HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-06-04 - Orange Coast Pilot••••••
Teen 1noni m baby caper wants tot back
WILL DECIDE ISSUE
Judge Byron McMillan
Judge to make custody decision Friday
.By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
Of ................
An OranJ'e County Superior
Court judge will decide Friday lf
a 7-week old baby offered for
sale 'at a Mission Viejo
restaurant should be returned to
the custody of her 15·year-old
mother.
Judge Byron McMillan de·
ferred a decision Wednesday
foJlowing a 30-minute hearing at-
tended by both the baby's
mother, Mary Wilson, and the
father, Randy Wilson, 29.
Wilson was arrested Sunday
n1ght by Orange County Sheriff's
deputies who alleged be had
walked from table to table in a
24 -bour restaurant, asking
patrons if they wanted to buy the infant. He was arraiened
Wednesday in South Orange
County Municipal Court on a
charee of felony child endaneer·
ing.
Since the arrest, the baby,
Kathleen Wilson, born April 17
-Good Friday -lo Leuisluia, has remained in the nursery at
the county's Albert Sitton Home.
Director Bill Steiner described
Kathleen u being in good condi-
tion.
Du~na the bearina -to which
news reporters and television
cameras were admitted -Mn.
Wilson1.!'bo appears older than
15, teswaed that she wants her
child back. She said she believes
she is capable of adequately car-
ing for the child.
She ,testified that she was un-
aware that Wilson allegedly had
offered the baby for sale.
Mrs. Wilson currenUy is resid·
ing with a Mission Viejo family. Judge McMillan barred re-
porters from divulging the
family's name due to the nature
of the hearing.
McMillan requested the coun·
ty Social Services Department investigate conditions in the
family's home. He will ute the
results of that lnvetitiaatiOD to
decide if the inf ant should be
placed there with her mother. •
Wilson dld not testify. He sat
impassively at the counsel table
dre11ed in an Oranee County
Jail jumptult. He was shackled
during the court appearance.
Mrs. Wilson testified that she
and her husband bad been in
California prior to ·tbe child's
birth, returned to Louisiana for
several weeks, during which
Ume Kathle4'1 was born, then
t.raveled back to CaUfornia.
They took up reaidenc. with the
Mission Viejo famUy last week,
Mrs. Wllaon told the court.
Mrs. Wilson said she and her
husband bad known the family
since October. McMillan also scheduled a
June 30 bearin4 at which time
social workers will recommend
<See BABY, Page A%)
SALE TRY CHARGED
Father Randy Wil.son .
oettr ...... S'8ft ,._ ..
SEEKING CUSTODY
Mother Mary Wilson
Anµiesty for • a ·on· illegal aliens?
CLOSE COMPETITION -The excitement of this down wind
run will long be remembered by skippers Andy Rose of the
Fort Worth Boat Club on Ranger (112), Brian Wertheimer
OFJRA, Israeli-Occupied Sinai
<AP) -Prime Minister
Menacbem Be1in sa1d he ac-
cepted a request by E1yptian
President Anwar Sadat today to
cin more time for American
cliplomacy to resolve the crtsl1
o•er Syria's deployment of mia· .u .... LebmloD.
Bepa told a jajnt news COD·
ference Wltb Sadat after a Ila·
bour 1wnmtt tbat tbe two of
tb8111 bad "made lm.pattaat
a1reemenu, we reached Hrioill
• Dellf .......... A-. UdMltY
of Seattle on War Horse (US) and Gayle Post of Balboa on
Perspicacious (114). Rose eventually won the 6-meter na-tiona~ championship in the regatta off Newport Beach.
Eeypt baa refused such re·
quests in the past, ciUng the
Camp David peace treaty's re-
quirement for all Israelis to
leave the Sinai Penlnaula.
After the mornln1 summit
seas;, Belin broutht up the
1tra e situation resullint from
l1rae election laws tbat forbid
sbowlnt him on television dur-
i n1 the fou r weeks before
Drael's June JO n•tloo~I votlnt
for Parliament. .
"It'• lllollcal ud ridlculowl
tbat vtewen around tbe world cu tee tbe 1WDmlt and tbe peo-
pie of Israel will not," Begin told
reporters.
More than 300 journalists are
coverina the Ofira summit but
the cameramen for Israel
Television were the only ones
trying to keep Begin out of the picture.
Israeli troops routed pro-
testers opposed to their coun-
try's withdrawal from Sinai who
managed to demonstrate on the
beach a few minutes after Sadat
and Belin started their summit.
Hid ~meat·Clfftdali bitlle\le ... ,~ ol tile Arai.tan
commmdty ,....,to •U.t a pro-*'at the p1r1arm.aa. Bat-..
Hid ln~tan ba'H DO llrtct
mdeliee to 1U tH blmll n · plollcm to tbe MiMalan lljup.
f'alr Hid tilt ••PIOllOD on.....-a. •=li'alb cu ft lllt-louth llltra88. It
1battencl llx and emt.
Task force also urges
doubling of immigrants
WASHINGTON <AP> -A
White House task force is rec-
ommending that President
Reagan consider granting
permanent amnesty to more
than a million illegal aliens in the United States and that he
double the number of imml·
grants permitted to enter the
country from Mexico and
Canada.
In a final draft of the report,
obtained by The Associated
Press Radio Network, the Presi-
dent's Task Force on Immigra-
tion and Refugee Policy also
suggests that Reagan establish
an experimental guest worker
program.
The task force, beaded by At·
torney General William French
Smith, recommends that the
number of Immigrants allowed
to enter the country each year
from Mexico and Canada be an
creased from 20,000 to 40,000.
The report said "there is no
practical way lo round up and
deport" the 3 million to 6 m1lhon
illegal aliens estimated to be in
this country. As one option for
dealing with that problem. 11
suggests granting permanent res
ident status to about 1.2 million
illegal aliens who could prove
they were in the United Slates
prior to Jan. 1, 1980, and that
theY. have lived here for five con
aecutive years.
The task force also suggests
grantint temporary worker
status for an additional 1 5
million illegal immigrants.
A Justice Department
spokesman said the report
(See ALIENS, Page A2)
James Earl Ray
stabbed in prison
PETROS, Tenn. AP) -.lames
Earl Ray, who pleaded guilty to
killing civil rights leader
Marlin Luther King Jr., was
stabbed several times in the
chest, arm and neck today in the
law library at Brushy Mountain
Penitentiary, a spokesman for
the governor said.
Ray, S3, who is serving 99
years for the 1968 murder of
King, was taken under heavy
guard to the Oak Ridge Hospital
for treatment, according to Deb-
by Patterson, deputy press
secretary to Gov. Lamar Alex-
ander. His condition was no( im·
mediately known.
Ray was undergoing sureery
and was stable, Ms. Patterson
saw.
Two black inmates who were
not idenUfied were held as sus·
peels, and guards confiscated a
weapon fashioned from ~ 12-inch
metal brace taken from a win·
dow frame, she said. No motive
was known. Prison Warden Herman Davis
sealed off the area where the
stabbing occurred, and said
there was no 4isturbance at the
prison, according to Ms. Pat·
tenon.
"We do have him," said
Barbara Was}lburn, a h01pital
spokeswoman. "W• received
him throuah our emer1ency de-
partment, he was evaluated aa
having multiple stab wounds
wbicb be received at the prison
and be ls at the present time un·
dergoina 1ur1eo'." She said Uaere would be no
condition report on Ray until
surcery wu complete. She did
not know bOW Iona the operatklft
would take. ·
But Ron Bishop, clirector of la·
stltutlonal pro1ram1 for the
Slate corrections department.
said he was reported in good
condition. "We have the s uspects,··
Bishop said. "We know who they
are but we are not identifyinl?
them now until the warden feels
it's safe.·· ·
Ray was a fugitive from a
Missouri prison at the time King
was slain April 4, 1968. He
pleaded guilty to the slaying in
March 1979, after bis arrest in
London, England, but recanted
and bas been trying periodically
ever since to win a new trial or
hearing In the case.
He escaped for 54Yi hours in
June 1977 from the maximum
security prison in East Ten -
nessee. and tried to escape on at
least two other occasions.
Ray's wife lives in Knoxville
Ray pleaded guilty to the
charge in return for a 99-year
sentence. There was n o
testimooy at the trial.
..............................
OIAllil CIAIT llATHfR
Mostly sunny today and
Friday. Highs today
around 90 at beaches and in·
land areas. Clear tonieht
with lows ranging from 58
to 65. Cooler Friday with
highs around 70 at beaches
to mid-80sinland.
111111 TllAY
A~ llOCea GM ff/t·
tlar~ ..,.,._calla dluiftg
o bilorn f.mouh compoagta of r..,.. laa.t ~ wflla t~ ar-rwn of a Riwrndt male StU·
pecl.fS.E'ogeASJ.
11111
t
!
.. . or-. COut DAILY PILOT(f'huredey. June •• 1111
$1.5 million e theater. suit filed
By ftlCftAllD GR£EN
Of tllle o.tlY NII._,. County Falr1round1 ln Co1la LOu Harrl1, M•Usaa M111cht1ter
Men. and ant1n1 amphlthuttr
Tbt anUtruat ault rlled Mon· IPOkttman Michael Htnnl1an The 10,000·apectator lrvlne day ln U.S. Dlatrlct Court ln LOI Hld Wtdn 1day.
Meadows Amphitheater woo't Aa1elei alltltl Lhat performtr Ht cont nded that""' th ae ,
open for buslness until Au1. 1, co D tract 1 • n for ct d by 1rtllu and othtrt are problbatld but it's already embroiled In a Nederliridtr la 1tymieln1 elfort1 from 1ppe1rlng at the Irvine
legal controversy. by trvlne Meadows Am · MeadoWJ Amphitheater because
Owners of the amphlt;eater phitheater offlclal1 to book of p rrormonce contracts they
being built at Lion Country performers. hold with the Orffk Theattl'.
Safari have Ciled a $1.S million Speclflcally, contractual dlf· Th • conttaH1 contoln
lawsuit afainst the Nederlander flculties have preyented the clauae1 that prohibit Greek
theatrlca organlullon, which Irvine Meadows Amphitheater Theate performers rrom appear.
owns the Greek Theater In Los Partners.hip from 1l1nlna con· Ina at any other umphltheater
Angeles and Is developing an cert aereements with Jefrert0n whbln 100 mlles of the Oreek
a:.:m.:.:..i:P..:.:h.:.;il;.;.;h;.;:;e..;;;a..;.te;..;r~a._t__;,t...;.h..;..e_O_r_a_n_fl_e _ _.s_t _ar_s_h_l_p_. _T_o_m __ J_o_n_e_a._E_m_m_.r __ a~!!hin 90 days bufore and 60
d1y1 after their performance
there, HtMJt•n nld.
Thete clause1 reprHent 1
vlolatlon of the Sherman An·
Utruat Act, he claimed.
The lrvlne Meadow1 Am
phlthea\er la 67 miles 1outh or
the Greek theater.
"The allccatlons are falle,"
saJd Rick Witte, spokesman for
tho Ntderlander or1anlzahon.
"lt'a ti cute 11ult (that> r«'flects
an extraordinary dearee of l&·
noranco or this bualnesa."
Ho declined to ao Into the
soeclrtcs.
\
• Jr\llne Meadows Amphitheater 1poke1mao Hennitan 11Jd that
becauae or the terms of the
Grotk Theater performer con·
tucta, the lrvlne theater• will
be able to book only 3~ acta, 16
short or the desired number of
bookln11.
Thia U ·act s hortfall will
repreaent '500,000 In lost rev·
onue, Hennigan said. Under the
Sherman Antitrust Act. deten·
danta In antitrust suits can
claim triple the actual damages
incurred, he said.
Hennigan said he hopes that
"within a couple weeks" he can
appear bcofore a rederal judee in
an attempt lo win preliminary
relief.
Jl ennttan contended that
Ned rlandel' orclclal• may be al·
legedly aelcctlvely enforcing
their performer contracts in an
errort lo hurt the lrvine
Meadows Amphitheater. which
will compet e with an am-
phitheater the Nederlanders are
cons tructing at the Orange
County Fairground~ in Costa 1
Mesu. Thal amphitheater is to
open next year
Tennis star denied bid
Judge refuses to seal court file in lesbian love suit
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
Superior Court judge who
several years earlier sealed a
court file in connection with the
Patty Hearst case has refused to
do the same In the controversial
suit filed against tennis star
Billie Jean King by her former
lesbian lover.
Judge Earl F. Riley. after a
30-minute hearing Wednesday,
refused to issue an order to seal
the flies, saying, "I think the or·
der of that nature is uncon-
scionably broad and would be
absolutely contrary to every-
thing the court. system stands
for."
certain of their actions kept
private. I understand that is pre-
cisely the kind or people the
public wants to know about "
Ms. Barnell said she began
living with Mrs. King. who was
married at the time. In 1972 and
that Mrs. King promised to take
care of her nnancial needs in re·
turn for ber services as a com-
panion and business associate.
Mrs. Barnell claims Mrs.
King reneged on a promise lo
provide her lifetime financial
support as well as the Malibu
house where Ms . Barnell still
lives
tlonship with Ms. Barnett but de·
nied she ever promised anything
to her. The Kings have filed a
countersu1t to oust Ms. Barnell
from the house.
The Kings' lawyers based
their request to seal the file on
an order made by Judge Riley
several years ago Riley sealed
the probate me of the late
William Randolph Hearst at the
request of the Hearst family,
which said details of their
wealth would constitute a "hit
list."
His order. later lifted, was
made at the lime Hearst's
g randdaughler. Pally Hearst
Shaw, was kidnapped and held
by the Symbionese Liberation
Army
BACK TO VATICAN Pope John Paul II
waves to onlookers at Vatican City's San
Damasco Courtyard after bis return from the
h'ospital. J oining the pontiff, who is re·
.... ~
cuperat.J.ng from bullet wounds sustained dur-
ing an assassination attempt last month, is
Secretary of State'Cardinal Agostino
Casaroli.
The sealing was requested by
Larry King, the tennis star's
husband and business manager,
who is also a defendant in the
lawsuit filed April 28 by Marilyn
Barnell . a 33 -year -old
paraplegic hairdresser. She says
she lived with Mrs. King in the
early 1970s. Mrs. King supported
her husband's request to seal the
file s.
She is suing for that support
and house under California's so·
called palimony precedent un·
der which rormer s inger
Michelle Triola Marvtn was al-
lowed to sue actor Lee Marvin
for half of his earnings during
the period they lived together
In a recent news conference, •
Mrs. King admitted the rela-
But Riley said he made that
order because of the overriding
consideration of "the danger of
the lives of the llearst ramily ..
He said he saw no such danger
to the Kings.
Bridge celebration due
Henry Holmes Jr , King's al
torney, said his c lient has
already lost $200,000 in potential
earnings because of publicity
about the lawsuit. Joel Selway,
Mrs. King's attorney, cJaimed
the tennis star had lost $600,000
in potential earnings because of
Node U CI editor
• to retain post
I slanders smiling as repair work nearly finished the suit. '
Belway added that the suit
and publicity surrounding it
have placed a "tremendous
strain" on the Kings' marriage.
UC Irvine student editor
Barnabas Sokol will not be
stripped of his position or dis·
ciplined for posing nude and
printing a few vulgar jokes in a
"humor supplement" banned on
campus earlier this week. ac-
cording to the student council
A bout 50 lo 100 copies of the in
sert were stolen from a campus
loading dock before editors
destroyed nearly 10.000 copies
prior to distribution lo the re
gular issue Tuesday.
By STEVE MARBLE
Of u.. o.1y l'tMil San
Tempers have cooled and
smiles have returned to the
races of the merch.ants lining
Marine Avenue on Balboa
Island.
The bridge to the island under
repair for eight months during
which lime traffic frequently
was constricted to one lane, is
wide open again.
Shopkeepers say business has
started to pick up and that the
summer of '81 s hould be a
healthy one, financially speak·
ing.
. Merchants and other islanders
plan to celebrate the completed
bridge job June 13.
They've printed T-shirts with
a picture of the bridge on the
front, have organized a parade
complete with Dixieland band
and have asked actor Buddy
Ebsen. an island resident, to cut
the official bridge ribbon.
Ebsen, it was suggested. suf·
fered through the frequent traf-
fi c snarls around the bridge just
like aJI his island neighbors.
"It will be a moment to heave
a collective sigh of relief." says
Dottie Struchen, a Marine
Avenue shopow ner and a
coordinator of the festivities.
Jennifer Johnston, owner or
Our Gang General Store, said
the rebuilt bridge "looks really
good, not as cute as the old one,
, though.
"I think the builders did a nice
job even though they sure took
their ti me doing it," she added.
Tony Horvat , owner of a
Marine Avenue clothing shop
who contends his business
dropped 30 percent during the
bridge working months, says the
new bridge looks ''fine.''
"Relief," he adds, "is just a
summer away.''
Phil Maurer, a Newport Beach
co uncilman and is land
homeowner , calls the nearly
From Page A1
BABY •••
a formal plan for the infant's
welfare. -.,.
Should there be opposition to
the plan, further court proceed-
ings could be held, said Deputy
County Counsel Barbara Evans,
who represented the social
services department in the hear-
ing. ·
completed bridge "absolutely
and totaJJy rantastk"
He says that. whHe merchants
celebrate, he plans to honor
bridge contractor Peter Kiewit
by giving a representative of
that firm a 1929 photo or the first
island bridge when it was under
construction.
Other celebration plans. which
have been tied loosely with the
City of Ne wport· s 7Sth an-
niversar y, include moving the
Claa pole at the root of the
bridge.
Maurer claims the pole was
positioned in such a way that it
slicks into a clump of palm
fronds. He says it makes it dif·
ficult to see the•Clag.
Merchants also have
purchased 32 colored nags that
will be placed along the bridge
railings for the celebrat4on.
Lloyd Dalton, a city design
engineer, says the bridge proj-
ect was one of the toughest proj-
ects eve r unde rtak en i n
Newport Beach. He says he's
glad it's Just about completed.
He says the bridge work,
which included rebuilding all the
pilings, adding wider sidewalks
and new railings, was "a real
comedy of doing work and try-
ing to accommodate residents."
Krishnas get
begging_ ~ghl
NEW YORK CAP> -Hare
Krishna members can rove
among fairgoers at the annual
New York State Fair near
Syracuse seeking donations, a
federal appeaJs court has ruled.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals, in a unanimous de·
cision Wednesday, re'{ersed a
federal judge's dismissal of a
lawsuit filed by the religious
movement challenging the fair's
ban against solicitations.
The appeals court said it was
not endorsing tactics of swin·
dling and harassment done in the
name of religion, but it said "un·
popular traditions, practice$ Md
do c trines of alien re ·
Ugions ... must be tolerated."
Classes sought
SACRAMENTO CAP) -About
100 persons of wide ethnic
diversity marched to the Capitol
and asked the Leelslature Cor
more money for English clusea.
The rally took place Wednesday.
Cl1Httt.d edvertt•lnt 1141142-1171 All ottt.r depertme"'9 141-4.D1
Asked if he intends to attend
the June 13 a ffair. Dalton
quipped, ··1 think I'll stay away
-the ~ople out there can see
me coming."
The bridge fanfare is
scheduled to begin at 9 a.m.
From Page A1
ALIENS. • •
would be sent to the While House
this month. and other sources
said Reagan is expected to act
on its recommendations follow·
ing bis meeting next week with
Mexican President Jose Lopez
Portillo.
"Illegal immigration has
·Holmes said scrutiny by the·
press of future depositions or
factuaJ information about King's
finances and relationship wilb
Mrs. King could "ruin his
career, marriage and personaJ
life.··
But the j udge contended,
"Tl'\ese people are in the public
eye and while people in the
public eye would like to have
• From Pag~ A1
' BOMB •••
caused impatience in Congress but about 100 employees who
and the public with all migration were still inside the 12 acre
into the United States," the re· facility were evacuated. •
port said, adding that some Many spectators who had at·
members of Congress and the tended the Kenneth Copeland
Associated Students advisor
Dehnis Hampton said today a re·
solution to fire Sokol was
withdrawn al a Tuesday council
meeting before the s tudents
could take action.
Council member Jim Harvey
withdrew the resolution after de·
cidjng there would not be enough
coul\cil s upport lo pass it, said
Hampton.
The 23-year-old editor of the
New University newspaper
apologized to students earlier
this week anq look fu ll
responsibility for the eight page
humor supplement, considered
by other stare members to be of-
fensive.
public are especially concerned Crusade were In automobiles Gunman gets
with the ethnic makeup of the waiting lo leave the conveatton
latest waves of immigration, center parking lot where the ex-$112,000 haul
which was dominated by Hla-plosion occurred, he said. •
panics. Another group of about 300 LAS VEGAS CAP> -A gun·
Man kille d
in bridge jump
SAN FRANCISCO <AP I An
unidentified man has Leaped to
his death from the Golden Gate
Bridge. but the California
lhghway Patrol said it had few
details about the jump. ·•His foot went on top of the
rail. his arms went out and he
lunged off," said Kevin Estepp
of Vallejo. who said he saw the
leap as he drove across the
famed bridge al about 8:30 p.m
Wednesday. "It j ust tore me
up ." F.Allepp said. . Estepp said he reported the m·
c1dent to toll takers on the
bridge and the CHP confirmed
that a man had jumped from the
bridge and died.
lnan.attempttobringthehigh people had concluded an hour man who grabbed a bank
level of leaal and illegal immi-earlier a meetin g or the supervisor while she was open-Abortion wait set
grallon under control· and en· Southern California Service Sta· ing up a bank branch escaped courage more dlv•r~ity among Uoo Association, Fair said. with $ll2,000 lo cash in the big-CARSON CITY CAPl -The
th,e newcoq;>er~. the task force Damaee was estimated at • gest b$llk robbery in Southern Sen ate has g ive n final
report puts forward a aeries of. $3,()00, he said. Anaheim police Nevada. legislative approval lo a blll re·
options for Jteagan to consider. officers and members• of the The bandit, who apparently quiring women to notify their
The presideot will make the Orange County Sheriff's bomb hid outside the First Interstate husbands and teen·agers to
final decisions. squad searched the facility but Bank on Sierra Vista Drive until notify their parents and then
The report reco..mmends that found no other devices, he t h e supe r v iso r appeared wait 24 hours before having an
the current immigration ceiling _::a..:d..:d..:e.:d.:..... ___________ w_e_d_n_es_d_a_y . _________ a_b_o_r_li_o_n _______ _
of 270,000 admission! a year be
retained. In addition. spouses.
r hildren and parents .of U.S.
citizens would be ad mitted
without regard to the ceiling.
which would add another 150,000
r.ewcomers annually. the report
estimates.
Currently, there is a limit of
20,000 annual admissions al-
lowed from any one country.
The tas k force recommends
doubling that figure for both
Canada and Mexico. citing our
"unique relationship with our
neighbors." Raising the ceiling on Mex-
icans also would provide "a
means for reducing pressures
for Illegal immigration Crom
Mexico. the country against
which it is most dilficult to as·
sure full endorcement ol our
laws," the report states.
The task force also suggests
doina away wtth an immtaraUon
rule permitting brothers and sls·
ters of U.S. citizens to enter the
country outside the ceillna.
Some 92,000 people entered the
United States under thil
category in 19'1t, and their num-
bers Increase exponentially,
becaUJe they then brtna ln their
spouses, who ln tum brin& in·
their slblln&s. aDd so on.
· In a seetlon dealina with n.
leaal lmmlaralion, lbe task
force •Ulle•ta as one option a
comblftaUQn or beelln1 up the
U .8. ~er Patrol. establl1hln1 an nplrimental 1ue1t worker
proaram. penalliina ernployera
who knowlnaly hire llleaal
aliens Ind le&aJidns the 1tatua or certain w .... lmml.,anll.
The price tac for 1troll1er Im·
mlJntlon and N1turalliatlon
Setvle!e enforcement would be
f75 tnlWoia, aceotdln1 to ~ ,.
port.
Lena Horne, left, vi$1b wi1h Coretta King,
center, and Jackie Onassis on the stage of New
York's Nederlander Theater after a
performance of "Lena HorM, Che Lady and Her
Music."
Boos quenched
by82kegs
If they won 't lend you an
ear, or give you a cheer.
hand them a beer.
That was Republican Gov.
James Thompson's solution
after he took the podium at a
statehouse AFL·CIO rally in
Springfield, Ill. and was
greeted with boos for his al·
legedJy anti·labor bias
Thompson cooled the op-
position by inviting tbe
throng to the governor's
mansion for a cold one.
Jame s Ski lb eck, a
Thompson press aide, said
c"alls were placed to
Thompson's wife , Jayne,
asking permission to invite
"a rew thousand c lose
friends over for a party on
the lawn "
Permission granted. the
governor's re-election com·
mittee placed a rush order
for 82 16-gallon kegs at $26.25
per ke~ One thousand pairs
of elbows showed, ready to
be bent.
They s pent most of the
time chatting about work.
asking Thompson for his
autograph and trying to stay
cool. The only problem was
the mansion 's plumbing,
which couldn't handle the
crowd. After an hour, more
than a dozen portable toilets
were trucked in
Former Border Patrol
chief Harton Carter, who has
directed National Rifle As-
sociation acli vi ties since
1977. was elected to an un-
precedented five-year term
as the NRA's executive vice
president.
Nature photographer Ansel
Adams, who has scaled the
peaks and trails in Yosemite
National Park, Is facing
another uphill climb: he's
leading a campaign to oust
Inte rior Secretary James
Watt.
"This man is halting 100
years of growth of the na·
lional park system, halting
two decades of progress in
protecting areas neal' major
cities." s ays Adams. in·
terviewed in People
magazine.
The Sierra Club. acting on
Adams' suggestion. has col-
lected more than 80,000
signatures in five weeks on a
petition calling for Watt's re-
moval.
With her master's degree
in hand and her divorce on
the way, Joan -----
Kennedy is
hunting for a
television job
on her wily to
the "whole
new life" she
sought when
she separated
from Sen .
Edward M .
K e n n e d y Joan Kennedy
three years ago.
"I don't have a job," Mrs.
Kennedy said after Lesley
College presented her the
degl"ee while her estranged
husband and their children
watched. "I'm looking for a
job in the medium or
television.''
Lesley, a Cambridge,
Mass. school that prepares
women for careers in educa-
tion, awarded the 45-year-old
accomplished pianist a
master's degree in educa-
tion . She expected to
specialize in music.
It may be time for the
White House to order a new
batch of presidential
cuf(links -the kind handed
out to the Democrats when
Presiden t Reagan wants
some help on Capitol Hill.
Reagan is making it clear
that he may try to win ap-
proval of his tax cul plan by
taking the same tack used
when Democratic leaders in
Congress balked at support·
ing his budget plan.
The cu!flinks, along with
tickets to the presidential
box at the .Jobn F. Kennedy
Center for the Performing
Arts. became symbols, if not
factors , in Reagan's
courtship of conservative
Democrats whose support
helped him win approval of
reduced budget increases.
Feminist ISetty Friedan
says women must stop try-
ing to be
· 's uperwom· ,.
en" in their '
careers. just
a s m e n
sboul~ give
up lbe hard·
driving
be havior that
she says can
s horten their
lives. Betty Friedan
Ms. Friedan also told
Smith College graduates that
the women's movement must
include men in the struggle
for equal employment op·
portunity.
"ll is going to be more and
more possible to get quality
Of life clauses into union COD·
tracts and equal opportunity
laws -but not by women
alone," said Ms. Friedan,
herself a 1942 alumna or the
college.
Twisters touch down
T ornados damage Denver, others seen i n Texas, K ansas
C.Oastal f orecast
Light vul•lll• winds 1>e<omin9
wuterlf I to H knots wl111 I to l loot
wind wav9$ In alltrnoon. I 10 3 foot
westerlf s...i1 111rouon tonight Part @ ly < loudy wte nl91>t •nd Hrly ....,.,.
Ing. otMf'W•M ••• ,
U.S. summary
Tnunctentor-'°""°" m1Kh of tllt 11•llOfl W"Mtdty, 1p•wnlng
1catttrtld tom*'«>J •ncl prompting
fltsll fi-waknt1 l11 .. ,.....1st.las.
The l"'°'*'"-tf'I -"' r..,..r1ecl I~ Int sowthffn •lld <tnlrlll Pl•lnl
i. the southtrft tl'trw-q.,.r1en of tnt
Atl•nll< Coest.
Sever•• lorlll~ llrl>Ck O.nver
•ftll Its M10ut1a durlnt the elttmoan,
c •utlng some H01Nrty d•m•oe , P.ilce N4CI llle<t wart ~s of In· , .. , ....
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All<•, Teu1, •nd enotMr twister
tetl<ll•d clown nter Oru111b11rg,
l(•nw1. Olflclti. In All<• •• <llY Of 20,000
-··of~ Clll'ISll, Mid 11\tre w• 110 d•m•t• rrom Ille reported
twisters, 11111 """'' r.it\t toned Int
ctoalno ot some >lrMll 11«..,Mt Of
lllgllwettf
Fluh flOOd wetchH wart la~
for Mslern Cotor.eo, ~ Of Tt .. s,
Okl•llome end sowthwtstern
Arlt•"~ S-lta ...,.. WMY 111 !lit $ollthw .. t
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llklts. Tam _ _._ el"llllllCI VM Mlloll M
ml440y '#Mntldey r~ frtm •
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to • hlth Of 100 ...,_ In Pelm Spr-
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Whal do y~ I k• aboUt Uw Dally Pilot'!
What dOl'l't you like? Call the number below and
your meaace will be recorded, transcribed and
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The Hm• M·hour an•Wi!tit ""le• may
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name and tel..,.._. 1u1tpbtr for ffrincaUon. No
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•
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Orange Coa1t DAil. Y PILOTfThursday,, June '4, 1981 s Al
Coast citizens on j;ury
19 members of Grand Jury to take office July 1
El1ht Orange Coast l"esldentJ
are amon1 the 19 persons who
have been •elected by random
drawing to serve on the 1981·82
Or1n1e County Grand Jury.
Those resident• Include
Robert W. Houseal, 58, retired,
Huntlngton Beach, Phyllls 8 .
Journigan, 57, retired, Hunt·
lngton Beach; Frances E. Park,
60, retlred, Huntington Beach;
Sonja Richardson, 50, media as·
sistant, Hunllneton Beach ;
Howard Loudon, 68, retired,
Laguna Niguel ; Kent Moore, 41,
work experience coordinator,
Corona del Mar ; Martha
Newklrt, community service
director, Newport Beach, and
Eueenle Wenke, homemaker,
Corona del Mar.
Also servln1 on the Jurr,.
which wlll take office July 1, wtll
be Rochelle Barnes, 4.2, tlnanclal
administrator, Santa Ana; Keith
Boillot, 63, retired, Santa Ana;
Georee Hender, no age listed.
retired, Garden Grove: Arman-
do Perez, S7 . retired, Garden
Grove; Kathlen Barrlah. 39.
homemaker. Villa P.ark. alld
William Braz, 60, retired, Yorba
Linda. Also, Elizabeth Graham, 50,
homemaker and bookkeeper, La
Habra; Rodney Coulson, 74, re·
tired, Anaheim: Jerome Hersch,
65, retired, Anaheim : Beverly
Payne, 44, interior deslrner,
Buena Park, and Bert Wllllama.
66. teacher and adminiatrato.r,
Oranee.
Eleven persons not selected
Crom the pool of 30 nominees wlll
serve as alternate members or
the jury.
The grand jury le often called
the watchdoe of county eovem·
ment. The jury lnvestleates and
Issues reports on various llaues
and from time to time is used by
the county District Attorney's
Office to hear testimony ln sup·
port of criminal indictments.
Jurors serve without pay for
one-year terms.
Arthur La ff er speech due
Controversial economist slated at fund-raiser
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Of .. o.6ty ..........
Economist Arthur Laffer will
be the speaker Monday at a
fund -raiser for Rep . Dan
Lungren, the Republican
lawmaker who represents much
of western Orange County.
The USC professor is the
author of the Laffer Curve, an
economic theory at the heart of
the Kemp-Roth tax cut proposal.
Monday's dinner will be at the
Golden Sails Inn in Long Beach.
For details, cait 438·9931. Tickets
are $100 per person.
• • • HA RRIETT WIEDER , who
represents the 2nd District on
the Orange County Board of
Supervisors, will be the speaker
Friday at graduation
ceremonies for the Slst Basic
Peace Officers Recruit Class at
Golden West College in Hunt-
ington Beach.
Seventeen officers will be
graduating during the
ceremonJes, which begin at 3
p.m . The public is invited. • • *
THE CITY OF Westminster
will be the host Friday when of-
ficials from cities in West
Orange County's 7lst Assembly
district gather for breakfast.
Democratic Assemblyman
Chet Wray of the 7lst District
will be on hand to discuss pro-
blems of mutual interest with
mayors, councilmen and city
managers.
Westminster Mayor Kathy
Bucholz has planned the
breakfast for 7:30 a .m . at the
We s tminster Community
Center.
* * * REP. ROBERT BADHAM, R·
Newport Beach, has been named
a "taxpayers best friend" for
the second session of the 96th
Congress by the National Tax·
payers Union , according to
George E. Snyder. president of
the organization.
Snyder said Badham was one
of 45 members of Congress cited
for voting consistently to reduce
government spending in 1980.
County picks HSA director
Larry Leaman, interim direc-
tor or Orange County govem-
ment 's Human Services Agency,
has been permanently appointed
to the position.
terim director of the HSA.
Leaman was director of the coun-
ty Community Services Agency,
the smallest of the county's um
brella superagencies in which
several departments are con
s olidated under a single ad
ministrative structure.
Leaman succeeds Margaret
Grier. who resigned in March to
pursue private business in·
terests.
Leaman takes over the agency
at a time when Its method ol
operation is being questioned by
the county Grand Jury.
Leaman. a county employee
since 1963, will be paid $53,622,
equal to the salary he has been
earning since he received the in-
terim appointment.
The cou nty Board or
Supervisors selected Leaman by
unanimous vote after interview·
ing five finaUsts.
Others were Bert Scott, county
peraonnel director; Robert
Huntley. county employee rela-
tions director; Sara Walker.
HSA assistant director for ad·
ministration. and Randall
Bacon, deputy administrator for
human services ln San Diego
County.
Sunbelt gaining,
older cities lose
Leaman and Huntley ,
however, were not among the
three top choices or a screening
committee headed by county Ad·
ministrative Officer Robert
Thomas.
Leaman joined the county in
1963 as a purchasing agent.
Through the years. he has
worked for the former Harbors.
Beaches and Parks Department
and the Environmental Manage-
ment Agency.
Prior to being appointed in-
Tour course aet
WASHlNGTON !AP> -Led
by Anchorage in oil-rich Alaska,
three U.S . cities that were
already pretty big in 1970 more
than doubled their site by 1980,
the Census Bureau reported.
In all, 13 of the nation's cities
over 100,000 gained at least SO
percent in the decade, most of
them in the Sun Belt states or
the South and West.
The six cities over one million
population in 1970 were the same
last year, with New York lead-
ing the way at 7 .9 million and
Chicago, Los Angeles and
Philadelphia still second, third
and fourth on the list.
Detroit slipped from fifth to
s ixth, lls place taken by
Houston. The Texas city and Los
Angeles were the only ones or
the six to gain population during
the decade, the report said.
The Census Bureau reported
the big losers last month were
the Midwest and Northe~st in·
dustralized centers or St. Louis.
Cleveland. Detroit and Buffalo.
N. Y.. all suffering population
declines or 20 percent or more.
The three moderately big
cities that more than doubled in
populatio11 from 1970 to 1980
were Anchorage, which grew 260
percent to 173,017 ; Mesa, Ariz.
which gained 142 percent to
152,453. and Aurora, Colo., which
grew 112 percent lo 158,588.
Like many of the other big
gainers. Mesa and Aurora are
near the outskirts or even bigger
cities; Phoenix and Denver.
Orange Coast College is offer·
ing a three-part lecture series
this summer to better acquaint
visltors, immigr ants and natives to California.
Medal design picked
Titled "Seeing California for
the First Time," the series will
meet on successive Tuesday
evenings, starting June 16, at
7: 30 p.m. in Room 111 of OCC's
Social Science Building.
There is no charge for the lee·
tures and registration will be
conducted at the door.
Graphic designer Tom Grogg
of Newport Beach has been
c hosen winner of an Orange
County-sponsored contest to de·
sign a medal of valor .
Grogg, 33, will be honored
Tuesday by the county Board of
Supervisors for his winning de·
sign of a hand reaching out with
the word "valor" inscribed
above it.
If you've put aside your Cleoorattng dreeme for• lovelier
llvlng room until you find a real velue ... here'• the •n1wer to thc)le dream•, •II the finer quality f .. tu,..
utuaJty found In oofat ~ulartY telling for 1800.00 to
H 00.00 ... now only
80" eot.. In chOlce of atyl" and coven 1n a
wide ..tec:tk>n of cotort. 2 wMkl only.
A seven-member judging
panel named otber finalists as:
Michael Rodgers of Mission Vie-
jo, second; Randy Brown of La
Habra , third ; Lowell
McCracken Jr. of Los Alamitos,
fourth. and Julia Clueckauf of
Huntington Beach, firth.
The medal of valor Is to be
awarded to county residents who
perform acts of heroism in the
public interest.
Your'~•• 0..9ner W111 a. Happy l• Aealtt You
H.J.:GARRER fU~~ll1JRE
NOURI : Mott • .-U T11W1.10 •·"'·tot P·"'· 1J I I MAllOI ILYD. '"· '° 8.ln. te t '·"'· .... 1o •·"'· '° l:M '·"'· COST A NISA 646:.01711
s Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Thurlday. June 4', 1981
u•et reconc~liation may be m<:>re like divorce
y, WALTEa a. MEA88
WASIUNGTON <AP> -lt'1
lltd reconcUlatlon, but lt'•
!rely to be as rancoroua 11
vorce court as President
ea1an and bls alllea pre11
Con1re11 to deliver the S3t
Uion ln federal •xnding cuta It
ready has promis~.
The Ume has come to OU ln
e blanks, In a Hurrf.
1 tbere are Democrats who t 1ue that the process -cutUna .,eclflc programs to stay under
1P9ndin1 ceilings already set -Ii• an opportunity for liberals to
rearoup and regain money for
1ctomest1c spending programs
alashed under the Reaaan
l!budget. House Speaker Thomas
O'Neill Jr. is among them.
Not so, counters the
Republican administration, with
ran ample corps or Democratic
U,P.porters.
,. •Polley has already been de·
•
clded," aald budaet director
David Stockman, arsutn1 that
what ahould happen now 11
almost routine. He knows it
won't be hand.led that way -not
wlth a Republican admlnlltra·
tlon bent on chan1ln1 the way
Con1ress does budaet bualneu, and not wltb assorted pet
projects at stake.
•'As . we start this a rand
le1lslaUve experiment . • . it's
likely to unfold less llke a family
reunion and more like a dlvorce
court,•' Stockman aald the other
morning, launcbln1 a White
House drive to make sure the
cuts are enforced.
He spoke as conare11lonal
committees betan work on the
details of budget cutUn1, with a
deadline of June 12.
That's not much Ume, and lt ls
no small task. For example, pro-
grams under the supervision of
the House Education and Labor
NEWS ANALYSIS
Committee will have to be
pruned by SlO billion to Cit the
bud1et. And Democrata, many
of whom do not want such cuta
in toclal pro1ram1, are etUl the
majority there.
Besides, even lt they can't
wln; O'Neill and Democratlc
liberals may decide to make a
eland and fi&bt for more money
for their preferred pro1ram1 -
colle1e student loans and school
lunch fundl are two or them -
in order to make a political cue
they cart talk about later.
In the openlnt phase of budaet
•ction, the lssue was the broad
one: austerity ln 1overnment
spending. For all the debate, it
was clear tbat was what the
voters wanted, and Con1ress got
the message.
Now the quesUon ls where to
be •Ult.ere, which specific pro.
l'l'•m ii cut -and who lOHt
what u a reault. That's tou1her.
"Tbia covers every senaltlve
proaram poUUcaUy that you can
po11lbly lma1lne," Stockman sald.
He aald the administration i•
wUlln1 to bend on the allocation
of funds within the guidelines
already set. •'Our approach will
be one of flexibility 01> the de·
tall• but insistence on honest
scorekeepin1 and the bottom
line," the bud1et chief said.
That flexibility apparently will
be limited. Stockman said lt
isn't 1olng to be feasible to
restore large pro1rams or undo
larae cuts because there isn't
any place Jeft to make ofCsetUn1 reduction.a.
O'Nelll, who virtually con-
ceded in advance that Reagan
would win on the initial budget
resolution, now 1u11est1
Democrats 01ht to 1et some or
the cuts restored -even if it
mean.a bustint the 5895 bUllon
bud1et.
Stockman aald the wide
mat'gin or Reagan's victory on
the budaet re1olut1on should
help convince Con1ress to stick wlth it. If Congre11 exceeds the
budaet target, he said, it will be
"deliberate sabotaee of the ex·
pressed will of Congress and the
American people."
Reagan's forces won the first
House budget test with
Republicans unanimous and S3
Democrats sidintr with the ad· ministration.
The resolution they approved
set spending ceilings by
category but not by item. Now
committees or the House and
Senate must shape legislation al·
locating funds for specific pro-
grams. Their work will Corm the
reconciliatlon blU, ao titled
because It's 1uppoaed to reton·
cile spendl"' with the revenue
and expenditure tar1et1 Oxed by
the budget resolution.
When Rea1an was lobbyine
for that resolution, he WH QUOt·
ed as tetuna waverln1 members
of Con1ress that II they would
vote for the overall budaet, their
specific concerns about cuta In
programs dear to them and their
constituents could be handled
later.
Asked about that, Stockman
sal~ the administration wouldn't
object to chanees in spendln1
detail, so long as increases in
one item are balaflced by reduc·
lions elsewhere. The trouble is
that a change lo placate one
member would almost surely
make trouble with another.
Every spending Item has its
sponsors, and every cut will
draw their wrath .
Patient lies and waits
TB victim in isolation ward with nowhere to go
CLEVELAND (AP> -Louis
Semerano, who has an incurable
case of tuberculosis, is in a
hospital isolation ward with
nowhere else to go.
One of the nation 's top
tuberculosis hospitals dis·
charged him because his disease
is incurable and it could do
nothing for him. His home coun·
ty has declared him a health
hazard. And the state says It has
no facilities to treat him.
His disease developed a re·
sistance to all anti-TB drugs,
said Roy Raney, spokesman for
National Jewish Hospital in
Denver, where Semerano, 80,
had been treated for the put
seven months.
Amnesia victim
'not missing son'
LAGRANGE, Ga. (AP > -A
couple who have searched for
their child for five years said
that an amnesia victim in
Oregon is not their 26-year-old
son. But they said they would
help the young man search for
his identity.
After seeing an Associated
Press picture of Danny Moore of
Yachats. Ore., John ahd Louise
Clinkscales said Tuesday there
was some resemblance, but
Moore definitely is not their son
Kyle.
"It ls not him, not at all," said
Mrs. Clinkscales . "We've been
up and we've been down, and
we've tried to keep ourselves on
an even keel and not get our
hopes up too high."
The Clinkscales said they
hoped that the incident would
help Moore find his real family.
"We'll try to keep in touch
with him to try and see who he
belongs to,.. Mrs. Clinkscales
said. "We hope that enough
publicity will be generated that
will help him re·establish his
Identity. wherever it is, because
he's on somebody's missing list
sonrtwbere. He belongs to
somebody."
Kyle Clinkscales was last seen
Jan. 27, 1976, when he left his job
here to return' to Auburn
University in Alabama.
Moore called the Clinkscales
on May 19 after s~g them on
WTBS·TV, the Atlanta station
carried by many cable systems
nationwide.
Moore told them he had been a
victim or amnesia since he was
involved in an automobile acci·
dent in 1976. He said be was con·
vinced be was Kyle because of
the photograph of Kyle dis·
played on the television show.
The Clinkscales received a let·
ler Crom Moore on May 28 which
appeared to support Moore's
claim to be Kyle Clinkscales.
·'The writing matches Kyle's.
the manner of writing, which is
printing, matches Kyle's, the
terminology matches Kyle's,
and the signature matches
Kyle's," Clinkscales said Mon·
day.
He said be also talked with
Moore's employer, who said
Moore had no identification, ap·
peared to be formally educated
and took the name or Danny
Moore because it was ~e name
or the employer's deceased
son, Clinkscales said.
During their five-year search
for their son, the Clinkscales
have testified before a con·
gressional committee studying
the problem of missing person.a.
Clinkscales has written a book,
"Kyle's Story: Friday Never
Came -The Search For Miss·
Ing People." He also has
established a non-profit corpora·
lion called Find Me Inc.
SFA 's June Handbag Event
25% to 40% off
Original Prices!
Originally '25 to '72, now 14.95 to 53.95.
• Shoulder bags, totes, body bags, satchels, clutches,
envelopes ~nd more. .. some even imported from Italy.
"Slnce the drugs aren't work·
Ing, it makes no sense to keep
him here," he said.
Semerano, who has had
tuberculosis since 1974, was dis·
charged from National Jewish
Hospital, conaldered the nation's
top TB hospital, and was flown
here this week.
The state has recoll)mended
that Semerano be treated at
home. Dr. Thomas Halpin,
director or the Ohio Bureau of
Preventative Medicine, sald the
state does not run facilities for
treating tuberculosis and that all
cases are treated In com·
munity hospitals.
But Geauga County, where
Semerano's family lives in a
mobile home, moved to declare
him a health hazard and ban
him Crom the county. County of·
ficials said bis wife, Palmina,
fears that if he comes home, he
will contaminate her and their
three children.
Mrs. Semerano, who ls under
a court order to move off the
property s h e occupies in
Chardon, east of Cleveland,
because or an alleged violation
o( zoning laws, says she was
tricked into helping the county
bar Semerano Crom his home.
At the request of the Geauga
Health Department, Geauga
Probate Judge Frank Lavricb
on Monday ordered Semerano
placed In Clevela nd
Metropolitan General Hospital,
run by Cuyahoga County, for
two weeks because that's where
he was last treated before he
went to Denver.
Lavrich also ordered the state
of Ohio to take custody of
Semerano.
But "the stale hasn't made
any moves to take responsibility
for him," the judge said.
"So far, we have had no reac·
lion from the Ohio department
or health," said J eff Orndorff,
assistant Geauga County
prosecutor.
Halpin said he expected the
department's attorneys to
respond to Lavrlcb's order
within a few dayr.
. ...........
MOMENT OF CONCERN -President and
Mrs. Reagan and Frank Sinatra glance
anxiously across the Oval Office as Brian
Wagner, 7, of Mentor. Ohio, faints during a
ceremony for a multiple sclerosis fund-
raising drive. The chilct was unhurt.
--~--
Fish produced by cloning
Technique may enable development of better breeds
NEW YORK (AP> -Mass
production or fish by cloning has
been achieved by biologists at
the University of Oregon, ac·
cording to a science journal.
The mass·produced clones are
being used in genetic research,
but the technique also may ena·
ble scientists to cultivate better
breeds for fishing and food, ac·
cording to a report in the journal
Nature.
George Streisinger, who
directs cloning at the uni·
versity's Institute or Molecular
Biology, said the cloning of mice
and various amphibians has
been done on a very small scale,
but the cloning bis group baa
achieved with fish is the first
mass-production or an animal
clone.
•'The new aspect is that we
can do it routinely on a large
scale," he added.
The report in Nature revealed
that the number of cloned fish in
the experiments ranged from 73
to 874. with all the fish having
Flu deaths rise
ATLANTA (AP> -Influenza
and pneumonia caused 60,000 to
70,000 deaths in the United
States during the winter of
1980-81, the highest number of
fatalities since the 1968·69
epidemic of Hong Kong flu.
identical genetic makeups.
Streisinger said the intent of
his group, which worked with
zebra fish, was to "produce in-
dividuals on a large scale ... lo
do the kind of genetic experi·
ments that are routinely done
with fruit flies."
The ·zebra fish was chosen for
the experiments because it can
produce several hundred off-
spring every few days.
Theoretically, the technique
could be used to mass-produce
clones of mammals, according
to Streisinger. But he said that
does not seem feasible because
of the difficulty in obtaining
large numbers of mammal eggs.
HERE
HUNTINGTON
Reg. $864.50 ~
SALE :\--~ ... ~
• In summer's best fabrlCs-linen, canvas,
glazed cotton, chintz, netting and ribbon as
well as straw and jute. Some trimmed $691 50\S r:~
with vinyl, others with leather.
• All sales final. No mail or
phone orders, please.
• Find them now/ -in
Handbag Collections
... where we are all
the things you.are.
ATHENIA
Reg. $636.50
SALE s4995o
G3
BROILMASTEA
on 48" post
List
$464.SO
SALE
s395so
•••••••••••••••••••••coupon•••••••••••••••••••: : ... .
: Bring in this co4pon and we'll give you : • • : an addltlonal discount of : • • • I '20.000N~NY !
· PATIO FURNITURE SET !
• • ...............................................
Reg. $756.50
Town & Country Center ...
777 SO. Main St., Suite 102
Orange, CA. 92668
(714) 542-0174
South Coast Plan
3333 Bristol St.
Costa MH!t~A 92.626
(71oi) 751·1~
Open 10 ·I
..
.. ~
NO..sHOW -An ar-
rest warrant has
been issued in Santa
Barbara for actor
Ti mothy Bottoms
following his failure
to appear at a liear-
ing in his divorce
case. Bottoms played
a student in the film,
"The Paper Chase.".
•
,,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 4', 1981 s
Motorist harassed for 4 months by scurrilous notes on cars
CORONA (AP) -For tour friahten·
in& moot.ha, Jeffrey Hart hM been aub-
jected to a bllarr• campalp of rev•ce
-anonymous note• and phone calll to nelcbbon -wh1cb police aay may Item
from a freeway incident he doeln't re-
call.
Hart, a tile worker in this Riverside
County town, says neighbors have been
told be la a chlld molester. Some car
ownen elsewhere have found attached
to their wiodahleld wipers fiyen imply-
ln1 be la a homosexual. Other car
owners have found flyers aaY"inl be van-
dalized can ln the area.
"It didn't affect me too much because
there are all kinda of idiots out there,"
Bart said. "But I was worried for my
family."
Hart's ordeal may have come 'to an
end Friday when the Corona police ar-
rested David Sparks, 25, of Riverside.
for Investigation of criminal libel in
connection with a reven1e campaign
triggered by an incident In February in
which Hart was supposed to have cut In
front of Sparks on a local freeway.
Corona poHce detective Les Scott said
Sparks, a Riverside city engineering
aide, noted the license plate of the vebl·
cle and traced it through the Depart·
I
ment of Motor Vehlclea, decu:tiDI that
Hart wu the driver of the company.
owned vehicle. Then, the campalp
began. ' In February, the owners of cart
parked in ahopplo1 centers lo Corona
and Riverside found a fiyer under their
windshield wipers. The UDSilfted fiyer
aald: "I've always wondered what kind
of fagaot would park a vehicle Ute lhia?
So tell me -what kind of faggot are
you?"
The flyer llated Hart's name, address
and telephone number.
Another Oyer wu posted on bulletin
boards ill several public places, accord-
ing to Scott. The notice, titled "Gay
Nlgbtllne," listed Hart's name, address
and phone'number.
Another windshield flyer be1an to ap-
pear, again in shoppina centers. Ac-
cording to the flyer, Hart was listed as
the person responsible for vandalism to
cars. Again, bis name, address and
telephone number were reported on the
"flyer.
It was about this time, Hart said, that
bis phone 1>e1an to ring -at all hours. He said callers threatened bis life.
"I would explain what's happening,"
he said. "They would understand and
•
would apolo1lze. •'
From the 1hopplng centen tbe cam-
pal1n moved closer to home. In April,
Hart'• nelpbon lo Corona received an
unsigned letter in the mail.
At the top was the title "CallfomJa
Coalition to Defend Our Children:
Oran1e-Riverslde Counties Chapter."
Starting with the words, "Emergency
alert." it said, "We were recently in·
formed that Jeffrey Scott Hart baa at-
tacked another child in Corona." The
letter 1aid Hart was a child molester.
It urged neighbors to report any sus-
picious behavior to the police.
The concerned neighbors called the
Corona police, who had already been in-
vestigating since the first flyer. Scott
said "we attempted to assW'e everyone
that we bad checked and the allegations
were not true."
According to Scott, police were led to
Sparks after someone saw him put a
note on the windshield or a car about
two weeks ago in Riverside.
.. ,, .......
Hart said he does not know Sparks
and does not recall the freeway inci-
dent. He added that he drives a com-
pany truck. Any one of 10 employees at
the tile company could have been driv-
ing the truck.
BUMPY FLIGHT -Mrs. Leona Ross of
Turnersville, N .J ., was taken to a
Philadelphia hospital with a shoulder injury
after a jetliner from Orlando, Fla., ran into
turbulence. Thirteen other passengers and
crew members were injured.
KIDS, DRAW DAD HERE AND
WIN A GIFT CERTIFICATEI
Enter our Father's Day contest.
• Winning artist will receive a S20
gift certificate to purchase a Father's
Day gift for Dad. One winner and
two honorable mentions per age
category at each Nordstrom store.
• Winning drawings and other
entries will be on display in each
Nordstrom store through June 21 .
• The Nordstrom Father's Day con-
test is open to all children in three
age categories: 1 -4 years. 5-8 years
and 9-12 years.
• The theme is ·My Dad' and can be
anything depicting the child's father.
• Drawings. preferably in color. may
be drawn on nevvspaper entry pro-
vided or 11" X 14" white paper.
• Entries should be brought in person
to the men's department of the
nearest Nordstrom.
• All entered drawings will be
displayed in each men· s depart-
ment and. in some instances. display
windows.
• All entries must have the name,
address, phone number and age of
the child.
• Entries will be judged by qualified
community members. Deadline for
entries is Monday. June 15 .
• Winners will be announced on
Friday, June 19, at 7:30 p.m. in the
men's department but you do not
have to be present to win.
,J'
I
I I
i
I
2
DEAR PAT DUNN : I have received my
federal tax refund check but can 't cash it
since my wife and I a re separated and she re· fuses to endorse it. How can I get my money·!
K . T., Newport Beach
Tbe Internal Revenue Service says It wUJ
be ne«ssary for the two Spc>u.$H to reac~ an
agreemtnt and .both endorse the refund as a
new check cannot be Issued. Tbe reason for
this ls that since both parties are liable for
any tans due, then both parties have a Joint
claim on any refund to which they are en·
titled. Con.suit your attorney about this situa·
tJon lmmedJately. ,
Bankruptcy studied
DEAR PAT DUNN: I have almost de·
cided to declare bankruptcy. Can you refer
me to a good book on this subject, and tell m e
right away if spousal support still has to be
paid if I do declare bankruptcy. Also, how
about my ex's attorney's fees and court costs
which I was ordered to pay.
H. E.. Santa Ana
Chec:k any large bookstore for a copy or
"Ban.luuptcy: Do It Younelf," by '•alee
Kosel, a«omey. Th.. Noto Press book Is a
complete kit with all the forms and lnstruc-
tiom you need to do your own bankruptcy. ft
also includes information on how to take ad·
vantaie of the new, more generous federal
Bankniptcy Act.
As for your other question, spousal sup·
port la llOt dlscbargeable ID bankruptcy. Your
former spouse's attorney's fees and court
costs are dlscbargeable. Also, iD some sltaa·
t1oas, If the divorce decree ordered you to
pay debU Incurred during marriage, you
ma)' laan a legal obligation to yoar former
spoase to do so -even after bankruptcy. It
all depends on whether your obligation to pay
debts II either a kind of (non-dischargeable>
llldde• support to yoar spouse or, simply a
(cllschargeable) part of a division or your
marital property and debts. Tbls can be a
pretty t.eclulicaJ qaeatlon so yoa sboald check
~ltb aa attorney.
Leg p11lled?
DEAR PAT DUNN : I am very interested
in acrobatics and told my uncle, who sells life
insurance, that I thought it would be fun to be
a professional acrobat when I get older. He
lauahed and said I'd better not do that
because then be couldn't sell me any life in·
surance. He said acrobats are always turned
down for insurance . Is he kidding me?
L.R., Costa Mesa
Maybe Jaat pulllng your leg a little. The
Amerleu CouncU of Life Insurance told AYS
tllat It's a rare person wbo can't purchase a
Ufe lmvuce policy today -lf be or she
waata one. Nearly all appUcatlons for Ule ln·
saranee are acceptable, and of the 3 percent
tbat aren't, Ws 11.1aally became of seriou
bealth probJems or a particularly basardous Job. Tiie coancU advises you not to worry RD·
leas Y" end up as a grossly overwelpt
acrobat with a trick knee.
Recorda protected
DEAR PAT DUNN: I was hospitalized
recently and was amazed to see bow ll\UCh
patient information is being computerlied.
How can a patient know with any certainty
that personal medical information wlll not be
provided to sources be does not authorize?
R.J .• Costa Mesa
TMa coutltatJoeal rig.ht to privacy la be·
lal f.rd.er pro&ected by state law (AB Ut)_
... , C9tl'M acceulbUlty of medical rec·
ord1. It req•lres a patient's written
a•a.oruau. for an7 pertOll or oraaalaatJoD
&o •Mala or clbeloH medical lllfW•ailoa re-
latial .. <at padeat, wl<. ilJ'fflfled escep-
U.U. TM releue form specllln wllO llas ac·
ce111 _.,...Yi*• peaaltles ,_ •lolatloes.
•
--- --• ---•wcwwwo &Q QUUU UQQUUUU:QUQ1
I ORCHID, CELEBRATION
at
DAVID J. PHILLIPS
BUICK·PONTIAC·MAZDA
WESTERN DAY,
Sat, June 8th
will feature:
JUNE 4th THRU 7th
• GIANT ANNIVERSARY CAKE
•PUNCH
•BALLOONS
•HOT DOGS
•BEANS
•ORCHIDS
• MILEAGE CONTEST* .
*Guess how far an x·body will
go on one tank of gas! • ! e T-SHIRTS , .... whlle they IHt)
'•SQUARE
DANCERS tlti~ '300 Prize W
e BLUE GRASS
BAND
" OVER 30 CARS
Time is valuable, and nobody appreciates
it more than Perpetual. That's why we offer
every one of our customers a full dozen
free* services that can save you steps and
save you time.
Inter-branch privileges, save by mail,
telephone transfer, copy service, money
orders, and notary service are all
valuable conveniences. They save
you both time and energy.
And for safety's
sake, the free safe
deposit box you get
at Perpetual can't
be beat.
IN ORCHID SQUARE FOR SALE
AT UNBELIEVABLE PRICES.
Besides free services, there are our high
interest rates -the highest the law will
allow. Choose from among many savings
plans the one that's exactly right for you.
An agency of the U.S. government in-
sures your savings to $100,000 at Perpetual,
so your money is safe as can be.
One more thing: Perpetual is known
for its friendly, courteous staff of
experts, who will help you in
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Save money -and
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'
Mtlln Office: 9720 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, CA 90212 274«>M or 272~5868 • WMtwood omc:.: 10868 Wll1hlre Blvd., Los Angel•, CA 90024 47+3503
•Larchmont Offtc.: 250 No. Larct)mont Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90004 ~ • Northfldte Office: 18540 Devonshire St., Northrldge, CA 91324 380-2326
• Canoo•.P•rk Office: 84QO Pfau Ave., Canog1 Park, CA 91304 348-4141 • 'ullllrton Offtoe: 333-4 Yorba Linda Blvd., Fullerton, CA 92931 (714) 993-1200
• N~rt hach Office: 1834 San Mlgu.I Drive, Newport Beach, CA~ (714) ~1834 M sfftle1~lltM"1ttr.11 a•. tt ! P•· ..... ""'-,.... _..... ..._
.
REAL VALUES
on items from applesauce to zippers ·
are advertised everv day in the
• ON HIT LIST
Sen . John Chafee
Bom b rips h l"idge
CLOVIS (AP) -A team of 10
explosives experts was caJled in
to examine a bridge heavily
damaged by a bomb blast here.
The explosion beard for several
miles destroyed a 57-foot section er the 129-(oot wooden bridge ,
over Dry Creek.
\
W ASIUNOTON (AP> -Aa anU·abortioit camp&lp comnllt·
tee bu announctd · tbe names OI
nine memben of Con1reu it
hopea &o defeat next year,
promptlq the r11l1nat100 ol two
conir .. ._n from ita advilory
board.
"If we can knock off some
hi&hly visible officebolden, it
aend• a aipaJ to the mushy mid.-
die, u I call them," Peter Gem·
ma, executive director of the
National Pro-Life PolltJcal Ac·
Uon Committee headquartered
tn ra1.11 Cbyrcb, Va., said at a
news CCftference Wednesday.
Meanwhile, lhp. Henry
Hyde, R·1ll., author of the Kyde
amendment which restricted the
use of federal fund.I for abortion,
and Rep. Robert A. YOUftl, D·
Mo., another opponent of abor-
tion, announced their resipa·
lions from the committee's ad·
visory board. Both said they
objected to the kind or negative
campaipling represented by the
committee hit list.
"Mr. Hyde thinks ll is inap-
propriate to lend bis name to an
organization that seeks to defeat
Republican members of
Cojigress whose views on some
issues may dllfer from hia own,"
s a i d D o n n a H a r p e.r , a
spokeswoman in Hyde's office.
Young said, "During my 20
years as a state. legislator in
Missouri and tbrou1h my now
4th years in Cong~ss, I have
never been associated with this
sort of negative political cam·
paigning and I sincerely regret
that the persons in charge of this
committee have used this tactic
in such a way."
Among those targeted by the
committee is Sen. George
Mitchell, D·Maine, even though
he voted with the 52-43 majority
in the May 1S Senate vote to de-
ny Medicaid.financed abortions
for low-income women who are
the victims of rape or incest.
Gemma said Mitchell, new to
the Senate, voted against federal
funding of abortions four times
in five opportunities, but was
targeted because he is vulnera·
ble to defeat and because be bas
refused to co-sponsor a proposed
constitutional amendment to
outlaw all abortions.
Others on the list are Sens.
John Chafee, R·R .I.; Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, l>-N.Y., and
Harrison Williams D-N .J ., and
Reps. James Jones, D-OkJa.:
Morris UdaJI, 0 -Ariz.; Stephen
Neal, D-N.C.; Marc Lincoln
Marka, R·Pa., aod Paul Findle1.
R·Ill. A 11>okesman for Chafee react·
ed wltb qer toward the an·
nouncement.
"Tbe people of Rhode laJand
Cfll make up their own mind
wltbout the help ol these outaide
groups Crom Vlr1lnla,' • Hid
Cleve Corte\t, the senator'•
pcess secretary.
The aon'ouncement also
brought comment fl"Om Karen
Mulhauaer, exec:utlve director ol
National Abortion Ri1blJ Action
Lea1ue, wbo said, "Tbe new bit
list of the National Pro-Life PAC
is another tired attem~t to uae
their old 'scare tactic.' ...
Voters see right through the an·
tl·cboice rhetoric to a bidden
rl1ht-winc agenda,"
Gemma said the organization
intends to spend $250,000 to de-
feat the candidates it opposes. In
the 1980 election, the group spent
$210,000. National Pro-Life PAC, by
helping to defeat or elect highly
visible leaders on this issue of
abortion, frankly makes the lob-
b~lng and educational work with
th e politicians here in
Washington a lot easier,'' Gem-
ma s aid.
The R~v. Charles Flore, a
Catholic priest from Chicago
and chairman of the committee,
said the movement is showing
its muscle. •'The recent reversal of five
senators on the federal funding
for abortion vote on May 21 is
highly significant to the pro-life
movemept.," Fiore said.
He said five Democratic
s enators -Minority Leader
Robert Byrd of West Virginia
Lloyd Bentsen of Texas, Howard
Cannon of Nevada, Lawton
Chiles of Florida and James
Sasser of Tennessee -"voted
for the most severe restrictions
on abortion ever proposed,"
showing that "we're having a
major impact 11ationwide.' ·
Seniors t o view
movie in Laguna
Laguna Federal Savings will
sponsor a free movie for s~nior
citizens in Laguna Beach June
19 at the South Coast Theater at
2p.m.
The feature presentation will
be "Maverick Queen" starring
Barbara Stanwyck. Free tickets
are available at the Senior
Center, SlS Forest Ave. For in·
formation call 497·2441.
Orange Coaat DAILY PtLOT/Thureday, June 4, ~981
f
Thia Fathef's Day, show your appreciation to dad with chok:ewords etraight
from the heart and with epecial gifts from Roger's. You will find a great eeleo-
tlon of gifts ranging from the praetk:al to the romantic; gifts to make his yard
work or gardening a snap and gifts to add new dimensions to his leisure.
TM.ANKS DAD.!
SAVE 10%0N
GIFT CBRTIFICAT~
Purchaae a gift certlflcate by
June 24 and enjoy special
savings. Give dad a passport
to selection and quality at
Roger's, a sure way to suit his
tastes.
FLORA & FAUNA
FAUCETS
These unique and enchant- •
ing cast brass figures· are
mounted on top quality ~·
hose valves or bibs.
reg.'33.95 NOW •29.95
FUCHSIAS
At home in planters or in
hanging baskets, this beauti-
ful pendant-flowered plant is
available in several colors.
1 gat. reg. '3 1s NOW s 1 ..-99
COTTON ROPE
HAMMOCKS
High quality cotton ham-
mocks are tops In comfort,
and a must for practicing
suspended animation.
reg.•1e.95 NOW '70.95
BANDIN I
SUPER-BLADE
For a beautiful summer, its
time to charge up your lawn
with this super fertilizer.
20tb1.reg' e.95 NOW s 5.95
4()1bs.reg.112.95 NOW S10.95
IMPATIENS
The bright optomist of the
~~If flower world, impatiens ex-
plodes with color almost any-
where. Many colors available.
4·reg 11.09 NOW s .89
PIANT PROFESSOR
Gordon B. aker/ Lloyd , noted
garden expert, tan be heard on
KMPC and KASC radio and found
at Roger's Gafdens. Each Monday
he will be presenting a
demonstration from 11 :00
a.m.-12:00 p.m .. and a Question
and A'n-s w er session fro m
12:()().1 :00 p.m.
SEMINA RS:
Mon: June 8th "Citrus"
Mon: June 15th "Fuchsias"
Mon: June 22nd "Planting Sumer
Color"
Mon: June 29th "Tropicals"
Pren •lf«l••• th<v Jun• 2• end aubject 10 q .. ent"'" on h-
WESTCLIFF
PLAZA
ANTHONY'S SHCE ~VICE
BANK ~·f.MFN::.A
CHARLES BAAR .EW8..ERS
CROWN HAAOWAAE
DICK V~"°" SPaTSWEAA
Olt LOU B.DER optometrist
HAIRHANOl.ERS SALO-l
HALUOAY'S M~'S QOTHNG
HICKORY FARMS epedalty food item1
H~OUMPTY c .• dolhinQ
~NOAH.. c:lesiqner better sports.....,
.~~
MARKET BASICET ..
MES AMIES TEENS
NANCY OU~ ANTl<;US
NEWPORT BAI.BOA SAVIN:iS
PAPER UNLIMITED C'ifnond~ .. -
SAV-ON DRUGS .. ~=.o.
VET A'S INTIMATE N'PAAS.
WESTCUff C1.EN6S
WESTOJFfC~
qourmet ware ond colecti:iles
WESTOJFf SHCES
XAVl~'S FlOtlST
A7
·'
'
... _.
Ormp CoMt DAIL y Pll!OT trhur9da • June 4, 1981
• service
sought
SACRAMENTO (AP>
-The BlUnauaJ Rl1ht1
CoalJtJon says proapec-
tlve investon have ex·
pre11ed Interest ln pro·
vldln1 bi1'neual
telephone eniereeocy
aervlces in East Loa
An9elee.
A ~<>-chairman of the
coalition of 18 California
Hispanic or1anlzatlons,
George Navarro of
Sacramento, said Tues·
day the new bilintual
emertency services
would serve more than
300,000 subscribers lo~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the Greater East Los
Angeles area.
The Bilingual Rights
Coalition ls tryln1 to
persuade the s tate
Public Utilities
Commission to require
Pacific Telephone and
Tel~graph to provide
full bilingual emergency
services. The coalition
ls being represented at
hearings in San Fran-
cisco by P ublic Ad·
vocates attorneys
HO, HUM -Abe, a resident of the San Diego
Zoo, yawns as he enjoys bis new freedom
"' after a broken romance with Bouba, a
grouchy lowlands gorilla. A two-year effort to
1# ......
mate the two failed and wo officials are ship·
ping Bouba, a 32-year-old spinster, off to
ErJe, Pa.
~------------------------------------_.:.--"' ______ .......;.--------__;------------~Rob e rt Gnalzda, a 'c '" ' ~ former aide to Gov. Ed· i . onnie' seekinu lier nn!lt ~~:tu!~=~· Jr., and • -e r-Navarro said In an in·
DALLAS CAP) -Officers are
trying to piece together sketchy
descriptions pro-.ided by a dark·
hatred young amnesia victim in
an attempt to identify the
• woman. found wandering ~ around a motel pool in the sub-
urb of Hutchins.
She says she thinks her name
is Connie Russell and she
describes scenery resembling
' Loni Beach and New Orleans.
Most of the information the
woman has provided about
herself came in a 15-page series
of notes she wrote officers, said
Dallas County Sheriff's Depart-
ment spokesman James Ewell.
She has spoken very little
since she was found dabblins
her feet in the pool at the Golb
Inn.
Officials estimate she is in her
late teens or early 20s. although
••••••••••••••••••• . : .UI YOU PA YIMCi :
she said she thinks she was J>om
July 3, 1964.
''That would make her a
juvenile, so the FBI wouldn't
have prints or anything on her."
Ewell said.
The hazel-eyed, brown-haired
white woman is 5-6 and weighs
about 160 pounds, Ewell said.
She believes she is pregnant,
and says she remembers taking
a pregnancy test.
She was wearing a blue skirt
and blue terry cloth blouse and
was carrying a clutch purse re-
sembling a folded Italian edition
of Glamour magazine. Inside
were a hand calculator, owl·
shaped glasses, a cigarette
lighter, wrist watch, hunting
knife and bubble gum.
In her notes, Ewell said. she
described docks and
longshoremen. as well as a large
church with "monsters" -
perhaps gargoyles --on it. She
also drew a map of a highway
with a blue road sign reading
"10" -possibly an interstate
highway in California.
Ewell said she also described
' man named Lupe driving a
b1ue car and a woman she called
th& "drug lady."
Hutchins officers brought the
woma,l to Dallas County Jail
Friday night, where she was
booked oo a charge of failure to
provide fd.,entificatlon, a holding
charge. Sbe was transferred
Tuesday to. a county mental
diagnostic cent.er. Ewell said.
Rivers plans OK'd
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Alter
a three-year wrangle, a bid to
loosen controls over l\ve "wild
a nd scenic" rivers in Northern
California has won the r10d of an
Assembly committee .
}' :.__~OO MUCH FOi : ------------------------.....,!"""I
terview that if the PUC •
rules that billn1ual
emergency services are
needed, and Pacific
Telephone declines to
provide them, then the
PUC would have to give
the right to someone else.
The Hispanic or-
ganizations would seek
that right, be said. and
would use capital from
persons who have
a lready expressed in·
terest. The same thing
might happen in other
cities with large
Spanish-speaki ng
populations, he added.
At present, s ub -
scribers who speak only
Spanish have difficulty
reporting such emergen-
cies as fires, Navarro said.
HALLIDAY'S BRAND
Gentlemen's
Jeans
Now available m the same
traditional stylmg you've
come to depend on from
"Halliday's," your Trad1t1onal
Men's Store. Choose from
blue-denun or corduroy m tan.
navy or brown.
Westclitf Plaza -17th and Irvine Avenue, Newpon Beach 645-0792
1 · i .... L~.:0%,IAMCE?: 54 ·Years Of Community Service
· • GROUP OR INDIVIDUAL e ( 1927 -1981 ) NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING .: :c.. '-rq..t.640..607': •••••••••••••••• 1.
ff'1H"''"la9.t ..._HRgtaac..ter-
Celebrating this w .. k
with the Great Mall
Remodeling Sale!
THE COST~ MESA-NEWPORT HARBOR
LIONS a.ua
Proudly Presents the 36th Annual
~I~ FISH FRY ~ '
1
•• '' ' -and -
CARNIVAL
:~FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY
JUNE 5 - 6 - 7 I '81
~ LIQNS PARK 18th & Newport
GIANT PARADE SATURDAY
10:30 A.M.
PARADE IOUTI -• llill•• ...... -.. -· ,.._ WI .....
IOlllll to 19• Street. Welt to A••• ... S.-. to I.lolls P.t&.
ICHEOULE OF EVENTI
FRIDAY, JUNE I
5:30 PM . • . . . . . .. Fish Dinners • start serving
8:00 PM . . • . . . . . Carnival Rides & Games open
7:30 PM ...•... on stage-Band X·World'a Largest
Non-marching Marching Band
9:00 PM .. .. . . . • . .. . • . Drawing
(winning tickets must be present)
GRAND PRIZE
1981 FORD ESCORT
"lllM T•I M•U.•1 Ctf II 1111 Tllf"
,,..... i. *"''""' Wiii , .......... fn IWIMlllt tlcut .... 11111 .. ,,..... " Wiii)
•••••
MANY 01 Hll PllllES lndllcl•llQ I COLOll 1V • (WlnntllQ ltekt!J
mllS1 DI .,_i kit Ill prizes ..._ fold ~)
• ~ COllP«l/lotl ol OtWIS • 8tt1Wn
• ........... __ _._;~--..;..-.--~~._;._~--..i.:---------~~-------~---~---•~-------..:,:l.;...-_~--------------"~_.__..._.......,......_ _____ ...._~
~
~ --~
-:s
-I -•
I
':I
-·
SAN l'BANCISCO (AP> -five yean. •
R-ot IM Ual~ The .-archers, act«dlnl t. Callfonla bave med • 1 report 1ppearln1 today to
ta1 ~ to'Produee vac-: Nature ma1aalne, ia11rted
clne for UM *'afnit' 'a f ol human DNA Into baacterl1 to
bepatiU. tbat 1trtte1 1 veral e.nable the bacteria to produce 1
buadred mlllion people sound aubatance called Hep1Utla B
the world every yett. surface ut11en.
Other researchers b1Ve ~ UnW now, tbe aubltaoce has
duced the aubata.nce by tinker· been obtained throu&h an ex-
inf with DNA, but the Univenl· pensive proee11 of extraction
ty of Calltornia aelentilta aay from human blood, the scienUata
their technique la more efJlcleot said. Two other laboratories
thin pnviows metbodl. have reported 1ucce11 ln produc-
Wiµiam J . Rutter, who led the 101 small quantJtlea of the an-researcb, S1y1 commerelal pro-t11eo, but the University of
ductloo ol the vaccine a1alnlt California. acientJets say their Hep1t.ltla B could belin witbln scheme produces lar1er quan---------...,...,
Vey ager
LIMOUSINE SERVICE
673-2641
ENVIRONMENT AL
...... SCOPING MEETING ·
What can be done to Improve the
R ute 5/55· Interchange'
c1ncer.
The ncer is called bepatoceJ carcinoma. The
scientists ve the HepaUtla B vaccine mig also prevent thl.a
type of cane
Reg. 44.95
Baneroes extre
RRRID -Rep. Morris
Udall, Arizona Democrat,
concedes he broke a ~ouse
ethics rule, which he had
helped to write, when he
solicited support for a new
liberal political oraaniza-
tion. "It won't happen
again," he said.
Enter the John• Hopkins Flret National Seardt for
Penonel Computing to Md TM Hendlcllpped
•10 000 .,.... .._... "'"",.., ·-:·" ... ~-·,~··-.... ---.... ... .......... ...... '. .........,':J. .... fle ....... ,.,. GR .aND _.... .. _...., ""',.,..........., ........
R fOUllMIA... lftec*. l11foftM4lo11 le ........ PRIZE! ~RN~._... ltwctl. HIHTJ-.......
270/o Off! Stereo System with
· Cassette and 8-Track Decks
Clartr,.tte-102 by A ... l1tk:9
Save•ao
219 ~~2".N
#13-1208
Rec~d stereo tapes from phono or radio,
even ~ake 8-track copies of cassettes and
cassettt copies of 8-tracks. Automatic
recordll\g level, separate bass and treble
controls. Three-speed chafl9er with dust
cover. Ml~e and headphone jacks.
Matching 22" high speaker systems.
I V1S4· 'kll ,~;~:o~:~
Stereo-Wide Expand•
the Stereo Image For Added Reallam
SANl~
ANA. Two-Way Radio for
Safer Driving
Tl'C-422A
The alifornio Department of Tronsportotion (CAL TRANS) la looking ot woya
to I row the Santo Ano/Newport frffWO¥ Interchange. Various alter·
notiv 1 including Tronsportotlon Syatem1 Monogement ond alignment
modi otlona ore being studied.
Thia is ne of the Initial steps in the project d.velopment proceu. ond It will
be us to guide future studies leodlng to the circulation of o Draft En-
vironm tol Impact Statement.
The reo n for this Scoping M.etlng ls to insure thot vorloua public ~genclet
ond ony terested peraon1 ore Involved early in the environmental pfonnl"9
proceu. purpo1e of the meeting la to Identify the ronge of olternotlve1
and the si nlflcont aoclol, econotnlc, ond environmentol IHuH which 1hould
be con1ld ed In depth In the EIS.
Thia mffti will give you on opportunity to learn obout certain feoturH of
the project comment on the d~lslon process.
ting will be held on Thursdoy, June 25, 1 :30 p.m .. In the
r1 of Tuatln City Center, 300 Centennlol Way, Tustin,
tlon obout thla project, contoct:
Mr. ltono Koalnakl
Envlrontn tot Plonnlng lronch
CALTRAN
(213) 620-5
80Mlnut11
2tor259
Reg.Z.59
Each
byA .. ti.tlc
Save 6995 •so 1~:s
The perfect CB for travelers!
Priority switch gives instant access
to Emergency Ch. 9 and Highway
Info Ch. 19. #21-1503
470/o Offl 3-Way Speaker
System optt.mue--21 by .... 111t1c
Quality sound at a S ITO low prtcel 10" ave
woofer, 4" mid-
tweeter. Genuine
12995 ~·
Reg. 178.95 50
28% off! Take "home-quality" hi-fl
with you wherever you drivel 12
watts per channel. In or underdash
mounting. #12-1886
range and 2W' 7995
walnut veneer (not l!ach
vinyl) finish .
..0·2027 .. eg.141.91 Each Save•40
Exctuetw Auto-Magtce flne-w.. FM atatlone automltf.
ceHy. 25 W/~mln. nna. 8 ohme. 2NO Hz. o.~ THO.,.. .. ttlgh. #31-188'1
A great addf tJon to your system! The befktrlve
system absorb• vlbratlOf"t IO ~ hear onfy the. music! lncludea $27.96-value lltttc/Shure :J.~ magnetic cartridge and hinged dust cover.
HOUSTON
TX
WHAT TIME 18 IT? -Spellers Andrew
Hammel, left, of Houston, Tex., and Laura
Newton, Rosebur,g, Ore., find early start·
Bride-that-w_:--
ational Spelling Bee a big
ay. Finals will be held ln
.C. today.
't sues
Nigeria native claims airline st wedding dress
IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) -An·
na Osilo was to have ~me a
bride 1n February. But she's atill
single, she says, because United
Airlines lost her weddinl dress.
Miss Osifo, a native of
Nigeria, ls sutn1 the airline for
$50,000 damages, sayina she suf·
fered loss of personal property,
inconvenience, humiliation and
expense because of the lost bag.
gage.
The lawsuit, filed in Jobnaon
County District Court, said Miss
Osifo, who was flying to Iowa Ci·
ty for her wedding to a UnJversi·
ty of Iowa student, checked
three bags Jan. 17 with United
Airlines at John F. Kennedy In·
tem-atiooal Airport in New York
City.
The petition said that two of
tbe bags, containing her wed-
ding dress a nd a~cessorles,
could not be found when she ar·
rived in Cedar Rapids, the
nearest major airport to Iowa
City.
Miss Osifo said the wedding
was called oft because the bag.
gage wasn't found by Feb. 14,
when the wedding wu to take
pJace.
The airline refused to com·
qieot on the lawsuit.
William Lucas, Mils g&ifo's
attorney, said It is a Nigerian
custom to date the "'edding
dress and accessories.
. "U ~ aren't used on the
'
rl1bt day, tbey'r
anymore," be said.
Miss Oalfo said
Items are found, e weddtna
cannot be held. said she wtil
have to return igeria to have
the handmad dress, Jewelry
and other ite made and dated
again before e can be married
to Imuetioy_,. Adeghe, a fellow
Nigerian.
However, because of the $1,!500
Lad's le tter
fuJ1nels home
wicmTA, Kan. (AP) -No
on/ knows if Grzegorz Krynicki
h#s ever seen the "Wizard ol
Oz," but the grammar school
atudent from Brzozow, Poland,
knew something about this
state's reputation.
The young boy wanted to learn
more about Boeing aircraft, so
he put bis request for brochures
in writing and air-malled it to:
"Tornado, Kansas, USA."
With the help of the Postal
Service, the letter found its way
to Jack Wecker of the Boeing
Military Airplane Co. in
Wichita, a city known, even by
Grzegon, for its huge aircraft
industry .
RAMSAY DRUGS
price ol a ticket, she said, and
because of health consider•·
tlona, abe will not be able to re-
turn to her homeland soon.
Miu OaUo said sbe ia
particularly upset over the lou
of coral beads that had been in
her family for generations.
•'These are a special type,"
she said. "They belonged to my
1reat-treat-grandparenta, and
these are used for special OC·
casions anly. A special occasion
would be a wedding or a viait by
the king ol Nigeria."
lo addition to the beads and
clothing, 1' gold cow, a ring
and' several pounds of Nigerian
food were lost.
"Rl1bt now, I'm really left
stranded. In order for me to
have this special wedding, I will
have to go home," she said.
She said she did not know
when she would be able to return
to Nigeria.
F u nds withdrawn
LONDON (AP) -The Greater
London Council, in its first ac·
tion since switchln1 from
Conservative lQ Labor cootrol,
has withdrawn a $1 million grant
from the Royal Opera House at
Covent Garden in favor of
"more hard-pressed causes," of·
ficiais said. ·
PUBUC NOTICE
Peen nous.,.. ...
.... ITATUleNT
2241 NEWPORT BLVD.
(1 8'odl ~ °' 22nd St.)
COSTA MESA
Ma-7744 ~ ............. Uft.104 Tllefwf._ .... ..,._., ..... -...1_. .. : ANAHlllM alCYCLIE
CllNTll•, .. II. U......_ AMM!lft, CA tt•. JAMiii l'OOTll, ... , ~ • ._om. ...... , .. ear.a.
CA tlnD. flAT•ICIA 1... l'OOTll,
.,., 0-••-Drlw , .._. 1"' C.-, CA ftJa 1111t .,....._.II~ -.CtM .., 1 ... 1.,._.lt CH..._. &
Wife).
~ Alwap Oft Duty
r--~----------------; I 51.00 OFF I
I ANY COSMETIC PURCHASE ·I
f I f OF $5.00 OR MORE WITH . I
JI I THIS COUPON. I ,~-------=.:.-:=---------· Kodar::olor II
'
......... ,..
.,. " •• , •• ltrtoee
F ather's Day Spe cia l!
.•. perFarmance
· TELEVISION
Remote
PlJBLIC NOTICE
l'tCTITICIUS IWSl•lla
lllAMelTA.,.....T
Tll• lollewl,._ "''.., 11 Hl111 lluNll9ll • :
THI! Vll•TICAI., 1'Sl Meft,..,le Aw., C....M9M, CA t'ltD. .......... c. Saw91. 19SJ Moftrow1a Aw., C..... Mna, CA f»D. Tllla ....,_ It c.McllletM .., .,.
IMM..... · S.-C.59¥ ...
Tiii• ....,_. -fl!M wttll ... c-ty CJetlt .. 0r-.. c-t'f • Mev It,""· ....... ~ ....... Or ... COUt Dell., ~ .....
Mor 21,-. J-A. u. 1"1 am .. 1
PUBUC N.OTICE
IU~ll•t o a COUaT Ofl
CM.lf"OaMA.
Mlitc_...,u.. ....
Cell-,CA
19.A Ill ClflW .....
CWIMM.CA
...,".......,"' ~alaty,CA
101 c:...... Dal,..,
DelM«,CA
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7•FrrA-
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SOSWlllHre ..... n
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Newpcwt lleacll, CA
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101 Comlfte Del MM
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PUBUC NOTICE
loertl of Truat"• ,. .. ,.,..
prM .... al rejectlfll .,., and eH
or to,...,.. ~ lr........,U.S or
metltlft lfl .,Y lllcl or 111 u. ll6lf.
NOlltMAH E. WA TSOff
S.C.reUry .... ,, of
TruAlfK, c:.st C--..ity
Cel .... Oktr1ct
lllltNd Or ... C.. Delly Pilot, , ... ,,_,,,.. ,......,
PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE OF l~NT TO DEED
REAL PROPERTY TO THE STA TE
PU•IUANT TO llCTIOMI n•1 1M•OUOM ... ••V••u• AND TAXATIC* COOi, THI NOTICll DP l .. IMT TO DllD •bl. P~•TY
TO THll ITATll IM AND l'Olt TMll ...,MTY OP Otl,,.,..I, ITATI Ofl CALIP'OtlMIA, HAS allN DIVIDID MD DllT•llUTllD TO VAalOUI
NIWlflAfll•& OP' OllNl•AL ClaCULATIOM flUaUSMID 1• IAID
COUHTY, ll'Ott PUIUCATIOM Ofl A PoaTIOM TNll•llOfl I• SACM OP' IAIO MllWlflAfllltl.
111 tllb llJt t110 foll-Int e-...le· tlOlll .,. Uleel:
AP -,,._-, Pore.I
Ho.-H-
Por -Porll.,.
PAltCIL NUM81l•tMO
IYITllM llX~•ATION Tllo ,,._., Map florcel H""*-"
WIMfl 11totl to dncrllle prot»f1y 111 this ••I. rate" to u. ,.. _ _., mop boc*,
IN mep ...-or blocll ~ 111 tlw
llOoll ellel the lndlvldwal percol 11..-nbef
.., 1"9 lnllCI page or wlthlfl Ille block. •
pa1'cel ftumber n tor e•emple.
··~··. -..Id -80Gll .. o4 the ,.._.. Mep., 81ocll 363 (~
'8119 16, block )) , end Parcel S wltllln
NI bl«IL Tlw rn.,.. refef'recl to er•
avolloble tor lf!IPkllol'I 111 -offk,• 0 1
llleA•-·
All ,,...rty IJ 111IlleT~p5outt
and A .... Wit* el Soft llemertllna
.... olld~ ...
NOTICE
PAOPE•TY SOLO TO THE STATI!
IN THE YEA• lt16 FOR THI!
TAXl!S, ASIESSMIENTS ANO
OTHE• CHARGES OF THIE FISCAL YUllt lf7W6.
LAGlltA llfAQt 0TY No. •T -S
Ho. U -Sole No. 20606t, Afl IJMl6l•, tlt.1'1
'44-4SJ.21 1'°""9rt,eswcn.of1 • .._.. FOUNT: V .... lEY
No. ,. -S•I• Ho. 20UOJ, AP -........,.tt (lormerlyQSW1>·211, ..... CITY
No. 11 -S•I• No. 106404, Afl ...._..,.JO (lormerlyOS.11>·121 ..... Ho. 6t -Solt No. 606UJ, AP
Ne. ,. -S•I• Ho. 1064tt. AP ..... , ..... $111.M
'44-4n·IS llWINtly os.wts.211, i11•.t2 No. 10 -S.1e Ho. 6t7210. AP
No. ff -S•I• Ne. 107011, AP , ... JSJ.12.Q.014.2!
"4"'42·16 (formerly OSJ.m..o), ..... ~.AU • IAU
No. 40 -Sele Ne. 10701', AP ~ ~ ~·ISOormwlyOSWZMll,tM.11 CAPISTRANO QTY Ho. 41 -Sele Ne. 101010, AP M+44:2·1•1..,.,_...,ou.m421...... No. 71 -Sol• No. '20'4, AP
No. 42 -S.I• No. 201104, AP 121-140$,.,.
......,...n ctormer1ross.m-z.s1,sut.2' No. 12 -•••• Ho. u•H. Afl No. 4J -S.I• No. 101111, AP 121.1.,.. .... .a
M+ft+.16 l""'*'lyOSWU-111 u.a No. 1J -S~•• No. 6'11oso, AP
No. 0 -hie No. 2011°11, AP .... -041-07(ion-lytJA.20A>.t1t.SI
...._.17-0. CformerlyOSWSl-til, .... UM.JI ~ No. o -Sela No. 207H6. Afl lft'l'INE
6+Ml4-2•. AP 6+M14-l6, ,,. ........ 14-27 No. 1• -.... Ne. 4t06t, A~ a11d AP U4·414·21 Cformerlr .....,.,.,. 16.11 OSWSM11, l60.IM '
No. 46 -, ••• Ho. 101S411 AP _. ... ,rTDA~ 644-414-07(formerlrOSS-u..42),4J,04 \.N"' •l ftNW
No. 41 -Sal• No. 2010S2, AP SQl)()l
M4.1f1.U Clormerl't ~IU-1tl, $12Ut
No. 41 -Sele No. tlUOt, AP No. 1S -Sole . 702194, "" ..U.tat·U. tn.04 UM1MJ. ..... No • ., -Sal• No. 11SH4, ,,... No. ,. -•••• . 7UllS, Afl ............. 14 .. ,..,, .. ,, .... ,,
Ho. SO -Solt Ho. UOU, Afl ou.t6MI. ....
Mo. SI -Sol• Ne. 241261, AP N• 11 1 151·1tt•t. ,.,.. • -
No. S2 -Sel• No. 2S7JtJ, AP l7'-JS2.tJ, ... tt ..-.m.._.,,_.. •
Ne. » -Sele Ho. 2'1S1S, Afl 111_,.wia. ....
Afl
PUNK ROCKERS IN COURT -Punk rock
singer Wendy 0 . Williams, second from
left, waits in .Milwaukee courtroom for her
trial to start. She is ~barged with resisting
............
an officer and her manager, Rod Swenson,
is charged with obstructing an officer. The
arrests stemmed from acts in a show Jan.
19.
'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuradav. June 4, 1981
DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD
Fresh Fish ls now plenUful. Come In and select a fresh
fish or your choice from our showcase. We will gladly
filel, steak and package ll ror you at no extra charee.
Fresh Fllet of Northern Seabau .... Z.98 lb.
Fresh FUet of Sole. : ................ 3.98 lb.
Direct From Delaney's Kitchen <please
ask for a sample> Cevlche ............ 1.98 pt.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
Prime and top chnice beer aeed at least 30 days to the
peak of perfection.
Lean Ground Chuck (Ground Hourly> .. 1.49 lb.
Thick Cut London Broll •
(Great to Barbecue> •..•..•••.••...... 2.98 lb.
Reg. Cut .•.••...••••.••......•.•.... 2.98 lb.
Boneless Rolled Roasts <Great on lh~ *
MORNING FRESH PRODUCE
Sweet Juicy Watermelon ............ lSc lb.
Local Ranch Fresh Spinach .... 4 bun. 1.00
Local Grown Cucumbert ........ 5 for 1.00
Sweet Pink Grapefruit:' ........... 3 for 1.00
So. American Bananas .......... 3 lb&. l.M
DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR
DelanPy's Private Label Champaane C7SO mil>
Z. 75 ea. or 33.00 per use
Bel Arbel V1Hyard1 Cbellin Blanc t75t mU> . S.M ea.
SmlrlnolfVodka o.7511ter> 11.Hea.
Scoresby lcotcb (750 mil) .................... 5.55 ea.
<One liter>. . .. .. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. . .. . .1.15 ea.
Smoking ·bad for heart Rotisserie) ................................ 2.18 lb.
TIRED OF TRAFFIC JAMS?
CALL DELANEY'S FO& PB..SE ROME
DELIVERY SERVICE. YOUR ORDER IS
VNDEB COMPLETE REFlllGEllA110N FJlOM
OVR STORE TO YOVR DOOR. (st.oe MINIMUM
PLEASE>.
All liquor and wine plus lax
Complete caterine ser vice. from a sit-down dinner
party to party tray1 delivered to your home Call
Delaney's Caterlne Department, ask for Tom
Martin.
.
Study says quitting cuts cardiac risks in half
BOSTON (AP> -A study comparing the
health of people who quit smoking and those who
keep puffing provides evi4ence that kicking the
cigarette t\abit will cut in half the risk of dying
from heart disease, ~merica's biggest
killer. The report rebuts the arguments or those
who say it is some other weakness, not cigarettes,
that makes smokers more susceptible to heart
trouble.
The study said that even when all known dif·
ferences between smokers and quitters are con-
sidered, people who stop smoking are far more
likely to escape serious heart disease.
"Until someone comes up with other ideas
ilbout what these differences might be that could
explain away such a beneficial effect ol quitting,
we would have to conclude that quitting itself
seems to be beneficial," Dr. Gary D. Friedman,
who directed the study, said in an interview.
The study was conducted at the Kaiser-
Permanente Medical Care Program In Oatland,
aiid published in today's Ne\v England Journal of
Medicine. ·
It followed the health of 25,917 men and women
who had regular chect,ps in the Kaiser-
Permanente proeram. Half jr.tere either persistent
smokers or people who ga..e up the habit after
their first chec~up. The other half never smoked.
After these people were enrolled in the pro-
gram for periods ranging from four to 13 years,
I the researchers found that the risk of dying from
coronary heart dise$se amonJ the smokers was 2.2
times that among the quitters.
Some critics have argued that statistical com-
parisons are invalid, on the grounds that at the
time they stop s171oking, the quitters may be
healthier than smokers. Among reports criticized
this way was •n earlier on~ based on the same
group of patients in the Kauer-Permanente pro-
gram.
In the new study, the researchers conducted a
statistical analysis to take into account different
health factors, and found that those who later quit
smoking were equally at rist before kicking the
habit as those who kept smoking.
The researchm found that before they quit
smoking, the quitters bad less chest pain and other
early signs of heart trouble than those who later
continued to smoke. But those who later con-
tinued to smpke were thinner and drank more
alcohol than those who later quit, and the study
found that both thinness and drinking in modera·
lion were health advantages. "J:hese advantages,
the researchers said, balanced the disadvantage of
more early signs of heart trouble.
"That was a little surprising," said Friedman,
I "because in an earlier paper, we found all ·these
differences. We had thought that if you• adjust for
so many differences that are in favor of the quit-
'
tet, you would probably come out with less reduc-
tion in risk. But apparently these two -the dif·
ference tn alcohol ~o sumption and in body build
-were enough to o rride those others."
Friedman said at people who quit smoking
Expert chef triins
fat from own diet
WESTON, Mass. <AP> -Julia Child, French
chef, is on television, serving up a plateload of
mashed potatoes and ham ln wine sauce. Julia
Child, dieter, .Watches, nibbling at a half-
grapefruit, whole wheat toast without butter and a
cup of tea .•
"I'm n\wer going to be fat again," she says.
Ms. Child has trimmed 10 pounds off her 6·
foot-2 fram~ in the last two weeks, aided by the
Scarsdale Diet. Now at 175
pounds, she is aiming at 165.
Several years ago, she pro·
claimed herself fat and began a
diet, one of her own invention.
"I'm down again to what I
weighed after that diet," she
told the Boston Herald
American. "I've never been oo
a diet like this. I lhlnk this one
is excellent. You're encouraged
when you see results im·
om.o , • 'mediately."
The Scarsdale plan la a low.fat diet that
forbim alcobol. It \eallA for plenty of vegetables,
fruit and ~. ud DO cbeatin1.
"H you're determined, you can do it,"
said, dlaplayinj newly loo.ened waistbands.
weren't as heavy smokers to begin with as those
who didn't quit. And this might explain why the
lifelong smokers develop the heart symptoms so
early.
Heart disease is the nation's leading cause of
death, accounting for almost a million fatalities a
year.
Th is ad efrectlve Wed .. 6/3 through Tues .. ~ 9
DELANEY'S
Store Hours 9-6, Oosed Sunday
2920 Newport Blvd .. Newport Beach
673-5520 '
"TH ·Dav.id W. Jones
15242 GOLDENWEST
, PUS') EWE L ER S511~~~
(1 BLOCK SOUTH Of BOUA)
AT ALBERTSON'S ENTER
ENTIRE ~:~:::oA:, SACRI Fl CED
MAGNIE ICENT
JEWELRY
Daily 9:30-8
Sat. 10-7
Sunday 10-6
THIS IS IT!!
"One of the Most Magnificent
Inventories Anywhere!"
MANY ITEM S
WESTMINSTER
(ACROSS FROM HUNTINGTON BEACH)
SALE STARTS
THURS. I JUNE 4th
141T, CHAINS
16" 11" 20" ~o
Uli'l 188
\0~~ 'EIHA,S THE · LOWEST ,llCE
INAMEllCA
"
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thuraday, June ... 1981
Iran power struggle intensifies
By Ttle ~lated Preet
Prealdeot Abolba11an Banl·Sadr'1 poUUcal
eneml• are escalatine a power 1tru11le ln Iran,
threatealna to put him on tria11 but aeem to be
abrlnJdni from a climactic abowaown.
The president's foes -the fundamentallat
cler1ymen Of lbe Islamic Republican Party -
may fear that supreme revolutionary leader
Ayatollah Rubollah Khomeini will come down de·
clslvely on Bani·Sadr's side, accordin1 to
American students of the Iranian acene.
These analysts are akePtical that the IRP
leaden would actually pmaecute Banl·Sadr for
blockina their Cabinet choices.
• "It's getting nastier," said Barry Rubin, an
Iran specialist at the Center tor Stratecic and In·
temaUonal Studies at Wuhinatoo's Geor1etown
University. But "as long u Ayatollah KbomelnJ is
alive, I'm convinced he will maintain lbe balance or power."
Bani-Sadr and lbe fundamentalist clergymen
have been reudil)g for a year over the dlr,ecUon or
the Iranian revolution, the place of the clern in
1ovemment, and more recently the conduct of the
war against Iraq. The isolationist, conservative
clerics distrust the foreign-educated and left·
leaning technocrats and intellectuals Bani-Sadr
represents.
On Monday, the IRP representative on a
three·man commission set up to mediate disputes·
between the two factions said
the "majority" of the panel bad
decided Bani·Sadr was "acting
at variance with the constitu·
tioo" by rejecting Prime
Minister Mohammad Ali Ra·
jai 's appointment or several
Cabinet ministers. The IRP
supports Rajai jllld dominates
Parliament, which has ratified
the appointments. _.,., Bani-Sadr also was accused
of violating Khomeini's ban on provocative state-
ments by top political leaders. This apparenUy re·
ferred to Bani-Sadr's written and verbal attacks
on the IRP.
The commission was handing over its
evidence for the findings to Iran's prosecutor·
general, the IRP representative said -a clear
threat to put Bani·Sadr on trial.
But Richard Bulliet, a Columbia Univenlty
history professor and Middle East expert, believes
the IRP is more intent on pressuring Bani-Sadr
than on actually trying him.
The normal constitutional procedure for re·
moving the president would be by impeachment
by Parliament, a vote that must then be endorsed
by Khomeini, Bulliet said in an interview.
The IRP leaders probably worry Khomeini
woufd not back them, be said.
"It would be a great fiasco ror the IRP if they
1ot a vote of impeachment and then Khomeini de·
cided be was going to defend Bani.Sadr, which I
think is entirely Ukely," Bulliet said.
Khomeini has stepped in previously to protect
Bani-Sadr from the clergymen.
Nor can Rajai and bis clergymen mentors
count on popular support if they move directly to
oust the president.
Bani-Sadr was elected president in January
1980 with an impressive 75 percent majority. He
seems to have solidified his popularity by taking
charge or lbe war effort against Iraq.
Many Iranians -at least middle-class city
dwellers -blame Iran's severe unemployment
and other economic ills on the clergy's meddlin1 in
politics.
· The left-wing Moslems of the Mujabeddin Kbalq
have stepped up anti· I RP protests in recent months,
some ending in bloody clashes with pro-clergy ele·
ments. Khomeini has warned the clergy against tak·
ing too strong a political stance, and his leftist
grandson, Seyyed Hussein Khomeini, bas spoken
out against the danger or • 'totalitarianism in the col·
or of religion.·'
Ir Bani-Sadr is put on trial, "I would imagine
that the left would probably try tactics like street
demonstrations . . . an attack asainst clerical
hegemony in Iran," said Professor Michael M.K.
Fischer, a Harvard University anthropologist and
author or a book on Iran's revolutionary politics.
Bulllet agrees.
"There's a very strong risk that if they try to
prosecute Bani-Sadr, this will rally an awful lot of
support in bis favor," he said. "The IRP may de·
cide it's too risky and stop it."
This does not mean, however, lbat the IRP bas
little public support. ll has organized extensively
HARIOI U.WK-MT. OLIVI
Mo~luarv • Cemetel\'
Crematorv
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
Arms
control
ln tbe countryside and 11 believed to retain the
loyalty or many or the poorer and more devout
people ot the cities.
While the JR P ponder• its next moves acainat
Bani-Sadr, it bas not hesitated to snipe at thole
around him. The Tehran pl'Oleeutor Sunday ar·
rested a presidential lesal advlaer on char1ea of
bribery and collaboration with a1ent1 or the
forme1' retime of the late Shah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi. Earlier, authorities arrested a liberal
newspaper editor.
for a takeover by .Oro.Sovlet left ii ta in Iran lJ often
oventated ln the Onlted States.
The Iranian Communist Party "doft not have
much clout," aaid Fi1cber.
"Iranians are really very suaplcioua of tbe
Soviet Union .•. They've bad bad experiences
with the Russians and they don't want to repeat
them."
Rubin, whose book on U.S.·lranlan relation• waa recently published, aaid developments in the
el1ht·montb-old Iran-Iraq war could prove crucial
to politic• ln Tehran.
Tbe Iran-watchers say theY would not be sur·
prised lf the !RP-dominated judicial system picks
out other Bani-Sadr underlings and supporters for
punlsbment.
Some political analysts bell~ve lbe potential
If the lone-expected •Prinl offensive by the
Iraqis come• soon, 1' would force the factions to
drop their dlvisiv~ domestic tua-of-war and would
thrust Bani-Sadr back into bil highly visible AVOIDS SHOWDOWN
leaderabip role, Rubin said. Bani·Sadr BACKS PRESIDENT
. )•
Khomdni
LUMIDOR ROLLAWAY
CHEST · & CABINET
NO DEALER
SALES
AD STARTS
THURS.
STANLEY
STAILEY 25 FT.
POWEILOCI II TAPE
Here'• 80mething that
nobody ~ to n..d but
everybody ... m. to buy. (I
got one for my birthday! )
Full on• inch bl&c:le.
ALLTIADE
DISS TON
HACKSAW
BLADES
At this price you can
buy an eatra Mt and
bake one ln a calu.
9~~0Fl0
•El224C
77
#54R & #4SR
This one's not for your sox and
underwear. Four drawer tool chest 26~"
W x 12Ya" D x lS" Hand 3-drawer roller
cabinet 26Y2" W x 18Ya" D x 293/a" H .
Includes tumbler lock and keys.
WYDRIVER
STAITD llT
CoinM with 3 changeable
tipe: 1 Phillipe and 2
alott.d.
ALLTRADE 52 PC.
METRIC I SAE
SOCKET SET
I don't care what they
aay rm not con,,.rting to
metric but il you want
to, thia 1-a good deal.
W ith caM.
6" BENCH GRINDER ALLTRADE
31/z" IEICB
VISE Gr.at for cleaning and poliahin9
(but keep the coU .. bean. away,
got it?). Ya -hp m otor.
34!!.
I know I ha,,. a lob of
vie. and n ow lt'• high
time you ha.,. at lea.st
one. Hey, it'• a 9ood
price too.
.597
1308-V -3.6
ALL TRADE 3 PIECE
ADJUSTABLE
WIDCB SET
BLACK I DEC:IE
WORKMATE
8"
BOBBYCRAFTER
rlHCI llOTHllS
llU. llOADWAY
MOITUAAY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
IAL T% & IKGllOtof
SMITH & TUTHILL
WHTCUFF CHAHL
427 E 17th,St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
urged
LIVERMORE(AP)-7 97 1697 The former head of one So p f' -'-• -1 of two U.S. laboratories 15ss op wanta a WUJ.nV po• that develops nuclear for Father'• Day, buy hirn
weapons baa said that th ... in.stead and aav• th•
nuclear dlaarmamen 1 -----------------------------------+---...o.-------b_u_c_iu __ . __________________ .,. ................ l!il!m .... •1.s.-.o.25 ........ ..
For •mall tabletop projecta. Work •urface
tilta frorn 0 to 45 degreee forward, viM jaW9
open to 3", and rwi,,.l gripe hold unusual
ahape. up to SW'.
f'ttllCI UOTMBS
IMfTHS' WOITUA&Y
627 Main SI HunttnQton Beach
531Hi539
PACIAC Y•W
....,llAL,A&I(
Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel-Cr•matory
3600 P.c:1flc View Or1ve
NewPort Beech
644-2700
an4 arms control are the r
only sure means for
avoiding a nuclear
bolouust.
Herbert York, former·
ly director of the
Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory,
told an arms control
conrerence, •'The ad·
vocacy tbeae daya of
nuclear dlaarmament b not particularly
popular."
REMINGTON
POWEi HAMMEi
Fitu futenen in like a ahot
futenln9 2z4'• to con~.
electrical conduit, and
furring .tripe.
UTUC:TAILE
CLOTllllLllE
SllL 71,4 II ST AIDARD nun c:11c:uLAR . SAW
28~~
You can do circ1ee around
the other gu79 with tNa.
Cute 2%" at 90° and 1%" at 46°. 10 Amp
burnout protected. motor.
IUCllDECID
Fllllllll
IAIDD
16~!
ILACI I DECIO
1A" DmL
12~!
ILACI I DECIO
35" WOllllATE
97~!'039
With tN attackmenta JOU buy, 70\l
can clo almoet an~ with thS..
( tiaoept PQ \ha~).
..
I I
INTEDIATIC
TIMEll
CORDLESS
4~?1 -llB
SUPER COP VARIABLE
5 97
ID711B
Get a couple, Mt them at
diffeNnt tim .. and it mak .. it
look like you're home u llghu
go off and on when you're away.
(Did I !OM anyone there buid ..
mymelf?) '
MUUAY
·BICYCLES
IOB' ZO'' 1111
74~!
IOB' 20"
onm1111
888.!
Both have BMX frame and fork, 20.2.125
black knobbi ... 20" BMX hu couter
brake, comu in white with gloa black.
O.luze hu side pull caliper bra& ... red
and gold finiah.
~~RUBBEDIAID TRASH CAIS
30UU.OI
7~
30 CW.LOI IOUCDECI
10~
Got so many truh can speciala
that it alm09t l>N&lu my heart
to tell you I have no traah.. ( My
goat eau it all).
MTD 5 BP
ROTOTILLER
24997
Chain drive B&S
engine, 16 Mlf.
sharpening tin ... 135
rpm forward speed,
adjustable depth of
till to 7". While they la.st.
GRAPES
Here are ThomP90n s..dl ... , Flame, and
moN, (if my wino uncle reads thU we're
in trouble. )
SAGO
PALMS
5?!
I really can't d..cribe a &90 Palm. I vu ... you
would .. ,. it loo.lu kinda
"palmiah". (I bell ... thia
ia caµ.d mental
~on, doctor.)
IT.T TELEPHONES
VIVA
ROTARY
DIAL
In brown/ earth tone.
88
TREND LINE
ROTARY DIAL
\thite or Cocoa.
ULTRA 80
Choice of
Ahnond or Cocoa.
3788
3988
• Great chpice of phon• and by the way, it'• perfectly
legal to own your own phone. Th ... are approved too.
SuppoMd to call the phone company and My, "Hey, I
9ot my own etc." (I bought the Ultra 80, h-u
automatic redial in C&M of a busy ngnal.)
SADDLEJIAI SADDLDLAllET
SEAT COVDS
SMALL 1999
PICK-UPS
roLLSJZE .
PICK-UPS 2499 OR TRUCKS
Sure f .. l good, a lot better
than that sticky hot Yinyl
and when they get a bit
mungy you pull them off and clean them.
AICO CIAPBITI
IOW/40 WT.
NOtOI OIL
99:r
I think theN ia a Sl.80 by
mail refund from Arco on
thia stuff if you buy 6
qu&J'U. The store hu the
skinny on thia.
DURALITE
SAND CHAIRS
Hope we got a load znore
in becau.M when I w.nt to .,,..-J} th. st-. late Memorial
__.,-_ _.....,.~ Dey,.. 80ld out of 90me.
( doq't .. ,. that. )
MULTICOLORED WEB .
S!!
FOLDING FABRIC ~~e 8!i!
SPOSmON
FABRIC
~~=:19•9
towel bu. 19734
AllllTIOll
PUCI 'a P.IDI
FLOOI TILi 39c
Tl&IPllQin
FLOOI TIU
17!~.
•
GUMOUT DEGREASER
AID ENGINE CLEANER
I~!.
Spray on, wait a bit, and hOM
oU (I UM a stiff bruah a little
anyhow, worlu faster.)
BLUE POLY OIE. STEP
POLY SEALANT
s~~uoum
Clean., Shin ... and s..i. in
one step. (The One Step, been
doblg that for years. rm ready
for Two Step. )
BERi WOOD
PRESERVATIVE
6!!
Penetrate. deep to gi.e a tough
waterproof ~de......t. H.lpe stop dry rot,
warping, term.it.. and •hrinking.
4" WIDE
IEIDEI BOARD
Curve it to fit your planting areu, cut to
boz stuff, do 110m' light terracing,
whatever.
'Armless girl
gets diploma
LAS VEGAS <AP> -A airl whole arm1 were
backed off ln Stanl1lat11 County 2~ yeu1 •to bu
been graduated from h11b acbooJ here.
Mary Vincent, now 18, accepted her diploma
with the book that serves aa her left hand. Tben
she used the hook tbat aerves u her rlCbt band to
shake hands with Howard Marr, principal of a
special school for handicapped 1tudent1 where 1be
completed hlih school.
Her parent•. Lucy and Herbert Vincent,
watched proudly 11 their dau1hter, dretHd lD the
traditional cap and 1own,
marched Into the room puahinl
tbe wheelchair of another
graduate.
Miss Vincent wu a U.year-
old runaway when she accepted
a ride from a stranger in the
San Francisco Bay area Sept.
29, 1978. She was raped In a re-
mote area weal of Modesto, her
arms were cut off with an u
and she wu left for dead. vte.c .. ,.
Some motorists found Min Vincent sta11ertn1
toward Interstate 5. She recovered, learned to uae
artificial arms and returned to her Lu Ve111
home.
Lawrence Singleton, a 51-year-old merchant
seaman, wu convicted of the mutilation and wu
sentenced to prison.
Mother killer
Inay get estate
MADISON, Wis. (AP) -A man convicted of
suffocating his mother should not necessarily be
deprived of inheriting her $1.5 million estate, tbe
Wisconsin Supreme Court bas ruled.
In a 5-2 decision, the court said that someone
who willfully kills another iB disqualified from in·
heriting his victim's estate, but that in WiaCODJiD,
willful intent technically ls not an element of the
crime of reckless homicide.
Bernard Safran Jr., was accused of suffocat·
ing bis 70-year -old mother, Helen, in July 1977.
Police said the woman's body was burned two
days later in the basement of her South Milwaukee
home.
Although originally charged with second·
degree murder, Safran. who was 30 al the time of
the killing, pleaded no contest to a reduced cbaree
of reckless homicide and was sentenced to up to
five years in Waupun State Prison in 1978.
Mrs. Safran left her estate in trust to her son
in a 1952 will. His two brothers and a brotber·in·
law sought to disqualify him.
NY betus measles
NEW YORK <AP) -The incidence or measles
in New York City plummeted by ··an astounding"
94 percent over the last year, and health officials
predicted they would meet their goal of eradicat-
ing the disease here by October 1982.
Health Commissioner Dr. Reinaldo A. Ferrar
reported only 27 confirmed cases of measles from
January through April 1981. During the first third
of 1980, there were 457 reported incidences, Ferrar
said, attributing the decline to "vigorous efforts"
to immunize students.
THE MALE MAN
an unusual discount store
excellence in
fitted shirts
FATHER'S
DAY
JUNE
21st
•s
l
1
Oran~ Cout DAILY Pll.OTJThureday, June 4, 1981
City's mobile 1W~
proposal has ~rit
•
The Huntington Beach City they stand to lose between $JJ,OOO
Council has come up with on in· -and $30,000.
novative idea to alleviate the Although the tenants have 16
short~ge of mobile home spaces months to move, they say their
and to provid.e a place to relocate pllaht wlll remain the some,
evicted mobile home park ten-becau~e there aren't available
ants. trailer spaces in Orange County,
On a recommendation by And some of the mobile homes
Councilman Ron Pattinson, the are too old to be moved into other
City Council has agreed to put up parks anyway.
$700,000 or redera1 Housing and Without an ordinance reg.
Community Development <HCD> ulating conversions, the
money to purchase land to landlord -Huntington Seaclitf
establish a mobile home park. Co. -has no obligation to help
Although the $700,000 by itself t~e t~nants move. The same
wouldn't purchase much land in situation could happen to the
Huntington Beach, the concept is city's other 18 mobile home
that private developers could parks, comprising 3,384 mobile
rombine efforts with city officials homes.
to purchase a large parcel for a Thls total includes five parks
permanent trailer park. and 1,089 spaces in the city's
The idea is to create afforda· prime coastal. zone. These parks
ble housing and at the same time are the most ~1kely candidates to
provide space for tenants who be C?nvert~ mto ot~er uses, ac·
might be evicted if landlords de· cording to city officials, because
cide to develop valuable coastal the v.alue of the land is $realer
land into different uses. than mother parts of th~ city. •. . . The concept of usmg HCD
1:'he City Council als? wlll funds to create a permanent
consider a propo~ed or~mance mobile home park is novel. It
next month protectmg trailer t~n-could produce at least a partial ~nts f~om a?r.upt, costly ev1c-solution to the growing mobile
lion. City .officials say the p~o-home housing shortage.
posed ordmance could require First, however, an ordinance
landlords to relocate. the tenants s pecifically regulating con ·
to other parts of the city . version of mobile home parks is
Currently, there isn 'L a city needed to protect the rights of
o rdmanre regulating conversion tenants.
of mobile home parks into other It certainly is an idea worth
uses. pursuing. When money fever
For example , tenants of• the strikes the park owners there
43-coach Huntington Shores seems to be no one else ar~und to
Mobile Home Park off Pacific help protect the hundreds of
Coast Highway were given evic· mobile home residents who have
tion notices last month. Many say no plare else to live.
Good reason for fun
As coastal area families get
ready to participate in the 36th
annual Costa Mesa -Newport
Harbor Lions Club Fish Fry
beginning Friday, few are con-
templating the real r easons for
the three-day affair.
Much of the $50,000 net ex-
pected from the sale of thousands
of fish dinners and raffle tickets
will go toward giving sight to
those who cannot see.
Last year, tbe local club
spent about $20,()00 of its pro-
ceeds to establish an eye bank
and sight saving center at UCI
Medical Center.
A major !unction of the
c nter is the transfer of eye tis·
sue. which must be used for cor·
nea, transplants within 72 hours of
a ddllor's death.
Since its opening in April, the
bank has provided cornea tissue
for four successful operations.
And thanks to Lions Club ef ·
forts, the center has listed 45
Orange Countlans as future
donors.
In addition lo that vital runh-
tion, the center is available for
research projects aimed at find·
ing ways or preserving eye tissue
for longer periods of time.
A spec;ial thanks is in order
to the Lions Club, which has his·
to~ically been active in fighting
blindness and eye disease, for its
efforts toward establishing and
maintaining the county's first
eye bank.
And Costa Mesans and
Newport Beach residents who
partake of this year's fish din·
ners -an anticipated 50,000 -
might drop in at the organiza-
tion's mobile eyemobile.
The folks there will test sight
and bearing as well as off er in·
!ormatioo allowing you to orter
the gift of sight to some who does
without.
It should be gratifying to
Fish Fry patrons to realize that
~hi~e they're having fun and en·
Joying the famous fried fish
they're also helping in such a fine
cause.
Kindness costs money
There are more than 30
mouths to reed these days at the
Laguna Beach Marine Mammal
Center out on Laguna Canyon
Road.
The Friends of the Sea Lion
organization , which includes
about 25 to 30 volunteers,
operates out or the red barn area
adjacent to the city's animal
she lter.
There, visitors will find two
~ools containing recovering sea
hons and harbor seals. Stalls in·
side the barn house more
animals s uffering from a variety
or ailments and injuries.
Most of the sea creatures are
20 pounds underweight and all
suffer from lack or nourishment.
Factors that force the 1ea tiops to
bea c h themselves , include
parasites , lung -worms, •
hypo1lycem1a, pancreatltlt, liver
flukes. ulcers and dehydration.
That doesn't count the ones
who inadvertently swallow fish
hookB, Ot gel hit by boot pro·
pcllers.
Expenses run about $10,000 a
year, and the marine center
always Calla short of that mar~.
Frozen herring mu1t be shipped
in from San Podro, and an-
tibiotics, tranqulllzcrs, vitamins
and other druas don't come
cheap.
It's frustrating, say the stu·
dent volunteers, who are on hand
in the mornings, at lunch, after
school and on weekends to tend
their flippered patients.
If you'd like to help out, send
a check to the Friends of the Sea
Lion, 20612 Laguna Canyon Road,
Laguna, Beach.
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex·
pressed oo this page are those of their authOrs and •r11sts. Reader comment Is lnvlt·
ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) ~2·'321.
I
L.M. Boyd/ A 24-hour preaidency
You know about thet railway called
the Atch.lson, Topeka and the Santa
re. The Atchison therein was the
fellow who was President of the Unlt·
td States for 24 houra from March 3
to March 4, 1849. David atce
Atchison. Jam~s Polk's admlnW.ra·
tion ended and Zachery Taylor re·
fused to co to work on Sunday, IO
Senate President Atcblaon waa •m·
powered for that brtef time. He'd
~en workln,c hard to wind up the
larne·duck Congress, thou1h, ao he
slept lhrOUlh b1a entire term or of·'
lice.
Legislative payrolls soar
The salary of Senate President Pro
Tern David Roberti is, llke all other
legislators, $28,000, an amount substan·
tiaUy above the average income of the
majority of Californians, 50 percent or
whose reported taxable earnings do not
exceed $13,000. Roberll 's assistant
Jerry Zanelli, who bears the title of ex'.
ecutive officer of the Rules Committee
a post ~th nebulous duties, is paid
nearly t~.ce as much, receiving SSl.768.
Z~nelli 1s only one of the great army
of aides employed by the Legislature os·
tensibly to assist the 120 members in
their legislative work. Roberti alone has
31 aides while the total employees of the
Legislature now number more than 2.200
and are largely responsible for the
burgeorung operational costs or that
branch of government. This year more
than $100 million will be spent for
legislative support, an amount greater
than the entire state budget of 50 years ago.
THIS HUGE operational cost for the
Legislature, which amounts to almost
$1 !f1illlon per member, is due almost
ent_1rely lo the proliferation or staff,
which has taken place in the past 15
years.
The total of salaries of the legislators
is only $3,360,000. Add anothier $3
million for the fringe benefits the mem·
bers have voted themselves and a
generous $15 million for the legitimate
expenses of phones. printing, legislative
counsel and analyst and basic clerical
staff and the costs would still be less
than 20 percent of the actual total being
spent.
Most of the rest goes to the political
hacks who function as aides. press
agents and factotums. Zanelli is but one
or scores of excessivel~paid minions
whose primary duties are to cater to the
11Rl WITIRS
egos of.the lawmakers, many of whom
are P'.11d more than $40,000. Nor is
Zanelli the highest paid. Janet Roche
recently arrived here from Washington' ~.C., is paid $55,152 to serve as staff
director for Speaker Willie Brown while
Steve Thompson is paid $57,384 as direc·
tor of the Speaker's Research Office
T HE RATIONALE for assistants'
salaries substantially more. some twice
as much as the members who claim to
be "full-lime professional lawmakers ..
is hard lo fathom. Nowhere else in
public or private employment do aides
receive pay greater than their bosses. If
the legislative aides are worth more
than the members it would seem they
s hould be the ones the voters should
elect. Secretly many of the aides hold
that very thought.
. The irony is that for the most part the
aides are non-essential and the great
majority totally unnecessary as proved
by the fact the Legislature. meeting on-
ly every other year for more than 100
years, perform~d the same duties.
generally much better, with only a bare 1
handful or part-time help , mostly only
clerical.
But if the pay given the aides is dif.
flcult to understand the hordes of un-
needed staff isn't. The pure and simple
ract is they are there lo help perpetuate
the members in office. While a small
corps of th1s huge legion are highly
competent professionals in their fields
and studiously avoid political activity
and an.other group is merely
s~cretar1al, the great majority are
vigorous partisans, wheeling and dealing
and actively campaigning
STILL THEIR very existence serves
to create confusion and a tremendous
amount or "busy work" for the
legislators while at the same time insulat-
ing them from their constituents to the
point wber~ they ~come completely out
or touch with their needs and desires.
Many of the aides assume the
responsibilities and authority of the
members and build themselves into key
figures exercising Machiavellian power
over the members and legislative policy.
Since 1966 the state budget has grown
from $4 billion lo $25 billion. It was that
year when the Legislature became one
or "fuJJ-time, professional lawmakers"
and the excessive salaries, soaring
payroll and huge legislative costs pro·
v1de a clue to why the state budget has
been permitted to increase so tremen-dously.
Campaigns need wider fund raising
To the Editor:
The Daily Pilot offered shallow logic No lumter
in recently calling for "more
restrictions on campaign collecting and
spending ...
Either the Daily• Pilot's edilorial
writers are terribly naive or the Daily
Pilot actually supports the denial of the
freedom of expression.
When more restrictions are placed on
the ability of candidates and political
parties to raise and spend campaign
funds , only the non -restricted
newspaper editors with thejr biases wW
MAILBOX
have an unbridled say in who should be
elected. That would be a blow to
democracy, a blow to the First
Amendment and a blow to the intentions
of our nation's Founding Fathers.
The Daily Pilot should be calling upon
Americans to each give more to the
candidates of their choice and to their
political parties. The costs of
campaigns are borne by far loo few
citizens who accept civic responslbiUly
to give t.o poUtical causes.
MORE MONEY IS spent each year on
fireworks for the Fourth of July than is
spent on political campaigns In
America. How much more Important is
it that we have good men and women In
public office? Restrictions on who can
contribute to politfcaJ campaians and
reatrlctJons on What can be spent to
elect a candidate do not serve the cause
of freedom.
Like the costs for an of ua In our deily
personal and business lives, the costa of
campalins are affected bf infiation.
Today It cost.I more to mai a letter -
personal, business or political. Today It
costs more for radio time, television
ti me. billboard space, prlotlng,
newspaper ad space, cam~lgn staffs,
office supplies and headquarter• rtotal.
So long as newspapers t0nUnue to
raise the price or advertislng space,
they bad belteT not suggest llmlta on
campaifJl.Apendlna. I am yet to see a
._newapaper donate ad space to the
candidates.
For someone who has such a vest4!d
interest in the p41llical process a• news
coverage of campai1ns,' editorial
endorsemetlll, and the selUna of ad apace, lt should be embarruslna to ad•~•te Hmtta OD campalp funclin1
and IP"!dhil· · c • .....-aNit bve tlle ablllt,-to combilt.,..........: ........ Md
editorial elidoriem•tl °' "r'8· It D~ OlalJ the Dewtpaper Ion will UH~ lM WQ tMJ Ukt ll, \ TM.....,._ dttlrw beUw llaa uw.
rHOILU A. ft1DT88 PlnlV..~ ~-Party or0r...,. Coml'1
To the Edit.or:
With regard to an item in the May 26
paper headlined, "Hunter Slain in
County Gun Mishap," although this
certainly is a tragic accident, I take
offense at your calling this person a
hunter.
From your account of this apparent
accident this person is no hunter, he is a
poacher! Nol only was the deer knted
out o( season, it was done with an illegal
weapon tor taking deer, a .22 pistol.
The image of hunting suffers enough
from attacks by various animal
protective type gToups. We shouldn't
have to sufCer additionally due to the
irresponsible actions of people who are
not sportsmen. but are in fact poachers.
DAVE SIMPSON
Bus &loJ18 /or park
To the Editor:
If several comfortable Crystal Cove
State Park bus stops were provided just
off the highway on -either side, in-
numerable park visitors would prefer to
use the service of the many OCTD buses
that traverse the area.
These bus stops could provide a
shaded seating area in which to wait;
lockers for daytime storage of beach
equipment and lunch baskets; drinking
fountains; outdoor root showers; and
some information significant to the use
and enjoyment of the park. Until the
over-and underpasses were constructed
Cor people to go from the canyon section
of the park to the beach area, a band
operated traffic signal could provide for
safe crossing.
The park. the people and the buses
are here right now, needing this
service. UntU the planning ror more
permanent structures, such as have
been constructed at Bolaa Chica State
Beach ia completed, temporary
facilities should be provlded to meet tbe
presslng demand.
THE USE OF TOE bus ayatem for
tranaportina park visitors c:ould obviate
the need for Ute uae of many cera, thua
aavlng our scarce on, cuttlna down on
the traffic and alr pollution problems;
and avoidlnl the use for car parktn1 ol'
more than a mlnlmum of the park Ian~
•
so needed for uncrowded visitor enjoy-
ment. Such provisions would enable
many to come to the park wh9 do not.
have Lheir own private transportation
racillties, or who could not otherwise af-
ford the trip.
The Crystal Cove State P~rk ad-
ministration has all along been open to
s uggestions on U1e part or the public as
lo what development was most desired.
That thls service feature n~ further
emphasis needs to be conveyed to Slate
Park Director, Pete Dangermond, Jr.,
P.O. Box 2390, Sacramento, CA. 9S8ll
and lo our actively concerned As·
semblywoman. Marian Bergeson.
California Assembly, State Capitol,
Sacramento, Ca. 95814.
EVELYN GAYMAN
'Enriched' umer?
To the Editor·
The presence of midges in Newport's
water system will certainly raise prob·
lems for the present city council. I·
told-you-so environmentalists will point
out that for years they have questioned
the ability of the city to meet demands
· for clean water as uncurbed develop-
ment has been allowed to proceed~ En·
vironmentaHsts can now correctly
claim that development has already
out-distanced the city's ability to pro-
vide clean drinking water.
ONE SOLUTION to the city officials'
problems would be to advertise our
drinking water as "protein-enriched.''
The litUe critters that are in the water
are not too terribly noticeable and a
good ad·man might be able to sell the
water Cor us. The income would ~
unCul and could 'pay for additional
policemen, roads, sewers that develop-
ment such as the Newport Center ex-
pansion will require. One precaution the
city should take if it decides to sell our
"protein-enriched" waler is to take out
extensive Insurance covera&e in case
the long-term side effect or drinking the
little critters turns out to M some
dreaded disease.
CKARLES BRACHET
Orange CoHt DAIL y PILOT/Thurlday, Junt ... 1981 ~··
/"'Security' as a cover.i for gov~rnment secrecy
I
WASHINGTON -The teebnolo•y ot pubU1hJn1 the most newsworthy ex-"He only whetted Anderaofl's ap.
espionase has reached such a wondroua cerpta from the secret Cabinet mlnutee. petite. I was amona tboao from whom
state that the United States and the So· One of Carter's Cablnet member1, the a1JreSfive columnl1t sou1bt copies
vlet Union resularly intercept each Joseph A. Calltano Jr., bu now re· thereafter; I reht$ed, but Anderson aot
other's m0&t secret communications. vealed how much this upset the preai· them aomewhere else."
Yet of late, both aovemment.s have in· dent. In bis new ~k , "Governin1 For the put quarter century, I have
tensified their security routines. America,'' Califano writes: published news from claultled docu·
JICI 11111111
··Jack Anderson had begun oc-
casionally to carry excerpts from
cabinet meetina minutes ln his column
. . . Carter told us to treat minutes of
the cabinet meeting 'with the care that
should be gtven highly cluslfied docu·
ments. • The minutes would be dlatribut·
ed to cabinet members marked 'for
your eyes only,' he said:" 'We've got to
atop Jack Anderson pt.1ttlng lo his col·
umn what's going on at ubinet meet-
ings.'
ments. I have been lesa willlna than
other correspondents to accept the aov·
ernment's right to claHltY whatever it
wishes. The practice has been for gov·
ernment officials to clualfy incoming
information and then 'electively release
only what they want the public to know.
I try to intereept the intakes befQt'e they
are censored.
HIGH OFflCIALS, meanwhile, not
only use their classification powers to
censor the news but seek added restrlc·
tlona on the public's right to know.
Under the banner of national security,
they a.re Mw assaulting the Freedom of
Information Act and clamorln& for
stricter security laws. I
But unfortunately, no laws passed by
Congress can stymie the Russians' all·
seeing spy satellites and all-heartn1
monitorin1 devices. The laws would
merely impede the flow of information
to the American people, not to the men
in the Kremlin.
Long before Americans could vote
directly for their prea¥fents, before the
vo\;e was given to the poor, women.
blacks and youths, before presidential
nominating conventions or our present
political parties existed, the role of the
village editor and dissenting pamph·
leteer -as monitor. arbiter, critic
and rival of the polltlclan -was Im·
bedded aa a fundamental of tbe
American 1y1iem.
UNDER TBIS system, the D\111lon of
tbe press la to give the people an
alternative to the official version of
tbln11, a rival account of reality, a
measure by which to judse the etncac~
of rulers and whether the truth is ln
them.
The languase of the Conati&ution -
tbe people, justice, tranquility, ,welfare,
liberty -was intended to protect the
people from the aovernment. The
language of officialdom -security,
secrecy, s urveillance , executive
privilege -would protect the govern·
ment from the people.
Since they cannot ~P secrets from
each other, who are they trying to hide
their operations Crom? The deep-down
truth is that both governments are real·
ly afraid of their own people. They are
driven, therefore, to draw a curtain of
secrecy between their internal opera·
lions and the people they are supposed
to serve.
The millions who compose our own
per manent government, in tbelr heart or hearts, are at odds with democracy.
They prefer to exercise their permeat·
ing power from the obscurity of the
cubicle, shuffling government forms
and issuing edicts.
State legislature functions without any lawyers
THEY ABHOR conflict, which dis·
rupt~ the smooth implementation of
their plans and procedures. They em·
brace secrecy because what is not
known cannot be disrupted. They scorn
party politics, with the emotions and
harangues and ove~impllficatiorus, as
irrational. ·
But in a democracy, the right to make
the big decisions belongs to the people.
Thus controversy becomes the seed bed
of decision, and secrecy frustrates the
decision-making process. The dif·
ferences between parties, however ir-rational or elusive, are the bases of
decision.
Nevertheless politicians, once they
come to power, are inclined to adopt the
secretive ways of the bureaucrats. For
the politician in office doesn't want his
acts and policies to reach the people
through what he considers the distort-
ing prism of the press. What he wants
known. he would prefer to communicjlte
directly through more tightly controlled
mechanisms.
In 1976, for instance, J immy Carter
promised to install a people's presiden-
cy in Was hington. The good ole boy
from Georgia said he would run "an
open government to let our people know
what our government leaders are doing,
including the president.'· His Cabinet
meetings, he vowed, would be thrown
open for the people to watch.
CARTER HELD one open Cabinet
meeting; then like the presidents before
him, he closed the doors. I tried to help
him keep his campaign promise by
"The salary of Jhe governor 18 curmatl11
ridiculou.!. I om o f inn beUewr in the
minimum wage, and I believe tile goi1emor,
working day and night and anawtrlng to the
highest reipon.ribitity of the state, should be
paid accordingly.
What is the above? It is the synopsis
of a bill, sponsored by a Delaware
legislator with a labor union back-
{:.~'
:,~u .
C-llR-l-ll_M_cC-11~1 ---::atil
ground, to raise the salary of the sitting
governor, ~hose name is Pierre S. du
Pont IV, and who asks you to ~all him
Pete. Yes, one of those du Ponts. What
is peculiar about all this? First, that the
bill should be drawn by a labor union
man from Wilmington, John A .
Campanelli. Second, that It should be a
joke. Third, that Campanelli is NOT a
lawyer. Indeed. no member of the 21·
seat Senate or the 41·seat House of
Representatives is a lawyer. The last
lawyer who served in the Delaware
legislature is the above-mentioned du
Pont. He got out seven years ago.
NO OTHER STATE in the union can
boast of a lawyerless set of lawmakers.
.. Yet some how." says reporter Bill
Stall in an excellent piece about this
phenomenon, "even former lawyers
admit, Delaware·s legislative process
seems not only to have survived. but to
have thrived."
Charles L. Hebner. a public relations
man from Wilmington (the legislature
serves at the capital. Dover), confirms
that the lawmakers are doing well
without lawyers.
"Lawyers tend to t.ell you what you
can't do," Hebner said. "What we get
without lawyers Is a basic thrust of try·
ing to do things our constituents want.
It's a let's.get-things-done approach."
A legislative body without lawyers
seems like a baseball team without an
outfield. Or an automobile without
wheels. ''You can't have one without
the other," as the song says. Well ,
Delaware says lt isn't so. And people
are beginning to get the m,essage.
T HE DELAWARE LEG~LATURE
bas ladies who do nothing more im ·
portant. otherwise, than keep house.
There ii.re salesmen and realtors, and a
sheet met al worker. Pete du Pont says:
''The legislative process is manifold
better than it was half a dozen years
a~o." He says this is largely because of
· reforms such as open commi~ee hear·
ings, public votes, advance notice of bill
hearings and action on bill.S. The gov-
ernor adds:
"I can remember when a member
would say, 'I've got a great idea,' and
three hours later the bill would be on
the governor 's desk."
The boys and girls at Dover have
neatly undercut the favorite argument
of the lawyers that they as legislators
should make the laws. The upper and
lower courts, according to this
argument , could not understand the
laws unless they were made by lawyers
and encoded into the s pecial language
of the lawyers.
EACH LEGISLATURE ADM ITS the
basic vafidity of this argument. "('hey
have their own lawyers. Each house has
a team of three lawyers to help draft
bills so they will be intelligible to their
co-religionists in the judicial de-
partment.
This is the J .P. Morgan approach to
lawyers: "I don't want you lo tell me
what I can do I want you to fix it so it's
legal when I do it "
Cynics d1 s m1 ss the la wyerless
legislature with the argument that the
p2y is .only $10.545 for a six·montb
session. Honest Injun lawyers would not
work for such a pittance. If this is so. I
suggest we cut \n half the wages of
every legislature in the country, and
elect men who can support themselves
and family, if it be by working sheet
metal.
Write to your laWlllakers
U.S. SENATORS
E:ranston, Alan (D), 11100 Wilshire
Blvd., Los Angeles, 90012 (213) 824-7641
Hayakawa, S.I. CR), 3848 Campus Dr.,
Suite 213, Newport Beach 92660 (714)
545.7175
During Congressional sessions: New
Senate Office Bldg., Washington, D.C.
20510 (:M>2) 224·3121
U.S. REPRESENTATIVES
Orange County
Badbam, Robert ( 40th District-R>. 1649
Westcliff Dr .. Newport Beach 92663
631-0040
Patterson, J erry (38th District·D>. 34
Civic Center Plaia, Santa Ana 92701
835·3811 Lungren, Dan (34th District·R),
5514 Britton Drive, Long Beach, 90815
(213) 594-9761
Du Hn·g Cong r ess iona I sessions :
Badham, 1108 Longworth House Office
Bldg., Was hington, D.C. 20515; Pat-
terson, 2238 Ray burn House Ofrice
Bldg., Washin gton, D.C. 20515;
Lungren, 1313 Longworth House Offi ce
Bldg., Washington, D.C. 20515
STATE SENATORS
(Orange County)
Schmitz, John (36th District·R>. 4600
Campus Dr .. Newport Beach 92660
979-9670
Briggs, John V. (35th Distrlct-R>. 1441
N. Harbor Blvd., Fullerton 92635
879 -2345
Carpenter, ,Paul R. (37th Dlstrlct·D>,
5400 Orange Ave. Suite 203, Cypress, CA
90630 952.3201
During legislative sessions : State
Capitol, Sacramento 95814 (916) 322·9900
STATE ASSEMBLYMEN
(Orange County)
Bergeson, Marian (74th Districl·R >.
4400 Campus Drive, Suite 344, Newport
Beach, 92660, 641·7441
Frizzelle, Nolan ( 73rd District-R ). 18600
Main St., Huntington Beach 92648
842-7335
Johnson, Ross (69th District-R>. 1501 N.
Harbor Blvd., #201. Fullerton 92635
738·5853 Wray, Chet (71st District-0 ), 12777
Valley View, Suite 161, Garden Grove
92645 636·4691 ORANGE COU NTY
BOARD OF SUP ERVISORS
Stanton, Roger -1st District, 834-3110
Wieder, Harriett 2nd District, 834.32:M)
Nestande, Bruce -3rd District,
~3330 Clark, Ralph -4th District, 834-3440
Riley, Thomas F . -5th District,
834.3550
Address: 10 Civic Center Pl., Santa Ana
92701
There are t imes when people who live near airports say: our new MCDonnell Douglas
DC-9 super so Jets are t he quietest jet air11ners In their class. In fact, when a Super so takes off the noise around the airport Is cut -drastically-by
as much as 20 percent com-
pared to similar aircraft.
ger comfort. so do our new
wider seats and handsomely
appointed interiors .
In fact, everything we do iS
part of our new style t hat will keep you flying with us, again and again.
"Quiet please!" Well, at Alrca1 weve heard t heir request. And weve acted by finding ways to reduce air-
port noise. It's Just part of our style.
Quieter on the outside
means quieter on the inside. And t hat brings added passen-
our new Jets also are t he
most fuel efficient jets in their
class. conserving fuel is one Of t he ways we're working to keep the cost Of flVing down.
so fly Airca1. Experienc e the style that's winning the w est.
I
(
I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, June 4, 1981
uss Over tooighl
-.--.."1plexes PhyllU
NEW YORK (AP) -Althoulh ~e'a ISO J)OUndl U1hter thaw to
etln1 and exerclae, Pbyllla
•ore• 11y1 aht can't un·
deratand why there wa1 1uch a
flap over her wet1ht tollowtn1
• blrtb other IOD.
"P,ople were 11yln1. 'Have
you Htn Phylll1? • " Miu
Cleor11 1ay1 ln Peopl ..
dla1a1lne. "How lnaultln1 for any woman to have to put up
with that kind of 1crutiny: I feel
tiealthy u h.ck, and I 1Ull can't
• underttand why thl1 t1 1uc.. a
bl deal." Liu Geort~t-the wife of Ken·
lucky Gov. Jon.n Y. Brown Jr.
and a former Miu Amtrica and
televi1lon 1portac11ter, 11ld abe
bad a "tnmendoua water l'«ta·
tton problem" while 1he w11
carrylna aon Lincoln.
She alao 11ld 1he "enjoyed
every pound-I put on" durtna the
laat month of btr pr•tnll\c:y by
lndullillf ln mound• of chocolatt
c:akt.
Right to ~ire upheld
Nurse refused to display bare aerriere during skit
PHOENIX, Arla. (AP) -A b••t• for reinataternent, the county Judie baa upheld a jud1e aald.
ho1pila1'1 rtaht lo fire a nune Mr1. WaeonaeUer contended
who contended her di1ml11al oc· her problem• at the boapltal
curred-because she refused to started two yean ago when
di1pl1y her bare derriere durint fellow nu"ea "bent over and
a aldt. dropped thelr drawera" durtni a
Tbe boepltal lawyer, Tbomu
V. Ra"le1, areued tbal Mn.
Waeeoaeller wu fired becaue she failed lo do her Job properly,
not beca111e ahe objected to \he
moral ltandards of aome felJOw
nurses. Superior Court Judie A. perfo,rmance of an adaptaUon ol
Melvin McDonald ruled that the 9001, "Moon River, .. at the Climber rescued Scottsdale Memorial Hoapltal hospital.
co u 1 d d l 1 mi 11 C a the r l n e She said ahe refused lo take Y 0 SE M J TE NAT I 0 NA L
Wa1enaeUer, 34, of Mesa, for part in the number, lncum.n, PARK (AP) -A rock climber
what•ver reaaon It wanted the wrath of her supervisor. from British Columbia waa
because she wu employed Mrs. Wacenseller, who bad rescued from El Capitan after
under a "terminable at will" been the hospital's pa.ramedic Calling about 80 feet here. Pedet1
contract. coordinator when she wu dia· Ourum, 22, was hoisted lo a
-DHplte the furor-over her
w1l1ht 11lri, Ml11 Oeor1e aaya
1b1 wante another child, lnd
Ml• "rm ~"9d to 10 throu1h It ~------------' .2!!_a1a1n If I want to."
DAILY PILOT ct.ASSl .. ID ADS Even ll her allegations were missed in November, contended helicopter waitlae atop the QUESTIONS /t'LAP found lo be true, Mrs . ·she wu fired without cause and monolith for• filght to a park
Pht1lU• Oeor~~--------W-•1_ona_e_1_1e_r _w_o_ul_d_h_a_v_e_n_o_le_1_a1 __ w_1_tb_o_u_t _due___;p_roc_es_s _of_I_a_w_. ___ m_edi_cal_f_ac_rn_·t_y_. ---.,,.---
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89.59
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VAllAlllTI Quintessence• underwire
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34·38 B: 32·38 C. Also 32·38 D. DD.
reg. S 13, s~le S10.39.
Reg. $2.75. 140801
MMllll•O.M full·<:ut tai
nylon trlcot with cotton·li
White, beige, pink, blue. yel
candle or peach. 4·7.
Reg .$5. 18500
R.IXNl19 Something Else• control brief
of nylon/spandex · with cotton panel. In
black. taffy. beige, white. mocha, steel
blue or rose quartz. S·M·L·XL.
Reg.$12. 16887
MAIDINl'otlM Sweet Nothings•
underwire bra with fiberfill and front
closure, of nylon/polyester. 34·36 A,
B. C, in black: 32·36 A. B. C in white
or blush.
s12.49
Reg. $'14. 11256
WAll•l I No Exaggeration™
underwlre minimizer bra of nylon/
spandex. 32·42 C in beige o'r white.
Also 32·42 D. DD in beige or white.
Reg. "$14.50, sale S12.19.
3ys775
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MAm••Olll No·Show• cotton bikini
with smooth elastic lace trim. In white.
beige, peach, yellow or blue. 4·7.
, LlnQen-'OtYMar, 91 Sale ends July 18
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VAllAllnl Second Glance• bnef of
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OL8A Olgalon• contour bra in white
or naturelle nylon/polyester. 32·36 A,
B. C Also Olgalon• padded bra. 32·36
A, B. Reg. $1 2, sale $9.99.
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WAIMll"I
Whimsies™
camisole of
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with straight lacy top
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straps. In fawn
32·36.
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anti·statlc, anti·
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s1399
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OlOA Suddenly Smooth• underw1re
bra in nude polyester/nylon.
32·38 C, D. DD.
Reg. $11.50. 1412
OLGA Wonder· Wear• brief with secret
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nylon/spandex. S·M·L·XL.
s799
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VAllAllnl
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camisole with a
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fit bodice and
shirt tail hemline
in anti-cling
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32·36.
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S·M·L.
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Daily Plat
THURSDAY, JUNE 4, 1981
COMICS
INTERMISSION
TELEVISION
Erma Bambeck suggests checking
the kids instead of the baggage
when you fly . . . 86
'Air junkie' Ken Fine rates Mount Rainier on a nice day as greatest sight while he soars frequently through Washington skies into glint of sun.
Flier prefers 'see 1.evel' above the clouds
SUMNER, Wash. (AP) -U
you're not up to climbing Mount
Rainier with your hang glider so
you can jump off to see the sur-
rounding sights, try Ken Fine's
approach.
Fine uses bis 10-borsepower
ultralight bang glider to get up·
above the maddening crowd.
Tbe engine gets him off tbe
ground, and be can travel up to so mph and land at 18 mph. He
abuts off the engine in filgbt, let-
ting the ultralight elide unW be
restart.a it if necessary.
Fine, 38, of Sumner, has ftown
bang gliders and ultralights for
more than five years.
•'There are som e very
beautiful areas in this state to
fly," says Fine. "Chelan is a
great place during the summer
because of the heat. Pasco is
good. Tbe ocean is intereatinJC.
"Dog Mountain is one of the
most scenic, but the greatest is
Mount Rainier on a nice day."
,. ....... .
Km Fine gives hi& hang-glider a final inspection before recent /Ught. Craft weighs 118
poundaand carries two galloMof fuel. Flights cost about $1 per hour.
It's a sure bet Fine also likes
the freedom or flight and the
satisfaction of knowing be has
experienced something few
he,ve.
Motorizitd hang-glider comes back to earth. About the only thing that FiM dMm't Wee
about the lport u the cold since the craft u open to the elemnts.
Big business lends people, cash for schools
(Second in a Nriea on volunteer• tn
A menca'aclaurooma. J
BJ Tiiie Auoct•ted Presa
Bil business' role in public
education used to be measured
in tax-deductible dollars alone,
but a growing number or
American corporations are coo·
trlbutlna a tar more valuable re-
source to schools these days -
people.
Employees from banks and in-
surance companies, airlines and
the oil industry are headlna into
classrooms to help train tbe
e•eraticn that eventually will
replace them in the worlt force.
And tbelr boues are gtvtne
them the tl1&e off -and
1oaheUaiel the •tra dollan -
needed to undertake projeets to
do such tlWle• d raise readin1
levels, tfreak down fears of
mathem.tic1 and encouraJe
science careers.
"Corporations bave a aodal
conscience," 1ay1 Ellaabetb
Purcell ol the Na~al School
Volunteer Proeram ID A.leun·
drta, Va., wblib'1a79 corporate
participatlOD la aeboall wW be a
k1y ,...., la meettn1 eduea-
ll9na1 and financial needs ot
aeboe. la tJle um.. Tbe NSVP CIUUlOt HJ tiow
man1 eoqMll'ate volunteers then . are a--a tbe eatlmated a •IWoa DIOPle donatlDI time and 1kill1 ID the aatiOD'I acboola.
EYen 101De eerporatlolll an un-
able to say because public
school volunteerism is but one
facet of their community rela-
tions effort.
At Shell .Oil Co. headquarters
in Houston, for example, 500
employees take advantage of a
time-release program to do a
wide range or volunteer work in
the community.
Ten volunteers -from
"We want to be a good cor-
porate citizen, and this is one of
the ways we can demonstrate
quietly that we care," said Billie
Saiet, coordinator or Shell's
volunteerism program for
employees and retirees.
In Rochester, N.Y., Eastman
Kodak Co. participates with
local school officials in pro·
grams aimed at interesting
'If we're going to break the cy·cle
of unemployment and poverty . . .
a logical place to start is education.'
secretaries to en1ineera -help
with reading labl and tutortn1
math, Enalish and other
lanauages at t he minorlty-
dominated Marshall Junior IDgh
School 10 minutes from Shell
headquarters.
Three sctentlstl work with ex-
ceptioaal student• at Jesse
Jones High School uslltlne stu-
den ta in computer science
courses as part of the so-called
Van1uard pro1ram for lifted
and talmted studenta.
SbeU a1lo operatet a "Project
Bualneu" prQCram at schooll
near many ol ill facilitlet, pro-
viding ill personnel to teach
buslneu-oriented cluaea for a
semester.
Oil Mr nnt Yj.itt to Wolf Trap,
Mn. Re..-appeared oa tbe
YUt .... of tbe ,,.. C-.
earUew tlal1 wffil. •hlwa1
lbroailt. ·~-bour ibow Md bJ eoiie41ian .. b Hope . aad an·
ilOune.d tbe blrlbda1 lift ...
l
young 1tudent1 in careers in
mathematics and science. More
than "° employees have taken part in the pro1rams, which
often involve summer or part-
~e ~ for youn1sters. .
At Hu1bea Tool Co. in
Houston, JO employees spend 2~
hours a week tutorin1 Junior hip school students wbo speak
Spanish and Vietnamese. The
volunteers -lncludiq macblne
operators, enlineen and clerb
-are paid by Hush•• yhile in
the cluaroom.
At New York City's Park Welt
Hilb School, IBM employees
belpln the Hell's ~ltchen voca-
ttonal lebool. And in Bolton, the Volunteer
eom tu1 from 'extra money
ralaed la a priYate White .-.. reatontlon campatp.
Her cllec' •• ntHAYtd ~ Mn. Jou.tte SboUH, fOUDder Of Wolf Tru, W11o tGld tbe aUdlmee
they bad lileli*I ralae '300,000.
f
Career Counseling Project bu
brought the business community
together with more than 1,000
high school juniors and
sophomores through workshops
that teach students bow to apply
for a job.
Some companies have aone so
far as to "adopt " a
neighborhood school, providing
both people and money to im-
prove the educational system.
More than 100 employees ol
Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical
Co. have participated in a volun·
t,er procram at Oakland High,
where the company baa spent
more than $400,000 over the put
three years to establlab pro·
.,rams including a readin1
center~ a career center and,
soon, a math center.
A corporate neighbor, Clorox Co., la spending $25,000 this year
on a almilar ... Adopt-a-School"
pro1ram at Cutlemont Hip,
with empbuia on remedial read·
Ina and science. The comPUJ'•
contribuUoa piys for special
textbooks and teacher aides. ·
Next year, aald DaYid S. W91,
mana1er ol community afflin
at Clorox, tbe company bopes to
add a procram that wl11 actuallJ
put employees into tbe aebool
•'for bands·Oll experience In
helplnf tbeae younpten."
"We believe strenal1 in tbe
fact tbat compaalea need to
be'come involved in belplq .to lmpro¥e tbe commumtlel .....
tbelr emp&oye1 Un Ud -.k."
be Hid .
• " ... We're alto •erJ, very
much concerned witla tile
1eneral deterloratton of our
aebool 1jltem -and that'• DOt JMt trUe ~ Olklud'. U we'n IO-
lq to bi'eU tbe c1cJe GI ... empl~ and po..,t:J, lt 1111 tonut ........... n ..... to
QI a ao.lcal ... mH to ltart .. in
educat6ri'.'' ' ( .
\
! t
I
l
Fisli f'!Y
a fun fest
OFF 6 RVNNING DEPr. -Every now and then you
run into 10me sour pu11 who will ln1i1t on tellinl )'OU now
community 1athertn11
like picnics, fairs ,
bazaars and the like
are re•lly old hat.
Nobody goes to them
any more. They're just
too corny.
Surely, you're like·
ly to n'.ln into a couple
~ -~OM_M_U_RP-Hl-11~"
of these down-Jn·lhe-mouthers right in our own coastal re· _
glon .as the fair metroPolis of Costa Mesa 1ets ready for
tomorrow's opening of one of these event& for the 36th
straight time.
Friday marks the start of the three-day Costa Mesa
Fish Fry and Carnival under auspices of the Costa Mesa-
Newport Harbor Lions Club.
"NAB, YOU DON'T wanna get caught in all th4t
corn-pone," some Wrong Thinker will advise you. ''They
just gonna give away a bunch of prizes and sell fish din-
ner& and have a parade and carnival. Just cruddy ol'
stuff like that . . . '·
. Well, I've got news for you. If it's all so corny and out
of date, how come attendance keeps setting records dur·
ing the Fish Fry in Mesatown? Maybe S0,000 people show
up over the three days. Maybe 100,000. Who knows? Your
estimate is as good as anybody's. Suffice to say it's going
to be a lot of folks.
And they're going to have a good time.
l hope you won't run into anybody that suggests to
you that good times have gone out of style.
SO THE LIONS and their friends will start serving
those famous fish dinners about 5:30 tomorrow afternoon.
And they're going to keep serving them for three days.
The carnival rides open at 6 and then that famous aggregation known as Band X, the "World's Largest Non-
i •
i
··You mean they all volunteered for the F'uh F'ry parade?'"
marching Marching Band," will take to the stage at
Lions Park at 7:30 p.m. The big purr-rade takes to the
streets Saturdar at 10:30 a.m.
THOSE F ISH DINNERS, alleged to have been made
so tasty over the years because of a secret recipe for bat·
ter, continue to be one item that seems to have defied in·
flation.
The family-style fish fling is still only $3.50 a plate. It
seems to me it was $3.50 a plate when I was a kid and
gasoline was 18 cents a gallon. And tossed in with the de-
al, you might turn out to be the lucky winner of a new
1981 Ford Escort or a new-fangled color TV set or one of a
bunch of other prizes.
Through all this, it's going to be enormously difficult
to be a sour puss. If you run into one, tell him to hike on
down to Salt Creek Beach and count seagulls. Then you
go ahead to the Fish Fry and have a good time.
IN ANY CASE, there are only two Fish Fry events
where I abslolutely refuse to participate. I refuse to be a
judge in the Miss Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
beau\y contest.
FUrther, I ref use to make a selection in the Best
Baby Contest.
Jn truth, I haven't been asked to judge in either one
but I'm getting my refusal in ahead of time just in case.
AS A J UDGE in those contests, you have to re·
member that the parents of losers far outnumber the
parents of winners.
When it comes to telling parents who has the best girl
or the best baby, cowardice is the only way out.
See you all around the fish dinner tables, now.
lb STEVE MITCHELL °' .. ...., ...........
La1una Beach City Council
members have rejecte~ a re·
quest by Storer Cable 1V for a
rate Increase, but left the door
open for future consideration
should the firm provide evidence
to support Its request.
•'There-i$ room for a ?'ate In·
crease," sald Mayor Wayne
Bailin at the end of the nearlY,
two-hour hearing. "Butl don't see
the materials provided to back it
up. I'm receptive lo more in·
formatjon from Storer (in the
Cuture) but not based on faith or lr·
relevantstatistics."
The Laguna Niguel based firm
is seeking a rate increase from
$7 .SO to $8.50 per month for Ill
5,300 cable subscribers In
Laguna Beach. It also seek.s a
hike for additional hookups from
$2 to $2.50.
Councilman Howard Dawson
cast the lone dissenting vote.
A parade or speakers gave
council members a variety of rea·
-sons why they thought a rate
increase is lnappropriate.
A major concern expressed by
some hilltop residents was the
unavailability of cable service to
homes in Temple Hills, Top or
the World and Arch Beach
Heights.
Cable manager Renee Collins
said It would take about 15 miles
or cable to provide service to the
entire town.
She then offered a com·
promise that would see cable In·
stalled throughout the city in ex·
change for a partial rate in·
crease now, with the remainder
due when the cable is in.
But council members said
they'd like to see results before
approving any rate increase.
Mesa grants
$10,000 to
SCR theater
South Coast Repertory Theater
bas been granted $10,000 by the Cl·
ty of Costa Mesa -no strings at·
tached.
Co uncilwoman Norma
Hertzog's suggestion at the City
Council meeting earlier this week
that the theater stage a produc·
lion for officials of Orange County
governments as a Costa Mesa
promotion failed to receive sup-
port from the other four council
members.
But Donald Smallwood,
theater board president, indicat-
ed his organization would "con·
tinue" to cooper ate "to its
fullest" with the city in the com·
ing year.
He asked that the condition
not be levied but indicated such
a promotional activity might be
staged.
Councilwoman Hertzog, who
also is president of the Orange
County League of Cities, was In·
strumental in locating the ·
theater in Costa Mesa ,
Smallwood said.
Smallwood told the council
that the theater group, housed in
Costa Mesa's Town Center com-
plex, is in its third successful
season. The theater group's budget
deficit, be said, is about 25 per-
cent while other similar
groups are operating with
shortages up to 40 percent.
Condo plan restudied
'Pevelopers eye 'possible revision' of South Laguna project
I Plans for development of a
'to -story time·share con·
dominium project on the site of
the existing Treasure Island
1moblle home park in South
Laguna were officially sent back
'to the drawtng board today. 1 At the request of developers
Bernard Syfan and Merrill
JohnlOD, the board referred the
matter to the county Environ·
mental ManHernent Agency for
further study-and "possible re·
vision."
The developers last week an·
nounced their jntention to
withdraw the plan to build up to
SOO units on the seaside property
after Supervisor Thomas Riley, whos~ district includes South
Laguna1 warned that he m11ht
seek a aecrease in the number of
permitted units.
The developer sald that even
ish fry begins
Fiday in Mesa
at 500 units, the project would
not be economically feasible.
The supervisors• action -in
the words of one ~ounty official
-gives the developers "an out"
because the proposal was not de-
nied outright.
By sending the matter to the
EM A for further study, a new
proposal could be prepared and
later submitted to the county
Planning Commission and
Board of Supervisors Cot con-
sideration, he explained.
The proposed development
drew atrona crlt1ci1m from resl-
dentJ of the trailer park and
South La1una civlc leaden.
They warned that removal of the
ttailer rark would reduce the
stock o affordable boU1in1 in
the area,
Riley bimaelf warned ot the
project 1etttn1 a precedent for a
"Miami Beach syndrome."
Tbe iupemaor aald be bact ln·
terjected Id• offlce into tbe plan·
nlns of the project more than he
would usually becauae of the
numerous conntcta the develop-
ment Plam poled.
I
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(7U)IM4HO He aaid .tt wa a "t•xtaioOk caM" t:A U.. competlril d...,.. .___.,....,... __ _.,,....,,_,,_.,.~~,,,,....,-------------------~-----~-----
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thuraday, June 4, 1981 ••
Tt:MBLE•EED8
t• NEXT WE:EK'S OOR JIG Af.A81"!
1
1 EXPECT eYE:RY HU~ 1D RIPE: .--4T"...._. __ 001' ANP SLJPPL-Y
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WHA1Wf; IVEEP
fCR 11!
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COoKIE5
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MOH~IN&-<Wf!ftA MO'TIP FOR COCKlM.
WKINS 15 NOT .u!Yl
''Grandma won't let go of the doHor till YOAJ soy, "Comt on, George. Jutt bec1uae I btat you one llttlt
'Thank yOAJ.'" g1me?" ~~ ... ME~ lO~~)tl'J~.
~ARMADl:IKE by Brad Anderson DEN~IS THE MENACE
& ,~,,
w '~
.~~~
t ·.+ ~~
"He was supposed to baby-sit for a
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MOON M(;LLINS
Nor
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.JUST THE: BEER .
by Ernie Bushmiller
MY WISH FOR THEY'RE PAYING ME A DOLLAR TO
WHATARE YOU
DOING, SLUGGOf'
MONEY CLEAN THE JUNK OUT OF HERE.
DRJ\BBLE
'4i1.1.o? o.t, "' J\J(N! l4oW AU.
1'1l1N(,S ~ 'GIE.
~1ll.,10MI"'"'?
DR.SMOCK
Fl~ALLY
CAME
TRUE
I OON''f' ttbA> ~A1'
AAVUtltO, 111e.MV'I, 601' 'f~
t·eo·m~itMO. MDftMAN
OAA&W., ~ JO~'f' 1'AU~
H!! SAIP He WAS WHO!! 69!!1 "f"HA,.-HAP -ro ee A PRACT"I CAt.-vOK!!~,
K IPC'O •••
IM't"O~
~~
«ooM tH ~~l
by Tom Batiuk
Wft> CL.AiMED lWtT 1HE PERSON ~ ~ .StW)KI~ I~ 1ME. ~lkOOM WA5
I ~<.> AC~ 1HAf HE AMO ~RefawlS
1 tW) CREATED IN l ' -me SIOL.OG'J L.AB !
l
i
w twttc.£t&£i' «oorie1t
'" A WMUU~A~ ?l\ o.-, t~~AtJ~ WMA'f
All)~'-''-1\l1tllr lOUU" AA"
r-----. MffEME:P?~
we HAVE! NO POC,.-0~ WON~
ON OU ... S"f"'AFF' !
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
Orange Coaat DAILY PIL.OTIThunda~. June 4, 1981
By HM ""11 °' ............ Tbe world p......ien ot a new IPY•~l'Y, the
Oran1e County premiere of a muaical comedy aid
ti.le revival of a IOQ&·•baent drama compriae tie
varied theatrlcal menu belnl unveiled at local
community playhoules Ulla we.tad, all ralllaa
thelr cu.rtalnl Friday nt1bt.
Goln1 on the boards for the lint time
anywhere ls Jack Sharkey'• "Par for the Corp6e"
at the Irvine Community Theater. The Cotta Kesa
Civic Playhouse is offertna the musical
"Redhead." And the
Quntlngton Beach-------
.Playhouse bu "The INTl'DlllSSIQN Heiress" movin1 in for a UUftl
six-weekend stay. --------"Par for the Corpse"
ia the El 'l'oro playwright'• version of the A1atba
Chri1tie-type whodunit in which murder strikes an
isolated gathering. K.T. Cablll, Billye Wallace and
John GreensJade play the leadin& roles lo the
Irvine production.
Othen in the cast are Myrna Ryan, Paul
Pizarek, Jo Scott, Art Win.slow, Carol-Jo Max,
Tanya Tatum and Wil Thompson. Performances
will be given Fridays and Saturdays at 8, Sundays
at 2 throuah June 21 at the Turtle Rock Communi· tY Park clubhouse, on SuMyhlll Road off Turtle
Rock Drive in Irvine. Tickets will be available at
the door.
"Redhead" also ls a mystery, although of the
musical variety. Patti Tambellini is directing the
show, wblcb features Jennifer Odekirk, Richard
Paul Moore and Gilmore Rizzo beading a 25·
member cast. .
Bryan Beavers Is musical director and Susan
Walsh is choreographer for the musical, which will
be staged Fridays and Saturdays at 8: 30 through
June Z1 at the playhouse, on the Oranae County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Call 754·5159 for re·
serv atio'ns.
Merri Gerrish Is "The Heiress" and Michael
Poliahfilm wUu big aamrd
CANNES, France (AP> -''Man of Iron," a
Polish film inspired by the workers' uprising last
summer that brought sweepin1 changes in
Poland's ~mmunlst society, has won top honors at
the 1981 Cannes Film Festival. The movie, directed by Andnej Wajda, was a
surprise entry in Europe's most prestigious movie
competition.
MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLI
llleOl!f9C_ OI,,. ...... 11 IO...., ,,.,_ .............. . ....... _,.,,,_.,,,,,..._
~ AU AGcl AOWTTIO
~ 0.-..A-
lniil AU AGO ADMITTID ~,._.ca.._....,_.
AU. Ill fD Nt0 llJ FOl6 lllCEIVt
n1£ llAL OF TME MOTION PlcTUN
CODE OF SELF MGUV.T'°"
BREAKER MORANT ,......,,.,..
ATLANTIC cm -'*
r.-Dl!CLINE
Of ....... c:fvth.edoft , ........ .
Carter U.. fortune bu.oter at the KWlUnatoa Beach
PlaybOUM, where director Pbll de Barroe 11 teviv·
Ina tbe noted drama. Othen tn the cut are
Rlcbard Drake, Carol Ba11ett, Barbara
Warburton, Kartn Mallicoat, Del!a Roae, Roy
Mooaa ud Bettle Muellenberc.
Performances will be 1tven Fridays and
Saturday• at 1:30 throu1h Jwy 11 at the pla1bouae,
ln the Seacllff VWace Center on Main Street at
Yorktown Avenue in Kunttnatoo Beaclt. Reserva-Uona 8'7-4485.
Three local productiona rtn1 down their cur·
tains this weekend. They are:
-"Cbevallere" at South Coast Repertory's
Second Stage, ~ Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa
(957-t033), playinc toni1bt tbroutb SWlday at 8:30
with matinees at 3 Saturday and Sunday.
-"Shenandoah" at Ule Laauna Moulton
Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laauna
Beach (494-0743), running tonilhl tbroutb Satur· day at8 p.m.
-"Good News" at Golden West College, off
Gothard Street north of Edin1er Avenue Hunt·
ington Beach (894·9885), playtna Friday and Satur·
day at 8:30 lo the main tbeater.
Another half dozen shows remain on the
. boards. They are:
-"Anything Goes" at South Coast
Repertory's malnatage, 655 N. Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa (957-4033), playing ni1htly except Mon·
days through July 5 at 8 o'clock with 2:30
matinees on Saturdays and Sundays.
-"The Max Factor," a new comedy with
Cesar Romero, at Sebastian's Weal Dinner
Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente (412·9950)
playing nightly except Mondays at varytn1 curtain
times through June 14.
-"The Wiz," the black musical version of
'"The Wizard of Oz," settling in for the aummer at
the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor
Blvd., Santa Ana (979·5511), with varyln1 curtain
times nightly except Mondays.
-"The Hot L Baltimore" at the Newport
Theater Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport
Beach (675--3143), running Fridays a.nd Saturday•
.at 8, Sundays at 2, through June 21,
-"Story Theater" at the Newport Harbor Ac·
tors Theater, 390 Monte Vista Ave., Costa Mesa
(631-5110), on stage Thursdays through Saturdays
al 8 through June 13.
-"Wait Until Dark" at the Saddleback Valley
Community Theater, 2574l·C Obrero, Mission Vie·
jo (495-6559), playing Fridays and Saturdays (and
tonight) at 8 through June 13.
A UNIVERSAL
PICTURE
C.11142-5171.
Put • few words
to work for you.
W'1 Happ1nill9 at
Hwat~Cetlhr
Celebrating this week
with the Great Mall
Remodeling Sale!
The Prime Mo"*lta Tim• ELVIS IPGI 1:30 3:40 8:00 1:10 10:20
John Boormen'•
ECICA' •• (Al SHOWS AT
1:00 4:007:001:415
•• •.J~•1•,. .... I 4'it 4•f lJ' •• _. •';,I , ..
John Greenalade, K.T . Cahill and Wil ThomplOf'I (from ~ft) are aghtut at the latert mo aerie• of
murders m the world pr~e of " Par for the Corpae," opening Friday at the Irvine Community ·
Theater.
HIGH R11K (IU
-Pt11,ll'I' .. ,. _____ _
.a:.:=:.:-~-'TIL ,,. ... .,,,., ~ ""'-"'
____ .. ___ _
THI LaOIHO OI'
THE LONI RANGD CPQ) -80flDIJU.I• «N•
"T'Htl 11
11.YIS'' ..
.. LION 0'THE
DE§AT"INI __ ,..._
--..-.... -· "THI -.... "COAL MINER'S
• ...'.i..1 ~. --
edwa rds CINEMA Vil JO ... ,· .. ·:·~-: .. · .. 8306990
"LACAOEAUX
FOLLEI PART 2" -''ftU"
"'POPEYE"' PU114"1 .. AIRPLANE ..
''HIGH ......
P:M.MI.-
"DEATH HUNT" ........
''MAW\' 8'DAY .
'""'818
11.~.J::>
Mt,ertt
"TAKlTHll
J08ANO 1HOVE1r;...
l
l I i I I
I I
J
.. .. ..
·-
;; .
--111.:..-:...
WoMlt WOllWI ,...... .. ......... ....... ,_ ..... ~'°
~ .. "°"" ol ...... ktnd~MW!gln19111
tJoM ~ .... .,.,, 2)
I TIOTAO--
flrA•a•M
Mawk_,e and Trapper .,.,.,. '°' ..........
Ind bvt mudM..cled -II*'°' .. ......, !Mn. eeoooTlllm
J.J . ~ that ....
Im:; *" Man ~ Include,,,,...._,,
• T'OMOMOWI
~y
A ~ .. oomputer-eldad
-...i Ind~
blaf1111tl-*andlfleall0-
matton I ptoducltMty oon-
t~ Dr. W.. .._
of SAi 111• 1lltiol111 oom-_.. on tM lmllllllonl of
lllldltlollll ~ of -entlftc~. l:IOl.E°L-
W&OOl;m Ma(,
KOTTM
Gelle end Jule t811• tM
MWtlOrn twln9 hofM odt
to find ~ wlltl ~.,.... (P.t
~....Vtll.L
Benny Mtlrtnl • flll'ft com-
pany callff "Ctteapo
Alma."
I KmT•tHIAT ITIDO-"Unloyclaa" The It. ...
an'a 8dlOOI ~ Drtl
T_,, In ~. ONo
.,.._ Z""'_.. on
un6qdae. (A) i ::..,-.UR
Alh .,,_ ~ for a
CHAtlll USTlllCS
8 KNXT 1CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
I KTLA (Ind I LOS Angeles
KABC· TV (ABCI Los Angeles
(I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego e KHJ-TV (Ind I Los Angeles l1J KCST (ABC) San Diego
I KTTV (Ind I Los Angeles
KCOP· TV (Ind I Los Angeles
KCET· TV (PBS) Los A"geles e KOCE· TV (PBS! Huntington Beach
'2 on Town'
local hit show
BylEUYaUCK
APT......_~
LOS ANGELE! -At neon Steve nd Melody
do a stand-up in h'ont of U.. Beverly Cater. AD
hour later, they're amon1 the flowers at WaWet
Park.
SWI later, they're on u.e ltllCe of the llu-
quers Club, an ancient an4 an.a. ILaalout Iv. ae·
tors in Hollywood, wllicl they delerit.9 u "•
sanctuary for old proe and neweeaen alAe."
Then, it's on to a pluc for \kw upco111in1 show
taped in Hoeg Kona.
You never know where you're ~ to ft.ad
Steve Edwarda and Melody Roten. 'tbei may be
interviewint The Who, watc.ldq ticket eealpen at
work, takin& a tour ol bisarre Hal.lJ'11NOd. •bonbll
the Glma in Tokyo, or bein& 1topped II,' th
military in Nortb~rn Ireland.
As bostl of "2 oe tbe Town," they are Southern
California's moat &ad-about ceuple. Not oeJ:y are
they all over town, but all over the state -and all
over the world.
"2 on the Town" ii an OB-IM•tioa m.,...U..
a bow sbowu five Diallta a week~ K1CXT. ChMmel
2, the CBS-owned television 1Ultlon ta Loi An1etet.
It's the moat .,o,War local allow iD the ?:JO
p .m . pl'lme-tlme accen preriod la S..tJteMl
California -at the top of Ute nbp lea th• two
monthl after it was intndueed IMt Sts*mt..r.
The shows are not just illter'ddq and in-
formative. but doWDript entertailntq. Mwar'dl
and MW Ropra aN •neallnt ... more lm.-r· tant, booelt. They never hlM tbeW fellqa.
Edwards wu repa.IMll. for bllUDce, br t1Mt
bloody spectacle of • b~ iD llesiee. 1tiM
Rosen criqed at the atpt ol • st.fled ba1t1
elephant in a Tokyo disco. Both turaed ., tMtr
noses at buffalo bur&era ln Catallu, ad their ea·
did remarb while aboard the q..., IWuMMI II
promoted Britilb Airw~ to ctil-llMte ~ te
ride tbe Ccmconte t. Loo .
,,.. show has taktD u.e rullt'/ w.N• of
"8() Millu&elH ..... "JO.JO., and 9'aled lt ~ te 8
pleuinl ...a of ai&pu Md 1GU8111, .,..........,
oddlU• and .icartoua Ylalta to ..Ue forelp
local•.
''It prwee )'Git n:e Ma '-al llilow •••••M-ly ln a i.se mUMt," IQa LuTr ,,11•5. P.
eram .,...of &.NXT. ,._•ell"• l11lrl• •.., its ..... .,.,. ta ................. .
mllUea-ck>Uar commitment iD ..-P•••t an• penonnel to "2 OD tbe Towa" WM l1aQ at beet,
but it paid otf wttldn two IDGGdll.
"U I b8d to pkk .. ward fw die lllow tt
would be blformatloilal.'' ,.,. ....U•• dlneW
Joel Tator. ''It's .. MWI, 9d lt'1 ~ Mt atrtctb' ............................. .....
llll)1.ldns .. ,.. b7 to bdoril ... •UclWiDee -tbinp tbeJ maJ net know abolt."
Bdwardl N'JI, ••wut .. •ii eemmmleate . ... .... "'* .... ai-........... UY•
eome --tllill'aiDuM --:u • MWMlllt atoritl .... ~ ... an "'7.'I .a..._ ...
h19J, -......... ,.. ... ...... ................. .,.~ . ..,-• ....
DAtUN." Ta&erta11 .......... ._,,,_111118•
te ...... i;·-:~' I .i1olo It 11111 ,.... .... " ............ ....
....... Allaf_,.., ......... , dfl, Me .... flftlli ~II• .. ,_
........ lllM;'N ..,..., • ..,
Stwe Edwardl
~~ ...... ..
'J st0116o ........ . • fllCWll **" .... Up ,... Down ........ (*1) ~
OIMM.-. ......... ,. ,.,.. ...... ...,...
toe. In a ...... '°"°°' Ind .. ...., .. ~ ..................... ..,..._ ·--"°"' ...... C...*-
prw .... W'lfl tor .. .._01111..,..,..._IDob .. .......... -~ ........ .,...,~,,...
;-::::., aiWTMOO Ol1
GL,.,,..
...... f'IOlll .. ............
HllWy ............ lll'"Y.
.......... IN!llnhlt ,........,
ecw..MJllllSTT '
MD ....
OU.:TIM~. ·-........ "°Is hart end Gane
..... nwi.w "luetJn'
~ ... .,,. .. S."end . .,,.~ ........... ·-"°"' Hoddlng caiw. '°""" . .,,_~-..
S... Oap•ti••ll. loob • ._ .... tfle .... OM-
--II_...,~.,,_ oo-aoa. ... (I) 9CNOT8~
Gefy II unab111 to~ wletl .......... fOOd fotlUM
lftd ~·on• drtnk-
-~A)' *** "AlinDow'' (1871) Niche McArdle. Piper
l.airle. The lmmottlll Judy
Gartlnd'• ~ ... Ind
"""'" '°' -.. cir• •'l•d (A),
• 111 UIMY -.&..11' ,.,,, ..,_In ... ~
l'OOlft .... tM lnternel
~--elMRll~ .......... ef .... rue..
~ • .-v ......
G.-ta: Ot90n w ......
Robert ...,..., L.-cy J. cw.
'°"· ---oo.ro. • aouNDSTAM
"L.-cy J. Diilon WW; Con
~· -~ ............ Roger Ebert Ind Gane
8'111 .. rw'9w "au.tin'
~:· ''Tiiie 11 EMI" lftd
"The Four a.eon.."
t:IO e 111 TAJCI
Jim retuma home IO ,_
,. ~ ... dell tot the
tint tlrM rlnoe N dropped
out of eod9ty In tM •eo. .
(~J
• .. llNCAN INDIAN
M11ITI
Senta o.ra potter9 a.-
~ ,,._. Md her
~ Joaepll L..OMWOlf
--~-a.y end moldlng Ind llr1ng
ltlelr poMry. (A)
tOJllO 11 •• NIWI •110
n.-OLD~
Bob VIie lnlpectt the ~
~IWdwoOd ....
....,_ In .... Mm end
tall.a .......,. on • t-°'
the fKtory ...... " -...... -1-NI &IDerT
NnWOM-
lecaliBed for the same reuoe. We have ao time
limlta, no location llmita, and we CH take any sub-
jed and ftt it into o.r format."
-----·------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 4, 1981 ••
TUBE TOPPERS
KHJ e 8:00 -"The Tarnished An«ell."
Movie based on a novel by Wtlllam
Faulkner ltarring Rock Hud.IOO, Robert
Stack and Dorothy Malone .
KCOP ,e 8:00 -"Up the Down
Staircase... Sandy Dennis and Eileen
Heckart atar ln a film about a novice
teacher io a ghetto school.
KCET QI 9:00 -"Soundltage: Lacy J .
Dalton and Con Hunley." Country and
blues songs create a down-home even-
ing.
• u.mucwe 1aa UClwtANOna .. ''TN 8'tn ..._ ......
TIWM dlMl*ld Amer1cM1
from .....,.,,. 9CIOliOftllo. •
-"* Md ---.,.._ pandl ..... thllr _...
ttona. oourtlll9 Md llCtNe ....... I OMA,,,,,,.,. ,,. ••<1>111 NIW8 8TMTime
Klrtc trlae to -en lllen ~ from deatruo-
tlon.
I NBWL.VWIDCIAMI M•A•a•H ..._...., c.. AoOer1a
.-.ne to tM 4077ttl to
updld9 Korean W11 oondl-
tlona. (P8't 2)
•....vtll.L
11anny .,._w anoew
~ llllecdl of ''TNfto9
Go Wrong .. "
• DIOKCAWTT au.t: J-Clawll. (Part
1°'2}
11:IO. (I) THE & I C ilONI
Jenny, Mfflto/ "'8l'n.d to
Uonel, goltl the cflal'°8 to
DO to Englllnd tor three
monttw.(A)
• TOMGIHT
~ lloet: ~ LAl1•·
"""' au.tr: e...t ~. Teri Garr, W9lrd Scott. e 111 A8C NIM fDfT\.N 1 ....-aMAaADML
HOGAH'9 HEROU
Hogan'• future aa • ~
l«lf II thrMtened ~ ttM1
rtYlll ~ of two Gennan
~
• INWTTA ··o-ay Nwl/la''
•• CUTlONID A8C
NIWI
-...n-
1l::OO. (I) M..'llfiCll(
A .... ICIUlptur9 ww1'I 13
mlltlon d~ juet
before It.I umelllng end
BllMcell .. glYwl two deyl
IOflnd It.
-~ * *'4 ''Thi Trojen Hcna"
(1M2) 8teYe "--·John
Dr-81trymore. TIM
Qre•k• and TroJ•n•
~ln~bl1·
""'°'~· e 111 etwl.Jl'a
AHGILI
8aobnne. .. end l<ely -
hlr9d to ftnd out who II
ttwetenlng the life of en
epperently timid lab
°*'«.(Ill)
• tMVBICK Aiw Mcomlng ln\IOIYed
with -· doge, ...., rnd Clttle. 8r9t ~ out . .......
• MllfON: ..CHiii.i
The IMF lntercapte a rVtro-
~expert who ..
to blow up a ~t
~-
ta:ao . TOMOMOW
~: beerOell gr ....
Henk Aaron Md Ernie
Benka; the roclt group
8Cllt Enz.
• otm ITIP .voNO
"The O.ltl Welti'' The
daught9r of en Anny Colo-
nel .,_.,..,. her father to
elftd 1 "'"°' on an lndlen -uno exped!Uon.
JOHN DARLING
t•eNWND "•ra••'-'"' WOM.D...,.,.
~Md~
Of ........ *-DllNrlt
ll"'t*lft, lteay H""'· ~ ..-.. ~ ...... ......,. .....
rfllCWll • • ..,,. °'** Gull" j1tM) ~ Ml,w-pfly, ....
ry Aftderl. A ~ II
~w .. -.1,11 .................... ............... ..,_°'
notorloue ~ WllO
~ .,.., '°"'*""" ... taM\. .... ...,.
N1TWOM.-
1:10e MCMI
•• "'..n.te franll"
c , .. , "°" v~ "'°"" lq11• Ven Vooren. A
brrwny country boy
b.comH • big-city
bnlwler. 111 CMO&. ..,.sn AND,_.,.
Slc"r: ''W'°"f Number,"
"Seucley Ntgllt... '1llr
Alclft8l."''V-.untS.....
ftW\." 1:ao• MOYll • ••• ,,. Wfll'' (1111)
AlcMrd Rober, Heny Mor· oan.. P9fty prejudloee ..
....... ~ • bledc dlld
~=1·=~1n ......
l::OO NIW8
MOYll
*~ "Duel At Apedle w•" c111M1..,.. Cooper,
AnM Merill AltMrghettt. A
young man attemc>tr to
prot.ct 1111 ....... rWIOh "°'" the lntNllon of out-...... a:'°. ll)fTONAl.
1:11• MOYll
··~ uo.y ~;Don't UM* ...._, You" (1871)
.,..., L.ewford, H9rry Mor·
gen. OWy .... out to "** down • ltrengler who ha bean tarr01111119 ....
YOf'll. 2:41. MOYll
• • "UncflelMd" ( 1856)
Elfoy Hlr1eh, Barbera
Hale. A group of lnmet•
~llte ln emW-
mum -.tty ptteon '" CHno. CalNomle. .......
• MOYll
• ~ "T wror In The Jungle"
(1NI) AoMr1 Bl#na, f8M\
8"-'. A jungle .-di per·
ty i. organlad to r-=tl •
~ ~ Ctllllh MW\INof
befoN he .. c:aptUNd ~
C8Mlb911. a:a• NIWI • I
... MCMI ... ......,~....,.,..
(1 ........ A.Nlt. .....
0-..Nt~....,
.......... ln ..... 11
.. dllld ........ .....
fl1'nd _, ftlldl ..... .........,.., ...........
••• lllCMI *" ..,.. .__._ Gillf" (1N1) ............
~W....,,A.....,
............ ln•llfl ,.....,... ....... .................. , '"'* .. , .. .,. . ...... '=II MCMI •'4 • .,,. Gitt ,,,_ c...
,.,.,. (18'7) ..... ~.,. D'cna,.
•
-MDRl•tG-
11:00 e •"6 ''Troullla ...._ .. ,,..., eo-y ~ ...
~.After .... 111119•
murder, the ~ ...
trouble loc9llno the deed
body. u:ao• ••• "A TIIMTo
~And A T'"'9 To 069''
(Pett 2) (1Nt) Jofln Gavtn.
Ulo Pulwer. The .,_
and~"' -encourr1•• ro"'enc•
.,_,. of • need '°' CIOf'llC* .,.......,,
-AFTEINOON-
12:00 •••• ~ '"The Big
Country'' (Part 2) ( 18M)
Ql-.gory P9c*, a.ttCfl
Hetton. An Eaaterner
.,_,_ embroled In •
bltW '-Id ~ ...
T-rWldlere -..._ tr':"·~ "S.ernber A,,_ .. (1MO) Jo9r1 ,_
talne, Joaepll Conen. r..
people bellewd _..., In an
lllrplane crl8tl conelder
rtarting .... -fl9aln togMIW.
a:ao ...... ....,. .• oaa..
cat• Condition" (1"3)
J-*i. Gleeaon, Qlynle
Jofww.A-~
....,... with .. 111.-brnd
lifter N lluye a drugsb9
Ind ear-.
by Armstrong " Batluk
.JOH~..L -rH ~ PART ICUL-~ ~E~ OF DO~ IS VER'f
EX,l"E ANO 15 ONL'( OWN D 8'< ""THE CReMe.
..... ~~~~~~ ....
A .JET Sl!TTE'R/
LA ~EME/
Writers sue NBC in theft
of 'Real People' concept
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two writ.en who
claim their idea spawned the televilioo proeram
"Real People'' wan a small victory in their lunuit
against NBC when a Superior Court judge struck
down one line of the network's defeme.
Judie John Cole ruled that tbe network could
not claim that it bad created the program indepen-
denUy and unaware of an idea put forth by Conan
Berkeley and Zane Buzby. Tbejudp made hia rul·
ing apparently based on a tedmicality.
Berkeley and Miss Buzby claimed they ap-
proached NBC with the idea in June 1978. Although
the network never agreed to accept it, tbelr idea
emerged the next year in the form of "Real Peo-
ple," they said. "Real People'' is a reality pro-
gram which delves into the uauaual activities of
everyday people.
NBC said lt will take the "appropriate action
to correct the ruling," said spokesman Gene
W alsb. "The decision relatet to a· procedural
i,ecbnicality that is not concerned with the merita
of the case," he added.
But Berkeley and bis attorney, Brad Raisin,
interpreted the ruling as a decision tbat tbe two
writen created "Real People."
"I'm tbrilled," said Berkeley, 30. "I think it's a
classic case of David and Goliath. It really renews
H COMEDY SENSATION!
. "A WONDERFULLY FUNNY COMEDY
about~ fathers and youthful
seduction. . -Nrncy1011et.u1X'1l•a ~
~ m1ll. -f!"
·~ONE WILD MOMENT -................
our faith that there la justice for two relatively
young, new writers who are tryin1 to get their
work produced in Hollywood."
"Real J>eople" is produced by George Schlat-
ter, the creator and producer of "Lauch-IA."
NEW YORK (AP) -"Bob Hope's Birthday
Party" oo NBC won the week'• ratln11 race, but
CBS listed seven of the 10 bighest-rated procrama
to win the networks' competition, fteures from the
A.C. Nielsen Co. show.
CBS' average rating wu 15.l, compared with
14.3 for ABC abd 13.8 for NBC. Tbe networu aay
that means in an average prime-time minute dur-
ing the week, 15.1 percent of the TV-equipped
homes in the country were watching CBS.
CBS, No. 1 in the recently completed 1980-81
TV season, now has won the three-way race two
weeks running.
The rating for "Bob Hope's Birthday Party"
was 21.3. Nielsen says that means ol all the homes
in the nation with television, 21.3 percent saw at
least part of the program.
Why would fow" pys risk their lives
for a weekend in Colombia?
We can give you 5,000,000 "asons-
al in cash!
Orange Coat DAILY PtLOTJ'Thursday, June 4, 1981
t
.
';A_-, brand new home oa tbe bayfront . a WM tbe Mttlnl fOr tbe debutallte an..-
in, nouncement tea 1lvell by tbe N~rt
h Harbor Auxiliary of the Children 'a
,-ome Society.
'" Mn. James Gray, the hostaa, bad •v•ry
l wt flower lD place for tbe preMDtation of the 22
.Joun1 women who wUI make their debut in
• ·December at the Marriott Hotel.
• 1 Girl• and their mothen were creeled by
Sta. Hup Sutherland, auxilllJ')' prtatdent;
ra. Lloyd Muaey, debutute cbairmJD; and
, ra. Alvin Phillipa, ball chairman.
At 1ueat1 e njoyed tea, pastries and
alrawberries at tables overlootin• the water,
the Clrll were introduced Lndivldually to the
1roup and given a red roae.
Tbe debutantes, whose acholaatlc, com·
piunlty and school activities were llated, also ln·
1troduced thelr moU\ers to guests.
A touch of local history wu noted, because
two motben of debs ( Mra. William Rina and
Linda Irvine Gaede) also bad made a debut.
wlth the Cbildren's Home Society.
11 After the formal presentation, a fashion
•· •bow cl gowns for debs and their mothers was
women to debut
Newport Harbor debutantes honored
HAPPENINGS
a11l1tee1 by Sue Olaon, Mar1aret KredeJ, Pat ,
McClellan, Lorett. Milton, lllen Miller and Pean Stemler.
Mcmey raiied tiy the part1 will be preaented
to the Oranae COunty Pb!lbannoolc Soclety to
help witb youtb proarams and concerts .•
Amona the suettl were Mr. and Mrt. Lloyd
Gre1ory, Mr. and Mra. John Rohrer, llr. and 1 ~
Mra. Richard Nellon, Mr. and Mra. Ernett
Beauchamp, Mr. aod Mrs. Richard Cornell, Mr.
and Mn. C. llor1an Gepfert, Mr. and Mn. 1
'
Heinz Boriacb, Mr. and Mrs. David Snow and . l
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Hubert.
T he Newport Harbor Republlcan
We>men•a Club invited buabanda to din·
!Der at the Balboa Bay Club recently.
The main course was Chicken Kiev,
but deuert wu tbe ever-popular jelly beana for
the loyal GOP.
Speaker for the evening was Bruce
Herscbeliaohn, political commentator for KABC
in Los Angeles.
Alter speaking briefly about cbanaes in aov·
ernment during the past 21 years, be turned the
speech into a spirited question-and-answer
session for the 300 guests.
Ellie Faber, .,resident of the aroup, served
as muter or ceremonies for the proenm, which
included awarding or two scholarships for $1,000
each to Oranae County high acbool seniors. · .eresented by auxiliary members Mmes. Don
1tu11ell, Oared Smith anct John Van Dyke, as
•well as past debs Wendy and Michelle Rude, .-----=:-:'.:".'.7""'"'7"""-:--:--i
i)(ary Blake, Jane Rafael and Carol Ware.
The Dwight D. Eisenhower Scholarships
were awarded this year to John Hassapis from
Westminster High and Michael Nelcber from
Valencia High in Placentia. Thll year's debutantes and their parents ln·
elude Kathryn Asahino, Dr. and Mrs. Steve
'' .lbablno; Monica Becker, Mr. and Mrs. Nick
.Becker; Victoria Collison, Mr. and Mrs. Martin
.. Collison: Bronwyn Davis, Mn. Maralou Ingold
... and Philip Davis; Erin Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
William Davia; Megan Dobrott, Mr. and Mrs.
James Dobrott; Callie Doan, Dr. and Mrs.
Thomas Doan; Paige Dunn, Mr. and Mrs. Max
Dunn; Page Ewing, Mr. and Mrs. Kae Ewing,
Holly FiorinUno, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Fiorin·
lino, and Michelle Foxx, Dr. and Mn. Richard
Foxx.
Others are Diana Gaede, Mn. Linda Irvine
Gaede, Amy Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Johnson; Nancy Patrick, Mr. and Mrs. William
Patrick; Kristi Piper, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Piper; Penny Pizzo, Dr. and Mrs. Albert Pizzo;
Susan Ring, Mr. and Mrs. William Ring; Lynne
Rutter, Mr. and Mrs. J . Edgar Rutter: Kristin
!swedlund, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sw~dlund :
f Kimberly Tarnutzer, Mr. and Mrs. Byron
Tarnutzer; Elizabeth Vance, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
... Vance and Erika Woods, Mr. and Mrs. George
:-:Wood•.
I
T he Irvine Terrace Philharmonic
Group in Corona del Mar held an old·
.. .. fashioned tea dance with a "Spring
Flini" theme.
The sprini flavor was carried out with a
!bandmade patchwork quilt complete with em·
1>roidered pastel flowers, which was the big
j>rlze in the drawing at the end .or the party.
group
(The quilt, made by members, was the de·
sign or Jane Faulkner, who has inspired and made many other quilts· ror the group's
fund-raisers ln the past.)
Pastel balloons and flowers on the tables
completed the spring theme, as the guests en·
joyed hors d'oeuvres and danced to the music of
Jean Tandowsky'• Trio.
Marge Spelleticb, chairman or the group,
introduced a special guest, Carmen Weber, who
bas been chairman of the women's committees
for two years for the Orange County
Philharmonic Society.
Several members honored Mrs. Weber with
a singjng tribute done to the melody or -what
else -Bizet's ''Carmen."
Frances Gibbons was chairman for the par-
ty, held at the Park Newport Spa, and she was
The young men, who attended with their
inotbers, are planning careers in areas of
service lo their country and submitted essays '
and letters or recommendations lo the commit·
tee !or selection.
Lyon Turner is chairman of the
scholarship's board of trustees, and other mem·
bers include William Crosby, John Fernald,
Barbara Stone, Jane Ann Rasmusson and
Deane Watson.
Among the guests at the dinner were Ann
Spencer, president of the Council of Republican
Women, and Charlotte Mousel, vice chairman
of the Southern State Central Com mittee.
Tom and Lorene Anfinson of Irvine found
time to enjoy the dinner, too, although they'll be
moving back lo Washington, D.C. next month.
Mrs. Anfinson ~ former President Richard
Nixon's niece, and her husband will be working
in President Reagan's administration.
R oyal Trojans know football season is
never over, so the Newport Harbor
Alumni Club will host a football banquet
Friday at the South Coast Plaza Hotel.
Jan Young is president of the group, and
Trojan football coach John Robinson will be the
honored guest with USC Athletic Director Dr.
Richard Perry serving a s m aster of
ceremonies.
Tickets are $25 per person, ahd more in·
formation is available by calling Chris Melchior
at 548-8518 or Doug Marshall at 644-9990.
J!hy ·not. check the kids instead of baggage?
-l'Dl DOt sure, but I think I've stumbled onto lflfetbinl that may revolutlclllhe air trHel with
ctd!dren in this country. it1i :ow about carrying your Iu11a1e onto the llDd checking the children through bauage? ·.Now wait a minute! It's not as bad u you
tlilak. There's nothing children love any more than
rudbing around and falling down in a big. area •bfre they cannot hurt themselves, and wbeo they Ide\: to their destination . . . the pieee de resistance
. ·. •. there's an excilin# ride on a conveyor belt tttlt lakes them up a chut.e and slides them down
ontp a revolving carousel. I wouldn't be surprised
if Oisney'a Land and World adapted it as a ride.
Tbe problem is that adults don't really. UD·
del*tand what entertains children. I saw a woman
d a plane one day who looked like a OoaUng ae aale. She carried a huae bag stuffed with a
et1 three furry animall, an inflatable pillow
• di.leased·looklng doll with one eye. : ~1111' handbag bulied with storybook.a, cooties,
~-me with a bell and a Marie Osmond thermoa.
~'
,. OFF DAY·ftMEHF.SSES
0 T·SW&TSA:SWEATEU
(Sa .......... )
CLUTCHE.86CANVASTOTES
Selected Merchandise
(That was when the child was three weeks old. other parts of the airplane. Last week, I saw a toc1!
Within six months, I bad reduced the cargo to one dler with an aitllne meal in front of him. He fiat·
diaper and a pacifier.> lened out one pea at a time and pressed them onto
You don't need a lot to keep a child occupied. bis teeth and then looked into a mirror and smiled.
Their own noses will keep them occupied for . The kid was obviously a genius. For years, I
hours. So will taking apart a seat or removing bad been eating the food .
1•~·=2=-===== ... ~11:&
The kid spent the entire trip kicking the back ~
of the seat and snapping the ashtray open and
shut.
The idea of transporting the home with the
child is a carry-over from the days when families
weren't as· mobile as we are today and our trips
were limited lo cars.
I can remember loading up the playpen, the
portable feeding table, the plastic inflatable fOOl,
the poUy seat, the blankets, change of clothes,
diapers, the plate that ~eld heal, an aaaortmeot of
food, small saucepan, a spinning lop, extra towels,
bottles or formula and a mobile. And that was just
to tide me over for a Sunday dinner at Grandma's.
Go Bass or
Go Barefoot
~s w"h tM ~rfect ~•"'8 httl. ,,_from Biss
Lntt>et Ofcool anvas ~ ~ lflM'f soles."' )'OtK '"°"" spnns colots Mid fa5htomble bn&h''·
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... .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June•. 1981
IN THE EVE~T
OF FIRE.
8REAK G-LASS
Reaga11 palate
'adt'entztrous'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The man who recom·
mends wines for state dinners at the White House
says President Reagan has "an adventurous
palate."
Dave Berkley, 37, specialist for the Corti Bros.
gourmet and wine stores, gives his tips to Michael
De:iver, who is Reagan's deputy chief of staff.
Berkley said that his unofficial and unpaid
connection with a president interested in wines
"gives me the opportunity lo display some of the
finest wines ln the world" -American vintages.
It all began when Oeaver, who consulted
Berkley regularly when Reagan was governor,
telephoned to determine which wine lo serve with
lobster in Belle-Vue sauce remoulade on Reagan's
10th birthday. ··
For that, Berkley received a copy of the birth·
day menu on which Reagan had written, "Thank
you for the great wine selection."
Berkley in turn picked a gift he hopes lo pre·
sent to Reagan this summer during a meeting with
White House chefs: A bottle of Sandeman Port da~ed 1911, the year Reagan was born.
Blind 1niile falls
into nearby pool
EAST HAMPTON , N.Y. (AP) -Wanted: one
seeing eye dog, for a mule.
A man in this wealthy Long Island resort was
startled one mornint recently when be looked out-
side and aaw a mule in bis pool.
Police dispatched to the man's home found be
was right. A blind mule bad wandered from a
neithbor's property and stumbled into the water.
Tbe mule, wbicb was not injured, wu pulled
from the pool and escorted home.
RILL Y ASSUMAILE
• IMTUEST OML Y
.2nd TRUST DEEDS
OWNER/NON0'"8 OCCUPIED ·
Call William B. Mitchell
C.11 lod•Y for quote • No ObhgatlOl'I Irons na1lonol funding
Irons notional funding f114l 975-1128 ~:=~l
If the old
heater can't get
any hotter
Time for new one? Energy-saving gas water
heater with glass-llned tank, and
temperature ahut-off. 30 gallon.
95
40 gallon ••••••.•••...•.•••••.••• 124.95
SO gallon ........................ 184.95
I
' I
boolee ClllYll beach chain
shear cutting lblllty
Flakare lightweight ecla-
aora are crafted to atay
aharper longer. Reg. 12.ee .
.... 111, ll'mOI' Ill
for cl11n and luatroua
• plutlc, rubber & vlnyla,
treat them to Armor-All. 8 oz. Reg. 3.49
a•1
..... Ille-' F1mou1 l1tex flet Wiii pelnt from Glidden.
BMuttful flet flnllh. Scrubt
ctMn 1nd mys ook>rfMt.
Ealy Wiiler cleen•UP. Reg.
11.49
MOl'9 comfort than fN« on the beech or
pool deck. Blue eanvu on 1
folding 1lumlnum fr1me. 911 Quick-drying 1tyle. Reg.
14.95
high 1p11d *"' set Muter Mechanic high apeed drill Mt la
Juat whit ever home
mech1nlo needa. Premium,
prectalon meet.. 13 pieces.
Reg. 11.99
kick bacll In comfort
Multl-poaltlon ban1na
chairs made of strong. 7•• comfortable vinyl strapping
over ateel frame. Reg. 14.95
Black & Decker ~ v1rl1ble speed drill
la double lnaulated and t>orn-out protected. Idell
for home or workshop
UM. #7127. Reg. 24.95
•
. ....
. . .
:·
up against the will-paper ·
AalOrted color• and patt«ns of WtlllpaP9f
for decorating any
room In the house. 3 o OYt Improve your In-0
terlora now. Off,.
..delex,. _.. .. deluxe"
for rour kitchen
""
o.lex faucet by Delt1 With w1ter-11vlng
design. Gleaming ftnlah 1818 for a be1ullful kltchsn
alnk. 12102. Reg. 26.85
1
Leo1~ake the initiative! • ..
Did ANN: Lut wtM W ...._lid
came pba11ed IDd air laUlbudi' • ,.. \trtd Dlumbert.IOt out b1I pl .... 1 .UICI ~m If lt WU uae Hmt •• M UMd bl tM ~ltt. Ht uawtred "Of count!" "Wtll,"
t
11ld, ''kHP that lb.t.D1 out ot my 11Dk."
t had 1 bll row.
,,...,,, ... ,,.,
lrlYDNIYO~ll a10 I ,. prtjUDt. TM bllllJ'• fa&Mr .S. ttlleat teobalotu, but 11&1 Qil*t ti tbt
nltd tvtrYUil11, wtat aroud t11ll11 pttl -ad tM mu doela't uvt a olu. AllU <March ll·Aprll 111: Chartema ta
1tort• aboUt mt (1mall town) ucl midi Tbt towel tha' be Ultl ll ftltQ. I'm 1urt hilhllshttd. Peopleaomment onyour"wtn· mt out to bt a tramp. be ua• the 11mt ou lor m1n1 patieeta. l -11 .. v 'll t I ralMd my dau1bter .aou ucl did a Now I am wondertq -aboUt bll lutru· :n? /:t":rrooi.tX· ln 0~~., ~:~ •,:t,~!J11::
1ood Job. Now, 11/tan law, tht 1\11 who mtatl. How clean an Uler' a. really la a proetu. Chan1• of 1ctnery 11 on 11end1
crn tlvlty, fulfillment, tmtUonal C rt1pon111, pront or dMdtndl ,,.. bull· :
nHI tnltrpi11t, IUCCtllM cont..ta-IDd :
lovt . Leo, Aqu1rh11 and •not.her Ubra •
tt1urt0romlntnU1. Popularttylncreutt. S
ICOIPIO <Oct. U·Nov. 11>: You rlat • above petty annoyance•-and pol!Uct. Ac· : ctnt on promotion, prt1t111, rtplltatlon ind :
honor. Hunch pay1 ort -lntultlon 11 lharply :
honed. You 1ain greater eenae ot cllrect.lbn. :
I
He s thtre t1 not 1 plumbtr tn tbt
orld ~ would carry aeparatt plun11ra
11111111
faUltNd tbl cbil bu rtturud to claim ttnt perlOll, but tf bt dota't 1b1pe up I'll andprove1btneftclal. "bl• daqbttr." bav1 to ftnd anotbtr dentllt. 1 hope f CID TAURUS (Apr1120-lrhy 20>: Study Aries Family member proposes valid ~oocept ~
conceroinl finances :
SAGITTARIUS <Nov . 22·Dec. ;p::
Travel. commuoJcation, aplrlluld lmlaftt.a t and abstract principles of law dominate •
She tblft.ka be la Just 1reat and can't UD· reach him throuth you. Pltue print this. messa1e for valuable hint. Open dlalo1ue
derstand why I am upset by b1I sudden re--L .A. THANKS with family member concernina 10vest· appearance. In aU these years be bas Dear L.A.: If tile ata&emeat.t Y• laave menu, safety and lasues of basic and never given me a dime for her support. made are true. &be ma• e4Mlld be a meaace mutual concern. Gemini, Virgo, Saalt·
Next fall she will be •oin" to colle"e. I to th ..._ I" .. ot .... I 8 all tarlus persona 0&1U'• in "provocative.. " • • • e _,a ... ..... pat eata. 1 mea .. 1 scenario. ,
have worked and saved to send her. tell him exactly wla•t yoe la.ave &ojd me. GEMINI (May 21 .. June 20> RelaU ves, :
I have never said one criUuJ word to Implore you DO& te be afraid of oftndla1 nel1hbors and visitors dominate "busy" HOROSCOPE : this tlrl about her father. So now, because him. A Joi more la bavolved daaa lalJ feel· scenario. Trips. calls. ideas. special i
I be talc:a her to nice plaeea for dinner, she ta1s. messages are featured Important .. thinks _M ls wo11der!ul. The~ ii trylnl domeatl<!' adfustment Is hi&hlighted scenaHo. You become more aware of bddy :
rbr slnks and toilets, so the thlnfS 10 trom to act as if I deprived him of hil dautbter, DEAR ANN LANDERS: Is it proper for Taurus. Libra. Scorpio natives fi gure image exercise, diet and nutrillon C(jm-!
(ine family's nusb to the next family's when the truth ls that be reJected her. How a widow to continue to use her deceased prominenUy. Moneysurprisedue! mand attention. ~nk . Doesn't. it make-you a UtUe sick? It can I make her understand? _ BROKEN-husband's first name, such as Mrs. John CANCER <June 21-July 22! · Get hmt CAPRICORN <Dec 22 Jan. 19). Neg~; RTED ORCEST Doe? Or s hould she use Mrs. Nary Doe? rrom Gemini message. Spotlight on ordetailacould causedelay,auraof~ef•at.: id me. b HEA IN W ER, MASS. Slfn me -A QUESTIONER FROM possessions, valuables. income potential Know it, check basic requirements and.re·~
I went downtown and boug t my own Dear Ma•.: Maay womea uare )'Ml ABILENE. TEX. Terms are clarified; aura or deception is move safety hazards. Emphasis on hidden :
plunger and cleaned my kitchen sink drain dilemma, aM 1t•1 a •·n tltaatlea. My Dear Ab: Mrs. Jolla Doe ls eorred. A erased. You obtain information concerning ractors. finances of one close to you and ~ dut myself. advice It cool I&. AaJUl.lml YCMI H)' will be creditratings. abllltytodlgbeneathsurfatemdicatlons. ~ Do you think this ls common practice viewed u soar gapes. To eKerelae nck lood way to remember: A huband may LEO <July 23·Aug. 22>: Power play AQUARIUS <Jan 20 Feb. 18>; Gi ve full ~
i mong plumbers or are we really ignorant coatrol la extremely dUflcalt bat tt•1 tile PHI OD but hJI widow geu to keep bis you're in driver·s seat ' Emphasis on In-reintolnt.ellectualcuriosity.Askquesti<Sls • up here in Maine? _ A LADY WHO only way to so. aame forever. ilialive, production and the making, of especially an connection with contratls: : NEEDS TO KNOW Yoa 4-'t mentloa tile PY'• flauelal money and love. Taurus. Virgo, Capricorn subtle legal nuances and methods of pre·•
• Dear Lady: I checked tbree Clllca10 status. Maybe he'd like to eome ap wttJt What'• prvdWa? What'• O.K.? I/ JIOU crm't natlvesplay lmportantrole~ Judament,in sentln1 ideas. products. Gemini, Virgo. ·
ld W lite ba·... tuition ring bell of accuracy Sagittarius persons figure in scenario. 1 ~ ehtmben. AU three .. I .. e ue some ~ Hppon meaey and lead Ill• sure, "°" n«d tome Mlp. rt·· oooilable m tM VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22! Events occur PISCES (Feb 19-March 20): Family ~
l\ame plungers for whatever needs the Job dausbter to college. Wlay llOt uk laJm -ID booklet: "Necking and Petting -What Are tM which.serve to build confidence and release member may utilize health as lever ror con· ~
"one." n.e last one added, "And I c1oa•t private, ol coarse. H lie w..U to be ta oe Limit•?" Moil JIOUT re~1t to Ann 1Ander1, fears, doubts. More attention is pu1d to your cessions Emphasis on basic services. ~ts. ~
4fven rime mine off!' Have a 1ood day, the divvy be ought to be la OD tbe belt&. P.O. Bo:c 11995, Chicago, IU. 60611, mclodng SO views, desires and financial reqwre dependents and employment prospects 'Be •
folks. DEAR ·ANN LANDERS: I'm writing cmt1 and c Ieng , .tamped, aelf-addre"" m· ments. Anes, Leo, Libra persons play 1m diplomatic. but refuse to be gulled. halled. \
, DEAR ANN LANDERS: Eighteen years because I feel I must. My dentist ls an ex-velope. por tantroles. Project will be completed ' chided or ca1oled mto decision you know 1s . ~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.-L.. LIBRA <Sept 23-0ct. 22_1_·_F_o_c_u~~o_n~_no_t_w_1~_e_·~~-•
... Here's a T Stra p
Sanda l for summer with
the "Look You Will love"
White Calf.
~ t~~ SHOES
99 Fashion Island ... Newport Beach ... 759-9551
MORE ·
PFALTZGRAFF
FOR LESS.
ETCHED GLASS
DRINKWARE
Witer Goblet, 10 oz.
Wine Goblet, 8 oz.
~= $3.25 lt1I
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on
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STONEWARE
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• -..
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I"m GRADUATION SALE !'!
STORES i
ANGELS FUGHT SLACKS .
Casual btlted QdOl'd and f'lannel slacks In a varlet\ of
colors make a great gill lor the grad! Wal51s 2&36
Regularly $28.00. Now only $22.40
STUDENTS' CORD BLAZERS Mt young man \MU look his "Sooday ~"In
lhls wlde-v.ele corduroy blaztf by Le\.4's
T radlflons. Astorted colors. sludenl sizes 16· 20
Rcgullrly $50. Now only S40.
LOREN SCOTT SPORTSHlRTS
Select from a wide 111rleiy of plaid sportshlrts In on
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Now only $14.40
S.# PT:lces goOJ_ lhiu 6/7 M.lltk suPP<ies /8SJ.
.. :
u: 41 SC :s:•u •
D1ily Pilat
THURSDAY, JUNE~, 1911
..
BUSINESS cs
Fluor Co. shatters
income records . . . CS
Atlgel win is fun, efubarrassing
~ . . ...
TORONTO (AP> -The Antell' bat-
ters, perhaps inspirM by the work of
their pitchers the last two days, decided
to t{lke matters lnto their own \hands
Wednesday nl1ht.
The Angels, held to three sln1les over
the opening four innines, went on a 16·
hit rampage for the remainder of t}le
game en 11>\lte to a 17·6 victory over the
Toronto Blue Jays for a sweep of the
three-1ame American Learue baseball
series. The Angels had recorded two 3-0
shutouts ln the opening two games of
the series.
lected three hits and Brian Downing
added a three-run home run.
Naturally, there were two schools of
thou1ht on the nllhl's proceedings.
"How many runs did we get In the
other five games, 14? .. asked Ang•l
manager Gene Mauch who la 4-2 since
replacing Jim Fregosi. "Well this ls a
heck of a lot more fun for them!'
In the Toronto dresslne room,
maoager Bobby Mattlck blasted hls
club, calling them semi-pro players.
~eadlng the onslaught a1ainst five
Toronto pitchers was shoryt.op Rlck
Burteson who went 5-for-5 with three
runs batted in on four singles, a double
and a sacrifice fly. Dan Ford chipped in
with three hits and four RBis while
Butch Hobson and Rod Carew each col-
.. It was just a terrible exhibition o"
baseball,'' he sald. "It better be embar-
rasslnR for the players too.
''It was the worst game I've ever
been associated with either this year or
last year. It's one thlng not to htt but It's
another when you screw things up all
the time.
CdM doubles over
Miraleste dethrones CIF tennis champs
By ROGER CARLSON
Of .... Dell' ,.... , .. "
TORRANCE -Corona del Mar High's Sea
Kings have made a living in the tennis playoffs
with a powerful doubles attack during the past six
years as they swept to one CIF 4-A title after
another -and Antony Emerson and Jamie Paul
combined for a typical CdM effort in that area.
The two upset Miraleste Higb's No. 1 team,
which was composed of two of the three best
players for the Merauders -John Letts and Matt
Frooman, a paif of juniors.
That, however, was just about the sum total of
success for the perennial champions as Miraleste
stunned the Sea Kings, 16·12, here at La Casa de
Vida Tennis Club to end the six-year reign by CdM
as kings of Southern California prep tennis.
THE VERDICT WAS effectively decided dur-
ing' the first half of play as Miraleste grabbed an
8-6 advantage despit~ the play of Emerson and
Paul. The Sea Kings' No. 1 doubles team broke
service in the ninth game of each match to record
6·4, 6-4 victories and Miraleste's victory plans ap·
peared on shaky grounds. ''Emerson is a great player," said Miraleste
Coach Clag Offutt, "but Paul really put some gray
hairs In my head." But as quickly as the Sea Kings· fortunes rose,
they dropped to the lowest point in seven years as
1he advantage evaporated as Miraleste senior Dan
Wooten and freshman Ricbard Goldenson com-
bined to defeat sophomores Brian Sullivan and
Jeff Ewing.
"That wa~ Richard's best tennis ever:· said
the winning coach.
within a stroke of gaining a split with a 6·4 lead in the
tie-breaker.
"You have to give Miraleste credit, its doubles
team did it under pressure in that lie· breaker, ..
said Heffern.
The next blow to tbe CdM cause came mo-
ments later as sophomore Rafael Osuna, the son of
the Mexican star of the same name, rallied from a
1·5 deficit to defeat David Gerken, 7-5.
By the time the two teams had played through
three rounds of singles Miraleste owned a 14-10
lead , needing anything more than the magic
number of 14 to claim the victory.
Freshman Eric Amend did the honors, drop·
ping Greg Hayward, 6-1, and the remainder of the
schedule was strictly formality.
The loss drops CdM 's final record to 22·2 and
snaps a 34-game winning streak in the playoffs,
while Miraleste avenges its only loss with its 21st victory.
"WE HAD A FEW breaks go the wrong way,"
said Heffern. "The last time we saw Osuna he only
won two matches." Also potent to Miraleste's at·
tack was Mexican Davis Cup member Jorge
Lozano, who won three before dropping a mean·
ingless duel after the match was decided.
The Miraleste coach was in agreement: "I
thought he (Osuna) was good for two wins. max-
imum. And there was no reason for my first
doubles team to lose. But Emerson is a great
player."
Emerson distinguished himself individually.
but bis efforts with Paul were the only thints to
write home about this time for the normally all-
winning Sea Kings.
· 'Thls game hurts m e more than
an thing." ~urleson's performance ended a poor
road record on a high note.
"It's about time," said Burleson. "I'd
gone l·for-17 on this road trip.
''I think it's been a couple of weeks
since I collected an RBI and I was won-
dering it I was ever going to knock in
another run.·•
After the Angels took a 1-0 lead ln the
second on a run-scoring double play
ball, Toronto moved ahead 2-1 in their
half of the inning on solo home runs by
Otto Velez and George Bell -their first
runs in 23 innings.
The Angels broke it open with six
runs in the fifth by sending 10 batters to
the plate.
After Downing and Juan Beniquez
walked, Hobson singled in a run and
Beniquez scored when Bell's throw went
through two Toronto players at third
and into the dugout. Hobson moved Lo
third on the play and scored on a single
by Burleson. Carew's single moved
Burleson to third
For.d singled home Burleson and
Carew scored the final run on a
sacrifice Oy by Don Batylol"'.
Downing's three-run blast. his fifth
homer of the season, highlighted the
Angels six-run seventh that also pro·
duced a run.scoring triple by Hobson
and RBI double by Ford.
Ford then singled home two more
runs In the Angels' three·run ninth.
The J ays. who added a run on a
second solo shot by Velez in the sixth.
giving him seven homers on the year.
scored three times in the ninth with
Danny Ainge driving in two runs.
,,.,.1,.....1• COM COACH DAVE HEFFERN agreed that
the No. 2 doubles turned the match around end it
was a scene which found the Sea K'ings dropping
the tie-breaker in the final set , 9-7. after being
Now, it's wait until next year -and hopefully
get anothe,t.shot al Miraleste, which did it with on-
ly one senior. Atlanta's Terry Harper ex•cutes a graceful approach to third ahead of throw to the Dodgers' Ron Cey
Atlanta's 42-year-olds too much for Doc;lgers
LOS ANGELES <AP> -U any team
~s aware of the abilities of veteran
iAtlanta right-handers Gaylord Perry
.:and Phil Niekro, it's the Los Angeles
:Dodgers.
Tom Lasorda. "We gef three runs ln
two nights against two guys who are 84
years old.''
The 42-year-old hurlers sent the Na·
Uonal League West-leading Dodgers
down to successive defeats the last two
nights, with Niekro burling seven in·
nings of Atlanta's 4·2 triumph Wednes·
day night.
Atlanta Manager Bobby Cox saw
nothing at all <Unusual about the two
games. ,,,
"There are so many similarities
between them," Cox said of Niekro and
P e rry. "They're both great com-
petitors, they know what they·re doing,
they both have a great knowledge of the
game and they've had sound arms their ••we're just not scoring any runs,"
said an angry Los Anl{eles Manager whole carters.''
.Au revoir Jimmy!
l s .McEnroe next?
The tournament continued to·
day with two women 'a semifinals.
American Chris Evert Lloyd,
favored to win1her fifth French
Open title, me&.Hana Mandllkova,
the fourth -seeded
Czecboelovakian.
ln the other women's semifinal,
Hanika facet No. 3 seed American
Andrea Jaeger, who was playing
on her 16th birthday.
Borg, wbo bas not lost a set on
his path towards a record sixth
French Open title, comes up
ag.ainat 6-4 Victor Pecci of
Paraguay on Saturday, Bor1'1
25th birthday.
Clerc will take on the winner of
the Lendl·McEnroe match in the
other men'a semlfll)al.
Connon• loss to Clerk marked
the biQeat upcet to da\e at this
year'• tournament on the tlow,
red clay courtJI of Roland Garro1
1&adium.
-------
After Perry, with relief help from
Rick Camp, beat the Dodgers in 10 in·
nings Tuesday night 3-1, Niekro and
Camp restricted Los Angeles to four
hits Wednesday night.
Niekro, 4·3, pitched into the eighth in·
ning but after giving up a leadoff single,
Cox replaced him with Camp, who pre·
ser ved the victory with his seventh
save.
"Phil has pitched with a pulled mus-
cle in his back, but it didn't bother him
until we took him out," said Cox, who at
age 40 is younger than both his pitching
aces. "He can pitch with a lot of pain
and he hardly ever misses a start."
Niekro said, "Basically, I was getting
my knuckleball over the whole game. I
had a good knuckleball, good speed.
The times I got hurt, the home run and
a couple of hits, was when I got behind
the hitters."
Pedro Guerrero hit his 10th homer of
the season, a two-run blow in the fourth
inning, to account for the Dodgers' only
runs.
Baseball's
final
4 8 hours?
ROCHESTER, N.Y. <AP>
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn's
comments on baseball's finan·
cial condition bear no r ela-
tionship to management's abili-
ty lo pay for hefty free.agent
contracts. accotding to Ray
Grebey, director of the owners'
Player Relations Committee.
Grebey testified Wednesday at
a federal court hearing in which
the National La bor Relations
Board is seeking a preliminary
injunction ordering the owners
to rescind for one-year their con-
troversial free-agent compensa·
lion proposal.
A key part of the NLRB case
being heard by Judge Henry
Werker is built around Kuhn's
"gloom and doom" speech de-
livered at baseball's winter
meeti ngs in Dallas last
December. The commissioner
s aid at that Ume that teams
would h~ve to ''discQv er oil
wells under se~ond base," ln or-
der to continue to operate.
·'There are those who argue that
baseball's increased o~raling
revenues are more than ade-
quate to meet the risln1 costs ot
our: business, particularly player
compensation," Kuhn told the
convention. "Thls simply is not
so."
But Grebey told the court that
Kuhn's remarks were strlc'tly
personal and dld not reflect
owner poltcy.
"He spoke not as an agent of
the bargaining committee,''
Grebey sald. "It doe•n't express
the policy of the Board of Diret·
tors of the Player Relations
Committee "
At1d Kuhn testified that has
Dallaa remarks referred to
bueball'a competitive balance,
not lta ftnandal coaclilion.
The NLR·B baa chuted
baseball with the unf alr labOr
practice ol faUJn1 to baJ"Pin in
10od f altb beeauae ol tePMted
public complalnta of llnancial
ext1ency while contlnutn1 to re·
; fuH to open their bookl. t
-
.a Ora~ Coast OAILY PILOT(Thursday, June 4, 1981
~.-----------------------"""!"..,
A 'BOy o f Summer '
has r o ugh rellnion
From AP dJspatches
NEW YORK Russ "Monk" •
Ml'ycr, who pitched for the Brooklyn
llod1i1ers three> decades uao. returned
here Tuesday for a reunion of the "Boya of Sum.
mer" and It cost him two World Serles rtnis
und ti watch
"This never happened to me when 1 was
ployin~ bnll hero," Monk said Wednesday.
"They Ju!!t came out of nowhere," he said In
un Interview describlna the holdup at 2~th
Str\'N ind Lell.lngton Avcnu . a few blocks from
the Gr4lm rcy Park Hotel. where he was stay·
lll,ll
"I'm walking looklni: tor a joint to get some
brt'akfast and the two or them, one guy with a
.iun and 3n<>lh~r one. and they just put the aun
right to my hcaid und he said. 'Gel it up or
l'ISl' ..
"1,,ey got both my Series rings, the 1953
und the world champ1on11hip 19M rlna. an $1 ,100
'' nst \\atch that had diamonds an it. and $400
1·ash. · ~ aid
Mt'yer. S1. had returned lo New York for a
reunion with u f<>w Dodger teammates or the
.. Boys or Summer" t•ru in a double promotion
1'uc::.da)· for " book and a l<X'al politician's ef·
fort lo bring blli! league baseball back to Rrooklyn.
He was returning Lo his home today, his native Peru, Ill.
Quote of the day
Pnl Spllttorrr. Kansas City pitcher.
after being rained out for the third time in
seven scheduled starts: "I should be elect·
ed to the farmers· Hall or Fame."
Bills interested in Reynolds
BUFFALO. N.Y. The Buffalo
Bills of the National Football League
are talking contract with Jack
Reynolds. former linebacker for the Los
Angeles Rams. according to a published report.
The Buffalo Evening News quoted
Reynolds' agent, David Fishoff. as saying the
Bills were among seven teams interested in
Reynolds.
"We like Buffalo because Jack has a lot of
respect for Bills Coach Chuck Knox.·· Fishofr
told the paper .. There's a lot of mutual respect."
Gross• homer cools Whfte Sox
Wayne Gro • slammed a three Ill run homer in the first iMing and
8rian KJ-.man scattered seven hill
as Oakland whipped th Chlca10
WhJte Sox, 8-3, tQ highli&ht American League
action Wed1ltsday nleht Groas hJl bis fifth
home run or the year and aecol'ld In two nlcht
before Chicago starter Francl.eo Barrio• 1 3
could retire a batter . . . Elsewhere. Grall Net:
Uea drilled u two.run homer
wllh two out in the bottom of
the 11th Inning, alvlne the
New York Yankees a 2-0 vie·
tory over Baltimore behind
the nine-hit pitchin& ot Dave
Rlgbettl and Ron Davis ..
Jerry Grote drove in a club
record seven runs with a dou·
ble. slnele and grand s lam
home run, offsettine a four·
Grou homer assualt by Seattle and
powcrlna Kansas City to a 12·9 conquest. Grote,
a 38·year-old catcher, has spent the last two
years in retirement .. Bump Willa knocked in
three runs with a trlple and a single. Buddy Bell
hit a solo homer and Rick Honey~utt won his
fifth aame in six decisions as Texas beat Min·
nesota, 6-3 . . . Rlcble Hebner had two hits.
scored a run ~od drove in another to pace
Detroit to a 4·1 t1'iumph over Milwaukee ...
Toby Harrah knocked in three runs with two
homers and scored three runs lo lead Cleveland
to a 4· 1 win over Boston. .
Rose closes within seven of Musial
Philadelphia's Pete Rose had two Ill
singles in the Ph Illes· 6-2 loss to the
New York Mets to move within seveo
of Stan Musial'• all-time National
League career hil record of 3,630. Rose had a
single in the third inning and another in the
eighth. when h e knocked in bo~h of
Philadelphia's runs. Rookie right.bander Grea
Harris pi~ked up the win for the Mets as he
blanked the Phillies on JUSt
two hits over seven innings
... Elsewhere in National
League action Wednesday,
Dave Concepcion had tbree
hits and drove in two runs,
leading Cincinnati to a 6·2
win over San Francisco , , .
Terry Puhl snapped a seven·
th-inning ti~ with a run-
scoring double and Cesar
Ro1e Cedeno had three hits and
scored three runs to lift Don Sutton <4·6> and
Houston to a 6-1 victory over San Diego . ,
Rookie Orlando Sanchez tripled to open the 11th
inning and scored one out later on Tommy
Herr's single, giving St. Louis a 3-2 edge over
Montreal ... Jason Thompson smacked a two·
run pinch homer in the eighth off rookie Randy
Martz to Lift Pittsburgh to a 3-2 triumph over
the Chicago Cubs . . Hous ton's Art Howe has
been named the NL Play.er of the Month
Howe's month wa:; highlighted by a 23-game hil·
ting streak. the longest in the NL this year. He
also led the National League with a .362 batting
average entering Wednesday·s game.
Baseball today
On th1$ date In baseball in 1984: Lo Angeles Dodgera' atrtkeoul lunar
Sandy Koutax ranned 12 Philadelphia
PhlllJ ln posting the third no-hitter ot his
career, 1 3·0 victory at Connie Maack
Stadium.
Today'a birthdays:
ClnciMatl m nager Jot\n McNamara Is
49. San Diego catcher Terry Kennedy is 25.
Umpires cross picket line ;
PITTSBURGH Four major Iii leugue umpires, led by crew chief
John Kibler, crossed a picket line set
up by striking ushers, ticket handlers and main·
tenance workers at Three Rivers Stadium.
But there we.re some side effects tor the
6,437 baseball fans who paid to see the Pit·
lsburgh Pirates beat the Chicag9 Cubs 16·3
Tuesday night, including the abaence of hot
dogs, pizza, french fries and other hot snacks.
Pirate management had been prepared to
use sandlot umpires if necessary. but the ree· ulars reported.
''We felt we should honor our contract
which says we won't strike." Kibler said ... And
I'm sure had we stayed out they'd bave had an
in junction and we'd be back tomorrow anyway."
Kibler was joined on the umpiring crew by
Bruce Froemming, Joe West, and Fred
Brocklander. Kibler said the umpires made the
decis.ion after consulting with attorney Richie
Phillips, legal counsel for the Major League
Umpire's Association.
The ground crew honored the picket hne
and so did taxi .1nd bus drivers who let
passengers off outside the stadium's inner cir·
cle,
Tampa awarded 1984 Super Bowl
Tampa was awarded the 1984 •
Super Bowl by the National Football
League owners al the conclusion of
their two·day meeting Wednesday. The Florida
bay city received 24 of a possible 28 votes.
Pasadena and Miami received one each. while
two owners were absent . . The Aga Khan's
Shergar, ridden by 19·year-old Walter Swlnburn,
scored an easy victory in the 202nd running of the
Derby Stakes at Epsom Downs in England .. A
negotiator who wants to bring t he Oakland
Raiders to Los Angeles testified that inflation has
made part of the original deal for their move ob-
solete. and a new contract would have to be
negotiated if they wm a court fight The
Cosmo~ announced they have purchased Steve
Wegerle from the Los Angeles Aztecs for an un·
disclosed amount of cash and future draft choices.
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: No events s cheduled.
FRIDA V RADIO
Baseball Dodgers at Chi cago. 11 30 a m ..
KABC <790>
American team
faces Brazil
Volley"l?all match at GWC
Volleyball fans will have the chance to see top
international competition when the United States
national team plays the Brazilian team at Golden
West Colleae Friday night al 7:30.
The exhibition match la one of 30 •cheduled
acroiss the country reaturlna the top amateur
players from the U.S. against international com ·
petition. It's being sponsored by the Golden West
Volleyball Club. Tickets are on sale al tbe college
bookstore for $3; a11d wlll be sold at the door for $4.
The American team features famlllar names
such as Dusty Dvorak and Cralg Buck. Both are
Laguna Beach residents. Dvorak, along with Tim
Hovland and Pat Powers represent USC. runner·
up to UCLA in this year's NCAA finals. Buck plays
for Pepperdine.
The U.S team will also feature Karch Kiraly
and Randy Stoklos, both members or the UCLA
championsh1p squad.
Brazil has won every South American
volleyball title since the early 1950s. In the 1980
Moscow Olympics. the BraziUan team lost a hotly·
contested match with bronze medalist Rumania,
narrowly missing a medal.
Brazil has been first or second in every Pan
American Games volleyball competition since the
early ·sos.
The U.S. and BraziHan men's teams have met
several times over the years with the series about
equaL Both nations have a similar history for
recreation and collegiate volleyball and approach
the game with some of the same technical and tac-
tical concepts.
A few of the Brazilian players are well known
in the United States Many have attended
American universities and those best known in the
area have played al USC . A number of Brazilians
have also played in the U.S. professional volleyball
league.
"This 1s probably the premiere volleyball
match to be played in Orange County this year :·
says Golden West volleyball coach Lou Ann
Terheggen, herself a top amateur competitor in
the '70s,
After Friday's match. the teams will tangle
Saturday night at UC Santa Barbara. followed by
a Sunday night match at Cal Pol y 1San Luis
Obispo)
Lawn bowling tourney set
One of the largest lawn bowling_ tournaments
of l)le season will take place at the Newport
Harbor Lawn Bowling Club Friday and Saturday
beginning at 9: 15 each morning
A total of 192 players will particiapte in the
two-day event with 32 three·person teams each day
com petrng for prizes amounting to Sl.500 and
sponsored by Forem ost Home Brokers, Inc
Three person teams are coming from as far
away as Santa Barbara and San Diego to compete.
Rogers
n ext CFL
d e fection?
Water keeps getting lwtter_f or Martin.
VICTORIA VILLE. Quebec
CAP> Running Back George
Rogers of the University of
South Carolina liked what he
saw Wednesday al the Montreal
Alouettes' training camp and
said there is a good chance he'll
sign with the Canadian Football
League club.
Rogers, the Heisman Trophy
winner who led the NCAA in
rushing last season with 1,781
yards, was the,, first selection of
the New Orleans Saints of the
National Football League in lhe
April draft.
·'There's a better chance of
me signing here than with New
Orleans.·· said Rogers, who ar-
ri ved here af training camp
Wednesday afternoon.
The 6-2. 225-pound tailback
said money would be the de-
termining factor in his decision
to either play with the Saints or
head to the CFL.
So far. Aloueltes owner Nelson
Skalbania has convinced former
Los Angeles Rams quarterback
Vince Ferragamo, Houston
Oilers kick returner-receiver
Billy Johnson and Chicago
Bears wide receiver James
Scott lo play with the team.
''There's no doubt Montreal is
serious." Roge r s said . His
agent, J ack Mills, said Rogers
had already rejected two pro-
pos als from the Saints "and the
counter-offer they made slilJ left
us pretty f~r apart."
Rogers returned lo Montreal
from training camp Wednesday
night but it was not known
whether talks were held with
General Manager Bob Geary,
executive vice-president Bill
Putnam and president Rene
Forte.
"We already have talked num·
bers with them In a general way
and we reel we're certainly com·
petjtive, '' said Putnam.
NB wedge r llll
set for June 27
Tbe Newport ~each wedie run
ts scheduled tor Saturday, June
27, with the start originating
from the Newport Pier.
Th~ race will begin at tbe
south aide or the Newport Pier
and co to the •ed1e. Tbe run·
ners will then return to ltle Pter
(5.9 miles).
Pre-registration fee tor the
race It • (that lnclUdet a T· abirt>. Race day resistnuan ta ·a for the race on17.
Cbffk•ln time for the start of
Ule raft ia al 1!30 a.m. wttti the nm blllnftlna at I .
Jon Buller
Preps eye
CIF state
crowns
NORWALK -Ten Orange
Coast are.a track and field
athletes -four boys and six
girls, including Edison High dis·
lance star Jon Butler and
University High's one-two punch
or Laura Mills and Polly Plurrier
-begin their quest for a state ti·
Ue Friday at Cerritos College.
Field event prelims begin al 4
at Cerritos, followed by the first
running event at S. The dlscu.s
prelims are at Excelsior High1 <near Cerritos) with the
women's division beginning at l,
the men·s al 4. • ,
Friday's competition will pro·
duce lhe nine finalists in eacb
event for Saturday's nm,1$ at the
same sites. '
Buller is entered in the 3,200,
boasting a best of 8:53.96 at the
Masters meet. His tou1hesl
competition is expected to come
from Steve Valen of El Modena,
but that problem won 'l be con·
tended with until Saturday, as·
suming both advance as ex-
pected.
Plumer is the defending cham-
pion in the 1,600 and along with
Ml1ls in the 100-meter ~ow
hurdles, is a heavy ravori~ to
qualify ror the finals.
Mills Is also entered in the dis·
cus and high jump, makinl her
one ot the tew triple threats in
these finals.
Others given &ood shoU at
earnln& final• bertb1 include
Kevin Jefferlea of Newport
Harbor tn Lbe discus and Rennie
Durand of Laiuna Beach ln the
•omen's aoo.
AAd the lon1 shots -Fount.aln
Valley's Annabelle Villanueva in
tbe s.200. Un lvereity Hltb
ffeihman Annette ..Rolft'I in the
100, lrriM'• LyUM JrllleY In
UM loal jump and ONaa Vliw
Jualor .,mur 'Rn 8~ I• Ule f JOO and JOO. J/
Umpire Terry Cooney files common assault charge
TORONTO <AP > Oakland A's
Manager Billy Martin was charged with
common assault by umpire Terry Cooney
Wednesday in connection with Martin's al·
leged on·field bumping of Cooney in a
game here Friday n ight
Meanwhile, Bill Kunkel, the chief of e
umpiring crew which includes Cooney,
said Cooney was injured when bumped by
Marlin.
"RIGHT NOW HE'S not mentioning it.
but since the incident. he is receiving
muscles spasms in his back and in his
c hest:· said Kunkel. "He's receiving
medication right now and he has been con·
s uiting a doctor.··
Cooney, who worked Wednesday night's
Angels-Blue Jays game here, s~id he filed
ch~rges because: "'I feel that I may not re-
alize any benefit from my actions but
somewhere down the line. some official -
whether it be in hockey, or whether it be in
basketball or football or baseball -is go-
ing lo realize my efforts were not in vain.··
Meanwhile, Richie Phil Lips, counsel to
the Major League Umpires Association.
said at· his Philadelphia office that his
group planneJ to take civil action against
Martin in the United Stales, seeking an un.
s pecified amount of damages
American League Pres ident Lee Mac-
Phail said he regretted Cooney·s dec1s1on
to go lo court
"DISCIPLINE RELATING to events
happening on the baseball field -unless
s erious injury or assault with a bat or
something of an extreme nature is in·
volved s hould be handled within
baseball." MacPhail said. "I expect lo dis-
cuss this matter further with Cooney:·
Ed Sapir, Martin's lawyer . said in New
Orleans he will ask on behalf of Martin
in hi s cappcity as A's general manager -
that MacPhail bar Cooney from working
any games involving AL Western Division
teams. "It necessarily follows that as a re-
sult of the action Mr. Cooney took today
agains t the manager. Billy Martin, that he
will be unable lo be unbiased or unpre-
judiced against the Oakland A's," Sapir
said.
"Mr. MacPhail could not be reached this
evening and I will try later tonight or
early tomorrow for said ruling. I would
ask that Mr. Martin's request be granted
immediately and remain in effect until all
matters involving Martin and Cooney be
fi nalized "
Martin said in Chicago he could not com-
ment on the advice of counsel.
JUSTICE DONALD BEGLEY said that
Martin would be served with a summons
when the A's next play in Toronto Sept. 21 .
The s ummons will order Martin to appear
in court at a dale not yet set. Begley s aid.
Cooney said that although Phillips in·
formed him of all avenues open to him. "It
wouldn 't have gone this far if I hadn·t
wanted it to go this rar.
"I'm not being prodded to do anything
by anybody. This is all on my own."
Phillips had warned s ince last Saturday
that his association was prepared to go to
court against Martin. either in the United
States or Canada. if it felt MacPhail's
punishment was too lenient.
On Monday. after Mac Phail had re·
viewed films or the game and announced
the one-week suspension, Phillips said it
was not enough.
Cowboys-rope
Miami, 12-6 ;
ASUnext
Baseball standings
OMAHA, Neb. <AP) -Third·
.ranked Oklahoma State un-
leashed a 17-hit barrage to
send second-rated Miami of
Florida to the College World
Series loser's bracket 12·6 Wed·
nesday night.
The Cowboys will face No. 1
Arizona Slate ln the Friday win·
ner's bracket final. Miami, now
61·9, will meet Texas, 59-10-1, ln
an elimination game today.
That game will follow the
elimination meeting of 45·14
South Carolina and 46·16 Mis·
siasippi State.
· Darren Dilks aDd Ray
Elcl\.ebarre.f} tieaded the 51·16
Cowboys with three hits and two
runs batted iQ apiece. Dilks
slammed a two-run homer in the
eighth to put the icing o{l a ~
lead.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
We~lvlslon
W L Pct. GB
Oakland 33 20 .623 -
Texas 28 19 .596 2
Chicago 26 19 .578 3
Angels 26 27 .491 7
Kansas City 17 26 .395 11
Seattle 18 32 .292 161 2
Minnesota 1 14 34 .292 16'\
East Division
Baltimore 28 18 .609 -
New York 28 20 .583 1
Milwaukee 28 21 .571 1 ~
Clevelatid 24 19 .558 2~
Boston 26 22 .542 3
Detroit 25 25 .500 s
Toronto 16 35 .314 141~
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Dodgers 34 17 .667 -
Cincinnati 29 21 .580 4 ~
Houston 26 24 .520 7 ~
Atlanta 24 24 .500 8\"l
San Francisco 26 27 .491 9
San Diego 19 31 .380 141-2
East Division
Philadelphia 29 20 .592
St. Louis 25 18 .581 1
Montreal 27 21 .563 P:r
Pittsburgh 22 20 .524 3\1'2
New York 16 29 .356 11
Chicago 10 35 .222 17
..... Y'tlc-Atte11t.•.~l
New Yorti •· Pftl~lpllla 2 Plt~S.~2
$1, Louis S, Mofttr .. I 2111 lnnl"lll
HovtlOfl 6, Sen Die9o I Cl11c1-11 •,Sen l're11eltc01 T..._ .• ._..
Mo11lrHI COulllelito11 l ·Sl at St. L..,lt
(59re-Ml,d HOUSIOl'I (J. H191lroWI ., s.tfl Dloeo ( ..... ..,.
Clll<090 CKlllltow t•I at Pltllllurg11 (9',_..n Ml
Olli y IMfl* KllOdlilM.
Etchebarren led orr the three·
run second inning tor OSU as the
Cowboy• collected ctve con·
secutive singles.
Oklahoma State then chued --;;::.:;;:--~:--~--:;-~::::::::::::::::::::::::~===========::;:i;;;::.;.=
Miami st.rter Brian Sliva• with h~o •incl• to lead otl the third
tnnla1. Reliever Jeff MOrrilon tben gave up a two·run double to
Etcbebamm and the CowboJI
tot two more runs on a wait,
fleWer'a cbolc. and •male to'°
la front '1-0.
Mlamt rebounded wilb four
runs In the bottom of the third
via a thrff.nm. t out double bY catcher l'rint CutrG. OSU '"
pttcber Mllth ('.Oploe l'ffOfffed
to •trike out Mltcb Seoene to ad
tbe Hurricane t'leat. l'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thureday, June•. 1981
..J
ca
............
NIGHT ON THE TOWN -Chris Evert Lloyd (left), this week in a restaurant in Paris while taking time out
Bjorn Borg and Borg's wife, Mariana, share a laugh from the French Open.
~~~~~~~~~~~~---"--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1
JIM NIEMIEC
Irvine Lake good for bass fishing
Bass, cra ppie, catfis h and bluegill are
combining to attr act many fresh water
anglers to lakes in the Southland.
As the water temperatures contmue
to rise at all lakes with the arrival of
s ummer, these pan fish go on lremen·
dous feechng s prees which will last well
into the early fall. Most all anglers,
whether fi shing from a rental boat or
from shore, are bemg rewarded with
some rish on the stringer.
Locally Irvine Lake is producing
some very good bass fishing in the early
m orning hours in the 2 to 3-pound class,
with an occasional lunker in excess of 6
pounds being caught.
BLUEGILL ARE PLENTIFUL
anywhere along the shoreline. while
those after crappie and catfish are hav-
ing lo work the thicker weeds and trees.
There is also some trout action at
Irvine, but with the clear and warming
water onJy those who have a little rain-
bow trout fishing knowledge are having
any luck.
Elsewhere, bass fishing is rated tops
with the smaller pan fish beginning to
lake over. At the San Diego City lakes.
El Cap and Hodges are good for bass on
Unllinited
catamaran
introduced
Something new is in store for unlimil·
ed hydroplane racing fans this year -
an Aronow Unlimited cat amaran -the
first ever in the sport.
In early test runs last year the new
cat streaked down back stretches at 175
miles per hour but was surprisingly
sluggish in the turns with two 900 hp
Ford Cosworth auto engines.
Don Aronow. the designer, then com·
missioned Keith Black. the American
engine wizard, to come up with a pair of
supercharged high torque Chrysler
en gines conn ected to Mer Cruiser
sterndrives. The new power plants are
expected to highly improve the
performance of the catam aran, both on
the straightaways and the curves.
If it performs as expected, Aronow
thinks the new craft wlll turn 140 mph
laps. The fastest lap ever recorded in
the s port was 140.6 mph by the famed
Bill Muncey in his Rolls Royce.powered
Atlas Van Lines on Sept. 21, 1980.
Aronow is the world's leading hi gh
performance boat builder with such
creations as the Formula, Donzi,
Cigarette and Squadron XU hulls that
have dominated ofrshore power boat
racing.
A rol"ow says speed has not been the
only question mark for his unlimited
cat. Finding a driver has been, too.
Aronow bas called oo Gary Barbreaht
who, until bis retirement led Mercury
Marine's teams to worldwide successes,
to find a driver capable of handling the
catamaran·type hull.
B a rbrecht.. has c hosen former
Mercury team outboard tunnel driver,
Buck Thornton of Richmond, Va. lo
take on the job of handling the cat in
competition.
Barbrecht point.a out that an unllmlt·
ed hydro runs nose down, tall up at
speed, and a catamaran does just the
opposite. The catamaran must run nose
up to catch air for the all important tun.
nel o! air Jift.
top during the early hours and into late
evening. while during the day dark col·
ored worms are enticing the bigger
bronzebacks lo bite.
San Vicente and Lower Olay are just
fair. with Sutherland being its usual
tough self. Henshaw, Wholford, Vail,
Skinner . El sin ore . Moreno and
Miramar are kicking out fish of all
species.
THE BEST FISHING at all Southern
California lakes is coming during the
OUTDOORS
week, when boating pressure is down.
On weekends. those getting on a spot
first are doing well, until waves begin
moving the fish to deeper water.
Lakes at higher elevations such as
Silverwood, Big Bear , Hemet and
Cuyamaca are still producing some
t rout for trolle rs finding weed free
water or those who know of a rocky bot·
tom off a point. Trout in the 10-to 12·
inch class are being stocked regularly.
Look for bluegill and bass to also
start hitting at all those lakes during the
next couple of weeks. Due to the nights
being cool at these elevations, the best
bass and bluegill fishing doesn't begin
until 9 a.m., but lasts until dark.
With school letting out in the next few
weeks, there is sure to be more angling
press ure on waters of California.
Families will be looking to shorter trips
to save fuel costs this summer, which
means that advance reservations for
rental boats during a planned outing
should be made well in advance. Lakes
such as Casitas, Cachuma, Nacimiento
and San Antonio to the north will be full
most all summer long, due to the good
camping facilities available for week
long vacations.
SWITCHING TO HUNTING, avid
waterfowl hunters do not want to miss
the California Waterfowl Association's
meeting Tuesday night at the Alrpotter
Inn, beginning at 7:30. The gathering of
duck and goose hunters is free and open
to the public, and in attendance will be
speakers from the Department of Fish
and Game, biologists and repre·
senlatives of shooting and hunting-
sports.
Lido-14s sail on iooekend
Balboa, Newport Harbor clubs host regatta
By ALMON LOCKABEV
Dall' ~I ... IMUtot Wrfller
Balboa and Newport Harbor yacht
clubs will join forces this weekend to
conduct the Lido-14 fleet championship
regatta to be sailed on inside the bay
courses. The regatta is scheduled Satur·
day and Sunday.
Big boats will also have their day in
the sun Saturday when Voyagers Yacht
Club sends a neet of Performance Han-
dicap yachts away on the fourth race of
the Humphrey Bogart Series.
Capistrano Bay Yacht Club will cater
to the PHRFers Saturday on an over-
n i g b t race from Dana Point to
Oceanside.
Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club will get
into the power boat act with the second
race of its Predicted Log Series.
In other areas of the Southern
California Yachting Association:
Los Angeles-Long Beach
Catalina Island Yacht Club -Long
.Beach to Catalina Island race ( PHR F>
Saturday.
Little Ships Fleet -Catalina Island
race (Long Point and Return> Satur-
day. Sunday.
Quest wins big
Quest, a Cal·27 skippered by Roger
Gooding. Voyagers Yacht Club, was the
overall handicap winner in Balboa
Yacht Club's first long distance race for
yachts 30 feet and under.
The 134-mile race took the eight
yachts around the west end of Catalina
Is land, down the back side of San
Clemente Island and back to the finish
at Newport. Winds for the race were re·
ported light to moderate.
Second overall was Sparrow Hawk,
sailed bY. Bud Desenberg1 organizer of
the race, and third was Ctaire de Lune,
skippered by Paul Frazier, Dana Point
Yacht Club.
Desenberg said it is hoped to make
the race an annual event with possibly a
course around several other of the
Channel Islands.
after "bums" were added to the butl.
The Withdrawal of tbe .9rotftt leuet
Simonis cwerall ri la th Hunt1nitoo
Tidelanda race lnlact.
Overall urlea 'wtanera aflu
wlthclrawai Of Uat . prOte.t: 1. Blila, Dennl1 Choete LBYC ;. I . ,._.wll,
JobD ~. BYC: 1. BraYUn, 1mn1 ~Ube, RJdunond Y,::. -
\
Alamitos Bay Yacht Club -One
Design Regatta, Saturday, Sunday.
Santa Mollica Bay
California Yacht Club -Cal Harbor
Layover race (Overton Series> Satur·
day. Sunday.
Del Rey Yacht Club -Berger Series
No. 3, Saturday.
Westward Cruising Club -Bay
Series No. 5, Saturday, Sunday
Windjammers Yacht Club -Mac
J ones, Dulce Jones Series No. 5, Satur-
day, Sunday : Lido-14 fleet c·ham-
pionship, Saturday, Sunday.
King Harbor Yacht Club -Spinnaker
Serles No. 4, Sunday.
San Diego
Coronado Cays Yacht Club -Classic
Series, Sunday.
Mission Bay Yacht Club -Thistle
district championship, Saturday, Sun-
day.
!i Clara Racing Association -
Su r Series (all classes) Saturday,
Su .
Coronado Yachl Club -Bissel ocean
racing championship (handicap) Sun-
day.
Oceanside Yacht Club -Butler race
( PHRF) Sunday.
San Diego Yacht Club -Frazee
Serles (PHRF) Sunday; Dix Brow
series (SDHF> Sunday.
North and lnlud
Westlake Yacht Club 4 Westlake Cup
Regatta, Sunday.
Ventura Yacht Club -Gold Cup
Regatta, Saturday, Sunday.
Santa Barbara Yacht Club -Spring
Serles No. 3, (one-design, handicap)
Saturday, Sunday.
Paclfic Corinthian Yacht Club -Spr-
ing Serles No. 3, Sunday.
Pomona Valley Sailing Association -
Class raclng, Saturday, Sunday.
New race billed
Long Beach Yacht Club hu lasued ln·
vltations tor a new sailboat race called
the Nine Marks Invitational, scheduled
Jone 21.
The re1atta ls invitational to mem·
bers of recoinbed yacbl clubs wlt.b
yachts carrylnJ lriternaUonal Off1hore
Rul• and Perforroance Handica~ Rae·
tns neet certJfleat", and to Cal·U ownera who are members of their
re1pec:tlve neeta .
Completed race entJ')' cards abouJd be
IUbmltted to the LBYC offtce by 12:30
p.m • .i... 19. Lat• nlri• wtll be ac-
cefted "1 the race com mlttM boat unW
UM waiiU& alpal for the IOR cl111 on
rece d8.J';~P1ve 9nilr. are required to
t1&1bt11h 1 clau and qu1llf1 for
ti'OpMia. l
Caulkins swims at MV~
Seventeen meet features top stars
Tracy Caulkins will be amon•
the field of GOO at the fourth annual Seventeen Swim Meet or Champions
at Misston Viejo, June 19-21.
Caulkins , an 18-year-old from
Naahvllle, has captured more na·
tional titles (31) than any other
worn an in U.S. history.
The meet'• male and remate hiah·
point winners each wtll receive a
Sl,500 scholarship to the school of b1I
or her choice and trophies wUl be
awarded to the top elaht finalists ln
each event and to the consolaUon
winners.
Moffet, a junior at Newport Harbor
A member of the 1980 Olympics Hiah. will compete ln the 200-met•r
team, she has held American records individual medley and the 100 and 200
in all five events -freestyle, butter· breaststroke.
tty, breaststroke, backs troke and In· Moffet earned a berth on the 1980
dlvidual medley. Olympic team with a 2: 18. 79 in the
Others lo the field include BlU Bar--200-meter breast.stroke.
rett, Craig Beardsley, Kym Linehan, Barrett of UCLA holds the world
Steve Lundquist, Mary T. Meagher, record for the 200-meter individual
Jill Sterkel, Jesse Vassallo, Cynthia medley; Beardsley of Florida set the
Woodhead, John Moffet and Steve world mark in the 200 fly laat
Barnicoat in a star.studded field. August.
• • • • • •
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fl!MNt,Ml._...,az; WW• New Ytrll. .,. Mw .... ,Ollll ..... U ; hll, TH111,n , • ,__ •• Oec ..... )
Cl .. , ......... M ; .._ye"", Ttll .. ,H: p, MIN'tlM•. llllWIMf• • ._1; Vuuevkll,
Mllw•1'11 .. , ... t; K .... til. OallU1~1.~IJ r..oreer ...... ....,... w : 8'1n!, ~.
unoeiM. ..ueu• ••• • • .., tt
• Ill ,. .. .. . . ,. .. . "' . .. .. .. . -" . .. .. .... " . ... "
.. .. ., -~ .. , ...
4t -.. -. -·-.. .., .. -....
French Open
!e\Plrtll ...................... ,,_ ...... C:len Clef. J._., c-.. +4,
1·1, ..... 1·1. M l IMll ~ 1"41 ~
M<l1u•. M. M, t~ Crain llM,.., lltllllna Intern•••~>
........ Qllll~ll ..... IYM• ....., .. wl, Mertine Hevrall....,., .. t,M.
Ore88 Courta tourna"'ent
CatMICllel..,,llllMtllll) ,.... ............
John Llo.,d clef. Pel 011Pre, '"'· '"II Weynt '"-• #. Vklor Ama~e. 1-4, H , H , Brad ~It dirt. John 5adrl, ... 4, J.4.
.. J. Jtlf llorowlalt cltf. Tim Oulllkson, , .. ,
.. 1. 11·•·
Hlah school Cllf .a btAMPIONSMIP
let U C..w YIM Tc:, TlrraM:•I
MW ..... M. c:..--.. Mar IJ
SI .....
Ha.,ward CCI lost to Osuna, w , dtl.
JOl1nll0n, .. 2, to.t lo l.Ai.ano, S-7; Iott lo
Amt"ll, ••; Oeftl., CCI loll S-7; -..0,
M ; Iott +6; Jl-1 IC) !Mt 4 .. , 4 ... t .. ; "°" '"': 8-tlte"9" IC) -. .. 2 ... I; last , ........ .,.....
Emtr-·Peul CCI dtf. Ltll•l'r-1\ 6-4, •~; def. Woottn-Goldonton, .. 1, M ;
S..lllwan-Ewlng CCI losl :M, 14; 1°'144, 7-t.
OTHIH PLA YOlflf ICOltal
CllfJ.A
Rlwrsldt "'°'"IS, Palm '4W11191 IJ
Cllf J.A
CalellMa IS, La Hawe 11
Cllf '"" C.rplnlerla 14, TNtctler 14 (Ctrpln..na
wins on_...,. io., 1021.
LOI Al•mllo• llHDNUOAY'l ltRM.ILTS c11111 .. .,........,...., .. _1 Finl race -Ole SClllflrt 18f"-•I, a.to.
l.00, UO; Ttlll N Tlwll IF,_.,), IUll,
6--to; Fast .lltfln CDemlf\9Utal, 4 ... U ••·
tc11 c•o CMll<lm.•. s.conc1 ,... -,,,....,. ca,.,,,u1, 1L•.
1.2', 4.eo; VOM CWanll, t.JO, 4.e ; Get "-
Gold CCllH'Wal, J.20.
Tlllrd ,.. -Slr Oancelot CTr-.),
t.M. 4.40, la; Ferns JM CCltf'IM), I.•, UO; Son Of r • ._ (Ward). •••.
P'Ollrtll , .. -Dual llNctn CCJ1ave11,
11.40, '·'°· UO; 8-les ClllO CPllktftWI),
12.40, 7.00; MlJa Trlpoll IFlof'e), 4.00. PU·
acll IS.71 pt1c1 $131.40.
"""'race -Mtr C«o ltey CC•-.i1. uo.
J.00, J.OO; Got The call CAlll-.l, J.20, J.19;
Winier c;,_,., CAnnltrongJ, 4-00.
Slath race -Too ~II TOIK:h ta.rd),
lo.20, UO, lM; Euy S..... CCMwt>, a.•.
J.10, Hurry On -CCMCIOUI, 4M U •UC· II U-21 paid $2UO.
Stwntll race -T..,.,,...wwct Au (Fry•
dey). 10.60, 6.40, 4.40, Mr ltl .. 111trolt
Clltrdl. lo.Ill, 1.20, Toolln H lt11lln CHM'tl,
UO. U tUCll (1-7) Plkt SM.00.
El9"111 race -Boovlt a111e1 ITrM111ro1. n .... U.40, t.00; Out Pan Oii IP'rydll'tl. 12.20, s.oo; Nitro Ma111tno1 CMy1t1), 4.00. u
•11.t<ll C1·2) paid 13'6.40. . u Pio Six l4-J.M +11 palo u.na.oo with
14 wlnnlnt lk lttll Cflve 11or1111. p Plcll Six
Consoltllon peld $43.40 with 24t winning
llclltlS (tour llortnl.
Nlnlll ract -Slr Jet 11"9 (Ctrdou), UO,
JM, 2.40; Elattl The Hard Wey IW•rcll. a.to,
J.M; Whet T"t'OlllMt CCltrl11tl, t.60. U '""'° &a CS.71 paid S».40.
Alle-.-7,'29.
Hollvwood Perk
WllDNEWY'S ltllM.11.TS , ..... '54ily-Ill .. ...,
Flrtl ract -Treder Oon IC.llftedll,
10 • .0, UO, J.00; Wlnutn Etrly CtE1tr-I
4.40, J.AO; HoClloy IT,_1<11), Lto.
StcOIMI race -ClllkllOf' Gold CM<Carr91), 7.40, •.20. 3.80; Cltwr IHW IHawtey), S.00,
>.OO; Wl'9"9t IValdlvleso), 11.20. u dllly doulllt , .... ) Pllkt Mol.20.
Tllllrd r--0.lk MIMtrel CMcearYWll,
JM, 2.IO, UO; I.And ~r&ud CC>f1eOll IMO. 12.20; "-CPIOf'<tl, 10... $Sta Kt.1174' PtldWS.00.
Fourth ,.,. -ContesUnt C~l.
U.00, tM, S.to; For1l'1 Treet CM<CMrenl,
t.oo. •.oo; SWarainty c Plncay>. &.41. ss •uc· ti C4-I) 1M11c1 S»7.JO.
P'llth r--ltnefactor (Plncl't), MO,
J..40, 2.00, El Pantllo ...,.., 11.'-"m>, 7.JO,
4M; M.._ $ur9"ft IPl«ct) 4.00. $S tuc·
II 14-r) paid SttA.00.
Sixth r.,. -Sc«ttt O'WCwldtf' lu.Mml,
IUO, uo, S.00; SauC'f ... IVeldlvl ... ), .....
>.to; Mery Htrl'll (Wlnlallell, 6.00 •
k ... ntll r.ce-Soft Reply (Llllflaml, t.IO, a.oo, 2.00; a.ttltwlnd lllloetntlttf'), .....
UO; JtllMan (T,....tdll, LOO. $S ·-· IM) paid S11.JO.
S2 Pkk Sia C•7.....,...l paid 112,30S.20 w"'1
IS WIMlnQ lkUb Cll• llenlsl. S2 Pklt S la
ConlOl•tlon "Id Qt7 JIO wlUI Ml wlnlllfta 110.tll .
t!lthlll race -Slllt C tn'I Miii
CValtnrutle), t.10, ..... J ... ; CMnlMI
lfrollc Cc.Mn>, •.OO, 1.M; llllM Hltfl CLlplllm),4.C.
Hl11th nic. -Wlfl9M Tllrtlwleftee Cllt.,. c ay>. •.oo, a.oo. 2 ... ; One ,.., IMve
( e1tredl), S.'41, 1.40; Markel Ca"'' IValtnz:wla), S.tO. JS tllMll ~t-1) Ntf
'51.fl.
Atttndlnct-21,SIS.
Hora..:..~ atandlnt• ( Mtfltl
.IOUSYt .............. .... , ........... ..
-ttS , ....... .... .. '" .... , ... . ,., ,. .. l.MUPI
SJ7 "' 6t ...,,,,.. ., ti ....... . .., ........ .... .,, ..... , ... ...
71' Ill , ....... ,., " ., . ...,,,..
T•AtNln ...,. ...
1'7 • tt• • -.. tt1 ... :m • -.. u• •
"' 11 .... * • ...... --.. -......c:-.. • , ~"-'"• 4 • . .._...._. .. ........... <-•• ....... "--.. ... c....r ' • ==-: : ,..._._ .. I I ,.....,... ' .
.. ....
.. 11.""9 .. , ....... .. ......
.. l,ltf.ltt It •• , .... .. , .. ,. . ...... ~ = . ... = .... == == I! •
Racing'• Triple Crown winners
,..... ,... lft ICentuotcY Derby, PtwtknNa, •nd lelmont .......
YW ..._ ...... Owner Tnilntr
t It t lit 11e1tot1 .1Dtw1 ~ J K. L Rot. H. a. l9edwtll
1830 Gallant 'O• EAlll SltlOt e..i. 8111C1 .i-r11Z11101 ""°'•
t!!5 ~ Wllllam ~ 8elllf Stud JllTWl_Flln#nmont
IB7 w., Admlrtl ~ ~ o~ Riddle ~ eonw
1 t Whllllw~ Eddie Araro_ k.lmet ,ann a.n A.~
1'43 C9u!!!.1Mt_Ji!!:ln ~ _ ~HetU 0on_ca~
~ ~II Wenan ~ ~HI
~--C~~Fttm Ban A.~
~Ji E of C. T. ~ 1.uci.n LauM
-'-1 Cl\'JlllM ICat9ll L T &ytot W1111am f;;;;;., Jr
1171 """-d 6""9 Ceutt.n -~ V-F11111 Lauto-S ~-
Hole-a... Foll (1830) It the """ T. Crown wlnnlf 10 -• Tnplt Ctown MlllQ,
OmlN In '935 Wlllam WoodwtrO Sf .. --of lelM Stud. Wll brMdef •"II -ol bOiti hOtMI wftil .. lrttlned by ....,,.. (Sunny Jim) ~
0,..T-~..._ Olillr-..-
~ . . ., .
WOMEN'S SOFTBALL
MlltMTLIAeUa ,..,...,_
LIN ...... UM Houl\, A/10lt Mllkltto
IEd'-1; Terry Craft, Tint ltyler, Alli.A
Marcott• CMtrlne>; Tricia l!cMtr,..cll
CNtwpor1 Htf'Mrl; Cindy H11hn, Clltll
Wyclnow1kl Clfo1111taln Valley); Diane
WtllOll (w..tmfnlltr).
Mesi vat.,..: ..... and l(yltr •
llC.-.T-
Coll-8trr;. Ul!da 9ollm, JOdy Fltto;ller
(Marine>; Pern Coll CWHtmlnsttf'l; Htncy
"-'· DI-. Otlwre CHllfttlnv'on ... Ill; Cetlly ScMtttll, S11t Tr11bovlU CEdltonl;
ltetlnt T...,_i CF-&1111 Velleyl.
llMl'tltl LIAOUR
PlrllT-
D'-AeulNe, 1.Aurlt Holler, Kay~. Haney TOllCNnl DI-Vltll CCYIH'-'i
Pa111 Wllltt COcu• Yl•wl ; Otnln
llllM ....... T-,.,..., Clt_.,I; UN
Godfrey llC..Wla); CMWTllt Gall• lloar•I.
M011wa1ue11M:a.,... •. .....,,._
LIM..,,_...,,, It-Cr-CKMMdyl;
....... ........ '-'ltw ~ IOU.
Vl1w1; L111rl1 l(ordl<h, Stndy ltlvera
CCYPt'Hll; M911nda Mor ... , U11rt lt.,,.lrn.
CICettlla); Jullt ltey (Loi Alemlloll; Lawe
ltemlrtl (Kfttfla); SNron S.... IL.oaral.
Pro bowllnl NATOUaMAM NT , ........ , ... .__, ... ..
PBA money leeders ,.,,,,...... Ma., ft)
1. Earl.,,_,.
2. Ml....,1 Helmen a. Marti_,.
•. wa,....WWI>
S. Sltft ""'1lft
Brftlah emeteur latk~lc ...... ...........
Dontld ~I CU.I.) *'· 0-... HalfWI IU.S.), S and 4.; Dtvld Ojele IV.$.) *'· H9Yllla 0trU CSolllll Africa), I Md 1.
n.Nlt ....
Joll11 9r0dlt IU.S.1 dtl. Jofltl O'Mara
IU.S.I, I•; Joel Hll'Kll IU.S.I Clef • ..,._
McEYoy C~), I -21 OJalt (U.S.)
dtl. Merk Devis llnottndl, I and 2;
P'ranlllln ROM (U.S.1 dtl. Marlln Wllcl
CU.S.l, a end 2; Oubol1 IU.S.> Clll. Jcllttt
McKo CU.S.I, 4 tfld J; ROMlcl Gal"'
CU.I .I *"· G«"°" Dai91el111, I and t ; TOfn
Aanclolptl CU.$.) dtf. C.1111 MCL.aclllM Ckotla~I. I -J; Tom Kallrt (U.S.) Clllf. Daltlcl LM IU.S.), I and 2; Geoff Godwin
U!ne••MI def. Ollnun ev-cu.s.1. •.,,.. s. •
P0A moner leedera ,,,.,...... Mar 111 t. TOMW.._, U"4'1
2. arwce Llttlll• 216.JU
J. Illy"'°"" 241 .... 4. Hal• lnwlft ,,~ s. Jot.My Miiter m,-
'· Tom IClllt 1.a,m 7. Craltstedltf t4',AS2 t. C11r1l1 ICrM(le tM,M1
•. 8111 ,..,.. llt,7•
1t. Jerry Pett tlt,1M
NAIL WSITlaN OIVlttON W L ., tA ., ....
• J u 1• " t1 , •1'•1151
• 1 11 tt 16 II
• 1t1tell•
NCMtT'MWIUDIYJIM* v-.-• • M II II .. IHttle 7 , .....
Pwtlalld 1 J • " It '1 1-.itltft • 7 " » 14 • C..learY • • • " • " • LUTl•NotwttlCllt
CeMtM " • ,, .. • "
.""'"""" • • .. 11 • " .. MIM'"' • 1 JI • '9 .. T.,..... 4 t tt. tt •
IOVTMl•M DfYlllOll
AlllMI 1 • • If D .. ,.,., ... .,... • s It t• •• .. T_,...., • t D at • a
Jacll-Hlt e I II It 11 • ct1wraAL ..,,. ....
CNc... t a tt M • ,, ,... • • ti It tJ 4t ......... . . " .. " . 0.. Jlttltltt .. ...... _....,.. ... , ....... .,
...,,,_ lllCWy, ........... fir ....... •ldlrr. o. ...... ,..... • •-. _. ........ ...._ ..... ,.r .... ..............................
...... ..-i ~=t·i ... e-··i~l,..~ .... ... ·-'-=t.:=::: .......,......
Dffp Mii f11hlng
NllWPCMtT IA11'1 I.A ..... ) -SI tf19ltrl; .... ,,.....,,,,, lllOllllo, '"..,,., Mu, J
YtllO•ltll, 144 meckertl, 24 rock cOd .
IOH•r'• Lallerl -117 anglers: .. --rec11dt, 1U l>onllo, 561 ... nd l>au, 1
Ytll-tlll, U reek <Od, 132 tn.acktrel.
OANA WtlAAlf -13' enottn: m ...... 12
barreclldll, Ut tlonllO, 1 lltllbllt. 2 rock 11111, 11 t maclttrtl.
OCRANSIDR -75 t119lerJ: lit bonito, 231 cellco bast, 216 llnd 1>a1, 2t rock 11111, J02
mecurel.
IAN 01100 CHAM laUll11, lfllll·
""'••:•, Pel• L-.1 -.. eno1er1. t Y•l-uil, 1 ............... 17t banlC...,., 11• callc:o boa
SAN NOltO C2211d 14. Latldltltl -144 ano•••· • ca11co t>at&, i.. """"•· 211 .,.,. recllde. ,,_. O' Calll -n anottn; HO
l>arrecllde, 221 c.ellc.o baa. uo send-.. 2'
llOnllo, 122 mac .. ,..,, • 11111-.
LOHO 811ACN CltlmHt PIH) -12
ang1er1: 165 btrraclld&, tJO mackerel, 100
Nftll ball, JS Ullc.o ball, I lllllllut. C0-.'1 wt!Mf I -10. lllQltrs. >M l>lrr acllde, >I
bonito, tOJ c.tll<o l>au, 26 ... nd btu, •
11en1>111. 17 rock lltlll .
lllAL •llACN -17 MOien: ?JO rock <Od, 140 meclttrtl, ISi cellco l>IH, 167 lier·
rtelldf, I wnd l>IH, 1 1111111111.
IANTA MOltlCA -.. anoters: n <•llc.o
l>au, ID Miid l>lu, SI mack ... tl, 17 bonito, 1 lltlll>llt, 1 llarraclldt.
MA•INA OIL ltllY -'2 anQltn. l50
rodl COd, Its llllCktf'•I.
alOONDO -IJ• 1n91tn. 111 calko llasl, 2112 llOnlto, JI lltrraclld&, 1 yell_..1, as
rock llJ.11 ...... -to .,,...n: .oo ,,...;°"'·
lfS llaftlto,., --11111. MOltltO 8AY CYlrw'• L .. dl .. 1 -26
llftllen: tJ , ... cOd, tit red rock cOd, SJ .,.11 ........ 1• fllllt boas.
OOLITA 81.ACM -Ii 1n91tn: -rock COd, to red.,......., 211111 Coed, 4 COW COd.
Thi• wen'• trout pl11nt1
LOI 14.NOILll -•lo Rock Cr-. 8-
q ... , Canyion Cl'ffll, C.talc Laite, Cr,,,a.1
Lake, JacklOll Lake, Lltut Rock Cr-. Pyremld I.AM, SM Olma ltttarvolr, San Ga~ltl ltlwr CEell •"II North Fork), U-
Plt11 Cl'Mk CFr-tvnan'1 l'letl.
SAN 1a•NA1tDINO -A~ La•,
819 a-L.aU, ~ Valley I.Alie, Gf"IOIW'Y
Lth, Ly11t Crttlt IMlddlt and Horth
F-1). Slntt All.a River, Sanlt Ana RI..., 1Sout11 FOtll), •1va1111oa -Dark Cenyo11 cre.-,
Flllltr·Mlll OMlt. Parris Aa.......olr, Sen
Jacinto Ill..., INorUI Forti). Slllnner L.aU, Slr-borry Crttll.
IAN 01100 -Sin L11l1 Rey Rl.,.r, s-tw<lltr Rlwr.
MAOlltA -San Joeqllln Rlwr (Mlddlt
P'orltl, SIMtl-IN< LAl<t.
K II a N -Aldtr Creo, Ceder Cr•lt,
Ersltlnt C,_, l<trn Rlwr 1Dernocra1 Dem
to Kiit "-tllollM, Borell PoWtmo-lo
Otmocrel Dam, lubella Dem to 8ort11 PowtrlMKIH, I< Ill Powtrllo11sa to Lakt IUl>ella).
Decathlon
,., ............ La.)
l'IMlkatwl I. lttlMr lllYU), 1,17t points; t . Ande,_
CUCL.Al, •.171; I. JacklOft (Ari-SI.I, 1,..1; •.01-c• st. Mtrv'•l, 1,n•; s.s..,. ,.._..,,, r,61S; '-Plrtlt cv1re111111,7.J6f. ·-Laemn 111 HUltDl.n -Jack'°", 14 •• et•l' s..,., 1u.sc•1; P1rtte, l4..1St"5J;o.w..t,
14.17 (161); .._.,_., 11.97 CIS2l.
01scus-01-. 1su <1JO>; Jack1Gn, t~s
!INI; s..IMr, t•7 17t1); 14.nde,_., 10.t
17Jll ; Mn C P'lof1dl st.>, 14 H Cf 441.
POLE VAULT-Sayre I~ IH!ftoltl,
16-J (l,QS2); Sllrtl, 1 .. 1 C1.o21); setlner, l~S
(tll).
JAVaLIH-Anclerwn IUCLA).14'-1 CMSI ;
Steiner, 216-f Ctltl; OIHll, ,., .. 17421;
Eric~ IW..,,lnetonl, 1 ... .s; s..,., 1 .. 11 en•>· t,SOO -Oonlell CUtahl. •: 11.7l (nt);
llrkk-, l:tUS C60l; 14.nderwn, 4:0 .0
CPO; Stnl"1 CNtyY), •:lU2 Cd l; lrvlnt
CArl-U.),4:1S.'6.
Misc.
Gilchrist isn't
a specialist
USC star is multi-talented
By EDZINTEL
O( .. o.M ............
ln this age or specializatlon,
we're told it's better to do one
thing weU rather than several
things not·so-well.
Well, Debbiy Gilchrist doesn't
buy it. She does a lot or things
and abe does all oC them well.
Uke sports. It's not enou1b
that she can play tennis better
than the average 22-year-old.
But tennis is only a small part of
the talented Gilchrist's athletic
repertoire. She also cross coun-
try skis, backpacks, rockclimbs,
Jogs, plays racquetball and even
skydived-once.
"My mom and dad bad a fit
when they beard I went skydiv-
ing so I gave it up," she says.
BUT GILCHRIST has never
been known as a quitter. At use. where she'll graduate
tonleht with a degree in sports
medicine-recreation, Gilchrist
was a member of a women's
tennis team which, over the past
several seasons, has been
nothing short of phenomenal.
. The Trojans are currently vy-
ing to defend their AJA W Na·
tional Championship and gain
t~e fourth such title in the last five years.
In the process , they've
~massed a winning streak or 64
an dual match play, including a
30-0 record this year.
The Trojans' roster is littered
with some of the finest amateur
talent in the country, with young
~omen who have defeated the
lakes of Tracy Austin, Wendy
Turnbull, Betty Stove, Bettina
Bunge and Pam Shriver
For starters, there are the
Fernandez twins Anna Maria
and Anna Lucia. Their combined
singles and doubles dual match
record while at use is 118-14.
Anna Lucia, the taller one at 5·8
compared to Anna Maria who is
5·6 "4J, is undefeated through
three years of singles play.
TH EN THERE'S freshman
standout Kelly Henry. A product
of Glendale High, Henry was one
of the top-rated junior players in
the nation before coming to
USC. A three-lime Cl F cham-
pion in high school . she has won
matches over Austin, Stove,
Bunge and Shriver.
Another freshman star is Lin·
da Siegal. She teamed with
Henry lo win the 1980 Am ateur
Indoor Doubles title and defeat·
ed Austin in 1978 to win the Na·
tional 16-and-under singles
crown.
Nina Voydat, a sophomore
from Sacramento, is one of six
USC women who earned All· ~merican honors last year and
1s undefeated in her collegiate
singles career .
That kind of lineup left
Gilchrist in the back11ta1e Ws
year, although ahe played more
this season than in any other or
her college years.
STILL, GILCHRIST was a
champion in every right. She
ba.d. the chance to play a1&inat
aome of the best in the world,
here in the states and abroad.
Two years ago, the 22-year-old
Newport Harbor High grad com-
TENNIS
peted in Europe for three
months.
She played in several coun·
tries, including Switzerland.
Germany, HolJand and Norway.
It was in Holland wl\ere sbe
experienced what she says was
her most memorable moment in
tennis.
"IT WAS RAINING, so we had
to play an eight.game pro set
(where the match is decided in
eight games rather than the
longer two-out-of-three match
format>. I was down 2-7 and
came back before losing by just
one point. What was so thrilling
was that everyone at the "club
was cheering me on against my
opponent from Germany. I
guess J won a few friends over
t here."
Athletics have been the major
part of Gilchrist's life ever since
she can remember. She took up
tennis at the age of 13 under the
tutelege of pro Bob Abbott at his
s umm er tennis camps in
Newport Beach
In hig h school , Gilchrist
played tennis and ran track. She
was an average miler and 8*>
runner. "But I bet I could do a
lot better now," she says.
As a senior at Newport Harbor,
her tennis team advanced to the
CIF quarterfinals and Gilchrist
was honored by the Chambi?r of
Commerce as one of the out-
standmg senior athletes
GILCHRIST has taught tennis
and while in Europe, organized
some tournaments. "That's
where I first played on clay. It
helped a lot. It m akes you a
steady player. Playing one set
on clay is like playing two on
concrete."
This summer, she will teach
tennis at the Old Ranch Tennis
Club in Seal Beach and some
day. wouJd like to be a tennis
pro. If not, she'd like to pursue a
c areer as an exe r cis e
physiologist.
That's Gilchrist. Nothing
usual about her. Right from the
spelling of her first name C"l
s pell it Debbiy jus t because
there are so many Debbies in the
world").
BYU's Steiner wins
decathlon title
BATON ROUG E, La. CAP> -
Tito Steiner of Brigham Young
surged into the lead with the
best vault of his career Wednes-
day night, then held off a de·
lermined bid by UCLA's Mark
Anderson to win the NCAA de·
cathlon champions hip for the
third time.
Steiner finished with 8,279
points to 8.171 for Anderson -
..both collegiate and NCAA meet
records for scoring.
STEINER SCORED 4,078
Wednesday -the most ever
scored by an American college
competitor on the second day of a decathlon. Anderso.n set a
first-day scoring record with
4,241 but faded in the second
day's competition.
Steiner held the previous col-
legiate record for scoring with
8, 124 points scored in 1979.
Raimo Pihl of Briaham Young
.held the NCAA meet scoring rec~rdof8,079setin 1975.
Steve Jacobs of Arizona set
Surfers vie
at Salt Creek
Saddle back College and AVCO
Community Developers will
sponsor the fourth annual swf·
ln1 championships at Salt Creek
Beach in Laguna Ni1uel Satur-
day and Sunday.
The ~ntest will operate under
National Scholastic Surfinf AA-
aoctaUon rules, which require all
competitors to be full·Ume slu·
den ta.
Competition begina at 8 a.m.
on both dllJ's or the contut.
Divltlona include boys, ace 14
and under; J unlora, a1e 15
tbrouch 17; mea, aa• 18 throup ~; muten, age 2S and older;
wom~n·a o~n; and kneeboard opeo.
The entry fe6 ls $12, which ln·
clude1 1 T~lhirt and c•rtlflcale.
Awardi Will be pre1enled to the
U>p Ufree ln each cl111.
For more Information phoM
831·4Mt.
the collegiate mark for second·
day scoring . in 1979 with 4,059
points and Mauricio Bardales of
UC Irvine set the second·day
scoring mark for the NCAA
meet with 4,011 points in 1977.
Dannie Jackson of Arizona State
was third Wednesday with 7,861
points.
Steiner, a l&-year-old Argentin·
ian, won the decathlon o~ •m·
p1onship in 1977 and 1979, then
sat out last season in hopes of
competing in the Olympics for
his native country. However,
Argentina joined the Moscow
boycott.
49ers' Settles
hangs self
in jail cell
LOS ANGELES (AP> -An
investigation was under way in·
to the death of Long Beach State
running back Rom Settles,
whose body was found hanging
in a jail cell three hours after he
was arrested, police said .
Settles, 21, from nearby
Carson, was the fifth-leading
rusher in Long Beach State bis·
tory with 1,323 yards. He had
one year of college elialbility
left.
Settles' body was found 'Tues-
day hanging from a tnattress
cover tied to a horizontal sup-
port bar in his holding ceJl1 the
other end knotted Uthtly around
his throat, accordina to police
lieutenant Robert Deeley.
Deeley said SetUes had been
arrested at 11:30 a.m. the same
day. Settle. waa stopped tor
drlvtna 47 mph tn a 25·mpb IOne,
Deeley said.
Deeley aa.ld that s.ttJea pWjed
1 knlle when police otflc•n
ukect bJm to fet out ot tM car .
S.ltlea was boolleil on ••p&ckla
of aasault wltb a deadly .. ..,...
realatin1 arreet, pou..U.. oi
cocaine and 1peictta1, Deele1
11ld. i
-
Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT/Thursday, June •. 1981 Cl
rnrn~~m~~~
Fluor shatters income records
Fluor Corp., lrvine, has an-
nounced record earnings,
revenues and backloa for the
six-month pertod ended April 30.
The company said It earned
S72.7 million, up 13 percent, for
the six-month period ended April
30 compared to net earnings of
$64.1 million for the like period
last year. Earnin4s per share
were Sl.49 for the six months, up
12 percent from $1.33 per share
for the comparable period In
1980.
Revenues tor the first six
months of flscal 1981 were $2.7
billion compared to $2.3 billion ror the prevtoua year. New or·
ders were $5.3 billion compared
to $3. 7 billion in 1980. Bacldo1
was $18.8 billion, up 38 percent,
compared to $13.6 bllllon al the
end of the tlrtt six months of
1980.
E arnln1s for the second
quarter were $37.S million com-
pared to $36 million for the like
period the previous year. Per-
share earnings were 77 cents
compared to 75 cents per com-
mon share for the second
quarter in 1980.
Revenu were $1.4 billion ln
the second quarter compared to
$1.1 blllion tor the like period
last year.
Fluor Corp. has acquired 45
percent of the shares or St. Joe
Minerals Corp. and Intends to
acquire the remaining S.S per-
cent or such shares in a merger.
which has been unanimously ap-
proved by the boards or direc-
tors of both companies.
In the merg~r, Fluor would ex·
chanae 1.2 shares of IU 1tock for
each share of St. Joe 1toclr.
Proxy material for the upcom·
lna meetin1s of the shareholders
or the companies has been sub·
mitted to the SecuritJea & Ex-
change Commlsion for its ap-
prov al. Upon approval of the
material by the commission, it
will be submitted to the
shareholders or bOth companies.
It is anticipated the mer1er will
take place in the early part of
August.
Shuttle flights trimmed to 34
WASHINGTON <AP> -Tight
budgets and supply problems
have forced the National
Aeronautics and Space Ad·
ministration to cut Crom 48 to 34
the number of space shuttle
flights planned through 1985.
Or. Stanley Weiss, associate
administrator of NASA , has said
the "substantial decrease" in
the shuttle program means only
* * *
30 operational missions -plus
three more test flights -will OC·
cur in the next four years
Weiss said the rescheduling is
necessary primarily from two
reasons: budgets that keep the
space agency from flying some
of its scientific missions and de·
lays in constructing and deliver-
ing a new, lightweight external
fuel tank for the shuttle.
* *
NASA oCficials sald they had
planned to use the new external
fuel tank, which is 6,000 pounds
lighter than the one flown on the
Columbia, on 28 operational mis·
sions.
But these tanks, which con·
tribute to better performance
and payload, proved harder to
make and assemble than an·
* * *
Space 'hottest' buy on Earth
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP> -A narrow corridor 22,JOO
miles up in the air is being billed
by space officials as (he "hottest
real estate on Earth."
ll 's an area where satellites
can "hover" in orbit above a
fixed location on the globe. The
demand for the parking space in
the heavens is booming, and ex-
perts predict the traffic jam will
get worse before the end of the
decade.
the advent of the space shuttle
program. During their first mis-
sions. space shuttles will carry
at least 11 geosynchronous
satellites into orbit.
Theoretically, an almost un-
limited number of satellites
could occupy the flyway without
colliding. But because signals
from communication satellites
can jam each other. they must
be spaced 1,500 miles apart to
avoid interference.
more locations by the mid-19805.
Still more satellites are awaiting
approval by the FCC.
Although Latin American
countries haven't launched any
satelUtes yet. they are staking
out their share of the corridor.
Following the advice of the State
Department, the FCC has de·
cided to leave three spots open
for Latin American countries.
Dividend declared
ticlpated, and eight will not be
delivered on schedule. they said.
NASA officials met last week
with private contractors and
government agencies who have
scheduled payloads on the shut·
ties and informed them of their
revised flight times.
Weiss said some users are dis·
turbed by the delays, but most
were understanding and "pretty
upbeat" about the shuttle pro-
gram.
Users who have bought cargo
s pace on the shuttle have been
frustrated because or previous
delays. Some have opted to con-
tract for old, expendable rockets
as a backup to launch satellites
in case the shuttle isn't ready
to fly on lime.
The successful, near-perfect
flight or the shuttle Columbia in
April has restored confidence in
the program and showed that
the space glider would perform
as expected. Weiss said.
"At the m~eting, there was
much less talk about expendable
vehicles," Weiss told a news
briefing. ··one concern has
been dissipated -whether the
vehicle will fly."
Even so. he said, some users
may decide to cancel their shut-
tle reservations and fl y earlier
on another rocket.
Al"W
BOEING FAMILY -Each model or Boeing jetliner is in 1
line in photo taken at Boeing Flight Center in Seattle. The
firm has delivered 3,959 jet-powered airliners to 215 t
worldwide customers. Some of the planes pictured are !
the 727, foreground, the military 707 (A WACS), 737 and
747 . Each aircraft, except TWA 's 747, background, are ,
undergoing flight testing before delivery. We!ttern Airline
serves John Wayne Airport in Orange County with its 737
made by Boeing.
Passenger use dips
• at county airport
The number of passengers
traveling through Orange Coun-
ty 's John Wayne Airport
declined slightly in April from
March, according to figures re·
cently released by airport of·
ficials.
than in the same period in i98d.
the report notes.
There were 2,456 operations
<either takeoHs or landings) ol
commercial jets in April, 4 pet·
cent more than the 2,357 in AprU
1980, the figures showed
Grants awarded
or the 1,101 satellites now in
orbit. 110 of them are in
"geosynchronous" orbit -orbit·
ing at a speed that keeps them
at a fixed point above the
equator. The rest travel at lower
altitudes. circling the Earth up
to 16 times per day.
Only 10 satellites were in
geosynchronous orbit in 1968.
and the count is expected to rise
to 300 in the next four years with
In the space above the
Western Hemisphere, there are
21 prime spots for communica·
lion satellites. Twelve already
have been taken by the United
Stales and Canada, and the re·
mainder probably will be filled
by the end of the decade.
The United States has eight of
these slots, and the Federal
Communications Commissions
has authorized the use of six
MSI Data Corp. 's board or
directors has declared a regular
quarterly cash dividend or 10
cents per share on the common
stock, William J . Bowers.
chairman and chief executive of·
ficer, has reported. The dividend
i s payable June JO to
stockholders or record June
12. MSI is in Costa Mesa.
Weiss said seven of the can·
celed missions we re NASA
flights and the other seven in·
volved private communications
satellites and payloads to be
launched for other countries.
Figures s howed that 204,048
persons passed through the
airport jn April, compared to
206,285 in March, a decrease of
about 1 p erce nt. The
passenger figure was nearly
identical to that of April 1980.
For the year to date, 765.680
have travele d through the
airport, about 2.6 percent less
WASHINGTON <AP> -Two
Sa n Joaquin Valley Indian
rancherias will be awarde~
more than $2.7 million In hOU&·
ing grants. said Rep. Chari~
Pashayan, R· Fresno.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~.--~~~~~~~~~~--.~~~~~~~~~~~
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PU~UC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTla OF TRUSTEE'S SALE f'ICTITIOln Mnt..... Ml"RIOlt COURT Of' "ICTITIOUS IUSINEH f'ICTITIOUI 1u1ueau "ICTITIOUI IUllN•U "'CTITIOUSIUllN•U f'ICTITIOUI MlllN•U
L-No. C<WSJ NAMa STATUUNT CAU~ .. IA, COUNTY Of' NAMI: STATEMaNT fltAM8 ITATaMeNT llAME ITAftMllNT NAMEITATaMaNT ~ ITATaMllNT
T.S. No.~ TM, ......... ...,_ .. "°""....... Oll&lfO• Tiie lollowl119 penon •• dOll\Q TM tol•-•no ---"· .... clOlnQ TM toll-Int _ .. M .,. clOlllQ Tllefol!OWtftt...-••dolnollu.i..... TM lollewf"f --•r• .. I ... AMERICA.N STATE BANK•• CIVIY _.. ORDaRTOIMOWCAUla f'OR t>uslness•: bWlness•: -•-•: H : · '"'"-•:
-lnt..s Trus'91 ""*'Ille followlllQ MI RAGE INT•A IOAS. UOO Q1ANa Of' NA11M1 CAMCO SERVICES. •S> So. Hanoer. STAP'P'ORO/AlltO JOINT VEN· SUCHUK DEVELCWMENT CO.. A. SUlfGAOWTH INVESTMENTS, COURTYARD SHOES, 1~ He4t
det.c:rlbed -of trvst WILL SILL F•lr•lew Aoed Suite L·lt2 CMte CAMlllUM9aR,.._,_.. SMl•AN,CA'2104. TURI, SHO l lrdl SlrMI, ~ 1"7 H...-...... ""-' leecll, ll20PeclfkC..H19MreJ,HYl'ltl .... A-,TIMlfl.CAfJlllO. .
AT PUILIC AUCTION TO THI Meu c.1"°""8·,.._ ' '" tlle ......... 919 ...... latleft Ill Ace (Arey -Int, t3l So. H-r. llffdl, CallfonUnMO. CA ftMI.. '4oKll,C•lfwlll•nMI MARTIN A. CHIAVARIO, Inf
HIGHEST BIDDIEA FDA CASH DAVID f'ETI! OOWLEY, UDO JOSt4 ELLIOTT IELL for a..,.. of S.nt•Ane.CA'2104. THE STAFFORD COMl"AHY, • CHAAL.UH. TUllNEA, 1 .. 1HM· SUNGROWTH PAOPEATY P:elr-.uuw.od,CA"711. I
'"'•Ille •1 time of ••le ln l•wful Felrvl ... lllMM, Suite L·202, C.t• N•me. Tiii• buslneu ,. <onCluc:lild by ... c.11 ........ 0.-el P.rtnenhlp, SI row 1"1-,.....-nt.ec11,CAt21MO. MANAGEMENT, 1120 Pec:lflc: C.oHI ANNIE I.EE 041AVARIO, J22'
money of Ille Unllecl SC•tesl ell r"811t. Meu, eatlfonU ,.._ JOSH l!U.IOTT IELL l\u llled 1 lnc:llvlCIWI. II r <II I tr .. I, New por I B .. <II SU.I.AHNE TVRNf It MM H..-.-H..,.,.•y. H..,.I""'°" llffcll. C•llfonll• P:•lrmllf\, IAllewelld. CA "'111.
tllle •nCI Int-I COfl"9Yed to ..... -Tiiis IMnlMsl K c:-.Cll90 by ., !ft. wtll'-11 '" INl C>llW1 for .., order e l-Au C. -1"9 C.lltonll• ftMO. ...... ........, llMcll. CA fMM. .,.._ Tlllt ........ It ~ .., t..
Mid by II-Mid OMO., TrlKl In div........ I_,,..~ le < ...... "'• neme Tiii• ...... _"' .... llled wlUI Ille AEltO COURT, A CAl.IFOANIA Tiii• ...,.,_II <•Muc:1ed .. , • uwnnce D. Sc:.llleJ • ..., ..._ dlvlclueltl ......... &Wlfe). IM~lleAltwlllereletcrllled: O..... ..... Dowtey from JOSH l!U.IOTT IELI. "'.10SH CountyClef'llofOr1n91C-tJOflMey GENERAL PARTNERSHIP, t ... 1 19Mf'•I,_ •• ....._ Key Clrcre. Hvnllngton Buell, ~A.C:Nevetle
TRUSTOR: ERVING JUSTIN,.., Tlllt ......_. -flled •IUI h El.LIOTTCAMMEll. 1', 1'11 CAN YON CREST. SAN JUAN OW'MIN. Tw...-C•llfonti.'2MI AMlel.a~lo 1
unmurled men Ceuttly Cle<tl of Or .... c--, -,.,.., It,,........, Dnlwed -I ... ,.,_ "1H04 CAPISTAANO, CAl.IFORNIA m7S. "'" .......,,_. ... fllell •ltll IN GI-L. GNrllen, 1't2J s._, Tiii• ~ ... ti ... •ltll ,,,.
BENEFICIARY: AMERICAN 12.1•1. 1-Mcllntlleinetterefer ... ICI-PvbtlllleclOr-ColllDellyPllOI, THESTAfOFORDCOMPANY, C041111y Cle<lt of Or.,91 COunly on Drive, ~l"91011 8Mc:ll, C.llfoml• C-tyCle<tlolOr .... c:.ny-MeJ
STA TE BANK, • Celllornl• corpore· fll'917 -r llelwe ltU c:.wt In o.,.rtlMfll M•y 21, 2'. JUM 4, 11, 1•1 2l7Mt A CAl..IFOANIA Gl!NERAL A1Wll 2t, 1"1. .,... 26, l"1.
llon P"bllllWd Or .... CM$t o.lly l"llot, .... 1 et NO Civic GenW Ort.,. Wea, • PARTMER$t41P "1611# Tiiis t>uslneu Is c-1ed lly e 11Mntt a ............. Aec:Of'Cled Mlly ts, t• M lnllr. No. Mey u, 21,., J-'· 1"1 219N1 s...u AN. Callfernle,.,. .,_ u . 1911• PUBLIC NOTICE BY STEVE STAFP:OAO, ......,,.,..,. 0r.,,.. CMll o.lly PllOI. -••l-1nerllllp. ..,. C...... DrM, ....,., 1 .. 50 In -l3'0t, "911 ln.. of Di· -e111·ae.l'I\. _.._eMh,.._ GENERAl.l"ARTNER MeyJ9,J-•, l1,1I, l"1 107 .. I G ...... L.GNrll9n ..__. ...... CA ....
ll<l•I Rec:orm In the otllce of Ille PVBUC NOTICE ~ If...,·_.,,..,.. ftY tekl pell· -THIS STATIM•NT WAS FILED Tiii• sle-.,., 111.o wlUI Ille 11 ... UA Rec:orO.otDreneaco..ntJ;S• .. CIMcl llonl;rdwllltofnoeme-CIMlbe NOTIC•O .. TRUIT•E'SSAL• WITH THI! COUNTY CLERK 01" CowlttyClerllofOr .... C_,.yonMey ,.,..,.
of trvst dH<rlbe• IN 1011-1"9 "'°' .,...,led. T.S. N ..... 1 ORANGE COUNTY OH MAY 1, 1•1 PUBLIC NOTICE 2', 1•1. Pufall.,... Or-CMll Delly Pl~
party: ,. C'T1 II Is -........ ~. CltllY.. NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN, INI MU•n•• & VOii, Pl._ Mey 2', J-•.11. M, 1•1 1-..t
I.OU t50 -tSI of Trect No. to7, In wr:::.::::.-::-ltlll or• 9 -~lie .............. on We..,,._J, J-11, t•t et t :OO AnORNenAT LAW f'ICTITIOUl IUllNaU Pwellllllecl Or ..... CMst o.lly ,.I._, • IM City~ Newport leec:ll. C-y of TM fol ...... llHW Is dolfll buM lnTHl DAILY PILOT, •-peperof o'<lo<lt• m.ofselelci.y. In llle-yol 1 ... f'AlllQttU>DRIYe, NAME ITATWMT Meyll,J-4.11,1,1"1 24'S-11. l
Or.,..a. tete of C.lllwftl•. ••Pit' . · .,._., ,~. ~llMcl In.,., 1111 olfl<u of AEAL ESTATE sun•• Thi fol'°"""',__ 1, ..,._ llUM· PUBLIC NOTICE
1 """"reciw-ln 8ootl 211. Peoes H le........ <_I, et --.. ....... tor,_ SECURITIES SERVICE, locetecr ., f'OITOflf'IC•IOXt"'1 MUH: .... -
M l1Kllltlw, MIK•11•-s MelK. In ._. ::oAS~AL EQ~v, '"r!.~·M.!:2 <OflM<UClw-. iw1or •IN NY Of mo Non11Br-•y,5\111• *·In Ille 1Rv1 .. •,CM.1flCNINIAftTIJ OPl'S CARl"l!T, 1_,. WfftlWI• PUBLIC NOTICE ,.,_..,._ ........... .. IM olfke of Ille C-iy Rec:ereler of , ..... -. -• Mldl\eer-City of s.nt. AM, C.-ty of Or.nee, PUll.ISHED ORANGE COAST • .. .. -·--
UICI CovnlJ, to1•111•r •llll 111• c.llfS~ll .~-~-•o1 Detff"'-Y12.1"1 St.I• of c.llfoml•, GEOAGE~ DAILY PILOT, MAY 14. 21, .. JUNf strwe .... ~,· .. -. ·o·CA··~s •• ,. s. NAMllSTAT9Maln I NOf'tll-ly17teelGflNl-11eft• 1 -·-·Y· _,,,. -._..M ,..,_ AECONVEYANCE COMPANY • •,1'11 i:m.1 ., ..,,. ,. " '"'" .. Tiie fe41owl del VI• c.-ecl)olflifll uld 1...., on u. Orhe. Relllno Hiii• Etlotu , -.·.,.. C•llfornl• corporellol\, •s d~lw v~-....GWIMM,CAt12IOIS. PICTITIOUllUllMHS 119 _ .... ••• .., Calllonlle tOU• ·-' Tltls ....._It~.._.., In· NAME ITATaMeNT ... tlneu•: SooillleN&.......,,... by R..oluU.., of . --..c:-t appolnt..t Tl'Vll" ,,_ •llCI --nt v' RALEIGH HILLS HOSf'ITAL ... City C-11 of llM City of ... WllOl'1 I Tiii• bltslness I• conel\lcteil llY • oouo· uc ......... LIE-CHTY to 1~ -., .. ,. c-forred In 111•1 PUBLIC NOTICE dlvld ... I. TM foll-•no ""'"" •r• clOlno f I I mi-..--.... ...... . ·-.---· ~· JAMES£. lt091EllTS -·11-··· c"A'°'..!.:. -s.....t, --1 IH<ll/I Beecll, • cert fled c09y of wlllcll -~"'"•" AttAWMY ot '--• cerl•ln Oeff of Trust uecvted by ..., ·-RHOlullon wu rec:orded June 10, ltSJ AIM<tSt.fl SION.-tc.tUrDr S t20 ERVING. JUSTIN en vnm•rrled Tlllo ......._. -llled wlltl IM THE MESA PINES. llOO Quell AOVAHCIEDHEAL'"SYSTEMS
'" loek 2511, P•o• , ... 0111<1•1 Tiii• ....._. ... llled wltll IM .... ,.,. ...,_ c. .,... ... men -rec..-Mey 12 1-In f'ICTITIOUI aUSIN•U c-t., a..."' Or .... C-y.,. Mey Strwt, Wtit lei', _,.,., &Ndl, CA INC., 171tl (M1wrltlll ...... lrvlM:
Recorcll. ,....,,, a..t; °'Or .... c_,. ... Mey ,,,., ........ B..-'*'of Offlc:lel Rec:...d. of Mwd MAMll STATa ... NT •• 1"1. tMM. CA '271• '
2U VI• Geno•. Newport 1••<11, 12. 1•1. ,...1111..., 0r.,.. Cont Delly Piiot, County, •I P• .. 1,.,, Aecoreler'• Tiie followfnt peraon It Cloln ~~= . .:=;. .i./..A.~':!:.· c! ~~rlllr ....!.1111~_..;..,_.11COlldllctocl 11, • cerl
C.tllornle. "1...U. M•y 14 21 a. J-' ,., m1 .. 1 lnstrul'TMftlNO. 1JCM.t, by r-of • IMl•lne1t ff: -,_..,._. ..... -.. Ill• llTWI eOC!ress or common de-PwblllMd Or .... Coast 0.lly l"llot, • • • · bree<ll or del•vll In payment or O'S KIDS, 414 C•w Miu St., Coste ............. CA.... WALLY KNUE, JAn "-'' W•J, ·ADVANCE O HEAL T"
•ltnellon Is sllowl'I Move, no ••rrenty """' 14, 2l. 211. J-•. 1tt1 2221 .. 1· perlorm•nce or Ille obll9et1on• ""-M, CA ta.27. '1 ... ltA COii• ....._CA '2IUL S STEMS INC. I
It t1"9n u to lb<~ or 'or. PUBUC NOTICE MCure<I tllereOr lnc:lwdlng INI cMUln 01-L Fortlley, 4' Cott• .._.. ,.,..,. T'lll• _,,..., Is 'encki<IM by • Y •
rKIMUI. .. Tiie llenefklerJ -r UICI PUBLIC NOTICE j b<'Ncll.,. Cltl..,it. Holk.I of _!di •H SI., Colt. """8, CA '2'21 PwbllltlM Or.,.. Cout Delly Pllelt. 19Mr.t ,.._...._ "'-L '"-'-· I
O....of TNSt,byre•Mnof•brM<llor --------rec:ordecl J-ry 2', !tit In toot; Tllh bwlneu I• conclucllcl bJ.., Mey9,J-4,11,11,1"1 t.C7"'1 ~~ Tiiis :..=;"'.!.. 11..., wllll ~
d•f•ull In Ille Obllptlon• tK11red f'ICTITIOUl•UllNESS lltJO of Oiflcl•I Records or Hid lncllvldlull. Tl!'• .... _ ... fll~ .......... c-ty Clortl el Orllltlt QMIMy .. -IMrebJ, ....Were·--..... de-"ICT1TIOUSaUstNISI MAMlllTATaMaMT Covnty, er pege 1122, Recorder'• Ol-L.Fortney ,. .,.. -"',,. 21 l•l ---,
llwrecl .. IM vnder"9oN • •rllten NAMa ITATeMaMT TM ttllOwlflt .--.,. *"" lnttrvment No. MOi., WILL SELL AT Tiii• tt.111-1 ... "'" •1111 Ille PUBLIC NOTICE C-tJ Clerll tllf Or .... eo..nty Oft Mey • . a
Oecl•rollon of Oef..,11 -OtmMd Tiie fal ...... --lo ...... llMI-11u.i ....... : PVll.ICAVCTIONTOTI41EHIGHl!ST CountyC!ar1lofOr ..... COl.WltyOflMeJ ---26,1•1. ,.-.-.....,,.,..Or .... c-tOellJ l'I
fer S.le, encl Wf'nt.ft ne41U .r llne<ll Mii •: I AA ELY LEGAL FUN ANO llDDER FOA CASH lhlflll -y of It, t•I. -Mey 9 '-4. 11 141 1"1 ..... •lld •• •lec:Uon I• (8\IM IM un-CAL PAC ~ITAL SERVICas. SUNWIAR, I001 ll~ll ....... 4. S..lte INUlllledSIAtn,•llP•YHllottMtllM fl1U4et PICTITIOUI IUllM•U .......... Or .... C.O.st Delly ....... • • •
ClenltMCI to ... , MIO pr-rty lo "" I . '"" ,.,...._ W1e Jlt. SeMe l .. ,, .... ,....,CAn.a.. or .. 11. •11 rlgllt. tlll• ...0 lnllf'fllnow Pvbllsl\M Or .... Cout Delly Piiot. NAMEITATUdNT Mey··'-··..!~· ... 1"1 UlJ.41 ---· MtltfJeeicl•l9etlOft9,encltllerN,_.. AN,CellfwmletV01. fl.AMELA El.llAllETH lleldbylt etTrut ... lnancttol,,.t Meyll.21.J.,..4,ll,l•I tm-11 TMfe4'°"""'~"tlolftCllMlll· PUBLIC NOTICE • Ula"'*"'"'*' <MIMCI MIO Mtlce of P'RANK McENCIANY, M12 N-..11 F'EL TMAN, 17JO Chluy Drive, , .. , pr.ny llt16et. '1n Mid C-ty 111" H : PUBLIC NOTIC"" ' 11<·ucll 9111dllt<11eft10 lie Recorded w • .,, caca-... Cellfer'ftle9a27. N..,pertlMdl CA'2MO. •nd St ... clel<rftlecl "foltows· Loa PUBLIC NOTICE SUNSHINE MAINTINANCE, Ml r. ---•
Fettr11•ry1S,t•leslfWtt.He,Jt71SU. T"lt~l1c:.-.CtedWM.,._ 1tATl4YOufiONT,tl40Tonc.ny, t50ef141M,l ofTr«tH .. toJ,ln0.:.Clty L•M .. ery L•ne, L•tll"• Buell, f'ICTITIOUllMISl .. aU ;
llOoll I,_, -US, of tekl Offkfel tlvldlYel. •11t,f'leyao.llloy,CA. of N-Por1 e.ec:ll COllllly of Or..... PICTlnoulevMNaM Cell=~:'5~1tON JOUVl!NAT, "ICTITIOUllUMMUI Tiie ... ~~~':!.-... _,! A~kl'*-.... ~ri ~ _ _.... ..... -tt~• T•'-!~·-,' .. ~ wt--Tiiis ...._ It <....,_""' by • 5'ele of C.lllorrtl•: ff lhoWft Ofl e,,.,.. -& .... IT&-... •-llAME ITATaMtlMT -··· ......,. ~ -· .... -I --· -"-· -· -~ .... _,_ -,,_ -~ .....,.1~. recor"-d 111 llOINt -. ..-ea• U to » -•••-.. • Ml L--.,.y LAne, ~ lhec:ll, coWMl!l w _r_,1,, .,...,.. .. or Im-C°""ly Clerk of Or ..... c.unty M P-.CE.P:ellq\M lnclualve of Mhcelleneous Mep&, "'° .. ~ ...... --II ...... bid!· C•lllOnileftU1. TIM IOllowlnt --11 dOl119 llWll· McCAAY INTIERNATl°"-'L,,...
plle4, ,...1"111111 11tM, po_ll...,, er ,..,II 1S, l"1. Tlllt llOl-t .,., lllecl wlll\ W. records"' Oo'-CO<llltw c.llfor,.le . Tiiis buMNu It --ll90 llY., ,,,. MMR~H EL£CTAIC, t'5 nr. ~t !.'..~ ~ C.. MtM., c.llfWlll~, 111<..mbrllnC.IS, to poy Ula ,_lnlnt """'9 C----" • l"LANTS l"ERMANENT, 6U dlvldlYel •-IWkKlpet..,,.. flf IN -Isl NCWW PWlltfleclOrefttie c..t 0.11, Piiot. 1 1~~of0r .... c-tyMMeJ tcooet~wlllltlleNortllwftWt'ly l7f .. I "'-A-,c..a.MeM.CAf'MD. OAYIDJOUVEMAT 14•.t.C..UMeM,Cellfwlll•taV Rellert M<Crey, "" Pll'81"4 ...,Mi.o.ottt1T""4,~l~t• Meyl• t1a,J-41911 nu-et a, · ,.1&_tl ollNI flWllOnofVteO-*')ol"lllt . RDIRftT LEa SMITH, Ht Tilll .._. -ft ... wltll t111 RMert MkMof ..... lftlll. WUN C>rlw c..-...c:etlfwllle ...
111 uld ..... prowlClecl ......_ .. If.,.., • • • -· Mid lend .., V. SoutMott -ndonecl ....,,.., A-c...t. ,,...._CA 9116!7 C-t., Cl.Aftl of °" .... OMlrilY Oft ~7 • -l. C-te MIM. C.llfomle T"lt INUlwa It C9"d!K~ lly .,
vnoer .. tonNtf.itlclOeedofTnia~ P11 .. lltlled o. ..... Coell O•llY bJR•lolUCIMoflMCltyC-lloflM '"l'"""•altCMdlictedlty•...: Me 111• ·-•• lduel IHI, CMf99s en41 upenset et Ille PUBLIC NOTICE f'IJot.MeyU,2l,2t,J-4, 1•1 n..MI City of N_,...., 8N<h, • c.rtlflecl •ldlMI. Y ' • Ill~ Tiii• ..._ 1, concluc1ecl .,Y.,. In-• •
TNllH 111111 ..... lrutb er..-. ..., , ... ., Of wltkll R-"'tlon .... t'Korded • lt-.n LM SIWtll P\o!MI-OBntlt ~ Deity Pla.t, dlv141Nl. ""' -=Mt-ere: ... ....,. .... o.tt"' Tn.M. Seid Mia wm.,. f'ICTITIOU11UM••• PUBUC NOTICE J-10. Im le looll Ull,,...Mot TlllS ......,_. -filed"""" lie Mey1•,21.-..1-•, 1t11 mHI Tltla --=~.:-'.:: -C-.CIN1ltfOr=C-y• llelcl lft ~I J-1', 1"1 It 11:• _&__, -&-.~... Otflc:lel RICM'da, c-l., OW.f/I 0r-.. CMlllly M Mey '-~w Cl......,'"' Or .... "'-~w -..._ "-Htl e.ftl.etltlettlfkeofT.D.~C-. -..... _,., Tllttlreeted0r"9or_r_ 9,1tt1, _.., ........ _,,,_,__,, "°''' ._.of -k.e T-. iwt• TM ,.,......,. ,.,_ .. •Int....._ dHltnetton, If eny, of Ill• •HI .,_. », 1'11. ,..._ ~ltlwd 0r.,... CMtl Dell~ l'I
1110. OM en., levlev•r• W•U, -••: ':'~::.'i"~.1:.° proptrly llerell\lboVI clta<rlbed ,, l"WlllllM 0r-. o...t Delly ...... PUBLIC NOTICE ...,.., ..... Or-C-t Delly PIOAO Mey .. ,,_., 11,,.."" M1t .. 1
Ora11t1,CA...... KOlff IMTIRNATIONAI., t"S Netkeli..._,tl_ll!Mllldlwlll purJeftH te Ille: 2U Vie Genoe, Mayl!l,.i-4,11, ... 1"1 MtM1 ---------------tl'?-
AI 1M tllM M tN !Nltel .... lutlell ..... v ... °""" It-. ..... D•. .. reulWcl ...... "' -............... .... N .. ...,. IMdl, Celllorllle. -f'ICTITIOUS IUIU••U Mey •• ,,_ •• "· ,, 1"1 ..,, p• ... uc NOTIC ...
tt1 lMt ... lee h MUI -of Ille C..UMMa.~.... • ..... ~ Tiit 1111•11""" cllt<lelfM MIJ _. PUBLIC NOTICE •WITATEMaNT "9 0
llllJ•ICI ..... IK. ot Ill• ... 11 .. llM T.C. KOCHUltOIHY. 1SS5 ..... ='=~=:= ........ ,,ly tor.,,. ltl<ernc:IMu., . Tll• fell-Int PlrlOfl la CIOlno llKvrM..,tN...,.deec:tllled ..... V... 0rM hll, Wtle we. C:.C. Hltllklte.tDlttrkt. " Mid tlrMI ......... er olher C-m.11 ....., __ ,
tndt eM ..UlfltillM c.tl., .............. Cal ..... ftla. •sltNlleft. fltCTITIOUllUM•ea ""~UTHaR .. CA P:OA .. AP T •flcl .._ It tlM,265.0la. to ... Title ......... ~ .. by. I~ .... IGrlll --wltll ..-clfketlent 58111 .... wlll b• m•H wn11 ... 1 .... IT ......... , ""' " LI "' LAN
tetmlne U. .,...,ftl""' -_.,Ult div..... .... ~_I ...... "' ,..,,,. cev•ll•f'll M •• ., .... ,. ••IH'•H ., ,.... ......... --.. .... IAOKIRS. "" OKNlnl St., Senta ow•11...... 1'.c.~ -y ........... ftMI"" l»~kl lft'lpla.d,.....,..lili..--··· _ .. : AMH ....... CAft707. o.te· -.-.1•1 TMI ......... - , ......... '""'"' .. '"' O•J•tlftl•lll, 11UI ___ ..._ ......... Ille IM'IMINI M·C.MA(HINa, I ..... !Mee Wiiii.ti w.ltH Pll,.,, HS lltfl $1., 0AM&ftlCAN.ITATellAMK eo-t.,a.trOfOr .... ~et1Ma'y i.--= A-, ............ 9Ncfl, "-1•-•llllNetter..W.-iteet,_ \C:..MaM.~-*' ao;~~;.:_'°17, .. ____ by M
•MlclT""'-U., 1"1. MyltlfllftWY'9-..nM• M<llfecl lly Nld 0... of Truat, •ltfl M ~ •• OWi, 1Mt lllltl l4llel
I T.D.URVICECQM,.ANY .. ,._. 1111 ti•.._.,. It lt IM.Mocl ..,.,,. lnt.,.11 • snvlttH In \oW NOW et Mrwt,c.t.MaM,Clf...,,..._., v ,..:11•-W.flll'•• ' .._. .... 0r.,...c..t0111lrll'I-. ,.,...,,~.,. • ....-. ••lier o4111 .. u..; 114111 ..,_ ... II Tltlt ....... le~..,.,. ...., _., ... ~u..-Mayl4,tl,.,~4,ltt1 mM1 .,II•• ait.11 M clHrly m•r••• ..,.,,....,_._..,,.,._.MlclO..• _,....._ Tltls ......._. -119" wltll 11'1 ,.:......;-., ~~ '!~. i:::.:.-Tr111t •114 1111~•11 .,. eny tll<ll ....... °"" C_t.,Cl9ftlf/IOl' .... ~.,.Mey
0..C)ly .... WMl -• --.. _..,,. • I .... MIC .. eM ~ '-• ~.... Tltll ........ -,.... ... lt, , .. ,, ' 0r-CA,.... · PUBLIC NOTICE '""""••1111 ._..._.,, H11H1t1-.iM .. ,...... of .. TnHlllH _, °' .,. c-tl' °"11fll0r ... c-.ty.,. a.~• .......... 0r-,.,~1 ..... ,,~•,.um,~.
1,:;;;:::.,._ .. ecll Ullleft Hltll kltM4 DIWkt, ttvttt CACIATf.O IY SAID OEaD OP ... 1 .. 1. ~----....,. ..,.. ' ,.. I~ "41rMr Newt t0U1 v ...... fl<W, H .... 1 .... 1 TRUST. THIE TOTAL AMOUMT Of' MeyJl, ... J-4,ll,1_, IJIMI -.:::~9"fl0.0r ... c.M fllCnTIOUllMllf.... INdl, CA ..... W ....... et W $1110 OILIOATION INCLUOINO ~--Or-..c..t~l'
OeHJ ... ~.MWt,11,11,"'1 ,.,,_., Tlte ~:!:~,. ...... ~t;_·.:;."'l!,':;."':l~":i l"RINCt~ACCltUiOINTHllT, ... ,. ....... 11 .... "'1 DINI '-----....,..,--:--:---........... : _..,.,..., ... ,.. ~~=... ... v"~:.".!~:::•;::~. HAR~lfll( MOtUOMI Alf ......... ~ .. ,__,.. CHAROlt ANO ..... Hid Of' tHf PtlBUC NOTICE
IMYUTOM t1A. WI 0... ......._ .,. .. , 4 .......... lllCUllM TltUStee, AT THI TIM• OF 'tcTfTMWIUIHtell =Ml. .......... """"-CMlfWllla ..,_,Ill • ._ IMITIAL f'UIUCATION Of' THIS ---·..... ..,._ITATUMl.-T .. ...,..... .. ,.,.. ...... .._......,. NOT1ca.1s...,....st .--···-----T111..._.._.._ ..... ...._ HAltaoR~ .. IC MORTOM« ...._..,. .... _... .. ._ .... , DATWOMAY1~"" ~ITATIM99T -•I
T ... ........._...,_.,. lflfYUTOMtlNC>,WtO.....,__ _. ... ......,,.. ....... ,._......,_ G • 0 R 0 e TOWN .,.. ........... ..,__..,......... OLOIAL •YtTIMI
.......... : ..... , • ......, '-"' ~ ~.....,.,. ......... lllllllief• alCONYCYMC9ClOl11U•&ttY -•1 IM.,.ltMAT'IONN.o 4ttt C.... ~
l"llTOl.llt,.N. T...._0-.,.... _., A (M.lflORNIA CiORl'ORATIOff •NlltGY f'IMAMCll1I., nt IMC ....... ~IWI ~-......... -..rr. *' °"""--. Tlle._. __ lllltttiM•,.tect Al TftUIT•e, ' •t1•'1r f'Ma, ......,. ... di, 0.... L. .......,, •• C.. J-, cert .. ---.~ .................. '-"'~ ........................ av RRAI. llTATI[ .. ..c---.~IWI
ll'tece ........... ~-. ~-... .__ ......... llr a ................ JIC\JlttTIU CW.:~="'9...... .._.,,_.,_..,,mt .... .... J, ----.·-.c·er• ,..,.-,._....~ ... Ml ........ 919 .... lll•"•W'-U.ltY~AU.L.ll'ORNIA D9 CW. • 11'.0 • ._,._.,II ••• ... II.~ lllN,.._ ......... ~-...... _. ... ._....,_ tfltlH. TN Dllttlct MalH llt COR..,_.TIOM ITIAOIMT 11'.T,.._ ~ W
TMl..._11_....lr .. • --·ll'llClftc .......... ..., ...... -................ O.J.~llt ' '1Me....._,.~.., .. -. Tiiie ....... jj ceMIK.-.., a ........ ,...-..,._... ....._If_,.._ ,._ INY '9 (MM.I 0 J .MOROl1t, IT1 ...._ ....... .......... c.t a.--... ,.INrf',.......... • ... _ ,._ ... ",....,_ "* PRUIOINT OIWlllT...... ,_l"fWll.....,
,.... --... .-.. 111111 ._ -......... ••• = 1 111 "°"™ •~v. aun nic. ......_ -,_ .-.. "* -.. -,... .-. .. c..,,~•-c.-, .. ..., c:..ra....•or..., ~ .. ..., o....: •·"" A, O..-f//IOr .... c:.ity .. .., ea.tr Clnf#Gr-. c-rtt .. ....,
II, Mt. II,""· MwaL......, IM'fA 4"11; CA mtt a, tll'I .. !tit. W ..,_ ,,_, • ......, TIL.1Ctt4)_,.. ~ fi-
............. c:.9' DlllW..... ........-~ Dalty...... ........... ..... c:..lll 0.lf Pl... ..... ..... or-. c.. DallY..... ......... _ c-.. Delft..... ~-c.. OMtr ~ ............. --~-~· ........... "' ........ ..., .,...., ......... ~..., MIH1 ....... '-•·•., mMi .., .. .-4........ ...,, .................... ....... .
I \ • • .: . ._--:-'
•I
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
Orange COut DAILY PILOT/11iuraoay, June 4, 1981
DEADLINE PROTESTED -Irene B. and
Thomas F. Tatum carry oversized personal
' oheck into Portland, Ore. office of Pacific
Northwest Bell in protest of the time allowed
-EXECUTIVE SUITES
JADE MANAGEMENT
881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14
N EWPORT BEACH
71 4 -631-3651
$50,000 to $500,000
fNCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
• lal•r••I oftly INVlftftll ··--• Co••..-<lal
•R..W-lial
• Weekly co••loaenta
• Monthly hlndln9•
• 6 •onth• to J yean
• So•the"' C.Hfornu
( 11fH1t1 r •HU
loan Information ••nrlce
j ., \~•Ur f1t1tHI( 111y nt'~J,
(714) 759-1515
AMElllCAH HOME MORTGAGE 230 Newpo<1 Cen1er Or1•e
Design Plaza
Newporl Beach
Cahtorn1a
92660
Lovier Your Overhead,
Earn More Prolitl
Answer Network can help lncruse your
profits by lowering overhead. With Answer
Networtfs shared-overhead concept, you
wlll have available every office servece you
need, Including your own phone number
and answering service ... all at a fraction of
the cost of expensive facilities and ataff.
COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS
IERVICH AVAILABll:
0 Answering aervtce
0 Quote prices
0 Matle appoln1mentt
0 l etters and typing
0 Word proceutng
0 2• hour dictation
Specl1ll:rln1 In:
O Conference rooma
0 Payroll
0 M11111at1
0 Telex
0 Facstmlle
0 Pagl~
C.rttfl9d 1erv1ce call dl1p1fohlng, order taking
and cr9dlt checking
Anawer Network has 1 Solution, Call
llBlJER NETWClAK
714-953-1234
DT.721
for late payments. They claim 15-day grace
period is not enough but a spokesman for the
company told them most customers pay on
time.
ly
AL ...._~ ...... r............;_.-.
HOLLOWAY
Experience 1s 11 great
teacher A father never wakl's his second baby to
see it smile ••• Tired Youngster helping
father dig potatoes
"Daddy. whal\VCr made you bury these ,
an)"' ay"" ••• Junk 1s the stuff we thro"'
away Stuff 1s the junk we
save •••
Today you can gel some of the best penny candy
) ou C\'er ate for 30 cents.
*** ll 's a "'1se father who
throws away his old re
port cards ••• We 're gr aded · F '. fo r
fabulou:. at Tll'e City. 1950
Newport.Blvd . Costa
Mesa where you'll Cind
Lop 'alue in Ures we're
First in the Field.
Telling the most people
possible is important to the s uccess or any
garage sale. Make sure you rs Is lis ted in C lassified , phone
642-5678.
COLLECTORS
CORNER
R•r• Coln• a 9t•mp1
GOLD a SILVER
·-~·, Ge .. C ... Wt.et 111.,... Cl. t1U7 . ..,. ....
~.as .-.u
$471.• .... $4M.7S $461.7S ue1.• .,,, .. .... ~ -~
,..-~-... Cel----(714) 551 U50
South Coaat Ptua VIiiage ...-.. ..... ...
(Ac_.._ ..... c:... "-91
IT TAKES LONGER
:~;··~~)
In the pa s t there
always were a few people
who lived long lives. Bul,
most or them acquired
the disease or old age
before they were fifty
years of age. Alter that they suffered from pains.
aches, lack of energy,
chronic coughs and other
miseries.
Medical knowledge,
diagnostic techniques.
and positive acting drugs
have b ee n greatl y
improved. Now many
people are young al
seventy and hope to stay
that way. To a great
degree, how long you will
II ve depends on you regularly having your
physician check your body.
YOUR UOCTOR CAN
PHONE US when you
need a medicine. Pick up
your pres cription if
shopping nearby, or we
will deliver promptly
without extra charge. A
great many people
entrust us with their
prescriptions. May we
compound yours?
'AH UDOPHilMACY ,,...,.._.,
151 ....... ... ...,,,.... ... .
642-1111
WANTED DIAMONDS • GOLD
Jewels by Joseph purchases diamonds,
gemstones, gold and tltver from pnvate lnc:IM-
dUals and estates. careful examination and
evaluallon by our exper1s. Highest pncee pMI.
io.& dally, Sal 1<M>. Ctoeed Sunday. Ptione
today. Ask for Betty Graoe or Eric ZatePtes.
A 1'MOl1lOH Of ™1ST fC». OVO\ 60 YlAN.
J [W [LS by JOStPH
Soull Coast Plaza, Ce>eW Meu • 54C)..9()H
~'lr~ ~~ ORANG~ co~
REL y ON the IMIJ Pl
Check out CHEK/IN; ·
More ways to earn on your checking.
55orofti?
Free checking
with ~rage balance of just $100. Write ell
the check.I you wish. •400 average minimum balance.
fo·ree checking.
Onllmlted check writing.
Pree flnandal aerYlcea
wlh •zooo In a savtnQa eccount Free
checking, wtth no mlnlmum balance
needed. free safe deposit box. tmtelers
checks and money orders.
Cheek Guarantee Card.
Check-Reaerve ~It .
PR>tec:tlon on your apprcwed good credl.
Earn 51/4~ mmual lnterat
compounded deify on your 0£.KflN•
bll1nce.
CHEK/I~
lbuf. dollar's best
friend.~
Bank offers confusing
'Money market,' 'T-bill' terms misleading
NEW YORK <AP> -Th• com•
petltlvt battle for tht 11v1r'1
dollar tn lhl• era ot hlth Jnterest
ratea hu touched off 1 prollftra·
tlon of new type1 of account.
and a bull market In contu1lon.
IOmelhlnt nHhltr -namely, 11montty m1rket lunda."
Th• day may be fatt •P·
1>roachJn1 whtn b1nk1 can offer
• product with all the charac·
terl1tlc1 or • money market fund . But It h11n't urived yet.
customer back the orltiinal
putchase price plus an agreed·
upon amount or interest.
The newoat weapon lh tho
arsenal of the banks and 11vln11
ln1tltuUon1, for example, 11
aomelhina called a "retell r•·
purchase proaram." Reaulatora
aave the go-ahead to start offer·
ing them In mld·M y .
And advocalft of the "real"
money.market mutual fund.I are
quick to point out that what the
b1nk1 have to offer riaht now ta
1omethlna quite dlrferent, re·
aardlcH or what they mlaht call
It.
Minimum Investments vary,
generally from $1,000 to $3,000.
So may the Interest ratea lo·
dividual ban.ks offer, and cond!·
lions under which early
withdrawals are permitted or
restricted.
Now "retail repurchase pro
gram" may atrllte you as a pret
ty unsexy name for 1omethJn1
that is designed lo compete with
the high-flying money market
mutual funcb, which have al·
tracted $117 billion, almost all of
It In the last 2~ years.
•'These retail repo programs
are not realstered with the SEC
CSecutlllea and Exchanae Com-
misaloo), nor do they Issue a
proapectua, aa Investment com·
pan lea are required to do." said
William E . Donoahue In bis
newsletter, Donoghue'• Money
Fund Report of Holliston, Mass.
One ~ank announced late last
month it woutd offer repos for
terms ranain& from four to 12
weeks, at an Interest rate 1 per·
cent below the prevailing rate on
s ix month money·market
certificates.
Some banks obviously think so
too. Reports from such diverse
places as Maryland. Texas and
California tell of institutions that
are calling the ac c ounts
•·Individual investors could be
misled Into believing that these
"funds" are profesalonally
managed, diversified portfolios.
But in the situation of bahk
failure coupled with rising in·
terest rates, the individual in·
vestor could lose principal," he
contends.
Experts say that any in·
dividual s hould study the merits
o r a repurchase program
carefully. Unfortunately, given
the propensity or bank market·
ing departments to dress up
their products with catchy but
confusing names, that's not
always an easy assignment.
P enalty urged
for utilit y firm
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
~tale utility examiners have
recommended that San Diego
Gas and Electric Co. be
penalized a maximum of $2
million a year over the next five
years for opposing, delaying and
challenging s tate·ordered
energy saving programs.
Donoghue's point is one that
regulators have insisted the
banks and S&Ls make clear in
selling the repurchase plans.
Unlike most other types of bank
a ccounts, they are not deposits,
not covered by federal deposit
ins urance , and in the words of
the Comptroller of the. Currency.
not guaranteed "in any way" by
the government.
In California, for instance,
some banks give their six.month
money market certificates
names like "T·bill account." A
visitor to the state can find any
number of friends and relatives
who think they have actually
bought "T-hills," when in fact
they do not own Treasury bills at
all.
The Public Uttllty Comm1ss1on
panel said Tues day that
SDG&E, which serves part of
southern Orange County, unlike
other California utilities, "has
no clear conservation goals and
no adequate established process
to accom~h these goals."
It's easy enough to understand
the urge t o deve lop new
products for banks and savings
institutions to help them resolve
the serious problems many of
them face. In a repurchase plan, a bank
sells a customer a piece of a
portfolio of government
securities it owns, agreeing up
front to buy 1t back after a set
period not to exceed 89 days . At
the maturity rate, it pays the
At the same time, if those
products actually represent a
good deal for the customer. it's
only natural' to wonder why they
have to be given names that ob-
scure, rather than clariry, what
they actually are.
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
NEW YOAK CAP) ClbUtA I> DV. H•l"'AI< 4fttl Slo\ Nu<rp wl 1~ IS'll SC•IWlr 1014 10'11 ~~?:V0111;:1::: ~'1~~~~ · ~ ... ~~ ~:r::! ~~ 2~"' ~::,c_y:: ~~ ~-l:~i~~ ~ ;:~ NASDAQ SUMMARY •nd 1-1 olfers 11'1 CtowCp n. I Hoover 'I: 1~:! OtlFerro 11 17'11 s1-.,,. «Wt 41\lt 'llJ:rkel INM" es of ColrTle I~ 1• HOf'lrAs 24'11 27~ OlterTP 1"" 11 SldMl<ro 11 11 ....
H . Prlc .. OO llOt CotGllM>4
14Jt111111 ~ tA\'o PCA lftl im m: ~~' e~ t NEW YOllK.IAPI -T1-follow! ...... ~~~=·!'= ... ,. IM• : .. ,,.i,~ 1 , .... PP•Gl>Jl"B 21~ _,,_ s•·nSI ·-3~ .~. -,..._ • -. ,. __ ,_ talon for W..S.. C...,CtH ""' 3"' Inlet a •v. c • -.. -"" ,.. •• .,__ .,. v....... v-,,__,,.. Stock llld Aall C"'tSllr 1' 17111 lntrcE11r 13 1314 PeuteyP 14 f4'11 Str•wCI nv. 21\1\ tlO<ka and werrMls tNll ...... 00"* up AEl. tl'ld ll\I\ It'll CmwTet 17 17~ llll"'IGs IO.... 1~ PPff•v,t~1s ~ ~ S11ber11 34 .. U II,. most and clown the motl beMCI .,
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Adclt111W IJ1¥1 1414 CycllrOll I.Slit 1~ Jeri'° ' l''I• 2~ • r 1714 17-TecumP U ""' dlffere11Ce ...._ U. ,....,,._ ctosl,.
Advllou ~ 4V. 0.11tyM JS'll 3'V. Jlfl,,FO ~" V. ~~l~'l:'t ~ 31 TelemA JI ~ bldl)<lceand-.'slastl>klll'lce. Affl!f,' v,.Yt :v. ~Des 20flo 21 ~OS ynM ~ ~ PlerceSS 11i. 11-Ttne111 I 21111 21¥1
Ale. I .. •• 0.ytMel IN 20'11 alsSt pf' ·-2·~ PPllOnftkrJ,ne ..... 60 Tlprery ""' U 'll Al co n< ... ~ 08ffr 7'-7~ Kol•er ..... ., " ol014 .iov. TomlOll 7V. 1'-
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Batt.pp 11 11~ E11twlstt • ~ ~-"'p •• • • ., SIH•IGd • ,..,., WslOrel ""' IN 20
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8aHIFr 2• 2414 F5C 2"' 2" Merton I '" 10 ~IOOH :; ~~ :"'m!~ ~ ~ "
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Bllfl•I• ~ J1141 Frank 21-tt\olo MonlCol •Va • Herne voi-Bid Alllecl a.. : io''::~
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfT'huraday, June 4, 1981 I
Say you are told by a federal otnctaJ your rec-
ords ate scheduled for review H part of an inquiry
Into securlUes fraud. You protest. "l never had any
dealings in any aec:uritlea at all! How can a 1tudy of
my files help any legitimate ~e l.n an inve1ti1•· Uon?'' /
"Maybe, but we don't know that you bad no deaJ.
ines in securitiea unW your mes have been reviewed
to see whether you did or not," tbe offlctal may
answer. "Catch 22!"
With almost unbelievable lack of publicity,
Congress in 1980 passed amendments to the "Right to
Financial Privacy Ad" < Rlf'PA) whlcb set up a pro-
cedure under
wbicb the U.S. ~ government
can in effect
file secret ~~~rr:so;:!:n:!s -,-,-VIA-P_l_RT_l_I_~ Z
obtain papers - -
relating to you
without your knowledge.
Rlf\PA was passed in response to the era of
Watergate "enemies lists" when Americans were
subjected to federal audits and investigations for the
"crime" or holding unpopular opinions.
RIFPA requires the government notify you when
financial records about you are requested from banks
and similar institutions. If you object in court, 'the
government must convince the court the investiga-tion is legitimate.
Originally, the Securities and Exchange Com·
mission was temporarily exempted. because to police
the nation's securities the Securities and Exchange
Commission needed quick. ready access to financial data.
In 1980 the SEC convinced Congress it was ap·
propriate for it lo collect secret evidence of the need
for secret access to your files so it could submit the
evidence to a court.
If the court Is convinced by the evidence -wbich
you do not see then the SEC can get records about
you without telling you. In short, secret dossiers
about you can be filed in court, without your
knowledge.
RIFPA became law in the closing days of 1978 as
part of an omnibus banking bill. The act represented
a major step toward protection of privacy, for it pro-
vided that if ybu objected to examination of your
financial records, the examiner had to convince the
court that the inspection was for a legitimate
purpose.
But once a government agency claims that there
is a legitimate inquiry, you have a tough time trying
to block access to the records it wants to examine.
The obvious reason is that It's hard for you to prove
an investigation is not legitimate.
Stopping the use of lists of any kind, good or bad,
in the computer age won't be easy. It may not even
be possible. But the use of secret written dossiers
against you and me is a threat to our freedoms. RIF·
PA as it reads today seems the worst and most
dangerous of regulations in our entire re1ulatory
jungle.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
:.:·~
-lo't
+ lo't +1
NEW YOAIC CAPI -Sein. Wed. pr1ce
encl ,,.t c11Mc19 of Ille tin mott ectlw AINrlCM S.C• EllCMnle I-,
VMlflll ~111 tll "*--'1° HouOllT r M,JCIO 1Slll + 1 • Oenlel'trl I u..-IMll +1•
MCO Holcll"' 411"°° 1S'°' ••. ~ .. H11C1180lt 1 m,200 1n11 • lfttl 9ftllnlt MS,too 4._ + Ill ~elftwllOlt ,,,.. 2t + Ill 11~1 '"·'ao 1111o -111 Oo<c"llttG9t 117.JOD 21-Y, + 2~ Crni.100 121,000 251' -1
OulfCe11 9 120, 100 n + 111
•
;
NEW YOIU((API FIMI Dow-'-•,.._ .., -.. Jwn. &.
STOCkl L.w C ...
• IMI ~ :r:. '1U2 .... 71 + fl 10 Tr11 417.71 ell.Al •n .46 422 22+ I.ft lj Ull 1QJ.7f ICl6.a. IOU1 MIS.st-OM U !.Ill J1'9.J7 m.1' l7s.tt Jtl.74+ O.J7 ''""'' ... ... ... ......... .... 4,14},a Trell ...................... 2.-,a UUlt .... , ... • .. • . . • . . .. . • S".JllO 6S Sitt .. . .. . . . . .. . .. • • . • · · · 7 .. 2S..-
WHAT STOCKS DID
H EW YOlllC CAPl J1111. J
Adv_.,
Oecll'*' U11ell.....,
Totel I-N-llltill& New lows
WHATAMU OIO
T-:. .. <111 lltS .., ..
NEW YORI( CAPI Jwn. I
METALS w.dfteMNY
C.,.~centse pound, U.S. -11-
tl0ft11.
L .... 37..JI centJ e poiMCI.
IJllC 46111 cent•• soound, oeowreci.
Tl• S..DM Metals w..to c-lt• 19.
A'-'-7 ... (Wl1U _..i, N.Y
MerQlf"f MZS.00 per 11..-.
Pl•U-SOf,GOtroyoa., N.Y.
SILVER W-.oey
Nl!W YOAIC (AP) -Hendy & H-
sllv., IOdey t10.4JO, up IO.OJO.
E1t9e111erd 11twr tto.~. up 10.oso,
·1eor1ce1" Sllwr 111.on. ""to.osJ.
. . ' I o I • ..
..
·'
Killed for • 1? Jenninga ....... ·~'*"~... PM:TtTtOUUUtl.... •M:tl1't°"9MIMHll DOS PALOS (AP) -"'CTtn.s...._. UMan•, ..... , ....... auT«MeWT ....,,..n•Tu..en A Dos Paloe homicide •-p,• -• .._n.,......, '""' ......,.... ....-''--. wv. Ti.. ...... lftt --.,. ••11t "'° fellOiWlnt ""-11 ..,.. ._,.., 1 Ml o ..-.. T1'9 ---. ......... _ ...,. .,....,1 *'"°••? ,... ... v cum may have been
.......,._., wH1T1 1uvu1 UAHO•NO U·NllD•A·OOOO·l'•11n••· P•UA 11Ac1'01tv, ••u va10 killed for $1. Bernardo lies
YACHTING COlflUL'TANTI '"°""II'»~. c.u .............. A\OOllllO, C..t• ..... ·-· ...... , .. lr¥1M, c..i-... Va1que1 Cardoia, 58, 00 e MM V .. ClllWte. Wto 1 Hew..,i C ........ -.z7 c.llfWllM 9'V fl114 e..a..CA-.. · fl&D •tvH 11tAH01No 1~ .. ._ w...-,,.,_, ..a •• ,....,, ,, o.wt1. 1J> ,,.,......, auctered mualv• bead
•oHin o . HA0111t ,., 11•u1e11-... o.wMH11.CAtfflWt11• A-.~Mea.c.11w..i ..... lrYIM,c.t...,,...nr14 lnjuritt before drownln& Oran1e Cout Colle1e V.,......._ Cllllll..._. CA.:.V -.a1 kot ,......,.,, ~ Mlt ...... Tiiie ...,_It~ ity M .... l I C a. h "09eit cacMtDo•••L•• ;., '"•"-c..-l..afteM ...... , ""• .. ,..,CM••-... c.IHWN• ... --. n an lrrtaatlon canal n oata Pleaa aa •---...,"--......,...-_CA c..111•"'"'-c-.-...c.1!Wftl• ttU1 ~ ... ~ elahl miles southeast ot named Mark Jennln~
...... t2t.2J Tiii• llMlll•M •• CoMMclM lly • Tlllt ..._.. ............ tlle t Ct ·-·-v lJ I , .. ~ " ~ _., • T1111 ~"' .. '' ,_'"'"" 111 lfl• ..,.r••~ c_,., Cloftt ., 0r..,.. c:~ ... ,.._h_e_re_. --------• o r oun._. a ey aa .....,.,.., ar11t1s. ,...,..,., __ ,,_.,, _...... ,_ .._ -.,._, ...,.,"' .. .,,_ '· ,.,, PU UC o u ta Un d l n a • o c t a l ~•To......01N ------,_....,.._, ,.,...., B NOTICE aci t"de • t th o.i. .. ......_ • "'" ......,.... -111• wlWI ..,. "''' ...,_.. ._ ,,... wlttl ,,. "'*'.,..er.,. ceMt °*''' 11,.., • ence I .. Di. or e
QUEENIE
.. • .. " ..
,,... ....._.. _ 11._ wtlll.,. CovMy Cltf'tl of OtMltlt Co\1111'1' °" c•~ty ciot11 ., OrMet CwMV "' .,,_ •• n. 11. u, 1•1 1-..1. NOTICE OF DE"'Tt. OF 1980·81 academic year .
C..W,C11o11otOl'-..c-.., ....... J-J·1
"'· J-'·1
"'· ~ " Jeno inc•. al.~iimii;;i~ ''"'· ,,~-"'*1t11m0r-c-.1o.1~'= l'llMl.,_Or._c...1Do11y"'= PUBLIC NOTICE THERESA F . AXENE, sofuhomore, bas main· --.., ,.~1 •k• THERESA FRANZ ......... Or..,.. C.Ut Dally J-·· II," IS,' ,_..,. . J-•• II, 11, 1', 1•1 J)al<ll. J'ICTITIOUI auuN••• A x e N e A N 0 0 F ta ed :oi:rfect 4.0 (A)
.. •
.., ... , ... , ... J-•.1111 ,...1 .. -arade t averare lo --------PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTIC• MAMaSTATaMHT P ET IT I 0 N T 0 AD .
D --.!!"'~~ --b...,,. .... MINISTER ESTATE NO. 51 .5 unlla of social PlJllUC NOTICE ·-~ •• I 1 H .. • Ptcrmou•.uau•Hs c11icAT1v• 01uGINA1.1 av A-109017. ac ence c uses. e re·
NAMUTATSMCNT ·=r:::~=:r flNa, m ll'Mtll Troo Wiie, N--1 T 0 a I I h e I r I , CtlYed 8 1cbola1'1bi1 for r~5~~~;;;~;2~~~~, ttOT•awHunac•u.aLe "" 19111ew1,. .--1. cto1ne 11ut1· ,.,. ,...___ -1•....,. ._..i. IMCll,CMHwnl•twt beneficiaries creditors •11s, contrlbu•e by '-.... OISn ,....... ----·-· ""• ~ti• °"'"'· UI ... K" _... I • • .. T.L-. _.. c:1.1~ INSULAUD MG co.. ,.. .. ••· ,,... i.-• .....,.., 8"<fl. ca111WN0 &nv cont ngent creditors Of f acuity members from
AMtrlttCAN tTAT11 SANK•• 11111, 1011 Cllemlcot UM. Hwnll11tt•11 HllUTAOt HOMI! IUtl.D&llll, n... THERESA F . AX E!N E OCC'a Social Science de·
.... II ... TrvMle ~tho f9110wlnt •-11. Callforlll••... JOtU ,_Olma, 11 Toro, C.flfOrlll• Tlllt ...,_,.COIMM .... "' ....... aks THERESA FRANZ *terltled .... ., tnAI Wll.1. s•1.L ("•lttfllO Marl• Morr•lll, UI '2UO Ofll'4Nol AXE partm ot. A T "u a Lt c Au c T 1 o N To Pr..,..c1, --1 .. .Kii c.11,.,,,,. 1tar1 wiu""" ""'°'· 1"tt ,.._ TIN Man.~ NE and persons whO 1 ddlU J · TH• "1°""' 11De>a1t •ott CASH ~ • oimo, •1 Teo, C:.O•lfwlll• ._. T111• ... _....... •• 111..; w1111 "" may be otherwise Interest· 0 a on, ennmgs ,_.YO_.. at""'°., Ml• 111 1owM Tllt•~•tt<oncluelffllY ... 1"" T11111MfNM l•<*""'•"•11Y""1"· co11111~ Clerk•• 0r.., .. e.o-1y.., ed In the wlll end/or and 22 other local OCC -y .... Ullllod StOlff) •fl •fOllt, dlvldll•I clM-•. JIH'O 2, , .. 1 •'ud ·-h be tlttooncllMH'•c~e.lllCI-· Olt'lllt1MMlll'lolllorr•tll "°"1w1111em"4ttor ,.1.,... est1te. • en... ave en ac· ._. .. ..,1tw11111tM1c1DeMonr.m111111t "''• **-w• .,..., "''"' ... Tiii• ~ wM 11 ... wllf\ """ Pl*llllM er.. c • .,, 0.11. PU«. A petition has been fifed cepted into Phi Alpha ~.........,CloK,MIM: c:ou111y c1er1t • 0r-. c-t•., J-Cou111Y c:1or11 °' Oranea Ceunty • J-•. "· '' H, 1•1 tS»••· by Harry Wiiiiam Axene Mu honor fraternity. a •0-1•-1-~..._-_. _ .. _._....._ __ ....... _-__ ..,...,;,.....;_.;;:......,;.;... _______ _ -!:o'::.:"~••vtN ca.. JUITIN, IN\ '· 1•1. "''** .,,_ '· l"1. ,,, ... r and Frank H. Spearman, social aciencf honorary
llNE111c1A1tY: AMl!R•CAN P111111.-ar-. CM~• Deity ~ioe. P~,.,. °'""" C..Jt o.uy ,.,.... PUBLIC NOTICE 111 In the Superior Court Of organization. Members "Mr. Simmooa wanta to know why there's nothing but ST,.~T• BAHte,oc.11-....~ .. .i-•.11,..,,u,1t11 tuU1 . .,,_ •• 11.11,u,1t11 tUMt. Oran,.. County ....,.uestlng . h ( i orf-<:olorjokesonyourpocketsec~ry?" _, •1mnou11u11NHs -·-.. m t e ratern ty must -----:.------------------Rat....,~'' 11, "" •• IMtr. ~ NAM.I auraMCMT that Harry Wiiiiams Ax· I t i 3 5 d 2J11t111..., 121l0Nee tlUotOflklal PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE T11ot ,.._.,....,_is tlOlll9 ....... en e and Frank H . ma n an 1 · gra e
':.°'°'°"!: c':,.,:'.ic.~::., ":: •sw -·~ • s Tc Li," Nu"' Es Sdpearman 111 be appoint-~:;r~ed":~:r;_~ ~~i:;:;
*tcrl ... hlOllow"'9preporty: MOTICeTOco•n••CTOlll "ICTITIOUS.UllM•U REGISTRY, lt17 Wostclllf Drlvo, e as personal represen. L.ob,._tSt., Traci No.'°'· ,.,..._. ..... 1wca1 NAMelTAT&M•NT S11lto20t,NOwpcM't1Nc11,t.111or111• tatlves to administer the courses and have an 111 111a citv Of Nowport e.K11, eountr S.•IHI .,,.,,,.... w11111o rocelvod ot TIM 1e11-1,. -*"• 4'tl1111 boitl· Ru.erl, inc.,• eatlfoml• c~· estate of Theresa F. Ax· overall 3.0 average .
.. Of.,., SUt• of Callfoml• ••• -1llt office .. PIMC Oiper•tloM -Clllof llOU••· • • ........ , Wnlitllft DflW, Su••-· ene aka Theresa Franz thT~o~ a~ce~ted into ... ,_...Ill loot! B , ~ U lo of Pl.,.IO!let'ot,_ flt, F•lrYl9W Stele JOHNS STAIN GLASS SHO". Newport IMcll, Calftornla ' "' 1 ~ » '"'""'•· Ml-•--MatM. 111 H-.plt.o•. zsoi 140,_, """·· eo.t.o 1t1•1 SMreHllO, No. 3, H11111111et011 Tiii• ...,..,,.. 11 ,~..,by• <or· Axene (under the lndepen· e ra m1 Y e : """" 111t offk• of u. Go11n1y Recordof' ot Mo ... c.111. ml6 """' 2:00 P.M .... 8MC11.cat1tomY•.-llOf'••'°"" dent Administration of Coote-.. -• .,...,. A ... riu, Hiii county, toe•tll•r wltll 111• J..,,. "·'"'at Wftlcll time INY wlff lie Joll11 Kt1111e111 Tllomu, ""' Rourt, 111c. Ar11111r A. Estates Act) The petition ~rtlcan...11. R'..:~d P-~~~-'·Yeo..oo ~·. NortflwaAlfty 17 *'et~,,_,...., of P\lblkl• _....,. ,_ tor Ptrlorm· Sflor•llM, No 3, Hul\Ufllllon IN<ll. K11l11119I, p,.-,i I .... ..,._ ...,_, ... Via Ge.-Olljolfllne Nld ·-... Ille ,,,..,.,.. Cafllorlll0'2IMI Tlllt AM-' w., tllod wltll tlle s set for hearing In Dept. P•rk.
Soutfltett .._MIOMcl"' R-iutlon of F1irnhll all •-. ""',.,. .. ,,. toots Tlllt bllsllltn It cOl\dlK1od by., 111· county C••rll of Or•nte cw111r on No. 3 at 700 Civic Center H••U•ttH •Hell -Dev Id 111tC1tyc-ic1tet111t Cltyof N ... _t and equlpme111 11ecuury 10 dMdu••· J ..... a.1t11. Drive, West In the City of Cllfld•"· MlcllNI 1· H•••. Lori • 1 .. e11. • cortlllod COPY of w111c11 "RELOCATE PATIENT/CLIENT Jollnte.n.om.. 1114m1 S t A 'c llf 1 Ra11o11 -SrlVl•V•Z-t.
llH01vnon -rocordod J-io. ''" CLINICS" RMOOclel voriou. r-of T111s ~· -111oc1 w•t11 111e Pullll.-0r.,.. Coast o.11., ~•. an a na, a orn a on .._,,., a.ca -~ Denrw1, }" IHll U11, Pogo "41, Olllclel lfle "RAT"l1d9. IMO:--l•ttre-County Clortl of Or.,_ ~y Oii JIHM4,11,11.U,t•1 Utl .. I. July 1, 1981at9:30a.m. Gory Ev-,~ Ktftllo, NlcllOI• ltoura ce"''°" .,...,,...,_. tt•llon, dllewn• JuM 2, 1•1. IF YOU OBJECT to the Kovel9ftM, Ullda OIM, Ketllorlne
• / tu VI• Go110•, Newport eoacll, offlco, nrfous c11111cs, Pll••I<•• '16*J PUBLIC NOTICE granting of the petition ~~~Cary:!_~·~'~:~ ,.~ .. 11 C•Ulotllla Medic lllo -rll tpace COlllerellce Publlslled Oranoe Coast D•lly Piiot, r---_.,. ._, ·-· ....,_.,
"Ill•..,_ --., c-•· room, ..-1y .. 111..,. .~ .... tor'*'· J-4, 11, 11. 24. 1•1 1~1 •~-----------you shoUld either appear a11e1 J•Mines. ~tloll I•._-· no warr1111ty dfcap •ccen1b111tr. stor•oe aru . -PUBLIC NOTIC.., NOTICE OF DEATH OF at the hearing and state J;:.e:..-;' ... ~ ~!,'1-:t'"• Clary· •tl,..11 ~.•10 <-4-orcor· •mployu ut11111/vendl1111 •ro• et .:. FOSTER M FRYM"'N your objections or file ,,,, ... _ ....... .._w11~. rectMul. Tllo lltlleflcl•r'I' ~said F•lrYlew St••• HotPll•I 111 •<· • " I t ob" I I ....,_ .. _ -· OooclofTn.st,byrwMftotobfffc"or cordal\aw1t11.,._ __ ifiutloM AND OF PETITION TO wr ten Ject ons W th the 110f•ut1 111 111e oei1 .. t10fl1 toe:11r.., 111erefor. o•oUTOSHOWCAUH•o• ADMINISTER ESTATE court before the hearing.
.,,.,....., ,.._.,.. ooclllod •lld ..._ Preferenc. w111.,. llf'Mlecl 10 bid-CHANOIO•MAM• NO ... 109001 Your appearance may be 11 ... ,... to IN 1111dors'9noc1 • wrln ... dert pr-rly •l>tl•OYod H "Smell CAI• MUM••• A·....U • " • . 0oc1ar .. loft ot C>ef...it ...., OoM4llld &uilneu" 111 eccordell<e w1111 s.cuon 111 111e IMtllef' of 1r1e A#llcatloll • T o a I I h e I r s , tn person or by Y<>Yr a t·
lor S.lo, efld wrlltoll notice of llrMCll ..... et, teq., Titla t. C:.Ofon>I• A~ VICICI SUE ANDERSOft -NANCY beneficiaries creditors torney. a11d of •loctfon lo c•uu UM ull· ,,.11111tr•llvo c-. APttllutlons for ANN ANDERSON llY SUSIE J, d ti t' dlt f I F Y 0 U A R E A • llOrtltllOd to .. 11 wfd pr-rty to pr•t•r•11ce ,,,..., .,. sut.mittod • UMt POMEROY. Pllt11i-r tor Cllallft of an con ngen ere ors o CREDI TOR t ut11ty MldoD11Qa11ons, •lld 111eroatt•r Small 11111""' Ottk•, 1nJ _ ,.," N•me. Foster M . Fryman and . or a con •
.,,. IHWltf"SitNd <-Yid llOlk• o1 s., .. ,, sacr-. CA ••H. llOt ••u sus1E J. POMEROY 11as 111ec1 • per sons who may be lngent creditor of the de· ~.~~of o1ee11on 10.,. Rocordod 111a1111,.. u1 celelldar de•• 111-M<• """Of\ 111 11111 court tor Mi oroer ei-otherwise Interested in the ceased, you must file your r•--· ... "'1 M Instr. Ho. 2"'2A ltl of bid _.. ...... ,. Thia profennco 1owf1111 •P1>flc.en11 to cll•f111• tll•lr I i "th th t .._ 1,_,. pegt 20$, of wld Olflcl•I apptlo to profoclJ .;llere the estfmal· n•mH from VICKI SUE ANDERSON Will and/or estate: C a m WI e COUf Or Rocords. edproJKICOllHC-$15,000. Ud NANCY ANH ANDERSON 10 A petition has been filed present It to the personal Said .... wlll ... -· bll1 without lld cw-.is tnllSI lie subnllnocs for VICKI SUE POMEROY -NANCY by Steven Fryman and representative appointed co.....-or • .,r...ty, nprou or Im-,,.. •11llr• ..... dotcrl-tMrel11 ANN POMEROY r-llvoly b th rt ithl f p11oc1, .....,-c11,,. uue, 110UKtloft, "' Deviations ,,_, p1an, ---Ilk•: ",, ,_.,., cwd.ec1111at •11 ·.--u Christine Schwable In the Y e cou w n our enclffllllr-. to pey "'° •M1•ln1,,. llont wfll noe 11e consfdet"ecl alld w11111e Interest• In the rnettM •fo,....ld 011-Superior Court of Orange months from the date of :;'"'~:,,::;" .. ~the no:·••> NCllf'od OWH lor r•J•CtlOllS of bid•. Tllo put llof<n INI court In Oo!Mr1,,_I County requesting that first issuance of letters as
Id .. ~~.,..~ t111111-.,. t 111 Dopert-11n 111o ,...,. to••'"• •"Y Ho. J •• 100 ct .. k c.n1 ... 0r1vo wffl. st even Fryman and provided In Section 700 of M ._.. .-~--·-· Mi•. lrr99111¥lly Ill a !Md or to reloct .... or Sanl• Ano, callfornl•, °"July IS, 1•1, th p lllldOrt11tiar-o1 .. 1c1Dooc1ofTrw1, •llbld$. •• 1o:>o O'c1oe11 •·"'·· -111e11 •lld Christine Schwable be ap· e. robate Code of !:::'::,_~'of '":.t"::.!: Ho bld wm i. cont1oerec111111eq it•• 111ere INw c-. 11 any 111ey n.ve. po In t ed as person a I Caltfornla. The t ime for of Trust Said ,.<~1~!!1c1 dT mado011•~dlorm1"'"''""!''~ w11, .. 1c1,...111on 1or c11anttofnomo representative to ad· filing claims will not ex· . .. ..., --°" .,. .. 111t ~ -" ,,,_ 111 II<· ,_Id not 11e .,..-. I I d9y,J-J0,1t11a111oo e.m.01111o corda11<owt111ttw "l11s1ructl0111toB1t1-11 11fwt11erorc1eroe11 ... 1eco.,yo1 minister the estate of Pre pr or to fO\lr months offk• of T.D. $eryko Company,·-ders" ... ,. order lo ... CAlllO bo ,.,.,.hhed Foster M Fryman (under from the date of the hear-:!::·~~ =r·:lt• 1110c. 0ne11f c••1Y Protpecu ... ~rt ........ ,,,,,,. 111111e DAILY PILOT. a.._._ ot th e 1 nd.epe n dent Ad. lno noticed above.
" • tl\99, • or11 • •lld ot>laln plan$, -•fkatloftt -9ell0f'•I clrcuMlloll, ....,.,Siied 111 11111 . YOU MAY EXAMINE '2661. bid '°'"""'u.111,,. ..... mall!,,.., .. COllllly •• lffSt -• -~ IOllr m inistration of Estates . "' t11e lime of tM 111111•1 pvbll· q.,.1110111e 0Hk•ot 1tw °""of p,.,, c-1111 .. -" "''°' 1o ,,. u y of Act). The petition is set for the flle kept by the court. ~~:i :/ i:,:1~~c:.,.:!: ~0~ Operations ot 111e •bo"• •dd••n. Mid llo•rlnQ. . hearing in Dept. No. 3 at If you are Interested in the
obllt•Uo11 MCurod by , ... abov ····~~ 17"1 tS7·Sllt. Tll• wllerHbovU 01 AppllC•lllS 700 Civic Cente D I estate riou may file a re-detc: lbod • A pay--· SUinOerd ,.,.,,, eo1 11•U.ra1 •-11 ---to ~,. r r ve, •
Co
'
' dMd of inost -d """"'1•1 '" 111o -of '"" perc, ... 1 of • .,. canu •net Pt41-. West, In the City Of Santa quest w th the court to re· • t, ••"°""' •11d • wa11cH t ....,. . I I ti t.24.at.lS. To .-'9nn111e ,,. °"°"11111 con1r11e1 ,. .. e mu11 ace_, • .,.,1 o.,..,. J .... 2.1t11 Ana. California on July 1, ce ve spec al no ce of the
bld,you ......,ca11111•1'31-oM. ~=~:c!t~="" 911 •"'*"'"",..In Jlld9'tof~:s::!.:.r: 1981 at9:30a.m . Inventory of estate as·
Oot.o: =~:i~ STATE BANI( TllO wc~t1u1 111-w111 .,. , .. sMelLA nu. ATTOAMSY AT LAW IF YOU OBJECT to the serit s and of the petitions, aaldT..,. qu1reo to ... cut•• c•111r.ctu••I "'T-~Or.Me. ,. granting of the petition accounts and reports .. ' •. eor .. ,,,_111111tlormof•"St.oftdlln1 C:..Mow.C&.WM • d lbed j Se ti 1200 S eyT.D.SE.1tv1cE Allf•rnent, ~m 2 .. ""''<" .,..11 ... Publltllecl 0r.,,.. CMs• Delly Piiot. you should either appear escr n c on . ~OMU::Y,•0-111 1>111d1119 -'Irle~°' C•flfwlll•-. J-4, 11• 11, u , 1., 2,.., at the hearing and state of the California Probate ,!,.._.,,, Mayu. Aul'111m 1y ""°" _...,.111y 111e si.1e your object ions or fl le Code.
0nec1ty8h•d w.11 111 .ccorc11e1ocew1t"n.pro111tloll•of PUBL•C NOTICE written objections with the CRUIKSHANK ANTIN & Or . ' SOCllo11 1710 of -LA~ Code, Ille ,. '!.. Tet~~ 0opar11NM ,... •tc•rt.lllod ,.,., t11e court before the hearing. GREBoW Pwbllllleci Hewpor1 H•r-Nows oenor•I _,, ....... , ••• of w•tes • Your appearance may be aw Wilshl,... Blvd. 40
""ucomlllllodw11111N0ranoe co .. t P•k•~ 111 111e c-y 111 wt1kll ,.,. NOTICE OF DEATH OF in person or by your at· Beverly Hills, C.. 90211 Dally Pf'°'-J-4, 11, 11, 1t11 1ou1 work 1' 10 be dOllo •r• ''--1•• Do Ro T Hy a N N E torney (213) 655-4141 esleblhllod •11d P11bll1Md 11y tllo "' · Director of 111duttrl•• R•l•t10111 BRADY, AKA DOROTHY I F Y 0 U A R E A Published Orange Coast
f:.1e:1o1~~-~:1:.:~~:~:~1: A , 8 RAD y, AK A c
1
REOITOR or a cont-D
19
a
8
i
1
1y P
25
1
9
10S-t,
8
June4, S, 11,
H-.p1ta1 •net •' 111e OotMnment of DOROTHY BRADY AND ngent creditor of the de· t.
I• MOTl~a.0::~1f:.;:,s.nE 0ovo1opmen1a1 s.rvicet llelldCluert.,., OF PETITION TO AD· ceased, you mus1 file your
' T.S. .... JllSH off~•·, MINISTER ESTATE NO. claim with the court or PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tear gas
• seD1111ars
atOCC
A pair or two-hour
"Life Guard" seminars,
designed to teach in·
dividuals bow to protect
themselves against at·
tack by using tear gas,
will be ofrered at
Orange Coast College in
Costa M esa this sum·
m er .
The seminars ,
certified by the state
Department or Justice,
are scheduled June 17
and July 22. Both start
at 7:30 p.m . in the OCC
Forum.
The seminars wiil cost
$20. Residents may r e·
gister through the col·
le ge 's Community
Service Office or al the
door on a space -
available basis.
Following training,
participants will re~ive
a certificate and permit
to carry tear gas.
PUBLIC NOTICE
••. TttANS.COAST SERVICES. INC... Pio::. =:c.tto;.::: :0":9.~.!!.Z.--A 1Glft4. present It to the personal
t :::::.r:-'...:r-:.!~-:.::.~.·~ , .. ,., ... , ......... !al T 0 a I I he I r s' representative appointed MOTIUlOCHDITO•S NOTICE OF DEATH OF
·:, $E1.LATl'UILICAUCTIONTOTHIE v1c1oreJ01•Jec. beneficiaries creditors by the court within four ol'.UUlTUMSHR JOHN F . PICKERING
1 AIGHEST BIDDER .. OR CASH PllOll~:.:,.~'~'!,';' ~::.. and contlngent1credltors of months from the date of Not1c'~~i:::~.~~· to l ANO OF PETITION TO l :Y"::!.~S:~/:111='. June 4,ll,1t11 lllWi Dorothy Anne Brady, aka trrst IS6uance of letters as creditor• e1 LOU IAECHTEL/ ADMINISTER ESTATE .1 · iltl*olllll....,....con ... Y"to--Dorothy A. Brady, aka provided In Section 700 of 1E1i.• of loll IHcfltot, Tr-i.ror, NO. A·109021.
\ 'ldb¥1tundwlaldOeodofTnnt111 PUBLIC NOTICE Dorothy Brady and the Probate Code of .,_......_ ..... ,.nuww, To a I I heirs
·[' Tr~~=';~~~~LL persons who may be California. The time for •·~=~~:':it.,, beneficiaries. creditors
• .,..,DAM.l~L.f\.,._,9M NOTtCEOPTAunu·ssAL• otherwise Interested In the filing claims will not ex-eflOUtto•,,;..,.tol..<>f'Aw.vAHcE and contingent creditors of
··•"· ,"-.• ~~~ wllland/orestate: pf Ire prior to four months ~0~.,!.~.!~·,!~~ JOHN F. PICKERING I ~ '· IENEFICIAllY: ALLSTATE ._._._....... t..._ da _,__ -~ • -~ _..,... d \ SllVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION, AMfRICAH STATE 8AHIC .. .,.,ly A petition has been filed rom ·~ te Of the hear· Avo11uo, ... boa ltJMll, c-1., .. an persons who may be
• •~HonNcorporatton. ...-i111oc1rrvaw..,.,.111o 1o1tow111t by Margaret Anne Brady Ing noticed above. °'°'*·s..orc.1tf0nll•. I otherwise Interested In the
'{ •oc.,... J-ts, 1m •• 111ttr. N .. •1e•lllod .... of trust wtu. SELL and Martha Ann Donovan YOU MAY EXAMINE TllO "'°""" '° • ''°"'""• 11 will and/or estate • ntnl11-1Jtapaeo'°4of0ffkl•I AJ PUILIC AUCTION TO THe I ... _ SUpe th fll k t b th t loc•tode1129Mllrlll0. lollloa lllanet, A tltl ha bee. filed
, 1tocorc11 "' ... Mtk• of ttto Recordof' HIGHEST e1DDeA ttOR CASH n ,,. rlor Court of e e ep Y e coor . '-tt'•O!'..,.. 11ato0fc:atttom• pe on s n
of Ot.,. c-t't: ""' ...... °' ,,.,., Cpay"'• 't ""'°of .. ,. 111 1ewtut Orange County requesting If you are interested In the s.14""""".; ... rlbod1n....,e1 by John W. Plc.kering In
-..cr1110t .. to11owllltpr-'y: :=-:.:.!::"::;:::_•.::.;:; thadt ~rgaret AnneOonoBredy estatte, y~themay firtle ta re· ~11~1'.:":.::, ":·~'-:..~=J t0he Su~!~.lotr Courttl of 111~~~~~~~.; 11tldby1tl#lderuldl>NdotTrutt1n an .... rtha Ann van ques wl\,,, co.u ore-REALTY'"'''"°" 11_11 .. 1. range ....... n y reques ng 'i "'~-. se.. of C.lllOrftla," por "'° "'°"ny 11ere1Mfterc10tcr1.,..: be appointed as personal c:elve special notice of the arwc11• a. "-<t.tn .,. ._ .. ~that John W. Pickering be .l ~ ,...., "' -w . ....,.. 1 _, t n u•oa: ERVING. JUSTIN, on representative to ad· Inventory of estate assets m .urlM, ....... ,......,, Coullly"' appointed as personal
t ' 'fctftl"° °' MIKtt'--""-· '" wn;i:~':'F~ARY: AMERICAN minister ·the estate of and of the petitions, ac-°'.;:::eb.,.":':,.=~·i. c.cin_,, representative to ad-.; :;.=:..=,r=::,:.~: of STATE eANte, • eaflf<Klli• c.,...., .. Dorothy Anne Brady, aka counts and reports .... t ..... .,.._.,,. .... N'fotJ-mlnlstertheestateofJohn
li'A1tcEL ,, UNt No • .,••.,._ "°" Dorothy A . Brady, aka described In Section 1200.S , .. 1. •' io:oe A.M. ot .... ,....u.1 F. Pickering (under the In-
-llfferlllod "' 111o CMOom1111um Aoc:or-AlllUlt 11• """' 1111"· Dorothy Brady (under the of the California Probate l!tc,.... c..r,,, 1ao J..,,._.. R-dependent Administration PlM ,....,... A'9lll IJ 1'7S I -No ...... "' .... ,,.,, ,... -of Of. N•w~ lffcll c..inty Of 0r ..... • · " fk1e1 Roco,.d.t 111 '"° oftk• of,,,. Independent Admlnlstra-Code. Stotoofeatlfomt~ of Estates Act) The peti· ~~!~'R:.'=~:~~.1"'1"•· llocordorofOr-.Gounly;talddNlltJon Of Estates Act). The Hall Seely, Attorney at $ef., .. "-.le11WTr-ior-lion is set for hearing In "AltCEI. 1. A11 u11d1v1deo 011• of trvst e1oscr1.,.. t11e followfnt ,... f:tltlon Is set for hearing Law 366 San Ml"Utl •11 1>Wl_____ Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic fifty......,. Cl/Mil ,.,....., ._, pony D I ' • rt Tr_..,.., for ttw ttir .. .,..,.. 1 C "'c--111 ... ,.. 1111M"t~ -lo Lott "° ..... tSl of Tract No. '°'· n Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic r Vf, SUite 300, Newport past .,.. ,... _.._of enter Drive, West, In the
IM ~-Aroa o1 uld Lot •lld '" 111e Cll'f of N!tWPor1 e.K11, c-itr Center Drive, West, In the Beach, CA '2660; tel. D~'9d:·,,,..,-.1t11. ' CI t y of Sant a An a.
Tract• 9llCll term 11 c1et1nod"'.,,. of or.,., Met•"' C.llfol'lli•. •• -CI t y of Sant• An a 6'4-5501 • Lor•W. V....:• California on July 1 1981
Arjklo _,,_ "OeflllfUoM" of"" =:-.,.":.~:!;:::.1:11•.: Callfornla on June 2.4, 198i PubllShed Orange Coast :,::,:;_....., at 9:30a.m. '
' ::•::t:._ ~ ~= ottk• of ttw <-Y roconlaf ot Mid at 9: 30 A.M. Dally Piiot. June 3, 4, 10, Pub11111ec1 0ranoe coHt o.11y Pltot, IF YOU OBJECT to the "·ms. 111 -1144, P09• 306, county,.....,.,wlllll/leHorthwetlor· IF YOU OBJECT to the 1981 257S-81 J-4,1"1 UtW1 oranting of the petition ~':::..~ o1 Mid COllflty ,.,. :!.:C:1~::-:.=-..:'1.:"t:. v~= granting of th• petition, you should either appear
,.A•cn >. Noll·ucl11ttw• _..,...bf._..,....,"' 111e c11, you should either appear PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE at the hearing and state -1M1M1orecuu.1,._ • ..,_.., c-11ot111ec11yofHawporte.K11, at the heerlng and state your objections or flle "'~ tllCIPOr1 and,., _.IWf • cerullod CC111Y of w11ic" 111••o111t1o11 your objections or flle "u••11c ~~ written objections with the ...-... elf 11 wH racordlM J-IO, HU 111 "°'* -_,,_ •" ,..._., "'we .--. .,, "'"· ,...a.,Offlc1a1,.ecor0t. written objections with 'he crnoPlllVIH court before the hearlnn. l ~for .. llolloflt of .. ., ... ,od UIVlaO.-""""°'18"'11 CA t ...... t .. -..... I •INltT °" UlllSOP y ... .. . .. Ow11or1 111 '"• Art1c1e ot tll• ""' • ttrwt .:..,,._.,. c~ ... cYoouurr .~• ance',.. ,..,ar ngbe, ••v•Mu• ate••• ... PVMM 1 our appearanbce may bet • o.c .. ,..., Mtlllod "E-u'' •leNtJan , .. ._....,..,. "° •• ,,..,,Y ..--r may l'tKAI. v••• ....._ n person or y your a • . 1 ..::.""' .,......: m .. .,.,. c:-11 ..... 11 • • 1ts comp1.t-.. .,.. c-In person or by your at-~ .,._,-. 1t11. "" ,,,., ~11 • ... a1y t1 1nr1,.. ...... • ~ ,..,.... torney. .. 'n..·~=~-=-of roctMMl."Tllt-.11c1ary ............. torney. enc1,...,....,. ....... .,._ .. _...,...._..,111ttt.a: I F y 0 u ARE A ~ n'*t._.,.._., • .,,_llortltfMt o..clotTn;a._.,'""""'•tlrMCllor' I F Y 0 U ARE A "'-'Mk lMelv-CREDITOR or a cont-'* tM *'totk>M MC NCI tlltr-. ••••uit 111 t11t o1111 .. uo11t toewrM CREDITOR t li'\lllllcO!leracklll .................................................. ,1•.-I nt ....i1t ,; ; ...,,._ Ollklllod.,.: .. .,...,. .; tflatffY • .......,. •11tevt.1 el\cl.,.. or • con • v ... k .. ~•OllW•...,. ...................................... us.-nge er ... or of the de·
U ~-·'• ai • -'""' oacwMNtl 11w,., • • '"'*"* .. • wr1t1it11 lngent creditor ot the dt· ,._ ... _ ceased, you must file your ., .,. °"'*" .... s.,.,. 0o<1«.c1011"' 0ot01111 ..,. Oof'llMll C9aMCI, you must file your _..,,.., ,.,tMttcea-claim with tht court or , MtM .,..._ .. _.ot..ai.. .., "'°· ... wr1no11 ...c.k• °' '"-11 claim with the court or YMlllorVlc• ........................... , ........................ , .. ,. p t It t" t .. -.. I '" ...... • WllllW...,_. •• _.1..., •'"' •• ate<.Uon •• <•11 .. it1o u... SontorlorYlce .................................................... n.-resen v ,.., persona :ot· .....,_ • ... ..,., ..,. .. ._......, don1111oc1 •• .. 11 ._,. "'°"""••present It to the personal Ro<,...'°"~''-............................................ ..._ representative appointed .., ......., _ .....,,...._. c..,... Ntl•'' ta1c1 ..,....,...,., _, tNnottor representative appointed N by the court within four illll..-C.it..._,._..,ttoctlM._ "'° 111•....,'*'Md Niil llttk.a •by the court within tour ft<tw.,._"~'-........................................ •.-months from the date of
.. It~ •oWuerY " 1 .. 1 .. Woo<ll .... ., otoctlon to .. 11-.... t"''" f t-.. _t of fl t I -..: .... ,.,.lft .... ,,....·,...._ "'~"·1•1•11111r.Ho.m11111 mon rA rom .... v. • ••-'-•~1<UManatnt1H .............................. .,,,. rs ssuance of letters as "'(._~~--acer& ...... '*' ..... .,., ...... Offlclal first lstuenee d letters es Tiit °""' ......... .,........,., .. _.... ....... ·~--provldld In section 700 of c.C:.:-.... ._,.,...,._,,,..,,_ "=--...... 11 .__.. ..,. ...... provided In Section 700 of •uNDSAVAtLAIL~o•tNANUA"""°"'1ATiC:. :UTt TID the Probatt Code of ~ .... ,..:,::~:!•· ·=: , . ......,.,. ·-~..,.., .. .,,_or itno the Prot>•t• Code of GoMl'llllllftl ................................................... 1...._ Callfornla. The time for .....,.. ........ -.·/:,_....\iii IMIM.. rogiwdlne ttoa, lll"'R"I•·., California. The time for ._._....,,. ................................................ 1.1-.. flllng claims wlll not ex-
.,_..., -"' ....... aacww i.y __,mer-..., • •~ .,. """'1ltllel flllng cleims Wiii not H· '"·'..,.. plre prior to four monthS ... .,...:.=:~~ .. "' :.':':",.;::-""...='!..~:: plrt prlOr to tour months tuMMAllYO,.R10DMMtN010."""°"'""~ from ttledatt of the hHr· r,: ~..,_ .. ...,DeMen:!t ,...~--.e.Hany,lllldlf' from the dete ol the hNr-c1tyc:-c11 ........................................................ -... Ing notlC'tdebove. ..,.... _. • .,..._. "'tlle t11t..,_•.,o.tenruat,fMt. lng"ftlcedllbo¥a. cit,........., ...................................................... m.-YOU MAY EXAMINE
I .... -.,... < ..... .., ,,__ .......... of .. '"""""' YOU u.&y EXAMINE Cltyc.ti................. • ....................................... "'* tht fllt k~t b t-#<ourt 0.. Of Tl'1llL 1* .... wtll M .... of .. tfWb ,,.._"' Mlf DeM ,._ City..,,..., • ... " ....... •••" .......... • ............ " ........ 1n.-y '"' "' . .,...... ~ " "" •• onr-...., .... w111 w .... on--. the file QOt by the court. t!:'_...· ........................................................ .-If you ere ntertsted In tht "" .... .ift<o•To .....,"-...,, .,,_,., ,....°' 111•"-M.ot"" If you.,... lnt.,-.sted In the o.en-i .................................................... ntatt, you may tilt• ,... ... ., .,,..u· ,._ °"10 t1 T,o. .., •• ~ • ._. ettattwfiou may flle a ,. Ufftlfll•._"" ltfttco. ......... · ·•••• .......................... ,,..,tU quest Wtth the court to r .. .. 0-(My ......... f!IAfllttkaT~Wtalllt.OlleC:lty ' ~°' ...... A ............................................. ,. I I °'911111.~ ...,....,.. .. ,Qr ..... CA quea1 "the court to re-c--...,..,,,._ ............................................ 1,•,• ct vt JPtCl•l not ct of the
At._ am. of ... fflltJet ,_k.alloit At ... ...,. of ... Wti.t ,..iut._ ctlvt special notice of tht ,..le llifltY · ·· .... ••· ···· .................... , ................ ......,, ltWtntorv of estate •. sset1 ., w. --. .. •• __.. • .. "' tlll• llMlet, • _... --.. of "" Inventory of ttt41te •sltts ,....tt wwu · .... · · · ·" ....... · ......................... · · · ·· • .... ..,...,, and of the petitions ac• . .._., ... .-• ., ,._ *1COfl =:;::=:.::...=1:=-; and ol the petltklns, ec· , .... ,.....11 ...... ...._...,_ , ,,.,,..,..counts and reports :-..::.=~.,.-........ ~...-...counts •nd reports u .. ~~"f"" a.1crlbed'tnSec1lon 1200.s .-... _ .. •• tt•..ti~"·"· Te ::,..:=;<:.::,:1..:..-,:-..!;~ dnc'1Md In SICOon 1200.S ....... ~-=:.:--~... • .:;:: of the CellfOtnl• Probate :=-.:;..,......-.-..-May ,,,,.,..,.._ of the CaHfonUa ~ u....i.c.-...._..._. Code.
._..1_,.._.,. o.t.· ..,.... Code. • ..._...._......_~-. ,,..... MILAN M. DOSTAL
· .tarM..n••9Yecat1ttc. :::1::.ATl 1AM1t JelMI A. h11&••, At· ,..., .._... A,,._...,
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........ • ................. :::"..::::.: Delly ..... M9y ~1....1!1 OAftD~-~.':' Delly PUat.Ju.~·s, 11, 'i*n.a.-..... _·19N1. .... .... "•"'"" WNt JUM,, 1.1 t~ ,,......or.ei~c..iy"""'-4.NI ..... 1M1 .m7 .. 1,
. ..
Insurance
covers debts
By The A11oclated Preas
~f you've ever borrowed money or signed a cr~1t agreement, you may have gotten -and
paid for -more than you expected.
. ~any loan contracts include a provision ror
hfe insurance and some consumer activists say
borrowers often don't realize they are buying the
extra protection.
The purpose of the insurance 1s to make sure
the creditor gets paid if the borrower dies and to
protect the borrower's sur vivors against debts .
YOU ARE PROBABLY FAMILIAR with this
type of insurance if you own a ho~e ; lenders fre·
quenUy require the purchase of a separate life
insurance policy as a condition for a mortgage. You
may not realize, however, that credit insurance alsc
is offered forsmalJ loans and credit agreements.
The American <.:ounc11 on Life Insurance
estimated that as or the end of 1979, credit life m·
surance accounted for 5 percent of all life in·
surance in t he United States. Other sources
estimate that Americans
pay anywhere from $1
bilUon to $3 billion a year CONSUMER
in premiums on credit in·
surance policies.
Credit insurance was
introduced in the United States in 1917. At that
lime, the cost generally was absorbed by the
lender. Today, however, the price of the policy
usually is passed on to the customer. Most credit
msurance is charged to the borrower. in full, when
the loan or credit agreement is signed. A lump
sum, representing the total of all the premiums
during the term of the loan, is added to the amount
of the debt. And finance charges are applied to the
premiums -just as they are to the loan itself.
FEDERAL REGULATIONS REQUIRE len-
ders to disclose finance charges for credit life m·
surance only if the purchase of the insurance 1s
mandatory. When the purchase is voluntary -as
it is for most smaller loans -the lender may not
necessarily explain th~ added charges.
The Paul Douglas Consumer Research Center.
the education and research arm of the Consumer
Federation or America, studied credit insurance
several years ago and concluded: "Because the
monthly credit insurance premium charge added
to most credit transactions .. .is relatively small
and because most consumers usually sign the
authorization for it when a sale.sperson tells them
to, without asking questions, many people who
purchase the insurance are hardly aware of hav
ing done so."
Credit insurance can be a valuable protection.
On a small loan, however, it may not be worth the
added expense. Your existing insurance may be
adequate. If you need additional coverage, you
may be able to get a separate policy from someone
other than the lender at a lower price. Find out ex-
actly how much different lenders charge for
credit insurance, including interest, and compare
costs.
THERE ABE TWO BASIC TYPES of credit in·
surance -credit life, the most widespread, and
credit disability. With credit tile insurance, your
lif is insured for the amount of the debt. If you d ie,
the benefits are paid directly to the creditor. Most
credit life policies are decreasing-term insurance.
As ti me progresses and the amount of the loan stiU
oustading gets smaller , the amount of protection
drops. Uollke regular life insurance rates.
premiums for credit Life insurance usually do not
vary according to age.
Credit disability policies provide for the insurer
to make loan payments during periods when the
borrower is disabled. In most cases, this kind of
coverage is available only as a supplement to credit
life Insurance. Cred.itprs generally oHer either
"retroactive" or "elimination" plans .
In both cases, there is a wailing period. You
.must be disabled for a fixed amount of time -
•usually 14 or 30 days -before benefits will be paid .
With retroactive policies, back payments will be
1made once the waiting period has pu&e<I. With
~elimination policies, there are no back payment.a.
Canoe wedding
makes splash
LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) -The weddlnf got
off to a rocky start. The minl.Jlte.r wu fritbtened of
water, the cl'ffk ran a little Cut and one iueal fell
In. But it wu the moat unusual canoe trip anyone
in tbe weddln1 party bad been on .
LU'O' Ado and Brenda Shelton 1ay they fell in
love wblle paddlln1 canoet, so UN!) donDed blue
leans and ar•bbed p1ddle1 to fel married recently
n one ~ their weddlnl pretenta 4"" an aluminum
canoe coveted with nowera .
Two doaen friendJ humored their wiaba and
rowed. out to tbe middle o1 Wildcat Ct.-while '°
more atood OD. tbe bank.
"Don't ldlll her, Larry, just Up the c:uoe
over." aoa ..-yelled.
A mare uble ftshln•:boal .,.. pnMcled 1ut
WM far tbe Rn. JOlePb Wlck al LalQtUe.
''TIM mJalater aaid ~ wu Mand Gt water, 10
wt bed to set blm a boat that 11'1111dn't Up owr:·
AdolaN.. •
·~ Joad. ''J tried to talk ..... -of tt.' bat they ...wda•t u.ta. I wut ~to-.... th1I la .at lnm1Job~.··
. ,
II• ,
nd Kathy Aspevig stand outside the
, Ore., home which Dale designed and
building. The solar collectors on the
roof, along with the greenhouse thaJ will be
built, wiU help transfer energy to heat the
house.
egon exploits sun
State, ot in sun belt, encourages solar heat uses
SALE'.'f, e. <AP> -Soggy Additionally, Oregon offers
Oregon is h dly a place where tax incentives to those who take
Ole Sol co be expected to advantage or solar energy. Resi·
warm hous heat water and dents who install a solar system
fry potatoes. that supplies at least 10 percent
"This is e like the rain-of a home's energy require-
belt, .. says D Merkle, owner ments are eligible for a state in-
of the Sunwo s company in come-tax credit of up to $1,000.
Portland and under of the The Department of Energy
Oregon Solar rgy Industries has received about 3,500 applica-
Associalion. tions for the credit since the pro-
Yet. solar en y in recent gram started in 1979. Applica-
years has bee e a multi-lions now arrive at the rate of
million d?llar in try here in 100 a week, Gallagher,says.
the Pacific North st where it The state has a similar pro-
rains 200 inches a a'r in some gram for business and com-
places. mercial buildings, which has at-
There are solar using pro-tracted about 130 applicants so
jects in Portland , a Jar-heated far.
goat milking barn i end, and State energy officials say com-
on the coast, where• infall is mercial solar projects include
the heaviest, motels re using nursing homes, motel chains
the s un's rays to t their and taverns with solar water
tapwater. systems.
The solar boom has en en-A potato processing company
couraged by federal state in eastern Oregon is switching to
tax credits, the populari of en-solar power to produce 2,000
vironmentally safe ene and pounds of steam per hour to beat
the push to replace d ng the cooking oil used to fry more
gas and oil supplies re-than 4 million pounds of french
newable energy sources. fries per day.
Also, the Legislatur and Merkle started his business in
several cities are worki on 1979. Working alone, be did
"right to light" proposals Of-about $230 worth of business the
ficials want to assure 0 o-first. month, building solar water
nlans that once they inv in heaters and systems for
solar energy their access to e greenhouses.
sun Will be protected from w He now employs nine people
buildings and tall trees. and does about $250,000 in busi-
' 'The thin~ that is uniq ness a year. He says the state
about Oregon 1s it is not a pla solar industries association bas
where the solar industry gre about 150 members and is the
up, like Florida, New Mexi second largest in the nation.
and California," says Ric next to California.
Gall•gher of the Oregon Depart "Oregonian4 are very recep-
ment of Energy. "You'd expec tive lo solar because they are
them lo be in the foref~nt." aware of the energy and en-
Bui Gallagher said solar " vironmental implications," says ener~ works here beca\ISe the I Merkle a chemical engineer
state has a mild climat and "Solar i>ower can reduce our de:
about 70 percent of the sun ·n-pendence on foreign oil."
frared rays penetrate even Merkle says owners of solar
cloudy days. equipment need to be assured
that sunlight will fall on that
equipment.
"We've gone from 30 solar
houses in 1974 to,3,000 in 19~ and
people don't know if they have
so lar protection ," says
Republican state Sen. George
Wingard, a Eugene builder. "I
believe that people who have
built solar homes ought to be
protected from the problems of
somebody growing trees in their
way in the future."
The state Senate this month
passed a bill that states that all
applications for building permits
must certify that passive solar
ener gy was considered as a
source of heating. .
The small towns of Woodburn
in the Willamette Valley and
Ashland in southern Oregon
already have adopted ''right to
light" ordinances. City planners
say the measures don't mean
someone can be ordered to cut
down their trees or knock down
a building to give their
neighbors access to sunlight.
However, existing trees and .
buildings must be kept at the
present height if growth or addi-
tions would block the sun.
"Most people who are install-
ing systems are careful about
what is on the south-facing lot,"
says Margie Harris who helped
draft a solar access proposal re-
cently pr-esented to Portland of-
ficials. "The city is preoccupied
with encouraging people to in-
stall solar systems. It also needs
to concentrate on maintaining
solar rights."
Ms. Harris says the Portland
proposal would require the city
to compensate the owner of a
solar system if access to the sun
is blocked by a change in zoning.
It also would allow homeowners
to register their "sky space"
with the city, similar to record·
ing property boundaries.
Newfo d~veloped
Nourishment said to ave worldwide potential
\ LOND~N (AP> -A high-tein soi production in developed coun-
tries.
A pilot plant at High
Wycombe, 25 miles northwest of
London can make up to two tons
a week, but commercial produc-
tion will require between 2,000
and 10,000 tons to be produced a
week, the partnership says.
Re fun lanOK'd
SAN FRANCISCO ( ) _
Pacific Telephone's. plu re-
fund $20.9 million ln overcb a
hH beetl approved by the
Public UtlUQes CommlNion.
The company sald the r
to aublcriben with Zone Uaqe
lleaaurement service, would
amount to about $t for each of
the 3.4 mllJJon PacUlc Telepbon•
aubtcriben affected i.n tbe Loi
AD••l• area and 1.1 miWan In
the San l'fucbeo Bay area.
ZUM Ml'Vice cbU'lea bavol" iD·
ter·area calla and replaetd
meHured local aDd mulU·
meaup ualt char••· Tbe refundl wtJl laciluie ID· t.en.t cm the bUlc amouat .,..._
, ~ from Ju. e, 119 to
llarellil •· u.. :TMJ wtU bl
reflecMctt • eNdlt -Miii to thnAe ruatomera recei•la•
service under the ZUM plan on
March 3>, 1981 .
The PUC aaid the overcollec·
Uon actually was '21.8 mllllon,
leas f70P,OOO in aettlemedta with
General Telephone Co.
Oran
'€rime wave'
false hyee?
By THOMAS D. ELIAS
Callfomla politicians of all stripes have adopt
ed the crime isaue and are trying to use it for their
own benefit.
Among Democrata, Gov. Edm~d Brown Jr.
has taken the lead In sel~ing on the Issue, calling
for the first major tax increase of any kind since
he took office in 1975. He wants an additional
quarter-cent sales tax to fight crime and build
prisons.
But even left-wing activist Tom Hayden now
tries to use crime, informing his followers that it ts
not an issue belonging exclusively to the right. ~Jl.;"'11!~~
Crime affects the poor most of all, Hayden noted, •----·
so politicians who want to represent them had best
respond, too.
Among Republicans, Atty. Gen. George
Deukmejian is the leade r in trumpeting the latest
"crime wave." Deukmejian started early, sending
out scores of press releases and starting several
CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
new magazines within
his office soon after tak-
ing office in 1979. Hts
aim is to con vince
Republican voters that
he and not Lt. Gov. Mike
Curb would be the stronges t crime-fighter.
Deukmejian needs to be identified with a
popular issue because he trails Curb right now in
early polls on next spring's Republican
gubernatorial race.
All this political involvement leads skeptics to
wonder just how genuine the "crime wave" is.
Even beginning journalism students know that
politicians and the media can "create" cnme
waves whenever they wish. simply by playing up
routine events.
Crime has increased over the last two years,
but violent crimes have climbed only at a rate
slightly higher than population increases.
This suggests that crime 1s really not much
more of a problem than it always has been, while
fear of crime has unquestionably become more
widespread.
It's the fear of crime that produc.-es the
political involvement
For Gov. Brown, his tax increase proposal
serves two purposes. First, it would allow him to
call a special election m November and still evade
accusations that he is calling it only to get the
much more controversial Peripheral Canal issue
out of the way before he runs for the U.S. Senate in
1982.
For a referendum on the canal project, the
plan to divert Northern California river water
around the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta via a
43-mile ditch, will be the most divisive issue on the
next statewide ballot. ·
But if Brown spent most of his time before a
November e lection pushing an anti-crime
measure. he might avoid taking a stand on the
canal. The governor was initially a canal booster,
but has turned lukewarm in the face of solid op-
position to the project from Northern California.
What's more, no matter what happens to his
anti-c rime proposal, Brown could campaign for
the Senate as a crime fighter next spring.
If it doesn't make the ballot, Brown could
campaign against the Republicans who opposed it
in the Legislature. If it qualifies for a vote and
loses, be could say he did what he could. but the
people didn·t want to foot the bill
And 1f 1l wins, he could claim the victory for
himself. regardless of whether his plan is effec-
tive For the 1982 election will come too soon to-tell
whether the anit-crime tax will do any good.
Brown, thus, has more to gain from milking
the crime issue than anyone else.
But it's also vital to all the other politicians
who have begun to exploit it. Deukmejian, for one.
indicates opposition to Brown's sales tax plan. If it
passes or even makes the ballot, the crime issue
might be passe by the time he stands for the gov·
ernorship simply because of overexposure. And
Deukmej1an needs to keep it alive.
It would be an exaggeration to say the crime
issue is entirely a political fabrication. But a
variation of the old caveat emptor rule -let the
voter beware -certainly applies when would-be
officeholders lake up verbal cudgels against
anonymous criminals.
fThomas El141l ia a columniat based in Santa Monica.)
Girl, 10,
• survives
ordeal
LOUP CITY. Neb.
<AP> Kristi
Edelman's parents
thought s h e had
drowned when the 10·
year-old fell into an ir-
rigation pipe and was
s wept down the water-
filled, mile-long tube.
Kristi 'and her sister.
Roxanne, 13, were play-
ing near the pipe recent-
ly when the younger girl
slipped and fell in. The
surging water swept her
along inside, but s he
was able t o breathe
from a two·inch air
pocket along the lop
Finally, two hours
later, her unconscious
body shot out the other
end. into the arms of
rescuers. She was re-
leased from a hospital
after being treated for
cuts and bruises.
Prisoner
phone use
/eared
SAN FRANCISCO
<AP 1 -Officials in the
San Francisco District
Atto rney's office are
afraid that pnsoners in
the county jail who now
have almost unlimited
access to telephones will
use the phones to harass
witnesses.
A Superior Court
judge has stripped one
inmate or telephone
privileges after the
prisoner , accused of
murdering one of his
sons and assaulting the
other, allegedly made a
number of telephone
calls to his wife
The calls were "a con-
stant source of emo-
tional distress" to the
prisoner's wife. said As-
sistant District Attorney
John Rowland, who took
the matter to co~rt.
Audiologist's work
involves many aspects
Dear Joyce: I would like lo know
about becoming an audiologist. Do
you have materials?
-N.W., Torrance, Calif.
Professional• in audiology and
speecb-language pathology say bear-
bag and speech are so closely related
tllat speclallsu ln eltber field muat
have bowledge about &be otber.
l!•IU diagnostic equipment,
audiologists evaluate bow macb and
wbat kind of bearing loss a penon
baa aDd bow lt can be remedied.
Speecb-languase patbologl1t1 help
patients overcome problems of
speech, articulation, aon·Oaency aad
stuttering.
In Washington, D.C., audiologist
Ratb Wair. 1ay1 her cllnlcal work
at tbe ~Tl• W aslu.g1oll Ual•entty
Speecb aad Bearlq Ceater olfen &k
threefold ~atlafaclloa of wortdag wKb
peo]»le, data ad Udaga. <A sales rep,
for lutuce, woru mabalJ wltll peo-
ple, u accoaataat wltb data ud a
'meclaulc wl&la W...11.)
WaU• etljoys tile lnteracUoa of
teatbag Qd coaaaeU.g eacb clleDt,
wblle evalaatlag tile cUeat'• recorda
aad budllag the laatnamematioe of
tbe aadlo eqalpmee&.
.. My work Ch•• me re1•lar
cloaare," ab&rela&H. Closuef "Yet,
I aee tlae eatceme of IDJ ettoru wtu.
eacla penm. I doa't feel I'• merely
• cos la a pl'OCeN over wlakb f lane ao eoatroJ. Like aa ardal&ect or
artltt, I uve Ute reward of ..a.1
tile reRhl ol my labors," Wallall
ff ......
A•dlilkt.19tl aad apeeela·l ...... e , • ....,.. ... ••Y _,., wllat .-er 4lo
IMI& &lit _.. loel lilne a few ...,.
.......... Witt. eJ1pllJa9 llW .e
wont. pan ta laavl•I .. tell ..,....
&Mir eMW lau a permuat lieait.81
.... Aliil ~ .......... ~, ....
llte f 1d tlaat for Hme patlemt1
&laer•'1 ua't •elp. A mHter'1
CAREERS
degree ls basic to the job of either
specialist and some states require a
teaching certificate to work In the
public schools. 1n moat states, you
need a Ucenae to work outside tbe
1cboola and Ucensure requJremeall
vary.
Beglnnlng pay 11 elaslk by geo-
graphy and employer, wltb pubUc
1cbools a& *'-e low end and prtvate
practice on top. Tbe federal govera·
meat pays $18,5" annually to ltart
and H average of approximately
$%7,000.
Competition for Job• cOllUnetl to
'row bat so do Job opeala1a,
partlcalarlY ln areaa outside ol dte
large metropoJltaa areH.
(For free "Speech-Hearing"
career mattriall, courtu11 of th•
American Speech-lonfllllJOt·Heoring A•·
1oclotion, encloff a large, ul/-oddraHd
mailing loMl with JIOt.11' requed to JOflC'l
Loin Kmn«ly, Orange Coa1t DcrU11 Pilot,
P.O. Boz 15«>, Co.to MtlG, Cclfl. t2IS26
before Aug. 1.)
H~minguxiy
for China
PEKING (AP) -A Sl'lancbal
publlsbln& house ls prlnUn& the fint
nlectlon of American wrtte.r .Emett
Hemln1way•1 abort 1torlea •n
Chilfeae, the official Xlnbua MWI
agency reported.
The book includes 21 1tonel, lD·
cludin1 "The Snowa of KUlmuijuo,"
.. The \Jndefeat.td'' and .. Old .. 111..., at
the 8rldae." Xlnhua aald
4""'°""'•mitftU {>r Pool
Lr1al "'-altc'H .._ .. t o.ind
P"'tii0ne&.a• ~talllut..• Tru .. •
SE.VICES
'rfut"• r .. "'".,.,
EMf'lOYMENT &
PRmHTION "'PM*• ln1tructtOt1 Jut.'4 • .n~tl· "··~ ......... 'IA.. MERCHANOISE
:~1~ ..
AWltOG ::u:: MMen•I• l •mtt•• 6 C..wpn .. nl l~u °""' •)-"toYow f\irn1tw.r« G1ra1• Sat• ..... •-C-• , ..... ,~
~\f"\lOf-,..,..._,ntt)
~, .... ,l•M'CNl M1w-ttlaM'Ola ._11ntt(f
•hwr•I tntlnllMfth Ofh ............ t.q,... .....
t.."":t:.~e=. Sport•ncc-. S&oA "-"l•ti.1taftt 8•, ~·,r.,ho.thf'1 !)uno
IOlTS & MAJJN(
EQUIPMENT
°"rc·r1n
t am,.,...n Mt. Rettt
Dtc1nt Can =~-...· Matot Hm• t;ait' ftcn4 Tra1ltn Tn\lt1 !::~~,-Y.~•!lti.,.h
AUTOMOllLE
l.~Mr•t AAUQu.t• l:lu.au.• lteic"rtlltOll Ydudn ~l':,~~:(Jd\
Trwo v-Avl61AM ... "-·-•UTOS, IMPORTED
Uu~r•l
AU• KOmt'Q Aud• .\.-ha H•.U.y BMW
l•pn
&r.-O•laUn ... C'tr•rt
f't•l .........
'"'*"'•' JteM•
K•t..,.nnc.fb•• IA-Clllol Mud•
\etl'lf'ffto tkn' Ml.
llGll Opol P.ntt'•• t't..a«'< .. Pon< ht
R..n•i..lt Roll• Ro)'rt
Ro'"' ~ lwNN ~ ... Tnumph
Votb•a1u1 VotH~
AUTOS, NEW (.;"""'•'
:c Wt ·-·-111)11
lllll .... ·--ti.Gt DI» ---~ -J'ltlO --
l!A» 111n
1100
,.:c» ••• 8111) -----ID<.! IOl<I ----111'1) --11'1111 --.., -.., ... -.... -
tc)lf --------, ...
tlJO
tllO ...
IUD
'"" tllO .... -------lfJlj --
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USITHI
DAILY PILOT
"FAST
llSULT"
SHYICI
DlllCTOIY
For Result
Service Call
642-1671
lilt.Ill
~ill~~~~~~ rn T he ""1rketpWce on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678
N earl11 half of all Dail11 Pilot <UUn
have ~ the cku6ifitd 1ecti.i to btlJI
or a ell a prOduct.
'
lllOIS: ~.ntten
~c'-11....,ocb
cWy ... report~
ron h •• ....,,.,. n. 1---------
0AIL Y N.OT ••-11 DECORATOR
w.11ty tor tt.. flnt NEEDED
lacorrect JHertlon IN CAMEO SHORES! _... Bring paint, carpel, and
-1· ideas for this half a
••••••••••••••••••••••• &...rat 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DUPUX 3 bdrm. 2 bath each unit.
Fireplace, buiJl-ins. Ex·
cellent rental area. Near
beach & bay. $285,000.
642-2253 eves.
associated
,1 P ''° ' lo/ > lo/ t ;'\ T f.I s
' "" ti t ~ ,
SUNSET
WATCHING
IS AFFORDABLE in
Cameo Highlands! Mini
mansion is priced to sell
at $349,000. Large as-
sumable 1st, plus owner
will carry $100,000 2nd
TD. Spectacular ocean
views from living, din·
irig and master bdrm.
Huge lot with beautiful
grounds. Don't hesitate,
call 673-8550
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
OCEANFRONT
2 Bdrms, 2 ba. unrum.
New. $850 yrly.
IAYFltOHT
3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unfum. Mint cond. $850 yrly.
CHA..._ FltOH'T
3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum.
$7SOyrly.
associated I"' .. f" .. I /\ .. ... s
. "' r • ..
Little h Ilg!!
Classified Ads are really
small "people to people"
sales calls with big re·
adershlp and big re-
sults! To place your
classified ad, call today
642-5678.
million dolJar fixer. ll 's
the lowest price fee sim·
pie on the market by
$125,000. Be clever, then
enjoy your profits!
Great assumable 1st TD.
Call today before it's
sold. 673-8S.'50
THE :REAL ESTATE:RS
P~--r··pa..
Large 3 Bdrm2 Ba Mesa
del Mar home. Located across the street from a
park . Owner will
finance. Submit your
terms. Full price
$121.900.
TR,\DI T 10\,\L
J?L\l.TY
631·7370
MEW CONDOS
13\.lt%/50% SOLD
NEW 1850SQ.FT.
2 & 3 Bdrm. CONDOS Cement drive. dbl
garage w/openers.
micros, trash com 's, air
conditioning, walk ins,
pool & jacuzzi's, ~11 block
all shopping & theaters.
Next to parlc.
WILSOHPARK
COHDOMIHIUMS
380W. Wilson, C.M.
Open 10-5
631-5055
FtHAHCIHG OK
Sharp 6 year old Corona
del Mar duplex .
Spacious and woodsy.
Super location. $320.000 -only $70,000down.
(714• 67J-4400
12n t ua.2121
HARBOR
*OCEANFRONT AXER-3 UNITS
a...~wel ....... tobeclltforW•.a.I
S..cl, MO & s..I. 0WIMt' wll cwry lat
T.C. at 12'11¥0 .......... t. $675,000.
*BLUFFS END UNIT-VU
hwll.., :I gredN coner ontiooldag r····· ............... l INd. ca. with __ .._ ao.ts! $260,000.
DESIGNER PERFECT-UTILE IS.
A ,.... w..t of d9anw & ~· with
_..,.., CGWlllllKe Ir Ollht.cilMJ •
t::t.111h .. fWt CCN'Mf' J bed. \oM_
• becl. ,...tal + Molds qvarten.
$637 ,000. 673-6900. ,,
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
S.a, RMU1l1, PloPerW ~nwnt
2436 W, CoMt Hwy 316 Manne A~.
• Ncwpon Beach ~Island
Hl-1400 '7Mt00
LINDA ISU
LOCATION UNSUIPASSID
Exquisite home located on one of
the most souJ ht after bayfront lots. Captivating view of main
turnl.Dg basin from most every room . This home has 61 feet of
bay frontage wi th space tor 4
large yachts. Unusual features
include pool & spa in private
courtya rd a nd elegant decor
throuchOut . 5 bedrooms & 5~
baths . Shown by appointment
~. 92,eoo.000.
C.OLE OF NEWPORT IEALTOIS
2515 I. Comt Hwy .. CoroM cltl M•
675-5511
'ESl.FY N
~YLOR CO.
REALTOHS ~111l·1· l!HH
IALIOA ISL.AHO DUPLEX
4 Bedrooms upstairs and 3 bedrooms
downstairs with patio and deck. Cov-ered garage and laundry room. Ex-
cellent for summer-winter rental. Just
steps to the sand from the door of this ex~ellent tax shelter plus potentially
appreciatinS property. Call now for this new listing. $450,000
WESLEY H. TAYLotl co .. RIALToas
2111 S-~Hllhlood
NEWPORT CrHTEI. till. 644-49 I 0
I
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
COME WITH US •••. TO DOVll
SHORES. ENCHANTING THREE BEDROOM
HOME .. SPACIOUS FAMILY AND DINING
ROOMS .. ntE REAR YARD IS AN ABSOLUTE
DREAM WITH OVERSIZE-POOL ,
EXTENSIVE DECKING AND LUXURIANT
PLA?\IINGS .. $495,000.
1617 WESTCUFF OR.. H.I. 6Jlt7JOO
TUITLBOCK
HIGHL.AHDS
CREATIVE FINAN·
CfNG: L3.,,'k: · Lease op-
tion possibility. Very
finest new CONDO buy
in Harbor area. 2 & 3
BDRM. 3 BA. 1650sq. fl.
Incomparable amenities
in area. We have Owner
Investors who will lease
with option to purchase
to well qualified Buyers.
Don't miss chance for
futur e discount
ownership.
WILSOHPAR.K
COHDOMIHIUMS
380 W. Wilson, C.M.
A stunning achievement
by Pollock Interiors.
Exquisite decorating
thruout this 4 Bdrm, 1 sty home with separate
dining room and large
master suite. A new and exciting orrering
$312,000.
Open 10-5
631·505.S
SELL idle items with a
Daily Pilot Classified
Ad.
RESIDENTIAi REAL rs TATE SERVICES
UDO ISLE IEAUTY
Owner found another house -truly
motivated! Perfect home for family
& entertaining. The gourmet
kitchen & living room open through
french doors to flowered garden
courtyard. Large formal dining
room seats twelve easily. Many ex·
tras ! $599.000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
ALLOT
C W £ S Y E H E L R E 0 8 E T E C T A
S 0 H 0 E G I V E L U W L 0 U L Y E S
H A I L I T N 0 K M E P T t 0 A l T L
T H T S R U A P A 0 H 0 U M N Z Y A I
0 Y S l T 0 A P I U M E £ V 0 P P C W
H A E 0 A R H V A E A T I J J 0 L 0 l
T 8 0 S R G I U M R E X t E T R M L S
I t W A 0 0 0 I R 0 T C R D R A A L R
0 A U T A P 0 T U H 0 l T R 0 P P A 0
S S W t P I N T L T U S A W P T P K 0 ME 1 A NIAL L 0 TJE [" 0 l EL As
t T W T R 0 I S T L P L I P l N Y W W
£ R A G U 0 " K E E L N E R " K U R M S 0 0 L T I D C K T T I 0 M A E R l S
S I 0 0 J M T S ! N I 0 0 T R I H T E
: Hlddlll ... -...... --""""'· ..... . ...... "'· ............... '.'""' .... -.... "'· -, ::... = .. =~ .... = _ ... = ,...... ·=~ r..,,.a..
PININSULA POIMT llACtROMT
Panoramic bay k ocean view at
wedee. from prime large lot, 4 bdrm,
3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine room. $1,385,000.
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm, den, spacious Plan 8,
immaculate. Low priced at $215,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
\ l ' I• 'y . 'l • l f' • • ' ~· 'I ' l ,, It) ,
QUALITY MEDITHRAHEAN DUPLEX
New, custom, corner lot, skylights,
textured walls, cedar ceilings, the best
construction you can buy. One unit is a
three bedroom, the other a two
bedroom. Old CdM $449,000.
U~l()UI: tif)Ml:i
REALTORS, 675-6000
2'43 Eut Co .. t H19hway, Corona del Mar
WE HNE ~OF ntE BEST AGENTS IN 10NN
1006 •••••••••••••••••••••••
For S•by o...,.
Charmin1 2 story Cape --------AIHORMAL Cod: 3 Bdrm, 2 ba + 1 JAS._.. CllEB
Can you rmd a property bdrm unit w/bath, laund New o~fe~ 1g! Beautiful four doon from the So. rm. 2 car ear. Lee fixed Plan 2 h lots or ex-
Bayfront with a "5x85' assumable + OWC. tras. New sel in new· lot on Balboa Island ~75,000.173-0188 d d d where the owner wlll ---------• ly Ian • pe yar ; L skyllebts nhance Ulis CODlader anytbinl of for S• 1111Y OWMf' taatefull decorated 2
value-stocks. cash, land1 ISLAND CHARM Bdrm, bath. den units, you name it. Ana Updated 3 bdrm 2ba f 1 · i .. lhe owner will trade. w/loft, frplc. 2 car gar, orma 10 ug roon home. 5,000-0wnlt Includes plans for a new laund rm. View & steps willine 0 help wi.h
duplex. Alking$59:5,000. to the bay. Larae as· financin Call for ~ lal»oa hlmd •Mu s u m a b I e + 0 W C . .... , $475,000. Call673-0188 pointm to see .
'7J.1700 6 ·5200
OPEN F«I I 0..2
~ .... ~--711-1111
PEMHSULA
COTT AGE $225,000
Walk to bay or beach.
Great location. 2 Bdrm 1
bath. Fireplace in livina
room. Flexibleterms.
75'-1616
THEILUFFS
Finest original area
Superb greenbelt selling
ofrering "Massive"
view. Spacious 3 bdrm
end unit, totally re·
decorated townhome al $265,000. Agt, 640-5560.
JUST UKE HEW!
This lovely 3 Bdrm home
has been completely re-
done. New roof. new
cpts, etc. Owner will
carry large loan. Only
$132,500. Call today
SAT /SUHDA Y I to 5.
I It.Mc.WA.a. j P:TE
!JARRET
.. REALTY -IALIOA ISLD DPLX
lat time on market ·
great location btwn Bay
& Village. Spacious 4 Costa Mna I 024
Bdrm. 13>'• home + l •••••••••••••••..-•••••
Bdrm apt. Walch the 1--------world go by from the
front patio. Xlnt rinanc· mg avail. $530,000
WATERFRONT
HOMES
REAL ESTATE 631-1400
Capistraao leach I 011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut. 180 degree sweep-
ing ocean vu, added 2nd
level & enjoy rare 360
deg. view. 3 BR 2 Ba,
privacy, walk to beach. $209 ,00 0 . Ownr .
1-677-6533
Corona def Mer I 022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ow....-w/Orry
I st TC
MESAVd>E
POOLlfME Just in umJor sum-
mer! This *nning 4
Bdrm hom features
huge famil)l'"OOM with
bar, skyJht~ and
stained glls wandows
overlookil beautiful
solar heiid pool and
spa. Andlor the avid
photogrilter. a com· plete d~ room with
custom abinets. sink.
separat water heater.
light i and ventilat· ed. Be · u1 wallpapers
THlt«IHG
_________ , 979-5370
HiWPOUHGHTS A
2·l IDRM UNITS
Only 7 years old with
ocean view, spa, 4 car garage, o~n beam cell·
ings. Built by Warm·
ington. Great buy at
$375,000. Owner wants
quick escrow. Call Jim
Davis, 760-1743
and I lors thruout. A
uniq• kitchen with
ceda,Skylight and re-
cessJ lighting. This
custnized home is a mUf~~ see. orrered at S~· For an appoint· m' to see. caJI 540-1151 TOWHHOME7
Call the specialists at
lhe condominium in·
formation center.
Touchstone Realty
963-<*>7
Deluxe townhouse LLS.,." TE duplex. 3 bdrm family. I"
2\.lt bath each unit. Fr pl cs. all bu Ill-Ins. , ___ A_EA __ L_T_OA_S __
decks &c patios. Park· no. S'9alt Not like landscaping .
SELLER WlU. HELP Shal DECOIATOll FINANCE. $295,000! But there's a UtUe devil
! ~ HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
CONDO Sllt,tOO 1a1toaa-.p..-in all of us. Call for in·
-1 · -r-formation on our owner 1---------1
Winding greenbelts lead • .._.. financed units. For ex-
MESA VB.DE
EMTERT AIHEllS'
to bright sio(le story •67~7060• amp 1 e, pride 0 r
condo. Exquisitely de· l~~~~~~~~~I ownership Hnlg Bcb
S200Kat 121120/o
FtNAHCtHG
corated watb custom 1: dplx. ll's a steal al
wallpaper and cabinetry $147,500. CDMCOTTAGE thruout. Formal dining SUNDECK HAS T o u c H s T o N E
room too! Owner will CHAMHa VIEW REALTY PLUS INCOME
or 3 Br 2 ba home wn
iso lat ed mastr
bdrm /parent retreat'r
cooperate with rmanc· Ing. Won't last at this Only $209,900! Charming ____ 963-al6'1 ____ _ · u Newport Beach 4 Bdrm. pnce. so ca .now. features wood burning
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
fireplace. Huee oyer·
slied lot with rear cov-
ered patio. Owner is
motivated and willing to
help finance! Juat listed.
Call now,67~
THE :REAL ESTATE:RS
SECLUDED in-law quarters + ;t>r
EASTSmE cotta~e. Any way /ou
Reduced! Huge 4 Bdrm describe it . it's c!im· ing, up to datellnd plus pool. Waterfall and beautifully deco,ted.
bonus .room here too! 4 Priced al $280,ool'wlth
king 11~ bdrms, huge very special fina~g. ~ountry kitchen. Flnanc· CALL FOR DOILS
mg is great. Large as-.. sumable 1st TD and 644-721
owner will help with
rest. Don't wait. Call
631·6990 •
~ ............. il:AI&--
DBJGHT
Lovely 4 Bdrm 3 bath
home. Beautiful park·
like yard with pool and
spa for your summer en·
tertainlng. Large family
room, Mexican Lile en·
try, very light and airy
Asking $273,500. Fnr
more details, ca ll
540-llSl
: HERITAGE
. REALTORS
9 .25°/o Asanable lsl of $94,500 payable
$795/mo. Sellers will
carry lrg 2nd 41n this
4-5Br Mesa Verde pool
home. John 631·0213,
641·8458. Agt.
11 ~•4Yo -10% LOAM
@ EASTBLUFF, JSl listed. Be first to se(thiS 3 BR ·----------
1 :i~ ba Lusk 11ome. On •-------SEA COVE ree land. P!11llum ca OWHEI FINANCED * HAllOI VllW HOMES * Sensationally decorated Carmel
Model in move in condition!
Feat uring 3 Bdrms immaculate
yard & FEE land. Priced to sell
at $262,000. For private showing
call 795-1501or752-7373.
Walker &lee
Real Estate
-111111 ILlllS CD.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
SUPBt IASna.u..c~ Former Model With Vie Of Big Ca-
nyon. Three Bedrooms Plus Con·
vertible Den, 2~ Baths. Wet Bar. In-
ter-Com. Lovely Appointments
Throughout. Community Pool. Best
!alue In Area. Lis t~d Under • .,.00,000. A ••Joy Of Newport" List-ing.
HIWPOITHAAIOI Y•W HOMI
Desir able Com er Location In Phase
II Harbor View Homes. Popular
Montego On Fee Land. Seclud
Yard With Spa. View Of Fash Island & Big Canyon. One B
From Community Pool, Parle & e Trails. Owner Very Motiv ed . 1195,000. @ ,
PROPERTIES nyon locauci S315.000. ~~r:ie e ~ ~:!:1 u ~ i ~~~
114-631-6990 OWC, De•ln & Co. wallpapers thruon. CuJ
642-6368 de sac street. Ow.er will
carry AITD for T years
at 13.5~ interest For an
appointment to K!e, calJ
540-! 151
•.· HERITAGE
RE.\LTORS
6 PLEX/WTSIDE
RED. to sl2s.ooo
With $152.000 In assuma·
ble loans ranginf from
9~% to 11~. 27 ,45C
gross income annual)~
Well kept single story
units wlth 4 garagf6
PLUS off·Slretl parkiJlt.
On 60'x300' lot.
644-721 t
Br condo <MonUJUo>
$81,500. Webb RJlyJ
493-<r781
By Owner. Two 2
houses on 1 lot.
Auumable 11%
OWC2od. 640-7
) • (
" . " -
;.~.~ ....... ~.~~ ........ ~.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~!.~.~........ Otange' Coatt DAILY PILOT!Thul'lday, June 4, 1981 'I I i
...... ~ I 024 llulla .. a heilt I04 '"IH I 044 Ne•port .._.. I 06t Mewport IHdl I OH ......_. Por StM OtMr leGI ... H1•" U,. ...... d ....... u ...... d ~~-"c!•i!!~;;.•••• :·b· .. ~bi;;t,A~·2··:·· ·*····*···M·u··s··1··s··a··L·i.·· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• :~~:::::.:·:::::f!!:! ·······;:;·;:;;;··iooci c:h·M::. ······;i2~ ;;.::.·············;i44 ~
~..,•THIS ., r, • a. rp"'· l 1.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
EXQUISI TE MESA flnencln.. Grotflnancln1 on thll 3 4 IDIM +. ~ APPLIVALLIY NBM z•W~C VEdDE Extcutlve Bl::L.OW VALUE Br 2'-' Ba lrvlne LOvely.tBdrm.famlly Nor ow 4-Plex. 2 ei""ttl A'•l Unlveratty Park condo.
bome.Louoloak L1r1e SlU,000 \ownbome w/attlcbed n B. l home on quiet tr Uned bdrm 2 bath each unit u DI. 'ol ll• no 3bdrrn. 2 ••b•. bonua malttr 1ulte tl)d Let'sDeal (21J)500·U~ 1ara1e. Owner wlll 111· I atreet. Neitrly v. acr1.1 with hreplece encloaed pets.&4iCU.S.'6.SO/Mo. room. Oreal loc. All
kitchen. SoJAr b •Uri&. '"ae 1044 sll\ with f!ntndna Spot· •Wf"'' •ac 1ard wltb 1patklin1 pool p•tto, double iaraae. HIW JlltW/RPLC amenities. UOO/m o 41 Pool fr Jae. Aasu~l1 le 1! Must ttll NOWt and spa. Two euy $185,000. Bill Grundy, Bulll·lna. Adults. no '760·1816· 1,
loan. 4 Bdnn with all tbe ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call tordcuila. flreploc:ea, 1paclou1 Rltr. 175-6181. ..... ...... -aa«1\/Mo ~241 •
extru. lkoker96'M568 * * DftJ BUY St•7.990 famlly room with bar. IJ'V-• ,.._.,_..,, ...,_ · L.,... hedt • ' ~ '159,900. NIWPottT 11.ACH 3 Br. l Ba. fiouse. 11ew ••••••••••••••••••••••• n
OWMrdC.,-y lnColleaePark 38drm IJ\\bodbttdge Prime re11dential. palnttn11de&out,oce1n Large wood & &la1113 br ~
Give ue a caJJ to see \his + den. Syracuse mdJ. Leverage-leverage. As· view ya~. Adulll on1y. 2~' ba, family rm , 2 car l'I
"moreforyourmQfley" Lrc femlly kitchen, RealfU aume h u11 1010s. $650 + utlls 64S-3000. 1ara1e. ocean/ranyon
home. Give )'CNr Jamily •leps to comm pool end 551-3000 Triplexes & dupleus in 548·9849 view. No pet.ti. $1025/mo.
eruoyment ol their own park. Priced lo sell It •,nu Pkwy.lnilnl' This 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda ' Corona del Mar & . . Sierra MCml Co prlvate pool & s pa. thouaands under l 17THATPROSPECT Belboa Penln. Owners BeautJtul Ellec home nr 841·1324, eves & wknch perfectly setup ror re-merket Make us un of· Is e. A private guarded Community in TUSTIN. 7!U-3Ul mqtlvated So Cal Plaza, pool 1_494_·04_17_. ____ _
luin1 or eotertalnlng fer. * * 125M! the heart of Newport Beach. Boat Other Red !atah C/21 Hewport Clttr. w/Jacuzzi, pool aervlc:e,
with tedwood d~kina & End unit 2 Be condo on slips for (3) SS'·701 Yachts. For Sale or ••••••••••••••••••••••• 640..5357 760..6767 gardener 5bd 3ba 3 car &.ogw.a Hilt
a aaa BBQ. Add lo thi.s 1 0 Trade. MobHt HGIMI garg S2000 mo 556-1737 •••• •••••••••••••• ••••• the solid comfort ol a 3 sec uded quiet •l. wner For Sale 1100 art 4pm orwkends. LeJ$e 2 Br condo. all Bdrm 2 Ba home. All fQr will help fb>ance. SHOPPING CEMTER a.._en1tles. pvt yrd, enA. :-;;. l,,'\1''' ~ 1:1 . .t l'I
c:: I I (
..,..., l, r '• t f
~ •'• 1 .'(J()l)
THIHICIMG
TOWMHOME?
l .. _UV\ Sl.25000 We are developers so submit land or ••••••••••••••••••••••• Located in No s.o. m .. ·--' C t M 1 B l I 31 .... 2 la aar. 551-0255 eves. other Real Estate to owner Jim os 8 esa r r r county, super ,rrowJb F / D'-Yd Bit · home w/cabana •'<JC30 area 15 °"' 1 p , i w , • -ms. \\bodbrtdge Thompson. Adults. xlnt 's69oo: ble. Own:;' .::11 fin!~~=~ Adlts. No Pets. 54z.0835. Lagwta......., 3252 ReallU 673·3826 f'ull price $850,000. Ask _n_oo---'pe'--r_rno_. _____ ••• •••• ••••••••••••••••
551-3000 HT ATE SA.LE for Mike. 3 Br, 1 ba. l& enc yd. $585 Lae 4br home ln new de·
4t2tBamnu p11,..,.,lrvlnl' (7141121-1210 12131591-136J 966 M · . 1 1 lease. 376 E. lBth St. <in velopmen t. Modern 1 aJesllc ocated n rear> Orivebylhen call k itch e n Including
Beaut. cust-0m Interior.
1800 sq ft, 3 bl', e ba.
hugh kit., skylite:s. blt·
ins. Lge atS-9um. $148,500.
845-4567
Call the specialists at
the condominium in·
formation center.
Touchstone Realty
963-~
Laguna IHCh I 048 •••••••••••••••••••••••
CIOOI 352-3710 Laguna Beach Park. 873•0884 micr owave & bar b·
near ocean Week days q u e / r 3 n 1 e . R e c . l
7!19·4175 s BR. 2 ba, lg. backyd. facilities a vaJI. No pets.
OWHltt W /AHANCE
3 BR 2~ 'ba twnhse,
w/lge' ratio, dbl gar.
pool. 115.000. Ruth
Laurie, Qkr. 646·4380
EXLCUSIVE
COLOMY
THE SHAKES
We a th ered ceda r
shakes, that Is Custom
designed 3 bdrm, fam
'rm, 2 baths. Exterunve
use or wood &lass &
ceramic tile. Beam ce1l
ang, frplc. Sl6S,OOO.
IACKIAY
3 Bdrm ramily home
Owner wilJ carry new lst
T .D . al 13%. 2311
Redland Dr. $197.000.
Dix Universal l561;1 sq ft. Frplc. Cul-de-sac. Avl. $900/mo. AnJI July lsl.
Irvine. All amenities, now . S7~mo 631-7089 540·8300 daya, 836-9784
Uparaded. Zar. 2ba. c: eves/wkndS "' 2 Br. w/stove & refrige, Star Park. Appts. only, enclsd garage. Adults, 3000 sq rt, 4 Br. Niguel
$65.500. SSl-2738 Indus~ 2100 no pets. $475. 773 w. golf course. ~l.600. A&t.
•-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.-;.;;;;;; Pro Wilson. 631-4889. Val, 499-4220, 497-4844. ....................... -----
l
LI
' 0 .,
II
p
lASTSIDE
Prideorownersbif.· 3 BR 2 Ba. fplc, b -In 's,
Woodland School-,dbl
gar. w/o ner. $149.~.
Lrg family home reatur·
Ing 4 Bdrm, 2~ Ba in
Irvine's Colony Club.
Walk to comm. pool, ten·
nis courts, schools, shop.
ping. Priced to sell. Call
for details.
M lssion Realty
(7 14)494·0731.
BAY CR~ BEAUTY 5
Br Family Rm. $200,000
assumable lsl. Owner
may carry Sl00,000 2.nd.
1 year. 5435.000. Call
Hedda Maros1 Agent
646·1044. Tosee&sell!
C /J I Newport Cntr.
640-5357 760-6767 AFFOIOAILI LAGUNA HACH Eastslde Town~e 2 Br. Newport leach 3269
HOUSIMG Canyon industrial bldg 112 Ba. Garage, patio. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..
PEHTHOUSECOHDO l.Jdo Peninsula mobile oeartown&artCestivat S465 /mo. No pet8. SPYGLAS.SLEASE
Agt. 64
IHVESTdtS DREAM
DRAMATIQ 3br, 2.1.~ ba 2
sty. Nr bch.'Fee l OCYc dn.
Owner will flhan~e. ~ f\,\f\!Ul
Hf /\ l I Y
~)~ l 1 /000
_S_1_7_9._000_._6'6-_l_~ ____ Orange Tree Coodo, Plan
$105,000
3 bdrm, I~ bath, new
paint m & oi.a. Really
sharp!
Red h d I 0-~ RL\tlty
I;~:; -;-: :( If I
5. 2 br 1 ba $103,500. Call
552· 7552 after 7pm.
**STEAL IT! Super price on this new-
ly back on the market 2
Br + den attached home
in Woodbridge Estates.
Hurry'
S.165.000
OPEN Ho"'" College ( lli]~odbrldge Park. Lo int. assumable.
3 br, 1~. ba. dbl sided Realtu
frplc. Sat/Sun. 1·4PM. 551·3000
Prin. only. 336 Princeton 4tttBarranu Pln1y,lr"lnt'
Dr .. 213-373-4787
YOU CAN AFFORD
this ocean view custom
in an executive area.
Large view decks·
beautiful home. 3 Br 212
ba. den. Only 315,00I
;ft o" 4e'IShorAYFROMTS600 Wliltboh d oFck f odr 40 I hbme. 2 bdrm. 1 bath. grounds. 9600sq. (t. fully 675-8133. 3 Bd, formal dining, ram "' ov r es. sq sa at. ee liq . 180 Priced to sell. $22,900. leaaed. Gross annual in· rm. lrg yard, 2 frplcs, rt or top ~uahty con-dearee ocean, CaLalina Owner will carry with come $54,000. Npt Hgts. Gorgeous Jbr. $1600tmo. Bob & Dovie sMtrud~tion.1 hisid5 bdrm1 & bay views. Pool. SlO,OOOdown. Realonomlcs 675.6700 2•12ba CONDO. frplc, Koop.Agt.6311266
e tl. sty e res ence s security, huge assuma----------1 fam rm, lndry/gar S72S. 3 Br 21 • Ba. Condo. the best of locations and ble loan N • hes the best of financing early new lO Unit In· 646"0329 Ocean view. $725/mo.
LCICJuna Village R.E
497-1761
available. Sl,225,000 al C /2 I Mewport Cntr. dus\rial Bldg in Costa E. Side 2br, l ~ba CON-Ask for Ron. 752-5111
only 9ctc int. Full price 640°5357 760..6767 Mesa. 15,000 sq rt 25% DO 1 1 u.nk 11 -------includin g the land down. Owner wiU carry 'rp c,s e.n vrm. BIG CANYON LEASE
9 CUSTOM HOMES Sl ,750,000. Owner wall HEW'ORT CREST 1st TD at 13'7r, interest pati~.ar S600846-0329 3 Bdr 3 Ba. formal dm!
Featurmgspeclacular carr y Sl,000,000. Call 3 Bdrms, front unit, 180 Trailer w/added room. 1 forJyears PhiJSulUvan ang, pool, bot tub, vu,
views. quality construe· Dan Bibb for appt degr~ ocean & Catalina br . fumi.shed, imrnac. Realtor 548-2103. Easts1de sharp 2 Br l:\• very sharp. $2000/mo. \
lion. exciting floor ROGER'S RlALTY views Absolutely pnme d 1 rk B R Bob & Dovie Koop. Ail.
Plans. Too much to men· location. Pool, tennis & A u t pa . Principals Lah for Sale 2200 d a . an g e, oven . 67S.23 I I spa. only S9000. 645-3070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• shwsr, frplc, vaulted 631·l266 _____ _
lion. FromSSS0.000. r~~~~~~~~~~l ---ceillng Adults. SS001Mo. Mol seed & Ryl~. 1~ I C /21 Newport Cntr. Cem•~ Lots/ R· I Whitewater Vu 381 Hamilton.
Architect&Oevelopers. POOLHOME I 640-5357 760-6767 Cryph 1500 Greatterms.subord.
Fowler & Assoc. J UST LISTED, lovely 5 ---••••••••••••••••••••••• 714/492-3320, 645-2781
Exclusive agent. BR 31,2 ba + den with THE ILUFFS 2 c em et e r y Io ts.
759.0207 wetbar +ram rm. and Prime view condo. 3 Westminster Memorial INVESTORS! Del Mar
Large garage, tmy house
Adults, no pets. $400.
761·0433. -----Bd f l F p k G duplex/condo Jots w/o-•-..,a N'--1 I 052 deii~hlful kitchen over rms, ron row. ee ar . ood section -'JI ~· looking pool and )acuna land. worth S760 each, asking cean views Ready to 2br, 1•.,ba, 2 car gar. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... / bu1"ld NOW F o b 'Il l k'd / •· Master & guest or C 21 HewportCntr. $1200 for both. 714/ · r m u1 · ns. no 1 s pe..-., Fox glove model in Lake mother-in-law bdr ms 640_5357 76,,.6767 642.91S6 eves. $67,000 ea Buy one or S475640·S0030r642·7261
P ark. 2 br. den. 2 ba. with own baths 3 car -------more w /super sub-vaulted ceahng. French gar. Agt 646.4:11() MOVING forces sale of ordinated financin g . DRAMATIC 3br, 2~ba 2
doors. Assume at 10:\• ------UPPStlAY Westminster Memorlar Details 1·755-4667 . sty. Nr heh. xlnt Joe .
THE BLUFFS
3 Bdrm condo w view.
Remodeled. like new
with gourmet kitchen 1
yr lease. SlOOO mo.
760-9678. ------
Nwpt Shore 4 br, 3 ba,
canallront. nwly det!or,
pool. tenrus, 2 blks ocean
$1,100. 962-6e83.
ON THE WATER
. .
.~ .. -
,,
SAVE YOUR MONEY!
3 great rondos, try very
low down. Sellers will
help finance. Priced to
move fast. Call now fdr
deta its. 752-6499
* *PARK PLACE Not Monopoly but a
b eautiful S Bdrm
Northwood home with
great available financ-
ing. Call for details.
$154 ,900 Owner FtSH FflOM East of Irvine Ave., 4 Park Cemetary Plot 1-755·4556 S795 64_~_1_035 __ _
__ 83_1·7_634_._7_59·24~ YOUR DOCK Bdrm 3 bath home, large .Present value S770 will "-.A f c--.... Huntington leach 3240
MANY OPTIONS L covered patio. r hoice sac. S500 call collect ..,.,.p o rty-"r Newport leach I 069 · arge (714 1727 ....... n ro-2550 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 Br+ Canallront home corner lot $213,000. --<iV'OJ •••••• -;:••••••••••••••• • • • 4 Br. 2 Ba. frplc. Comm pool. tennis. Roy Mc:C_.., RJtr C I blk re ga age N Waterfront D•...a...x omm~rc al 11 O+ --1 nee. r · 0
Great view or boats & '• bay Brick fplc, family li
room Availeble immed. • •
for 9months. Only S995 • •
PlanlllRealty '177
·
900
fijj'l\\boctbrldge
.,...... across from beach. En· 548-7729 p _..... 1600 -·.. pets. 19811 Bushard St. WithloatDock joy the sunset. Noquali ~~~~~~~~~ ro,.... .. , consisting of 31 lots. s125,mo + $725 S.D ~~~~~ p~~e:~~:r~~~~~ ~·~~·e~°:. =es~o~e~ S-ta Ana I 080 ··~;~;;~~;~~~.~~·· ~!~':·:~t. r:;U,~ 642·7743·
home with income unit you in. $269,000. Call ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ora,nge County S120.000 Terms available Jbr. 2ba. fenced. nice
mo. I THE REAL FSJ'ATERS
673-8550
too ! Call for info Barbara 675-7611 or Iv ByOwJV?r OWCat13"' ... 3 net net net (document EdithW.Hesslc:k cond, clseschools/shpg, layc:rest 3 Ir /DH -
Remodeled '\Od re-decorated like new. Ter· Ei~~/PJ! P~lbi ~ua s1~~t' _B_r_o_k_e_r._963-8 __ 1_82 ____ ~g at 700.~t99 Br. P•• Ba., frplc. dbl ed >. Great location over RHftor $675/mo. lst/lastldep.
Oc"' •~,__ gar. New paint & carpet. 20' /gallons profit Back 18051 46~0500 968·3495
~"""' 751·8°"5 room high profit ---------
$450.000 $65,000 DOWN South L 1086 margln. Ask for Steve Re-al Estate 1 Br. Condo. Pool, tennis.
riric patio wigorgeous
pool. spa, BBQ and fire
ring. Sl500/mo. larfe )'ard. Spa. Owner
wit h~lp finance. 10%
assumable, $127 .900. W ,OODIRIDGE
: LANDING
This rtrst time ortering 5br pool home $389.SOO CICJlllMI (7 14)831-7540 Ex h 2800 W & D. crpts, drps. No is an estate sale. One of Open everyday 1·5 •••••••••••••!..P•.!..•••••• c: mtge ..... ts $375. ••t. last &
645·9161 .
--,_,.... oug:,··~ . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . d..-68 633 .... Newport Beach's finest lJOOMarianLn 642-6768 nits .... _ 1800 ~IUTR"'..,E ep. 7 ·7 .
views. 3 bdrms home -""' -PETERS· PUN 5 Here it Is • Loads of
charm Delightlully de·
corated & lan<bcaped.
$359,000. 12l4°r assuma·
ble. 8 Sunriver Owner
551· 1534
witbgueslaptor2units. PAY Sl.837 A MONTH : ••••••••••••••••••••••• New condo in Palm
Realonom1cs 675-6700 For 5 years with $78,000 Triplex 1 year old, dbl lot, Desert for sponfisher or
See the ocean from the
front yd or this 3 br
house. $750/mo. S300sec.
dep. Call Rita. M · F.
8.30·2 OOpm,846-1476.
. OPEN HOUSE
Rf AL TY
/ WHITEWATER VIEW
90' to beach. l()C} assum
loan. May take note on
your prop. as down . 4 BR
SI ')5,900 '-.-------•I 2 Ba. recently upgraded. ~ ,. wt possible in-law qtrs. MES.A VERDE ln•estor's Priu u nder S29o.ooo io clds
3 Br pool home ~/ad di· 2 Bdrm 1 1~ Ba Ash mdl, land. Move fast! 752-6499
lions, S96,000ol assuma· nu carpel, freshly paint· P1an1T1R.ealty
bl lo r-'--Co ed. AIC. high assumable LJ[ e ans . .....,, x. A.Jl. I Sl 16 SOO 631 l'""'or,,....l "'"'" oan. • . . ...,.. "" -v-uu Town & Country $25,000 DOWN H...tln~leach 1040 Realtors 552-1100 Exclusive Eastbluff
•••••••••••'••••••••••• ---------Townhouse. 4 Br. 3 Ba.
0 Woo4'...1~I 11!...&..-L. $275,000 Owner anxious. C E A N V I E W uut ••HVTIJ M k ff 0 SACRIFICE Adams plan. Bdrm. 21, a e o er. wner·
Ba, attr•ct.ixe rinancins. Pr inc• Pa Is on I Y 11,11 blks to bch, glorious Sell Sl9',900 or lease _97_8_·042_3_. _____ _ view, new 2100 sq ft
home, all bltns, jacuzzi. SllOO/mo. AA for Lynn l•--------•I A steal at S2:50.000. As· Noah.
sumable loan. Must sell Town & Country
by 6·1·81. 950.3211 or _R_e_a_lto_rs __ S_5_2·_1_l_O_O (213)~92-~
$9,000llOWH !!!
Beaut. 3bdrtn, Zba fa mi·
ly home, close to ever-
ything. Hun)', won't last
long ! Agt: 646·5271,
631-2336.
MINT
CONDITION
NEWPORT CREST
Terrific Pkln I.
2 bedroom, 2 bath with
assumable $79K 1st TD.
Priced for quick sale.
$165,000
*Cote Realty
& Investm ent
640-5777
PACIFIC PARADISE
No quall!y usumable
fixed loan. (Mner will
carryt 2nd. 3Bf. 2~Ba,
1 "'1 bllu 10 bcb, new 2100
sq Ct home w/view. AU
offers cons/'dered.
9&0-3211 or (213 592·21U!i
with location to match. 4
bdrm, 2"4J ba Fordham
Mod el in VIiiage 11,
Univ. Park. N~erous
upgrades inside and out.
Superb view andl~~~~~~~~~
privacy. S176.~.
2 BR 2 Ba. a<Utlt. pool,
jac. uc. Walk to beach.
$124.900. Ownr. 644-109-4
l"IM I 044 ttS23 C0Ut"'5l>a:IRV1t1£ ....................... ---------
.II~
YllW! POOL! S'A! Seaview in
Newi><>rt Beach "Port Royal" lov-
ely 4 BR. a bath plus family room.
Fantastic assumable loan plus
owner .mey carry second. · Call to·
day! $525,000 Darlene Herman
752·141' (K'lS)
HEW PORT ISU.HD
$315.ooo. owe s 190,000 at '00/o
Fee simple. 3 bdr, den, 2
ba, patio deck, ~ x 95
lot. Single story. By appt
714-675·3971
2 Br 2 Ba condo, 2 car gar,
low interest rate. as-
sumable loan. Prin. on-
ly. 714 /523-1391 eves,
714/760-3675
1 yee.r new Blutrs condo.
End unit, ''G" plan.
3bdrm. Fee land. 13%
VJR, ~ year financing.
Ow11er I Agt: 760-8816.
Duplexes. oceanfront,
buullrul ocean view.
Perfect loc.atlon. New
condition. Agt. 813-7300
3 br, fam., $25,000 under
mkt. Call ror facts.
$177 ,000. pp. 645-14.91
HAUORRIDGI
2 Choice Offertnta
• 3 br condo, E-Z tenn1.
•Engl. Tudor custom home, OWC lge llll TD.
Agt, Steve, 7SZ.1920
IYOWNIR
Brand now 2 bdrm, 2i.t
ba condo. Dbl 1ar.,
frplc. bulJ\..w. suo.ooo·
tS.75CA. nnandns due ln 4
yn plua. Pnct 1150,000.
Own/ast.M5--.
S,Y.L'ASSIMI
Famlly homt ln A·l
locadon' 3 bclr'1ps + den + remll,. rm. Seeurit1
• U.rou11aout. lNT · Rut
Vlri Clrele. 0P.tN SAT 6SUNl~
C/21 Me .... Ctilr. 640.1117 7~767
down. Prestigious 4 Jrg owners unit, Two trawler.
bedroom h o m e 1 n ENTER A WORLD OF 2bdrm. 2ba units Prine 1·340·30361 .346 7726
N e w port Sb ores ' ELEGANCE Only. 700-0734, 631 4402. 5 uoats at beach, Long
Beach. to trade for
house. 892-8162 Bkr.
Complete With den, din· This private community
Ing room and fireplace home in prestigious
Surrounded by lovely Monarch Bay features 4
gardens and patios bedrooms. 3"'2 baths,
$228,000. TARBELL. contemporary styling. 2
R E A LT O R S c a 11 fireplaces. high beams
979-2390 a n d o c e a n v 1 e w S6~.ooo. 495-1720
DUPLEX on WATER e
Dock for 30' loat l" 3 & 2 Bdrms. 2 frplcs. 1ngo
decks and patio. AnouaJ 111.a& .. ,.
income $25,000. •
C /21 Newport C..tr M-e"--wpo--rt-1--h--I 0-,-,
640..5357160-6767 •••••••••• ~.'!~ .•.....•.
41R POOL HOME· $208,000! Owner
extremely motivated to sell home
and will assist in financing.
Spacious open floor plan with
separate in -law quarters . Many
custom features incl. formal din·
ing room, family rm, atrium,
bath. no-care redwood deck yard.
Paula Bailey 642-8235 (K74)
!OUJ, mtJl& !O!&L u.nsaarm
SUMSITI, 51ASCAPL
S'YGLASS & MORI
await you in this masnlflcent Southport1 Tliis tastefully decorat.td
6 bedroom, 4~ bath viet.t home has
ao many optic>ns available .You'll
believe you're in a custom bullt
home. The many tiers Ol used brick
both •front and rear ~~d total
dtmen's!on to the lush 1arden1.
Offered at $699,500.
J oin a Friend & buy
Duplex. 1 house Crom
Ca n al in Newport
IMMAC. 3 br. 2 ba. fam.
rm. cov'd patio, frplc.
bltns, dshwshr. close to
bch ., schools & shops.
Gardener. $725. 963-8600
Beach. lSOOsq. ft . earh. Developer has su b-
1·3Br 3Ba 1·3Br 2Ba. division for Beach
Corner locauon. 8 years Home, T.D 's or '! Some
o Id . W a I k lo Lido f r e e & c I e a r · Huntlft....._
BluffS condo, 3 Br 2li Ba,
prime backbay view. lrg
patio. upgraded. SlJOO.
644-0350
Vil I age . 832-9110 or 12131698·01.81 --Ho,.,:;;· 3242
\ 40' IOAT SLIP
Jbr. 2 1~ba CON DO,
beautifully decorated.
$1200/mo. Yearly .
675-6775
6390~-4Br nea r Newport •••••••••••••••••••••••
ANAHEIM B a c k b a y r o r Prestigious Wethe rly
(2)4·Plexei $200,000/300,000 So. Bay Twnhs. Minute
County home or Condo. Crom ocean. 4 Br. + 3 B 21 B Cond f I Owner Financed D 3 B Bo t 11 r. ., a. o. rp c, 831·0611 en. a. a s p, r f d in Low Down Crplc, patio, balcony, am rm .. pro · ecor.
Low Interest pool, tennis, dbl garage. 15 acr~ private park.
S265,000each Retttah Sl750.83l-0666. $675. 631-1266. Mr.
Patty &Johnson Rlty ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marshall
714/!179-8610 Houses Furnished lnine 3244 ----.-----
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harbor Vie~ 4 Br. 2 Ba. S,.C:ome Property 2000 l"ifte ] 144 Wood bridge Condo 3br, Gardener lpcld. $1075.
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2~ba, $775/mo. tst/$800 Avail. 551-4288 Callaft 5.
M.AKE AM OFFER! Panoramic Turtlerock aec .. frplc. a c. 644-4646 LIDO ISLE view. 2 br + den, com· eves
5 Income Properties
Eastaide Costa Mesa
20'# down. Owner will
carry. P.riced to sell!
714 1841-0763
2925 College Ave.
Costa Mesa. CA
Pletely fum Lara 2 a --------3 BR. F.R .. D.R .. 4 BA. ' · e c r WILLOWS 4 Br. 2 Ba. Boat stora1e a vail. gar .. w/opener. fplc. s171V1/M y I 67,.9060 lighted tennis crts, pool, Patio Rm., renced yard, "" o. r y. :.J."'
spas, W/conslder short dbl garage. S650/m o. Adult condo. walk to
lae . $1200 mo. Agt. 644-l480&8J0.50S0ext81. Westcliff Plaza, clean as
752-5668 fresh 2 Br 2 Ba, pool.
Houses UllfurnlslMd
Woodbridge lea.se. 4Built Waterfront Homes Inc.
b y P e t e r s . T h r e e 673·6900 \
••••••••••••••••••••••• bedrooms. two baths. 3202 Sin gle story home in Saft Juan General
••••••••••••••••••••••• Woodbridee. SlOOO Capistrano 3278
month. Owner can give •••••••••••••••••••••••
three year lease. 3 b~. 2 ba, no pets, pool
Includes refrigerator. pr1v. $600. A wall 7-1.
washer, dryer and 586-3734aft.5.
3206 recreation facilities. 38r, 2Ba, Pool-Spa ac·
••••••••••••••••••••••• Joan Blrdsall, Agent. cess. New crpts. ac $700. 840-8927 or631·7300. 496.9268; 4S4"8208 Charming Island Fam.
hse. 4 bdrm, f~J 3 ba .
Enclosed patio. NO pets.
$1000 mo 673-0686
Ilk to beach. s Br. 2 Ba.
P'rplc, ..... avau now. .. ea.-.
----RENTALS -"" Two bedrm, 1 bath <!Ondo. 3br 2ba _, $425 per month
3br 2ba Sl.250 Furn. (714) 640-1031 4br 2'hba S900 •----''--_.;..._-~ 5br2~ba S900mo10mo. SaMo AM 3210
Bdrm, 2 b1th, famll,y
rm. nreplece, gooct loc•·
Uon t6SO mo p,t or child
okay. lmmfll, occ11p.
580-5to<l alter 5 5'8-$967
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
Beaul trl·level 3br. 2bu,
P<)ol, spa, dbl gar ... xlnt
S.A. loc. or. s.c. rln•
$850 lst/lasl + sec.
·'
\
1
•
•
•••••••••••••••• a a s
Cash in on 7or11...__H•r•'••1Ut•Hl'netor Oran .. Co4.1MJectY ......... _
Th•!e .are two ways to win with a Dally Piiot High Roller Ad
Run 7 days for $7.77 11 days for $11.11-3 llnes
Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678
Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification.
\
.I
Daily Pilat
No cancellation Rebate.
Tow..._. · -'flu 1 .. •h &Ww'R. A#=, ...... ........_ ' ROOt1t1 4000 l...tol1 to Shere 000 Offlu RttttoJ 4400 llNluttrfal l...tal 450 Awa•c....... 5100
U11fwrtt:lthecl 3525 Af>w ...... ........_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••0• Cosio M... 3114 .._.. .... ...,_ 3140 wauna Beach Motor lnn. Senior lady wanta to abr Appro 1100 n 4th ti It 100 sq rt office + THI ADVaTISIMG
s A Hat. 2 br + den 3 loltoo l.a-d ll 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••.•••••••••••••••• 985 No. Pacillc Coast her CdM hrne w/same wate~~ont bldg', NB r, ~areho~se.' Irvine In· COMSULTAMTS . . ' ' ••,•••••••••••••••••••• H L B h WI k . t.h ba, wet bar. rrplc, pool, AVAILABLl!:NOW EAmtDE 2Br. Condo. 2 car gar, wh. aauna eac · t o bus /shops. 642·4644 dustriaJ. 35" triple net. Now you can reap e
jac,2cargar. $700mo. Zb lY CtdlrWoocl coveredpat.io,V..mlleto Dal.)'. Weekly, Kitchen 640·7390 CaU 646-UM4 or lnqulre benefiUalhiJhc011tad· (213>9~lM1'. 823-5021 •'"'"Ir, summcroc;..r! ,,;.... 2 Br 1 Ba Adults no beach. Access to pool & available. Low winter ---Small 1 man omce m ex-Marosi Co 16753 Noyes. vertialn& for your com·
....,., mo. v•or "' • · M • 29 co ts s575 Ha rates.494-5294. Fem nonsmkrtoshr2br ecutiveswtemo-moren-""7 """" 8 .... r Coop ·n pany• LetTheAdverli.s· 4 Bdrm Monticello pets. $450 / o. 3 ur . . .... lb d Soc I L "".......... ... . I . eo' nsuJtan•-set u
Townhse "'-stslde C M CorcNtadelMcr 3111 University Or. Mgrs. 2 1 3 I 9 2 5 · 4 7 9 6 . 8 con ° nr oast la · aguna Hills vlted. 1ng . tio"" JP .,,.. ft · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eves 548-0648 7141675.4902 Room for rent on Blutrs. Plaza. $210 moMS-4505 $225/mo. 9151-6001 your own in· use ad·
area $650 mo a Spm Old CdM, 2 blka to bch. 2 · · Brookburst/Victor1a. 1300 sq rt. M·l space with vertillin& agency Ple~e
IM&-4035 br , 2 ba, din . rm , "'UIETUVIMG '"1-., 38 .. 4 851-1262 MT/Ftofshr 3 bdrmhouse, CorporahtPlcrla front omce, large rear call Mr Crosson for tn· ..,. .... ,. op o World , Lag. Bch, 850' d $395/ 1785 r ton fireplace, garage. Great Larae Bach, 1 or 2 Br. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hotels, Motels 4 I 00 nonsmoker, avaU. now. oor. mo. orma i .
Aportllt .... Furnilhed ocean view. Avail 8/24. Apt s. Cathedral cell· Orangetree 2 Br. 1 b11. Air ••••••••••••••••••••••• Steve 631·3600; 494·4806 ~c~!~l~f:w~~~~~llon, Whittier St. C.M. Days 759-0652 __ -
••••••••••••••••••••••• $900/mo. 67S-8370 in as . prv balcony or cond On stream. up-_ _ 540-9352. Ev~ 646-0681
8elboo I.a.ct 3706 patio, dishwasher, rrplc. stairs. Adults only. Sub· SEA WK M ~·30 t.o shr 3 br apt. 3 prime unobstructed R...toh W..ted 4600 Roo•iaata 5--Yke •••••••••••••••••••••••Attractive lrg Br. ba, pool. Lndry & bbq. mit on ndc. Kos. Mary pool, J'ac. Bavwood, NB LOWEST PRICES!! kit h uv rm w/frplc d 1 ..., N .,..._ ..,., ., -ocean vu full service ex-••••••••••••••••••••••• A VAil.ABLE NOW c en. . . A u ts over '-'· o pets. 644· 7211 MOTEL S232 + ':i utils. 760-0524, .....,.. h r Free girt ii you have a 2 br. summer or yrly, pat.lo deck. ~psta1rs. & 1 S37S & up. Mesa Pmes, 640·2719 er. suites avail. 145 180 ... v per r or open s pace place. Paclrlc Room-
$500/mo. 673-0727 Br, ba , kitch enette 26SOHarla,549-2447. THE Lakes. 2 br, 2 ba •Weekly rentals now &360 \w/wetbarJ ~If for big party with live mates. Call 558-8608. 7
downstairs. Storage & twnhome. Uparades. avail. •$98andup. Wanted rmmate, non Singletacljolning Excei band. blig yAnards, kdrived· days.12..Spm.
CorotlaclelMcr 3722 laund. $95(1 combined or water vlew, spa rac's. •Color TV •Phones m stru1ght. emplyd, over prk 'g Design Plaza ways e c. Y w en
••••••••••••••••••••••• S650/S350 Avail 6/3, me8tiB.J18 L rooms. 24 HBdlx 5blk l fo'ash1on I sl A j Fri/Sat.rughtsofsum·Lost&Foelnd 5300
675.6611 Avl.71.S695mo. aura, 2274NewportBl"d.C.M. • p , so Properll"".759-9036 mert1.me In .non Avail l Bdrm apt for APARTMENTS 637-7333 dys., 544-9904 646-744 •• ; b c h S250 +phone --'"" resldenUaJ area. in 11.B ••••••••••••••••••••••• summer~b~!!,~se. 3br, 2ba, bn·ght, cheerful, 8 ·r I I d d eves. 960·3023afl.12noon Beautiful new office area or within 10 m1. '""~ eaut1 u an scape ----·1 536·6632 Brian. Please upper dplx, built-ins, garden apts. Pallos or Mewportlleoch 3869 8 JG BEAR Lakefront Clean.resp.,non·smkr I sNpaceava.ia,blem oneor leavename&number
Costa Mesa 3724 storage, avail 111. $750. decks. Pool & Spa. Heal ••••••••••••••••••••••• Motel, kitchens, 2 peo.. blk. from beach. Ref's. ewports inest om ce
••••••••••••••••••••••• 640-6110 paid, covered parking. Oceanfront for Winter pie, S30. l-866--061 Employed. $250. mo., $75 bu 11 d 1 n gs· N r 0 · C · FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Calk
CASADEORO Adults.nopets. Rentals. Fumls~ed & SunNMrltentab 4200 dep 675702SN B airport. ~900· with or 1 .. 11fte11/t.vest/
ALLUT[LJTl ESPAID Cozy 1 br .. so .. or hwy. 28R.2BA. $490 C 8-'-67"' •912 --. . without secretarial Fiftmte•
be d lin r i un um . 1uaer. ...... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ame ce1 g, rerg. 398W Wilson.631-5583 Mature Mt F rmmle services Call for de-•••••••••••••••••••••••
Com pare before you OW . gar $490. 955-3649 NO FEE! Apt. & Condo LIDO ISLE charming 3 n /smker 2 blks from tails 833-0440 8 ht
rent. Custom design Costa M-.. 3124 2BR. IBA. S48S rentals Villa Rentals bdrm, 2 bath, playroom. N.B. Bch. Day 435-7561 -u0s pporiunftyess 642-5678 ·-· · Just r emodeled. Mon· D p-1-t 5005 teat~res: Pool, BBQ. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~O Vanguard, 540-9626 67S·4912 Broker thly rental. Bill Grundy, Eve 675-4693 Cina u.n •••••••••••••••••••••••I~~~~~~~~~~~
cov rd garage, sur· S . 3B ...... B 675·6161. lu111MssCeftht-T X RE E F p rounded with plus h pac1ous r__.. Wes tside 2 Br. 1 a . PARK NEWPORT Female to share rurn 2 Individual executive ruu A LI A LOST Fem Doberman
landscaping. Adult liv· 2BrS375~~carporl Duplex , kitchen & •NWPT OCEANFRONT Br w /frplc. lncluds service oHice suites p R EC I AT I 0 N b I k I la n . v I c
ing at its best. No pets. dinette. refrige. enclsd COUHTitY CLUI & Lido Isle bayfront, sm ullls. $295 1 blk rrom w/harbor view for rent. W I M G MT S2 8 · O O 0 Beach / Adams H.B. 5/25,
BachfumishedS370 NEWLYDECOR. garage. Upstairs & UVIMG boats & dock. Wkly ocean. July thru Oct Furnished reception INVESTMENT 50'7. REWAR0.960-7195
2Br fumished SSOO 1 Br. gas pd, encl gar quiet. No pets . $390 i...-d 673-SURF Call John 675·5020. lOAM area in Dana Point Call BFJRRASCTKYETEA, Rl.8HKIGLHOESSR 365W.Wilsoo,642·1971 770.S629or548-S«2 Singles. l&2""' room 1 thru6PM. EvelynGroo Lost Gennanshorthair d/washer. pool. Adults apts&townbouses. I --BR ACK ET Y 0 U female. An s wers to
SUSCASITAS
Furn. 1 br. apt. $325 &
up. End gar. Adults. no
pets 2110 Newport Bl
548-4968 btwn 8 & SP M
Furn comft 2br apt in tri·
plex. Cple. non-smkr.
refs $390646-2323
642-5073. • 2 Br 2 Ba . Near From S510 644-1900 OCEANFRONT 3bd rm home S225. 6SH300 ESTIMATE. Kaya. Last seen Sat eve
31 T .....____ So.C.Plaza, S.A. $525. o...iy Furnished 3 Br. 2 Ba. Private pool & jacuzzi Balboa Island· custom WARD INVESTMENT vic40lhSt,NBonBeach.
r OWNWW Adult area 549"3232. OC EA MFR """' with office, 2 car garage Nr beach M F w1lh re Executive office s pace CO 642-8844
Newly decor. gas pd .. ----3Br.28a.Duplex.2car with auto opener. r erences Pac1r1c avail Share computer. 7l4-642·2000 ----
encl gar .. pool. dswhr. 1STORY2BR,2 Ba.nr garage with auto Washer & Dryer meld. Registry,558-8608. word pro.c ess1n g lnYHtmeftt Los t · Gold Wedding
Adults.642·5073. S.C. Plaza. Pool. jar. opener. Yearly. Must Avail.now.Weekly. capabilities & other ex-0-..-..u.. 5015 Band, Sunday, 5·31.
28r. I la~ gated comm $6.50. Deb. seetoappreciate' TSLMGMT. 642-1603 Rmmte wanted to shr ecullve amenitie~ Rent •••• rr::"::::;? ••••••••• Laguna Beach Ocean
631·6990 TSLMGMT 642·1603 house. in H B Non g 110 Ag t S t restaurant . ladie's Newly decor. as pd. ---Npt Bch pier area, 2 Br smoker S220/mo. + 'a ne . a e 1,666 shares of Hentage room. approx. 6pm. Sen·
encl gar .. pool, dshwr. E.Side 2 Br. 1 Ba. priv Exclusive Bach. Pen· 1"2 Ba,slps8, •2 blk lo ut1l.AvailJulyl.CallK 673-2943.673-9054. Bank Stock·SlO per ti mental value
Newly decor. 1 Br. Dplx. Adults. 642-5073. yard. encl gar, new cpl, thouse. total security, beach. Avail. 6/27·7/ll. Sanborn963-0670. p fftsioftalty s h a re · Ca II Fran REWARD! (714)645-8748
SEempplybdyadgualtro.veQru35i,ento. Beautiful2Br.Adult Con· pool . $500 /mo. No vacanl.$400.978,.0423. $350prwk.8/29·91l2S400 --------roD-----'--~ BE·3622.· eves kids/Pets. Manage(' m ---pr wk. Families only lnl'I traveler looking for ~ Mo-yto• --50~5 --. ---w----
pets.$350.548-1021 ~-~.Pl81a SSSO/mo. Apt "8 " 24.S3 Orange OCE.AHF«OMT Dys 957 0534 . eves quiet resp man to shr 770 sq ft of pro-••• :: •••• !'::: ••••••• " •• Lost lgeturtle .broken
D•a roW 3726 Call Days J .D. Property 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. dbl gar, 675·4947 2Br Irvine apl. Ft p, f•11io11al office .,ac• Doctor has SlOO 000 max shell. vie. of 400 Costa
••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut iful Townhouse. ~gmt. 751-2787_. __ ~1~01:;.~~pet . yearly OCEANFRONT ho~~ pool. etc. Great loc lin Costa Mn& Bright to lend.Anylegitreason-MesaSt.548-1.989
Super 1 Br. l Ba. Villa. $S25. 2 Br. 11Q Ba. l B ts d dsh~r bd d 1 6 S2S0+1;uul 5519553 ando-.R.......,when secured Mr.&Mrs Ken Shepherd. mixed. male. F. I Sa w ·1d r. cp · rps. · J '"COBS Rll!!""LTY rm + en. seeps · ---r-·-_._, S h PO BOX OS Neat courtyard. 1 Adult. irep ace. vage I e d I 0 A '""" G yo.. an mil 27 tan & blk. Blk lab. & C 675-6005 lSposa . garage. 67r.6670 Avail. Aug & Sept. Agl. araqn • H t · l B h 92646 no pets. $350. 493-4:llO or o. · 641·1545 ~ 675-8170. for lleftt 4350 631-2242 un mg on eac mixed, female, mix, brn
673·2181. lnt....cl Ocaap. VILLA BALBOA ••••••••••••••••••••••• blk male. Irish setter,
HUlltlin""'-leach 3740 2 Br. l Ba. Apt. Beam 2 BR. 2 ba W /side. Avl 2 Br 2 Ba new condo for Npt Bch apt. S450 wk, sips 30' long gar, dbl wide MortcJ.., Trust ma le. 3 legs, kitten, ••••••~:;::............ ceiling. lndry rm. pool. immed. Adults. no pets rent. Nice amenities 6. 3 Br 2 Ba 1 blk to drive access Drywall Deida 5035 grey. male. Terrier.
Adults only, no pets. No $350. 673-2113 5700 Sandy642.6149. . water. 5110 Neptune. l.Jned. 846-4152. H.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mix, blk & bm male H .... 's RHEST last Mo. rent. $300-$.16.5. lower unit. Agt/Ownr Sattt. Mf9. Co. Springer spaniel. liver &
Spanish Estate Living ! TSL MGMT 642·1603 L~~2m~· ~t ~al.a!~!:~: IA y & OCEAN VIEW! G us . 2 13 / 9 66. 1 7 1 1 Double Garage 20x20 ap· FOR LEASE-840' Orrice All types of real estate whHe, male. 644·3656.
Beautlrut park·like sur-• 9u'" 2br, 2ba. Penthouse unit. Families preferred. prox HB storage only mvestmentsslnce 1949 round in gs. Terraced 2 bdrm 1 ba attached encl 540· JOO "Versailles" S750/mo. S8S per month 960-5260 in Newport Center 2 S lal"'--in Found · remale lynx pool. Sunken gas bbq. garage, nu pnl, crpts, BYCO 64S.22Sl Lido Isle 2 Bdrm, furn suites & secretarial pee -"JI point, declawed. 6 mo
spar kling fountains. drps, adlts only, no pets. Newer 2 BR, with garage. June , July & Aug . Office Rental 4400 area. Great Ocean View. 2ndTDs 760-0527,557·7533
Sp a c i o us r ooms . 279 w . Wilson S425. adults. no pels. S425 mo. ,O@l§Atftes 1 br penthouse. $2000/mo. 673-8717 ••••••••••••••••••••••• outdoor patio. t year 642-2171 545-0611
Separ ate dining area. 645.1819. 548-5766 _ ___ near ocean. lease w/op-PL.Ali lease al $1.75 sq ft 2 FOUND . Male Blk/Grey
W a l k -in closets. Large l Br Upper tion.SS50.968-5133 NEWPORT3Br.1 house EXECUTIVESUITES year option Avail July homelike kitc hen & 2 BR, encl gar. patio. from ocean. Nice rum 1. 1981 759-9121
WEPAYTHEMOST s triped cal , v1c
For your T.D. 's & Notes Katherine Way C.M. red
at Dennison Assoc . collar646-1098 cabinets. Walk lo Hunt· O/W, lndrv rm, adlts. no Enclsd garage. s375. l""YFR,__ incl. linens 675-6775 ., M d IM c II A "'"' "Thereisadirference" ington Center. esa e ar area. a PRIME IA YF«OMT 673· 7311 Found_f_e_m_a-le_'/\_f_g_h_a_n l Bedroom-furn, S440 pets, avail July 4. $400 752·9905. Iv message. New Oplx 2 Br 2 Ba. 2 Bdr m beach house.
2 Bedroom.furn. SSlO mo. 548-9<84 or 540..5446 Spa. gar., bit-ins, lndry. Weeks avail. $375/up 714-752·0234 Office space. janitorial. WIDOW ha r \'I C Fountain \!alley Adults,nopets. 2 Br. 1 Ba. New carpet, frplc. $1100. 911 12 W 675.3148 2082Michelsonw212 parking, etc Owner s money 0~ Utilities Free! 28r, crpts, drps. bltns. lndry Cac No pets . Ba y 714/675·0629 or ------673-1003 T O.'s. Sl0,000 up! N
gar, adults only• no pets. $385/mo. 271 16th. Pl. 213/461·~1. BALBOA ISLAND 1617 Westclifr. N. B. Want CR EDIT '· No pnlty. Lost· Fem German Shep
~3976
LA QUINTA HERMOSA
16211 Parkside Ln. 1 blk
W. of Beach, 3 bl ks S. of
Edinger.
847-5441
Mewpot'f 8eocJI 37 69 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Decorator rurnished
Townhouses. S89S
700.9117
2 Br. 2 Ba. Condo.
CompletelY accesorized.
J ust tum the key. Short
term avail. SlOOO/Mo.
675-2543 or 673-5261.
THE
"GOOD
LIFE"
YEAR·~ RJM;
Social Acltv1Ues DI·
rector • Ffff Sunday
Brunch • 880'1 •
Parties • Plus more
GREAT AECRl!ATION:
Tennot •Ffeal-.
(pto &. pro •hop)• 2
Health Clubf • Saune
• Aydromauage •
Swimming • Goll
OrtYlng Range
MAUTIFUl APTI:
Slnglee, t &. 2 Bed·
room• • Furnl1hed
.. Ur.fumilhld • AdUlt
Uving • No Pata • Model• Open Dally ato 8
O•kwood Qerden~t9
*•pcWtawhN. 880 lrviM (II lell'I)
(71•) &46-1104 ... ..,.. .......
t700 11th St. (Oo¥.f ., llttt)
\ C7t•> 8'2·15 113 .._ ___ _
Victoria/Canyon area ••4 0452 2 br 2 b· house ca port financial inst 7000s ( Stonemlll Business Park. Call agt. Elleen~73-7311 m1·x. 50lb. v1·c Dover & $430/mo 631·6812 aft .,.. . NEWPORT HEIGHTS. l ' a ' r 2915 Redhill Ave. C·l03.
I-•--h 31.tO B d $395 + dbl gar. Avail 1st rJoor.AgentS41-5032 Approx 1100 sq. fl Sl3.SOOeamsS46SO Marin e r s Dr . NB 5pm Hwtt .. ""'-..-. .. r .,garage,yar 7 18·8115 S500 /wk. 11 ths · b h "•£6874eves ••••••~:;::•••••••••••• __ _64(). __ 78_14. 673_9224 AIRPORT AREA Custom improvements in mon wit t 1s ....., ·
2 IR.2 IA.
& I BR. I IA.
Pool. crpls. drps .
Adults. No pets. Agent
731·6829. 548-0574
2 Br. 1 ba. adults. $425, 1st
Ii last. Sl.50 dep gar. ldry
W /CM. 548-5861
S.C Plza · 2Br 2ba. Patio,
pool, Jae. SS2S. 833-2462,
631·7278
SPAC. 1 BR ADULT
Ope n beam ceilings,
ser ving bar, lots or wood
thruout. newly redec.
$345/mo. 2260 Maple St.
548-7356. 673-8803
Large 3 BR 2 Ba, upper,
nr So. Coast Plaza. oo
pets. $470. 641-8657
Lovable 1 bdrm, encl
gar .. adlts. no pets.
Refrlg & e&ec stove. $325.
2035 Fullerton CM
642.5964
• I & 1 811 '"'°AIMS • 01sttwune1) & 880 s
• Pool & Arc Room
• C11oen l•ndU 10•"9
• J09 10 Buen & StlOe>s
G
SEA ENVIRO NM ENT
'.i U HAMll TO~ H IJ
'*-l ·~oo
THE WHIFFLE TREE
Luxury Adult units at af-
fordable living. 1,2 & 3
Br. Well decorated.
Olympic size pool, light·
ed tennis court, Jacuzzi,
park like landscaping.
Most beautiful bldg in
H.B.
From $395. 846-0619
Unfurn . 2 Br Apts
Adults only No pets.
960-2675.
Mewport HcJh:. 1 br, 1 ba condo. adult 2 or 3 tidrms., t ba._ 1 comm unity over 40
story, owners unit. Gt>IC,tennis.pool. Patio. fenced yd, flpc, SSOO W/O •• ,.., <...., ,,,.,,1 $49-9279 ........ ......,...,.,.. .
2 Br . 1 Ba. $395. Pool.
Adults, no pets. Avail.
immed. Savage Wilde &
Co. 642-4470.
Nice 2Br. t \,<;a Ba, pool,
gar . laundry. patio .
$49S/mo. 1·630·0350 or
754-0439.
L b r I c --------Furnished or un 979·0482orl·756 4625. TruslOeed.Bkr768-0922 -Fo_u_n_d-. F_T_e_r~er--P-ood--le
ge 3 r. 2ba. rp c. am Vac....a..1 .... R--A~ .. 250 furnished Executive $3750 SSOOO . 6 h'te ec ntly h d rmd '1 dbl gar. deNck. H$650ts •••• '!'::::.::".::: •• :.... 3 ornces + Reception earns '" w I • r e a a u ts/no pets pl Suites'" lrvme, walking area lo sub-lease near months with secured pups. Beach & Adams.
668 ·Luxury oceanfront distance t.o A1q~rt. All ft 15"' To Patrick HB.536-8294 . 760·1 Kaanapali Bch. condo In services avail. 2082 O.C. Airport. lOOO sq. · < • ---------
M · I 5 ·1 7/22 Michelson. Suite 212. make orter for all or S3l·l26SAgent. Found: Keys, 5/29 in 1 Br s tudio penthouse, aw, s ps · avai part .. 760-0169 Any time. ocean vu, take occupan-to 8/5. Days 832-4204, ext _7_1_4_·7_5_2·_0234______ _.. ~---___.._/ front or Heck's, Lido. Jn. 10 --·~ dentlry. 497...1262. · cy 6115. P. Finnerty · NEWPORT BEACH Busie"' R...tclll 4450 ,.,....../
7S2·785Sbet.8:3Q..5:30 KAUAI Lux2/2on Polpu Con venient Peninsula ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost&Foe.d Found Clean Male
3 Br. 2 Ba. 1 blk to bch.
$650/mo. 1 yr lease
avall. 5106 Neptune Ave
832-2080.
Small 1 Bdrm beach apt.
$350 /mo on yrl.y lease.
Avail 7/1, 675-3148 ---
EASTBLUFF 2 Br. 21~
Ba. Enclsd garage. $675.
Call 640·5316 or 753-1220
Bch. Sips 6 Pvt pool/ten· locaUon acro6S from Ci· For st.ore & office space ••••••••••••••••••••••• Golden Retriever . 1
n I s S 5 9 5 / w k . ty Hall. Executive style at reasonable rates. >.MounctlMfth 5 I 00 year. Broken chain. flea
(714 )673-9479 orficea w Cull services 500 to 2700 Sq Ft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• collar & Harts llhr col-
avall From 215 sq ft MESA VERDE DR lar. Vic. Tustin/Bay, Mexico·Bajamar. Golf.
swim , tennis. 2bdrm.
f u rn , pvt home .
and up. No lease re· PLAZA SHAREAPLACE C.M. 675-3485, 640-6363
quired. Call 673-3002. 1525 Mesa Verde E, C.M. PLENTY AVAILABLE Kristi
C714)546-6493eves Prestigious Office Space. 3 window omces avalla·
Rntoh to Shere 4300 ble in full service Legal
••••••••••••••••••••••• Suite ln Newport Center. Avail now! 640-5640
54S-4 I 23 For all types of people --------
Only S30 ree Guaran-FOUND: 1 3 /81 nr
teed results. Pac1r1 c Bushard/Garfield tool
Registry, 658·8608, 7 box/tools96J..97~ #344
days from 12-8pm.
RETAIL SPACE
770 sq . ft. on Harbor
Blvd. in C.M. Only SSC
sq. ft. Great expo&ure.
Realonomics 67S-6700
Found· Keys. Vicinity of Moving? Avoid deposits
& cut UVU1g expenses! S-CIHl4Colc .1176 Professionally since
Springdale &
Meadowlark Lane.
Hunt. Beach. Call iden·
tiCy. 846-4536 ••• •••••••••••••••••••• 1971.
2 BR· $450/MO
586·0741or7t&-4541
HOUSEMATES
83'z.4134 LOST Blonde Cocker
Spaniel puppy w i red
collar Adored child's
pet. Vic. Woodbridge
area. Pis. call· 857-4475
Found· Male Golden
Retriever, in No. San
Clemente. 4.91-6731
I
I I
1 ,
' Orange Co11t OAILV PILOTfThureday, Jun••· 1981 c _ Cll >
o~f1:1i>~ ... ~"' ff ~t~~ :· :• . .: ·1 .~ 1)-~"'~ "') ;~~tJl :(t 1)1 ;;I> ''tj':f ;·~·
---·• C••-'•Tll -•• t 11119 Her.lwood"°°"'-~ otnnlttlllt , • ....._9,.••ri ,.;..t ~ " c-:a.a...,.. . -
SMll
SPECIAL
1t~.1~~Jy
fora :M)~~d
• DAILY
PH.OT
Savtet
DIUCTOltY
DO IT NOW !
A.a.Pors-dr'a
Your Dally Pilot
Service Dlreclory
R•present.atl ve
642·H71, ext 322
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ······••eeeeeeeeeeeeee, ••••••••••••••••••••••• /• 1llCJ II ef' ...... .... --•········•••••········ ............................................ . •HWtc« & SON Gardeotn1, landacapln1. HARDWOOD FLOORS DON'T BE EMPTY, Fln lnti SPRINKLERS•SOD Buddtr1SincetlO LAMlmrfTILI trH trlmmln1 & re· Cleanecl&Waxed THIRSTYORLONELY e pa ~y Richard PLASTERPATCHINO TTH removal DIG IT
Addition•. rwmodeUn1. Kitchens, balhrooroa, moval, m-.Jor deao·u'p, AnJtime,832-411818 A Wuit your house. planu SJnor. Lie, · 13 Yl'I ol lnt/nl.a>~up. Laochcape •7m
plan1 Free est. Ret.a. tfttriel. ,Lk•d. m-oao • free Ht. 752,1s. & pets. Security Plus. happy N B custom ere Neat wort Paul M$-Z9'71 ....;.. __ ...:......;...' ----
r au 1 . Llc. 3109'2. _ Hn•Rt 631758'7 Thank you 831-4410 •1 Stock.,..,..
5't.21TO EXPERTLAWNCARE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• , Ceramlc TUe wort at,... Mon~ly service. T\'ee• Haul, cleanup.concrete Exp 'd couple, non· COLLEGE STUDENT, •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• Stock•, money market, ca_,..-•• -a11tw1r uonable pric•. QuaUty fl cl ea ou pa. Mt k4l removal. Dump truck. 1moker1, ReUable. Care exp, ,lnt /ex, any Job for PLUMBING-new con tax a heltera. Steve
••••••••••••••••••••••• work done quickly, Call J41.204t Qu1ckaerv.G42·70!B of peu/pl nts Reta leu · Alex 851 ·93'11 , atruction, remodelln1. Johnatoo,
All Around Carpenter. Ron,N0-4S.f1 DUMP JOBS 842 2678 552·0231 repalral restaurant, 544-2"2.
f'lnlsh • ~h. Free CL.• ... C MOW & E00£.1~ dls-electron c leak detec· Eat. John 775.8082 -_.. count, ~ price winter Small Movlnl Jobs lronlR9 PAPER HAMGIMG Uon. Top Hat Plumbing.
••••• •••••••••••••••••• rates. ~1328 Call MIKE IMB-1391 ••••• ••••••••• ••• •• ••• • 25 yrs exp. Free est. 636-2030
All Types Remodelln& & LIC'DDAYCAS\E IROllo..ll.._.G Fast.neat.reliable. -------Repairs, lop quality, 17 My C.M. home, aaes 1·'· CALIF. GARDEN H1uUn1&DumpJobs. 1""111 1""111 $7/rolJ &up.MS·6490 HollemanPlumblnl
yra ln area. Uc'd. PT /FT. &42•'°38 Tree trim, clean·uPI. ce-Ask'°" Rand)'. lrooln1 ln my home. Sales·Servlce-Repalra
SwhMllftcJ Let•,.. •••••••••••••••••••••••
Will ln1truct cbJldnn lo
swim at your home
Reas Rob~too •ft 1 Mr. Palombo,982.8314 mentwork.&4M6:\5 641-8427 reasonablerates. DAVE'SPAINTLNG Freeettlmates 552-7183 SJ I. 90 /WI( C .. 646-tl 00 Serv. sahsned cust. 9 Tiie
Carpet 5-'¥1ce Hot lunch. ~.M . Chris· LANDSCAPEMAINT. HAULING-student has )'rs . Qual.-lntegrlty. MOONUTE •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• tianPreacbool.&46-5423 Bual.apt.conde>-churcb lar1e truck. Lowest L•cbc...... Reas.ins,lic.7~7301 PLUMBING CustomCeramlcTlle
Shampoo & steam clean. & bomea. can 548-1489. rate, prompt. 7~9-1976 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Eves & Wknds. Prompt New-Remodel·RepaJr ~~~~~~~~~I Color bri&btenel'I, wht C4MltNctw Thank you, John. Renovatlng·Rolotilllng INT I EXT PAINTING serv. Lo rate.s. 548-8847 Free est Chuck, IMo-8208
AldWtrWMJ Senolct crpta 10 min. bleach. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TREES Sprinklers-lawns-clnups Lo rates. Prompt. neat. Hall, liv.-din. rms SlS; Construction·Alltypes Top~/removed,clean C~Ya...Act Dave642-4MJ Freeeat. 848-5684 PropertyMm11191•Rt Typlll9Stnk:t • • •• •• • •••••••••••••• •• .., 50 h •10 ............ W I t 1 Bud ---------•• • •• • • •••••••••• •••• •• • •• • • • •• ••••••••••••••• Professional Staff. Com· ava rlT\ ••· : couc • ; 20)'rsexp .... -est. ups, •wnrenov. 751·3'76 e c ean ou garages. 646-8481 puter A•••-•....a System. chr $5. Guar. ellm. pet Lie. '334.589. 645-5973 ton Lruck. $25. 548·,769 AGAPE ~ORCE Prof. Property Mamt PROF. TYPING T .... li>ocu odor. Crpl repair. 15 yrs Sam Fukumoto YARD Ma10ftry PAINTING 1.,;0MPANY Apts, houses, coodos. o(· On IBM Selectric dlc-
he Headquarters Com· exp. Do work myself. Carpentry, Additions& MAlNT. & Clean.Ups. TREE/SHRUBTRIM ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Generationsof (ices PMCo.a.51·6666 laphone. 1tatlstlcal. re·
panies.851-0681. Refs.531--0101 Smalljobs-2Syrse.xp. Tree trimmlna. email Garage & yard clean· BRICKWORK Small PalnhnsE.xcellence. RooflnCJ ports.etc.W79-4W
•...Jla..ct R--'r We Care Carpet Cleaners Uc. 309152 548-2'719 landscaping. 645-3540 ups. Free est. 557-8271 . Jobs. Newport. Costa 839-5851 -,..... wr-Mesa Irvine Refs ....................... WlndowCle .. MJ
••••••••••••••••••••••• Steam clean & uphols. D-all HAULlNG & 675 317'5 ' R ENTA' " PAINTED QUALJTY ROOFING •••••• • • •••••••••••••••
Guar.Usedrefrlg. Work guar. Truck .~.'.';•••••••••••••••••• YARD Cl~an·Ups, tree GARAGECLEANUP · ln t /eK~ Prompt AlJtypes.freeest. "LetTheSun.shlneln"
Good cond. Sales & mount unit 645-3716 Drywall Specialist wor.k, lm1aUon & re· Free est. 631-<>953 Brick·Block-Stone Seaside Painting, Greg, Visa, MC. 541·5930 Call Sunshine Window
Service. 842·7154 · Qual. & prod. New &c re-r. 8 1 r' I r• e 0 be 1 t Very reas. Lie, bonded 536-4806 HARBOR ROOFING Cleaning, Ud. 543-8853
Aaphott No Steam/No Shampoo mod. #3119944. 532-5.549 andacaping. S5l-<U29 HovHcltaNng Bob 54S.27S3t536·9906 o -..1in 11 Stain S"""'ialist. Fast St Dan's LawnServi·ce ••••••••••••••••••••••• RAIMIOW PAINTING Orange Coast IWVl g·A CALL JUUO'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• r-~ trt al Driveways, parking lot dry. Free est. 839-1582 •••c••••c•••••••••••••••• Precision lawn maint. ROBIN'SCLEANING Wanted: Small Jobs EFxrtesel!!~t' ~~-to96m14. types of roofing. Repairs For all your house &c l 1 f all 1 Servic~ thoroughly Brick & block. Low hrly .,,.... ~ & additions. 646 FasL.:re w i ndow c 1 ea n Ing . Sr~~Sa rs. hse1a coating. CtHht9,Acoudk ELECTRICIA~-priced pEro1ram1 boror 1 awns. cleanhouse.~<&57 rate.499·1226aft 6. ------liable. honest. Free est 645-5689.
"' Asp at. 631·4199 ••••••••••••••••••••••• right free estimate _2!}-xpert a · ow rates. ----WALLPAPERING Call Dave 541H733 or .-··•••••••• Lic'd. Acoustic Ceilings + large' or small Jobi. free eat. 641·5017 Want a REALLY CLEAN Movin9 Prof. installed. first roll Chris 646-2:119
ASPHALTREPAJRING customhandtexturing Uc.#396621 673-0359 GARDE HI HG HOUSE? Call Gingham ••••••••••••••••••••••• hungfree.1·639·1429 •----------~
Sealcoaling &Striping Lie. 38~ 532-5549 ITIL. Girl. Free est. 645-5123 Moving? The Slarving --Sandblosffng Formica,·-WANTED College Students Movmg RALPH'S PAJNTING •••••••••••••••••••••••
<::omm/resid. Free est. Cttnfllt/Co.c,.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mowine. edging, ra.:k· SHIP TO SHORE Co has grown, Insured Lic'd Int eKt Neat.
Lie. 1397362 64S.818l ••••••••••••••••••••••• FormicaCountertops ing. sweeping Free Boat&HouseCleaniog s ame good service Prompt. 964·5566
Automotive Foundations. Retaining Custom built&installed, estimates. 646·0944 or Reliable-E.xp.·Bonded llT124 ·436 License ----
••••••••••••••••••••••• Walls, Hillside Restora-lateat colors & designs. 645·5737. Est. 64s.2342, 545.9789 64l-8427 EXTERIOR PAINT
LOCAL SANDBLAST ER
Lie. ins, reas. No Job too
big/small. 840-7909
THE MORE
YOU TELL
Alan's Luxury Motor Car
Care. Waxing, polishing.
int. Home/ofc. 536-4151
tion. Slabs, Patios. Freeest.646-4871 H-... ym--2 college s tudents. Sandblasting: Res. com· --· ABC MOVING. Exper :.peciahzing m M. Verde m'l & industrial Dust
Block&Brick.Llc'd. RoorCo•trinCJ •••••••••••••••••••••••HOUSECLEANING-prof. low rates. quick area.John.~4328 free. safe /Cast Bert
642·8387eves/960-05l9 •••••••••••••••••••••••HOME IMPROVEMENT LOW RATES. Own r arefulservlce 552-0410 -------546·5745
labyslttlncJ Pool Decks and Patios. CRPT·UNO-WOOD Remodeling--Oddjobs trans. call Marta aft -----Plonts, Interior -------
••••••••••••••••••••••• Masonry Sport Courts installed/repaired. Ltc. 28 yrs exper. W19-2265 5PM 646-7698 "MOVIN·MAN" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Secntorial Sertlces
THE MORE
YOU SELL
M · 11 b b · . 'c L' · #369260 Greg 499-5142 . 1s careful, courteous & Interior plant design & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ehiWr::,13-4 y~.yl~l'my2 Tennis ourts. IC. R oofing, plumbing. Gener.al Houaecleamn.g cheap.Plscall642-1329 mamtenance for home Skilled swr for all Sec· with a
374067.8Sl-l966.84M078 GCU'OCjeDoorOpeMn carpentry, painting.I Weatmloplease Ref s ------or offi ce Plant It ' tr'l/WP J'obs.TheHead home. Big fncd yd. I 979 066 p · t• /P • Childproof house. .. ..................... floors, repair/remodel. ·1 a1n lnCJ apetlftC) 551·2894 . quarters Companies
SPRINGS/HARDWARE Free eat. 968-2056 aft. s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 851·0681 Dayna,642-9264. __ Conc ..... Ratwort& AutoOpeners·newdoors Your HOM E SWEET •STEVENSPAINTING Ploster/Repolr ---Build~ Driveways, patios, pool Llc.Bob's546-3667 JockofAllTrodts HOME-car e you de· lnt iext. Free 1tem1zed •••••••••••••••••••••••Mae 's Secretarial
••••••••••••••••••••••• decks service walks Call Jae. k, 675-3014 serve. Refs. Kathleen. ei1t. Neat. quality work Neat patches & textures Service Typing. dictat-
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
Coundations installed'. GardeftlftcJ 833 9187 832 32aJ 546 561 9 39 1ng Pickup/deli very D. & D. luildtn Lie. t 1800334. Free est. ••••••••••••••••••••••• People who need people . - ---· -· -· '4 -Free e!_t. 8 3• I 4 64.5-8638 ~o~~:n;t~ ~~;t;~ KC Podflc Corp. CLEAN-UPS/LAWN should always check the Make your s hopping Trade your old stutr for ED'S PLASTERING ---
avail. Charles (714 , (714)634-4741 Maintenance·Lndscp ServiceDirectoryinthe easierbyusingtheDaily new goodies with a All Types Int/Ext Have something to sell?
898.3141 Al(714)963-8433 I~~~~~~~~~ Free est. 642-9907 DAILY PILOT Pilot Classilied Ads. Classified ad 642-5678 64_5·_8_25!_ FREE EST Classified ads do 1t well.
CALL 642-5671
and let a friendly Ad·
\•isor help you place your
ad today.
PenCNtoh 5350 Personals 53~0 Persot1al Senolcts 5360 Help Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Help Wanhd 7100 Help Wonted 7100 Help Wam.d 7100 Help Wcmhd 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
COVER GIRL * OllTCALL * 953·0778 MC/VISA
•FOXY LADY*
OUTCALLONLY
VISA MC * 972-1 Ill.
Psychic Reader Advisor .a. MW .a. y PRODUCTS Past, Present & Future. "' "' Love, Marriage, Health. Kathy, 960.5646
Character &c Business.
Cater to Parties. Card & ~Dlo...-..6& Tea Leaf Readings. If un,NI 1·~:
ca nnot solve Life "pGlatioft
Problems on your own, s:ti:c;;;;;:•••••••••••••
'4SSEMILY GIRL
Plastics experience pre-
rerred, but will train.
Must speak English.
642·1026.
Basic Clerk Typist with Bookkeeper. exp'd_ A P.
good escrow back P R . G L. parttim~.
ground. 1 girl office n on s moker Irvine
975·0644. 751-7020
IU.UTICIAH Babysitter wanted. FuU To run small shop. The
time Summer job. My Hayr Barn. 609 W. 191.h
home. Student OK. St. C.M .~i.>646-1145
644·1382. Eves & Wk.nds.
BOOKKEEPING
P tim e Appl y at
Crown Hardware. 1024
Irvine <Westcliff Plaza I. NB
CHILDCARE
Loving grandmother
type lo care for my two babies, ages 4 mos & 2
yrs. Perm. fuU time 4
-days a wk.
675·6l!2, 675-0321
Choir Director
COOK European Restaurant.
Exper only. Full lime nights~ Contact Rick or
Karl 497-4441
COOK
~~t~l~7~r=:; & ap-1Mtn.ct6alt 7005 _________ , ...................... .
IOOKKHPER F/C
Raridly-expanding re· tai company seeking
F C Bookkeeper. Ex
c elle nt co mpan y
benefits. Starting saJary
$1200/mo. Call 846·0011.
Laverne or Chris.
look Post.up ,
PtTime Mon. 1 :30PM to
6PM. Tues. 10:30AM to
6P M . No exper necessary. Apply Pen·
neySaver 1660 Placentia
Ave.C.M
For small church. 3·4
hrs /wk . 642 ·2740
am 1963·4195 pm
Exp'd . line cook with
conhneotal cuisine bk·
1rnd. Appl(: Surf & Sand Hote , 494·8460
from 9·5PM , Mon· Fri. ---------t SOOTHINGMASSAGE Swlm"mlng lessons , Red Babysitter, lull time,
summer. perf. for col·
lege student. Needed lm-
m ed . 844 -8071
eves/wknds.
Beautician
lalboal~~ .. SWEETHEARTS for Discriminating men cross Cert. Beg to lnter.
•ESCORTS• Call Peler.494-4871 Pvt &c group. Mommy &
24 HOURS Me. Beg July 6, Foun·
VisafMC 972.9773 lain Valley home pool. AFTERNOON 963-2810 att6pm. '
E S SHE
C 0 RT S
MODELING
835-9199
&
•DELIGHTS•
HOMe /Offiu/Hohl * 972-9773 * 24 Hrs. Now Hiring
MC VISA
Preventative & Stress I~~~~~~~~~
JobaW.ted. 7075 •••••••••••••••••••••••
UVf>.IM
Available July·Aug .
Part time rest or year.
Xlnt refs.
731-2648. 7 AM best.
Babysitter needed.
Mature. resp woman
needed for occasional
babysitting in my Costa
Mesa home. 979-7593
Babysitter. Mother want·
ed with other children to
care for my 1 yr. old. full Reducing Massage by
Doris. "lntro" Special• •• time Mon thrU Fri. After SPIRJTUAL 2 Kiodergarden teachers 4 640-9006 READINGS have summer program.
lO lOp Full L' 'd Reading, swimming, BABYSITI'ER am-m. Y ic · ft'eld lrl""'. Monday thru
G ate 492-7296 or 492.9034 1815 . .... Mature person to care
" ompcmty S. Ca mi no Real. San. Fnday 548--4ll5 for 1 yr old. my home. Escorts Clem Help Wcated 7100 Balboa. 675-5061 mom·
24 Hrs. 641·0180 T h 8 utif I B ••••••••••••••••••••••• _in ___ g_s. ______ _
C --L./Chtck o t e ea u runelle .... 1 who aald "hello'' to me Acco.llftg Cltrtl Banking
548-0407
Is now ltirtftcJ
Haln~at Prererably wffollowing
X Int working cond .
Please call Tues·Sat
642·0092. Ask for Joyce
IOOKKEErER. F.C .
For realty mgmt. <'O
P .T . nr Coa s t Hwy/Dove r 955-2391
IOOKK&rBt F/C
Newport Beach property
mgmt. firm. Career opp· ty. for bright indiv. with
prior F JC ex per Ca ll
640-0123
IKKR/SCTRY
Exferlenced. Full time. ful charge position for I
pen;on office ln flower
shoe. Group health plan avaJ.lable. Call for appt. ~~~~~~~~~
641·2990, ask for Kent.
Clark Kennedy Florist
loolckttpet"
part time. 10 to l.S hours
per week. Hours suitable
to your needs. 833-9252
IOOIOCIEIPIMG
BUS DRIVERS for school
bus pos1tion5 avail. Will
train if nee. Fountain
Valley, 962·3312.
Carpet lnston.r Helper needed. Wiii
train. Mission Viejo
area. 18 yrs & older.
831-9070. leave name &
phone no ·Wiii return all
calls.
Carriers
CLaJCAL Soundcral't.sman Audio
has interesting position
available with varied of·
fice duties: typing. fll.
COOK Part or Cu.II time
for Npt Bcb. restaurant.
Exp. pref'd. but will
train . For interview
call : 642-8881 -----ing, phones. mail Call Cook
<714 )556-6193. Pizza. Short Order
CLBUCAL Must be 18. Af:ily
p ER SON FRIDA y for _ 311 Palm Ba boa
ronstruction company COUMl'ERHKJI
Bookkeeping & typing Wanted p/t for food deli
S8SO mo 546-6906 call between 9AM·llAM
Clerical/Gen. Ofnce 752·540J
Must be good wtnum· COUMTEIPE:RSOM
bers. Pleasant office en· For quality drycleaning
vironment. No typing. plant In Huntington
Call <714 l 771-4750 Harbor area. Excellent
working conditions. Ex· Clerical Typist: Opening perience preferred, but
with young dynamic will train right person.
engineering/ construe· 846·001S. AM EXP/MC/Visa at Swensen's in CdM Experience requlred. 30 Huntington Savlnga is ~~~~~~~~~I Sat . n It e M a y 2 3 h r • w e e k · P ~ H now acceptine applica-
WOW ! ! ! Love lo meet Sportswear. Call Tme lions for full &c p rr teller
Mature man or woman
with some experience
for 3·4/hrs. Tues. Thurs
& Sat. mornings.
$4.50fhr. + vacations.
548-3687 ask Cor Alice.
BOOKKEEPER . Full
c h arge thru F S .
Mature. exper 1n
d1vidual to handle all
phases or acelg for R. E
Develop. Firm. R. E. ex·
per. helpful. 2 person
ofc. Salary based on ex·
per. Now located in Cer-
ritos moving to Dana Pt
orc /Sepl . Call
714/521·854.2 or send re
sume: l:l}19 Strui.kman
Rd. Cerrit06. 90701.
Register Newspaper has
lmmed. openings for af-
ternoon auto carriers in
Laguna Beach &c Laguna
Niguel. Must be over 18
years old & have an
economical car. Work
3:30·5:30pm weekdays.
S-7am weekends. Earn
SS00.$600 monthly. Call
Mr. Ensley951·7113
tion firm. Must be sharp. 1-----------
d e pend able with ac· COUNTERHELP
curate typing skills (60 FT /PT. Gary 's Deli ..
wpm+ ) Salary com. CdM, 675-2193 for appt.
e n surate with ex -
---------i you again at Swensen's _556_·_2995 _______ positiona.Call84.2·8600.
I
I
I
*FANTASY
*STUDIO*
any Sat at 9pm. Mike A C C O U M T I M G
(I'm the blonde with CLEIK
glasses). Typist-learn bkkpg
.........
Pri•ateltoams
The Beach area's closest
& most exotic readinl
studio. 8125 Bolla Av ..
Midway City (2 blocks
E. of Beach behind li-
quor store). Open loam.
3am dall)'exceplSun.
543-920
J ... Speclal
SS.00/0FF
THE
GirHriends
•ESCORTS•
Hotnt/Offlce/Hohl * 972-9772 * Male/Female Escort
MC VISA
machine. Ptr24 hn/wk.
Wed , Fri, Sal. Country
Club In C.M. 549·0377
Mrs. Myer
Administrative
fut22~/c~~
Secretarial, marketing,
warehouse & other posi-tions. We straa neat ap-
pea ra nce. Must have
tranapo. Call 10am·3pm
wkdaya. (714)847·2422.
r--·~~~~~~~--~~~·~~·~-.;....---. ARTGALLERYhaspart
lime Job for attractive,
lntelliaent, Poised and
poUabed Y<>unl woman
with p otential fo r
reaponaible executive
position. 6'4·4545 or
540-0908
~.~~·t;~~
'. ~ C;)~---~~1' ·~. 1--~Li~ c~@F h~,~.
{a\ . ~ . ~~·~!
t •
Use ~Ai service
when placing your ad ... a
Daily Pilot ad number will
ap~r in your classified ad
. . . we take your messages
2-4 hours a day . . • you cal I
In at your convenience
during Office hours and get
the responses to your att ...
this service Is only $7 .50
week. Eor: more Informa-
tion arid to place your acl
ca 11 642-5678.
-I
'-
ASSIMILR
, to work with chuela wir-
ine, P .C. boards, &: pro-
totypes. Must speak It
read en1U.h. 2 ~·ex pr. minimum. $4.50 to 16 hr.
South Santa Ana.
5'9·0GS
ASS8= &ICTI S
lmm•dlate opuln11
with lrowbal company.
M•chanlcal u"mblyj
wlrtna, aolde:rin•· Sm•l company atmo.phere,
1ood beftefttt. tmot. d ·
perlence pref erred 1145--. ,,_
Banking CARRIERS
SIHIOll Tai.ER ::::·:°'i~~;y:;1 .•••••• Daily Pilat
IRA/Keogh preferred .• • Adverti"si"ng •. Call Maureen at 496-6133
WANTED
Irvine/Newport Beach
area. Early AM delivery
of L.A. Tames. $4.25+.
Stuffers needed also.
Call Jess 546-~.
Provident Federal E~v:sm • Production Artist : ~~~~~~~~~I· The Art Department or the Daily Pilot has an.a _________ 1e 1mmedlate opening for a full-tilne ...,
CASHIERS
UTDTEM Banking
RE-ENTERING
JOB MAllET
TEUEI TRAINEE
Newport Balboa SavinJa
I.a aeeklnl a mature, well
1roomed indJv. who lov·
ea workinl with people
to traln m our Newport
Beach otc. Excell. opp-
ty. for st.able, responsl·
ble peraon lo learn & de-
velop in a 1rowin1 aa· soclatlon. Full lnaura.nce
beoefita ~ paid career
apparel. Pia. call:
Ma. Denny Parilla
714-MS-~
MIWPOIT IALIOA
SAY..-S&LOAH
E.0 .1£.
• permanent artist position. One year oie
• production art preferred. Good basic.
knowledge in preparing advertising shop and
• apec layouts. Some ability in illustration and.
• type specification. Must have the ability toe
•
handle basic neat production including maps.
and charta. Show potential in graphic and
e deaJicn fields. Portfolio necessary. Please •
• Call 642-4321, ext. 243 for appointment •
: Advertising Sales · :
•Experienced newspaper diaplay ulesperson • • lo handle key accounts In major department • •tore or food and drua categories. Salary +
• commtulon and excellent benefits. Excellent •
MARKETS
For 2nd & 3rd Shifts
We promote lo manaee·
ment & supervision from
\lt'ithin. WANT A CAREER~
Costa Mesa
111Del Mar
63HM21
Laguna Beach
494-9233
Huntintton Beach
1162-9116 • growth opportunltiea. Call fOl' appointment .•
•Call 642""321, ext. 277 for appointment for. !~~~~~~~~
Interview.
• • Cashier
: Part Time Evenilrs : OFFICE CASHIER
• C1•1•1 Y..et. c.,;;ie... • Enjoy workin1 lo
•
Adults with ou11tandlnJ attractlv~ Slavlck'a Jewelers.
peraonaUt.l• who enjoy worldna •tth 10.15'9" Duties Include verif)'inl
eyear old youths evenln116·tprn: Call 142·'321· ules balaocea, doln1
'.
ext 343 between 2pm to Spm, ask for Diana. • dally bankJl\1 tranaac· tJona, dla~lnl funds &
i C II D Custotntr Senolct per ence. a ave Gen'l office akllls a Peter, Peter & Assoc. Inc. San Clemente must. PCH Sportswear.
<l9'l·373S. Call Tina. 556-2995
Clerk-gift shop. Mature. Delivery men over 18 for
Full-time incl weekends. L.A. Times lo home$ In
Apply Fri, Sat or Sun. C . M . 3 a m · 8 a m ,
Laguna 8each4-97·31.S5. ttonomy car required, no co llectina .
Cletil-typist $400.1(5()/mo. + bonus.
hours flex pt. 759·1021 _64:.._.:.6_;;·0637..:.:..._o;;.;r_;;646-S844~.;..;:..;_,;.' __
(Ask for Stan Norman) DttttalFnttOfc.
CLlllK TYPIST
Energetic person wlth good typing needed for
busy managing general
agency . No exp .
necessary, but ability to
team a must. Attractive
· salary & all company
benerlta. Call Sally at
848-6264.
COMM ERCIALS. films,
models, extras. SCAS
needa new faces .
957·0282 c-., ..... Aidt
Mature or elderly lady,
lite hskp1. some cooJc.
In g, llve·ln, wknde,
perm. S.3688
Companion for elderly
woman oo Balboa la.
Fem ale llv~ In .
Housekeepln1 &
peraonalcare. 675-Wl
Pedo. non·smoker,
Fashion I.aland, 6'4-0611,
DINT.Al.
ASSISTANT
Modero procreulve practice •eeks ex-
perienced cbalralde U ·
sistant. Meanln1ful
career opportunity for
an todlvldual who i.
looldnc for personal re-
co1nltlon and ucep·
UonaJ financial rewardl .
We are team orient.I
and c arln1~~erln1 many rrtnse lta ln·
cludln1 medical ln·
eurance and percentac•
of production. ' da1 week. $13l0 a month U
qual ified. Fountain
Valley 96:MT~
DINT M. ASllSTAM'r
3 daya per.-. (Tuel,
Wed, Tluan). Will train.
CaUM0-110hl\6pm. •
•
:
oth r related duties. Ex· I.. Secretarv tD cell. Co. beneflt.a COMPANION Wanted : ! 1 f:ckai•· Contact: Mr. Mature womeri for am·
DIMT AL ASlllT.
••nted for iartvaa. Npt
8cb omce. botl pey •
benefila • ...-. /. ~:i~:a~":~~t"'!•1:Su •. Executive OffiCe .• 71'·~.1~~ m
0
l t • ~~:~0:.1 ;;=.r5~~l
time T.U.r poaltton, lmmecUat• openlnf for versatile ~vldual SLAYICK"S daya a weelt toflx luoch.
IrvlH Savlft1• la In· e Mun be capable or handllq faa(.peced.. _Faahklnlal•nd • CdM aru Reltr. rtg. ~Ill 10'L Pleasant • •arled and lntereattnr dut.let for newapaper. ~~~~!!!~!!!!!!~~! Writ• P 0 . 731. l30 W
DIMT AL fllMT OPC
HELP!!
workln1 condltlooa, • ••ecuUve • personnel 1dm11llat.retor. ioode ' CAsmER Ba.)t, P 0 Boa 1560. C.M.
lood HllU'J Ii benent =lllnl 6 typinl Hntlal. Cell: f42..4.121, 9alK _ If you fl•V. e:Uerieaet
paeht•· E11p1rie nce e t.mforappt. e 1 :~~;:::~c:t!~ Comp•nloo/Alde for tnln•uraoce,C!OlleeUom
preferred. AJiply ln • • Hardware. 3107 E Cat paralyaed 1lrl·ol1ht1 fr atroni, ~ fMI• c;.oa btlwttn tbt 0~ CMlf • Cd Will train. 5*-90ll mUnlc1UDD Ull\J, .. of lOAll·NoGD • e D PW H•1. • -_ ~ Mec11ou.m .M11. . IP'\=~--• . 330 w. ay Street • Chlld car..CdM Summer coon '1/ DIMTALAIST
11511 llkA.rthur Blvd. ' Costa M etll. CA e .1 u n • 11 t b on· I -~ J.t moa. etper. Apply Ortbodoatic olftct la 1n-.ea . .,11 ~ual Opportunity Employer • d•11/wk. IAM·5:30Pll btwn tAM • Noon. taiwa IMd **till
-• --o .. • ll/P -· •••••••••••• ...... for. 1 chikl Med car. wlk Cbarlte'a Chm1 aoo1 for u,....._.. w. .., _ .. ,., to bch, 1ood wa1e.• 1ltdh1ll. Bide. tz, Ste. 011-ble, 141·HH.
171->4MS,T»t570 Ual,Cll I l18.:a4M. _.;,;_..;.;...;.;....;..._~--~~--I
• -.
:"
•
I
I
······=•+=••JF¥'••••+••••• •••••
' ...., W...eH W...eH 1100 Hefp W•t.d 7100 H.a, W..t.d •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
HtfpW..ttcl 1tl0 • .,w..., 7100H.fpW...tM 1100 tt.a.W_..., 7100 J>at control '«htUctan •ITll.,,.SOM S.cretar)'1R~uptJonl1t Ttlephon
••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••~T••••••••••••••••••• aeedtd. Exp•r. prt· For P•rldnc lot monll«. rur exec. •earch firm nr GllAT SUMMEI
1005
WANTED TO IUY DIMTM.Offlel •IMllALON'tCI foU1tllttper RID In ex Medil'al fer red bu l o o l 221hn • wf'otk Cont ct OC airport. Apfrox JOIS
M1H1.1u rront olflt" lnteriorlandacapinaco rhao1• for 4 hra day PROMrOMCI necHtn)'.CallM~. Mana1er. Ancient Hhr/wlc. fl~x bl~ 5 lmmt1dlatr opcmlnti•
person F.)(pt'r rtqulr~. nl'td rw.rson to do typ. cleantn1&:couklna8 day Mature. experlt>ncN.I In flh t .. l p I t Mariner, 2G0'7 PacJflc 1chedult. Mu..t have gd li1Udn 11 on uurtel.-phone.
J buy old 8Un1,
diamonds, tvry.Jade Ir colleeUblet Ca (71• >
972·4926&i11k ror D•ne
Typinaskllls.lnauran<'t Ina &r"an11 wer busy wk. Nonsmoldna. non 08 ·0YN. hea,y ii:0x0:':P;·,r.;::r~ Coast Hwy, NB . typlna 1klll1. Xtnt deep~olcei1 preferr~
bllltna.4da.vsi>t"rwttk. phont"sf/t,monf'l'lwltll drmklna, aft ·WM or t lcphont1. Stod r•· blacktwlut.e Printer ror ~Oi?Ol tulary. N . Duford Mon·•'d, 6-9pm Come
Ne\\ port Bucb. Cull ro brneflta ~-6249 wkM• !SS&-1737 1umff tu Bo~ •"112 C/O Photoiraphy Studio -~-------1 752 8S21 by 1 UIO North Coaat
642·3181 --HOUSllC•H Daily Piiot P 0 BOX Full time 845 31MO. Sales Hwy. Laauoa Buch
GE ... -.... ,.....Cl .. 0 .. Fri. full·tlm•, ueo. Cu1t1 Meu CA - --AMIXCmN~ SlCRITARY-llGAL Wffkdayaaftcr2pm bl
3 pc bdrm tel, •rmo1re,
11rondhtbtr c loc k ,
cf'd11r chatt. hall tree
644 9400 DENTAL Aul"tant. "~ vm m .. ,. 926i8 PLU..-IMG 2 c11roer oriented poet. come. l11l hired. lrvlnv firm h1111 Im· 7·3 30pm. Ml.lllt IPO"k SALISOPl"fY. tlona open In Irvlnf!. 2 $ J> Um• for Orth(> ofr
J..)ental t-xp needed not
pecelll uril,y Onhc> up
ROA. 642~ •
mediate openlna tor En1Ush. Newport VIila. MIDICALCLAIMS SUPPUIS We ue enlurlo& • yr•. leaal experience
brla1ht. self illarter 642·MMl1 _ 'ROCISSOI Orowin11Co huxlntop tremendous new Cleld oC Xlnt bentfit.s & worklna
person to perform. a Housekeeper/Companion M uat be experienced xtr, ~o: r~°"8·, ~c~~~~ =~~~~tl~~~:~~l~~\J: condltion1 Ciill Fran
variety o( orrice dut!t'S Live In or out F IT· uk for Dl'lh knowle<l&e ot J)lumbina aire looklna for a sales 8J3·!t622
Dktribtlton. ~~~~~!~ ~~~:~:: ffi· 833-2000 l114 >$40.l7u products h~lp!ul. Good orl~ottd ~rson who bas SlCRETARY
l''or nC\\ d~ t plll. Amat· In t Contact Be\•er C worklna condltlunst fr I.I desire tor above Parttlme. for 1m111l 1ng PJ"OdUt't. &ills eully &. cc. • HOUSI& ROOM MEDI AL Inge beneflta full llmu. uvera1e lllcome. You hi h s Full time or pt lime. ly. 641'8820· A TIEHDAHTS RECORDS Ca 11 Mr. rot" r 1 b mllc ne 8 op. .L. Mr~ hk11I for ho .. ~ ... wives ex Th S f •·Sa-.. u 11 <11•161• .oan mutt u personable & Co. G3l·~_!?r a1>pt ""'" e ur "' 1w note n TR ... .._.SCRIBER .. ....._,., confident In your ability
tra lncotTl(' L & M En --------• Laf Och hrts lat & Znd An ----lo communicate with SKretwY Jr. ll'rprii.cs D1str1butors Gener11I omce Shi l. full & p/lin\f open Requir $0Wpm t..Yt>lna. POST BOX othrr1 & have dependa· No shorthand. lr )'UU hkt'
ror Light For re Newport Beach 111 in as Ca ll M knowled1eotdlctapl\Ont' P T.nei.ReUredOK ble trunJportaUon. We a , a r I et y n r
Products SSl-11693. <21JJ surance co hai. the M c C u I I o o i h & medlcal tcnninoloay ~~rport 549·"2287 will train If neceuary. respon11ib1Uties ttuit 1n
l38 2005 rollowing p us1t1on s Housekeeping,497 4477 Organization. attention Excell. fringe benefits. elude typing. runr11n"
Uo11111 shop. (';arly AM
i.hlrt. no CXl)el' llt!C. App.
h Oipplty Donuts, 1854
!\l'\\IXU1 Blvd C M. ....
DOMUTSHOP
1-;urly AM No exp. nee
Xlnt start. i\pply till
noun, D.K ·s , 2959
1-·a1rview. CM
DRIVER
to detail & follow up u·~ A 1 1' 1 • available· , ----very lmportunt. We o( 1•rlntlng PP Y at: e eprompt~r blue print.s, m11lntainln!l
MAIL & FJLE CLERK IMSURAHCE fer excellent environ Offnt Pf"fft PffSOI\ o( Newport Beach, 901 engineering ltbrury &
Dependable. mature Underwriter w1Lh i:om· ment. C•pts lrano by the E x p e r · c.I 2nd :ea;:tb St • Newport more. and you.-t)'lillll(
person to a1s1st with m 'I auto experience Sea hos~ 496·5702 _ Pressperson. Ooas Com·'·-~~~~~~~~ skills are S5 wpm, "'' mail. filing, switchboard 50wpm, lO·key, some muntly 4 unit. Apply 1 n.eed you
relief, no typing ratmg. Salary open. Ex· MESSIHGER 1660 Placenlia Ave . CM Sales We offer an xlnt benefit
BILLING CLERK cell. working conditions. 6 mornings a week. ---$l6,000 + packa,ge which 1ntludei. Typing JOwpm Expcr. New ore .. moving to Mon: 5::.>AM to SAM. Production mediHI. dental und lHl'
helpful. Irv 1 n e in Aug us l Tues. tllru Sat: 6:30AM Pull time pe rson for BE v ERL y HILL s insurance. paid vat•n
Gd co lx>nefils w,>rk 759·0401 to 9AM Excell. driving prod. Dept Packing & Hea lth & Nutrition Corp lion, and an educallonul C===~~~~~~ r"'" req'd Apply Pen handlin° hosiery settin~ ~o""'r"lt'ons 1n enrichment program mg hours 8AM·4 ISPM ...... · · .. ""' .. Please ('all for a ppt Cal I ror tnlerview appl ~~!a.v~~ 1660 Placentia Crysla I Creat iuns Ap 0 C e ltey people for M a r Y I' a l le rs 0 n
btwn 8:30 & 11 30AM, INSURANCE ___ _ ~a!el. 631-S-414 Superv1Sion & Training. 556.707s
Travel At11:nt for bu•'/
Commerc11al Aiicncy 111
ln·lnL" l\tl.L\t have S1tbre
ex ~r. & isl leru.t 2yrs ex
per with larie ('Om
merr1i11 i1c·ct s . X Int
u lary 4t ben. Call Tom
mle ~33 2ff77
ANTIQUE SALi
Leu than Swap Meet
prices. Tablet~ Chairs.
Beds. Wararobes ,
Dressers. Wuhatands.
Corner Cabmel. Ect. all
refinished oaJc I We have
a reflnishlni ser vice
too' Tuttles Antiques
TaA VIL AGEMCY 130 E 17th St Umt T
Now " your chante tu C r.~ __
JCl'l into tht' exc1t1na Stnppin& & Refm1Sh.ing trav~I bu1nneu Busy Antiques at reasonable lrvlne lll(t.'flcy neeW; en rices
try h•vt1I d0<·um1•11t de· p Rick 646 4041 livery tn1lm•t• Must be
2lyrA of uc have,ultd
Coll( dr1vn" b('enci.e
and l(<tod drinng re
torda f':xt•t.ll ll'nt c·om puny btnl'fl\)i und op
Poriun1ltl'll for advuncc
ment Call Tc1mmw J l
83:• 2!m
ESTATE From T enn
Oak dressers, buffet .
bookcases, princess
dresses + many more.
Dealers welcome. Fri..
June S. 9AM 18352
Gothard St . Hunt. Bch
847·6S4S
"Ill) packing duties (;ood dn\'lng record and
good referent•es Con·
t:u•t Mr Daboub. 548-2271 h~tween8& 5 PM.
833·84$0 Busy service ctr. ol auto t'ull or Part Time. Will -----
COM MERCJAL ins. agy. has openings MNGMHT POSmOM p IT Clerical train Xlnt career or 1--------
BANKERS LIFE for the following posi Fabhrici chuxinl 't C.M .• & woA altemoons. Duties sMupplezmenht. Cabll D·Spm, SECRETARY R.E.
Tlt1\\ Jo.I. \l,Jo:~T for
bu..,)' Ii' lfll' agenc_y
Mm1murn :! yn. recent
ex per Com1>uter ex per
pref (Jual1f1ed <tllly
9$7 2700
Antique Sale June 6th,
IOam. Mostly Amerka11
µ1eces School deski..
cabin ets. fireplacl!
mantles. small tables. I
only refmished roll top 1401 DoveSt .SteSSO lions ~~:1 :i~~O n oppl Y include lite typing. as· 97~.8443u" er rod at Secretanal position m
EXEC. SECRETARY Newpan Beech •Claims Dept Take In sembling bro('hures. -~-_ active Newport Cent<.>r
rur busy Npt Beh ore E o E M F 1tial reports & handle / MODELS/ mailers. etc Contart Sales Realtor's office f'ront
I .. _ h d fl 1 ·---------follow ups Ca th)' Lester 642 9470. * IRID •L office position requ1rei. 'ping. 511"rt an ea •Renewal Dept Quote " d I h bk d h 1 r 1 goo le ep one vo11·e. e-.tate gm · e Pu GIRL FRIDAY & follow upon renewals. ACTORS QC RECEIVING lnspec· CONSULTANT • lyping & appearanc·e
$ l 3110 mo + · rom w t boo Hvy auto rating exp tor Trainee. Must be SH •· 1·aal estat" "'X lllt'n!.urate l(J l'X"er l(lSOme kkeeµmg. ~ef'd B oc . rf w II . "' .. ' ,~ · 1 , k" r Salary to commensurate usy ·casting 0 ice self·starter & able to 1 1 rain Pa rt lo perience helpful but not L~~Li!:t'in'!~· as or with experience ccounllng Dept has "after strike'" mo driveforkltfl 540-6300 F lime Pref retail essential Prefer loral
642 1026 In\ ou:mg. ,customer re· lion picture casting ec clothing sales exp C M resident For mter\le"
funds & deposits counts Non.union extra 546· 1821 556 9333 call Mrs Duhl. Weslev GIRL FRIDA y work for fun. SS. credns RCPTIOHIST /R.E N Taylor C-0 644 4910 ..
TRAVB. AGEMT desk. 1 oniy cruISe ship
Lookm1i for 11 thange uf oak ('aptain's cabmet paee~ l::xperient•ed The Minuteman . .U7 W
\'acat1on ai<enl ts needed l s I S l · T u s t 1 n
for a lar~e multi branrh 1714lS44·1411.
~gency 11l ln•me Xlnt 2 beaut. hand car\'ed side
salar} & bt'n Opp for arm chair.. uphol seats advancement Call Tom S2SO 675-IM!I mte 833 2977 ·
Applianus 80 I 0
TYPIST ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Beach Mrn 4S
E\per d pen.on "'anted
" 5 Lo 10 yn> exper m cpl wea,ing & mend-
1111-:. Sdles & purchase of
hJndm11de rugs. SSOO per
\\I>. Call l'er~1an
frea-.urt• Ru~
j 11 673 ti!*ll
and assn't part time. Sah1ry c·omm. with exp. Interviews l''r1 1Sat. Type SO wpm, exp pref. Sales . experienced. part
flex. hrs student o.k. Pd co. benefits. f'or June 12 & 13. M/F, 18·25 Ask for Bill. Bkr/Owner time Ladies s1>ec1ality -
Must drive. like travel & appl . call Linda at FGS. yrs old. dependable 97_9_·S~o__ shop. Fashion Island. ---------•I
outdoors. be mdepen· 963 0941 transport.ation. no ex REAL ESTATE SALES Flexible hrs Call '11m1 ••SECRETARIES•*
wpm Jui.l B1ki111s ,
752·6771
HARBOR AREA
APPLIANCE SERVICE
We buy used appliances
dent & able to mk de-1 _____ .!'.!'.!'•_-_-•I penence PEOPLE Investment 759·9951 Rct·pt TSO OursSt0.800
c1S1ons Good salary _SSl-8608foropp't. Firm building Real BackC>rc FshlsSJ0200 Call760·8461or64694t8 LANDSCAPE Sa~s EnginMr Recpt TS5 1F'wiS11 .210 INST AUER MOTHER'S HELPER I Estate Sales f''orce Must have experience in Ex pd. Consultant Ours
FLORAL DESIGNER GIRL FRIDAY Nl•\\ Conroy'sopenmg in Local manufo('luring
S;inla Ana. l':arn top business .needs girl fri \\J~l:'s in be.1ut1ful en da) Duties varied, exp
'1ronmenl I':\ per + I mandatory, salary com· ~·>od ref,, C:all mensurate "'Ith ex·
i 11 551 376H l'H's pcnence Pleal>e apply
Fl'LL Tinn•. p lime.
Mm t_yping rnq'd Ans
H'n No exp. nee Call
li31 ·0140 F:OI':
GENERAL OFFICE
Soundrraftsman Audio
ha!o mterestmit pos1twn
;1vatlable wnh \';ened of·
lice duties t) ptn)t. fil
Ill!(. phon~. mutl Call
17I~1556 6193 L
Ccnl!rdl
iv1cK1 HESTONI
& Associates
Specialt:rmg in
1"1·m porao Cler1ral
Personnel
540..0400
G ENERAL OFFICE
I' lime No exp nee Ap-
• µI) bt~n 9AM & Noon
Charlie s Ch11t . 3001
Hl•dhtll, Bldg 112. Ste
11226CM
GENERAL OFFICE
Electronics firm in
C:osla Mesa !leek!. person
\\tlh general office &
ltght bookkeeping ex·
per .. includmJ( accounts
payable & accounts re·
ct•1\·able Permanent
1>0sillon require!. reha-
hle person_ Call
V olor S.Ct ronics
540..9264
GENERAL OFFICE-
Are you m earnest" Can
you think' Are you as
'lcrli\'e" Are }OU a perfecllorust ., Are you
r1ueer oriented? Are
~ ou mat\tre" Can you
1ake over an en1trg1mfg.
nfc-where your work re-
a 11} mauers" Really"
Well then, I would hke to
talk to you Pb send
~our rei;ume to Tom
Tompson. P.O Box 2951.
'"Pt Brh .. 92663
m person. 1922 PlaC'entia
<.: M
G IRL Friday . self
starter. ex cell typist.
~d telephone personah·
l}. non·smkr St7S "k to
i.tart Call for mten 1ew
556 698 1 , Window
01!s1gns 3195 "O""
Airport Loop Dr . CM
GRIMDBl-
CENTERLESS
Top wages. benchts.
overtime for exper'd
operator Mu.st be able
to sel up lor close
tolerance work CM .
l>eltron1c. S4S 003
GUARDS
Full & part lime All
areas Uniforms furn·d.
Ages 21'0r O\'Cr. retired
welcome No ex per nee
\pply Unt\ersal
Proll.'clion Service, 1226
W 5th St .. Santa Ana Interview hrs. 912& I 4.
Mon-Fri.
Hair Styllst-Mamrurist
for Costa Mesa & Npt
Bch area. 548-9344
Hardware Sales, F time
pos in retail hardware
store See Mike or Ste\'e,
ll W Wnght Co . 126
Rochester. C M
HARDWARE SALES
Management potential.
Apply in person. Crown
Hardware. 3107 E. Coast
Hwy .. CdM
HOUSECLEANING
Liie laundry. Weekly.
Small residence CO M
area. Ref req Day f\44·4613
HSKKPR/Companion
S days a week. live 1n
Allend elderly lady
SJOOO mo-+-own room &
board . Refs. req .
673·4743 after 6 pm. ----
Looking for dependable. Wanted fem 18 yrs or t Lic'ensees invited to call selling up seminars, and Liz Reinders Agy, Inc
hard working person olderMonFn.2girls9& 641 ·0763 training personnel in 4020Rirl·hEst'64EOE
w m 1n t yr ex per Hl yrs Close to beat•h & seminar prei.entution Newport'833·8190 Free
lnstalhng trees. shrubs, recreation Start 6 22 RECEPTIONIST Pa)' on shares, comm
header board & sod thru August Must be re Expen en('ed recpt for expected SOM Call for
lawns Starling pay hable.Callrordetailsaft rap1dily expanding appl 675·904210am 12& SEC'Y /RECWT.
S8·1200 mo Pd ho!Jdays 6PM (714>6449878 Newport Beach law 24on Mon&Tues
& vaeat1on. hosp Ins. firm. Some typing: lite S
For ne" compan) rn
Ne" µort Beach Ex
pt>r1cnre neces•ar)
Non smoker. 9 5pm
:\1on Fri Start 1m
mediately Call Cole<.>n
857 4666
avail Inte r views by MOTHER'Sllelper want l'lerical duties. Front of· Al.ES Jewelry. rull time
appt only. call 646-7441, ed. Resp high school rice appearance. good pos1t1on arnil for fine
Lloydi. Nursery. girl ror summer job diction. mature Judge· retail store <"all for
starting approx June ment required Please appt. 7S9·1722
LEGAL SECRETAHY lSth SmosoldbabvLB send r"sum"' lo " ~ ~ Sa lei. for Npl Bch. law firm. aft6PM Cmd) 497.2297 Class1f1ed AD ~911.
Will ttam person ~ gd Daliy Pilot. P.O Box
basic skills Mag card Newspaper delivery 1560,CostaMesa92626
JOIN
A WINNING TEAM
Total Care. a leuder m
Carpet Cleanmg field is
now seelung hcenseei.
\'eh1cle Eqwp + train·
1ng included Net
$3 5,000 mo Call
968.9659
SEC'Y/RECPT.
P/T exp helpful Call Joy1•e person . 18 or over
for app"t 640-5650 Dri\'er's lil·ense. in RECEPTIONIST P time
suran('" econo needed immed after·
Exe1· Search firm nr
0 C Airport 25 30
hri. wk f1ex schedule
Mui.I ha\:e gd typing
skills Xlnt salan ~
Danford 152.s:ru ·
Lr.G •• SEC'Y ... my ear s; Al. :'lip! Sch In Costa Mesa noons for la"' ofr rn 0 .C
Needed for partner of area. 7 d)s pr wk. Mon airport area 833·8486
prestigious Newport Frt. 2 5PM Sat Sun ask for Pam
Beach law office. F.x· 4·7 ·30AM . Approx
per1ence rreferred Mag SSOO/ mo Call S40·3007 fl helpfu Top salary & bet !Au SPM A k r beautiful surroundmgs · 1 "' s or Call (714 l833-0730. Lee or Bob
LEGAL
SECRETARY
Probate experience
Permunent part lime.
Newport Beach ar<.>a
673 7120
LEGAL SECY
•NITECHEF/
BROILER MAM * Full or p/time
TOP WAGES PAID
Apply in person. The
Village Inn. 127 Manne. I
Balboa Island
Temp 6 15 ~ 19. Hntg · ------.. --Bch. non smkr, 848·1400
Liquor Clertl P ff ts~ Mesa Verde Dr
LIQUOR CLERK with
knowledite of Wines
wanted Spigot Liquor.
1802 S Coast Hwy.
Laguna Beach. 494 1533
Liquor Clerk. P 1T nights
Ask forSle\e
548-8410
LVN / Medtcal Assist.
Back office. full.time
days. 5S7-6300.
MAID
642,~
MAIDS wanted, exp'd
Im med hire. See Angie.
San Clemente Inn
MAID WANTED
Don Quixote Motel
2100 NewPort 81. CM
MANAGERIAL. er.ec.
persons interested in ad
ditional income part
time flex. hrs Call
Marin a del R ey,
213 823 6982 for in
terv1ew 1n your area
Masonry & concrete help
wanted. Laborers,
finishers & supervisor.
Mike 496-8582. ----
MA TUU PBlSOM
need~ to help operate a
tea garden in CdM,
Sat/Sun only, 9 :30AM to
3PM. Apply in person.
Sat & SWl., 10AM-2PM,
Sherman Gardens. 2647
F.. Coast Hwy., CdM
Md>OHALD-S
ofSmtCle1Mnt•
<Under New Ownership )
is now acceptine •P·
ptlcationa for day &
nlihl J>Ollltions. Please apply ~n penion betwttn
9-lam It 2-Spm wkdy• a\
McDon ald 's, 850
A venld a Pico. San Clem.
MIOICAI. cou••• Must bave own
traosfortalloo & be
ram1I ar with Caltr.
lteewa y system. Mon·
Fri, 11 5pm. 788-8500
M8MCAL
TIAMSCRllB
Work ll home. t.of P•Y·
Re q ulr4!t m t n fmum
5/Yrt •cul•=l•I ex· Pfrience In all aM1 ot
medtul di , C:all
1-.UOO for 11\lAa\'ll'W •
OFFICE MGR.
AA in Business or Ad-
min 1stration or 2 yrs of
fire related ex pt.>r
needed for this challenit
!ng pos1l1on with gro"-1ng investment rlrm
Typing skills a plus All
phases of office opera
t1on involved. 64 l ·885S
Cyndi
OFftCEHELP
Part·llme. 2 days per
week for growing com
pany. Typing 4Swpm. fil-
mg & phones . Newport
Beach. 851·9222.
Opportunity 1n BE I::
LINE FASHIONS 3 peo
pie needed now. Flexible
hours. sample fashions
& personal wardrobe.
832·0672 or 546-7489
ORGAMIST
For small rhurch. 3-4
hrs t wk 642 ·2740
am 963 4195pm ------
PART TIME
To deliver Daily Pilot
auto route m Newport
Beach
HOURS· Mon. tbru Fri
approx 3 .30pm to
S:JOpm
HOU RS: Sat & Sun
5am·7am.
Earnings approx S3SO
per month
Call 642·4321 for Bryan
Holland or Sheldon
Harte. Equal Oppor
Em ployer
Part·hme help. 3-4 hni
per day for typing & fll·
Ing. Len·Mar Renlal1.
54G.3195.
PART Time. ans. serv.
No exp. nee. Cati;
838·3333btwn8&4 EOE
Full ti!~T100. Full
com pany benetlta. E•·
reN~ E~~A0vlnER A~:~
Placentia Ave. C.M.
PAY-OU:CLRK
The Jolly l\oeer loc .• ao
e1tabli1hed retll urant
ch ain, haa an opentn1
for an experien ced
pliyroll clerk lo worlc in
a 4 P. Ml<>n dept. Ablli l)'
to ban dit. e xtentlve
phone communlc.Uon•
and 10 by by touch a
m us\ Salary com m•nauratt with eu
pertrnce. Apply Ip
person between lam·
$pm at . nu: J OLLY ROGER
INC. l'JOU GW.U.Av., Irv, ,n.,....1
ReceptlOftlst
Law office. OC AirPort
area. High school grad.
Call 833-9124
RECEPTIONIST for new
corporate headquarters
in Irvine Requires
pleasant phone skills +
typing. Send resume to
Controller. 2698 White
Rd. Irvine. Ca 92714.
SALES
Loan co desires person
with sales or frnance
background. to generate
business loans. Salarv
Sl,000 to Sl.200 + comm
1142 1470
SALESPEOPLE
llome improvement
SI K week draw possible
for right experience
RECEPTIONIST Call Chet494-4604
Phones, lite typing & clerical. Exper not req. Sales
Small congenial Hunt· Prof. Salffpeopt.
1ngton Bch law ofc. ~
842·0023 Marketing Reps to sell
RECEPTIONIST
Needed . Newport
Beach. Boal type busi-
ness . 4/days week, Sun
Wed. 8 30·S ·30pm
$4 SO/hr. Heavy phones
& typing experience
Call 645-7100.
a product that 1s wanted
& needed by everyone.
Earning potential.
$40,000.$.50.000
• Co. Training
,, Qualified Leads
• Higb Income
LiquiciYM EMnjy
Syshtm
RECEPT10HIST Al 754·~. 545-6793
Oro~lng S.A. Co: b~s Sales
opening for recepuonist 10 POSmo ... s with pleasant phone . " personal lily T yping Open for motivated pe<>-s l< i I 1 s 5 s w p M pie. either m sales or de·
Responsibilities mclude livery. 951·2642
typing of orders with Sales·Students 16 & up,
some lile corresp<.>n· need summer jobs or dence etc. Competitive . entry level salary with P /time year round
periodic reviews For work. Call Mr. Jones.
personal mlerview con· 541·4!._18 __
tact Cy Simpson at Sales
5$8·2603 THE BUCK
STARTS HERE
The Los Angeles Times
Sec'y-S~
P T Costa Mesa area
Judaic• bkgd nee
968 3652
Sh1pp1ng, Receiving. &
Warf' house Clerk needed
in Adh<'sives Mfg. plant
Exp. prer . not net· 1S37
Monrovia. N.B
Shi ppift9/Padlogincj Futrt1me Experience
helpful , but will train
Costa Mesa.645-5421
SHIPPIMG DEl'T.
TRAIMH
Excell. co. benefits
Steady work. She must
be good with numberi>
CM. Deltronic.54S·0413
Small Retirement
Foc:iltv Housekeeper-~aitress
Serve breakfast & lunch
to elderly residents . No
tips. Mon.Fri. 7am·3pm. 494.9455
STATIONARY
Store In CdM needs
salesperson f itime. 5
days. Xlnt working con
ds. Especially line chen·
lele. Phone 644·7482 for
app't
STUD&n'S
Job opportunity 1n
s ports promotion &
sales Prr. summer &
year.round work. Call
Mr. Adams: S41-41 l7
RECEPT rrw OPR
F l time temporary. II
you have a good
telephone voice and typ-
ing skills or SS wpm. we
need you t.o handle our
busy co rdless
switchboard. greet
customers and do misc.
typin&. Exper pref'd.
Please caU Mary Pat·
terson for appt 556·7075
Circulation Dept is look· STUFf:ERS mg for well groomed, en·
Paul Do6ier Assoc ..
3050 Redh.Ul Ave., CM
thuslastic people to earn Lorn to earn Sl80 wk
up to $4().S50 per day for work 1·2 hours daily
:i few hours work as slurring envelopes. Send
pa r t . ti me s a 1 e s self addressed stamped
represenlalives. Hours envelope to: Regal 424
are from 4pm·9pm. and W. Commonwealth
train me will be pro· De fr 'G. Fullerton
vided. Your earnings as 926
a Times Sales Represen·
taUve will be based on SWIM THERA'Y
auaranteed hourly wage AIDE
REC.rlOHIST of $3.50 + generous com· Swim Therapy Aide for
SEC UT ARY :~~~01~~~!1o'!i°:~~ ~:ed~~ a ~Y E~~nctrot~t~~
Fast growing Npl. Sch. lhis 1reat opportu.olty. Beach City ScbooJ Dis
ad agy. s~ks lndlv. with (714)957·2381. ext. 1204. trict Crom 6/17181 thru
top typing skills .· --7/1/81. S/hrs. per day.
Telefhonesplusavarie-Sand wich Salesperson $4 .73/hr. First Aide
ty o responslbltlties & Mon -Fri. 7am·lpm . Cert.&LifeSavlngCert.
opportunities. Call Bob. Mus t have own trans. requir~. Apply 73$ 14th
844-7644 RAC, C.M. 642-1900 St. H.B. 536-8851.
llCa'nOHIST
ll'root or e t)tper .
F ritndly atmQs phere,
lit• typlna fl tO.key Loll ot benetlt.s her•. Nr. O.C.
Ai rport. Call R usty
Pelican. Corporate Ofc. 549.9322. Z862 McGaw,
lrv
~---~-~-~ SICltETAIY TAILOR or seall)slress
631-2004 for lallor shop, Crown
--------1 Tailor Shop. 5935
SICRITAIY W•r ,ner Ave., HB .
with telephone ability. 846-4221 Oood salary to •tart. For 1--------
lnt•rvlew contact Mr.
Dabou b . SU·2271
betwecnU r5PM.
fll.a-H~E
PIOPU
Secret.ry Receptlonlat/Typt.st ll"Ont p IT SICRIT AIY ,
ofc Sun·Thur. Pvt coun. 1 sfrt offlce. Approx.
To set appointmenta. No
selllni. $4 /hr . +
S4/a p pt. + bonus .
S:30·9:30PM. We nt0ed
steady, matu~ J>«'Qplt-
C. M. S4S •941 Hk for
Mike «>r Marshall.
'ry ~ 844.S.O. 3fhrt dail)' for f""1!ture
RHl.aUtant rep. ~7-5389or .s4f.Q528
M ... MTTUIMH ASUSf AMT
Tramre <>Pftlinll oflel'I
1ood 1 tarttn1 wa1e.
health plan for you Ir
your family, paid vaca-
tion. Must bt 18 )'l'I or
older. Contact Bob Rtd,
Me n·&d'I Pizu, IJM l
New hope St.:i... Qai'den
Grov• or caJt D>-03.12. E.O E
• Telephone Sales oHlce
MOW IS THI TIMI nffda experienced tale
for Job Meke1'1 to check help. E .. Uy earn up to th Dally Piiot Help W/hr . CaU497·4198.
Wanted du1lftcaUon H ---------
tht Job you want la not
there )'OU ml1bt con·
1ld•r ofrer toa your
Hrvlces With a.. ad in
Uu Job Wae te d date~J ......... KTI
TYPIST
Xlnt pos1t1on for :\Int
t} PISL Lots of "Ork m a
busy offit·e lovely I rvm<·
surroundings Call
Barbara 1!57 1204
TYPIST
A r c u r <1 l c I B M t-: "'
t'cut1\ e experience pref
Light office work Fll'll
hour!. l'o:.ta Me•a
540·2522
TYPIST
Mature Type &n\ 01t·e~.
r1gure dpt1tudc. 10 kt•\.
40 hri. C ;\I 979·8600
TYPIST /RECEPT.
S900+ per month
Fullt1mt-permanent
Musi type 60 wpm &
ha\ e good phone sk1lb. 3
~ears offit·e expl'r
Opening 1n long time
established t·onstructwn
company Xlnt benl'f1ti.
& solid future m lovttlv
ne"' ofrlce 545·7189 ·
TYPIST Acrurale typmg & gd
ret•ept1on skills for
µleasant Execult\c
Suites 11.n. 8 30AM to
SPM . tor 5 day-;
i14·752 023-1
"e sell recond. guar.
appliances 549.3077
I BUY APPLIANCES
Les 957·8133
Electric range, Portable
dish~ asht!r Washer &
dryer S125 each 646 5848
llefng. frost frl'c. "orks
fine. excellent. S25CI
548-8Sl3. 548·4485
MINl.JU:FIUG
36 · high, walnut finish.
perfect for bar or sgl
room. hke ne"' sacr
Sl75 494 8744
Kenmore Duo power up
right vacuum heavy
duty. ltke new S7S ofr
also Hoo\'er compact
'ac " attachmen~ SIU
960 1963
KENMORE Apt Sz DL~
hwasher S175
673-9212
Brand new Hotpoint elet
dbl ht lo oven. all xtras.
$400 firm. 325 Grand
Canal. Bal Is
GE washer gas dryer.
rnatchmg set. hvy duty.
1 vory. both xlnt cond.
S4SO. 8Sl·5073 aft G
---------Gibson frostfree refrij! " 1remaker. gold, xlnt
Typists
Typists 50WPM
Dicta Sec'ys
Exec Sec'ys
ChClftCJincJ Caner?
Look fOf'a
ChalenginCJ
Opporlwtity
cone!. S450. 851 5073 aft 6
Sea ri. Freezer Froslless
IS 3 cu ft 536 lbs Sl2S
546-5054
H • y Duty Dryer
$225 OBO 1>44·0381
Frigid aire 20 6 cu ft
rerrig. w 1cemaker.
S4SO OBO 644 0381
llcycles 8020 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Use temporary jobs as Schwinn outgrown red
your shopping tool. We girrs 3 speed. Xlnt cond.
have long & short term $60. 760·9636.
jobs a\ailable in the ---0 C Airport area Week Schwinn Traveler Ill
I~ paychecks. quarterly brand new super lite
bonus trips Never a fee Sl25 call eves 840-3~7
Call for appt today· ------Schwinn cruiser Custom 557-0045 paint. S2SO or best offer. r-n.·Lln--·-Rare1y~ed83J.0141 U \ SCHWINN Beach Cruiser
IEMl'OIW!V~uuMas Red. w chrome tube
forks. Sl20 MS HJ67
lulldin9 Materials 8025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Redwood 2 by 6's. xlnt ·-~!!_!!_~~-~~~~~-decking. 8 to 20' long
TYPOGRAPHERS New load Just arrived.
3723 llrch Street
N•wDOrl Beach t .O.E.
Save at ss• per ft. PhotocomJ>?SlliO!l s. 10 646·9885 anyume. vears experience m high ---
quality Ad work. Group Cameras I
Hospital benefits Lo('al EquiptMnt 8030
ed in Irvin e at••••••••••••••••••••••• MacArthur & 405 S D.
Frwy Will mterview on
Saturdays Call 549·2231 -------
WoiterjWaitnss
Apply btwn 9AM &
Noon. Charlie's Chill.
l Redhill, Bldg. 112.
CM ,__ __ _
w .ttr.s1/Woltet'
Experienced, for Indian
restaurant. Bengal
Tiger. 5930 W. Pacllic
Coast Hwy, N. B. 646-1302
WAREHOUSE
&DBJVERY
P /T 2025 Newport Blvd.
642·1Sll
Nikon 3Smm camera w 3
lenses incl. wide anf le &
toom + more. al for
S350. S40-6472
NIKON F2 W/50mm &
5Smm macro3.!I
$500 851·2.109
Pentax KlOOO with ac·
cessories, ~or best of·
rer 848-8823 tor lnCo. --------Cats 8035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Himalayan. fem. 11/mo
Beaut. Seal Pt CFA. ex
cept. for breedlna Must sell 547.2375
AAAHOMEDOG
TRAJNING
In your hol'd4M>bedience
41 pn>blem aoMn1 ....
I
dsk w/exec chr $1500; 2 Small dinin g set. $75.
gst chrs S200 ea; file cab Arm chair. $25 sets or
$400. dishes 857-2956. 64.5-6923
---Movin g sale-Maytag
Dan1$h Bench Seat for washer. gas dryer .
two. $75. Walnut buffet refrig. roll-a -way bed.
SSO. Ph : ~J793 r ha1rs & misc 499-1657.
Rust sora & 2 matching Jewelry 1070
chair! $150. s· Seascape •••••••••••••••••••••••
oil paihtini $'15. 2 Tif-Diamond ring, 2.i:J cl!.
fany lamps $25 each . Or-yellow &~d Tiffal)y set-
ficl! desk &: chair $75 ting, seooo. 751-4293
D r a f ting c hair $25 640-1968 28"'2 Ct. Star Ruby, only
----------$300!
Din . set. fruitwood rin.. 640-8688.
drop Ir, 6 chrs. good to
exc $250.545-8951 Half carat diamond wed----------1 d1na r&nf ssoo appraisal
Chin a Cabinet. maple, val Sl,000631-5789
$175.
631·3796
Couches. vanity. din. rm
set. grandfather clock.
end tables. 644-9400
Rent 23' Lux. mtr home.
fully self ront. SSS /dy.
500 Cree m1. 548-0949
Rent: 22· mot.or home.
sips 6. self cont, avail
6 /20-7 3. S2951 wk .
640-8585
Rent 20' mot.or home. self
cont. $22S/wtc. 500 free
m.I. 968-3990
Trailers, Trani 9 170 ..... , .................. .
Mini tr ailer -compact
car. Kitch, awning, port
a potty. Sl.500, 548·2497
'65 Afrst.ream
21 ', good cond.. ver y
clean. Air cond, awnin g,
T V rotators, sips 4.
$3,500. 661-1844.
THEODORE
ROBINS
fORD
• H JI' UR HI '• ')
Ii' .T.\ Mt I\ (• 1: 'I !11 ·-------
'21 Mod•l A Town Sedan,
4 dr, re.-ored. Ideal tor
1tudenl. $1.0,500. ALSO '44 Ford Woodle,
restored. $13,500.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 4, 1981
1979 CHEVROLET
"SPORTY SHORTY"
Pickup Auto trans .
pwr. st .. lilt. dual fuel
tanks. custom trim &
nms (126977> <Stk.
P4600Tl.
OMLY $5695
Theodor. Robins
Ford
2060 Harbor Bl.. C.M
642-0010
•• Earle Ike
TOYOTA· VOLVO
"UH.,._lh &
CottoMHo
"'646·'101 or540-9467
Top Dollar
Paid
For Your Car!
JOHNSON & SOM
Lmc•Mercury
2626 Harbor Blvd"
Costa Mesa 540 5630
WeP"'f
OVER
llwlook
For Your Good
VW. Porsche or Audi
VW PORSCHE AUDI
445 E Coast Hi way
at Bayside Drive
Newport Beach 673-0900 ·----
Premium prices
paid for any used car
'60 FORD 3 4 TON 1fore1gnordomesticl
With full camper. l()w in good condition ..
AL:THORIZED
MERCEDES BE~Z
DEAi.EH
831 1740 495 1700
BMW 320. '19, a c. stereo. '72 250C
cass, 26K mi. $11.000 Or 2 dr. sport coupe. Im
best offer 646-5666 aft 6 maculate. S8200 Tom
or wknds. 675-9797, 673-6210
'72 Mercedes 250 Sdn. wht Capri 9715 w beige Lilt, auto. AC,
••••••••••••••••••••••• AM t FM . xlnt rond
73 CAPRI s1000. 646·7093 dys
V6 4 spd, AM/FM stereo. 964-1836eves
air cond. clean.
646.5625 78 300D. Icon gold.
1mmac.sunrf. PP.
4fl6..4344 '74 Capn U , xlnt cond,
56K ml, auto, am/f m
cass, must sell! 548-0316 '73 280C beaut cond,
Dat 9720 Io ad e d , m us t s e 11
sun $7500 080 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7S2--2404
1974DATSUM
7102DOOR
Hardtop Coupe. Auto.
trans .. air cond .. one
owner car & extra low
miles <902ZAI > <Stk.
1514). Offer good thru
6/7181
MOWS2395
NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
833-1300
'59 Mercedes 300 SL
Rdstr wht. rd i.nt . xlnt
cond. SJS,00>548·6611
'70 280S. 4K on rblt eng .
new shocks tJres, xlnt
cond. $5950963-6583
'79 450SL Maple Yellow.
like new. call arter 6PM
644-6173
'67 2305
3000 mi on new eng. New
brakes. new tires. xlnt
cond. Best ofrer
675-5020 ---·51 190 Sedan Classic.
4Dr , radJo, heater. gd
r unning cond. $1400
642-0098
'78 450SL. White/Parch·
m6nt, 26K mi, Blk soft
top, $28,00> firm 67S-73.S5
mileage. ~675 4~ i//l:ll!l~s1e~e1u,s1Filll!'lrsl!l'llll""IJI. 177 B2l0 2-dr, low mi, nu
'76 Ford flatbed truck paint. good mileage
GI 9144 •••••••••••••••••••••••
hydraulic lirtgate nu AM/FM, P.P. 759 0988
Ures ttransmiss1on Must
sell 964-5628
COMMHL
C l>ffYROU I
--'l.o II •,. ' . .
'>4b I 100
HleHIUYIR Top dollan tor Sporta
C•ta. ••· C1mper1. 914 'a, AudJ'1 ..ut for UIC MGR
JIMMdlMO voursw•• .. 111U Beach Blvd,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
14z,;.2000
.!888 llarbot Hhd
( '111-IJ .\lt>S~ 540 0330
1981 DATSUN
280ZXCOUPE
5 speed trans . AM /FM
cassette, air cond ..
custom pamt & lots or
extras! (253214 l I tic
1498). Offer good thru
617181.
NOWSI0,895
NEWPORT DATSUN
888 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
833-1300
'77 MG B, orig owner
perf. cond 21.000mi.
$5000 642· 5334
·79 MGB. wh.lle w/blk lnt.
amtfm cass. lug rack.
13,000 m1. xlnt cond.
S5900. 851-5073 art 6
Must sell by 6115.
PeUCJeot 9748 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
198 I PEUGEOT
TURBO,s
BEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
'77 924 PORSCHE snrf.
a/c. alloys, blauplunkt
stereo. all xtras' $10,000
498·9579
'80 Targa, blk w/ful\.tan
lthr int .. alarm, a lloys.
4500mi. $29,500 759-0920.
551-8984
COut OAJLV PILOT/Thur8da , June•. 1981 A.toa, UMd ...... UM4 ~ UIH Mfet, UMd ....................... , ..•.....••...........•...••...........•.•...........................
• ATLAS CHRYs&a.f'L YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 5'46-1934. 3 blockt
80Yth of San Diego Freeway oH Harbor Btvd. Complete
body 1hop. Sal ... Service. Parts. Sentloe Dep(. open
Monday thru F•lday 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. end 8 A.M to
5 P.M. on Saturday .
• IEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove StrMt, Newport S..Ch. Tel. 752--0900. Call US,
we're the specialists for Alfa Romeo, Peugeot & Saab.
• THIODOREROll4SFOID
Modern sales, Mrvlce, partl, body, pelnt & tire depts.
Competili¥e rates on le ... & d•ilY rental•. 2080 Harbor Btvd., Costa M..._ 642-0010 or 540C11.
• JO~MSOM & SOM UMCOLM ..acuay
2828 Herbor Blvd., Costa MeN. Tel. 540-8630 57 y..,.
of friendly famlly service -Orange County's oldelf Lin·
coin-Mercury dealetsttlp.
•• • ••••••••••••••••••• '7 ·camaro, 11.000 oria . .,,, vs. auto, clean, '7007
•••••••••••••••••••••••
' 11 0 I d •, C u ti a u Brouaha~1 Orta owner,
will fin, pa cond. many xtru. $4495 JOBO
"5-7431
Conv. Rate. U495,
552-7715or638-113l
tt27 ~ 9931 ............................................... 1977 fl YMOUTH
VOi.Aii WA•OM e cyl., auto. trana .. pwr.
steerinl &t brak'9, air
cood., AM/FM 1tereo 6
morel (467Ml).
OM.YSZ7'1
Theo .. eltoWis
Ford
2060 Harbor Bl., C.tl.
642-0010
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • NEWPORT DATSUN
888 Dove Street, Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the
triangle of Jamboree, MacArthur & Brialol. Sale1.
Service, Leasing, Parts. Fleet DliSCounts to the Pu.bile.
HOW ARD CHIVIOLET
Dove/Quall Streets, Newport Beach. 833·0555. We
speclallte In Corvettes! And our body shop Is one of the
besll See the all-new '82 Cavalier now on display I
• f
DAVID J. P .. LLIPS IUICM'OMTIAC.MADA
Salee • Servloe • Leulng
24888 Allcla Pwkway
Laguna HUis 837-2400
IOI LONaru roMTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd., Wntmlnsfle(. Tel. 882-6651. Orange
County'a oldest and largest Pontiac dealership. Sar.,
Service, Parts. •
UMIVHSITY HONDA
2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa MeN. Tel. 54(>.9&40. 1
South 405 Freeway. 6aleJ. HNlce. parts & leasing. •
• SANTA AMA DATSUN
2001 E. 17th Stl'Mt, Santa Ana. Tel. 556-7811. Your·
Original Dedicated Oataun o.Nr.
COSTA MESA DATSUN
2M5 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tel. 54(r6410. Serving
Orange County for 16 years. 1 Mile So. 405.
SUNSET FORD, IMC.
(tjome of Wlllle the Whale~ 5440 Garden Grove Blvd.,
Westminster. Tel. 636-4010. .
• FRANIC NOTO LIMC~CURY
&ervlce and Parts Department alwaye open 1 days a
week 7:30 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. 848-n39.
. ..
2 -Advertising SUpQlement to coAST LlfE June 3, 1911 .. DAILY PILOT June ... 1911-SUPERCOUPON . .
t
OMI FHH'RIATMIMr
: -Wl1M TttlS COWOM-•
: Call about our economical treatment plans · : Ofllr..,.,.. ,,,.,.. .
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------------------~------------------------J----------~
-PIZZA
SALADS
11046 MAGNOllA
(AT WARNER)
IN THE RALPH'S CENTER
842-1411
2180 HcW bor llvcl. & Victoria
(Next To Lucky'a)
Costa Mesa • 548-5523
~ . --------......... -------~---------, I . t,... •••
I s200 l s 1 so
OFF I OFF -••• ~ ,I
ANY LARGE I A.NY MEDIUM
PIZZA t-Plll4
Foontaln Valley LocatlOn . I Expires 7r.KJ/81 : I . ~--------------------------------------1-----------------~ ~~.-----~-.,------------------,
s200
OFF
ANY l:ARGE ~
'PIZZA
I .
I . . _ 1 • i 1 so • :\ . .. • f I • I . OFF
I ANY MEDIUM I l'IZZA
J Expi,.. 7/'JOl81 Costa Mesa Location Onfy I Valid Piek~p Orders Onty
Advertising Supplement to COAST LIFE June 3, 1911 & DAILY PILOT June 4, 1911 -SUPERCOUPON -3
.,-------~~~-----------, Mothlf's Mcdet It Dchen
FREE!
Delicious, fresh-fruit smoothie with pur<?~ase of any of Mother's great,
nutritious sandwiches.
~------------------..--------------------------------------'
----------~-----~-------------,
Mothw's Manet It Kitchen
Organic
VALENCIA ·
.~~~~ ORANGES 1 O!
•
J
r
I I
I l •
-~~~~----~------------------..---------.......... ..-........ ==:::::o::::s=-----------
Proudly Presents The 36th Annual
FRIDAY,· SATURDAY AND SUNDAY
JUNE 5-6-7 I ·J 981
LIONS PARK 18th & Newport
GIANT PARADE SATURDAY, 10:30 A.M.
PARADE ROUTE -·on Harbor Boulevard -From Wilson, south to 19th Street, west to Anaheim, south to Lions Park
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
FRIDAY, JUNE 6
S: 30 PM •..........• Fish Dinners -start serving
6: 00 PM ...• , ... -• Carnival Rides & Games open
7 :30 PM . . . . . . on staQe-'8and X-World's Largest
• Non-marching Marching Band
9:00 PM .................................. Drawing
· (winning tickets must be present>
10:oo·AM .......... Carn(val Rides& Games open
10:30AM •..........•.. Lions Parade Spectacular
12:00Noon .......... FIShDinners-startservlng
2:00 PM .... ":'": Parade Awards (at stage in Park)
3 : 15 PM •.•..•.••...•.....•.•.• • ••...••. Drawing . (winning tickets must be present)
4: 15 PM ..•••••• Arlee Higbee Dancers (on stage)
'= 00
PM· • • · • • • • < w'•""·,;;g i1ckets "'"''·tie =rw 7:00 PM ...•.....• Plaza Rhythm Band (onstaae>
9:00 PM ............ Drawing for color TV &otfier
prizes (winning tickets must be present)
. .
PRIZES•••FOOD•••RIDES•••GAMES•••BEAUTIES
GRAND PRIZE
1981 FORD ESCORT
"Road Teet Magazine'• Car of the Year"
PreMnted In cooperation with Theo Robina Ford
(Winning ticket need not be preaent to wtn) ••••• MANY OTHER PRIZES including a COLOR TV*
(Winning tickets
must be present for all prizes except Ford Escort)
*With cooperation of Davis -Brown
***** OUTSTANDING STAGE ATTRACTIONS
***** BABY CONTEST
All contestants must be registered before S:OO PM
on June 4 -Registration begins on May 18.
••••• STl LL ONLY $3.50!
Oonadon for the Lions famous f lsh dinner and a
chance on all prizes Including the Ford Escort.
Buy a Booch.
The finest Carnival Rides & Game Booths
**"* See Our (Lions, Dlstrld 4-~•> New SIGHT, HE~RING & BLOOD SUGAR TESTING UNIT.
Stop by for an Interocular pressure screening.
AdWrtislng Supplement to COAST LlFE JUM '· 1tl' & DAil. y PILO.T Jww 4,, 1'11 -SUPERCOUPON-s ~ ---~~~~~ -~-----~
CEITEI
I I : 2308 MAllBOI wa~ COST A MESA I . ~~-------------------------------~----... -------------__.. •••• •. F • ------~---,
I l'Ye OFF OM l
DISMM4ERJIAMS ·:
1.50/o OFF OM !
IOOTS i • i K&l 2lf£>}!_!~EAR ~
: I ~--...... ------~------------------------·..----949·-----·· ...... -----------.. ·-----------~
SAYI J"-01 MOii
WOI •rs ... SPOITSWIAI
' S8.ICrm :a TOPS. CAMISOU. ~.tti JACIDS. saa TOPS AND MOU
~ Ytll.t.SU. NOW'7"·'14"
• ic: 'CPen MU 991. " .... i fs'b ney 2300 HARBOR BLVD.
I 646-5021 ~-----------..... ·-------------------------------------~--__, ------------------------------~ JOCKEY
11teaWEA1
~ 20°/o nfF= r-wmtTtn~POM
-
1 THE MALE MAN . i an unusual djscount store ~:~':
L••••••••~•••••--••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ..
I
I I .
-
a a ••
585 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa
54&;5511 • 833-7707
TIEMPO RADIAL
. .
SUN TIRE ... RAIN TIRE •.•
ONE TIRE THAT DO~ IT ALL!
NOW AT SVPER LOW PRICES
,., .. 12 -•47
~.,.o 'II 'IZ
PW11'5RO •1 'II ,., .. 0 .. -,., .. ,. ... ,
,.,.,... '7! -
,.,.,... '71 '74 ,.,.,.,. ., -
'215/'llRM 'II -
Pm/71R14 '17 -
,., .. -..
PmJIM• -W
P9111'M• '11 '11 ,.,.,. ... -
'2•171R• .. -,.,.,.,. .. -,.;.,. ... -........ ,. .......
eMe\'11411
QM9\'Mll POWEllSTllEAK POLYG'l!f ,fJ.T NL VEl'J'Ell .. U·PL 9t'
elJ'ft.INB SIZ.E WHITE llAQ( ............. ,... eoox12 --A70x13'11 EtOIC14 -n A78x13 811 ..
070x14 ... FtOxM '11 878x13 --D78x14 ... .. E70x14'8 G80x 1• ·11 I E78x14 .. 117 F1'0Jt14 .. L80x14 'If F78x14 .. 1 ..
810x14 '7! AIO>c15 '71 G78x14 -..
H70x14 '11 G80x15 ... H78x14 .... ta
G70x15 '74 H80x15 '17 G78x15 -.. 1
H10x15 •n l80x15 .. H78x15 ... ...,
l78x15 .. II/A
"-Uel1Mto .... ,LT.
--~---------------------------, LUBE. OIL CHANGE
& FILTER
AU for
1288 !="
·-··---·····"" ............ ~ ..... ~Cira ~--------------------------------------------------------..
We'll rotale all 4 wheels and
inflate tires to recommended
pressure for maxi mum
mileage.
-----==---------~---=.,------, ~~.,..
MOMRC>-MATIC
SHOqK ABSORBERS
s1ass .................
' I l
l 4
GARDEN i6
SPE61ALS -. ---·
'
TWO CUBIC
FOOT BAG
~$4.39
' NOW
s339
Corrects
yellowing (chlorosis)
in all western
lawns, trees & shrubs.
Also contains
Nitroformu. Nitrogen
that provides
for prolonged
summer green.
I I
......................................... ,
VINCA
4" Pot
Ideal color for
full summer sun
a ... trNow69c
I
I I
I I
: Expires &-1<>-&1 LLOYD'S GARDEH SHOP
~----------------------------------------------~------~--~ ------------------------------, PETUNIAS
Pony Pak
Ideal summer and
· fall color
Expires &-1<>-&1 LLOYD'S GARDB4 SHOP.
~--------------------------------------------------------..
Expires &-1<>-81
----------·-----------------------, IEAUTIFUL HANGING ...
FUCHSIA IASKETS ............... ........ ~ -...... ~ hJ.Slt.tl
Now '15"
------~------------~-----------, ORTHO .
KLEENUP.
• ._.......,,.,...,.,....... R .... 98
OOMIOI .... _,.,_.,, eg. -· -··· , ....... I =-:=s Kiiier
I •C...-llllOl-Md • : au~ ·"MOW~ -, f ~
I • flow9'....._ " --·~
.: Expires s-1<>-&1 ; ' • LLOYD'S GARDEH SHOP :..-~---------·------·-···--·-·------~-----------····-----··.,
IMPATIENS ....... .......... ......
.... SJ.so Nows I "
ITCH EN CABINETS • V AMITIE
IMRILLAT, DIAMOND CAllNITSI
SPACIOUS SHOWIOOM
WELCOMES YOUl INSPICTI9N • INSTALLATION AV AILA
J; t:u.-..-A9':rlean Kit~n & Bath~
HOURS: 10:00-4:30
. 1741 W....clHDr .. Me.,.,+leecll MON.·SAT.
631-7032
••••·•·•• •••• , ..... , ... «•••••. •"••,• ... ,,.•IJj•.<-"'•",."~'·· •• ,.,,, .. ,. \" 4,'w;'••· ·~"' ,,.(' o, • ...., .. " Jr ,•.".;· J • t ...._ •
-..------~--~-----------------,
AddltlalMlll IGYlllgs wilm f!lll pl'IM ...... Cl .. IL ..
HOUIS I 0:00-4:30
MOM-SAT
----------------------949·---------------~----------------'
OUR 5th ANNUAL FUCHSIA FESTIVAL
SAT. JUNE 6 •SUN. JUNE 7 j=:r=7':~_,. (:2:;"··
Schedule of Events June 6 and 7th
11 AM -FUCHSIA CARE & CULTUIE
By the Fuchsia Society
12:00-WWASA HYDROCULTURE
House Plant Hydroponics
I PM • FUCHSIA CARE & CULTURE By the Fuchsia Society
2 PM • SUMMER ROSE CARE
By a Pro ... Charlie Kastler
3 PM • RJCHSIA CARE & CULTURE
By the Fuchsia Society
2640 Harbor llvd._. Costa Mesa
Ad ioOcl th.rou1b June 9, JJl1 while supply laau
.:~·±·' . ·~ .. i~ ~.
~I II> .. '
DAILY
9-6
SUN.
9--5:30
2701 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, C~
(Harbor & Adams)
---~-------------..------J-___ _
OFF
ON ANY P.URCHASE Of $10.00 OR MORE
EXCLUDING SALE fTEMS ANO FTO ORDERS
---------------------------------------------------------1 -----... --------~---------~1 EXPIRES JUNE I , 1•1
1 COUPON PER CUSTOMER
5300 OFF ··
ON ANY PURCHASE OF $30.00 OR MORE
EXCLUDING SALE ITEMS ANO FTO ORoeRS
--------------------------------------------------------~
. ~\"l., ... l.~'i'~l.~~~s~~'-:r ,. •r1. ~ ~ ~~%~~1&.•~:·Y.·~L:v.\:t.... · . . l\'l'\•'}\•f'.V1.•'J .•.• \, .~ ~ ~~--kJ'8 ... ttl1 I. DAILY PILOT June4 1t11 -sueeRcouPQ(l-t ----. ..-----------------------.~ ~ ~~;~·;;;·1;;~-&;:~~~-,·
etc ... ._CIMT'm
~~~}1 -~ ~ ffa\fl) THIS All womt SI ... OflF THI -~~~ CAl9I NICI OM MfY CIUlsa 7 DAYS .
MesaWrde
Center .
2701 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, CA
(Harbor & Adams)
I
MESA VERDE CENTER
Albertson's Market. ............... : .. 751-4270
Bank of America ..................... 759·4476
Bllbo,Baggins ....................... 54.5·17~.
Coco s ............................. 540·965
Command Performance ............... 540-6
Dolphin Hair Fashions ................ 540-0600
EdwardsCinemaCenter .............. 979-4141
Fash'N Splash ....................... 957·1055
Hamburger Hamlet. .................. 546·7392
Ice Capades Chalet .................. 979·8880
Mesa Verde Florist. ......•........... 549·5115
~esa Verde Travel . . . . • . ............ 556·6311 .
Mione's Restaurant .................. 979·6735
Music Market .....•................• 546·0038
Photography by Jeffrey ..........•.... ~5-6786
Reubens Restaurant .•..•............ 540-9672
Southern California Optical. ..•........ 751-1185
Spa Lady •..............•........... 540·9822
Swensen's Ice Cream ..........•.•.... 556·6937
Vicki's Sunshine Factory .•..•......... ~9·3399
'1' ..A dfc C>a LOt1e•-llSlbA110MS MUST 11 , ,,_,d> MAM •oa JULY 11t-1suJ11
: CAI.&. MOW:~ ALL YOUI nAQL .-s.
: OfllM 6 DAYS SAT. 11U. l:H P.M. • ~--------------------------------------------------------..
CUA'1¥1 Wlltllle fttOTOMAftfl
lelAT9DICIMTIR
545-6716
OMI ... COLOa hit W-. ,_ c••• OfO.Atl1 ... ,...
~~\ ------------------------------, •,~~: • ~ FREE
• ~' "HELLO KITI'Y11 GIFT ~,)1 ~ ~ ....... t I ... [ .... ~~~~ •
0
• VICIO"S=~;i,:CTOIY
,,, ..sA ,_CIMT'm
: • 1711 HHloa &YD.An' I
1 COSTA ..sA, CA. t2W
I 149-Jltt
: Limit One Gift Per Coupon -Offer Expires Jone 30, 1981 ~------------------------------------------------··------~ ~~\ •-.t~--....... --------------~---, ·~\~)·~~ THED"GLPHiN ~~'!~ ~ .. ~ }-iair' F~hion~
,,_ ... -... ft0 0 \c,t-M.-;a Vuda Can~u i #t~ i,f!f.~ 2701 }-i~r'bor', Co-;Ja M.-;a
I
: BY APPOINTMENT: 5-4<>-0eOO •,.. • ,., EXPIRES 6-30-81
~------------------------------------...-------------------.. --------------------------··---,
\ . FREEi . /
OPTICA( SCllWDllYD Ill
...... 1a ..................... c..
.. .......... ,,.,., •O..Pwc.,t..er
IJ'll Y .. -'9 r. me,. ._.. ·s ... a. c.., .... ~ea. . .........._,.,, mt He,.,., Bhd.
aaf.'W, -··~ ..... ,_..,_ t-:'•'IKt'.." " c:..*'• "",.. f:IH PU;\ 751-lllS 6/1/11 •
ICEC~~ADES
CHALET
1
1
10 -f~~-Wont~QAS1'tJlffeJl.JiW'3J•tl1 A IMl~ll:.~Uftr~<ttlf~~~')A . '
I
OPIM
7DAYS
549-3073
_ _._ _____________ ._.. ____________ ,
I I I I I I
'40%.0FF.i .., :
MANY STYLES & SIDS A.LL DOOIS IN STOCK i
•-I ~iii&iiiiiiiiii.iii:iiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-=--=-=--=-=-·=-=--=-~--~-~--~-=--~--~-~--~-~--~-~--~-~--~-~--~-~--;-~--~-~--~-=--~-=--;-~-~ ii/t -~--------.-.-------------------, ONE WIK OHL Y VIDEO CASSETTES FOR SALE OR RENT
o .... 1200 A••••· --s.cll At:
• ,.,.,. • SerW . • A.lhre4 Shies . • o, .. ..,,_,.. • w,....,v ....... c.._,.o1s. ...
• Blpll.tW.. • _,.... • ......, • Hop1coldl w--AI ........ ....._ C.w ... llly ...... 11,_,.c...._
·w. .......... ,.. ................... .....
VIDEO CASSETTE RIEAMT ALS C.:-.:!.=.n
BUKER FULLEA.Q•&AIEN
PAINTS
Quality Paint • Wallcovermgs
516 West 19th St
Costa Mesa. C.llforn1a 92627
(Just West of Herbor Blvd I (714) 141·0171
SINCE 1949
~l!PAftTMl!NT STOftl!
1116 MIWPORT IOUi.IYAID .COSTA MISA
J927 MADOR ILVD!! ~OStA MISA 17141631-3293 IVa-..Me..tlMIU
1020 ........ ta a .u11tn1.stu
RENT 3 MOVIES FOR
THE PRICE OF 2! . 1..,2....,... ..... w .............................
AVAILABl.f IN OVER 800 COLORS ~ ....._.... ________________________________________________________ .. ________ ...,....... ________________ -..
LADIES Sll>RT SLEEVE
(Easy c.are)
POL VESTER PRINTS
REG. $20 s999
• --------------------------------------------------------~ SAVE-~aoocr·-.1
OFF OUI ll&ULAI LOW PllCIES
. OM PUICHASI OF A,
CASAILAMC4 FAM -Wiii nh c, .... _ Offw,... ... ,., ..
WHAT A BEAUTIFUL WAY TO SAVE Et&GYI
Save·~ -
Stain Protection
Anso IV repels liquids. Quick
removal prevents or minimizes
most stains. Protection is effec-
tive after heavy wear and re-
peated cleaning. No other fiber
has it.
Static Shock ProtKtion
Anso IV virtually ehmenates
annoying static shocks. Static
shock control 1s fully effective.
·------~-----------------~--,
•1120
INSTALLID
.:.·.;::.:::=. ' I 7"ft. ... AMMTATIC-~IOa
NOFMle • IUILT INIO ... , ...
..
:
1 1
•
.. -----e -....-. • iiiili t
12 -~ ~llfMM to COAST LIF~~ J,_~~-DAILY PILOT '-Mr 1"1 -5UP£RCOUPON .... ......__.__ _____________________ ,
fARLY SUMMER SPECIAL ...
llMIOSI
MCID•CTS ,,,.. ....... .....
MIW'POU _, COCH
CA. .. MJ3'
w..;.,. w. t:Jt.6 " .
MIA llOSI .. oeucTI ~111n11 the ANSWER TO CS 11 TE . . . THE NO. 1
SUMMER EMBARRASSMENT! SOLVE THE OtMfl'LE
Oil.EMMA!
ConttOf It 'YOURSELF with Iris eooehlftO lo _,. SElF-WRAP
eftec:trv. Mbll Cf'efM wttklh peiiieb .... a d'->fvee f#C'I
uneighMy c:ieltuhe. --It titt*ne. tones. ftrme & d-. COMPLETE INSTRUCTIONS, ~ng-.,. & umple ctwt
guide lnchAded wtth -=t\ MtA ROSE SOOY CONTOU,. KJT .
~UNCH & DINNER
HOTENTIHS
SALADS • SUNDAES
IAIBYDB.ICiHTS
TAii OUT SllVICE
111a ..... ..._.c:...r1
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'Westdqf Corners
1100 Irvine Avenue, NeWi>ort Beach
(next lo Newport Balboa Savings)
«M5-8777
Lady Madonna
Mleslon V.lelo ~all #7•-· fMllToMar60.u~lenl
Mission Viejo_ 495-2623
CfOWn v.., ... and 405 FWJ.
. -----· ~
HERIT~&E FLORIST
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50c OFF R5ULAR SIZE SALAD .... 11.11
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1
i
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IRYIMI -talT AfH Pl.Ali
At "FM C.W-ef C......md W ...
Call 552-3442
I I I I I I
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With any PurchGse of 'lCPO or More
OFFER Good Thrv June 21
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Six Styles To CllooM '"-
• No le•__.. Offw lefmed!
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. supply lasts. First Come. First Served!
------------------------------"I
5211 Ciold Ylctorim
CEILING FAN
s 199oo.... $4211.0G
24C...t~old
Offer expires 6/30/81
Fne Ught Kit wlfll C~Dll & Pwcllase
They~m h•lfwc\y Mound the WOfld. crc\wled
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home wlthoot "complc\lnt WhoarerheyHhey
Me Vietnam \'lererans and <hey still get a.lump In
their tl'lrOc\11 when <hey think of 1hose whodlcfn't •
rMk~ It ~ck. So do we
I
••
-I
1
1
14 -Mwrtlslng Su . pptementtoCbAST LIFE
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t
' \
June 3, 1fl1 I. OAIL"'Y PILOT J ., une 4, 1911 -SUPERCOU PON .
,. , '\
HoW abOul .. , a reliable mother's helper. one that comes to
your hom• regularly, eve<Y day. one that otters new Ideas on
chlld rearing and teaching. Household organ1zat1on. tlm•
management and budgeting. food, nutrition and health.
ConSumer issues and saving money. And one that's atw&Y•
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real help to homemakers ... beC8US8 It's tllled with practical
1ntormat1on that makes th• job easier and saves ttme. 01
couraa. you'll also keeP up with the new• In thl• community
and around th• world. Like moat bUtY women. you can use a
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~ewpOrt's Jloosevelt backs Reagan
Eldest soh of FDR says dad's policies 'not appropriate'
o.My ..U.. Staff~
'REAGAN NEEDS CHANCE'
Newport's Roosevelt
By JOEL C. DON
Of .. Delly ... IUff
The son of the chief architect.
of the New Deal has thrown un·
bridled support behind the
Reagan Administration, addlng that his father's Depression-en
economic pe>licles are no longer
appropriate.
"I think Congress in 1933 ...
gave my father the opportunity
to put the New Deal to work,"
said James Roosevelt, the eldest
son of Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, Wednesday. "I think the Congress today ought to al·
low President Reagan to make
his plan work too."
The 73-year-old Newport
Beach resident went as far as to
say President Reagan and FDR
s h a re m any of the same·
leadership abilities. Reagan has
assembled a "competent'' staff
of advisers and c an com·
municate well with the nation,
he said.
.t\11111esty for
~LOSE COMPmTION -The excitement of this dovvn wind
run will long be remembered by skippers Andy Rose of the
Fort Worth Boat Club on Ranger (112), Brian Wertheimer
Judge to rule on custody of-child
And Roosevelt compared
President Reagan's economic
and Political challenges to bis
father's battle with the Great
Depression and the onslaught of
the Second World War.
''I really honestly believe that
there are many things in our life
today that are not different rrom
the press for what he claims is
not accurately explaining
Reagan's economic Policies. He
took to task the notion that the
president is planning a system
which rewards the rlcb and
takes from the p00r.
Contrary to what has been
said lo the media, Reagan is not
'I think Congress should allow the
president to make his plan work'
then," he sai~. In a speech
before the Newport·Balboa
Rotary 'Club . "We have
idealism, opportunity and the
enterprise to make our country great.
"I think the country is yearn·
Ing for the kind of leadership it
ls getting from President
Reagan today."
Roosevelt took sharp aim at
"heartless," he asserted.
•'This country is not going
back (to) its reactionary way,"
he said, adding, "We do un·
derstand that people need incen·
tive.''
Roosevelt, who was a member
of Congress for six terms and
now runs a business consulting
firm , also warned that Moscow.
based propaganda is whittling
away at the free enterprise
system.
Jn an interview following bis
speech, be declined to say be bas
any criticism of President
Reagan's poJicies.
In fact, instead of challenging
some of the president's pro· pools, Roosevelt said it's be ter
to offer positive sugeestions.
"We have to look at the tal
results," the Democrat ex·
plained. "Not until a year from
now will we see thP. hroader ..... suits of what has been achieved.
"We have to keep nexible," he
added. "I want to stress what I
agree with." He said he doesn't feel like a
"disloyal Democrat" because he
believes former President Jim·
my Carter had a chance to solve
many of the nation's problema
and failed.
And he said New Deal policies
were appropriate for 1933, but
many do not apply today.
CHANGED NATION
Franklin D. Roosevelt
a illegal aliens? .
' DllMY ......... .,., ... ~
of Seattle on War Horse (115) and Gayle Post of Balboa on
Per)picllcious (114). Rose eventually won the 6-meter na·
tio ~ championship in the regatta off Newport Beach.
Task fotce also urges
doubling of immigrants
WASHINGTON CAP> -A
White House task force is rec·
ommending that President
Reagan consider granting
permanent amnesty to more
than a million illegal aliens in
the United States and that he
double the number of immi·
grants permitted lo enter the
country from Mexico and
Canada.
In a final draft of the report,
obtained by The Associated
Press Radio Network, the Prest·
dent's Task Force on Immigra·
tion and Refu1ee Policy also
suggests that Rea1an establish
an expet'imental guest worker
pro1ram.
The task force, beaded by At·
torney General William French
Smith, recommends that the
number of immigrants allowed
to enter the country each year
from Mexico and Canada be in·
creased from 20,000 to 40.000.
The repe>rt said "there is no
practical way to round up and
deport" the 3 million to 6 million
illegal aliens estimated to be in this country. As one option for
dealing with that problem, it
suggests granting perm anent res·
ident status lo about 1.2 million
Illegal aliens who could prove
they were µi the United States--
prior to Jan. l , 1980, and that
they have lived here for Uve coo·
aecutive years.
The task force also suggests
granting temporary worker
status for an additional l.S
million illegal immigrants.
A Justice Department
s pokesman said the report <See A.LIENS, Page A.%)
Fired Irvine pair
to get jobs back
Two Irvine city employees,
fired Jan. 6 after being accused of soliciting and taking gifts
from contractors, wlll be re·
instated Monday with back pay.
That decision wai announced
Wednesday afternoon by Irvine
City Manager William Woollett
Jr., acting on the recommenda·
lion of Administrative Law
Judge William F. Byrnes.
Byrnes, who presided aver an
eight-day personnel bearing for
the two inspectors in March and
April, found that the city
couldn't prove either man had
actually solicited anythlng.
And while there was evidence
each man accepted a bottle of liq·
uor, such gifts are "far from
uncommon" in the building in·
dustry and don't justify the dis·
missal of the two lnspecton,
Byrnes said in findings made
public Wednesday.
He did recommend that tbe in>
spectors -Bruce Bullard and
Arthur Peck -be suapended fOl'
10 days for taking the liquor,
which is a violation of a city
policy that Byrnes called "am·
biguocas."
Irvlne City Manaeer Woollett
adopted the recommendation
and deemed the suspension to
have taken place during the
R&gingbiill
high on pot
SALEM, Ill. CAP> -Georte
the bull, was behavlna "awful
dumed atranae" -1ticldnf out
bh tonpe, arehlna hll neck aDd •
pawlnl at tbe rrouad while
bawllnl loudlJ, bll owner said.
But wben la1I bOofpi'liata were
found next to 1ome nibbled
ma~ plenta In a putan, tt
was plain to ... wbat bad mede
tlM 1-..-.. bllll .et up. llMrlft'1 .._ .. ban•tM ~~--ae INiDG• .. ·1 ...... Claid--CIQ ..... Nkl tM
~· .. -i ............... to d rmtne -. n1u .. te11 llM ~~f---'1liild.
period between Jan. 26 and
March 11 . That is the one period
for which the men won't be paid
based on a technicality involving
the scheduling of the personnel
hearing, said Vance Simonds
Jr .• attorney for the two men.
He explained that In order to
win a delay of the personnel
hearing for that period, the in·
spectors had to forfeit any possi·
ble back pay for that time s~an.
The delay was necessary for
preparation of their case,
Simonds said.
Simonds added that he was happy with the judge's decision
and that the men would get back
pay for the remainder of-their
absence from their Jobs.
They were fired after Irvine
police investigators claimed the
men were soliciting and accept·
lng liquor, lunch and overtime
pay fJ.'Om builders in the city in
exchange for favorable and
(See GIFl'S, Pate AZ)
111111 CIAIT IUTllR
Mostly sunny today and Friday. Highs today
around 90 at beaclles and in·
land ueu. Cle•r toni&ht
with lows ran«lU from 58
to •· Cooler -Frlday with
b11b9 around 70 at beaches tomld-blnland.
A,......_ ...,..,GftdU/e·
threat,..Pftiiti ci9Ui dumag obtearre·.-....~o/ r~•....,aat#Wor· N•tofo-..rd,....._,...
,_cl.(S.,.._MJ.
11111
• •
OFlllA, lara .. l·Occupled Stnal
CAP> -.Prime Mlnhter
Menachem Be1ln aaid be ac·
cepted a requeat by E1ypU1n
Prealdent Anwar Sadat today lo
tlve more time for American
dlpJomacy to resolve the crisla
over Syria's deployment of ml.I
aUes in Lebanon.
Bealn told a Jolnt news con-
terence with Sadat after a alx-
hour summit that the two of
them had "made important
agreements, we reached serious
aolullona," but 1poloal1 d tor not dllflotln1 th1 rdult1.
"The 1oluUont, '' h• 11ld, "Will
devtloP and become known In
the proc • ot their realliaUon."
Btlln 11ld h• had acctPted
"the requtiat ol my Crltnd Prtai·
dent Sadat to 1lve more time to
Mr. Phlllp llablb to try to aoJve
tho crlalft In Lebanon, c uaed by
the Syrlana. by peaceful m ans.''
Hablb 11 the special U.S. Mid·
die Ea t tmvoy to resolve the
crl1i1. ~ apent three weeks last mon b' abuttUna between
MldeMt capital•. and is expect·
ed to return from consultations
In W aahlnaton shortly.
Jn Waahlnaton, the White
House aonounced that Beain and
Sadat had been Invited to meet
aeparately with President
Rea1an in early August.
Israel Rndio earlier quoted
E1yptian sources as sayine
Sadat wanted Begin to promise
not to escalate the tension over
Tennis star denied bid
Judge refuses to seal court file in lesbian love suit
'
AP..,._
WORD WHIZ -Pctige Pipkin, 13, of El Paso, Texas, holds
her trophy high after she won the National Spelling Bee in
Washington today. Paige, who finished second last year,
won the competition by spelling "sarcophagus." Spelling
Bee director James Wagner watch~s .
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
LOS ANGELES (AP) A
Superior Court judae who
several years earlier sealed a
court me in connection with the
Patty Hearst case has refased to
do the same in the controversial
suit filed against tennis star
Billie Jean Klhg by her former
lesbian lover.
Judge Earl F . Riiey. after a
30-minute hearing Wednesday, .
refused to issue an order to seal
the files. saying, .. I think the or-
der of that nature is uncon·
scionably broad and would be
absolutely contrary to every-
thing the court. system stands
for."
The sealing was requested by
Larry King, the tennis star's
husband and business manager.
who ts also a defendant in the
lawsuit filed April 28 by Marilyn
Barnett. a 33 -year ·old
paraplegic hairdresser. She says
sne llved with Mrs. King In the
early 19705. Mrs. King supported
her husband's request to seal the
files.
Henry Holmes Jr .. King's at-
torney. said his client has
already lost $200.000 in potential
earnings because of p11blicity
about the lawsuit. Joel Selway,
Mrs. King's attorney, claimed
the tennis star had lost $600,000
in potential earnings because of
the suit.
Selway added that the suit
and publicity surrounding it
have placed a ''tremendous
strain" on the Kings' marriage.
Ray 'stable' after jail stabbings
PETROS, Tenn. <AP) -
James Earl Ray. who pleaded
gu ilty to killing civil rights
leader Martin Luther King Jr ..
was stabbed several times in the
chest, arm and neck early today
an the law library at Brushy
Mountain Penitentiary, officials
said.
Ray. 53. serving 99 years for
King's murder 10 1968 in Mem-
phis, was taken to Oak Ridge
Hospital under heavy guard, ac-
cording to Debby Patterson, de·
puty press secretary to Gov.
Lamar Alexander.
He suffered 22 stab wounds
and also was beaten, said Dr.
Ernest L . Hendrix , who
performed the hour-long sur-
gery. He said it took 77 stitches
to close the wounds.
Ray was In stable condition.
Al I his chest wounds were
superficial, Hendrix said.
.. Perhaps the worst area was
lhe left arm. Some of the wounds
there were very deep.·'
The doctor estimated that
Ray. recuperating in a private
room in the intensive care unit,
would ''be out of here in a couple
or days unless other problems
arise."
Ray's wire, Anna Sandhu Ray,
who Uves In Knoxville.last saw
her husband on Saturday. and
went to the hospital when she
heard of the stabbing.
Four inmates, three black and
one white, were held after the
stabbing, she said. Their names
were not released. Guards also
confiscated a weapon fashioned
from a 12-inch metal brace
taken from a window frame.
The maximum-security prison
was locked down after the stab-
bing, but there were no dis-
turbances, said Warden Herman
Davis.
''These suspects will be held
for investigation," he said. "I
hJve in tum notified the Morgan
County sheriff and we have
sealed off the law library."
Davis said it would be up to
-Bomb blasts Convention Center
·s,ooo spectators miss explosion in Ana heim
A bomb exploded in a lobby at
~the Anaheim Convention Center
Wednesday n ight just five
minutes after 5,000 spectators
finished Ciling out from a re·
ligious crusade meeting.
.
Anaheim police investigators
said it was the first such ex-
plosion in the facility's 14-year
history. They said it might be
related to a sc heduled
performance Friday of the
Turkish Folk Dance Troupe.
Police spokesman Dennis Fair
said department officials believe
representatives of the Armenian
• From Page A1
r GIFTS. • •
• soeedv buildin~ inspections.
Bullard, Peck, and building
inspector Manny Linares were
· charged with misdemeanor
·counts of accepting and solicit-
ing gratuities and were all fired.
Bullard and Peck appealed
their dismissal from the city.
Linares didn't.
Deputy District Attorney Pat
Geary said Linares is to be tried
June 30 in Harbor Municipal
. Court and the trial of Bullard
end Peck is scheduled July 21 in
the same court.
He said that a decision on
whether to go ahead with the
prosecution of Bullard and Peck
'awaits the outcome of the trial
.of Linares.
Attorney Simonds has fileddef-
amation sults amounting to
more than Sl million a1ainst the
city relative to statements made
.by city officials about Bullard
~and Peck. Assistant City Manager Paul
Brady Jr. said this morning that
the whole matter involving
Bullard and Peck will probably
1 end up costing the city more
than $25,000 in legal and staff
fees.
community plan to stage a pro-
test at the performance. But he
said investicators have no direct
evidence to link the bomb ex-
plosion to the Armenian group.
Convention center manager
Tom Liegler said today ,
however, that "it might be a
very misleading statement" •to
focus on the Armenian pro·
testers as pe>Ssible suspects.
He said the Turkish dance
troop is still scheduled to
perform Friday night.
Fair said the explosion
originated in a plastic trash can
al the south lobby entrance. It
shattered six windows and sent
glass flying 150 feet.
No one was injured, be said,
but about 100 employees who
were still inside the 12 acre
facility were evacuated .
Many spectators who had at-
tended the Kenneth Copeland
Crusade were in automobiles
waiting to leave the convention
center parking lot where the ex-
plosion occurred, he said.
Another group of about 300
people had concluded an hour
earlier a meetlne of lhe
Southern California Service Sta-
tion Association, Fair said .
Damage was estimated at
Countian ·dies
in gas blast
A Cypress man transferrin1
gasoline between two containers
Wednesday evening died from
burns after the gas fumes were
ignited by the pilot light of a
nearby water heater.
Edward Asher Stein, 40, died
about 9:45 p.m. at Los Alamitos
General Hospital. He was taken
there alter firefighters dragged
him from h.is garage on
Salisbury Street, said Cypress
polict Strt. Ray Peterson.
O"ANOE COAST Diiiy Piiat CIH alfted edWttl9'ftt 1141142·1171 All othef •P•,.,....... MM»1
Thome• P Haley ""*'* ...... 0.... (--Qfflolr
Robert N WHd ........
M Thoma• Keevil ......
MlchHI P Harvey
-~Owelllor
L Kay SCtlwltz c.....rtl~
l<ennelft N Godderd Jr. ~-r:=~ Murphln• = Mtlulmaf'I
o.teeH LOO. .... ....,.. ...
MAIN Ofl'1C2
U0 WHI..., •. , ( .... M9M, CA.
Mt1I ...... hll 11 ... C.la IMU CA nta
$3,000, he said. Anaheim police
officers and members of the
Orange CQun~ Sheriff's bomb
squad searched the facility but
found no other devices, he
added.
·From Page A1
ALIENS. • •
would be sent to the White House
this month, and other sources
said Reagan ls .expected to act
on its recommeodatlona follow·
Ing his meeting next week with
Mexican Presid~nt Jose Lopez
Portillo.
"Illegal immigcatlon has
caused i1t1patience in Con1teas
and the publle-witb all migration
into the United States." the re-
port aaid, adding that some
members or Congress and the
public are especially concerned
with the ethnic makeup of the
latest waves of immigration,
which was dominated by His-
panics.
In an attempt to bring the high
level of legal and llJegal immi-
gration under control and en-
courage more diversity among
the newcomers, the task force
report puts torward a series or
options for Reagan to consider.
The president will make the
final decisions.
Tbe report recommends that
the current immigration ceiling
of 270,000 admissions a year be
retained. In ~ddiUon, spouses,
t"l\ildren and parents ot U.S.
citizens would be admitted
without regard to the ceiling,
which would add another lS0,000
newcomers annually. the report
estimates.
Currently, there is a limit or
20,000 annual admissions al-
lowed from any one country.
The task force r'commends
doubling that figure for both
Canada and Mexico, citing our
"unique relationship with our
neighbors."
Raising the ceillnJ on Mex-
icans also would J)rovlde "a
means for reducing pressures
tor illegal lmmi1ratlon from
Mexico, t he country againat
which it la most difficult to U ·
sure full endorcement or our
laws." the report statet .
The task force also su11Jest8
doing away with an lmmi1r1Uon
rule permittlng brother• and 1ia·
ter1 of U.S. citllem to enter the
country outalde the celUa1.
Some e'l,000 peoi)l• entered the
United Statet under thll
cattlOl'J tn im. and their nmn·
bera lncreaie exponentlally,
bee•UH tMJ then IM'tu 1n thelr
apoua•. ""° tn tum brias In their 1tblla11, and '° oo.
the sheriff and district attorney
general to pursue charges.
No motive was known, accord·
ing to Ronald Bishop, director of
institutional programs for the
Correction Department.
•·Ray was in the general
prison population and had no
known problems with the sus·
pects." he said.
The law library is accessible
to entire population, he added.
Armed guards were stationed
outside the hospital, 15 mil«;s
from the prison, Ms. Pattersdn
said.
Barbara Washburn, a hospital
spokeswoman, said Ray came
into the emergency department,
"was evaluated as having multi·
pie stab wounds which h,e re-
ceived at the prison" and sent
into surgery
Ray was a fugitive from a
Missouri prison at the time King
was slain April 4, 1968. He
pleaded guilty to the Jlaying in
March 1969, after his-arrest in
London, England, in return tor a
99-year sentence. There was no
testimony at his trial, only the
statement by the prosecution
outlining evidence against him.
He later recanted and has
been tryinl periodically ever
slnce to win a new trial or hear-
ing in the case.
He escaped for 54 ~ hours in
June 1977 from the east Ten-
nessee prison and trieCI to
escape on at least three other OC·
casrns.
Elec tion &8sure d?
LAS VEGAS <AP) :-'"' Roy
Lee Williams' et~ction today
to a full live-year term aa
president of the Teamsters was
considered inevitable despite his
troubles with Che Justice Depart·
ment and a Senate subcommit-
tee.
Holmes said scrutiny by the
press of future depositions or
factual information about King's
finances and relationship with
Mrs. King could "ruin hi.s
career, marriage and personal
life ."
But the judge contended,
"These people are in the public
eye and while people in the
public eye would like to have
certain of their actions kept
private, I understand that is pre-
cisely the kind or people the
public wants to know about "
Ms. Barnett said she began
living with Mrs. King, who was
married at the time, in 1972 and
that Mrs. King promised to take
care'bf her financial needs in re
turn for her services as a com-
panion and busmess associate.
Mrs. Barnett c laims Mrs
King reneged on a promise to
provide her lifeli me financial
Jpport as well as the Malibu
house where Ms. Barnett stJll
lives.
She is suing for that support
and house under California's so
called palimony precedent un
der which former singer
Michelle Triola Marvin was al
low~d to sue actor Lee Marvin
for ' hall of his earnings during
the period they lived together.
In a recent news conference,
Mrs. Kin$ admitted the rela·
tionship w1th Ms. Barnett but de·
nied she ever promised anything
to her. The Kings have filed a
countersuit to oust Ms. Barnett
from the house
The Kings' lawyers based
their request to seal the file on
an order made by Judee Riley
several years ago. Riley sealed
the probate file of the late
William Randolph Hearst at the
request of the Hearst family,
which said details of their
wealth would constitute a "hit
list."
His order, later lifted. was
made at the ti me Hearst's
granddaughter, Patty Hearst
Shaw, was kidnapped and held
by the Symbionese Liberation
Army.
But Riley said he made that
order because of the overriding
consideration of "the danger of
the lives or the Hearst family."
He said he saw no such danger
to.the Kings.
From Page A1
BABY •.•
McMillan also scheduled a
June 30 hearing at which lime
social workers will recommend
a formal plan ro ... 'Jhe irifant's-
welfare.
sboutd there be opposition to
the p,an, further court proceed-
ings could be held, said Depllty
County Counsel Barbara Evans,
who represented the social
services department in the hear·
ing.
Syria's deployment or missiles
In Lebanon
Begln made no substantive
comment when be emerged
from the mornln& session of the
s~ummlt. and Sadal met alone
with a iroup of onrans who pre.
sented him with a request to be
allowed to stay In the area on
the southern tip or the Sinai
Penins ula after Israel 's
withdrawal next April.
Egypt has refused such re
quests in the past, citing the
Camp David peace treaty's re
quirement for all Israelis to
leave the Sinai Peninsula.
After lhe morning s ummit
session, Begin brought up the
strange situation res ulting from
Israeli election laws that forbid
showint: him on telev1s1on dur
i ng lhe four weeks before
Is rael's June 30 national yotlng
for Parliament
''It's illogical and ridicuJous
that viewers around the world
can see the summit and the peo
pie of Israel will not." Begin told
reporters.
More than 300 JOurnahsts are
covering the Ofira summit but
the cameram en for li.rael
Television were the only ones
trytng to keep Begin out of the
picture
Is raeli troops routed pro-
testers opposed to their coun-
try's withdrawal from Stnat who
managed to demonstrate on the
beach a few minutes after Sadat
and Begin started their summit
Train, a uto
incid e nt hurts
mom, 2 kids
With their new car stalled on
the railroad tracks in Anaheim
Wednesda y and an Amtrak
passenger train barreling do\\n
on them. the mother and her two
children tried to run for safety .
Fwarn Fambyal , 35. or
Garden Grove. her 11 year-old
daughter Aruna and 8·year·old
son Diwker crawled out or the
car and ran a way from the
train
Then the tram hit the car And
the car hit them
Anaheim Police spokesman
Dennis Fair s aid the two
children were taken to UC Irvine
Medical Center, where they are
both in the intensive care ward
todav
A hos pital spokesman said
Aruna is an critical condition and
Oiwker 1s tn good condition.
Both are suffering with multiple
inJunes.
Fair said the accident oc-
curred at th~ Santa Fe Railroad
crossing at Ball Road west of
Lewis Street.
Crisis d ecla r e d
in st a te colleges
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> Legislative proposals to shift
more funding for the California
State University and Colleges to
the backs of students have left
the nation's largest college
system in a "crisis situation,"
its chancellor has said.
Separate proposals before
senate and assembly commit-
tees would cut the 1981-82 CSUC
budget for ils 19 campuses by up
to $32.6 milt.ion while increasing
student fees from about $200 to
as much as $350 a year, Dttmke
told trustees during a meeting
Wednesday at San Francisco
State University
Lena Horne, Left. visits with Coretta King,
center. and Jackie Onassis on the atage of New
York's Nederlander Theater after a
performance of "Lena Horne, the Lady and Her
Music "
Boos quencMd
by 82 kegs
If they won 't lend you an
ear, or give you a cheer,
hand them a beer.
That was Republican Gov.
J ames Thompson's solution
after he took the podium at a
statehow;e AFL·CIO rally in
Springfield, Ill. and was
greeted with boos for his al
legedly anti·labor bias.
Thompson cooled the op-
position by anviling the
throng to the governor's
mansion for a cold one.
James Skilbeck , a
Thompson press aide. said
calls were placed to
Thompson's wife, Jayne,
asking permission to invite
"a few thousand c lose
friends over for a party on
the lawn."
Permission granted, the
governor's re-election com·
mittee placed a rush order
for 82 16-gallon kegs at $26.25
per keg 6ne thousand pairs
of elbows s howed. ready to
be bent.
They s pent most of the
time chattibg about work,
asking Thompson for his
autograph and trying to stay
cool. The only problem was
the mansion's plumbing,
which couldn't handle the
crowd. After an hour. more
than a dozen portable toilets
were trucked in.
Former Border Patrol
chief Harton Carter, who bas
directed National Rifle As·
sociation activities s ince
1977 , was elected to an un·
precedented five.year term
as the NRA's executive vice
president.
Nature photographer Ansel
Adams, who has scaled the
peaks and trails in Yosemite
National Park. is facing
ano~her uphill climb : he's
teadrng a campaign to oust
Interior Secretary James
Watt.
"This man is halting 100
years of growth of the na-
tional park system, halting
two decades of progress in
protecting areas near major
cities, .. says Adams, in-
terviewed in People
magazine.
The Sierra Club. acting on
Adams' suggestion, has col·
lected more than 80.000
signatures in five weeks on a
petition calling for Watt's re·
moval.
With her master 's degree
in hand and her divorce on
the way, Joan
Kennedy is
hunting for a
television job
on her way to
the "whole
new life" she
sought when
she separated
from Sen .
Edward M. Kennedy K e n a e d y
three years ago.
"l don't have a job," Mrs.
Kennedy said after Lesley
College presented her the
degree while her estranged
husband and their children
watched. "I'm looking for a
job in the m edium of
television."
Lesley, a Cambridge,
Mass., school that prepares
women for careers in educa·
lion, awarded the 45-year-old
accomplished pianist a
master's degree in educa·
tion . Sbe expected to
specialize in music.
It may be time for the
While House to order a new
batch o f presidential
cufflinks -the kind handed
out to the Democrats when
P r esident Reagan wants
some help on Capitol Hill.
Reagan is making it clear
that he may try to win ap-
prov al of his tax cut plan by
taking the same tack used
when Democratic leaders in
Congress balked at support·
ing his budget plan.
The cufflinks, along with
tickPts to the presidential
box at the John F. Kennedy
Center for the Performing
Arts, became symbols, if not
fa ctors, i n Reagan 's
courts hip of conservative
Democrats whose s upport
helped him win approval of
reduced budget increases.
Feminist ISeUy Friedan
s avs women must stop try·
ing to be
"superwom·
en" in their
career~ just
a s m e n
should give
up the hard·
drlvlnc
behavior that
she says can
shorten their Friedan lives.
Ms . Friedan also told
Smith College graduates that
the women's movement must
include men in the struggle
for equal employment op·
portunity.
"It is going to be more and
more possible to get quality
or life clauses into union con·
tracts and equal opportunity
laws -but not by women
alone," said Ms. Friedan,
herself a 1942 alumna of the
college.
Dow.npo11r floods Texas
L ouisiana also dren ched ; more rain fore cast for today
wcutal f orecast
Petclly loW cloucb 1.ie lofli9fll end
eerly Frld9y. Olherwl .. '"""' end cooler Frldev.
Co.stal -51, tnl-•S. Coestal lllgl! 70, lnl-90. llsewllere, llvt>I varlel>le winds
night -,._,.no -.rs becoming llfftlerly I to U knots wltll 1 to 3-fool
wlM wows. One to l-fllOI Wftlerly
-ell tfvOUOll loflkltll
U.S.. summary
L.ocelly -.,, rllft '9..-noocllno
In Ille ~n pei1s of Tuu and Lovlsleno Hrly todoY. wllll• rein .i .. fell from ArllM!us to tlle Greet
Plelns, -from the Eett Coest to
Ille OllleVol...,_
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forecast ~ tw ti. f'lelns. Illa
lower Mlal•lppj llelley, Ille Ten-
llHSH VOiiey, the -Ohio llelley ..... tho All...Uc GdeA.
Tempereturn •round IN neUOll el
IT\ldnlgl!t reflglld from 42 In 8\llte,
Mont., '°'°et Lllk•Alr Force 8•M In Phoenix.
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What dllil't you like? Call the number below and
your inetaaae w1U be recorded, trantcribtd and
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tOpl ... box contribUton muat mtlude Uaelr
name •d te~phooe number fM verificatlon. No
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Ol'ange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thureday. June 4, 1981 H/F Al
Coast citizens on j11J!y
19 members of Grand Jury to take office July 1
Eight Oranae Coaat resident.
are amona the UI persona who
have been selected by random
drawing to '&erve on the 1981·82
Orange County Grand Jury.
Those residents include
Robert W. Houseal, 58, retired,
Huntington Beach, Phyllis B.
Journ1gan, 57, retired, Hunt·
ington Beach; Frances E. Park,
60, retired, Huntington Beach;
Sonja Richardsqn, 50, med.la as·
sis Lant, Huntington Beach ;
Howard Loudon, 66, retired.
Laguna Niguel; Kent ¥oore, 41,
work experience coordinator,
Corona del Mar ; Martha
Newkirt, community service
director, Newport Beach, and
Euaenle Wenke, homemaker,
Corona del Mar.
Alao serving on the jury,
which will take ofllce July l , will
be Rothelle Batnes, 42. financial
admtQ.istrator, Santa Ana; Keith
BoUlot, 63, retired, Santa Ana;
George Hender, no age listed,
retired. Garden Grove; Arman·
do Perez, 57, retired, Garden
Grove; Kathlen Barrlah. 39.
homemaker, Villa Park, and
William Braz, 60, retired, Yorba
Linda. .
Also, Elizabeth Graham. 50,
homemaker and bookkeeper, La
Habra; Rodney Coulson, 74, re·
tired, Anaheim; Jerome Hersch,
65, retired, Anaheim; Beverly
Payne. 44,_ interior desianer.
Buena Park, and Bert Wllllams,
66, teacher and administrator,
Orange.
Eleven persons not aelected
from the pool of 30 )lomlnees will
serve as alternate m embers of
the jury.
The grand jury 1' often called
the watchdog or county govern·
ment. The jury lnveatigatH and
issues reports on •arious iuuea
and from time to time is used by
the county District Attorney'"S
Office to hear testimony in sup-
port or criminal indlctmenta.
Jurors serve without pay for
one· year terms
Arthur Laffer speech due
Co ntroversial economist slated at fund-raiser
By O.C. ~USTINGS
Of .. Dlllly P'l• IUH
Economist Arthur Laffer will
be the speaker Monday at a
fund -raiser for Rep . Dan
Lungre n , the Republican
lawmaker who represents much
of western Orange County.
The USC professor is the
author of the Laffer Curve, an
economic theory at the heart of
the Kemp-Roth tax cut proposal.
Monday's dinner will be at the
Golden Sails Inn in Long Beach.
For details, call 438·9931. Tickets
are $100 per person.
* * * HARRIETT WI EDER, who
represents the 2nd District on
the Orange County Board of
Supervisors, will be the speaker
Friday at gra duati o n
ceremonies for the 51st Basic
Peace Officers Recruit Class at
Golden West College in Hunt·
lngton Beach.
Seventeen oHicers will be
graduating duri ng the
ceremonies, which begin at 3
p.m . The public is invited.
• * * THE CITY OF Westminster
will be the host Friday when of.
ficials from cities in West
Orange County's 7lst Assembly
district gather for breakfast.
Democratic Assemblyman
Chet Wray of the 7lst District
will be on hand to discuss pro·
blems -of mutual in terest with
mayors. councilmen and city
managers.
Westminster Mayor Kathy
8ucholz h as planned the
breakfast for 7:30 a .m . at the
Westminster Community
Center. * * • REP. ROBERT BADHAM, R·
Newport Beach, has been named
a "taxpayers best friend" for
the second session of the 96th
Congress by the National Tax·
payers Un ion , according to
George E. Snyder, president of
the organization.
Snyder saiQ Badham was one
of 45 members of Congress cited
for voting consistently to reduce
government spending in 1980.
County picks HSA director
Larry Leaman, interim direc·
tor of Orange County govern·
ment's Human Services Agency,
has .been permanently appointed
to the position.
terim director of the HSA,
Leaman was director of the coun·
ty Community Services Agency.
the smallest of the county's um·
brella superagencies in which
several departments are con·
solidaled under a sin gle ad·
ministrative structure.
Leaman succeeds. Margaret
Grier. who resigned in March to
pursue pr ivate business in
terests.
Leaman takes over the agency
al a time when its method ot
operation is being questioned by
the county Grand Jury.
Leaman, a county employee
since 1963, will be paid $53,622,
equal to the salary he has been
earning since he received the in·
terim appointment.
The coun ty Board of
Supervisors selected Leaman by
unanimous vote after interview·
ing five finalists.
Others were Bert Scott, county
personnel director; Robert
Huntley county employee rela·
lions director; Sara Walker,
HSA assistant director for ad·
ministration, and Randall
Bacon, deputy administrator for
hu!llan serviees in San Diego
County.
Sunbelt gaining;
older cities lose
Leaman a nd Huntley ,
however, were not among the
three top choices or a screening
committee headed by county Ad·
ministrative Officer Robert
Thomas.
Leaman joined the county in
1963 as a purchasing agent.
Through the years, he has
worked for the former Harbors,
Beaches and Parks Department
and the Environmental Manage·
ment Agency.
Prior to being appointed in·
Tour OOUT8e set
WASHINGTON <AP) -Led
by Anchorage in oil-rich Alaska,
three U.S. cities that were
already pretty big in 1970 more
than doubled their size by 1980:
the Census Bureau reported.
In all, 13 o( the nation's cities
over 100,000 gained at least 50
percent 1'1 the decade, most of
them in the Sun Belt states of
the South and West.
The six cities over one miJlion
population in 1970 were the same
last year, with New York lead·
ing the way at 7.9 million and
Chicago. Los Angeles and
Philadelphia still second, third
and fourth on the list.
Detroit slipped from fifth to
sixt h , Its place taken by
Houston. The Texas city and Los
Angeles were the only ones or
the si-x to gain population during
the decade, the report said.
The Cens us Bureau reported
the big loser:s last month were
the Midwest and Northeast in·
dustralned centers of St. Louis.
Cleveland. Detroit and Buffalo,
N. Y.. all suffering population
declines of 20 percent or more.
The three moderately big
cities that more than doubled in
population from 1970 to 1980
were Anchorage. which grew 260
percent to 173,017 ; Mesa, Ariz.
which gained 142 percent to
152,453, and Aurora, Colo., which
grew 112 percent to 158,588.
Like many of the other big
gainers. Mesa and Aurora are
near the outskirts of even bigger
cities: Phoenix and Denver.
at Orange CtHUt
Orange Coast College is offer·
ing a three·part lecture series
this summer to better acquaint
visitors, immigrants and natives
to California.
Valor medal design picked
Titled ·'Seeing California for
the First Time," the series will
meet on successive Tuesday
evenings, starting June 16, al
7:30 p.m. In Room 111 of OCC's
Social Science Building.
There is no charge ror the lee·
lures and registration will be
conducted at the door.
Graphic designer Tom Grogg
of Newport Beach has been
chosen winner or an Orange
County-sponsored contest to de·
sign a medal of valor.
Grogg, 33, will be honored
Tuesday by the county Board of
Supervisors for his winning de'
sign of a hand reaching out with
the word "valor" inscribed
above it.
If you've put aside YoUr decorating dreams for a lovell.,
llvlng room until YoU find a reel v.iue ... here't the
anawer to thoM dreams. ell the finer qu.llty f .. tur98 uaually found In 110fas regularty aetling for saoo.oo to
1800.00 ... now only
s59900 ! !
90" IQfM In c1'0l<:e of •tyl•• and OOV8r9 In •
wla• Mtectlon or cotcn. 2 wffka only.
A.J.GA~~EJT -f U
HOW.I : Moft. ttwu T"ws. 10 •·"'· t9 I'·"'· '9t. 10 e .m, .. I p.fft. aat. 10 a,"', le 1:80 p.M.
A seven ·me mber judging
panel named other finalists as :
Michael Rodgers of Mission Vie·
jo, second; Randy Brown of La
Habra , third ; Lowell
McCracken Jr. of Los Alamitos.
fourth, and Julia Clueckauf of
Huntington Beach, fifth.
The medal of valor is to be
awarded to county residents who
perforpi acts of heroism in the
public interest.
Hll MAllOl IL¥0,
COSTAMISA 646-HHf
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/111ursday, June 4, 1981
uspect qJiizzed.,-
eleased in Atlanta
· Tovnado stirs
'looter Watch'
ATLANTA (AP) -A black
n whn was questioned ror
tly 12 hours a bout some of
alayinga of 28 young blacks
d then was released today de·
d any connection with the
ase but said, "I still think J am
prime suspect,"
The 23-year·old man said he as given a poty1raph test when e was questioned by Atlanta
lice Wednesday night and
rly today and otricers had
'arched his home and car.
''I have nothing to hide.'' he
said at a news conference ln his
northwest Atlanta home. but he ~ded he believes police still
consider him "a prime suspect."
He invited reporters to the con-
ference on the condition they not
use his name.
I Long-range mini/,e
development O~'d
WASHINGTON <AP> -The Reagan administration has
authorized the Navy to build its
new cruise missiles with the
long-range capability to strike
deep Inside the Soviet Union, the
Washington Star reported today.
The newspaper quoted uniden·
tified senior Navy officials as
sayhrg the Navy hopes to have
the first of the missiles. which
can carry nuclear warheads, on
submarines and surface vessels
by mid-1982. with full deploy·
ment by 1985.
WOOffi [[[l
Auto aala gain·
from May, 1980
DETROIT (AP) -Despite
high interest rates and price In·
creases, saleJS by the five major
U .$. automaker• were up 9.3
percent last month from May
1980, company reporta lndlcated.
But analysts weren't impressed.
Imported ca r 1ale1,
meanwhile, captured 28.4 per·
cent or the total market 1n May,
up a fraction from the 1ame
month a year agp but down
slightly from April.
Oil glm w sli.M
gmoline pricel?
NEW YORK <AP)
American motorists heartened
by recent reports of a glut on the
oil market have some more good
~ews -several oil producers re-
portedly have decided to slash
prices, likely meaning lower
costs at the gasoline pump.
Wednesday's reported reduc-
tions by two members or the
Organization of Petroleum Ex·
porting Countries and one
American producer came on the
heels of a $4 per barrel cut on
Mexican heavy oil the day
before and were expected to
signal more crude oil price cuts.
Damage to Cana.da
prison 'massive'
MATSQUI, British Columbia
<AP ) Prisoners were Ii ving
in makeshift tent shelters today
and eating "spartan meals" of
sandwiches and bolled eggs
arter guards and soldiers
quelled a riot by 288 inmates
that Inflicted ·•massive"'
damage to a federal prison.
The warden of the medium-
security prison said Wednesday
it may take days to identify the
ringleaders among the inmates
who rioted for more than 19
hours.
Strike in Poland?
WARSAW, Poland <AP> -A
Solidarity union chapter,
angered over the explanation of-
fered by authorities for the beat·
ing of three unionists last
March, threatened today to
atage regional warning and
general strikes If the matter is
not resolved by Wednesday,
Warsaw Radio reported.
Iran suiJ iooighed
WASHING TON (AP) -The
Reagan administration has
asked the U.S. Supreme Court to
promptly reject a suit alleging
that then-President Jimmy
Carter lacked authority to freeze
Iranian assets in retaliation for
the seizure of the hostages. The
court was expected to consider
the suit at its closed conference
today.
}etll t,o Yenezuela?
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
Venezuelan government bas
shown interest in buying F-16 jet
fighters from the United States
and the Reagan administration
is expected to approve such a
sale if a formal request is re·
cei ved. U.S. officials said.
SFA /s June Handbag Event
25% to 40% off
Original Prices!
Originally '25 to 172, now 14.95 to 53.95.
•Shoulder bags, totes, body bags, satchels, clutches,
envelopes and more ... some even impotted from Italy.
A ..........
POA~IT IN CL.A Y -Statue of . Lady Diana Spencer,
draped m a 4amp cloth to keep the clay wet, ii given final
inspection by Muriel Pearson before molding. A plaster cast
will be made from which a wax statue will be taken. It will
then join the statue of her fiance Prince Charles in the Lon-
don gallery of Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum shortly
before the couple's marriage in July.
Reagan vows fight
for tax cut plan
WASHINGTON <AP> -Pledg-
ing a fight for its three-year tax-
cut plan and claiming the votes
to win, the Reagan administra·
tion is rejecting a two·year. lS
percent Democratic alternative
that would target extra relief toward lower· and middle·
Income Cami lies.
President Reagan "is com·
milted to a three-year tax cut
and will make a fight for it,"
said Treasury Secretary Donald
T. Regan, signaling an apparent
end to efforts to negotiate a com·
promise with congressional
Democrats. "We think we have
the votes."
Whether the administration
has victory in its grasp could be
determined by the end of the
day . The 47 ·member
Conservative Democratic
Forum was meeting today to
discuss whether to side with the
president or the Democratic
leadership. On a crucial budget
vote earlier in the year. most of
the f'roup went with Reagan. The alternative proposed
Wednesday by Democrats on the
House Ways and Means Com·
mittee is not acceptable to
Reagan, "because it is a two·
year program and be wants a
three-year blll," Regan said.
"And it's only a lS percent cut,"
compared with the 30 percent re·
ductlon recommended by the ad-
ministration.
The Democrats ' s ubstitute
would cut taxes by $41 billion
during the budget year that
starts Oct. 1, compared with SS4
billion in the president's pro·
gram. The smaller lax cut would
reduce the federal deficit by an
estimated $10 billion.
The new Democratic plan Is a
broad outline that Ways and
Means Chairman Dan
Rostenkowski, D·Ill., wants to
use as ihe basis for writing a
tax-cut bill. The committee,
already assured the support of
most Democrats in the House,
will begin filling in the blanks
next week.
All 21 committee Democrats who attended the meeting
Wednesday favored
Rostenkowski's proposal. Absent
were Rep. William Cotter. D·
Conn., who is ill, and Rep. Kent
Hance. D-Texas.
The president's tax plan is in
two simple parts: a 10 percent
cut in personal lax rates In each
of three straight years with the
same reduction going to rich and
poor alike; and for business.
faster write-offs of expenditures
for plant and machinery.
The Democratic proposal con·
tains more than a dozen parts,
but there is no assurance the
committee will include them all
in its bill.
• In summer's best fabrics-linen, canvas,
glazed cotton, chintz, netting and ribbon as
well as straw and jute Some trimmed
with vinyl, others with leather.
• All sales final. No mail or
phone orders, please
• Find them now! -in
Handbag Collections
... where we-are all
the thinss you.are.
ATHENIA
Reg. $636 .50
SALE s499so
G3
BROILMASTER
on 48" post
L ist
$464.50
SA~E
s39550
DENVER <AP) -National
Guardsmen were posted by the
governor to watch tor looters to.
day after violent storms and al
least a dozen tornadoes tore
roof• olf buildings, cut houses in
two and scattered trees. killing one person ahd injuring at least
42 others.
The twisters sliced through a
30-mile arc Wednesday, leaving
the most·damage in the Denver
suburb of Thornton, where the 42
were Injured. The one ratallty
was a woman in another part of
the state who was hit by light. nlng.
Gov. l\ichard Lamm declarea
a "disaster emergency" and as-
signed National Guard troops to
Thornton after some looting was
reported, said Lamm's press
secretary, Sue O'Brien. Lamm
planned to fly over the area lo·
day, she said.
Extra police officers were sta-
tioned in southwest
neighborhoods of Denver to dis·
courage looting.
"It started way up in the air
and then all kinds of clouds
gathered and it came down
fast." said Peter Baker. who
was standing in his Thornton
yard when the tornado bit. "We
could see it moving stratght at
us across the roofs of the houses.
''Then we ran into t he
neighbor's house and huddled in
a corner. When the roof starting
coming off, I prayed lo God for my life." ·
Baker's house was cut in two
by the twister. Across the street,
a two·ton camper was thrown 10
~eel by the wind and flipped onto
its roof. A light aluminum boat
next to where the camper had
been parked was untouched.
A spokeswoman for Valley
View Hospital, Sonia Weiss said
Kim Franck. 18, of Tho,.'.nton,
was in critical condition with
multiple fractures. Ms. Weiss
said the hospital treated 33
tornado victims for minor in-
juries.
Several others were treated by other hospitals.
Mary McCarthy , 21 , of
Wharton, N.J ., was killed after
being hit by lightning near
Brainard Lake about 50 miles
northwest of Denver, and two
other women with her were in·
jured, officials said. Although no
tornadoes were reported in the
area, it was bit by heavy rain.
The first twisters touched
down in the Lakewood suburb
and at a busy southwest Denver
intersection, scattering trees
and broken glass and destroying
the roof of an apartment com-
plex. Some cases of looting were
reP_Orted ~here, prompting local
pohce to tighten security.
Minor injuries were reported
from several car accidents.
Then the twisters skipped and
churned for about 1 1~ hours hit·
ting in Thornton, Northgienn.
Fort Lupton, near Platteville
and out into the farm land
northeast of the city.
Heavy rains and golf ball-size
hail in Thornton forced some
creeks over their banks, and
scattered e l ectrical a n d
Re g . $864.50
Reg. $756.50
•••••••••••••••••••••coupon•••••••••••••••••••• • • • • : Bring in this coupon and we'll give you : • •
telephone outa1es were re·
ported.
No damage estimates were
available.
Tbe worst damage was report-
ed at the D&B Shopping Center
In northeast Thornton. Roofs
were tom off the center and a
nearby bank, and windows were
blown out or an apartment bulld-
lnl(.
Daughter
of mayor
suicide?
MINNEAPOLIS <AP> -
Mayor Donald Fraser's 26-year-
old daughter, who relatives say
may have blamed herself for the
death of her young sister 15
years ago, has been found dead
in her Minneapolis apartment. ~ois M. Fr~se~ "was strug·
ghng to cope with at <depression>
and it just didn't work." said
Fraser.
He and his brother. John,
found Ms. Fraser's body jn her
Minneapolis apartment Wednes·
day evening an.er learning she
had not reported for work at a
temporary clerical·belp agency
where she was employed.
Police and the Hennepin Coun·
ty medical examiner's office
have not ruled on the cause of
death pending the results of an
autopsy, but a police spokesman
said there were no signs of foul
play.
In addition, her 30-year·old
brother. Tom. told the Min·
neapolis Tribune that a
crumbled suicide note was found
in a wastebasket.
"The substance of it <the note)
was that she loved us all and
that she didn't want to cause us
any suffering, but she felt that
dying may be the best way."
Tom Fraser was quoted in the
Tribune as saying. The note was
turned over to police.
He added that his father
believed Lois died less than 24
hours before her body was dis·
covered.
Fraser said his daughter had
been receiving help recently
from the outpatient clinic at
Hennepin County Medical
Center in Minneapolis.
She was one of six children
born to Donald and Arvonne
Fraser. A sister. Anne. died in
1966 at the age of 8 when she was
hit by a car on her way home
from school.
Fraser said Lois may have
blamed herself for Anne's death.
since Lois was responsible for
walking her younger sister
home.
"She was supposed to have
waited for Annie at school. but
she didn't on the day Annie was
killed," the mayor said. "The
death of her sister affected Lois.
We always worried about that.
We tried to work with her on
that, but there was some reason
to think we didn't succeed."
•
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Town & Country Center-777 So. Main St., Suite 102 Orange, CA. 92668
South Coait Plaza
3333 BrlstOI St. Costa Mesa. CA 92626
(71•> 751-1313 (71•> S.2-017•
Open 10 ·I
"•
Orange Coast DAILY PllOTlThursday, June•. 1981
I 2
DEAR PAT DUNN: I have received my
federal tax refund check but can't cash it
since my wife and I are separated and she re-
fuses lo endorse it llow can I get my money'!
K T . Newport Beach
The Internal Revenue Service says it will
be necessary for the two spouses to reach an
agreement and both endorse the relond as a
new check cannot be issued. The reason for
this is that since both parties are liable for
any taxes due, then both parties have a joint
claim on any refund lo which they are en-
titled. Consult your attorney about this situa-
tion immediately.
Bankmptcy studied
DEAR PAT DUNN · I have almost de·
cided lo declare bankruptcy. Can you refer
me to a good book on this subject, and tell me
right away if spou!>al support slllJ has to be
paid if 1 do declare bankruptcy Also. how
about my ex's attorney's fees and court costs
which I was ordered to pay
H E., Santa Ana
Check any large bookstore for a copy of
''Bankruptcy: Do It Yourself," by Janice
Kosel, attome}. Thii. Nolo Press book Is a
complete kit with all the forms and lastruc·
Uont you need to do your own bankruptcy. It
also includes information on bow to t'ake ad·
vantage or the new, more generous federal
Bankrupt~y Act.
As for your other question, spousal sup·
port is not dlscbargeable In bankruptcy. Your
former spouse's attorney's fees and court
costs are dischargeable. Also, in some sltua·
tions, ll the divorce decree ordered you to
pay debts incurred during marriage, you
may have a legal obligation to your former
spouse to do so -even after bankruptcy. It
all depends on whether your obligation to pay
debts is either a kind of (non·dJschargeable>
bidden support to your spouse or, simply a
(dlscbargeable> part of a division of your
marilal property and debts. This can be a
pretty technical quesUon so you should check
witb an attorney.
Leg pulled?
DEAR PAT DUNN . I am very interested
in acrobatics and told m y uncle, who sells life
insurance, that l thought it would be run to be
a professional acrobat when I get older. He
laughed and said I'd better not do that
because then he couldn't sell me any life in·
surance. He said acrobats are always turned
down for insurance Is he kidding me?
L.R .. Costa Mesa
Maybe just pulling your leg a Uttle. Tbe
American Council ol Life Insurance told AYS
that it's a rare person who can't purchase a
life insurance polJcy today -If be or she
wants one. Nearly all applications for Ute ln·
surance are acceptable, and ol the 3 percent
that aren't, lt's usually because of serious
health problems or a particularly hazardous
Job. The councll advlses you not to worry Qb·
less yoa end up as a gross ly overweight
acrobat with a trick knee.
Records protect,ed
DEAR PAT DUNN : t was hospitalized
recentl~d was amazed to see how much
patient . ormation is being computerized.
How c a patient know with any certaint,r
that peraonal medical information will not be
provided to sources he does oot authorize?
R.J ., Cost.a Mesa
This consUtuUonal right to privacy ls be·
la1 iurUiier protected by state law <AB 48t)
tltat coeem.1 acceHlbUlly of medical rec·
orda. U requires a patleat's wrl&tea
aatllortution for any perlGll or orgaabatloa
to oMalD or dlsclOM medical lillormatloa re·
laUag to that patient, wttlt ~lfied excep·
tioH. The release form apedllM wt.o laH ac·
ces• aDd provides Pf'a<let for .WaU-1.
ORCHID CELEBRATION
at
DAViD J. PHILLIPS
BUICK·PONTIAC·MAZDA
WESTERN DAY,
Sat, June 6th
· will feature:
•HOT.DOGS
•BEANS
•T-SHIRTS
(whlle they IHt)
•SQUARE
DANCERS
, ....
JUNE 4th THRU 7th
• GIANT ANNIVERSARY CAKE
•PUNCH
•BALLOONS
•ORCHIDS
• MILEAGE CONTEST*
*Guess how far an x·body will
go on one tank of gas!
•300 Prize
OVER 30 CARS
SUNBIRDS
REGALS
GRAND PRIXa
LE MANS
•BLUE GRASS
BAND t~!·
IN ORCHID SQUARE FOR SALE
AT UNBELIEVABLE PRICES.
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Besides free services, there are our high
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REALVALU S
on items from applesauce to zippers
are advertised every day in the
NO-SHOW -An ar-
rest warrant bas
been issued in Santa
Barbara for actor
Timothy Bottoms
following his failure
to appear at a hear·
ing in bis divorce
case. Bottoms played
a student in the film,
"The Paper Chase."
-
.a...·-~
"""'" ""''\~ ""' ... '~·--~ \.l \w'\.•l\.'"4'"''''''·· \ -
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/T'huraday, June 4, 1981 s
Man h:etd ·in ~evenge canipaig
Motorist harassed for. 4 months by scurrilous note~ on cars
CORONA (AP) -For four frisbta·
lo& months, Jeffrey Hart baa been au~
Jected to a bi.lam campa.lp ol reven1e
-anonymowa notes and phone calla to
nel1bbors -wblcb police aay may Item
from a freeway incident be ctoean't re·
call.
Hart, a lile worker lo this Riverside
County town, says nei1bbon have been
told be is a child molester. Some car
owners elsewhere have found attached
to their wlndableld wipers Oyen imply·
log be ls a homosexual. Other car
owners have found Oyen saylq be vm·
dallied cars in the area.
"It didn't affect me too much because
there are all kinds of Idiots out there,"
Hart said. "But I was worried for my
family."
Hart's ordeal may have come to an
end Friday when the Corona police. ar·
rested David Sparks, 25, of Rlven1de,
for investigation of criminal libel in
connection with a revenge campaign
triggered by an incident in February in
which Hart was supposed to have cut in
front of Sparks on a local freeway.
Corona police detective Les Scott said
Sparks, a Riverside city engineerinl
aide, noted the license plate of the vehi·
cle and traced it through the Depart·
ment of Motor Vehicle•, dec1din1 that
Hart wu the driver of the company.
owned vehicle. Then, the campa11n
be1an1 ,
In February, the ownert of cars
parked in aboppln1 centera in Corona
and Riverside found a flyer under their
windshield wipers. The unsigned flyer
said: "I've alway• wondered what kind
of fa11ot would park a vehicle like this?
So tell me -what kind of fa11ot are
you?" '
The flyer listed Hart'• name, address
and telephone number.
Another flyer was posted on bulletin
boards in several public places, 1ccord-
tn1 to Scott. The notice, titled "Gay
Nl1btline," listed Hart's name, address
and phone number.
Another windsb.leld flyer began to ap-
pear, atain in shopping centen. ~c·
cordlng to the flyer, Hart was listed as
the person responsible for vandaliam to
cars. Again, his name, address and
telephone number were reported on the
flyer.
It was about this time, Hart said, that
bis phone began to ring -at all boun.
He said callers threatened his llle.
"I would explain what's happening,"
he said. "They would understand and
would apoloalze."
From the 1boppin1 centers the cam·
paign moved closer to home. In April,
Hart's nei1bbors in Corona received an
u.nsiened letter in the mail.
At the top was the title "California
Coalition to Defend Our Children:
Oranee-Rlveraide Counties Chapter."
Startin, with the words, "Emergency
alert," it said, "We were recently in·
formed that Jeffrey Scott Hart baa at·
tacked another child in Corona." The
letter said Hart was a child molester.
It urged nelghbon to report any aus·
~iclous behavior to the police.
The concerned neighbors called the
Corona police, who had already been in·
vestigating since the first flyer. Scott
said "we attempted to assure everyone
that we had checked and the allegations
were not true."
According to Scott, police were led to
Sparks alter someone saw him put a
note on the windshield of a car about
two weeks ago in Riverside.
u .......
Hart sai(l he does not know Sparks
and does not recall the freeway inci·
dent. He added that be drives a com·
pany truck. Any one of 10 employees at
the tile company could have been driv·
ing the truck.
BUMPY FLIGHT -Mrs. Leona Ross of
Turnersville, N.J ., was taken to a
Philadelphia hospital with a shoulder injury
after a jetliner from Orlando, Fla., ran into
turbulence. Thirte~n-other passengers and
crew members were injured.
KIDS, DRAW DAD HERE AND
WIN A GIFT CERTIFICATEI
Enter our Fa th er' s Day contest.
• Winning artist will receive a S 20
gift certificate to purchase a Father's
Day gift for Dad . One winner and
two honorable mentions per age
category at each Nordstrom store.
• Winning drawings and other
entries will be on display in each
Nordstrom store through June 2 I .
• The Nordstrom Father's Day con-
test is open to all children in three
age categories: I -4 years, 5-8 years
and 9-I 2 years.
•The theme is 'My Dad' and can be
anything depicting the child's father.
• Drawings, preferably in color, may
be drawn on newspaper entry pro-
vided or I I" X 14" white paper.
• Entries should be brought in person
to the men's department of the
nearest Nordstrom.
• All entered drawings will be
displayed in each men's depart-
ment and, in some instances, display
windows. ·•
• All entries must have the name,
address, phone number and age of
the child.
• Entries will be judged by qualified
community members. Deadline for
entries is Monday, June 1 5.
• Winners will be announced on
Friday, June· 19, at 7:30 p.m. in the
men's department but you do not
have to be present to wfn.
..
ON HIT LIST
Sen . John Chafee
., \;
Bomb rips bridge
CLOVIS <AP> -A team of 10
explosives experts was called In
to examine a bridge heavily
damaged by a bomb blast here.
The explosion heard for several
miles destroyed a 57-foot secl109
of the 129-foot wooden bridge
over Dry Creek.
\;;:'"'~""". ,.,...,-~ ~~-....... -~l'M,..,..~,..,~.-.~rr-•• ••• • •••• = • __ a .-.~r:w"r.n~nr:w"Wir.tTnrs-~rw:'g"ln~~~~!':'!"'~"mn!l!!!'l!IP!!!!!'~
WASHINGTON (AP) -An
anti-abortioo campal1n commit·
tee bu announced the names ot
nine members of Conaress it
hopes to defeat next year,
prompting the resignation of two
con&reQmen from ita advisory
board.
"If we can knock off some
highly visible officeholders, it
s~nds a sipal to the mushy mid·
die, u I call them," Peter Gem·
ma, executive director of the
National J>ro..Life Political Ac·
lion Committee headquartered
in Falla Church, Va., said at a
news conference Wednesday.
Meanwhile, Rep. Henry
Hyde, R-W., author of the Hyde
amendment which restricted the
use of federal funds for abortion,
and Rep. Robert A. Young, D-
Mo., another opponent of abor·
lion, announced their resigna-
tions from the committee's ad-
visory board. Both said they
object4Cf to the kind of negative
campaigning represented by the
committee hit list.
"Mr. Hyde thinks it is inap-
propriate to lend bis name to an
organization that seeks to defeat
Republican members of
Congress whose views on some
issues may differ from bis own,"
said Donna Harper , a
spokeswoman in Hyde's office.
Young said, "During my 20
years as a state legislator in
Missouri and through my now
4'h years in Congress. l have
never been associated with this
sort of negative political cam·
paigning and I sincerely regret
that the persons in charge of this
committee have used this tactic
in such a way."
Among those targeted by the
committee is Sen. George
Mitchell, D·Maioe, even though
be voted with the 52-43 majority
in the May 15 Senate vote to de-
ny Medicaid-financed abortions
for low-income women who are
the vi.ctims of rape or incest.
Gemma said Mitchell, new to
the Senate, voted against federal
funding of abortions four times
in five opportunities, but was
targeted because he is vulnera-
ble to defeat and because be has
refused to co-sponsor a proposed
constitutional amendment to
outlaw all abortions.
Others on the list are Sens.
John Cbafee, R-R.I.; Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., and
Harrison Williams D-N.J., and
Reps. James Jones, D·Okla.;
Morris Udall, D-Ariz.; Stephen
Neal, D-N.C.; Marc Lincoln
-----
Marks, R-Pa., and Paul Findley,
R·IU. A spokesman for Charee react·
ed with anaer toward the an·
noun cement.
·'The people of Rhode Island
can make up their own mind
wit.bout the help of these outside
aroups from Vlr1lnla, '' said Cleve Corlett, the senator's
press secretary.
The announcement also
brought comment from Karen
Mulhauser, executive director of
National >.bortion Rlgbta Action
League, '\Jho said, "The new hit
list of the National Pro-Life PAC
is another tired attempt to use
their old 'scare tactic.' ...
Voters see right through the an-
ti-choice rhetoric to a hidden
right-wine agenda.··
Gemma said the organization
intends to spend $250,000 to de-
f eat the candidates it opposes. In
the 1980 election, the group spent
$210,000. National Pro-Life PAC, by
helping to defeat or elect highly
visible leaders on this issue of
abortion, frankly makes the lob-
bying and educational work with
the politicians here in
Washington a lot easier," Gem·
ma said. The Rev. Charles Fiore. a
Catholic priest from Chicago
and chairman of the committee,
said the movement is showing
its muscle. "The recent reversal of five
senators on the federal funding
for abortion vote on May 21 is
highly significant to the pro-life
movement," Fiore said.
He said five Democratic
senators -Minority Leader
Robert Byrd of West Virginia,
Lloyd Bentsen of Texas, Howard
Cannon of Nevada, Lawton
Chiles of Florida and James
Sasser of Tennessee -"voted
for the most severe restrictions
on abortion ever proposed, ..
showing that "we're having a
major impact nationwide."
Seniors to view
movie in Laguna
Laguna Federal Savings will
sponsor a free movie for Sl!nior
citizens in Laguna Beach June
19 at the South Coast Theater at
2p.m.
The feature presentation will
be "Maverick Queen·' starring
Barbara Stanwyck. Free tickets
Ora"gt Co11t CAIL Y PILOT/Thut'lday, June 4, 1881
This Father's Day, show your appreciation to dad with choice words straight
from the heart and with special gifts from Roger's. You will find a great selec-
tion of gifts ranging from the practical to the romantic; gifts to make his yard
work or gardening a snap and gifts to add new dimensions. to his leisure.
TH~NKSDAD!
SAVE 10%0N
GIFr CERTIPJCATFS
Purchase a gift c~ificate by
June 24 and enjby special
savings. Give dad a passport
to selection and quality at
Roger's, a sure way to suit his
tastes.
FLORA & FAUNA ,
FAUCETS
These unique and enchant-•
Ing cast brass figures are
mounted on top quality ~·
hose valves or bibs.
reg.133.95 NOW •29.95
FUCHSIAS
At home in planters or in
hanging basketS, this beauti-
ful pendant-flo~ered plant Is
available in several colors.
1galreg 13 75 NOW s1 .99
COTTON ROPE
HAMMOCKS
High quality cntton ham-
mocks are tops in comfort,
and a must for practicing
suspended animation.
reg 178.95 NOW •70.95
BANDIN I
SUPER-BLADE
IMPATIENS
The bright optomist of the
-~~~ flower world, impatiens ex-
plodes with color almost any-
where. Many colors available.
4"reg 11 09 NOW s .89
PLANT PROFESSOR
Gordon Baker Lloyd, noted
garden expert, can be heard on
KMPC and KABC radio and found
at Roger's Gardens. Each Monday
he will be presenting a
demonstration from 11 :00
a.m.-12:00 p.m .. and a Question
&l'd Answer session from
12:00-1 :00 p.m.
/"'
SEMINARS:
Mon: June 8th "Citrus"
Mon: June 15th "Fuchsias"
Mon: June 22nd "Planting Sumer
Color"
Mon: June 29th "Tropicals"
AT
are available at the Senior~~~~~~~.:..'.'.~~~~~..:....'.:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..:_:.~~~~~~~Center, 515 Forest Ave. For in-
formation call 497-2441.
WESTCLIFF
PLAZA
ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVK:E
BANK cr-·/IMfn:.A
CHARLES BARR JEWa.ERS
CROWN HARDWARE
01(1( VEIU'O-I SPCRTSWW
OR. LOU ELDER
optometrill
HAIRHANOLBlS SALQll
HAWOA Y'S MENS QOTHflG
HICKORY FARMS
speciolty food item1
HUMPTY DUMPTY
children'1 ~
JEAN OAH... deli~ and better apottswea
LA GAU.ERIA .ieqone• 1n-1os1-.ion
MARKET BASKET
MES AMIES TEENS
NANCY DUNN NffiOJES
NEWPORT BAL.80A SAVINGS
PAPER UNLIMITED ~f11 and 11otioner1
SAV-0N ORl..GS
~~ea
VETA'S INTIMATE IV'f>AAa
WESTCllff a..EN6S
WESTCllFf CORl"QS
qounnet WOl9 and «ilecribles
WESTCUFf 9'aS
XAVIER'S RORIST I
\.
• -.1
• •
I
lfi . •
Orange Cout DAILY P.ILOT/Thureda 'Jun• ... 1981
Pet -eating ban blocked
Hearing on bill pits animal lovers against Asian immigrants
SACRAMtNTO CAP> -After aa
emotlcloal ~ P'Uint anlmal lov·
.ra •taln.lt Asl• lmmitrantl, an A•·
aembly commiOee defeated a blll to
outlaw the killlnt ot doc• and cata for
food.
Lon1·lim• .nim~l protection ac·
tlvht Gl8'ys Sarsent pleaded
Wednesday, with tears lo her eyes:
"We've fot to protect theat animals,
pleHe. 1 we don't, out humane educ a·
tionladownthedrain . .,
But A11emblymu Art A1ao1,
whoae San P'ranclaco district ia 11
percent A•ian, called the bill "a
racially and culturally insensitive
solution to a problem that does not
exlat. ''
OM ol th• tuppertera, malaly from
anlm•l and pet or1anlutjon1,
brousht to Lhe hHrin1 a brown-and·
whltt 1prtnier apanlel named Rlneo.
Hls S... J'ranclaco mast.er 1aid Rl-.o
was 41opapped by a Hona Kone immi-
grant who planned to eat him.
Rlnao wore a 1t1n. "I'm for lovin1,
not ror eatiq.''
Vir,UUa llandley of the Fund for
Anlmala aald the lack or a law puts
animal 1heltera "in a precarious
poaltlon" bee••• t.My can't ref'u.ae
to &lve a stray to a peraon who aaya,
"I want that Saint Bernard ao I can
take him home and eat him."
But Apoa said CWTent law asatnat
cruel and inhumane killln1 of
animal• la aufllcient. He aald he The Wa~, Pal'U and Wildlife Com·
mittee V9tea 4..0, ••abort of the ma·
jorlty Meded for 8'841 -Y Sen. Mal'I Garcia, It-Menlo Park.
Garcl• Hid hia bill wJj prompted
by seveNJ caaea of Southeast Allan
cal-. bwnane asencies and police ~iiiiiiii~iiiilll;;;;~!f~-all over the state and could find --::,;;;jjj .. ~•
aotMns INt nnnon Hd hearsay. 1
"You want to tell people who
fou1ht ror ua a1ail•st Commlnism
that we .ton 't like who they are and
what they stand tor because of a
rumor about their cultural back·
' immlfJ'ant.s' catchinc stray do11 in
San Franc~co park:I and1 butcherin1
them for recNI. Dot• ar~ eat.ft in
Mm• p.U ol ~·· TM bill .-..l,d ba¥'8 made it a nd•·
,,.._.. demeanor, paniahable ~Y a max·
imum t!OO fine and six months In
jaiJ, to kill a dom~ticated dog or cat Sen. Marz Garcia, author of a bill that would out-
law killing of dogs and cats for food, look& at a
springer spaniel named Ringo during a hearing in
ramento.
with Lhe intent of eltlng it.
"The purpoee la to help Southeast
Asian ntua• adjuit to our society
and Ill v.-. ... Gar aatcl.
srouad," he aaid.
Reiko True, a p1ycholotl1t whe
work• with SouUaeaat Aala refu1ees
and her.elf immlcrated from Japan
Z3 years a10, said, "Education would
be a much better process . . . Being
incarcerated and taken into the legal
precess would he very traumatic"
ror -lmsniirant.
class set
Skaters roll to partial win
Four two-week swim Bill restricting activity modified after protest
classes will be offered SACRAMENTO (AP) -A 1roup that akated to k f r · starling June 15 at f 0 kl d t S _. 1 . 1 . wor ... "It'saMallby ormo recreation. Orange Coast College in rom a an o acrameua.o to protnt e111 ation " ... Since I've started skalin1 I've had
Costa Mesa. that couJd restrict roller skating acored a partial dreams or flying."
Fee for the program is tvhicetobt!'YU. when a Senate committee voted to mo41Uy Al'tbe bill cleared the AsN111bly , it would have
d r h authorlted local covernraenta to pass resolution• $15 per stu ent or eac The measure, AB~ by AuembtyMaa Larry or ordinances that woWd prohibit or restrict skat-
session. Registration Stirling, R·San Diego, wpuJd let cltiel Md couatln ins on rQads and sidewalks. Ciliea and the
will held June 13 from 9 restrict or ban roller skating on aJdewalb and California Hi1bway Patrol favored the rneaaure.
a.m . to noon in the OCC streets. Stirlia& explalaed that a loophole in U.e ' law
gym. It was sent to the Senate floor Wednesday oa a has left citits wltheut. authority to resulate akat·
Swim classes include 4·1 vote of the Local Govemm•t Committee after ins, even t~gh tl••Y can resuJate bicycles,
instruction for the tod· the skaters' objections promptelt 80ll'le "'-B1e1. skateboards llHf ,.,.atrian u..tnc. dl~r to the advanced ''Fifteen to 18,000 akaten C!Oll'M out to GoWen But he aateect to allew loeal iovernments to
swimmer. Gate Park every Sunday, la the foe, ill the •mot.'' act only by o~ance, wtHcb re11ulres a hearins at
w , said David Miles or the Northern California Roller which members of the public can teattry. Resolu-w Oman mayor Skating Association. part of a croup that made the lions can be adoPted without such a bearing.
MERCED (A p l -10-hour, 90-mile trek on wheels here this w~k to Stirling also agreed, al the akating groups' re-
Carol Gabriault was protest the bill. "Skating is here to atay." •quest, to give IOcal 1ovemment.s the power to
elected Merced's first "Skating is not sometbinl that lO·year-olds "regulate" skatln1 rather than to "prohibit or
HALLIDAY'S BRAND
C.atlemen'•
Jeana
Now available m the same
trad1t1onal styling you've
come to depend on from
"Halhday's," your Trad111onal
Men's Store. Choose from
blue·denun or corduroy m tan,
navy or brown.
woman mayor in a do." said Roger Lewis of the California restrict" it. \
unanimous vote of other Streetskaters Association, a IJ'O•P or akaten and "1llere ia no intent to allow a city to ban it," WestcWf Plaza -17th and lrvme Avenue. Newport Beach 645-0792
council members. businesses. "It's someth_in_s_th_a_t _peo __ P_l_e_d_o_to_i_e_t_h_e_sat_._d_. ------·.---------L~~!!!!ll~@!!!!!E!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!~----19!!1!ml!!!!!!!!!!!!'!l!l-ll!l!l!!._!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~-
I•••••••••••••••••• • ARI YOU PA YIH• :
• TOOMUCHFOl • ,...------------------------------------------------~ ·-----------------------------.------------------------------------..., : !:~::t.~::o:,:_11~ 54 Veers community Service ~ ~"?.~!;~!~ .. ~~!!;'A;~;!~~.~?
1 ·~ ..... 9Mte····'·4·°'"'···01.1: ( 1927 -1911) .....,... :\ • TO THE GINER.AL PLAN AND llR NO. 81·2
THE COST A ME~-NEWPORT HARBOR NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that• public hearing will be held by· the City
II'' I MUT..a _ ............
St lo< 211~7
Sefonte '-$1-01 YOIH 0oo< fC .. S.....-.. IYOIH AtH)
COSTA 1DAM1•1211 ... ..._....__
..... ~1 .-ac.-c:o.i--..... .,....~ .. ,,....,,...,_,I
..
tr1H .. p11i.1.t ........... c.....
CetebnltJng this week
with the Gtea' Mall Remodeling Sale!
a:
0 m a: c :c
w :c ....
Lt..
0
fl)
Q z ::>
0
(/)
0 w a: w ....
"'
LIONS aua Councll of the City of Huntlnaton BMch, In the Council Chamber of the Civic
Proucly ....._ __ -£5 the 36th Annual Cente!r Huntington eeach, al the hour of 7:30 P.M., or as soon thereafter as r-r-....11 posslDte on Monday the 15th day of June, 1911 . for the purpose of
, ... ae,., ~ considering Area 3.1 of Land Use Element Amendment No. 11-1 to the
5_ 1 FISH FRY ·General Plan, a request to redeslgnate 116.15 acres of property between t •Twenty-Second Street, Watnut Avenue, Palm Avenue and Sixth Street from
Low Density Residefttl• to Medium o.nslty Residential (Area 3.1 > •
· A l~I descrlptlan ts on fHe In the Oevete>SNMnt Services Off ice .
E11v1rorwnental Unpect flt.,.,,-t No. 81-2 will be heard In conjunction with _ 9ftd _ At'ea 3.1 of Land Use Etemeftt Amendment No.11 -1.
Coples of the pr°"sed Land Use Elemertt Amendment and Environmental CARNIVAL Imp.ct flteport are avali.t>lefor review In the City Clerk's Office .
All tf'terested persons are Invited to attend said Mering and express their
opinions for or against said Ar•• 3.1 of Land Use Element Amendment No.
81-1 ~ EIR No.11-2.
'(. Further Information may be obtained from the Office of the City Clertt, 2000
d:~fRIOAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY ~:~~o"~!;.~~~~'r°" aeach, ca11torn1a. n"48-<11 .. > S36-ss21
JUNE 5 - 6 • 7, '81 CITY OF HUNTINGTON 8~ACH , By: Alicia M. Wentworth
~ LIQNS PARK 18th & Newport city c1er1c
GIANT PARADE SATURDAY
10:30 A.M.
SCHEDULE OF nDT1
PM>AY, JWI I
5'301'11! .• '.' .. , .. FlshOlftMf1 • ltlft--0
11:00 fl'M . . . Carnival~ 6...,.. .,_
7:30 PM • . on Sllgt·Band X·Wond'• IMfell
Non-marct11no Marcillng lllld
9:00 PM .............. Drawing
(winning tickets mull bl prtttM)
IATHOAY, JM I
10:00AM . ~ ..
10:30AM
camtval Rldet •GINS 'IMft
... llonl '""' s,eaac• R1h IJtnMfl Stitt ""Mf 12:00 Noon .
2:00PM Paraoe Aw1rd1 (at st1911n "1k)
. . . . , . , • . DrlWlnt
(winning tletllts mutt bl pr9Mftl)
3:15PM
4 15PM
6:00PM
. . Allee Higb911 DlllWS (on •11181)
.. . ., , • . . . • . . .. .. 'Drlwlng
(winning tldlltl "'YIC Dt prtMnt)
P1W """""' lllMI (on ..... ) • Of1wt11e tor Ct101 TV 6 OCMr
prim (wl11n1no ttc1tt11 '""''bl pment)
"' Su.AY,,,_ 7
12;00 Noon • . Carnfwll ftlde1 • GelMt open
12:00 Noon •• Flttl Olnntfa •start WVint
2 00 PM • , • MIU Cotti M111·Ntwpett Hal'OOf
Lions~ rAnttll
3 'O t'M • • . • . Biby~ • ~ratloll
~ .. °""' i*GI lllt ...... ,
5.30 PM Ofawlnt (w6Milg ._ ....... ~)
8: 1S PM .... OOroltly JD Dllafl (lfl ••>
1:00 PM .. Orlwtng flt Fore! llcort I -prtaa. c.-... ....... "" ... " ........ .., Al •z
.
IRAND PRIZE
1M1 FORD EICOIT
..... , ........ c. .... , ... ................. n. .... ,.... c-.... .......... ,,..... ..... ,
•••••
.. AH't' OTl!lll PfllZES lftdtJ<Ung • COlOll TV" l~•nlllllQ lltktts
11111$1 .. P!*lll 1111 111 pnm __. Ford flCllfl)
·-CftJIW-"°'"" ,,_
•••••
OUTSTA.HDINCI STMll ATlMCTIONS
•••••
IAIY COHTfST
All con~ _, o. 11Q1Sltltd llllor• 5 00 PM on J1111t
4 ~ "91111 on May 11 IS. •Iler llOt ti 11111 alllitl 11ri.......,,,
• ••••
5't Our (ltOM OtloCI 4 l4) -. SIOtlT HEAlllllG t. llOOO
SUIAA TESTIHQ Ultlf .. 11J lot 1111 ~ """" ~
Tiii Cftll ..... • lltwplll HMllll U.... C..0 tflCI lllt ~ "~ IMlll 1""1 llM .......... -fYl.:All• .. tlllt It ... llJ .,_ ,..,.._. 91111111 l!le Fllll Fry llli ..... .......
• ••••
•li• 10 I ' 'I I
'I
..
-.,..,,,,,.,, ____ "' , ........ , •... ,.,, ............. .
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, June 4, 1981 .49
Science tackles hepati.,..·~
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -five yeara. titles ol the
HepatiUa 1 conaidered the examln1n1 residential
d O'ne of tbelr chief
ctaarettea, will be shown
UCI Medical Center
au m, 101 The City Drive,
Or June 8 at 7:30 p.m.
T is being shown by the
UC dical Center Burn
Rec Group, conslsUna of
nd former burn P•·
heir familles and
Researchers at the University ol The re1earchen, accordln& to
CaWomla have used enatneer· a report appearing today ln
in& tedmlquee to produce a vac· Nature ma1azioe, inserted
clne for use a1alMt a form ol buman DNA into bacteria to
b•patitis that 1trlkea aeveral enable the bacteria to produce a
hundred million people around substance called Hepatitl1 B
the world every year. surface anUaen.
Other r~earcben have pro-Until now, the substance bu
duced the 1ubetance by linker· been obtained throuab an ex·
tng with DNA, but the Unlveni· pensive proce11 of extraction
ty of Callfornia scientlsta say from human blood, tbe sclentlsta
their technique is more efficient said. Two other laboratories
than previoua methodl. bave reported 1uccess IQ produc·
most d a n1 ous type of
hepatitis. The lseaae, caused
by a virus, strik the liver. It la
also linked to • type of liver
cancer.
T h e ca n cer s called
hepatocellular car oma. The
sclentbta believe the ey>atJU. B
vaccine might also, p vent tbiJ
type of cancer.
ERRED -Rep . Morris
Udall, Arizona Democrat,
concedes he broke a House
ethics rule , which he had
helped to write, when be
solicited support for a new
liberal political organiza·
tion . "It won't happen
again," he said.
I the vlewin1, the
diJscuss the proposed
Safety Act which
re. the tobacco in·
produce a self·
1 claarette.
William J . Rutter, who led the lnl small quantities o! the an·
research, says commercial pro-ti1en, but tbe University of
ductioo ot the vaccine aaainat California 1cientists say their
Hepatitis B could befin _wi_tbln __ a_ch_e_m_,e produces lar1er quan-
Researchers in Ne\ York
showed recently that Hep\Utl.I 8
surface antigen makes a ·~ably
errective vaccine for men ~th a
high risk of contracting lh•'dia· ease.
Voyager
Lll\t)USINE SERVICE
673-2641
ENVIRONMENT AL
COPING MEETING
n e done to Improve the
e /55 Interchange?
SANTA
ANA
PROPOSAL
The California Deportment of Tron1portatlon (CALTRANS) ls lookl t ways
to improve the Santo Ano/Newport Freeway Interchange. Vari alter·
natives lncludl09 Tronsportotlon Systems Management ond o ent
modifications ore being studied.
This Is one of the Initial steps In the project development process. and t 11
be used to guide future studies leading to the circulation of a Oraf .
vlronmentol lmpoct Statement.
The reoson for this Scoping M"tlng Is to insure that various public agencl
and any Interested persons ore involved early In the envlronmental plonnl
process The purpose of the m"ting Is to· Identify the range of alternatlvH
and th_•.tignlficont social, economic, ond environmentol l11ues which should
be con.fdered In depth In the EIS.
This m~lng will give you an opportunity to learn obout certain features of
the project and comment on th• decision proce11.
WHIN AND WHlll
The St~"S) MHting will be held on Thuradoy, June 25, 1 :30 p.m., In the
Council ChOmbers of Tustin City Center. 300 Centennlol Woy, Tultln,
Callfornlo.
For further Information obout this project, contact:
Mr. Ronold Kosinski
Environmental flllonnln9 lranch
CAlTRANS (213) 620·3755
•
-I
Enter the Johns Hopkins Flrtt Nettonllt learch for
Personal Computing to Aid The Hendk:apped
•10 000 JcilMl ........ ~ .. -a.""M\ ..... , .........
' ..-ctl '°' ........ ln"'11o1• ...... -..... f"'W\111~1MY Md fie 111111 .. ,,_ GRAND ::.C:.~:=~~..:=:'!: PRIZEI ~-w.-... ~~-,...... ..
270/o Off! Stereo System with
Cassette and 8-Track Decks
Ctartnette-102 by RNllatk;e
Savesao
219 ~~299.I&
#13-1208
Record stereo tapes from phono or radio,
even make 8-track copies of cassettes and
cassette copies of 8-tracks. Automatic
recording level, separate bass and treble
controls. lhree-speed changer with dust
cover. Mike and headphone jacks.
Matching 22" high speaker systems.
=m:il'•·l ,.:;A:T~~$J
Save $151 Highly Sensitive AM/FM
Portable Radio ey A .. 11.uc
1111!~~~ 33°/o Off Save 140 ;i~ifi§~ 2995
Reg. 44.95
Batteries extra
99 ~~ ~
139.95
Stereo-Wide Expanda
the Stereo Image
For Added Realism
Signal-pulling circuitry and two ceramic filte~ provide
superb reception even In metropolitan areas! With 4" ·,
speaker, AFC on FM, auto AC/bllttery switching. AC/battery
operation. #12-665
90M1nutes
2tor 259
Reg.1.59
Each
Two-Way Radio for
Safer Driving
TAC-422A
byReall1tlc
··~-~ 0
0 0
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The perfect CB for travelers!
Priority switch gives instant access
to Emergency Ch. 9 and Highway
Info Ch. 19. #21-1603
470/o Offl 3-Way Speaker
System opt1mu.-2s by R .. t1e11c
Quality sound at a S S7Q
low price! 10" ave woofer. 4" mid-
tweeter. Genuine
12995 Save
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280/o off! Take "home-quality" hi-fl
with you wherever you drive! 12
watts per channel. In or underdash
mounting. #12-1886
2So/o Offl
Belt-Drive 1Wo-
Speed 1\.amtable
LAa-210 b)' Reelldc
range and 21h'' 7995
walnut veneer (not Each
vinyl) finish.
#40-2027 Reg. 1•9.81 Each Save•40 . 9995 ..... 1atM
A great addition to your aysteml The belt"'(jrive
ayatem abaort>a vibration• to yau hear only tM
mualcl Includes $27 .95·valut R•lfatfc1Shur9 =-~ magnetto cartridge and hinged duat oovw.
Ale
HOUSTON
TX
WHAT TI0ME IS IT? -Spellers Andrew
Hammel, left, of Houston, Tex., and Laura
Newton, Roseburg, Ore., flnd early start-
'
............
ing time cl the National Spelling Bee a btg
yawn W.fdnesday. Finals will be held in
Washinj(on, D.C. today.
Bride-that~wttsn 't sues
Nigeria native claims airline lost wedding dress
IO~ACITY, Iowa <AP)-An-right day, tb~/re no eood price of a ticket, she said, and
na Osifo was to have become a anymore," he said. because of health considera-
bride in February. But she's still Mi Os'lt . th t if th lions she will not be able to· re· single, sbe says, because United . l ss "~ sai tab eveneddin e turn io her homeland soon Airlines lost her wedding dress. 1 ems are aou • e. w .g · Miss Osifo, a native of cannotbehel ShesaJdsbewill Miss Osifo s aid she is
Nigeria, is suing the airline for have to ret to Nigeria .to have particularly upset over . the loss
$50,000 damages, saying she suf· the handr_nade dress, Jewelry of coral beads that bad bffo in
rered loss of personal property, and other items made and da~ her family for generations.
inconvenience, humiliation and again be~or:t she can be marned "These are a special type,"
expense because of the lost bag-to. Im~eunyan Adeghe, a fellow she said. "'Ibey belonged to my
gage Nigenan.. great-great-grandparents, and Th~ lawsult, filed in Johnson Howe'/er, because of the $1,SOO these are used for special oc-
County District Court, said Miss casions only. A special occasion
Osifo, who was flying to Iowa Ci-would be a wedding or a visit by
ty for her wedding to a Unlversi-Lad 's lette r the Icing of Nigeria." ty of Iowa student, checked In addition to the beads and
three bags Jan. 17 with United f ' Js h clothing, t{.,go1d coins, a ring AirUnes at John F. Kennedy In· QDDe Ofile and several pounds of Nigerian
ternational Airport in New York food were lost.
City. , "Right now, I'm really left
The petition said that two of WICIDTA, Kan. (AP> -No stranded. In order for me to
tbe bags, conWning her wed-one knows if Grzegorz Krynicki have this special wedding, I will
ding dress and accessories, bas ever seen the "Wizard of have to go home," she said.
cpuld not be found when she ar-Oz," but th~ grammar school She said she did not know
rived in Cedar Rapid&, the student from Brzozow, Poland, when she would be able to return
nearest major airport to Iowa knew something about this to Nigeria.
City. state's reputation.
Miss Osifo said the wedding The young boy wanted to learn
was called off because the bae-more about Boeing aircraft, so
gage wasn't found by Feb. ~4. he put bis request for brochures
when the wedding was to t.Pe in writing and air-mailed it to:
Funds withdr a wn
place. ·'Tornado, Kansas, USA ."
The airline refused to com-With the help of the Postal
ment on the lawsuit. Service, the letter found its way
William Lucas, Miss Osifo'a to Jack Wecker of the BoeiJlt
attorney, said it is a Nigerian Military Airplane Co. in
custom to date the w'eddin1 Wichita, a city known, even by
dress and accessories. Grzegorz, for its huge aircraft
"If they aren't u.sed on the industry.
LONDON <AP> -The Greater
London Council, in its first ac·
lion since switching from
Conservative to Labor control,
has withdrawn a $1 milUon 1rant
from the Royal Opera House at
Covent Garden in favor of
"more bard-pressed causes," of-
ficials said.
RAMSAY DRUGS
~-NEWPORT BLVD.
(1 lllOck Noftll of 22.ftd It.)
COSTA MESA M-.7744 M-F ............ '""· 10-3 Phenudst AlwaJ9 On Duty
r~------------------~ I I 51.00 OFF I
I ~ANY COSMETIC PURCHASE I
I OF $5.00 OR MORE WITH I
, I . THIS$J;lfON. I
~-------------------· • Max FllCfOt • Revlon • COSMETIOUE
•Arden • Almll)' • FINE FRAGRANCES Low, Low """ 0.Hllplllf Prtc:n
Fa_ther's Day Sp ecia l!
• perFarmance
TELEVISION =~--Remote
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTITIGUS_..M ...
llMle STATSMSWT
TIMI '911oWlftt,._•r••llt9 lillltl-.. : ANAHlllM llCVCLll
CllNTEll. _. E. u.-., AMM!M,
CA fUM. JAMES POOTll, .. ,
Gt.-IUwr Drtw, _.. "'-C:.-, CA tint. PATIUCIA L.. P001'1l,
"'1 Of'.-llUwr Drlw, ,._. "'-ear-. CA tmt. 1lllt ..._ .. -. -.Ctad .., ........... ,.,...... &
""91.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Ptc:TITIOUS IUl4MIU
MAMI ITATIMbn
The followlng peraon I• clol111
llUSJ-•: THE Vl .. TICAL, ltS3 MoftAVla
Aw., C.la MotM. CA 92627.
Slepfleft C. Sev ... , ltSI MonraVla
Ave •• G..ea Mew, CA fllU1.
Tlllt ~ It coNuctM l>'f lift
lnellvldo&al. ....._c.s.v ...
Tlllt .....,_. w• lllM wltll IN
COIHll'f Clef'tl ef °' .... c:-ity lift Ma't 1t,1•1.
Pl .....
P"*'lllllCI °' .... Gout Dall'f PIM(.
liMIY u.•J-4, 11, 1tr1 nn~•
PVBUC NOTICE
1uP1 ••0 • c o uaT O fl
CM.I .......
•
Pt18LIC NOTICI
1"'7~..,...
HllM'"-" 9Mdl. CA
...... ,,.,,.,,. StrMt
llldloo, CA , ...... .,A_
La JOiia. CA
11'11 sen VIII<.,... louMvard
..... A ........ CA
llW V9"1ce ...._ .. .,.,
l.M,........CA
J.US Wll"*9 9olllnwd
L•A ........ CA
$etMflvecle INvd. encl MarlM A ...
MaftMtlM a.ct\, CA
"'°C-alA-Maftt<lalr, CA
''"'......., NHdlft,CA
..0 N...,_, Ceftler Ori ...
N-.-t IMcll, CA
II C-IM HorVI "5C Oc.e-'*,CA
lttMl __ A_
CkeaMAltt.. CA
~ ...,..,,.,.,_... CAii ....
~CA
mv,... ....
0c..-..CA
1--llctitlA-
Ofllarlo,CA
121'SH......,111
Pat"'o..rt,CA
•S--.PMnC--Ort ... Palfft........_CA
1512MalllS..... Ila-, CA
----~Ortw "8"dle ..,_.._CA
lon\arW c.-..w Df'I ... ............ " RallCllo .._.,CA
Aw9'1U•Acaclat
aM l!ITClrdD llMClws..ta ... ,CA ..........................
llM!aftlh.CA
_,llNt ... Lltw
"'•'"·CA
ms c.,.. Cl'ftl on ... 111...,slde,CA
llS EHi _... Strwt
Sane~. CA
101 Nat111 E Sb'wt Saft ..,_..,, CA
1tt41E ............ A_
SanB ........... CA
.. NWlllOSV-San._...,CA
501 Nat111 Mt. V-A-SM I .......... , CA
laet ,.__,.._ Df'lw
SMO ..... CA
12221~~
5-J-c.lllr-.CA
, ...... .._,. s..ta Fe .....
5-~CA , ...... .._..
s.Ma ... ..... SM~C,A , ...............
S.....AM.CA
td~SllllM ... Dftw ..._lleedt,CA
m11v.....,.~
...... C-,CA .... c..,.., ...............
S.Ctty,(A
-.c:... ......... ValleyC:.W,CA
1GJIN111rwt
Vldlnllte,CA
•tMlVllUWty v .... ,CA
U.A l!I c.nlno RMI
CMlt.llecl, CA
... OraMIA-
Cerllllad, CA
m21H..,_y111
CaUIMrOI City, CA
1411 Cemlfto Dl4 #Mr
Del Mar, CA
111t WHI E.l Norte Part.way
l!Keftdklo, CA
IOU Sovll> Melfi StrMI
l'all!Wa*,CA
JU.A NorUIG-leA-
Oleftdale.CA
~1157 l!ott FlorlcN Awn ...
"°'""-CA
Stetlall encl Hemet
Hemet.CA
tlOI HOii.,_ .,.. ... •rd
Hell.,-.oed, CA
lte$ N-'WeslMll A...., ... HOiiywood, CA
1tt07 Al~S-1
HunllllClllft BMd\, CA
46-020 MMwoe Strwt
lllCllo,CA
7MOFa'tA-
L..oJOlla,CA
11611 SM~ ao..i...Md
LMA ....... CA
IUl$Velllca .........
l.MA ........ CA
SOS WlllHA ......,.,.,
L.MA"819*,CA
... GMtralA-~lalr,CA
1'1tlrMfwey
NHdlet,CA ... N..,.,. c:.Mor Ori,..
N.._t '-di, CA
El Camlfto HorV1 RSC
Oc..,.16*,CA
110 Mllalon A-
Oc-.... CA
OcHftMdlt lkMllev ... d and Col ....
Oce..,-'dt,CA
!$7 Vltta 9elte Oceanllde, CA
1 SouUI l!utllcl A-
Ofttarlo, CA
727tSH ...... y111 Palm o.-t, CA
aoo South Palm Canyon Drlw
Palm ""1nlt. CA
U12 Main Stnlel
11•-.CA
a.nwtrdoc.Mer or1 ...
llaecllO lemardo, CA
lorNroe Cefttlt' Ort ... ................ u
llancllo ..,,_.,CA
AWlllda e Acacias aMEIT ....
II one Ila Santa .... CA ., ............... ....
llMlallCb, CA
,., ....... u,.
"lane, CA
,. Sevtll lleftclla ..............
.... Ma~CA
IW IE .. Ulll S4r9tt
SaM&AM,CA
,_,...,.
Vlc_,,llle,CA .. , ........ ...........
Wlolel ... p P,CA
, .
E.WATSON
retery, llcMlrd of
•· Coell Community
P16ml .... Ohtrkl
Pul>lllohad Or-(MM Oall't Piiot, Pu Or .. COH1 Oally Piiot,
Ma'f 14,21,a ,J-4, 1•1 UINI. Ma_Y:J_J..,._4_,_1•_1 ___ 1_.-.. __ 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF INTE
REAL PROPERTY
TO DEED
THE STATE
PUlllUAlllT TO saCTIONI Ull TM
TAXATIOM COOi, TMI NOTICll OP INT
TO TH8 STAH IN ANO l'Oa TMI
CALIPOllNIA. HAS lllN DIVIDID
NIWIPAPlllS 01' oa111aaAL c1ac
COUNTY, l'Oll PU8UCATION Of' A
SAID NIWIPAPllaS.
" ...... v .. •u• AND 0 Dl•D ••• L paoP••TV
Of' OttAMa, ITATa OP
ST•llUTll• TO vaa1ou1
ION PUI UlttaD , .. 'AID
110N TMIH!P t• llACJI Ofl
PAllCIL M~lalNO
SYSTeM IEXl'UMATIOtt
A,_., IM9 Parcel Numt>er
used to •rlbe pr-rty In 1111•
111 11111 list the IOll-lng encw ... 1a. "°"' •r•-· AP .__.,, Percel
No.-N-
Por-Pwllon ref•" to w As _ _., mep llooll,
mep fWllll"' _. --.r"'"" 11, end IN,._._, PMul numllet
IM map .. or wllllln .,.. l>IOCk A
•«•I " l>er •• for eaample, "'""'"._""'...w, -Id -800lr .. o4
M A• ' Mai>t. 810dt iU Im•
peve » k J>. -PMcel S within
1110t b~· The maps referr.d to •rt
ev•ll• .. IOr ln""9(:tlon In the office 01
Ille Af'H-·
P<OC*'tY I• In ti,. T-ntNp So;itt
R...., WetC of San llffnerdlfto --lcllen.
E
tn P\lr"'8nC:e of lew, llUl>llc k eb\I given tllet, Oft the tt1 dey of Jul'f,
1'11, •I IN hour o4 10 o'clock 1,,.. drf. tlle -nlttwd Taa COi-· TrH•urer of tM c-ity of Or 1 llh Oflke Ill h City Of Sonte AM, SIOte
of Celllornla, wllt cie.d to the$ unteu -,....,_,°'an lnttallment plan of redllmPtlon Is Ii.Ille ,,....,.._ l>Y IMf prior • S P.111. lift -la9l
bwlnn1 dey of J-, 1"1, t 1 pr°"'1Y ....,..,,.,.., dHUlllM -wltkh oete llw,,, mor• .,..,.. wlll •19PIH from IM d.C• of h .... of Mkl.,,.
perty 1.0 U. Stole. TM a Which the deed wlll be luwcl wfll lie tM toCo1
•mount c1119 tor Wlllcll It te U. Slate, Mid •-• 1191"9 Mt lorttl In ...... -cenQ oppotl dncrlpllon Of Ille .... _.,.... II Ille ~ty It
dHcled to Ille State, Ille of redemption wlll 1 .. mtne• -any --t teleer-cOfl,..y , lleSYte.
As provided l>'f I• SC.la lftoll ,..,,. IN -eu~lly 1o r-1 ... eH
rents, 11--pr rltl"9 In any ,,..~ from the _,-ty Ml.....,. to
Ille Stella. All Information lt19 ,._.mptlOft °' the lnlllellon Of an IMlOllment
pten of .-· II, upon request, be fuml"*' 11'1 Rollert L. CltrCM, T .. Collectw·T~:·~., end Redemption Offkw. 110 Fl-llde., tJO N.
8roodwrt IP • IGI), Sante AN, Callfornle '2102. • led""' 13th de'f of,...,, 1•1
OBERT L CITRON
TH c.olle<IOr·TrMlllrer
ofOr--C-l'f Stole of Callfornle
Tiie Artlet to lie deeclltd -Wbje<I Of Ulll nolke ere MlllalM In tM
Covnl'(FtN,,,.., State of Calllornle, end PM1ku1Mty dHcrllled es lollOwl, to
wll:
JERTY SOLO TO THE STATE SAftNta&-y.a•lfY
1:P'E YEAR 1'1' FOR THE &IUl.&;Ul"U\ -
T .ts. usesSMEHTs AHO UNRB> SCHJOl <JEii CHARGES OF THE FISCAL Dfrt'DlrT r" 1'1s.1•. ~'"""' LAGUNA BEAOt QTY No • ., -S•I• No nnu. A" ·~1.-, 510.7' No. JS -S•I• No. 20•0'9, AP M4-4U.21ClormerlyO~J02·00,51.M FOUNTAIN VM.lfY No. ,. -hi• No. 20UOJ, AP
M+*MI ltonnerly OSS.JlS-211. 51.M OTY
No. 3' -Sele No. 206404, AP M4•7·101ior.....lyOU-31).221.51M No ... -S••• No 40U2J, AP
No. JI -Sol• No. 206UI, AP 169.011·1',$1!0.44 .
'44-471·1S (lormerly0U"31S.21), 5111.'2 No. 10 -S•I• No. •01210, AP
No. ,. -S•I• No. 201011, AP 1• .. 1"·2:2, '2,l>IUJ
'44-«M• uormenv oss.m..01, 51.M SAN AJAN No. 40 -S•I• No. 20701', AP ~MS (formerly OSWU•H. $S4 10 CAPISTRANO OTY No. 41 -Se l• Ne. 207020, AP 644-44M4(tormerlyOSS-322-621,M.M No. 11 -Sele Ho. 6242 ... AP
No 42 -Sele No 2071U AP UH43"'5, ULM ~22 (fOnnertyOSS.DMS), t i42.1' No. 12 -Sete He. U426J, A"
No. 0 -S.le No. 107251, AP 121-1~,.....,_., 6U-424-16(tonner1yO.SW.S.ll),$S.IJ Ho. ,. -S••• Ho UIOSO, A,,
No ... -S.I• No. 207Jl1, AP 6M-041-07 (fonMrly124-212.oJI. $It.SI
'40•UNM (lormef'l'f OSS-Ul-02), $1.M
No. 4S -S.I• No. 207$46, AP IRVINEOTY ....... n .. 1•. AP 644-414-2', AP '44-414-21 No. 74 -S.I• No. uton. AP
end AP 6H·•l4·21 trormerly •4'-00·7',16.a
OSS.tiMO, M0.04
C#ISTRANO lHFIED
SOIXI. DISTRICT
No ... -S••• No. 207S47, AP
644-414-07 (fOr!Mrly OSws.-621. 42,04
He. 41 -Sale No. 20IOS2, AP .....,.1-24 (~lyOU-365-1'1, $121.2'
No. •• -Sele No. 21UOt, AP Ne, 1J -Sele No. 7020 .. , AP 644-121•22, 5').CM 6J0-taMt .....
HO ••• -S.I• No. 215444, AP Ne. " -S•le Ha. 1UIU, AP
.,, ............ 14 .. l·ltl~l.JJD,12
NEWPORt llEAOt OTY
Ne. SO -Sele No. 214SSJ. AP
04s.ouoa. ... •
SAVANNA UNIF1ED
SOIXI. DISTRICT
Ne. SI -Sele No. 14e26t, AP No. 17 -Sale Ho. 72'H1, AP OSMtl~I. t it.GO •
No, SI -Sele Ho. 2S7Stl, AP °"'75247• .. ·1
... u1.-.~u4
NO ••• -•••• No. tons. AP 11M'2.C.tt.•
SAN a.EMBm aTY
SADDt£MO( VALLEY
UNlftED SOl>Ol DISTRICT H•. &• -Seit N•. Jt•MO, AP Ne 11 lete NO. 1JOISt, A,;, .., ...... ,..,_ly ....... ), .. .tt . -I"
No. SS -.... N•. anoss. AP MMot·1t,$7,17 .., ... ., ,...,.,.,...,.,..ltW6), ttt.t• .. r;;,.~ .;:,:•I• No. 1U2H, .,
Ne. S• -S.le Ne. 111•11, 1AP No M Sale No. JUlll, AP
.... 16Ml, tll.42 Nl·tiM•, ••
..::..:,.;;.:.•I• No. Ul474. AP .... " -.... Na. 714216. AP
Na. ,. -S•I• No. U147S AP '2l·l11·».UUI ......... .,,... • No. IJ -Sal• No. 7HtU. A, • .. ......... 10.. COSTA MESA QTY Ne. n -S•I• No. '' .. "· AP
No. Jt -Sele Ne, 4701~ •• AP 6'~:·1~~Sal0 No 76447' "' 141·1ft· .... '1 • • •
No, .. -Sale No. 41U4S, AP 6"°16 ... aa; -.IJM41*-1'1'11M11-1411~.J6 l'&at ... .&t.W\ t ... ll:ll:ft
Mt. ti -hie Ne, 4U4't, AP ""'°""'·'~ ""9~ ~i~~·~ He. mses, o SOl>Cl.DISTRICT 111-1•as "11r. I~ t17.,..,, ••· H -late Nt tUt .. , AP .... V ..... .....,._ .... •·tit.-, AP -.1S111 ,..,_.,
............... V~CA N•. 6a -Sale No, ......... AP"'.....,, .... ................. C•• ......... ~--,...;o llP·•at ll'w, 1--.r '11·_..., No. M -lelo IM. tflltf, A• ......... I ....................... _ ... 1' ................ m ......... .. ---~--....... -U ....... M Nt ... -lalo Ne, *MP. A, Ito. 17 -.. ,. "°· tUt•. A, 11111 IF r• .. .......: •111 ......... t •......,.. --m ..... !f ,_, l..,_ty UMIM,I, , • ...__ -.. --......... ...~-------· .... ·-.... ~--"'"'· "" .. ..._ • ._.. • lllllL..,. .... • No u -lal• 1te ...... •• 111,...., A, ... ,...., I..,_.,
tt . ---::a..... -.., .... ''llJ ......., .. ,.. ..... ""· c~ m ............ .... ........ ...-.. ~· ...... ._......... ...... .. ... ~ ....... ' II, Ill# ........ "..,.. r.: Pt..._.··~ ....... Me ... -S.la Na, 414,,.., AP , .. , ... ta.'6 o s•s--.,_..: .o._,,_, .... ,_...CA!!!:.~"'·1~1.,.-....,~ ...... ~ .. C.-... :lllllr
t ••ct• •• ,...._ ... , ,, ..... , ....... ..., ... a • JWllO, "''· ---· -' -
• ..
•
llTEINATIC
TIMERS
CORDLESS
4~?1.11B
SUPER COP VARIABLE
5 97 •D711B
Get a couple, Mt them at
different timff and it mUff it
look like you're home .. light•
go off and on when you'N away.
(Did I lOM anyone theN besidM
my.elf?)
MURRAY
BICYCLES
IOll' ZO'' 1111
74~!
IOll' 20"
DELUDllll
888!a
Both have BMX fram• and fork, 20z2.12S
black k.nobbiff. 20" BMX. ha. couter
brake, come• in white with glou black.
Deluxe hu side pull ca.liper braku, Nd
and gold finuh .
~~IUllEIJWD TIASB CAIS
30WLOI
7!!
30 w.LOI IOUCDECI
10~~
Got so many truh can specials
that it ahno.t brealu my heart
to tell you I have no truh. ( My
goat eat. it all).
MTD 5 BP
ROTOTILLER
24997
Chain drive B&S
engine, l 6 Mlf •
sharpening tines. 135
rpm forward speed,
adjustable depth of
till to 7". While they last.
GRAPES
Here are Thompson Seedl .... Flame, and
more, (if my wino uncle reads tht. we're
in trouble.)
SAGO
PALMS
5?!
I ....Uy can't deecribe a
8&90 Palin. I gu.a you
would •Y it loolu kinda
"palmieh". (I bell .... thi8
ta c:allecl mental
regr..ton, doctor. )
VIVA
ROTARY
DIAL
In brown/ .. rth tone.
TREND LINE
ROTARY DIAL
White or Cocoa.
ULTRA 80
Choice of
Ahnond or Cocoa.
3~··
3988
Great choice of phon• and by the way, it'a·perf~tly
legal to own your own phone. Th_. are approved too.
Suppoaed to call the phone company and say. "Hey, I
got my own etc." (I bought the Ultra 80, h-aa
automatic redial in c ... of a bu.ay aignal.)
SADDLEllAI SADDLDLAllET
SUTCOVDS
SMALL 1999
PICK-UPS
. PI~~t: 2499
OR TRUCKS
Sure f .. l good, a lot better
than that .ttcky hot vinyl
and when they get a bit
mungy you pull them off and clean them.
ARCO CIAPBITE
IOW/40 WT.
NOTOI OIL
99!.
I think there t. a $1.80 by
mail Nfund from Arco on
tru. stuff if you buy 6
quart.. Th• store hu the
skinny on this.
DUWITE
SAND CHAIRS
Ho1>9 ,.,. got a load moN
in becau.. when I ,.,.nt to ,,,..--1) the eto ... late Memorial
~-_....,,~ Day we eold out of 80ft\e.
(don't .. ,. that.)
MULTICOLORED
WEB
5!!
FOLDING FABRIG
8!!
8 POSITION
FABRIC
!,~1999
towel bar. •5734
AIJISTIOIC
PUCI 'a PIDI
FLOOR TILi 39c
12"a12" TILE
Chob of ...Uord Brick. Palatial. OU
Knoll. and Loe Alamo.. ( nam. you ha"
oop\e to bow and I.owe.)
GUMOUT DEGREASER
AND ENGINE CLEANER
·~~ .
Spray on, wait a bit, and hOM
off (I UM a .ttff brush a little
anyhow, worlu fa.hr.)
BLUE POLY OIJ!-STEP
POLY Sw.lNT
s~~Z. ldOUID
Clea.n... Shin ... and Seals in
one .t.p. (The One Step, been
doing that for yean. rm ready
for Two Step. )
BEHR WOOD
PRESERVATIVE
6!!
Penetrat. dMp to giYe a tough
waterproof undereeal. Helps stop dry rot,
warping, termite. and •hrinking.
4" WIDE
BENDER BOARD
Cun• it to flt your planting areu. cut to
boa stuff, do some light terracing,
whatner.
Armless girl
gets diploma
LAS VEGAS (AP) -A etrl whose armt wtrt
backed off ln Staftlslaus County 2~ yeart a10 bu
been fraduated from high acbool here.
Mary Vincent, now 18, accepted her dlplos:na
with the book that serves as her left band. Tben
she used the hook that serves u ber ri&bt bud to
shake hands wttb Howard Marr, pritictpal of a
special school for handicapped student.a where abe
completed b!gb achool.
Her parenta, Lucy and Herbert Vlneent,
w¥ched proudly as their daueht~r, dresaed in tbe
traditional C81J> and gown,
marched into the room pusbln1
the wheelchair of another
1raduate.
Miss Vincent was a 15-year·
old runaway when sbe accepted
a ride Crom a stranger in the
San Francisco Bay area Sept.
29, 1978. She was raped in a re·
mote area west or Modesto. her
arms were cut off with an ax
and she was left for dead. v1NcHT
Some motorists found Miss Vincent sta11ertn1
toward Interstate 5. She recovered, learn~ to use
artificial arms and returned to her Lu Veeu
home.
Lawrence Singleton, a 51·year-old merchant
seaman, was convicted of the mutilation and was
sentenced to prison.
Mother killer
niay get estate
MADISON, Wis. <AP) -A man convicted of
suffocating hls mother should not necessarily be
deprived of inheriting her $1.5 million estate, the
Wisconsin Supreme Court has ruled.
In a 5·2 decision, the court said that someone
who willfully kills another Is disqualified Crom in·
heritlng his victim's estate, but that in Wisconsin,
willful intent technically is not an element of the
crime of reckless homicide.
Bernard Safran Jr., was accused of auffocat·
Ing his 70·year-old mother, Helen, in July 1977.
Police said the woman's body was burned two
days later in the basement of her South Milwaukee
home.
Although originally charged with second·
degree murder, Safran, who was 30 at the time of
the killing, pleaded no contest to a reduced charge
of reckless homicide and was sentenced to up to
five years in Waupun State Prison in 1978.
Mrs. Safran left her estate in trust to her aon
in a 1952 will. His two brothers and a brother·in·
law sought to disqualify him.
NY beaJ,s measles
NEW YORK IAP > -The incidence of measles
in New York City ptummeted by "an astounding"
94 percent over> the last year. and health officials
predicted they would meet their goaJ of eradlcat·
ing the disease here by October 1982.
Health Com missioner Dr. Reinaldo A. Ferrar reported only 27 confirmed cases of measles from
January through April 1981. During the first third
of 1980, there were 457 reported incidences, Ferrar
said , attributing the decline to "vigorous efforts"
to immur\ize students.
THE MALE MAN
an unusual discount store
excellence in
fitted shirts
FATHER'S
DAY
Great Selections
Great Prices
JUNE
21st
.l
Great Gift•
14 Or•• Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, June 4, 1981
..
Ciiy'S "mobile horrw
proposal rJias rrwrit
The HuntlngtQn Bench City
Council hu~ romo up with ~n In·
novntivc ldl'o to ·ullt"vtat the'
shortogo of mobil ' homb spare
and to provide u pince to relocote
evicted mnb1lc home pnrk t n·
unts.
On u rc-ron1mendution by
Councihnan Hon Pattinson. the
City Counl'tl hus nf r-ccd to put up
$700,000 of fodcra Hou Ina und
CommWlit}' Development CHCD>
m oney to purchase l11n d tq
l'Sl,\blish u mobil home pnrk
AlUWURh the $700,000 by Itself
wouldn't µurchase much land m
I lunlington Bea<'h . the concept I.
thut pri\nte dt•vclopers could
romblne efforts with cit~· offirlols
In purchasr a lar~H' parc<.'I for o
1>t•rm~mcnt trnil<•r purk
The 1dl'n 1s to create afforda
bl(' housing and ut the same ttme
pro\'lde spacl' for tenants \\hO
might be ev1ctt>d if landlords de
c1de to develop valuable coastal
la nd into diffl'rent us<'s
The City Council also will
consider a proposed ordinance
next month protecting trailer ten-
ants from abrupt. costly evic-
tion Citv offic1uls say the pro-
posed ordinance could require
landlords to r elocate the tenants
to other parts or the city.
Curren th·. there isn 't a city
ordinance regulating conversion
of mobile home pa rks into other
uses
For example. tenants of the
43 -coach Huntingt on Shores
Mobile Home Park off Pacific
Coast Highway were given evic-
tion notices last month. Many say
they fttand to lose between $15,000
and $30,000.
Although the tenants hove 16
months to move, they suy their
Clight will remain the same,
ecau c there aren't nvailable
trailer spaces in Ornngo County.
And some or the mobile homes
ore too old to be moved into other parks anyway.
Wlthout on ordinance reg-u Jn t l n g conversions, the
landlord Huntington Seaclitf Co. has no obligation to help
the t nants move. The same
sat untion could happen to the
city'· other 18 mobile home
pnrks, compr1sinl( 3.384 mobile
homes.
This totul includes five parks
and 1.089 spaces in the city's
prlme roastal zone. These parks
are the most Ukely candidates to
be converted into other uses. ac·
cording to city orriciuls, because
the value or the land is ~realer
than ln other parts of the city.
· The concept of using HCO
funds to create a permanent
mobile home park is novel. It
could produce at least a partiaJ
solution to the growing mobile
home housing s hortage.
Firs t , however, an ordfoance
s pecifically regulating con-
version of mobile home parks is
needed to protect the rights of .
tenants.
It certainly is an idea worth
purs uing. When money fever
strikes the park owners. there
seems to be no one e lse around to
help protect the hundreds or
mobile home residents who have
no plare else to live.
Raids seroe warning
Fountain Valley police re·
cently concluded a three-month
undercover operation on the
city's two hjgh school campuses
by arresting 19 students for aJ.
legedly selling illegal drugs.
The department placed two
young police officers at Fountain
VaJley and Los Amigos high
scbools . The undercover officers
made up to $20 purchases of
marijuana, cocaine, LSD and
qlher illegal s ubstances.
• Arrests of this sort appear
quite modest when compared to
the multi-million-dollar dealer
busts that r eg ularly make
headlines. Still , they are impor-
tant.
Even though the Fountain
Valley arresL'i probably will not
affect the money men behind the
illegal drug trade, they will re-
mind students that high school
campuses and nearby businesses
are not "free zones" where drug
laws go unwatched.
Also, s tudents who dabble in
drugs only occasionally may
now think twice about the possi·
ble consequences.
The liming of these
particular arrests might be ques-
tioned . Campus drug s ales
usually decrease dramatically
during the weeks after a large
series of arrests.
But only about two weeks re-
mained in the school term when
the Fountain Valley busts took
place. The "scare value" of such
arrests might have had lengthier
impact if they were made earlier
in the school year.
Fountain Valley police say
they pref er to keep their liming
unpredictable, an approach that
also has merit.
One PoSiti ve note in the drug
bust operation is that Fountain
Valley officers concluded that
while assorted illegal drugs are
still widely available, more stu-
dents apparently are choosing to
a void these substances.
The situation is not as bad as
it could be.
The band plays on
' This has been a good year for
the Fountain Valley High School
marching band and to top it off,
the group finally got out of debt
this week.
Last Dec. 5, the 134-member
band and drill team w·as notified
that it had been selected as one of
20 high school bands nationwide
to march in President Reagan's
inauguration parad e in
Was hington D.C. That was the
good news.
The bad news was that the
group had s ix weeks to raise
$81,000 to pay for air fare and
rooms in the nation's capital.
After a hectic time, the group
gathered S61,000 in donations.
The rest was borrowed from the
•
high school's associated student
body treasury. This week they
paid off the loan.
The band marched in the
parade just moments after it was
announced that the American
hostages had been released from
Iran. The group's rehdition of the
Civil War tune "When Johnny
Comes Marching Home" brought
emotional cheers from thousands
of spectators.
It took 1,025 individual cash
donations to get the students to
Washington D.C. and out of debt.
but their experience was invalua-
ble. And they did an outst.IJ)ding
job representing Southern
California.
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views tx·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is In lilt· td. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1S60, CO$ta Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7W) '"2·4321.
L.M. Boyd/A 24-hour ~idency
ORANGE COAST
lllilJ PHii
Senate President Atchison was em·
p0wered tor that brtet Ume. He'd
been workln1 bard to wlnd up the
lame-duct Con1~. tbouJh, IO be
slepf tbi'oU1h hla enUre term of of. flee.
Claim la that onl)' the owl, amon1
birds, can detect tht color blue.
Legislative pa yr9lls soar
The saJary or Senate President Pro
Tern David Roberti Is , like all other
learialatore, $28,000, an amount substan·
liaUy above the average Income of the
majority or Californians, 50 percent or
whose reported taxable earnings do not
exceed $13,000. Roberti's assistant,
Jerry Zanelli, who bears the title of ex-
ecutive officer or the Rules Committee,
a post with nebulous duties, ls paid
nearly twice as much, receiving $51, 768.
Zanelli is only one of the great army
of aides employed by the Legislature os·
tebslbly to assist the 120 members in
their legislative work. Roberti alone bas
31 aides while the total employees or the
Legislature now number more than 2,200
and are largely responsible for the
burgeoning operational costs or that
branch of government. This year more
than $100 million will be spent for
legislative support, an amount greater
than the entire state budget of 50 years ago.
TIUS HUGE operational cost for the
Legislature, which amounts to almost
$1 million per member, is due almost
entirely to the proliferation of s taff,
which has taken place in the past 15 years.
The total of salaries or the legislators
is only $3,360,000. Add another $3
. milHon for the fringe benefits the mem-
bers have voted themselves and a
generous Sl5 million for the legitimate
expenses of phones, printing, legislative
counsel and analyst and basic clerical
staff and the costs would ~till be less
than 20 percent or the actual total being spent.
Most of the rest goes to the poUtical
hacks who function as aides, press
agents and factotums. ZanelU Is but one
or scores of excessively paid minions
whose primary duties are to cater to the
;'
f -AR-l W-AT-fR-S -~
egos of the lawmakers, many of whom
are paid more than $40,000. Nor is
Zanelli the hlghest paid. Janet Roche,
recently arrived here from Washington,
D.C .. is paid $55,152 to serve as ·staff
director for; Speaker Willie Brown while
.Steve Thompson is paid $57,384 as direc-
tor of the Speaker's Research Office.
THE RATIONALE for assistants'
salaries substantially more, some twice
as much as the members who claim to
be "full-time professional lawmakers, ..
is hard to fathom. Nowhere else in
public or private employment do aides
receive pay greater than their bosses. 11
the legislative aides are worth more
than the members it would seem they
should be the ones the voters should
elect. SecreUy many of the aides hold that very thought.
The irony is that for the most part the
aides are non-essential and the great
majority totally unnecessary as proved
by the fact the Legislature, meeting on·
ly every other year for more than 100
years, performed the same duties,
generally much better, with only a bare
handful of part-time help, mostly only
clerical.
But if the pay given the aides is dif·
ficull to understand lhe hordes Of UD·
needed staff isn't. The pure and simple
fact is they are there to help perpetuate
the members in office. While a small
corps of this huge legion are highly
competent professionals in their fields
and studiously avoid political activity
and another group is merely
secretarial, the great majority are
vigorous partisans, wheeling and dealing
and actively campaigning.
STILL THEIR very existence serves
to create confusion and a tremendous
amount of "busy work" for the
legislators while at the same time lnsuJat-
ing them from their constituents to the
p0int where they become completely out
of touch with their needs and desires.
Many of the aides assume the
responsibilities and authority of the
members and build themselves into key
figures exercising Machiavellian power
over the members and legislative policy.
Since 1966 the state budget has grown
from S4 billion to $25 billion. It was that
year when the Legislature became one
of "full-time, professional lawmakers"
and the excessive salaries, soaring
payroll and huge legislative costs pro-
vide a clue to why the state budget has
been permitted to increase so tremen· dously.
Campaigns need wider fund raising
To the Editor:
The Daily Pilot offered shallow logic
in r ecently calling for "more
restrictions on campaign colleding and
spending."
Either the Daily Pilot's editorial
writers are terribly naive or the Daily
Pilot actually supports the denial of the
freedom of expression.
When more restrictions are placed on
the ability of candidates and p0litical
parties to raise and spend campaign
funds. only the non -restricted
newspaper editors with their biases wlll
MAILBOX
have an unbridled say in who shouJd be
elected. That would be a blow to
democracy, a blow to the First
Amendment and a blow to the intentions
of our nation's Foundfog Fathers.
The Daily Pilot should be calling upon
Americans to each give more to the
candidates of their choice and to their
political parties. The costs of
campaigns are borne by far too few
citizens who accept civic responsibility
to give lo political causes.
MORE MONEY IS spent each year on
fireworks for the Fourth of July than is
spent .on political campaigns in
America. How much more important is
it that we have good men and women in
public office? Restrictions on who can
contrfbute to political campaigns and
reatrtcUons on what can be spent to
elect a candidate do not aerve the cause
or freedom.
Like the costs for all or us in our dally
personal and business llvea, the costs of
c11mpafgns are alrected by inflation.
Today it coeta more to mall a letter -
personal. business or pollUcal. Tod~y it
costs mf>re for radio lime, teleVJslon
time, billboard space, printine,
newspaper ad space, campatsn staff~.
office supplies and headquarters rentar.
So tone a1 newspapers conUnue to
raise the price ot advertlslna space,
they had better not su11est Umita on
campldp.1pendlns. I am yet to s~ a
newapaper dOnate 1d apace to the
candid.*.
For tomeone Who baa auch a vetted
interest in the political proeess ai oewa
coverase of campatana.' editorial
endQrtementa. aad the aelllnc of ad
spare, it shOUld bt ernbarras1ln1 to
adwoa&e UmJta on campup fundlns ..............
CtAatn&• •• baft tM lllilltJ to _ ..... r::::£~ nr-==~~-~. Tb•,_,.. •••Wier u..t. T8011A8 A. PU8N'J'8I ,.,_ VJet QlalrmD ..,...._....,.,°'I ... O••ts
No hunter
To the Editor:
With regard to an item in the May 26
paper headlined. "Hunter Slain in
County Gun Mishap," although this
certainly is a tragic accident. I take
offense at your calling this person a
hunter.
From your account of this apparent
accident this person is no bunter, he ts a
p0acber! Not only was the deer killed
out or season, it was done with an Hlegal
weapon for taking deer, a .22 pistol.
The image of bunting suffers enough
from attacks by va rious animal
protective type groups. We shouldn't
have to suffer additionally due to the
irresponsible actions or people who are
not sportsmen, but are in fact poachers.
DAVE SIMPSON
BUA 8IDJ18 /or park
To the Editor:
If several comfortable Crystal Cove
State Park bus stops were provided just
off the highway on either side, in·
numerable park visitors would prefer to
use the service of the many OCTD buses
that traverse the area.
These bus stops could provide a
shaded seating area In which to wait;
lockers for daytime stor age or .beach
equipment and lunch baskets; drinking
fountains; outdoor foot showers; and
some information significant to the use
and enjoyment or the park. Until the
over·and underpasses were constructed
for peopJe to 10 from the canyon section
of the park to the beach area, a hand
operated traffic signal could provl~e for
safe crossing .
The park, tbti people and the buses
are here riebt now, needlne this
service. UnUI the plannin( for more
permanent structures, such as have
been constructed at Bolsa Cbica Slate
Beach is completed, temporary
CaclUUes should be provided to meet the
pressing demand.
'THE tJSB OF THE bua system for
tran1port.1nc pm visitors could obvt1te
the need tor lhe use or many can, t&ua
aavine our scarce oil, cuttin1 down on
tbe trafflc and a1r pollution problems;
and avoiding the ute for car partiq oft
more than a minimum of the parll lancl
so needed for uncrowded visitor enjoy-
ment. Such provisions would enable
many to come to the park who do not
have their own private transportation
facilities, or who could not otherwise af.
ford the trip
The Crys tal Cove State Park ad-
ministration has all along been open to
suggestions on the part or the public as
to what development was most desired.
That this service feature needs further
emphasis needs to be conveyed to State
Park Director. Pete Dangermond, Jr ..
P.O. Box 2390, Sacramento, CA. 95811
and to our actjvely concerned As-
semblywoman, Marian Bergeson.
California Assembly, State Ca pitol,
Sacramento. Ca. 95814.
EVELYN GAYMAN
'Enrichetf umer?
To the Editor:
The presence of midges in Newport's
waler system will certainly raise prob·
lems for the present city council. J.
told-you-so environmentalists will point
out that for years they have questioned
the ability of the city to meet demands
for clean water as uncurbed develop-
ment bas been aUowed to proceed. En-
viron mentalists can now correctly
claim that development has already
out-distanced the city's ability to pro·
vide clean drinking water.
ONE SOLUTION to the city officials'
problems would be to advertise our
drinking water as "protein-enriched."
The little critters that are in the water
are not too terribly noUceable and a
good ad-man ·might be able to sell the
water for us. The income would be
useful and could pay for additional
p0llcemen, roads, sewers that develop-
ment such as the Newport Center ex·
pansion will require. One prec1ulioo the
• city should lake if it decides to aell our
"protein-enriched" ••ler ta to take out
extensive l~urance covera1e in case
the long-term ilde ~ffect of drtnkl~ the
little critters turns out to be aome
dreaded dls~ase.
CHARLES BRACHE'I'_
'\
' , ' The flve commercial Jet air
carriers ... 11Utboriled to serve
John Wayne Airport now have 80
days in which to deme ways to
"'eel noise reduction require·
ments ouUined in an airport ac·
cess plan approved by the
Orange County Board of
Supervtaon.
Under the plan, the five car·
riers must agree to us.e so-called
quieter Jets such as the McDon·
nell Douilas DC-9 Super 80 on at
least 50 percent of their flights
by Oct. 1, 1982 and on all fiights
by Oct. 1, 1983.
An excepllon may be
permitted for Western Airlines,
the only carrier serving the
airport that has no plans to
purchase the Super 80s .
Language was added only hours
before the plan was adopted that
will permit any carrier to Iden·
tify "special circumstances"
that would prevent it from com·
plying with the plan's pro-
visions, namely the requirement
for fleet conversion to quieter
Jets.
The language was inserted to
stav~ off the possibility of legal
acUon against the county.
Pacific Southwest Airlines,
which will begin service at the
airport Oct. 1 with two flights
daily, will have no trouble com·
plying with the conversion re-
quirement since It already bas
four Super 80s in its fleet. PSA
officials have promised to use
only Super 80s at the airport.
Aii:Cal bas take.n delivery of
one Super 80, and is due to re-
ceive another in the near future.
County officials say AlrCal,
which will be permitted 23.5
nigh~ daily, also will be able to
comply with the 50 percent con-.
version requires:Bent long before
the 1982 compUance date.
Republic Airlines, with a
night authorization of 1L5, and
Frontier Airlines, with two
fllehts, also are purchasing
·s uper 80s.
It is the county's intent µoder the access plan and the compan-
ion Airport Noise Control and
Land Use Compatibility Plan to
reduc!e average noise levels in
residential areas located below
takeoff paths by 7 .5 decibels on
the Community Noise
Equivalent Level scale.
Such a noise reduction would
reduce the size of the high im-
pact noise zone in those
neighborhoods by 86 percent,
from 237 to 31 acres. according
to the plan.
As the access plan ls written,
the number or permitted daily
departures from the airport
would increase aa overall noise
levels decrease. Forty one de-
partures are now permitted.
R'-'bies clinic
set in HB
A dog vaccination clinic in-
cluding rabies, parvo and dis-
~mper shots is scheduled for
Saturday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
at Murdy Park in Huntington
Beach. ,
Each shot costs $3. The clinic
ia sponsored by the United
Humanitarians of Orange Coun-
ty a.Del i. at 7000 Norma Drive,
near Golden West Street and
Wanaer Avenue.
Dop should be on a Jeash, ac-
cording to a clinic spokesman.
COMICS I N TE R~ISSIO N
J'ELEVI SION
Erma Bambeck suggests checking
the kids instead of .the baggage
when you fly . . . B6
Police say they believe the
suspects who kidnapped and
raped two 14-year -old
bitcbhJkers ln Huntington Beach
Tuesday also committed two
previous rapes along the coast
earlier this year.
"We think they're Involved in
two rapes in February because
the descriptions, the vehicle, the
·ume and the methods are very
similar," police Sgt. Ed McErlin .
said today.
•'There's no doubt in my mind
that they cruise,the beach area
Theater
embroile d
seelng what they can do," 14.
said.
In each assault, two in Runt·
ington Beach and the other
Long Beach, the suspects= fered females a ride and
drove them to the hiJly area ne
si;;:eor ~~t~!:~~~~~9threaieo
with knives and repeated
raped, police said.
Both of the victims in l
separate February attacks,
16-year-old Huntington Bea
girl and a woman, 20, from
Beach, were offered rides
their car had broken down ne
Pacific Coast Highway at a
2: 30 a.m .. police said.
In Tuesday's assault, the t
juvenile hitchhikers, fro
Westminster and Huntingt
Beach, were picked up by tbr
s uspects on Pacific Coa
Highway and Lake Street at 2:
a.m. ....................
Huntington Beach's historic Newland House may be the focua of a 30-acre park 01 city approve• By RICllAllD GREEN
OftM Delly~,...,
They were taken to t
Anaheim HiJls area, threaten
with knives and repeated
raped before the suspects r
turned them to Huntingt
Beach and dropped them off at
gas station on Pacific Coa
Highway and Warner Aven
severaJ hours later, police said.
preUminary plans for project. •
30-acre park backed
Huntington council OKs plan for Newland facility
The Huntington Beach City
CQ...uncil h as ap proved a
sch'ematic plan for a 30-acre
pa~k behind the proposed
Newland Center off Beach
Boulevard south of Yorktown
Avemre.
Seventy-five percent of t.be
park is to be a natural setting
with nature trails , picnic
grounds and a marsh nature
area, according to city officials.
Scheduled recreation facilities
include a grassy turf site for
baseball, basketball and
volleyball courts, a playground,
and an open site for a park view
restaurant. Park development estimated
to cost $580,000 isn't expected to
begin until 1983. Development
includes planting 500 trees,
grading, seeding, pouring
sidewalks, building a buffer wall
between the center and the park,
and nature traUs.
Vince Moorhouse, director of
community s~rvices tor tbe city,
recommended to the City Coun-
cil Monday that the historic
Newland House, built in 11198, be
upgraded before the' park is de-
veloped. The historic house is to
be preservej as the centerpiece
Ocean View High
get,s new principal
Gearge H. Bloch will be the
new principal at Ocean View
High School in Huntincton
Beach when school opens next
year.
Bloch, 39, of El Toro bas been
principal of Culver City High
School since 1978. He officially
becomes Ocean View principal
on July 1, replacing John Viculln
who bas resigned.
of the shopping center, which is
under construction.
Proposed upgrading includes
new fencingJ a gazebo, and turf
planting.
Moorhouse also bas proposed
construction of a "barn" recep-
tion center behind the Newland
House to be available for wed-
dings, conventions or historical
society meetings. He said such a facility could generate rental rev-
enue and is in demand because
of the picturesque setting.
The city council will consider
the Newland House proposals at
its June 15, meeting, according
to city officials.
The shopping center is being
built in the Victorian motif to be
compatible with the historic
house. It's to be 190,000 square
feet and include two
restaurants, a two-story office
building. two banks, a savings
and loan ftrm and a number of
smaller stores, according to city
officials.
Signal Landmark Inc. is build-
ing the center. In past years the
deve loper dedicated the
Newland House and the park.
site to the city as condition ror
developing homes in other parts
of the city, according to city of·
ficlals. '
The Newland Center site is on
a bluff top, overlooking moat of
the proposed park. A six-foot.
high wall will separate the park
and the shopping center.
The 10,000-spectator Irvine
Meadows Amphitheater won't
open for business until Aug. l,
but it's already embroiled in a
legal C()Jltroversy.
Owners of the amphitheater
being built at Lion Country
Safari have filed a Sl.5 million
lawsult against the Nederlander
theatrical organization, which
owns the. Greek Theater in Los
Angeles and ls developing an
amphitheater at the Orange
County Fairgrounds in Costa
Men.
The antitrust suit filed Mon-
day in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles alleges that performer
contracts e nfor ced by
Nederlander is stymieing efforts·
by Irvine Meadows Am-
phitheater officials to book
performers.
Specifically, contractual dif-
ficulties have prevent~d the
Irvine Meadows Amphitheater
Partnership from signing con·
cert agreements with Jefferson
Starship, Tom Jones, Emmy
Lou Harris, Melissa Mapchester:
and Santana, amphitheater
spokesman Michael Henntean
said Wednesday.
He conten'tled that these
artists and others are prohibited
from appearing at the Irvine
Meadows Amphitheater becauae.
or performance contracts they
bold with the Greek Theater.
These contracts contain
clauses that prohibit Greek
Theate performers from appear-
ing at any other amphitheater
within 100 miles of the Greek
and within 90 days before and 60
days after their performance
there, Hennigan said.
These clauses represent a
violation of the Sherman An-
titrust Act, he claimed.
The suspects drive a blac
Cbevrole( Mikado pickup wtU\
camper shell, police said.
suspects are male whites, i
their late 20s or early 30s.
had mustaches and one had
beard, police said.
McErlin said the investlgati
is being coordinated with
Beach polic4:.
HB r enews
animal pact
with county
The-Huntington Beach City
Council has renewed its annual
contract with the Orange County
Animal Control shelter fof
$14~,404.
The city offsets the cost~ animal control by collecting f
for dog licenses. City offici
say license fees for the fisc
year. beginning July l ar
estimated to bring in $160,000.
But employee overhead a ·
sociated with licensing wi
bring the city's total animal co
trol cost to about $207,000
nually, according to city o •
ficials.
In 1980-81, 17,815 dogs wer
licensed in Huntington Beach.
The new contract with t
county takes effect July 1. T1*
year, the county is charging. t
percent more for animal contf;t
than it did last year, accord~
to city officials.
Bloch also has been principal
at Garey High School in
Pomona, assistant principal at
Indio Hieb School and was a
teacher in the Las Virgenes
Unified School District, Cen-
tinela Valley Union High School
District and at St. Genevieve
High School in Panorama City.
Nude editor won't 1be ousted I
NEW AT OCfAN VIEW
Principal George Bloch
Freew~y)blocked
North~Und traffic on the San-
ta Ana Freeway was snarled
more than an hour this morning
after a tractor-trailer rig over-
turned and blocked two lanes.
Bloch, married with four
children, received bis doctorate
in school management from the
University of La Verne and also
received degrees at St. Mary's
Co llege and Cal State
Northridge.
Viculln, 39, has been principal
of Ocean View since the school
opened in 1976 with its con·
troversial "variable ctedit"
grading system that allows stu-
dents to earn credits at their
own pace.
He will become principal at
Gahr High School in CerritOI
next month, according to district
officials.
The variable credit system at
Ocean View High School will be
retained next year.
UC Irvine student editor
Barnabas Sokol \!{ill not be
stripped of his positlon or dis-•
ciplined for posing nude and
printing a few vulgar jokes in a
"humor supplement" banned on
campus earlier this week, ac-
cording to the student council.
Associated Students advisor
Dennis Hampton said today a res-
olution to fire Sokol was
withdrawn at a Tuesday council
meeting before the students
could take action. CoUl)cil member Jim Harvey
withdrew the resolution after de-
ciding there would not be enough
council support: to pass it, said
Hampton.
The 23-year-old editor of tbe
New University newspaper
apologised to students earlier
this week and took ru
responsibility for the eight pa
humor supplement, consid~
by other staff members to be
fensive.
About 50 to 100 copies or the·
sert were stolen from a cam])
loading dock before edito
destroyed nearly 10,000 copi
prior to distribution of the re
~lar issue Tuesday.
!·
OFF 6 RUNNING DEPr. -Every now ~d thtn you run into aome 1our pu11 who will tn11tt on tellln1 you how
community eatherlnga
like picnics. fairs , hl) baza.ars and the like ·
are really old hat . ' • ·
Nobody goes to them ,..
any ~ore. They're just ~r
too ~~Y. you'N! like-Tll IUIPHlll ,k¥f /
ly to nm into a couple · · ·
of these down-in-the-mouthers right in our own coastal re-
gion as the fair metropolis of Costa Mesa gets ready for
iomorrow's opening of one of th'ese eveiits for the 36th
straight time.
Friday marks the start of the three-day Costa Mesa
Fish Fry and Carnival under auspices of the Costa Mesa-
Newport Harbor Lions Club.
"NAB, YOU DON'T wanna get caught in aJl that
corn-pone," some Wrong Thinker will advise you. "They
just gonna give away a bunch of prizes and sell fish din-
ners and have a paracfe and carnival. Just cruddy ol'
stuff like that . . . "
Well, I've got news for you. If it's all so corny and out
of date, how come attendance keeps setting records dur-
ing the Fish Fry in Mesatown? Maybe so.ooo people show
up over the three days. Maybe 100,000. Who knows? Your
estimate is as good as anybody's. Suffice to say it's going
to be a lot of folks.
And they're going to have a good time.
I hope you won't run into anybody that suggests to
you that good times have gone out of style.
' SO ntE LIONS and their friends will start serving
I those.fa mo us fish dinners about 5: 30 tomorrow afternoon.
And they're going to keep serving them for three days.
The carnival rides open at 6 and then that famolis
1 aggregation known as Band X, the "World's Largest Non-
'You mean they all volunteered for the Fi3h FT',/ parade?"
marching Marching Band,·~ will take to the stage at
Lions Park at 7:30 p.m. The big purr-rade takes to the
streets Saturday at 10 :30 a.m.
THOSE FISH DINNEJlS, alleged to have been made
so tasty over the years because of a secret recipe for bat-
ter, continue to be one item that seems to have defied in-
flation.
The family-style fish fling is still only $3.50 a plate. It
seems to me it was $3.50 a plate when I was a kid and
gasoline was 18 cents a gallon. And tossed in with the de-
al, you might turn out to be the lucky winner of a new
1981 Ford Escort or a new-fangled color TV set or one of a
' bunch of other prizes.
Through all this, it's going to be enormously difficult
to be a sour puss. If you run into one, tell him to hike on
down to -Salt Creek Beach and count seagulls. Then you
go ahead to the Fish Fry and have a good time.
IN ANY CASE, there are only two Fish Fry events
where I abslolutely refuse to participate. I refuse to. be a
judge in the Miss . Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
beauty contest.
Further, I ref use to make a selection in the Best
Baby Contest.
ln truth, I haven't been asked to judge in either one
but I'm getting my refusal in ahead of time just in case.
AS A J UDGE in those contests, you have to re-
member that the parents of losers far outnumber the
parents of winners.
When it comes to telling parents who has the best girl
or the best baby, cowardice is the only way out.
See you all around the fish dinner tables, now.
Irvine scouting
leaden due honor
Four lrvine scout leaden will
receive the highest merit award
at the Santiago District at a rec-
ognition dJnner Friday at the
Santa Ana Elks Club.
Those being honored are John
Bowski, Kathleen Ann Curnutt.
W. Les Kemp and George K.
Koch.
frvine gains $300,oOO infetkmlfimds'
I I Being labeled a "metropolitan cording to 1980 U.S. Department Development funds.
lty" by Uncle Sam will mean or Census fieures released in Since 1974 Irvine has bad to
,000 io grant funds for Irvine April. compete with other county cities
extyear. of less than 501009 for Urban
The latest population figures County Prorram f'"1ds that are
Since l!t'14 the population bas in· will entitle the city to a blgaer given by HUD to the county for
reased from 26,100 to 62,134. ac-slice of ffousin1 and Urban distribution.
Dllltr ..... .....__, RkMrf ......
HITTING THE MATTRESS -Nine-year-old
Brody Humple of Irvine leaps from platform
to a mattress at Adventure Playground in
University Park at Beech Tree Lane and
University Drive in Irvine. The playground
offers a number of supervised activities fot 1
young thrill seekers.
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Fluor Co. shatters
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I
TORON'l'O (AP) -Tile An&els' bat-
ters, perhaps inspired by the work of
their pitchers the last two days, deci4ed
to take matters into their own handa
Wednesday ni&ht.
lected three hits and Brian Downing
added a three-run home run.
Naturally, there were two schools of
thou1ht on the night's proceedings.
"How many runs did we 1et Ln the
other five games, 14?" uked An1el.
manager Gene Mauch who ls C-2 since
replacing Jim Fregosi. "Well this is a
heck of a lot more fun for them.''
The Angels, held to three sin&les over
tbe openinc four innincs. went on a 16·
hit rampa&e for the remainder of the
eame en route to a 17-6 victory over the
Toronto BJue Jays for a a weep of the
three-game American Lea1Ue baseb1dl
series. The Angels had recorded two 3·0
shutouts in the opening two games of
the series.
In the Toronto dressing room,
manaaer Bobby Mattick blasted his
club, calling them semi-pro players.
''It was just a terrible exhibition of
baseball," he said: "lt better be embar-
rassinR for the players too. Leadinl the onslaught against five
Toronto pitchers was shortstop Rick
Burleson who went S-for-S with three
runs batted in on four singles, a double
and a sacrifice fiy. Dan Ford cblpped in
with three hits and four RBis while
Butch Hobson and Rod Carew each col-
"It was the worst game I've ever
been associated with either this year or
last year . It's one thing not to bit but it's
another when you screw things up all
the time.
CdM doubles over
Sea Kings' reign ended by Miraleste
By ROGER CARLSON
Of tlle Deify ...... Si.ft
TORRANCE -Corona del Mar High's Sea
Kings have made a Ii vin& in the tennis playoffs
with a powerful doubles attack during the past six
years as they swept to one CIF 4-A tiUe after
another -and Antony Emerson and Jamie Paul
combined for a typical CdM effort ill that area.
The two upset Mlraleste ffigb's No. 1 team,
which was composed of two of the three best
players for the~arauders -John Letta and Matt
Frooman, a ~r of juniors.
That, however, was just about the sum total of
success for the perennial champions as Miraleste
stunned the Sea Kings, 16·12, here at La Casa de
Vida Tennis Club to end the six-year reign by CdM
as kings of Southern Calirornia prep tennis.
THE VERDICI' WAS effectively decided dur-
ing the first haU of play as Miraleste grabbed an
8·6 advantage despite the play of Emerson and
Paul. The Sea Kings' No. 1 doubles team broke
service in the ninth game of each match to record
~.(, ~-4 victories and Miraleste's victory plans ap-
peared on shaky grounds.
· "Eeerson is a great player," said Miraleste
Coach Clag Offutt, "but Paul really put some gray
hairs in my bead."
But as quickly as the Sea Kings' fortunes rose,
they dropped to the lowest point ln seven years as
the advantage evaporated as Miraleste senior Dan
Wooten and freshman Richard Goldenson com-
bined to defeat sophomores Brian SuUlvan and
Jeff Ewing.
"That was Richard's best teMls ever," said
the winning coach.
within a stroke of gaining a split with a 6-4 lead in the
tie-breaker.
"You have to give Miraleste credit, its doubles
team did it under pressure in that tie· breaker."
said Heffern.
The next blow to the CdM cause came mo·
ments later as sophomore Rafael Osuna, th~ son of
the Mexican star of the same name, raJlied from a
1-S deficit to defeat David Gerken. 7-5.
By the time the two teams had played through
three rounds of singles Miraleste owned a 14·10
lead, needing anything more than the magic
number of 14 to claim the victory.
Freshman Eric Amend did the honors, drop·
ping Greg Hayward, 6·1, and the remainder of the
schedule was strictly formality.
The loss drops CdM's final record to 22-2 and
snaps a 34-game winning streak in the playoffs,
while Miraleste avenges its only loss with its 21st
victory.
"WE HAD A FEW breaks go the wrong way,"
said Heffern. "The last time we saw Osuna he only
won two matches." Aho potent to Mlraleste's at-
tack was Mexican Davis Cup member Joree
Lozano. who won three before dropping a mean-
ingless duel alter the mateh wu decided.
The Mlraleste coach was in agreement: "I
thought he (Osuna> was good for two wins, max.·
imum. And there was no reuon for my firsi.'
doubles team to lose. But Emerson is a great
player."
Emerson distinguished himsel! individually.
but his efforts with Paul were the only things to
write home about this time for the normally all-
winning Sea Kings.
·'This acame hurts me more than
anything.''
Burleson's performance ended a poor
road record on a hieh note.
''It's aoout time," said Burleson. "I'd
gone l ·for-17 on this road trip.
"I think it's been a couple of weeks
since I collected an RBI and I was won·
derinac it I was ever goine to knock in
aqother run.''
ACt~ the Angels too.k a 1-0 lead in the
second on a run-scorinac double play
ball, Toronto moved ahead 2-1 in their
half of the inning on solo home runs by
Otto Veles and George Bell -their first
runs in 23 innings.
The Angels broke it open with six
runs in the fifth by sending 10 batters to
the plate.
After Downinac and Juan Beniquez
walked, Hobson singled in a run and
Beniquez scored when Bell's throw went
through two Toronto players at third
and into the dugout. Hobson moved to
third on the play and scored on a slnale
by Burleson. Carew's single moved
Burleson to third
Fqrd slngJed home Burleson and
Carew scored the final run on a
sacrifice Oy by Don Baylor.
Downlng's three-run blast. his fifth
homer of the season, hiihliJhted the
Angels six-run seventh that also pro·
duced a run-scoring triple by Hobson
and RBI double by Ford.
Ford then singled home two more
runs in the Angels' three· run ninth.
The Jays, who added a run on a
second solo shot by Velez in the sixth.
giving him seven homers on the year,
scored three times in the ninth with
Danny AJngedriving in two runs.
............. CDM COACH DA VE HEFFERN a1reed that
the No. 2 doubles turned the mate~ around and it
was a scene which found the Sea Kings dropping
the tie-breaker in the final set, 9-7, after being
Now, it's wait until next year -and hopefully
get anotb~r shot at Miraleste, which did it with on-
ly one seruor. Atlanta's Terry Harper executes a graceful approach to third ahead of throw to the Dodgers' RonCey.
•
Atlanta's 42-year-olds too. much for Dodgers
LOS ANGELES <AP> -If any team
is aware of the abilities of veteran
Atlanta right-handers Gaylord Perry
and Phil Niekro, it's the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
Tom Laaorda. "We get three runs in
two nights against two guys who are 84
years old."
The 42-year-old hurlers sent the Na-
tional League West-leading Dodger•
down to successive defea\,S the last two
nights, with Niekro burling seven in-
nings of AUanta's 4·2 triumph Wednes·
day niacht.
Atlanta Manager Bobby Cox saw
nothing at all unusual about the two
games. 1
'.'We're just not scoring any runs,"
said an angry Los An"eles Manager
"There are so many similarities
between them," Cox said of Nlekro and
Perry. "They're both great com-
petitors, they know what they're doing,
they both have a great knowledge of the
game and they've bad sound arms their
whole careers ...
Mc~nroe, Jaeger,
Lloyd eliminated
But Lendl, the No. 5 seed,
broke back and closed the acap to
4-S, drivinl every shot deep to
the bueline, with McEnroe net·
ting three and overhltting
another.
Two 1ames laler McEnroe, 21,
dropped hil service again. 11e
tried ioing forward, bu~ sent a
backhand volley yardl out of
court, and then double faulted.
Lend!, alao 21, finished off the
service break with a backhand
return down tbe line.
The semifinal• lineup pita
Bjorn Bore of Sweden, tbe de·
fendlq champion, a1atmt Vlc· •
tor Pecci of Pua1uay, aDd
Lendl qainst Joee-Luil Clerc ol
Arsentlna.
-------
After ~erry, with relief help from
Rick Camp, beat the Dodgers in 10 in·
nings Tuesday night 3-1, Niekro and
Camp restricted Los Angeles to four
hits Wednesday night.
Niekro, 4-B, pitched into the eighth in-
ning but alter giving up a leadoff single,
Cox replaced him with Camp, who pre·
served the victory with his seventh
save.
"Phil has pitched with a pulled mus-
cle in his back, but it didn't bother him
until we took him out," said Cox, who at
age 40 is youneer than both hi& pitching
aces. "He can pitch with a lot of pain
and be hardly ever misses a start."
Niekro said, "Basically, I was getting
my knuckleball over the whole game. I
had a good knuckleball, good speed.
The times I got hurt, the home run a.nd
a couple of bits, was when I got behind
the hitters.''
Pedro Guerrero hit his 10th homer of
the season, a two-run blow ln the fourth
inning, to account for the Dodgers' only
runs.
48 hours
n ot e nough
for judge
ROC~TER, N.Y. (AP) -
Federal Judge Henry Werker
heard closing arguments today
in the National Labor Relatious
Board's request for an i.Qjunc-
lion acainst major league
bas.,ball, then told the parties
that his decision might take
longer than the 48 hours he had
originally promised.
Aftet Marvln Miller, executive
director of the players' union,
appeared as a rebuttal witness
opening today's session, Louis
Hoynes, attorney for the Na·
ttonal League, and Jerry Mayer,
representina the NLRB, present-
ed their closing arguments.
Werkerrepeatedlyinterrupted
Mayer'& remarks. At one point,
the NLRB lawyer cited com·
ments made by Peter Bavasi,
president of the Toronto Blue
Jays, regarding the compeosa·
tlon 1'aue and its relationship to
free-agent salaries.
"The Blue Jays are not the
subject ol this petition," Werker
told Mayer.
Miller appeared on the stand
for about 10 minutes and dilP'lt·
ed testltDOQ)' given in Weclnes·
day's openlq 1111lon which
aaid that the injunction was
·sou1bt merely aa a Clelaytaa tac·
Uc.
"That's demonstrably UD· true," Mwer said. "The relief
sousbt WM data, IO days to
analyse tW data ... a Period of
bar1alnlDI te r.llow.''
Mlller cl~ N1ff9'*9....,. re·
porta and in~ of owners
complalninl alMMat -... MU'•
bur1-1nl .e.omic 1ttu1daa,
and Mays aleo refettld IO tMle
i'epot11. •
; 'Iii ~ eqllerieaee eo&leetive
bar1alnln1 takes ii\ae• at a
aumtier ~ levels, "' HlllJ la bueball, and the pred 11 • a.
t'8r.al part of tbat P.Nlllla''
llOltrlald.
••V.....are--.Jttie • flMIDPt to err.et Mrl aM fM.11 an ftl'J,.,.. Ell
Orange Coaet OAILV P.ILC?f /Thuraday, June•. 1981
.-----------------..... """'!"~
A 'Boy of Summer'
has rollgl, reunion
From AP dispatches
NEW YORK -Russ "Monk'' •
Meyer, who pitched for the Brooklyn
Dodgers three decades ago, returned
here Tuesday for a reunion or the ··Boys or Sum·
mer" and it cost him two World Series rln11
and a watch. •
·'This never happened to me when I was
playing ball here," Monk said Wednesday.
·'They just came out of nowhere," he Hid ln
an interview describing the holdup at 25th
Street and Lexington Avenue, a few blocks from
the Gramercy Park Hotel. where he was stay-
ing.
'Tm walking looking tor a joint to get some
breakfast and t)le two of them, one &UY with a
gun and another one, and they just put the gun
right to my head and .he said. 'Get it up or
else."
"'They got both my Series rings, the 1953
and the world championship 1955 ring, an $1,100
wrist watch that had diamonds in it. and $400
cash." he said.
Meyer, 57, had returned to New York for a
reunion with a few Dodger teammates of the
"Boys of Summer" era in a double promotion
Tuesday for a book and a local politician's et·
fort to bring big-league baseball back to
Brooklyn.
He was returning to his home today, his native
Peru, Ill.
Quote of the day
Paul Spllttorff, Kansas City pitcher,
after being rained out for the third time in
seven scheduled starts: "I should be elect-
ed to the farmers' Hall of Fame ...
Bills interested in Reynolds
BUFFALO. N.Y. -The Buffalo
Bills of the National Football League
are talking contract with Jack
Reynolds. rormer linebacker for the Los
Angeles Rams, according to a published report.
The Buffalo Evening News quoted
Reynolds' agent, David Fishoff, as saying the
Bills were among seven teams interested in
Reynolds.
"We like Buffalo because Jack has a lot of
respect for Bills Coach Chuck Knox," Fishoff
told the paper. ·'There's a lot of mutual respect.''
Wayne Gro11 slammed a three· •
run homer ln the first lnning and
Brian Kinsman scattered seven hits
11 Oakland whlpped the Chica10
White Sox, 8-3, to hlehllght American Lt11ue
oction Wednesday n1eht. Gross hit his fifth
home run of the year and second in two n11bts
btfore Chlcaao starter Fruclaco Barr101, l 3.
could retire a batter . . . Elsewhere Grall Net·
Uea drilled a two run homer
with two out in the bottom of
the 11th Inning, glvlng the
New York Yankees a 2·0 vlc·
tory over Baltimore behind
tht nine-hit pitchJn1 of Dave"
Rl1heUJ aod Roa Davis ...
Jerry Grote drove in a club-
record seven runs with a dou-
ble, slngle and grand slam
home run, o(fsettina a Cour-
Crou homer assualt by Seattle and
powering Kansas City to a 12-9 conquest. Grote,
a 38-year·old catcher, has spent the last two
years ln retirement . . . Bump Wllls knocked ln
three runs with a triple and a single, Buddy Bell '
hit a solo homer and Rick Honeycutt won bis
fifth game in six decisions as Texas beat Min-
nesota, 6·3 ... Rkble Hebner had two hits
scored a run and drove In another to pace
Detroit to a 4·1 triumph over l\filwaukee ...
Toby Harrah knocked in three runs with two
homers and scored t)lree runs to lead Cleveland
to a 4-1 win over Boston.
Rose closes within seven of Musial
Philadelphia's Pete Rose had two • singles in the Philles' 6-2 loss to the
New York Mets to move within seven
of Stan Musial's all-time National
League career hit record of 3,630. Rose had a
sin&le in the third inning and another in the
eighth, when he knocked Jn both of
Philadelphia's runs. Rookie right-hander Greg
Harris picked up the win for the Mets as he
blanked the Phillies on just
two bits over seven innings
. . . Elsewhere in National
League action Wednesday.
Dave Concepcion had three
hits and drove in two runs,
leading Cincinnati to a 6·2
win over San Francisco . . .
Terry Puhl snapped a seven·
th-inning tie with a run·
scoring double and Cesar
Rose Cedeno bad three hits and
scored three runs to lift Doo Sutton 14-6) and
Houston to a 6-1 victory over San Diego ...
Rookie Orlando San~bez tripled to open the 11th
Inning and scored one out later on Tommy
Herr 's single, giving St. Louis a 3·2 edge over
~ontreal ... Jason Thompson smacked a two·
run pinch homer in the eighth off rookie Randy
Martz to lift Pittsburgh to a 3·2 triumph over
the Chicago Cubs ... Houston's Art Howe has
been named the NL Player of the Month.
Howe's month was highlighted by a 23-game hit·
ling streak, the longest in the NL this year. He
also Jed the National League with a .362 batting
average entering Wednesday's game.
Baseball today
On this date in baseball In 1964:
Los Angeles Dodters' strikeout king
Sandy Koufax l nned 12 PhJladelphla
Phillies in posting th third no-hitter of hls
career, a 3·0 victory at Connle Mack
Stadium.
Today's birthdays:
ClnclMatl manuger John McNamara Is
49. San Diego catcher Terry Kennedy Is 25.
Umpires cross picket line
PITTSBURGfi -Four major • league umpires, led by crew chief
John Kibler, crossed a picket line set
up by striking ushers, ticket handlers and main-
tenance workers at Three Rivers Stadium.
But there were some side effects for the
6,437 baseball fans who paid to see the Pit·
tsburgh Pirates beat the Chicago Cubs 16-3
Tuesday night. including the absence of hot
dogs, pizza, french fries and other hot snacks.
Pirate management had been prepared to
use sandlot umpires If necessary, but the reg-ulars reported.
"We felt we should honor our contract
which says we won't strike," Kibler said . "And
l'n;i sure. h~d we stayed out they'd have had an
lnJunction and we'd be back tomorrow anyway." •
Kibler was joined on the umpiring crew by
Bruce Froemming, Joe West, and Fred
Bro.cklander. Kibler said the umpires made the de~as.ion after consulting with attorney Richie
Ph1lhps, lefai counsel for the Major League
Umpire's Association.
The ground ~rew honored the picket line,
and so did taxi 4•nd bus drivers who let
passengers off outside the stadium's inner cir· Cle.
Tampa awarded 1984 Super Bowl
Tampa was awarded the 1984 •
Super Bowl by the National Football
League owners at the conclusion of
their two-day meeting Wednesday. The Florida
bay city received 24 of a possible 28 votes.
Pasadena and Miami received one each, while
two o~ers were absent .. The Aga Khan's
Sbergar, ridden by 19·year-old Walter Swlnburn,
scored an easy victory in the 202nd running or the
Derby Stakes at Epsom Downs in England ... A
negotiator who wants to bring the Oakland
Raiders to Los Angeles testified that innation has
made part of the original deal for their move ob·
solete, and a new contract would have lo be
negotiated if they win a court right ... The
Cosmos announced they have purchasec;I Steve
Wegerle from the Los Angeles Aztecs for an un-
disclosed amount of cash and future draft choices.
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: No events scheduled.
FRIDAY RADIO
Baseball Dodgers at Chicago, 11 30 a m .
KABC <790>.
American team
faces Brazil
Volleyball ... match a't-~WC
Volleyball fans will have the chance )o see top
International compellt100 when the United States
national team plays the Brazl111n team at Golden
West Colleie Friday niaht at 7:30,
The exhibition match 11 one of 30 scheduled
across the country feaiurlni the top amateur
plar.ers from the U .s. against intem~Uonal com-
petition. It's being sponsored by the Golden Wut
Volleyball Club. Ticketa are on aale at the college
bookstore for $3, and will be sold at the door for $4
The American team features famiUar names
such as Dusty Dvorak and Craig Buelt. Both' are
Laguna Beach residents. Dvorak, alon1 with Tim
Hovland and Pat Powers represent USC, runner-
up to UCLA In this year's NCAA finall. Buck plays
for Pepperdine.
The U.S. team will also feature Karch Kiraly
and Randy Stoklos, both members or the UCLA
championship squad.
Brazil has won every South American
volleyball title s ince the early 19~. In the 1980 Mosco~ Olympics, the Braill.ian ~m lost a hotly-
contested match with bronze medalist Rumania
narrowly missing a medal. '
Brazil has been first or second in every Pan
American Games volleyball competition since the
early 'SOs.
The U.S. and Brazilian men's teams have met
several times over the years with the series about
equal. Both nations have a similar history for
recreation and colleg1ate volleyball ·and approach
the game with some of the s ame technical and tac-
tical concepts.
A few of the Brazilian players are well known
in the United States. Many have attended
American universities and those best known In the
area have played at USC. A number of Brazilians
have also played in the U.S. professional volleyball
league
"This 1s probably the premiere volleyball
match to be played in Orange County this year."
s a ys Golden West volleyball coach Lou Ann
Terheggen, herself a top amateur competitor in
the '70s
After Friday's match, the teams will tangle
Saturday night al UC Santa Barbara, followed by
a Sunday night match at Cal Poly <San Luis
Obispo>.
Lawn bowling tourney set
One or the largest lawn bowling_ tournaments
or the season will take place at the Newport
Harbor Lawn Bowling Club Fnday and Saturday
beginning at 9: 15 each morning.
A total of 192 players will particiapte in the
two·day event with 32 three-person teams each day
competing for prizes amounting to $1,500 and
sponsored by Foremos t Home Brokers, Inc.
Three-person teams are coming Crom as Car
away as Santa Barbara andSanD1egotocompete.
Rogers
next CFL
defection?
Water keeps getting hotter_/ or Martin,
VICTOR IAVILLE, Quebec
<AP> Running Back George
Rogers or the University of
South Carolina liked what be
saw Wednesday at the MontreaJ
Alouettes' training camp and
said there is a good chance he'll
sign with the Canadian Football
League club.
Rogers. the Helsman Trophy
winner who led the NCAA in
rushing last season with l ,781
yards, was the first selection of
the New Orleans Saints of the
National Football League in the
April draft.
"There's a better chance of
me signing here than with New
Orleans.,.. said Rogets. who ar-
rived here at training camp
Wednesday afternoon.
The 6-2. 225-pound tailback
said money would be the de-
termining factor in his decision
to either play with the Saints or
head to the CFL.
So far. AJouettes owner Nelson
Skalbania has convinced former
Los Angeles Rams quarterback
Vince Ferragamo, Houston
Oilers kick returner-receiver
Billy Johnson and Chicago
Bears wide receiver ,James
Scott to play with the team.
"There's no doubt Montreal is
serious," Rogers said . His
agent. Jack Mills, said llogers
had already rejected t\VO pro-
posals from the Saints "and the
counter-offer they made still left
us pretty far apart." .
Rogers returned to Montreal
from training camp Wednesday
night but it was not known
whether talks were held with
General Manager Bob Geary,
executive vice-president Biil
Putnam and president Rene
Forte,
"We already have talked num-
bers with them in a general way
and we feel we're certainly com·
~Utive." said Putnam.
NB we(lge r1JD
. •et for June 27
Tbe ~-Uort Beach wedae nan •s achedUlld•for ·aaturday, JWM
27, wltb the 1tart orillnalln•
from the N~ Pier. •
The race wlll beam at the
south aide or the Newport Pier
and ao to t.M -'dp. TM NII·
nera will then retwn to Ute pt«
(5.9 nillea>.
• Pre-rqiatratJoa ree ror the
race 1Ji '8 cthal lncluda a T·
1birO. Rae• day re1lltraUm It SS for &be r.u anlY. Clld·m Um• ,for u.e Rart o1
lbe l'8C9 ii at 1:30 I .ID ........ die
rue~lqat8.
P01'1iJte balorm1Uoa, .....
541-tlal.
l
' •
Jon Butler
Preps eye
CIF state
crowns
NORWALK -Ten Orange
Coast area track and field
athletes -four boys and six
girls, including Edison High dis·
lance star Jon Butler an<l
University High'a one·two punch
of Laura Mills and Polly Plumer
-befin their quest for a state ti·
tie Friday at Cerritos Colle1e.
Field event prelim1 ~gln at 4
at Cerritos, folJowed b)' the fU"St
running event at 5. The d1acua
prelims are at Excelsior Aigh,
<near Cerritos) with the
women's division betinning at 1,
the men's at 4.
Friday's conipetiUon will ~
duce the nine flnallata in eaeb
event for Saturday's finals at the
same sites.
Buller 11 entered ln Ute 3,200,
boastin1 a beat or 8: 63.91 at the
Masters meet. HI• tou1heat
competiUon ii expecte4 to come
Crom Steve Valen of El Modena,
but that problem won't be COO·
tended with unut Saturday, u -
su mi n1 both advance as ex-
pected.
Plumer la UM defendin1 cham-
pion ln the 1,eoo and alon1 with
Mll11 ln tbe tOO·meter low
hurdlea, Is a heavy f avorlte to
quality for the Onal1.
Mills ii also entered in UM dit·
cua and hllb Jump. maldn1 het
one of tbt few triple thr•t. ln thete ftiaala.
Other• ••ven 1ood shou a\ earnLDt flDaJ• bertha include
Xevla Jefferlea of Newpot\
llUbGr ID llae d~UI and Renn.le
DlaNliii Of t.q...a Beach ln the ...........
A8d tbe =-abota -P'ountebi V•U.,"• A~• Vlllanuna la
Ute I M, U•l•eHUJ Hltb AR1MW ..,..,. lD tbe
I '• Lrindl s.ue ID u. .... -. •. o...Nw Janlor..,,... Ila .,... In tbe
100U11•.· '{
Umpire Terry Cooney files common assault charge
TORONTO (AP > -Oakland A 's
Manager Billy Martin was charged with
common assault by umpire Terry Cooney
Wednesday in connection with Martin's al·
leged on-field bumping of Cooney in a
game here Friday night.
Meanwhile, Bill Kunkel, the chief of the
umpiring crew which includes Cooney,
said Cooney was injured when bumped by
Martin.
"RIGHT NOW HE'S not mentioning It,
but since the incident, he is receiving
muscles spasms in his back and in his
chest," said Kunkel. "He's receiving
medication right now and he has been con-
sulting a doctor."
Cooney, who worked Wednesday night's
Angels-Blue Jays game here, said he fil ed
charges because: "I feel that I may not re-
alize any benefit frdm my actions but
somewhere down the line. some official -
whether it be in hockey, or whether it be in
basketball or football or baseball -is go-
ing to realize my efforts were not in vain."
Meanwhile, Richie Phillips, counsel to
the Major League Umpires Association,
said at his Philadelphia office that his
group planned to take civil action against
Martin in the United States. seeking an un-
specified amount of damages.
American League President Lee Mac·
Phail said he regretted Cooney·s decision
to go to court.
"DISCIPLINE RELATING to events
happening on the baseball field unless
serious injury or assault with a bat or
something of an extreme nature is in-
volved -should be handled within
baseball." MacPhail said. "I expect to dis·
cuss this matter further with Cooney."
Ed Sapir, Martin's lawyer, said in New
Orleans he will ask on behalf of Martin -
in his capacity as A's general manager -
that MacPhail bar Cooney from working
any games involving AL Western Djvlsion
teams. "It necessarily follows that as a re·
suit of the action Mr. Cooney took today
against the m anager, Billy Martin, that he
will be unable to be unbiased or unpre-
judiced against the Oakland A's ,'' Sapir
said.
"Mr. MacPhail could not be reached this
evening and I will try later tonight or
early tomorrow for said ruling. I would
ask that Mr. Martin's request be granted
immediately and remain in effect until all
matters involving Martin and Cooney be
finalized ··
Martin said in Chicago he could not com·
ment on the advice or counsel.
JUSTICE DONALD BEGLEY said that
Martin would be served with a summons
when the A's next play in Toronto Sept. 21.
!he summons will order Martin to appear
tn court al a dale not yet set, Begley said.
Cooney said that a lthough PhiJlips in·
formed him of all avenues open to him, "It
wouldn't have gone this far if I hadn't
wanted it to go this far.
"I'm not being prodded to do anything
by anybody. This is all on my own."
Phillips had warned since last Saturday
that his association was prepared to go to
court against Martin. either in the United
States or Canada. if it felt MacPhail's
punishment was too lenient.
On Monday, after MacPhail bad re-
vi ed films of the game and announced
the one-week suspension. Phillips said it
was nol enough.
Cowboys rope
Miami, 12-6;
ASUnext
Baseball stanJings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Oakland 33 20 .623 -
Texas 28 19 .596 2
Chicago 26 19 .578 3
Angels 2G 27 .491 7
Kansas City 17 26 .395 u
Seattle 18 32 .292 161h
Minnesota 1 14 34 .292 16~
E'ast Division
BaJtlm.ore 28 18 .609 -
New York 28 20 .S83 1
Milwaukee 28 21 .571 1 ~
Cleveland 24 19 .558 2~
Boston 26 22 .542 3
Detroit 25 25 .500 5
Toronto 16 3s. .314 14 ~
•
...,_r'tle ..... A~ 1'1 Tw"''° • c ..... _.,._...
.... Vn t. '9ftl~ t 111 IMIMilJ °"~~=' ,I(-U,IHttttt
T•llM'-a Det ............. . ............ ...,
T•ut CMlltlllCll J.j} et Mi--. (N,.,.MI,
hti"' C'ftnw4'!1 et~ C~M> ... ll!tlw. (~ Wl et New ...............
Ml
0..._ C~ ~S) ec CJllc"9 COMMll wt o.e, ..........
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Dodgers 34 17 .667 -
Cincinnati 29 21 .580 4'h
Houston 26 24 .520 7~
Atlanta 24 24 .500 8"'2
San Francisco 26 27 .491 9
San Diego 19 31 .380 141...;
East Dlvl11lon
Philadelphia 29 20 .592 -
St. Louis 25 18 .581 1
Montreal 27 21 .563 l'h
Pittsburgh 22 20 .524 3"'2
New York 16 29 .356 11
Chicago 10 35 .222 17
..
NY E COMPO ITE TRAN ACTION
OllOTAYIOln IMLl.IK taao •Olf '"' ••••Oltll,MIDlrl"· 'ACl~IC; ..... a.otT0411, o•t•ol'T ••O (IN(llfNATI •'l'O<• I l(CMAlfOU AlfO al~llO a't Ttll tlAtO AlfO IH,Tllill T
Cl
Say you ue told by a federal otnclal your rec·
otds are scheduled ror review as part or an inquiry
Into securities fraud. You protest. "I never had any
dealings in any aecurit.\es at all! How can a atudy of
my files help any legitimate purpose 1n an lnve•d••·
tloo?"
"Maybe, but we don't know that you bad no deal·
lngs in securities until your files have been reviewed
to see whether you d1d or not," the official may
answer. "Catch 22!"
Witb almost unbelievable lack or publicity.
Congress in 1980 pused amendments to the "Rl1ht to
Financial Privacy Act" <RIFPA> which set up a Pl"O·
cedu re under
which the U.S. ~ government
can in effect
file secret ~~~rr:so~~::~ l_Y_l_ll_A_P_l_IT_l ..... 1-~ Z
obtain papers -
relating to you
without your knowledge.
RIFPA was passed in response to the era or
Watergate "enemies lists'' when Americans were
subjected to federal audits and investigations for the
"crime" of holding unpopular opinions.
RIFPA requires the government notify you when
financial records about you are requested from banks
and similar institutions. If you object in court, tlle
government must convince the court the investiga.
lion is legitimate.
Originally, the Securities and Exchange Com·
mission was temporarily exempted, because to police
the nation's securities the Securities and Exchange
Commission needed quick, ready access to financial
data.
In 1980 the SEC convinced Congress it was ap-
propriate for it to collect secret evidence of the need
for secret access to your files so it could submit the
evidence to a court.
If the court ls convinced by the evidence -which
you do not see -then the SEC can get records a~ut
you without telling you. In short, secret dossiers
about you can be filed in court, without your
knowledge.
RIFPA became law in the closing days of 1978 u
part of an omnibus banking bill. The act represented
a major step toward protection or privacy, for it pro-
vided that if you objected to examination of your
financial records, the examiner had to convince the
court that the inspection was for a legitimate
purpose.
But once a government agency claims that there
is a legitimate inquiry, you have a tough time trying
to block access to the records it wants to examine.
The obvious reason is that it's bard for you to prove
an investigation is not legitimate.
Stopping the use of lists or any kind, gd or bad,
in the computer age won't be easy. It may not even
be possible. But the use or secret written dossiers
against you and me is a threat to our freedoms. RIF-
PA as it reads today seems the wont and most
dangerous of regulations in our entire regulatory
jungle.
STOGKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
AMERICAN LEADERS
H~W YORI( (AP) -s.lff. W.O. pr1ce
-Ml <Mntlt of IM Ml\ moM ectl""
•-rlCMI S.11 Eac!IMOe ··~ tredllltl NllloNlly et ,.... thM 11. ~ITr M,JllO t~ + n• o.m.Pt11 a w.aoo ,"' + 1" MCO .._... 411,JOD 1~ ...
HwebltOll t UUOO Jl .. '+'• Intl B'*1W' IU,tllll 4"' + 14 ,.etmntOll 1".200 19 + " ttMMrOll , .. ,100 llVt -\41 Oorcll•IGes 1'7,200 21Y> + 24 Cry1te1011 111.-Ufll -1 C.ulfCen 1 120.100 U + °"
UPS AND DOWNS
NEW YORK (AP) -Tiw fOltow\f>e lllt IMws .. New v.nc S-.Ck Ell<...,._ ••ks ... _,.,,.. tflet 11e ........ -.. ._ tMtt end dllW!I IN ...... _..., Ofl PWCent fll <'*"'9 .....,._.. Of ..,.._
lw Wecl..
No IMCWIUel Ir ..... llle!OW $2 .,. IM~ \lded. Net end llWUll1-CIMflOtl Me ltW ,,,..,.._ .~ tM _...,, <lollno
prtc. ellCIWednetdeY'• price u" N#N Uat C"8 Pct. 1 VIII~., IM 17\11 + 2\11 U. U.0
• ama..,,."' t + 1"-Up 1u I Mellll hllt 1>¥1 + IV. Up IU 4 tt...-iur llV. + IV. Up lU J Tllenl Ind 1'\jli + 11111 Up 11.1
• LLCCor1t J + \'I U' 11.1 7 EAL wtO 7'-'> + .. Up tA
I tnall<e :: 20tl + l'llt Up U t PIW I I 3111 + Yo Up U
10 ~· 17 ... + 1.. u, u 11 U1tlwLM1 U V. + I~ u, 1.1 12 C....ICa lllfB '2"9 + I Up 7.J I) N.i.....,. I 171' + le.a Up 7.A 14 Uftleft <»!11 tlll + .. Up 7.2 U OelWllllMf a-+ 1.. Ut 7,1 1' Am Nrtlfl 21\lli + 1-. UP 6..t OOWWI ~tlol -~ ~-"' Mii -.. . -. • -IV. 12 .. -1 ... Ulll6 -1114 l'ti -.. ___ ,_
,,__ 1\41 •1.'t -t,..
SJ -Mii 1.4\lo -, ... 101 -7 114 -Vt ,., -"'
GOLD COINS
NEW VOttll CA') -"'°kn .... W......
• ., ..... c ..... ~""" t.......,.. """·· • .....,..., l -, •• , ..... 7S,Cllff •Ut •
......... t .,..,. •••••• .11 • .,, ... .. ......... ,...,, .. ...., ........... ... .....
....... ,.,,.._, ·-.,.., .... 1461.1!, ....... .
t.wc•.OMa· .......
DP! JDR~~A~l ~UWJl ·~ 'or WM., JWI. l.
JTOClll uw C.._ Oii
• llMI ~ =ti. w..a :Nl • UJ 19 Tm 417.11 CU.41 412.46 · + 1-" .is u11 1C11S.1• -.. 1cw.n 1os.J6-OM
U SI* 319.JJ m.7' '7Ull •1.74+ 0..57 ~~· ::::::::::.:·:::::.:·.:·: ;~:: Ullll ••.. ................ S..,_ U Sltl ....................... 7,.UAOO
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW YORI( IAPI J .... J
Todll.1 .. 4111 1"5 • ..
HEW YORK (AP) JWI. S
METALS
T-y :11119 m 112 .. 20 u
C...-~ catlll e ....-, U.S. ci.ti-
tloM. LeM ., ... c.,..,. ll8UftCI.
lJec .,,.. C8ftts • .......,, •11....-.
T .. $6.4* Met.tit Weeil COf'lllMMlle lb. Al ........ 7MOcentsepound, H.Y
M«c.., SQS.00 iaer flelll •
ll'Mltl-"4100l~YOL. N.Y.
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
L....,_:meml"911•1ntM6a.U,°"lllr7S. ~: _,..,_fl•U19""2.•,off l1'A
Perll: ....,_ fl•lftl ~I.II, eff t6A
l'retllllM1: ....,. •• Off" •. ~. bl'k•: Lite fl•lnt 5461AO *-oH flJAO. ...............
Ht11•r A ... .--: (etlly Mlly .,.I S-UO,CllffllMI.
I ....... : (GlllY .. fly .-1 ...u.-. Cllff l lUO.
,......,.., <Mir oe11y .-.1 t.Oru•
1411.00, oHllUL
SYMBOLS
0
... ,
•
t
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday. June 4, 1981
Killed for 81? Jenninga
.. ,... IHCTt'*'IMll... ,ICTt.,_...,.... ll'ICYITIOUleutfNIM DOS PALOS <AP) -
"'"' ... ..,..... .....nATWllT uo111uT•f1IMPT uMuunMHT A Dos Palos homicide lotna -• .._PA'9MlllT TM i:---..,._It......... TIW ... I..._. .--.,. NI.. Tll9 ... ._.,.. ,.,_ la......... l tl h ...... r..,, '"' ·' , .. ~ ---...._ --.. -....flt _ .. 1 v c m may ave .,..en
....... ~ WHITI ltlVllt UAMDINO U·NllD•A·OOOO·ll'AIMTllt, .. IUA ffACTOltV, t•S 'Ut• kUled for $1 Bernardo colleg~ VM:HTINO CONIU1.TA1n1, ::,:::~':.. ............ c. .. -... u.a ., ... •-.. c .. -. .._. .. ,A-• ..,.. 1». 1r,.,., c.tlfwftM V11que1 Cardoza, 51d ~
.... "11 o..n. . .,. .. 1• .. _.,. 1t10 1t1v111 QAlllOINO tllOH1 C:.lllf•... •11• f:ffered m111lve bea e..a.u-. , ..._..,.. ,..,..,, ..., ,._ ,....,.. '· ~ i» ........_, it••• •T o . NAO••. 111 tm ..._....., c.e.-... c.e...,. •-· o.M...._, eei...,......, tr••·~ wu Jurles bet ore drownln1 Oran"e Cout Colle1e VWtWe"'-C.. ...... CA""7. -.7 ktil r.-vi.i ~ .. lttl ..,_.. Tlllt ........... ~ ..... 111-• :"' •Oiiit o.OON ILi"-•1 •11•-c..a LANteMNe, "1 AA• ........ C:..'--... cetMWlll• •1,,.._.. in an irrleation canal In Costa Me1a bas
l'W ,..._ ... ..._.~._._,CA c..,., .......... ~-...c.1""• ,..., ~".o..-" eitbt miles aoutheast of named Mark Jennings :; '*t,. ....,_ .. UllM ... .,. • ~: .. .._. 1ac..--. ... •"" ..!!!~1=~ ~1• " • c~~., '=-: 0,-..._.~ ': here. ol Fountain Valley as its ...,.,=,.,.., ........ ~c:..-w....-.. , ...,. _,.. ,...11c• .1-1.1•t. . , outstanding social "" ._~!,::o'"' r111 • ..,.. -,,... -.111 ... -:,:• .=.... _ ..... .,.. ... ""*' ..... 0r.,. CMtt ... ~= l'llmJC NOTICE eclence student for the
:. '"".......,. -111e11 •• • cw .. 1• c19111 ., 0r-. CeuM• • c-tr c ..... e1 0r.,.. CWM• .. .1-•.11.11, u .1•1 1*t1. · 1980·81 academlt year .
... ~ClwtlalOr ..... c..ity911Mey ,,_,,I... 11'1 .... ~a ... 1. NOTICE OF DEATH OF Jenn 1 n gs al.~••ii:t~
"'"1• N»illwe 0r .... c-t o.i1r ,..._., ,......,.. 0r.,. c;...,. o.1."::=. P\JBUC NOTICE THERESA F · AX IE N E..t sophomore, bas m'ain· ,.11,11.,..t:a')..c-.'~:i: J-•.11,1a.as.1•1 tS>H1.~4.11,1t,u,1 .. 1 (., .. 1, lk• THERESA FRANL talnedarn:rlect-40 (A) ,.. ... -1•1• J • 1•1 -.. 0 1 ~ •1CT••"-ou• ............ A x E N e A N o o F • .
--· .... '4 -• -PUBLIC NOTICIE u.ii 1TATi ..... , p e T IT I 0 N T 0 A 0 -c.-ade Pont a veraee ln
P\18UC NOTICE "19UC N&l"ICE ,_!:-_~ •• te-. _,. MIN1$TEi. ISTATE NO. 51. 5 units of aoclal
ll'ICTtn•t9W••.. ....,........ , c1t1AT1v1 o•1•1Nua 1v A-109017. selence classes. He re-
MoT1caCNJT1tutTH'UA1.1 Tiit ... =.':!~'!!...,-.. ..... n.=:; T•NA, • ""'" ,,... ... -. . ...._. T o a I I h t I r t , celved a ICholarsbip tor w.-.cwa ,,.. ... : · Tti. ........_,.._ .. ..._...,. ~~-~·:,. • ,..,. ~neflclerlts, c.-.dltors '175, contributed by
T'.t. -._... cL•MAX tN$ULATID a.o co .. -. ... : ''" .._ """-1-..di. c..1...,.. lftd contlntent creditors Of faculty members from • AMlltlCAHSTATl"IANICea41vly Ustl Clwmlcel ........ Hllfltl11tt9fl HllllTA_!!_~ 9UILelltl, "* . THllltESA F AXENE occ· C!--t IS I d
P\J8UC NOTICll "1aaJC NOTICS QUEENIE
OJ•~ ..,_.,....~lllMltftM._. ... 11\t 1M<11,c.1.....,. • ._.. 2M2~ .......... rw,c.t"9nlla n 11...,...1 ~-.11y a. k THERE_."' FR"'NZ' •~•a cence e · :~ • ...,. ......... lnal WILL HLL Cll•hllM Merl• Mffr•lll u1 ft.at ellliew.t • -a s "11"\ "" partment
:&"' AT ,.u•Ltc AucT10N ro ,.~ .......,t ..._,., c;e11.;..,.i. ••rt •ui-.....,, .., ... _ · TIMMw••,...,_ AXINE encl persons who 1 addi. . •• THI H•W4PT ••D0111 ,.011 CA.SH ~ OtM•, 11 rtre. c:.1--..... TMll ....,,.,,. --il.J """ • may be otherwise Interest· n tJon, Jennmgs ,,., ..... et,._• Mt• 1 .. 1awt111 r1111....,_ta'4IMwlt-.11y 111 ""' "'" ...... '•~•••"'" c_., ~ .. 0r.., c-c:v.., td In the will and/or and 22 other locaJ OCC
,
"'
=-~=~=:;:~·~':!; .......... owisu .. ,..,, ... ,..... _.,,...,., -..iWlllWll~ "-'·1"'· Ht•tt. students have been ac-~
...... ., .. ___.Wclo.t .. Trwllfll... Tiit......,...,. -H ... wllll tM , .............. -......... "* ..... Or .... c...to.I:': A petition has been filed cepted htt.o Phi Alpha ~,':..~::~~TtN .... ~.°:',:~~0etti•0r.,..c-t.,01.1-~=~~~ .. °' .... c.v"'v 911 .1-•.11.11,as,1"1 u.At. by H•rry William Axene Mu honor fraternity, a 01•1 °"'-~"'" _,.._ _
_ ,.,..,,_ ,.1._ 11'1..e and Frank H. Spearman, social sclence honorary "M Si •·to .. __ ,. h ,.._ IEN1r:1c1A1tY: AME11 1cAN Put111v.ci0r.....,c:.." De.tty l"llet. ,.111111.._0r.,. c-ate>eov l"INt. PUBLIC NOTICE 111 In the Superior Court of oreanization Members r. mmons wab.. ...-w Y Uft:"re'a nothing but
STATE aAHK. • eatHwnl• corioor• J-•.11 . ..,u, 1•1 UU41. J-•.11, "'"· '.., 11»41. Oren,:, County r""""uestlnn in b · . off-color jokes on your pocket secretary?'' tkln ,ICTtnous.,..••• .... • t e rraterruty must • RK~AIW1t 11, 1m .. 1Mtr.No. PUBUC NOTJC• ....,..ttATUMUiT that arry Wllll•ms Ax-maintain a 3 5 grade ---------------------m1•111-.. .,,,.....,. tasa tt Ottklel o "18UC N~ '"-,........ ,.,_ ts ....,. .._. • n t a n d F r a n k H . . · .
llKonb 111 ... 9'1ke Of.,. -~ • -... , S,..rman II I be •ppolnt· point averaee in pre· s d k .. 0r .... ~;Mld .... oftru11 ... wasTc1.1,.,. Hu1t111..... scribed socl l le eettrl111'1 .. fllll ..... ,r-..rty: NOTtaTOCOWT•AC"TOttS ll'ICTt1'-fUtllM• ltlGllTltV, 1't1 WHtCIUf 0tl'9 -•S personel represen· a SC nee econ qua e .......... ts1., TrKt No."'· ,.,_.-.la!Wcat .-.naTJ1M91n 1111 .. ..,,..._.,9Nctl,Ca1...,,... · tatlvH to •dmlnlster the courses and have an
'" u. atv • ~ hecll, c.umv SN1" ,.,......., w111 .. ...wvw ot ™ !"'......,. .,... ...... 119111t ..,... R•urt. lflC., • eatlfenll• ctr11W• Htate of Theresa F. Ax· overall 3.0 average el o.-.,., ..,.. Of C.tlforllle, •• IMf IN office of Pllflt °"9r•ttona -°"., ..... ••· tton, 1611 .._lfff Or..,. Mto • k T... · · ,,..,, __ .,...._.,,..,.•tsto Ofll't•t1t°'9!'11tteN t1t,,..irv'-Sl.C• JOHN'S su1N ouss sHo ... N--1-..c11,c:.iu..........' • ene, a• .. eresa Franz Tho21.e a.cceoted tnto hi
t"9 otttc. Of IN c-tv ltecordef of MeM, Calif. fl63' ... 111 2:00 11'.M. on IHcll,can•on•1••.. -•llon. dent Administration of C•te M9M -,.,...,. A\lef'ttt, » 1nc1W1 ... , Ml_,._ Maps.. '" HoaPll•t. 2501 H•"'°' et'fd., coate mu Sllot•ttne, No. a. Hut111t111°" T1111 tau111101• I• ~1114 111• (If' Axene (under the lnc:tepen· the fratenuty trre: """ ts
ui. Couflly, toeotll•• •1111 Ill• JllM 11, 1•1 .. wflkll lllM IMY w111 11o J•lln K•t1nolll Tllam11, ltlU Ro.art. tnc. Arttwr "· Estates Act) T"-natl ti on "°"" Cenflotl. Mert Ectu•1elor. COnnl• • Norttl....,.y 11 ... t Of tNI -1lofl of lllUllllCI~ ...... oftd l'Mcl tor...,...,,.., Sllot911M, .... I. Hl#ltlntl&on 9"<11, 1C11l1P9I, ,.,......_ I t f he I '"' t"'vDe t Mertlfl, Ak ... td Penl111 -Yoo ¥. · ·• via o-..,_.lllftt ..... IMd -.. '"' 1111 wor•.. c~ttonole.... '"'' ~ .,.. ..._ ._.. "'" I S• or ar ng n p , Por-. ••• 9wt,..... • •by""°'"'...,.. ,...,,,..., e11 ....,, 1Nttwtais, ...,. ~ ••~"' 111 "'· c.,... ,._.. .. o,... c.... • Ne. 3 •t 700 Chile Center Muu11u::• •ue11 -on14I
Riverside
:'-· lfltc1•t••t11et•Clt't•.....,.... ... ••••I'"'•"' ,.ec .. •••r u • ._. ~ J-a..tilil. ~lfe Welt lft.,.. City -4 :•n, lleet •· H•t•, L••• ••. ••cit, ........ CW't .. Mllcll "lllLOCATIE PATleNT /CLll•T , .... -· • ...... --03. nt.' A-' ,.. .. llfornla on ~~'l•Z... ltteo1'*911._.,,_.._,,_,.,1 .. CLINICS"...,,..._.._,._., -... • ... -Ploelllllat"'--.._, -_..._, .... -JOllft DMl-. -:'. lfl 8..W U .. , ..... a•. Oltlcl1I ttto "'lla.T" ..... i.:~lete-Ctll...., ,_,. -·-0.-. M J-f,11,ta.l:t."'1 . WIJ 1.t.1•1 •t9:301.m. O#y Iv_,.._..,.., Nldloles ltK..-& c911tl9ft ...-t_....• -1 .... tioc'""' J.,. t , •· IF TOU OBJECT to the teov••.,..•. LI• ouvt, ttetttorlne
.. ~ c' 2» 'II• 0.Me, N•wporl ••.ell, offl<••. werlo111 CllfllCS, ll'llyalc•I P'*llVIM Or .... ,._ t ... a.,'~1~ p•rmiLic NOT1~· nrantlnn of the petition ~~c.wv .. ··~· -·~: '· .,lforllM MtdlclM work speco cot1l•r•t1<• .,.., ...., Y .. .... u• "-.,.. • • -""" -.-ren c:Milft "CU• ltrwt __._or <-• room, modify elllstlne l~i.ts tor,_. JllM •,II, 11, 2•, l•I 1,.,..1. YOU Should either appear •llCI J•l'lnl,..
..
.,.._tlM ts......,....,.,,.. •8'rant., c11up tcc.u101111v. s1or .... ,... NOTICE OF DEATH OF at the hearing and state c-• Mw -Ktmeorty Ctar..,. ····-~19111compi.-.. .,co .. emptor .. Hll1!9/¥9fldlfll n•• •• PU•LICNOTICIE ,OST•· M FRYMAN your objections or flle Jo:~~T~~wm11111" r.c:a-1. Tllell9Mfkl•,.,,llflder18"1 .... ,,, ••• Sl•I• Ho111ll•I, lfl •<· " . "' ..... ~·~ ..... DMc1o1Trwt.brf'"MMrlofe11Aoc11..-ccwuftC9wtt",.._ __ 1t1<etl9M AND 01' ~ETITION TO written objections with the
dofe1111 '" u. ot11l1•t1-aecur9d 11wr9f..-. o""c':.!l..INOWCAVM,.. ADMINISTER •STATE court before the he•rlng. 1Mt'911Y, • ..._ oMCull8cl -• p,....,_ wiM • .,_ .. t• ...,... w..,... .. 0 .. 1.,.1 Your appearance may be
llve...C '9 IN llfldwsltfltd • wrllteft ders pr..,.rly -·-11 "Smoll CAie ..., ..... A-_, " • "' • I o.ci ... -.. ., o.1wi1 _, OHnMd ltdtMu·· .., ·-· •"" 5ectton 1 .. "" ,,...., ., ._ AellluUM ., T 0 a I I h • I r s , n person or by your at·
tor Sa••. -""ltteft -ac.. °' _,, 1.,. e1 -.. T1119 2. c.11""""• -vicK• sue •oallttON.,. •-CY beneflclerles creditors terney. Hd of elecllofl to <euH lllO Ufl• mt..is1r.ttw 'c.o.. A#llUtl•s t.r ANN AN0£1t50N •Y IUSte J. d ti t' _..1.__of I F Y 0 U A R E A c1ora11noc1 to .. 11 Mid IN'-rty •• II'••--.. ....,,..ttocl .,. ._ ll'OM•aoY. """'-.... OMllt o1 In con ngen c;,"""' -• C • 1! Mll•lf ....... ._......._.,..t,..~ Sm•ll .__, 0tt1u . 1m -1«11 N-. Foster M. Fryman •nd "' OITOR or a c ont·
t11o111......,1111M c-...c1 .. 1c1fl0tkeo1 strwt,s.tr-.CA•• ........... 1us11 J POMettov ,... ,...,. •persons who may •e 1...-nt creditor of the de·
t1twc11 .,.. of 91Ktlofl to • Aec..-41 theft,.,.. m c.._ •n '" --· 1Mt1tio.. "' • oawt.., 1111 W8r ••· ott\erwlee Interested In t:fle ceased, you must flle your ~~ :S~':' ~-~~.!: :'Ht;:" .. -::..'Toct~:;,:."~°:~ = ,,:'~:'c'::: ;~,'~':~~~ will and/or estate: cla im with the court or
lloco..... 9CIP•OJICtcaatHCeocls$1S..OOO. •n• NANCY AHN ANO.ltSON to A petition has been flied present It to the personal
Seid .... w111 ... lftlde • .,.,. wt1110U1 etd ..,......., m11tt 11o SUbmltt9d '°' v1cK1 w• ~•11ov 8M NANCY by Steven Fryman and representative appointed ~~ ~!!'•tJ ty. •ltP'ftl ~ ,,... 111e ... u,. wor11 descr1-t1M,.1n. ANN POMEROY. ,...,.ct1 ... 1y. C"' lst' Sch ~ .. le In t...._ by the court within four ... -. ·--· .... posatt_., ., 0 ... 1.110 ... ,....., pt-.... .-<lllu· It .. ......,, ........... •" .,._ nr ,,. w-... ~--to .. , tho r-1fllflCI .. _•Ill ...... COMlderN .... wltt ... 1 .......... In .................. .,. SUJerlor Court ef Orenee rno"ths from the date of ~lflC!~~ of.,,. not•I•> MCUl'H c•uto for ••l•cllOM of 1ti.1. T"9 ,.., .....,. U11& <-' 1n .... '1•••t County requesting thet first Issuance of letters as w• ..... -• rruai. with lnt-1 lfl o.p.r1men1,._t1wrltl!t10-•v• •"Y N•. a el NI Civic o..rw °''" w-. r lded I "'--t i 700 of Mid flOl9 -'d9f, .,..one ... 11 ..... 1,,...,1.,11.., In • bid., 19 ro19<I .,., or ...,,. AM.~ • ., Jlllf "· 1•1• Ste v en Fryman • n d Pt hov p bn ~ on IHl4ertt11termtllfMl,o..ctotT""'· •lllllft. •1 tt:• .. , .......... .-te-.,.. Christine Schwable • • e r o ate Code of ~":':.::-' •-"ot 11• Tru11" No1>1c1w1ttb9 considereo""fe'1 't11 ,,,.,. -~. 11 ... .,1ne., twvo. pol nted as personal Callfornla. The time for
Of• T t ea~IS .. <"'8111t9d tl'I' t.eld Tl>Md medo one stenderd form fUf'fllt,,_!r11' wl\y said 119tl•on tor , ....... of.,.,,.. representatl Ve to •d filing Claims Wiii not elC· r111 . _,, M • 1IO held°" uos· lllO 0.-1menl -ts l'lledO In K · slloulcl ftOI 119 trw.G. • def,Ju,.IO,l .. let1t:OOe.m.e1tlM tordenuwllllU.."0ln1tr11CIJonsto8lcl-t1 ls !W1MroN91'Mllletecop1of m inister the estate Of plre prior to four months 01110 ot T.o. s.rvac.. eon-v. een11 dor•"· "''' 0,..,.,..,.. ct111M-. "*'"*" Foster M Fryman (un<Mr from the date of the hear-ot Am•rtc. T-•. 51111• 1110, OM City p,_., ... l>l«lers '"°" ... mlM lfl .... OAILY PILOT .... ......_,Of t h I d. d t Ad Inn noticed above 8oulov•"' W..I, 0r•"99, Cellfornle elld ot>!Mn p18llS -dftc.lloN el'ICI 1W'9'el clf'<uletloft ;._.,.,_. In lllll • n e pen en • •y • ttw. 1>1c11ormsbycett~•tormo111,.., .. c.u111v .c a..t ...i.e • .... ..,...., ministration of Estates OU MAY EXAMINE At 111e um. 01 111o 1 .. 111.1 puou. """ttolN OHtc.et IM Ollof., ,.,.,t <-lllllw _.. ,,.., • 1118 •v of Act). The petition Is set for the file kept by the court.
c•ll•n •' tll•=.::o. Ill• total 011er•ttons •I ,,,. .... ,,. Hdr••· ..... ......_ ...._ari"" I "-t N • t If you are Interested In the •-t llf .. belllMO Of ... l9~........,. (1i.) '57-5112. Tiie wllWNMllll 9f -.itceftll" i1W • ._ " ..,_ 0 O. q a oi.u .. 11 ... •<11••41 i.y ,,.. ....... A"""'°"'.....,, 51.Mderd 11«"' 907 otaw••I f..., •• ..._ 19 _. ... 700 Civic Center Drive, estete. you may file a re-d91<flt1e11 ... of .,... .,,.. •tlmatw '" 111e .,,.... .. fifty IMf<.,, ., "'° ,_, .... ,...,....,, W•st, I" the City of S.nt. quest wt th the court to re-<oal• ... .....-.. •flil • .,, ... , .. 1' cOfttre<t lltl<o-~Y ,,,.,,. D•tH: J-1. 1t11 AN C.llfornla on Jutw 1 celve special notice of the
$24,112.JS. To *"""'"' IN ...,.,"' cont,«t inv.ivine .,. • .._._llH't lfl lteM6d H. ~ ' . ' ' I t llld,roumeyc••m•1m..,... ••<_.,,15.-. ~., .. ...,..,c-t 1"1 at9.301.m . nven ory of estate as-o.•:..., .. 1•1 Tllo IUCCMliM ...... wlll .. , .......... =.,.,....uu... IF YOU OBJ ICT to the serlts and of the petitions, ~1~~ATlllANK •u,, .. te ... ,.,.. • comrKtura1 ... ~ er.•• granting of tt.e petltlOft accounts and reports
•-·--· .,_ tn u. torm of• • ._ ....... ,. ~ ca... • de I-.. I "'--ti 1200 S 9¥T.o.sa11v1cJE A.......... F#"' 2 .. ..wc11 _11 • ll'wtMI..., OP c-t Delly ""..,. Y•u should either a~ scr ,_., n ~ on . ~~Y,..,_ MM1nt.-._._ .. c:.1Nw111a-J-•.11.11,a.~ ,...1: at the hNrlnt •nd state of the California Probate ,!,.,., Me.,..,A.ilWll. ,.,lll'Oft...,........,llWSt.a•. yowr objectltftS or flM
a.. CMr 11w. -.... .:C~.:~,:: :" ~~ P\J8UC NOl'ICE written eoftctlons with u.e r.r,r.CAfttfl o.~,.. •1<9Nl1WC1 tN\.,.. court before the ._.,.....
Put>ttaM ~ ... ,,,., N-• ....... 1 -•""" ••• ot ·-• Your appear•nc• mey ._ ....... ~w1t11tt110r.,,..0oott p11cott1e 1" IN,_., 1" Wltkll u. NOTIC,OPD•ATMOP In penon or by 'f'O'llr ...
•utKIMANK, ANTIN a •••aow ...... ._.,. .......
..wrty HM ts, ca. tolt 1 (lia) 651-4141 o.u., ""._ J-• n II '"' M7._.I -" ta to .. ..,.. •• .._ rms 0 0 • 0 M y .... • R t"'ney ' ' ' ulellll..._. end !Hlltllsllo41 lly II•• A .. "" • Olrutor of lt14l111trl•I lt•t•tllfls. ••AOY' AKA DOaOfMY I F Y 0 U A lit £ A Pu~lshed Orange Cout PUBLIC NOTICE c~ .. ,.,.,., .... .,, .. 11,.111tM0t A . I AD y, AK A CREDITOR or a coftt· O•llY Pflot,June4. S, 11,
Tear gu
• senunars
atOCC
A pair of two-hour
"Life Guard" seminars,
designed to teach in·
dividuals how to protect
themselves against al·
tack by using tear gas.
will be offered at
Oran ge Coast College in
Costa Mesa this sum·
mer.
Th e sem inars ,
certified by the state
Department of Justice,
are scheduled June 17
and July 22. Both start
at 7:30 p.m . in the OCC
Forum.
The seminars wiil cost
*20. Residents may re-
eister through the COi·
l ege 's Co mmun ity
Service Office or at the
door on a s p ace!-
available basis.
Following training,
participants will receive
a certificate and permit
to cerry tear gas.
RIVERSIDE (AP> -Residents of San
Bernardino and Riverside counties were iolted by a
l\\ild eartbqt1al«! for the second llay in a row ea.rly
tbia montini, b•l no injuries or damage were re-
ported.
Tpe quake, which measured 3. 7 on the Richter
scale, struck at 4 :51 a .m . and was centered near Lake~~inore, according to Dennis Meredith of
the "fomia Institute of Technology Seismology
Lab in asadena.
Auth>rities received a rub of phone calls from
anxious residents. said Riverside Police Dis-
patcher ~e Pulliam, noting tbat her office had
about 10 C'Uls from "just a lot of curious people
wanting to ~ow if we had one <an earthquake)."
Vet~tgrma
LOS ANGtLES (AP) -Looking something
like a WoodstO<.\ in miniature, the encampment of
protesting Vie~ veterans outside a Veterans
Adminis tration ti spital here has blossomed into a
(uJl.fledged settle ent with its own leaders, rules
and even a name Veterans Village.
String tied bet een trees on the lawn of the
Wadsworth VA Me~~al Center in the high-priced
Brentwood area m~~ the limits of the makeshift
community, whose estimated population by
Wednesday was 3S an<1growing by two or three a
day.
2 die in •hooti~
GARDENA <AP) -P~ce responding to a re·
ported robbery and murder ~hot to death a man
who allegedly wounded an ofJ\cer with a sawed-off
shotgtDl, authorities said lod.av.
CALIFORNIA
The alleged r obber,
who •• not immediate·
ly iden~ed, died at tbe
scene Wedeesday nigh\
near VePspont Avenue
and Cornptl.o Boulevard .
not Car from the body of a man who police
believe was lhot and robbed.
Police were alerted to the iacident '1rhen two ~~:..~~1"'.:1 ~,.!1~:!.";'': DOaOTMT aaADY AND 1"9ent credftor of t"9 de· 1911 2.S9S-81 . ·.!.. NOnU...:~~~~SAL• o.vo.._....1 s.rv1c91 ~OP 1t•TtTION TO AD· ceased, v-.t must file your ~f u ..... ..,,.. oH,t:·1111PKt10fl 111 ... ,..1c1.,,_... MINllTl!a •STATI NO. cl•lm with t"• cowrt or
•------------, witnesses ran up to a patrol car and told 'he two
P\19LIC NOTICE Pl18UC NOTICE
TRANKO.UT suv1ce.s. iNc. .. Pa" .. corM<1 Pl:,., O.-••toM. · A 1..... present It to the personal • ~c::::.~,:oi.::::.!=-:.~~~~~~ ,.. .. ,..lewltaWHotPital T •• I I h • I r 5 I repreHnt•tlve appointed llOTfaTOCHOITOltl NOTICI OF DEATH OF
seLLATPUILtcAuCT1°'4TOTHe VICW&.lel•.llK. beneflclerles creditors by the court within four OfituUtTU.tll'H JOHN F. PICKERING
HIGHEST e1oou Fo11 CASH P11011=:.:::...,,.c:'~~~\:O.. end centl"8ent'cr..ittorsof months from the date of Neta:!8:'t':::!'u,.1t;:;.1
1• 1.,. ANO OF PETITION TO =•yO::!,~':.:'sc:~1 1:,.'~:::.~'. JunH11.1•1 1S»11 Dorothy AIWM lrecfy, elc• frrst issuance of letters M Cr•dttwa 91 LOU eUCHTU/ ADMINISTER ESrATE uu .. nc1 aneor..t <Oflwy9d to -now Dorothy A. Brady, 19'a provided In Section 700 of ...... ., i.-lrCMet, Tr~. HO. A-109021.
,..ldbyttun•u•klOMctOfT'Nsttfl PUBLIC NOTICE Dorothy Br•dy •nd the Probate Code of a.-..:'=::..1:,,mMOl'I• To a I I he (rs. •";:=~;;'-:'~~~=LL persons who may ate C•llfor'"•· The time ,.,. cai1..,_;.._. '""" ::,.,. 1 beneficiaries, creditors
eM tOAM.'81tOOMALL,lllltbeMIM NOTIUOll'TllUSTH'SIAl.I otherwl• lnttrott.S '" ttpt flllno clllims will net ••• ..._. .. LOttA w. VANC• •nd contingent creditors of • .,., ~.:-=: wltl artd/Otteat.•: plrt prior te four montfts ..._!0~~~-.·1:~ JndOHN F . ~ICICERING SA~~:o~:!.~~i:.~r;T~J:. AMhtCAH STATE BANI(...... A ,..ltl., Ms M9n flied frem the date of the he•· ;;;:..-:-;i ... la1":.. •. 'C-tv .. a persons who m•y be
oC.ttfOnlMICCMWr•llofl. 8"0!t1toc1 T,..........,., u.. ,.,.._..,. by ~ ·AMe 8r1dy tno noticed at)Ove. °'91199 ..... .,c.i.......... I otherwise Interested In the llt<..-d J-u. im .. , .... ,.No. ••rlllN llilM., trust WILL SELL end MartNI AM Ooftoven YOU MAY EXAMINE TM ~ .. • tr_,.,,..d 1• will and/or est.te. ~1:!:!':*.!a::;-;:.ci:.: ~r0~~~~·~1~~cET~o~0~0c~~= In the ~or C.Urt ot the fll• kept by the court. =:c!" ..... ~~=~U.:.-~ A petition has~ filed °' 0r...,. ea...tv; Hid._. e11ruat cper-111• ~tu .... e1 M .. '" 1.wt111 Or•• Ceuftty ,....,...,,. If you..-. Interested In t"8 .... ~ls•tcr....,.MI...-.. by John W. Picken,,. In d9Krtllftu. ... _...,,~, -Y'•hUNto11S1etft>•11 rttM.ttw1t=retAnMaredw est•te:Jou ~Y file a,... •:AH.-.i..1 ..... 11.iw..~the Superior Court of T .... ...,._ .. ~2o4T•Kteon •1• .... 11111ra1_,.. • .,._ -....... ' · t t.,... ..... 11 ..... con.i .. 10 County •-ti • ..... .,. "_.... ae141 o..., Trwt 1n end Ann ~an quest U\ tM court o ,... lllAL TY llWIWH• """" .. L.-ren .. c: reQud ng ~~~:..'"Tc!,=.~.~ w. ~ ... ....,....,d9k,._: IM •••lfttM ft ....-..nal celve 9"Ci•I notice of ta. arwc11w & ~ 9nd ·~ • tt\lt JoM W. Pickering be •· m-. 11i.111 ..... 121.,.... •.,,.. • TllUSl'Olt: •1tv•N ~-JUSTIN,.,. reorffeRt•Uve to ad-inventory of ..ate asNts m -.n. . ..._ lalond, ~., •ppolnted as pirsonal ::":',:::, :u4~.~ ~ "":':'~':' .. ~u Y : AMUtCAN Mlftllttr te.t ettate of a,_. ef the petlt19"1, •· :::"'~:~'". repruent•tlve to •d-
.... ~ • .._..,.. .. 191._., STA TE llAHIC. • c.•"°""• <"-•· ~ AIN ar..ily 1 ak• c o u n ts • n d re, o r t s ...,... ••.,.,,tho..,...,_.,,_ m In Isler the estate> of John
,.AltCEL 1: UNI Ho..., .. .,.._ uc; Oor~ A. erHy, aka described In Sectl°" 1200.S 1•1. •• 11:• A.M . .et ••tM1oAt1• F . Pickering hmder the In·
.,.. deKrlllecl '" .... Condomlnh1m Ma ~....... All9lllC 21• '"' .. lflltr. ~ .......... (~ the of the C.llfot'ftla ~robete ··-c:.... ,.,. J--..... dependent Administration PIM rt<INlll ...... 11 lfU lfl 11oe11 ..... -lft 0.-11215 .... -of Of· ' _., N-.-r1 IMcll c-ty of Or.... • ' · "'''' Records 1 .. '"° offl<• of t"' lnd•IM'*nt Admtftl1tr1-Codt. .._.,c.i~ of Estatn Act) The pett· ~~~1 =..:::i.-..i:~:.•ualv•. llKOl"doro10r.,.c-ty;M11c1 .... ti.n ef IEltafea Act). TM Hall IMfy Attorney et lo tar•.._-.. ,,.. Tr......_ tlon Is set for ""ring in
• ~ PA•CEL 2: Afl 11ftdtvtd•d on• of tr11•1 dolullltt,... '-'-•ne ,... r:uuon 11 set tor Marl_, Law JU lan Mlguel .. ,...,.. __ .,...._ ~t. No. 3 at 700 Civic
, ..... .-.--11-11n..,.... 111..m IM't•· "'--11 ... A.of ' •·J "1'.,,...,_..,"" 1"'• -• ·c t Ori W t · the 4 ., .. -...... ,_, Lets"' -'"., Tl'9d.,.. •1 " ~· No. Jet 100 ._vie ... ~ "' -" IOO, N..,,.n ,... -· ...,.. .. '--' ·~ en er ve, es , m
officers inside that an e lderly man was being
robbed on a street nearby, said Gardena Ptlice
Capt. Bruce Traylor.
Fire 1tMI" Hope home
PALM SPRINGS (AP> -A brushfire
threatened a number of multi·mlllion·dollar homes
in the exclusive South.rid1e ~rea, including ~he
palatial, muahroom·shaped residence of comedian
Bob Hope, authorities said.
The (ire which started Wednesday bad burned
about 80 acres by early this morning. Full control
was expected by 6 p.m ., said Bruce Cowie of the
Riverside County Fire Department.
Anti-aVne bill. admnce
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Tile state Senate
Finance Committee has aent to the floor more than
20 anti-crime bills, despite wamlnss they would
require extra guards and prU<>n cells but wouldn't
pay ror them.
But the committee rejected Wednesday. on a
4-6 vote, a proposal to add apprnpriations to each
bill based on the estimated number of inmates it
would add . ~ ~..::! "::!:':=:' '.'.., ""!.:: '""' o• • --c;..; C.otar Drive, -•. In ti. •••~ U HOO; l•I, """''""• -· · C It y •I h n h An a, .,...~ 11 eetl .... Ill Ul8 .. Or ........... c:.MHwtlle, -..... ~I 'It •• s a" t. A". ....,., . ..... •. YllOC• C .. I'°""• Oft Jvty 1 1H1
..._ "0011111ti.." .. "" "'Ol'N<.....,, .. _..,...,.u .. ,. I ..... ., 1•' P .... ~Or C ,,......_...._ tt -/ "-1--...i__ bill nnaa-1 .._. °' c-tt CoMttt tflCt•a.,., M1tce11a,._ ~ 1 .. ,_ •I .. ,... cin June • , l u., .... ,_, 8ftte ... t Tr....,_ • :-a .m . . ~~ r-~ ...-:~"-, • ...; °" A~ oHko of ._ ~y rocorwr of Nie •t t :JO A.M. O•llY "''°'• JUM 3, 4, 10. ,....... 0r.,.. c.. ... 1, ..i1et. I rt YOU OIJ €CT to the
u. ms.'" ..... "*· P ... ao.. ~~·r~°:'::t::~.:-:::.; !rt YOU O&J«CT to the 1911 2175-11 "-•·"" u•w1 gr•n!!.!!..~ d•f
1
thhe petition ~~~-°' told County '"'° 841lol"'"' .... 1-on .,. lOlltNMt trentt"I efo .. .-itltlen, you '"""'I e t er appear
PA1tc1L a: Not1-uc111110 ... ....,.. br 11oM111t1on °' tll9 citr yeu .,..... .-er appeer ftJBLIC NOTIC& ftJaLIC NOTICS at the Merino •nd state .... _..,..~..,.. ........... C-110fu.ct1YOf.......,.e..tt1, et the hNrlftl aft4I lltlltt , yowr Gb)edlo"s or flle
9Mr..m1-.....,.... t11111 tor.,,.., • cm tffed c.,. fll Mlk:ll ~ YtVr ~=:· w. fife =:=4:= wrlt1en ottftctlofts with the ~ .,, • IUCtl • ......._.. ••• ••• 1'9C.,.. .iwW "· '"' lt1 _.. a. -~ ...... I
l ~--""""Of"' ...... Utt.~M,Oflltlll .. --. Wt'n-wtt" tM r .... court -··· tr. • ..,ar ng. to Ow•n 111 111• A,ttc•• •• ,... .~v1aoa..,........,.--"<CA ceurt ....,.. "" Mef'tM. ..:_:~::... Your .,._.ranee M•Y IM : o.c.., ...... .., .. 11-u" llf••,....--.,.c-•· Yeur _,..Mm m.y tie ~., .. ,.... In P9rMft or by yeur et· Anet ..,.... m .. ,.... c • ...,..,..,ts • .....,.. ........ ,.. ••rT..t• I .... .... t Wtet •• .......,,·._,. eel~ -la tlwn • t9 1• ~•111, •• .,. _. " Pt,_.. Off .,,. 'rC*t 9'" Ool IMY M. Itel, .._ City C::...11 • .. Clt\I fl t.W. ...._ o z:-c---Of'MY,
' 1 T1Wl!Wfldarv....rNldowiet r«.._.),"Tllo.,..klMY UftlW._twMy. ==.._......_.,..,_ ............. ..., : IF YOU Ai. I! A
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111e 11 1111 .,.,.,. •""""' o.c.., .. ..,. ,._... .. .,. 111• .1..-• .,1._ 1...,.e uedftW ., tM dt· ..,...._ ct•sect, you must file your :,::::-...: .. =:.:~~ :C~:':..°!w':..~.,O: c .. t f*'• ~ '""" .. flle.l'9: ~.::: ................... : ............................ -.-claim t"'tlttf'ltotht!_ court or1 .. ... • le • .... " ..... ..-••'••.ctt"' •• <•11t• U10 .,.. c • m w'" cou er ......,~ .................................................... ,.. presen ,,. perSO(\a ~ • :...i-,1 w!-_......_ '"''"'" •• .... Mid,,.,.,...-. ,,...m It te"" .......,_., '*,...._~ ................................................. reJresent•tlvt •PPo1'9fed _...,.... ... .._,..,,....<_.. aet1t1vsolfo111._.....,_.........._ reprtMntatlw ..... ,.tM ......_,.,..,...._ by tf'le court within tour ..., ..... .,.._. .. ., ... d._ .... _... • ., ... cwe .... -*•lf WU. c.urt .,.,_.,. feur ~ ......................................... .-mentM from the •t• of ::.,"-.::=.';.-=:~~· 1t11.:: ~-:S~,::"'...:,,ia:.,~ ,,......_Mm tl'9 _..Ill ..._ ... ac-k~• .................................. first l1tu.nc:• Of let1er1 as •-*OMdal......_ ..... ·..,.. 1,...,... "'· .. ..._ Ofttclet first ltMllPIC8" teeWa H , .. Oty.,1,.. 19_... .....,.. DTt:.:= prtvlded In Section 700 of
....... _.. ... _..,...,.WMMllC "~ ........ .,._. ......... previ. In S.Ctt• NI ef .. u .. eaAvA1u.ai.l'TZn.!:~i~..,......1."C:. 1 tf'lt Prob•t• Co4• of
<'"::'..;,::':"Y· • ..,... ... ~.,_...., ...._.,..,... t"• ''•b•t• Co'• et ...._.~ ................................................... ,.,.. Callfornl•. The tlMt for : • "* • ,.!,'·tC'~=\i.'.i l'llH. ,._... ... : , '=·.,. Cal!Mi'ftla. :rM ttrM for ,._....,.,. ................................................ 1 • ...-flllnt claims wlll not••· .,,.._ =-., ...... _..,... .,. 1111<11"*-. • &:i • ,.... r r c flll"I ,...,.. wen Mt ex-'"·,.,... plre prior to tour months ....... :.:: .. ~ ... :::i:er:::.~.-:.= 9'n.,,. .. fllUr .,..., IUllMA1tV~MODMM9NH0 ............ 1ATI... from tM ...... Of the hMr· :,-:....,.., .... 0.,n::: .... ~.......,.,.,-,_, t...n ...... .., tM Mera ~c:-.d1.,. • ...................................................... Int notkedebOW. ,... c_.... _...,..... e1.,. ._..__llNOlllllf,._,-. IM ..... -.W.. .......,--.., ...................................................... m_... VOU MAY IXAMIHE
t.-. .. " ....... < ...... w UlerWle ................ ,,_. \'OU MAY IXAMINa c"'°"···•••H•••y••h• ........................................ ,.,. the fll• k~ .... the court. ... °"""'TAI& .................... .,....c,_.,...... Ctty__.,, ..................................................... 1'1-.,,.
,... ,._... ltlM 0 .., et _.,,.. ................. -. tM •• 11et • • ceurt. ......__ ........................................................ •• If you •rt ~1ttd In the w•:'"' .... .-.., o.a-tce •· '-"·"" • 1ti•A;aa. •• If yeu _...,,_~In tN .._ • •1 ., ....................... ~ ..................... .._ eat•te, yeu ,,,.y filt • r.•· ~;·._.,a-tea, ....... ., .... o...,..~ .... "ea•J: ""' flUe •,.. -••••••....,,-.......................................... ,.-.... quest wt"'.ttw court to re ""''""°"'u....._..wwi .,._...,._, .... ml,._Cftr '--... " c-oi.xn, .. ••'IQHt •• ,. .................................... ..-.= t ..... I t • Cllllfllle • '"'"'"'...,...-.CA quest ... -"""' ,.. ca ••• 1wttca ............................................ •·•· ce ve ..-c .... Mt ce of he ~ .__.,. ........ ,..."""" •• .... .,.._ ...,.1111111 cetw ..-a•= fll Ult """8MctlllltY .................................................... ...., lnvtntlry .of tttet• ••tats "'WI ............ e..-e el 111 9f 11111 ..... -... __ " ... fflVIMu fl ewli ,,..._ ............................................................ ,.. ... en• Of b ... ft1Gfll1 IC•
...... ._ ....-C• .. , .. •M•::.• ::c=:i.:-..:.::,:1s::,1et1 _.Ill ........... ec· , ......... ..,, ;••...,.•••• .,.,,..,.. ce\fnt,a •nd rtJOtts ~-=-==--~....:.,. ------...... ceURU .... ,.,., .. U•N ................ dllcr ........ Sectl4Nl 1N.S ,~~~:·~• ... ,.111.tt. '• =--= tt ~·.::.._,._.In.._ t•.I ~=~_:. • .tJ: " tM CMl""'I• fllrollMt ,:. •,., ~ ,,,. " .. c111-... ,.,..... u •• ,_ ,.... c ....
_, ... r~ C911. .._...,_"'I 1 111 ....... MILAlllM.DOITAL
.... ,::.:Aft... ...... •At• T• ~ ·;p,e:~ ~IUVtl9 •• .,. -~·-="*--·--~ . 2 rn""•=-·--• =-~==-=--==-== ..... ==~--~ ;a.;r..::&-.. ..
C..'iia ·-~=~=--=-= --..... .-.. "·,.,"" ......... .._
SACRAMEMTO <AP) -Aner a debate
similar to those on the Vietnam War In the 19605,
the state Assembly has n11TOWly approved a res·
olutton asking Conereu to i.alt mtlltary aid to El
Salvador.
School. foMtdin6 ptMNI
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state Assembly
bas pused the $151 million 1chool funding bill
AB111, but Republican opposition rorted tile etrec-
Uve date to be delayed.
The bill, by Assemblyman Leroy Greene, D·
Sacramento, went to the Senate Wednesday on •
50·7 vote.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A national or·
1anl11Uon of ieotoatata la puahina for epeedy ex·
ploration for offshore oU and cu ln the United
States and let• concern about pou\ble environ·
mental dam11e.
Tbe American Aeaoclatlon of Petroleum
Geotollata preM!nted ita recommendatloae, which
were lint prepared for llltertor Secretary Jamet
Watt, at a convention Wed.netday attended by
10,0001eok>c11ta.
~~.oltlerf
SAN PABLO CAP) -A rlfle·lhoottnt band OC
men In caiDOllll.,t were J.at ",autaa et Mldlen~•
enr tlht weelt..S, oae or t.Mm •JI. M ce•pen'
reperta ot an "Arab ar•r" ~. lbOotlna
ud .....u .. falUnt '° dM ~ cM8t.tn1 lD
th• ll•doelH NeUonal Por•t l••d•J 194 .. ~lo-.-.. an~·-,.... et coaty,
•t•Mt -,.... ...... l'I.
,.... -~ ...... ,, ..... I U.S. Army m....a .-ltlell .,..._ IWI. • lli -ear Md tMy ctt.i .._ MIMI, a tf I• ,..... fot ilmedl•·
u.. ot ,.. ........ two ..... ····-.. Mi"''
llTElllATIC
TIMBS
CORDLESS
4 97
fDl -118
SUPER COP VARIABLE
5 97
•D711B
Get a c:oupl•. Ht them at
diff•rent timu and it mu .. it
look like you're home u li9hta
90 off and on when you're away.
(Did I lOM anyone then b..id ..
my .. li?)
MURRAY
BICYCLES
IOD'20'' ID
748.!
IOU' 20''
DBUDID
88~!
Both have BMX frame and fork, 20&2.126
black knobbi ... 20" BMX h.aa coaster
brake, com .. in white with gloa black.
Delwte hu sid• pull caliper brall•, red
and gold fini9h.
~~IOllDIWD TRASH CAIS
30ULLOI
7~
30 UU.01 IOVCDICI
10~
Got 90 many traah can apecia.la
that it abnoat breaks my heart
to tell you I have no truh. (My
goat eat.a it all).
MTD 5 BP
I OTO TILLER
24997
Chain drive B&S
encrin•. 16 .. u -
sharpening tin ... 135
rpm forward speed,
adjuat&ble depth of
till to 7". While they laat.
GRAPES
Here are Thompaon s..dl .... name, and
m.ore, (ii my wino uncle reada thia we're
in trouble. )
SACO
PALMS
5?!
I really can't cl..cribe a
8&90 Palm. I guM11 you
would eay it loou kinda
.. palmlah''. (I belieft thia
18 call.d mental
~cloctor.)
ITT TELEPHONES
VIVA
ROTARY
DIAL
In brown/ earth tone.
88
. TREND LINE
ROTARY DIAL
White or Cocoa. 37••
ULTRA 80
Choice of
Almond or Cocoa. 39••
Great choice of phon• and tiy the way, lt'• perf~tly
legal to own your own phone. Th ... are approved too.
Suppotled to call the phone compan~ and •ay, "Hey, I
got my own etc." (I bought the Ultra 80, h-u
automatic redial in c ... of a bu.ay aigrial.)
SADDLEIUI SADDLDLAllET
SEAT COVDS
SMALL 1999
PICK-UPS
PI~ JJ!:f: 2499
OR TRUCKS
Sure f .. 1 good, a lot better
than that sticky hot vinyl
and when they get a bit
muzun you J!Ull them off and clean them.
AICO llAPBITE
IOW/40 WT.
•OtOI OIL
99!.
I think there 18 a $1.80 by
mail refund from AJ'CO on
thia atuff if you buy 6
qua.rt.a. '11\e atore h.aa the
aldnny on thia.
DUIALITE-
SAID CHAIRS
Hope .. 9ot • loed moN
in heoau.ee when l went to
the store late Memorial
Day we eold. out of 80l'l\e.
( clon't eay that.)
MULTICOLORED
WEB
5!!
FOLDING FABRIC
Tangerine
eolor.
AllllTIOIC
PUCE'• PIDI
FLOOI TILE 39c
8!!
GUMOUT DEGREASER
AID EIGllE CLEAIEI
·~~
Siw-y on, wait a bit, and hoee
off (I u.ee a atiff brush a little
anyhow, worka faster. )
ILOE POLI 011-STEP
POL I IEALAIT
5 88
16 OZ. LIQUID
ci.an., Shine., and SeaJ.. in
one step. (The One St.p, been
doing that for ~ rm Nady
for Two St.p.)
IEBI WOOD
PUSDVATm
6!!
Penetrate. d .. p to crive a tough
waterproof uncleneal. Helps stop dry rot,
warping, termite. and ahrinllinq.
4" WIDE
IEIDD IOAID
Curve it to fit your plant.mg areu, cut to
bo• atuff, do eome light terracing,
whate....r.
Armless girl
gets diploma
LAS VEGAS <AP> -A itrl whose arm1 were
backed otf ln Stanltlaua County 2~ yean a10 hu ·
been graduated trom hlth acbool here.
Mary Vincent, now 18, accepted her dJploma
with the book that serves u her left hand. Then
she used the book that serves u her rt1ht hand to
shake bands with Howard Marr, principal of a
special achool for bandJcapped student.a where 1be
completed hilh school.
Her parents, Lucy and Herbert Vinceat.
watched proudly as their dauahter, drnaed ln tbe
traditional cap and gown,
marched into the room pushing
the wheelchair of another
graduate.
Miss Vincent was a 15-year·
old runaway when she accepted
a ride from a stranger in the
San Francisco Bay area Sept.
29, 1978. She was raped lo a re·
mote area west of Modesto, her
arms were cut off with an ax
and she was left for dead. v•Nc..,T
Some rqotorists found Miss Vincent stagcerlng
toward Interstate 5. She recovered, learned to use
artificial arms and returned to her Las Vegas
home.
Lawrence Singleton, a Sl·year-old merchant
seaman, was convicted of the mutilation and was
sentenced to prison.
Mother killer
1nay get estate
MADISON, Wis. (AP) -A man convicted of
suffocatine his mother should not necessarily be
deprived of inheriting her $1 .5 million estate, the
Wisconsin Supreme Court has ruled.
In a 5-2 decision, the court said that someone
who willfully kills another is disqualified from in·
beriting his victim's estate, but that In Wisconsin,
willful intent technically is not an element of the
crime of reckless homicide.
Bernard Safran Jr., was accused of suffocat·
ing his 70-year-old mother, Helen, in July 1977.
Police said the woman's body was burned two
days later in the basement of her South Milwaukee
home.
Although originally charged with second·
degree murder, Safran, who was 30 at the time of
the killing, pleaded no contest to a reduced charge
of reckless homicide and was sentenced to up to
five years in Waupun State Prison in 1978.
Mrs. Safran left her estate in trust to her son
in a 1952 will. His two brothers and a brother·in·
law sought to disqualify him.
NY beats measles
NEW YORK <AP> -The incidence of measles
in New York City plummeted by '"an astounding"
94 percent over the last year, and health officials
predicted they would meet their goal of eradicat-
ing the disease here by October 1982.
Health Commissioner Dr. Reinaldo A. Ferrar
reported only 27 confirmed cases of measles from
January through April 1981. During the first third
of 1980, there were -l57 reported incidences, Ferrar
said, attributing the decline lo ··vigorous efforts"
to immunize students.
THE MALE MAN
an unusual discount store
excellence in
fitted shirts
FATHER'S
DAY
. Great Selec;tlons
JUNE
21st
Great Prices .------- -Great Gifts
Mon.• nu.. 10-7 ,,.,..
Sttuide1N .,,..,,..
Or&nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. June 4, 1981
agu~ns can add, to
t .e ir city's 'wish list ·'
11 ·~ a tight budget and
nohotl\ made roention of uny
frills m the $7 12 million spending p~< k:1gc .for Lagunu Beach last
W('Ck during a budget hearing
Council members lauded city
offkials for next year's budget
doc·1111a!nl. and the praise was de·
i:n i:d Till' r1ty faces a loss in stale
hail rn1l funds of at least $471 ,000
pn~'ibly $488,509 And lhal
l tllh :-. un top or the final re·
lUJ1~lrul'l1on bills for the Del Mar
1 Vl'lllll' landslide, which totaled
mur t• I han SS:i0,000 ~11 l'Vt'n going into the new
hs(.. ve.1r. Laguna Beach faces
"otn •tough choices.
\crtheless. C1b Manager
h.1·11 1 ·1 <mk did hold out some
!1111 .. lhat a ltttlt! money may be
L' 11n lllf! Laguna's "ay dunng the
\ e,J.I
l·or one thing, the federal
ch· .. 1,.,ll'r agency might contribute
lo th• city's general fund account
tt• h~lp pay for emergency work
at U1t.: Dd Mar landslide.
'it" officials will be appeal" In~ • t1\•rual of those funds in the
Ill'~ l II.'\\ \\ Cl'kS
In the event more money
doe~ find its way into the c ity
general £un<l. Lcmuna Beach of-
ficials want a priority list from
which to select items for m·
C'lusion.
Topping that list, 1f council
members agree, will be re-
instatement of u police in-
vesllgator a position that can
hardly be terme d a frill in
Laguna Beach.
And wtth the city's woeful lit-
ter problem . a maintenance
worker is also high on the list
Other items that will be con-
s idered at the June 16 final
budget hearing include a word
processor to lessen the workload
in the citv clerk's office; a trash
compactor that city officials s ay
will pay for itself in just two
years; an additional Lifeguard
position; and a radio pack set for
lhe lifeguard department.
The budgtit document comes
up for final council and public
perusal June 16 Citizens with
suggestions for s pending -or
saving the city money should
keep the date an mind
ead start on college
lh·ginning in Septe mber.
l .1 11t1.1 B(•at·h Htgh School stu
d~nls will I.Jc able to gel a head
st ail m1 collc.ge courses while
t~1I ng classes al their ow n
Sf htH I
1 11dt•r a nl'w pro~ram agree
rm 111 l>t't\H.Jcn the La~una Beach
U111f1t:J School Distnct and the
~11oldlch<.u:k C1>llCR<' District. high
--··h11ul 111 mor.., and seniors will
li.1\(' l lw opportunity to take ad
\ Jn1 1 d coursc.•s fo1· college credit
01 1\\.ird high slhool gradua-
11011
'I h· pro).!ram comes after
t:Ut~ l a<h anC't!d rlass offerings
·1 1 th < hool such as fourth-year
languages. calculus, physics and
environmental s tudies.
The advanced classes were
cut due to budget constraints in
the Laguna Beach Unified School
District Administrators said the
distract could no longer afford to
offer them
All the C'lasses will be taught
at the h"igh school m the late af ·
ternoon or e\ en an gs by mstruc·
tors from the Saddleback Com-
munity College D1stnct.
It appears that the interests
of the college, the hi gh school ,
and especiall~ tbc students will
be well st'rved by the new pro-
gram
i ndness costs money
Thero arc more than 30
1lu \hS to fce<l thest' days at the
ugtmn Beach Marine Mammal
't·nlt:r out on Laguna Canyon
oad.
'l~hc Friends of the Sea Lion
r g~nizatinn . which mcludes
~bout 25 to 30 volunteers,
(>l'~ato. out of lhe red barn area
tdj<?<'\.'n t to the city's animal
~h(l111
rhcr~. v1s1tors Will find two
po1ll!>t 1·onlammg r ecovering sea
hon 111d harbor seals. Stalls in-
hle th1 barn h o u se more
an11n als suffcrm~ from a variety
ot 111lmt:nh and injuries
:\ln-..t of the sea creatures are
20 pot1n1b unclcrwc1ght and all
suif •1 from lack of nourishment
• F ac 101-; that force lht' sl'a lions to
lH ..i l thernSt.·lvl'S. include
po 1o1s1 les lung worms,
•
hypoglycemia, pancreatitis, liver
flukes, ulcers and dehydration.
That doesn 't count the ones
who inadvertently swallow fish
hooks, or get hit by boat pro-
pellers.
Expenses run about $10,000 a
year, and the marine center
a lways falls short of that mark.
Frozen herring must be shipped
in from San Pedro. and an-
tibiotics. tranquilfzers, vitamins
and other drugs don't come
cheap.
It's frustrating. say the stu-
dent volunteers. who are on hand
m the mornings, al lunch, after
school and on weekends to tend
their nippered patients. •
If v6u'd like to help out, send
a c hec·k to the Frier.ds of the Sea
L10n , 20612 Laguna Canyon Road.
Laguna Beach
Op in ons cxpre5.'>~d in the space above ar1: those of the Daily Piiot. Other views e><·
pr ·•ed oro this page are tho~ of their authors and artists. Reader comment is lnvit·
IW J\r1<1r"'" The Da ily Pilot, PO Bolt 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
6-42 h I
M. Boyd/ A 24-lwur presiOOncy
Y 111t know about that railway called ttw \1chison. Topeka and the Santa
'•• I h \Lch1son therein was the
elJo;\ who wa~ President of the Unit
•d St.•'··~ for 24 hours from March 3
11 M111c h 4, 1849 David Rice
lt'h1· on James Polk's adminlstra
Ion enti<.'d and Zachary Taylor re·
usctl ,o go to work on Sunday. so
Sen.th' President Atchison was em-
ov. rrt:d for that brief time. He'd
wt•fl working hard to w1nd up the
nmc duck Congress, though, so he
lepl through his entire term of of
ice
Gr .1sshoppers wiped out the crops
n Nebraska for 19 consecutive years
rrom 1856 to 1875. Thmk of that!
Jow do you suppose the early set·
lcrs th •re stuck it out? Those who
tayed must have been a apecial
reed.
Golf 1 such an attracUon in Japan
h. t thP Koeene C.ounlt'y Club
tlarccs an initiation rce of $200,000.
soldiers rarely show them smiling?
A. Bad teeth
Q What's the meaning or the enter·
lainers' word "shtick''?
A. ll'i; Yiddish for prank.
That "pillowing" is Japanese slang
for physical romance bcc;ame widely
known alter the lcnathy program
"Shogun'' turned up on television.
Might note it's also slang for the same
in France. getting there by way of
what once was French lndochitta,
which pi~ked It up earlier from
J apancse !oldler~.
Q. What's the difference be~ween
thermal spMngs and hot springs?
A. Thermal, more than 70 degrees
F Hot, over 98 de1rees F .
Toy oldlers ought to be called
Fr •ddl s. 1 th1nk Jt was Fredertck
th<' Great. king of Prussia. who ~p.ulAftlM. tht.am. Between 1'46 and
1786. Ill-found d hl1 reputaUon 11 a ·
brllllunt mllltar)' 11trate1isl by plot·
ting hli mlhtary move' wtth toy soltllcrx
)
--. ---., .. , . ~nn2
~~~~~
Legislative payrolls
The salary of Senate President Pro
Tern David Roberti is, like all other
legislators, $28,000, an amount substan-
tially above the average income of the
majority of Californians, 50 percent of
whose rep0rted taxable earnings do not
exceed $13,000. Robertl's assistant.
Jerry ZaneUi , who bears the title of ex-
ecutive officer of the Rules Committee,
a post with nebulous duties, 1s paid
nearly twice as much, receiving $51,768.
Zanelli 1s only one of the great army
of aides employed by the Legislature os
tensibly lo assist the 120 members in
their legislative work. Roberti alooe has
31 aides while the total employees or the
Legislature now number more than 2,200
and are largely responsible for the
burgeoning operational costs of that
branch of government. This year more
than $100 million will be spent for
legislative support, an amount greater
than the cntm." s tate budget of 50 years
ago
THIS HUGE operational cost for the
Legislature, which amounts lo almost
Sl million per member. is due almost
entirely to the proliferation of staff,
which has taken place in the past 15
years.
The total of salaries of the legislators
1s only $3,360,000. Add another $3
million for the fringe benefits the mem-
bers have voted themselves and a
J generous $15 million for the legitimate
expenses or phones. pr1nling, legislative
counsel and analyst and basic clerical
staff and the costs would still be less
than 20 percent of the actual total being
spent
Most of the rest goes to lhe political
hacks who function as aides. press
agents and factotums Zanelli 1s but one
of scores of excessively paid minions
whose primary duties are to cater to the
IARL WATfRS
egos of the lawmakers, many of whom
are paid more than $40,000 Nor is
Zanelli the tughest paid Janet Roche,
recently arMved here from Washington.
D C . is paid $55, 152 to serve as staff
director for Speaker WilJie Brown while
Steve Thompson is paid $57 ,384 as di rec
tor of the Speaker's Research Office
THE RATIONALE for assistants'
salaries substantially more, some twice
as much as the members who claim to
be "full-time professional lawmakers,"
is bard to fathom. Nowhere else in
public or private employment do aides
receive pay greater than their bosses. If
the legislative aides are worth more
t han the members it would seem they
should be the ones the voters should
elect. Secretly many of the aides hold
that very thought.
The irony is that for the most part the
aides are non-essential and the great
majority totally unnecessary as proved
by the fact the Legislature, meeting on·
ly every other year for more than 100
years, performed the same duties.
generally much better, with onJy a bare
handful of part-time help, mostly only
clerical
But if the pay given the aides 1s dif
fi cull to understand the hordes of un-
needed staff isn't The pure and simple
fact is they are there to help perpetuate
the members in office. While a small
corps of this huge legion are highly
com petenl professionals in their fields
and studiously avoid political activity
a nd another group is merely
secretarial, the great majority are
vigorous partisans. wheeling and dealing
and actively campaigning.
STILL THEIR very existence serves
to create confusion and a tremendous
amount of "busy work" for the
legislators while at the sametimemsulat-
mg them from their constituents lo the
point where they become completely out
of touch Wllh their needs and desires.
Many of the aides assume the
responsibilities and authority of the
members and build themselves into key
figures exercising Machiavellian power
over the members and legislative policy
Since 1966 the state budget has grown
from $4 billion to S25 b11Jion. lt was that
>ear when the Legislature became one
or . full·t1me. professional lawmakers"
and the excessive salaries, soaring
payroll and huge legislative costs pro-
vid<:' a clue to why the stale budget has
been permitted to increase so tremen-
dously.
Campaigns need wider fund raising
To the Editor: The Daily Pilot offered shallow logic
In recently calling for "more
restrictions on campaign collecting and
spending.''
Either the Dally Pilot's editorial
writers are lerribly naive or the Dally
Pilot actually supports the denial of the
freedom of expression.
When more restrictions are placed on
the ability of candidates and political
parties to raise and spend campaign
fund s , only Lhe non -restricted
newspaper editors with their biases will
MAILBOX
have an unbridled say in who should be
elected That would be a blow to
democracy. a blow to the First
Amendment and a blow to the intentions
of our nation's Founding Fathers
The Daily Pilot s hould be calling upon
Americans to each give more to the
candidates of their choice and to their
political parties The c9sts of
campaigns are born~ .by far too .f~w
citizens who accept c1v1c responsibility
to give to political causes.
MORE MONEY IS spent each year ~n
fireworks for the Fourth of JuJ~ than .ts
spen t on political ca~paig ns an
America. How much more important ls
U. that we have good men and women in
public office? Restrictions on who can
contribute to J?OUUcal campaigns and
restrictions on what can be spent to
elect a candidate do not serve the cause
of freedom. .
Like the costs for all of us in our daily
personal and business lives, the costs of
campalcns are aHected by inflation.
Toda)' it costs more to maJl a letter -
personal business or political. Today )t
COits more for radio lime, television
time, billboard space, printing,
newspaper ad space. campaign staffs,
oftice supplies and headquarters rental.
So lone as newspapers continue lo
raise the price of advertisln.g space,
they had beUer not suggest Uml\s on
campaip..s ndln1. I am yet to see a
newspaper donat~ ad .apa( '° lh-..
candidat~
For Mmeone who bas such a ve.sted
interest in U>e pollUcal protcss aa news
covenae of campaisns: editorial
eAdorhmeot1, and the selUnl of ad
•pace ll should be embarraHinl to
advodM Umi&a oe campaip tundinl ___ ,,
Bus 31.oJ» for park
To the Editor:
If several comfortable Crystal Cove
State Park bus s tops were provided just
off t he highway on either side, in-
numerable park visitors would prefer to
use the service of the many OCTD buses
that traverse the area.
These bus stops could provide a
shaded seating area in which to wait :
lockers for daytime storage of .be~ch
equipment and lunch baskets; dnnkmg
founlains : outdoor foot showers; and
some information significant to the use
and enJoyment of the park. Until the
over-and underpasses were cQnstructed
for people to go from the canyon section
of the park to the beach area, a hand
operated, traffic signal could provide for
safe crossing.
The park, the people and the buses
a re here right now. needing this
service. Until the planning for more
permanent structures, such as have
been constructed at Botsa Chica Slate
Beac h is completed, temporary
facilities should be provided to meet the
pressing demand.
THE USE OF THE bus system for
transporting park visitors could obviate
the need for the use of many cars, thus
saving our scarce oil, cuttin& down on
the traffic and air pollution problems ;
and avoiding the use for car parking of
m ore than a minimum of the park l!l"d
so needed for uncrowded visitor enJOY·
ment. Such provisions would enable
many to come lo the park who do not,
have their own private transportation
facilities, or who could not otherwise af·
ford the trip.
The Crystal Cove State Park ad·
ministration bas all alona been open to
suggestions on the part of the public as
to what development was most desired.
Tliat this service feature needs further
emphasis needs to be cdnveyed lo Stale
Park Director, Pete Dangermond, Jr .•
P.O. Box 2390, Sacramento, CA. 95811
and to our actively concerned As·
aem blywoman, Marian Ber,eson,
Cattrornla Asaembly. State Capitol,
Sacramento, Ca. 85814. EVELYN GAYMAN
A.liao saving dUpuletl
wasn't based on declining enrollment,
or El Morro would have been closed. It
a lso wasn't based on building size
because Aliso can hold as many as El
Morro or TOW. <The higll. 700 figure for
TOW is with "adjuftments"
whatever that means. J It was chosen
simply because it can't hold more lhan
600 an the future which the others can by
addition of portable classrooms. Aliso
will not reopen in five years or so; the
other two schools will just get ov2r·
crowded and expanded with portables.
TUE 1'1AIN issue is the projected sav·
Ing of closing Aliso. Sanchis estimates
about Sl50.000 will be saved. He
estimates a revenue of $40,000 if it is
leased. I Remember the Blumont build-
ing can be leased > There is nowhere
mention of additional costs to the two
schools housing more students nor extra
bus costs. Maybe the district plans on
raising bus fees. but maybe, also,
parents will rebel. At any rate there are
additional costs not mentioned by the
district lhat will eat into the savings.
The $40,000 saving of Proctor's salary
shouldn't be counted. The TOW prin-
cipal can do double duty After all._ if
the district packed 700 students with
"adjustments" into TOW, he would
handle them. The combined enroll-
ments now are 765.
Another consideration (despite
Marilyn Pauley's comments that losing
60 students is not any problem) is stu-
dent night to private education. Cindy
Prewitt in her May 21 speech told of a
survey and a reasonable projected loss
of 60 "Students lf Aliso is closed. That's a
loss of over $100,000. If you've been
adding, you can see the possible saving
Qf closing Aliso is about $10,000.
Now It's true that maybe 60 students
won't leave the L~D. Maybe fewer
will go or even more. But. some are go-
int, and the 'djstrict will be losing
money unnecessarily. Even thoueh the
savin& can't be predicted accurately
by anyone, the saving Is not going to be
what the board expects. Plus the board
hH 1otten a lot that it doesn't want -
th~ enmity of several hundred people ln
th.ls community.
JOYCE BOWEl't
-_______ ... __ , _____ --~~--..,.. ,
COM ICS 83
INTERMISSION 84
TELEVISION BS
Erma Bombeck suggests checking
the kids instead of the baggage
UllU lllCl/11111 ClllT when you fly . B6
Laguna 8sks end to ~egal .J\id fund
Jn a split vote, Laguna Beach
Clty Council members have sup-
ported a resolution calling fQr
the end to tax-supported funds
Cor the Orange County Leeat Aid
Society. ·
The resolution, sought by
Mayor Wayne Baglin, was op-
posed Tuesday by council mem-
bers Sally Bellerue and Nell
Fitzpatrick, who said such a
move "threatens ppen govern-
ment and the check and balance
system.
The loca! Legal Aid Society
has filed suit against several
Orange County cities over low-
cost housing issues and, lo the
case of Laguna Beach, attempt-
ed to prevent approval of the
proposed Baywood development
In Sycamore Hills.
The court found in tavor of the
city in that suit, but the society
has appealed the decision. In ad-
dition, attorneys for the Legal
Aid Society have suggested
county supervisors not allow
Laeuna lo sell the Sycamore
HUis Property unl~s low and
moderate Income houslne is in-
cluded.
Wbat Baalin aaya la disturbing
to him ls the society's use of tax
dollars to sue eovernment agen-
cies that provide the funds.
Supervisors approved J{iving
$300, 750to the Lee al Aid Society in
October, l~ from federal re-
venuesharing funds.
· Baglin's resolution soueht to
eliminate tne funding for the
society, aayine the money is
beind used "for politically
motivated legal actions against
Oranee County cities."
He gathered the support of
council members Howard
Dawson and Kelly Boyd tn bis
motion.
Dawson said the society, "ii
"tryine to eel low-cost housing tn
an area where low-cost housinJ
does not fit. They (tbe society)
are blocking the will of an entire city ...
But councilwoman BeUerue
Hid that, "while we ma)' not
like lQ be sued to provide af-
fordable housing in our com-
munity, the Legal Aid Society
acts as a check and balance."
She said "special interest
eroups ~d prevent the soclety
from representing those who
can not afford to d~fend
themselves," adding, "Those
who believe in open government
tor all will also oppose this
resolution.
Councilman Fltspatricift
echoed Mrs. Bellerue's 1tate1
ment, saying, "I'm disturbed
with the Leeat Aid Society's ac-
tion. I wish they'd 10 away. But
to say they should not aet gov-
ernment funda ls wroni.
''But I must defend their rieht
to proceed as they see fit."
The approved resolution Is to
be sent to county supervlsori
and federal officials.
1
Sycamore buy delayed l
LAGUNA NIGUEL LAKE -Couples relax on
the shore of Laguna Niguel Lake with the
Chet Holifield federal building, popularly
known as the 1Ziggurat, towering in the back-
ground. The map-made fake is part of the
Deity ........... .., Rldlllftl • ....._
156-acre Laguna Niguel Regional Park, ded-
icated in 1973. Boating and fishing are some
of the attractions at the 36-acre Jake, former-
ly a Moulton Niguel Wa~er District reservoir.
Quiet-jet deadline 60 days
Carriers due to devise ways to meet noise guidelines
The five commercial jet air
carriers authorized to serve
John Wayne Airport now have 60
days ln which to devise ways to
meet noise r.eduction require-
ment.s outlined in an airport ac-
cess plan approved by the
Orange County Board of
Supervisors.
Under the plan, the five car-
riers must agree to use so-called
quieter jet.s such as the McDon-
nell Douglas DC-9 Super 80 on at
least 50 percent of their flights
by Oct. 1, 1982 and on all flights
by Oct. 1, 1983.
An exception may be
permitted for Western Airlines,
the only carrier serving the
airport that has no plans to
purchase the Super 801 .
Laneuage was added only hours
before the plan was adopted that
wlll permit any carrier to iden-
tlfy .. special circumstances"
that would prevent it from com-
plying with the plan's pro-
visions, namely the requirement
for neet conversion to quieter
jets.
The language was inserted to
stave off the possibility of legal
action against the county.
Pacific Southwest Airlines,
which will begjn service at lhe
airport Oct. 1 with two flights
daily, will have no trouble com-
plying with the conversion re-
quirement since It already has
four Super 80s in its fleet. PSA
officials have promised to use
only Super 80s at the airport.
AirCal bas taken delivery of
one Super 80, and is due to re-
ceive another in the near future.
County officials say AlrCal,
which wm be permitted 23.5
flights daily, also will be able to
comply with the 50 percent con-
version requirement long before
the 1982 compliance date.
UCI iron't strip
1uule editor of job
UC Irvine student •dilor
8arDaba1 Sokol wilJ not b• Mrtl al his ~itioa or dil· cle.11 fOi po11n1 nude and ~ a few wl1ar Jokes ln a !...., lliDPleinent" banned on ..,..._., ....... W. weeli, n-
~ to UM 1tUdeat couacU.
Aatoetated Student. adVWol'
ffamPton aald todar a NI• o • fire Soko WH
at a 'heed., eomcu
•Hdal. before tb• 1tudnt1 ..... tmadioa.
01.-i .... ._Jim H8"eJ ......., tllt NIObaUoa ..... ..
..... tlMre would not ... .........
council suppc:>rt to pus it, said
Ham pt.on.
The 23-year-old editor of the
New University newspaper
a90lo1t1ed to students earlier
lhl• week and took full
respon.ibillty for the eitht pace
humor 1upplement, comidered
by Other staff memben to be ol·
, .... y ..
About 50 to• JOO copt" of the lft.
Mtt were'atolla rrom a campua
loadin1 dock before •dilora
deltloftd •arb 10,000 oopla
prl0r lo diatrtbuUon of lite re1-!:'lar l•• 'Netday,
I
RepubHc Airlines, with a
flight authorization of 11.5, and
Frontier Airlines, with two
flights, also are purchasing
Super 80s. ..
It is the county's intent under the access plan and the compan-
ion Airport Noise Control and
Land Use Compatibility Plan to
reduce average noise levels in
residential areas located below
takeoff paths by 7.5 decibels on
the Community Noise
Equivalent Level scale.
Such a noise reduction would
reduce the size of the high lm-
p a ct noise zone in those
neighborhoods by 86 percent,
from 237 to 31 acres, accordin1
to the plan.
As the access plan Is written.
the number of permitted daily
departures from the airport
would increase as overall noise
levels decrease. Forty one de-
partures are now permitted.
.
South Laguna
grad lionored .
Karen Ann Borucki, 22, of
South La1una, will receive the
chancellor's manbal award fOI'
the clus ot 1•1 at UCLA ~
ceremoni• June 21.
Miss Borucki, a 1177 Lal\IM
Beach Kith School araduate,
has been selected banner
m1rshal for tile ~meneemeat ....
ceremontee. In iddttioa, lbe re-
celveet UM Brum hUe Awaril
from the UCLA Alumni ~
ilOD ........ Pi .. PM liriiii·
t1 kat{on1I Cb•pter S.mee
i\watd.
Her bacbelor of aelence
...... 19 In kl-~. Sllit 11 the d1upter Of Mr. Ud 111"1.
Norm Borucki.
.._~~·-----....... ,·~------...... --.~ ...... ---------.--,------....... ----....... ~--....._
~r
Laguna council grants developers 30-day reprieve
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. oa11, ~ ........
The Laguna Beach City Coun-
cil has granted a one-month
reprieve for a development firm
seeking to buy 62 acres of
Sycamore Hills for $5.4 million.
But Mayor Wayne Bailin, who
cast the lone dissenting vote,
had som e strong words for
former owners of \he 522-acre
parcel, and said be want.s the ci-
ty to explore "lucrative offers"
from other companies.
City officials say they are near
an agreement with Rancho
Palos Verdes Corp., former
owners of the land, and the
Baywood Development Group,
which proposes to purchase a
portion of the property to build
300 townhouses.
The purchase would leave
LB school
budget
• rev iew set
By JOHN NEEDHAM °' ... °""' ....... Laguna Beach Unified School
District trustees will review a
$6. 7 million preliminary budget
for the 1981-82 school year when
they meet tonight at 7: 30.
The budget is $36,497 hither
than la.st year.
Employee benefits and
salaries make up about 82 per-
cent of the total. The remainine
portion is slated for educational
programs, supplies and operat-
ing expenses, with $66,000 being
held in a contingency reserve
account.
Teachers' salaries are expect-
ed to be a total $2.9 million,
while other certificated
employee salaries, lncludinl ad-
ministrators and librarians, will
amount to $440,285.
Salaries for classified person-
n e I Including instructional
aides, clerical, bus driven and
maintenance employees come to
$1, 132,978. The amount for
employee benefits was listed at
$848,109.
The Laeuna Beach district
will have fewer teachers next
year following the firing of eight
full-time teachers and one part-
time teacher.
The layoffs were part or an
austerity move to help balance
the budget of the financially pre-
ssed district, which faces an an-
ticipated $540,000 d_eficit.
· Trustees also voted to close
Aliso Elementary School in
South Laguna.
The preliminary budget docu·
ment shows income to the dis-
trict from federal sources at
$72,808. However, 25 percent of
that amount could be cut under
proposals sponsored by the
Rea1an Administration.
Income from the state, Includ-
ing average dally attendance as·
aistance paid for each sutdent, is
listed at $3,030,928. Income from
the coW'lty ls $3,000, while local
income from property taxee is
$3,473,50()(
District trustees wlll review
a nd discuss the pr~liminary
budeet at 7:30 p.m. at school dla-
trict beadquarten, 550 Blumont
St. Approval of a final bud1et la
scheduled for Aupt.
Laguna Beach with a $1.5
million debt to Rancho, and
more than 460 ·acres with which
to raise that amount.
But the on-again, off-again
negotiations between the three
entities has stretched well over
a year, and Baglin sars he's
ready to call it quits.
"Delay after delay continue to
come to us, and it seems that
with the delays come additional
strings," Baglin said.
"Rancho (Palos Verdes) has
been very ·patient over the past
few years, but now they're
pressing too hard. They're
milking us for everything they
can."
Baglin said be is "also aware
of several lucrative offers pend-
ing, without the strings that
Rancho and Baywood have.
"If this (negotiations> would
end I think they would come in
with an offer."
But fellow council members
disagreed with Baglin, and
Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick
said the council sbo6ld not
a bruplly e nd negotiations
"because of a few rumors bant
died about.
"Rumors of other potentia1
proposals that are banging out
there are speculative," he said.
"We should pursue (current
negotiations) for an additional
month."
Council members Kelly BoycJ
and Sally Bellerue both agreed
canceling the negotiating agree-
ment would be a mistake whe11
things appear so close to '
favorable conclusion.
New amphitheater
embroiled in suit
I"
l
By RJCllAllD GREEN oe .. .....,,......,
The 10,000-spectator Irvine
Meadows Amphitheater won 't
open for 1:¥&siness until Aug. 1,
but it's already embroiled in a
legal controversy.
Owners of the amphitheater
being built at Lion Country
Safari have filed a $1.5 million
lawsuit against the Nederlander
theatrical organization, which
owns the Greek Theater in Los
Angeles and is developing an
amphitheater at the Orange
County Fairgrounds in Costa
Mesa.
The antitrust suit filed Mon-
day in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles aUeges that performer
contracts e n forced by
Nederlander is stymieing efforts
by Irvine Meadows Am -
1
Graduation
plans set at
Laguna High
More than 260 Laguna Beach
High School seniors will
graduate during ceremonies at
Irvine Bowl June 12, beginning
at 7:30 p.m.
Tim Timmons, pastor of the
South Coast Community Church,
will be the commencement
speaker, along with valedic-
torian Susan Welner and
salutatorian Bettina Nicely.
The all-night ,graduation par-
ty. with a country-western
theme, follows commencement
at Laguna Beach High School.
Tickets are $15 each.
Baccalaureate services will be
held this Sunday at t he
Community Presbyterian Church
on Forest Avenue. That cap and
IOWD atrair begins at 7 p. m.
pbitbeater officials to book
performers.
Specifically, contractual diV
ficulties have prevented the
Irvine Me~dows Amphitheater
Partnership from signing co~
cert agreements with Jefferso9
Starship, Tom Jones, Emmr
Lou Harris, Melissa Manchestet
and Santana, amphitheater
spokesman Michael Hennigao
said Wednesday.
Re contended that these
artists and others are prohibited
from appearing at the Irvine
Meadows Amphitheater because
of performance contracts they
hold with the Greek Theater.
. These contracts· contain
clauses that prohibit Greek Theater yerformers from appear-
ing at any other amphitheater
within 100 m1Jes of the Greek
and within 90 days before and 60
days after their performance
there, Hennigan said.
These clauses represent a
violation of the Sherman An-
titrust Act, be claimed.
The Irvine Meadows Am-
phitheater is 67 miles south ol
the Greek theater. ,
"The allegations are false,''
said Rick Witte, spokesman for
· the Nederlander organization.
"It's a cute suit (that) reflects au extraordinary degree of ig-
norance of this business."
He declined to go into the
specifics.
Irvine Meadows Amphitheater
spokesman Hennigan said Ulat
because of the terms of the
Greek Theater performer con-
tracts, the Irvine theaters will
be able to book only 35 acts, 15
short of the desired number qr
bookings. ·
This 15-act shortfall will
represent $500,000 in lost ret-
enue, Hennigan sald. Under ~ Sherman Antitrust Act, def -
danta in antitrust suits c
claim triple the actual damac
Incurred, be Hid. ·
OFF a RUNNING DEPI'. -Every now and then you
run into some sour t>USS who will tnslst on telllna you how
community gatheranes
like picnics, fairs ,
bazaars and the like
are really old hat.
Nobody goes to them
any more. They're just
too corny.
Surely, you're like-
ly to run into a couple
of these down-in-the-mouthers right in our own coastal re·
gion as the fair metrop<>lis of. Costa Mesa gets ready for
tomorrow's opening of one of these events for the 36th
straight time.
Friday marks the start of the three-day Costa Mesa
Fish Fry and Carnival under auspices of the Costa Mesa-
Newport Harbor Lions Club.
"NAJI, YOU DON'T wanna get cau~ht in all that
1 corn-pone," some Wrong Thinker will advise you. "They
just gonna give away a bunch of prizes and sell fish din·
ners and have a parade and carnival. Just cruddy ol'
stuff like that . . . "
Well, I've got news for you. If it's all ~o corny and out
of date, how come attendance keeps setting records dur-
ing the Fish Fry in Mesatown? Maybe 50,000 people show
up over the three days. Maybe 100,000. Who knows? Your
estimate is as good as anybody's. Suffice to say it's going
to be a lot of folks .
And they're going to have a good time.
I hope you won 't run into anybody that suggests to
1 you that good times have gone out of style.
SO THE LIONS and their friends will start serving
those famous fish dinners about 5:30 tomorrow afternoon.
And they're going to keep serving them for three days. 1 The carnival rides open at 6 and then that famous
I aggregation known as Band X, the "World's Largest Non -
I
,~
~
·You mean they all volunteered for tM Fish Fry parade?"
, marching Marching Band," will take to the stage at
Lions Park at 7:30 p.m. The big purr-rade takes to the
streets Saturday at 10:30 a.m. .
THOSE FISH DINNERS, alleged to have been made
so tasty over the years because of a secret recipe for bat·
ter, continue to be one item that seems to have defied in·
nation.
The family-style fish fling is still only $3.50 a plate. It
1 seems to me it was $3 . .50 a plate when I was a kid and
gasoline was 18 cents a gallon. And tossed in with the de·
al, you might turn out to be the lucky winner of a new
1981 Ford Escort or a new-fangled color TV set or one of a
bunch of other prizes.
Through all this, it's going to be enormously difficult
' to be a sour puss. If you run into one, tell him to hike on
down to Salt Creek Beach and count seagulls. Then you
go ahead to the Fish Fry and have a good time.
IN ANY CASE, there are only two Fish Fry events
where I abslolutely refuse to participate. I refuse to be a
judge in the Miss Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
beauty contest.
Further, I ref use to make a selection in the Best
Baby Contest.
In truth, I haven't been asked to judge in either one
but I'm getting my refusal in ahead of time just in case.
AS A JUDGE in those contests, you have to re-
member that the parents of losers far outnumber the
. parents of winners.
I
When it comes to telling parents who has the best girl
or the best baby, cowardice is the only way out.
See you all around the fish dinner tables, now.
lb •ICRAaD oaEEN or .. ..,...,......,
A four·man police team In·
veati1attn1 the my1terlou1
murder of Manuela E. Witthuhn
wlll be d.iabanded Friday, exact·
ly four months after the 28-year-
old Irvine woman waa found
bludgeoned ln the bedroom of
her home. ,
Irvine police Lt. Bob Lennert
s aid today the case will betome
the primary responsibWty of in·
vestigators Ron Veach and Scott
Cade. He added, however, that
they eventually wlll eet other U ·
signments and won't be able to
work full-lime on the unsolved
murder.
Lt. LeMert said police have
conducted thousands of in·
terviews and studied thousands
of arrest reports Jrom other
police departments.
Police officials say that
despite the extensive Investiga-
tion, they just don't have a lot to
go on -a fact that bu been
clear since Ute earliest phases of
the investigation lnto tile slaying
of the attractive blonde-haired
employee of California First
Bank in lrv)ne.
The woman, whose body was
found by her mother, Ruth
Robrbeck, at 11 :30 a.m. Feb. 6,
bad no known enemies and
police say they still aren't sure
of the motive for the bludgeon·
ing.
Lt. Lennert said that police
have asked various law enforce-
ment officials if they knew of
any violent sex offenders living
in the area who might have com-
mitted the crime.
He refused to say, however,
whether the woman was sexually
assaulted.
And Lt. Lennert said that
police still haven't determined a
motive for the killing.
Police have theorized that
Mrs. Witthuhn was hit over the
bead with a blunt object late
Feb. S at her home at 35 Colum-
bus . Her hu sban d was
hospitalized in Western MedicaJ
Center in Tustin at the time.
No murder weapon was found.
The assailant entered through
a sliding glass door that wasn't
equipped with a burglar-proof
locking mechanism, in-
vestigators said .
Her mother found her the next
morning after the dead woman's
husband, David M. Witthuhn,
asked her to check on his wife,
who didn't answer his telephone
The Witthuhn murder is the
second unsolved homicide ln
Irvine in the last two years.
In the other case, Savannah L.
Anderson, a 22.year-old
secretary, was found strangled
in her Irvine apartment in May
of 1979.
Police say there is no ap-
parent link between the two
murders and the Witthuhn case
apparently isn't tied to any
other slayings police know of.
Irvine scouting
leaders due honor
Four Irvine scout leaden will
rec;eive the highest merit award
at tbe Santiago District at a rec·
ognition dinner Friday at. the
Santa Ana Elks Club.
Those being honored are John
Bowski. Kathleen Ann Curnutt.
W. Les Kemp and George K.
Koch.
f rvine gains $300,000 inf ederal funtb
.Being labeled a "metropolitan
it " by Uncle Sam will mean
,000 in grant funds for Irvine
tyear.
1 Since 1974 the population bas in·
creased from 26,100 to 62,134, ac·
cording to 1980 U.S. Department
of Census figures released in
April.
The latest population fleures
will entitle the city to a biuer
s lice of Housin1 and Urban
Development funds.
Since 1974 Irvine bas had to
compete with other county cities
of less than 50,000 for Urban
County Program funds that are
given by HUD to the county for
distribution.
Daily ... ~ ....... .., 1tk11e.-1t.-..
HITTING THE MATTRESS Nine-year-old
Brody Rumple of Irvine leaps from platform
to a mattress at Adventure Playground in
University Park at Beech Tree Lane and
University Drive in Irvine. The ·playground
offers a number of supervised activities for
young thrill seekers.
SELECT
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PoMble. aluminum cake pans with cover also In atock .• 39'-1.39
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Pre·cut 1111 WOOd parts
deeigned IOI' the beginner
~83.'ee 14488
Other styles avaMabfe
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Assorted
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PLACEMAT
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Easy to follow
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We carry feathers for your
cowboy hat bands.
TARZANA
(2tl)NMIH
WUTCOWM GM•DMOYI • LAMl'ADA aANMQO LAllllA
Cl,1) ..... 71 (71411»Ht0 (Ut)~-1 ~114)HMIH (114)4&1-1117
CORDLESS
4~?1 -llB
SUPER COP VARIABLE
5 97
107118
Get a couple, Mt them at
clilfennt tim .. and it mall .. it
look lib you're home u light.
go o£f and on when you're away.
(Did I lOM anyone there be.id ..
myaeU?)
MUDAI
BICYCLES
IOU' 20'' 1111 1
748!,
IOn' 20"
DILUDllll
-~ ' Both have BMX frame a.nd fork, 20.2.125 •
black knobbi ... 20" BMX hu coaster
brake, com .. in white with gloa black.
Delu.ze hu side pull caliper bralus, red
and gold flniah.
~~IUllEllWD TUSH .CDS
30C~LOI
7~
30 llLLOI IOVCDICI
10~
Got 90 many trash can special. '
that it alm.t brea&e my heart
to tell you I ha .. "° truh. (My
goat .. u it all).
> MTD S BP
IOTOTILLD
24997
Cn..tn dri" B&S
engine, 16 •lf-
aha.rpening tin ... 135
rpm forward apeed,
adjustable depth of
1 till to 7". While they lut.
ODD
Hen are 'n\ompeon s..dlea, Flame, a.nd
more. (if my wino uncle ...ad.a thia _..•re
in trouble.)
VIVA
ROTARY
DIAL
In brown/ earth tone.
•TRENDLINE
ROTARY DIAL
. White or Cocoa.
UL'l'RA80
Choice of
Almond or Cocoa.
3788
39~·
Great choic. of phoriM and by the way, it;• peri~tly
legal to own your own phone. Th .. are approved too.
Supposed to call the phone company and say, "Hey, I
got my own etc." (I bought the Ultra 80, h-u
automatic reclial in C&M of a buay signal.)
UDDLlllAI IADDLDUllET
SUTCOVDS ,
SMALL 1999
PJOK-UPS
Pl~= 4 'Jl99 ORTRUCK8 ....
Sure f .. l good. a lot better
~ that .ticky hot 'finyl
and when they get • bit
mW\9)' you pull them off and cle&n them.
AICO CllPllTI
IOW/40 WT.
•Otol OU.
99!.
I think there ia a tl.80 by
mail refund from Arco on
thia .tuff if you buy 6
qUart.8. The non haa the
akinny on thia.
DUWITE
SAID CBAllS
Hope .. got • Joed 11\0N
in l:.caUM whtn I went to
the non late M.moria1
Day .. eold out of 80l'M.
(don't ., that.)
MULTICOLORED
WEB
.5!!
FOLDING FABRIC
T.,...m.
oolor. 8?!
GUMOU~ DICIEASD
AID EIGllE CLEAID
133
17 oz.
Spray on. wait a bit. and. hoe.
off (I uee • .tiff bnaah a little
anyhow, worlu faet.r.)
ILUE POLY OIE-STEP
POLY SEALAIT
Sl!~uoum
ci..n.. 8hlnM. and s..i. in
·one .tep. (The One Step, been
doing that for ,....... rm ready
for Two Step. ) .,
IEBIWOOD
PUSDV&Tm
6~
,
4"WIDE
IDDDIOAID
47:rr.
C'"'" it to fit your planting areu, cut to
lloa stuff, do eome light tenecinq,
whateftr.
LAS V&GAS (AP) -A ,.,., whole atbll
hacked Ott In Slam.laUI CountJ ~ yean &IO
been p:aduat.s from h11h ICbool here.
Mary Vlncent, now 11, accepted her di
with tbe boot that serve• as her left band.
1be UMcl the book tbat aervea as her rltbt hUllJ
abate banda with Howard Marr, principal ol
apeclal 1cbool for handicapped etudentl where ~ •
completed blab school. ~ ,.
Her P•rent1, Lucy and Herbert Vine
watched proudly u their daU!lter dAued
tradltlonal cap and aow'b,
marched into the room pUlbi.nJ
the wheelchair of another
graduate. '
Miu Vincent was a 15-year·
old ruuway when ahe accepted
a ri9 from a straneer in the
San Francisco Bay area Sept.
29, 1978. She was raped in a re·
mote area west of Modesto, her
arms were cut off with an ax
and abe was left for dead. v1•c ... .,
Some motorists found Mias Vincent staue
toward Interstate S. She recovered, learned to
artificial arms and returned to her Las V
home.
Lawrence Singleton, a Sl·year·old mere
seaman, was convicted of the mutilation and
sentenced to prison.
Mother killer
may get estate 1;
MADISON, Wis. CAP> -A man convicted ol
suffocating bis mother should not necessarilY. be ,
deprived of inheriting her $1.S million estate, the
Wisconsin Supreme Court bas ruled. ~
In a S.2 decision, the court said that someon
who will!ully kills another is disqualified from t
beriting bis victim's estate, but that in Wiscon1~ willful intent technically is not an element o(
crime of reckless homicide. • ·
Bernard Safran Jr., was accused or su!foc'f;
ing his 70-year-old mother, Helen. in July 1m.
Police said the woman's body was burned two
days later in the basement oC her South Milwa:l
home. •· ·
Although originally charged with secon
degree murder, Safran, wbo was 30 at the time ol \
the killi.ng, pleaded no contest to a reduced cbatfe
or reckless homicide and was sentenced to up~ ,
five years in Waupun State Prison in 1978.
Mrs. Safran left her estate in trust to her IOD
in a 1952 wiU. His two brothers and a brother-in·
law sooght to disqualify him.
NY beats merules
NEW YORK CAP) -The incidence of meaales
in New York City plummeted by "an astoundint''
94 percent over the last year, and health official
predicted they would meet their goal of eradicat·
ing the disease here by October 1982.
Health Commissioner Dr. Reinaldo A. Fef'Nlr
reported only 27 confirmed cases of measles fr
January through April 1981. During the first
of 1980, there were 457 reported incidences, Fe
said, attributing the decline to "vigorous effo
to immunize students.
THE MALE MAM
an unusual discount store
excellence in
fitted shirts
The Irvine City Council and
t (( should be COttlmended for
onting VP with a creative financ·
11g plao that calls for construction
of $e5.g pt11lion worth of projeds
l\:er thtfnext five years without
sting taxpayers a cent.
That' right. ff the plan works
nd there doesn't appear t.o be
hy reason it 't'On 't -no tax money
wall be spent on the five multi·
milhon·dollar projects .
The staff has been working six
mouths on a funding plan that will I low the city to set aside revenues
from the hotel bed tax and systems
lcvf'lopment c harges to finance
the projectS.
~niona the much needed
facilities planned are the Civic
Center. an operations support
facility, a Performing Arts
Theater and Windrow and
Heritage parks.
Last month the City Council
agreed to set aside the two sources
o! city revenues and also directed
the staff to study possible joint
powers agreements to help.
It may have looked like a small
matter shoved down at the bottom
or the council agenda. But it's a big
step in the direction that more
cities should betaking.
• arm water c osts nse
When it comes to water, it's
wtier c you live that counts.
Last month the Irvine Ranch
W t et District unveiled its pro-
:& ~cctcd water increases effective
Jul) 1. Treated water or drinking
,,,_·ater will rema in the same at 41
cents per 100 cubic feet or $6.15
ot the average monthly bill.
• n But farmers and those using
J eel aimed water might have a
hard time swallowing the new
p rice hikes until tl\ey realize
what goes on elsewhere. An ac re
..foot of agricultural water will
.ru mp from $63.50 to $71.
The I RWO purchases its
L\ at er from the Municipal Water ~Dist ri«H which wi ll like wise
t <J tse prJces from $51 to $61 an
at•r e root of untrea t e d
)ag ricultural water.
A~ the county has become
more indust rialized, cities that
once sold agricultural water now
sell farmers the same water they
do other customers .
So while the Orange County
Water District will lower
agricultural wat e r prices Crom
$17 to $15 an acre foot July 1, that
won't mean lower prices for
farmers in those cities.
Most cities rely on a mixture
of water from the Orange County
Wa ter District and the Municipal
Water Ojstrict. Farmers in Foun-
tain Valley will pay $208 an acre
foot for water, Costa Mesa $287
and Huntington Beach $198. ·
That's why when you talk to
farmers a bout produce pri~es,
they talk a bo ut the price of
water. StiJJ, lbey're better 1off
farming on Irvine soil.
'fl_ecycle plan stumb les
Ther e are more than 30 '
!flOu t.hs to feed these days at the lla~una Beach Marine Mammal
Cc-nler out on Laguna Canyon
Road.
The Frhmds of the Sea Lion
o rga nization , which includes
l>o ut 25 to 30 v o lunteers,
Ol erat<.'S out of the red barn area
ct1:icent to the city 's animal
ht~lter
There, visitors will find two
JP<>0ls cootaining recovering sea
tions and har bor seals. Stalls in-l'~1 ~ t' the b a.r n ho u se mo r e
mryrnls suffermg t rom a variety
f u1tments and injuries.
Mos t of the sea creatures are
W pounds underweight and all
uff er from lack of nourishment.
nctors that force the sea lions to
b e ach the m selves, include
p a ra.sites, lung worms ,
•
recommended . and lbe City Coun-
cil approved, expanding the pro·
gram for another six months t.o the
neighborhoods of El Camino Real,
Walnut , Culverdale and
Or angetree.
Publicity costs for this e~·
pansion plan are expected to run
another $1,500.
Now the idea o! collecting old
papers is respectable, almost as
worthwhile as reading them in
the first place.
But it's time to trash the re-
cycling program before the city
and the ta~payers wind up sink·
ing further in the hole.
hypogtycem1a, pancreatitis, liver
flukes, ulcers and dehydration.
That doesn't count the ones
who inadvertently swallow fish
hooks, or get hit by boat pro.
pellers.
Expenses nm a bout $10,000 a
year, and the marine center
always falls short of that mark.
Frozen herring must be shipped
in from San Pedro. and an·
tibiotics, tranquilizers. vitamins
and other drugs don't come
cheap.
It's frustrating, say the stu·
dent volunteers, who are on hand
in the mornings, at lunch, after
school arld on weekends to tend
their fl.ippered patients.
If you'd like to help out, send
a check to the Friends of the Sea
Lion, 20612 Laguna Canyon Road,
Laguna Beach.
ln1ons expressed in the space above arf! those of the ~llV Pilot. other views t-l(· ,..sstd on this page are those of their authors and arti$6. Reader comment ls lnvlt·
d2 f'J':/.ress The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa ~sa. CA 9262~, Phone (714>
It
Legi~Iative payrolls soar
The salary of Senate President Pro
Te'!' David Roberti is, like all other
legislators, $28,000, an am'Ount substan·
tlally above the average income of the
majority of Californians, 50 percent of
whose reported taxable eantlnga do not
e xceed $13,000. Roberti's assistant
Jerry Zanelli, who bears the title of ex:
eculive officer of the Rules Committee
a post ~th nebulous duties, Is paid
nearly l~_ce as much, receiving $51,768. Z~nelli JS only one of the great army
of aides employed by the Legislature os-
tensibly to assist the 120 members in
their legislative work. Roberti alone has
31 aides while the total employees of the
Legislature now number more than 2 200
and are largely responsible for 'the
burgeoning operational costs or that
branch of government. This year more
lha_n $~00 million will be spent for
legislative support, an amount greater
than the entire state budget or 50 years ago.
THIS HUGE operational C<>Sl for tbe
Legislature, which amounts to almost
$1 million per member, is due almost
entirely to the proliferation of staff
which has taken place in the past iS years~
The total of salaries of the legislators
is only $3,360,000. Add aJlother $3
miJHon for the fringe benefita the mem·
bers have voted themselves and a
generous $15 million for the legitimate
expenses ot phQJles, prinUng, teeialatlve coun~eJ and analyst and basic clerical
sta(f and the costs would still be less
'I
than 20 percent of the actual total being spent.
Most of the rest goes to the political
hacks who lunctlon as aides, press
agents and factotums. Zanelli is but one
of scores of excessively paid min.Jons
whose primary duties are to cater to the
I
ii'
1-AR'"'!'""""!l l~IT-IR-S -i~
egos of.th& lawmakers, many of whom
are paid more than J40 000. Nor ls
Zanelli the highest paid. janet Roche
recently arrived here from Washington' ~.C., is paid $55,152 lo serve as staff
director for Speaker Willie Brown while
Steve Thompson is paid $57,384 as direc-
tor of the Speaker'• Research Office.
THE RATION'AJ,E for assistants'
salaries subStant.4ally more, some twice
as much as the members who claim to
be "full.time prof~ssional lawmakers "
is bard to fethom. Nowhere else in
public or private employment do aides
receive pay greater than their bosses. If
the legislative aides are worth more
than the members it would seem they
should be the ones lhe voters should
elect. Secretly many of the aides hold that very thought.
. The irony ls that for' the most part tbe
aides are .non-essential and the areal
majority totally unnecessary as proved
by the fact the Legislature, meeting on·
ly every other year for more than 100
years , performed the same duties.
generally much better, with only a bare han~ful of part-time help, mostly only clerical.
But if the pay given the aides is dif-{'ftult to understand the hordes of UO·
needed staff isn't. The pure and simple
fact is they are there to help perpetuate
the members in office. While a sma11
corps of this huge legion are highly
competent professionals in their fields
and studiously avoid political activity
a nd an.other group is merely
secretarial, the great majority are
vigorous partisans, wheeling and dealing
and actively campaigning.
STlLL THEIR very existence serves
to create confusion and a tremendous
amount of "busy work" for the
legislators while at the same time insulat·
ing them from their constituents to the
point where they become completely out oJ touch with their need.a and desires.
Many of the aides assume the
responsibUities and authority or the
members a.nd build themselves into key
figures exercising Machlavell,lan power
over the membe('S and legislative policy.
Since 1966 the state budget bas grown
from S4 billion to S2S billion. It was that
year when the Legislature became one
of "full -tilne. professional lawmak.en"
and the excessive salaries, soaring p~yroll and huge legislative costs pro-
vide a clue to why the state budget bas
been permitted to increase so tremen· dously.
Campaigns need wider fund raising
To the Editor:
The Daily Pilot ottered shallow logic No hunter
in r e c e ntly calling for "more ~hstrictlons on campaign collecting and To the Editor:
spending." With regard to an item in the May 26
Either the Daily Pilot's editorial paper headlined1 "Hunter Slain in
writers are terribly naive or the Daily County Gun Misnap," although this
Pilot actuaJJy supports the denial of the certainly is a tragic accidt!nt, I take
freedom or expression. offense al your calling this person a
When more restrictions ar~ pla~ on hunter.
the ability of candJdatea and politic•l From your account of thls apparent
parties to raise and spend campaign accident this person is no hunter. he is a
funds, only the "''"·restricted poacber! Not only was the deer lulled
newspaper editors with their biases will out ol season, it was done with an illeeal weapon for taking deer, a .22 pistol.
The image of bunting suffers ~nough
from attacks by various · animal
protective ty~ 1roups. We shouldn't
have to suffer a'<lditionally due to the
irresponsible actions of people who are
not sportsmen. but 4re in fact poachers .
DA VE SIMPSON
Bua atopa /or park
so needed for uncrowded visitor enjoy·
ment. Such provisions would enable
many to come to the park who do not
have thelr own priva,te transportatiOn
facilities, or who could not otherwise af.
ford the trip.
The Crystal Cove State Park ad·
ministration has all along been open to
suggestions 011 the part of the public as
to what development was most desired.
That this service feature needs further
emphasis needs to be conveyed to State
Park Director, Pete Dangermond, Jr.,
P .O. Box 2390, Sacramento, CA. 95811
and to our .actively concerned As·
sem blywoman, Marian Bergeson
California Assembly, State Capitol:
Sacramento, Ca. 95814.
EVELYN GAYMAN
'Enrichetf imter?
. To the Editor:
The presence of midges in Newport's
water system will ceJ tainly raise prob-
lems for the present city council. I·
told-you·so environmentalists will point
out that for y~ars they have questioned
the ability of the city to meet demands
for clean water as uncurbed develop·
ment bas been allowed to proceed. En·
vi ronmentalists can now correctly
claim that development has already 1 out-distanced tbe city's abillty to pro-
vide clean drinking water.
ONE SOLUTION lo the city officials'
problems would be to advertise our
drinking water as "protein-enriched!'
Tbe little critters that are in the water
are not too terribly noUceable and a
iood ad-man might be able to sell the
water for us. The income would be
useful and could pay for additional
pollcerneri, roads, sewers that develop-
ment suoh as the Newport C~er ex·
pansion Will require. One precaution \be
city should take if it dec:idllii'to sell OW'
"protelh·enriched" water 11 to take out
extensive insurance coveraae m cue
ttie IOf\l·term side eltect of drinklnc the litUe crittere turns out to be aomt
druCled disease.
CHA RLES BRACHET
The 10_,.000;spectAtor Irvine Meado~~ Amphitbeater won't opee , ror bu.slness until Aug . 1,
but it's ._ir._,ady embroiled in a
l•(•l'cootrove"'y.
o~~ Ot U.e •mphitheater be~&' built 'aJ Lion Country Sa•rl have filed a $1.5 mUlloa
l•W•Uit atainst the Nederlander
theal(ipal 'ortJnizatlon. which ' .
own.a the Greek Theater .in Loi
Aa1elea and is developibi an
amphitheater at the Or..tnie County Fair1round1 in oosta Mesa.
J'he antitrust suit filed Mon·
dl)' lft U.S. District Court in Loe
ADteles alle1es that performer
contricts enforced by • Nede11land4!r is stymleinc erfortl bf; Irvine Meadows Am~
pththeater officials to book performers.
Speclrtcally, contractual dif· ficultles have prevented the
Irvine Meadows Amphitheater
Partnership from signlne con-cert aireementa with Jefferson
Starship, Tom Jones, Emmy '
Lou Harris, Melissa Manchester
and Santana. amfhltbeater spok~sman Michae tleniliean
.said Wednesday. . t
He contended that these
artists and others are prohibitQd
from appearin~ at ttie ~rvlrie
Meadon Ampb1tbeater becaute
of performance coi>tracta they
bold with the Greek Theater.
These contracts contain
clauses that prohibit Greek
Theater performers from appear·
ing at .any other ampbltbeater
within 100 miles of the «Greek
apd within 90 days before a.Qd eo
days after their, pe~formance
there, Hennl1ao ~aid,
· Tbese· clauses repre.sent a
violation of tt~e She,rnuu1 An·
' .. ,!t .
\
Fi1hf~
a fun fest
OFF 6 RUNNING DEPr. -Every now and then you
run lnto aom~ sour ~usa who wlll lnstat on teWn1 you how community gathermgs
like picnics , fairs,
bazaars and the like ~ are really old hat. •,.
Nobody goes to them ~\
r~ c1::'n~~· They're just TOM IURPHlll .~/t
Surely, you're like· ~. --------~-·~--' ly to run into a couple
of these down-in-the-moutbers right in our own coastal re-
gion as the fair metropolis of Costa Mesa 1ets ready for
tomorrow's opening of one of these events for the 36th
straight time.
Friday marks the start of the three-day Costa Mesa
Fish Fry and Carnival und~r auspices of tl)e Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club.
"NAH, YOU DON'T wanna get caught in all that
corn-pone," some Wrong Thinker will advise you. "They
just gonna give away a bunch of prizes and sell fish din-
ners and have a parade and carnival. Just cruddy ol'
stuff like that . . . " ·
Well, I've got news for you. If it's all so corny and out
of date, how come attendance keeps setting records dur-
ing the Fish Fry in Mesatown? Maybe 50,000 people show
up over the three days. Maybe 100,000. Who knows? Your
estimate is as good as anybody's. Suffice to say it's going
to be a lot of folks .
And they're going to have a good time.
I hope you won't run into anybody that suggests to
you that good times have gone out of style.
SO THE LIONS and their friends will start serving
those famous fish dinners about 5:30 tomorrow afternoon.
And they're going to keep serving them for three days.
The carnival rides open at 6 and then that famous
aggregation known as Band X, the "World's Largest Non-
i & ' ..
"You mean they all volunteeTed for the. Fuh Fry parcuh?"
marching Marching Band," will take to the stage at
Lions Park at 7:30 p.m. The big purr-rade takes to the
streets Saturday at 10:30 a.m. · 1
THOSE FISH DINNERS, alleged to have been made
so tasty over the years because of a secret recipe for bat-
ter, continue to be one item that seems to have defied in·
fl a lion.
The family-style fish fling is still only $3.50 a plate. It
seems to me it was $3.50 a plate when I was a kid and
gasoline was 18 cents a gallon. And tossed in with the de·
al, you might turn out to be the lucky winner of a new
1981 Ford Escort or a new-fangled color TV set or one of a
bunch of other prizes.
Through all this, it's going to be enormously difficult
to be a sour puss. If you run into one, tell him to hike on
down to Salt Creek Beach and count seagulls. Then you
go ahead to the Fish Fry and have a good time.
IN ANY CASE, there are only two Fish Fry events
where I abslolutely refuse to participate. I refuse to be a
judge in the Miss Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
beauty oontest.
Further, I refuse to make a selection in the Best
Baby Contest.
In truth, I haven't been asked to judge in either one
but I'm getting my refusal in ahead of time just in case.
AS A JUDGE in those contests, you have to re-
member that the parents of losers far outnumber the
parents of winners.
When it comes to telling paren~ who has the best girl
or the best baby, cowardice is the only way out.
See you all around the fish dinner tables, now.
Laguqa
• re1ect11
TJ?: hike
lb ITBVB MITCHELL ., ....... ,.... ..
Laguna Beach City CouncU
members have rejected a re-
quest by Storer Cable TV for a
rate increase, but left tbe door
open for future conslderation
should the rirm provide evidence
to support Its request.
''There ls room for a r•te ln·
crease," said Mayor Wayne
Baglin at the end of the nearlY,
two·hour hearing. "But I don'tsee
the materials provided to back it
up. I'm receptive to tnore ln·
formatJon from Storer (in the
future) but not based on faith or ir·
relevant statistics.'•
The Lal\Dla Niguel based firm
is seeking a rate increas~ from
$7 .50 to $8.50 per month for its
5,300 cable subscribers in
LagW'la Beach. It also seeks a
hike for additional hookups from
$2 to 82.50.
Councilman Howard Dawson
cast the lone dissenting vote.
A parade of speakers gave
council members a variety of rea-
•Sons why they thought a rate
increase ls inappropriate.
A major concern expressed by
some biUtop residents was the
unavailability of cable service to
homes in Temple Hills, Top of
the World and Arch Beach Heights.
Cable manager Renee Collins
said it would take about 15 miles
or cable to provide service to the
entire town.
She then offered a com-
promise that would see cable ln·
stalled throughout the olty in ex-
cb ange for a partial rate in·
crease now , with the remainder
due when the cable is lo.
But council members aaid
they'd like to see results before
approving any rate increase.
I
Mesa grants
$10,000 to
SCR theater
South Coast Repertory Theater
has been granted $10,000 by the Ci·
ty of Costa M~a -no strlop at·
tacbed.
Councilwoman Norma
Hertzoa's suggestion at the City
Council meeting earlier this week
that the theater stage a pf'Od~
tion for officials of Oraage County
govemments as a Costa Mesa
promotion failed to receive tup-
port from the other four cotmcil
members.
But Donald Smallwood, theater board president, indicat-
ed bis organization woUJd "con·
tinue" to coot>etate "to its
fullest" with the city in the com·
ing year.
He uked that the condition
not be levied but lndicated such
a promotional activity might be
staged.
CoUDcilwoman Hertzog, who
also is •~ldent of the Orange
County League ol Cities, wu in·
strumental io Jocating t he
theater In Co~ta M.esa,
Smallwood said. '
Smallwood told tbe council
that the theater group, l\oosed ln
Costa Mesa's Town Center com-
plex, is in its third succes,lul
season.
The theater group's budget deficit, be said, is about 25 per-
cent while other similar
groups are operating with
short~ges up to 40 percent.
Co~do plan· :r:estudied
·· 1Developers eye 'f)Ossibl~ revision' of South Laguna project
Plans for development of a
;10 -story time-share con-
dominium project on the site or 1 the existing Treasure Island I mobile home park in South
Laguna were officially sent back
1to the drawing board today. ·
At the request of developers
Bernard Syfan and Merrlll
1 Johnson, the board referred the
matter to the county Environ· m..ental Manaiement Agehcy for
further study -and ''possible re-
v1siol)." ~ The dev pers last week an-
nounced t ir intention to
withdraw the Ian lo build up to
500 unite oo the ,aside property
after Supervisor Tbomaa Riley,
whose diJtrict includes South
Laguna, watned that he milht
seek a decrea.e in the number of
permitted unita.
The developer said that even
Fish Jr:y begim
Friday in Mesa
la the pat 11 yean, UM Plab
Fry baa utaed more ttian
MOO.oao for toeal dlariti•, Fer·
rymanNid ...
Ttie eYent, wblcb 1tarted ln
INI, wu the Idea of two Uom
Club lnemMra, •~eordiq to rerrymaa.
80b llD•. • camt•al m•,
••tMW.UdwttJatbeMJPot
ffjlJlj K.aiMr'• ,.. baU., ....
.... ....... • ritdfr. ;.-'11... 0. 1)"6a); ............. ,_
Mdpmeta.a.4!111•• ....
At T:• p.m .•. ~~J..ua .e. ...... ftri& ............
' ·~··
at 500 unlta, the project would not be economically teulble.
The s~aors' action -ln
the worde ol one countY, official
-lives tile developers •ian out"
because the proposal was not de·
rtiedou~~ lJy the matter to tbe
EMA for further study, a aew
Jll'Qpoeal could be prepared and
later subrftttted to the county
Plannin1 Comml11ion and
Board of SU,pervtaon for COD·
slderation, be explained.
The proposed development
drew strona critlcf1m from real·
dents of ~ trailer park led
South Lapna clvlc leaffrl.
They wUDed that removal ol the
trailer pan would reduce tbe
•toek o1-.·~ ........ hi
tile~· r
ltUq blmaell warned Of tbi
project HWns • preeedent for •
"Miami Beach syndrome." ne -..pervllor aaid be Mid ....
terje~ bit office into t» PliD·
nine ~ tM pro~ more tbllD bi
would liliUJlJ bff6UM GI UM
numerom eoafUc:ll UM .. , I• mem ,__ pDMd,
JG<M1
$89.50 For your graduate!
Theres a perfect Pulsar Quartz watch
at a perfect price.
What could be a better way to soy how much you core 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 great values. they 11 please Y.ml 1ust as much
Everyone will love a new Pulsor Quartz watch. There ore alarm chronographs and calculator
alarm watches. And slim dress and sports models for special people who appreciate
dependable. carefree service great timekeeping and beautiful appearance
Pulsar'"' Quartz
Always a beat beyond. In technology. In value.
Nufo-f~,1~
857·0166 14775 Jeffrey Road. Irvine
· Any quom watch moy be used 1n 1h1s odvert15eme"I
This odv9'1~1 can be used same size O< enlarged to f11 ony space unit up 10 one pog ..
DO-IT-YOURSELF
CRAFT SAVINGS
1katcl~ SHOP MOSKA TEL'S FOR ALL YOUR
WEDDING, PARTY, CRAFT AND FLORAL
NEEDS
ALL
CRAF.T BOOKS
SELECT
GROUP
CREA TE YOUR OWN WALL GROUPING WITH
WICKER WALL DECOR
BASKETS, FANS & BROOMS
88~-•1.88
~ a splash of colo< to your grouping
by~ some sHk or dried flowers. • ~T1~J>wERs 88t pkg.
CAKE DECORATING ••• FUN & EASY
''TRY ·ME'' KIT
By Wilton
12..Pl,ECE
Kif *2.75
SM OU!' .....t eeleeldl of Oltlef Wiiton <:Me decorating supplies l>C*til. ~ ~e pens wtttl COYef' also In atock .. 311-•1.H
~CAPE COD ~ W/SHWGLES
DOLL HOUSE
. KIT
Pre-cut .. WOOd perts
~*''°'--~ ~~-·9 •44 .. Otheretyte1 availabfe
2.SCU.FT.
STYRENE
PELLETS
forS*klng&
~bflQchMs
reg.
4.99
1/3 OFF ~~~r>
NEW BAMBOO
WALL SHELVES
Perfect IOI' any room .
SPECIAL *8 88 PURCHASE •
POTPOURRI
Choose from
aromatic plants,
herbs. spices a oils
20% OFF
100 VOS. POLY CABLE CORD
6mm ~~s '*2.88
9mm ~~9 *3.88
2 OZ. GREAT GLASS STAIN
Assorted
colors
PLACEMAT
reg.
1.39
PURSE KIT
Easy to follow
instructions
884
llTElllATIC
TIJIW
CORDLESS
4 97
•Dl-llB
SUPER COP VARIABLE
5 97
•D711B
Get a couple, Mt them at
different timH and it maJue it
look Uk• ypu're home u lighta
qo off and on when you're away.
(Did I lOM anyone there be.id•
mYMli?)
MURRAY
BICYCLES
IOU' 20" 1111
74~!
IOB' 20"
DILUD 1111
88~!
Both have BMX frame and fork, 20&2.125
black knobbi•. 20" BMX h.u coaner
brake, com .. in white with glou black.
Deluxe haa •ide pull caliper bra& .. , red
and gold finiah.
~~· RUllDIWD TUSB CAIS
30 CAlLOI
7~
30 WLOI IOUUllCI
10~
Got mo many truh can mpeciala
that it almost break. my heart
to tell you I have no truh. (My
goat .. ta i t all).
MTD S BP
ROTOTILLER
24997
Chain drive B&S
engine, 16 Mlf -
•harpening tinu. 135
rpm forward apeed,
ad justable d•pth of
till to T'. While they la.st.
GRAPES
Here are Thompmon Seedl .... Flame, and
more, ( if m y wino u.ncle read. thia we're
in trouble.)
SAGO
PALMS
5?!
I Nally can't deecribe a
Se.go Palm. I ~ J'OU
would .. Y it loolu kind.a
•'palmbh". (I beU... thie
l8 called mental
ngrwion, doctor.)
PARTY?
HOW COME :c WASNT
INVITED? •
l·TT TELEPHONES .
VIVA
ROTARY
DIAL
In brown/ earth tone.
TREND LINE
ROTARY DIAL
White or Cocoa.
ULTRA 80
Choice of
Ahnond or Cocoa.
88
3788
3988
Great choice of phon• and by the way, it'• perf~tly
legal to own your own phone. Th ... ar. approved too.
Supposed to call th• phone company and say, "Hey, I
got my own etc." (I bought the Ultra 80, h-u
automatic redial in c ... of a busy •~gnal.)
SADDLDIAI UDDLllUllET
SEA'l' COVEii
SMALL 1999
PICK-UPS
Pl~=2•99 OR TRUCKS
Sure f .. l good, a lot better
than that sticky hot vinyl
and when they get a bit
mungy )'OU pull them off and clean them.
AICO GIAPBITE
10'!1/40·WT. •otoa OIL
99!.
I think there b a $1.80 by
mail refund from Arco on
thb .tu.ff U you buy 6
qua.rU. The .tore h.u the
•kinny on thia.
DUWITE
SAND CBAIRS
Hope we got a load more
in l.cau.. when I went to
~ J) th. 8toN late M.rn.oria1
~--'·~ 0.y we eold out of eome. (don't uy that.)
MULTICOLORED
WEB
5!!
FOLDING FABRIC
T~
color. 8 99
'8720
8 POSITION
FABRIC
~~1999
tow.I bu. 18734
GUJIOUT DEGREASER
AID DGllE CLEANER
I~!
Spray on, wait a bit, and hoee
off ( I u.e a 8t.iff bru.h a little
anyhow, woru fa.tu.}
ILUE POLY OIE-STEP
POLY SEAUIT
s~~~UOUID .
Clean.8, Shin•. and s..i. in
one step. (The One Step, been
doing that for ,..an. I'm ready
for Two Step. )
IEBR WOOD
PRESEIVATIVE
6!!.
Penetrate. d•p to gift a tough
waterproof undeneal. H.lpe .top dry rot,
warping, termite. and •hrinking.
4" WIDE
IEIDEI IOARD
47:rr.
Cune it to fit your planting anaa, cut to
boz .tuff, do aome light terracing,
what...r.
Armless girl
gets diploma.
LAS VEGAS CAP> -A girl wbote arma were
backed off in Stanialaua County 2~ years •to baa
been graduated from bJ1h school here.
Mary Vincent, now 18, accepted her diploma
with the hook that serves u ber left band. Then
she used the book that aerves u ber ritbt band to
shake bands with Howard Marr, principal or a
apeclal school ror handicapped studenta where she
completed high school.
Her parents, Lucy and Herbert Vincent,
watched proudly u their daughter, dreased ln the
traditional cap and gown,
marched into the room pushing
t he wheelchair or another
graduate.
Miss Vincent was a 15-year-
old runaway when she accepted
a ride from a straneer in the
San Francisco Bay area Sept.
29, 1978. She was raped in a re·
mote area west or Modesto, her
arms were cut orr with an ax
and she was left ror dead. v1NcHT
Some motorists found Miss Vincent staggering
toward Interstate 5. She recovered, learned to use
artificial arms and returned to her Laa Vegas
home.
Lawrence Singleton. a 51-year-old merchant
seaman, was convicted of the mutilation and was
sentenced to prison.
Mother killer
1nay get estate
MADISON, Wis. (AP) -A man convicted of
suffocating his mother should not necessarily be
deprived or inheriting her $1 .5 million estate, the
Wisconsin Supreme Court has ruled.
In a 5-2 decision, the court sald that someone
who willfully kills another is disqualified from in-
heriting bis victim's estate, but that in Wisconsin,
willful intent technically is not an element of the
crime of reckless homicide.
Bernard Safran Jr., was accused of suffocat-
ing bis 70-year-old mother, Helen, in July 1977.
Police said the woman's body was burned two
days later in the basement of her South Milwaukee
home.
Although originally charged with second·
degree murder, Safran, who was 30 at the time or
the killing, pleaded no contest to a reduced charge
of reek.I~ homicide and was sentenced to up to
five years in Waupun State Prison in 1978.
Mn. Safran left her estate in trust to her son
in a 1952 will. His two brothers and a brother-in·
law sought to disqualify him.
NY beats merules
NEW YORK CAP> -The incidence of measles
in ~ew York City plummeted by "an astounding"
94 percent over the last year, and health officials
predicted they would meet their goal of eradicat·
lng the disease here by October 1982.
Health Commissioner Dr. Reinaldo A. Ferrar
reported only 27 confirmed cases of measles from
January through April 1981. During the first third
of 1980, there were 457 r eported incidertces. Ferrar
saicS, attributing the decline to "vigorous efforts ..
to immunize students.
THE MALE MAN
an unusual discount store
excellence in
fitted shirts
FATHER'S
DAY
Great Selections
Great Prices
JUNE
21st
Great Gifts
4
F ( . reeway. extenswn
pllln hits r:oadbli:>c~
Caltrans off icials in
Sucr ameQto a re preparing to
lounch the second phase ot a pro-
gram to eventually do something
with bu rgeoning traffic alon g
Newport Boulevard in Costa
Mesa.
State highway planners have
held s poradic hearing s
t hroug hout Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach for about a year,
-;eeking public opinion regarding
a muJlitude of new routes and
plans.
About the only thing they've
determtned 1s t hat everybody
knows there's too much traffic
along Newport Boulevard
between the Cos ta Mesa
J''reeway's end at Bristol Street
and Pacific Coast Hi ghway in
Newport Beach
But nobody wants a relief
plan that will mess up his own
neighborhood.
Downtown merchants want a
highway that follows the once-
approved freeway alignment
through west Costa Mesa. That's
the most expensive proposal by
tar.
But widening, lowering or
l'aising Newport Boulevard in the
downtown area as an alternative
would tear up the busy boulevard
fo r four) ears. they contend
Businesses would go broke.
Westsiders would prefer the
lt>ss-expens1ve downtown route
that would save their homes and
buslnesses iroh: obliteration.
iast Costa Mesans, who
sighed in relief when state plan-
ners dumped a plan to route the
highway along Orange Avenue
last year, now seem to prefer the
west Mesa freeway afignment.
Highw ay cons tru ction
through the downtown area, state
officials say, would detour hordes
of drivers onto Orange Avenue
for up to fo ur y~ars while
Newport Boulevard is torn up.
The lates t plan accepted for
study is one that would take a
hig hway behind the businesses
along the east side or Newport
Boulevard.
Considered a compromise by
city officials, that route would
miss Newport Boulevard and
would tear through pa rking lots
badly needed by merchants, and
bus inesses surely will suffer
without parking.
There is no panacea.
And there's no state money
for t he construction project,
either, Callrans officials admit.
It'll be two years before a
final route is determined, they
add, and at least six more years
before any construction could
begin if money ever becomes
available.
Like most Caltrans projects,
this one looks like another long-
term problem with a solution
more elusive than ever.
Good reason/ or ftm
As coastal area famrnes get
ready to participate in the 36th
a nnu al Costa Mesa-Newport
Ha r bor Lions Club Fish Fry
ueginning Friday. few are con-
templating the real reasons for
the three-day affair.
Much of the $50.000 net ex·
peeled from the sale of thousands
of fi sh dinners and raffle tickets
will go toward giving sight to
those who cannot see.
'
Last year , the focal club
pent about $20,000 of its pro-
c:eeds to establish an eye bank
•nd sight saving center at UCI
ttedical Center.
A major function of the
Center is the transfer of eye tis-
~uc, which must be used for cor-
nea transplants within 72 hours of
u donor's death.
Since its opening in April, the
bank has provided cornea tissue
for four successful operations.
And thanks to Lions Club ef·
for ls, the center has listed 45
Orange Cou ntia ns as future
donors
In addition to that vital func-
tion, the center is available for
research projects aimed at find·
ing ways of preserving eye tissue
for longer periods of lime.
A special thanks is in order
to the Lions Club, which has his-
torically been active in righting
blindness and eye disease, for its
efforts toward establishing and
maintaining the county's first
eye bank.
And Costa Mesans and
Newport Beach residents who
partaJce or this year's fish din-
ners -an anticipated 50,ooo· -
might drop in at the organiza-
tion's mobile eyemobile.
The folks there will test sight
and hearing as well as ofter in·
formation allowing you to offer
the gift of sight to some who does
without.
It should be gratifying to
Fis h Fry patrons to realize that
while they're having fun and en-
joying the famous fried fish
they're also helping in such a fine
cause
Help plan city's future
City Council members will
begin work tonight on a long.
range policy plan that is expected
t.o determine what Costa Mesa
wilt be a-; it a pproaches the turn of
the century.
That poli cy , the city's
Oeneral Plan, sets policies that
wi II _regulate res ide ntial, in-
dustnal and commercial growth
for at least a decade.
The Gt:neral Plan, wruJe not
11 law it self, c r eates the
framework for zoning revisions
that will determine whether the
~ommunity will s wing toward
multiple-unit housing on closely
packed lots or maintain single-~am ily residential neighborhoods.
•
And the plan covers a variety
of other issues, ranging from
high-rise buildings and noise to
biological a nd h istori cal re-
sources within the city.
Tonight's session, begin ·
ning at 6:30 p.m . in City Hall, 77
Fair Drive, is the first of five
weekly sessions set for June.
Council members urge public
comment during the special
sessions scheduled June 4, 10, 18,
25 and 29.
Concerned citizens who'd like
to take part in forging future city
g rowth -whether it is slow,
moderate or intense -should
take the time to offer sugges-
tions.
i lnions expressed in the space above ar~ those of the Dally Piiot. Other view' ex· essed on this page are tttose of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt· "f":Z t3~~.ress The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box tS60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. PhOne (71~)
I
.M. Boyd/ A 24-hour ~idency
You know about that railway called
l e Atchison. Topeka and the Santa te. The Atchison therein was the
RllJow wh'> wa\ President of the Unit-4'd Stales for 24 hours from March 3 tp March 4 , 1849. David Rice
4tchlson. James Polk's admlnlstn·
Uon ended and Zachary Taylor re-
f'U.sed to ao to work on Sunday, so
*nate President Atchiscm was em·
AOwered ror that brief time. lie'd
titen wortlna hard lo wind up the l~me-duck Congress. though, so he
ORANGE GOAST Daily Pililt
slept through his enUre term of of·
fice.
Q. What's the difference between
thermal springs and hot sprinp1
A. Thermal, more than 70 degrees
F. Hot, over 88 degrees F .
Newborp babiea can see Ma and
greens well enou1b. But they can't
make out blua until they're about
three moat.ha old. So repc:>rt Univenl·
ty of ~ublnl(oil r.aearcbers.
Legislative payrolls soar
The salary or Senate President Pro
Tern David Roberti is, like all other
legislators, $28,000, an amount substan·
Ually above the average income of the
majority of Californians, 50 percent of
whose reported taxable earnings do not
exceed $13,000. Roberti's assistant
Jerry Zanelli, who bears the title or ex'.
ecutive officer of the Rules Committee.
a post with nebulous duties, is paid
nearly twice as much, receiving $51,768.
Zanelli is only one of the great army
of aides employed by the Legislature OS·
teosibly to assist the 120 members Jn
their legislative work. Robeit.i alone has
31 aides while the total employees or the
Legislature now number more than 2,200
and are largely responsible tor the
burgeoning operational costs of that
branch of government. This year mote
than $100 million will be spent fOr
legislative support, a n amount greater
than the entire state budget of 50 years ago.
THIS HUGE operational cost for the
Legislature, which amounts t-0 almost
$1 million per member, Is due almost
entirely to the proliferation of staff
which has taken place in the past lS years
The total ot salaries of the legislators
is only $3,360,000. Add another $3
million for the fringe benefits the mem-
ber s have voted the mselves and a
generous $15 million for the legitimate
expenses of phones, printing, legislative
counsel and analyst and bask clerical
staff and the costs would nm be less
than 20 percent of the actual total being spent.
Most or the rest goes to the political
hacks who function as aides, press
agents and factotums. Zanelli is but one
or scores or excessively paid minions
whose primary duties are to cater to the
fARl IATfRS
egos of the lawmakers, many of whom
ar e paid more than $40.000. Nor 1s
Zanelli the highest paid. Janet Roche
recently arrived here from Washington'
D.C .• is paid $55,152 to serve as stafi
director for Speaker Willie Brown while
,Ste-ve Thompson is paid $57 ,384 as di rec·
tor of the Speaker's Research Office
THE RATIONALE for assistants'
salaries substantially more. some twice
as much as. the members who claim to
be "full-time professional lawmakers "
is hard to fathom. Nowhere else in
public or private employment do aides
receive pay greater than their bosses. If
the legislative aides are worth more
than the members it would seem they
should be the ones the voters should
elect. Secretly many of the aides hold
that very thought
The irony is that for the most part the
aides are non-essential and the great
majority totally unnecessary as proved
by the fact the Legislature, meeting on-
ly every other year for more than 100
years, performed t he same duties
generally much better. with only a bar~
handful of part·time help, mostly only
clerical.
But if tbe pay given the aides is dif-
ficult to understand the hordes of un-
needed staff lsn 't. The pure and simple
fact is they are there to help perpetuate
the members in office. While a small
corps of this huge legion are highly
competent professionals in their fields
and studiously avoid political activity
and another gro up is m e r e l y
secretarial, the gr eat majority are
vigorous partisans, wheeling and dea1ing and act1velycampaigning.
STILL THEIR very existence serves
to create confusion and a tremendous
a mount of "busy work" for tbe
legislators while at the same time insulat-
ing them from their constituents to the
point where they become completely out
or touch with their needs and desires.
Ma ny of the aides assume the
responsibilities and authority of the
members and build themselves into key
figures exercising Machiavellian power
over the members and legislative policy.
Since 1966 the state budget has grown
from S4 billion to S2S billion. It was that
year when the Legislature became one
of "full -time. professional lawmakers"
and the excessive salaries, soaring
payroll and huge legislative costs pro-
vide a clue to why the state budget has
been permitted lo increase so tremen-dously
Campaigns need wider fund raising
To the Editor:
The Daily Pilot offered shallow logic No himl,er
in r ecently cal l ing for "more
restrictions on campaign r.ollecling and
spending.''
Either the Daily Pilot's editorial
writers are terribly naive or the Daily
Pilot actuall y supports the denial of the
freedom or expression.
When more restrictions are placed on
the ability of candidates and political
parties to raise and spend campaign
fund s, only t he non-reslricted
newspaper editors with their biases will
MAILBOX
have an unbridled say in who should be
elected. That would be a blow to
democracy, a blow to the First
Amendment and a blow to the intentions
of our nation's Founding Fathers.
The Daily Pilot should be calling upon
Americans to each give more lo the
candidates of their choice and to their
political parties . T he costs of
campaigns are borne by far too few
citizens who accept civic responsibility
to give to political causes.
MORE MONEY IS spent each year on
fireworks for the Fourth of July than Is
spent on political campaiens in
America. How much more important Is
It that we have good men and women in
K?Ubllc office? Restrictions on who can
contribute lo political campaigns and
restrictions on what can be spent \o
elect a candidate do not serve the cause of CreedOm.
Like the costs for all of us i,n our daily
peraonel and business lives, the costs ot
campaipa are attected by lntlaUoo.
Today It costs more lo mall a letter -
personal, buatness or political. Today it
costs more for radio time, television
time, billboard space, printing,
newSl;>aper ad space, campaign staffs,
oUice supplies and headquarters ren.tal.
SO IOf'I aa newspaper• conUnue to
raise the prlce of advertising apace,
they had better not sugeest Umit.s on
campa.lp..apendin1, I am yet lo see a
newspaper donate ad space ~o Ule
candidates.
For aomeone who haa auch • vested
interett in the political t>rocesa •• news
coveraae or campal1na; edltorfaJ
endorMmen\I, and the selling of ad
apace. it should be embarraa,alng to
advoeate Jllliltl on campi.lp fund.in& . ...... ,,, .. c••=::,r.-.-.W"' eoaW ••••• U.S HltoiW ........ of . If
~ c;iidY ... ........... will
• .,. ~tlw •• , tbl.Y De It.
:Tate~ d•ll'Y8 tMW tMll lbt.
TllOllAS A .,,.,.....
rtr9\ Vlili a.atnnaa Repu~~an Par\1 Of 0..-.. CoaiitJ
To the Edjtor:
With regard to an item in the May 26 paper headlined, .. Hunter Slain in
County Gun Mishap." although this
certainly i!J a tragic accident, I take
offense at your calling this person a
hunter.
From you r account of this apparent
accident this person is no hunter, he is a
poacher! Not only· was the deer killed
out of season, it was done with an illegal
weapon for laking deer. a .22 pistol.
The image of hunting suffers enough
from attacks by various animal
protective type groups. We shouldn't
have to suffer additionally due to the
irresponsible actions of people who are
not sportsmen. but are in fact poachers.
DAVE SIMPSON
Bw •loJM for parli
To the Editor:
1( several comfortable Cryst.al Cove
State Park bus stops were provided just
off the highway on either side, in-
numerable park visitors wouJd prefer to
use the service of the many OCTD buses
that traverse the area.
These bus stops could provide a
shaded seating area in which to wait;
lockers for daytime storage of beach
equipment and lunch baskets: drinking
fountains; outdoor fool showers; and
some information slgnllicant to the use
and enjoyment of the park. Until the
.over-and und~rpasses were constructed
for people to go from the canyon section
of the park to the beach area, a hand
operated traffic algnal could provide for
safe crossing.
The park, the people and the buses
are here rigbt now, needing this
service. Until the planning for more
permanent structures, such as have
been constructed at Bolsa Chica St.ate
Beach Is completed, temporary
facilities should 'be provided to meet the
presslng demand.
TUE tJSE OP THE bua syatem for
transportin& part visitors could otmate
the need for the use of many cars, thus
savin1 our scarce oil, cuttlo1 down on
lbe traffic and air polloUoa ,coblema;
and 1voldln1 the use for car par~ ofl
more than a mtnlmum of the pati l~
so needed for uncrowded visitor enjoy-
ment Such provisions would enable
many to come to the park who do not
have their own private transportation
facilities, or who could not otherwise af-
rord the trip.
The Crysta l Cove State Park ad-
ministration has all a long been open to
suggestions on the part of the public as
lo what development was most desired.
That this service feature needs further
emphasis needs lo be conveyed to State
Park Director, Pete Dangermond, Jr.;
P.O. Box 2390, Sacramento, CA. 95811
and to our actively concerned As-
s emblywoman, Marian Bergeson,
California Assembly, State Capitol.
Sacramento, Ca 95814 .
I EVELYN GAYMAN
'Enriched' UXJler?
To the Editor.
The presence or midges in Newport's
water system will ce;tainly raise prob-
lems for the present city council. I·
told-you-so environmentalists will point
out that for years they have questioned
the abiJity of the city to meet demands
for clean water as uncurbed develop-
ment has been allowed to proceed. En-
. vi ron mentalists can now correctly
claim that development has already
out-distanced the city's ability lo pro-
vide clean drinking water.
ONE SOLUTION to the city officials'
problems would be to advertise our
drinklng YCBter as ''"protein-enriched."·
The little critters that are in the water
are not too terribly noticeable and a
good ad-man might be able to sell the
water for us. The income would be
useful and could pay for additional
policemen, roads, sewers that develop-
ment such as the Newport Center ex·
P•1'sion will require. One precaution the
city should take lf it decides to sell our
"protein-enriched" water is to take out
extensive insurance coverage in case
the long-term side eftect of dl'inkine the
little critters turns out to be some
dreaded disease.
CHARLF.S B.RACHET
r ,. ,.
The values of six properties
located under the takeoff path at
John Wayne Airport have
decreaaed 5 to 12 percent u a
result of jet noise, a real estate
expert testified today in Orange
County Superior Court.
~obert Flavell, employed by a
group of Santa Ana Heights and
Newport Beach homeowners
who are suing Orange County
government for monetary
damages over jet noise, com·
pared the value of the properties
against wbat would be e11:pected
in areu not impacted by airport
operations.
Flavell examined the prop·
ertles of Robert Nichols, John
Chiu, LeRoy Carver, Richard
Simpson, Tom Williama and
Melville Farmer. The properties
ate located on Mesa Drive,
Galaxy Drive, Starlight Circle . and Somerset Lane.
Balboa Island sets bridge celebration Saturday
Bridge work done;
merchants rejoice
By STEVE MARBLE Of .. DMly NII .....
Tempers have cooled and
smiles have returned to the
faces ol the merchants lining
Mar ine Avenue on Balboa
Island.
The bridge to the island under
repair for eight months during
which time traffic frequently
was constricted to one lane, Is
wide open again.
Sb,0pkeepen say business has
started to pick up and that the
summer of '81 should be a
healthy one, financially speak·
ing.
Merchants and other islanders
plan to celebrate the completed
bridge job June 13.
Tbey've printed T-shirts with
a picture of the bridge on the
front, have organized a parade
complete with Dixieland band
and have asked actor Buddy
Ebsen, an island resident, to cut
the official bridge ribbon.
Ebsen, it was suggested, suf·
fered through the frequent traf·
fic snarls around the bridge just
Uke all his island neighbors.
''It wlU be a moment to heave
a collecUve aieh of relief," ¥Y9
Dottie Struchen, a Marine
Avenue ahop owner and a
coordinator ol Lbe feetivities.
JennUer =ton, owner of
Our Gq al Store, said
tilt rebuilt brtd1e •'looks really
tood, not u cute u the old one,
tbouah.
'' 1 lhtnk the builders did a nice Job even tboUgh they sure took
Ua8'r time dolnl it," she added. ~ony Horvat, owner of a
Manne Avenue clotbinc •hop
"llo contends ht• bualaeu
iroDPid ao percent durtnc tbe blidt:=. months, Hfl the aew "fine."
.. Relief," he adds, "is just a
summer away."
Phil Maurer, a Newport Beach
councilman and island
homeowner, calls the nearly
completed bridge "absolutely
and totally fantastic."
He says that, while merchants
cele brate, he plans to honor
bridge contractor Peter Kiewit
by giving a representative of
that firm a 1929 photo of the first
island bridge when it was under
construction.
Other celebration plans, which
have been tied loosely with the
City of Newport's 75th an·
niversary, include moving the
flag pole at the foot of the
bridge.
Maurer claims the pole was
positioned in such a way that it
sticks into a clump of palm
fronds. He says it makes it dif·
flcult to see the nag.
Merchants also have
purchased 32 colored flags that
will be placed along the bridge
railings for the celebration.
Lloyd Dalton, a city design
engineer, says the bridge \)roj·
ect was one of the toughest proj·
ects ever undertaken tn
Newport Beach. He says he's
glad it's just about completed.
He says the bridge wort,
which included rebuilding all the
plllngs, adding wider sidewalks
and new railings, was "a real
comedy of doing work and tr)'·
ing to accommodate residents."
Asked if he intend.I to attend
t he June U affair, Dalton
quipped, "I tblnk I'll stay away
-the peopl• out there can aee
me combit. •·
The b rid 1e fanfare 11
scheduled to betfri at 9 a .m.
.--.-ford rites set
.. ltlrilftd r.: ....... Carol ·~of Gron ... a.u,,.a.11ro1..-.a.
Memorial 11rwic11 are ......... t:• ...... Utt Falrlla••• Me .. rlaJ 7arlE ._..., -c.-..,. l'IOI hl,.._A.._ ....... AU ...
COMICS
INTERMISS ION
TELEVISION
Erma Bombeck suggests checking
lhe kids instead of the baggage
when you fly . . . 86
The appraiser, who In tbe put
has examined the effects ol
airport noise on properties
around atrpbrt.a in San Jose, Los
An1etes and San Diego, said the
Nichols property would be worth
$212,500 If jet noise were not
present. With the noise, however,
the property is worth $187 ,000, or
about 12 percent less, Flavell
testified.
As for Carver's 2.5-acre estate
with a 5,50()..square·foot luxury
home and a 180-degree ,view of
Uppe~ Newport Bay, Flavell
testified that. if noise were not
present the value would be
$1,100,000, compared to mo.ooo
under current conditions. Tbat.
too, translates to a 12 percent
loss.
Carver, an automobile deal·
ership owner. testified earlier
in the trial before Judge
Raymond Vincent that he con·
Mesa's Narmco·
strife continues
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of .... Delff """'" A labor picket wbo walked the
line at Narmco Materials, Inc.
in Costa Mesa Wednesday suf·
fered what police described as a
minor injury in a brush with a
truck entering the plant at 600
Victoria St. Officers said picket David
Lapkovski, 22, of 1642 Iowa St.,
Costa Mesa, was treated for a
"possible sprained wrist" at
Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital
shortly after the 11: 15 a.m. inci·
dent.
Lapkovski, who was walking
at the entrance to the con·
troversial plastics plant's main
gate with four other members of
the International Association of
Machinists and Aerospace
Graduat,ion
• ceremomes
se tforOCC
Orange Coast College will
bonor 1,564 students as it
graduates lta 33rd class, June 12
at commencement exercises ln
OCC's LeBard Stadium. The
ceremonies · are scheduled to
begin at 7·:30 p.m.
Dennis Eugene Brady, a
member of OCC's Associated Stu·
dentt' Board of Trustees, will pre-
sent the cocnmencement address.
Brady bu titled bis speech, "~y
Tool Box.''
Dr. Norman E . Wat.son, chan·
cellor of the Coast Community
College District, .will present
OCC's annual Outstanding
Citizen Award. George Rodda Jr.,
president of the Board of
Trustees, will accept the class of
1981. •
Music during the ceremonies
will be provided by tenor Thomas
Randle and accompanist Joane
Wilhite.
• Workers, allegedly was knocked
down b>"a Narmco truck driven
by John Finch, 30, of Riverside.
Police said witnesses tell dlf.
fering stories regarding t.he inci·
dent. Security guards, police said,
told them it appeared Lapkovski
acted as though the truck hit
him and fell to the ground.
Finch told ·police he didn'l see
Lapkovski.
Other witnesses said the truck
brushed Lapkovski, third man in
tbe line crossing the plant entry
way.
Union members began picket·
ing the troubled plant May 7
when a three-year contract ex·
pired and salary negotiations
came to a standstill.
Last Wednesday. a Molotov
cocktail was tessed into the
plant and exploded in flame. An
alert plant supervisor doused
the blaze before it could spread
to nearby flammable chemicals,
police said.
An investigation turned up two
other incendiary devices that
apparently bad been tossed into
the plant but did not explode,
police said.
On Monday. union pickets
were joined at Narmco by
neighborhood residents.
Members of Chemical Action
Neighborhood Association
turned out about 20 strong, car·
rying signs calling for clean air
and seeking Narmco's exodus
· from the neighborhood.
Those pickets, part of a CANA
move to gain city action to halt
what they claim are dangerous
Narmco chemical emissiooa.
dwindled to a half-dozen or so
but continued to march on Tues·
day and Wednesday mornings,
security guards said.
CANA has asked the city to
declare Narmco a public
nuisance and bas asked action in
halting "emissions and safety
hazards .. .''
Planners to stu:d.y
Banning project
Plans for partial development
of the 50()..acre Banning-Newport
Ranch with bdmes, offices and
stores will be reviewed tonight
by Newport Beach planning
com missioners.
The 75-acre strip marked for
development Is inland of Pacific
Coast Highway and west of
Superior Avenue in an ai.r that
now contains litUe more an a
sprinkling of oil rigs. ·
If aUowed, it would be e first
major development project in
west Newport In several dee·
a des.
The plans have Deen JOtnUy
liled by Beeco Ltd., a firrn that
owns mo.t of the acrea1e, and
the Newport-Men Unified
School Dillrlct, wbJch owns an
unused school slte in the area.
Willtam Hancock BanniQS,
preaidenl of Beeco and a descen·
daft\ of the orl;tnal tancb
owners, 18)'9( &he project la oDly
tbe ftnt pbate of lar.-r develop-
ment plaM.
...... ,-1 H
\~...._It
\ .,\"-~-\ \ \~~
\ '--11 RUT ,,.. ... ,
' ' I.Oil \ s=:: .... / I ..... ____ -t= ....
l I ~
I I
I I
~ ........
RANCH JOB MAPPED
Streft atnftonl planMd The bulk ol the 500·acre raneb,
Banntna says, la currently llt
ulde for oll drtlliDI operatioaa and ISth atr•-6• _ would be that are expected to continue ua--· tll the m.ld· 1980t. exteaded west to conn~ wlUl tba
Specifically, tbe pae that 11 to new Blllboa1tretcb.
be reviewed b J city com·. Banatnt Hfl· It'• 1Ull un·
misalonen ca1U for comtruetioD decided •MtMr to call UM
of 170 homes, more tban nortbera iatea1lon Ba lbOa
700,000.aquan·feet of office aDd BOulnilrd at Jllld Road.• hM
industrial tpace and 75,00I· been sualMed "'....,.., ...
square-feet of retail devel• deata .
ment. Eventua lly, plaaa note. TH ......_ a.I~ .......
thereWoUldbel•Mln•tiidL ,oece 1ta-.1t » itMI "~
hta1 la a lor1••1 aa,, 'P llilllllllli l!lll!f. deftaopild U'ft, tM plUI e90 die ; ...... litM
cell ""' A·r ... M -ti• .. tlaakm fil -'""' ...,. BotaW ... i*llll 1 ··eom·•··~·· •9tt0fl'8 ........... ~ ........ ~ ..
would... ... to. ·:rw·---·--•t:• .. ........ = .... , ......... I .......... <**II CM•llill'S. ftnil.-li•=·~·=• ........... mta. ... -........... .
sldered bis property worth $2
million.
"I 'd hate to try to prove he
was wrong," FlaveU testllled.
He said it was particularly dlf·
ficult to value the Carver prop·
erty because there are few
similar properties In the area.
The Farmer property, located
on Somerset Lane, showed the
smallest percentage loss, five
percent, Flavell said. Without
jel noise, the property would ht
worth $447,500, compared to
$425,000 under current condi·
tlons.
Residents are attempting tq
demonstrate to the jury that
they have suffered emotional
dlstress from jet noise and thal
the values of the properties have
not appreciated as much as the~
would have in a quieter area.
-FREDERICK SCHOF.MEHL
DMly,.... ...... .., _...,... .......
Nearby ruidents protest operations at Colta Mesa' Narmco plant.
Carrying picket signs are Vicki and Randy Cristilli and Craig and
Barbara Chamberlain.
New amphitheater
embroiled in suit
By RICHARD GREEN Of .. .,...,,.... ....
The 10,000-spectator Irvine
Meadows Amphitheater won't
open foi; business until Aug. 1,
but it's already embroiled in a
legal controversy.
Owners of the amphitheater
being built at Lion Country
Safari have filed a $1.5 million
lawsuit against the Nederlander
theatrical organization, which
(\wns the Greek Theater in Los
Angeles and is developing an
amphitheater at the Orange
County Fairgrounds in Costa
Mesa.
The antitrust suit filed Mon·
day in U.S. District Court in Los
Angele:; alleges that performer
contracts enforce d by
Nederlander is stymieing efforts
by Irvine Meadows Am ·
pbitheater officials to book
performers.
Specifically, contractual dif·
ficultles have prevented the
Irvine Meadows Amphitheater
Partnership from signing con-
cert agreement.a with Jefferson
Starship, Tom Jones, Emmy
Lou Harris, Meliaaa Manchester
and Santana, .amphitheater
spokesman Michael Hennigan
said Welnesday.
He cl otended that these
artl1t1 and others are prohibited
from appearing at. the Irvine·
Mea®ws A,mphltbeater because
of performance contracts they
hold with the Greek Theater.
These contracts contain
clauses that prohibit Greelt
Th~ater performers from appear·
lng at any other amphitheater
within 100 miles of the Greek
and within 90 days before and 60
days after their performance
there, Hennigan said. ·
These clauses represent a
violation of the Sherman An·
titrust Act, he claimed.
The Irvine Meadows Am·
phitheater is 67 miles south of
the Greek theater.
"The allegations are false,"
said Rick Wit~e. spokesman tor
the Nederlander organization.
"It's a cute suit <that) reflect;s
an extraordinary degree of i
norance of this business."
He declined to go into t
specifics.
Irvine Meadows Amphitheat
spokesman Hennigan said th
because of the terms of t
Greek Theater performer c
tractsi the Irvine theaters wi 1
be ab e to book only 35 acts,
short of the desired number.
This 15·act shortfall wl l
represent $500,000 in lost re ·
enue, Hennigan said. Under' e
Sherman Antitrust Act, def •
dants in antitrust suits c
claim triple the actual damq
incurred, be said.
Girl 'finds' baby,
admitS it~ MrS
'
OFF" RUNNING DEPT. -Every now and then you
run into some sour puss who will insist on tellln1 you how
community gatherings
like picnics , fairs ,
bazaars and the like
are really old hat.
Nobody goes to them
any more. They're just
too corny.
(~'
~"" ... T-DM ...... 1--1-RP-Hll-l,~li
Surely, you 're like-
ly to run into a couple
of these down-in·the-mouthers right ln our own coastal r~
gion as the fair metropolis of Costa Mesa gets ready tor
tomorrow's opening of one of these events for the 36th
straight time.
Friday marks the start of the three-day Costa Mesa
Fish Fry and Carnival under auspices of the Costa Mesa-
Newport Harbor Lions Club.
"NAH, YOU DON'T wanna get caught in all that
corn-pone," some Wrong Thinker will advise you. "They
just gonna give away a bunch of prizes and sell fish din·
ners and have a parade and carnival. Just cruddy ol'
stuff like that . . . 'J
Well, I've got news for you. If it's all so corny and out
of date, how come attendance keeps setting records dur-
ing the Fish Fry in Mesatown? Maybe 50,000 people show
up over the three days. Maybe 100,000. Who knows? Your
estimate is as good as anybody's. Suffice to say it's going
to be a lot of folks .
And they're going to have a good time.
I hope you won't run into anybody that suggests to
you that good times have gone out of style.
SO THE LIONS and their friends will start serving
those famous fish dinners about 5:30 tomorrow afternoon.
And they're going to keep serving them for three days.
The carnival rides open at 6 and then that famous
aggregation .known as Band X, the "World's Largest Non-
l b a1CHAaD GaEEN
0( ..............
~ four-man police team ln·
vestlaattna the m y1terlou1
murder ol Manuela E Wlttbu.b.n
wlll be disbanded Friday, exact·
ly four months alter the 28-year·
old Irvine woman was found
bludaeoned ln the bedroom ot
her home.
lrvlne police Lt. Bob Lennert
said today the case will become
the primary resporuibUity of In·
vestlcators Ron Veach and Scott
Cade. He added, however, that
they eventually wlll aet other as-
signments and won't be able to
work full-time on the unsolved
murder.
Lt. Lennert said police have
conducted thousands of in·
terviews and studied thousand$
of arrest reports from other
police departments.
Police officials say that
despite the extensive invesUaa·
lion, they just don't have a lot to
go on -a fact that bas been
clear since the earliest phases of
the investigation into the slaytna
of the attractive blonde-haired
employee of California Firat
Bank in Irvine.
The woman, whose body was
found by her mother, Ruth
Rohrbeck, at 11:30 a.m. Feb. 6,
had no known enemies and
police say the)' stiJI aren't sure
of the motive for the bludgeon-
ing.
Lt. Lennert said that police
have asked various law enforce-meqt officials If they knew o(
any violent sex offenders living
in the are.a who might have com·
mitled the crime.
He refused to say, however,
whether the woman was sexually
assaulted.
And Lt. Lennert said that
police still haven't determined a
motive for the killing.
Police have theorized that
HITIING THE MATTRESS -Nine-year-old
Brody Humple of Irvine leaps from platform
to a mattress at Adventure Playground in
University Park at Beech Tree Lane and
Deltt ~Ml ...... "' Rlca.tnl ll-
U ni versity Drive in Irvine. The playground
offers a number of supervised activities for
young thrill seekers.
Mrs. Witthuhn was bit over the ·-----------------
~
"You mean they all volunteered for tM F'ish F'ry parade?"
marching Marching Band," will take to the stage at
Lions Park at 7:30 p.m . The big purr-rade takes to the
streets Saturday at 10: 30 a .m .
THOSE FISH DINNERS, alleged to have been made
so tasty over the years because of a secret recipe for bat-
ter, continue to be one item that seems to have defied in·
flation.
The family-style fish fling is still only $3.50 a plate. It
seems to me it was $3.50 a plate when I was a kid and
gasoline was 18 cents a gallon. And tossed in with the
deal, you might turn out to be the lucky winner of anew 1981·
Ford Escort or anew-fangled color TV set or one of a buncht
of other prizes.
Through all this, it's going to be enormously difficult
to be a sour puss. If you run into one, tell him to hlke on
down to Salt Creek Beach and count seagulls. Then you
go ahead to the Fish Fry and have a good time.
IN ANY CASE.' there are only two Fish Fry events
where I absolutely refuse to participate. I refuse to be a
judge in the Miss Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
beauty contest.
Further, I ref use to make a selection in the Best
Baby Contest.
In truth, I haven't been asked to judge in either one
but I'm getting my refusal in ahead of time just in case.
AS A juoGE in those contests, you have to re-
member that the parents of losers far outnumber the
parents or winners.
When it comes to telling parents fhO bas the best girl
or the best baby, cowardice is the only way out.
See you all around.the fish dinner tables, now.
head with a blunt object late
Feb. s at her home at 35 Colum-
bus . Her husband was
hospitalized in Western Medical
Center in Tustin at the time.
No murder weapon was found.
The assailant entered through
a sliding glass door that wasn't
equipped with a burglar-proof
locking mechanism , in·
vestigators said.
Her mother found her the next
morning after the dead woman's
husband, David M. Witthuhn,
asked her to check on bis wife,
who didn't answer bis telephone
The Witthuhn murder is the
second unsolved homicide in
Irvine in the last two years.
In the other case, Savannah L.
Anderson , a 22-year-old
secretary, was found strangled
in her Irvine apartment in May
of 1979.
Police say there is no ap-
parent link between the two
murders and the Witthuhn case
apparently isn't tied to any
other slayings police know of.
Irvine scouting
leaden due honor
Four Irvine scout leaders will
receive the highest merit award
at the Santiago District at a rec-
ognition dinner Friday at the
Santa Ana Elk.I Club.
Those being honored are John
Bowski, Kathleen Ann Curnutt,
W. Les Kemp and George K. Koch.
Irvine gains $300,000 inf ethral funtb ·
Being labeled a "metropolitan
city" by Uncle Sam will mean
$300,000 in grant funds for Irvine next year.
Since 1974 the population bas in-
creased from 26,100 to 62,134, ac-
cording to 1980 U.S. Department
of Census figures released in
April.
The latest J>OPUlatlon figures
will entitle the city to a bigger
slice of Housing and Urban
Development funds.
Since 1974 Irvine has bad to
compete with other county cities
of less than 50,000 for Urban
County Program funds that are
given by HUD to the county for
distribution.
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SALE ENOS SUN .. JUNE 7
• CIMITOI TAflZANA TO.-"AfllCI
(a1,)UM1U CIUJtl .. UI CIUJ llMlh
L:A .aADA &¥ IMIQO I.A MIM
fttltMWltt (7,.)lt1""9 171~1'8J.Hl7
•
HCONcMDO
l'"I 14M2t t
INTEllUTIC
THIEU
CORDLESS
4~?1 .11s
SUPER COP VARIABLE
5 97
•D7llB
Get a couple, .. t them at
different tun .. and it ma& .. it
look Ila you're home u Ughu
go off and on when you're away.
(Did I loae anyone there be•id•
my.elf?)
MUUAY
II CYCLES
IOYI' 20" 1111
74~
IOD' 20"
DILUll 1111
88~!
Both have BMX frame and fork, 20z2.125
black knobbi ... 20" BMX haa coaster
brake, com .. in white with glou black.
Delwte hu •ide pull caUper bra&.., red
and gold fi.ru.h.
~~RUllEDIAID TIASB CAIS
30WLOI
7!!
30 W.LOI IOUCDECI
10~
Got so many truh can •peci&la
that it ahno.t break. my heart
to tell you I have no truh. (My
goat .. u it all).
MTD S BP
ROTOTILLER
24997
Chain drive B&S
engine, 16 .. lf.
sharpening-tine•. 135
rpm forward apeed,
adjustable depth of
till to 7". While they last.
GRAPES
Here are Thompson Se.ell .... Flame, and
more, ( if my wino uncle reacl. t}4s we're
in trouble.)
UGO
PALMS
5?!
I reaU,. can't de.cribe a
8&90 Palin. I vu ... you
would .. Y it looks kinda
"patnu.h". (I belieft th1..
b ca1W mental
"91'Wion, doctor.)
·PARTY?
HOW COr\E :r WASNT
tNVITED! •
ITT TELEPHONES
VIVA
ROTARY
DIAL
In brown/ earth tone.
88
TREND LINE
ROTARY DIAL
White or Cocoa. ·
ULTRA 80
Choice of
Almond or Cocoa.
3788
3988
Great choice of phon• and by the way, it'• perf~tly
legal to own your own phone. Th ... a.re approved too.
SuppoMd to call the phone company and aay, "Hey, I
got my own etc." (I bought the Ultra 80, h-u
automatic redial in C&M of a buay aignal.)
SADDLEllAI SADDLDLAllET
SEAT COVDS
SMALL 1999 PICK-UPS
PI~~f:2499
OR TRUCKS
Sure f .. l good, a lot better
than that sticky hot vinyl
and when they get a bit
mungy you pull them off and clean them.
ARCO GRAPHITE
IOW/40 WT.
NO'l'OI OIL
99!.
I think there is a Sl.80 by
mail refund from Arco on
this atuff if you buy 6
quarta. The atore hu the
skinny on thu.
DURALITE
SAID CHAIRS
Hope we got a loed mon
in li.cau.. wb.n Iw.nt to
,,,.-_)) the aton lat. Memorial
~ Day .. eold out of eome.
(don't •Y that. )
MULTICOLORED
WEB
5!!
FOLDING FABRIC
Tangerine
color. 8!!
S POSITION
FABRIC
!c,~1999
towel bar. t8734
AIJllTIOIC
PUCl'a PIDI
FLOOl TILi 39c
GUMOUT DEGREASER
AND ENGINE CLEAIEI
I~!
Spray on, wait a bit, and hoee
off (I u.-a stiff brush a Uttle
anyhow, worlu faater.)
ILUE POLY OIE-STEP
POLY SEALANT
5 88 '
16 OZ. LIQUID
Clean., ShinM, and s...la in
on• atep. (Th. On. Step, been
doing that for,...,... rm ready
for Two Step.)
IEBI WOOD
PIESEIVATIVE
6!!
Penetratee d .. p to gift a tough
waterpl'OOf undeneal. Heli-atop dry rot,
warping, termitee and shrinking.
4" WIDE
IENDD IOAID
47:rr.
Curve it to fit your planting area.a, cut to
bos .tu.ff, do some light terracing.
whatever.
Armless ~rl
I
gets iliploma
LAS VEGAS (AP) -A 1irl whote arm• were
hacked Off In Stanlalaus County 2~ years 110 b11
been eraduated from hi1h ecbool here.
Mery Vincent, now 18, accepted her diploma
wlt.h the hook t.hat serves u her left band. Then
sbe used the book t.hat serves u her rt1ht band to
shake bands with Howard Marr, principal of a
special school for handicapped students where she
_ completed high school.
Her parents, Lucy and Herbert Vincent,
watched proudly as their daulhter, dressed ln the
traditional cap and 1own,
marched into the room pusbine
the wheelchair of another
1raduate.
Miu Vincent was a 1S-year-
old runaway when she accepted
a ride from a 1tran1er in the
San Francisco Bay area Sept.
29, 1978. She was raped lo a re·
mote area west of Modesto, her
arms were cut off with an ax and she was left for dead. v1NcHT
Some motorists found Miss Vincent staggering
toward Interstate 5. She recovered, learned to use
artificial arms and returned to her Las Vegas
home.
Lawrence Singleton, a 51-year-old merchant
seaman, was convicted of the mutilation and was
sentenced to prison.
Mother killer
1nay get estate
MADISON, Wis. (AP) -A man convicted of
suffocating his mother should not necessarily be
deprived of inheriting her $1.5 million estate, the
Wisconsin Supreme Court bas ruled.
ln a 5-2 decision, the court said that someone
who willfully kills another is disqualified from In·
berlting his victim's estate, but that in Wisconsin,
willful intent technically is not an element of the
crime of reckless homicide.
Bernard Safran Jr., was accused of sulfocat·
ing bis 70.year-old mother, Helen, in July 1977.
Police said the woman's body was burned two
days later in the basement of her South Milwaukee
home.
Although originally charged with second·
degree murder, Safran, who was 30 at the time of
the killing, pleaded no contest to a reduced charge
of reckless homicide and was sentenced to up to
five years in Waupun Slate Prison in 1978.
Mrs. Safran leJt her estate in trust to her son
in a 1952 will. His two brothers and a brother-in-
law sought to disqualify him.
NEW YORK <AP> -The incidence of measles
in New York Cjty plummeted by "an astoutlding" .
94 percent over the last year, and health officials
predicted they would meet their goal of eradicat·
ing the disease here by October 1982.
Health Commissioner Dr. Reinaldo A. Ferrar
reported only Z7 confirmed cases of measles from
January through April 1981. During the first third
of 1980, there were 457 reported incidences, Ferrar
said, attributing the decline to ··vigorous efforts"
to immunize students.
THE MALE MAN
an unusual discount store
excellence iR
fitted shirts
FATHER'S
DAY .
Great Selections
Great Rrlcea
JUNE
21st
Great Gifts
Orange COaat OAJLV Pll:OT/ThuradayJ June 4. 1981
NewpQrt united on
• • airport expanswn
The packed auditorium at
Newport Harbor High School
Monday night was another con·
vincine indicator that many
Newporters are dead serious
about their concerns over John
Wayne Airport. • Roughly 700 persons attended
the city-sponsored ~ublic ~or:um
on the airport. City off1c1als
wanted to let citizens know what
the city was doing to oppose
growth at the county airport.
But the meeting, orderly
throughout, was more of a pep
rally. The six speakers sai<l ex·
actly what the crowd came to
hear.
City Attorney Hugh Coffin ex-
plained that the cit,r recently had
filed its fifth lawsUJt over airport
matters.
Councilman Don Strauss
called the county 's airport
master plan "more of a disaster
plan."
One Newport resident even
stood in the lobby of the
auditorium passing out sign.up
sheets for a class action suit he
has promised to file against the
county.
Although it is doubtful that
the well-attended hearing will
lead to any real or direct change
as far as the airport is con-
cerned, it was a united s howing.
While some might look upon
the gathering as an exercise in
futility, the residents clearly are
troubled and are serious about
their concerns.
They are hopeful that
someone out there is listening.
Good reason for fun
As coastal area families get
ready to participate in the 36th
annual Costa Mesa-Newport
Harbor Lions Club Fish Fry
beginning Friday. few are con-
templating the real reasons for
the three-day affair.
Much of the $50,000 net ex-
pected from the sale of thousands
of fis h dinners and raffle tickets
will go toward giving sight to
those who cannot see.
Last year, the local club
spent about $20,000 of its pro-
ceeds to establish an eye bank
and sight saving center at UCI
Medical Center.
A major function of the
center is the transfer of eye tis-
sue. which must be used for cor-
nea transplants within 72 hours of
a donor's death.
Since its opening in April, the
bank has provided cornea tissue
for four successful operations.
And thanks to Lions Club ef-
forts, the center has listed 45
Orange Countians as future
donors.
In addition to that vital func-
tion. the center is available for
research projects aimed at find-
ing ways of preserving eye tissue
for longer periods of time.
A special thanks is in order
to the Lions Club, which has his-
torically been active in fighting
blindness and eye disease, for its
efforts toward establishing and
maintaining the county's first
eye bank.
And Costa Mes ans and
Newport Beach residents who
partake of this year's fish din-
ners -an anticipated 50,000 -
might drop in at the organiza-
tion's mobile eyemobile.
The folks there will test sight
and hearing as well as off er in-
formation allowing you tC> offer
the gift of sight to some who does
without
It should be gratifying to
Fish Fry patrons to realize that
while they're having fun and en-
joying the famous fried fish
they're also helping in such a fine
cause.
Another Caltrans muddle
Enough likely has been said
concerning the recent traffic
snarl on Pacific Coast Highway
in Newport Beach that Caltran.s
helped manufacture.
But there· s another way of
looking at that ~raffic mess that
backed up vehicles from the
Newport Bay Bridge to the
arches at Newport Boulevard.
That other way would be
from the policeman's point of
view.
To start with, Caltrans re-
portedly had informed police that
it would be sealing off a single
eastbound lane of the coast
)\ighwav at 9 a.m. Police were
prepared to handle any prob-
lems.
But Caltrans decided, ap-
•
parently, to get a jump on things.
They closed off the lane at 8:30
a.m. When police arrived on the
scene, it was a mess. ,
Police claim bad they been
on the scene when the lane was
closed, they couJd have directed
traffic and prevented the exag-
gerated snarl that developed.
Also, polic'e claim, fewer of·
ricers would have been required
to handle the problem.
As it turned out, police were
summoned to the scene when
they should have been in other
areas of town tending to other
problems.
A little bit or planning and a
little bit of consideration on
Caltrans' part would help.
Opinions expressed in the space above ar~ those of the Daily Pilot. Other vlew5 ex-pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvit·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone C7U}
642·4321.
L.M. Boyd/ A 24-lwur presidency
You know about that railway called
the Atchison, Topeka and the Santa
Fe. The Atchison therein was the
fellow who was President of the Unit·
ed States for 24 hours from March 3
to Ma rch 4, 1849. David Rice
Atchison. James Polk's administra-
tion ended and Zachary Taylor re·
(used to go to work on Sunday. so
Senate President Atchison '*•s em-
powered for that brief t\me. He'd
been working bard to wind up the
lame-duck Congress, though, so he
slept through bis entire term of or-
fice.
Grasshoppers wiped out the crops
in Nebraska for 19 consecutive years
from 1856 to 1875. Think of that!
ff ow do you suppose the early set· •ten there stuck it out? Those who
stayed must have been a special
~reed.
Infrequent romanti~ action atr~ta
ftte hormone balance in men over the
age of 50, according to Columbia
Medical School authorltles, and thla
leads to heart attacks.
Q. What's responsible for the fact
hat pboto'lrapbs or Civil War
soldiers rarely show them smiling?
A. Bad teeth.
Q. What's the meaning of the enter-
tainers' word "shtick"!
A. It's Yiddish for prank.
Q. What's the difference between
thermal springs and hot springs?
A. Thermal, more than TO degrees
F . Hof, over 98 degrees F.
Q . What's the first routine
household cbore most children are
taught?
A. Putllng away toys.
Not all doctors wlll be terribly un·
happy over the re,$ulta or a survey to
determine why so many patients
change tbelr pbysictane. The No. 1
explanaUon was "I couldn't get an
appointment soon enough.''
Newborn babies can see reds and
ereens well enough. But they can't
make OW. blues unUJ they're about
three rnontbl old. So report tJnlvenl-
ty of'Wuhlnston researchers.
~olf 1.8 auc:h an ettrattion in Japan
t hll the ltogenel Country Club
tbar1es an lniUation fee Ol .,,000.
Legislative payrolls
The salary of Senate President Pro
Tern David Roberti is.· like all other
legislators, $28,000, an amount substan-
tially above the average income of the
majority of Californians. SO percent of
whose reported taxable earnings do not
exceed $13,000. Roberti's assistant,
Jerry Zanelli, who bears the title of ex-
ecutive officer of the Rules Committee,
a post with nebulous duties, is paid
nearly twice as much, receiving $51,768.
Zanelli is only one of the great army
of aides employed by the Legislature os·
tensjbly to assist the 120 members in
their legislative work. Roberti alone bas
31 aides while the total employees of the
Legislature now numb,er more than 2,300
and are largely responsible for the
burgeoning operational costs of that
branch of government. T~ year more
than $100 million will be spent for
legislative s upport, an amount greater
than the entire slate budget of SO years
ago.
THIS HUGE operational cost for the
Legislature, which amounts to almost
$1 million per member, is due almost
entirely to the proliferation of staff,
which has taken place in the past 15
years.
The total of salaries of the legislators
is only $3,360,000. Add another $3
million for the Cringe benefits the mem-
bers have voted themselves and a
generous $15 million for the legitimate
expenses of phones, printin&, legislative
counsel and analyst and basic clerical
staff and the costs would still be less
than 20 percent of the actual total being
spent.
Most of the rest goes lo the political
hacks who function as aides, press
agents and factotums Zanelli is but one
of scores of excessively paid minions
whose primary duties are to cater to the
IARl WATERS
egos of the lawmakers. many of whom
are paid more than $40,000. Nor is
Zanelli the highest paid. Janet Roche,
recently arrived here from Washington,
D.C., is paid $55,152 to serve as sWf
director for Speaker Willie Brown while
Steve Thompson is paid $57,384 as direc-
tor of the Speaker's Research Orfice.
THE RATIONALE for assistants'
salaries substantially more. some twice
as much as the members who claim to
be "full-time professional lawmakers."
is hard to fathom. Nowhere else in
public or private employment do aides
receive pay greater than their bosses. If
the legislative aides are worth more
than the members it would seem they
should be the ones the voters should
elect. Secretly many of the aides hold
that very thought.
The irony !s that for the most part the
aides are non-essential and the great
majority totally unnecessary as proved
by the fact the Legislature, meeting on-
soar
ly every other year for mor~ than 100
years, performed the same duties,
eenerally much better. with only a bare
handful of part-time help, mostly only
clerical
But if the pay given the aides is dif-
ficult to understand the hordes of un-
needed staff isn 'l. The pure and simple
fact is they are there to help perpetuate
the members in office While a s mall
corps of thls huge legion are highly
competent professionals in their fields
and studiously avoid political activity
and anot h e r group is merely
secretarial, the great majority are
vigorous partisans, wheeling and dealing
and actively campaigning. '
STlLL THEIR very existence serves
t.o create confusion and a tremendous
amount of ''busy work" for the
legislators while at the same time insulat-
ing them from their constituents to the
point where they become completely out
of touch with their needs and desires.
Many of the aides assume the
responsibilities and authority of the
members and build themselves into key
figures exercising Machiavellian power
over the members and legislative policy.
Since 1966 the state budget has grown
from $4 billion to $25 billion. It was that
year when the Legislature became one
of "full-lime. professional lawmakers"
and the excessive s alaries, soaring
payroll and huge legislative costs pro-
vide a clue to why the state budget has
been permitted to increase so tremen-
dously.
Campaigns need wider fund raising
To the Editor:
The Daily Pilol offered shallow logic
in recently ca lling for "more
restrictions on campaign collecting and
spending."
Either the Daily Pilot's editorial
writers are terribly naive or the Daily
Pilot actually supports the denial of the
freedom or expression.
When more restrictions are placed on
the ability of c"°clidates and political
parties to raise and s pend campaign
funds. only the non -restricted
newspaper editors with their biases will
MAILBOX
have an unbridled say in who should be
elected. That would be a blow to
democracy, a blow to the First
Amendment and a blow to the intentions
of our nation's Founding Father!.
The Daily Pilot should be calling upon
Americans lo each give more to the
candidates of their choice and to their
political parties . The cost s of
campaigns are borne by far too few
citizens who accept civic respOntibillty
to give lo political causes.
MORE MONEY lS spent each year on
fireworks for the Fourth of July than is
spent on political campaigns in
America. How much more important is
it that we have good men and women in
pubUc office? Restrictions on who can
.contrfbute to poUtfcal campaigns and
restricUons on what can be spent to
elect a candidate do not serve the cause
of freedom.
Uke the costs tor all. of us In our dally
pen;onal and business UvH, the costs of
campalpa are affected by ln.Oation.
Today it costs more to mall a letter -
personal, business or political. Today it
costs more fOf" radio time, television
time, billboard space, printing,
newslJaper ad space. campaign staffs,
office suppU~s and headquarters rental.
So long as newspapers ~Unue to
raise the price of advertllln1 spacie,
they hacl better not suggest limits on
campalsn.:1pendln1. I am yet to see a
newsp•per donate ad apace to the
candidates.
For someone who ba11 such a vested
tnterest in the p0UUcal proceu as news
covera1e o! campalglls,' editorial
endorsements, and the aelllnc of ad
apace, ll abould be ~mbarras1ln1 to
adv~aie Umi\J on umpalen fundln1 and..-...• cftse=.t• ..-. u.. .aillttr • = ,.. .... ,...,........~
rlll tlldortel'D..U "'s· " Mt, ... , -~ wUl -~··•1u.et ftj ,,.~~~=-.............. =...~
Bw stoi-for park
To the Editor:
If several comfortable Crystal Cove
State Park bus stops were provided just
off the highway on either side. in-
numerable park visitors would prefer to
use the service of the many OCTD buses
that traverse the area.
These bus stops could provide a
shaded seating area In which to wait;
lockers for daytime storage or beach
equipment and lunch baskets; drinking
fountains; outdoor foot showers; and
some information significant to the use
and enjoyment of the pa;k. Until the
over-and underpasses were constructed
for people to go from the canyon section
of the park to the beach area, a hand
operated traffic signal could provide for
safe crossing .
The park. the people and the buses
ar e here right now, needing this
service. Until the planning for more
permanent structures, such as have
been constructed at Bolsa Chica State
Beach is complete d , temporary
facilities should b& provided to meet the
pressing demand.
THE USE OF THE bus system for
transporting park visitors could obviate
lhe need for the use of many cars. thus
saving our scarce oil, cuttin& down on
the UWfic and air pollution problems;
and avoiding the use for car parkln& of'
m1>re than a minimum of the park Ian~
so needed for uncrowded visitor enjoy-
ment. Such provisions would enabl~
many to come to the park who do not
have their own private transportation
facilities, or ,vho could not otherwise af-
ford the trip.
The Crystal <;pvc State Park ad·
ministration has au along been open to
sugaesUom on Ute part d! Ute public u
to what development was mott desired.
That this sei;vice feature oeeda further
emphasis needs to be conyeyed to .State
Park Director, Pete Dangermond, Jr.,
P.O. Box 2390, Sacramento, CA. 95811
and to our actively col)cemed As·
semblywoman. Marian Beraesoo,
California Assembly. State Capitol,
Sacratn~nto, Ca. 91114.
EVELYN GAYMAN
Bait boat needed
whete the fish are located.
M'any of these same people and their
boats are located on the entire Newport
Harbor waterfront. It seems to me that
no one house or area has a right to
dictate a pohcy that has such a far
reaching effect on their neighbors.
The Cannery, The Balboa Pavilion
and the bait boats are the only reminder
of the origina l character of thls great
area.
FOREST SM ITH
'Enriched' umer?
To the Editor:
The presence of midges in Newport's
water system will certainly raise prob·
le ms for the present city council. I·
told-you-so environmentalists will point
out that for years they have questioned
the ability of the city to meet demands
Jor clean water as uncurbed develop-
ment has been allowed to proceed. En-
vi ronmentalisls can now correctly
claim that development has already
out-distanced the city's ability to pro-
vide clean drinking water.
ONE SOLUTION to the city officials'
problems would be to advertise our
drinking water as ''protein-enriched.··
The little critters that are in the water
are not too terribly noticeable and a
good ad-man might be able to sell the
water for us. The income would be
userul and could pay for additional
policemen. roads, sewers that develop·
ment such as the Newport Center ex-
panslon will require. One precautlon the
city should take if it decides to sell our
"protein-enriched" water is to take out
extensive insurance coverage in case '
the long-term side etrect of drinking the
llltle critters turns out to be some
dreaded disease.
CHARLES BRACHE1'
LtUtr• "°'" ,...,, ••• ,....t-Tiit •ltM lo,_,,.. l•I· l•O lo Ill-•.,. eh ml Nit llDet It ~ uu.,, ti M
-•Ot O< ltU wlll .. Ol\Otfl pulefeflte 411 ltllt~ ~ lft>
(llldt \ll'lotl"'t •ncl m•lll"9 ~n M MMH _, lilt
•llllMla 1111 f~I 11 wfll~I fM~ ll -..,9111 PMlfY
•ill 1101 .. °""41 ..... l.ttltf'\ m•t 0t ltlol---" JO MJ..-
N•MI Incl p/IOlle lllHf\Otr Ol IM UlllrtlMllOt 1'1!1111 .... ...., !Or
Ytl lli(tllOll -PO•fl
r
· C::OMICS 83
INTERMISSION 84
TELEVISION BS
Erma Bambeck suggests checking
the kids instead ot the baggage
when you fly . . . 86
Property· ~evalued hy · ajtj>ort noise?
sidered his proskrty worth S2 Tbe values of slx propert.Jea
located Wlder the takeoff path at
John Wayne Airport bave
decreaMd S to 12 percent u a
result ol jet noise, a real estate
expert testified toda~ in Orange
County &aperior Court.
Robert Flavell, employed by a
group or Santa Ana Heights and
Newport Beach homeowners
who are suing Orange County
1overnment ror monetary
damaees over Jet noise, com-pared the value of the properties
acainst what would be expected
in areu not Impacted by airport
operations.
Flavell examined the prop-
erties of Robert Nichols, John
Chiu, LeRoy Carver, Ri~bard
Simpson, Tom Williama and
Melville Farmer. The properties
are located on Mesa Drive,
Galaxy Drive, Starlight Circle
and Somerset Lane.
The appraiJer, who in the put
has examined the effects of
airport noise on properties
arQund airports id San Jose, Los
Angeles and San Die10, said the
Nichols property would be worth
$212,500 If Jet noise were not
present. With the noiae, however,
the property Is worth $187 ,000, or
about 12 percent less, Flavell
testified.
As for Carver's 2.5-acre estate
with a 5,500-square-foot luxury
home and a l80-de1ree view of
Upper Newport Bay. Flavell
testlfied that, if noise were not
present the value would be
Sl,100,000, compared to $970,000
under current conditions. That,
too, translates to a 12 percent
loss.
Carver, an automobile deal-
ership owner. testified earlier
in the trial before Judge
Raymond Vincent that he coo-
Mesa's Narmco
strife continues
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Oft•Dll., ...........
A labor picket who walked the
line at Narmco Materials, Inc.
in Costa Mesa Wednesday sul·
fered what police described as a
minor injury in a brush with a
truck entering the plant at 600
Victoria St.
Officer's said picket David
Lapkovski, 22, of 1642 Iowa St.,
Costa Mesa, was treated for a
"possible sprained wrist•• at
Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital
shortly after the 11: 15 a .m. inci·
dent.
Lapkovski, who was walking
at tht! entrance to the con-
troversial plastics plant's main
gate with four other members or
the International Association of
Machinis ts and Aerospace
Graduation
• ceremomes ·
setforOCC
Orange Coast College will
honor 1,564 students as it
graduates Its 33rd class, June 12
at commencement exercises in
OCC's LeBard Stadium. The
ceremonies are scheduled to
be1in at 7·:30 p.m.
• Workers, allegedly was knocked
down by a Narmco truck driven
by John Finch, 30, of Riverside.
Police said witnesses tell dif·
rering stories regarding the inci·
dent.
Security guards. police said,
told them it appeared Lapkovski
acted as though the truck hit
him and fell to the ground.
Finch told police he dido 't see
Lapkovski.
Other witnesses said the truck
brushed Lapkovski, third man in
the line crossing the plant entry
way.
Union members began picket·
ing the troubled plant May 7
when a three-year contract ex·
pired and salary negotiations
came to a standstill.
Last Wednesday, a Molotov
cocktail was tossed into the
plant and exploded in flame. An
alert plant supervisor doused
the blaie before it could spread
to nearby flammable chemicals,
police said.
An investigation turned up two
other incendiary devices that
apparently had been tossed ibto
the plant but did not explode.
police said.
On Monday, union pickets
were joined at Narmco by
neighborhood residents.
Balboa Island sets bridge celebration Saturday
Dennis Eugene Brady, a
member of OCC's Associated Stu-
dents' Board of Trustees, wUl p(e·
sent the commencement address.
Brady has titled hls speech, "My
Members of Chemical Action
Neighborhood Association
turned out about 20 strong, car-
rying signs calling for clean air
and seeking Narmco's exodus
from the neighborhood.
Bridge work done;
merchants rejoice
Tool Box." '
Dr. Norman E . Watson, chap-
cellor of the Coast Community
College District, will prese.nt
OCC's annual Outstanding
Citizen Award. George Rodda Jr.,
president of the .Board of
Trustees, wUJ accept the class or
1981.
Those pickets, part of a CANA
move to gain city action to halt
what they claim are dangerous
Narmco chemical emissions,
dwindled to a hall-dozen or so
but continued to march on Tues-
day and Wednesday mornings,
security guards said.
CANA has asked the city to
declare Narmco a public
nuisance and has asked action in
halting "emissions and safety
hazards ... ·•
By STEVE MARBLE
Of -Mfy " ... S&lft
· Tempers have cooled and
smiles have returned to the
faces ol the merchants lining
Marine Avenue on Balboa
Island.
The bridge to the island under
repair for eight months dt.iring
which time traffic frequently
was constricted to one Jue, is
wide open again.
Shopkeepers say business has
started to pick up and that the
summer of '81 should be a
healthy one, financially speak-
ing.
M~rchants and other islanders
plan to celebrate the completed
bridge job June 13.
They've printed T-shirts with
~ picture of the bridge on the
front, have organized a parade
complete with Dixieland band
and have asked actor Buddy
Ebsen, an island resident, to cut
the official bridge rlbbon,
Ebsen, it was suggested, suf-
fered through the frequent traf-
fic snarls around the bridee Just
like all hia island neighbors.
"It will be a moment to heave
a collective sigh of relief," says
Dottle Struchen, a Marine
Avenue shopowner and a
coordinator ol t.be festivities.
Jennller Jobmton, owner of
Our Gana Geowal S">re, aald
tbe rebuilt bddle ''loou really
tood. not u cute u Ule old one,
though.
"I think the bullders did a nice
Job even thoulb they sure took
tbeir·time doint it," she added.
Tony Horvat, owner of a
llarlne Avenue clotlataa shop
who contend• bl1 b\11tnea1
dropped 30 ~t .durlq the bnd~~ months, aaya the new a "fine.''
"Relief," be adds, "is just a
summer away."
Phil Maurer, a Newport Beach
councilman and island
homeowner, calls the nearly
completed bridge "absolutely
and totally fantastic."
He says that, while merchants
celebrate, he plans to honor
bridge contractor Peter Kiewit
by giving a representative of
that firm a 1929 photo of the first
island bridge when it was under
construction.
Other celebration plans, which
have been tied loosely with the
City oC Newport's 75th an-
niversary, include moving the
flag pole at the foot of the
bridge.
Maurer claims the pole was
positioned In such a way that it
sticks into a clump of palm
fronds. He says it makes it dif.
ficult to see the flag.
Merchants also have
purchased 32 colored flags that
will be placed along the bridge
railings for the celebration.
Lloyd Dalton, a clty design
engineer, says the bridge proj-
ect was one of the toughest proj·
~cts ever undertaken in
Newport Beach. He says he's
glad lt's just about completed.
He says the bridge work,
which included rebuilding all the
pilings, adding wtder sidewalks
and new rallin11, wu "a real
comedy ol doint work and lrY·
ing to accommodate residents ...
Asked if he Intends to attend
the June 13 affair, Dalton
qulpped, "I think I'll stay away
-the people out there can ~
me coming.''
The brld1e fanfare la
scheduled"> betin at 9 a.m.
Music during t1'e ceremonies
will be provided by tenor Thomas
Randle and accompanist Joane
Wilhite.
Planners to study
Banning project
Plans for partial development
of the 500-acre·Banning·Newport
Ranch with homes, offices and
stores will be reviewea tonight
by Newport Beach planning
commissioners.
The 75-acre strip marked for
development is inland of Pacific
Coast Highway and west of
Superior Avenue in an area that
now contains UWe more than a
sprinkling of oil rigs.
If allowed, it would be the first
major development project in
west Newport in several dec-
ades.
The plans have Deen JOUlUy
filed by Beeco Ltd., a firm that
owna most of the acreage, and
the Newport-Mesa 'Unified
School Diatrict.. which owns an
unused school site in the area.
William Hancock Bannint.
president of Beeco and a descen-
dant or the original ranch
ownen, aays the project is only
the f\l(lt phase of larger develop-
ment plana.
The bulk of the 500·1tcre ranch,
Banoinl says, la currently set
Deity ..... ,..
RANCH JOB MAPPED
StrHt exte?U'ioM planned
aside for oil drillln• operatiom and 15th streets -would be that are e1pected to continue un-Ul the mtd-1990a. extended west to conned with the
Specifically, tbt pl..-that ls to new Balboa stretch.
be reviewed bf city com· , Bannln1 aays lt'a still Wl·
miulonen calla for conatruction decided whether to call tM or 170 bomu, more titan northern exten1loa BaUtoa
700,000,aquare-feet of ornce and Boulevard or Bllllf Roact.:u ...
indu1trfal apace and '75,00I· been •ua••t.d "' DeWb; riill·
1qHre·feet 6f retail develop· dents.
ment. Eventoally, plana note, ::lb• rllldl, ......... _....
there WOUkl bi •.aa bomes bull&. ,oace ltntdlild , far·= .,. Beta1 In a l'tr1ely ua-•a.a wa Ulid far.r ......
t1 1umved bJ two lilff•. Carol developed ana, the plau allo Over ..,..,.. tM ranell Ml •~Clf .Gtilillm Gron~ ~•ll for new ro•• ud ex· been illbtilld bra& •Ulom de-
8eC(J1s.llJ Of Areaclla. tenalom ol UilUq ltrettl. Hl~u ta.
llemorlal 1er•icea au~ Balboa 8ouleYard. at a DOlat Pllilld.Jil Commltak>D::.aa·
klleduled at 1:• p.m. at die weat ol ltl preMDt termln'Ua, PiCtM "> tali MVWal to
f'alrla•••• Memorial ;Park WOuld be~ niordl '°a 'nviewtbeptana,1Met11t1J:mm II~ _. c .. ....,, &• polntpel'ptftd.tcuiHtolftb&lnet.· tbe N""'1 Cowl~tl CbamtMtn, rairhawn Aft •• 8udll Aaa. Ttiree eXiltlill roidl -1'7tb, 18th · 3IOO Newport Blvd.
million.
"I'd hate to try to prove he
was wrong," Flavell testified.
He said lt was particularly dlf·
ficult to value the Carver prop-
erty because there are few
similar properties in the area ..
The Farmer property. located
on Somerset Laf\e, showed the
s mallest percentage loss, five
percent, FlaveU said. Without
Jet noise, the property would ~
worth $447 ,soo, compared to
$425,000 under current condi·
tion1.
I Residents are attempting to
demonstrate to the jury that
they have suffered emotional
distress Crom Jet noise and th~t
the values or the properties have
not appreciated as much as they
would have in a quieter area.
-FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
.,..., " ... ~., ..... ,.. ......
Nearby residents protest operations at Costa Mesa' Narmco plant.
Carrying picket signs are Vicki and Randy Cmtilli and Craig and
Barbara Chamberlain.
New amphitheater
embroiled in suit
By RICHARD GREEN
Of-Delly ...... "'"
The 10,000-spectator Irvine
Meadows Amphitheater won't
open for business until Aug. 1,
but it's already embroiled in a
legal controversy:
Owners or the amphitheater
being built at Lion Country
Safari have flled a $1.5 million
lawsuit against the Nederlander
theatrical organization, which
<'Wns the Greek Theater in Los
Angeles and is developing an
amphitheater at the Orange
County Fairgrounds in Costa
Mesa.
The antitrust suit !iled Mon-
day in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles alleges that performer
co ntra cts enforced by
Nederlander is stymieing efforts
by Irvine Meadows · Am·
phitheater officials to book
performers.
Specifically, contractual di!·
ficulties have prevented the
Irvine Meadows Amphitheater
Partnership from signing con·
cert aireements with Jefferson
Starship, Tom Jones, Emmy
Lou Harris, Melissa Manchester
and Santana, amphitheater
spokesman Michael Hennigan
said Wednesday. ·
He contended that these
artists and others are prohibited
from appearing at the Irvine
Meadows Amphitheater because
of performance contracts they
hold with the Greek Theater.
These contracts contain
clauses that prohibit Greek
Theater performers from appear·
ing at any other amphitheater
within 100 miles of the Greek
and within 90 days before and 60
days after their performance
there, Hennigan said.
These clauses represent a
violation of the Sherman An.
Utrust Act, be claimed.
The Irvine Meadows Am-
phitheater is 67 miles south of
the .Greek theater.
"The allegations are false,"
said Rick Wit~. spokesman fot
the Nederlander organizall.eo.
''It's a cute suit <~at> reflect.I
an extraordinary degree of ig·
norance of this business." I
He declined to go into t~e
specifics.
Irvine Meadows Amphitheat
spokesman Hennigan said tll t
because of the terms of t
Greek Theater performer co ·
tracts, the Irvine theaters wi be able to book only 35 acts,
short o6 the desired number.
This 15-act shortfall wi l
represent $500,000 in lost re ·
enue, Hennigan said. Under e
Sherman AnUtrust Act, defe ·
dants in antitrust suits ci
claim triple the actual damag
incurred, he said.
C.irl 'finds' baby,
admits it's hers
A 14-year-old eosta Mesa lirl
who called police WeclMlday to
report she had found a new-bom
baby admitted later in tllit day
that lbe had liven bli'tb tO tbe
lnfaat tn IMr famlly'a llvlq room .
(
'
OFF & RUNNING DEPT. -Every now and then you
run into some sour puss who will insist on telling you how
community gatherings
like picnics, fairs.
bazaars and the like '\ ~-a re realJy old hat. •ft' '
Nobody goes to tnem r~ er::.~~· They're just _TD_M_M_U_R_P_H_l_N_f ~-,,
Surely, you 're like· ~----------~--ly to run into a couple
of these down-in·the-mouthers right in our own coastal re·
gion as the fair metropolis of Costa Mesa gets ready for
tomorrow's opening of one of these events for the 36th
straight time.
Friday marks the start of the three-day Costa Mesa
Fish Fry and Carnival under auspices of the Costa Mesa.
Newport HarbOr Lions Club.
.. NAH, YOU DON'T wanna get caught in all that
corn-pone," some Wrong Thinker will advise you. "They
just gonna give away a bunch of prizes and sell fish din·
ners and have a parade and carnival. Just cruddy ol'
stuff like that . . . "
Well, I've got news for you. If it's all so corny and out
of date, how come attendance keeps setting records dur·
ing the Fish Fry in Mesatown? Maybe 50,000 people show
up over the three days. Maybe 100,000. Who knows? Your
estimate is as good as anybody's. Suffice to say it's going
to be a lot of folks.
And they're going to have a good time.
I hope you won 't run into anybody that suggests to
you that good times have gone out of style.
SO THE LIONS and their friends will start serving
those famous fish dinners about 5:30 tomorrow afternoon.
And they're going to keep serving them for three days.
The carnival rides open at 6 and then that famous
aggregation known as Band X, the "World's Largest Non-
J .~.-..... ..J3 C.. ,,,,. .
"You mean they all volunteered /or tM Fish Fry parade?"
marching Marching Band," will take to the stage at
Lions Park at 7: 30 p.m. The big purr-rade takes to the
streets Saturday at 10:30 a.m.
THOSE FISH DINNERS, alleged to have been made
so tasty over the years beeause of a secret recipe for bat·
ter, continue to be one item that seems to have defied in·
flation.
The family-style fish fling is still only $3.50 a plate. It
seems to me it was $3.50 a plate when I was a kid and
gasoline was 18 cents a gallon. And tossed in with the·
deal, you might turn out to be the lucky winner of a new 1981•
Ford Escort or a new-fangled1color TV set or one of a bunch1
of other prizes.
Through all this, it's going to be enormously difficult
to lfe a sour puss. If you run into one, tell him to hike on
down to Salt Creek Beach and count seagulls. Then you
go ahead'to the Fish Fry and have a good time.
IN ANY CASE, there are only two Fish Fry events
where I absolutely refuse to parHcipate. I refuse to be a
judge in the Miss Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
beauty contest.
Further, I ref use to make a selection in the Best
Baby Contest.
In truth, l haven't been asked to judge in either one
but I 'm getting my refusal in ahead of time just in case.
AS A JUDGE in those contests, you have to re·
member that the parents of losers far outnumber the
parents of winners. ,
When it comes to telling parents who has the best girl
or the best baby. cowardice is the only way out.
See you all around the fish dinner tables, now.
By RICllAJlD.GllEEN 0( .. ..., .........
A four-man police team in·
vesti11ttn1 the m11terlou1
murder of Manuela E . Wtttbu.bn
will be dlabanded FridtY1 nact·
ly fou.r montba after the •·Y•ar· old Irvine woman waa found
bludgeoned In the bedroom of
ber home.
Irvine police Lt. Bob LeMert
said today the case wlll become
the primary respon1lblllty of in·
nstigatora Ron Veach and Scott
Cade. He added, however, that
they eventually wlll 1et other ••·
signments and won't be able to
work full-time on the unsolved
murder .
Lt. LeMert said police have
conducted thousands of In·
terviews and studied thousands
of arrest reports from other
police departmebts.
Police officials say tbat
despite the extensive investiga·
lion, they just don't have a lot to
go on -a fact that bas been
clea.r since the earliest phases of
the investigation into the slaY1D1
of the attractive blonde-haired
employee of California First
Bank in I.rvine.
The woman, whose body was
found by her mother, Ruth
Rohrbeck, at 11:30 a.m. Feb. 6,
had no known enemies and
police say they still aren't sure
of the motive ror the bludeeon-
ing.
Lt. Lennert said that police
have asked various law enforce·
ment officials if they knew of
any violent sex offenders living
in the area who might have com-
mitted the crime.
He refused to say, however,
whether the woman was sexually
assaulted.
And ·u . Lennert said that
police still haven't determined a
motive for the killing.
Police have theorized that
Mrs. Witthuhn was bit over the
head with a blunt object late
Feb. 5 at her home at 35 Colum·
bus . Her husband was
hospitalized in Western Medical
Center in Tustin at the Ume.
No murder weapon was found.
The assailant entered through
a sliding glass door that wasn't
equipped with a burglar-proof
locking mechanism , in ·
vestigators said.
Her mother found her the next
morning after lbe dead woman's
husband, David M. Witthuhn,
asked her tp check on bis wife,
who didn't answer bis telephone
The Witthuhn murder ii tbe
second unsolved homicide In
Irvine in the last two years.
In the other case, Savannah L.
Anderson, a 22 -year-old
secretary, was found strangled
in her Irvine apartment in May
or 1979.
Police say there is no ap-
parent link between the two
murders and the Witthuhn case
apparently isn't tied to any
other slaylngs police know of.
Irvine scouting
leaden due honor
Four Irvine scout leaders will
receive the highest merit award
at the Santiago District at a rec -
ognition dinner Friday at the
Santa Ana Eilts Club.
Those belng honored are John
Bowslci, Kathleen Ann Curnutt,
W. Les Kemp and George K.
Koch.
Irvine gains $300,000 in/edemlfunds
'being labele<l a "metropolitan
city" by Untie Sam will mean
$300,000 in grant funds for Irvine
next year.
Since 1974 the population has in·
creased from 26,100 to 62,134, ac·
cording to 1980 U.S. Department
of Census figures released ln
April.
The latest population figures
will entitle the city to a bigger
s lice of Housing and Urban
Development funds.
Since 1974 Irvine has had to
compete with other county cities
of less than 50,000 for Urban
County Program funds that are
given by HUD to the county for
distribution.
..
....., ............ ..,.k ..... lt ......
HITTING THE MATTRESS -Nine-year-old
Brody Rumple of Irvine leaps from platform
to a mattress at Adventure Playground in
Univers!ty Park at Beech Tree Lane and
University Drive in Irvine. The playground
offers a number of supervised activities for
young thrill seekers.
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NYSE COMPOSITE T R ANSACTIONS
OUOTATION,IN(LUDa Y•ADUON TM& NIW YO•K,MIOWUT, 'ACl,IC, 'IW, aOt'fON, O&Ta01T .. D (llf(tll•ATI ITOCW U(CHANOflAND •&'O•TlfD IY TMI NA'O AND lllUUllT.
CLOSING 986. 73
Say you are told by a federal official your rec·
ords are scheduled for review as part ol an inquiry
into securities fraud. You protest. "l never brtd any
dealings in any securities at all! How can a study of
my files help any legitimate purpo6e in an investi1a·
tion?"
"Maybe, but we don't know that you had no deal-
ings in securities until yoUl' files have been reviewed
to see whether you did or not," the official may
answer. "Catch 22!"
With almost unbelievable lack of publicity,
Congress in 1980 passed amendments to the "Right to
Financial Privacy Act" <RIFPA> which set up a pro·
cedure under
wbicb the U.S. ~ government
can in effect
file secret ~,. ~:~rf:So~~!:":! IYlVIA PDlffl ~.:;, l
obtain papers -
relating to you
without your knowledge.
RIFPA was passed in response to the era of
Watergate "enemies lists" when Americans were
subjected to federal audits and investigations for the
"crime" of holding unpopular opinions.
RIFPA requires the government notify you when
financial records about you are requested from banks
and similar institutions. If you object in court, the
government must convince the court the investiga-
tion is lecitimate.
Originally, the Securities and Excha.nge Com·
mission was temporarily exempted, because to police
the nation's securities the Securities and Exchange
Commission needed quick, ready access to financial
data.
In 1980 the SEC convinced Congress it was ap·
propriate for it to collect secret evidence of the need
for secret access to your files so it could submit the
evidence to a court.
H the court is convinced by the evidence -which
you do not see -then the SEC can get records a~ut
you without telling you. In short, secret dossiers
about you can be filed in court; without your
knowledge.
RlFPA became law in the closing days of 1978 as
part of an omnibus banking bill. The act represented
a major step toward protection of privacy, for it pro-
v\ded that if you objected to examination of your
financial records, the examiner had to convince the
c.ourt that tbe inspection was for a legitimate purpose.
But once a government agency claims that there
.is a legitimate inquiry, you have a tough time trying
to block access to the records it want1t to exsmine.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
Pct. Up 16.4
Up U,6 Up 1U
Up a ~ , .. U11 U
Up &.• Up 7, Up 1.1 Up 1 ..
Up a ~ 1.t U• 7.2 U• 1j ~ !.
f'ct.
ff 1A ::I ti
ti J.1 •.1 u
NEW~~~:"~~-= e·-. "*'"" ,,~ .. --riu lnMot SCM,900 5"" + tit HouOllTr 150,700 i.i. + II& Oomef>trt s JCt,ICIO 1'-.....
CIMmp Ho 27',100 2" + "" HUdsBOll 9 164,600 1911'1 -I'll fl--1)tl IJt,JOO ii~ + 1,1, AIHb Alrt 124,700 tV. + V. ConOll Ga 1CM,IDO 1~ + 111& MlchlE s •..SOO 26\lt + ~ Plo-r Sy IS.000 ~ + ._
METALS
c.....-IS'W1 CMtts • ~.U.S. 6elllna-
t1on1.
L.-.17..Jec.nts• pOllftd.
111K *"'cents. -'<! • .,..,,..,.cl.
Tiit 9'-4* IMtlilt Wftlt <GmCIOSli. lb,
Al_... 7H0centse pWftef, N.Y. ~ .... $45.00per fl-.
l'latl-..-.oo troy OL, N. 'f.
SILVER
M ... y & M-, tto,02 per troy ounce.
SYMBOLS
•
Or.nge C.Oett OAtLY PILOT/Jhur9day. June•. 1881
Killed for II? Je~
.,.. Ptenn-••-PtCTm.,.'1U1tMHt DOS PALOS (AP) -,..,,.....,.__.... ..... na.wn ..,,,... 1uTSMHT A Dos Palos homicide to~ at / ..,...,,.,...'" Tiie ,....... -"" • .._ .._.. TIM ,..._."' ..,_, •'• "'"' TM .......... •• ••-... ...,. vlc••m m h be 1'1lf ...... ..,.... _ ... _... w.i,.. ... : ,...... u ay ave en
......... : WHITI ltlll•1t UANOINO u.Na•D·A·~OOO•,AINUll, 1t1iiA ltACl'OllY 111U Y•t• killed for $1. Bernardo colles:,n YACMTtNO cOMSULTANTIJ !.'!~~!!!.~· C111t .,...., u.a a1..,. .. .,._, e .. 1 ....... A-• ., .. , .. ''*-· Ce11WNe Vaaquei Cardosa, 58 , .:;,; ll1t Vie _,.., ..... 1, ...__, ,,. ... __ -Cetlfer•""1 ft114
e.ca.CA-. .. OlttVH 11,ANOINO llllON" ,.._..,.""""'·Ma.... ... ... '" 09enl, 111 ........... suffered massive b~ad 11oa111T o. HAOIN , IU ::,.._...1e,c.w-..,CellfW!lle .... -.c.elMM,e.....,.nw lrv1M.~•1m lnjurles beforedrownlna Orange Coast coue~e ~ ....... ~ ..... CA*1), $ct• TeN¥111 L-11. MIS ..... "'"..__ .. ~_.,.,. .. I I c • '"*'wr .oAOOH 11..111 •• t11•-c..-Le111111u., .. , A11e 1treet, ~ .. -.., eetlfWlll• e1vi.u.i, n an irrleatlon canal n osta Mesa ha1
1:••._"-,.....,.._ll.u :11•.,._c..-..,c.1tW111• ~~1 • ...,"_ 11 <.-.C••.., • n•• -.'=!".;,~ ••• , ... eight miles southeast of named Mark Jennlnrs
.,_ ~ .. ~-.., • Tiii• ...... 11e1MW ... .., ... ,,. .... ,., ~ e_t., c1«1c 11 °'"""' c-1V .,. • here. of Fountain Valley as lta ,... .. ;o..-.;ro: ., ...... ~c:e-~ TeMYI ..;::-w•""-.....,11c .. "-*·'"'· · 1 outstandloa •octal o.w!~.:.::!°'"· Tiit• .......... -11i., wl• .... Tllll "......,... -..... wltll ... ,.,,....,... ~--c-t ~= PlJlSUC NOTICE science student for the
PVaUC NOTICE QUEENIE
TMt....._. _t.._ _... u. ~=~~.~ .. 0tM11t CluMy 111=~~1~1ert1110r-.COuMY111 .1-•.11,ia,u,1., U9M1. NOTICE OF DEATH OF 1980·81 academic year. ~0Wti•0r...,c-ir, ... -.., ,,... "~ THERESA F AXENE J ~ n n 1 n as • a·~;;;;;~ , .. ,... J ''*'.r::-,ar:;,C1141 o.11;s:,:· '"'*'.,_.o.-.,.c:.e.c o.i~ ....... Pvauc NOTICE •k• THERESA FRANZ sophomore, has main· I, .....::ru::1.~:.~=I ~~ r.. . . "-.. 11, 11, ti., .. , .,,..,, lttCTITI ... UUl•••ll A x E N E A N D 0 F ta(ned a perfect 4.0 (A>
PlJlSLIC NOTICE ....... ITATIM ... , • p ET IT I 0 N TO AD . grade point average in PU~UC NOTICE .!~.'~ ....._ ••.._._,._MINISTER ESTATE NO. 51.5 units or soc la I PUBLIC NOTICE P1etmCM1uuat•... cttlAT•v• 01uo1N•1.• av A-109017. science classes. He re·
'""'caOPTllUITH'llALa MMMllTATaMIUIT '=:::::.~" TINA,mll'Mt!ITreeLAM.New..n T 0 I I I he Ir s, celved a scholarship for -=:!~~~;;;;;;;~~~~:::::::1
'-Nit.C4111 ...!. .... ~...,,...--11 .._._.... TIM........_ .....-1 .. •111 w•· ~·~=·~ m ~ 11 beneficiaries, creditors $175 contributed by
,... ......... cl1MAX 1NSUu.Ho 11Ao co .. -.. , ,,.. i.-~ ~ e.11~ and contingent creditors of faoufty members r 0 AMalt lCAH STATE UNI< .. ..,,., USll Chemlc•I LIM Htil)tlnet•n HUllTAGI HOM• IUILDUI. ~ • • THERESA F AXEN E occ· C.--j 1 s I r m ..... ,.. T',,,.... Ulldlf' IN lollowlflt lffcll Celttwl\letJWt • JOn2 ,,_ OI-. II Toro. GellNnll• Tlllt """""'II COllCNC .. lty 111111 k TH ER s' z' s ~ a c ence de· -.cr1• ..._"'•Mt w1L1. HLL chrtst111e M1tl• Motr•lll u1 '2NO dM4l1;et · a s E A FRAN partment AT ~u•L1c AUCT'tON TO flro..-1. ~ .. Kfl. Cell~• K•r• wi111e111 -.i1tr. aom ,___ · TINMert.GMrrY AXENE and persons who ln deli.·. THI HIOMHT 1100•11 "'°" CMH 926,. Olm•, 11 Tor~ c.11fllnll•,.. Tiit• ~ _ '"-wtt11 .. may be otherwise Interest-a ti()n, Jennings c .. Y .... et u,,. °' .... 111 i.wflit "''' ....i-11 t~ ... 111y ... 111. '"'' ~ iu..-.c-..1ty 811 1,.. ce1111t., c1or11 ., °'"'-c.w.tv Ill ed In the wl 11 and/or and 22 other local OCC -.. ., tM UllllM ,....., ell tltlllt, Cllllldt;ef Cllv!Wel, J J 1'91 t d b be _ _._...1 .-? ' 11u..,...,_..c~•...o-· °"1tllneM«t•Motrettl Ke11w111191n1to1lff -· · ,.,._estate. 1 u ents ave en ac--~~ ""'""11MW .. ldo-.tonrus11t11i. T1111 "'""""' w1t n..-w1H1 111e "''' nti-i -111e11 w1.111 1tw 1t1;1tll111M 0r .... c.o.tt o.11~ ~.... A petition has been filed cepted into Phi Alpha Tua'-r':t~~~~TtN • .., ~';:~ya.Rtt0r-.e--ie.,ot .1-~=~~1~':."11 Of °''"99 c-ty.., J-•.11.1,u,1t11 211M1'. by Harry Wiiiiam Axene Mu honor fraternity, a 01••""'9~••.,.-.i..c _,._...._....
_,,.,.,,,_ • • 111._ .. ,... r and Frank H. Spearman, social science honorary "M SI i.--·· b: , .. _ • ••Ntf'tCtAllY : AME .. IC:AN Pv1tllllliNOrlll9ICMst Deity,.,.... ~11btltlwd0r ... c..11 o.11y Piiot. PUBUC NOTICE Ill In the Superior Court of organization Membe r. mmons wanta to 1Uavw w Y u""re s nothing but rf'AT• &AHK, • eei11orn1• c°"19'• J-•· u.11. u, ,.., 2J2Hl. J-•. i1. ,., u . '"' ~. Oran~ County requesting . rs olf~olor jokes on your pocket secretary?" "°" , _ 1ttCTtTIC1U1au1n•H• in the fraternity must ~ .-1111, trn.. ....... .... UMSITAT ... •T that arry Wiiiiams Ax· · t · 3 5 d ----------------------..,. .. .,.. ,,,,o,...1asu10Htci.1 PtJllUCNOTICE .U.UCNOTICE ,,..,..._.,....,_,,.,..w.i. ene and Frank H . maan am a .. gra e ~"'•office°' ... AecotWr .... , •a: Snaarman 111 be a"'polnt· point average m pre-s d k .. -...c-w..11e1c1._ .. ,,,... .... w1E1Tc1.1"" Nu11s1s ... ~ "" scribed s i I i atcr .... hl9l10wt119pr_.n'I: NOTICaTOCOffTllACtOH fllCTIT1.,taUllNH$ ltlEOISTltY 1617 We1t<IUI Ott,,. ed a~ personal represen· . OC a SC ence econ qua e Lota tSO _. "' °' Trect N1. '°'· ...._...,w.tc•• NAM81TAHM•NT s.i11e20f.~8Hc11,ceufel'flle · tatlves to administer the courses and have an
'" ui. cii., flf ~t BHc11. c-ity s .. 1.0 _... w111 i. reu.1_, et '"• io11owi,. '*'_.' .i111 ... .,. 1t0Qtt. 111C., • Cetlfonll• u,,.,. estate of Theresa F. Ax· overall 3.0 average
" Or ...... tlet• of Cell~. •• -t11e office of ,,..,.. Oilef•tltM -e111.. ,,. .. •a: "°"· "" W..tc:lllf Oftw s..n. ..,. k T · . -.. ,_ .. 111 .--. ..._.. u t• °' Ptent0pere11-111 F•ttvlew lute JOHN'S STAIN oL.Ass swo~. N ... ~ e..c11 c:.ilfwllte' · ene, a a heresa Franz Thos.e acce1>ted tnto hi
.. lftch..., .... Ml_,...._ Mllll. In HOJpltel, U01 ...,...;.. Blvd .. C:O.le ltltS Sl'lor911M. N•. >. H1111t1119t... Tiii• .._,· ,, ~ .... by.«<· Axene (under tM lndepen-the rratem1ty STe: """ ts .. office°'.,. c-ity •-Off°'._ ... Ce!H. tM• 1111411 t:• ,._,.. 111 hKll.CellfvnlenMI l*•llofl. dent Administration of c.tu MeM -• .,..,.. •wrm. ••If '""''" , .. •tll•t w1111 Ill• J-11, ""et w11tc11limeltle'I1t11111e Jolltt Ke1111e111 Tll•m••. lttU lloa•tt, t1tc. Arttwr •· Estates A t) T .. -tltl H1111~Mery1Ec11rne1«. c.MI• Riverside
.,.,I olW IY It feet Of ltlet PWtloll el pt;l:>llocty ..--NM f9t "'"°"'"' SIWHllM, .... t Hwltlftlllll !INCi\, 1tn1...-1, ~ C '"' pe on Mettln, llkherd Pet\1111 -Voo M.
-..i11111t Mid•-.., ti. tnewo11in C:•lllwlll .. IMI "''• tt•*""'1 •• 111 .. wlt11 .,. Is set for tlearlng In Dept. P1r11 .
...,lllOMd 111y ""°'"''°"of ,..,.,111111 111 1etior. 1N1ettels. toots Tiii• _...,,~by..,'"'" Ge11n1y C:l9"1 tt Ortll99 c-tily .., No. 3 at 700 Civic Center MuU•ttH •Hell -0010
llef tM Cttyof Newport ind ••"'""'•"' nec .. ury te 41vldu•t. JllM J, 1.,. Drive West In the City of Cllllfera, Mlcll••• a. Hele, Lori rtlllH CoPY of wlll<ll "llELOCATIE PATIUIT/Cl.tUn JeMK.,.,,..,,.. l"ttma ' ' 1t1llenMC1SyhrteV111ZM1.
-,_ded J-10, 19$3 CLINICS" ... ,,.... vwtous ,_of TlllJ ~ -lllWI •1111 u. flltbll.Jlled Or .. CMat Deity...... Santa Ana, California on ....,... -..Cll -"°"" Deft-. i, ,_.. Ula. "•" ~•. 0111c1e1 ttw "lt&T"' 91c19. ,.,..: -.roprlet• , .. CCH.tnty c1or11 ., Or8'\99 c.wity .., J-•. 11, ,., u. ,.., unet'. July 1, 1981 at 9:30 a.m. Gery Ev-. M«ll Kellll•. NkllOI•
lltteta cet»llon -'--•' .......... ••"' J-2, "''· IF YOU OBJECT to the Kovet..,..., Llftde Ollvl, Ke\Mrlne U) VI• 0.-, Newport h•cll, olltcn vtrto111 cllnln Plly1tcet Pt'*I ti f th tltl Owefl-C.Wrlel.llYWI. Cefltwftll Meflcl:.. -rlL JpeU conl•t•ll<• PuMI ..... Or .... CNll 0.lly Piiot, PUBUC NOTICE gran ng 0 e pe on p ...... v.-..,, -Detrlll cr-i ..
''(If I..,_ ---Of' common de· tMf'I. modli., u lt11"9 t0ii.ts few 11111· J-4, II, II, tA, 1"1 29MI. YOU Should either appear •1111 J•IWllll9L .._.,.,,.tMwll....,.,nowenentv 01ce11 •cceu11t1111v 11or .... ,.. NOTICEO"'OE•THO.., at the hearing and state C-•Mlf'-Klmc.r1yoery-ttllvt11•••ac~ ... cor· •mployee ••11(19/v'nolne •t • ,j PUBUC NOTIC&' r ~ r ~ ti fi J-•WldT.,rtGemmllt. ~t1M1Ul.''Tlle.....,ki.ty11t10ert1ld F•lrvl•w s111• w!1p11e1, 1~ •c· ..,. "OSTER M. '81tYMAN your O ec ons or le 1ni..-0w,...w11-. o.MotTNA.bottMIGrlof•IWM<llot c.,..ncewlt11P1--..-cHk•tloM · ANO Off PETITION TO written Jectlons with the ftfe1;11 in UM ..,,,.11 .... 1eorec1 ti.m.... 01toa1tTO....WCAVM POii ADMINISTER ESTATE c.ourt before the hearing. ~ ........... _.,..., -.. Ptefennc.e wlll be ......... to Dlf. ~.,...... HO .. ,_, Your appearance mav be IMtM • .. ~9'K • wrltt.efl dera property ._,,,....., .. ''Sm•ll CASI! 11U••• A-"'917 • ~ ~ • I 1
O•cter..._ .. DM..a1 -OemMCI BYJI_ .. 111 e«..-d«lu w1111 s.c11en '" 111e,........ • ._ .-..i1cet1111., T o a I I h e I r s , n person or by your at-
.., ......... Wl'ltteol llOllce .. ..,_II ..... et,-· Tltlt 2. Gllllenll• .... VICKI SUE AHDalttON -NANCY beneficiaries creditors torney. • .... llkllon lo ClliH Ill• Ult• mlnlll,.ellve c.w. A11t1lkell1na ,., ANN ANOIEASOH ... SUSIE J . d ti t' redlto f I F y 0 u A R E A sem1na...a -.1....-•• ..it .. 111 11ropetty to pt•f•rtnc:• _ .. .......,1"'"' • 111e ~OMEllOY, "Miii-,., CMlltle., an con ngen c rs o C R E 0 ---AA a
Tear gas
!lflat~aeldoet'91tloM,llldti..,..,., sm111 a\ISI""• Olfke, 11n -1«11 N411M. Foster M . Fryman and DIT R or a cont·
RIVERSIDE (AP> -Residents of San
Bernardino and Riverside counties were jolted b)' a
mild earthquake ror the second day in a row ~arty
this morning, but no injuries or damage were re·
ported.
The quake, which measured 3.7 on the Rictlter
scale, struck at 4:51 a.m. and was centered near
Lake Elsinore, according to Dennis Meredith or
the California Institute ol Technology Seismology
Lab in Pasadena.
Authorities received a rash of phone calls from
anxious residents, said Riverside Police Dis·
patcher Sue Pulliam, noting that her office bad
about 10 calls from "just a lot or curious people
wanting to know if we had one (an earthquake)."
t=!:; .. '"MMl'lol•led ceuMd .. ldnotic•Of str•t,s.cr...,...,CAt•••.Nt.._ sustE J. ll'OME1tov .... '""•persons who may be lngent creditor of the de· l OCC ~.· .!..lectlon, to be It.corded '"-" 11 .. m c ........ •rt In ....,IM. ""''°" In lN• C-1 "' ... ... ... otherwl"'"' Interest-In the ceased, you must flle your a 'I/et p--.•~t grma .~. ·-·et Mir. No. 2IA2.t Ill Of bid -.1119 -· TlllJ "''"""'• 1owl119 aippllcen\f lo c11t11ge tMlr .-...u I I Ith th t Y 4 •~ "" "'" ...,. 205. °' u1c1 0Hlct•1 eppii.. to _Je<tl...,. tM ntlrNt• ...,.... "°"'VICKI sua AHDIEllSON w ill and/or estate: c a m w e cour or -...... . edp,.'9<1coateac ... "S,OOO. enCI NANCY ANN ANDIEllSON I• A petition has been filed present it to the personal A pair or tWO·hOUr
s.w .... w111 • -· tiut w11.11e11t Bid propau11 ,_, ... MlmlttM '°' v1cic:1 SUE POMuov ...o NANcv by · Steven Fryman and representative appointed "Lire Guard" seminars, ~.:,....-:-'~!: =i:.'': ~ .• :~= ;::: ,,.'::'::;' .=1~! A~."11~~~...:!.~r·..,_ Christine Schwable In the by the court within four designed to teach in·
_ .. .....,._, lo pey IM refn.tllllne lion.I wlll llOI .. Clftildeted 11111 will lie lnt•r•SWO In llW IMlter oforeetd ... Superior Court of Orange months from the date of dividuals how to protect ~::-b::" .. ~ ':. '::.!~> wcwt: u .... ror r•l•cll0111 or bid•. Tll• -r.,...,. 11111,_,1n o.rwt"*'' county requesting that first Issuance of letters as themselves against at· ............. ~ . .dv...c.:.'fi".!.v. ~!!:.:=::::=~'o::!~,':!: :~t!~1..._100~~!'.1';!V:s.~·. Steven Fryman and phrovldedp In Section 700 of t k b · "'*, ... ..,,,,. .... kto..oofTrwt, eni;'cta.. • ,.... ' e1 1o·JO o'clodl e.m.,..., ,..., .~ Christine Schwable be a"-t e robate Code of ac Y using tear gas. dlereea.,. otowT ... ,... c llf · T will be offered at _o1u.t •:s-"...,wse1d': Holll4wtllbe<*IJ1-un1eq11111N,. v-~. 11 .. ., 1t1ey ....... pointed as personal a orn1a. he time for 0 e1Tni11.~ .. i:=.1betw1e1on n .... ::*~!,'°~ ,:::•~!'~ =:,::::::"...:. cN119e 11 11eme representative to ad· flllng c.lalms will not ex· range Coast College in
9ly,June».•••.t11:ooe.m.e11M corde11C ... 11U1.,."tMtr11e11onstoa10-ttl•twt11erore1or .. 1i..11capyot minister the estate of plre prior to foor months Costa Mesa this sum-"1k• of T.O. Service Compelly, 8.enll det1". • "'''order w IMw Ulllte be publllMd Foster M . Fryman (under from the date of the hear-mer. ~=~ ~,'·0r"'"• 1110,;.~111 cu,., PrOIP9(11w Olelden mey eum1ne In t11e DAIL v PILOT. • ,.~, of th e I n depend ... n t Ad. Ing noticed above. T h e s e m i n a r s ,
.... a .... • Mlllll ...... °"" • eno obleln Pler\i, ll'Klflcellont end .....,., c1rc-1an. "'*'"'"In tlllt " YOU "MAY EXAMI E -1>1c11or,,,,.wce1llf'9etorme111119 .,.. ,..,,,,., •• IMtt OflC9 • ..... 1or ,_ ministration of Estates N certified by the state At .,. ume of "" 1n111•1 P\lbll· ci11et1to111e OHie• •the Clllef oi Pt•• cootae<uttft--. ~ •, .. NY • Act>. The petition Is set for the file kept by the court. Department of Justice, • , tllls notice , , ... l•t•I Op•t•llOllS •l ..... .,.,,. Mdr•H •.. Id lleertne. he I I "-t N 3 t If you are Interested In the • .. .,,..ic1 .._..,_ flf the tolefl!MIM _....., m•> uMz.12. Tfl• .,..r .. ....,11 ., "••llcenu• •r ng n ..,_ · o. • are scheduled June 17 t1e11 Mcur•d by t11e oove APIY,,...lloncl.S'*'«!MdForm• ,..111,.1 ,.._ 11 ~to A#ti.. 700 Civic Center Drive, estete, you may file a re-and July 22. Both start
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Looking something
like a Woodstock in miniature, the encampment of
protesting Vietnam veterans outside a Veterans
Administration hospital here has blossomed into a
rull-Cledged settlement with its own leaders, rules
and eveQ a name -Veterans Village.
String tied between trees on the lawn of the
Wadsworth VA .Medical Center in the high-priced
Brentwood area mark the Um.its of the makeshift community, whose estimated population by
Wednesday was 35 and growing by two or three a
day .
2 die in shooting .. ,.,.. ... °' .,,.., ..,. ".,,,...., 1n ow-".,. fifty.,...._.,°' t11e ce11t111111 "'9tttlolwr. West, In the City of Santa quest with the court to re· at ?:30 p.m. in the OCC G.~u~'f:~~·~~·:::1,:: COlltrect ~must •u~., .,,.,., oei.c1: J-2. ••1 Ana, Callfornla on July 1, celve ~al notice of the GARDENA <AP> -Police responding to a re-... .,..,"".,c.t11C11•> "''°"' c011trect l)VOlvlne .,. •Kjlllndltwe 1" •-ICI "· ,.,_ 1981 at 9·30 am Inventor of estate as-Forum. ported robber¥ and murder shot to death a man 0•i.: ...,., "" ... ~:S~:!s°!;, .,..., wm 11e ,. 1M••&.AI'~~==~~ IF Yo'U OBJECT to the serlts of the petitions, The seminars wHl cost who allegedly wounded an officer with a sawed-off ='~!:"TIE BAHk ... ,,eo to eucwt• • con1tect1;re1 ... .,_c..._ .... ,.. granting of tM petition accoun s and reports S20. Residents may re-shotgun. autborities said t.oda.v. .
9rT.o.suv1cE !:,:=.'" ,:-"'~ :::c;;'=: ,...b11~=-~ ~.., "'i.t. you should eltt"r appear described In Section 1200.S glster through the col· The alleged robber , C:-J::Zi......,. 111Mt119"""'theSteteotc:.i11orW•-J-•.11.11.u.1t11 2,,..,. at the hearing and state of the California Probate leg e's Community who was not immediate· i:c,...,.Y "'""""'-'""'*'__...W .. ~•. your objections or flle Code. Service· Office or at the CALIFORNIA ly identified, died at the dl.e:11ya1YC1.west ~~:~~111~..:0=~,: PUBUCNOTICE wrlttenobJectlons wlththe ClltUIKSHANKL..ANTIN & door o n a space -scene Wednesday night t~~ o.111rttnent 1w11 •.1e•rt••-t...t IM ___ court before the hearing. GREBoW available basis. near Vermont Avenue flv1t1t.-i Newport H•ttior N... ...,.,., -ve111n1 , ... °' wet" eo-Your appearance may be Ul3 Wilshire Blvd. 40 F 11 . t . . 1 d -.-~w1tttu.0renoec..11 p11u11,.111111e~y1nw111c11u. NOTICaOl'oaATHOP In person or by your •t· BevertyHllls,Ca.90211 ~.owing ram11~g . and Compton Bouevar •
ih!IY ,_,,... •• "· 1t. ••1 WA-t• ::::11111~.,!. •ei>d-:,:r.~.!.~;i:: Do lit o TH y A N N E torney. (213) '5M141 I part1c!pants will rece1v.e not far from the body or a man who police
r-01r1c1or or 1ne11111r111 11.1.euon1. •lltADYL AKA DOROTHY I F Y 0 U A R E A PubliShed Orange Coast a certificate and permit believe was shot and robbed.
PtJaLIC NOTICE eop1eso1u.r«•et•onm .. iu.ot-A. a,. Ao y AK A CR EDl1TOR or a cont-Daily Pilot, June ... S, 11, to carry tear gas. Police were alerted to the incident when two
ttemCSOPT1tunu·slAL• ~~~~~.Pt.:• ~,:u:;.,:.::,:,ie; DOROTHY •RAOY AND lngent creditor of the de· l98l 259S-S1. ;------'''-------.witnesses ran up to a patrol car and told the two
LOMN0.111'11• o.ve1~1 Sety1<ea hHdqlM!rtors O~ H'tlTION TO AD· ceased, you must flle your officers inside that an elderly man was being
T.u-.emw ot151ic.!·i-1onw11tbetwld1t.....,.., MINISTER aSTATE NO. claim with the court or PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE robbed on a street nearby, said Gardena Police TUNS-COAST s.11v1cu. tNc. es PIM• ~';;t;d Pl•t ()poretltM. A 1"9M. present It to the personal ::i!.t~~-:.!:iete:i=~.·t~ F1trvtewSCeteHot1P1111 T o a I I he I r s , representative appointed •oncnocHDtTOIU NOTICE OF DEATH OF Capt. Bruce Traylor. •LL.AT..UaLtCAUCTIONToTwe. vtaor•Jet•I•. beneficiaries, creditors by the court within four OPIUutTHMSPH JOHN F. PICKERING F• u ho HIOHIHT ••DOE• l'OR CASH Olleof .. ~ ... ()peretlonllll and centl-tcrtdltorsof months from the date of CS.C...•MMWU.C.c.J ANO OF PETITION TO IFW? near uODP. me ,,.., .... et time of HI• In lewflll P11tlll~Or.,..CM1IDelt~P11ot, • ..,..... f"" t l Notice 11 llet•b., elv•tt I• Ille ADMINISTE S r-" _., ., 1111 u111 ... sc.tn> •11 'itflt "-'· 11, 1•1 uu.a1 Dorothy Anne •r•dY, •k• "s ssuance Of letters as Ctedlt•n 11 LOU uacHTIE!Jt R E TATE 11tte ... ....._. _Y*I to llllf-Dorothy A. •rady, aka provided In Section 700 of ••11• "" 1..eu 1rec111e1, ,,_,.,.,, NO. A-109021. 1111or1t~o..°'T""'"' Puauc NOTICE Dorothy Brady and tht Probate Code of ::::."l".:!:'=:,'~2!.,~· To a I I he Ir s, ,t•u•v=. ~1t•v~~~=L1. per sens who m•Y' be Callfornla. The time for .. '"''"""' tNt • ..., ... 1ren•... beneficiaries, creditors 'f•OAM.iiaooMALL.~-1toT1caOPnunH·sSAu otherwise Interested In the flllng clelms wlll not ex-.....,. ..... ,,.... .. LOllAW.vANc:• a. ndcontingentcredltorsof · '--CAil• wllland/orntate· plre prior to four months .1ovcEAMOt.ou.Tr_.._, JOHN F. PICKERING eN&FtCIAltY: ALLSTATE T.S............ ' f of wMM ~ ....... II JM Mertll9 d ho be IAYllllGSANDLOANASSOCIATION, AMERICAN STATIE. IANI( -duly A petltlen hes been filed rom the date the he•r· Ave11v• ... 1 .... IUlll!d, G-y .. an persons w may • ~c~tloft. 19POfni..t Tl'Vltee _.., 111e '°''-"" by Margaret Anne Brady Ing noticed above. 0r-... -... .. Cellfornle. I otherwl54t Interested In the 11ec.,..1-u, m•n•n•tr. No. •acrllled..,"" '""''WILL Hu. and Martha Ann Donovan YOU MAY EXAMINE TM ,......ny • • .,..,.."" 11 wlll and/orestatt. ·~'::~,';.-:*.:!:~':.O:.:: ~To~~~~·~1~~~'~0;0~0c~~~ In the SUperlor Court of the flit kept by the court: ~~::'.:~~::4~~~1 A petition has been filed "'°' ..... ~;...,. .... "" tnitt ,,...,,..,.et ume .i .... •n 1ewt111 Oran .. County requesting If you are Interested In the S.l4lprt1Pff1Yt101H<rllledltt99119r11 by Joh" W. Pickering In -.c11•t11e'9Mewtlltpr-1'(: -Y °' 111e Uftl1e4 MMes> •II r~. thet #Mr .. ,.t Anne Bredy estate, you may file a re-.. , Alt a1DC111n tr•.11xtvr-. ......i the Superior Court of ni-,.,,_1on1o11.et2ttTrect11n tttlellllf.....,.~•11141 --~ ......... "'-Oonov t ·"'Ith t.... rt t ,,...., .,. ........ , • .. CWW111IOr1nna Count ti "' .. CJ!Yf/I ~ 9"cll ~ ,..., .,., ,,_., ..._ o.ottTNA In •nv ,.,.,v_ ""'n an ques .... '""' cou ore-llEALTY 1Mi1t11en ""°•" u L~ -Y reques ng
., 0r...,, 94-.., c.i1torn1• ... '*' t11e~lllft!Mt.,.c11tKr111ed: be a,.,olnttd as itenonal celve special notice of the arec111e1 & ~I.MN.,,. IK:lted ·~ th•t.John W. Plc.kerlng be .._ rn.e 111 ..... 121,....., 1 _, • TllUSTOtt: uv1H o. JUSTIN • .,. r1presefttetlve to ad· Inventory of estate assets m ._.,..., ...... ,.._., °"'""' tt appointed as p ersonal
:•::. ':.::u'~ec~ '; ""::'~i:'F'rc':ov: AMElttC•N minister the Ht•t• of and of the petitions, ac-°':=-:V:~i. conawn representative to ad---~ ~11 ..... ,..._.1 STATI llAH.K, • c.111om11 cotPO••· Dorothy Anne Bredy, aka cbunts and reports metect1nw1twuwaot11e1eyotJ-mlnlstertheestateofJohn
} ,.Hlb.'1: U111t "'°' • .. "-" "'; Oerothy A. •rady, aka described In Section 1200.5 '"'· •• 10:00 A.M. •• ••lldelltte1 F. Pickering (under the In·
MM -.r111M1 lft .,. c.4'MllftMtt N• ~~:= ~,.:· ''".: ~~· Dorothy Brady (under the of the California Probate •ec,... eerp., 100 ".,.,.,... ...., dependent Administration r::;1rec:;::=~:t ":~l:.'=' 11ci.1 Recor•'" t11e':'1<.• et 1M Independent Admlnlstra-Code. ::'.'!rc..i=.. c.-ey 11 0r-. of Estates Ac.t) The petl· J)fflc1il ._.. .. Mid c:Nit.,. • "~ °' 0r-. c-.,; Mid flNd tlon Of Estates Act>. The Hall 5"1Y Attontey at .. '• • -te tt1e n--.. tlon Is set for hearing In 1tA1tcn t . •n llMtvtlff• •11• ~'~" -.cr111et tM 1e11ow1119 ~"petition fS set for heerlnt Law, SH San Ml9uel 11111w1 __ _........._ Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic :::;=~:"',!.::C~ =:: ~ ,,._. tS• o1 Trect .... to7, In Dept. No. 3 et 100 Civic Drive, Suitt •, New"'1 ::.I.'::~:.':.;..ttv:, .,_,, Center Drive, West, In the
P.ALM SPRINGS (AP> -A brushfire
threatened a number or niuJti-million-dollar homes
in the exclusive Southridge area, including the
palatial, mushroom-shaped residence of comedian
Bob Hope, authorities said.
The fire which started Wednesday had burned
about 80 acres by early this morning. Full control
was expected by 6 p.m .. said Bruce Cowie of the
Riverside County Fire Department.
Anti-crime billa admnce
SACRAMENTO <AP> -The state Senate
Finance Committee bas sent to the floor more than
20 anti-crime bills, despite warnings they would
require extra guards and prison cells but wouldn't.
pay for them.
But the committee rejected Wednesday, on a
4-6 vote, a proposal to add appropriations to each
bill based on the estimated number of inmates it
would add. C-AtWttM141Uten41 1n1.11eC1tyflfHNpor1h4Kll.c:-tyCtnterDrlve,W"t,lnthe 811~ CA t2Ht; tel. DelH:,,,_..,.,,.,, City of Santa Ana , •.:=.~:.:~~~:;::: ~:.::'::.~~=:s•_:: CC 11t1y o1t SaJnu Ana1 '44-PSasJbtl;· .......... 0• =-~= cta911t30ornla on July 1, 1981 Sal·--..i--biU ..,..... ., ~ CeNtt.i-111C11111w, ~•-""""· 111 11e I forft a on une 2,., 1911 u ~ range Coast Tr__._ a : a.m. VfMlllr ~ 11..irta._ rtcenteci 111 A"""4 ottiu "' .. ~ ,_,.,. et Nl4I att: JO A.M. Dally Piiot, June 3, .. , 10, NlllJN41 0r.,. c..st Deity~. IF YOU OBJECT to the
,.,., '" 1tOe11 11-..,... *· ~·r~~==:==: IF YOU 08.JIECT to the 1911 2575-11 .1-•·'"' utMt granting Of the petition
1e1 ~ • '* G9wlly ,.,. ec11o1nl"9 ..._ 111111 111 .,. ~" ranting of the ,.iltlon, you should either appear
t\llcu i . Nen·uctv•tv• .,..,.. .... 111y ""°"""" °' ,,.. etty you should either aflPHr PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE at the he.arlng and state
eceftl, ,,..,..,., .., .... c:-11 of ti.. c1i., • ""-'' 8Hcll. at the heiring and state your o~Jectlons or file *""" llld..,. oe11er • '•"lllN '°"" .. wt11ct1 ,. ... "'._. your o:tectlon1 or file ll'VM.•~ ..,,ca written objections with the .. -II_ ... , .... r--.. JUM ,., 19$1 Ill ... It J _. .. lllMfM • • •-"" Utt,,....M,Olfklll lleurft. Wr ten ectlent With tfM CtTVWllM.. court uos1ore tM hearing.
• t1 o ... ,. 111 ,,.. Artltt• ., 111• .!~,v11=,....,.,.9ellCll.CA court befot'9 tt. ,....rlnt. •sv"l:.==.;r... Your appe1tr•nce may be ...,...,......_. .. ._ ...... ,.... ._...:,. 11 .,:.::,: =:.:; Your 8PPNranct may be ,.~ yua ,... . In person or by your at-,~~:.!:.. -=._c-t• .,_ .. • "'wo11•i..• ... wr-'" person or ltY your at-_: ~ ,:'.:..'!!...~ C.:" • 11e O'Y et,,..,....• Mfk ""'1111 torney.
"· Tiie.., iriwy .,,,..;.., O..et t9<"""l.''Tlw'-"fklery.-WMl9 torMy. 11r-.._....-------t11t...a: I F Y 0 U AR E A ~T,._.,,....., • ....,._...._.. DMlle1Trwe,.,.,,..._.,..WMc11., IF Y 0 U A ft E A lt'li8ltc=-:.;..._, CREDITOI' or a cont· ~c::-W':''::::.':."':11!':.:'tt :.::::;:;..:.:::C'::.. ==CREDITOR or • cont-:"et1kt1~•owiitiW''.'.::'.:'.::·::::::.:::.':.'.'.'.'.'.','.'.::::·:.::'.•= lngent creditor of the ct.
' • un• •••• • _...... o.c ...... ~.,::.. "'!. ~.._. • Wtltten '"":!. credtw °',.lhe de· eem~ / ceased, you must flle your ·:.=:.~ .. °:':.:~ 1w ~ ...... .., .... •:.:;: .. O:: ~r!im '.:r-'th ~ •~r v..,., .... '"'.': ................................................ ...,.. cl aim twllttht tht~ court or1 .. _ ............. • _.. ......... •IKtWlit -. ~ UM ,.. ,,.... cou or Stoller~ .................................................... ~ presen o ,,. persona
r :=C:.-::'Y.:" .. ::1C::..::. ~-:.:.::~.': .... ~ r.:=~:a~1v:'.:::: 11ec,..._ow.-,. ............................................ ...,.. ~~p~=-~:,t,!.v•w='~C::
' • .,...,.._._..,..._ ............ ~ _.. .-.. • by tM court within four .. .-.PJ'lflt~~ ........................................... menths from ttt. dett of
: .................. II "" llrMtll ................... ....,... ,-' --.. _ ..... ., I ..., •...,.. •-.,.... .... -. ....,_,as. tt1t • INtr ..... ..,., 111 """' .,. "'"" ---·· •-• ~ UMINIMIM ................................. .-f rst Issuance of letters as i:••OMc111---. =:""' .......... Offtclll first lllUMCll 9' letters es n. Cltv., ,,....,.._......,. 19 _.... • ......,., UTt:...~ pro•'-In Section 700 of .......... -. ..................... .,._...,. ...... provided In s.ctlen 1'0 et l'U•DIAVAtLAeUTOPl~A""°"IATIONS the Probate Code of e...-" .-.=, ~ • ,._....~ . .-...-. t"• Pr•lt•t• Code of ...,.. ....................................................... ......-Callfornf1. TM time for riiJiii,.liliiia-;i!l'• t: :::::ii;,....,.....,......,' r••· "Cefltemla. n.e time f« ..._..,_ ................................................ ,,.,. fifing clal"'5 will not ex-.. ----·-• .. -~..,-· ..... --.. • .., ..... = flllftl ctelm1 Wiii Mt••· ,,,,,.,.. .,.re prior to four montf\I .. """"=-:•• C':'T;::.:'..:".':a-.. ,. ,,..,. t• few ment1t1 1UMMA"v~"•GOMM1'fHDA1t,_...ATIOM1 from the cMtt of ttt. hMr· .. =:--.-..u:.I: ..... ,,..._.....,"_,·...., '""" .,._..., tM Mer· Ct1Y~11 ............................................................ 11\tnotlctdabc»w. -._ e1 , .... .._., .... ._.,,,_.., lngMttc.W-... c..,~ .................................................. , ... m.M YOU MAY EXAMINE
,, ... ..__~., e11er111 .. .-.... ~ ~YOU ..... Y •xAMIN• cter ........................................................... ....-tM flle k~ ..... --court
11 .,._ .......... • ...... .._."'81111.,....... ,._ 5 a aey.--.., ...................................................... ttJ• .. ,. v... , ,,.. " ... " .,,.... ................. tM flle le-' i., tM ceurt. ...,._ ...................... s .................................. •• If you are '*'-StMl In the IP!!!•-~·• -...,,9, ... .-. ... ••tt.•A.M.•-If yeuerelAllu91tid lfttM J1111rC::1e1 ....................................................... tate, you rnai file•,... ~d,~ :=. =~~-= tNtl; ,_ fMY ftle •,,. ·r-·-•• 'r:::.e·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ quttt wl"'the court to re-•• ..._. .... ~a .,... wt• tM C9Wt te rta ca 1 ••• 11rMea ............................................ ,,..,.. ctlv• IPIKl•I noUct of the ....... "' ..... .,. ...,. ...... cetw .,. ... MUCll of ... ...._ ........... , ............................................. ....._. lflvtntor'Y. of ~t• 1ssets .. _. .... ., .... -..... ...... lftv•""'°' ..... .-a ~ .............. , ...... ~ .... , .................................. 1.ttt ... and Of tM petitions ac·
I/I ::::-•"'&&'I:.~ -II ... -~ Ka l•Ar I II ........ Jltllb ......... COUfth and report I _. .... •== .... -.~ coutttl ••• r•-•rtt UM:l:':=:=:!z dncrl•lnS.CtlGn1200.5 •. ;.a..'11;:;.., ~ ....... ••.:t ---s:'.ev· .. . . =.,.Cal'""''• ~r-... "W .. c.lt .... Pf•• URI--o C:.... --1~Piililb"9 --.......... I 1 ---MILMM.WTAL
SI! .,.. a. , ae-••-::==~ •• ,. t ··~· "" • .................. Cl .", •• ,19 := • • .....
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Arter a debate
similar to those on the Vietnam War in the 19605,
the state Assembly has narrowly approved a res·
olulion asking Congress to halt military aJd to El
Salvador .
School. fiJntlbw paatea
SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Assembly
bas passed the $358 million school fundlnr bill
AB777, but Republican oppoelUon forced the erfec·
ttve date to be delayed.
The bill, by Assemblyman Leroy Greene, D·
Sacramento, went to-the Senate Wednesday on a
$CM vote.
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A national or·
11nlaadoo ot aeolc>Clsta i• ,.rune for speedy ex-
plor.Uon for oftlhore oil and 1u ln. the United
States and lea• concern about ponlble environ·
mental danutfe .
The Am1rlcaa Auoclatlon of Petrol1um
Oeololitta PHMtlted Lta rec:ommendatlou, wbicb .
ware ftnt pnpai'ed for Interior Secretary .Jam•
Watt, at a oonventloa Wednilday at\ended by 10,0001~-
GIOup ~ .oldier1i!