HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-06-05 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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FRIPl\Y JiJNf 0 ) I 11i' 0 Ii ANGE ( 0 u N l l I Al If 0 fl r--. I A :1 '> c EN l s
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.Marriage of IDan, 59, ~I, 13, banned
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. lAP> -A Judie baa denied a
$9.year-old man permission to
marry a 13·year-old he made
pre1nant, aayin1 the unlol'\
would not be in the best interesi -bt the mother·to-be or her un·
born child.
"The court is of the opini()I)
(hat this marriage would be
doomed to failure,'' Pinellas
County Judge Horace Andrews
sald Thursday in denying an ap-
plication for a marriage license
by S.T . Shedd and Lucinda
Shuchmacher.
Thursday was to have been
the couple'• weddih• day.
The couple went to Andr••s
on Monday because under state
law, a marriage license cannot
be 1ranted to someone under 18
unlesa the applicants are
parents ol a child or have a doc·
tor's statement verifyln& prt1·
nancy.
Shedd said be fathered the
baby. The couple gave the Judie
a con.sent form the firl claimed
was stened by her mother.
But the mother later said she
never signed the form and bad
no idea her dauchter was apply·
inc for a license.
The couple alao provided blood
tests and a doctor's letter HYinl
the teen·ager was about six
months prepant Aprit 30.
After~ with the couple,
Andrews referred the case to the
Florida Department of Health
and Re~billtatlve Services and
to tbe state attorney's office,
Ukin1 that tbe circumstances
be investi1ated.
Assistant State Attorney Mary
McKeown said Florida law
forbicb intercourse with some·
one under a1e 18 and of pr•
vious chute character. Viol•·
lions are pun.ilbable by up to 15
years in prison and a fine ol
$10,000.
Ma. McKeown said abe wun't
certain the law would apply.
Mrs. McKinley said abe
bell eves her dau1hter, who waa
placed in HRS juvenile custody
Wednesday forged her name
because "she's wantin1 to give
her baby a name."
The judge also noted that Miss
Schuhmacher apparently bad
not been going to school regular·
ly and has no training or
employment aldlls. Shedd worka
only occasionally as a house
painter, he said.
M ra. McKinley said she
brought her daughter and 11·
year-old son to St. Peteraburc
from Jacksonville about a
month ago, partly to get away
from Shedd and his son. She said
Sbedd's son is her former
boyfriend.
In Jacksonville , Mrs .
McKinley said, she. ber children
and the elder Shedd were living
In the same place to ahare ex·
pens es.
When s he learned her
daughter was pregnant, ahe
said, she went to authorities in
Jac ks onville, but said no
charges were ever brouaht.
Now, Mrs. McKinley aaid, she
hope& her daughter wlll 1lve up
her baby for adoption and IO on
with her life.
"She's a very intellieent girl,''
said the mother. "And she's a
very good actress. if you know
what I mean."
·;panel nixes Reag~n nominee
Parents
charged
·in death
; A 22 -year·old Huntington
<Beach man and his 19·year-old ~ommon·law wife have been
£barged with murdering their
)O·week-0ld son who died earlier Jhis week from alleged physical
)lbuse.
; Sidney L. Green and Cynthia
~vans, 19, each of 19132 Hunt·
mgtoo St., were arrested Thun·
day and are in custody at Huot·
f8ton Beach Jail. Ball is set at
~·~each, police said. ~Police Lt. Bruce Young said
· amedics were called to the
· ple'a apartment Monday and
· d the baby, Joey L. Green,
breathing. Paramedics took -~ boy to Pacilica Hospital
ere he was pronounced dead.
An autopsy revealed evideQCe
· baby bad died from lack al cen resultin1 from physical
se, PGlice said. •
The baby atao bad nine ftac·
res, Youn& said, including five , · ken ribs, a broken clavicle
•· a fracture of the Ju.
~= 19lls runnin g
~:CHICAGO CAP> -About ;.~90.000 travelers who use the
-~icago area's three major ~mmuter railways got a brief, :~urt·ordered reprieve from ~eatened shutdowns.
MIDWAY PROTEST -Japanese demonstrators chant protest
slogans as the U.S. aircraft carrier Midway returns to its
home port at Y.okosuka this morning. The vessel baa been
caught in controversy over alleged stationing of nuclear
weapons on Japanese soil.
·~::
~yes wittering at smoggy forecast
r; ..•
·Jij Tbe A.uoclated Presa what the AQMD called the
:!::J.itUe relief was in sight for smoggiest day l>f the year.
~ first siege of summer smog "We've bad episodes of smog
tfrat plagued the Southern since February, but we've been
eelifornia area, authorities said. moving gradually toward this -
The Air Quality Management the first day of truly typical
·District said there was a summer IMOI conditions," said·
possibility of second ata1e ozone Jeff Schenkel of the South Cout
,aLerts today which would re· Air Quality Control District.
quire industries to curtail opera· AJr quality was not helped by
lions. twQ bnisbfiret that broke out ln
High temperatures and little the San Uernardino·Riverslde
wind Thursday contributed to area. .
~
Santa Ana
boy abducted,
returns home
An 8-year-old Sant.a Ana boy,
Ramoo Garcia, was safe in San·
ta Ana ~ after goina throu&b
a bizarre, botched lddnappina
i9cident.
~~~~~~~~~~---
The highest temperature of
the year, 90 degrees, was re·
corded in downtown Los Angeles
on Thursday with the same or
higher temperatures predicted
today.
The Natlonll Weather Service
aald temperatures should drop
sliehtly Saturday, with highs In
the upper 80I.
Six first.stage smog alerts, in
all parts of the San Gabriel
Valley, the Pomona·Walnut
valleys, Riverside and Upland,
were called Thursday, trigger·
ing a call for lesa outdoor
physical activity and less driv·
ing.
The bigb temperature was 10
degrees cooler than the record
for the date, ln 1895. Last year
on June 4, the temperature
reached75.
N atlonal Weather Service
forecaster Rory O'Lou1blln said
temperatures would be slightly
cooler lo the inland valley area,
predicting 95 to 103 for San
Bernardino, 103 in the San
Fernando and San Gabriel
valleys.
Explainin.1 the weather chan1e from Tuesday's overcaat
skies and sprinkles, O'Loughlin
said, "We have " lar1e and im·
preaslve high p'ressure rid&e
that bas just given us some light
offshore wind flow that swept
away the low clouds. "
8 firemen injured
in 2 brush fires
L e fever
prospects
in doubt
WASHINGTON (AP> -· In a
preliminary defeat for President
Reagan, the Senate Forei1n
Relations Committee today
overwhelmingly rejected bis.
nomination of Ernest W. Lefever
as human rights chief.
And Democratic and
Republican leaders diaaeteed on
Lefever's prospects for being
confirmed by the full Senate
assistant secretary of state for
human rights.
The committee voted 13-4 to
recommend that the Senate kill
the nomination.
Republican ~bairman Chari•
H. Percy's opposition -a m~
defection against the Republican
president -was disclosed in a
draft statement obtained by The
Associated Press.
·'I regrdfully vote a1ainat the
Lefever nomination," the state-
ment said. "The credibility ol
the administration'• concern
and the effectlveneu of iu
policy on human right.a will de-
pend to a crucial de1ree" on
who is human rigbta chi~f,
"I do not think Dr. Lefever ls
a suitable candidate for that
role,'' Percy's statement Hid.
Re1ardless of the committee
vote, Senate Republican I~
Howard Baket said Thursday a
head count showed prospects
are eood that the full Seaate
would vote to confirm Lefever.
Senate Democratic Whip Alan
Cranston, however, said be
thinks opponents may be •bit-to
"s1mply vote down the nomina·
Uon" in the Senate.
Reagan has stood fut behind
Lefever's nomination, which
sna11ed over his statements
that human riehts violations by
non·communist countries could
be dealt with better by private
persuasion instead or publ~c
pressure.
Edwin Meese III. Reagan's
counselor, described Lefever on
Thursday as "a man who for
years bas labored in the
vineyards of idealism and im·
proved foreign policy and better
relationships with other nattona
and for the cause of human
rights."
"The president feels no one
has come up with any reason yet
•by he sbo\&ldn 't be fully sup-
ported," Meese told The A•·
soclated Presa Broadcasten M·
sociation.
10111 CUil IUTlll
Sunny today wtt.b low ·
clouds and early morninf'
clouds cleartn1 Ulla atter-
noon. In creasina low
clouds toni&ht and early
Saturday, becominl most·
ly sunny Saturday after·
noon.· , .... ,.,
TMrr1 .,,..,,_.,.,/Well go.
~ on fft CMG Al•M. Tlw •· , .. ,ar Cono Me•o·NtwpOrt
Harbor UoM CM> FWt Frf,
canttval ldcb o// tOldgM t..
MHa'• Lfon Parle. Storw. oror>MD1.
11111
I' l
., .........
Sl~HT AT LAST -The Mino brothers o(
Q,u1to. Ecuador, albinos legally blind since
birth. try on special glasses that will enable
them to regain 90 percent of sight. The
brothers Edaor Clcrt 1. 3?i_ ltc11rnhlo, 18, and
Byron, 31. were rttted Thur11da~ hy Or
Richard Brllllont In Phlludelphlo
~~~~~~~~~~~~
County panel to quit?
Fair Campaign Practices Commission stymied
By GLENN SCO'M'
Of, ... o.lty ...... ''-"
Members of Orange County's
Fair Campaign Practices Com-
m1ss1on left their meeting this
week unsure whether they'll
ever convene again.
Al issue is a state appeals
court ruling last September in
which judges said political can·
d1dates don't have to include
their names and addresses on
campaign literature.
To do so. they said, would be a
vio:ation of first amendment
guarantees of freedom of speech
and expression.
Both the s tate and U.S
supreme courts have refused to
he ar the case.
lo urange County, all can-
didates for countywide election
Principal charged
in phoned thre ats
GUSTINE <AP> Gustine
High School Principal Pat Ryan
was charged Thursday with
making annoying or threatening
telephone calls to residents who
oppose his administration.
Police arrest.ed Ryan after the
district attorney's oCfice filed a
complaint in Merced County
M unicipaJ Court charging him
with four misdemeanor counts.
Authorities said the calls were
received by residents who want
trustees to fire Ryan, 49.
are required by the election code
to include their names and ad-
dresses on literature
They also are supposed to sub·
mit copies of all mailed material
to the commission within three
hours of its mailing.
The five -member com.
mission's job is to review the
material and judge whether it is
false or misleading -and to
ensure that it meets county
guidelines.
But members noted during a
meeting this week in Santa Ana
that their functions will be au
but canceled if candidates can
send fliers, brochures and other
mailings without saying who did
It
Said member Jack Mandel :
"If we don't know whose sending
this stuff out. we cease to exist."
The commission asked the
county Board of Supervisors to
seek an opinion from the county
Counsel's Office on the matter.
Other decisions seemed to
pale in comparison to questiQns
about the court case , but com-
mis sioners also asked the
s upervisors to consider giving
them power to levy fines against
candidates who violate the
group's guidelines.
Commissioner Joan Riddle
noted that the District At·
torney's Office took no action on
54 violations sent to 1t lh umu oy
the commission.
The group also agreed to
enlarge to seven members to
create an improved "public
per~eption."
.............
OOINO HOME -Pope John Paul II bolds hand of Mrs. Ann
Odre, 58, of Buffalo, N. Y., during their meeting at the
Vatican Thursday. She was wounded in the chest in St.
Peter's Square May 13 during an attempt on the Pope's life.
Mrs. Odre is enroute home today.
.
'"'Ct .. Mfl4NI ectv.nllfftt 1141142 ... 11 Alt otMf depe,,menta 142-4a1
MAIN (WltlCI
.aJ0 Wtt\ ~ M., tale M .. a. CA Mell •H'911 .... IMO, C•t• Me .. , SA m1'
Appointed directly by the
supervisors, the commission has
come under criticism most re·
cenlly by the Orange County
Grand Jury for its ties to that
political body.
Ms. Riddle suggested that the
extra two members could be ap-
pointed by a group other than
the supervisors.
However, the dec1s1on to make
the change lies with the
supervisors.
Nixon looks
at newlwme
in suburbs?
NEW YORK (AP> Former
President Nixon apparently has
grown tired of the city and may
be leaving his Manhattan
townhouse for the greener
pastures of New ·Jersey, accord-
ing to a source familiar with
Nixon's plans.
Nixon, staff members and
m lllionaire Bebe Re bozo visited
affluent Franklin Lakes and
Saddle River in northern New
Jersey on Thursday, looking for
a country home, according to
the source, who asked that he
not be identified.
Earlier this spring, Nixon had
considered locations ln Bronx-
ville in Westchester County, the
source said.
Nixon and his wife, Pat,
moved from San Clemente to
their townhouse at 142 E. 65th St.
to be near daughters Julie Nixon Eisenhower, who lives in Penn·
sylvania, and Tricia Nixon
Cox . who lives in New York
City.
A woman at Nixon's office
said the former president's
spokesman was out of town for
the day. When asked about the
possible move, she replied. "We
don't know anything about that.
The Nixons love New York
City."
2 campers
found d e ad
ALTURAS (AP) -The re·
mains of two sisters who ap-
parently froze to death on a
camping trip last year have
been found in the Warner Moun-
tain Wilderness area about 15
miles southeast of this Modoc
County community, authorities
said.
Undersheriff Bruce Mix said
the remains of Catherine Jean
Cuchra, 25, of Long Beach, were
found by a fisherman May 23 in
the Pine Creek Basin area. In·
vestigators also found the re-
mains this week of her sister,
Jean Jackson. 27, also of Long
Beach.
The women, who had gone
camping in the area July 26, 1980,
bad apparently frozen to death
and had either fasted or been
without food before they died, Mix
said. It was not known when the
women died.
Cops canine
dies in chase
.Be~, Sadat tell gains
Syria blamed for crisis; Israel won't end raids
JERUSALEM CAP) -Prime
Mlnlater Menachem Be1ln 1ot
th• backint ht wanted from
Pr11ldent Anwar Sadat In thelr
1um mlt conrerence on the
l1r1tll·Syrl1n mlaaile crl1l1. But
U11ln refuaed th• E1ypU1n'1 re·
qu11t for an end to laraell at-
t u lu on Palntlnlana In
1oulh1rn Lebanon.
1'ha lt1dtr1 met 1lic hourt
'l'hurad•r on th• 1oulh1rn cout of tht ~Ina penln.aula, which laratl
11 tu return lo f;IYPl by nutAprtl.
Al • Julnl new1 t'onteretlt!t, 1d1t
blamP(l R)'rltn l'r1!91th!hl H1le1
Auttd fol' lhl! Lebanese rl1lt1111d
ex educ tlon
lim its sou ht
SAChAMl!lN'l'O IA)' I 'thfl
11tale Renate. apµatettUy lHUtit1.-tl
l.Jy 11 ru11da111ent•ll•t ptofti~I
a•alnsl a sex eduutlon 1111111ut1l
rot teachers. wanll to lltnlt 9flll
education funding
ll voteu 21-6 ThuntJay tll "'"d
Rlt697 by Sen Dan O'Keefe, It
Cupertino, to the As1trnbly
'l'he manual never rHched th•
toacher11. State 1chooJ SupNfo•
lendent WIJaon Rllee acrappod It
nfler the protest IHt ye.r. Th•
manual suggested, amon1 oth.r
lhl n1s. that pupils In early
grades be told about variou1
sexual concepts. and that youna
teen-agers be taken lo visit drug
s tores where contraceptives are
sold.
Dollar hits high ;
Gold prices down
LONDON <APJ The dollar
hit all-time highs apinst the
French franc and Italian lira to-
day. reached a four-year high
against the West Germak mark
and a 10-month peak against the
Japanese yen.
The British pound steadied -·
easing only fractionally -after
its worst ever one-day loss
against the dollar on Thursday,
a f~ll of 7th cents. Gold prices,
which tumbled to their lowest
mark since December 1979 on
Thursday, were stable this morning.
Reactor hill OK'd
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
House Energy Committee has
approved legislation that would
allow new commercial nuclear
reactors to operate at rull power
before receiving final approval
from the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission. The bill was ap-
proved on voice vote Thursday.
aaid he uJced Be1ln to allow ·~am·
p)e time" for U.S. envoy PhilipC.
Hablb to work out a PHCtful aet·
Utmeot.
Bt1ln nld he accepted "the
rtQUOlt of my friend President
Sadat to 1lve more tlme to Mr.
Phlllp Habib to try to 1olve the
crl1l1 In Lebanon, cauaed by the
Syrlana, by peaceful meant."
Sadat aaid he aJ10 aJked Be11n
·'to end the ralda on the Pal-
u ll an 1 " ln Lebanon. but
the ltraell leader made It clear
thHt would conUnue He 11ld
the Palallnlan• were plannlna
"d•>' aand nlf ht to carry out
murt11rou1 at 1ck1 •a•lnat our
J'llUJ'lt," and "what we do la an
1wl of lv14IUm•t• HI/ derenae In
tltto hlteh~t moral Hnat."
fh11.ilh wH IHvl111 W11hln1ton tut.In t111 1110r• mt1elln11 wllh
At1li a11d ltrHll leaden. be1ln
HIN.If 111 fh1udl Ar11l>lu. 'l~hfl Mlltls ha 111 trylnM to re 1t111 ~ .. lit dutt ~· tht 11urruro·lo 1tlr
mlullea Syria deployed In
eutern Lebanon around the
CbrlaUan clty of Zable, where
Syrian aolclien have bffn bat·
tlln1 the Cbriatlan Pbalan1e
Party'• militia 1lnce April 1.
Syria moved the Soviet-maOe
SAM ·6 mlasllea there In late
April after laraell planes 11t.>t
down two Syrian hellcopters
operati~ a11lnlt the Christi•.
Sadat called for the
withdrawal not only of the mls-
sllea but ai.o of the 22,000 troops
Syrla has kept in Lebanon slnfe
the 197~78 civil war there. ije
char1ed that Assad's goal was to
annex Lebanon and create a "a realer Syria."
Auad claims his troops are a
peacekeer.ln1 army to enforte
lhC! arm 1tlce that ended tbe
clvll war between the rl&htilt
Lebanese Christiana and the aJ.
llance of leftlat Lebanese
Mo1lem11 and Palestinian ru«·
rlllu.
Irvine coast tour
planned by panel
~lltf'I 1•otu1tul rommlulonera
m•~llnt( In Sun f''rancl1co
h11 ve1 u•rt'rd to lour the county's
lrvlnl• ('out un•u where develop.
mcnt or home11. hotel11 and offices
111 undnr l'C>n11lderatlon
Thl! tour, commission plan-
ners said, wouJd lake place June
15 several days before com-
missioners are scheduled to re-
view and vote on the development
project.
The 11,000-acre Irvine Coast
area, stretching from Corona del
Mar to Laguna Beach, wouJd
largely be set aside as open
space. according to the Local
Coastal Plan prepared by county
planners and the Irvine Com·
pany.
The Irvine Company. which
owns or has owned most the
c oastal land , is seeking
permission to build 2,000 homes
-many envisioned as multi-acre
estates -several hotels and of·
fices. The firm also plans to build
two roads.
The Irvine Coast area includes
the newly created Crystal Cove
State Park and other land to be
put in the public's hands.
State commissioners originaJ-
ly were to begin review of tbe
project Wednesday during their
San Francisco meeting but con-
tinued the Item on lhe request or
Orange County planners.
County planners asked for the
delay in order to "fine tune"
some elements of the proposal
that were expected to be coo·
trovera1al.
Following the tour or the
coaatal land, comm11Bionera will
meet In Los Angeles on June 16,
17 and 18 . The developmeot
scheme will be discussed and
probably voted on then.
Reagan e ases
penalty tax
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
"marriage penalty" assessed to
more than 15 milhon working
couples would be eased -but
not altogether eliminated -un-
der a compromise tax proposal
endorsed by President Reagan.
The new, bipartisan proposal
also would provide tax relief for
small savers and investors, peo·
pie who want to set money aside
for retirement, heirs of estates.
Americans working abroad,
companies that invest in re-
search and development anti
those who own land that pr6-
duces oil.
These targeted tax cbanffs
are tucked away among Use
broader planks of the program,
which calls for reducing
personal income tax rates by 2S
;:>ercent over three years and
providing business tax relief ln
the form of acce lerated
depreciation schedules.
>--~ --
~mi~'''
AMlo'I s ••• ,, ""
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made from
a totally new MAGIC carpet fiber ... AlsoJI!
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AMOUA •Aamoott1.1uxur1out .
~no aaxonvtnat
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In 20 ~ COlc>ll to ftatt« ell
.)'OUr fumlthlnge.
WltJ; a ICI of Hclnlll ln
hla ¥otoe. Gov. BW :la*&ow had juat told the 111 1raduatH of JU111 Hltb
School in a commencement
) address, "I never araduated
from hi&h school,"
But as the 1raduatH
walked acroq • 1ta1e on ari
athletic field to 1et their
diplomas, 1omeone called
Janltlow's name.
The governor, a surprised
look on hi• face. walked over
to School Board President
Howard Hutchi•••• who puU.ed out an honorary blah
school diploma and handed it
to him.
"Fellow classmates," a
smiling J anklow told the
cheering crowd, "My God, r
got a high school diploma!"
J anklow was handed a
green cap like those worn by
his fellow graduates, and
wore itifor a few minutes.
' t.
CBS newsman Charles
Kuralt1 charaed in February
with <triving under the in·
fluence of alcohol, has been
fined $260.50 in San Mateo
after pleading no contest to a
reduced charge or reckless
driving.
. '
., ..........
Unidentified member of Harvard's 330th graduating cla.!s
replaced her traditional mortar-board regalia with "Mickey
Mouse" hat during commencement ceremonies on the Cam-
bridge, Mau., campus Thursday.
Reading and sex
'second to 7J"
Former Laguna Beach Ci
ty Council candidate and
civic gadfly Maggie Meggs
was among a group of sub-
scribers who commented on
Storer Cable TV's rate hike
request at a council meeting.
But the outspoken Lagunan
approached the council with
a sugeestion rather than a
series of complaints.
She said the cable firm
should offer Laguna Beach
senior citizen customers a
straight SS-a-month charge
for the service.
That would be the best
public relations the company
could gamer, she offered.
She said seniors spend 83.4
percent of their waking hours
watching t.elevision. an inex-
pensive form of entertain·
ment for older folks who
can't get out and about.
And the other 16.6 percent
of tbe time?
''That's spent in readlng
and sex." she snorted.
Former television
anchorman Waller Cronkite,
cited for covering ·'virtually
every major news event" of
the past 30 years, was
awarded an honorary
diploma by the City Universi-
ty of New Yol'k.
Cronkite, wbo retired in -
March as anchorman and
managing editor of the "CBS
Evening News," was pre-
sented an honorary Doctor of
Humane Letters which said
"you have given us not only
the news, but what is behind
and beyond the news
above all, the truth."
Author William Saroyan
left most of his $1.3 million
estate and royalties from his
writings to a foundation set
up in his name.
Saroyan, who died May 18
of cancer at age 72, estimat-
ed his estate was worth
$700.000 in real estate and
$600,000 in personal property
plus royalties.
The author of "The Time of
Your Life" and ''The Human
Comedy," left about $150,000
to be distributed to heirs.
Kuralt did not appear in
court. His plea was entered
by his attorney.
Kuralt, anchorman on the
CBS morning news show,
was c harged with being
drunJt Feb. 8 while driving in
Burlingame on U.S. 101.
Kelly Ogle, deputy district
attorney, said Kurlllt was al·
lowed to accept the reduced
charge during a pre-trial
hearing before Municipal
Court Judge Gregory Jensen.
"This is standard pro-
cedure, and we would do the
same in every case," Ogle
said.
FINED$260.SO
Charles Kuralt
season opens
, nland cities get dose of high temperatures, pollution
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Souihem California 1raf report. Srm, moon, tidf¥
Whal do you llke about the Dally Piiot?
What dOn't you like? Call the number below and
your masare Will be recorded, tranacrtbed an<t
dellvtted to the appropriate editor:.
TM same 24-bour anawertn1 Hn&ce may
be used to record letten to the edltOr oa any
toptc. M81lb0il contrlbUton must lnclUde their
name ind tel..,.._ numbU for •enncathiift. No
cJrclaJMion eaUI, pleaae,
Tell ua what'• on )'OUr mlDd,
................. -"" ....... ., 4 ',t I I SW 4 I I 1W S ti I I SW J 14 1 a SW
.Antennas banned
in beautification
By GLENN 8COTI' °' .. ...., .... ,.... If you think Indochinese ref.
u1ees in Oranee County &et
hiaher than normal welfare
checks, 1peclal low-lntereat
loans, pr,ference for eovern·
ment training and houaln1 -
well, you're wrong.
The retuiees from Vietnam,
CambodJa aod Laos compete for
welfare, loans, Jobs and bouslnk
just like all other U.S. residents,
according to a repQrt filed tbia
week with the Orange County
Board of Supervisors.
Tilled, "Myths Concernin1
Indochinese Refugees," the re·
Port was prepared by the new
refugee affairs manaeement
team formed recently by the
supervisors.
The report contains what It
calls 10 myths -or unfounded
rumors -along with explana-
tions of why they aren't true.
Lois Wax , manager of the ref·
ugee affairs team, said the 10
myths are examples of mi.sin·
formation about the refugees
which has spread throughout the
county.
"We felt that perhaps the
easiest way to clear these up
would be t.o state them pubUc· ly," ahe expJained.
Jn the report, she and ref·
ucee specialist Beverly Hunter
CurUa wrote : "Unfounded
ruqiors exacerbate the problem or community tension and (>re-
judlce."
Among the rumors la the of·
ten-repeated allegations that In·
dochlnese refugees get lar1er
welfare payments than other ap-
plicants.
Although refugees do receive
money from the federally
financed Refugee Resettlement
Program, Ms. Wax said pay-
ments are the sam e amounta re·
cipients get through other P.r<>-
grams such as Aid to Families
with Dependent C hlldren
<AFDC>.
The same is true for loans, 11he
said. Indochinese refugees can
try to qualify for Small Business
Admioistratio"n loans targeted
for economically disadvantaged
business people. But few or those
loans have been granted to
Orange County's Asian popula-
tion, she said.
As it turns out, about the only
advantage the Indochinese re-
eel ve in Oran1e County la
apeclal health 1creenin1 ror
tuberculosis. It'• a perk that
1ome mlaht say la dubious, at
beat.
Ms. Wax said rumor-paHera
are way q(f when they apread
what she called "probably the
most prevalent myth." That is
the comment that the In·
dochinese people like t.o be on
welfare.
False, she says. "They are
very independent and very
motivated."
Rather than perceived u a
group of people bent on taking
advantage of American hand·
outs, refugees should be looked
upon as people who have risked
their lives t.o reach asylum, she
said. Many family members and
friends died m the attempt, she
added.
Another myth worth refuting,
she said, is that the U.S. govern-
ment doles out $5,000 to each ad-
mitted refugee
"Actually," she said, ''the ref-
ugee arrives with a large debt,
having agreed in writing to re-
pay the transportation costs in·
curred to bring him here." ·
Atlanta: hopes dashed
ATLANTA (AP> -Jn a scene
that has been repeated time and
again, this troubled city was
brought t.o the brink of success
in its search for a killer of young
blacks -only lo have its hopes
dampened when another lead
failed to yield an arrest.
Tbe news that a man bad been
taken into custody and was be·
ing questione~ in connection
with some of the 28 slayings was
followed Thursday morning with
a brief statement from a tense
and tired Public Safety Com-
missioner Lee Brown.
·'We have not arrested
anyone, we have no one in
custody," Brown said, facing a
bank of television cameras and
microphones several hours after
the man was released at about
3:30 a.m.
ll was not the first time since
the rant two bodies were dis·
covered in July 1979 that hopes
had been raised of a break in the
case.
Since the beginning of the
year, while the murder toll con-
tinues to mount, tbe investiea-
tion has taken the following
twists and turns:
-In April, Roy Inni•, leader
of a faction of the Congress for
Racial EquJ1lity, a civil rights
croup, said he had a s~ret
female witness who could iden·
tify the killer.
That bubble burst alter a
police investigation of the
purported witness. Brown said
CORE's witness had "no rela·
tionship" to the slayings.
-Earlier that month, FBI
Director William Webster had
announced that Atlanta
authorities had a suspect in "12
to 16 cases and have substantial·
ly solved three or four others."
But Brown said no cases had
been solved.
-ln March, local newspapers
received letters signed by "the
ghost killer," claiming
responsibility for the slayings.
And a minister in nearby
Decatur who had issued a
televised plea for the killer t.o
surrender said he received two
telephone calls from people
claiming responsibility for some
of the slayings. Two men later
were arrested, but poUce said
they were not involved In the
slayings.
Also in March, an Atlanta
man was arrested in Hartford,
Conn., on a fugitive warrant in
connection with an attempted
robbery charge. He was ex-
tradited to Atlanta and ques-
tioned by the task force about
his relationship with one of the
victims. But authorities said
later they did not believe he was
connected with any of the slay-
ings.
The man questioned Wednes·
day and released Thurs day
seemed, for a time, to provide
the most promising lead or all.
Police said the man was stopped
in May near a bridge over the
Chattahoochee River shortly
before the body of the latest vic-
tim was found. Six victims bad
been found in the river.
., ..........
PERSONAL OPINION -Assemblyman Art Agnos, D-San
Francisco, had a succinct view of the proposed $25.8
billion 1981-82 budget passed by the Assembly Thursday.
SAFARI .
SHl.RTS
. \ LONG AND SHORT SLEEVE
' REGULARLY TO 42:50
...
l
............
Unidentified member of Harvard's 330th graduating cla3s
replaced her traditional mortar-board regalia with "Mickey
Mouse" hat during commencement ceremonies on the Cam-
bridge, Mass., campus Thursday.
Reading and sex
'second to TV'
Former Laguna Beach Ci·
' ly Council candidate and
civic gadfly Maggie Meggs
was among a group of sub·
scribers who commented on
Storer Cable TV's rate hike
request at a council meeting
But the outspoken Lagunan
approached the council with
a suggestion rather than a
series of complaints.
She said the cable firm
should offer Laguna Beach
senior citizen customers a
straight SS-a-month charge
for the service.
That would be the best
public relations the company
could gamer, she offered.
She said seniors spend 83 4
percent of their waking hours
watching television, an inex-
pensive form of entertain·
ment for older folks who
can't get out and about.
And the other 16.6 percent
or the time?
"That's ~pent in reading
and sex," she snorted.
Former tel ev ision
anchorman Walter Cronkite,
cited for covering "virtually
every major news event" of
the past 30 years, was
awarded an honorary
diploma by the City Universi·
ty of New Yotk.
Cronkite. who retired in
March as anchorman and
managing editor of the "CBS
Evening News," was pre-
sented an honorary Doctor of
Humane Letters which said
"you have given us not only
the news, but what 1s behind
and beyond the news
above all, the truth."
Author William Saroyan
left most of his $1.3 million
estate and royalties from his
writings to a foundation set up in his name.
Saroyan, who died May 18
of cancer at age 72, estlmat·
ed his estate was worth
$700,000 in real estate and
$600,000 in personal property
plus royalties.
The author of "The Time of
Your Life" and "The Human
Comedy," left about $150,000
to be distributed to heirs.
Wltb 1 ace ot 11w11 ln bit vetce, Gov. Bill .Jaaklow
b ad juat told the 111 •
1ractuat11 of Rt111 Hl1b
Sehool ln 1 commencement
addresa, "J never ll'tduated
from hilh school."
8 ut as the 1raduates
walked across a 1ta1e on ari
athletic field to 1et their
diplomas, someone called
J anltlow's name.
The governor, a 1urpri1ed
look on hi• fa~e. waiked over
to Sch<>C>l Board Pre1ldent
Howard Hutchla11. who
pulled out an honorary high
school diploma and handed it
to him.
"Fellow classmates," a
smiling Janklow told tbe
cheering crowd, "My God, r
got a high school diploma!"
Janklow was handed a
green cap like those worn by
his fellow graduates, and
wore if.I for a few minutes.
CBS newsman Charles
Kuralt, charged in February
with driving under the in·
fluence or alcohol, has been
fined $260.50 in San Mateo
after pleading no contest to a
reduced charge or reckless
driving.
Kuralt did not appear in
court. His plea was entered
by his attorney.
Kuralt, anchorman on the
CBS morning news show,
was charged with being
drunk Feb. & while driving in
Burlingame on U.S. 101.
Kelly Ogle, deputy district
attorney, said Kuralt was al·
lowed to accept the reduced
charge during a pre-trial
hearing before Municipal
Court Judge Gregory Jensen.
"This is standard pro-
cedure, and we would do the
same in every case," Ogle
said .
FINED$260.$0
Charles Kuralt
season opens
What do you like about the Dally Pilot?
Wbat don't you lllte? Call \be number below and
your messaie will be recorded, tranacrlbed and
delMered to the appropriate editor.
The same 2'-hoU.r an1werift1 servlc• may
be used to recOrd letten to the edit« on any
toptc. Malll*l eontrtbutort mutt lnclUdt their
name Ind tele;hOM number for ftrlncauon. No
cltHIMklft calle/ pleue.
Tell ua what'• on JOUr mlnct ..
A~lco
~
Cvtt-1',...,.n ===· .... -MeMtet8eJ
Maul .. 11
Mer!Q
MHICoClty
HHUll St. klttt
T9011<IO-IP11
PAMllM
TOOAV
71 • 11 .,
6S .... .. 6a
70 .• a .. • u
13 6a .. 7' .. .. .. •7 • 11 ., 74 14 11 .. ,,.
71 4'
11 71 .. 11 14 .s
ti 1J '2 u a ta n 11 .. 67
IOI 1S
1' .. ,. S1 61 M n .S4 .. JI .. '71 n 4t
16 ..
IO ,fl
61 ,.
IS ..
'° 10
76 SS .. .. .. .. .. n
• 1S .. n • .,. ,. 1• n 57 " n .. ,, • , .
IS 71 IOo 11
IO $9 • ,, .. ,. .. 11
f'l,.t -6:'9a.m. -1.t ,,,,., ~ 1:9'~m. i.t
---""" •:• ,.,.., 1.4 IWI Mb t • "'"' ,,_ "'1.., s:q a.191. ~Mb 10.11 p.m., ,._ ~l4rl
t :'2•·"'·
Antennas banned
in. beautification
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 5, 1981 s
.No s~ial hent'fits
Report says refugees don't get preferential treatment
By GLENN SCOTT 0( .. ....,,.......,
It you think Indochinese ref·
uaees ln Orange County I~
hl1her than normal welfare
Checks, 1peclal low-interest
loans, pre.fel'ence for eovern-
ment tra{nJng and housing -
well, you're wrong.
The refu1ees from Vietnam,
Cambodla aod Laos compete for
welfare, loans, Jobs and bousink
just like all other U.S. residents,
according to a report filed tb11
weelt with the Orange County
Board of Supervisors.
Titled, "Myths Concernin1
Indochinese Refugees," the re·
port was prepared by the new
refugee affairs management
team formed recently by the
supervisors.
The report contains what it
calls 10 myths -or unfounded
rumors along with explana-
tions of why they aren't true.
Lois Wax, manager of the ref.
ugee affairs team, said the 10
myths are examples of misln·
formation about the refugees
which has spread throughout the
county.
"We felt that perhaps the
easiest way to clear these up
would be to state them public-ly," abe explalned.
In the report, she and ref·
ucee specialist Beverl)j Hunter
Curtis wrote: "Unrounded
rumors exacerbate the problem
of community tension and pre-
judice."
Among the rumors ls the of·
ten-repeated allegations that In·
dochlnese refugees get larger
welfare payments than other ap·
pllcants.
Although refugees do receive money from the federally
financed Refugee Resettlement
Program, Ms . Wax said pay·
ments are the same amounts re-
cipients get thro!-'gh other pro-
grams such as Aid to Families
w i th De pen dent C·h 11 d re n
<AFDC>.
The same is true for loans, ahe
said. Indochinese refugees can
try lo qualify for Small Business
Administratio)l loans targeted
for economically disadvantaged
business people. But few of those
loans have been granted to
Orange County's Asian popula·
lion, she said.
As it turns out, about the only
advantage the Indochinese re-
cehe In Orange County is
1pecial health screeolna for
tuberculosis. U'1 a perk that
1ome might say Is dubious, at
best.
Ms. Wax said rumor-pa11era
are way o!f when they 1pread
what she called "probably the
mo$t prevalent myth." That is
the comment that the lo·
dochinese people like to be on
welfare.
False, she says. "They are
very independent and very
motivated."
Rather than perceived u a
group of people bent on taking
advantage of American hand·
outs, refuiees should be looked
upon as 'people who have risked
their lives to reach asylum, she
said. Many family members and
fri4!nds died in the attempt, sbe
added.
Another myth worth refuting,
she said, is that the U.S. govern·
ment doles out $5,000 to each ad-
mitted refugee
.. Actually," s he said, ··the ref·
ugee arrives with a large debt,
having agreed In writing to re·
pay the transportation costs in·
curred to bring him here."
Atlanta: hopes dashed
ATLANTA <AP) -In a scene
that has been repeated time and
again, this troubled city was
brought to the brink of success
iri lts search for a killer of young
blacks -o9ly to have its hopes
dampened when another lead
failed to yield an arrest.
The news that a man had been
taken into custody and was be·
ing questionep in connection
with some of the 28 slayings was
followed Thursday morning with
a brief statement from a tense
and tired Public Safety Com·
missioner Lee Brown.
'·We have not arrested
anyone, we have no one in
custody," Brown said, facing a
bank of television cameras and
microphones several hours after
the man was released at about
3:30 a.m.
lt was not the first time since
the fint two bodies were dis·
covered in July 1979 that hopes
had been raised of a break in the
case.
Since the beginning of the
year, while the murder toll con-
tinues to mount, the investi1a·
lion has taken the following
twists and turns:
-In April, Roy Innis, leader
of a faction of the Congress for
Racial EqUllllty, a civU rights
group, said he bad a secret
female witness who could iden·
tify the killer.
That bubble burst aft~r a
police investigation of the
purported witness. Brown said
CORE's witness bad "no rela·
lions hip" lo the slayings.
-Earlier that month, FBI
Director William Webster had
announced that Atlanta
authorities had a suspect in "12
to 16 cases and have substantial·
ly solved three or four others."
But Brown said no cases had
been solved.
-In March, local newspapers
received letters signed by "the
ghost killer ," cla iming
responsibility for the slayings.
And a minister in nearby
Decatur who had issued a
televised plea for the killer to
surrender said he received two
telephone calls from people
claiming responsibility for some
of the slayings. Two men later
were arrested. but police said
they were not involved in the
slayings.
Also in March, an Atlanta
man was arrested in Hartford.
Conn., on a fugitive warrant in
connection with an attempted
robbery charge. He was ex-
tradited lo Atlanta and ques-
tioned by the task force about
his relationship with one of the
victims. But authorities said
later they did not believe he was
connected with any of the slay-
ings.
The man questioned Wednes-
day and released Thurs day
seemed, for a time, to provide
the most promising lead of all.
Police said the man was stopped
in May near a bridge over the
Chattahoochee River shortly
before the body of the latest vie·
tim was found. Six victims bad
been found in the river.
..........
PERSONAL OPINION -Assemblyman Art Agnos, D·San
Francisco, had a succinct view of the proposed $25.8
billion 1981-82 budget passed by the Assembly Thursday.
SAFARI • •
SHl'RTS
. ' LONG ANO SHORT SLEEVE
REGULARLY TO 42.50
FATHER'S ~DAY SPECIAL
s1299 .
SOLID COLORS ONLV
~· .
W ASlllNGTON <AP> -FUen
and d'dtMt creW1ne.D <* tbe carrier Nlmlt& had worked near·
ly 14 hours a day for almOlt two
week• when a radar-Jaaun.lq
plaH tlammed into tbe deck
and ' killed 1' people, Navy of.
ficlala 1a1d.
Atrmea apent about four houri
a da1 ftJins and uod>er elpt to
ten boura dally at other tNks
a board 1illp, offlclala aald
Tbu~.
They decllned to discuss any
1peciflca reaardlna the air crew
wbo flew the EA·6B which
lkldded aCJ'OM the f\l&bt deck
l11t wHk, kllllD8 all three
llarlne f.1Mrl and ll Navy men
on deck.
But tbey 111d the poulbUltY
that f_ausue may have bMii a coabibutt.nC uuae probablY1.Wtll
be cooatdered by inveaU1atot1.
Commander James H.,.. a Navy 1pokesman, Hid'. tbai
Iona work boun "mo.t certain·
ly" are common when any car·
rier ii enaaeed in ru1bt opera·
lions at sea.
Accordln1 to Harneaa, the
Nlmill launched and recovered
plu11 ~utnUy ln both day
aod ~'· ualnhl1 dt1rlQ& 12
daya ~ tbe dlaut.roua cl'Mb
off Jacuooville, Fla.
· 1. addlUoo to the 1' dead. 41
men were ir:Uured aQd JO planet
destroyed or damals.cl.
Lite all U.S. carriers, ff..,..
Hid, the Nlmit& bu only ODe
ntabt deck crew. Therefore, ht
Hid, "they wor.ked all tbrouth day and nig,bt ru1ht operat1Gda ...
Other members of the carrier
crew. handllnt such duties Al
plane maintenance and runnlnt
of the ship, also put ln lon1
boura.
Stagehand guilty
in Met murder
In peacetime, Navy abipe are
manned below full wartime
strength. The Nimitz ls no ex-
ception, with about S,500 sailors
and air·relat.ed penonnel com-
pared with the 6,280 men the
ship wpuld carry in a war.
NEW YORK <AP> -Former
Metropolitan Opera staaehand
Cral1 Crimmins bu been found
illilty ol felony murder in the
6acik1ta1e tUUn1 of violinist
Helen Hapies Mlntlb last July.
Tbe M of seven women and
five mtm acquitted him on a
cbar1e ol int.enUonal murder.
Jurors befan deUberatlnt the c11e at m d·day Wednesday
after recetvlDa letal imtructfon
from Actine Supreme Court
Justice Richard Denser.
.Jury fOC'ewoman Christine
Overton read the verdict 'lbun-
day and Crimmins' relatives
eaaped when she said "not lull·
ty'' on tbe first count of inten-
tional murder.
When 1be said panelists found
him "eullty" of felony murder,
relatives collapsed into each
others' arms.
The 22-year-old staeehand wu
accused of the murder last July
23 of Mn. Mintlb, 31, a free-
lance musician performlne with
the Berlin Ballet at the opera
-.. in Uncoln Ceoter.
She was tut seen durlDg an ln·
terJDi.Woo that night. Her nude,
bouad '°d 1a11ed body was
fOW\d the next day. Accordine to
testimony at the trial, she wu
kicked, alive, down a three-story
airsbaft from the roof, dyln1
1 from the fall.
Felony murder ls a killing
commltted during· commisaion
of a crime or duriq n.icht af.
terwud. 1be staceband faces a
muimum of 25 years to life in
priaon.
Crimmins, a blth·school
dropout employed ~' a
staeeballd at the opera house,
waa arrested Aug. 30 after be had
been questioned by deteetlves
several times durtn1 a police in·
veattaatioa.
Before bia arrest, he wu said
to have confessed to forcin1
Mrs. Mlntib off a bacbtage
elevator and later killing her.
Tbroqhout the trial, those ad·
missions and police behavior in
obtaininl them, ~re in dispute.
Defense lawier Lawrence
• Autol~ , ;!-:• Ouoces By Phone ......... .. ............... ,, .......... c.... .....
ca11 u2-5171. Pu1 a tewword•
to work tor vou.
Hocbbelser contended Crimmins
ia a slow-wilted, 1u11estlble ln~
dlvidual whole confession 'tVU coerced by detectives wbo "put
worch in his mouth."
The six-page "confession,"
which was written in longhand
by a deteeUve dw1Da a private
conference, had been denounced
by tbedefense as "phony."
A11l1tant District Attorney
Ro1er Hayes, in bis three-hour
sulDmadoa.tbla week, called the
confeaaton .. very 1tron1. very
powerful and very compelllDg
evidence.'·
The prosec\ltor said the ad·
mf11tooa were made voluntarily
by Crimmins, who wanted to
pur_ge himself of "&ullt."
Hayes challenged jurors to
"throw the case out" if they
beUeved the defense contention
that police lied when they said
Crimmins' confession was
voluntary.
The loot hours spent by the
Nim{t.z crew were cited earlier
this week by Maj. Gen. R. Dean
Tice in arguiDg before Coneress
for a sipiilicant military pay
raise.
Navy officials have claimed
that substand~rd pay and lone
overseas deployments are
responsible for chronic
abortaeee of skilled and veteran
officers and petty officers.
Admiral Thomas Hayward,
Cblel o( Naval Operations,
teatlfied earlier tbl1 year that
''tbe Navy's readi.nesa today is
the lowest I have seen durint
my naval career, due almoet en·
tirely to our seriou and contlnu·
in& sborta1es" of such offlcen
and non-commissioned officers.
Vice admiral Landow W.
Zeeb, the Navy's manpower
chief, spoke of ''the unique and arduous aspects of Navy life" ln
bis pitch for what he called ade·
quate compensation.
Suspect captured
in biggest robbery
URBAND~E, Iowa (AP> -A man souaht for questioning
in the biggest bank robbery in u .s. history -$3.3 milllQD -
was captured after a high-speed
chase through Urbandale.
Do~ Bruce Fenimore, 34,
who is under indictment in
two jewelry store robberies in
Arizona and California, was
caught thls week and appeared
in U.S. District Court.
He WU arraigned ln CODDeC·
lion with tbe two jewelry rob-
beries and charged with two
counts al conspiracy. two counts
of interstate transportation of
stolen property, one count of be·
ing a felon in possession of a
firearm and one count of recelv·
ing and concealing stolen &oocls.
He pleaded innocent to the silt
federal charges and wu ordered
held without bail.
U.S. Attorney Roxanne Coa.lin
said Fenimore "is a suspect in
another major bank robbery in
Tucson." ·
The FBI had sought Fenimore
and two other Dea Moines men
for questioning tn tbe U .3
million holdup April 22 of the
First National bank of Arizona
branch in Tucson -the largest
amount of cash ever taken in a
U.S. bank robbery.
Fenimore , David Lee
Grandstaff, 38, and Douglas
Wayne Brown, 3', were indicted
last August on charges of con-
spiracy and disposing of stolen
1oods taken in the robbery May
22, 1980, of $1.5 million in
jewelry from G. Darrell OIHn
Jewell in Phoenix.
S<XJTH CQ\ST PLAZA
Tea Daadng Every Sanday
JEWEL COUR.T
All SamJHr long 1:30 to '=30
•
MINISTRY • •
SALVAGE JOB -Members of Woody
Hinkhouse family of Thornton, Colo. rum·
mage through their trailer, which was flipped
onto its top by one of at least a dozen
...............
tornadoes that hit Denver. One person was
killed and at least 42 injured by the twisters
this week.
Reagan splits Democrau
Popular president wooing conservatives to cause
By WALTER R. MEARS aJ~owu r 1
WASHINGTON -Pushing for
pasaaae of President Reagan's
budget and ta.x pro1rams. ad·
ministration strategists are try.
in1 to divide Democrats -
which isn't too difficult these
days -and write new rules for
Coneress.
So far, the strategy is succeed-
ing. But It ii not without risk, on
both froots.
Congressional leaders never
have taken kindly to admlniltra·
tion1 that tried to instruct them
on detailed procedures for the
conduct of House and Senate
business. It's enough that the
White House is forever telling
them what they should do -
they don't like being told bow as
well.
In another time, the efforts of
on& party to split tbe ranks of
the other could well have
boomeranged so u to produce
unity, or the appearance ol it.
But that reckons without
Reagan's hilh·rldlnl popularity,
and his success lD wooln& con·
servative Democrats to bis
economic cause.
And in bia quest for consensus
terms on a multiyear tax cut,
Reagan is making both those ad·
vantages count.
The question of compromile
on bis three-year, 30 percent tax
-cut has been perklD& for week.a.
At first, Reagan said no, be
would stand on his ori&inal pro-
posal. Then the admtniatration
said maybe. Then It offered to ·
NEWS ANALYSIS
accept a slightly smaller lax cut
and to delay the effective date.
When that gesture failed, the
administration succeeded in
maneuvering ~ Democrats in·
to a position ln which they had to
struggle to compromise among
themselves.
Democrats on the House Ways
and Meana Committee agreed
tbia week to draft a two-year tax
cut, with a 5 percent reduction
effective Oct. 1 and another 10
percent on July 1, 1982.
The White House promptly
said that wasn't good enough
and forecast that a building
coalition would attract
Democrats as well as
Republicans to the Re agan
formula.
So the timing, terms and dura-
tion of a tax cut are still at issue.
And the administration still is
p~inting to Democratic
divisions.
The administration would like
a compromise tax bill preserv-
ing the basic elements of the
president's proposal, preferably
with the support of top
Democratic tax-writers in the
House. That would speed the
process of passage. But if that
isn't available, Democratic dis·
unity on tues won •t break any
hearts at the White House.
The tax bill must ori&inate ln
the House. But it cab be rewrit·
ten when it reaches the
Republican Senate.
On the spending front, budget
director David A. Stockman ii ·
getline into the fine print of
legislative procedures ln de·
manding that Congress stick
with the $36 billion ln budget
cuts already approved in out-
line.
Stockman, who served two
terms in the l{ouse before join·
ing the administration, said it is
essential that the spending bill
be considered under a closed
rule. That would mean no
amendments -at least no sur-
prise amendments -could be
offered on the House floor.
That would bar roll call voi.s
on the restoration of funds for
politically attractive programs
facing the budget knife. Normai·
ly, even a closed rule leaves
room for an amendment or two
to be presented by the opposi-
tion.
But Stockman said if the door
were opened to a limited
number of amendments, it
would be open too wide. He said
that could lead to five or 15 or 30
attempts b> add funds on the
House floor.
House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill Jr. said be thinks there
should be slx, perhaps 12 amend·
ment votes on such items as col-
1 e g e student loans, school
lunches and health programs.
Even conservative con -
gressmen, dedicat.ed to cutting
the budget total, could ha-<e
trouble recording votes aeainat
some of tbo!'e items.
-· ----------·
four private. world life at Park Newport is a com-•
blnatlon of privacy when you I
want it. social goings-on when
you'r• in the mood. and exhil-
arating recreation when you '
feel rusty. 1 • of pleasure
in the middle of Newport Beach. Here Is the ultimate In care-
tree Newport Beach living aur· 1
rounded by ~convenience. 1
Paff( Newport residents NIYtt a gourmet marf(et, a beauty anop
and dry cleaner Just steps away from their apartment. There j
are 8 llghted tennis courts, 7 poota and a 5750.000 Spa and
athletic club. '" I
Fashion laland's fabulous shoPt are fuat acrou the way. New. t
pOrt'a year-round attraction•. eandy beachee, Pl ... ure boet· i·
ing. deep aea fiahlng, plua theetera. mu.euma and hundredl
of fine rettaurantt. All: right here.
Right here beside Park Newpe>rt. Why don't YoU vitit our
.Rental Office and ... If all thfl len't Ju.t what you'Ve been
tOoklng for. On Jambofff at Sen Joaquin Hiiie Roacl le ..
pnone ('714} 8«-1900.
~PAATMENTS IT WNHOMES F.ROM '510.00 JO 11000.00
_____ ,___ ---
Air traffic
controller's
j>rank studied
,JI
i>·· OAKLAND (AP) -An air
tralftc CCJOtroller at Oakland In·
ternational Airport may face
disciplinary cbaraes after he al·
legedly played a prank on a
fellow worker by feedine useless
data into a traffic control com·
l>uter. ·
• Officials at the Bay Terminal
Radar Approach Control facility
said the stunt posed no danger to
aircraft safety.
Supervisor Vlncent J. Mellone
of the approach control facility
, .-aid the prankster, whose name
;:.was not released, bad been tem·
.. porarily relieved of duty and
w aa now back on the job pendlne
• final disciplinary action.
0
.SPC4 rejects
:dog fighter
I:
l SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Tbe
' head of the local Society for the
Prevention of Cruelty to
·•-Animals bas refused to let the
owner of a fighting dog put in SO
<!hours of work as ordered by a
•San Diego judge. ·
• Richard Avemino, president
of the city's SPCA, called the
~court order "an insult to our
Vt>lunteers and staff."
"Under no circumstances will
a dog fighter who trains animals
•to be vicious, deadly weapom,
owbo gets perverse pleuure from
1iwatcbin1 does mutilate one
hanother ... be 1ranted access to
oibe animals in our care," said
·Avenzino in a letter mailed to
San Diego County Superior ·court Judge James Malku.
County wbef9 8tHJe worked ., a 1upervlloc.
In ua ..... .w prOcedure fGr en
emp~ beartaf before the
Callforma 80ard o Penonnel,
Steele bi'ouabt in psycboloCllU
and p&ycblatrilta to support bis
caae W-..ct91 that be auttend
"poat·traumaUe 1trea1 ayn·
drome" caUMd by the Vietawn
war and did not take the mooey
for personal 1ain.
"Hts taldne of money lm·
preaaes me u a tborou•hly irra·
tlonal act," paycblatriat, Dr.
H.R . !Connoe, who specializes in
treatio1 Vietnam veterans,
testified.
''The amount wu small, the
possibility of detection clOM to
100 perceit. He wu mentally
dlsturbed and, at the time, the
d isturbance wu beio1 ex·
acerbated by the boata1es lo
Iran, their releue especially.''
Kormoe lald.
Steele, who said be bad never
been fired from a Job or coaault·
eel • peycbiatrlst unW recently,
aald be be1an to overcbaree fea •
when the hostages returned r
from Iran.
"I opened up the office one
mornt.ns in Fortuna," Steele
sald. "The first customer
st.ej>.,,a up to the table and I
said $4.25 Instead of $3.25. I've
tried to figure it out for a long
time," be said, hia voice quak·
log.
Investigators followed up the
customer complaints and Steele
was fired .
"When my dismisaal came,
the only thing I could see .to do
was to kill myself. I disgraced
the department, my wife and
myself," be said.
Steele described his 180 days
ol a ctive combat duty in Viel·
nam after hf enlisted in the
Army in 1987. He recalled bow
friends were killed before his
eyes, bow children taunted him
as a murderer when be returned
to tlpe United States, and be re-
called bia an~er and frustration
over the heroes welcome tbe
U .S.1 hostages received when
they returned from lran in
January.
Steele said he always "loved "
the ~otor vehicle department.
"It's ail I wanted to do," be said. \,I tboupt of it as a big
machine and I wanted to make it
more ttumane, to be nicer to .,,O·
pie." .
But .Harry Towne, department
counsel. said Steele's theft gave
the government a bad image.
"He',s our man, he's our
person out-there," Towne said of
deparlll$elll workers.
•ta.stying
• auylcs
160<45 Bolsa Chica, Corner
Bolsa Chica & Edinger
,._~~~~C••••~•~•1-.....;.1.,.~=~·~ .. ..;...11~-~C~•Mlf .. O••~~__,
Orange CoMt OAIL V PILOT/Friday, Junt 5, 1981 s
ENGLISH, PLEASE -A group called Save
ESOL (English for Speakers of Other
Languages) Committee display signs at the
A
Capitol in Sacramento, calling on lawmakers to
provide more funds for English classes in adult
education programs.
. · ...
l VII l
BERKBLEY <AP-> ..i. Tb'
leader of, the National Soeiallst
1 White Workers Party ·••ta be baa received a surrimool onSer·
· inl the part)I to vaieate i" bead·
qUartera, IHkler H.U'9 "ltbbl five
days. ')t1
The Alameda Coa.nty1 SOperior
Court summons wu bdtblted by
William Gobblns, the new'Wner
of the eight·unit, comrri.reiaUy
1:oned building in whlob1 t~ par·
ty ls headquartered, Allen Vin·
cent said . .,. •
Attomel Lelan<\~•lman, r~preaentfa1 the J ~her,
said the eviction a notbins to
do with Vinceni political b~liers ~~noted atsae old
owner of the bull g il9' has
been evicted. The other tp\its ln
the building already were va·
c•nt wbe~ J,be bulldiog .changed
. bandsl'be Hid.
"My eviction ilh't based on
the fact that he'1 a rne.naber of
the Nazi Party -not. that I'd
hesitate to do it for that ~NOO."
said Spieeelman. "M)I eviction
is based on the fad tbat be
doesn't belong ther~" . . .
Vincent seid he holds •··lOQI· term lease on the property and
doesn't intend to leave,
"I'm going to try t.o s~legaJ
counsel, bl.at, its ahnQst impossl·
ble to Jet anyone to repcesent
the Nazi party," $ald, Vincent.
''I'm probably goh\&I to,w,.u. and
see what happens, whether they
will try to evict me pi»'slcally."
Father reunited with his 'hidden ' kids
SAN FRANCISCO CAP>
Two children taken into the
Federal Witness Protection Pro-
gram with their mother were re-
turned to the custody of their
father who searched for them 20
months and sued the govern-
ment to get them back.
turned out to see them reunit·
ed," Margolin said, "and there
wasn't a dry eye in the place -
certainly not mine."
The children disappeared Aug.
24, 1979 while playing in their
grandmother's front yard In
Rlcbmood.
Margolin said . In mid·1980 ,
Salmeron was dunned by the
Contra Costa County district at·
torney's offi~ for non-payment
of child support to his wire -
even though she bad no legal
claim to custody of Bobby and
Melissa and Salmeron bad no
idea where she was.
' Salmeron· filed guit, ip U.S.
District Court in Janu'aey after
turning to the American' Civil
Libe rties Union artd -obtal'ning
Margolin as bis reptesentative.
I '-f"t r
The government agreed to re·
turn the eblldren t>li condition
that Salmeron drop 'hl!l l'~~t. Melissa and Bobby Salmeron,
both ll, were reunited W edoes·
day with their father, Robert
Salmeron. an oil company
worker from nearby Richmond.
The children bad no records of
school attendaJlce or medical
and dental treatment, 1aid
Salmeron's attorney, Ephraim
Margolin. He aald the two U.S.
marshals who escorted the
Salmeron learned that hi•
former wife, Susan, had been
living with Mlkel Homer Jen·
nJnas, an lnlormer in a govern-
ment Heth Angela motorcycle
club cue. and bad been ad· milted to the witness protection
program. She bad beerY given a
new identity and moved out or
California and the children ap. parenUy were enrolled in the
pro1ram as well, Margolin said.
Bill ope n s returns
. children to bis office bad no
papers to show they had been of.
ficially returned to their father's
custody.
•·Everybody in the office
Salmeron went to the U.S. al·
torney's office in an effort to
locate them , but got the
bureaucratic runaround,
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Tbe
Senate bu approved a measure
.. which would allow judges to in·
spect an individual's income tax
return to determine whether
support paymenu to a former
spouse should be increased.
A 21..-11 vote sent SB1199 by
Sen. Milton Marks, R-San Fran-
cisco. to the Assembly over pro-
SHORTS SALE --13.00 to ~19 .~00 ::? .
• To look your best this summer, take a shOit trip to N-M Juniors.
tests of some lawmakers• that
the bill would set • precedent
which would improperly •Opell
confidential tax returns for
numerous other purposes:
"Once you open tax returns
for support proceedings, how do
you stop opening them for other
purposes,·· said Sen. John
Schmit&, R,·Corona del Har~ 1
.. ,, ....... ".
' ..... ,/*.". ... ,, ... . '. '
....... f .. ;·· ;, ... ... ".~'' : • r .J.tJ
J
, .... ti.;. , ;. : --
I I •
New childre~'s home.
needs public support
"I never miss a chance to
plug this project," commented
Oranae County Superior Court
,Judge Byron McMillan in urging
.support before a battery of re-
porters and television cameras
tor Orangewood, the proposed
new home for Oranee County's
abandoned, battered and
otherwise homeless children.
McMillan's unscheduled re-
mark came at the conclusion of a
hearing this week on custody of a
seven-week-0ld baby its father is
alleged to have attempted to sell
at a Mission Viejo restaurant.
The inf ant now is being held
in the nursery of the existing
Albert Sitton Home in Orange.
There is room for 88 children at
the home; there were 93 there as
of Thursday.
Orangewood would replace
the overcrowded Sitton home. At
an estimated cost of $6 million,
Orangewood is an ambitious
project involving both the public
and private sectors. The county ii
providing the land -at the old
Horace Greeley School slte in
Orange. Money to build the f acili·
ty will come largely from . the
community.
The Junior League of
Newport Harbor has put up a
"challenge" grant of $117,000.
More than $50,000 has been raised
toward the amount, despite the
fact the formal fund-raising cam-
paign has yet to get under way.
Under way or not,
Orangewood is a deserving proj·
ect. We echo McMillan's com·
ments that the project deserves
broad public support.
Gas nozzles do 'help
The motoring public has had
good reason to feel unhappy about
the new gasoline vapor control
nozzles. Most are cumbersome to
handle, some splash gas, and it's
been established that certain
models can recycle gas -which
you' re paying for -back into the
station'sstoragetank.
Just last week the Daily Pilot
noted these problems and urged
greater effort to protect
consumers who are being
victimized by them.
But the South Coast Air
Quality Management District is
urging us not to give up on the
program-and for good reason.
Through some 98,000 special
nozzles the vapor recovery
program, says the district, has
resulted in recapturing 95 percent
of hydrocarbon emissions that
previously wandered off into the
atmosphere during refueling.
That adds up to 65 tons of
hydrocarbons a day, or about
24,000tonsayear.
If those figures don't mean
anything, compare them with the
18,000 tons of hydrocarbons
emitted annually by the district's
10 top sources of air pollution -
seven oil refineries, a power plant,
a steel mill and an auto assembly
plant. And these are plants
already operating under strict
smog control conditions.
District spokesmen agree
there's room for plenty of
improvement in design of the
vapor recovery nozzles, but so far
they've received only 461
complaints about them in the past
12 months. Only 19 percent of the
98,000 in use are of the design that
has resulted in gasoline
recirculation. Five other designs
apparently avoid that problem,
although some result in spillage if
the nozzle is pulled out of the tank
before it has fully drained.
The major problem ,
according to the experts, is
•'topping off" which results in
repeated clicking of the shut-of(
valve, wears out the nozzle and can
cause resiphoninJZ.
The AQMD-is planning a
public education program to help
people operate the nozzles
properly. And it's probably worth
paying attention because, in
addition to removing potentially
poisonous fumes from the air we
breathe, the vapor recovery
program in the South Coast basin
currently is recovering enough
hydrocarbon vapors to reclaim
600,000gallonsof gas each month.
Solet'snot give up just yet.
An error of judgment
Although we applauded the
issuance of a federal court
injunction to delay the sale of 32
off shore oil leases in response to
suits flied by Gov. Brown and
enviroomental groups, it is clear
the judge who granted the
injunction should have
disqualified herself when the suits
reached her court.
'lbe twin lawsuits filed against
Interior Secretary James Watt
seek more state participation in
environmental studies of the
prop()Hd oil explorations prior to
the leasesales.
Bids have been opened, but the
injunction issued by U.S. District
Judge Marlana Pfaelzerwilldelay
actual sales pending a July
heariJtg on the suits.
Unfortunately, records of the
Fair Political Practices
Commission show that Judge
Pfaelzer was a senior partner in a
•
law firm that contributed $18,865 to
Brown's 1978 gubernatorial
campaign.
Additionally, the judge
admits, she and her husband made
personal contributions to Brown's
1974 and 1978 campaigns and she
also served as treasurer of
Brown's 1976 presidential
campaign.. ·
She was appointed to the
federal court by President Carter
and has not been involved in
political activities since takln& the
bench, Judge Pf aelzer says.
It is her contention that there
is no conflict of interest ln her
handling of the current lawsuits.
Be that as it may, she ia a personal
friend of one of the litigants and as
such she should have offered to
step down.
Infailingtodososhebascasta
shadow on an issue of great
significance to the state.
Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex-
pressed on tnls page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit-
ed. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Box J.560, G:osta Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714)
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd I Away from it all
I
Q. J'm thinking about retirin1 to
aome vill•I• in the U.S.A. u far
from the big cltiee '' I can 1et. Any
au11estiom? Jc . How about the bu1tlln1
metropolis of Ekalaka, populaUon
607? lt'a in Carter County at the
furthermost IOUtbeut corner ot Mon·
tana. With the nearest paved road r7
mile• away. Local Joke refen to It H
the oaly town in the country wMre
you can drive ln but have to back out.
Q Wbat do car 1ale1men mean
by "lowball" and "bl1hball"?
A. Lowball ll • price q\ICMtloo
Ht low to interest • proepeet. 1t•1
tbtn Jacked up durlnt the deal.
H11bball ll a hleh otter on a trade·ln.
ORANGE COAST If Pilat
It's then whittled down during tbe
pltc:h.
Q. How much would it co.t in
parta and labor to replace a totalJed
$6,000 compact car?
A. About $24,000 now.
Tbe tonier tbe b'11band1 and
wlves live to1ether, the tart.her apart
they like to be when they 11ffp,
Generally, 1enerally. A bed
manufacturer hired a reaeucb flnn
to come up with that dubtoua revela-
tion.
Q. What country h11 th• hJibest
cllvorce rate•
A. The Soviet Un.ton. The Uatted
States •• HCond.
0 o a o uaozo o; oz z ca q ewe a .. . . . .. ..
'Loyalty' tests modified
WASHINGTON -Pruident
Reagan's doctrfnaire conservative sup-
porters will be surprised to learn that
the White House ls practicing a kind of
political "reverse discrimination."
Political loyalty tests apparently have
been relaxed in the case of minority
candidates for top jobs.
The idea of boosting an administra·
lion '1 lmaee by seekine out women and
minority nominees is nothing new, of
course. In bia recently published
memoir ot Cabinet We under Jimmy
Carter. Joseph Califano claims that
Carter ordered that all incompetents be
weeded out of the government -with
the exception of women and minorities.
THE REAGAN White House hasn't
gone that far. But its pollcy on minority
appointments was explained by Vice
President Bush at the April 2 Cabinet
meeting three days after Reagan was
shot. Bush's remarks behind closed
doors were reported in a private memo
to Energy Secretary James Edwards by
the.man who sat in for him, W. Kenneth
Davis, the deputy designate. The memo
has been reviewed by my associate Jack Mitchell.
"The vice president . . . stressed the
fact that the president had pledged to
incorporate a substantial number of
minority people at the top level in the
new government," Davis reported.
"The vice president said that we were
clearly not doing the job we had prom-
ised to do and that we needed to do a
lot better for the remaining jobs. The
point was raised that many or the
minority candidates cannot pass the
political tests. The vice president said
JICI AllllAI
that the tests were being modified in the
case of minority candidates. . . . "
Davis had other news from the
Cabinet meeting. "The vice president
mentioned that there were a lot of busi-
ness people coming In with special in· ,
terests seeking to eet special con·
cenlons with respect to taxes and
thought this was quite unfortunate and
that the members of the Cabinet should
do what they could to resist this type of
pressure and counteract it." Davis
wrote.
I
WHAT MAKES this particularly ID·
teresting is that a top corporation ex·
ecutive was sitting in on that very
Cabinet meeting. It was Davis himself.
At the time, he was still a vice presidtnt
of Bechtel Power Corp .. which bas
more than $100 million worth of energy-
related federal contracts.
After bis appointment as Edwards'
deputy, but before his confirmation by
the Senate, Davis assumed his duties atl
DOE. The propriety of allowing aJ
private corporation executive to run a
federal agency Is questionable when the
executive's company is heavily in·
volved in projects of sending a cor.
porate bigshot to sit in on a meeting ot
the supreme policy.making body i~
the federal government. •
DA VIS' VIEWS on a potential conflict~
of interest between his· corporate pas,
and his government position were sub-
sequently made clear during his con-
firmation proceedings. He outragedl
Senate investigators by asking for at
waiver that would permit him to take•
an a ctive part in DOE policy dec1sionsl
affecting Bechtel. A compromise wasi
worked out. and he was eventuaUy con •
firmed.
Footnote: Davis was unavailable for
comm ent. but a DOE s pokesman
stressed that Davis merely ··sat an" for
Edwards at the Cabinet meeting, but
did not otherwise participate
A Bush spokesman acknowledge~ that progress on minority appointment
was of concern to both Reagan an
Bush. and that the While House ha
hired aides to recruit women. blacks
and other minorities to the administra.
lion. \
How come politicians never strike?
You hate to giggle add laugh and
make jokes about something that some-
one else thinks is serious, but I can't
keep a straight face when I read about a
strike by baseball players. A strike
seem•about as far away from playtn1 a
game for fun as you can 1et, ancl th.at'•
the complaint many of ua have •••inst
sporta tbele daya. They've 1otten too
far away from the fun.
I'm not clear what the llsue la and t
wouldn't pretend to say whether I think
the owners or the player• are ritbt; all
I know ia, it strikes me runny.
down with some dumb sign over ber
bead, sbouting slogans. If I were a pupil
and saw my teacher marching on a
picket line, it wou)Ji change my whole
atUtude toward class.
WE'BE ALL lllRATIONAL wbeo it
comes to strikes. Row we feel about any
strike we read about depend.6 more on
AllY RlllHY IT'S INTERESTING bow each of us
reacta to a strike. We're all used to
strlkes by coal mlnera, auto work.en bow it affect.I us personally than it de-
and newspapen, and even tbouih we pends on the justice or the strikers'
know they'd all be matln1 $.1.25 an hour cause. ii they had never 1one on atrtke, we're f'or example, DO matter what the
not usually on their aide when they 10 situation t. I never aet used to a strike
they're already so 1rossly overpHld and
that their working conditions and fringe
benefits are so ridiculously good that1 they have no reason to. Most people re :
sent striking policemen and,1
schoolteachers as I do, but I think most
ot us would be amused to see our politi·
clans strike. It would be fun to see ii our.
world were any worse without them fori
a few weeks. 1
The truth about why politicians don't '. slrik~ ,is not they are overpaid, though. {
The truth is many of them like working:
too bard. The average mayor of the t
averaee town often makes less than the I
high school principal. He or she gets to !
work at 8 in the morning and doesn'tl
quit until that last appearance at the
last fund-raising dinner that evening. ·
The Army general doesn't like being a j
general because of the money ; be likes f
the power. ,
out. I'm a workin1 penon. b1 wblcb I by firemen or policemetl. It seems
mean I have no way of maki.Df money wrone for tbe police to co on a strike. THAT'S WHAT kef'ps politicians go· f
except by 1ellln1 what I produee myself They repreeent o.rder in any society and ing, too. The average worker may be
with my own labor, and yet I usuallJ a strike la •deliberately disorderly af-ma1tln1 more money than the mayor:l
find myself afainst the worldn1~an in fair. A tiood ~op is part lawyer, part bui be doesn't have any power and1 a strike situation. What'• '1m>lll with doctor, part toldler and part polltlcian. that's what bugs him and accounts fo~
me, anyhow? It's unfair but I expect the cop to be a the S,000 strikes we have in Americ~
There are some strikes I never eet saint, too. every year. I
used to. Teachers have as much right to THERE'S ONLY one large body of I can't explain why baseball pla!'er~
make a good living aa anyone, but I workers in this country that has never would strike. They have both power and
bate to see them on strike. It seems so gone out on strike. I speak of poUti-money. I'm not even sure why l find a!
unbecoming and unteacberlike to see an clans. Why haven't politlclani. ever strike by them so funny. I think it has td
arithmetic teacher marching up and struck? We can only conclude Ulat do with the play on words.
Country folk can teach us a thing or two ,
legislature to raise faculty salaries. ThJ
farm bloc couldn't see why the stat4
abould pay college profQIOf'S so muct\
money Just for talkln1 12 to 1' how-a 4
week. The faculty reps made nj headway unW one who'd had farrnin
experience took the floor
"Gentlemen," he told the ruatt
lawmakers, "a colle1e professor is a lit
tie llke a bull. It's not the amount o
time he spends. lt11 the lmPortance
what he does." They tot the raise.
City folk are fond or making fun out or
rural habits and manner•. but it ls my
impression ovet the yean that rural
people find more quietly sardonic
humor in the attitudes and antics or the
city folk. A farmer may be out or place
the next field, •·Hey, ls Utla bull over
here safe?" "Well," said the farmer,
"he's a dem sight safer'n you are."
Easy does it here. both verbally and
otherwise. Emerson lon1 a10 told of vii·
ltinll a farm one day and was amused to
aee two clty boys trylne to put a calf ln
the barn; each shoved and fulled to no
avail. Finally a far~ I rl nearby
smiled, walked over, put her middle
ftn1er ln the calf's mot.Ith. and 1entl~
led tt into t.M barn.
THE ONL V WAY TO persuade peoplt
of the soil Is to talk tiir 1anaua1e. A colleaie preaident I kn wu apeakint
at a conference on " he Place ol the
HumanlUes in Educatl n.'' The ereced·
in1 speaker, 1 rich farmer, diem t think
much ol lh• bumaniUes compared wllh
pratitlcal course.. "What I want my son
lo do, for example," he aaid, "ls to mllk
a cow."
"That's a very 1ood lde~:· said the
prealdent, who 1r•lt up a countl'Y bOy.
"t walit ~ aon to be able to milk a cow,
too -bUt rd alto Uh hJm to do some
thlnp U.at a calf t111D1l do better.''
Once at a~ mte aartiultval COi· ~ ..... a ~ .... broUsh~ to. tM
1
l
1
1
' J
. (
" c
d
p
s
v
n
~ s
s
r
d
s
d
SI
Ol
A
]
DEA.a BEADEaS:. ne J'edual TrMle
Comm..._ ta trflat to locate su .... fer•er
•t•de•ta ol Bell 6 Bowell eer...., ••••ce coarHS wbo may be eUJlble for nftadl. fMw·
deata wllo took die eleetl'Oll&H ... a""9t·
ta1 bomemuly eoane1 dulq m1 tllrW,.
1171 are eUt:lble. Vader • U. Fl'C Hlllellt
order, tlaey will allare tl.5 mUU-fro• a
huad set ap by Bell 6 Howell Sclilooal Jae. fte
FTC atan need.a to obtala die addreuet ol
former atudenta aa MOa u JOUlble la order
to mall tllem tile atteuary ret...s laf.,..a.
tlon.
Altboap Ute company provided Ute nc
wllh tbe aamea ud adclreaeta of ahldea&a
wllo ma7 quality for a refulMI, muy mo
loa1er Uve at those aclclreael. la erder to
make refandl available to ellJlble peneu.
tbe ataff n•• current add.reuel. atwcleat
l.D. number, enrollment datea, CMrte tit.lea
ud aoclaJ 1ttarity Hmben. Tide lafonaa·
tloa aboald be seat to: Bell 6 Bowell aetua.
Federal Trade CommlMloa, 5$ Eut llouoe
St., Salte 1'3'7, Clllca10, IU. Illa.
Tile Fl'C ataff alao ta trytq to a.a&e COD·
samen wbo bou1ht eltttrlc ruen called die
"Black Mu'a Shaver" aad were dlnitlafted
wllh It.a performuce. Tiley ma1 be eUJlble
for a mud ander tbe &erma ol a provlaJoaal·
ly accepted consent a1reement betweea Ute
manufacturer -tbe Sperry Corp. -ud tile
FTC.
Sperry haa air~ to mall refuel form•
to cuatomen whose names ud add.reun
they have OD ffle. Conaumera who pucbHed
tbla product are encouraced to make ave
AIU Y ASSUMAILE
INTlllST OHL Y
2nd TRUST DEEDS
0 WNER /NONOWHER OCCUPIED
Call Wilham B. Mitchell
C111 today for quote • No oohgat1on llOns not1ono1 fundng
(714) 975-1128 ===\
Grand Openin1
Sat., June 6th
Mr. Fud&e's home-baked
chocolate chip cook·keys.
Newport's finest. Great
variety. Soooo de-lic·ious.
t)"ll)·ffi«)
Our Silver-Tag special.
It's the best deal around.
Raleigh quality. Plus
free act"eSSOries worth $32.
Come in and see for yourself.
But hurry, this offer won't last long.
;e • f ... 0•vv •'•••ooue sooss a sac zsez a so ossa+scoosoo co zs
tile)' 1et a copy of tile queatloualre for re·
fud ellt:lbWty by aea411q &Mir u•• ud ad·
•rHa a.: ~ry Col'f., P.O. Bos HM,
BrldC.,..-l. • MMI.
AIH, ....... of ltH·lt71 aabblta,
Daallen, Sdroceet, ud Aadla wlM lane Iliad
oll·relued ealllle probl••• a.re eMWraled
to coe&aet tlile Federal Trade Co•mllllGm.
Tiie Fl'C recently cllarted tile muabe·
tuen ol tllleM ean wltla faUare to wan toa·
Hmen about potea&lal nliae preblema.
ftla type ol laformadoa mlPt ltave al&ered
b•Jiaa ded.aSou or t•e wa1 owaen malD·
talaed dlelr caJ'I.
aepaln tlaat eouamera may llave ex·
perlucecl laelade replacemeat ol cyU.der
laeada, vaJYeltem seall. aad GUler valve work
cottl•C from Ut to more &laH t4H. toanmen wltla relevant lllfo.rmatloa alloald
..ut1: Federal Trade Comm...._, a.bert
Dorie, ltll 6 Peanaylvaala N.W.,
Waa .......... D.C. zt581.
e ''Got o problfm? Tian write to Pot \.. l Dunn. Pot will cvt red tap., getting
11111 tlw ~• and action ~ Med to
aoloe frwqidtiea in gowmment GJld n bumNu. Mail ~r QW.attoris to Pot
Dunn, At Your s.nnce, Orange Coaat
DailJI Pilot, P .O. Boz 1560, Coata Me1t1, CA 9206. Aa
man11 ldtn• oa poanble waU be ~ed. but phoned
anqufrie• or ~ttna not including tla. reader'• full
name, addreu and bi.i&iM•• houn' phone number
cannot be con.sidered. Thi& column a~ara dailJI e:r·
cept Sunday• ...
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 5. 1981 A7
FOUND TROUBLE
Anita Baker
Kissing OK
• CL.!--? IR IUllUe
HONG KONG <AP) -A Pek·
in& literary magazine has ad-
vised readers that kissing is not
indecent.
"Kissing in Western countries
is as common as shaking hands
in China," according to the
Literature and Art Gazette.
The magazine noted that a
kissing scene in the
Shakespearean play The
Merchant of Venice produced re·
cently by Peking's Youth Art
Theater "almost caused a scan-
dal"' because of China's "ig-
norance of the outside world."
HOnesty didn't.
pay gir~ 18 . ' .
~ BISMARCK, N .D. (AP> -
Things have gone badly tor
Anlta Baker since the day she
found Sl,200 in an old pillow.
After turning the money over
to pollee, 11he was fired from her
job. Later, she was totd she was
' ineligible for unemployment
benefits and was ordered to re·
pay a $50 unemployment check
"It's really pretty a.illy," said
Miss Baker, 18, of Minot, about
70 miles north or Bismarck. "My
folks couldn't believe it that
they'd fire me for being honest,
and the unemployment service
would want their money back."
Her troubles started last year
after farmer Robert Ganskop of
Flaxton got approval to clean
out an old rural home belonging
to a deceased neighbor. The
man "was about 80 years old,
11 vlng alone, back in the 1960s,"
said Minot police detective
Donald Schneider.
From the home, Ganskop
brought old feather tick mat-
tresses and pillows to the Minot
dry cleaning plant where Miss
Baker had worked about six
months.
Opening a pillow cover. she
found a wad of money.
It was mostly in $10 and $20
bills. Schneider said. There were
also gold certificates a S20 bill
printed in 1905 carrying the
name of the First National Bank
of Bowbells, another $20 from a
national bank in Glasgow,
ew
Mont., a bill dated an the 1890s
and a number of old Canadian
bills. I
Total face value was S1.200,
but Schneider said a local coln
dealer valu~ one bUl al.,ne at
$150 to $200. I
After discovering lbe mone)\,
Miss Baker said she tried to
reach her job supervisor, Ueab
Fiske, to tell of the find, "but
everybody was gone." I
She took the money home anh
in the morning turned it over to
police.
Shortly aCler, on Dec. 24, she
was fired. Miss Baker said Miss
Fiske told her it was because ol
a company policy requirln1
employees who round valuable$
to turn them over to the firm.
''They never told me of their
policies. I didn't know." Miss
Baker said.
Attempts to reach tilisa Fiskt
by telephope at h'r job and
home were unsuccessful.
Miss Baker, no longer wor)\·
ing, applied to Job Service Nortfl
Dakota for unemployment
benefits She received a $50
check "a couple of months ago,
then last month they heard I'!;l
been fired for violatin1 cptnpan~
policy and wanted their money
back." she said.
She appealed, and after hear-
ing her testimony. Job Service
appeals referee Richard Durkop
of Bismarck ruled Wednesday
s he could keep the S50
one way by night oneway byday
,
"E t'<.'T)' nonstop a
ll'idebod\·-hott' ccm
I . .. gottTORK····
.,,I tl'osgoing to see this film
this tl'eek am,t'<I\'. Hmmm, I
H'onder i/ rheresan~· popcorn ... ~'
Fly nol\ltop. Make raervations and
buy dckets 7 days in edvance. 1haveJ
before Sept. 1, 1981.
Unlted 's your best way to the East.
With brand-new low fares. great new
schedules and the biggest fleet of wide-
body nonstops going.
Seats are limited and the restrictions
are easy. For information and reserva·
t1ons call your 'navel Agent.
Partners In 'Travel with WesUn
Hotels.
Lee\'e Arrive
8 30 am 4 45 p.m•
915 a.m 520 p.m ..
12·00 noon 8: 10 p.m •
2:45 p.m. 10:35 p.m~·
9.30 p.m 5 25 a.m~
9 40 p.m.i 5:30 am ..
9.00 am ..
9.00 a.m·
12:00 noon•
12·00 noon••
'5:30 pm•
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225pm
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12:45 p.m. 9:00 p.m 9:30 a.m. 12.25 p m '"l) 8adl --
homt
1.25 p.m 9·20 pm 9.00 am 11 20 am
AJI wideboclft 10 Beck
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9 00 a m 11.45 11 m.t
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I •JFK ••Newark tOullct iNtght Coach
Schtldulet 1ubjrct to chanae.
"Choosing from J ddidous
entri•<.•s is the toughest
part of the flight :'
FHy Rcstrk1lon1 lo Nt-w York: Fly
nonstop Make T¢icrvatlons a1'd buv
uckel!> 7 da>c; In ad,ann• Travel
beforc Sept I. 1981
Euy RC"1trlctloo1 to WHblnaton.. Phlladelphla, Boston, B•hlmore:
Make reserv1111ons-and buy round
crlp ticket at l<'ast 14 davs In advanc-c
make &n) c hanaes In r<'lum l'\.'9Crva
tlons at lea• 14-dl\Yli In adva(le&
(or fly standby or lose dlk'Ount)•
lita)' throua,h 11 Frid•>'-or 1r you leave
on .a Satu"1ay. rt'h.~rn an)' day
(With a mulmUJ!l stay of 60 days)
• I
Oran Coast DAILY PlLOTn:rtda • June 5, 1981
This Week's
Special
1980 CADILLAC .
COUPE DEVILLE
Equipment includes dual comfort power seats, Cadillac wire wheel cov-
ers, AM-FM stereo with cassette tape player and many other power as-
sist options. (604ZBJ).
s
'
Outstanding Resales
1980
CADILLAC
FLEETWOOD
BROUGHAM
O"Elegance. (325ZBW).
512,995
1980
CADILLAC
ELDORADO
COUPE
Factory t wo-tone
paint (621.389).
51•,995
r '
1979
CADILLAC
ELD.ORADO
COUPE
Stendard cloth seating
., ... (632681).
1978
CADILLAC
COUPE
DEVILLE
With Cadill.c wire wheel
covers. (154UXR).
57995
1980
OLDSMOBILE
CUUASS
SUPREME
W ith 1 DlESEL
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·57995
1981 .
CADILLAC
ELDORADO
COUPE
AM-FM stereo radio
w 11 h cassette tape player
(1BJZ8'M).
517,995
1978
CADILLAC
SEVILLE
Leather covered seating
area (976TXK)
510,995 . -
1978
CADILLAC
FLEETWOOD
BROUGHAM
Dual comfort power
Hitt. (111 UKY).
58195
1977
CADILLAC
SEDAN
DEVILLE
Duel comfort power
seats. t730WFI)
~6'95
~. ..
'
1976
CADILLAC
SEVILLE
Equipped with all
Cadillac power IMltts. •
(993TJJ).
57995 1
1979
CADILLAC·
FLEETWOOD
BROUGHAM
Factory padded elk-grain
vinyl top (719WYB).
510,995
1979
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SEVILLE
Equipped with all of
the C adillac power
assists (711YBD)
511,99$
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1979
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1977
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SEVILLE
Rolla Royce cuatom
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59895
1980
CHEVROLET
CORVEnE
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I ,_.
Daily Pilat
FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 1981
FEATURES
COMICS
TELEVISION
83
84
88
After years as a
gourmet, chef Arend
deserves a break ... B5
Jet simulator revolutionary
:P •.•
•
,.
Nearly 500 pilots will be trained on new Super 80 simulator in San
Diego. The $5-millwn device pitches, yaws and moves in every
way the real. plane will. --------------
SAN DIEGO (AP> -A thun·
derstorm hits one side of the
cockpit while lightning and a
blinding s un obscure the other.
The two pilots really see only
mirrors that reflect television
pictures in a complex computer
arrangement worked by an in-
s tructor in the room behind.
It's not what it seems in this
Mc Donnell Douglas DC-9-80
coc kpit , a revolutionary
simulator for training pilots in
which all situations and con<li-
tions that a pUot encounters in
real flight, except real danger,
are duplicated. (The DC-9-80
made its debut flight from John
Wayne Airport an Orange County
earlier this week.>
Here's how it works:
Anchored in an un -
precedented six-axis base., the $S
million device pitches, yaws.
rolls. heaves and moves every
possible way a real Super 80
will. A dial-a -flap mechanism
Jets a pilot set any wing nap
position for takeoffs or landirtgs.
Altitude and geographic
positions can be changed at 8,000
mph.
The digital flight guidance
system fine-controls navigation
of the so-called '"Super 80"
Jetliner to a unique degree. A
new displ ay unit combines in·
formation fro m a variety of
flight instruments so the pilot
can monitor them all while look-
ing out the windshield.
As many as 400 possible
malfunctions can be inserted in-
to the computers by the instruc-
tor, who also can operate the
"plane" electronically an all
weather conditions
Everything that happens in
the cockpit can be recorded
to be played back by the pilot.
'·Anything and everything that
could ever be experienced In
fllgbt will have been covered"'
by pilots who complete the re-quired training, s ays Dean
Pontius of Pacific Southwest
Airlines. (Super 80 flights from
Orange County are thus far be·
ing m ude by A1rCal.)
The jet, first of its kind for
U S . domestic aircraft. un-
derwent 50 different cert1f1cation
tests by the l''ederaJ Aviation
Administration before making
its first commercial flights Mon·
day.
A simulator built by Canadian
Aviation Electronics of Montreal
has been installed in Geneva by
Swiss Air. which expects to
begin its pilot traanin~ in July
After they qualify for the
wide-bodied ai rliners. '"the real
world will never be surprising,"
Pontius swd in an interview.
.... .._._
While in8tructor, foreground, looks on, two pilota "fly" new, quieter wide-body jetliners tn identical.
simulator, only one of its kind. The "cockpit" comes complete with thundeutorms. .
iSenior citizens slzare wi,sdom with students
! f lcut m a senes on voluntura rn · -pa per m his retirement packet
; Amenca's school systems.) I when he le,fl Lockheed Aircraft
1 Corp Ile works three mornings
I By LAURINDA KEYS with kindergarteners at NesUe
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Their Avenue School in Tarzana and ~own children are now parents two mornings with hearing im-
1 themselves and their careers I paired pre schoolers at Newcas-
.1 are fading memories. So ~he~·ve ' tie Avenue School in Reseda.
gone back to scb~I this time I "I 'would like to think that by
to ~hare the _wisdom and ex-
1
being there and doing what we
penence or their ~ears. . • can to help the teachers and help I They are senior c1l1zens the children. we would be an ~om-: 4,200 of them -volunteer-I added source of energy and car-
ing time, energy and. knowledge ing. Maybe saving money is not
to help youn~sters 1n the Los th e way to express it. but
Angeles pubhc school syste_m possibly we ·re contributing lo a~d ~ase t~e burdens on the <tis· the efficiency and effectiveness
lrict s _barn~ teachers. . of the education process · N allonw1de. an estimated
150,<JOO older Americans are do·
ing volunteer work in schools,
according lo the National School
Volunteer Program in Alexan·
dria, Va. But nowhere is the pro-
gram as extensive as ·Los
Angeles' Dedicated Older Volun·
teers for Educational Services
-tbeDOVES.
They Include :
A retired aerospace engineer
who spend! three days a week
collecting milk money from kin-
der garteners and blowing UJ>'
playground balls that have gone
soft.
Ms. Davis says volunteers find
that their service "is a two way
street. Nol only are they helping
the students and assisting the
classroom teacher. it's good for
the older adult~ · ·
In a city where elderly citizens
are prey to vicious youths who
beat and rob them, M s. Davis
says the DOVES have never
been hurt on a school campus.
Lucy Kibbee, whose pro·
fessional acting name is Lucille
Meredith. used to read to her
children \\otM?n they were young.
A few years ago. sh<> found that
she wasn't working \'ery much,
so she offered to read to high
school students "
A 65-year-old actress whose
voice is familia r on TV com-
mercials. She gained a new
generation of fans firth and
sixth graders who applaud when
she enters their classroom to
Jack Hanshue. 61, retired Lockheed Aircraft Corp. worker, aids hearing impaired preschoolers. But high school students had
established reading habits. and
she never felt rewarded So ~he
went to the Welby Way elemen-
tary s chool in Canoga Park,
where she reads 45 minutes a
day. three days a week to rl(th
and sixth graders.
read the classics.
A retired nurse who helps ban·
dicapped students learn to
swim.
And a 105-year-old artist who
demonstrates bis skills to high
school students.
These senior citizens spend
one to Cive days a week In Los
Angeles schools, relieving
'
teachers of non-teaching duties.
exposing children to the ex-
perience of older people and giv-
ing themselves something lo do
and a sense or being needed.
The program, ·originally
funded by the Edha McConnell
Clark Foundation of New York,
is entering its ninth year. It
started as a volunteer
grandparent program , but
evolved into much more when
the schools came lo realize lhe
untapped potential of older
Americans.
Now, says Sarah Davis who
heads the school district's volun·
teer programs omce, without
·'the talents and experiences of
the volunteers, there are many
services the students would not
enjoy, such as we1gbthfting or
ballet water dancing, which are
not part or the curMculum. ··
"We don't like to Imply that
volunteers, tutors or DOVES are
there to replace staff," she adds,
with teacher unions in mind.
"They're there to support and
reinforce services the paid staff
·
1Parents assail space invaders I IRVINGTON, N. Y. (AP> -The games, displayed on a w o u Id make merchant a said Provenzano, himself th~
Parents in this suburban village video screen, generally allow resp on s i b I e for keep in I rather of three.
say little men from outer space players to "shoot down" lnvad· youngsters off the machines and Provenzano .said the teens
are takin& their children's lunch Ing spaceshifs and bad guys would require merchant& to buy don't bother other customers.
money and making them late for while emitting appropriate a $100 license to operate video "I live the kids somelb1n& to
I school. They want the vlllaae rumbles, bmzes and screams. · games. Merchants violating the do, and when they come in here
trustees to ban children from Jerry Malota, 15, says he code would be subject to a fine they 're super vi a e d,' •
playing coin-operated video spends "about 50 cents'' a day or $500 and ~evocation of game Provenzano aaid. ·•If they're
space 1arnes. on hls favorite, "Star Chaser." licenses. look Ing at me as a problem,
Th• Board of Trustees will ''It's really no big deal. it's A representative or At•ri Inc.. they're looking In the wrona
1 vote JOOD on a new ordJnance just OK for lunchtime enjoy-maker ol "Asteroid!" an<l "Star direction."
that would prqhibit people under ment," said Malota. "Some kids Caatle," aald by telephone that
17 from Jlayinl the video games come in and spend two or tbred company ortlciala who could
and pre•ent busine11ea from dollars on the machJnes, but not comment on the proposal were
owntna snore than two of the many." not available.
popYlar .iectronic gadaeta. According to Re1tn1ld Marl'a, "I have a feelin1 the orislnat
Tbe J)l"Clpoeal has pitted 1ame mayor ol tbe 6,200·realdent com· proposal will be modlrted, •·
pWyen~t rents. •.. munlty north of New York City Marra said. "We held tbt meet· ••My arid Dtd ~b a1ree In Westchester Counly, the pro· ine so the J)lople cwld apeak,
wttti tl9e law, and we've had a posed ordinance was drawn up and now we want to Incorporate
coudl• ar melltl about tt," after he anct the board beCan r.· their feellnp lnto It."
Dan M , 14, tild u he ceivln1 comPlalnta that children But Ralph Provenaano, whole
lOok a from an lntersalac· were apendln• too much time Th ls • n • Tb at ti as th re•
tic b on the "Aateroidl" and money on the mach.lnea, machines, thlnkJ the whole thln1
at the 11ii1 ·n• That whlcb 8" primarily louted in 11 simply "somebody tryin1 to
1&Uadall!Cl!lllltle. two amall ii'loret acrot• from the make waves."
..... eam my awn moner. town'• middle school. 1 "You can come into my stOre ~:/ I '!"Lwork, uil I don t He Hld debate went far an~tlme you want, and if you
l I• '° ~1. liow I HD lntO tM'DlaN at two publ1o bear· evtr ,.. any t.rouble, I'll ftv•
apeM tt, • llcLau"1Jln Hid. ln1• on~ftae pr-opoul, wblch you every dime J ake here,''•
.Explorers
get grants
INDIANAPOLIS <AP> -Six
Explorer 1couta active In posts
spetlall&ln1 ln law edforcement
were awarded ~ scbolarsh1ps
by the J. Eqar Hoover Founda·
tJon Scholarahlps.
Tht non-profit foundation
t>ecun by frienda of tht tale FBI
d,rector ls dealcned to en·
tourace 1tuety ttiat will improve
tbt law Wor"'1Ueat proft111oD.
a 1Pokeeman~t'lt lb• Explorers
aalcl.r .
give."
The volunteers give guest lee
lures and demonstrations, do
paperwork, help students who
have been absent c atch up,
supervise playgrounds and act
as a settling influence in the
classroom
Jack Hanshue, 61, of Encino.
learned about DOVES from a
She dresses glamorqusly, with
makeup and jewelry and "the
chil:lren think of me as 'the ac-
tress,' not as a gr andmother,"
sht-savs. ------
\
CKange Coast DAILY PtLOTf1=rldav. June 5, 1981 ------~----r-------------------------------------~--------4
WALK A METER FO& A UTE&: Leafing through our
sterllng Journal juat yesterday, I learned that we have the
state high school championship track meet tonight and
Saturday night upcoaat at Cerritos. It should be high
excitement.
Scarpling the predictiona of which athletes have the best
chance to come up winners, however, might be a bit of a
pu1zlement for old-time prep runners.
For example, you study the dope sheet to determine the
favorites in the one-mile run.
You sean again, squinting
at the lists slightly.
You do not find the ·
one-mile run. (;;,
ml MllPllll~t; The reason is that there
isn't any. No 100-yard dash,
either. Or a 220 or a
quarter-mile.
EVERY RACE, YOU SEE, has now been converted so
that they measure it in meters.
Thus what used to be the 100-yard dash is now the
100-meter dash. Which ts more than 100 yards. How much
more? Aw Just some.
Take lhat one-mile run that used to be the exciting four
laps around your old high school track. Now it's the
1,600-meter ru.n .
The machme that opened Western (ontin• -mi~ after mHe
Investigating for the sake of trying to get up to date, I
inquired into the savants of our sports department about what
seemed to be a rather odd distance.
"THAT'S TRUE," one of the savants explained. "in
colJeges and universities, they don't have a 1,600-meter run.
They run 1,500 meters."
Why? you inquire, still in bafflement.
"The only explanation ever given for why the high school
athletes run a greater distance is that 1,600 meters is closer to
an actual mile.
You got that?
Thus you might be left asking this question:
If it's so important for the high school athletes to run a
distance close to a real mile, then why don't they just·run a
real mile and forget aJ1 this tomfoolery about .nmntng 1,600
meters, which is near a mile but really isn't a mile?
In this day and age when we're all in a headlong rush to
convert everything to centimenters, millimeters and parking
meters, you have to suppose that question will be left
unanswered by the powen-that-be. Whoever they be.
ONE OF MY EX·FRIENDS once observed that back in
the beginnings of this nation of ours, we created 8n industrial
revolution in this country that made· us one of the Great
Powers of all time and changed the face of the globe forever.
We did all this wonderfulness in inches, feet and yards
while the rest of the world was slogging, along by meters and
centimeters.
"Now," be suggested. "Everybody wants US to convert to
the way THEY were slogging along in measurements.''
Indeed, it does seem to be a great irony.
And I'll never give an inch on that.
Labor, ecology groups
· h ·attle toxic wastes
' SACRAMENTO <AP> -
California's major labor and environ-
mental lfOUps have joined forces to
work for passa1e of le'1slation to
clean up toxic wastes.
The state AFL-CIO, the Sierra
Club, the Natural Resources Defense
Council, the Federated Fire Fl1bters
aad Tom Hayden's CampalJD for
Economic Democracy were among
aroup. at a Capitol news coo.ference
to announce the lobbyln1 effort. ·
They will be opposed by a newly
formed industry coalition, led by the
Califomla Manufacturers Alsocla-
tion, which want.a to soften the Im· pact of the bil}J.
Some of the wues In dispute are;
-Wh~ to let a business that is
sued for damage caused by wutes to
defend oo the grounds that it used all
reasonable care.
· -Whether local governments
should have the power to reject sites for waste dumps.
The bills backed by the labor-
en viroomental coalllton, and also
supported by Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr., would put most of the cle8'1UP cosu on· 1ndu1try, prohlblt a
leasonable-care defense to law-
suits, and let local 1overnmeoi. veto
dumpsltes.
announce the opening of
WOODIRIDGE FAMILY FOOT HEAlTH CARE
It
Woodbridge VII~~ Center
4760 Buranca Parkw1y
k'Vlne, CA 9271'4
Podiatry Fooc Spedtllw
,57-1219
(ewnlf'I houri IV~
Editor
to stay
at UCI
UC Irvine student
editor Barriabas Sokol
will not be stripped or
his position or dls-
clpllned for posing nude
and printing a few
vulaar jokes ln a
"humor supplement"
banned on campus
earlier this week, ac-
cording to the student
council.
Associated Students
adviser Dennis
Hampton said a resolu-
tion to fire Sokol was
withdrawn at a Tuesday
council meeting before
the students could take
action.
Council member Jim
Harvey withdrew the
resolutlon after decid-
ing there would not be
enougb councU support
to pass lt, said
Hampton.
The 23-year-old editor
of the New Un1versity newspaper apologized to
students earlier this
week and took full
res ponsibility for the
eight-page humor sup-
plement, considered by
other staff members to
be in poor taste.
About 40 to 100 copies
of the insert were stolen
from a campus loading
dock before editors
destroyed nearly 10,000
copies prior to distribu·
tion of the regular issue
on Tuesday.
Seniors due
tax help
The Irvine Senior
Center i s assisting
persons over 62 in filing
for homeowners and
renters property tax re·
bates.
•
Father's Day is coming
soon. At At In .._ We
carry just what Dad is
really hoping for.
Shirts By 'olo and
Lacoste to keep him
comfortable and
looking good during
those hot summer
days ahead. We also
carry jeans for men by
famous tables such as
Ccnln KW.. Jordache,
and lo•fo•r at
unusually Low Prices.
Moulton Pkwy lnlne C.Oter. Drive
First-line designer lables
always at least 200/e off
Men. Women. and. Boys
I
• ?.
.( ·' ~ ~: •' ·: •, ., .. •, ;· .. . ; .. • . .. :: .. ; . ' '· ~· ~: .. .. ~ • ·! ·. .. . :· .· JUNE
SPECIAL · ~ ·.
With a fit so good they
ought to be outlawed.
Only '29"
Regular •4()00
MEW STORE HOURS
CLOSED MOHDAY
TUESDAY-SATURDAY tM
SUNDAY 11-4
Applicants must have
owned or rented a home
between Jan. and Dec.
31, 1980 and must have '
earned less than $12,000
last year to qualify for
this free 1lSsistance. Dis·
abled or blind persons
a_lso qualify for as-. ,
s1stance.
It r eally does make sense to shop and save at:
Assistance will be of-
fered Monday through
Friday from 8 a.m. to
noon at the Center , 3
Sandburg Way. For an
appointment. call
=·
754-3889.
"ISLAND SUNSET"
'•~ .. ,, llnf( •hh 11uhtlt• lone··
on tolor url .. .cation lo atltl n
dnn1alil' •llfH<aront•t• cu am
nM1m! t'niffUf' In 1t1d•) · ..
ma~•·t.
lllTIODUCTOIY '1 Otl
PllCI SI. TD.
770-1677
PACIFIC DECORATING CENTERS presents!
OUR ALL NEW CARPET
LINE FOR SPRING 1981
FEATURING:
RMSTRONG CARPETS
by EV ANS & BLACK
with EASY CARE
DUPONT DACRON YARN
Our IH·11I 114·1linf( 'hort 1>il1·
1>h1>•h. 33 dt•li('i1111" <"l1lon;;
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Now there's an Armstrong
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'.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 5, 1981 &1
Good belt • in mouth -ends her skep ivalkirig
• • .
DEAR ANN LANDERS: In re1ard to
sleepwalking : 1, too, don't know what causes lt.
But I sure can tell you how to stop lt.
I put up wlth lt ror years with my wire. Most of
the time she had ntgh\marn alon1 with the
aleepwalklng. Sometimes she'd ioout ln the yard
and scream her head off aod wake up the
neighbors. She a lso did her share of hldin1 tbin11
while she was asleep. The next da)' she would
drive everybody crazy trying to find them.
A bout eight months aeo she launched into one
or her mJddle·of·the-nigbt screaming fits. I belted
her in the mouth. From that day on she never had
another nightmare.
Now she is trying to make me feel guilty -
claims 1 am a wife·beater. Actually it'• the only
time I ever laid a hand on her. l feel as if I've
helped both of us. She isn't walklng lo her sleep
any more, and I'm getting some rest. What do you
say? Am I a good guy or a bad 1uy? -HERO
CALLEDA BUM
Dear Reader: I am no& calllag you either a
hero or a bum. But I'm not about to band you a
aood conduct medal either.
'f II vou really bit your wife for "medical"
1111111111
purpoaea and It put aa end to her al'lltmaret, tbe
should not bold ll a1ala1t you • .Jaaat make aare that
tberapeutlc approach doesn't aJop over Into otber
areaa,Bab.
DEAR ANN: Here is one for the books. I ha"e
been married for almost five years and am still a
virgin. 1 enjoy hugging and kissin1 but the thought
of Intercourse, getting a pelvic ex.Jminalion or
even lnsert.lng a tampon Is a traumatic ex·
periencefor me.
1 have been examined by two l)'necolo1ista.
They both said there ls nolhing physically wron1
I alaodiscu.ssed my fears with them. Tbeflratdoc·
tor said he was baffled. The second one sent me
home with a prescription for Valium and suegesl·
ed I return in two weeks if it didn't work. Needles•
to say, it didn't work but I never made another ap·
polntmenl
This is aucb an embarruslnt problem and 10
ditflcult to discuss with anyone. Fortunately, my
huaband l• a very lovfo1 and underatandlna man.
He claims beinl married l() a virgin doean'l
bother him but I'm aure it must be very fruatrat-
in& at times . After all, he'• only human.
My question ta thls · Am J lht only woman in
the world with this rear? Can It be overcome? l
would love to have a normal relationship wlth my
husband and we do want lo start a famlly 1000.
Any advice you can gl ve will be &l"eatly appreclat·
ed.-SEARCHING fORASOLUTION
Dear Searcblng: You need psyclalatrlc help to
fel over your pbobla, which I.I uncommon but IMK
unheanlof.
Tbole l•o gyaecologlata tboald have recom· ~ended a competent llterapl8' for yoa at oace.
The fact that tbey dJdn't ralaa eonae 1ertoa1 qae1·
tloa1 l.D my mind abouUbelr competeace.
If your husband has been puUlDI up wllb Ulll
for five years, be ls my penooal uadidate for
ulnthood. The man deserve• more oat of tbe mar·
rlage than you are giving him. See that be geta U.
Soon.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a US-year old
lirl wbo wUiba she wu a contortioni1t so ah~
could ldck bt>rself In the rear end
l went steady with a neat guy for lhrft
months. He was terrific compahy, very in·
telU1eot and· knew how to treat • lady. The
break-up wu aJl my fault. He wu about two
Inches aborter than l , and a few of my fre.lnds,
made cracks about "the runt." LU(e a dummy, 1
let it get to me.
I picked a fight and told that beautiful
person I dJdn 't think we were suited to each
other. He asked me what I meant, and I told
him I needed a taller guy.
Now be ia daUnc another girl, and I'm
heart.sick. l hear Yia the grapevine that be still
cares for me Any auggestion s" I 'd give
anything to get bim back. -PEANUT BRAIN
IN LA CROSSE, WIS.
Dear Peanut: Put oo a pair of nat·beeled
aliloe1 and walk over to that neat guy ud plead
&emponry l.uaalty. There are an awfaJ lot of
abori roa out there who people ol aU alaea look
up to.
~'·1-------------------. --------------------------------------------------------------....,. :C:.lwlesterol still big killer Aquarius: Now is time to listen i
I • I ~By JOHN D. ROSEN, M.D. One is m China. one in South America and the Saturda}, Junt&.1981 LIBRA 1St>pt 23 Oct 22 • Dl•t·1s1on ... reat'hed con
• Dear Dr Rosen. third in Russia. In one of tbe places they eat cerning mvestmt•nt. rclJt111n:.h1p and d1rN·t1on Supporl
For the past 10 years I have been struggling to nothing but rat and protein. In another they eat By SYDNEY OMARR comes from surprise soun•c. \OU ha'e more ulllei. tha
' f I t f t bl b t r t Th thj d · d'fr t originally ant1c1paled .keep my cholesterol down. Now I read wbere I 0 s 0 vege a es u no a · e r ts 1 eren ARIES 1 MJrch 21 April 191 Past l'oncepts are re· SCORPIO tOct. 23 No' 21 1 Import.int business
'your cboiesteroJ lt low you'll get cucer. Cancer still. vised Person JI scenario h1ghhl!hts t•hange, travel. proress1ooal contact made durin.: ... ot1al affair 01spla~
runs in my family, so I'm really scared. Will I get But there is one common aspect lo the diet. In spec111l relat1onsh1ps and ab1l1t) to express setr through versatJl1ty, humor und rtex1b1ht' Lon.: 1l1~tanl'l' com•
1 canter? -F.S., COSTA MESA all three areas there are times in the year where written word , munication proves significant
ANSWER · Stop worrying! You are domg the there is no food available These very old people TAURUS 1Apnl 20 May 201 Emphasis on home. SAGITTARIUS 1 .'.\lo\' 22·De<' 21 Attend to d1•ta1isl
are also very thin' propert)'. domestic ad1ustment and coming to terms wtth ,
'ASK THE DOCTOR
!absolutely correct thing b~ keeping your
·cholesterol low
The recent news about low cholesterol bemg
:associated with a certain kind or cancer has oo
: practical significance. It is one of those statistical
flukes but it sure has upset a lot of patients
'Uteart attacks are far and away the number
one killer in this country. Keeping your weight
down and watching out for cholesterol are a vital
~art of preventing them
There are three areas an the world where we
get reports or people li ving well past 100 years.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
Dr John D Rosen. a practitu:mer in Newport
Beach. welcomes your questlDn& Mau requests to Ask
the Doctor. P 0 Bor 1560. Costa Mesa . 92626.
Classes slate reunion
A combined reunion for the 1961 graduating
classes of Huntington Beach and Westminster high
schools is set for Aug. 29 at the Costa Mesa Coun·
try Club
No-host bar will be held from 6:30 p.m .
followed by a burret dinner and entertainment
Reservations must be made by July 1.
For m ore informahon contact Huntington
Beach High School at 536·2514 or Westminster High
School al 893-1381.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
SUMMA A Y O,. AO O "TIO ,.ICTITIQUS aUSINaSS "ICTITIOUSaUSINaSS OaDINANCI NAM« STATIMaNT NAMCITATIMllNT f'ICTITIOUI aUMNaU NAMalTATIM9MT
Orcll.....u 11•. 11Klled<il..t10 c.. In ...!:~sloltowlne ,..._ 1' "°'"9 IMnl· T11efol_.,.__.11dolne1M1t1Nu
lull etftcl JO Gey• from June I, '"'· p AT• 1 c I A s I HT E II I 0 A as: oMlcl was ..topUd. b'( llW IOll-1"9 roll DESIG N. II Belmonle. Irvine, CA DESIGNEltS SHOWCASE, 11111 . coll YOla C-.Cll Mam!wt'\ AYES. '7714 ... di """·· H..ntl,..., -"· CA :S<ll•l•r, Hall, H•rtL09, Mc"•··-· PATlllCIA ANN SAMAllD, II nr:.. -.s. ms -v .... E .. ·=tort. HOES Nor>e A8SENT Belmon•,lrvlM,CAft714 eo.teMff4CA....._
• Ordln...u 11• ,_.., .. .01111 ... i.· c11!1~=•~""' Is concllleted by .., lro Tiiis ........_. Is cendYC10d •Y en ~
, talnmtnt bullneslff b'(: '""lrlne • Patrld• Ann 5'1mard dlvkluolTed-ard
Tiie ,.,.._,,. __. Is doln9 IMltl· ...... .,
G A SOUND, \01'2 l(Uk11I Lo,., HWI
ll119toro a..dl, CA..._
G,....., "· •-. 101'2 Kullvl .... ,.. H""tll\tllM .._,,,CA,_ Tiiis .,....._ ,, c-19Cl by.,. lro-dlYldllal.
Gt99DrY "· A ..... Tllts ~ w• filed wltl\ Ille c-1., a..11 ef Or ..... ~ ... Moy
II, ltll. ,ooroc1111-1 UM Ptl'mll, reslrl<llft9 Tiiis swi.-1 wos llled wllll Ille Tiii• __. -filed wllll Ille . •oc•ll«o, •1*1111lno •t>el•nMnt P,..... C011n11 c1er11 ol <>r..,ea County oro c-1y Clef"tl of 0r.,.. c-.,.., _., :c-r.a few -Ofllorml"9 edllll'"' A 1127 ,.., f'IU* "'""' "ublllNd Or .... Cootl O.lly Pliot, .tert•lnment b111l1'Ust•. and, pr • ,.1_, V,t•t · estebll•lllno _...,.nl 1tandarc11. 1 Tiie full 1 .. 1 ttf llw propo'8d or Pulltl"*' Or""'9'f CoHI Dally I' lot, . dlneno mey be reed In Ille City Mey 22, 1'. J.-S, 12, ltll 2_..t
; Clerll's Oltke .. n Felr Or"'-. Cona
\llMM, PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
1'11bllslwd Or ..... C-•I 0.11'( Piiot, May IS, 22, 2'. J-S, ltll :tm .. I
-Y 1',J.-s. tt, tt. 1t11 ,.,...,
PUBUC NOTICE I EILEEN P PHINNEY l City Clart. "ICTITIOUS aUSINISS f'ICTITIGUa IWIOIH& . OtyofC:O.t.Masa NAMllSTATaMllNT SUNRIO.COURTOf'TMll NAMalTATllMmMT ( ""blllhed Orenee C-•I Delly Pilot, TM lollowlne --It dOlnt b<nl· ITATIOl'CAUf'IORNIA Tiie , .. ~ ... --.......... tJwS: "'' l>HS H f'OR nca COUWTY Ol'oaA.... llwl-•: ,__ r 1571 .. 1 conAOa SYSTllMS, llt Soflof• lrtU.Monerlll.. " ,. l..OAH MltVICINO, nftl El Aoacl, C•I• -·Coll,_• t»». ,.,..ketlero ol Tor• Ad., El Tor .. CA '211a.
family member who apparent!} wants to "stretch HQRftrPQP[ f budget " Diplomacy aids in oven·oming obstacle W'1 :
G EMJNI c Ma} 21 June 201 Appearances are deceiv· :
1ng . avoid Jumping at (1rst of(er Ke} IS to be selective. :
especially when.• 1deus. i.cnpts, rormals and social in a bigger project is on horizon. Kl'Y 1s pro11t•r preparation}
vita11ons are concerned Insist on quality and clear Check files and basic sourc~ Hl'search JJJ)" di\ 11frnds .1
definalloo of terms CAPRJCORN c Dec 22 J Jn. 191 Your kno" lc<11(<' "'1'1
CANCER cJune 21 July 221 Accent on payments. be tested Obtain hinl from Sag1ltdrius mt''i'>age;
collections. 1Mome. pror1table transactions and sale or Separate fact from w1i;hful thinking Takt• nothinR for
speciul matennl You iiuin murt> recogrut1on and will be granted. espet•1all) wht>rc morll'\" prum1w~ an• con:
rehe' ed of unnecessaQ burden cerned
LEO cJul> 23 Aug 221' You are on bnnk of ·major AQUARJl'S (Jan 20 Feb Ill • Do 1>lt>nl) of lli.l<'mnf
discovery." Success indicated through new starts. many are eager to impart 'nluable inrormJt1on1
special pro1ecl.b. creative endeavors and contacts with Focus on public relations. coo1wrat1,·e cUorb law an4
those in fields of commun1t•at1on relationstups of a perm.rnt>nt nature '
VIRGO I Aug 23 St'pl 221 \fyster} 1s solved You PISCES tFeb 19 ~1arch 201 Go slo" he lo" anO
·wake up" with ans"ers Emphasis on clandestine meet pay attention to Aquarius mes»a.:c Emphao;1s on speCJal
ings, romanlll' involvements and behind scenes at•llvity services. improved techniques and JOIOlnfl ron·e!i wit~
Project will be successrully completed those who share your basic concerns
~~~~~~~~~~
SONY !Hf OH( & ONLY.
THE SONY WALKMAN
... oar AIU STHfO
•G•t••llO Pia~ •C'ie 6 A..,.,.
•Tone ~Ot
•t•O .... ~.J~t,io
•Mot l.•ne Funrt'°"' •\, o,,t ... Qnt
M••dunooe
•Al..OC. 311 & l M
~ ...
James A. Henderson, 11, llt MAHltOU P'OUAZANJANI T 0 l'l.llllkM-. lllC., a o.t.were ~·~~~~~~ ~~-~c ... ~-~~~u.~~-----~~====~===========~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~!! tUJ4 .... ,.,_.. Twe,CA,_. • °" ,.U.LIC HllA•ING This buWNU Is COflduc1ed by en llt· ORM• TOSMOW CAUi• Tlli. ..._.. 11 cot-.c:W by. C..-• ~ CE IS HEREBY GIVEN "'81 a Cllvlclual W H E A E A S M A H a 0 U -•tloft. puW"llMtl .. Wiii i» held by Ille City James A..._,..,.,, II POUAZANJAHI, ,..Ill._, .... filed TD"'*lull-. lrte. RUFFELL ·s Co4MIJ of Ille City ol Casie Mesa on Tiiis 11ate1Nftt w• Iii.cl wltll Ille a "9tlll<lro wttll Ult Clef"ll ef 1'\lt c-1 ~.LTwella
Jl 1tl1 II\ Ille Councll Chambers Co11nty Clerll ol <>r..,ea '°""'" °" for •n .,.der C"-1"" ""111'-r'• ~--UPHOLSTEIY • • . ... .... lrom MAH~ POUIUANJANI r11i. _......,. •• 11 ... wlll\ .. el Hall, 11 Felr Drive, Costa AIWll 22."lt loM•u-•~•a•Ni~• c-t'(Cl.nlefOr .... .---....,-y •--otr-.. ~---'-M at 6 .JO p.m. or as soon "l....U """""'........ ...... -"• -· •--....-111 \er u pra<tlcabte, on IM P11llllllleel Or-Coast Dally Pilot, IT IS OADEAEO tNt ell...,._ lro-U, 1tl1.
IOI • 1""1: a,yy U .1', J..ne s, n. 1•1 W WI lerested lro ttw .-..-llled mat* f'16hft 1922 HAllOI ILVO. EAATIVE AGAEE.MENT ..,._.r ......... Ullt <-1 .. IO• A.M. PvM.._. Or .... c:-t 0.ll'f PIM«. COSTA MISA -54a.l IH
"'' • .,_ Orane• Co11n1Y H..,sl1>9 PUBLIC NOTICE :_ ·~":;...., =~ J ,.':::;'. May IS, J2. 2', J-s, 1•1 n.1 .. 11 ~==========~! Au~lt.,, lor Cmplamenlatlol\ of NEA 1 ORANGE COU NT Y '-~ "J" IArtl<lt Ml wlllcll "'" • ·~ lfl '"' pr(Mlr'( alt<llon ol MOTIC• o .. TltUITaa·s SAL.• SUPEAIOA OOUltT, .,.. Clwk Cetltw .111,.:f, i• . I I Income Ne. lf'M1!1U Drive. cHy of SMto ""9, -ty et ~ ' concetll .... -· HOT ICE IS HEAIUY GIVE N THAT 0r .......... of Coltfoml• .......... N9f1CE IS FURTHER GIVEN INI "rlO.y, Ille 2611\ NY of J.-, 1•1. ca11H, II Wl'f wtly IN pelllloro tor at .... tlnw encl place all ,,.,._,,, 1,... al Ille 1-r of 11:00 A.M.., ot Ille South clle,.,.. of,..,.. -.id root w tr-•. =ma., ~er atod be 11earc1 by lrorol tntrarou to tlle Or ...... C.O..nly IT 1$ ,.UATHEA O"DEltED U.Ot • tlle tt Courocll .... lht alor.,.,..,lloned olcl C011rt -in tlle City Of ~nte COPY of 1Ns or-lo allow ~ be ,.. Aroa, Counly of Orange, 51•1• ol PllMIMHI 1ro .,. "Or..,.. Cootl o.lly EH.EEN p PHINNEY Cell lornla, Sl•l•wlCI• Foreclosure Piiot" •.....,......of...,., .. clrcvi. C.ltyCletll Services, a. ~c-TrvtlM, wlH llOfl IH'lnled lrt IN 0r.,.,.. C°""'"· ~ Oranea co.sl Deity Pilol Mii •• public auctiaro, to tlle htllfM•I C•llforrole, once • -for tour lllC· J""'-f. ltlf 1S1C).tl' bidder, lot ca.I\ In tewl11I ,,,_.,of lllt cosslve _.,. prto.> lo 11\e dale Ml fOr -~---------Unlltcl SIOIH. all payable al UM llmt 11 .. rlne on Ullt petCllon.
l'VBUC NOTICE ol ule, 111a1 certoln real property Dated: Mo.,• 1'91. 1f111altd In Ille city of Ne"'POrt leacll, MARTIN"· llllAMO C-ty of Or-. Slate of C.llfornla, AtwweyoU.-C"" U74 and descrlbtcl H loll-•· •M _..,. C.... Dttw ,,..,.a 01' TaUSTll'S SAL.a LOI I, Block 432, COrona Del -· a.ltt 11M T s. ..._ 1151 Tract •• per ,.,.. re<or-In Bo<* 3, ........ llNca. CA,.... ...,.._. siu0o J-Md._ pa991 41 -'1 of Mtsctll-ou~ Maps OMI ..,.,. Qii .,,11;. 12 it11 al t tS • m II\ UM offk• ot 11\e c-ty llteorder of PublllllM Or..,.. Coast Dolly 1'1'°'-A *.l.:r49LE ·,. ECOHVE YAN·c !' .. 1c1 ,_,.Y _, 1',J.,,,.s. It, 1t.1•1 u1w 1
PUBUC NOTICE
Cd""°AATION, H Cluly appointed The tlrfft .otlr-arocl olller com· r ..... undllf" and purwant 10 o..ci of moro dealenetlaro, II .,..,, ol '"' rMt r~: .._ o.c.-11, tm, r• iw-rty c1etcr1-aoow I• ourvoneci c~ o.c-t U ltn n IMt. No I• be -----------~'Ill ... 1...a.:,,. 1•. of Of· 421 Femllel, ""-Del Mar, ca NOTlca IMYITIN• ••os llc#l~CW'dtlrotlltoffk•of l ... C:-ti.as. NOTICE IS HaR&BY GIVEN, ... ,
PUBUC NOTICE
SEMINAR-SATURDAY, JUNE 13 9-12 ttOON -fN IRVINE
1;~of0r..,.. C-''1', Stoteof Tiie undtrllll'*I Trvsl" cll1Clalm1 ... Itel iw_.11 for lur11l1lll1>9 ell c any llMltllty for aroy lnt.,.recftu 91 lall•r. mll•rlell, eq111,mero1.
U.. SELl AT PUBLIC AUCTION Ille_.,_ --1 arocl o .. r common lren-1ot)Gn-~II other focllltlet T ttl6H&ST a!ODEA FO" CASH Clnlllfl•ll<lro, II any, INWl'l llefeln. •• may Im ,.quired for CONUAUC•
CP4.,._.. at tlmt or Mia II\ lawful S.ICIMlewllli.rNCltwllllOulcwtn· TION 0, 81KE TRAIL AT ORANGE mWI OI Ille Urolted Slelft) •t the ..... or warrant;, .""'". or lmi>lled, c 0 u ,.. T y F A I A G A 0 u N D s ,,....-...,Oflee lo 11\0old OrantitC-, ... tdl"ll tltla, po_u...,, or tntwm· BETWEEN AA LINOTO N DRIVE
,, • l«Oled oro Serol• AN llnrocea to Mtllf'I' '"' ...... lloros AND MESA OAIVE will .. re«IWcl WOOD LIGHTING, IND.
• --S'(cjllmOA SlrHI illld MC~ed try ---lie Ille ..._, 11'1' the City el Cato MoM, At IN offlal a , Sorola Alie, Celllwftla, ell ol Salt ,....,.,..,.,, In that certain Doecl tlf lllO City Clwl(, n '•'• Oflvt, Cotta w IMH'tSI CIOftw'(ff to ol Trvst cllt«I November 14, 1•. H · MeH, Celltomle, unlll tllO hour of
11e1c1. try ll uro49f told O...OI ICUltcl 1»'-John II. Souket•""" 11:00 a.m.,J-U, 19'1, elwllicll llnw ill ... ~ llutod .... Hid Aroli. ~ ... Trvltor, to Wftlem .,..,, Wiii ... _.... ,ulllkl'I' ..... .-.-sc.dlat(rt ..... · Mut11al Corporation, as Tr11tt .. !« alOuel 111 IM CtaYrocll ~ IHled "ti Trect 7116, lfl IM City of HurotltY nroonclal, • lleMfklory. to tw__.I• IMll llMr the tllle of ti. c_,., • ar ..... , Stat• of M<11re tllt sum of *10,GOO.OO. •1111 lro-wol1l end'"' -Of Illa lllddw ttut no , .. ~ oro a matt thot'eof tereal Iller..,,, •• prwldM 111 .. 1c1 cotllar dlltl,.,...1111"9 marlu. My bkl
In Boak 194, INll" M -11. nattlll, .,,,ances, It .,y, llMltf Illa received elW ti. Khl<Nlod clotl ... le11eo11a M•11•. rodrcls ol lerm.s el Mkl Dead et Tr .. t, !Ma, llmo f.,. IN rootl,t of lllds "'-'1 I» ,...
eei.ty. Cllerllft eNI tlllleflM9 of lM Trwt• twl\Od ta lllo .,._, ~· It tllell
..,... ....... 91141 -· Corn-Md of lrvstl Cl'M!M 11'1 Mid 0..0 of bf tlla tole ,......lllllfty of W,. lllOdef
-....'1" .. ..,;,.--..lon, If ..,,., of ti. rMI Trvst1 lllld _.,.,, .... Novemlllr 17, to lff INt Mt Mel r. recel"oct In llf'Cl9Mf
-.cr1 ... ...., •• , __... 1•. 111 ... tm7 .c ..... m , •Of· umo.
6 Reclwllo A-, lrvlroe, lk lel --·ti# Or .. Couroty, ..... A Mt ef 111-, S..Clel "-11"-of Callfof'NL MCI Hdltllllt .. Qero«el l'rtvltltflS ..
IMIWl•t11 Trwtw dl1Clalnt1 All l111tr1111'falll S11Utltvt1111 1"'11.....,..lpKltlUll .. may••
tty fw MIT lllC.,.,Ktnesl fJf Stale•I* "OACl._e S.tYI"', H l•lllad at 1111 alllce Of lllt Clly
............. ,,., COMmoro Trull .. ---M ,...., II, •1111-. 71 "* Orlow., c:.to ....... ,lf.,y,~""9lll. 1'81, Det-.... t11t7, Ill .... C:.ll!Of'Ma. "--llMClllcetltftl Md wlll .,. ,...., lliut "'!Miit ,,..._ ot ..... ltd , 0r...., c-ity Of. «Nr cMltect '9<.-C. moy OIN • -ffllltt • ....,_ ., Im• 11<1o1 ..--. eu111l11H ot "'° offk• el ti. Qty
Ullo, ........ , or Tiie .. llOfkl_,, llftder Nld De .. of Cltrll of Ila City of Qale MIN. to,.. 1119 l'Mlell'lllll Trust w tecwtty De..tto, lrf """"of e•cll .ic1 111111 lllO M•Oo oro tlle ~ .... ,,...,,, _.,,... • lltMCll"' *911111 Ill ... •ltotteN ~ '9rm. "'"'' ,...1 ....... ,. ..
0... ti Trwt, wltll 1-....t MCU .... "*"'· ._.....,. ·-~ "'9Yi.cl Ill IN Hfl1roe1 dK~ a twWldlld Ill .. Ml M4111•1, IM •11-W lo "'9 ~ • end 111•11 lM o<cempe11lt-_,, • • °"'' llMitr "11 temll of wrtttefl 0.llf9tlM Of o.t..it lllMf <ottlfled W ~I dlotk ... a t*I ti Tf"M91. foot, ~rtM eftd 0.lftOl'ld for Solo, "'41 _,lttM HetlCt Mite fW Ml lftl tlloll 1°" of tllt ti .. TNINt Md of CM of DofaUlt ,,,.,, l~loro ta loll l!Mtt -·ti tl10 llld, ,.._ N'l'MIO • tllO
"' .... DIOd., Tr•. 111a DrlM., .... °""of r,,.. --City ., c.o ........ ,,.... IMll
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tllo II-If tlto 1t1ltlat Dlr-ecilorot le lflO llf ... tty lnaT W It 11\Mo M • .._. fltnft fWNlllM lrf ., .. ~ of ...... ~..,,._.to. """tell, ........ City., Clllll-.. .... It ...... Ill ..... In.I to .. a.n.tkt.., lll~of occ.-.C. wttll .. ~"'IN
1ery ..-, NM o.." 11to ~ r,.... wltlllfl IM ,,._...,.,....,""'"'*' ......... HOC!Mf eM -~ ffM' .. first lll*kotMft tf Wllll aecll __, ..._ N licHmf IM ... **"llll!lf e Wfltltfl Trw ... ,1 .... , .... ~.,....,...., ....
ti OillflWlt ... ~ Tllo t .. ol '"'-' Of Illa tM'91e TM City CWl!cll ti .. City el c.to
a wtlttlfl .... le.t of ~ II IN ........ --· lllY Mato -.. rltM • Nt9<1..,, ............ , TM 1M-.. "*'1Y le .. Mtd, l..CIWllll w 041 llNL , ..... , .. W' llfetlO I ........ c.ott.,, .. ,_..., .-Mo Tllo ~-.. I '"""' Wla\ ............ -,. ,,.... ............ ... ,,..... .... "IK1'-,,,. .. 1111 .. --.._. -,_. 0.: -.,,., 1tli. l11<l11al"• 9f tllO C1llJMlll1 u-. ._.... IT AT I WI 0 I c:..t, .. .,._..... ,.... ...... _, "·"". "°"'CL..OtU"a ....,. ••11._."' ... City., ca... ~ .... ~ MIWtCllt. ll'C. Meu 9'lldl -..._"""" .,_ City ,,_... Al_..,..,,... Qorl ., ...... °'fl W IMll ...... .......... .. ... 4.. ........~----~::::r.:r.:•:-::---........... c ••''U:ll't.==e
11.1er.....; M:a:: °"' °"* .,.. v ....... Clty-Q19 ......
c..t Ollllf ....... .... ..... °' ... Olillel DallY lllllM. ........... Cir ... CtMI , ,... ., ,... II -... .i1111t •· u. "· "" ..,.... -£. "'""
You are invited to come
and see one of the most
complete displays of
lighting fixtures in
Southern California.
You 'll see lighting
fl>ttures in roomlike
settings, table & floor
lamps, and a display of
the 'lery popular fan
lights.
I •
•
NOW MON ·Y /MAR·KET RATES
· INSURED .
ON YOUR "CHECK, NG DOLLARS
COMPARE WHAT YOU GET:
Interest Earnings tied to
the money market
Check writing ability
ACCOUNTS INSURED BY FSLIC
up to $100,000
Earn today's near record
interest rates for six months
Long weekday business hou_rs
Saturday business hours
Fr~e safe deposit boxes
Free travelers cheques
Free use of Community Room
•
Free photo copying
Your money kept in the U.S.A.
right here in Ca_lif ornia
>
I
The Money Market PROFIT CHECK Account is backed by an Overdraft
Account secured by a six month Money Market Certificate. When a check
is written in excess of the amount in the PROFIT CHECK Account, money
is automatically advanced from an Overdraft Account to cover the check.
Advances are made in multiples of SS00.00, up to 90% of the MOney Market
Certificate. Interest is charged on the daily outstanding balance of the
Overdraft Account at the daily periodic rate 1 % over the Money Market
Newport Balboa
Money Savings
Market MONEY MARKET
Fund PROFIT CHECK Account
YES YES
YES YES
no YES
no YES
no YES
no YES
no YES
no. YES
no YES
no YES
no YES
'
Certificate rate. At the end of each six month period. the interest rate
may change upon renewal of the Money Market Certificate.
Deposits to the PROFIT CHECK Account are automatically used to
pay back any loans in force at the time of 'the deposit up to the deposit
amount: Sl0,000 minnnum deposit required to open the account. Federal
J Regulations prohibit the compounding of interest during the term Qf the
Certificate. CALL FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION.
Coming Soon To
Corona del Mar
" .
•
•
fiijCl ~
-·-
,This chers
chic IC en:
He created 'McNuggets'
OAK BROOK, Ill. (AP> -Rene Arend
once prepared baute cuisine for the cultured
elite ln opulent dining salons of the Old
World. But the tourmet chef t.bouJbt lbe
taste buds of the muses deserved a break.
So be became executive chef for
McDonald's Corp., and bis culinary brain
~·"'-~bildren are filtering down to the common
man in outlets of the fast-food colossus
around the world.
The jump to the world of fut food was
not a quick decision, tbouah. It took six years
of job offers from Ray Kroc, founder and
senior chairman of McDonald's, to win over
Arend.
'"I told Mr. Kroc, 'I'm a chef. I don't
• believe in hamburgers,"' the 52-year-old
Luxembourg native says with a grin, his pale
blue eyes twinkling. "But after a time, I
became strongly attracted to the idea of glv ·
ing something to the people without a big
wallet. Now I make many people happy with
my food, not just a rich few."
Hired by Kroc in 1976, Arend says he was
given the mission of "preserving the quality
of McDonald's food" and developing and test·
ing new food products for the chain's
restaurants.
In bis spacious kitchen at McDonald's
• ~ headquarters in this Chicago suburb, Arend
judges fast food candidates with the help of
company home economists, food technicians
and consumer research data.
"First," Arend says, "we get an idea -
from Mr. Kroc, myself, McDonald's
employees or franchises, for example -then
I gather recipes for that product from my
fellow chefs, create my own recipes for it,
and compare them."
Approved recipes go to a company test
market.
Arend says that in Europe "inferior"
cuts of meat encouraged gourmet chefs to
create distinctive sauces pleasing to every
palate.
"Successful ~estaurateurs always play
around with sauces," be says. "The choice of
meats is always limited, but sauces create
the variety."
Arend says he applied his expertise in
... ~
Rene Arend, ezecutive chef for the
McDonald's Corp., debones chicken for his
latest creation, "McNuggets" in the com·
pony's test k:Uchen in Oak Brook, IU.
sauces in developing McDonald's "Chicken
McNuggets" product, introduced last year in
1,000 of the chain's more than 6,000 outlets
worldwide.
"What makes me so proud of this
product is the choice of sauces served with
it," Arend says. "The customer can choose
three -mustard, sweet-and -sour or
barbe<:ue -which I developed.
Arend also developed McDonald's
"Chopped BeefSteak" and "McChicken"
sandwiches.
Despite his lofty post with an American
fast-food giant, Arend makes no bones about
his favorite dish. "For me. it is pate de foie gras or pate de
campagne, with truffle sauce," be says.
''And I could eat a pound of ca vier anytime."
Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Friday. June 5, 1981 •
SACRAMENTO <AP) -A consumers' coall·
lion is callln& ror creation of a state "family home
bank" to help low-and middle-income Californians
acquire bOmea.
The coalition of consumer advocata, real
estate interests and mtnortt)' .,O-.pa has told a
news conference \bat 91 percent of thole who want
to buy homes for the flnt time "are now frozen out
of tbe boualna market."
The plan ls to establish a Famlly Home Bank
Board to re1ulate new, privately chartered banks
that would offer low fixed-rate and limited
variable-rate mortga1es to nrst-time bomebuyera.
The funds would come from investors and de·
posltors who would aet major tax breaka, lnclud·
' tng tax-free savings accounts.
The coalition said the decline in tax revenues
could cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars,
but that would be offset by property tax revenues.
"The variable-rate mort1a1e ts doinc nothin1
to solve the housing cri1ls ln Callfomla," said
Harry Snyder, West Coast director of Conaumers
Union. He said variable interest rates "are Uke put·
ting up your down payment and throwing craps to
see If you can make your mortaage pa)'ment Mi:e
month."
But banb and savin11 and loan l.nJUtuGoel •
say they need to ebar1e borrowen aufftclat ·
terect to pay ln~rut that will be hlth eDQJ.tp
attract de~itt. Ri>bert GnaWla of Public Advocatet, a puWt
interest law ftrm, aald the avera1e cotl of I
California home In April was SM,000 which, wt.a
Interest rates that currently exceed 18 pertent, ii
out of reach for most first-time California buyer1.
Under the ramlly bank plan, Gnmda said, •
$80,000 home with 10 percent down would have It•
terest payments of $300 monthly on the remaildlll
S72,000 when purchased wltb a mort1a1e at 10 ,,..
cent lnterelt.
Figurine ln tbe principal, he added, the _.
monthly payment would come to $450 to S500 ,.
month, art affordaltle amount, he said, to mldcUI"
and many low•lncotno f amilles.
David Scott, a San Francisco real eatate
broker and former director of the California M-
sociation of Realtors, said the "real problem 19
credit allocation," adding that tight credit •
home purchasing has crippled the housing muttt.
Total bus deregulation fought
Industry spokesmen testify before House panel
WASHINGTON CAP> -Anyone who could af·
ford to buy a bus, no matter how old and beat up it
is, would be allowed to operate a charter or tour
service lf there were total deregulation of the in·
dustry, bus companies say.
Industry representatives, opposing a proposal
by the Interstate Commerce Commission and the
views of the Justice Department, has recom-
mended there be limited deregulation along with
the elimination of discriminatory state regula·
lions, including those on passenger fares.
"One of the major deterrents to a consistently
viable, competitive bus industry nationwide has
been the crazy quilt of inconsistent state regula·
lions that have discouraged investment in new and
expanded bus services," Theodore C. Knappen,
senior vice president of Trailways lnc., told the
House Public Works subcommittee on surface
transportation on Wednesday.
Norman C. Thomas, president of Thomas
Motor Tours lnc. of Lothian. Md., told the subcom·
mittee that the ICC has sought in recent days to
administratively deregulate the intercity bus in·
dustry "by allowing almost anyone who could
purchase a bus for the haulage of people, a pre·
cious cargo, without first examining the person or
persons· ability to reliably engage in such services
to the public.
"Moreover, there have been strong campaigns
to encourage certain segments of the population to
enter into this very lucrative genre, as envisioned
by the ICC today," Thomas said. "This industry is
already well populated and even overpdpulated in
many areas.·• The bus companies, including Greyhound ...
Trailways, all supported an ind~stry-sponlONt
bill to limit deregulation by ehminatint eUllB
regulations and allowing greater freedom ..
abandon unprofitable routes.
William L. McCracken, senior vice pres
of Greyhound Lines lnc., told the committee -
"a meaningful reduction in regulation will p~
a number of desirable results including greater ..
ficiency, lower cost.a. more innovation, grea•
variety of service and price options, more flexi ..
operations and a greater responsiveness to tie
needs and desires of the traveling public."
Comprehensive Care
wins defense pact
Comprehensive Care Corp., Newport Beaela,
has been awarded a two-year contract to pron•
an employee assistance program to more U..
14,000 civilian erµployees working in the Penta-
The contract, effective July 1, was awarded ...
the Department of Defense and is worth $260,000.
Comprehensive Care Corp. Is the natl•'•
largest private provider of alcoholism treat...-
services, treating more than 35,000 patients an·
nu ally. Treatment is provided in care units, COD·
tract units based in community bospitals and la
free-standing alcoholism hospitals.
: ·HIGHER YIELD and SHORTER TERM
Mercury Savings Now Offers
NEW "Repo Plans."*
~:~_ (..~ We loa•• M•eral "Fmdo"* c.w1""*t ~~->· ~ available for ow cuatonwrs ~,, ~, ~FOR CURREHT RATES ... Call or visit
0 ~~ . . your nearest Mercury office. t.:.·~ .. · ':· . MERCURY SAVINGS ~-~ ·~ and loon aaotiation =~ ~-------, . ttm Buell Lake F1rest
23021 Lake Center Or.
El Toro. CA. 92630
(714) 770-2601
-~eim Hills
~77 E. La Palma
Anaheim. CA. 92807
(714) 779-7047
TIStil
1095 Irvine Blvd.
Tustin. CA. 92680
(714) 832-7701
B•na Pn
8955 Valley View
Buena Park. CA. 90620
(714) 821-6000
his obligation is not a savings account or deposit and Is nof Insured by the
eral S8Y1ngs and Loan Insurance Cor ration.
All fans guaranteed up to 5 years
Choose from alx different stytes
No Refunds or Exchanges
B. 24 "-et told platN 12" Gold VlctCMtan
(Shown wtlh optional apt ldl)
SALi $ 1 CJCJOO ... '411.•
....... , ••• ~....._ ...... , ... Offwt
Amid a generation of rapidly depre-
ciating cars, the BMW 3201 stards as an
automotiVE\rarity. A car woch, over the years, has held
virtually all of rts value.
Indeed, according to the January 1981
NADA Used-Car Gulde, the 3201 dlKing the
past 4 years has retained an average of
95.2% of Its original purchase price on the
used--car market.
A figure which becomes au the more
remarkable when one considers that, over
the same time span1 the value of some cars
dwindled bot as rrucn as 5096.
The reason for the 320i's extraordinary
~tment potential hes, we believe, in one
fact.
It is extraordinarily engineered.
The benefits of which are exhlb1ted-
not only on the used-car lot-but on the
open road.
Press the accelerator of the 3201 and
its fuel-in1ected engine responds with a
thrust that harks back to the days before en·
wonmental controls.
Rourd a particularly dramatic curve.
and the legendary BMW suspension system
makes one feel as though the e<1 were slot-
ted into the roadway ·
And perhaps unexpected tn a car of the
3201's perlorMance credentials are its mile-
age figures.
For with a 5-speed stahdard ttansmrs-
5'0f'l (.automatic IS ava1la.ble) rt deliVeis en im-
pressive EPA estimated~~ m the city,
ard 36 estimated mpg on the tighwaJ.
(Naturally, our fuel efficiency figures
are for comparison only. Your actual mileage
may vary. depending on speed, weather and
tnp length. Your actual highway mileage will
most hkely be lower.)
All of which explains why the editor-
pubhsher of Car and Driver magazine-a
man nol renowned for extravagant pra1se-
once wrote, "The BMW 320i is the sort of car that enthusiasts turn into legend."
If the notion of owning such a car in-
tngues you, we suggest you phone your
rearest BMW deafer and arrange a thorough test drive.
.. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 5, 1981
Corporate role debated
~hould less government mean more responsibility?
r CHET CVRIUEB neu' sake Isn't enou1h -parttcuJarly now that
NEW YORK (AP> -It wa1 the typical proxy the nation has voted overwhelmln&l)' ror an ad·
•tatement ror a corporation's annual meeUna. mini1tr1Uon pledCed to reduce the role of 1overn·
complete with a list or a ball dozen prop0111.s by menl ln aoclety.
acUvtahtockholders. "We mwst makt aun that H method• chanae.
Resolution No. 3 called on the board of dlrec· aoals and ldealJ do not,·' be aaid.
t.ora lo order a sharp lncreue In the charitable "Jt t1":9 cutback• we 're all readlna 10 much contributiona made by the company. about today mean a atroncer America, better able
Resolution No. 4 called on the board of direc· lo benefit lta cltbena but without the muahroomln&
tors to order an LmmedJate halt to au ctiaritable cost of the past, thJa la all to the cood.
contnbuttons made by the company. ''But we can't let ltaa 1overnment in our lives
No. 3 called It an outraae that an or1anbation and less cost to taxpayers mean 1111 f airneaa to
derlvln1 so mucl\ benefit from American society our mlnortties, lesa equality In American lift, leaa
._ sumptuous salariea for its executive., millions opportunity for aood Jobi and " aood educatlon,
in dlvldenda for its shareholden -was making less honesty in the marketplace, le11 health, lees
only a modest gesture at charity. safety, less security for our older people, less art
All wrong, No. 4 declared. The company's and culture available to fewer people.
responsibility was to Ha owners -the "We have promlaed to provide more and bet·
stockholders, big and small to earn for them the ter jobs for our minorities, without mindless
.createst possible return on their money . quotas. We have promised to treat women in the
In this particular case, neither resolution workplace in the same way lo which we treat men, ume close to passing. without bureaucratic prodding.
But despite their quiet demise, the two con· "We have promised to strike a sensible
traslinJ proposals pointed up an issue that has balance between environmental concerns and the
been simmering for\ a long time. If a good many need for economic growth, without an interfering
observera of corporate America are right. sooner government. We have promised lo let the or later it ls going to come to a rolling boil. marketplace regulate prices, witho11t needless
In a speech he gave earlier this year, Howard rules and regulations.
Goldfeder, chief executive of Federated Depart· "We have promised to protect the health and
ment Stores, parent of BloomingdaJe's, Bullock's, safety or the men and women who work for us.
Burdtne's, Filene's and several other famous without armies or inspectors. We have promised to
rtames in retailing across the country, defined the run our businesses in a way that is fair to our
question. customers, without government lnlervenors.
From a manager's point or view. he told the "These promises must be kept," Goldfeder
\National Conference of Christians and Jews, "just concluded. "There are plenty or people who 'running a business in a businesslike way is a big believe they will not be kept. Ir we do not keep
challenge" these days. them, we may never have another chance to have
Ho.,.ever, Goldfeder said, business for busi· our convictions taken seriously."
iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijif
-EXECUTIVE SUITES
JADE MANAGEMENT
881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14
NEWPORT BEACH
714 -631-3651
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
"1BUC NOTICE
COUECTOAS
CORNEA
Rare Coln• 6 St•mpe
GOLD & SILVER
6-4-11 e.NC_...,_. 161.wCl.Stt.U ....... WI.JS .-,u 146&.• ..., ....
.... ,. MS17S
U1Ut UM.It •11" •U"
OVER THE COUNTER
'· ..
,
NYSE COMPO ITE TRAN ACTION
QUOTATto411$ INClUH •••OfiON , ....... \IO•IC. MIOWUf •AC:•••c ...... lt0$TON, ou•on AND CINCllOI•"' llOC• lllCWANOH a11o••'°•TIOIY Tllll IU•OANO IN\ltNIT
N•I• \411 .. ~·
The arocery bualness la in a 1chboohr.n.lc •tat•.
beat characterised perhaps by a dellnltlon a friend ol
mine once coined tor that. uniq~ly American len:D,
"superette," which 1ome nela,hborhood food at«ea
u&e to t.ell the world they're 1mall but not that amal,l.
''There," he said, "IO a prefix and a aul!lx bead!ot
oCf in opposite directionJ."
This diviaion wu apparent Jut month in Dallas
where some lS,000 1rocery people gathered for lbe
44t.h annual convent.ion of the Food Marketln1
lnstltute It's the blgge1t grocery meetin1 of the
year, and it. waa not the happiest of 1alherin11 lbla
time arowtd. You may be aghast at what the CHh
register shows at the checkout counter. but ~he
supermarket operators are having a hard time ralJ·
ing their prices fast enough to meet their cosla.
Neither Safeway. our largest grocery chain, nor
Kroeer. the No. 2 chain, was able to make 11 much u
a penny on a dollar of sales last year.
To cope, the supermarket people are char1ln& off
in two different directions. One way says "go blf."
The other way says "go small." The traffic is heavy
on both routes.
The "go big" school advocates lhe building o!
giant stores, sometimes called "superstores" or
"combination stores" (food-and-drug>. In either case
you're putting ~ up a monster l'-
s lo_re., at the \i~ o m1n1mum 'r ,
30 ,000 s_quare .,--~ reet, WI th at ___ .. ____ _, _____ _
~h~c~o~t t co~n~ lllJll lllUlllZ
ters , and
merchandise stretched out so far you need binoculars to get oriented
Ttie superstores are being built. Safeway opened
120 of them last year. One, in Sherman, Texas, cov-
ers 57,600 square feet. The rationale for these stores
is clear: "Let's get away from the food business."
It's a fact of retailing life that margins are very low
in the food business. A store can make more money
selling lipstick. drugs, cigarettes. greeting cards and
sneakers than it can selling milk. lettuce, chicken,
hot dogs and rrozen peas. Hence the passion, among
supermarket folks. for non-roods.
But there's another strong voice in the grocery
business that insists: ''Let's get back to basics." This
school advocates scaling down stores, reducing the
number or items earned, eliminating frills, atocldng
up on private label or generic products and passing
on the cost savings to the consumer in the form or
lower prices.
A bunch of these stores are being opened.
They're called "limited assortment'' and
"warehouse" stores. Some simply display the pro-
ducts on the very pallets they arrived on. These
economy stores carry, among others, these names:
Aldi, Plus. Save-A-Lot, Grocery Box, Economiser,
Mark & Pak. U-Mark It, Bobco, Kash N Karry, Cub, Prairie
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
AMERICAN LEADERS
Hl!W vo .. K (All') -s. ... TIIW"-Pfk• Mf Mt cNflOI of U. i... .-t ktlW AnMfl<en S.11 lb"** Is-, ltMlfta ~1., .t "*'9 ~ II. llltl 81111Nt »t,1119 fV. • .. DomePtn. 41J,All!ll ti -.. HollOHTr •.200 t6.. + .. CM,,._ 14-JOl,taO 2'•
"efl9IH"()ll 1'1... 11 \'I .... IWcliaOll t ,.,,.. 2'111 -~
MklllE 1 "'·MO 2'\'I + .. Al..U Aln 12'.eoo in. + " CeftOll Goll 1u;200. '"' • ,,.
,.._,. " •.100 sv. • "'
GOLD COINS
HEW YOIU( (Alt) -~Ql .... W.... NY 9f llDlll <.elN, ~ wltll .,._.,.,
ltfle• . • ,.....,...., t _., e&., ..... ,,_ 9" 16.IS --.... .... , .,.., ...... ,,,fM ... .. ............. ,'""' .......... .,, .._ .. •--'-"'~ .... ,.., ......... ,,. .........
Haw votllUA~I ,,.,,.., ~ ......
hW T........,,Jwt.4.
STOCKS C-.. Cllll
JO '"" cr=., =e. ~ __ ,_ t.fl
20 Tr11 CUI C2IUO GO.It GAAi • 2.Jt
U Ull IOUJ '85.1' =.::: ,..,,.,_ !·?J ~ .. ~.·~-~~ .......... ~~ Tl"M ... • ... .... 1,m.• UUIS . ... .... .......... S._,. 6S so . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . ..,,, ...
WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW YOIUC IAl"I J.., 4
T-7' , . .,
1'22 .. n
HEW YORI( (All') JIM!. 4
'°" i: ns 11
12
I '""· ii ..
''" I
METALS TllurloMY • c: ...... ~1c-• ,.._,U.S.~
llOftS.
LeM J1,. <MIU• llOllfld.
lltte ...... ~ .................... .
T .. 16.45'0 MeUls W-~It• lit.
At_...., ... c.-ils •pound, N. Y. MMcwy tell.GO .. , ti.a.
~IAtl-..... OD troy OL, N Y.
"_...,a..-.'"._,,..., __
-EVBM-
~, .. ..,.
.,.._WOMAN
._,., WOl'Mll le oon-•
_..bytllrMNul
~
,,... .,.,,_.. . ---.. tlOft eftd t•te Ille
......... " !Ml c.i .. ~todhlm. •Ol'MAIG.._
MOW
Dllne g«t r~
~ wlll't ...... hlind-'°"'• •"d debonelr
"°"*'·(Ill) • CMOl. IUlllmT
IMO .....
~...,,... henloll
•• WAii-TON _ .....
MO. (I) THI DUQI OIJ
HAZZAN)
TM IOOI from • ..... roe.
b9ry .. found In Aoeoo'• _.,,,.,
-~ "lldl ltlow'' (PremWe)
~ t<arMI, conNe ...
-. A 1..,_-o6d ~
~ .. dta'9 ••pup-
pe4eet "' ... 1t40I and ..
befriended by • big top ....... I TlC T~ DOUGH
M'A'l'H
A dlepanuud Korw
t9lnlly end a °"' """ • 01 beby ceu. pl'obteml tor
t11e40ntt1.
• 0000'*'8
PULLING STRINGS-Lance Kerwin plays
a 16-year-old puppeteer who Joins the
circus in the late 1940s in "Si e Show"
tonight at 9 on Channel 4.
•• MOVll • • ... "Tiie Comet>ecll
IOd" (1M0) "°"" ""*· s-Dey~ ""' .-plrtng
b...cMlll pltGNr ""'° .. cut
from 1111 "*-~
tMm ~ • pley-
oround eupen41or tor a
~of ltrMt ~ ,,., . ..,,,,~
Oueet1: Relph O.Uno,
J•ry Ven Dyke, Allen
Fewcett, ~thy Cfonklte.
Monique Yett Voor9n.
n. e..,.,,. ~ '** "' economic ~ after both
--and J.J. lo. "'* lira EUICTNC
i..r& I l(OfTa
!(otter n1u1t decide
whither he thould IC)lnd
-time wtth Julie Of
help Barbarino prepare tor
Illa makeup 1111.
• llENNY Hill.
Benny playl l'rench tllm
dltect0t Pierre du T ltfl.
• KCET NIWeMAT e sn.oo1&
"Olr1 81k•" Molorbllt• .,. ridden through .,.
Ol>atade coune and on the
S1ddleb1ck Treck In
Southern Callfoml. (Al
Cl) NIWI 0 MMSYMIUM
In the. midst of a New Yotlc ,_t -· Berney ._ ,. cool whlll hie wife ~
~· him from tlklng 1 --· 1:111 EDfTONAL ,:00 C.NIW8
..CNIWI
I • HAPPY QAYI MNH
Rlc:hle the benehwll'mll'
becomla a ~etbell • ..,
lfter ~ .,, ln~ed pqyer.
• A8CNEW8 ·~ CHANNEL LISTINGS
VCll Ponw ......... 11.J.,
Fninll llnd "9dar gM ~
~ loaf on their wey
back from 1 medlc:tll rnMl-a· mmT't Of< SAN "'""°"°° . Stone beconWa IUrllDue
~ .. prteon. won't
fight tor 1\19 ln."IOl*IOI
whfll ,_ ~ lhed8
.... Oft the ltVttl.
• OW..IA8Y ~ta:~ Key Starr,
l,ISC P'ofellOt Fernando
T 0trea 01. pelnt11 Alu
Mllld!DMdo. (A)
• MACNIK. I LDNR
NPOM
(I) TIO TM; DOUCIN
• ..,,,, GM'9'tN
~·: Ralph o.uno. Jerry Van Dyke, AAln
F.-tt.
7:IO 8 I OH THI TOWN
Hoeta: Strte Edwwcn.
Melody Roger-. A -who ..._ to llnlmml; lhe
art of ftllConry at tN AJI
Force ~ In Colota-
do Spnnga; the Mltchlll
8o)'I Choir. D 'M&YflaJO .... _'UJ..
8alllmore OrtcMI at c.....
lornle Angell
• T1WTC*E I '"°'THI MUtec ALL ... TMIFMM.Y
Gloria Ilk• out her fNll...
tre1kln9 lboul beir'O preo-
nlnt on Mike.
• MACHEL 11..BtMR
~
IJ KNXT 1CBS1 LOS Angeles
0 KNBC 1NBC1 Los A(lgeles U KTLA 1lnd) Los Angeles D KABC TV tABCI Los Angeles
()) w.FMB tCBSI San D•ego 0 KHJ TV (Ind) Los Angeles
9 KCST (ABCI San Diego
G) KTIV I Ind I Los Angeles
Cl) l<.COP TV (Ind I Los Angeles fD KCET· TV I PBS! Los Angeles
a\) KOCE TV 1PBSJ Hunt1ng1on Beach
•••••• DCH•Mlll
"MoWlftO Product'' The
•hipping. rell•ay and
tructdng lnduatrlM ire
~lnU.lookat
tM ~of moWIO
P'Odllct8 In end out of Cll--
lfoml&.
(I) ...... MAGAZJNe
Battlmore'1 Tough ~
and Glr1I conlelt; llte on
tN P-*lc lalend par9dlal
of 8ora llorL
e:OOeCll TMI~
HULK '
Oe"6d &aMet'•. ·~ "*'" on htm..it beClcfn and _., him Into .,. -
mor9 prlmltl"9 ute. (A)
• HARPa VAUSY l'TA
Stell lllma the Alllyl -lllegelty ~ ....
from the town creek IOt
-et their lectory. (A) ea..,..
Blnlorl ..,_ to help
l(r-ea.dy '°'her dttnn-
ltllp ...... (A) .MCME • * ''The VIOient ll'tot.-._.... (1175) Nchard
Conte, LI*•~ One
m1n le det•mlned to
Cf'O dowl'I on the ~
oete wlll't °' without lll4p ,,omttiei.w. ., .... ~
a.ltlmor9'• Tough ~
and Olftl ~; lfe on
... Pacl8c ....., peredlla °' aor. Bon: ~ c.not
Oft tN good and bad of
~ Joen Embery lot-
low8 a herd of,_ ...
• MCMI • * * "My8t11lel From
Beyond Earth" 111n1 Doc-
umentary. Sdentlat9 and
run Chel• explore Ille
par1lnOf'lnll ..ortd of UfOa.
l(lrtlan photognipfty. pey-
cftoldnelll. c:lofq, ESP
and Iha Bermuda Triengle.
• LOI Af4QE n WOK
.. MVWW
Hoet: ca.e. Aoblrll.
• MAOB. I LEH..,_
~ l::IO. M..aN>
Mlle .. with the "'·
• WALL ITMET Wiii<
"Economlo Growth And
W.W. To find"'' au.:
A. Gary~. ptWident.
A. Gary an.no & eomp..
l ine.
VOT'llfaPIPIUNI
11n09 County In Wuh-
lngton" Hoel Jim Coop«
~Or ... ~
'Y'• COllOf eMlollel --.,.,.. on the national ..._
thet .. "9¥9 • llPedll lm9Kt on the locel .....,, t:.ao. IAClft..._ITO Wll!IK .....,,_
Hoet; Mwl'llY Fromeon. 10*>. Cl) DAUM
Thi oonfllct ~ 8otJ..
by and J.A. --.t ....
9obtly '-"-to .eeci
down .. pl'Mident of
ii'IOl.(A) I MAii"= ce TNIATM NITIVAL OIJ
'AYONTU
"Thi Oo6deft Bowl'' 8uecl
on I nowl by H~
..i.mea. In .,. etternt>t to
c:hangl her ~ Meg-
~ beglfw • PfGgrlm of
..-ng mor9 of CNrton•
IP"1 l)(A)
.ai.MO't'DW
~
"My\91 Hotjon, Thi Htllbll-
ly Aldlcll'' 8111 Moy9ra
lnteMewi My:lel Horton,
lduoatOt end foundllr of •
edloOI 1n T.,,,_ ttwit
teecn. poor people the
.tof ...... (PW11)
10:IO •• NRWI
I =:~=~ ContrOI?" au.ta: ~
R. s..beny, PMt ~
dent of Callfomla Rlftl and
Ptltol Aaeocilt1lon Ind 816-
ney lrmue, dlllrman of the
COllltJon for hlndgl.w'I ~
trol
Henry James story shmm
love and morality of 1800s
By MICHAEL DOUGAN
Ot .. 0-. ...... Swt
Henry James' curious tale of moral irony,
"The Ambassadors,'' will be presented in a
literate and ctiarming dramatiution at 10:30 p.m .
Wednesday, June 10, on Channel 50.
Programmers at the Huntington Beach station
should be cbi4ed for puttin& this entirely satisfyine
BBC-Time-Life co-production oo the air so late.
Since it runs 90 minutes, many early birds will be
forced to miss a good
teleplay. (It repeats
TELEVIEWS Saturday. June 13, at
il:3() a .m., an equally
unllkely time to be
watching the tube.)
patiently at the station," be tells another young
American. "without me ba~g the eumption to
know it was tbere ... but it's too late. The train ii
gone and I bear its faint recedine whistle miles
and miles down the line. What one loaes one loses,
make no mistake about that."
Obviously, Scofield is delUned to fall in bi1
ml11lon and lose the affection of the wayward
lad's mother. Juat aa clear, in Ume, ii that he
ctoesn't care.
At issue, it 1eem1, is whether the youn1 man
(David Hoffman) Js aleepin& with the worldly
woman, portrayed with baahful ele1ance by
Delphine Beyri&. Jf not, their relationship may be
wholesome and juatlfiable to tbe folb back. home;
It IO, it ia vile and mat be termlnated by force
(remember, these were the l.800I).
But, Ultimately, James 11 concemed with
TUBE TOPPERS
KHJIJ 8 :00 -"The Violent
Professionals." Richard Conte and Luke
Merenda star in a movie about a man
who fights the syndicate.
KCOP m 8:00 -"Mysteries from
Beyond Earth." A documentary tum ex·
ploring UFOs and psychic phenomena.
ABC D 9 :00 -"The Comeback Kid."
John Ritter and Susan Dey star ln a
movie about a tough-luck ballplayer who
helps a gang of kids.
.... w
HmTWOMNRWI n:001eeCllO NIWI 8TARTll9C
The Enter11'1M and ...
cirew -tt ...... .i not to
~ .,.., mlaa6on of
oontactJng • -gaAMy . I NIWLVWIDGAMS _,'A'l'H
Col. Pott.,.• mare Sophia
myst.nou.ly dlaappeal•
from her -· and ...... • end 8.J. try 10 lll4p a
yowig Kor.-i who .. trying
to e\IOld conac:t1ptlon Into
the 91""1· e....vHU a.my pl!ly8 a honeymooli-
., 8Pl"dlng Ille night on
Anwtcln I ~ dll-
~ wrttOtY.
• DICKCAWTT
Ouell: ,,_ Clewll. (P.t
2of 2)
·INEAK~ RoOI' Ebert Ind a..
81Mll review "Bullln'
~ ... ''Thia la EM8" and
"The Four 8-one."
t 1:aG. Cl) TMI NIGHT
8TA&.JCP
Kolc:Nk -• mutder bllnO commlnad by a man
he ..... he -blfot9 -;a~ the fTIOt9UI.
au.t hOlt: Devld Letter-
man.. au.a: Dr. l.idon
Smith, Hoyt Axton, Joan
Embery. eO MCNIWI
Nam.M ·=MAQADIAL *. * "Thi ar.et oat.bY'
( 1174) AoOert AedfOtd,
Mil Ferrow. 1-.d on tN
now! by "· loon Atlger-lld. A WMltfly 1t20a boot·
....~ ..... ..,
,.....,,..19 lhe -he lcMI.
• cwa"""" ~ JudGae= si-
~. C)ndy 0...-..y, J!ly
Johnlof\. au.et: Johnny Potr-. ••~uc NRWI
1HO. MOV1a * * 14 ''C4HN Of Thi
Undeld" (1Mt) Enc Flem-
ing, Mlc:lhell P-. A vwn-
plr9 gunrnett .--ler• '°' thfoughout lhe w .... 10 PMJAYI MAYIM* 81111 ...... to ._ 111'1 elec.-
tlon efter ,.... ..... ttwe9t·
ened.
• MMTTA
"tt'a H#d, lut tt'I Fair"
-~ tt:IO D TC>MoMow
The outer frlngel of lll'lt•·
talnmeot a,. 1Jqllofld
lnthl• ICMClal edition,
r..turlnt the Englleh punli
bend Thi a..11, under-
oround mov1e ....,. OMne
and a 'ltllt to a eedo ,,_.
a...... ... '*'b.
tl:AO. Cl) MOVll
•• ''Zebra Force" (1175) .... a..n.. Alotlard x.
Sleltery. a-. form.
'"'9l'nben of I mllltary tac1·
lclll unit ..,.,iy "'* trlllrMg
to the av..u with .cunnang
.n.cd .. _(A)
HIO. NYCHC
... ,O .. ..._TMI
WON.D-.VOND
JOHN DARLING
, ,.
............. "'The .......
Hom:......,~
~Huftl. ... Or ....
.. &rteo ...... ..
---::;.:~_. .............. &,···~ WOM ...
1:10. VlleO WllT
~ "*' L.lay, My """'"9. 9M coee.llo.
Tld T~. 8riM "'°' ... Lo.e. • ADMl-11 Miiiar end ...... c.I ... .-. ....... atirt• ....
...... ""' ... -.ota of
IWOOIM&
1•• MOYll * * ''Wheel Of FOf'tl#le"
(1t41) ,,._. °"' Joflrl W.,.,._A~~
..,... ... """' aboul • ~ polltMrl _, 1119
Ill ...........
• MOYll
•• "T-"' The Cfypt"
(1llO) Cfw1etoplw '--· ~ AmMr. A ldentllt
·~byl-'IOa
llrange _... to deltroy a --• MDVII * * ''Hatdlail F0t A Hon-~" (1110) 8 .....
~.Deen-L--.
der. Newl)-..d gltte -rnurdeNd wttll 1 .._
hlfdleil by • men who
remember9 ,_. of hie
~ wtth .-:II lllllng. t:40. MCME * * "What Are 811t
Frtendl FOt?'' (1113) Ted
8-91, Lee Orwlt Aller
...... kkb him °"'· •
INfl ~to,__
~ tN tr-by lt!lylng HOI .. a=· ilowe. .t:IO NRWI
HO IDITONAL
1:11 MCME *** "Ac11on In Thi North Atlantic" ( 1143)
~ &oo-1. AllY·
mond M~. Metcllant
"""'-llgflt ...,...,ely
to keeci ~ .,_
f:=' World War II.
._ MCME * * "Ood'1 CCMlnlry"
( 114t) 84'11er Keaton,
"'°'*1 l..Ollpery. A buffoon
oawpolle --lrwoMd In mlndYlnturea on th• w-.m,..,.. .MCME * * "Horror RIMI FrOll! Thi Tomb" (1110) Paul
Hllclhy, Emma Cohen. 1:101 =
.... ''The,.,.., Red ~
et" (tMO) Gare1c1 Motw,
Nora Hayden.
.. ,.... .
.. MCM9 •
•• ·<Qroee~"
( ttll) H.I w.,,,.,.. ~ .... I ... .....
-..\llHll\\ -I --
by Annstrong & Batluk
THE 00XeR IS ONE. OF
I HE M05T 0EAUllFUL AND MAJE1STIC OF DOGS. JOHN.'
,.--~~~~~~ .....
YOU HAVE SOME
FILMS THAT
YOU'LL BE.
SHONING-A00UT I HEGE c::oGS,
C\?N'T '(CXJ,
NATHAN ~
-rMA'1"6 RIGHT! T~~Ei...L
6E SOME l30'><ER 5HORIS SMOWN IN 'THE-AUDITORIU M /
· Congress cuts
CPB dollars
BJ NORMAN BLACK
a-W.Pt-.Mtler •
WASHINGTON -A House-Senate conference
committee, in a major defeat for public broad·
casters, has agreed to cut $35 mUlion from the fis·
cal 1983 budget for the Corporation for P~lic
Broadcasting.
The decl.lion still must be ratified by both
chamben of Con1reu to be final. But PuPlic
broadcasting official.I said it was unlikely they
could persuade the Senate and House to reje,:t a
compromise worked out by conferees. I
The budget reductlon for the year that begins
Oct. l, 1982, from S172 million to sm million. is ex·
peeled to have a serious ~pact on the 1siz' of
CPB's arants to il\dlvidual radio and TV statlons
and on the level of national pro1ram produqtion
undertaken by CPB itaell.
Tb4 show stars Paul Scofield u a 19th century
M assachwsetta provincial dispatched to Paris by
his wealthy fmacee to rescue her aon from the lov-
e·gr.sp 9f a sophiAticated French woman. There
he befriends, and quietly f~la in love with, an
American expatriate played by Lee Remick.
another type of morallt,y, more deep and 1ub9tan-PaulScofWldandl..nlWmiclc,ltar1fn
tlal 1D nature. In the end, Scofield makes a de· "TIM? Amball0dor1."
claion that is Impeccably moral, even while we
The CorporatJon for Public Broadcasting 14 the
private. non-profit or1anlzatioo created In 19'7 at
the direction of Con1reas to encourafe the g ... wth
of commerclal·free radio and t.elevi1ion. I
Seofield sees the youtb'1 W• u fu richer than
that he has pursued.
root for him to do otherwise. clviUled, soft-spoken and poueu a tra&ic wit.
"'lbe Ambassadors" is directed in a gentle, The program deserves a lar1er audience than
CPB's moat important roles now are i. aJ .
locate and distribute federal funds directly to in·
dlvidual station.a. quiet fashion. The main ~b,_.-acten are PCJ1Jetically it will probably draw.
~~:;zi=~~~~~"t:pii~
"It's as if the train bad been waiting for me
Wh~t is The Bottom Line?
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The Bottom Line ii an eurd•e aaloPJ where each indivktual
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Step back
Into 1890
~~~~~~~~~~-
• Buddy Edsen as
Master Of Cenmonies .
Offlcill Bridp Dtdlcatiln
ta bi held on Brid11
Antiqui Car Par~ ·
• Dixieland Band
I
1906. 1981
BRIDGE DEllCAl111!
SUl•HJ • ~ I Jiii. 9:00 A.M.
JOHNSEYANO
SNOOPING A&OUND:
: LiQebacker Jack Reynolds, formerly
of the Rama, it still quietly seething at
b1I ln-laws' boule ln Tennessee. He ia
lite 1 time bomb ready to explode at
any second.
Tbe reaacm for Jack'• u,er ls sim-
Ple: be feels the Rama deliberately put him ~ a seuon of bell, causing
ReyDOldl to baYe one of bll best -and
moet fnaltratlq -seuqm • a pro.
s : •• s o a o us s cs: a a a --·-~
% ..
l1ilJ. Pilat
FRIDAY, JUNES, 1911
$ c •• • a u •..-4-
Ah, spring,
time for· •.
Football? You guessed it!
BY &OGE& CARLSON or .. ....,,........,
Spring -time for baseball, track, golf,
tennis, and assorted fancies, such as football.
Football? That's right, it may be months
away from the opening lticlcoff in the fall, but
Orange Coast area hopefuls have been and
are busily engaged in spring drills, a time
when coaches get that extra look at the'
personnel, hoping maybe a nugget will ap-
pear they weren't counting on.
Tbe rules are such that athletes can only
use their football shoes with the basic shorts
and T-shirt routine. Even helmets. except for
special foam ones resembling a Nerf-ball,
are not legal during the spring.
So what's the point in spring drills, you
ask?
WELL, FOUNTAIN VALLEY HIGH
Coach Mike Milner, this summer's coach for
the South in the Orange County All-star game
at Orange Coast College, supplies a few
answers.
"Baaically we're trying to evaluate our
personnel for the fall," says Milner.
TJtE SIGN OF SPRING (TRAINING) -Costa
Mesa Higb's football hopefuls do just that
during spring drills. The s~enes are varied,
as reflected by Laguna Beach's Damon
Berryhill strengthening his leg, Irvine's
Steve Schwicbtenberg cooling it and Foun-
tain Valley's Greg Bolin shoving a sled
(above). Below Newport Harbor's Greg
Selby runs a drill, Edison's Dave Geroux
and Theo Langford reach for a ball and
Marina assistant Leon Wheeler watches
Dave Morris perform a tackling drill.
"And it's a chance to introduce technl·
ques and fundamentals that are essential, in
addition to building the unity that is needed
to be successful."
WIDLE FORMATS ARE obviously dif.
ferent from school to school, Fountain
Valley's program is a good yardstick.
"It's a time to indentify our personnel
and to instill techniques," adds Milner.
"Chalk talks, experimenting with personnel
defenstve and offensively~
right ~ but insiders say a better bet for
the 11-year veteran would be San Diego.
There are three reasons for this: a>
be wouldn't have to move from bis
home in Huntington Beach; b) Charger
Coach Don Coryell could desperately
use a middle linebacker of Jack's ex-
perience to plug a defensive gap over
the middle; and c) Coryell and the
Cbarae~ would be willing to pay
hanct.omelJ tor such a service.
Re)'IW)ldl, altboulh he likes Knox,
lsO:t parUCularly elated with the treez-
in& temptl"MUres ol Buffalo.
Reynolds to be wearine the blue and
gold of the Charcers in 1981.
*** IN LISTENING TO the Angell play
Toronto the past three camea, one
couldn't help but wonder why third
baseman Danny Ainge, an All·
American buketball player at BYU,
would ~up a lucrative b11k~ball career 1 Blue Jays team ~I
under . with Ainge, himself, hltuni
less than . . ·
The reuoa isn't ao complex once you
analyse tbe numbers involved.
The decidlnf factors, for a number of
players who have cboeeo baseball over
other sporta, appears to be money aa41
careet'lonaevity.
AcNdlq to ft1urea published recetlt·
ly in BMebaU Dl1e1t, the averaa•
1aluy In major tea1ue baHball 11 tia.oeo, with the avera1e_c__. leaiQI belftl lft9 HUOGI. Tbit a""19 pro
ba~ttbaJl 1iilary la '111.-. but Ul NBA career avera1es OD1Y m .. -...
19 fOotbidl, tbe aumbers are allDOlt em· .,.,_., cwtderlaa &lie p•l1hmemt
they tae: '15,000 ·m ftve Mucml (DO
wHder .Jack Youa1blo0d expeeta a .a.nu .... tlMi ptQ .. • cmtraet .w. \be~~ in 1111) •
•
• ~,. wbo bave Joined.
1&.'"~ the uUaa'• No. 1 iii;flldude: o. .. WlllftlW al ..
Yanlt.. <IWUDI IGl'Wlril
"We usually keep it short, about two
hours a day in order to maintain a consistent
attention span.
"We spend more Ume individually and
with half-line situations."
One of the problems in spring drills is
potential injuries. Without padded equip-
ment, the errant elbow can sometimes be
more damaging than regular hostilities dur-
ing the seaaon.
"IT AFFORDS VS the opportunity to see
those sophomores that will be juniors, and
the juniors wbo will be seniors," adds Milner.
One of the eitlalls in this are the hopes one
places on the new-found prospect, the one
who looks so good in the spring, which you
hope will look just as good when the pads are
on and the bitting is for real.
1'Somet1mes you'll find someone you
weren't counting on," says Milner. "But you
also usually experience the other end of the
spectrum .
.. YOU CAN FIND a great prospect with
pads, but with the pads in the fall, you realize
be isn't going to be the player you an-
ticipated.''
It's all wrapping up now, usually with a
spring game with the losers of the "touch"
battle generally ending up with a plate of
beans and the winners with something a bit
better, such u fried chicken.
for Minnesota drafted. by tM NBA) ;
Detroit's Kirk Giblon (a wide receiver
for MiclUcan State drafted No. 1 by St.
Louia); and Pblladelpbia pltcber Ron
Reed, who actually played two seuons
in the NBA with Detroit.
Said Reed: ")ly fint love WU ba$et·
ball. But J had 1 1reater chance for 1
lone career lo baseball. Baabtball
players wen 1ettJn1 so talented I knew
l coaldn't compete; I would have been a
r•erTe."
Which ls exacUy where .\lnte mlgbt
And hhnaelf lf be doesn't start hitttna.
.
1
Orioles come to town
with some prolilems
From APdlJpatcbea
BALTIMORE -Report1 of •.
clubhouse dissension ln Yankee
Stadium have become commonplace
over the years, but this time lt made headlines
lo Baltimore. Tbi.s time, the Orioles were battl-
lne.
A slmmerine reud between pitcber Jim
Palmer and third baseman Doua DeCinces went
.. public just before the Orioles
-took the rield ror • game
• against the New York
Yankees Wednesday night.
"I'd like to know where
he gets off criticizing every-
body on this team,"
DeCinces said after hearin&
what he considered a knock
on his defensive ability.
"You can ask anybody -
DeCmcn they're sick and tired of it,"
DeCinces said, according lo a story in the
Baltimore Evening Sun. "Lt's always somebody
eise's fault. We're a 24 -man learn -and one
prima donna."
The dispute dales back to lhe second inning
of last Saturday night's game, when DeCinces
failed to hold a two-out ground ball with an
across-the-body stab.
WHAT A KISSI -New York Mets
coach Joe Pignatano's hat stands on
end as he is kissed by the Phillie
Palmer flung his hands up in disgust as a
Detroit run scored, and left the game at the con-
clusion of the inning trailing 2-0.
Quote of the day
Aoki leads Nicklaus, Watson
laao Aoki, a Japanese golfe~ now
a full·fledged member of the
American pro tour, birdied four suc·
·'The best system ror d~Jes iJ for both
playen to be up at tbe net. Tbe second
beat 3ystem iJ for both players to be back.
The worst syatem In the world It one·up,
one-back. ~d, the universally played
system is one-up, one-back! -te.nnis in·
structor Vic Braden.
cessive holes on the way to a 67 Thu.nday and
the first l'C>Wld lead in the Atlanta Classlc. Trail·
ine Aoki by ooe-stroke are Jack Nlctlau and
Tom Wa&aoe . . . Cblca10 bualnessman Joel
Hlracb defeateJS Arizona State student DoDlld
DaBola, 3 and 2, to gain the quarterfinals of the
British Amateur championship in St. Andrews,
Scotland. Uil'Scb wu one of only two U.S. sur·
vivors from and original entry of 52.
UCl's relay team
passes first· lest
Special to the Daily Pilot
BATON ROUGE, La. -UC
Irvine's mile relay team, led by
Eddie Carey's 46.0 split, ad·
vanced lo tonight's semiflnal
heats at the NCAA Outdoor
Track and Field Championships
here Thursday night.
UCI. running in heat 1,
finished at 3:08.44, good for fifth
place. The top six finishers in all
fou,r or ;I'hursday's heats
qualified• for tonight's three
semifinal heats, with the top
three teams from each advanc-
ing to Saturday's final.
Arizona State won heal 1 with
a 3:07.68 clocking. Southern Il-
linois was second af 3:07 .87. Ten-
nessee third at 3:08.06, Southern
University fourth al 3:08.18, UCJ
fifth and Ohio State sixth at
3:08.'79.
TKE FASTEST time of lhe
nighl was posted by Arkansas in
Coman angry
with MacPhail
PHOENIX <AP} -Retired
umpire Jocko Conlan says
American League president Lee
M acPhail should be fired for his
handling of the latest BUly
Marlin affair.
'l'he 8l-year-0ld Conlan, who la
in baaeball's Hall of Fame, aaya
he l!atched television tapes of
the Qakland Athletics' manager
bumpin& umpire Tirry Cooney
at Toronto and throw dirt on bis
back.
Cqnlan. in an interview Thun-
d a f with sports editor Joe
GI martin of the Phoenix
Gatette, said he had been work·
ins the game he would have hit
Ma tiri "with eve thlna I bad."
...
heat 4 at 3:06.35. Other heat win·
ners include the University of
Arizona (3:07.20J in heal 2 and
Indiana University (3:08.96>' in
heat 3.
The Anteater quartet of
Car ey, Bill Dorvall, Carlyle
Kidd and Tony Wells have a
seasonal best of 3:07.65. They
will run again tonight at 9: 50.
In other action Thursday:
Carl Lewis of the University of
Houston began his quest for a
rare double with a pair of im-
pressive performances.
The brilliant 19-year-old
sophomore from Willingboro.
N .J .. opened bis bid to become
the first athlete since Hall of
Farner Jesse Owens in 1936 to
win a track event and a field
event in the same NCAA outdoor
m eet by quallfying for today's
trials and finals in the long jump
and reaching toda~"s semifinals
in the 100-meter dash.
In the long jump qualifying',
Lewis, tbe defendine champion.
leaped 28·8~. a record for
Louisiana State Uninraity's
Bernie Moore Stadium. And in
the trials of the 100, in wbicb
Lewis .ia the colleJiate record·
holder, be was clocked In 10.34
seconds in winning his heat.
The versatile Lewis is at-
templlna to become the first
lone·jumper to capture (our
NCAA titl~ Hf1 already hu won
two indoor championablpe and
one outdoor crown.
"I feel very tood,'1 said Lewis,
U\e ov,rwhelming favorite lo the
long jump and the co-ravorite in
the 100 with Georgia's Mel Lat-
tany.
Lauan.y won his 100 heat easi-
ly in 10.28, and was timed in
20.71 tot the 200 -the fastest
times in the trials in both events.
Eddie Car~
Miami upset
by Longhorns
OMAHA, Neb. CAP) -Chris
Campbell and Burk Goldthom
homered to lift Texas to a S-4
victory over previously Uft·
beaten Neal Heaton and No. 2·
ranked Mia ml, Fla., in a CoUece
World Series baseball elimina·
lion came Thursday nifhl.
Campbell blt b1J fourth home
run of the year down lhe left
field line wtth Larry Long on
second base in the bottom Of the
fUtb in.olng. Long bad doubled
home Spike Owen earlier in the
inning to help Texas overcome a
3-0 Miami lead.
The 60-10-1 Longhorns ad-
vanced to Saturday's round
a1ainst Oklahoma State. In the
other Saturday matchup,
Arizona St.ate will play South
Carolina. whJch eliminated Mis·
sissippl State earlier Thursday,
6-5.
Jc~P~: AUTOMOTIVE llSTOIA TIOMS
AHD R•AllS
DIRT TRACK
.,...,......
Phanatic during a game Wednesday
night in Philadelphia.
Gretzky selected NHL's best
Center Wayne Gret1ky or Ed-•
montoo captured the Hart Memorial
Trophy, awarded to the Most Valua-
ble Player in the National Hockey League, for
the second c:onsecuti ve season, edging $t. Louis·
goaltender Mille Lia& in the closest voting lo his-
tory. Gretzky had 242 points compared to Liut's
237 . . . An attorney for Bobby Unser attempted
to shot' that Marlo AndreUI, awarded the Indy
500 after Unser was penalized one lap, also com·
mitted a violation during the race that was ig·
no red by the U.S. Auto Club.
----
a-b•lltoday ~
On ~ d1t1 in bu1b1ll ln 19'74:
On' lllr Nt1ht'' tn CJ1vtlud, taundrtda
of rowd)' f IJll 1ptuld onto th• fleld durln1 th• ninth lnnln1 of 1 a.a 11m1 bltw•n tbl Indiana and the Ttx11 R1n11r1 . Tb• 11m1
w11 forft!tld to th• R1n1en after f au b111n brawllnt wltb player1
Yankees win, tie Orioles
Rookie G,ne Nelson, the Ill
youngest player ln the major
leaeues, held Balumore to one hit 1or
elaht lM.ings -Al Bumbry'• openini alntle -
and Bobby M'-rcer drove ln the l ,oootb run or
hls career as the New York Yankeea put on
thelr biggest offensive display of the season in
crushing Baltimore, 12-3, to hlghli1ht major
league action Thursday. New York, which has
made up 4~ games in six daya, moved into a
virtual lie ~th the Orioles ror flrst place in the
American League East . . . Elsewhere lo AL
action, Chet Lemon singled home the tie·
breakine run in a two-run eighth lMine to lead
the Chicaeo White Sox past Oalcland, 4-2 . . .
Ex·An1el Caruey Laufo.rd sparked one rally
with a slnele and hit lhe game·winnin1 home
run as Boston edged Cleveland, 6-5 . . . Roa
Jackson and Danny Goodwin drove In two runs
apiece to lead Minnesota to a 7.3 win over Texas
... In the National League, Dane lorg rapped
three hits and scored two rurui to back the
seven·hit pitching or Lary Soreuon as St. Louis
whipped Montreal. 4-1 ... First baseman RH·
dy Baas marked his return to the starting lineup
after an absence or more than a month by driv·
mg in four runs with a single, double and homer
to lead San Diego to a 7.5 win over Houston ...
Lee Lacy tripled and scored on Dale Berra'•
bloop single off reliever Lynn McGlotbJn to
snap a lOlh·inning tie and lift Pittsburgh to a 5-4
victory over the ChicaJ;(o Cubs.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: " ' ' ' excellent; ./ .f ' worth watching;./' fair;" forget It.
7:30 p.m., Channel 5 ./ ./ ,/ t/
ANGELS BASEBALL: Baltimore •t Angels.
Announcers: Don Drysdale, Bob St•rr and Ron Fairly.
Southpaw Scott McGregor (S-2) will pitch for
the Orioles against the Angels' Mike Witt <~> In
the opener of a three-game series at Anaheim Stadium.
• RADIO Baseball -Baltimore at Angels, 7:30 p.m.,
KMPC (710).
Borg gains French Open finals
Swedish star polishes off Pecci in straight sets
PARIS <AP> -Defending champion Bjorn
Borg or Sweden reac hed the finals of the French
Open tennis tournament today. defeating Victor
Pecci of Paraguay in str aight sets 6-4. 6-4, 7-5.
Borg has not lost a set in the tournament.
Borg said afterward it was a tougher match than
lhe final two,,.years ago, when he beat Pecci io four
sets.
The tall Paraguayan played bold tennis and
went rorward to the net to try to disrupt Borg's
machine-like baseline game. He scored freely with
volleys, and at times Borg seemed to have oo way of
passing him.
In each or the first two sets Borg broke service.
but Pecci broke back.
In Thursday's action. Czechoslovakian stars
Ivan Lendl and Hana Mandlikova sent the
American players home empty·banded.
The lanky Lendt, a 21-year-old who is ranked
fifth the world, completed his upset over No. 3
seed John McEnroe Thursday in straight sets, 6·4,
6-4, 7-5 to gain a berth io the semifinals of the
$611,000 clay court tournament.
Hours later. Mandlikova made tennis history
by becoming the first Czech woman to reach the
semifinals ol the prestigious toumment when she
shocked Chris Evert Lloyd 7·5, 8 ..... Lloyd had been
heavily favored to win her fifth women's singles tl-
Ue here but.Manlikova, 19, ended Lloyd's incredi·
ble 64-match winning streak on clay.
"I TIDNK this ls the ereatest win in my Ute,"
Mandllkova said. "I've never beaten Chris on
clay. She's the best player we've ever had on
clay."
A third American hope also was drummed off
the slow courts of Roland Garros Stadium. Andrea
Jaeger, the No. 3 seed, lost on her 16th birthday to
Sylvia Hanika or West Germany, who moved into
the finals with a 4-6, 6-1. 6-4 triumph.
The defeat of McEnroe, the two-time U.S.
Open champion, ended any remaining hopes for
the first American men's victory at this tourna-
ment since Tony Trabert took the title 26 years
ago.
PECCI, RANKED 21ST in the world, had de-
feated Borg once in their previous eight encoun·
ters. That defeat came only seven weeks ago in
Monte Carlo where Borg lost in the rirst round.
then took off until this tournament.
Clerc had woo five or his six meetings with
Lendl.
Mandlikova and Hanika face each other Satur·
day The men's final will be Sunday.
Lloyd had not Jost a set getting to the
semifinals and took a 3-0 lead in the first set. But
then lhe Czech star began to come alive. crushing
Lloyd with slices and topspins.
"I think she'll win this tournament," said
Lloyd. "She's never Ii ved up to her potential
before .now."
McENROE'S ROAD TO defeat began Wednes-
day night when he lost the first two sets to Lendl.
He was leading 3-2 in the third set when darkness
halted play.
Thursday, McEnroe moved lo 5-2 in the third
set but the smooth Lendl cooUy took the next five ·
ea mes for the match.
"I don't think I put out one good match in this
tournament. I don't deserve to win the way I've
beep playing," McEnroe said.
B<Ueball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West Dlvlalon
W L Pct. GB
Oakland 33 21 .611 -
Chicago 27 19 .587 2
Texas '28 ~ .583 2
Anaels 26 27 .491 6\.'.i
Kansas City 17 26 .395 lO'AI
Seattle 18 32 .380 13
'Minnesota 15 34 .306 15\.'.i
Eut Dh1sloo
Baltimore 28 19 .596 -
New York 29 20 .592 -
Milwaukee 28 21 .571 l
Boston 27 22 .551 2
Cleveland 24 20 .545 2Yt
Detroit 25 25 .500 •~
Toronto 16 35 .314 14
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Dodgers 34 17 .667
Cincinnati 29 21 .580 4\.'.i
Houston 26 25 .510 8
Atlanta 24 24 .500 8'h
San Francisco 26 27 .491 9
San Diego 20 31 .392 14
East Division
Philadelphia 29 20 .592
St. Lou.is 26 18 .591 'h
Montreal 27 22 .551 2
Pittsburgh 23 20 .535 3
New York 16 29 .356 11
Chicago lO 36 .217 17Yt
---~ ----------·-
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 5, 1981 CS .
High Hopes
will hear
Sherman
Riolo heads U S4 C cotttroversy l:Wats up
drag field Unser should have.been penalized earlier
. . •
Former USC and professional
football atandout Rod Sherman
will be the guest speaker at tht
Hl1b Hopea Neuroloiical
Recovery Group fifth annual
awards dinner tonight at the
Costa Mesa Country Club.
Sherman, president of
Man aae ment and Sports
Marketing, Inc .. holds decrees
from USC ln Finance and Real
Estate and a masters decree In
secondary education.
The former captain or the 1967
Rose Bowl team, Sherman wa1
the No. 1 draft pick of the
Oakland Raidera where he
played for five years.
ln 1972, Sherman was the lead·
ing receiver tor the Denver
• Broncos before finishing up his
career in 1973 with the Rams.
Following his retirement from
1 football, Sherman worked as an
athletic administrator at UC
Irvine.
In 1978, he formed his sports
marketing company.
The dinner, with a donation
cost or $12.50 and $6.2.5 for High
Hopes students, starts at 7:30
p. m. No host bar cocktails will
start at 7.
Ea_ch year, High Hopes reg·
ognues students, parents,
volunt~rs and community or-
ganizations who, through their
support and achievement, have
furthered the goals of the or-
ganization.
Alan Chm&n
Christian tops
cycle field
Speedway motorcycle raclne
returns to the Orange County
Fairerounds in Costa Mesa
tonight following Saturday's
World Qualifier at the Coliseum
with the first heat race set for 8
o'clock.
Alan Christian of Huntington
Beach, Mike Bast and all the
other top regulars are expeeted
to participate in the program
tonight.
Among the other regulars
competln& will be Lance King,
Dubb Ferrell, David De T~mple
and many others.
a·t OCIR
Dave Riolo, the ldnfpln of
Northern California pro , ..
dras racln1 competition, will
rnake tu-ftnt appearance at the
Oranse County Internatlon•l
Raceway Saturday and Sunday
to compete in the Popular Hot
Roddin.a ma1azlne pro 1ae and
bracker champlonshlpt.
Amont the UUea woo by Riolo
and hil 1955 Chevy that bu been
featured on the cover of the
sponsoring magazine two times
in the la.st three years, are:
Northern California pro 1a1
champion-1914, 1976, um and
1978; bracket champion, l.9"15;
Sacramento Autorama winner,
1980.
He will be facing a different
set of circumstances at OCIR
this weekend than be faces in bis
home area, however. He must
run a 9.80 second Index com-
m ared to a 9.50 index at home.
He mu.st also face deep stag-
ing for the first time. Tbls is not
allowed on the northern tracks
but ls a regular feature at OCIR.
Among the top Southern
California drivers competing
are Randy Fabbro, Joe
Fraelich, Carl Smith, Dave
Meziere, Charlie Marcum, Erl
Sigmon and Jim Parrish.
Gates open at 8 both mornings
with time triaJs and jackpot
bracket races running until 10
Saturday night. Final ellmina·
lions begin at noon on Sunday.
AU-star teams tangle
in volleyball twin bill
The best of Orange County high
school volleyball will be on display
tonight at Laguna Hills High where
the fourth annual Orange County All·
star tournament takes place.
The women's game begins at 6,
followed by the men's game at 8:30.
The men's game features a South
team boasting stars from CIF cham-
pion Laguna Beach (Lance Stewart
is the CIF's Player of the Year) and
runner-up San Clemente, along with
Capistrano Valley, University, Irvine
and Mission Viejo.
Coached by Laguna Beach's Bill
Ashen, the South includes Laguna
Beach's Eric Clark and Doug
Top volleyball
players clash
The annual Offshore Four-man
Volleyball Masters Tournament will
be held Saturday and Sunday at Big
Corona State Beach in Corona del
Mar with nearly $3,000 in prizes to be
awarded to winners in this
prestigious event.
Top name beach volleyball stars
such as Matt Gage, Gary Hooper,
Steve Obradovich, John Vallely, Ed
Becker and John Redding will make
up the 20-25 four-man teams with ac-
tion getting underway both days at
10:30 a.m.
Prelims will be held Saturday with
finals on Sunday.
The tournament is open to tbe
public for viewing and there is no
charge.
Parsons, Craig Moothart and Fred-
die Verselles of Irvine and University
High 's Rene Rimlinger.
The North, under Newport Harbor
Coach Steve Buchan and Fountain
Valley's Rick Evans, boasts several
Orange Coast area standouts, includ-
ing Sun.set League Co-MVPs Rey
Gubernick (Fountain Valley) and
Mark Barrett (Newport Harbor).
Also participating are Ocean
View's Casye Osterlund, Huntington
Beach's Mike Burdick, Eatancla's
Dou& Hartung, Brad Elli1ood and
Bill Mattias, Newport Harbor's
Robert Peterson and Rich Holmes,
Fountain Valley's Kirk Harty and
Jim Speth, Marina's Tom Plane and
Costa Mesa's Paul Knipp and P.J.
Kiley.
Among the women's North squad
are Newport Harbor's Mary Alllaon,
Marina's Linda Bohm and Mater
Dei's Teri Donohue and Mary Stam-
bra.
The South women'• team lncludea
Irvine's Suzy Bo11ess and Laurie
Adams of Estancia.
Tennis clinic slated
A free, two-hour junlor tennis clinic
is being offered Saturday, Ju,ne 13 at
three Orange County tennis clube.
Sponsored by Converse, the clinica
are scheduled rol' Santia10 CanyOD
Tennis Club in Oranee , Minion Vie-
jo Tennis Club and Cotta Meaa Ten·
nis Cl ub,, each bellnnin& at noon.
Further information can be ob-
tained by contiactlng the tennis clubcs.
Dulle Would Be ProUd.---.1
'
.
No one gets tired of winning, eepecialty
John Wayne Tennis Club member9, Tom
Leonard and Jerry Van Linge. Tom end Jerry
won their fifth consecutive Men's Open
Championship In Orange County's biggest
tennla tournament. The 20th Annual AdoPtlon
Guild.
Ten of the fourteen winners In the Open, A.
and Senior divisions were John Wayne Tenni.
Club members. There were over thirty
different clubs repreeented. Gall GIMQOW and
Tom Leonard won the Mixed Open
Championship and Gall waa a winner In the
Women's Open.
Jerry Van Unge 11 a teaching pro at the
Wayne Oub, atong with Kim WlttenbefV and
Lynn Morrow. If you need help on YOAK game.
give the winners at the 11 club in Callfom\a a
call at &M-e900.
8y HOWAao L . RANDY Ot .. 0-,,.... .....
One has to wonder just how Ion• tho feud
betwetn the U.S. Auto Club and CART will eo on
and b<>w it wlll continue to crop up with heated
controveny.
USAC has run the Indianapolis 500 tor many years, even going 10 far as to try and fh~t out any
driver and car owner conn~ted with CART
aeveral years a10 before a court order chan1ed the
aroup's thlnklne.
Car owner Roeer Penske and driver Bobby
Unser bad the Indy 500 victory atripped from them
the day after conclusion ol the race. A 1eemln1ly
routine altuaµon, at least in USAC'a eyes.
Not so.
AND WHETBE& thU bad anything to do with
the contlnuing feud between CART and USAC. one
bas to wonder. It certainly coqld be construed by
Penske ln that direction and might be broueht out
when the case goes to court in the future.
While Unser undoubtedly passed some cars
under the yellow caution Oag, the method In which
USAC officiala made the disqualification leaves a
great deal to be de1ired.
One person who believes things should have
been atraightened out at the track on race day is
Laguna Beach's Bruce Barnes, a business partner
of Unaer.
"It ls unfortunate that after it was reported to
race officials that they did not make a decision at
that time and take a lap away from Bobby,''
Barnes SJys. ''Then be would have bad 50 laps or
so to make up the ground and stiJl win the race.
'' USAC bad observers all around the track and
they should have noted any infraction, whether it
was Bobby or anyone else.
"IF YOU WERE to watch the television
broadcast of the race again, it looks like they spon-
taneously noticed Bobby's infraction. In fact, it
was put in after the race was completed.
"Chris Ecooomaki was ln the garage area and
. . :
he went to aee Marlo. He checked to ate
whereabouts in tbe race they had lod,ed tbt
claim.
"Bobby and 1 are partnen but I also do aome
work for Marlo and aome of the o\ber driven.
"I don't see thi• th.ln1 u a dilpute amona tie
driven. It's back lo USAC'a handa aaaln and it ~I
comes down to thelr inability to respond to altua·
tiooa.
"It ls very unfortunate the way it turned out.
It put.s a bi& cloud over the entire race and reflect.I
MOTOR SPOKIS
poorly oo U.S. auto racioa and the lndianapoUa Motor Speedway.·•
THE RE9'All.KS by Barnes were made this
week, well after the conclusion of the race .;_
which leads one to wonder lf all apof'U should ije
governed by television replays followine coo-
clusion of the events. :
It bas to bring up the long-standin1 instaot
replay for officials of NFL games that atiU hasn't
taken ecrect.
But what i! an official blows a call and after
the game the league office backs up a protestOr
and reverses the game's outcome? It certainly
would bring about a big furor.
Why doesn't the same reasoning hold true tn
auto racing? If, indeed, Unser was to be penalized,
he should have been penalized a lap at the time of
the Infraction and then be could have possibly won
the race anyway by pushing his car a little hard•r
at the end after moving up during yellow cautic)n
periods.
But that's too simple for race officials to up-
derstand, apparently.
Certainly, to take the victory away from Unstr
after he has visited Victory Circle and taken all
the plaudits the nieht after the race, is not the wiy
it should be done.
FOOf.
AUTOUTl ~ RAC
__ /..,
Regu~ 69!
Re~ror 89! 14!!
SUMMER
OIANT
1WIN
CAR
MATS LEE-flts most CAB.
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BuyTwo-
Get One Freel
tee $10fe for del<llls
12GAL
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IADIATOR
COOlf.R
fMY 10 INSTJIU. Ms
MOSf CAIS. NO Sl'llCllll
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RlBUILT
ALnRNATORS
" .. , ... "' .... ~"'
N11111• ...... cae ..... 0,TMI NOTIC• OP Dl!ATH 01' ...._ •1tt10•1
PHYLLll L. DUCLON °" ~.Ji.=. •Ira ftMYLLtl DUCLON A ,....... .......... ~et AND 0, tt•TITION TO lll11•r111•.,•:•t .,. ... ,. C•1111tr. Saturday's TV, radio Coach Vic Braden 1howw bow to make your Atlanta Golt Ctaaaic. n> -AUTO llACING ADMUUIT•• ESTATE ~·=:.,-:.::;::::
TELEVISION 1trok:-p::.roc/6f duri~IJ~1:;ia~c:~·t! IN ~lf~~!r~ 19'1 Mason·Dhton aoo, taped May NOT~~j h • 1 rs :~:~'C :::•.;:•::-..:.:
11 a.m. (~) -TENNIS -Vljay Amritraj VI. GERMANY. 1:30 p.m. (50) -SPORTS IN AllEalCA -beneflderlt1, creditors~-=--~=~.":: Manuel Orantes in the WC'I' lnvltatloaal, taped in 9 P~m . (50) _ SPORTS AllE&ICA -Hl&blllhts of 1 Pro/am aurfin& compeUUon from andcontfngentcredltorsof tu, ... ,,, ... •· w1e111er, •rwu
Marcb at Salisbury, Md Ri1hU1ht1 or the UCLA·Arliona State college Huntinaton Beach. PHYLLIS L. DUCLO~! .... t ... ,....... '· •• ,... _,Ille
, ll;U a.m. <~> -BA8E8ALL -The baaeballtametapedlDPhoenlx. 2p.m. (4)-WESTERNOVTDOOUMAN. (7) :~ .:~~~~~oa: :!~~ .:,.:..~~~
Philadelphia Phillies vs. the Braves at Atlanta RADIO ~ NCAA CllAMPIONSJllPS -Taped coveraae of otherwise lntltrffted In the Jlldl<Jet ....._ 1t "'**· ...,., •
Stadium. (11) -DODGE& BASEBALL -Baseball -Doc11era at Chlcaao. 11:15 a.m., three NCAA champlonsblp events. J>efendln1 wllland/orestate· Hwrttd• 1• .. 1ui•d ••
Dodten at Chlcaso Cuba. KABC ('190); Baltimore at Anaell, 7 p.m .. KMPC champion Texas (El Puo> returns all four of lta A petition hes ~n flled ~z=~=~ l':oc~~~~
1:30 p.m . (11) -OUTDOOa LIPE -Former (710). 1980 lndlvidual Utlist.s to UUa year's tract meet. by DAVID w. DUCLON In •• ••••ct., tw '" Me11c11u1., NBA star John Havllcek goes after bluefish o(f the Horse Racina -Belmont Stakes, 2 :~ p.m., Iowa, seek1n1 lts fourth strai"ht wrestllnt title and the Superior Court of C-tllt• ~......,. ""'"*lnl
ape coas . KNX (''070).Be moo rev ew, : •• : .. , : a .m., Nebraalta blddlna tor a •a.:-..a stral•ht orvmnutica -.. ,,... ... .. -C Cod t l t P 1 8 40 " "0 11 40 ... Oran~ Coun~ r ..... uestlng .~~ ..... -........ , • .,,.,, ~ .. ~11 P• .... rk, Th lath A' ' • UJ.U'1 _.. •1 · that AVIO . OUCLON IUwer vi-Giit, Ille., I• c.ent""*I '° 2 p.m. (2) -HORSE RACING -e 1 12:40p.m.,KNXC1070 >. crown, are also featured. (11) -aODEO -be appointed 15 personal ,,_ 2• 1t11. ,_ ...... ,..,.,. ., •.
runnlnc of the Belmont Stakes and the last leg of HlebUgbta or the New Orleans Rodeo, taped in representative to •d-11¥111 ... .._.. ••••t1•11• com·
Pleasant Colony's.bid to become the 12th Triple Sunday's TV, radio May. minister th• estate of ~·:~.c.'-c:':.;-::.-..::_: Crown winner· (4 ) -WESTERN OUT· 2:30 p.m. (4) -SPORTS AFIELD -Outdoor PHYLLIS L. OUCLON, f'.Ullty 11~ CMlldtrau ... .,,
DOO&SMAN -Segments Include a goose-callln1 TELEVISION writer Bob Cary and producer Glen Lau enjoy the lrvlne, ea. (under the In· t9,~::c:;:::;-~,1~:°:t=.;
expedition ln Texas' Sabine Pua waterway. Allo: 10 a.m. (ll) _THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL. scenery and rlshing on the Minnesota.Canada dependent Administration Ml'vkHAllMY 1t....,1-. 1t-.1
A trip to Idaho's Snake River in search of ancient (50) _ SPORTS AMERICA _ Hl&hlJ&bta of the border. Also: A look at hand-built rlfles. of Est.tes Act). The petl-inc,_ tw ..._ tenkes •.-,
white s~urceon. (11) -KANSAS FUTURITY -ll d l 3 p.m. (") _ SPORTSWOllLD _ Taped cov-tlon Is set tor hearing In ~~ ...... ~.T~-m....._,,.. r!:...~ UCLA·Arlzona StJte baseba 1ame, tape n .. De t N 3 t 100 Cl 1 ......... -_,_ .... ..... .. The 31s running of the first jewel ln the Triple erafie of the championship 1ame of the 1981 P · 0• a v c m1111en ""' tt "et""" .,. r•· of h ....i.... t ped M 31 at Phoenix. Center Drive West, S.nta <•1-i . ..__~tor P'lec:e1111e Crown quarter orse ra .... ~. 8 ay · u a.'m. (2) -TENNIS -Same·day ·covera1e Col eee World Series from Omaha. Also: A Ana CA 92701 on June 2-4 commllflltY CM1c 11..,..__,. Tr.:1
RuldoaoDowns (NM). of the men's final in the French Open, taped at SportaJournalreport. 19811at9:30a.m. '=~r.-.,T::~.=·:~~;::.
3 p.m. (2) -GOLF -Third round play in the Paris. (50) -SOCCER MA.DE IN GERMANY. 4 p.m. (7) -AMERJCAN SPORTSMAN IF YOU OBJECT to the Vt1111-""11t 1tw1t11111111111,,. r•
Atlantic Golf Classic. (7) -GREATEST SPORTS 11:15 a .m. (11) -DODG&U BASEBALL -Some 400 years after Sir Francia Drake left granting of the petition, 11e111111e1i.t. Ti.t .. r•em1111 w1111
LEGENDS. The Dodgers meet the Cube at Wrisley Field in Plymouth, England for a three-year voyage that you should either appear ~:.:~:~~:C.'.~c:.'!~~ .!:~ 3:30 p.m. (7) -PRO BOWLING -The finals Chicago. made him the first Englishman to circumnavigate at the hearing and state cr"k ._... 1t -*d. Ntgo41•,
of the Seattle Open, taped from Leilani Lanes in 1 p.m. (2) -GOLF -Final round plav m· the the alobe, a .n-nup of vouna explorers between the your objections or file tklll et .......... for 11• s...ic. ' • •·-' • written objections with the Aidt .,,...,_ • .,..,lat11. Tiie llFP Seattle. ages o( 17 and 24 set out to re-create that journey court before the hearing. ,,~r,:::· .. ~ .. ~·:. ~~~.:'.
4 p.m. <2> -TENNIS -Same-day coverage of Tennis tourney slated including a crossing of Panama. Your a~r•nce may be eon11.,,..." .. ...,._, s.rv1ce1 the women's final in the French Open, taped at 7 p.m. (28) -TENNIS roa THE FUTURE -I b t A9tftcJ" .. I I • '•-1 •• ,_
Paris. · The Seventh Annual Boy Scout Invitational ten· Coa ch Vic Braden demonstrates the key polnta of t~r:!~~ or Y your 8 • l~::~i.:.-=::~:111111~10;.,:~
5 p.m. (7) -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS -Dis tournament will be held at the Balboa Bay Club strategy and movement in doubles play. 1 F you A R E A tttWed "'_... '· 1W1. 1ten1a1 .,, voe.
Former middleweight champion Alan Minter RacquetClubMonday. , RADIO t REDITOR ~ a cont· ~4:'11~1:;' .. ~~!~'cf.'::":;~~
{19·7) vs. Mustafa Hamaho (29-1·2) in a 1cheduled Registration tor the tournament and a pre· Baseball -Dodgers at Chicago, n :lS a .m., lngent creditor of the de-e11111orlad .. ....,.. • m"un11 1n
l.O·round bout, taped at Las Vegas. Also: The New tournament lunch wlll be held at the Irvine Coast KABC (790); Baltimore at Angels, 1 p.m., KMPC ceased, you must flle your sur.,,1e111e. Tiit ••uuor 11
York State Firemen's competition, taped at CountryClub,beginningatl1:30a.m. (710). clalm with the court or =:,~1::.1..:"C..:...';~!:::
Hempstead, N. Y. (28) -SOCCER. Tournament play starta at lfollowed by a dinner <The Dally Pilot la not reaponalble for late present It to the personal t1011<Mlt'1R1a.11uw blcd, ..... -
6.· 30 p.m. (50) -TENNIS FOB THE FUTURE atl"'CC. cban1e1.> representative appointed eM ,......._ .-11 MMGe1 11 • ~ ---------------.:~----------ibY the court within four po1111e111 "'• ~ c.-ci.1gn Pre<· __ .:.;_::..:....,::.__.:...:__:________________________________ f the of llces C..1 Ila• ~ Olll•reno
months ron"I date f'u11111t ert ,....Mllllttll lor Ille im••••••••••••••••••illiill•••ii•••••••••••••••••••••l[ll,-••••••••••••·~· first Issuance of letters as ci-c111r .. ~ ........ provided In Section 700 of 1,.. •re • • ,....._. wttt ,,._
the Probate Code of =.-:~:.:-J::.:S-M!i~ California. The time for ..._. °'*Ida. ... ..._ svs...,.
Ironwoods
Summer Rate
1()3,4% (11% A.P.R.)
. Never Again Terms on a Few Courtyard Homes.
Summer flnds us with a small number of sman new C.Ourtyard condominiums. These gracious
plans, in the very center of Ironwood's recreational pleasures, are private, convenient and luxurious
... and they are offered for the off season with the best finandna in the destrt. It's really worth the
trip to have our sales representatives fill in the details about our limited offer ... or, if you already
know and love Ironwood, as so many do. you might Uke to telephone one of our sales counselors
at 346-0551.
These lovely homes with their own private therapy pools, view decks and many special
features are ready for occupancy now. With a little help from our newly expanded design center,
you can easily be in r.esidence by fall.
PRICED FROMi $156,300!-
flllng clalms wlll not ex· c..i et """"""'-'• •ppro-. Al·
Plre prior to four months *•11°" "' -"*"'9 fund• 1• ~ ..... II 11-et ""'Ing from U)e date of the hear· ••• f• ..,..,,.. .... 11m1 ... A.ttOp-lng noticed above. lion anti••••• .... e1cen..1n conflkt YOU MAY EXAMINE ot lntel'ftt ClMl9 -•ppr-. n.. ltt1N'OCIUC:tl9 .....,.., Service Fund I• the flle kept by the court. ....._.._ . .._. ....,.,ktt•on. °'*' If you are Interested In th4t Amtrl<Hs Act , 11 epprove.s.
estate, you may flle a re-~°fJ:~:_.:r.= ~i: quest with the court to re-~ • .. .,... • ..,... A1,._1 11 Cel\le special notice Of the alltllotllM. MllltieMI allOUllOll ol Inventory of estate assets 111111111, AH,• 7t>. It •11thor11e<1 and Of the ,..,tltlonS aC• lttetmmenU.lena e11 Mo111ton -, P.n<wrt ~ ,...., .,. apjlr..,,.., C 0 U n t S 8 n d re p 0 rt S County IMMlll .. • reN mllN99 11 described In Section 1200 at11ottttt11. ,...._., ta• r • .,.,..,. ... of the callfornla Probate c ....... I• ••1 .... '°' cwtaln -......... 1'4 ..... mtlert .. -Court· Code. tJ·•lcte,........ 111<oer•m 11 r•· Sllvert.ra, Rosen, Leon a1 .. ec1 • .,...,... t...,..... of G._
& Behr. By· Afan S. 11••Jtes,,..e.c•rulldl111.11ap. • • provetll, Tlw ......... CommlulOfl re-Watenmak9!! Attorney at comm•.,,......• .. ArHwloe Fl•· uw, 202' «;;entury Par.le eel Imped .......... Mol>ltd. Th• East #1'00 Los Angeles eo.n1 ......,.. "'MtfMrY of Tee111y CA t00'7 ' tel : (213; A•-. Hallie...._ .. Cht"1r• •lld
500 W.L. Sci.r,tr. 277..e • CSEALl JUNE ALEXANDER Published Orange Coast c1en1 of u.e Soard
Dally Piiot, May 29, 30. 0,.,1ciAL ••cotUt:'o~~:;· June s, 1981 2-452-81 ........... AVllO•S
PUBUC NOTICE
0, ..._-9TY, CAU, •
....... c.i ........ A,......,_... .. _ Board of
S11perw1aera ef Ore119• Co1111ly, C.111-.... .,.,.. as Ille Go"ern·
Ing INnl ef -Olttrklli .,.,...,..., lllJ lllt ---• ......,,_, ••• -NOTIC• cw T•U1Taa•11A&.a IMJ v. ""· .. •=• A.M.. The,.,_. T.l. .... llf74 1111 ,,.,,... _..,.. lilel"9 -1: NOTICa IS HIERE•Y GIVEN, 1Mt ltelPll I . C--. o.lrmon; RotW R.
tfl f'r lllleJ, J-It, 19'1, ti t :OO SIAllll°"• ........ lltt M. Wl-r, 8r11<e e'clecll a.m. ef uld def, et u.. -Nt1tend9, ,,..._ I'. Alley alld the trallCt tottwofllctstf REAL ESTATE Cltf'll. SaCU•ITIES Sl!ltVICIE, 2020 NotU1 Trect M9. .... 11• It received. A •rMlllwer. llrl .. *·"'.,.. CltJ .. ,..,.. Slaff AMIJll tll 11411tlOll Is •11ltl«IU<1 i. AM c.n., .,, er.., StM9 Of for Solltll W-. -... .. ..,.,.,. T••· Cellfe;11le Ml!WPOAT •EQU ITY ruorJ 11 ,,_,.,,.Ill from SlrHI f'UNOI, 1...C., e c:.afffwNa c~ Llglltl ... 111111 I a Otslrkl Ho .. 10
U.. u 111111, .......... T,__ lllldlff to SI,_ ~ Malllt......ce Dis·
.... ·~·ttw...-el Mile<-trkt Ne. II .. ""-Uglltl119 #Min·
fwrttll llllfllllcen.111 Dettll°' Tnmtn· 1-t Dllllrlct Na. 6. """9•1 °"UP c u t t Ill 11 y W I L L I A M C . n.51P Is ...... .,._. PAJlldke ...,._ WARMINGT<* Ill 911 UNntf'ri.ct 11t••ll011 M SOM\ Llelltlnt Main·
-.... --............... tt11. tenance OMMct -11 11 _.oW<S. i. w l2tO ef Offklel AaWe of Slorm *ell\. ..--..,, alld bike trail
..... C-. 81 .... 760. 'le<onler'I ta•mtrltl, y_. lmS, .... VtUIH lllltf'lllNlll N., 41:122 111J ,_ ef e Appetl • UP lt-17F h gr.,,ted IH'tecll w dtfewlt '111 peymt11t or Orcll-Na. 9M la edopttd. ,._., 11M1rfer-11et ef tlle ellllltetltllt °"Apt IO-IOP, W•IMP-Slit PIM .-11,... ......... lnchdftetMtctrtalll It tre11t-. ......... 1 Auoclellon ol
lilr'NCll w dlf..it Metk• Of~ ... 8•11k w_... lflC, 11 comme11<;ed. • Ill lllGOll R1111tll M. ,,.,...... Is CClfttf'atlllal..r. ==-a::::.-~::'!. C-TrllMltt .. 11114 .. ...,,,_ VIiia. Hll t' et Plll9t IUL R«.,.....• l11stN-21121 la ....... ._kl Y. lllller 11 111e11t Ne. 1714e WILL SELL AT ...,.,... .,._ ~. Trec:I Ma9 ptU•L.IC AUCTION TO THI! 114* Is~. Tiit k erd ild· NIOMllT a100•• f'O• CASH, JourMCI
lewfvl _.,, ef ttw United sa.t.., all .M*lf ALEXANDER
...., ........ time .......... r'91M. Owll Of the .... o
tllM atW .....,.... -lwltll lllY H.. .. el 5-wbo" TrvAet Ill ...... tMt rMI pr_.ty P'llllll .......... CMst 0.Uy PllOI. 11t11att 111 Ntt11 CtlHllJ alllll Stele, J -J, 1• U.Q~1 *"" ............. :
A~l,,......lftantllto:
ftAaCti.h P~.NOTICE
i..t 7'tf Trat Ne • .ue. u -...n °"
e IMP ---Ill 9oOll HS. P .... 1 Notke k ....., tt-tlwlt COM· It II, lnc:hnlyt, of Mlsctllt-s MIE A(a•AMlt, OU MecArlh11r
llNpt, ,_,,. .. N6cl 0r.,.._ Ceunty. 9oulew....-, ..,.._. 9Ncll. C.lllorllla
ftA•cn•: t2UO .... "'"' ..... Ille F•dertl All .,,..,..,111111 -•CIUllW -Otposll 1-C#fiWallOll, tfl AP. 111t11t fer l119reu •11111 •trtll pllc•tl .. • ..... Main Offlc• or ~wt• ef TrKt Ho. 6UO, • lrencll, wNdl~ wuacupl·
IMwll on a MllP ,_.., 111 llOGtl MS, tel tor fllllle•-.1. "'I .
..... , II to tJ. lllCllltlwt, ef Mii· Tiie ... IOlll• It tw Ille AIOc .. IOll ctll•11-~. rtctrd1 of wltll of u. MdlM °"'99 ....., 1e. ~
Of .... c:...ty,......., wltll -l«etlelltl419~9oultv•n:I, me1111 fer ~ tfld tttll-t N...-art .._, CeMlnll• nwo to • ........ ll6d l'Wotl I etlllolM lAt 12 ef ...,. lecat ..... l•l Oowt SlrMI,
Nllll Tract ..,. ~ wn11 -H..,.n-..-~• ""°·
_....fer --~....,. ""'' --........ ,_....,. °" 111<11 ••-ere <Mllrll<-111 •c· 11111 ·~ _., fMe 1111 <om~ c~ wltll _,.k•lt ll'Mllllclpel kl wrftllll _... .. .....,..1 Dlrtctw
......., _ _.. M ~t. of 1111 .....,. -...u 111aurenu
.. c1we1 ........... -Ille ftcllltlts ~--•• .....,... OfflQ, 44 ltc ............ w... MollltllNfY ........... l600, s.n
TM IVwt ....,_or..,.., -f're11CIK•, ~ t4104. If ... ., ..,......... If llll'f, tf tM rNI P,,..,.• ,.,_ ....,_ •......, tflt trentlnt ty Mnlf\l!Me dltcrffltll II pur1ICM'1M of 11111 -I • 1 M ._ a rlftlt to tllo t• lie: ., Vitt• Or•lllll•, Newpert ao If lie..._•...-llOllc• of Ilia 111-
lhedl, Cellfwllle. tent wtt11 • _.... 01...aor wltlllll
TM Ulldlt ... 4111 dltclelma My Mel 1J-..,. ...... -' .. IHl ll'lllllk• en lleMltty fer t1W 1-...ctneu tf tlon ef IHI...._ fte MllCOflfldemlel
teJtll strwt ---... ..,.., ,_ """""" .................. Ille
dMltMtlM. '" tM _..., tJWke .. pert .,, ... 1e1111 .... w111•met111twlw..t ~, .. ti •• ·~ ... c:.rw· aMt w _,_..,, ...,_ w ,,,..led, UM Tllll ............... PMWk Ill-= ~tllfJ ::-:r= =i.tl .,.. ~9111tlef' llllltllltH
..._. ......... ....,_. • I t S I Wed~ MW 0.-ef Tl"llll. .. .,._ pt111tl ...... ,..... It tel tfl :;.. • ..,..,...111....,.._w m.t•c~co • ... ...,....,.. ,_..,... .........,..; .... ...._.. "tlll\'. -=:.::.. ............. ·--· _. ... ..,_ ef Mid 0..-tf TNM. C ..... .
Mid ..,....... ..... , lllCll .,,,an(.. • ........... ..... """"'""'c....,...e11111....-.et ---~~ tit \',.._ eM flf tM tnlltl CIW ............. Olelt Dell, P'tlllt, lllr .. Id Oloed et Tntst. 'ri.t 'tt•I ,,_ S. tt... _..., ..................... lllCllllM!lt • 11rlMl,.1, ec:crlled l11tert1,, etllt,~-~--------11t1 tMll .... Md,..._.. • ....... ..... CMr'IM .. ..,._..,
-... r-,,...., ............ lllltlel ----------,...., ...... "* Nttke, ·~ ~ ..... ,,."" H~IQUITY
l"UHOI, IHC.. • CIMlrWc.,,.,..lefl. •TNllll!t .. .,: ..... .-.._..... tlnlklt,
·~----. ltl-..... C~-1 D..J ........ ,
.. f'Nllelll """' ..... 117 ....... ........,, Tlllt ----..... •ltll tM .,... A. c-tr cw. • .._ COwflfy ... .... ~CAte,._ ,_.__
(1\4)..,... • • ..... ,.......,o.-..c:.-o.ttr ....._ ,_._..,... .... 0e11,.....,
..., 19, ,,_.s, ti. ... F l"' ..... Jwe I, tt, ..... ftlt ~.
..
Ora.J\gt Cout OAILV PILOT/f'rlday, June 5, 1981 a
~ Angel, Dod(C~r Schedules
• Angel• on "•dlo KMltC (710) An1•I• on TV Channel I ) Dodg1r1 on "•dlo ICAIC (?to) ~~~!!on TV Ch1nne111 .
Mon 11 Tue1d1y W1dneld1y Thur1d1y l'rld•y l1turday
June 5 6
•Bait. 11 A1111i. 7:ll
1Mrws at Cl.tls 11.35
Boston at ..,. , JO
• IMpts at Pliatti • ~
'W' ' 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
Ball 11...-1 Clev. at Alt* / .Jl Clev at._. 7 lJ Cle~ al ..... 7.30 Boston al ..... r11 Boston at Alpb. J.30 Boston al Alt"5, I ·~·t ~ 11·20 • IMpn at SI. L. 5.J5 • 1Mpt1 at St l. :>.J) llltltn at St L 5·35 • IM1ers at Pirates. t 35 • IMl•rs al Pirale~ 11 t~· • • ,,. . " 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
• Bostoo at Alie*. 1 C&i1s at IMeln. 7.35 Mella at Yriees. 5 Alttll at Yriees. 5 • Meets at Yriees 5 Alleb at Bostoo. • ll • U,ets al Bo~too I • IMttn at Pilates, 10~ Clbs at lten. 1 35 St l..at ........ 735 St l at lllillpfs. / .35 Pirates al """'1. 7.35 P11ates al ~en, l 11' Amerlcen LHgue ,....,, ......... . TtUI no ... __ , ,. l
Minnesota toa 002 00• -1 1t t
Malleck, H•11tl\ C•I. Ktrll (I I an41
~; A"""9 ellll ~. W -"-'•
t'O'l'O (Ml. L -Mallec:ll (3-4). A -4,1'$. •
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
• Alct!s at Boston, II All•ll at reus, ~35 All• at rew. 5.ll Seattle at All*. 7 JO Seallle at Ancets. I
Pirates at ....,, 1-05
Padres at lllltW1. 7 .35 Pvates at ~ 7.35 ~IS at Texas. 5'35 a es at llltlf'I, 7 .35 • Dlqeri at Aslros, ~ 35 • lled1en al Asrros ~ o " ...... ,, .....
28 29 30 July 1 2 3 llo&IM OOI 011 Olt -6 It 0
Cltvelalld 000 011 012 -s t 0 ,~,.z. Oear l•I, ...,..,..._ It) tfld ~
man; $11111fttf, ~ W , Stent• ltl -
Olt•· Vi -Torre.r (~2). L -~llMr I l•l). S
-811 ........... Ul. Hfh -IGM411, u-....
1J>. c.._.encs. 1>1a m. ~'"' m."' -11,7'7.
Suttle at ... I Texas at ~ 7.30 Texas at ._ ];lJ Texas al ._ 730 • Te.as at An(lls. 7 30 • Royals at Allllh. 7 30 • Royals at Aniets. • ..,,,rs at Astros. 3 hllpn at ares 705 hllltn at Pnes. Hl> l!Mprs at Pnes J .05 IMprs at Pnes. J 05 • IMpn at ~ 7 35 • Oodyers at ~·~
Y ..... l .. OrieMJ
aalllrMH too t00 OIQ-I • 1 ~-Yori! 040 ICM 10.W -12 11 0
l"ord, Lllffber 141, Slodclard 111 -
Graham, HelMll, l.allec,. It) -c....-.
l'ao1-Ctl.W---. (S.t). L ~41 CMI.
Hlh -e.tUm«t, Dauer Ill, Mvnay 111
N,_ Yot1\, 11-1 ... (4). A -J1,tM.
...... .,..o-
Solltfl CM'ell111 (~14) trl. Ari.MM ~
U2·12l, TllA
Ttau c ... 10-11 vs. Olllellom• St•I•
!SI-ISi, TBA
Belmont fleld, odda
~
"-HcUy CNa 1 aere KnlleklH Etrenl »I
1. HIOllland B'-\/Mq1111 a.1
1. EICMlllle Bey Maple »t
'· W~ PlllUy ...
N .. , .. W , .. S rl S. SummlnQ Mart.,,. 10.1 " " or... e •• • .• Stage Door Key Mee: B•UI • , W11M1 tea'• A'1 I DOUaL• •UMINATIOH 1 1 Plrlsto Cor.,.,o IS.I
OMiand 020 000 000 -2 II J , .. LllMK-. Tues) I. St1you !<ell »I
Atlanta Claaalc Cllk'90 000 000 2:b -4 I 1 ,...,...,., kw" t. Bold Ego Lively 10.1
l•llGfCW'CI -~; 0o1-. F.,~ Liberty 11ac>t11t S, IUuw Pacific 4 10, a Tep~· Herna.-i •I lwo A«*I U-J2-47
(ti llld 1'1111. w -OolSon 14-SI. L -Solllhe••er11 Okl•llOIN 1, S..1"9 A.-II. PIH....CColony vai.-· ., J•<k Nk.111-U.3:>-41
la119•wd IW l S -1"1rm• (U. H9' CMICh.) SCSptl119A,_.ellml"ltMI I L_,.J ,..,.,._ntdtlllry TommyVtlenll,.. )~
OMiand, ,._ C,l. A -J7 ,l'OL T.....,..• 0-t ~lemeni.1 1111ry tor \S,OOD, ..... 1 ROQllr Meltble 27-31_..
Nlltk>nal League Grand Cenyon vs wi111em .u-11 ~rur~-i.rv si.11.tr'• , .. ol su.ooo ~::: :::=;.d ~==
~•. •..,..1 Ow"ln 1. Ntthen Kelly, 2 Ptn·Y-aryn LennyWedlllns ,..,.._.. Molllreel 000 000 010-1 1 I Fa rm, l. Allnel1!t EUO...lu, 4 Gr...,t-Caitrin PMte ~
St, Louis 021 001 OOx~ t l Si.tilt, S Clltrlfl T Wll-. Jr .. 4. L_,. J Bob Eett-U.n-.t
G11lllchon, llHrdoll (1) end Jla,....., Pete rt, 1, Jenice Felnt>tr9, I Ptttr Sten Alt911t JS.u-.1
Sor-•11•11 end Sallche1. W-s..r.t.Mll l~l 8erberl110, t ~· 8 Rench, 10 L_,. J J.c:k Fereru l4-M_..
L-G1111kuon 12 .. 1. A-lt,til. Pttera, 11 B11tlr.l•llCI l<erm Georoe c-e JS.:14.-.t
Trallltfl 1. Everett Kl119, 2 David Oouo Ttwtll U.~
....._7, ,...,.., Whll•l•y; > J Wiiiiam llonlfM:t; 4. Jec:I( Jerry HHnl :M-~
Hou1l011 000 200 210--J 14 0 G•v., Jr., S. Luis 8•rr.,e; 4 R09tr LlllCly Miiier l).,.._..
S.11 Diego 201 IOI 00.-1 1J D L111rl11, 1 Gtor941 Hendy, t E11gtn• SteYt Melnyk :M-u-.t
J . HltVo. ,.._, l'l. Sltlltfl Ill. I.IC-Jtcobt; •. Jec:k VIII 8er11. 10. Horetlo Lllro, 8ru(e PtuQIMl J4..u-.t ltl •llCI ,,,,,,..,.,, P\l)ols (ti, Mura, Cll<tls CTI, 11. John CMnpii. Biii Britton >1..J!-
Lll<ll It) end l( ....... dy. W-M11ra (J.71. lo• Alemlto• W•IOl'tb 124 POllNHffdo Merk Lye ~
L-J . Nl ... re l~l S-Luc•1 (ti. Hlls-ntUllSOAY'S••SULTS Pur>e UU,30D If 11 U art Flr\I Rey Floyd JS.); ...
Hou1ton, en.a II), CaOeno 12.1 Sen 01-. 1_.,,, _ _...,..., .. ,.. •• 0 1110,seo. Se<onct -S.2,144; Tlllrd U4,DOO. Mii<• Reid >+l~
B•u U l. A-12,40). Fir"•«• -ci.uy Hatlw !Myles), 21'0, Fourtll -Sii.~ Ai.• T""9 ~-
,..,. ... ,,~• 11.60, UO, o.,...1ate CNlcodltnun), 14JO, Poll Time l •Pm POT MlktSulllven 14-lS--.. Clll<aeo 000 000 JIO ~· • D 10 IO, n.1t,,,..rtnd (Hartl, J.20. u •ateta r111vl1la11 CBS, 2-J p.m POT. Larry Zteot• lS.,._.. Pllllburgll 101 020 000 1-S U 1 0 ·91 pelctlJl7.llO. Frank Conner 27..U-10
Kruk-. E•IWl<k m. C:..111• m. Tl'*'-St<-race _ NII Olemond IMlt<....,l. Triple Crown wlnnera JOM Foughl ,.__10
(t), McG ......... 1101 MCI J 0.vls; R-t .0, S 20, J.IO; c_., OM (Cr .... rl, 11.ID, PleHant Co-y 11'191 on S.turdey IO Vence HHlner 14-M 10
JM:ll_, (7), Teflutw ltl MCI Nl<osla, ,._.,. l .IO, E~y Rown ICMCIOU ), 4.60. become the 12111 ,_.lo Win rec:l119'1 Trlole Pet LI--, J4..U-1'D
(t). W-T ... ulve 12.Jl, L-M<Glotf\111110.JI Tlllrd re'9 -BUiiet Peys (8¥d), S.00. Crown -tlW Kenl11tky O.rt>y, .Pl"MIUWU Mllr.t Klelll J1.J).-10
Hll PlllsDllrgll, PerilM UI. A-6,140 :·:: lA~~.:y .=-.:~~!~:i~.lio11!: si;i:,:\== =ur•. ~=11J:.:,. :.:..::::
Top 10 <-!ff. "" -Sir Barton am C•lf• ,..._1t ( ...... * ...... , ,...,rtll rec:e -One ICIP'Y CC..tro), IUD, tno -Gell-Fo• 0.Wln w .. _ J~l'D
..... ,CMI La .. u• '·'°· uo, 0.11111 °' ......... CMtlr), > •• ltlS -OmeN Miii• Morley U.U-10
0 Aa a M l'Ct. 2.60; Oatdanl 8111 ICr .... r), SM . U eaecle 1'31 -W., Admire! 01n11y Edw-J4..)ol-1'0 stnol•ton. a.1t1..-. 46 ,.. 21 SI SSt < 10·41 peld $oW.OO. tt4 t -Wl\lr1-•r 0on Pooley J6..)ol-1'D
L.1Mlorcl,90lloll " "' ,. 10 .»! F lllll rec• -Fun In Ele11ty OM 1"41 -C:-F ... 1 WeyMLAvl ~
it.my. 8CIADll a. 14' 24 s1 .la err-we>, S.60, 'oo, 3.00; .i.t•••r l•Y , ... -Aue\111 0e11111s Tfl•I• l4-»-1'D
E•1111,8ol10fl .. 115 " 62 .m IPllUlllOfl), 7.to, S.20; o ........ Widow IMt-Cltetlon ,..,ryA"""' »l)-11
Pecl-.S..ttle 47 17' 11 SI .:DO 1Ct rd9Ul,l.40. lt1> -Sac:r9'1rle1 W-y alec.llbUm JS..--11 "'"'°"· 01ka1o '-S 163 21 Sl J2S Slalll •--Ot4-a.dlM11oe 8oy CCr .... r), 1917 -$Miiie SI-Jofll'I Muu J6..U-11
WWlald, .... Yori! ... 112 2' S'9 ,JM l .to, ,,oo, 2,IO; OH·A11tocre11c (Mylesl, ~~~ ~"=..-,,,. lttlltU<lr.y ~ Jim·-· IS..--71 II. H~,Oelll-Sl 20'1 U 4l .m 12.101 11.AIO, •.20; a-VtOM 8o 18¥01, S 40 Fred CCIUDIH U.»-11
Ollwr, TeMI • 107 • 4l .m OH-..,._., lk ........ u •ucla IWI -,.,...._but..,.,""'' t>lcl for tllt Tri-M•rtl Pf911 J6..U-11
lt-1<'.b. ~ a 1JD 11 • ,J11 paid a.as.a $2 ..... (7.J) paid s.ss.oo. Pl• Crown with • defHI In u.. ............. NUii• McCwllouQh a.J7-11 .._ 11-Sevtl'lltl race -Got Hit Shere ICenlo11),. Tiie ,..,_, wllll tllt Belrnonl winner 11'1 P-r ~ 14-J -11
TllOmM, Mii-, 1'; Ev-, ao.tOfl, It 00. S 60, t.10; Ml ~ Cr-IT•-iwtl, -•nlllells.,.. • Jot fllrn.t 3~»-71
IJ, Ar-. ~ H: Gray, Saattle, 11; 6.IO, • 60, Oii Oii Olt !Frydty), .... U •ate· 1'44 -,.._.,,. Caow.tlno Home) &reel Brytllt J4..U-11 De•,...., ......... tt. la CJ.JI i»ld ta.20. ltSI -Tim Tem (CIYOlll Jtrry McGee J6..U-11
.......... I• ElgllUI rae• -/IN, Mtyer1 Doll I Hert). 1 .. 1 -Carry a-11 CSfterl11<kl 11111 SIA Ck '1·-71 ev ..... ...,,.., •: ,.,,,,_, oui.l'ICI, ». "20, 11.60, 1 40; ...... f'•SI CN< (~I. 1"4 _ _,_.,, l>elw»r (Ql.tMftnOlll J. c. SnMd 31->4-71
Wlnl lt ld, Ntw Yorll 3'; Tllomu, 11.60,12.40,1,.,,.WlldWllld lC.-CIOul,1.AO. IM-IC-'ltlno(Amberold) JtrryPMt J6..U-71
Mllw•u-, :a; ~Y. °'"'-· J2; B UU•<llCl-3)paid ..... UO , ... _F_d,...11ISl.aQ90oorJotwwtyl Miii••·-~n B .. I. Teut, a:t. U Pl<k Sia C>I0.-7·.J/7·S.1l peld U ,1U 00 , ... -llMjastk P,.fKe CArta 11'111 l.attw&) LM alclar JS.»-71
Ptedlllltl4DK..._I wllll IJWlnnlnotkieb lflve"°""l. U ll'l<k tt71 -C:-oll tP-C~) 11. W. Elka U.Jt-11 CIH<, ........ , .. , .-.,.Cvtt. TtUt, S.I, Sia Contolellon ,..., QUO wllll l4I WIMlllO lt7t -Sclectac.vi.r aid CC:O.•ll i.-1t C*-~~11
o . MertlMI, •• 111.._., .. ,; Vuckovkll, ll<k•U 1'-'*'-). Or-. N°"'*' JS.»-11
Mllw•ul<H. 4-2; ICMll.,., Oaklencl, ._2, Nlntll •«• -UI ltllM:ll H-CHertJ, S •• Oaw Elclle!Wr91f J4..»-11
McG,...,, llaltl,_., S.J, Torra, ._ ,,20, l 00, Tru v ... ,.,,.. Cl'rtttonl, I•· ,,to; Mike Hollend .__,,
s.21 B11rns, Cfllcai9o, s.t. Kerry Tt IMl!d»IH. S.40 U euc:i. 17_.l Jr~ =Norri• 1171~!!
paid t.SS.60 '"" ....-•• MATIOMALIAAOU• Ati--.-1,MI How l'wltty J6...»-72
• Aall M~ BoOM~ ~ Yovn9114c1.,..... YO<'k J6 112 14 U .• I E41 f'tert 11.a-n
Brltlah amateur , .............. k•••> """'" ..... 'JHI Hin.ell (U.S.) del Oolltld Oulloh
CU SI. 3 -2; Tom lltndOlpll CU S.) d9f.
Altn Ly-IEngl-),2-llC>, TonyGrHham
Clef Tom Kelley, 1-llC>; Plllllppe PIOii~
lFranctlOM. Pelff C>Mbl• !E1>9lencO, I-up;
TOC11y'1QIMl1tr1lnel pelrl1191· PIOll)oua ""
Colln o.lgieltll CSc:oU-l, Mtl<otm Lewis
CEnol•lldl vs. Jolln Carr Cl relend);
Gr•sll•m ~ Geor'Qll OuMlre ( E1111lalld),
HlrKll vL Rendotpll. IS.mlflnalt wlll •lt0 be pl eyed 1CICYy wllll the llnall Se111rday).
French Open
l•tParbl Mell'I Qwn.rflMI $11'191H
lve11Lllldldef.JoftnMcE11roe,4~,.-•,l·S
......... s...lf\11111 .......
H•n• Mlndllkove def. Clwl1 Evan LIOyd,
1· s. t 4, Sylvie H111lka del. AnorNJHOtr ,4-4,
1-4.t-•
GraH Cour1• tournament
lelMe4'CMat•,• ..... M I
O.rterllMIS ..... 1
&red ~I dltt. Peter l'ltm1119, 1-S, U ,
.. 3; 8111Sc.nloncltf JoMLloyd,l,.,4·1.
Legendatournament
CetT-tel
l'1nt9'-S ... 1t1 RoclL.averdef.OwenOavl-.1 S,4_., ... ,,
Cllll Rlc,,.ydef.Merty RlttHn,lHl,4·1.
lnten:olleglate regatta
(etU_,..,,NYl
.. llllMMAN l'OUllS
liHI 1 -t • ...,,,_...,,,, 4:Sl.t , 2 Navy,
1 01.0, 3. °' ..... Coelt, 1:11.0, '· CorMll, 1:14 D; S. Otrt_.11, 1 Sl.O. HNt 2 -1 Wl1C0111in, t GS.O. Hut l -"911Mylvenle,
• 02 0
A.Howe, HGv.lon • 172 21 U ·* Hollvwood Pwtl O.rtt CilUftlle'f u.a.-1'
Madleclt, ~ • '" n 42 .Illa TMUUbAY'S aruuLTS Oaorve ""-u.s1-n Deep ••a flahlng
Eatl#,1'1*-""' • l4' JI '° ·• Ultltf...._f .... ltl .. a41-'> Lynlott 1'.J>-12 N•WPCMlT(Att'a~-·tnt ..... : 11-,PNl.mtllflla 4t ,.. » .. .»:l First rect -TIOl Tew• Otriur Jln!C~ u.a?-lt •berra<UIM,IOllOlll1o,Slbeu,1yeflowlell, Mat..._ ""'.....,...•41 l4l 14 S3 .m 1Be1i.uw1. ss.•. 24.00, t.oo, c-. Cet1«1o T•,,., OltH »-»-71 cal mac.urtl, 1t rocl cod. coaver1 LAcllwl
llal11H, MonCr'lel ... ID J2 " .m IWlnlalldJ, 21.40, t .20; Alrrollne CLi.Mml. NAIL Biii 5aMw *1..u-12 -112 .....-n: $ barrec:ude, M ~. N ...,.111ns, s.n Ofe9o '2 111 11 .. .121 uo. ........ oc.,..._ a..,..,.., »-»-n ...... 211a1111w1, m rnac11are1. P.w..i,~ '' 172 ll U .J20 Secoritl race -Sl\e..,111 Oe lier W L K OA eP"" JotwlS<.tnMw Jl.M-12 DANAwttAll .. -2<10enoltn: SteNu,p Collln1,CK~---' .. Jt 6J ..llO !Mc Heroue>. e.oo, ,,,D, 2.40, lnocter SenO..... I S 23 It It 41 Tlmll......,, ~72 llarrec.-,tnllonllo,1 ... llllut,Jy.t...,..._
,.._,..,. CRlv.,tl, l.60, LIO; Sou!Mt11 Grits C~ LOIAllQlll• 1 • II 20 IS iS Mtr110'......... 11-M-n traclr.flJfl,SmacMrel.
Sc:llnlkll. Ptlll.....,.., U; Dt•IOll,. ,,,,.,,.. c.ayl, 2.211. u Clllly -· IS.7) .. 1c1 un.a. Slit,,_ • 1 11 tt 16 J2 Gert WtnU »-M-72 ocaAMSIOCI -111 •noltn: a MrrKllde,
""'· 13, K....,.._, ..... Yori!, 12; ,...... '2 COftlOlaUtfl...itr-CS.It) pale!~ SWf s 1 12 ,. 12 d Nllk• ""'"' i1·l~12 n1 6onllo, ,., c.allco bes., ,. Mnd MM, .. Cl11<lnnMI, 12; o.nwe,. o.-ni. lit. Tl!lrd race -SN!leklle CH•wley), •.», ...,.._ Otvi.._ rocll llM. J4 ___. •
._ ...... I• 4 20, J,00; ...,_To Muak CUclhtlnl, S.40, V..,<CHIWf I 4 lo6 12 11 .. SAN 011.0 (H&M Le•t101, Pltll· ""tM, ClndnMtl,4~ C41nea4Klon. Cine.,._ 4.20, N-IW.C.11«1, 4.to. u eaacte c1-.s1 s .. m. 1 1 lJ 2t • .. •nft•lt'a, ,,_.... C.-.1 -''° ..,.""' 1
"'"· •; Sdlmia, ""'' .. lllfll•. • . .......,, paid sn.oo. Ponland 1 s 20 u tt •t LPGA tournament 11a111111t, It Y9flow\ICI, sis berrec:vtlt, kS ~.•: lkKll--. Cl\lcago,ll. Fourtl! rau -9o1c:1 .t.O (Ollver11l, to.oo, Edmontoll • 1 It » IA a IM11 ... roc11n.ti,2trnacllertl, J-lto .
MAlllNA OeL lllY ... •n91trt I
lltllblll, 11 barre<~. JO Hiid bau II
bonito, no u llco IMH, llD me<Urel OQ
rock cod.
R•OC*OO -1• _,.,, 41 barrtt...i•
JOS bast, ISl bonito, 1 yellOWlell I hellt>ut, ti
roo 11111 . ..,._ -M •1111•••• 92 Dortlto. S'lll
m101re1. 2 IMl'rec:uc:t•. 11 rock''"'
UN PIDRO IZlM St. ul'Mll .. l r. •"91tra 1' yellowtell, l02 barrecud•. I~•
cellco beu ,,..... O' Cell) 111 *''9'"'' 131 IMrrec:.-. :163 Ulko !NU, 11 Dortolo. l1
Hnd bau, J .,.111>\it, 2SS mec~er•I 14 r.)I •
"'"· LONO a•ACH latlmtl'\I ,.l trl H
a119ten 1115 barrec:ucs.. 1 -.110. 4' cat.co
bau, 3 M.lld t>eu, 110 meckeref 10 ..... '
Wllerll -1U "'Ille" 1J yellowl•ll, 401 bar
r•cuo•, 119 c•Uco Nu JO Yftd bAH 'J
llall!Mll, ID roO "'"· 1 111'19 Cod S•AL •EACH -17 ettQler\ ISO rO<k c<>CI
ID Wiid beH, '° <•ll<o NH 110 t>Arrac ..... 10 Dortlto
Pro bowllng
Pa.to TOUllHAMINT
IM Seettlel
TNNll-La-~
I LerryL-
2 Joe 8er•rdt
S. GllSllller • c•··-·-· S Jim WIMlepleek
NHL
AWARDS \IOTI HG
)~I
l-
3Ul
3 l!Ol
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Her1 __,.I C-vtl11ttllt IOIOtrl
I Weyne Gralllcy, Ectmonlon, 2'1,, Mlh
Llul, SL Louis, U1 Marni D ....... Kl ....
U ; Nllkt 80HY. NY lll-r•. 70, S 8ryAn
Trollltr, NV Ill-" 9 s..... (llest ... -.i ... ,.,..., .. ,
I Bob Gelrwy, -rul 10 , 2 C•••Q
R•m1ay, llvlf•lo, US, 3 Urry Petey t
LOllll, 9'; 4 Stave K•>Ot•. &<>.ton. 10
Bob Bourne, NY Ill-rs JI
~~ .. , ..... ,_ .. ,
I Peter Si.stny, Q .. bt<, 2311. 1 l.err1
MM~\'. 1ti... 121) 3 Don 8uui>r• M1•
nelOte, 12, 4 Derry! Sutttr, Cllte-40 \
Deni• S.verd. CN<eoo. lD.
Htmt ""'-!al 1 .. A ........ m..,l
I Rel'ldy (Arlylt, PltUllurQlll, 170, 2 Oeno
Potwin, NY llltnd•rt, 111, l Leroy ltOllCnton, _,..,, 100, 4. Rey Bour.,.., aoaton, sa. s. Roel UNllW•y, MoftlrM I, ll. LM'I' • ., ......... ,..,
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NII kt 8041y, NY hlendera, 60
Misc.
..._..... (4 Dec ..... ) UO, UO, l.aftr E1111t IT•ltdal. UO, l.lll. C.19try ' • t4 • 14 • 11" ~ ..... , ,,.....,. MOR•O ••Y ('\ltr1•• UMllll) -11 Ca''""-..... ....._ .. M ; II-. ""° umallcca (HaWttyl, J,00. IE-.. OWW. JOA,,,,.~ 1119i.r1: 1J llfle <Ocl, 4l rock <Ocl, 2t11 red tllMlrF,M;canwAt*M.S.t;~.o,,.. f'lfl" rec• -a11eci. """''<Ha•..,,>. Cotmot 10 ' 37 tt • '° Aoblr1W•1* ~ rauc.od,.a:t ,.iiow-.,s~. Thu~ey'1tran1act1on1
4
cl1111•tl, ~I;, v ......... , .............. , lLOO, 4.40, 2.IO; Mia'• Girt ( Plncay), t .40, Wasllln9'on • ' t3 17 It Q l(•"'Y Martin ..,._.. AVIU MY'"""' IM 1.1111•1 -It.,...... liASaaALL ....._, o.lllln. 1·l; ,..,_, MDllV..C, t.•; Mhe ._ CUflflaml, >.20. '3 •ucla Montrul s 1 21 IO It 4t AJkt MJllM' ~ 211119 cod, 14.S rock cod, 50 m•<llertl. "-"'<.., ~
S.t; "-'I. k. ~ W . (._II Ptld SlOl.lO. Toronto 4 t It » It 4' OI-Diiiey n.._.... SAN 11*°" -S1 ..,.._,.., *2 ll119 c.od, .C TEXAS RANGE RS -Tred•d 8ol>l>y ,• •
Slatll rec:•-~-1Plncay), 1AI, Ull, .......,. Dtv..._ M.J. 5"""' ~ otlw Nu. 162 rocll cod. 10 '"rock cod, 61 &ondt, outlleleler, from Wlcllll• or IM M•Jor •••au• •••d•r• l .IO; Wlnolno It C~•l. '·"· J.00; AllMt• 7 s 2' It u " Amy AICCllt ~ ..... llltpPer. Amerl<M Auoclatlon lo "" Clllceoo , .. , • ...... ~ LaMU• Ambe..-(T,..t<ll), 4.00 Fl. L•'*'dllt I S ' 1t I' 16 ft Sandra f'iOct ~ UN'l'A M•llARA -IJ 'llOlen: 10 red tor''"' elld 1 p1,.,., IO be lllmff 1 .. ., RUNS: ......,_, OHlalld, "; Ev-. 5.,..,.111 race _ Tell•'-"" IC.UtaMdel, Tempe Bty • t n JI 10 D Pa1 er..a1ey = """"'9r, lttroclltllll. "'"-' LHIW ::.
8o1to11, "; l.alll#Ot'd, ~· l4; C-, S 00, ).40, 2 40; P-r 1Veltn1velll, L40. Jt<ktonvllle S t U 1t 12 .. ~'!~~ U.»-l1 .,:x~AllO: !ct.T."' l>-4 roclt ~:·' 1\: ST. lOVIS CAJIOINALS -Pltee(I MIWe "•'
A ... lt, II; ,.,,,...y, OM -»-70 • ....._ 4.20. Mtbedoon't "-Y C Plwc•I. J.40. \S c-trM DI.,.._ •·· I .. ~Altlst.tr JJ-l4-ll ~: Sf ~I lllll bl .. llffdl, Utt ll1m...,, lr11lt4d9•', .,, the 1May O~ • • • HITS: l.anlfof'd, &oltM, ; ' ua<le (1.JI pelclStD.Dll. Chlc190 9 J 2'f I' 23 n _, • ,._ --· ....., 1 1111 Moved 0¥rell Porter, cetchlr, lrom •.•
A ......... ; Annn. 0-lencl, 65; H--.. 12 Pkll Six (1-H+.J..1) ...,, 1146,112.tO TlllMI 1 s 1t u 17 S1 °"'' J.._ .. ,,_,, P09'T MU•N•M• IAlftarlcH) -IS • tllt ls.d•y dlMC>IMI 111110 ,,.. 21 ... y dl\&Dlt<I .: • O•ltland, 6S; Oii-. THH, u . •ltl! 0111 --1no tkktt (Ma -... ,. '2 l'klt Ml~ • • It 22 " " TlltNM........... ,,.,._,, •119r.rs: m roc:k cod, 2 C-Cod. llSI. • .. OOUaLES: Armu, OO!tnd, 14; SlxCOftlOlellolli»ldU3>.olOwlt11146wlMlnQ Oelle1 212 '» I 1t J•11lt1pfttn1011 ~I MALleU -"enolen:IScellcoMa,d l'OOTUU. ::-
Peclor•, INttlt. 14; Lansford, 8"ta11, 11, 110,11 lllve ll«wsl. SI• potl'll• er• ewarcled for a rogulatlon or hlly IClrw ~1 Mind Mu. 1 borlltt, IS rnac11 ... 1, 1 .,.llM, I Neu....t l'..-ell L...,.. ,
Miiier, eo.lon, 12; Olis, "-""' City, ti; El91\lll recie -Swl11 Bini IM<C:eHoo). OVtr'llrM vl<'°'Y "-...i11u lot'• si--.. Pat M•.,..n • ~ be•.,.<ude. HOUSTON OILERS -Sl(llled 8111 leey, ;..
Hetcller, Ml-. 11. 4 '° 2.-110. SI CVtldM•tol , • 2• vl<tiory One bofl111 point IM ,.,.,., ooet Holly Hero.., ~ PAllA0118 cova -te ~n 1 lier· d•l•ntltrt beck; e nd Oett>ert Fe ... l•r :;• TRIPLES: ~lffll'I, T-to. S, Bal-. C ' , Dot j.1 40 S.S ' • ~ 1 2' scored wltll • mea.1mv1n ot tllr• per ....,., 1t•roly11 K-~ recllCla, 2 .......,, 2 hallbllt, a..,... Mis, m llMbe<Ur ,.,
Cl\lceoo, •; Caltlno, Mlrw.tot•, 5~ "..... low~ so I I ncay). 2 . Hie 1' I No -.us~ 11 ••trded for overt•-M Muffin Soent•·O.vlln J1·lS-7' UlllCO.,... HOCKEY <;
A ...... •; ~. Ollcaoo. ,, H....o.r....., ... ~~lltrl . ,.;.;. -Sc:-c Toro), u 60, 4 60. -•out.,.,,, Mero• StlA>blrileld »-»-72 SANTA MONICA -1S •nglert: 1111 Mr· ....-...1 Hecby ~ ~: °'"'""'·" J.40. Pierre UI Mont (\lelenJWl•l. 17AO, ~., •• k-Jullt Stenoer IJ.JS-n re<\14M, 2 llonllo, 2 hellbut, J .-...... -NEW YORK RANG~RS -NamM H .. 11 • STOLEN •ASES: H-•son. 0.111-. •.a .. Crt ... ·~ CommellCler (MCCerrOlll, T111 .. 2, Diii• D Berber a MoJ<nHI u.v-n Ullko INss. C' I p I j k •• »; Cnu. S..ttle, 2'; L•Flof'9, c111~.3 i.:O . ., ... ;:;1 ... 11 peldtAn.00. T--··~ K•llly HI\• JT.U.-72 SANTA MONICA -1S •11QI•": 107 celko Brookl Neel CHCh end ••• 0 • 't WIO ::~ l----~~~:--11111,., __ ._Balt __ l_moro ___ ._12_,_~_,_ .... __ ·_c_ .. _"'_--________ "_tu __ lldMCt ____ -__ "_ ............................................ _L_o_•"_..., ___ .. _·_•_E_~_"'°'_"_~_n _________________ L°" .... 1" .... e_ruca ___ P_.,.... __ ' ................... ».45-n ________ .,._ .. __ ·" .... bolll .... ~_._l'D_mec: ___ ... _r_.,_._2_11a_1_111u_t_. _________ ~ __ ·1_oe_11_•_-__ .,.. ___ ," __ m_•_"'_"" __ • ______ ~~__.~
From Page C1
SEV ANO'S COLUMN . • •
f<>rmed by the hitter's station·
ary bead and the position of
the visual angle widens. When the
ball is about 20 feet from home
plate, it begins to pass through the
larger arc too fast for the human
eye to track. Aa a similar exam·
pie, you ~an watch a speeding
train approach, but as it nears.
your eyes cannot keep it in focus.
Subsequently, it'a a blur.
Don't ask it. I already know
your next question. Why, then,
can George Brett hit .394?
What enables a hitter to make
contact, even thoush he's no
lon1er looktnl dlrectly at the ball,
ii the prepro1rammlog of hia
neuromuscular system based up·
qo previous experience and the
4-ta accumulated wbtle the ball
waaatillinsisbt.
Good bltten Hem to be able to
wait tonier before committlnC
· tbemtelw.. But even they cannot U.p thetJ" •Y• on the ball unW
tbe momeatltllhlt.
You mow somethln1? Thia et!·
ttreaPladan 111ay 1t•••wbol• new meanlDI to the phrut,
"YCMl'rellllndumpl"
YMlilOW, maybiebela. 't '· •• * AN.,..• naoay often
oHJ'91fd .. the one wblch 1tatea: ·~· .... IMU>all la • t.out)t ~btdWt~~·
We~ tbat'I pri)blbly rllht. ,
lleal11& ........
In reality, there's no such thing
as a rising fastball. Oh sure, a ball
moves, but not up, unless the ball
Is delivered underhand ala Kent
Tekulve or Dan Quisenberry.
The logic is simple. You can't
defy the laws of gravity. At a
s peed of 100 miles per hour (to
simplify things), a pitch takes
roughly 0.4 seconds to arrive at
home plate.
According to the gravity
formulas of Isaac Newton, during
0.4 seconds the ball will drop
about six feet. Th• only coun·
terbalance might be the spin put
on the ball, but the" Uftln1" effect
is not enough to overcome the
downward pull of gravity.
Therefore, studenta. what pro-
ba bl y happens ls that some
tastballl do not drop as qulcklY u
others, creaUn1 Lbe iUU1lon that
the ball toars. '
Special to &lie DaUy PUO.
LIVERPOOL. N.Y. -1'11hl·
Inf l'OUlb Md chopfy Wai.ti,
the Oran1• Cou Coll•I•
fre1bman four. crew flnl1btd
third tn lta biat on UM fli'lt dl1
ot th~:..i.rcouec~te Rowtaa A.Jaoc: •1 cbamp•OOlb.lp .... uua .... Tbuncla1.
~~ ,;..:
.~. ~: ... ~· ,...
~~ Cubs' legend like a breath of fresh air ~:
:1 WILL GRIMSLEY years, starting in 1953, dunng which time hew a~
APa-&11c.1 u •• ' dervish in the field and poled 512 home runs is ~·
What baseball needa is more Ernie Banks. devotion to the game has never waned. ::
Owners and players are at bitter locgerheads. At one ot his several appearances, Banks WJS ~-; n strike impends. Bowle Kuhn ls in court. Billy asked what current player most closely represents::
Martin burnps an ump and tosaet hand.lull of dirt his own boyish, vacant lot enthusiasm forP.:ttie ::
at hla stem. The ump sues Billy for assault. Ellls s port. · ::.
Valentine changes from an Expos to a Mets He pondered a moment and then replied· ·:
uniform and blasts his ex-boss, Dick Williams. In "Dave Winfield, the new rich kid with lhe -:;
Cincinnati, teammates snipe at a hobbled legend, Yankees," he said. "lam impressed wllb his hus. :~
Johnny Bench. tie and attitude. When somebody asked him why. ::;
Discord and dark clouds envelop the game. as a $20 million ballplayer, he hadn't bit more ::
home runs, Winfield replied, 'When I came lo the :: THEN ERNIE BANKS COMES to town. Sud·
denly1 the. clouds open up. There ls a new burst of
sunanine. Birds warble from the city's
sty1crapen. Smlles li1ht up people's facei. A1ain
all's ript with the world.
"It's a good day to play two," sayJ the former
infield wizard of the Chlcaeo Cubs, baseball's am·
bassador.
Ernie, inducted into the 'Hall of Fame lo 1977,
has been appointed -alont wlth anottier Hall of
Famer, former home run king Ralph Kiner of the
Pittaburlh Ptratea -baseball'• offlclal travelln1
salesman for tbo 1881 ll·•tara Game, scheduled
July 14 ln Cleveland.
:Thelr Job lJ to 1•t out the •ote. Since 19'0,
wben the election waa turned over to the f ana,
more than 83 million ballot.a h•v• been cast lo the
natlonwtde election, run by GUJette tor bueball.
Ernle wu in New York Wt week, dOlnl in·
tervtews, eatJnc aplnacb ••tacit, 1tteadin1 ·the NeJ!
York·BalUmore game• at Vallee !bdlum U4
Jo11ID1 Qve mUe1 dali, in Central Pan.
RI LOOU AS SKINNY and fr&U u whee he
played ~'end n.-t bue for the Cubt for 19
Yankees, I didn't promise home runs. I said that :·
other things win sames -like speed, def~nse, a ~~
good arm. These are aasets 1 could offer. My job ls ·~
to help the team win. The home runs will tak~ caro •• :
of themselves.' :·:
"THEN TUESDAY NIGlll' he hit a homr run. :~:
He was like 1 happy kid at ChrlstmasUme whc11 he:·!
circled the bases. There was pride and joy in bis ::.
face that $20 mlllion could never buy. Once, wblll\ •!•
he sot a hit and rounded fint, he fell down and tlil! ::;
to scramble back. He loob like be really enJO)' ::·
playlni." ::
Ba.nb added that be had no intention of isnor· ::
lna the obVioua -the Pblladelphla PhllliH' n· :•. blllevabl• Pete .Roae, who at ace 40 es b Al')l'I ::
down an &an M\dlal's career record of 3.&30 hals. ~:
••ftoM typifies what tM a.amt is 1111 •bout," ::
the former -C"ba sreat 1asd. "ff• 1UJt play~ tbc ·!
1••• 11 be dtd on tbe cocner jot, His t r r ::· proba~ bu been extended ft•e or six yHr Ju.11l ·::
becaYM M enJoya lt '° mu~." :·:
t:r'nl• aaid he felt hi• own carwr was ut nl ;:;
by tbe fact that be played •ll ol hla Mm1..11m .iln :::
the daytiaM at Wrt1l1y Field, Ute only unll1h1ed ·:· park. · ·
.
Orenge Cout DAIL V PtLOT lf'rldey. ~une 8, 1•1
Ga-rdener's checfcl' t .
' • • Th•r•'• 1Ull Um• to IOW •ffd• or to put an Wl\@r t!lllP lh •lready 1t1rted pl1nl1 uf HIM of your favorilt ln1lt1d.
v111t..ble1 tomatoet, 1qu11th, b11n1, carrot1,
. ar .. n onlona and cucumber..
• It'• not too late to plant roett. Chooa•
bloomm. planta from your nuraery and you'll
have an lnstaot ro.e bed.
• l\111 Umtt clumpt1 of lr&AH
put a a y11r1
wMt rln1 lo help
• Try to a.old any heavy pruning um aum·
mer as this may put some of your planta ln
shock which means they will require lots of
• Hurry up
beaonlu, chry1
you're interested.
~.54 Years Of Community Servic
(19'0 -1981)
11E COSTANBA-HEWPORT HARBOR
UONSQllS
Proucly Presents the 36th Annual
~~\ ·FISH FR ,, .. \• ncl -a -CARN.IV f ~FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY
. JUNE S -6 -7, '81
-~LIQNS PARK 18th & NeWf)ort
GIANT PARADE SATURDAY
10:30 A.M;
.. ,
.'(• -..
S130PM
8:00 PM •
7130PM ••
Q;OOPM .
SCHEDULE OF EYOOI
FllOAY. JUNE I
Asll Dinners • stan serving
. cam1va1 Rides & Games open
on stage-Band X • Wonf s Larges I
Non·marcllfno Man:lllng Bancl
,. ............. Orawlng
(winning tlclcet• must bt prestn1)
IATUIDAY, JUNE I
10:00 AM • Cllnlval RkltS & Gamls open
10:30 AM . • lion• Parade Spectacular
12:00 Noon . . . .... Fl•ll Dinners • star1 serving i·oo PM . . ... Parade Awards (af stage In Park) t."'5 PM . • . . .. . .. . . . . Dtawlng
(WIMUlg llcktt• mufC btprtsenl)
1JfM . . .Mel H~ Dancers (on stage)
PM , .. . . • Drawing
(~ tlCkets mutt bt ptesenl) r.oo PM , , . . . . . . . ~ Rllyttlm 8alld (on stage)
t:OO PM • • • • , .•. Drawing for c:Olol TV & other
prizes (wlnnlnO tickets must bt present)
GRAMD PRIZE •
1981 FORD E~CORT
.. ._. flll .... ,...,CM• .. Yw'
,,...... .. ...,.... .. hM ...... f«f
IWlllllt *"' ........ ,,..... ... ,
I 11111 . ..
MANY Olttt:A PlllZES llleludtl)O I COLOR TV' (W11W11Q llCUll
lllWt bt prtMlll lof all ""'" ... '°'d bcot1) 'IMth cooptr111011 ti OMs 8fown
•••••
•••••
BABY CQlllTEST
All conlklan11 must OI ttgiat41tl llelott 5 00 PM Oii Jv11t
4 • ~11111 111!11111 .tMar W (Ste otll« 111111 ol tlllS 9""' '°' """* Clllllllt I ' ••••• . sru-.v'3~
OOlllJIO!I lllr • lloM lll!IM lltoll OIMW and • C"-t Ill II
pnztt lll<Mllle 1111 Ford ~ort, IJl'f I Bul!Ch •' }. ..... , ... ,
• --
..
f'h• glant-liud Olooml
of tM hfldrong«i con be
f'•liff upon to Qivt lot• of color to tlw •mmer
gcr<Un. T"'1/ bove a
hand1om1 fol$aoe tuture -qtdlt·like in
appearance and ~ou
"' can, chooae from tither
blue, pink. laVftlder or
white flow.r color,
' _, I .
uchsia Eestival this Weekend.
MEED
HB.P! ...,._ w.,...,
Stire ...
....... Cf.Olm , ....
....... '{. --.... , 11-..L ....,..o._ ·--·-
1ourd1, aucculents,
whHe marl1old1 and
dwarf 1eranium1.
Admlulon to the
event la 50 cent.I, and a am shop and refresh·
ment stand will be
open.
THE COSTA Mesa·
Bay Cities Branch of
the National Fuchsia
Society will meet Mon·
day at Columbia Sav·
ings and Loan, Harbor
at Wilson, Costa Mesa,
at 7:30 p.m.
Property Icing Sold
NURSERY
Liquidation Sale
All ~als'Subiecf
to Supply on Hcmd
SAVE UP TO
70°/o
Presented In cooperation
with Costa Mesa-Bay Cities
Branch National Fuchsia Society.
FUCHSIA
FESTIVAL
See ... Hundreds of Beautiful
Fuchsia Blossoms on Display I
· Schedu.le of Events June 8 end 7:
11 A.M FUCHSIA CARE a CUL TVRE -., tit• FuchM ...,,.,,
12 ,00 LUWASA HYDROCUL T\JRE -Hou1• ltl4lnt ,,,.,,.,..,.,_
1 p .M. FUCHSIA CARE a CUL T\JRE -., ,,.. Fuchll• loc,..,
2 P.M. SUMMER ROSE CARE -a,• Pro ... CN,,,_ IC .. ,,.,
3 p .M. FUCHSA CARE a CULTURE -er'" Fuda .. locNtr
Florist Special ... Full, lush, green
BOSTON FERNS
p I t Ll
r
---i...-~..-.. ...... ----------................................... ..._ ________ ~-.
LIMELl:TERS RETURN ... 03
SONGWRITERS EXPO ... OS
'HOT L BALTIMORE' ... 06
The etltire cast of South Coast Repertory's prodiu:tWn of 'ANYTHINGGoes'getstogetherforthegrandfinale.
The gypsy fortune
teller was right
By SANDIE JOY
Of .. ..., ........
Show business bas been
"damn good" to Ellen Travolta.
• Tbat's what she ·says.
''IT'S BEEN good to me and
good to my family," adds the
older sister of John "Urban
COwboy" Travolta. "Of course,
some ol ua bad more luck than
o era."
Ellen recalll when she was a
little girl, her mother took her to
a IYP5Y fortune teller to ask -about her future.
According to Ellen, the erpsy
Hid, "She'll be big, have a IUC·
ceuful career, but, madame,
your baby will be a
phenomenon.·'
The gypay's predictions seem
to have been right on tar1et.
The "baby," J obn Tr a volt.a, la
a. superstar, idolized by millions.
And, Ellen, too, bas a SUC·
tessful career.
SHE'S APPEARED on more
than a dozen different television
shows, numerous stage presen-
tations including feature roles
on Broadway, movies such as
~Grease" and even had her own
TY talk show, a sort of "AM
A'.merica"·type production
called "About Desert Hot Spr-i.Gcs. II
She's scheduled to begin film·
in1 in an episode of TV's
"Love Boat" on Monday while
continuing to perform niahtl
through July S at South Coast
Repertory Theater, Costa Mesa,
where she's starring in Cole
P--orter's musical comedy,
"Anything Goes."
She loves her work, the
theater, life, her brothj!rs and
sisters, her boyfriend and, most
of all, ner children. .
"The biggest success in my
life bas been my children," she
says. "I feel like I've given
something special in brinVDi
them into the world."
BEa CBILD&EN are Molly,
who turned 13.fut Saturday, and
Tommy, 16. Both children at·
tended the First Nighters
performance of '' Anytbin1
Goes" last Friday night aloo1
with the rest of the Travolta
clan.
Molly is a dancer, aays Ellen.
"She takes lots of dance cluaes
and plays softball."
Tommy is a drummer. Ellen
says, "He's interested lo drums
and cars and girls."
If her children wanted to 10 in·
to show business, Ellen says ahe
would neither encourage nor dis·
courage it.
"They should do whatever
they want to do.•'
Brightening when uked bow
she came to name her daughter
Molly, Ellen says she "loves"
the name and that h e r
grandmother bad been Mary
Molly Murphy.
Ellen says her life is just that
of any other mother trying to
raise a couple of kids alone.
"Up at 6 ... the dentist ... the doc·
tor ... homework. You know
what it's like.t" she said.
Tommy just 1ot a sportscar, a
<See EU.EN, Paae Dt> Ellen Travolta and Don Tue he in duet.
iions off er chance to roar
· 'Ragin' Cajun'
and his flaming
'5' fiddle ... D5
· · 'Doing dramatic and emotional parts is good, but
musical comedy is uniquely an American form
... It's important -as important as drama as to
what theater is all about.'
-Richard Doy~
A long way since
days in minstrel
By .JIMMY JOHNSON
Ddy"911 ..................
Little Ricky Doyle has come a
lon1 ways since be used to do the
"Patsy and Ricky" act around
the military camps of Virginia.
Doyle sampled st\ow business
at the ripe ol' age of 8, liked the
feellna and bas been indulging
himself ever since.
STAR11NG WITH community
playhouses and USO shows as a
child, Richard Doyle has gone
on to do theater, television,
feature films, some soap operas
and at the present is starring
with Ellen Travolta in South
Coast Repertory's dandy
musical comedy. ··Anything
Goes."
"I started in show business as
a kid," he recalled recently dur·
Ing a break in rehearsal at the
SCR theater. "I did a little Irish
song and dance act with a little
girl. We called ourselves 'Patsy
and Ricky ' and played a
mlnst.rel show, but since it was
an Irish act, we dido 't have to
blacken our faces.
"By then, vaudeville, as we
remember it, was dead and the
acts bad infiltrated down to the
community houses. I saw some
great acts as a kid. I loved
watcbins great showmen work
and I love being a showman."
In "Anything Goes," Doyle
plays the part of Billy Crocker
and from the start it ls obvious
he eajoys his work.
"I love doing musical com·
edy," be said. "There ls usually
a lot of applause during this kind
of a show. The applause grabbed
me as a tid and I never got over
it.
"Doin1 dramatic and emo-
Uonal parts la good," the friend·
ly actor added, "but musical
comedy is uniquely an American
form.
"THEREFORE, IT'S impor·
tant -as important as drama
as to what the theater is all
about."
Doyle bas been with the South
Coast Repertory almost from
the start, joinina the company ln
UMM. ms first play was a produc·
tion of "Volpone."
"I 'll never Cor1et that ex-
perience," be smiled. "We
moved into an old building on
Villa Way in the cannery district
ol Newport.
"We bad to renovate the build·
ing. It had been an old swap
shop. It was a lot of bard work,
but I loved it and that's when I
first knew I would stay with the
company."
In the meantime, the war ln
Southeast Asia was whipping up,
so after two abort years with
SCR Doyle was drafted into the
army.
Having grown up in a military
family -his dad was a career
officer in the Navy -~yle
knew bis way around a military
base. By knowing the ri8bt peo-
ple and having the proper COO·
nections, he ended up in a USO
unit and was sent to Vietnam to
entertain the troops.
"I WAS FORTUNATE enough
to do a couple of Bob Hope and
M artba Raye s hows while in 'Nam," Doyle said. "Then an
awful thing happened. The Tet
Offensive came in 1968 and that
put an end to the USO for me.
··I was faced with some
serious problems . . . and I
wasn't so crazy about takin1 up
a rifle and going into the bush.
However, I eot lucky. At one
time in my life I had been a
lifeguard. so I did some quick
(Daneuvering and spent my Jast
four months in Vietnam u a
lifeguard.
"And that's probably why.I'm
back at SCR," Doyle aaid. "I
may not have made it if I bad
taken the rifle and gone into the
bus h . I wouldn't tra de m y
military e xperience, but I
wouldn't want t.o do It again
either."
Doyle returned to the com-
pany in 1969 and immediately
went into a production ·'The Jn.
dian Wants the Bronx." It baa
been a growing experience for
both Doyle and the South Coast
Repertory.
"It was a pretty brave move
to come into such a conservative
community," be pointed out.
"We've tackled some pretty-
challenging stuff, not just the
tried and true. The commuiUty
has responded very well. 1t bas
been with us all the way. As the
community has grown, ao bu
SCR. The community bas ~·
trlbuted to our growth and I
believe we have contributed
sometblng, too.
"ACTORS ARE much the
same way," Doyle continued.
"They, too, must grow. We
have. As a matter of fact, we
have been living the Cinderella
dream.
''I can remember doing
'Othello' in quarters so close to
the audience they were ductin1
the sparks from my sword. I can
remember 1oing back1tage
between acts and sayln• to one
of my fellow actors 'I think I hit
someone in the audience during
that last duel.'
"During t hose early days
there were 14 of us living in the
same small building where we
worked and performed. There
are about 10 of us who have
stayed together right from the
beginning. It bas been a wealth
of experience for us all," he eon·
eluded.
Best bets for the weekend
"PAR FOR THE CORPSE," a new mystery-comedy by El
Toro playwright Jack
Sharkey, receives Its world
premiere tonight at the Irvine
Community Thea,ter. The show plays Fridays and
Saturdaysat8p.m.,Sundays
at2p.m., throt19hJune21 at
Turtae Rock Community Park, Sunnyhlll Road off Tur·
tie Rock Drive In I rvlne.
Tickets are evallable at the
door.
"PANOPLY,"thelatest
work by the Gloria Newman
Dance 'Theater, wlll premier
Thursday, June 11, and Fri·
day, June 12, at 8 p.m. In the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse,
606 Lll9UM C.nyon Re>Mt In
Laguna Beach. Reserved
9Htfnt Is $6.50 for lnforma..
tlon or reservations call
77M701 °' 4944021 .
HAYDN'S "TH•
Crilitlon" Wiii be
performed by the Oranoe
CMtt College ChOrate and
Alumni Choir, under the
direction of Alcbllrd AaUb.L at 1 Nft. s.tuns.y In u.e oc\; Aufllar'hlt'ft. They Wiii be
JolMd by tOeolsts Mary
ltawcltffe, IQPf'ano; ~oMttwn
Mack, tenor end ThOmat Wltcox, tint. TlcketS .,. S3
. .
.
02 Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Friday, June&. 1981
-PLAYS--------
"PAR FOR THE CORPSE" premieres tonlaht
at the Irvine Community Theater. (See Beat
Bets on WHkender cover for oetalls.J
"REDHEAD," the Orange County premiere of
a musical mystery, arrives tonight at the Costa
Mesa Civic Playhou" on the Or•n~ County
Fairgrounds In Costa Mesa. Performances wltl
be given Fridays and Saturdays at 8 : 30
through June 27, with tickets available by call·
ing 754-5159.
"THE HEIRESS" Inaugurates a SIX-WHkend
run tonight at the Huntington Beach Playhouse
in the Seacllff Village center on Main Street at
Yorktown Avenue. The drama plays Fridays
and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. through July 11.
Reservations at 8-47-~65.
"BETWEEN TWO LOVES," based on Golda
Meier's autobiography "My Life," will be pre·
sented at 8 p .m . In Temple Judea, 24512
Moulton Parkway, Laguna Hiiis. Presented by
the South Coast Communities Jewish Center,
the play stars husband and wife acting tHm
Rena and Stanley Waxman. For reservations
ca II 497-2070.
"HEARTS ON FIRE," a Los Angeles Theater
Works presentation of the Dorl1 Bal1ley
musical, will be performed at 2:30 and 8 p.m .
Saturday In UC Irvine's Fine Arts Concert
Hall. Call 833-6378.
"ANYTHING GOES," a revival of the 19~
Cole Porter musical comedy, Is on stage
through July S at the South Coast Repertory,
655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa.
Performances are nightly except Mondays at 8
with weekend matinees at 2. Call 957-4033 for
tickets.
"THE HOT L BALTIMORE" continues
through June 21 at the Newport Theater Arts
Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach. The
Landford Wilson drama plays Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. Call
675-3143 for tickets.
"RUNAWAYS," a new play by Jay
Christopher, plays tonight and Saturday at 8
p.m . in the Artists Theater, 625 Park Ave.,
Laguna Beach.
"THE ROBBER BRIDEGROOM," a musical
comedy by Alfred Uhry and Robert Waldman,
wraps up tonight and Saturday at 8 p.m . in the
UC Irvine Fine Arts Little Theater. Presented
by the school's Music Theater Workshop. Call
833-6617 for deta i Is.
"ALL DRESSED UP ... " by San Diego
playwright and UC Irvine graduate Tom Silber
plays. Saturday and Sunday at 8:30 p.m. in the
Irvine Cultural Center, 17302-A Daimler St.,
Irvine. For reservations call 979-1582 or 979-3176. ~
"CHEVALIERE" plays tonight through Sun-
day at 3 and 8 :30 p.m . at South Coast
Repertory's Second Stage Theater, 655 Town
Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Call 957-4033 for
ticket information.
"WAIT UNTIL DARK," a suspense drama,
continues through June 13 on Friday and Satur-
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRVINE
COMMITIEE FOR ARTS presents
HEARTS ON FlRE -A play with
songs. premiered in Los Angeles as
Catholic Girls. Winner of the Seven
Drama-Logue Awards
Sat. June 6 -2:30pm and 8pm -
Concert Hall
Tickets available at ASUCI Box Office
Mon.-Fri. 9 :30am-4pm. For further
info call 833-6378.
General $5, UCI Fac./Staff/Alumni, Sr.
Cit. and Students $4.
20 YEARS OF THE NATION'S
MOST POPULAR MUSIC
ARRANGED FOR THE SELECTIVE LISTENER
day evenings at I In the lacldltbltk V1t,1y
Community Theater, U?•1·C Obreto Ml• on Vie Jo. Reaervatlon1 .,. btlno t•ktn 1( 4tl 6Ht.
"GOOD N•WS" P'•Y• on• "\Ort w tktnd It
Golden west co11 ... ,., MununUton ••• ~n. Thi
revlvel of a Roarrno llOI mu •I wltl be on
stage Frld•Y• •n4 1iturd1y1 I l 1JO p.m . tilt
894-9885 for tlcktt1.
"STORY THIATIR" la on .• , ~ht NIWPort
Harbor Actora Thtlttr, * Mon' Vl1t1 It,, Costa Meaa. Tht lmprovt11tton1 how run•
two more w•tktndt pt1yln1 hund1ya
through Saturday• 1t ~ p,m. Ctll •~1 ·1'10 for
reservetlons.
"SHENANDOAH," • mual ., lbOUt • Vtrg_lnlt
family c•ught up In the m1111trom ot \ht tlvll
War, marks Its fln1I ~ttktnd It tht L1gun1
Moulton Playhouse, 606 L.•1un1 Canyon Aoed
Laguna Beach. Shows tonrght 1nd tomorrow a{
8 p.m . For reservations e1n 494.0743.
"DAMES AT SEA," a M~·uP of Hollywoad musicals, contln1.1es at the ~m Theater, 12152
Main St., Garden Grove. Performancea on
Wednesday through Sunday, evenings at 8:30.
Closes June 13. For reservations, cell 636-7213
Tuesday through Saturday, noon to 6 p.m.
"THE MAX FACTOR," a comedy starring
Cesar Romero, continues at Sebastian's West
Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave Pico, San
Clemente. Performances nightly except Mon-
oays through June 13.
"GUYS AND DOLLS/' the popular musical by
Frank Loesser, ls on at Elizabeth Howard's
Curtain Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino
Real, Tustin. Curtain times vary. Call 838-1S40.
-CLASSICAL MUSIC---
HAYDN'S "THE CREATION" wlll be
performed at Orange Coast College Saturday
evening. (See Best Bets on Weekender cover
for details.) ·
SIX ENSEMBLES Wiii be featured In the final
concert of the Santa Ana College music depart-
ment at 7 p.m. Sunday In Phlltlps Hall. The
concert will include three vocal groups, a
percussion ensemble, concert band and Jazz
ensemble. Tickets are $2 at the door.
THE SUNDAY PLAYERS, a master class
directed by Frieda Belinfante, will present a
.. .
free chamber music concert 1t' p.m. Sunday
In tht Neighborhood Congrt1Atlontl Church of
L1guna Beach, Otenneyre·StrHt and St. Ann'•
Drive. The evening Wiii fHture movement•
from the pt a no quartet by Schumann, piano
trio• by 8Hthovtn, khumann and Bach and
tht Ovor1k ctllo contrto.
"PANOll&.Y,'' • new work, wltl bl peHOrmea
by the Olor11 Newman Denet Theater et the
L11un1 Moulton PllYhouM nt•t Thursday end
f'rrd1Y. \IM lttt Itta on the WHkender cover
for dtt111.>
"A NIOHT IN THI CAllAH," a benefit
perfol'manet bM th• At11h D•ncera, • bellvd1fttltta trou from corona dtl Mar, wlll
bt htld ton~ht I I In the llnt• Ant VWCA,
1411 N, •r WIY, Tr•dlttontl denct• with Cqt• tum11 w nclLICM tht "Dence of the Stvtn V•ll•" a 1word d1nct, t1mbourlne dance, VIII
dantH, 10101 and troupe performencH.
l ltket1 1rt M for adult•, $1 for children. l'or
lnfortn1tlon, call 5~2·'577 or 731-4574.
.. ODIO IX MACHINA, 1 Santa Monica
modern danct troupe, wlll tppttr In concert at I p.m . hturd1y In Sant• Ana Colleoe'• Phllllpa H•I~ '7th •nd Brlstol StrHtl. The thow will rn-c lue1t •rch dlveru cheracttrlzetlona ..
11mur1 w1rrlor1, predatory Ha birds,
marching bands, Flamenco dancer• and punk
ch1trltader1. General adml11lon 11 $5. For dt·
t11t1 cell 667·3099 or 396·1080.
-GALLERIES-----
ftllUMtTtVa ROCK ART 11 tht theme of Helen
Btflln91r'1 wattr·color paintings, henglng
through June at Merrlll Lynch brokeraoe, 1000
N . Main St., Santa Ana, undtr the euaplct1 of
the Orange County Art Aasoclatlon.
"INNER EXPLORATION of the Outer
World", an exhibition of personal responses to
the environment and relatlonshlps, runs
through June 28 at the Miiis House Visual Arts
Complex, 12732 Main St., Garden Grove. Call
636-6707.
A ONE·MAN SHOW of new collector's prints
and watercolors by John Ramos wlll be held at
the Surf and Sand Hotel's "Top of the Surf" .
Saturday from 11 a.m . to 7 p.m. The hotel is at
155 South Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
WESTERN ARTISTS Lewi s Jones
(scratchboard) and Wiiiiam Rushing <water-
color) will be featured In a show to run at the
Saddleback Western Art Gallery, 1660 E. 1st
St., Santa Ana, SUnday through June 30.
ARTWORK BY ARCHITECTS from the
Philippe Bonnafont Gallery In San Francisco
w ill be exhibited from 2 p.m . to 7 p.m., Satur-
day and Sunday In Bob Ruble's Showroom, 1088 •
N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Phone
494-21 31.
THE PHOTOGRAPHY of Holly Wright will be
shown at the BC Space, 235 Forest Ave.,
Laguna Beach, Tuesday through Saturdays un-
til June 27.
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 5. 1981 D3
Lioleliters ~eturn to (where else?) the limeligh:t
The folk scene's most cerebral trio will appear in concert this weekend with Orange County Master Chorale
Bv MICHAEL DOUGAN ij(-Dlllty .......... .
~ Robert "Red" Grammer,
~oungest of the legendary
J,.imeliters, stepped Into a
classroom at the Oranaewood
Academy In Garden Grove and
!announced, "I've just had a re·
)lgious experience."
Alex Hassllev and Lou Got·
~Heb, the group's old-timet"s.
smiled in confitmation.
· Grammer's "high." as he
described it, had been a first
run-through of the song "DaMy
!Boy '' with members or the
Orange County Master Chorale,
Tehearsing in the school's adja-~' nt auditorium. The Limeliters
d the chorale will perform two
int concerts in Fullerton
~nd Laguna Beach this
Meekend.
t
~· The shows are or are not the 1 trst the Limeliters have done
:With a chorale. Hassilev insists ~ey are, and he's excited about
lit . "I'm looking forward to sing.
1ng with a 100-voice choir," he
hid. "We've never done that
&efore."
Limeliters old-timers rleftJ Alex Hassilev and Lou Got-
tlieb are joined by newcomer r right J Robert ·•Red"
Grammer.
:· "Yes, we have," replied Got·
Web. "In Rockford, Ill." i "Then I didn't show up," said ~assilev.
:. "You were there," snapped
P.ottlieb. • · The issue remains unsettled.
:' What all three agree upon is
\hat the Limeliters, after 17
rears or "retirement or semi·
l'elirement," are back 'On the
~merican musical scene as a
hall-time performing group.
L-. "We're still singing after all
~· . ~ ... i
these year s and we hope ,
through s hee r attrition, to
become the grand-daddies or folk
music." said Hassilev with a
laugh.
The kimeliters, among the
more cerebral of the early folk
groups, formed in California 22
years ago. Besides Hassilev and
Gottlieb, the group included a
young maq named Glenn
Yarbrough who is still enjoying
a successful career as a soloist.
.. i if-.. -:r. -'9 . '
Grammer, his replacement, was
six years old at the time.
··We were pa.ct of the folk
movement," said Hassilev in a
clear unders tatement. The
group enjoyed prominence in the
field throughout the period in the
late 'SOs and early '60s when folk
music was America's hottest
~enre and l\ootenannys drew rull
houses.
The L1meliters disbanded as
folk fell before the onslaught of
! ::. tlASSIC IT AllAN CUISINE
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ombrero Street
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10 AM to 2 PM CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY
BUFFET BRUNCH V~~AklNO
2JH L C..t Hwy, C:..... .. ..._.
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Beatlemania, the Meraey Sound
and other creative aberraUon.s
from acrot the AUantic. It was
the dawn of a rock 'n' roU Rtn·
nalssance and folk music went
bacl~ lac the relative obscurity
from whkh lt sprana.
Of course, it never dlsap·
pea red and loyal folk fans kept
the old acts eatina, if not ter·
ribly well.
''There is a kind of Jolk
scene," said ffassilev, who noted
that the fabled Kingston Trio
also has survived. "But the pro-
blem is that it's not mainstream.
"Folk music will always be
around on some level. Being
source music, it is very exciting
stuff to work with.
"What bu distinguished folk
practitioners from Mber, dif·
ferent kinds of sineers is that
folk singers felt a certain affinl.
ty for the sort of truth you find in
a song that has withstood the
test or time,' I
Throughout the years, the Limellters have periodically
reuQited with Yarbrough for
well-received tours.
They created their own record
label Brass Dolphin -and in·
stalled Yarbrough's wife, Anne.
as president. The outfit sella new
Limeliters albums throueh a
mail-order system promoted
solely by flyers distributed at
their concerts.
During that period, said
Hassilev, "we all did very dif·.
rerent thin~s . I went into the record production business
from 1973 to 1975 and Lou
became an executive hippie.''
That, explained Gottlieb, in·
vol ved "an in-depth , broad-
apectrum study of leisure."
The Limeljters briefly
replaced Yarbrough with a man
named Ernie Sheldon. lronica1·
11, Sheldon wrote ''Baby, the
Rain Must Fall," Yarbrough'11
only top 40 hit.
They met Grammer at
McCabe's in Santa Monica. one
of Southern California's last
areal folk joint,., The disparity
in their ages is considerable:
he's 28, while Hassilev is 48 and
Gottlieb i.s 57. Both expressed
tremendous e nthusiasm over
their new partner.
·'This kid will have a brilliant
future, no doubt about it," said
Gottlieb. "He blends with us bet
ter than Glenn did and he's a
more glrted soloist for contem
porary songs."
Contemporary is what the new
Limeliters want to be. They said
their format is varied. in·
corporating country and "frank-
ly pop" tunes an with the folk
material.
"There was a kind or unity of
attack in what form or music we
might s ang (before )," said
Hassilev. "Today we don't have
that."
But, he added, ·'Ours has
always been a hiah energy, good
time singing and comedy act
and it continues to be that "
••From a r ecording stand-
point, that's a handicap," he
conceded. ''Record companies
like to pigeon-bole you.''
He said the group's willful
lack of v1sib1llty over the years
r
also dictates against their mak-
lna a smash hit record •
But Hassilev said bt takes
"comfort'' from the respc>n1es or
their live audiences.
''The audience is there and lt'f
very loyaJ'" he noted. "When
younger people come in to see us
they say who are you guys, you
guys are great -and. or course,
that's heartening."
The Llmellters appearance
with the Orange County Master
Chorale, directed by Maurice Al·
lard . will include separate
performances by the trio and the
chorale plus a combined effort
on a medley of Irish ballads.
Tbe show will conclude with
several patriotic songs.
Concerts are set for 8 p.m .
Saturday in the Plummer
Auditorium, Lemon Street and
Chapman A venue in Fullerton
and 4 p.m. 'Sunday in the Irvine
Bowl, Laguna Canyon Road.
Laguna Beach.
Ti ckets are S9 for adults, SS for
children and senior citizens.
Mastercard and Visa reserva-
tions can be made by calling
535-0153. They can also be
purchased at Laguna Beach
Music. National Music in
Anaheim, Blue Note Music in
Santa Ana and Great Western
Savings and Loan's Fullerton,
Laguna Hills and El To ro
branches. --1 DAILY PILOT
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EL TORO 77042tt ·
cd1"10«Ut
JIM McOQWAN Song Stylist
Tues. th.ru Sat.
RAYMOND
JOHNSON
Sun. and Mon,
TW1UOHT-, .....
1••1'.M.-....
3210l COAST' HWY.
LAGUNA NIGUEL
!Al C•-.......... lnt•rl
499-2626 ~5773 .
... Otanoe Coat DAIL y PtLOTIFr1~. June 5, 1981
Eric's eutery ,in IJaguno tough 'act' to follow
ay NO&llAN STANLEY ................
la todey'• v.raacular 1ou
bear a lot ot talk about tettlna
on•'• act to11tber. Everyosit from plumbera to company
pruAdentl uJ>tN, accordln-11, io Uae polished Job performanc9
of a Bera.budt or Barrymort.
An Oranst Co11t reatauratew'
who 1ucceed1 band1omely ln
tbiJ retard la Eric Van Eppe,
proprietor ol Erle'• in Laaun•
Beacb. Hi• "act" ls one ol atar
quality, a production that pvea
diners I ltm of reataurant
1bowmanabip.
Tb.at'a because the bl1 thne io
any 1ucce111UJ operation -food,
service and decor -are pretty
bard to fault at Erlc'a. The
mae1tro seems to have a knack
for keeplna tbeae ~cton COG·
1JstenU1 praiseworthy, an ac·
complbbment inade all tbt
more oulltandina in vlew ol b.la
read.J.neu t.o be tnnovaUve at the
Hmetlm1.,
. Since OW' lut vltlt, aboUt a
year and. a hall aao. Erle bu
made tome chan1ea ln both th•
menu and the pbyalcal la)'out of
the restaurant. Tht r11ulta
be1pe1k a protre11lv1
brancblnl out without alttrtn1
any of the features that bad been
1 source of earlier enjoyment.
What bad been a 1Jde dJ.nlna
area somewhat divorced trom
tile restaurant'• malnatream
h.aa been transformed into a re·
laxlna and intimate cocktail
loun1e. 'Jbe apace occupied by
the old bar bu been incorporat-
ed lnto the maJn dinlna area and
flven a HNe of treater opell·
neh adjacent to the outdoor din·
tn1 deck.
DESPITE A NEW entryway to
accommodate separate acceu
to the bar, none of th"• cbantes haa modified the famll11r at-
mosphere I've alwala thoutbt
best d11crlbed aa 'luxurious
mountain lod•• at the seuhore," but 1Ullcb Erle
PUTA
tllTLE MAGIC
MVOURLPE
See tht wlurcjry of Gus Searcy, a member
of the prestigious Hollywood Magic U5tle at
South Coast Plua Hotel's Blue Parrot Lounge.
NoOMtr • Pef'form•nces Tue.-S.t. from t p.m.
Droc04 .i ~Doege> r1ffW*/. c~a .~
FOR THE HOTTEST
ENTERTAINMENT
IN ORANGE COUNTY
..• Go to the
him11lf baa dubbed "early economic.••
Hla cbaracterbatlon fr'OWI out
of tbe buUd.l.nJ'I colorful h.lltoey,
datlnt back to 1932 when it
hou1ed the Public MIU Lumber
Com p•ny. Down tbroucb tbe
yeara, until the takeover by l!!rtc
and hll auoc iate, Jltn M~Mullan, It was 1ucce11lvely a
dealJn and manufacturing
studio for pottery and ceramics,
a factory and retail ouUet for
ladles' sandals, the Nicllelodeon
Theatre abowlna old silent mov-
ies and three restaurants called
the Kea. Steak Houae and Rib
Caae.
The structure la noteworthy
now for lta bold, two-llory ...
alan with all faclUUea a atalr·
fll1ht above the street. Surprta·
ln1ly, tbe rambllnc interior
ltJelf occupies a acatte~ aeries
of levels where apack>mneu la
accented by auch touches aa
blab beamed ce1lin8•, three in-
vtu n1 flreplacea and warm
natural woods.
TO STA&T YOU& dinner
Hf hert er
take hetM
STAC
CHllSE W.
there'• a temptin1 variety of ap-
peU1er1, hi&hlilh~ by ooe ol
tboae partlculara that d1•t·
ln1ullbel Erle'• tare. ln place ot
the usual restaurant offerina of
a 1in1J• .. caraot dl1b you're
Civen a cbolce Of three Hlec-
tlon1,
Unlformly tabbed at *5.H
each, the trlo lead• off with the
claH\c Bour8ullllon preparation
<•whrunlnc in berbed •arllc but-
ter> but served in a Ull.lque COG·
talner with 1lx lndentattou that
obviate the uae of 1h1lb. The
other• are e1car1ot fondue
<finished in aballot-berb butter
with wine and fine cbees11> and
Provencal (prepared with 1arUc
butter, tomaloel, mushroom and
whlte wlne).
If your appetite ts up to it, you
1bouldn't bypus the opportunity
to try Eric'• HDHtional French
onion ar•tinee soup, *2. 75. With preparation a tlro-day alflllr, it
comblnel aauteed onions with
homemade beef broth abd
co1nac that la encrusted with a
thin Frencb croutoo and full-
fiavored Swi.s1 cheese.
Fourteen entreea run the
samut from New York alrloln,
fl.3.95, t.hrou1b shrimp 1campl, tu.es, to unU1ual aelecUan.a llte
breHt of cblcken moutarde <•
boneleet breut aerved ln a del-
icate mustard 1uace), $t.95. All
are served with ve1et~ble and
brown rice or chef's choice of
potato (a small dinner salad or
cup of IOUP du Jour la $1 addl·
tlonal).
THE n:&8T OF our three en·
trees wu prime rib, baited slow-
ly here to preaerve the natural
Juices. and done ao with conawn-m ate skill, $9.95 Cexlra cut,
tll.95). Served au j us with
creamy horseradish sauce, the
meat was uncommonly tender
and flavorful and served to the
precise shade of pink ordered.
Considerable praise waa
llkewiae in order tor the other
two ept.rees -sweetbreads vin
blanc (Wisconsin veal 1weel·
bread• gently 1immered in
white win~. mushrooms and
shallots with a light touch of
bordelalae sauce), $12.50, and
e11plant l'Itallenne, lightly
FRESH LOCAL ABALONE
Lunch -11:»1p.m.
Dlnnet-5:00.10 p.tn.
HAPPY HOUR
Mon. J1vu Ftt. •:.OCM:OO P·"'· W .. Dttnb .to Drllft 9Hr .IO
FfM cannery Cl•"' Chowder
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Hlthtl1 end Sunder A~
breaded 1Ucea of e11plant bakW
with a mixture of cheeses toppM
with zesty Italian aauce and
served with 1arllc toaat, Sl.95. •
It'• almost aale to say you'h
misted life'• createat tute trftt
it you haven't tried the hoUM "· ter·dlnner (or any lime) drtq,k,
the Blue La8\&Da, priced a litfle
hiah at SC.so but worth it. nu
m aaterful ~oncoction , wbi~h
takes about 10 minutes to pte-
pare -what with all the ftam-
ln1 and hardening of au1ar on
the rim of the glass -comb~
Droste bittersweet cbocolat'e,
FranaeUco and blue Curaco wtpi
coffee. 1 A DINNER BOUSE only,
cocktail service geu under way
nlgbtly at 4:00 and dinners at
S:OO. Sunday, though, Eri~s
opens at 11:00 a .m. for brunch
with a menu offerina e11 dilbei,
French toast, Mexican break.fut
hash, omelell and crepes.
Eric's is located in mist ·
Laguna, between Thalia Street
and St. Anne's Drive, at 858 :;.
Coast Highway. Reservatiom: .4fti -4408.
HCIRC~,,__...._.-Tt ....,.....,. .... __ ,__., . ., ----·---... .,. ..... ,....., . .._., .................. .,-...... _,
I .
..
•·•1 Jin PAU&a o.,. • ..., .......
bn lf'1°" tb1Ak you've sot a bit i1All• bummlnt
around IJW(ft yoq, tM ftftb UDu,al Sonfwrtter Ea· ~.,po Mt fOr June • and 7 ina1 be U.. place to 1et it
J~nalyaed, crit1cl1ed1 pre&Md. and maybe even
tl"&bliabed. Tbe wee~eod ~po wiU tan pace at Beverly
, ill• Biah SCbool, wben .._. ot profealoaal
c 1ion1wrlten, performen, producert and aaenll
twill canveoe. to hel~ ~writert do wbat t.bey ~oat want to do -wnte and Mll their tonl•·
,;~ WUTEU SUCll u Cynthia WeU ("You've
,'i..ost that Lovin' Ftelin'," "'You're lly Soul and·
.}nspirauon," "He'• So Sby"), Marty Pamer <who
rt penned 23 Barry ManUow IOQIS lnchadln1 ala on
hl1 greatest hit.a L.P.) Dlno Fetart1 (''l Will ~urvive," "Reunited, "Sbake Your Groove Tbiq''
.,llJld "I Just Want 1o Ct!lebrate") and Alee WiWI,
1.wbo wrote nearly t:IO aon,1 tut year alone, moat
;;or which were picked up by lletlua ll~cbester,
11Cher, Al Jarreau and othen, will all be a part of
.lhe Hit LyriclJt Panel on Sunday.
, . Producen set to conduct claues are John
'Boylan (IOWldtrackl to "Goodbye Columbus" and
"Urban Cowboy">. Al Kasha ("Take This Job and ~hove It"), Byron Wasner (currently wortine with
~ob Dylan), David Foster (Averqe Wblte Band,
}lall and Oates, Peter A.lien) and Bruce Hinton,
who baa worked witll Mickey Gilley, Johnny Lee
.od Charlie Rich.
CONTINUOUS EV ALUATION8 or cuaette
tapes will be offered throu,cbout the two-day ~po.
Various aooswrttera and producen will criticize
:;,acb taped song, offt:rln1 their im!ibti into what
~ 1ood and bad with the mualc. VlJlton submit· ~ling tapes will be usiped a number for their
ong, so that anonymity will be protected dwin1
be evaluaUon sesslom.
~ John Brabeny and Len Chandler, who or-
f.nized the now-famous weekly Los An1elea
ngwriters Showcase, or1aniJed tbe event for th'
rst time five years a10. ~· "The areal thine about the expo is that you ~an accomplish a lot of businaa in Jt.mt two days -
Ptapea are evaluated, lyriciatl speak about their
l'craft, producers are there to offer help and scout
Hor talent. Most of the professionals who offer their
ime would have given an)'tbln1 to•bave bad such
a thing when they were starting out in the busi-~ess," said Brabeoy
~ LAST YEAR, son1writers from some 28 states
3>articipated lo the expo, and Brabeny and
c:thandler expect a Jar1er turnout tbi• year.
f. Of special interest to Oran1e CountiaDI is the
r·commutlng Songwriter" aeasiona, teared to
show bow a person living outside of Loi An1elea
Why would faur IUJI risk their lives
for a weekend in Colombia? .
We.can give you 5,000,000 reasons'-
• in cash!
can build a careel' lD the muaic Industry.
GUEST PIANE Pl'llFBA, a Capltbl tftord·
lnJ art.lit' wbo launched her career trom St. Louil
and now Uvet ln AUanta, wU1 addreu th• 1pecla1
problelJll ol tbe aonawrtter wbo Uves beyoad UM
Loi .U,eles area.
"Besldel ovtn1 partlclpantl a chance to have
their wort evaluated and talk to aona-wrlten who
have made lt, we're allO olferln1 a aumber of
panels on the legal aspects ol ton1wrlUn1.'' said
Chandler.
••we want to de-myauty tbe bualaeu. And a lot
or people forset that this .. UM aoncwrtUos bual-
nel1. fl you l1nore the buainell aapectl of music,
you can make the wrone aareement and become
-
.. __ _... --,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 5, 1981 -
overtly succenful and poor lD the DC>Ctet.
un BAitP~NI raEQUINTLY that lt takes a
Iona Ume tor an artist to reeoup HPftMI tJl,rou&b
royalU-. Befi.lmen don't undentand tbat record·
lnt costs, studio time and promotion coat.a are
often taken ovt of royalty eamln11. U you 1pent 27
houn • day lQ t.be atudio ror a year at $150 per
bO\lr, it )'OU want a rblnestooe-studded albQm cov·
er arid a founta\n flow.ln1 from a Sunaet Boulevard
blllboard1 you'll never eee royalty money lD your
lltet1iiie. You b4k:ome a 20th century venlon or the
lndentved servant," said Chandler.
''The money you make lD pubU1bln1 ll often
much more tha.o towiq maney. New art.lltl 1et
lnto dlfflculty l!fben they make poor publi1hing
cont.ractl. Publ..1Jhln1 royalUe1 are eum..., lrn·
portent, and our panel people will tboW'" _..,. Jr
you ha~ a hit eons, the-print mualc ~mffl ln·
valuable. Anyone wantl to touch lt, Ito. a
maroblnt band to the Mormon Tabernade Cllolr,
you ••paid tor it. •t said Breheny. " RepresentaUv• rrom 8)11, ASCAP ,, ft)ajor
labell, new labels a.nd music lnduatry Sl"fbBC'aUom
"The Muatc Connection" and ''8AM,. ..n$1lne
will attend the expo. '
Claaaea, wo rkabop5', aemi .. , and
panels will be held continuousb from lf._a.llJO O 7
p.m . each day, and the coet ls S,O ror ~ d--c>r
S25 for one day. For more lnformaUoa on
Songwriter Expo, call (213) 482-1382.
-,, .
'Ragin' Cajun' is a fiddlin' phenomenon
The only thing wron1 with Dolli K1,nbaw'1
four performances at Santa Ana's Cruy Hor1e
Saloon lh1J week was that they weren't tbree Umes
aa long. It wu almost cruel tbe way Kenbaw
would leave bis audiences to eo cold turkey after a
one·hour let and a brier, purely token encore.
That's because Kershaw la, without qualifica-
tion, one of the moat phenomenal performers
around. H1J unique combination ol cajun, country
and roe~ is pure musical adrenaline. Kershaw
could get a standl~ovatlon in a traveyard.
Thia atraneely handsome man frolD Louhla·
na la known a1 tbe "Ragin' Cajun" for tbe Wn11
be does to a fiddle. The 1uy wbo reatrin11 b1a bow•
must be rich, because Kershaw destroys one -
and sometimes two -per tune. You can actually
see the beat riainl from the inatnament, and near-
gaalfied rosin drifts away from the 1trtn11 in wbat
appear to be puffs of smoke.
Of course, any fool can abuae a bow. What sets
Kershaw apart is the notes that come out of lt -
they are clean, intri~ate and wonderfully excit1q.
Not so well known 1J that Kenbaw could put
on a fully satisfying abow without ever toucbin1
the instrument tbat made him famous. In fact, be
only played bis fiddle for about ooe·tbird of the set
on the night we went.
Then Kershaw moved to aCOUltic 1uitar for a
few relatively mellow numbers. Then electric
guitar for "Flip, Flof and Fly," a '50I rock
classic. Just to show of a bit, be played lbe piano
next, belting out a bit of basic booste. Then be
picked up his accordion. "lt'a not fair," said the
1irl sitting next to me.
Not that Kenbaw needs any of these iutru-
ment.a to entertain. He proved that b7 ·~ a cappella.
Doug Kershaw destroys one bow per song
Kerahaw's voice is melodic in an eerie,
spiritual sort of fashion. ute hia in1trumental sty lings, itstands alone lD the world of contemporary
music.
The general impression ia not that Doug
1bedOmedYkr9rif!J: ~··had it up tr;> ... ~ f .
~ ~ l
Kershaw plays music, but that he u mutt. Not
only lD the sounds he makes, but in t.be wa1 be
moves, the expresaloDd" in hia face. ' . .
We shouJd add that Kenhlw ii a fwmY man.
His elisU~ features, exaggerated mannerl•ma and
pbysic,.J.comedy make for a show that i• viaaaJly
entert.8.inUiJ. as well as musically aturmlng. He's a
complete showman.
There was one db appointment lD the show. On
the nlgbl. we went, anyway X°enbaw didA.'1.Rlay "Orange Blosaom Special." We wanteaib ttiiPtbe
ultimate fidcller do the ultlm"te fiddle IOPlti.and
bis r~ll famous. We relta little cb ecr.
But ooly a little. .
, WI -M~4FlililUJI
Country writers.
can enter contest
• Country music songwriters have unlU Jcl1jt'3 to
enter the fifth annual Kentucky.Fried Chiek.n Na·
tlonal Ci>untry Music Songwritinl contest.
The winnini entry will be recorded by Brenda
Lee and distributed nation all)(. ·
Entries, recorded on cauettes and no more
than 31,'J minutes ln length, should be submitted
with a written c~y, of the lyrics and statement of originality to P.O. Box. 1014, TiDley Park, Ill., 60477.
Tapes will not be returned.
The top 10 winners will be ~ied by Sept. 11.
·By TOM TITVS °' ............. Jn the wrona handa, a play like "The Hot L
Baltimore" CO\lld be deadly. 10 dependent ls it on
criap char~cterlzatlon the lenltb and breadth of Ill ensemble cut.
In the skilled hands of dlteetor Joan McGllU1
and an inapll'ed company, however. Lanford
Wilson's poignant comedy about the residents of a
condemned old hotel emeries ., one or the finest
community theater production.a ot tbi year alon1
the Oranre Cout. Wllaon's characters, a motley crew
hovertn1 on the frin1ea of society, must func·
Uon as a unit, at odds with -yet.atrantely depen·
dent upon -one another. The hotel i1 for aome, a
refuge against the world' and, for othen, a stop· _______ _.
ping o.ff place between INTERtlSSION nomadic experiences.
The Newport cast is --------a splendid mix, interact·
ing with natural skllls -honed to a fine edge by
Miss McGlllls -u they pursue their personal de-
mons, and are pursued by them, through a sin1le
day of their lives. The play may have failed some
time back as a television series, but as theater it ls
a most satisfying experience.
Yet even in an ensemble cast there are in·
dividual standouts, and three inbabitan\a of "The
Hot L Baltimore" turn in memorable
performances. Carol Stockmeyer Is hilariously
pawdy u the overweight booker, while Shannon
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Dawson attack• the rote of the pushy street n1hter
looking out for her shelllbockecJ brother wilh zeat and polish.
And, ln an auspicious •t&&e debut, ~sa Wilcox
is simply outstanding as a teen~1e call 1lrt bubbl·
ing with zest and compassion. Hers 11 a dltticul\
role -young and pretty but wf~ a lifetime of ex·
perience which atlll bun 't dhpiniahed the joy of
living. Miss Wilcox displays a1auperb natural af·
finlty for the theater at a tendef, untralDtd age. •
Shalymar Martin imp~ u the ea111o1.nt
ni&ht manager, while Thomu McGovern lencb
sharf. contrast u the more bard-nosed daytime
chie . Nathalie Michaud beautifully underplays the
part of a longtime ~ldent r~ectlne on tbe past,
wbile Ray Judson is fine u a crotchety oldster
I
who turns a game of checkers Into somethlne ap-
proachln1 Arme11edon.
Others turnJna in effective portrayals are
Florence Ehlers as an old lady with several
crosses to bear, Curtis Ewine u MIJ1 Dawson's
befuddled brother, Marjorie Rockwell aa a brassy
streetwalker and David Metsenger H • an ex·
convict in search of the grand.father he never met.
The mixture la a volaWe one and, atahut the
fascinaUng scenic backdrop fuhloned by a de·
signer billed only aa Stramblad, It ienltea on many
occasl<>M. The sparks that result provide one of
the year's most thoroughly Cu.tlllllna evenln1s ol
community theater.
"The Hot L Baltimore" (the title refers to a
misslna "E'' in the sign outside) conUnue1 for
three more weekend•, playint Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 with Sunday matinees at 2, at the
ceater, 2501 Clltf Drive, Newport Beach. Put it oo
your ·•must see" list. ••• AN INNOVATIVE SUMMER workshop for
children will be offered by South Coast
Repertory's Youn1 Conservatory from Aug. 17.29
at the Fourth Step Theater in Costa Mesa. Now ln
its second season. the workshop includes programs
from youngsters age 8 to 1'.
Faculty for the youth program includes dlrec·
tor John-David Keller, designers Cliff Faulkner
and Dwlaht Richard Odle, and techiniC:al
specialists Linda Kimball, Michael Beech and
Steve Shaffer. Call the theater at 957-2602 for addi·
tlonal information.
• • ~Ellen Travolta lives for show buSiness David Messenger bearm aa (from left) Lua
Wilcox, Shannon Dawson aM Nathalie Michaud at·
tempt to locate hU musing grandfather in ''The
Hot L Baltimore" at the Newport Theater Aris
Center.
Ck"rom Pa1e DU the nearest one-hone town, El· would talk to me," she recalls. sift from Ellen's brother John. len continued to find outlets for She had her entire family on
"It wu scary. at first," she her creative bent. the show at one point or another,
·taid of letting the 16-year-old Arriving at their Wyomin1 including brother John. That
~rive. "But, then, John, who is homestead, she recalls, they was about six months before he
very young and very wise, said, learned it hadn't been occupied be1an performing in TV 's
you have to let lt go." So, now in years "except b~ rodents and "Welcome Back Koller."
she says, she's not as worried. cattle, who had left a great deal Some of the tapes from the
toberememberedby. show, she recall•, are "juat 1 ELLEN BEGAN training f'or ' •There was no water, classic.•' Unfortunately, she said
career early in life. At aee 5, In no toilet and weeds up to here. they probably all were erased.
fact, when she was enrolled in I remember standing out When her marriage to Fridley
dancing lessons. there and thinking, 'ls anybody broke up, Ellen says she was
Throughout high school in watching?' This was a really big "just devasted," but she did the
Englewood, N.J ., and colleee at part, and I was going to get a only thine she knew how.
Carneaie Technical Drama Tony for sure."
School in Pittsbureh. she kept She packed up her children and
busy with plays and musicals. SHE SOON BECAME busy returned to Los Angeles where-
After three years in college, giving tap and ballet lessons to she resumed her show business
ahe landed work in children's ranch kids in exchange for career.
"Television is much more
family oriented," she explains
with daytime Monday througl)
Friday production schedules.
Noting that although she's ap-
peared in feature films, she has
yet to do a bard drama, Ellen
says she'd like to portray ac·
tress Anna Magnani on the
screen.
"She was my favorite," she
explains.
When it comes to ·'the busi-
ness ," Ellen says she'd like to
be respected within her in·
dustry.
She also notes that she likes to
be oroducti.ve.
•l1 think being productive is
She says her parents gave her
•·a great sense of respect" for
herself.
As a result, she enjoys life.
"I HAVE A nice time," she says. "I feel very fortunate fol'
that. I think l have an awful lot.
I have good kids, consider
myself to have a good career
and I have a rich relationship."
That relationship is with actor
Jack Bannon, who plays Ed
Asner's assistant on "The Lou
Grant Show" and with whom she
will co·star in the "Love Boat''
episode.
Of Bannon, she says, "I love
him. I adore him ."
Of life she has learned. she
says, that "No one thing can
make you happy, and no one
lack can make you really unhap·
py, either ... .! love my work, and
l love the fact that l work, but
this will never be a do or dle
s ituation f or me , only a
pleasure.
"I have," she says," my own re·
~ea~a~ rewes, th~was ~~dtingandoo«e~np~ ''lw~bukintoth~bmineu ------------~------------------------~
featured on Broadway in shows. duced the Miss Newcastle pre· to make a living," she says
real important. sources."
such as "Gypsy," "Irma la liminary for the Miss Wyoming· frankly, noting it's the only thing
J>ouce" and "Carnival." Mias America Pageant. ahe knows how to do.
While starring in "Three Later, the family moved to "I had to survive." she adds.
phe.ers for tbe Tired Busi· Desert Hot Springs where she She likes live theater best, she
nesaman" in Chicago, she met says all of their attempts to tum says, after reflecting for just a ~
lnd married fashion photo· 1usty desert into grass resulted moment. "It's why you are in
•rapber Jilb Fridley, embarking only ia seeding all of the the business." · f~anewpbaseofherlife,thatot Coachella Valley that l,ay
'fllfean"thenmother. downwind. She says she doesn't know
When Fridley ,.rew restless Af ain reeling the itch to bow anyone P'IJ'8Ues a career m
d decided he wanted to be a per orm, sbe launched the the theater, noting the hOW"I for
towboy, she went alooe, asree•· "Abot¢ Desert Hot Springs" '8lk ... rehearsal and performances are
ble as alwars: to Wyo'niin1. abow oo a local cable station. awkward when a person ls rals·
But. even there, 20 mJlea from --·-=·l~'d=-=tntervf::=:. :..:..;.e.:..w:.;__anythin=:.==•~tba=t-..,..io...;;g;....a_f_amll_....;;Y_,_.....,.. __ • ___ _
The story of two enteq,ri.sing young men
who make an aniazing amount of money ·
selling ice cream.
CHEfCH a CttONGI
"NICE
DREAMS" '"' -. ......... -.. ,-., ..... ,,., .,, .. , .... -.-
••• More
Diversions
VS NSATIONI
"A WONDERFULLY FUNNY COMEDY
about pom~a f1thent and yOUthful
Mductlon.1 --.,11o11;1nx~a A
Ill.cm"" lWllw -:Jlil.r. _
·~ONE WILD MOMENT --.. ~ ...... ETCHINGS BY Gulllaume Azoulay will be e>e·
hlblted at the Orangerl•,. 102 S. Coest
Highway, Laguna 8Hch, dally until June 30. C•ll"'-5656. ;.--~~~~~~~--.
~atlng thla week
with t~ GrMt Mall
Remodeing Sale! ' FHNCHMOYll
EXOTIC LANDSCAPES by California artist
Jesse Allen will be featu...ct at the \'orpel
Gallery, 326 Glenneyre Ave., Laguna Beach,
from Sunday through Aug. 31 . A reception wlll
be held for the artist Sunday, June 1• from 1-6
p.m. 494-94'1.
-ETC.------
A FISH FRY AND CARNIVAL will be held this
weekend by the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor
Lions Club. <See feature'story, Weekender cov-
er for details.) ·
RICHARD WAGNER'S "LOHENGRIN" will
be presented as a puppet show at 3 and 7 p.m.
Saturday In the Laguna Niguel Center of
Performing Arts, 27610 Forbes Road, Laguna
Niguel. Performed by the GEM Opera Puppet
Theatre. Tickets are $2. Call 831-136' for re-
servations.
"AN EVENING OF LIGHT OPERA" wlll be
presented at 8 p.m . tonight, Saturday and Sun-
day at 3 p.m . by the Saddlebeck Colleoe's
auditorium. Tickets are $5 for general ad-
mission. Call 831-4656.
"PORGY AND BESS" will be spotlighted
Saturday and Sunday when the Fullerton
College Community Concert Chorale concludes
its premier season in the campus theater. Ad-
m isslon to the four-part pr~ram Is $3.SO at the
box office.
THE KOOL JAZZ FESTIVAL kicks off tonight
at 8 in the San Diego Stadium with the Isley
Brothers, Kool and The Gang, Manhattans, and
The Crusaders. Tomorrow nights' attractions
are Aretha Franklin, Temptations, Peabo
Bryson and The Jones Girls. Tickets, available
through Ticketron, are $8.SO, $10.SO and $12.SO.
IT LOOKS LIKE an Instrument designed by a
mad scientist, this thing that eccentric musi-
cian Llyn Foulkes plays. Foulkes redefines the
concepts of music and lyrics. He appears In the
Orange County Center for Cc>ntemporary Art,
3621 W. MacArthur Blvd., Space 111, santa
Ana, at 8 tonight. Admission is $C or $2.SO for
students. Floor seating. Concert benefits the
Orange County artists register .
• • • Fish fry
(From Page 01)
Festivities resume at noon Sunday, with Miss
Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions beauty contest
slated for 2 p.m. and the baby contest at 3:30 p.m.
A drawing is set fo r 5:30 p.m., the Dorothy Jo Dan·
cers go on stage at 6: 15 p.m. and the grand prize
drawing for a 1981 Ford Escort, Road Test
Magazine's "Car or the Year, II will be held at 8
p.m .
Over the past 35 years, the fish fry has raised
a total of more than $600,000 for local charity, a
Lions spokesman said.
TOO RUDE ..• TOO UWD ... TOO CRUDE ... ANO NOW ...
THEY'RE TWO FOR THE PRKE Of ONE!
THE
BLUES
BROTHERS
·-~
MATINEES SATURUAY & SUNDAY
Chetch & Cheng L'IH'indF ~
mCE DREAMS DEIERT (R)
(R) SHOWS AT 1:00
8:001:1010:15 In Dolby Sttrto
EXCAUIUR
(R)
5:15 10:10
S.11k Pmilw At 1:00
Carel lup..llltt TllE FOUR (PG
SHOWS AT
•:• 1:1511:20
Neil Diamond
Ml2m'EI SHd~AT 1:001:20 10:30
RATIO (R) NOW PLAYING
A MARTIN BREGMAN Production "THE FOUR SEASONS"
A.LAN AWA • CAROL BUINETJ' • LEN CARIOU • SANDY DENNIS
RITA MORENO •JACK WESTON • BESS ARMSTRONG
Written and Directed by ALAN ALDA • Executive Producer LOUIS A. STROLLER
Produced by MARTIN BREGMAN • A UNIVERSAL PICTUR~
o.._..cm a.ac ~:+='9111#J
Orange Coast DAii. Y PILOT/Frldey, June 5, 1981
°"""" ETTORE MANNI
ANNA PRUCNAL
BERNICE STEGERS
OON ATELLA OAM&ANI -.. LUIS UC.ALOI '·~-~·-._,, •.
Exclusive Sho\..vtngl
Today $2.00 tlll 8:00 P·"1·
ShowtJmea Dally~
2:00-4:30-7:00..9:3\CJ
-·~..-.. --,._...,, _ _.., ._.._
BBIT
BBIT
IABBIT
BBIT DIESEL
iABBIT DIESEL x
IABBIT DIESEL
I ROCCO
I ROCCO
7457
6708
6724
6580
6624
7082
6657
7060 -
7000
7545
7053
7309
7583
7213
7341
7123
7604
7403
. .
137505 $6Q55
052259 $7680
054774 $7890
010851 S7620
025046 S7620
118693 $7695
030316 $8445
016057 $8915
142738 $7635
022494 S9160
021803 S9780
020478 s9950
022511 $9885
004158 s9535
287534 $8480
354214 S8995
331175 S8765
293597 S8765
. ---
$5678
s7120 PICK-UP DIESEL
s7047 PICK-UP
${)872 5748 PICK-UP
S6873 s747 PICK-UP
$7052 5643 PICK-UP
$]621 5824 PICK-UP
S7796 s 1119 CONVERTIBLE
S6777 5858 CONVERTIBLE
S7987 s 1173 CONVERTIBLE
S8627 s 1153 CONVERTIBLE
S8821 s 1129 CONVERTIBLE
S8817 5 1068 DASHER DIESEL
S8483 5 1052 DASHER DIESEL
s7479 s I 00 I VANAGON
S8273 5722 VANAGON
S8125 5640 VANAGON
S7872 5893 VANAGON . .
-----¢ JS w. • ••
1.D. #
ALL BRAND NEW 1981 's
7400 116552 $8120 $]458
7615 103895 · $8760 S8019
6892 077131 $7870 $6796
6978 104592 $]460 S6766
7069 126621 s7715 S6905
7063 130570 s7400 $6686
7264 145291 s7210 $6551
7493 013537 $10,290 $8996
7488 013617 $10,395 $9314
7419 012905 Sl 1,465 Sl0,168
7484 012910 $ll,090 S9866
7329 012055 Sll,090 s9902
6910 901448 Sl0,610 S9486
6915 901998 Sl0,610 S9486
7375 085774 Sll,140 S9892
7348 042578 Sll,675 Sl0,354
7346 057021 $11 ,675 Sl0,354
077379 Sll,700 Sl0,393
Sl3,905
0 •
5669
sl074
5694
58 I 0
5714
5659
5 1294
s I 08 .1
sl297
5 1224
s 1188
5 1124 .
s 1124
5 1248
s 1321
s I 23 l
5 1307
5 1353
:11 AUD• FOX 53275 ·79 DODGE OMN• 5425 , ·1• FORD MUSTANG
i210oor. 4 speed, stereo cassette. immaculate condi· Auto. trans.. diec brakes. AM-FM radio. One owner G~la. 4 spd.. ac, stereo, powr steering. only 36.000 tfon. (863TOV) very sharp -on sate (165YDM) miles. (174780)0nly
54975·
t,6DODGE>/4VAN 54675 '76CHEV.CHEVETTE s2· 675 '77CHEV.'h TONrU s5475 Au~o .. P.S., P.S .• air, st. c:usette, new tires & wheels, Auto .. air, AMfM. An Bcellent. economical cat. V-8, auto. trans .. factory air conditioning, power steer-~-tom Interior excellent condition. (049478) (1ACA282) Ing, stereo, tilt wtieel. dual tanks, wide tires & wheels • excellent condition, low miles. 1 F24038) (3358)
~6TOYOTALANDCRUISH s4975 78RAlllT s4775 '75VWWESTPHALIA s5475 lpffd, stet90 cassette. blue wf#hite top. A Great 4x4. IPICIAL 9ITIOM • POP TOP CAMPER. r spee<I, stereo. Summertime Is
j'421SWT) • 4 apd .. ac, It. ~e. low mllee. (688W~O) here. Pop Tops are in. Excellent condition. (8-49PCO)
---------~--------~~~~~---+-----------------------------+-----------------~~-----~---~·-
l
I
•
rJ 5 AUDI FOX WGN. 5265 I 77 HONDA ACCORD s4475 '79 MG ..... CONVT s5975 ;·_ ·.·; 11pd .. r9dio, only 59,000 miles, runs exceptional. 1pe4td, ~m. drives great, e)tcellent condition. on 4 apd .. st. c:easette. A great little tun convt Ready 10 •
• iTRS) • Nie. (890WRC) gol Only 29,000 miles. (833YTY)
~
, •FORDMUSTANG 5345 , ·1•DATSUNSIO SM" ·11v.W.WESTFALIA 14 cyl .. 4 spd., **1 caaette. only 60,000 miles. A real Hatchback. 5 speed, air cond., AM~M stereo, sun roof. Pop-top, great condition. 4 spd with am/Im & c:. b unit ~k diamond Pi\' 165315. (522WMZ) (736TOI)
56375.
H•DATSUHPICKUP 54375 77PLYMOUTHARROW SDJS ·11v.W.8UG 54275 spe4td. ione.J COYet, amlfm stereo. Only 25,000 ape4td, ~M casaette, excellent tranaportadon 4 speed, stereo cassette. A Beautiful Sliver Diamond
....... (1M38258) (233TJE). only witfUllVerwheels. (158WfM) .,,..
6 CAPRI II sa11s •79 TR7 CONVERTIBLE su7 ~JCYI .. 4 apeed, air coodltlonlng, disc brakes, AM-FM 4 speed, aJc. stereo cassette. Excellent summer car. j919reo, maga. vinyl Interior. (489NOH) (705XWQ) •
'78DATSUN200SX $ 7 ~
5 apd., aJc. am/fm radio. Beautiful and economical. 45 5 .... r
(8-47WRK) .... r~f
54550 ·~~ t '
7POMl'IACTRANSAM 54175 ·1•TOYOTASR-s SJ9'JS ·1•v.w.sc••occo to. P.S . .ir. A Black Beauty and on sale. (666SMR) A 5 apd Llftback. In excellent condition and lo mlles. 4 spd .. fm stereo. A beautiful silver w/ltripes and • ' • (418UMY) custom Interior. (978SEG)
7DATSUN1210
Door.I... 4 apeed, air, stet'eo, tow milee.
j1042t1'J 53411 77 vw sc••occo StJ'll ·12 PORSCHE 914 s4975 Auto \rana AMfM ater90 (078200) 4 •Pffd. ~m cuaette. A Classic Sports Car in : .. . auperb condition. (744ZAH)
.I
CLASSIFIED
INDEX
1100 l:IDD l300 J4CXI )42$
1* ~ Will ,,-.cJO
J'!OO -l!iOlll
toGD -..... I mo 4200 ~ <DI ~
MW
M5CI =1 -
l •Pt• er.-0.uu.n ...... ,,.,. ...... .._.. J., ..... ,
Jt"-H'Q
l\~.rnwno \.tll• ~mbo<pw ..... ,1 ...
\tr11t·tkt~ Jknt Ml. 'II.II
\)po p.,,...,.
t'•u,fwf t>uo'"n" Kt'~41Ull R.u41.. fto;••
fl:tn•t ,.. ..
si ... ~1>-erw
fU)fX• Tru~l'ftph
\olA.•••l("iirn \ulu,
t.rntrt•J
t.rn«'t"•I .. , ..
ltw.o (•\1111 • .c
AUTOS, N£W
AUTOS, USED
1$ ----------.,.
"" Wit -= -... ------
ilW ---·-----
1110 tl:ID '"' 11411 tlllO
tlfjl)
ll'JQ
11111 MOO
i100 Lem .. rv
11JIO l"MHokt
.ullQ l~tAl•f, ~ C.-1 -. ~· .S«ID l:.t\r\M'
M» '°"«•r SEIVICES ~I'
....,\ tft Dtrfflw> MO> ~".•'
£MrtOYMEHT ' 111 ... n·• lbnwr) ra£1AHTIDN :1.:':.:~.,. :l'.!":!.'~~l~llCUM ~ PtlKO
.W,11_.,. M• I' tMlll ::!!,.~'h
..JM-...lll:l).M_cmi __ •N_o_1s_c _ _.lllmWLL~:~:
Publish~• Notice: 1HouHsfor5*
All real estate ad·•••••••••••••••••••••••
v e r l i s e ~ I n , t h 1 s Gtneral 1 002 newspaper IS subJect to •• •••••. ••••••••••••••• the Federal Fair Hous-
ing Act ol l968 wtuch
makes il Illegal lo ad·
vertise "any preference,
limilalion. or dis -
c rimination baaed on
race. color . rehg1on.
sex. or national origin,
or an intention to make
any s uch preference,
l1m1tallon. or d1s-
cr1minallon ··
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising ror r eal
estate which Is in viola·
Lion or the law.
ERRORS: A.ctnrtt..n
shoYld chtdl ttwfr ods
dally and report er-
ron bmntdlatety. The
DA.IL Y PILOT en.._. ••••ty for .... ftnt Incorrect lnHrtlo11
only.
131/;aO/o
FINANCING
Mesa Verde's finest 3
Bdrm 2 bath, fami ly
room, bnck Cireplare.
dtning a rea.country
kitchen, 2 patios Corner
lot. RV access. Owner
will carry ls l TD or
$105,000 at 131,r, Call
now. 546-2313
THE REAL ESTATE:RS
DUPLEX
3 bdrm. 2 bath each unit.
Firel>lace, built-ins. Ex·
cellent rental area. Near
beach & bay. $285,000.
642·2253 eves.
associated
BROl<ER5 RE Al TOR5
l Ol'l W 8olt1 ,n h 1' !flt. I
Dalebout
Bay&Beach
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949
COME WITH US •• TO WISTCLIFF.
CONVENJENTLY LOCATED -YET VERY
QUIET STREET CATHEDRAL <.;ElLINCS IN
LIVING AND DINING ROOMS .. THREE
SPAC IOUS BEDROOMS .. POOL S IZE
YARD .. PROPERTY I N TOP
CONDITION .. JUST REDU<.:EDTO $197,SOO.
1617 WISTCUFf DI, H.L 6l 1·7300
presents
UMUSUAL
HAUOtl HIGH&.AM>S HOMI
New On market. Customized 3
Bdrm and den, 2'h bath home
wlth 5 car garaget Separate •
tiulldlna in low maintenance rear
yard. Lirge living room with
open feeling, shaded front deck.a
witli llrinl to watch the world go
by. $18$,000 . .... ..,.. ..
Daily Pilat
FR I DAY, JUNE 5, 1981 Want a Burmese python or a red-
tailed boa? They can be yours . See
the ''Pets" want ad on Page EB .
~::!.C:-:~~••••••• ~:!.~.~•••••••• ~~:!.~~••••••••j ~!.~.'.~!'.~ ....... .' ~!!!.~~ ...... ~ ~.~~••••••• Housn for~ GoeMral 1002 Ci..r.I 1002 Getterol 1002 ~tneral 100 Go....... 1002 GoeMrel 1001 ..... ; ................ .
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• (iene al tOOJ •••••••••••••••••••••••
YOU DISHYE THI IEST
And here it is, waterfront property
with a dock and a view you can't
resist. This house has four bedrooms,
two baths, and an income unit. Come
by car or boat, but hurry. this is a
value at $800,000.
U~l()U~ ti()M~'
REALTORS, 675-6000
2443 Eaat Cout Highway, Coron• d~I Mar
WE HNE 47 OF ntE BEST AGENTS IN TOWN
37 ASSUMABLE LOAN
No Qualify ing, small down
payments, low interest rates. no
loan points. 2. 3 & 4 BDRM Houses
& Townhomes. In good areas of
Orange County.
REAL ESTATE INVESTOR
Always wanted to invest in Real
Estate -but don't think you can ?
Let Golden West Realtors show you
how to invest with little cash & no
"Tenant Problems" Call now for
more details.
WANT A HOME?·
But don't think you can afford it.
Golden West Realtors has designed
a program that has allowed many
people to enjoy home ownership
that never thought they could. Call
now for more details.
148-8518
AGENT WILL IE
SHOTIY
IRATEsaLER
1C this btn home 1s not
sold immedlately fresh
paint in & oul. Located
1n desired College Park
area. Take over exis t 7',
VA loan $245PITl.
Owne r will car q
545-9491
:......-: Walkar 8 lee
REAL ESTATE
SA.MDDOUAltS
This 3 Bdrm 2 Bdrm
duplex presents a great
m vestment opportunity
In West Newport. The
location or this property
(only 2 lots from the
ocean and steps lo the
bay> coupled with the
unbelievabl~ financing
make this orrenng re·
allsllc and smart Ask
mg only $265,000.
lalboo Island ltffy
673-1700
* LIDO ISLE BEACH RETREAT
Stnft to stroda locaffoa. Cwforiable
l bed. 2 bath home with_.. c~
fireplace. Priced rlCJht at $355,000.
ON-WATER CORNER-SLIP-VU
Woods. warmth & 1.-cff•e ~ Ill
CJOOd ..... Mo.. In today .... •tor
MllNMf' °" the lay with YOS" boat at
yow docw 2-story 4 bed. ...._, &
pri•acy; leaded glau, awMtc) & al
am .. ltln. Sl.200,0000. fM. 673-6900.
PENINSULA POINT--SUPER
Wolk to lay & Oc: .. from tWt .W.gle-d
bewty. Completely Hw Ill & CMlt wttt.
loads of rooM for tM fcmly. Sp•ciam
2-story with pecJPd & CJrOOYed ftoon.
beaM• & stained glasL .._.. lbd.. lbtl..
IC). f..lly ,... • eta ,... Exultllt
fLtanclftg $444,500. 631-1400.
• Detdes New Usffftg
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
s.lts R.n1al1 Propu1v Ma._..,.n1
l15 MarllV Aw
&itio.lmlld
673-6900
I I,,,...,.. -IO'o/o LOA.ti4
• HAllOI YllW HOMIS * Sensationall,y decorated Carmel
Model in move in condition!
Featuring 3 Bdrms immaculate
yard & FEE land. Priced to sell
at $262,000. For private stM>wihg
call 7~1501o_r752·7373.
REALTORS
'75-5511
ASSUMAIU LOAM: Lcrp CctM ~·
wltt. good ~IMJ. heh_.. 3 .._ 2 la.
faMlly rM + •tlllty roo•. CloH to
en~ Asldllg $429,500.
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
25151. Coast Hwy., COl"OIMI def Mer
675-5511
FISH FRY
All or us at Traditional
Realty urge you lo sup-
port the Costa Mesa -
Newport Harbor Lion·s
Club in their eHorts to
raise money for local
char1t1e1> Please attend
the 36th annual Fish Fry
this weekend See you at
Lion's Park' '
EXECUTIVE MA.MOR
in Carisbod with
luxurious BLACK -
BOTTOM r>00l for those
"wet 'n wild" parties.
Jacuzzi loo ror those
intimate parties a nd get
togethers J Bdrms and
den with formal dining
rm frpk and expensive
appointme nt s
throughout for ONLY
$285,000 So Call (714 I
729-5966 Wallace & Co.
Rltrs
FOR THE DOLLAR
CONSCIOUS
FAMILY
We have a superb value
m this spacious 4 bdrm,
THEILUFFS
Finest original area.
Superb gret.>nbelt 1>etling
0Her1n g Masi.1ve"
view SpJl'IOUS 3 bdrm
end unit, totally re
decorated townhome al
$265.~ Alt· 640 55641
OWMER
DESPERATE
Executive home 4 Br &
pool Assumable f1nanr-
ing $205.000
675-1771
FATHER'S DAY
SPECIAL
We'll help you surp1rse
Dad by showing him this
C07} 3 br. 2 ba rm!}
home. H~'ll love the
huge mstr hr & btfl stone
frpk Spa v.ill cornpl~te
the resti\ Illes 545 9'191
~Walker B lee
REAL F.STAn: 21'2 ba Baycrest Home. __________ ,
Many extras including
swimming pool, s helves
and cabinets in the 4th
bdrm 2 fireplace s .
Ouunandmg yard with
citrus trec21. Assumable
loan. Owner wnl he!il
finance. 129.5,000
IAYFtlOMT
OPEN SUMOA Y I ·5
38 lal»oa Cons
BOAT SLIP-SAN DY
BEACH + l!lrge 3 bdrm
& den, 2 bath home &
much more! $525.000'
Owner/Agent~3 91R7
lalboo lay Prop.
RHllor's
•67~7060•
--------
H!SIOENllAl Rf:Alf '>fllfl Sl HVll f S
RARE JA.SMIME CUB
Plan III. One level 3 BR. Open
view thru the greenbelt to the
ocean. You will lik e the
harmonious decoration of all
the rooms. $375,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
OHL Y I 00/o DOWH
I am a beautiful 3 BR 2 BA home,
freshly painted inside & out. Excellent
roof, covered patio, large yard, block
wall. RV storage, cheerful & spacious
kitchen, skylighted vaulted ceiling in
bathroom. Excellent financing and
affordable. $96,000.
Ask for Ann or Jim "Your Coldwell
Banker Residential Specialists".
645-0303.
FOREST E. OLSON, REALTORS
JASMINE CREEi<
l'umtort<1blt• 3 1111 1 m
home with plant.111on
... h U l l l' I '.'\ , p J I ti U (' l
lluor:., lu..,h ea1 pl'l1ng,
la!.telul dt•t·o1a11ng
\\'11h1 n thl· 'l'l'lllll\
l(Jle., of Ja-.mmt• I 1t•t·k !I'• """1mahll' lu.111 s:n.'>.ooo
CAMEO SHORES
Outstandmg oce.rn \ 1ew
home on ree land 3
bcdroomi.. ramtl} room.
form a I duung room 5
bath . ~orgcoui. pool
Large lot 1n prest1~10us
area $725.000.
ONE YEAR OLD
Best local.Jon. steps to
pool & \-Olleyball
UNDER SI 00,000
Perfect starter home
with great assuma ble
loan Call now.
751·3191
---------
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
OWNER ANXIOUS
5 Bdrm, 13.• ba, a lot or
house Cor SUJ9,900. As-
sumable loan. Call Nan-
cy, 979 5370 or 979-8728 aat..
THINKING
TOWHHOME?
Cull the speciah~lb Jt
the condominium 1n-
rormat1on ('('Oler
Touch,:,tont' Reali)
963·~
2 TRtPLEXES
Right in tlw heart or the
l'l'ntn!\ula S1 dt' by
l•ach UU\ both ror
SS30.000 or iust onl' ror
hair Tr} S50.UOO do~n &
seller w1 II c·arry
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670
WOODBRIDGE
HOMES
PRESCOTT Exec.
home, 5 Br 3 ha,
FA soa.
AKI N EASTCJN-3 Hr 212
ba. den. 2 door!. from
lake
1\1\l:'ll CA~IRRIC 3 Br.
2', ba. Jo'R, quiet loc
AKIN AUBURN 2 Br
2ba. l slry. quit.>t loc
CREEKSIDE WILLOW
4 Br 23.ba. FR ~uper
eds location
C REEKSIDE
SYCAMORE 4 Br 2' 2ba .
fR WARMI NGTON 'O "
2Br21 2 ba. den. 2:itry
FAlRFIELD "f " 2 Br
I J• ba. premium lo<'
Sunset and lake v1ewi.
PARKSIDE DARBY 3
Br 211ba. FR. O\ erlook·
mg prk.
CaD lrod 552-551 O
C .l.R. R.altor --
SECLUDED
EASTSIDE
Reduced' Huge 4 Bdrm
plus pool Waterfall and
bonus room here too' 4
king s1zt'd bdrmi.. huge
country k1lchen. Financ-
ing 1s greal Large as·
s umable Isl TD and
owner will help wilh
rest. Don'l w:ut Call
631·6990
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990 --EASTSIDE!
$90,900
One of a kind ;! Bdrm
cottage, 60Xt2i lot
F'antastll' rina ntlnR
Owner will carr} 12', Isl
TU. A rare opportunity
'acant and read~ Call
546-2313
THE REAL ESTATE:RS
CE
110111 ILllRS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
ILUFfS
Very Desirable Three Bedroom,
Two Bath. Tastefully Decorated. A
Highly Upgraded Airy End Unit
With Sun Deck On A Culde-Sac.
Owner Will Carry Large Second.
Call To See & Submit AU Offer: .
759-9100.
HARIOR VllW HIU.S
;Just Llsted In Much Sought After
Haroor View Hills. Tbree Bedrooms
Plus Family Room On A Comer
Lot. Beautifully Maintained.
Owners Are Being Transferred.
Good Financing. Price $325,000.
WOODBRIDGE
COHDO
SI 47,500
3 Hdrm 21 bath v.1th
double Jllilt'ht-0 !larage,
a11· c·und1Uo11ing v.ood
hurr11n g 1111·11la1'I' a nd
unh 2 \ l'•tr"' Ill!" ..,uper
financing "Ith Ill' clmo.n
for quahfit•d bu~<'r'
759-1616
SUNDECKHAS
CHANNEL VIEW
Only S2W 900' Chai ming
Newpon Ht!ach 4 Bdrm.
rc;itures wood b11111ing
hn•plan• Huge over·
s11ed lot "11h rear cov
ered patw (lv.1wr 1s
moll\ atcd and w1thng lo
help Cman<:l'' Jui.t listed
l 'all nov. 673 llSSO
THE REAL ESTATE:RS
SIS,()(~ DN
\'it'" !'ondo 1n \ilia
Balboa \.-. ... uml' Loans.
Sl37 ,500 Ha~ Rocli:ers.
631 121l6 <\gl
NEWPORT
BARGAIN
l'tt'lure1>q11~ bal'k hay 3
Rdrm 2 hJth pride or
ov. ner~h1p hum<' Y.1th a
t'ountr) ft·~:hni.:' Large
k1t«ht.>n. vt•ry private
yard Hari.:a1n pnl'ed at
St68.500 f.Ui i lil
THE REAL ESTATERS
DECORATOR
COHDOSI 19,900
Wmdmg l(rtoenbfolh lead
to bright sm~lc i.tory
t'ondo t:xQUl!>ttcl> de
<·orated v.1th t·u .. to m
1Aallpaper and rahmetry
thruout Formal timing
room too' Qy.ner will
cooperate wtth (inanC·
mg Wont last :it this •"'" '(!)"
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
C HE AT!\ E FINAN
C"ING 131 Ll•a-.c op-
tion po:.!>1l>il1ty Ver)'
r1nest nev. CONOO buy
m Harbor area :! & J
BDRM 3 BA 1650 Sfl rt
Incomparable amenities
m area Wt• haH' Ov.-ner
In\ es tors who .,.,, 111 lease
w1lh opt11m to pun·hase
to Y.ell quahried Au-.ers
Don't misi1 chanC'l' for
rutur e tliscuunl
ownl'rsh1p
WILSOMPARK
CONDOMINIUMS
380 W Wilson. C ~l
Open 10-5
631 5055
OWHERWILl
CARRYAITD
Adult occupied ho me
fl•aturing low main ·
tt•nanre yard. hnrdwood
floors Jnd lar~e master
bdrm. Close tu private
ramily club For an ap-
pointment to s~c. call
540· !151
.. ,_$,, HERITAGE
' . REALTORS
I st TlrM luytr or
INVESTORS
100/o DP,
Mo Oualifyln9
Cute 2 BR house & I
Bdrm unit on lar~e lot m
Orange . Seller will
finance at l3'o for 31~
years. 641-1991, 631 4361
agt
CITY LIGHTS
BARGAIN
Popular hidden 2 "IOl"Y
Covered t!fltry, pr1v11lt
living Huge fnroll>' reom. fir ~fll:ace, coonlr)'
kitchen F"ormal llmio1
room. 4 Bdrms 3 b:ith.S.,
Cull deek I.ii rear of home
for a beautiful vi YI
Many u tra:s. Only S22S.ono caus.112313
I ·
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
...._._.....,
, ............ -111911 •1«11 u.
Caunty Ci.rll ef Or~ Caunty • ,,_,,,..,.
PUBUC NOTICE
HAllOI U.W~MT. OU'f/I
Mortuarv • Cemeterv
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave Co11a Mesa
~55~
110 Broadwav Costa Mesa ~2-9150
IA&.Tl .... MOM
SMITM I TUTMU
WISTC&Jll' CHAN.
4Z1 E 17th St
CO.t•Mna M&-8371
MOW II TMI TM 1
for jolt ......... ~k
tbe iQ•ll7 Pllot H•l.P w..-. e .... wae.iuaa. u »iob ,.. ... t .. IMil ,...... 1"' 19 llltl ~Oft•
1ldtr oUerl•I roar
... ~ with n •• ln tbt Job Wanted ~. PhdMMa-5171
•
5
6
7
8
A. C.HA. T IUY -S 1 ll.000
Compare these features with any
other home in the area. Beautifully
landscaped, over-sized lot-Great
workshop-hobby room as extention to
2-car garage. 2 Bedrooms, 2 baths,
large living room with wood-burning
fireplace and cozy den. So much for so
little. $183,000. Call now.
WESLEY H. TA.YLOR CO .. UALTottS
Jiii S..J~ ... Rood
NEWPORT CEMTEa. M.I . 644-49 I 0
LINDA ISLE
Wide channel view from spectacular
~rch.itectural designed 4 bdrm. 5 bath,
oool home. Slip for 2 large boats.
$1,495,000. Summer occupancy.
LIDO ISLE HOMES
Featured on Homes Tour this lovely
traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm. 3
bath hQme. newlv decorated. Priced to sell 9u1ckl_y at $475,000. Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings . Great for entertainin Ji? . $420,000. Best price for the money.
PENINSULA POINT 11.ACHFRONT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, 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 al $215,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J.11 Roy"d' [)""' NH 67'> 6161
THE REAL ESTATERS
12 AC RANCH
3Br. 38a Cusl. home &
barn Many amenities.
Reddington. Ca Call for
details Agt 64.2·4758
DUPLEX
POTENTIAL
CUSTOM DUrl.U .
4 bdrm. family rm, 2 flreplaces, {>!US 3 bdrm rear un.it with fireplace
" beam ceiling. Close t.C> beach. Good Cinanclns
potential, $495,000.
MA.URY ST A.UFffR
SE.A UOH UAL TY ·
673-5354 .
OWNER A.MXJOUS
TWOLOVB.Y
CDM DUPLEXES
Good location and a&-
sum able loans. Need to
sell both properties nolt'
as owner has purchai;ed
another home out ol
area. Call Barbar~ Glass. C/21 Sandpiper
Rlty. 640-4950or 851 9S41
Costa Mesa. remodeled
4 Bdrm 2 bath home on
6,000 sq.ft. R·2 lot. Easy
conversion to duplex. Copper plumbed ! Firepla c e ' Large EASTBLUFF,justllst~
storage s hed. Only Be first to see this 3 BR
$112.000! 646-7171 l:\'• ba Lusk home On A fee land Premium ca t:fiQW ~:;;.oc;~~ . .,~··~
C.M. COTT A.GE
Small 2 Br 2 Ba E.side
home Needs some work
but has loads or poten·
tial Assume lO"'t Isl
loan and owner will help finance_ Only $119.SOO
TR,\DITIO\,\L
RL\l.TY
63 1-7370
CDMDUrLEX
Excellent Financing
Fine location. Pnde c4
ownership. No vacan· cies. 6«-4026 or 780-0140.
Agl
CdM IHVESTM.BCT Duplex with peat jr(
come. Asking $290.000
$45.000 down and f\nano-ing at 13'k. Won't last
Call Jim Davis, 76'-1743
RVM~
IH \I lt •H~
$93,900 VA
COSTA MESA! IRVIHETHliCI
Comfortable 3 Bdrm OWC-Custom Hom~ family home 011 quiet 3br· pool. steam room .
street. Remodeled tiled many extras! &45-2816 or
bath, new waterheater, 673·6881 Owner/B~r. ..
copper plumbing, co!'· Costa Mesa I 024
crete driveway. Move-in •••••••••••••••••••••••
condition. Finl time ad·l·-------11!"'•
ve.rti.Sed! 646-7171 OWMER FIMAMCID
l
PUBIJC NOTICE MEW CONDOS
13tr'i%/SO"k SOLD
NEW 1650SQ.FT.
THE REAL ES TATERS
Large 4 Bdrm 2 batti b om e , beau lit u•l
wallpapers thruout. Cu1
de sac street. Owner will
carry AITD for 7 years
at 13.53 interest. Pot an
appointment to sel!.
$40-11.51
2 & 3 Bdnn. CONDOS
Ce m e n t d r I v e. d b I lalboa Island I 006
1arage w/openers. •••••••••••••••••••••••
micros. trash com 's, air I 0 conditioning, walk ins, For s.•by WMt"
pool & jacuzzl's, •2 block Charming 2 story Cape
all shopping & theaters. Cod: 3 ~rm. 2 ba + 1 , $ :--HERITAGE
Next to park. bdrm urut wfbath. laund
WILSON PA.Rt< rm. 2 car gar. Lge flxtd ~~~~~~~~ COHDOMIMtUMS assumable + owe. -=
. -REALTORS
380W. Wilson. C.M. S575,000. 673-0188
Open 10-5 For Sale by Owner
631-5055 ISLAND CHARM
PUBUC NOTICE
Updated 3 bdrm 2ba
w/loft, Crplc, 2 car 1ar.
laund rm. View & steps
I u M .. A. y 0 .. AD 0 .. T K D to the bay. Large as-o•o•NAMC9 s u m a b 1 e + 0 W C . ordl-11-7, la sclleCIUllld to lie In $475,000 CaU 673-0188 full .. feet JO 4'1'r' ,,_.. ,,_ I, ltlt, ....:..:....;.;..,_ _______ I
Mii ••s .._.., by the foll-•ne roll m...a -1 I "2 '4111 vOlll: ~II ~n: AYEI: OP~"" ""'
Jol>titOf!, NOES: HOM-A9Sl!HT: '°' .,._ • Sc .............. H«twe. M(ffartafl4, s "'T(iS ........ A y I to 5
H-. I 6 MartM A.n.
Onll-11-1, cr.ano-Ille -'nv .IALIOA. ISLD DPltX ol ~-.Met ., 2019 Mid :roas k wall•<•A-tromAttolu. lst time on mar et
TM '"'" ...... u. Ill'~ or· areal location btwn Bay dlnatic• mar ... , ... •n tM City & vmaae. Spacious 4
Clerk'• Olfta • n l'elr Or..,., co.ta Bdrm. l~ home + l
MaM. EILHN , .. f'HINHl!Y Bdrm apt. Watch the a" OMi world 10 by from the P1o11»1•=~== 1>a11r Pltet, front patio. Xlnl financ-,_ s. ,,., lnc aV1il $S30.000-
PUBLIC NOTICE
WATE.RFRON'T
HOMES
REAL ESTATE
831-1400
MIWUmMG
PIMIHSULA POIMT a atory. 2 Bdrma, 2
balb1, 2·1 ca.r a•ra••· t.lve in oae. rent the
oth•r. Larp Uvln.1 room
with fireplace and
formal dtntn1 room.
Walk to bay or beach.
Owner will carry note to
a11lat with flnanctna.
1359.500
642-1200
9.25°/oAs..-ma. lst of $94-,500 pa)'able
$795 /mo. Sellers wlll
carry lrg 21\d on this
4-SBr Mesa. Verde pool
home-John 631-0ZU.
641·8458 Agt. •
2 Br condo (MonUcello>
$91.500 W~b Rlty.
493-0761
$10,000DOWM Eastslde CM S129.500 by
owner. 3br R·2 644-6099
Beautiful new co~o. a
Bdrm. 1500 sq.f\,, '2"9
baths. Double ••r
garage w/el~ opetel'.
Draped, never b•en
lived in . seqer
w /finance at 1~ for P
years, or w/coosidef
leaae option. 641-ltl>h
631·'361 aat.
MISA.vaDI
llSTVA.LUE
Sharp l Story, 4 Br. 3 ll~
new carpet, redw~
1pa. easy Clfi• yard.
$1f5,000. ~"Bour1t•
Realtor 548-~
EASTSIOE
Close to ~, cbarminl • Bdrm 2 Ba.. trole. a.,
lot. EH>' care. mov.ta
coodlllOl'. Owntr 'IWlD
belp finance'. •t•,909 541-613$ •
THE
fJ\MIL't'
CIBCt:8·
by Bil Keane
:~ "Aw, Mommy, not a shower! Pleose?" . '
by Brad Anderson
"I can't find my contoured plllow and I just
can't muss up my hair tonight!"
816GEORG£ by Virgil Partch (VIP)
~ --,~"·, -·~ \.~
,. ,--(:, -
"You can atop baiting now, Cosgriff. Helps on the
WJy."
DENNIS THE '9ENi\CE
~ I I I I
Hank Ketchum
e
l C,AN1T STAND \---~llh:...
WUMPSTREET
MM.DRE'··
'W~CAN1T
WE LIVEoNA
' OJ&~ 5T~EET?
WE.LL., I l)o
WANTYOUTO
BEMAPPY,
E:MMA ..
0
0
0
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
.......F"-..,....;;i...__ __
PMNIJTS
VES, ~AM.1.. ™IS IS OOR LAST vA'( Q!
SCHOOL .. VE~ TMESE ARE
TEMS IN MV EVES ...
TtMBLt.:ltEED8
SHOt.:
:\t\NC\'
THE RESERVOIR
IS QUITE LOW···
DON'T WASTE
ANY WATER
GORDO
BRABBLE
~fol, I CAMf. (1c,Mf M.R
I \IURO '40V ~ I~
MW~! W. 1>0 OtCA-4'?
Orange Coast DAil. Y PILOT~rlday1 June 5, 1981 .... £1
~·.....e
!'UIHL.'
1u1•~
5'1t1 .. ~e
~IH'-t
SC~IHL.f;
by Charles M. Scl)ulz
I 60T Ntf FIHC8 CAU6HT
IN MV BINDER!
by Tom K. Ryan
j
J ~
lJ •
by Ernie Bushmlller
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
by Kevin Fagan
l CAME. ALL 114~ ll)A'f ~
~u foR A SEE ~1Mlt ?H
r
-----·--. .. SW¢.!_.. • •••
...
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT~riday. June 5, 1881 ...... Pw 191 ........... w. ........... w. Other.......... OtlterlHt• .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••fwW. th•11..,.S. ...._.._S. M111"..,.W. Mlw,.,.IMd. t06' wwtlMdt 1069 w,.,t.._ 1069 ....,.._. rr.p1rty 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... ,••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• r.~~~•••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• llwS. I 100 •••••••••••.::; .. C .... W.. IOJ4 lluslk .. mleeclt 1040 M 1044 hiecll 1141 _ _ ...................... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~··•••••••••••••••••••• HAllOI YllW Co1ta Meta 1 Br trlr A.PPLIYA.LLIY YOUCANAFFORD -home w/cabana 15xJO Ntar oew 4·Plu, 2
By Owner. Two a Bdrm 2 BR 2 ... Id.ult. PoOl, W11•t••...... ~ w... view cwatom HOMIS Adults. xlnt 'tuoo: bdrm, 2 bath each unit
.... oo 1 lot. Sll0,000. jac. att. Walk to beleh Adaaal ,a. l Mna, IWI lo an HttuUve area n B. l Lo•llr ~ 17S..aeat • with flreplace, encloted APumablell~lltT.D. $UU000wnr.IM·10N 8a,att.rad.l .. flaancln1. Larae view decb: •••ina•~ .-,,. 38r.2Ba.FlretUmeof· ratio, double aara1e.
OWClnd.M>-7414 IY~ Sell $194.900 or IHH beaudtulhonM.IBrl~ -,_ _r'I. -fered.Dn,500.J'ee. UTAllSA.U 185,000. Bill Gr&IMl.J. vn~ S1100/mo. Alt for !-Ynll ba,d•.On.l.y Sl5 OOl LEN HAYNES ltle Majelt.lc loca~ In Rltr,17H1Bl. •
.. MISA. YllDI a br. frplc. •.ooo. A•· Noab. • hi •Vlleltl.i •ASSOC. La1una Beach Park.
: ~nSat/S..1-5 tum.l~loe.ID-Tl• T•we&C1 tor 497 1761 M).8454 near 0te.a.n. Week days MAICEANOFRRf "'~ u:.~~, +o~ !'.1:1 .... POOL HAL.fa ... .,. llJ..1100 • Q ~ nf _1_5t_·•_11_5 ___ _ ..... URI U"• a v..-5 Income Propertlej
1' •· corner lot, II 4 bdrm. l~ ba, pool• DRAMATIC tJnJnntty • C•aA '#0 NIWPOlrfCUST Dix UnlverHl 1580 aq ft. Ead1lde Coeta Mea4 patio. $110,000. A1t Jae, RV accesa, ~bile to Park Dun home. •Br __.i""'"~ 3 Bdrma, front unit, 180 Irvine. AH amenltlea, 20% down. Owner wiJ Vlt-~ elem . acbool. OH Sba Fam nn, AC. new -rTW1L de1reeocean~Catallna up1raded. 2Br, 2ba. 5 carry PrlcedtoaeUI
Sll,OOODOWH M.d'addeo bet. Btaeb crpt, 1rtat loc. SM5.000. .__._ 1b1a 5000 Sq. Ft; Home alts on Linda vlew1. Abaohrteb' prime star Park. Appta. only. ../.'
CAM IUYTHtS :~~ :;,re;~r.<:· ::r~~ 552•1311 !ale. A private guarded Community in ~C:.~uon. Pool. tennla " "5,soo. 551-2'739
EXflll SfTE MESA some. SlU,OOO fuJI price. PAlllltaDft' LA.•UMAUVI~ the heart of New~rt Beach. Boat O/ZI "9wportc.tr. Trailer w/added room, 1 ~e.~~~.~~~: r.re:~~eriat'tu~1:i ZBr~l.':.':'sw'!m'll:ap. ~u:a:rmlH,~:n::d:~r.~ ~~!~r (3) 55'-70' aclU. For Sale or 640.5317 760.6767 :~·u~u~n~~Prti~::=~
"nrluter s uite and 195.3304 P 0 10 tment 1 . nel1bborhood. New THllLUPFS only.$8000.~3070 714/IU-0763 • •
Jd\.cben. Solar be.Una. p r 0 t e 11 1 0 n a 1 1 y earpet1n1. well kept. Prime view condo. 3 heclt r ,., I 5 2925 CoUqe Av-.i .: ~Pool A Jae. Auumable •tr.=z::-landac~ed. 2 patio nas,ooo _ We are developers so submit land or Bctrma. front row. F--,.,., l 0 Costa Meta, CA ... 'Joan. 4 Bdrm wtth au the ---d .. 2 other Real Estate to owner Jim 1 _.. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ulra1. Broker857-15G8 104 ~al a cover. car IMllALDIAY auu. :,
---------....................... attached 1ar. Pvt, oi::i TmA.CI Thompson. C /ZI "9viporiC.tr. llACHPIACHI
lea\lt. cu.stom interior. Condo + 30' boat slip, f~~u~=-s~l~t Ait. A11umable flnanclna 640.1317 1604767 P r i v a t e be a c b 0 C E A MF I 0 MT :J.8bo 1q ft, 3 br, 2 ba, 3br. 2~ba , beaut. Bndssz.5&io makeath.lalmmaculate ownerabip1oeswltht.his IMftD lw&b kit., akylltea. bit· 1rnhae window . ly decorai.d bome an 17141121-1210 121Jllf .. IJ6J U.STO cbarmln1 older. well Beautiful 4 Br. 2 Ba.
1U. Laeassum. $141.500. balcony, patJo. fp. xlnt Cl•SIDI excellent inveatment. 11001 ~s•J7IO preserved and uparaded Upata.lra· 3 Br. 2 -M ~ cond. $219,500. WI.LOW B r I c It fl r • p I a c • , • .,. SANDY llA.CH 3 B d r m b om e I n downata.lra. Flreplatter
Days (2U)411·3655 4 Bdrm. 2~ ba. fam FR, "parate 1ue1t quarters, Remodeled 2 story oo Carlsbad. Huie renced 1ara1e. laWldry room. 9WMll W /AMA.MCI Eves <714>631·3675 fnnl dinins rm. 2154 ft. lar1• rooms. UZS,000. l&e lot. 3 bdrm + den. yard. and "oodles'" or Xlnt loc. ~ .. 1B1~Re f:2~atio'b.a dtbw1n1haser .. In... 104 Super eds location over· IY -w1 e muter suite with rich wood deckinl and TSL INVSTMT fSU..UIOO ,. lookt'"I pool. park. IJl .. 440 OWHH Wtlhrlvowl."-'-x !replace aod Roman patio areas. Only po~-'e. Bl~~.·22.,0~~utb ···.···.·••BES••••,•••BU•••,••• schooi. Close to lake, Brand new 2 bdrm, 2'fl Wltttloaf W tub. Newport Shores. $135,000SpCall .. ..._trial/
Laun .u _._, e.nnb hops cu At HID .. 4-WAY ba condo. Dbl 111., C Id b S325K. Wahce&Co.lltn. Property 2100 ~rad. ~5510 a I . Charmin• La1una Cot rrplc. buih-lna. suo.ooo· I OU e Newport's C7 I 4t 729·5966 ·················-···· IASTSIDI In C0Ue1e Part. 3 Bdrm t~e·remodeled, on la• lS. 75% flnanc'"" due in 4 owest priced waterfront • ... ,,,.U ........ 1• •CH
P..id t hJ 3 BR b Id --home with Income unlt _,. ,_ -,., eo owners f.· . +den. Syracuse mdl. Woodbridge Estates, ablelot.lnlhelove. yn plua. PriceSl.50,000. too ! Call for Info. Canyon Industrial b!dg i Ba, fplc. b ·In•. Lr1 family kitchen. Wublniton Model , lyNorthEnd.41N+475lor Own/al(t,645-3988. Broker.983-81.82 c ... tetJLoh/ neartown&artresti•al
Woodland School-dbl atepatocomm.pooland 4b<lrm.2~ba,2200aq.f\, •9'1·"'4• Crypti 150 1round1.t600sq.ft.fully
J&r. w/opener. $149,SOO. park. Priced to sell al Assume SJU,OOO lit. By '-"U•I ..... & CO-BAY CREST BEAUTY. 5 OCIANFIOMT •••••••••••••••••••••• leased. Gross annual in·
l,gt.. f46+4:tJI) t b o u 1 ands under 0 w n er. S 18 9 , 0 0 0 . .,. "' "' • • Br. Family Rm. $200,000 5450 OOO 2 c e m et e r y I o t s . come $54 ooo ·
li..ey"IST,....S D•1t•M rmera.rket. Make us an of· .. ,.,5778. A I bdrm house with Hsumable lit. Owner • u-i•y Weatminater Memorial Realono~ca 675-6700 ,. """ -.,.,.,. ocean view + a l bdrm may carry Sl00,000 2nd. This flnl time offerin& .-.--. "' Park. Good section .
PRAMATIC3br,2V.ba2 FOR SALE BY OWNER. Income unit. Sptc&apan 1 year. '435,000. Call 11 an estate aale. One of East or Irvine ·Ave., 4 worth $760 each, asklnal•--------
sly. Nr bch. Fee 10% dn. B•autt'ful Turtlerock with fresh paint & new Hedda Marosl Aaent Newport Beach's rinest Bdrm 3 bath home, large 11200 for both. 714 / STOP ltEHTIMG D Ill fin " pets ar h In views. 3 bdrma home covered patio, choice si~:.~.~1035 ance. Gpa'::r.~::·:t,~r:~ ~r[chen. Waal~ ~~th! 64&-10...Tosee&sell! wRlth11ueamltaptor2un1t1. colmerMclot.CS2~. 642·9136eves. !~~e~slt~'toc::o:..r~~
beach. Seller rinancina. ea ono ca 675-6700 oy --. l.ltr MOVING forces sale of Huntington Beach &
OPEN House. Colle1e a bill with eorieoua city $280,000. 114• IA YFltOMT 5 .... 7729 Westminster Memorial Fountain Valley. Call
Park. Lo int. usumable. views day & night from SB.DOM.. In Dover Shores. 5600 1q WESTCLIFF, really bla Park Cemetary Plot. Paul 545-«157, Agt.
I br, l~ ba, dbl sided all livine areas, muter available. An oceanfront fl of top quality con· house 5bdrm. 3V.ba. Present value $770 will I~~~~~~~~~
frpk. Sal/Sun. HPM, THt ... M& bedroom • decll.1. penthouaealmoelontbe atruction. This 5 bdrm Huge!.Owner-646-8118. IWFFS sac. UOO call collect
Prin.only.338Princeton TOWMHOME? Dramatic windows & und. Breathtakln1 Medlt.stylereaidencela Rarefrontrowplan,un-(714)727·20t9 Nearly new 10 Unit. 1.Jl·
Dr., 213-373-4787 Call the specialists at skylights thru-out. Thia views or cruhine surf & the beat al locations and restricted view of Back dustrial Bldg in Costa
SAVE YOUR MOHEYI
J great coodol. try very
low down. Sellers wiU
help finance. Priced to
rnove fast. Call now for
details. 752.11499
Plan lll Realty
. $35 ODO ON
Euf$.fd'l 3 Bdrm 2 bath.
ia.rce yard. Spa. Owner
will help finance. 10%
auumable. $127.900.
'45·9161
OPE N tlfllJ~I
RlALIY
/
the condominium In· 2 Br. 2t,.e, Ba. home has Catalina sunsets. Ex· hu the beat of flnancin1 Bay. French doors, par· Co-erdclt Mesa. 15.000 sq ft. 25""c
formation center. master suite with own cellent owner financing. available. Sl.225,000 at SHA.aP quet firs, outstanding Property 1600 down. Owner will carry
Toucbst.ooe Realty study &i b a Icon y $480,000. I only t% lnt. Full price FA.MIL Y HOME decorator home. Kathy •••• ••••••••••••••••••• lit TD at l3Cl}( interest
963-0ll67 Spacious master bath SPICTA.CULA.ll 1 lncludin1 the land 5bdrma.newpool,new· HardestyRJtr761>-8244 IDEALRETAJLSPACE for3years.Phi1Sullivan
bas huge oval tub with Spaclous lwnuy 3 bdrm \1,750.000. Owner will ly decorated. move·ln Plaza Newport, 1000 Reallor$48.2103 EXLCUSIVE sk ylight. Mirrored & family room home in carry Sl,000,000. Call condillon. Newport THEl&.UffS Bristol St. N., Ste 20. at Lobf COL~y wardrobes " walk In aem'frlvat.e area on the Dan Bibb for appt. Be b COMPLETE Jamboree. 1078 sq fl or 5* Z200 ,.,....... I Fi I bl f ·---~ ····n REMODEL $1.20 sq ft. Beautifully ...................... . Lr1 ramUy home featur· c oseta. ·rep ace, at· u overlookln1 the vw ~ R--. 3br, 3ba, (am rm. formal decorated, W to W I· I WWhwahr V" ,_1 • Bdrm, 2,L Ba LD. tacbed 1ara1e &aircon· beach. Unsurpassed 675-2311 dt 1 t 1 d .:io w .. ~ di · · Good " hi l n ng rm. gourmet carpe · mme . OC· Greatt.erms.subora Jrvlne·s Colony Club. uontng. asauma· ocean w tewa er ~~~~~~~~~ rd 833 3998 bl lo ., .. __ I ..,._ ooo -= ga en kitchen! Lge as· cu Pan c Y. · • 714/492-8320, 645-2781 Walk to CQmm. pooJ, ten· e an. "'ouw" by appt. v ewa. -· · aum flllancing at good 759·9288
niacourta,acbools.sbop-752·6619 or 499·5776 . ~ POOLHOME ~~~~~~~~ old rates! 1235.000. Call
fcing. Priced to sell. Call _O_w_n_e_r_l_A.;:;.ge_n_t_. ----• ~-~-.....;i--JUST usrED. lovely 5 -Owner (714)76().9339 ~-.--....-..., BR 3'fl ba + den with DU•LD w•TH ordetail1. lroedMoor~ "'""''°"' wetbar +fam rm, a.nd .-°" "'
0--1.,.:,1t1
I ' I " I I "
1' I l • '/) ()1)
3 BR 2 v. ba Carmel delightful kitchen over· Dock for JO' loat
model, superb location. 1•111.0....._._ ,looking pooJ andjacuu1. 3 & 2 Bdrm•. 2 frplca1 Jacunl one of many '-...,,.~._, Master & guest or deckt andpaUo. Annua
xtras. Good assumable 17 I mother-In-law bdrms income '25,000. 1st TD. Prine only. l4 494-1177 with own baths. 3 car C/21MlwportClllr
$169.500. Lag••...... I 052 ....;;g_a_r._A..o.gt_._64IH:llO _____ 6_4o_._S_l _57 __ 7 6C6CM __ 7_6_7_
MANY OPTIONS
• PISHFIOM
YOUR DOCK.
----------! OPEN SAT /SUN 10-S .••••••••••••••••••••••• $65 "00 DOW ....
Large 5 Br+ Canalfront home. Cornm. pool, ten-
nis. acros& rrom beach.
Enjoy the sunset. No
SPYGLASS llDGE qualifying, tow interest,
INVESTORS! Del Mar
SERVICE STATION duplex/condo lots WI<>
Oranae County $120,000 cean views. Ready to
nel net Qet. (document· build NOW . From
ed). Great locaUon over $67,000 ea. Buy one or
20</gallons profit. Back more w/super s ub·
room high prorlt ordinated financing. mar1ln. Ask for Steve D i I C714)8Sl·7540 eta a 1-755·4667 : 1·7S5-4S56.
Co•do•d•l-a/Tow• M-_..._._ o~--'
""'" ..... 1700 --· __...-., ••••••••••••••••••••••• letori 2400 56 Racin1Wlnd Fox (love model in Lake '" " 857-4972 I 5br pool home $389,SOO Par . 2 br. den, 2 b . o~n -·-"'ay 1 c: Super price on lbi.s new· vaulted cellin1. French ........ ,... .,,
Family home In A·l low payments. $34,000
location, 3 bdnns + den moves you in. $269,000. Sharp 3 Br. 2'fl Ba .. dou-
+ family nn. Security Call Barbara 675-7611 or ble garage, patio cover, llG llAJl
*•STEAL IT! •••••••••••••••••••••••
ly back on the market 2 fl doon. Aslume at l~ 1300 arian Ln 642-1768
$I 35,fOO Br + den attached home h.54.IOO. Owner. PA y Sl.837 A MONTH : in Woodbridle Estates. UJ.7834, 759-2465 For 5 years with $78,000
throu1hout. 1647 Reer Iv m11at76().7199. $126,SOO Agent 968-2297 LAKEFRONT View Clrde. OPEN SAT ---------Don 't miss this chance•
•SUN 1·5. Owner rmancing beaut ~J1ea/ Lge lakefroot home In MESA VERDE Hurry! si-.ooo Town af Co~ntr down . Preati1iou1 4 J Br pool bome w/addl-.... n•AL P•a u:zlcV• bedroom home in
C /J. I Mlwport c.tr. Harbor View Home, OM. S. 1100 Fawnskin, the No. Shore
640.5357 760-4767 !bdrm. 2ba. frplc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ofBigBear.Beaut.cstm \lon.s ,$98,000olu.su.ma-(VJ]ua...~brl-'-WW\ Pool 6 jac., 3 Brdm. 2 Newport Shore a! ble loans. John Cox. Alt. nvvw UV"' Ba, formal dloinl rm Complete with den. din-
_.1J_l_·l266 __ or_OO_.&f.58 ___ -1 Rahl IEST IUY S2l~.ooo. ~3866 1n1 room and ftreplace.
.._. I 2-5 551.3000 L o w e s t p r i c e Whelan Surrounded by lovely w~ ..aa.rraace ftwy lnlM '"Melbourne'" with pool. cardens and patios. -' spa. 3 bdrm. forml din n--1 Estate $228,000. TARBELL, Come and see beauliful ---------• rm. fa m rm. All for I~ R E ALTO RS. Ca 11 Mesa Verde custom 4 $151 950
Wrm. 2~ bath home. *•MUST SD.L! ' S52·1100 Hewportleedt 106' -97-,.-2390-----
.Many extras. Must see Greatfinancingoothis3 ---------••••••••••••••••••••••••Assum. 2400' CONDO
IACICIAY
3 Bdrm family home
Owner will carry new lat
T .D. at 13%. 2311
Redland Dr. SlVl ,000.
C/21 MlwpartC.tr.
'40.5317 760-6767
NMTHOUSI COHDO
comm. pool. Highly up-Triplex 1 year old. dbl lot, design home, over 1100'.
1raded house " yard. lrg owners unit, Two Vaulted ceilings. pak
$35,000 down. $239.000. 2bdrm, 2ba units. Prine. cabinets, rock frplc, \ge
Sb o w anytime . Only. 780-0734,631-4402 wooden dttka. bll·in ap-
0 w n er I R ea Ito r : pUances, spa. & ~>t
64().5987, 752•1ai. Join a Friend & buy more! A JWtme toe. U.,t
SEAVIEW
Belt buy & View on the
Hill. 760-1917 Agt.
Duplex 1 house from is sure not to laat Jt Canal In Newport $298,000.Formoreinfo
Beach. 1500 sq. ft. each. Town &Shore Prop ..
l-3Br 3Ba. 1·3Br 2Ba. 644 ·1795 wkdayr. o-r
to appreciate. Vacant & B r 2 ~ Ba 1rv1 n e * * 125MI Harbor Vu Hm.. payments. E. Bluffs. ready to go. Seller will b I tt b d .._ Cl · ----d town ome w a ac e • Beau•"ula··----•ocean OSI.DI ~ ... as own work with all oUer;a. 3182 ~-ill .,._ ... uni B cond LU ........,,. 1 ....,,.,., ...... ....... tc>untry Club Dr. Cen· 1arage. vwuer w U · ,,..... t 2 r o on vu.a. perfect for enter· on y. --"' •• .rv-1 /Ber 889 slat with financin1. Spot· secluded quiet at. Owner talninl a.round lovelr. tury21 1962-1 leas! Must sell NOW! willbelpflnance. pool&apa.4 Br +fam -UDOISLI
Corner locaUon. 8 years 1-1166-2046 wknds
ol.d . W a li to Lido For Rent near Anza.
Village. 832-9110 or Secluded 2br on acre
639-0291. w i t h v I e w . S2 7, ~
Wltb dock for 40' Cute 2br, lba House
sailboat. Fee land. 180 w/bacb. apt. on 33rd St.
de1ree oceu. Catalina l 'fl blks to beach. S175M • bay views. Pool, w/$30M down. Assume
security, huae assuma· my loan. No problem Ft.x ... .,... (714)765-1072.
0 ,.. H....ori•• to Call for detaill. S12S.OOO ly rm. excellent fmanc-$100,000 REDUCTION l6t Mwrt1$t9,t21 Sl47,990 (I inl Marcia 631121116 OPEN'HOUSE1-5P.M ble loan. qualifying. Call Owner 26282 Via Caul Do not llG IEAR LA.KE ·.·
C/21 ......,,.. Clllr. 549-3722 disturb. SJ.99,000. 25% dn BY OWNER
<Btwp E. 22nd. 21st St, g\&J..-...1.r1.i-~i ~~h",• . . . raM~~~~~~AY off Orange Ave.) """" •-111154'
This 2 Br starter cuUe Re If nady to move in. Only a I 551·31M
•• 921. Ooops! 11 R2 lot 551-aMO m:t rraaca P'tlw)',ltvtae ..;;;;;;;;"-========•
.loo. Century 21 Gold Ha P'tl.,y,fnlM . VERSAIU..ES 2BR. ocn
'40.5357 760-4767 •-1 -... ,---,,.,...--•• -... UTY--• & may carry back 75% Sharp 2br, full ba. frplt.
,.. "'_..' _ at 13% lnt. 2 Br. 2 Ba ea. furn., paved road. leL'~
12"9 61•:... led C..,.. R.L talk terms. 165.000. 0Re"
Newport'• exclusive (714)194-5577 House Sun. 675 Temple. Peninsula Point.. Newly ---------(714)979-S<ll&
conatrucuid 4 Bdrm 4 ba ANAHEIM ----'-------
R&"M~
f 1 ~ 'I I • 11' RCTaylorCo Coast Realtors. 548-UU LegalM a..11 I041 view. low dwn. no quall-
1!1111 ... -----~-W 0 0 DIR ID Ci E •••••••••"• .. ••••••••• r11n1. smK. 1ao-2210
OPIM s.t/S-1-5
27S I. I 6111 St.
_s>wner will help finance
oack of auumable loans on thla super clean 3
-bdrm, family room
home on a Newport
.Hei1bta R-2 lot. Motivat-
ed .. uer bu Juat r•·
Jiu~ priceto$159,000.
MAUIY STAUffll
-SU UOH QA.I.TY .,. 67MH4
LANDING THI IMAllS ofc. 142-2812 home.
PETERS· PLAHS !!t~~~~e. ~~ WHITIWA.TaYllW Here ll la · Loads ot deaigned 8 bdrm fam 90• to beach. 103 u1um
charm. Detilhtfully de· rm. 2 bat.bl. Exteoalve loan. May take note on
corated • landscaped. use of wood llaaa lit your prop. aa down. 4 BR
$358,000. 12'4"" uauma-ceramic We. Beam ceil· 2 Ba, recmtl.Y upCraded. ble. 8 Sunriver. Owner ing, frplc. $185,000. w/poealble fn·law qtrs.
551-1.534. MIMJon Ruhy Under $.290,000 locld1
(114>'1N-07Sl. land. Movefut! 152-6'99
t CUSTOMMOMIS
Featurio1 apectacular
views, qU.allty ~true·
tlon. excltln1 floor
pJana. Too much l4> men-
tion. From ~000.
Mo!Jeed • kylee,
A,rcbited6 ~elopara.
Fowler & Aaaoc.
Exclusive a1ent.
7Sl9-0207
1044
VllW-VllW·YllWI Turtle Rock Vista! Enjoy the panoramic_
nl'ht light views from th1s IWl· unoua condo. A 38R, family rm,
formal dinlna • bonus room holne w /central alr. Flnancln1 available. $325.000. Bene Partch
752-1414 (L13)
IOUD caroaT IM A. PA...UCI
llftlN•t E••Y maintenance,
1pacfoiameM aDd location are the ~ to thll 2·Jtof'Y, 2BR condo by
Broadmoor bl Deerlleld. Cloee to eoalw· Uvtna rm w/fplc. Cev w/profe11Joba1lj UMt Uled surface. Auuma·
bl• ,fl•\:f~ $124,300 John RJebard CL14) -. ..... '
Plan WRealtf
** LIDOISLI ** Lovely 2 Br 3 ba bome.
Beautifully remodeled 2
yrs a10. "84,000 with
1Clnt flnancln1. Open
bouae Sat/Sun 1·5 at 119
Via Vella. Own /Aat
873-0&97
NEWPOIT CIEST ,.,.,.. .....
2 bedroom, 2 beth with
uaumable S79K lit TD. Priced few quick aale.
1185,000.
*Cote Realty
6 Investment . 640--pn
MIWPOllT ISi.AND
SHl,IOO·OWC .. , ........ .,,. "" ••••11 bclr, den. 2 ba, .paUo aeck. J> x • lot. lin11e1tot1. By appt
7~1--1
a Br 2 Ba condo, I car •• ,,
low lnterttt rate, H ·
1umabl• loeft. Prtn. OD·
lJ. 714/W<l•l eves.
114/180-lm
Duplex••· oceaorroet,
beautiful ocean view.
tt.rfeet loeeuoe. Njw
....... ~.m-1100
640 l)C)QO
11.AUTIRIL SIAWI ..
POITOftMO
A most impressive elegantly
decorated 4 B . R. h ome.
Featuring a bonus room or
mother-in-law unit. Formal
dining room. Living room with
step down conversation area
around a fireplace. Magnificent
view of city lights & excellent
financing. AU for $479,000.
RCTaylorCo
<>40· <J()OQ
Ill[
200 11.oca OP COIOMA D& MAii
DeUghU\il 2·story home w /ocean
view. Lush cpts and designer
fabric wall coverinp and natural
wood 8anell_ng, 3 la BRS, 3 BA Ir den. uest quarters off 1ara1e. Spacious living & dlnlng rms. Overalie lot. 1650 ,000 Holly
Markaa 8".-00 (LU)
YOUI ... OPPOITUMrT;Y Nothing
small about this chance to invest
in a bil family home on l& corner
lot. Huie family rm w /space for
pool tab&e, 3-car 1ara11, 3 paU~1 pool 4'i vtew of Fashion Jalane
make UU. opportunjt_y rare. Act
Now! Seller usi.ttea financlu .
S398,000 lncludea lancJ.
Dona/Mary Lou 84.2-8235 <Lll> ....
.. l.-111a ... -.a.. ....,... ...... ___ ........ ........... "'_. .... u.
residence with pvt. boat (2) 4-Plexes Or~~
dock. SJ,650.000 lnclud· Owner Financed Property i$'(ill
lntt the land or $1,295,000 Low Down •••••••••••••••••••••••
le & IC! bold. Owner I Low lnterest Accident. ForeclOB¥re,
forces sale, assu~e
loans. SmaU do~ .no
fees owoer831-3793
Builder Dan Bibb. $26S,000eacb
175-2311 Patty &Johmon Rlty s...... 714/979-8610
C.,n""-» I 071 t.cw r...,.rty 2000 Real hW. ·············~····· ••••••••••••••••••••••• bcltm9t 2eqa
TURN OF THE CEN· TURYD~IGN
This handcrafted home
on an estate slU!(f lot
boasts bay Windows, oak
trim, stained glass and
anUque fireplace. With 3
bedrooms. 2~ baths and
countr y seclusion In orange arovea, this
home really has It all.
Add1Uooal feature ls a 3
car 1ar.,e and bonus
room. $245,000. (93-8812
IEACH "'1 -D •••••••••••••••··~.',¥" ~· Developer bas .au6· Two1orceousunit1 -l'fl division for Beaph blocks to beach and only Home, T.D. ·5 or ? . Some 2 years old. Ocean view. f r e e & c 1 e • r
2 • 3 Bdrm units. The 3 (213)898--0181 ' :· bdrm la rreat for owner )
occupant. Only $300,000. 4 Br near Newport
Call now 97&..5370. B a c k b a y f Q r
A S200.000 /300,00Qq$Q: LL$TATE County home or Co~~-
831·0611
REALTORS . ...... . . I 0 UNITS.C.M. •••••••••••••••••••o ••
Gor1eoua buildln1, ter-....... ftnl1Mct , .
rifle tenna, break even ••••••••••••••••••,,,..
with 1100,000 down . .,..... 1l44
Won't last! Joyce Wall.le •••••••••••••••••••••••
'31·18 Panoramic Turtle'foelt
view, 2 br + den. eGm· pletely furn. Lar1et1Hr
•ar., w/opener, fP(I!,
01hted tennil Cl'U1 ,OOI.
1pa1, W teonaider allort IOIO ---------• lse. $1200 mo. ~gt .
. INVISTOl'S 152·5168
By Owner. OWC at in,. 3
Br., 1~ Ba., frplc, dbl
1ar. New paint~ carp«.
151·'°'5
Ele1ant custom home,
cor. lot, 5 Brm. aooo If,
trl·lvl, pool/1pe. nu klt ..
crpta/dro-/pnt. $195JC,
29 ~ dn . 10. 7$ lit
$1141.lllo. PP SSl-2138
DIU9HI'/ 10"-DP .._-.,,-,_.-.._.---,-•• -,
fi"o ~"~on ~ •••••••••••••••••••••.-• th! otb":: ~le~ !Tu 811 Canyon Condo> ~finance for a , .. n at decorator f1.&m. vlt;t • U ~. 10~ DOWN . pool. tennis , ~ae
Ml·lltl; 8*1..all ast. $1800/mo. M0-88911 ..
llOua.ft.IX Ho•" Uwfu al1h'4 ." BY OWNER •••••••••••••••••••·_. ••
Xlnt11nwlnfl •••NII lttJ
'8\0,000 ................. ~~···· °'*' ._..... 171-oon. <1w>M.5-4ua MacArthur vmac• ~r
• ............... ••••••• 0 M 11:/Sldt 4 1 1 ed entrance 1 '1~ , =.=-1100 ~.i11 riow. 'f1fa.ro':. z.;~•n°1 • · ·~ ·
....................... 2'1.1% dn. owe bal. at • lJ~. 11.8 X If. Prin. on· 4 br. 2~ ba. a/Cl, ltf 'jd,
lY. f40.0l9'7 (JlaO worktbop, 1ar. rr~/~·
MIWPOlrTmACH '40-lllOlvemac · • .: .
hlme retldentlal. ..... ..._.. ~ i.e. .............. ~ ........ -.............. _
aum• 1tu1• loau. Cbrillblt lalud ~•· Trlplft• • ....._. ln lllM. 4 .... fpc;~J~IJI·
Corona dtl Mar • IMaoMd P9tlo.-No . BalbM Ptiiila. o...rt '1000mo.,.,._
motlYll&ed. --~--~~-----'-'-
C /Jf Ml palC:.. a~---~u~11 ...... •• , , .... ,,, YI !IOU~ ' ms , J.t·
•*'••I
• •
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June S, 1981
Cash in on 7 .or 11 ....... _..., .............. 0t ..... C....., ....... ,
There are two ways to win with a Dally Piiot High Roller Ad
Run 7 days tor $7.77 11 days for $11.11-3 llnes
Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5878 lailyPil
Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation RetMtte.
•e. U • ... d H1•"U ...... 1tid ·H-ftUatwlll•d 'Aportme .......... tlted Apaluc•h......_ . Afmlw•hU..... 'Afatwah........ Apel ..........
M1111a U•fm• .1cl •-= ·• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••...,.. .............................................. &.. •• 3Z5J Mewporta..dt l26t ..... P11•11 .. e 3707 c_... ... Mw llZZ CosteM... 31Z4te.t ...... leectt1140 s..lllL1.. -C ....... ..___. •-L 1• 11 ••• '+c ....... JJ40 , ....... ••·················· a ••••••••••••••••••••••• eeee•••••••eeeee•eeeeee eeee •eeeeeeee•eee•eeeee ee eeeee e••············· ·················~ .............. ~ • --~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• A....-• .1.....; • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• L&e 4br home l.n new de· Adult condo, walk to Studio, yrty, utila paid. Attractive h'l 1 Br. 1 Ba E.Slde 2 Br, 1 Ba, priv MARINBlS WALi 2 Br. Condo. ~ .... an.,._,
3br, 2ba. bowie ~I/Jae, * • • 4 Br. 2 Ba. f'rplc. velopment. Modern West.cliff Pwa. cleJo & Quiet. noo smoker. USO kltehen, liv rm w/frplc , yard, encl &ar, new cpl, 2 Br. 2 Ba. TowA.houae pool. $500. 00
Im med avail. call blk fence, 1ara1e. No kitc h en lncludlng fresh 2 Br 2 Ba. pool. 675·3268. dlninl aru. patio deck, pool , UOO /mo. N o ~pt. From MZ. PaUo.. ~17
(213)592·4487 ask tor $725/mo + $725 S.D. ?iue /ranJe Rec 67,.6900 · ot ftO Cosy l br so of hwy Apt "B" 24$3 Orange. Hunt.Harbour.IM<MlllO?. orU• ........ ~ .K;Aren 494-9214 ; pet.I. lMll ushard St. microwave & bar-b · Waterfront Homes Inc C teM 3724 laundry.9650.67~11 kids/Pet.I. M.ana1er ln 1mflecargara1e.near .,..._, .. ~
Betty 842-7743 · ti I N ....-. or ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ' ' C II D JD P rt . aclli ea av . o ..,...... CASA DE 010 beamed ceilinl, reJria, a aya . . rope Y 2Br • 2Ba Warner " Spr· ••••••••••••••••• -"'
C......delMw lZZ2 Adult Condominium. ~~=· :;Y~ J::.::. 3br 3baBt!'1r!':! formal ALLUTD.JTJ~PAID DW.&ar.$490.955-3649 Mamt. 751-2787. lnadale. Gar, upstalra 1 S E AW I M -.;1/
••••••••••••••••••••••• Marlner'11 Cove. This 2 / .__ .. _ ' • • ri • 1 Br cpts drps dshwhr, chlld ok, no pets. $450. VIL' •GI ~ 4 8dr m,bonusrmw/pool Brl~babeautysecuri· evesw........ dining rm,p vateapa, 2br, lba, gar ap t . dis ' 1' • $320 Sie r ra Mgmt Co I.A
tble, I& bkyard w/pool ty syatem, sauna, pool & 3000 sq ft, 4 Br. Niguel SlOOO/mo. 644-2300 ~:~~aC~t~~ordeea1~~ Range/refrig $600/mo 641~~. 1arage. . 641-1324 New 1"2 bdtm 1.-,
Sl400 per mo. 631-4888. tennla. Avail immed. golf course. $1800. Agt. 4bdrm . 2~ba exec . features: Pool, BBQ. years lse. 612~ Jasmine adult apta ln 14 ,...
AskforGreg $725/mo. No pets. Agt Val 499-4220 497-4844 Newport Creal condo. cov'rd carace. aur· Opendailyl-5 2 BR, 2 ba W/side. Avl. WALKTOBEACH from $440, 2r1"11 ~
548-U68 ' ' · Man"y faclllt1e s rounded wltb pluah Co1taMftG 3124 lmmed. Adults, no pets 1 Br . with stove. SSOO + poos, t~nn-. ., SPYGLASS CAPE COD . Mhlloll V&.fo lJ67 $950/ 631 0460 landscapina. Adult hv-••••••••••••••••••••••• $350. 673-2113 S350 I Mo. 536·2456 or waterfaU., ponds. a. 6 Bclrma, '~ ba, ram 1 Br. Condo. Pool, Lemus, ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. · · ing at it.s best. No pee.a. MESA VERDE home at· SJS.7979 for cookln1 le heatJns r~ bonus nn. 2 frplcs, 3 W & D. Cf1>la, d11>1. No HOME FOR RENT Best area. Harbor View Bach furnished $370 Newer 2 BR. with garage. --paid. From San Die89
c.ar 1ar. cul-de-sac. pets. $3'75. lat. last & 3 Bdrm. $600 Fenced Home, 3bdrm, 2ba. 2Brrumished$500 moapbere.2&3dlxapts adult.s,no pet.s.$'25mo '""'• 3144 Frwy drive North Oft
$1975/mo. dep. 768-7633. yard & aarap. Kids & frplc, comm. pool. 36$W. Wll&on,842.1971 Nopets.546-l034. $48-5766 •••••••••••••••••••··~· Beach to McFaddee
ts welcome 545-2000. s i 3B $'25 Orancetree2Br.lba.Air t.hen Westoo McFlldd9t , MOVERJGHTIN See the ocean from the ~ l nofee · $1200/mo. Leue/opUon SUSCASITAS pac ous r · Larae 1 Br. Upper cond. On stream, up· to Seawlnd Vlll•t•
3 Br. 2~ ba, Jasmine front yd of thls 3 br g ., · Ok. Show anytime . Furn. 1 br. apt. $32$ & 2 Br$37S~~carport Enclsd garage. $375. stairs. Adults only. Sub-(714)893-5Ul8.
Creek condo. Plan 6. house. S7SO/mo. S300sec. Mewportlecldt lZ6t 64().S9S7. 752-1.830. up. Encl. gar. Adult.I, no Mesa del Mar area. CaU mlt on pets. $595. Mary llOOMI
$1800/mo. dep. Call Rita, M·F . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harbor Rid&e beautlrul 3 pets. 2110 Newport Bl. MEWLY DECOR. 752-9905, Iv message. _&«_-_1_21_1 _____ _ "'·~&mLaVeraBurns 8:30-2:00pm,846-H76. 3BSdPYfoGrLASSmaJ .. ~~!-5Eram Br. 2 Ba. Condo ln pre· 548-4968blwn8&5PM 1 Br. gas pd, encl gar 2 Br. 1 Ba. New ca,......t, THE Lakes. 2 br, 2 ba Laguna BeachMotorl9,
I u1uu1g, t •gi mm nil d/washer, pool. Adults ...... 985 N Paclflc Coalt Walktobeach.3Br.2Ba. IMMAC. ~dbr, 2Uba,,ram1. rm, trg yard, 2 f11>lcs, ~a~da~~~cowith umai~· Newly decor. l Br. Oplx. 642•5073. lndry fac . No pets. twnhome. Upgra,de,•. Hwy 0Laguna Beacll Frplc .. 1ar. avail now. rm. cov pa o, rp c, $1800/mo. Bob & Dovie )""' · Sep by ga r Quiet S385/mo. 271 16th. Pl. water view, spa ac •· D 11,· Weekly Kitcllllli ~. 642-5290. bltns, dshwahr, close to Koop. Act. 83l-l.2e6 tMenantc5e1500. ReAntvaJ~I on.owto Emplyd adult over 35, no 3 Ir To_,.,ae 644-0452 Av(. 7.1. aS95 mo. Laura. .:.11able. Lo~ wintet!
Cozy 2 Bdrm cottage.
. ~•an side of PCH.
Arched ceil's. f11>lc. no
pets. $875 /mo. Call
'79-1734
bch .. acbool.s ar shops. d o. a · · · pets S350 548-1021 N 1 d pd 63'7·1*13 dya., ~.9904 rates ti4-S21M Gardener. $725. 963-8600 3 Br. 2'1'J Ba. Con o . Call 760-86a7. D-a·P-~ 3726 e;;r ~ar~~.~~wh~· ME.5A VERDE 2C1Br up. eves. · · Ocean view. $725/mo. R _ -Ad Its 642-5073 per, garaae ose to Eastalde Costa Meee . 3 Br. House near beach. Ask for Roa. 752-Slll. Newport Shores 3 B ....................... u · · shops. Adults, no pets Log•a leach 3141 Nice larae room wlfrylit
Aval I July 1. $550. AFrame, SSSO. Webb Super 1 Br. 1 Ba. Villa 2 Ir. I laADI $400.540-5446. ••••••••••••••••••••••• and own entry. Colie91
631-1534. HARBOR RIDGE Ocean Rlty Neat courtyard. 1 Adult, Newly decor. C:as pd . . Lux ur lous near new. gal pref. $300/mo. Cal View. Lux. 3 Br. 3 Ba. 831-2170 no pets. $350. 493-4380 or encl gar., pool, dshwr Bach with loft. refr1ge. wood & glass upper after 5 pm. 646-337S
4 Br. Harbor View Hills 3br, 2ba house, fenced Lge Mast.er suite, den. l Br Versailles condo. 673-2181. Adults. 642-5073. stove, pool. $375. 283 duplex. Woods Cove
Home wit.hspa&vegeta· yard, dbl aar. $650/Mo. wet bars, f.p., tennis. Avocado.645-6404 area. 3 Br. 2 Ba. frplc. Room for rent on Blul'ftl.
, ble aarden on 1,-11 acre. Nr. Bushard/Garfield. pool. jac .. $1900 /mo. •'!fits, no~ets , ~~c ·1H...tlncJtoaleoch 1740 Beauliful2Br. AduJtCon stain ed 1tass e ntry, Brookhurst/Victoria.
$1800/Mo. Daya 642-3349, Av a i I. June 12th. 675-4078, 549-9009. bl g, cove par in2g l ••••••••••••••••••••••• do. S.C. Plaza. ~50/mo. RAoopmt .Y i·3n Bqr.uT1· eotwnAhodusulel huge deck, ocean vlew. 851·1262 '
833-7381 days/eves. ?!...7 .. 06085 I mFro:... 7 5 2 · 7 1 2 • H.I . 's FINEST 646-0686 Lease S9:i0. 497-4114. -· €v~6~2490· OMGOLfCOURSE """ "" · Complex. Newly re-Furn. room w/ba • 'c"teMeM 3224 H•t~'-View3Br.3Ba +Den& C'.-Cle-"• SpanlsbEatateLlvlng! Beautiful Townhouse decorated. fireplace, Mewportleadl 3169 refrlg. Pvt entran~e.
•• .. •••••••••••••••••••• HClf"bitr 324 Bar. SUOO. 645-7606 or -,,_ 3276 Beautiful parlt-like sur $525. 2 Br 1\Aa Ba enclsd patio & garage. ••••••••••-••••••••••• CdM . Mature quiet .. , ••••••••••••••••••••••• roundin1s. Terraced So --MIW Zll W /RPLC •••••••••••••••••••••• 646·1713. SAN CLEMENTE-Ocean pool. Sunken aas bbq. Fireplace. Savage Wilde rry no pets . .-.../mo PARK NEWPORT smkr. S27S/mo. 675-nM Buitt.l·as. kdults, no 3br. 2ba. ramily rm. . I I C d '-l1·n a to nta1ns •-co 67"' ,,_.,,,_ 645·3381 or675-5949. !!S n $975/mo. Call Unda, BIG CANYON LEASE View tri-eve OD o. sspar... .. u "' . .............. ARTME Hotels. Mohh 4
pets.64.2-0lm.$650/Mo. AGT.846-1371 3Bdr3Ba,formaldin· New. Beachltn blks.2 pacious r oo m s 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt. Beam Lar&e2Br.1Ba.Adults. AP NJS •••••••••••••••••• ~
ing, pool, hot tub, vu, W alk -in closets, ceiling, I rm. poo . no ogs. ~mo . ...,,, BIG BEAR a.e ,•• master bdr ms eat'h Separate dinlna area ndry I d ~-1 s•cr1 L ,_ t-a Br. 1 Ba. House, new
paint inside & out. ocean
view yard. Adults only.
fiS50 + utils. 645·3000.
548-9849.
Prestigious Wetherly very sharp. $2000/mo. 7/r~·~!·th~":f}er,0~~ homelike kitchen & Adults only, no pets. No depoait. Patio, garage, COU..-Y CLUI Motel, lcit.chen.s, 2 '
Bay Twnhs Minute Bob fr Dovie Koop. Agt. cabinets. Walk to Hunt lastMo.rent.$360-$365 Lndry fac.2009MapleSt. "'" ple,$30.1--866-4161 . ~:: ;c::~· ~a~r~ll;, 631-1266 ~i'!,',~~~~. ~~!~ in1ton Center. TSL MGMT 642-1603 548·5861. LIVING IN S290/Mo. + $00 ~
frplc, patio, balcony, THE IWFf:S fir eplace living rm. 21 BBeddroom·f,um, ~10 2Br, crpts, drps, bltns, 2 Br. 2 Ba. Townbo11Se, 2 NEWPORT Slngle or Double1~. PoolTV•
Ea•t Side Duplex. 2Br, pool, tennis. dbl garage. 3 Bdrm condo w/view. Plush carpeting, sunny, e room· urn,... 1ar. adults only, no pets. c ar garage, poo I, llACH Spa, linen serv ce, .
$1750 837-0666 cheerful thruoUt. Very AUdtulilitsti·es'noFrpeee~.· Victoria/Canyon area clubhouse. $525 /mo. Ambuaabor lnn, C.lt. lBa frplc, lg yrd, gar _.:... __ . ___ .____ Remodeled, like oew private patio. Jacuzzi. f Aaent 646-7418 MS--
S57S/mo873-2077 I llte 3244 wit.b gourmet kitchen. 1 Encloaed 2cariarage + $430/mo. 631·6812 at e An adult community on __ :rr..-..,..._ ____ ~ ---------i " yr. lease. $1000 /mo. workshop. a20 cazador LAQUINTAHERMOSA 5pm Bachelorette Unit . the Back Bay. Sp.ec-Sm 1.,....,. ..
·.84•utiful Exec home nr ;•••;;;~···~···;··~·· 760-9678. 11 3 s8501m 0 I ea 5 e 16211 Parkside Ln, 1 blk 2 II. z IA. Newport Heights area. tacular Spa, 7 swim· ••••••••••••••••••• ... • ~So Cat Plua. pool IL~ 4 ~ ,.d· CTI4)537~ W.ofBeach.3blbS.of Avail immed. Utils ln· minapoola,81ightedten· LIDO 1$LE c~ w/jacuui pool service Pbt10 Rm . f S6 la . Nwpt Shore ' br, 3 ba, Edinger. ' & I IR. I IA. cld 631·0401 nu courts, bike trails. bdrm, 2 bath.•""*"· gardener
0
Sbd 3ba 3 ca; d 1 garage. 5 /mo. canalfront, owly decor, S.. ..._ 84'7·5441 Pool. crpts, drpa putt I n a & re ea . J uat remodefed. llA-
iarg $2000 mo 556-1737 644·l480lc8»-5Q')OextSl. pool,tennis,2blbocean Capls"-Adults. No pets. A&enl 2 BR ,oewpeint.lgeyard, Bachelors, 1 and 2 t.bl.Yrental.BillGr'UQd7.
aft Cpm or wltends. Woodbrid&e lease. Built Sl, 100. 962-81183. •••• •••••••••••••••••• Newport lecldt 37 69 731·6829. 548-0574 encl gar. Child OK. $435 bedrooms apartments. 675-8161.
Th 3 br. 2 b •• no ....... , pool ••••••••••••••••••••••• k f BIU and townhouses from ---------31 .. 2 lo by Petera . ree OMTHIWATM prlv . ....,,.,. A';;i1 7.i.Decorator furnished S.CPlla ·2Br2ba.Patlo. mo.Ai or ·631·1.266 $510.00permoot.b •NWPTOCEANFRON!' bedrooms, twq baths. Great vl .... al boa•-•-_,,.,, T nh -I j -Q ..... "~0" O J bor At •· Lld I I b yf t •• F /p, D/w, Yd, Bit-ins, s · 1 b 1 .,_ ... .. 586-3734 an.. 5. ow ouses. _,.., poo . ac, .......,, ........ -. 1 BR, new cpts, dr ps, n am ee .. o s e a ron."" Adlts No Pets 642-0835 Ing e etor y oms e n bay. Brick fplc, family 7fl0.9117 631·7278 palnt, wallpaper, lots of Sao Joaquin Hilla Road boats & dock. Wk1)1.
f100Por mo. · · W oodbrld&e. l OOO room.Availableimmed. Twobedrm,lbalhcondo. wood.S38Smo.Askfor (714)644-1900 673-SURF ' month. Owner can give for 9m9Qt.bs. Only $995 $425 per month Large 3 BR 2 Ba. upper, -
New 2 bdrm rondo, dbl t.bree year lease. mo. (714) 640-1037 nr So. Coast Plaza, no Bill. 63l·l2.166 Oceanfront for Winter BEACH FRONT 4 Br. ear iar .• elec opener, lncludea refrigerator, THEREALESTATERS pet.1.$470.641-&a1 lBr.gaspd,nrahppgcntr Rentals. Furnished le Ba. Completely fu.,.,
$800. 2000 Meyer Place w • 1 her. d r Yer and 17~ s-ta AM lZI • b S300 't unrum. Broker. 875-4912. h o m e . FI rep l a c e , 831.4361;&4l·l99l.agt. recreation facihties. •••••••••••••••••••••• Lovable l bdrm. encl 646 ~ · + s«un y. was her/dryer , d is·
Joan Birdsall. Agent, THllUlfFS 4 Bdrm. 2 bat.b, family aar .. adlts. no pets · NO FEE! Apt. & Condo hwaaher, 2 car garac-.... 3 Bil. 1 ba. I& enc yd. S585 640-8927 or 631-7300. 4 bdrms, 2 baths. super rm. fireplace. good loca· Ref rig & elec atove. $32S. La 2Br. 1..-,Ba Valencia. 1 ~ntab. Villa Reotalst No pets. tllOO per week.
lease. 316 E. 18th St. <in ---------clean. Yearly lease. lion $650 mo pet or child 2035 Fullerton CM · child OK. no pets uso. 675-4912Broker June 844 .95sz ~~~rive by t.ben call 3br zb!EKf ALS $850 ~.mo. Alt. 673-5~. ~ltoc,l~:e;1S.:~P· YEM-AOUHD FUN: 642·5964 ~i1~~ a Mgmt Co . OC EANFROHT 213/8%7-5109. • ..,
2 Br. w /stove & refrige,
enclad garaae. Adults,
n~ pets. $475. 773 W.
Wllf>n. 631-4889.
East.aide Townhouse 2 Br.
l'-f" Ba. Garage, patio.
SOS/m o . No pets.
615'·1133.
Npt H1ts. Gor1eous 3br.
2..-,ba CONDO. frplc,
3br 2ba Sl.250 Furn. jllll-------•I ---------• Socia! Actlvitl•• DI· Me~ HCJk · . 3 Br. 2 Ba. Duplex. i car OC EA ..... Flt~ 4br2~ba S900 l.ycrestllr/O.. Co.do•hDl•t• reetor •FreaSunaey 2 or 3 6drms.,1 ba .. 1 L1e upatairs 2br, lba, ga r age with a u to . " ,
Sbr2""b• $900motomo. Remod eled and re· Utu .... hlled 3425 Brunch • 880'1 • story. owner s unit. covered p atio gar opene r Yearly Must Fum11hed 3 Br. 2 -,'
decorated like new. Ter-••••••••••••••••••••••• Pattie•• P1u1 more fenced yd, Ope. $500 w/hook-ups, 00 pets 1475 see to appreciate! with office, 2 car gar._e , ~t :;~0054a~~eri~! 2PS!:!~!~~~~ ~=T.~: S49-9279 + aec.675-8819,962·8331 TSL MGMT 642-1603 ;~~~ra~t~ei::~
rinl. $1500/mo. mountain & city U1bta (pro & pro •hop)• 2 2 Br. 1 Ba. $395. Pool. 2 Br . with 1arage, amaU OCEAMFltOtlT Avail. now. Weekly.
view. 2 Br. 2 Ba. den, ~~r~i:.~~"! fdul~ & petsg wCci•1l fn cd yard, water paid. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. dbl gfr, TSL MG MT. 642-lelS r.
frplc. Never Uved hi. Swimming • Golf mm · va e e Adult.I only. $465. 24.3'7 oew car pet, yearly Balboa Peninsula funa._J
New ! $1000. Dl'Mng Range Co.64.2-4-4'70. O r ange Ave . "C". $1250/mo. Br. Apt w/partdn1.11la
Also 2 Br. 2 Ba. ocean ac BUUTl'Ul UTS: 1 Br. Stove, pool, carport, 638-4120 Btwn 1·5. JACOIS REA&.n from beach. $425/~
...... ~_.~ .... :om_rm_._lndry __ 'g_ar_. -tr25-1. -.523 C.U."')Dl:favtlCE
city light.I view. From Slng!H, 1 &. 2 Bad· I au n d r Y. gas Paid. f 'xnt~.._ •w1. JI ~c 6 7M6 70 313 E Bay Ave. 67s.t• $850. room• • Furnlahed -_...._ -.., 675 9,,,. ._67 .. 9,,... &, ..... _._..._.. ....... Adult.I, ref's. $305/Mo. • • N B h •~...,. ._ -.
• ....., • " ..-. .,..,.., _ _, ,..,.,., 0 "'8727. Rutland Road. Westcliff pt c apt,_,., w .. , •...-Living • No Pata • ,..._ 6 3 B 2 Ba 1 bUl .. Beaut tri·level 3br, 2ba,
pool, apa, dbl aar, xlnt
S.A. Joe. nr. S.C. Plaza
$650 lat/last + sec.
SS1·2960eves
Model• Open Delly area. $460/mo. lBdrm. • r · E. Slde 2br, l tnba CON·
DO: frplc, sunken liv rm.
'Jl•Ub.
1ar $800 646-0329
.£N\Side sharp 2 Br . 1»4 "'lh~ R a n 1e. oven.
· ~h~ar, frplc. vaulted
celBn1. Adults. SSOO/Mo.
ail Bamiltoo.
Ulrte aaraae. tiny house.
Adult.a, no pets. $400.
781-<M.33.
2br.' ltnba, 2 car gar,
tniilt·ln•, no kids/pets,
N» Mo-5083 or 642-7261
DRAMATIC 3br, 2~ba 2
sty. Nr heh, xlnt loc.
.JIN; 646-1035
2 Br. l Ba. Water furn.
~ lfHr 1choolt. ~/Mo.
J ,._l.238orMM8'70.
)l,SSA VERDE. Jmmac,
.stra 11 fam rm. bar for
H tertalnin1. 3Br 2B•.
D'W, elect fat opener,
· ,.wdener incl, lllnt loc.
. W llut/dep. Lease 1825.
Mf.0587
Woodbridge Exec. home, ... ,.. 9 ~1 view of lake. 4bdrm. ___ 7i_4_7uv __ ._~ __ _
wtlk to pool, spa, ~ark.
sc h ool. $950 /m o .
552·5804.
Bluffs condo, 3 Br 2tn Ba,
prime back bay view. lrg
patio. upgraded. $1300.
644-0MO Lovely 2Br 2Ba single ----=--------
family house, ceramic 40'10ATSUP
entry. Master Br w/Or 3br, 2~ba CONDO.
to cellina mlrT'Of' wall. beautifully decorated,
French shutters. $1200 /mo. Yearly .
Overloou lovely patio & 675-6775.
fem 1rotto prden . Dbl ---------
gar. auto opener. pool, 3 Br. 2~ Ba. Coodo. f11>l~.
Jae, tenn.ls. M4-9Ul fam rm., prof. decor. m 15 acre private park.
$675. 631·1266. Mr .
Manhall
WOODlllOGI
LTg 2 Bdrm 2 Ba. condo.
Air , covered paUo, 2 car 1ar, $725/pr mo. lit. lut Harbor View 4 Br 2 Ba. + sacio. A.lk for Jlln. Gardener lncld. $1075.
Avail. 8-1&. 551-4288 Call
aftS.
11< \DI I I<>\ \I
1n \I "
,',jj.JJ7~J
Coodo 3 bdrm, 1 ~ ba,
kidt/petto.k. Avail now.
Nu paint. drapes ft d/w.
6SHOU.
LlDOJSLE a BR. F.R., D.R .. 4 BA.
Boat stora1e ava il.
$1700/Mo. Yrly. &'7>9080
110.CAMYOH
TOWNHOUSI
Split-level (Greenbriar)
2 Br. 2 Ba. Stucly area,
rtreplace, 2 PaU01. Security, Pool, Tennis.
Open Sat/Sun 1-4.
541 S.. b land
9 10 6 1 b r apt . S t ove & Comm 'ly pool. Wallt to water . 5~10 Neptua.
Refrigerator W. Side. ahopplnr center. Call lower unit. A&t/Owar Oakwood O.rden ApeftlMnta Rer·a. $250 Call Answer • 1 1 111111 P"io Aiiis 675.6646 or 833-3&22 G u a, 213 / 9 6 8 · l 7 l t
Ad #501842-4300 • Ois1twas11ers 1 880 s Fam\U!f prefernd.
• Pool & Ate Room VILLA BALBOA
• G•rocn l•nc1S~P•"9 2 Br. 2 Ba. new condo for
Newport BMch N.
WOODBRIDGE avail Im· 880 irvtna C•t 1att11 2br, 2ba, twnhse. E. Side,
• J09 10 euc11 & SllOos rent. Nice amenities. ed 2b u.b (714) 645-1104 3 yrs old. S500 1·998-7 m · 2sty, r, 1-n a, d k f DI k frplc . a /c , mirrored NewportlwttS. ays aa or c . wardrobes, $825 /mo 110018tl'ISltOover 11111111 64().2426eves/Wknds (71 4) 642-5113
' S EA E N VIRONMENl
857-0155 E. SJde ideal IOt'. nr. 17 ,.t, 1. HA'°''• t "• H B
Prime Newport Condo, St 2br, $415
walking dlatance to LGE. l br, steps ba)'. ~
...
beach. Pool. apa. uuna, beach, yrly. Adlt.s, no STUNNING. I&. 2 & 3 BR.
rec rm. Le. 1 bdrm. SSSO. pet.s '4~. 673-0072 2 ba 1arden apt. Pool.
Todd <213>~9077 Bachelor, lge pvt sun-$U.5 & $445. 710 W. 18th
THIWHIRUTUI
LWtury Adult unit.I at af·
fordable livin1. 1,2 & 3
Br . Well d ecorated.
Olympic slze pool, Ughl·
ed tennis court J acuul. deck1 1 blk to bch. $350 _S_t_. -------• y rl y . Aak for Olli
631-1266 EASTSIDE park Ulce landscapina.
C .... Wood Moet beautiful blda. ln 2 Br. 1 Ba. Adultl, no H.B .
pet1. $450/Mo . 329 FromSBS.846--0619 University Dr Mfrs. Ev ea 548-0648. 1 br, 1 ba condo. adult
---------1 com mbnltY ov.er 40. 9\llET UVlMG Golf, tennis, pool. Pauo.
Lar1e Bach, 1 or 2 Br. w /D. M25. 53M021. Apt1. Cathedral cell· .-..~......;... _____ _
inas. prv balcony or Nice 2Br. 1 ~.Ba, pool,
pat.lo, dl.abwuher. frplc. Jar. l aundry~ R•tlo.
pool lc apa. Lndry atbbq. '495/mo. 1·630-0350 or
Adulta over ZS. No peia. 714-0439.
$375 & up. Mesa Pines. 2650Harlil.,5@-U41. 2Br, Condo. 2 car 1ar.
----------~v•red patio. 14 mile to
\each. Access t.o pool le. c o uru . $575, H .B.
213 /925 ·4 194 .
714/17H902.
S700. Sandy842-6149 ..
Versailles 1 brpenthouse,
near ocean, lease w/op.
lion. ssso. ~133
IAYFltONT
New Dplx 2 BT. 2 Ba.
Spa, gar., blt·ins, lndry,
frpic. snoo. 911..-, w.
Bay. 714/675·0829 or
213/461·~.
NEWPORT HEJQHTS. 1
Br., cara1e. yard. $3115,
840-7814.
1 Br atudio pentbowse,
oc:Hn •u. take oc:cupan·
cy 8/15. P . ""8berty.
752.7155 bet. 8:30-S:IO
I Jr, 2 Ba. 1 blk to bell.
H~O/me>. t yr lute
av•tl. $108 Neptune Av•·
811-2'190.
Udo Isle 2 Bdrm, furs.
J u n e. July at Au•·
$2000/mo.17M'711
NEWPORT 3 Br. 1 hou.e
from ocean. Nice furn.
incl. Unena.175-mS.
2 Bdrm beach hou••·
Weeb avail. $315/"'.
675·3148
BALBOA ISLAND
2 br, 2 b• house, carpolt
+ d b l au. Avail.
7 I 18·8/15. $500/wk.
67S-9214
, ' I ,( , ~\f '1 \, • ~'\
.. •
SUllll
SPECIAL
J) .. ~l~o!IJY
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in the
DAILY ptLOT
SllVICI
DlllCTOIY DO IT NOW I
A .. ,_.5-*e
Your Delly Pilot
S.rvic. Directory
J\epreHnlaUvt
641·1671. ed llZ
Orange Coast DAILY ptLOT/Frlday, June 6, 1981
--~ c ..... /c:..ct.h llectrk.. a .... .., ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Mom wlU babyall i FoundaUOM. Relatnln1 ELECTRICIAN-priced Dan'• Lawn~rvlce
children M yra ln my Walla, Hillalde Retlora· ri1bl. free •tima.le on 1~reel1lon lawn mal.nt
home. Bii fncd . yd. Uon. Slabe. Patlo1, laraeoramalljob4t. proiram for all 1uwn1.
C h i ldproof houu Block.tcBnck.Lic'd. Llc.#396821 673·0359 Expertlabor,lowrales,
Dayna, Ma·92fM. "2·Ul'7 ena/960-06SI '°""k•/Tlle free esl. "'2-501'1
Cblldcare a e yrs de pen· Pool Decks and PaUoa, •••• ••• • ••••••••• •••• • • G A R D_l _M_l_M_G_
dab It hm·5. SO pm. Muonry, Sport Court.a, FormlcaCountertops
Lunche•. llntcka, IC· Tennie Cou'rts. Lie. Custom buill&lnslalled, w~
l Iv I l I ea , o u l i n 11 . 37'°'7. ISH9M. 8471078 latest colon &r deslans Mowina. ecl&ma. ruck·
Reesonable968-2993 Free eat 8411o48'11 Ina. '"' eepina Free a---C _.__.. eallmutes 646·0944 or
HollteclffRMcJ Mcnwy PelfttilHJ/P ... .,... looflat . •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Want a REALLY CLEAN Wanted Small Jobs WAUJtAraJMG QUALJTYROOFlNG
HOUSE? Call Oln~h11m Brick & block Low hrly Pror. installed. fl rat roll All types, free et~ Glr.!.:.!ree e.at. 645-S 23 rate. 499·1.226 art. 6. hun1 free 1 8»1.429 VIia. MC. $41· '1
ROBIN'S CLEANING MoM'-HARBOR ROOFl .... ., RALPH'S PAIN'flNC ~ Service-a lhorouahly ....................... Uc'd lnl t'Xl Neal S_........,
clean house 540 ~7 Moving? The Star ving p ' ' •••••••••••••••••••••·~
Colleee Student.is Moving ~t -ll6H5G6 LOCAL SANDBLASTER
SHIP TO SHORE C'o has crown. Insured Plonta Interior Uc. ins, reas No Job too
Boat & Hous~Cleanang ame eood service •••••:••••••••••••••••• biatamall.840-7909 ~l:~~i~s!f.';;::: •Tl24 436 License lnler1or plant design & Sandblasting Res. com·
WklH'I CMC,.... Mwwt& ...,._... o• .. -. ~·5737.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Drlvtwa)'I, paUot, pe>ol ••••••••••••••••••••••• General Housecleantni D & D. t•~•n deck1, urvlce walk•. CRP1'-LlNO..WOOD HcmtdyM• We aim to please Ref's
641842'1 malnlenanre for home m'I & industrial a..u..
ABC MOVING. Expe~ or ofhce Plant ll ! free, safe/fast Bert
prof, low rates, quick 551 2894 546 5745 Dealcnera Cu1tom foundallon1 lnalalled. lnatalled/recfr:l~ Lk. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9791066
hOM••· 37 Yl'I exp Fln. Uc. IUBOO.U4. Fret est. U69260 reg499-5142 HOME lMPROVEMENT H--&ML..... C'areful service. 552·0410 Plo1ter/Repdir S.CretarialStnkfl -• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• avail. Charin (714) ICC PocHkC-. Remodelin&-Oddjobs ones ... ..., "MOVlN-MAN "
891·3141 Al (714) 9113-'433 ('714)$34°"''14l "' Gwoge Door OpeMn 28 yrs exper 979 2265 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '-' <'areful. courteous & ~~~~~!!~~~~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• --DON'T DE EMPTY· cheap. Pis call 642· 1329 GHWICIC&SOM r: SPRlNGStHARDWARE Roofing, plumbing, THlRSTYORLONELY -----
Neal patches & lexlu1es Skilled Staff for all it!c
Frff eat. 193-1439 tr'l/WP job8. Tht: Hnd.
ED'S PLASTERING ~~a~~rs CompaQies Bulldtn lnce 1947 QUALITVCONCRETE AutoOpeners·newdoors carpentry, painting, Wesltyourhouse,plants Polfttlng/P...,w.q
.cci•llM-Addlllona, remodtllng, All Types Cemenl Work Lie. Bob's S46-3667 noors, repair/remodel & pets Secunty Plus ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~!!'!'.~........... plana """ est Reas. 11112-11849 -G .... "'"9 Free est 968·20S6 an 5 631 7587 •STEVENS PAJNTJNG
All Types Inti Ext - -~
00·8258 FREEEST Mae s Secret arial
r.n .. ha-Boolt...__plng rates L1<' 310942 C fc'WU... ••••••••••••••••••••••• R""PAIR/REMODEL E 'd 1 lnl/e'xl. Free itemized
ll ;..,. ·•~ot """b 1 M92170 ~ •-"' xp coupe. non· est Neal.quality work a .,...ates ye>Ur us · ---••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEAN-UPS/LAWN All types or repairs. free smokers. Reliable Cue 832.3208, 546-45Gl
PLASTER PATClllNG-Service Typing. diet.at·
Ing. Pickup Idell ver;<. lnt/ext. 30 yrs exp. 645 8638 ,,
fte&I It or peraonal botlk· PENDLETON CONST Malntenance·Lndscp est, guar 631-l 137 afl 5 or pels plants Refs
k:upln1 your omce. Room additions " re· a ... M ...... TIU Free est. 642 9907 842 2678 home or mlile. Call for --• -----__._ Jock of All Tract.a tnfo n!&ardlna services _models, rreeest_ 839-8297 Kitchena, bathrooms. Gardenina. landt!caplna. Call Jack. 67s,3014 !rotting
an4 our ~"onal re· c...,..t.r entr ies. Llc'd. 978-0320 tree trimmin1 & re· ----•••••••••••••••••••••••
au1rements . 17 14 ) ••••••••••••••••••••••• moval. major clean.up, H..-dwoodAoors IRO..._.l..._.G
842-4'81 ----All Around Carpenter. Ceramic Tile work at re· free eat. 752 1349 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,.... ,.... ~~fee Finish & Rough. Free aaonable pricea. Quallly EXPERT LAWN CARE HARDWOOD FLOORS lr~ena~:~:b~yr~~e"::e.
•••••• ••••••••••••• ••• ~t John 775-02 __ work done quickly Call Monthly service Trees Clean1..J & Waxeds c-646.9100 R Anytime, 8:)2,4881 A u" -Pn>tnsional Staff Com· All Typea Remodehni & on, 140.4337 __ _ & c I ea nu ps Mike
puter Aamted System Repalra. lop quality. 17 Cltfld c... 648·2049 LandacopincJ TM H.e.dquartera Com · yrs in area Ll<'.d Haullng ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'Ries 851 0681 ' · ••••••••••••••••••••••• MOW & ED<I E-10'7< dLS· ••••••••••••••••••••••• R Ro -',....'----· ____ . _ Mr Palombo, 962·8314 LlC'D DA y CARE enovaung. totJll.lng A I a~ count, lit pr1re wanter Uaul, cleanup, concrete Sprmklers·lawns·clnups If! •c• -..-c..,.. Serfke My C.M home, ages 1·4· rates 95$-1328 removal Dump truck Oave642·48S3
••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• _P'l'IFT.&42-4036 . Qutckaerv.642-7638 BudfW6.8481 Gwar. Uaedrefng. & l CALIF. GARDEN - -~cmd.Sales& ~!~~na~::!e":s~ e;~l $] 1.90/WK Tree trim. clean·ups, ce· DUMP JOBS Loans
_ ___!!i~ 842 ~ crpts 10 mln bleach. Hot lunch C.M. Chris· ment work 646·46SS Small Moving Jobs •••••••••••••••••••• •••
.A.ip•• Hall, ltv .clin. rms $15; lian Preschool 646-$423 LANDSCAPE MAINT. C_a_ll_M_IK_E_646_·1391 MORTGAGE MONEY
•••••••••••••••••••••• av1 rm S'1.$0; couch SlO. Co.tractor Busl-a pt-condo-church Hauling & Dump Jobs AV AJLABLE
Drtvtways. park1n1 lot chr $5. Guar. ellm. pel ••••••••••••••••••••••• & homes Call 548-2489 Ask for Randy $20,000to S250,000 repairs. sealcoatina odor Crpt ~pair 15 yrs Construction-All types ----641-842'7 Ho lollooft Paymnh
S..S Asphalt 6.!t u99 ex~ Do work myself. 20yrsexp. Freeesl. TREES Up to 15/yrstorefay
Llc'd. -Re a 531·0101 Li e. 11334589 64.5-5973 Topped/removed, clean HAULING Student has PRIME FINANC AL
W C C tCl 1 751 3476 larde truck Lowest SERVICES ASPHALTREPAJRING e are arpe eaners Carr.-ntry,Additions& ups, awnrenov. · • 527-3477 "'-I · •· s Sleam clean ._ uphols ..-rate. prompt. 759 1976 ~a coauns ... tr1p1ng "' · Smalljobs·25yrsexp Sam Fukumoto YARD Comm/resid.Freeesl Work guar . T r uck Llc.309l"" " .. "'Z7l9 Thankyou.John. Uc. 1397362 64S-8UH mount unit. 645-3716 -----...,..------MA INT . & Clean-Ups ------MolOf'lry
N S I Sh Drywol Tree trimming, small I ca.~ Your Act ••••••••••••••••••••••• o team No ampoo ••••••••••••••••••••••• _l_an_d_s_c_ap_111g 645-3540 We clean oul garaaes l BRICKWORK · Small
Alan's L Mot C dry Freee3t 839-1582 YARD Clean-Ups, tree Mesa. Irvine, Refs
Fme painting by Richard
Sinor. Lie. ins. 13 yrs of
happy N.B customers
Thank you 631·4410
<.:OLLEGE STUDENT,
exp, ml/ex. any job for
leSi' Alex 851 9371.
552·0231
PAPER H.A.MGIMG
25 yrs exp Free est Fast. neat, rehable
fl /roll & up. 645·6490 ----
Neat work Pnul 545 2917 Sprlnlla.n --J.
Pktrnbln9 ••••••••••••••••··--·~~. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPRINKLERS&sop
PLUMB I NG new con-Tree removal DIO ·rt
st ruction. remodeling, Ldndscape. 646-7<170 r epairs, restaurant. ----
elertrontC' leak deter-Stock Brok~
tion. Top Hat Plumbing ••••••••••••••••••rt•••
636·2030 Stocks money ma~kel~ tax s helters S~e\'e . Holleman Plumbing Johnston, · ·· '
Salel>·Servlre-Repairs 644 2442.
Free estimates 552 7183 SwlmtnlncJ l.nSOM
MOONLITE •••••.••••••••••••••••••
PLUMBING Will mstru<'t C'hildren lo
Eves & wknds Prompt s wim al your horoe
ser v. Lo rates 5488847 Reas Rob646-1042af!2._
Printed Circuits Tilt
DAVE'S PAINTING
Serv satlsfied cuat 9
yrs Qual integrity
Reas, ins. lie. 760·7301 -.•••••.•.••...•....••..•.•.........••....•..•.
INT/EXT PAINTING Tenant Problems? Custom CerarruC'T1Le
Lo rates Prompt, neat Ma•ntenannetoo high ' New-Remodel· Repair "' ~ · Free est t'huck, 640 8208 Free est. 848 5684 Ev 1ction Nightmares? _ _ _ _
AGAPEFOR<.:E
PAINTING COMPANY
3 Generations of
Painting Exrellenre
839·5851
RENTALS PAINT~D
lnl ext Prompt
Seaside Pamtmg, Greg.
Go with a professional TypinCJ Senlce ·
Mgmt co and sa ve ••••••••••••••••••••••• Single families & up. PROF TYPING
Orange: R1v~rs1de & San On IBM Selectm'. die
Bernadmo. Co llarr1son taphone. statistical. re & Assoc. Prop Mgmt. ports. etc 979-4155 9516001 ---
--Window e&ee11•MJ Roofing ••••••••••••••••••• , ••.
••••••••• •••••• •••••••• "Let The Sunshine In" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Stam Specialist. Fast Drywal~S iabst ---I ~n truck $25. 548-47~ Jobs . Newport, Costa
UX':'fY _or . ar · · Qual. & p . New & re-work, irrigation & re· TREE/SHRUB TRIM ~are. Wa~. polishmg. mod. #389944. 532-5549 Pair • green be I l Garage & yard clean· 675·31_75_ ------Orange Coast Roofing-All
ml Hometo c 536-4151 Ceflag, Acoatk landscap111g 851-0129 ups Free est S57·8'Z7l Brick Block-Stone RAIHIOW PAIMTIMG types or roofing. Repairs
536·4806 Call Sunshine Wmdo" Cleaning. Ltd. 548:885J
1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Get GREEN cash -------Ex ts lnts. custom. & additions. 646 Fast, re·
Trade your old stuff for Acoustic Celline.s + for WHITE elephants LAWN MAINTENANCE HAULING & v:~h ~~~~~s~=· Free Est 642·9614 Liable, honest. Free est.
CALL JULJO'S
For a II your hou!>e &
window clea ning
645-5689
new goodies with a custom hand texturing with a Classified Ad Cleanups TreeTr1m GARAGE CLEANUP - ---Call Dave 548·1733 or
Claasilied ad. 642-56'18 Lie. 389944 S32-M49 Call 642-5678 Free est. 6421337 Free est. 631·0953 Want Ad Help' 642 5678 Want Ad Results 642 5678 Chris 646-2389
l...tdh to Shore 4300 Ret1tals to Shan 4300 Office R...+al 4400 Office Rental 4400 Industrial R...+al 4500 Mortg~ Trvst Lost & Found 5300 Lost & Found 5300 Personals 5350
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• D•eds 5035 •••••••••••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Moving? Avoid deposits Fem. roommate wanted, Corporah.Plcno L.B prestigious of(' suite 1300 sq ft. M·l space with ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost German short hair Lost-M Sib. Husky & M SHE
& cut living expenses! 2 bdrm house, C.M. $250 850. xlnl dwntwn loc AIC. fronl office, large rear Want investor ror Npt rem ale Answers l o Keeshound. Orange &
Professionally since + ,, utils &tS.5073 3 offices w/receplion. 870' + 494·8335 door $395 mo 1785 bayfront home Give Kaya. Last seen Sat eve Ba~ 642·9028.6311666 E S C 0 R T· S &
1971 ocean view. 759-1550 Whittier Sl C.M Days well serured 1st or 2nd vie 40lh St, NB on Beach MODELING
HOUSEMATES ~~';.' 3;:~us~l~/j~~<k~ 3 prime unobstructed ~~w~e~. ~~~e~. 2po::1~~~ 540·93.52. Eves646-~81 T.D. Agl. 675 616~ 642.8844 ~~~. ~~~ Gv~~~v~~e~ 835-9199
832·4134 +util.631·1666 oceanvufullserv1ceex· trance. Sec recept & MESA WEPAYTHEMOST Los t · Gold Wedding Mariners Dr . NB Preventative & Stress •S~U•lng• ec suites av8ll. 145,180 law library a•a1I. IMOUSTRAL For yourT D 's & Notes Band . Sunday, 5 31. S45·6874eves. Reducing Massage by Counselprstopersonally Fem rmmte for 3br &360 (w/wetbar) str. lmmed occupancy at Dennison Assor Laguna Beach. Oceans ---Doris. "Intro" Spec1aJ !
select your compatible duplex, 2 blks from bch. Single /adjoining. Excel $500/Mo. Sara. &sl-8141 PARK 673-7311 Re staurant. I ad 1e 's s25 REWARD 548-0407
rmmte to suit your Sl&0 575·Ul'5 prk 'g. Desicn Plan. H•~ lch 711W.17th. St. -room. approx 6pm Sen· Losl Great Dane female ------
lifestyle Shared-Ltving. Fem rtigbl attendant pre· Fas bi on Isl . A . J 525' car"pet_,,ed-.· panelled. Costa Mesa, Coif. WIDOW has mone) for t i men ta I v a I u e Answers to Labell 612
833 Dove~~~~1te 31 NB rers same to shr 5br. Properties. 759-9036 conferenc e room 642·4463 ~J'£'~1:1~000N:P~n~~ :v~~ ARD! <7l4J645·8748 vie East Bluff. Vista Gr.atc_,,..y
Escorts
Roommate wanted to
share 3 Br house m
Hunt. Bch. 2 m i les
beach. Female prefer.
$191/Mo. 964 4724 aft 6
3ba. lrplc hse Irv. Com· Beautiful new ofltce S425/mo. 963-5647 •1870-5650 sq. fl Units Call agt Eileen. 67J.7311 Trueba 955-0600 --
m t Y f a c N o space availa.ble m one of •.-t.... ... 11 R.............. 4450 avail for OC('upancy late Lost lge lurtle w broken males/kids pets. S300 N f t rn ... ..,.. llJ'f'ITUI June. •One 'Z700 sq ft $3750 returns 15375 m 6 h 11 f 400 c ewports mes 0 ce ••••••••••••••••••••••• w h •. 710 ft s e . VIC 0 ost a sc11u ·ETS +shr util. 548·0511 or buildings Nr 0 c . are ouse ex sq . months with secured MesaSt.54.8l91:19 IUYt'L ss7.9317 For store & office space ofr1ce avail for 1m· 15 ry, T 0 Patrick airport. 200-900' with or at reasonable rates mediate occupancy. AN~ERS Malewantedt.osbrbeaut without secr etarial SOOto2700SqFt. •33'-35• per sq It. 63l l266Agent --Found FTernerPoodle .Jn
2br, 2ba Ilse Irv. Non-services Call for de· MESA VERDE DR Leasing office hrs Mon INVESTOR SEEKS white· recently had Mosque -Fudge
smoker spa, pool, tennis. tails. 833-0440 PLAZA lhru Fri 8-4 PARTNER. for prime pups Beach & Adams. Oxide Growth
24 Hrs. 641-0180
Cosh/Chedl1
AM EXP /MC/Vbo
Prof woman wants to shr
house w/same. Corona
de! Mar $365 mo.
494·7915 .. 7 .20am/eves
Fem rmmte needed. pre-
fer nn·smkr for apt nr
So Coast Plaza .
pool/laundry fac1I .
$187 .$0 + utll. 545-l:llO
S3SO + "'1 util. 559-0848 D-p-1-..6. 1525 Mesa Verde E. C M R~ots W--"-..... 4600 res1denlial an vest prop H B 536-8294 TUXEDOS _.... 54S.4 I 23 W'fTf mnwv · S oo There's all kinds or van~ ~~-I -L.-C__..__ ••••••••••••••••••••••• now in escrow 75 Found Keys. 5 29 in dalls m. Some k1"ds broke w .... •~• ............. cash req·d No negative. r r H k' L d 1 for ent 4350 Individual executive full S20 per hr for open space 832 7'Z79 ront 0 ec s, 1 0· n-into a history museum
••••••••••••••••••••••• service oHice suites PRIM[ for big party with live -----dentify 497·3262 and dressed all the
•FANTASY ·
*STUDIO*
M/F, nonsmoker. $160 +
14 utits. nr So. Coast
Plaza. S.5'1·9640 aft. 6.
Fem shr 2br, 2ba. xlnl
loc. Non smkr. $200/mo.
Xlnl. F.V. loc.
91J3.6218
Rmmate wanted ln plush
New~rt house, 2 blks fr
beach; Pool & tennis .
$350, 1st & last. Paul.
760-7024
30• long gar. dbl wide w/harbor view for rent. band. big yards, drive· F o-u-;;;-C-I e~ M-a I; I cavemen~ TUXEDOS
drive access. Drywall Furnished reception RETAIL ways etc Any wk end AnnoWlcftMfth/ Gold en Retriever. 1 P•nonots 5350
lined. 846-4152. H.B. area in Dana Point. Call ~r~~~\ ~~h~ nor ns~r;:: r:~~ year. Broken chain. flea ...................... .
Double Garaoe 20x20 an.. EvelynGroo LOCATION residential area, m H.B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• collar ~ Harts lthr col· FIRST LADY
prox. HB storage only G61-1306 area or within 10 m1 . .A.Mo...c......ts 5100 lar. Vic. Tustin/Bay.
185 per month. 98().526<> B•lboa Island: custom I 150 Sq. Ft. 536·6632 Brian. Please ••••••••••••••••••••••• CK.rMi·s·u 675-34&s. 640 6363 Esc,ort
0
• Models
Executive office apace COnMr Location leave name & number. THE ADVaTISlMG
Offlceltwhl 4400 ava'il. Share computer, Outa..._._StrHt M coa..aSULT"' ...... S FOUND ·. l /3 /81 nr. orty ...cen. ••••••••••••••••••••••• word processing ._., Quiel Apt alure " A"' * 972·1345 * Pl.Ali capabilities &.other ex-·•kMl .. uHly. Woman, extr e m e ly Now you can re.p the Bushard/Garfield tool MC&VISAAccepted
UECUTIVESUrTES ecullve amenities. Rent MtcJOfl.W.Ten..a. n eat. non smoker . benefits ol high cosl ad· box/tools96J.9725#344
S C 11675 8662 Reasonable.IJ40.5172 vertlsin& for your com-COVER GIRL ne& · 110 Agate l. G • pany! Let The Advertis·
"Thereisadilference" 8'73-2943.873-~. Wanted : furn/unfurn Lng Consultants set up
_._ .. .__... RDAILSPACE · hse/apl. nr. bch 1· your own ln·house ad·
714-752-0234 P.o;;:;;;;'.d' 770 sq. ft. on Harbor 2bdrm. Very resp. rem. vertising agency. Please
Found· Keys Vicinity of
Springdale &
Mea dowlark La ne . • OUTCALL * 953·0778 MC/VISA
2082 Mlchelaonl212 Blvd. in C.M. Only~ 780·7177.644-1592 call Mr. Crosson for in·
770 IC( ft of pro-sq. rt. Great exposure. formation ------*FOXY LADY * Hunt. Beach. Call 1den· •--------•I l1fy. 846-4536
ltllllffM
Pri•ahRoom1
The Bearh area's r losest
& most exotic readmg
studio. 8125 Bolsa Av.,
Midway City (2 blbclt~
E. of Beach behind li-
quor store> Open lOam
3am datly except Sun
543-9243
1617 Weslclirt. N.B. Wanl
Senior lady wants lo shr fina ncial inst. 7000..f.
her CdM hme w/same. 1.sl. noor. Aaenl541·5032. Wik to bus /shops.
840-1390
fetaloMI offk9 apace _R_e_a_lo_n_om.l_ca __ 67_S-_67_00_ hslH11/ .. mtd/ 759-0652 LOST : Blonde Cocker OUTCALLONLY
In Costa Mn& 1"4Jht LOW COST •• ~~•~••••••••••••• -1-0-0-..---... -.. --,_,..--k-e--t Spaniel puppf wi red VISA MC .ct-.. • ......._ w..._ industrial office space •·~._HI ES collar. Adored child's • .972-1138 •
Psyrhic Reader Ad'llisor
Past, Present & Funn>e-;··
Love. Marriage, Health.
Character & Buslne.ss.
Cater to Part.Jes, Card &
Tea Lear Readmgs If
cannot solve Li fe
Problems on your own.
consult us for lnfor~p
poant. (TI4) 646-4013 .... -
Fem non 1mkr to shr 2br
lba condo nr So Coast
Plaza. S210mo545-4505
M/F t.o ahr 3 bdrm houae.
Tot> of World, Lag. Deb,
non•moker. avail. now.
Steve 831·3800; 494-4806
. M 25·30 to ahr 3 br opt,
pool,jac.Baywood.N.B.
$232 + ~ utUs. 7~4.
f40.27'19
Wanted rmmale. non·
1trat1bt, emplyd, over
24. 88 dpllt, s blb t.o
b c h . $250 +ph one.
INI0-'3023 aft 12 noon
Matore M/F rmmte .,,.91., 2 blk• from
I{ N.a. lkb. Day 435-7561
( S..17Mll3
._, wanted. M. 1bare
allarp lra hie, F.V. $285.
Incl llW. Pvt ba\b, car.
'avaU. 'clean. 2 min to
Fw)'. 9'4-27&
Fttuale to abate fu.m. 2
I t . w /ft pie. lnc lud1 -.u., -. 1 bUt from
ocean. July Olru Oct.
Call John 815-5020. IOAM 1 tbnatPll.
abdrm bome $225 .
Prtote pooil • JacuuJ.
Nt bf.ad\. M/P with r• fuencu Pacltlc
ll.ptr)'.--·
AIRPOtrT AltlA •
Furnithed or un-
furnished Executive
Suites in Irvine. walking
distance t.o Aif1>0rt. All
services avail. 2082
Michelson. Suite 212.
714-752·0234
-r----r _.. u.. SOOS LOWESTPRIC !! pet. Vic Woodbr1dge•--------y• .... with small shop space. Opportunny Free glft lf you have a area. Pis. call: 85'1-4475 611..2242 Total 1342 sq ft. Rare ••••••••••••••••••••••• place. Pacific Room· overhead shop entrance. TAX R EL IE F I AP· mates. Call 558-8608, 7
Pvt bathnn. 1001 West p R E C I A T I 0 N days, 12..Spm.
17lbSt,CM,979-8533 W /MGMT $28,000 ------
SOOTHING MASSAGW..
for Discnmmating m~
Cal: Peter 494-4871 "J
Found : Male. Golden AFTERNOON
Retriever. in No. San
Clemente. 498-6739 *DELIGHTS* i-------lllMI RETAIL/OFFICE Space INVESTMENT. 50% SHARIA Pl.ACE , BRACKET, 18K LOSS PLENTYAVAlLABLE 700 · Westclilf area N.B. FIRST YEAR. HlGHER For all types ol people. Found : Male black & tan Hoine/Offlce/Ho+.t SWEETHEAR . ;,
Shepherd puppy, male * 972-9773 * •ESCottTS• .. :
MEWPORT llACH Convenient Peninsula
location acroes from Cl·
ty Hall. Executive style
offices w/(ull services
avail. From 215 sq.ft.
and up. No leaae re-
quired. Ca.ll87~3002.
FOR LEAS&MO' Office 759· 1550 B R A C K E T Y 0 U Only $30 ree. Guaran·
In Newport Center. 2 lftclustrial R...+al 4500 ESTIMATE. teed results . Paclrlc
s uites & secretarial ••••••••••••••••••••••• WARD INVESTMENT Registry. 558·8608. 7
Cocker Spaniel. butr col· 24 Hrs . Now Hiring 24 HOURS , ....
or. female long wire hair MC VISA Visa /MC 972~7~
area. Grtal Ocean View. $675. Approx. 2295• In· CO days from U..8pm. dachshund, female ler· l~~~~~~~~~~I
rler X. tan & black;
female black & tan
Shepherd, male black
Papillian. 64-4-4656
PraUglous Office Space.
3 window offices avalla·
ble ln full service Le1al
Suite in Newport Center.
Avail. now! 64().5640
DR's ofc. in DwntWll HB.
2,000 aq.f\. $1200 lse. Red
Carpel, 893-1351
outdoor patio, 1 year d us ' I/ Off Ice. 18 l 0 l 714·642-2000 HOUS ........ T .. S
lease al Sl.'15/sq. ft.. 2 Redondo Cr. "T". Hunt 1---------..._ 5
year option. Avail. July Bch. 842·2834 YUM. YUM! AV AtLAILE
l, 1981. 758-9121 Gourmet meat markeL 18·80, all types. Share MESA your space & costs. $30 PllMI IA YROHT Kot Costa Mesa locallon, fee. Cheaper than ad· Found: small M Shep·
Office space, Janitorial, l..._.DUSTRIAL &ood least, parting and verlisin1 with no hassle.. Collie mix. vie. Spr· parktna. etc. Owner ,.... price. SUSS,000. Terms Free 2 for 1 dinner book lngdale & Heil. H.B.
6'13-1003. PARK arranged. Inquiries in ror June tnem be r s . 840.7039
person or by ma.II only. p 1 c lfi <' Real al r y , -------StonemUI Busineaa Park, See Chris Kopper. suite 558·86081days, 12-tlpm. Found: Small husky type
2915 RedhJll Ave. C-103. 711W.17"-St. '1, male dog. vtc. Maanolla
Approx. 1100 tq. ft. Cotta M1M. Ctlllf. ~ta dJ vl/Oi RIU Y Al'PllOVIO le Atlanta. KB. 1162-9946
Custom lmprovementa. 642-4463 ~· HOHoftOfllT arter 3:30pm.
m-o482or1·75M«'ZS. -~ ~ Corp. av-11. 642-3300 llhnrftt. 1980 sq. ft. Unit avail. ~ ou:u.. --"--------1 L-Ost : Calleo Fem. vie
Pro........ 3 Offices + Reception May Ut. cug,;ts. 67.'J-~ MllELS/ Atlanta. Newland & area to l\lb-leaae near dr .. ba 'llM ........ Kam lllon 538·4557 S p a c e a v a \ I I n a~ w~ r. • ...... • .2.S5 E. co... Hwy .. ..._
cooperative rul estate O.C. Airport, 1000 sq. rt. sq. ft. *1..e11ln1 office ACTORS REW ARD
ell e ,. u . 1• •. "r 1 me make offer for all or hrs. Mon thru Fri 8-4. .. ...., " • r rt 1-01-An ti 'lff Loet men'• pretcrlptlon Airport locatloo. Many P• · ""' -Y me. Sat. 10-2. 0 "1 5015 Bu.sy O.C cutlnc omce 1 1 1 sse1 • 8 an k 0 f
amenlUes. '152-5111 Plush om-. """ .......... .,. ---------t •11...., bas ''after strike" mo-.. ri c .. 8 h ~-.,.,.,...,.,.,. .... INDUSTRIAL ••••U••••••••••••••••• Uon pict~ cuUna ac· nme ca, .... ranc · m sq n + •tonu•• \Ale ,. ft, 1801 Newport Blvd, SP •cl 1 eee •tlarte of Httlta1e counts. Non-unlon extta Reward ~6583.
common area. NB Bus C.M. 8*Mll6 "" \iank Stock·UO per work for rw:i. sa, credit&. ....,. area.1~58111 otn in FOil.iA.Si aha re Call Fran : Inter view• Frl/Sat, --------• AJ:°~~~ p~' :n_: COSTA MISA W:lm J1&ne 12 ls 13 Mt F. l .. ~ ~ f.!·~~:!FJ~
NIWPotl'TllACH coffH, JaaJtor, lncl. 642-4461 Mofley .. ..._ IOH yr1 old, d•p~ndable nearLarkspur~8296
FuJI 1ervlce exec. of· Sec...Urtal avct on pr. * 0 n e 2 7,8 0 8 q 1 t ••• •••• •••••••••••••• •• trao1portaUon, no ex·
llcH from P97 · "On mlaea. ms. 1&'1·'3Sl. ware.houae av.U for lril· Doctor hu SlOO ooo mall pH'tence. LOST · (2) Wond• Cocker
Call" t:1ec. om.a. from med. occu ........ y. •ir.o to lend. ~l·< rMIOll HM60I fw 't Spaniel• vie. Ok:oasl '105. lodda aecretartal, W .... -~ _...... ... phone ... , Woc'd pro-A,~"'", UIOO 1q It unlit, omce Is aecund. r. fr lln. Ken Lett & ,.... UOO Co 1l e 1 •. lh ward
CtiMTH.,••=Ttla,QWtpi.oaa lxte11t h• Sulte1 . warebw 1.,ate avail. Smltb. PO BOX 2'105 ....................... •05601'11-'lD .,.ff ART ... _. Prt1tl1tou loouon. Jwse 1 .•• .., per aq, HunUDl\OllBt•ch1121M1 COMP a ProftHlonal eulron· ft. •Ltlllini ollk• brs .. ;.:.:=.:;:~:.::::;;.;;;,;;~:.;.;:~~ .. --------·1round youn1 black.
71'/111-Gm m .. t . Qu.allt1 lteetP:-Mon thni hi M, Sal U1D,.._.,._ T.wt IOJI clipped mate Cocker. Uo•lltl HrvlcH pro-10.2. •"4i flHIMD lat' Llbr collar. turquota
vtded. 8•cretar11I I 700 an n ofrlce + ••••••••••••••••••••••• !11"9 ~ atones. Vic, Uftivenlty
.-.lff avld.lable. CaU • '' • S ...... ~C.. Al£~ Dr, lnlne. 17'·1121. C •. ,. o I 0 b • • d le r wareho1a1e. lrvln• In· All typn ti real ntale r~ 141-mt T J 4 I I 4 t · 5 s 2 I o r dualrlal. 9 triple nf'\. lnvnlmentJ line. 19'9. l'.a. ........ _ ...... ______ ~
Ul/IH·Hll. Pettn Call 141-lOM ot lnq.:atr. c-........ 111 ~ FOUND: Jletrltv•r I Lalldla,L..~· 11111 ... llarost Oo. 18753 Noy ~..... 60MJI &paalel •b? dOI med
•· ....., .... zoo. ::-· Mr COOp 'a· ,.z.z' '' ....... ' ' ~~...:.;. llUllHvrboi'
Use ,,,.,,.,, M service''.
when placing your ad ... a ·
Daily Pilot ad number will
appear in your classified ad
... we take your messages
24 hours a day ... you call
In at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to ¥Our ad • . :
this ·service Is only $7.501
week. For f!)Or-e Informa-
tion and to place your ad
call 642-5678.
I
~~~ ......... !?!~~~!!~ .... .?!~ ~T.!!:=! ..... !!,!C? ~!!:=! ..... !!!! ~'r.~:=! ..... ?!.~ Orange Coast DAILY PILO~/F.r4day'!_u",e 5. 1981 ·~~.
'!~ .. j ........ I.. llAUTICIAM II c~ CM N.l.Wmled 11oo~w...-. 7100~W-'M 7100 MlfpW.-.4 1111 SPlRJTU.AL Chevrolet ..._r Medi To nm 1mall 1hoo. l1te Part llcne. App.bi : The Pina, Sbort Order ~~~T••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• .. ••• ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••·-•~ READINGS motlvatied ._people ln· Hayr Bana. tot \f. ltth Earl'• Plumbin&, 1521 Mutl~18 A_pply ... llA&.OffltCI ' ~· ' • M•ICALOMCI PAITn.-.1.,_(
ioaeaOpm.FullyUc'd. terealedlnaUul*tlof St.C.M . .....,Ne.-1145 Newport Ave, Co1ta 311PalmBalboa P/tlme.Noap.oec.Ap. IMS..,.MCI Huntlo•ton Beacb To deUvtr DaltJi eu.ii(
OZ·T2Nort»ICl:Ml9U auto aalu. No ex· IKll/sCnY M•a.l14ll4M2:89. COUMT'll..., ply btwoaAMllNoon. BU1ytervkeetr.ofauto Sutaeon.11lrlotc.MU1l auto route In~
S. Camino Reel, San g:tHee nee.nary. Expert~. Full time, Wanted pit (or food deU Charlie'• Chill 3001 ln1. •JY. has optnlnl• be exprd. ~on lo Prl, Beach Clw Lad Gil')' Webb: 900 full char1• pm!Uoo for 1 c•~lll(IS call between 9.AM·llAM Redhlll. Bktf. t2. Ste. for I.he followlna potl· 9-5. Exceptional o~rt. HOURS: Moo. t.biU rrt. T~U-.Bea\lt.llUJBNnettt 1e~t"~ 1:.f~~ putoo otnce la flower 1W1W 752·5'01 f22eCM !bon~ Salaryopen.Ml-IO approx S:IOpm to
wt\Q ••id "hello" to me 111·1'. No calls. ihop. Group heahb plan ---------•1·--------1 la ma Otpt Take in· Medical s ·30Dm
at Swensen'• In CdM B b 1 •-__ ..... -·11 avaJlable. CalJ f~ appt, u TIJT M COUMT'm,..SOM CHHllALOMCI ~tll~~w':~ " handle fROMTOffllCI HOC1RS: Sat Ir St.In
Sat. n It e M a Y 2 3 • a YI l..... Wanwu. "" 841·2980, .. ror Kent. E P'or ~ualJty drycleanin1 ° ...... 5am·'7am.
0 IAh ... Cl .. K--.-a Fl _.._ I 1 H I Electronlct llrm In •Renewal Dept-Quote Mature. experienced In Earnlna• anpro• •••"' WOW••' Love to meet mt Summer ,.,.,. ra'/ ar. ""w-..y o~ .. t & a'bo n u~ n~ton CottaM•a•Mkl person & follow·upon rtnewals. 0 B · G Y ftJ , h •av y per month. " .. .....,
yC>\I ai·aln al SwenH.n'a home. Student OK. Bo OK KE P! p E R MARKETS w~uf1 ~~~ gt with 1eneral ofrlc• 6 Hvy; aulo raUn1 exp. telephone1. Send re· Call M2~ for Bryan 10~ Sat • 9pcn. Mike 8"-ll82. Eves•Wkncla. Pelboard, med. ore For2ndfsardShifts perience preferred. but Haht bookkeepin& H · pttf d. aumea lo Box 1762 CIO Holland or Sheldon
U'm thefblonde with Baby1ltter. full time, Typlnl • lnl La1. Bch. We promote to ma.naae-will traln riCbt person. per• lncludlnl acCOWlt.I •Accouottn1 Depl-Dally Pilot p 0 . BOX Harte. Equal Oppor alJ••ea). 1ummerd perf. for col-area. Call : Betty, ment&aupervt.slonfrom W.0015. payable Is ~ccounta re lnvoicinf, customer re-1580, Costa M~u CA Employer
I .. .,.. -1 wi hin ceivable. Permanent funda&rdepcalll 92626 --------------
• •~ c.....1....1 r:•: ~~ ~l~~8~ f i ........ 1"" ~ANT A CAREER? COUNTER HELP r.:itloo ~uirel relia· Salary comm. with exp. MISsa.GB ,~
-...--eves/wkndl. lo#H,.r CostaMesa FT/PT. Gary's Dell.. peraon. all: Pd. co. beneflta. For 8 mornl~1 a week, Full Um• . Yllll $5 00/0FF part time. 10 to 15 hourt 111 Del Mar CdM . 6'75-2193 forappt. V .._.Beet nMlk• Ex • Baby1Hter needed . r:rweek."-~au'"able 131-9'21 c-~<R-lc• S•A ·f264 appt,callLl.ndaalFGS, Mon. 5. M to ·~J company . THE ~.. ~ _.._ __,, .. ..,_ 116S-0941 Tues. thl'\I Sat: e:30AM per or wltraln. Apply !'e~~~'d'·,::·~c::i:'n~~ yourneedl.133-92:52 Laeuna Beach Oon'I orftce skill• a to 9AM. Excell. drMne PENNEYSAVER 18'0 Glrffriends babyaltllng i.n my ~t• IOOIK91RP/C 41M-9233 mu1t. PCH Sporuwear GIMlltAL.OfflCI JANITORIAL Evenlnce. rec. req'd. ApPt.Y· Pen· PlacenUaAve.C.M.
'*ESCORTS• Maahome..97~7593 Rafldly·expand1n1 ~· CallTlna 558-2995 Areyoulneameat•Can 3 to 5 hrs Call : ~;~a~~~lBPlacentia PAYIOU.e&.al •
H /Office~ tal company aeekinf Huntlncton Beach Delivery men over 111 for you think? Are you IS· '114·992~1.114.530-3333 The JollY .Rocer Inc .• ap
... , .. .__. 81by1ltter. Mother want· F /C Bookkeeper. Ex· 1162-9116 L.A. Timea to home. In sertlve? Are you a •MGMTCOUPLI*.. eatabUahed re1lauranl * 972•9772 *· eel wltb other children to ce 11 e ot com pan Yl~~~~~~~~~I per(ectlon.ist? Are you LEGAL SECRETARY 61 adult oy units ln E. chain hu an o~nin•
Male/Female Escort care for my l yr. old, fuU benefit1. Start.inf salary C · M · 3 a m · 6 a m · career oriented 7 Are for Npt. Bch. law firm. Costa Mesa. Nice, no for a payroll clerk \b MC VISA lime Mon t.hru Fri. After $1200/mo. Call 846-0011, CASHIER economy car required. you mature? Can you Will train penon w/sd work in a 4 penon dept. ~~~~~~~~~I 4 640-9006, N.B. area Laverne or Cbria. H1 ouseware aales. Apply ~.!!,. .~ o I I e c t I n I . take over an en1r11mr1. bulc skllJa. Mae card pets.146-00'73 lO-key by touch a muat.
-::: D per s 0 n . c r 0 w n """·-50/mo + bonus.. ore. where your work re· exp. helpful. Call Joyce MMGMMT PosmOM Salary commenaurat.e
BABYSI'ITER IOOKIWB. F.C. Hardware, 3107 E. Cat 646-0637 orM&-5844. ally matters? Really" for app't. 640-5650. Fabric chain, C.M. & with uperience. Apply p~ s.mce. 5160 Mature person to care For realty mcmt. co. Hwy, CdM. Well then, I would like to ----';...;;_______ Anaheim. Xlnt oppt'y. In person betwMD Sam·
AMV/AYrltOOUCTS forlyrold,myhome. P .T . nr . Coast Childcare Mothe r 's DPEINTALrRelcekplt . talk to you. Pl.s. send LIGALSEC'Y Geri646-4040. 5pmat:
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Balboa 615-5061 mom Hwy/Dover.965-2391 easant 0 c., oo ng your resume to Tom Needed for partner of THE JOLLY ROGER K•y. '60.164' in · · --'--------1 Helper needed for 2 girls for enthusiastic indlv T p o Bo """l -cs o--.... G ompson. . . x "''"" . pruti&lous Newport MODELS/ lNC · I v _ _.," 11 & 13. Irvine area 12 to for full time poa. Salary Npt. Bcb .. 92663 Beach law office. Ex· 1700 Gillette Ave. Irv., "'n:i:':.! BABYSITl'ER Mature man or woman &PM . Mon-Fri. Own open . 6 4 2 • 6 8 8 0 periencef.re/erred. Mag (714)M&-0331
8 wks summer job in with some experience traosportaUon. 552-3'744 wknds/eves: 673-3403 General J1 belpfu . Top salary & ACTORS ~··••••••••••••;••;• Irvine. Uve out. Very It for M /brs, Tues, Thurs. aft 8. IVICKI HESTON I beautiful surroundings. Busy O.C. casUng office Pest control technician 1W..e.cl. 0 5 h1kpa; supervise older & Sat . morninas . --------DB4TAL Call ('114l83,W730 __ haa "aft-s .......... mn-needed. Exper. pre·
••••••••••••••••••••••• chlldren. Lota or free $4.SO/hr. + vacations. CHILD CARE ASSIST AMT ... u-..... ..-r e r r e d b u t n o l
•-•111..1 Umeby~ ...,,/wk. S48·3687uUorAllce. Loving eraodmother Modern progressive lrAuodates LEGALSICY lion picture c•sting ac· necessary.Call"~·-. ..... _" ..., r counta. Non·union extra _.._ Available July·Aoc. Startim .552·920'1. ty~locare ormytwo practic e seeks e x· Speclalizlngin Ternp.61~/19.Hntg workforfun,$$,credits.
Par{ time rest ol year. IOOIOUEIPH ba ies, ages 4 mos & 2 perlenced chalrside H · TemporaryClerical Bch,nonsmkr,848-1400 Interviews Fri/Sat, Photographic Printer: Xlnt refs. Banklnl yrs. Perm. full time 4 sistant. Meaningful Personnel June 12 & 13. M/F, lS.2S E x p e r i e n c e d
'31·2648.. 7AM best. HunllnetAln Savlncs Is !;,~ll :~t"1:~~:ret!g0J>fa daysa wk. career O(>l!Ortunity for 540-0400 LEGAL yrs old, dependable black/white Printer for
now accepUos applica· Beach contractor. Must __ 6'1_5_·6:11_2_._61_5-_0_32_1_ an individual who is SICRETARY transportation. no ex· Photocraphy Studio. 2 Kinder1arden teachen tlon1 for full Ir Prr teller looking for personal re----------1 Prob at• experi•nce .-Ji•nce. Full time. MS-3840. h have construction ex per. Cllolr D1.......-..&.-.-· · d G 1 Offi " "' ..-"' -ave aummer procram. positions. Call842-8600. 494_6525 ~,,_.. cognation an excep enera ce Permanent part·Ume, 3 559.16oe •--_1•
Readlnc. swlmmln1.1-.-~--·-·--·l1~~~~~~~~~ For small church. 3·4 ttonatrlnancialrewards. Newport Beac h in rulldaysweek.Newport ..._....,. field \ripe. Monday thru 1• hrs I wk . 6 4 2 · 2 7 4 0 We are team oriented surance co. has the Beach area. 673-7120.
Frlday54MU.5 Banking IOODEEPIMG am/963·4195pm and carloe1 offering following positions MOTHER'S HELPER ·
Wanted fem 18 yrs or
older Mon·Fn. 2 &iris 9 &
10 yrs Close to be.acb &
recreation. Start 6/22
thru August. Must be re·
liable. Call for details alt
6PM ('1141644-98'18
PLUt.91MG
SUPPLIES Growing Co. has xlnt op.
ply for aood. reliable driver . Geoeral
knowledge ol plumbin&
products helpful Good
working conditions. Fr·
mce benefits full Ume.
C all Mr Peters
(714 167~ •
RE l'U'l'(llMf' many frlnge oenefits in· available· LIQUOR CLERK with Exec. Sec'y 4 yrs. exp. ~I na 10 key bf touch. Ac· .CLERICAL cludin& medic al in MAIL& FJLECLERK knowledge of Wines
w/sborthand &ookinc for curate typmg. Part Ume Soundcraftsman Audio surance and percentaee Dependable. mature wanted Spigot Liquor,
interestinl job w/smaU JOB MARKET daya Better'Way Foods, has interesting position of production. 4 day person to assist with 1802 S. Coast Hwy.
firm. Temp/Full Ume. N.B. 645-2'&44 available with varied or. week. Sl.200 a month ir 'I fil' . hbo d Laouna Beach, 494·1533. (714)'1'76-2239 flee duties: typing, fil qualified. Fountain mai · mg.switc ar •
TELLER TRAINEE B 0 0 K KEEP l N G ing, phones. mail Call Valley 963-6702 relief. no typing. Liquor Clerk. P/T rughts.
HetpW..ttd 7100 P /time. Apply at · (7141SS6·6193 ----BILLING CLERK AskforSteve
••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Balboa Savings Crown Hardware. 1024 I DIEKT AL AS5'ST A.MT Typing JOwl>m. Ex per :>48-84lO
---· MOTHER'S Helper want·
ed. Resp. high school
girl for summer job
s l»rting approx June
15th 8 mos old baby L.B.
art6PM Cindy41r1·2297
Accowl~ Cleril is seeking a mature, well lrvlne (Westcliff Plaza l. CLERICAL 1 3 days per week. <Tues. helprul
Experience ~uired. 30 groomed indlv. wbo lov-NB PERSON FRIDAY for Wed, Thun) Will train. Gd. co. benefits. Work·
hr 1 week . pc H es working with people construction company Call840·1804aft6pm. ing hours 8AM-4:1.SPM. ~~ear. Call Tine ~!~~in of~ o;!c~1!°~!::~ IOOKKEIPEll F/C :::~ping & typing. DENT AL ASSIST. ~:~1n fo~ ~te~vi~~ ;x~:
ty. tor stable, respoo.si· Newport Beach property wanted for private Npt 8J3.84SO
... C C 0 U .... TI ....., G ble person to learn & de-mgmt. firm. Career opp· Clencal Typist Operune B h ff Ex I •- CO ... MERClAL -cuia " velop in a growi.na as· ty. for bright lndiv. wllh wllh yo ung d ynamic ~ne~t;~~~ pay"' BANKERS LIFE soclation. Full inaurance prior F /C exper. Call: engineermg/ construe· 1401 Dove St .. Ste 550 'l'ypist·learn bkkpg benefits & pa.Id career 640-0123 tlonflrm.Mustbesharp. DEMTALFRMTOFC NewportBeach
'1l•cbine. Ptr2Ahrs/wk. apparel. Pis.call: I~~~~~~~~~ dependable with ac E.O E M/F ~l~b Fn"·c~t .. ~:."~~ Ms. Denny Paruia BOOKKEEPER _ Full curate' t>'J>Ul& skills 160 '-• 71~ wpm + I Salary com mts.Myer MEWPOln'IALIOA char1e thru F IS ensurate w i th ex
Mature, exper in -· c II D Adminlltrative SAVIMGS&LOAM divldual to handle all penence. a ave
$ I OOOYcMO E.O.E. pbues of ac ... 0 for R.E. Peter, Peter & Assoc. ~-. In c, San Cleme nte Summero Career Develop. F\rm. R. E. ex· 492·3'735.
Secretarial. marketlng. l•--------i per. belJllul. 2 penon warehoioe & other poei· Banklnc ore. Salary based on e&· Clerk·&ift shop. Mature
Uons. We stress neat ap-per. Now located in Cer· Full·Ume incl weekends
pearance. Must have TB.La ritoa movin1loDana Pt. Apply Fri, Sat or.Sun transpo. Call 10am·3pm o I c I Sept . C a 1 J Lacuna Beach497·31~.
wlrdays. 17141&47·2422. If you are a mature in· 714/521-8542 or 1encf re·
divldual seekinl a ruu sume• 13111.t Strul.ltman•--------~eGJ~R~~up!~. time Teller position. Rd.Cerrit.os,IO'IOl. CUltKTYPtST Irvine Savings is In· Energetic person with inteWrent. pc>Ued and terested in you. Pleasant loolr ,...._ 1ood typln• needed for
polished younc woman working conditions. P/Tlme Mon, 1:311PM to busy mana1in1 reneral
wit)! potential for &ood aalary •benefit 6PM, Tuea.10:30AM to acen cy. No exp .
respon1ible executive package. Experience II P K . N o e x p e r necessary. but ability to
position. 644·4S4.S or preferred. Apply in necessary. Apply Pen· team a must. Attractive
540'°808 person between the neySaver 1880 Placentia salary & all company
HELP!!
J( you h.ave experience
in 101urance, collections
& stron1 phone com-
munacalloo ability. we need you. 63H.(2().
DEHT AL OFFICE
Mature front office
person. Exper required
Typinc sldlll. insurance
billing. 4 days per week
Newport Beach. Call
&U-3181.
DENTAL Assistant,
p/time for Ortho ore
Dental exp needed not
necessarily Ortho exp
RD A. 64Z-59!17 hours ot lOAM·Noon & Ave. C.M. beoefila. Call Sally at
"".ASS&9L Y GIRL 2PM·4PM at: ---------1 848·6264. n-k Clerk, experienced r(asUcs experience pre-trvineS&LASln. BUS DRIVERSfor scbool1~~~~~~~~~~I .,_
GIRL FRIDAY
With some bookkeeping.
Salary to commensurate with experien c e
642·1026
GIRL FRIDAY and assn't part lime,
flex . hrs student o k . Must drive like travel &
outdoors. be 1ndepen· dent & able to mk de-c is Ions. Good salary.
Call 760·8461or646·9418
GIRL Friday . self
starter. excell typist.
gd. telephone personah·
ty. non·smkr. Sl'1S wk. to
start. Call for interview.
556·6981. Window Deslcns 3195 "D"
Airport Loop Dr., CM fe""d. but will train. 18552 MacArthur Blvd bus positions avail. Will'~ preferred, be able to
Musi apeak English. lrvine,Ca.92715 train lf nee. Fountam COMMERCIALS. filma. meet the publ1 c.1---------
642·1026. 792800 Valley, 962·3312. models. extras. SCAS pleasant persona lily. I GIUHDa----------,~~~E!.!O!.E!.!M!/!F!~~l CABINET lNSfALLERS ::s~.~~ new fa c es . ::~tabor Inn, C.M CEMTf:RLESS
ASSlt&aS r: Exp 'd . productio n Top wa1es, benefits.
C r Id I Dt-t ................ overtime for exper'd . Loe. Mission Viejo co. Basic Clerk Typlat with C abinet ins tall e r s ompanion or e er Y ra1won. needs Assemblers w/2 eood escrow back-n .. _ .. _ ..... ..,..SS15 woman on Balboa Is For new dletJ;·ll. Amaz operator M~ be able """"'""' ~ F 1 11 · to set up for close yra. exp. Candidates ground. 1 girl office. ----------1 em a e v e In Ing rroduct. Us easily. tolerance work. CM. muat have gd. manual 975-06«. Carpet......,. H o u s eke e ping & Fu! time or pl lime j
dexterity, gd. eyesJcht. ---------• Helper needed. Will personal care. 6'75-1831 Ideal for house wives ex 1~D~e!lt!ro!n!c!,!54S-~003~~~~I
-ne.t ln appearance It de· i---------1 train. Mission Viejo tra income L & M En· r: pendable. Work is ln Life Beautician area. 111 yrs le older. COMPANION Wanted terprtses Distributors
s upport medical elec· I.._ lay CW. 831·9070, leave name 4' M1ture women for am· f o r LI c ht F o r c e
trooica. Gd. beoerlts. k _. MrMt , phone no.·will return all bulalory recuperating Products. 851-0593, <213)
Only responalble H-'--..... st calls. women. Approx . 5hr·5 438-2005. persons seetinl perm a-~ -r. ---------days a week to fix lunch.
M.Ql .emplyml need ap-Preferably w7foUowing. CAJtlJHS CdM area, Refer. req.
Plyv. Call: Mrs. Parelli. Xlnt worklnc cond. W ... ~ Write P 0 . '1216. 330 W Please call Tues·Sat. ~•151W' B po Bo S60 c M SAJ..3830 64.2-0092. Ask for Joyce Irvine/Newport Beach ~ · x 1 · area. Eariy AM delivery
Donut shop. Early AM
shift. no ex per nee App-
ly · Dipplty Donuts. UIS4
Newport Blvd. C.M.
DOMUTSHOfl
GUARDS
Full & part Ume. All
areas. Uniform• fum'd. Ages 21 or over, retired
welcome. No el(l>er. nee. Apply . Unlveraal
Protection Service, l.22:6 w. 5th St .• Santa Ana.
lntervlew hrs: 9-12& 1·4,
Mon·Fri.
Class&rled Ads, your one·
siop sh(>pping center
WANT ACTION?
Claasifed Ad.I 842-56'18
of L.A. Times. $4.ZS+. Companion/Aide for
Stuffers needed also. paralyzed girl-nights.
Call Jess S4&-0'l35. Wiii train. ~-9081. Early AM. No exp. nee. Hair Stylist·Manlcurist
Xlnt start Apply till for Cost.a Mesa & Npt
Carriers COOtc no.on .. DK. 's , 2959 Bcharea.548-9344 e••••• ~ Daily Pilat ~~:i~r :=:s'7:r h:t. ~~~~e~~Y R~f1u;T::i~ Fa1rv•e::~~
• • temoon auto carTiers in nights. Contact Rick or with packini duties.
• Advertil'inn • Laau.na Beach & Laguna Karl 49'1-4441 Good driving reeord and ' "'"''5 Nl1uel. Must be over 18 COOtc aood references. Con·
Hardware Sales. F/Ume
pos. ln retail hardware
store. Ste Mike or Steve.
H. W. Wright Co .. 12E
Rochester. C.M. -• Pr.duct,•00 Artist I years old & have an tact Mr Daboub. 548-22'71 Om. I W k Exp'd. line cook with HARDWARESALES
• Jbe Art Department or the D&lly Pilot has ana 3:30·5:30pm weekdays, continental cuisine bk· -Manacement potential.
LVN IMedlcal Assis t
Back oftlce, full.time
days 557-6300.
MAIDS wanted, exp'd.
lmmed. hire. See Angie,
San Clemente lnn
MAIDWAMTEO
Don Quixote Motel
2100 Newport Bl. CM
Ne ws pa per deli very
person, 18 or over.
Driver's license. in·
surance. economy car.
Npt Bch-lrv·Collta Mesa
area 7 dys pr wk. Mon·
POSTBOX
P /T, flex. Ret.lred OK
N wpt/ AiJ'l>Ort 54&-228'1
Produclion
Full time person for
prod. Dept. Packing &
handling ho s iery . Cryatal Creations Apl
pa rel. 631·5414.
Fri. 2·5PM. Sal/Sun P IT Clerical
4.7 : 30AM . Approx. woA afternoons. Duties
s:;oo1mo. Call 540..3007 Include lite typing, aa·
u NAG ERIAL bet. 11AM-5PM Ask for sembling brochures, "'A • exec. mal' lers. •tc. Contact persons interested In ad-Lee or Bob h "' ditlonal Income part Cat Y Lester642-9470.
time flex. hrs. Ca11 •--.. -m-C-H•9-/--IREAL ESTATE SALES
Mar In a de I Re Y. * PEOPLE. Investment
213·823·6982 for in-IROILEllMAM * Firm building Real
tervlewinyourarea. Fullorp/Ume Estate Sales Force. TOP WAGES PAID Masonry & concrete hel P Apply an person, The Licensees invited to call.
wanted . Laborers . Village Inn, 1Z7 Marine. _64_l·_C17_63_· -----
finishers & supervisor. Balboa Island. RECEPTIONIST P/time
Mike 496-8582. needed Im med. after·
noons for law olc in O.C. MATUREPBSOH MUISE/RMorLVH airport area 833-8486 needed to help operate a from 3 to 11 30 pm. 41 ask for Pam tea garden In CdM , bed Convel. Hosp Santa
Sat/Sun only, 9:30AM to Ana Hts.SAs.49-3061
3PM. Apply In person, Sat Ir SWl., lOAM 2PM . OFFICE MGll leceptlaulat
Sherman Gard~. 2647 AA in Business or Ad· E Coast Hwy., CdM ministration or 2 yrs of· f1ce related ex per.
needed for this challeng. ing posWon. with (row·
an& Investment firm Typing skills a plus. All phases of office opera·
lion involved 641·8855
Law office. OC Airpcut
area. Hieb school c:rad.
Call 833-9124
McDONALD'S
of s .. c1 ...... .
. <Under New Owners~p>
as now accepting ap·
placations for day &
ni&ht po!litions. Please
apply in person between
9-lam & 2·5pm wkdys al
M c Donald's , 650
Avenlda Pico. San Clem.
MEDICAL COURIER
Mu st have own
transportation & be
familiar with Calif.
freeway system Mon·
Fri. 9·5pm '168-&SOO
MIDICAL
TRAMSCRllER Work at home, top pay. Requires minimum
5/yrs acute hospital ex·
penence In all phases or
medical dictation. Call
768-8500 for interview.
MEDICAL CLAIMS
PROCHSott Muat be experienced.
F IT . ask for Beth : (714 )640..1'711.
Cyndi. __ _
OFRCEHB.P
RECEPTIONIST for new
corporate headquarte~
in Irvine. Requires
pleasant phone skills +
typing. Seod resume to
Controller. 2698 White
Rd Irvine. Ca. trzn•.
Part·tlme. 2 days per IECEP110MST
week for growln( com-Ph lite t · • pany. Typing .Swpm, fit. ones, ypina . Ina & phones. Newport clerical. Ex~r not req.
Beach. 8Sl·S222. Small concenlal Hunt· ---------1 ington Bcb law ofc
OFFICE CLERlt _B42_·0023 ______ _
Are you ready to re1oin RECEP110MST
the work force ? Ideal op-Needed . Newport portunity for part.time B h Boa b 1 orrice clerk with typing eac · t·type us · skills. Duties are varied ness. 4/days week. Sun-
with flexible workin, Wed~ s :30·5 ·30pm. $4.50/nr. Heavy phones hours. Please c a l & typing experience.
(714)7S4-'T748. ---1 Call645·7100.
Opportunity in BEE RECEPTIONIST
LINE FASHIONS. 3 peo-S Co
Pleneedednow Flexible Growing .A. · hae opening ror rtteptionist hours. sample fashions with pleasant phone
& personal wardrobe. peraonallity. Typing
832·0672or548-7489 s k I 1 Is SSW P M .
ORGANIST Re1ponsibiUUes include l econ aca car. or between 8 & 5 rM.
)snmediate openinc ror a full.time • 5-7am weekends. Earn I~~~-::r~r,: 4~~.r:46~ EXEC. SECRO'ARY Apply ln person: Crow11
prm•nent artist poaltlon. One year oie $50().$600 monthly. Call rrom 9-SPM. Mon· Fri. for busy Npt. Bch. ofc. Hardware. 3107 E. Coast E~~lc:'cc~:t:'Tast .• =~~!t, :~P~:~e:J::rtt.~O:bo~a:~~· Mr. Ensleylli.U·'7113. COOK Part or full lime !ft~~'·b~~:~1:fui~ Hwy . CdM typilt for busy office.
typlna of orders with For small church. 3-4 some Ute correspon·
h rs I w k . 6 4 2 · 2 '1 4 0 dence ek. Compellt.ive
am /1163-4195pm entry level salary with
l apec leyout.1. Some ability in lllustraUon.ande for Npt. Bch. restaurant. $1.300/mo. +. com· Housekeeper R/B In ex Must know all front or. '1'Pe apeclltcatlon. Must have the Jbillt,y toe Cashier Exp. pref'd. but will mensurate to exper chanee for 4 hrs da)I fie~ procedures. peg
Parttime boy for water· periodic reviewa. For
in( garden. Vic. West personal interview con·
Nwpt. Sl.50lbr675-3823 tact Cy Slmp1on at 5Sl·2603
:
bandlebaaicneatproducUooincludiqmapa. train. For Interview Call: &40-1633. ask for cleanin&&cooking6day oar . ms. & phone. HB
aod charts. Show potentlaJ In graphic and OFFICE CASHIER calJ :642.fJ881 DonLlchtner wk. Non smoking, nori area147•2347 PART Time. an.a serv. RECEPT,ITB.IOPR
dain fiel<h. Portfolio necessary. Pleue . Enjoy workln& In Exper'd. person wanted drinkln&. art 4PM or Have something to sell? No exp. nee . Call : l'ltlme temporary. It
:.
Call642·43Zl,ext.Wforappolntment. • Slavick'• Jewelers. COOtcS w/S to lOyrs. exper. ln wlcndass&-173'7. Claaslfiedad1doitwell. 838·3333btwn8&4EOE )'OU ha ve a (OOd
• Duties include verilyin1 U mos. exper. Apply cpt. weavtng & mend· HOUSH•H · telephone voice and typ-
• ulea ba.lancea, dolo1 btwn DAM & Noon. in I " h of r 1 I .. , , .. ,at inl ... Us ol ... wpm we e • Advertisinl S. · e dally b~transac· Charlie's Chili. 3001 tia'nd5!:Jen:~cSS:~r ~::'~0;;,~· M~i·~1~:.c it.. II J I eeJ-;ou to b.nctte'our .Experienced lll1'•Paper d.llJl'a1 aalespenoo . ~t':;::i!:f duJ~! =~lM Bld1. 12, Ste. wk. Call ; Persian ~~~~:Newport VIiia .••••••• ., • • :~\~c\b~:rd~ ~:e\~
•tobncllekeyaccounlllDmaJordepertment e cel l. Co. benefits -----------Treaaure Ru1, cU1tomersanddomlle .
• •tore or food and drug cawiorl•· Salary +. package. Contact: Mr. Make your advertlslntt _7_H_-6'1_3·_6118_l ____ HSICKPl/C-..a• e • typlna. Exper pref'd.
commilaion and excellent beneftta. Ex.ceUent M c D e r m o t t . dollar 10 farther! List FLORAL DIS~9'8 5 deys a week, live ln. • • Please call Mary Pat·
• pvwth opportunities. Call for appointment. • 'Tl4.f44·13llO. your buaineA every day New Conroy's openina ln Attend elderly lady. tel"IOn for appt.. s:ll-1015
•C.11 M2-4321, ext. 277 for appointment fore sLAYICl"S In the c1 ... 1fied lect1on Santa Ana. Earn top nooo mo+ own room• e Jan:+·na· I e Paoll>ollerAAoc:.
lntervlew. • Fubioftlaland of tbll new1paper. wasea ln beaulllul en· board . Refs . req . IW 3050RedhU1Ave.,CM • • ~~~~~~~~!!!1_1142_·_561_8_. _____ 1 •ironmenl. Exper. + 8'73-4'14Jafter6pm. 9G.neral maintenance & Janitorial services .• • ...,. e · • " • 1 0 0 d re r 1 . c a 1 1 e Fuu Ume permanent poahlon. Call '4.2"4321. RIC..,.OMST ,..., n...;. (VllMft I •1y p•1at '714/5518'161 Housekeepers wanted ••.• •xt.331forlnt.ervlewappolntment. 1 Frollt oft. e~per:.
• Cal ,.:_-,_.-C~ • ••··~ II I GIH~e:S.c1 ~:~llw~~':~c~. e ~[~~;~:\S:k;;~:!:a
:
Adulu wit• ou\1tan:.!:;li atlractlv_~ ••• • Soundcrart.aman Audio 49'-9717 e ' Pasteup P•'Nftll e ofbenentsben.Nr.O.C. pel"IOOallu.i Wtw:» enJo1 Ina wttb 10.1.5W' baa iotnwtlni po1ltlon 1 ,,..., Airport. Call: Ru.1t1
.,..r old 1VU&bl eveolnp e-9pm. C.11 M2-ua1e e fi1AL1 ~•IA• Sapemsor• e 1vallaba.•1Ut varied of. Houaekeeper/Companlon e w1ua oewapaper expertene.. Part time, e PeUcao, Oarpariate Ofe •
•
at141bet...enlpmto5pm, au for Diana. • • .., Jill~ e nee dutl•: &yplac, fU. Uvelnorout.. e lloun Uamo.lpm, JllODday tbna F'riuJ. e 54 .. tm. • NeGaw. I 1n1. phones, mall...: Call aa.2008. , ' • S:a~t COll\JNIAY btoeftU. f'W .,,.. tor • Irv. i .J
i ,............. .. I • L1mlted openlnlS •vallable In lM <>fans• • ' ('714 >SS...UN. -" HOUSI & •Oc>M .......... eall 142-ml. at. m. . llC.rlOMsT ~ ,
t ~~~J • • Coaat &rft, for •~lf.~oUvattd, catffr • •B4RALOflllCI A,,..AMT'S • : Needed Tra l ; (llClt . ..a.YI Al&i.:... • • ortented lncUv1du1l who un wCJi'k with e , Interior iudletM\I 00 The S.arf • SIDd Hot.el in e ~;u. hftt Irvine ioeaU:. :G::I IU1 UHM Field SaMI People. il'raln, motJv1t• and • Meda "'90IJ to do lYP-t.aa. Belt baa a.t • Jnc1 • -"""~J • Uu. . _ t1 ~late opeaJat fot ..,...Ii llidMdual.. • 1•l rnult1. Statloa waaon or van ina 6 anawer buay 1hllt full tr pltim•Ofell· !'f. 1 IO h th nd diet h ·-~-
i • .._ " capable ot ha~ fall_.__,. • •ttetNO'. Exceptional earniDp, plm job • _......_flt, rne-fri wllb l ft,·, ca I I· M 1 • P "' wpm, 1 or a I •P ont •• R•c•r.tloeallt/SecretUJ ~ ' . ....._.and•-·~·..:. d· .. '--~-... a.,td WMfita avatl•b~ for Ute naht .......-11 c c' 1 1 0 ~ 1 h · •'Hnat phone voice. Work for h~o. ,.,. m~ nn11 18 • II •r-_._.uni -W ...,..,.,_, • •-JI ---"' .. 1 • '1 CO. ~.$6Gtl u--~~-, -~ ~ cae9illlPft' UffU\lvea. Excellent. bellefk.I lrvl•e. •---..... ., r ........... • ~ ~.· C 5... you can prvu.-ce m,...ia, DOl • _ .__, _,._,, , d 1 r --•-.. ._ ·-"-"'!'
1• • ......_ • ........ "'-' e talk abcnu at call· 980 0894 ror l•--•··-----1 --. e u tnY ronment. or ... _...tmeat •ctde t7pto1 • 1hor0aa4 ~: Ji;.1a1 m ttt ;;;;::' •••~· Call: Ml ··-• rvift'. Alk tor>'~· C.:ba~ce . • •lt411AL QlllRCI --r. IMmW-. call ea.mi, eatt. m. • •klll•r Dutt• iradMe ·~ t '• lr•lu llrm hH lm• IMIUllAMCI Upl bOCltk...-.. 10
1 1 ;:;c.... 11 ~C...t • _mdlale optnl•I for U-..W,._ trttb tola· • ~C...t • ._,6,~...._. I D ..., ,.. e brtllal. ••tf·•larttr cn•t. euto Ul*kitce. e D ,.. j tloa. IBM •••on
) I 330 W. ay 9trMt • -W. Y Stnet • e:~i !,0 J::!0~:._: =:~·~',°;'_~ • • »0 W. ay Street ' =•w=•=
Jtl_.fll ... ~~ I . t , """"'&:8~1~~~ I =t~i-.=!~ F.-8:.~T.;Ll~·'-&i .... g:-:r1~~~ ::; ... ~lioiot 1 --=~~~-·.··~~·-·' 1 ~·····~····~-~,~ 1~11!!!•!!!'"'!!-!!_!!'!!,_!!!:!!!~~~1-lf~ .... !!!!!!_ ~~,-~:~~c .~~-~l ~~··--·•·:~~~-~~I~~ -°' ~~
·--' --------~ "'!:'r --.,.--":::"'
I
Sales, experien~. part
time. Ladies speciality
shop, Fash1on Island.
FJexlble hrs. Call Mimi
759•9$51.
SALES Loan co desires person
with sales or rmance
background to generate
business loans Salary
$1,000 to Sl.200 + comm
642-1470
Sales 1orosm0Hs
Open for motivated peo-Shipping Receiving, &
pie. either in sales or de Wareho~e Clerk needed
livery. 951-2642. an Adhesives Mrg. plant
SALESPEltSOM
Exp. pref .. not nee. 1537
Monrovia. N.B.
Mature salesperson for ShlPttilMJ/Packa.ptg
Ladies Speciality Shop. F uHtime. Experience Ex p . pre r. but no t h 1 r 1 but ·11 t ln ~ecasary. No nites. 6 e P u ' W1 ra · Sundays per year. Full _C.;...os....;_t_aM_es_a_.MS-__ 542_t __
& p a r t time . C alli---------646-5388
Sandwic h Salesperson
Mon-Fri 7am-1 pm
Must' have own trans.
RAC, C M. 642·1900
SHll'PIHG DEPT.
TIAIHH Ex~ell. co. benefits
Steady work. She must
be good with numbers. CM Deltroolc, 5U-OU3
WAITRESS
Exp. preferred for
cocktails & food . 644-955-0
Call Karen.
WAREHOUSE
&DBJVlttY
P /T ~ Newport Blvd.
642-1511
Weeke nd Supe r visor ,
4.AM-noon, Sat/Sun 16
total hrs. Primary j ob is
being certain adult a uto
carrier picks up papers
Sade by side copper tone
rerrie 1195, good condi-
t ion Catt 752-0664.
Allctfoa 1015 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PUBLIC FURNITURE
•AUCTION•
7:30TOMGHT
Lovely Bedroom sets.
armories, baby cribs. tbl
& chrs. china, liv rm tbls
& stoves.
SAVESA VESAVE
We honor Bora. MC,
C ashlera's checks Ii
Cash. NO PERSONAL
CH E C KS PLEASE.
Food ayallable. Items
subject~ presale.
MASTERS AUCTION
2075~ Newport Blvd CM.
839-9625 646-8686
k
SECRETARY
631-2004
on Ume & monitor & de· llcycles 1020 SllHlllllfilc•.t liver complaints called ..................... .. an by c usto mer s Schwinn outgrown red Fadltv $100/mo expense check. alrl's hpttd. Xlnt cond. SecretcrvJr.
No shortband.1f you like
a v a rie t y o f
responsibilities that in·
elude typina. runnin&
blue prints. maintaining
engineering library &
more. aod your typin&
s1Ull$ are SS wpm, we
fteed )'OU. We Offer an xlnt benefit
package Which lncludes
medical. dental and ure 11>aur~nce. paid vaca-
lioo, and an educational
enrithment J~oara m . ..RJ.ule caU QC a ppt. "'lla r y Paterson ,
$56-7075
SICUfARY
A t ront office secretary tor 1mal1 Newport
Beach manufacturina n.rnr One ~ wltb t~P.inl " secretarial aktlls to a&.o perform
booklteeplna . po.stln1.
Call 5(8..8818 for app't.
Housekeeper-flaitress $3.SO hr to start. Must be _seo:.:..;._7....;60;__:·9636..;:..;... ____ _ Serve ~reakfut Ir lunch to elderly residents. No 21 or over. Valid driver's Schwinn cruiser Custom
Ups. Mon-Fri, 7am-Jpm. lie· & insurance. Call paint, ~or best offer 494-~. S40-300T 1Uld-2PM. Ask Rarel.¥ uaed 833--0141 for Bob or Lee.
PIClftO
Perfect cond. $500 or
best orrer SS7·6207 Eve.
Sportt.19 Goods 1094
SAUNA ••••••••••••••••••••••• Elec. port. 4'x8', Sl.500 NEW K2 244 's with
752-0558 all. Spm. Solomon 626 bindings &
pr of Lang NLl boots
$280 /all 751-9227
RC A 25 .. color TV ·
AM/FM · phono, walnut
console. nds a llllle
work. SllOfirm. 751-3069
OriJ. De Winne Oils. A
Steal! 30X36. 5 heads,
U SOO ; 20X24, $1800 . 875·7978. Blaupunkt am/Cm cass.
John Wayne Tennla clb,
f•m mbrsb.lp $800, incl
stereo. Model CR2000. 2
11pkrs. still in carton.
Sl85. 960.Qn
trans fee (4QI) 356-S76S 1 1 R a t e d T o w e r w ..... aw.. SPEAKERS. Xlnt
20 pc set. Never used. sound. Orie S900 sell S450
$390 or make offer. 552-9047 Scott
6'2-452'J ---------i New Sony stereo, am/fm.
Simmons queen H mat· BSR turntable, cass., 2
t.res11,lyr new. Box 1pr-Sony spkra. in orig.
ina. 1185. Webber Kettle carton, woo in contest .
$25. G M Chevy radio, $22.S. 640.5449all. 5.
..:n..:.:ew;..._'35:..:......_· m_._9037 ____ , Realistic Base station 40
New Cpl soft areen S42S ch CB S/8 wave attenna
(100 yrdt) + beaut. cstm S75. 162·"77
kin& spread S75 559--0848 I RACIC STBEO
Comm 'I CatJ*. S3/1q. 979-4133
yard, C!581yardl)
tD-&422 Sony Tap recorder, amp, ___ ..:;..;.;;..._;..._ __ -.i tuner & du•l tum tbl a· Flber1lu1 Sailboat $300 875-3335
w /alum rl11ina $250, •-.-&...a .... .-..... Minolta SRT 101 Camera _. --w /caH 1100, metal I ._.__..
draw desk S7S. Coleman •• ;."1--;-r•••••••••••••• ..
9 X 12 Ttnl tlO. Call •wNI 9010
545-9'142evtt •••••••••••••••••••··~· Non·r rofit ort ndJ YOUC' Snake: ten ft. P ython boe , piano, car, etc.
$W; twin tnmdle ~. Liberal tax deduction
matlre11ee ta. Cash. advantaae. 2'3/65-4-2341
'84·Mtl .
1981 TOYOTA 5 SPEED
DELUXE STANDARD BED PICKUP
Thia one has a 5 speed transmisaion. window pecqge, one touch tailgate panel & Is fully factory equipped. (015583). ~601150 599 00 I s 11750
~~"{~:.~Nf~i.~~]~:_lllul~I~~ 56048~ 59,9oo I ~614750
~:~~~}j~~~~l~R!!£KJ.L. 57475 75 599 00 ./ 57574 75
1981 TOYOTA
LONG BED DELUXE PICKUP
4 speed automatic trans. with overdrive. window pkg., tailgate. undercoat.
Ultra mlrros & chrome atep bu~. (011103).
1981 TOYOTA 5 SPEED
SR/5 SPORT LONG BED PICKUP
5 aPffd trans.. air c:ond .• tin wheel. tire pkg., window pkg .. one touch 1-ilgate
panel, unra mlmn a chrome bufl1*. (003021).
5637760 599 00 I 5647 60
57:67715 599 00 I 57776 15
...
• F2 Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Ftl~. June 6, 1981 ~.~ ••• !!.~~ !~~~.~'! ... !!.~~ !~ ............ !?.~1~~!~ .... !!.~~ ~~!.~ .... !~!!
IMt..; PIWlr f040 IMh. .__ f040 leitl. lflfA/ ht.t.. s.. 9060 Moped . Clmattl Clty Encl. trlr. ,. X 7' very 5-w W .A.NJEDI ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••'••••••• _C...., tolO ••••••••••••••••••••••• b!kti Hardly uaed. Xltlt clun, 12'7'1080 ~ A • •;. ' i9ft.lat:h le.t 31' Cbrll v.tP CB llKI .. , ....... ,............ • c T I eood. ~. &40-7450 980.&398 P~!! Late model T~o&M and ~,. llodt1S400Avoowl&hl5 bud, ;Up 'vau: fun Samarana, 2 matted 70' '!!1~t":u'~Sae~t!~ Motorc MotorcvdeTrtr LowMIMcltl Volvo~,· all ua ~x:ttl=rt~~~·c~~ boat. ll'Ul 1Uapc. S8900 :g,~::.~ ·~el~!~'•. 8 a Island. ~y equipped, Scoo=-/ fl 50 .. !!.~.11, $425, ~1-5Sll • I HO 4.,&'..JI
1
tpd.
Mnt at t5·Z031 or orofrtf.M4&CT1 heeds, full PU.l. main inboard iru eng, '31,000 •••••••••••••••·~··•••• AldoSH"Vke ,.... D..._rkkUpa
Ul·fl?G. u' no answer, 18W woO&!n hull flshina Salon. aux cleiaeJ. Avail 8?5-44$6, 780-&3S9 Fdnt~stlf b~ 11 750 & Acceuoftes 9400 Tr .... 1tdDt11 TOYOTA·• Y
PLEASEkeeptrylna! boat wltb trailer. S500 or ~ ~8har~Bon~: 14' Hobie w/trailer, bfft 1~':n!c .:;h·u n ~KN~i ....................... SO'Ylnaslll
33' 6W ENS BRIG S/F best offer. tlk).7201 Nw.pt Be~ 92880 x offer. Biii Willia SH.95. Must lff. 67s.40GI ' Michelin X tirt11. 205·15 Miile".,... ..., S.-~day1 Nr new , matched wh .. ewpe>rt Slip, new ao· Seara)', xlnt cond. 9~ UUIACZI' 3'' BO TS ---Honda ST·80 Trail bike 8'2·2'33
crusaders, trana ~ l"°" "'I> Weekender loan. •8/Umo.p~pre~td FOR SAIL Sporty 12' 550 milea. Xlnt cond'. 4'1totf We ;> P• ftad.ar, pHot, alt many extras. &&s-1315 ..... 0_ •t•lmo ln"'udina Sallbotl w/traller $500 ._.. 780........ or tank Ka1~ fa-1y1•·m , ........ • "' ac7 J""l ..vv. vv..JU. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' ""' ... ""' ' tllp. lea..-· '114/"""" ..........,. ""' · -eves s.n.soo•'N44 10' Rubber Rart. wood ........ .............. 8SO KAWASAKI lo ml, IMPORTANT '1 bottomwtthSHPmotor, SH ... ~KS!I. 26'11lander'et,S6SOO clean,maboffer NOTICETO " *ZODIAC* like new, comp $900 or ~ 98 •D2·880t 642-9684 ~~¢~~¥fs~~
!H' POlT..ArM>llMI wRIU 11911 motor aep. 329 38' Pacem er Yacht, 4 ·lll07, ••·08la '80 Harley """tde Glide" The price of items
1 ........ ,..... ochester, C .M . alee.,. ~1 for Chart~r! •11 ........ ,_14 " d 1 .... b n.---IOATS 845·2586. Speclalll.Vl& ln ahark fl•· .-.-80 C.I. ex cond, oil cool. a vert s..... Y vehicle
2925 CoUqe, Costa Mesa , hint off cataUna ltland. with trailer 4' extras. tea th sad baas. Muat dulert In the vehicle (714) 540-2070 18 Glupar Sea Falr 213/37'Mll97. Weekdays. $2600. Eves and Wkends see. aft 6. 993-3843 cla111fled advertlsine
Cabin boat. lOOhp Mere call 847·0646 columns does not In· 280 SEARAY Sundancer OB, trlr. all access! bate loah, Sal 9060 Honda ssoc. aacrlflce, elude any 1ppllcable
w/1Up, '711 lo bra. auto tank, ad cond. '4,000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Udo IV, dolly & cover, runs good, needs paint, taxes, license. tranarer
pilot, alcohol elec stove, 546-8301 Seekinc partner In 34• 11,o75 $290. 845-3406eva. fees, finance charges,
refrt1, dock 1lde pwr & Columbia Sloof· Fee or fee1 for air poUutlon con·
c:h&{Jer, fathomet.er flsh W A NT 1t D 2 o · . 2 ( • leasehold. Cal Brandy &73-4063 '76 HON'DA Gold wing. trol device certifications
llnder, apelco radio Catalina Boat I/0. trlr, 846-4774. c & c 29, 1977, Atomic 41 Full touring equlpmt or dealer documentary tele~. rad1o di.rec· Fg, flab, cruise. 851·1853 wheel, electronics, well· Su per cond. $2, 150. preparation charges un-
tion finder, fUll canvaa, , Cal-20, &ood cond. Clean. equipped, moorlnc 968·8171 leu otherwise spe<:ified
) 84l·825lor964-3Sll '70 17 Tri·HuU Wallt lhru Newport Beach. $3,200. avail. 9'7l-Ol54 by the advertiser
120H.P. Me~. 1/0. l850. P.P. (714)873-7968. 125 HODA.ICA .. -"-• I -
673·8833 Sailboat Capri Cyclone 13 SUS 541-7174 -ciJ..1fc1 9520 -I 4' HOlll $950 with new trailer llOO/of. --------• TlADIWINDS.. GOOd cond. 631·5424 rer. (714>8'2·1714 after HONDA MIMlltt(IS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ n. Chft$ Comdr. sed. - -6pm. XLl'lQ E PUTTllST FIB,a11 ...... 4KW kt'd CAL2Q'1oodcood, SL70 '57T llRD w/eq1.1lp. ~loa.-at N.aails,OlHrlr. heh, H,./ :. XR75 • •
14%. $S9K. ao.ar.r Doclla 9070 551-ssu IM TOWN!
42 n. Unlflite S.F. '78, ••••••••••••••••••••••• IEST OFFER!
low bra~ Osl. rdr n~ People who need people Dock NMdP .. 7 '78 RM 80, modllied. very (~KZ)
KW• ready to #latl . ahould alwayscbffkthe Reas. rat• 675-9720evs fast, must sell. "00.
Sl&sK · ServiCf' Director')' In the 8'2-2811 BlU •'7 ft. Chris Comdr. ftuah DAILY Pit.OT • * • 1 l' beam, up to 30 in --------1
deck, F/~ &lass, dll, ln&th, $275 mo. 311 MotorHOlllft S./
O'Nnerfln.IUOK • Power • t040 Edaew•ter673-1N3 let'lf/Storagi. 9160
8?5-900'1,911()..l'72SevN •••••••••••••••••••••••WANTED: Uve aboard •••••••••-••••••••••••
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
20<•'' Hl\l!BOll Bl VD
CO'>TA Ml'>A 0111 0010
•llP for 43' Gran Mariner WE CAN SELL
bv th & L B YOU '29 Model A Town S4!dan. " mo er son · " R R. V 4 dr, restored. Ideal for ~~ii· ~~[1°{1~:ind~~h~ ss-1304 • student. Sl0.500. ALSO
(1U1894·0684; eves & Rent 23' Lux. mtr home, '4 6 Ford Wood i e.
-BARWICK DATSUN
".o • J~ !'11 ,-.J~1"t' •Wl''
83 1-33 11
•CHIV. MU 'I I
I TOHSTAkl
12 ft. model with Urtcate, duals, air cond., H.D.
springs, pwr. steertn11 aux . tank & more!
Workhorse complete!
(3961).
OMLY $12,491
HOW ARD Chenold
Dove/Q\Lail Sta.
NEWPORT BEACH
llJ.0555
IO YW PICKUP
4 speed, stereo. Clean,
sharp! UWJ.9700)
$5ttS
JIMMAllMO
VOLKSW AGEH 18711 Beach Blvd.
142-2000
1974TOYOTA
PICKUP
With camper shell ,
automatic trans . &
AM /FM stereo .
154095W).
ONLY$2995
MIRACLE. MAZDA
2150 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MF.SA
645-5700 wknd1 (213)823-1350. fully sell cont, $55/dy, restored. S_l3_,soo_. __
...... SpMd& SOO freeml.548-0949 '59 PORSCHE 356 'A' 70 GMC w/camper. good
Sid 9010 Rent: 22' motor home, Cpe. must sell totally cond Makeoffer.
••••••••••••••••••••••• alps 8, self cont, avail. restored, show car black 6'2-8223
18W '77 RANGER 460 6 /20-7 /3. $295/wk. lacquer paint (714 )
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
AND TRUCKS
CONNHL '
CHEVROLET
'"IJ 111• I 1\1.,I
"""1\\1~"'
546-1200
WE MEED
YOUR EXOTIC
&IRmSHCARS
Top Bellar
Paid For Your Cart
JOHMSOM & SOH
U.c•Mlrcwy
2628 Harbor Blvd'.
Costa Mesa 540.5&30
w.r.,
OVER
• .. look
For Your Good
VW. Porsche or Audi
. ..., ...
-' "'~ i \ ~ .. ' . .
VW-PORSCHE-AUDJ
445 E. Coast Hi way
at Bayside Drive Newport Beach 573-0900
Autos, hftported ··············~·~······ AlfalOIMO 9705
1981 ALFA
SPIDERS
BEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
SACRJRCE
'61 Alfa Romero. Body
style 2000. N~ work
$1500/0BO. aft 5 ask for 8111. 675-0345. ---------IMW .FORD Jet. aeata 10, less 640-858S 594-8258 wltdays art 6PM '73 FORD
than 5hrs on~· Bimini --------1 &r weekef)d, iv. Ton pick up. Sl800 or I ~ top, trlr. 3 aklls. rope, R~t 20' motor home, self --------best. 646·4391 aft 5
Hf<N\ I ......... ,_.... l '55 IMPERIAL etc._,.,.,. 971-7295 cont. ~ "'"'· 500 ree One family, low ml.
T,_sportotloa .:~:=DER Dodae __ C_a_l_l e_v_es_._640-_77_'3 __ !~ ............. !!?.~
9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For The Best
Buy Or Lease Deal
In Orange County ...
Come See Us Today!
' GLASPAR & trailer. mere. f llll.Y eq w pped.
'$1S00. 675-S886
JO' SIOPJAClt
1973
X)af Cond. Low hrs. Many amenlties. $7500.
PPfff-9617 aft6PM
ishlng boat w/moon~e
for ~. Dys 547-6561 ;
nJgbt.s 631-11196
11·1--ww.r
10~ hp evinrude, rns
great. mny xlras, Inc
vhf,fm, bic whl trlr
$4700.144-1006
ave 1omethln1 you
wan&i-to sell? Claasillad
adS""do It w.eu. 642-5671.
TWIN l30 VOLVO'S!
LARGE FLY BRIDGE!
LARGE REAR DECK FOR
FISHING OR ENTERTAINING!
BAIT TANK!
LARGE CABIN W/HEAD.
GALLEY & INDOOR CONTROLS!
OFfftlS OVER $10,000 TAKa.
Yoo won't find anything this dl8llP again
C••••••••••:~••••••••• 22· -leeps 6, dnt cond.1--------·1 ·11 FORD Bubble-lop ----/ i '41 FonlDeliaeC-Camper Van, all OP· • .!:&'..... 912 32000M .-,00seeat 231 H Ch ·-lions, clean. $559" ...,. SberwoodPIC.M. as a ev engine, 645 7226 ., •••••••••••••••••••••• 5'S-Jl'3 needs rewiring, 1ood __ . ______ _ 10~ Camper Four Star tires ls need.a paint & re· D o d g e V a n . 7 4 .
w /refricerator & stove. TraUen, TNYet 9170 upho tering. Tradesman 100. orig
Port -a -potty . AU ••••••••••••••••••••••• Calt645-5913toaee. owner, top cond. Auto.
Butane, Queen size bed. Mlnl trailer · compact Pwr brk. air. truck tires. Sleeps 6. In excellent car. Kllch, awning, port 63 ooo · · 1 condition. $1500. Call 11 potty. SlSOO, 548-2497 4 Wheel Dn•ft 9550 · ma, cust mt. s ps 4.
between 10am-5pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _E_v_e_.55_7_·745_7 ___ _
631-7657 · '65 Alrstream 1979 SUIARU · 6 s o O o G E v a n
Motomed libs 9140 ~:~~n~~~ C:t~·w;!'i, 4 sp!~: ~fn~Ol• roof equippeds7t~
••••••••••••••••••••••• TV rotQtors, sips 4. rack. (660WYM ).
13·500· 66l-l844. ONLY $3995
559-4769 Aljo trailer, '71. 181"8', self MIRACLE MAIDA ----.-------1 cont. xlnt cond, $2950. 2150 Harbor Blvd
Assum •79 Trans Van not
contained. $297 /mo
975 03211556-0571 Mary
wkdays Moped 1976 Batav~. 345 PP 548·6263 COSTA MESA
mi. turn Sl8nals, xlnt 645-5700 '78 Ford •, ton, xlnt rond.
cond $350. 675-4433 '79 Midas, 31' • almost --------See to appreciate Must
3100 W. Coast Hwy Newport Beach 642.94(X5
TOPSDOLURS
For Clean Used
Cars & Trucks We pay cash on the spot •
Contact buyer al
De Santis c-.,...
San Clemente
83 I ·0580 492-8500
Premium pnces
paid for any used car
(foreign or domestic l
in good condition.
See Us First!
r-sou·, N l.uAST
:_&
SAOllEBACK
BMW
28402 Marguerite Pkwy
Mission Viejo Avery Pkwy. exit
(off 5 Freeway)
831 -2040 495-4949
Closed Sundays
new, loaded. 7000 m1. ·74 BLAZER 4X 4. xlnt sell $3800 Moped, Motobecane S2S.000ort.akeoverpay. cond w/many extras. 84().4853
Moby. Xlnt cond. 500mi. ments. 960-0370 h1rd /sofl top $3600 ............ W-......~
Askin& $400. 875-8448 ' b · 1 631-0317 -.vi llllD'C'U '59 16 S asta Trat er __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 PecarMoMd sleeps 4, propane con-Trucks 9560 WEPAYTOPDOLLAR
... Dodge
The Most bcitincJ
Part Of Your
BMW PurchoH Or
LHM COllld le
McLaren BMW!!
luyOrl.eOM
ly Ow Phone rt.!
171 4J 522-5333
ORAM GE COUNTY'S
OLDEST 38mi.~ &61-8972 tained'7504'7·1219 ••••••••••••••••••••••• for top used cars· :!8118 llaibor Ahd
l'o!>lJ \h•'>J 5-44> 0330 .& 9100 A..tos, Mew 9100 1979DATSUM
KIMGCAI
Pickup. 5 speed trans.
air cond.. radio. bum-
pers. m11Tors & looks
like NEW! llf..5.4390).
<SUt. ~). Offer good
lhru 6/7 /81.
MOW$l995
HEWPOttT DA TSUM
888 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH
Ill-I 300
forei~n . domestics or
classics. If your car is
extra clean. see us
FIRST!
~
#I ht Or_,. C-.ty
2925 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
979-2500
'60 FORD~ TON W AHT TO IUY
With full camper, low '61 -'66 T·Bird Conv .
mileage, $2200. 675-4568 (714) 548-2664 6 lo 8 PM
We buy
CARS & TROCKS
TOP$$$$$$
Sales-Service-Leasing
Roy Carver.Inc.
Rolls ltoyce BMW
559.5790
WANTED!!
Cl.-Imports
Top Doll.er er
Paid!!
Call Jim H09an
Mike Lab c ..... Moton
1540Jamboree Newport Beach 640-6444
'68 1600, good body/in ·
tenor. good mech. needs
Jillie minor work. $2200.
494 1475 -----or BMW 320i '79, a le. stereo,
cass. 26K mi, SU,000 Or
bes t oHer 640-5666 aft 6
or wknds. 835-3171 '66 Ford Econoline P/U lo Wanted '79 short bed -'77 BMW 320i. blac.k on
miles, auto, good Cond camper shell "Snug" or Find what you want In black. sunroof. xlnt
$1800 OBOS.S.1800 "Stockland" 552-4679. Daily Pilot Classifieds. cond. must seU.493-7076
Alltos, Mew tlOO 4-tos, Mew 9100 Autos, Mew 9100 Autos, Hew 9100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ON ANY NEW OR USED VOLKSWAGEN
We are a small family owned dealership, and a little hard to find
(we are out In the country) but ... once you find us, you'll find us
hard to beat!! I Give us a. call today.
78' 'fO"IO'TA 'fRUCK 't~ ~ ~ (/Jl/tsO 5 SClll wltll car ""'4 and llf, MA FIA
--y~ ---"°""' uuck I\ .,on'\ \II at '* ~ ~Mo. 1\.34109
()tltntd $60S4·96 cllh l'f\C914SS9.02 ~Pf' 2,.57
$4277
9399 tj57 .11
oOWM 36 MO.
RETAIL PRICE $13,723
01scouN1 . ';' $3oQQ NOW $10,723
$1495 O()'#M
~ .. ; ..... . --. . . . ·""'. .. . ---...... -... __ ....... ..,,,.,,... .,.,_ ... .,..u ........ ---·---______ .,.,,...,.. ...
'llO Tarca, blk,w/rull tan llhr Int., elartn, aUoya,
'500ml. sa.aoo. 7S9-0920,
551-8984
'79CKIV. ~u• "" ~-,..::~
tr\ftl.111-"1
IEACH IMPORTS
8'I Dove Street
• NEWPoRT BEACH
'79 Cellca GT Cpe, Cully
loaded . AM/FM 8 trk ste~. 1nrf, air, $5500
559-5'89
SAUS.-Ytcl
AHDLIAllMG
OVERSEASDElJVERY
EXPERTS
'72 Super BUG new '
radials, mags, cass,
$2700
67~74
'67 VW Bm, 7 ,000 mi on
new eng. Receipts. Gd.
cond. in & out. $2,200.
\ 673-9506 I
'74 VW Convt. New paint,
new top, rblt eng, $5000.
642-8135 eves
Sharp '70 Squareback,
xlnt cond. $1750/ 080.
963.«)44 ev. 846-3'20 dy.
'77 Rabbit, 4 dr, sunroof,
auto. am/fm cass, a/c,
med. blue, orig. owner.
$'250. 751·2"5
'19 Convertible, over·
hauled "U motor, xlnt.
$3750. 546-1377
'73 Super &a. xlnt cond,
nu paint/int, beaut.,
must see. AM/FM cass.
$2650. 494.1475
'79 VW Co nvt .
Black/Brwn llbr int.
German top, 2001 radial
Nerdl wheels, best there
is~Sll,000. 499-1919days
1l TO CHOOSE FROM ALL DISCOUNTED
*700
I IWIW>LI STK. ISll
UST 11711OtSc.SMSALE1112
COR~ 11 TO (HOOSE FROM
ALL DISCOUNTED
*2000
S]OOQ
••1Utc1
A rea~oold9a two tone blue, front
wheel *ive • a hl1ttly economiiell quality car.
C201XXJ'). Wu $7295 :
MOWS6995
" ltMIUICK
.. AL
Bulcll'1 IM&Olber one sell·
in& car I Gold with tan
trim, ab eond. & wire
wbeel1. (111981 > Was
$7895;
MOWS7395
...... UM4 ...... UMd ...... UHd Atlto1, UHd A.wtot, UHd Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 5, 1981 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ .......... !!.·.~ ~ ............ !!.~ ~:!1 .......... !!.~~ ~:!1 .......... !!~~ ~~ .......... !!~~ ~~·.~~~ ........... ~~ ....... !!~~1~ ... ~~........... . ... ~·.~~~~........ .. .. .,.
7t CAl&LAC g Qodf• Coronet Wan. ORANGEOOUNTY'S 74 M9... 1965 FORD 11'4 952 lt72 OLDS OW.mob• 9955 PCNtffoc tf65 ••
C0 ... "'8.11 Oood trane. •Int motor. ,.., Brouaham 4 dr Only MUST ... ~ GT ...... 9 c ...... __ s... .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···············•••#•••• .. DllSIL 1'150 M-2* LINCOLNMEl\CURY ' . AnW ....................... ---· w '781' m \M er la ..11-wbetl · ¥ DEALERSHIP 66.000 ml. Orli owner. In aood condltlon l '65MUSTANOxlntcood. Coupe: Jn uceptlot1ll '71 Olda CuLlau '°° l~P<t '2'1 ... u •· ""-COV· ~ 9940 • . l1995.54S-&788 Automatlctranl ~disc new radial• usoo coodlhon for µie year Brou1bam.Ort1owner. en14o4~.· 9'f111• ~~· 1f•:!:d ~:0.~':~1
.......... _ ........... ~ ~ldftil.•· brakes Make orter Call 962·3433 with LOW m1le1, air will r1n, &d oond. many $6230. 11. ,.-_
,a r · lt"18 Ford Torino Sl.200, '76CW'I 842.9924 lf no answer ~ " cond. " unmarked xtru . $4495/080 °78 Trani Arp. n ·o or best offer. Call of\ LJNCOtN·MERCURY Xlnt cond. f5,700 mi. PLEASEkeeptryl,na• • 74 Mustang II, orl1. metalllc blue paint 84:1-7431 tapedtock n wtlr .
3PM,642-8680 ~·18AutoCenterDr. SWU'ool.racerred,$2900 -owner , a c, ps, xlnt (275ETO>.Waa$2!15; U500 • ~ill'~·i
'78 Ford Granada g cyl, S Fwy.Lil Forest ex.it 0 B 0 or I & owner 1970 FOaD cond, $2000. S75-Sl63 HOWS 1995 Plftto • · 9957 '· · ·'
pe,8·trk,64,000mJ. Orig. 8ll'!.V17NOOEO 975.3217 MUSTANG '"a auto P IS &ood int ••••••••••••••••••••••• CponvtelrtibGle~_J'u•-l11tl owner '2895/080. """ Seethlaooetobelle\eit! ""· · • " 19710LD$'1 "14 Runabout, auto. 218.000 on at-r .. "~· ... 4\11 . 559-t860 Great ramlly & vacation Ver y original stock Sl300/080 l-yeo-, ml vety good cond, pwr . crulst-. lilt, qu11d
1971..aCUIY car'78 Mere. l.eph. Wgn. Looks &drives lake a one 644-0452 __ This -~11 loidedt SlSOo.546-tm s tereo XLN1 Mnd.
'78 LTD Landeau xlnt ZIPHYICOUPI Lo ml. air. auto. ps. 81K. year old car. Automatic OkhMObh 9955 Moonroof" Landau top, NOr81&~~!1,J,~~dyi!'\~\U'r
--A lom1' ......... Z7. Automatktnns., air 645-4440. trans •-aa· r cond .... ,, ........, "vuu, • _...,., · "' • ••••••••••••••••••••••• pwr. 1ea'8, lllt, cru~e ......... _....... 996 · · · "5·6118 759-5753 cood •• AM/FM cauette, -(893BSM J TtUs car wUI . 2 C C 1 9 stereo, air cond.. wire •• ,_ vinyl top, chrome wire Must9") 9952 appreciate! 7 us tom ru ser w bee 11 Ii m 0 re ! ••ho•• .... ••••-•••• '70 Pont1at· f'1141lth •I,
Pty desire 73.74 LTD. wheels & only 36.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOW 52995 pau. ata. win. $400 <063ZBX). Wut..W95; 71 PLYMOUTH formula 400 Nu '''"'" -.:..--------! xtra clean, lo mi, amall miles! (4~VZV>. ~ 7S2·0558aft.5pm HORIZOHSEDAN $1995.842-31:.i:c
'79 Seville, Eleaante. ~~~·3Sl. Anthony, OHLYS4895 '66 FB 2+2 VS, auto. '750lds118Re1ency,2dr.. HOWS5695 4 apeed, air. 28,000 Vega '974
sharp, lo ml. Snrf. MllACUMAJDA beaut. cond! New pnt/· full power. Ori& owner ~ miles . Like new ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loaded. $11,900. Eves. '71 Galaxy, 2 d.r .. xlnt 215-0HarborBlvd. tsres/brabs,easytoap-$2295 . 774 -91t00 da ($61UVR) '74GT.Jomivn11c"1·11 i.:
(714) 142-8874, da (213) cond, air, Sl.200 rlrm COSTA MESA preclate. $3000640-1876. 64G-0441after5 PM. $3695 Xlnt cond
681·2613 IUS·6206 645-5700 ,65 Muat.wa Zl9 #1 111 °'9ft c.-y Estate Sale JIM"MARIMO S5'7·~t.>q·~
'81 Eldorado, 4000 ml, '68 Ford Falrlane. p/b, '77MonarchGhlaloaded, VB auto. A/t:,, very 2925Harbor8lvd '770meaa.4d.r .sllver · ' VOLKSWAGEN
leather, 2 tone brown, p/s, xlnt cond $950. Call 43K ml, always gar'd, sharp. $249.5 COSTA MF.SA w 'black top, lo mi #I Ill Or-.. c--. 18711 Beach Blvd .
.$17,000. 837·3'7'4 <714)549·3112. $2800 PP&44-2766 SS2·ms. 638·1131 979-2500 M·F, 8-4, 759·4382 2925 Harbor Blvd. 842-2000
COSTA MESA 70 Cad . Convert, all Autos; Mew 9100 Atftoa, Ntw 9100 ..,..., New 9100 Autos, Mew 9100 Autos, Mew 9100 9794500
xtras. xlnt cond. S2500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••,., ........... ----------• 080. 642-8223
63 Cadlllac 4 dr, new
paint & poUsb. Good
tires, clean int .. runs
aood. 74,000 orlc mi ..
S9SO or olr. Day 975· 7834;
Evs, 646-1523
'80 C.D.W. Perf. cond. 2
tone brh' fire mist paint,
beiae leather int, tilt
whl, wire covers, vogue
ti res. crulle, tourin&
susp., heavy duty
radiator, am /fm
stereo/dllUal clock/
c ass. $13,000 (irm.
975.()0111 days; 752·6'532.
O.tofl&Sale '79 Fleetwood Brougham, loaded !
$9250. '78 Eldorado, sharp.
$7995. Chuck Perry
549-8871
c ...... •••••••••••••••••••••••
1971 CHIVROUT
CAMAlO?Ja
Automatic trans .. air cond., pwr. windows, tilt
wheel, cruise control &
under 20,000 miles.
(60122).
ONLYS5995
MllACLI MADA
2150 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
645-5700
'79 Camaro, It blue,
am/fm cass, a/c, xlnt
cond, $5500. 851·5073 aft.
6.
'78 Z 28: Rebuilt, new
brakes , new tires,
c ustom int. T ·Top.
Sanyo Bl-Amp. Stereo.
$6500. 556-1737
Cht•rolet
SEE US FIRST! We have a 1ood selection
o f NEW• USED Chevrolet& I
CONNELL
C HEVROLET
....... ~ 11' •
' ,....., : . \' ~ .
~46-1 200
'78 Caprice Clusic 4 dr, •
2-lone, am/fm stero. ale. a/t, pb, ps, $3970.
968-5230. lpm-7pm
'77 Caprice Classic. 4 dr.
loaded, lo ml. pvt pty.
Best offer. 644-2242
'76 Malibu Classic wgn,
loaded w/extras, lo mi,
$2500. 64().0076
'80 MALIBU Classic, 2dr.
fully equip, mint cond.
6200 mi. 752-lOlD
'74 Caprice, tdr, gd cond.
Loaded. $1,SSO best of·
fer. 64$-2331 eves.
'80 Moina, 4-cyt, 4·spd,
Hatchback. AM /FM,
$4.550. 641-0140
'74 Caprice classic 2 dr,
loaded, low mileage,
best offer 8M-C74.
'72 Mo111e Cerio
Good buy! $950!
97N533
•••••••••••••••••••••••
'63 Coovt. new eng, & top.
22M PO, Sl400
.. 5526
c ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 T-Top 427.390 bp, 4
spd, 1 owner. $5800
87~3635
·79 Sliver T -Top ,
pinstripes, dual exhaust.
$10,000. 6'5-SS28.
'75 Conette Tita, white,
excellent condition
75'-8581
'77 ·veue, white w.
buckskin Int, beautiful
car, fl985.1·~11
VAN
CONVERSION
$8995
1981 DODGE 8·150 VAN
CONVERSION
Dodge B· 160 van convefSIO!\ 6 cyl engine, 4 speed transmission. 36
Qa1on tallk. beaulrful custom paint, carpet and panetlng, hi-bad< seats.
reatbly windows. custom mag wtleelS. plus much. rructl, men
(71251) (252513)
THE PERFECT SOLUTION
FOR THAT VACATION
TRIPI
'81' COL BYMITSUBISHI
And ai $548 lbod; Colt beats Tercel Uftbeck. Honda CMc: 1500,and
Datsun 31 O on stid<ef price.
$499ooww $157 .01Mo
Cash prloe Incl. Tax, Lie., and Ooc Fees. APR 17.09 DellfTed .. ...... $5481
ID 502565
PLYMOUTH
SPORT
Plymouth Sport TC3 Coupe
with 4 speed. alf conditlonlnG. A
GREAT GRADUATION GIFTI
10 No. ML24A90168042
\
$3795 .
TOYOTA
·Toyota SRS Coupe with 5
IPled trwmlsslon. air, 1NO
wtlellt. A REAL BEAUTY!
Uc No.715Kll
CADILLAC
Cdllc Coupe Deville with
57,000 miles, automatic trans.,
power steering, power brakes
power windows, air. Stlreo
Uc No. 509JLC
$2395
DODGE
VAN
Dodge van with 1Uloma1JC
transmission, powtr Sleet!~
HARO TO FIND!
Uc No. 1C57709
DATSUN
Dat.soo 8210 two dOof wttn
tour speed ma~ trans.
GRADUATION SPECIAU
Uc. No. 478TXN
$3495
Pontiac ven1 .. a with automatlc
transnisslol\ power steering, a
REAL STEAU
Uc. No.201 WPB
1981 .C'.icAR
1981 K Car with front whfff dive, four •peed tNn•
mlaalon, and a beeutlful J-t Black paint with bodyald•
moldlng. '
$5995
19,81 I
BROUGHAM
lltustrattd picture one d meny modetl milabla
$14,995
_10 No. 74028
Make summer traveling luxuious
and comfortable in a travel
vanl by Dodge.
DELIVERY DATE
JUNE 28
VolksNgon 9 passenger bUs
with b.r 5'*"' manual
trans.. and sun roof. GREAT
FOR VACATION'
Uc. No. 3 i 5XVZ
$7295
CADILl:.AC
cadllllc 4 door with automatic
transmission. Ilk. power stNr·
Ing, power windows, sttreo
llPI dick.
Uc. No. 070ANC
Datsun 510 2dr Sedan with
automatic transtrlsslon and
light beige paint
A REAL STEAU
Uc. No. 672WCK
$3995
Pontiac Safari 9 passeoget
wagon wttll IUllOmltlc b'lns-
mlsslon. poWer steering, air,
power Windows. rel L l'llck
A GREAT FAMILY CAR!
UC. No. 568XXQ
!-
) . •; ..
.·.
,. '' ..... ' ..
• .. , I(
Orange Coast DAILY PfLOT/Frlday, June 5, 1981
Equipment Includes economical 4 cyl.
engln$, 4 speed transmissiC>n'; left rimote
mirror, max. cooling. bench seat, body side
moldings, white sidewall glass belted radial
tires and morel (145687).
1981 IMPERIAL
DEMONSTRATOR
Economical 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans.,
b1,1cket seats with fotd down rear seat, tinted
glass, elec. clock. body side moldings, max.
cooling, glass betted rad ial tires and morel
(108773).
Equipment Inc I udes V8 , auto ma tic
transmission, power steering, power brakes,
bucket seats, body side & deck stripes, wh lte
sidewall glass belted radial tires and morel
(136529).
Load«l Inc. auto. trwls., air cond., pwr. at.-brakH·wtndow.,..pllt
leathereeets. AM-FM 1wreo with •pe. tilt, crulM,
custom wheels, wsw atMI belted radial tlr• Md much, much morel (111431).
1977 PLYMOOTH
YOLARE WAGON
Automatic trans., air cond., pwr. 1"9rlng &
brakes. radio, luggage rack, waw til'98 Ii
morel (023TDH).
52595
~l~loi'11ill
LC>llded Inc. auto. tran1.. air oond., pwr.
at.·brakaa·apllt Hat-wlndowa-dr. looks,
AM-FM a track. vtnvl top, tllt, cnMa & morel
(417UCT~ s
•ou1smvte1
DIPAITMINT AIOUT UtmN•
A 'I I CHIYSLa 01 PLYMOUTH:
2· fires char
· 3,509 acFes
J=ISH FAY FESTIVITIES -Kristy MacFarland, 4, of Costa
!Mesa checks out rides at the Costa Mesa Lions Park
.baseball field. Carnival is part of the 36th annual ~sh Fry,
.... "" ...................
sponsored by Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club.
Details of weekend activities plus a map on how to get there can be found today on Page D·l.
SAN BERNARDINO <AP) -
Two bru1bfirea that raced
throup the b1lla near Colton and
Rivel'Ude blackenln& more than
3,SOO acrea inaururated the sum-
mer brushfire season, threaten.
inc homes and causing at leut
el&ht Injuries to flrefiihtera, authorities said today.
The flrefithters ,..ere treated
for smoke inhalation and minor
burns while battling a 2,500-acre
blaze that burned gara1es and
slnced roofs on the edee of
Colton.
The fire then climbed tbroup
the mountain canyons separat-
1 n g San Bernardino and
RI verside counties and came
within about 10 feet of jolnlnC a 1,000-acr~ flre that threatened
homes in the city of Riverside on
Thursday night, said Randy
Wilson cl. the state Department
of Forestry.
Firefighters said the blazes
were separated by Pigeon Pass
Road today. The Riverside blaze
had been contained by midniaht
Thursday. However, officials
didn't think the Colton flre would
be contained until mid-day.
Shortly after the Colton fir'I!
started at mid-day Thursday,
the San Bernardino County
Sheriff's Department advised
residents of Westwood Drive ln
Colton to prepare to evacuate.
Flrefipten moved from rooftop
. to rooftop to battle the blue
throu1h th4 bruah.
Many retldents be1an watet-
lnl their roofs; hones and clop
were freed from their pena, and
rabbits could be seen dart.ma out
of the path of the names.
But the fire moved on before
ao evacuation was necessary,
said Sheriff's Deputy Hector
DeCampo.
•·When I was cominJ back
from the bank, I saw the
flames," said Rose Anderson.
''So I rushed back up here and
got my invalid mother and two
dogs out. I can tell you, I sure
wasn't dilly-dallying around."
Five air tankers dropped fire
retardant on the flamea aa
crews from the state Depart·
ment of Forestry , San
Bernardino, Colton, Loma Unda
and Redlands city fire depart·
ments joined in.
The Colton fire burned into
Reche Canyon and then into
Pigeon Pass east of Rivenide,
where it inched toward the blue
that had consumed beehive. and
threatened homes in the
Riverside County seat .
The Riverside fire, wbJcb
be1an about 3 p.m. Thursday,
threatened 200 homes at the foot
of Mt. Sugarloaf .
• nominee
'lrogress
ieen at :;?:::. ~bmmit
IRUSALEM (AP> -Prime -• ter Menachem Begin 1ot
·_::backin1 he wanted from
· ident Anwar Sade.t in their
1-·mit conference on the
li.Syrian missile crlsll. But
n refused the Egyptian's re-
for an end to Israeli at·
s on Palestinians In
em Lebanon.
·e leaders met six hours
•• sday ori the southern cout of
~linai peninsula, which Israel
··return to Egypt by next April.
i(~olnt news conference, Sadat
• · ed Syrian President Ht.fez
d for the Lebanese crisis and
4$ld he asked Begin to a now "am·
pldime" for U.S. envoy Philip C.
~b to work out a peaceful set-
8i$ent. ~gln said he accepted "the
tiilitest of my friend Pretident
I to give more lime to Mr.
p Habib to try to solve the
in Lebanon, caused by the
ns. by peaceful means."
Sadat said he also asked Begin
''to end the raids on the Pal·
estlans" In Lebanon, but
the Israeli leader made it clear
tflese would continue. He said tt.e Paiest.lnlans were planning
"day and night to carry out
murderous attacks against our
~pie," and "what we do ls an
~t of le1itimate sell-defense in
tfte highest moral sense.''
Habib was l .. vtn1 Washington
tbday for more meetings with
Ar11b and Israeli leaders, belin·
qlng in Saudi Arobia.
The crisis he is trylnl to re·
solve ls due to the surface-to-air
mlasilea Syria deplo)"ed in
tastern Lebanon around th.e
Christian city of Zable, where
lyrlan soldien have been bet.-Wine the Chri1tlan Pbalan1e
Party'• militia 1lnce April 1.
lyria moved the Soviet-made
SAM ·S m111Ues there ln late
April aft« laraeU planea •bot
Jcn~n two Syrian heUcoptera
•n'atln1 atllinlt the Chrl1Uana.
Sadat calfed for the
&bdrawal not only of the mil··
,.., but alto of the 22,000 troops
'1rta bu kept AD Lebaaoe linH ~· 197$-78 civil war Uiere.
MHd da&ID9 .... lfOOPI .....
i cetMPIDI army to enforce armlaUee that ended. th•
U war betwMn tbe lilbtilt
a;.baMle Cbii.ltlam And the al·
ll'ince of leftlat J;ebaaeae
,~ma and Palettlnlan suer·
MIDWAY PRQTEST -Japanese demonstrators chant protest
slogans as the U.S. aircraft carrier Midway returns to its
home port at Yokosuka Uiis morning. The vessel bas been
AP---
Caught in controversy over alleged stationin~ of nuclear
weapons on Japanese soil. (See story, Page A4)
Eyes watering as more smog hi sight
Second-stage ozone alerts possible; fires add to Riverside air problem
87 Tiiie Aleoda&ed Pf'ffl
Little Nlief wu Jn 1t1ht for
tbe tint liqe of 1qmmer •mos
that platued the SouthtNl
California area. authorlUes said.
The Air Quality Manasement
District aald there was a
poealbllity ol MCOnd 1ta1e 010De
alertl today which would re-
quire lndllltriea to curtail opera-
tions. Hip temperaturn and little
wind TbundaJ contributed to
what the AQMD called the
smoa1leat day of the year.
"We've bad epJJodea ol smoe
11nce February, but we've been
movinl eraduallr toward tbla -
tlae fint day of truly typical
summer •moe conditions," 11ld
Jeff Schenkel <A tbt South Oout
AtrQuality Coatfol Dlltrtct.
Air quality wu not helped b1
'two bl'Ulbllrea tlaat broke oat ln
th• San Bemardino·Rlvenlde
The bilhest temperature of
the year, 90 detrees, wll re·
corded ta downtown Loe Ansel•
on Thunday with the aame or
hither temperatures predicted
today.
corded 105, San Bernardino 106,
and Burbank 100.
Explaining the weather
chante from Tuesdaf '1 overcut
skies and spfln.kles, O'Louahlln
aatd, "We have a larie and im·
preuive hilh pressure rid1e
that bu just liven us some lipt
offshore wtna now that swept
away tbe low cloudJ that we
bad. Allo, It's uaoclated with
1iatln1 air1 which bull up
fa1ter than ruins air."
The amoe W&I pred,cted , to
be particularly heavy today
aro.and the induatrial city ol Fon·
taaa 1ald James Blrak09 ti the
AQM D. He added tbatlf tbe wlndl
are u lllh\·• they were Thun·
day' the aeeond 1ta1e man eould
eaallybereacbied. -··-·-· Wbm a ..eoftd.,taa• .itll\ II
called. Blrd• Hid, ind..VW
plaata tbroupout tbt Soatb
COHt Alr BaalD muat •••
me4'•~PI .... , :;1U1n1111 =-.............. ., . .. ........ .. , -=· ..... ,=:-., = .. tM two "*'"' • .... .. tllile tni'" ..... ttoa UtM ;lal*ri 'tHOMra
C"'*1• '*r"',_·
~ . .
Lefever
p;rospects . .,_
in doubt
WASHINGTON (AP> -ID a
preliminary defeat for President
Reaaan. the Senate Foretp
Relations Committee today
overwhelmingly rejected IU1
nomlnaUon of Erilest W. J.Alfl'r«
aa human rilhts chief.
And Democratic and
Republican leaden dilap-eed oo
Lefever•s prospects for be.inl
confirm~ by the full Senate
assistant secretary of state for
human rights.
The committee voted 13-4 to
recommend that the Senate kill
the nomlnaUon.
Republict.n cht.lrman Charles
H. Percy's opposition -a major
defection ara.inlt the Republic.an
president -was disclosed la a
draft statement obtained by Tbe
Associated Press.
"I reeretfuUy vote a1ain5t the
Lefever nomination," the state·
ment said. "The credibility of
the administration• s concern
and the effectiveneu of its
policy on human rights will de·
pend to a crucial degree" oo
who ls human richts chief.
"I do not think Dr. Lefever I.I
a 1u1table candidate for that
role," Percy's statement st.id.
Reprdless of the committee
vote, Senate Republican leader
HowJrd Baker said Thursday a
head count showed prospects
are ,good that the full Senate
woutd vote to confirm Lefever.
Senate Democratic Whip Al•
Cranston, however, said be
thinks opponents may be able to
"simply vote down the nomina·
lion" in the Sen•te.
<See LEFEVEa, Pase A!)
Sunny today wttb Jow
clouds and early monlinl
cloud.I cleartna tb1I after.
11001\. lncreulna low .
clouds toni&ht and earl)'
"Saturday, becomina m•t·
ly 1unny Saturda7 after·
noon.
llllllTIMY
.,.
Orange Coaat OAJL Y PILOT/Friday, June 5, 1881
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
<AP) A judae has denied a
59-year-old man permi11lon to
marry a 13-year-otd be made
pre11nanl, saying the union
would nol be in the best lnterest
of the mother-to-be or her un-
born child.
•'The court la of the opinion
that this marriage would ~
doomed to failure," Pinellas
County Judge Horace Andrews
said Thursday in denying an ap-
plication for a marriage license
by S.T. Shedd and Lucinda
Shuohmacher. 1
Thursday was to have been
the couple's wedding day.
The couple went to Andrews
on Monday because under state
law, a marriage license cannot
be granied to someone under 16
unless the applicants are
parents of a child or have a doc·
tor's sta~meot vertfyinc preg·
nanc~.
Shedd said he fathered the
baby. The couple gave the judge
a consent form the glrl claimed
was signed by her mother.
But tbe mother later said she
never signed the form and had
no Idea her daughter was apply·
Ing for a license.
The coupJe also provided blood
tests and a doctor'• letter aayina
the teen-ager was about six
months pregnant April 30.
After talking with the couple,
Andrews referred the cue to the
Florida Department of Health
and Rehabilitative Services and
to the state attorney's office,
asking that the circumatan~
be inveat11ated.
Assiatant State Attorney Mary
McKeown said Florida law
forbids intercourse with som e·
one wider age 18 and of pre·
viou1 chaste character. Viola·
tions are punishable by up to 1S
years in prlson and a fine of
$10,000.
Ms. McKeown said slle wasn't
certain the law wquld apply.
Mrs. McKinley said sbe
believes her dauehter, who wu
placed ln QRS juvenile custody
Wednesday foreed her name
because "she's wanting to cive
ber baby a name."
The Judge also noted that Miss
Schuhmacher apparently had
not been going to school recular-
Fair seeks
Country Girl
beauty
Orange County beautlea have
until June 13 to enter the Coun·
try Girl p3geant July 5 in Costa
Mesa.
The Country Girl title will go
to the girl who gets most points
as judged in jeans and casual
top, a party dress and a one·
piece swimsuit, said a
spokeswoman ror the Orange
County Fair.
Entrants between the ages of
17 and 25 must reside In the
county and represent the aMual
fair during its 10-day run at the
rairgrounds across from t he
Costa Mesa City Hall.
Also to be chosen are three
Country Cousins and a Most
Phot oge nic Girl, the'
spokeswoman said.
SIGHT AT LAST -The Mino brothers of
Quito, Ecuador, albinos legally blind since
birth, try on special glasses that will enable
them to regain 90 percent of sight. The
AP ........
brothers -Edgar (left), 37, Reinaldo, 18, and
Byron, 31, were fitted Thursday by Dr.
Richard Brilliant in Philadelphia.
Prizes for winners inlude
trophies, flowers, gifts and cash.
Winner of the Country Girl title
will be entered in the National
Orange Show's Citrus Queen
pageant.
Entry forms and information
are available by calling pageant
director Fran Mauck at 771-8032
or Eleanor Jorgensen, 635-4883. Funds limited
for abortions
WASHINGTON <APJ -The
strictest restrictions on federal
financing of abortions ever ap-
proved by Congress would ban
women from receiving Medicaid
funds to end a pregnancy this
year unless their Lives are en·
dangered.
The House and Senate ap-
proved the restrictions, part of a
· $13.2 billion suppletnenlal spend·
ing bill tor 1981, in separate
voice votes Thursday and sent
the measure to President
Reagan.
Assembly approves
King state holiday Cops' canine
dies in chase
A bill making Jan. 15 a school
holiday in honor of slain civic
rights leader Martin Luther
King has been approved by the
California Assembly.
The bill, approved 43;24 Thurs·
day , now heads to lbe stale
Senate where Newport Beach
Sen. John Schmitz has vowed to
oppose it vigorously.
Schmitz, a Republican, has
called King a "Communist
fellow traveler.'' He claims
King is unworthy of having a
holiday in his honor.
LOS ANGELES (AP )
semblywoman Marian Bergeson Rooster. a police search dog, fell
said holidays have become to his death while pursuing a
meaningless, just "a trip to the suspected burglar, officials said.
beach." It was the first death of a de· One assemblyman, though, partmenl canine in the line of
said Kine was unpatriotic for his duty.
stance against the Vietnam War. Rooster had been driven to the
Los Angeles Assemblywoman scene of a downtown bur&lary
Maxine Waters said other na· Thursday, where he picked up a
tiooal figures who are honored scent and followed it to the
with holidays probably could not seventh-floor, according police
stand close scrutiny on such spokesman Lt. Dan Cooke. The
things as slavery, a reference to dog apparently slipped while
George Washington. trying to jump across to another
ly and hu no training or
employment skUls. Shedd works
only occasionally aa a house
painter, he sald.
Mrs. McKinley said she
brought her daughter and 11·
year-old son to St. Petersburg
from Jacksonville about a
month ago, partly to get away
from Shedd and bis son. She said
Shedd's son is her former
boyfriend.
I n Jacksonville , Mrs.
r.tcKlnley said, she, her children
and the elder Shedd were living
REBUFFED NOMINEE
Ernest W. Le/ever
From Page A1
LEFEVER • • •
Reagan has stood fast behind
Lefever's nomination , which
snagged over his statements
that human rights violations by
non·communist countries could
be dealt with better by private
persuasion instead of publ:c
pressure.
Edwin Meese Ill. Reagan's
counselor, described Lefever on
Thursday as "a .man who for
years has labored in the
vineyards of idealism and im-
proved foreign policy end better
relationships with other nations
and for the cause of human
rights."
"The president feels no one
has come up with any reason yet
why he shouldn't be fully sup.
ported," Meese told The As-
sociated Press Broadcasters As·
sociation.
in the same place to share e~
penses.
When she learned hef
daughter was preanant , sh'
said, she went to authorities in
J acksonvllle, but said no
charges were ever brought. 1
Now, Mrs. McKinley said, sbt
bopes her daughter will give up
her baby for adoption and go 04l
with her life.
"She's a very intelligent girl,'
said the mother. "And she's a
very good actress, if you kno\f
what I mean." '
Sex ·educatio
limits sought
by senators
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Th~ state Senate, apparently touch
by a fundamenta>ist protea
against a sex educ4Uon manu
for teachers, waqts' to limit sd
education funding.
It voled 21-6 Thursday to sen~
SB697 by Sen. Dan O'Keefe, R;
Cupertino, to the Assembly. i
The manual never reached th~
teachers. State school Superin•
tendenl Wilson Riles scrapped i{
after the protest last year. Th.1
manual suggested, among othel
things, that pupils in earlj
grades be told about variou$
sexual concepts, and that young
teen-agers be taken to visit drug
stores where contraceptives ar4'
sold.
Swim lessons
scheduled
by institute
The Rehabilitation Institute of
Orange County will offer swim-
ming lessons, water safety
classes and lifesaving instruc·
lions beginning June 15 and con·
tinuing through the summer a1
two-week intervals.
Swimming lessons cost SlO.
while water safety classes cost
$5 and li(esaving instructiont
cost $15.
The center serves physicall~
and functionally handicappeq
children and adults ; but durins
the summer, the center opens iti
facility to community use.
The center is al 1800 E . -La
Veta. Orange. For further in-
formation call (714> 951-7400. · The abortion rider eliminated
rape and incest as grounds for
women to qualify for Medicaid
money for ending pregnancies.
Opponents of the move say
about 10,000 poor women would
be affected.
On the Assembly floor, most of
the opposition to the bill came
from lawmakers opposed to
more school holidays.
She suggested the bill "would building, plunging to his death.
say to blacks and other -----------------------------------------
Newport Beach As ·
AP .......
GOING HOME -Pope J ohn Paul II bolds hand of Mrs. Ann
Odre 58 of Buffalo, N.Y,. during their meeting at the
Vatican Thursday. She was wounded in the chest in St.
Peter's Square May 13 during an attempt oo the Pope's life.
Mrs. Odre ls en route home today.
minorities that we recognize the
contributions that a minority
. leader has made in this coun-
try."
Nixon looks
at newlwme
in suburbs?
NEW YORK (AP> -Former
President Nixon apparently bas
grown tired ot the city and may
be l eaving his Man hattan
townhouse for t he greener
pastures of New Jersey, accord-
ing to a source familiar with
Nixon's plans.
Nixon, staff members and
millionaire Bebe Rebozo visited
affluent Franklin Lakes and
Saddle River in northern New
Jersey on Thursday, looking for
a country hofne, according to
the source, who asked that be
not be identified.
Earlier this spring, Nixon had
considered locations in Bronx·
ville in Westchester County, the
source said.
2 campers
found dead
ALTURAS <AP) -The re·
mains of two sisters who ap·
parently froze to deat h on a
camping trip 'ast year have
been found in the Warner Moun-
tain Wilderness area about 15
miles southeast of this MOdoc
County community, authoritlet
said.
Undenberiff Bruce Mix said
the remains of Catherine Jeu
Cuchra, 25, of, Long Beach, were
found by a fisherman May 23 ln
the Pine Creek Basin •rea. In·
vestlsaton also found the r•
mains lhia week of her silt«,
J ean J ackson, 27, also of Loil1
Beach. ·
Dam98e aese1aed
~
' • 4
f ~-
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Unidentified member of Harvard's 330th graduating class
replaced heT traditional mortar-board regalia with "Mickey
Mouse" hat during commencement ceremonies on the Cam-
bridge, Mass., campus Thursday.
! '*.
. ,,;,Reading and sex
; 'second to TV'
:• , . Former Laguna Beach Ci-
: ty Council candidate and
' civic gadfly Maggie Meggs
was among a group of sub-
scribers who commented on
Storer Cable TV's rate hike
"request at a council"meeting.
But the outspoken Lagunan
approached the council with
a suggestion rather than a
series of complaints .
She s aid the cable firm
should offer Laguna Beach
senior citizen customers a
. straight $5-a-month charge
·~ for the service.
That would be the best
'\•;·public relations the company
could garner, she offered.
She said seniors spend 83.4
per cent of their waking hours
,, . watching television. an inex·
,... pens ive form of entertain-
ment for older folks who
can 't get out and about.
'· And the other 16.6 percent
of the time?
r • "That's s pent in reading
and sex," she snorted.
Former t e l evisi on
anchorman Walter Cronkite,
cited for covering "virtually
every major news event" of
the past 30 yea r s , was
awarded a n honorary
diploma by the City Universi·
Ly of New York.
Cronkite. who retired in
Ma r ch as anchorman and
managing editor of the "CBS
Evening News,"' was pre-
sented an honorary Doctor of
Humane Letters which said
"you have given us not only
the news, but what is behind
and beyond the news
above all, the truth."
Author William Saroyan
left most of his $1.3 million
estate and royalties from his
writings ·to a foundation set
up in his name.
Saroyan, who died May 18
of cancer at age 72, eslimat·
ed bis estate was worth
$700,000 in real estate and
$600,000 in personal property
plus royalties.
The author of "The Time of
Your Life" and "The Human
Comedy," left about $150,000
to be distributed to heirs.
With a trace of 11dne11 ln
bl• volct, Gov. am laaklow
had Ju1t told the 211
araduatea of Rl111 Hl•h
School in a commencement
address, "I never graduated
from high school."
But as the araduates
walked across a staae on an
athletic lield to aet their
diplomas, someone called
J ankJow's name.
The govemor, a surprised
look on his face, walked over
to School Board President
Howard Ha&cltta11, who
pulled out an honorary hi&h
achoo! diploma and handed it
to him.
"Fellow classmates," a
smiling Janlclow told the
cheering crowd, "My God, I
eot a high school diploma!"
, J anklow was ha oded a
·green cap like those worn by
his fellow graduates, and
wore it for a few minutes.
CBS newsman Charles
Kuralt, charged in February
with driving under the in·
fJuence pf alcohol. has been
fined $280.50 in San Mateo
after pleading no contest to a
reduced charge or reckless
driving.
Kuralt did not appear in
court. His plea was entered
by bis attorney.
Kpralt, anchorman on the
CBS morning news show.
was c;harged with being
drunk P'eb. 8 while driving in
Burlingame on U.S. 101.
Kelly Ogle, deputy district
attorney, said Kuralt was aJ.
lowed to accept the reduced
charge during a pre.trial
bearing before Municipal
Court Judge Gregory Jensen.
· 'fhis is standard pro-
cedure, and we would do the
same in every case," Ogle
said.
F'INED$260.So
Charlea Kuralt
lash floods forecast
wo trapped in Texas floodwaters killed; more rain due
lllCAeslfll ... CIOudS lete 10n'911t
••rl'I' s.twdey olherwlH sunny turdey.
Coutee low ,..., '°· lnl•nd "· tel 1119'> S.turo.y 70, Int-IOw .Wntr61.
EIMlll!lert, 119111 verleble winds
ltl\t ..... mot'fll"O "°""' bKoml119 t te IOUl"-'I 1~1' llftOb In etter· s. West lo touthwesl ,,.. .. t to 2
fft. lOw cloudl end f09 IA<r .. 11119
t nlgtl\. Dllwwi• fefr
V.S. summary
T hu"°'"'°""1 contf nued 10 pour
rein eYtr lllt lower Mississippi
Veftey end ... aoutnern Plelns M<ly too•r. wttll n..,. flood wM<,.• POtt·
ed for most of Arkenu1 end
Loui.1-. Nlltm end <otstet Tnes
Mel -.tllemOtll-'*M.
T...,.ldet.,_ •I•_,. 1otttl"td
ever 'l«ICll, fr-"'refnle to Horth Cerollne, end from Mlnnesot. Int•
.northern Ml-I to<efttHI IM"'°'s. Ourl119 ~'I"• storms In Tu·
H , • l~-otd boy and ~ Army -geeitt MR "-llltd eftw llity wtte
trepped In lleoctwe1en followlng
eV'(~ • wec:o ott1<1e11 Mid A-.nMo ,,.,.. Weco ....,....,., wM Jr•PC*I In•
"'-niur-. ··-.. end. nc1 ..,.. ._ Into weco Creett
lie t ldl119 ,,.,, blcfcles. Tiie dffld ... Mt l•JuAd.
... 1sf1tent Flt'11 Cftlet C.W. Terry
d • ...,.ell fllf' I,_ lley'1 llOcly In tllt , ... OCll•IOfll 1tOf"1 HWtr pipe,
l\ICJI empt1e 19 .. ~-lllftr, tdr.UMtod9y,
The Oocl'f ef SCeff stC. Tllomes H. • ., •••• ot ,..,, Hoed, ... ,..,.,.
-Kl....,, ellOUt ttw.e mllti-• ...,. i. tl'IM to cniu • flooded
rotd lo help tome 1t,.•n•ed mof«llb. •
. . -_,. . :-... ,, ---===
Offlcle~ Mid ... , Nd 110 welt few
f.-Welerl to recedt llelof't recever· •no Edwerds' bodV fr-• tr .. °" Mounteln Clffk.
Tiie H .. lonel W..lhff Servlq Uld
• troplcel clepreHIOft heel formed
•~t 7S mll• orf 81'0WMvllle, TtJIH
In Ille ~tem Gulf of Mealco et
J •.m. POT !Odey, f'orec•ltf• Mtd
llle ••••storm system w• HPKltd to move to ,,. nortlleHt tnd •P.
prOll<h the "Plltf TellH Ca.tit tole .. Cley.
HHVY re!M -teportM In • nerrow lltllCI from Weco to L.etedo, will\ Stn Antonio r9'10'tln11 lhrH
ln<IMSofrelnlett.
E•flf lode'!', • tomedo touclled
down on the OllUl!lrts of Ott.,..kNI, llerlng .. roots from MV•r•I ._.
tlld en •~r1mtnt ctmplt• en•
d•m•11lne c•s. Gttve1ton County
1utl\or1tl11 Hid -per .. n wu slltfllly lfllurect..,, llylftt .....
"'""' .......... Cevtrtd "'"' llooellllll tllMy I~ IOIA~t
Te•u. ~ CMI ~ Olrte·
Mr F'"ds H~ Mid ...... -------~~=--.... --in. ......... ,~ IA Ille ••ownwood section end •omt Clownt-~ ,._..,.. .... .,_,.,..,.. ll\1111-
.. ,,""--" tr• •-.ltd to autttr from Hlllllern Ttu1 tnr011gl\ tlM
Tenne-Ve11ey.,.. '"' i.wer Oltto V • lley. Tiit 11\0wtrt encl 011011• Wl"'-n-elto~ttdto Atel\ elOng tM ~I C0Mt 11M1 tf'9
Atl..,tl( CMtt ...... '""" "*-'"""°" Vlf9lnlt. S1>owen ellO ftll tftr UM"°"""""* l'eclflc Con\. Te""'91'et-.,Mid IN MtlOA et
mldflleM POT r•"9M lro.n • In Lewis~. Merit., to " In alrtl\e, (elll.
We're Listening •••
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•• I
Temperatures
Ml u ""--AIMft'f a '2 ·°' AlllulfVe 12 47 Amtrlllo 7t SI
Aslltvllle 11 .. . Ol
Atltnc. n 10
Atltnlc Cty ·~ 61 Btltlm-" .. M ••-•netv'n • 11
8 111111tf'Cll 7t ,. .OJ eotse IO 50
801ton IS 62 .ti •r-nsv!te ..
8Uffel0 10 CIMlrlttnSC • n ClwtrlttnWV 17 .. •• o.e-,.-76 ., .11
ClllC•llO 15 • CIMlnnetl et .. ,17
Clevetend 77 " ...
O>Nm!Ma ll ,.
.ol 0.1-l'lwtll " ..
Oellver n S1 ,os
Oe•~ u ff Detroit , . • Oulutll n 4t Htrtlord .. 63 .IS Helene 10 .. HOMlulu 1• tndneplls a .. .01
Jec:ll111vllt .. n
Ke~Clty a 63 .12
UI ... " ..
Little Roell " .. L .. A_.., .. .,
~ltwlllt u 1t .M
Mtmllftb " 74 .12
Ml•"'l ... n .t)
Mllw..._ .. J4
Mttl•St.P 11 " HHllvllte t7 71 .4)
HtwOrie.. " n .01 HewY«1l ... 6S ... ......... tt 7J •• Olll• City ta '* l.t1 Ol'MM a " on-. ... 71 .. ,,......,... " ., .et ......... IOI ,,
PlttMwtfll 19 .. .......... 74 SI .... ~--.Ore " J4 ·" ..... " JO ... ,L.-. 71 ., ........ 1' .. =-.. • .. • •• ML•• as ..
SIP· Tempe '° 10 1.26
St Ste Merle " SS .2S
5'loll•ne .. " TUIN .. ..
WHhlngtll .. n .02
CAUP'OllNIA
Beke"1lelel 100 16 Blythe IOI IO
Eurtt<• 62 S3
Len< ester ,., ..
Merysvlltt IOS 1: Monterty 74
HttdlH 103
Oelll•nd IO
PeN ROClle 102 ii
Red Bluff 102 ... RedwoOCI Clty " '3
Seer-llO '2 Stllnes '° " Senta Bert»r• ... " Senta Marie ..
Stoc:ll9!1 t06 TMmlel IOI ,.
Ulllell •• " 8erl10W 101 .,
e19a-• 71 4
Catellne ,. St
a1cemro UM n
'StllJOM tOI ,.
,$tilt•,.,.. a 61
l'Aft AM
Ace11111Co • 1S
8•f9tCIOS l5 1)
Curuto • 1t ''""°" '° ,. GuedateJ.,• '3 S1
Guedeloupe 17 1S
H1vene tO 75
Monttgo 8ey • 1S Meutltn IS 11
Merkle 100 n
#Mxko City IO St
NHNU • 1S St, Kitts .. 14
T-..icl .. ltMI to 11
Sun, moo~ tiJes .,....,
SecoM '°"" 6.IS p.rfl. 2.4
· IATUllDA't
"'"' llltll 12:'7 e.m. S.7 Flnt •-1:au.m. t.I St<Ofldlllgh 2:a.p.m. U I
Second low 1: '* •·"'' t .6 SVft Mb t:Ot p.m., ''-Set ....
St42e.m.
Moon •• 1t::M p.m., rltM Stturl NY 10:05 e.m..
. t
BAKERSFIELD (AP)
-A man accused of
bluffing hia way onto the
medical stall at Kern
Medical Cent.er pleaded
guilty to one count of
prac,llclng medtcl._.
wi thout a license.
Gabriel Lo'<Wy, 30. q&dt
mectical t.achooJ sh .
months lntm 1radua ·
Uon
Orange Coat DAILY Pll .• OT/Frlday, June 5, 1981 H/F -No special benefits
Report says refugees don't get preferential treatmenf
8y GLENN SCOTT Of ... .,.. ..........
If you t.h.lnk Indochinese ref·
ugees ln Oranae County 1et
hi&her than normal welfare
cbecks, special low-interest
loans, preference ror eovern-
ment training and housing -
well, you're wrong.
The refugees from Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laoa compete for
welfare, loans, Jobe and housln&
just like all other U.S. residents,
accordine to a report med this
week with the Orange County
Board ol Supervisors.
Tltled, ''Myths Concerning
Indochinese Refugees,'' tbe re-
port was prepared by the new
refugee affairs manaeement
\earn formed recently by the
supervisors.
The report contalna what it
calls 10 m)'ths -or unfounded
rumors -along with explana-
tions of why they aren't true.
Lois Wax, manager or the ref-
ueee affairs team, said the 10
myths are examples of misin-
formation about the refugees
which has spread throuehout the
county.
"We U.lt that perhaps the
easiest way to clear these up
would be to state them public-
ly," she el(plai.ned.
In the report, she and ref·
ugee s pecialist Beverly Hunter
Curtis wrote: "Unfounded
rumors exacerbate the problem
of community tension and pre·
Judice.''
Among the rumora is the of·
ten-repeated alleaalions that In·
dochlnese refugees aet larger
welfare payments than other ap-
plicants.
Although refugees do receive
money from the federally
financed Refugee Resettlement
Program, Ms. Wax said pay-
ments are the same amounts re-
cipients get through other pro-
grams such as Aid to Families
with Pepe ndent Children
<AFDC).
The same is true for loans , she
said . lndochlnese refugees can
try to quallfy for Small Business
Administration loans targeted
for economically disadvantaged
business people. But few or those
loans have been granted to
Orange County's Asian popula-
tion, she said.
As it turns out, about the only
advantage the Indochinese re-
ceive in Orange County ls
apeclal health scref!nlng for
tuberculosis. It's a perk that
some mieht say is d\lbtous, at
best.
Ms. Wax said rumor·paaers
are way off when they spread
what she called "pro~ably the
most prevalent myth. •"?bat ls
the eomment that the In-
dochinese people like to be on
welfare.
False, she says. "The)' are
very independent and very
motivated."
Rather than perceived 8$ a
group of people bent on taking
advantage of American hand-
outs, refugees should be looked
upon as people who have risked
their lives to reach asylum, she
said. Many family members and
friends died in the attempt, she
added. '
Another myth worth refuting,
she said, is that the U.S. govern·
ment doles out SS,000 to each ad-
mitted refugee.
"Actually," she said, "the ref-
ugee arrives with a large debt.
having agreed in writing to re-
pay the transportation costs In-
curred to bring him here."
Atlanta: hopes dashed
ATLANTA CAP> -In a scene
that has been repeated lime and
again, this troubled city was
brought to the brink of success
in its search for a killer of young
blacks -only to have its hopes
dampened when another lead
failed to yield an arrest.
The news that a man had been
taken into custody and was be-
ing questioned in connection
with some of the 28 slayings was
followed Thursday morning with
a brief statement from a tense
and tired Public Safety Com-
missioner Lee Brown.
••We ha ve not arrested
anyone. we have no one in
custody," Brown said, racing a
bank of television cameras and
microphones several hours after
the man was released at about
3:30 a.m.
It was not the first time since
the n.rst two bodies were dis·
covered ln JuJy 1979 that hopes
had been raised or a break in the
case.
Since the beginning of the
year:, while the murder toll con-
tinues to mount, the investiga-
tion bas taken the foll~wlng
twists and turns:
-In April, Roy Innis, leader
of a faction of the Congress for
Racial Equality, a civil rights
group, said he had a secret
female witness who could iden-
tify the killer.
That bubble burst after a
police investigation of the
purported witness. Brown said
CORE's witne$S had "no rela-
tionship" to the slayings.
-Earlier that month, FBI
Director William Webster had
announced that Atlanta
authorities had a suspect in "12
to 16 cases and have substantial-
ly solved three or four others."
But Brown said no cases had
been solved.
-In March, local newspapers
received letters signed by "the
ghost killer ," claiming
responsibility for the slayings.
And a minister in nearby
Decatur who had issued a
televised plea for the killer to
surrender said he received two
telephone calls from people
claiming responsibility for some
of the slayings. Two men later
were arrested, but police said
they were not involved in the
slayings .
Also in March, an Atlanta
man was arrested in Hartford .
Conn., on a fugitive warrant in
connection with an attempted
robbery charge. He was ex·
tradited to Atlanta and ques·
tioned by the task force about
his relationship with one of the
victims . But authorities said
later they did not believe he was
connected with any of the slay-
ings
The man questioned Wednes·
day and released Thursday
seemed, for a time, to provide
the most promising lead of all.
Police said the man was stopped
in May near a bridge over the
Chattahoochee River shortly
before the body Of the latest Vic·
tim was fo und.
...........
PERSONAL OPINION -Assemblyman Art Agnos, D-San
Francisco, bad a succinct view of the proposed $25.8
billion 1981-82 budget passed by the Assembly Thursday.
LONG AND SHORT SLEEVE
REGULARLY TO 42.50
FAl!HER'S DAY SPECIA
s1299
SOLID COLORS ONLY
..
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP> -
A 3'-_year-old Des ldolDea man,
who Ml ..._ called a 8'&1pect in
Uae i..-.-bank robbeey in U.S.
history, WM beinl beld wit.bout
bond today ln connHUon With
the heist ot S2 million ln jewelry.
Doqlu Bruce Fenimore. who
surrendered after a 1tl1b·•peed
chase, ple14ed innocent Thurs·
day to six federal char1es stem·
mine from a $1.S million jewelry
theft in Pboenlx, Aria., and a
$500,000 theft in Walnut Ci'eek,
Calif. He alto la a 1uapect in a
$3.3 mllUon bank robber' ln
Tucson, Ariz.
Man convicted
NEW YORK <AP> -Jurors
who convicted a 22.year·old
stagehand of murderin1 violinist
Helea Hai•.. Mlntlk1 at the
Metropolitan Opera House
believed be wanted to "get rid of
her" but nqt kill her, one juror
said.
iN:atio~'s jobless rate increases
WASJUNGTON (AP) -The
nation's unemployment rate
1hot up three·teotha of a percen-
tace point to 1.6 percent lo May.
but the firtt decline lo three
years in wholesale eoer1y prices
beld inflation at the wholesale
level to a 0.4 percent increase,
the 1ovemment rePPrled today.
The wbolesale·price inflation
rate, which tr1111Jates into an
annual rate of 4.8 perce.nt, wu
the lowest since the 0.4 percent
reported lut December.
The unemployment rise,
which many an&Jnta have been
exp1ctJn1 ln tiiht of tbe •P·
parently weakenln• nattonal
economy, wa, the flnt 1tnce lut
October and &Jao marked the
bJthffl level 1lnee that month'• 7.t percent.
The May lncreue -up from
Ult 7.a percent that had held for
the precedlna three months -
w11 the blaant since May of
J41t year, wb~ tht receulon
bootted the unemployme·nt rate
up0.7 percenta1e point, 1l1oto1.e percent.
Tot&J employment actually ln·
creased about 280,000 Jail
1Dontb, accordlnl to the new
l41lbor DepartrMnt report re·
lea•ed today. But the number ot
Job bopefUJs rose even faster,
addlDI ;425.000 Americans to tbe
joblesa roU., the report Hid.
lfbe seasonally adjusted un·
employment rates rose lrom S.8
percent to 6.3 percent '8r adult
men, from 6.6 percent to 6.8 per·
cent for adult women and from
19.1 percent to 19.S percent for
teen·agers.
In a separate report. the
Labor Department Hid fi.nished
• energy goods at the wholesale
level declined o.s percent in
May, the first decline since
February 1978.
Within that category, gasoline
prices declined 1.8 percent, and
the index for home heating oil
decreased 1.2 percent although
natural gas prices rose
somewhat, the report said. .
Prices for consumer food at
the wholesale level stayed even
ln May for the second month in a
row. also contributing to the rel·
atively small increases in over·
all wholesale infiatlon.
Passenger car prices con·
tlnued to rise in May, climbing
1.2 percent after a 1.4 percent
galn in April.
ment'• producer price index for
finl1hecf looda -that la. loods
ready for sale. 'The index 11 con·
sidered a 1ood indicator of
future price trend.a in retail con·
1umerprices.
Tbe unadJu1ted 1H7·baaed
producer price lndtx stood at
288.9 In May, meaoln1 that
1ooct1 which c0tt $10 In um cost
'26.89 ln May.
The. department's unemploy.
ment report also sald tlle
average workweek for
employees on private non·
a1rlcultural payrolls declined
0.1 hour in May to 35.3 hours,
while average hourly eamlngs
rose three centa to $1.16 -S9
cents above the year-earlier
level.
Economists were. saying in ad·
vance that the May increase in
inflation at the wholesale level
could be as low as O.S or 0.6 per·
cent -the lowest since Decem·
ber's 0.4 percent.
Their optimism was based at
least ln part on what has become
widely known as the worldwide
"oil glut," a supply so rreat viat
it is holding down prices. l .•
The situation bas been cr~te0
partly by brisk production, by
Saudi Arabia coupled with ob-
vious conservation efforts in °the
United States and other · in·
dustrialized Western nations~
A weakening U.S. economy
also lessens inflationary pfes·
sures, partly because c.on·
sumers are cutting back spend· ing.
f~ ahip greeted
~--dteen, jeers .........
MEMENTO -Charles H. White, fa th er of Capt. Steve Wllite,
pilot of plane that crashed into U~ Nimitz May 26, killing
14, weeps as he receives flag during military funeral at
College Station, Texas. Pilot's wife, Ann, an Air Force
captain, looks on. ·
And price increases also
were recorded for floor cover·
lngs, books, soaps and de·
tergents, household furniture
and alcoholic beverages.
Capital goods prices rose 0.9
percent, including big jumps for
agriculture and construction
machinery.
There bas been ample
evidence recently that the
economy is indeed weakening in
its once·robust recovery from
last year's recession. The na·
tion 's output -as measured by
inflation·adjusted gross national
produce -rose 8.4 percent U1e
first quarter of this year. :eut
numerous government reports
have shown various economic
Indicators flattening out or fall· Ing since then .
Food inflation at the wholesaJe
level probably continued rising,
but at a moderate pace in May.
said private analyst Donald
RatajczaJc. commenting before
the figures were released today.
The 0.4 percent overall in·
crease is in the Labor Depart· from bis M-16 rifie toda.y at a fir·
ing range, ldlllne four of them
and seriously wounding the fifth,
the army said.
Tbe announcement from 8th , "ts. Atf1t:1 headq"'ner, said
the •oldJeu. all ,11s11ned to
beadqual-ters compan.v, 2nd
Englneer Battalioo, were taklne
M·l8 rifle qualification ftrlng at
Ingram Range east of Camp
Casey. which is 24 miles east of
Seoul.
Reagan slims doivn tax-cut plan
Diaitl.D freed
WARSAW. Poland (AP)
Ttlt Supreme Court ordered th•
release today of one of Poland's
best·known anti·Sovlet dlsal·
dents and three associates who
have been Lmprisoned pending
trial oo charges with anti·state
activities.
WASJilNGTON (AP> -Presi·
dent Reagan, directly challeng-
ing House Democratic leaders
on a three·year tax cut, ls em·
bracing a slimmel' version of hls
orielnal plan with some added
features while courtinJ the
Southern conservatives who
1ave him a big t;>udeet victory
earlier this year.
One of the conservatives, Rep.
Kent Hance, D·Texas, agreed
Thursday with Rep. Barber B.
Conable, R·N. Y., senior Jax·
writer in the House, to introduce
~CQ\ST PLAZA
.. '
"' T• Duct. Every Sunday
JEWEL COUlt';r
All Surunn 10111 1:30 to 4:30 . .
...
•
Reaean's Latest attempt at a tax in the marriage penalty ;
compromise. liberalUatioo of savings incen·
Reagan, refusing any further lives; elimination of estate taxes
compromise with Democratic for all but the wealthiest 2 per·
leaders, said the revhed plan cent of Americans; faster tax
"will put us back on the road to writeoffs for' business; and a
a sound economy." Moat of the special tax break for those who
pac1ta1e had been propoud own lands on which oil wells are
three weeks ago by con· located.
servatives and had been em· The original Reagan pJan
braced by Reagan advisers, if called only for a 30 percent cut
not by the president himself. in personal tax rates over three
It includes a 25 percent cut in years and the faster wnteoffs,
personal tax rates over three or depreciation, for businesses.
years, with the fint 5 percent The 2S percent personal reduc·
taking effect Oct. 1; reductions _tion is $16 billion smaller.
Reagan bad wanted to leave
the other features, such as the
reduction in the marriage penal·
ty. to ' a second tax bill he had
planned to submit later in the
year.
Flanked by congressional sup·
porters, Reagan made a brief
statement outside the Oval Of·
fice on the steps overlooking the
l\<>se Garden and expressed bis
"1pecial appreciation" to the
group, saying it "is united in the
belief that together we must re-
buijd the economy.•• ___ _
' --·-------. ----------------------------
--.,..__,-. Your private world
of pleasure
Vn the middle of N~wpoit Beach.·
Life at Park NewPort is a com--
binatlon of privacy when you
want it, social goings-on when
you'rfJ ~n the mOOd, and exhil·
arating recreation when you
feel rusty.
Here is the ult mate In care--
free New pert Beach living sur·
rou.nded by &v9'Y convenienoe.
Park Newport resfdents have a gourmet market. a beauty shop
and dry cle•ner Just steps away from their apartmttnt. There
are 8 lighted tennla courts. 7 pools end a S150,000 Spa and
athletic club.
Fashion Island'• fabuloua ahops are Just across the way. New-
Port's veer-round attraction•. tandy belches. pleasure bolt-
ing, deep ... flehJng, Plut thUtel'I. muaeums and hundredl
of fine reetlurants, ALL right here.
Right here bet de Park Newport, Why don't you vlelt our
Rental Office and M8 If an thlt ..,., Juat what v<>uV. been
IOoklno for. On Jambo,... It Sen JOIQuln Hllll Road. Tel•
phorie (714) M4·1900.
APARTMENTS & TOWNHOMES FROM MfO:OO TO '1000.00-
,,.
1.. SACRAMENTO (AP> -A
,, proposal to allow Callfornla·
chartered savings and itou u -
:.;, aoclations to sell "affordable
, payments anort1a1ea" hu won 1 ~, overwbelmiq a.,proval of the
• .,. 1tate Senate.
A 31·1 vote Thursday sent
SB809 by Sen. John Foran, D·
, '1 San Franclseo, to the Auembly. • ~, The measure would allow in·
·,1 terest rates to be adjusted up. ,~' ward or downward every six
' , months according to an lndepen-
· ~,dent index of current mortia1e ~~'rates.
I!: If ;.
But it would Umlt the dollar
amount that mort1a1e P•>'·
menu could be railed !n any one
year to T~ percent -that's a
7~ percent Increase In the
dollar amount, not a 11h percen-
taae point lncreue lri the ln·
t.reat rate. , '
Foran said UU. featw:e would
allow, "rietatlve amot1lutlon"
-by which a homeowner eDcls
up owing more money alter
several years of paymeqts than
when be started -If interest
rates rise rapidly. But he $aid
that would h!lppen only tt the ,
:~'.·.Containerized ppt ·~
:~~fished from ocean \
~,. SANTA ROSA (AP) -Hl&b .,t.,~rade marijuana worth an
•c 'estimated $7.5 million bu been
!>">recovered by ofllciala who
-{'fished 75 heavy metal containen <•· out of the surf along the Sonoma '~·county coast, the Coast Guard ':lu:said.
"1 As many as 75 more con·
ialners could not be recovered,
tn•coasl Guard spokesman Dave
.. ., Cipra said Thursday after the
noday-long operation.
br The boxes were spotted bob-
bing in the surf th.is week by a
., 1 'lsecurlty cuard in the Sea Ranch
?O ·residential area.
0( !t
~~~ Senate, auembly
c·~ · OK tuo .... ~-eu
h.11· ~·
.. ,:1 SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
l\iaSenate and Assembly have ap-
" 111proved different versions of a
., . o $25-billion-plus st.ate budget, cut-
·l l1:o ting funds for poor women's
abortions but raising the
~it.Legislature's own operating ~/,budget.
, • The Senate, after a lenethY
h, .. fight Unged with bitter rhetoric
1'1' over relatively minor amend-
't•ments, voted 31-7 late Thursday
on a $25.2 bllllon budget for the
· fiscal year beginning July 1.
. Earlier In the day, the Assembly
By a 28-2 vote Thursday, the
Senate approved SB424 by *°· Paul Carpenter, D-Cypreas, to
require applicants for creden-
tials to pass tests al the college
entrance level. ·
SAUNAS CAP> -RuaseU Lil·
lle, a former
member of
the terrorist
Sym bionese
Liberation
Army, has
been ac -
quitted at bis
retrial in the
1973 slaying
of Oakland s c b o o 1 unu
superintendent Marcus Foster.
He will be released from
custody July 19, after he com-
pletes a jail sentence for an
earlier escape attempt from
Alameda County jail in which he
stabbed a guard in the throat.
The Monterey County Superior
Court jury, which began its de-
liberations th.is week, returned
the verdict after a total or six
hours of consideration.
adopted a $25.8 billion version ln De-_ _._ 8 __ .J.! _J
~ 54-20 vote. ~ ~
Teau~
1 • SACRAMENTO CAP> -New ~tl;·pubUc school teachers should
lb have ~ prove they can read, ~ •. 11wrlle and do mathematics at the
:1 · first-year cQllege level, in the
opinion of the California stale
Senate.
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Viet-nam veterans protesting
Veterans Adminiltratlon health
care with a fut and VA hospital
sit-in reasserted that their pro-
test will only end when they bear
from the White House, but said
they were "clarifying" their de-
mands to a group of VA officials
from Washington.
PllM SPICIAL
hKlt ••• ~!.~;coupon s~o
• Special good one time "";,... only Pfr cuatomer ._....
I ...... . ....,,.. ........ ,..
•acrylics
U6-5000
1 eo.-s Bolsa Chica. Corner
BQlsa Chica & Edinger ·
~~~~-~.._,_,~..-.__~~~•C~•~blif_.1~•~~---
homeowner chelee that to keep
hla paymen\a low.
Because a 1mall increase lD
an interest rate can make a bit
difference in the dollar amount
of interest owed each month,
Foran'• propoeal would allow
tbe 1~ percent limit on dollar amount tncteases to bold
monthly payments below the
amount of interest owed.
In that cue, Foran said, the
homeowner would bave the
choice ol raialn1 hit paymena
beyond the 7~ percat celJIAI, ~r of havln1 the dlffer~ce
Drug item
measure
supported
SACRAMENTO (AP) -'!be
state Senate wants to mate it U-
letal to possess or sell drul
paraphernalia such as roach
clips or water pipes.
Sen. Newton Russell, R-
Glendale, told a floor session
Thursday:
"What we are trying to do is
i;ut the head shops out of busi-
ness. It is hypocritical to outlaw
the use of drugs and, at the
same time, to permit busi-
nessmen to reap financial profit
by mer c handising
paraphernalia which will be
used to commit illegal acts."
The senators then voted 31-0 to
send Russell's SB341 to the As·
sembly.
1 The mea8ure is backed by a
wi4e range of law enforcement
organizations and the California
· PT A. OppoaiUon is led by the 1 National Organization for the
Reform of Marijuana Laws.
between hi• payment and ln-
tereat 0wed added to the prin-
cipal balance be muat eventual-ly pay.
The meuure was sponaored
by the state's three major as-
sociations ot home leQdera: The
CalUornla Savings and Loan
Lea1ue, the California Mortaaie
Banken .U.oclation, and the
Callfomta Banis.en Association.
In committee bearln1s on
variable-rate bills, the
California Association of
Realtors -the only or1anbed
opponent to Foran's bill -arsue
strenuously for a ceiling on in-
creases in interest rates, citinc
hypothetical cases In which in-
terest rates could escalate to 73
percent.
.. We have to find new ways to
make cub available," Foran
said, adding that traditional
mortaaaes, with fixed interest
rates for the lifetime of the loan,
have all but disappeared
because they expose lenders to
too much risk in an era of
volatile c hanges in interest
rates.
.. Nobody is giving a fixed rate
when the market is so volatile
. . . I don't th.ink fixed rates are
likely again," Foran said.
Sen. Man Garcia, R-Menlo
Park, added, "ll we want to pro-
tect the lenders and depositors,
we have to free up these institu-
tions so they can make loans al
the goin1 rate."
''The variable rate is the only
game in town. If you want to
help these institutions make
more money available for borne
loans . . . you have to free up
these institutions," Garcia said.
Bill outlawing nozzle
stalls in state senate
SACRAMENTO <AP > -
L~gislalion to outlaw gas-
stealing service station nozzles
h~s sta>led lD tbe C~4fornla
Senate. .
The author of 881208, Sen.
Dan O'Keefe, R·Cupertino, bear-
ln g both Republicans and
Democrats complain that it
went too far, asked Thursday that
no vote be taken.
That left open the possibility
of imen<,tm ts to restrict the
bill to just the one nozzle design
that ls causing most of the com-
plaints.
The noides, designed to pre-
VIPt tbe •cape of VafJOr-. were
dl1coven8 to be also typhonln1
small amounts of gasoline back
into the pumps when users tried
to top up the last few inches of
lbeir filler pipes.
The design causing most of the
complaints is one of six ap·
proved by the state Air
Resources Board.
'\ .vw.· 2 1 ... ? Nisa Bhimani and attorney Stan Springer walk from cocmroom
after she was allowed 'custody of son born to tin tbffptoing
artificial inseminaticn. • • . ~· "'
Cuswdy bid tlroP~d
• . ' in surrogate case .. ~
PASADENA (AP) -A New but that be would h8..i!q;t10,n,ita-
York man with a transsexual tion rights Jllld that JUSl( B~iqiaoi
wife has given up his struggle to would retain custod'r .Qf r~ 2·
get custody of a child born to a month-old ~.hild. , ~ r
surrogate mother, saying Noel Keane. Noye•'s ~af.'Yer,
publicity generated by the case said his client had aicl?red to
would bairn the child. drop the suit "because he feels
The agreement to end the that the extraordin.,-y publicity
lawsuit over custody of the child lbis suit h~gener•ed wt» not
was reached Thursday lh a allow his child to li~ • u<itrnal
closed session by attorneys for lif,-
both parties. It dissolved the "We regret havmg to 91alte
s urrogate birth agreement this decisiqir bUt think .. .id the
between Nisa Bhimani" of best inte~ltk of tht' Mild,"
Arcadia and James Noyes of Keane said. "But· we May well
Rochester, N.Y. attempt to have visitation rights
During a deposition on granted in the futur~:" · J ,
Wednesday Noyes' wife · ·'" ~ Bjorna, revea'ted that she is ~ ALTHOUGH NOYES'..ai~·ear·
transsexual who underwent a ol~ wife was• not a •party•to' the
sex change operatloo five years' Sutt, her fitness lisJ a (f>af nt
a10. SM bad refUled to•auwer "~'Id havel~ome.JP11m' ad certain ~~tiont J>Ofed bf Ma. 't:n11t;case gct\~'(urtb~i t; Bbimani 1 lawyer Until com-'"It (tJ'an&MJ(ualit,yl be pelted to do so. a factor that would weigh •ery
heavily," Olson loJd the Los
SUPEllIOll COU RT Judge Angeles Times. "I wouldn't go
Robert M. Olson said Rick so far as to say it would pr~lude
L a f i tt e B h i m a n i ' s b i rt b a couple (rom getUng a child;
certificate would~ amended to that would depena on the
read ijiat Noyes was the father particular transsexual ase. '
"
.-. .. -.,,.
__ _...
.... I I ....
..
,
~--------
Ora~ Cout OAILY ptLOTIFrJday, June 8, 1811
New chililTe1''s Imme
needs public support
"l never ml11 1 chanct to
plu1 Uli• projec~" commenttd
Oran1e County ttuperlor Court
Juct1e BJTOO McMUJan ln ur11n1
1uP1N).tt before a battery of 1 rt'
porten .,id televl1lon oam1r11
for oran1ewood, th• pro~td new bome for Oranlt" County'• abandoned, baUtred fnd otherwtae homeloa1 chtl4r n.
McMUlan'• unaohod"lt<t 1'0· mark 01me at tho acmoluaton ot a
hearlnt thl1 we k cm outttOOY Qf -aeverMWtk·old baby l\a fatl\t'r l•
1Ue1'9d to hav at\emptfd to • U at a ~iuton VltJo re1ta\1ran\, The inf an\ now ta b(\lt\I hfl<1
In th• nuraery or th~ exlMUna
AIMr\ • tton llOOlet ln Orf'nl
ThoN ll room for ~t\U<\~ at
the hom : th~N were~ U\~ ""
of Thund~, Oranatw~ \\"U\lld Nµ.l"'\'
tht overcrowd d Sitton home. At an 1Umattd coat of te mllUon,
Orana wood le an ambltlou1 project lnvolvtn1 both the public
and' privet eeoton. The county 11 p_rQvldlna the land at tho old
Horao Or olcy School 1lte In
Orana ... Monciy lo bull4 the raclll· ty will com laraely (rom the cammunlty.
Tho Junior '" oaue of Newport Harbor haa put up a ''t'holl nae" .ir1nt of Sl17,000.
Mar than M0,000 haa been rulsed tQwcard th amount, d aplto the faot th te>rmal tund·r1l1lng cam·
Piltfn h y t to aot under wuy.
llnd r way or not ,
Orftn&owood l• a doe rvlna proJ. ~<1t . Wo 0<1ho McMillan's com· m~nli U\at th project dcaerveft bro~ul pubUr aupa><>rl.
Gas nossles do ~lp
The nAAWll\¥ public h• had
iood reasoo ta i l unhappy about
the new aa ln vapor control
no11l . Most •~ rumbersome to
handle, ome splash 1as. and lt 's
been established that certain
models can recycle gas -which
you 're paylng ror -back into the
station's storage tank.
Just last week the Daily Pilot
noted these problems and urged
greater effort to protect
consumers who are being
victimized by them.
But the South Coast Air
Quality Management District is
urging us not to give up on the
program-and ror good reason.
Through some 98,000 special
nozzles the vapor recovery
program, says the district, has
resulted in recapturing 95 percent
or hydrocarbon emissions that
previously wandered off into the
atmosphere during rerueling.
That adds up to 65 tons ·Of
hydrocarbons a day, or about
24,000tons a year.
If thocse figures don't mean
anything, compare them with the
18 ,000 tons of hydrocarbons
emitted annually by the district's
10 top sources of air pollution -
seven oil refineries, a power plant,
a steel mill and an auto assembly
plant. And these are plants
"lrcady operating under strict
smott control condltions.
District spokesmen agree
there's room for plenty of
improvement in design of the
vapor recovery nozzles, but so far
they 've received o nly 461
complaints about them in the past
12 months. Only 19 percent of the
98,000 in use are of the design that
has res ulted in gasoline
recirculation. Five other designs
apparently avoid that problem,
although some result in spillage if
the nozzle is pulled out of the tank
before it has fully drained.
The major probrem,
according to the experts, is
"topping off' which results in
repeated clicking of the shut-off
valve, wears out the nozzle and can
cause resiphoninl(.
The AQMD-is planning a
public education prog~am to help
people operate t he nozzles
properly. And it's probably worth
paying attention because, in
addition to removing potentially
poisonous fumes from the air we
breathe, the va por recovery
program in the South Coast basin
currently is recovering enough
hydrocarbon vapors to reclaim
600 ,000 gallons of gas each month.
So let's not give up just yet.
~n error of judgment
' Although we applauded the
issuance of a federal court
injunction to delay the sale of 32
off shore oil leases in response to
suits flled by Gov. Brown and
environmental groups, lt is clear
th e judge wfio granted the
injunction should hav e
disqualified herself when the suits
reached her court.
The twin lawsuits filed against
Interior Secretary James Watt
seek more state participation in
environmental studies of the
proposed oil explorations prior to
the lease sales. ·
Bids have been opened, butthe
injunction issued by U.S. District
Judge Mariana Pfaelzer will delay
actual sales pending a July
hearingonthesuits. ~
Unlortunately, records or the
Fair Political Practices
Commission show that Judge
Pfaelur was a senior partner in a
•
law firm that contributed'$18,865to
Brown's 1978 g ubernatorial
campaign.
Additionally, the judge
admits, she and her husband made
personal contributions to Brown's
1974 and 1978 campaigns and she
a lso served a s treasurer or
Brown's 1976 presidential
campaign.
She was appointed to the
federal court by President Carter
and has not been involved in
political activities since taking the
bench, JudgePfaelzer says.
It is her contention that there
is no conflict of interest in her
handling of the current lawsuits.
Be that as it may, she is a personal
friend of one of the litigants and as
such she should have offered to
step down.
In railing to do so spe has cast a
s hadow on an issue of rreat
significancetothestate.
Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pllo\. Otner views ex·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and •rtists. Reader comment Js lnvlt· ed . Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7141
642·4321.
L.M. Boyd I Away from it all
Q . J'm thinltin1 about retlrin& to
some villace in the U.S.A. as far
from ,tbe bll cities aa I can aet. Any
susa.,atiom?
A . How about the buatltn1
... metr of Ekalaka, population
6077 ll's in Carter County at the
furth aoutbeut comer of Mon·
tea. WlOa t.be n .. rut paved road 27 mu away. Local Joke refen to it u
the y town ID the country where
you drive in but have to back out.
It's then whittled down durtna the
pitch.
Q. How much would lt COil In
partl and labor to replace a totalled se,ooo compact car?
A. About $24,000 now.
The lonse~ tbe ~u1band1 and
wlvet Uve tojether, th• farther apart
the1 like to be wben they 1leep.
Generally, 1enerall1. A bed
manufacturer hired a rettarch nrm
to eome up wtUt Ut1t dub6oue revela·
Uon.
'Loyalty' tests modified
WAS HIN GTON -President
Reagan's doctrinaire conservative sup·
porters will be surprised to learn that
the White House Is practicing a kind or
polltlcal "reverse discrimination ."
Political loyalty tests apparently have
been relaxed in the case of minority
candidates for top jobs.
The idea of boostin g an administra-
tion's image by seeking out women and
minority nominees is nothing new, of
cour se. In his r ecently published
memoir of Cabinet life under Jimmy
Carter, Joseph Califano claims that
Carter ordered that all incompetents be
weeded out of the government -with
the exception of women and minorities.
THE REAGAN White House hasn't
gone that far. But Its policy on minority
appointments was explained by Vice
President Bush at the April 2 Cabinet
meeting three days after Reagan was
s hot. Bush's remarks behind closed
doors were reported in a i>rivate memo
to Energy Secretary James Edwards by
the .man who sat In for him, W. Kenneth
Davis, the deputy designate. The memo
has been reviewed by my assocl't~
Jack Mitchell.
·'The vice president . . . stressed the
fact that the president had pledged to
incorporate a substantial number of
minority people at the top level Jn the
new government ," Davis reported.
"The vice president said that we were
clearly not doing the job we had prom-
ised to do aqd that we needed to do a
lot better for the remaining jobs. The
point was raised that many of the
minority candidates cannot pass the
political tests. The vice president said
G
-J1-c1-11-1-11-11-1 -~·
that the tests were being modified in the
case of mUiority candidates .... "
Davis had other news from the
Cabinet meeting. "The vice president
mentioned that there were a lot of busi·
ness . people coming in with special in·
terests reeking to get special con-
cessions; with respect to taxes and
thought 1.h.is was quite unfortunate and
that the members of the Cabinet should
do what they could to resist this type of
pressur,e and counteract._ it," Davis
wrote.
WHAT MAKES this particularly in·
teresting is that a top corporation ex-
ecutive was s ilting in on that very
Cabinet meeting. It was Davis himself.
At the time. he was still a vice presidf'nt
of Bechtel Power Corp., which has
more than $100 million worth of energy-
related federal con tracts.
Arter his appointment as Edwards'
deputy. but before his confirmation by] the Senate, Davis assumed his duties at
DOE. The propriety of allowing a
private corporation executive to run a
federal agency is quesUonable when the
executive's company is heavily in·
volved in projects of sending a cor-
porate bigshol to sit in oo a meeting of
the supre me policy-making body in
the federal government. -~
DA VIS' VIEWS on a potential conflicl
of interest between his corporate pastl
and his government position were sub-
sequently made clear during his con
rirmation proceedings. He outraged
Senate investigators by asking for a~
waive.-that would pertnit him to take
an active part in DOE policy decisions
affecting Bechtel. A compromise was
worked out, and he was eventually con
firmed.
Footnote: Davis was unavailable for
com ment, but a DOE spokesm an
stressed that Davis merely "sat in" for
Edwards at the Cabinet meeting, but
did not otherwise participate.
A Bush spokesmfln acknowledge
that progress on minority appointments
was of concern to both Reagan and\
Bush. and that the While House had
hired aides to recruit women. blacks
and other minorities to the administra-
tion
How come politicians never strike?
You hate to giggle and laugh and
make jokes about something that some-
one else Lbinks is serious. but I can't
keep a straight face when I read about a
strike by baseball players. A strike
seems.about as far away from playing a
game for fun as you can set, and that's
the complaint many of ua have against
sports these days. They've 1otten tQo
far away from the run.
I'm not clear what the iuue is and I
wouldn't pretend to say whether r think
the owners or the players are right: all
I_ know is. it ~trikes me funny.
down with some dumb sign over ber
head, shouting slogans. If I were a p14pil
and saw my teacher marching on a
picket line, it would change my whole
attitude toward class.
' WE'RE ALL IRRATIONAL when it col\1l~ to strikes. How we feel about any
strf ke we read about depends more on
'~ ...... ,
~J ~ llDY ROOllY IT'S INTE&ESTING how each or us
reacts to a 1trlke. We're all used to strikes by coal miners, auto workers bow it affects us personally than It de-
and newspapers, and even though we pends on the justice of the strikers·
know they'd all0e making $.1.25 an hour cause. if they had never cone on strike we're ; For example, no matter what the
not usually on their side when they IO s;tuaUon ii I never get used to a strike
out. I'm a worldnl person, by which I (by firemen or policemen. rt se~ms
mean I have no way of makinl money Wl'ODI for the police to go on a stnke.
except by sellln1 what l produce myaelf I They represent order in any society and
with my own labor, and yet I usually { a strike is a deliberately disorderly af.
find myaelf a1ainlt the wortlqman ln fair. A good cop is part lawyer, part
a strike situation. What's wron1 with . doctor, part soldier and part politician.
me, anyhow? It's Wlfair but l expect the cop to be a
There are some strikes I never get J saint, too.
used to. Teachers have as much right to THERE'S ONLY one large body of
make a good living as anyone, but I workers in this country that has never
bate to see them on strike. It seems so gone out on strike. I speak of poliU-
unbecomina and unteacherllke to see an clans. Why haven't politician& ever
arithmetic teacher marchint up and struck? We can only conclude that
they're already so grossly overpaid and I
that their working conditions and fringe
benefits are so ridiculously good that
they have no reason to. Most people re
1 sent s triking p o li cemen a nd
schoolteachers as r do, but r think most
or us would be amu11ed to see oor politi· I
cjans strike. It would be fun to see if our l
world were any worse without them for
a few weeks. I
The truth about why politicians don ·1 !
strike is not they •re .overpaid, though. 1r
The truth is many of them like w6rking .
too hard. The average mayor of the j
average town often makes less than the ,
high school principal. He or she gets to I
work at 8 in the morning and doesn't I'
quit until that last appearance at the
last fund-raising dinner that evening.
The Army general doesn't Uke being a
general because of the money; he likes
the power.
THAT'S WHAT kffps politicians go-I
ing, too. The average worker may be f
making more money than the mayor,
but he doesn't have any power and
that's what bugs him and accounts forl the 5,000 strikes we have in America
every year.
· I can't explain why baseball pla!1ers
would strike. They have both power and
money. I'm not even sure why I find a
stri.ke by them so funny. I think it has to
do with the play on words.
' '
Country folk can teach us a thing orl two
City folk are fond of making fun out of
rural habit.a and manners, but it is my
lmpreuion over the years that rural
people find more quietly sardonic
humor In the attitudes and antics of the
city folk . A farmer may be out or place
the next field, "Hey, Is this bull over
here safe?" "Well ," said the farmer,
"he's a dem sight safer'n you are."
Easy does it here, both verbally and
otherwise. Emerson lone a10 told of via·
itint a farm one day and was amused to
see two city boys trying to put a calf ln
the barn; each shoved and pulled to no
avail. Finally a farm girl nt;arby
smiled, walked over, put her middle
finger ln the calf's mouth, and 1ently
Jed it lnto tbe barn.
THE ONLY WAY TO persuade people
of the soil la to talk thelr la""'a1e. A 1 college prttldent I know was speaklna
at a conference on "Tbe Plac. of the
Humanities ln Education." The preced·
ln1 apealter, a rich farmer, dldD'\ think
much ot tbe bumanitiu compared with
practical courses. "What I want my son
to do, for example," he Hid, "l• to mlllt
a cow."
"That's a very lood ldea," hid tbe
esldent, who II'•• up a eouDtr)' boy.
'I wut"" IOI\ to be able to milk a cow,
too -wt I 'd alto Uke him to clo aome
thin•• that a calf can't do better."
Once at a tmall state a1rituJtural COi·
le1e. a M'Q• I wu bl'Nbt to th
legislature to raise faculty salaries. Th
f'1lTm bloc couldn't see why the stat
should pay colle1e professon so muc
money just for talking 12 to l5 hours
week. The f culty reps maGe n
headway until one who'd had farrnin
ex perience took the floo-r
"Gentlement11 he told the rustl
lawmaken, "a colleat proftssor ls a lit
tie like a bull. It'• oot the amount
time he spends lt's the Importance
what he does .. , They got the raise.
r
J 1
1
I
• :i••w •• __ ...._, ___ --------
DEAR READEaS: ne Federal Trade
Commluloa 11 h'yla1 &o locate s12,• feraer
1tadeata of Bell Ir Hewell correepoMeeee
couraet who may be ell&lble for ~. 8-•
deatl who tooll tbe elecu.kl ud aeeeu&-
la& homestudy cot1ne1 Orta& lt71 tk.rw~
lt7t ue eligible. Vader a t• FTC ~t
order, they will 1laare $1.5 mJlllea fro• a
fud let up by Bell Ir Howell Sdaoob Jae. 'fte
FTC Ralf Deeds to obtata the a4ldreuea el
former 1tudeatl u MOii u poalble • order to mail the m the aeceuary rd.-laforma-
Uoa.
Allboap the compHy pro.wed the Fl'C
wUb the names aad addreillel of lltlMata
wbo may qualify for a ref..S. muy 80
longe r live at &hole ad•reue9. la onler ..
make refancb avaUabJe to eUpble ,.,....,
tbe atalf needs can .. t adclreaes, "1Mlettt
l.D. number, elll'Odmeat dates. CRne UUes
and IOClal aeeurlty namlten. Tlala lafenaa·
&Jon shoald be Miit to: BelJ Ir Bowell aet.a.
Federal Trade Comml.11 ... , 51 Eut M•roe
St., Suite 143'1. CbJca10, Ill. ~.
Tbe FfC 1&alf allO 11 trytag to loca&e COD·
1amen wbo bought electric ruon called tlte
"Black Man's Shaver .. and were cllasatlsfled
w~lta performance. Tbey may be eUpble
for refund under tbe term• of a provlalollal·
ly a epted consent agreement be&weea tlae
man acturer -&be Sperry Corp. -aad tile
FTC.
Sperry bas agreed to mail refad form•
to customers whose names aad adclreaes
&lley have OD Rle. Coasnmen Who parcbued
tbls product are encourased to malte nre
AIU Y ASSUMAILI
IH'THIST OML Y
.2nd TRUST DEEDS
OWNER /HOHOWHER OCCUPIED
Call William B. Mitchell
Call today lor quote • No obhgatton trans nallonol funding
(-714) 975-1128 ~=='
Grand Opening
Sat., June 6th
Mr. Fudge's home-baked
chocolate chip cook-keys.
Newport 's finest. Gr eat
var iety. Soooo de-lic-ious.
SllVer-
bllie S.-:
Our Silver, Tag special.
It's the best deal around.
Raleigh quality. Plus
free accessories worth $32.
Come in and see for yourself.
But hurry, this offer won't last long.
U..y 1et a copy of.._ ,...uouaar. for n ·
tad ellllMUty by aeadla• ...... u•e ud ad·
dre11 to: Sperry Cerp., P .o. Box 1 ... , .............. c.u. Mtn.
AIM, ewaers of lt'74-lt7t &altblt•t Da.._., Sdroeeoe, aU AMII wlao;ave llaca
o11.re1..-•&iM preblem• an etlff9ra1ed
.. fflltad llte Federal Trade Commllaloa.
Tiie rrc receatly ellarsed tile •Hafu·
&wren of UteM can wttll failue to wan eem·
Hmera abHt poteatlaJ eapae proble••·
fth type of Wormatloa •IP& lane altered
ba1taa clee...._ or tile wa7 owaen mala-
t.alae4 tWr can.
llepaJn ta.at eouamen aay llave H ·
perlfteed blelMe replaeelMllt of eyllader
laeau. valwstem aeala, alld odaer valve werll
cottla1 from $41 to more &Ila• Utt.
~•amen wlU. relevut lalOl'matloa. Moald
DOtlfy: Federal Trade Comlllllaloa. aobert
Dey le, Ula A Pennaylvaala N . W .,
WH......,_, D.C. zer'·
• "Got a prob~? TMrl write to Pal. ""l Dunn. Pot wUl Ct.It rtd tape, getting • tta. auwer• end action J10U netd to
aolve f1WquUie1 in government and n buriM11. Moil !IOU' qw~tjoru to Pal.
Dunn, At Yoilr Servfct, Orangt Coa6t
Daily Pilot, P.O. Boz 1560 , C06ta ~'°• CA nnt. Aa
many lettna aa pou ible tDiU bt CU111Dertd, bid phoned
inquirin or lttttn not including the rtader1 full
name, oddrt11 and buaintu houn ' phone m1mM1'
cannot bt con.ridntd. Thu column oppeara doil11 ez-
cept Sunda)la."
Orange Cout DAIL. Y PILOT/Friday, June 51 1981
FOUND TROUBLE
Anita 8akn'
Kissing OK
in China?
HONG KONG (AP> -A Pek-
ing literary magazine has ad·
vised readers that kissing is not
indecent.
"Kissing in Western countries
is as common as shaking hands
in Chin a," according to the
Literature and Art Gazette.
The magazine noted that a
kissing scene in the
S h akespearean play The
Merchant of Venice produced re·
cently by Peking's Youth Art
Theater "almost caused a scan-
dal" because of China's "ig-
norance of the outside world."
~ BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) -
Things have gone badly for
Anita Baker since the day she
found fl,200 in an old pillow.
Aller turning the money over
to police, she waJ (ired from her
job. Later, she was told she was
ineligible for unem ployment
benefits and was ordered to re·
pay a $50 unemploy"'ent check.
"It's really pretty silly," said
Miss Baker, 18, of Minot. about
70 m iles north of Bismarck "My
folks couldn't believe it -that
they'd fire me for being honest,
and the unemployment service
would want their money back."
Her troubles started last year
after farmer Robert Ganskop of
Flaxton got approval to clean
out an old rural home belonging
to a deceased neishbor. The
man "was about 80 years old,
living alone, back in the 1960s,"
said Minot police detective
Donald Schneider.
From the home , Ganskop
brought old feather tick mat·
tresses and pillows to the Minot
dry cleaning plant where Miss
Baker had worked about six
months.
Opening a pillow cover, she
found a wad of money.
It was mostly in $10 and $20
bills, Schneider said. There were
~lso gold certificates -a S20 bill
printed in 1905 carrying the
name of the First National Bank
of Bowbells, another $20 from a
national bank in Glasgow.
. .
Mont., a bill dated if ·l~ U¥M>t
and a number· of olO C&nadlaJ\
bills.
Total face value was $1,200,
btJt Schneider said a local coin
dealer valued one bill alone at
$150 to $200. I j I )
After discovering .~ money,
Miss Baker aaid · she \ried te
reach her job supervjsor , nea11
Fle1'ke, to tell of the r;nc,1, "buJ
everybody was goneY
She took the money home and
in the morning turned It over t~
police.
Shortly after, on Dec. 24, she
was fired. Miss Baker said-Miss
Fiske told bier it was.beoause ot
a ~ompany policy. requir ing
e m.,loyees .,,.,,tao found valuablet
to turn them 9ver to t,be firm.
"They neyer told ble of their
policies. 1 dldn 'l kriow ,' Mis~
Baker said. 1 •
Attempts t o reach 'Miss Fiske
b y telephone a t her job and
home were unsuccessful:• · I
Miss Baker, no longer worki
ing, applied to Job Ser v,j.ce1tllorth
Dakota for unem p loyment
be n efits. She received a S50
check "a couple of monlbs ag(\
then last month thef ;Hc;\rd r•
been fired for violatirtg' corilpany
policy and wanted their money
back," she said.
She appealed, and after hear-
ing her testimony, Job Servic~
appeals referee Richard Durkop
of Bismarck ruled Wednesday
sbe could keep the $50. ..
I '
one way by night oneway byday .,
"E 11{'T)' nonstop er
H'idehoch-how ccm
I . It go wrong ....
"I ams going to see this film
this lt't.'t'k an)'ll'O)'. Hmmm, I "
ll'onder if there~ an)· popcorn ....
"Choosin}.! fro m } ddkious
rnlr~es is the toul{hcsl
pare of th e flight:•
s179 eacli~ with ~und-trip purchase to Washington,
Philadelphia, Boston, Baltimore.
F1y non-. Make reservadom and
buy tickets 7 dayt ln advanc:e. 'lravet 830am. 4·45pm•
Arrive
I · '?:/
Easy Restriction to Wuhlnatori!
PhlJ•delphla. Boston, B•ltlmorT:
,.
before Sept. 1, 1981. 9 ·15 am 5 20 p.m··
1200 noon 8 10 p.m•
9'00 a m ..
900 a m'
1200 noon•
12:00 noon••
5.30 pm~
I 1"30 a m
11 ·15am
2·25 p.rn
230 p.rn
8.05 p.Ql.
9;00 p.m.
Make rcsc:rvallons and buy ro~nd1
trip tic-kc\ at least 14 da)'s In adva~Ct'.
make any c;ha""cs IQ return ~na· ~
lions a t lc3St 14 days in ndvan«' , "
(or fly standby c1r lo dl11C<>unt)I•
stay throuah u Frida). or If yo~ leave
e>n a Saturd~·. rcturn\1U1) da)' ,
(with a max\{TIUJT\ llty of 60 dl!)'S~
United's your best way to the East.
With brand-new low fares,_great new
scheduJes and the biggest neet of wide-
body nonstops going,
Seats are limited and the restrictions
are easy. For infonnation and reserva·
tioos caD your 1hlvel Agent.
Partners ln 'Travel with Westin
Hotels.
2·45 pm 10.35 p.m··
9;30 p.m 5:25 a.m~
9:40 p.m.t 5 30 a.m .. 630 pm~·~
12:45 pm. 9·30 a m 12·~ pm.
9:20 p m Q.00 n m. 11 :20 a.m.
'/ •JrK ••Newark tOulleil ;N1aht Co;at'h
Scheduk-9 whject to chantci
11 :46 a.m.f 1 :40 p.m
!S15p.m t 7.15pm.
LI I
I I 1 (
··1 ·m lllkiTIQ Ut~ fqsl} way o~~
to tli~ a<1t.'1
•
>
1
i
~)
1
.. . '"'
r!l •. •
·c~
l , ~ ~
(
H IF Oran • Cout DAILY PILOT/Frida • June 5. 1981
t_
980 CADILLAC .
COIPE DEVILLE
11
Equipment includes dual comfort power seats, Cadillac wire wheel cov-
er~ AM-FM stereo with cassette tape player and many other power as-Yr, sist options. (604ZBJ).
,
.
QutStanding Resales
I 1980
CADILLAC
FLEETWOOD
B9'0UGHAM
O'Elegance. (32SZBW).
1980
CADILLAC
ELDORADO
COUPE
Factory two-tone
paint. (621389).
( 1978
... CADILLAC
COUPE
DEVILLE
With Cadtllac: wire whMI
covers. (1S4UXR).
57995
. 1980
OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS'
SUPREME
·•I·
.1981
CADILLAC
ELDORADO
COUPE '
AM-FM stereo radio
w 11 h cassette tape plaY9r.
(1BJZ844).
517,995
1978
CADILLAC
SEVILLE
Leather covered seating
area. (976TXK).
1978
CADILLAC
FtEETWOOD
BROUGHAM·
Dual comfort power
seats. (111 UKY).
1977
CADILLAC
SEDAN
DEVILLi
Dual comfort power
Hats. (730WFI).
56495 .
1976
CADILLAC
SIVILtE
EqulpJMd with all
Cadlll1c power Ullat" •
(9m'JJ).
51995
1·979
CADILLAC ·
FLEETWOOD
BROUGHAM
Factory padded eik-graln
vinyl top. (719WYB).
510,995
'
1979
CADILLAC
SEVILLE
Equipped with all of
the Cadillac power
assists. (711YBO).
1979
CADILLAC
COUPE
DEVILLE
Factory Cadillac wire ·
wheel covers. (38016t!).
1977
CADILLAC
SEYIL~E
Rolls Royce custom
grlll. (301SOH).
59895
1980
CHEVRO--ET
CORVETTE
T·TOP
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,,
bllJPillt
FRl'?AV,JUNES, 1981
IUITlllTll BYCH If 1111111 lllllY
FEATURES
COMICS
TELEVISION
83
B.4
88
:County fair caDlpalgn Panel Blay fade
By GLENN SCO'M'
.0( ... Dl6ly ,.... ...
Members ol Oranie Collnty's
Fair Campaip Practices Com·
mission left their meetiAJ this
,week unsure whether they'll
ever convene again.
At issue is a state appeals
court ruling last September in
whi judges said polUlcal can-
d " tes don't have to include
eir names and addresses on
campaign literature.
To do so, they said, would be a
violation of first amendment
guarantees of freedom or speech
and expression.
Both the state and U.S .
Supreme Courts have refused to
hear the case. .
ln orange County, all can·
didales for countywide election
are required by the election code
to include their names and ad·
dresses on literature.
They also are suppos~ to sub-
mlt copies or all malled material
to the commission within thrM
hours of its malling.
The five-member com·
-mission's Job is to review the
moterial and judge whether it is'
false or misleading -and lo
e nsure that it meets county
guidelines.
But members noted during a
meeting this week in Santa Ana
that their functions will be all
but canceled if candidates can
..., ...................
Huntington Beach hone lovers Delynn B<denhomer (left) and Marsha Jackson mu trail near Centrol
Park. Thtir group i! seeking permanent stable in park. .
, Huntington horse owners upset
Miffed at consultant's opinion on p~rk stables . Horse owners in Huntington
Beach say they're upset that a
private consultant doesn't seem
I
to agree that the city's Central
Park is big enough for both
equeslriaq stables and recrea·
tion.
Representatives of the
Equestrian Trails Inc. group
1 will ask for a permanent stable
, al the park during a Monday
I I special session calle<l by City
C Council, according to group
~ spokeswomen.
A consultant's report has rec·
ommended various develop·
ment alternatives for the 297·
acre park, but hasn't recom·
mended a permanent horse
stable.
The City Council has been con·
sidering development in the
park for the past two years and
will discuss recommendations
by Ullrasystems Inc. that in·
elude • golf course, hotel,
athletic field and gyll)nasium
complex, a restaurant and a
threatened by future housing de·
velopmenl.
The horse owners use a 2.2
mile equestrian trail that nm.s
through Central Park, but it al$<>
is listed as temporary use by the
citv. ...
''We've bent over backwards
to be a good group and maintain
o ur own trails," said Ms.
Jackson.
··But without a permanent sta·
ble there's no guarantee that
there'll be any horses in Hunt·
ington Beact) five years from
now."
The consultant's report says a
stable for 250 horses in Central
Park would be "extremely
challenging" to operate suc·
cessfullv.
"The· city would have to ac·
cept a minimal return on the
land rental,'' the report states.
It says 15 acres would be
needed.
Office should review the recc>m·
mendatlons of the sheriff and
the General Services Ad·
ministration and come up with
Its own proposal.
He sald that officials should
examine what it would cott lo
provide uniformed presence by
using otf ·duty deputies on an
overtime baais. •He aaid that
mlgbt be cheaper than addlnl new positions for security.
Nestande orlfilnally called for
the study of the buUdin& aecilrt·
ty. He said lt was promptect by
recent thefts from the bu1ldlnc
and hls concern about tbe Hfety
of officials at public meetlnp.
l2ontract rejected
Ne,otiat.lona were to resume
today def eUalbWu worll .. fri the Oran1e County Social
Services l)epartment rejected a
mana,.ment Otter for a two·
ye•r ccnttact wttb a •· 75 percent aalary meteue.
Tbe worken voted 71·64
ftui'ldQ Diehl to nJ9d tbit COIA• tract oner. .
The eountJ offer *lUclM a maximum · I pereent eon.of.
Uvln1 lncreue and contrlbuUciaa
to the Ntlrement fuicl.• ltl total
nlue equaiect • 1.3 peree.t _.
home bicreaM, olftclall 1Ul
AbOut • ~ ol the • •ll1ibW~ won.a ...... to .. Amerteaa ,.._ .... fl .....
C,unty ind Munlclltel Worbrs.
'
send ruers, brochures and other
mailings without saying who did
it.
Said member Jack Mandel:
"If we don't know whose sending
this stuff out, w~ cease lo exist."
The commission asked the
county Board of Supervisors to
seek ~ opinion from the county
Counsel's Office on the matter.
Other decisions seemed to
pale in comparison to questions
about .the court case, but com·
.
mis si'oners also asked the
supervisors to consider givill1
them power to levy fines against
candidates who violate the
group's guidelines.
Commissioner Joan Riddle
noted that the District At·
torney's Office took no action on
54 violations sent to it in 1980 by
the commission.
The group also agreed to
enlarge to seven me mbers to
create an improved "public
perception.··
Appointe d directly by the
supervisors. the commission has
come under criticism -· most re-
cently by the Orange County
Grand Jury for its· ties to t.bat
political body.
Ms. Riddle suggested that the
extra two member~ could be ap-
pointed by a group other than
the supervisors.
However, the decision to make
the change lies wi th the
s upervisors.
Pair charged in death
Huntington man, woman arrested in murder of baby son
A 22 -year-old Huntington
Beach man and his 19-year-old
common-law wife have been
charged with murdering their
lO·week-0ld son who died earlier this week from alleged physical
abuse.
Sidney L. Green and Cynthia
Evans, 19. each of 19132 Hunt-
ington St .. were arrested Thurs·
Santa Ana
boy ~ucted,
returns home
An 8-year-old Santa Ana boy,
Ramon Garcia, was safe In San·
ta Ana today after going through
a bizarre, botched kidnapping
incident.
Garcia was abducted near E:d·
inger and Cent r al avenues
Thurs day morning by two
women in a white car as he
walked to school, said Santa Ana
police Lt. Terry Dakin.
The kidnappers contacted lht
boy's parents and demandea
$9 ,000 cash for his release.
Dakin said the father obliged by
dropping off the money al an ar·
ranged sit~ in Los AnJteles.
The suspects never came to
collect the money , though.
Insteaa, young Ramon was re·
leased at 10 p.m. al a restaurant
in Notwalk, where he walked in·
and asked a worker to <!all his
parents, !ltllid Dakin.
The parents picked up the boy.
then went back to the drop-off
point an<l collected the $9,000,
Dakin s,,Ud. ,
Investigators from Santa Ana
police and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation are still working
on the case, he added.
Summer.swim
classes dae
The Huntington Beach Com·
munity Services Department
will conduct registration Satur·
day from 9 a.m . to 4 p.m. for its
summer swim lessons.
Sign-ups will be held at the
pools at Edison High School and
Golden West College, sites for
the summer program.
Fees range from $13 to $16 de·
pending on the age category.
For more information, call
536-8895.
day and are in custody al Hunt·
ington Beach Jail. Bail is set at
$250,00o each, police said.
Police Lt. Bruce Young said
paramedics were called lo the
couple's apartment Monday and
found the baby, Joey L. Green,
not breathing. Paramedics took
the boy to Pacifica Hospital
where he was pronounced dead.
An autopsy revealed evidence
the baby had died from lack of
oxygen resulting from physical
abuse, police said.
The baby also had nine frac·
tures, Young said, including five
broken ribs, a broken clavicle
and a fracture of the leg .
The Investigation is contint.t·
in~. police said.
DM!y ..........
PARK PROPOSAL -A schematic plan for 30-acre park ad··
jacent to historic Newland House and shopping center has
been approved by the Huntington Beach City Council.
Irvine coast tour
planned by panel
Stale coastal comm1ss1oners
mee ting in San Francisco have agreed to lour the county's
Irvine Coast area where develop·
ment of homes, hotels and offices
is under consideration.
The tour, commission plan·
ners said, would take place Ji.ine
15 -several days before com·
missioners are scheduled to re·
view and vote on the development
project.
The U,000.acre Irvine Coast
area, stretching from Corona del
Mar to Laguna Beach, would
largely be set aside as open
space, according to the Local
Coastal Plan prepared by county
planners and the Irvine Com·
pany.
The Irvine Company, which
owns or has owned most the
coas tal land . is seeking
permission to build 2,000 homes
-many envisioned as multi-acre
estates -several hotels and of·
fices. The firm also pJans to build
two roads.
The Irvine Coast area includes
the newly created Crystal Cove
State Park and other land to be
put in the public's hands.
Lifeguards
rescue 50 ·
at Ht01tington
Lifetuards made more t.ban~
rescues in Huntington Beaeb
Thursday as clear sides and tem·
peratures in the 70s brought about
40,000 people to city and state
beaches.
Thursday's weather conditions
will chance slightly over the
weekend as late night and early
morning clouds are expected
because of a low pressure in·
version, according to a National
Weather Service spokesman.
Temperatures in coastal areas
are expected lo be in the 70s over
the weekend.
IND OP M U19 '-Sufftr ltrlJ&bteM out u
wall ~ wattr Clotes lb on him DorUa of the H~ ... eb pier Tb~.·&arf wu
ltlll ~ 4 and I feet today an4ft
'7ALK A METER FOR A LITER: Leafin1 throu1h our
sterling journal Just yesterday. I• teamed that we have the
state high school championship track meet tonlaht and
Saturday night upcoast at Cerritos. It should be hllh
excitement.
Scanning the predictions of which athletes have Ute best
chance to come up wlnnen. however. might be a bit of a
puzzlement for old-time prep runners. .
FQI' example, you study the dope sheet to determine the
favorites in the one-mile run.
You scan again, squtnUna
at the lists slighUy.
You do not find the
one-mile run.
The reason is that there
isn't any. No lOO·yard dub,
either . Or a 220 or a
quarter-mile.
.. ~
,~~' -Tll_l_l_RP-111-1.m~
EVERY RACE, YOU SEE. bas now been converted so
that they measure it in meters.
Thus what used to be the 100-yard dash ls now the
100-meter dash. Which ls more than 100 yards. How ·much
more? Aw, Just some.
Take that one·mlle run that used to be the excltlng four
laps around your old high school track. Now It's the
1.600-meter run.
Investigating for the sake of trying to get up to date, I
inquired into the savants of our sports department about what
aeemed to be a rather odd distance.
'"THAT'S TRUE," one of the savants explained. "in
colleges and universities, they don't have a 1,600-meter run.
They nm 1,500 meters."
Why? you inquire, still in bafflement.
•'The only explanation ever given for why the high school
athletes run a greater distance is that 1,600 meters is closer to
an actual mile.
You got that?
Thus you might be left asking this question:
If it's so important for the high school athletes to run a
distance close to a real mile; then why don't they just' run a
real mile and forget all this tomfoolery about running 1,600
meters, which is near a mile but really isn't a mile?
In this day and age when we're all in a headlong rush to
convert everything to centimenters, millimeters and parking
meters. you have to suppose that question wiU be left
unanswered by the powers-that-be. Whoever they be.
ONE OF MY EX·FBIENDS once observed that back in
the beginnings of this nation of ours. we created an industrial
revolutioo in this country that made us one of the Great
Powers of all time and changed the face of the globe forever.
We did all this wonderfulness in inches. feet and yards
while the rest of the world was slogging afong by meters and
centimeters.
"Now," be suggested. "Everybody wants US to convert to
the way THEY were slogging along in measurements."
Indeed, it does seem to be a great irony.
And I'll never give an inch on that.
UEUTINANIS -Colta Meuns Robert Donnelly (left), a
11'78 F.atancla High grad, IDd Kirk Knipp. a 1977 graduate of
Cotta Mesa Hialt, were li'Bduated Wednesday from the U.S.
Military Academy at West Point. Donnelly was com·
miasioned a second lieutenant in the field artillery and
Knipp is a second lieutenant iii the armored brancb.
Labor, ecology gr.oops
attle toxic wastes
some of the illuet ln dlll>\M are:
-Wbetber eo let a bualftlll tbal 18
Md fell' cluiaa• caUHd tiY ,....,. to
defend -·a. lroundi &bat~ ... ill reaMUbleeare.
Nuclear
dmnp
backed
CARSON CITY, Nev.
(AP> .:.. The Nevada
Senate has voted 12·6 to
keep open a nuclear
1arba1e dump -one ot
only three In the nation.
The acUon was a defeat
for Gov. Bob List, who
wanted to shut the facili·
ty near the desert town
of Beatty.
A 8200, which would
have outlawed all
danaerous chemical and
low·level nuclear waste
dumps In Nevadn, was
shelved Collowina three
unautce srul amend·
ment attempts by
lawmakt!ra who sa_id re
vlalona were nt•eded
btfote thoy could sup·
port lhe plan
Sus Jim Ollbray,
Ulll H\'tnlllUdt '111d Don
Aahworth, all LH Vef H
Democt'elB, J m Kb81n~kl, \) 'l'Hltk11, Ulll
lhnlo. O ltcno, ud
ThomM "Svlkc" Wilson,
D Reno. w~re lhc unly
lawmakeni to favor \hll
bill which had r"
celvt'd an overwhelm ·
lllM ~:1-8 BUPVo•'l In lhc
Auemhl1.
Ullbray uld, "l don't
know whot all lh• bu<·k
movement la In thl11
house that's kllllng this
blll." ond oskcd his col
leattuea to "iurnrch your
consciences and think
about the health of the
people or Nevada."
Gov. List has waged a
running battle with the
state Board of Health
ever since the panel last
year granted dump
operators a three-year
extensioR on their
operating license. List
even threatened to oust
one board member who
voted to keep open the
Beatty dump, about 100
miles northwest of Las
Vegas.
Nevada is one of three
states with low·level
radioactive waste
dumps. The other ·two
are in Washington and
South Carolina.
Although Beatty
serves as a dump site
f or only low·level
radioactive wastes, ad·
voe ates or AB200 pointed
out that those wastes in·
e lude dangerous
uranium. thorium ,
and cobalt.
-Wbetber loca\ 1oyeramtat1 •
lbould ............ to,.... .... 1or ......... .
ft•lillla~C! •vbo .,.. 1911o ................
Jr •• W0UW --.. Ille clMDUp ce1t1 oa la-.111trr1 prolllblt a reaa .. l»le·ciri der••N .. law-_...,_. ... ._ .. .,...,.._._
dmpiltei.
o.ey ............. •ldllerf .......
R!8UILDINO -A 20,000-square-foot building July 30. While Dan Snyder watches, Alex
11 golna up at ABC Lumber's Costa Mesa site. Bizzolo pours concrete for the new center,
replaclna the facility that was leveled by a which is expected to open in August at 140 E.
dlsoatroua $600,000 fire in pre-dawn hours last 17th St.
Services planned
for Rev. McFarland
M emorlal services for the
Rev Dr. 0 . Scott McFarland,
the Presbyterian minister active
in bringing Hoag Memorial
Hospital to Newport Beach, are
scheduled thJs week and next.
He died Monday at the age of 92.
Private services for Mr.
McFarland, who h-ad been living
in Duarte, are to be held Friday
at 2 p .m . at Fairhaven
Memorial Park in Santa Ana.
Pair named
to CAI board
Two Newport Beach residents
have been named lo the board of
trustees for the Community As·
sociaUons Institute.
F. Scott Jackson, president·
elect of the CAI, and Newport
Beach developer Patrick Munn
were seated during recent
ceremonies in Washington D.C.
The CAI, which has a mem-
bership of 4,330, is an indepen·
dent, non·profit research and
educational organi zation.
Public services wiJJ be held
June l3 al 3 p.m . at the First
Presbyterian Ch urch or Santa
Ana, where he served for neµly
30 years beginning in 1927.
Designated as pastor emeritus
or the Santa Ana church in 1956,
Mr. McFarland was known aa
"Scotty" to his friends in
Newport Beach with whom he
often went fishing. Newport resident A. Vincent
Jorgensen. a longtime supporter
and board member of Hoag
H ospital , sa id that Mr.
McFarland began his effort to
found the hospital and had
raised haU a million dollars
for it before World Wat-II.
He said the Hoag Foundation
equaled that amount following
the war.
Mr. McFarland was president
of the Santa Ana Rotary Club in
the mid·1930s and was active in
a variety or other community
activities.
The family suggests memorial
gifts be sent to the Dr. 0 . Scott
McFarland Memorial Fund al
the First Presbyterian Church or
Santa Ana.
Kids' movies
planned at
NB library '
The Newport Beach Pubtk
Library's Saturday matiau
children's movie serin will
begin this Saturday wit.It show-
ing or "Pinballs" and ·"Snow·
bound" at the Mariner's Bnmcb
Library, 2005 Dover DTiYe,
Newport Beach.
All films are in color and will
be shown at 2 : 30 in tbe
M ullipurpose Room of the
library. Admission is free.
Other films for June are:
.. Julia," "The Gourdcarver
and Yoshiko" and "Ttie
Papermaker," June 13; "Niok."
and "Ponies of Miklaengi,"
June 20; and ''Helen Keller and
Her Teacher" and "Violin ...
June 27.
July programs include:
•'Santiago's Ark." July U;
"Moods of Surfing,"'
"Skateboard Safety" and I
.. Magic Rolling Board," July 18. 1
The series ends July 25 with "It's
Nice to Have a Wolf Around ttie I
House" and "Rikki· Tikki· Ta vi." t
PACIFIC DECORATING CENTERS presentfl!
OUR ALL NEW CARPET
LINE FOR SPRING 1981
FEATURING:
RMSTRONG CARPETS
by EV ANS & BLACK
with EASY CARE
DUPONT DACRON YARN
Our lk•1<l 11t•llln1r "hort 1>il1·
1•l111<h. M cl1•lirlo11" c-olors;
h1'8utiful So•um\ wlwt fini'lh!
f:o1111uarnh11• i~ 111>1><1i'rrmr1·
nrul clctrnhilil) lo i1t•111 ..... ,.11.
it1f(8l 15.00tiq. )ti.
SAU s91s Pltc:f SQ, YD.
44GRAND AFFAIR ..
Now there's an Armstrong
no-wax floor you can
really afford.
Not just
"printed-on"
color ... but
shimmtf y
glOW·from·within
lnlllid Colar -""' , .... , __ ...... -....... ..---··--......... -·-_ ..... -. .... .. ........... ,.,1( .. ... ,,__ .. ......, --.-·
...... ,. ,..,
-I
~ r::
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION
OUOlATIOlll• INCt.WDI T•aotiON , ....... •O••. MIOWUT, ... C"I(, PIW, 1ono111, ou•o•Y ANO (IMCllllNATI noc11
lllc.MAllOHAlllO •tf'OllTIO 8 V Ttll NUO ANO 1111'111111T
Su~rmarltelft . , . .,,
change cour~:
The ar<>cery bualneH ts lo a 1chl&ophreolcl ~t.s
best characterized perhaps by a d fWUoo a frt ~ mine once coined !or that unlqoely American !
"superette," which aome nelghborh~ food 61
use to tell the world they're small but not that •ff!~l1·.
"There," he said, "go • prefix and a suffb: be,~6.i off in opp05tte dltections." ,
This division was apparent Jut month in Da1'•p~
where some 15,000 grocery people aathered for' di~"
44 th annual convention of the Food Harkefinj
Institute. It's the biggest crocery meeting of t.Hi'
year. and it was not lhe happiest of catherin&• thi. 1
time around. You may be aghast at what tbe caaft1'
register shows at the checkout counter, but the
s upermarket operators are having a bard time rail·
ing their prices fast enough to meet their costs.
Neither Safeway, our lareest arocery chain, nor
Kroger, the No. 2 chain, was able to make as much u
1l penny on a doJlar of sales last year.
To cope, the supermarket people are chargtn1 off
in two different directions. One way aa~ "go blc."
The other wat says "go small." The traffic Is heavy
on boJh routes. • ,
-The ·•go bfg" school advocates the build.Jog of
giant stores, sometimes called "superstores" or
"combination stores" (food-and-drug). In either case
you 're putting ~
up a monster !'-
store,. at the ;/ ~
m i nimum r / 1
30,000 s.qua re 4 , -!;
feet . with at ••-·----------~h~c~o~tt co~n~ llllll la .. nz
lers , a nd
merchandise stretched out so far you need binoculars
to get oriented .
The superstores are being built. Safeway opened
120 of them last year. One, m Sherman, Texas, COV·
ers 57,600 square feet. The rationale for these stores
is clear "Let's get away from the food business."
It's a fact of retailing life that margins are very low
in the food business. A store can make more money
selling lipstick, drugs, cigarettes, greeting cards and
sneakers than it can selling milk. lettuce, chicken,
hot dogs and frozen peas . Hence the passion. among
supermarket folks . for non-foods.
But there's another strong voice in the grocery
business that insists: "Let's g~t back to basics." This
school advocates scaling down stores, reducing tbe
number of ite ms carried, eliminating frills, stocking
up on private label or generic products and passln&
on the cost savings to the consumer in the form of
lower prices .
. A bunch of these stores are being opened.
They're called "limite d assortment" and
"warehouse" stores. Some simply display the pro·
ducts on the very pallets they arrived on. Tbes~
economy stores carry, among others, these names:
Aldi. Plus. Save-A-Lot. Grocery Box, Economiser,
Mark & Pak, U-Merk It, Bobco, Kash N Karry, Cub, Prairie.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
Hl!W YOfUCCAPI l'hwl Dow.J-....... I# T--,,, J-4 STOCKI
'°''"' ~=~~-fl JO Tm cn.61 OD.JI al.61 + t.Jt IS Ull IGS.D 105.11 104.Jt IOU>-t.n u $tk m .tt *·" 111M •1.-o.a lllCNS .. • .. .. .. .. • .. • • • • • . .. 4,41,_
TtM •••. ................. 1~-Ulllt ............. ........ .,.,_ u $1t1 ....................... '·""-
WHAT STOCKS DID
Hl!W YOftK (lltPI J..,, 4 ,.,..,,,
AAIVeMed T~ 4:1.· OKll-71D =t ¥:t:-i':::t .,
ltU \115' = ::::-" • 1' ..
WM.\ T AMU OIC> 1
Hl!W YORK (API Jiii\, 4
Prw;
Adv enc• T-~ ·= OKlllMCI us UllC.Mft99CI --T-.•t 1-ns ...
Htw C'tN 37 3 "'" ows n
.....
~WOMAN Women II OOflo
by .. e\111 ~-
"°TAO DOUlltt ....... "
tlllpau rnd KatMll
~ lllld I girt 'tWlttl I 01
~ --"'"""" fof lhe~71111. e GOODTIMll
'UL"'"° ITWUNGI -tance Kerwin play• a t8·1w101a a>uppeteer wbo Join• th• clrcua ln tho late 1940I ln 11Side Show''
tont1ht at t ()f'l Channel 4.
Tiie l!v-lll'flltY ,_ Ill
economlO orllllf '"" bOttl J-Ind J,J, IOM tllelr
8~~
CMHIWI
AIOHIWI
.. • JOl<llft WIU> WILOOMI IACt<.
KOTT'E'
l(ot11r muat d1c:ld•
wMtlW he lhould IC)llld
-time with Julll Ot
llllp Batbltlno Pfeplll IOt
hie IJ\llltup t•t
• llNNYHIU.
8lnny pleya French lllm
dll'lct0t Pierre du Terre.
I Keal' NIWMIAT
ITI.001&
"Dirt .._.. Motorblkll
ere ridden tllrougll Ill
~ courM llld on tl'll
3 1ddl1b1cli Tr1c11 In
Southern Cllllfomll (R)
(I) NEWI 9 llAMEY MIU.EA
Ill 1M n*'9I of I New York
.... -· 8emey loeel .. oool ..,., hit wtl9 pr•
-a '*" trom tlllll\Q • --... DT'ONAL. .,_ C88NEWI
• ..C:NEW8
• tMW\' O.Y8 AQ.AIN
Aldllll the be11c:hw11n111
~ • .,..llbel .. .,
.... fllPllC*IO .... Injured
pllltoer
• MCNEWI ·~ CHANNEL LISTINGS
11 KNXT tCBSJ Los Angeles
D KNBC1NB C1 Los Angeles D KTLA tlnd I LOS Angeles D AABC· TV I ABCI Los Angeles
(I) l\FMB 1CBSI San Diego 0 t<HJ· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles
KCST (ABC1 San 01e90
CD KTTV (Ind I Los Angeles
Q) KCOP TV (Ind I Los Angeles
fD KCET· TV 1PBSI Los Angetlls m KOCE TV 1PBS1 Huntington Beach
•••••• iie»ttNN "Mclvmt ,.fOdllC1'' Tll•
'"'"'"" r111wev •n-..-~ Wldultri.e .,,
....... In Ihle loolc II
1M UNll (tf "'°""" Pfoductl In Ind °"' of Cll-~
(I) fl,fll.MMAIM
WlmQre'1 Tout'\ Guye
~ a.tt tonlelt: Nt9 on
........... !Mind pwldill
.. tof•lofa.
W. (I) THI INCIM)IM.a Muuc
o.~ .__.. 1111*1·
ment1 on tllll'IMlf .,_ nr.
Ind Mnd him Into 1111 -
~ ptllfthM 11..., 1~
• HANie YAU.SY '1TA
ltelle IMml the~ ....
~ d'*'"'O _t.,
lrOll'I tM tOWl't or.-lot
11M 11 1"* r.otory. C"I ea .....
lenlon ..-to 1111p
Kt-atUdy lot "" ~._
lfllipte.c.(A) ewcw. + + "Thi Vlolerlt .... ~
lllol'llll" (1t76) Aichlrd
Conte, l.ukl .......... One
min II determined to
creca ctown on IM ll>"'d'-
Clt• wltt'I OI wllflollt hejp
tromtn.i.w. • ,..M. IMMZINI
8eltlmore'• Tougfl Ouye
Ind a.rte conteet: • on
the PecMlc: .-nd PlfedlM
of Bora 8ofl; Olc>t. Carrot
on tM good Ind bid of
Clfl'OU; Joen Embery fd..
lowl I l'lefd of,,_ cte..
• MOVle • • * "Myatltlle From
Beyond Elrth" ( 1911) 000.
urnentwy. Sdenttau Ind
,_c:hlrl ~· the pwMormll wor1d of UFO..
Kltlen photogr'llPhy. 1)9Y•
dlolllnella, donlnO. ESP
Ind the llennuda Trtengle.
• LOe AfM¥' n Wiii< .. MVIRW
Hoet: a.. Roberta.
• MACNllL / l.84MA
MPORT l:30. IA..oN>
Whlll llc6c with the nu,
Henry James story shmm
love and morality of 1800s
, What is The Bottom Line?
Dear Readers:
-i'ht Bottom Une ii your hlaUh. Tltert art U~a in our U~
~hen we fqrget that and W07TJI about thing• that aren't MarLJI
' as important When you have your phJllical and tMntal Malth,
y:ru have tM building blockt tDith whfch to face all tM attendant
ptoblems of living a full, challenging and rewording Uft. Pleole
remember that evtT.JI day and thank God f!'r it. We ~IUoed in
.,. ,. this idea so much that we 1tart«1 our own ~ .. de<Uoattd to
'" H,talthand named U The Bottom Une.
iJ " fhUl I
·i t'F.he Bottom Line u an e:m-du IQlon wber• .ach ~
·t 1 ~oeives personoliud at tendon,. Oar goal ii for NCh pm10n to
·~ ~lop to thdr fullest potrnttal ~allJI and ~fr. Our
f' ~pbfc ezerci$e cl4Ue• ore conwnWntlr off~ I tfmH ~ ,., •11. and Jolt for one hour. Our cloNe• C11e ck~ ao tMld
''lirNngth, flerlbilitJI ad endurance.
"
1?°\f,' :would UJc.s to invite you to a com.pUmentor, clan to lff , '*' TM Bottom UM reallJI it.
1peclallzJng In
American Oak.
Many unique
handmade gift•
. awell 11
· collectable1.
me mcnbHla and
much more.
Step back
Into 1190
nJBE TOPPERS
KHJe 8 :00 -"The Violent
Profeulonala.'' Richard Conte and Luke
Merenda star in a movie about a man
who fights the 1yndicate.
KCOP m 8:00 -"Mysteries from
Beyond Earth." A documentary fUm ex·
plorlng UFOs and psychic phenomena.
ABC D 9:00 -"The Comeback Kid."
John 11.ltter and Susan Dey star in a
movie about f tough-luck ballplayer who
helps a sans of klda. .
••••w ..,..,. ... tt:i001ee(J)O NIWI tTMT"9C
Thi lntifprlae Md ... orew.,. ~not to
oomp6N ..,.., rnilllon of oon===· I w•A•a•H
Oel. Potter'• llMW9 ......
myetlriOUllV dlMppNn
from Nr eotrel Ind H.-•
.,.. Ind l .J. tty to help I
YoUnO KorMn wflO II tr;tno
to IVOld OON«lptlon lneo
the~. • ...,,HU
leMy pleyt I~,.
., epeildlng the flight on
Amlf1cM I ~«*
~tln1tory.
• DICK OAYWTT
~: J-Clfv9ll. (Plt1
2of 2)
• INIAK ,_.llW9
AoOlf Ebert Ind °"" 8111111 rl\lllw "llultln'
~." ''TMI 11 EMI" Ind
''TM FOU( a-i.,·•
1 t:IO • (I) THI NeC»fT
ST~
Ko6ahlil -I murder
being CCMMlltwd by I m111
he --hi ... belor9 •• ;o~lhl "*GI"·
Oueet hOlt: Devld L«ter·
man. au.te: Dr. t.ndon
Smith. ~ Aldon, Joen
Embery. eO MCHRWI
NeGHTUNI
·~ADIAL * * * ''Thi Of• G1t1by" (1874) Robert Aedford,
Mle ,.,,_, IMed on tM ,_. ~ ,, loon ,._., •
llld. A ~ 1tl0a Noe•
....~--to , ... ,,,.,,. .. -'*' he
io-.
• OMOINYM ~ )lldgel( ··-Oelw,. ~ ~ • ..,
.JoftnNin, ~: JoMny
'°''-· •• CW'T10NB> MO ....
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• flt&OIOPHY
tt:aO. Tor.ioMow
The out• trlngll of lfltlr·
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lnthl• 1pecl11 ldltlon.
tMluring the Engllltl punk
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ground mC>\111 .,., Dl¥tM
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Miil• Line. Aldwd x.
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members of I mllitary t8Ct•
lclll unit lpply their trllnlng
to the ltrMtl wlttl stunning .,.__ (R)
t:OOG NYCHC ... '°"9" THe WONJ> laYOND
JOHN DARLING
IHE 00XER 15 O NE. OF IH£ ~ST 0EAUTIFUL AND MA.JE.5TIC OF DOGS, ..JOHN.'
..-~~~~~~ ....
YOU HA'VE 50M£
l='ILM6 THAT
YOU'LL BE.
!?>HONING-A00UT IHEGE ~5,
DOl'-fT '(OJ,
NATHAN?
by Annstrong & Batluk
1l-V."T'6 ~IGHT/ ~~E1...L
6E SOME 00XER 5HORT6 SHOWN IN "THE-AUDITORIUM/
I
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'c i ongress cuts :
Excellent selection
of antiques
CPB dollars I • I I
I
..
lJigf) Hopes
will liear
Sherman
·Former USC and profes&lonal •
1 footbaU standout Rod Sherman
will be tbe guest speaker at the
Hilb Hopes Neurolo(lcal
Recovery Group fifth annual
awards dinner tonight at the
Costa Mesa Country Club.
Sherman, pre!tldent of
M anaaement and Sports
Marketing, Inc., holds de1rees
from USC in Finance and Real
Estate and a masters degree ln
secondary education.
The former captain of the 1967
Rose Bowl team, Sherman was
the No. 1 draft pic k of the
' Oakland Raiders where he
played for five years.
In un2, Sherman was the lead· Cbr·. t• l ing receiver for the Denver 18 Ian ops
Broncos before tlnishinl up bis •
career ln 1973 with the Rams. cycle f Jeld Following his retirement from
-------
D~e Riolo, the kln1pln or
Northern California pro caa
dra1 ractn1 competl~lon, wIU
make hla first appearance at the
Oran1e County International
Raceway Saturday anct Sunday
to compete in the PopulJr Hot
Rod4Jn1 maaaz.ine pro 1a11 and
bracker champlonahip1.
Amons the tlUes won by Rl*
and hia 1955 Chevy that bu ~
featured on the cover of tl)e
1ponsortna ma1azine two times
lo the last three year1, ar•:
Northern California pro aa•
cbampion-197-4, 1978, 1977 and
1978; bracket champion, 197$;
Sacramento Autorama win.Der, ·
1980.
football, Sherman worked as an •.
• athleti~ administrator at UC
Irvine.
In 1978, be formed bis sports
marketing company.
The dinner, with a donation
cost of $12.50 and $6.25 for High
Hopes students, starts at 7:30
p.m. No host bar cocktails will
Speedway motorcycle racini
returns to the Oran1e County
Fairground• in Costa Mesa
tonight following Saturday's
World Qualifier at the Coliseum
with the first beat race set for 8
o'clock.
He will be facin1 a d1fferent
set of circumstances ~t OCIR
this weekend than be faces in his
home area, however. He m\flt
run a 9.*> second index com-
mared to a 9.50 index at home.
He must also face deep 1ta1·
ing for the first time. This ts not
allowed on the northern tracks
but is a regular feature at OCIR.
Among the top Southern
California drivers competin&
are Randy Fabbro, Joe
Fraelich, Carl Smith, Dave
Meziere, Charlie Marcum, Ed
Siemon and Jim Parrish. ·
start at 7. Each year, High Ropes reg·
og_!lizes students, parents,
voJunteers and commuuity or-
ganizations who, through their
support and achievement, have
furthered the goals or the or·
Alan Chri1tian of Huntineton
Beach, Mike Bast and all the
other top regulars are expected
to participate in the program
tonight. Gates open at 8 both mornings
with time trials and jackpot
bracket races running until 10
Saturday night. Final elimlna·
lions begin at noon on Sunday. ganization.
Among the other regulars
competing will be Lance King,
Dubb Ferrell, David De Temple
and many others.
All-star teams tangle
· in volleyball twin bill
The best of Orange County high
school volleyball will be on display
tonight at Laguna Hills High whe're
the fourth annual Orange County All·
star tournament takes place.
The women's game begins at 6,
followed by the men's game at 8:30.
The men's game features a South
team boasting stars from CIF cham·
pion Laguna Beach (Lance Stewart
is the CIF's Player of the Year) and
runner-up San Clemente, along with
Capistrano Valley, University, Irvine
and Mission Viejo.
Coached by Laguna Beach's Bill
Ashen, the South includes Laguna
Beach's Eric Clark and Doug
Top volleyball
players clash
The annual Offshore Four-man
Volleyball Masters Tournament will
be held Saturday and Sunday at Big
Corona State Beach in Corona del
Mar with nearly $3,000 in prizes to be
a w arded to winners in this
prestigious event.
Top name beach volleyball stars
such as Matt Gag~. Gary Hooper,
Steve Obradovich, John Vallely, Ed
Becker and John Reddlni will make
up the 20-25 four-man teams with ac-
tion getting underway both days at
10:30 a.m.
Prelims will be held Saturday with
finals on Sunday.
The tournament is open to the
public for viewtn1 and there is no
charge.
Parsons, Craig Moothart and Fred·
die Verselles of Irvine and University
High's Rene Rimlinger.
The North. under Newport Harbor
Coach Steve Buchan and Fountain
Valley's Rick Evans, boasts several
Orange Coast area standouts, includ·
ing Sunset League Co-MVPs Rey
Guberoick (Fountain Valley) and
Mark Barrett <Newport Harbor).
Also participating are Ocean
View's Casye Osterlund, Huntington
Beach's Mike Burdick, Estancia's
Doug Hartung, Brad Elliiood and
Bill Mattias. Newport Harbor's
Robert Peterson and Rieb Holmes,
Fount.a.in Valley's Kirk Harty and
Jim Speth, Marina's Tom Plane and
Costa Mesa's Paul Knipp and P.J .
Kiley.
Among the women's North squad
are Newport Harbor's Mary Allhon,
Marina's Linda Bohm and Mater
Dei's Teri Donohue and Mary Stam·
bra. ·
The South women's team includes
Irvine's Suzy Boness and Laurie
Adams of Estancia.
Tennis clinic 8lated
A free, two-hour Junior tennll clinic
is being offered S~turday, June 13 at
three Orange County tennla clubl.
Sponsored by Converse, the clinic•
are scheduled for Santiaao Canyon
Tennis Club ln Oranee , Miaion Vie·
Jo Tennis Club and Cotta Meaa Ten-
nis Club, each beeinnine at~.
Further iJJformation can be ob·
tained by contacting the tenm. clubl.
Oulte Would Be Proud----.
No one get• tired of winning, eepecially
John Wayne Tennis Club memt>ert. Tom
Leonard and Jerry Van Llnge. Tom and Jetrry
won ttielr fifth conHcutlve Men's Open
Championship In Ora11ge County'• biggest
tennla tournament. The 20th Annual AdoPtlOn
Guild.
Ten of the fourteen winners In the Open, A.
1nd Senior divlalon1 wer• Johll Wayne Tennis Club members. There were over tt)lrty
different ctuba repteMnted. Gill Glaagow and
Tom Leonard won the Mhced Open
Championship and Gall wu a wlMW In the
Women's Open.
Jerry Van Llnge la a teaching pro It the
Wayne Oub. along with Kim Witt~ ~
Lynn Morrow. If you need help on yiour game,
give the winners at the 11 club In Celifoml• •
call ~t 844-45900.
By BOWAaD L. KANOY °' ................ One bu to wonder Just bow loq tbe feud
between the U.S. Auto Club and CART wlU 10 on
and how it wlll continue to crop up with he•ted
controversy.
USAC bu run the lndlanapoll1 500 for many
years, even 1oin1 so far u to try and 1hul out any
driver and car owner CODAeCt.ed with CART
several years a10 before a cowl order chan&ed the
· froup's th.lnkin1.
Car owner Roser Penske and driver Bobby
Unser bad the lndy 500 victory stripped from them
the day after conclusion of the race. A Hemlngly
routine situation, at least ln USAC'a eyes.
Not so.
AND WHETHE& thil had anythin1 to do with
the continuing feud belween CART and USAC, one
bas to wonder. It certainly could be conatrued by
Penske ln that direction and mi1ht be brO\llht out
when the cue goes to court in the future.
While Unser undoubtedly passed some cars
under the yeJJow caution nag, the method ln which
USAC officials made the disqualification leaves a
great deal to be desired. .
Qne person who believes things should have
been straightened out at the track on race day is
Laguna Beach's Bruce Barnes, a buaineH partner
of Unser.
"It is wifortunate that after it was reported to
race otficials that they ·did not make a decision at
that time and take a lap away from Bobby,"
Barnes says. "Then be would have bad 50 laps or
so to make up the around and still win the race.
"USAC had observers all around the track and
they should have noted any infraction, whether it
was Bobby or anyone el,se.
"IF YOU WERE to watch the television
broadcast of the race again, it looks like they spon·
taneously noticed Bobby's infqactlon. Irr flJCt, it
was f.Ut in after the race was completed.
· Chris 'Economaki was in the garage area and
be went to see Marlo. He c~c}Stcl to see
whereabouts in tbe race tbey had liodled the
claim.
., "Bobby and I are partners but r ala<> do some
work for Marlo and some of the other drl°"Ca.
"J don't see thh thing u a di1pu~ atnq~I the
driven. It's back in USAC'• banda 8'Pia fnt1 it fll
come• ®wn to their lnablll(y to reapond to 1ll'f&·
lions. · ''n la very unfortunate e way lt tar.ed o(at.
It puts a bli cloud over the entire race and refle4t1
MOTOR SPOKFS
poorly on U.S. auto racin• ~ the Indl•t1apoU1
Motor Speedway."• I
TR~ BEJllMlKS by Bemea were made ulis
week, well alter the conclusion of the race r
wJiich leads one to wondet if all SpOrts should l>e
eoverned by te~e-vlsion replays followin1 cor·
clusion or tile events.
It ba.s to ,brlnj up the long-standiJla instaf l
replay for officials of NFL 1ames that 1Ull bas 't
taken effect. ·
But what if an official blows a call aad a~t r the game the league office backs up a protea r
and, reverses the game's outcome? Jt certa y
would bring about a big furor. L
Why doesn't the same reasoning hold true P.1
auto racing? If, indeed, Unser was to be t>enallzefl.
be shou.Jd have been penalized a lap at the time pf
the infraction and then be could have•possibly wqn
the tace anyway by pushing bis car a lit.tie harder
at the end after moving up during yellow cautic>n
periods.
But that 's too simple for race offLcials to ub·
derJitand, apparently.
Certainly, to take the victory away from Uns'1'
after he bas visited Victory Circle and taken ~ll \he plau4ita the night after the race, .is not the way
it should be done.
AUTOU1t
Reau~ 69!
SUMMER
OlANT
BuyTwo-
Get One Freet
~ Stott for details
3!9
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SEV ANO'S COILUMN .
In reality, there's no such thins
as a rising fastball. Oh sure, a ball
moves, but not op. unless lbe ball
ls delivered underhand ala Kent
TekulveotDanQuisenbecry.
Tbe logic is simple. You can't
defy the laws of eravity. At a
speed of 100 miles per hour (to
simplify things), a pitch takes
roughly 0.4 seconds to arrive at
home plate.
AccoTding to the 1ravtty
formulas of Isaac Newtoo, durins
0.4 s~ds the ball will drop
about six feet.. The only COUD·
terbalanee mllht be tbe sptn put
on the ball, bull.he ''llftin1'' effect
la not enough to· overcome tbe
dowe.ardpullof varity.
Therefore, students, what ~
bably happens le ttaat eome
fa;.tballl do not drop u quickly as
Qtllen, etealiftl the w ... 1on t.Mt tllebaDIOflrs. 1.,....." ____ ,,,
An11t1 on Radio KMflC (710)
Dod .. re on ft1dlo. ICAIC (1IO)
TUlldey 'rtd•y
June 5
• 811t. al • 7·30 ~atC..11:~
8 9 10 11 12
Clev. at Ac*. 7:30 • .._.... at St L .. 5:35 Clev. at ..... 7:'1.l
• """' It St l. 5:35
Boston at -. 7-J)
Wpra at St. l., H~
Bostqn at -. 7:30
• llllltrs at Pirates. 4:3S
. 15 18 17 18 19 . .... al llostUI. 4:ll •All*atbta\ H ~ al Yriees. 5 ... at Yrieet S • _. at Yri.ees. 5
at ....... 7~ St l .. at -.S.1:35 St L at lllltln, 7·3!1 Pirates at -.rs, 7~ Prates it ......., 1 .flJ
21 22 23 14 25 28 .a.1
·--atbtm1, ll Padres at llllllfs, 7 ~ _.. at rem. >JS .... at Teus. 5-.35 ...-at rem. S..30 Seattle at ....... 1 :30 Seattle at -. 1 1
Plfates at llflars. l:OS Pirates at lllltln, 7:~ Pntes at -..S. 7:3! • Wpf1 at A.mos, S:JS • ~ at ~!ms. b-JS'
28 29 30 July 1 2 3 I J 4
Seattle al -I Texas at -. 7:lJ Texas at bpi, 7JO • Royals at -. 7 :30
• ....., a( Astros, 3 Tmsat ~7:30 .....,. at es. l:flJ lllOfs at Pachs. 1 :llJ
Texas at ~ 7:30 ~al es, 7.a>
• Royals al = 7 r ~ at P~es. 7:05 • fM1tn at Giants, 135 • 1lo4aers at ts. 11os 1
I
Belmont flekl, odcft ....
-_..., OMI 1 ••• ,. ~... ,,__ .,
2. H'9Mandai-v...,.1 •1
1 esc"'*'o eov ""'-'• •1 •.W~ l"lf'IUY .. 1 s. Swmmll\I MMt-10-1
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7. ~Porlsto c-..o 1s.1 t. Sel'fOU Fell •1
t , 804d E9o Ll .... y 10-1 10. •·T11t1Slloes HerMl'ldel .. ,
H, PIHMtltCOIOf'ly Vo1ot4ue1 •S •-LomwJ. "91ors-ow.....,ef'ltry.
s -~tot "'''Y lor U,000; must poy SllllPl••..,.lory tlort.,.•1 loo Of SIS.000
Sotwrdoy
Owf'IOfs: I. N•INn Kally, 2 "9f'l·Y·llrtl'
Farm; l. """'9tto Eubanlls; 4 o.-1tw
Stoblo; S. CNrtos T. Wll_, Jr.,'· L-J.
l"eter5, 1. Jonlco l'olf'lber9; I. Poter
8or110rlf•; t . °°""'' II •anci.;. 11. ~ J. Pei.n; 11. lluOIOftCI Form.
Tr•lners. I Everou Kini; l . Oowte
Wlllleley; 3. J Wlltlom llof'tllace; 4. Joell
Gover Jr.; S. Lula Borroro; •· R°"r L•wrln; 7. Georee Ha11dy; I . Elltof'I•
JacCIOS; •. Joe-..... Bor9; 10. Horatio LIKO;
I I. John Compo.
W•lon•s: 126 poun0s each.
Purse: S2'•,:JOO II II Slorl. l'lrsl -
S170,st0; SocOf'ld -tu,U6; Third -'34,000; Fourth -Sl7,Q51.
P .. 1Tlnw:2:llp.m, POT.
Totevltlan: CBS, 2.) p.m. POT.
Triple Crown winner•
PIHIOl'll eoi-y lrlH Of'I S.tllrUY to
C>Komo a. 1291 '-•to wlf'I roclnt's TrlpM
Crowf'I -... l( .... hKlY Oertly, Proo-
Stolles Of'td llelmonl Stollos
Tiie Trll>lo Crowf't wl,.,,.n •re:
!tit -SK llortan
1'30 -Gollof'lt Foa
ltU -~
1931 -Wor Admlrot
1'41 -Whlnow•Y
1943-C-l'loel
1'4• -AIMllll
1'41-Gllollof'I
1973 -Socratorlol
1977 -S..111o s•-
1971 -Altl"'*' NIM ilor'lti haw_, ... Kefltll<kY Oot1J¥
aftCI l"rOOlktlesl. ""' 10.1 their bid tor,.,. Tri-
~ c._, w1u. • .... , 1 ... -1o1mant. TM llOneS, wllh the lol..-1 WllWIOf' 11'1
-thotb-: . 1'44 -........ ,......,1,.. .._,
ltSI -T1m Tom IC..-J
1'61 -CMry 90Cll ($Mf1vdl) 1"4-....,._,, DaMor (Qo.aclrenglO)
"'' -K...i Kiiie (,.,,...~) 1'61 -"-It .... CSloee O.W Jtfwlyl
, ... -Maletttc l"rlf'ICO '""' ..... l.MWI)
1971 -c-t'olt 11"-Galdwr) 1m -S.-laclllat l ld 1Coa"'1>
NA8'.
...... 04""9
W L OC OA ·~Pia • s u lt ~" ., 1•1'201Sf.S
' 7 17 2t ,. $l S 7 12 11 It G
IMr1llwoltDlwtalelil
•• 2' 12 21 ..
1 1 D 11 • • 1 s 211 14 1t .,
• • 7 ... 14 •
•• It • , ••
---~ It 4 :S1
I • 23 s 7 11
4 ' ,. ~DMI* Atlaf'llO 1 S 26
Ft. Lo....,_ I S It Tam,...., • I U
Joc'-vlllo s I IJ
c:.tnf 04.wo.
ft •• 17 ,. ti
20 1t ..
D It a
It 21 ..
14 .. ff
JI iO S2
It 12 40
Chlutao t a 2t 14 tl 77
TUIM 1 S JO 1S 17 ff
l'lllllllOIOU ' ' 1t 22 ,. 4' OellH 2 12 t U I JI
Six polllts ore owwdld Mr o ,..,..,Ion°'
offttll'N 'lllelofy. Four polfltl '°' • llflCI04oVt victory. OM bonus '°Int tor every .-1
tcoracl wttn 0 ma•lmum .. thr• .., ....... No lloftUI pelnl Is owardell tor owr11me or
shootout .-isi ,....,....,..sc..
Twlso 2, OoltaO T ....... 10-
LM,........alE-
At11nte CIHllC
IMOAOlll
JodlNlc-Mlut Tommy Valof'IUM
R°"rMallblo OoryM<Cerd
Tomwauan L...,.yw .. 1ris
Cotwlf'll"wte
llobEa--
5lol'IAll9eft
JaCllF-
O-toCacll•
OWllT-1
Jerry H-d
Llf'tdyMlllor
Stowe Moltlyll
llrwc:o Oow(llots
11111 llrlttoll
Metil Lye
Roy Ftoyd
Mlle Rehl
AIOllT .....
Mlle Slllllv.,.
L.orryllotlor
"""" CClllMr J CIM F outfit
\101'(0 .........
Pat LI.......,
Mlk• Ktolft
TomJ-lleowl_..
lllllCol ...
O.WlltWM-
Mllo MOrley
Oonf'l'l'Eltw.,.ch OOf'I Pooley
WoYMLavl
0.f'l!lll Trl•l.,.
PorryArtnw
WOOdy B*llbwr1>
J ohf'IMazut
Jim._
FroclC ......
Mol"tl~I
Ml•oMc°'lowlfl .. ...,~
Joe lf'llnM .,.. •rvwit
Jerry McGoo
"" Stro di J.C.S..-
JOf'f'Y ..... MMlaat_,.,.
Loo~ ...
R.W,Eall
i.en ... 1a ci.n-u
=~ .............
Tim Nortll
JoffH-.._.,._Twtt't•
llobM..,.,,..,
Eltl'lerl
0o .... °""""" Goorto ArVtflf
l..'(l'I Lott
Jim Collltft
'1'erryOllN
9!11SMC11r
lobTway
J~~ T Im Slmjlean
~O'---
Gory'Wlllla
MlhSm llll
UQA toum1ment
(M...,_,~ • .,
Jo.a.-c..Nr •WlnW..._
icauir Martlft
Alk e Mttlor
01-~ M.J.~
Amy Arc.et "'"''•Pall l"ollr...., .. "'~ Joc-lo lortlcll
~I• McAll_,
CJlf I• Joe.-t r.:s:~ .... .,ic1,.
Pol Mtyert
Holly Hartley
ttan>tynK-
Mvtflf'I 5'19ncor-Oevllf'I
Mar .. s~ J11tle Stongtr lof'Nro ,__
tCotl\y Hlto L.all1M ll'VQ PorU
JS-3247
3W>--tl
u.~
37.31-411
~
JW:l-411 34-a4-4I
~
IW>-4'
u.~ ,...,.._..
lS-,.__..,
34-»-tt ~ ~ ,..~ ,..,,__..
J7.J2 .......
,..~
JS-34 .......
34-u.4'
~
34-U-6t u. .......
37.Ja-111
S..M-70 ~
lW+-11 374i-10
~ 344'-10 ,..._70
U-JS-70
lw.s-70
S..14-70
•J4-70 ,..,._70
34-»-70
31-D--71
U.3'-71 •»-11 U..-71
3s-»-71
36-1$-71
34.J1-11
)4-1-11
3s-»-71
~· ·~I 3744--11
1744--Jl
Jt.U-71
Jl.»-71
lW6-11 ,,..._n
16-35-11 IS-3'-71
~
»*-12
11..JS-n l7.u-n ~
)t.l)-11
,,~
Ma-n 1W1-n
Jto.»-n
lWJ-11 -.....n ,,....,11
~»-12 lWol-n ~
~
»M-n 11.as-n
Brltl•h emeteur
(ot ........... Sc-. .. , .. .... ....
Joel Hlrt<lt (U.S.) Wt. O.Wkl C>Wola cu.s.1, J'"" 2; Tom .__.. .cu.s.1 mt.
AIOI! L.,..., C llnt40f'td>, 2~; Tt11r GretlWl'I del. Tom Kett.y, 1...,..; l"tllllppe ~
1'r111co>Olf • .....,OeeOiolEf'ICll•ndl, 1.,.;
T llN'l"I quortorflMI polrlf'l9I: Ploll joua ~ Cettn ~sit /Scott-); 1Mk04m Lr#tl
IEnet•f'ld) n . Jehf'I Corr Ctreton.i>; Grelh•m vs. Oocwllt Ouf'lslra CE111110ftCll;
HlrKll ve. Ralldolptl.. CS.mlllM ll wlll olto be
1>1oyed1oOe'(WllhlhelllMll•Sat11rclorl.
French Open
(.atl"ortl)
..... ,~Miii .....
tvaf'l l.of'ldldol.J-McENoe,M ,M ,1·S. ..-............. ~.
H•n• ,,,.,.dfl-ovo dol. Cllrl• Evert Lloycl,
7·S,•·4;S'l'IVloHof'llkAldef.Af'tdrMJM11fr,M ,
...... 4.
Gr11•Court•tourn1ment
C•tMaMllllW,a .... .-1 ~s-....
Brod Dr.-. dtf, Peter Floni1,., 1.s. w.
.. J ; llllSCAlnlOf'ldef.JoNILIOyd,7 .. ,'"3.
L48endB tourn1ment ~T---)
l'lrwtR ...........
ltodwwrdef.O-Oov._,7·S,44 ... I ; Cl~H ltk.,..._,,Marty RleuMl,6-0,'-1
lntercofleglete r•a•tt• l .. U...,...,MYl ............ "°" •• Httt I -1. ~.,..... 6:51.1; t. NW'f,
7:0J.01 .. Or ...... Cout, 7: l:U; .... c.on.tl.
7:H.O; S. ~ 1:St.O. HNI 2 -I. Wltc0ft911'1, l :OU. Hoot a -..._,.,,.,la, 1:oa.o.
Cubs' legend like a breath of fresh aii: :y WILL GaJMSLEY &l..,...c:as t f 1
Wbat baseball needl la more Ernie Banb.
Owners and playert are at bitter touerbeads.
A strike impends. Bowle Kuhn i• in court. Billy
Martln bumps an ump and tolaea handfuls ot dirt
at his stem. The ump sues Billy for assault. Ellls Valenttne thanges from an Expos to a Mets
uniform and bla11t.s his ex·boss. Dick WUllaQlJ. Iii
Clnc1Mali, teammatet snipe a~ a bobbled legend,
Johnny Bench.
Dtacont and dark clouds envelop the game.
I ' MA•IMA O•L ltSY •4 Of'l(lltk: 1 '
attti.u1, 12 borracvde, 21 ...... ~ .5S
lloflllo, I• COlko bou, llO mac•Of'ol, GO
rOdt COd.. •
flaOOllOO -•• Oftllor•; '1 borraaida1 ao5 bolt, 152 bonl•, I yetlowloll, I N llbll\ t7, rock fllll. ..... -SI M(llert: tl 11Mllo, "9
INl<llorol, 2 borracllCM, 1t rocl 11111
IAN NO•o CUM ,M. LaMl"ll -IS ot111lors: 19 yetlowtoll, :I02 borracucM, 2"
utleo bol&. '"""' O' Calll -113 iftOIOrs: I!
738 borNCllCM, 3" colko best, 77 bort'kh U / ••nd boss, J 11o1111u1, 2ss ln•ckeret, ;4 1'11Cltl
ft.II. ' ( ' LONG l•ACH l lolqtouU Pier) -34r.
af'l(ltora: 115 barrocuclo, ~ llOl'ltto, 4' c•11td •
boas, 3 .....o boU. 110 n1oe11oro1. <~• •
WNl'fl -us onoters: tt yettowtoll, ~· •· rocudo, l7t CAlko bass, JO soncl beta, 2
N llbut, 10 roc.l ""'· 1111'1(1 COCI. SSAL IEACH -77 .,._,. UO ro<ll COG,
10 sond -S. '° CAiieo bass, 120 INrrocllda. 1t bOrllto. •
Pro bowllna ~llA TOU•NAMIMT c•SHttte1 TlllN ..... "9Mtn I. 1.MrY Lo11b 3 .. 1
2 JM ltrardl •.-O 1 011 SllllW ),GJ
4. Clarke Moore J.llQ
S. Jim W~lo; 1.1'1
,
NHL AWA9UJSYOTIMO Hof'\__...( ............... .,...,
I. W9'N Oratiky, I-loft. 242; t . Mille Llllt, St. L.auls, 237; Morr.ol OtoMo, !( .....
M; MIU lolly, NY 111-s, 20, S. llry.,
Trottltr, NY ISIOfldien, t. .... , ................... ,
1. loll Golney, Mofltroot, 141, 2. Crolt
lt•msoy, Wf•to. 115; >. U.n·y l"atoy, St.
Louis, ft; 4. Stovo Kowier, llollOl'I, 10; s.
llOb &oume, NY lstofldon, 11.
GaNw'*-"l 1'91 r.,...lel
I. Po tor SIMtny' Quebee, t JO; L LM'r'I'
,........,, IC""9 1171 J. OOf'I loawpre, Ml~ -'°· 12; •·Darryl SUt•r. CNcoeo. 40; s. Oenlt S.Worlt. CNcaoo, lO. .._........,_...,c11ttt•flw-1 I. 111_,.CMl'l'le, Pl~, 120; 2. 0-... ~ot\1111, MY hlOl'INr•, IU; a. LllrTY ..... MGI\ MCll'ltrMI, iee; 4. Roy ........
... ton. P; S. Rod u~ .... r( ~Cl~ lM't.... I , ................ .,...,
1 ... ldt ....... Pl~ T•; 2. WllliM
Grel4't, ~. 1•; I. lttc-M~ ........ a: 4. Kenl NI .. , C.toorY, ,
MIN lloasv. NY ltlofldlr\, to.
Mis c.
Thu'9dey'1 trenHctlon•
WmlALL
"-1c09L...-TEXAS RANGERS -Troded .....,
a9tlda, 0Ylllelder1 ,,_ ¥1flchll• .. •
Amer1CM M-'-4-'° tta Olk .... ..-.,,.,_..,
fer utlll.., a 1119¥W to ,yl'Md IMar.
ST. LOUIS=:,,. -Plac:M ......
R•msoy, llllloldtr, .,. ttw lktay dl.-.M 1114. Mowe Darrell l"or'W1 calctter, '""1
the ls.dtiY Cllsoblecl 11•1 to Ille21.doy ,...._.,
1111.
f'OOTIAU.. .........................
HOUSTOfol OILERS -$ftMcl 11111 Koy,
delof'tslve ba<ll; ond 0•1~1 l"owMr,
llMtNICll«.
. .
·' .•
"
I
J
• i ~ Callls>rnia's loa&.. warm JUDt! days ~aeF ~ 1rowin1 season, but pluta and lawns
):an dry out qulcltly. iu;;:" should wal<:h for thlnty pt .. u and )rt' uals an.d ve1etablea ct&.ulad.Y. prel· -1 y the early momfn1, report Southern
lfQmia aardeQera. Also check ~ta!Aer pl-.nta
-a hl+a'f wave could wipe them out.
• ' Alt lbQ warms up certatri pfanta may show
!_I f\Soot ~hloroe~~ or yeUowtnl' la the leaves. J' nts which art susceptible to W. )Delude bol·
• &>rush, f itrus, eucalyptus, 1ardenlu, hibiscus,
l> ~ and roses. If applications of nitrogen
f llier do not help, apply iron sulfate or chelated ll' .
, ~ • Southern California gardeners can plant a
variety of annuals In June. Seedlings that do quite
lwell include agatum, aate,ra, ·~=rfior9n1
be1onias, ~arna , dwarf d ...... 11 a d6J&Y ,
Impatiens, mari10 da, petunias. portulaca, a.nap·
.d'lgon, sweet alyssum, "erbena an. d zinnias, ac-
·cofding to Sunset. For those wh9 we'• planttn1
a nt)uals from seed, there ls atlll tilb ..
' Plant subtropical trees and shrubs in June.
Orchid, banana, sold medallion, ficus, palms, Jnd
sd«)Wfla.lte trees ire all good choices. Subtro~ical ia~tutis such as sardenla and hibiscus, philoden-'d~N.h!(reliwa &nd vining plants or beau~ontia, • ~ Jrl. ....
·~G"amener'S Chee/di-st }lo',.Qj.~ffi..
lf1l '4<10 rt , '>l•rl"•Tbere's sWl time to sow see& or to put hi water to snap th
aWni)y started plants of some or your favorite instead.
ztvUt!'tables -tomatoes, squaah, beans, carrots, ~ ..
.rtrJJen on.Iona and cucumbers. · • It's time U.~a.· ahead and dlvlde the
•)rn 1•) " clumps of lrlses ~·tiaven'\ been lifted In tlM rr11, .. "I 1It's not too late to plant roses. Che>c*e past 3-5 years. ~w dhtislons wlll need
tab>ming plama Crom your nurseo-and you'll watering to help them along at first. ~·an insta.mrose-bed.
I ud t
111 J 'l'ry to a\'oid any heavy prunine th.is sum· -as this may put some of your planta in 1~~"whlch means they will recaulre Iota of ·cl '<m Jr
• Hurry u bv those tuberou1
begonias, cbrysa¥MP•• and gef.,.U&lma ll
you' re interested. f}
I The giarel·*ed blooml of the hJldrcngN con be
r~u.d vpon to ¢~ ·""' of color to tfw aummer
garden. TMJI ha~ a
hand•ome foliage
t~~ure -qulU-U~ in
appearance and rou
can choo1e from eftMr
blue, 1'Cnk. lavender or
whiu {lower color.
Fuchsia Eestival ·this weekend · ·
The fifth annual mer l'QSe care and re· to 5 p.m. on the Cal gourds, succulents1 Fuchsia Festival will be lated products. St ate Fullerton white marigolds ana
held Saturday and Sun-The fuchsia 15 the of· Arboretum GJolln4.J. dwarf ceraniuma:
day in Costa Mesa. ficial flower of the City Unusual •d ClllM>Uc Admission to the
More than 2 O 0 of Costa Mesa. Tbe planta will be-offered tor eve6t is so ceota, and a
varietie' of fuchsia festival wU.Ybe held•~ show and s•le at the gift. shop and refresh· blos~ will be on dis· Hollister's Nurse?: ant event. Gardonlng and ment staod will be
play, preeented by the Flower Shop, 2uo· randacaplnc clinics, open.
Bay Cities branch of the Harbor Blvd. totlrs, fresll vegetable
Nati on a 1 Fu c h s la tastings and a beekeep· THE COSTA Mesa·
Society. THE EIGHTH annual ing demonstration will Bay Cities Branch of
The festival will in-Green S cene pl ants be offered throughout the National Fuchsia
clucle dlspl~ and dem-s h ow a n d s a 1 e the day. Society wtll meet Mon·
on1$rations of fuchsia sponsored by t be Among the yiants to day at Columbia Sav·
propa,atJon and care, Friends of the Fullerton be s hown wil be ex· ings and Loan, Harbor
drip 1mgation, house Arboretum is set for otics, indoor foliage, at Wilson, Costa Mesa, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'._,...J!P~lan~t~h~ydropo~~m~·c~s~, _!SU~m~-• S~~ur~~f. from 10 ~,_;;..g_e_sn_e_r_i_ad_s_,_o_rc_h_i_d_s , __ at_7_:_30~p._m_. __ -"--
~Jh ··~It ICHOUU DF EVtllTt
~m :;tn I• •
1t1 'l.i~rl • FRIDAY, JU. I 7
s,,rlT L9 l
540f>MJ.lf ~' .....• , Alli Oinners • S11rt servfng
&Ctol!tf1'l\ ........ ~nlval Rkltf &Gamls OPlll
1t\10~ ;;. ,, ... on ~Bind X·w.ricl'J l.lr~t
'()!> .,0 ,l t40llofNrchlng r.e,rc:f1lflCI Band
. ·• 9:00 PM ..... . .............. , • .J,,,jDfawlng,
(winning tickets must be present)
GRAND PRIZE •.
1981 FORD ESCORT 1. ••
..... flll ....... '•C:.••Y•"
'•l• .ri=.·.= ~-"t ::!1'.!.:.i"
••••• 1r.WIY OTHUI l'RlZlS lftCludll'9 i tolbR tv· (WlnlWllg IKkfll must • ptlMftl lor .. Pllztt ...,. Ftfd ~,
•..i111 tftlflM'"°" " ams . Ir/Ill/It
•••••
OUTSTANDlll<l STAG[ ATIAACTIOlll
••••• u •CONTEsf
HIED
HILP!
Yhlt-
IHt·Ylnlf
Stire ...
PLAllT fOOD • POTI • Lmll
Property lelng SOid
NURSERY
Liquidation: Sale
. · AH 'Spedil1 W.fed
to Supptr on Hanel
SAVE UP TO
70°/o
_....., ..
c.--.. ,.
Presented In cooperation
with Costa Mesa-Bay Cities
Branch National Fuchsia Society.
FUCHSIA
FESTIVAL
· Schedule Of Event• June 8 end 7:
11 A.M. FUCHSIA CARE & CULTURE -Ir tlte '"elHNf loc,.,,
U ;OO LUWASA HVOAOCUL TURE -HOtlH ~nt H•*•"Hlca
t P.M. FUCHSIA CARE & CULTURE-,,,,,.. ,ueltlM loc,.,, .
2 P.M. SUMMER A0Se CARE _,,, e l'to ••• C.._rl,. IC....,
3P.M.
..
SSIFIED
INDEX
T1PllCtY11rM,Clll
&42·5678
llMS(SfllSAU o-.i .... =· ..... Im ~= -1•1• =41111 Mar •• ~..::. ... --,_...v.u.1 ,.,. -.. ........... . .. .,. .... I ... ~•It«• UNI Lac .......... 1• =~=-·-"" E'Ei"~· 1• .. '"' Ca,lilr•• IClll 1:::\: .. &-.
Sul w• 1• ..... ...._ ·-.......... 1• -·-S&lo 11• IOl£STATE Acr•q•l<wSU. 1• ~ .. ,.a. .. ·-..... ~ wt
-1 1• 0.-wy I.AU Crtptt ID ='~-"1:r.' J• 1100 °""8•n Uort1 Bai. ·-_ .......... . ... ...... '-ti' -,..,......._.., 11• ....... ,.. ..... ZD
-le H• 1'rlr Pr•• DOO 111-•.lleM<t.11•-t -Or~tCo ~ .. 2* g:.,=~-:tlolO -"-.._,., ... a .... 11'1 -~.-.. -~ .. Ellat• ........ -IDCTALS
-1'\onllJW llot -u.r-.---hrawUal ,.
~1.o1 ... Pll•• -c..mw ... u.1 -Tow-F•r• ,,,.
Tooo-Unf ~ o..i. •• """ -~•U•f -,.,.. . 11'0 AIJll&Ut>lw•. -Alli Pllra or Uni -llOolaa -._ • ...,d -=i::.~ 41 .. cue --•llOlllala Giii v .. ....,.11.nt&h -......... !ill ... • .. Gar .... !or Roni -Olliff R••I -..._.__. -,_ .. ...,
'* • :!.~w.-WI -11 ... Rootall -IUSIM£SS, INVEST·
MOO, mtANCE ==--.!OIO :::::::~, IOI) -_, .. i..ou --,w--~-.m-. -ANNOUNCEMENTS,
POSOfULS &
LOST & FOUND
A.1--.re•eta ) .. Car .... 1131 1AaaJ NaU<n uao tMc •r-UDO ...._. ... ~ Sono1C1••· -Tra\'91• -SEIYICES • s.r .... DltfftCW'l' -EMPLOYMENT &
rtflWTIDN
........... 0. -~~~:u, lVIS
Tlot
MUCIWllSE -, ........... Motk.:
All rea l eatate ad ·
verl l sed In lbls
newspaper is subject lo
lhe Federal Fair Hous-
· in& A~t ol 1968 which
Titalle' It UJecal to ad·
vertiso "any preference,
lim itation , or dis·
crlmtnation based on
race, color, religion,
sex, or national orlcin.
or an intention to maJce
any such preference,
limitation. or dis·
criminatioo."
This newspaper will not
.knowingly accept any
.·ad vertisina for real estate whJcb is in viola-
tion or the law.
... ;aaoaS: M¥erttsen
··Motilcl died& their tlds
• Clalfy -report ...... ...,.. .... 11 .. 11;.,...
D~ILY n..or •••11 .... tr for .......
l•correct lasertlo• ...,.
== . = llet.tiala ... c-.... sw,... '1 -c..u .• = Doe• ... R.,"..:.,';· --:;:::'* .. -t-...wGooot. -,....., 11!1 ........... ..,,
llMlll_, 11!1 ~.._ -......... _ ...... = _ .. ,...,_.
~hra·~· -Ill? =~~= --~a.-= SW..at!ll-Mll.lar ~.'C.i..H1n.11«w --BOATS a MAllNE
HWMOIT ...... ... ....... ____ -lloaU.Man .. E'llllP -=·==-·ti.art•• --IMU.S.11 -.......... Dotto -~.:~· --WMSPOHATION Alm•~ tllO Ef&--...
Ca" tilt == i..s.o. .... • .... '"' lll-H11,..&1t llnt ... Trllllen.Travtl ""' X:::,';:!1:!1tJarta ... -~OMOllLE o-a1 ... AAUq'-'"1Cl1n1C"a -RttrelhOO VelttclH tll3U ~· R•rt kod.t -4 Ne1Unwn -Tiwu -v-.... t::."'~~~ --AUTOS, IMPOITED
Gworel ...,.,
Alf•ll-S1llt
A•cll lllO'I A..U. He•l•.>' -BMW •Ill Capri ~ 8'.-11111 o.u .. t7JI Fft"fa1' '7D ..... lnlD -· rm J••1i1•r fl»
JOllW• "111 r==·· 17»
t1JI 11...U f1ll Jhnedh 8t1u 11100 110 ll'IG 11011 111 .. °'"' '1 .. ,. .. ._,. •m p-'1• ~ ... '1'41 &.uuh t7» Rolloltoy .. 11.!0 llO\t-r f1Sf S..11 W19I et,. ::: ToytU t7ta
Tnu"'pll 1'1f1 Volk1w•1•• t710 Vol"D f171
Cftilf'al
MITOSi NEW -AUTOS, USED Genera.I •1 AltC -... .-.. 0
C.dtlt.• -~ c....,., •n Clot\,_ -~···· Co--.., c.c-.... 1 -C«>.U• -9=' ---1-n•I IN.i i.-oi. ~ lhwnc• .., -. .,, -~le 92 -p..,. ., Pl,.__ -.._. .. -1-<llml -v.,. -· _ .... .wt
HO.HI for. Sale ••••••••••••••••••••••• G......a 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
131/2°/o
FINANCING
Mesa Verde's finest 3
Bdrm 2 bath, family
room. brick fireplace.
dining area.country
kitchen. 2 patios. Corner
lot, RV access. Owner
will carry tst TD or
Sl05,000 at 13tn"'"· Call
now. 546-2313
THE :REAL
ESTATE:RS
DWI.IX
3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit.
Fireplace, built-ins. Ex·
cellent rental area. Near
beach & bay. $28S,OOO •
642-2253 eves.
associated
t-... • ~ JI '\ t -1 . ... ' .
[J)alebout
Bay&Beach
Real Estate
COMI WITH US •• TO WISTCLIFF.
CONVENIENTLY 40CATED -YET V~Y
QUIET STREET .. CATHEDRAL CEJLINGS JN
LIVING AND DINING ROOMS .. THREE
SPACJOUS BEDROOMS .. POOL S IZE
Y AR D .. PROPERTY I N TOP
CONDmON .. JUST REDUCED TO sun,soo.
1617 WISTCl.lflll DI. M.I. 631-7300
YOU DISBVI THI llST
And here it is, waterfront property
with a dock and a view you can 't
resist This house bas four bedrooms,
two baths, and an income unit. Come
by car or boat, but hurry, this is a
value at $800,000.
U,._ltJUI: lilMl:i
REALTORS. 675·6000
244S Eut Coa•t Hltftway, Cor-dtl Nu
WE HNE tr1a:1HE BEST AGENrS IN TOWN
37 ASSUMABLE LOAN
No Qualifying, small down
payments, low interest rates, no
loan points. 2, 3 & 4 BDRM Houses
& Townhomes. In good areas of
Orange County.
REAL ESTATE INVESTOR
Always wanted to invest in Real
E.5tate-but don't th.ink you can?
Let Golden West Realtors show you
how to invest with little cash & no
"Tenant ProblemS'". Call now for
more details.
WANT A HOME?-
sut don't think you can afford it.
Golden West Realtors has designed
a program that has allowed many
people to enjoy home ownership
that never thought they could. Call
now for more details.
141-1511
AGEMTWIUIE
SHOT'IY
lltA Tl SB.LB
if this bt.11 home is not
sold immediately. Fresh
paint in & out. Located
in desired College Park
area. Take over exist 7%
VA loan. S245PITI.
Owner will ·carry.
545-9491
~ .... Ila
REAL F.STATE
SAMDDOu.AltS
Thia 3 Bdrm 2 Bdr m
duplex presents a great
investment opportunity
in West Newport. The
location ol this property
Conly 2 lots from the
ocean and step1 to the
bay ) coupled with the
unbelievable financing
make th.is oUerinc re·
alistJc and smart. Ask·
ing only •.ooo. .......... Uy
67U700
* UDO ISLE BEACH RETREAT
Strfft to ...... locaHoa. c-foutuAh
3 bed. 2 bath ........ wlttt dralw
fireplace. Priced ript at SHS.000.
ON-WATER CORNER-SLIP-VU
WOock. wwMlll & selecff•• decor •
pod ...... Mon Ill fodmr • ~ .... ,r • tt. ltlJ wlttt ,_. Mat •
,... ... 2-ttory 4 .... ··~ •
prt•ocy: IHdecl gins, ...... & • ·
........ Sl,200,0000. fee. '7U900.
PENINSULA POINT-SUP.ER
w .... lay. 0c .. .,... ... tt-·•
IM..ty. Co11•l•hfr MW Ill & .. ._
loMs .. ,.... ........ .-,. s, .... .
2-ttory .... ,.,. .......... .... ............. ~ ............... .... :..: c.:,t room & ... na. ls.e1l1at
1444.500. 63 •· t 400.
•D..-.MNU.tt.g
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REALESTATE .
S.Wt, Rftl1alt, Pfopor.ty ~"'
2436 W Coetr HIOIY 31S Manne Aw
Newpoft Buch 8elboa lei.Mid
611·14'1 67MtM
-------_____ _.. -
Wan t a Burmese python or a r ed-
tai led boa? They can be your s. See
t he "Pets" want ad on Page E 8.
o/ newPo''
RllLTORS
671-HI I
ASSUM .. I LOAM: &.:.ret C4M .... JI
........ ~ ... hc .... 3 ... 2 ...
fe.,ly rta + .tlffty NO& Cloae to
••Wfi'I lo ~ S42f ,SOO. -COLE OF MIWPORT REALTORS
2515 I. Coast Hwy .. c... .. M..
675-5511
FISH FRY THEILUFFS
Finest original area.
Superb greenbelt setting
oHering "Massive "
view. Spacious 3 bdrm end unit, totally re·
decorated townhome al
$265,000. Aet. 640-5560.
OWHER
DESPERATE
Executive home. 4 Br & ~~~~~~~~~! pool. Assumable nnanc·
mg. $205,000.
All of us at Traditional
Realty urge you t.o sup-
port the C0tla Mesa.
Newport Harbor Uon 's
Club in their efforta to
raise money for local
charities. Please attend
the 36tb annuaJ Fish Fry
this weekend. See you at Llon's Park!!
EXICUTIVI MAMOR
lnC.tsbtldwlttl
lux u rious BLACK·
BOTTOM pool for those
"wet '() wild" parties.
675-1771
I Jacuzzi too ... for those intimate parties and get
togethers. 3 Bcinns and
den with formal dining ---------1
rm , frplc and expensive FATHER'S DAY
a p p o i n t m e n t s SPECIAL
throughout for ONLY We'll help you surpirse
S285,000. So Call (714) D d b ho · h' h' 729·5966. Wallace & Co. a Y s wmg im t is coiy 3 br, 2 ba fmly Rltrs. home. He'll love the
FOtt THE DOLLAR
huge ms tr br & blfl stone
frplc. Spa will complete
the festivities. 545,9491.
c~:c:'' ~ .... 11.ae
We have a auperb value REAL ESTATE in this spacious 4 bdrm.1 _________ 1
2"' ba. Baycrest Home. 11---------i Many extras lncludlng
swimming pool, shelves
and cabinets in lhe 4th
bdrm . 2 fireplaces .
outstanding yard with
citnia trees. A&9Umable
loan. Owner will belp
finance. 1295.000.
'523 CAMfiVSDa~hMtlE
INCRBMIU
IAYRlOHT
OPIM SUNDAY 1-5
311c6oaC0Ye1
BOAT SLIP-SANDY
BEACH + large 3 bdrm
& den, 2 bath home &
much more! $525,000!
Owntt I Agent 67!-9187.
lalbooloyProp. .......
*'675-7060•
SAV!S25,000 Thal'a the amount the
price has been reduced
on t his large custom
built home in Baycrest. 4
bdrms., formal dining
rm., family rm., huge
game rm. & pool. Now
$(25,000!
• ,OML Y I 0% DOWH
I am a beautiful 3 BR 2 BA home.
freshly painted inside le out. Excel'-t
roof, covered patio, large yard, block
wall, RV storaae, cbeertul at •.P.!c\oua
kitchen, skylighted vaulted ceiling in
bathroom. Excellent financing and
affordable. $96,000.
Ask for Ann or Jim "Your Coldwell
Banker Residential Specialists".
645·0303.
THIMKIMG
TOWMHOME?
Call the specialists at
the condominium in·
formation center.
JASMINE CREEi( Touchstone Realty
t:omfortable 3 Bdrm 963-0867 home with plantation --2-T-R_l_PLEX __ ES __ _
s hutters, parquet floors, lush carpet mg, R1ghl in the heart of the
ta!>teful decorating. Peninsula. Side by
Within the security each-buy bolh for
gutes of Jasmine Creek. SSJ0,000 or just one tor 91,• • assumable loan hal!. Try SS0.000 down &
$335,000 seller will carry.
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670
WOODBRIDGE
HOMES
PRESCOTT Exec.
home, 5 Br 3 ba,
FR SM.
AKIN EAST<fNJ Br. 21 2
WOODIRIDG
CONDO
$147,500
3 Bdrm. 21,> bath wl.&~
doubJe attached garam
air conditioning. wood
burning fireplace and
only 2 years new. Su.,.~
ftnancmg with 10'7'C dowti
for qualified buyers
759-1616 ,''18,
__,
SUMDECKH~~
CHANNEL Vll:w
Only $209,900! Charmine
Newport Beach 4 BdrlJh
features wood bunain«
fireplace. Huge over-
sized lot wllh rear cov·
ered patio. Owner I•
motivated and willing lcf
help finance! Just listed.
Callnow,87..,.. I
f!Wj
SlS,000 ON I
View Condo in Valla
Balboa. Assume Loans,
$137 .500. Rae Rod& n
631-1266. A.gt.
NEWPORT
BARGAIN Picturesque back bay 3
Bdrm 2 bath, p~e o(
ownership home With ~
country feeling! Large
kitchen, very private
yard. Bargain prU:ed at
$168,500.646-7171
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
CAMEO SHORES
Outstanding ocean view
home on tee land. 3
bedrooms. family room.
formal dining room, 5
bath. gorgeous pool.
Large lot in prestigious
area. $725,000.
~:ke~en. 2 doors from DECOltATOR
AKIN CAMBRIC 3 Br. COMDOSI 19,900 /
ONE YEAR OLD
Best Joeation. slept to
pool Ir volleyball
UH DER $I 00,000
2' 2 ba. FR. quiet loc. Winding greenbelts leaCI
AKIN AUBURN 2 Br lo bright single story
2ba, l stry, quiet loc. condo. Ex<luiaitely ~e,
CREEKSIDE WILLOW corated with custom
4 Br 2:a.-.ba. FR, super wallpaper and cabinetry
eds loution. thruout. Formal dinin!I
C R E E K S 1 0 E room too! Owner wilt
SYCAMORE 4 Br 2~ba. cooperate with fin~~.I
FR. in,.· Won't last al 11119
WARMINGTON ''D" pnce socallnow
2Br21n ba,den,2stry. ' @ .
FAllWIELD "F" 2 Br l~• w, preQJium loc.
SuDHt and Jake views.
PARKSIDE DARBY S SEA COVE
Br 2inba, PR. overlook· PROPERTIES ing prk.
Perfect starter home CallradH2·SSIO 114-631-6990
with great assumable _..:_..~:__J_.A._l_ ......... ___ --fCREATIVE FINAN·
loan. Call now. CING : 13"'%: Lease op-
751·3191 S~SWTSDIDEDE tion possibility. Very
11;.A finesl new CONDO buy C:.' I ( • -t-" I •I J( d .If . I 14 t)
U you want the best tluy
in Harbor area It have
qualifications for cash
problems.
SHAZAM 1714) 673°4400
IJIJt Hl-JIJI
Reduced! Huge 4 Bdrm in Harbor area. 2 & S
plus pool. Wahlerfall and BDRM. 3 BA. 1650 sq.~.
bonus room ere too! 4 Incomparable amenities lmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiimiiiiiiiiml king •ized bdnns. huge in area. We have Ow country kitchen. Finan<:· Investors who will lease
Ina is great. Large as· with option to purc.baae sumable lat TD and We have a financial
partner to asalat you.
WILSOHPAU
COMDOMHUMS
380 W. Wilson, C.M.
Open ... u~s
631-5055
HAR BOA
IAD JASMIMI came
Plan m . One level 3 BR. Open
view thru the greenbelt to the
ocean . You will like t h e
ha rmonious dee.oration. of all
the rooms. $375,000.
IN NIEWl'ORTCENTER
owner wrn help with to well qualllied Buyl!"•
rest. Don't wait. Call Don't miss chance for 631·6990 r u t u r e discount.
@ ownership. ~ -t" WILSOHPARI(
~ COMDOMtMtUMS
380 W. Wilson. C,M tJ
OHi.ALA! I SEA COVE .Qpenl0-5
Lovely ' bdrm home PROPERTIES 63l ·SOM
with large low interest 71 ~.631 .6990 a•sumable loan . .. ~:.;:Jgo. Call today•--1-A-ST-5-10-E-1--
A $90,900 ''L l'"f'A TE One of a kind 2 Bdnn L iii'" cotta1e. 60Xl27' lot. .. IAL .. _I Fantastic financing.
___ .. _...__.._''""---• Owner will carry 12% 1st TD. A rare opportunity,
OWMEI ANXIOUS vacant and read y. Call
S Bdrm. 1~ be, a lot of *-2113
hou.e tor Sll»,900. As· sumabl~ loan. Call Nan·
cy, $79·537'0 or 979-8728
aat.
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
--------
ow.awtu.
CAUYAITO
Adult occupied horqe
reaturln& low m•ln·
lenance yard, hardwood
noors and tarae roast~ bdrm. Close t.o pcivafci
family club. For aq ~e·
polntment to see.r call 540-1151
• HERITACl
. . REALTuh~,
~
..
. ·
H}F
HdlOI U. WM-.MT. OUYI
MO<tuarv • Cemel•IV
Crema1orv
1625 Gisler !we
Cosra Men 540-555~
NICIMOTHIH
l&LMOADWAY
MOIT\IAIY
11 o ~ec:twav
CostaM ...
~2·9160
IALftA ..... OM
SM'TH I TVTMLL
MSTCUffCHANL
"27 E 17tt'I SI
Coel•Mela 6'9-tl371
Oren~ Coat DAll.!.Y PILOT/Friday, June 6, 1981
PU8LIC NOTICE p
I
L
0
T
~
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOZ Go.-r.. 1002 ..... ,.. IOOZ C.,ntr.eheclt IOll,
····················~·· ...•....•.....••.•.... . ............................................ .
. '·HALF THE MONTHLY PAYMENTS OCWROMf ~~u~!!:~!.de::d i
HALF THE DOWN PAYMENT 2 Bdr m•. 2 ba. unfurn level it 81\JO)' rant ISO •
N -CJ\ I d~ view. I BR 2 8 .. : ew.-yry, ~
WILSOM P ARk CONDOMINIUMS IAY,.ONT f z o•:~o ;~ tg ;"~er . ;
310 W. Wllsoft, Cotta Meso ~~~d.1~·YT~fum i-_rT_7-M_33 ____ _
714/6Jl-5055 • CHAMM&l'IOMT COroHdelMlr 1022 • Bdrm. a ba, unluru •••••••••••••••••••••••
Spaclw 2 & 3 l .. OOM ._.a
In Pri• Part&al• Locaffoft
Contact:
HOMHUYERS SERVICE CO.
A ScOlt Hci .. 11 Ca ,_,
714/631-0778
1670 s.tti AN Atte, Wt. I
Cott.Mffa.CIM.
Wl·:SLt·:Y ~
TAYLOR CO.
llEA LTOH.s s 111t·t· 1 ~Mu
A GUA T IUY -S 113,000
Compare -these features with a ny
other home in the area. Beautifully
landscaped, over-sized lot. Great
workshop-hobby room as extentioo to
2-car garage. 2 Bedrooms, 2 baths,
large living room with wood-burning
fireplace and cozy den. So much for so
little. $183,000. Call now.
WISUY N. TA YLOI CO .. UALTOIS
21 11 S-Joocplill NII Rood
MEWPOIT CEHTER. M.I. 644-4910
LINDA ISLE
Wide channel view from spectacular
tlrcbitectural designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath,
oool home. Slip for 2 large boats. $1,495,000. Summer occupancy.
LIDO ISLE HOMES ~ Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdr m, 3
bath hQroe. n~iv decorated. Priced to sell <JWCkl.Y at $475,000I Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for entertaioin~. $420,000. Best price for the money.
'841NSULA POIMT IEACHFROMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge. from prime large lot, 4 bdrm,
3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft.
· featuring marine room. $1,385,000.
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 b drm , den i .. spacious Plan 8,
immaculate. LO~ priced at $215,000.
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
~ • 1• I I jl! ~ ~, ~ f)'', f,lf)l
f750 yrly. Z·l IDIM UMR'S
associated
'' .. '' ! ,,
/, I '
·SUNSET
W'ATCHING
IS AFFORDABLE In
Cameo HlablanCS.1 Mini
mansion It priced to sell
Only 1 yean old •Uh ,
O<'tan view, 1pa, 4 car
1ara1•. open beam c I~ 1 fn11. Bunt by Warlt\·
ln1ton. Great buy at ~:k~c~eCnUj~'f~ I
Davit, 78().1748
at 1349,000. Lari• ••· ------~-&.4-1umable lit, plut owner
w\11 carry Sl00,000 2nd TD. Spectacular ocean
views rrom Uvln•. din·
In& and muter bdrm.
Huae lot with beautirul
eround1. Don't he11tate.
call 673·8550
THE :REAL ESTATERS
DECORATOR
NEEDED
IN CAMEO SHORES!
Bring paint, carpet, and
ideas for this half a
million dollar fixer. It 'a
the lowest price fee sim-
ple on the market by
$125,000. Be clever, then
enjoy your profits!
Great assumable 1st TD.
Call today before lt 's
sold. 673-SMO
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
12 AC RANCH
38r. 3Ba Cust. home &
barn. Many amenities.
Reddington, Ca Call for
details Agl 642·4758
TRIPLEX
Three units
rlreplacea, on • cs ·:
Corona del Mar lot, ror•
the price ol a d@lei<.:
Favorable usu~abhi:
lit loan, 1eller VII/carry•
2nd. Priced at '322.ooo.:
down payment $80,000. ·
By Owner/Bkr-will· cooperate. 67S-314l
CUSTOM DUruX 4 bdrm, ramlly rm, 2•
rlreplaces. plus 3 bdrm.
rear unit w1lh fireplace
& beam ceiling. Close to
beach. Good financing
potential, $495,000.
MAURY STAUFffR
SEA LIOM HAI.TY
673-5354
OWN8t ANXIOUS
TWOLOVB.Y
CDM DUPLEXES
Good location and as·
sumable loans. Need to DUPLEX sell both properties noy,•
POTEHTI "'L ; as owner has purchased ~ another home out or Costa Mesa. remodeled area . Call Barbara
4 Bdrm 2 bath home on Glass. C/21 Sandpiper 6,000 sq.ft. R-2 lot. Easy Rily. 640-4950or851·9541
conversion lo duplex .~~~~~~~~~~ Coppe r plumbed !f·
Fi re p I ace ! La r g e EAST BLUFF. just listed .
storage shed . Only Be first to see this 3 BR
$112.000!. 646-7171 1:\4 ba Lusk home. On
THE REAL ESTATERS
C.M.COTTAGE
Small 2 Br 2 Ba E.side
home. Needs some wor)<
but has loads or poten·
tial. Assume lO'h-lst
loan and owner will help
finance. Only nJ9,500
fee land. Premiuro ca··
nyon location. $315,000.·
OWC, Devin & Co ..
642·6368
CDMDUPLEX
Excellent Financing
Fine l~aUon. Pride of
ownership. No vacan·
cies. 644·4026 or 760-0140.
Agt
..
CdM INVESTMENT :
Duplex with great in·:
come. Asking sno.ooq.:
'45.000 down and st.dne-· Ing at 13%. Wo1fl last.:
Call Jim Davis, 1eo-tll43 :
S93,900VA
COSTA MESA! IRVIM&.TEDACC
Comfortable 3 Bdrm OWC-Custom Home'
family borne on quiet 3br-pool, steam room,;
street. Remodeled tiled many extras! 6'5-3816 o~
bath. new waterhealer. 673-6881 Owoer/Blc:t'. • •
copper plumbloa. con-Costa Mesa cret~ drh•eway Move-II\ ••••••••• .. •••••••• ••• condition. First tJme ad-•
vertised ! 848-7171 OWNYAMAMC :
P UBUC NOTICE NEWCOMDOS 13~%/50%SOLD
NEW 1650SQ.FT.
THE :REAL
ESTATERS
Large 4 Bdrm 2 ttath
h ome , beautl(u l
wallpapers lhruoul. l:al
de sac street. Owner will
carry AlTD for 7 years
at 13.5% lnteresL FOf an·
appointment to ttee.'
540-USl
2 & 3 Bdrm. CONDOS
Cement drive. dbl lalMHI lslilltd 1006
garage VI/openers. ••••••••••••••••••••••• micros, trash com's, air · conditioning, walk ins. For S• by OWMr
pool & Jac:uni 's, ~block Charming 2 story Cape
all shopping&: theaters. Cod: 3 Bdnn, 2 ba+ l
Next to park. bdrm unll 'N/balh. laund
WILSOH PARK rm, 2 car ear. Lge faxed
CONDOMINIUMS aasumable + owe.
W Wi•--C M SS75.000. 673-0U!:s 380 . .......... . .
Open 10-5 For S• by OWMr 631-505.5 ISLAND CHARM
PUBUC NOTICE
Updated 3 bdrm 2ba
w/lort. frpk, 2 oar gar,
laund rm. View & steps
I UMMA•Y o .. ADO .. T llD to the b~. Luge 86·
~ ... HERITAGE
REALIU..._S
9.25°/oAa........, lit of $94,500 pllyable.
S7fS/mo. Sellet!6-~11 carry Ira 2nd on Is
4-SBr Mesa. Verde I
home. John .631-0 1a,
641 ·84S8. Ag\.
01to1111ANca s u m a b 1 e + O 'Ii C •
0r11tnanc;e 11.1, 11 schedulecl to IM !fl $475 000 Call S7" "lS8 2 Br condo l<MobUcello~
hilt .tfect '°•YI ,,,_ Jl'M 1, 1te1. • ' """ $911500. Webb Rlty. '
encl was edaPt• *"' tlle 1a4_,,. "911 call vo•: c.outicfl Mal'nban: AYES! OPEH Nl 10-Z 493-0761
Scll•far, Hall, ~ M<Partaiw. 5 •T/S• .-•y I to S Jolln1on. NOH: NoM. A9HNT: • "" v"""" • $I 0,000 D0Wji4
";4tnanc. 11., ,...,,_ '"' IOf""9 116 ~ J.n. Eastslde CM $129.Soo bY. _. ,,~ ioui.ct et 101t anct *5 IALIOA tSLO DPLX . orner. 3bT ,R-2 644·a9_;
W•tlau A-frwn IU to llJ. lst time on market · ,,_,_ •
1111 r..i1 text °' .._ ~ •r· ireat location btwn Bay Beautiful ~ condtf. 3: 11tl'la~ce rMY 11e , ... in tti. Cltr & Vltlage. Spacloua 4 Bdrm, 1500 sq.fl.. 2'h , c1wt110ffla11tT7F.ir0riw.~ Bd lM b 1 batha Doub!~ •a~ M4tN rm. ~ ome + . "" .
l!ILll!'N P ..... , .... .., Bdr m apt. Watcb the garaae w/elec optl)e~.: ~':=ia MtM world 10 by from the Draped. never bee~
Pw&lltlwd er .. CoNt Dalty Plltle, front patio. Xlnt financ· I i v e d j n . s en e r
-'-S. Itel ml avail. ~.000. w/f\naMe at.IJ't,. for l
P UBUC NOTICE
WATERFRONT years, or w /conaid er
HOMES lease opUon. &n .H91;
REAL ESTATE 131-4361 ast-
63H'400 MISA ¥BtDl: ~_,_~-.~---.-.~~~ llSTVALUI
Sharp 2 i'°"1'. 4 Br .,..J B~
new carpet, rttdwooi:I o•. usy care rar•t
$1U,OOO. D. Bourk ' 1tealtor 546-lllllSO. , i
... ..
'
Orange Coast DAILY PIL.OT/Frlday June 5. 1981
• •• ..... s ..... ,.. IMU'l'ICIAM • SPIRlTUAL Chevrolet 4Miler needs To nm -.&l ..._, l'be
READINGS tnollu\ed people in· H1.rr ._., •. W. lSIUI
l •l()pm. Fully Uc'd. terat~ ln an upect.t of st C •:......,-.11.,
'
•92·'72" or 492>9C* ltl6 II.Ill) U lea. No U · ~'
• Camino Real. an ptrlence neceuary. Ea hU lU.ti ~--1111111..-----1 ... leQJ Contact Gary Webb: 900 f" .. ~....,.111~ 11:or 1 --S. Coast Hwy, Laauna .. ' _.._. ,.
T9 lbe Beautiful Brwietl• Beach between e.spm, p_ersoe tt In flower ~b~ said "heUo" lo me M·F. No calls. sboD.-;Group buhb plan
at Swensen •a In CdM a vallable.· Call for a ppt, sat n l t e M a y 13 Babyallter wanted. Full Ml ·aMO, uk for Kent. wf>W 1 ! 1 LOve to m~t thne Su.mmer Job. My Cl•" KriDMy FJoritlt
)'Ou aaaln at Swennn's home . Student OK. B 0 0 K KE S P E R
any· Sat at tpm. Mlke M&-l3S2. Evee&Wknds. Pe1boaid, mfd of<'.
(I'm the blonde with Babyellter, full time, TYJllnl ft IN. La1. B<'h
glasses).' 1ummer, perf. for col· •rea. Call . Belly,
ltaeatudenL Needed lm. 499-1301
med . 144 ·8071 ---------J-Special evea/wknds. 1"'311,.r $5.00/0FF part time. lO to L5 hourt
MARKETS
For 2od ~)rd Shtl\1
Wt promote to manast• ment It supervision from within.
WANT A CAREER?
Costa.Mesa 111 Del Mar
831·9421
COUNTER HELP
FT/PT. Gary's Dell.,
CdM, 67Hl93for nppt.
61HHALOMCI
Electrntu firm lo
Costa Mesueek11 perscm with 1eneral office •
ll&ht bookkeeplni ex·
per .. lncludinf account.a
payable & accounll rt· eel v •bte. Permanent position requires r Ila
ble person. Call:
Vat.r8"trolllca
540.9264 ... THE Bab ysltter needed . per week. Houra 11ultable
Mature, r~sp woman to~ourneeds.833 9252
G• lfri d needed for occasional .
C111t0Mtr SerYIH Gen'I office skilfs al~~~~~~~~~
Ir en S babysittini In my CO$ta aootctc•a F/C *ISCORTS• Mesa home. ~7593 Rafldly.expandlng re-
musl. PCH Sportawear. Call Tina. 556-2995
tai company seeking Hunlln&ton Beach H ... /Offlce/Hohl Baby•ltter. Mother want· F./C Bookkeeper. Ex· 962-9116 Delivery men over 18 for * 97%•9772 * ed with other children to c e 11 en t co mp an yt~~~~~~~~~ L.A. Timea to homes in lttale/Female Escort care for my t yr. old, ruu benefits. StartJng salary I · C . M • 3 a m · II a m ,
MC VISA time Mon thru Fri. After $1200/mo. Call 846-0011, CASHIER economy car required, ~~~~~~!!!!!~ 4640-9008,N.8.area LavemeOi'Chris. Houseware sales Apply n o co 11 e ct In r . -i o p e ra o n : Crow n M00-$450/rno + bonus ,~ Senkft 53'0 BABYSITTER IOOICllEPB. F.C. Hardware. 3107 'E Cst. 646--0637 or646-5844.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Mature person to care For reaJty m1mt. co. Hwy. CdM.
A.MW A. Y rllOOUCTS
..... ·"0.5646
flnDloY'*"!lf a ,,.,. .....
•••••••••••••••••••••••
7075 •••••••••••••••••••••••
for 1 yr old, my home, P . T . n r . C o a s t D E N TA L R e c e p l .
Balboa. 675-5061 mom· Hwy/Dover.955-2391 Childcare . Mother's Pleasant ore .. looldna
ings. ~lper needed for 2 girls for enthusia.stlc indlv IOOKKHPING 11 & 13. Irvine area 12 to for full time pos. SaJary
BABYSITTER Mature man or woman 6PM. Mon-Fri Own o pen . 6 4 2 . 6 8 8 o
6 wka summer job in with some experience transportallon. 552-3744 wknds.eves: 673-3403
Irvine. Uve out. Very It for 3-4/hrs, Tues, Thurs. art 6.
hskpa; supervise older & Sat. m o rninas . D&ITAL
children. Lots of free $4.SO/hr. + vacations. CHILD CA.RE ASSISTANT UV&.IN timebythepool.$90/wk. S48·3687asldorAlice. Loving grandmother Mod ern progressive
t\va)lable July.Aug. Startlmmed.552·9207. i---------i type lo care for my two practice seeks ex · Pfrt time rest ol year. babies, ages 4 mos It 2 perienced chairslde as· Xlntrels. Ba.nk:lng IOOKK•H yrs. Penn. full time 4 sistant. Meaningful 7~1·2648, 7AM beat. Huntlnaton Savings is Full charge, great opp-days a wk. career oeportunity for
GEMHAL OFFICE
Are you In earnest? Can
you think'! Are you as·
sertlve? Are you a
perfectionist 9 Are you
career oriented? Are
you matutt? Can you
take over an enira/mra . ofc. where your work re·
ally matters? Really ?
Well then. I wouJd like to talk to you. P1-. •~d your resume to Tom
Tompson, P.O. Box 2951. Npt. Bch., 92863
General
iv1cK1 HESTON I
& A.st0elates
SpeciaUilna in
Temporary Clerical ~el'IOnnel
540.0400 now accepting applica· ty. with b11$y Laguna 875·~. 675-0321 an indiv1Cb.tal who is
2 Klndergardeo teachers Uon11forfull&Ptrteller Beach contract.or. Must CholrDl--'-r looking for personal re---------•
tulye summer pro1ram. posltJons.CallM2·8600. haveconstructionexper. ~JV cognition and t!Xcep· GeneralOfrice
R'e4dln1, swimmin g. 494·6525 For small church. 3.4 lionalrinandalrewards. Newport Beach in-
field trips. Monday thru l"'!~~------11~~~~~~~~~~ hr s I wk · 64 2 · 2 7 4 O We are team oriented s urance co. has the
ft14ay50-4115 Banking JOOKKEEPING am/963-41.95pm and carinat oCfering fo llowing position s
E Se • AE ENJ(RIMI' o k b t h CL~•c "L many fringe oenofits in· available xet. c y 4 yns, exp. • na 1 ey '/ ouc . AC· ~ A eluding medical In . MAIL & FILE CLERK wJshorthand looklna for curate typmg. Part time Soundcraftsman Audio surance and percentaae Dependable. mature
int.eresUna job w/small JOB MARKET days. Better Way Foods, has interesting position of production. 4 day firm. Temp/Full tlme. N.8 . 645-2444 available with varied of-week. Sl.200 a month ir person to ass ist with (7\4)17~225 B 0 0 K KEE p ING (ice duties: typing, fil· qualifl,eJ...:. Fountain mail. rihng.sw1tchboard TELLER TRAINEE ing, phones, ma1l Call Valley ~102 relief, notypl.llg. HelpWmhcl 7100 P l time . Apply at <710SS&-6193. BILLINGCLERK
•••••••••-•••••••••••• Newport Balboa Savings Crown Hardware, 1024
1
DENT AL ASSIST AMT Typing 30wpm Ex per. Accoulla; Cltril is seekini a mature, well Irvine <WestcUff Plaza l. CLSUCAL 3 days per week. (Tues. helpful
Experience required. 30 aroomed lncliv!i..wbo lov-NB PERSON FRIDAY for I Wed Thurs) Will train Gd co. benefit.s. Work· h J', week . pc H es working wim peopte1 ________ -t construction company Call M0-1804 aft 6 pm. mg hours 8AM·4 LSPM.
Sportswear. Call Tine to train in our Newport 100.,., __ F/C ~-6k906keeping & typing Call for Ullerview appl.
SS&-2995 Beach ore. Excell. opp-llUUOll:l'"tl;lll .,._ DENTAL ASSIST. btwn 8 :.> & 11 ·30AM, ty. for stable, responsi· Newport Beach property . ted f · t N """84"'0 ble person to learn & de· mgmt. firm. Career opp-Clerical Typist· Opening wan or pnva e pt .....,. " AC C OU HT ING velop lo a growing as· ty. for bright indiv. with with young dynamic :::e~r:;~~~I pay & COMMERCIAL CLStlC social.ion. Full insurance prior F /C exper Call: en&meering/ construe· BANKERS LIFE
Typi11t-learn bkkpg benefits & paid career 640-0123 uonfirm Mustbesharp. DEMTA.LFRMTOFC 140lDoveSL,Ste5SO ~e. Ptr24 hrs/wk. apparel. Pls. call: dependable with ac· Newport Beach ~l~ rnri.C~t.° =~ Ms. Denny Parisia BOOKK EEPER: Full curate typing skills <60 E.O.E MIF Mrt. M.yer 714·~-~ h wpm +). Salary com HELP !! NEWPORT IALIOA c a r g e t h r u F / S · e n s u r a l e w I t h e x · Matur e , exper in · Administrative SA.YINGS&LOA.N dividual to handle all perience Call Dave
. $I OOOYcMO E.O.E. b f t r RE Peter . Peter & Assoc. P ases o ace g or · · In c. San Clem ente
Summero Career Develop. Firm. R. E. ex· 492·3735. Secretarial, mllTketing, per. helpful. 2 person
warehouse & other poel· Banking ofc. Salary based on ex·
lions. We streu neat ap-per. Now located in Cer·
pearance. Must have TB.LSl ritos moving to Dana Pt. ~ranspo. Call 10am-3pm o I c I S e p l . C a I I
Clerk-gift shop. Mature.
Full· lime incl weekends .
Apply Fri. Sal or .Sun.
Laguna Beach 497·31SS wkdays. (7l4l847·U22. If you are a mature in· 714/521-8542 or send re·
ART GAU.ERV bas part dividual seeking a full sume: 13919 Strwkmanr---------
flr1'e job for attractive, tlm e Teller position, Rd. Cerritos, 90701. CkERIC TYPIST
int-'liaenl, poised and Irvine Savings is in· Energetic person with
q terested in you. Pleasant look,..._ &ood typing needed for
polished young woman worklnf conditions. P /Time Mon. l .30PM to busy managj.ng aeneral
wilh potentia l for good saary & benefit 6PM. Tues. t0:30AM to aaency No ex p .
responsible executive pack are. Experience 6 P M . No e x p e r necessuy, but ability to
position. 844·4S4S or prererred. Apply in necessary. Appl)' Pen learn a must. AUracUve ~-pe rson between the neySaver 1660 Placenlla salary & all company
lf you have experience
In insurance. collections & strong phone com·
municalion ability, we
need you. 631-1420.
DENT AL OfftCE
Ma ture front off ice
pers_on. Ex.per required. Typing skills. Insurance
bllling. 4 days per week.
Newport Beach Call
64.2·3181.
DENTAL Assistant .
p/lime for Ortho ofc
Dental exp. needed not
necessarily Ortho exp
ROA. 642-5997 hours of lOAM·Noon & Ave. C.M. benefits Call Sally at ~ASSEMILYGIRL 2PM-4PMat: _B_U_S_D-------1 848·8264. Desk Clerk, expenenced Ylaitlcs experience pre· Irvine S&L Assn. RfVERS for school 1~~~~~~~~~
GIRLFRIDA.Y With some bookkeeping.
Salary to commensurate
with ex p e r ie n ce. 642-1026.
GIRL FRIDAY
and assn't part l•me,
flex hrs student o.k.
Must drive. like travel & outdoors. be indepen-
dent & able to mk de·
cis1ons Good salary
Call 760·8461or1143-9418 ----GI RL Friday , setr
starter. ex cell typist.
gd te lephone personali·
ty. non·•mkr. S1T5 wk. to
start. Call for rntervlew
SS6·6981. Window
Des igns 3195 "D"
Airport Loop Or., CM le~. but will train. 18552 MacArthur Blvd. bus positlOftl avail. Will I · I preferred. be able lo M wst s peak English. Irvine. Ca. 92715 tram if nee. Fountain COMMERCIALS, films, meet l he Pub Ii c . , ________ _
642·1026. 752-2600 Valley, 962-3312. models. extras. SCAS pleasant personality GRIMDER-
-.. ------···~~~E~·~O~.E~·~M~l~F~~~I CABINET INSTALLERS ~;.~ new races ::.~::~abor Inn. C.M CEMTERWS A.SSB9l8S I · Eitp'd . production ---------Top wages, benefits,
Loe. Mission Viejo co. Bask Clerk TypiSt with Cabinet installers Companion for elderly Distributors. overtime for exper'd .
needs Assemblers w/2 good escrow bac k· needed.540-SSlS woman on Balboa Is. Fornewdletpill.Amaz· operator. Must be able
yrs. exp. Candidates ground. 1 girt office. ---------Fem a I e Ii v e i n . Ing rroduel. Sells easily. ~~lesr~~c~p ..:i:k .c~:i~
mut have gd. manual 975-0644. Corptt IMfahr H o u s e k e e pt n g & Fut time or pt time. Deltronic, 5'5·0fll de~terity, gd. eyesiaht, .._ ________ Helper needed. Wiii ~al carc.675-1831 ld~lforhouse wlvesex ·~~~~~~~~~ neatlnap~arance atde·,. train. Mission Viejo tra income. L & M En·1~
pendable. Work is in Ufe Beautlclan area. 18 yrs & older. COMPANION Wanted : terprises. DJstribulors GUAIOS
support medical elec· lal»oa lay Ct.lb 831·9070, leave name & Mature women for am-r o r Li g ht F o r c e
ttontca. Gd. benefits. It ROW 111rf1MJ phone no.-will return all bulatory t'ecuperatlng Products. 8.51·0593, (213) :~a~U~~~s"fWJ~ 0 n l" r~s o n s I b I e HJ-t.,,.st calls. women. ~erox . shr·S 438-2005. ' --.---d r· 1 h A&es 21 or over, retired persons I perma-p r b 7f 11 ays a w 0 IX unc . I No
tr:! em~ymt. need at re era l.y w o owlna. CAUJERS CdM area. Refer. req. Donut sbop. Early AM we come. exper. nee.
C M P I Xlnl workin~ cond. W"UPKft Write PO 7216 330 w s"'ft,noexpernec.App-Apply : U n lver1al Py. • : rs. a.re • Plea~ee call ues-Sat. ~·-· · · · lU Pro••c••on "-...,lee ,....., ~81·3830 642-0092. Ask.for Joyce Irvine/Newport Beach ~~ P 0Box1560, C.M. Nly : OiprtpilByl Dond CuMts. 1854 w. Stb .. St .. ~~ta •;:;:. ~!!!!~!!~~!!!!!~'~~~~~~~~~~I area. EaW. AM deUver)' "-'u ewpo v · · • Lntervlew hl'lr i-12 & 1-4, ~~u7r:;s n~~·eJ4·~5~ Compan ion /Aide for DOMUTSHOP _M_o_n_-_F_ri_. _____ 1 C1aalfied Ad1, your one
1topshoppin1 center.
WANT ACTION ?
Ctauifed A'ds 642·5678 Call Jess~. paralyzed iirl·nlghls Early AM. No exp. nee Hair Stylist·Manlcuriat
Will train. 549-S<Mll. Xlnt start. Apply trll for Costa Mesa & Npt
Carri era COOK noon. D .K .'s, 29S9 Bcharea.5411-9344
E R l Fairview, C.M. Register Newspaper has
immed. openinas for af
temooo auto carriers in
Laguna Beach & La1U11a
Niguel. Must be over 18
years old & have an
economical <'•r · Work
3:30·S:aopm weekdays,
S.7am weekends. Earn
$SOO-~ monthly. Call
Mr. Ensley 951-7113.
Cashier
OFFICE CASHIER
uropean es auranl.
Exper only. Full time
nithu. Contact Ride or
Karl497-4441 -------COOK
Exp'd. line cook with
continental cwsine bk·
grnd. Apply: Su.rr &
Sand Hotel. 4114·8460
from 9·5PM. Mon· Fri.
COOK Purt or full time
for Np\. Sch. restaurant.
Exp. pref'd. but will
train. For Interview
call : 642.-'881
COOl<S
3-11 mos. exptr. Apply
btwn SAM 4c Noon.
Charlie's Chili, 3001
Redhill, Blda. #2. Ste. #228,CM
Enjoy work l na In
Slavic k 's Jewerers.
puties include vertrylna sales balance.a, doing
dally ba.nkina transac·
lions . disburalns runda &i
other related dutJea. Ex· cell. Co. benefits ---------•
packaae. Contact: Mr. Mah your advertising M c D e r m o t t , dollar go farther! List '11'-&M·~. )'Ot.tr b\dlness every day
ILA'9Clt"S In the Cla.ulfled section
Faahionbla.M 'of thla newspaper.
~~~~~~~~I 642·567• . .....__ ____ ,
Limited open~ 11vaUable In the Ot'tnae
Coa•t area, for H lr•motlva-.CI, c11rffr
Train, moth.•••• und
DRIVER
with packlna dufies.
Good drivi.ttgttcord and
goQ<t rtrerencn. Con·
tact Mr Oaboub. 548-2271 belween8&SPM.
EXEC. SECltfTA.RY
for busy Npt. Bch. ofc.
Typing, shorthand. Real
estate bkgmd. belJ>ful.
Sl.300/mo. +. com ·
mensurate to exper.
Call: 64~1633, ask for
Don Li&htner
Exper'd. pet$<1n wanted
w/5 to 10 Yf"'. exper. in
cpt. weavinc & mend·
lng, sales & purchase of
handmaderugs. $500 per
wk . C all : Per s I an
Tre11sure R u e .
114-873-69$1
R.OUL_....
New Con1'9Y'• openln& In
Santa Ana. Ea.rn top
wages \ti beauUful en·
virol'lmenl. Exper. +
aood refs . Cati
714/5$1·2'118eves.
Hardware Sales, F/tim
pos. In retail hardwar
store. See Mike or Steve,
H. W ... Wright Co., 12
Rochester, C.ltt .
HARDWARE SALES
Manaaement potential.
Apply in person: Crown
Hardware, 3107 E. Coas
Hwy., CdM
Housekeeper RIB in ex
AN ITORlAL Ev,ninas. a to 5 bu . C all :
114•992·•821. 714.530-3333
LEGAL SECRETARY
for Npl. Bcb. Jaw flrm.
Will train ~J:$0n w/gd
baste skills. l'dag card
exp. hefpful. CaU Joyce
for app't, 640-56:W.
LEGAi.SEC'Y
Needed ror partner of presUglous New"port
Beach law office. Ex·
periencepretet'l'ed. Mag
ll helP.fU . TOP salary & beauufu1 st.irroun<lings.
Call <7l4lm<n'30.
LEGALstCY
Temp. 6/15-6/19, Hntg
Bch, noii•m)tr, 848-1400
LlGAL
SECRETARY
Probate experience. Permanent Put-time, 3 run days week: Newport
Beach area. 673-7120.
LIQUOR CLERK with
knowledge of Wines
wanted. Spi&ot Liquor,
1802 S . Coast Hwy.
Laguna Beach. 494· 1533.
Liquor Clerk. P/T nights.
MHGMH'I' POSITIOH
Fabrjc cha.In. C.M. &
~aheim. Xlnt oppt'y.
Gerl 84&-«MO;
MODELS/
Full u!e~t~. Full
company benents. Ex,
per or w/traln. ~pply
P ENNF;YSAVEJl 1860
PlacellUa Ave. C)d~
PA.YIOLLCLID
The JotlY Roeeifnt':, a
established rest.aura
chaln. h• an ~·
ror a payroU ciertl t..
work In a 4 penoo dqt.,.
10-key by touch a q,it.11t.·
Salary comme:xeatl with e..xperien~e. y
in person between • Spm at.
THE JOLLY ROGEl(
JNC.
17042 Gillette Ave., Jrv.
(714)546-0331 ACTORS Busy O.C. casttna office Pest control tecbnidan
t<as •·aft.er ~trike" me>-needed. Exper. pre·
i i rerred but not t on P cture casting aQ-necessary. Call .. ~,. ... ..-. countll. Non-union extra ....,...,_,,
work for fun, SS1 <'tedlts. Photographic Printer: ~~:rJl:r: :rJ:~:.~ bEI xkp ebir iPelnnte-~t y rs o ld, dependable ac /W te r el' ~o,. transportatron, no ex· \ Phot~graphy St~cf10.
perience. Full urne. 645-3840.
558-16Ge for o 't. PLUMllMG
tdOTHER'S HELPER . SUPPLIES
Wanted fem l8 yrs or Growing Co. has xint OP•
older Moo.Fri. 2 girls 9 & pty for good. reliable
10 yrs. Close lo ~ach & d r i v er . Gener a l
recreation. Start 6/22 knowledge ol plumbinl
thru August. Must be re· products helpful. Good
bable. Call ror details al\ working conditions. "'· SPM (7l4 l&M-98'78 inge benefits full time. _ Ca I J M r . Pe t-e rs Ask for Steve 548-84lO MOTHER'S Helper want·
ed . Resp. hish school
LYN /Medical Assist. girl ror summer Job
Back office, full-time starting approx June
(7141675-4830
POSTBOX
days. SS7·Dl0. 15th 8 mos old baby L. B
MAID aft 6PM Cindy 497.2297
P T, Oex. Retired OK Nwptl Airport 549-2287
Production
642-30:.l Newspaper delivery Full time person for
prod. Dept Packing &
handling h osier y .
Crystal Creations Apt1 parel. 631-5414.
pe r son, 18 o r over.
MAIDS wanted. exp'd. Driver's license, in·
lmmed. hire. See Angie, surance, economy car.
San ClemeQ&e hm Npt Bcb·lr\'-C.0.tA M~•
area. 7 dys pr wk. Mon· ~::iig::.~~1 Fri .• 2-sfM. Sat/Sun P IT Clerico.I., . .,
2looN rtBI CM 4.7 .30AM. Approx. Wor'k l!Cl£moons • .Dut.iu..
ewpO · $500/mo. Call 540-3007 Include Ute typing, as-
M AN AG ERIAL. exec. bet. llAM-SPM. Ask for sem bling brochureg..
persons interested' in ad-Lee or Bob ma ilers, etc. Contact
dilional income part 1---------1 Cathy Lester642-9470.
time flex. hrs. Call •NITECHEF/ REAL £STATE ~ALES M a rin a de I Re Y. M4H PEOPLE. Investment
213·823·6982 for in · IROIUR * Firm building Real
terviewinyourarea. FulJorp/time Estate Sales Force. TOP WA.GU PA.JD Masonry & concrete help AP.ply in person.. The Licensees invited t.ocall. wanted . Laborers. Village IM, lZ1 Marine, _64_1_·_07_63_· _____ _
finishers & super visor. Balboa Island RECEP110N1ST Pltwe
Mike 496-M82. needed immed. ar\er,
MATUUPBSOM NURSE/RHorLVN noonsforlawofc.inO.C. airport area 833-8486 needed to help operate a from 3 to ll ·30 pm 41 ask fo r Pam
tea garden in CdM . bed Convel Hosp S~nla ------.,..,....-
Sat Sun only, 9:30AM to Ana Hts. SAS$-3061
3PM. Apply in person. Sat. & Sun .. 10Al•f-2PM. OFFICEMGR.
Sherman G11rdens, 2647 AA in Business or Ad· E Coast Hwy., CdM mintstraUoo or 2 yrs of
Recepffollht Law omce. OC Airport area High school grad.
McDONALD·s
of S• Clemente
(Under New OWnersbJpJ
1s now accepting ap.
plications for day & night posjtlons.. Please
apply fn person t>etween
9-lam & 2-Spm wkdys at M c Donald 's, 650
Avenlda Pico. San Clem.
MEDICAL COURIER
Musl have owo
transportation & be
r&m1liar with Calif. freeway syst.em. Mon-Frt. 9·5pm. 768-SSOO.
MR>ICAL
TRAMSCRIHll
Work al home, (op pay.
Requires minimum
S/yl's acute hospital ex-
perience Jn all 1>hases or
medical dictation. CaU 768-8500 for interview.
MEDICAL ClAIMS
PROCISSOR
Mull be ~~ienced. F1T. h~ ror Beth . (114)5*1'11 ....
MHfc .. Seu, ... t
Eleper. accurate & fast typist for busy office.
Must know all front of·
rice ret._ted ex pe r
needed for this challeng.
mg position. with f row.
mg 1n vestment arm.
Typmg skills a plus. All
phases of office opera·
Uon Involved. 641·8855
CyndL
OFFfCEHRJI
Call 833-9124
RECEPTIONIST for new
corporate headquarters
in Irv ine. Re quires
pleasant phone-skill.II +
typing. Send re5ume to
Controller, 2691· White
Rd. Irvine, Ca. 8271~• , •
Part·tlme. 2 days pt"r RIC.-nOHIST 1
week for growing com· Ph lit t i •· pany. Typ.lna 4.Swpm. fil. ones, e YP og ""'
101 & phones. Neweqrt clerical. Exper not r~.
Beach, SSl-9222. Small congenial Hunt• ington Bch law ofe.
OFFtCECLERIC 842·00!l_ -----
Are -you reaclv lA) r•join REC8'110NIST
theworkforce"lde;dop-Needed . Newport
portuo1t)' ror part-time Beach. Boat-type busfJ ornce clerk with typing d __ .. s skills Dutje.s are varied ness. 41 ays _._., W1·
with flexible workin, Wed. 8 ·30·5 30pm . $4.50/hr. Heavy ~ hours . Pl•ase ca l & typing experience. m4>7s4-7748 Call 645·7100.
Opportunity In BEE IEC8'110M9ST L1NE F ASHJONS. 3 peo.
Pie needed o.e>w, Flexible Growing S.A. Co? bas ,. u opening for recepqoni11t hours, ~ample fasmons with pleasant~ phone
& personal wardrobe. personallity. TypJn•
_..,.832..._·007_2_or_. _546~J?.-1489 ___ 1 s k II I s S 5 W P JI-._
Responsibilities incl.ade typing or orders with
some lite corres~oo~
dence etc. Cod\petitlte entry level salary with
periodic reviews. ~or
peraonal lnterview coo-
ta ct Cy Slm p•on •t
558·2803 •'I
=·
S~dw1ch Salesperson ~on-1''ri. 7am-lpm .
usl have own trans.
AC. C.M.642·1900
SlCRETARY
631.2004 s .................
I Focilty
Housekeeper-~ aitress
Serve breakfast & lunch
to elderly residents. No Ups. Mon·Fri, 7am-3pm. 49(.!R511,
STATIOMAIY
Store In CdM needs
salesperson F /time, 5 days. Xlnt worldnc con·
ds. EspeclalJy fine cllen· tete. Phone..,..,..... for •
... ................. 1 ................... 021 Vi~J:DUrl'l:Jl •••• , ................. .
ABBEY Redwood 2 by t '1, xlnt
ANTIQUEMALL decklnc. I to JO' Iona.
Daity liM, fri 10-9 New load J111t urlved. Cao..lTue!!May Save at 55* per f t.
11'751 W..tmina• A.e. --~ anyth1'e.
Gardea Grove
509 Jasmine, CdM, Sat. &
Sun . 9-5. Lamps,
bedspreads, china, re·
cord player, misc. St·SSO.
Relr1g, books, clothes,
mlac. Sal/Sun 10-4. 307
Garate Salt
Ski boots. ar part1,
1cuba 1ear , mens,
womens clothes & mlac.
3892 Claremont St.
Irvine , Culverdal e
Tract.
Unique • Unusual
Garage Sale-furn,
e•rden acces, golf clubs,
1port1n1 equip, tools,
.....,,, .. , ........... _
••••••••-•••• .. ••••••• W_..., IOll Halt t..._. "emiietd w.d· ....... .., ............ 0
dUll rill1 llOO appralaal W A N T I!! D : U • e d
val Sl oooai.s11t hllhchalr uad u ·• trtcy· ' de. Pbone5»7Nt
Dlamood, rud brilliant t ._. .e
1.0I n. VVSl, H, xlnt ... ~ t IOIJ cut, p~ perty, SU,500. • lt1-037aaft.e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ ...,_,_.;...,_ ____ .,.or ule; Ptnder Lead JI,
Briltlut Ola.mood Pear, Red 1raln maple n~k
Appratud Ut.H7. w/hard 1hell case. 1
VVSl, tolor I , loose .wtek old. M•aar. S350
S t 0 ft a , lb U tl S e ll _s.&-_;,,;_...;.%7...;.64...;._ ____ _
$8000/mah offer. AUTOHARPtuo/OBO 710-l108 Eves. t60-7fZI M9c......, 1071
••••••••• .. •••••••••••• RICKANBACHER BASE AIR COMPRESSOR. w/bardahellcMe. $450
Portable D> • 4 hp, hm 87~'7887
cyl, USPSI, ~ke oew. BASE Amp. PVT le T 100,
'395, 645-9112 xlnt cond, S2ClO call aft
Wood lathe, all cut lron 6PM ~~140 c!W J..~lonal tools. FLUTE
---------• Armstrona. xlnt cond, Mhc••11• IOIO S.190.Uf. orM2·3'753 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GAME SHOW PRIZE 4pc Slln1erla.nd drum set SILVER or FT w /cb-700 cymbals,
CERTIFICATE worth stands le throne $225
$1000. Will sell at $750. 752·0835 Brandon
546-9215 Office ....... &
All year Bubble Pool .... ,.... 1015
Enclosure, 30 x 55. Xlnt. • ••• ••• •••••••••••••••• $750/offer. MZ-9688. ADLER Electric 21C Ta·
ble model. Excell .. cond. Lo••l•aa• Recent overhaul. $200. Helium Bouquets de· Pia. call: US.28'2
livered. Perfect for every occuloo. 673--«19 CPA'• a ccountants & services. DEC 310 CQm· 6 ft redwood picnic table. puter with LA180 printer
Brand neW. f/S. 646-9885 & client acct'lng system
anytime software. Jn operat.ion.
ST AIMED Grl.ASS
Wlndows and Skylltes
Add Beaut.y/Wannlb to
homes. Est.548-4491
$10,900. 752-561.S.
Manolla 101 Copier with stand & approx. $100 ln
supplies. Xlnt. shape.
Cost $2400, now $1475. 5' Dell Produce Case, new (714)957·9331, 551-6907. compressor $250, 6 H.P.
shredder $20084&-6705 Copier Savin no Copier.
Under service contract. Vacuum, pump <i n· Assume lease. $101 per duatrial type), vacuum table, bell jar. 251 mo. 642·5640 da 642-6421
Camellia Ln CM Eves _w_k_e...;.n...;.d~s_. -----
aft 6 , ... IOl1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Beach Tennis Burmese Python $150/bst
Club membership avail. o f r . Red ta i I Bo a
M o v e d · m us t s e 11 . $100/bst. About l 'h yrs.
(415)128-3846. 642.6694 ---------
Rebound Mini Tram.
poUne, Spring 101uSed lees . like new $79.
494.8388
Dilly Pilat
FRIOAY,JUNES, 1981
llllll lllCl/IDITI ClllT
FEATURES 83
COMICS 84
' TELEVISION 88
I After years as a
gourmet, chef Arend
deserves a break
•
Builders to fight poWer hookup hike
By STEVE MITCHELL
.. Tll• DellY ..........
The Building Industry As-
sociation of Southern California
bas vowed to fight a proposed
rate bike that would see de-
velopers in south Oranse County
pay up to $2,500 for electrical
hookups to new homes.
The California Public UUUUes
Com mission will meet for five
'1ays in San Diego beginning
Monday over a Sao Diego Gas
and Electric Co. request seeking a $500 to $2,500 hookup charge
for new electrical customers.
If approved, the hike would af.
feet all new homes built in
SDG&E's Southern California
region, including Three Arch
Bay, Monarch Bay, portions of
· Laauna Niguel, Dana Point,
Capi~trano Beach, San Clemente
and San Juan Capistrano.
The hookup fee could have a
d r a ·m at i c e ff e ct on new
homebuyers in south Orange
County, s.ays Frank Hughes,
chapter president of the building
association.
"We're sympathetic with
SDG&E's financial pliaht,"
Hughes said. "However, we want to be sure that future res-
idential customers do not bear
a disproportionate share ot new
electric service costs."
He said the proposed hookup
fee "would have a sianlrlcantly
harmful effect upon the in·
dustry's ability to provtde af.
fordable housing.''
But spokesmen for the utility,
which provides electrical
service to about 43,000
INtly PUlt ......... ·~It...._
Mouth of Aliso Creek becomes a dangerous trap for unwary waders when the tide changes at the South
Lagunp beach.
Aliso lifeguard saves infaiit
A BVIYDAY
U/egtMmf Kooroji(Jn
'I heard the basket cry,' says rescuer
"I heard the basket cry," said
lifeauard Dave Koorajlan,
describlog a rescue Tbunday
afternoon at Aliso Creek Beach.
The 13-year-old lifeguard said
he saw a woman stumble in the
creekbed Thursday afternoon.
dropping a wicker basket she
f.ras carrying.
When be arrived to belp the
distressed wader. the woman
screamed and pointed toward
the basket, which was rapldJy
being carried out to sea.
That's ~en Koorajian beard
. the basket cry.
Duhing thrdugh the turbulent
creekbed, the lifeguard reached
the bobbing basket and snatched
it from the water.
Inside was an eight-month-old
infant.
· ' ·I thought it was just her
lunch." Koorajiao lauithed.
Thursday's rescue was the
second for Koorajian, who
guards the South Laguna beach
adjacent to the Aliso pier.
'Earlier in the afternoon be
rescued a six-year-old boy who
sUpped down a s and embabk-
ment into the creekbed and was
being carried out to sea when
Koorajian arrived.
In beth cases, lifeauards said
they were too busy t9 collect the
names of the victims.
•'That creek is tricky when the
tide changes," said Llfeauard
International presidf'M Jim
St'au((er. "It can ctta~
drardatltally in Just five
minute.." ·
A four or five·foot-wide creek
bed stream turns Into· a 30-foot
chasm when the tide comes up, be
said.
When visitors cross the creek
earlier in the day when it ls
relatively calm, they figure they
can cross back again when water
from the creek-is sur1t111 toward
the ocean, Stauffer explained.
And that's exactly what hap-
pened Thursday when the young .
mother tried to come back
across the creek mouth, carry-
ing ber baby.
"That creek keeps us busy
every few days when the tide
changt??," Koorajian aald.
'Eentative school
tiudget shows rise
Laguna Beach Unified School
Dl•trlct trustees have unan-
tm oualy approved a $6.7·
million preliminary school
bud1et for the 1981-82 school
year. The spending package shows a ~.497 increase over last year's
final bud&•t. with employee
aalaries and benectts makl.ng up
about S2 percent of the total.
Trustees wlll bold a joint
bud1et study sesalon with dis·
trict principals June 24 to review
the initial bud&el document.
Dlatrict Business Manacer
Clyde Lovelady aaid Thursday
the prelip)inary budaet was pre-
pared ustn1 "expected" rev-
enuea from atale and federal
lady said a favorabfe outcome
ls not anticipated.
Under the preliminary budpt,
only $1.000 is slated for tile
purchase of textbooU in 1111.aa.
Trustee Ron Chllcot.e au,,_...
soliciting funds from the Lapfta
Beach Educational Foundation
ror more fUnds lf lt la found •· dlUonaJ boob ate needed.
The foundation i1 a il"OUP
formed to ralse money ln tM
community to help tb• ftna-
clally-pressed dl1lrkt, wbicb
facet a deficit of more than a
hall mlWon dollars.
customers in south Orange
County. said the alternative to a
steep hookup charge for new
customers ls increased rates for
eurr~t users.
"It's only fair that the people
who create the need (for
hookups) should pay for it." said
Maurice Luque, a spokesman
for the utility. "Why should
establilhed customers subsidize
new hookups?" be asked.
"We're attempting to put the
burdeci on the ones who created
the burden."
SDG&E officials say new utlli·
ty customers currently pay only
$8.30 for an electrical hookup~
south Orange County. And that
doesn't begin to cover the coet,
they contend.
A spokesman said it costs
between $2,000 and $4,000 to pro-
vide electrical power to a new
residential dwelling, adding that
even providin'g power to a new
unit located between two exist·
init homes costs $500 to $800.
And, they say, those already
C>n ll•e system have been footi.D,(
the bUl ever since lnnauon took
over.
Tbt utility spokesman also
at11tect that the new electrical
. hookup fee fcbedule "wilJ only
add about $19 to ·a new
homeowner's monthly house
payment."
The commission hearln11
beain at 10 a.m. ¥onday in the
State BuUding, USO Front St.,
Sao Diego before Administrative
L•w Judie James D. Squvi.
County panel to quit? J
Fklr Campaign Practices Commission· stymied
By GLENN SCOTr
Of ... .,...., ...... u.tf
Members of Orange County's
Fair Campaign Practices Com·
missiotr left their meeting this
week unsure whether they'll
ever convene again.
Al issue is a state appeals
court ruling last September in
which judges said political can-
didates don't have to include
their names and addresses on
campaign literature.
· To do so. they said, would be a
violation of first amend{l'lent
guarantees of freedom or speech
and expression.
Both the state and U .S.
Supreme Courts have refused to
bear the case.
ln Orange County, all can·
didates for countywide election
are required by the election code
to include their names and ad·
dresses on literature. . '
They also are supposed to sub-
mit copies of all mailed material
to the eommission within three
hours d its mailing.
The five·member com·
mJHion's Job is to reyiew the
material and judge whether it is
false or misleading ~ and to
ensure that it meets county
guidelines.
But members noted during a
meeting this week in Santa Ana
that their functions will be all
but canceled if candidates can
send filers, brochures and other
mailings without saying who did
it.
Said member Jack Mandel:
"If ~e don't know whose sending ~ls atrdf 001> we cease to exist." Tt.C comi«isaidn asked the
• 1untY SO.C of' Supervisors to
Mek an oplnioa from the county
Counael's Office on the matter,
Other decisions seemed to
pale in comparison to questions
about the court case, but c()m·
missioners also as ked the
supervisors to cooaider giving
them power to levy fines against
candidates who violate the
&roup'a guidelineJt.
Commissioner Joan Riddle
noted that the District Al·
torney's ()ffice took no action on ·
54 violations sent to it in 1980 by
the commission.
The eroup also agreed to
entar1e to seven members to
create an improved "public
percept.ion."
New Aliso
boundaries
approved
New attendance boundaries
tor atude"la attending Aliso
Elementary School, which will
be eloeed ln June, were ap·
proved br Laguna Beach
Unified ScJlool District trustees
Tbul'lday.
Startlnl in September, Allao·
ahldtnta . Ytho live south of
Dl•mObd Stfeet to Three Arch
Jby, and belew Arch Seacb
HelabU and Portaftna, will at-
tend El Morro Elementary
School .t the north end of town.
It~ livinl ln Arch Beach ffeldll 1111 Portaftna wUl at-tnl rap Of lbe World Scbool .. Ho~••r, truteH aaid tlley ~~ te 1rant Int*
•tetrlct transf•u wben ilwtoiari tiDrollmeau pennt.l. B r•tlY atteedin& SI J'ap ol the'~Workl
e remain at their
'91,.etiwe bl~ next tear.
Appointed directly by the
supenisors, the commission ha.a
come under critictism -most re-
cently by the Orange Couniy
-Orand Jury for its ties to that
political.body.
Ms. Riddle suggeste.d that th~
extra iwo members could be ap-
pointed by a group other than
the supervisors.
However, the decision to make
the c:t)ange lies with the
supervt.ors.
Security 'costly'
Sheriff's proposal sets tab at $76,00(} . . .
-
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of tlle Dally l'ltee Staff
Orange County Supervisors
say they would like to improve
security at the county Hall of
Administration in Santa Ana -
but $76,000 worth?
That's what Sheriff-Coroner
Brad Gates says it wo1,1ld c~t to
man the building between 6.a.m.
and 10 p.m. on weekdays with
two deputies.
As proposed by the sheriff, the
deputies would provide uni·
forhled presence at all ~eet.
logs or the board or supervisors
and county Planning Com·
mission.
The recommendations don't
DediCation
Monday of
road irork
Caltraqs and Laguna Beach
officials will partlcipate ih
public ceremonies Monday ded·
icating the nearly completed widening of Laguna Caoycm
Road.
Caltrans district director
Heinz Heckerotb and l.•on•
Beach Mayor Wayf)e Baglin will
s p e a k at the 1 O : 3 0 a , m .
ceremonies off tbe canyon road
just north of El Toro Road.
The $160,000 -,videntn1 project
is expected to be colhple~d
June 11 and opened to traffic
soon thereafter. •
The fe)\.lr·mile project inchadea
widenina of the roadway; paving
of the shoulders, striping for
passine lanes, wider bicycle
lanes, new pavement markers
and new guard raiJs.
stop there. It is 'also suggestA!d
that deadbolts be installed on a
score ·or doors in the three-year!
old, S9·million building and~
a more sophisticated control
systeQt be install~ at the enlr)I
to the building'it subterrane~· parking garage.
The sberiff:s report W'8 rt
leased just minutes befoi. j
start qf a .superyi.lors' m~;
earlier tltls week. "Becaus'et"Ulil
had • had tim_e to examine th l r.eport, superviAQrs delay.i ac1
tlon o6 the security i.ssue until
June 17. • Board members made it cleq
they're not looking for an ex~
pensive security program. ·
··I'm not interested to eJj
pensive items," declared boam
Chairman Ralph Clark, in refer·
ring t.o a suggestion from thel · ooun~· General ~tvices Agenc1
to OU l the ~ jlearing ml
\fllh deo cameras. . i
Ancf S~rvisor ~omas ftle>l i said be had "deep reservadoft.s' 1 about any expeHive secarit11
proaram. "Cost is a very impor·
ta11t matter for me," Riley said. I
SuPfrvisor Bruce Neataodel said the county dministr~ qm~stiould rew the r!JCJti· men tiOna of shertfr·: arid
the eneral ~rvices Ad·I minl~on and a>me up .U
its own proposal.
He aaid that officials IAoul4.
examihe what it \would cost td
provide unilorme<> presence b
ysint~ff-dut>: ~fl.Illes c-., • over\~r·.·e basis. -Re safd"'6a migt\( be cheape than a ~ew "5i(ions for urlty.
Neita.ode origiJulily called fo
t.he slwdy of the bUlldtng secwi
ty. He said it was prompted
rece!Jt thefts from \be bJ,l.il
and bik concern about the saf
Of of~i.-S at pub meetiJlll
Irvine coast tour
planned by panel
• I
State coastal combtilllioners·
meeting in San Francisco
have agreed to tour the county's
Irvine Coast area wher~ develop-
ment of homes, hotels and offices
is under consideration.
The tour, commlssto~ plan·
ners said, would take .-Jace June
15 -Mveral days ~'8 com-
mtssioDers are scheduled to re-
view and \loC.e Oft the d8"10pmml
project.
The u ,000.:aere Ii-vine CoMt
area. st.tetching from ~a del
Mar to Laguna Beach, would
largely be aet asidt H apen
1pace, according to :tM. Looal
Coa1tat..Plan ~pared .. ,. eounty
plannen and '\JM lr~sii ~om· .
pany.
The
own a or has of.'~d ·most tht
coastal land , is seektns
per ... lssion to bUild 2,000 hornet
-mal\y enviaionM as multi-ac'N
eat.US -NNffAl hotels and~ fie 'lbe firm alSo plans to bUl
two roads. .
T• Irvine rea hd:lud
the awly created":Crystaf Co
Sta~ Park and other land to
put_.. pttblic•aands.
State commlssloners ori~ ly w~ to beibrnvtew....,,..,...
iJ>roJect Wedn~
...
•
·•
j1 ryAL& A METER FOa 4 LITU: Leaflnl thi'ou&b our
1terllna journal just yesterday, l learned that we have the
at•te flip school championablp tr.ack meet tonl1ht and
Saturday ni1ht upcoaat at Cetrltoa. It should b• high
excitement. . .
Scanntn1 the predictions of which athletes bave tbe beat
chance to come up wtnnen. however. migbt be a blt ot a
puzzlement for old-Ume prep ruonen. .
For example, you study the dope sheet ~ deterniine the
f avorltes ln the one-mile run.
You scan again, $quintlng
at the lists slightly. ~
1 You do not find the · .. · • •
one-mile run.
The reason is that there · ~ ...
Isn't any. No 100-yard dash, Jll IU-111 ~ either . Or a 220 or a nr• ~
quarter-mile.
EVERY RACE, YOU SEE, has now been converted so
that they measure it in meters.
Thus what 119ed· ~ be the 100-yard dash is now the
100-meter dash. Which is more than 100 yards. How much
more? Aw. just some. Take that one-mile run that used to be the exciting four
laps around your old high school track. Now it 's the
1,600-meter run. '
lnvesUgating for the sake of trying to get up to date. I
inquired into the savants of our sports department about what
seemed to be a rather odd distance.
"'l'llAT'S TRUE," one of the savants explained. "in
oolleges aad uni)'.enities. they don't have a l ,000-meter run.
They run 1,500 meters."
Why? you inquire, still in bafflement. "The only explanation ever given for why the high school
athletes run a greater distance is that 1,600 meters is closer to
an actual mile. ·
You got that? Thus you might be left askinl this question: ·
If it's so important la, ~-blO school athletes to run a
distance close to a real rilile, .~why dpn't they just·run a
real mile and forget all this toinfoolery J!bout nmni.ng 1,6()0
meters. which is near a mile but really isn ta mile?
In this day and age when we're all in a headlong rush to
convert everything to centimenters, millimeters and parking
meters. ybu have to suppose that question will be left
unanswered by the powers-that-be. Whoever they be.
ONE OF MY U·WUUOI Once obseryed . .ttiat back in
---begimiings of ttiltlUltiaB ot oars, we created' ab industrial
.._.-~·lutloa in this countr; that-made-us one--Of the Great
Powers ol all time and cbanaed the face of the globe forever.
We did all this wonderlulness in inches, feet and yards
while the rest of the world was slogging along by meters and
centimeters.
"Now," he suggested. "Everybody wants US to convert to
the way THEY were slogging along in measurements."
Indeed, tt does seem to be a great irony.
And i·u never give an inch on tbat. , I
SUMMER STUDIES -Randy Collazo,
Laguna Beach High School senior , has
been accepted" for summer $tudy at
Cambridge University in London.
.
Tram pass fares hiked in Laguna
Frequent usen of L•""'8'• aum" wbo exhibit at the three festivals will mer tram ayatem wUI k 1111Yb11 10 for $15. Blocu of 25 or more
ore for the aemc. :.tadl "9Uva1 pa1H8 will fo for SlO per PMI• and
aeuon when new rate8 So mto .Sect. all aeaoa ,..... are 1ood oa tbe
Bat the buic fare for vi11Jton Wbo fntl•al tralm u well as flsed route
want to catell a •iall• ride t.d die city '"-·
f•tlval srouncll or around ton wW remaia at 50 cents. -~·..,.,.,the festival tenon thla year rum
Tbe council voted to Increase tbe from laly 14 to Aquat ao.
price of summer tram and trolley
pu.. ID arder to bftDC reveDMI •m_. llne ..... es..,......
• receive
• degrees
Thia year's 1raduat·
ln1 clus at Westmont
Co lle1e in Santa
Barbara includes three
South Orange County
students.
The are:
Tami Hanson ,
dauehter of Marjean
Hanson of 555 Mystic .
Lane, Laguna Beach.
1She r,ceived her cjegree •in physical education. 1 Katherin e Smith,
ldufhter of Mr. and Mrs.
Al en Smith of 1003
Emerald Bay, Laguna
Beach. She graduated
ma1na cum laude with a
d e1ree i n religious
studies.
Ca r ol McKinley ,
dauehter of Mr. and
Mrs. William McKinley
of 31050 Los Cerritos
R oad , San Juan
Capistrano. She earned
her degree jn economics
and business.
College
Emeritus
Day set
Volunteers are being
sought to help with the
planning of the fifth an-
nual Emeritus Day at
Saddleback College in
Mission Viejo.
Emeritus Day is
scheduled for Oct. 23
from noon until 4 p.m.
Programs include live
entertainment and art
displays.
For information on
Emeritus Day or classes
call 831-4836.
Citizenship
aid offered
The Capistrano Adult
School will offer a class
for people seeking U.S.
citizenship beginning
June 15. •
Classes will be held in
r oo m 101 at Sao
Clemente High School
from 6 to 9 p.m . Dates
for the classes are June
15, 16, 17, 22, 23, 24. 29,
30 a nd July 1. For more
Information call the
Adult School office at
493-0658.
IFlft Q[JU IffiOue
~ Ii I ,M
JUNE ,.._,.., Dttr is coming
soon. At At • .. We
carry Just what Dad is
really hop ing for.
Shirts By Polo and
Laco1h to keep him
co mfo rtable a nd
looking good during
those hot summer
days ahead. We also
carry jeans for men by
fam ous fables such as
Cal"f• 10e1R. JordclcM,
a nd lo•lo•r at
unusually .Low Prices.
SPECIAL11
Only sz9" 1
:J "'" A i1 •4000 <!()'# egu,ar • ''!'~
First-line designer fables
always at least 2CWo off
Men. Women. and. Boys
IFlt n_rFi1 Iffilue .
Moulton Pllwy trvtne Centi9'. DriV9
--.--~~~~ f .....
......
~I.
~L-eo J .,~ ..,..,.,.,..,
Sf-l-~N
I
CLOSED MOMDAY 11·1
_ TUESDAY·SATUIDAY ICM
SUMDAY 11-4 • c:
It really does make sense to shop and save at:
IF01t 0[JU IffiDue
770-1677
PACIFIC DECORATING CENTERS presents!
OUR ALL NEW CARPET
LINE FOR SPRING 1981
FEATURING:
RMSTRONG CARPETS
by EV ANS & BLACK
with EASY CARE
DUPONT DACRON YARN
Our lw11l 111•llinfe Mhort 11U1•
11lu11h. S3 d1·lk;ou11 c-olors:
he .. utifu) ~'4HI\ whrl nnil'h! • '
f :01111.ar1h11• f~ UpfH'llrllnN•
anti 1l11r1hilil) l11 il1•111 .... ,.11.
""' ., 115.00 ...... )d.
Now there's an Arm.strong
~o-wax noor you can
really afford.
--1'1111'·--.... -...... ··--·· ... -.... ~---·-"· ·~· -·-..--.. .. _, ........ __
. ,.
. ' .
1
I
(
llllJPUlt
FRIOAY,JUNES, 1981
FEATURES 83
After years as a
gourmet, chef Arend
deserves a break . . COMICS 84
TELEVISION 88
I
·BySTEVEMITCHELL fqrne"telectrical customen. "We're sympathetic with customers in s outh Orange SDG&Eofficialsaaynewutm ..
.. n. °""'"".... If approved, the hike would af. SDG&E's financial pli1ht," County, said the alternative to a lY customers currently pay only
The Building Industry As· f~ct all new homes built in Hughes said. "However, we steep hookup charge for new $8.30 for an electrical hookup in over.
$DG&E's Southern Califomia want to be sure that future res-customers is increased rates for soutll Orange County. And that
aociation of Southern California region, including Three ArQll identlal customers do not bear current users. doesn't begin to cover the coet, The 'iftllity spokesman also bas vowed to fight a proposed 8 M h 8 rti f d . rti b · th t d arau«t that ._.e new electrical
rate hi .. e that would see de· ay, ooarc ay 1 po ons o a ispropo onate s are of new ey con en . ..~..-. .. ~aguna Niguel, Dana Point, electric service costs." "It's only fair that the people uuua•e. fee schedule "will only
VelopenlnsouthOrangeCounty papistrano Beacb,SanClemente who create the need <for A spokesman said it costs add about $19 to a new
pay up to $2,500 each for elec-.-nd San Juan Capistrano. He said the proposed hookup hookups) should pay for it," said between $2,000 and $4,000 to pro-homeowner's monthly house trical hookups to new homes. fee "would have a significanUy Maurice Luque. a spokesman vide electrical power to a new payment."
The-California Public Utilities ' The hookup fee could have a harmful effect upon the ln· for the utility . "Why should residential dwelling, adding that
Commission wlll meet for five Ciranutic effeCt on new dustry's ablllty to provide af. established customers subsidize even providing power to a new The ·commission hearings
days in San Diego t)eginnln1 bomebuyers in south Orange ford,ble housing." Dt'W hookups?" he asked. unit located between two exist· begin at 10 a.m. Monday in the
• 'Monday over a San Diego Gas County, says Frank Hu1hes, But spokesmdn for the utUity, "We're attempting to put the inl( homes costs $500 to teoo. State BuildinJ, 1350 Front St.,
'and Electric Co. request seekin1 chapter president of the building which provides electrical burden on the ones who created San Dieeo before Administrative
a $500 to $2,500 hookup charge association. setvice to about 43 ,000 the burden." And, they'say, those alread)' LawJudgeJamesD.Squeri. ~_.... ____________________ --~--------------.._ ________________________________________ _,;;;...__;_;:.__ ________ ;:__ ______ -=.. ________ _.:_ ____ ~
GROUND RULES --When they told Mike Allen, 7, of Irvine, to go fly a
kite, he tried and tried, .. d just when it seemed his Jolly Roger woul~
get airborne the wind died down. So Mike gave up ... at least for the
kite:flytna contest .i Irvine's Turtle Rock Community Park, #1 Sun-
nyhlll Drive. Kite-Dying is just one of the supervi$ed activities at the
park. At 3:IO p.m.tTuesday there wilf be musical roller skating and at
the same time on June 16 a water carnival is scheduled.
Unm.lty fair CaIDpaign panel ~a~1 f~~~
supervjaors to consider ii~ ' A,ppo1ated a1reqtl>: ~Y thJ
them power to levy fines a1ainst s upervi5411"8, the comm1ss1on h&SJ
candidates who violate the come und• criticism -most r~j
group's guidelines. cently by the Orange CouotYl
Memben of Orang-e County's
Fair Campaign Practices Com·
misslOh left their meeUn1 this
week unsure whethK they'll
ever coevene a1ain.
At yreue is a state appeals
court i'\Wng hast September in
which Judles said political can-
didate. don't t)ave to include
, their mmes and addressea on
campalan literature.
To do so, they said, would be a
violation of first amendment
guarantees of freedom or speech
and expression.
Both the state and U.S.
supreme courts hav~ refused to
hear the ease.
ln OranghCounly, all ckn·
didates for county~ide election
are required by tbeF.ection code
to include their na es and ad·
dresses on literatur . ·
They aJao are supposed to sub-
mit copid or all m~iled material
Uon on the secu
June 17.
Board mem made it clear
they're not tool< 1 for an ex·
pensive securltY : ro1Tam.
"I'm not intfrested in ex·
pensive items," declared board
Chairman Ralph Clark, in refer-
tinl to a suu~tion from tbe county General rvices A1ency
to outfit the ht d bearin1 room
with video cam u .
to the comrniNion wltbiJl three hours~ tta m.W01. •
The five -member com·
mission's job is to review the
material and judae whether it is
false or misleading -and to
ensure that lt meets county
guidelines.
But members noted during a
meeting this week in Santa Ana
that their functions wUI be .n
but canceled if candidate9 can
seitd fliers, brochures and other
mallinas without saying 'who did
lt.
Said member Jack Mand el:
"If we don't know who's sending
thls stuff out, we cease to exist."
The commissiob" asked the
county Board or Supervisors to
seek an opinion from the county
Counsel's Office on the matter.
Other decisions seem ed to
pale in comparison to questions
about the court case, but com·
missioners also asked the
Commissioner Joan Jliddle Grand Jury for its ties to tha~
noted that tbe District Al· political f)ody .
torney's Office took no action on Ms. Ri~e sufl~~ted ~t t!le
54 violations sent to it 1n 1980 by extra \wo membets could b'e apJ
the commission. pointed by a l~P other &ha&l
The group a lso agreed to the supervtaors.
e nlarge to seven members to However, the decision to make
create an improved "public the change lie11 with the
perception.'' supervisors.
•
lroine coast torm·
., planned by panel
:· . :· ·. ..
WALK A METER FOl A LITE.a: Leafma tbrouab our
"aterling journal juat yesterday, l learned that we have the
at•te hiltl school cbami>ionahip track meet tonight and
Saturday night upcout· at Cerritos. It should be high
excitement.
Scanning the predJctloos of which athletes have tbe best
chance to come up winners, however, might be a bit of a
puzzlement for old-time prep l'UIU)ers.
For example, you study the dope sheet to determ\Jle the
favorites in the one-Qiile tun.
You scan again, squinting
at the lists slightly.
You do not find the · ~ one-mile run. . ..
The reason is that there
isn't any. No 100-yard dash,
either . Or a 220 or a
quarter-mile.
~\ -
TDI MURPHHll .~I/
EVERY BACE, YOU SEE, has now been converted so
that they measure it in meters,
Thus what used to be the 100-yard dash is now the
100-meter dash. Which is more than 100 yards. How much
more? Aw, just some. •
Take that one-mile run that used to be the exciting four
laps around your old high school track. Now it's the
1,600-meter run.
The machine thpt ClfWMd Western frontiers-ml~ after mile
Investigating for the sake of trying to get up to date, I
inquired into the savants of our sports department about what
seemed to be a rather odd distance.
''TllAT'S .TRUE," one of the savants explained. "in
colleges and universities, they don't have a l ,600·meter run.
They run 1,500 meters."
Why? you inquire. still in bafflement. ·
"The only explanation ever given for why the high school
athletes run a greater distance is that 1,600 meters is closer to
an actual mile.
You got that?
Thus you migbt be le kif:\ quiion:
U it's so important sch 1 athletes to run Jl
distance close to a real Dille, why d n't they just· run a
real mile and forget all this tomfoolery about running 1,600
meters, which is near a mile but really isn't a mile?
In this day and age when we're all in a headlong rush to
cpnvert everything to centimenters, millimeters and parking
meters, you have \o1 suppo1e that QUfStion will be left
9!!J!~ans~ by ; Wboevttr they be. •
ONE OF MY EX· dnce ob!terved that back in
the beginnings of this nation of ours, we created an industrial
revolution in this oountry that made· us one of the Great
Powers of all time and changed the face of the globe forever.
Wa. did all this wonderfulness in inches, feet and yards
while the rest of the world was slogging along by meters and
centimeters.
"Now," be suggested. "Everybody wants US to convert to
the way THEY were slogging along in measurements."
Indeed, it does seem to be .a great irony.
And I'll never give an inch on that.
I
Lah~r, ecology groups
hatile toxic wastes
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -
CaUtomia's major labor and environ-
~ental groups have jolned forces to
•ork for passage of legislation to ielean up toxic wastes.
The state AFL·CIO, the Sierra
Club, the Natural Resources Defense
Council, the Federated Fire Fighters
and Tom Hayden's Campaign for
Econbmic Democracy were amon1
grou:ps at a Capitol news conference
to announce the lobbyinc effort. They will be opposed by a newly
formed induttry coallUon, led by tbe
California llanulacturera Associa-
tion, which wants to soften the im·
pact of the bills.
Some of the issues in dispute are:
-Whether to let a business that is
sued for damage caused by wastes to
defend on the grounds that it used all
reasonable care.
-Whether local governments should have the power to reject sites
for waste dumps.
The bllts backed by the labor-
envlronmental coalition, and also
supported by Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr., would put most of the cleanup costs on lndustry, prohibit a
reasonable·care defense to law-
suits, and let local governments veto
dump sites.
at
Woodbridge Village Center
4760 Barranca 'arkway
Irvine, CA 92714
Podiatry foot Specialists
857-1279
Edito~
to stay
at UC/
UC Irvine student
editor Barnabas Sokol
will not be stripped or
hil position or dis-
ciplined Cor 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
advi s er Dennis
Hampton said a resolu· lion to fire Sokol was
withdrawn at a Tuesday
council meeting before
the students could take
action.
Council member Jim
Harvey withdrew the
resolution after decid-
ing there would not be
enough council support
to pass It , said
Hampton.
The 23-year-old editor
of the New University newspaper apologized to
students earlier this
week and took full
responsibility for the
eight-page humor sup·
plement. considered by
other staff members to
be in poor taste.
A bout 40 to 100 copies
of the insert were stolen
from a campus loading
dock before editors
destroyed nearly 10,000
copies prior to distribu-tion of the regular issue
on Tuesday.
Seniors due
tax help
The Irvine Senior
Center is ass isting
persons over 62 in filing
for homeowners and
renters property tax re· '
bates.
Applicants must have
owned or rented a home
between Jan. and Dec.
31, 1980 and must have 1
earned less than $12,000
last year to qualify for
this free 'assistance. Dis-abled or blind persons
a lso qualify for as-
sistance.
Assistance will be of· fered Monday through
Friday from 8 a.m. to
noon at the Center, 3
Sandburg Way. For an
appointment, cal l
754-3889.
,
t
IFR!1t OrnJ lffiUue
JUNE Father'• Dar is coming
soon. At At llt ._ We
carry Just what Dad is
really hoping for.
Shirts By Polo and
Lacost. to keep him
comfortable and
loo15ing good during
those hot summer
days atread. We also
carry jeans for men by
famous labfes such as
Cat.111 .... JordacM,
and lo•lo•r at
unusually Low Prfcff.
SPECIAL I ..
First-line designer tables
always at least ZOO/o off
Men. Women, and Boys
•
With a fit so good the.¥
ought to be outlawed.
Only '29'' ' . ,.,, 1
Regular •4000
Moulton Pllwy Irvine c.ntef. Drive
=
MEW STORE HOUR$
CLOSED MONDAY
TUESDAY·SATURDAY 10.6
SUNDAY 11-4
It really does make sense to shop and save at :
Irnt
770-1677
PACIFIC DECOR.A TING CENTERS presents!
OUR ALL ·NEW CARPET.
LINE FOR SPRING 1981
FEATURING:
RMSTRONG CARPETS
by EV ANS & BLACK
with EASY CARE
DUPONT DACRON YARN
"FAMOUS FARE"
Our ,,..,., 1wllin1C "hurt pile•
ph111h, S3 de•liC'lou" t'olor!ll:
he·autiluJ ~'om wht't lini11h!
C :01111 .. rahle• i~ n1)1warnn<'t'
1u1cl clurnJ1ilit) lo ih•m" .... 11.
l111e at 115.00 11c1. >•I.
SA11 s91s PllQ SQ. YD.
"GRAND AFFAIR"
Now there's an Armstrong
no-wax floor you can
really afford.
Not just
"printed·on"
cofor ... but
shimmery
gtow-hm·wtthin
Inlaid ColDf
-C*llof•--...... -.. ..... ..... _ ........ .... -.............. -·-.......... " = .... .-_ .. ..._ . _.,..
•
Members of Orange County'•
Fair Campaign Practicea Com·
mission left their meeting this
week unsure whether they'll
ever convene again.
At Issue is a state appeals
court ruling last Sep~mber in
which Judges said political can·
didates don't have to include
their names and addresses oo
campa.lgn literature.
To do so, they said, would be a
violation of first amendment
guarantees 'Of freedom of speech
and expression.
Both the state and U.S.
supreme courts have refused to
hear the case.
In Orange County, all can·
didates for countywide election
are required by the election code
to include their names and ad·
dresses on literature.
They also are supposed to sub·
mit copies of aJI malled material
THE LAST SHOW -Students from Corona del Mar Elemen·
tary School, which will close this year, prepare for the final
school play, "You're a Good M~. Charlie Brown," to be
presented Tuesday at 9:30 a.m . and 1: 30 p.m. The play is to
be a tribute to the school. In bottqm row are, from left, Eric
FRIDAY,JUNES, 1981
FEATURES 63
COMICS 64
TELEVISION 68
to the commission within three
hours of its mailing.
The five.member com·
misslQn's job is to review the
material and judge whether it is
false or misleading -and to
ensure that it meets county
guidelines.
But members noted during a
meeting this week in Santa Ana
that th~lr functions will be all
but canceled If candidates can
send fliers, brochures and other
mailings without saying who did
it.
Said member Jack Mandel:
"If we don 't know who's sending
this stuff out, we cease to exist."
The commission asked the
county Board of Supervisors to
seek an opinion from the county
Counsel's Office on the matter.
Other decisions seemed to
pale in comparison to questions
about the court case, but com·
missione r s also as ke d the
Vinje, Patrick Brown, Kalin Hatfield and Jason Hanek. In
top row, from left, are Jeff Stellor, Alice O'Kieffe, Jon
Bono, Marcella SeltzeT, Todd Murdock, Erica Plastino,
Chrissy D' Angelo and Amy Estey.
BOost in county haH security costly
$heriff' s $16 ,000 estimate pro.mpts supervisors t? review plan
ByFllEDERJCKSCHOEMEHL
'Of .. ...,Nll .....
Orange County Supervisors
say tbey would like to improve
security at the county Hall of
Administration in Santa Ana -
but $7$,000 worth?
Thal'• what Sheriff-Coroner
Brad Gates says it would cost to
man the building between 6 a.m.
and 10 p.m. on weekdays with
two deputies.
As proposed by the sheriff, the
deputies would isrovide uni·
formed presence at all meet·
ings of the board of supervisors
a'nd county Planning Com-
mission.
The recommendations don't
stop there. It ls also suggested
that deadbolts be installed on a
score of doors in the tbree·year-
old, $9-million building and that
a more sophisticated control
system be installed at the entry
to the building's subterranean
parking garage.
The sheriff's report was re-
leased Just minutes before the
start of supervisors' meeting
B&lli08 Island man
I A 2"·year-old 'Balboa Island
residem is ln seriout condition
today with bead injuries after
Ji.is motorcycle hit the front of ari
onco .. lng car in Newport Beach..
.
Police claim Lawler was driv-
• ing west and crossed over into
the eastbound lanes on a curve,
bitting ao oncoming sedan
driven by Nathan Rynn. 57, of
Laguna Beach.
Jobi Andrew Lawler wat Rynn and his wife , a
ta.ken ~ the trauma cent.er at passenger in the car , escaped in·
Fountain Valley Community jury.
HoaplUI followtni U.e t :G p.m. Investigators said Lawler was •
ThundaJ mishap on the Bayside not wearing"protedive headgear
Drive cw'ves eut of El Paaeo and suffered bead and internal
Drive injuries. N~pqn~ nabbed
coc~ne charge
Authorities dalm Officer
Wllliun Mclnii• WU HJled l.o
the ~ calDpln OD I iii: , ~c.u -... told tMl two mea blld tried to rob Punta
but ne.s att.er • ~.
TM ... teeman Hld tie 1potted
the . bulidlea Of cocaine wbUe
talld• *ltll PUrib. A ....... ol
the ......... police Hid, ~ t•n'"' ., .. ,.,., .. _. a.d tto.•milllll.
earlier this week. Because they
had not bad time to examine the
· report, supervisors delayed ac-
tion on the security issue unUJ
June 17.
Board members made it clear
they're not looking for an ex·
pensive security program.
"I'm not interested in ex·
pensive items," declared board
Chairman Ralph Clark, in refer·
ring to a suggestion from the
county General Services Agency
to outfit the board hearing room
with video cameras.
And Supervisor Thomas Riley
said he had "deep reservations"
about any expens ive security
program. ·'Cost is a very impor-
tant matt.er for me, .. Riley said.
Supervisor Bruce Nestande
said the county Administrative
Office should review the recom-
mendations of the sheriff and
the General Ser vices Ad ·
ministration and come up with
its own proposal.
He said that officials should
examine what it would cost to
provide uniformed presence by
using, off.duty deputies on an
overtime basis.
After years as a
gourmet, chef Arend
d~serves a br~k ,
supervisors to consider giving
them power to levy fines a1atn1t
c andidates who violate the
group's guidelines.
Commissioner Joan Riddle
noted that the District At·
torney's Office took no. action on
54 vioJations sent to it in 1980 by
the commission.
The group also agreed to
e nlarge to seven members to
create an improved "public
perception."
Appomtea airectly by the
saperviaon, the commission has
colhe under critlclsm -most re·
cel)tlj' by the Orange County
Grand Jury for its ties to that
political body.
Ms. Riddle suggested that the
extra two members couJd be ap-
pointed by a group other than
the supervisors.
However, the decision to make
th e c ban e-e Hes w i th the
supervisors.
Mesa co&Stat
plan· a}ji)roved
A state·mandated Local
Coastal Plan wu approved late
Thursday nieht by Costa Mesa'•
City CouncU , designating most
of the city area inside the
coastal zone for development of
a small·boat harbor.
The plan also proposes main-
taining nearby city-owned
Canyon Park as a wild life and
natural environment.
Most of the· area proposed for
a marina currently is held by
Orange County \Jut eventual an-
nexation Is expected by the city,
officials note.
Sale of
ill Mes
The five .ac r e Narmco
Materials, Inc. plastics plant
site in Costa Mesa is scheduled
to be purchased early next year
by a condominium development
firm.
. George Alvarez, vice presi-
dent of C.M. Janes Co., Inc. of
Costa Mesa, said today he ex·
peels escrow to close on the land
owned by the Ravens Trust of
Costa Mesa within the next nine
months.
The trust is a holding entity
for 72 ·year-old Dr. Glenn
Havens of La Mesa, who
purchased the Costa Me$a prop-
erty for construction of a plant
to manufacture fishing 1ods and
aircraft adhesives in 1~7.
Subsequently, residential
neighborhoods have gro~n
around the property now leased
until 1982 by the Celan~e Corp.
for operation of its Narmco sub-
sidiary.
Neighborhood residents have
filed a class-.action suit against
CelaneM and Narmco sedlnc to
close the plastics plant and col-
lect damages for "What they al-
lege is an inordinate number of
physical ailments' caused by
plant emissions.
N armco was cited by Orange
County officials last year for al·
alternatives for policy con-
sideration.
The C®Dcil laboriously waded
through the 12 alternatives to be
considered in the first goal and
adjourned after four hours at
10~39 p.m. without touching 44
others that are part of the
second General Plan goal.
In essence, the counci l
established policy to enhance
urban environment through con-
servation of resources such as
o pen space, park s ites ,
agricultural lands and biotic re-
sources while preserving his-
toric .buildings a nd sites and
water sources.
' legedly causing n(li'sance odors
in the now mostly residential
area. Officials pleaded "no con·
test" Did were fined $500.
Currently. machinist union
s trikers and neighbors are
picketing the plant at 600 Vic·
toria St.
The labor~rs seek higher wages; the ne1,ghbors seek City
Hall acden to close down the
plant pr1or to its scheduled move
to Anaheim by the end of this
year.
Developer Alval'ez would
neither confirm nor deny the $2
million rumored to be the prop·
erty's s81e price.
Dr. Havens, a physicist, re-
portedly purchased •the 1ite in
the 19*>5 for about P. ,500.
Alvarez said float escrow
closun, as far as be is con-
cerned, hinges on three impor-
tant iMues.
A major is~ue, he said, Is ihe
possibility of tome wastes ia the
groUDd ae the r~t of cbedlit:'.al oper.U~ overtbe years.
I
Si~ tMU are ~pected to re-
veal Wb:et.fler such problems ~
is t , be 1aid, .although "1
perso)ially believe there are
none."
lrrvine coast tolfr.
I
nlanneil by panel
"IALK A METER FOR A UTBR: Leafina through our
sterling journal just yesterday, I learned that we have the
state high schooJ championship track meet tonight and
Saturday night upcoast at Cerritos. It should be high
excitement.
Scanning the predictions of whith athletes have the best
chance to come up winners, however, might be a bit of a
puzzlement for old-time prep runners.
For example, you study the dope sheet to determine the
favorites in the one-mile run.
You scan again, squinting
· at the lists slighUy.
You do not 'find the
one-mile run. ~
The reason is that there
isn't any. No 100-yard dash,
either . Or a 220 or a
quarter-mile.
,~~1
-TDM ....... M ...... U-RP-HH-lf mi/
EVERY RACE, YOU SEE, bas now been converted so
that they measure it in meters.
Thus what used to be the 100-yard dash is now the
100-meter dash. Which is more than 100 yards. How much
more? Aw, just some.
Take that one-mile run that used to be the exciting four
laps around your old high school track. Now it's the
1,600-meter run.
The machine tha.t opened Western /rortlin• -mi~ after m~
Investigating for the sake of trying to get up to date, I
inquired into the savants of our sports department about what
seemed to be a rather odd distance.
.. THAT'S TRUE," one of the savants explained. "in
colleges and universities, they don't have a 1,600-meter run.
Tbey nm 1,500 meters."
Why? you inquire, still in bafflement. I "'lbe. only expllmation ever given for why the high school
I athlete& l!Wl a greater distanc Js ~t 1,sqo mf!ters is closer to
1 an actual mile.
You got that?
Thus you might be left asking this question:
If it's so important for the high school athletes to run a
distance close to a real mile, then why don't they just· run a
real mile and forget all this tomfoolery about running 1,600
meters, which is near a mile but really isn't a mile?
I ln this day and a tf~lM' 'rG all in a headlong 111Sh to ··i~nnve~ everything k> eldttnln1 rs, millllne~rs and parking
meters, you have to tWppose that question will be left
unanswered by the powers-that-be. Whoever they be.
ONE OF MY EX-FRIENDS once observed \hat back in
the beginnings of this nation of ours, we created an industrial
revolution in this country Ulllt made us one of the Great
Powers of all time and changed the face of the globe forever.
We did all this wonderfulness in inches, feet and yards
while the rest of the world was slogging aJong by meters and
centimeters.
"Now," be suggested. "Everybody wants US to convert to
the way THEY were slogging aJong in measurements.'·
Indeed, it does seem to be a great irony.
And I'll never give an inch on that.
LtEUTINANTS -Coeta Mesans Robert Donnelly (left), a
1976 F.stancia High grad, and Kirk Knipp, a 1977 graduate of
Costa Mesa Hilb, were graduated Wednesday from the U.S.
Military Academy at West Point. Donnelly was com-
miHioned a second lieutenant in the field artillery and
Knipp i& a second lieutenant in the armored br'ahcb.
Nuclear
dump
backed
CARSON CITY, Nev.
(AP> -The Nevada
Senate has voted 12·6 to
keep open a nuclear
earbage dump -one of
only three in the nation.
The action was a defeat
for Gov. BOb List, who
wanted lo shut the facili·
ty near the desert town
of Beatty.
AB200, which would
have o utlawed all
dangerous chemical and
low-level nucJear waste
dumps in Nevada, was
shelved following three
uns uccessful amend-
ment attempts by
lawmakers who said re·
visions were needed
before they could sup-
port the plan.
Sens Jim Bil bray.
Bill Hernstadt and Don
Ashworth, all Las Vegas
Democrats, Jim
Kosinski, 0 -Sparks, Bill
Raggio, D·Reno, and
Thomas "Spike" Wilson,
D·Reno, were the only•
lawmakers to favor the
bill which had re·
ceived an overwhelm-
ing 32·8 support in the
Assembly.
Bilbray said, "I don't
know what all the back
movement is in this
house that's killing this
bill," and asked his col-
leagues to ''search your
consciences and think
about the health of the
people or Nevada."
Gov. List has waged a
running balUe with the.
state Board of Health
ever since the panel last
year granted dump
operators a three-year
extension on their
operating license. List
even threatened to oust
one board member who
voted lo keep open the
Beatty dump, about 100
miles northwest of Las
Vegas.
Nevada is one of three
states with low-level
radioactive waste
dumps. The other two
are in Washington and
South Carolina.
Although Beatty
serves as a dump site
for only low -level
radioactive wastes, ad·
vocates or AB200 pointed
out that those wastes in·
elude dangerous
uranium, thorium ,
and cobalt.
~ly ............ lty IUc ... .-ll~
REBUILDING -A 20,000-square-foot building July 30. While Dan Snyder watches, Al~x
is going up at ABC Lumber's Costa Mesa site, Bizzolo pours concrete for the new cehter,
replacing the facility that was leveled by a which is expected to open in August at 140 E.
disastrous $600,000 fire in pre-dawn hours last 17th St.
Services planned
for Rev. McFarland
Memorial services for the
Rev. Dr. 0 . Scott McFarland.
the Presbyterian minister active
in bringing Hoag Memorial
Hospital to Newport Beach, are
scheduled this week and next.
He died Monday al the age of 92.
Private services for Mr.
McFarland, who had been living
in Duarte, are to be held Friday
at 2 p .m . al Fairhaven
Memorial Park in Santa Ana.
Pair named
to CAI board
Two Newport Beach residents
have been named to lb.e board of
trustees for the Community As·
sociations Institute.
F. Scott Jackson. president·
elect of the CAJ, and Newport
Beach developer Patrick Munn
were seated during recent
ceremonies in Washington D.C.
The CAI, w,bich bas a mem·
bership of 4,330, is an lndepen·
dent, non-profit research and
educational organization.
Public services will be held
June 13 at 3 p.m. at the First
Presbyterian Church of Santa
Ana, where be served for nearly
30 years beginning in 1927.
Designated as pastor emeritus
of the Santa Ana church in 1956,
Mr. McFarland was known as
"Scotty" to his friends in
Newport Beach with whom he
often wentflshing.
Newport resident A. Vincent
Jorgensen, a longtime supporter
and board member or Hoag
Hospital, said that Mr .
McFarland began his effort lo
found the hos pital and had
raised half a million dollars
for it before World War II.
He said the Hoag Foundation
equaled that amount following
the war.
Mr. McFarland was president
of the Santa Ana Rotary Club in
the mid-19305 and was active in
a variety of other community
activities.
The family suggests memorial
gifts be sent to the Dr. 0 : Scott
McFarland Memorial Fund at
the First Presbyterian Church of
Santa Ana.
Kids' movies
planned at
NB library
The Newport Beach Public
Library's Saturday m atinee
children's movie series will
begin this Saturday with show-
ing or "Pinballs" and ''Sn0'9'·
bound" at the Mariner's Branch
Library, 2005 Dove r Drive,
Newport Beach.
All films ar~ color and will
be s hown at 2 :30 in the
Multipurpose Room of the
library. Admission is free.
Other films for June are~
.. Julia," "The Gourdcarver
and Yoshiko" and ''The
Papermaker," June 13 ; "Niok.1'
and "Ponies of Miklaengl,"
June 20; and "Helen Keller• an:d
Her Teache r" and "VioUn,J'
June Zl.
July programs include:
"Santiago's Ark," July 11 ;
"Moods of Surfing ,"
"Skateboard Safety" and
"Magic Rolling Board," July 18.
The series ends July 2S with "1t's
Nice lo Have a Wolf A1'ound the
House" and " Rikki-Tiltld·Tavl"
PACIFIC DECORATING CENTERS presents!
..
OUR ALL NEW CARPET
LINE FOR SPRING 1981
FEATURING:
RMSTROJ'W CARPETS
by EV ANS & BLACK
with EASY CARE
DUPONT DACRON YARN
Our IH•11t t'llin,t l'hort pil1•
f•lu11t\. 33 d1•lic-io1111 c-olorti;
h• .. utlfuJ ~'""> \t'ht1 finl .. h!
C .om1N1rahl1• in n1•1"·oronr.·
und dur11l1ilil) lo il1•111 .... ,.11.
in" •t tl$.OI Ml· >•I.
~~~ sges se. ,0_
"GRAND AFFAIR"
Now there•s an Armstrong
no-wax floor you cari
really afford.
Not just
"printed-on"
color ... but
shimmery
QIOW·from·Witftin
Inlaid Color
-c•n11.-.--..,.._ _ .. ...,.. " ___ .. ,...,. ......... --.... ·-........... .. --· .. ·-...... -........ -·-·
· ~ 'Me .. bera of Oran1e County's
.,-air. qampaign Practices Com·
Olisskta left their meetint this
..,eek unsure whether they'll
ever ctnvene again.
At ~e is a state appeals ~urt g lut September in
'!Vhich · udges said political can·
tlidat don't have to include
their dames and addresses on
c1mpQgn literature. ·
: To db so, they said, would be a
ViolatlPn of first amendmen
'l'larantees of freedom of speech tfd expression.
, Both the •State and U.S.
jupreme court.a have refused to
bear the case. .
1 Jn Orange County, all can·
didates for countywide election
are required by the election code
to include their names and ad·
dresses on literature.
They also are supposed to sub-
mit copies of all mailed material
SHOW -Students from Corona del Mar Elemen-
School, which will close this year, prepare for the final
play, "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown," to be
ted Tuesday at 9:00 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. The play is to
tribute to the school. In bottom row are, from left, Eric
FEATURES
OMI CS
ELEVISION
to the commission within three
ho11rs of its mailing.
The fl ve· member com·
mission's job is to review the
materiai and Judge whether it is
faJse or misleading -and to
ensure that it meets county
guidelines.
But members noted during a
meeting this week ln Santa Ana
that their functions will be all
but canceled if candidates can
send fliers, brochures and other
83
84
88
I
mailings without saying who did
it.
Said member J ack Mandel:
"If we don't know who's sending
this stuff out, we cease to exist."
The commission asked the
county Board or Supervisors to
seek an opinion from the county
Counsel's OCfice on the matter.
Other decisions seemed to
pale in comparison to questions
about the court case, but com·
missioners also ask ed the
Vinje Patrick Brown, Kalin Hatfield and Jason Hanek. In
top row from left. are Jeff Stellor, Alice O'Kieffe, Jon
Bono, Marcella Seltzer, Todd Murdock, Erjca Plastino,
Chrissy D'Angelo and Amy Estey.
ost in count~ haH security. cOstly
her.if!' s $76 ,000 es timate prompts supervi sors to review plan
' EBICK SCHOEME.HL ings of the board of supervisors ef.rlier this week. Because they said he had "deep reservations" ~.! ,....... and county Planning Com-had not bad time to examine the about any expensive s~curity ·o ge County Supervisors mission. report, supervisors delayed ac· program. "Cost is a very 1mpor-
r The recothmendations don't lion on the security issue until tant matter for me," Riley said. would like to improve 1 " d at the county Hall of stop there. Jt is also suggested June 17. Supervisor Btuce Nestan e ~dm tration in Santa Ana _ that deadbolw be installed on a Board members made it clear said the county Administrative
score of door$ in the three-year-they're not looking for an ex-Office should review the recom-ul 000 worth? ; h 'ff d ill 'ff c old, '9·milli building and that ~sive security program. mendations of the s en an Th.,.;'1 what Shert · oroner a more so histicated control ''I'm not inte rested in ex-the General Services Ad· Brad ates says it would cost to · h man building between 6 a .m. system be iastalled at the entry pensive items," declared board ministration and come up wtt
and p.m . on weekdays with to the b~uiring's subterranean Chairman Ralph Clark, in reftr· its own pro~al. two es. parking g ge. rilg to a suggestion from the He said that officials should
county General Services Aaency examine what it would cost to
The sheJiff's report was re· to outfit the board bearing room provide uniformed presence by
leased j~ minutes before the with video cameras. using off.duty deputies on an
start of upervisors' meeting And Supervisor Thomas Riley overtime basis.
man.
nabbed
Jifter years as a
gourmet, chef Arend
deserves a break
supervisors to consider &lving
thfm power .to levy flnes against
candidates\.who violate tbe
group's guideJlnes. ,
Commissioner Joan Riddle
noted that the District At·
torney's Office took no action on
54 violations sent to it in 1980 by
the commission.
The group also agreed to
enlarge to seven members to
create an improved ''public
perception."
Appointed curectly by the
supervisors, the commission bu
come Udder crlticism -most re·
cently by the Orange County
Grand Jury for its ties to that pol1tical body. .
Ms . Riddle suggested lhal the
extra two membet~ could be ap-
pointed by a group other than
the supervisors.
However. the decision to make
the change lies with the
supervisors.
Mesa coastal
plan approved
A state-mandated Local
Coastal Plan wu approved late
Thursday night by Costa Mesa's
City CouncU, designating mott
of the city area inside the
coastal zone for development of
a small·boat harbor.
The plan also proposes maln·
tainlng n earby city-owned
Canyon Park as a wild life and
natural environment.
Most of the area proposed for
a marina currently is held by
Orange County but eventual an·
nexation is expected by the city,
officials note.
Action on the LCP, which now
goes to the South Coast Regional
Coastal Commission for con-
sideration, paralleled council ef·
forts to adopt new environment
policies for its state-mandated
General Plan,
Schedltled ,(pr adopti.QD •ert
the first two of ~ Genei.:N-J>lan
foals containin~ ll tot.1&1" of 287
alternatives for policy con-
sideration.
The council laboriously waded
through the 62 alternatives to be
considered in the first goal and
adjourned after four hours at
10:30 p.Q). without touching 44
oth'ers that are p art of the
second General Plan goal.
In essence, th e council
established policy to enhance
urban environment through con-
servation of resources such as
open space, park sites.
agricultural lands and biotic re-
sources while preserving his·
toric .buildings and sites and
water sources.
Two west Coast Mesa resi-
dents, Elizabeth Powell and
Karla Kramer. 't'._hose home
overlooks Canyon r;uk, at8\I~
that consiruction ~d oper~ ~f mllfiQA facilitletr:are not
ts~: ~~. w i t \ h e ~od
Sale of Narmco site
in Mesa chhluledr_J
The five -acre Narmco
M ateriaJs. Inc. plastics plant
site in Costa Mesa is scheduled
to be purchased early next year
by a condominium development
firm.
. George Alvarez, vice presi·
dent of C.M. Janes Co., Inc. of
Costa Mesa, said today he ex-
pects escrow to close on the land
owned by the Havens Trust of
Costa Mesa within the next nine
months.
The trust is a holdin& entity
for 72-year·old Dr. Glenn
Havens of L a Mesa, who purchased the Costa Mesa prop-
erty for construction of a plant
to manufacture fishing rods and
aircraft. adhesives in 1947.
Subsequently, res!dential
neigbbdrboods have grown
around the property now leased
until 1982 by the Celanese Corp.
for operation of its Narmco sub·
sidiary.
Neigbborbood restde11ts have
filed a class-action suit against
Celanese and Narmco seeking to
close the plastics plant aDd col·
lect damages for what they al-
lege is an inordinate number of
physical ailments caused by
plant emissions.
N armco was cited by .Orange
County officials last year for al·
.
~egedly causing nt.QJance odorS
In the now mostl:9' residentiaf
area. Officials pleaded "no con•
test " and were f10ed $500.
Currently, machinist u.nloq
strikers and neighbors are
picketing the plant at 600 Vic·
toria St. The labore rs seek higher
wages; the neighbors seek City
Hall action to close down th~
plant prior to its scheduled move
to Anaheim by the end of this
year.
De vel'oper Alvarez would
neither confirm nor deny the $2
million rumored to be the prop.
erty's sale price.
Dr. Havens, a pllysicist, re·
portecUy purchased the site In
the lp«)s ror abou~l1.500.
Alvarez said ffoal escrow
clos ure, as far as be is con,
cerned, hinges on fl>.ree impor.
tant Issues.
A major issue, ba said, b the
posslbllity of toxic wastes in the
ground M the result of chemic.al
operaUone over the years.
Site tests are expected to re·
veal' whether such problems ex·
isl, he said, although "I
personally believe the re are
none.''
Ir-vine coast torm
p~anned by parWl
State coastal commtssioners
mee ting in San Fraadsco
have acteed to tour the county's
Irvine Coat area wbe~'-'..,_
ment of homes, hotels and offices
is underconaideratlon.
The tour, commission plan·
ners saiCI, would take place JW'le
15 -ttVer-1 ~aya befHe..i.CM>· mlasi..,-s are ecbec:halllADM
view andvoteootbedev ent
prpject,.
The 11,000.acrt li-vtae Coall
area, *elcbinl from Corou del
Mar to Laguna Beach. would
largelJ be set aalde aa open
apjlce, acco~ lo .. -1.fcal
1 .
l
\
·,
., •
'iAL& A METE• FOa ~ IUTEll: Leafinl through our
1terllng journal just yesterday, I learned that we have the
ttate hich school ch•mpiohshlp track meet tonight and
9atUl'day nlaht upcoaat at Cerritos. It should be high
excitement. Scannlnl the predictiOns of which athletes have the best
cla•ace to come up winners, however, might be a bit of a
puzslement for old-Ume prep runaers. ~ ' For example, you study the dope sheet to determine the
favorites tn the one-mile run. '
You scan a1ain, squintirig
at the lists sl11btly.
You do not find the ··~,*·mile run.
·"' ~ The reason is that there ~ 'Dln't any. No 100-yard dash,
~·
111 IUIPHlll ~-,, ·either . Or a 220 or a
,:4uarter-mile.
· EVEllY llACE, YOU SEE, bas now been converted so
that they measure it in meters.
Thus what used to be the 100-yard dash is now the
100-meter dash. Which is more than 100 yards. How much
more? Aw, just some. ·
Take that one-mile run that used to be the exciting four
laps around your old high school track. Now it's the
1,600-meter run.
TM machiM that opened Weltem frontitt• -mi~ after mile
I
Investigating for the sake of trying to get up to date, I
in•uired into the savants of our sports department about what
seemed to be a rather odd distance.
"THAT'S TllUE/' one of the savants explained. "in
colleges and universities, they don't have a 1,600-meter run.
They run 1,500 meters ...
. W)ly? you inquire, still in bafflerpent. · "The only explanation ever given for why the high school
athletes nm a greater distance is that 1,600 meters is closer to
'an actual mile. ,
You got that?
--v. Thus you might be left llsking ttds question:
, ". If it's so important for the high school athletes to run a
. .-':' 'itistance close toll real mile, then why don't they just· run a
· . ·real mile an._d forget all this tomfoolery about running 1,600
· 111eters, wblcb is near a.mile but really isn't a mile?
In this day and age when we're all in a headlong rush to
• verti everytbin& fP. p i'1ebters, millimeters and parking
meters, you have to auppoae that question will be left
unanswered by the powers-that-be: Whoever they be.
ONE OF MY EX·F&IEND8 once observed \hat back in
the beginnings of this nation of ours, we created an industrial
revolution in this country that made us one of the Great
Powers of all time and changed the face of the globe forever. w' md all this wonderfulness iD inches, feet and yards
while the rest of the world was slogging along by meters and
centimeters. '
"Now," he suggested. "Everybody wants US to convert to
the way THEY were slogging along in measurements."
Indeed, it does seem to be a great irony.
And I'll never give an inch on that.
.
CARSON CITY. Nev.
(AP> -The Nevada
Senate has voted 12·6 to
keep open a nuclear
iarbage dump -one of
only three in the nation.
The action was a defeat
tor Gov. Bob List, who
wanted to shut the facili·
ty near the desert town
of Beatty.
AB200, which would
bave outlawed a ll
dangerous chemical and
low-le.vet nuclear waste
dumi>s In Nevada, was
shelved following three
unsuccessful amend·
ment attempts by
lawmakers who said re·
visions were needed
before they could SUJ?·
port the plan.
Sens. Jim Bil bray,
Bill Hernstadt and Don
Ashworth. all Las Vegas
Democrats , Jim
Kosinski, D·Sparks, Bill
Raggio. D·Reno, and
Thomas "Spike" Wilson,
D·Reno, were the only
lawmakers to favor the
bill -which bad re·
ceived an overwhelm-
ing 32-8 support in the
Assembly.
Bilbray said, "I don't
know what all the back
movement is in this
house that's killing this
bill," and asked ttls col-
leagues to ''search your
consciences and think
about the health of the
people of Nevada ...
Gov. Llst bas waged a
running battle with the
state Board or Health
ever since the panel last year granted dump
operators a three.year
extension on their
operating license. List
even threatened to oust
one board member who
voted to keep open the
Beatty dump, about 100
miles northwest or Las
Vegas.
Nevada is one of three
states with low-level
r adioactive waste
dumps. The other two
are in Wasttlngton and
South Carolina. I
Although Beatty
serves as a dump site
ror only l ow·level
radioactive wastes, ad·
vocates oC AB200 pointed
out that those wastes in-
clude dangerous
uranium, thorium ,
and cobalt.
o.lfy""' ,......, •lcMf.. .......
REBUILDING -A 20,000-square-f oot building
is going up at ABC Lumber's Costa Mesa site,
replacing the facility that was leveled by a
disastrous $600,000 fire in pre-dawn hours last
July 30. While Dan Snyder watches Ale>c
Bizzolo pours concrete for the new ~enf"9r,
which is expected to open in August at 140 f1.
17th St. · . "· ..
Services planned
for Rev. McFarland
Memorial services for the
Rev. Dr. 0 . Scott McFarland,
the Presbyterian minister active
in bringing Hoag Memorial
Hospital to Newport Beach, are
scheduled this week and next.
He died Monday at the age of 92.
Private services for Mr.
McFarland, who had been living
in Duarte, are to be held Friday
at 2 p .m . at Fairhaven
Memorial Park in Santa Ana.
Pair named
to CAI board
Two Newport Beach residents
have been named to the board of
trustees for the Community As·
sociations Institute.
F. Scott Jackson, president·
elect or the CAI.,, and Newport
Beach developer Patrick Munn
were seated during recent
ceremonies in Wasttlngton D.C.
The CAI, which has a mem·
bersbip of 4,330. is an indepen·
dent, non-profit research and
educational organization.
Public services will be held
June 13 at 3 p.m. at the First
Presbyterian Church or Santa
Ana, where he served for nearly
30 years beginning in 1927.
Designated as pastor emeritus
or the Santa Ana church in 1956,
Mr. McFarland was known as
"Scotty'' to his friends in
Newport Beach with whom he
orten wentrishing. Newport resident A. Vincent
Jorgensen, a longtime supporter
and board member or Hoag
Hospital , said that Mr .
McFarland began his effort to
round the hospital and had
raised half a million dollars
for it before World War 11 .
He said the Hoag Foundation
equaled that amount following
the war.
Mr. McFarland was president
or the Santa Ana Rotary Club in
the mid·1930s and was active in
a variety of other community
activities. .
The family suggests memorial
gifts be sent to the Dr. 0 . Scott
McFarland Memorial Fund at
the First Presbyterian Church of
Santa Ana.
...... ,;
Kids' movie;:· ·
planned at f-.
NB library .>
The Newport Beach Public
Library's Saturday matinee
children's movie series will begin this Saturday with @ow·
ing oC "Pinballs" and "&Mriv·
bound" al the Mariner's Branch
Library, 2005 Dover Drive,
Newport Beach.
All films are in color and will
be s h own al 2 :30 in the
Mu 1 ti purpose Room of tfi~
library. Admission is free.
Other films for June are:
.. Julia," "The Gourdcarver
and Yos hiko " and .. The
Papermaker," June 13: ''Nioli':'
and "Ponies or Miklaengt:~·
June 20; and "Helen Keller aDd
Her Teacher" and "Violif."''
June 27. ...
July programs include :
"Santiago's Ark," July 11:
.. Moods of Surfing ~·:
''Skateboard Safety" atl1!
"Magic Rolling Board," July ti.
The series ends July 25 with "It's
Nice to Have a Wolf Around t,fte
House" and" Rikld-Tiltld-Tl!Vi .• ,
PACIFIC DECORATING CENTERS presents!
OUR ALL NEW CARPET
LINE FOR SPRING 1981
FEATURING:
RMSTR~G CARPETS
by EVANS & BLACK
with EASY CARE
DUPONT DACRON YARN
Our a ... ,., !4 .. tlin1e 11hurt 11ilt•
11lu .. h. M d•·li<'low• N1lor11:
l11'aulif11J S.11on) wht1 fini-lh~
C:o111porahl1• In ap1H•nrnnr1•
und cfuruhilil> lo ilt·m .. ,,.11.
lt1f( al 115.Clit 'Cl· )ti.
~~~ s91s sea. YD.
"GRAND AFFAIR"
Now there's an Armstrong
no-wax floor you can
really afford.
Not just
"printed·on"
color ... but
shimmery
glow-from·within
Inlaid Ctlflf
-C• f111-t .... -........ -.. ..-. .. ----· ... _.,.. __ ...,.._ ................ --· .. ~ .,__ ... _, __ ..,.,
·-
The grocery business is in a schizophrenic. staae,
best characterized perhaps by a definition a friend of
mine once' coined for that uniquely American term,
"superette," which some neighborhood (ood stores
use to tell the world they're small but not that aroall.
"There," be 1>aid, .. go a prefix and a suffix headlng
off in opposite directions."
This division was apparent last f\\ODth in DalJ"5
wh ere some 15,000 grocery people gathered for the
44th annual convention of the Food Marketing
Institute. U's the biggest grocery meeting. of Lt!e .
year , and i~ was not the happiest or gatherings lMa.
time around. You may be aghast at what the cal!ltlt
register shows at the checkout counter, b1,1\ •\he
supermarket operAtors are having a bard time rais·
ing their prices fa st enough to meet their costs.. .
Neither S"afeway. our largest grocery chain, !)Qr
Kroger, th. No. 2 chain, was able to make as much .U
a penny on a dollar or sales last year.
To cope, the upermarkel people are chargirig off
in two different directions. One way says "go big."
The other way says "go small." The traffic is heavy on both routes.
The "go big" school advocates the building of
giant stores, sometimes called "supers~ores" or
"combination stores" (food-and-drug>. ln either cue
you 're putting ~ up :i monster 1:-:
s tore, at the ~~ c. ,
minimum l
30.000 square AU re et. with at ___ .. ___ :.. ______ _
~h~c~o~t t co~n~ lllJll lllUllfZ
ters . a nd
merchandise stretched out so Car you need binoculars lo get oriented.
The superstores are being built. Safeway opeped l~O of them last year . One , in Sherman. Texas. ~e>i'·,.
ers 57 .600 $quar1! r~e\. 'I:he rationale for these "Store.~
is clear: "Let's get away fi'Qm the f(>od busfpe.tt,. ,...,
lt's a ra.tt.~tr:et~1lilf'C J;t'#.tl.Jat mareins are vei-Y'laiw tn the fOQd buiMnesa.rA .tore tan ma~~more nw~gq
selling Upsti~k. drugs, ciptettes, greebng car·u laOd
sneakers than it can selling milk, lettuce, chicken,
hot dogs and trozen peas. Hence the pHsion, among
supermarket folks. for non-foods .
But tber~·s .apQth~ :1twng voice in the groee~.
b1,1siness' that-ins tit.a<: "4-Let~s-get back lq basics~ 1'1\1\ ~cbool ad\l~ates .. !>caltng ,down stores, ·reducing the
number of ;t;ema carried, eliminating f)ills. sto,c;~ i
up on private la:,be1 or geperic product.& and pauin1 ...
on the cost savings to the consumer in the rorqi or
lower prices.
A bunch of these stores are being opened.
T-bey.'re called •· Hm ited -.nsortment~ amf
"warehouse .. stores. Some simply display the pro-
ducts on the very pallets they arrived on. ..
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS ..
UPS AND DOWNS
~t. VII to Up lt.7 Up ti.A Up 10.t
Up ,.7 ~ a.1 u. 1.1 Up 7.J Up 7.1 u,, 7.1
Up 6.1 Up 6.J Up U Up 6.4
HC t:l
Up •• I Up U Up &.I u t!
SILVER
NEW '\'ORK IAP) -HenQ & H-
lllwr 100., SlUOS, e# U.tlS.
l!nt t llletd 1•l•er St.US, •ff $1.0IS,
lelwkeled lllwr S10AOS, Off 90.014.
. -~··-·······-····•·•·•••••••••••••••••••ousa sossss-
,.,., . =· ·--....... .... ... ...... ., ... a. .. ft ..... ... _.. ..... ...
'*'-... ~ ......................
• .,.... en• t11e•o11•tr
...... ("> .CWQ.. .. .,,. ...... cau.: ... ~.
···-~ -·MV9W .... (I) 1"1~0#
MADAN)
Theloothm• .........
blry .. toUllld Ill boo'•
Oii'. (A) .MCMI ..... lflow" (~) u.-Kerwin, COMll I•
-A 1~.-S bo, jollll .... *"-.. ....
~In 1hl 1 ... Ind ..
blft*lc* by • blO • .......
PULLING STRINGS -Lance Kerwin plays
a 16-year-old puppeteer who J'oins the circus in the late 1940s in "Si e Show"
tonight at 9 on Channel 4.
.. ..,.
•• ~ "The COIMINldl
Kli:f" (1WO) JoM .....,,
au.i ~.,.,. ....... b..-.. pllcNr Who .. out
from 1\11 "*I« ....,.
lewl\ blcOfnel I plllyo-
ground ~ tor •
8 KN)(T 1CBSI Los An~es D KNBC 1NBCl Los Angeles
• KTLA tlnd I LOS Angeles
·1cb lh~u • ~TV tABC~~ J'fl9.ll'.IRll II n1njo.uo'• Cll tCBSl S 'fg9no1l Jn•J 1 1 t a · 11nd, L ~ geles 9 KCs (ABCI San Diego e KTIV (Ind l Los Angeles
• KCOP·l'V (Ind) LOS Angeles
ti) KCET· TV 1PBS) Los Angeles
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from .,. town cnea for
WI llt 1hllr r.ctory. (A)
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lhlp tilt. (A) ewcwm •• "Thi V'°6lnt ~
llonlll" ( 1175) Alcherd eom.. U.1 ......,,._One
"'"' II diftermlned to c:rldl down on thl ~
cm with or wttt1out help "°"' the .... • , ..... llllMAZINI
Blltllnor9'1 ToUgh Ouye
Ind Olr1I conteet: .. Oft
lhl P9Ciflo IMnd perldlll
ol Borl Bore; Clpt. Clrrot °" "' good lfld bid ol cemQ; Join Embery fOI..
low9 I hlrd ol r-dllr. .MCMI
• • • "Myl1ertll From
Beyond e.ttl" ( 1977) [)oc.
-tlty. 8cllntlln end
rrr • • '"*" fXplorl lhl
perlllOmlll lllOrtd of UfOI •
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.Milty Van Oytll, Min
,FlllllOMt, Kathy Ctoftkltl,
Monique VIII V~
• WALL'"9TW9C
"Economic Ofowttl And
Whlr9 To Find n" Oullt:
A. OlfY 8Nllflo. ~
A. OlfY ~ & Compe.
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lngton" HOit Jim COoplr in.,... <>renoe coun-
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Thi cqnfttc1 .,.._, Bob-
by lftd J.A. _...... •
Bobby NUii to 9tlp
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THIATM .-nYAL CW ,.YC)N'T9
"Tiii Goldin lowl" Bllld
on I now! by ~
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clllngl hlr llNetytl, Mic>-
~ blglrll I pn>grWl'I of
1111ng more ol CMrtotte.
(f>twt 5)(A) • a.a. MOYIM'
JOUNCAL
"Mytll Hotton. Tiii Hllb*-ly ,....... Bill Moy9r'I
lntlMlwl MY.Ill Horton,
lducator Ind loundlt ol 1
ldlool In T-tlwt
~ poor PIOc>6I the
1rt o1 anlwll. (Pert 1)
10:IO •• NIM YOUTH ANO 1Ml --"Should WI Haw Oun
ControfP" °"9lell: ,,_
Fl SIUltry, pelt ~
dint ol Celllornll Allll llld
Plleol Alloc:lellon Ind !Md--
~ "'""'· °'*"""" ol tlll ~Ion for IWlndOllll -trot.
1
Henry ]aines story shoim
-love--and moralitY-of 1800s
By MICHAEL DOUGAN .ap-D911Y.......... .
Henry James' curious tale of moral Irony,
"The Ambassadors," will be presented in a
literate and charming dramatfaat1oo at 10:30 p.m.
Wednesday, June 10, on Channel 50.
Programmers at the Huntington Beach station
ahould be chided for putting this entirely satisfying
BBC·Time.Life co-production on the air so late.
Since it. runs 90 minutes, many e&Tly birds will be
forced to mill a good
telepJay. (It repeats
Saturday, June 13, at
11:30 a.m., an equaUy
unlikely time to be
, watchina the tube.)
Tbe show stars Paul Scdield u a 19th century
Massachusetts provincial dispatched to Paris by
hisiwealthy finacee to rescue her son from the lov·
e·grup of a sophisticated French woman. There
be Mfneods, and quietl31 falls in love with, an
.\lnerinn expatriate played by Lee Remick,
Scofield sees the youth'• life as far richer than
\hat be bas pw:sued. un•s as if tbe train had been waJUn1 for me
patiently at the station," be tells a.not.her young
American, "without me bavl!lg the gumption to
know it was there ... but it's too late. The train is
gone and I bear its faint receding whistle D)lles
and miles down the line. What one loses one loses,
mate no mi.stake about that."
Obviously, Scofield is destined to fall in his
mission and lose the affection of the wayward
lad's mother. Just as clear, in lime, ts that be
doesn't care.
At lsaue, lt seems, la whether the youna man
<David Hoffman) is aleepln& with tbe worldly
woman, p<>rtrayed with baahful ele1ance by
Delphine Seyrig. If not, their relatiomhip may be
wholesome and justifiable to the folltl back home;
If so, it is vile and must be terminated by force
<remember, these were the 1800s).
But, ultimately, James la concerned with
another type of morality, mo.re deep and sut.tan·
Ual in nature. In the end, Scofield makes a de-
cision that la Impeccably moral, even while we
root for Nm to do otherwise.
"The Ambassadors" is directed in a gentle,
quiet fashion. The main characters are poetically
TUBE TOPPERS
KCOP • 8 :00 -"
Beyond Earth." A docu
plorlng UFOs and psyc
ABC a 9:00 -"The
J obn Ritter and SUI
movie about a tougb-hac
helps a gang of kids.
.... w ..,.,. .... n• 1• •<I> a ..,. ITART'9C Thi l!ntlrprtll _. n.
-lrl~noltv _,.,.... lt*' mlellOn of
~1nt1new~.· I NmM.VWIDMMa
M"A"l"H
Col. Pottw°I ""'9 lo,NI
myet•lol.tlly ~ from ..... _,.., lftd ......
• Ind IU. try to hllp 1
young KONlll wtlO II trying
to -*' 001-tp\loft Into
=~Hu.
8lllny ~· -~ • ~ the nlgM on Amlf1oln I Aulllln ._
~ terrttofy. • DD<CAWTT
~: ,,_ Cllwll. (Pert
2ol 2) ·-.AK~ Roger Ebert encl °"" 811kll relllew "lkl1tln'
~ ... ''lllll .. 9¥11" Ind
"Tiii Four 8-11."
t1:IO. ()) THa NCIHT
ITAUCIR
Kolclhlk -I murder
bllng committed by I "'*'
... --hi -b9tor9 -ar~hl morgue.
au.t hoet: DllWI Litter-
-~ Dr. Lindon Smlttl, Hoyt Axton, Jo9I\
Ernblry. eOMCNnl
..atm.M ·~MNCEADW.
••• "Tiii 0'91f Gltlby"
(197•1 Robert Aedlofd,
~~~~~~~~q;:;;;~
Excellent selection
Congress cuts
€PB dollars
.
I I .
• 'I t
' ;
f
~ t I ,
~·•LAca I .... .
· tt' GTON -A House-Senate conference
cemmJttee, tn a major defeat for public broad· :
cuten, "8s agreed to cut S3S million from the fis·
eat lB budget for the Corporation for Public !·
8toa~. · •
Tbe 4'eclafon still must be ratified by both 1
ca.ambt!rs of Coniress to be final. But public '
bl"Mdtaltiq oltieiala said it was unlikely they •
could persuade the Senate and House to reject a t
cotnproQ>.ile worked out by conferees. I
The bucket reduction for the yeal' that begins
Ot!\. 1, 19*.l ~m '172 million to $137 million, is ex· 1 ~ to nave a serious impact GD the slu of ~
Crtl's crantt to individual radio and TV stations f llld en ~ level of national profl'am productJon I
unartata by CPB itself. !
Tiie Oorperatlon for Public Broadeutina is tbef I prtvaa, dOll·proflt orraniJat1oo cruted in 1967 at •
the diretdoll of Concress to encourage the irowt1' :
of cemmerciM-Nee radio and televisiorl. :
CPB's mo.t lmPortant roles now are to al· I
locate and dbtrlbute federal funds dlrecUy to ln· i ·y~s DI. .J