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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-06-10 - Orange Coast Pilotr ' . . . . . . 1111111111111 DlllY PIPfll WEDNESDAY. JUNE 10. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Bottles of wh~.~ey chaiiged their lives o.11r ,.. ... ,_.., oery ,.....,_ Irvine city inspector Bruce Bullard says he's happy to have his job back but unhappy about being fired in the first place. I But Irvine inspectors have their jobs back By RICHARD GREEN OftMoe1tr ...... 11Mt Irvine city building inspect.ors Bruce Bullard and Art Peele say they still can't believe what they went through because of a cou- ple bottles of whiskey. Crank telephone calls, thousands of dollars in legal ex- pe nses and family strain are just three problems they say they've encountered as the re- sult of accepting bottles of Jack Daniels whiskey from a building co ntra c tor b e fore last Christmas. They say 1t was the accept- ance of the whiskey that led the city to fire them early this year and also led the Orange County District Attorney's office to charge them with misdemeanor solicitation and acceptance of gratuities. Bullard, 50, Costa Mesa, and Peck , 51, Anaheim , were re- instated to their old jobs Monday after an administrative law judge who presided over a personnel hearing for the men found that the city didn't have just cause for firing them. Judge William F . Byrnes found that the city couldn't prove the men ever solicited the gi rts in return for speedy build· ing inspections as the city had charged. And the mere acceptance ol the glfts isn't grounds ror dis· missal, Byrnes said in recom- mending to City Manager William WooUett Jr. that they be returned to their jobs. Woollett complied with the recommenda- tion and Bullard and Peck re- joined the city inspection crew Mond~. After quitting lime. the two men said in an interview that they feel exonerated and are hopeful that the misdemeanor charges against them will be dropped. But they both added that the experience of the past six months will stay with them for the rest of their lives. "This guy kept calling up my house and saying 'You're a thief,' " Peck said. "Well, if the guy has my phone number. I figured maybe he has my ad- dress and I was concerned about the safety of my wife and dau~hter." Peck said that he has a con- tractor's license and was able to work in the construction field after being fired from the city. He said, however. that he has a permanent arthritic disability in his hip and that the work he was able to get tended to aggravate the medical problem. <See RETURN. Page A2) After his first day back on the job, city inspector Art Peck said his co-workers have supported him ever since the day he IOO.f fired. Begin-in stern warning to Iraq TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> - Prime Minister Meoacbem Betin v..amed that the Israeli al· tac~ on Iraq's nuclear react.or •m be repeated if the Jewish nation l.s threatened again by an enemy Arab nation's plans to de- velop nuclear weapons. "Israel will not tolerate any enemy to develop weapons of mass destruction against the people of Israel,•• the 67-year-old prime minister told a questioner at a news conference Tuesday. He added this was not a new policy. ' Jsraeli experts said the destruction of the French-built reactor out.side Baghdad on Sun- day did not put an end to the Arab nuclear potential. "This is a ~low to Iraq but not lhe end of the plan to build an • Arab nuclear bomb," wrote the military commentator of the newspaper Haaretz, Ze'ev Schiff. "Israel cannot prevent this development by military means. It can only delay it by various methods." Yeboshafat Harkavi, a former military intelligence chief, said the Arabs were not likely to ac- cept Israeli "veto rights over Arab nuclear development." An Iraqi government official was quoted today as saying Iraq is determined "to buy new and better nuclear reactors." Foreign Minister Latif Nassim J a~sem said in an Interview with Al Thawra , the official newspaper of Iraq's ruling Baath Party: that the Israeli raid "will not prevent Iraq from continuing with its nuclear pro- Ex-deputy jailed in phoned threat A suspended Orange County sheriff's deputy -convicted last week in the abductions of two women -has been ordered $tiled on $250,000 bond after one t>f his victims claimed that he made a threatening phone calJ to her following Friday's Jury de- cision. Orenee County Superior Court Judie James K. Turner, citing the defendant's "bizarre, 1tranJle'' behavior in the case, ordered that deputy George Loudermilk of Costa Mesa be jailed immediately at the con- clusion of a court hearing Tues- day. Loudermilk, who was found guilty by a Superior Court jury of two counts of kidnapping and one count of felony false im- prisonment, bad been allowed to remain free without bail after his conviction last week. (See DEPUTY, Page AZ) gram and deveJop1t1ent plans," the Gulf News Agency reported. A French technician who worked at the destroyed plant told a reporter on arriving in Paris today that it was impossi- ble to go near the facility because one of the bombs dropped had not yet exploded. The technician, Jacques Rim· baud, said the plant would have to be rebuilt from scratch. In an attempt to answer criticism of the raid in the Unit- ed States and prevent sus- pension of American arms sales to Israel , Begi n said the American planes used In the 600-mile strike "were given tow; for purposes of self-defense,'' and the destruction of the reac- tor ·'was an act of supreme legitimate self-defense." He charged that the Iraqis were planning to develop three lo five Hiroshima-type, 20- kiloton bombs. Three such bombs, he said, "could have destroyed completely, utterly, the Dan district, the basis of our industrial , commercial, agricultural and cultural lire." Begin said such an attack would cause 600,000 casualties, the equivalent of 44 million in the United States or more than eight million in EJlvPt. ''Where is the· country that would tolerate such a danger knocking at its door?" he asked. Lt. Gen. Raphael Eytan, the Israeli chief of staff, said Israel was on guard aealnst Iraqi re- t a 11 a ti on . - ...,,.. ..... .,,.~ ..... Firemen. and paTamedic• worlc to free two te~e girll from the twisted wreckage of an accident in Costa Me1a. Jill Ann Gerondale, 11, of Coda Me10 W01 ~in the one-car sma.thup. 4 die in coast crashes Two victims injured in five-city area accidents By STEVE MITCHELL Of Ille Delly ...... SWI Four people have been killed and two others seriously injured in a rash of traffic accidents in five Orange Coast area cities. A 17-year-old girl due to graduate from Newport Harbor High School Thursday was killed in Costa Mesa Tuesday. Another Newport Beach woman was fatally injured Tues· day in Newport Beach while rid- ing on the back of a motorcycle. A Huntington Beach man was killed early today in Santa Ana. Irvine police also have identified a Marine who was killed in a crash ln that city Monday. In Huntington Beach, two peo- ple on a motorcycle were seriously injured Tuesday after- noon . Police reconstructed the acci· dents this way: The latest fatality occurred at about 12:05 this morning when an automobile drfven by Roy B. Rumble, 29, or 16959 Blue Water Lane, Huntington Beach, struck a guard rail on the La Veta A venue exit of the Santa Ana Freeway and suffered fatal in· juries. leased on his promise lo appear in court. An auto accident Tuesday af- ternoon al Bear Street and South Coast Drive in Costa Mesa took the life of Jill Ann Gerondale, 17, of 428 E . 16th St., Costa Mesa. Police said Miss Gerondale, a senior at Newport Harbor. was a passenger in a car driven by Erin Kathleen Davis, also 17, of 759 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach. DlllCI CUil lllTHIR Nrgbt and morning low clouds with sunny after· noons throuth Thursday. ffi1hs near 70 at the beaches to low IOs in lhe htland areu. Lowa ton19ht Chores help elderly PoUce said Rumble was south- bound on the freeway when be took the La Vela offramp and struck the guard rail. Late Tuesday night, Newport Beach police said Steven Irvin Waeaoner, who lives on 45th Street in that city, was ridlna hia motorcycle south on Irvine Boulevard north of Heather Lane with a female passeneer on the back ol the bike. Mi ss Davis told police her passenger grabbed the wheel for no apparent reason and tbe car went out of control, skidding 46 feel before rolling several times and shearing off a power pole. Santa Ana and Costa Mesa firemen worked for more than (See CRASHES, Pase ,\.%) ,. • 82to67. Fitness expert says older citizens must use muscles Washington, D.C. for 600 senior citizens leaaers. Keelor said the benefits of senior fitness are not reserved fundi, becaus4! that's not the answer,'' he says. "We want to use existln& facilities." For example, be 1u11eata that 'People . : .think that ... dependence on others is the t00y it is when you get old.' · . for the elderly. Older Americana will need leas bUlt.b care ll the)' an fit. M a result, Keelor H)'l1 tbe tu burd4in to toelet)' wUl Uabten. Kfflor •• fttneu la • do-it· younell ~ and doil not,.. quire co1U1 equipment or m111lve IOClaJ Pl'Oll'•m•. "Vf.e're not s0tn1 to aaaeet the •reat lnfualon of f tderal acbOoli m.labt keep 11mnu1um1 open for senlor citlsena on weelumdl, cburcb.. could ac· commodate tltaeu clat•• ln Ulelt baaemenu and private clU ... can eta.rt walkln8 clubl. AddtUonally, be aa:ya. com: pa._ can bead olf meclleal pro. blem1 by belpln1 workers etaJ ftt. <lei nr._•••• Al) Police satd Wauoner er:b ceeded t.hroueh a curve at a rate of speed, collldinl with a guard rail. Both the driver and bis unidentified pasaenaer were hurled from the cycle, wtth the woman atrlkina the roadway in the northbound Janes. The 31-year-old woman; wbo waa described by police aa a lout transient, died at Fountaln Valley Community Hospital followtna the 10:.s p.m. erUb. W11toner WH arreated oa char.tea of vehtcular manal•qbter with n11ug:; and wu transported to lleaa Memorial Hoepltal ud later UCI lledttal Cnw fW lnatment.:Of loJuri•. ffe WU ,.._ Town passes gun ban law ' ~MORTON GROVE, Ill. <AP) :... Owning or posseulne a handgun ln this Chtca10 suburb will draw penalties of up to t.'500 tn fines and six months in Jail when ordinances outlawina the weapons 10 into elf eel at the end of summer. Despite publlc oppo1ltlon, trustees voted to ban Ille and po11euloo of band1un1 lD he>iJe their aetlon will tell lawmakers 1cro11 the country "they too can do 1ometh.lna about the ......, le11, waaleful lnjurlH and death.I tbat are direcOy teln.d to hudpna." Only Mven ol .. Wit.MIMI at th• beartnc attalded Ute ..,... ~· t , ---------~~~~-- •Orange Cout DAILY PILOT NYednffday, June 10, 1911 • Sheri/f's deputy George Loudermilk, Vlown wfth hil tDi/e, Marilyn, sent to 7atl after allegedly making threatening phone call to one of his abduction victitm. Measles birth brings award ACSTIN. Texas IA P ) -The ~o\ cmment must pay $625,800 to <.1 a ) Nt.r old boy born with multi- ph• defects because Air Force doctor ... failed t o warn his mother ol the dangers of having ;. b a b~ aftt'r contracting 1;e rman meusles, a federal judge ruled l S D1 str1ct Judge Jack Hobl•rlli mude the award Tues- da) in the .. wrongful lHe suit" filed on hehalf of Charles Scales. • The boy's mother Judy, a former Air Force r ecruit. filed a St 25 m1ll1on suit against the go\'ernment claiming doctors at t \\ o bases where she was sta- t 1oned fruled to advise her that h1rth defects could result when a \\om an contrac:ll> the illness dur· ing pregnancy From Page A1 FIT ... · If workplaces provided workers with exercise programs and incenuves to be active in them. they mlght be more fit "'hen they are 65 than when they <.1re 45," the fitness expert sug- gei;ts However. Keelor said, tbe real ... tumbling block to senior fitness ,., the attitude of the pubUc, tn- t·ludmg the ~lderly themselves. "We've got to make people re- ali ze that it's typical, but not normal, to be frail when you're elderly," notes Keelor. "It's pormal to be healthy and robust -Onlll you die. Th~ golden years have been tarnished." Keelor says people o,·er- protecl the elderly. saying things like: "Oh, mom, let me carry those g roceries," and "Johnny, go help grandma in 'ltie garden." ·'They <the elderly) should sweep. They should walk. They should carry groceries," says Keelor "They should do every- thing C\Crybody else does un- less thay have a major medical problem " He thinks people should en· courage elderly family mem· be rs to get active. Keelor says "Drop them a line like . 'Dear Dad. I saw this art 1cle from The Associated Press a nd thought you might be interested. Love, Altce'." Business I.ax breaks reawred w ASHINGTON (APl -Stuna by corporate protests to its com- pro m ise tax package, the Reagan admirustratlon is restor· ing some of lhe business tax lireaks pared from the pres.i· dent's original plan. The latest'changes, announced°' Tuesday, would let businessmen depreciate new plants and equipment more the first years of \heir use and thus allow them to •I aim lar&;erdeduct1ons. ORANGE OOAST Daily Piiat ThOmu P Haley ~and Ct!Ntl E-.<vt .... ~ , Aobtrt N. Weed ,,_... M Th0ma1 Keevll l.w Michael P Ha,...ev ~Oi<eclW L l<ay Schulti Qr..cb olO!Nf- Kennetl'I N GOdOatd :Jr QrMIMln ()Ht;!o)f Thomas A Murph me ................. e:;:o SC~u1m11n O*laH Loot ..................... From Page A1 DEPUTY • • • But the stocky, 37-year-old law enforcement officer surrendered to court officials early Tuesday a!ler Tumer issued a $500,000 bench warrant for bis arrest late Monday. The judge issued •he warrant after Deputy District Attorney Michael Jacobs presented in· formation alleging that Loudermilk made the threaten· ing phone call to a 33-year-old Mission Viejo woman who had testified against him at his re- cent trial. Loudermilk denied the charge under oath Tuesday. The woman had told the jury in Turner's courtroom last month th~t Loudermilk threatened to rape her and kill her after driving her to a secluded hilltop area nur Irvine in October, 1980. She wu re- leased unbanned. In all, Loudermilk was char'ed with four counts of kid· nappmg in connection with four separate incidents that occurred befween July and October of 1980. The jury convicted bim of kid· napping in two of those Incidents and of false imprisonment in a third. It was alleged that Loudermilk abducted tl\e women after stopping them on suspicion of drunken driving. The most aegravated incident was that involving the Mission Viejo woman, who tQJd Judge Turner Tuesday that she was up- set and frightened after receiv· ing the telephone call early Saturday from a man whose voice she identified as Loudermil.k's. She taid the caller told her at one point: ''You know who this is. How could you forget after what you did to me?" ·The woman said she im· mediately alerted authorities after receiving the call. On the following evening, the worn an testified, she heard what she believed to be a gunshot out- side her home. She said she notified authorities the following day. Defense lawyer Allan Stokke, who bitterly assailed the c redibility of the woman's testimony Tuesday, found on cross-examination that she had gone to the Newporter Inn with prosecutor Jacobs -rouowing the jury's verdict -and had dis- cussions of bow Loudermilk could be put into custody. The woman, Jacobs said later. was concerned for her own safe- ty. Stokke, however, maintained she was Cabricatina the story of a phone call to have Loudermilk arrested. Loudermilk, during bis brief appearance on the witness stand Tuesday, said be bac;l never at· tempted to contact the woman since bJs arrest last October. However, before be was taken into custody originally, the lawman had contacted her by phone, explaining that he was only joking with her when he made statements on the billtop ot how she could be raped and killed. Super 80 jets 'loud' From Page A1 CRASHES • • an hour to cut the driver from her Datsun. Noise leve ls from John Wayne Airport below other aircraft Mias Gerondale was pinned under the wreckaie and waa pronOWlced dead at &tie acene of the 5 p.m . crash. The new McDonnell Dou&laa DC·9 Supel' 80s are continuing to depart John Wayne Airport with noise levels above those olfictala had anticipated, but well below readings loggeJi by other jet aircraft. The flnt commercial rutht of the Super 80 from Orange Coun· ty occurred June 1. Since then, according to officials of the airport noise abatement office, the jet has logged composite noise readings in the range of 95 to 96 decibels on the Community Noise Equivalent Level scale. By contrast. older DC-9-305 and BOetng 73'7s produce com· poslte DObe readtn11 8.5 to 1ix decibel• louder than the Super 80, despite the fact the Super 80 ls. a larger, heavier aircraft. During a demonstration filgbt in Auguat, the Super 80 toned a composite noise readin1 of 90.5 dbCNELontakeoff. Officials believe that fieure could be achieved routinely if ' the Federal Aviation Ad· ministration would modify a reg· ulation governing the manner 1n which pilots may reduce thrust during takeoffs. Such a modification ,is being sought by AirCal. owner of the Super 80 now In uae at the aJrport, and county 1overnmftlt ottlctala. A dechuon ls peodJna. Current standard• require com merclaJ Jet pllota to brtn1 their aircraft to an altitute of 1,000 feet before ln1tltutina a power cutback. AlrCal and COWl· ty offtclal1 want the cutback altitude lowered to 500 feet. The Super 80 ia bein1 uaed on four of AlrCal 'a daily de· partures. AirCal UIH Boeln1 737s on the remainder of Ill flight.a. ALrCal will aoon be takinl de· UveryofuecondSuper80I. Each plane LI coettna th•aJrllne about $22 million. Mill Davia remains in critical condition at Fountain Valley Commw\Jty Hospital. A 20-year-old Marine fatally injured in an Irvine traffic col- li•ion ba1 been ldentlfled by military autboritln at Lance Cpl. Kevin R. Van Pelt, uslped to Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 482 at the Marine Corps Hellcopter Facllity lo Tustln. Nosedive ruling rapped Van Pelt was thrown 30 feet by the force of a collision between his motorcycle and a car driven .by James M. Lawhorn, n, of 20 Wild Goose St .• Newport Beac~ Monday eveninc. The cl'ash occurred at the In· tersection of Irvine Center. Drive and Oranae Tree Street. Lawhorn, who 1uffered cut. to the head, was arrested oo charges or drunken drtvin1. police said. Safety board 's findings bring outcry from cr ew And in Huntington Beach Tuesday, a couple on a motorcy· cle were seriously hurt when the cycle collided with a station wagon at the intersection of Warner Avenue and Edwards Street. WASHINGTON (AP> -A flight crew and the Air Line Pilots As· sociation have disputed a federal finding that the crew was at least partially responsible for an airliner taking a spiraling, Cive- mile nosedive over Mi chigan two years ago. The dispute concerns a Trans World Airlines flight that went out of control April 4. 1979 over Saginaw and plummeted from 39,000 feet to about 8,000 feet before the pilot regained control and made an emergency landing in Detroit. Eight of the 89 persons aboard suffered minor injuries. The National Transportation Safety Board said Tuesday that the Boeing 727 went out of control when one of its leading edge slat! -a control device -did not retract. This caused the right wing tc drop and the plane began to spiral until the force of the turns tore the slat off the craft, allowing the pilot to regain control, the board• s staff concluded. The NTSB said the plane first rolled right and was leveled out by the pilot. Capt. H.G. Gibson, and then rolled again before spiral- ing. In the second roll, il concluded, Gibson used his controls in an "untimely" manner, causing the ultimate loss of control. The board also concluded there was no malfunction or failure of the aircraft and that a contribut- ing factor to the loss of control was Gibson's being distracted by his efforts to find and rectify the cause of the control problem. The finding was disputed by the pilots' association, which con· tends that the crew didn't extend the slats in the first place. Some Man denies theft of transit coins A torlJ\er Orange County Transit District worker denied iD court Tuesday that be '5tole coins from buses parked in the district'• Garden Grove main· lenance yard. Jeffrey Reynolds, 29, of Buena Park testified that he often car· ried the coins from fare boxes to vaults in white waste baskets. But be said be never took the boketa to his car. · Key prosecution witnesses said in court last week they bad seen Reynolds carrying the plattic baskets to bis car. A fellow service worker. Tony Garcia, testified be had con- fronted Reynolds one night .la.st f au iri a mini-bus and bad seen coins in a basket which the de· feodant later placed in his vehi· cle. Reynolds said Tuesday h~ Agca trained at Syria base WASlllNGTON (AP> -The young Turk accused of trying to kill Pope John Paul II was trained in terrorist tactics at a Palestinian base in Syria, tJ.S. and foreign diplomatic sources say. The disclosure is the first link· ing of Mebmet Ali Agca with Palestinians, although it was known he had told his Italian captors he was sympathetic to '·Palestinian commandos." The sources said Agca was trained near Damascus al the Hamuriyya camp operated by Al -Saiqa, a faction of the Palestine Liberation Organiza· lion controlled by Syria. Accord- ing to the foreign sources, who declined to be identified, Agca also received training lil the past at the PLO base al-Hilal in Libya. El Toro Marine safe after crash YUMA, Arh. (AP > -A Marine Corps A-4 Skybawk jet crashed next to the Southern Pacific railroad's malo line near here, but the pilot bailed out before it crashed, a spokesman for the Marine Corps Air Station' in Yuma said. The pilot of the jet, Capt. Joseph J. KreJm.,, 27, of Green· fieldL..~ua., who i• 1taUooed at th• I!;! Toro Ma.rine Corps Air Stat.ton, wu not l.Djared, tbe spokesman sald. Ludde n rites sei · LOS ANGELES (AP) -A memorial service wUJ be held Thursday for Emmy Awar d· wlnnlne ••me •bow actor A1leD Ludden. wbo d.ied al ••• a aft.- • leallhr.boot wltb cucer. Luadea, the lonltlme aboW bolt Of TV'I "Puawont" _. "G.B. CoUe19 &owl.'' died MrW TuM~a7 at'•Good Saman tu 11otp11a1 ln LOI Aqeles, Nici ~pltal 1poke1womaa ~ettJ ....... 4 didn't remember such an inct· dent. Reynolds is accused in the misdemeanor grand theft case of stealing at least $200 from dis· trict buses between August and January while working as lead service worker on the night shift at the yard. District officials claim about $63,000 was discovered missing after audits were completed in April. They say they have no other suspects but have evidence for only the misde· meanor case against Reynolds. Suspect free; judge a ssailed OAKLAND CAP> -A small group or demonstntors picketed the Alameda County Courthouse, angry that a man accused of raping 13 women and two children was released on bail. The pickets said Tuesday they want Superior Court Judge Win• ton McKlbben off the bench because of his decision in February to reduce the bail of Thomas Sales from ~.000 to $100,000. Sales, 36. of Hayward. is facing trial on 71 sex charges. McKibben declined comment Tuesday. He previously said he was "reasonably confident" that Sales would return to co~rt without committing more ck'imes. mechanical device railed, the group says, causing one slat to pop out on Its own. The group not· ed that the rod used to push the slat into place has never been found. Gibson sald he Isn't sure why the plane spiraled out, but dis· agreed with the board conclusion. He said he would react the same way again, using full left tum pressure lo try and stop the roll to lhe right. And be said there was no first roll and then correc- tion, the plane just begao spin- ning, rolllng over six or eight times before be lowered the UD· dercarraige. This changed the attitude of the plane and allowed him to regain control, he said. "The airplane didn't do any of the stuff they described in there. That's a joke," said Gibson, ad· ding that a petition for re- consideration is planned. Bank c uts prime rate to 19.5o/o NEW YORK CAP> -A lead- ing commercial bank cut its prime lending rate today by one- half percentage point to 19.5 per- cent, a move that may mean in- terest rates have peaked. Marine Midland Bank, the na- tion's 13th-largest bank, undercut the 20 percent rate that prevails at most other major banks . Some Wall Str eet analysts said they expected the prime rate to drop because com· merciaJ loan demand is weaken- ing and banks· cost or funds has fallen in recent days. On Monday, Girard Bank in Philadelphia cut its prime rate to 20 percent from 21 percent and several big banks, including Marine Midland, cut broker loan rates. The broker rate is what banks charae on loans to securities dealers when they use · stock as collateral. Changes in the prime rate, which banks quote as their base rate on loans to blue-chip cbr· porat customers, often lag behind changes in other kinds of interst rates. Tne rate on federal funds, for example, has dropped a bit in recent days to as low as 17.5 per- cent. That rale applies to over· night loans of uncommitted re- serves among banks and is a key determinant of banks• cost of ac· quiring funds for lending. Ar. re· cently a· Friday, the federal funds rate was 20 percent. Karl Edward Yeager, 20, of 6762 Warner Ave .. Huntington Beach, was reported in critical condition today at Fountain Valley Community Hospital. His passenger, Beverly Anne Edg· ington, 20, of 16522 Tripp Drive, Huntington Beach, was reported in serious condition at the hospital. Police said the 4:30 p.m. crash occurred when a station wagon driven by Kathaleen A. Jewell, 29, of 6621 Wrenfield Drive, Hun- tington Beach, attempted a left turn at Edwards, colliding with the eastbound motorcycle. From Page A 1 RETURN • • • Al the same time, the loss of his city job meant that he bad no medical insurance for himself and bis family. Bullard said that he wasn't able to find a job after being fired from his city job and that the $15,000 he spent in attorney fees drained a college fund he had set up for bis children. Peek said he also spent $15,000 in at- torney fees during cily person- nel hearings. Because of the legal fees, Bullard said his 18-year-old son, Bryan. who has just completed his freshman year at Harvey Mudd College, will be going to a less expensive, public school next school year. Bryan Bullard was a valedictorian at Costa Mesa High School last June. Bullard said the whole ex· perience was also tough on his 17-year-old son, Brent, who goes to Costa Mesa High School. ''Kids were coming up to him and saying, 'Is that your dad who is the crook'?" Bullard said. The two men said that, despite all the bad experiences they've encountered over the past six months, they feel good about the way tbelr friends and co· workers rallied in their defense. And they said that their first day back on the job was a good one, despite the fact that they are now assigned to less- challenging work than before they were fired. Both men said that the incl· dent may have insured that they will never move up lo ad· ministrative positions in the city and that they might have trouble getting a job if they ever leave the city's employ. TheY-'ve arrived our tong-awaited shipment of fabulous L.A. Seat Q>vera have Ju$t arrived ... and they're beautiful! The 100% cotton Jog aet shown Is available In white, mac pink, yellow, powder blue, natural: mint green. $18 each piece. Many other new stytes are here, too -Jackets, jeans.drawstring pants. shorts, rompers. Q>me see your summer Clothel at ' ••• ,,,,.c.,••u• • ,, ......... ~,,. ·'"•t•, '' •• •' •• ,, • "'. •, •' ,, •' •· ~ '•• .•. •• ••, \ ............ Britain's Queen Elizabeth 11 chats with actress Amy Irving, who stars in the movie ''The Com- petition," prior to the royal premiere of the film in London. The shewing was a benefit for the Missions to Seamen and the Variety Club of Great Britain. ............. Newport seeking 'happy medians' The budget item called for improving median islands in Newport Beach. and Mayor Jackie Heathe r said s he wanted more money in the kitty to upgrade the is les . Terming the city's m e- dians as miserable. the mayor said she wanted to add another $10,000 to the $19.920 budgeted for repairs a nd improvements to the mid-road di viders . .. At least we can s tart a program to improve some of these is lands." she said . shaking her head. That prompted Co un· cilman Don Strauss to ask. "That's called a happy me· dian, isn't 1t?" Identical twins who earned 4.0 grade point averages will help lead tbe singing of the alma mater at McLane High School as valed,ictorians in their class. Kathy and Kerri Bye, 17- year-old seniors. are among 11 valedictoria ns in their class . Sen. Paul. Lo.ralt, R.-Nev., raises hl$ gl.a.$s at Paris' famed Moulin Rouge cabaret, joined by French singer Lina Renaud. They are aurrounded by the girl.a of the Moulin Rouge. The Byes went to classes and studied together ever s ince school officials re- versed their decisions t6 separate the girls in first grade. New Englftnd • rainy Florida, Plains report record-breaking heat Wastal forecast 5-11 crllll edvlt+ ~ w•lers from ,...,. ~'°" to s... Nl<OIU 111•"4. ~i-11 winds IS lo >O lulots ...., • lo 1 loot comlllnect ... ,. EIHWlltre llglll v•rlable wind• be<Oltlllll -11er1y 10 10 II knob In llle •ti-. I IO J loot Wfflerly swell. CIOuely night and mornings , tllrollOfl lonlilhl wllll par11•1 after--<INrl"lj. U.S. swnmary Loc•llY heavy lllu"4er11orm1 cro5M<l Ille Hew EneMlnet CCNlst Tues. NY~ 9'., .ov.nc1"9 cold front, producing lllgll wlndt lllal oustH lo S7 mpll llt Bolton. NHrly 1.s lncllff Of rain tell et Movnl WMNngton, N.H .. during IN sla-hour perloo ended el 11 •.m. POT, with t-lhlrdt Of .n ln<ll •I Po<tlancl, AMI,., clvrlno Ille "'- perloo. Sll-1 -•-r11orm1 _. 1c•1t•r•d over f<lorlde •nd the .. stern G<AI C:O.st. A tun,.1 cloud was slghtM ,.., Pesc.oovl•, Miu., and • tot'*'° formed over water IOU111 Of MlulMllJl)I City, Miu. Scellered 111ower1 and lllun· derslorm1 •110 ••tended from ••stern Sou111 O.kol• Into llOUlhern WIS<oMln,...., over 1111 _.1111rn encl ctnlral R0<klft and western M<llonl Of lllt notthem Pf .. M . SllOW WM re· porltd f•lllng over Montene'1 -stern .-.ins Record·breakln9 1111111 tem- per•h"" _... '""°"" In soutflorn f<lorlde -Ille MUINrn "'-Ins. ,..,..,....._•round Ille IMl1l0n •• mldc141y Tuttdff r.,.O fr.m • IOw Of 52 •I lkll•. Mont .. lo • lllllfl Of 101 •t Palm S41rln91. f<or l«My, toltereCI 1-.rs •net 70 ' .. ~ tllunderalorms were lorec•1I from Arkenw1 end southern Mluourl tllrou911 Tennessee end ttw lower Ohio V•lley lo Ille mid encl northern Alla11Uc eo.st. A few -· were IOtKHI • ._ IN PKllk NOf"lllWHI COHI H lglll In l,_ 60$ -•• P<edlc led over nort,....,, Minnesota and UPC"r MlclllgM; In Ille 90s over Vlr9lnl• end Ille C...olln.u, Ille Gull CCNlll eno over much Of Ille Soulhwosl; over 100 from IOUthwHltrn Te .. I lo IOulhem C•llfornla, -In the 70I •net IOs elMWllefO. California Co•ll•I •tt•I In Southern C•llfornl• 111111 ....,. nlllflt •nd morn- ing low Cioud'S, wllll •fter,_ clMr· Ing. Otllonoll•, we•ll•r will i. f•lr tllro11Q11 TI111rl4Uy lhrouglloul IM So11lhltnd.i wltll 11111• '""pereture cMnoe. DHchff c•n ••PKI only !*'ti .. Cl•rlng. ------------. In Or.,... C-ty, the Upe<led 1119111 ,..,,., .ild,,,.,,..., .... U-70 at the llHc,..., IO lnl.nci. LOWI will drop to tM """'*' 5Clll lo mid .OS. lnllnCI vtli.,s Wiii MW lllQ!ls bolll ~Y• In mid IOI to ._ 'Os. Lows In .,. .. M•11nttln •r••• wlll h•v• nortllwntwly winds U to as mtlll •t times. HllN ,..., Mid Tllu,....y 7S to as. Lowt In tM 90I. Northam dmertl Wiii MW -l•P' ly wlndl 21 to IO mtlft. Hltfll Wiii r•nee .,.._ tt -'°"with fews llet-.. -.Id 15. So...,_ft ••rtt wlll ,....,. """9 ff'llm I01 tt 114, tows lnttwJOa. 10cc•sl-1 119ht lllowera •rt ••· peeled ,.., tllt Oregon border In norlh•nt C.lllOfnlt •net v.,.leble 111911 clouds•• llmM ICltMdlng Into No•tllem c.llfontl._ Otllerwlw, Ille norllltrn -<•nlr•I PMts of IM •l•I• wlll i. fair -mllcl Uvouvto Tllund•y wflll pelclly COltS .. I '°' •nd low clouds In IM nlQM1 -"'°'"' 11191. Temperatures NATIOH Alti.fty 71 u Alllllque 100 62 Ariwtlllo '°' u ""'"°'• 51 4S MMvllle " t.5 All Mt• '' 1$ AllMkCty • .. B•IUm~ " 74 e1rmlf19hm '2 11 Bl1rn•rck ., St BOIW .. • Bo.ton IO '2 •1'9WMlflle "4 IO eutf•lo .. .. CMtl1ln$C ., 7S Ctwlrtrtn WV 11 7S C~NW 74 " CH< ... 71 " Clflcl-1 .. 7S Clevet.ild ,. u C.lutnbul 1t .. Del·l'IWth .. 11 0.11"8r " .. 0.1Mol11H n .. Detroit 7S ,. °"""" 10 ~ ......... " .. "4•1'\Mtd • u .. ltM .. '7 Honolvlu • 7S HevtMfl ft " 1 .... l. ts .. .ltcllllllll .. .. rs J1111t•u u a. • Ptl • Rapid C Reno Richmond Sall L•k• SH Ille SI Lovl1 SIP Temc>tl SIS .. -le SPOii• .. TUIMI Waslll"910ft CALll'O•NIA Apple Valley 88ktrlfleld Bers to., Bio BHr BllhOI> Blythe C•t•llna Culver Clly Eureka L•keAr- IAncHIM L°"9 BH<h Lo.A1199I• M•rys,;llle Monrovlt Monterey Ml. Wiison NHdlH NewPort9MOI <>t•l•nd Orlterlo Palrn Stw1• P"4MleN "-R*• Rectelllff Redwood Cl 1Y R-S.Cr•mettto S.llne• S.11 • .,_. .... SMO!eQO s.,. ,.,_Ital SM JOltf SMt•ANI SMt•9-• SMteCrva s..i1.-..i. . S.11ta Maftb StodLton , ..... .., ...... Tlltrrn•I T.,r•n<e Yurn• OLC*AL A1r11t.,.,,. At .... ._... ... ......... .. ,,Ill u 7• t7 ·" IS '3 ,, ,. 11 n .... ,. '5 7' M '5 SS n " as M ., 74 71 .. St St " 7• " 7t ., 0 '5 0 .. 1t " n " ., ., " '°' 11 IJ ., .. S7 IU 7' 74 '2 ,. ... u M as '° '° 71 7' .. ,, ., " '° " ., 71 M 17 .. 110 a n ... 71 " " ,2 111 • IM u '° • • ,. ,. '° as ,.. ., " 7' " " ., ,, .. ... M n " n u 7S " IO S7 71 S1 7J .. '° " 7S SI 100 11 11 u 101 " .. ,.. • " • IM .. " ,, .. K-Clly ft fi Sun,moon,tide LHV ... 107 Llttlo ll4Kll .. '--''""'-• 1' ~' MM!~ ft " .. , ... t..._ ......... u MIMll "4 t1 ,.,,..,_ n:•a."' ... .......... ., .. IK_.Nlfl ""•"'· •• ......... n S1 ............ "'-.,....,..__ ....... 11 .. .. 17 ..,. ... , .. ~ ""'°"-.. " ,...,...1 .................. NewYft .. 1t MYllJU.111. ~ cali/omia~~ --=1 r1 • • • • . ~ . Orange Coa1t DAILY PtLOT ,Wtdnelday, June 10, 1981 s Al OC's growth penalized? Clark raps proposed reduction of state allocations BY O. C. HUSTINGS Of'l'NOeifyf't ... IUff Budget-weary Orange County officials say they'll have fewer pennies left to pincti II the state Legislature adopts its proposed statewide funding formula. They said the county stands to lose $4.3 million in the 1981·82 fiscal year If the proposal is ap· proved to help the state make up a $250 million shortfall in its budget. Ralph Clark, chairman of the county Board of Supervisors, said the proposal is unfair because it penalizes high-growth counties such as Orange County. Under the formula, state al locations would be reduced to counties where local revenues have grown more than 4 percent during the last two years. In Orange County, revenues have grown about 9 percent. Clark was critical of the pro· posal because, he claimed, It ls tailored to benefit four large, urban counties: Los Angeles. San Francisco, Alameda and Contra Costa. Supervisor Bruce Nest::nde, a former state assemblyman. of· fered this analysis: ·'If you know pe rsonalities and you know 'areas. you can pretty well tell what's happe ning in this budget." A conference committee com prised of members each of the Assembly and Senate are meet Ing every day this week to work out a funding formula. * * * AFTER FOUR YEARS as an executive assistant, Stephen Kozak is leaving the office of 0 range County Supervisor T homas Riley for an ad· ministrative position at John Wayne Airport Kozak has been named by Airport Manager Murry Cable as airport plans and program <?f · ficer effective Monday. He will succ~ed Norman Ewers. who is retiring. She's for the birds The 29 -year-old Orange rest dent, who holds two masters degrees. handled airport-related matters while serving as an aide to Riley. whose district include.'> the airport. A nirnal officer aids lost chicks By JERRY CLAUSEN Of UM o.lty f'llet Stat! Pert, brown-eyed animal con- trol officer Irene Hare is making her rounds in Costa Mesa these days with a bird cage resting beside her on the seat of her orange truck. "It's fledgling season," she ex plains. Young birds are just learning to fly. Some don't make it on the first try. Ms. Ha re says, and well-intentioned Orange Coast residents, fearin g for the creature's safety pick them up and then call for help. That's how she acquired the young house wren and blackbird kept in the portable cage. "ActuaUy." she advises, "un less there is immediate danger from cats or other animals, it's better to leave the young birds alone." The mother bird. s he says, usually will herd the grounded fledgling under a bush and con- tinue feeding 1t until it can fl y. If you must protect a young bird, she advises, heat is the most important thing. ··Put it in a box on a towel with a heating pad underneath or with a 40·wall electric bulb immediately overhead ," s he says. Rescuers' first impulse is to lry feeding stranded birds. she says. "Don't. unless it 's really hun gry and squawking up a storm " Milk or sugar water is a ll wrong, Ms . Hare says. People end up drowning the bird." "Meal eaters should be fed squashed meal worms, beef baby food. vi tamins and egg yolk. "Seed eater s. lik e the housewren, can eat high protein babv cereal a nd egg yol k, bananas or blueberries." Better yet, she says, call Gregg Hi ckman. a bird expert. at 776-3751. Or, she adds. 1t won't hurt to put a grounded bi rd back in the nest. if necessary. The old wives tale about a mother bird aban· doning novice fli er s because they've been touched by human hands is just that an old wives tale. Ms . Hare says she's not a bird expert and that oaring for her own small brood. the cage safely rastened down with a seat belt. isn't even a small part of her daily activity. "But I think they have a right to live just like any of the animals." she says Kenneth Hall Jr .. 21, of Santa Ana. has been named by Riley to succeed Kozak For the past nine months HaU has served as an intern ex eculive assistant in Riley's of· fice. Hall recently graduated from Chapman College with a degree in bus iness. He was na med outstanding sen10r man during the school year just com pleted (.!uick action saves lives SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A mechanic who Jumped into the cab of a runaway truck and stopped it just short of a crowd of pedestrians may have saved 20 lives, according to a police of· ficer who witnessed the heroics. The mechanic, Mario Evola. said he just happened to be help- ing a stalled motorist Monday when the two-ton delivery truck barreled through a business dis· trict intersection without anyone at its wheel. "I had to run like hell to get it." Evola said later .... [f 1 think of it now. I was crazy to do it." o.lty ............. " ltkMrf Ill-- Animal Control Officer Irene Hare feeds a tiny blackbird "rescued" by a weU-meamng person after it failed on its attempt to fly. Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Certified GemolORiBt. ACS PEARLS more popular than ever It wouldn't be fair lo say that "pearls are back:" they have never really gone away as a great American favorite. But. there has certainly been a growing interest In these sim- ple, be.autilul creations. Women wearing ropes of pearls are seen very frequently now In the society pages. Pearls are in their glory when matched with the basic black dress. or with any dark or vivid colors. Just as women's clothes are lurnina to the traditional cla.ssic look, ao ii the cla.ssic pearl be.Ing sou1ht as the. perfect accompaniment to such clothln1. From chokers to ropes to earrlngs to simple pearl-and-diamond pendartts, one oC nature'• areal beauties ts enjoyina a heyday. Remember pins! They're back, and the popularity of pearl• ii one ol the biggest reuoaa Womeo'• 1u1tl are particularly complimented byJapil plna. Oy1ter1 ln Japan an elsewhere are worklna overtime to supply the demand Cor beaullCul pearls, IO pricw wlU not be out or line. It l1 cooc,t to see the ctuak pearl 1un sucb PopU.larity, PEARLS A CLASSIC GIFT FOR GRADUATION DAY I <9> / J. C.J./ump/w6 }.w11f.rd MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY 1823 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA 33 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION @ 8e~rcl-M•\tf C~ llt«>NI ..._S.Ot • , • ....,. ___ ... ~ ............ f ...... , ... ,.......... .......... • ••• ,. ,.,,,.., • . s Orange Co .. t DAJL Y PILOT /Wednesday, June 10, 1981 TI!battleground for Reagan's tax cut plans By WALTER •• MEAas WASIUNGTON (AP> -In this corner, representin g the Democratic Party, Tbomu P. O'Neill Jr., speaker of the House. . · Over there, promoting Presi· dent Reagan's tax-cut plans, James A. Baker UI and Edwin Meese ill, two administration heavyweights. A touch of makeup for the television cameras, and the cross-town debate begins . 0'Ne1ll, Baker and Meese are doing the network talk shows. The three network interview programs, 30·minute-que5tion· and-answer sessions shown at midday on Sundays, frequently are the platforms for rival sides in the battles over federal spend· ing and taxes. It's not prime time, but it is the prime topic in Washington. Meese, the presidential counselor, has made a half· dozen appearances on the in· terview programs since Reagan was elected. Baker, the White House chief of staff, has ap· peared three times. O'Neill used to decline invita- tions to the interview shows, but there hf> was Sunday on ABC's "Issues and Answers," claiming the votes to pass a Democratic tax program instead of Reagan's three-year, across-the· board tax cut. TV ratings show an average of 2.5 million to three million households usually have sets tuned in on at least one of the three interview programs. The lowliest of prime-time shows draws 6.5 million to seven million, the most popular 17 million to 20 million. But the audience is broader than those comparisons would indicate. For one thing, the in· terviews are monitored around Washington, where the dec~lons are made. The high points show up on tape in network and local television news programs. They are prominent in Monday newspapers, Sunday being a slow day for news. So when O'Neill claims, as he did Sunday, that Democrats have the votes to put over their tax program in the House, he's guaranteed an audience far beyond the TV ratings. "Right now, l think we could win it," O'Neill said. "If the vote were tomorrow, we could win it. The quicker we can get it to the floor, the better off we're going to be, to be perfectly truthful, because I know the power of the presidency." Reagan's lieutenants had an instant opportunity to start try- ing. What O'Neill said at ABC was repeated in a question at CBS, where Baker offered the rebuttal: ,, He's the head Democrat in the only branch of Congress or federal government still under Democratic control, and his style had drawn criticism from colleagues who saw him at a dis· advantage in debating an ad- ministration well tuned in on the uses of television. The Reagan people never shunned the cameras. .. I do think we start this con- test over taxes in better shape than we start~ the contest over the budget... Baker said. "I think in the final analysis we will prevail." UPBEAT SHOW -Members of Denver's "Taiko" or traditional Japanese drum group take center stage at the annual Cherry Blossom Festival in the Mile High City. The .............. rhythmic, exuberant art is one way the third· generation Japanese-Americans try to keep their heritage alive. So it was O'Neill on ABC versus Baker on the CBS pro- gram "Face the Nation" and Meese on NBC's "Meet the Press." warming up for the tax struggle that shifts today to the House Ways and Means Com· mittee. That same assertion-reaction process was repeated on another front, since O 'Neill accused Reagan of surrounding himself with the wealthy. and taking their advice on tax terms. "He has no concern. no regard. no care for the little man of America," O 'Neill said . Pugnacious panda given the gate WASHINGTON (AP > Chia· Chia, the panda Romeo who throttled his Juliet. hits the road today after making war instead of love. . Viewing audiences for the Sun- day interview programs are dwarfed by those of the prime· time. entertainment shows. The Over at NBC. Meese. had a re- tort ready. "For the speaker to say. to make that statement. he knows and we know it's absolutely untrue." Meese said. The Import from the London Zoo leaves Washington's Na· Uonal Zoo in the back of a truc.k for New York, the first leg of his journey home. • Come to our Father's Day· Breakfast and meet your favorite Dodger player/ It's fun for everyone/ Come !O the breakfast and have your picture taken withs DodQ8f player. It's only 4.95, and Includes breakfast, a favor, plus a chance to win tickets to a Dodger game. June 20, st 10:30 s.m. Dodger Joe Beckwith wl/} be In mission vle)o, Biii Russell In brea, Steve Howe In south bay, Rick Sutcliffe In westmlnster, Jay Johnstone In laurel plaza and Manny Mota In eagle rock. Call the store restaurant listed above to make your reservation. WHlmln•,., 898-2521,, m1-Jon •Jo 495-2800 . mgy thcz. original c\655ic, '0czcz,rauckar fOr dad.8 day ... When he arrived , Chia-Chia was billed as the greatest lover since Valentino and was sup- posed to give Ling-Ling a baby panda. something that's hap- pened only once before to pan- das in captivity. But in the five days in April when the pair were to have mated, Chia-Chia bjt and kicked his intended instead of giving bear hugs There's still hope, though. Zoo keepers say Ling-Ling and her domestic suitor. Hsing-Hsing. bleated and chirped at one another. For pandas. that's a sure sign of affection. (PL.US DEPOSrT Ol"t AU.. KEOS) Ax death charges dropped EVERETT, Wash. (AP> Prosecutors have dropped a murder charge against John Ray John.son, accused of killing his arandmother with an ax, because he married the chief prosecution witness. Superior Court Judge Daniel T. Kershner, in acting on the dismissal motion from Deputy Prosecutor Vickie Norris, left open the possibllity that the charge against the 30-year-old Johnson could be filed again. Officials in the county pros· ecutor's office said th~ charge could be filed again if the mar· riage falls apart, If there is ~ change in the state law barring spouses from being forced to testify against each other or if there is a court ruling forcing Johnson's wife, Linda Orton of Kirkland. to testify against him. Kershner said an appeals court might consider letting a s pouse testify concerning a crime that occurred before the marriage. "It is the state's belief that this marriage was done for the sole purpose of having Miss Orton not testify so as to defeat the state's case,.. Ms. Norris said. The two were living together when Madeline M. Johnson, 75, was found dead in her home on March 24, 1980. Authorities said she died of a blow to the head from the blunt end of an ax Johnson was arrested 1n February. He and Miss Orton re- cited their vows by telephone May 24, standing on the opposite sides of a glass partition in the county jail. Johnson remains in jail for parole violation concerning a previous burglary conviction. but his lawyer . John R . Muenster, said he would press for a parole hearing soon. The defense lawyer also said he was considering an appeal of the judge's ruling to dismiss the charges without prejudice. leav- ing the possibility that Johnson could be charged again in the future. · 1 wish personally the case had been dismissed with prejudice." Muenster said. ·'This has the ef- fect or holding it over him Had it gone to trial, the evidence would have been insufficient for conviction." ............ ., ... ~··-·· -...... , .... ..,. V°'ll W.¥" ......... . ""~ WOMEN HONORED -Sherry Lansing, left, president of Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corp.; Verna Fields, center, vice president of Universal Pictures, and actress Jane Fon- da were recently honored at the 5th annual Women in Film Crystal Awards in Los Angeles. They were cited for their ef· forts to increase the participation of women in the enter- tainment industry. Woman in left background is uniden- tified. Methane school hazard OCEANSIDE (AP > -. Alarmed .by hl1b readings of noxious methane aas fumes seeplnl rrom a covered dump ground, school officials have set up equipment to closely monitor classrooms tor signs of buildup. State Inspectors last week found levels of odorless gu. 10 times for the lowest concentra- tion_ for fire or explosion. So far, lnvesti1ators have found no trace of the odorless gas inside the three school build· ings that sit near the 11-year -old dump site. • 'Tne first day we get a trace ot the gas inside the schools, the kids are o ut,'' said Dan Armstrong, publk informa,Uon otficer for the Oceanside Unlfied School District. Last week, the Oceanside City Council voted to appropriate $4,000 for a study that will ex- amine the extent of the danger and devise an evacuation plan if necessary. City and school officials believe the 10-acre plot of play- ground land will be unfit for slu· dent use in another 25 years. Fifteen monitoring stations have been placed by city crews around the canyon, which was filled with dirt in January by the city. Methane gas is a common byproduct of domestic garbage and sewage. . An explosion is possible if the gas is trapped in a confined area. "We try not to think about it," said Joseph Timilione, principal of tbe Burgener School for 96 mentally and physically re · larded handicapped students. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT JWedneeday, June 1 o. 1981 s .,. ........ 'BLUE EYES' PRESENTS AWARDS -Enter- tainer Frank Sinatra shares a few smiles with winners of the 15th Annual Frank Sinatra Musical Performance Awards at UCLA 's Royce Hall. Ten students were honored this week as outstanding musicians by the UCLA Coll ege of Fine Arts and the Department of Music. 'Brownie Mary' charity cook SAN FRANCISCO CAP> A judge has ordered "Brownie Mary" Rathbun to switch from baking drug-laced goodies to cooking for the poof and elderly. Mary J ane Rathbun must spend 500 hours cooking in chari- ty kitchens to avoid a 30-day jail sentence on nine drug counts, San Francisco Superior Court Judge Thomas Dandurand said last week. He also placed her on three years probation and ordered her to keep illegal ingredients out of her cooking. Ms . Rathbun was arrested Jan. 14 after running a thri "ing baked goods shop from · her home, featuring brownies laced with marijuana and psilocybin mus hrooms. She advertised on fliers and neighborhood bulletin boards a nd was doing $500,000 to Sl million worth of business a year. officers said. Ms . Rathbun claimed she turned to the browni e business after an injury made it impossi- ble for her to continue her long- time work as a waitress. Police confiscated 54 dozen freshly baked marijuana-laden brownies, 20 pounds of high- gr ade marijuana, psilocybin mu s hr oo m s, cocai ne and seconal when they raided Ms. Rathbun's house. lay ... PllCll macy "Purveyors of Old~lme Neighborliness" HIGHER YIELD. and SHORTER TERM !t•'"tee "'"e Sl.U at "°"' Ooot IC•H Store Hulet' Your "'••1 COSTAMHA641·1289 •ue..._..,,., llOllllON v..io495-0401 ,_,~~- 19•A Deaelt ,..,. ... ...., l'fty I 1016~Dr. M-.-tt.ecll 760.0111 Mercury Savings Mow Offers MEW 11Repo Plans."* C.11642-5678. 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Ora diamond pendant from Dad that says, "I know you'd make it" without words. NIWflORT IEACH MU~ t.Wo /67S.2'Tl1 lot ~\U' "'tAOtNA' '-""" tA8MIA M&M....-../tAN •tWICnCOl~I ~~ We han several "Nds"• cwifillly -t~-~ ~, available for -coa-rs ~,, FOR CURRENT RATES . . . Call or visit your nearest Mercury office. MERCURY SAVINGS :~ and loan auonation H1~iton Beach Lake F1rest T1stit 7812 Edinger 23021 Lake Center Or. 1095 Irvine Blvd. Hnt. Ben., CA. 92647 . El Toro, CA. 92630 Tustin. CA. 92680 (714) 842-9333 (714) 770-2601 (714)832-no1 l.J Habra/f lllertan Ana~eim HHls 811na 1001 E. Imperial Hwy. 5677 E. La Palma 8955 Valley View La Habra. CA. 90631 Anaheim, CA. 92807 Buena Park, CA. 90620 (71 4) 870-8700 (714) n9-7047 (71 4) 821-6000 *This obligation 15° not a savings account or deposit and is nof Insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor ration. K mart's Got All. The Ways to Care For All Kinds Of Audio-Video Equipment! You'll Need Some Of These If You Have Any One Of These: 2. VHS Video · • 4 97 Cauelte Head Cleaner .• I • Head and tape guides cleaner fOI' VHS 3·==. ........................ 2.47 Includes Regula. Phllllpps Saew- drivef. demognetlzOf 4·=c~ ............ 2.97 Includes brush arm and cleaner s. ~.~~ ................ 7 .88 For full size cassettes Quick and easy to erase. 6. AC Tape Head 8 . 97 Demagnetizing ................ • Used fOf most cassette. 8-Trock tape reoOl'ders. 7~ngAnd · ceeanr; ca...... ........... 1 .4 7 Use fa cassette tapes. I. ca. ..... Head Cleaner 97 0 With Cleaning Uquld ........... . Used for cleaning cassette. and tape recorders. 9. Electronic .. 8 97 Ellmlrte:llol' • • . • . . . . . . • . • . . • • • • • • . • ~and cleansreoords. NoetY. llquld reQulred. 10. lelamax·Vldeo 14 97 em111te Head Cleaner. • MOfk • II video casaette head and ~ guide cleanef. •11·=.\r~ ................... 3.97 . Fot rnicto ~ to completefV cleOn anything recorded. We Honor J .............. " PROBED -Holmes Tuttle , a longtime Reagan ad viser, is under investigation for illegal owners hip of a bank. He claims thP issuP is "trivial." Funds sought SAN F RA NCISCO <APl Mayor Diann'- Feinstein has proposed a $1.17 billion budget which contains fonds for more police and transit workers. Orangt Cout DAILY PILOT fN•dn•ld1y, June 10. 1H1 Togetlierness one way to beat housing pinch MEDFORD, Mass. <AP> -lt'a, double or nothlna tor two couples who joined forces to purchase an $84,000, "sln.cle·family" house. With a 17 percent Interest rate, Richard Fahlander and his wi fe, Kathleen Allen, and Paul Kahn, and his wife, Barbara Norman, decided joi nt o wner s hi p w·as the' only alternative. Each couple have e arnings of sll1htly less than $20,000. House prices In s uburban Boston average nearly $86,000, according to the Greater Boston Real Estate Board, which estimates that buyers need an· nual incomes of about $50,000 -more than double the area's median. So loca l b r oker s say s hared ownership i5'a growing trend. "It starte<I on the West Coast and 111igrated here," says Milton Sbpw, executive vice preside nt of the Massachusetts Board of Realtors , with reports of co-ownership deals In such Boston suburbs as Weston, Lin· coin and Marshfield. OccasionaJly brokers suggest the alternative, and "we a re assuring people that it can be done." says Ma rshfield broker Patricia Roy. "U 1 h1ul lwu•hl 011 my own It would h11vu boem u l'Cmdomlnlum," aay1 Ru ch I Mor1•l11 , 1 l'omputvr pro reaalonal lnatc•d, 1ho b<HIMht 11 hou•• with a friend. Co-ownership hu It• probl1m11 Joint decl1lon1 on overyth!n1 from plumblna overhaul• to l1nd1caplna. Most ownors set up detailed lea11 agreementa lncludlna what hap· pens when one co-owner wanta to move and the other wa nts to stay in advance. Says lawyer Steven Goldenber1: •'There's a potential for a lot of problems and ill will." In Medford, Kathleen Allen said, "We 've come closer knowing more about each other. We see each other at all diffe rent tim es, not j ust socially." Kahn says it's best to avoid co· ownership when one couple is more prosperous than the other. Many such property owners say they'd prefer a place all their own. But in today's market. prospects are dim . The next phase, realtors say, is construction of homes with double suites. We'll give you ~great ideas for dressing up the Dad in your life · at our ''Father's Day Fashion Show''. If he loves that tattered old shirt as m uch as he loves you. it's time to introduce some new favorites to his wardrobe this Father's Day. Come to our "Father's Day Fashion Show", The Broadway Newport, this Saturday, June 13, 2 p.m., in the Men's Department. We'll show you the latest in men's clothing and accessories, and give you lots of su per ideas that'll make choosing the perfect gift for the special Dad in your life, surprisingly simple. THE BROADWAY II •• I L· " ~ (\ f " I I u (1 • I u I I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NS.71128 NOTICE OF DEATH OF NOT ICE OF DEATH OF GEORGE R. MURRAY, THERESA F . AXENE, a k a G E O R G E aka THE RESA F RANZ REYNOLDS MURRAY A X E N E AND 0 F AN 0 OF PETITION TO P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A D · ADMINISTER ESTATE MINI STER ESTATE NO. NO. A·10l922. A-109017. . PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE --------a aM>l.UTIOfll NO. lttl.fJ aUOt..UTICMI Of' TMa M>AllO CW 01aaCTottl 0, lllVIN• aANCH WATaa OlnttlCTL OltAMOa COUNTY, CALlf'OaNIA, ADOlNO l•CTIOM I.I TO TH a au Lal ANO tt•GULATIONI Of' TH a lltVIN• aANCM WATatt OllTltlCT f'Olt WAT .. I, saw••. AND ••CLAIMID saav1c• PUltMIANT TO STlf'ULATION ANO AOtt•aMllNT CW l•TILiMaNT IN SH•aNAMAN 'f. taWO T o al l h ei r s T o all h eirs , b f. · · d 't ' beneficiaries c re ditors wH•1t•.u. 1 .... 1ne Renell Weter Dlmkt URWO> I• e ea111orn1e we1er ene 1c1aries, c.re 1 ors . ' . 0111r1c1 or99f'11ec1 en0 •lll•ttft9 uncle•,,,. Cattforni. wei.r 011trk1 IA•, Md and contingent creditors of and contingent creditors of •II of the I-within 111e 110UnC1eri.a o1 .. 1c101atr1<1 ere toutH 1n the CCM#lly George R 'Murray aka THERESA F . AX ENE, ot<Henet.SUteo1 cAi11omi.,enc1 George Re.ynolds M'urray a ks THERE SA F RAN z WMHSAS, Section um o1 the CA11i.mi. w.-com_,.. 111e 01 .. E E lrkt lo ..-.its11, Pl'IM -d~lrl!llM ..-~ "'"'.,,.. ~tloM lot IM a nd persons who may be AX N and persons who d111r111u110n of wet.,. end s.c11on as• of aeld weier c:.-..,.._,.. 111e °"" otherwise interested in the may be otherwise inferest-trkl to ••tel• or -eny of l1W _.. or proc ........ ~'"" ... Ille will and/or estate· ed In the will and/or ce1llor11I• Weter 011tr1<1Lew 111 cenv111118'1111• pur.,.....,,. ,_.,..to A petition h~s been filed estate. llH'n~~::9'u:.7~~-:ofDlroctonoflRWO,~~ofR••lvllonNo. by Dorothy Murray in the A petition has been fl led 1tn·4' on IMY 2l, 1m, Mop1ec1 •11to• en0 AeewletJoM 1« water. s.-, _. Superior Court a! Orange bydHFarrykWHilliSpeam Axene 1toc~=:ts~1~r;:,:":, Ei:.=::..."':":9~ .... ~ • 11.,., ... IOft County r equesting that an ran · . arman, .,., At,__ of Setttomem 111 UM .cu.., ....itted .,,.,._ v .... ,... of Dorothy Murray be ap· 111 In the Superior Cou~ of 01roc:1ono1tho 1rv1ne Ranch wet"' District c0r ... 5o11por1or c.un c.o No. poi nted a s .per s on a I OthratngHe Counwty.lrllequestAing 2w!,w1~~~. the ao.rdot o1r0e1onof tRwot1eoms 11...,...._.11111111111 r e presentative to ad-a arry 1 ams . X· 1Nt ll -.ectbo lnt11e11Ht lnteffftof1N01strkt'°...,..1b1t111esend m inister the e state of e ne a nd F ra nk H . R-.u4etlonltoeddS.CUon u uwr.to;ond George R Murray aka Spearman Ill be appoint~ wHa .. A1.-1 1osatc1s1~end~o1~.111e G · ' ed as personal represen-1oon1 of Ol1'9Cton of IRWD ,... .,,.,...... ..,.... to ......,. 1t1 1t111os _, eo~ge ReynoldS Murray. . . Aevwtetlonl 1o edd s.c11on s.s.uet tont1 tn ElClllWt "A"• -St,...,. .. ,_ llftCI Irvine, California (under tattves to administer the AtrttmentolSott'-t; the I n depe ndent Ad. estate of Theresa F. Ax· Now, THIHf'01t•. the ao.rd o1 DI...:..,. of 1 .... 1 ... Renell Wo'9f 04.,. ministration of Estates eAne, ak(a dThetrhesa1 dFranz tr1c1:.._~1E:!:~;:·5~E~E!::!.~.!.".:~ ... -1,. Act). The petition Is set for xene un ~r e n. epen· L-1-Houslftt ProJ«u -.. ....,... pertlaNti, eet,... 111 Ellllllllt "A'" hearing In Dept. No. 3 at dent Administration o f 10 11111 .._lion, ett.KllOd ,.,... .. 01111..., W• ~,...... •..,, ,_..,, 700 Civic center Drive Estates Act) The petition 11e,en0 1a~-odopted W e s t , Sa n t a A n a ' is set for hearing in Dept. °" e!:t"I: a. Tr..t '"° pnw1s1ona of 11111 ReSCllutlon wn ._.,. ettoctt ... • California 92701 on June No. 3 at 700 Civic Center ~·a. Tr.ot said s.cuon s.s.1 htlAby........, w1111ec...,111ec1 ll'f the 24, 1981 at 9: JO a.m. Drive, West, in the City of Socr•tort o11111a 011trkt -111e Socrotarv 1s........, _..... _, Olroc'9d to I F YOU OBJECT to the Santa Ana Cali fornia on 1>111>11"'....,. one•• -k 1or -_..."' tM Or-.. c:-a Delly""•·• · • J I 1 1981' t 9 30 ,.. .. .......,. Of ...,., .. clrcwlellon llUlllbf!M Ill OrM99 Qlullly, Collforni•. granting of the petition, u Y • a : a .m. 1111rwenttothepr°"111onso1SocttonUCMofthoCellftrlNW.twc.M9. you should either appear IF YOU OBJ EC T to ~he AOOPTEo.s1GNEDANDAP,.AOVEOt111a11111u,otMay,1•1. at the hearing and state granting of the petition w .A. c1.n, Pr811dellt your objections or file you should either appear Aut11urc.Kom,Socretery written objections with the at the hearing and state Soctton u . .,_ .. Ftnen(lnQ tor At,.,_... fllldlor LAW •-.._.... court before the nearing. your objections o r fi le Pro1ec11 r ltten ob. t•o Ith th J.S.1 .......... .-tlllk l"IMM .... II prtfOf1y wltt>lfl ... Olwkt for Your appearance may be w Jee 1 ns w e w111c11 w.-. _,end/or rectellnff w.eer ....,1co 11,......... wtu lndlldl9 In person or by your at· court before the hearing. not tes•tNn..,.percentof thetlf'lta•ufto,......8Mlortowl-llOullnt torney. Your appearance may be 11111u .. htAln defined or"" 11M11 •tltNMd..., u. City of'""'"°· Ceullty o1 • I F y o u A R E A in person or by your at· Orengo, or other well e11uty ,.,.. 1on11 -wN<ll ~ tNt • iwtton ot t11e CREDITOR Or a Cont. torney. 11111t111e1111c1evo1ope41M11 11eattordltt11eWld/oirtowlfl(_...,..,..11111b• "°'°'"defined, eny wcll-lkenl, -'•<'...,_wMfl ~ ·-· i ngent creditor of the de· I F Y 0 U A R E A _, en/11./or roclelmoc1 water -v1co tor 11Kll ..,.....,, -T,...... IM ot.- ed t f·1 CREDITOR or a cont trtct to lftltl ... procooc111191--11t •~ ._ .. ..,.,.,.. ~1111-cea s , you mus 1 e your • ... sment dl11r1e1 tor tho ~ °' PlllllklY tlMftelllt tM ""..i• ...,. _.... c laim with the court or lngent creditor of the de· waler, -Mtd/or rodetmod wet~iu.. ~ • -MN-. present it to the personal ceased, you must flle your voi.pmont .. wo11 •• ony ..... ...,.. of tM Muro '-'"1 co1t1 wt11c11 t ti I t d claim with the court or w11111o "'"'""11Yor11ene111111o 1n1t1a1 ~_,~t11etl1Mot<-· represen a ve appo n e uon 10 IOkl tocnn,_ Tito Pf'GPOIOd 0_, •Mrkt.,.... ..... au., tt1o by the court within four present It to the personal 0," •lltllllo for Allemoto ,,_Int .. ,_,......,"' 1911e liKtlell s...t _, months from the date of representative appointed wc11 otNuroo10g1<.et1yMrWdr,u.1oc11"'-•...,.,....,_wt11ootw1c1 first Issuance of letters as by the court within four in"' 111xm1on. Tiii• P"O'll• 111n1_..• ~ • ....,_... oNJer tow provided ln Section 700 of months fr'om the date of :.,.~ ~ u;i~1:i,.•1•;:::.,:•s~.menr.t ••• llllltt * ""'*" ....,tc. ts,. the Ptobate Code of first Issuance of letters as Callforrila. The time for provided In Section 700 of u -2 hlltWNll ef ~ ,.._..., "-"" reco1v1111 •,...... ..,.._\t • ,lllng Claims Will not ex• the Probate Code of Soct1on~1.u.01stt1ctsMl1,"" .... 't,,....••...._tot*llllllSoct..,. S.W , l11IU040 proc ...... pwWOl!t to OtlfllkM6o '-to._,.. e "'9tlel -plre prior to four months California. The time for l9IOflldlrtrkt•111e,.,,...o1P111111<1y11M11C111ttN......_.,._... ... , from the date of the hear· filing claims will not ex· -end!• r.clOl!Md wow tecuu ... _., • _ _.. • .. .,..,. i _ __. i I t f th •• -11 • ony .. ,........ portloll of tho llltln ~ ~ wN<lt wllt • lft. lngnot.....uebove. Pre pr or o our mon s c11~.,or1111Mththe l11n1o1.,.,.,y~e1•u-of~toNM YOU MAY EXAMINE from the date of the hear· toct1lt101. th• file kept by the court. Ing noticed above. If you are Interested In the YOU MAY EXAMINE s.w...._.. .. ,.,._,..._,...__ T11ootw1tt~...,.,.._. estate, you may file a re-the file kept by the court. ~~~~-:.'.' ... -.:'=1111°":'1°:=,.,--=:.:..-:i.: quest with the court to re-if you are Interested In the Mllfl4I _.... flNl!ltlllt Pl'-nk" • 11 ,.. ----•T .._... ,., • I I I ti of t .. _ file • re-'°"''".., 1111'9'«t-11 .._ -o1 M.tt ~ ""'-"".,. ...... .... ce ve spec a no ce ,..,. estate, __ you may .. ol'Cloroc-i"9ntw11t1_..~._1~1Nllll'9Cflal.o«tt ... r--. Inventory of estate assets quest with the court to re· ., 11t1•nc1111 .-n "',,.,...,,_.._ ~ "'° Dl91t1. 1t1 ,,.. .... •,.... ""*' and of the petitions, ac· celve special notice of the tiw11o<UM 1-W. 111e 011wtt ,,.. .. ,...., • _. ... aclillel\ ..-11 *""'"' counts and reports Inventory of estate as· .,..,.~ .. ,........,.llM.,.,.....~ ... ac...._ dncrlbed In 54Ktton 1200 serlts and ot the petitions, s.M. ,,_ .., ~ • ......_ n. Dltllrkl .... •• ..,. • ,...... of the Calffornla Probate accounts and report, _..___.. .. 1ott1o11S.H•IM•...,. .... ,... ..... ,...... Code. described In Section 1200.~ • of the Calltomla Pr-·te ..,..,. ..., • u ...,_'-._.......,"Ahli• 111..,., ..._ .,_ .....,... _....., ..... MnlfllMllMw ...................... .... Hewser, Ger.tner & Code. .... ........... ,.._. .. ,,,."'*•c:....._ff9••e-•r•••· •r: D••••• "· CRUIKSHAN!<.L..~NTIN a -·-•..-.cY ...... )lfll* ... ____ .... .,_ ...... •rHerlO, AHWlteY ., G9'•11UW ...... Law, 49 ~Drive, IJllWlllNrealvd. aea 1117, Ne...., 8Hcla Me. 1• f.illf•r•I• ,. .. ,. 014, -...rtY Miiis, c. ... 11 ... • C11l>UM141 1.t-1.cw•11r1.--.....-..-..-.. .... ..--Pu1Mlthtd Orange Co .. t Pub411Md Orange COHt Dl*kt ..,_. • lftlal9lt .,... ::::.=.-:: • 111*1 ... ,, • _... O•Uy Piiot, June 9, 10, 16, O•lly PUot,June4, 10, 11,. :".=' .::::=r-=--==: =....,:..lf '.:r::-J 1911 161W1 11981 UtS-ll. .. .................... ..,... •· ......... . ...... ~_.:.-.,....,,;~~---=-~~.:.-----..... --__..~ ....... ~ ........................ :1::· ;; ......... ..... ............. -... -... -....._ .. __ __..., .... ~,_.., . .., ... __ .,._ ... $Mil ............... __. ............ ~ .. Dtllrtd ............................... ,.,.... ...... ...... .................... ._ ... _.. ................... ~~ ...... -......... ~-..,..----"---·-~__,..._ ___ ...... ___ ...... ~0.-..C.-MI' ...... Jl//M11, U, I., • ~ ' J.t.:L ....... ,. ..... "<*-......................... ..... ..... .... l!Mretl ........ WfllCll ..................... ,....... • ..................... ,,_ ........................ . •". •I for FATHER'S DAY WE HONOI YOUI CREDIT! • SAVE•3.00 REMY MARTIN v.s.o.P. COGNAC 750 ML. ANCIENT AGE SEAGRAM'S V.O. BOURBON • CANADIAN WHISKY ::~:. 10.88 ::;:. 15.99 PO POV VODKA 80 PROOF 1.75 LT. GILBEY 'S GIN KA MORA C~FFEE LIQUEUR 750 ML. 5.99 SCORESBY RARE SCOTCH 86 PROOF 80 PROOF 1.75 LT. 9.49 750 ML. 4.99 SAVE 7tr ANDRE' CHAMPAGNE •WHITE •PINK •COLD DUCK GALLO MID-VARIETAL WINES • f1llllClt ca.-.a :~::T. 2 .99u BLUE NUN Ll•8PRAUMILCH RHINE WINE 750Ml. 2 .99 BERT OLLI LAMaRUSCO RED WINE 750 ML. 1.49 CHRISTIAN BROS. DAY CHAMPAGN• · 7SOML. 4.99 Mr. a Mrs. "T" MIXERS "PINA COLADA " Olt "MAI TAI" YOUR CHOICE ,._ .. ,.~ ........... . "' \ ' ' . . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 10, 1981 _ ..... 111111111111 ... ~------------------~----~ ..... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- GWC to return to four-day work week NEW STAMP -The U.S. Postal Service will release this 18· cent stamp on Ju.ne 29 in Milford, Mich., to call attention to the International Year of Disabled Persons. Golden West College wlll return to a four-day work week June IS, revivlnc a summer experlmeht which t1ved near· Ly $3~.ooo laat year. Under the second year plan, employees will work 10-hour days, Mon· days through Thursdays and most of the campus wi ll be closed Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. The exceptions will be the commuolty service and administration of juaUce programs, which will continue to operate Fridaya and weekends, but in desianated areq ot campus. The reJU)ar five·day week sched'1le will resume Au&. 24. Most of the nearly $35,000 savln1 lut year was attributed to enero bills, ac· cordina to college ofticiala. The otftcials said the Friday closures allowed the college to close energy systems Thursday ni&hta and leave them off unttl Monday mornings. Had the college continued to use energy at Its summer 1979 rates, bills for the 10.week summer pertod would have been $142,000. However, the bills last year totaled $114,000. Another cost saving ractor ln the Fri· day closures is the overtime pay for custodJaJ and maintenance workers, of· flcials said. Because the campus was cleared of students and employees on Fridays, maintenance crews were able to complete remodeling and repair proj· eels quicker. a a aa aa aa &&&••••A •••&A ·~·.,.... SPECIAL! NO PRIVACY' Ruth Graham E vangelist ,life hard 'f or u:ife l C llARLOTTE. N.C. l< A P l -R u l h Be 11 'Graham says if she'd known what her life as ~M r s . B i II y G rah a m ~'would be like, "I would ave been scared to 14 ea th ." _. Life with Graham has •meant marriage to a- f req uen ti y absent (husband whose life re· volves. not around jh o m e , b u t a r o u n d 1worldwide evangelical 1m in1stry, she says. It plso has meant surren· 'd e r 1 n g pr i v a c y to tourists and the media. she says. ·'They're both very trong personalities with trong opinions," Jeanie lFord said of her sister and brother-in-law. Mrs. Ford is the wife of Leighton Ford. vice resident ol the Billy tiraham Evangelistic ssociation, based in inneapolis. "Often," Mrs. Ford aid, "if you find two real people together, here's competitiveness. But she is so in love with him. I think she'd rather see him get the atlen· 'ion." Mrs. Graham raised •five children , has 15 Brandchildren and runs tier own ministry, which Sn c l udes visits to ~ i c hlgan 's Jackson ~tate Prison to visit in· I'm ates. "I might not have ~one into fu ll-time revangelism if it hadn't •been for her." Graham $aid of his wife, whom ~e married in 1943. He said he listened to Jler when she told him in h949 that evangelism !was his calling. ~ "It's not been an easy aHe for Ruth ... to have fyour privacy intruded ~pon constantly. to :answer the phone hun- ~reds of times a week, Ito be interviewed and 11>hotographed, which ;the dreads." ~ But he says when be nters the rough-hewn ront door at their moun· ~alntop Montreat, N.C .. ~ome, "it's a honey- lkl'loon all over again." • l/apanese lan told TOKYO (AP) -The apaoe11e gove.rnmeot ill pay for 100 merlcan high school tudenta to study in apan_ each year start· i in 1982, ofltclals aid. The program will cost bout $300,000 a year . Under the plan, each .S. senator will recom· end one hich school t udent for atudy tn I apan NC?h year. SAVE20' CMUTION UDTWOOO er ....... PAITY Tm ICE CREAM SQUARE PAK ·-IMIUMm 1 69 --mm l.ICA-------IT Ml mms. 1/2 UL 8 U. SAVE 8 2.00 : HAIRSETTER •C.14 19.88 SAVE 8 1.154 t400 watt pistol grip lets you dry. style, curt. or atrarghten your hair SAVE •1.t 1 U'"TAal TW f'ICMC BRAZIER l•TMUT1 AD PRICES PREVAIL: WEDNESDAY. JUNE 10th THRU SATURDAY. JUNE 13th IF YOU LIKE SHOPPING AT ~r-!-1 SAV·ON ... YOU'LL LOVE L c.... OUR PHARMACYl Prompt, professional and personal service. Always ready to answer any questions you may have about your -Fi medications whether prescription or . ~--.::.,,,... non-prescription drugs ENGLISH LEATHER "MUSK" AFTtR SHAVE Deluae padded case with rnstde pocllet folder Has lock & key with aluminum closures 17" J 12'' I 4" SOUW:llU PORTAllE HOPE o SUNDAY~ .JUNE14 0 ~ CASSETTE RECORDER 3 oz. BUS SAVE •s.os PANAIOMCAC "MR. WHISK" ELECTRIC SHAVER _._. T•MH For reined shnono al home or anywhere else an AC ou11e1 rs available .... 39.95 SAVE 8 7.07 TIIRI • "QUARTZ" ALARM CLOCK wlllll-'-M_. tor homf or tra~el Almond or black case w11h oold tone dial ._. .. J4.88 .. =~~:~~=:i: f~:'1u1omilrc 3 3 9 5 7 9 5 and pencil tn Sliver 141Ytl control takn IN outuwotk oold or asso• led ou1 ot rlCG<dtno y- ,_ ... _, ,.,_ • ~ • KT SAVE 8 3.00 SAVOY CASSETTE or CARTRIDGE CASE SPECIAL! Goes with you everywhere "-----Ir~' tor tasty cookouts' Extra heavy oauge 1teel o:onstr1Kt10n , __ 2~ 2.99 w11h Aluminum Closures •CAIKTTI( ..... FOLGER'S COFFEE w .. ,....... 8 88 ~ 3.89 11214 • SAVE•a.oo PUSITOP DRINK DISPENSER Keeps bevflfages hot or cold hours lonoer ... ~5.95 &AVE-.S.00 QUAID J.SIEI mn UNIT Sturdy construe· lion with wood look ltnlsh rn warm llQhl wood grain Acl1ustable shelves Easy to assemble ~'!J.50u -6 .00 ENGLISH LEATHER "THE OORY SET" . .,,.-a .. .... CIUPf'lll ·--1 .. •.-T ... •tu 7~ .50 BAY• •t .OO QIUTTt ORY IDEA IOtJ...OM um.HllPIUlfT Scenteo or Unsctntld DRIP. REGULAR II C..-. T ... ) I 1111 or ELECTRIC PERK • CAl1lllll ( ..... 12 ... ,,.. , ... , •1112 --9.95 ~ 2.29 .. •ant11111&w:1.n .. •"""811Tmc&J.na~-------------------------.~-----------------------. OLD SPICE "GIFT SET'' . .,,.....,._ 1'0• • ·-··-- SAVE •s.oo IUCI l DECUI //_; DUSTBUSTER f; ~ COIDUSS VACUW '\: ti's a cordless recharoeable cleaner that has no hose. no cord Grul for quick clean-ups after spills .~4. ls -24.95 SP•CIALI EFFERDENT DllfrUll Cl.IMlll "Extra Strength" SAVE soc 10 u . CRAYON MUG looks Juat Ilk• ttt. real thing &r!HIJnt colors to pltast any th11sty YO\lllQ artist COPPERTONE SUllTM LOTDt " SUllTM Ol 1.48 .. SAVE •2.00 llIIM..-ATIOM "KIBBLES 'N BITS" DOG FOOD SAVE•t.30 SUPER WM!l~S . .... ......, ...... .. ._.. I OU! I 1 .• ,...,.. TMUTI SPECIAL I ~-------~--·------...-.~ I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, June 10, 1981 Interior appointment bad news for nation Ronald Reagan gets 4.ligh marks for charm and persuasive· ness but, whether it's his fault or that of his advisers, too many of his appointments have left too much to be desired. He was spared a potentially ugly fight on the Senate floor last week when Ernest Lefever withdrew from his nomination as top human rights official in the State Department. Reagan had vowed to support him despite widespread criticism of the nomination, but Lefever bowed out after the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in a 13-4 vote, found him unfit for the post. Unfortunately, the almost equally poor appointment of James Watt as Secretary of the Interior was not blocked -and the reverberations are likely to continue indefinitely. So far, Watt has proceeded with bis plans for selling offshore oil leases without consulting the states, put a freeze on new parkland acquisitions despite the availability of funds, and is in· sisting on letting the states open up federal lands and rangelands for power plants, strip mining and oil shale development. Watt says he's doing all this in "the national interest." The fact is, he apparently thinks the national park system is just a waste of 'ood land, couldn't care less about the effect of off shore oil drilling on com· mercial fishing, tourism and the coastal ecology, and sees absolutely nothing wrong with the exploitation of precious open space. His opponents see the threat of dismantling a land preserva- tion system that has been under way for 100 years on the specious excllse that anything likely to contribute to the deyelopment of energy is justified. · This ls a shortsighted and dangerous view and one that bodes ill for future generations of Americans if it succeeds in destroying their heritage. So far Watt has managed to end.run federal conservation laws by simpJy firing the people -hundreds of them -charged with monitoring the laws. Efforts are ulider way in several areas to curb the hard· headed Watt, but he seems to have the support of the ad· ministration. His original ap- pointment and the failure to rein him in do no credit to the presi- dent or his advisers. Press control ploy For the past several years, Third World members of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organiza· ti on (UNESCO ), have been engaged in a campaign to control the flow of international news. They contend not enough favorable news about their coun· tries is reported in the world press and they want to create a "new information order" to cor· rect this. Not surprisingly, the idea is firmly backed by the Sov· • iet Union. which bas long held a tight rein on news emanating from the communist world. Right now UNESCO is engaged in a three-year study that would define this ''new or· der," establish ''fundamental principles" to guide the press and create an international Com· mission for the Protection of Journalists. The ·'protection·' envisioned would be the issuance of iden- tification cards to approved journalists. cards which, of course, could be withdrawn if the holder did not do a good job of promoting the policies of the gov· ernments being covered. At long last, free world members of UNESCO are mov· ing to head off this attempt at in· ternational news censorship. Meeting in France, members of press organizations from 20 coun- tries including the United States voted to wage open war against the UNESCO news control plan and to urge expansion of the free flow of information. They are supported by the governments of the European Common Market partners and the 2l·nation Coun· cil of Europe. The opposition probably won't stop the UNESCO effort to establish its "new information or· der," but it might open the eyes of some members to the fact that control of the press helps no one but politicians seeking to protect their turf. Ad11ice worth· heeding High school, or better yet pre·higb · school, students plan- ning to enroll in the University of California system would be well advised to heed the words of Alice Cox, assistant vice presi- dent for student academic services at UC . Sbe points out that while meeting "mininwm" admission requirements can open the doors of the university. this by no means gllarantees that a student is adequately prepared for uni· versity-level work, especially in some majors. ~ well-prepared student, says Ms. Cox, will have taken four rears of English in high schoo -with strong emphasis on expository writing -three to. four years of math, two to three years of foreign language, two to • • ihree years of laboratory science, one year of history and one or more years of art or humanities. This is substantially more than the minimum admission re- quirements. But students are reminded, for example, that more than half the tnajors at UC require three years of math as basic prepara- tion, though only two years are called for in the basic admission requirement. An extra course or two at tbe high school level can meet this need. Students who heed the.advice to become well prepared, rather than just adequately prepared, should find the path throu&h uni· versity much ~moother -a point that should be emphasized by high school counselors. Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex· pressed on this page are those of their autllors and artists. Reader comment is lnvlt· ed. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Bo>t 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . L.M. Boyd I Fish: pref er dark ~ If you tum off tbe Ugbt.I every night at the tropical fi•h tan,k, the fish will IJ'OW faster and bluer, I'm told. Wbal.effll fish do that'• akin to sleeping they prtftr to do in the duk, evidently .. Q . How much money is a Stradivarius vlolln wonh tbeM days? A. Can Oftly J'eport lllat one such sokt lit a UildOn audloft Jut yearrorSIOl,UO. In '.Auatria, ll a ..._e bu a alp on It wlLb noddnl tMlt a picture ot a green bed, that means "room for rent." U it's a red bed, it alsnlfies ••no vacancy." ./ ' / " ) '· I• Ill II •I ,,, 11 11 111 11 • .. , ~II II ..... l{ I J J'l , .. THE ~ua1'1A OF THE BL~D S~INT WATi ... t I I ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------,, Teamsters pick shady chiefs ., WASHING TON . -Leadert of the Teamsters Union met i.D Lu Ve1as last week to decide on a successor to their late president, Frank Fituimmons. As expected they settled on. the Interim president, Roy Lee Wllllams. Two weeks ago, Williams, fitness for union office of any kind ..._ much less head of the nation's largest labor union -wu challenged by a Senate subcom- mittee report. The next day Williams was indicted by a federal arand j~ on charges that he attempted to bribe Sen. Howard Cannon, D-Nev. HISTORICALLY, Teamsters presi- dents have been notorious for their brushes with the law. Dave Beck and Jimmy Hoffa wound up in prison; . in· vestigations of Fitzsimmons. however, never got past the guilt-by-aaaociation stage. In the rough-and-tumble world of union truckers. disapproval by govern· menl authorities bas never been a ban· dicap for election to high office. That's been the situation with Williams, whose involvement with the scandal-ridden Central Slates Pension Fund has done him no damage within the union. But the indictment for bribery may prove to be a truck of a dif· ferent col6r. · For yeus there have been allegations that Williams has ties lo Kansas City mobster Nick Civella. Much of lhe evidence lo support these allegations was circumstantial. But wttb Williams' indictment for bribery along with the Teamsters Union's-financial wizard, Allen Dorfman, the evidence of Mob links could go beyond the circumstantial. There's one piece of evidence that connects Williams with casino skim· ming operations conducted by Civella's gang. Among documents seized in a raid on a crime family member, FBI agents round some handwritten sheets listing the distribution of skimming pro· ceeds according to first names, initials and code names. THE UST NOTED the amounts to be paid to various individuals, and the names of the rec ipients included G -Jl-Cl-11-1-ERS-OI--~ several Civella "family .. members - Nick, Cork, Carl and Pele. One notation designated $1,SOO for "Rancher." Williams is known as a rancher. and accordipg to a still-secret report pre· pared by the Senate's permanent sub· commiUee on investigations, law en· forcement officials have identified "Rancher" as the Mob's code name for Roy Williams. The skim-split sheet also lists $1,000 for "S.A." Sources told my associate Tony Capaccio that these initials iden- tify Sam Ancona, a Teamsters organizer who is close to both Williams and Nick Civella. FBI affidavits say it was An· cona whom Civella called after aUeged· ly setting up a meeting between al· 1 • lorney Morris Shenker and Williams on , , Oct. 12, 1978. The meeting was held in La Costa, , Calif .. and its purpose. according to the 11 FBI. was to have Shenker and Williams discuss ways to get around a court or· de r forbidding a casino loan by the Cen· tral Slates Pension Fund. The day after the meeting, Ancona l' and Williams flew back to Kansas City together. And according lo a General 1 Accounting Office document, the t pen~ion fund"s trustees did indeed try to 1 funnel $91 million to Shenker after the meeting. THERE IS ALSO a wealth of still un- r e leased wi retap evidence involving .. Rancher" in a series of meetings with . - Civella. Dorfman and other organized a crime figures. The meetings were held m 1979 and 1980 to discuss ways of tap· ping into the Centra l States Pension Fund. Footnote: In fa irness to Williams, one misconception should be cleared up Last year. federal investigators im· plied, in testimony before Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga .. that Williams was pivotaJ in the pension fund trustees' approval or a loan for the Tropicana Hotel in Las Vegas . The loan s upposedly gave Civella a foothold in the hotel. But ac- cording to confidential minutes of the Central Slates Pension Fund. the • trustees, including Williams. on Sept. 11. 1975. in fact vetoed the loan to the Tropicana. ,, 'Sin taxes' a safe bet for lawmakers One of the favorite dodges of politi· cians whenever they perceive a need for more taxes, is lo bunt for ways to lax which will cause the least protest. It is for this reason neither this state, the federal government, nor local govern· ments ever develop an overall tax pro· gram which would be falr and equitable to all. One of the most favored taxes over the years bas been the "sin" tax, levy- ing upon those things which are viewed by many as vices. Thus gaming and wagering levies have always been falr game a• are ll· quor and cigarette taxes. THE CURRENT Le11slature t. no dif· ferent. Looking for more revenues they have seized upon liquor and cigarettes as two areu where additional taxes can be imposed without great rltk to themselves from an irate public. The cigarette tax bas a apeclal appeal to the lawmakers since anU-smokint sentiment bu grown considerably in re- cent years. Already carrying a total of 18 cents per pack plus a 6 percent sales tax, the lawmaken plan an additional ten ce11ta a pack on ci1arettes, raising the cost of a 50-cent pack ol cigarettes to 82 cents. Lawmakers estimate this will double the current S26S miJUon annual tax take on cigarettes. Maybe so but there is a law of diminishing returns and no doubt as prices rise due to taxation many will resort to rolling their own as was the cas.e during lhe Great Depression. AND DESPITE the fact that il is estimated that 90 percent of the public ~o partake of afcohollc spirits. lbe >" ' r, ~~: ' .Ull Wlllll ~ f • lawmakers also plan to increase the taxes oo liquor already taxed $10.50 a gallon by the federal and an additional $2 a gallon by the state. plus increased taxes on beer raising the total tax on that beverage to around $1.20 per case. The harshest increase of all was that proposed for wine, raising it from one cent a gallon to 16 cents but pressures from California's huge wine industry will probably reduce that down to a minimal increase of perhaps one cent. But protests from the public against further taxation of spirits and tobaeco will be of no effect, the lawmakers be- ing happily supported by those who are against smoking and drinking and would favor taxes so high as to make the commodities prohibitive. IT IS UNDOUBTEDLY the recogni· Lion of this fact that the liquor and tobacco industries are not fighting the lax proposals as such but the beer In· duslry is waging an all out baWe to pre· vent both earmar.king of the new laxes as well aa the indexing or them. For t})e addition~! beer taxes are 1' sought on the pretense they are needed · / lo finance local alcoholic rehabilitation centers and programs. Cognizant of the fact that earmarked funds have a way of being spent whether they are needed or not, the beer lobby wants the in' cr:eased revenues to go into lhe general fund which would compel the rehab pro· grams to come in and justify their budget requests annually. They also op-l pose indexing because it would provide · ever increasing revenues if inflation continues without the need for justifica-J lion. THEY HAVE A valid point. Ex· perience has shown U\at in every in· stance where revenues have been earmarked for special purposes, money is spent unnecessarily and demands for more funds follow, until the programs become bottomless holes. Book banners on the warpath nationwide Here LI a 10-second quh: Who haa claimed they have a hqly mandate to brlna enlllbtenment and order to socie· ty? Wat tt Adolf Hitler, Ayatollah Cockamamie or Lou Barnes? Now, here ii tbe fun pan of the qui.a. The answer: 11 "Y•" -you whl no mat. these people seeking to ban what you can read. The number ol attempts at book ban· nlna bu, durina these ~even months, Jumped by some 500 percent. Curiou sly. these same ultra- rtghtwlnaers adore the free enterprih· open market syatem when ~plied to toothpute, inf .at formula and gun.a, but not when applied to ideas. TbeJ are, u you muat auapect, foT Ute b..-nl111 of book• and ldeu with whiC!b they diUINe on tM l.roimdl that sex, violence IDd profanity mat be driven out ol 10Ciety. the old, but still valid point lhat. if these book banners are against books contain· lng sex and violence, the Bible should be the first to go. Mor~ to the point. the TV program "Dallas'' which parades all that sex and violence the Moral MaJorlt)l objects to, is consistently 'Yatched by half of the households ln America. It raises the question ol Just how much of a majority the so-called Moral Majority is. -----~--·-------------- • Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT,iWednead1y, June 10, 1981 Controversy seen for hook On male sexuality ... NEW YORK (AP>-Shere Hlte doesn't need "The main reason they had attain was to buttress "There's a whole problem dealing with Shere a passport to contl'overay. She'• a permanent the marrlaae. Hlte's material -lt'a a hard thins to flaure who's citi1en. "I think men and women are very alienated in it," said Dr. Bernie Zilbergeld. a Berkeley Her first encounter was five years ago when today because men have very tom feeUn11 about psychologist who has studied male sexuality. critics lampooned ber retearcb met.hods in the the role of women in today's society," she said. "If .. 1 saw the questionnaire years aao and 1 best-selling book "The Hite Report on Fema.te Sex-they have a wife who doesn't work, then th~y "' uality," which examined the sexual practices of wonder If they are exploitina her. U she does work, didn't want to rill It out." he said. "Most of the women throuab anonymous responses to a ques-a husband might not feel comfortable about that men I knew didn't want to invest the time lo do it. tionnaire. eitbel.'.. You tend to get people who are upset about Now she's back thla Ume with "The Hite Ms. Hite, who bolds a master's dearee in his-somelblng or somebody who wants to show off. Report on Male Sex~ality," which explores every tory from the University of Florida, said she tried When you send out that many questionnaires and corner of the physiology, psychology and practice to match her sample to population statistics of the get so few back, you're pulling from a small aub- of sex, using testimony from lbe men who wrote U.S. In terms of race,_relleion, education, age, In-::~lpol~.~nd it doesn't auarantee a representative in. Some responses are humorous, whUe others are ~ome, and where one hvea. poignant Some border 00 erotica But because the responses were anonymously But Ms. Hite is unflappable in her defense: "I But the method Cor both boob is the same: un-done in writing •. there is the. possibility that some never wanted to do a survey. I didn't want to find scientific. And the results are expected to be the may be fantasies, jo~es, untruths, or that one out what was normal because that reflects a same: best-seWna but controversial. person could have filled out several different culture Ideology and doesn't show what people "I was very shocked last time wheb people forms might want or feel.'' used the word 'unscientific' with my work," Ms. Hite said. "They meant unrepresentative. I did social sciences methodology'. You can't take physical sciences m~thodology and apply it lo social sciences." The current Hite report, like the other Hite re· port, represents an exhaustive effort: more than 100,000 questionnaires asking for anonymous replies to 168 essay questions were sent to-senior citizen centers, churches, colleges and universities around the country. Responses came from 7 .239 men, ages 13 to 97. whose occupations Include car- toonist, butcher, dentist, chem•cal engineer, chairman of the board, police officer , lawyer. mechanic, postal clerk, one vagabond and one "wage slave," resulting in a 1,129-page book. It took five years to complete. And her findings, though not earth-s hattering, should provide good grist for cocktail parties: -Men do not like a "macho" image and think such a person insecure. -Most men think women don't want sex often enough. -Ninety percent of those who responded en- joy masturbation and most of those who said they have sex with a partner four or more times a week masturbate about three times a week. "Society has told men that intercourse is necessary for orgasm and I round most men say· ing they had better orgasms without penetration," Ms. Hite said. Her most surprising discovery, she said, was that 76 percent of men married between two and rive years had had extramarital affairs, suggest ing that fidelity is fast becoming an endangered value' in American marriages. The figure is about 20 percent higher than that round by noted behaviorist Alfred Charles Kinsey. "I was surprised that so many married men who had affairs weren't guilty," Ms. Hite said. DEATH NOTICES Mexico CROW research GLADYS MANN CROW. b~rn Februarv 2s. 1901. funded widow of John Bradford Crow. pass~ awa>: on June Why did Mexico enter 6, ~981. She 1s survived by J a half-century period of children, John Bradford . . Crow. Jr. of San Marino depression starting in Mrs. Millon Reimers. o/ 1810? Rancho Santa Fe. Mrs Crow To find the answer to Vernon of Newport Beach. that question and others • 10 grandchildren, 10 ereat-concerning the 19th cen- grandchildre~. sister Mrs. tury development of Robert Hugg1~ of La~una Mexico, Dr. Jaime E . Beach. Family services Rodriguez_ dean of UC were held at the Balboa Bay 1 1 • ' · · Club on June 9th. In lieu of rv ne s Di vis ton of flowers. family requests Graduate Studies and donations in her name to lhe Research, has been Arthritis Foundation. Inter-awarded a Fulbright- m e nt at Pac ific View Hays Research Grant. Mortuary. The grant will fund a STORUM trip to Mexico during H A R LA N D A LL E N which he will study that STORUM . resident of nation Newport Beach since 1952. · . passed away June 1. 198l He ~as written ex- following a brief illness. He t e n s i ~el y on . t. h e 1s survived by his wife econotruc and political Marie. sons William and development of Latin 11 Rollin Storum and 4 America. grandchildren. Mass of His research in Mex- Christlan burial. Thursday ico, scheduled to begin 11AM at Our f:.ady Queen of in January 1982, will be Angels Catholic Church .. In· carried out at the terment at Pacific View 1 · d · Memorial Park. both in ~shtuto. e Investiga- Newport Beach. In heu of cior:ies ":tstoricas 8:l the rtowers donations may be Un1versidad Nacional made U, lhe North County Autonoma del Mexico in 1 Branch of San Dieg o MexicoCity. Chapter of the American Heart Assoc.. 519 S. Santa C Fe Ave., Vis~. Ca 92083. 08St Pacific View Mortuary. ~=h-re-cto;;;;;rs;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-; students Neptune ~ciety CllaMATlOfl IUlllAL at SEA honored 646-7431 Y-eecM1 MCWtty.., ...-.. Fifteen area students =~:,~,.:lb~y attending Orange Coast eaui.r•rw-'ffll• College have become ~~z•!!iiw~a.~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=c=·'"=·='111='·!!....I permanent members of Alpha Gamma Sigma, a We're Moving to South Coast Plaza and Celebrating with Great Savings in all Departments -for Men, Ladies, Boys, and Girls! AUTHOR BACK Shere Hite .4executed for theft MOSCOW <AP> -A senior state prosecutor and three other men have been put to death ln the southern Soviet republic of Azerbaijan for stealing $2.8 million worth of goods from a knitwear factory, a re- 1 gional newspaper re- ports. The Baku Worker did not say when or how the men were executed. Capital punishment in the Soviet Union is usually by firing squad. ,_CllaOYHHS .._.OADWAY wo.TUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 statewide honorary scholarship organiza- tion. To achieve such status, students must complete at least 12.5 units for each of the last three semesters with a 3 .25 grade point average. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Don't forget to shop at our IALTZIHGHOM SMITH & nmtlU WHTCLff CNAPIL 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 64~9371 ,..c1MOTMlis SNITMS' MOITUMY 627 Mam St Hllnt~11eh In addition to perma- nent membership awards, 204 students qualified for temporary membership for one semester and were honored for being named to the society for two semestera. Students receivin1 permanent mem - berships are: c .... MH• -LHll• Arnel41, 0..,,,.., HUllw, CM'OI AM IC.i ... , AllMMI C. LAY, Crelt W. ~~ 8M latt W. Yelldl. •••U ..... eHO -Orelle ._...,.._ o..r.llJ. ICMll, ,.._fl, ~ ... ~V9'1L..U. • ......... .... ., -..... , ... ,.ICMr .... TM';S. Hlllll. •••.-n .. ecll -"'"" "· w...-, ... ., T, Wllf'lf 111141 MkllMI C.J- USITHI DAILY PILOT .. ,.,, IHULT" lllYICI DlllCTOIY For Result Service Call 642-1671 Iii. Ill Big Mesa Center store for an even greater selection of styles, sizes, and colors for the hole family. ...-imllllll~ -..... . .. . . ......... ~ . . .. ·-·"'"#'-•• ,_ • ._... ...,. lit • • • • • • ,. I , , .. . . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, June 10, 1981 QUEEN IE "I have a headache .. .I have a headache. have a headache ... " • ID Bureau danger DEAR READERS: The Senate finance Committee acted May 27 to cut the budget of the dlvisfon of consumer services by 71 per· cent. If this recommendation ls adopted by the Budget Conference Committee during its m eetings, all consumer protec:tlon programs of the Departme n t of Consu mer Affairs would be either totally eliminated or severely Impa ired, according to the department. The Senate Finance Committee also acted to eliminate the budget of tht> consumer ad· visory council. If you would li ke to express your opinion of this action, the limt> is NOW. Contact your local legislator and write to the me mbers of the conference com mittee listed below. The Assembly version or t he budget maintain!> funding ror the division or consumer services and the consu mer advisory council at the curre nt level. CommJttee members are: Assembl) man J oh n Vasconcellos, State Capitol room number 6026; Assemblyman Charles Im · brecht, room 3013; Sen. Alfred Alquisl, room 5031; and Sen. Willia m Campbell, room 3086. Ad dress committee members by name, State Capitol, room number. Sacramento 95814. DEAR PAT DUNN: I'd like to lose some weight and was amazed at the variety of diet aid piUs and products in the drug store Do any or them really work? How can you tell which ones are effective ? S. 't·· Huntington Bea<'h A panel of experts appointed by the Food and Drug Administration reported there is some evidence tha t two non-prescription drugs are helpful as aids to dieters. They are phenypropanola mine, which also Is used as a nasal decongestant, a nd benzocalne, which is a mild anesthetic sometimes used ln throat lozenges. You may want to check these diet products to see lf these Ingredients are In· eluded ln the m . The panel also was critical of some or the promotlonal claims made for over -the · couater diet pUJs, candles and chewing gum that contained these Ingredients. Be sur~ to check with your doctor before using any product that claim s you will lose weight . . Diplomatic guides DEAR PAT DUNN: lam very interested in preparing m yself for an eventual career abroad in a government position I'd really like to become an ambassador som e day. I am studying French now and plan to go into other languages. Can you teU me where to write or provide further information as to what my course or study should be for this type of career? A.J .. Costa Mesa 'Information about required training for various dip lom atic service positions Is available from the Public Affairs Division of the State De partment, 2201 C St. N. W., Washington, D.C. 20520, and from the Public Inquiries Unit, Office of Public Information, United Nations, N. V. You also could con1ult m aterials in the career library 'at Orange Coast Community College and seek the ad- vice or your college counselor as to the rec- ommended courses and type or degree that would help you attain your career goal. Money order data DEAR PAT DUNN: Can you tell me how to find out IC a money order has been cashed? I purchased one to send with an order for some cookware Crom a mail-order company My merchandise finally arrived after three months, but I'd still like to know about this money order matter. ST , frvme The J>Olll ofJ)ce advises waiting a month after maWn1 a mode)' erder before you han a tracer put OQ it. Take your ruelpt to whe rever yoa parel1Hed "e moaey order and fill out a tracer for m. Anotlter thine to reme111btr II al••>'• to keep a topy of any or· der you le.Mt IO a snalJ·order 'ftrm , end be aure &o record tJae address bi caM problt m• do come ap later. · YOU'H IMVITIO TO A FREE CONTI FORUM discussing selected topics In the commodity markets THURSDAY JUNE I I th 7 30 P M • SAN MARCOS ROOM SOUTH COAST PLAZA HOTEL I~ AT BRISTOL ST COSTA MESA Make reserva11ons by ContlCommodlty calhng (71 4) 231 ·1711 or ~~ ... ~o::P~;°"'l'jfNl"' Cal Wats 80015'-2·1550 eoo11tt"' '''°' s..o..ve INSURANCE CLAIM IN COURT SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA , COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES CASE #2843 40 -1 I 1031 1 FM STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR (?CJc::Jc::J c::> CJ~ c::Jc::::J c:::>c:::Jt::J• c:::J'\) 0 ~ ' FORCED PUBLIC AUCTION At t~ O'llllJtwr\ of the tooch h.a•• no1 v•t ritCtt••9d comP9nt1hOn f,u,., ,.,. in~ut11nu c;on-tp•nv 1h•y heve bffft lott9d to ,.~_. .. mereh.andl.til to ••• .. "'°""~ tu P•v credUOtL HANDMADE ORIENTAL RUGS 8 1raditions... . ---- ' a start at your dinner table. 1 8 . • Ba11ed 30 hOursl •Honey 'n spice Glaze o · 0 0 lncluct.d m th~ 1wc:hon ••II h• 'UIS '" all ,,,.., ~ qv•lit•" fro'" mG•t 'U' ..,.."'"' COUf\1f•et. All ..-..,,.. 1n JNrlfft cond111on A C•mfk'•H ot Au0'4111IC1tV wilt b• •tt-.H•Cf to1 tech pv,-ch ... FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, THE AUCTION WILL TAKE PLACE. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10 AT 8 P.M. HUNTINGTON BEACH INN 21112 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY HUNTINGTON BEACH RUGS MAY BE VIEWED ONE HOUR l'RIOR TO AUCTION Terms: Cash/Check Q A perfect meal for •Spira! sllced for 8fSY serving 0 dd d • Whole or half hams we ings. gra uat wn. •Nationwide shipping service 0 Father's Day or every • Full service Delicatessen day meals •Old wortrt Cheese Shop g ~ri:~i:::~,;;,~~r~~~.:~ "f -~~j:~;. a J700 I . COAST HWY .. C-• def M• f'HOHI 67J.f000 a ~· 0 a 24601 IAYMOHD WAY .. ll TORO ltD~ ll TORO. f'HOHI IJ7-JIJJ a lt06' l lACH ILYD ... GARFtllD, HUMTINGTOH llACH, f'HOMI 14'-1575 a O· 0 0 0 0 lnfor m•tlon: (213) 709-0028 A, A a. A Loqutd•tors·Auctt0n-1 a Also Anaheim, Orange, Rancho Mirage, La Habra, San Diego, Lakewood D n Westlake Village, North Hollywood, Woodland Hills, Santa Monica, Pasadena l1 I D o o o c:x::>c::loo o ooo oc:x=Jc::>c::Jo o oocooLJ . We'd like to introduce you to your neighbor; Hoag Hospital. You and we live in a very special place-Orange County, California, U.S.A. Most of our neighbors agree-just about the best physical, recreational, educational and vocational envi - ronment on earth. , Living in such a very special place call for a very special ho - pital. You've got one. Hoag. Our full name is Hoag Memorial Hospital-Presbylerian, and since 1952 we have been offering the best in edu~tional as weU as remedial health care prog(ams to lengthen and improve the quality of the already fortunate liv of us Orange Countians. ' In future weeks we'll be telling you about some of these pro- grams and services we offer to help keep your family healthy and safer ... and, of course, introduce some of the very special people who perform those services and program ... not only our SOO member medical staff, ou r 1800 employees. tiut our over 31000 volunteers as well. It's these three groups-together-who produce the synergism that makes Hoag unique. "Of the people, by the people, for the people" -that historic phrase reaUy applies here. Created by the generosity of Orange County residents, operated by an Orange County professional staff and volunteer , non-profit for the benefit of our Orange County neighbors. We thought you'd like to know. HOAG HOSRllAl · HOAO MEMORIAL HOSPITAL PRESBYTERIAN 301 Newport Boulevard Newport Beach, California -· ....---.. -. :.-• -------~""-"' I Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1991 COMICS FEATURES TELEVISION 84 BS 87 Irvine car dealer's product isn't a gas to drive ... B9 Foreign, U.S. shoemakers locked • in combat The number of plants in America has fallen to half ; ·13,000 have lost their jobs because of shutdowns M cSHERR YSTOW N , Pa. (AP> -Ten miles from where Brig. Gen. George Custer's trqops met Confederate forces in the Battle of Gettysburg, the Sylvania Shoe Manufacturing Corp. is waging a war of its own. Like other American shoemakers, Sylvania is locked in mortal combat with legions of foreign manufacturers for sur· vival in the $17 billion·a·year U.S. shoe market. "The imports . . are killing us," said manufacturing vice president W. Ray Recard Jr., adding that few days pass when a salesman doesn't bring back a new low-cost imported shoe and ask if Sylvania can match its price. Sylvania sells all its shoes to retailers, who in turn sell them under their labels to lhe public for about $16 to $35 a pair Partly due to import pressure, the number of U.S. shoemaking companies has dropped by half -lo about 300 the last two decades. Sylvania began feeling the pinch of import competition in the 1960s when low·priced shoes from Europe began trickling into lhiJ country. The trickle rose to a torrent in lhe '70s as shoes from Korea, Taiwan. Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, the Philippines and Eastern Europe made major inroads. The American Footwear In· du stries Association says for eign-made shoes, which held 4.3 percent of the U.S. market in 1960, claimed 49 percent two de cades la ter -costing 13,000 American jobs in four years alone. "It's a very difficult situation, and the U.S . manufacturers have got to be creative," said Michael Levine, a Sylvania engmeer. Sylvania, a closely held cor· poration founded 35 years aao. says it is battling imports on several fronts -by increasing labor productivity, m~ernizing plants and marke ting ag· gressi vely. The compan y's push for modernization to hold off the Im· ports began about 15 years ago, said Recard. Since then, productivity per worker has increased more than 40 percent, he said. The time it takes to produce an average or· der. transforming uncut piles of leather into cases of shoes ready for shipment, has fallen from six weeks to three weeks, he said. Sylvania has invested in automatic stitching machine tra n sporters that allow seamstresses to remain seated while work comes to them to carry haJf.finished shoes from machine to machine, an automatic materials handling system to expedite shipping and handling and a centralized warehouse Recard said in the last five years. Sylvania invested $2.5 million to upgrade and modernize its five plants in Pen· nsylvania and Maryland. Meanwhile, the· industry has been waging a political war. After four years of quotas on shoes from two tough com· petitors -South Korea and Taiwan U.S. shoemakers are asking President Reagan to ex· tend the impart protection. to give them more time to put their house in order. Foreign makers, domestic im· porters and some U.S. retailers oppose the trade barriers as h armful to American con- sumers. Sylvania makes casual shoes ror men, women and children for s uch well-known retailers as Sears Roebuck and Co.. Thom McAn, J .C. Penney and Kinney. It is a middle-sized company with annual sales of about $35 million. Although imports have caused production to level off. in recent years. Sylvania has enjoyed con· tinuous growth since its incep- lion, said president Allan Pearlstein, who credits the com· pany's insistence on low over· head, good sales and efficient manufacturing. ·'Innovative management, that has a lot to do with the reason we're still here today," said his son, Bob Pearlstein, a Sylvania sales offi cer Sylvani a reflects what the U.S. International Trade Com· m ission, which recommends possible quotas to the president, says has been a real effort by U.S. manufacturers to adjust to intense foreign competition dur· ing the year s of import protec· lion. The ITC. tn a recent report to Reagan, said U.S. shoemakers have substantiaJly increased in· vestments in plants and equjp. ment, and the mvestments are only now beginning to pay off. At Sylvani a, Recard pointed proudly to a computerized m ac hine tha t can do 1,250 stitches a minute, guided by a cassette that tells it the precise pattern for a certain shoe style and size. He noted the . "lasting" of a shoe, in which lhe upper portion Is a ltached to the "last," or foundation. once required 12 st e ps and has been reduced through modernization to four. But labor costs are the key to the import problem, said Allan Pearlstein. "There's no way that we can compete with the No. 1 Asian countries where t heir wage scales are as low as one-tenth of ours," he said. Pearlstein said the outlook is * Employee at Sylvania Shoe Manufacturing Cory. operate• automated 1titching machine in company's McSherrystown, Pa. plant. Automat1on wiU Mlp tncre0$e production for firm battling low-cost imported shoe1. ble ak for U.S. producers unless the government stems the im· ports. He believes quotas must be permanent. "The same investments are being made over there," he said. "They have the same technology * we do. You combine that with extremely low labor costs, and there's no way we can com· pete." Although it found the U.S. In· dustry is still "by no means healthy,'' the ITC last month * r ecommended an ''orderly marketing agreement" with South Korea be allowed to ex· pire as scheduled June 30. The commission urged Reagan to ex· tend for three years an agree ment with Taiwan. * Oassic shoes never walked away With so many 'in' styles it's difficult to buy the wrong footwear Dr. William A. Rossi, a Cohasset, MO$s. podiatmt, holdl 1keleton of leg and foot. Rossi, editor of a footwear column, say1 thne i3 a cliche which says "there is a fortune for the guy who invent1 the shoe that's bigger on the inside than on the outside." NEW YORK <AP) -Cowboy boots have walked in from the range. Deck shoes have walked off the oceanfront. But the classics -the penny loafer. the pump, lhe wing tip and the sling never walked a way. Style-conscious America is covering its feel and filling its closets with a wide arr;ty of footgear. from white canvas shoes on rubber soles to lace.up, round·toes black oxfords on leather. The Western look is "in." But so is the preppy look . And the classic look. And the continental look . There are so many looks it's hard to decide what to buy - but also hard to buy the wrong thing. \ "No one 'look' is outstand· ing," says Mike Federman, spokesman for Thom McAn, the· Worcester , Mass.·based com· pany with 1,250 retail stores na- tionwide. "It's becoming very * * * Running shoe 'ideal' Study of biomechanics of feet makes for quality By tbe Auocl1ted PreH Americans buy pair after pair of good-looking, but not always well-fitted, shoes off shoestore racks. But podiatrists think a near-perfect shoe can be found -ln athletic stores. "The nmning shoe, believe It or not, is the ideal shoe that we've been able to come up with to this day," says Dr. Mark Sussman of Wheaton, Md., co- author of the boo.k "How to Doc· tor Your Feet Without the Doc· tor." Runninc shoes combine li1ht welebt and nexlblllty with good Loe ind heel aupport. Their solid sol ea provide extra stability. Their thick heel• lnaulate the root from the ahocll of ha"9 pavement Podlatrilt.s aay the makera of runnlna aboel are amon1 the few lbat atudied the biomecbanlca ol feet to dealrn better shoes. Paradoxically, the Jontn1 craze that created t his "perfect" shoe also baa boosted the number or foot injuries, greatly swelllna the average podiatrist's business. "Sports medicine has put podiatry on the map, I agree," sa'/s Sussman. "But that's not the reason we recommend the running 1hoe. If people could work in runninl shoes on a day· to-day basia, we could save an awful lot of fatteue at the end of· the day." For all their benefits, runnini shoes aren't aelUng Uke they once did. ''The boom is over. Our eales have leveled off the last she moQUaa,'' 1ay1 Hal Stern, 1naH1er OI Runner'• World, a New Yort Cit)' store that aelb 1boea and other runnlna •P· parel Tbe Joaln1 aboe Hln boom, wbldt .befan .ln the mtd·lt'TOll, ta at Jeaat pVUy .... .,..lbl• for .. lea ol athletic footwear Jwnp. Ing from 60 mlllion pairs in 1979 to 78 million last year . And many of those shoes -more than 70 percent, according to in· dustry estimates -were made by forelan companies. One of the top sellers is Adidas. "Our business is on an upsw· ing, but the runnin1 shoe busi· ness baa leveled off,'· says Ralph Llbonati, president of Ub- co, the East Coast dlatributor of Adi du sportswear. ·'There were people who thought Jog1lng would be very good for their health and their aex life and everythlne e\ae, an<l now they've just stopped nm· Dini," he aald. Ankle ind knee lnJurle1 claimed some or the otben. "T'-1 lber.'a a blll mai'llet ol people ,.bo JUll put Cll\ 1 aboe to be wlt.b·lt, who were weannc athJeUc aboet and other appar9) Juat to alt on the patio or mow the lawn," Llbonatl said. difficult to be a shoebuyer for a shoestore." Western wear is gaining a n a· tionwide following. And what do cowpokes wear on their feet? Cowboy boots, of course. "It's Reagan, it's 'Dallas' ... and it's everyplace." Federman says .. So what h as become the "look" in the birthplace of western wear -Texas and Colorado? Boal moccasins, believe it or not. In a dozen dif. ferent colors. ··It's the look eve r ybody wants." says Bill Bullock Jr. a clothing store m a nager in Steamboat Springs, Colo. The granddaddy of the boat moccasin is the Top-Sider. in· vented by Paul Sperry in 1937 for yachtsmen. "We can 't make them fast enough," says John Phelan, vice president and treasurer of the Stride Rite Corp .• which makes the Top.Sider. The growing popularity of casual shoes has spread even to the upper reaches of the retail price r a ng e. Bally of Switzerland has sever'al Unes of s hoes with rubber soles and lightweight leather uppers sell· Ing for $80 retail. Others or Madison Avenue's chic abops are showing the weekend shoes as well. "Casuals are ln. Leisure, lifestyle, country club casual," says Mary Lee, spokeswomen for Bally. "Our aboes have always been a dressy casual. Ligbtwelg ht. A continental look." Bally, whose men'• and WO\Jlen'a shoes 1enerally run about $1'0 a pair, has 21 owned and operated stores In the Unit· ed States, and volume haa tripled in five ye•"· Other Im· ported aboea a.re makin1 stmll~ atrldea Into th• U.S. market, analyata say. Americana spent more than $11 bUllon on footwear lut yea.rt or about '18 each1 compano witta SUS bllUon Ui• year before. Tak.IAC lnnauon lnto ace<Hmt.. ltowever, Amertcau spent l• inl ... One reason may be the lD·. creaaanc pop"larlty or cuual shoes, which are less expensive. But for working h o urs , Americans are choosing more expensive shoes and classics they know will be in style for awhile. "People are looking for shoes that last," says Carol Simantz, fashion spokeswoman for Sears Roebuck and Co. "We're finding that people are buying better shoes, a little more expensive shoe, and on~hat will wear." Wing-tips for men. Pumps, with low heels, for women. Thom McAn's male customers are buying more dress shoes and "they want a ~hoe that will gc. * * * with anything, so they're going for the pretty standard dress shoe,•· Federman says. "Classic. That really sums up our women's collection says Ms. Lee. "There's nothing here that will be wrong next year." Open-toed sling s hoes for women are particularly popular, but so are the traditional pumps. The heels are lower and the spectrum of colors range from basic maroon to apricot and pink. Even men's shoes are turning to lighter colors. Taupe is popular. So is aqua. * * * Orthopedic-looking footwear popular NEW YORK <AP) -The spike heel and needle toe are still with wi, but Americans may be wearing the most roomy, comfortable and healthful shoes they've ever laced on or slipped into, the nation's root doctors say. The workmanship and material of the averaae mus· produced shoe has Improved s t eadily in r ecent decades, podiatrists s&id in interviews. Even f uhion, wblch unW re- cently sneered at shoes that doc· tors would a.,plaud, seems to be . reformina. ''Shoes certainly are 1 lot~· ter than they were 10 years ago;• says Merritt Ialand, n1. pod\atrist Dr. Richard Scbuster. ''The slzes are more 1~. the ahanks are more aoUcl and people 1ren 't aa concerDed, about wearing Ueht shoes wttb polnted toet." Much of the impetu1 for chanee baa come from tile youn1, wbo have made "an e.x· tremely ortbopedlc-lootlnf ahoe'' an ac~able •l1l•, a.,. Or. EUubetb Roberta o1 New York. ''l'bere bu beep mon ol a tendency to we..-a tie abM with a wide toe, and the older people tend to follow about a year or two behind what the younger people do," says Dr. William Munsey of Worthington, Ohio, past president of the American Podiatry Association. The nation's 8,500 podiatriat.s have a special concern for the foot -their practice is limited to It. Four yea.rs of speciallied tralnln1 1fter colle1e en1blea them to do anytbio1 to tbe foot an M.D. can, except 1mputate it. Podiatrists interviewed by The Associated Presa aren't thrilled with every trend ln lhoe fashion. Cowboy boots, for example, 1et ae.nerally poor maru for their pinched toes llld hllh heels. So do the lnc!reuln1 num· bera of aboea wltb DOn·breathinc man-made uppen, which don't ahape t.bemselves u readily to the foot. u leather and an a tommon ICIW'H ol 1mell1 r.tt. Dr. BenJamlll Kautb mata. tabu American· &Dd CuldM- made ahoel .are ''itW tbia bll&'' for Amerlea.n f .. t. But ot11Mi pocllat.Nb 181 a ebeap....,. II a cheap aboe, • aa.U. ,.._. It la made. .. SOCK I T T O 'EM DEPT. - Sometimes you get the impression that some of the people who live in ED\erald Bay just out.side of Laguna Beach are a touch snooty. For starters, you know, it's a private enclave where they have gate guards and streets with bumps in them that ~·· ~\ T-DM_M_U_RP-Hll-1 fi41t _, -_J they own themselves, nice tennis courts and their own ,little cove with ll sandy white beach. In Emerald Bay, the old money drives a Ford station wagon and the kids have a BMW each. The new arrivals are in Mercedes or Rolls. When you ask them where they live, tfiey answer simply, "The Bay." Un· derline The. I'VE GOT LOTS of friends in Emerald Bay and I think it's a pretty "Look out, Alke! TM coo.dal czar• are ltockmg "°"' tUt:lc." neat place. I like riding around in their old Ford station wagons and malting fun of their fire department. It is, however, their own fire depart- ment. Others, however, don't share my view. 'Ibey bate Emerald Bay and all it represents; the vile, despicable rich; sale behind their guarded gates, sipping from chilled glasses, lounging on the beach and counting their coupons. Vile and hateful. Capitalist terribleness of the first order. People get worked up like this and ,,,,,_/: . ALTA HM llLD elDUR elEESI regularly 2. 95 lb. "• 1 1.f, ''· ftarllar View Center Mt-1733 1'21 SM Drive, Nnrpor1 BNcll Loala ... O.. GRAND OPENING S5' .... -. 1-. IOA.M,7 P.M. · OUI 20% OFF ·=: fl& BDMm -BSTll ,. ... . ...a.11.a11Te..,I too.UftlftM8~•M'IPIOll ..... M ~MILTN.OfM0/1111_. Jo's Knit Wit Ut t. 17• St. tJt c..t. ..... 141J477 ~cue'" 'I~,,, .--...... ..._to experience our May, June SPRING SPECIALS. COMPLETE SKIN CARI! By Kathy SpeallllzJng In: ., ... ~ ......... ~ ..... • _ .... Clliillllll. ~. ~ • • Aldllllt•.-. NAIL CARE Tux & Tailor's Shop ~ 'Fish ·Fry proceeds .. dip Costa Me1a event ra,ses $130,000, down 119,000 · turn colon. Mlinly 1reen, wttb envy. TIDS MUST BE T&UE for a majorl· ty ol members of the re1tonll Coutal Commi11ton and those bureaucratic functlonarlea they call their 1taff. Color them Emerald Green. For years, the coastal czars bav~ been trying to fi1ure a way to force Emerald Bay. people to lfdnt a public easement through their private etreeta to the beach below. Since Emerald Bay was built before most anything along this coast.line, and ,certainly before these bureaucratl were even nasty dreams, they've had a tou1h time forcing the public right-of .way. Now just this week, the reJlonal Coastal Commission majority rejected Orange County's land use plan for the Emerald Bay-Allview Terrace area. THE REASON? Because the county plan doesn't contain a provision that would force confiscation of a public right-of -way into Emerald Bay the Nery next time the community association tries to get a county building permit for anything. Don't try to build any tennis courts or rebuild the clubhouse or zappo! It's land theft time. Actually, we should probably ex· amine the abysmal stupidity of what the regional Coastal Commission czars want. They want access to a beach where there is no parking except on the most dangerous S.curve in the Orange County sector of Pacific Coast Highway. That's for starters, THE BEACHFRONT RULERS seek this confiscated access in the name of "the public" -that's you and me -so visitors can jam into a little cove that is already utilized by 1,500 members of the community that is already there. Meanwhile; immediately next door to Emerald Bay, the state has opened up a public beach park at El Morro, Crystal Cove and Scbtcbman's Cove where they already have inadequate public parking, a few scattered outhouses, no public con- cessions and the potential this summer for the biggest mess in the history of our coastline. And against this backdrop·, the state beach czars want to do the same thing to Emerald Bay. Of course they do. The Emerald Bay people have a nice place now. And you can't have that. So join me with Alice as we wander through the looking glass . Wbtl• Cotta MH•·Nawport Harbor Ltona Club mtmbtr1 1old more ftth dlMtrt than ever at thla year'• Nth annual nah P'ry In Colt• Mffa, 1rot1 pro- cud1 are down • notcb, a 1pollffman aaJd Monday. Early tabu11Uon1 lndlut. t.bt club wtlJ aroe1 about tiao 000 tht1 year from 111 event.a tncf ud· )n1 carnival rldH and con- ce11lon1, down about tit,000 from tut year'• 1t7ur11. Laat y11r'1 t forta netted $53,000 for charity. Net flprea for thl• year's thrH·day event that tndtd Sunday won't be available for at leHt a week, of. flctalJ lndicated. The Ft1h Fry and Parade ex· trava1uu:a, lar1e1t annual com· munlty event held In Coat• Meu, features a baby contest, the select.lon of Ml11 Mermaid and Mias Costa Meaa -a double title -and a parade down Harbor Boulevard to Lions Park in the downtown area. Lions Club officials have re- j lt11td a lilt of tbh )'tAl''I wtD· nett who participated In the 180·ent.ry event. They art: Banh Ana Wind a, band 1w••P1tlket trophy· Ettancla ffiMh School, belt hl•h achool band. Maran•th1 Chrlatlan Academy of Santa Ana, bat Junior Nth band; · Z·Bee Band ot Cerrlt.ot, belt lntarmedJ•ta band; March Air Force BHt Band, flrat place In the "open" cateaory; Garden Grove Stnwberry Feallvai, aweepstakea noat; City of Coata Meu, float theme wlMer; International Guiding Eyes, civics noat; Girls Club of the Harbor Area. best youth or religloua float; Bob's Bia Boy, beat com· merclal noat; City of Westminster, best city· sponsored noat; El Bekal Shrine Temple, Assemblyman due at :tJCI graduation Assemblyman John Vascon· cellos, D-San Jose, will be the keynote speaker at UC Irvine's 16th commencement Saturday at 4 p.m. in Campus Park. I Valley fire rating wins class boost The Insurance Services Office bas upgraded Fountain Valley's fire protection classification from Class Five to Class Three, city officials report. The new classification is ex- pected to result in lower rates for owners of commercial and industrial businesses in the city who are insured with companies that use the Insurance Services Office rates. The Insurance Services Office is an evaluating agency that classifies cities in the areas of risk management. The evaiua- tion focuses on the quality and capabilities of the local fire de- partment, water system and emergency communications system. Student speakers at the com- mencement, where almost 2,D> undergraduate, graduate and medical students will be awarded degrees, will be Robert A. Kuntz of Fountain Valley and Daniel L . Johnson of Los Angeles. Dr. C. Everett Koop, surgeon general-designate of the United States, will speak at the UCI College of Medicine's present&· tion of candidates, Friday at 4 p.m. in Campus Park, the center of the university. Also Friday, Phi Beta Kappa wi 11 initiate 117 nominees at ceremonies in the Fine Arts Village Theater al 6:30 p.m. Then at 8 p.m., an honors coo- v o ca ti on will be held in C rawford Hall. Students 'graduating summa cum laude, magna cum laude and cum laude from various· schools and programs will be honored. Also at the event, members of Phi Beta Kappa and Eta Kappa Nu, an electrical en1ineering honor society, will be rec- ognized. · , Prior to Saturday's commence· menl, a reception honoring the graduates will be held from 2·3 p .m . in the Backlot Restaurant, University Center. -ttOW ... ~ HU"-ti"1qto"' Bea.®~ FOot\tO.\~ Vo,\\eq •.• 6!1/tUili 'PRODUCE! \ La New erop II *IGO v111.e. t ipe 4 .... ,. l'Ele.llES .• ~ -ClRTAWDPE .... {p'll .. <:?ltMki, er1sp II ,.. GO sweet; ~1~1& 1;1f} -LEHUCE.~~ -APRICllS ... -- Anabeim, btlt drum and bull• corpe: &scallbura of Rancho Cucamon1a, beit percussion 8roup: Garden Grove Elka Lod&e, bt1t clown IJ'OUP; Lecton of Honor, El Bekal of Anaheim, best novelty 1roup; I John Cana'• Buick racer, via· ta1e 1909, best anUque auto; I Brion Muo1ey of Estancia Hl&b School, best high scbooJ drum major ; I Dana Bott, Maranatha Cbria· tlan Academy, best junior blab drum major; 0 re1 Rock.ford of tbe Santa Ana Wlnda, best youth drum ma- jor; Mel Susitan, March Air Torce Bue, best military drum ma- jor; Karen Dick• of Maranatba Chriatian Academy, best junit' majorette; Donald Garcia of Walnut Hip School, best solo major; Maranatba Chriltian Academy, best junior majorette It.earn; Continental Cadettes of Hunt· lngton Beach, best senior ma· jorette team; Sun Seekers of Fountain ·Valley, best junior majorette corps; Pal Twirlers of Placentia, best senior majorettes corps; W esternett.es of Costa Mesa, best senior drill team; Westminster Coronettes, best junior drill team; Edwards Air Force Base, best military drill team; Santa Ana Winds, best tall· flags drill team: Irvine Police Depart*nt, best color guard; Bobby Vigil of Santa Fe 1 Springs and Clarence Sultzer of Montebello, best equestrian division marshals; E .P.J. Co rral No. 20 of Sunland, best mounted color guard; Modj eska Maveriks of Orange, best mounted group; Betty and Ed Tilisty of Yucaipa, best matched pair; Linda Rombaugh of Fontana, best fancy Western equestrian lady; Harold White of Ontario, best 1fancy equestrian man; I Cindy Vigil of Santa Fe Springs, bes t Spanish open equestrian; Darryl Nelson of West Covina, best novelty equestrian; . Jana Morino of Los Alamito., best parade horse. cars•bikes• •skateboards• ' trucks.baby carriages•tea carts•trikes rollerskates• I I walkers•toys •wagons•••• scooters*hot 1 1 rods*coupes• trallers•hard I tops•convert- lbles•motor • homes•tawn mowers• 11 mos •corparate headquarters •garden carts Model A's•••• •typlngtables wheelbarrows• recreational vehlcles*golf carts*model tralns*bikes *pianos•cars refrigerators •skates•••••• If lt'sgot wheels, you'tt move · It faster In a Dally Piiot classified ad.call t>d-5678 and a friendly ad· vlserwHt help you turn yOU r wheels Into · cash. . ! P . ' r1.nce s l>i rtl1d<iv • '110 j •llSS' J.O~I H >N \I' 1 Six l\ ,\l':!r!\ a~u totlay. Pnn<"c l'hihp, the Duke I) I Ed I II h u I' ' It ·' II ii • h ll ,, i> ~ n cl 11{ Ii I I I a lr1. s Q11N.'ll t:l11:al1t•tlt 11. \o\ .,.., lt11111 n11 <1 d111111g 111on1 l il hie> I l \'or I 11 (; rl'f'l'I.' 1'111~ 1111 theta <:hould ht' 1 .. ..,-.; 01 .1 ro) ul fam1l) II S Th<' 11hh ·rm of l'nnre \ndr t \\ 111 (:n •'< t' ''ill 111•·.,it.~ 111 lht• Rc1\al \ 'l'H ld!lllC' <.;111•11•1\:. 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"hose 1th h1rth1ia~ has pr 11mpt1 ,, r Ill\ tr l;utes J ti(J µ1.1ll!ei; in the llntrc;h prr ~ I' l ti I µ \\ cl s IJ U I II l tt l'r lllCl'Sl> \li{C of Bat l1·n burg on a dining rnoni tal J..: l1l'l'uUsf.' a l<•t a I rlo<'lor thought it n Hll'l' ... u1t .. l IL' than <.in up,t .1 u:. ~ lroo111. I .i::.t vt.'a:-he ·1ttcn<INI I' I I lf11 i,1i fUlll'ltoll5, <;:J( lo\\ 11 • I R!) t Jnq11t I' and "' .. ,I 011 l l l\ 1.'fSC<.iS \ ll>· .r . m 1 I, I 1 l! h I m ltH· 1 tt•st nh•mht>r nl thl• , al fumil\ Miletary spe di g e1)~ ee l S J < l K II 0 L M . \\ t•c k n \ J• 1 The IA 111"11! •Ill<> of m1lltarv "I n !11 runninp at ii , 11 t n11ll1on a n11 nnt • 1 hl ~l"l kholm I i I 1 11 1 1 o 11 .t I I' 1.• a c: t• B··~t.u 11 Ir trt111e sa1tl 111 1l~ 1 •tli 111nuiJI report· In 1'~8'1 irm~ spf'nding ,.. o I '" 1 ll 1 oppNI $500 h1ll1r n he institutt! '!>.ltd nd '' CXJ>eC'lt»d lo r r \\ \'Ith tnl l"<'llSed I S o.;1•1•11d1rig \l.hrch the S11\"1t'L" ari• t·xpcrtcd to folio.\ flll're h.1s he~n an in· 1 1 a:.111g mihl;.iriiation 1•f l lw pl.11wt during the I.1st JO c irs." satd the I n "t I I u' t ~ F T an k !Lt rn;•h\ !'ht• arms tr.ult.> "went out of cnntrol'' 1n the l~Jio .... he said. and • I h~1 c is a drift in v. orld :u m:.imt>nl trends a\\ a~ from OU('lcar de \4'rrc>OC(' LO nuclt!IH ' (I gh lint( " PATIO OR SAND CHAIR OUTDOOR FURNITURE RIG.1.79 6'' • S1urcly tubular olum1num lromo webbed colorful teat YOUI & bock with cool to lhe touch plo•••< orm •••Is Save• CHOICE GENERAL ELECTRIC FOOD PROCESSOR REG. 59.99 4999 II' like hovon g on exlro hond •n •"e k11 chen This mul1o u•• appliance chops, 111· ces blends m"•es . WEBER 22 .... 1 /2 IN. KETILE BARBECUE RIG. 69 .99 54'' Heavy porceloon. -clod steel, top & bottom venlt. osh cotcher & cooking lid to 1eol 1ulc•~· STURDY WOOD FRAME METAL FOOTLOCKER REG . 21.99 14'' 81g 30 1cl 6°"12 tturdy bu.It locker hos dust proof closure & lock with • hosp Blue or Gr-n. AM/FM HEAD PHONE PERSONAL RADIO llG. 19.99 148' lightwe19ht, ••II ·con· .7' tolned radio features • quollty tound I podded eor cups . 'PHONE SlnER' ANSWERING MACHINE Simple to op.rote Eosy plug-In inatol· lotton. Never miu o meuog• ogoln I 69'1 "CHARLESTON" SHO•t SLEEVE DRESS SHiit REG. 4'' 6.99 Short 11-.ve poly/<ottoft In White, P'oatelt ot •1rlpn. Ne<k 1l1H l-4°I12 to l1. MEN'S CASUAL KNIT SHIRT REG . 5'' 7.99 Fo1hlon poly /cotton with r~t rontrost color tipped 1IMYe1 I coltor. S·M·L ~ ........ ""---·-.-.. THE fi\MILt' c1aca;1 by Bil Keane "I like broccoli OK . My taste bugs don't like it." t ~:\R'9 .\Dl'KE by Brad Anderson J • l t i f I , e·IO ~ "Nothing can hold Marmaduke when the Ice cream truck comes by!" .ll'DGE PARKER THE REAOON I DIDN'T TELL 'fOO AOOUT THAT WAITR£55 te I DIDN'T THINI\ IT IMPORlANl.' 50Dlmp 51 "KlllMe -·· DOWN • Audition 2~• 3 8qulndlt9d 4 -tfle IN UNITED F-MtuteS~ r~·· Pl.lull 8oMd s,.... 27Amend 8 lmplled 21 Yllld 1 T1mbN 2t .... '*' • Slct.utlll 308'11p'•P<* t 1Mo 9f tld • sa (lpelm 10MllllllC S3T .... IO ",.., °°" ,. ... • 34 Mtclft""' t3 ,......,,.,. 31 l<lnf OI .. ,........,. 37-~ 21 --... 40 Ollllll•• 21fl'-.,~ ......... ~ 4a """°" BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "I don't know who he la, but he's bffn hanging around here a lot lately." Hank Ketchum by Ferd & Tom Johnson Now MAY8e ALL Yoo G~NTLEMEN C~ iMINK -=--=--.-.... .ABoOT BOYING A 81EP. -~~~rwo. ~~~~ '.\.\'.\('l ' I DION TGET THE POINT OF THAT JOKE NANCY TOLD ME ORA BB LE ~'41 1Ct1'f'f. ~~OYER~ I tAK'f SL£"'~ 'fOO'~E M0&61~U., 1\I& ~£ etO! ~ ' AH---NOW GET IT GOC)OWfi(D/ HJOl ~ "IX'llNO it) 6CJICJeJ i rr Ol'f'! 1 IM!~ .. CJ/F 6eCDNO I ~11.0MCoC>! J ~1lmrar .~ "-"' --~.._.._......,..._.._w_...,.~~~~~~~-~ ------- HAR-HAR- HO-HO-HO by Charles M. Schulz o ... -·-·-... by Ernie Bushm1ller I'VE GOT iO LEARN TO THINK FASTER OR RUN FASTER by Gus Arriola by Tom Battuk ~Et..>'VE BE.EN IN H~ M.>IN(;, 5~ INVADERS roR PRACT'IC.AU.4 "THE 00~ W ! ! f/10U6Hf fHE4'D NEVER. LEAVE ! M1sssssssH •'SO WHA,.- AM :X:: S 'POSec:::> 1"0 5AY ~ FOR BETTER OR t'OR 1'0 R8t; by Lynn Johnston 1':0,00'PJ ~ THINK WOMEN WERE PVi Ofll 'l'H\S ERR'll-t To SERE "Ms-4? IF I COOK~ CLEAN l'fS 0ECAUSE I on:a: 1b DO 00-t'(ll"eEOl)SE l PM ~R'llENT! )bu 010Ni- TELLMe.~ WAS''ONEOF lfiose.; Spoileli girl, no dignity DEAR ANN LANDERS: Barbara bu bffll ao- lna with Mel for three yean. Sbe comes home alter wort, IUIPI her aupper down lo IO mlnutea, ruabea out and retums a1 U p.m . or m1dllJ.cht. On Frlday and Saturda)' nl&bta ahe doeln't come home at all. She ataya wttli Mel. He Uveia with b.lt parents and two brothera. Mel'• bedroom ls ln the cellar and t.bat'a where they aleep. Barbara ls 22. Sbe bu been worktq for three yeua and hasn't saved a penny. She apendl her lllUlllll entire salary on herself and her boyfriend. (She phones him every morning to make sure be aets up and goes to work.) Last year Barbara got loto debt $1,400 and I helped get her out. She owes me $800. Thia alrl doesn't contribute a penny to the household. Thank God, J don't need it. My wife does all her laundry and cleans her room. Now Barbara want.a a big wedding, and you know bow much that would coat. What is your opinion of this whole mesa? - ANTHONYX Dear Aatboay : Same aoag. Second verse. Spoiled girl. Uaed to getfulg ... doen't Ir.Dow llow to give. Wanta to do as abe plea.es ud doeaa't care what anybody. thln.lta. (Sleepln1 ln tlle baae· meat wltll ber boyfrie:ad yet! Where'• Iler dlgaJ. ty!) Yoa aren't golq to cb•1e ber, bat yo. 1boald lnalst that •be repay the $811 -wblcb wW 10 '°ward ber weddtng -11 you feel like gima1 ber oee. And make It clear, NO FINANCIAL HELP after abe marrle. -or yoa'U wind ap npportlnl ber and Mel forever. DE'AR ANN LANDERS: My mother·in·law just called again and I'm about ready to explode. Every spring she phones to uk if my husband bas scheduled his summer vacation. Then she arranges hers to coincide with ours. For the past 10 years, this scenario has been replayed: She invites herself up to her brother's home, 500 miles away, and calls to say we have all been invited to spend our vacations there. She wists that my husband drive her because she is .. too old" to take a bus or tr.,tn. (She is 60 and a widow of lS years.) Out of eullt, we take her. While my husband entertains his mother, I cook and clean and make sure our children don't make my mother·in·law nervous. Last summer I told my husband I was tired of bis mother's demands on us and bis cowardice toward her, and it was t.be last vacation we were going to spend that way. He agreed and promised we would have our own vacation tbis year. Now here we go again: My mother-in-law is calling a~1 our vacation plans and be baa not yet told her that we ere doing something different this year. When I volunteered to speak to her it almost started World War III. He is afraid I wouldn't handle it tactfully. Short of telling him that the children and I will go off on our vacation without him ii he insists on allowing bis mother to trap us again, what can I do ? I 'm waiting for your answer . - SECOND-HAND ROSE Dear ao.e: No&Jabag. So go lkad ud •alle tile declaratloa -bat be prepared to follow tltroap. H 1oa lume aacJt aa aJU.at.. alHl cblckm oat, yoa are shack wt&ll die arru1emeat for We. DEAR ANN LANDERS: It burns me up when people write in and criticize your advice. Folks who write lo and ask for your help value your judgment and have faith in you. The others don't need to read the column. Get annoyed when those jerks from South Bend or Yonkers or St. Cloud chew you out for something you said just because they don't happen to agree with you. Why don't you tell them to shove it, instead of being · so polite? - LAKELAND, FLA., FOLLOWER Dear Lakeland: I appreciate yov aapport, bat aometlmes tltoae folk• from Soath Bud, Yonllen and St. Cloud are right. I lean from tbem Hd llope they never stop writing. Bat thaab for look· lag out for me, pal. Do fPI' feel owlcward, ulf-coudolu -loMl~? Welcome to the club. There'• help for~ in Ann Lan· dert' booldd, "The Key to PopWari~." Snd 50 cent. with flOUT r~lt and a long, damped, Nlf-oddreued envelope to Ann Landen, P.O. 80% 11'95, Clricago, IU. 60611. .......... "" ,.,, ••141f••• ..... ~ .......... 'fY • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 10, 1981 Tatum takes it all off in new film By MAIULYN AND RY GAADND F or Our "She Could BaN~ Wd" ~.: Now lht P"NCodoul ldd fTom "Popft' Moore1' ha.a pc Oftd doftf U. l" Mr MW moot., ''Cfrlf o/ Tulo," with IUclaard 9uttoft, •lw '4ktt u off, SM """' ·u all oJll Tht ndt~ ha.a Z./t Mr fat>wr. ocfor RJIOft O'N«Jl, thodced Oftd ...,...t. But Tatum could Catt ~ ... "I'm 11," w qt, "Oftd okl nouoh to mob up mu °""' mmd. Dadd~ con 'bf '1£C1t 0 prude." Q: I understand from some frienda who Uve in Atlanta that little Gary Coleman of "Dilf'rent Strokes" bu been very concerned about the children being murdered there. Aod that he filmed a m essaee to youngsters lo Atlanta ur1· ing them to be very careful. What did be tell them? -MRS. JOHN R., INDIANAPOLIS A: The IJ·year-old TV atar. ID oee of the messages being broadcast Uarougboat AUuta, aald, ''You're toup, I know. Alld yoa tbJak what's going oa right now can't bappen to yoa. Believe me," declares Gal')', "It CAN ltappen to you! Yoa know, u amart and carefa.I S•Y• are our community'• futa.re." Q: I saw a rerun of "Dracula" as played by Bela Lugosi. And to me, Lugosi was the Dracula to end all Draculas. Is it true what they say - that he was a drug addict and that be tiled or an overdose? -ED JONES, JERSEY CITY, N.J. A : The legendary actor'• clnag addlctlon began lnnocently enoogh with medically pre· scribed morpblne to treat a very paJnlal form of sciatica. From morphine, be went on to methadone. "I used to lnject the methadone ln my lep," be once coafe.led. "And wbea I could no loager ft.Del a place to l.Djeet, that wu the end." la 1155, be voluntarily comalUed lllmaelf to a bospttal to cure bJs addJCU-. "I cloa't bave a dlme left," be sald. "I am depeadellt oa my frienda fo.r food, and a amall old-age peuJoa. I am anxlou to rebabWtate m)'lelf." Three-and·a·balf moat.bl later, Lagosl left the charity ward cared. And a year la&er began worltlng again. Tbls time 11 a moa.ter caUed tbe Gboul Mu la a G.rade·B movie, "Plan NIDe From Outer Space." Before the movie waa com· Single parents • set wine party PARENTS WITHOUT P ... !lTNEBS Hunt· ington Beach chapter will have a wine party at 8:30 p.m . Friday in Garden Grove. The group wiU h ave a house party al 8:30 p .m. S.turday in Foun· tain Valley. For information, call 964-5296. PEOPLE SAMPLER led by Emily Coleman will be held al 8 p.m . Friday in Newport Beach. For information on the social, call (213) 828-89'9. ORANGE COAST SINGLES will have a pot SINGLES ·CALENDAR luck dinner al 6 p.m . Saturday in Huntington Beach, For information, call 751-0291. OUTDOOR SINGLES will have a wine party at 7:30 p.m . Saturday in Costa Mesa. For informa· tion, calls.44-8276. PABENTS WITHOUT PABTNEBS Orange Coast chapter will have a house party at 9 p.m. Saturday in Fountain Valley. For information, call 559-0846. WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP will go to dinner and dance at 6: 15 p.m . Saturday in Buena Park. For information, call 531 ·0701. GUY HALFERTY and the Society Combo wlll perform at a singles dance at 6:30 p.m. Sunday in Newport Beach. For lnformaUoo. call 673-4011. NEW JEWISH SINGLES will have a coffee social Sunday in Cypress. For information, call 963-1877. BALBOA SK.I CLUB will have a volleyball game Tuesday in Newport Beach. For informa· lion, call 752-0128. FINANCIAL PLANNER Tom Hilgaertner will lead ,a discussion on personal asset strategies for singles al 7:30 p.m . Tuesday in Newport Beach. For information, call 957·8400. TATUM O'NEAL ... Daddy shocked and upaet 'GLAD YOU ASKED THAT' pleted. however, Lugosi wa• found dead ID bis apartment. A heart attack bad done him la. Q: My sister a nd I love to browse about in thrift shops on the Lower East Side. And a few times we've 'Seen a man who looks just like Robert De Niro. But we've been too embar· rassed to ask him. Any chance it could really have been De Niro? J ENNY L., STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. A: "It's very possible. De Niro baa been known to scavenge thrift shops collecting jackets, sblrts, shoes and bats for bis movle roles. "Costumes," explains the Oacar·wlmt1Dg actor, "can look too created." PUBLIC NOTICE 0mzi~ .. ICTITIOUS •USINIU CUSTOM FRAMING ---STATUHNT Speciellzlng In ...,!t~0~~1"' __ , are 001"9 Hend Flnlahed Freme1 JDR DIVELOPMENT COM· 1803 Newport Blvd. PANY, 2U91 El T..-o RMI!, s..11e m , Costa Mesa 548-4511 Et Toro, c.llfomle t»» a::::========~ S..nMt ~-. Cellfwni• (Of'·1-porellon, JSUS •••<II Roed , Cel>istr-9"cll. Calltornle nl2' '~--------Jemes H. Eldrldt•. i11c .. • • CelifOf'lli• corpof"ellOfl, 21942 Win~ , PUBUC NOTICE 11eMeo ~. El Two. o c.llforN• \,-------- GARY COLEMAN ... concerned about killings I Q: Ate they still trying to connect organized I crime to the assassination of President John F . K~nedy? 1 -TIMOTHY C .. SEATI'LE 1 A: Yes. "The evidence leads directly to Carlos Marcello and Saaloll Tratncaate, •• fa. 1 slats G. Robert Blakey, former cblef coaa.el to tbe House Assassinations C.ommJttee. "U yoa 1 gave me 25 FBI agents, five lnveat111to.r· J prosecutors and sis moatlts la the field," Blakey said on "Good Morning America," "I think I could either get yoa an lndictmeat or tell I you whether an lodlctment could be gotten." Send your questions to Hy GordMT, "Glod You 1 Asked That," oore of th1s new8JXJPer, P.O. Bo:r 19620, J Irvine, Cali/. 92714 Marilyn and Hy CardMr will . an1wer QI many question.a QI theil can in their C<?l· • umn, but the volume of mail makes pertonal reptu1 ' 1mposnble. I I .....a Tl!LllORAMa v.-...ri' Df'f'WRTAINMUn' P/llnY/~~ • --0.. ~ · IODe 0.. ADULTS j 1u.H. •-..--•• c.111WN• "~=:'!':~" ~T1!.:;!~.NC>c•~ I c.orpo1.u.i, n:as ~ llllm On:te, Tll foll I t ~ .. '.,__ i l!I T-. c.llforNe nut ~:... .,,":" 119 --• ere do nt For en • .,,.,, •• n,.,....1 ulrav•g•ru• or good OIO Tlllt IMoslran Is c....tu<ted by • PARK . cou1n PROPERTIES, ,_,,.,,,..,fun -alt.,,. trnnmonge -...... • ... • -•i ~. 1•1 G ~ Pie<• Seflle Ane WeM oo __ ., • -lo,,,..,,. -euce-ol s....t E""ltlft, Rkllerd J . C.llfor·nleft101 · ' 'l'OU• epeciel oee..-By pnone, "' ~ •nv I 8-tt. "'-. 11119t"t H. o.Mft, n4 Nort1t Mople • Tiiis stMement •• 111• ,.jtti Ille Df"tw, Alewrty Hiiia, Callfoml• t0210 tocelion "" eny ,_.. We *'"•..., lllNonQ. covn1y c1en1 of Orenee c:-mv on s..-I!. o.ien. n• "°"" .,... -·,. 1ne tun ............ , J-1,1'81. ..l6Jtn pie Orlw, .... r1Y Hlll1, Cellfornle 7t4/79t-3300 • f • ......_._..a.......... "211 1ecn1 lfCVPAAt<. &l.WT'E l.-. CA tn7'• A Pu I • • ,._ c.,i..... Tiiis .....,_le -....Cted by., In Ott Mac' ... p _._ .... -dM-.. • ..._,. E GMil • • • • • • f• .............. ~..... Tiiis .......,_ ~ lllecl wltll IM t ........... c>.,.. Caest Delly Piie(. CovnlY C*1I of 0r.,.. County ""t------------,---------_...-. J-J, 10. 11, M, ,_, JSU-SI. J-I, 1"1. .... _ ....... Aeew.r•u. PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ......................... l -t-PUBLIC NOTICE ..... ._.... ~..,.. ll'tcT1nou1 •U11N•SS JllCTIT10UI 8USINEU : NS-71132 TOI: CnJJ -NI NAMe STATIMCNT NAM41 STATIMIENT .1 NOTICE OF DEATH OF Pllblltllell 0r.,.. c:-st Delly PllOt. Tiie fat-no 119.._, 11 dolM bu.II-Tiie tollowlna -"'"' ••• .,1,.. ROSALIE JEANETTE J-J.10,17,14,IWl UU41 ne1us: IM.tslMIS ... LANGZETTEL AND OF WAYNE MIOtAELS. SUI 111'-• PAUMA GROVE ASSOCIAl'li!S. L-. Cninu. c.tllcmle *30 LIMITllO, 1'1'2 ._<II 80<.tle"frd. p E TIT I 0 N T 0 AD -PUBLIC NOTICE Ml<llHI w. Wright, )ISi Ellnor• Hunll .... on 8Mdl. c.oaM7. MINISTER ESTATE NO.. Lene,Cypnsa,Qlllomle*30. Hector MerHcll, 16162 Buell A·1"6A.OS, Tiiis _,.,..Is ~Oltducted by.,, In· 8011leverd. H11nt11191on Beec11.1c• v~ "ICTITIOUI 8UllNais dlYld11e1. n.41. T o a I I h e I r s , 1UMa1TATllM«NT MW-1w.wrt8"t ENA o.,,.,.....,. CorPOr•tlot. • beneflCJarJeS Creditors Tiie lollowl119 poraons ere dol"9 Tlltl sta....,_I wes llled with tlle Celllomle c:on-ttlon, 161'2 B4ecll and Contingent' creditors '-'"°:;:ER t CAN ASSET ;.o.;~Cler11of0rentieCountyOftMe ~;~urd, .H11nlln9ton BHcll,,CA Rosalie Jeanette Langzet --..NAGEMeHT NO. I, JJ7 Doi Mer, ' . "1U41J Tiiis IMIMll 11 conducted !&o e tel and persons who may L..-. e..dl, CMH..-N• nw P111111S1W 0renoe eou1 o.11y Piiot llmilH -1nenNP. be otherwise In terested I Rollwt "· --..r, eenwe1 s-tner. Mey 20. v. JUN'· 10. ,., nos.e; =~~. eor.. f the will and/or estate: :Sr:9' ,,.,, LeouN llH<ll. Cat1fornl• . o.vld .._. ... A petition has been m T1111 11usi,,. .. 1• c~1ec1 by • pu·suc NOTICE PrwtlCl9nl ~ by Mildred c. Ladoma I llmlleclpe..-lfllp. Tllb stet-1 .... lllecl with,,,. Robert 11 _.,.r '• ----County Cler11 of Or-Collnly on y the Superior Court o Geftffei ;..,,.,_· 1 u P 11•1 o • co u • T o,. 1', 1,.1. Orange County requestln Tiiis Rel-I ... lllecl wlltl Ille CA&.Jl'ORNIA, .. 1~7 that Mildred c. Ladoma Co11nty c1er-of 0ren99 c.o11ntr on COUNTYo,.o•ANOI , P11b1tshed Or-coes1 Delly tot, be I ted I l-1, 1'11. 111 Ille Melt!« llf t118 Ap91ketloft of [Mey 20, 21, J.-J, 10, 1 .. t 1 t appo n as persona "1611n OAVID HERMAN PEKOVSKY '"" ·---------~ representative to ad Pu11111hec10r-..c..s10.11vP11ot. c11e,...llf"-I minister the estate 0 , ..... ,, 10, 11,24.1., 141Ht CANNUIMHA.,.. PUBUC NOTICE Rosalie Jeanette Lanozet ----o.o~":°c:C:~': "H . el, Costa Mesa, Callfornl PUBUC NOTICE DAVID HERMAN PUOVSKY ,.., "1cnTiou1eu&1NU1 Hyper doesn't tntean tension (under the I ndependen . lllecl. ""'""" ....... court I« en«· ........ ITATaMaNT ¥.' Ad I I t ti f E t t btr •llowffte petlt..._ IO C ....... NI Tiie lol'-'flle --It ...... W. m n s ra on 0 s a e "ICTIT10US8UllNllSS ll•m• from OAVIO HERMAN ..... Act>. The petition Is set fo NAMSSTAT•M•NT PEKOVSkYtoOAv10AuSTiN HALL•E1to ORA01No o hearing In Dept. No. 3 at ..!~.:S"':"'"' per-• ore dOlflt II ls ..... «dered tllet •II ~-,. ... W•llter Circle. Wostmln ·: 700 Civic Center Drlv TOWER a ASSOCIATES ftt••ff'*llllU.rnetteretor .. id •P-~tlfenlle,... W ADV er ...._ Ulls COW1 In Depertmeftt DMllel Liie Hellllllf't. 1•t W or By JOHN D. ROSEN, M.D. Dear Dr. Rosen : I just had a check·up and my doctor told me that my blood pressure is too hieh and I have hypertension. I was stunned becauae I am a very calm person and not the least bit tense. My husband went in and was told that his pressure is DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE normal. He ls a very tense, nervous persoo. Do you think that the doctor aot our reoorda mixed op? -E.T., ANAHEIM. ANSWER: It is not likely that your recorda were switch~, but I can undentand your con· fusion. 1be word "hypertension" bu nothln1 to do with whether you are tense or not. "Tension" is simply the medical word for pres· sure. ''Hyper'' means •'too much,•' so hypertensjon means that there is too much pres· s ure (in your blood vessels.) U you put too .much air in your Ure, you could correctly say thal your Ure had hypertension. So you see that when we say someone is tense, meaning nervous, we are givlng the same word a different meaning. II your doctor tells you that you have hypertension be onlt" mean.a that your blood pressure is high. He•does not mean that you are a tense individual. Someone who LI very jittery could well have normal blood pressure, while a calm person such as yourself might auffer from hiab blood pressure. e s t I s a n t a A n a , ,. •• : ~=.::, Vlctorl•. Celle o. J •• ,.. 0Yk Ge<IWr Of-I Well, Circle, --·~llMIW. CallforMe California 92701 on July 1 C•r•I Hltlllower 4U Norlll I•""" Call .... nl• ... Jllly'Ts. 1W1, Thi• ...... It<...._.., """ 1981 at 9:30 a .m . R~ ""'*-· c.ii1om1e..aa 110:• e.m., end.,_ ... ,,.... -dMdue1. IF YOU OBJECT tot ROerl Decller, 41J Nortll YM,HM'ftheYllrff.WllvMWllMI· '*'"4LlleHe1"*'9 R-n_ N..,._ Callforulle taaa fOr C-.. Ill ...,.. "*"cl IMlt be Tllll ..._ •• ftlecl W1111 .. ranting of th& petition, Tiiis Ml-1, conducted by• ....... ' ~yClor1iofOrenoeee-tyoit y YOU should either appea .-.rel............ ~II ii ~ «*red tllel • CCIP'J of 22, tWI. t th.. o.-~ I d t t CM'8I HI.,,..._, I• Of'dw to --.. Pl*llMd ,, "' ,..,..r ng an s a Tiit 11 111e 0.11., Pltet • ,,..,.......r °' ~ ...... 0r.,.. c-i Delly your objections or fll c..,n:r~~~·co':::'Y 1: re1c1rc111at1o11;...,..1.,.intN111My21,.1w1ea,10,11,1., t 1 rltten objections with th J-1 1w1 ,,.....1., et IMlt 001t• • ...a '°' 1 • ourt before the hearing ' · f11611t1 ~~'1111 .. _... .... ..,. '°the drt ot Your appearance may ht! Pulllllfled 0r..,. c.u Delly Pltot, !'9'C:.=:~ 1 1•1 PUBUC NOTICE In person or by your at-J-i. 10. 11· 14• 1•1 24•z-.~ -.td H. ,.,_ orney. =.:~ I F Y O U A R E PUBUC NOTICE OWHMfT .... D TM r.llewffte ,__ we REOITOR or a cont -uw , ...... ..,.___ n ..... nt creditor of th& de fllCTITICIUUIUM••• ,(Amil t ll'ANOU ITCH LUE• a • -~ NAMa ITAT•MmNT et· (7141 9'Wl11 CO. Ofl CAL.If'~ ml,.,_.. eased, you must file you Tiie ,..._..,. __ •r• ._1... ,.;.......,.0r-..c..ll o.11v Pliot, ~&Mdl,CMlfMH,... I aim with the court o ••-•1 ' _,, 10. 11.a..1•1 un.-t · lllkMnl care~. nte resent It to the personal """ INV&,TMENTS, o• Mt, • ~.~=· "••••rt •• representative eppolnted ~~'°· "-i.111 V•ll•v. \ PUBUC NOTICE J118111t• 1t11r10., "°"1 .. 1, by the court within four 1tl<MN "'-....._, 11• '*· c•"' ~•Mite• 0r1.,.., N-JoHt .. onth$ from the date ••••• Orin, f'evllltlll V•ll•Y. f'ICTlft°"'IVM••• I T~..':. .. Taurus: Give tlwught to deposits first I~• of letters H ~..:r:-1*~ 11• .... Cllf-UMHTAT'UIWNT ~,:......,.... ---~ rovldld In Section 700 of ~.:'-'1r«1., f'e11111e111 V•ll•r. Tiie ...._,., l*W '' ......_ _,_.... s.,....... he Prob•t• Code of ..,. -u: T1111........,. --.. ... •llfornla The time for Tt1•1 .......... •• ~-"• ~=~.~.~=:~-. 1~an .. 0r.,...c:i-t,.,. lllng ctalms wllf not ex-~""*'~.:..":'..... '*'u.-M1c...._.., .. t • • Tlaanctay, 1-. It, 1911 81 SYDNEY OMA&& A&ID < lilattb 21 ·Apdl 19) ; rtnt otter wtll 00\ ... a-............ fh ... -... to be c ccuJdencl. Public ,..,_..to effottl w1ll bt hi . • A (April 30-llay 201: Focus oo •ml>loyment. YlaGO (Au1. a.Sept. ,.,, ........._, •oleo, P•Y· Ire prior to four months~ - ---a. « .. -.<A-ment.a and coUectJ.ons cJeirn mon-tbaa-uaual altenUon. rom the date of the hear-, cwhtOr .... CllllMY M Mey .. :=..~ 1 • ~" .. 111 Majordomelt!c adjustment la hl&bllthted. Ing notktd above. 1•1. ,,.... ' IMrtl.M~ F ----------1-- Lll&A (Sept. 23-0c:t. 22): IA.mar eye.le pol.nu to cor· YOU MAY EXAMINE ~ ..... &Ilaire 11 Tll!. ........... -,.._. wt111 reel dedtkln at cnadal moment. Key now b cooftdence, ht flle kept by the court. a" ''--ow,.-= c-tvc:-t"0r .... c-riy•Me lnlUatlve and •b&Uty to Imprint lndlvldual ·~ If you art Interested In tht ===-==-.::. "' ••· 8COU'IO (Oft. 23·Nov. 21>: Get wort ln qw.t1 t•te, you may fll• • r · ........., ~ Olell oetrr ~ u.nobtnlliv• manner. Empha• on what occun beh.lna uest with the court to re-17.-. ..... "·"" MM 11--------""""'-_;;..;,. 1cin•. You'll be med to vlJ1t bolpltaJ or OU.. lt11Utu· elve 1PKlal notice of tM -uon. 1 nventorv of estate 111ets ~ PtJBUC NOTJCS 8AGITl'Aart78 (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Volv.nat ap()fal I nd of the petitions, e<· ---------LI b.11bUpled. Popularity latte-. 1AaQar emplaaals on o u n ts and rt port 1 "9CT'l1*11 ..,...,. dealr•, proteulonal acdalm and compl.U. qt tmpor-rlbed In S.Ctlon 1200 MMHTATUle"f t.nt project. tht C..llfoml• Probate n-._.. ~ i. ....._ ~ CAnlCOaN <t>tc.22..Jaa lt):New,monlad&pead·I ode. -~~..cw••_. .... POUcY Nnltl la more elfteWnt prod:ucUoe aad ..... •• c-. ....... ~ poe.18* Pcoeution, ObJedlv• eoaM bato aharp, clear• fir.-, AWWll & Vant ... il.Q...._..._.,........, l0cua. YoubOwWb"atlbollldllliedoM -ke~iltodoltl •y: ••r Averm, At-•• -.c....._~._ AQU.\1111'1 (Jin, »hb.11): Plail ahtad for travel, eUey ti La!.£._ UU Tlllll ..... IUMllW•~•o,.11 lut- eclucatlan md commun1e.uon. IA• and tbe media flpn . ~alntar A,,...., wwttttw ...... . lo )'OUJ' Pll"IOMJ ·~· You,... .. laq-dlaUDee call ' •llf•rRI• tttH. czul dlelt ..... c1-UYIM .... ol 6"ec!UOe. ....... • ..... CN"if.8aftl9 •>:Ge& ftaaacial attain In Pvbtllhld or.nae Coast onter. l"oeut • CP•. aedltl afict "eoDe1 litUdoa" .,. Uy Pfaot. June t, 10, 1•, tectJnc one doM'lO yoiu, lllc~ partMr-ounat•. 9'1 2'1M1 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wtdnt1day, June 10, 1981 Liza Minnelli bring house down wiihout dancing or acting By 808 THOMA A...Cle ... ,,,_WPllW HOLLYWOOD -"Fabulous" "dynamic". "overwhelmln&.'' Those are amona the •dJ~ctives Los An1ele1 crlUca unabashedly tosaed at Liza Mlnnelli ror her concert performance at the Greek Theater last week. The revelation was the MlrmelU voice. In the past, her 1lngina has been o\·erahadowed by her talent as an actress and dancer. She aot by wlth her son1s. but there was always the comparlaon lo the clear, n awless beltln1 of her n1othtr, Judy Garland. This time around, Liza is makln1 it without backup singers, dancing boys or apolo1les. The en. tire act Is singing, and she even felt confident enough to do what she has resisted In the paat: In· elude a number identified with "the best friend I ever had." The song: "The Man Who Got Away," h'om "A Star Is Born." Miss Minnelll ls in the middle of a national tour with her "Cabaret " cohort, Joel Grey. During the four-night appearance In her home town she talked about her life and career In an lnter~iew at a friend 's house on upper Bel Air Road. She was just visiting, since she and her third husband, sculptor-designer Mark Gero, make their homes In a New York apartment and a Lake Ta hoe chalet. About her singing: "I'm an actress. basically. Also a dancer. I don't have a natural voice. so that is something I've had to work on. How ? By singing in the bathroom a lot. By listening to singers I ad- mire. l haven't hHd any coaches. but I do get good ad vice from Kay Thompson. who is my godmother BREAKER MORANT ,,_,_ ATLANTIC CITY ,, .. ,, .. F£WNI CITY OF WOMEN ..-:-.~• THE DECLINE ;.. of wHtem ctvlbaUOn ........ , ........... ,. MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ~ AU Ml£S AOMtmD ~,., ....... a.._. .. Su-- ® ..0 OH£ UNDER 17 ADMITTED 1"99 '""" .... , ••"! ,,.. 01111.a1" ., ... , Al..L am AHO l8I F~...S RECEIVE !HE SEAi.. Of THE MOTIOH PICTURE C00E Of SELF REGULA fl()N John Boorman'• EXCALIBUR I RI SHOWS AT 7:00 9:45 I Carol 8utn•tt Ai.n Aide 1ltE fQJR -.....IPGI Show• et e:oo 1:15 10:20 I Antho__ny _Quinn LION OF ntE OBERT (POI Shows et 8:00 Nell Diamond JAZZ SINGER (PG) SHOWS AT 6:00 8:20 1Q;30 The Private Momenu nt11•ELVIS (PG) SHOWS AT 6:00 8:10 10:20 Fl~~ The Hills H•w Ev .. (RI Rlc:Nrd~r laJSTIN'L (RI And Whteh W•v It Up (RI I John Boorman'• EXCAU9UR (RI Hippy Blrthdey ToMe(Rl c::=::==:::::JC I Pm'EYE IPGI ANO AIAftJUE IPOI c::::=== Rtcherd Pryor Gene Wild• mRCRAZV,RI C.vemen (PG TttEa.uo-.1A1 Chffch • Chong'• Next Mo~le (RI ~DAILYAT7:JIO Und• 12 frM Uni-Noted HE'S NOT ONE OF THE BEST. HE IS THE BEST! and the belt sinain& coach In the world. If I have trouble with a word, I ask her. ''She told me, 'You used to be ln love wlth t~ words ot a son1 : now you must be In love with the music.' That's what I've tried to do. I'm always learning, I'm never eatfstled •. "Each SQnl J alna la aboJ.Jt a specific character. I even write a resume about her: what l he eats, what the drinks, dOH 1be paste decals on her refrl1er1tor? I want to know everything about her, so that her character comes through In the words ol the song." Liza Mlnnelli ii retumlng to the aUver screen next month, starrina with Dudley Moore, In "Arthur." It la her firat film in three years: the last was "New York, New York" which provided her with a ahow-1topping song If nothing else. Why the film-making lapse! "It just happened," she said. ·•1 was signed to do a Broadway s how. 'The Act.' Even lhouah I re- alized It wasn't working. I had to 10 throuah with it. All of us round It terribly frustrating to be doing something we didn't really believe In . ''Immediately afterward I did my Carneaie Hall show, which was taped for Home Box Office. I wanted to do something simple, so I worked with only 12 musicians around a set that was patt'emed after my father's Girl Hunt ballet in 'The Band Wagon' all steel and plelliglass with stairways leading to nowhere. I look ratter ln the show. because I was three months pregnant." Liza lost the baby. then filmed "Arthur" last s ummer. She had another miscarriage after si x months of pregnancy. Instead of "lapsing into melancholia," she launched the tour with Grey. THE COMEDY SENSATION! "A WONDERFULLY FUNNY COMEDY about pomeous f athera and youthful s~uctlon. -Nancyscott.SFEXAM•HER ~ Sftl11ni"' 'lfilll. :. - -~ONE WILD MOMENT FRENCH MOYIE RATED (A) NOW PL.A YING ~ The oomedy tor everyone .. who's had tt up to here ...• Wehandcut our fish fillets even!<faY. ... dip them in batter made fresh every hour and serve them with plenty of golden fryes. First-nighters at the Greek Theater were overwhelmed by her enormous energy. She waa asked bow s he trains for such strenuou. performances. "I get a lot of sleep," she explained. "Bu\ If you do nothing but rest, that can be selt·defeatlng. So I paint and I sculpt and I study." Lear sued in script theft flap · NEW YORK (AP> -A New York writer has filed a $10 mllllon rederal damage suit charging that hls outline ror a television show was stolen and aired without his permission. The plalntiff, Thurman WhtUield, alleged ln his Brooklyn rederal court ault that he mailed a script in March 1979 to TV producer and director Norman Lear or Los Angeles for a show entitled "Boomerang." The complaint claimed Whitfield was In- formed Lear and his associates were not interest· ed in the idea, which dealt with a racially integrat- ed rock group which fights crime and corruption In a middle-class neighborhood. However, Whitfield charged, ihe script was used as the basis for a show telecast over the Publi c Broad ca sting System and entitled "Righteous Apples." Liza Mmnelli ~flM ;;ti I .;·;Lt~.i~~ir~:(;:, _,_ ... , __ ..... -·~ff~·) :~~: ,,._, __ ~ llMITllP'l'll~ "TAU THIS JOB AHO IHOYI IT' (..0) ,.,. ...... -·-·-·- ----~· "ete•CH a atOHO'I NIC£ D"EAMI " flll ....... 1l1M11 ... , ..... a:.-.......... ·•oeATH HUNT" ..,...""""' ,,, .. ,_ "HIGH "llK" ..,... THUllS. "'""' "Kill AND Kil l AGAIN" _,,_,, '"'· ""'"' "UCALteUR" .... ,...NI. .... llOIAMl"'YCMI "aUITIN' LOOI&" 11'1 ~ "dw.n d c,, CI N f MA Wf ST AO ',',"~~"' 89 1 19 _.,.,... "eUITIH' LOOll" c111 -··-'"""" ~---­NICIDflllAMI" ..... TMUM. ?IM,-1111 \\I 11 " ..,, J \' -EVEN1tG-•1•••••HAU. DMler& .._ CMdlNll In SI. L.OllfL t:oo, ...... ~WOMAN Whan M11)or St-Tr- le flCX)ueacf of .. boleging a t~ MC,.I govartllMl'll mlMlon, Wonder Woman fight• to prow 1119 lnno- canoa and -a 109 Nut apyrlng • MCMI • • • ..o,... MIMoutt ,_., .. (ttlO) 'tlOd~ Cw.y, Weftdlll c:on.y TIMI J.,..... Md 't'oungw bOye ~ to ltde the OUllllw tr ........ e nta 'WMIADOM A,_ (PU~). Mnt to 'ft to r-..cue a )'Ol#IO ~ ,,..,.. .,_ tfl9 clulcNI of • W«tdly ...,... *-· .. aided In Ille ,,.. lion ~ a cNnNno Nnen- GM'I .,,.,,.... (l.M """'" let!) In !NI drwM!lullon of Htnty J.,._. nowl. a:aoe M•A•t•H ,.... ....... hofM 10 .. mother wNle H.wk_,.. e.- rlaa on IOo! ~and , Col. Poller getl .not In Iha Mc:tlelde. MO. (I) MCMI ••\t "Uptown Satu1d~ . Night" (4174) Sidney POI- tier, 1111 eo.by. A flllllory WOtllar and • ..,_._......, cabtlle get eauott• "" In a oardMd feud wherl ttwy • deQde to trail a eanoa•• who Mid up a bar. CAI I TIC TAC DOUGH 0000,,... -'-IM'Y9 • gun 10 pro- tect Iha lamlly from a raat> of~ In Iha nalghbOr- llOOCI. CHECKING OUT -Richard Pryor is a con man and private investigator in the comedy movie "Uptown Saturday Night" tonight at 9 on Channel 2. • DW'MNf eTR09CD Arnold la lrtdced Into Qkt#- lng Ne M'llnge to the Puer- to Ak:an door"'an to .. ..,_.,. In a tlOtW running at a.lmont. (R) Q •a AMEM:AN DMAM •• ILICTNC eot#AN't(fQ . 9 AllCNlWI l:ao G ..IC*a'I wtL.D •• llNNYHIU. Benny raturne with his own varalon ol tha nurt«y rhyme .. Jeck And JIN .. I Kc:eT NIWllleAT ITIJDIOIU "Orient-Ing" Watch 1 Nanlucliet man make kit•; take a lo<* 11 Iha ~I of orlant..,lng (A) 9 IAANIY MIU.Bl 8art111y Is Qrdarad lo l•Y off tllr• of 1111 man aa New York •1ffar1 1 llnanc1.i cri- 111. 7:00 I cu NIW8 NeCN!WI HAPPY DAVI AOAIH Polllill and Ralph are both In love w.111 a ,_ atudanl WhO only hat ~ '°' Richie -• a tutor I AllCNIWS 9UU.MYI ITMETIMIAN FMHCllCO Stana'. murder ln\'11111~· uon II Nlmparad by a nar- cotlca agent wtlOM •"'- CHANNEL LISTINGS tuda and tactlcl .,. unde-..... • ~EAa'Y ''Villorl'' GualU. ~ alar Sylvia Sidney. ophthalmologist Or. Wayne Fung (A)Q ID MM*llL I L.BtMA MJl()RT (I) T1C TAC DOUGH 9 ..,.., GAIF1'IN Guaat1: Zall Z... Gabor. L-• O'Mallay. HarOld Aot>blnl. 1:30 8 I ON THI TOWN Holt•: Steve Edward•, Melody Rogan. ~" hOw to 11\op lnttllfigantly for prnc:rlpllon drug• and Olhar l\Nlln aide; a look et a ,_ ~ which offara bookl on audio CUMtta. take an lnlicM look •I pub- lic ace:.. TV. D ,..U..Y Al'UO 8 8HANANA Guaat: PaA Anka. 8 HOLLYWOOD IQUAAQ I "ACE 'ntE MU8C MACND.. I L!HREA AIPORT G KNXT 1CBSl Los Angeles D KNeC (NBC) Los Angeles I KTLA 1lnd I Los Angeles KABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles (ll KFMB tCBS) San Diego D KHJ· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles (fJ) KCST (ABCI San Diego • KTlV (Incl I Los Angeles ., KCOP·TV(lnd I Los Angeles 8'J KCET-TV 1PBS1 Los Angeles 69 KOCE-TV 1PBSI Huntington Beach GTHE~ "-AYI "The Wintar•1 Tale" A )Mlou• king, • loat prln--ceu. 1 dlegulMd prince and Olhar c:hatec:tara we b<Ougtll togathar In Wii- iiam St1a11MpNre'1 magi· c.i tlilry tale aintetlng on Iha tllalnaa ol rebirth. raconclllallon and redemp- tion. (I) ,,M. MAGAZIHI An attempt at Iha world car jump record; 1 cowboy longhorn roundup In Nave- da. 1:00 9 (I) THE WHITI 8HAOOW Coach ....... INrN the -iou-°' 1111 tatllar'• lffnNa and dacldat to Hlend 1111 llay In New Yori! (Par1 2)(A) DNAL~ FNturad. a fatnllle llock.ry player; a man who llU bMl'I lldvar11eing tor a ... ,. tor 30 >'M'•· prof...ion.I maldvnakara (R) 8 MOYIE * * * "Tha Borgia Stk:tt" ( 1907) Oon Murray, Ingar SI-Two man In • crime ayndlc:eta try IO break 1way lrom 1111 oroanlzatlon 8 9 CHARLIE'S ANGIL.I Krll reu. tor Iha muler- mlnd batllnd a highly IUC· CMINI and Intricate bank· robbing ICharna. GMOWE * ·~ "Tlla Other Man" ( 1970) Roy ThlnMS, Joan HllCllatl. A WMllh~. beaull- lul woman 11a1 an affair with a rnyetarlou• ••-con- The No¥81<•' ,_ ii r ... ~eel • AU .. THE,.MaY tt looll• Ilka M.lka may ml11 an oCIC)Ottunlly lor a P<O- rnotkHI ~ ol hie r-. . UOD n.,.ACTl~UFI Natalia~ extremely popular attar har llrat d•t• with a talliatfw boy, bo.11 can't llgura out wtiy. (RI • MllW GIW'f1N Gu.t.1: ZN Zall Gabor. Lanora O'Mallay, Hatold Robbin•. Terri Walin, R011t1Y Kenny. • AIWHVDAY Marietta Hartley stars u an unNpPY TV 1tw who lallM a doM IOOll al har pat ...nan Iha IC*'dl an atlamoon. Iha flrlt ln five yews, with har mother (Collin Wbx). 10:00. QUNCV An unpopulat trllCll COKh II llCCUMd o4 nagligant llomldda wnan one or llil atlllal• dlM, ~ly at a raaull of Iha b<u\M training,. (A) ••• NlWI 8 9WGAS Dan-~ for a mur- derous P'OCUI« wfM> ii torclng rama1e •-convict• 10 poea •• call glrta to lufa man Into • ~ blaca- mall ldleme. (R) , • a.at, IT<>f'.'Y OF A w~ Thia doc:umantwy exam- lnet Iha 9-29 bomber from 111 conception through i .. development, eventual 1UOCMa and IUbMquanl ob~ attar Wortd WWII: Actress turns to .. directing for. 'Rainy Day' project By .IERllY BUCK A,.T....,.._..._. LOS ANGELES -Six years ago, actress Beth Brickell dropped out and joined the ghosUf ranks of Hollywood's MIAs. She disappeared from the screen, like so many performers before her. But in her case, the phone didn't stop ringing. Instead, she set her acting career aside to become a director fellow at the American Film lo.stitute. "I really hadn't intended it that way, but I couldn't take the course and act, too," she said. Miss Brickell enrolled in the Center for Ad- vanced Film Studies, one of three filmmaker pro- grams at AFI and the only one that ls full-time. In her final year, after making five videotape plays, she was given $10,000 to make a film. The result is "A Rainy Day." which she wrote, directed and produced. It will be broadcast' at 9: 30 tonight on Channel 28 -only the second AFI film ever shown on national television. The JO-minute film, which Miss Brickell said Is based on her own feellnts and experiences, tells of -a TV actress who flies to her hometown for her father's funeral. She is unhappy with her career, and for the first time in five years, she talks with her mother. Having little to talk about in the ~resent, they reminisce about the days when the actress was a little girl. Out or that, remembering bow her mother drove her relentlessly toward perfection, comes an understanding of why she hates success. The mm, which stars Mariette Hartley as the daughter and Collin Wilcox as the mother .. is sensilive and moving apd reveals an Insight into the generational conmct. ''It has two themes.'' Miss Brickell said. "It deals with the importance of resolving resent· ments with one's parents in order to move forward with your life. •·And it deals with the conlllct between pita.s- ing others and pleulnc one'• self. It abowa the price one pays for winning gold stars, making straight-Al, putting that before one's own happi· ness and needs." She said she prefers to write tn the areas of human relation1blp1. "I like to explore such rela· lionshlpe and the internal contllcta," she said. ''I lllle deaJ.inl with lndJvldua1 va. society's needs.'' Although she was ariven Sl0,000, il actually re- quired $18,000 to make the little movie. "I had to raise the rest," she said. "I rai5ed $4,500 from the industry, and the rest came out of my pocket. But I also received many services free. 'Tm told that if I had lo pay the full cost of the rilm," she said, "it would have been between $100,000 and $150,000. "The thrill of making a film with no money is finding out how wonderful people in this industry are. Everyone I askejl for help gave it to us. The studios, laboratories, optical houses, everybody. The crew worked for no money. The cast will be paid if the film is ever sold.'' Miss Brickell, who starred in the TV series, ''Gentle Ben" and such movies as "Brock's Last Case" and ''Posse," was asked why she made the career change. "I couldn't do both," she replied. "Both are full-time pursuits. I took a year's leave of absence from AFI to make the decision. I realized I had come to a crossroads. I had to make a commit- ment to become a writer and director. or not do it at all. "I wanted to find an answer. Did I want to re· main an actress and perhaps never have any con· trol over the films I make? Or did I want lo take a chance on putting my acting career on hold, perhaps going back later, and continuing with this exciting new change in my career?" Since she finished the film in 1978, she bas been spending most of her time writinar. "I eot an agent and we showed the film to the studios and they all asked what I wanted to do," she said. "I realized I'd have to bring in a project. "I spent-10 months looking for someone else's project. J found as a new director I didn't have ac- cess to the best scripts and writers. And when I did I had no option money and no control." , She said she finally realized she was wasting time looking for someone else's acrlpt. "I spent two years writing," she said. "I have three screenplays. I'd like to direct one of them and act ln one ot them." Her only source of Income now is the rent from a house she owns ln Beverly Hills. With that she leases a am all apartment. "I live very simply." she said. "I don't feel deprived." Alan Alda Carol Bumctt Orange Coast DAiLY PIL.OTM'ednetday, June 10, 1881 ID . TUBE .. TOPPERS KCET @ 8:00 and KOCE & 10:30 - "The Ambassadors." Lee Remick and Paul Scofield star ln a dramatization of the Henry James novel. KHJ IJ 8:00 -"The Other Man." A re- leasea convict tries for revenge in this movie starring Roy Thinnes, Joan Hackett and Tammy Grimes. KCET D 9:30 -"A Rainy Day." Mariette Hartley stars as an unhappy TV star who returns home for her father's funeral. <See story and photo below). 10:10 • ....,., EtDINT ..-rwoN(--ID THU.-AIMDOM A man (Paul Scoftald). 9MI to Pwla to -• VoUtlO Amerlean tnand lrom tlla ctul"-of a WOf'ldly Par1- 118nna, .. aided In "" mil- lion ~ • cf\al'mlng ~ can aapatrlat• (LM Ram· ltkJ In tllll dfam11llzatlon °' Hanry J-· novel tt:008D8•Cll9 NIWI 8 STARTMK Kirk muet nnd Iha antidote 10 I ptegua that thrNl«ll 10 kill al Iha crew ol Ille E.ntarprl11. D NIWLYW!O OAMI! Cl) MNNYHIU Banny pla~ a deputy with an unueual wey or dNllng with hi• 1><leoner ID Dta<CAWTT Guael Mlcllaat Oavi& 11:30 9 (I) MOVIE * * * "Murder Al TM Mardi Gru" ( 11178) O•vld GrOh, Didi Conn A caal'llaf or> a tree trip lo New Or1Nn1 wit-1 crime t>.11 CM'I ga1 anyone 10 ba11ave har 11ory ( R) 8 TONIGHT Hoal Johnny Cereon Ouaat1· Madelina Kahn. Pete Barbulll •@AllC .... NIGHTUHI D Ln'I MAICe A DIN.. • M'A•l0 H Colonel Flagg tuma up a1 Iha 4077th wanting penicil- lin 10 bati.r lor Informa- tion • UMTTA ::Iha 8naka Chu«" • CAP'TIONB>AllC NEWS -Ml>NGHT- 1 t2:00 8 MOVIE * "Tha Bonnie P8tker Slory" ( 1158) Dorothy Pro- YIM . Jeck Hogan. Bonnie P1rker )oina bankrobbar Clyde 98frow lo lerrorlza Ille WHI during lh• o.s>rMll<>n. D O LOY!BOAT "Sounds 01 Sllanca" Son- ny Bono. Shalla Lanh&m: "Cyrano csa Bricker" Char- lie C.llU. Jiii St. John; "Murd., On TM High San" Dana Wynter. Pater Lawtord (Al G MAVENCK Brei ii lllmolt lynchad tor a crime commlltad by • c....., con man who ulad Illa name. • t.UllOH: ~ Tha IMF blanka OUI an enemy agent a memory to JOHN DARLING ,,.. """ "** .... ............ u:11eTOMOMOW °"""" ..,.....,. ""' ~ectl and Catota ..,.., e ONI lf9t ISYOND "~ar1on Unknown " WMMCI lty pOloa tor hlll pet1jclpa.llon In • Mnlcan re¥0Mlan, • -llik• , ... In .,, *"°81 ..,,_ ed OOIW9llt' 1:00• NY(HO ... ICl .. t4THI WON..D.....oND "TM AncNnt AIU" Hoai.! 08mlall ~. ··~ Hunt. OUHll K•rm• Walotl, Ethel Cwt• llfown and ........ Mc:Laughlln dllQM numerology, pa1. mletry Ind Ofaphdogy. -~ * • ._. "Atct1 Of T r1ump11 •· ( tfMI) Ingrid kgman. ~ loyw, An Awtrlan ~ ...,c;hM Pllrll for • o.tapo llgelll. ' •• .,.w NETWOM..w8 t:108 MOYll • • • "S.gMnt DMct· head" ( 11851 Frankie Avlllon, Oabcwlfl Wllia>f. AMr a ~ trip, M off!.. car )eoc>ardiz91 both hie eat-and low Illa with Illa r""'4y Kq\Meel par900811- 1:21 f. NlWI 1:ao • t.tO'M *... ''Rod. Around The World" ( t957J Tommy SI ..... Honlar Hanc:ocil A looa at Iha rlaa of Tommy s ....... llnglng pre>'- liOn, ., t.tO'M • • Y. "Footatepa On Tha Moon" ( 1907) Documante- ry. N8tretad by Dr w.,,_ von Btaun. Man'1 111'11 lunar eclllavament1 are r8'1lawed 1:"611 NEWS 2:001 NlWI 2: t5 EDITOAW. 2:208 MOVIE * * '-' "The Impatient Hearl'' ( 19711 Carrie Sno<SgrMI. MICllMI Con· atanllna A tod8' worker CM 'I ao!\19 her OWll prOb- laml bacauM Illa'• 100 buay 1otvlng everyone ..... ........ ... ..,. • ._. "Aa You W.." (tt11l Joe...,.,, W-... Ttllll'I• TM~ ...... ~ Ola.,,.,_ la..,. a -ot~~.._.,M --'°--~ .·-•ta ..,. ........ ~ .. (tM4) Cllat ... Bo~. lngrld ltfOINft. A dlMolc.i ..... !Mind ... °"' to drllla .. .... lnMne. ~ti· MCWll • .... "Mf. Wlllltla T ...... ( 11t12) Wiiiiam Trll08iy, Joe lawyet 'l'••nd••'• 'Da11i l.w !11•.,ln 11•• •\t"!Monde~ mlta" (11MI) 8-y Boyl. Ao. J8rgane. The ... .,. kept tluly when "- organlm 1111-1 ~· 11:ao• ••~ "TWllgttt For The Goda" (Par1 t) OHa) Aoc:lt Hud9on. C)d ()w. laM. P Tl I ig91 I aboefd a ~en-Gown lfllp --together to IUrviva and rMCll.uaty . -AFTERNOON- t2:00• •• "Santiego''(1~ Al•n L add. Ao111na Podalta. In Iha tunglM ol Cuba, an opporiuni.1 lllla guna and than IWitcn. atteglancal for • l..ad<)m.. llgl!tlng woman. • * * ~ "The Big Caml-v1r c11s11 Klrtt Oougl•. Jan Sterling. In ordat to boolt 1111 cat-.• ntport. ar explojt1 Iha 11111farlng1 of Illa wife of • man tr~ In. c:a11e-ln. l:aO. * * "Ww Of The~ •I•" ( 1971) John RidlWd. '°". Katia Cllrfsllna. Art Amancan IPllOI craft is overtaken ~ ...,. and -not ba ralMMd w--. I ha craw is ab4e 10 light off amonater by Armstrong & Batiuk OH. 0Y THE WAY ... DID~ ~T'1 'VOU MUST~// MENTION !HAI IN ORDER BE OUT OF ~ Ml"""'., 10 PUT A C.UQSE ON CBS, WE'RE GOING "TO ~GU1Re Q A ~UMAN ~IFICE! : Heth Brickell. former actress. Signal weaker KCET is experiencing problems with its trans- mitter and is currently broadcasting al Just 40 per- cent of its normal signal strength, according to Hal Smeder, director of enelneering at KCET. According to Smeder, It will be five or six months before a new antenna can be constructed, Installed and fully operational. In the interim, a temporary antenna will be utilized -maintaining the reduced signal at 40 percent of normal power. Transmission to viewers in the Los Angeles metropolitan area will only be marginally affect· ed, but in the outlying areas such as Orange Coun· ty, Lancaster and the extreme east and west valleys, the signal wlll be severely reduced. Starting a New BU8fneH Aeeeordl111 ta ~ ......... .... ,,... ...... Cede ''"· 11tH ta 11Ut) •II ................... .. , ....... ....... ' Ill••• ....... ..._... ..... "" CMMy Qaftt a11d II•,.. It ~UM•• favr ""''' lllt • -···-r: ....... araa II Wlllall Illa -....... .. ....-. Ttle 1tata111a11t la ~_,, __ _ ..... ..., ........... . r••r ..._.,.. .. 11a1111 • ..... ''""' , .... ,, . ...... -' ..... ..... _ _,.... ... .... Tiie DAILY "LOT ,,.,,... ..... . C"' .. * ....... .. " ..... n••...., ..... 9'141 ........... . ••nr .. ,,,... •• ••• ora111e Cau11ttt c. .... _ ...... _ ,, ..... , *"' .... " ............. ., '"'"' Ull LIOAL DIP~~ • .... ... ,., .. ,. ..... 5 .......... .JUST A. SECONo.~F·· WHAi AeOUT 5 E tN KCOUNTtN Amendment demonstrated NEW YORK CAP) -A mock trial in which participants debate the right O( the press to UM confidential sources is a highlight or "The First · Amendment Project," a unJque three-week effort by WCBS, the network's flagship affiliate here. "I'd become concerned about the number of onslaughts on the First Amendment we've seen in the last couple of years," says Edward M . Joyce, WCBS' general manager and the man behind the project. ''It occurred to me that while most people have heard of the First Amendment. in general, they don't know what it is, or how it works, or why it exists." Joyce says he began work on the project while general manager at KNXT, the CBS affiliate in' Los Angeles, which will broadcast a similar, though independent, series during the same period. "It was created out or conflict 200 years agq," Joyce says. "Most people aren't really aware that it was the printing press that broke the crown's . monopoly on information. "It's been reshaped over the years, most re~, cenlly by the Supreme Court," he says, "and It's as important to people today as it was two cen- turies ago. "You begin to realize. my God, what a tradi-• tion we have inherited -nothing like it exists l anywhere else in the world." i Joyce says one aim of the project is to · demonstrate to viewers that the First Amendment is not something conceived for lawyers or journalists, rather "for everyone who is watching -it's their · First Amendment. "We try to relate everything we do to the lives . of everyone who will watch the programs," Joyce ' says. Joyce says expert advice was summoned for segments produced by WCBS for the project. ) "I think we have to approach the subject on S two fronts.'' be says. "The first is educational -t the history is fantastic. Then we have to move into S current issues, and call on all of the varying polntl of view." Orange Cout DAILY Pt LOT ,Wedneldey, June 10, 1981 A,,_,..... Don Cannaday fixes a Leaky faucet on OM o/ hi! ;obs as a rental hU3bond -a bu.Tineu he and a partner started m Dallas. They do odd jobs /or pay by the hour Rent a husband handy plan DALLAS (AP) -Oh. for the perfect man. Someone to paint your house, wash the windows, fix the car and do all those other menial household chores with a smile. If you d8n't already have one, you can rent one 1n iallas Don Cannaday and Robin Hill are Husbands by he Hour. The two divorced friends will do odd jobs around the house -without expecting dinner. a date or some romancing in return. They're actually just glorified handymen with a catchy name for marketing their trade. "We just wanted a name people wou.ld remember," Canna- day s ays. They charge $20 for the first hour and Sl7 .SO for each additional hour of work. They'll tackle most any chore. but Hill, 35, insists he "won't do ovens." Hill quit his job as a production manager to go into the business full·lime. Cannaday, a 37-year· old salesman. does "husband" work in his free tim e. They went professional a little more than a year ago at the suegestion of a friend, who said they could be earning money instead of a good din· ner or a six-pack of beer for their trouble. "I thought about It on my way home and came up with the name," Cannaday said. "Alter we stopped laughing about it, we registered the busi· ness and s udde nly began gelling a lot of publicity." The JObs they're hired to do range from mun· dane such as painting, carpentry and pruning trees to bizarre. One woman hired Cannaday for an entire day to show her how to drive her new S· speed car While nearly 90 percent of their customers are women, some are couples and a few are men, Hill said. "Most of the time, though, men don't like to admit they can't do something," Cannaday said. The two men hope to expand the business eventually and become consultants, "maybe a service tbat lists companies or workers and refers our subscriber11 to them." Hill said. SD trolley fares set SJ\N l>lf!!<i() IAI'> Th.-planned 16 mile trolley rich· from 1lownt,,wn Him Dleao to the Mex· 1<.'<tn txm1n h1111 u l'll•tom•r 1111n ta1· tt each way for th1• 1•lllrtly aml tumtUn pJ>Gd, the tare It to n•nlt The M«tr11pt1llls.n 'rr•n.!Ot lJen lupment Board dt·<'id NI 11n fllrf"' "''ft•• ,.,.N b1u11 'trnlley, • tll~ 3 nulhon mi""' lt flnl'll 11y11t•tt1 ""Vf'<'l .. J to bc.J•ln roll 111.r July 2'1 PUBLIC NOTIC elONO.IMt COlllfllACT '90. ..... NOTICe TO CINtl,.ACTHI CAU,lllM ll'Ott llM kl\MI OIMrlcll NIWll'OaToMllA UMl,.10 &OtOOl OllTIUCT, llol o.MllN! t ·• 9'clecll •"' tf ~ hi .. y If JWy 1W1 fll«• If llt ll«tlM un ~IUMitl• .... (Ml• ..... C..ll~flt». '"""'I""'"'"'*' "'"''' INlllOV tOHHllV"TION Ml"IUltH AT QO~" OIL MAit HIOH Kt400L; ,_,_. ,,._ lft en •lltt llJI ~IK1ntl1 SI~"'· C•tl• Mtu, Clllltnll1 tlUJ. NOTICI II MlllleY OIVIN \Mt IM •M,_. fMl'Mt k ..... Oltlrkt •f or~ c-ty. c.llWlll•, Mllftt "" en41 lllP~ IU O•'"'"'"• ... ,., lltrtl 11•lltr ,.,.,,,. It •• "OltTAl(T", O#lll rK•lw ~ It, !NI "°' ,,,., 11'1111 .,. ....,_..,, .... lllM, Mtlff IN• tw IN ••nl or 1 cenlrlCI tw ll\I ........ flCI A l'rit 11141 CM~• It ~..._,, .. t•t J~ 11. t•t. t JO 1.m., •llfl Mr, JI"' Htltle1141. Olrt<MI °' M • 0 llU Ut &ml, et Ille Cot-Otl ,._., HI.., k""" "''· '''°' ... 11111111 ori ... Ntw_.,, 9"cll, C.llfwftlt Nt 11141 wlll .. l<C ... 11111 .. , !ht ~Ire<., II• ltlldt lllil ~ ~lffefttt. e 141 ~llM9f\ll ••• IO .. pick.a up ti ll'w 11'\;tCllMlllO Offlct , IUJ ,,llCtfl lie llr .. t, CHlt MtH, C•lllornlt 11141'°"'2111 •1• ''*' .. , •• ,_ ... "" lllt<• 1411111111• -.... • ...-w1111e ..,..,.., llM ltlllllle ly •tM elwcl •1 lM .. ,, .. •lllMll-11\fptlCt. Tlltr• #111 • • l'llly Oo41•r 1uo.001 .. ""' '""''" ,... Nell .. , ti 1110 document• IO IUlfllnt .. IN ,.lum In tOOd Cendltlell wllhl11 14 Nyl •lltr Ille llld 6"<11119 dMt Eull bid mutt ct nform ·~ bt rt-•I .... ,._ COftlrlCI 4«11......nu. I Rech bid NII .. ICCompenlff by IN '9C..,lly rtf .. red le lft lM C ... lrtel CIO<U ..... "41 -by IM lltl OI pr--\llllC:Oftlrector\. Tiit Dl:lTlllCT ,_ .... , , ... rlQlll lo rtlt<I MIY or ell blch or lo •tlve .ny lrre9u1.,111 .. °' lnformt llll•• In •ny l>ld• or 111 llll llldldlfto. Tht OISTltlCT 11e1 ootelntd ffWI\ 1111 Olnl<lor ol !flt o.,..r1.....,1 ot '" I cklllrlt l Rel•llons lht ~ti prtv•ll· ln9 r•tt el -dltm w..-1 lt1 IM lot•llly In Whltll IN• WOt-,, lo bt perlormtd tor H<ll crtll or type Of workrntf\ ~ to t•t<ute "" con- trect TllHe "'" ere on fllt ti IN OISTIUCT offkt lo<tl.O t i. P"'rtlltl 1"9 Dep4, llS7 .,._.,.tit Strttt, Coste Mtw, Calllwnl• •»V CoPlt1 mt y De Obltlntd on '-'· A COl)y o1 -rtt•Slltllb9--.tttltjoblltt Tiit lor-"'f '°*9ult of per dltm ••9t• la -_. t _,klnt d•Y 01 tl9lll Ill ,_.., T'llt rtlt for hOllClty tnd ovtrll"" _,II •IWlll l>t •I ltttl tlmetnd-·lltll II 1nt ll be ,.,,_.lory upon lht CON· TRACTOR t.o -t ... ct11lrtcl h •wtrdtd. -"l)Oll tny Wbconlrtetor .,,,.,., 111rn, to PilY not ltu tn.n t11t w lCI •Pt<lfled "'" to •II wot11rnen employ.a by """" lft IM t•K ullon 01 I IM conlre<t Ho bldeltr ,.,,..., wlthdr•w Ill• bid for • period ol •••ty 1601 do• •N•r IN Cltl• '91 lor '"' Ol)tnlnv of bid• A PtY-bond end t jMrtormtftCt -.d wlll be ,_,..., prlOt to utcv· loon ol lllt contrtct The .,.y,......t """" st>•ll be In tilt lw.rn Mt forth In lllt conl••<l dotumtnb . 0. ............. N ay l'Wt-1 .. Dlre<W Publltntd OrM199 C.0.11 Otlly Piiot. J uM 10, 11. 1 .. 1 2-.1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUIUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PV'8UC NOTJCI PUBLIC NOTICt --------- PICTITIOUI aUStNHS N-a ITATRM .. tT Tiit fotlowlnt penons trt dol"t buslnentt DIAMOND VIEW HOMES, 0 .. M•tArlhur llva .. Suitt 102, Hewoor1 BHch. Ctlllornl• •-.o REGlSTllAHT; Dltmoncl View Vllltgt, t ~rtl PtrlnertNp, Ill Geft«•I P•r1fter, 42" MtcArlt'llK Blvd. Suitt 102, Hewpor1 htell. c.lllwfll• t-.0 Alpt\t II, • Limited Pertnetlhlp. Its GtMrtl P1rtn•r. 200 NtWPOrt Cenltr Drive, S11llt >Ot, Newport Buell, Ctlllornl• t-.O Tiiis butlMU It c.ondut ttCI by • QtMrtl perlnentlip. DltmOfld V ..... HOmet t Gelltr•I Pertntr.-lp llY OI-Vltw Vllltgt t Gelltr•I PtnMnlllp llS~ll P•,,ntr PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ll'ICTITIOUS eus1111ass lllAMR STATEMSNT Tiie IOllOWl"t per-. Is 6'>4"9 bllll ........ D G FINANCIAi. SERI/ICES, '61~ Nlglltlnttle Aw , Founleln Vellty, CA t'J70I. Don H H-. ,.u Hlglltlnoale, Fo.inttln Valley. CA '2109 Tiiis _,,..., fl COftCIUCttd by en lft CllvlCl.,tl DonH H..._, This llelt<Nnl wet llltd wltll lht CO\lnly Clerll of Or'anot Covnty on Mty lt,1911. l'HM14 Pvbllslled Ortf\9t CDllSI O•lly Piiot, Mey 20, 21. June 3, 10, '"' llll? .. 1 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICITITOUI eUSIN•H By. Tiit JDM Mtrtln Co.. l'ICTITIOUS eUatNRH lllAME ITATRMRNT t C.lllornl• cc><porallon N-R IATATRMRNT Tiit followlng pe"ons are doln9 Its Gtntral P•rtntr The tottowtnv perton I• doln9 bUsl· bUslr1tu H By Jolln T Mtrlln neu tS: TH E J AME S GROU P , B lts,,.,...14enl AARDVARK PAINTING CON· Ponew-. 1.-.lne, Ctlllornltt%714 By Rlllh E O<llot TRACTOllS. 1'07 Elden Awn .... Cost• Cllestnvll Court, Inc .• t Ctlltornl• Ill Stcrtt.,y AMw, Ctllloml• f11U7 P\llUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PtJBUC NOTICE flfCTtT10UI eull .. IU NAMll ITAT&MllNT tlle to1i.w11141 P•flon\ a rt doln9 1111111\Ht •• , MAltlC0, 1SDT1141fft-t, H1111I 1""""' ~. Cll"-'i• nw Aryll l. ...,..,, ,., Giii• '" dt,t1141t~~ fl•11t11l t l11 V•llO, c:.i11 ... n1._ Dori. M. 9eyltl, 10Ql (Ille In dtll•ndtnc lt, '•""'•In Vell•y, Ctlltor nit f2'JGI JM "· "•• Jr , 1t142 Tt ldtnl I.•,.., HUlltl"ltOft .. t<ll. Ctlll.,lllt t2Mt M•rllyn o. "•· tt142 trl•nt ~· ""-II,.... .. 1'. CllltM'lll• Thia ""'~" It c..,du<t.O "" • '9M' ti pet'lnt<1hl• Ool'lt M. .. .,.., Tlllt IWi-i WM fllect wllll lht County Clerk Of Oftnte (6vllty on June I,'"'· "'"1 .. "ICTITIOUI eu11..... PVOll-Or ..... CMt1 Otlly P1191, NAM& ITATRMaNT June IO. 11, 14, July I, 1•1 t'1M1 Tiit tollowlM "''°"' •rt dolnt .. .......... S, S. "· PllOPlltTIES, 12.Ml HtrllOr e1vo., 0...otn Grow, CA 92640, M•M11 R. ktlentl, 12 Ho. Vlllt Ot PUBUC NOTICE C•llllM, ~ llMcll, CA n•n. l'ICTITIOUI •UllNEH JOM R. ~. 1..a 5eqvole St , N-a ITATllMRNT 11'-ltltl Vell9", CA t270I. The IOllCM!fte Ptf'totl la dolnt bu•I 1100tr1 H. ,..,,.,1. JOit E L.tllt Hiii MH as. Or , Or ...... CA fH61 WOl.F ENTUtPRISSS. UIS Wtll Tlllt l>UafMH It ConClv<ttd by t Mt<A'11'111' ......_,trCI, UNI •1, C.lt .....rAI ptl'tntrSlllp, AMW, Gtllfornlt ttt• JofVI R. Sc11tnt1 John Ch"'I Song. 2644 Etent Thia alet-1 w•t flltd with tilt AY•n ... , WMI Covln.t, Ctllf0tnl• tl1t2 County Clerk ol Or'enoe County°" Mty Thi• ltlAIMu ll tonca10td by tn In It, 1911. dlvldv•I I' IUU4 Jofln Cllo;l 5of'9 Pvbll\MO Ortt19t C:0.11 Otlly Piiot, This llot~I wM llled wllll tM Mty 10, 27. J-3, 10, 1te1 214111 County Cltrk of Ortnoe CO\lnly on JUM l,1"1 l'IU1 .. PUBLIC NOTICE PvbliSlltd Orenet Cotti D•llr Piiot. l'ICITITOUI aUSIMRIS NAM• STATEMRNT The loll-lne perton• .,. Clol"t JUM I, 10, 17, 14, 1•1 2~1-11 PUBLIC NOTICE builr1t••'" l'ICTITIOUI eu11111ass RAPID GRAPHICS INC., 411 S 111-E STATRMllNT M<lln StrMI. Oranot, C<llllornlt .,.., Tiie lotlowing "''°" Is dotnt buti Strn w Vvlnov, Aepld Gr-lu MU•• lftt , t Ctlllornt• ccwporel .. n. 417 $. SHAMROCK ENTERPRISES, 11 Main Slretl, Or anot, C<llltornl• flMI An1• Sl r-1. Udo "'°nlnwtt, He..,oon This "'*""' 11 conducllld by t cor B .. c11. Ce411cwntt .ir.u PO•tliOrl. Hert.rt J. McCent1, IJ Anu Rao!O Gr~u Int Str eet. lido Ptnln1ul•. Htwpert Stm w Vulnov ll•..:11. c.lllcwnlt t.U President Thi• ltullntst It cono..cled by tn '" Tl\11 ~\et-I wet tlltd wolh lllt CllvlClvtl. CO\lnly Cltrli of Ouno-County on H__, J M<Ctnn J Unt I, 1•1 I Thll llOIHnenl wn tlltd with !tit P'IUUI Covnty Cltrli ol Ortt19t Counly on Pvblllhtd Or~ CDllll Dally P iiot, Jvne I, 1•1 Junt 10, 17, 13, Jv4y I, 1 .. 1 ,.~.._., PIUJtl ---P"'bliu.tet Or~ Cotll D•lly PllOI, PUBUC NOTICE Jvne 10. 11. 24, Jl//iy '~-' -2\lMI corpo,.tlon, U Pinewood, I rvlnt , By Crlltrlon DewloP .• lftC Rlcllerd ErnHI HtOtrt. 2t01 i:lden C<1lilornlt '2114 t C.llfof'N• <C><llOt•lloft Avtn.,., Coale Mtw. C<lllfornlt t1'21 l'ICTITIOUI aUSINESS This bonJn•u 11 c.onCIUCltd Dy t tor· Iii Genetti Partnw Ttllt _,,..,It <-ucltCI by 1tn In Iii.AMR STATaMENT PUBUC NOTICE POrtlloft By; O.W..ld E. Boucllt< dlvldutl. Tnt lollowlng pe"'ons ltrt CIOlt\91 FICTITIOUS eUSlllEU Cllettnvl Court, Inc:. Ill Pretl<*ll RlcNlrd E. Heber! bU\lneu .. , 111-• •TATEMRNT J-l .JoMston, By· Frtntr.l. Fel'I" Tnl1 stalt<Nnl wn llltd with IN NEWPORT D E TAILING, 1112 Tll• lallowlnt Pt<ton Is dol"t bull Pl'etl*nt Viet Prnldtnt Counly Clerlr. of Ortn11t County on Dennl1 °''"'· Cotlt Mtw, Ctlllornot ne11 ts. Tnll •IAlltmtftl wH flltet wllh IM This slet..,_1 WH flltd wlll'I 1,,. J vnt I,'"' ttU• I REID WASH80H -PRECISION Cout11Y Cltrtr. of Or'tt19t COllnly on County Clei'k Of °'"'0-County on PIUt• Otrvtl1 Smltll, llU Dennis Drive, METAi. CRAFTING, 1Ut -owl• Jllnt I. 1"1 Jvne I .'"' PubllSlltd Ortngt CD111I D•lly Pllol. Cotta Meu. (.alilornlt t »» Avenvt, Unol t . HtwPOrt Btuh l'IU141 PIUJ~ JllM J, 10, 17, 14, ... , 2n1-t1 Htnry Ht1lln11•. UOJ Hetlhtr Celllornlt f2Ml P"bll.n.d Or•"91 Cotti Delly Piiot, Publl•l>td Ortn9t '°'" Dtlly vllol, 1 Lene, Newport llelCll, Cthtornl• tiw.o ReiCI Eclw1<d W11,_,, '30.A W J vne 10 11 14 July 1 '"' 2"1 .. 1 June 10 11 n July 1 1"1 >•S1 .. I PUBLIC NOTICE This bu11ntn h conducted by t Btlllot Blvd., S.lltot, C.lllorntt t:i.61 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' Qtntr•I pertntr\/llp Tiiis bualnns Is conCluCllCI by en In -------------Henry HtSllnt1 Cllvlduel PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE lllOTIC• 0,. TltUSTH'S SALE Dtnnls Smltll Reid W•lllbon I TS • ..._ 11"6 This Slelemtnl wts llltd wolh ,... Thl1 Si.I-I wh tlltd •1111 Ille -----.--NOTICE IS.HEREBY GIVEN. tlltl Counly (Itri. ol 0••"91 County on County Cltri. ol Orange Counly 011 aRIOLUTIOM N0.11.U °" w.-..,, J-24, '"'· el t 00 Junt I, 1 .. 1 JvM I , 1 .. 1 ltUOLUTtOM 01' TNR llOAltDO" DlltRCTOltl o'clo<ll t .m of uld a.ty, ti ,,._ en l'IUJ• "'"',. Publlllltel 0rtn9t CDllst D•oly Pilot, 01' TM• MOUl.TOtl ... OOU•L WAT•• OllTa lCT lrtnce lo U..offk.nof REAL ESTATE Pullllsl>td OrtnQt COllll D•llY Pllol. I NOTICR TO CltEOITOU DaCU.alNG nta 1 .. TaNTtOM TO D&TACN ,,.O,,•an SECURITIES SERVICE, 2020 Horth J une 10, ll, 2J. Jul~ I, 1"1 161 ... 1 0" euut TltANS,,Rlt ll'llOM IM,,ltOVaMaNT DISTalCT NO. IA IHW•ltl Bro..:twty, Suitt lOt, Int ... City of Stn· llt<Lltl-4M1U.C.C.I WHEREAS. 11 ls tht cMtlre Of lllt •-d of Olrwcton o1 tt1t Moulloro•loOlllftl It An•, County of Or-. Sl•lt of Hollo Is lllreby tlventocrtdlloo of w .. ., Ol51rk t (MNWDI lo dt'-<11 etrttlft .--rtY. dttcrlbed 111 E1Nltll "A" C•lllornl•, NEWPORT EOU ITV PUBLIC NOTICE Ult within Mmtd 1.-1-111 llltt • lo tllls llt101uuon, wfllcll nlllbll I• •ltt<.-'-*end by 11111 reflttefKt ls 1 ... FUNDS. tHC .. • C.lllornlt corPOr•ll· ------ June 10, 17, 24, Jv4y 1. "" 1611-11 PUBUC NOTl~E 1 IMilk lrtMNr Is MIO<ll '° .. m-Oft <..._•led htreln, lrorn lmpr-t District Ho. IA 159-•I of MNWD, -on, ti dUly ...,1 ..... Tn .... u- person11 P•OP••IY ll•rtlnefler I WHEREAS, tilt Burd ol Olrector1 ol MHWD llnft llltl IN *llC""-1 of •M ...,,_to -_, ol Yle con· ••SOLUTION N0.11_,. clelTcrl-I ~ -~ wlcl ~ from tmpn"••m-1 Dlstrlel No. 1A (S.W.rl of MNWD wlll ltf'rtd In tlltl cert.tin 0-0 o1 Tr1nl •1· ltRIOLUTIOM 0" TNR llOAltOO• DtltRCTOal tit netN i i -ltus .... u -•us -Ill tll(ll ~; tnO t<Uled tty HARltY llROOMALL •nd 01' TM a MOUi. TON-NI04.l•L WATEa DISTltlCT of IN lnl.rldltdtr"'t'*rorOI trt WHEREAS, 11 ll Ult OMlrt Of IN ll"'dol Dirado" o1 MNWD to ~I a IDA M llROOMAll .• llusbtnd end DRU-AltlNG In INTRNTIOMTOAIOIRll ,,ltOl'RltTY I F R E R E J A C 0 U E S llVbll< httc'int •I wftlGll Ptf'Mll'lt mty......, -De_,.., rel•llw lo tilt Pf'O-wife, end rtc.0tdtd Mey 16, ltlO, In TO IM,,llOVRMRNT DllTltlCT NO. 1A ll•W••I I RESTAURANT COMPANY, INC .. 000 POMd dellC-1 lrom lmpro .......... 1 Olttrkl No. IA ISl-•I; Book l:Mllt ot Otllclal lltc.Ords of Wld WHEREAS, 111• '"' Otslrt of IM 11-d of DWt<ton of lht Moullon·Hltutl Campvs Drlvt, Suitt 210, HewPOrl HOW, THl!REFORE, tht 8otrCI 01 Dlr.ctort of MHW. D OOES HEREBY Count.y, .t peoe 1-... Wtt•r Dl1trlel IMHWDI t.o .,,,,., etrUlll ~. •• dtterl-Ill £1tNlttt Buch, C.llfomlt t-.0 RESOLVE, DETERMINE AHO OllOER ts foll-.: ' Rtcorder'a 1 .. 1r-t No. 171n. b't' "A" to ltlls lletOlllllon, Wftlcll t11lllblt ll tllK-htf'Wto tftd 111>11 tt\11...-....Ct The ntmthl -bvslntH --· lec1Me 1. Tlltt It IS"" Intention Of -lloerd ol DfrtelO" of MNWO IO.... rNMlft of • brffch of default In pey. Mr•ln lftCOrllO'•ltCl, lo,....,,,.........,, Olstrl<t Ho. 1A ISt-1 of MNWO; - of , ... Int..., 1r .. sttf'ffhl .,. 1-Cll ~ ltf'rlton' lrom llftjlr-1 Olltrkl No '" 1s.-1 of MHWD ment M perlormtnct of .... ~·oa· WHEREAS, 1111 llotrdof DlrtdOt' finch ---••Ion of wkt Pf'-"Y HIHFAS CALIFORNIA, INC .. 013 s.n ... L .,_. mep .._Int'"' twt«lor _,.., .. ot tilt t«r1ttry .... llOM S<l<W'.0 tlltrwOy lftCIUCllnt , ... , to lmllf'-Dlatrkt Ho IA IStwtrl ol MHWD wlll -II well pt-1y. Vlt Dolce, Merlnt dtl Rey, Ctlllornla clcrtKIMd. Wflkfl mep alWll llOVf'n !of' •11 dtlell•" to IN e-of IN trM to ur1•1n _,.. or .faun. Holk• of and tOHI De dtWdltd. Is°" lllt •11'1 tt1t Secrt4ery o1 M-D end Is tv.i1-tor In~· Wftk l'I w•• , __ ,.__., 24, 1•1, WHEREAS. II Is tilt Otslrt of lllt ._..of Dll"e<tOn lo ..-1 • pultlk Tlltl lllt prap4rly Ptf'llnenl htrtto IS llon by lfty .,.,_.,, --ltlltf'tsttd In B-11"1 of Otllcltl Records of "'••Int at wNch _...,.may..,._., •nd 119 -d rtl<lllw to Ille,.,_.., - desert-"'0tntre4 ts: All •-•• ,,... S.C.._ J. T'lltt !tit dtle<..,,....t bt eccornpll-wll"'°"' term• end condl· ••kl COllftly, at -1m. Recordtr'l neullon °' \tC'l'ltory to ,....,,,.,.ment Olttrkt No. lA IS.-rl ol MNWO; <hHlln9: fumlturt, llxt11re1, lu'911olCI tlons. Instrument Ho. J?a, Wll.l SEl l AT HOW, THEREFORE, Ult llotrd Of Olrwcto" ot MHWD OOES HEAE.llY improv_IS_equl-1,andl• S.C.,_._.,_ ___ lsl0t<•rrytnvoultf\YP\ll'-otlrnpr-. PUBLI C AUCTION TO THE ltESOl.VE,OETEAMIHEAHOOROERHloll-.: loctltel ••• "° s. Sl•I• ColltQOt 8 1vCI., menl Olsttlcl Ho. IA (Sl-•I. lftChHllne pe~ ol ptlftclP91 of -lnt-t HIGH EST Bl ODER FOR CASH. *'"" '· Tiltt It Is tilt ln!Alftllon Of IM llDlln:lol Olrwwnof MHWD lo-• Bret, C•lllornlt tll21. °" el\y ltOftdl or • .,,..,ls outsllftdlftQ. Wll no1119COf'lllftvtdto119 ltwl.O le ttwfvl money of -Unlltd SlelK. t ll urtt ln tt<rtlory lo lmpro...,,....t Olltrlcl Ho. 1A <~I of MNWD. TM ltutlntH ... ,.,,. uMd by "" wlcl lllt tltttftl .... In -"""""' orovkled for "'.,. Ohtrlet •-eM'Dllon ~·of PtY•blt ., -time of ...... •II •19111. Seethe L TNI. """' ·-.... tilt t.Wlor -·'" ol tilt ..... ,,tor, It .. lrtnllerorOI al Mid locellon 11 Cew 19'S. -t11t I-In Ult territory to 119 -.c-. llllt -lnter"t ,_ llelO by 11. H •--. Wflk h meo W..11 llOWtn ,.,. •II dtlelll ts lo lht tnenl 01 IN .,.. t.o di Poms-t led .... T"-1 • puOlk _1,.. .. tnd Olt -Mrttly" ce41ectto 119 ... 111 et Tru•IM Ill ..,,, t.o llltl real Pf'-rly bt ...... -. ~Oft Ille wltll 1M Secrtl•f'Y of MHWO..,,, I• ........ for •n- Tlltl w ld bulk lr..,Mtf' It lnltndtd 10 l :JO p.m., or• -IMrMfttr ••I• prectk . ..,.. I" lM offk• of MHWD. 17500 '""''''' In ttld County tnd Sltl•. lion by.,,.,.,.,....... or Pt~ lnltrfl-bt conswmmettd •I 111t otflU of Tiii• L.t Ptt 110.0, i.....,. NlllWI, Ce mn • ..,. J-11, 1111• end !Mt ti yjd 11,,,. dfferl-tS lotlows. S.Ctlt9 J. Tlltl tflt ttrrltory to i. •nntatCl to lmproo-..t Dlstrkt Ho. 1A lnsur•nct tnd Trull Com1>4lny, 700 tnd pit<» for aid PllOll< httrl"t tny ~ ln.....,ttd, lnckldlng Ptf'.orl• PARCEL 1. IStwt r) ot MNWO INll bt enMxed wit"'°"' l•nns-condition•. Wll"°'lrt lllVd., Sllltt S10, ~ A"llflH, ownl"t lend wlllllll I.ht.,.. lo bt dtlt<lltd from lmprov.,.,..nt Dlstrkt Ho. IA Unit ._,. •• ,_ on INI t erttln Sectltll ._ Tlltt tsMU.....,ls tor ctrrylng out any purpoM of u ld lmclf'OV• C•llfc><nl• 90017 on or ett .. Jvly 1. I Sewer). mey .... ., end b911t•rC1. Conoomlnh•n Plan ...cor-Alf911tl ..... 111 Olstrk t No. IA 1s.-r1, lnthHll"t PtY"*"I ol prlftCllN! of...., lnternt on Itel ~ a.cti. 6. Tllel lfle Secrei.ry of MHWD be -u. ......... ,...., Is dlreclOCI to 12 1f7S In llool< IUll Pt9t l»l of Of eny -or • .,,.,,ls oulSIMMll"t llWlll De i.vlM u c.twvely _. t11e tench In .™ ,...,.,. Ind ---IM pen.on c...w 1 ~ of ll'llS R..,lullOft too l>t Plltlflsfltd •nd posted In lht m-pro-fkl•I Rec.trm -., dl1lned In '"°"' ukl Im_....,. Ol51rltl, lnclvdl"t lhe ttrrltory -..01.ht<tlo. wolll wlloom cltlms mey be Ill.cl Is vi-by Stctlon »41• of 1111 W•ler C-of v.. SW!t ti Cal~•. certain Otcl~r•tlon• of Coventnll, Stet._ l. T'hel t PllOlk llMrl"(l 119 tfld lht _,,.,,.,..by h uli.t °"!flt_. Mtrllyn ~. Tiiie IMUranct -AOOPTl!O, StONEO AHO Al'PROVEO W. 2151 NY of AMY. t•t Condlllont -At51rk Oont rtc.0rdtd llon of tlle .,_utlon of ctrteln terrllOtY to ,,.,,.......,._. Olatrk l No. IA Ttvll Compelty, 1'00 WllsNrt a1vd , MOULTON-NIOUELWATEllOISTRICT &..-l\4M Peet J0t ol Otlkltl CSewtrl lnd..,yolt'ttrrnal~rtl•tl1t1lo..,yoft11tf01"91101ng to bt ... lcl.tl JO Suite $10. LOI A119tlts, C1Ufornl• Din w Sfflflh Viet p,.. ..... , :;' rCI • p.m .. cw ft -lllerMfttr .... ~eclktltll, ill lht offkM of 11\NWD, V500 L.t 90011, tfld tht latdtyfof' llllnttltlm• Mel...i. L Tvrtwkl, AHlst•ntStc.rtlary ~:Rl£1.2· ,,., ROlld, 1..-Nl9lfel. c.. mn, OftJ-11, 1"1.-1Mlet'81d """' -b't' •ny cr.altor INlll be J.,... JO, l•I, STATI! OFCALIPORNIA I An UndMdeo l/"1'1 lnteffll In LAI piece provldtd !of' Mid public Mtrlng any pe..-lnt«-.cl, lncllllllnt which Is lflt bl.Illness O.y befo'9 tllt 1 ,._ 2 of Tr tel Ho. eon,",_...,.• 11\ip perton• ownl119 llnd wllllln IN •re• to bt .,_xedt• '"""'°-• Olstrkl No <ontlill'lrnatlon 0.te '"'"'" .. ._.. CO\INTY Of' OltANOE I rt<Otdtd 111 ._ J2I ,.._,I tnd t Of tA IS.-1, mer tCIPfer ...0 be ht•rd. so ftr .. I• It-to Ml• Intended I, M•LAH•• L. TUATURICI, Ault!MC S.Crtttry .. , ... ._,,of Olrecton Mlsullent0111 Maps ,., •••• ol lkti.6. l'Mllht Se<•....., of MNWDbe-tllt-Mrttloy lsdl~too Trtnsltr•tlll uld lllltllchd of IN MOULTON NIGUEi. WATElt DISTltlCT, *,...,..., <ertlty tfltl h Ora119t c-t(y C.llfonile -.,. end ce-<I C10PY ti Ifill Rnotllllon to be pueitlSl'led Ind post ... It! IN -,... Tr•nsf•l"Otlll _.. .,.. IOl141Wlllll Mell· lweoolnt ...ootutlon -dut., tdOpltd by.,.. llotnl of Dlrecton of Mkl Olllrkl Otflntd ••eon-:.,_ ArN .;,, lilt'"°"' Cl'llrH by lectlOft a..u of lht Wtlw Com ol lht si... ol Clll'-"'a. tlOftlttll•I ltutlnt1~ ..!' -• 1•nd1 ~~ •I• r~ tNellllCI of uld llotrd lltld on U.1151 NY ol ... y. t•t, -IMI 11 mtllllolltd Condominium Plan •nd ADOPTED, SIGNED ANO APPROVED 11111 Jtsl city of""-'· t•1. w n ·-..... .,..r ....... -. ...,._ ........... by tilt fotlowlnt vote: Otclt r•tlon. MOUi.TOH-NiGUEi. WATER DISTRICT di Pompei, 2UOt H•wthOrM elvd., AYES: L.trry A. ~. H. I.ft R .... mtn, Din w. E1cepll ... , ... ,.,,om •II oll oll OoftW. Smllfl. Viet Pr.sldtftl Torr•nu, Ct llfornl•; UU Ad•m• Srnllll, Dw'9fll A. Wlllltm-., Rlchtrd s Flort, rlvl!lt, mlntr•ls, mlntr•I rlgllU, Mteanle l . Turturic:I, Atslll<lnl SecreWy ll1¥d., C..tt Mew, C.lllcwn~~·.:i~" llry•nS.Hell,-0.,.ldE.Bvck n eturtl llH rltllh •nd elhtr STATEOFCALIFORHIAI 1Urd Sl=C.~11:'• ~l:°"·r• 1 HOES: OIAECTOftS: N-. hydrourllon1 by w11ai-ver 11•mt COUNTYOFOAAHGE : sL •Y ~K•I:~· "' ABSTAIN: OlllECTORS: -klMIWll INilmeyl>twltlllftOf'lllldtr ,... I, MEIJINIE L TlntTURICI, AUhltftl Ste,....., ... , ........ of Dlrecton Vkt Prffldent ' AllSENT: DlllECTORS: -· par(tl of lend.............., -rlbed. of IN MOUL TOH NIGUEi. WATER DISTRICT, dOO ...... , certify_, tllt l-Tr-ltf'M(l l ....... leLTurWrlcl. togetfltr wl9' lllt -1~1 rlllfll Of fortQOlftg....ivtlof'l-OUly..,_...,byllle._,.of~nof-Ol*kl Pultll"*I or ..... Cotll o.lly Pllol Altlllanl Stc.r.Ury of IM drllflnt, mining, •Xlllorlng, tnd II I rttJlllM ,.,_11"9 ol Mid Board lltld °"IN 21st MY°'"""'· 1"1, --11 JvN IO IWI l.UAi MOULTON NIGUEi. WATER DISTRICT -•llntl tflltnofor end Jlorl119 111 -WH IO adoop•tcllliy llW followlnv vote. • of"" 9oerd of Olre<lon llltC"tof rernovl ... .,,. .. ,,,. from Mid lend .. AYES: l.trry "· UJDtte, H. I." Remmen, Don w. PUBLIC NOTICE Pulllllhtel Or.,. Cotti D•llY Piiot, J-3, lO, ltfl ttOUI trom eny otl-llftd, lfttlvdll'lt '"-Smith, OwillM A. Wlllltmton, Rk lltnl s. Flore. I r1111111o .,,11111oc• cw dlrtctlOn.tlly drlll eryen s. Htll, -0.••ld e. Bvctr.. ------------etld mine from 1-ofNr U...n llloM HOES: O ltRCTOSIS: -· PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE lltrtln1i.ove dttcrlbed, oll or tts A8STAIM: OlltRCTOllS: -· wells. l-l -lNfl• Into, llltovtl\ AISEHT: OlltECTORS: Mont. Of' ter-1119 -1te• o1 Ole •-MflMle I.. Twtwkl, ...,..,,... ..... lltterllled -'° _,..., AWslMt Seer~ of lllt svch whlp,stockM or dlrtctlOfttlly MOUi.TOH NIGUEL WATER DISTRICT drll._. wellS, """"'41 •ftd 11\tfll urteltr of IN...,.."' Directors IMrtol tnd w...i.11 °' .,.,,_ '"' e•ltrlOt Pvblltlltd Or•nve COlst Otlly Pllol, J-i , 10, 1"1 150t-ll • -----------llmlls llltC'eof, and lo '"'Ill, rtt'IHIMI, equip, ,,,.lt\ljlln, ,..,.,,, dttMfl •nd •Ptrllt tlly avc:ll wtlll or ml,.H, wltl\ol.lt • .....,,.,, lflt rlllflt lo drlll, m in•, tl0t•. ••Pion •114 opertle PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ftHldltnu lll•llllotlon ... ,( ... ~ ..,.,,,(, l"'IMtt IMl.llltllon e1t1c IW11ttt ltfvkt' l11111141H ~llWvk• C-li.M lvt<Mr• -It llt llNl'lecl 10 ""'"'::.::'; """""'9 H " •10 u .. lllrOUlll'I 1119 -1•• .. --· JOO fffl •I lllt llllKUrflCt of Ille lend _..,""'9¥e Mcrlbed ••• ,._.,... '" Ille o...i or LffM lrom lht lrWIM Cempeny, ,._,_ Septtm..,. I, 1t1• In 9°" 11•, l't9t Ul of Otll<l•I ltteord-. "AltCELJ: Hon·l!aclvslvt EtHment lor UtlllllH, Ac-, I~. Etrflt, En· croecflfNflt, 11.wert. .,_ tor oll\er pu~. •If • -..i 411'11 dtflNd In thO.. etrtllll Dt<let .. IOft of Cove· nenll, Clftdltlont olld ltttttt'l<ll°"' r• corded In ..-"*· ""' J06 of Of· flci.1 RKOrda, end tny Amtnd,,,.nlt , ... ,., .. TIM strwt ...,_ « oci...r common ••lenlllon. " .,.,, • " "" , .. 1 P<-. IY lltrtlt'llllOW Clleer1111td It _ _... to lie: tn ...,._ c:.v..w.11. NewllOrl lttcfl. Cellffll'ftl4I. 16.A" Tiit UMlt...,_ dltclelmt MY 411'11 II.'" •II llAllllY fet !fie 1-nclne11 of Ml4 •tAel ......... or OU...r com""'"' """"'"""' S.ONI Nit wtll .. rnNt •llMlll C.ft !\Ml Of' _.. ....... .,,.... ., lfl'ltllled. ,....,..,,,. 11111, ..... left, "' e~- '"""' t• Hll•I' IM 1trl11cl1111 .. ,_.,,. ..... ., etMf ...... ,lefl N<v,_ by Ml4I OIM Of Tru.l. Wltfl 111< ,.,.,, "lllf0¥ldell ltl-.MI NOtt er o\tltr MfltlllOnl ptla .... -... " '"'. Wfto •r "" i..rme Of Mid Deed OI T n111 •Ml ltl ...... 1 Oii eftY _,, --... .... ,... ..... U\lfOIM.,.. ........ Of tM TrwMit .... ti IM ..... Cf'MtM llY u lf 0..-.. Tr.,11. TM l•t•I ..,...... t4 .... _._.. IMllldlfle .,llKl .. t, eurlttof ,.,..,, • ..._, ,_,, •• tfltft ..... •!Id .... -.... "*""''" fwt, CNt'1111 efld 1..-... " IM T"*9t, ti tM twn. Of lllltl1I •11•t1utt111 •' tflls Nellu, le 11 ... ,..., •• o..,.,,_...,,.., NfWllOlt'f IOUITY "UNOI. INC., • °'"""" ,.,...,.,_ .. ,.,...., Ir: ltlM. atT"Tt ...... l'TIUM•v1e1. ·~ C9f111W•l'-I. ... __ l1UiU D.J • ......,., , .. ,,..... .., ............ .... "" =in.--.:: '=·~'~ c... Dtflf=~ I "Analyst disputes inflation theory By JOHN CUNNIFF A~ ....... ._.,.. NEW YORK It Is now almost • an article of faith that domesUc inflation is caus ed by excessive growth of the money s upply, and it ~s. a dictum of monetary policy th11t high interest rates are the cure. ll is the uncritical acceptance of • this analysis, and the resulting • course of action, that explains why men such as John Wright can be seen holding their he ads and looking baffled, frustrated and angry. To Wright, who fo\.lnded and presides over a I arge and respect· The list continues. High rates "inhibit and diminish long-term capital investment, producUvity, research and development, pro- duction and development or new sources and efficient application.a or energy.'' "They are," he s tates, "bankrupting small businesses, increasing the concentration of economic productive power , drasticaJly reducing effective, competitive price cutting and have caused the highes t rate of bankruptcies in our history since the Great Depression." Orange Coast DAILY F>tLOT ,wednesday, June 1 o, 981 • ed service for ins titutional in· ' vestors. including many impor· tant banks. the theory is mindless and the course or action destruc tive. lnshort, 1tis mad. But, the exptanation _goes, all this is necessar y to curtail ex· cessi ve dem ands that were fueled in the past by excessive growth of money. Jim Wilson is an unusual au.to dealer with a unique car. It's electric and costs about 1..3 cents a mile to operate. If continued, he states in an analysis issued recently from Wright Investors' Service head· • quarters in Bridgeport, Conn .• the current high interest rates "will <Jestroy the American economic system." First, "they ta ke from the poor and add tot he rich,'' says Wright. whose own p o r t f o li o c hoices reg· ularly i n · e lud e th e bluest of the blue -chip s tocks. H e is n't against the rich: he is against poor· cu111Ntl'P ness. Next, he s ays, they diminish the producers and expand the lend· ers. and in h.is view of things that is some what contrary to the de· sires of most Ame ricans . In his view. people have an instinctive desire to produce Hogwash, says Wnght. Look at the figures, he says. Inflation, he agr ees, can be caused by ex· cessive monetary growth, "but there has been no excessive monetary growth in the U.S. dur- ing the past decade." Instead, he conte nds, "while the Gross National Product in· creased 37 percent in constant dollars, the m o ney s upply dee lined by 3 percent.·' H you want lo find explanations for inflation, Wright argues, look at imported oil prices, for one thing, and for another, consider the growth or Eurodollars (dollar credits created abroad by banks which lend on dollar deposits> Som e $550 billion of them have been created, doubling commod1· ty prices and forcing up U.S. im· port prices. Why, he asks, s houl<J we bludgeon the U.S. economy for problems that didn't originate with it? Why deny itthe .. essentiaJ lubricants" of money and credit? Current monetary policy, he sug- gests, is masochistic. Solo Irvine car dealer goes electric By STt;Vl!: MITCHELL Of th Deity ...... S'9tt Jim Wilson doesn't fit the ste reotype image of a new car dealer. For one thing, the 27-year-old Irvine resident has only one car 1n stock. And that's h.is own. His sales pitch if one can call it that -1s low key He doesn't even wear white shoes. Frankly, Wilson will tell you, the elec- tric car he's pushing is probably beyond the m eans or many customers. Who's going to plop down $27,000 for a n automobile that only goes 85 miles before it needs a charge? Not many folks, he says, shaking his head. "The people who can aHord this car a ren 't wo rried about the cost of gasoline ," Wilson says. "It's for people who are conservation-minded. Instead of b itching about clean air, they·re will· ing lo do something about st.'' Gra nted, he says, once you've got the thing paJd for. the Bradley GT II Elec· tr1c Car is inexpensive to operate about 1.3 cents a mile at today's cost for electricity. And there's no tune-ups. oil changes or ever-climbing gasoline prices to worry about. All you have to do 1s keep the water level up on the l6 six-volt batteries a nd the 12-volt accessory battery that power the 3,200-pound vehicle. The electric sportscar• looks like a cross between a Ferrari and a Datsun 280Z, but sits on a standard Volkswagen sedan chassis and transaxle. Its reinforced ri be r glass body features two gullwing doors, removable s unroof panels, a four-s peed s hifter, AM I FM stereo with tape deck, a 20 9 horsepower traction m otor , battery charger. contoured bucket seats and , or course, the plug. Wilson savs it takes between five and six hours to full charge the batteries. using a regular house or office outlet A full charge -costing about Sl. LS will get the motoris t about 85 miles down the road Same with acceleration. lt"ll go from zero to 30 mph in eight seconds. Max· 1mum speed 1s 75 mph, and 1t cruises along best at 47 to 55 mph. The cars are manufactured in the Minneapolis area, and Wilson sa yi. the company, Electric Vehicle Corp . 1s put· tin_g out between fi ve and 10 cars a dav Delivery takes about six weeks Wilson. who scouts for 17 major league baseball t eams. thinks he's fou nd a wrnner in the electric car He's only been a broker for two weeks and he 's yet to make a sale But he's confident "There·s a market for these things out here, especiall y in Newport Beach and Laguna Heach ... he says ··Detroit is tooling up for electric cars m 1984 and people are going to want to have one now before the no\'elty wears off ·· Wilson's phone number 1s 551 ·4597 PUBLIC NOTICE . PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSIN•U MAM& STATeMeNT NS711:UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIN~=:TICE __ Pp~=l~:s~~s~:~: l PUBLICNoTl~:SOLUTl°"NO-=·~BLlC NOTICE FICTlTIOUS IUSIMEU FICTITIOUS IUltN•U lllAM• STATEMENT •HOLUTION OP TM• llOA•DCM' o•••CTO•s NAMt! STATe .... NT MAMa STATWM•NT TM lollowlno .,.,_, "OOlng bull· OF TMll MOULTON·NIOUEL WAT•• D•ST•ICT Tiie follow!llQ ...,_, It dOlllQ llutt- MU •t ""'as DECLA•INO ITS INTllNTI°" TO ANNUl ... MUtTY Tiie lol-1"9 ,,.rlOfll are OOUIQ TM loll-lftll --are dolllQ SOUTH COAST PAECISIOH, ~ TO tMPllOVEMlNT OtSTalCT M0.1 IWATeal lal WESTEllN PAINTI NG & l.I THOGRAPHY, IOI WESTERN Pa1NTER5 & l.ITHOGRAPHERS; and l<J WESTERN PRINTING, IOI W. B••.,. Strwt, Suite A, CAKla Maw, CA m2•. bu••-as l>vll .. u n : p,.,.....,, Orlw, Colla Mfta, CA nn~ WHEREAS. II Is -dfflre ol Ille Boan! of Olredo" of Ille Mo<illon·Nl9utl A9NEA"S COMPAN Y• ZHU 0. J. 9llOWN AS50Cl"'1'ES, ll1'2 GERAl.O H 9ENCK. s.&J Pler_.t Waler Olstri<I CMHWDl to .-x <•rtalfl pr_.iy, a1 det.Cro-'" Exhll><t P ... rta AMI, Mlssloft Viejo. CalllO<l\la vi. Ver-.,,..,.,,., Calllonlia tVU ~lwe, C..ta -... CA t26J6. '"A" to 11111 Af'IOIUUOfl, wlll<ll Ullibll 11 altaclwc:t hereto ano Is Oy 11111 rtlnefl<e '269J HAN COCK · BROWN Jemet T OllOfl, J1S67 Puetl• CORPORATION, a Calllomla corpor• Tltlt bUsineH 11 'Grldu<lled Oy an II\• llereln ln<.,,..,..,atecl, lo lmpto..,meflt Olllrl<l No. 1 Cw.ierl of MNWO, •nd Olvldu•I. WHE REAS, Ille Board of Olr•clors llnG> 11\at Ille •nMxallon ol Uld pr-rty RHI, MIMlon Viejo, C.lltomla t:i.n llon, ll1U Via Verona. trvlne. Ger•ld H. 8e11Ck to lmprowme<>t Olslrlct No t 1wa1erl of MNWD •II• -111 W<ll property, 9arry M. James, J7l47 Puerta CalllOl'lll• fJJU Tiiis ilal-1 •as Ill.a wllll Ille and JAMES F. BLOM, INC .. a Calllorllla c..._a11on, IOI w. llalUtr s1r .. 1, Suite A, C.la Mew. CA 92626. AHi, MIM!on Viejo, C.llfonwat:IM2 Tiiis butl...s b condutlltd by• cor· Counly Clerk of Oran99 County on WHEREAS, II Is tllt clellr4 Of Ille B...,o ol Dlrecton to'°"""''• l)Ubli< Maril J L~. z7l47 Puert• -•llon. June 1, 1•1 nearlnQ at .,.lcll .,..,.,.,, may •-•r •nd i. he•rO reiallve to tlle Pr090S4<! .,.. AHi, Mltslon Viejo, Calllornla .. ., HaflcOCll·B...-Corp PIU141 ...... '°"of territory to 1mprowmet11 OlllrK I No. I IW•I••> of MNWD. Tiiis t>uSIMU I• con4'1<tt<I by • OonJ. iu-Publl-o-.,... C:O.•I Dally Piiot, NOW, THEREFORE, the Board of o.reao ... ol MNWO DOES HEREBY TMs ...,,.._ ll tonducfled by •tor· -•llor>. J-P. Blom. In<. J-"·'"'"'· ~ -·at -::::::J-• Tiiis := ... meo wllll -JUIW ), 10, 11, U, ltll U~l RESOl.VE, DETERMINE ANOOADEA nfol~: lee ... I. 1-It ls the ,,,...,,loll.,, ... 9oerCI of OlrKlen ., MNWD lo ....... 'Fiiis sue_. was filed wltll the C_,ly °"".,Or-C--.. °"May ortel11 l«rl'°"' to ,,..,.,,...,,._. Ot11rkt No. 1 CW-) of MNWO. c-•Y Clef11 of Or .... ~yon May IO, lttl PUBLIC NOTICE leclle9 1. That. mao ·-•nt .... •xtefior bouncM<"le• ol the lerrtlOl'y lo ... PUBLIC NOTICE Tiiis -ement •• 111.0 wllll lhe c-ly ,_of Or-C-ty Oft Mey 27, '"'· '1617t1 Publ l-Or-C:0.11 Dally Piiot, "161W7 May 21, J-J. IO, 11, 1"1 Uil .. I PublllNd 0-ange Coa1I Delly Piiot, JUM >, 10, 11, 2A, 1•1 Us.ti 2t, ltll "1'21161 •11nexed, whl<ll map ...... QOwrn 10<' all CllUlll ti lo Ille nleflt ol Ille •rw to ,,._ Pvlll._ o-.,.. C:O.sl Dally "11°'· FICTITIOUS IUSINESS lie ennuacl, 11 on Ille wllh lhe s.<retary of MNWD and 11 evall•ble tO<' •n•..-.c· Publl.-Or .... Coesl D•llr Piiot, May u. J-J. IO, 17, 1•1 24IMI NAM• STAT•MENT liOfl or a11y 119"""..,. peraont 1ntereslt<I June J, IO, 11• 14• 1•1 Jl4J .. I. Tiie 1011owl11Q ,,.,IOl'lt are doln9 S.Cll• J. That the territory to be -•eel lo Improvement D11tr1c1 No I t>uslMSt '"· I Waler I Of MNWO .,,.II lie ar>ne•41<1 wlll"toul ternu anCI colldlllon•. ------PUBLIC NOTICE VALL!Y HOMES, 1116 Mal11 S.CI..., 4. That .... u,....nlt fO<' carrying oul •ny purpo .. Of .. ,a lmprov• N1111tJ PUBLIC NOTICE -----PUBLIC NOrlCE s1r .. 1, 1 ..... 1ne, CallfOl'llf• t211' menl 0111r1c1 No. 1 IW•t•rl, 1nc:1uolflo p,1yn"Mftl o11>rlnc:1p,11 or •nd 1n1ertt1 on ----- FICTITIOUS aus11t•ss PUBUC NOTICE NS 7'74J Pllllfp "· Mc Na..-, 1176 Main ally -OI' warrallll oulllandl"iJ Ulall i. lewleCI uctu~v•lr .. _. .... ·-In MAMll STATeM•NT •tCTITIOUS IUSIM~.. FICTITIOUS IUSINIUS Strfft, 1 ..... i... Callfornl• t2114 wld lml)'0.,.,,.,.,,1 OlslrKl, ln<ludln9 Ille tenltory .,..._., ,,..,.,o Tiie loll-ll\Q '"''°"'are dOll\Q -----r .. .., NAMESTATEMeNT Tllh buslnell Is conducleCI by a S.Cll•S.Tllel •~l<lle•r•1>9be-the..,,,.herM>yilcalledon1Moll*> >utlMUM; NOTICE OF DEATH OF NOTICE OF DEATH OF NAM« STATEMENT Tll• 1011-tng ...,._,II CIOll'IO llvll· llmlled PW1ftert/llp. UOll o1 u. _,.uuon of <•rui" 1err11orr IO 1.....,.0.,..,_, D11lr1<1 No 1 1 TASTEEFREEZEOF CYPRESS. JOHN F . PICKERING FOSTER M. FRYMAN Tll• 1011-1nt per.-i ••• dol<19 reu u Pttlllp H Mdu~e (Waterl anC1anyotNr malt•rr•l~l11\QtoanyoftllelM-'119100.held •11 JO su.::~1~c:-=·~~11~~~ AND OF PETITION TO AND OF PETITION TO llvllMnn AIRPORT CENTEA PRINTI NG. Tiii• 11a1-1was111.0 with tlle pm ,orau-.111tre•ll•r•1hpracllc•0te,•lllle oWcnolMNWO.moo u 'w-·-.. ,~ .. r-111-'-tllDI ADMINISTER ESTATE ADMINISTER ESTATE &ARON VOii 0 co .. S2l Superior JtU c A .... 111 Aw . c ... ta -... CA County Clerk of Or-County on Paa Road,....,,. Nl9119I Ca .,.,,.on J-11. 1•1. •11<1 lllal al wid """' -···~ ~ -·-""' _ .. ,. Avenue, N.-.l)Of1 Beecll, Callfornl• mu JUM 1, 1•1 pl•ce provided lor wld put-lie hHrlnv eny 11erwru lnter .. 1eC1, 1nc1uc11no Hsiu Min CNano, JOI s. (/lapel NO. A-109021. NO. A109001 . n6'l LEO N A. PAWi NSK i, I OU P'16116t ,,.rlOn1crwnlnt lanCIWlthlntheartatooe ........ e1101m1>rowmenlDl1trlct f\lo ';e,:;~·.,:':':"~;~c!:!:c~':1,,.. T 0 a I I heir s. T 0 a I I h eirs, Valeri• A. Gooooooy, no R•OlanC11,Play•OelRey,CAt02'1. Publllht<IOrM199C:0.SIDallyPllot, llW•t•r),m1yappear•nClbelleard tl•lduals 111us0er1thnd wll•>. benef lciarie s, creditors beneficiaries creditors Mar1oo10, c.or-o.1 Mar, C•ll/ornla r1111 bUsiM» Is <onduc:IH by.,, 111-June J, 10, 11, 2•, "" zs114 .. 1. SecU• '-Tllat Ille Secretary or MNWO be an<1111t ....,. her•b"f I• olrKlf'CI to , n•U dlwldual. cauM a copy ol lltl• RHOIUllon 10 be pvbll-anC1 posteel In Ille manner •• Wero Citing CNa11t and contingent creditors of and contingent creditors of Kendall"'-W•-•. m •211d Str'ffl. L-. A. Paw1n.-1 qu1rec111y s.c,..., _., • ., ,,,. w•ter c_ of.,. s1a1e o1 c.111..,.n1a This ::u..=tC::"111eo with the JOHN F . PICKERING Foster M. Fryman and NewportleKll,C.llfo<lll•t2MO Tiii• _ _. w•J 111.0 •1111 1111 PUBLIC NOTICE AOOPTEO,SIGHEOANOAP PROVEDtl'li12htdayolMay,19t1 CountyClet'llofOr.,..coYlllyonMay and per~s who m~y be persons who may be eos1:':C::::"~!·,:.': cabrlllo, f:"1':.c1H11o10r-.toun1YCM1 May =';T~1~1~ue;w".!!',,~01STR1CT lt, 19t1. Otherwise interested In the otherwise interested in the Tlll1 buMMU h conoucl..S by • ' .. t6DM NOTICE DP' TllUSTEE'S SALE Mel""le l.. Tu'rtu~~I. ~":11stant S«relArv Puotlllltel o--. Colll Oall~1:r..:.~ will and/or estate. will and/or estate: -··· ~~~. w ..... 1 PvOll-Or•nte C:0.11 Dally=i NOTICE I~·~::-:~~" GIVEH lllal UATE OF CALI FORNIAI : .. June J, 10. 11, 24, 1•1 U.1 .. 1 A petition has been filed A petition has been filed This 11a-1 wa1 111.0 wltll IN MO 70· 21• J,_ J, IO.,., __ on W-y. Jiiiy 1, 19t1, at t 00 COU NTY OFOAANGE l ----by John W. Pickering in by Steven Fryman an<J Cou11ty Cltrll 01 0tan99 county on PUBLIC NOTICE o'c1o<11 a.m. ot •alo <Illy, 11 Ille.,,. 1. MELANIE L. TURT URICI, Aulll•nl SecreYir, 01 ti.. Boaro 01 Dtrecto" PUBLIC NOTICE the Superior Court of Ch · ti Sch bl · the June 1.1•1. tr•11<•tolheof!lceiolREALE STATE ot lhe MOU LTON NIGUEL wATER DISTRICT 0o nereb, certify 111at ,,.. rtS ne wa e IO '1631Q SECURITIES SERVICE, loeateel al lore9olno reSOlution was duly •cloj)ted by llW Bo.rd of Dlr.clon of wld District Orange County requesting Superior Court of Orange Publl-o-anoe coe11 oa11y P1101, NOTtC• OP Taun••·s SALll 2020 North •r-•y, Sult•:'· In tlle at• r99u1ar ,,._lino 01 .. 1e1 Board e..ld on tN 2111 oey 01 M•v. 1~1 •no that 11 FICTITIOUS •USINHS that John w. Pickering be County requesting that June J, 10, 11, , •• 19t1 241 .. 1 Ts. .... J1U1 City of s.tlla AM, c-ty Ofan99, wes IO ad0"1edbY tht loll-lno vote· MAManATSM•NT appointed a s personal Steven Fryman and NOTICE IS0HEREBY GIVE N !NI St.I• ot C.lllof'nla. REAl. ESTATE AYES Larry R l.lrotte, H Lei Remme" ()on w ..-!!'*.,11o11ow1no _ _.I• cloillt .,....,. representative to ad· Chr"1st1·ne Schwable be ap-°" w---..-J..,. u ••t ai •·oo sEcuA1T1Es SEAv1cE. ~ c.11tor111a Sm1111. OWl1!fl1 A w1111•mson. Ric.,.ro s F•or• ·-·· PUBLIC NOTICE , ~-.. • • corporation, n duly ._intecl Tront" Bryan S "•II and c;.r•iO E Buck BUENA VISTA CONOOMIHIUM minister the esta'te of John p 0 int ed as per s 0 n a I . 0 clecll. a.rn. of said day, •1 1111 -under -_......., lo Ille -., NOES DIRECTORS' None OWN ER'S ASSOCIATION, 14.12 ._ F. Pickering (under the in· rep re sen tat Ive t 0 ad-lr•Mt to Ille olflc•ul REAL UTA TE Ull• cOl'lfe<recl In tllal urtaln o.ed of ABSTAIN DIRECTORS None Vl•I•. SMC-•, C.lltomtat»H dependent Administration m 1· n'1 st er the estate of PICTITIOUSIUMNllU SECURITIES SERVICE, 1020 Hort/I Trutl •UCllted by Ya<lll W-r•r ABSENT DIRECTORS ... _ Jo/In G. Brouuard, 1412 auene 111AM• STAT9MIENT 8ro.clway, Suite I06, In llle City ol Sen-Corporation, a CallfMnl• corporellon, _,.,,,. L Turturl<I. vim, San~. GaMfomla ~s of Estates Act) The peti· Foster M. Fryman (under Th• 1011owl11t ...,._, ar• 001n9 1• Ana. County of Oranoe, Stat• of anCI rec.ot'DICI AuQull 11. 1'90. In eooi. Asllst.ant Se<retery of,,,. Thll bu11111n IHonducl9cl by all un· l ion iS set for hearinn in the 1 nd e pendent Ad . bUJlMHH" Calllornl e RHI Eltate S•turlllei 1l6t7 of Oltklel RKorctl of Wld Coun· MOULTON NIGUEL WATER OISTRICT I ftld I Ion w ALL CITIES FENCE CO UOO Serwlu , a Calilof'nle Co,.,,..,.atlon •• ly, al PaQlt IM, R.corcler's lnstrum.fll of Ille Ba.rd of Olre<tor1 lhereol .::!'!°'n1>1p •MOC at GUier tllan • Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic m In I stration of Estates Adams A-. •:zo•. Costa~ ... CA duly •-lnted Trustff u11der and No.,, .... by rMllOl'I of. bnacll Of <Ill· Publllhecl OranteC:O.SI Dally Pllol, June l. 10, 19tl . JOllll c Brounard, Center Drive, West, in the Act>. The petition is set for '2626. r""u•r1 to .,,. -r of Ml• COii• fMlll In.,..,.._, or perfomlMC• ol Ille Hom-C i t y of San ta A n a , hearing in Dept. No. 3 at Ro• ER T R. M <co Y. 1 u •rr.cl "lflllt c.na1n Deed of Trutt ••· oblltoatlons -u..o theret>y, l11Cludl11Q Tiiis st•-· we1 llled wllll lN C--llfornia on July 1 1981 700 Civ'1c Center Drive Felrwlnda l.•11•. Co••• Mesa, CA •<t1l•d by Vl11u111 H. Hlclu •1141. llNI Ctrtalll bfMCll or defa.ilt, Hollo Cov11ty Clerk or Or.,99 Coullty °" ., • • '2626 Wlll•M E. Hklll, ...,._ -wife, of wllkll _, r.corded Merell S, 1•1. J ..... 1.1•1. at 9:30 a.m . West, in the City of Santa BILL w. JENK1Ns, l103 CaJsla, -rKonllcl ....-n. '"°· 111 .,_In a-1m1 of 0111<111 11.cord• of P"1ui11 IF YOU OBJECT to the Ana, California on July 1, •o.eosu-..,CAnu.. 1>11tof OfllNIR.coraof .. ldC-wld c-1y, •t PtOe "· R«..,..,.,., Pui.tl-Ora19 Cot•I Dally Piiot ti f th t'tl 1981 t 9 30 Tiiis llvllnen IS COfldvCleCI by I ly, •• Pate llSL 'IMtrumont No. 7SU. WILl. SELL AT 'gran no 0 e pe I on a : a.m. AKO,..,.slMlr-No tm•.bv PU9LIC AU CTIO N TO THE J~>.10. t7.u , 1•1 2M-M1 you should either' appear IF YOU OBJECT to the tene•••=:.~c;o,, ... '°" °' • OrHc.11 °'default 10 pey. HIGHEST a100ER FOR CASH, at the hearing and state granting of the petition, Tiii• , ... _ was 111.0 w1111 ,.,. me111 or ...,....._. of 1111 OIMltf-1awf111 -I' of t11e vn11ac1 StatiH, •II YO Ur Objec tions Or file yOU should either appear County Cler'lt of ()(.,99 CoulllY on llOlls MC....0 tlllreby, IMhMllllQ lllal payable et the II-Of Nie, all rl9'1t, JUM I, 1•1. c•rt•lll Orff<ll Of dtfaull. Nolk• Of tltl~ -1111-• -lleld Oy II, as PUBLIC NOTICE written objections with the at thp hearing and state """• wllkh was,__ F•bnlary 21. 1•1, Tru•t ... 111 _, to 11\et ,.., property F1CT1T1ou1au11NaH court before the hearing. your objections or file Pub11"'9do-.,..c:o.11 oally Piiot, in Boolt ,,.... of Oltl<I•• aecMds of 111uat• 111 Hid county and St•••. Tll• f==~!T:!':!: ... ~. dol11t Your appearance may be written objections with the Jut1u, 10, 11.u. 1•1 u•o~1 ::!: ... =~~w~l.~;'1£°[~~~ ·~;~~~1~.'.:'~~ of Trect tCMJ, 111 llu6inM•ts: In person or by your at· court before the hearing. PU9 LIC AUCTI ON TO THE lheClty oO .. wpor18M<ll,C-.tyol IA• RAY, cto J. Rey can.1ruc11on torney. Your appearance may be PUBUC NOTICE HIGHIEST 1100E1t P'OA CAS"· 0r.,,.., stew of c.111orn1a, H ,... ComPM'(, ... East 17111 StrMI, C..la I F y 0 u A R E A In person or by your at· lawfwl _.,of ... Ulllted States, •11 INll -111 ... -· peooes :16 .. llMU, c.etl,.,.,,.. t2ll.Z7 OR t · payable .i the time of Mle. all rltlll, Jt l11<h11lve, Mlscell--Mel>l. 111 llay o.v.top-11, inc .. • c.tltornl• CREDIT or a cont-orney. MOTIC'9 nfVrrueo a1os till• arid 1-..1 ,_ helo by It,•• 111e office of the county recorwr o1 <Or1110r•tloll, "' EHi 11111 SlrHt. ingent creditor of the de· I F y 0 u A R E A Notice It """" ,,,,.,, ,.,., .... Tru11 ... In -to tflal ..... 11" ....... Y UICI"""'"' • C"'• ~c.l11Wlllatai7• ceased yo4i must file your CREDI TOR or a cont· eo.n1 of T,,..... of.,. c-t c-111uat• 1n .-id cov111r and St•••. PAR CEL t : Non·E.c1u11ve Hs• Or" .• ' ... c~·~·~ ..... ·~c-.tryClue claim 'with the court or ingent creditor of the de· m11111ty Coll ... 0111r1ct 01 ore1199 c111er111ec1afoltow1. ment owr tNI IWOll9rtY and tor the ----._.. •-C-1)', c.llfoml•, wlll recel"9 -lad LOI 41, Traci °''· H per m11c> r• llll'pOff as ~II .... ,,,.,,It are r• ,,.,,.. P. 1ar11aro present it to the personal ceased, you must flle your 111.-up to 1:eo p.m .. Thurtc1er. J-tordlG 111 ... 110 111199 1s-1t o1 ~ .. ,....., '"'IN '*'9111ot,,..orented10 :•Y ow.E1~, IM. representative appointed clalm with the court or 11, "" .i 111e Pwe11a1"' 0epan,,,.,,, in,,,. ""Ice., t11e COUllW recwmr o1 _,,.rs••• ton11 111.,,. 0ec1er.i1on .:.._~. ;.,:_ by the court within four present It to the personal tt .. ,. <*teet •tttr.ct tocate.i tt 1m Mid c-.tv, SQIHfC•l>t«nle. o1 C•ftMlltt. te1111t11ons -s R•tr•c· nrs ~ wn 111e11 w1t11 t11t months from the date of representative 11ppolnted ~~'.tA:':l~~·.f.T'~ .. 1':,,!~=~~~-=i:.~= =: :;.,~~=ie'.•;.=: , C-lyc:lffllofOr-~on May first lssu.nce of letters as by the court within four ,wlkry..,.,....,.,_,,_: . ty llerelllllllow-.Utlled It pur-1ff Nd ..,y .,..,.. ... ,..or .,_uti.n "· 1•1· ••n•u provided In Section 700 of months from tM date of IUS TltANS~OIHAT ION .. -.. 1'1S ~...-Cln:le, c..u MeM, u.nto. r ,_ p b t C d f ftr I of f~t SEltVICll "°" THIE ~EltlOO JULY Ctllt.<llla, TIW 1ttwt ldllreu,,.. ot11er -Put111t11M ~ CMM ~•Y """· th• ro a e o e o st ssuance 9' ers •s '· '"' TH•ouoM JUNE ... 1t12 Tiii lllldlt ....... fl1e•e1m• .,y..,. 4nltnaUlft. "etf'I,., 111e ,.., .,...,,.,.. Me120,V,.,,_J,1,1tl1 Ud .. l C•lifornla. The time for provided in section 700 of WITHU~TOFOUll (4)0"10NALI ... 11 .. llty ..... '"'---.. tY ............... dll<rllled'-POlf'llOrted C NOTICE t1111ng cilalms fwll~ not eth•· tChellf Pr1obaTte c1ode 1ot Y~i:.:_•::w.:~111 __..._ .... =~.:_.'i:_ .-... or ottw t.om"*' :.:~.~..!::~ w-. 111ew_, p re pr or to our mon s a orn a. he t mt or .... '"' ,.,.. ~· .,.. c..fl.. s.14 .... .in "',_,,. w11._, '°,,.. r119 "'*"""" lllKteltM .. , -from lhe date of the t..ar-filing claims wlll not ex-tteMIM~~-.., ....,,.,_.r-1, • ..,....,,,,_.i.ci, •n "*11",."" lllC~ 01 PICTITIOUl,VSl ... 18 ln(I noticed above, plre prior to four months ...... eM!MflllelKlifWlll ... tltlct ,.._,.lllf Utte, _.. ........ --· .... tlr•t --or..,_ c.tll"*' fWllllllTAHMIUfT YOU MAY EXAMINE from the date of the ,.,_.r-., .. ~..-...... c.1 .... brt11ce•. '• nt1•'' ,.,. ,r111<1 .. 1 •11.,..1-. I "'" , ......... --••• ... II •ltttkt. Mletlc• ........ ., ........ u... .. ...... '"11 .. m.a •"'-'-~-. th• le kept by the courl. Ing noticed above. ••"...., ,,.., ..,.., w1t11 ,11, ..c1trMW9llNO..efTrwt,wfttl1n-•t ... _.,......,, .__. "'-"tll. t'TfUCTl.Y1An1,owa,,..n. lfyou•rtlnterestedlnthe YOU MAY EXAMINE *•~u--.~dle< .. ..,_., .. ,.......lfl .... ,...., • .., ,....Ni,.."'" .............. "'_ "c~ . .-.c.1m..CAt1114. estate, you may fllt a rt-tM Ille k:-r,t by the court. • .......,, _.. _ ,.,... • ........ ...,.: ~ ..,_., ".,.,.,, -11re11cu, t• 6•11Uy tM ,r111t1,.1 •114 0111.,•· 1•7M A1•1"• It. Qutat wt trt the court to ~· If "Ou -• n•-,est-~ In t-"*' .,, •a. c-ity C.-... • "" •-• uld o... ., T""' ••-• • .. ,... • .._ ..,tett*' ~.CAtU.. , •• .., WU ... 01Url(1 ....... , Trn••u '""' ..... ,,....,.. ........ -II ... _ .... 119CIWHWMlld°"41efTrwt,wtttllflo .._, .,.,.. ~ ..,.. celv• ..,.cl•I notice of the tat•t•, you m11y flle • re-_."" ._ -tt,,.. ~ o ..,. ,........,~..,. .......... ._. .. ,,..... ...... ,...orotMr 11., N«11WtdM,CAtta lnventQN of estate usetl q uest wttrt the court to re-,_...., .... _,_... ... ....,., ... tllt TrUll!le .w., .._ '"*• t.rwtM •• .. ti...;....,......_ .... ".,..,,.,,,.. Tiit• ... .r ..... I• u114lllc••• •Y end of tM petltJons •c-celv• SPtCl•I notice of the ""' •...., .,. .. ....., ..... ,,... '' •••• o... .. Tr••· T11e tot•• .,. "" ..,._ .. MH .,... .,, Trlltlt ........,.::::t:n counts and reports lnvtn1orY of tst•t• HMll ~~.:;.:::=:.-::= :=.:.:r::-:i=-.~r.= =~::.:;.::.:=-:; r1111 ......_.. -flM9. .-• cMscrlbld In Section 1200.s 1nd of tM petitions 1c· ,_ *" *"ect. .. ,.,.....,, • •-1111ts theft .,., • ,..._..., •• 'l'fllMM -., .,. ~ ,,...._. c.Mr °""., °'.,... c:.uM1"' Mey of tM C•llfoml• PrObal• c o u n ts a n d r •po r ts '*' ..,. • ............ • lft .,. ,_ ... ,,,......., c:Nr9H 1M ··~ •1 u•• °'" " Tr .. st. TM '•1•1 # tt, ttl\. ef e ....... Ml_........, will"-tlle ~ ..... tlftw ef l'lllht ~ .. Mid 91ilel .... lfK ........ .. ......,, Codi. described In Section 1200.S ......, .. ,...<fllMel....,ltt. ...... k .. ••••~.11ua.uu1. ,t111tlMI. •""'" 111ter .. t. et11er • ~ °'91111 CM1t IWIY,....., MILAN M. DOSTAL: of tM C.llfOml• Probalt• ... ...._,,... .......,._ 1111 ... • 0....1 _.,,.,"" •-ts -..,., .,,.. ,....,__., • .... , 11, v ...... a."'"" ,... A ""••l••I Code • .., ... • ~ ,., _,. ""' ,.... R.... ..'"'.,....., IMf'IH _. .....- Telllnl tbe CllOllt people po11lba. It l&Qportut lo 1 t•• tuee••• of •n1 1an1• tale. Mueaurt JOHt It lltt•d ID Claulfled, plaoa• I0-5"71. . ... ...... -............ ---lenk• .... ~ .... tllM .. , ...... cw,w..._ Hall s.tY Attwwey at ~-..,..., n.ri.. -.. . ~c.,._.1e11, ...,..tc..._..,.,..~ .. .,.,....., •Cttf ....... •Y Lew, H• .... Mlttt•I ,,l'Wl ........ i.c................. •T~. ~:;.-.. ,..,. Me 1-irfVt ..... -,...,.,. _. .. wlw..., ,,,... .• t• • lfto I IMAU O...J._,..,, HAL.llTAfl ,,,. .. •-......... eact_ C.t. tl'661, ttl ,_,.........lll"'fWWllltllt....... ............. RCV911TlllH91VIC• ,_ ... _ ....... ':....".J "' , • ~l.w.\TIOlll 111*'1111..,....,, ea.lfWIMt..._. C ) •BM _. ..-.. • .. ,_,,. eillH.,, ..._"-• ~ PubUIMd orange Coatt Pubtfthed Orange CoHt :=:,c:wt .... ~CA..,., .,O.J ....... O.Uy PtlotrJ---4r 10, 11, Delly Pflelt, J.._ l, 4, 10, ,,.... ~ :::' =~ 11111111.!:':::'cwi °"'• "!..._ ,......:.~= CMtl oa1ry ""'· 1t11 2'9'7 .. 1. '"' ms..1 ,_~_,,..... 141Mt _,,.,. .. 11, ... , u .... , " ...... , ... M."" --.... .,•-;;_..-----""-~---.. ~ - 250)41 PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE aESOLUTtON NO. 11·2' llasC>LUTI°" OP TMI llOAllO OP DllllCTOH Of' TME MOUl. TON·NIGUEL WATllll DIST"ICT DIECLA•INO ITS INTENT!°" TO ANNEX ... o .. EaTY TO IMPaOVEMENT DISTalCT NO. I !WAT I al WHEREAS, 11 It Ille 0.1lre of lhe Board of Olrec1o,.. of Ille ~llon·NIQUel Walllf Olt1rkt (MHWOI '° -a c.rtaln -'Y· 11 o.Krl-In Ealllblt "A" to tlllt RHOlutlOll, wllkll Hlllblt 11 .itacllecl .,.,..,o and Is Oy tftls rei.renc• ...... 1,, lll(Or1'0f'alld, to lmpl'Oftmtllt OIWICI No. J IW•t•rl of MNWO, and W!il!REAS. the Board of Olrecton linen ltl.t the aMt .. llon ot Hid property to lmpro...-Olstl'kl No J (Water> of MNWO wUI ..... 111 wch ll"-1Y • ..... WHEREAS, II Is IN Clellre of Ille &oaro of 0.l'IC10n lo c-..CI a puotlc lle1rl119 el 1"!11<'1 perscl'IS may..,,..., -lie Nani reletlwe • the !)'-MCI efl ,,. ........... rtltory to 1-o-t 01.Jtri<t No 3 (Weter) of MNWO, NOW, TMEal!FOAE, Ille 9oerd Of Olrecto,.. ol MNWO DOES HERE&Y AE$0l.V£, OETERMIHE ANO OaOER Hlol._. lecU. t. 'That It Is the llltHlllott ol the Board of Olreelo" of MNWO lo ....... ceri.ln 1 ... rl'°'l' to 1....,..owm..,1 Olstrk1 No. 3 CW.i ... I ol MNWO Stctltlt 1. Tl\al a mep •-Int ,,.. ••lerlor boundarla• 01 the t ... rnorv to i. •MIXtd, Wllkh lfttll lllall oowrn fOf •II delallt .. to Ille Utelll ot IN ar .. to lie •11M.-cl, II on Ille wltll Illa Secretary of MNWO ano I• n•ll•bl• for 1.._. llon oy .,.., Plr*' or _.on, l11let'ffled . lee"->. Tllet Ille •rllMy to be .,,,.,.eel to lmpro....,..ent Olslrlcl No. i IWetwl of MHWO llWll lie -Mii wlt/lollt .. ,_ 9ld <Ofllllllons S«U.. t. T'llllt .-ta for c.,.,.,,1,.. out eror ....-of tald •mpro-mlftt Olstt1d H9. ) (W•t ... ), l11<hMllllQ ~ ef Pf111C!Pel M -lllt-1 °" .,, IMfldaw wwr-~outttMICl!no r.11a11 .. leV!edeach.iwty -tN I-!ft Mid lmP1'9-lt Olstrlet. ln<1Udlfl9 I .. te.Tllory Wle..0 llleret• leeU. .. .,,,... 11111111< .... ,. ... be and tM -......., ,, t elled 011 Ille -11111 of IN -utlon fll <ertal11 territory 18 l"""'°v-t Olltrlu No ) I Wat., I olllldt11y ot"9r m•ll•r relall119 lo eroy of the tor-"'9 '8 be lleMI tt t :a p.m., fW " -tMrMfW et II PfllClk .... , M tr. offlt• Of MNWl>, t1JDO ~ ltaa aoeo, L...-HI-I, c;e, .,.17, on J-1e. t•t, MCI tllet et Mid llrne tM Pl.Cl pnMdld let Uld '"°"'" -1111 _, ...,...... llletr..tecl, lllCIUlllfte fl"MM ~ IW wfflllft Ille MM te be alNllH to ,,,.__.....,1 Olstrkt .... a (Wet ... ), mey .,...., •1111 M llffrd. S.C-.. &. 1"" .. Se< ... al'l ot MNWO i. ... IN -llWM1y It·~ .. t-~ OllfJt'f.,""' aHOhlt1111" i. ...,..,.,_..,. _...... '" .. -,... IWffff t1¥ S.UM _.., ... lM Waw c.Me ef .. lltte ti CAlllMrrll• A~IO, Slc;.Hl!O ANO A,lt910Vl£01Natt.ltw•• Mey, 1•1 MOULTOfl..HIGU•LWAT•a OISTltlCT o.i w. 51911\11. vic. ~Mtellt _....I.. Tllt1ut1cl, AUl&Nlflt s.m.tMy , ... . " :legislative hattle ·over mortgages heats up Real estate, S&L lobbies in big-money fight SACRAMENTO CAP) The flnandal fat• of hundredJ of thousand• of California bomebuyer1 and sellers ,nay be decided in lhJ! next few week1 by a leeislatlve battle over competln1 home mort1a1e proposals. Four closely Intertwined mort1a1• l11ue, art involved In the latest series of heartn11. 'fhlch becln today before a Senate committee· ASSUMPTIONS Should California prohibit or allow new buyers to asaume older Jow·lntoreat mortgages of sellers'' VARIABLE RATE Lenders, realtora 1md consumer advocates a1ree that California needs u new kind or variable rate mortgage, in which the interest rate rises or falls with current mortaaae ra~es. But they differ over the form, and whether lhere should be a maximum lntere11t rate CREATIVE FINANCING Because o( high interest rates and the shortaae of mortaaa• money, most home u lcs Involve multlpl mortgages, es~al-atlng payments, larae deferred "balloon payments" or other financial arranae· ments which muy contuin 'hidden traps tor both buyers and sellers. -- .. AFFORDABl.E MORTGAGES An "af· while they ure currtinlly ptiylnw Crom 12 l'('rt't.'nl to fordable mortgage" plan has ulready passed the 17 percent to savers Senate. Under 1t. u buyer Is guaranteed a low On the other side, lobbylitl l)ulluld <;1lllt•i1 or monthly pay ment, even if interest rates rise the California Association of Realtors ~u:v• HO per sharply The catch comes when the monthly cent of the home sales In Cahforn1a la11t year 1n interest due exceeds the payment. Then the volved loan assumptions, ond lhe abollllon of as· difference is added to the principal. and the longer sumptions would "all but destroy" the remaining a person pays. the more he owes market. r But Kurmel says while lbw·lnterest loan as· None of the options before the Legislature of· s umptions help a few buyers, they drive interest fe rs an) great reli ef to prospective buyers or r~tes ~till higher for other borrowers, particularly sellers and some like the one on loan assump· hrst ·llme buyers who do not have the large lions · pit one class of consumers against equities from previous home aales. another. Asked how the realtors could help the savings Therefore, c~sumer groups are conspicuously and loans. Gillies advised , "Ri~e it out . . The 7, absent in the struggle. But two of California's most 8 and 9 percent mortgages will eventuaflly pa) powerful lobbies the savings and Joans. and real out. Until then. the lender made the Judgment " estate are locked in battle. The legislation to reverse the Wellenkamp rul- The California Savings and Loan League is ing is AB2158 by Assemblyman Jim Costa. D- eager to overturn a 1978 California Supreme Fresno. It is tentatively set for an Assembly hear Court ruling, the Wellenkamp decision. which ing in about 10 days. gave buyers the right to assume a seller's existing That bill. sponsored by the Savings and Loan low·interest mortgage. even if that mortgage con· League, is also the potential vehicle for tighter tained a "due on sale" c lause. It applies only lo control on som e abuses of creative finan(•1ng. stale-chartered savings and Joans. Costa says he is more concerned about that Savings and Loan League Vice President particularly to protect bomebuyers from a gree- Larry Kurmel says most of the associations in ments with balloon payments they may find 1m· California are losing money today -although he possible to pay than overturning Wellen~amp says none is close to failure -m part because of He also said it is "quite possible " he will drop the loan assumptions ruling. the provisions to repeal lhe WeUenkamp ruling. "af · He said 55 percent to 65 percent or lhe $122 I can find good ways to protect buyers . and billion portfolio of loans held by California savings find other ways for lending institutions to upgrade and loans is in mortgages or 10 percent or less, their portfolios." ~EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 CONSTRUCTION MONEY AVAILABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. • Residential • C.ornmerdal Buildinp: Takeout Commitment required alon1 with leaeee.. • Land loans up to one year 50% apprailal. CONTACT: YOU'RE IMVITED To· A FREE CONTI FORUM discussing selected topics in the commodity markets THURSDAY JUNE I I th 7 30 P.M. ·SAN MARCOS ROOM SOUTH COAST PLAZA HOTEL 1-405 AT BRISTOL ST . COSTA MESA Make reservetlone by celling (71A) 231•1711 or Cal Wets (800) 522·1550 ContiCommodity SU8SIDCARV Of COHllNEHTAL OIWN COM"'NIY IOO 8 llrMI • 1904 ._, ~ AIU Y AS SU MAILE IMTUEST OML Y 2nd TRUST DEEDS OWNER /HOHOWHER OCCUPIED Call William B Mitchell •Jeff Johnson- lrvine Office (714)851-4050 Call 1oday 101 quo1e • No obhga11on trons nottonol lunding (714) 975-1128 === THE UNCONVENTIONAL BlfNK. Herit~e B~~G2 We make a market in the common stock of Ultrasystems Incorporated I For more inf6rmation, p}ease cont~ct Ray Crandal at (714) b44-7040. . nKidder, Peabody fd Co •• Ncoa•o•ATlo , .......... M,,.Utr• N.-Yfft .,., Al!NrlH" S1ed1 hthtt,., .. COLLECTORS CORNER Aere Cofna a Stampe GOLD a SILVER 6-9-11 Geld c .... .,.... lllWI' er. t11.• •!'1 "'' ICrvegetand W'M Ml .. "'-•1• LNtt M6t.• 41tM 100 c.onet ~-MSI. .. :,.~'T:.,.... = = 70% Bank Financtng IRA&KEOUGH (714)5~ louth Coalt Pte"' Vlllege ................. CAc,.. ,,_ ~ C:.... f'ttlHI ' 1 owrtt:a~t·:. Uul l'>ll11l• 1'11,11 le1t·<l 1n.st1tut11m-. \\hwli h:n c more lh11n d1111l1h. the> ltu!l •nt.• ii. u1 t• hound IJ) rule•!-> 11! lhc I''!'' lutu1 e f\urrn~I of lht• St1Vinfts und t.o:.in I t<i~Uc UP· 11cfrt .. \Uf.50 II\ :>~1·111lthm:io lorn Banl' I> \,111 Nu"' 'I Ill' htll ~11uld ;sllu\\ st1tl4i r ha1 h·rNl ••I\ 111•'1' a111i lo.an!> lo ts 111 Ila• alfll' k111d ol \ 1,1r1 ,t11ll' Jlt mortaagf'.s \\ 1thout .111 int en · t t'IAll u~ lt.'Cler 11 "" I~ <'hu11ert·d .1:;lH1l'lill1t>n~ I The .·u11s1111•l'I' 11111•11•~1 1:-. in j•t•lt111g \h1· , n111111•\ out 1111'11• 111 11.,. t1orm rnortgai,!e r11a rk1 I ~ We l';lll l tlo 1t1111 111111• ·, ""1• t 1111 ~ell lo,111::. 11n th\"•;: :.t•ct>n1lan r11111·t .. a••1• 111 111-...t ::.1, 11ar1l\ \\\.Ith ll11• ~ i • ,., " • " I r"·d1·1 JI llc1rrll' I 11Jll IL111k U11arrl ru<1rt~u~t1 :ind .. , 11thl·1 h•d1·1 .ii 111•11'1,;.1•:•• -.tund.11 els rn kr•\. • ~ K ti1 nwl 1>.11cl '. t lk.&1101 h.1\ 1 ln11i,:hl that prnpolltll. 11 .. .,l 1111111~~ :i ;1 hq1ottwl1t 11I -.11u:1lt•111 111 wh1l'h a 14 p1·rn•11t ~I m111 l~Jli(t• l'ould '"'''l•1:.1· .1 i3 11111·1•111 n111rl~UJ'l' 111 : I :lO )l•,11'~ ,ICI l'\,llllpl• 11 lllC' ( .dj• C,IJ I ldll lllt1IJ' 11 S ' hard lo l'\ t'll ,.,, ·''''" : I llw 11llt11 11.11111 w.•r lhl' .1(lord.tl1l1 '' mo1 l1!1tgl· 111111·11~1·1! in ..;nxi1ci It) 's1•11 .Joh11 I· •JI rn ·~: I> S 111 fr HI• ' 1 \\I l'!i lh1 "11.tl• s1•11t I 1 1111 \ • i '41111111\ •>II .1 II I \•Ill 111111 cf,\\ : ' It I'. 'ijttlll'a•H t•ol 11\ tlh' '';d1f1q llt.I S,I\ Iii.?" UC tJ ! l.11.111 l.1•,,l'I r •''cl 1111' ( 1hh•1n .1)l 111k1 r,., '"'"''' 1.1 .; 1 i'Hl •• uni of'l>"'-l d h\ 'h1 1 ( 9ltur ~ ·~ Co'ltu ~jld un allernal1\'e to O\ e1 turninlo( Welh•nkamp would b<' to ~1ve tnlt'rest r.ite dis t·ounts to borrowt"rs who merge old low 1ntert•st hwn::. with new variablt.• rate mortgapes fhc rcaltors s trenuously oppose a ny <·h<tng<' 1n Wcllcnkamp, and are skeptical ;,il..>out restnct111g l'reullve finunc1ng II \\•Hild di(.\\ 111!11l' 11nti·<; lo ri ,:.' 1"'''"11! ,., n st'I( n111rllh 11 1111 • '' th ,11 1111h I'• r d1· I nd1' ol 1 :tit•" Hui p.1\ 11 •·n1<. 1111dt! 111 Ill• 11 .1~1·1 1111 'ltll't 11i.u171 111·11•1111.11111 II ~1111'1' 1 I J l I 11! I I I l .1 11 IHllhh Ill• 111111111.I\ , .. , llll 111 h\ !Ill' 1111 .1•1111 ·"'"' 11 c .1l11·d 1111n' 11 \\l11 t lht• •I • "I trunk m tht• vast maJorll) of t•uses t'real1H• f1nan r1ng packal-(cs are ~oing to \\Ork out But ob v10ush . onh t1mt.' will tell. said rt.•altors lohtn t!'t Gillies · · Ill•\ , t I 1, " : I\ 1111 • 11 ·: : ' I " 11t·::.1fi\1• .111 '"' 1[1"1 <·1111hl rn.1k • I'·" 1111·1 l Lenders. consumer <idvot·ates and lhl• rea ltnrs all s a) lht.' best 1mmed1ate ~olut1on 1s a hM;.11ln \anable rule mortgage But the) disagree over what conditions should be plat•ed on them m111 .. 1 la;111 "h1•11 t1• "' , • 1, I • I I I 'I Vunablc rate mortgage" ha\ e heen available an ('al1forr11u sint•t• 1970, but most have a 2' ~ pt•r cent c:<1p on r<ile increases. \o\ luch lendt•r'> l'all 1m prac tical Federally l'h<irtered saving~ anrl loans rum are free to issue the unt•a pped variable rill<• OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS HEW VORK IAPI Clrllco NASDAQ -'<lllOM CIUSoC.• INh•ll'IO hl(llleil bids Clt1VIA •nd low"' oflen by CllJVIB m•rket .,..ken u of fl.rkJL Tuel Pr~ oo -ClowCp lnclUCMrel.llllm•rl<Uj) ColrTle marl<do-or comm· Co1Gsnot IUIOl'I IO< T-j Sloe.. 8kl A\k ComCtH "'Et Ind " 19 '> Cml511r A Prot 9 10'" Cm• f•I A Cp 4' • •'" Cort P•P Accur•; 11~ 11,.. CMdis Acld1s .. w 1~ I•• CrosTr• AdvRou '"° "'°' CullrFd • Alll8.i> ... .., 3'I Cycllron AluAlu J5•,, .l6 O•ntyM At1co11>< 4l .. oi.on Allyl'IB 7~ 1~ O•ytMal "11U •. ., '"° D8eer Am•ru 13 ll'·• OeklbAg AF111n S~ S'> D•lC•nT AGrtel 13'• 14 Oe••vEt ACl'IGP • 61 .,., DI.Cry\ AMlcros 1~ lS" ObnCru ANalll'IS I~ IJ'lio Docull • AOunr 11'• 12 OottrGn ARnMo 22\. U OoylOB • AWel""9 ,.., 61 Dul\llilnD "nMtll• ~ 10 Our1rn \ An9SA IJV• I,.. EsOroel •no•Gcl 12 ,,..,. Eatnllnc Anl:fr C•"9 20\jo ECOftL•b :~:i.nG~ 1'3" 1;~ EIPHEI AMICola 41 •I.,, llCl4tr8e AllGsLI 14\IO U\o ~:=I, '1C..,Rs ~ 11 En•Oe• B•lrOCp ll"' ll'• EMMelNI BallyPP 1~ II EnRsv 8•ntHE 101/• 10'1 Enlwhll lluicRs t I I •• EqulSL 8•U1Fr 14 14 .. EqlOtl Bol~-tO·, IO'~ FSC llMCIM f fl-1 F•bf'ln 8tntPll I•• l FarrnGp 8..,llyL ..... loO Fldlcor Bnlll wt 1'l\o. lS•1 FtBkSY• 8.U •b S4 ~t. FtBo•tn BevM~ I~ I~ FIEmpS BClll>Co 10 .... t1 FIWnFln 81,.Son 12"" IJO.. Fl91181<1 8Cr1ct>• ~ 9'> FC~l<Qr 81yvoor ''"' u~ f'kMltPnt eon...... l'l•l!Fla • 1 la•'" 16 Flurocb s 9,....Tom ~ S.•Ao ,oreito euc:lltiee 1,.,, n~ '°''"1111 8uffels J7'4 31~ 'r•rtkCp 8<KllUP5 16'·• I~ flr•nkll CNL Fin 11,!o l l'reeSG CPT Cp 51'4 59 f'remnl s C.IW\Sv XI U FlllltH8 :anrMIH J'-. Pt Ga laayO C•PEno GnAUlm I l~ 1• 1 I· 16 GnOevcs C•PSwC ,. JO GnRIEll CplnAlr ~ J'AI vEFn C•r.Cp 16 ''°"' rttnM C.vnohC 1"'° 1~ ,0 •0., CnVIPS t3'n 13~ lllnhl Ct><mSll " """ yrodyn C"-rlHo 43~ 43.,, •mlP • ~=w ~: .... ~i Hero•u Ct>INwTr /'IYt IO HrpRow Cllubll .. 'II. 50 H•rpGp MUTUAL FUND llUI -;! ill I I r11l ,1 I '•;ii I\ r" 111 li!t Ill c' 11111•1 ,. l 11• .., ... '4"-..M • > ..... ii • l .. I) ,, t u.n. •fl'• .u "•"' "'· ti , , • 11 ... ., .. ll • ~ ....... 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US NL Equ•\ S... •.«> Looml' S.•les Cmsu. tU1 tUl2 OodCll ., "52 NL .. llfld, l'IC CapH ltl1 NL eircll a.ti NL 5• M 11.tl NI. Cmrce t 6f NL MUI U U NL Fd A"I tO 11 11.7' tH aw U.14 NL ll\CI Tr -van Lord llilt91l ~r-29-0e .... L reyl111 Grp. Pllol t.• Nl Allllld t.• t n 4'rllt t2a. Ult A 91td tt.J.2 NL GT ,ac 11.ot H 8n4 Oil t.53 It '1 ICI :19.14 » '1 Dreff li.6.S 11 10 Galt Oo 1$ 1' NL O.v GI 30.11 n 05 l'rovkl or •,. u.... 12-" 2u1 oe sa.s JO ti NL 1..com 1n J t4 A Gtlll'd 7.tS I S1 H HlM t2.Cll NL GE: SS L4 • 14 NL Luther_,, Bro. A Htrltt ........... 1 $t>I lftC 7. to NL 0.11 WC IU1 NL A l11$6lnd !Mittv•ll Tew ax to. U NL Gfth IM lt N NL A ll'lllHI 1>07 NL Thrd C 1.14 NL Ha A ll'IYlllC II " lo. lhOI 0111 uo 10 a ._ NtGlll 4 q e .II a1ft11 ........ A Niii!( IU~ tt.• 8etM t.U I• lnc;om 7 li El. Amw•~· us .. ..,,. 10.. NL kert Glh 12. L A-• H , Grwtll tl • 12 ... ,, L... JO L l'l>d 8 .7' t n Ille.Ml e 2' 4 H_,..CI 16' .U NL Ill<..... 4 It 4 41 SOo<I W.U 1S 116 Hor 1111'°" f4.16 NL llwll ltoe I0'7 Sl«.11 11.• 12.17 ll'iA HIY •.K Ut MtT MIG MIO MCD Ml'D Ml'B M"11• NASDAQ SUMMARY "' . " "I I• .... .. , . ~ ... ~ II\ I~ 1 ' " OI • Of! 011 l)ll ' 01t 'w ... .... • > 11 , .l{I!) . , . • , . H~ .. J ' < IJ • I' I / .... L tf ¥ \ I • I 1 •I 'I t I 'I I 'I • I • . ' 'I I I •I ' . ~ . f \ I ·; J , . f .. • I • ., I ,,. ..... _ _...._ ___________________ ..;;o;.;.r•;,;,n.;.:g;.;;;,•..;;Co;.;.;;u;.;,t.;O;.;,.;AJ;,;;;;L Y PILOT!Wldnetday, June 1 o, 1881 a ••• r Second of lhree·parl ienea on m(llprocllc~ The /inol article wW OWfOr Fri.doll J With the growth or medical apeclallutlon and virtual djsappearance or the family doctor. few of us, as patients. maintain a close relationship with physi· cians. There is a greater tendency today to sue than in the past. T,hat is one reason for the upsurge in m41lpracUce claims and the equally significant enormous settle· m~ls. I The prime reason, however. as medical progress which has resulted in increasingly complex and often dangerous methods of patient treatment. --~· SYllll PORTIR , Z Modern machines and procedures to lre at illnesses formerly con· sadered hope· less un avoidably cause injuries to patients, provide opportunities for mistakes -and the subsequent lawsuits Many new drugs which, although of real therapeutic value, may have unexpected. unpleasant side effects. Coupled with the complexity of modern practice are greater and often unrealistic expectations. When the "mir acle cures" promised by television, movies and other media do not occur, pa· tients and our families blame the doctor rather than our illness. StiU another cause must be the so-called con- sumer revolution which has made us more aware of our rights and more willing to take legal action. Legal claims of all kinds <not JUSt medical prac- tice > are at an all-time high. At the same time, juries have become more sympathetic to consumer claims. especially those as emotionally charged as medical claims often are. Aggravating the problem 1s a "contingency fee" system wider which a lawyer gets nothing tf he loses the suit but receives a percentage of the plaintiff's award -perhaps as much as 30 percent to 50 percent -if be w.ins . Since the plaintiff, after expenses. may wind up with only pennies out of each dollar awarded. some lawyers are encouraged to accept and magnify the seriousness of cases that they otherwise would reject as having little or no merit. Frequently cited as contributing to the spurt in malpractice suits are our grievances as patients: re· sentment of high medical costs; frustration with the manner in which complaints are handled, or not handled; various problems of commun ication result· ing either in misinformation. or no information, about the probable outcome of surgery or other forms of treatment. And finaUy, although many malpractice claim- ants may have suffered medical injuries not caused by negligence, there is no denying that carelessness. mistakes or sheer incompetence are factors A recent study. published in the New England Journal of Medicine, concluded that or 815 patients admitted to a hospital al the Boston Universit) Medical Center durln-1 a·five-month period, 290 <or 36 percent> had suffered SOO medical mishaps . These mishaps, more than 200 of which were complications due to drugs. contributed to the death of lS patients. What can be done lo reduce medical malpractice and the claims to which it leads are detailed in the final column on malpractice STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT ,DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORKfAPI Fin•! Oow·Jon~ ••o• '?I rrld•v. Jun •. S OCIC. 1 re!" L.o~, Ct.M Cll.,l U~c1,. , :li ~14.f m.a m:at-6.H I 11 106,,1 105.19 10S.7t-0.5-C 1 .tt ,..,, ael.6t J8.l.1l-o.eo • .... .... ..... ..... l·1i:·1 n" ... ...... . . . ' VI It .. . .... . ... . sm• .S Slk . •• , • • • WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK fAPI Jun • Prev AMERICAN LEADERS d;&. 1H •IJ 1931 •• 18 NEW YORK 1A1>1 Jun • P~v lo<HJ, m METALS Tu...s.v IDS 21 20 d~ m '" .. JS 11 c-~ce1111epou11e1,u.s ~11- t10111 • ..... • ,.,. ... pound. lllK 4614 ,.., .. • poufld, CMllverld. Tia U.,.11 MellllS WHk C-llt fb Al-'-7..eo c..,ls e POUnd, N Y Mere..-, $40.00 per flan. f'l•ll-Mll.00 lrov or., N.Y. ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday. June 1 o. 1981 t AMILY AFFAIR -Clint Ca- ble, tight, 3, assisted by twin iste,r Courtney, aids photo- raJ)hers in posing · newest dditions to Cable family. riplets, from left, Megan, itchell and 'Molly were rn l8$t week at Memorial tiospital in Johnstown, Pa. r:other, Vanessa, had been ospitalized eight weeks rior to birth of the triplets. Paid Advertisement Wyoming Oil 'Lottery' Open To All In July! SANTA ANA. CALIF (Special)- Hundreds of U S c1t1zens w1li win 011 lease rights m upcoming public drawings conducted by fhe State of Wyoming Some may achieve overnight wealth by selling their rig hts to oil com- panies and retaining lifelong royalties on any 011 or gas pro- duction Incredibly. most will risk no more than S30. tax deductible, to enter the little-known program that offers every American the opportunity to compete on an equal basis with giant 011 com- panies for leases of public lllnds. Entry details and information may be obtaired by wnting The B Ryan Snyder Company. Inc (011 and Gas Lease 01v1s1on). Post Office Bbx 268. 2030 East Fourth Street. Santa Ana. California 92702. Enclose $1 for postage and handling The Snyder Company will for- ward ott1c1al entry cards and lull instructions in time to meet the July 10. 1981 deadline o The B. Ryan Snyder Co . Inc ENVIRONMENT AL t1116w SCOPING MEETING What can be done to improve the Route 5/55 interchange? SANTA ANA PROPOSAL Tiie California Deportment of Transportation (CAL TRANS) Is looking at ways td improve the Santa Ana/Newport Freeway Interchange. Various alter· "'tives including Transportation Systems Management and alignment m,bdiflcations ore being studied. Ttlis is one of the Initial steps In the project development process. and It will be used to guide future studies leading to the circulation of a Draft En· vitonmental Impact Statement. Ttle reason for this Scoping M .. ting is tp insure that various public agencle1 a d any Interested persons are Involved early in the environmental prannlng pCocess. The purpoM of the meeting is to identify the range of olternotlves at\d the significant social . .Conomlc, and envjronmentol issues which should bf considered In depth in the EIS. T~ls m .. ting will give you an opportunity to learn about certain features of tijt project and comment on the decision process. WHEN AND WHERE The Scoping Meeting will be held on Thursdoy, June 25, 1 :30 p .m .. In the Council Chombers of Tustin City Center. 300 Centennial Way, Tuatln, :f 11fornlo. For further Information obout this project, contod: or, Mr. Ronold l<oalnskl Envlronmentol Plonnlng 8ronch CAlTRANS (213) 620-3755 Mr. Al Gallardo Federal Hl..ihway Admlnlatroflon (9 16) ~40-3'78 u can't ottend the mHtlng, ~u may .. net your written comment• to; CAl. TitAHS District 07 Envlronmentol ,tonnlng ltanch 1 ~ South Sprtng Street lot Antelet, Collfomla 90012 A,.W~ ............ ,..., . ..~. •'11 t t Tower closings studied Four California airports may lose traffic control SAN FRANCISCO t AP> Air most recently. Concord and traffic rontrol towers at four Stockton, Garvis said. Calirom1u airports are among 66 Hours were reduced for nationwide that the General Ac· periods of liihl traffic, said counting Offtce says are un Garvis, and traffic controllers derused and should be closed. were reassigned to shifts during The Californaa a irports are an busier periods. Marysville, Chito, Fresno and ··We r eview o ur sys t em Merced periodically and make adjust· The tower 1n Fresno 1s at men ts whenever necessary." Chandler Airport. not the city's Gar vis said. "Safety is the main air terminal primary criterion in deciding A F ederal Aviation Ad ;::::.~~to cut back on tower ministration official In Los The GAO complained that Angeles said T uesday the rec-"The Federal Aviation Ad· ommendalions by the GAO, a Congressional watchdog are not n:tinistrati~n has not .taken ~(fee· new · t1ve action to discontinue In. the last rew months, said Al ...... economically unjustified airport Garvis, the FAA has routinely trafflc control ~owers or to re- sur veyed California airports and duce the operatin~ hours of con- reduced the number of hours tr~l ~owers which mee.t th.~ control towers operate craterta for reduc~d oper~llons. The report said closing un- derused towers could "save millions of dollars." Among airports where tower operations were reduced from one to seven hours are. Long Beach, R1vers 1de. Fullerton. Chi no , Napa , Oxnard. Sacramento Executive, and, Listed as candidates for dis· continuance were the following airports: Miami O•d•·Colller, Chicago Mel91, St "mnllwt. l"ta • Wiii"'"· Aa,., ~. Mw,.lc I pal, Pl•l,.vlt•, Tt lla1, Mery1v•ll•. Ct lll Mtr<td. Calll , Alto,., Ill.; l"rHllO, Celll , 0..-r Ho1141a, H.M., ""*"""• Otlla , O...vlli., 111 • Clevel""41 c.,., ...... ; ...., '""· H c . Wnt Memplll1, Arll , K-111•. re ..... OownlOWfl, MlllOI, H.O • Gel ....... IN,; ''"'°" H•~. Mich., Eftld, Ollle.; VelOeltt, Ge.; Sente ft, N.M., MiotrldlM , MIH .. L.e ..... re .... Sen Antonio. T111t1. st1-. M UICW\, Ill ; TwscelOOH, Ale.; H . MyrU• Beech. s.c .. St. JOMClfl, Mo.; WllMllnt, w.v .. ; Alllen.1, Ge • 8'-"lnoton. llld.; ldellO ,. ..... IOeho; Heger1tow11, Mel.; St>ertent>wrt, LC.; GrHnvlllt, Miu.; Jeckson, MIH., Htwltlfl•; ShrevePOrt, L.e . 00Wftlt•n; IA•lsllllrt, w .Ve.; Ann ArbOr, Mlcll.; lrwns•k•, Ge., Mc:KI-; Ow•n•bol'o, Kr., Pad&ICeh, Ky.; CJ!lco, catM.; Aluenclrla, L.e • Jttbonvlli., l'le., Crelt- Twln Fall•, Ide"°; Pine l luff, Arlt.; C- Glre rCIM\I, Mo , Klemeth fell•. Ore.; ~. Pwtrlo Rico. Fl~telt, Atl1.; Hlc•ery, N".C.; Troutdalt, 0.-1., McAllen. TexH; ~911. Ore .. TOC)tkt, Ken., l lllerd, Joplin. -.; Mot 5"'lne1, Atlt . IN'f ..... I, "'*10 II~; 0- vhlt, S c., Olympia, W•.111 • Key w..i. l'ta.; "• Ptto, Alntrken Semoe, Valdtl, Aleske; 0.- l>le, Mo, Liited a• c.on01c1e1n tor r-ecl -'•tint llCKln ..,. airport• In Alltn-n, Pe., ....,..,,., H C , Erle, Pe . Hwftllngton, W.Ve., 1 1n9llamton, H V , Clltrluton, w Ve ., fe,..._ ltvlllt, H c.. Nlegare Fells, H. v .• UlkA, H."f' •• Au9u11e. Ge • Colum1>u1. Ge., Tr91110f1, HJ ., 8rl1tol. T.nn .• GtHt. s.c . T•ll•f\a•-· fl•~ Wllml1191on, H c., rei.rbcH'o, H J DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS &42•54578 Saving precious energy has always been, and ·will continue to be, a major concern of both The Irvine Company and the City govern- ment. So no matter where you choose to econol!lically balanced ci ty. Growth guided by two important factors. The City's farsighted, living General Plan. And concerned residents from the community, City government and The Irvine Company who work together to make it happen. Ample sh opping areas are being carefully lo- cated thro ughout the community. And good schools are being pro- vided within walking dista nce o r just a short drive from home. And that's just part of the plan to save your e nergy. There's much more to com e. For information on this growing new city, please visit or call The Irvine Company Informati on Center. Culver Drive exit off live in Irvine, you'll see the benefits of en ergy- conscious planning. And as the city develops, you'll find sh orter dis- tances to drive and more things oo do close to home. It's all part of Irvine's continued growth to - ward the goal of becom- ing an energy-efficie nt, We may n ot al ways see eye-to-eye on every detail, but the result has been, and will con- ti nue to be, a city tha t gets better to live in every day. Ifesiden tial areas are being built close to business and industrial employment centers. • San Diego Fwy. (I-405). To corner of Barranca. (714) 551-1500. • • Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1981 SLI M GOUR MET CS SUPERMARKETSHOPPER CS \ Serve tall glasses of amber-clear iced tea for a summer thirst- quencher . . . C6 O.lly ............ ..., ... erk .. O'r.-1 Newport Beach's Firebrand Chili Team rleftJ as- sembles around the sacred pot for the final taste before judging. After a moment's silence, Bob Longpre, with a spoonful of chili proclaimed: "ft is good and it sure as hell ain't Perrier." Voila! The piece de resistance (above) of the consummate chili cook: a culinary ven- ture into the world of spicy eats . ••• Not just another .pot of red BY JOEL C. DON O(llw Oelly PllOI Sllllf G round chuck may be OK for the frugal chef, but never shall it touch the well-scorched lips of the true chili connoisseur. Any good chili cook worth his Tabasco sauce knows you.start with a good slab of meet. such as sirloin tip or brisket. And the ultimate secret of a good kettle of hot ~ stuff, say some of the best chili cooks in the state, is the extra time put into fine chopping of all ingre- dients. At the recent California State Chili Cham- pionship, held at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa, some 68 teams gave their all to con- coct the best mouth-sizzler. A good hunk of beef was the main ingredient, though many tempted the not-tbo-delicate taste bud with pork, spiced sausage, turkey, lamb and chicken. Most chefs preferred to saute their meat in a hot frying pan before dishing it into large cast-iron or aluminum kettles. Next come the spices, the piece de resistance of any good chili pot. In chili cook-off competition, fillers such as • beans, mushrooms and vegetables are verboten. Onions, however, are a llowed since they're con· sidered a spice. Topping the list of powdered herbs, of course, is chili powder. Now some cooks preferred to grind their own fresh chili peppers, others used ex- pensive gourmet brands of the savory condiment. But take a lesson from the first place winner of the California chili championship: He used one of the more common store-brand powders and nary a judge could tell the difference. · · l'he list of other spices wafting in the breeze included cumin, hot mustard, oregano, sugar, bay leaves, cayenne pepper, fresh-ground black i>eP· per, tomato sauce, vinegar. cinnamon, et al. Alcohol has been relegated a spice, which comes as no surprise to a chili gourmet who•d just as 6oon label spirits and suds under any one of the four basic food groups. So the addition of beer and bourbon was the mainstay of the 68 contestants. Finally. a superb chili takes at least three hours to simmer, time washed away by an endless stream of frothy beers. Fred Drexel of Sherman Oaks, who captured first place at the cook-off and a bid for the world ti· ·<See CHILI, Pace C4) OKl~ . -----~------------------------=:----------------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday. June 10, 1981 Cream your calories with whipped • ncotta I v 8ARBARAGJBBON. ; k 1t·utt.1 cheese. t.h l' fum1l1ar flllinJ( for lpsa1:nu, llj 111w of thf' l!t'sl t·ulol'lt• \\IM' t•oo,k tp R SUb'>lllUll''> for lll'lH y ~rcum • Purt·skiln frc•sh rlcot to. whh>l>t'd to ti t•rum~· smoothnt•111t 111 uur IJl t.>nder or ruod. Pl'o• q<.•ssoa'. Md th "me cJ a 1 ry fresh fli.tVt'r 4tlld ~·,t un• ab cn•un \\Ith• ~·arllon or th\• fa' and pa lont>s, •! Ut•raU!\t' N('Ott l &21 u ch den H' 1 'h. • n t•1 t•am. you oob o~ed t111lf U'> mul't1 In rookin£, t h"•relorC', ~ <·up t\f ~ hljlpt.'d I ICOttJ at 171 C"iJ lorws t•an n•plart-1 ~up of hca''' t•n•a m •l f .!I t•alom•., More ~ood flt'\\ s I cup ul ht•U\) crt•am hus 88 jtrams or ta t und 32ti malh~rams of t·holt•skr ol. \\hilt• •, cup of part '>klrn rt<'ottu 1s onh Ill gr;11m of fut and 38 rnalllJ!rams of c h o I I' .., t 1• 1 o I a h 1·,ilth11•1 cho1<'(' h~· far \lthou~h l'll'Otta rs l1• 1· h n 11a11~ .11 f n 1sh chl't'Sl'. ll hus 1101w of thl• t.irtrwss or eheci.i Ol'SS of othl'I ('Ur l'd or t'ulturt•d dair~ products: ih "'"or 1-.. s tnC'll y that o I I 1t • s Ii <'rt' a m As p111 dia-.l'<I , hmH•n•r. the t t'' 111 rt• '" -..om cw hat gr .1111~ until the gr;11111m·-.... rs µ111 \<.'rited in t lw hlt•nclc>r or food p111<·1·-..,.,111 llt·H"s ho\\ \\ 111 l'Pl.J> RICOTTA E 111 pl\ .i t 5 011ncc con tm111·1 of fr •. ..,h 1wrt skim r1eott.1 d11•1•st• into a bll'ntlt•r 111 food proc essor 'll'>lng lht• slt'cl blJd<' 1 and Jll'IH'ess rm Coconut: it., s tl1e top 1 PAS.\IH;N,\, Ca li f ~ \I'• \ <·m·onul mo.Jde out ol l'llnt·11lat1• and co<·o1111t 11·1· <·r<•am and lillt·cl \'1th l'olorful nug g('l ... of trnp1c·al fruit beat 1111t sud1 mouth\\ atering com p1•t1t 11111 a' H1H'k \ ,ttounta1n \l,1clm•s.., and • R u r g 11 n ti ' (' h <' r r ~ Hor,thl 111 \\Ill the ~rand 111111· rn a nat w nal fre C'rt•am t•ontt st , ·coconut Surprise · ~·<J rncd creator Sherrol .~•ckla'> <J JO eta;.' atal1on rf111 l\\o rn !long K1rng at ~Ill' final., of I h1• frn1rlh an ,nu.ii B.1,f..111 Hohbtn'-l<'l' ;t'n·am Sh11\\ ()If Ht•c·1pt• ,('nnt•·,11111 Frida\ :• Thi· Hoc·f.. \ H 1 vl'r. Ohio '1 IH"rnr!'>t I'\ inst rul'lor 's ;t'llllCIHtlOll lopp<.'d 27 :01 hl'I C'arhoh\ dra t e· >iadl·n e'tra\ aga.n1as, in· 1' I ud1ng a m eringue- d Ii bblcd "Mount St. H elens Spectacular" that spewed smoke and fire actually dry ice <rnd rtnming brandy. Th<> \tount ~t llclens I t nt n chdn t l<Jke any top J•rtll'!'>, hut \Ol<·anos ... , t•n•n t lolalh lf!nore<l 1n thl• <rnar<.ls .Jamoca \'ult·ano. · f<•:1111rrng l n sh '' h1">kl'' and frozen "h1p1wd c•n·am atop a m o 11 11 cl 11 I .I <1 m o <· a Jlm11n<I fud).;l' tl'l' t•ream , \\on f11·,t pr11< in the sun· da<• 1·<.1tt•gon for l\lrnam I ('oht•n of Camhr1dge, \I a.,.., A panel of S('\•en food writc·r">. afll'r a long day "pl'nl most I) \Hiiting for the 1·ntril'!-. lo be I.I S· semhlt•d h) ho ml' Peonomists. also a\\ ardNI first prizes 1n t hret' nt her categories An avocado and c'oronut ice cream bl end ca lled ·warm Winds Float" won in the drinks '>l't'l1on for J oellen Crouch of Corte Madera, Calif . Karen lla rmatiuk or Santa Clara. Calif won the individual ice cream lreal prize ror her Jamoca Almond Pud· ding Cups," and Verlene Ke lsey Sharp of Salt Lake City took t he ice cream s pectacular honors ror her • Southern Praline Pecan Roll " hl1h it~t'd until 1mooth und creamy Return It to lhr ~nhunt1r and store In the rtfriaerator. Use it to turn poachln& liquid into <'rt-um .auce, uis u to1-11)h\M for frt: h ltult1 ur \.tl&:t'tAbl 1 or a but fot low·catorl~ dtpa or H •• t-rei.my protein·rlch '"' Md for brtad or N't k~ r11 ; it ulorlH p r t•M POC:>n. cooked llnaulnl <or ---------apai,~et~~P dry while SLIM GOURMET ~e Pinch ot grated nutme1 and lemon peel •\ cup WHIPPED part·akhn ricotta cheese 8·ounce packaae crabmeat, thawed a tablt1poon1 minc9d f'relh pAnley a tabhspoona mlftc:od chtvH (or 1calllon1> 2 tablespoons 1rated Parmesan cheese Salt, pepper, to taste Return hot, drained llngulni to the PQt it was cooked in. Add wine, nutmtlg, lemon peel and whipped ricotta cheese: tou lightly over very low htat until mixture is hot and pasta is coated wlth ''cream" sauce. Gently 1Ur In crabmeat, par11ey and chive&. Cov- er pan and warm over very low heal 1 or 2 minutes. Spoon Into two plates and top with arat· ed cheese. Add salt, if needed, and coarse pep· per to taste. Makes two main-course servings, 350 calories each. More ricotta Ideas: APPLE CURRY DIP l cup part-skim fresh ricotta cheese 1 cup 'unsweetened appleuuce 2 to3teaspoons curry powder (to tute > 'Ai teaspoon pumpkin or apple pie s pice (or a pinch of cin- namon, nutmeg, clove, ginger> Optional: salt, pep· per, to taste tr us ing unwhipped ricotta or chunky ap· plesauce, combine all in· gredients In blender or rood processor a nd blend smooth. If uslng already-whipped ricotta and smooth applesauce, simply stir inaredients together until blended. Chill until servln& time. Surround wltb fresh fruit or vegetable dip· pers ; 14 calories per tablespoon. WHIPPED APPLE CREAM TOPPING FOR FRUIT DESSERTS Combine 'Ai cup each of whipped ricotta and smooth unsweetened ap· plesauce; stir smooth. Spray "lieht" whipped cream into 112 cup measure. Add It to the ricotta mixture and eenlly fold 1n wttb tbe tines of a fork <don't overmlx and denate it). Use as a toppinc for diced apples, sliced oranges, oth er fresh fruits ; 12 calories per tablespoon. Add a f eative air to din- ing and dieting with 1kinnv dip1. Send a 1tamped, 1elf- addre11ed envelope and 50 centa to SLIM GOURMET PARTY DIPS, P.O. Boz 624, Sparta, N.J . 01f1J. YOltl RBDUCBI YOUR FOODBILL Gl\•.ii:'E~' F':7t1.it.IC£ G.= Clt'ERlr' c.~:_r (S1.J1llli,Wl·l~l~I) --~,, ,_ (;,qt1•.'ERlr' 1 2-' ,. 1 .!!-!~Li .1S.· L8 FP1.~ :"IUCE 1 ('Ii 1. ~?LB @ • 4!l.' L8 . VO ft I LOWEST H_.,~ PRICE OF THE YEAR (:.=· .. ~(~·~..,, a=::r~~11' Gf'', ··.·~-,:::£ G~: __ ~· .. · E= ,· Gt= .• :-:-·,· GF _-:~.;.'r' t'.·. ---.... I GC : .--.: r' · ·,· · 1 5.:._3 Li ~~. L5 F .=::·UC£ 4!4 .,._.._r,··. .:.t ,_·,.-,_ ._,. i~ll(' ,:~ CRISP ICEBERG LETTUCE EA . FRESH -A SALAD FAVORITE LIMrr 4. (Purchase over limit·reg. price .49) SAVE .27 GROCERIES MEATS ~e 1!0Uo"<1 (""-l'llL'<H Green Olant Green Beans " -~ Mayonnaise • OO'<l .INl-2"UJ.l Spencer ~nuffed Olives !!O!Kf °"" 51t"'fl> oel Monte Tom•toes 't::a~net Softs~ LIQUOR 1199 299 299 489 ~' f-AL TH f, BEAUTY 238 CALIFORNIA CHERRY AVOCADOS TOMATOES • ~t...HASS 12<XIU~ 4 ~1°0 ~69 RED CABBAGE !iUC£O &OZ. PACKACE BUY ONE QET ONE SAVE .49 FREE RADISHES &ONIONS LONG GREEN CCJCUMBERS !.i9 SWEET RED ONIONS IT N..IN1 STilE '!.17 '!.33 COLGATE MAZO LA TOOTHPASTE CORN OIL 90/ --..tlHfRU !OO!Hl!NIJ .... 14 OU"I< [ l!OnLE Put ., ..... o-'f'I Wn" fe'(jl f"W" • 8)• Lll'lll I tPuu"'-WQlirt'f 1onwt1..q pr.ct' I J11 t..-Ul ·' ~~129 ~~119 AJAX CALIFORNIA CLEANSER NECTARINES •• our.cf. (Nt ~'<nl:l AHO l t.-.Vf .. ~ Oilef ......... pre-~ 4 1 .IUt::'r ~~29 ~.59 CHICKEN LONGHORN NOODLE SOCJP CHEDDAR 10 l •OUNCE U'Vf • ~~FAMl.VPAOI , ........... °"".,,,.'"II pno )41 ·~--'"II-•• 27•1 ~~28 ~~J99 UI ll'llT 2 FLATWARE ELEGAltt STAllUZU AT BIG SAVINGS! ITf.M OF THE WEEK DINNER FORK 1) s.oo •. l'tnlOtASt 'I ::~ • f\A l"#AM r'f REQ •• 89 LAJO~Oa ~s~ PIUNCU9 •• CONl.fl?,. PIECES ALSO AVAll..A.l&.e AT VOl'I. LOW PRICU lt1'tM .... ,,"".'" :/. c., .... ...... )4111 °""' ~iftl Dr ... ..... I ; ----. --------.-:---------_____..,....,...---------....,.......... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 10, 1981 • meal lish . . 29t. •neer lleakl ---- ••rl111t• heel rihl· *119 1•· lohsler tails *298 · 1 •· fresh salmon $249 •I• ., .. H , •. •"·· rib roast I 291. c1he llealcs .... u.. pl•pple \ *698 seal• ,.,,, •lz• 29.t ground heel .. Hies 11t1tt•••••••11tt1111111 .... avoead• '"''" ,,. .. cucuinhen ""' " ........ . raspherrles INI• r111• I""" nlt11ll oranges ••• 11 J1le1 •lz• . ·- 4 "' *100 *149 I •11bf bakery almond coffaeealca *189 s , •.••• llW flkl11 1r•1n 11 frttz1r •••f fr11 pork 1111 • "'" .,~ .. ,~.,.~ ... ... .. 11g · 1tan . ..... .., . ,... "" .... *149 w ••• ..... .., *189 , •. fresh tarltot deli . ... ,. ... •rW• pastrami ,... ua .. i. $r.~ ----- . , .....• ,,... nl• 89+ • ..,. ••• "I· ua nit *2\! ' ----•l111r ...... 1 • ~~ t~~ .. i. 89• hra1nseh•iger ,... ut .. ,, *279 ••• ••I• ••1 soup mix ... •• ,.Hll .. ,,. •••• ,. "'• ... INl11 ,. ..... 11, ................ ,. 11 ...... ,1 11llltt11t. •••• 11 ... try tM •lfftre111 . ,,. ... corn tortllll1 t •u .. 2s• wheat bread *129 ...... ,.. ...... ehe.W.r ehea11 t •· *289 vilamins l6St .... All., e.e. ... 6IM404 t4111 lfW IW., W. .._.. , -.... it Ail.,,.... ......,. , . . . . .. . • I Otange Coa1t DAILY PILOT ,iWednelday, June 10, 1981 • •. Chili <rr.•Pat•Cl> tle, often lb11 prbe-wlnnlna reclpe aana the Juice ol a Cermeoted plant. Drexel reminds the cblU cook to dice tht oAlona lnto fine pieces and the beet m11t Into small cubes. Fil ED DllEXEL'S ltll FIUT Pl.ACS CHIU 10 lbe. beet brisket 2lbs.aau.saae 2 bottles cblll powder 1 bottle cumin 4 onions. diced hot mustard, to taste ore11no, to taste sugar, to taste oil Saute meat In bot, oiled akllltt. Sault onion• Combine all lnaredlent In lar1e. covered pot and , cook for mimlmum three hourt. If you're on a tl&ht bud1et. Uncle Leonard'• Cheap Chili Is a quick dish that'll 11l11ty tho taate ot most amateur chili lovers. UNCLE LEONAllD'SCHEAPClllU l lb. hamburaer 1 can tomatoes 1 16 01. can red kidney beana 2 medium onions. diced chill powder. to taste (2 to 4 tblp1.1 cumin. to taste salt and pepper. to taste Saute around meat ln frylne pan. Drain fat. Saute onions. Put all in1redlents In mt'dlum·•lled pot. Cook at low heat for one to two hours, addlna more spices to taste . JOE STEWART'S lt7t WORLD CHAM PION "RENOREDCHILI" 3 lb. round steak, cut into small lnunks 3lb. chuck, ground 6 dried red chili peppers. stemmed, seeded and boiled 30 min. in 3 to 4 cups water 3 tbsp. cumin 6 med. cloves garlic, minced 1 tblp. oregano brewed in ~ cup beer 8 tbsp. chili powder 2 tbsp. MSG 3 med. onions, chopped 2 tbsp. paprika · 2 tbsp. cider vinegar 2 cans beer broth 1 cup pureed, stewed tomatoes 2 tbsp. masa flour Brown meat in rendered beer rat, adding black pepper to taste. Drain meiBt. Add chili powder, cumin, MSG and garlic. Cook 30·40 min. Add cook· ing water from peppers as necessary. Remove skins from chilis, add mashed pulp to mixture. Add onions. oregano, beer mixture. paprika, vinegar. one can beer broth and pureed tomatoes. Dissolve masa in remaining beef broth. Stir into chili and simmer 30 min. Add more spices to taste. Simmer 15 min. and ser ve. EASY FIXIN' BEEF CHILI 12lb. ground beer 1'2 cup chopped onion l 6 oz. can tomato paste 1 12 oz. can beer 116 oz. can kidney beans <don't drain> 1 to 1 'h tsp. chili powder 1 tsp. sugar 1 tsp. garlie salt 1h tsp. oregano Lightly brown beer and onion. Add tomato paste and beer. Cook a few minutes. Add remain- ing ingredients. Cook slowly uncovered medium saucepan 10 to 15 min. Add a little water. Serve. RUDY VALDEZ'S 1976 WORLDCHAMPIONSHIPCHILI 1 lb. pork shoulder, chopped 1 lb. beef nank steak, chopped fine 1 tsp. cumin, divided in two wrtions 1 ripe tomato, chopped l clove garlic. minced 1 white onion 6 6-inch stalks celery 1 8 oz. can green chili salsa 1 8 oz. can green chili peppers, diced 1 tsp. oregano 1 tsp. Tabasco sauce 3 tbsp. chili powder water salt to taste Cook pork and beef in separate pans for 20 min. Add 'h tsp. cumin to each skillet. In 6·quart ;Saucepan, combine tomato, garlic, onion. ·celery. chili salsa, green cbilis, oregano, Tabasco. Make a paste, addlng small amount of water, with chili powder and add to vegetable mixture. Cook 20 min. Prain juice from meal, add to vegetable mix- ture. Cook about 1 'h hours. Salt to taste. DEADWOOD DICK CHILI 1 tbsp. butter or margarine 2 large onions, diced l lb. ground chuck 1 tsp. salt l tsp. chili powder 1 cup diced raw potatoes 1 small green pepper, diced 'h cup chopped celery 1 16 oz. can tomatoes 1 10 ·~ oz. can tomato soup 216 oz. cans kidney beans <don't drain) Melt butter or magarine in large saucepan. Add onions and cook until tender. Add chopped meat and cook until reddish color is gone. Add salt and chili powder. Continue to cook for few seconds. Add potatoes. green pepper, celery, tomatoes and tomato soup. Simme~ for 15 minutes 'Or until e dges of potato cubes become transparent. Add kidney beans and simmer 15 min. U chili as too thick, add tomato juice. ITALIAN DEt.ICATESSEN Specializing In • Fettuccine • Ravlon • Linguine • Lasagna • cannelloni • S•uces Antipasto Trays 4sagna and Cannelloni ~uares. SanctwlchH • catering .. ~ECRETS'REVE.4LED Get ready to make blue-ribbon jam Do • ll tak a •11 l'lul "knHk" l'1 m•ko llrlao wlnnln~ J•m' "No. HY talr Judie• who p\t'k tho wlnnora. \11ln1 full)' ripe, hllh QUMlll)' trull\ M tlClOd rtO• h•\\ and tal owln• pro· o dur ei•artly •r• the n<'r•l• Uf blue ribbon a u o~ •• •nyone ~•n cap)'. Judaea look tor 1mooth, thlok Jam with brlf ht t'olor and ex t•ol ont natural fruit thavor. Jam 1hould be 1ll1hlly sonar than Jelly. For perftlet Jam that can win approvul from fair Jud11ea or your taml ly , uH this recll)tl for • -• Spiced Peach Jam ·and follow these tlpe: Use hteh quality powered fruit pectin. A recipe with powdered p ctln e liminates aueuwork and allows you to use fully ripe frulll, tor best flavor and color . Measure accurate· ly. Top quallly results depend on exact amount.a of fruit, pectin, acid &and sugar. Use a large, flat· bottomed pan, so jam wlll cook quickly and not boll over , Make only one batch at a Ume. Time cooking ex- actly. -Stirring and skim · ming tor five minutes helps distribute fruit evenly ln the syrup. Check fair rulebook for jar size. Most call for standard 'h-plnt jars or glasses. SPICED PEACH JAM 5 cups prepared peaches <~bout 4 pounds) 2 tablespoons lemon Julee 1 tablespoon grated lemon peel 1 large cinnamon stick 7 cups sugar 1 pkg. fruit pectin Wash and sterilize 8-oz jelly jars; s cald lids and rings. Wash and pit fully ripe peaches; peel, cut Into pieces and gri nd . Measare fruit into 6 to 8-quart saucepan ; if necessary add water to make 5 cups. Add lemon juice, peel and cin- namon stick. Measure sugar Into large bowl; set aside. Combine pectin with fruit mixture. Cook over high heat until mixture comes to a hard boil, stirring constantly. Add sugar all at once. Cook . and stir over high heal until mixture comes to a Safe way's Lowest Price On Ground Beef In 3 Yearal GROUN BEEF • -• U$4t. Ft ... 11 ci-1 -0-IMWU•I full rolline boil Cone that cannot be stirred down l. Boil hard 1 minute. Remove from heat : skim and stir with metal spoon or skimmer for 5 minutes lo remove foam . Remove cin· namon stick. Ladle into hot jars, leaving 1"8·inch rim at top•. Immediate· ly wipe jar rim clean. place hot lid on jar and sc rew metal ring on firmly. Check for seal in 12 hours. 7 to 8 cups. •To seal with para!· fin . Ladle jam into hot jars, leaving 1'1 inch at top. Cover with thin layer or melted pararrin. about 1 1 inch thick. ·~~~~, .... , ...... Colgate Toot .... sto Folger'1CoffH ·::: , ... s22• lolMlon lrol St ... 1 ,_, ; .. 39C C.11 Cu...it 2 '-Mw 0-u..it SJ SOI lomalMLett•c• ._.. _ ~""'-' . ~3bvJ1°0 QUALITY MIA Y! GROCERY LIQUOR BUYS! BonelessRumplRoast~""'!1" ~reoCookles -•t:1151 •WhltelawVodka = i.:'5" Beef Cube Steaks~ • '2" •eanquetMeatPie-3~•100 •Jim Beam "T.t:"" 1:'10" Chicken Fry Steak~°=-. '2" 3¢Vegetables .. :--:-3::1100 •Gordon's Gin --i: '8" Boneless Tip Roast ~. 1211 m¢celeste Pizza ,._, ~ '11 ' •Seagram's ~= i:'11" I BonelessBeefCubes==· •2•• Whole FilletButts..:'~. 13~1 Premium Ground Beefr=~ ... 1171 Fresh Fryer Wings.~=. • 79• Boneless Turkey Ham=:c:::: .. '1 71 Smoked Sausage~~.;:..":": ... '2" Sliced Beef Liver "::"::" • '109 DELI & SEAFOOD Chunk Bologna 'C" • 99• Variety Pack Mea~ 'I: 1111 ffllh True Cod Fiiiets • 12N • '6" ~Cheesecake =. ~ '2°' •Almaden-.~ c=: ~·211 :ai;-spaghetti Sau:;. .. ~'111 .Andre Champagne re: '1" X,Bagels .~. 2~'100 :!IC Apple Juice l-='1" LOW PRICES! ~Orange Juice "::... .. \: 89-~ragmont ,_ ... , t: 89• •HoneyBran ii· t:8~l ~If & Half -::. 49' •cinnamon Rolls '=" :t 99' •eottaoe Cheese _, ~ 85' •Bush's Baked Beans1; 49' •Lucerne Yogurts 3 .t:..'1" • Argo Beans 't'!!' -t: 29t awesson '::-:: 12" FRESH PRODUCE! Green Cabbage '...::"' Crisp Carrots := Delicious Apples ~.::· Sweet Red Onions ~·. Tropical Mangoes Cherry Rubarb Cucumbers _,., -Floral Bouquets .::. 2~ 55• • 49c • 39' i... 89• • 49• -25• -'1" HEAL TH & BEAUTY •Toddler Diapers ~ •ory Look :=. •vanquish ..:r :ti 15ot \: •211 ,.. ~1,.. ........................ ~ • 144174»fWIP .... Wtllill., Ir.- r !1'' -~------....--~ -4 W 4 4 4 U 0 # 0 ¥ W QP • F W -~-~ ... ·---·""" _ _,.,..,.._.,.,,.. ...,_.,.._ ___ ---•- _F_O_o_o~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-o~ra~e~a~DMLY~L~~nnd~,JuM1~~1 l~i1~~~~~~~~p Fizzy drink . ranks second The lemperature soars -you need 1 thirst quencher - preferably cold and fizzy. Rieht? Maybe - according to a study done at Michigan State University a few years ago. A cold and fizzy drink -plain unflavored soda water actually ranks second in quenchability behind water with a tablespoon of lemon juice added . Oddly enough, even with a bit of sugar added for flavor, a tart lemonade is a better thirs t quencher than some sweeter lemonade mixes or sweet sodas even though the pe rcent sugar is about the same. SWEET drinks aren't as thirst quenching as non-sweet drinks. That may explain why diet drinks seem lo have more quenchabllity than regular sweet drinks. "Beer contains more water than does milk, lemonade and non diet colas, so beer should be thirst qu~nching, indeed. Maybe. Beer does contain alcohol and a 1 coho I can have a dehydrating, not-so-thirst-quenching effect. You might also think a drink must be ice cold for it to quench your thirst. This is purely ., matter or habit and culture. Telllperature bas nothing to do with thirst quenching properties. It's t he water and tartness that count. I CED tea, minus sugar, is another top thirst -quenching beverage. And it's easy on the scales and budget. You can use an inexpensive tea blend for iced tea. l~ flavor blends well wi!h either mint or lemon. Save money by buying the generic (unbranded) tea. Instant tea or tea bags are more convenient than loose tea. but all three work equally well. When your aim is to q uencb your thirst and plain water doesn 't seem to do it, try adding something tart and maybe a wee bit or sugar. You spend about 7 percent of your grocery sto r e food dollar for non -a l coholic beverages. That's about the same percent as you spend f or bakery products, vegetables. pork and fruit. Think it over. Maybe you can quench your thirst and save money and calories at the same time. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~- CASCADE DISHWASHER DETERGENT 65 oz r2s9 SPIC 'N SPAN 54 oz !229 ~--. -~ . ------BdUNCE FABRIC ~o~~~~s ....... ! 2 89 n DOWNEY &FABRIC SOFTENER 6402 !234 No one can top new Millbrook English Muffins. (except you!) Help yourself to our bottom offer. Save 15¢ OD new Millbrook rep.lar or sourdough English MUftins. BOLD 3 LAUNDRY DETERGENT 171 oz. COMET LIQUID 21 oz. 1111 , ~ IVORY LIQUID DETERGENT 480Z £269 OUr Pr•Ct ProCKtlO" POllCV gu;irant~ Ctwft pn<ll to bl tHtc~IVt weone\Oo'ly JUnt 10 flYU Tul'\d.lv Junt 16 , .. , MJB-The famous Colombian blend. Also available in 100% Colombian Flake Grind. OONSUME. .. 011~ tl1M.cl to one COUPO<I' per p;i~M. Good ontr on PftMnitho'I lo yo11r g•ocer on 0111c11eu 01 MJ8 PIOll\tlil'I O!Ollnd Ot MJI Premk.lm FltkO Ground Colloe Any Ol!lof UIO con•lltUlff lreuel GROCE .. Pitt .. ltdffrrl tllle cou oon et 111o 11cw ••llH on -un ol MJ8 OrounCI C:Ollff You "'" be tOIMt>uretd II tllO tee:• value ptu• 71 ~ ll•ncttlno, OfO- •ldeCI you tn<I conilu111•r lie•• tolllplleCI wltll 11\t llflftl of lllleolf~. ~may nor 1>e u1lan•d or 111n11errtd by you Wt •Ill not llonor rtdtmpllon• 111rouo11 011t1tdt tatnCIH , otoktra, etc Your cu'1omtr m1111 pey·any •••••I•• Cov~ "°'Cl where tt•td. orOlltboed °' rfflflcttd, ln•OICff •llOlitlng your j)VICllHH OI 1um cient tlOCk 10 co,.. courion• ~loO IOf 1edtmphon muel l>t lho•n on ltQuttl C:Hn ••"'9 1120 OI one _, ,. .. JllOf!IPI 1.otl'llPllOfl l'lltll OOUPoll 10 MJe Co , llO Bo• '"'·Clinton io..a ~,u la,._ ......... ao; *' Orange Cout DAJL y PILOT IW•dnHday. June 1 o, 1981 Quiche and tea for lunch When ls a quiche not a ~ cup milk In l1r1e bowl beat quiche? 6 ta&S •H•· Then beat In cot- A nswer: when the lcupcottaaecbeete ta1e chee •· 1111onlnf1 custard-Uke creation la 1 teupoon ult and bread crumb·ml k baked without a crust. '-'teaspoon pepper mlxture. Drain 1pln1ch In today's recipe two v. teaupoon dry ln a 1leve and pre11 to k i n d s o I c hopped mustard remove all llquld. Add spinach are combined ~ .. teupoon saae 1plnach, onlona and with beaten eggs to pro-1 ( l O • o u n c e 1 ) Cheddar cheese to en duce a 1reen-flecked. package frozen chopped mixture. Mix Well . c reamy custard. Aller spinach, thawed Spread evenly In well baking for about 40 8 sr~n 9nlons wlth buttered 7 x ll·lnch minutes, let It stand for tops,.thlnly sliced c111erole. Bake ln pre· 10 minutes before cut· 1 cup s hredded heated 32&-degree oven ting into squares. s harp Cheddar cheese . until set In center, about Serve it with a tossed C o m bi n e b re a d · 40 minutes. Let stand 10 This main dish spinach custard makes a light and lovely summer luncheon dish. Serve it with tall glass of amber- clear iced tea. green salad or a kabob crumbs and milk. Cover minutes before cuttln1 of fresh summer fruits. and refrigerate 4 h~rs Into squares. Makes 6 to ·They make a lovely ll&ht ou1r~o~v~e~mi~g~ht~·----~8~s~e~rv~·(~n~1s~·-____ __!~tl!l!!!l!!!l~;d~~~~:J~~-ll~~b~~~~~~~~~~g~~..::_====J----------lunch on a hot summer ·- day. . . Another welcome refresher when the weather ls hot or humid is that perennial favorite, Iced tea. Its clean. fresh taste g~s well with all kinds or roods and, happily. because it is so low on the calorie scale it won 't add unwanted pounds no matter how many glasses you thirstily con- sume. GREATER OVERALL SAVINGS ON DAIRY AND DELI FOODS. Directions for making perfect amber-clear iced tea with teabags. loose lea, instant tea powder or the flavored and sweetened Ice lea mixes follow. EASY WAYS TO MAKE I CED TEA With teabags or loose tea and boiling water Bring 1 quart of freshly drawn cold waler to a full rolling boil in a saucepan Remove from hea t and immediately add 15 teabags or ''-' measuring cup of loose tea. Stir, cover and let stand 5 minutes. Stir again and strain into a pitcher holding another quart of cold water. Serve over ice. Makes 2 quarts. With teabags and cold water: Fill a quart pitc her or containe r with cold tap water. Add 8 to 10 teabags (remove tags ). Cover. Let stand at room temperature or in the refrigerator at least 6 hours or over· night. Remove teabags, squeezing against side of container. Pour intc ice filled glasses. Makes l quart. Recipe may be doubled. With instant powder or iced tea mix Use 2 rounded tablespoons of I instant tea powder to each quart of cold tap water. Stir If using lemon-navored iced lea. use two small envelopes or 1'2 cup of mix to each quart of cold water. MA IN DISH SPINACH I CUSTARD 1 cup soft bread crumbs ..• Team <From Pase CS> minutes or until tender. Star In stuHing mix, orange juice. sa lt. mustard and pepper un- til well mixed Place about 12 cup stuffing mixture on each ham shce. Roll up as for jell y roll. If n ecessary. sec ure with wooden picks or whole cloves Arrange In 13 x 9 x 2- inch baking dish. Pour Orange Glaze over rolls . Bake In 400·degree oven 15 minutes. basting oc- casionally with 1laze Add nectarines. Cook 15 minutes longer, basting frequently. or until heat- ed and &Jazed. Makes 4 servings. ORANGE GLAZE In 1-quart saucepan stir together :t:i cup dark cor n syrup, ~ cup vinegar, 3 tablespo1ns water, 1 teaspoon graled oran&e rind and 111 teaspoon ground cloves. Stirring occasionally, brlni to boll over medium heat. Cover; si mmer 5 minutes. Makes lcup. ptCUDAHY 699 i 2,R·S HA~Lllcan pt KRAFT SLICED 129 i CHEESE FOOD Slnglt wraci. Amlr1Cln 12 Oz. "'9- BLADE CUT 88 ~U.£K ROASTLll • DRUMSTICKS 98 ORTHICHS "Vine CNcMn. or• A. TYIOfl Lb. HARVEST DAY PEACHES Cllngi HllVfl Of lllCed. 11 OI. Ctn .38 ~ ,.JOY LIQUID -137 i DETEROEN,Tor .• ?I . W1ICtl you need to IMly ...,, pork, or clalCktn ,.N le lattr q11Htitia. )'9'1 •n •w S CllMI otf "'91 ,...., witll MqM M:. M11111 "'' Ofrm ' ......... qlllality -u Y" fttMt .... , twt)'day &09flfW1t• ........ • • pt LOW FAT· iMILK LICly Lee ptBALL.PARK 139 iFRANKS MUt or llef 11 oz."'~ SHANK PORTION 99 HAM My COOUCI. loM-ln Lb.. KERN'S PRESERVES tcr!Mbltry, II 01 Jft 149 ~ .P'LAKI TO LAICI ~19 i .CHllSI ._.. .. , tOI.~ Ot LolllflOm l CELISTE PIZZA ..... ,., .. ....... 111 }i IUllCHMANN'S 879 iOIN ID flfOof 1.n ur. tn. /lfore mlue · fbr gour 1i1at dollar. Our "Val .. Trim" policy 1M11tt1 yo11 better wl~ for your meat dollar. ()\Ir bittchera •hittlt IWIY nctta fat, bont and tall tad ••Mc ao you can Upec1 more edible tema,9 per pound. lLADYLEE 138 !£!.~~~'-!CM Ctn. Key Buys mean extra •ngsl Key Buys are items priced even lower than their reaular discoun1 prices as a resuh of manufacturers' temporary promotional allowances or exceptional purchases. Youil find hundreds of Key Buy items every ume you shop. FRESH 97 ~R2~~ BEEF Lb • CROSS RIB ROAST IOfWIS. IOnOlcl 8"f Chuct '"188 DOel Hot Oclecl 309' Fat LARCE END RIB ROAST IOndtOllef COLDEN BANANAS .... HedV to ltt, Lil .25 ~ LARCE CANTALOUPES lwtet.Lb. .25 ~ -! Hl»m t eUNDAV Ml!Milotl '"198 FRY INC CHICKEN '".49 Wnoll loCIY Tyson ()rlOI A HASS FRESH AVOCADOS CUCUMBERS ~~lldl lOfl9 or.\ l.ICft .24~ .15 ~ D'ANJOU FRUIT PEARS ROLLS aroc:wa ~ MeOftld. Eld'! .35 ~ ---"*Y::.----t91t I "'*""'-....... .-1-..-,.. , ... _,..... .... "'*""'. NIKl ........... Ui9~~ • I I. • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, June 1 o. 1981 Cl Team frtrl.t and pork chops Mention stone soup 2 pJums, sliced quid in baking pan. Stir 2 cups stuffing mix nearly anywhere in tbe • Cooked rice together corn starch and lt'l cup orange juice world and children eo Jn s mall bowl s tir water until smooth. Stir or water into peals of laughter. together chopped plums, into liquid In pan. Stir· v. teaspoon salt . But stone fruit, now corn syrup, wine, salt, ring constantly, bring to ~ teaspoon dry \Jthat's anoth~r matter. ginger and pepper. boil over medi um heat mustard Stone fruits are no Place chicken, sldn-slde and boil 1 minute. Stir in l / 16 teaspoon pep· gas tr on om i c ~ o k e . down in shallow roasting plum slices . Spoon sauce per They're that large and pan. Top with lh plum over chicken and serve 4 slices boiled ham, wonderful category of m ixture. Bake in 375• with rice. Makes 4 serv· ''a-inch thick fruits ranging rrom degree oven 30 minutes. ings. Orange Glaze <re· o lives and dates to Turn chicken; top with cipe follows) Pork chopa-and fresh peaches team up for a summer barbecue. Lemon- grilled pork chops and peaches make a tasty meal. PI um s. c herri es, remaining plum mixture 'NE CTA RINES AND ~ peaches, peeled, peaches, nectarines and and bake 30 minutes GLAZED HAM ROLLS pitted, quartered even almonds. longer or until chicken is 2 t a b I esp o on s In small skillet melt Botanically speaking, fork -tender . Re m ove margarine margarine over medium they're "drupes." This h' k l h,eat. Add onion; cook 2 c 1c en top atter; keep I/• cup c h o ppe d means · that they have warm. Skim fat from Ii· onion (See TEAM, Page Cl) fleshy fruit and a I arge _..:::..:_.:..:.:.......:.:..:::..:..:..:...:....:....:.....:..:..:...:::.:.....:..::__..:.::.::.:::__ ______ ~.:......:....:_::-=-.:......:..:....:........:..:...___:_ _ _::===· s tone in the cente r . They're among the best- loved of all of nature's fruity gifts. Happily, this is the time to enjoy three of the mos t luscious members of the drupe or s ton e -fruit family. Ral of Savings a Value Peaches, nectarines and plums are at their grandest now, and re· adily available wherever you market. All three are delicious eaten in hand. They're colorful and tempting in a bowl. And they're com patible with ' one another or with other fruits in a juicy com· pote . They also are highly versatile when used in cooking, equally at home in a main dish or a dessert. It is for this re· ason that from their an· cient origins in Asia' th rough their trav(ls· around the world that peaches, nectarines and plums have played ma· jor roles in good eating. The following recipes emptiasize the use of fruit in main dishes. Although peaches, plums and nectarines are hardy enough to have s urvived for thousands of years and have been g r own on nearly every continent, they are at ttie same lime delicate. Members of the California Tree Fruit Ag reement, major world suppliers of these fruits, suggest proper handl- ing. If the fruit gives slightly to the pressure of the hand, it is ripe. Store fruit at room tern· perature for a day or two to complete ripen· ing. · Once ripened, use plums, peaches or nectarines immediately or refrigerate, un - covere~. for up to three to Ci ve days. Longer than this and they will begin to de· leriorate and to lose some of their fiavor, tex- ture and exce lle nt nutritional value. LEMON·GRILLED PORK CHOPS AND PEACHES 1'2 cup dark corn syrup 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind , 1 ~ cup lemon juic~ 2 tablespoons soy sauce 1 ~ teaspoon ground cloves 4 pork chops, about 1-inch thick 4 peaches, peeled, pilled, halved In shallow baking dish stir together corn syrup, lemon rind and juice, soy sauce and cloves. Add pork chops, turning to co at . Cover ;• refrigerate, turning on· ce, several hours or overnigtat. Remove pork c h o p s; reserve marinade. Grill pork c hops about 6 inches from source of heat, turning and basting fre· quently, about 1 hour or unti l pork is tender when pierced with fork. Grill peaches. turning and basting occasionally with some of reserved marinade 5 to 10 minutes or until heated through . In small saucepan bring remain· Ing marinade to boil; simmer genOy ~ minutes. Serve with pork chops and peaches. Makes 4 serving~. Note: Rather than grilling peaches, peach halves may be heated in a pan in ~ cup ot the marinade. CHICKEN WttR PLUM SAlJCI l cup finely chopped ' peeled plums ~ cup dark corn syrup 14 cup dry wblte wlne IA, tea.,.._ salt ~ teas,_ 1r0Ulid alnaer J,\lHlplaa~ l brolle;•;lr.y.er chicken, out ln part.I t tablelPoOft corn atar~h y. cup cold w•ter Pr-t llllt coupon~ ,.ith 1ny one Manut1Ctur1t1' ·cen11-otr cou90n,1nc1 gel doub41 tne ll•inga ..nen you purellaal tne ltern. Nol lo include • ., .... ,. "lrM" ot "grocery pure.,... .. coupon1 ot ellceed lhl yatue of Ille Item EJ1Clucles llqtjOr. IOblCco and ftuld mM~ ptoclucts Limit One Item P91' Menutac:tur91''• Coupon end Limit 3 Double Coupone Per Cu•lomer Coupon Effective JUM 11 thru June 171 1111 Double Coupon PrHen1 1ni, cou90n llong Wtlh any on1 M1nut1c1urer1 "Cln11-ott ooupot> Ind gel double 1111 u¥tng1 -you purclleM the 111m NOi to 1nc1ud1 "re1a11er· , "lrM" ot "ll'OC!l<Y purchau" cou90n1 °' l•CMCI Ille value of the 1t1m E.cclUd• hQuor. IOblCCO I nd ilu10 mllk p<oclllcit Limit OM Item Per Manufecturer'• Coupon end Limit 3 Double Coupon• Per Customer Coupon En.cttve June 11 thrU JuM 17, 1911 Double Coupon Pr .. e1H U'u1 coupon a1ono wt1h any one Manutac1urw1· .. C.nta-off" coupoii and gel OouDI• lhe uvings when you purch ... the 11em Hot to rnct1i1de r11111er 'frff' Of ··g1ocery ourchaM"' couPonl Of eaceed the value of the item E•c1vde1 l1Qu0t. tobacco ind flu.Id mh p<OOUCll Limit One Item Per Menutecturer'• Coupon end LlmH 3 Double Coupon• p.., Cuetomer Coupon Ellec:tlve June 11 thru June 17, 1111 Approx. 5 lb. Chub PLAIN WBAlt Smoked-Sliced Ralphs-Grade AA "Country Fresh" Ralphs-" Especial" Pkg. of 12 Ground Beef Holly Bacon Limit 2-5 lb. Chubs per customer Al t111lned Vegetabl .. , Fruit, Cereal or Julen Gerber Biby Food • Llmlt24 each jar • Baby-Gentle Johnson's Shampoo • Frozen-Defro,ted-New Zealand 11 oz. btl. L~mb Loin C~o~s · per lb. • 299 Relpha-Freah-Hot or SwHt Italian Sausage per 179 lb. ____ ,.__ Large Eggs Corn Tortillas Limit 2 dozen ctn. • Vine Ripened 10 oz. pkg. • California Cantaloupes • per• lb. Ocean Spray · 11 · Grapefruit ·Juice 9',. 48 ,oz. ., btl .• Ralpha-Egg Sesame Bread Auorted Flavor• .Fritos Doritos . From Mexlco-Gold-750 ml. Btl. 1 lb. loaf 7 oz. pkg. Jose Cuervo Tequila Save .14 .49 .89 599 ._, .. CISTA llJA I ·' , ' , OI Orange Coast DAILY Pll.OT /Wedneaday, June 10, 1981 ... Handling consuJD e r coIDplaints isn't easy •Y MAaTIN SLOANE tory. Fewer than half or the shoppers relt that Facts and neures like these are leadlna Th• supermarket industry la wa.kln1 up tb~lr problem was handled properly. supermarkets to become more acUvlst ln to • tacl that tht manufacturers have known What. did these shoppen do! More lban their approach to cuaton\er relations. ror some lime: that quickly handlln1 half of lbem took their business elsewhere. They are alving lbelr employees more cuatomtr complalntl and tolvtn1 lbe pro· And that wasn't. the end or lt. On the average, training in how to handle complaint.a and bltma thal caused them la vitally necessary each told 11 other shoppers or their bad ex· more authority to take prompt and ertectlve to retain bualne11. perience. action to solve them. Handllnf. complatntl lan'l as easy for All of a supermarket's efforts to attract Recent industry surveys show that 1upermarke H It la for compantn 1uch as new customers may be offset by poor customer courtesy booths are one of the most All I ket' f Proct r fl Oamblt and Kratt. customer relations. When a dissatisfied popular features in supermarkets. Stores are 0 ' a supermar s e • The COMplalnt Pl'OCtlS It tho ltoret la de· customer deckles to shop elsewhere, the also making it easier for customers to com· f t t tt t nnlrallatd and Involves many more people. supermarket loses $3,100 in annual sales. municate with them by offering comment Or S 0, Q TOC new Every supermarket employee who comes ln The Whlte Home study indicated that as cards and by selling up toll-free telephone Customers mat l be Offset by ~antacii with 1hopperJ It Ukely at one Ume or few as one out· of 50 dissatisfied customers numbers to receive complaints and dlapense -o 1noth r t.o bCI tbt recipient ol 1 C0"1Plalnt. went to the trouble or complaining. So, one Information. t lat • A llUdy made tor the White house found complaint may be the Up of an iceberg that Many stores are keeplne careful records poor CUS Omer re 10718 • lht\ when shoppers complained to a store will eventually melt away SlSS,000 worth of of complaints and pertodically reviewinl ~~--------------":::"--""'"'::-:"""""'.::::::==::::::::::::::'m:::p~lo:yee::-,~th~·--,...~u~IU~w~·~,..~'·~r~tro~m~·=·U=a=f=ac=·==:===b=us=i=n~:::~========~:---:::~~~~~====(=See==S=U=P==E=R=M=A=·~K=E=T=,P=·=·=e=CI==)=-========~~) ans port • e trop1 •• o patio You can tran•purt \ht ~ropics to your patio or ~olslde wlth <'Mll1'1 (trlnks that whlsp •r ur the Caribbean. Tht l\ln\• mertlmt pleasur\'ll t\f lazing by lhc pool. < ~ ~ Ing In a hammo<'k . t'r lllretchina out In it chaise lonaut> on the \\•r race are tmh.anct<d by I ftosty drinks that bll'nd the comrlt'mt'ntary tastes o CocoRlbe coconut rum Uqueur and luscious bananas In fllct. the na,•ors of banun.a and e«'Onut are so populur that servmJl these drinks invites m · stant applause These extraordinary beverages of varying hues recall island fan· tasies. But they are as accessible as your blender, and very easy to make. While bananas are such a familiar item on the Amertcan table. the drinks will remind you of th e ir island origins . Be s ure to choose completely ripe bananas to give these drinks the fulle st dimension of the fruit's mellow sweetness. Banana Boat is a sun· ~ chocolate coconut drink that Imparts the ~~lvety texture of coconut rum liqueur and the lively banana. With Yanilla ice cream . creme de cacao and crushed ice, it is an up· ll>fting version of a tltirst-quenching banana I.hake. Man go Fandango oJows with shades of a 5'aribbean synset. The combination of mango, etr.ange and pineapple Juice, accented by the lush duo or coconut and banana, makes il so de·. lectable that you're con· rinced you're vacation· &pg in the tropics. A drink that is as pink ~ a little girl's frock - ~ut ever more phialicated -ls · nana Craze. A splash Of club soda over a mix or Creme de Almond, beavy cream, banana apd coconut rum liqueur ct ves Jl a fizzy foam. • Because of their rich· o-ess , these fanciful I.rinks can be served in· '1ead of dessert, or, if YJ>U prefer, as apertifis. BANANA BOAT 2 ounces coconut rom liqueur 1 ounce dark Creme de Cacao 1 2 ounces heavy tream or 2 tablespoons ~nilla ice cream ~ dpe banana Crushed ice Col'l\blne all i~gre · dlents in container of electric blender. Cover. Blend to a slushy con· slstency. Serve in a blghbatl or cocktail glass. Yield: 1 serving. )IANGO FANDANGO 3 ounces coconut, rum liqueur l ounce orange Julee 1 ounce pineapple )9ice i...; ripe banana ~ripe mango Swirl 1renadlne •iru&u.bed lee Combine all lntre· ~ents in container of tectric blender. Cover. end to a slushy eon. stency. Serve in a tall tJass. Yield: her_vlria. BANANA caAZE 2~ ounces heavy eam 1 ounce coconut rum llbueur 'T 1 ounce Creme Almond · \i ripe b'°ana crushed ice Clubaoda Combine all in1re· entl except club soda ~r of electric 1nder. Cover. Blend . r•JdCbblllllMI. _.. • 1plath o1.'club 9C11k";Jteld : l 14trViriC. • n•11 OF IHI llAIOll ' \l'Mt ~'' •M•~•o NO i.11 10 c~uc1•1 ot•1tu Qll 1 10\'lt\'IO• ~ .otl INO -.QI Alll"l'•t\l IN \ll"'Uh COUNO Tiii\ ~ 9111'; •'*""• ot 11119119• II Roncho w 'H11thet lid.. WI WILCOMI fOOD ITAMlt IHOltltlal U S 0 A Choice lo'"b SMALL LOIN CHOPS ..... ~.~ .... ll. 3.99 U S.O A. Choice Lo'"b LARGE LOIN CHOPS ..... ~~~ .... LI. 3.59 U S.0.A. Choice lo11ele11 Lo'"b SARATOGA CHOPS ............... ll. 3. 99 BOlllLlll LAMBK-BOBI ·~H50?~ ·.~·i ': 98 \5-o~. Reg• E.atro Sody Conditioner Ol>d .. ,_ llLKllllCI I 94 IHAMPOO~~o.i • Soft, Mediu'" 99 nACH TOOTllllllUIH • 6ot. Flo--..~. Vi11e9or ' w~ 99 llAlllNGILL .... ~~~~~ .... • FRESH ALAS~AN CENTER CUT SALMON STEAKS .... 4.59 ' Pacific Fillet1 9 FRESH RED SNAPPER ........... LI. 1.8 Nor to Eacffd 22~ Fat LEAN GROUND BEEF U AntfS ... LI 2. 19 leonur Nol lo hcHd IS% Fot GROUND BEEF ........................ LI . 2 .49 El Roncho SwHI or Hot ITALIAN SAUSAGE . .. . ll l .•9 U.S.O A. Chooce FrWi Wesfwn SMALL LOIN LAMB ROAST .... LI. 3.89 U.S.0.A. Choice I ,9 FRE'SH GROUND LAMB ......... LI. • Fr .. h N4rw England CHERRYSTONE CLAMS ....... LI. 1.29 U.S.0.A Choice leef Chuck Cut 0 BONE ROAST ................... LI. I .69 U S.0.A Choice lonele11 Rolled Chuck 2 ,9 SHOULDER CLOD ROAST ..... La. • U.S.0.A. Choice leef Chuck Cut 7 BONE ROAST ..... . .... la. I .29 El Rancho Port. & S.Oaoning BRATWURST .......................... LI. I •• 9 E.A. Ranch Style 9 SLICED BACON ...................... LI. I .0 BESTFOODS 32 OZ. JAR REAL EGG MAYONNAISE 35 LIMIT 2 Stnoll • Mediu'" • large LUVS DIAPERS .. . ......... ...... ... 2.89 12-01. Cont 12 PAK COKE • SPRITE ............ 3.69 Aul. Flavor,, 611 01. 9 LIVES CAT FOOD ................... :3 fOll' I {J() Cou"r .Incl. JSc OFF BOUNCE ~ABRIC SOFTENER ..... 2.69 8 01. Jor YUBAN INST ANT COFFEE ......... 3. 79 '801. KNUDSEN ORANGE JUICE ....... I .39 fo,..oly Sue 12 Counr k1. Aut. flo.-ors LIPTON TEA BAGS . . ............. 1.09 KNUDSEN YOGURT PLUS ............. 9 llJi!l!fi.~ 120Z.PICG RANDOM WEIGHTS HIBRIW llAnOllAL LONGHORN CHDH ::c.--.....,1.98 ::~~ ..... 2.38 S.O Snfck ... Ao&. 9 SHRIMP COCKTAIL... .. .................. 6 lorden't low Colorie ... 9 01. LITE LINE SLICES ......................... 1.39 H119het ... l6 01. , ROQUEFORT DRESSING ............ I .69 Pillsbury luttennllli ... I 01. BIG COUNTRY BISCUITS ................. •f LB. GIOCIR'S OtOICI PRUIT SNACKS ......... .1.~~!!!~~!!!.~ ............. IA. II• T~ S.-• , ... ,. 11\9. NOODLES . . ............. 11 w ... ,,. ,... ...... "' D EAD MEAL ...................... . *.~ .. 1 ..... 1'\ •. SWEET RICE .. .. ............ JI GOLDEN CRIME HALF GAUON ROUNDS ASST. ~VORS · 0,....,,. .............. ( .. MUS"1ROOMS ................. 79 .._.___, .... ,..., .. 10 ... - BEAN CURD .... : ............. I.II U S 0 A Grode A Lorge Fryen With Giblet' SPLIT BROILERS . LS .69 Nor to hcffd IS% Fot CHOPPED STEAKS . .. .... ll . 2 .•9 U S.O A Choice loMleu Beef loon TRI· TIP ROAST . . . LI 2 .89 FRllHPORK SPARERIBS :r·w.l.39 Clonk 1.5 Uter ~=~:~~ ......... 2. 19 Plain Lobel I. 7 5 liter ...................... 8.99 Ploin lobel ... l .7Htr. 9 99 ICOTCH........................ • h I • t'. ,., '•' " 1. •I 11• 1•1 "I ,JI) ''I l , .. ... 11• "' rl ... ., t I ... 'I .. 1 I . ' . " ... ' ~ .. !: ..: I •o I -t---------- • • .Supermarket <From PageCI) them to tocua on problem areas. And employees who are aood "problem aolven" are receivin& special recoanltion. Will this trend contlnue? It should. When supermarket shoppers receive the help t.bat they need, 7(> percent of them continue to ahop at that store. And each of them tells three trienda about their good experience. REFUND UPDATE The people at Swift & Co. have informed us that thelr Peter Pan One Bite Saya We're Right Offer, originally distributed in 1979 without an explratlon date, has been terminated. Campbell's has informed us that the "Campbell Kid Spoon" Oiler ii llmite4 to one spoon per household Offen published in tbls column always have a one-per-household llmllat.ion unless stated otherwise. REFUND OF THE DAY Wrlte to the followina address to obtain the form required by this $2 refund offer: Agree Summer Halr Care Refund Offer, P.O. Box 1025, Ridgely, Md. 21660. Send for this re· fund form before July 17, 1981. Cooling drinks special rou MWAYI MVEI Summer days are an opportunity for a special touch to entertainment for family and 1dests, with unique, cooling drinks like tbe C haramba , Green Fantasy, and a special and memorable Fruit Parfalt. To make those cooling drinks and icy desserts -something unique on your warm weather menus -look to the great variety or special liqueurs that help make you r party an outstanding occasion. FRESH PORK WE 11(CHOPS Ll$1J9 111 ClllPS LI 51.89 !llOIN llAST LI 51.39 !limy SME RIBS LI 51.49 !ftoULDER STEAK Llsl.49 TO MAii r'Ocl BEEF LARGE ENO ••• IT A TUI tllOI. 1'4Z L•llCll IUATS fMl!IEI JC>t411 ......... -FL¥-......-: Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT,iWednesday, June 10. 1981 lllTll ITATER lllOt UJl!l-lOll PllNJEll u 'I" ""'" l'1IOZIH "'YINO ., .. .... ITS LI EA., .. tU'tOMILUI UI., •• •nwlllAT Lt .,. ""8t4 L1Nt NOT TO DCUD 22'11. f AT • , ff HOOi ..... UI HUtLAO£CUT c•c•••••T HU CHUCK llOAIT ......... llU CHUCK llOAIT , .•••. t;• Lt 97• LI., •• Lt ., .. Liqueurs and cordials provide a perfect touch for a variety of summer drinks and concoctions, from spritze r s to parfaits, adding both distinction and range of taste. Americans have already taken cordials and lique urs to their hearts -and palates. Liqueurs, particularly ROAST fAMllJI JC>t4H t uu ~ 1.1 •1•• ....... H()f'" 1..0Z u flH IHf CtlUCll llOflfLlll • , ff KIC•aACON ••OULDIJl HA9'f UI " imports, are among the fastest growing areas of alcoholic beverages. An interesting co llection or world-Camed liqueurs now coming into prominence in the U.S. is the group ef natural fruit and herb-based liqueurs from the House of Riemerschmid , · distillers of Munich, West Germany. since 1835. Packaged in eye -catc hing handpainted bottles and ceramic jugs that make attractive a n d interestine highlights on serving tables or bars, they include the unusual Escorlal Green , a translucent and lovely lasting 112 proof herbal liqueur that mixes smoothly in a range of drinks and is o ut s tandingl y m emora ble over chocolate ice cream. Another ·comp l i · ment·provoking liqueur is Cherry Liqueur and Rum , made with Caribbean rum and Continental cherries. Here are several new recipes featuring these popular liqueurs you may want to try next time you entertain. SUM M E R F R UIT PARFAIT 8 oun ces cherry liqueur and rum 2 cups raspberry s h erbet (slightly thawed) Strawberries, c leaned and cut in halves Peaches, cut into quarters Pineapple chunks Into four parfait glasses, add in layers: sherbet and liqueur, strawberries. peaches and pineapples. GREEN FANTASY 1 ounce Escorial Green Uqueur l ounce coconut· milk 1,11 ounce simple syrup 1 ounce club soda Place all in a shaker, ahake for one minute; Uren pour over crushed lee in a 4-ounce cocktail glass. CHARA.MBA 2 ooncea c herry liqueur and rum 1 ounce Caribbean LB. -•IL 1'4Z l'OUltt EA., •• ,, •• ...... Ill' tLADe CVT Ul • 11• c•c• •TIAK 1w1n 1>0z ... •1•• IUF llOllHD toHE Ill Ll 'I" •••••••••••• . ....... , IWOOI #le/AU IEtWN:E IEU _, ______ ,, '"°" FllOZIM ., .. ALO l'OlATO >Hl 39• 1111UOT fll.l.l'T Lt aALAD HVtoHILut AlD CAllllOT RAISIN UI • 17• "1IUI lffB ••••• STIAK --IOP LAllOl IJID c&niU•TIAK 1.1•1•• .. u••• •ALAD ---1-MI. Ma La., .. •-..r-••••nAK FllUH AIOZIDI STIMI LI'•" D£L.TA VALLFf AlllflllCAH .. Li a•· ......... CMDA t..i•-.~t(t()F.-t.t.•'\"' JU#E ,,_" H:U llOllllD IOMIL~ 1.1•2•• C O •OI t,l., • l l • Gu•-.•11o1uo 10 •j 1•1.1 , ••• nAI( Pit~ AVM.MU THUMIUISAT '2" SUC.D TO OllOlll •21• I .......... Lt . ... , .... .. l. ~°"O"'°""'~'"''· ,,,, M (.M(llt,\IU.• lllf•~Ofb TOii COLUNS OR GINGER.ALE C SHASTA MIXERS .. 1-l 33 I cAZAii0 OIL ................. uoz . , ~2 I SKIPPY PREM CHUNK IEEF,3 IN 1 DINNER OR 3 I c IOI FMI ~.~~.~~~~~ t iiAsn1s ................. 1M>Z 99• t LINDAS 99• TOR11' A SIRllS 1.0Z t SUNSHINE CHOCOLATE HYDROX • S9 COOKIES ................... 1M>z I t OOlDIAA C DIAL SOAP .............. 7~z 63 · • TIUGGEA SPRAY CLEANER C FORMULA 409 ..... 22>0%99 YI.ASIC "'°" Dlu.t. HSTl'OC>Oe r.ifi iSHtDIWOll SP READ KO R DILLS I .a:t1a• l aa-02•1•• ·~·2 .. JOHMONS I ~~Ji'itNU, -tl>&u7t1 MAYONNAISE I .A9• 1 »0Z•1a• I aoi2I• . •"~"'~' PlllPOll tcOTCH ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1,7).L 111.11 tEI .. ac.IMON •••••••••. ' •••••••••••••••• : 1 Jk ... ---~··················''"'11M Cll.1111 OIN ................................ t~ .... lllF FllUH FllUH CVT LOHOHOllN CUal•nAK Lt •2•• ........ LI •2•• c••••• Ul'I" COIDEISED MILK ~ 9 ,~z '1.D3 GRAPEFRUIT JUICE =. t ~ '1.27 ORAllGE JUICE ~ =~· .. ·' ~z s1.59 HASH UH'l'I COl!HID aeu . .t.. t BBQ BEEF =JOI ARMOUR TREET ~(~. !S~Z '1.05 •• IUM>l s1.119 11-0Z '1~ DOG FOOD #r":iaw ' . ' . 144z2r MACARONI & CHEESE S~ .!z s1.07 ,~98CJ • lC. DlrT lllTUIUHL.f UP I ""' I Oii llfQ ~ DlfT DADI llOOT "'ILA Miii HO Oll' NO lllT\nUI. . • GRAPE NUTS l'OIT I . . I.OZ $1.12 GRAPE NUT FLAKES l'09T . ' ,M)Z s1.11 CROUTONS =~~ .... t ..... . M>Z970 RY-IRISP ~D~ .t a-0z llc POTTED ET LUYt ....... ... . M>Z 31c YDIA SAUSAGE ~ . ·'· .. . .oz49' IOYAI. 10.ATll •VM ...... , •• .o~W COFFEE at~~ ...... '-.......... ~ s135 (t:s ~~ .. w ~ FROZBI FOODS Pim fllAB ISUm lllSTEI • F1SI film ~~-•. PET lf1l Pl SllUS lllO~NCH • W I• CIUI PIS ........ A.CHOOO'.ATIOACOOOHUTCIOEAM • MIT ... IAffUS Oll!Ol .... L • •.•lWfll -1:'1'1 • I tTAW.tAYmS9AYIY .. Ml•YI ...... ..................................................... .., .................. ., ___ ................................... ,. ......................... ~ ... ....,,...,,.... I I _.,....,,~_...... ______ _......,~ ..... ~ ~~ --.--~---... --..___..~~-------------.. -.. .,. ... -.... . . . , . . . .. .c:._1_• ______________ o_~_nge ___ eo __ as_t_o_A_1L_v_P_1_L_o_T_tw_•_d_n_•_sd_•_Y_._Ju_n_e_1_0_._1e_a_1 ________________________________________________________________________________ l Salad inspired by· classic i For an impressive ad· hard-cooked egg wedees 2 cups cut-up cooked cream. dill weed, salt ditiontoabulfel orasa ror a potato salad that chicken and pepper . Divide i I . I rn a i n co u r a e r or a looks as outstanding as 2 hard-cooked eggs, s a u c e mi xture i n to • special luncheon, serve it tastes. chopped halves. Mix potatoes. Salad Oliver YI cup chopped dill chicken, eggs a o d Io spired by l he SA.LAD OLIVER pickles pickles; fold in half the Russian classic, It com· 1 package (5.25 Heat potato slices and s.auce mixture. Cover bines the tenderness of ounces l s ca 11 oped 3 cups water to boiling and refrigerate potato Russet potatoes and potatoes in 2V..·quart saucepan. mixture and remaining cooked chicken with a 3 cups water Reduce heat; cover and sauce mixture until flavorful sour cream l cup water simmer until tender, 15 chilled, about 4 hours. Salad Oliver makes J an impressive addi- tion to a buff et or matn course for a special luncheon. and mayonnaise sauce, 'h cup mayonnaise to 20 minutes. Rinse un· Shape potato wedges <Spiced with the fresh or salad dressing der running cold water; into mound on serving t~ste of dill and the 1f.I cup dairy sour drain. Mix 1 cup water plate. Spread with sauce s a u c e m i x fro m cream and the sauce mix in mixture. Garnish with scalloped potato mix. :l..a te1tspoon dried saucepan. Heat to boil· tomato wedges. hard· Spread with the dress· dill weed mg over medJum heat, cooked egg wedges and lng mixture and sprinkle --~1~· ~le~as~poo~~nls~aJ~t~_js~tir~· iri~n~g~c~ona~t~an~t~lY~·~S~t~ir:.Jd~il~l ~w~eed~~if~d~e~si~r~ed=·~5~or~__'.~~t.:.!-.'.~t_~~~~llllll!l!iiJi~~--·~~~~~!::~------~-with dried dill weed lo 11i1 teaspoon pepper In mayonnaise, sour 6 servings. serve. Then, garnish with tomato wedges and Pasta· with salmon There is renewed in· terest in pasta recipes with the advent of shops specializing in freshly made pasta and the availability of pasta· making machines. Fettucin e con Salmone (Flat noodles with Smoked Salmon) is typical of Northern Italian cookery where ege n~es are teamed with delicate sauces. Here diced , s moked salmon is sauteed in s weet butter, mixed with feltucine <noodles>. and then tossed with heavy cream, eggs and Parmesan cheese. Serve immediately for an im· pressive first course or elegant litUe supper or lunch. Homemade pasta is in a class by itself. but high quality commercial noodles, either imported or domestic, make good ~ubstitutes. The smoked salmon is as convenient as the deJicatessen case of the s upermarket, where it is sold sliced and packaged in three· ounce see-through en· velopes. Although the method is simple, here are a few pointers: The noodles are cooked until tender, but firm. They should be drained well, but not rinsed. AU ingredients should be the freshest possible: newly grated Parmesan cheese, sweet creamery butter and fresh dill. FETTUCINE CON SALMONE (Flat NoodJes with Smoked Salmon) 12 ounces fettucine 1 (3-ounce package> s liced smoked salmon 3 tablespoons sweet butter 4 eggs 1 cup heavy cream V.. teaspoon coarsely ground pepper If.I cup grated Parmesan cheese 2 tablespoon!! minced dill Cook fettucine in boil· ing, salted water until tender, but firm. Drain and keep hot. Dice fmoked s almon and saute briefly In butter. Beat eggs with cream and pepper. Mix fet· tuclne with salmon in skillet, then toss with eu mixture until well mixed. Stir lo Parmesan cheese and beat gently until liquid begins to thicken, then add dill. Toss again. Turn out on· to heated platter. Makes ,six servings. Food tips / Most people know that tossing cut fruits in .lemon juice prevents .d'1kening. But, do you )now how much lemon juice is needed? The juice from half a lemon is enough for more than 'a quart of sliced fruit. Keep laaa1ne molal during bakini by addlnl finely c.bopped euplant to Ule meat sauce. For a .bultlly snack, 'munch OD froien &rapes. Remove red or creen 'seedle11 1r•pe1 from at.ems, IJl8Ce ln 1 plaatle 'b•I and frtez•. They're ;terrine Mdltion• to frult Hlldl beUUH lbey'll keep tbem cbWed. Lower Prices. OVerall . . Nobody offers more assurance or stronger total guarantee of Lower Overall Prices than Market Basket ,Triple-The-Difference Guarantee! IUT 15 Olff(ll(Hl llUIS WOllTH $20 011 MOllE AT MAllKET IASKET. THEii GO TO AHY OlHEll COllV(llTIOllAL SUl'lllMAllKET AllD COM,AllE l'IUCES THIS WUK 011 THE SAME ITEMS (Diil Y ONE Of EACH ITEM MAY IE USED IN THE COM,AlllSOtl I " THElll TOTAL IS lOWO llllllG YOUll ITEMIZED MAllKET BASKET llEGISTtll TAl'E AJIO THE OTHEll STOllE'S l'lllCES TO MAllKEl IASKEl Al!D WE Will 'AY YOU Tllll"lf THE DlffU£NC£ lkCA9". • IWl UW llCli•IU ~ l .... CU ... O<UOt l'IOOVC1$ All OUAllTlfY AIGHIS llUEllVEO NO SALE TO DEALERS OR fOll llESALE 011 COMMEllCIAL USE MARKET BASKET CREAM SUNKIST UNSWEETENED PINK GRAPEFRUIT JUICE Q·OZ. PRICES EFFECllYE WCO JUNE 10 IHRU 1 UES JUNE 16 19l 1 GREAT FOR BARBEOUE COLORTEX BATHROOM TISSUE FROZEN-THAWED U.S.D.A. llSPECTED CRISP CUCUMBERS CHEESE HZ. PH. .69 CRISCO OIL Ill. 22e LEG-0-LAMB 149 ll. ·-~ Chlllhl Rh1111 Burgundy l)r lttcl• lltn m' Almaden Mt. Wine 1 1 11 5 11t9vtar Or llt~I 12 fl! Lucky Lager Beer ·~.:l ~ ""'' Cll,...s.lurfwety • Y1ft llKI ro-Canto Mt. Wine REGULAR OR DIET 1111111 BEVERAGES .25 2.99 2.59 Aoy11 Plnlo ffi Pink Salmon Scetll11WM1 !ff Facial Tissues H11n1 H! Ketchup Mtt·llH Famlly l'Kk Fr11tn m Taquitos KROGER FROZEN CUT CORN !HZ. Pit. 44 ., tu 1.89 .69 1.49 21111 .. , 2 79 ,.. . .12 .nai.10 m Wh~j~·a~~ei;ss Ham .1.69 ~~ Folger ' s Coffee 13·0/ 1 99 Uft • f rnll lth ~lq ·AM .43 B! lfflR1;1nd 1-2.29 ' Mixed Vegetables 16·01 Sirloin Tip Steak CH m G111ft 1i11n1 ,J_., .43 M11k11 la1kll .. 1.09 Cut Green Beans +J! Thick Sliced Bacon can Shud Ouftio Or Crusllff lft J111u . 71 m iiiiib~t"steak .. 3 .29 Dole Pineapple 10 .. , CIHI ROYAL VIKING 149 I _ _, .. 1 ae CllllMOI m PACIFIC RED ROLLS .1HZ. 1 SNAPPER ..... ll . MEAT FAMILY PACKS REDUCED s• PER LB. J ; . ' I ----.---.,.,,~, ....... ..,,.._,.~-~~..,._.-............ -----~--... ---....-----.. ._.._..-~------ Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1981 CLASSIFIED 05 Delly ............ .., ........... It took 51/2 hours and 15 innings to do it, but the South prevailed in All-star baseball . . . D4 I Hassler on target Clouds of doubt drift away with victory • By JOHN SEV ANO Of tM Dally "*' llllff One year ago Tuesday Andy Hassler returned to the Angels amid a cloud of skepticism. Fans wondered just whic h Andy Hassler was coming home Was it the southpaw who set an Angel record by losing 17 straight games between May of 1975 and July of 1976" Or was at the left-hander who helped the Kansas City Royals win their rirst divisional title an 1977? ·Hassler quieted the doubters last year when he came on at mid-season an a cash deal from Pittsburgh and became the Angels' most effective hurler out of the bullpen, compiling a 5·1 record and a 2.49 ERA. THIS YEAR, however, the clouds started forminJ! again. es pecially after a slow start that s aw his ERA rise lo 4 11 at one point. Fans were beginning t o wonder if Hassler's '79 cam· pa1gn had been a fluke. Well, Hassler and particularly the Cleveland Indians will tell you it wasn't. Mike Witt with two runs in, one out and the bases loaded in the s econd, struck out Rick Manning and Jorge Orta in s uccession to thwart a possible game-crushing rally. "It was kind of early to use Hassler, .. defended Manager Gene Mauch of the second in· ning appearance, "but if we don 'l stop the rally in the second inning then there's going to be no use for him or the rest of my bullpen in the eighth or ninth. "HE WAS JUST s uperb. That was the ball game ." Actually, the Angels looked knee-deep in trouble with only a two-rWl deficit as Len "Perfect Game" Barker was on the mound for the Indians. Barker, who had thrown his gem against Toronto just 25 ·days earlier, entered the game with the lowest ERA in the ma- jors C 1.82 ) and an unblemished 3-0 lifetime record against the Angels. But Barker made two mis- takes Tuesday mght, and the way the Angels are playing these days, that was enou~h. His first miscue was a fastball to Fred Lynn in tbe fifth inning with Rick Burleson and Rod Carew at the corners. Burleson and Carew to tie the score. Barker's next -and last -mis lake occurred two batters later when he hung a curveball to Don Baylor and be drove it deep into the seats in the left field corner. Baylor, prior to the game- winning shot, wa s l ·for-11 against Cleveland in 1981. "BAYLOR lS a good hitter, even if he's not hitting lor average," commented Barker. "He's a good ball player. He hits home runs and that's what be gets paid to do. "I made only two mistakes, but one mistake sometimes is alJ it lakes." Hassler didn't make any big mistakes. but he wasn't flawless either. Brian Downing had to throw a runner out at the plate in the third inning and Hassler needed a double play ball and a fine running catch by Lynn on a drive by Ron Hassey to get out of trouble in the firth. "It was a big win to be able to come back against a pitcher of that caliber," said Hassler. "No one game turns anything ar ound but this could be the start or something big." Umpire Ken Kaiser asks the Angels' Fred Patek ·what's the beef?' after calling Miguel Dilone safe. In Hass le r 's lon gest and strongest relief stint of the year, the tall, lanky left-hande r went five scoreless innings and the Angels re bounded after spotting Cleveland a 2-0 lead to post a 4-2 victory before 22,490 at Anaheim Stadium Hassler. who relieved a shaky Lynn, who was O-for-his-last-10 and O-for-14 against Cleveland pitching this year, promptly s macked the pitch up the gap in left-center for a double. scoring By wanning, the Angels got back to the .500 mark (29-29) for the 11th time this year and the first time since May 22_ It also <See ANGELS. Page D2> Forsch wild about Dodger s Cardinals spank LA, 6-1 ST. LOU IS <AP> Bob Forsch proved not on- ly the master of pitches he was bouncing in front of home plate, but also of s lumping Los Angeles Dodgers hitters_ "I just feel fortunate," the 31-year-old dean of the St. Louis Cardinals' staff said Tuesday night after emerging with a 6· l triumph nailed down by Bruce Sutler's relieL "l was so wild that they weren't even swinging ... That Forsch , 6-2, was not at his best was evidenced in part by the four walks be issued com- pared to the lone strikeout he was able to record. "HE THREW A LOT of 45-foot curve balls. He didn't really throw hard ." said St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog. "I think his best fastball was 85 miles an hour. He battled He 's a good com- petitor ." Herzog also s uggested that lingering shoulder problems which have plagued Forsch during the early part of the season may have, ironically, helped the right-hander become "a better pitcher." "I think he's right to a point, where I try to fi. nesse a little more," said Forsch. "There's a On TV tonight channel 11 at 5:30 chance that it will ma.ke me a better pitcher. but I'd rather have a little more velocity. There wasn't really too much pop lo the ball." Forsch, relying on sinking delivenes, worked around two walks and Dusty Baker's double with the aid o( a double play in the first inning. AFl'ER THAT, HE protected a two-hit shutout through the ralth. And in the seventh, before pinch- hitter Jay Johnstone reached him for a single which drove home the lone Los Angeles run, he struck out Rick Monday on a slidet. Herzog lifted Forsch folJowing Johnstone's two-out bit, citing tbe Importance or relief such as that provided by Sutter to the starter's success. "With the bunch we have in the bullpen, he might have been about 18·8," the Cards' pilot said in respect to Forsch 's 11-10 campaign in 1980. "I think he averaged about se"en-plus innings per start." While Forsch struggled at times. Burt Hooton, 7-3, suffered more -beginning with George Hen- drick's doubling home a first-inning St. Louis run. GARRY TEMPLETON SINGLED a second time to trigger a three-run Cards' rally in the third inning . After Keith Hernandez and Hendrick each walked, Dane lotg belted a two-run double and Sixto Lezcano capped the uprtaing with an RBI in- field hit. The victory, the Cards' s ixth in eight games, marked the first anniversary of Herzog .. s appoint· ment aa St. Louil mana1er while the Dodgers were plu.nainl to their fifth setback in six contesta. "We haven't scored any runs," said Los Angeles Manaaer Tom Lasorda. "Before, when we were 1corta1 two runs we were winning our games.'' The teams tetume act.Ion toni1ht with the Dod1ers' Jerry Reuss (4·2> tacln.i Lary Sorensen (5·4). TM lon, coupled•wtth Qncinnali's 8-4 vie· tory .over tb• New York lleta, reduced the Dod1en' leed wer the Reds toJuat 1~ 1•m•. The Dode..,. and CaJ'dlnal• will be televised tonl1ht a d 1'bur1day al1ht (when FernJndo Valemuela pltcMt), and all tbl• 1amu rrom Pilla~ OHl'~tu w.etend an .abeduled for televltJCJej .... Iora thoillht M w11 In a can't-JOI• po1ttfoG when he ea .... Nt ID tM tWrd laalN· "TM NMI ..... loadtd. -~·-to let a pitch ......... -·· .,.., .. wttb th• two-run ...... "f'ortunaa.11 I It 1D t.be n1bt tpot." A ,..., ...,, •bin H.,.. '°'* 09•. tbe Cardi were 1IAe. DI CK MI LLER Ford's nude pose brings $8,000 So Disco Dan Ford received $8,000 for posing in the nude for Playgirl magazine. I can give you the names of a dozen ·ball players who do it for nothing for s maller audiences. the An~els last week. was a surprise s how at the John Hall Goodwill golf tournament last week. Just a couple of days past scoring his milestone 8,000th riding victory, Bill Shoemaker stopped by to say hello to the former Angels skip- per. had his job saved al least twice by powerful sports writers, who came to has defense_ The lesson was lost on Fregosi. who was charming with the media as a player and the worst <in my 26 years> experience as a manager in dealing with the Fourth Estate. • • • PATRJt K CAPPER HADEN, lhe well known quarterback and para -legal, waa playing In a charily golf tournament and got off a drive that m ust have traveled 280 yards. "It's a long one," said an astonished Doug Finley, who is about three inc~es taller and 50 pounds heavier than tbe Rams' quarterback. "The thing that upset me," said Fregosi, who owns 21 horses and who spends his nlghta at Los Alamitos Race Course, "is that I was fired on a Wednesday. If they had done at on Tuesday morn· ing," he told Shoe, "I could have seen you win No 8,000." The bottom line is winrung. Gene Mauch, tbe new interim manager (that's the onJy way to describe anyone who works for Gene Autry ) once had the perfect answer to what makes a good manager: "It will be intercepted,·· s ighed Haden. "All my long ones are." One of the reasons that Fregosi was bounced was he never graduated from the Bill Rigney Charm School When he was managing the Angels and Fregos1 was his only quality player Rigney "Good players." Fregosi will learn from his experience and if the Lords of Baseball have any sense (there is no CSee MILLER, Page 0 2) • • • JIM FREGOSI, STILL upset by his sacking by Warriors pick Okayama -who? Rose's mother • to wttness r ecord blow J apan's Osaka University center· stands 7-8 PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Pete Rose's mother will be on hand when her son becomes the all- time career National League hit producer. The Philadelphia Phillies an- nounced Tuesday night they are bringing in Mrs. Robert Noeth from Thonotos assa, Fla., near Tampa. Rose, th e P h illies' first baseman, moved within two hits Tuesday night of breaking the re· cord of 3,630 held by Stan Musial, former St. Louis Cardinals player and a member of the Hall of Fame. Rose has 3,629 hits, which in· eludes his hits Tuesday against the Houston Astros. The Phillies meet Houston again tonight, and then have a three-game series with the Atlan- ta Braves st.arUng Friday. Mrs. Noeth, incidentally, celebrates her 66th birthday Thursday, an off day for the Phillies. Musial also is in Philadelphia, ready to coogratuate Rose when he connects on the record- breaklog hit. ·Rose has 3,629 hits ,in 18Y.t seasons in the majorl . .Musial played 22 years for St. Louis . NEW YORK (AP) -The names everyone were waiting for in Tuesday's National Basketball As- sociation draft were called promplly Mark Aguirre. Isiah Thomas, Buck Williams. Then, after a while, came a call for C hibi Okayama ... C hibi Okayama? Okayama is a 7-8, 303-pound center from the Unjversity of Osaka who was selected on the eighth round of the NBA draft by the Golden State Warriors. MOST EXPERTS weren't ready for Okayama's name to be called but when it was it became part of a list of other surprises on draft day. Okayama was the biggest m an selected, but ·the height margin wasn't that big -John Hollinden, 7-6 of Indiana State-E vansville, was chosen on the ninth round by the Dallas Mavericks. Two other seven- footers were chosen, Mike Frazier or George t own a nd Paul Loba of Cleveland State. On the other end of the ruler Vic Sison, all 5-7\.'J of him, was chosen on the loth round by the New Jersey Nets. Consider Sison the first leg of the Larry Brown-New Jeney Nets underground railroad connection. Brown. the former UCLA head coach and present Nets mentor, drafted Sison in his last pick. Sison didn't score any points at UCLA and didn't pull down any rebounds but he apparently did impress Brown in handling his chores as manager of the Bruins. The draft was also a family affair as some famous sons and brothers were chosen by the NBA teams. KEILV TRIPUCKA, son of former Notre Dame football great Frank Tripucka, was chosen by Detroit on the first round. Another first-rounder was Dan Schayes or Syracuse, son of former NBA great Dolph Schayes. Albert King, the 10th overall pick in the draft, will now be competing against his brother Bernard of the Golden State Warriors, while Frank Johnson o f Wak e F orest. Washington's Cirst-round choice, is the younger brother of NBA AH-Star Eddie Johnson of the Atlanta Hawks. Mike MitchelJ of Cleveland Cavaliers and Dudl~y Bradley or Phoenix couJd have their younger brothers joining them in the NBA as Ben "Chicken" Mitchell of Alabama-Huntsville, was selected on the eighth round by Chicago and Charles Bradley of Wyoming was tabbed as the last pick of the first round by the Boston Celtics. There was one coach-brother com- bination as the new assistant coach of the Portland Trail Blazers, Jim Ly nam, saw his younger brother Kevin drafted by New Jersey in the sixth round . SOME OF THOSE chosen are good at more than just basketball. Danny Ainge, the Toronto Blue Jays' third baseman, was picked on the second round by the Boston Celtics and Ken- ny Easley, UCLA 's All-American de- fensive halfback, chosen fourth in the National Football League draft by Seattle. was taken in the last round of the NBA's draft by Chicago. The University of Maryland had four starters selected In the draft. Albert King and Buck Williams were both fi rst-round picks by New Jersey, Ernest Graham was tabbed in the third round by Philadelphia and Greg Manning was taken in the seventh round by Denver. Jo Jo Hunter, who transferred from Maryland to Colorado two years ago, was taken in the sixth round by Milwaukee. But the group whose numbers could swell the mos t are the Johnsons. Five players with last name Johnson were drafted and they hope to join the 14 Johnsoos who played last year in the NBA. McGee tabbed '~stant Offense' by Westhead INGLEWOOD (AP) -The Luers Tuesday made awing man Mlke McGee, the all-time lead- ing scorer in both Mlcbiaan and Bt1 Ten Con· ference history, thelr top .-election in the annual National Basttttball AsaoclatJon draft of colle1iate talent. McGee, a 8-5, 115-pounder, 1vera1ed M.• polnta per came u a senior and 21.• poicta per out. Ins durlnt his exceptional caner. The 19th player taken overall, he la th• 211t le1dlo1 scorer ln NCAA history. lleOee 1ufttrid a ttna fracture tn hl1 rt1bt au•· ·-moath -.hue plajtQI In • pickup 11me in lllclltsan Md ll eurrea&W weUiila a caat, but a 1Polie1man 9 lb• Laken NJd It la npecqd lltOee WW be able to DIQ tbe laat two WMkl ot lbe l1lllllDM': ,..,ue MaiOD ln 8outbera Catlfomla. LU• Coldl Paul W..u.HI, wbo aa• McGee play several times In the AliClasslc in Honolulu followlna the 1980·81 seuo calla the former Michigan standout ''Instant ense." "Mite's got the abtUty to come lo off the bench and score Immediately," aald Weathead. "He's a tremendous offensive player and a 1 reat shooter.·• McGee.had th highest si111le·1ame total tn tllt Aloha Classic when be scored U point. in one of the All-Star contute. The Laker• selected 10 playen ln the draft befor J)Ullnc on the nlnth aftd 10th round•. ln the ucood round, they selected t -8 forwatd Harvey Knucltltt of Toledo and 1-10 centel' £Jvll Rolle ot Florida St.te. Jn the tb1rd round. tbey took 8·2 1uai'd Zam Frederick ol South Caronna and f.8 forward Ran ComeUua of Padftc. The Laltua toot. one player lo each 'of the fourth through eighth rounds -6-1 awing man Kevin McKenna of Creichton; &-11 center Crate Watte of North Carolina State;. s.e forward Kevin Singleton of California; &-9 forward Larry Petty of Wlaconsin, and 6-4 auaht Jay 'l'rlano ot Simon Fraser. Knuckles, the mos\ valuable player ln the Mid· American Conference thl• put Muoa1 avera1td 22 POlntl and eeven rebound.a for TOiedo. Rolle averared l& Polnta and nine reboundJ u a Mnior at Flortdll State. Fl'edtriek w .. th• u~·· leadla• teoret amooi NCAA Dlvlilon I pa.,.. la im.ai. aver ... ln1 21.t ~ ,.,. same. Oanieb•, .. ol UM out- 1tandi.nc Players la the bJltOl7 fll \be Pariftc c_. Atbl..X AAoclatioa, av....,_ II pOlnte aDd ...... rebC>Undl duJ1Di bla Hnki' ,..... ' • f ·' .. -' ........ -... . . . -----·---- Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT /Wednelday, June 10, 1981 · .... -..;;:.;;;;;;::.;..-.:.------------~~·· . ~--------------------------------------------------------------. Players.to ~die strike negotiations From AP d.Japatebel negotiators, still lookini over thelr NEW YORK Bueball Ill shoulders for a federal Jud1e'1 rullna on an injunction, Tuesday spent another fruitless 30 minutes at the bar1alnlna table. And aft.er the session. union leader Marvln Miller said in the event of a strike, he would let the players themselves handle the ne10UaUn1 sessions with management to show the other side "how strongly the players fee l on the issue'' of compensation tor the signing of free aeent players. "It's getting very terse very tense,.. said federa\ mediator Kenneth Moffett after another meeting of no movement. "Until lhe judge rules, it's going lo continue Milln this way." Moffett called a tentative meeting for Wed · nesday afternoon, which could be canceled if Judge Henry Werker rules beforehand on a Na· tion al Labor Relations Board injunction that asks that the implemeatation of the owners· free-agent compensation proposal be postponed one year. Werker's office said on Monday that a de· cision would come "later this week." tr the judge denies the NLRB request. the players have said they would strike within 48 hours of that decision. If the players s trike, Miller said he would let the players handle the negotiations "unless in specific instances that players request I attend." Miller. executive director of the Major League Baseball Players Association since 1966, said the change in format stems from the owners· "underlying assumption that they can · sell the players the Brooklyn Bridge and I'm the only one that stands in the way." Quote of the day P ete Rose, who needed 74 hits this season to break Stan Musial's National League re<:ord or 3.630 hits: "Stan got two hits in the final game of his career. I was Cincinnati's second baseman that day. and one hit was to my righ\. the other to my left. Gee, lf I'd had any range then, I'd· need only 72 hits this year." ROGER CARLSON Wlnfleld, Nettles ho,.,,.re aid Yankees • Dav. Wtaneld and GraJc Netti• Ill alammed bome ruoa and One La8~1te, M.Ule GrUtla and GOOM GOIH(e pitched 7~ lnnlnit ol ICOff· lea• relief aa the New York Yankees won their ninth 1trallht 1amo, downtn1 Kan1a1 City, 8·5, Tuetday ln American Leafue action • • • Roa Jack10D'1 two-run double ln the bottom ot the fourth lnnln1 propelled MlMesot.a t.o a 8·1 vie· tory over Milwaukee . . . Wayne Nordba1eo bit an lntlde·lhe·park home run and It.kb Dottoe hurled bl1 fourth lhutout of the !eatOn H the Chicaao White SOx de· teated :roronto, 3-0. Dotson. 7-3, moved lnto a tie for tho leaaue lead In shut.out.a. scat· terrna five hit.a . . Jim RI~ knocked In three runs and . Due Stapleton added two Wm/ield more to back Mlke Torres'• flve·hit pllchln& aa Boston blasted SeatUe, 10·1 ... Tom Broolleat knocked In three rune and AUftllo Lopea 1ave up rour hJta throuah six innlnga u Detroit took a S·O win from Texas . . . Jim Palmer walked Keith Drumrt1ht in the seventh innlnl with the bases loaded to break a 2·2 tie 11 Oakland downed Baltimore. 4·2 in the first 1ame of a double·header. In the ni1htcap, Drumrl1ht bad a two-out single In the bottom of the ninth inning to drive in the winning run as Oakland won. 3·2. The A's regained the lead In the West Division with the sweep, two games In front of Texas. Baltimore's Dou1 DeClncea suffered a back muscle spasm before the first 1ame and did not play. Schmidt hit wins; Rose near record Mike ~bmldt's two.run triple II highllghted a five-run third inning and Pete Rose singled twice to move within two hits of breaking Stan Musial's National League career hit record as Philadelphia pounded Houston, 10-3. Rose start· ed the third·inning burst with a single to center and singled again in the eighth to give him 3,629 bits to 3.630 for Musial ... Catcher Jobn Stearns threw away Dave Concepclon's ninth-inning bunt, allowing Cincinnati to break a tie, a nd Dan Driessen added a two·run single to help the Reds to an 8·4 victory over the New York Mets. The Reds are now only 1 ~-games behind the Dodgers ... Steve Mura scattered nine hits in seven innings and hit a two·run Schmidt double to lead San Diego past. Pittsburgh, 7·4. It was scheduled as the first haU of a twinight double·header but the second game was rained out after 2~ scoreless innings and will be played in August ... Tim Raines drove in three runs, two with a triple in a seven-run second inning, and Scott Sanderson scattered five hits as Montreal snapped a five-game los· ing streak with a 12·1 triumph over Atlanta . . The Chicago Cubs take a 2·0 lead into their resumption of a game with the Giants today which was suspended after five innings because of darkness. Basebal I today On this date lo baseball lo !N4: ln the m.idlt of an 18-0 deteat to the St. Loul• Cardln alt, the Clnclnoati Red• called on youn1 Joe Nuxhall to fltch two· thlrd1 ot an lnnlna. At thtt aae o 15 years, 10 months, and 11 da)'I, Nuxhall became the youngest man ever to appear in a ma· jor leaaue game. He eave up live runs, and didn't ret"m to the majors until 1952. On t.hla date In 1921 : Babe Ruth of the New York Yankees became baseball'• all·llme home run leader wben be bel~d a drive off Cleveland's Jim Bacby for h.11 120th career homer, one more than the total amassed by Gabby Cravath. Today' a birthdays: BalUmore outfielder Ken Sln&leton la M. Mont.real pitcher Elias Soaa la 31 . Chlca10 While Sox pitcher Francisco Barrios 11 28. Atlanta pitcher Rick Camp ls alao 28. Seat· tie pitcher Floyd Bannister 11 28. SeatUe catcher Brad Gulden is 25. 1 O charges against Mason dropped Protecutors have dropped 10 of • 25 felony charges against former . University of Arizona football Coach Tony Maaon, saying they do not want to confuse a jury by mentioning indictments against co· defendants ... Al Davla, the Oakland Raiders' managing general partner, testified that he was first asked to move his football team to Los Angeles three weeks before the Los Angeles Rams announced their move to Anaheim . . . A U.S. Auto Club steward testified he wanted to penalize Marto Andrettl as well as Bobby Un1tt for violating the no-passing rule during a yellow caution period on the 150th lap of the In· dianapolis SOO·mile race. The offsetting penalties would have left Unser's victory intact . . The National Hockey League rules com· mittee made several recommendations dealing with such matters as goaltenders and fighti.ng They will be discussed at the Board of Gov- ernors meeting June 22·24 in Chicago . Jon Ross, who was to have served as co-captain of Navy's football team next season. has resigned from the Naval Academy because of an honor· code violation. Television, radio Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: / 1 1 1 excellent; 1 1 1 worth watchlng; 1 1 fair; forget it. n 5:30 p.m., Channel 11 ./ I I I DODGERS BASEBALL: Dodgers at St. Louis. Announcers: Vin Scully and Ross Porter. It wiJ I be Jerry Reuss (4-2) on the mound for the Dodgers tonight against the Cardinals' Lary Sorensen (S·4). The Dodgers' lead was cut to l'h games over Cincinnati after losing to St. Louis Tuesday night. RADIO Baseball -Dodgers at St. Louis, S: 30 p.m., KABC (790); Cleveland at Angels, 7:30 p.m., KMPC (710). From Page 01 Indication they do) Jlm will manage llaln eoon. There le one lh1na No. 9 (That'•· bow many managers the Ao1el1 have fired ln 21" YHrt and not bis number) doea weU and that 11 t.o become a part of the community. When he wu a player Fregosl and Bobby Knoop made appearance• at Llt· tie Leaeue dinners. Rotary Club luncheon.a and salet rallies to promote the team. The}' were not paid for their nrvicea. They were just trying to aell the pew team in town. Alttt the A111ela won their half pennant in 1979 Fregoal appeared, gratis, at 53 civic luncheons and din· nere. Many of them were charity fund raiun. They won't have to put oo any luncheon or din· ner benefit.a ror Jimmy. who invested wisely ln acreaae ln Chino years ago and in a showcue Tustin Hills home. But maybe he can use a few bucks to invest in one of 8111 Rigney's charm courses It might save his next job fir • • IF I WAS SIGNING the checks and owned the Angels I'd sign one less free agent (be would break down anyway) and give a bonus to pitching coach Tom Morgan. The Plowboy could make a winner out of the Venus de Milo. The Angels' staff earQed run average is better than a run per game less than In '79 when they won their mini·pennanl llnd arms like Nolan Ryan's and Frank Tanana's are missing. Other bodies will be missing this winter. First base coach Bobby Knoop, demoted from third base to first to make room for Preston Gomez over the winter, somehow survived Fregosi's dismissal but his days are numbered. •Hall of Farner Warren Spahn, the Angels' minor league pitching coach, probably will be given more authority. He wun't one of Fregosi's favorites. * • • WHAT HAS HAPPENED to the Rams' deal with the city of Anaheim to develop the parking lot with a fancy hotel, banks, office complexes. restaurants and other developments? Two years later. nothing. Does this mean Madame Ram, the eternally youthful Georgia Fronliere, might sell one of the best NFL franchises? And are the rumors true that if Madame Ram sells the Rams will she wind up as the owner of an expansion team at the LA Coliseum with Pete Rozelle as her partner? If you don't know the answer call Bud Furillo or Steve Sommers. They know everything. Bogart series Mld Forty-six boats hit the starting line Saturday for the fourth race of Voyagers Yacht Club's Hum· phrey Bogart Series for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts. The series honors the late actor who was one or the most enthusiastic racers in the local area. The trophy for the overall series winner was once retired by Bogart who later dedicated it to VYC. Winner in the Class A fleet of 10 boats was Cats Pajamas. skippered by Carl Last. VYC; the Class B winner 02 entries) was Aloha 11, sailed by Glenn Reed, South Shore Yacht Club. Area preps boast bragging rights Winner in the Southern Ocean Racine Division !SORO) Class A was Runaway II, John Wiebel, VYC, and the Class B winner was Wind ChHd . Lee Armstrong, VYC. Troohy winners in each class: ~ PHRF..A -1. c.tl Ptlwn•t. 2. Hol Foot. ftOOI OoutiMttY, SOYC; l. .,._. M81Sl9r, 81Vee H-. VYC. PHAF·8 -1. Alol\8 II; 2. Puuyc.el, J-SUl•y. VYC; >.Fire Crest.,.., Gluier, VYC. SOADA·A -I. Run.way II; 2. Andi-• .._Sodan>, IVC; I.~. Peter Tono. SSYC. One of the fringe benefits of operating within the Orange Coast area is the bragging riehts issue -it's somethlng that can be harped on with con· sistency at this lime of year as you look back at what has transpired over the past nine months. CIF championships are the ultimate yardstick for high school athletes and for this area, it was another year in which distinguished efforts were commonplace. The big. one, of course, was at Anaheim Stadium where Edison High's Chargers made it two straight, as 28,000-plus watched the Sunset League's best slug it out. The vanquished in that game was Fountain Valley, making it the first time two from the same league finished in the major division finals since 1967 when Sunset League champion Santa Ana and eventual CJF UUist Anaheim collided. Each school, of course. dominated the All-CIF selections and Stanford-bound Emile Harry. Foun· tabl Valley's Athlete of the Year, was named the Clf"s Player of the Year. CROSS COUNTRY FEATURED CIF 4·A champion Jon Butler of Edison and water polo was again dominated by Newport Harbor, which swept to Its fourth straight 4-A crown under the direction or Bill Barnett. t Corona del Mar was the CIF 3-~ basketball c hampion and Ocean View High's Wayne Carlander was the Southern Section's leading scorer and rebounder. Carlander and La Quinta star John Rogers, in· ci4entally, carry second team All·American hoSlors with them into Saturday's Orange County AJl,star game at Fountain Valley High. The St. Petersburg Times' selections, without questioo the most respected All-American team From Page 01 picked. lists Pal Ewing of Cambridge Ridge & Latin High, as the player of the year. Also in Saturday's game with honorable men· lion honors is Servile High's Scott Sinek. who will be playing for the North. John Moffet, a junior. led Newport Harbor to its second straight runner·up spot \n 4·A swim· ming, which is tantamount to a title since Mission Viejo wins it annually with imported talent via the AAU Nadadores. Fountain Valley was the champ al the CIF swim relays. Buller completed the running cycle with championships at the CIF 4-A. Masters Meet and state championship in the 3,200-meters (two-mile). The biggest surprise was the rise in power for area baseball. For many years a stru11llng entity, the area produced the 2·A champion in Corona del Mar and the 4·A finale was another Sunset League production with Westminster edging Edison for No.lat Anaheim Stadium. The topper, in sheer excitement, was Laguna Beach High's volleyball team, as CIF Player of the Year Lance Stewart led one of the most re· markable rallies In any sport to hold off San Clemente's upset bid al Sadd.Jeback College. It alJ begins again in three mooths. * * * THE MOMENTlJM AT Laguna Beach con· tinues a.a the Artlsll begin preparation for a tour of Holland, Germany and Austria. The 14·day tour begins July as the artist.a leave with billing as California's No.' 1 prep volleyball team. ' EL TORO WGH 18 searching for a replacement for athletic director Chuck Sweazy. wbo haa re- ANGELS TRIUMPH • • • Spinks sends his blessings signed the post, but will stay on with the football pro- gram. Deadline for applications is Friday for the • fir • EL TORO HIGH IS EL TORO HIGH IS searching for a replacement for athletic director Chuck Sweazy, who has resigned the post. but will stay on with the football program. Deadline for applications is Friday for the the El Toro opening, which includes a staff position at El Toro. * • * N<n'F..S AND THINGS -When Edison High takes Its rootball team to Hawaii in September of 1982 the Chargers will be laking their sophdmore team, too, to duel Punabou High -says athletic director Lyman Clower ... Tim Holmes, a three· year starter at the University of Arizona as a re· cei ver. has reported called it quits. SOA0-8 -I. Wind Clllkl. 2. Son-. O.W1 R-. VYC; l. .. ~ Tl99r. AkNl'd HalCll. SSYC. ORCA I K~lstlne, 1. Defiance, H""' Towle, VYC. Loufeks take Prindle VENTURA The husband·wife team or Richard and Gretchen Loufek, Costa Mesa, con· tinued to dominate the Prindle·16 catamaran class by winning the Class A division in a Prindle Points Regatta held here. Sixty.five contestants turned out for the event -including three classes of 16s, one clas,s of 18s and one class ol 1ss. :~~.·~,.;:~and Grete,.,.,, l.oufotll. CO.ta Mela; 1. °""'* -OttD l(ruse, San Oleoo; l . 8rlM Heffenn--0.le Ma,_, Ari-; .. Mew Miil 8.rl ..,.,,,,., ..__,,.,,, -II; s. Stew °'*"•l.ellle Uftdltfnell, Ari-. 16·8 1 Chris Cro<kell·J •Y Graves, Ari-; 2. Daw Aft4 S•w Kerl•~ BllrMnk. 1 Pot• Saft'teY·El'i< l..Ml'll,., ~ 9HOI; 4. SW... Orr· Tim Fritch ... Venh•nr_S. Oet'rell H9l'Cly-Amy Elliott, Vetttwa. tt-1. Randy HMflel0-11.lm Je<oll, LOftl llNdl; 2. N ... I -Miu weod, San 01990; J. Terry SwMm-Wtrren F•-C!r ~ 4. o. ... ..,..._. Suun Sergitr Lofl9 llMch; S. TOIN Moir_ .. H ~ 11111 ~ t .. NOVICE-0.Vld Re.,..,,_ll!e ,,,,..,.,,, Vlftt-; z. Jl111 ~.-!II Jollnoon, y.,1ura; 3. JOOI A4atn.,8rY<e EdWW._ Ventwt. IS-t. EM"l IClllM.....,., 8Uf'Mnll; Daw"""",..,_._ Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE West Dlvlaloa West Division W L Pct. GB W L Pct. GB Oakland 37 22 .627 -Dodgen 35 20 .636 - Texas 32 21 .604 2 Cincinnati 33 21 .611 llh Chicago 29 22 .569 4 Houston 28 28 .500 7~ Angels 29 29 .500 7"'2 San Francisco Z7 29 .482 81h Kansas City 18 30 .375 131h Atlanta 25 Z7 .481 8th Seattle 20 35 .364 15 San Diego 22 23 .400 L3 Minnesota 17 37 .315 17~ East Dlvlllon East Dlvlllon Philadelphia 33 21 .611 - New York 34 20 .630 -St. Louis 29 19 .604 l BalUmore 30 ~ .577 3 Pittsburgh 25 22 .532 4"' Milwaukee 30 24 .556 4 Mont.real 28 25 .528 4"' Boston 29 25 .537 s New York 17 32 .347 13~ Cleveland 26 23 .531 SIA Chicago 12 37 .245 181h Detroit 29 26 .527 s"' ,..,...,.,._.. Toron~ 16 40 .286 19 ~~1!'::'t ~~·-0 0 '""""" -,......,..It.-~ . ...,..,.., imbroved their bomestand rec· orl to 4·2, far and away the ~el't mark they've bad at "':f.heim Stadium lbiJ seaaoo. ''The caliber of play of every ball club it dictated by 1t1 pitching," sald Mauch. "As of June 9, Hassler and Aase are the best." ~., c.,,,.._, s. 01.., 1, "nMwlfl 4 <1.t ..-1 DETROIT <AP> -"Tell o.a ... ..,,a.m-t.,, SMO!t9t•Pttt•1•Wf1C2N..-.-..,., Larry Holmes be'• got my bless· ~.:T.!~-.=cno ~~':.a · I think it'• baffled every- bo4y why we haven't been win· nhla at home," added Hauler, i: threw only 51 f>itcbq (85 ol lb m IU'ikea) dwin, bll five In· I•· "I don't h.ave a reuon for lt. • C'WHY ARE WB wlnnin& notv? Because we're playin1 bet~ td b ... ball. We AaH a lot ot aetr ~ on thla team and J tJdDk we're just 1tartlnl t.o Jell. •we have a Sood maoa1er wtto kDOWI baseball llke tbe b.ek of .. b.mt but. batkally, lt~tbe playen Who are produc . In ." audl tw coatftded all aloDc th t for ..... AAiell to be fllfte· U tbl6r pitebiq,bu to M ti· ' •· AIMI •. wtt.b HMal•'• ft". ... of won com ..... WW. ...... 2\t ...... ol ...., ..... the P'Q·blndMiP' per w• ObYloualJ pleued. * A•eallOTH-11.,__ ..... ~ ...,_. "' .. ..,. .. --.. -""',._.. ...................... .,.,~ ..... ....... .. ,. -... -· , .... ~. Tiie ....... -.. """"~------~ ....... ...... •N ....... lt'e....., • MMll ...... _ W .. .. ,...,,,.....,..,. __ ......_ ... ~ ..... ................................ ..., ........ ...._:·~.-... ..... oetl-ftllllie It ._ ,..r. I -..... - ---..... Or ... o.-tr ..... ... ............................ ,,., .,._..~--0 _ ... .. ,......._... ... ,,. ......... ... ............. ulllf ''T __ ..... -41 ~ .................... .... ....._ -............ Tiit I ' .. ,........,, ....... 111 ......... -.."-............................. _ ................................. ..,, ... ,..._ ....... ...., .... -.. SW'lllMu& ,.. ....... -.,. • .............................. ......................... ..,_ .. ~-= .. ~.ir-;r.==-= _,...... ..., .. __ lltCll ··-"'------·~ ~ ...... -= .... ,.. ........... .......... .... .. ==r:;,:-... 5m::..::. .. ·:-~ , .. ~ ... rwr.111 ..., .. ................ Cllf. • ln1 and I wiab him Ute best. ot M1._...a,~1 c1M11W11t1t. .... v-• luck,'' taYS Leon Spinks. :::•:.;~::.:, DMewt <"-'1::~:.=.. 1s.-11t-4), While wlsh1n1 Holmes well, , .... ..,,. 181.;:•,:,-:-,...... 1~ """ ~--. at Olk.eea. -----., _ SplnU made a promlae t.o Ute W>, ,._..,_ u.abeat.en World BoXlnl CouDd.l • ..:=~ <~.,.., .. •·•> •• Oo1an11 1 .. ~~~IK• 1orlt11n 4-41 •• °''' ... beav~eliht champion who he K-. Cltv <~,. .. ,. at Twtntt 1~ "".,.'• <........, •11 at Me11tnM c0ui1~--. wlU n,bt Friday nl1bt in the Joe ~~~.::i IMllY ... , at Ole.et ca-HI," 1~,.. ,...,_. 141 .. ....,._ .. cC1rttM Loul•Aren•. T• .. •C~t41111Mll--C"9MWl,11 •O.n "l'lllt~t.ocUDttobJmUke o.tNitt <Mlffl•~J•M1-.-c..._•11. s.n 0-.. • ..._ .. ,.. w1 • ,..._.. •"'--J 11 C"'"-11·11. n a T·•tiirt punch more~ · ... _CT..._M> .. ...._c,.,....1~.11 c111cJf'NllC_.U1 ...... v.-c.-.w.1,• ever did a1aln1t Muhammad ----::::;::;;;i-=:::;:::-----:::::!::!!:::::::=:::===c:=====:z: AU," iaid the 2'7·yea.r-otd Spinka who Will be makln1 b1I MtGOd tJ\Je bld in Juat bis 15th pro n,bt. In bl.a elabth pro fttht. u.lDI the prature tactiri be &>rom1"I to u.te aplnit Holm•, SiMnb won the -.Uvenal tltl• by Meir· I.al • JS.rolind 1pU\ decltlca °"" All Feb. 15, im. at Lal Veau. Bat be ilckDttttdly didn't ha· dM .... tM p~ tllat ~ wUll U•• Utle. aad II• laad probMme lbat led to bM ,.._,. moatlr lovolvln1 bla drltl.g babltl Md bl• Ule tf.1le. -. . . I l"l85 SOI' 13 TUBELESS WHlllW\llS P195/75RW $45.99 $2.15 P215/75R1.4 $50.99 $2 . .43 P205/75a15 $49.99 $2.-42 P215/75a15 $51 .99 $2.58 P22"75a15 $53.99 $2.7.4 ~.SR15 $57.99 $2.85 THE U.S . GOVERNMENT GRADING SYSTEM RATES PEP BO'IS CORNELL "900" TIRES WITH GOODYEAR AND UNl~OYAl-HIGHER THAN GENERAL & MICHELIN FOR TREAD WEAR & MtlEAGE. SEE FOR YOURS EU ••• ,,,. CoiMll 900 ....,.,. ~· tooo •• n.. Good,...,."'"-....i ..._ u .... °""' s1 .. i.,, 1 s,oop ,..,.. ~~No-..,,,.-C>..ot 5• ... 11 ond2<t noa,,.11-. ~ ''-" _.. M·dtwl-tr1iXWW No---~ '"•.-,If,.,.. •• .,.,.,.cf OVI ~ th• ~ n..... l)h! f1uvt .. \.o\lf'd ~ 0 C•"'PO"f+Ol't of~~"°"" frOf'I' ~ ........ _,. ~ ...-~· -°"--' v ......... , ... OuciWI)' °""""' .,,,_ •..J•o"'i>of ofl 1Not-•l90(r,.,,11-y ... 0Mul 20'M.0t .. tt..oproof,...,.IOI>,,_ 11< .. MAIMAC1Uaus· UTIMS. JO• u~ GOVlllNIUWT QUAUn &IAOlllt nsmu ~~ =ION A)ID Ofl OOVllMMINl ' MANUFAC'T~lt~-.~~~t TRlADWIAlt n~~~~. lt!P BOYS C NELL "900'' B/C: 22 66 000 GOODT~R ARRJVA llC 220 66 000 !_INl!tOYAL S'HLH 8/C 220 66 000 GE~~L DUAL n~l!_llt-_a/_C---1~-17~0_.__S"-'1-'-'00~0 _. MICHELIN XWW All 140 42 000 'tt., • U ~ !I q T ••pOrtdalo<l• 1~8() "'~ ... -. -· .. dve ....... , ... hoboh, ....,...,_ ol .... klo. '°"" .......,_, .. (h ....... . PEP BOYS m11 GIVES A ' UMITID ROAD HAZARD WARRANTY* AT NO EXTRA COST! M ,., '°" Gflflt • ~tto .... 1.AMn """" C"OeNl\l 1'1U ~ A.""°"'° fr+UMk• Of MOHfHI '°""'' '" ")An IVJ~m"' --AASU-• w 1116 ~""~!It NO\ActOWllit '"'°Nlt-1'11• AO>llSl..cHT~ ~ON...,.,.,.. Sf\ll•.O...C:f lil -Of""'°""" Oranoe Coast DAIL V PILOT/Wednesday, June 10. 1981 WORlD'S NO. 1 l-----.l lllSTAIT PUNCTURE REPAIR OV8t 1t m1JOll CMS SOlD WOllD Wiii INRAm na wmt LATU tutlt:a WHICH SWS PUNCTUaS 3/l6" IN DIAMml IN LISS THAN 60 m 24141 74 SICONOS wmtOUT A WMHl CHANGl ........ u•rrm WABAlll'Y mt424f 59: 'l7 21f 71 7l 74 lACI BARD AHL TOP 01'1· V Al VE LUBRICANT b orl IA r. • t ......................... PW•W•4W4494U.4040W04 4# •• , .. , 494., •••<•1• • I' ';, ,. • .. .., !, • . . j ~ . ' . . . " AMe.RtCAN LUQUE Anoeta 4, Inclan• 2 CL•v•l.Allo -CALlf'CMHllA .. ,... .., ... 011-. If S 0 t 0 Herl-rf 4 0 t 0 Menfllne,cf , 0 0 0 .llf'I ....... '' 0 0 8anJtr, cf 2 0 0 1 • C•r-i• I 1 t O on., rf s 0 2 0 LY""· Cl J 1 ' 1 Tlln1l11, • 4 0 0 9 Ootllflllftl. If 4 O I O ~~e~.ID ! ~ ~: .. ylor,• 4 II 2 He ... ., 11> 4 1 2 I OI\, < 4 0 1 0 K111,..-:a 4 0 2 I HobMfl,ID 4 0 t 0 VwY»r •• 2 0 2 0 Cam ....... 0 0 0 0 Kell.,, llfl 1 0 O O ,. ...... 111 4 0 0 0 o.,1>JJ1I, u o o o o Toi.ell s. 4 10 4 Tot.ta 12 J U 2 ._...,., ...... Ct.w lMOI m -D -2 C.ltfwllle .. .. .. -4 IE -lleLw. DI' -Cellton\le I. ~ -Ct....tend II, Cel_,..• 6. 28 -LyM, Oft, Hll -...,. (ti. S8 -Ollofle 2, DI.a, T-nlOft, ~ML s-Vory1er, c.-. C....._. II' M II a11 ee IO lerkor 11...J.3) e 10 4 4 I 6 C.11..,... Wiii 11'> S 2 2 2 HHalw (W,.).I) s • 0 0 2 A.ev IS.J) 2\'> 2 0 0 0 4 WP -tMI-. T -2:43. A -22,4'0. AngeJ AveregH UTTllllO C.rew lvrl- Ho!Mofl ,,.,.. Grlcll Downll'IO Herl- LYM Clerk Ott H•rrla P•I .. 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L- MatllKk, >S. S-S.UClw In. A-17,1!0. FllUTeAMa A'l4,0rw.t aeltlmore 000 ooi 000-2 • 2 Oelllencl flO 000 20¥-4 S 0 Pelrner, S-d (7), Mef11nea m .,... Dom...,,, GAlwm (t); M<Cttty Md - W-M<c:.tty, 7-4. L-P•lmor. M . Hll- O<tkletld, ..... (I). HCC*D9AMa A'U,o.t9'oa2 a.iu,,,_ ttt t1o __ , 1 o o.llland .. 100 Oll-3 • 0 Two outs...,. Wll'lftll)9 run _.... McGre90r, St-ert Ill •11d GreMm, Dem'M~ 171; Klngmen, 0Wclll11llo CS>, J-a (7) -HHtll. W_,,,_, •1. L-Slow•rt. 2-1 HR-0.IWld, JollMon (t). A-ll,S20. y ........... , .... New YOr11 014 101 ,.._. 12 0 K•n•H City 2'0 000 or.-s II I N•I-. lARoctw (2), Griffin 161, Go&Met <ti •IMI Coron.; lere-r. Mllrtln <JI, QulM ....... ry (I) AftCI Glote. W-lAltOCM, M . \.---1\. 1-J. S.-00....,... (17). Hlb- N•w Y•rll, Wlnlleld 171. Nellles C11. A-•.-· ....... , ... ,.,.. ......... 1 Olk... •• ----a • • " ..... WNtt; ~ .... ,, ...... O.t-, f·a. i..---Lul, W. 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IPMll H-on Cl...14) 4 1 S Golla 2 I 0 CHllllo 2 2 I It. LMla Fet'KI\ (W,wJ ._., Suttff IS, IO) 21'> T -1.>t. A -lt,U4 I 0 ........... , •• H IO S t I 0 o. 0 I I 0 I 0 4 • CllKl-1 011 110 ..._.It t New York oeo tOI Oio-. 0 4 PHIO.-•, Mo11l811 (61. H11m• (el 8fl4 Nol•; H«ni. ..__ m. l'.ic:-Cl>, Allefl (ti -,._,.,., ~. •t. L--l'elc-. t..i. Hlt-OM!Nwtl. Orltt-ID. A-t2,J11 PlltST .... ....... 1.--· S... Oloeo ... -000-7 11 I ltltls......... 00J oeo Oto-4 11 I Mllr8, LucM (I) -llC._.,; ll"8olln, cnn (0 . Jee:._ ttl ...o ,..,... w-Mvr-e. 4-7. \.-"-, .... Hlt......s8n Oleeo, ... (4), lAfotlvre ISi. ,.._,..., .. -~(I). MCC*DeAM• PO$ ....... r811\. c.-a. ....... S... Fr8ntblc.o 000 ~ I 0 Chicago 011 .._, 4 I G-..........., -to --9fter llw IMl!lllL lllploy and ~f; Krull-and Devi•. A-4,7lS. ............ ~. Hollaton 001 Oii 01-J II l Piil 18dltlpfll8 ICIS 011 02Jl-IO IJ 0 N IHro, Smltll UI, S.W-(7) elld l'\l)ols; 8yUl"Olft, lleed (7) Md 9o0fw, ~-(I). W-Byslrom. .i. \.-lollro. 6-S. S-lleed UI. 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IUl'Mr•, 7-2; V11<kovtcll. 111\llww.._, 7~; McGrt91W, a.ni ...... W ; Torrez, llOIMfl, ... i ; Morrll, Detnill, N ; ..._.,, ......... N ; Norris, 0KI0"4 N . " ,,,... . ... .. .. n ·• ..... sa .-".., .. ·'" ., ,, .. .. -*" HIOHICHOOL Orange CotHt,!t!fMter Game CMLa ..... ) . ._,,. .... ,. '9CNl"ne IOUTM •r11.,. ellr•lll "llCMI, cf t t t t Oyllatre, ct 1 t J 0 .,,., ..... ct t 1 I • Cemeclle, II , , I 0 N•,.,rf JOit P ... 11 2010 lt~ll. rf 4 I 1 t 8tdle,.. • I t t lt-IW, a 4 I 2 I TWIH, M 2 0 0 0 H•lttl, .. t t 0 0 ltrlet, "'1> 4 I 0 0 Ce<.IWfl, ... S 1 t I Herrl1, 11 I 0 I I S\Nll, 111 I I 0 0 A11911A, I> 0 t 0 r avena, a.. t t 1 o M41na•,lb'9• t 2 ~18,11 01 0 I MllCMll,IO 2 0 I 1 hl\111 .. 11 I 0 t O ~.ID 6 t I 0 '-'. c t o o o o ... ld.< ' > 1 o TIM<e, c • t I S Mw11t.r, < 1 0 0 0 lllldcllffe, c I 0 0 0 lrvlM, ti ' 0 ' I Al•rld, II 2 0 0 0 YMrre, ti , 0 0 0 ltrt<I .. If 1 I O O Co•, 211 4 0 0 0 H8yl0fn,'11t 4 O I O Goftli .... a 2 0 0 0 r.:1=-.. • 11 : l h vl•,.. 11I0 TOI.el• S4 ti 14 10 To .. la .. 1J It t "*'911¥1 ...... North llOI> 103 070 100 000--12 14 I S0..111 SJO OO'l 002 100 091-U It a N-Ollt wMft wlftnlnt rllll K-IE -~. StMI>, ~. lllHKl!ftlt, H•YMft.~~11.~. Twlu t, PrleL DI' -H«ttl 1. Se<ltfl t. LOe -Ntf\I\ IO, $Mlltl II. 28-MeftdON, Kerrts. ,. -Coc:llr-. Hll -Tinoco l , It--. SI -Krwwl•. Al.,kl, ,.,_...., Z.VM8, Roth, Hr(Mnl. ()ykltr• S, "9•, Out8el\. lrVIM, c.n-ho. S -... ro, Allt .. t. "'"°'*' Ill M 11 •• aa IO Blenllentllip \'> S t 2 0 0 DffM IV> I 2 0 1 l l!v•n• 2 I t 2 0 I S..Ovl• 2 > t 1 O S lonlll• JV> I I O 1 t Co<hr-S\'> S I 1 I 4 FIMlll CLI 0 1 I 0 IMt• H•rrls (W) ' J 0 0 I ' Sm•ll I I 0 0 0 0 Pries , I I I I I lrown 1 1 J 3 2 I ~n-I 1 0 0 0 0 Mendo141 ~ J S S J I , .. .,.,n 41'> 4 > o 1 o HeP -l>Y A11911at cF.a<ll•I). WP- ll•nll•n•lllp, l•nlll•. P•-R•d<lllf•, -nt.r. T-s:ao. A-t,JOO. NBA draft Tiie ._.,. • ._,, •l«t'-111 T...o.ya Nelton.I ~I Auocl•lloft dnft: ATLANTA MAWlll Al Wood, f, Nortll C•roll11•; Clyde lredal\ew, a. DeP.,1; Our...O -11111\. I, Lovlslo,.. Sl•t•: K..,ln ..-1 .. r•. f, SW Lovlsl811•; Stew Krefclslll, <. I-; OerrVI Werwkl(, a. Hemptoll lntt.; K•vln v....,,. c. tono; .011 S.""8' c. Noire o.m.; Ho_,. Tllonlplllfta, f, w...,....; Miii• Frul•r. c. a-.--. llOSTOte CaLTICS Ch•rl• lredley, 1. w.,.ml11t; Tr•cr J•Cll.-. .. -... Deme; ~ Al ....... lrlghem Y011119; Jolw\ ~. f, MkM9111; s1.e11 w1111 ..... t, us.lie; oi-G,_..., f, t11dl-; St•w W•ll•, c , I-•; Tom S.on1111, f, Holy c ... ; o.o,... Mor.-. '· Crol911te11; Gr .. M<CteY, f , V•. Coln-m•nw••ltfl; K•11 111\ettllewa, 1 . North cereu ... ,...., 041CM09ULU OrlOlldo ~. I .... tre Demo; Mille Olllwr,., l.Mnw; Ollwr Le•, I,....,.._.; Jol'l11n., Nefll. f, Arl1.0flo St8te; lt09"' l11rkm811, e. L.AMtvlll•; Scott WllllOfl'IS. I, Sovlh Al ...... o; .. n Mll<lloll, f, Al•.· HllftltVllle; Torry Mllr11n, e. LAmllUtl\; tc..... ny EHi..,, t. UCLA. cuivau.1110 CAVAUUtS MICll.ey 0411..-4 g, Flori* st.Ce; ... Bowers, f, -lc111; E~811 Mertln, e. LOlllSI-SU.; !(.., ...... 9, Hit-. Melde:8; MrOll 54,...,._"' •. Hewoll;,.,,... Sfnllll. '· lll•l>••ak•; Glenn M•rc111, 1. Al•.· 81rmlneNif'll; ,...,, lloN, <. Cl•wlaftd SI.el•; G ... .._, 9. ~··· MIM. DAL.LU MAV••latl M•rk A911lrr•, I, Delt•vl; llOIM!do I lack men, 1. "--Stot•; J•y Vlf>c9llt, f, Mk h .... Met•; Elstori T-. e. ..._..,. pl; Ar1 .......,, c. 1(-; ..... Mom. .. SyrKllM; ""'9 ....-0, f, Ner1fl CenlllM; K•rl ............. f, UMlll; 08llfty Oe .... , f, NC·Wll"""91.,; Oevld Ke.....,, 9. Clllc~ noll; J-Hollllldon, c, lndl•M Stet• EHn•vlll•; Scott 9of8flko, 9, Nortlwnl SIAW-S.D. HMV•• .. uoetrn K•MJ Gr-. f, 1'811 -kell; WINle Sims,•· l.Aloll9MN s.8'•; Alena w......,.,, '· e>.11-; Gng MllMI ..... ...,.,._: outh takes its time • • • 1n w1nnmg pykstra, Irvine, David keys-to 13-12 marathon: victory .)' ROGER CARLSON °'-~"-Miff Westminster High baseball coach Rick Hayes grinned and said, "I hope the fans got their money's worth." ~. Corona del Mar High's Tom Trager, an assls· t to Hayes for the South in the 14th annaal ange County High School All·atar game, simply ked, "What time is it?" Well , it was 1 o'clock this morning and time to o home and what was left of a crowd of l ,5oo wan- ered off after the South finished the 5\-;·hour, 15· ing mauthon al LaPalma Park in Anaheim ·th a l!H2 victory. which began Tue$day eve-. g. It ended lik-e it started, with a bang supplied pitcher David Harris of Westmi:nlter. Ria rin1· g double to left scored Corooa del Mar's Jeff ies, giving Harris, the original starter, the vic- tory after returning to toss the final three innings. loss to Tea Men puts Surf dowD ~ llpeeiaJ .. tlMt Dalb PtW , JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -ll's been a lon1 road trip eo far and there ii atill one same remalninl for the Callfomia Surf. 1\teld-.y night, the Surf 1\lff ered itl aeeond ttraiaht road lou </. the current tbne·tame out-l•, a 4-0 blanki.D.1 at the bands ot the JacboovWe ea Mm befon-8,881 fant. · llldftelcler Jan Van Der Veen lef\ tb• 1am• at the 1*-mtnute mart with a atraiDed ac.bill• tendon and Coecb Lauri• Callow-.y feell U.., bad • let- 11111!nm lftet' tbat with the Tea llen acortn1 three of aoUa ln the ftnal U minutel. • .... ~ 0\11' shape (formation) I.ad our com· po9Uft,'' C.UO.aJ 11.ld. "Our llC'•etlcal dtldpUne a1lo brot• down and everybod,y WU trJlDI to ...... f'Dr'Ward .., ... uw um1 10e1. tmta.d, we npoMd ounel¥M a& &be back." .. J~ acor4Mt the ftnt 1oal on a Nd bo~ taUait Smf 101Ue A.la Ila,.... blO tD the cbett.. .JacklGarille ,.u. Amle .......... ma • IODI kick l:Ut boUDc.4 Oil tbe Jt.rard liDe ad WU ' Ml9d tarward by Bob N.,.._, .._ lt boaeed tM DOt time, tt bit an Objeet ... .-.-. .,.. ............. baDdl .................... . an Ot1ilD tbeD ~ into the em1ltt Swf net. What transpired between Harris' first ap- pearance on the mound and the Uth inning was a remarkable combination of classy defensive plays, individual heroics and, at times, something lea~ than ,spectacular play as evidenced by 11 errors - eight by the North. Among the evening's highlights was the pl-.y of Garden Grove star Lenny Dykstra, a will of the wisp who managed to eet on the basepaths on eight occasions, stroking five singles, walking once and getting aboard on two-Of the North's miscues. That wasn't all fOT Dykstra, lbe game's win- ner of the Hustle Award. lie stole rive ba~ea. scored three times and threw out Loara Hi1b'1 John Fischel at the plJtte on a perfect throw from center field to stop lhe North in the 12th l.nnlng. Drafted by ihe New York Meta and coveted by Arizona State University, Dykstra'• play was im- pressive, to say the least, but it didn't stand alone. Ocean View High's Doug Irvine banged out four singles in four at-bats, Maler Del's Steve Mendoza doubled and sineled for three RBI and Marina Higb's Ken Bodle Mot 2-for_. wjth two RBI and acored a run. Santa Ana's Ivan Camacho scored three times. And that waa just some of the South's offense. . Tbe North rallied for seven runa in the ei1hth inning to tum it into the marathon it became and Katella Hlgb. catcher David Tinoco was the rin1leader of tbe rally, 1trokin1 a pair of long home runs in bis first. two appearances at the plate for five RBI, 1alning the Jame's MVP award. Defensively it waa JU1t as 1ttntn1 with bie play• ln the outlield by the North'• John Nero of Troy (twice) .-ad SuMy Hills' Brian Sharkey, amona other endeavor•. • "There were a doiea great dete:n1ive plays out there," commented Hayes, who led W•tminater to tbe CIF 4·A champlouhip. The South bad the upper band with a 7-0 lead throuah hfo lnnlnl•. but tM ae••Hua elsbtb in- nin1 for the Nortb put the Betie1' doWD, U·t, Oftly to '""the •ame tiect ill the bottom ol tile ninth ~hen Bodi• •trolled a •lnele to cmter to acore Edbon Rllll't Tom Duuan, before MaWr o.1'1 AmU. O.vN MlOl'H UM &JIBI manw on lnotber North~. :Aaabs tbe Nortb &Oat'~ 1Ud tD UM 10Ua wM'a ltateifa'a lt8lt ~...-a lbot lntlD \M Wt nead IUmda. M uae.16116 i'elhd wttll tlle help ot, anodttir SIW ta keep It .... Tben ... --~ •ftd tuniiql' -W the Soatb'• 1 to nm, keJed bJ r;::;,.., ud \be Nortll'1 tJ to,,.. oa David (be tlaNw W. nmnen CMll at Heoad), •unlJl •pt tbe soaalt afloat. Cllni. ........ • 91. ~ H. 'f.; .,,..,,_ ---· ...... ,....,, Otwkll ......... ............... M'T110f'f ......... 1 .. M ,,._,, .. .,..,.., K .. 1., Tr..-., '· N•tr• Da"'•; Jtllll ...... " s. .... Alai.-; 0..... ~ .... ~I a..,.. DeV.., c, NC:-0.rMtt•;· vi..c. ............. I, I-; ~ N811Ce, • W. v..,.., -""""' c. .. ,.,_, Illa.; ..... ~~:"" ..... MeMll .... ......... eOL.D1•tT&T8WA••tCMt1 ..... ••"-. '· ..,._ ...... c:.rttlll N8¥Wtlll, '· ~, Lor#6I -~ '· Or.-1 TMY ............. T-... ; ...... McOIMll, t. ..._. .... , c.tw lc•ll, e, ON• lt8te; ••MY O•tly, t! Ari-I Ollllii C..y-., C. \Jlllilltr'tlty « O..u; Oelll ..,....,, f, SM JIM ...._; .. r,.,......, f, ...... ,. (.el, MOUITOle ... ..,. •e TWtw, f, T••AAll IArrt ~ f, ......... 1 ................ .,-.y.-~ c.w ..... t ~llyj -,.._, '· ........ G,_;.....,lr-... --~ IMDIMA PAaa lftrl> Wllll-, C, Ollie 9l•; lt•Y II-. I . O;o9t11ft 9'el•; Al I.Hiit, t. 8vc'-Mtl; ""ryl• Miiter, '· leutlwnl Cell ...._ ftr•1lor, t, llrlw Cliff; o.r... ~ c, .l•tt•Y City lt•t•; lt ... tt '••1111, 9, WHlllfl9lM ; Larr., McKl-y, C. ..... ~; LAii ...u.-.1or. <. Of'utl; kACI WlllUey, f, WINlarll & MMy; ._....y ~ e.WrltlMll• .. KMMICf'fY ltl .... ...... ~ " Or..-i ..... ; !'•""" "'°*'· f, Al~,. ......... ~ f, llllnolt; Cwtll ..,ry, I, Ml-I; 1Ct11 ~ nere, f, ~; 8 L O.Vt" f, IA..._; U.I.. II•••· t. Ar11•11 .. s; lrle11 Wtlk•r, •· ltvrduo; Cll111811 Wl\Hl•r, f , Wllll- ltet•rMll; llMCt., ln!llllM<\, L Wklllte Stele; iw ... llff,.,, .. IUcllf'll•M; Mlll'll WllMll, e. ....., H8Y1 Stote. LOIAMO•l.•tLAll• .. Miile M<G••· f. Mlclll1•11; Hervey Knu<kles. & TOI ... ; Elvta lt8lle, c, ,......._ SIRe; Z-~-kll. e. teoM C-ellN; llOll CorMlllA, " "•lfk; lt•vlft Mc•-. I, CrelelMll; Crefe Wott'-c, Nwtll car.llM Sl.ete; K.n111 51"'"'811, I, Ctllterllle; L.erry Petty, c, WhciOflalft; .l•Y Tr'-v l. 11.-l'roMr. MILWAU1t•• auaca Alton Uatw, c, ArlHft• Sl8te; Merk SmlUI, t, llllMl•i Kris ....., .. 11. f, l'lerte. St•t•; IC•lvln Troy. f, R11t .. t1; .I• Jo H11nt.r. a. Gllor-; Lewla IAttlmore, c, Virginie; iw ... lrll.ovkfl,. fllkHe9ll St•; Clllp llV<Jwr. I, ~; Artt. 0-, t.~r_...c1a. MaWa .. •YM•TI a11<k Wiiii.., c-1, Mllryl-; Al IU"L I, ~ryl-; R.ay Tollllert, <. lndl-; Devld 811rM, g, SC. L.oult; IEdmullcl Sherrod, 1. Ve. Com-.,; Joe c.c.er. c, Color-; K•vln L-. a. LAS.II•; Rod ...... -. e. "11rtl\wHler11; Ken Wel>lt, I, F•l•l•I ... DIClll-; lllldy WUll-1, f, l"f'Ov'-e; Vk Sltoft, 1. UCLA. Maw YO•IC KMlatl Greg ~. f, L.oul•lt11• State; Frenlt 9rlck0Wllll, c, """" Stet•; W•""° M<l(oy, <. St. John'•. N.Y.; AIH •••dl•Y. '· Vlll-v•; Jim WrltiM. I, llllocle laloftd; Jol'ln ll•lr, g, Monmouth, N.J .; Terry Krom•r, 9, Ripon; ert.11 O'Connor, f, TllomH Mor•, Ky.; M•rly Headd, g, SyrK.,..; Kevin-...-.. I, SI .... lw't. ""11.ADCLPMIA nau FrOfllllln e:-... 1. C ....... end Sl8t•; Vernon Smllll, I, T.,.._1 A&llo\; lt•r""t Gr•llem, f, "'-'VIMd; RYllft Wrlgltt, I, TH- •• A&llo\1 SI..,. Craig, 9. ~1111\Am Y-.g; M lk• Tll•mH, g, Norlh P•rk, John Cr•wlord, I, K•na"; Fronk Giiroy, SC. J-··· 111.Y.; "°" wtstor, c. Temple; 1'9t• Miii ....... i, Del-.... l"MCMllllX SUMI Lerry Nona, f, CIMllOll; S8f'I\ Cltft<1'. f, Pitts__.; Cl ... Dytt...,., I, LCMW e..h SI.el•; p.,. ._,.,,..,, f, Mlclllgen; ...... Korrta, e. Nor1,_.1Mn; O.vld Wllll.,,.i. I, SoutMrn; Stow 111 .. ey, I, Inell-; .... ., JoflnlOft, I, CAllor•do; Fellon Se•l•Y. 11. O;o990ft. llCMlTLAND TllAll. au.za .. Jeff L.Mo-., e. Virgin!•; OWMll Ve1 ... t1M, Cl. K.,...; 9rl0ft Jeck-., f, Ul.911 sc.ete; Derek Holcomb, <. llllnola; ,..t., Guo. -· C, WMl\lnglon; Petet' V•,,_VOll, C, Fru110 Sl8t•; Herl> Andrew, 9, Sovtll Alo~ ......,.. Aini•, f, Teu•,f:I "9so; Jull11S W•1'ne, 9, THOa-1!1 PHO; JoM Sml~. f, SL JM'&. Sid Wllll8nu, I, S8ll .-s .. w; sw... c.oc11r~ 1, LAwl• & ci..... ..... MTOMIOIPUU a-e.nb. I, OW•; Ed ll•IM, I, $Dull! Alt4Nlfn8; T°"""" ... .,, e, IEo.llWll 1(- tucky; IEMI e.ldler, 9. St. aon.twnt ... ; Miiie Rllode•, 9, V•nderl>lll; Norman Sft..,•n. f, J8cllto11 Sl.ele; Mtrk Ml .... ,,_, c, N. Nlklll .... ; 9oO a.tl'Dle<Mw, I, 5811 OI .... ; ~I ~.1 • .......-.. IMt..; Alvl .......... u-. SAM Dta90CUP1t•1U Tom ~ f, U\tft; Jim Smltfl, f, <>No StMe: LM It.Ur. f, Vlr9i"""; 0.-11 lllllell, '· -.,pN• St.to; Mike .......... • Not'tll CorolN; ltendy ,,...,,_, I. ~ C--; Todd Ho9YNt, f, 0.VI-; Art J-•· f, Nwtll Cerollfte St8te; Tt11., GwyN1, g, S.n Ole9D Stoee. UATTL.• IUP•ltlOMICS 0-,, Vr8"tes. I, Ui.tl; ,...,. It..,,.,,,, e. °"9911 SUI•; lwlil • Gf'lffl11, f, W•M'llflllOll; E•rl a.nu, I. Aut111n1; Torn SlenkWwke, a. VUI-. UTAMJAU De11 Sdwye .. c, Syrecvw; Howtf'd Wood, I, T-; Geot9t Torm, 1. .. INny NuertM; Mike Clortl, <. Oregen; K•...,. s.>re-. '· l.O'l'ol•lll; MllM ltotllnw.>, <. Celltr•I Mic ...... ; lloe Ctttaee. C, .......... ; K•11 Ollie, f, ~ .. ; Joe~. I, Wis.· 1: ... c1.i-.. · INVESTMENT SALES H i gh Caliber Salee Peraonnel needed tor expanding I nvestment flrma new office opening July 1, 1981. Broad b ... of investment products for licensed rHI estate and/or NASDs&lff. • bcllllt C111lsslla • •Laafa .... LMAla.no. TVQO.\Y .. •UUl.TI , ..... ,,..... ........... ....... """ r--.... C., (11--1. 11.00. '··· &Al; ••Y °" 0.. '""" .... '· UO, J.•; VN Rllle lllo\lkMlll, 4.00. U •• t<l.e ( ... ) ..... $1,. ... S.CMOI r•• -0. l.Yny (Tr-•l, ..... uo. a.a; 1te11t hf1y e.y 111r-.1. s.•.•.•; ,,_ ..... 111111tc11e111.•.•. Tiii,_ rK• -Canlla T,...,..• ICM-I, 12.10, 1.00, 4,to; Tem• or ..... ~111111 IMllclltlll, 10.to, S to; NltM Stletd IHM11, uo. ""•11rth ••u -lfldl•11 W•r O•nur 1c11 ..... 1. 1.40. uo. t .40. J111t11u _,...., ICl•r lo•>. tt.OO, 1.to; Gul<k•n l'leme IH•rtl, 7,00. U •MCU IH ) ..... sittA. ,..lllfl r"'8 -9IMN Venture (H8t1J, 1tl, UO. tM, TrWlt °*"" (l'•-1. t JO, UI, T-Wll90tfK"(N~111),'-• ll•lfl , .. -Mtle L-IN (Tr_.l, L», tM, 2.-; a.tw•r w.,,,. IM1tc11e11>, 1,ao, 2.•; Da Oii Tory ll'ler•I, UD. tl •uca 1~21 ,.Id Ul.40. levonth r--""-w• e111 1cr .... rl, .... 1.60, >.•: ....,,,, 11-1He'11, •••• a..; Mldlllelll s.IM (Tr-.1, 7,JO '1 •lliK .. ,.,, .,. .. ma. IUtlfllh r--Ctllt. CM IC1etl1»I, 1•, t tO, t.•. &Ady< Tr"" 1c.reno1. >.•. >.•. J"1ew•Y ... y (H8t11, 4 ... U euc .. 12'41 ,.. .. ., .•. " Pick ... (I ... , ... ,, pel4 ... ltOM with oleM wl,..lfle lk llota Ill• llot-1. ta fl'lc:ll SI• con ..... i.. ..,... ...... wltll ut w'-1 .. tlek•I• !fl .. ,__, Nlntfl r--MIM ....... LArk (Fr-). U.20, Ut, la; Hll'll • Mll'll (9r-•I, 1.00, 2 20, Jell c. Dendy (CtrlleU). 1.60. u ... to !M l peld Ka . All•--•.21S. Thia ..ek'• trout planta LOS ANOaL&S-919 llock Cl-. e-- qvel c ... .,.,,,, J eck-. LAk•. Llltl• llock Creoll.. UIU. Rock RKWVO!r. 5811 01,,_ lle»rvolr. IA.Ill ea11MA•ot1K> -Jenka LAke, IWll CrHk, Sii-R...,.,..r. 1uva•11oa -F111"""' uk•, Hemet Lek•. IAN OlaOO -~ Pond, Sen \.via Rey lllvor. MAOallA -SOii JoeQvln lllwr (Mi99e Fork), S~Uke ICallN -Alder CrHll, lrl9hl VolleJ ltH4rvolr, c.ci ... CrMll, ErMllne er-. K•rn River (Oemocr•I O•m lo Kiii Powerhouse, Borell Power,.ouse to Domo<r•I O.m, 1 .. 1>ell• Oam lo Borell PowerllouM, KR2 Po•erhOuM to Uke 1 ........ ,. INYO -...... er.-. 1'9 Pine er.-. llthOCI Cl-C~r, MIOdle, Soutll ..... lnt•ll• Ill. CotlOllwood Creek, 0-1• CrHk, l~nce Cr••k, L-Pine Cre•ll, North Lek•, Oak Cree II. C Nor1h Forll), 0-lllw r IS lridves -•Ir-.. to $1•werl L•n•I, l'l••1onl VAiiey ll•Mrvolr, s.twlno LAii.•, Sllephord$ c r.-, Symmn ~. T•-cr..-, Tlnem- CrHk, Tullle c.-. MONO -9rldgapott 11 ... rvoir, Bvclleye CrHll, COnvlct c.-, Convl<t Lelle, DMd- m•n Cr•ll.. Ellery LAU, George Leu, Gl•t,J Crwk. ~Ol'll LAU, G,.... Cl-. Gull Lelle, Hll-Cr-. J-ull.e, \.ff Vllll"CI CrH I&, Lee Vining Cr-($outll Fork), Lii· ti. Wolll.er l.allt, Uttl• W•lkor 111 .. r. L ..... dy Liil•, -.10 LAk•. MMnmotl\ er-. M•ry L•k•, 111\CGM CrHll, 111\111 Crook, OWofl• 111-(lllenton Crou'"9 AftCI 919 SOr· lflOll, Piiie C ....... 11-rM Cl-. II~ CrHll, llock Creek I P•r•<llH C•mp lo Tom"I Pl-. QraH court• champlon•hlpa (el~) .....,_,..,_ ......... JOM MtEnnle clef. Jofw'I Fo•ver. ~I. 6-J; llOKOO T-dltf. ONiy PUW>, W , W, J oflft S..I dllf. IWllo Et•P. M , 6-3; Jofw'I Allltlll dllf. Tlm Wlllll-, ... , , 7-4, ~ · ThePayroU !'savings Plan is one Of the euic:11.1afe8' wa)'9 lo get ltarted on ttw 111\.;ng habit. i!:\"CO jf savin& hat alvra,·s 1«meJ too di tr icult in pul te&M>nt. Versus Goodyear Custom Poly· • steel. Firestone 721 and Mtehehn ·. XWW based on a comparison of protections from manufacturers treadwear ratings under ihe new Govemment Untlorm Tire Ouahty Grading System A little is automalicaD\ taken out of each paycheck toward the pun:haae or U.S. Se,;ni• Bonds. )ou'll ~'U ml•• it. '°you'll oner spend it. ltju.t keep11 ~'in( for~ comin,C ..,nn,c. M May~• \\aml 'a1:atio11 dur\n( a cold winter. It'• a plan for all •uona. For all American11. Jf.. ~ -~~ ~nca. ,, I• tf Jiit~ l•I l•H rtl •II.HO 1'if; '"4!• '"'" I '> ''" '""' ,...,../, .,..,, 11 ,,,.,,..._,.!!to ,,,,tJ,I. l"fi:ltlf·t ltthtu ,_._,•·HJ .,,,..,.,,! Jf•f(' ''"" """"' w" I Witte ... at a price '• ....... tklrt .._tletlc• k«wllot""'9111 C•llf0tnl• 0 ._. JKU..Wllt. I ,._... korl,. Jec:llMllvllle, Gr-IHowttll, ~11uer). U 'U; 8row11 (OrHlll, 76.•; GrHn IN..,811, ••rrlo). IO:OS, Ir_,, (Newtori, O'IWel, ... SO. SIWlta -Ctlllornl• 7, Jecl\toflvlllo J1; Fovla -Ctllfornl• It, JKll\onvlll• It; S.v" -Ctllfonll• IM8Yorl 7, Jec:kMllvllle lllo\•111-1 J; Corner lll<ka -Ctllfot'Oli• 4. ,JKll-vlll• s, Ofhldes C.lltornl• 7, JKU..WllleO. Al~ e, ... NASl WUT•llN OIVISH* W l.OllOAIM ... • ' .. 21 17' " • • 2J 20 " ,, 77 1tJ11t .. • • 12 n u • eASTallN OIVlllOlll CoMloa Wulllngton _,,,..., Toronlo 11 4Jtltlll• • , 2' 21 22 .. 6 7 n 20 1t SS 4 10 It M It 4 IOUTHa11111 OIVlllOH All-• • • ,, n i. 1• Fl. L•-rdllle e • It U 16 ft JKUOMllle 1 0 20 21 11 • T ......... " •• 14 SJ 21 s:i Olk ... Tvlw MlllfltsOlo DAllH CllllTllAL OIVllH* 10 J Ill " u .. 7 6 D ll1'~ 7 6UUltSS 1 13 ' JS • ,. lllO•THWaJT OIVlllON Seattle • 1 u ,. 30 " v Afl<OllWf • , ?• " J:J 71 PortlAfld 7 6 JI 16 Jt '1 c.1 .. ,., s ' " n ,. .. Edmonton 4 I 17 11 U Jt Sia poltta •r• ••M-lot • revvl•llon or ovet11me victory. Four poinh lot • -.... •l<tory One bCW>lla point tor every -I Kor•d wllh • me•lmum Ill lhr• per o.,.... Ho bonua poln1 11 •worded f0< o••rtl-or aftOOIOlll-11 T-r'•Scwn Jo<k-lllo4.~0 All•nlo l , Porll•nd 1 T ........ ICO-.. Cosmos Al Fort LA-rdale T.,,.pe e.y 8t Loa A.nee~ Clll< 990 Al V OllCOllW r .,._._.,..,Gome Se•ttleet Tll4w Misc. Tueedey'• treneec:tlons la.UaULL ""-"-~ lf,t!JCAGO WHITE SOX -5'19Md 0.-y! Bosfon. outllelcler OAK LANO A'S Optioned Mllchell P09t, OVlll•lder, 10 TACOINI al lflO Pe(lllc C.0.SI Le•gvo. Recalled Merll Budesk•, ovlft.•-. lromTe<ome U.SltETeALL N.U..l ......... llA-let ... INOIANA PACERS -Tr-Dudley Bre<lley, ...,-d, -lvture '°"'lclere1i-lo IM P-'• Sun\ tor -.ond-r"OUNI dr<lll pie.kl In 1•1 Md 1"2. NEW JERSEY NETS -TrA<lecl Mike Hewlln, gverd, lo tM N•• Vor~ Knlckl lor M lk• Woocllo<>, guard. PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS -Tr-Mike Gale, ...,-d, lo IM Golden S .. te w .... riot\ tor --c1re11 pk u In 1"2.,... ltlS. HOCKEY ........... lief.._ IOSTON •RUINS -Signed Br .. ce Crowder, •Int. BUFFALO SABRES -Slon•d Jim Wiemer, loll •l"CI. -Dent.I H-. • leflM..._. MINNESOTA HORTH STARS -Tr-O•n Cllkolne, •Int, lo 1he Ouelle< .._,. QVH lor --1"'1on, •lflO. ... IEW YOllK 15'.ANOIERS -Named Jim O.ve11-..i1tant ...,.r., .....,_r, ..,._. llft Aug. I. SIQnedMellHAllln, I•" Wl"Cl, loO• mulllyfff'ConlrKI. WINNIPEG JETS -Signed Thomo1 Slffn, <.,,tor, lo e mulllyMr contrec:l SOCCE• .... -..u.s.u .. .._ LOS A"'GIELES AZTECS Signed Wllll•m Swrblitr, mldflol--defendor I Anl'llCNftttnwnt' l'1t Pool ~&11 l'IOh<fl L.o.t ••·-Pttaon•l.t.• So<-111 Clulll• T'8v .. • SEIVICES ~~•"'* Dtre<'forf EMrLOYMENT & NErAIATION :..--. ln>l/Wt;M Jo4tW411lH• ~lplhlll ... ,. •• MERCHANDISE Alll"llln """'',.._ Awttor1 t:U.':; MaL.tn••~ C.moru 6 f;qU1plJlt<nl C"'.-l. Oop l'ttelO Vo.. f\1rl\lt11 .. C1n&•Sal• llon8 -c-J .... 1,,, UVtilOO M=-> 1111 ··-111.-11-alttanl«I llllW<al '"'""_ ... ()11...., l'lim6 ~WI' Pou c=~~f:~ lipon•111G-Stan . Rn11wnn4 llu ~~·r.cho H••"'• Sl~" BOATS & MARINE EQUIPMENT 0•-·• 8o.at1.M11n' Ser-vt« ao.11 ......... &quip llolib. Po•Uf llo6U.Rofll Cll&nor eo.tt.Sell llMb.Sllpa Ootb llNIJ.!ipeed • Sll1 8oaU.Slor•1• THMSPOITATION Id IOOI um 1011 ·= llDI Ullll um 1Gl4 10.0 1°'4 10. 1050 IOIU ion ·-lrll lll'lt IOlll 10'4 1• 1• 1100 SIOO ~1311 )2i)O _, U.-.0 :ltOO ~IO "'°" 7005 iU1) 7100 IOOr. IDIO IOIS llll20 lllD -1111.U --IOOO -... --111n --a 1 IOD -MS! --.... --.... 111110 !QI "= -·-I07t .. - tilt '\JO !11.ll 1140 tut , .. tl'IO t\111 MOO •• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, June 10, 1981 The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 M edum income of Daily Pilot /amilies exceeds $34,000 a year. Your ad reaches the county's most a/fluent ooying au- dience. RHlbt• Ho.net For ScN HovMt For ScN HouusforScN ...•.•....•...........••.. , •.•••.•.•..•.•..•••••.••••...•••..•.......•.•••••...••.••.•.••..•..................•.............••..............•.•................•.........•.•.•..••..... • , ... ,.. I 00~ G1•,._. I OOZ ~••ral I 002 G ... r.. I 002 G........ 1 OOZ G..,r.. t 00? GeM..... I ................................................................................................................................................................ EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTU~ITY Publisher's HoHc.: All r eal estate ad· ver t1 sed 1n thi s newspaper is subject lo the Federal Fair Hous- ing Act of 1968 which makes 1l illegal lo ad- vertise "any preference. l1m1tat1on. or d1s- c rim1nalion based on rac·e. color. religion, sex. or national origin, or· a n intention to make any su ch preference, l1m1tation. or di ~ cnminal1on ·· DaleOOut Bay&Beach Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COME WITH US ••• TO MISA VHDL NEAR GOLF COURSE. UPGRAPED FOUR BEDROOM HOME .FAMILY ROOM WITH BEAMED CE ILING USED BR I CK FIREPLACE .D I NING ROOM WI T H FRENCH DOORS .. INCREDIBLE WINE ROOM .HUGE REAR YARD WJT H ROOM FOR POOL AND P UTTING GREEN .. $250,000. 1617 WISTCLIFF DR. M.L 631-7300 Model Homes for Sale This newspaper will not knowingly accept any ad"ert1s mg for real estate which is m nola- llon or the law. OPEHHOUSE Fri I 0.2, Sun I ·5 This Santa Ana lle1ghls 3 Bdrm 11:1 abi:IOlutely 1m· maculate' Park like back ~ a rd. nt:'" paint in and out. new c pts -Owner will help with ----------i fmancintc $125,000. ERRORS: Adv•rtisen should chKk ~ir ads dally and report •~ ron lrntnf'diatety. Th. DAILY PILOT CHtumet liability for ~ fint lncornct ins.rtion only. Ho111es for Sat. 20242 Orrhid Sl 546.-5605 DREAM PUFF Nice 3 br. 2 ba home w good subject lo loan al 9 1 J', Well priced. moll\ all'd seller All this for bt:'low S!I0.000 !HS 9-1!11 ~Walker I lae REAL F.STATE ..................... ·~·1----------1 G•neral 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DECORATOR CONDO SI 19,900 Winding gret>nbt'lts lead to bright single s tory condo Exqu1s1tely de coratcd with c•us tom wallpaper and cabinetry thruout f ormal d mmg room loo' O"ner '4111 c·ooperate w1lh hnam· 1ng Won't last at this pnt·e. so c•u ll now @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 114-631-6990 MEW CONDOS 13' z', 50', SOLD NEW 16SOSQ.FT 2 & 3 Bdrm CONDOS Ct'ment dr1\e . dbl ~ara ge w open ers, micros. trash com 's. air conditioning. walk ins, pool & Jacuzzi"s, 1 ~ block all s hopping & theaters. Nexl to park. WILSOHPARK COHDOMIHIUMS 380 W Wilson. C .M Open 10-5 631·50:'>5 WHA rs UHIQUE ABOUT UNIQUE PAHK LIKE: I n Haycrest. JO trees. 1:1pa •mil µool. 4 Bdrm. + fam1lv rm Dt•coralor perfect & good rlnanc·- in.i S275.00 $375.000 FANTASY, Ll\'I NG Prn ary. fireplaces. atrium. family rm. + 3 Bdrms. comm pool. spa and tennis this home has 1t a II for ~.000. \' A L U F: I N WEST<:LIF'f'' Cm;tom 4 Bdrm. master s uite, for mal din ing rm, lge p\'t yard A tcrrifit-buy al S250,000 WHY PAY MORE'' 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. fo1 mal dm· mg rm. ram1h rm. s un n} dec·k & l'reeks11le patio T err1f1c a l $142.500 -Ll\'E ON T HE ---------1 GREENBELT F:slate OCEANFRONT 2 Bdrm s. 2 ba. unfurn New. $850 yrly. IAYFROHT 3 Bdrm. I ba. unfum. Mint cond S850yrly. CHAHHa FRONT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unlum . S750 yrly. associated 8ll<1wfP<, llfALTORS ' 1 / .,,,. 6 •' t l•J ,, 1 16 Ii 1 like atmosphe 1e. & rllihome com enience. <.:o mm t e nnis. pool. bicyc le palhs 3 lovely Bdrms. 21 v ba All this for $139.SOO EXCITING CITlllOME 3 Bdrms. den. 2' J ba. looks oul on quiet l(reenbt'll $169.500. THAT'S WHAT'S UHIQUEABOUT -------1 U,_.l()Ut t1()Ml:S DUPLEX 3 bdrm, 2 bath each uniL l•-•R•e•a•lt•o•rs•"•67•5•.s•ooo--•I Fireplace. built·ins. Ex- ceUeot rental area. Near beach & bay. S285,000. Telling lhe most people 642·2253eves. PoSSible 1s important to associated BPrl., f w• Jlf I\ "ORS ' • ....... fl ' ~ ' . ' • ,.., the su cces~ of any gllra&e sale Makt! s ure yo urs 1s listed 10 C l assified. pho n e ~~~~~~~~I 64z.s61s CE 110111 ILlllS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE LUXURY COHDO Co n v e n i e n' t L o c a t ion . T w o Bedrooms, Two Baths. Plush Car· pets. Plantation Shutters. Skylights. Top Security. Lock Up & Leave When You Wish. Large Assumable 10 ~% First Trust Deed. Only $269,000. llG CAHYOM CUSTOM IUM.T HOMI Overlooking 18th Fairway. Epitome or Understated Elegance. Jn The 1'"'amlly Wing There Are Four Large Bedrooms , Each With A Bath: Mas ter Has A Fireplace, Two Large Walk·ln Closets, French Doors Openine To A Brick Terrace. Formal Dining, Gourmet Kitchen, Bonus Room Wlth Bath, Plus Maid's Quarters. Call For Appoint· menL $2,200,000. NEWPORT HGHTS D e luxe townhouse duplex. 3 bdrm family. 2'• bath eac·h unit frplrs. all hu11l 1n:.. dec:ks & patios Park like landsc·a111ng SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE $295.000: Balboa Bay Prop. Realtors •675-7060• THIHl<IHG TOWHHOME7 Call tht:' 1>1)t'C1al1sls at the condom1n1um in formalwn t:(lnle1 TOUl'h,:,lOnl' Rl•J ll \ !163-~ . SECLUDED EASTSIDE SUPER DUPER lleaul 1ful. 1mmac:ulatt'. nl eely lan<.hn q a•tl I bdrm huml' on c·ul Ill· sac· Spacious ruorns. \ 1ew of golf l'OUI M• £I Ulll proper!}' Owm•1 will help with fmam·111g On ly Sl39.500 Call nu\\ !179 5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS Bedun•d' Huge 4 Bdrm ---------• plus pool. Wate rfall und SAVE $25,000 bonus room lwrt:' too: 4 That'!> lhr amount the king sized txlrmi:I. hui.:e prke has l>t:en 1 edun·ll country k1tl·hen Finan!" o n th1~ larl(l' <·us tom ing 1:. great Large as built h omt• in B;i~ l'l l'i:ll I sumablt• l!>l TD •rnd bdrm!. rm m.il dining owner "'II h<•Iµ wllh rm. ram1l~ 1m hug" rest Don't \\a1t Call gam e rm & 11eH1I '\11" 631 6990 5425.000 ' @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714·631 -699-0 C REATIVE F'INAN CING 131 J', Lease op· lion poss1b1hl~ \'er) finest ne\\ CONDO buy m Harbor area 2 & 3 BDRM 3 HA 1650sq rt lncompJrable amenil .. s in area We ha\'I.' Owne r ln\'estors who will lease with oplion to purchase to well qualified Buyers. Don't miss c·hance for futu1e d1sl·ou n t ownership WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS 380W W1lson.C.: M Open 10-5 631 5(6.S INCREDIBLE If you want the best buy 1n Harbor a1ea & ha\e qualifications or ~ash problems SHA ZAM We ha\e a rinanc1al partner to assist you. WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS 380\\' W1lson.C M Open 10-5 631 5055 A D1v1.,1on or Harbor rnvei.lmenl C.:o HARBOR RIDGE A "ar d w1 nn 1ni: "Jodelle" eslJtt' home Isl resale offering on lhlS exquis1ll'I) a p)>o•nl ed t o wnhome '41lh massl\ <' 'it•w or ha). O<'ean. eoasthnt> & night 11 g h I s . 0 ff e rl' cl u t $885.000. 1!i.: .. ltlll\" ,\: l!:11 .. i!: l'. '.!I 111 ,, R1nq fJ·l(1 '>'>bn Anyt•me E .1-.tbluft Prof Bld<1 WATERFRONT CONDOS HUNT INGTON llHUH Purchase with 5', clo" n on fantast1t· term!>. Brand new. <'1>t 'd & draped ON T ll E WATEH Guarded ~att> entr). Views. 2 <·a1 g.ir Pool and tt•nna!. 2 & 3 sn ·s ,\\'All. l~L\IED F'ro m $299,000 CALL 714 5.56 0000 Rf SIOfNftAl AF.Al fSIAll SERVICES A. HOP, SKIP AHi> A JUMP TO THI WA1IRI This "woodsy" cottage could win a personality contest with its used brick, hardwood floor s, french windows, cozy fireplace & irres istable redwood hot tub. $399,000 by appointment. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 J Hours. 1 pm to Spm. From $173,000. Laguna Niguel Realty: 496-4040. Homeowner assessment available at sates ott1ce Prices effective tor date ol thls publication JJ»mJarlr ®. © Cimarron Court Laguna Niguel. CA 92677 (714) 830-5050 EAST SIDE Bargains G.ilrn·,·1 Wt• haH' lh<• ni.:ht urH' 1111 you All !'111.l':.. pools too Grl'al lmam·111g, l 'all r111 more dt"ta11~ @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714·631·6990 PEMMIMSULA Fixer Onl) steµ::. to thl' !>Ul I 1:- thti:I bargain f1xl•1 B1111g l'aint l11w.ht·~ & -.hml•I.. &. l·ash in on ~l ;ill nm\ @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 ·6990 -OM~ IHt..LTORS $50,000 ino\t'!. you 1nlu I'll' ::.ll)llOU~ SpyglJ::.:> l hll h) fut tht• l>e:.I \a Im• on tht· hill Anx1ou::. 11wnt•1 "Jnl!> tt i:.olrl this ""'l'I'' lk Jut1lul how.t• 111 l!ll'Ul :-h:.ipt• with µ.IOI and sp:.i D.M. Marshall 640.9990 760.0835 Owner D•sperate E\t•1· home .iH1 & pool Assumahle f1nJnc·1ng $205.000 675-1771 I I >/•°lo -800/o LOAH • HARIOtt VIEW HOMES * Sensationally decorated Carmel Model in move in condition ! Featuring 3 Bdrms immaculate yard & FEE land. Priced to sell at $262,000. For private showing call 795-1501 or 752-7373 . ~ Walker &Lee Real Estate LINDA ISLE CORNER--4.0VR Y! A residence of grand proportioft °" pnstHJlous Linda Isle. Enter thru lush CJGrdens over brick wclc way & dip pool/spa to total el~. Two story home with wlndiftCJ oak stairway, 1t1try fountain. Formal lhlng room with spoclous faMlly roont lndldncJ large ..nren bar. Formot dWftg mL + ~ met kitchen. Luxurious _.... wutt. + 4 CJY"f bedrooms. Lelf"P _.._, pcrtfo plus boot dock & 511p for 3 boots. SI ,395,000. 631-1400. PANORAMIC VU--OWNER AN! leautlful decor Ir coordinated throughout 10 you Cmt ftlDYe rfght in. '--9• rOCHM Included In this VU ho.- with 3 bH. fQlft. ""' cln. ""' + bimord """ separate •-o: prfvat. spa. docb Ir balcony. OWMlR WILL CARRY. $975.000. 63I·1400. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL ESTATE s.1,.. Rtnlol Proiwtty M6nqnwn1 ~ 2436 W Coesl Hwy 31!. Manne Av• NC'Wl)Ori Beo1eti &!boa Island '31°1400 67Uf00 NEW BUSINESSMEN Contect the DAILY PtLOT for Information regerdlttg th• countj reqealrementa for uaift9 1 FlctlttoU• 8ultn••• Neme. ... -----~ WESLEY N TAYLOR CO. REALTORS .... 111• t ' 1H4u 2-STORY DUPLEX~ llACH snrs TO HACH-OWNER AHAHCI Call today lo see this fine duplex. Live in one unit & rent the other. 4 Bdrms & 2 baths in upper ; 2 bedrms & 1 bath in lower. Fireplace in each. Some view of ocean owe 1st T.D. & note of $247 .ooo . int. only No loan fee. $299,500. WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., REALTORS I 2 I I I San Joac,M Hiiis Rood f NEWPORT CEHnR, HI 644-49 I 0 ' OCEAHFROMT Duplex 3 Br 2 Bu upper with sundec•k + 2 Br 2 Ha lo"er \\llh prt\UI<' pal111 th:ek Both l·om pletl•ly tumished 4 l'31 M:.tld Ml' Tak ~ o\er $.-125,000 loan 1ndud 1ng 12 11 '. tf1:1.ed1 fut JO Yl'ars Al>km~ !!..">!15.000 JACOBS REALTY 67§.6670 FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL "l' II hdp ) ou ... ur pll "<· Dall h) shoWIOI! him lh1s l'U1\ 3 br. 2 ha fml\ homt· He·11 lo' t· tht• huge mslr br & bl fl s tunt· 11 pk Spa "'tll l'Ompll'll' lhe rc•stt\ 1l1es 545 ~!II ~Walker 8 lae I! E .\L ESTATF: STOP HERE! T hi'> s uper n1t't:' 2 bl'll 1 o<1m 2 bath l'undo 1" JUi:ll 111:ht Im a ) oung rnupll' 1:1lartmi: out \II lhl• amenit1e::. an· ht·n· La rge lo" tnll'l esl loan J' .i il;i blc and selll'I "111 l·a1 n a 2nd P1ll't•<l 11ght JI SI00,000. Balboa Island RHy 673-8700 I CAMEO SHORES Ouu.tundml( ocean v1$ home on fee land lJ bed1 ooms, fam1I} rooif. fo 1 mal d1nanl( room 5 ba l h . go1 gf'OU!'J poc-' Lat i.:e lot 1n p1 est1~111i~ J 1t•a S72a.000 DUPLEX COROHADB. MAR Ont.' or lhe ft:'W duple b w a pool D es1ra e strt't:'l w h1 1nc·o t·omfort 3 Bdrm own s UOll $320.000 For an Ad In WamH1's Wortd Can Sue 642-5678, Ext. 330 The Long Vest! The wtSt·1Kket has top pnonty IOI now and the months to come Casual. comfortable. shmm1n11 Crochet Ion& -.est '" 1ny easy open 111ttein stitch or synthetic worsted wttll contrast boulers Pattein 1363 d11ections fol sutS 38-40, 42·" 1n,luded $1.00 lor exh pa!tfln Add ~t tK~ 111ttem for post• and h1ndhn1. Std te: Niall'lllll N .. dlecr8ft Dept. 105 Deity Ptklt .. IU, Ol4 CW.. Sia., ... ,... If IOIU. Plitlt ..... .._ Zip, Plttb "•MMr. Catch Oii to tht etalt boom' Stnd for our NEW 1981 NCEOlECRAn CATALOG 0wer 172 desllfts. 3 Ir• patterns lnStdt. Sl.00 M.l CUfT IOOll. .suo .. ....... cai:s ..i,,. ................. ,,... ,. Oiikl. ...... Qllltl llU ......... ~ Uft:t.:-. ··--~ N SIMIJl..5& 1=·~-, ...... lit-~*~.Qlltl m.,.. .... llu..dllt .. --117-llll Art ti II le afnt llU ;1 W.W 112·""9-- 111-C.. .. " ..... c.w 11•11 ... .. .......... .._ 111.-... ....... ••• b ,,.... ... , ..... ......... __ Wrap It Up! 9093··1 i,,, 1TT ""'; .... llf c...~r WRAP UP 1 l"lt slur! - c~ fronl or bKk wrap st)'lt- to 111m with blaztr JIChtS.~ you1 beit tops No hl11n& Ptob ltms-walk 1n and button to 111 Printed P1tttrn 9093 M~ W11s1 Sitts 24. ZS 26~. 21 10 J2 Sue 26 'l elCll ta~ I 1ti raids ~ •lldl flbrte s.su ...... ...... Mil* .... ,..._._,. ---~s..-· llllAllM ...,,. '•"•"' o.,il w •• Deity Not u, .............. . lMll. Mlt ~ ZIP, Sitt .i mu. N£W SPlllNC.SUMMER 1981 PATICllN CAIAlOC b11ncs"'llu fOllrrtc SAVINCS .. i Wttk. motley With Mt 100 , usy pettwM Pt11t he n ct1111M <U V .... ) ~ I 11.L*Y-..!UM ,,.. ...... ... ISU..-..... .... m.-..... ...,. .. , ............... .. loN lllCI Clll't ,_, .11 ....... I - f. • • r .. r e . \ Orange COut DAILY PILOT /W•dnetday, June 10, 1981 LIMDA ISLE Wide chunnel view from spectacular architectural designed 4 bdrm, S bath, pool home. Slip for 2 large boats. $1,495,000. Summer Occupancy. LIDO ISLI HOMIS Featured oo Homes Toun this lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm, s bath home1 newly redecorated. Priced to sell qulcKly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 putio~. Ream ' cejllngs . Great for ~ntertainlng . t $420,000. Best price fol' the money PENINSULA 'OINT llACHFRONT Panoramic boy & or~un view at wedge. from prlml' hH'tlt' lot. 4 l)drm. 3 bath custom horbt'. 3700 sq. rt . feutur· ing marine room l.~\g5.000 NEWPORT CRIST CONDO 2 bdrm, den. • puclous Plan 8. im- ' maculale. LO\\ prired at $215.000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.ll t~uy\od• llr••• "4 I\ r-.,", tdbl REALTORS 67S.HI t NEWPORT SHORES: Great 3 ~ 2 bet hoiM, Opt'ft MOfft C ...... MIY OCHH to ocHn beach, clubhouM wfth TIMMIS & pool Just SIJS,000 tMh. COLE OF NEWPORT l(JALTORS 2515 l. Coost~Hwy .. CoroM dtl Mor 615-5511 CUTE ST ARTER Pictun Perfect Professionally landscaped front & rear \'ery prl\ ate enlC'rtam mg pauo and pool urca-3 o,·ers1ied bt-drooms and H111•1'9folet ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ...._gto. leach I 040 l"IH I 044Mtwport1Mca. I OH Mtwport leoclt I O't Mew,.rt IMlt I OH ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -J.u1 9-o,. Yo"' mom The neatest, sweetest 2 bdrm, no steps home with lots of light & air. Super neighbors. lge frplc, newtsh kitchen olus a real back· ya.rd with lawn & trees. Smart 2 bdrm unit with sun· deck . builtins, peek-view, all on artistic Goldenrod at the foot bridge. $335,000. Oh ye1, H-..y Ded'1 0., HO DH. $1400/Mo Nu quallfytnc. luse with ophon to share equity New 2 Bdrm 2 story hou1e. Allstate Rllra 848•31 li SIDRMHOME plua formal dlnlr\M rm 211 bit, fitmlly rm. 16' p11tio A·l RV t'Ofl('ret• pitd, bk y1d. Owner financing Only 1169,000. 962·S.OO Roy M Iller lrvlM 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MODEi. PERFECT Gor1eous Univ. Pork townhome. 2 Ur 2 Ba +hideaway Ion. centr. ulr. hrdwd flOOl"ll, COY· effl.I patio All the extras + aa1umable flnanclng. Hurry ! ~--; I.,· I If I , I " I ; ' '. 1 , 1 ' ( 11 Ii I HOltTHWOOD H4UTY IUILDB,tOIStGHat A mu&t see BAYFROJ'iT a r eal potential ror h11h re· tum! Lease-opt on dur- ln& plan approval and ll ve on the waterfront ror the sum.mer. Only $550,000. lncludes land. 642-5200 A PETE BARRETI REALTY .. ~... ~owna de/ vlla4 ~~673-8494 *•POOL, SPA Jmmac ulatP 3 Bdrm I~~~~~~~~~ home on quiet cul de sac in Northwoods. Plush carpets and cu.atom draperles.lhruout. Huge patio, with aoothln& spa Many extras plus. low This 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda Isle. A private guarded Community in the heart of Newj)Ort Beach. Boat slips for (3) 55'·70' Yachts. For Sale or Trade. JOS !-c .. t Hwy •• C.... .. Mw Sl.S,OOODN View Condo In Vlllu Balboa Assume Loans $137 ,500. Rae Rodgen; 631-1266. Agt. ~- Laree 4 Bdrm 3 Ba ex ecutlve home In ex elusive .cabled develop-ment or Woodbridge OoraeouK patio. pool, ,pa, walk to tennis dub. All amenities. C:all for »howlng Asking rail.900 interest assumable loan. l•--------$167,000 We are developers so submit land or other Real Estate to owner Jim Thompson. Coplatranoleoch 1011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WALK TO llACH PoU1odtthDle1 Woodsld1n11 1n11fdc ou1 Vuul1ed beamed t•l.'lling11 in llke ntiw condlllon mus I set>' Hl•tlun•tl Sl0.000 lo SlW.llOO ~ •• R llB RaAL •• EB1Ai8 , .. , ........ 4j .. 41111 l<WU Co,.•chlM• IOU ••••••••••••••••••••••• UOOkat 12'1i0 o FIMAMCIMG CDMCOTIAGE PLUSIMCOME ur :i Uorm 2ba home with 1~olated mslr bdrm parent rel• eat or 111 luw qrtrs bd rm cot lage Any wuy you describe 1t , it's charm mg, up lo dale a nd beautifully decuruted Priced ul $280.000 with \'t>ry SJ>t.'C•al (inancmg CALL FOR DETAILS 644-7211 /JD.NIGEL ElAlLEY & ASSOCIATES MISAVMDI ASSUMAILI Nice 3 Bdrm 2 biilh home New mor. our 1rhtK1h1 un<l 1ho~lli Aak Ina 11211 .DOQ io'or 10 rurmllllon. rail :Mio 1151 , • ,. HERITAGE . . RE.Al TO RS :.t U1 rnnclo I Montlt'l'llu 1 11 .~0tl Wt•hh ltll} 4U:M1701 I \\bodhrldge Re11tu 551-3000 4t2' arnnn Pkw),lrvlnt' *•ESTATES St.te this beautiful Wood hrtdl(l' Estates Jefferson tnoclel, 2 Br + den. end don o s en r•··' It 111.., 17Tll AT PROSPECT TUSTlN, 731 3111 fl Town ~Counlry OrAL~ unit. all umemtiei. In WOODIRIDGE quiet locution acrosi. 3 Bdrm Danbury Md l, f1orn pool & park As upgraded thruout Good II) Owm•1 T"o :l lltlt Ill sum11ble fmancmR Call ass u m able Io a n hmlNt't' on I IOI $130,000 f 0 r Ii h 0 wing 0 n l Y $163.500 AllhUnlllhll1 II'. h;t TI) s173.0<>0 552-1800 OW<: 2ntl 640 740.1 (g] - SAVI YOUR MOHEYI \\bodR b:ldge ~~~!~~ ..... !?~~ 3 111·1•111 C'OlldOll. ll'Y \l'l'Y el •u THE SHAKES low tlown !Wllers will 551·3000 Weat h ered cedar hl'lp rtnance P11cetl lo ft2tBarrann Pkw),l,..ln«' shakes. that ls Cuswm mu\ e rust Call MW ror -designed 3 bdnn, fam details.. 7S2·6411':1 THINKING rm. 2 baths. Extensive 1T7 TOWHHOMEJ use of wood glass & Plan L1( Realty I Call the specialists at ceramic tile. Beam ceil· - -the t·ondom101um 1n mg. frplc. $16S,OOO. It's Pool Time I formation renter Mission Realty and I've got one for you! Touchstone llt'alty <714>494-0731. It's m College Purk Ha~ 963-0867 HIDlf>.A-WAY a great pool with slide. Charm ing Laguna Cot· co\'ered patio. lush land * *BEST BUY tage-remodeled, on lge scaping Brano new buildable lot. In the love· carpets. paint and wall in Collt>ge Park 3 Bdrm ly North End 494.4751 or paper No qualifying + den, Syrac•usc mdl 497.4844 bkrBrenda731·9Z78 Lrg family kitchen. MESA VERDE Beaut spacious o!Br + den tn-le\'el home at Z720 Gannet Or. $190,000 Agl 979.5009 stt>ps to comm. pool and park Priced to sell at lhou!>and:. undl'I market Make us an of fer. H A R B 0 R HIGHLAHDS New on market Customized 3 Bdrm and deo, 21 u bat.ti home with S car garage! Separate 17141121-1210 12131 Stl-1363 · 11001 Jl2-J710 building In low mam ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tenanre rear yard. :! Large li ving rwm with ------------------open reeling shaded front decks with swing to watch the world go by $185,000 642-5200 j PETE J BARRETI ·.. REALTY OCEAMRtOMT $450,000 This hrst time offering 1s an estale sale One or Newport Beach ·s finest views 3 bdrms home with guest apt or 2 units. Realonomics 675-6700 WHITEWATER VIEW oo· to beach, 10', assum loan. May lake note on your prop. as duwn. 4 BR 2 Ba, recently upgraded. w •possible tn·law qtri; Under $290,000 inc·lth land Move fa st' 752 6499 Plan N Realty NEWPORT CREST Terrific Plan I. * *BAYFRONT * * LINDA ISLE-NEWPORT BEACH Nolhing Down & Assume Our Position On This Prestigious llBdrm. 56a. JSlip Home In Newport Beach Most Desirable Area We Are Looking For A High Income Owner Who Needs A Tax Wnte,Ofr f·ur The Best Deal On 'I'he Bay. We Are Owners. Not l:lrokcri. l'all Oarleol' <71411123-1280 tD1rect or Collecll Office Open !1·5 Mon F'n. SEA VIEW Best buy & \'1C'w on tht' llill 760.8"30 Agt Cute 2br. Iba Hou:.c w barh apt on 33rd St I' i bl ks to beul'h. SI 75M w $30M t.lown. Assume m~ loan No problem qua hr) mg Call Owner 549·3722 BA YFRONT BEAUTY XLHTTERMS A\'AILABLE Shi , Jha. family rm. priced below market at S165.000 1641 Orchard Dr Santa Ana Hgt!> Open Sun l 5 Qr may he shown anytime by appl WIEDEMANS c ll 1 751 ·4293 C honninCJ Bluffs Dcl1gh1ful Bluffs 2 ht>droom H plan with '1c" on tht> Cauda I greenbelt near pool and putlmg green F'lex1ble hnanrmg. $230,000. 3 Btlrm 1 Ba Westside cu11e Quiet trt't' linetl sl reel Assume low m terest loan with low tlown paymenl Full price Sl00.000. -.. D.M. Marshal R"r 3 baths Lar~e k1t ,·hen OCEAN VIEW TERMS-TERMS ..• Sl5K down S1.160 'Mo. SUPER 4br. nr S .C.:. Plaza Lease option possible Owner t\GT $123.900. 675·2345 ~ H,\NLH HI 1\ l 1 Y ~)~ 1 /000 BY OWN ER. Arch Beach Heights Lo\.t!ly 2 sty. 3 BR. 2 Ba. 2 car ,::ar. hot hut and many amenities. $239,500 213·926 6719 Tr Plex 565,000 Down Great terms. Panoramit· Ocean View Wa lk to bea('h S295.000 Prtn c1pa ls only. 499-1526, 2 bedroom. 2 bath with ass1.1mable S79K lst TO Priced for quir k sale $165,000. 12% flnanclncj Newport's exrlus1\e Peninsula Point Newly constructed 4 Bdrm 4 ba resid ence with P''l boat dock Sl.650,000 mrlud mg lhl' land or Sl.295.000 leasehold Own c1 Builder Dan Ribb 675 2311 D.M. Marshal R"r 644-9990 76~0835 ramtlv room t•ombu Spacious 4 Br Harbor Owne"r will f1nanct' View Hom e with lrg S369.500 bonus rm, newly 1e D.M. Monhol Rltr modeled & prof decorat • 644-9990 760.0835 POOL HOME 644.9990 ed m warm earthtones Large 3 Bonn 3 Ba 2·sty 760-0ll5 Besl location. Beaut. .)Vllh family room yard wllhnewp,·tpool. Located near CX:C and 1---------1 spa. & gazebo Too good walkin.i distance to Bolboo Island 1006 to be true at $419,900 i>arks and shopping ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pr in . only. Patrick Owner will help finance Tenore. 631-1266 F'uJl price Sl79.000 DESIGNER PERFECT Llttle Island $10,000 DOWN . owner financmie 4 BR 13·• ba. near Baker and Fair view, 594.900. Dev m & Co 642 6368 MESA VERDE Executivt> home, 3 br. 2 ba. 1 story home on quiet A rare blend of charm and elegance with every con' en1ence and out· stand1n i: apporntmenls in this comer 3 bdrm ho m e 1 bdrm ren tal+maid's qrtrs 5637,000 ---------cul·de-sac st. I lge bdrm ~ 759-1111 TURTI.EROCK $166,500 Beautiful new 2 Bdrm + den condo. 21 ~ ba. dble gar. private pallo. Take subject to lge exist lsl TO al 131 2"t annua I inl rate. 759-1616 WATER CORNER Sip& View Woods. warmlh and selecti\'e decor m good taste Mo\'e in today and enjoy ummer on the bay with your boat at your door. 2stry 4 bdrm, balcony and pn\'&Cy, leaded glass. awning and all amenities 11,200.000 fee. - Wl\TI IU IU>NT HOMI ., Inc. REAL ESTATE 87M900 WANTED Retired business exec .. long time l..tcensed bkr de\'eloper wants lo buy could be con\'erted to make 4th bdrm Room for RV access or pool Bkr. 963-81.82. 1n1 0 or buy o ut . ----------1 established med. sized & act1\e R.E ofc in NewPort Beach Corona del Mar area Send replies to Ad No 929, Daily Pilot, PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92627 Investors Duplex on best street. pool. hl income. Owner $320 ,000 640.4999 COM DUPLEX Prime location. Top in- 10% ASSUMABLE $35,000 ON. Eastside. owner w1U help finance 3 Bdrm 2 bath. spa .. Only $127. 900. 645-9161 . OPEN HOUSE R~ Al r Y / come. Xlnt financing. l~~~~~~~~~t WHAT A DEAL! I ~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~ __ 644_·4026_n_60-_0_l40_Agt..:. ALL OFFERS HEARD· Spacious 3 bedroom. 2', bath condo. Enter lainers special with formal dining room. and super kitchen Looks just like a model mside ! Prime location. S\34,750, TARBELL REAL TORS. 979-2390 '=~=· e@~'1lA-"~trs· -----...... Irr Cl.A\' a. POUAN •......... .....,. ol.... ----._ ........t.W WOtd• be- low to •-four .-c>i. -dt I t 11' l r El " r I I COPHE I 1' · r I I I . t .... .... ~_R_E_L_C_K-1 ;1 11uat bought• mini compact Ii I' I I .. by mall. Talk about NI)'. All I . • . . nffded wu a 1mall down pay-.. 1 _l_E_V_N_O_S_-.1 men'. and a .. 1t-lddruMd I I' I' I I o c-i--.. chi.die .-.1 • • • by ltll'"f In tt.. .......,.. word '--................... ~~__. "°" ... '°" ''°"'.., No. 3 below. • PllNT NUMtUfO I' _. lt lTflS IN SOUAlfS . 6 UNSC:IAMllf ltTTEIS I 'Ot ANSWU rrrrrr1·1 I I I I I I I I SCUM-LITS AMwen ht Cloutflc:offotl 1010 1111( & llNlf EUROPEAN LANGUAGES C S Y P L 0 Z 8 Gfl A N G U A G E Sl l P s A(J A E P O R y ElA A P J A W M C X N £ A S E Z 0 A S L W M I 0 K F D D O E L £ A , 6 H R 8 I M L K E l I L A R R R T U T A J A T P D W E E H I A E RFRTAMRNALURRMUSWST £ M R 0 R H I l I T L G I M £ 0 C V H R M I [ M A I E C S E S U R A A N l A VOGRNAIHCEHOIETVRSL TV,LMCNEURROYASRWOA H C A I I D H I I I C S l £ 0 £ l D A U O T N 0 S Y K A Jt 0 A R 0 D A U A T S A H N E 0 H 8 0 H N 8 T l £ T J R N tRCIRANAANOS St~SOE~ I E D S E l T H G C L H l £ ) R W l S POTEKTIA.L PLUS So. of hwy. 3 BR l:\• ba home. Room for 2nd un it. Reduced to $235,000. Stephen Myer. 76().8S20 Costa Meso I 024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWHER FfH4HCED Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath home , beautiful wallpapers thruout. Cul de sac alreet. Owner will carry AITD for 1 yean at 13.5'!t interest. For an apPolnlmenl to see, call 540.11.Sl , : • HERITAGE . . REALTORS $9500 TOTAL ON. & CLOSING COSTS $1214 total Moflthly POJ"Mftts New spacious 3 Br home In prime parkslde loc. ScottHolMHCo. The Equily Sharing Speclalilll 531-0771 Mesa Verde 3 Br. SSSOO down le take over pay- ment.a; 645-3369. ----MEW LISTINC. D•o PoW I 026 Sharp lrg 3 8d wtbonua •••••U•••••••••••••••• rooma. pool, apa. A/C, LOVELY FAM 1 LY t more. Only $129,900 ' ROME w /ltrm1 . Patric k Sptawlln1 ranch · 4Br Tenore. 631-J.288. 2ba, l1e pool al:r.e yard. Owner will carry. '1,6$,000 L.,_o Vlloge R.1 4'7-1761 IYOWMll 10".l ••turnable loan. 2 br, l ba, f'rl)lc, remod. k.lt. • bath, 2 car gar .• l&e lot Drive by 11:1n Krepp Drlve. Open House Sun. U,.f •1.000. 1183-7186 II WOODBRIDGE '*Cote Realty & Investment 640-5777 OCEAN FRONT Oupl('x & Tn Plex Xlnt lo< p p 673 7677. 673 7873 LANDING i--c·u·s-TOM--l-STY--1·--~~~-__ _!!I_ PETERS· PL.AM 5 3br. 180' Whitewater NEWPORT ISLAHD PARTY IN HARBOR VIEW GOLFCOURSE HPTBACKBAY Colrcourse \ 1ew from this spacious 3 Bdrm home Extra wide 85' frontaRe that chara<· terlZl'S ftOl' nl'.t;hborhoods Som(· lul'ky buyer can ha' l' lhts heaut) for JUSt Sl90.000 and 13', fmant• ing available with onl~ 20'. down. 751·3191 Here il is · Loads of View' Entertainer's S385,000 -0WC charm Delightfully de Dream! Open House $190,000ot 100/o Smashing family room w ith wet bar Un belle' ably beautiful en lertamer's pallo 5 Bdrm Sommerset on fee land Absolutely imma<·ulate mo' e in cond1t1on C r eat1 \'e f1nanr1ng corated & landsl'ape<l Sunday 12·5PM 1524 S35\J,OOO. 12'•" assuma Caribbean. Laguna Fee s1mple,3bdr.den.2 ble. 8 Swirii,;er Owner Beach ba. patio deck, JO x 95 551·1534 UHi REAL ESTATE ~~~-~~~A:,~lory. By appt FOR SALE J.M. PETERS WOOOBRIDGE 17141ISS-tI00 i---------Duplexes. oct>anfront. beautiful ocean \'iew. ailla~ED CARPET 754-1202 C:. '-,{I { ( T -t""' ~H()PI I~ 11{ <, LANDI HG Last avail. Plan l . For information call 551-8058 LOCJWIO MicJ-1 I 052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Perfect locatwn. New cond 1t1on Agl 673-7300 ------Son Clemente I 076 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BAY CREST BEAUTY. 5 --------i--------Br. Family Rm S200.000 UDO WALKTO assumable lsL Owner A Wery Of Life GOLF COURSE may carry $100.000 2nd \'our dream will come AND BEACH 1 year. $435,000. Call 1rue in ttus s pat:ious. 3 Jbr. home m fantastu· BEAUTIFUL VILLA Hedda Marosi Agent bdrm home on a extra lol'iltton . t'reatt\l' PACIFICA 646.,1044_. T_o_see_&_se.!_!' wide lot. Large game financ1ni.: a\ all Just A SMART START Owning your own home still makes more sense than renting. Start with lhis well kept 1 bdrm. I ba. Plan A. The Lakes. Northwood. Assumuble loan $103.900. Located in the adult ··--------•I room . a Ir e ad} 5137.500. comm unity or V 111 a 1• furnished. This home is pa c I r I ca. thi s 2 UPPER BAY perfect for family li ving ....... bedroom. 2 bath home West of Irvine A\'e .. 4 & entertaining. Call •• RC II S enjoys use or the com· Bdrm 3 bath home, large-now! FE.AL munlty clubhouse and covered patio. choice •• ES w pool. Amenities include corner loL $213,000. .........!::!'I: a formal dinina room. Roy McC_., Rttr Redh ill C-~.p lk,1lt} I I ; • ; ; : :1 II I air conditiomng, and ll S4t-7729 koi pond. $145 ,500. ~~~~~~~~!!I 498·1040 493-0202 495-1720 l~~~~~~~~-~I SM Juan THE BWFFS Co-'strono I 078 Lingo • .. h ..... 1044 ------...................... . DI[ I SIU.ER WILL HEL, FfHANCI. A sought after Darby in Wood brid_ge. 3 BR, master bedroom with witting area, wood floors in entry and fam rm, s hutters and much more. Assumable loan plus owner will place large assumable second. This is priced to sell and won 't last at $176,000. Mary Welsh 551·8700 (L76) WOOOIRIDGE P ARIC Lovely 3 Brs family home tastefulb' decorated in earth tones. Living rm w/fplc, formal dining rm, lg kitchen/family rm & wet bar. Spacious mstr suite w/ro11,1an tub. $163,900 Lorraine Rennie 752·1'14 (L77) UMIVIRSITY P4Rll Highly upgraded 2 BR & den, 2~ bath University Park Peter& townbome, w/private spa. Good loan available to new qualified buyer at favorable rate. $189,000. Sandie Fix 644·6200 (L78) COMPLETE r REMODEL WATlltROHT ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br,3ba.famrm.formal CONDO $50.000 Down. Greut dining rm, gourmet Boat slip for 45' boat terms. 'it At;RE oc·ean garden kitchen! Lge as· Beautiful condo on the \'iews Secluded 4 Br sum n nancing al good bay . 2 bdrm & den. S349 ,900 Broket old rales! S2J.5,000. Call Owner will cury or _49_9· 15~-· _ _Ow_n_er_< 7_1_4_)7_6()._9_339_ trade. $650K. Santo Ana 1080 MANY OPTIONS FISH FROM YOUR DOCK. Redh ii IC-~ f\L',1hy I,~-:; ~: :1 II l ••••••••••••••••••••••• ASSUMAILE LOAH Large 5 Br+ Canalfronl 1~~~~~~~~~ home. Comm. pool. ten· 1: HO QUAIJJYIHG Freshly painted. sharp 4 Bdrm 2 bath, large yard. new driveway. Brick fireplace, 5 years new. Owner anxious. Move in co ndition. Asking $129,900. For an appoint· 11!.enl to see. call ~l J.Sl nls. across from beach. Enjoy the s unset. No qualifying, low lnteresl. low payments. $34.000 moves you In. $269,000. Call Barbara 675-7611 or Iv msg at 760-7199 . WANTED Retired b1Miness exec .. long time licensed bkr /developer wanta to buy Into or buy out. established med. sized & active R.E . or e In Newport Beach I Corona del Mar area . Send repflea to. Ad No. 929. Dally Pilot, PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa CA. 92627 • ERSAILLES 2Br. ocn view. low dwn, no quallfylna . $129K. 730.2270 ore. 642·2682 home. Going Into Business? DISTRESS SALE lniine Terr. lovely re· modeled 3 Br w pool + sauna on ree land was appraised ror 1439.000. Sacrifice for $379,900 w 1146.000 dwn. Patrick Tenore. 631-J.266. · f. HERITAGE . . REALTORS Mewport hoc• I 069 ---------······ ................. . O'IM HOUSI SAT. OHLY l·S SOI Av_.. Lala....., ... .,.... ..... BLUFFS Green Belt location shows off thls warm 3 BR and · convertible den home. Fireplace, spacious dlning room, and some appliances tncluded. Private cul·de·sac near Corona deJ Mar High School. $199,000 Joyce Edlund 642·8235 (L79) I I Orange Coast DAILY PfLOT,wednt•day, June 10, 1981 • • Cash in on 7 or 11 ..... _ ... , ........ wngtorOr•" .. eo.trectw.ttteen.: There are two ways to win with a Dally Piiot High Roller Ad Run 7 days for $7.77 11 days for $11 .11-3 lln s Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Daily Pilat Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate. ..._..,_W.. Qht'l•lllJst .. • ....... U ........ d .._...U•fwwf•d Condo......._ •••••••••••••••••••••• Otltff R911 l:IW. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••~••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Unfunihhed 3425 ·~........... ... ·-· u.tw.. .,. ....... ........... U ......... lhtd ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• .. •••••••••••••••••· Sc.ta AM I 010 •• •• ••• • ••••••••••••••• lltal lst• Cott• MIM 1224 Mew port t.ach 1269 • ••• • • •• •••••••••• •• •• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dlllll9x•s/ w .. tec1 2900 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Irvine 2br. 2~abu rondo. •••••••••••••••• ••• •••• Cotta M"9 Jl24 .._..tt-ltoch i140 Gt..tral 3802 ····~··•••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••Large 1 Br. ·Upper. 2 br. l~ ba condo, nr So. Onftt S. 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COMDOllEAUTY SPYGLASS LEASE Attached ur View. Coast Plaza. a/c, patio. •,•••••••••••••••••••••• Builder wants land. 3 bdrms, 2~t baths. 3 Bd, ronnal dining, lam Golf, tennis, swimgting. 24 hr sec. bldg, $86,900. . NIAil THI SAND W /plans. Tenns or joint Highly u~raded. Pool & rm, lrg ykrd, 2 lrplcs, Avail. SBO(). 76G-8708 Assum. $53,190 w . • l•lboa'en.O..-.x venl.499-4820. tennis. Kids ok. Lease $1600/mo. Bob & Dovie u .37%. Cons. small 2nd Seconds to the water. $775. Agt, 613-5354. Koop. Agt. 631-1.266 TD. Owner,894-2592. Excellent 3 BR owner's'll91ttah "home·like" unit & 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oth.r lHl lstah BR, 2 ba, rental unit. HouHs Fwnilh9d ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ideal for home & in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• MoblleHo.Mt c~me. Close to Newport Mewportlffch 3169 For Saa. I I 00 pier and shops. S289.9SO. •••••••••uu•••••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••••• ••• W•sley M. Taylor Co. LIDO ISLE Realtors 644-4910 Exec home on quiet end Coat a Mesa 1 Br t rlr home w /cabana. 15x30. Eastslde 2 Br .. garage, 3 Br. 2~v Ba. Condo. fucd yard. Avail. now. Ocean view. $725 /mo. S495 I mo. Kids OK . Ask for Ron. 752-5111. 645·8369 NICE2BDRM Small child OK 675-1771 SANTIAGO Dll. $650 HUMTIMGTOH ICH BRAND MEW Prestigious HARBOR VISTA Condo. L ge lbdrm $525/Mo. all amenities. (213)550-5285 days -<2 13>592 -1647 eves /wknds or (714 )848·24& APTMTS FOR REHT Enclsd garage. 1375. H.B., N.B .. Costa Mesa Mesa del Mar area Call Somethlng for Everyone 751-9005, Iv message. Bach. to 4 Br. Unfurn. Apls. Certain locations 2 Br. l Ba. New carpet, offer : Pool , spa. lndry fac. No pets. fireplace, laun. room, $385/mo. 271 16th. Pl. b e a m e d c e i l i n g s , 644-0452 garages. all bullt·ins. ---- Garden & Townhouse Rat h with loft. refrige. design. NO FEE. stove, pool. $375. 283 TSLMGMT. 642·1603 Avo(•ado.645·6404 lalboa llland 1806 Large 2 Br. 1 Ba. Adults. ''" AUUl l ~~ LIVIN11 • I 6 l 811 ,allO Apls t 01sl'l1U$1\tfS 6 890 S • Poot ' AK Room • G11 Ot" l 1nO$CIO•flQ • J09 to Bue~ ' Sl'IOO$ S G SEA E NVIAONME Nl ,.,.,, 1. t-tAM11 l11~ •i 11 M. ·1· /IJ Adults, xlnt $6900, · 673-3826 Income Pf'Ol*fy 2000 of Lido. Club priv- t e n n is I boat · l 'Bdrm Condo, nr So. ing/beaches. 4br. 3ba. Coast Plaza. $4501mo. Beautirul house avail now in elegant area. 4 Br. 3 Ba. Dining Rm, Living Rm. & Family Rm. New wallpaper, cozy kitchen & many many xtras. Children & pets OK. 759·8974. VILLA IALBOA Bay view Condo. Bdrm, 2 Ba. Security Big. $850 mo. Wk da Judy al 557-7382. wk ends Dave675-9489 ••••••••••••••••••••••• no dogs. $425/mo. $150 --------- ESTATE SALE 1966 Majestic located in Laguna Beach Park. near ocean. Week days 759.4175 Trailer w /added room. 1 br, furnished, immac. Adult park. Principals onJy . $9000. 645-3070 SO'xlO' Expando. 2 br. lge yard, many xlras, $18.000. W. Newport Park, ~.B . 673·0365. 645-8474 ---·---·----- LAGUNA CUFFS double wide mobile home, 180degree view of beach and ocean. beal·h access, mus t see to believe. Sl~.000. < 714 I 877-0226 Mr. Alden ••••••••••••••••••••••• APPLI VALLEY Near new 4-Plex, 2 bdrm, 2 bath each unit with fireplace, enclosed palio. double garage. $165.000. Bill Grundy, Rltr, 675-6161. MAKE AM OFFER! 5 Income Properties Eastside Costa Mesa. 20'i; down. Owner will carry. Priced to sell! • 714 /641 ·0763 lge patio. $700/wk or 631-1400 Agt . $2000 /Mo. 645-8063 -------Huntlntfolt hoc:h 1240 Houses U"*-"'lsh.d • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMMAC. 3 br. 2 ba, fam. G I 3202 rm. cov'd patio, frplc, eMra bltns, dshwshr. close to •• ••••• •••••••••••••••• bch.. schools & shops. 4 br, 21 ~ ba. a /c, lge yd, Gardener. $725. 963-8600 workshop, gar. $700/mo. 840·8180lve msg. EXEC 3Br+den. 2 ba, MacArthur Village. gai.1 ed e n trance 1 BI!. pool /tennis . $435 . 646·4380 fam rm. dining rm. con· versation pit. Great area nr shops & sc hls . 963·5191 Capistrano le-och 3218 LU.X front 1 Br Pierpoin~, ••••••••••••••••••••••• nr beach. Auto gar. poo. 3br, 2ba. house pooltjac, spa, tennis, laund. patio. immed . avail. call frplc.S4851mo.962·5409 K a re n 4 9 4 · 9 2 1 4 ; Irvine 32441 <2131592·4467 ask for ••••••••••••••••••••••• _B_e_tl_Y _______ Woodbridge lease. Built BIG CANYON LEASE 3 Bdr 3 Ba, formal din· ing, pool, hot tub, vu. very sharp. $20001mo. Bob & Dovie Koop. Agt. 631-1266 THE BLUFFS 3 Bdrm <.'Ondo w/view. Remodeled. like new with gourmet kitchen. 1 yr. lease. $1000 /mo 760·9678. . Nwpl Shore 4 br. 3 ba. canalfront. nwly decor. pool. tennis, 2 blks ocean $1.100. 962-6683. New 1 Br 'Adult Condo Near So. C. Plaza. Pool & carport. $425 •mo. 955·2669. Large 1 Br. D/W, W tD, deposit. Patio. garage, upstairs, $500 w /dis· Im.try fac. 2009 Maple St. count. 675-9378 548·5861. ---- Balboa Peninsula 3807 2 BR. new paint. lge yard. ••••••••••••••••••••••• encl gar. <.:ruld OK. $435 1 br. newly painted, new mo. Ask for Bill. 631· 1266 crpt . yrly only. Must see. Mgr. 404 E. Balboa Blvd, 111. 646·9131 I BR . new cpts. drps, paint. wallpaper. lots or wood. $385 mo. Ask for THE WH9FfU Tlll Luxury Adult units at af· fordable living. 1,2 & 3 Br. Well decorated. Olympic size pool. light· ed tennis court. J acuzzi. park like landscapinJ Most beautiful bldg. In H.B. From $395. 846·06Ul Very large 2 Br. 2' :.1 Ba. Corono ......... M-3821 Eastside Costa Mesa. llll'C'I -• Near new, beaut. decor .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _Bill. 63!·1_2li6 ________ DELA WARE PIMES (rpJc. w/d hookups, 3br,2ba.bright,cheerful. Lg2Br.11 28aValencia.l patio. garage. pool. spa upper dplx. built-ins, child OK. no pets S450. included. $750 mo storage. avail 7 l. $750. Sierra Mg ml Co . 640·6ll0 641 1324 642·1603 Days. 642 153 1 · Eves. 2 b r . 1 b a. gar a Pt. s p Ac I OU S 2 BDRM Townhouse Range /refrige. Adults, ADULT. open beam ceil- UnfurniWd 3525 no pets. 9>001~0. Years ings. sen '. bar. lots or ••••••••••••••••••••••• lse. 612' 2 Jasmine. Open wood. New crpt.s. 2260 b 2b 2s ·i daily 1·5. Ma pie St. S410 mo. 2 r. a . ty. ava1 . now . _ --- $495 'Mo. Bachelor unit. $3251 mo. 548·7!56· .?'7~·880_3. _ .. _ 631·6995 No pets. Walk to beach. ArTS. Sparious 1 & 2 Br. Apt. Frplc. pool & indry rac From $450. Adults only. no pets. 19221 Delawart' St. Hunt. Sch. 842·8807 2 IEDROOM CONDO Near Hntg Harbor. $500. Avail. now. Agent Diana. 846-1371.840-4027 Eve -------2925 College Ave Costa Mesa. CA Lovely Luxurious home <not a tract) 1600 sq fl Never rented. Washer. dryer. micro. refrig. 3Br, 26a Particular for choice people. S750. 493-0467 by Peters . Three bedrooms. two baths. Single story home in Woodbridge . SlOOO month. Owner can give three year lease. Includes refrigerator. washer. dryer and recreation facilities. Joan Birdsall, Agent, 640·8927 or 631-7300. OMTHEWATER Great view of boats & bay. Brick fpk. family 673·782'7 room. Available immecl. Duplexes Unfum 3600 for 9months. Only $995 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bach apt. lge mo<lem. mo. Beach 2 blocks. 2bdrm, R · 1 25 THE REALESTATERS 1'2ba, gar, patio. H.B. cozy. esp g1r over . ____ 67J..8550_ _ $475.Nopets.645_1682. Non s mkr, must in· 2 Br. Adults only. no pets. $425 . 755 W. 18th. St. 646·9507 MARINERS WAUC 2 Br. 2 Ba. Townhouse Apt. From $496. Patioa. single car garage. neur Hunt. Harbour. 840-6807. •EXCITING• 0 c E ~~~ 0 MT Best Buy In Town Beautiful 4 Br. 2 Ba. Gold West 24x60, 2Br. Upstairs: 3 Br. 2 Ba. 2Ba w family rm. in downstairs. Fireplaces, Lag. Hills nicest 5 star garage, laundry room. k 21 t rr Xlnl loc. p . yrs + o qua 1 y. TSL INVSTMT 642-1603 $.19.000. M• port l•ach FOUR.ft.EX 20x52 2 , lBa front kit, BY OWNER ·v r , nat wood in· Xl ""-· terio . o have new ex· nt .. mancmg ! $310,000 terior plied by seller. 675.0073, (7l4)34S-4123 $27,500. CLASSIC COSTA MESA. MOllLE HOME NOW REMODELING Corona del Mar 3222 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Bdrm, bonus rm w/pool tble. lg bkyard w /pool $1400 per mo. 631·4888. Ask for Greg WALKTOIEACH 2 Bdrm, 1 ba. $675 mo. very priv .. Nr. shops & trans. 644-7441 Lovely 2Br 2Ba single Cam ily house. ceramic entry. Master Br w 1flr to ceiling mirror wall. French shutters, Overlooks lovely patio & fem grotto garden·. Dbl gar. auto opener. pool, THEILUFFS 4 bdrms. 2 baths. super clean. Yearly lease. $950. mo. Agt ,673-5354 . Bluffs condo, 3 Br 212 811. prime backbay view, lrg patio. upgraded. $1300. 64-4-0350 4bdrm. 2 "2 ba exec Newport Crest condo. M a n y f a.c i 11 t i e s . $950/mo. 631·0460. ___ __ _ . _ . ten iew. AJI util pd $325 mo. 644-5319 ava117 l 81 Apartmetlh fumls8'.d •••••••••••••••••••••••Costa Mesa 3824 2 Br. 1 Ba. Completely re· no\'ated, enclsd garage. laundry fac. Walk lo shopping. $150 security. S400 renl. l970 Wallace. 646-0341or545·6155. Balboa PtMlsula 3707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spacious 3Br $4.25. •--------BACHELOR 2 Br $375. Pool & carport Oceanfront Balboa __ 548-~ __ Quiel area. l adult. no MlWLY DECOR. pets. S395 including utils 1 Br. gas pd. encl gar 673-6372 --------d /washer. pool. Adults 1 Br. r urn. Carpets. 642-5073. drapes. stove. refrige. l lrTo'Wft."louse Utils pd. Utensils for 4. BAY TIMBERS SPACIOUSl ER Lge patio, walk ·in c loset. OW. frplc . garage. Pool & laundry fac. 399 W. Bay St. 646·9883 2Br. 2Ba Warner & Spr. ingdale. Gar. upstairs 1 child ok, no pets. $450. Sie'rra Mgmt Co. 641· 1324 Huntington HarbOw 3142 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Owners Unit 3 Br. 11 1 Ba Gar. patio. fireplace S580 1Mo. 893-6103. ---- nine 3144 SA.LES 3 · 2 bdrm & 4 · 1 bdrm all 2706 Harbor, Ste 206-A 1 story. Lot size 100X200. Lge 3 Br, 3 ba. stove. jac. tennis. 644-9121 ~ !W • frsl~. pvt pa;;o. Condo 3 bdrm, l314 ba. $375/mo. 675-0680. Newly decor. gas pd., ---------••••••••••••••••••••• •• Harbor Ridge beautiful 3 encl gar .. pool, dswhr Lrg 2 Br l Ba. great E. Bachelor condo. S375 mo. Br. 2 Ba. Condo in pre· Costa Mna 3724 Adults. 642-5073. side location. S47511no Refrig. incl. A\'ail. im med. 641·200.1. A 937 Steal this at $275,000. ~~~5~4~""~5~~~~I Days 642·1334 ; eves ower p x. 962.1 5• kids/petso.k. Avail now. 631-1456 Nu paint. drapes & d /w. stigious community, •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• 1 l N t c II 2 Ir. I la~ yr y se. o pe s. 11 landscaped with main· SUSC ... SIT ... S "" LI d 6756670 --------· -= 851·9889. '77 KEY WEST. 24x64. 2 br, 2 ba, serv. rm., 4 ton Air cond .. 6x3 shed, fall colors. s.52.500. 770.5299 or768·8346 Lots ol tile/marble. Old CdM. So of hwy. New 3Br 2ba, frplc. pat.lo, 2 car gar. $950. 675-1018 631·7~. R M "" "" Newly decor. as pd. oy · · -Orangetree Condo l br·. 1 tenance. enl o. to Furn. 1 br. apt.. $325 & -----Mo at $1500 Avail now E I Ad Jts encl gar .. pool. dshwr. 1 Br apt. Single person ha. A1C..:, end unit. pool, 2on a lot, San Bernadino. Assume 9'n'h VA loan. Full price, $75.000. Loan balance approx. 144.000. Owner will carry aome RENTALS 2 Br. 2 ba. 3br.2ba. . · · · up. nc . gar. u . no Ad I ., • ., cnn3 Call 760-8607. pets. 21l0 Newport Bl. u ts . ....., • ...,, · _ only. New cpts. Quiet re· tennis, adults only. Na 548·4968btwn8&5PM Beautiful Townhouse. s1d . area. No pets. pets. $400mo.675-1434. $525. 2 Br. l ':i Ba. $350 mo. S150 sec. Npt L-• 1--1. 1141 $725 1850 1 Br Versailles condo. HVHM 2 bdrm & den. New cpt, paint, huge yard . $950/mo incl gardener. Agt. 631·1400 3br. 2 ba 4 br. 2"2 ba. Furn Sl.2.SO adults, no pets, sec. S900 bldg, covered parking Newly decor. 1 Br. Dplx. Hts 642 5939 -~· - S Q . Fireplace. Savage Wilde __ :.. _·___ _ • •• • •••• ••••••••••••••• Cetnete~Loh/ paper. 951-6001 Cryph I SOO T . I C M "' . to b h $5 7 5 /mo. 7 s 2 · 7 12 2 . 586·0608 Fred. ep by gar. u1et. Emplyd adult over 35, no & Co. 675·6606· Utilities pd. t bedroom 2bdrm, lba. ocean \'iew, pets. $350. 548-1021 2B ts d blLn $250 mo, quiet. adults s.550 Incl util. ••••••••••••••• ••••••. • rip ex . . L. m1 c , 2 cemetery lots. 3·two br, 3 car gar. Westminster Memorial $159,500. Agt 675·5200. Costa Mesa 322~ r. crp . rps. s, 644.6958 645·2317. BIG CANYON ADULT DCllMI ;toW 3726 gar. adults only. no pets. CONDO. Plush 2 Br 2ba. ••••••--••••••••••••••• Victoria 1Canyon area A/C, frplc, encl prk'g, Lrg Studi1,,-small refrlg $430/mo. 631·6812 afl E~~~id~ Spacious 2 Br. 2 Mew port IHch 316,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Park. Good section - worth $760 each. asking $1000 for both. 714 / 642·9136 eves. * 1% DOWN MEW 281 W /FttPLC Built-ins. Aaults. no pets. 642-~. $25/mo. pool. or $950 t mo . w /hot plate. Partly rum· 5pm Ba. Garden Apts .. pool, •••••••••••:••••··~··•• ent lsd garage. Adults. Oceanfront for. Winter no pets. Water & gas Rentals. Furnished & paid. S.StO. 645.5780. unfurn. Broker. 675-4912 .• Or Less! Toke O•er Paymet!h 6 Units. 1 year ne)V. Top Santa Ana area. Sli0.000 below appraisal. As· sume loans or get own financing . A real sacriClce. Beautiful Exec home nr So Cst Plaza. pool w /jacuzzi. pool service, gardener 5bd 3ba 3 car, garg $2000 mo 556-1737 aft 4pm orwkends. 644-7722 857·2026 shr gar. ~"" 13 util. 1, block to coast hwy & en Panoramic ocn \'U, lg trance to Dana Harbor. MOVING forces sale of Westminster Memorial Park Cemetary Plot. Present value $770 will sac. $500 call collect (714 )727-ro.9 pool w fdiving bd, 4 BR . 496-5434. Co11unercld Property 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IDEAL RETAIL SPACE Plaza Newport. 1000 Bristol St. N .. Ste. 20. at Jamboree. 1078 sq ft $1.20 sq rt. Beautifully decorated. W to W carpet. lmmed. oc- cupancy. 833-3998; 759·9288 ALSO * 10% DOWN BrealcEven Small retail center. Garden Grove. $249.000. Seller financed. Adja- cent lot also avaJlable for expansion. Be Creative! AGENTS:B-7733 FIRST TIME &MVESTORS 3 ldrm28a F Ip, D /W, Yd, Bit-ins. Adlts. No Pets. 642-0835. $1675 per mo. 3 Br. 1 ba, lg enc yd. s.585 lease. 376 E. 18th St. (in rear) Drive by then call 673-0884 2 Br. w /stove & refrige, enclsd garage. Adults. no pets. $475. 773 W. Wilson. 631-4889. Turtlerock-spac. 2 br & den, adults. $800 mo. Agt, 759·1616 Carol. Orangetree 2 Br 1 bacon· do. Adults only. Submit on pets. A tC. comm ten- nis & pool. On the lake. $595, 644-7211 ask for Mary. Woodbridge 3 br condo. wrap·a round yard. avail. June 18, S675tmo. Golden Properties. 752·1589. ~-~~~----,- W 00 DB RJ DG E. Great 4 2"2 ba. 2 fplc's, vy plush new decor. AdJts, w /xlnt refs. $1650/mo. Ytly lse. 1492-6264 E. Blufr 2 stry vu, 3bdrm, 3ba, lrg. rec rm w /2nd frplc. Everything new. even appliances . $1350/mo w1grdnr. 2939 Catalpa. 644·1450. IRVIME TERRACE CUSTOM 3br.3ba. pool, many extras! Lease/ Lease Opt.ion. $1500 Mo. 645-2816, 955-1980 Nice 3br home in Harbor View $900/Mo. Huntlngtoft le-och 3740 • •••••••••••••••••••••• H.1.•s FINEST Spanish Estate Living! Beautiful park·like sur· roundings. Terraced pool. Sunken gas bbq, sparkling fountains . Spacious room s . Separate dining area. Walk -in c losets . homelike kitchen & cabinets. Walk to Hunt· ington Center. 1 Bedroom-furn. $440 2 Bedroom-furn, s.510 Adults, no pets. Utilities Free! MerilteA ... CorMr with heavy root traffic. Has retail store and two apartments. 1550,000 Cee. 3 Bdrm. D.R .• single family. only $12,SOOdwn. owe. Offered al 185.900. 64G-8355 MESA VERDE. lmmac. Bdrm 3 bath. Yrly xtra lg fam rm, bar for 195otmo. LA QUINTA HERMOSA entertaining. 3Br 2Ba. Waterfront Homes Inc. Newport Shores. walk to 16211 Parkside Ln. 1 blk 540·3666 D'W, elect gar opener. 631-1400askforDan beach, 3bdrm, 2ba. W.olBeach,3blksS.of Whelan gardener incl. xlnt loc. Loguna leach 3248 frplc, dbl gar. $750fmo. Edinger. WATt .Ht HONT lsl /last tdep. Lease $825. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·4996 or673-5187. 847-5441 ttOMI.~ lac. 642-9436 aft. 5:30 L ood •· 1 3 b REAL ESTATE Real r.-.._.._ arge w ... g ass r , _________ Newport lffch 3769 ..,,.._ ~-.cw..-3 Br. 2 Ba. Taft Way. 2i..1 ba, family rm, 2 car Exceptionally nice ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------~1 F l g l d ga.rage, oce-an /canyon BAYSIDE CONDO. 2 Decorator furnished ~~~~~~~~~~!--trial/ h ~~ k '. ug:~~ ~a~ ~~ Svi~w. No pets. 11025 /mo. Bdrm & view. $1950/mo. Townhouses. S895 Co•do1111Ri111HjTow1to 'roperty •2100 children. $700 /Mo. t erra Mgmt. <.:o . EASTBLUFF. Nice 700.9117 laoutet for .. 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avail. July lSl. Sierra 641-1324, eves & wknds 3Bdrm 2ba at $1400/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• LAGoUHAllACH Mgmt.Co.&41·1324. _4_94_·_04_1_7_· ______ cWaterCrontHomes lnc. Mtwporthoch Canyon industrial bld,g OCEANVIEW 631·1400 Ch . g 2b 2b CON near town & art festival 2 Br. 1 ba duplex, rrplc. Newly upgraded 3 br. I~~~~~~~~~ 00af:.1!'st pJce I~ "Th; froUfldS. 9600sq. lt. fully laundry, kida ok: Avail. bonus rm, retreat off 2 Bdrm, Newport Beach, Bluff' area. Low in-~ased.Grouannualln· 6 /15. 682 Joann St. masterbr.storagerm."2 stepstobeach.165btmo. terest-assum loan-low corne $S4,000. 548•0438• b a . S 8 5 0 I m o . 675.1771 down. Owner Prin Only. Realonomtcs 875·6700 4 Br + home. Quiet cul· (2131924·9'21 --------- ( 7 1 4 ) 5 2) . 1 3 9 0 Nearly new 10 Unit In· 'de-sac. $1200 mo. Sec. ON THE BEACH Mobile EXEC. 4 Bdrm+ family eves 1700.3675 dugtrial Bk!& lo Co$ta deposit. Ava i I. 7 / l , Home $1000 mo. home. Pool & spa. 3 car ~ Men 1S 000 ..,., ft 2$1# 979-2940. ~-_16 gar. ~sq ft. Gardener XH ·. ' .., • --incl. lmmac. Avail 8/16. .ah I 10 down. Owner will carry •••••••••••••••••••••. bl TD at l3'k interest 2br, renced yard. patio, ~ Mlptf 3Z52 $2500 lease. Agt. 640.5357 ANAH!!IM ror a 1ean. Phil Sullivan cpt/drapes, no kids. pet ••••••••••••••••••••••• S. J Realtor 548-2103. OK $425 $46-7506 I "e 4br home in new de-c.~.--3271 (2) •·Plt'xea .,. t M '" ...._ OwnerFloanced •--for•...._ 22-38r, lBa.lencedyrd.aar. ve opment. odern •••••n•••••••••••••••• _,. -vv ,_ kltch e rr includlna Lo1/il0own ••••••••••••••••••••••• oil alley. $750/mo. oae microwave " bar·b · 3 br, 2 ba, no pelt, pool Lowlntereat BY OWNSR-\.' .. acre 6"·6530 q u e 1 ra 0 g e . R • c prlv. 1600. Awall 7·1. $285,t>OOeach. level, ocean/panoramic E:/Slde modern 2 Br. l racUiliea avaU. No pets. 586-3734 aft. 5. PattyllJohnlonRlty view tot. S129,000 Ba. patlo It yard. aar. IBOOtmo. Avail J~ lst, s.t.AM 3280 7Ml911-8610 (714)•118o5531 Pet ·OK. Nlce. '550/Mo. $40-83~-~~ys, ·9784 •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• ---------utllll1•••mlt~•• o...ft, 152·2282 day1. &42·5281 eves /w '""'· 12 mo. lelM optiOn, Im· COSTA..-SA l...rt 2400 Eve1. 3000 aq (t, 4 Br. Nlauel mtd. avtil,. i Br 2 Ba, ~ •••••• •••••••••••••••u aolt courte S1BOO Agt Fairview /Edin1er area. .. LAKE ARROWHEAD We1t1tde2br, l ba, frplc, Val 499.a 497.4844 ' Xlnt cond. ram rm on 21r, I Beaut dM home on reh , no pets, S650. ' ' · cul·d•·tac st. 1110,000. Eact• aldfo Laqe Ctnced MHd01t' Beb:/pvt Ith 548-tUOart. epm. 1 .. -......._'-"'-'-~267 '750/mo. SS1·278S aft rear 1a~. Low main· 6 L It 1 r ,..._ •..,... • IPM lf'ft&Mt, wen kept front a e N . p • W'P. I M M I 0 0 c ••. •••••••••••••••••••• ---· ------- )' Hd tar1e cemut • 2 f 2 ' O O O ' • ~ t • • HOME P'OR RENT drtveway. new ext.rior <11•>•17•9251: m .noe CUP.ANCY s Bdna. 1175. Senced U.._ l1Md J421 peint, ~ roof, 'OwMr net. 3 &\'. I BL ~. 2 car yard 6 prate. Kidt .... ••••••••••••• .. ••••• t111al\clllc. ....... 1ara1•. trptc. W ID peg ••lcomt. »iooo. Recreational Newport Sl4UOO •••• •• ZIOO "~~~~up. :~ld bl~~r· Act .• nor... COlldO, Walt\nldle~ (7l01Ctl• ............. -....... t!.!110• >' • Y Mt rt.._. Jlit to bu ch. Pool. apa, ~ •B r •••r Newpor& fi'LMGMT "2-1803 ... ~ ................ •bd•un•, -~ Todrm.dta<. '1•11 '-!!!f!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!I 8 a c It b a 1 '' • r rm. -· <l • ;; !.HO!t00/100,00I &o: SICLL ld1e ....,_ wtlb a s...tb19lrC!llftdo, l&•lbr, _M0-_807_7 ______ __ UOUMY hnin• or ODndo. D•llp Pflol a ... med N ~1 Jool. bale. llllO. ..... Ad. 121J)Ml .... THE "GOOD LIFE" 'VfAR-*>UNO PUN: Social ActlVltl•• DI· ...e10f • Fr" Sunday Brunch • 880'1 • PertlM • Plue l'1'0r• QMAT MCMATfON1 Tennie• F,.. leseont (pro l pro •hop) • 2 HMl\tl Clube •Sauna • Hydrom1111ge • Swimming • Golf OrMno Rang• MAU'TffUL Al'Ta: StnglH, 1 & 2 Bed· room• • Fl.lr11l1h1d • UnM'nllhld. ~ l..Mno • No P•t• • Modal• Ope11 Delly o toe Oekwood ca.deft~ta NewportlMOhN. AO '"''"' (•I 111111 (7t4} 845-t 104 "'""°" ...... . '700 '"" SI (()o ..... , I~) (714) '41·1113 2 BR. 2 IA. & I Bl-I BA. Pool. crpts. drps Adults. No pets. Agent 731-Gm, 548-~74 2 Br. 1 Ba. $395. Pool. Adults. no pets. Avail. immed. Savage Wilde & Co. 642·4470. STUNNING. lg. 2 & 3 BR. 2 ba garden apt Pool. $415 & $445. 710 w 18th 2 BR twnhouse. Li\'ing Rm .. Dining area . kitchen. frplc, gas & water. attached garage. pool, jacuzzi, laundry fac. on property. Adults. no pets. Avail. immed. S.SOO + S275 security. 631·4984 . • 2Br. 1 Ba. Near So. C. Plaza. S.A. Luxury Con· St. • do. w pool. Child OK. EASTSIDE Ce-darWood 2 Br. 1 Ba. Adults. no pets . $4 S 0 I M o . 3 2 9 University Dr. Mgrs. Eves 548-0648. SS25. 833·8974. Deluxe lBdrm S385 Mo New, a\·ail. dishwshr, gar.-patio. 759· 1914 494.2962 NO FEE! Apt. & Cond~ rentals. Villa Rentals. · 675·4912 Broker tPARK NEWPORT COUMTRYCLUI LfVIMG Singles. 1&2 bedroom apts & townhouses. From $.510 644·1900 OCEAMFROH'T 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, dbl gar, new carpet. yearly $1250 /mo. JACOIS REALTY 67S-6670 EAST BLUFF 2 Br. 21 t Eastside 2 Br .. garage. Ba. Enclsd garage. $675. 9UIETLIVIMG fncd yard. A\'ail. now. Call640-5296or540-7~ l Br. Apt. avail. now. ' S4 9 5 Mo. Kids 0 K •--------- Cathedral ceilin~s. P!" 645·8369. Winter Rental '630/Mo. 3 balcony or ·patio, dis· --------Br. 2 Ba. Upper Unit. 929 hwasher, frplc. pool & Large 3 Br. 2 Ba. New W . Balboa Blvd . spa . Lndry & bbq . ca rpel. frplc. patio & 673-3987. Adults over 25. No pets. yard. enclsd garage.•--------- 5460 & up. Mesa Pines. Adults only. A\'ail. 7-1. Lge 2br. 2ba, 1 blk to bch. 2650 Harla, 549-2447 S575 /mo. 548-1936 avail 7 /1/81S6SO/Mo.230 ------Cedar 645-6596 2 Br. 1 Ba. Near Baker & 1---------mle8liBJIU Harbor. garage. walk to S• Cle......_ 3176 shops. No pets. Max l· ••••••••••··~··•••••••• APARTMENTS c hild . S425. Sierra 2 BR. 2 BA. CONDO. On Beautiful la ndscaped Mgmt. 641-1324. golf course. SSOO. garden apts. Patios or --------·-492-6700 de~ks. Pool & Spa. ~eat 2 Br. with garage. Adults, Sotlth L 1,,, paid, covered patkang. newly decor. carpets. ••••••••~•••••••••• Adults,nopet.s. drapes. bit-Ins. fncd . . 2BR. 2BA. $490 yard w /patio, water Br. Condo. Ocean view. 398 W. Wilson, 631-5583 paid. Call 1·5. 638·4120. pool. ssociir.l-6700 28R.1BA. $48$ ~/~~~nge Ave. "<.:". l&J--Mllloa 2250Vanguard,540-9626 2619 sant1l Ana "H''. Westside 2 Br. 1 Ba. $43$/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Duplex, kitchen & IMSTAHTIMI S E A WI M D' dinette, refrige. enclsd 2 Br. 1'11 Ba. Townhouse • ILLAGE' garage. Upstairs & Easlslde. 1 child OK. • quiet. No pets. $390. Yard, lndry rm. Great New lti bdnn lu.110 170.5629or548·5"2 loc. "SOMo. adult apll In 14 p(Ua E.Slde 2 Br, l Ba, priv TSL MGMT. 642·1603 from 144(), 2 bdnnl 1500 + PoOl•. te , yard, @ncl gai;-, ttew cpt, IASTSIDI ..ns watertana. poodst pool , UOO /mc>. N"' 2 Br.l Ba. Pool. 1ndry ror cooldn1 6: he I ldds /Pets. M-nager In rm, 1 child OK. MOO Mo. paid. From San Apt "B" 24$3 Oraogo. TSL MGMT. 642·16<>3 Frwy ctrlvc Nort Call D•Yt J.D. Property Beach to McFa-.i Mamt. '151·2787. • llwtlltt• ...... 3840 then Weal on McF•ddlb l BR, 1 ba w !lidt". A\11. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~;u~tt\.~t&.~ Vill•I!· lmmed. Adult.I, no pell 2 aR, 1\.t ba. Avail. J~o 1-----~.-.;.;~ SJ2$. 673-2113 12. M'15 • ..... 982-2$1$ .................. ..... Newer 2 BR, with car•••· La1un.a 8eacl Motor adults. no Pf(.I. M2' mo. Deluxe poolalde xU'• M$ No. Parill~ MS·lm1e lar1e 2br, 2ba, bl\na, Hw1 Laiuaa dawhr. Ht miles bt•ch. oaui, Week11, Kiit Adil.I, no ptU. MSG "'" •V•Jlal>le. Low ._. W.UU. ./ ral•.4'WIM. AOoin ID 119 hiiiM. CEP prtr. i mi ,...... ~-. n101mo. 1$7·1HI. •·lSU I ' I . r , e • ....... rT' """~...,,,._,.,.... • ..,,,....,.,.,._ .......... w ... ••'""""""°',.. n !'Iii~~. -~;w.·•v • • • • • '"" • •= • • • a •'* v -. Rvvm hse S27S. Rrnukhurst & VMurla, l'M Workin& mal\!il un cll'I 30 ~l l.262 Room lloord 4050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• N1•w1xnt l.Wut•h. tWl 11100 l'lu•h ufflcllll. :w>o 0000 1q S1•11·inl ull tlw S l'<lll~l rt, 1801 Nl•wport Ulvtl, \' M 6411114~ M Ult It'll Ollll lillVl'lllh Gimhin 0 111"" K~ !JAIJJ , inlt'I HI In 111>l complt•x Mature ISyrold Al1·11111( 1t:l\J'<' 11trl1•e. 641.1 1274t•\'t!li.S1u:l'ltkc. Ju...,uncse boy 11r1·k11 1111·--------• J1h11 11 11 11 1u , <•olh•l'. !H:AU1'Y SlJOr <oJi 11111'1'11\'tl .. :n14ll11h by Iii ah ti I Ill . h II tu ti sa ll () IUlltol'. ln<'I St'C'INul'lul tlonal 1 w 1adj<Jlnln11 2br, 11\1( w chlltJa l•O II hout r Ii\ l'\l, 1111 lll't11lll1UPI S:l2~ 21J", r11111lly t111rn•• Xlnl ~11 m1• 1q11•, ln <h·t-1111 r11ut1• flOlll 41 )IH'\IUI 11.'iT llll.,1 ' " ' \ ll'\\ llll(h 111e.1, In llunl N1 lw111'11 ~1 I" 111th 111 Mmm'I. 1111• :I'• 111111um lkh who spenk r-;n.ih11h I •• I I' 111 ,. ~ (' u ('Ir I,. w AJIRFRONT lt11rn A 11•11 ln\ i'lillllt'lll run wol'k or Vil\ board & ll1•.:1i.tn .. \:ill llt.Uil fo: 111, 4. u 1 I, .. s u I 11, 111 PP Allt• & illnt•n fon·t•11 HOOP'tncNMta • 12$ REWARIJ Lc>1t G~at Dane fem ale . Anawera to L.li!M'JI 112 vie EHt Blute. Vlata T rucha. tM~osoo FIRST LAD Es ;orf. Moc~ls ,.rty O.Cen. •972·1345• ASSIMl&.YGIU. Plaallc1 ex~nence pre (erred. but wlll t rain M ua\ a peak En•li•h 8'2 1026. ----- Fem Gt't rn Shepherd, M<.'" VISA Acl-epted ASSIMILBS apx I yr old, hlk & ton. COVER GIRL Loe Mlaalon Vie.Jo 1·0 friendly Hl ~21J8, nud11 Alffmblert w 12 831 1030 • OUTCAU * yra. up. C11n<Jld 111te1 n i:; w A fl 0 L 0 1 1 , ~3 07711 Mt: VISA mu11t have ad. manual FM iWhlte, •hur1 hair i .. --------•I dt•xtt•r·lty, !id. •Yt'•tlhl, 1• neot in appearance & de- p o Int c r 642 UH . * FOXYLADY• .,endable.Wotk bltnllrr 642·31~1 OUTCALLONLY •upport mt.~lc11 l clcc VISA Mt' t I Gd b tit Ab&ndunt•d fomllht 1t•l r on c1. l'ne •· •f7J,.llll• O nl y ruE'on1lble tt>r, lovable , pluyful, ~nona •~kmll pei•mu net>d1 11ood hor1w 1714> m•nl umplymt. net.>d up 8YS·~50 SWllTHIARTS ply. <.;olt': Ml'll. Pe relli, l"OUNO. lllk1Tu1Wh1 •HCOttS• Mn 3830 I'' l' m Puµ l>Y 11 PP rnx 24 llOUR8 3mo1 vi{'. 11 H. Knox V1u 1M<: 11721177!1 ville ~au 761+ Attornt'y f11m1l111r w 1con1truc•\lon prllr tlct'11 , lel(al ., COrtllU'-' 8ankln1 RE-ENTElltl JOB MARKET TELLER TRAINEE Nt'wport Qalboo Sa~ in&• II aeeklnai 11 m41turt, wrll &room'-d lndlv who lo' ea workln& w1lh ~>pie tu lrialn ui ou1 Newport Beach ufr F.Xl't•ll opp ly for atable. 1 c1pon11i ble per11on to lcum & cJt• velop in a JO'OWlnl( ua 1mclatlon full ln11urio1m·<' bcnt'rth & paid l'll t l't'r llfll)Or<>I PIJI cull · Ma 0Mn)' P11rh1l.1 714"45·~ HIWrOIT IAUOA SA VIMGS & LOAN KO f. '.:I ' . 100TH A nENDEMT N1•wpor\ A1che11 Matma l'ull. Judy or llarl'ey. IJ42·46U . Mon· Ft 19·5 CAARIERS WAMTEO I 1 'inc Nt>WJ1C>rt Ueuch urN1 Ea1 •r AM deli\ er} of L A Tunes $4 25 + S1urr1·n. needed also l' J II J t••& ~I 023.S. CASHIER rnom. f~i.pt'llt'll<'t'<.I 11ul Pt ti•llyloua l••<"'tl·in lllh• 1714JM27632 11•1 It h 11 I .•. ... l' 111 I n\lll I" 1111 .I h I ' "' ' 110 1n11 11n< l'J!IPl't "' 111 l)ft'ulunul \'II' Iron IC t•ldN I) ~·11th1•1 'b l'llllt•t• iluplt•\, I! hlk" 1111111 hrh llhlOI Q1111llty ltt•l't•V ll1•t1I i':t1t&lt• Olllt't• lot • II I t• c.: II Ill " I t' t 1• I ) t•11u1111wd Al lm·ut111n In N1•wpo1 l lll•at•h 011 l'l' 11 Ujum 1140 ~:~7 l''OUND Mall• lh•njl ty11t• 1 I(' Hollow Uu11hu1 ti ... V 113!1 :..~II·' 1·~ •• SPIHITlJAI, llf':Al>INGS tuul Gd h11ckl(1·oun'l t----------n·q 642 8100 f" T " P T. N11wpurt 111'.al'h & la 1mt' an·a IA-Ill Ill G44 ~ H!ll :>71i7 • :i>ltl0tl7.\ l~I.\ l1t1nh1lll •t'I \ 11•1•11 11111 Hotels. Motel• 4100 )-'l•111 I II 14h1 Jltl•111l11111 111 t• \ I ti I:' cl S l' C' I ti\ U I 1111 "''I' 11·1• 1.1\ 111l11hh• l 'ull {' u I II I l' h u II ti I t• I 1 1 t ll<ltl ~~t?ll 11 1 213 ~U2 ~~I~ 1'1•l1• 1 II to'uuntl l.r" yn" wht M Poodh:. 6 G OWll· 01110111· St . (.'M 114tl47111 & ••••••••••••••••••••••• It·•~ 'LHtu• tu •h• !\lu , SEA LARK MOTEL • \\'(lekl} 1ent1tli. nu" ,I\ ;111 •Sit! un<I 1111 •I 'olur TV • l'hont'' 111 lllOffi) :!::'i I '\4•\\ Jlll1 Ill\ cl l \I ti-lb 714'> 111t: II ~:A H l.uk1•l1 otll :th.i 11 ph h"· In l 11111 1111\ l.1, ~II lll1lll'l> ""'' l't'I"' S3110 • ,h1 ulll !1~11~11 111 ~711,111 lh111111111,11t• 111 ~hull' 111n• " IUlll :! H1, '"' Ill 1·11,1.1 \lt<,11 \111~1 Ill' ' I 1• ol I\ (\ ll' l'llO n"' 11111' .;:!:!~ 11\(l 1>1.111.1 ; .• :: 11111111. t•42 ~~22 t.>42 ~•22..! l.•n\lln11 1-:)(1..•1 Su111•i. 111:190 l't 'II Snitr WO. II It HUfttlntton lch ~· \'Iii l*h'41, Jlltndh·1I. l' II II r l' I t' n l l' I u ti Ill $4~ 11111 llll.'I fl647 MoHy to Lomt 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l>ut·tu1 hui. $100,000 mux to lend Any lc.ilt 11•ason 1cl·u11•4I M1 & M1~ ll.1•n Smith PO UUX 2705 I luntln1111111 B1·111'h lfilti4H ~II~ Rt'wurcl for Info Uhl y1•1low h1•11d /\mu/On pull ot l(t'l'tm & v1•lh1w fllmlly 1wt Ph·1111t' n11l, no qut•i.t 111n11 ui.k1•1I, 536 5763 \1011•1. kttdwn~. 2 111•1• pit• $JO 11!4lll ~IUI \I F tllln 'lllf..r 111 'hr :!b1, 11pl 1111111 Jiil' • S:!2U :\lo 4200 h:l l 27:17. tl31 ~~l!I :\l1k1• Summer Rentols AIRPORT AREA $1 .00PER S9FT Pnml' uHil'c 11potc. 2100 lttj rt. fl'l'l'J>l llln . frt't' pul'kin~, bulldin1o1 ltfonti ty 1>0ssiblc. Contal'I Mr Turlt•y S4tH606 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sattler Mt9. Co. All typt.>:; of real l'1>tutl· 1n1·eslml'nls slncc Ul4!1 Lo!tl Pun 'OI HEWARD !)pen u I µet G rl'en Amairnn . 1ed heud Reward for info thut leads lo si11h1m1: ('all Tito Olivare5 at 400 6932 or II' msg at 493 1171 01 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISl.1'~ d11111111111: ~I lltl11n. 2 1i.1th. plu~ wo111 .llhl l't'nl(Hi.·h•lf ~1111) l hi) 11•111 al 11111 <: 1111111\. Iii;) tlltil 0 l'ut n1'ht'(I 3 111 2 Ba ''1th 111 lllt'. 2 t'JI .:ur 11.:1• \\ I I h ,1 U l 11 11 p l' n l' I \\,1~tw1 & D1H·1 1ndd \I Jll no\\ \\'l;t•kh TSI. \I c; \IT 1;4~ lli03 '\ ,,, lll'h JJ>l. S1atl" k :.111:. i. 3 II r 2 Ba I hlk to II Jtt'I 5110 .'\t•ptUlll'. ,.,,, f'l Ullll Al:I 0\\ Ill Ci u:. 2 I 3 'I G 6 I 7 1 1 Fam1llt''> 1)1t•ft•1 n·d "'1':\\ POHT 3 B1 I houi.t• t rnm 01·1•an :'\1t·e furn 1111'1 hnPni. fi75 fi77S :! lld1 m lll't1d1 hou:.1' \\1•t•i.., a1ail ~75 uµ 1;7;, JJ.111 \\'t·t•k lv Hcnt:Jb :'\ I! $2lJO Wf..'l'k UJ1 /\J!t•nl. 67~> 11170 'I r "antt~l tn i.hr :llnlrm ••Pl " guy & i:tl'l s:.!SU nw ~ 11111 & dt-11 . 11.llhou P1•nin ti75 6077 ... (' Ill .1 I t' I Cl s h II I l' " hl•(ti 1111111 aµt Sll'ps lo lwad1 :-\ U S250 In :\lo I I l"llh-631 2:.,'70 • Hoo111alt' lo :-hi 4llclrm houst' 11 U1·h S200 plll!> Ulll 898 4207 CORPORATE PLAZA 850 SQ fl. 3 o ffites " rel·ept1on. plush Int Oct'an \'lt'w 759 1550 EXECUTIVE SUITE Al'a1I June lS. 150 :.q ft window offlct', $395 All serl'ke:. a1 ail Ask for Lisa. 833·9971 :-.Oe" 1>011 Bl'h h) SanlJ 1----------A n J R11er 2bcl. 2ba. .:ara~c !>48·!15:li L"St apt Fall "Bl. lo shr. 27th St JdJ to t'O" O" n ht. S350 mo CJr sh1 \\ I Ill 01J\(' 111 l'hOit'(' Sli.) mo Fl'm uni\ 6-14 OfiJ.1.640-0173 . OFFICE SPACE IN NEWPORT BCH 2400 sq ft . ·Nwµt l'enter 1280:.q rt Do1t•r 01 Xlnl rates for Newport Beal·h l'all l\1m J osephson,Agt,7521111 Speclalidn9 in 2ndTDs 642-2171 545-0611 Want in1esto1 for Npt buyrront home Give well secured 1:.t or 2nd T 0 A~l. 675 6161. 66J.1845 L ost : Mini mall' St•hnauzer: gry. 2 lN•th m1ssin1: C..:dM llt!W!lrd 760· 1644. 558 3324 LOST: S1her. Pt'rs1un 15th St on Penin:.ula REWARD 675 3045 01 WIDOW has money for 549.2200 T D ·s Sl0.000 up' NO I CREDIT • ~u µnit~ 1 Found tame r·abb1l. Sµr C:all ugt 1-:1leen. 673 7311 mgdale & PCll. II B $3750 returns SS375 in 6 monthi. "1th !>t'cured 15'. TD Pa1111·k 631 1266 Al(ent Do you nl"l'<I Sl500 & up 2nd 01 3rd TD on \'OUI hom1• 01 unit Call· £1k1 213 43g 1539 847·9671 wkdys8 30-5 Found. White medium :.l male do~ 6 4 81 Nt Bro\>knursl & Bolsa Westminster 531 1568 Found Lhaso Apso male l\lagnolla & Garfil'ld . H B 6 7 Call !!60 4745 Bmmtt· losh1 hsl' in II B ,_ _________ Announcements/ non smkt'. S220 + ' 'ut1I ProfesliOftCIUy Pnsonals/ Found. Ap1>rox 6 mos male German Shepht'rd V 1 c B e a c h H63 0670 Decorated Lost & FoUtd Bll'd Talbert fi ll Garoqes 770 sq rt of profeS!>IOOUI for"R~ 4350 office spal'e in l'ost a .........•............. Mesa. Bri~hl & open. Ready when you lire 631-2242 • • • • • •• • ••••••• • • • •• • • • 842·0Ui0 Announcements 5 I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Penonals 5350 • •••••••••••••••••••••• :! l'All Garagl' nr. 1"lh & Plal'l•nlla. (".\I S'iS IX'I" 1'111 ona dt'I "a1 :1 Ht 2 mo 6i.) ~33!1 MODELS/· *FANTASY *STUDIO* Ba !>W11nmmi.: llCM>I. •, hlk tn h1·a1·h SJ<IO wt·ek ,\,.iii fil!l fi131f>OO :\lark '>: E \\' P 0 H T c H.' E A :-.; FRO-.;T Lux 2 I B1 Wk II 671 SL Hi''. 673 7fli7 )Cr frnrn :o.:tml. :\\\pl lkh Sha111. dt•c1n I b1 apt. <12.'>0 " k 2 hr Sl.'iO "k Junl· lnqu1rt• ahoul Jul\ .~ \u.: 6i5 8127 ~!(Ji 0-132 1 .. \1\ E T \llOE motion ptl lllrl' l>llxlU<l'I ·:. IU'C I h d I m , I 2 in J \ l t• I hdrm:.1, :!ha. 2 11 >:I rvk:.. l.1m 1 m tl1•11" t'•m1t·1'\i hll' 'lt•t•pm.: fJl" i\ctosS f11lm hcaut Bumi t'l•tlar Bt•ath & nr llvatt 1 lotl'I & < as1n11, "111 c l1nt• \'ill~1ge. Ind cabl1• T\' 1~ith 2·l hr~ of "Showtime"' mo~1es. Also U\'llll <.:hr isnaft plt'asure, flshm~. water ski boat S150 du~ 01· l>HSO "k F1nt· 1 cf' s u mui.t t 7141760 9'.!04 llop, 'kip & a Jump from lhc beach June 15 30 ti;n 7231 Lon ur Bou \\ t' h,l\ e ;J 'IUp('I Hll ll'I) 111 summer rentals \loM ul lhrm walkin.: tits t.rnu: tu heal'ht:s l"Jll u:. 1111 lwlp m l'hoosm.:) ou1 Summer Plat·e" \\ Jlt•t lront lloml', Int• 631-1400 7" f:W PORT liEAl'I I \\ t'l'kl~ rental:.. lllol'k ltnl!l ot·t•an & ba) 1i:JI 1100 \\'utt:rlrnnt llnmes. Int· Vocation Retttals 4250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lu"Cury oceanfront Kaunapali Bch rondo m \1 n111. slvs 5, u1 ail 7 122 to II 5 Days 832 4204. ext tl) LAGUNA BEACH Jloml' nr beach. quiet St . 3 bdrms. !600 wkly July 494·96:11 PUERTO \'AL.LARTA <.:ONDO We~kly rental. 7 16 thru 7 22. 7 23 thtu 7 29. On beach. pool. daily maid sen 1t•e. restaurant. l'osla Vida. $450 per week. Or tradt' for ' Call Oa ii~ :.hop l.pa<·t· J' a 11 tor I l'nl. to "ork on 1·ars. le11 hod~ \\Ork, µamtm.:. 111 mt·1·h l'ompn•s:.01 J' a ii ~98 0176 -l!nHl3.\!1 t'\ \'~ Office Rental 4400 .•..................... AIRPORT AREA Furnished or un · furn1i.hed Executtl'e Su1tei. m lnme. walking distance lo Airport All :.l'n ll't'& a' ail 2082 Mtl'hel!>on. Suite 212 714 752 0234 1617 Westd1ff N B Want fmanl'1al mst. 7000s.f. t::.t floor Agent 541 5032 1.25 Sq. Ft. on NEWPORT HARBOR 1 CORONA DEL MAR Deluxe Off1l·es Sl85 & S300. A l' Realonom1cs 675·6700 usinen Rental 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For store & office sµal'l' al reasonable rates 500 to 4000 Sq Ft. MESA \'ERDE DR PLAZA 1525 ~l esa \'erde E. C M 545.4123 PRIME RETAIL LOCATION I 7 0 Sq. t-t. ACTORS Busy 0 <:. casting olf1t·e has "after strike'" mu t 1on Pll'lW~ caslmR at• counts Non union extra \\'Ork for run. SS. l'I edits lnten 1ew:. Fri Sal. June 12 & 13 M F. 18·25 )rs old. dependable t1 n nsportat1on. no ex penenre 5 58-8608 for' ape't Lost & FOWtd 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND ADS ARE FREE Call: 642-5678 Lost : M Sib. Husky & M , Keeshound. Orange & Bay. 642-90'.!8, 631·1666 Beautiful Private Rooms The Beath area·:. closest & mosl exotic reading studio. 8125 Bolsa Ai . Midway Ctty 12 blocks E of Beach behind h quor slorel Open 10.im Jam daily exl·ept Sun 54)..9243 SOOTHING MASSAGE for Diserimmallnl( men Call Peter. 494·4871 AFTERNOON •DELIGHTS• Home /Office fHot~I * 972-9773 * 24 Hrs. Now Hiring Ml' \'ISA 303 . Sq. H. Comer Location Outstandlnc) Street -side idetttity. Hecioti.,_ T emu. LOST. 121 Blonde l'o('ker --~~---~~·----­ Plush OfffcH Bay Views Private Patios Lots of Wiltdows Pa riling GanMJe For the busmess man Who wants to make a ,~1167 .8662 RETAIL SPACE 770 SQ ft. on Harbor Bh d in CM Onl> 65• ~q. ft. Grealexposure Realonom1cs 675 6700 good 1mpress1on. RETAIL OFFICE Space Won't Last. 700'. Westcliff area N B Spaniels '1c 0 l'oast College . Rev.ard 966·0550 !179·7:M>O LOST Golden Retre11er Male Wht collar ··King" Vic NB Reward 640·1373 LOST Wedding Rintc <.:dM High School area REWARD 833-7517 CalToday! 759 1550 __ ( 7 I ) 7 8 C 'of Found. i''emale mixed 4 6 ~ 6 6 2 omlft~rc• 4475 breed. blk I bm eye. 1 --__ Rentah NEWPORT BEACH ••••• ••• •••••••• • ••• • •• blue e1·e ~6805 e1 ._ Convenient Peninsula X~nl loc. ~71 W. 19th St. Found : tong hair cat. location arrms from Ci· CM _1600 S900i Mo. 10 COM. must identify E S ·SHE C 0 R TS MODELING 835-9199 & P re1·entat1\·e & Stress Reducing Massage by Doris. '"Intro" Spee1a I' 548·0407 Great Company Escorts 2.4 Hrs. &41·0180 Colh/CMcks AM EXP/MC/Vlfo ty Hall. Executive style par k mg spaces. 642-5851 64()..7804 om~es w tfull services lndustrfol Rental 4500 ______ -:-:~===-----------, avail. From 215 sq.rt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• and up. No lease re· ,.;., . quired. Call673-3002 "°75. Approx 2265 ln, ------·--d u s 'I /Office. 18 101 Prestigious OHice Space Redondo Cr. "T". Hunt 3 window offices avalla-Bch. 842·2834 ~le in. full service Legal 8.100 sq . ft office : Suite m N~port Center . wa reho use. Irvine In· Avail. now. 640.5640 duslrlal. 3.5< triple net. HEWrORT IEACH Call 646-lOM or mquire Full service exec. of· Maroal Co. 16753 Noyes. rices from $397. "On 957-9266. Brkr Coop In· Call" exec. om ces from vlted. $105. lnclds. secretarial. ---M-E-5-... -- phone ans. word pro-,.. ceasin g, Telex. qwip. INDUSTitAL THE HEADQUARTERS p .A. IHI COMPANIES ,.._"" 714 /&U-~1 71 I W. 17th. St. O:inc.>557 ~. Rentals to Shere Approx. UOO n. 4th Or, 4300 waterfron~~ NB. Co1taMfta.Colf. 642~46l • 1870·5650 sq. I\ Unlt1 avail for occupancy ltllt- June. •On• 1100 1q ft Warehowie fl 710 1q n. o rrtce a vail ror Im med latt' occupancy • 33' 3S• per aq . rt. Use,,,.,,., Ad service when ptaclog your ad ... a Daily Piiot ad number wlll appear In )f<>ur classified ad ••••••••••••••••••••••• J\to\·lna? Avoid drposlts /. cul li\'lnl t>xpciue ! P rorualona lly 1in ce 1971. HOUSIMATIS 832-Cl34 ----• Sh•rtd LM1t9* Coun1t•lof1 lo Pfl'IOnal~ llt'lt'rl your rompntlblc r mmte tu 11ull yo u r hfcstyle Sham! 1.1\'lng. IW Dover Or Suitt.~ 31 NB 63"1801 Sm all l man om ce in eit· ecull ve au.Ile mo-mo ren· ta l. L a auna H i lls $225 /m o. 1151·8001 D_,.... Leaatn1 om ce hrs. Mun ........ c:..lw thru Frla.4. fodlvldual e•~tlve full 1...teh WlllltN 4600 1er vlr• oUlce 1ulle1 ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• w /l\arbor view for rent M l lo ..,. Fur nla he d r ereptlon a ure emp >'11:'\1 womao I D P in C 11 need• am. nice unrum. aru n ana 0 t a a pt w /aar on Balboa ltle F:vclyn Groo by AUi or Sept., Yrly. 661-1300 Ref.180-l17hvn . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call In at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad •.• th is service Is only $7 .SO week. For more Informa- tion and to place your act call t.:42-5678. Ilium IOpm 1-'ull) l.k'1I 4[12 72!111 OI l!l'l !JOJ4 181~ S (.'um1n11 llt•al. S1tn l "lt•111 JuMSptelal SS .00/0FF THE GlrHnends •ESCORTS• Homt /Office fHottl • 972-9772. Mule Fumull' Ei.tott Ml' VISA I won 51.100 Sat & Sun at llollywoud Paik I 1m·kt>d 5 Exadab Sul & 3 on Sun pill!> 5 othl't win lll'I b tor lht• 2 day)> Fo1 83.'.i I will hancl11·a11 .ill !J 1at'l'S h11 Jn~ cla) !'all 731 6055 Em_ployment & Preporatfon ••••••••••••••••••••••• Auto. h<1'1y & ft'ndet mun, l'XJ>cr Own toola. cum llO', of labor 4W 01711 4tHJ tlJ5g ll Yell LOT A TTEHOANT w 11nted 1mmt<d1Jtt•1r • N u I> h o n t' 1· u I 11 P L EASE' A11µly In ~nwn to Chuck M u1 phy Ill BABYSIITER 6 wki. summer job in Irvine Live out. Vt>ry It hskpg: supervise older children Lots ul lrt'e time by the pooL $90 wk Start 1mmed 552 !IW7 BABYSITTER Matu1e woman lo babyi.11 mf<inl m our home w ref':. CdM t'all 675-7937 tlA:\I 2PM ~on·Ft1 J b Want.ct 7075 Banking .~ •• ~ ••••••••:••••••••• MANAGEMENT 2 Kmdergarden teachers Trainee ha1e summe1 prol(ram Lat ge Consum~·1 Read1n~t. :.w1mm1ng. Fmanc•e Company seek· field trips Monda) thru in.: 1nd1vidoal with Friday 548 4115 d1reet l'Onsumt>r fmam·e Comµan1on. l1tt' hoUSt'\\Otk $S µet ht or OnC'e a week Clt'an1n11 S25 $35 µer day Du l'r 1 ands, gurden. l'k rl'ls t 1 ans . Barll<1 ra 548-0261 7am I\ Grandmolhl'r w i ll manal(l' your family & home l day or longt.>r. Local husmes:. woman Refs. reliable 7Sl 4287 aft 6 Man seeks interesting work. f'(ood S. l'!\I area Ref":. a\all Alan MS 0346 HtlpW~ 71 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ACCOUNTING P T 30 hrs. a p, a r. payroll Exp in <·om puter termmal dJtd en Ir) helpful l nmt• area. ~I a n u fa c t u ri n ~ t: 11 MART RON 546-5543 Acco...ting Cieri& Experience required 30 h rs week PC ll Sportswear Call Tme 556·2995 Accounting i:xµctll'nl·e Good saliirY EOE Good benefit:. 9SIJWI Bank mg TELLER FULL TIME Immediate opportun1ly' Brent wood Sal'ings & Loan has an opening in our Costa Mesa branl'h Cot a responsible tellrr to work S days a wet>k . altt>rnatmg Satul'da) s We seek an ind111dual with µre1·1ous S&L banking l'>. penence. energy and en· thus1asm. and a spel'ial flair fer workm~ with the µubhc We offer allrat·t11 e !>alaries and beneftl!>, and a great ruturr "1th a gro" mg company For rurlher 1nformat1on plea:.e call. ' Tom Drosky 'i\41979·3910 BRENTWOOD SAVINGS &LOAN 1640 Adams Street Co~ta Mesa, CA 92626 E qual Opportunity Employer M 1F A/PCLERK Repldly g rowing in · ternotional co. seeks responsible Individual fo r our Accounts Paya· ble Dept. Good typing & 10 key capabilities re· q'd A P exper helprul. Salary com mensurate ---------· w11h ability Outslund 1ng benefits ·1n a ---------• pleasant working en· \'tronment Contact Pot Mills AMF Scientific Drillin9 lntentatlonol 18011 Mitchell South Irvine. 557·9ml, EOE Administrative SI OOO /MO Summer or Career Secretarial, ma rketing. warehouse & other posi· lions. We s tress neat a p· pear a nce. Must have transpo. Call 10am -3pm wkdaya. (7 14)847·2422. ADMIH. SEC'Y Banking TB.LER If you are a mature m d1l'idual seekmg a full time Teller pos1t1on. In ine Savings is in· teresled in you P leasant worki n g con ditions. good salary & benefit package Expel"ience pre fe r red. Apply In person bet ween the hours or lOA M-Noon & 2PM·4PM at: l rvineS&L Assn. 18552 MacArthur Blvd. Irvine, Ca. 927 15 752·2600 E.O.E. M/F To lop executive in busi· ness field. Diversiried ---------• d uties requires good ski ll s . E xcell e n t benerlts. Ocean View School Dist. Apply by l ;~m. J une uth. 16940 "B' St. H.B or call 847·2551 ext. 231. ADVIRTISIMG Acct eo.-•ator TWO acct executives need a hl&hlY·moUvated acct coordinator with top 1kllb & a11ency ex· perlence. Ambiance is ru t paced. but warm & lrlendl.Y, with arowt h pot e ntlal. ln\e rH ted ! Pleaae call Mary Ann 979·7000. Aa •nt 'a Aulat a nt needed. NeWJ>Ort /lr vln e area. L.A Times. Bxp. Dependable. Call Dave : 548-0235. • BANKING Our Newport Center or. flee has a n immediate opening for a T .... c 30 Hrs. per week l Ex perien ce no t re- quired-training will be provided. Wells Farso Bank offers outatandlna benefits and conaenial wol'king at · m oaphere. For more ln· form ation please call: J09lft 714-6404900 Sl"tt*11S.1 WELLS FARGO BANK nanklnl( • • • SECRETARY II 11 yu11 would 1•n)l1y w111 k mi: m 11lu~h au1 round lnl(!I ut OUI l'\.1•1A phi l l t•n11•1 11rr11·1· Jnll 1 .. n mt·t•I llUI ll''tUlll'llll'lll't Wh) 111111(1\1' U-J l'Jll" Wt• un• r 11111·nth 1n 11•1 \ ll"Wlfll( •·t1t1cllllt1lt'!! W Ith 11 llllllllllUlfl llf 11 rn II ~ II I I' \ I II U II i.el'I total tul l'Xl>t'l ll'nn· t•>.t't•lll•rtl typini.: l'klll' COO lo IJ5 "11m 1 u111I th4· alJihly lo rnmmun1t alt' elft•<•t11 ely i-: x 1· t' 11 l· n t i. t a 1 1 1 n t.t salu1 \ and IX'nl'f11' For m111 t· 1nl111 mJt111n . pll•aM~ l'Ull KevlnTttry 7 I 4-640-9 32 I s .• "@ 10: WELLS FARGO BANK f.60 Nl•wµor1 t 'l•ntt•1 01 ~t'WIXllt fieJ~·h Equal Opp Empl m I h Hanking NEW ACCOUNTS REPRESENTATIVE Curn·nl posit 1t1n a 1 a Ila lite in lht• N1•v. flOl'I Lfra('h ofr 6 mo:. l''< IJ<'rlt'nce, Ill'\\ at'l'I!.. Ii a l\l'OJ:h p1 l•l 'd T) II mg 40 4Swpm Sa1 m~)> 1x1s1t 1on1> alw a' uil m nl.'w L.i1:u11a ll1lh ore t "onlat·t J ohn Laun 714 675 4500 L.A . FEDERAL SAVINGS E 0 E :\1 F BARMAID l'ollt'ge OK Full 01 P T l" M 646 5.'>44 BJs11· l'll'rk T) p1~1 \\1th ~ ll () d l' !> (" I O \\ b J l" k RIOUntl 1 )!Ill oll11•t• !!75·0644 HIL'Yl'L E M<'t'hun1ci, & CASHIERS UTDTEM \1 A fl K f:TI. 1'111 Zn<l lc 3111 Shtll!> Y. 1• i11 •11111it1• ti• 111ima~e mrnl 4. \Ul-"'fl i.11in 11 om w11hin WA'T Al Al!Jo:f>:H '' ( 011t.1 \h·i.d 1111>..r ~ ..... i;;o ~21 l..iitunJ lk<wh 4'14 ~rl.'JJ 11 unt1n.11l11n Bt'<1d1 116211116 t ASllll-:k llouw\\ art· ~all·!. Appl~ 1 n I> l' r '> o n L" 1 o " n 11.uct"Jll'. :mn E L:.1 11").td\I ( .\TEH l:\G Se1 I l<'t' nd" ft1<1d IJI t'I' \\01 l.t'I~ ~ h 1 Workm.R hrs 5A ~I IP .\I :\I )-' l.o I 1 ' l\1tc·hl'n 31ITT !::> I la1 ho1 Bl ~ ,\ 'Ii~ 07-17 1111 a l'l'l CLEfUCAL Soundl'rartsmJn ''"'h" h.i::. mll'rl>:.ltnl-\ 1J<1~1t 11111 LI\ atlable "1th\ aJ'led ol llt·e dUlll's l}ptnJ!. Ill mi.:. phonl':.. mail l"all t714155'i bl~3 l'll'rll'al ACCT. CLERK TO $13,200 l.on1I Ml~ Firm St't'k" Al't'l Clerk lu l:.tke 111 drrs. type in10H·t•s & h.indle tl'lcphonl· & ";ill.. Ill l't'l't'IJltUn inqu1rl('" .>.Int hl•nl'f1ts & wo1 kmi: t'ond111nn:. EVERY LEVa ACCT. CLERK SI 0,200 Lota I Land D<'\l'lo11t•1 nl'l'cl:. 1nd111dual "11 h good 11.l!UI t' aµl1t utlt• .it !tpt>llinJ! Light t~ ping f am1lia1 with acid in I! 111ach11w u plu~ Plu:-h oll > l't'l> Sales~ersons nct•ded for RECEPTIO~IST l~e b11•yclc storo. Some ,... exp pref'd. Apply 111 TO $ 12 000 person only . Stary B1ry • de World. 2146 Ncw1xu1 Bl. C..:~1 BKKR/SCTRY Exper1t>nced. f''ull t 1me. full charge pos1t1on tor I person orr1ce Ill f101~e1 shop Group hl•alt h plan a1 a1 lable Call ror aµpl 641 2990. ask ro1 Kcnl l'lark Kenned} Flori!>l BOOKKEEPER Accnts µuyabll' pa) 11111. IOVOl('e reg1stt•t & Lil' <·ounung report~ Hoat mg knowledgl' dt'Mru bll' See Patrick Lido Sh1pya rds 900 Lido Park Dr NB.673 7272 BOOKKEEPER, F.C. For realty mgmt co P .T . nr Coast Hwy 1Dover. 955·2391 i IOOt<kEErER • A~ounllng experience. Pa11 time or full time 631·6941. Bookkeeper1Part lime, accounts payable, t yp- in g, flP;tihle h our s, Laguna Qeach location. 499-457 1 BOOKKEEPING 10 key by touch Ac· curate typtng. Part time deys. Betler Way Foods. N. 8 645-2444 IOOt<KHPIR 10 key, Ute phones and typing. Xlnt benents, full or part time. 540.7144 IOOt<KEStB FULLCHAlGl Flrfa nclal Sta\e!llents, P tR Tues, 11le1 taxea. no n-smkr, CPA Firm . <.:.M. Call Mr . Tracy 7S4·UMO --800KK Et PI N G P /tlm e. Appl y at: Crown Hardware. 1024 lrvlne <WestcUff Plaza ). NB l.01·ul Firm seeki. lleC'ept,ionist T~·pisl fol' I arit•t' or Sec'l'elar ial dut 1t':. · Sornt' f1~ure ap t11ud•• a plus Good wurk l'll\ 1ronment & llt.'nl'flls INS. CLERK TO $12,000 Loc·al Independent Agent needs Personal I.mes Assistant lo hl'lp m busy offu:e L1Rhl lYIJ· mg Ca ll Marilyn orMike 714 547-6561 VANGUARD PERSONNB. SERVICES ts.to E. Edinaer , Suite I, Santa Ana 1oor, E m ployer F ee Paid EOE CLERICAL Va r ie d ge n . o r e responslbiUties with ex· cell. ad \•ancement op portunltles. Moderate typing abt'lities req'd , ROSAH.IHC. 714-548·5S33 Equal Oppty Emplyr CLERK OFFICE Bia co, will pay you as train you. Xlnt future. EXPO AGENCY 16483 S. Map\Olla J:i.B. 1 blk No. or warner 842-6447 CLERK TYPIST· $910. AJao qe" &f'I\ ofc dut\es In M .,or rned1ca I co. • • r ( ' ~-------.-----.----....... ~------------. ......... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/WednMday, June 10, 1981 ,.:=~~~~=r:.IWWen C ..... /c..u.t. Forwalce/THe Garde.. CMIHC....... Mo•ift9 Pelnttft9f'aperint Roofln9 ~u•u ······················· ······················· ······················· ······················· ······················· ······················· ······················· ······················· D.&D.Md1r1 Pool Decks and Patio~. FormloCounterlops P.rof.Jspanes,eCardcncr WuntaREALLVCLEAN Mnvln.i? The Starvlna Nt-:WPOttTPAlNTlNG 01'a1111l'l'o1U1tRuolln¥ SPECIAL Deal1n1n. Cullom Maaonq1, Sport Courts, Cu.alombullt&lnstalleJ. Lawncutting.ln!etrim HOUSE" Call Gin~ham ColleaeStudt•nll;Mo''lflK <:omm.rlndw. it\'illd, All ty 1,t-11 or roof1n)t. homea. 37 yrs exp Fin. T•nnlt courli . Lie . latest colors & d~algns mlna. w~!no.S41J8375 Girl. f''l'eeest.645·5123 Co h1111 &l'Own. lnaur~d ... t 1 t Rl.'11aln & adt.11t1on,., avail. c.;hartea (7 14 1 "' fi'roeee11l.G46"8'7I • same iOOd sel\lc e rl'N'\'!$ · A.iwru Ctl f''a!<l. H•llohh-. ho11et.l 1i1 67 Per 0, """"3141 Al (714) ""'33433 37•087. 8Sl lll68,MT·T07B -H_....... ROBIN'SCLEANlNG II T 124 436 Li t'U IH' R42·Gl2B f''n•1• 1•!<1 l ull DUH' h1A\'4ALLyou y 1, ...,,_.. on:rv1ce &1tnvf'()u~ 64HM27 l>li'i PAINTING :>&II 1733111 l 111,1~, "'*'"' • 0 "'9 vv •-.---------Floor Co•...&-.. ··-··••'••••••••••••••••• .,_ .. _ h¥ ·1 •G 0 • " •or GEllWICk & SON ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOM!!: IMPROVEM"ENT clean ho ...... MO 085 l t t N t 11 bl I a CCMKreteFt.tworll ''RPT LlNO.WOOO _.. As·· UQVING. L"x•• .. , n l('X t•a . I~ a '" s--.M...lo·~ 30d.y 1ad Builders Since l947 n-i I I " · Rem()(lelln• Odd Jobi ... '" "' ,..~ r o "u ,..,.,., unvu ••• ,.. Ultbe Additions. remodeling • ., .. vewaya, patoe. ~ lnstalll'd n:paln.-d Lie 29ynexper• 9'792265 SHIPTOSHORE prof, low rate•. quick rt' 1 u\t!"'"'""°"'''" ••••••••••••••••••••••• DAILY plans Fttt est Reas. 1:i:~i.tr~~;1~~s~~.~~· _•_369_2GO Grea~ ~lt2 _R_E_P-AIR1REMODEL Boal & H~ Ch:un1na careful Set\'l(.'e. ~ 0410 o<X·K NEEDS PAll\T" LOCAL SANl>lll..ASTt:n -OT a l s LI " 310942 Rellable...,.•p Bonded R l r L1t 1n ' 1eJ., "In Joli tvo ...... r.n2e170 .. Lie # 1800334 Free est Go..-.. Door o-n • 11 tynos of ~pair•, (r•s. ""' .• .. M OVIN·MAN' u s r1:1 es. I t't' l'!>t S.VICI .,...,. .,C p 1...__ C • ~ ,...-··-" ,,_ .. ,, • ""'" Est. 646-2342. !)45-9789 .. "ar"'fuJ, ,...urt•·•ou·. • bi5 9120 673 l!t'Jl.! hit: 1>mull 840 7!10!1 " OC•TnO orp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _esl,guar 631·1_137afl5 ..... ..-.. v ' ·•"' DllllCTOttY PENDLETON CONST. ('714)834·4741 SPRlNGS HAROWARF. Houaecleanil\& r~hoble, l'heap. Pbcall~2-1329 Pim.ts Int.nor Sumlblu;tuw Ht·~ l'ulll DO IT NOW 1 Room additions & re· Auto Openers·new dooni Jock of Alt Trodes iiood w. ork, steady Job ,0 ._,,_ 9 19....=... 9 • •••••. : •••••••••• ••••••• nl I & mdu,ln JI l>u.,1 models rreeest 8398297 Lac. 8ob'a546·3667 Call Jack,675-3014 Refs «.t6-7""°afl 4 "' .. , • ..,.......... I I I M. fret'. 1)1111' fai.t Ui·rl A.tlforSc.*a _ __!_ • QUALITYCONCRETE --~--~---· · ••••••••••••••••••••••• nl(•iior pant ll'!lll£O ~" :>4G ~1i:, SYeor~lr"Dea.tD'1.l~~tolorty Ca.,,...t.r All Types Cement Work Gordenlftg CONCRETE& BRJ<.:K HouHsffflnCJ The Pape1· Hangtir, Pror. ~~ll~trr':~~~i· ~l;:·11r'"m S'"'cretari'al S-"ic ... .. Y ~ '~"" ••••••••••••••••••••••• 89'b6849 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PLUMSlNG. ETC. ••••••••~•••••••••••••• install De<.~rato1 quul ss 1.2894 -.. ~· 't' .. . Representative All Around Carpenter. C 1 TIM CLEAN UPS1LA WN 631·!)433 DON'T BE EMPTY, Frel' est. Stev~ !)47 4281 642·5678,•d 322 t'lnlsh & Rough Free •"°"' c Mnlntenance·Lndscp -----THlRSTYORLONl!:LY Plaater/R-lr ••••••••••••••••••••••• Skillt•rl St.an lu1 jll S.•1 tr 'I WP JOI>~ Tht• lle1.1rl quu1tt'l 8 ('omp.1rt lt'' K.'i t Ot'IKI Est. John 775.8082· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Free .!!t· 642 9907 Hardwood Roon We sit your house. plants •STEVENS PAJNTING •••••••••::-.~ •••••••••• -••••••••••••••••••••••• & pets Serunly Plus Int text. Free ilemite\J Neal potlche), & lt•xtu1 t'!> AnswerilNJ ~le• All Types Remodeling & LAMIERTTILE Gardening. land~caping . HARDWOOD FLOORS 631 .75117 est Neat, quality work F.-.e est. l9l· I 439 '•••••••.•••••••••••••••• Repairs. top quality. l7 Kitchens. bathrooms. tree lrimmin~ & 1 e Cleaned & Waxed 832·~. 546-4561 Prores11onaJ Starr. Com· yrs in area Lic'd entries Llc'd. 978-0320 moval. ma.ior dean up. Anytime. 832 4881 SA lronlnCJ .. pu\er Auisted System. Mr Palombo. 962•8314 free est 752-1349 --••••••••••••••••••••••• The Headquarters Com----Houlltt9 IRO.._.l.._.G pan lea. 851·0681. Room additions, rences, Ceramic Tile wo1 k at re· CALIF GA KOEN ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1"111 1"111 l k r asonable prices. Quality Tree trim. dean ups, ce-Appllance Repair concreJe wor · roo s. work done quickly. <:all menl work 646·4655 • • ••• • • • ••••••••• • •• • • • • palloa e'.:!:_Y !75-81_?3__ Ron 840·4337 - - - Guar. Used refrig. Ca..,.t Senlc• ' TREES Good cood. Sales & ••••••• .. ••••••••••••••Child Care Topped tremoved, dean Service. 642-7754 Shampoo & steam dean ••••••••••••••••••••••• ups, lawn renov 751 3476 --Color brighteners. wht $3 I • 90 JWK .. -~alt crpts 10 min bleach Hot lunch. c!.-M ~ t:hris-Sam Fukumoto YARD ~•••••••••••••••••• Hall. h\. d50ln. rmsh $15 : lian Preschool 646.S423 MAINT & Cle11n·Ups avg rm $1 • couc SlO: - -Tree lnmmang, s mall Haul. cleanup. concrete removal. Oumplruck. Quick serv 642· 7638 DUMP JOBS Small Movlng Jobs Call MIKE646 1391 Hauling & Dump J obi. Ask for Rand) 641-8427 Ironing In my home. re~sonable rates Call 646.9100 LandscoplncJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Renovating· Rotottl hng Spnnklers-lawns-clnups Dave &t2·48.S3 Bud 646-8481 Driveways. purking lol chr SS Guar ebm. pel COllfrador landscaping 645 3.S40 repairs. sealcoaling odor Crpt repair 15 yrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loans S&S Asphalt. 631 ·4199 exp Do work myseU. Construction All types YARD Clean Ups. tree HAULING Stude nt hJs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ltc'd _____ Refs 531 0101 20yrsexp Freet!st work. 1rnaat1on & re large truc k Lowes t MORTGAGE MONEY -L 1*334589 645 5973 Pai I . green h e 1 t rate. prompt 759 HJ76 A \'AJLABLE ASPHALT REPAlRING We t:are Carpet Cleaners ic landscaping &1 01~ Thank you, John S20.000to $250,000 Sealcoating & Striping Steam cle11n & uphols. SAVE 50'; We make old N B lloon P Comm tresid.Freeesl. Work gu11r. Truck concrete look new! No Oan'sLawnServ1ce Clean-upYourAct U~too15 1yrsl:r:::•: Lie #397362 645·8181 mount unit. 645 3716 more crat•ks 1sta1ns-Precision lawn m11inl. We clean out gurugi•s PRIM E FINANC IAL Automotl•e ----ava il in 3 colors . program for all lawns. tonlruck $25.5484769 SERVICES ••••••••••••••••••••••• No S~eamtll!o Shampoo Guaranteed! Free Esl Expert l11bor. low rates . HAULING & 2 7 7 7 •Alan's Luxury Motor Car d;;a;ir~!*~~ahslJ;~~ New Crete645 9560 _!.!·~ 642-5017 GARAGE CLEANUP 3 Care Waxing. polishing, -D II G A R D E N I N G Free est 631 095:1 ml. llome ·ore 536-4151 . . •• T.~ ... •••••••• ... ••• W .a. ..... ED Masonry - - -CeililtCJ Acoustic _.,...,., Hauling S25 pr load Lile ••••• •••••••••••••••••• Ext ml painting. t·ab re· Cm i.latn. Prof Rsnbl Free e~t Ste' c :>47 4281 Fine painting by Richard Smor. Lie. ins. 13 yr::. of happy N.8. customer~ ~o·s l'LAST~Hl~G All T\ µE'it Int Ext 1!45 8258 FIH: E EST Pl.ASTER PATl'lll.:\G • Int l'Xl 30 ~1 i.1•xµ Neal work Paul 5'15 ~77 Thank you 631-4410 Ptumbin9 COLLEGE STUDENT. ••••••••••::••••••••••• exp ant ex anv Job ror PLU :\t BI NC, Ill'\\ 1·011 I t's~ 1 All'~ 11•51.9371. i.trut'l1on. 1t•rnodt·li11i.:. 552·0231 n ·pa 11s. 11·~tu u 1 .1 nl l•lt•c·u on1 <· lt•Jk th·t1•1 PAPER HANGING 25 yr~ exp Free est F'a1>l . neat. rt·hahlt· S7 roll & up f>.15 6400 AGAPE FORl'E PAINTING COMPAN'l' 3 Generation~ of Painting Excellenct! 8:11·5851 llENTALS PAINTED Int e xt. Promµt· St!astl.lt! Pam1111i.:. c; ll'I:. 536 4806 l1011 Top I lat Plumhm.i 6:J6 2030 llt>lll'm..tn Plumbm~ SJles Se n 1ce-Hepa1n, fo'rel' t•sl1mah·~ 552 i 183 MOONLITE PLUMBING Eve:. & wknd~. Promvl sen' Lo rates 548-8847 Printed Circuits ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tenant Problems? M J t' :. S 1• c· r 1• I u t 1 .1 I Se" ate T\ µ111.i 1l111a1 m i.: P 11 kup dt"ll\ 1•1 \ 645 ijt}J8 Stock Broken ....•.•..............•. Slot k.,, Oll)IH'~ ll\li( ""' I a \ "' h \•It t' r s !\1 t•' C' .lnh11~11111 . 1;w 2+12 Swimmin9 Lessons ...•................... \\ 111 1r1~11 u1 t duhl11·11 lu )\\ 1111 JI \OUI hunll' Hi'J' Hoh Wti IW~ Jlt i Typin9 Service ••..........•••.•...... Pl!OF TYPI'\(; On 111:\I St-ll'<'ll ll d 11 tdphull\'. stut1sttt«ll. 11· port~. l'l<' \17!1 -11.1~1 Window Cleanin9 ....•..•............... 'Ll·t rht· Sun::.h11w In l 'J ll S unsh11w Wm1hm I 'lio,1n1r1i.: 1.ttl >-Hi 1111:-.:1 labyslttlncJ •••••••~••••••••••••••• Drywa~crahsl Mowing. edging. nrl·k mo\'ing, t'll.) dum~. d n BR IC KWORK Small ••••••••••••••••••••••• Acoust1cCe1hngs + Qual. & P New & re-ing. sweepinl( Frt'e ups 754·9904. 955.0095 J o bs ~ewport . t'ostu RAINBOWPAIHTIHG Mom will babysit. any r ustomhandtexlurmg mod "389944 532 5549 estimate!> 6460944 or AskforMark orMel Mesa . lr\lne. Rl'fs E:1.blnts.t·w.tom :\1 a mll.'nanre too h1i.:h ·• E' 1ct1on N1.:hlmares? Go with a professionul Mit mt co and sa ' l' San.ile fam1hes & up Oran~e. Rl\e1~111!> & San Lh•rnad mo l'v liar n son & Ai.i.oc-. Prop :\l~nl t !.15l tiOOI I \I.I. J l LIO ~ I• 111 .1 II '11u 1 huu "l' & \\ 1 11 ti o " , I,. J 11 1 n ~ 1.1:. ;~~I age. any hrs M-F, my Lie 389944 532.5549 &ctrical 645·5737 --· ·-675·3175 Free Est 642 961-1 II B home. 964· 7882 •• ••••••••••••••••• •••• U-N-IQU E C r I Housecleaniftcj ----Cem-..t/Concrete ELECTRICIAN i ··d , are o your 1••••••••••••••••••••••• Beauty s~lc.s ••••••••••••••••••••••• 111ce la ndscaping, .we du HouseholdSen·1c·es + + ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1''oundat1on11 Retaining right. free es~tmale on sp.e~ial&ze-d maint. ~e Tailored to ind1\ldual Beautiful Sculptured Walls llillsiue Restora-l~rge 0 " small Jobs utatling. & clean-ups Call Wkly. bimonthly. Sat1 s. Nails. $25.100"{ Guar tion,' Slabs. Patios. Lic.11396621 673·0359 s539·4777 guar. Nwpt area·s yrs Honclsandhet Block&Bnck L1c'd Find wh11l you wunl in Our B1other 's Kee pi:r. 675-4400 LlNDA 642·8387 eves '960-0539 Daily Pilol l'lasi.if1eds Want Ad He lp" 642-5678 631-4118 \9·51 Brick-Block·SlOn<' \ ery reas. Lie. bonded Bob 548·2753 536·9!:1~1 Wanted : Small J ohs Brn·k & block Low hrlv rall' 499-1.226 aft 6 • W ALLPAPERIHG Prof installed, firsl roll huni.: f1l'l' 163\1·1429 RALPH'S PAINTING L1c\I. lnl t'Xt Neal. Prom pl 964·5566 If an.• i.omething to sd I'' Clai.~1f1t'd ads do 1l w1•ll It 'uu H' nfll rt-atlm1it till' It ll ll· .ub 1n c ·1as~1 llt'd )0 U '1t• m1ssmi.: a lul ol n1·v.~\ 1nfurmal1un :..:- .,., C'll a:. "'"'l' .ia •at liu~ :- H.lp W ~ 7100 Help W •tflt 7100 H.lp Wanted 7 I 00 Help Wanted 71 00 H.tp Wanted 71 00 Help Wanted 7 I 00 H•lp Wanted 71 OC Help Wanted 7 I 00 Help Wanted 7 I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• CLERIC TYPIST Ent•ri.:elit• person with goot.I typing needed for COOK DENTAL R e t• e pt GENERAL OFRCE GENERAL OFFICE lla1r!>l\ hst. I month n·nt MANAGEMENT We areseekingamalure Pleasant ofc . looking Experience ht'lpful. Make tra\'el arrange ht'e Progrc·s::.1\e Shn11 Key Punch \1 ,\:",\GF:~I E:-\T l.ook1ni.;l111 l111.;h1·n1·1,.;\ or retired person who for enlhu.s1asl11: mdiv goodtypmgahility.pro ments forexet~+st>lUIJ mLu~una Hrlls7702345 •KeyStations• t'.. 11mo1t l\t' .11 11111!11· 111 Joves to cook to lake for full tame pos Salary ficienn Wllh r1g u1e~. trade s hows Ahle to llatrs t y lisl Manll'Ul'ISI Operator A GREAT CAREER 111 .111.1 1.t ,111.1 11 11 111 } bus) managing t(eneral 11.:ency No exp . net·essary, but ability lo leurn a must Attrat·li\ e salary & ull rnmpany benefits. Call Sallv al over our kitchen. No o Pen 6 4 2 6 8 8 O 10-ker hy tout·h . Op think for self m lot•al MAY BE YOURS AT "'''1"11·" '"11' ,1w1• 1 di heavy responsibilities. wknds 1eves 673 3403 port unity for ad' unc·e· branch ok Costa M ESA-N t>wport Douglas Oil l'omµan'' 111 111'1 k' • •:! lllll:! pleasant workmg condi· ment Excellent com 7.et! PlaceS48·9344 California has joh 'u1' THRIFTY \l.111a~1·1 1\1 111 1· \\111 I.. tions without the usual DENTAL ASSIST pany benefits. Informal EXPO AGENCY llardv.are Sales. f' tcme portunity for l'Ml' Kc) 1·01111I C'I hi•lp 1 .. 1 1nod 848·6264. • pressures F V 557-3734. Opportunity in Fountain office. l' M l'all M ilia• 16483 So. Magnolia II B pos an retail hardv. ui e Slatton Operator M us l Drv9 & Discount ,,.1, 11 1 St•a,011.1 I 111 • --Valley for RDA wanting afler9amat 6455800 l·BlkN.o(Wamc1 SlOI(' SecMikeorSll•\t'. ha\e mm or I w ar1•x Sto~s 11111 I 11 ll .111'.I I ,di ~ COPIER OPERATOR p time work m a con-842-5447 II W Wright l'o . 126 perience ondke); lo d1i.l' :--1111 .. 1,,th. -11 11 r 11 -f'ulh1me Xerox Kodak l li rr GE .... E .. .a. I OFFICE l n .... blc t T II n I FT y •d I ,. I ... ... I' I I ,j, ' gen1a pre' en ve o ice. "' ~ Rochester. l' ~I sys emi. a "'' a · 0 111 ~hfl '1!>13 ~~ operator Experience Staff 18 self motl\allng Telephone. hte t}pmg. & key 12.000 slrOkl'~ J)t>1 l'hJl!l-ngl· l"11nl111u1111.., CLERIC TYPIST not n e c e s~ a r Y . and we ha\'e fun helping book k eeµi n 11 c a 11 GENERAL OFFICE HAROWABESALES hour Ad ' an cl' m •· n 1 O 11 \1 .1n11 u11'1l I munlh I <'Ill I 1 t·t l't•>t.:lf'"" • "h"P 111 l..1i.:11n.1 I hlb ;111 :n1, Work on Balboa for sm Professional rop} shop. people 962·2432 Newport Flooi l 'u\ermg Looking for a \Cr} m Management potential po1 tun11 ~ .inti lnn1m prop. mgmt company I n 1ne Cal l Berky. ------formlernev. teresltnl( part ltml.' Job Aµply m per¥>n l'rov.n Good s t arlin)! ~<1 la1 > t>J1 J hll' Eammi.:.., m tlu In me Personnel Agy 752 0482 DESK CL.ERi< 1 n p le asa n l or r 1<·t>' llanlwan.'. 3100 E l"<1<1~t and excellent emµloyt!e Ht•t;11I F1dll 488E.17th,<..'oslaMesa COUMTeaHElP FullandPartl1me.rlex Clerical. for matu1e Hw) .l'dM benefits Please call fo r \I \ I I II I· Suitl• 234 642· 1470 ~ hours Best Western Ali GENERAL OFFICE person Location P l ' II , a I' p o 1 n t m e n t E' a ~ Wanledp/tforfooddeh Baba Motel , 2250 lrnne rirm has 1m . Npt. Bch Exµcr a HOMEMANAGER Taylor, Emµloyt•eRela M:.i nai.:1•ml'nl Tr:i11w•·., bl'gtn at. ii .0!15.00 IH'I month. ~nlh Jdd1t 111nu I (•ons1dt'rat11m gl\t'n 111 l'Ollt').ll' graduate ... F:a1 n 1111!1> l'Olltinut> 111 llll'l'l'U~I' ll• m o11• than $15.000 Jn nuall) m l<'!>i> thJn I."• month::. 1111~ :o..FK l-.1-:11 ~.1< 11 111 a11· q u.11l1 '" E' • -----call belwt!t!n 9AM·llAM Newport Bivd. C M. mediate openlnl( for must. Accur11le tyµmg, 25 hr week for busmc~s t1ons Dept. <714 1540.1111 CLOTHeSTIME 752 S40l 645·7700 bril?hl. self start e r no s hortha nd. 20 hr family Cooking ci;sen DOUGLAS OIL ,. 1• I I ,. n l 1 l' 1 ' Positions available im· COUMTER PERSON person lo µerform a week includes Sat & Sun t1ill. Permanent po~• COMPANY OF me-d ror manager & as· F 1 1 . DONUT SHOP \'ariety of orflce duties Call: 646-7431 lion 673-1521 .Bam 7pm. CALIFORNIA 1:!131:1:12 :10~ MATURE PERSON s1sl. manager trainee or qua ity dryc eanmg Early AM No exp nee. including '<eroxing. m· ----- M in1 mum 6 mo. ex pla nt in Hunlin~ton Xlnl start Apply till ter-off1ce delivery. r1l· 3160Airwa) A\e perience ...:all Yvonne Harbor an!a. Exce lent noon . V K · s . 29 59 ing. etc Contact Be\'er General HOUSECLEANERS Costa Mesa. Ca 92626 II•'•'"'"' tu twlp UJll'l .Ill' .I 11',I l,:.llclt•ll Ill I'd \) sat Sun onJ\ <i :to \)I 111 :II' \I \µph 111 J>l'l '011 642_1231. working t.'Ondrlions Ex· Fain iew, <: M ly. 641.8820. G R d Toss 'hr. car. 645-5123 Equal Oppty Emplo)er perience preferred. bul . et ea y will train nghl person DRIVERS (Rout.I Ad,anc-ement tu Sl n11• \l;.i'nJ JZ t'I . hast•il on nw 11t J nd J)t'rf111m;im1 · "'1th annuul l'<1m1111(s 111 S21.1100or morl' ·~.1l &. sun . 10 \\1 l l'\I Slll'I m.111 (i;11 1lt•11, ;!1,~j t-: l llJ'I lh" 1 ·.i \I COMMERCIALS. stunts. hims. models. extras S<: AS needs new faces 955 0282 COMPANION Wanted. Mature women for am· bulatory recuperating women. Approx. 5hr·5 days a week to fix lunch. t:dM area. Refer. req. Wnle P 0 . 726. 330 W. Bay. P 0 Box 1560, CM 92626 COMPUTER DATA ENTRY Xlnt opportWlily lo learn how lo operate our IBM 5ll0 System. Must be de· tail oriented. No exper. nee. We will train you on t•odmg, data entry & re- conc11liallons. Localed 1n Costa Mesa near Airport Call Ray Cullen for appl. S49-2l22. 846·0015 w an led r 0 r I 0 ca I GENERAL OFFICE For Summer! Housekeeper R B tn ex COUMTY HELP supermal'ttet deb very of Register now for, a n ous change for 4 hrs day new snack food product. Are you m eamHt? Can temporary assionments deaning & l-ookmg 6 d11y I 1 ·2 pm . Mon · Fri G d d d you think" Are you a::. ., wk No ok' 955.3740. oo ri' 1ng recor in u1rpo11 area. We hu\ e n sm mg. non r serth e? Are "OU a 1 k . fl 4P't necessary. re ereni:es " opportumties PLUS J'obs t nn ang. a •• or ----· d p l perfectionist? Are you k .• 5r:.,, 737 CUSTODIAN require . ermanen career oriented? Are that will work around w_n~-.J<T-~_:_ position with future OP· your busy s ummer P tr. exp'd. Flex. even· portunlties. 84a.1900. you mature? Can you schedule. Long or short House.keepers wante~ ing hrs. Salary S400.S650 take over an engriwnfg. lerm. <:all today for ap· ~acliff Motel. lf!Sl .s. mo. depending on no. or ore. where your work re· poi'nlmenl Coast Hwy, Laguna B< h faril1lles served . EXEC.SECRETARY a lly matters? Really ? · 494.9717 Children 's Center. LeadingNewportBeach Welllhen.lwouldhketo 557-0045 -----833·6276 _ _ __ stock brokerage co has talk to you Pis send Housekeeper1Companaon an open ang for exec. your resume lo Tom r-n.. Lln-Live in or out. DATA ENTRY s ecretary to Pres & Tompson. PO Box29Sl. U \• :, ~2000 COMPUTP Gen. Mg1. No short.hand _N_p_l. Be~~ Offic e duties-type Dictaphone & word pro- 60WPM . 10 key, salary cessing exp nee. Call· open. non·smkr. CPA Personnel. 752 0070 Firm C.M. Call Lynda 1---------754·1040 FLORAL DESIGNER New Conroy's opening in Santa Ana Earn lop wa11:es m bt'auurul en· vironmenl. Exper + good ref s Call 714 551 3768e\t'S -TlMPOIWl'f PfllSOHNU SEIMCfS -----------------General Loc*Jnc) for S'""'"91'Work7 Variety of temporary as signments avail Work when you want. lop pay. no fee. We need· Stenos Typists Data Enl Opp Factory File Clerks Assemblers GIRL FRIDAY With some bookkeeping. Salary to commensurate with experienc e 642-1026. . INSURANCE Busy service clr. of auto ins. agy. has openings for the following posi lions: •Claims Dept Take In 1tial reports & handle follow ups •Renewal Dept Quote & follow·upon n!newals Hvy auto rating exp pref'd Legal Corporate Para le,Ka l or St'cretary with h<'a \} t·or porale back).l round Small law officl'. a1rpo1 t area. Newpor1 Beach <.;all Kathie; 833·9980 LEGAL SECRETARY Probate expen(•n \•l' Permanent part·llmc. 3 full days week Nt'wport Beach area. 673-7120 Legal Secrelarv Exper m Fam law. xlnt i.k11ls. salary open Con lacl Ms Winterbottom 851 1733 <)u a It I it•d l'and 1tl alt':- should bt' 21 n'<ffS or older Soml' l'oilege µn• lerred D1sr 0\er how profit a hie a n in ten 1t•w C':ln be See Our lll'prt'.,t'nlatt\ t' THURSDAY, JUNE 11 l9AM • 12 NOONt 32 121 Camino Copstnm.o I Del Obispo> LEGAL SECRET ARY Smt Juan Leading Newport Beach Capstrano. stork brokerage co. ha!. CA 92675 an openin~ ror Ad m1ms lral1\'e Assistant Openincp in with legal exp. Pos in McDONALD'S of San Clemt>nte 1 l 'n1h·1 \:1•" <h1 n1·1..,h1p1 1:-now .1C:t•1·pt111g .1p 11l11·allnns 101 tla~ & n11thl pos1l1uns Pll'<l!.l' ;ippl.v m 1x•1').o1tn ht>l1H•1•n I* lam & 2 5pm '' k1lys a t \I l' I> o n <t Id <.. fl 5 I A H'n11la Pwo Sant "lrm MEDICAL RECORDS TRANSCRIBER Ht•qu11 t•s (i(IY.pm t) pm,i:, knov. lc•dl(t' ul dwt.1ph11nt' & llH'dH·JI ll'I OllJ~ill(ll(\ Orga1111..1t1nn, a1t1•nt 11111 In d1•t ,11 I &. 111111111 Ill' :II t' 11·1 \ 1mpo11.1111 Wt• ol ,,., l'\lt'lll•lll l'lll 111111 m,•nl t JJll!.l1ano II\ llw S1·a hn"p -t!:I(• Sill:! COOi< Experienced. lmmed open Ing Exce llenl benefits Apply in person. The Jolly Roger, 2300 Harbor Blvd, C.M. DELIVERY PERSON For early AM LA Times home delivery . Economical car req. Adults only 212hrs1day. No collecting. S475 mo. nel take·home + bonus + gas allowance Westminster Garden Grove area. G:jl.5466_ Food Prep & Sen ice now hiring If you're friend· ly. consc1enl1ous & de· pendable we want you from SAM 4PM wkdys. Apply'1n perso n . Ston emlll Terrace Restaurant . 2915 eludes secretarial s up Huntinc)ton Beach, GRINDER-Salary comm. with exp. port lo Dir of Opera· LOftCJ Beach, CEMTBLESS Pd. eo. benerits. For tions . Word processing Santa Ana. Laborers WhseWkrs ---------MEDICAL Full lam e flon1 111111,.1111 h u s ) " p I II d i I) I lhoped 11· olfw<' < 'hJtti.. tlesk 11•llt'I . msura m·t· F. x p l' I I t' n l' t• •I ti n I ·' 646 5!.l!>:i for upp l COOK Professional. im· med. openings. Call: 714·552·4462 -----~ The fastest dr1tw in Wat. . .a Daily Pi t Clasallled Ad. M2·S678. DENT AL ASSIST •• wanted for prh·ate Npt Bch office. Excel pay & benefits. 646-4868 Dl!MTALASST Parttime. Back om ce. Eltperienced only. Mon. & Wed. 49!H369. 499·4667 ••• .-•• • Daily Pilat •• • : Classified Sales : • The <.;laaslned Department of the Dally e Pllol ha.s an opening on a telephone aaln • 1 • desk. Must be able to type appro.xlmatt ly e 45wpm. Salary plus crnl commlulon e • r.rogram. · !xceUent cvmpan,y benellta • ncludina medical, det'ltal, ure lmw-ance. ~ e c:redll union etc. Call ror appointment ror e • lnletvlew, 8'2-·4321. exL 2'17. • : Classified Clerk : • Trairiee • • Jr you can type Is us. a 10 key ad~r we will • • train you few thl• J)OllUan. Opportunity Cor • • advance~t. all company bmcfitl Call e • tor •PJ>Olntrnent for lntervltw, ~l. • Ht.%77. I ~:: : • •w:., Street • ·~ COlt.e ..... CA • :e Equal ()ppoltUDtty Employer' • •••••••••••••••• Redhill, CM. Npt Bch 556-85:.W Equal Opp Emplyr M IF exp. a plus. Salary S O C t Top wages. benerlts, appt., call Linda al f'GS. comm. with exp. Call o. ~ oun Y overtime for exper'd. 963·0941 Personnel. 752.0070 operator. Must be ablel~~~~~~~~~~l ~~~~~~~~!!I'• An Equal Opportunity lo set up for close . -: Employe1· tolerance work. C M. JANITORIAL Eve!'mgs. LOAN SERVICING j~~~~~~~~~j Oeltronl""'"-'"'13 3 to 5 hr s . Ca ll : IOOKICEie.ll!n Jlave somelh t'ng you ~ . .....,.,. 714·992-4821,714-530-3333 g--!l;ft Ha ve somethin g you FULL Time. P tTlme.1---------GUARDS KEYPUNCH Experienced key punc h /t ab equipment operator. Excellent company benems. In· formal omce. C.M. Call Millie after 9am at 645·5800. t:om binatlon assign want to sell? Classified want lo sell? Classified ment for right person for ada do it well 642.567e. ads do il weU. 642-5678. Ana. serv. No ellp. nee. Call btwn 8 & 4:30PM. 546·3333 EOE 'ilMERAL OfftCE SOundcrafl.sman Audio has interesting position available with varied of. fice duties: typing, fll. ing, phones. mail. Call (714)55&-6193. GEti411AL OMCI/ SICUTAltY Seeking uperlenced front oCflce type penon to handle • variety ot 1eneral om ce duties. 754-8822. General Otr1ce Growlftl Co looldo1 for dyn1mlc operallont man•aer. Realize you• potenU1l! T .R. Black ..!!5~?· ____ _ General Otrtce·Typi1t1 P IT. 9-3pm, Mon-Fri. Sm. pubUI~ lft Tustin. Hard worker , non· 1m«er. e /hr. m.~. ... llAL OlllllCI Slrllla ~ lmmtd. 0 p. n In I T 1J>1.n.I actledul1n1. hY)' paona. tlSO atal"t. Company btneftta so.am General Office Newport Beach in · surance co. has the rollow1n g poa1tlons available: BILLING CLERK Typing 30wpm Exper. helprut. Gd. co. benefits. Work· ing hours 8Al\t-4:15PM Call for Interview appt. btwn. 8:30 & 11:30AM. 833·8450 COMMERCIAi~ BANKERS LIFE 1401 Dove St , Ste 550 Newport Beach E .O.E . Mt F General TMl.._.leyCW. ..... ....._ Host tffot'"• 8 mo. min. eitp. req'd. SPM 11 PM 4c Sun. Brunel\ Full & part time. All areas. Uniforms fum'd. Ages 21 or over. retired welcome No exper nee. Appl y . U n iversal Protection Service. 1.226 W. 5th St .. Santa Ana. Interview hrs: 9· 12 & l-4, Mon-Fri Want Ad Help? 642·5678 ••••••• aailyPHat • • : Field Sales Supervisor : • Limited operun111 available IA the Orance • • Coast area. for 1elf-mot1vated. cvrHr • • oriented indiv1du•I who can worlt with • • Fi~ld S..ltt Pt-opl~. Ttuln, mot1vult' wnd • get resulla. Stut1on wugon or , ... n e necnury. Excepllonal earninp, plus job e : rel•ted bent'nts 11vnllable ror the riaht : m:Phl. H yt>u C11n prO<luce raul~. not l t•lk abo1.1t It, tall: 960 oet4 for • ervlew. Ask for Mr. Chanee. • • ;ac... • Ptolualonal yet e ,.. e pleasant workJnl en• • <SW\ w ay st~ • vlro1unm. Ir you are -• ·~ quallhed for lhla !>091· \ C.OSta Me.a. CA e uon. p&e&M caU for appt. E(l ual Opportunity Employer • 6'S·71H. MOft•Frl., • t :IO-$PM • • ••••••••••••• mortgage loan firm tf. fi:.~li~ ~a~JeFa" . •••••• ~ Daily Pilat MAID WANTED • 2?:'N~~~ :1~~~1 I Advertising • MAIHTENAMcE • Production Artist I Bullock• South Coast. Is •.The Art Department of the Daily Pilot has ane seeking Ftr po6illon for lmmedlattl opening /or 11 full .tame. building maintenance • permanent artist pos ition. One year ore person. Basic carpentry .• production art preterr-ed. Good basic. & minimal electrical knowledge in preparing advertising shop and. background required. e apec layouls. Some ability in illustration aJld Excellent salary O(· • l)'pe apeciflcatlon. Must have the ability w e rered. Please contact • handle bask nut production indudlna ma~. Rersoonel office, Tues· and charu. Show potential In 1.-.phic and Fri. lOam·S~. • dethln fields. Portloho necessary. Pluse e E. .E. • Call M2_.S2l, ext. 243 for appolotment e Maintenance help, Mon· Sun. Daya olf arranatd •• e sus1t1r. to llart. Apply • Part Tun· a Eve·~Ls • • al Newport Dunes. 1131 '"'' Sack Bay Or. N.B. • C_ ... , Yotlttt C • .Adult• wlth outst•ndtn1 atlraotlv4 Malnt. per1on1 nt-ded .personaUUes who eJ\,foy worldn1 with 10.l~ for 1team cleanlnf co. year old youths "venln&a 6-9pm Call 642·4:Ri• Od. pa)I, east lo !tam. e ext 343 bet~2pm tospm, a k for Diana e Foreman pc.ttioo avail. • o' Mi c--.a. • Mutt know Oninie Co. -· ChrlU4l·llmi • D Nit ' • • 830 W. ay Slrftl • e Costa Mesa, CA e e 'Equal Opponunll~ Employer e ••••••••••••• •• *. ' ' , ~ • ' r t . •••• ••• soc 0¢¢¢2 :u a s Orange Cout DAJL Y PILOT /Wtdntaday, June 10, 1981 I j 1 00 .......... w~ 7100 ~ W,;._;,,.......1 7100 H -.a.....i 7100 11 8 ~, It eo1:0 Mi•nlla eo'" IOIO MelaW-..... 7IOGH.t,W-... l .. _,,,, --HalmW..t.d 7100 elpWwn~ cycles 020rum ure " ••••••••••••••.-•••••••• ~••T•••••••••••••-••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••• ~~·-:--·•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• ••••• ••• •• ••••••••••••••••• •• ••• • •••••• ••••••••• •••••••• ----------~ Mcdlral Pre Schuul Tt'a<'h er Salf't SECRETARY St(''y-acru1'11c typ111t TRAV&AGIHT 17 '(,'f:NlllRH>N :! U11l'l1 t f.i 111 , in PIOHT OFFICI wanttd, •ummer. · <:ert. •1110.Al SHOP• Nr 11lrport, N.U Mu11t for le111tl ~ork 341 hr wk. l..ool\Jnt« Jm. 11 ('ha/lit' 01 ti ~J)f'('O Ult')'dt• 111111.11'" 11 •• 1 r11M 1 Mature, tKl)eril'nCt>d In ieq ·P'T ~lpm. Mon· have •dphone&typin1 MrMyN·1 ... 0.11l10. pace·1 •:x1H•1l('"ottd $250 5'11'117 e11t s111t'rt>nKll!.'\.lh1lt> O o . G y N , h l' u v y Fri. N.8. 640-8820. Part LO full time, will kills Gd appear n~f SENIOR SEC'Y v;1t•ut1on atwnt I nct>cle1I l"u:llom 3 •t>d t·rul~L:t " di.• 1 111 111, 111 01•11 te l~phone1 Send re· train Pref exp. in tet&ll Plea1&nt 1urroundin11 1 d l f 2 lru ai ht11tl' inultt bH1m·h JCUJI thi·ft prool 111,.k, rmuk 1· I' &..'l!i 132 aumea to Box 11782 0 PRESSRQQM clothln1s11les C M. Growth pott<ntlal. mme 1u~!>~nsn11 or Jlltnl·~ 111 llnnc. Xlnt d:>oi bt•:.toUl't li41i &r!'7 Dally Pilot p 0 aox 5'8 1121 5Se-9333 7$2-6S99ot752-2309 aenlur se y 1>01tllloni. H lttr) & l~.'ll Op1l rm {;!1 l'ull lllJlt lim &•I I 1$60. Costa Meio CA workll\J: fol ChH·<·tor or .uhJlltt'lll\111 \';all Tom· l t.>\1an11 l:t•ntu1111n JU i)lUtlt t1111u 92626 Enfry•Levtf Sales Sf(•retary bu:.101•111lcH?loµm1•nl '" n11t• llJJ 2!JT7 ""II, ••ootl n mll Shu u1f1•1 i;T:.l "11 • -. Colle It student•· 'IT SECRETARY d1rtcto1 of,. t1mutlnM ,. " -> Medical/<;hiropr.aclic We hu ve por1tlon 1 tuchers exceptional 1 afrl urrtce.. Approx NN!d 11001.l l)'fliUM 4' Tr~H•I Ajll.'llt for hui.y 751111751'H'1 L>ld 111 11 '1IHtti•l"lt1. clinic needs sharp. ai-avalluble for encraelic ••lea opportunlt) J thra.dally,g('nerolof shotthund akll s m\l•l C'omme1t'1ul A.:1•11cy in lulldlnCJMottrfat 8025 1111.liHI , m111111 a r eulve rrunt de1k hurlJ w ori.lng In reprea«1nt1na prettl"t tlce workforwholtUlt> huve11ood\<t'rool&writ Jt vtnt> Mi.thJH•S,1h1l• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltl'd "'""''..\.1111 ,11 ,,1~111 person Wtlh heuvy exp. dividuals Interested in company It pro(lu<'t. rep 557 ~389or 549·0528. l4'n conun1.1n1(•ot1un Op t"X~1 , &. ul leost 2yri. t•x llcdwuml ~ h't' Ii'~., xlnt m.1td1 ~ill li71:! & opp't sched., Shones. learninl( the Printing Flexible hrs. t:irteit!ston port'Un1ty for curctv 1>t'I with luri;:,. rom deci.inii 8 lo :!l.l' 111111¢ data e ntry .:> y wk. trade. Manual lubor In Ni n e F oundation mtndt'd inrlt\ld\lltl Ex mertuil IH'l'lllr XlnL N~~ lmul JU t 11111\l'<I 1'111111 lo\h1 .. 1bl~· 1 I lo\lllt• salary com men with volvt'd Full benefits tn· 833·1017 pcrltnce Ill fc-ttrt-d '<Int •ala,.> & bcn Cull Tom Sa',. 11 t ~5· IH'• rt cl11 s s, u11 '"'·" 1 111 c1 .... 64().6002 cludina S4 50 hr with bent Cits F'or furtht>r m· llllt 833 2'J77 u 16 tlAA!I anytum· ,\ 1;7 1 .;u.:i ~~ --· shirt dlffere nllul .on Sales. Children'stTeen form11llon contarl Medical Secretory Exper. accurate & raat typist ror busy ofllce. M uat know all front or ri c e procedu r es. pegboard, Ins & phone HB •rea 847-2547 MESSEHGER nights ~nd Sundoys (.all shoes. hrly + comm. Ma1g11rt>l llolmu II\ Ro n Cru11 al t7141 Exp desired . T op "*'*~"''""'-...... .., •• <,. O e\ l'IOJ>ffil'nl t'o ~-1441. ext 45 or apply ben e f its Mt Finn . SICRET""RY <714Jll331ft>80 M1F' EO~ m verson al : · ·. · "' N e w port Boot e r Y • POSmOHS AM PRESS 27742 Forbes Road LaKUl)a N11(uel. (.'A !12611 Equul Oppo11unity Employer M F 644-2464. A d in i n I s l r a t I v e . SALIS Cat r h this opportunity ~SlOOtday. Youna am bilious r rew has room for more Training & Lranspo provided : 54o-76S2un UAM 1ecretary rect!pl1on11t (2 I. reception 11>t pa 1 t lime St-win~ MAC~IHIST It B Mu l haH t.>i. perience on O\ erlocker Xlnt com.ltt1ons 000 11537 6 mornings a week, Mon : 5:30AM to SAM, Tues. lhru Sat: 6.JOAM lo 9AM . Exl·ell. dnvlng rec. rcq'J . Apply Pen-I•--------• i------~;;;;.-.-__ 1 nysaver, 1660 Placentia p T offit·e & Lelephonl', 3 SALES Shlpplftg/f'.aclcoging 1''u ITU me. EiqwtlPnt·1• h1•lpful, Llul will truin Cost;:1 l\tesa 04~5421 New Laguna NliUl'I Of flee ts s~ln~ qualtried appllcanlii with l)l'Ovcn secretal'ial skills who enjoy the fast pace of a dynamic R.E. office. Ad 1---------m1n1slrative set·retiu > Ave .. C M hrs da). 3·5 days wk Experienced. P ,T * Md\fr COUPLE * 1'' \' 968 7638<6-l!pm1 Ladies Specialty Shop. must have 2·!1 yrs e~ peraencc io related field R E ltcense preferred, but not essential Open ing alao ~:ousts in South Laf(una Orrlc~ for secretary 1receptio01:.1 Positions offer excellent company benefits & \ery pleasant en' iron ment Salary l'om mensurute w llth e'< pertence For inttn 1t•11. call Ce t:c Bu1n i. 499· 1320or831·0836 SHIPPING DEPT. TRAINEE Excell co bcncfiti. Stead) 11.u1 k Shl.4 mu~t he good with number!> (..'M Oclt1-omc. 515 t\113 67 adult oy units 1n E REAL ESTATE SALES Fashion Island. Flex t:osta Mesa. Nice. no PEOPLE lnvestmt>nt .._h•r•s•C•'a111•l•M•i•m•l•7•59•··995-1_. pets .646·0073 F Lrm butlding Rea l " MMGMHT POSITION Fabric chain. l' l\1 & Anaheim Xlnt 0111>1 "v Gerl 646-4040 ·MODELS/ ACTORS Busy 0 .C. cast mu oft ice has .. after stnkr" mo· ttOn pict ure cablm.: uc: counts Non-union extra work ror run. SS. tTl'dtti. lnten·1e 11.s F'n Sat. June 12 & 13. M Jo' 18·25 y r s old. Je1wn1IJb le trani.portatton. no t•x µerlence. 558·8~08 for app't. News pa per d t• I I\ l' r y person, Ill \Ir '" 1•1 Drl\·er·s lrct.'ni>l'. 1n :.urance. econom\ 1·a1 :-<pt Bch In Co:.t.i ~ICSJ area. 7 d}s vr 11.k Mon· F'rr, 2-SP~I Sat Sun 4 7 : 30AM A 1111rox SSOO mo. <'all S·IO 3007 bet llAM·SPM. Ask fo1 Lee or Bob Newspaper Ot'h\ t'I) LA Times to home!> on Balboa P cn1 n :.ulJ J.30am to6am SGSO mo 548·844lor646 1413 HURSE/RH orLVN from J to 11 .30 pm 41 be d t:onvel. Hoeip Sunta Ana Hts SA s.J9-3061 HURSE-RH or L VH Partttme. to work 11.tth proctolog1st tn II R of ftce on F'rstlays Xlnt working cond1tioni. & sulary. <2131919-3.'\77. NURSERY YARDMAN to do delHen~ & ht'lp w stock1n~ Jo' time wkdys lnten 1ew:. I>> appt only. <:a ll 6467441 Lloyd's Nurser) NURSING ASSISTANTS Raleigh Hills Hospital m :"1•11. port Beach has 1m med openings for N urs 1n~ Assistants <.:ert1f1t'<l or exp'd. prefd. Open 1n~s are fo1· t1'il' 11 7 shift. both full time & part lime. Excell. fringe benefits package F'or Interview, call Mel( An- drews. 714·645·5707. EOEM F Estate Sulei. Force Licensees tn\'tted to call. 641-0763 RECEPTIONIST P time needed 1mmed after noons for 111w ore m 0 t: 111rport area 833 8486 ask for Pam RECEPTIONIST Front office appearance for Orange Co de· veloper l'Ontractor Lite typing Liberal benefits. Chance for ad\ance· ment Appl) in person. Hamilton Parnulzer Construction. 2915 Redhtll A\t>, Ste F-200, Int 'I Co headquarters tn Tustin seeks person for Telephone Order De:.k w inventory control resp. Requires person with inside sales ex per & ability to handle order proccsalnM. Hrs. 6 AM to 3 PM Sal Rl'OUP benefits & attract1\'e worktnR cond Send resume Lo Clas!>1fted Ad 11928. Oatly Pilot , P.O Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626. Costa Mt•sa 5.57-7951 _ SALES Jt•welry. full time RECEPT fTYPIST pos1t1on a'·ail. for finP .as wpm lntcrnauonal retail store. Call for tradin l( com pany . appt 7591722 SECRET ARY R.E. STUFFERS Lrarn to t•am SllllJ '~ k 11.ork 1 2 hours d11il\ stulftni: t•mdopt•s St•nd self uddn...,wd '>L11mp1'<I t•nH•IOIK' lo Hl•.:111 ~:!~ W l' nm m n n" t' .1 I 1 h Dt>pl '(~ l'ulll'rl11n "\lw:12 Summl'l Juli. \H1rk1ni.: 1•anmh lll'l'<I ll' .. POllSI l>lc 11e1 son In surwr ' l'-t' k11ls I.I\ t' 111 111 out '\11 house\\ 111 I.. \I u-.t '"" 1• drl\ t'I s lit· 1;1i! HUUI 6 !lµrn Secretarial position in acllve Newport Centt•t Realtor's 0Ht1:t> Front orftce pos11ton rt·qu11 ei. aood telephone \ llll'e tyrtng & UPIK'llrJnC<' SI & real estalt• t•x per1ence helpful hut not essential Prelcr lorn I!•--------- resident. F'or inll'n lt•w I tru ll Mn Duhl I Wesley H. Taylor Co . Realton 644-49 I 0 * S Vf ITCHBOARD • OPERATOR Perm P T , F'n & Mon. 1----------9.4. JOpm l7141833_8970 Salesperson needed Lo Im medi;.itt• n1l(·n1nl! JOI t•Xpl•rit.'n1·l•d 111111\ 1du.il 11. 1th i.:ot11I t1•h·11hon1• 1wr-.onaht~ lo 11.m k lull time· in •lUI ht•JUlllUI m . .11n 011111• ~'.Xrl'llt•nt w :i ~ ... a n d h 1• n "' r 1 t i. pu<'kal:l' l'll•ui.t• nm tal'I Jut·l..1t• SJhh• l7ll > ~>40 :>JOO A!>k for Nonna sell matnt rootracts m growing t'O Wiii tram. gd pay, easy lo learn. Call Chris· Unlimited Matntl'nance Ser\'ice. REC E:PTIOHIST Needed. Tra,·el agency. ln ·inl' location. 552·3052 Lisa RECEPT /TYPIST Office neat OC Airport, l·all Mr Guffin, 752 9055 641-l079. SALESPERSON Mature salesperson for Laches SJ>('<'tahty Shop RECEPT /TYPIST Exp pref. but not L11:ht ('Jene-al necessar:r No nitcs. 6 Newport area 549-7966 Sundays per year Full RE<.:EPT TYPIST t.s.~~t ti me Ca 11 TRAINEE PARTTIME 1-~-~~~~~ 11 J Datly $3165 hour. ,- Fro nt office ap · pearance. J!OOd basic :.kills. lmrned1atl' open- ing Student OK . .957-0701. SALESPERSOH RECEPTIONIST Answer busy phones of big co. Also learn othe r duties EXPO AGENCY 16483 S Magnolla II. B. 1 blk No. of Warner 842-5447 RECEPT /TEU OPR F time temporary If }ou ha\e a good telephone \Otce a nd typ- ing skills of 55 wpm, we need you to handle our b u sy co rdl ess s wit c h board. gree t customers and do misc. typing. Exper pref'd . Please call Mary Pat· terson for a~pl 556-7075 Paul Dosier Assoc., 3050 Redhill Ave .. CM ~lature lady p time for boutique s hop 1n Newport Beach Expr helpful 675-3020 -1 ' -- Sales Standard Shoes ts now accepting avphcations Crom serious minded men & women. We have created a ne w rom m1ss1on system that will offer $250-1350 wk to qualified indivduals. We also o ffc1· good Co. ben , and the chance to move into Mgmt positions. We prefer previous sales ex per, but will tram eager. agressl\e men" women Apply in person Mon-F rt 9-llam 30T1 S Brlstbl, C.M. ------Sales-Students 16 & up, need summer jobs or P time year round work. Call Mr. J ones. 541·4118 SECRET ARY II H you would enjoy work mg m !)lush surround tni:s at our NI.'"' port Centl'r offic·e Jntl l'.ln meet our t t'<!Ulrl'mt•nb wh) not g1\'e w. a t•u11 ·1 We are current!) 111 tervtewmg cand1tlalt•:. with a minimum ol fi m os pr t•v1ou-. secret a rial experwnt•t•. excellent typmg Skill!. (60 to 65 wpm) anti th1• ab1hty lo l'Ommun1cJll• effoct1 \'elr l!:xce l lenl ::.ta111nr su In ry and l)(.'nt•r II!> For mo r e in formi1L1un . µlease l·all Kevin Terry 7 14-640-9 32 I S1•rt(•)111: WELLS FARGO BANK 660 Newport t:entct D1 Newp0rt Beach Equal Opp Empl m I h __ =z: Secretarial Exec. Secntory Challen£ing, temp0ra1 y poa. lhru December Ex cell. pay scale. SOUTH COAST BANK Equal Oµpt) 1-.mpl \I F TEACHER E'µ d IOI lolill<l 1J t Church !:>l-hool p11 .. 1t 1on Sunda,.., onh l.'Jll 4!111 3~'mmnmg,. Tt•l<•rihont· S.ill·!'. 111111' nl•t•d!> ... ,1K·nt•m 1·•I ::.J '"~ hl'lp f.ast l~ l'Jm up to ~ hi ('Jll 497 ll!ll! Tele11hone 1nt1•1 , .... "., work rrom vou1 homt• ~:>.<'t'Jl\HIOJI 011por111111 I~ P1·t•:.t11:l' com11Jn~ lhgh l'OffilnlSSHln f'lt''CI hie hr:. Phonl' 833 1017 TELErHONE OPERATORS t\111>11. l'rllll! St•n it·••. ';inou:. !>h1fts. lull & P T 362 3rd St ll "1 .. Lai.:una lkarh Tclephont• GREAT SUMMER JOBS ROSAN, IMC. 714·548-5533 Equal Oppty .Emplyr -~~~~~---•! R-ec-ep-t-10-nist Ty;tst-f-ro_n_t Seamstress, exper. '°' Office help. Wed thru Sun ofc Sun-Thur P \1 coun· sail loft UUman Sat.ls 9 s . Yacht C:lub. (.'d~I. try club 644·5404 675-6970wkdys. l~~-~~~~-- 5 immediate tlpenin~s talking on our tel!!phom•. Jeep ''mrc:. orelerred Mon-F'n. j-llprn Come b\ 1180 North (.'oust tlw~. l.aguna llral·h 11.eekda~!> afil't 21>m ht come blh•red Telephont-Sal~ WORKATllO~IF, 644·9530. Partllme boy for water· mg garden. \'ic Wes t Nwpt. $1.50 hr 675-3823 PART TIME Temp to circulate flyer!> near 0 .l'. Airport Own transportation 53.40 Hr 1157·0648 PART Time, 11ns. sen. No ex p. oec . <:all : 838-33S3btwn8&4 EOE Port Tinw Person To deh\'er Daily Pilot auto route m Laguna Beach area. RESTAURANT Business ls booming. We need cooks, wait. host. bus. dish Q>me lO BJ's. 106 Mam St . Balboa Pen. & fill out applica· tion. Restaurant. Cate ring firm hus opening for respon. adult to operate Hobart auto. s li<'er & learn portion control. Exp. pref but will train. 9:30am to6pm t.1on. thru Thur. Sam to lpm S un. 979.0747 ror appl. Lori's Kitchen SEC EXEC SI 300 Help run itrowing com pany EXPO AGENCY 16483 S Magnolia H B. I blk No. of Warner 842-5447 Security Acpftf1 Call Garden G1-u' t' Bullocks SOulh Coast. Is S30 5220 seeking professional. re TEL..,..H,...,,_.E tall oriented securlt) g--..,.... agent ror F '1' positions SOLICITORS n\.a1lable 1mmed1a tely lmmed openm •s Wo1k Pre\ lous r etail ex ple11sant e,·enmi;i h1 s pertence is preferred 3·9. Mon F'r1 No sellm~ Top salaries offered t:all 9ti6·0151 ufll•1 lpm with full compun) Secretary benefits. Please conlatl T£>1ephoneSalcs LEGAL SEC'Y personnel office, Tues· TELEPHONE P IT -Newport Beach . Fri, lOam-Spm • TALENT S m a ll congen ial firm E 0 E Wtnnei11 & etr starters looktn& for intelligent. only! I ore In Santa friendly. exp. Legal Ana G1t'at op~t) 'lew Secr~tary with cor SEC'Y /RECErT. .. • ..., ' II porateflillgation exp. ,AltT·TIM~ ~~%~7 "'".., r "4 · l BM Memo r Y 100 Executive search firm TYPIST jRECEPT. 100+ cemt·nt b1wks :t ~ " SUOO+ pl'r month x7:illx2'dtlt'.t 1'~ullt 1ml', permantHll 1163 1141Xl l'11111I \ I\ ... 1 I lut)I'~ :.! I l'i old s>ino ,. 11111 M usl lY(>e 60 wpm t. h1n-cl(e>«lphoneskllh•.3 Cameras& Otlho l)1111·11 11,11111~~ ycuss offict' e,,;ia·i Equi~ 8030 11 ttnl· •1111111," '" vld Opening m long tlml' ••••••••••••••••••••••• \In l 1"<>1111 •• ,., • 1 ,r,;e, t-stabhi.ht'd ct>nstructton Pent11x KlOOO w1lh Ul -<\o•\\ comp.rn) Xlnt bcneftls t'l',!<.CJl'll'!i ~or lwi.t ol 2 111'' !>l '''· '>JU & soltd future 1n hi\ el~ ll!t 11-111118:l3 tui 111111 Ki! .. , '' .th•t t .. ti too nt.'W ufl kt• ~.'i 7l8!1 Ii If, J 11.J I 1 1 Hit! Cati 8035 Walter /WoitrHs '-1•lilY b\"' n U '\ ,_t & Noon t'h11r hr i. Chili. JOOI lll•dh1ll Billg ;::! Stt• •226 l \I w A I T H 1': s s \\ ,t I I ,. I II. l'lll lul \\.ldll'I IJ;i:;kt!I lundt M·I I !l :to I .IOP\I · M 1'' 1':u rn Sl25 Sl'>ll "k I) !\lust ht' lll'<.1t . l>t'l"SOll,I hit• & t'rll'l'l-(l'l 11' !H!I 07 17 all ICl\1\1 tu1 • 1ppl WAREHOUSE I: .Ill\ ''" dJ\ l .oll <tll l lA \I 1 IO 11 •. 1:! \\'t•l'k1'11d .... lll'l'I \ 1:>01 1 \.\I 1101111. ~at Sun rn tnt;il hn, f'llllllll} JUU Ill l11•1ni. 1·t•r1.i111 udult auto l'Jllll'I flltl.." Up llaJJt'i' 011 t1m .. I\. m1m11m X.. t1 .. '" 1•1 111mpl.1101,, ' 11l1·tl Ill h\ 1U.,\fllll l'I' SIUO mu t'\IH'll!>" rht•l I.. S:I ·,u h1 to ... 1 .. 11 \IU!->1 h1• 21111 1\\ 1'1 \ Jlld ilrl\ l'I •, h1· Sot 1n"u1 ann• ''.ill 'l1t1 :1uo; 11 \~I :!l'\I ''" 1111 111111111 l.t•t WORD PROCESSOR lmm1•tl1Jl1 11111·n1n~ 1n Olli ll\llll 111(111 k. no\\ lt·tl t.:1· ot t PT "111 tJ jlfOl'Clil>OI hclµlul, hu1 11.111 llJll1 ~.tl.11\ 11111•11 l Jll f1 .tn K:!J :J(;2:! XRAY·PERSON P1 r·~on I'' p ti in .\ 1 .1 ·' t1·1l11114Ut'" \lllh "'Ill" IJli l..no11. hu\I 111 11.1lhn~ n1·.,~ lo h•Jlll nt'f'lll'tl I 111 bu~' rnt•d11 al Jll ••llw1· l'Jll '.1'11 :IK:lll .1·,I. 1111 Su1amw X H.i\ 'l•·1hn1n.111 I' I' \\ IJJc·k 1111 t 'l"'I 11>1 01 I hup1•tl1,1 ol I 11 •' l1:U l:!llO ••••••••••••••••••••••• t'LTJ-: KJ'rfl.:'~ Siu mt'!>l' ~lu11x 1111' 1,1 ks old, :Sl~>t.·..i !N~ :111 II Dogs 8040 ....................... 1'1-:~;SllO"lll> l'ul"• \1\1 l"hJlllp 'illf' ;\1 ~ l'l'I•\ !> h O II. I' I I JI I :!13 1;117 134511lt 1i 1'111 \\A llO\IE fJrH, fltAl'\1,1 • Ill \ 11111 htllllt' llhl'tl I II l & p111hlt"111'""1111' 1•.~'l:!t).\ lh•1111t F l.l1J,,1 \1"1' I }I l•·llll'l'l11 -.1 1 ,\~"ool humt· ~ll~1 1~11 ZKt.'( • ,,,, ... , ..... 1•111•1 m.tlt•, 1111111J1 < It 111111 lirtt'' I' I' J..11,1111.:hnrro 171 I 1•1i11 >~II., I'" ... 1·1 Sp.11111•1 \1\1 F1•111 l'l "k.,ohl ~l1o1t" ,:,11 11711 B1111.111\ !'.1•uml'I' .!\I 111 "ko; 1 h.1mp h1111t 111s.: hut·' Sli.)l',t l~fl • Ii l.o\ahl1· ~ilk' 1•111<1 pup~ \K1 1 •'I! Ii ~111•11 I" I pl\ •. 1•1 .d I' Free to You 8045 ••.•.•••.•..•.......... FREE KIITEHS 1;111111 h11111, -.11; II. 11 \ I 1 t•1 tu 1-!•JC•I hum•• \I \11 ... 1 (;1·1111 !-.h1·1· I \I old 11,·1• I•> I!'""' 11111111 1,:11 li:ltlh ( ,Jt. ,\ 11Uni! 1!1,1\ 111.il• .ill 'huh. n1•u11•11"I ''"'ii 111\Jn~ huntt I h1•1 r • 1,:11 '1IH Da" Iii ~old t11n lr1•1•11 ii p11nt "11.1 111\" ,.,,I J 111 Id:! .!klll \\\I I.Iii \II \1 (111 1"11111 I 111 1,,. •I 11.11. h1.1il 1 .. 11 1 .... ,.1 1h,1\\ll ti"'"'' ••.• \\ 1111 I 1111tltf ~.I• lu•t( \I I I •ol ,di nlll( 111 II I •'11 lll• ~I' !1,1111IJ1 ' pl I 111\ , • I 11 I \I 1 h • o \I .. I "1"11' I •1111 \ &)p ll ~I "''If lf1 I l ' I\ I f1l 11Jf I '"'" ·GorCJqe Sale . ,, 8055 ..•.•••...••........... , • ' ... I I " I I ,. 111 I I. I it • ..., ,,, , 1 t 011 I Hou~ehold Goo:h l30b'• ••••..... 't•1 ' I\( II I ,1,-1 ~' h Merchandis~ ...•................... B t'.1 11 I \I ,, l ,. I, " I d I\ I I• I AntlquH 8005 . ...............•...... lfrll 11•11•1 J.!n11d l\ l-.111' .1!1111d h11111•<•IK l~'IK WANTED TO BUY f\lrnitur~ 8050 Machinery i-l018 I bu1 old .:u n s d1Jm11nth. l\IU-) Jlldt 6t colle1 t 1hh•' Call 1711 972 4'l2t. & ,1i,k fot 0Jnl.' .......••...•...•.....••...•.................. 2 IJt>aot h.11111 !'an t•<I ,,1dt• a1 Ill l'hilll1>. uphul w;it<.. S25o 1i7 ;, u~ rn Oal. S11h·l>oard partne1' dt:~k. mi.:.c :IJ9 7HO OAK SIDEBOARD Sl500 002· 7 ~o I Ant1quei. 1!103 oak u1• rsl(ht piano, oak )1brary SOFA! !I II l"l t''I nt I .lpi Ill I (lUl' t.;nld .d\••I I \ l I ll1•11t l nn1l1l 11111 ~)11,1 1)\1 \bo l \\II d 11 .. l11111,1n ""'J.! puh \111 I rhJ11:0. l.lk.I' '\!'\\' j:# • 1'.llh I .dl1;1'1 'Iii o lo:! ~•i ::U't' ,,. <:uotl ll'>t<l rllllll 1111 \ .\pph,1nn·~ tlll I "''' !'>VII 01 s~:IJ.1111 \ 1111 MASTERS AUCTION 646-8686, 833-9625 table & cha1ri; dough I BUY FURNITURE cabinl'l, old lcuthPr s teamer trunk, ouk Ll's !•:i711l"J3 iceboA. ~Jmclback :.of.1 SU e d l' s 0 ( U l' O I ( t• C table&. 8 1><: llmwn & J o r d a n p a t 1 o ~ 1• I 496·8007 I\ e m~I( ILLNESS \I ust ~··II kmi: &. 'lllt••·n !1111• mJllll.'~sei. & tao, i.pnni: .. 11!~1 272!l ' -Ii .. r I)\\. n II I .11 If ... '•I ·' . Appliancn 80 I 0 matt• h 1 n I! l 111 t'" t• :1 t . ••••••••••••••••••••••• llAROOl\AREA t•ha11 &nttnmJn k.tt "''I APPLIANC:ESER\'ICE "' I I h;lll,, S4 ,I) tll We buy us~I appliance!> !N;i; I Hill .we sell rtcond. guar El hJn .\lien i:ulh 1· t.il•I\ a (fl:>hanres 549-3077 tl! rn1l rusllt-1111w I BUY APPLIANCES >.Int S2 10 631 -1,-;•1 Les 957·8133 iJt10 ~1·1. 2 mm. nit! ~ l,1.,, to11 w 4 l'lwi r<> .1-;k 1111.: Hvyl;)utyD1:r 1 :s27!> 6m11 olrlmaltn•s $200 OBO -t:.038 & "'11otlt·n bo' w1 lrl)I 1"r1g1do1re 20 G cu fl Sl!l:1 67'1 7:r79 refrig w 1cemaker. Ita l (.'nltt't' & ""'' 1,tlilt• $375' 080 6440381 µla:-<. 1nlJttl, 111 111'" W:ishcr and Dryer Sl.25 each. Fre~zer SlSO. 646 5848 recltn1•r <'hr. 1111, \ I nt'W rt>ll lj.t 1>7:1 4/4:1 -.1·1 I' 1111 U• \\ 11,u ,t , 111 1111 I '11 \I \\ ,, 111 I 111 JI I 11 I Misc;ellaneoi,,) 8080 ••........•............ I; \ \I 1-. :-It 11 \\ I I 11.1, S I I \ 1-. II 1, I I I I ~; 11 TI I h \ I I \\ .. 1 I h ~101~· \'.di .... 11 ' ' ,., .,.1., '•:! '., \II \t•.11 ll11hl1t. ~ht lo'ttlH ~J \ "• '' ,II .nl ,,~, f,S ft IA love Balloons 1'111 II \h11 II 1• I 111111 ll1o11°1111 t., .i. I 11 I' I. " l'•'I I• I I 1111 P\ t'I'\ tt1 ""''"'J\ h1 't 1 IJll ''II H~I \tol 111111 t. llh llr .11111 11 ·11 • > •·Ito',~\ .111~ 111111 ll1•tl\\1•11il • ,,, 11" \ltll ol1•1 kin ' 'I lo 'II 1.,11 :'lfc \\ lu,1tl Jll'I 11 I \ • d ~fl\,. ·-' t ,:, It• I 11 hlli 'lilH.l .111\ 111111 :-..1•\\lklll l\l,1dt f, Ill·~ L 1111> llH'tttl11•1,.h1p I 111 ""'"d 11111 .. 1 .,, I 1 ll.')1i2k ·~1i :-.111•1·1 tl .... 111 llOURS: Mon. thru Fri. approx . SAM to 7AM. Earnings approx S400 per mo. RETAIL Part Ume clerks. typewriter & ProData n r. O.C. Airport. 25·30 TRAVEL AGENT Comp.blllingknowledge hrs t wk . Flexible E'<1)d agen t wantetl Fros1free12c1treh·11(,l 'helpful. Salary com schedule. Must have gd Saber trained. lgc com· yr, off-whl Penny's mensurate with skUls & t yplng s ki Ila. XI nt pan y, sal ury com mdl. s.iso. IW2·7953 BL' FF 1':T Chu1u llull'h S275 Hl'cbnert'h1 S20 .')~ K48.1 Sut l'llll1' \1111•n11.1 II\ I\ d 11'\if l I 111111 11\,111.1 I HO r\ .,1.1l 11111s GIY.! fi:i:2 12'KI <.:all 642-4321 for Mike B uescher o r Qryan 1Holtand. STorM•Go MAIUCETS 4555 eo.t Hwy., Newport leoch Permanent P 'I'. service greeting cards 1n local supermarkets. 15-201hrs week. Flex. h1·s. Calll~~~~~~~~~~I John <714>S33-8958. rHSOH RIDA Y Lido Isle seeks penion for part/Ume work with IOOd ('Ommun1c at.tons skills. Call Cheryl or Sal- ly. 813·29<rl RnHtlD PERSOH For parkin& kll monitor. 22/hrs a week. Contact Managu. Anci e nt Mariner, 2607 Pac ific Coast Hw y, .N .B. 646-0201. SAILORJlxDr. to sail 11 lt-G'"arden Ketcti. Job requir., br~ ingilll a neglected l YT old yacht lo Briatol cOnd. and keep it same M..a. live near Newpott Some overnl•hl cruas• Re&. a must. Call"1·0148 --- exp. HealLh Insurance & salary . N. Don lord . mensurate "1th ability ----ALWlST i\ I·:\\ parkiPI provide d , 752-832L Call Monti 1714)8338000 GE Refr1g.,.,_rrostfree, 13 t µl'acock 0 ••k •11 m 640-5640,Lindaori;>ebra. -------cu fl. Uke new. $300. Call ch111111, StOOca 759-UOtl3 61--------~-~----~ 646·5766 SECRET ARIES NEEDED! Work Temp0tary or Pa11 Timti Call· iv1c11 HESTO•I IA11ecliltl1 SpedaH11ng In Tem~raryClerical Peraonnel 540-0400 SUMMER JOBS. Kini( :;ite l>NI w hdll1 d & Stove. old 1920's model. r i nm e $200 li I uc ". good cond works good. cout•h, Si!OO ~2 7MH $100 548 85l3. 548·4485 Dryer, clean works good. S75. S48 8513, 548-448.'i Rer. rrostrree. very good, excellc>nl $250 548 8513, 548 4485 Remod•llna built-In tun1e & O\N\, $100. d~ bwuhu, S125 ; ~ll'c. Gorgeous VHto11un Wwlnut hdrm set 01,1 bed & matt \et') lull hdhrd Marblt• ll'>JI dresser w tlrg m1r101 , marble lOP wash tun<l w mirror ~00 tQkt•,, oil ,\ntt<t lll' <1e.tle11 welcome 64().5300. D. R. Tabl + 6 mlih.h ·d chnlt s. Inc. 4 leaH~tl $1~ 67!5663 . .. •I •I • L ... ' t 1 f r N:;;ao • * a • ~ Mlac1l•11• M.._ hllh, W 9060 A.to Sff'Yke, Perts •••••••••-••-••••••.. l1111.,•1llt 90JO ....................... & Acc .. miea 9400 Brunt w lck 1 lo . alate ••••'•••••••••••••••••• Tornado Cat. 20'. US J335 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bum per pool tbl ln.flatat>&o 9'8" Sen perlt , w /nu tilt lrlr, rac~ re· SSAVISAVI S w /leather bard1op. Xlnt 1375. ady. S:J.200. 846-9080 WITH US1D PARTS cond. $300. l'fMlM7 f'IS-l4M. KITE 11878 lmpo{~~lr.farta Fabulou1 5' ablp model, • • • 4 HP Johnson 0 /8 , 2 ealla. dolly, l(lnt cond, AUTO SUPPLY rosewo6d tbl, antique X I • t · S 2 8 5 · C • l I Sn~. 548·0812 101 N. Manchester dd 7141871-6$4& An h i 6 9900 tealdcot• •• y, ~~!~us 14' CYCLONE Sall boat. a e m 77 . per ~ona. -'79 Suiukl T,' 1 S.S. w /fuel c v r A t r 1 r $12 oo. Lynx Muir, Ink Jkt, tank. k> hrs like nu 1475. 1·328 40$2evtt sforS. ---.....••...•............ Fu ra. Sliver as Turq. _67_3-_2303 ______ _., OWC lo hftrest IM PORTANT JwJry. Mlle llt mt. rua. 957·3063, Ext. 207 C M. MUST S&L CF 41 Del Rod ria. 9 NOTlCETO R . E . 0 R A H j\ M aalla, ttfril alps 71 al\ READERS AND Bumper pool tab~. S2()0. FIBERGLAS . dbl A I 1 ! S •-ADVERTISERS Bar & stoo!a, $300. ROWING SHELL · ox ous' tt °' The price or Items Rowln a u sem bly, 19' DE AL N 0 W 1 ! J · advertised by vehicle 1M1a-7SOl s h ell " P lantedost Bromley,7 t4·673 '998 dealers in the vehicle Ala rl Video Computer wooden oars. Sella new lotltt Sipe/ cla('sifled advertising System , $120 or best of· for SU70, sac. ~. 9-5: , Dodst 9070 columns does not In· --taxes, license, transfer 200 bric ks , sofa b e d , s..ts, Powef' 9040 W~NTED; Live aboard fees. finance <'harges, '590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTEDll Cte.llllPCM"fa Topl>oll.- Poldll Call JI• Hogo .. or MlkeL• Crener Moton llS..3171 w .. ·11 Buy Or \di Tou r Clt·on Imp ort On Con \lqnml·nt ''' C oll Our U\rd C or Munoq .. r TODAY'" S J 1-1040 4 '1',-4 '1 4'1 Soddll'boc!-BMW M1H1on V1 e10 I (er. 962·1259 646·3908: eves: 875-2406. ••••••••••••••••••••••• elude any applicable Su111ki 80 t ypewriter ••••••••••••••••••••••• slip (or43 Gran Mariner fees for air pollut.1.on con· t hat 846-S934 '33' OWENS BRIG StF ~ mother " son L.B .. trol dev1cecert1rications , ___________ _ I an iq, c ' w /Newport Slip n ew unt. Hrbror Nwpt 9ch or dealer documentary . .. . d ~-C a 11 C r 1 s tine d a y s 13 9 Saalllsh Sailboat crusa en. tra!'S "' Pr'?' 1714 )894.0884 eves & preparation charges un· s 3 s o I o 9 o . • 6 9 ps. Radar, pilot, bait wknds 1213>823.l 3SO less otherwise spec1f1ed I Old smobile •dr auto tank, Halon fire system. by the advertiser $400/0 80, cam per for $37,SOO 540-7245 WANTED General 9 5 10 small pick up make offer 260 SEA RAY Sundapcer 26' boat slip BSS·4069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~5-4493, 642·9274 . w /slip, '79 lo hrs. auto , AUTO BROKER pilot. alcohol elec stove, WANTED: .Shp for 26 Will find you the car or A~llque dining lbl $165, refrig, dock side pwr & Sailboa t an Newport yo u r choice a t Chest $65, Desk ,r.o.. charger ratbometer Cish Harbor. PPS48-5832 Wholesale Pric·es ! Game tbl '75. 6'0-716 . finde r .' ape I co radio loah, Speed & 631·4621 '645-0389 Sc.RIU •£ $ l~lephone, radio dlrec-Sid 9080 Ant~uea/ Nft"L T taon finder, full canvas, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Classics 9520 A~H 84 1·82Sl or964·3518 l8's' '77 RANGER 460 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IWftt.ft-1 zo· SKIPJ•cw FORD J et, seats 10. l~s PRETTIEST Mingle Epoch -A " than Shrs on eng. 81mm1 , Clerk-Sloven -1973 top, trlr. 3 sklls. rope. 5 7 T-llRD ENVELOPE Xlnt Cond . Low hrs etc. S6500. 979.7295 IH TOWN! I JUSt bought a mini com-~~~-~;~w:~MS7SOO BEST OFFER• pact car b y mall. Talk TroMportatioft (OOOUKZ> • about ea.ay. AU l needed 31' Bertram Race Model. •••• •••••••••••••••• ••• was a small down pay· 482 c u. an . Ch~vy's, C-~"· SaJ./ me nt a n d a self · traile r. 1 ton t r uck . Reilt 9120 addressed ENVELOPE. World Record holder . ••••••••••••••••••••••• TICKETS 121 Tom Jones Sl00,000 Invested. S25.000 10~2 Camper Four Star Greek Theatre J uly 4th r i r m . Ca 11 Ne Iso n w /refrigerator & stove. $15 each. '97-5740 wk days: (714 J640·881 l. P o rt· a · poll y A 11 Butane, Queen size bed 17' ltKtoft Whaler Sleeps 6. In excellent IOI I 100 hp evinrude, rns con dition. $1500 Call great . mny xfras. in c between 10am-5pm •••••••••••·-·~··••••• \'h r.r m. big wh l trlr 631·7657 THEODORE ROBINS FORD '.20b 'J HARBOR Bl VD COSTA ME SA b42 0 010 '29 Model A Town Sedan. 4 dr. restored. Ideal for student. $10,500. ALSO "46 Ford Woodie. restored. Sl3.SOO. WEIUY CLEAN CARS AND TRUCKS COMMUL CHEVROLET 'X?<)l.111••1 1111 I 11;:-..(\\H .._\ S46-l 200 HIGH BUYER Top dollars for Sports Cars. Bu~s. Campers, 914"s. Audi s Ask for U C MGR JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH 842-2000 TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR GOOD&CLEAN USED CARS! miracle mazda '41 Ford Deluxe Cpe I 2150 H.t.or ll•cl. Has a Chev engine, Cotta MeM 645-5700 WANTED S4700· 644·1006 -Motori·-...a 1n.-, 9140 Blue s hort s l eeved •""" _. security guard s hirts . 30' Searay Weekender. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Size 15to 1.S'~mediwn . xlnt cond. 912rk loan, Mo p e d , Motobecane 64L9 I OO many extras. 645-131.5 Moby. Xlnt cood, SOOmi. v-At\king $400. 675-8448 n_eeds rewiring, good WENEED tires. ne~ paint & re YOUR EXOTIC '7 I Pacer Moped Wanted : Jazz & vocal LP's or '50's & '60's in gd cond . Call D enny : 545-6786 between lOa m · PACIFJCA44 5215,000 38 mi. $350. 001·8972 upholstering. Call 645-5913 to see. & BRITISH CARS 5pm da_i..;;.ly_. ____ _ Musical .............. 8013 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FLUTE Armstrona. xlnt cond. Sl90. 646-2985 or 642-3753 Leu than 300 hours. Like new PACIFfCA41 $190,000 Only 30 hours use Like new! Davidfrawr 67l-5Z52 Moped Cimatt1 City bike. Hardly use<l Xlnt cond $250, 640-7450 Honda Express. 1960 ~ ~1217 . New Puch Maxi Luxe $525 2 elec. gultars, like new. I~~~~~~~~~~ 673-1455. Ford '32 Roadster Bea uuful c·ond1t1on All new. sas.ooo 640 8454. 9-5 4 Wheel Drives 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Cherokee, good cond. a s kin g S5000 Firm 642-9193 Hondo II prof. Fender 38' CAUFORHIAN ---- Stra tocrafter copy, $290. ' MotoSc!!t~/ '73 GMC E t Hondo ll,$150.fi44·033l 78, tw. Perk.185's, ld'd 9150 . 4x4 x rai.. w /eq•ip, owe at 10'1r. ••••••••••••••••••••••• S3000 firm . Offic• ,.. ....... & low dwn. slip avail. Fantastic buy! .77 750 Call960-12!Jl ~...., 8015 $89,500. Bkr Honda, less than 6K mi. ...... :-.;~·.;Jl........... 075-9007. 96().172S eves Immac.-extras. ONLY r~• 3100 W. Coast Hwy Newport Beach 642-9400 TOP $DOLLARS For Clean Used Cars&Trucks We pay cash on the spot! Contact buyer at Des.tis Chevrolet San Clemente Orange Coast DAILY F'tLOT,wednesday, June 10, 1981 ~•I!'-• Auto•. IMporhd Mfot. •ported ....... .,.rtitd . ....... Uted ............................................................................................ IMW t7 U OCJllOr t7JO Vol&t'(..... t770 C .. loc tftS •••••••·••·•·••··•··•·······················•· ........................ ···•···············•··· For The Best 'M XKE Cpe A/C, ster eo ·ee VW, ,'OMJ)I ttatored. ESTATESAL~ Buy Or Lease Deal Best orter. llm 499-2883, Porte he en& ' paint. '7!S Eldorado. 20 r h1,1r(J !n Orange County... wk 896·199'l mverylhlni new. Mlnl top. Nds Qmt> work. Come~ Us Today I. .... 9740 cond. See to 4pprec. Mon-Frl 8-4pm. 759 .t382 : _& SAOll.EBACK BMW 28402 M arJuerite Pk w~ M iss1on Viejo ~very Pkwy. n it torr5 Freew~> 131·2040 49Mt4t CIO$edSunday1 CREVIER $I U 6 HOo\OWAY SANfA ANA 835·3171 TH• Ul.TlMA fl OlllYOte lllACHM •USEDBMWs• '76 2002 4spd (00031 '79320i S /1' <5894> '79 5281 S /R (1076) '81 320lA (0115) C loMCI s..days The Most Excltin9 Part Of Your IMW Purchase Or uase Could l e Mc:Laren IMW!! luyOrL..ose By Ow Phone Plan! 1714) 522-5333 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST & Sa les-Ser\'ice-Leasmg Roy Carver,lne. Rolls lloyce BMW 1540Jamboree Newport Beat·h 640-6444 '76 2000 lo m1. snrf. am/fm . phonC' 640-1812 '68 1600. good body tin· lerior, good mech needs little minor work $2200. 494·1475 Capri 9715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Capri II Ghia. 27 K mi. S32000BO 548·2775 642·4348 Oats.an 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• reed" 631-4786, 941-12:91 -••••••••••••••••••••••• CC11111oro t9 I 7 AUTHORIZED M ERCEDE.S·BENZ DEALER 831 1740 495·1700 '74 VW Convl New paint. new top, rblt ena. SSOOO. M2·8Wevn '7'VWCOMVT Black /Brwn lthr Int German top, 2001 radio Nardi wheel, ~l there la-Sll.000. 499·1919 days. '72 BUS-rbll eng, $2300 M2-5094 • •••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Z 28' Hebualt, new bra ke1. n w tar••. cuttom Int T·Top Sanyo B1 Ami> Ste1eo.1 ~95 556 1737 Che•ro ... 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEE US FIRST! We ha\'e a aoocl •tilt>ctlon o r N E W & U S r-; D Cht'\'rolets 1 '72250C ---- 2 d r sport coupe. Im· '69 Cam per. 5000 mile$ maculate . $8200 Tom since4 all new engine & 675·9797,67s-Ql0 drl~ train installed. COMMEll CHEVRO LET ,._.,. II .. r I•,· 111 • • ,..._ I '. \1 I \ Xlnl cond. $2000. 496-5548 S46-l 200 '59 Mer cedes 300 SL Rdstr. wht, rd int. xlnt 73 VW Camper Westfalia, cond. $35.0005411·6611 loaded. AC. sink. rerrig, tent awning. 16200 644·0937 ·77 Caprice Class1<'. 4 d1. loaded. k> m1. p\l ply Best orrer 644 22A2 '70 28~, 4K on rblt eng .. new shocks /tires, xlnt cond. SSSOO 963-6588 ·1s 450SL, White /Parch mont, 26K mi. Blk son. top, ~.000 firm 675· 7355 ~r~g4~:'!e~~m~cuy} side & out. Only 59.000 miles. perfect mech cond1t1on. Diffieult lo I ind better '76 M BZ for Sll.500 Ted 1-634-1655 or 1-1137 1144 '06 M BZ Van. vrry uni· QUl'. runs well, must sell· be:>l o rrer. 675-0666, 675·9663 ----- Opel 9746 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Malibu Cl:ii.s1l wgn. '63 Window Bus. sunroof, loaded w t•xtn1s. lo m•. very nice, white. good S2500. 640 oorn int. $3000 644·7!11Xi '74 OEETLE Rebll eng. new shocks. l'CISS $2500. 494.-2782 '74 Malibu l'lassil', loaded, lo\Y, low mijei- Xt ra t'lcun Bt•:>t offr1 675 4451 '74 Bus. 7 pass, dean. •72 C APRICE am rm casl>. SJ695 Dys S2SO 642.1475 540 4058. e\ i. &t5·6163 '65 VW SQUAREBA<.:k Sh(lhl damage. As 1S best offer 642 6337 '69 lm1Jjl1.1 . j !> 1i. Ji,t S55U takei. II ~9 3984 belorl' !lP~l Dianna Corvette 9932 '7 VW BUG N--d ·k-••••••• •••••••••••••••• 1 . ee s wo1 . .68 T T 4.,., ''"" h ~ $1000 or l>l'sl ofr. Call OP ~· "'"" p, 96Q.l29l l>j)U. 1 OWIH'I' S5800 tl73 3635 '73 VWBUG Sl850or best ofr Cull 673-9317 7 7 . \'0l' l l l'. \\ h 1 l t' "' bUl'k1>k 1n mt. be.rntiful car. S7!)% I 1124 8161 '6 9 Opef Kodnt Aulomall<.'. completely '79 VW Bug Convert reslorf.'d. 34 mpg. See lo Rare blk w blk intr app1t'l'1&te !Also man} 12,000 m1 Extra dean Opelparts.~36·37~ M1c hel1nl> AM FM. P•UCJ•of 97 48 S 9 O O o or b s t o r r . '76 2 sell> uf T lolJ~ :\tint l"ond Strnoo hi.I D ~ i71! 22·HI. wk nil t'' 640 1!935 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 213/679-3335. 2131542-3789 ·75 Co1 \ t'lll' Ran• Cu LEASE Dl:<E --T! 198 I PEUGEOT TURI Os BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street · NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 Ponclw 9750 • •••••••••••••••••••••• '80 Targa. blk w /Cull tan lthr int .. ala rm, alloys, 4500mi. S29.SOO. 7S!Ml920, 5.51·8984 . Vol•o 9772 HeR. 4spd, a e, ~~00 ••••••• • •••••••••••• • •• 857 ~178 aft 6P M #I VOLVO DEALER CoUCJar 9933 IN ORANGE<.:OUNTY' ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALES, SERVICE AND LEASING OVERSEAS DELIVERY EXPERTS EARi.EiKE va.vo 1966 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 646-9 303 540.9467 ORAMGE COUNTY VOLVO '70 XR 7 Con' Hare S2 -l!l5 552 7715 Cll 6:ll 1131 "78 XR7 itood l'Ontl, I' )I. J t• , ~ l l' I t' V '.!> I 0 0 0 840 17115 Ford 9 940 ....................... fJ! Hanc·ht'rn. blul·. \'8. mml l'c>rlll. S4500 f>42 4610 '78 2<1r Granada Ghia PB. PS, AC. Am Fm Slt' rt•o l.Jndt>1 37 .OOOrrp S4, 2111) fi40 li552 t: \ l'S & wkndl> ADLE R Electric 21C Ta-C a mp wants to b uy Sl-495. Mustsee.673-4068 ble model. Excell. cond. newish 11· 165 hp l /0 Recent overhaul. 9200. o.pe n bow ski boat. '80 Toyota 4-whl drive long -bed l mma e Loaded 15.000 m1 831-0580 492-8500 1a:.:.=~~~~~ '66 912 Cpe, restored. ap- pr $8,000. Make ofrer. 1213) 832-4367 Largest Volvo Dealer in Orange County' 8UY01 LEASE DIRECT bclusivety Volvo Maverick 9947 125 HODAJCA $9200 OBO 646-7875 Pli. call ;&fS..2842 49'2-8954 J im $325 541-7174 Trvcks 9560 Ma nolta 101 Copier with °79 RM80 modlried. very stand & approx. SIOO in loah, lent/ 9050 fast, xlnt cond. $495. su pplies. Xlnt shape. Chorhr 642-2.818 Cost $2400. now $1475. •••••••••••••••••• ••••• --------- 1714)957·9331,5.51·6907. SHARKS!! ~=/~= Sale/160 Copier Savin 770 Copier. 38' Pacemaker Yacht, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Under service contract. sleeps 6, for Charter! WE C "'ar..a SELL Assume lease. $101 per Specializing in s har1< ris· An mo. 642·5640 da 642-6421 hing off Catallna bland . Y OUI R. V. wk ends. 213/377-7897. Weekdays. S51H 304 Desk, steel. 7 drawers. loa. Sol 9060 Rent 23' Lux. mtr home. 32x60 and ch.air. Sl~. ~····-•••••••••••••••~ fully self cont, SSS/dy, 6fS.D4<11 7 9 M. o n t go m er y 10 500 free ml. 548-0049 w 1sa1ls, motor, x lnt •------ Obsolete computer com· cond. Must sell. Asking Rent: 22' motor home, ponenls, terminals & re· $1250, call eYes 832-9508 sips 6. self cont, avail. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Special Purchan!! LowMflffcJe! 1980 4 spd. and S 1pd. Datsun Pick Up's Tremendous S av Incas!!! Mc:iMdOwn Oftd moathly paytMfth BARWICK DATSUN San Jua n C apl\lrano 831-3311 l a t e d sc r a p . C al l ,75 CATAUNA Sailboat. 66410~0~~!/3 . $295 /w k . -======-----~ 5u56·,J:49d3Sc. NhooewlpoDlsrt·Mlesa w/boat slip on Balboa __ ..-.._______ •CHEV.HU'81 ni ie tr ct. Island. Fully equipped, '73 COMMANDER Dodge I TOH STAKE Pm 1087 inboard gas eng. s:u.ooo 22· sleeps 6, xlnt cond. 12 ft. m odel with liftf(ate. •••••••••••••••••••••• 67S·"56, 760-8359 32000 Mi $8700 see at 231 dua ls. air cond. H D TIOPICALASH Seekin g partne r In 34' Sherwoods!~~: !Pi[:.gsla~kr &st~~·~:; 831-6305 Columbia Sloop. Fee or ____ __..__ Workhorse complete' 2 auinea pigs leasehold. Call Brandy Trailers, TraYef 9170 (3961 L and cage. s10. 646-4774. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OHL Y SI 2,498 •2178 . Aijotrailer. '71, 18'2'.self HOWARD Chevrolet --------tC & C zg, 1977. Atomic 4, cont. xlnt cond, $2950. Do\'e/QuailSts Plett0a & o.-g.s 809 wheel. e lectronics, well· p p 548-6263 NEWPORT BEACH •••••••••••••••••••••• e quipped, moor in g -----PIANO. Yamaha upriglll a'vail. 971·0154 '79 Midas, 31'. a lmost 83).0555 conte mp. Beaut. walftut new . loaded. 7000 mi. fl n is h . Xlnt t on e . . 14' Hobie. ready to sail. $25,000 OT take over pay. 548.()891j $800. Lido Isle. ments . 960-0370 Hammond Organ : Mint <'Ond $600 551-4246 714-675· 7fi67 --------A.to S•rvlc•, Pcris VENT\JRE21, Sails. twin & Accessoriff 9400 compasses. life jackets. ••••••••••••••••••••• •• trlr, S H.P. Motor . ready Datsun Z r ims for US Piano, pecan Scha rer & to go! $3200/0 8 0 or spokes. Fulda ltres. SlOO Sons conaole, 18 mo old. Trade <7 14H9'-44Sl or best offer 675-5613 X ln 't cond . $1 650. •-.-£... p 842-0725 __,., eww 9040 loah. Poyer 9040 Mason Hamlin P iano 881. 7' Excel tone, beaut. rerm. 675·7570 TV, ltedle. HIFl,stw.. '" •••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful Color TV, 2 Jr wrnly. Free delivery $148. 841-1718. Sony Tap rttOrdet, amp, tune r " dual tum tbl $300. 675-lm ............ ......... ...................... .... ,... .tOI •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1978 DATSUN ICIHGCAB Pickup. 5 speed trans. air cond .. radio, bum pers, mirrors & loo~s hke NEW' <1L543901 (Stk. 1508) Offer good thru 6 14 '81. HOWS3995 tolEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 83).1300 '73FORD 3• Ton pick up. $1800 01· best. 646-4!111 an 5 '77 FORD Fl.SO P U auto. p/1, p /b, needs some work $2400 /0 B0559·7470 72 Dodge p\tup. 6 cyl. auto. 6' bed. A·l <'ond 642-4610 ATT EN TI ON M ec han ics & o r Sportsman. '73 Chevy P.U. W/Shell fully equip make offer 67J.7<r78 eves JetHng. '570 WANTED! Late model Toyotas and Volvos . Call u s DA 1966 ..... ll•ll c: ......... . "' ••._OOl er u c..tu 1 Top Dollar Paid For Your Car! JOHNSON & SON Llncollt-Met-cury 2626 Harbor Blvcf. Costa Mesa 540-5630 We Pay OVER Blue look For Your Good \'W, Porsche or Audi \'W-PORSCHE-AUDI 445 E. Coast Hiway at Bayside Dn\'e Newport Beach 673·0900 Premium prices paid for any usf'<.I ear (foreign or domestic> m good condition. See Us First ! Autos, lmport9d ••••••••••••••••••••••• AtfaROIMO ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! 1981 ALFA SPIDERS Non·prorit wa ndl yo.r boat, plMie, car, etc. Liberal lair deduction advantap 21S,.....Dt1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SACltFICI '78 Chev Van,"" ton, VI. '61 Alia Romem_ Body auto, ps, pb. radio, xlnt style 2000. NeedB work. cond. $2250. Call Stan at Sl50010BO. an. 5 ask rq_r 833-0070 (8-5) Bill. IWS-OMS.. ~~~ .... !!!.~ '63 Gh.UieUa, xlnt cond. Wl:PAYTOP OOLLAR ~zh~BO fo r t o-p uud cars ----..,.-.,......,.--· for eign, domestic• or IMW claHlcs. If your ur la ext ra cle•n, aee ua FJRSTI ~ ,,, .. .,.... c:.-. am HUtloi alvd COSl'A .. ISA 979-2100 '77 BMW •• blatlt on b latk , •unroof, )(Int co.act, mustlell. 4117'7• 1m 330 I BMW, Lotidld, new enc. 1unr0ot; Jt.lnt eood. "500. MO-*I "78 BMW JOCR. air, ak)'• roof. allo)'I, • •Pd rna en I . $1, HO ( 2lS) 832~367 '77 280Z 2+2. auto. elC'c snrf. am rm tape. a c. pwr booster. maRS. xlnt cond. $6800 700-0159 '80 Datsun 20<SX t•pe, like ne w , low m 1, ask ing $7500. 557.2900 '79 Datsun 280ZX. bronie, fu lly loaded. 18500. 4!Hl-4764. 499 4754 i7 280Z. Xlnt cond. low ma. Automatic, A C. $7000. Call 645-9321 art 6 ON ALL TRUCKS~ IN STOCK! .__,_...,...,._ AICWI ~to pnor-.... ·llOOd l.IWU Ille ....,,., lollow"'9 llUlllC•lloft. To ~ly lfr -· CiaPI' ol eel -i. _... .. 1-ol"""'"-- ,. .. 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Spyder. xlnt cond . VISIT YOUR ORANGI COAST HONDA HEAD~ARTEIS _TODAY!!! UMIVIRSITY SALr.8 ls SERVICE OLOSMOllU Ha..A •MCTIUCKS 2&.\0 HarbOr Blvd. COSTA MESA ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• "70 PORSCHE 911T S6900or best offer 857 02L5: C2131433·0051 '77 924: Silver XJnt cond X l r as. Sunrnof. 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Automatic Super Ol!ANGEl'OL'NTY'S R H EST Ll~t"Ol.!I< :\I ERl"L'H Y OE,\l.ERSHI P ~ ";t.Ulse LINCOLN :\I ERtTRY 16 18 Auto l'enlt•r Or SD F"'.> Lk Forest l':\ll IR\'INE 8 30.7000 '7 6 c CIDl"i Xlnt cond . !5,700 mi. Sunroof, ra<'er red. $2900 080 orif( owner 675-3217 Great family & \a<'ation car. "78 :\lerc Zeph Wgn Lo m1. air. auto. PS. 81 Tag:. 645-4440 LEA SE DU E T. cond. 640-4667 Buick -MUltClftCJ 9952 9910 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1981 SAAB TURBOs BEACH IMPORTS 848 Do\·e Street NEWPORT BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 BU I CK CONVERTIBL E SlOOO OBO r uns ~ood. low miles. 831-6249 '76 Skylark. 4 dr. 6 cyl. 67M mi, lmmac. orig owner, $2750 673-6073 752-0900 Cedlloc 9915 ---.....••....•........... Toyota 9765 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Celica GT 5spd, au·. chrome whls, car cover . immac. cond. 892-1146. ESTATE SALES '71 Corolla. 2 dr. 4 spd Whit w /blk. top Lo m1 M·F .8·4. 759-4ll2 78 Toyota Corolla. very good, new exhaust . ball. r b1t carb. A M !FM s t ereo. S2200 OBO 839-~5 anytime 7t CADILLAC COUPI DIVIW Dttsa Cruise, wire wheel CO\'· ers. leather lnt .. stereo, tilt. aircond. (008YBD> 1965 FORD MUSTANG GT I n Ro 1>el ton d 1 t 1 on ! Automatic· trans & disc brahs Make offer Call 642 9924 . 1r no answer. PLEASE kl'E'P trying! '65 MUSTANG xlnl cond new radials S2500 962 3433 '6 6 MUSTANG 3 s pd. 1ebulll t.>n~ & trans. clean $2350 675·8762 '65 M UST/\NG G real S hape' Needs motor work. $1000 960-7930 Estate Sale '77 Omeg11, 4 d1-. silver w. black top. 10 ml M-F.S.4, 7:>1>-4382 ---Pill to . 99~7 •••••••••••••••••••••• Statt.w.,.,_ AM /f'M Stereo . pwr steer • xlrft rond' 11.900 m I. 5'29$ 840-2102 ...,...... 9'60 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·n PJ.Y Cl1111it. immac. con d ., .uooo ,o so. IMll·Oll69. MUIUff. ----,""-t-. ----~-~"'-----'°""" ,. r , I • ' • r Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Wednelday, June 10, 1981 NEW 1981 PLYMOUTH RELIANT 4 speed trans .. bench seat, body side moldings, max. cooling, left remote mirror, front & rear bumper guards, deluxe wheel covers, wsw radial tires & morel (111764). NEW 19 81 PLYMOUTH RELIANT 41 EST: HWY. Equipment includes economical 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed transmission, left remote mirror, max. cooling, bench seat, body side moldings, white sidewall glass belted radial tires and more! (145687). t 25 E.P.A. EST. M.P.G. Figures are for comparison only as actual mileage may vary. F 1gures are for comparison only as actual mileage may vary NEW 1981 PLYMOUTH RELIANT WAGON NEW 1981 PLYMOUTH HORIZON 4 DOOR SEDAM 1 Econom ical 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans., bucket seats with fold down rear seat. tinted • glass, elec. clock. body side moldings. max. GOOling. glass belted radial tires and more! (108773). t 1974 PLYMOOTH CUSTOM SUBURBAN WAGON Automatic trans., air cond., pwr. steering & b<akes, radio, 3 seats. wsw tires & morel (041KOB). 51595 1978 CHRY LeBARON COUPE Automatic trans .. air cond .. pwr. stHrino & bfakes. AM·FM radio, vinyl top, wsw tires & more! (748TSU). 52895 Automatic trans., air cond., pwr. steering & b<akes, radio, wsw tires & more! (153LFI) 1977 CHRY CORDOBA COOPE Equipment includes manual trans .. bench seat. max. cooling. body side moldings. radial tires & more• (172996i (Equipment does not include wood grain sides, rear defroster & special wheel cove<S.) 1974 OOIMiE COll GT smAN Economical 4 cyi engine. automatic trans., bucket seats. radio. power b<akes. wsw tires & morel (951RKT) 51895 1977 BUICK CUSTOM le SABRE COOPE Loaded inc auto trans . air cond., pwr. split seat-steering-brakes·w• ndows-tocks, tllt, cruise, AM·FM "•'••·s3395 (1 msz'. 1977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE WAGON Automatic trans .. air cond .. pwr steering & b<akes, radio. luggage rack. wsw tires & morel (023T0Hl. 52295 · 1979 CHRYSLER CORDOBA COOPE Automatic trans , air conct.. rtWr steering & b<akes. air cond.. split seat. vinyl top. radio, waw tires & morel (532WWC~ 53495 I • • • • • r WEDNESDAY . JUN[ 10. 1qs1 . OHANGE COUNTY CAL I FOR NIA 25 CENTS Condo confusion What happened to affordable units? ~ By Steve MU.cbell Of .. Dmly,.... .... If recent newspaper accounts about low-cost condominiums being available in Newport Beach caught your eye, join the club. And if you followed up an the stories and called the Orange County Housing Authority to say you qualified as a low -income wage earner for the units, you weren't alone. Further, if you became frustrated when Housing Authority officials told you there are no low-cost units available, you were one or dozens disap-pointed. calls slnce the (newl) articles came out." While ll 11 true there are no low-cost condominium• current- ly available at the Villa Balboa complex ocr Superior Aveaue ln Newport Beach, state coutll commission officiall are sUll holding out hope for a resolution to the problem. A capsule history of the 1ltua- tion follows : Newport Beach developer Robert McLain was ordered by the state coastal commllaion to create 20 affordable homes at bis 132-unlt luxury condominium project now under construction on Jamboree Road. low-income wage earners have lost an opportunity to buy some condominiums in Villa Balboa in Newport. "The whole thing is a mess," says Housing Authority repres~ntative Pauline Murphy, who said she has received "999 But since units at that de- velopment will be in the half million dollar range, McLain (See HOMES. Page AJ> Begin warns More' disaster funds sought The budget of an Orange County government agency ,responsible for emergency pre- paredness should be increased so that the agency can better In- form the public of what to do in the event of a disaster. the Orange County Grand Jury recommended today. tn an 8-page report, the jury generally found that county or- ficJals have done a good Job in prebarine response plans for sud> evepts as eartb~uak.,, fires, fToods, chemical sp1lls and nuclear accidents. "The Grand Jury concluded that if the people respoqsible for ~. plementlng these plans are ly informed, the public is well ved. The people responsible oi: formulating these plans are ~ be commended," the jury sald 1* the report. ... The 19-member panel fi>wever, also concluded that "i~ yiew of the multitudinous duties *'id responsibilities" that the ~ff of the Emergency Manage- d)ent Division or the county (!eneral Services Agency be enlarged. A larger staff -the division's • staff now consists of six penons -would assist in informing the public of what to do in the event or an emergen~y. the jury said. • Tfle jury also recommended that county officials meet on an annual basis to update emergen- cy plans and that the Emergen- cy Management Division en- courage cities in developing local emergency plans that fit with the county's plans. In its analysis, the jury re- viewed emergency plans ouUin- l n 1 responses to war and peacetime emerg.eocles, accl· dents at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, earth- quakes, dam failures and hazardous materials release. In the event of an emergency, the cO\Ulty's response plans are directed by an Emergency Management Council currently made up of directon of the coun- . ty's General Services, Human Services and Environmental Management agencies, the Sheriff·Coroner, and the manager of the Orange County Fire Department. Ex-officio members of the council include the chalrman of the county Board of Supervisors, county Administrative Officer and the manager of the Emergency Management Division. Deputy arrested in phoned threat A suspended Orange County sheriff's deputy -convicted last week in the abductions of two •omen -has been ordered JJiled on $2~.ooo bond after one ol bis victims claimed that he made a threatening phone call to tier following Friday's jury de- cision. Orange County Superior Court Judge James K . Turner, citing the defendant's "bizarre, ~tranize" behavior in the case, ordered that deputy George Loudermilk of Costa Mesa be Jailed immediately at the con- ~uision of a court hearing Tues- day. Loudermilk, who was found guilty by a Superior Court jury of two counts of kidnapping and one count of felony false im- prisonment, bad been allowed to llAIGI CUil llATHIR Night and mominl lo• clouds with sunny after- noons through Thursday. Highs near 70 at the beaches to low 80s in the • • Inland areas. Lows tonl1bt :, ato67. llllETlllY Siter• Hite, author of ''TM fffW Rcpon Oft F~ .sa.au .... ti bock ioith ''The l:IUe Report Ota Mole SuuoU· tw ," which uploret the ,,,..,noion. ,,.~ 4"" ,..octtce of .u. SU pag. At. lllfl ......... .... ...-.. . ........... _.. ..... ;1j • ..... M remain free without bail after his conviction last week. But the stocky, 37-year-old law enforcement officer surrendered to court officials early Tuesday alter Turner issued a $500,000 bench warrant for his arrest late Monday. The judge issued the warrant after Deputy District Attorney Michael Jacobs presented in- formation alleging that Loudermilk made the threaten- ing phone call to a 33-year-old Mission Viejo woman who had testified against him at his re- cent trial. Loudermilk denjed the charge under oath Tuesday. The woman had told the jury in Turner's courtroom last month that Loud e rmilk <See DEPUTY, Page A2) Bank cuts • prime rate 1:w1 !:.c.f!t A lead· jog commercial bank cut its prime lending rate today by one- half percentage point to 19.5 per- cent, a move that may mean in- terest rates have peaked. , Marloe Midland Bank, the na- tl on 's 13tb-lareeat bank, undercut the 20 percent rate that prevails al most other major banks. Some Wall Street analysts said they e~pected the prime rate to drop because com· merclal loan demand ll weaken- lnl and banlts' coet of fundl baa fallen in ret•t da71. On Jllonday, Girard Bank ln Phlllldelpllla cut lta prtme rate to 20 ~t from 11 l*'"al and....,. .. Illa.....,, lac.._, MartneM.....it,eM ...... IMi "*· 11'9 ~ rate II what ba•h e= oa loaaa to HCUritill WlMa tbey .. ttoc:kut.WliW'al. Iraq he'll do it again l RESTING AT ANCHOR -The 125-foot brigan- tine "Pilgrim..'._' is now on display near the Orange Counfy Marine Institute in Dana Point Harbor. Institute officials are trying to raise the $500,000 to purchase the ship, a Dmtr,... ........... replica of the vessel author Richard Henry Dana sailed on about a century ago. The "Pilgrim" was moved to its new home from a Long Beach boatyard May 5. Chores keep elderly 'healthy' Older citizens urged to exercise for physical fitness SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Instead of "babying the elder- ly." people should urge older citizens to keep in shape by do- ing chores and exercising, says a federal fitness expert. the great Infusion of federal funds, because that's not the answer," he says. "We want to use existing facilities." For example, he suggests that schools might keep gymnasiums open for senior citizens on weekends, churches could ac- commodate fitness clasaes in their basements and private citizens can start walking clubs. things like: "Oh, mom, let me carry those groceries," and "Johnny, go help grandma in . the garden." "They {the eld sweep. They should . They should carry groceries, ya Keelor. "They should do every- thing everybody else does un- less thay have a major medical problem." Reactor bombing defended TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) - Prime Minister Menachem Begin warned that the lsraell at- tack on Iraq's nuclear reactor will be repeated if the Jewish nation is U\reatened again by an enemy Arab nation's plans to de· velop nuclear weapons. ''Israel will not tolerate any ~nemy to develop weapons of mass destruction against Ure people of Israel," the 67-year-old prime minister told a questioner at a news conference Tuesday. He added t.hi5 was not a new policy. Is raeli experts said the destruction of the French-built reactor outside Baghdad on Sun· day did not put an end to' the Arab nuclear potential. · Vhis is a blow to Iraq but not th~ end of the olan to builtf "" Arab nuclear bomb," wrote the military commentator of the newspaper Haaretz, Ze'ev Schiff. "Israel cannot prevent this development by military means. It can only delay it by various met.hods.'' Yehosbafat Harkavt, a former military intelligence chief, said the Arabs were not likely to ac- cept Israeli "veto rights over Arab nuclear development." An Iraqi government official was quoted today as saying Iraq is determined "to hur new and better nuclear reactors." Foreign Minister Latif Nassim J assem said in an interview with Al Thawra , the official newspaper of Iraq's rulin g Baath Party, that the Israeli raid "will not prevent Iraq from continuing with Its nuclear pro- gram and development plans,'' the Gulf News Agency reported. A French technician who worked at the destroyed plant told a reporter on arriving in Paris today that it was impossi- ble to go near the facility because one or the bombs dropped bad not yet exploded. The technician, Jacques Rim- baud, said the plant would have to be rebuilt from scratch. In an attempt to answer criticism of the raid in the Unit- ed Slates and prevent sus- pension of American arms salet lo Israel , Begin said the American planes used tn the 600-mile strike "were given tom for purposes of self-defense," and the destruction of the reac· tor •'was an act of supreme legitimate self-defense." He charged that the Iraqis were planning to develop three to flve Hiroshima-type, 20- kiloton bombs. Richard 0 . Keelor, director of program development for the President's Council On Physical Fitness, says the elderly must use their muscles if they don't want to go from the rocking chair to the wheelchair. "A lot of people lo America, particularly older folks, think lb at the shaky palm, tottering ealt and dependence on others . . . ls Just the way it It when you aet old,'' said Keelo.r lD an interview. "It just Isn't that way." Additionally, he says, com- panies can bead off medlcal pro- blems by helping workers stay fit. Countians . urged To combat that stereotype, Keelor wlU lead a conference on flLne11 Sept. 10.11 In WaatUn,ton1 D.C. for too am.tor citizens leaaen. Keelor said tbe benefits of senior fitneN are not r....-ved for the elderly. Older Americana will need lea bHltb care II tlM1 are ftt. Aa a re1ult.. JtMlor 1111, Ule tu bUrdeo to lod.-, wW l11hten. 1'8elorar:lllllMI II a do-It· 10VMlt aad .,.. not re- q u I re e 11 eq•fpmeat or mullive iodal pracram1. "We're not tolal tn •QUiit ' • "If workplaces provided workers wlth exercise prOIJ'&IDI and incentives to be active 1.n them, they milbt be more nt when they are 65 than when they are '5," the fttneu expert. •UC· cests. However, K.etor said, the real atumbUq bloft to Hllior tttMM la t.h• attitude Of tbe publle, tn- cludlq t.M elditrl)' themH1"9. "We'.e Col tO make PMPle re-allH tW It'• ln&cal, but not DO~al, to be fruhirJaeD JC*'h elderb. '' notea Keelor. "It'• normal to be hUhby MCI robmt · unW ,ou,dll. Tbe.lo&dft,..... bn• beilla liriillbeCf. ... . . r' kHlor .. , •. J>HPl• 0 .. ,. protect ll•• elderl1. aa1tn1 . to curb activities Oranae County resldentt were urged to curtail out.aide activity, form more car poob and reduce eml11ioo of aulfur dlolid• ror the ~'cond atrataht day today ~ ~cause ol heavy aullat. coocen· traUona. Unlike the more common OIOftl epliodel, Whlcb puk ta the afternoon, 1ulf ate epllodet continue th.routhout the day. Air Quallt,y, liluqemeDl Dli· trlel offletala uld 1ulfate epll0de9 Oft\11' 10 to 1S Um. a , .... 1'illidQ WU die ftnt WM till• ,..,. tbllt ...... ........ ••• above 31 mtc~ ... I*'. cubic ...-fl air;'.~ tM ,. I ~~· _____ ..,,. _______ ':"""' _______ .._._.._. ___ ~.._. ...... .. Orange Coat QAILY PILOT tNednHday, June 10, 1981 ·Sheriff• deput11 George Loudermilk, •hot.on with hil wife, Marilllft, sent to jail after allegedl11 making threaUning phoM call to one of hi1 abductton victima. From Page A1 DEPUTY JAILED. I • • threatened to rape her 8Jld kill 'Per after driving her to a ~ecluded hilltop area near Irvine 'in October, 1980. She was re- leased unharmed. In all, Loudermilk was charged with four counts of kid- napping in connection with four separate incidents that occurred between July and October of 1980. · The jury convicted him of kid- )lapping in two of those incidents and of false imprisonment in a third. It was alleged th al Loudermilk abducted the women after· stopping them on suspicion of drunken driving. The most aggravated incident was that invol vina the Mission Viejo woman, who told Judge Turner Tuesday that she was up- set and frightened after receiv- ing the telephone call early Saturday from a man whose voice she identified as LoudermilJc's. She said the caller told her at one point: "You know who this is. How could you forget after what you did to me?" The woman said she im- mediately alerted authorities 1tfter receivine.tbe call. On the followlng evening, the woman testified, she beard what !!he believed to be a 1unsbot out- side her home, She said sh~ Med college ·rite s slated Dr. Everett Koop , U.S . deputy assistant secretary for health and surgeon general designate, will address arad\latin& students of the UC Irvine College of &'ledicine al the traditional hood- ing ceremony a\ 4 p.m . Friday in Campus Park. The students will receive their medical degrees the following day as part of UCI's 16th annual commencement set for 4 p.m. Saturday in Campus Park. The hooding ceremony will in- clude the presentation of academic hoods by UCI Chan- cellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. and Or. Stanley van den Noort, dean of the UCI College of Medicine. El Toro Marine safe after cruh YUMA, Ariz. CAP) -A MariJle Corps A-4 Skyhawk jet crashed next to the Southern Paclfic railroad's main tine near here, but the pilot balled out ~fore it crubed, a spokesman for tbe Marine Corps A1r Station ln Yuma said. The pilot of the J6t1 Capt. losepb J. Krejmu, 27, OJ Green- field, kaas., who 11 ataUooed at the El Toro Marine Col'pl Air Station, was no\ Lnjared, the •pokesman said. notified authorities the following day. Defense lawyer Allan Stokke, who bitterly assailed the credibility of the woman's testimony Tuesday, found on cross-examination that she had gone to the Newporter Inn with prosecutor Jacobs -rouowmg the jury's verdict -and had dis- cussions of how Loudermilk could be put into custody. The woman, Jacobs said later, was concerned for her own safe- ty. Stokke, however, maintained she was fabricating the story of a pb<>ne call to have Loudermilk arrested. Loudermilk, during his brief appearance on the witness stand Tuesday, said be had never at- tempted to contact the woman since his arrest last October. However, before be was taken into custody originally, the lawman had contacted her by phone, explalninl that he was only joking with her wben he made· ~ments on the hilltop of bow she could be raped and killed. Judge Turner. in orderln1 thal Loudermilk be taken into custody, Tuesday, said that if the woman was going to make up a "phony baloney story (about the call>. it would have been a lot stronger than what she says." Tbe judge also said, .. I'm verr, sincere. I 'm not doing this because I'm m ad at Mr. Loudermilk. I tbi.nk he's sick in some way. But 'l don't know what it ia." Sentendni for Loudermilk Is scheduled for .July 3. Judge drops murder case SANTA BARBARA (AP> - Murder charges have been dis- missed against two brothers who allegedly confessed to helping bum a man alive. A judge ruled that sheriff's deputies coerced the defendants to gain their con- fessions. Murder charges against a third man, the alleged ringleader, alsb were dismissed Monday by Santa Maria Municipal Court Judge James Jennings after he learned from a transcript about a police inter- rogation ln which detectives threatened to deport relatives of the two brothers. ' ''I think the judge did the right thing," said Deputy District Al· torney Mike ~t. Initiative unveiled SACRAMENTO (AP> - Former U.S. Senate candidate Paul Gann unveiled what he called a "victims' bill of right.I'' Tuesday -a 12-point crtme ln· iliative to m a ke convlctlons easier and sentences lonaer. F light crew denies 'partial responsibility' in five-mile nosedive WASID.NGTON (AP)-Afll&bt crew and the Alr Line Pilots All· sociation have disputed a federal finding that the crew was at least partially responsible for an airllner taking a spiraling, five- mile nosedive over Michigan two yeanago. The dispute concerns a Trans World Afrllne9 flight that went out of control.I April 4. 1979 over Saginaw. mid plummeted from 39,000 feet to about 8,000 feet before the pilot regained control and made an emergency landlna in Detroit. Eight of the 89 persons aboard suffered minor Injuries. The National Transportation Safety Board said Tuesday that the Boeing 727 went out of control when one of lts leading ed1e slats -a control device -did not retract. This caused the right Wini le drop and the plane beean toaplral un U l the force of the turns tore the slat off the craft, allowing the pilot to regain control, the board'• staff concluded. The NTSB said the plane first rolled right and was leveled out b~ the piloti Capt. H.G. Gibson, and then rol ed again before spiral· lng. Gold-laden plane force lands In the second roll, it concluded, Gibson used bl• controls in an "untimely" manner, cau.sins the ultimate loss of control. The board al.so concluded there was no malfunction' or failure of the aircraft and that a contriblJt. ing fact.or to the loas ol control wu Gibson's being diatracted b1 his efforts t.o find and rectify the cause of the control problem. Craft r uns out of fuel; 248 bars taken by armored car MACEDON, N.Y. (AP) -An airplane that ran out of fuel while carrying 248 1old bars - worth almost $12 million - made a forced landing ln a field From Page A1 HOMES. • • convinced the coastal com- mission lo allow him to buy op- tions on 20 condominiums at Villa Balboa, a 450·unit develop· ment under construction near Hoag HDspital. with no damage to the plane. police said. The gold, being shipped between banks, was removed from the plane Tuesday and taken by armored car to an un- disclosed location in Rochester, about 15 miles away. A farm tractor towed lhe plane, a twin-engine Britten- Norman, to a grass landing strip a half-mile away where it got fuel and took off. Pilot Joel Heil, 43 , told authorities he ran out of fuel on a flight from Providence, R.l .. to Toronto because he was buck- ing bead winds, according to Deputy Sheriff Robin Nichols of Wayne County. Heil, accompanjed by security guard Steven Morron, 28, set the plane down on a farm Just north ol Macedon Center. Neither man was hurt. The landing "wasn't too much of a problem," Heil said. "There was plenty of open iu-ea to land in. I wasn't too worried. The. plane's cargo, 248 gold bars weighing 24.998.565 troy ounces, was being taken from Citibank in Providence, R.I., to the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce in Toronto, Nichols said. The gold was valued at ·$11 849,320. he added. The plane. owned by Colonial Airline, Manchester, N.H., was ch a rtered by International Armored Car Service for the riight. The findlng wu disputed by the pilots' assoclatlon, which con- tends that the crew dido 't extend the slats in the first place. Some mechanical device (ailed, the group says, causing one slat to pop out on Its own. The group not- ed that the rod used to push the slat into place has never been round. Gibson sajd he isn't sure why the plane spiraled out, but dis- agreed with the board conclusion. Under the agreement, signed more than a year ago, McLain has a 30-day option on con- dominiums as they become available in the Villa Balboa de· velopment. He gets three units from each building as they are completed. McLain is lo turn that 30-day option over to the housing authority, which has the task of selling the units to low-income wage earners al prices ranging from $24.000 to $70,000 each. McLain, in tum, would make up the difference to Villa Balboa owners for the fuJJ price of the units. Man denies theft of transit coins He said he would react the same way again, using full left turn pressure to try and stop the roll to the right. And he said there was no first roll and then correc- tion, the plane just began spin- ning, rolling over six or eight times before he lowered the un- dercarraige. This changed the attitude of the plane and allowed him to regain control, he said. , "The airplane d1dn 't do any ot the stuff they described in there. That's a joke," said Gibson, ad· d ing that a petition for re· consideration is planned. Problems arose when housin~ authority officials could find no low-income home shoppers who could afford the low-cost units. That "Catch 22" situation is due to '1.he fact that. while the price ta g is attractive, monthly payments are not. Potential buyers would be socked with a 17 percent interest rate; property tax assessments baaed on the actual value of the units ($125,000 to $350,000); and a $125 monthly homeowners as- sociation fee. That Jacks the monthly bill to $850 a month, putting the unit. out of reach of low-income buyers. Housing Authority representatives said they could find no qualified buyen within the 30-day pe(iod in which McLain held options on the first six units at Villa Balboa. Thus, the option period lapsed and the Housing Aulbortty was left with no units to offer. And that leaves the a uthority and coastal commissioners acram- bllngforasolutiontotheblem. Coastal commission attorney Tim Eichenberg says he'll be meetine with the housing authority and McLain June 18 t.o "lry different approaches to the problem." One solution, he says, might be to •'toss all 20 (options) into a hopper. take the average price of $38,000 to $42,000 per unit, then see ·lf we can get a flnanc· ine package from a lending in· stltution for all 20 units." He said the housing authority would then screen applicants and perhaps bold a lottery. But McLain, when reached for A former Orange County Transit District worker denied in court Tuesday that he stole coins from buses parked in the district's Garden Grove main- tenance yard. Jeffrey Reynolds, 29, of Buena Park testified that he often car- ried the coins from fare boxes to vaults in white waste baskets. But he said he never took the baskets to his car Key prosecution witnesses said in court last week they had s een Reynolds carrying the plastic baskets to his car. A fellow service worker, Tony Garcia, testified he bad con- fronted Reynolds one night last faJl in a mini-bus and had seen coins in a basket which the de- fendant later placed in his vehi- cle. Reynolds said Tuesday be didn't remember such an inci- dent. Measle s birth brings award AUSTIN, Texas (AP ) -The government must pay $625,800 to a 3-year·old boy born with multi- ple defects because Air Force doctors failed to warn his mother of the dangers of having a baby after contracting German measles, a federal judge ruled. U.S. District Judge Jack Roberts made the award Tues- day in the "wrongful We suit" filed on behalf of Charles Scales. The boy's mother Jody, a former Air Force recruit, filed a $1.25 million suit against the government claiming doctors at two bases where she was sta- tioned failed to advise her thal birth defects could result when a woman contracts the illness dur- ing pregnancy. Reynolds is accused in the misdemeanor grand theft case of stealing at least S200 from dis- trict buses between August and January whlle working as lead service worker on the night shift at the yard. District officials claim about '$63,000 was discovered miss~g after audits were completed in April. They s ay they have no oth er suspects but have evidence for only the misde- meanor case against Reynolds. Ve t protest site shifte d LOS ANGELES CAP) -Viet- nam veterans fasting lo dramatize their demands for im· proved Veterans Administration medical care set up temporary headquarters at a church but · were looking for a new protest si le following their peaceful eviction from a VA hospital where they bad camped out !or three weeks. Some 25 veterans, including at least 12 hunger strikers who said they had gone without solid food for 17 days, moved into St. John's Episcopal Church in downtown Los Angeles Tuesday after leaving the Wadsworth VA Medical Center in Brentwood. Attack s resisted SAN VICENTE, San Salvador (AP) -Leftist guerrillas, lodged on the slope of an extinct vofcano, have resisted a seventh day of government in· fantry and air attacks in El Salvador's heaviest fighting since January. Fighting con- tinued during Tuesday night despite an army report Monday that 150 of 800 guerrillas were dead. Su s p ect fre e ; judge a ssailed OAKLAND CAP> A small group of demonstrators picketed the Alameda County Courthouse. angry that a man accused of raping l3 women and two children was released on bail. The pickets said Tuesday they want Superior Court Judge Win- ton McKibben off the bencti because of his decision in February to reduce the bail of Thomas Sales from $250,000 to $100,000. Sales, 36, of Hayward, is facing triaJ on 71 sex charges. McKibben declined comment Tuesday. He previously said he was "reasonably confident" that Sales would return to court without co mmitting more crimes. Town passes gun ban law MORTON GROVE, llJ. <AP) -Owning or possessing a handgun in this Chicago suburb will draw penalties of up to $500 in fines and six months in jail when ordinances outlawing the weapons go into effect at the end of summer. Despite public opposition, trustees voted to ban sale and possession of handguns in hope their action will tell lawmakers across the country "they too can do somet.hllul about the sense- less, wasteful injuries and deaths that are directly related to handguns." Only seven of 44 wilnesse5 at the hearing attended the meet- ing. comment on the commission at----------------------------------------torney's proposal, said he hasn't even been contacted about any meeting on June 18, "I'll meet with them,'' the de- veloper said, "But 1 can't prom- ise anything will come of the meet· ing." Further, McLain says, be now believes be ls responsible for providing only 14 low-cost units. "When I lost the option on the first six units, as far as I'm con· cerned, I was released of any ob· ligation to provide them again," he said. He said it ls not his fault that housing authority officials were unable to fmd buyers for the first half dozen units before his option lapsed. , And, he says, lt mJ1bt be a year before be ia able, to take an option on the next three unit. at Villa Balboa. / "They haven't even started butldlnl tbem yet,•• McLaln saJd. Nevertbeleu, low-income 1 1boppen who sWl Yiant a 1hot at th«Jfe units -when they become avaUable -art uraed to call the houal1'1 aut borlty and leave their name and adclreN. Houeln1 ofllclala aatd they keep nalMI unW the ccmclulkln of the ~-18 meet1a1. tben se.nd callen a written letter clt· · tn1 tlli NiiNIU ot t.bat .--.. 8otb tbe boUStial •utborit; aDd llcLala HJ thtJ hne NH betl9Pd With pboa• calla in reei:iihiltb. AJMI both ~ NY ~ an bo= • 1olalloD ean bt .... . To nidl U. ldlltq •a&Mri· tr, call ln·tua. ., ' '\..----==T=.-:h~eY-'ve arrived our long-awaited shipment of fabulous L.A. Seat Q>vers have Just arrived ... and they're beautiful! The 100% cotton jog set shown is available in white, lilac, pink, yellow. poWder blue, natural, mint green. $18 each piece. Many other new styles are here, too -jackets, jeans.;drawstrlng pants. shorts, rompers. O>me see your summer clothes at .. ............... Britain's Queen Elizabeth II chots with actress Amy Irving, who stars in the movie "The Com· petition," prior to the royal prenuere of the film in London. The showing was a benefit for ~he Missions to Seamen and the Variety Club of Great Britain. Newport seeking 'happy medians' The budget item called for improving median islands in Newport Beach, and Mayor Jac kie Heather s aid she wanted more money ID the kitty to upgrade the isles. Terming the city's me- dians as miserable, the mayor said she wanted to add another $10,000 to the $19,920 budgeted for repairs and improvements to the mid-road dividers. .. At least we can start a program to improve some of lhese islands," she said, shaking her head. That prompted Coun· cilman Don Strauss to ask, "That's called a happy me· dian, isn't it?" Identical twins who earned ~.O grade point averages will help lead the singing of the alma mater at Mc\,.ane High School as valedictorians in their class. · Kathy and Kerri Bye, 17· year ·old seniors, are among 11 valedictoria-ns in their class. Sen. Paul Lazalt, R .-Nev., raile.t hia gkus at Paris' famed Moulin Rouge cabaret, joined by French singer Lino Renaud. They are SUTTOUnded by the girl! of the Mouli" Rouge. The Byes went lo classes and studied together ever since school officials re- versed thelr decisions to separate the girls In rlrst grade. , Tornadoes in Indiana Severe thund.erstorms hit eastern Kansas , Ohio Valley Coastal Nl olll. mornlno low tlouds otMtwl• l&lllftJ 411~ Tllursdey. CollSYl IOw 62. 1119'1 70. lnl-low '1, lll9't IO. w.-6t. .,_,,.,.., -" crell IMlvlwry wernlnes for nort,..•st winds ts to• 1tnou Md 4 to Moot comblne4 IN'- OtlMrwla, lloM v•rleble winds 11lgllt end momlno hours 11ecom1119 -••· ly 10 .. II lulots In eflie.--. 0.. to ).foot _,, s-'1. _,, cloudy ntfllt ...i moml119 llourS c1 .. rl119 In ~rnwet9"1neft-. U.S. summary HHvy rel11 -~ed trom 1t11 Ohio V•ll•Y to Ill• centrel AP· INllKhl-Hrly todey1 wtllle ltol• •d •llo-rs tell over Ille Peclllc Northwest ond from tlle co111r.t Plel111 to tlle upper MIHIHIHll More"-t• '9$1ditnb of 011 City V•lley. •-re WKua\ICI tor• time dwl119 l .. Very ievere llluncterslorm• lllt 11-1119 111 the town •bout 90 mllft ••stern K•nHs, wllll• tornecto•s nor111 of PlttallurQll. -r•-"*' In IMMl'lffll llldl-Temperetures •round IN net Ion et Sc•tt•r•d lllullderstorm• were mldnlollt PDT ronoe.i from 41 111 lorec:est for 1o1 .. lodey from Ille ml6-Lewlst-. -t., to '3 111 81Yllle. Atlentlc ~· Imo Ille Olllo V•ll•y C•lll encl .c:.--Ille Cenlr•I Pl•lnl Into I ... Sutt-s'-n ...-e eapectecl a l 0rn:a _l,,.m lllOfl Pl•'"'" c 1 ·1i to crou h _.,,.."' Pocllk coHt lo ., ldello •nd ~.MCI Nncts o1 H•lt•r•d showers •nd tllun· dersho-n ere pre41cted tor tlle wu11Mrn 4tlenllc ceest ecrOls Ille centr•I Goll! <•U end Me..,. tlwOUOll Vlrolnle. "•nn•Yl••11I• Go•. Dick Tllornbuf'lll -_. T_..., lo declw• • lllMater Ill v.,_. County In Ule nort'-Aem pe<t of Ult llete, IOll-lng flllll llOodl"I lllet wrecked homn, ••Siied t1it-tlloJlf' roods, ..... nc1 ~· •.C. l«Vk• •nd left et ._. _ P9nGft ml..,,.. \outllern C.lllor11lens, 1mertl119' ''°"' .,.i -•r dey Of eye.stlnolno, un,,.•llhllll SMOO, were uroitd -eeln tod•Y to cwt outdoor ectlv1tle1, telle Ille llMll end lllllllenllelly reduce lUI .. l•t• emls.llons from •-trlel plents. "Tllere's .,,. pOt.ntlel for MVlftll, U. wont _, •wr," sel4 J im Blrell.011 SflOll.••m•n for Ille Air Qu•llly AMM99ment District. In· dlcetl111 ,.. •• cencerlled -I ,,. nu.mber al SfftOl •..-U 11111 - Tiie AQMO 1114 Irle South Coest Air •• .,,, ell n..dey tuffered tflrougll Its first IUfleM el.rt 1111<• Oc-r. And more al u. -wos 1111.•IY lor todly, with Wll•lt r•dl"91 of U mlcroer-.., cMk 11..,. ot elr. Tllet's t,_ 1"'91 et wtll(ll ~ Pl•11ts, oil rell11er1 •nd tome Uoeml~ •111t1 rrllllt by•-reduce ..,.,,., efftlNIOlll by 20 lltl'Uftt. Then Wff •ts ~ent tompllMc• Wiii! the Cllt .. Cll tr•I' TUf.O..-, olflClall Mkl. S.111..,.,. Qtl llefnl 1 • .,.,. ._., more •mot tllen _.,..,_cities .. OUM ... meir-..llten ...... rlfl9'd Illy moutltllN wtlkll Pffveflt '°""' ...... f"'91 ~ On .. , d•'fl, M I~ leyef' ef melt\ -----------merllle elr ....... \QM ........ H.0£,t U' 0•94 .. (.,.. ...... _, •• ,.,......,.,,. -·s hHt, - 1119 • lld Olftfle llftlll -ltMPfnQ t ... smo0 l11tlde. M••nll-. AOMD olllcl•I• Hid Mv•n ol U. mon commo11 first· si.ve wnog eMrts were expecl9d for Ille r•olon -y. 14> f....., flve on T.,.ldey. It _, ,,.. 11th dey this yHr tllet lUdl •lel11 l\eve beef\ It· sued. Smoo -elQlktecl to be -nt In Ille ... , Sen !"ff ... v.u.., ..... •ncl _ .. Sen OM11e1 v.11..,, ""'9f' S.nt. Cletti. V•lley, Uplend, l"oft· t•Nt encl Sen BerNtrdlno. weet,.....,., temperelures _,.. to remel11 etiout IM -n IN ...-1 ...... .,. -hot end st Idly. Hltflt In Lot .A,,..i.s Md CMIYI v•lleys lhollld 119 111 the IOw IOI, 111 111- termecllete ,,..,..,,as to ts, 111 rno;in- i.ln er-75 to IS, In .._.r ••rt• ts to llS, ellCI In I-dM.u !OS to t IS • Temperature& "' Loe ~ Al..,.., 19 S1 .t6 Al_. 100 " Am•rll .. 106 " ,....., .... " .. At14111te " u AtlMtkCty . " .. , .... -. " '5 .SI 8lm1 '""'"' '2 " Bltmerca 47 ~ .IS ..... .. . ....... . .. .ti 8rewMlll!e .. ., ....... .. -Cllotrlttll IC '2 • 1ncin.p111 15 J.c:Uflvll• ti K•M City '2 LHV-107 Little Roell t1 LM Anotl• " LOUllvllle • Mempllll '2 Mleml • MllW!klkee 61 Mpl..St.P 12 N•snvlll• '4 NewOrlew>J '4 New Yor11 u NortOlll ~l Olli• City 97 0....h• 15 Ori•-t3 PllllfdpllWI 17 PM911la 1 .. Ptlbburgll 76 Pllencl, Me 76 PU-,Ote 65 Reno 15 Akhm-,, Sall Lelle n S.11Dlego 73 Sell Fr•n ... SH Uii '° s1 Louis t1 SIP-Tempe " StSteM¥1e ., Soc*-S4 TulM .. Waslllnotn t1 CAL.lflO•MIA &Hertfleld t1 Blylfte 112 Eurelt• " Fresno t2 L•nc•s• '° ~r .... vllle " Mefl'9rey 11 Nledlel 110 Oeltlancl 71 P-RoW• '° AeftoodClty 74 s.cramento ., s.llllM 11 s.n.. ..,..,. ,. Stodlleft .. Tllermel 1Q5 Ulllell 77 ..,It_ '°' . .. ..., ., ••"'-ti C.elallM 14 UAn_...., IS IAnt 9eecll 11 ~ .. ~a.cft .. ~ .. .. ....... ~ 111 .. ...-.w .. S.ht,..,._no t1 SMJ-7S Senl•AN 11 SMt•C,_ • T .... Vel~ u " 76 " IO n .. 70 ,, 7t S7 " 75 '2 .. u 76 " 76 65 " '° SI S4 " 6t SS v S3 SI 61 ,, 42 41 ,, .. ... .. SJ " .. " S4 S4 " SJ S4 " n " n •t Sf '2 ,. " ~ u 61 • 63 .. " " S1 JI .11 ·" .01 .OJ .OJ ... .1• .01 ·"' .71 .2J 11 ... cw .... CMflltllWV at • Clley-eMe 1• » 'S tide ~ 11 ..• n un,moon, We'~e Liste;,lng ••• What do you llkt about the Dally Pllot" Wbat don't you like? Call the number below and your meua1e will be recorded, transcr1btd and d.Uvtnld to Ute approprial~ editor. The ta~ 24·h0ur an1wertng service may • be Uaid lo reeorct leUtl'I to the edltor oa any topte. lbUMi t0n&ributor1 mat lDcl'-lde their aame -~ •mber for venncaUon. No cl~,~~ N•wllet••~IBlild. · N Clft<l-'I c ........ ~ 0.1·" WWI Dell-o..-.i ... OM"'41 Dul• ... ,....... ........ ............ ~ .. '1 1.11 74 • .., ,..._T " " ... lkeMllltll ...... !ft, ... " n TMUlllMT .. f1 ,.,,.. ... 111••·"'· , .. • " "'"'""" ''"··"'· a.J 1J • ........ .. ........ '·' ,. . •• .... Niii . ........ M . " ... .......... ....,.. ......... . ,, .... ,.,~ . " ~ """'-1114 ··"'" • ., , ... 1: • ..- -~· .-. .................... ,,,,., ............ ""'" .............. ._. .............................. __ ..... ~-- . ' Orange Cout DAILY PtL.OT/NednUday, Junf 10, 1981 OC's growth penalized 'II Clark raps proposed reduction of state allocations BY 0 , C. HUSTINGS Of'rllleo.MJ ........... Budset-weary Oran1e County officials say they'll have fewer pennies left to pinch if the state Legislature adopts its proposed statewide funding. formula. They said the county stands to lose $4.3 million in the 1981-82 fiscal year if the proposal is ap· proved to help the state make up a $250 million shortfall In its budget. Ralph Clark chairman of the county Board of Supervisors, said the proposal is unfair because it penalizes high-growth counties such as Orange County. Under the formula. state al- locations would be reduced to counties where local revenues have grown more than 4 percent during the last two years. ln Orange County, revenues have grown about 9 percent. , Clark was critical of the pro· posal because, he claimed, it is tailored to benefit four large, urban counties: Los Angeles, San Francisco, Alameda and Contra Costa. Supervisor Bruce Nesta'l'lde. a former state assemblyman, of· fered this analysis: "'If you know personalities and you know areas, you can pretty well tell what's happening in this budget." A conference committee co prised of members each of Assemb(y and Senate are m ing every day this week to out a funding formula. * * * AFTER FOUR YEARS as executive assislttnt, Steph Kozak is leaving the office Orange County Supervis Thomas Rile y for an a ministralive position at Jo Wayne Airport. Kozak has been named ~ Airport Manager Murry Cabl as airport plans and program ricer, effective Monday. He w succeed Norman Ewers, who retiring. She's for the birds The 29-year-old Orange resi· dent, who bolds two masters degrees, handled airport•related matters while serving as an aide to Riley, whose district includes the airport. Animal officer aids lost chicks By JERRY CLAUSEN Of 1M D .. ty 1'1191 S .. ff Pert, brown-eyed animal con· trot officer Irene Hare is making her rounds in Costa Mesa these days with a bird cage resting beside her on the seal of her orange truck. "'l's fledgling season," she ex- plains. Young birds are just learning to fly . Some don't make it on the first try, Ms . Hare says, and well-intentioned Orange Coast r esidents, fearing for the creature's safety pick them up and then call for help. That's how she acquired the young house wren and blackbird kept in the portable cage. "Actually," she advises, "un less there is immediate danger from cats or other ani mals, it's better to leave the young birds alone." The mother bird, she says, . usually wiU herd the grounded fledgling under a bush and con- tinue feeding it until it can fly . If you must protect a young bird, she advises, heat is the most important thing. '·Put it in a box on a towel with a heating pad underneath or with a 40·watt electric bulb immediately over head," she says. Rescuers' first impulse is to try feeding stranded bi rds, she says. "Don't, unless it's really hun- gry and squawking up a storm." Milk or sugar water is all wrong, Ms . Hare says. People end up drowning the bird." "Meal eaters should be fed sq_uas hed meal worms, beef baby food , vitamins and egg yolk. ··seed eaters , like the housewren, can eat high protein babv cereal and egg yolk, bananas or blueberries ·• Beller yet, she says, call Gregg Hickman, a bird expert, at 776-3751. Or. she adds, it won't hurt to put a grounded bird back in the nest, if necessary. The old wives tale about a mother bird aban- doning novice fliers because they've been touched by human hands is just that -an old wives tale. Ms . Hare says she's ndt a bird expert and that caring for her own small brood, the cage safely fastened down with a seat bell. isn't even a s mall part of her daily activity. ''But I think they have a right to li ve just like any of the animals," she says. Kenneth HaJl Jr .. 21 , of Santa Ana. has been named by Riley lo succeed Kozak. For the past nine months Hal,l has served as an intern eif- ecutive assistant in Riley's ot fice. Hall recently graduated from Chapman College with a degree in business. He was named outstanding senior man during the school year just com pleted Quick action l . i saves ives · SAN FRANCISCO CAP l -\ mechanic who Jumped mto the cab of a runaway truck an~ stopped it just short of a cro~ of pedestrians may have sav~ 20 Ii ves. according to a police ~­ ficer who witnessed the heroics . The mechanic, Mario Evola. said he just happened to be he~­ ing a stalled motorist Mond when the two-ton delivery tru barreled through a business · · trict intersection without anyone at its wheel. "I had to.run like hell to g¢t it," Evola said later. "Jf I lhifllt of it now, I was crazy to d~ o.lly ............. .., ltk MN It.._. Animal Control Officer Irene Hare feeds a tiny blackbird "rescued" by a well-meaning person after it failed on its attempt to fly. Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Certified Gemologiat. AOS PEARLS more popular than ever It wouldn't be fair to say that "pearls are back;•• they have never really gone away as a great American favorite. But, there baa certainly been a growing interest in these slm· pie, beautiful creations. Women wearing ropes of pearls are seen very frequently now 1n the society pages. Pearls are in their glory when matched with the bask black dress, or with any dark or vivid colors. Just u women's clothes are tunU.nc to the traditioaal classic look, so lJ the eluate pearl beint sou1bt •• the perfect accompaniment to sucb clothlq. From cbobn to ropes to earrlop to 1111$1• pearl-and-diamond pendanlJ, ODe Of natw'e'I &re at beauties ta e.UoylDI ~ h'1day. Re111em.ber pina?.' 'hiil1're back, and the populartty cl pearls la one al the blHetl nuona. Women'a. IUlta are putleUlarl)' ~compUm.atail bJ J•pel p&m. Ojl&en la J.,.. •• elHwllere are workl•I overtime to supply tb• delaeDd for beautltul peull, to prt._ •lll Mt ... out of line. ll la aood to '" the elaUlc pearl 1atn IUC!h popularity. PEARLS A . CLASSIC GIFT FOR GRADUATION DAY & J er yu ter 1111. •at· the le" As· R· .he L. .he nd 10. ns in 11')' 1as >Ut )V· se .he in- • J • ] s t b i fl [ c f1 e -------~·_......... ··"""-· - ~4 H /pt Panel seeks return. of death penalty W ASIUNGTON <AP) -The Senate Judiciary Committee is recommendln1 .-eatoratlon of the federal death penalty amid charges that the lestslation ls unco1U1Ututlonal. The committee voted 13·5 Tuesday to re·eatablish the death penalty for a number of federal crimes , lncluding aircraft b.ijackin1, the attempt- ed or actual assusination of a president, kidnapping, treason and espionage. Aldo workers due back in AFLQO DETROIT (AP) -The United Auto Workers union will rejoin the AFL-CIO as early as next month, endini a 13·year separa- tion that be1an partly as a personality clash between union leaders. The executive board of the 1.3 million·member UAW voted unanimously Tuesday for realfil- i a t ion, said UAW President Douglas Fraser. He said the merger, which will swell the ranks of the AFL·CIO to 15 million, will strengthen the labor movement "in one of the most difficult periods working people have ever faced." Former Tennessee governor corwictd NASHVILLE (AP) -Former Gov. Ray Blanton convicted of extortion , conspiracy and mail fraud in a liquor license· kickback scheme, faces a sentence of up to 70 years in prison.· Two aides . , of the soy -I LANTOM bean farmer, who was booted from office in 1979 in a coup engineered by fellow Democrats, also were convicted Tuesday as the eiJlhl-week trial ended after nearly-a week ot de· liberations. The coovlcUon ''should serve as a lesson to anyone ln public olfice who might be tempted to abuse their authority," said Republican state Sen. Victor Ashe of Knoxville, one of Blan- ton's hardest critics. Miners in Idaho flee shaft blaze BURKE, Idaho (AP) -About 200 silver miners, alerted to danger by a foul-smelling warn· ing gas, safely fled the Star Morning Mine when a fire broke out at tbe 6,700-foot level, of- ficials said. The fire was discovered by day-shift miners at about 8 a .m. Tuesday, according to officials of Hecla Mining Co. Navy ship nuu aground off roast NORFOLK; Va. <AP) -A Navy combat support ship ran aground off the coast of Virginia today while returning to its home port, but no injuries or ap- parent damage resulted, a Navy spokesman said. The USS Detroit was returning from "routine operations at sea" when it went aground about 311a miles east or Old Point Comfort while entering the Hampton Roads port area about 1 a .m., salt U . Ross Kudlick, an assis~t public affairs officer with the 2nd Fleet. Bread, not bultRJI" WASHINGTON (AP> -The Reagan administration has de· cided that the Soviet Union should not get any surplus U.S. butter-for the bread baked with wheat purchased from the Unit· ed States, the Washington Post reported today. ,,, ........ Nermin "The Sheik" Kolofllu , left, and Gigi "Litt~ BU" Monza batt~ it out in the mud during Wall • Street Charity Club'• l1enefit for the mentally retarded. A male ezecutive on Wall Street, dresl«I in white dinner jacket, referee•. Wall Streei slings mud ·Women fin anciers get down and dirty for char ity NEW YORK CAP) -Wall Street businessmen tired of getting punched in the nose for charity let their female counterparts wrestle with the prob- lem -in a PQOl of mud. The s porting event at Madison Square Garden's Fell Forum Tuesday night was sponsored by the Wall Street Charity Club for the benef~t of the mentally retarded. Instead of the boxing snatches between Wall Street exeeutives that blackened many an eye in the past, this year's bouts were fought by 10 young .Wall Street women who squirmed in the mud, grunting and groaning while their male colleagues cheered them on. The Wall Street amateurs, however, were only in the preliminafy bout.s. The main event was lhe professional troupe known as the Chicago Knockers, nine shapely women who gyrated In the mud Ln scanty bathing suits. The women from the stock excbal)ge floor or the brokerage offices couldn't compete with "Hur- ricane Blondie," "Sassy Sandy" and "China Doll," but they tried hard, even to the nicknames . Robin Warren of the New York Stock Ex- change called herself "Killer," but she lost the first match to Arlene "The Polish Princess" Young, who works for Thomas McKinnon Secs Inc., and got a big hand when she appeared in the ring in a "Miss Piggy" mask and neck-to-toe flesh· colored body stocking. Gigi "Little Bit" Monza, clad iJt lavender short · shorts and bra, and Nermirl "The Sheik" Kologlu, of the prestigious investment firm of Paine Web- ber, Jackson & Curtis, battled as if they really were angry at each other, in true wrestling tradi- tion. By the time tbe Chicago visitors had done their thing, the spectators were throwing beer at each other's pin·striped suits and, in several cases, following up the beers with fists. When Dawn "Taste of Honey" Rubsky of the New York Stock Exchange and Lisa "Butterfly" Stankunis of the Discount Corp. of New York came into the ring, they bad to give the roaring crowd a good show, and they did -apparently having picked up some tricks from the pros. When the mud bad settled, the judges named Paine Webber's Ms. Kologlu as the reigning "Miss Mud Queen of Wall Street." As the club counted $50,000 in receipts for charity, no one seemed concerned about earlier protests from feminists who thought mud wres- tling would undermine women's accomplishments on Wall Street. Central America targeted . WASHINGTON (AP> -The United States and Mexico, despite deep differences over the turmoil ln Centtal America, are taking t~mtative step s toward cooperatin g in a multilateral development PTO· gram for that region. Mexican Secretary of Foreip Relatlom Jorge Castaneda said Titeaday that the proposal was suuested by President Reagan during his meetings with Mex· lean President Jose Lopez Portillo and that the Mexican leader gave bis conditional ac- ceptance. Lopez Portillo said his country would help ''fight the Soviet Union or communism in the re- gion" and that no country be automatically excluded from Reagan's proposal, Castaneda said. The Reagan administration has been developing a plan for the entire Caribbean-Central American area, but Castaneda said the proposals discussed re- lated only to Central America. He said Venezuela and Canada also may cooperate in the pro- gram. Castaneda spoke hours after the conclusion of the Reagan· Lopez Portillo summit, which was characterized by unusually warm expressions of friendship by the two leaders. "Mi casa es su casa," Reagan said in a toast to his guest after a state luncheon, repeating the age -old Spanish.offer of friendship: "My house is your house." "I must confess that I am moved," he said. "I have spoken before an auditorium in this sam e pl~ce three times before, and I have never been so moved as I feel today. It is true that I had always been sincere but also cautious ... The relationship for som e reason or another had always been a tense one ... For the first time now I have felt totally relaxed.'' During his remarks, Reagan also announced his acceptance of an invitation from Lopez Portillo to attend a North-South ·summit conference of in- dustrialized and developing na- tions in Mexico in October. ~-------------------------------------------------------------------------- Come to our Father's. Day Breakfast and meet your favorite Dodger player/ It's fun for everyone/ Come to the breakfast and have your picture taken with a Dodger player. It's only 4.95, and Includes breakfast, a favor, plus s chance to win tickets to s Dodger game. June 20, at 10:30 a.m. Dodger Joe Beckwith w/11 be In mission vlejo, Biii Russell In br6B, Steve Howe In south bay, Rick Sutcliffe In westmlnster, Jay Johnstone In laurel plaza and Manny Mota In eagle rock. Call the store restaurant llsted above to make your reservation . .,..lmlM,., 898-252 1,, mlalon w.Jo 495-2800 mQy 2020 2920 2020 -~~d .3645 HALF KEG Michelob QCJAATER KEG Michelob HALF KEO Miller's (PUJS DEPosrr ON ALLl<EQS) e C'. el p it at ii) t)I •.•.. -ca ... iaw.• ..._......,, .. , -s-•es--•--•• .. , •••uu .... -. ••--•""·'_,,.,.., ..... _, -~ • ..,........,_..__ ... Orange Coast DAILY PtLOTJWednffday. Jun.e 10, 1G81 H /F Baptist presid.en• lliscounts protest LOS ANGELES (AP) -After his re-election In the face of the 11tronaeat oppo11illon to a Southern Bapt111t president in more than 20 yean, the Rev. Balley ~th 1ays the 40 percent vote against him "wasn't a pro- test of anything." Smith, 42, was re-elected Tuesday by a vote of 6,Sl:W to 4,524 over challenger Abner McCall, chancellor or Baylor University. Voting delayed on gas tax bike SACRAMENTO (AP> -A proposal to boost the gasolln\} tax by two centa a eallon and hike driver's license and vehicle registration fees has stalled in a hassle over amendmenta. A vote on the measure. which would cost the average motorist an estimated $25 per year, was put off Tuesday by the Assembly Transportation Committee after more than a dozen changes were proposed. gubernatorial exploratory com- mittee ne~t month. Bradley, who was just over- whe,mingly re-elected for a third term, has lnvtted a eroup of wealthy San Diego Democrata and party activists to a Thurs- day breakfast meeting in that ci· ty to discuss the governor's race. It is bis first openly cam- paign-Oriented session for next year's race. Mom kills kids; slash es throats WILMINGTON (AP ) -A 28-year-old woman, apparenUy despondent over a love affair, killed·her two children and then slashed her own throat with a kitchen knife Tuesday, police said. Esperanz, Valdez was in serious condition Tuesday night after four hours of emergency surgery at Harbor·UCLA Medical Center Funding slashed .. ............. Husband shot; wife acquitted SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A woman who claimed her husband beat, harassed and sex- ually assaulted her for seven years has been acquitted of at· temr>tinR to kill her husband. A jury or eight men and four women Tuesday found Delores Churchill not guilty of attempted manslaughter in the shooting of tiler husband, Frank Churchill, a Richmond policeman, on a San Francisco street Feb. 20. The jury deliberated nearly three hours before delivering the verdict to Superior Court Judge Ollie Marie-Victoire. Defense attorney Gerald Schwartzbach had contended that Mrs. Churchill shot her husband in self-defenfe. Frank Churchill had testlfted that be did not ab'uae his wife. Durina the trial, prosecutor Eugene Sweeters told the jury. "Givlog her (Mrs. Churchill> a license to shoot her husband Is like condonine murder. What's to keep a victim of the nagglng- wi f e syndrome from shooting his wife to end his problems?" Among those. who testified was Lenor e Walke r , a Denver psychologist, who said that Mrs. Churchtll suffered from the bat- tered-wife syndrome and the shooting was a "reasonable" act Guard autlwrized to curb rafting SACRAMENTO (AP> -The California National Guard has the authority to curb rafting on the Salinas Ri ver in Camp Roberts whenever it is incom- pali ble with military uses, the attorney general has ruled. Tuesday at the request of As· sem blywoman Carol Hallett, R· Atascadero. Bradley r e adying gove rnor's race LOS ANGELES <AP ) - Mayor Tom Bradley, while try. ing lo avoid the appearance of actively launching bis quest for the governorship in 1982, bas tentative plans to Co.rm a SACRAMENTO <AP > -A panel of six weary lawmakers struggling to come up with a S2S million state budget have slashed proposed funding for veterans and public employee retirement, and withheld action on whether to pay for a state gay rights counselor. REFRESHING BREAK -Stephen Theisen, 39, San Diego busines_sman, relaxes along Highway 1 in Monterey and cools his feet. He has walked 5,080 miles since May. 1980. Last year he sold his construction business that netted him $300,000 a year and decided to "take a long walk and think things over." He flew to Alaska, 5,500 miles away and has 450 miles left to San Diego. The guard says it would welcome negotiations with a federal, state or local agency to license recreational use of the segments of the Nacimiento and Salinas rivers that flow through Camp Roberts, so long as the state "would be relieved of all li a bility regarding tubing ac· tivities." Attorney General George Deukmejian issued the opm1on The deputy commander of the guard, Brig. Gen. Anthony L. Palumbo, said in a letter to the stati? Department of Boating and Waterways that a few years ago, a small number of civilians found ideal "lubing" waters in the rivers within the military reservation. But growth in the sport nas raised serious concerns about the tubers' s afet'y and the gov- ernment's li ability because military units use parts of the area for live-fire weapons train- ing. Sef'wq ftme St.,,. at v out OOCH fCaH S~ NMrnl Your A'••• COSTA •1AfM1·1289 ... .._......, lllSSION~1 -c.,...c..-... (Son Diep'""· el """ ~llwy I a.,... "'-macy "Purveyors of Old!ime Neighborliness" 10 16 lep~ Dr. .._,_.. ... ca. 76o-Ol I I Interiors ______ by Valle', 9'111ffoc I hove just moved into o single rOOfTI oport.,,.. and would fike some advice on the best way to subdivide the' 51eeping ateo. Amwr. There is o very good way of aeoting o room &vider and it's inexpensive. YOJ buy o piece of lumber I 1 x I ), some cup hooks and clothsfine. Cut the wood to the size of divider needed. Attach it tq the ceiling and floor. Next, insert the cup hooks into it 13 in. opat). Run the clothsline from the bottom hex* to the top, skipping ~ery other hook, then con-e bcrl and use the missing hooks. Then odd yot.X personc:J to.ich. You ..Mii be c::mozec:f Of the effect. lllhrion by v•• Ille. 112714. Wetlclff Dri•e Mewport IHda. ~. t26H 714-645-1300 the Nothing says "congratulations'1 quite as effectively as a gift from Howes. for example, a lifetime watch from our choice selec:.tion of Swiss-made masterpieces: Rolex, Patek Philippe, Girard Perregaux, or Movado. Or a diamond ~ntfromOad that says, "I know you'd make it,. whhout words. HIGHER YIELD and SHORTER TERM Mercury Savings Mow Offers MEW 11Repo Plans. 11* ~~ We han 1e¥eral "Funds"* c•renlly -1'11~-~ ~ • available for ow cus~ ~'Y FOR CURRENT RATES ... Call or visit your nearest Mercury office. :,.... MERCURY SAVINGS and loan auoetatton IRtinlbn Beach Lake forest Tustil 7812 Edinger 23021 Lake Center Or 1095 Irvine Blvd Hnt. B<:h., CA. 92647 El Toro, CA. 92630 Tustin, CA. 92680 (714) 842-9333 (714) 770-2601 (714)832-7701 La Hnra/Fulerton Anaheim Hills Buena Park 1001 E. Imperial Hwy 5677 E. La Palma 8955 Valley View La Habra, CA. 90631 Anaheim. CA 92807 Buena Park, CA. 90620 (7.14) 870-8700 (714) 779-7047 (71 4)82N i000 *This obligation IS not a savings account or deposit and is nof insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Cor ratio!\. K mart's Got All The Ways to Care For All Kinds Of Audio-Video Equipment! You'll Need Some Of The se If Yo u Have Any One Of These: 2. VHS Video 14 97 CGSHlte Head Cleaner .. • Head ond tape guides cleonef tor VHS. ' 3 · ==.., ...................... 2.4 7 Includes Regula. PhHlipps Sctew- drtver. demognetizor . ... Aulomattc Record 2 9 7 Cleaning Arm .................. • Includes brush arm and cleaner. s. ~.~~~ ................ 7 .88 Fa full size cassettes. Quick and eosy to efose. '·~~ ................ 8.97 Used for most cassette. 8-Trock tape recorders. 7~ngAnd ·aea~ea • .-........... 1.47 Use for c assette tapes. I. =--Head Cleaner 9 7 0 Cleanlng Uquld .......... .. Used for cleonlng cassette. Qnd tape recorders. 9. Electronic Static 8 9 7 lllm1"4:111oi1' •••••••••••••••••••••• • ~ood cteonsreoords. Nob(;etv. liquid required. W• Honor I • ' ' I Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT tNednttday, June 10, 1981 Togetherness one way to beat hou~ilig pinch. PROBED Holmes Tuttle, a longtime Reagan adviser, is under investigation for illegal ownership of a bank. He claims thP issuP is "trivial." F unds sought SAN FRANCISCO IAP l -Mayor Dianne Feinstein has proposed a $1.17 billion buc1get which contains funds for more police and transit workers. MEDFORD. Masa. <AP> -It'a double or nothin1 for two couples who joined forces to purchase an SS.,000, "slnate-famlly" house. With a 17 percent interest rate, Richard Fahlander and his wife, Kathleen Allen, and Paul Kahn, and his wire, Barbara Norman, decided joint ownership was the only alternative. Each couple have earnln1s of slightly less than S20,000. House prices ln suburban Boston avera1e nearly $86,000, according to the Greater Boston Real Estate Board, which estimates that buyers need an· nual incort\es or about $50,000 more than double th~ area's median. So local brokers say shared ownership Is u wrowlng trend. '"It sturted on the West Coast and migrated here." says Milton Shaw, executive vice president of the M assachuselts Board of Realtors. with reports of co·ownershlp deals in such Boston s uburbs as Weston. Lin- coln and Marshfield. Occasionally brokers sugeest the alternative. and "we are assuring people that it can be done," says Marshfield broker Patricia Roy. •·Ir l bad bou&ht on my own ll would have been a condominium," says Rachel Morris, a computer pro- fessional. Instead, she bought a house with a friend. Co·ownershtp has its problems - joint decisions on everything from plum bin& ovel'bauls to landacapin1. Most owners set up detailed le&al agreements -lncludin1 what hap· pens when one co-owner wants to move and the other wants to stay - In advance. Says lawyer Steven Goldenberg: "There's a potential tor a lot of problems and IU will.'' In Medford, Kathleen Allen said, "We've come closer knowing more about each other. We see each other at all different times. not just socially." Kahn says it's best to avoid co· ownership when one couple is more prosperous than the other. Many such property owners say they'd prefer a place all their own. But in today's market, prospects are dim. The next phase. realtors say, is construction or homes with double suites. We'll give you great ideas for dressing up the Dad in your life at our 11Father's Day Fashion Show''. If he loves that tattered old shirt as much as he loves you, it's time to introduce some new favorites t<tb_is wardrobe this Father's Day. Come to our "Father's Day Fashion Show". The Broadway Newport, this Saturday, June 13. 2 p.m ., in the M en's Department. We'll show you the latest in men's clothing and accessories, and give you lots of super ideas that'll make choosing the perfect gift for the special Dad in your life, surprisingly simple. THE BROADWAY '•I ~HH Q t 11 1iOO '.I U tl PUBLIC NOTICE P UBUC NOTICE NS-78121 ,.OTICE OF DEATH OF NOTICE OF DEATH OF GEO RGE A. MURRAY, THERESA F. AXENE, a k a G E 0 R G E aka THERESA FRANZ R E YNOLDS M URRAY AX ENE AND 0 F ANO OF P ETIT ION TO PETIT I 0 N T 0 AD · ADMINIST E R ESTATE MINISTER ESTATE NO. NO. A-108922. A-109017. . PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE llHOLUTIC* MO. ttlt-tJ llUOt.UTIOM CW TM• eoAllO OP DUl•CTOl'I OP lllVUI• RANCH WAT•ll DtlT•ICT, CHIA .... COUNTY, CAUPO•NIA. ADOtNO MCTIOll U TO TH• •UL•I AND 1t•OULATIOMI OP THe lllVIN• LUICM WAT•• DllTillCT POii WAT••, H W•ll, AND ••CLAIM•D UllVICe PUlllUANT TO STIPULATION AND AO••llM8NT OP saTTL•M•NT IN SH•llNAMAN w. lllWO To all h · 5 To all heirs , e • r • b f I . . d . t WH••EAS lrvlM RllftCll Weter Olstrlet llllWOI ••• Cal-• Wntr beneficiaries, creditors ene ci_aries, e r~ 1 ors o1w1ct or11M1.:....nc1aa11t1nounc1er11wc:.a11tom1ew-011111e1La•,-and contingent creditors of and contingent creditors of •" 01111e1aftdS w1t11111111a boWIClarles ot .. '° 01str1e1 are touolad 1n 11w County George R Murray aka THERESA F. AXENE, ofOra,,..,SU11aotea111on11a;anc1 George Reynolds Murray aks THERESA FRANZ u1c1~:=~::n::b~,::..eai.:.=.w:.:;.~::::=::.~'!!: and persons who may be AX ENE and ~rS?ns who dlt11lbut1on ot .. ..,. .,,., Section u• o1 M1C1 w.tw c... __.....,.. u. DI .. otherwise Interested In the may be otherwise interest-1r1et to a.no•• or use any ot ,,. ....-.. or ~ contalMCI In .,. will and/or estate· ed In the w i II ii nd/ or ea111orn1• w.ter Dlttrkt uw In <•"Y"'9 out 11.1 purpoMa and ,_.,. to A petition has been filed estate. . . '"'"~~:~.:~-;:of 01r.ceonot 1•wo,.,.....,.._."°""loft "°' by Dorothy Murray In the A petition has been flied ,,,,...., on Meyn, 1m, -.ited 1tu1eune1 ~ ror waw. s.-, ~ Superior Court of. oranoe bydHFarrykWHllllSam Axene •ac~1=::.-.=-=,:':,'c,.-:::,~~~ .... .,..,_. • • ....,1111..,. County requesting that an ran · pearman, and A9,_,.,,. o1s.ttlelMnt 111 1t1e ecUoll aftlhled SMrMman v. 8Mt'd of Dorothy Murray be ap-111 In the Superior Court of 01rector• o111w 1rv111e 1tanc11 waw 01m1ct c<>ranee ~1or eoun c-No. pointed a s pers onal Orange County requesting n.e1-1•>:anc1 representative to ad-that Harry Williams Ax-, ... 1~1H!!..t~ ': ::::S~ ~:~'°'!t°'.:."==:~i.:-,:::.11:: minister the estate of en e and Frank H . R-.v1 .. 1oNtoM11SKt1ons.sii.r.-0;1M George R Murray aka Spearman Ill be apftolnt· WHHUS,N'-'tualOSti..,i.t..,._.A.,_nwo•~ot,nw Geor:ge Reynold~ Murray' et dtl as pet rsodnall riepresehn-=-~~.:':.:~.:' S:,:!~.~ .~=-~::' .. : .. -:':: s~:: I rvlne, Callforn1a (under a ves o a m n st er t e Allf'MIM!lt or s.tttement; the 1 n dependent Ad . estate of Theresa F. Ax-NOW, TM•UP011•, u. 1toan1 of DlrectDn., ,,.,..,. ..-... wee.r DI ... mlnlstratlbn of _Estates eAne, ak(a dThetrhes~ dFran trk'.::.~·~:·5~11~:.::=.-;-..=::.•.:= .... Md/w Act>. The petition 1s set for xene un !!r e tn epen L-inc-Hou•lt'll Pfo)«u -.. ,_.. ~'-' ~ 1n a..111.it "A" hearing In Dep1. No. 3 at dent Administration of 1011111 Rnoklt10n.a11Khed11ereto•ne1.,0111,....._•meee •par111Weot. 700 Civic center Drive Estates Act) The petition 11e,anc11tapp-_ _...,.ec1. west, s ant a An a , is set for heari~ in Dept ... .=.1. ThltttlelM'Wl•lonuttN•~.,.11•-..._11 .... California 92701 on June No. 3 at 700 C1v1c Cente SK._ a. Thal .. 1d s.ctlOn u •• ~.......,. IMll .. ,ert1n.cs.,., 111e 24 1981 at 9· 30 a m Drive, West, in the City of s.<ntert o111111 011trkt _. ,,. s.c:i,i1...,..., ....,._Md directed t• IF YOU OBJECT to the Jsan1 ta1 A198na1, tc9a_l30ifornla on ==~ c:.::-:i~::.~,'.: =.:... U: ~= =...,~~.r:!i.~ granting of the petition, u Y , a · a.m . purwan1tou.pr .. 1s1on1otSK110nUC1Aattt1eC.lfWINWWf<:oa. you should either appear IF YOU OBJECT to the AOOPTEo.s10NEOAHOAPP1toveotM111•-..,.._.,,.,_ at the hearing and state or anting of the petition W.A.~ ...._,..,, your objections or file you 1hould either appear AlllhlKC.Kom,S.Cmwy written objections with the at the hearing and state s.<t1on u. Al-te P1nanc1119 tor Affenllllle f/M/tl i.-1-"'-"" court before the hearing. your objectl?ns or file Profs~~ ....... ._~ PlllMc._ "......,,,...,.. .._ Dltltkt.., Your appearance may be written objections with the w111et1 • .-. _ afldlor reclaimed WlllW .,,,1ce 1s,....... win lllCMllt in person or by your at-court before the hearing. "°''"'"*'""perc.ntefli.""ttsu....,,......,.,.,....,,_.....,... torney. Your appearance may be units••.,..,...,..,._. ... 11as llMft • ...,......, t11e °"at,,..,..,., cew.t1or I F Y 0 U A R E A in person or by your at· Orantie. «°""'well entity tor 1anc1 -wllkll ,...,.,.. tt11t •,_...,.of IM IHtlll being....,.,... llNll .... _._ MdlW ... --.......... units .. CREDITOR or a cont-torney. ......111dlflMO,an1-'l.-1CM1.-•~.._~.,...... lngent creditor of the de-I F Y 0 U ARE A -rand/orrec1a1,_, • ...,..,.,1ceter_,.......,.._.,,......_ot... cPased, you must file your CREDITOR or a cont· =~"':::k~~"':1911c~•=:-.:=:.::U-.,..: claim with the court or lngent creditor of the de-water,_ al'ldl• "'flalmtd wa-.r tac111t'" _ _., .. -111141 ... present It to the personal ceased, you must file your ....... "*"' • ,..., .. •Y .. ....-.. ""*" o1 ... Mw'9 c-.. c..a ftk1I representative appointed claim with the court or :::::;;::.:rr.=~=='7:!"~:...•..:;:.• .. ~ by the court within four present it to the personal ., ... 1..,.._ 1or Alt.,...• FIMn<lnl .. ..,.......,. • • _... J.J.t _. months from the date of representative appointed 111<11 ottw-141g1Q11t .... ._.11y t111 ,_11....,. ...... ,....,..., ... l>bt,kt first Issuance of letters as by the coort wlthlh four 111111e111Crwt1on.TI11sprovtao111m..,._.•111e.-.t11t....,....and/Ww ProvlA-J.4 In "'-~tlon 700 of months from the date of IMem• "°""""units" .... as tllt l'MIUt ••• lllllta *...,. wvic. 11,.. uau .,_ QWSlad ,.,,_to lllll lllctlen S.J..1, ' the P robat e Code of first Issuance of letters as Callfornla, The time for provided In Section 700 of filing cialms will not ex-the Probate Code of plre prior to four months California. The time for from the date of the hear· filing claims will not ex· Ing noticed above. plre prior to tour months YOU MAY EXAMINE from the date of the hear. the ffle Mt>t by the court, Ing noticed above. If you art Interested In the YOU MAY EXAMINE estfte, you may fll• a re. the file kept by the court. quest with the court to re-H you are Interested In the celve special notice of the estate, you may file a re- Inventory of estate assets quest WI°' the court to re- and of the petitions, ac· celve speclal notice of the counts and reports Inventory of estate as- deKrJDld In Section 1200 serlts and of the petitions, of the cMlfwnla Probate accounts and reppl'ts Code. d4fscrlbed In Section 120CU of the California Probate MowHr, G•rt•tr & Code. are ... ay: D .. ltl P . CR U IKSHAN~.t...~NTIN & •rn•rlcll~ Au.t"••Y at GREIM1W LaW, ,._ ~ Drlw, NIJ WlllNreBIYd. hiJ Dl7,l N1..-. llMCla, Ste. 1040 Clft,tforttl• tfMI. C7141 hv.tyHtns,c.. 90211 Mto'I•. (1111 UM141 Publlshed Orange coast Publtshld Orange coast Delly PODt, June •• 10, 16, Delly PUot,June4, 10, 11, 19tt 261M1 1911 2'9W1. ~···- s.u. ................ ,,__ ,.., , ... ""OllUI« llM!f ..... ..... llMl4le put'lllalll .. kt-S.J..I tfllf af'9f MltD .. a lll!Mk ............. y If II II"* .... IUCll .._...... •trltt ....._ ... It •=~ ... MUM nutlt&,itll '"-Ille .,IKtkel w Is ... 1111 I ....... w .._ -11<11111r ... ..-i. If...,.,.._ fl-" .......... ...._... ... ......... .. ar.~wfttl._...l'MIN< .... ..._.. ........... ..., __ of fl-lftt ....... ....,..,,, ..... ., ... DllWl!L ........... a ...... ...... IN• S.C.1911S.H ,1111 Oilttltt ..... ""*"a_...._...... Wltlkll .......... .............. ,.......,. ..... _ ... , ........ ..... J.M ni.t fir ~ ........ fte __, ... en ... a ,....e "*'-~ ...... ·~· ................................ . • # I# -,. for FATHER'S DAY WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT? • SAVE•3.00 REMY MARTIN v.s.O.P. COGNAC 750 ML. ANCIENT AGE SEAGRAM'S V.O. BOURBON CANADIAN WHISKY ~;:::. 10.88 ~;::. 15.99 PO POV VODKA 80 PROOf 1.75 LT. 6.99 GILB EV'S GIN 80 PROOf 1.75 LT. SAVE 70' ANDRE' CHAMPAGNE •WHITE •PINK •COLD DUCK KA MORA COFFEE LIQUEUR 750 ML. 5.99 SCORESBY RARE SCOTCH 86 PROOF 750 ML. 4~99 GALLO MIO-VARIETAL WINES • l'Wlllal CIU9IMI :~:T. 2.99 .. BLUE NUN u••PRAUlllLCH RHINE WINE 7SOML. 2.99 BERTO LL I LAllaflUICO R•D WINI! 750ML. 1.49 CHRISTIAN BROS. DRY CHAMPAON• 4.99 M M "T" r., rs. MIXERS ''PINA COLADA'' Ott .. MAI TAI" , • j .. lllTlllTll BllCH If IUITlll VlllEY Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1991 COMI CS FEATURES TELEVISION 84 BS 87 Irvine car dealer's product isn't a gas to drive ... B9 • D a '~hool shopping' appe·als elimin&t('d SCHOOL'S SWAN SONO -Jason Black and Jennifer Garrett enact the death scene from Shakespeare's .. Romeo and Juliet." The performance by mentally gifted fifth graders for parents Tuesday night was the final pro- duction at LeBard School which has been closed by Huntington Beach City (elemen- tary) School District trustees because of declining ~nrollments . .. Property fees delayed Valley to query residents on proposal for $623 ,000 By PIUL SNEIDERMANN Of-DMty" ... SWff The Fountain VaJley City Coun· cil has delayed for at least one year a plan to assess local proper· ty owners $623,000 to pay for in- creased street lighting, median maintenance and tree-trimming costs. By a 3-2 vote, the council opted first to seek the community's response to the proposed fees through a Nov. 3 advisory ballot question. Councilwoman Barbara Brown, who proposed the ballot question. said she felt local resi- dents must be officially consulted before new assessments are im- posed. Valley trash pickup rates increased Fountain Valley residents will pay a few cents more for their trash pickups, beginning July 1. The City Council approved an increase in the monthly trash pickup charge Tuesday from $3.52 to $3.98 per residential dwelling unit. The hike reflects an increase from $3 to $.1.40 paid to Rainbow Oispoasl Co. The remaining charge is a city bill processing fee. The new rate will remain in effect through Sept. 30, 1982. ln its new agreement with the city. Rainbow has agreed not to establish a special charge for picking up laq~e household items on an occastonal basis. She said council members must convince residents that the fees are justified prior to Election Day. Mayor Ben Nielsen agreed to the ballot question. saying he could not support assessments now because of apparent com- m unity opposition. The mayor pointed to a survey conducted by a locaJ citi~ens' ad- visory committee in which 88 per- cent of the Fountain Valley resi- dents ponea said they oppo5e any tax increase or new assessment district. "The sentiment at Ulla point ls ·not out there ror an assessment district,'' Nielsen said. If the council chooses to impose the street lighting, median and tree-trimming assessments after the advisory question is present- ed, the funds could not be collect, ed until the following summer, when county property tax ))ills are prepared. City Attorney Thomas Woodruff satd a fine distinction exists between an auessmentand a tax. He said a tax ls a levy for general government expenses while an assessment is a lie~ against property for a specific benefit, such as street lighting re- cei ved by theproperty owner. ' Assessment districts are not af. fected by Proposition 13, and city officials are not required to place such assessments on the ballot, Woodruff said. The result of the November ballot question will be advisory and not binding on the council. Councilman Marvin Adler, who opposed the delay, said the city will have to dip into its reserve funds to pay the additional light· ing, median and tree-trimming costsduringthecomingyear. Coast area crashes claim four deaths Four people have been killed and two others seriously injured in a series of traf(ic accidents in the Orange Coast area. Fatal victims included a 17- year-old girl due to be graduated from Newport Harbor High School Tburaclay, a 36-year-<>ld woman riding on the back oC a motorcycle in Newport Beach, a Huntington Beach man driving alone ln Santa Ana and a young Marine whose motorcycle col· u<led with an auto in Irvine:- Pollce gave the· following ac- counts: -Roy B. Rumble, 29, of 18958 Blue Water Lue, Huntlnston Beach, wu kWed ahortly aft.er mldnisht today when his car atruck a 1uardrail on the La • Vela A venue exit ol the Santa Ana Freeway. -A 1t1ll unidentJ.lted 36-year· old w0man wu killed wbtle rid· lna on the back of 1 motorcycle ID Newport 8Hcb. She WH thrown aft.er the c1cl• er~ and atnldt a pardrall IOUlh Ol lrvlne Avenue 1Dcl _oorth o( Heatber Lane la Newpor hacb. Sbe died at Fountain Valley Commllldty ffoepltal followlna die ll:Gp.m. Tuelday acci~ "I don't want to go into our re- serves," Adler said. "It will devastate our redevelopment area. lt think the city will be in very poor shape if we do that.'' City comptroller Howard Stephens said the interest derived from the city's reserve funds is the third highest source of rev- enue Fountain Valley receives. Also, the reserve funds are loaned for redevelopment projects, he said. Stephens warned that because of recent state 11ws, the city can- not replenish any reserve funds it spends. Public works director Wayne Osborne said the new assess· ments if approved, would cover the steep cost increases the city has paid since 1978. In the ~ast thee years, lighting costs have risen by S200 000 me- dian maintenanee by $230.ooO and tree tl"imming by S183,000, Os borne said. Huntington trustees toughen policy stopping freshmen from playing sports for one year By PATRICK KENNEDY Ot ta. o.11, ...... SYff Trustees of the Huntington Beach Union High School Dis· trict have eliminated parent ap· peals to a new policy that seeks to stop so-called school shopping for sports programs and illegal recruiting of student athletes. The new policy, enacted this year, bans incoming freshmen .from playing sports for one year 1f they make an intra-district transfer to a high school outside their residential area. Parents at the Tuesday school board meeting criticized the policy as discriminatory and ·un· fair punishment of students who transfer to a school away from their home to take academic courses not offered elsewhere in the district or to go to the same school as a brother or sister who transferred previously. Prior to this year, the one· year sports ban on intra-district transfer students applied to all pupils in the district except in· coming freshmen. The trustees decided to apply the rule to incoming freshmen because of "evidence of school shopping and recruiting" of eighth grade students for sports programs, according to district Superintendent Frank "Jake" Abbott. Abbott said the district has confirmed numerous cases of sports recruiting involving parents, youth league coaches and school boosters who are out· side the control of district of· ficials. He said district coaches or employees haven't been found to be involved. Although the trustees eliminated the apphls process on a 3-2 vote, they also told dis· trict officials to consider any possible, specific exceptions that could be incorporated into the intra-district transfer rule in the future. Exceptions wouldn't include ~cademic transfers, sibling op-t1ons to go to the same school as li sister. or brother or transfers from transportation reasons, ac· cording to district officials. Most of the appeals were for these reasons. according to district of- ficials. A committee of district of- ficials has beard the 40 appeals to the policy submitted thus far and granted 14 exceptions, ac- cordlnJ{ to district officials. But Superintendent Abbott rec- ommended eliminating the ap- peal process because, be said, the exceptions granted appeared to be arbitrary decisions because there is no set guideline to follow. The 14 exceptions will stand, however, according to district officials. District officials say that more than 200 incoming freshmen stu- dents have applied for intra· district transfers next year. with the greatest number going away from Ocean View High School which has a controversial varia· ble credit sys tem that en- courages students to learn at their own pace. Trustees admitted that some innocent transfering s tudents would be penalized by the sports ban but basically said their hands are tied because of the in- c re a sing incidents of school shopping for sports. ''There is no way to have ex- ceptions to this policy," said Trustee Stephen Smith. "There is either a no-exceptions policy or no policy. If there is no policy then this sports shopping and recruiting will go on and will In- crease." Smith voted against eliminat- ing the appeals process because trustee Brian Lake's motion opens the door to some future specific exceptions. which, if proposed by district officials, will be considered this summer. Trustees Zita Wessa, Helen Dille and Lake voted in favor of the policy. Trustee Doris Allen voted to keep the appeals process. She said the blanket sports ban on all intra-district transfers is un· fair because innocent students will be penalized. The 10 parents who spoke against the policy and in favor of the appeals p~~ess agreed. GWC grads to hear charter professor Political science instructor Margaret Holtrust will be the first faculty member to deliver the commencement address Thursday to the 1981 graduating class of Golden West College in Huntington Beach. More than 800 men and women will receive associate in arts degrees from Golden West presi- dent Lee Stevens during outdoor ceremonies that begin at 6 p.m. on the central quad. In past years, commencement speakers have been invited from state and county government or from other colleges and uni· versities. But Golden West officials de· cided to continue their year-old 15th anniversary celebration by honoring a charter faculty member. Mrs. Holtrust, who taught his· ·tory in Forum I the year the college opened, remembers, ''Classes began while they were still installing various pieces of equipment and carpeting around us." The following year. Mrs. Holtrust moved to political science, where she gained a re- putation for inspiring her stu· dents to ake an active role in state and local government projects. The veteran Golden West in· structor will be introduced by President Stevens and by Robin Matthews, one of her early stu- dents who is now a humanities instructor at the college. The outstanding citizen of the year award will be presented by Dr. Norman E. WatSon, chan· cellor oC the Coast Community College District. The district's board of trustees will be represented by its president, George Rodda Jr:. The R . Dudley Boyce Outstanding Student Award, named for the college's founding p~esident, will be presented by Dr. William Carpenter. dean oC college services. . What's yours is mine, pal Fish Fry · proeee48 dip Costa Mesa event raises $130,000, down $19,000 While Co1ta MtH·Newport Harbor Llon1 Club membera sold moro 0Jb dlnnel'1 than ever at this year'• 3eth annual f"tah Fry In Cotta Mesa, 1ro11 pro- c e •d • are down a nOtf h. a 1poke1man aald Monday. leased a U1t of thle year'• wtn· nera who participated ln tbt 160·entry event. Anaheim, bait drum and bull• corpli SOCK IT TO 'EM DEPT. - Sometimes you get the impression that some of the people who live in Emerald t Bay just outside of Lagwia Beach are a touch snooty. For starters, you know, it's a private enclave where •they have gate guards and streets with bumps in them that I" ~· I /"-\ I TIM MURPHINI ,~It they own themselves, nice tennis courts and their own little cove with a sandy white beach. In Emerald Bay, the old money drives a Ford station wagon and the kids have a BMW each. The new arrivals are in Mercedes or Rolls . When you ask them where they live, Uiey answer simply, "The Bay." Uu- derline The. l'VE GOT LOTS of friends in Emerald Bay and I think it's a pretty "Look out, Alice' The cocutal czars are stocking your deck." neat place. I like riding around in their •old Ford station wagons and making fun of their fire department. It is, however, their own fire depart- ment. Others, however, don't share my view. They hate Emerald Bay and all it represents; the vile, despicable rich; safe behind their guarded gates, sipping from chilled glasses, lounging on the beach and counting their coupons. Vile and hateful. Capitalist terribleness of • the first order. People get worked up like this and ~~'u'I~ ... ,_.--. ..... to experience our May, June SPRING SPECIALS COMPLETE SKIN CARE By Kathy Speciallzlng In: • faCiltl ~ • ~ AppjlC8I • Dllpl'wt~' lndl\r, E~ • MllMl•WW. NAIL CARE • ~..... • Menlc:IMW • ....._. Wt..,e • "9dlcure •NllGMle SPAIN SPECIALS If you have a Dally Piiot Want Ad appearing tomorrow, ple.ase cut out this recipe ... ... You may not have time to cook. ... .this S..., '" Cracllers Duo • makes a nice welcome •ft•r a hectic day: In saucepan, cOOk I/• cup chopped onion with '.4 to 'h teaspoon curry powder In 1 t•blespoon butter or margarine unttl tender. Add 1 can <1111• ounces> condensed spli t pea wit" Nm toUA; graduatty stfr In 1 soup c•n water. Add 112 cup ctto..0·9PPI•. Heat ; stir now and·. tftitn. MNl\whf t., sprNd t ,•ck•e• (3 ounces> creant • c~• (softened> on 9 round cracbrS. Sprlnklt with chopped tMtted •Imondi. M-kes 2 to 2 rv•nos. turn colors. Mainly 1reen, with envy. THIS MUST BE TRUE for a majori- ty of members of the regional Coastal Commission and those bureaucratic functionaries they call their staff. C~lor them Emerald Green. For years, the coastal czars have· been trying to figure a way to force Emerald Bay people to grant a public easement through their private streets · to the beach below. Since Emerald Bay was built before most anything along this coastline, and certainly before these bureaucrats were 'even nasty dreams, they've had a tough time forcing the public right-of -way. Now just this week, the ret:ional Coastal Commission majority .rejected Orange County's land use plan for the Emerald Bay-Allview Terrace area. THE REASON? Because the county plan doesn't contain a provision that would force confiscation of a public right-of-way into Emerald Bay the Yery next time the community association tries to get a county building permit for anything. Don't try to build any tennis courts or rebuild the clubhouse or zappo! It's land theft time. . Actually, we should pl'obably ex- a mine the abysmal stupidity of what the regional Coastal Commission czars want. They want access to a beach where there is no parking except on the most dangerous S.curve in the Orange County sector of Pacific Coast Highway. That's for starters. THE BEACHFRONT RULERS seek this confiscated access in the name of "the public" -that's you and me -so visitors can jam into a little cove that is already utilized by 1,500 members of the community that is already there. Meanwhile; immediately next door to Emerald Bay, the state has opened up a public beach park at El Morro, Crystal Cove and Scotchman's Cove where they already have inadequate public parking, a few scattered outhouses, no public con- cessions and the potential this summer for the biggest mess in the history of our coastline. And against this backdrop·, the state beach czars want to <\o the same thing to Emerald Bay. Of course they do. The Emerald Bay people have a nice place now. And you can't have that. So join me with Alice as we wander through the looking glass . Early tabul1Uon1 Indicate lhe club wtll 1ro111 about •1ao,ooo this year from all ovent1 lnclud ln1 carnival rid 1 and con· co11lon1. down about •te,ooo from lut year'• fl1urea. Lut yoer'1 offort1 netted m .ooo tor charity. Net flaurea tor lhl1 yoar'1 three·day event that onded Sunday won't be avallabl tor at l111t a week, ol- flclal1 lndlcaled. The Fish Fry and Parade ex· travaganza, lar1est annual com· munlly event held In Costa Mesa, features a baby contest. the selection of Mias ~ermnld and Mias Costa Mesa a double Litle -and a parade down Harbor Boulevard to Lions Park in the downtown area. Lions Club otrlcials have re- They are: Santa Ana Winds, band 1weepstakes trophy; Estancia Hll'h School, beat hlth school band; frfaran a tha C hri s tian Academy of Santa Ana, beat junior high band; Z-,Bee Band of Cerritos, best Intermediate band; March Air Force Base Band, fl rat place in the "open" category; Garden Grove Strawberry Festival, sweepstakes noat; City of Costa Mesa. float theme wiMer; International Guiding Eyes, civics float;. Girls Club of the Harbor Area. best youth or religious lloat; Bob's Big Boy. best com· mercial float; City of Westminster, best city-sponsored float ; El Bekal Shrine Temple, Assemblyman due at UCI graduation Assemblyman John Vascon- cellos, D-San Jose, will be lhe keynote speaker at UC Irvine's 16th commencement Saturday at 4 p.m. in Campus Park. Valley fire rating wins class boost The Insura nce Services Office has upgraded Fountain Valley's fire protection classification from Class Five to Class Three. city officials report. The new classification is ex· pected to result in lower rates for owners or commercial and industrial businesses in the city who are insured with companies that use the Insurance Services Office rates. The Insurance Services Office is an evaluating agency that classifies cities in the areas of risk management. The evalua· tion focuses on the quality and capabilities or the local fire de· partment, wate r system and emergency .communications system. Student speakers at the com· mencement. where almost 2,200 undergraduate, graduate and m edical stude nts wi ll be awarded degrees, will be Robert A. Kuntz of Fountain Valley and Daniel L. Johnson o f Los Angeles. Dr. C. Everett Koop, surgeon general-designate of the United States, will speak at the UCI College of Medicine's presenta- tion of candidates, Friday at 4 p.m. in Campus Park, the center of the university. Also Friday. Phi Beta Kappa will initiate 117 nominees at ceremonies in the Fine Arts Village Theater at 6:30 p.m . Then at 8 p.m., an honors con- vocation will be held in Cra wford Hall . S tude nts graduating summa cum laude, magna cum laude and cum laude from various schools and programs will be honored. Also at the event, members of Phi Beta Kappa and Eta Kappa Nu , an electrical engineering honor society, will be rec· ognized. , Prior to Saturday's commence- ment, a reception honoring the graduates will be held from 2-3 p .m . in the Backlot Restaurant, University Center. -MOW ••• ""' HUM,t i~qton, Seo.® ~t> Foo~to.\~ Vo,\\~... \ l!//dHi "PRODUCE! New C!Op .. BU~G" ta iit:ums.4~lf CiitTiwoPE .. 4~1f .iif.iice.4~1f · APRICi1s ... a~•- -..-r-- Excallburs ot Rancho Cucamonta. best percussion 1roup; Garden Grove Elks Lod,e, best clown group; Legion of Honor, El Bek al of Anaheim, best novelty group; John Carra's Buick racer, vin- tage 1909, best antique auto; Brion Munsey of Ee\ancia High School, best high school drum major; Dana Rott, Maranatha Chris· ti an Academy. best junior high drum maJor ; Greg Rockford of the Santa Ana Winds, best youth drum ma· jor ; ~ Mel Sugitan, March Air Force Base, best military drum ma-jor; Karen Di cks of Maranatha Christian Academy, best j.,mor majoreUe; Donald Garcia of Walnut High School. best solo major; MaranaU\a Christian Academy , best junior majorette team; Continental Cadettes or Hunt- ington Beach, best senior ma- jorette team; Sun Seekers of Fountain Valley, best junior majorette corps ; Pal Twirlers of Placentia, best senior majorettes corps; W esternettes of Costa Mesa, best senior drill team; Westminster Coronettes, best junior drill team; Edwards Air Force Base, best military drill team: Santa Ana Winds, best tall- fl ags drill team ; f rvine Police Department. best color guard; Bobby Vigil of Santa Fe Springs and Clarence Sultzer of Montebello, best equestrian division marshals; E .P .I. Corra l No. 20 of Sunland, best mounted color guard; Modjesk a Maveriks of Orange, best mounted group; Betty and Ed Tilisky of Yucaipa, best matched pair; Linda Rombaugh of Fontana, best fancy Western equestrian lady; Harold White of Ontario, best fancy equestrian man; Cindy Vigil of Santa Fe Springs, best Spanish open equestrian; Darryl Nelson of West Covina, best novelty equestrian; Jana Morino of Los Alamitos, best parade horse. cars*bikes• •skateboards· trucks· baby carriages•tea carts•trikes rol lerskates • walkers•toys •wagons•••• scooters•hot rods• coupes• trailers*hard tops"convert- ibles•motor homes•ta wn mowers•limos •corporate headquarters •garden carts Model A's•••• •typlngta bles wheelbarrows• recreationa l vehlcles•golf carts•mode1 trains•bikes •pianos•cars . refrigerators •skates•••••• If it'sgot wheels, you'll move It f aster In a Dally Pitot classified ad.Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad· vlser will help you tur n your wheels Into · caSh. .. H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT tNedneSday, June 10, 1981 Liza Minnelli brings house down without dancillg or acting 81 BOB 1110MA8 ._ ..... ~ ... HOLLYWOOD -"Fabu.lous" "dyna1nlc". "overwbelmln•:~ Those are amona tbe adjectives !Joi An1e1es criUcs unabubedly tolaed at Lin · lllnnelll for her concert performance at lb• Greek Theater last week. The revelation was the Minnelli voice. Jn the past, her alnglng bas been ovenhadowed by her talent _, an actress and dancer. She aot by with her sonaa, but there was always the comparison to the clear, flawless belting of her mother, Judy Garland. This time around, Liza ia makln& It without backup slneers, dancing boys or apologiu. The en· Ure act 1a singing, and she even felt confident enough to do what she has resisted In the past: in· elude a number identified with "lhe best friend I ever bad." The song: "The Man Who Got Away," from "A Star ls Born." Miss MinneJli is in the middle of a national 'tour with her "Cabaret" cohort, Joel Grey. Dµring the four-night appearance In her hom~ town she talked abou.t her life and career in an interView at a friend's house on upper Bel Air Road. She was just visiting, since she and her · third husband, sculptor-desi~er Mark Gero, make the\r homes in a New York apartment and a Lake Tahoe chalet. About her singing: "I'm an actress, basically. Also a dancer. I don't have a natural voice, so that is something I've had to work on. How? By singing in the bathroom a lot. By listening to singers I ad· mire. I haven't had any coaches, but I do get good advice from Kay ThoO)pson, who is my godmother BREAKER MORANT ,....,..,_ ATLANTIC CITY ,...,,.. FEUINI ·CITY OF WOMEN ~194tll THE DECLINE • of ••atem clvtllutlon , ........ ,. ChMch • Cho"ll MCE DAEMS 11\I SHOWS AT 8:00 8:10 10:15 John Boormen't EXCALl_,R IRI SHOWS fll.T 7:00 9:45 : I Carol Burnen Alan Alda I lME FOUR IEAllONllPGI Shows at 8:00 8:15 10:20 UOll OF T1t£ DESERT I Anthony Quinn ; IPGI Shows at 8:00 ~~~!!~~~~~~~ N~I O~mond -.ZZ SINGER (PGI MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ~ AU AGES AO....TnO ~Parental 0-.ce SuDQO•- AU. a m AND !Bl FILMS llECEIVE TI-IE IEAl ~ THE MOT~ PICTURE CODI!~ SEV REGULATION SHOWS AT 8:00 8:20 1Q;JO Tiit Privett Moments nt• •ELVIS IPGI SHOWS AT 8:00 8:10 10:20 Ricna~r IUSTIW tRI And Which Wtv 11 Up IRI I John 80CN"nwn'1 EXCALl9UR tRI HaPfly Borthday ToM• tRI ~r I ~E (PGI AND • Allllf'tAM tPGI cc::::::::::::1::;::::::::.:2az;=a··~ R lchllrd Pryor Gene Wilder mR CAAZY tRI Cne1n11n {PGI THE M.uB BROL {RI Chffc:h • Chone's Next Mo~ie (RI c.ENDAILYAT7::m Under 12 frM Uni-l'Jottd HE'S NOT ONE OF THE BEST. HE IS THE BEST! "Whll distinguishes this IJ'OWle .. ltl INmendous . ..... of corned)' ..• 1<11 md KIH A911n' la top nok:h .•• lheer theetric:all. ~" _,_Slid Siii FIWfCISt:fl o.llOllClt "What rMk• thlll fUm wortl la the enormous' vltaHty of the direction, the ct1spneu of the ICttpt Md the vtgor of .,!!:::. ~.· ~= oVai'1M and the best singing coach in the world. If I have trouble with a word, I asll Mr . "She told mer 'You uaed to be in lov. w1th the words ot a soni; now you mutt be ln love wttb the music.' That's what I've tried to do. I'm always learniq, l'm never aatisfled .. "Each 1on1 l 1in1 ii about a speclflc charatter. I even write a resume about her: what she eatl, what 1be drinks, does •he pule decal• on her retrteerator! I want to know everythlnc about her, so that her character comes throu1h In the words of the SOD(· .. Lua ?4lnnelll is returnblg to tbe 1Uver screen next month, starring with Dudley Moore, ln "ArthUJ'." It is her first film in three years: the last was "New York, New York" which provided her with a 1how-stoppin1 son1 if nothln1 elae. Why the film·making lapse? .. 'It just happened," she said. "I was signed to do a Broadway show. 'The Act.' Even thou1b l re· alized tt wasn't working, I had to go throu&h with it. All of us found it terribly frustraUng to be <loing something we didn't really believe in. "Immediately afterward I did my Carnegie Hall show, whlch was taped for Home Box Office. I wanted to do something simple, so l worked with only 12 musicians around a set that was patterned after my father's Girl Hunt ballet In 'The Band Wagon' -all steel and plexigJass with stairways ieadine to nowhere. I look fatter In the show, because I was three months pregnant." Liza lost the baby. then filmed "Arthur" last summer. She had another miscarrlaee after six months of pregnancy. Instead of "laesing into melancholia," she launched the tour with Grey. THE C MEDY SENSATION! "A WONDERFULLY FUNNY COMEDY about pomeous fathers and youthful seduction. -NllncyScott.SFEXAMINER ~ llA#·'1RU lfKTO• • "6UIUU LAMOU• -~ ·c:= ON£ WILD MOMENT • FRENCH MOVIE RATED (ft) NOW PLAYING I The oomedyfor everyone who'shad.ttuptohere ... 1 Wehandcut \ our fish fillets -~Y. ... dip them in batter made &esh every hour and serve them with plenty of golden &yes. First·nl&hten at the Greek Theater were overwhelmed b)' her enormous eaer11. She was asked how she trains for aucb atrenuoua performances. "I iet a lot of sleep," abe explained. "But lf you do nothlnf but rest, that can be aelf-defeaUng. So I paint and I sculpt and I study." Lear sued in script theft nap NEW YORK (AP) -A New York writer has filed a SlO mlllion federal damaee suit charging that bis outline for a television show was stolen and aired without his permiss!oo. The plaintiff, Thurman Whitfield, alle1ed in his Brooklyn federal court suit that he mailed a script in March 1979 to TV producer and director Norman Lear of Los Angeles for a show entitled "Boomerang." The complaint claimed Whitfield was in· formed Lear and his assoclates were not interest· ed in the idea, which dealt with a racially integral· ed rock group which fights crime and corruption in a middle·class neighborhood. However, Whitfield charged, the script was used as the basis for a show telecut over the Public Broadcasting System and entitled "Righteous Apples." Liza MinnelU --·-~ "THE trOUlt NAIONS" ('°, ... .--- ------,.....~--=-·,------~) :;:.:i:~-;: -,,_ ___ _.. -nllll'ftt-''TAQ THIS JOe ANO 1HOvt IT" (..01 ....... ·-·-·---MUf"t IMTHDAY TO -4"1 --·-·--PNOAY THI 1• ~Alt'T 2 O', "CHH.ctt a CHONO'a NICI DttlAMS" fltl _,,_ .. .. , ......... _. ... 1W .. .. ... "":c..., ... _ _.. ...... ,.- .. ~ ''TAKI Ttfll JOe ANO lttOW IT"' ..,.~ ''"...., "--.. .__ "WHIM 0011 IT HUltT"' (It) f lee AMC:. ..... Wllll lfl'IU. Ac~ 9"111 Y-Owll AM ~=-"trlNAL~ {It) --••• c·--T•···----- ( C "1 -"Ttt« CHUJlllNO IKT10N" !"I f ... NllCW .... WMtl lfllltMll .-c-. llrlfll Y-Owll NII -... •IQ40Qf a CHONG'(" Htca DMAMI" tit) __ ...;..;,;;;..;;._J "THI MOUlfTAIN MIN" (1') f •AM Car ..... Mal lfllll._. Ac~y .. , .. -Owl! AM ...................... ·~'"' ''CADOYaMACIC" f') ~ .... "COALMINlfl'I . .. •' ... .. ..... '· .. . 1·c1w.1rd" CINFMA VIEJO .. . .... ':. ", " 830-6990 ... cotlfllll\' "OUTLAND" ••~ '*· aru (Ill "aUSTIN'LOOR' .... .,,..,..,_ "TifR JlfU(" 1111 .... ,__ "DIATH HUNT ' _,__, '"'· ·-"HIGH "ISK" "EXCALllU"" -ft!llM. ,,. .. ., .... , ---.e: .. 1111 "KILL & KILL AOAIN"""'"ll'll "FINAL EXAM'' "D CAL18Utt" -"""",., .... "-"''°" "I UITIN' 1.0011"1111 ,... ... c·<h•1,ir <t< C I N f M A W f 5 T :· .. -. 891 ]9 ....... ,...... "aUt TIN' ' LOOll"1111t _,,.,,.., .,,,., .... '<OMDClll • ....... NICI DRUln" __ .......,,.,.._ "' HtOH RllK -~, .... , _ •·Df ATtt HUNT" -""'"--"" I • : • j I I l I t J I ' • • • • I Orange Coast DAILY PILOTM'ednMday, June 10, 1981 Spoiled girl, no dignity Tatum t'akes it all off in new· film DEAR ANN L:ANDl:RS: &Ubara bu *8 to- lnC wttb Mel for thre. yean. Sbl COllMI bomt after work, cuJpe her supper down a. JO mtnutta, rushes out ud retW'DI at 11 p.m. or mldnl1bt. On FridQ IJ1d Saturday nllhta ah• doeln't come home at all. Sbe atQI whh Met. Kt live• wltb hla parent.a and tW'o brothers. Mel'• bedroom b 1n the cellar and that's where they sleep. Barbara is 22. She bu been workln1 for three years and hasn't saved a l*Ul)'. She spends her 111 lllllll entire salary on herself and her boyfriend. (She phones .him every mornina to make sure be aeta up and goes ta work.) La.st year Barbara got into debt $1,400 and I helped get her out. She owes me S800. This &irl doesn't contribute a penny to the household. Thallk God, I don't need it. My wife does all her laundry and cleans her room. Now Barbara wants a big wedding, and you know bow much that would cost. What is your opinion of this whole mess! - ANTHONYX Dear Anthony: Same aon1. Secoad vene. Spoiled girl. Used to 1ettl.D1 ... doHD't bow laow to give. Wanta to do as abe pJeUff ucl doeaa't care what anybod)I' t.bl.Dka. (8JeeplD1 lD t1te base· meat with her boyfriend yet! Wlaere's lier dJ1nl· ty?) Yoa aren't golD1 to cbaate lier, b•t yo• abonJd Insist that abe repay tbe ... -wlalcJa wW 10 toward lier wedding -If yoa feel like iht.1 lier oae. Aad make It clear, NO FINANCIAL HELP after she marries -or yoa'll wlad ap npportlDg ber and Mel forever. DE'AR ANN LANDERS: My mother·in·law just called again and I'm about ready to e~lode. Every spring she phones to uk if my husband baa scheduled his summer vacation. Then she arranges hers to coincide with ours. For the past 10 years, thia scenario bas been replayed: She invites berseU up to her brother's home, 500.miles away, and calla to say we have all been invited to spend our vacations there. She Insists that my husband drive her because she is "too old" to take a bus or train. (She is 60 and a widow of lS years.) Out of guilt, we take her. While my husband entertains his mother, I cook and clean and make sure our children don't make my mother-in-law nervous. Last summer I told my husband I was tired or his mother's demands on UJ and his cowardice toward her, and it was the last vacation we were going to spend that way. He agreed and promised we would have our own vacation t.hia year. Now, bere we go again: My mother-in-law is calling about our vacation plans and be bas not yet told her tbat we are doing something different this year. When I volunteered to speak to her it almost started World War III. He iB afraid I wouldn't handle it tactfully. Short of telling him tbat the children and I will go off on our vacation without him ii be insists on allowinl bis mother to trap us again, what can J do? I 'm waiting for your answer . - SECOND-HAND ROSE Dear ao.e: NoUllag. So io abead aad make &be declua&loa -bat be prepared to follow tbroap. II yoa luae aacb aa alUmahlm and chicken oat, yoa are stack with tbe arrangement for life. DEAR ANN LANDERS: It bums me up when people write in and criUcl.ie your advice. Folks who write in and ask for your help value your judgment and have faith in you. The others don't need to read the column. Get annoyed when those jerks from South ~nd or Yonkers or St. Cloud chew you out for something you said just because they don't happen to agree with you. Wby dpn't you tell them to shove it, instead of beJn1 so polite? ...... LAKELAND, FLA., FOLLOWER Dear Lakeland: I appreciate you Hpport, b•t sometimes tllole folU from s..tb Bead, Youen and St. Ooad are rlpt. I leU'D from tltem aad bope t.bey never stop wrltlag. Bat Uta.ab for look· lag oat for me, pal. Do p fetl a1Dlnoord, wlf-conaciou -loMl11? Wede~ to the club. There'• help /C1' you m Arm Lan.- deri' booklet, "TM Key to PopWarftJI." Snd 50 cnt• with JIOU" nquelt and a long, damped, Hlf-odd,_tHd mvelopt to Ann Landnt, P.O. &% 11915, Chico.go, IU. 6061J . Q: I understand from some friends who live in AUanta that litUe Gary Coleman of "Diff'rent Strokes" bu. been very concerned about the children being murdered there. And that be fllmed a mesnge to younpten in AUanta u.r1- in1 them to be very careful. What did be tell them! -MRS. JOHN R., INDIANAPOLIS A: 1be 13-year·old TV star, la •e ol tlte meaaasea beln1 broadcaa& &Uoa,i.oa& Atlanta, aald, "You're &oalb, I bow. A.ad yoa tblak wbat'a golag on right no• cu'& bappen to yoa. Believe me," declare• Gary, "lt CAN bappen to yo•~ You mow, ua smart &Del carefnJ pya are our commanJty'1 future." Q : I saw a rerun of "Dracula" as played by Bela Lugosi. And to me, Lugosi wu the Dracula to end all Draculas. Is it true what they say - that he was a drug addict and that be Wed of an overdose? -ED JONES, JERSEY CITY, N.J . A: The legendary actor'• d.ng addiction begaa ln.aocea&ly enou1b with medJcally pre· acrlbed morpblae to treat a very palDfnJ form of sciatica. From morpblae, be weat oa to methadone. "I ued to laject t.be me&hadone ID my legs," be once coDfeaaecl. "Aad wbea 1 conJd no longer Ond a place to lajed, tbat was &he end." ha 1155, he volaatarily commtued '1Jnaelf to a hospital to care bla addlcthm. "I doa't bave a dJme left," be sald. "I am depelldeat oa my friends for food, and a small old·aie peuloa. I am andGaa to rebabWtate myseU." Three-and·a-balf mon&M later, Lugosi left the charity ward cured. And a year later began working agaia. Thia time as a momter called tbe GbouJ Man la a Grade-B movie, "Plan Nine From Ou1er Space." Before the movie waa com· Single parents • set wine party PARENTS WITHOUT P"~TNERS Hunt- ington Beach chapter will have a wine party at 8:30 p.m. Friday in Garden Grove. The group will have a house party at 8:30 p.m. Sllturday in Foun· tain Valley. For information, call 964·5296. PEOPLE SAMPLER led by Emily Coleman will be held at 8 p.m. Friday in Newport Beach. For information onihe social, call (213) 828-8949. ORANGE COAST SINGLES will have a pot SINGLES ·CALENDAR luck dinner at 6 p.m. Saturday in Huntington Beach. For information, caJJ 751-0291. OUTDOOR SINGLES will have a wine party at 7: 30 p.m. Saturday in Costa Mesa. For informa· lion, call544-8276. PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS Orange Co ast chapter will have a house party at 9 p.m. Saturday in Fountain Valley. For information, call 559-0846. WHEEL OF FBIENDSIUP will go to dinner and dance at 6: lS p. m. Saturday in Buena Park. For information, call 531-0701. GUY BALFEBTY and the Society Combo will perform at a singles dance at 6:30 p.m. SUnday in Newport Beach. For information. call 6'73-4011. NEW JEWISH SINGLES will have a coffee social Sunday in Cypress. For information, call ~I17"1. BALBOA SID CLUB will have a volleyball game Tuesday in Newport Beach. For informa· lion, call 752-0128. FINANCIAL PLANNER Tom Hilgaertner will lead a dJscu.ssion on personal asset strategies for singles at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Newport Beach. For information, call 957-MOO. Hyper doesn't .IDean tension 8y JOHN D. BOSEN, M.D. Dear Dr. Rosen: I just had a check-up and my doctor told me that my blood pressure la too high and I have hypertension. I was stunned because I am a very caJm person and not the least bit tense. My husband went in and was told that bis pressure ie DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE oormal. He is a very ten.le, nervous penoa. Do you think that the doctor aot our records mixed up? -E.T., ANAHEIM. ANSWER: It ia not likely tbat you.r record• were switched, but I can undentand your con- fusion. 1lM word .. bypertaloo" bu not.bins to do with whet.her you are tenle or not. "Tenaioo" is simply the medical word for pres· sure. "Hyper" means "too much," so hypertension means that there I.a too much pres· sure (in your blood vesaels.) U you put too much air in your tire, you could correcUy say that your tire had hypertension. So you see that when we say someone I.a tense, meanlna nervous, we are giving tbe same word a different meaning. U your doctor tella you that you have hypertension be only means that your blood pressure ia high. He does not mean that you are a tense individual. Someone who I.a very Jittery could well have normal blood pressure, whlle a calm person such aa younell mipt suffer from hilb blood pressure. C>r. John D. Roun, a pnlCffffoMr fft NfflPOrl Bt~h. welcc>JM• '°"' que1ttotu. MoU rtQWm to A•k CM Doctor, p.o. Bo.s 15'0, Coda Mt.a, nas. Taurus: Give tlwught w deposits TATUM O'NEAL ... Daddy shocked and upset 'GLAD YOU ASKED THAT' pleted, however, Lugosi was foaad dead la bis apartment. A heart attack bad done bJm In. Q : My sister and I love to browse about in thrift shops on the Lower East Side. And a few times we've seen a man who looks just like Robert De Niro. But we've been too embar- rassed to ask him. An y chance it could really have been De Niro? -JENNY L .. STATEN ISLAND. N.Y. A: "It's very possible. De Niro baa been known to scavenge thrift sbopa collecting Jackets, shirts, shoes and bats for bla movie roles. "Costumes," explala.a the Oacar-wlna.l.ng actor, "can look too created.'•· PUBLIC NOTICE 0m~ CUSTOM FRAMING Speclallzlng In Hand Flnlahed Frames 1803 NewPort Blvd. Costa Mesa 548-4511 GARY COLEMAN ... concerned about killings Q : Are they still trying to connect organized crime to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy? -Tl M()THY C., SEATTLE 1 A: Ves. "The evldeace lead1 dJrec&.ly w Carlos Marcello and Sanao. Tratncaate," In· slst1 G. Robert Blakey, former chief counsel w the House Asaaulaatlons Committee. "U you gave me Z5 FBI ageats, Ove Investigator· prosecutors and sb months In tbe field " Blakey saJd on "Good Momlag America," :., thlak I coa.ld either get you an lndJdment or tell you whether an Indictment could be gotten." Send your questiom to Hy Gardner, "Clad You Asked That," core of th1a MW6JJOpeT, P.O. Box 19620 l rvme, Calif. 92714. Marilyn and Hy Gardner wilZ aniwer cu many queationa as they can in their col- umn, but the volume of mail makes peraonal replies 1mpos8ible. For •"' ent«ttnnrnent ea1tevegeru_a 01 good ~o ,_..,,,.,., ...... -... -tnmnw-oe. -hev• • ""' we100 --•-to.._...-~a1 Vou• ~-· oc;c_, &,, phone "' PIWllOn ar>y locelon lot any ,....,., We IMv• em .,,...o.ng -•e tM Mme"- 7t4/78t-3300 PUBLIC NOTICE • • \I '• \ .. • t • ..-a .. • ~ • t. ltif t • 5• ' l/t# •• ~ ..... -.. ............ .. .... . .. -EVB•tG ___.. •:•eusHAu OMetfS .., .. C»rdlMls "' It. Ltula. MOl08 NIWI WONDIRWOMAN When Matot Ss.w Trevot .. eccuMd of NtlOttglng • lot> Meret govwninent mletlon, WOf\CMr Woman tlgt\tl IO PfOW Ills inno- ~ end -• tot> Nllll epy ring. ( I TIC TAC DOUGH GOOOTIMU Jem. buys • gun to pro- tect the 19"1My fl'om • rllh of c:r!m. kl lhe nligtll>Or· hood. CHECKING OUT -Richard Pryor is a con man and priv.ate investigator in the comedy movie "Uptown Saturday Night" tonight at 9 on Channel 2. • ID IE.&1CTAIC COM'NIVCJQ 0 MCNIW9 UO 9 JOICBfa WILD • .,.,.,HU Benny retuma with nl• own 11ertlon of lhe nur-y l: .. JKI! AndJlll."" KmTNEWUEAT ITUDeOIU "0rlenll9flng" WllCl't 1 N1ntuclt11 men m1k1 Id .... : tlke I IOOk 11 the l90r' Of ortentll(lng. (RI (II IAMEY Mll..lP Berney 11 c><derld 10 lay olf thr• ol hi• men N New YO<k 1Ulfer1 1 flflenclal Cl"l- M. 1:00 I cee NEWS N8CNEWS HAPPY DAVI AGAIN Potale and Ralph 1t• both In IOlll with I MW 1tudent """'° only NII eyea fc>< RlChll -11 I tutOt I MCNEWS IKJUBIYa ., 9lMET8 OF &AH FMHalCO Stone'• murder 1nvest1g1- tlon la hempered by 1 1\11· COiiea agent whOM lttl· CHANNEL LISTINGS tudl and tectlcl .,. unde- altlble. • OYEAIMY .. v111on·· a-t•· Kt.., 1ter Syl11l1 Sidney, ophthlimologlSt Of. W1yne Fung.(R)Q G MACHEL / lfHMll' ~ CJ) TIC TAC DOUGH al MIRV GfWPIH CW.ta: 211 bl Gabor, Lenore O'Mallly, Harold Robbins. 7::80 8 t OH r.-TOWN Ho1t1: St1111 Edwerd1, Mtlody Roci-•· L..,.n how to thOp Intelligently '°' ptescrlption druga Ind Other hell1h lld1: I iOolc II 1 MW l«vlce which offer• book~ IUdlO CUMlll; tlkl II\ ln8lde IOolc 11 pub- lic IClClll8 TV. D ,AMLVRUO g IHANANA G~t: Paul Anita. 8 HOU VWOOO 80UAM8 I FACE THE WU8IC MACNEIL/ LIHMA ~ 11 KNXT 1CBSI Los Angeles 0 KNBC tNBCI LOS Angeles g KTLA find 1 Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV (ABCI Los Angeles CJ) KFMB 1CBS) San Diego G KHJ·TV (Ind) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABCI San Diego m KTIV (Ind 1 Los Angeles m KCOP·TV (Ind I Los Angeles • KCET· TV I PBSI Los Angeles Iii> KOCE· TV tPBSI Huntington Beach ID THI atWCUJllANE PlAYI "'Thi Winter'• Tale .. A jNloul king, • Iott prln- ~. 1 ditou'Md prlnoe and other c:t\wacler• are b<ougttl together In Wll- lilnl Shekeepew•.. l'l\ligl- c.i llllry !Ml oentll'lng ~ the tllemM of rebirth, reconcHletlon and redlmp· tlon (I) ,. ..... llilAGAZJNa Ari ltlernpl 11 the wor1d car ju'"9 recc><d, 1 cowboy long,_n roundup In Hr.I•· di 1:00 8 CJ) THE WHrTI at4ADOW Ca.ch RMvea leerna the ...i-s of NI father'I ltlnell Ind dlCldff to extend Ills 1tey In New YClfk (Pwt 2)(RI D NALNOPU F11tured: 1 tem1ll hockey pleyer: 1 man who hN bier\ ldllertllinO '°' • will lor 30 yew•: proleallonal m1tehmlker1. (RI • MOVE • • • "Thi 6orgll Stldt .. 119f71 Don Murray. Inger St-Two,_ In 1 cr"'9 1yndiellt1 try to break 1w1y from the c><Qln!ZltlOn. 8 111 CHAAUE'• AHGIU Krll tall for ll'le muter- mind behind I higtlly IUC· Qllllul end lnlrlcall t>enlc • robbing .a-, G MOVIE •• 'h .. Thi Other ....,, .. (19701 Roy TlllMM. Joen Hac:llett. A WMlthy. OMutl· lul -h• .,, "'"' with I mytteriouil u-con- .MOY9 * • * "G1 .. 1 MlllOUO ...., .. (1M0) ~ Catey, W~ Oor9Y The J-.. llnlt Vouno-boys Mglft 10 r1de ttw oullew , trall IOMI< ·THI~ A man IPllAI Soofltlet). Mnl to Plfla to rteeue • YoUnO ~ "'*" lrom the du1CNe of I worldly PM- """"· le aided kl 1111 mis. lion by I cNrm1nO Amerl- CWI upetrlat• IL• "'"'- idt) 111 lNI dremetlullon of Hervy J-' no\191, e:ao• M•A•a•H Rider writ• home to hill "'°'her while Hewlttye CM• n.e on toot 1ne9ectlofl Ind Col Potter gell lflOt In the .,....._ ... Cl> MOYll * • 1h "Uptown Saturday Night" ( 1174) Sidney Pol- lW, Biii co.by. A lectory woni., Ind • atreel•wlM cat>ble gel eeught up In • gtingland t1ue1 wnen 111ey cMdde to trail • ganoll• who IMld up I bit. (Al • """'NH1' 8T1'0eCl8 Arnold II trk:lled Into giv- ing hit 11\llnOI to thl Puer- to Rican doorm1n to .. Ill_. .. In • llOtM running at~.(R)Q 8 111 AMEJlllCAN DMAM The McwMt' home II ran- uc:lled • AU. .. THl,NAY It .IOC*• 1111• Mike may rniN an C>p90rtunlty lor a pro- motion ~ of hit r-. . e:ac>D THIFACTWCWLR Natalie~ uiremety pcipullt after her llrll date wttti • tallcllllle boy. but CWl't llgure out why. (R) .MUNO...... G~ta: Zia Zia Gabe><, ~· O'M.-y. Hltold Robbin•. Teul Well ... Ronny Kenny. • AIWNVDAV Marlette Hwtley •111ra M an u""9ppy TV llar who Ilk.. I c:loM loolt II her put wnen ltMI IPl'ld• en '"""°°"· the lint In lllle )'Mil, with her mother (Collin Wilcox). 10:00 D at...cv Ari Ufl90PUlat trldt coach .. ICCUMd of negligeflt homlddl wtlln -of hie •lhlll.. dle9, IUj)poeedly u 1 r•ull of the brutal trlinlng. (RI II'-=" Oen -~ IOt 1 mur· derou• procurer wno 11 lorc:4ng lernM IX-COOllietl to ~ 11 call girl• to luf• men Into • YICloul black' mlll llChlme. (R) • 11-29, ITC>f.'V OF A WAMIOfll Thil doc:Umentaty exarn- .,_ thl 8-29 bomber from Ill c;onoeptlon through Ill d111elopm1nt. 1111ntu1I -and ~bllqulnl ~ICI 1her World WWII: Actress turns to . directing for 'Rainy Day' project By JERRY BUCK APT....,..._..._. LOS ANGELES -Six years ago, actress Beth Brickell dropped out and joined the ghostl~ ranks of Hollywood's MIAs. · She disappeared from the screen. like so many performers before her. But in her case. the phone didn't stop ringing. Instead, she set ber acting career aside to become a director fellow at the American Film Institute. "I really hadn't intended it that way, but I couldn't take the course and act, too,·• she said. Miss Brickell enrolled in the Center for Ad· vanced Film Studies, one of three filmmaker pro- grams at AFl and lbe only one that is full-time. In her final rear, after making five videotape plays, she was given $10,000 to make a mm. The result is "A Rainy Day." which she wrote, directed and produced. It will be br0adcast at 9:30 tonight on Channel 28 -only the second AFI film ever shown on national television. The 3()-minute mm. which Miss Brickell said is based on her own feelings and experiences, tells of a TV actress who flies to her hometown for her father's funeral: She is unhappy with her career. and for the first time in five years, she talks with her mother. _ Having little to talk about in the present, they reminisce about the days when the actress was a little girl. Out of that, remembering how her mother drove her relentlessly toward perfection, comes an understanding of why she hates success. The film, which stars Mariette Hartley as the daughteT and Collin Wilcox as the mother, is sensitive and moving and reveals an insiaht into the generational conflict. "It has two themes." Miss Brickell said. "It deals with the importance of resolvina resent- ment& with one's parents in order to move for,ward with your life. "And it deals with the confilct between pleas· hJll othen and pleasing one's aelf. It show1 the price one pays for wlnning gold stars, matm, straigt\t-As, putting that before one's own happi- ness an1 needs." She said sbe prefers to write In the areu ol human relationships. "I like to explore such rela- tionships and the intel'Dal confilcta," abe 1aJd. "I like dealing with lndividual vs. society's nffda. •• Although she was given Sl0,000, It actually re- quired $18,000 to make the litUe movie. "I had to raise the rest," she said. "I raised $4,500 from the industry1 and the rest came out of my pocket. But I also received many services free. "I'm told that if I bad to pay the full cost of th~ mm," she sa.id. "it would have been between $100,000 and $150,ooo, "The thrill of making a film with no money is finding out bow wonderful people in this industry are. Everyone I asked for help gave it to us. The studios, laborat-0ries. optical houses, everybody. The crew worked for· no money. The cast will be paid if the film is ever sold." Miss Brickell, who starred in the TV series, "Gentle Ben" and such movies as "Brock's Last Case" and "Posse," was asked why she made the career change. "I couldn't do both." she replied.' "Both are full-time pursuits. I took a year's leave of absence from AFT to make the decision. I realized I had come to a crossroads. 1 had to make a commit- ment to become a writer and director, or not do it at all. "I wanted to find an answer. Did I want to re- ' main an actress and perh.aps never have any con- trol over the films I make? Or did J want to lake a chance on putting my acting career on hold. perhaps going back later. and continuing with this exciting new change in my career?" Since she finished the film in 197-8, she has been spending most of her time writing. "I eot an agent and we showed the mm to the studios and they all asked what I wanted to do,'' she said. ''I realized I'd have to bring in a project. "I spen• 10 months looking· for someone else's project. I found as a new director I didn't have ac- cess to the best scripts and writers. And when I did I bad no option money and no control." She said she finally realized she was wasting lime looking for aorneone else's script. "I spent two years writing,'' she saJd. "I have three screenplays. I'd Uke to direct one of them and act In one of them." Her only source of income now ia the rent from a house ahe owns in Beverly Hilla. With that ahe leases a small •J>artment. "I live very slmply,'' she aaJd. "I don't feel deprived." ' . . . . ... . " "' .... .. ,, ........ -.. ., ... .- Orange Coast DAILY PtLOTiWednelday, June 10, 1981 TUBE TOPPERS _.. '*" "** hi le IOIMOM .... t:te•--1t:.tO. TOtitQMOW ... ..ov. ~ • .,. .. ,,. Vou W.•" (ttl1) M ....,.,, W..... T,_,. KCET 9 8:00 and KOCE 8 10:30 - 11The Ambassadors." Lee Remick and Paul Scofield star in a dramatization of the Henry Jam~s novel. KHJ m 8:00 -''The Other Man." A re- lease<f convict tries for revenge in this movie starring Roy Thinnes, Joan Hackett and Tammy Grimes. KCET 9 9 :30 -"A Rainy Day." Mariette Hartley stars as an unhappy TV star who returns home for her father's funeral. (See story and ,photo below). 10:80. INDIPINDINT NETWOMHEWI • THI A.MaMIADOM A~ (Peul Scofleldl. 111"11 10 Parle to reec;ue • young Amerleln lflend trom the Clutc:hll of a wc><ldly Pwl- .,.,_, .. lldld In hit mil-"°" by 1 c:hll'mlng Amerl· Cll\ 1~p8trlat1 (LM Rem· let<) In thll dr1mallutlon of Henry ,,.,,_. n0\111 •1:00ea••(J)o ..we • 8TAATAEK Kirll mull !Ind lhe l/'ltldote to 1 plague that thleaten• to klll .. the er-of the £nterptlM G NIWl.VWED GAME • 8ENNVH4U Benny pilyl I dee>vly with an unulUll way OI dMllng with hit prlloner • DDCCAVETT Gueet· Mlc:hlll 0 •"11 11:IO II CJ) MOVIE * * * .. Murder At The Mlfdl Oru .. 11978) O•llid Groh. Oldl Conn A Cllhief on I llM lllp tO New ~i.ene ..,,_ • crnne but can't get anyone to be11e119 h« atory (R) D TOMGHT Ho•I Johnny Carton. G~ll Mldetlne KIM, Pete 8"t>utt1 • (!I A80 NIW9 NIGH'TUHI G LET'S~ A DIAL • M"A'l"H Colonel Fl• turne up 11 the 4077111 wentlng penlclt- lln to t>erter lor ln!Clfml- tlon e IAMTTA :.:.!hi Snllc• C"-" SJ CAPTIONED A.IC NEWS -fltDNIGHT- 12:00 • MOVll • "'The Bonnie P1tker Story·· 11958) Dorothy Pro- vine. Jack Hogen Bonnie P1rlcer joint blnkrObber Clyde Barrow to terr0tlze the WHt during lh• Olpr .... ori e o LOVSBOAT "'Sound• Of Silence'" Son- ny Bono, Shella Lenllem. .. Cytano de Bricker" Char- lie ClllU, Jiii SI John; .. Murder On Thi High s.u·· Dane Wynter. Peter Lawfc><d (R) G MAVERICK 8'11 It llmoet lync:ned fOt 1 c:rlme commllted by • cleller con men wno uMd ht.Mml • fllll8SION: IMP08818LE The IMF bllnkt out an enemy 1g1nl's memory to JOHN DARLING ou.u ~""' hctlafectl w c.,o11 ........ • ONllTWt artOND "lt•t1on Unll11ow11 ... " Wented by pcloe tor Ille pertJolpetloll Ill • u..ic... r9\/0lutlon, • "*' tall" r9fuge In an llmOlt dMll't• edcon"""t 1:00 e NYCHIC '9•10f~THI WOM.D_.,OND "Thi Ancient Ml" Hoetl: OWNll'I Slmpeon, llaoy Hwnt OuHtl Kum• w.ictt. Ethel Cenw Brown end ..._... McLaugNln dlacull nurMrOlogy. .,.... mlltry and gtaphology . • MOYll * *.,. •· Arct1 Of TrlUmph .. ( 1941) Ingrid B«gman, Chal'lll 8oyer. An 11.utt1iln r«ugM -cm. PWll 10< • 0..tac>O egent. ....... w NETWOM..- 1:t0• MOVIS *.. "Sergeant OMd· h11d" ( 19115) Frankl• All9Nln, Oetlotlh WllM; After • ~ trip, an om. ()« teoP91diz.. bolh hit car .. and 10111 Hie wilh hit newly acquired pe<eonlll· 1:nit NEWS 1:30. MOVIE • .,. "Roek Around Thi World" ( t957) Tommy StMll, Hunter Hancoclc A k>c* II the r-of Tommy StMie't tlinglng P<O'- llon. • MOVIE * *'h "Footetepe On Thi Moon" t tH7) Oocument1- ry Narrated by Of. Werner 11on Blaun. Man'• llret lun•r achllllemente 1<1 rllliewed 1:'611 NeWS 2:000 NEWS 2: 11 IJ EDfTOfUl Z-.20 II MOVIE • • '-' "Th• lmp1t11nt Heert•· (19711 C1rr11 Snodgr.... Mlcl\111 Con- stant11>1 A IOClal ~er c.,,·, IOllll hit own prob- lem• beCIUM thl"t 100 bu1y 101v1ng 1vlfyon1 else's Thi ~llPh'O ,,.,.,Y of a pt1¥1• 11 ..,., • eoutoe of wrlhltion Ind llr\lly en ...... 0 .......... I ..... .,. MOYm * • •\t "OMlllll'I" ( 1944) Cblfla• loy.,, ln91ld 8"QllMlll A dlllbolM:lil ,_. bll'4 .... out to drM .. .... \t1Nft4l. ~, •• MOVtl •1t "Mt, Wallcie Tlllli." 11912) Wiiiiam Yr.aey, JM ~ Tlaur•d••'• I o.,,,·~ •• .,.ft 11:00 •• ·~ .. BlonOe Dyna. ml .... (1949) 8-y ~ A6lle Jergen1. The ~ .,. kepi buly when .,.., • ~.,, _, ager>oy 11:al> Cl•*~ "TWiiight Fc>< The Gode" (Part 1) (1951) Rock Huoeon. Cyct Chit· lue. P~t tbolrd • b<Ollen-down lhlp wOl'k together to -...... ena r~ufeiy -AFTERNOON- 12:00. * * "9-nUego .. ( t958) Alan Ladd, Rou1n1 Podelt1. In the junglll ol CA.bl. In opportUlllSt Mlle gun1 11\d then twitches ~IO< I lreedom- l~tlngwon'lln ••*'-' .. The Big Carnl- 1111" (19511 Kirk Oouglu. Jen Sterling In c><Olr lo t>ooet hil cateer, 1 rlC>O(l- er IXploill the Mllfll'lngl of the Wife ol 1 man It~ ln1ca111-ln. a:ao D • * .. w1t 0t The Ptan.- 111" ( 197111 John Richard-'°"· Katl8 Cnnttlne An Amerlcll\ apace cratt II Olllrllkl<I by llienl Ind will not be rlleaMd uMHI the ~ II Ible 10 light oft a monster by Armstrong & Batiuk OH 0Y "THE WAY... DID "1 MEN-T'ION IHAI IN ORDER 10 PUT A C.UR&~ ON C&S, WE'RE GOING -ro REGU1Re. <> A HUMAN ~IFICE! ~ ~TP/ 'tOU MU51..0ll BE OUT OF V0UR Min .• Heth Brickett, former actress. Signal weaker KCET is experiencing probiems wlth its trans· miller and is currently broadcasting at just 40 per- cent of its norm~ signal strength. according to Hal Smeder, director of engineering at KCET. A(:cording to Smeder, it will be five or six months before a new antenna can be constructed, installed and fully operational. Jn lhe interim, a temporary antenna will be utilized -malntalnin& the reduced signal at 40 percent of normal power. Transmisaion to viewers in the Los Angeles metropolitan area will only be maralnally affect- ed, but in the outlying areas such as Oranee Coun- ty, Lancaster and the extreme east and west . valleys, the sign will be severely reduced. St•rttng 1 eNew luelneu • 0 ••• "dlll ... Catttor• ........, ,iw1 ,.,... ...... CMitf( .... 1UH 10 1fU•> 111 ,.,..... ............. _..,.~.._ .................... ... .... °""4Y' Qeftl 1ft4 ._._ It " IAI' Id ... , ....... . ....... er:' .... ... OfO I 11 wlllell 1110 ................ Tllo ototollt4t11t 11 .................. •n•••lltiPlrll• I ,.., .............. . •... ...... ''"'•'" .................. ............. u-. Tao DAILY "LOf ,,..,..... ...... ... =·· ..... ·-.......... ,,, .............. -. ... , .......... Ot'I 1111 O•-.wtf Olctlf -~ ... . , ....... , .......... .. c::~' Ll•A~ ........ r.-.~ . ..... I -..,: . vUST A.. ~EC.0No.~A1-.•. WMAI A&OLJT 5 E9oP't' IN ,itiCCOUM"TIN 1 Amendment demonstrated NEW YORK (AP> -A mock trial in which participants debate the right of the press to use confidential sources is a highlight of "The First Amendment Project,'' a unique three·week effort by WCBS, the network's flagship affiliate here . "'I'd become concerned about the number of onslaughts on lbe First Amendment we've seen in the last couple of years," says Edward M. Joyce, WCBS' general manager and the man behind the project. "It occurred to me that while most peopte have heard of the First Amendment. in general, they don't know what it is, or how It works, or why it exists." Joyce says he began work on the project while general manager at KNXT, the CBS affiliate in Los Angeles, which will broadcast a similar. though independent, series during the same period. "It was created out of conflict 200 years ago," Joyce says. "Most people aren't really aware that it was the printing press that broke the crown's monopoly on information. , "It's been reshaped over the years. most re- cently by the Supreme Court," he says. "and it's as important to people today as it was two cen- turies ago. "You begin to realize, my God , what a tradi· lion we have inherited -nothing like it exists anywhere else in the world." Joyce says one aim or the project is to demonstrate to viewers that the First Amendment is" · not something conceived for lawyers or journalists, rather "for everyone who is watching -it's their ' First Amendment. "We try to relate everything we do to the lives of everyone who w1..l! watch the programs,'' Joyce says. Joyce says expert advice was summoned for segments produced by WCBS for the project. .. I think we have µ> approach the subject on t..wo fronts," he says. "The fint is educational - the history ls fantastic. Then we have to move into current lasues, and call on all of the varying point.a ohlew.'" I . r t l , -.. Orange CoMt OA&L Y PICOTIWednuday, June 10, 1981 "" ........ Don Cannaday fixes a leaky fmu:et on OM of hLs Jobs as a rental hwband -a ~H he and a portner started in Dallas. They do odd job$ for poy "" the hour Rent a husband handy plan DALLAS <AP> Ob, ror the perfect man. Someone to paint your house. wash the windows, fix the car and do au those other menial household rhores with a smile. If you don't already have one, you can rent one in Dallas Don Cannaday and Robin Hlll are Husbands by the Hour . . The two divorced friends will do odd jobs around the house -without expecting dinner, a date or some romancing in return. They're actually ju.st glorified handymen with a catchy name for marketing their trade. "We just wanted a name people would remember," Canna- day says. They charge S20 for the first hour and $17.50 for each adclitional hour of work. They'll tackle most any chore, but Hill, 35, insists be "won't do ovens." Hill quit his job as a production manager to go into the business full-time. Cannaday, a 37-year- old salesman. does "husband" work in his free ti me The) went professional a little more than a year ago at the suggestion of a friend, who said they could be earning money instead of a good din· ncr or a six-pack of beer for their trouble. "I thought about it on my way home and came up with the name," Cannaday said. "Alter we stopped laughing about it, we registered the busi· n ess and s uddenly began getting a lot of publicity." The jobs they're hired to do range from mun- dane -such as painting, carpentry and pruning trees -to bizarre. One woman hired Cannaday for an entire day to s how her bow to drive her new 5· speed car. While nearly 90 percent of their customers are women. some are couples and a few are men. Hill said. "Most of the time. though, men don't like to admit they can't do something," Cannaday said. The two men hope to expand the business eventually and become consultants, "maybe a service that lists companies or workers and refers our s ubscribers to them,•· Hill said. SD trolley fares set SAN DIEGO (AP> -The planned 16-mile trolley ride from downtown San Diego to the Mex- 1ru n border has a customer price tag: $1 each \~ ay For the elderly and hanclicapped, the fare is 40 cents. The Metropolitan Transit Development Board tleNded on fares for the San Diego Trolley. a $115.3 million mass transit system expe<:ted to begin roll- 1nJe July 26 d11f1~Jf · ao STANP I ........... CIOMTllACT NO. t1 •Ofte& TOaNllTllAC1'0ttl CAUJ• P'04' •• kMOI Olllrlitli N&WllO T,MalA UNIP'llD ICHOOL OllT• 't; llf De•llM 2 • 4t'Clldl .. 11'1 .. UI •yflfJl/lyHI\ ~-· __ _., 11.tr ,.1.01111• 11., c .. t ...... Cell..,....•""7: .... je(I I lfk•t'-" Ne"''' INl•OY COHSl ATIOH MIASU9'11 AT CO•ONA 0 I. MAii HIOM tCHOCM.,; ~~ •re to1 flllt 1H1 ... .ct11ll1 so .. , (Mt. ,,,.. .. c.i"'"""tan. NOTtC ti HUllY Ol!tN \Mt ti,. •ll0-19M ~Nol 01 trltl OI o • .,... c-i1v. c.tttt.t~. tlllt 11Y •11• ""Wiii llt ~wr11l119 '"''· 111r1l11•fhf ••ltrr•• I• •• "OISTlllCT", wot nc11 .. ._ 1-. IMll Mt ltltt """ "" ..._. ..... 11!'M ...... Mel~ ... ·~ .... .,.,,.ci ~ 1111 ....... Pl'IJ«t. A .. ,..... ~-· It tc.....,IW .... ,_ "' 1•1. •1•. "'' Wllll Mt JI"' Htlttll'lf, Dlr•c.., Of M ' 0 (114-l~I. Ill h c.r-°"' ,..., Hltfl 1<'*4 alte, Jl~I 1 .. 111111ff D!lwt, Htw"l1 .._II, C.lltomle, No llkl Wiii Ill e<t ll9'w •taJ h Colltrec•• et• ~lllh......_,~ •. ... o.c-.a ,,. " .. IM<ll• ... •I ,,_ flillnNJllll OHIC4, 19'1 ~ltetft> tie ltrett, C.Otll MeH, (llllotllle (114,160-Ul71. Itch .i.tft W re<tlwtel Ill I,_ tMKe lalltll ... -·· el'd """ .. --... ~kly,... ........ , ...... ... , ... 11_ ........ . Tllert wlll .. • P'lllv Oelllf IU0.001 ~tit ,_lrM tot MCI\ Mi ti II .. Cloc1tm.n11 ID ...,_,. .. Ow ret\jrft 111 eOCMI <ol'lfnlell wltllt11 ,. ••Y• .... , ... 111•9"111119 ..... I 1<11 Ill• "''"' <tll4erm 111<1 lie rn-t1"9 "Ult t..,trecl 4'0<11,,,.,.lt &atll 1114 lfltll Ill et<Oll'l-IH by Ille H<11rlty '''"'"to l11111t <Olll•KI Clo<ll"'•"ll -~ .,,. "''of tlt--'"kOftlrtetor,, TM OISTIUCT r-t llW rlQftl lo r•le<I lllY or ell bi4' or to wetwt e11y lrre..,1w111-. or 11\fom\11111 .. 111 4111Y bklt .. Ill U. blcldlfl9 Tll• OISTlllCT lle,t eltltlntO l•OM '"' Olreclor of ... 0..-rl"*'t Of 111 cNtltl•I ltelttlolla ... .,.,..,.1 .., .. ,11. 11>9 rtl• of 119' diem Wl9't 111 ,,_ IOC •Illy Ill '#tlkft tlli. w0f1l It 10 lie perf0tlftld for ee<ll crMI 0< IYPt of workmlll l...o.cl lo t11K11t• ,,,. con. tr•<t T~ rein •re °" lllt ti Ille OISTlllCT Oftlct IOC .. _, •t· Purclllt· 1119 OIP4. 1157 Ptec:-lt St<Mt. C•i. "".. Ctlltorlll• ••11 ~ m•y .. ot1t11...a Oii r-t A. c~ of -,., ...... ll .. -"'411111tlo0•11•. Tht foregoing ~le of .,., dl- ,,__,_ PlJBLlC NOTICt PUBLIC NOTlCE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE ~~-. -....-~~~~~~~~~~- CA1t 'tcnT10UIMtll"IU ltOTIU TOCHIHTO*J l'"tCTI'nOUlllU....... 'tefl'nOUllMIM•IM ,.. ~ ITAHIMN'T CM' !MIL.IC T•Mtl,.lt ....... tfAT ..... NT l(.uq l'fAT&MeNT IU,llllOllCOUaTCMICA'-'flOaNh• Tiit ... ......_ ...... It tlOlllt "1tl· (leet..6..,_. .. V,C.C.J Tiit .......... ....,_.ere Nl"I T ... lollOwllle --ere .. l"I COUNTYCN'CNl.... llttlot; Nttlct It MrtllV 1lve11 tt tllt ..._. .. , lluAl-t1 *GvtrO!Mlr........ lllA •••vtC:I .. lllllAlll, ntJ cr••••or• •• JAC ICION .... O&• 1.IAllMO. H17 ..... MAlllCI0,7mT'*'1Ne .... , ,.~ --tt19 lletor •I, H ..... l ... ltfl 1 .. <11, CA lllYHOLC.. Tr_,.,.,, ll'llOM ~·A-. e:N110 .... r,Cet1Nr•taaa 1,._-.Ceil...,_HM7 -~ ""'· ----lt141l~•.OW.. ........ • O.., lllft Vie,.,,.. ANfli!~ltytw, tml c.llt Ill• MA••tt.Oe Or .. WtllllOWkl, am llW:r •I, ~·~c.untyolOlrMlt,I ....... l*M,--~.c.tl ....... "'77 lllj1•11 .. 11cl•, flt1111tol11 V•ller, P'ITITIOHllll:IAUTUOtitOTA. HUlltl ........ 11,CA,,...,, c.11,.,111 •• '""'. llvlll ,,_,,,I• ................... ,_..._, CemorlUtVOt •ttPONOINT1 JOSIPHIHI TllltMl!lttll1t~1ty111 Ill• tllolll tt IM"' ... to IAMUal.. I . Mltllell~tMt Oorll ~ ltyler.,Mel CMlt In OINH flvldlllf AOOl.T, TrMll_..., ..._ ..._,_, Tllll It <~led Illy • d • I fl t I V 11 IUllMllll*t l'Wfl. y U.WI 0Nt Wlllll ... I« ... ,.., It 1'9» .._\'<,.. I.AM, Oil' .....,.. ..... ... c:r~~~ ..,11 I " e 0 • CAM., ..... ._ 01..at Tlllt, ............. Ill• •ltll IN el H1111ll111te11 let<ll, C111111y It ~II. Ow J .. P. "•· Jr., '9142 T''-111 NOTICI Ct1111ty Cltrtl « 0.Mtit C-r tfl 0.11191, Maltttl c;.tltOmle, ....... ,..,,._ I.In•. H1111tl,.... ~II. Colltw11I• Y• "'-... .W. Tiii C-.. -· Mey It, ltll. Tiie '""'"" le lie tf-*"'41 It Tllll ~ w• lllell Wltfl U.. ftM6 ~~ ....... ,_ ........ "::..::": fl1•MU •tctlllef In ... , .. M l All ti.tit hi C-ty Ciotti tf ~ .... ~ell May Merlty11 D "°'• 1'142 Trt•nt __...., _... .,.. .....-,..,..,.,...Or-. Cttil O.lly Piiot, w ... , lbn""" _..,.,.... eM .... n, I'll, WM, .,_.,...... loKll, c.tlfonll• .. ~ ..... -Ww IMIH ...... M•Y 2'. 11, J-J, 10, '"' UOMI wllt tt 1Nt Mllllllf9'1W"'9 ..,.._ ""'°" ..-... If Y• ............. _... .. • -l ll-11 • JACICIOH I.. •IYHOl.OI l"lllMI-. Or-C..... Deity ........ Tiii ... ~•-I -~-1 .. 11 ...,., ..... -· ,. ...... • ...... •c NOT1c-=-.... toe.., .. 1•12 Pl«el!ll• a ... " ""•",, J-. 1:;1 ,-, • ____ .. • '"--., • .. .,........ •..,.,_,......or .-vua.a .., . .. , , ., .. . .. Uf4-t1 .. 11erel -"-llW. .......-....... If_, ,.._ .. ,... Oii tlMe C:Olta MMI. C-y flf Or-., Stele et Oort1 M. Beyllt ._ • ''I · ----C.Uto,,.I• Tl'tlt ...._. w .. tll• wltll IN AVllOI P'ICTITlout lllllNHI Tiit llulk ,.....,,., Wiii ... '°"*""" PUBUC NOTICE c I Cl " •• Or ~~~ Ulltd lie tlM •1111Hftf1, II MAMelTATIMaNT mtt .. 911Wefw ... u .. ..., .. J_, /::.:.~ , .. •• .., 11'99 .. -.,y.., mMM! ,_ _..., ,....,. Ud.... Tfll 1..-. ... _...,It ...... llliM-1 .. 1 al tt·to A.M. et Wl$T1'-H P'lt»tf Hfltocle • -.. Uf. ,...... neu ••• MUTUAL l!SC:AOW COlll".: AT TN fllCTITIOUI au11Na~ ""°''"'" Or1119t CM•• 0.lly Pitel. .............. l.M ....... _... MAJllTIC CA• COM~ANY , A .. DITH AUS.SILL • .._ .. ...,_,, NAMllTAT8 .. &NT J-10,11,14,Jlllyl,ltel 2•1WI ... Mtim. lto't1 1-1*•, Hl.WltlftOIOll hKll, U09t lo Yorbe. Suite 101, T111t111, Tiie lollowlng penon. ere doing __ 11111 ....... MlklW el C••.le,. ClllNrlll• _. Ct lltorlll., Tilet.U. Int Mlt tot 1111111 1111•11'HI .. : .,. .......... .._..,.._WI Jtu•ll A.. s. .. ..,.,., uo1 ctel"'t lllh•tc,_,,...,, .... ._,..,. S.5.P.PAOP«A"T1£S,IZMJHer11or PUBLIC NOTICE llHtrlt ta....-it1•-lll•, M tt1t llflltl•.it, H1111tll11t•11 IHCll, hJllMU, ltet •"'•.,O-W..~.CAftlMI. --- --·• w ,......... 1 .......... c.llllflllt..... So,., 11 M llnewn to -''-"'"• MeM11 a . ""-ta, » No. Vltte OI :.:.:. ..... ~ -............ e Tlllt MH'ett It~ tty .,, ,,.. e ll 1111•11\flt 111mtt 111• .... , ..... C..tell .... LA91N leecll. CA ntt7 flCTITIOUI aUllNlll I TO. TH& llHPC>ffOIHT dlvlO..el, 11 ... by ti. T'eoullrer fer tllt pttt Jlf\11 A. SCl\tfttJ, 1..al 5'9Quo!• St., If-a ITATaMllfT · J°""" A.. loldt-• 111, .. '""ere: a.me. '"111 .. 111 v .. l•y, CA '170I. Tiie 1'Mt41W1ne .,.,..,. 11 .,no """ Tiit l!Otltlofltf .... ,., ...... 1111e11 Tlllt ·~ ... llled wllll "" Det ... J-l. '"' 11-n H ......... 11 ...... LAU Hiii ....... , "11'""',. '°"" ""'''-· If Y'Oll fell c-nly Ci.tk of Ott11oe C-ty •11 s.m..! E. Adoll Or . Or11119, CA '1667 WOLF INTE9'P'll1$IS, UU W.11 1• Ill• ......... •1llllfl ... .,. " ... J-'· 1 .. 1 Tr_,.,.. Tllli _,,,. .... COl\011(1 .. by • Me<A,_ ....,.,,Md, u1111 • '· Co&t• .. I. tlltt tllll -1• ""'".,. ,..,,. Pvl>ltllWd Orenoe '°'" O.lly Piiot, ..... rel Pli'tntnlllp. MeM, Ctlltoml•nl• Vtll, y-••ull -y ........... elld P11bll .... Oranea CNtl Oelly P'llot, June 10 '"' Jof\119'. S<llMll JOllll Chill So119. 2tH E .. 11. !:r"~~j=~1:'; :.!...-:=~ ~= J11ne 10, 11, U, July I, 1•1 16Jit.tl ' 1..._.l Tiii• '"'-Wft fll9d with Ult A.venue, Wwtt Covl111, CtJllO<lll• t11tt c.,111 .... dlvlt191 .. ..,_11., ~···• C011nty Cler11 of Ore1199 Count'( Oii Mey Tlllt bull,.... Is conclUctltd by .,. 111 .... ,.....,... ' ........... -PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE "· "" •tv10..t1. MllltlOf'I. <NICI cwt'°"f, CllllCI -1. "1'1416 J01111 Chui S0119 •nor.,.y ''"· <•b. end well_.,.,,. P .. 011.,,... Or-eoa11 O•llr P11ot. Thi• ,..._, -med w1111 Ille ~~" '::'~:led by IM co.wt "CTITIOUI 8UltNaSS PICTITIOUI aUltN&U Mey 20, 21, J..,. 3, 10, '"' 2341-tl Co11nty Clerk ol Or1119t County on OI• r1 "'""i~klng of N-• ITATIMaNT NAM• ITAT•MaNT Jyne 1. 1"1 "1"1 .. ::,~~=~11:; :;::..,r~' ~Y ~1~0~~ Th• tollowlng perton• .,. ao11111 Th• 1oiio.1no "'_, 11 aotr>g 111111· p.,011-0r-. coest O•lly Piiot. 11111 .,..,,,... .. , 11ttua: PUBLIC NOTICE 0 I .. Mtr<hU 1•1 DIA~O Vll!W HOMES. •2't 0 G ,..INA.NCIAL SERVICES ... IS J-).IO,ll,J-,l"I U•l-tl • • -A a • .:..k MICA-Bl..O •• Slllt• 102 ...... Port HIA'"lln-.. ""'·· F-.i.1n V•ll•Y. CA ..,.. ---"• BHch. Ctllfomll t:llWG ,... _. Clerk llEGISTllA.NT: t2lOI. By. J. ~.. Dllfl'IOllCI VI-11111~ •• n.......·ral Oon H. H-. 96U HIOllll~I•, °"""'1Y ·---....... -F011nt1111 lltll•Y. CA n·1ae Law Offkee.. PtrtMrlNp, Iii °""'"I Pert,,.,, •ttt Tllll bullnesl Is c-..Ct.o Oy •n In VAN DAO& UNTlfl• "'41cArthllr Bl¥CI •• Sull• !02, N-por1 •Mav•I ltl w 17'1.,_ Beech. Celllorftl• tJWO Don H H-~1 .. JU • Al~ II, t U"'llecl Pero..rstllp, Thll tl•l-1 "" 111.0 wllll Ille ..... AM, eel"'""• tint Ill G•nerel P•rtner, 200 Newport C011nly Cltrto of Oranot C<>Unly on Mey 11141 Ml·AU Center Orlve, S111te >cl'. Hewpor1 It IMl Pybll"*I Or-C:0.11 Oelly PllOI, 8':~~-~=: ~:w:'Olldlltled by , , . "1'2414 J""' 10, 17, 24, Jlll'r 1, 1•1 JMO-tl -rel ,_,,_f'll>lo, Puttli-Or-Cotti O•lly Pllof, .,..._ i)i.;;;,,., V-...,,._ M•Y l0, 11, J-J, 10, 1•1 uot-tl PUBLIC NOTICE • 0.-•I PenMnlllp ---- By: 01-View Vlll19t PUBLIC NOTICE • Geller et Part,.., tlllp lb~tl p_,,,,.,. l'ICITl"ftKll au11N•H NAM8 ITATaMaNT Tiie loll-1119 pertont .,. dOlllil b\lllMSIH RA.PIO GllAPHICS INC , •II S. Mel" Street, Or-. Cellforlllt '2t6I S.m W V11lno•, Aepld O'ee>lllCI In<., • ee11rornt• co,_111ot1. 417 s. Mein SI-I, Or-, Cellfor11I• t:IMI This lluMneH 11 C-.Cttcl by • cor· _ ....... R.,.ics Gr ...... u In< SemW v .. 1nov PreslcMnl PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITICIUI 8USINISS NAMa STATEMa:NT The followt"' oer1011 It Going Dull· MISH. SHAMROCK EHTEllPRISES, U Anre Str..i, Udo P9ntn1U11, HewPort BH<h, Celltorf\11 t1'4l HerOerl J M<Ce11n. 12 A.nH Slreel. Lido P•11ln1ul•, N•wporl 8HCft, Celllornl• tM.) Tllll b\ls.IMll It t onclll<llCI Oy •n In dMOuel. HerW1 J *""" w•ve• ,, ~ -• -1111\g d•Y of "CITl"ftKli aUilN•H 8y The JOllll Mer11n C:.. •• • Ctlllwnl• corporlllon Its ~ti P•rt,.., "CTITIOUS aUilNaSS NAMa IATATaMaNT This 1tet-wH 1119d wllll lllt Co11111y Cl•rl< of Orenge C011nty on J11nor1, 1•1 • f'luta Thll ,.._ .... flied wlUI ttM C011n1y 0 .,.k of Or-C:-nly on '""'I, 1911 t l9fll Ill "°"" Tlw rete for hollClly NM1W STATaMaNT •ncl OY•nl-~ '"'" i. 11 ltefl Th• lollowlng per~n' ••• doing llme encl -"tit. b\11ln .. t •• I I 11\911 i. mandllory lil>Oll 11• CON· T H I! J AM I! S O A 0 U P • S S TAACTOll to -"' ti• COl\lrecl I• PIM-.""'"'· C•llfornl• •vi. •w••O•O. -i4IOf\ •11y IUbtonlreclor o..itnutt Court, 111<., • Cellf0<.W• .,,_, him. to OIY not ltu then '"' corpor•llo11. SS Plne•oocl, lrvln•. w to 1pet1t11e1 rein 10 •II WOtll""n Cellfotnll mw I •mployecl by l,_m In llW elle<llUOll of Thll _,,..,.. h condueled by • t«· llw1 co11lrKI "°"''°" Ho bidder mey wlll'ldrew Ill' Old tor C"'"tnul C411rt. Ill< a 119rlOC1 of 1laly C60) <Wr• atter 1"9 ,_ L. .Jof>l\SIOll, de!• Ml for Ille -ntr>g of bids Prflldellt A p.oyfNflt bond •net. ptrf0tm•11<• Thi' llalement WU llllCI wllh ,,,. OOfld wlll be ,_,1....i pr~ IA> HKll-Co11nly Clerk of ~ange COVl\ty on 8 y, JoM T. Mertln I b PrttlOtnl By lllltftE.OcllM I b Secrwtery By Crll.,IOll Oewlop .. Inc • CalllOml• c.._111on II) Genetti Part,,.,. 8y; Dol\lld E. BOllC:her HiPrttlC19nl Br Fr-L. F•hH Viet Pr .. ldtnl Thl1 11.t._I .... filed wllll '"' County Clerl< of Drenge County on Tiie lollowtng llen«I II cloir>g b\111· neU•I AAROV/l\RI( PAINTING CON· TRA.CTOllS, 2607 El-Avenue. Coste Me ... Cell!orlli• t»Z1 Rlctw1d ErntSt H-r1. ttol E ..... A..,.n.,., c-i. ""-"· CalllOf'lll• t»27 Tiii• bUllM11 11 <-..Clecl by •n In· dlvloual. Rl<l•nl E. He119r1 Tiii• N-1 WM flled .. 1111 .... COllnly Clerk of Dr.,ge C011111Y Oii '""''·'"' Publl-0r"'9* lo.11 O•lly Pilot, JYM 10, 11, U , Jiiiy I. t•t )4' .... 1 PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUi •UStNass N-1 STA.TaMIENT Tl'le loll-Ing perton1 ,,. doing llYllMH .. : NEWPORT OETA.ILIHG. llU Olnnt> Drlw , Coote Mell, Ctlllornle t16H '1U1• O.nnl• $rnlth, 1111 Olnnl1 Orlve. "1611U Publl.,,... Or~ Coall Oelly Piiot, Jllnfl 10, 11. ,., JUiy 1, "" 1'~1 PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS llUllNaH H-• STATIEMINT T lie lollowlr>g penon I• doing b\111 .... ~ .. ~llof ..:.~~':~~:=:n~ J11ne I, 1'11. '16270 J11ne I,'"' P110ll-Or-Coell Delly Piiot, Cotla Mell, Calllornl• 93'3' ,.621 .. J11ne J, 10, 11, 1•, 1•1 U21-t1. Htnr, Htlllngs. 2:I01 HHlher p11011.,,... Or-Coest 0.lly ullot. Lane. H-1 Btld\. Callfornl• ~ llEIO W~tlON -PRECISION METAL CRAFTING, 1S)t Moflrovl• A.venue, Unit t, H••C>Orl 8••<11 C•lllornt• t21M3 llelcl Edwero W11-. '30.A W lie!-Bl¥CI. Blllloe, Ctlllorf\le tlWI fhl• ..,...,. .. '' condllct.O oy 4111 In dl•IOv•I COftlrt<I OOC-ts Publlt/Wd Or•noe C...51 Delly Pilot, 0.Wnol......... JYM 10, II, 1 .. July 1.1.l 1 .. 1-tl _...,H-yl'1tMr J11ne 10, 11. n. Jyty •. 1•1 w1-t1 PUBLIC NOTICE Thil 111111""' 1' collO .. <teo by • QeM,.I p.lrtMnllip ay l"wUail119 Olrec1llr P11bll~ Orenot C...51 0.lly PllOI, JUM 10. 11, 1•1 2"4-tl PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI TOCaaOITOH O' 8UUt TaAldflla (lec:L 1t1 .. 111U.C.C.) Holk• 11 ,..,...., given lo tredllon of 11• wllhlll Mined traMl..-0<(1) 11\tl • ...,,. tr.,..., 11 Mlollt to be ...-on perso1111 properly llt rel11•fltr dft<rl- Tlle -(SI -bllslnHs lddrat of Ille lmended tr.,i,.rorUl ere: FRERE JACQUES llESTAUllANT COMPANY, INC .. •lCIO C1mpu1 Orlwt, S..lt• 110, H-port lltKh. Celllomlt nM0 Tll• ,.._(I) -buslneH lddreu of"" lntendlld lr.,tter"<s> ere: NIHFA.S CALIFORNIA, INC •• OU VI• Oolc;e, Merl,.. del Rey, Celllorlllt 902'1 lhel Ille proplr1y per11MM hereto 11 dtKrl-In geMrll ••: All HMll ln- Cludlng: tumllure, lhcWres, leewhold lmprove.-.-ls -IQlll~I. encl It louted •I "° s. Stell Coll-lllYO . 8rH, Celllornl• '31121 Tiie buslnn1 ,.. .... UMd by llW "1• tren1lerorhl • wld 1<Ketle11 It: CIW di Po"'pet· Thel sekl b\llk tr.,tfet ls Intended 10 be tOllS.,..,.,,..._, ti tM Oftl<e of TUI• lns11re11ee encl T~I c..<npeny, 700 Wlltlljre 11/vd., SWlt SIO, L.ol Angelts, Calllorllia to017 Oii or 10..-Jiiiy I, 1•1. Tiie --ecldf'•» of the penon with •"""' <l•lmt mer lie 111 .. 11 "'41rlly" Lemont. Tiiie 111wren<1 -Tr"" Company. 100 Wlllllire Blvd .. S11lle SIO. ~ A119tle\, CallfM11la t0011, •net ,,,. last .. Y tor 1111119 detms by 111y crtditor tllall 119 J""e JO, ltet, wlll<ll I• ,,. _,l\IU oey DetOrt Ille (OftSll"'nwtlOn dlW -·fled-.... So ltr '6 11 kl'IOWll to Mid lf'll91\dec1 Trtlltlaret(I) Uld l11te11de• Tr1111ltf'Or(I) UllCI the lollOwll\o Hell· tlon11 1111111\eu -. •nd edclr- w1111111 tht llv'• "tMn 1111 pesl: C... di Po"'_,.t, 21309 HtW111MM BIVd., Torra11ce, C•lltornle; 15'S A••"'• BIVd., c.te Mew, Celllomle; 11111 1Ur• Stl"tel. C«rltM, Cellfornte to101. Ninth Celllornll, Int. 8y: L.Ao K•lltlltr, Viet Prttldtnl l-Tr41111fer"(s) P'vbllllWd 0r"'91 C-st Delly Plllt, J ..... 10, 1"1 , .. ,.., PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO c11ao1TO•• 0' auut TltANHP'll• CIK. 61'1.fllU.C.C.) Hot let l1 lwre0y glve11 to <.recllloo of Ille wllNn n.....O trtnsJenw ~I • b\llk tr_..r 11 *"1 to be -Oii P•rto1111 property llerel11elur CleKrl-. TM llllN -llllllMll .--a1 ot tht lnt..-i lr-teror 11; FAl.9'£ JACQUES RESTA.UAA.NT COM· PANY, INC., 4500~s Or .... , Suite 220, H-1 a.Id\, C..llforl\le nM0 Tiie -lllCI MlllHI ~ of the 111 ........ trwll..,_ 11: HINl'AS CAL,,OANI"-INC., UIJ VII Defee, Mtrllll dll lley, C..lllorllltto:nl. Tlltt lht ..,_rty Jlert"-t llert• II ,._rlllllt lfl ..,..,., H : All A&Mt1 ln- <111 .. n9: F11r11ll11re, Fl•t11re1, L.ffMIWld l"IPO-llt -• ..,.. "*II 9flll II *-• II! 1"5 AdtMI ""'""'· C.1e Miu, c..111or111e tM» The Nllltte -lltlCI by Ule ttld lr•"tfttor M Mid IOU!'-! II ! 'C-di "°"'"' Tllll Mid ll!Ylll V&'ltf• II Im--*" .. lie con-.. et llw llffkl .. : TTtle l11wre11e• 9M Tru•I ~. 1• Wllalllre BovllVMd, ltlllt J10, l.ot A11t9t ... c:ellfor~ M17 M Ot 1"'9r ,_.,, '"'· , ... ,..,,. ... ....,.. ...... ..,_ WIUI Wlltm Cl ..... PNY .. tllW It MerllYll LAINlil, Tlll9 .._.._. -Trut• Ctf.,,Hy, 1H Wllllllrt ltvl•ver•L~/le Sit, LA AflMIM, c.tllfwN•-17 _, .. i.t-ter fll· 11\j ,,.,.,. w .., ,,.... ..,, .. ->-... ""· """6Cll" t .. ____ , btlett Ille (OllH"'l'llltlOll f•tl .-<lflM ..... .. ,., .. ,, .._ ...... I,,._.. ,,_,_ ............. Tr., • ., .. ..,... ............ Mllltltllot ...... _. ................... .,... .,..,. ........ c.. ........... 11• "'"'M"'° .. vlner-, T•rt•fleo, C.llfO~ 11111 tGnl ..,.. .. CIWfl• Collt•rnl• to101, tM lolltll 'hto ~ ................ c.i~ ""'' o.ttd .... ' "'' .._.Cllf ....... .. :L.9.-..., ,,_. ...... ......... Or ... c.... 11111 .. -.-. ,,_ .. ,,.., ........ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "llCK. UT I ON NO. l,_,11 aHOUITION Ofl TH a llOAaO 0, DlalCTCHti Ofl THI MOULTOtf.NIOUaL WAT8a DIST•ICT oaCLAlllNO TH& INT•NTION TO oaTACM P•or••TY , .. OM IMP'•OVaMaNT DIST•ICT NO. 1A , ...... WHElllAS, It 11 Ille clfttre of'"' B-d of Olrecton of Ult Me..1-.N._. w.1 .. ot1trkt (MNWOI to o.t.<11 cenalll ...-1v. dlt9Crlllllt Ill EJdllbll "A'' to 11\11 RHOflltlOll, wllkll •Jlttiblt 11 attec.lltll .__ -by tlllt retffwl<e '' ,,.. <Of"PO'ti.cl llereln, ,,..,.,, lmpr°"""'"I Olllrkl Ho. IA IS.-) Of MHWO; -WHEaEAS, U.. ...,. Of DlrKlon of MHWD tllllb l1'at t11t delee,,,,_I of .... pr-1'f from lmprowtme11t Ol1lrkl Ho. lA (S.-,) of MHWO wlll blnet'I well prapeny, •NI WHEllEAS. It It IN detlre of 1"9 Boerdot Dlrec10rt of MHWO to c-1 a P\lbtk .... .,.. .. wllkll --· "'.., -...... _,.. """"'"' ... -PGM<I -.ClllNftt ,,...,, 1...,, 0,,..,,...1 OIWkt Ho lA (S.-); NOW, TH£REF09'E, -... ,. of Olrecton of MHWO OOES HE nay AESOLllE, OETEAMINE AHO OllOER .. 1o1-.: . ~ 1. Thet It 11 lllt 1 ...... tloll of IN 8oerd of Olrectori of MNWO to .... I.Kii certeln len11Do from lmpr0wtmenl Dlstrkl HO. IA CS.-1 of MHWO. iecu. .. "'°' • -"'°"""II the ·~-'*"-'" of .,,. twrttorv .. be .. ltclled,. wllkll mep '"'" govem for •II cllnlllt n lo the e.-of -,,... tio be cit~ IJ on fllt wltrl the Secrel.,.., of MHWO .... 11 ev•ll-tor In-· tlon by .,Y ...,...,,, or ,,.,_ lnt.,.1ted Sectloll 1. n..t the detecllmenl .. «<ornolltlled wlu-t ,.,"'. -~ llOllL Se<tioll 4. Tllet the -tnwntl for <tn't'lnQ out MY --t of lmpr- m.nt Olllnct No IA (Sewer),'"''""''"",...,_. of prlnclpel of -Int-! Oii eny .....,.. or ..,.,,..,ts outl._lllQ, llletl -be ~...._. le 119 ltvled I• me•••-lftlf 111 -"'_, prov I-lw 111 u.. °"1rkt R-99111.1.atloll Act of 1965, ~ UW llllldl In 1111 t•rrltory to be dltK,.... Sect._ S. Tlwll • P\11111< llHrlllil 119 end tllt ..,.,,. ~ 11 Ctllecl lo be lltlCI at l:JO p.m., or .. _ llwrMfltr .. " prt<tlc ... 111 Ille off\c•of MNWO, 27!00 La P11 "°"' L.-... Ht..,.1, ee mn. on J..,. 11. '"'· ....i ""' 11 ltld """ eM pltc:e lw ,.._ llUbtk twerlng •nr --In~ l11<Mll"' f*'Mllll -nlrwi ~ wlW11 ... •rt• llP be .. 1.Ktwd from ,,...,._ Olltrl<t Ho. IA (Sewer), rntV ....,.., olld be,,.., •. S«O• '-Tllet the St<,._,.ry ot MNWO be --..,... herterf 11 .. recllCI to """ • COPY flf tllls AttOIUUOI\ lo be PlltlllllWd .... POiied In "" ,,,_, Pl">" ¥10.0 llV Sll<tlon >MU of Ille Wiler Code Ol IM st.te of Cellfomle. A.OOPTEO, SIGHEO ANO APPll0\11!0 Ull• Jilt .. y of "'41y, 1•1 MOULTON-NIGUEL WATER DISTRICT Oen W. 5'nltll, Vic:.• President Mtlenlt 1.. T...,11rkl, A.ulttent Secrewy STATE 01' CAl.IFOAHIA I )fL COUNTY 01' OltAHGE I t, MIL.AMIE I.. TUATU9'1CI, AlltllMI St<~ry of U. ... ,,, .. Direct.on flf the MOULTON HIGUEl. WATEll OISTAICT, de her9'1y certlly \Ml - foregc>l!WI retolutloll WH duly edocltecl by IM Boord of Olrection of Mid Oltlrl<I •t e r..,Cer ""'UIWI If 1tld Board lleld 011Ille11at .. y of Mey, 1•1, -~I It •11 so adooted llV tlw roetowtr>g vote: AYEf: l.ofrr a. UllOttlt, H. L.ff Remlft4n, Dort W. Smltll, OwleN A.. Wllllam-, Rl<Nnl $. AOt., Bryon$. Kell, -~eld E. 811<11 HOU: Ol9'ECTORS: Norte. AHTAIN: OlllECT09'S: Hol\t. ABSEHT:DIRECTORS:Horlt. Mel..,_ L. Twtlirkl. AWSW!t St<ret.ery of tlle MOVLTOH NIGUEL WATER OISTlllCT of the ao.ro of 0 1rec1or1 t...,.eot PublllNcl Orengt Coel1 Delly PllOI, J-J, 10, '"' I PlJBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI 0' PU8LIC NIAllllHOI AJIO °" AMaNOMaNT TO PACll"IC TEL•PHONl'I O"P'llT llATa INC•IAll A .. 11\.tCATION TO aaflL8CT INC••ASID cosn llllUl.TINO '"°"" CMAttOIS , .. ACecMllfTO••""' SOCIATaD WITM INSTALLATION Ofl Tau ....... •OUIPM8NT TM c:Mllomit Pu«lllc Utlllllts Convnltllon (CP'UCI lln _,,,..,..... l!Mlblk -rl"91 In July CS.. tcr..dllle •-I on P9cltk T• ......... '1 P"VloortlY -_11< .. ....,.uUol\ to lncrMM 111 r.e.s ,..,,ec11,,. IMI .-Ille lllrOlllll to CllSlO"'tn edellttonel <otits r•11nlne from CM11111 Clltngel ordtrlCI b\I Ille F ... rel eomm..nt<eti.. Com"'luloll (FCC). T,_ ~ r..il t,.., aft l'CC ordtr. 1...,.. Ill Mlfc.11 Itel, tl\tt reQlllAI .. ._.. uUlltlel tio ,,,.,. IN_, U..y ecCCIYtl flW le4oplllN lllSlelllllon CM1I.,... 1rNt tMet t.a • ,...,... Item• -'" e1of>1 10 cust-n. Tiie .,..tcetlell or\llMllY •• tor iW "'"'IOI\_ .. ., . .._,, IMated M ~recent 1"'-llml. II "-11ec- IWCelNf'f to Mle1lll tllt ttPOllctllM to _.. lllC,_ i.tall"' ... "'"''°" - n""''· Tiit CPUC 1191 c-i1c1111 .. Pacific T...._..., ...,.lc.llloll wlVI • CPUC ln-119MIOll CO.I.I. Ho. Ml -Y WI tlllt Mlltl«1. ..Jo. II' 011.AHTEO, THE IHClll!ASI!! WIU. HA'll HO IMP'A(T "S COM- PANY l!AllNIHOS. Tlw tOllOWll\t cNr1 •ICPlel"" ttw elllmeled lllC:.--,.,.._i rettl flW 11\t werl_ c._ of wvl~ et ,.-OflOlltd bY l'ocNI< Te ....... : Dolltt lllC-" lllC ...... Oii..-flff•fll 0-.......,. "''" .... " ,, 110 u ti -------....,,., HHll- NOTICa 0, T•UST•a•s SALIE o.nn11 Stnllh T.S. Ho.""' Tiiis 'telemen1 "'" 111eo wllll ,,,. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, 11111 Co11nty Clerk of 0,.nge County on Oii W•dlletdaY. J-14, IMl, ti t 00 Junor I. ••1 o'cloc:i. 1.m of 1110 .. Y. •I u.. en 1,.llCt lollle offk"of llEAL ESTATE P110llllllCI Or-C...11 Oelly Piiot, SECURITIES SERI/ICE. 2020 North J 11ne IO, II, 1l, Jiiiy 1.1•1 ,., ... , Broeclwey, Suite 2°', In Ille Clly cl Sen- PUBLIC NOTICE RtldWlltlbOll Thh Slel-1 WU 111.0 wllll IM Co11nly Clerk ot Oranoe C011nty ori J..,.. •• "" l'lWM PYbll-Ore1199 COHI Otlly Pilot J11ne 10, 11, 2•. JOJiy 1, 1•1 2tl2-t1 PUBUC NOTICE ti A.n•, c.ouncv of Or-. SIAllt of Ca lllornlt , Hl:WPORT EQUITY FUHOS. INC., • Cellfomla corporell· on, •• «Nlr ._,,,..,. Tnn .. -r ,,,. P"'-" to ... -flf .... con· allO\.UTION NO. ll·M 1 ... red 111 INI certeln 0.0 of Trus1 ••· al50l.UTION 0' THIE aoAlllOOI" DlalCTOaS Klllecl bY HARRY BAOOMALL and 0' THa MOULTOfl4UOUaL WATa• DISTllllCT IOA M 81100MALL, h111ANtncl •ncl DICL.A•INO ITS INTIENTION TOAJINUI racw••TY wife, -r--Mey 16. 1•. Ill TO IMP'•OYaMINT 01n••CT NO. lA 11••••1 ._ IJ60t of Oftkltl llecordl of w lo WHEREAS. It II -dnlr• of,,,. aotrd of Olredori °' ""_ ...... Hl.,.i C-ty, .i Pl9' 1... Walet Olllrlrt (MHWO) to _,.. <ertelll ...-tv, '6 dtKrl-111 E.INblt RKOrdtt'I , ..... .,._, Ho. Inn, by "A" to 11111 AHOlllllOll, wfllcll ••lllbtt •• ·~ 111...Wllld •• by Oii• r"9ren<• rNiOll of e Ot'MCll of ..,...,II In pey· herein ln<orporttM, to l"""'°wmtnt Olatrkt Ht. IA (Se-r) Of MNWD; lftlf me11t or_.....,_. of -Mllll'-WHEAEAS,l,,.Boer•ototrectonll--IM-Jletlet\ofMklpr~ ''°"' MC:-thereby. lllCluclll\g IMI to lmpr-Olstrkt HO IA CS.wet) of MHWD .... -It-..........,,, <•rtt ln breech or c1e1 ... 11 Nolle• of Wld wlll<ll w11 r--Febr11ery 24. IMI. WHEREAS, II Is IM cletlre of lllt Boerd of Olrector'I to Ullldlo<t e poA>lk In Booti 1"111 of Ottld" 9'e<ord1 of hlerlf>I It Wflkh ,,.,_ mey epoett •nd 119 ~ rel•llwt to Ille~.,. wld County, et Pl9' 1m." Recoroer·1 "'utlon of territory lo lmprow11•1tnl Olslrlct Ho. IA. CS.wer> of MHWO; lnllrv......i Ho. 21'0I, WILL SELL A.T HOW, THEllEFORE. tllt Boero of Otre<ton of MHWO OOES HEllEBY PU 8 Lt C AU CT IO H T 0 THE RESOLllE, DETERMINE ANO OROl!A "foOOW'I: HIGH EST BIODEll FOii CASH. ~I. Thlt 11111,,. ln-tlonof the 8Mt'dof ot~of MNWO to_,.a 1ewful "*-Y of t1W U"lllCI Si.t .. , •II certel11 territory lo lmprowmt111 Olllrlcl No. IA CSewffl of MHWO. P'Y•blt .. the ume of 111t. •II rlOl\1, S«U. 2. Thel •""" tlloWlng lllt t•leflor bollnderln of tfW twrhory to i. 1111• -Interest now lleld lly 11, H •-•Id. ""'tell map 111111 govern IDT ell dei.111 u 10 IN •-I of U.. ,,.. 10 Tr'"'"· In end to thel re•I ,.,_,..y be t nMaecl, Ii on Ill• wltll Ille St<relery of MHWO end It • .,. .. _ twin.-. •111111• 111 .. 10 Co11nly end Sl•lt, llon bY 11\'f...,...,,, or,..,._., I mer.st .. dt1<rl-n followl S«tNe a. TNI h Wrltorv to lie MMucl to l"'P'••-nt Ollltl<I No. IA PARCEL 1 csew..-1 "MHWO V..11118 -·-··~ l•NM lllCI ,_. ....... unit 409 91 ,_ Oii 11111 certeln IKU. 4. The! HIHllft4tftb few cttrylng out '"Y --of ..io lmpro- Conoomlnlum p1.,, recorded AU9utl '""'' Olltrkl Ho. IA. IStwtrl, lnch.Olllil ""'~of IM'lnclpel of,,,. lfllerest on 12 191S In a-11•1 p-1363 of Of· lllY bondl or w•rrentl ovtsterldlr>g shell be ltvled eaclldlltely -,,,. I-In 11(1e1 llecorlb .,,., ~ deflMd In tllose .... 1"'__......1 011trlct, l11<llldlng 1"9 t•rrttory --U..reto. • I«!* S. Thlt • puOll< ""''"II lie 11\d Ult ..,,.. ........, 11 ullecl Oii llw _. certel11 Olclertll0111 of Co•enenll, lion of 1119 ..... uuon of c..Uln tertClorv to ,,...,._, Olltrkl Ho. IA C....,lllollt -AtstrKtlens reco":"° (S.Wtr) llftd.,yottwr me1t..-ret•U11gtoW1yof1Ml__.,.11o111,. .. 111:JO ~-a.;: "*· P--of Offl< 11 P·"'·· or n ,,_, tlltrMft.,. "Is P'«llcMle, .t IN offkn Of MHWD, U!OO Le PAllCEL 2· Pei II-. ~ HIOllfl, C•. t2'11 ,-on J.-11. 1 .. 1. -11\tt at Ml• lllM Incl ' pie<• provt4ld lot .... Pllblk llterlllQ My --ln ..... Aed, lllcl ... 1111 All UnctlNoY-_..1!11111 lnterfll '"LOI ........ ~~wltlltnlllt•re•to•-edt•l"'P'•V.-tOlllrklHo. 2 of Trec:t . -·· 11 ~ Oii •Map IA (S.-). rnty ..,._., eflfl i. htercL rt<Of'Oed 111 8oOll 121. P19b • -'°' IKU." ""''.,.. Se<reterv Of MNWD .. -"'" ..... ,,.,... .. cllrectecl to llllll<tllllltOlll MIPS, recor•• ol CIUM • COPY of ""' Rnofllllon IO -1111111•-end Po•-' Ill, ... "''-.... 0,.119t c:-ty, Gelllomla, .-n ellCI <:tUI .... ~Stell.., JMUof the Weter Codtof 11W Steteof C1llf0rf111. Cllflnecl H C-A.rN Oii llW •bov• AOOPTED, SIGHED ANO APPllOVED ltlls 21stdey of Mey,'"'· "'tnllonecl Condomlnlu"' Pl•11 •nd MOULTO..-HIGUELWATEll OISTlllCT Ot<laratlOll. OOll w. Srnftll, Vlc:t P,.."'9111 Exuptl119 tlltr .. rOM •II oll, o ll Met..i. L. Turtwkl, Anlrtenl Se<retery rlglltt, mlnertll, "'lnerel rights, STATE Of CALIFORNIA I 11•lure l 11•• rl9ht1, an• other I IL hy•rocerbolls by wMllaoever ntm• COUNTYOFOAAHGE ) known !Mt rnty be •llhln O< 111\der Ille I, MELANIE L. TURTURICI, Altlttenl Secretery of IN Boenl of Olrecton percel of I-NtelntOove described, of the MOULTON NIGUEL WATEll OISTAICT, clO lltre4)y certify ttltl IM tooetner wltll ,,,. .,.,,,.,,.., rlgfll Of toreeotne ,_I.Ille!\ wllS cMy........., by -&oerd Of Otrecton of Mid OtJtrkl •rllll110, "'l11l11g, uptorl"ll· •n• et 1 reeuttr ,,_ling of wtd ao.n1 lltlclOll t,. 211l .. ylf MIY. 1"1, -tllat 11 Ojleretlng .,,......., lllld ttortne In encl w11 90 ......,..., u..1o11-1no vote. removing t,. ...... from ltlld lend Of' AYIE.S: Ltrry R. Ullllttt, H. Les II"""""· Doll w. from eny ot..., lend, l11<ludlng tht 5'111111. ~ A.. Wllllamton, lll<Nrcl S. Ftor., rlolll to wNpAock O< dtre<tloNllly Orin Brytll s.. Holl, -GereMI E. BllCll. Ind mine tr--ollltr thell tlloM HOES· OIAECTOSIS; Norte. 11er1ln1llove .. scribed. oll or 111 ABSTAIH; OlaECTOAS. -· wells, 1..-11lftlf11\afh Into. lhrOUOfl ABSENT. 019'ECT09'S: -· or ecrou llw ...osurfec• of the lend Mel°"" L. 1'ut1wfcl. MrelMbow llH<rlbtd ,,,. to bottom A.Mltttnt Stcretery of 111e 111<11 WlllPtlOC:kecl or dlrecllonelly MOULTOH .. IGUEL WATEll 01$TRICT ctrll,.. wells. '"""'''.,,. tllefll 111\dtr of llW eoani of otf"IC1on tlltreor ,,,. ........ ,, or beY'O'ICt tht •irtMlor P11bl..,_, Or ..... C-Jt 0.lly PllOI. J-3. 10, 1•1 llmlts .......,, .,,. to rt«lll, reblnMI. equip, rntl,,..ln, l'ftl'lr, ~ encl operete enr SIKll w1111 or mines, wni-t. -r. 11\t rltlll to drlll, 'l'lne, 1t0<e. t•plort .,.. operate tlltwtll ... Wtitc• Of' "" ...,.r JOO '"' of the wllWrlK• ot tllt lallCI ...,..l111btlle -.Crlbed, 11 rn«YICI 111 1111 OolCI or Le-from IN I rvlrie Compe11y, ~ Stptember a. 1976 h'1 IOOll 1190, P19t 4J2 of Offkl•I llKOl"Cb. P'AltCELI. Nt11-l.achnl•• EtH"'enl for Utllltles, Ac~ 11111'-, &oreu, Ell· croecllmtnt. "-"'• 9"11 tor ohr ,.,.,,_., ell " tNwn -clef !Md 111 lllOM unel" Olc1tretlt11 of Co,,... 11111ts, ~tloftl ...-AtterktlOl\1 ,. ~ lfl ... 11 ... P19t -.. Of· tkll1 ··-· -... ., A11 ... 111rne11t1 llltreto. Tiie tlrw' ---Of otlltr ~ ... ..,...IOI\, If-· °' ... t'Ml ......... ,., lleftll\Mo'tle ~ •• _,..,.. to i.: tn ltYl*C:O.. w.11,........,.. lffctl, CeltNomlt. Tiit IOI ...... 411Klef"'I 4111Y eM ell 11 ... IMV ltr IN ll!eorrect-of Mlf ttrwl ..,_. or llhtr <Ol'OHftOll ........... S.lil .... .tll .. ,,... Wltlleut C ..... llllM w _....,..,, ,.,_ ... 1,,.1 ... , ,....,.,. tlltl, ,....1111, Of lflC"""" llr•ncot to MtltfY the •rl11c111e1 ... _."' ...... Of...., .......... _II, .. _,. .... 0.0. flf TNtt, wttll lfl. ....... .. """"""'"' ......... " ..... , ............. ~ If All¥_1 -. *" .............. OMd .. TrilM .... "''-'"' ... ...,. ... ..,,_~ lllf ,._,. .... '"""'° ............ .. IN'tr ................... (,... ... •r H id o.tf -6 Trvtt. Tiit tetel ........................... ~·ft(··· .,,... lfltltl'fft, •• ,., •-1111t1 tlltft fllo, Mf rN-91f fftlfl'I•• .... ~ ... ,.,..._ If INT,...... et the U-ef l11ttlel !l'll•llc•llert ti tlllt Nt11U, It ''"·"'"'· DMel: M9t ... "" NIWf'OltT IOUITY flUNO., INC., ,. •Cll .... -.Wet1141; •Tr.-. Ir; lttlM: UTA Te ~--·"'' .~ .............. ......... '. ltlAUD..t.~, ........... .,, ......... .. , .... ..-;CA""9 .._r,,_...,. ,........,.....,._D•llY_...._ , ........ 11, "" *Ml PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE -- , l r • l • ? I f • I . Orange Cout DAILY PfL ••• r Second oJ thre.·pot1 aene• on malprodict. Tht fjnal orttci. wCll appear Fri44J1.J With the growth of medical speeialbatJoo and virtual disappearance Of the family doctor, few Of UI, as patients, maintain a close relationship with physi· clans. There i5 a greater tendency today to sue than in the past. . That is one r eason for the upsurge in malpracttce claims and the equally significant enormous settle· ments. The prime reason, however , is medical progress which has resulted in increasingly complex and often dangerous methods of patient treatment. Mod ern ~ ma chines and procedures lo --------~a~Z treat Illnesses : ~?~~r~~y h~~~: SYlVIA PORTIR le ss un - avoi d ab l y cause injuries to patients, provide opportunities ror mistakes -and the subsequent lawsuits. Many new drugs which, a lthough of real therapeutic value. may have unexpected. unpleasant side effects. Coupled with the complexity of modem practice are greater and often unrealistic expectations. When the "mirac le cures" promised by television, movies and other media do not occur, pa· tients and our families blame the doctor rather than our iUness. Still apother cause must be the so-called con· sumer revolution which has made us more aware of our rights and more willing to take legal action. Legal claims of all kinds Cnot just medical prac· tice ) are al an all-time high. At the same lime, juries have become more sympathetic lo consumer claims, especially those as emotionall y charged as medical claims often are. . .. Aggravating the problem is a "con~ng~ncy fee system under which a lawyer gets nothing 1( h~ l<?s~s the suit but receives a percentage of the plamliff s award -perhaps as much as 30 percent to 50 percent -if he wins. Since the plaintiff, after expenses, may wind up with only pennies out of each dollar awarded, some lawyers are encouraged to accept 8!1d magnify .the seriousness or cases that they otherwise would reject as having little or no merit. Frequently cited as contributing to the. spurt 10 malpractice suits are ~ur grievances as '?alien.ts: re· sentment of high medical costs; frustration with the manner in which complaints are handled, or not handled; various problems of communi~ation re~ult­ ing either in misinformation, or no mformation, about the probable outcome of surgery or other forms of treatment. And finally, although many malpractice claim- ants may have suffered medical injuries not caused by negligence, there is no denying that carelessness. mistakes or sheer incompetence are ractors. A recent study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, concluded that of 815 patients admitted to a hospital at the Boston University Medical Center during a five-month period, 290 Cor 36 percent> had suffered SOO medical mishaps . These mishaps, more than 200 of which were complications due to drugs, contributed to the death of 15 patients. Whal can be done to reduce medical malpractice and the ~lai ms to which it leads are detailed in the nnal column on malpractice. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES AMERICAN LEADERS SOllC• .... \IGllit .-. -.......... ..... ..... ~ .................... .... ·-~~ .::9::1..., ... •.-.. .. ~-.......... ... NE~ YORK(API FIM I Dow.Jon" evgs. ~l<rct•y,J .... 9. I ~ J4• C-?.J Urn °fin ~1.>Y Jiil lr..tt-hl ti 106 II 10 ... 1 10S. 1' IOS.7t-g.s. .. .. .... 2• ,., ... 394 ,. ' s .... :................. f·1ft·fi r~n ... .......... .... • • • Ut t .... ········· · .... t ' u ,,.. . . ... s . WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK IAP) Jun ' NEW YORK (API ..1un. • METALS T~ m IOS 21 20 p,.., ~~ 71• 413 1931 11 II ~~ centse l*WICI, U.S. -11- lkwls, ~ •cients • ...-. DllC *" _..... -'°· ..... , .... T• 9'.S111 Ml4al1w..ttc~lte1-. , A'-'-7 ... CMlU '*"'4. N.Y Mtrc_,.taD.OOP9rflallr. Pla ...... tdUOtrvyOI., N.Y. SILVER HEW YORK (AP) -Hal'MIV & Ha...._ lllYff ,..., $10.11'0. 11111 to., .. l111etllar• '""'•' t!0.120, "" ..... , ,.~ .. •-•10.111. ..... ,... SYMBOLS 0 ••••• 0 0 ea a¥ • 3 22 a \ =------ Orange Coa•t DAIL v. PILOT JW•dnesd•y. June 10, 1981 ,. f AMILY Af:FAIA -Clint Ca-l> le, right, 3, assisted by twin lister Courtney, ,aids photo- r a{>hers in po8ing ·newest dditions to Cable family. triplets, from left, Megan, Mit~hell and Molly were horn last week at Memorial f.ospital in Johnstown, Pa. other, Vanessa, had been ospitalized eight weeks J>rlot to birth of the triptei., J'. ] Paid Advertisement Wyoming Oil 'Lottery' Open To All In July! tANTA ANA, c.AL.IF (Special)- Hundreds of U.S. citizens w1li win 011 lease nghts in upcoming public drawings condu~ted b.Y the State of Wyoming. Some may achieve overnight wealth by selling their nghts to oil com· panies and retaining lifelong royalties on any oil or gas pro- duction fncred1bly, mos1 will risk no more than $30. tax deductible. to enter the little-known program \hat offers every American the opportunity to compete on an equal basis with giant oll com- panies for leases of public IAnds. Entry details and Information may be obtalred by writing The B Ryan Snyder Company. Inc (011 and Gas Lease 01v1s1on), Post Office Bbx 268, 2030 East Fourth Street, Santa Ana, California 92702. Enclose $1 for postage and handling. The Snyder Company will for- ward official entry cards and full instructions in time to meet the July 10. 1981 deadline. o The 8. Ryan Snyder Co . Inc .. tll/6w ENVIRONMENT AL SCOPING MEETING What can be done to Improve the Route 5/55 interchange? SANTA ANA PROPOSAL T~e California Deportment of Transportation (CAL TRANS) Is looking at ways ta improve the Santo Ano/Newport FrHwoy Interchange. Various alter· notives including Transportation Systems Management and allgnl'(\ent modifications ore being studied. This is one of the initial steps in the project development process. ond it "fill W used to guide future studies leading to the clrculotlon of o Oroft En- vitonmental Jmpoct Statement. T~e reason for this Scoping Meeting is to insure that various public ~tel o~ any Interested persons ore Involved early in the envlronmentol plonnl,... piocess. The purpose of the mHting Is to Identify the range of alternotl.,.. o~ the significant social. economic, and environmental Issues which shouW be considered in depth In the EIS. Ttfis mHting will give you on opportunity to learn about c•rtoln fNtut .. of tlw project and comment on the decision process. HIN. AND WHERE r further Information about this project. contoct: • Mr. Ronold Kosinski Environmental Planning Branch CAL TRANS (213) 620·3755 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Alr trafflc control towers at four CaliComia airports are amoq 86 nationwide that the General Ac· counting Office says are un· derused and should be closed. The Calllomia airports are in Marysville, Chico, Fresno and Merced. The tower in Fresno is at Chandler Airport, not the city's main air termihal. A Federal Aviation Ad · mtnt11tratlon qfflclal in Los ~•eles saJd Tiaesday the rec-om mendatJon• by the GAO, a . Congressional WJtchdo1. are not new. In t.be last few months, sald Al Garvis, the FAA has routtnely surveyed California airports and reduced. the number of hours Control towers operate. Among airports where tower operations were reduced from one to seven hours are: Long Beach, Ri verside, Fullerton, ChinQ 1 Napa, Oxnard, Sacram~nto ExecuUve, and, moat recently, Concord and Stockton, Garvis said. Hours were reduced for periods of li1ht traffic, said Garvis, and traffic controllers were r~assigned to shifts during busier periods. ••We review our system periodically and make adjust· ments whenever necessary," Garvis said. "Safety ls the primary criterion in decidine whether to cut back on tower hours.'' The GAO complained that •"(he Federal Aviation Ad · ministraUoo has not taken effec· live action to discontinue economically unjustified alrport traffic contfOI towers or to re· duce tbe operatine hours of con· trol towers which meet the criteria for reduced operations." The report said closing un · derused towers could "save millions of dollars." Listed as candidates for dis· continuance were the following airports: Mleml D••Collltr; Clllcego Mel91; St .-.ier--., FIAi., WtllhM, All~ °"'9, M1111lclpel, Plel11vltw, T••••; Mery1v111e, c e llt.; Mere••· c a111o1 Attt11. Ill.; frHno, c.IH., CM-... ; Hot*I, N.M.; ~. Ollle , Oeml111e, Ill., c1ew1...-C11y ..... ; Ntw lam, H.C.; -I M9l'l\llfll•. A111.; .c ........... . Te11"', Oownlowll; Minot, H.0 .1 ~ IH.; te11~ H.rbOr, Mlcll.; E11ld, Ollle.1 V....., Gt ; Sent.a Fe, H.M., Merldlen, Ml .... ; ~ Tailet, Sen~. Teus, SU-. Marlon, Ill.; T11Kel-•, Ale.1 N. My"I• 1 .. e11. s.c.; SI.~ Me., WMel...., w.ve.; Alllelll, O..; lloeml"4110f1, ll'ld.; ICIMe ....... ldallo; Htgtrllown, Met.; SHr\enlMlrt. S.C.; OrH11vllle, Mlll.I J1Kk-, Miit., H.-lfts; $1\rt~ LA , ~l ~ W.Va.; AM Artlw, Mkll ; llr-kk, 0.-. Md:~; Owe111b«o, Ky.; ,.tdutefl, Ky.; OW.. Cltlf.; Aleundrla, LA.; JtClllOowlli., l'le., C:r .... Twl11 l'ell1, IMM; PIM a1\lff, ~ ; C:.. OlrerdHu, Mo,; Klemtttl ,. ..... et.,; ~. ~to Ako..t'. l'l ... taff, Jiiii.; Hl«OfY, N.C.; ,,.lllelel•, un.; MCAiien.· T••••: ~. Ore.; Toptlla, Ken., 9111ard; "°"'"'• •: He! ·Sp;I .... , Nil.; Meyf9\i9r. PutrW ltko; ~ viii•, S.C.; Oly,..ie, WHll .• Key w"'· ,It.; ..... Pqo, Ameriun "'-; VtlOll, Al.-0; C-- l>le, Mo L.llltO es Ce!IOl4al• fOI' rtlNcecl .-ttlN llolirt -• alrportt In AllelllOWll, Pe., Atllevllle, N.C., Irle, Pe., Hvnll11110'!1 W.Ve ., ll11f11arnlorl, H.Y., Charle.ion, w.va., ,..,... Wvfllt, H.C., HI-OW• felll, ... Y., Ulk.1. H.Y .. Autulle, 0.., c.1.....-, Ge •• Tre111M1, H.J •• 8rl1IOI, TtfWI., Or-. S.c .. Tell•"--• f'le., Wllml1191on,H.C., TtlAtrllo<o, H.J. DAILY. PILOT CLASSIFf!D ADS 842-5e78 Saving precious energy has always been, and ·will continue to be, a major concern of both The Irvine Company and the City govern- ment. So no matter where you choose to live in Irvine, you'll see the benefits of energy- conscious planning. And as the city develops, you'll find shorter dis- tances to drive and more things to do close to home. It's all part of Irvine's continued growth to- ward the goal of becom- ing an energy-efficient, economically balanced city. Growth guided by two important factors . The City's farsighted, living Ceneral Plan. And concerned residents from the community, City government and The frvine Company who work together to make it happen. We may not always see eye-to-eye on every detail, but the result has been, and will con- tinue to be, a city that gets better to live in ev~y day. · R'esidential areas are being built close to business and industrial employment centers. Ample shopping areas are being carefully lo- cated throughout the community. And good schools are being pro- vided within walking distance or just a short drive from home. And that's just part of the plan to save your energy. There's much more to come. For information on this growing new city, please visit or call The Irvine Company Information Center. Culver Drive exit off San Diego Fwy. (I-405). To comer of Barranca. (714) 551-1500. • .. • ~ilyPlllt WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1981 H /F SLIM GOURMET SUPERMARKET SHOPPER C8 ca 1 c as Serve tall glasses of amber-clear iced tea I or a summer thirst- quencher . . . C6 Newport Beach's Firebrand Chili Team r left) as- sembles around the sacred f)Ot for the final taste before judging. After a moment's silence, Bob Longpre, with a spoonful of chili proclaimed: "It <is good and it sure as hell ain't Perrier." V Qita! The piece de resistance (above) of the consummate chili cook: a culinary ven- ture into the world of spicy eats . ••• Not .just another pot Of red .-Bv JOEL C. DON C:: 0(111e O.Oy Piiot Stefl ( . G round chuc:k may be OK for th~ frugal chef, but never shall it touch the well-scorched lips of the true chili connoisseur. Any good chili cook worth his Tabasco sauce :!t bows you start with a good slab of meat, such as 0 ~irloin tip or brisket. 1 And the uJl!mate secret of a good ketUe of hot -stuff, say some of the best chill cooks in the state. !i1; is the extra time put Into fine chopping of all ingre- 81 dients. WI e't Pl dll • wj ~ I pn eil I h~ pit ne 0 I cl cb I'c r• 8J'J t~ ~~ :J t,r tba rqi in llit st• 7-~ dr tin: inn I wa ~~ At the recent California State Chili Cham- pionship, held at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa, some 68 teams gave their all to con- coct the best mouth-sizzler. A good hunk of beef was the main ingredient, though many tempted the not-t.00-delicate .taste bud wiJh pork, spiced sausage, turkey, lamb and chicken. Most chefs preferred to saute their meat in a hot frying pan before dishing it into large cast-iron or a~uatipum keWes. Next come the spices, the piece de resistance of any good chili pot. In chili cook-off competition, fillers such as ,. beans, mushrooms and vegetables are verboten. Onions, however, are allowed since they're con- sidered a spice. Topping the list of powdered herbs, of course, is chili powder. Now some cooks preferred to grind their own fresh chili peppers, others used ex- pensive gourmet brands of the savory condiment. But take a lesson from the first place winner of the California chili championship: He used one of the more common store-brand powders and nary a judge could tell the difference. · · The list of other spices wafting in the breeze included cumin, bot mustard, oregano, sugar, bay leaves, cayenne pepper, fresh·ground black pep· per. tomato sauce, vinegar, cinnamon, et al. Alcohol has been relegated a spice, which comes as no surprise to a chili gourmet who'd just as tioon label spirits and suds under any one of the four basic food groups. So the addition of beer and bourbon was the mainstay of the 68 contestants. Finally, a superb chili takes at least three hours to simmer, time washed away by an endless stream of frothy beers. Fred Drexel of Sherman Oaks, who captured first place at the cook-off and a bid for the world ti- • <See CIDU, Pase CC) I ' I ... . \ t j I I 8y BARBARA GIBBONS lUcotta cheese, tbe familiar tllllna for lpsagna, ls one of the best calorie-wise cook· lpe substitutes for heavy ore am • Part·sklm fresh rlcqt. ta, whipped to> creamy l-moolhneas ln your .lender or food pro· (essor, adda tbe same ·4airy·fresh flavor and t~xture as c~am wttb a taction ol the fat ad alories. • Because rlcoua ia rhuch denser than cream, you only n•ed half as much in ce0t1'1. ~herefore, ~ tup of whipped rkQ\la at 111 ~alories can rtpla~e 1 ~~P of 'heavy cream at Fl calories. More good news: 1 cup of heavy ueam has 88 grams of fat and .126 milligrams of cholesterol, while ~ cup of part-skim ricotta is only 10 grams of fat Jnd 38 milligrams of eholesterol -a healthier choice by far. ~Although ricotta is echni ca lly a fresh heese, it has none of e tartness or cheesi· oess of other cured or cultured dairy products; Us flavor is strictly that fr fresh cream . A1 urchased, however, the exture is somewhat grainy ... until the traininess is pulverized fn the blender or food processor. Here's how : WHIPPED RICO'ITA Empty a 15-ounce con· tainer of fresh part-skim ricotta cheese into a blender or food proc- essor <usi ng the steel bl ade> and process on Coconut: it's the top PASADENA, CaJiC. (AP~ -A coconut made out or chocolate and coconut ice cream and filled with colorful nug- gets of tropical fruit beat out such mouthwatering competition as .. Rocky ountain Madness" and 'Burgundy Cherry 'Borscht .. to win the rand prize in a national •Ice cream cont.est. "Coconut Surprise" arned creator Sherrol icklas a 10.day vacation ~or two in Hong Kong at he finals or the fourth an· pual Baskin-Robbins Ice Cream Show-Off Recipe <:onteston Friday. The Rocky River. Ohio chemistry instructor's ,concoction topped 27 other carbohydrate· laden extravaganzas, in· .eluding a meringue· dribbled "Mount St. Helens Spectacular" that spewed smoke and fire -actually dry f~e and fiiun.lng brandy. The Mount St. Helens entry didn't take any ta}> prizes, but volcanos weren't totally ignored in the awards. "Jamoca Volcano," featuring Irish whiskey and hozen whip~ cream atop a mound or Jamoca almond fudge ice cream. won first prize in the sun· dae category for Miriam Co hen of Cambridge, Mass. A panel or seven food writers, after a long day spent mostly waiting for the entries to be as· se mbled by hoore economists, also awarded first prizea in three othe\" categories. An -avocado and coconut ice cream blend called "Warm Winds Float" won in the drinks section for Joellen Crouch of Corte Madera, Callf.; Karen HarmaUuk of Santa Clara, Calif. won the individual lee cream treat prize for her "Jamoca Almond Pud· ding Cups," and Verlene )5.elseySharpoCSaltLake City took the tee cream spectacular honors for ·her ·'Southern Praline Pecan Roll." Finalist& were cbOilta from more Uaaa 15,M •recipes 1utiinltted at t.lie company'• 2,500 1torw wor.ldwld• duri111 J anu..-J and Felliruary. 1 aid com1>aa1 apokawoman llarl"9 No. •. ·"*~die ..... coll tel car .. •l • ....... Md, .... .. ~, ... oaa i mad• wu• JtttMlllDlce~­topped wltb "1'r'Bt marmalecle. • • OrMge Cout DAILY PILOT ,Wednesday, June 10, 1981 hi1h speed UJllU smooth and creamy. Rotura it to the conWner and store ln the refrigerator. Use It to tum poaching liquid Into cream sauce, as a topplnc for rreah frulll or ve1etables or a bue for low·calorie di pt or as a creamy proteln·rlch spread for bread or crackers; 21 calorlet per tableaPOOn. ~;:,"b~)lineuini (or -S-tl.,..M_G_O_U_R_M_E_T ~ cup dry white very low heat l or 2 minutes. Spoon Into two plates and top wtib grat· ed cheese. Add salt, it needed, and coarse pep· per to taste. Makes two maln-courae servings, 350 calories each. ~teaspoon pumpkin or apple pie spice (or a pinch or cin· namon, nutmeg, clove, 1inaer> Chill unUI ervlD1 Umt. Surround with tresh fruit or veeetabte dip· pers ; 14 calories per tablespoon. ricotta mixture and gently fold ln wlth the · lines or a fork (don't overmlx and denate lt>. Use as a toppine for di ced apples, s lice d oranees. other fresh fruits; 12 calories per tablespoon. CllABMEAT AND LINGUINJ GENCW£SE 2 cups tender· wlne Pinch or grated nutmeg-and lemon peel ~ cup WHIPPED part-skim ricotta cheese 6·ounce pac1ta1e crabmeat, th•wed 2 table1poon1 mine.ct freah parsley 2 tablespoons mtnced chives <or acalUons> 2 tablespoons 1rated Parmesan cheese . Salt, l>epper, to taste Return hot, 'drained Un1ulni to the pot lt was cooked in. Add wine, nutmeg, lemon peel and whipped ricotta cheese; toaa lightly over very low beat until mixture is hot and puta ls coated with ''cream" sauce. Gently atir in orlibmeat, parsley and chJves. Cov· er pan and warm over More ricotta idea.s: APPLE CVRRV DIP 1 cup part-skim fresh ricotta cheese 1 cup unsweetened applesauce 2 to 3 teaspoons curry POwder<tot11t1) Optional: salt, pep· per. to taste If us ing unwhipped ricotta or chunky ap· pleaauce, combine all in· ,redlcnt.s in blender or ood processor and blend smooth. If using already.whipped ricotta and smooth applesauce. simply stir ln&redients tog.ether unHI blended. WHIPPED APPLE CREAM TOPPING FOR FRUIT DESSERTS Combine ~ cup each of whipped ricotta and smooth unsweetened ap- plesauce; stir smooth. Spray .. light'' whipped cream into lf'2 cup measure. Add it to the Add a feative air to din· ing and dieting with 1kfony dip•. Send a atampttl, 1elf- addre1ud envelope and 50 centa to SLIM GOURMET PARTY DIPS, P.O. Bo~ 624, Sparta. N.J. 07'11. VOfll RIDDCBI !OUR · POODBILL uF.CIC G.c: iJ~~£R'r' GR01.'7£R'r' PF.O,UCE GF.OC£RV C1E:.. I .'29* 4.<i.;. .j4:,, 30·" GR0C£RY 1.2~~ :1. . .l?1..8 11 . 15/ LB FPc..~~UC£ 1. ~·7L9 tF. 4!'/ LB VO rt I . . ISIJ1•llilWl'l~l~I) CALIFORNIA CHERRY AVOCADOS TOMATOES • 7100 •&a.t.SICET9 4 ~ ' • LOWEST b~,,~-RED CABBAGE SUC:EO &-OZ. 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(Purchase over limit·reg. price .49) ~~28 ~~199 1 IQUOR SAVE.27 1199 299 299 4a9 I iLAL TH [, UF.AUTY ,,,.... ..otlr.tMIMt ' V<; r~ S BAKERY ~Pit.-&r:twot&ATC.IQN'C ~69 t l/2U-~Oltr:OO SU.me Twtat Drud .85 ~e French Rolla • 9 3 ,,,.-c:~ASm>Olt .89 l8 Ul"llT2 FLATWARE ELEGANT ST~ AT BIG SAVIJllUI ITEM OF THE weEK DINNER FORK 1) 5..00 .... ~ 'I °" f.A04 PEa°' • flAlWMW; r REG..89 IAJO~oa 49 PIUNC .... ~ PIECDALSO Al/NU'la.I. Al ~.LOW PfttCf.S ,J' ... a z Daily Pilat H 'F WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1981 CLASSIFIED OS o.lly ...... ~--lty LM ~., ... 6 a 2 2 a 6 It took 51/2 hours and 15 innings to do it, but the South prevailed in All-star baseball ... D4 Hassler on target Clouds of doubt drift away with victory ~ . By JOHN SEVANO Mike Witt with two runs in, one Burleson and Carew to tie the Of 111e o.tty ...... staff out and the bases loaded in the One year ago Tuesday Andy d k RI k M · Hassler returned to the Angels secon . struc out c anrung and Jorge Orta in succession to amid a cloud of skepticism thwart a possible game-crushing Fans wondered just which rally. Andy Hassler was coming home. "It was kind of early to use Was It the southpaw who set an Hassler ... defended Manager Angel record by losing 17 Gene Mauch of the second in- straight games between May of ning appearance. "but if we 1975 and July or 1976? Or was it don't stop the rally in the second the left-hander who helped the Kansas City Royals win their inning then there's going to be no use for him or the rest of my first divisional title in 1977 ? bullpen in the eighth or ninth. Hassler quieted the doubters last year when he came on al "HE WAS JUST superb. That mid-season -in a cash deal was the ball game ... from Pittsburgh -and became Actually, the Angels looked the Angels' most effective hurler knee-deep In trouble with only a out of the bullpen, compiling a two-run deficit as Len "Perfect 5-1 record and a 2.49 ERA. Gam e" Barker was on the THIS VEAR, however, the clouds started forminl'! again. especially after a slow start that saw his ERA rise to 4 .11 at one point. Fans were beginning to wonder if Hassler's '79 cam- paign had been a fluke. Well, Hassler -and particularly the Cleveland Indians will tell you it wasn't. mound for the Indians. Barker, who had thrown his gem against Toronto just 25 ·days earlier, entered the game with the lowest E RA in the ma- jors ( 1.82> and an unblemished 3-0 lifetime record against the Angels. But Barker made two mis- takes Tuesday night, and the way the Angels are playing these days, that was enough His first miscue was a fastball to Fred Lynn in the fifth inning with Rick Burleson and Rod Carew at the corners . score. Barker's next -and lul -mistake occurred two batters later when be hung a curveball to Don Baylor and he drove it deep iQto the seats in the left field comer. Baylor, prior to the g•me- wi nnin g shot, was l -Cor -11 against Cleveland in 1981. ''BA VWR IS a good hitter, even H he's not hitting tor average," commented Barker. "He's a good ball player. He hits home runs and that's what he gets paid to do. ··1 made only two mistakes, but one mistake sometimes is all it takes." Hassler didn't make any big mistakes, but he wasn't flawless either. Brian Downing had to throw a runner out at the plate in the third inning and Hassler needed a double play ball and a fine running catch by Lynn on a drive by Ron Hassey to gel out or trouble in the fifth. ··It was a big win to be able to com e back agains t a pitcher of that caliber,'' said Hassler. "No one game turns anything around but this could be the start of something big." Umpire Ken Kaiser asks the Angels' Fred Patek ·what's the beef?' after calling Miguel Dilone safe. I n Hassler 's longest a nd strongest relief stint or the year, the tall, lanky left.hander went five scoreless innings and the Angels rebounded after spotting Clev~land a 2-0 lead to post a 4-2 victory before 22.490 at Anaheim Stadium. Hassler. who relieved a shaky Lynn, who was O-for-his-last-10 and 0-for 14 against Cleveland pitc hing t his year , promptly smacked the pitch up the gap in left-center for a double. scoring By winning. the Angels got back to the .500 ma rk (29·29) for the 11th time this year and the rirst time since May 22. It also (See ANGELS, Page 02) Forsch wild about Dodgers Cardinals spank LA, 6-1 ST. LOUIS (AP) -Bob Forsch proved not on· ly the master of pitches he was bouncing in front of home plate, but also of slumping Los Angeles Dodgers hltters. ,"I just feel fortunate," the 31-year-old dean of the St. Louis Cardinals' staff said Tuesday night after emerging with a 6-1 triumph nailed down by Bruce Sutler's relief. "I was so wild that they weren't eveh swinging.'' That Forsch, 6-2, was not at his best was evidenced in part by the four walks he issued com- pared to the lone strikeQut he was able to record. "HE THREW A. LOT'Of 45-foot curve balls. He didn't really throw hard,'' said St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog. "I think his best fastball was 85 miles an hour. He battled He's a good com- petitor ." Herzog also suggested that lingering shoulder problems which have plagued Forsch during the early part of the season may have, ironicalJy, helped the right-hander become ·•a better pitcher." ''I think he's right to a point, where I try to fi . nesse a little more,'' said Forsch. "There's a On TV tonight channel 11 at 5:30 chance that it wilJ make me a better pitcher, but I'd rather have a littfe more velocity. There wasn't really too much pop to the ball." Forsch. relying on sinking deliveries, worked around two walks and Dusty Baker's double with the aid of a double play in the first inning. AFTER THAT, HE protected a two-hit shutout through the fifth. And in the seventh, before pinch· hitter Jay Johnstone reached him for a single which drove home the lone Los Angeles run, be s truck out Rick Monday on a slider. Herzog lifted Forsch following Johnstone's two-out hit, citing the importance or relief s uch as that provided by Sutter to the starter's success. "With the bunch we have in the bulJpen, he might have been about 18-8," the Cards' pilot said in respect to Forscb's 11-10 campaign in 1980. "I think be averaged about aeven-plus Innings per start." While Forsch struggled at times, Burt Hooton, 7-3. suffered more -beginning with George Hen- drick's doubling home a first-inning St. Louis run. GARRY TEMPLETON SINGLED a second time to trigaer a three-run Cards! ralJy in the third inning. After Keith Hernandez and Hendrick each walked, Dane lorg belted a two-run double and Sixto Leicano capped the uprising '\vith an RBI in· field hit. The victory, the Cards' sixth ln eight games, marked the first anniversaey of Herzog•a appoint- ment as St. Louts mana1er while the Dodcera were pllmliJll to their rutb setback ln au contests. "We haven't scored any runs," said Loa Angeles Manaser Tom Lasorda. "Before, when we were 1cortn1 two runs we were winnlni our games." The teams resume action tonieht with the Dodgers' Jerry Ileum (4·2) fadn1 Lary Sorenaen (5...C). Tbe loa1 coupled wtUI ClDdnnatl'• a.• vie· tor;y •ovel' th4i Hew York Meta. reduced the Dodserw' l..ct over the R:'!::.~' 1 ~ IUD•. The Dodlen and C lftl1 M tehvlHd tonl1bt 1* Tlunday nlot <when Fera~= Valem.ila pl~). and UI dll'M I••• Pittaburata °"" Uie w.--an K bedua.d fOt telev.._ illo. Jcq tlloa&1ll be WU In l e•°t•loM poeltloe wbenbe ... _ .. llMa,i~llllM---·~·--,... ........... l:t,. '° .. a pJLdt tD ... Uld ~ ... ,. """ ... lWO•nla ..... ··~ I ... 1t ........ rlabt spot.'' A y .. _,.._...__ ....... ,IMC... "'"~ DICK MILLER Some players pose for nothing So Disco Dan Ford received $8,000 for posing in the nude for Playgirl magazine. I can give you the names of a dozen ball players who do it for nothing for smaller audiences. the An~els last week, was a surprise show at the John Hall Goodwill golf tournament last week. had his job saved at least twice by powerful sports writers, who came to his defense. • * • PA.TRICK CAPPER HADEN, the well known quarterback and para-legal, was playing in a charity golf tournament and got off a drive that must have traveled 280 yards. "It's a long one," said an astonished Doug Finley, who is about three inches taller and SO pounds heavier than the Rams' quarterback. Just a couple of days past scoring his milestone 8 ,000th riding victory, Bill Shoemaker stopped by to say hello to the former Angels skip- per. "The thing that upset me," said Fregosi, who owns 21 horses and who spends his nights at Los Alamitos Race Course, "is that I was fired on a Wednesday. lf they had done it on Tuesday morn- ing,'' he told Shoe, "I could hAve seen you win No. 8,000." The lesson was lost on Fregosi, who was charming with the m edia as a player and the worst (in my 26 years experience) as a manager in dealing with the F ourth Estate. The bottom line is winning. Gene Mauch, the new interim m anager (that's the only way to describe anyone who works for Gene Autry) once had the perfect answer to what makes a good manager: "It will be intercepted," sighed Haden. "All my long ones are." One of the reasons that Fregosi was bounced was he never graduated from the Bill Rigney Charm School. When he was managing the Angels and Fre~osi was his only Quality player Rigney "Good players." • * * JIM FREGOSI, STILL upset by his sacking by Fregosi will learn from his experience and if the Lords of Baseball have any sense (there is no <See MILLER, Page 02> Rose's mother to witness r e cord blow Warriors reach for greater heights Golden State picks Japanese player who stands 7-8 PHILADELPHIA <AP) -Pete Rose's mother will be on hand when her son becomes the all. time career National League hit producer. The Philadelphia Phillies an· nounced Tuesday night they are bringing in Mrs. Robert Noeth from Thonotosassa, Fla., near Tampa. Rose, the Phillies ' first baseman, moved within two hits Tuesday night or breaking the re- cord of 3,630 held by Stan Musial. former St. Louis Cardinals player and a member of the Hall of Fame. Rose has 3,629 hits, which in- cludes his hits Tuesday against the Houston Astros. The Phillies meet Houston again tonight, and then have a three-game series with the Allan· ta Braves starting Friday. Mrs. Noetb, incidentally, celebrates her 66th birthday Thursday, an off day for the Phillies. Musial also is lo Philadelphia, ready to congratuate Rose when be connects on the record- breaking hit. Rose bas 3,629 hits lo l!S~ seasons in the majors. Musial played Z2 years for St. Louis . NEW YORK CAP> The names eve r yone wer e wa ili ng for in Tuesday's National Basketball As· sociation draft were called promptly Mark Aguirre, Isiah Thomas. Buck Williams. Then, after a while. came a call for C hibi Okayama .. Chabi Okayama? Okayama is a 7-8, 303-pound center from the University of Osaka who was selected on the eighth round or the NBA draft by the Golden State Warriors. MOST EXPERTS weren't ready for Okayama's name to be called but when it was it became part or a list of other surprises on draft day. Okayama was the biggest man selected, but the h eight margin wasn't that big -John Hollinden, 7-6 of Indiana State-Evansville, was chosen on the ninth round by the Dallas Mavericks. Two other seven- footers were chosen, Mike Frazier of Georgetown and Paul Loba of Cleveland State. On the other end of the ruler Vic Sison, all 5.7~ of him, was chosen on the loth round by the New Jersey Nets. Consider Sison the first leg of the Larry Brown-New Jersey Nets underground railroad connection. Brown, the former UCLA head coach and present Nets mentor, drafted Sison in his last pick. Sison didn't score any points at UCLA and didn 'l pull down any rebounds but he apparently did impress Brown in handling his chores as manager of the Bruins. The draft was also a family affair as some famous sons and brothers were chosen by the NBA teams. KELLY TRIPUCKA., son of former Notre Dame football great Frank Tr ipucka, was chosen by Detroit on the first round. Another first-rounder was Dan Schayes of Syracuse, son of former NBA great Dolph Schayes. Albert King, the 10th overall pick in the draft, will now be competing against his brother Bernard of the Golden State Warriors, while Frank John so n of Wake Forest , Washington's first-round choice, is the younger brother or NBA All-star Eddie Johnson of the Atlanta Hawks. Mike Mitchell of Cleveland Cavaliers and Dudley Bradley of Phoenix could have their younger brothers joining them in the NBA as Ben "Chicken" Mitchell of Alabama-Huntsville, was selected on the eighth round by Chicago and Charles Bradley of Wyoming was tabbed as the lut pick of the first round by the Boston Celtica. There was one coach-brother com- bination as the new assistant coach of the Portland Trail Bluers, Jim Lynam, saw his younger brother Kevin drafted by New J ersey in the sixth round. SOME OF THOSE chosen are good at more than just basketball. Danny Ainge, the Toronto Blue Jays' third baseman, was picked on the second round by the Boston Celtics and Ken· ny Easley, UCLA's All-American de- fensive hatrback, chosen fourth in the National Football League draft by Seattle, was taken in the last round of the NBA's draft by Chicago. The University of Maryland bad four starters selected in the draft. Albert King and Buck Williams were both first-round picks by New Jeney, Ernest Graham was tabbed in the third round by Philadelphia and Gree Manning was taken in the seventh round by Denver. Jo Jo Hunter, wbo transferred from Maryland to Colorado two years ago, was taken in the .sixth round by Milwaukee. But the group whose numbers could swell lhe most are the Johnsons. Five players with last name Johnson were drafted and they hope to join the 14 Jobnl008 who played last year ln the NBA. McGee tabbed 'Instant Offe~se' by Westhead INGLEWOOD (AP> -The Lakers Tuesday made awtna man Mlke McGee, the all-Ume lead- lnt scorer in both Mlcbtcan and Bil Ten Coft. !erence history, their top selection in the annual NaUonal Baaltetball Auociat1on draf\ or colle1late talent. McGee, a e-s. 185·P.Ounder, aver.,ed 2•.• "Intl per pme aa a 1enlor and 21.• polnll per out· Ina dµrtnc bis exceptional c&Ner. The 19th player taken ov•all. be la the 21tt leadln, acorer ln NCAA td.ltory. Me<Me 1uffer.ct a ttr .. fracture ln bl• rl1bt wle Lat maaUa .tdle pla;ln& lD a ptclrUp 1ame in .llNMf• -.. te'IWUJ ....tnc • Hit, but • ltOk• .. fw the Laen Mid it II oped.ad lltG• WW be able to .aa.r =• lut two weOI ol .................................. Callfomla. 1Milr COMfa ·. Pnl w..uind, Wbo nw lleoff play several times in the Aloha Classic in Honolulu following the 1980·81 season, calls the former Mlchl1an standout "Instant Offense." "Mike's got the ablllty to come ln off the bench and score immediately,'' said Weathead. "He's a lt'emendou.s offensive player and a arut shooter." McGee bad the hl1hest sin1le·1ame total tn the Aloha Claulc when he •cored 33 points in one or the AU-star coatats. Tba l.akera Hlected 10 players ln the draft before puain1 on the ninth and 10th rounds. Jn the HCOftd round they Mledtd M rorwant Harvey KD~kl• of TOiedo Ud •10 c•ter Slvti Rolle Of P1orida Mate. In the third round, tti•Y took 6-2 1u8rd Zam P'r;derick rA South Carolina and •·• forward Roil C«neJiua of Padflt. Tbe Lilken toolr one paa,_ In each Of UHi l J . • l ' l t • ....-w....--• '+" • -4 $WW40UU0GC4CCO OP 00 ¢QU05USC • 0 a suzs aaosusc a-~ 4 susseac sac -..-.-;;;;;;.;.. _____ Onlnge __ ~eo~~ OAJL y ~ILOT "'_,,;,,.~_n_• .... ·!""Y_· J_u_n_._1_0_. 1_ee ....... 1 _. ~-----------------~~-----, Players to ~die , strike negotiations I From AP dl1pa&dles NEW YORK -Baseball a ~ negotiators, still looking over their shoulders for a federal jud1e's rulln& on an injunction, Tuesday spent another fruitless 30 minutes at the bar1ainln1 table. And after the session , union leader Marvin ' Miller said ln the event of a strike, be would let l the players lhemsel ves handle the negoUaUn1 sessions with management to .show the other side "how strongly the players feel on the issue" of compensation for the signing al free agent players. "It's getting very terse. I very tense," said federal mediator Kenneth Moffett after another meeting of no movement. "Until the judge rules, it's going to continue Milin 1 'this way.'' Moffett called a tentative meeting for Wed- nesday afternoon, which could be canceled if Judge Henry Werker rules beforehand on a Na· , tional Labor Relations Board injunction that asks that the implementation of the owners' free·agent compensation proposal be postponed • one year. Werker's office said on Monday that a de· cision would come "later this week ... Ir the judge denies the NLRB request. the players have said they would strike within 48 , hours of that decision. If the players strike, Miller said he would let the players handle the • negotiations "unless in specific instances that • players request I attend." I . Miller, executive director or the Major 'League Baseball Players Association since 1966, ,said the change in format stems from the owners' "underlying assumption that they can sell the players the Brooklyn Bridge and I'm the only one that stands in the way ... Quote of the day Pete Rose, who needed 74 hits this season to break Stan Musial's National League record of 3,630 hits: "Stan got two hits in the final game of his career. I was Cincinnati's second baseman that day. and one bit was to my right. the other to my left. Gee, if I'd had any range then, I'd· need only 72 hits this year." ROGER CARLSON Winfield, Nettles homers aid Yankees ' Dave Wlllllekl and Grall Neulee a alammed home runa and D••• La •oelte, llll&e GrUfla and GOON G ... ap pltthed 'Aft ln.nin11 of score· let• relld u tbe New York Yankees woo their ninth straiaht eame, downtna Kan.au City. J.5\ Tuesday 1n American Leaaue acUoo . . . •• la~'• two-run double ln lbe bottom Of the fourth lnnJng propelled Minnesota to a 3·1 vlc- t or y over Milwaukee . . . Wayae Nordba'ea hit an lnsid4·the·park home run and 8Jcb DoUoa burled bis fourth 1hutout of the season as the Chlugo Wbtte Sox de· feated Toronto, 3--0. Dotson, 7 ·3. moved into a tie for the leaaue lead in shutouts. acat· ter[ng five bits . . . llm Rlc-e knocked ln three runs and . . Due Stapletoa added two Wmjield more to back MUce Torre1'1 five-hit pltchin1 as Boston blasted Seattle, 10-1 ... Tom Brookeu knocked In three runs and Aurelio Lopes cave up four hits through six lnn1n1s as Detroit took a 5·0 win from Texas . . . .Jim Palmer walked Keltfl Dnlmrt1bt in tbe seventh innin& with the bases loaded to break a 2·2 tie as Oakland downed Baltimore, 4·2 in the first came of a double-header. In the nightcap, Drumright bad a twQ-Out slngJe in the bottom of tbe ninth inning to drive in the winning run as Oakland won, 3·2. The A's regained the lead ln the West Division with the sweep. two games in front of Texas. Baltimore's Doug DeClncea suffered a back muscle spasm before the first game and did not play. Schmidt hit wins; Rose rn(sr record Mike Sebmldt's two-run triple la highlighted a five-run third inning and Pete Rose singled twice to move within two hits of breaking Stan Musial's National League career hit record as Philadelphia pounded Houston, 10-3. Rose start- ed the third-inning burst with a single to center and singled again in the eighth to give him 3,629 hits to 3,630 for Musial ... Catcher John Stearns threw away Dave Concepclon's ninth-inning bunt, allowing Cincinnati to break a tie, and Dan Driessen added a two-run single to help the Reds to an 8·4 vlctory over the New York Mets. The Reds are now only 1 'h-games behind the Dodgers . . . Steve Mura scattered nine hits in seven innings and bit a two-run Schmu1t double to lead San Diego past Pittsburgh, 7·4. It was scheduled as the first half of a twinight double-header but the second game was rained out after 2'h scoreless innings and will be played in August ... Tim Raines drove in three runs, two with a triple in a seven-run second inning, and Scott Sanderson scattered five hits as Montreal snapped a five-game los- ing streak with a 12·1 triumph over Atlanta . . . The Chicago Cubs take a 2·0 lead into their; resumption of a game with the Giants today which was suspended after five innings because of darkness. Baseball today ' On thJa date 1n baseball In 19'4: ln the midst of .n 11-0 defeat to Lhe St. Loul1 Cardinals, tbe Cincinnatl Red• called oo youna Joe Nuxhall lo fltch two- l.blrda ot an lnn1n1. Al the aae o 15 years, 10 months, and U days, Nuxhall became the younaest man ever to appear In 1 ma- jor league game. He 1ave up ftve run1, and didn't return to the majors unW 1952. On this date In 1921: Babe Ruth of the New York Yankees became baseball's all·tlme home run leader when be belted a drive off Cleveland'• Jim Bagby for bia ~ career homer, one more than the total amassed by Gabby Cravath. Today's birthdaye: Baltimore outfielder Ken Slngleton 11 34. Montreal pitcher Elias Sosa ls 31. Chicago White Sox pitcher Francisco BaniOtl Is 28. AUanta pitcher Rlck Camp is also !8. Seat· tie pitcher Floyd Bannister ls 26. Seattle catcher Brad Gulden la 25. 10 charges against Mason dropped Prosecutors have dropped 10 of II 25 felony charges against former . Uni'versity of Arizona football Coach Tony Muon, saying they do not want to confuse a jury by mentionlng indictments acainst CO· defendants ... Al Davts, the Oakland Raiders' managing general partner, testified that he was first asked to move his football team to Los Angeles three weeks before the Los Angeles Rams announced their move to Anaheim ... A U.S. Auto Club steward testified he wanted to penalize Marlo Andrettl as well as Bobby Unser for violating the no-passing rule during a yellow caution period on the 150th lap of the In· dianapolis SOO·mile race. The offsetting penalties would have left Unser's victory intact . . . The Natiqnal Hockey League rules com- mittee made several recommend;ilions dealing with such matters as goaltenders and fighting. They will be .discussed al the Board of Gov· ernors meeting June 22·24 in Chicago ... Jon Ross, who was to have served as co·captain of Navy's football team next season. bas resigned from the Naval Academy because of an honor· code violation. Television, radio Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratlng.s are: / 1 1 1 excellent; 1 ' ' worth watching; I I fair; forget it. • n 5:30 p.m., Channel 11 ./ ../ ./ ./ DODGERS BASEBALL: Dodgers at St. Louis. Announcers: Vin Scully and Ross Porter. It will be Jerry Reuss (4·2) on the mound for the Dodgers tonight against the Cardinals' Lary Sorensen (S-.4). The Dodgers' lead was cut to 1'12 games over Cincinnati after losing to St. Louis Tuesday night. RADIO Baseball -Dodgers at St. Louis, 5: 30 p.m .• KABC (790); Cleveland at Angels, 7: 30 p.m., KMPC (710). • From Page 01 lndlcabon they do> Jim wm manage 11aln aoon. Ther~ ta one thint No. 9 (That'• how many manacens the An.aets have fired in 21~ yean aod not hls number) doe1 well and that 11 to become a part of thtl community. When he was a player Frecosl and Bobby Knoop made appearances at Ut· Ue Leaaue dlnnera. Rotary Club luncheon. and 1alet ram ea to promote the team. They were not paid for their servttes. They were just trying to sell the n w team In town. After the Angels won thelr half peMant in 1979 Frecoal appeared, gratis, at S3 c:.'lvic luncbeom and din· nera. Many ol them were tharity fund raiaen. They won't have t.o put on any luncheon or din· ner benefits for Jimmy, who lnvested wisely in acreage in Chino years ago and in a showcase Tustln HUis home. But maybe he can use a few bucks to lnvest In one of Bill Rigney's charm course\. It might save his next job. * • • IF I WAS SIGNING the checks and owned the Angels.I'd sign one less free agent (be would break down anyway) and give a bonus to pitchlng coach T~ Morgan. The Plowboy could make a winner out of the Venus de Milo. The Angels' staff earned run average ls better than a run per game less than in '79 when they won their mini-pennant and arms lilce Nolan Ryan's and Frank Tanana's are missing. Other bodies will be missi,ng this winter. First base coach Bobby Knoop, demoted from third base to first to make room for Preston Gomez over the winter, somehow survived Fregosi's dismissal but his days are numbered. HaU of Farner Warren Spahn, the Angels' minor league pitching coach, probably will be given more authority. He wasn't one or Fregosi's favorites. • • * WHAT HAS HAPPENED to the Rams' deal with the city of Anaheim to develop the parking lot with a fancy hotel. banks, office complexes. restaurants and other developments? Two years later, nothing. Does this mean Madame Ram, the eternally youthful Georgia Frontiere, might sell one of the best NFL franchises? And are the rumors true that i( Madame Ram sells the Rams will she wind up as the owner of an expansion team at the LA Coliseum with Pete Rozelle as her partner? If you don't know the answer call Bud Furillo or Steve Sommers. They know everything . Bogart series held Forty-six boats hit the starting line Saturday for the fourth race of Voyagers Yacht Club's Hum· phrey Bogart Series for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts. The ·series honors the late actor who was one of the most enthusiastic racers in the local area. The trophy for. the overall series winner was once retired by Bogart who later dedicated it to VYC. Winner in the Class A fleet of 10 boats was Cats Pajamas, skippered by Carl Last, VYC ; the Class B winner < 12 entries) was Aloha II, sailed by Glenn Reed, South Shore Yacht Club. Area preps boast. bragging rights Winner in the Southern Ocean Racing Division (SORO> Class A was Runaway II, John Wiebel. VYC, and the Class B winner was Wind Child. Lee Armstrong, VYC. Troohy winners in each class: PHRF-A-1 c.t£ P•llllfta": 2. Hol Foac. Rt11 l>oulf*1Y, SOYC;, ~ .IMlsler, 8Na H-. VYC PHRF·I -1. A.-11, 2 PllUy~t. JahftSUl•y. VYC; I. Fire CTHt. Pat Glall.,, VYC. SOR()A.A-1 A-way 11;2.Andl-. llotl,,..ro,eve;I.~-.· Peter T-. SSYC. , One of the fringe benefits of operating within the Orange Coast area is the bragging rights issue it's something that can be harped on with con- sistency at this time of year as you look back at wbat has transpired over the past nine months. picked, lists Pat Ewing of Cambridge Ridge & Latin High, as the player of the year. Also in Saturday's game with honorable men· tion honors is Servile High's Scott Slnek, who will be playing for the North. CIF championships are the ultimate yardstick fof high school athletes and for this area, it was another year in which distinguished efforts were cotn monplace. J,,hn Moffet, a junfor, led Newport Harbor to its second straight runner-up spot in 4-A swim- ming, which is tantamount to a title since Mission Viejo wins It annually with imported talent via the AAU Nadadores. , The big one, of course, was at Anaheim S~djum where Edison High's Chargers made it two straight, as 28,000-plus watched the Sunset League's best slug it out. Fountain Valley was the champ at the CIF swim relays. The vanquished in that game was Fountain V•lley, making it the first time two from the same lelgue finished in the major division finals since 1967 when Sunset League champion Santa Ana and eventual CJF tltlist Anaheim collided. Butler completed the running cycle with championships at the CIF 4-A, Masters Meet and state championship in the 3,200·meters (two-mile>. Each school, of course, dominated the All-CIF s~ction.s and Stanford-bound Emile Harry, Foun-ta n Valley's Athlete of the Year, was named the C~ 's Player of the Year. The biggest surprise was the rise in power for area baseball. For many years a struggling entity, the area produced the 2·A champion in Corona del Mar and the 4-A finale was another Sunset League production with Westminster edging Edison for No. 1 at Anaheim Stadium. The topper, In sheer excitement, was Laguna Beach High's volleyball team. as CIF Player of the Year Lance Stewart led one of the most re- markable rallies In any sport to hold off San Clemente's upset bid at SaddJeback College. CROSS COUNTRY FEATURED CIF 4·A ctfampion Joo Butler of Edison and water polo was a~in dominated by Newport Harbor, which swept to its fourth straight 4-A crown under the djrection of~ill Barnett. It all begins again in three months. • * • J Corona del Mar was the CIF 3·A basketball ct\ampion and Ocean View Hlgh's Wayne c,rlander was the Southern Section's leading s~rer and rebounder. Carlander and La Quinta star John Rogers, in- cidentally, carry second team All-American Mbors with them into Saturday's Orange County AO-star game at Fountain Valley High. THE MOMENTUM AT Laguna Beach con- tinues as the Artists begin preparation for a tour of Holland, Germany and Austria. Tbe 14-day tour begins July as the artists leave with billins as California's No. 1 prep volleyball team. The St. Petersburg Times' selections, without q estion the most respected All-American team EL TOllO WGB IS searching for a replacement for athletic director Chuck Sweazy. who bar re- I ' NG E LS TRIUMPH • • • I proved t.belr bomestand rec· of to 4-2, far and away the b st mark they've bad at A ahelm Stadium Ulla season. '1 thinlt lt'1 bafned every- Y wby we haven't been wln· n at home," added Hualer, w o threw only 59 pitcbea (85 of th m 1tr\b1) dartq h1I five ln· nl ••· "I doo't have a reason tor It "The caliber of play of every ball club is dlclated by lta pitching," said Mauch. "Al ol June 9, Hassler and AaH are the best." * ... , .. .,..._1,.,.._. .... ~ ......... Min ............... ...... ........ --.............. <M __ _. llen Oft ..., MCU t..-ty, Tlll ,..._ -~ lftcll......,. .... _. lfte)W ........... .,. ...._a. 1r1.., • >-lrllC• ...._ w .. 11...-...... "._ .... _.... ... A-.-.. ......... -... """""" ...... ..... "'91r "" ....... ".._.,., • .,,. ,.... .... ..., U•O-"'"9 le .... ,_, I -.... ... --.. "'°'11119 c-MY -... .., ____ .,.... ...... ._ ... ,_ _....,.......,. ..... a _.._ ................. ,,.-............ ................ allllt~"-·-­UiMt••• ...... _.. ......... ............. ....._._,... , A e. ,......, ...... "'dlar ......... "-..................................... . ....... ..., ....... _.... .... = .............. .... ... ._ ................. .. • ! ....... ..., • .:'flll .............. .. ......... ..,... ........ _...,_ .. ---e;,e-···-----...... ••t•llO..WIOlt _.,.. .... " __ Mia .. ,_ ___ .. .._.. -.&' ........... ,.. ..... .... ........... ..,, .. _ ...... ... ....... _ ............. . ~-~ ...... 911!"!'····-=· ....... , .................... _, .............. ._°"· Spinks sends his b lessings signed the post, but will stay on with the football pro· gra m. SOR0.8 -1 Wln4 Cllllcl, 1. Sore-. O.Ws R-. VYC; l. P-Tlgar. lllchwO IWtCll, SSYC. ORCA -1. Kri.Une; 2. o.fl•M•. H"Glll Towle, VYC. Deadline for appHcations is Friday for the Louf eks take Prindl e • • • EL TORO HIGH IS EL TORO HIGH IS searching for a replacement for athletic director Chuck Sweazy, who has resigned the post, but will stay on with the football program. VENTURA The husband-wife team of Richard and Gretchen Loufek, Costa Mesa, con· tinued to dominate the Prindle-16 catamaran class by winning the Class A division in a Prindle Points Regatta held here. Deadline for applicaUons is Friday for t~e the El Toro opening, which includes a staff position at El Toro. Sixty-five contestants turned out for the event -including three classes of 16s, one class of 18s and one class of lSs. • • • NOTES AND THINGS -When Edison High [:.~."~=:~and Gr.lc:Mn L.OUIM. Colla Mna; 2. Gwft,,.r ..... Otte IC•liM, San Dle90. a. Brian Hatfann-0.le MA-. Ari-; •. sc.ve ..... Bari Boetww "--1 a .. c:ll, S. s.t..,e Qlieflll'-1..allle LI,._, M-takes its football team to Hawaii in September of 1982 the Chargers will be taking their sophomore team, too, to duel Punahou High -says athletic director Lyman Clower . . . Tim Holmes, a three- year starter al the University of Arizona as a re· cei ver. has reported called it quits. 16-8 1.' Chris Croc:llell·J•y Gra,,.., Ari-; 2. o. ... and s11 .... ICerlagan. 8""*"'; l. Pete Santley·Er1c: Lamlre. Newport 9eKfl; '-Sieve Orr· Tim Frltcllle. Vantlira; S. O.rrell H~Amy lllllo«, V•l'lbN'a. 1'-1 Randy H•tflaldo-IClm JacOll, l..ol'll BNdl~lfJtl ..... MIU Wood, s.n 01-. l. Terry ~Warr., Fr.r:~r ~ _---:-:i '· Dew ......... Susan ..,...,, ~ .. eel\; J TOOll Molr-ke ....._, s.11 OMea. 1 .. HOVICE-Oevkl Raval-Ml ... Mt'r9r, Vent-; i . Jim C.O,.W·alll JollnM>n, V9nt .. e; l. JOft AOem1-8r~e l!OW.,.dl. Ventur•. IS 1 Eerl KlnnemMI, Burtienk; o .... "9n'y, .. -. Base b a l l stand ings AMERICAN LEAGUE West DlvlJioa W L Pct. GB Oakland 37 22 .627 - Texas 32 21 .604 2 Chicago 29 22 .569 4 Angela 29 29 .500 7\h Kansas Cit}' 18 30 .375 13~ Seattle 20 3S .364 15 Mlnnesota 17 37 .315 17V\ Ea1& Dtvlsloa. New York 34' 20 .630 - Baltimore 30 22 .577 S Milwa~ee 30 24 .558 4 Boston 29 25 .537 5 Cleveland 28 23 .~l 5"" De-troll 29 26 .527 51,', Toronto 16 40 .288 19 ,...,..tc.. ..... ,~, Oeklellll U, ....._ M Otc.lltl, T.,.,.t New 'f'trtil. ~City S M1--..a,M1..._.I Oetrelt!!T-t ....... ~.1 T..,.19- CI_._. 1......-7•a) M ~ I~ W), ealtlmare (l'le11e9111 •·•I '' Oaklal'ltl , ... ,.,..wi I(._ City I~,. ~7) tt Tw..,.. C~ llilek M},11 " .... .,.,. tMe¥ .. , • Olk.let ce..n. N.l,"' Te-CMM!kll~l llMll__... C..._ M),11 o.tl'llt c-...11w111t Mi-.. , ... _ .. ti, ....... CT-M•'"'91 ,....,... t.lt,11 NATIONAL LEAGU~ Wu& Dlvhloa W L Pct. GB Dodgers 3S 20 .636 - Cincinnati 33 21 .611 1 ..... Houston 28 28 .500 7 ..... San Francisco 27 29 .482 8~ Atlanta 25 27 .481 8 ..... San Diego 22 23 .400 13 Eut Dlvtsloa Philadelphla 33 21 .611 - St. Louis 29 19 .604 1 Pittsburgh 25 22 .532-4'it Mon treat 28 25 .528 4\h New York 17 32 .347 13V\- CbJcago 12 37 .245 18V\ ~·lt-11. Lolli• .. ....,.' Olk ..... -,.,_._ • " I ....... -~~· '"°'•'·~··· .. --· * ~II ,...,,...,.. (11111 .. ,,... •· rilllll ~11.M ... 1 "" ................. . CIMlllMll ...... Yn 4 T..,..I._ ~C ...... 4o-tJ II lt.1.11111 CW-llM)1 II .... "'_,_et~~-.. -....... ..-. la" """'''" COrtffl11 •·•> •t Clllc ... ,,__. .. 1) AtleMI CllMHtr >OM MeMr9lll CW!tdl• t•>. II "-"" ,...,_. W> M ,.._.._.,..._ Cc.ttlll .. u,11 SM Dt1$1 ("°" ... "' W> et ......,_ '""'"' •ll,"' ~·-Ml• .................. . ! • I I : . llGlll lllCl/IDUTI ClllT Daily Pilat· WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1981 COMICS FEATURES TELEVISION . 84 85 87 Irvine car dealer's product isn't a gas to drive ... B9 D 0 1 Bottles of whiskey. changed their lives 1 -But Irvine inspectors have city jobs back Delly PttM,..... rt......,..,..,,_ Irvine city iMpector Bruce Bullard says he's happy to have hU job bock but unhappy about being fired in the first place. By RICHARD GREEN Of-. Delly~ It.ft Irvine city building inspectors Bruce Bullard and Art Peck say they still can't believe what they went through because of a cou- ple bottles of whiskey. Crank telephone calls. thousands of dollars in legal ex· penses and family strain are just three problems they say they've encountered as the re- sult of accepting bottles or Jack Daniels whiskey from a building contractor before last Christmas. They say 1t was the accept- ance of the whiskey that led the city to 'fire them early this year and also led the Orange County District Attorney's office to charge them with misdemeanor solicitation and acceptance of gratuities. Bullard, 50, Costa Mesa, and Peck, 51, Anaheim, were re· instated to their old jobs Monday after an administrative law judge who presided over a personnel hearing for the men found that the city didn't have just cause for firing them. Judge William F . Byrnes found that the city couldn't prove the men ever solicited the gifts in return for speedy build· ing inspections as the city had charged. Beach access issue heats up Coast unit's siding with public angers Emerald Bay By JOHN NEEDHAM Of ... Deity,..., .... County officials are calling a decision by the South Coast Regional Coastal Commission to demand publi c access to Emerald Bay Beach a "land grab." And the president of the Emerald Bay Community As- sociation says access will never be implemented because it would cause too many safety hazards in the area. In a split 6·5 vote Monday, the regional commissioners turned down Orange County's coastal plan for the Emerald Bay com- munity adjoining Laeuna Beach. and approved a measure requir· ing that the public be allowed to use the exclusive nine.acre beach. The Orange County plan calls for the 1,500-resident private community lo remain closed lo the public, citing parking and safety problems if it were opened. · Peter Herman. executive aide to county Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose 5th District in· eludes Emerald Bay, said the commission's ruling was •·ex- tremely disappointing, but ex- tremely expected." "I think it is an especially bad day for people when a govern-ment agency takes private prop- erty without paying_ for it," Herman said. "In effect, this is what is being done." Herman said he doesn't believe the decision to require public access could stand up to a legal test. and that the Orange County coastal plan complies with the California Coastal Act. Al Baldwin, president of the Emerald Bay Community Aa- sociation, said there is barely enough room on the beach for the 1,500 people Ii ving in the community. "We are already operaUng at full capacity down there," Baldwin said. "We 've bad to limit the number of guests a community member can · bring to the beach because there just isn't enough room." In addition, he said there is no place for people using the beach to park their cars except on Coast Highway, which would create a traffic hazard. Despite the ruling to demand a pub lic right-of-way, Mel Carpenter, executive director of the regional commission, said it is unlikely the public will be al· lowed in soon because the com- missioners have no authority to enforce their action. He said public access can only be required if· and when the Emerald Bay Community As- sociation asks the com- missioners for permission to , build new community facilities in the unincorporated area. "They can only be asked to make a dedication of access to the beach if they come in for permits for a commul')ity proj· ect, such as a new clubhouse, a pool, or a new tennis court," Carpenter said. He said access couldn't be re· quired for construction of single· family homes on the 25 un· developed lots in the gated com· munity, which straddles Coast Highway. He added that the com- mission's move Monday to re- quire access put it in a position to demand a right-of-way in the event the community associa- tion does ask to build new facilities. Carpenter said another way to get public access would be for the state to condemn the proper· ty, a move be said is unlikely. Association President Baldwin said as long as Emerald Bay is threatened with granting public access no permits will be sought to build nrw community facilities. 1 Niguel wins petition hacking County, state back move to form advisory cou-ricil Directors of the Laguna Niguel Community Association have won approval from county and state officials on their peti- tion to form a municipal ad- visory council in their unin- corporated community. Association President Paul Haseman said community mem· bers will begin circulating the petitions this week. At least 10 percent of all registered voters •within the proposed boundaries of the council's jurisdiction must sign the petition to qualify it for a vote in Novemher There are about 9,000 reg- istered voters ln the communi- ty, meaning at least 900 signatures are required to qualify the municipal advisory council (MAC). The newly formed MAC wouta be made up of residents of Laguna Niguel and surrounding communities included in its boundaries. They would make recommendations to county Coast panel OKs . plan to raise . levies The South Coast Regional Coastal Commission bas ap- proved a plan to raile the levees alona San Juan Creek near Dana Point to prevent further fioodin& near the waterway. Plana for the fl. 7 million nooct control project now will 10 to I.he Oran1e County Board of SuperviJon tor final approval. The project calla for about 100,000 cubic yards of aand to be dredJed f!'OU:-the creek bottom and depolH.a on the levffl, rift· nilll from Caplltrano BeaC!b to about• mile laland. Two yean •Co a,.u Of Daaa Polnt ...,.. noodH when lbt creek overflowed durina heavy rains, causing heavy damaae to a sewaae treatment facility on Del Obispo Street and mobile ·homes along the creek bank. Orange County nood coattol officlals have been 1tymied in their efforts to dred1e the creek bed became of • State Couta.l Commi11ion requirement that the dredled sand be placed on Doheny Beach. The CCKmty wanted to Mll the und to help offset tbe cott ol lta removal. The atate com· rnl11lon'1 m&Ddate meam tbe count,.y WOUid have bad to 1pend H addlticinal '580,000 to com· plete the dnditn;. supervisors on matters concern- ing planning, health, safety and public works in their area. By forming the MAC, it is hoped the area will have more clout in decision making al the county level, Haseman said. However, the advisory panel can only make recommendations to Orange County supervisors. If the MAC wins voter ap· proval in November, it will be the third to be formed in the county. The two others are in the Mission Viejo and Tustin Hills communities. The boundaries of the Laauna Nieuel MAC include all of Oran1e County Service Area 3, which now provides municipal services to the area. When community asaoclation direct.ors voled to form tbe MAC ln January, they included the Bear Brand Ranch area, which ii not part of the service area. Haseman said the area baa now been excluded from the MAC boundaries for the time be- ln1, pendlnc the outcome of hearlna• by the Local A1ency FormatJon Commlaalon to de- cide whether tbe parcel •bould be included in service area S. "If it ls included we wUJ amend 'tne ,.altlGia to brine Biar Brud Into U. MAC.·• u ... man aatd. "But lt we included It now and It 11 decided It •bouldln't come bato u.e HfVice area our petJtlon woUld be Oawed.'' And the mere acceptance of the gifts isn't grounds for dis- missal, Byrnes said in recom- mending to City Manager William Woollett Jr. that they be returned to their jobs. Woollett complied with the recommenda· lion and Bullard and Peck re· joined the city inspection crew Monday. After quitting time, the two men said in an interview that they feel exonerated and are hopeful that the misdemeanor charges against them will be 1 dropped. But they both added that the experience of the past six months will stay with them for the rest of their lives "This guy kept calling up my house and saying 'You're a thief.' " Peck said. "Well. if the guy has my phone number, I figured maybe he has my ad · dress and I was concerned about the safety of my wife and daui;?hter." Peck said that he has a con· tractor's license and was able to work in the construction field after being fired from the city. He said, however, that he has a permanent arthritic disability in his hip and that the work he was able to gel tended to aggravate the medical problem. At the same time, the loss of his city job meant that he had no medical insurance for himself and his family. Bullard said that he wasn't able to find a job after being fired from his city job and that the $15,000 he spent in attorney fees drained a college fund he had set up for his children. Peck said he also spent $15,000 in at- torney fees during city person- nel hearings. Because of the legal fees, Bullard said bis 18-year-old son, Bryan, who bas just completed his freshman year at Harvey Mudd College, will be going to a less expensive, public school next school year. Bryan Bullard was a valedictorian at Costa Mesa High School last June. Bullard said the whole ex- perience was also tough on his 17-year-old son, Brent, who goes to Costa Mesa High School. "Kids were coming up to him and saying. 'Is that your dad who is the crook'?'' Bullard said. The two men said that, despite all the bad experiences they've encountered over the past six months, they feel good about the way their friends and co· workers rallied in their defense. And they said that their first day back on the job was a good one, despite the fact that they are now assigned lo less· ch~llenging work than before they were fired. Both men said that the inci- dent may have insured that they will never move up to ad· minlstrative positions in the city and that they might have trouble getting a job if they ever leave the city's employ. After his first day back on the job, city inspector Art Peck ~aid his co-workers have supported him ever since the day he was fired. Anthony pressed again to resign An Irvine woman asked for Councilman Art Anthony's res· ignation Tuesday night, saying she didn't know how to explain to her lO ·year-old son how someone charged with a violent crime can serve on the Irvine City Council. "What do I tell him?" asked Dorothy Curhan. "I now feel em· barrassed that Anthony still sits on the council after the violence . . . He should resign from the council and save the city further embarrassment.·· Anthony res ponded to Mrs. Curhan by saying that he is inno· cent of the charges of assault with a deadly weapon that he faces in connection with an at· tack on his wife, Elaine. "I haven't yet had a pre- liminary hearing on this and to assume my guilt is to leave out a few steps in our judicial proc-. ess," Anthony said at the meet· ing. Anthony said this morning that Mrs. Curhan should ''e" plain this country's legal system l!J her son or anybody else who asks." Under state law, Anthony would be forced to resign from the City Council if he is convict- ed of a felony. At this point he is only charged with the crime. This is the second consecutive City Council meeting in which a member of the public has asked for Anthony's resignation. At a City Council meeting two weeks ago, Gene Peters of Irvine said Anthony shouldn't be serving on the council. Anthony, offered no comment at that time. At that meeting, Irvine resi· dent Kay DeVita spoke in favor of Anthony serving as a city councilman and another An· thony supporter echoed her com- ments Tuesday night. Anthony said this morning that he has received about 100 supportive cards and letters and about 5 letters that expressed negative sentiments. The 200-pound former Marine colonel said be is feeling better t hese days as the result of physical and psychiatric treat- ment he has been receiving since the alleged attack on bis wife. He is alleged to have beaten her and inflicted a superficial gunshot wound on her head on the night of April 9 inside their Irvine home. The couple has since recon· ciled and Mrs. Anthony has said she does't intend to testify against her husband. Anthony said this morning he will not ask that Friday mom· ing's preliminary hearing in Harbor Municipal Court be closed to the press -as is his right under exisUng law. I l., I I ! I ' t I I i ' I l l I ; ' I l SOCK IT TO •EM DEPT. - Sometimes you get the impression that some of the people who live in Emerald Bay just outside of Laguna Beach are a touch snooty. For starters, you know, it's a private enclave where they have gate guards and streets with bumps in them that they own themselves, nice tennis courts and their own little cove with a sandy white beach. tn Emerald Bay, the old r:noney drives a Ford station wagon and the kids have a BMW each. The new arrivals are in Mercedes or Rolls. When you ask them where they live, tfiey answer s imply. ''The Bay." Uu- derline The. l'VE GOT LOTS of friends in Emerald Bay and I think it's a pretty .. Look out. Alice! The coastal czar! are atacking ' your cUck." neat place. I like riding around in their old Ford station wagons and making (un of their fire department. It is, however, their own fire depart- ment. Others, however, don't share my view. They hate Emerald Bay and all it represents; the vile, despicable rich; safe behind their guarded gates, sipping from chilled glasses, lounging on the beach and counting their coupons. Vile and hateful. Capitalist terribleness of the first order. People get worked up like this and turn colors. Mainly green, with envy. TmS MUST BE TRUE for a majori· ty of members of the regional Coastal Commission and those bureaucratic functionari1!s they call their staff. Color them Emerald Green. For years, the coastal czars have been trying to figure a way to force Emerald Bay people to grant a public easement through their private streets to the beach below. Since Emerald Bay was built before most anything along this coastline, and ,certainly before these bureaucrats were even nasty dreams, they've had a tough time forcing the public right-of-way. Now Just this week, the regional Coastal Commission majority rejected Orange County's land use plan for the Emerald Bay-Allview Terrace area. THE REASON? Because the county plan doesn't contain a provision that would force confiscation of a public right-of-way into Emerald Bay the.very next time the community association tries to get a county building permit for anything. Don't try to build any tennis courts or rebuild the clubhouse or zappo! It's land theft time. Actually, we should probably ex- amine the abysmal stupidity of what the regional Coastal Commission czars want. They want access to a beach where there is no parking except on the most dangerous S-curve in the Orange County sector of Pacific Coast Highway. That's for starters. THE BEACHFRONT RULERS seek this confiscated access in the name of "the public" -that's you and me -so visitors can jam into a little cove that is already utilized by 1,500 members of the community that is already there . Meanwhile; immediately next door to Emerald Bay, the state has opened up a public beach park at El Morro, Crystal Cove and Scotchman's Cove where they already have inadequate public p<H"king, a few scattered outhouses, no public con- cessions and the potential this summer for the biggest mess in the history of our coastline. And against this backdrop, the state beach czars want to do the same thing to Emerald Bay. Of course they do. The Emerald Bay people have a nice place now. And you can't have that. So join me with Allee as we wander through the looking glass . . . .fish Fry procee~ dip I Costa Mesa event raises $130,000, down $19 ,000 ' . . tWh1le Costa Mesa -Newport first place 10 the "open" Maranatha Christian arbor Lions Club members category; Academy, best junior majorette old more fish dinners than ever Garden Grove Strawberry team; t this year's 36th annual Fish Festival, sweepstakes float; Continental Cadettes of Hunt- ti'ry in Costa Mesa, gross pro-' City of Costa Mesa, float ington Beach, best senior ma- eeds are down a notch, a theme winner; jorette team; pokesman said Monday. International Guiding Eyes, Sun Seekers of Fountain Early tabulations indicate the civics float; Valley, best junior majorette lub will gross about $130,000 Girls Club of the Harbor Area, corps; his year ~rom al_l events includ· best y~uth <!r religious float; Pal Twirlers of Placentia, best ng carmval rides and con-Bobs Big Boy, best com-seniormajorettescorps· essions, down about $19,000 mercial float; w t ' rom last year's figures. City of Westminster, best city-b es 8!'1'ettt:s of Costa Mesa, Last year's efforts netted sponsored float; est seru~r drill team; ,OOQ,Jor charity. Net figures El Bekal Shrine Temple, . ~estmmster Coronettes, best or this year's three-day event Anaheim best drum and bugle JUD!Or drill team; bat ended Sunday won't be corps; ' ~.dwards.Air Force Base, best vaUable for at least a week, of-Ex ca Ii burs of Ranch 0 m1htary drill team; icials indicated. Cucamonga, best percussion Santa Ana Winds, best tall· The Fish Fry and Parade ex-group; flags drill team; ravag8Jl%a, largest annual com-Garden Grove Elks Lodge, Irvine Police Department, unity event held in Costa best clown group; best color guard; etJ, features a baby contest, Legion of Honor, El Bekal of Bobby Vigil of Santa Fe e selection of Miss Mermaid Anaheim, best novelty group; Springs and Clarence Sultzer of nd Miss Costa Mesa -a double John Carra's Buick racer, vin-Montebello, best equestrian ltle -and a para~e down tage 1909, best antique auto; · division marshals; arbor Boulevard to Lions Park Brion Munsey of Estancia E .P .l. Corral No. 20 of n the downtown area. High School, best high school Sunland, best mounted color Lions Club officials have re· drum major; guard; eased a list of this year's win-Dana Rott, Maranatha Chris· M o d j es It a M aver i ks of era who participated in the tian Academy, best junior bigh Orange, best mounted group; 60-entry event. drum major; Betty and Ed Tlllaky of They are: Greg Rockford of the Santa Yucaipa, best matched pair; Santa Ana Winds, band Ana Winds, best youth drum ma-Linda Rombauab of Fontana, tt'eepstakes tropl}Y; jor; best fancy Western equestrian Eatanci~ High School, best Mel Sugitan, March ~lr Force lady; igb school band; . Base, best military arum ma· Harold White of Ontario, best Mar an at b a Cb r 11 tl an Jor; fancy equestrian man; cademy of Santa Ana, beat Karen Dicks of Maranatha Cindy Vigil of Santa Fe nzl'!'°~'1-~d!; i Christian Academy, best JunJor Springs, best Spanish open "UC"IC ~ o Cerr tos, best majorette; · equestrian; termediate band; Donald Garcia of Walnut Hip Darryl Nelson of West Covina March Air Fnrce Base Band, School, best solo major; beat novelty equestrian; ' ' Jan• Morino of Los Alamitos, ssembl~n due ;:;:;·~ealtli t UCI graduation runs planned . A11emblyman John Vatcon· llot, D-San Jose, will be the ~mote 1peaker at UC Irvine'• b commencement Saturda7 4 p.m. ln campua Pan. Student apelken et UM eom-NiiiM. .... allft4.t ~ --~MUte. •raduat• ud ...... •••d••t• •lll b• ............. will be RObert ,, A .... Of rl'omtalA VaU., iDd D .. l•I L .Jollaton of Loa ~: 11:...U Kq, turs-. ~ ol ftte Unla.d llaa., ..-J ~ apeak al the UCJ Collea• ~ Medlcine'• present.a· lion of candidates, Friday at 4 p.m . ln Campq1 Part, the center of tbe un!v.nlty. Allo Friday• Phi Bet.a Kappa will lnlUat• 117 nominen at cerelDCIOlft In tile P'tne Artl Vlll••• 'lbeater at t :IO p.m. Then at I p.m._ an boaon "°91· vocaUon will be held ln Crawford Hall . Stadent1 'sractutlnc twnma cum IMiclli, ma1na cum laud• and cum laud• from vartout acMoll IDd prosnrm will be~ The Oran&e <;:ounty Associ•· lion for Mental Health will be holdlnt a s, 10 ind JO kilometer run to empbaalie tbt rela· Uouhlp between &ood mental ...................... ~­....................... bi liilllt. 1!1cb nm Will re,tuN 11 .... aroup cat.eiOrMI u well u eom-...UU. tor Wblelcbair entrata. Medilllkml '"11 be awuded to the flnt man and woman nn....-..1n.u .. ....-.. Entl"aDN ftle II ... or tT.IO wlth .., n•l T-ablrt. Fences boosted in Mesa Costa Mesa City CouncU mem- bers have unanimously endorsed regulations allowina owners of homes alon~ major streeta to bulld 8-foot-higb concrete or block walls for noise attenuatioo. Previously. owners wanting fences higher than 6 feet bad to seek variances from the city at a cost or about $2S. Now. only buildln1 permits are required for taller fences along major streets. Six-foot fences have been stand- ard i>ractice in the city because of construction ease and less- con fining appearances, said Doue Clark, plannio& director. Clark also noted there is some question regarding erfectiveness of tailer fences in cutting back noise and produced sound studies indicating little resulting relief. But Jack Dougan, whose Flamingo Drive home is ex· posed to busy Adams A venue along one side, told the council Monday that traffic noise is "deplorable" and threatened to sue the city if some relief is not made avail~ble. And while Councilman Donn Hall pushed for help on behalf of Adams Avenue area homeowners , other Costa Mesans argued for higher fences for crime prevention. Lee Gibbs told the council his Pitcairn Drive neighborhood has been hit bard by burglars. --·------ Dally ............. " .IC ....... It ....... "We're looking al security, we don't care about noise,'' he ad- monished. . Burglars, he told the council, "climb over the (six-foot-high) fence, go through the door -in and out-and they're gone." BRIDGE WORK -Baker Street widening project, which began in April, is closer to completion as workmen pour concrete on one side of new bridge that will span Santa Ana- Delhi flood control channel east of Bristol Street in Costa Mesa. When completed Baker Street will be six lanes wide. Gibbs said he hadn't been hit because he had kept a St. Bernard in his yard. Crash victlln honored "He died," Gibbs told the council. Irvine Day set at Angels game A plaque honoring Sa n Clemente resident Larry Freeman, who was killed last November in a mid-air collision, has been donated to Dana Hills High School in Dana Point. Mr Fl;eeman. a flight photog- rapher for Hughes Aircraft Co., was killed when the heli copter he was ridtng in collided with a plane near Oceanside. The Irvine Chambe r of Com- merce, the Board of Realtors and Sports Club will be sponsor- ing an Irvine Day at Anaheim Stadium, July 19, when the Angels play the New York Yankees in a 1 p.m. baseball game. A group of his friends also donated large, raised lettering for the school 's football stadium s pelling "Hom e of the Dolphins.'' Mr. Freeman and hi::; wife. Barbara, an attendance clerk at Dana Hills, were long· time supporters of the school football program. On nurse board Michael R. Deblieux of Irvine, assistant to the director of the UCI Medical Center , has been elected to the board of directors of the 130-me mbe r Visiting Nurse Association of Orange County. Tickets are available at the Chamber office, 2801 McGaw Ave., for $4.50 each. 10 steps · toa success al garage sae. Ga1age Hies. yard Hlea. rummage Hlff. atrHt 1ai.1 no matter wn11 you call them. the Idea I• the aame -TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER NEED INTO CASH When you gat tired of hghting your WIV Into I crowded atllo or g.wege. or when you need e httle extr1 oun. ,.,. ... 1 garage Hlel So get Into the act. oleen out lho91 unw1nted items. and m.U money d01ng 111 II a fun. It'• profitable, and following 1""41 10 steps will make •t simple 1 Decide on dates. Look at 1 ca tender end NI the da1t1 end 11me1 of your • aale. Weekends are uauelty good, but m1ny aucceasful aalff hive ~n held 1n thl 9Wfltng 1ust af1er work Ctieo1' the -•her forecaet •n thl peper and wttcn for 911y othe1 11rge ewnt thll ~ 1ttract potenttal buyers ew-v. such as l11rs or oommun1ty even ta Have your Siie run at least rwo d1ys-. some people may not be Ible to come on any single d8y 4 Where to advertise. Place your ad wnere It Wiii be Men by people wno hve 1n tile area -most people ShOi> close to home The • Delly Pilot 11 read by 88.000 ldutts 1n COsta Mesa. Newpott Beach L1gune BNcn Irvine. Huntington Beach end Fountain V1lley -guer1n~1ng you wide e•posu1e And with the P•lot y<>u re not p1y1ng for waste circulation In Los Angeles or Anaheim ~Ian to run your ad 3 t1me1 or more 1nd auirt 11 e few dip before the Nie ao blrgetn hunteB can h .... piel'1ty of no11oe Z What to sell. E .. ry1h1ngt Thlt IS. evetYlhlng you he .. n·t used tn the last yeer It an item hU lllllQUe v1lue or Is brand-n-. • or has unusu1t v11ue. be_. to Uk 1 heallhy puce for 11 Get a pld ot peper and -ch your wnot1 llOuse 5 Make a sign. To help make your 11le suc:c:essful make 1 few s1gn1 • trom ~rdboard end let• ""th 1 magic marker A good algn 11m ta 14" x 22" Look everywhere, end lilt IMlfYlhlng ........... fhle It your -In attfti0110n end your beat aource of Income Be llUl'I to place furn1tu,. wtlefe II can be -from the lt19et Price lum•ture low 1no119h to OMt 1uchona and MCOndh1nd aales (checle the clasltfteda for comp1rtton1~ but hlgn anough IO you c1n come down I little When IOmec>nl snows lntlefeat RocktnQ oh1lrw. chett of~ tablff end chl lft •tall...,.., IUC~ul at OW• ...... IO featUft them in your Id. ......_ Smeller anliqlMI 1hould be grt>uped, end lcept CIOM et hand whert y<>u cen wttCh and llllk lbOut them Hottalg11 --...,.., populer -diaptay them -11 CWW.,. Mlkt ain clothing 11 clNn. end mark the p(lce wly down. Put • mltlY thlnge as poealble on hengera. Seperate klcl't lhlng11 by 1119 Oiepllly lldull clothing by tall arid 11119 Gf0\11> Low Pf'lcet .,. a ..., on clothet tllOID4 tor unuauel i•ma. which ehould ~.lagg9d \lllln an txplan1Uon (ltke, "h~oldefad lloweft. dretewom ~ Wt1t~" •o; • -T wlll Mlt fbr 1 tw price only 11 they WOf'll No one .-ill lllM yow wont tor II Ha11e 1n elftlMIOn cord 10 they oen be ... led, Of' btti.r y.t. hlM radlol pleylng. old TV Mii fumed on llC. Melle tufe buyen undlrltlnd ltley WI 90ld .... Lt .. ....._ TlllH 1m11lty go lat bYt ""9 thin\ out of • direct 1unllght. A good ldM le IO -your Plantt before the "" (Spidlr Uldy. Coualn Jaeper. Mmggle~ end write • line« two °" the nam1 c.ra *"' how to '*9 tor them 6 Placing your sf9'. The morning of the 1111, but !IOt before, place your • ttgna. Be aure end ldd your lddres. and 1ny d1rec11on11 wows Th IS tlhOU4d bl dOnt 1bout • hell hOur bel«• lhe ae• statt&. Piece ycMK lign wn.. It can tie Hen lrom both tioe. of lhl street by pess1ng ca.ra 1nd pedetlfl1ns CAl.ITION Some towna hive l•w• th1t r111trlct the pleoement and duration of garage 1111 signs Please check wUhyou< 1own·1 planning deplttment Of clark 1 Marking prices. '-'atk prla. whetl they cen be -clMtly Offlol • aupply tlOrlS he .. Ylroiul .. _Ind COloft of ahCklfl that work well, Of you C1n ..-. mlSklng tape H-you merk them _.. ,.-.... Garege Hie• ere IOI' 1>1rv1•n hunteft Remember • ....,, .. _ you c1n·1 1111 you II hive lo dreg b1clt In tlw hol.e and 1tor1 1g1ln lor 1no1titt year 8 Senlng refnshmellh. Thi• cioean't h•ve to CCIII much. end cl'I••• • 1ri.nc11y • tlm09phlre It no anooureg11 PIOPle to 111y l<>ngtt Ind pemepe buy mof'e You i:oulCI -ctwve for 1xp1n1lve lttme Ukt donull. °'the kldl coulO go In bullMM lof Ille dey, IOjfth t ltmooe<'t t tand, 9 Display. J ~-U.--~ Miiie 1ur1 9\llfY\hlng CM tie 11111 Hew cans tlblff or nntw yotr lllUt • botrdl wtet • tlleMll ~ lWI> ctllil'L Don't ..... It. •uggMtld M ' "Otrltlle Slla -::;· I cautt ~!>II to bend -..we.~ c.n't h9lp It. u .. Ben..___. ~ ._.__.,. ' • ....., ont •bit II I dNll wf*9 yolj <*! .. t\'efYthlng Ind • •-rockiflQ ,....., • ~. •n••,. c • ,-.; take money UM only ona CMll boa (lift c.tnl OI' bollM ~ ll't ontlNit~ ft'llny ~. ti ot wOfll f-lnd !MM IUl'9~ it~ un111Ue11teme, roctt ~. pi9ntl. AetrMmtnta, I .. c:etN9t-:-' It •II tlfMI .__ bMotttlend 1..,, 1 frtend a.1n toe pm lllt1Hdeylndluncley t1134 aoutll · ~ ... .,.. "" ~. YO\H'tOwn Ju1t ._ ~ Mein end Ind .. wtlO c.n nelp en_, quwtlQllt, rtlttf IOf lunch, ttc UM 11111 .. ~ Id 11 • QUldt It IUl'e to 1191 u1tUtUat ,..,,.. .. • 1"9Clfto • poeeeet OMt dlrletlont It llca..c" WW. ... ~ .ct i.-o 00n t UM :---•-mtl"Y peopla WOft t r~-CIOIMf to dtclptle:r I ~ Don't__..... frtHch envtntno yOu don't rMlty ,,.,_ Ewry Item In 111110' mutt bl on hind It 1111 ..,. .. ..... ..... ... If llnV •••II to j0\11 fO'lf .... '"'" liolll .... yOU __.,. '° "*-~With Ind inCf9Me ll't'9f'eet lft,. ..... °'*' lOWI '°"'.,. .... '° ......... Ill 'your ICI .... mplt ''ttl,_.lmt~ ..... '·~ ... ") Ol'ou,...., _,lot"'°"' 1111'1, too t I j j I l l I D1llyPll1t WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1981 COM ICS F.E ATURES TELEVIS ION 84 BS 8 7 Irvine car dealer's pr.oduct isn't a gas to drive ... 89 Anthony responds to call to resign. By BJCllABD GREEN °' .. ..., ........... An Irvine woman asked for Councilman Art. Anthony's res· lgnation Tuesday night, saying she didn't know how to explain to her 10-year-old son how someone charged with a violent crime can serve on the Irvine Ci· ty Council. "What do I tell him?" asked Dorothy Curhan. "I now feel em· barrassed that Anthony still sits on the council alter the violence . . . He should resign from the. council and save the city further embarrassment.'' Anthony responded to Mrs. Curban by saying that be ls inno- cept of the charges of assault with a deadly weapon that he faces in connection with an at· tack on his wife, Elaine. ''I haven't yet bad a pre· llminary hearing on this and to assume my «iuilt ls to leave out a few steps in our Judicial proc· ess," Anthony said at the meet· ing. Anthony said thia morning that Mrs. Curhan should "explain this country's legal system to her son or anybody else wbo asks." Under state law, Anthony would be forced to resign from the City Council if he is convict· ed of a felony. Al this point he is only charged with the crime. This ls the second consecutive City Council meeting in which a member ol the public bas asked for Anthony's resignation. At a City Council meeting two weeks ago, Gene Peters of Irvine said Anthony shouldn't be ser ving on the council. Anthony, CAMPING OUT -. Irvine's Turtle Rock Com· munity.P.ark was turned into a miniature tent city when youngsters learned some camping techniques. J eannette Fylpaa, 7, and Bri;in Reid, 6, hike with backpacks almost as big as they are. Heather Podlich, 8 pounds a stake and Jason Seitz.? 6, pulls up his tent. Activity was just one 01 many supervised events at the park. Coastal area· crashes · kill 4 Teen , due for Newport graduati on , among victi ms "' .. Four people have been killed and two others seriously Injured in a series of traffic accidents in the Orange Cout area. Fatal victim• included a 17· year-old girl due to be '1'aduated from Newport Harbor Hiah Sebool 1bunday, a H-year-old woman rtdlq on the back of a motorcycte in Newport Beach, a Hunllqton Beach man drivtna alone ln SAnta Ana and a JOWll Marine wboM motorcycle col· Uded wtth an auto lo Irvine. Police 1ave the followina ac· counts: · -Rew B Rumble, 29, ol 1 .. Blue . Water Lane, Huntlniton Beac:b , wu killed 1hortly aft.r mldnlebt tOday wbn Iii• eu 1tnek • ....-.u oa &be La Veta Awnue estt ol the SlnU AnaJl'rMway. -A aWJ unidentified 36--year· old woman was killed while rid· lng on the back of a motorcycle in Newpc-rt Beach. She was thrown after the cycle crubed and struck 1 pardrall 1outh of Irvine Avenue and ·norih o("' Heather Lane in Newpor Beach. She dJed at Fountain Valley Community Hotpit al followin1 the 10:~ p.m.1'\aelday accident. -JW ~ Gerondale, 1'7, ol 428 E. Utb SL, Costa ll11a I 1enlor at Newpott Harbor Wp School, wu kUled wbea a car In wblcb 1ht waa a .. p 111en1er rolleCI OTeJ' HVtral Um• ,.._. day at 5 p.m. on Bear 8b'Mt ne1r 90utb eo.t DrtYe l• Cclita II••· T'be driver, Erin K8WMD DaYit, IT, NeWport Beach, a180 a Harbor Hl1h ·senior, waa hospitalized with multiple in· juries. -Lance Cpl. Keven R. Van Pelt was killed Monday when bis motorcycle collided with a car at the intersection of Irvine Center Drive and Oran1e Tree Street in Irvine. In Huntin1ton Beach, two persons on a motol'cycle were 1erlously hurt when they col· Uded with a station wa1on at the hiteraection ol Warner Avenue· and Edwards Street ,In Hunt· lnston Beach. , Karl E . Yeater, 20, of '762 Warner Ave .• Huadfta1on Beacb, was =r;; ID crlt.lcal condi· tJ0n at f'ountaln V all•Y Com Japital. Hll ,..._.er, Bever))' A. Ed· ha.,_, •. ot H512 Tripp Drive, Runtlnltiili BMeb, wu· ltaud lD aertoua condJtiOft. offe red no comment at that time.' At that meeting, lrvme res1· dent Kay DeVita spoke in favor of Anthony serving as a city councilman and another An· thony supporter echoed her com- ments Tuesday night. Anthony said this morning that he has re<:elved about 100 supportive cards and letters and about 5 letters that expres~ed negative sentiments. The 2D(}-pound former Marine colonel said he is feeling better these days as the result of physical and psychiatric treat· ment he has been receiving since the alleged attack on hia wife. He is alleged to have beaten her and inflicted a superficial gunshot wound on her head on the night of April 9 inside their Irvine home. The couple has since recon· ciled and Mrs. Anthony has said she doesn't intend to testify against her husband. Anthony said this morning he will not ask that Friday morn· ing's preliminary hearing in Harbor Municipal Court be closed to the press -as la his right under existing law. ~ The preliminary bearing ls the step when a determination is made u to whether there is auf. ficient evidence against a person charged with a felony to have that person tried ln Superior Court. Orange County Deputy Dis· trict Attorn~y Pattie Manoukian l s ays she intends to proceed with the case with or without the J' testimony of Mrs. Anthony. Super 80 jets 'loud' I But noise levels from John Wayne still be low other aircraft ·1 I The new McDonnell Douglas DC·9 Super 80s are continuing to depart John Wayne Airport with noise levels above those officials had anticipated, but well below readings logged by other jet aircraft The first commercial flight of the Super 80 from Orange Coun· ty occurred June 1. Since then, according to officials of the airport noise abatement office, the jet has logged composite noise readings in the range of 95 to 96 decibels on the Community Noise Equivalent Level scale. By contrast. older DC·9·30s Barranca crosswalk ordered Irvine City Council members have ordered a temporary crosswalk to be put in the vicini· ty of the dama1ed Barranca Parkway footbridge. The council action came Tues· day night after aeveral mem· hers of the community said they t\ad witnessed people who were almost rut by cars while jay- walking across Barranca Parkway below the footbridge. The southern span of the low wooden bridge was destroyed when a tall truck sla mmed into the structure last month. Officials from the Irvine Com· pany. owner of the footbridge over Barranca Pa,rkway near Lake Road, said the bridge can't be completely repaired un· tll Sept. 1. They say the delay is caused by dilficulty in getting wooden beams for the bridge. The bridge provides the Irvine city bike trail over Barranca Parkway and serves as a main pedestrian and bicycle access into the Woodbridge Village Shopping Center, the largest shopping center in Irvine. Both the bridge and the shop· ping center were built about 18 months ago by the Irvine Com· pany. The company bas yet to officially give the bridge to the city. The insurance carrier for the Don Hart Low-Bed Trucking Co. in Placentia is to pay for the re· pair of the bridge, an Irvine Company spokesman said. Vern Hardy, the driver of the Dow Hart Co. truck that hit the bridge, complained that the structure had no sign indicating limited clearance. T he existing section of the bridge now carries such a sign. and Boeing 737s produce com· posite noi se readings 3.5 to six decibels louder than the Super 80, despite the fact the Super 80 is a larger, heavier aircraft. During a demonstration flight in August, the Super 80 logged a composite noise reading of 90.5 db CNELon takeoff. Officials believe that figure could be achieved routinely if the Federal Aviation Ad· ministration would modify a reg- ulation governing the manner in which pilots may r educe thrust during takeoffs. Such a modification is being sought by AirCal, owner of the Super 80 now in use at the airport, and , county government officials. A ' decision is pending. j Current s tandards require 1 commercial jet pilots to bring their aircraft to an altitute or 1,000 feet before instituting a power cutback. AirCal and coun· ty officials want the cutback altitude lowered to 500 feet. The Super 80 is being used on four of AirCal 's daily de· partures. AirCal uses Boeing 737s on the remainder of its fli ghts. AirCaJ will soon be taking de· Ii very or a second Super 80s. Each plane is costing the airline about $22 million. l l 1 r I I . Emerald Bay upset over access ruling ' I f By JOHN NEEDHAM Oft• o.lly ...... Staff County officials are caJling a decision by the South Coast Regional Coastal Commission to demand public access to Emerald Bay Beach a "land grab." And the president of the Emerald Bay Community As- sociation says access will never be implemented because it would cause too many safety hazards in the area. In a split 6-5 vote Monday, the regional commissioners turned down Orange County's coastal plan for the Emerald Bay com· munity adjoining Laguna Beach, and approved a measure rtctuir· ing that the public be allowed to use the exclusive nine-acre beach. The Orange County plan calls for the 1,500-resident private community to remain closed to Two in Irvine held in theft Two Irvine r esidents have been arrested on burglary charges in connection with the theft of $13,065 worth of items from a house in Irvine, police said . Brenda Lee Burt, 19, and Marion Stephen Charley, 30, both of 18 Streamwood Lane, Irvine, were arrested at 10 p.m. Tuesday at their residence, ac· cording to police. About $10,000 worth of valua· ble report~ stolen in a burglary of a house al Redwood Tree Lane was recovered at the home or Ms. Burt and Charley, police said. the public, citing parking and safety problems if it were opened. Peter Herman, executive aide to county Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose 5th District in· eludes Emerald Bay. said the commission's ruling was "ex- tremely disappointing, but ex· tremely expected.'' ··I think it is an especially bad day for people when a govern- m ent agency takes private prop- erty without paying for it," , Herman said. "In effect, this is what is being done." Herman s aid he doesn't believe the decision to require • public atcess could stand up to a legal test, and that the Orange County coastal plan complies • with the California Coastal Act. Al Baldwin, president of the , Emerald Bay Community As· sociatioo, said there is barely enough room on the beach for the l ,500 people living in the community. "We ue already operating at rull capacity down there, .. Baldwin said. "We've had to limit the number of guests a community member can bring to the beach because there just isn't enough room." Jn addition, he said there is no place for people using the beach to park their cars except on Coast IDghway, which would create a traffic hazard. Despite the ruling to demand a public right -of·way , Mel Carpenter, executive director of the regional commission, said it is unlikely the public will be al· lowed ln soon because the com· missioners have no authority to enforce their action. .1 I • ·r~--... q-...... ~---..... -.............. -·---· ..... *""'!" ............. "'!""'W., .... -.... -.---........... 'l"'V'.; ..... --.... --......... -... --.-·._.--..... r"'. __ _._ ___ _._ _ _.., __ ~-- - - - • yours is mine, pal SOCK IT TO •EM DEPT. - Sometimes you get the impression that some of the people who live in Emerald Bay just outside or Laguna Beach are a touch snooty. For starters, you know, it's a private enclave where they have gate guards and streets with bumps in them that b.)' ----------------~ TOM MORPHINE ,wit they own themselves, nice tennis courts and their own litUe cove with a sandy white beach. Jn Emerald Bay, the old money drives a Ford station wagon and the kids have a BMW each. The new arrivals are in Mercedes or Rolls. When you ask them where they live, they answer simply, "The ·say." Uu· derline The. l'VE GOT LOTS of friends in Emerald Bay and I think it's a pretty "'Look out, Alice' The coaatal czau are atockmg your deck."' neat place. I like riding around in their old Ford station wagons and making.fun of their fire department. It is, however, their own fire depart· ment. Others, however, don't share my view. They hate Emerald Bay and all it represents; the vile. despicable rich; safe behind their guarded gates, sipping from chilled glasses, lounging on the beach and counting their coupons. Vile and hateful. Capitalist terribleness of the first order. People get worked up like this and turn colon. Mainly areen. with envy. · TIDS MUST BE TRUE for a majori· ty of members of the regional Coastal Commission and those bureaucratic functionaries they call their staff. Color them Emerald Green. For years, the coastal czars have been trying to figure a way to force Emerald Bay people to grant a public easement through their private streets to the beach below. Since Emerald Bay was built before most anything along this coastline, and certainly before these bureaucrats were even nasty dreams, they've had a tough time forcing the public right-of -way. Now just this week, the regional Coa.stal Commission majority rejected Orange County's land use plan for the Emerald Bay·A11view Terrace area. THE REASON? Because the county plan doesn't contain a provision that would force confiscation of a public right-of -way into Emerald Bay the. very next time the community association tries to get a county building permit for anything. Don't try to build any tennis courts or rebuild the clubhouse or zappo! It's land theft time. Actually, we should probably ex· amine the abysmal stupidity of what the regional Coastal Commission czars want. They want access to a beach where there is no parking except on the most dangerous &-curve in the Orange County sector of Pacific Coast Highway. That's for starters. THE BEACHFRONT RULERS seek this confiscated access in the name of "the public" -that's you and me -so visitors can jam into a little cove that is already utilized by 1,500 members of the community that is already there. Meanwhile: immediately next door to Emerald Bay, the state has opened up a public beach park at El Morro, Crystal Cove and Seotchman's Cove where they already have inadequate public parking, a few scattered outhouses, no public con· cessions and the potential this summer for the biggest mess in the history of our coastline. And against this backdrop, the state beach czars want to do the same thing to Emerald Bay. Of course they do. The Emerald Bay people have a nice place now. And you can't have that. So join me with Alice as we wander through the looking glass . . . , Fish Fry proceeds dip ' Co sta Mesa event raise~ $130 ,000, down $19 ,000 '.While ~osta Mesa.Newport first ·place in the •-'open" Harbor Lions Club members ~ategory ; td more fish dinners than ever Garden Grove Strawberry this year's a6th annual Fish Festival, sweepstakes float ; y in Costa Mesa, gross pro-City of Costa Mesa. float eds are down a notch, a theme winner; kesman said Monday. · International Guiding Eyes, l Early tabulations indicate the civics float; ub will gross about $130,000 Girls Club of the Harbor Area, is year from all events includ· best youth or religious float; g carnival rides and con· Bob's Big Boy, best com· ssions, down about $19,000 mercial float; m last year's figures. City of Westminster, best city· Last year's efforts netted sponsored float; ,000 for charity. Net figures El Bekal Shrine Temple. r this year's three·day event Anaheim, best drum and bugle at ended Sunday won't be corps; vailable for at least a week, of· E x ca 1 i burs of R an c h o cials indicated. Cucamonga, best percussion Tbe Fish Fry and Parade ex· group; avaganza, largest annual com· Garden Grove Elks Lodge, unity event held in Costa best clown group; esa, features a baby contest, Legion of Honor,1EI Bekal of e selection of Miss Mermaid Anaheim, best novelty group: nd Miss Costa Mesa -a double John Carra's Buick racer. vin- tle -and a parade down tage 1909, best antique auto; arbor Boulevard to Lions Park Brion Munsey of Estancia tbe downtown area. High School, best high school Lions Club orficials have re· drum major; ased a list of this year's win· Dana Rott, Maranatha Chris· ers who participated in the t(an Academy, best junior high ·entry event. drum major; They are: Greg Rockford of the Santa S a nta Ana Winds. band Ana Winds, bestyoutb'tlrum ma· eellliakea trophy; Jor; Estancia High School, best Mel Sugitan, March Air FOl'ce gh acbool band; Base, belt military drum ma· M a r an a th a C h r 1 s ti an jor; cademy of Santa Ana, best Karen Dicks of Maranatha ior hlati bud; Christian Academy, beat junior Z·Bee Band of Cerritos, best majorette; termecUate band; Donald Garcia al Walnut Hieb March Air Fotte Base Band, School, belt aolo maJOl'; ssembl~n due t UCI graduation Maraoatha Christian Academy, best junior majorette team; Continental Cadettes of Hunt· ington Beach, best senior ma· jorette team; · Sun Seekers or f'ountain Valley, best junior majorette corps; Pal Twirlers of Placentia, best senior majorettes corps; ~estemettes of Costa Mesa, beat senior drill team; Westminster Coronettes, best junior drill team; Edwards Air Force Base, best military drill team: Santa Ana Winds, best tall· flags drill team; Irvine Police Department, best color guard; Bobby Vigil of Santa Fe Springs and Clarence Sultzer of Montebello, best equestrian division marshals; E .P .I. Corral No. 20 of Sunland, best mounted color guard; Modjeska Maveriks of Orange, ~t mounted group; Betty and Ed Tilisky of Yucaipa, best matched pair; Linda Rombaugh of Fontana, best fancy Western equestrifn lady; Harold White or Ontario, best fancy equestrian man; Cindy Vigil of Santa Fe Sprtn1t, best Spanlah open equestrian; Darryl Nellon ot West Covina, beat novel~ equestrian; Jana Morino of Loe Alamitos, beat S>arade horse. Mental health- runs planned. AIMtllbl)'lllaD loba VaHGG• .... D&n '°"· will be ... ~mote .U•r •t UC lntn8'• commencement Saturday 1.m. 1n Campul Park. Stw..t •Pffk ... et a.be eolD• ennm.t, wben almoet l.JOO CoUqe ot lledldot'• preMnta· Uoa of cllldldate., Frid ay at ( p.m. la Campqa Park. t.be C'llllet of tbe .-tYlintty. A1IO Frlday. Pbt 8eUI Kappe will lilltiaw 117 nomlDffl at ceremonlei ID lb• ll'ln• Arti Vlllaae n.m. at l:IO p,m. clerlnduate, 1raduate •nd medical •tade•tl will be awardlld ....... Will be Robilit, A. X.uata Gfl"ouataln Valley -4 Daaitl L . Johnson of Lo• ,... .. Or. c. s....u ltGOP-au...-~:~:-°' a~~'t~ ii.. •I p.m ., aa lilonOr'I ecm- w o ca ti o• wlll be lleld ID Crawford Hall. Studeah 'araduamc 1111nma tam ....._ ma1aa c1HD laud• aad cum laade frOm Yarlou* ~booll aDCI pro1rams will be boDOrtd J ) Fences boosted in Mesa Costa Meaa City Councll snem· bers have unan1moualy endorsed regulations allowln1 owners of homes alon1 major atreeta to build 8-foot·hilh concrete or block walls for noise attenuation. Previously, owners wanting fences higher than 8 feet had to seek variances from the city at a coat of about $25. Now, only building permits are required for taller fences along major streets. Six.foot fences have been stand· ard practice ln the city because or construction ease and less· confining appearances, said Doug Clark, plannine director. Clark also noted there is some question re1arding effecUnness of taller fences in cutting back noise and produced sound studies indicating little resulting relier. But Jack Dougan, whose Flamingo Drive home is ex· posed to busy Adams A venue along one side, told the councU Monday that traffic noise is "deplorable" and threatened to sue the city ir some relief ls not made available. And while Councilman Donn Hall pushed for help on behalf of Adams Av e nue area homeowners, other Costa Mesans argued for higher Cences for crime prevention. Lee Gibbs told the council his Pitcairn Drive neighborhood bas been hit hard by burglars. "We're looking at security, we don't care about noise," he ad· monisbed. Burglars, he told the council, "climb over the (six·foot·higb) fence, go through the door -in and out -and they're gone." Gibbs said he hadn't been hit because he had kept a St. Bernard in his yard. "He died," Gibbs told the council. Irvine Day set at Angels ga me The Irvine Chamber of Com· merce, the Board of Realtors and Sports Club will be sponsor· ing an Irvine Day at Anaheim Stadium, July 19, when the Angels play the New York Yankees in a 1 p.m. baseball game. Tickets are available at the · Chamber office. 2801 McGaw Ave., for $4.50 each. BRIDGE WORK -Baker Street widening project, which began in April, is closer to completion as workmen pour concrete on one side of new bridge that will span Santa Ana· Delhi flood control channel east of Bristol Street in Costa Mesa. When completed Baker Street will be six lanes wide. Cr ash victiin honored A plaque honoring San Clemente resident Larry Freeman, who was killed last November in a mid·air collision, has been donated to Dana HiUs High School in Dana Point. A group of his friends also donated large, raised lettering for the school's football stadium spe lling "Home of the Dolphins." Mr. Freeman and hjj wife, Barbara, an attendance clerk at Dana Hills, were Jong. time supporters of the school football program. Mr. Freeman, a night pbotog· rapher for Hughes Aircraft Co .. was killed when the helicopter he was ridjng in collided with a plane near Oceanside. On nurse board Michael R. Deblieux or Irvine. assistant to the director or the UCI Medical Center, has been elected to the board of directors of the 130·member Visiting Nurse Association of Orange County. 10 steps toa success ul garage sa e. araJe Sale Gange N'91, y•rd NIM. r1Jn'11!Wg41 N .I••. llrHI "'-' .• , no m•t .. r wh•t )'OU call them. th9 ldH Is the --TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER NEED INTO C"9H When you get 111-.d ol llghling your w•y Into a crowded •ttlc CY 0"908, CY wh9n )'OU need• ffttl9 eatr• caeh. ht"9 • gtt•ge Mi.I So get Into lhl act, clMn out t'-unwant.cl ll•me. Md m•lle money doing Ill ft'1 fun, 11'1 prolttab ... Md lollowlng tnne 1 O et~ will INM It 11mp1e ' 1 Decide on dates. Look " • ce .. nder •nd 191 IN m .. •nd times or your .... w .. llends .,. Ull.lllty good. l>Ut mtny IUCCHlfUI • ..-. h•w l>Mn Mid 1n IN iMM!ng. just •lter work Chedl 1119 -Iller lo,_. In tn. peP9f. and wetch lor eny ot~ 1.,119 .,..nt ti.t .,..... •11Teet po•nt,.t bU)"9rs _.,,. 1~ al lair• or COfmlUnity e"9nt1 H•.,. your NM run •I lfflt two deys--peopi. mty not be _,.. IO come on •ny 1•ngle dey 4 Where to advertise. Pltoe your •d wn.re It .... 11 bit N9f1 by people who 11,.. 11'1 IM MH -mo11 !*>P'-~ cloM to t>ome Th• • O..ly Pttot IS reMI by 88.000 tc1u1i. 1n Co11a M•N. !Wwport BHch. Legune BNch. ln1•ne. Huntington Beach •nd Fount11n Va11ey -guw.n11M1n9 you wid9 e~r• And with t!M PllOL ~ re not 1>9ying ror wasi. clrcul•tlOf'I in Loe~ or An1h91m. Pl•n to run your Id 3 ttmee or more end 11art 11 1 ,_ dtyw b91ore the .... '° b.,911n hunl«I CMI haw s>Mnty of nottce- 5 Make a sign. To !Mlp m•k• your .... a-1UI. melle • l•w 1ign1 • ll'om c.,dl>o.,d •nd lel1ef With. mtQiC ll\lll'kltr A goOd ·sign lize 11 14' ~ 22"' 6 Placing your 1191- n,. morning ol IM Nie. but not bltlore. plaoe your • tlgn1. a. eure •nd •dd your llddr-. •nd •ny • dlr.cllon•I •rTOwt Th19 "10Uld bit doM ll>out • h•ll hour tlefor• the eai. ft~ Pi-YC>IK 111Qn "'*9 It Cfl'I 69 ... n from l>olh •ldel ol lhe 1trHt by P•Hlng c;ar1 •nd P9d9•tri.ns. CAUTION: Some towns hive l•w• thtt rMtrlct IN Pl•oement encl dur•tlon of oar•oe ..i. lign1. Pie'" ctleok with )'OIJf tOWl'I'• pl•nnfng deplrtment or clerk • ~ 1 llllGE COAST Dally Piiat WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1981 COMICS FEATURES TELEVISION 84 BS 87 4 Irvine car dealer's product isn't a gas to drive ... B9 Sports fees nixed for Newport-Mesa ,, I t ! i ' I \ l ' I ~1 By JERRY CLAUSEN Of .. ....., PIMll I• High school students who participate in after-school ac- tivitles such as interscholastic sports won 't pay a special fee next school year In the Newport- Mesa Unified School District. ministrators to research the possibUity of charging feet to high school student.I following a recent Supreme Court decilioo ruling the pracUce legal in Santa Barbara County. Suggested late last month was a $20 fee for students participat- ing in after-school athletics, pep squads, marching bands. or- chestras, choral groups and slm.ilar activities. the Proposition 13 initiative that cuts property taxes. but to "pencil" $90,000 an to next year's school budget for extracur- ricularactivitybusing. to draft city-sponsored after- school programs that might be offered next year in place of ln· termediate school athletics. I I District trustees voted unanimously Tuesday night abandon the fee proposal -at least for one more year -on Superintendent John Ni coli's recommendation. Trustees had asked ad- But Nicoll said Tuesday that new litigation has been filed in the matter, maldn1 the fee levy· ing practice questionable. lo light of the pending legal action and the poaalble "picayune" proceeds from such fees, Nicoll said, the fee plan should be dropped. The fees would raise about $16,009 at each of the district's four hi&b schQols. ad - ministrators estimated. The dlstrlct bas been pressed for fund! the last few years as the result of court decisions that grant less state money to pre- viously rich school districts and DMIY ... .._.~ ....... ll...,_ Firemen. and paramedic• work to free two tem.oge girla from the hoilted wreckage of an ocddent in Costa Mem. Jill Ann Gerondale, 17, of Coata Mesa tDCU kilUd in the one-car smaahup. · Costa Mesa girl, 17, dies in auto crash A l 7·year.old graduating Newport Harbor High School senior was killed in Costa Mesa Tuesday afternoon when her girlfriend lost control of their car on the way to the South Coast Plaza shopping center. Dead at the scene was Jill Ann Gerondale of 428 E . 16th St., Costa Mesa. Reported in critical condition today ln a Fountain Valley Com- munity Hospital intensive care unit is her rriend, driver Erin Kathleen Davis, 17, of 759 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach, also a Newport Harbor High senior. It took 15 Costa Mesa and San- ta Ana firemen an hour to free Miss Davis from her crumpled Datsun following the accident on Bear Street about 200 feet south of South Coast Drive, police said. Several witnesses told officers the small car was northbound on Bear Street at a high rate of speed when it skidded out of con- trol just north of the San Diego Freeway overpass, crossing two other northbound lanes. The car rolled over several times and knocked over a light pole. before coming to rest on its top near a two-foot-high retain- ing wall near the plaza, police said. Officers said Miss Davis suf- fered broken legs, a broken pelvis and internal injuries. Costa Mesa police Sgt. C.R. McBride said the young driver told police that Miss Gerondale had grabbed the wheel of the car and shouted "turn here·: just before the accident. She told police she tried to re- gain control of the car but it slipped into a skid and began rolling. Then she s aid she blacked out , according to McBride. The young driver told officers, who arrested her for suspicion of driving under the influence of alcohol, that she had drunk four beers earlier in the day. Mc Bride said it is standard procedure to place a driver un- der arrest to administer blood alcohol tests following a traffic death. He sai~ the arrest waa lifted following the taking of blood and pending further investigation. School officials said both girls were popular figures on the Newport Harbor High campus. Miss Gerondale, an ad- ministrator said, "was a general all-around super girl, very popular with the students and the f acuity." She planned to enroll at Orange Coast College next fall. Miss Davis, school ad- ministrators said, is a member of the varsity tennis and track teams and played a leading role in this ye ~·s senior play, "Harvey." Both girls were scheduled to graduate Thursday in ceremonies at their school. Police helipad fought Plans to move the Costa Mesa Police Department helipad less than a hundred yards to the north of its present Civic Center location could be the ingredient that bolds up construction of two new city boildings. Allan Roeder, assistant city manager, told City Council members Monday that environ- mental impact report bearings and final state approval for a new heliJ>Qrt could be just as controversial as other helipad proposals sought recently in the city by private developers. Roeder's remarks came dur- ing a City Council study session in which he unveiled pre- liminary plans and drawings for a new communications center and fire station at the 7.8-acre Civic Center site at Fair Drive and Vanguard Way. Boyle Architectural As- sociates of NewJ>Qrt Beach, plan designers, propose construction of separate buildings to house each function, Roeder said. Originally, city offi~ials en- visioned one structure to serve both a communications center and fire station. Scheduled for construction first is the building designed to house the city's still-to-be- delivered, sophisticated com- puterized communications system. Resignation of Aitthony asked Irvine councilman cites innocent plea in wife assault , An lrVlne woman asked for Councilman Art Anthony'• rea· lgnatm 'J'Uesclay night, sayin1 she cUdll't know how to explain to her 10-year·old son bow aOmffQe CWled wit.b a violent crime can serve on the Irvine City Coundl. "What do I tell blm?" asked Dorothy CUrban. "J now feel em- b&rraaed that Anthony still lfll on the council after the violence ... He lhould resign from UM council and •••• the cllf fUrtber embarr .. ment. '' Aa~ reeponded to Mn. Curbo 1lr uYtaa that be ll lano- eent ot · &be chart• of a11ault wlt.b a ltadly ... ,. tbat be faee1 ID ~ wltb an at- tut -Ida wU•. ElaiDe. ... unn•t yet llad a pr• limtui7 ........ oa WI aad &o ..... ,.,-;~-a ,.......... ,...., =: .... .,.., ........ Anthony aald this morning that Mn. CUrban should "explain this country's le1al 1yatem to her son or anybody else wbo aaks.'' Under state law, Anthony would be forced to resip from the City Council lf be la convict· ed of a felony. At tbla point be 11 only char&ed wi\h the crime. Thll ta the second conaeritlve Ci\)' Council meettn1 tn which a • A boakmark dMiped b1 12· year-old Nicole Palambo of Colla .... u. ........ ,,_ ....... out Of alll'IOlt ·~-entri• 18 the Or•c• Ca8llj PaltUe L\brar1 Boollmaril .,... ... Calllllt. ~ Ollltll .... jlrl fj a -dtDt at 8'. Jobn tbe BiPlllt Moal. ). member of the public b•• asked for Anthony's reJJcnaUon. At a City Council meeti.n1 two weeks aeo, Gene Peters of • lrv,ne said Anthony abouldll't be aervtnc on the councll. Anthony, offered no comment. at that time. At that meet.Ln11 Irvine r.si- dent Kay DeVtta 1poke lD favw of Anthony MrVlDI u a dl)' councilman and another AD· thony supporter ffhOed her COll'I· ment.I Tul!llday Dl1ht. Antboftt Hid this morntn1 that he hai rec:el•ed abOut 100 aupportlve cardl and 1.u.rt Ud about nve l.u.rt t.bat ••Pfllled ......... ~··· Tbe .......... ,... Marine colonel Mid be II l•llDI betW tbH• dal• H U•• re1alt of ,..,..e.a llild ~ ...... mtnt be lia1 Mi6 reNl•lal 1laee the ....... ttaek -Id• wtle. Last year, trustees trimmed after-school transportation fund· Ing by 50 percent and urged parents and booster groups to raise money to keep teams and other groups on the road. The board finally ended the year subsidizing the transporta- tion funds when booster groups failed to keep pace wi~b require- ments. Nicoll urged the board Tues· day not only to drop the fee plan That figure would match the total amount appropriated two years ago. Tuesday's board action also continues district financing for intermediate school athletics but moves those activities to after· school times. The board ordered ad- ministrators to continue working with recreation officials in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa While most trustees agreed that athletics and other special activities are important parts of education, Trustee Todd Hess sounded a wa rning. '·Reality is gQing to cause us ' to have some sort of thing (fee i schedule) Like this in the future I if it remains legal (to do so),'' he opined. Super 80 jets 'loud' . . ~ Butnoiselevels from John Wayne stillbelowotheraircraft The new McDonnell Douglas DC-9 Super 80s are continuing to depart John Wayne Airport with noise levels above those officials had anticipated. but well below readings logged by other jet aircraft. their aircraft to an altitute of 1,000 feet before instituting a power cutback, AirCal and coun- ty officials want the cutback altitude lowered to 500 feet. The Super 80 is being used on four of AirCal 's daily de- partures. AirCal uses Boeing 737s on the remainder of its flights. AirCal will soon be taking de- livery of a second Super 80s. Each plane is costing the airline about $22 million. .... I i 1 I j l l The first commercial lligtit or the Super 80 from Orange Coun· ty occurred June 1. Since then, according to officials of the airport noise abatement office, the jet has logged composite noise readings in the range of 95 to 96 decibels on the Community Noise Equivalent Level scale. Emerald Bay upset over access ruling \ ~ I ~ \ f By contrast. older DC-9·30s and Boeing 737s produce com- posite noise readings 3.5 to six decibels louder than the Super 80, despite the fact the Super 80 is a larger, heavier aircraft. During a demonstration flight in August, the Super 80 logged a comeosite noise reading of 90.5 db CNELon takeoff. Officials believe that figure could be achieved routinely if the Federal Aviation Ad· ministration would modify a reg- ulation governing the manner in which pilots may reduce thrust during takeoffs. Such a modification is bein& sought by AirCal. owner of the Super 80 now in use at tbe airport, and county government officials. A decision is pending. Current standards require commercial jet pilots to bring By JOHN NEEDHAM Of Ille o.lly ..it.t Staff County officials are calling a decision by the South Coast Regional Coastal Commission to demand publi c access to Emerald Bay Beach a "land grab." And the president of the Emerald Bay Community As- sociation says access will never be implemented because it would cause too many safety hazards in the area. In a split 6-5 vote Monday, the regional commissioners turned down Orange County's coastal plan for the Emerald Bay com- munity adjoining Laguna Beach, and approved a measure requir- ing that the public be allowed to use the exclusive nine-acre beach. Buy bids sought in Wakeham site ~ids for the purchase or Newport-Mesa School District's 10-acre Wakeham school site in noTth Costa Mesa will be sought Jan. 6 following action Tuesday night by the board of trustees. Trustees declared the v~cant site at Smalley Road and San Pablo Circle surplus property and ordered appraisals in prep· aration for th,e proposed sale. School board critic Tom Williams, 1808 Starlight Circle, Newport Beach, lauded the move and claimed it came only because he and other district parents had pushed for the sale of surplus school property to Argyros on board Newport Beach businessman George Argyros has been elect- ed to the board of directors of the Independent Colleges of Southern California. bolster sagging district income. In a heated exchange between Williams and district superin· tendent John Nicoll and board president Ken Wayman. the school officials charged that Williams has embroidered facts in relating his conversations with school officials. Williams claimed he had been offered one excuse after another for not selling three district sites and publicly was chastised for his "absurd economics." Superintendent Nicoll took credit for that statement and re- iterated what he again termed a n ··absurd idea•· for selling school property to place money in the general fund. Nicoll has contended that such a plan cannot be worked out un- der current legislation, that only lease funds can be placed in the general education fhnd. The Orange County plan calls for the 1,500-resident private community to remain closed to the pubhc, citing parking and safety problems if it were opened. Peter Herman, executive aide to county Supervisor Thomas Riley. whose 5th District in- cludes Emerald Bay, said the commission's ruUng was "ex- tremely disappointing, but ex· tremely expected." "I think it is an especially bad day for people when a govern- ment agency takes private prop- erty without paying for it,·• Herman said. "In effect, this is what is being done." Herman said he doesn't believe the decision to require public access could stand up to a legal test, and that the Orange County coastal plan complies with the California Coastal Act. Al Baldwin, president of the Emerald Bay Community As- sociation, said there is barely enough room on the beach for the 1,500 people living in the community. "We are already operating at full capacity down there," Baldwin said. "We've had to limit the number of guests a community member can bring to the. beach because there just isn't enough room." In addition, be said there is no place for people using the beach to park their cars except on Coast Highway, which would create a traffic hazard. Newport educator new dean at OCC Dr. Jerrel T. Richards, 54, of Newport Beach bas been named dean of counseling ~lDd guidance at Orange Coast College. He replaces Francis Andreen, 61._of Costa Mesa, who is retiring this month. Richards will be in charge of academic coonsellng at the Costa Mesa campus. I I I I 'I. SOCK JT TO •EM DEPT. - Sometimes you get the impression that some of the people who live ln Emerald Bay just outside of Laguna Beach are a touch snooty. For starters, you know, it's a private enclave where they ha,ve gate guards and stree~th bumps in them that ~· . T-OM_M_U_RP-HIN-1~ they own themselves, nice tennis courts and their own little cove with a sandy white beach. In Emerald Bay, the old money drives a Ford station wagon and the kids have a BMW each. The new arrivals are in Mercedes or Rolls. When you ask them where they live, they answer simply, "The Bay." Uu· derline The. I'VE GOT LOTS of friends in Emerald Bay and I think it's a pretty "Look out , Alice! The c003tol czars are stacking uour deck." neat place. I like riding around in their old Ford station wagons and making fun of their fire department. It is, however, their own fire depart- ment. Others, however, don't share my view. They hate Emerald Bay and all it represents; the vile, despicable rich; safe behind their guarded gates, sipping from chilled glasses, lounging on the beach and counting their coupons. Vile and hateful. Capitalist terribleness of the first order. People get worked up like this and turn colora.,Malnly 1reen, with envy. TIDS MUST BE TRUE for a majori- ty of members of the regional Coaatal Commission and those bureaucratic funttionaries they call their staff. Color them Emerald Green. For years, the coastal czars have been trying to figure a way to force Emerald Bay people to grant a public easement through their private streets to the beacb below. Since Emerald Bay was built before most anything along this coastline, and ,certainly before these bureaucrats were even nasty dreams, they've bad a. tough time forcing the public right--0f -way. Now just this week, the regional Coastal Commission majority rejected Orange County's land use plan for the Emerald Bay-Allview Terrace area. THE REASON? Because the county plan doesn't contain a provision that would force confiscation of a public right-Of -way into Emerald Bay the. very next time the community association tries to get a county building permit for anything. Don't try to build any tennis courts or rebuild the clubhouse or zappo! It's land theft time. Actually, we should probably ex- amine the abysmal stupidity of what the regional Coastal Commission czars want. They want access to a beach where there is no parking except on the mo9t dangerous S-curve in the Orange County sector of Pacific Coast lfighway. That's for starters. THE BEACHFRONT RULERS seek this confiscated access in the name of "the public" -that's you and me -so visitors can jam into a little cove that is already utilized by 1,500 members of the community that is already there. Meanwhile; immediately next door to Emerald Bay, the state has opened up a public beach park at El Morro, Crystal Cove and Scotchman's Cove where they already have inadequate public parking, a few scattered outhouses, no public con- cessions and the potential this summer for the biggest mess in the history of our 'coastline. . And against this backdrop, the state beach czars want to do the same thing to Emerald Bay. Of course they do. The Emerald Bay people have a nice place now. And you can't have that. So join me with Alice as we wander through the looking glass . . . ish Fry proceeds dip • osta Mesa event'raises $130,000, down $19,000 While Costa Mesa -Newport arbor Lions Club members (>ld more fish dinners than ever this year's 36th annual Fish y in Cost.a Mesa, gross pro- eeds are down a notch. a pokes man said Monday. Early tabulations indicate the lub will gross about $130,000 is year from all events includ- ng carnival rides and con- essions, down about $19,000 rom last year's figures. junior high band; Z-Bee Band of Cerritos, best · intermediate band; March Air Force Base Band, first place in the "open" category; Garden Grove Strawberf.y Festival, sweepstakes float; City of Costa Mesa, float theme winner; International Guiding Eyes civics float; ' Mel Sugitan, March Air Force Base, best military drum ma-jor; Karen Dicks of Maranath1 Christian Academy, best junior majorette; Donald Garcia of Walnut High School, best solo major; Maranatha-Christian Academy; best junior majorette team; Fences boosted· in Mesa Costa Mesa City Council mem- bers have unanimously endorsed reculatJons allowing owners of homes along major street.I to build 8-foot-hlgh concrete or block waJlsfornoiseattenuatlon. · Prevlou.ly, owners wantin1 fences higher than 6 feet had to seek variances from the cily at a cost of about $25. Now, only bulldin1 permits are required for taller fences alon1 major streeta. Slx-footfences have been stand-. ard practice in the city becauae of construction ease and less· confinin1 appearances, said Doug Clark, plannlne director. Clark also noted there L9 some question regarding effectiveness of taller fences in cutting back noise and produced sound studies indicating litUe resulUng relief. But Jack Dougan, whose Flamingo Drive home is ex- posed to busy Adams A venue along one side, told the council Monday that traffic noise is "deplorable" and threatened to sue the city if some relief is not made available. · And while Councilman Donn Hall pushed for help on behalf of Ad am s Ave n u .e are a homeowners, other Costa Mesans argued for higher fences for crime prevention. Lee Gibbs told the council bis Pitcairn Drive neighborhood has been hit bard by burglars. ''We're looking at security, we don't care about noiae," be ad· moolshed. Bur~ars. he toJd the council, "climb over the (six-foot-high) fence, go through the door -in and out -and they're gone." · DINI' PIMl ....... ., Rkllltnl • ...._ BRIDGE WORK -Baker Street widening project, which began in April, is closer to completion as workmen pour concrete on one side of new bridge tbat wilJ span Santa Ana- Delhi flood control channel east of Bristol Street in Costa Mesa. When completed Baker Street will be six lanes wide. Gibbs said he hadn't been hit because he had kept a St. Bernard in his yard. "He died," Gibbs told the council. Teen mother progromset 'No Parking' zones studied in Mesa 1 for reunion Costa Mesa city offi cials are stydying a policy on "no park· ing " zones on neighborhood streets. • ''Proliferation of street sweep- Former students and students ing zones has become a problem now in Newport-Mesa School for enforcement. maintenance District's program for school and street sweeping functions," age mothers will hold a reunion said Rock Miller, transportation at Costa Mesa's H•ller Park services manager. June 13. ,. Complaints, officials indicate. Nancy Walsworth, counselor usually result when a car is and instructor, said 13 girls cur-parked in front of a house and rently are enrolled in the pro-the street remains dirty. gram designed to enable mar· When a majority of residents ried and unmarried girls to at· petition the city for a street tend school during pregnancy. sweeping zone, they usually get Since its inception in 1972• the .it.One in seven such districts is program has offered opportunity 1 a t e r r e v o k e d w h e n a to about ~50 girls, Ms . · hbo Walsworth said .... A majority of ne1g rhood reallz~s the hassle involved. Miller -said. them have gone on to gradua· Acting on a recommendation lion," she added. by the c ity's TraHic Com· Former SAM students and mission, Miller recently advi sed their families !}oping to attend the City Council that the parking the reunion are asked to call Ms. zones cre ate more problems Walsworth at 960·3270. then they solve. The picnic reunion, with each ''Inflexibility in posting, participant offering a potluck coupled with occasional late dish, ls scheduled for u : 30 a.m. Cs weeper) arrival and schedule in the park at 16th Street and changes . . . inspire frequent OrangeAvenue. complaints," he wrote. •'Postings have often resulted in overflow vehicles onto adja- cent streets. compounding prob- 1 e m s i n n ear b y a r eas . Co mplai nts are received when vehicles are ticketed after the sweeper has passed by." The Traffic Commission wants the council to stop making such districts and seeks removal of those already created. Instead, commissioners would like ~e city to launch a "public awareness" campaign, such as the one in Huntington Beach. that probably would resull;in cleaner streets. Coun cil members told City Manager Fred Sorsabal in a s tudy session Monday that they'd like to see comparative costs of full sweeper zone en- forcement and such a n a ware- ness campaign. Goodwill f ete set The Costa Mesa Goodwill Store, 620 W. 19th St., will have an open house June 18 al 9 a.m. in conjunction with its silver an- niversary celebration. Neuiport cqps to get pay hike Last year's efforts netted ,000 for charity. Net figures or this year's three-day event hat ended Sunday won't be vailable for at least a week, of- cials indicated. Girl! Club of the Harbor Area, best youth or religious float; Bob's Big Boy, best com- mercial float; Continental Cadettes of Hunt· ington Beach, best senior ma· jorette team; Negotiators for the city and Sun Seekers of Fountain the Newport Beach pollcP. Ing team continues to hold talks with representatives of the fire a ssociation, lifeguards , the employees' league (blue colllf' wdrkers,) professional and teehnlcal employees (planners an1d engineers ,> and the e mp loyees ' associ ation <sec r etar ies a nd o ffice workers.) The Fish Fry and Parade ex- avaganza, largest annual com· unity event held in Costa esa, features a baby contest, e selection of Mias Mermaid nd Miss Costa Mesa -a double Ille -and a parade down arbor Boulevard to Lions Park n the downtown area. · Lions Cl\tb officials have re- eased a list of tbU year's win· ers who participated in the 80-ent.ry event. They are: Santa Ana Winds , baod eepstakes trophy; Estancia Hi1h School, best school band; Marabatha Christian cademy of Santa Ana. best tity of Westminster, best city. sponsored float; El Bekal Shrine Temple, Anaheim, best drum and bugle corps; Excaliburs of Rancho Cucamonga, best percussion group; Garden Grove Elks Lodge, best clown group; Legion of Honor, El Bekal of Anaheim, best novelty group; John Carra's Buick racer, vin- tage 1909, beat antique auto; Brion Munsey of Estancii& High School, best ttilh school drum major; Dana Bott, Maranatba Chris- tian Academy, best junlor high drum m,.Jor; Gre1 Rockford of the Santa Ana Winda, best youth drum ma-jor; rt show winners rplit $4;300 cash More tblD U,300 ln prbe ey WU liTeD t0 Winnen in Jaried art 1boW ilurtac tbe uimlal NewfOrt Beacb Qty na l"eltlvalearUier thJj month., Tbe flltlval, helCI at Faahiaa alld, was 11~red by lbe aablGD 111anct· Merchants' ,... elation aod tb• N•wport ach QtJ AIU Commie.ton. Art 111DW Wtonen were Jobft u1uanoa: Harry WllUaJU, r.na C.ple, Roa sw ...... Da•ld Jl7mar, llachlval Cber.... Ro1tr Sboener aad 11••CiWlla. Otber Wlaller1 were R.IC. ,..,....., a.n.tl• Brtuma, l•rrJ Bd•.U. Diane NlleJ, Yana Biidle, Damt Kirt and Grace SOD&olo. Cbllclren'• award• for belt poeter went t0 SteY• eo,.., A.I· Uaon Merta and Allltoil TaJlor. In UM oldldren'• Juried art conteat, Wi•••rt w•re kott Sdrnama, CNly Zlmblaldl. Ar· rlll Nuabtidlan Hd a ... u lladi8aD. OU1er wlanera were lob• Croaaa. a.s ---· , .. Dlf•r ..._., a. TMmu, CliMI' teldlraft, Kiitie Creeley, Tom llal'lard -Ty CU1¥tr. Wla•faf eatrl,1 In t'• ddldtm't eoat11t Wiii 119 'lli-P18* a Newport 8IMll·m, llafl, -NlwfQJt •"'· fnm IUM•toA1C.lO. Valley, best junior majorette employees association have corps; reached an agreement that will Pal Twirlers of Placentia, best see sworn police officers receiv- senior majorettes corps; ing a 12 percent pay increase Westemettes of Costa Mesa, errecUve July l . best senior drill team; City Manager Bob Wynn said Westminster Coronettes, beat the agreement, which received j i drill tea City Council approval Monday I City Manager Wynn said be expects negotiations to conclude in the near future for those municipal groups. Harbor trash cleanup slated un or m ; night, williCOSl the city $626,000. Edwards Air Force Base, best That figure includes a 9.5 per-A Newport Harbor cleanup ef· nesses, homeowner groups and military drill team; cent increase for non-sworn for\ that is to involve scuba· harbor yacht clubs as well as the Santa Ana Winds, best tall· employees, as well as increases div~ng litter cr~ws and a trash police department's underwater nags drill team; t . in the city's contribution for command post outside the Can-search and rescue team. benefits. nery Restaurant is being The litter crews are to work Irvine Police Department, Personnel director Lorenzo planned for midsulI\mer. out of a command post set up best color guard; Mola said entry-level oUicers The cleanup activity, to take along the 'Rhine Channel. Bobby Vigil of Santa Fe wUJ now make $1,794 per month, place from 8 a.m. to noon on Ju. Sponsors urge citizens to Join the Sprlnp ~ Clarence Sultaer of with top level salaries at $2,lS>. ly as, is sponsored by the marine effort by calling 675-5777. They Montebello, best equestrian He said the pay range cpmpares division of the Newport Harbor say the harbor cleanup i• being division marabala; with the highest lhr~ police Area Chamber of Commerce. undertaken to tidy up the city for agencies in Orange County. l\S envisioned, help will be its 75tb anniversary ceremonies su! j :O·J,' b~~[ r !~u~: .. d 2:01:: r;~M;;;e;--ID-.;w;-hll_e_,-;th.._.e;c_it-;y;' s:n_e_g_oti7at:-;;· ;--p_r4:v:-id_e_d_b-;y;--w·~a::;;t::;;e::;;rf::;;r::;;o::;;n;:t ;:b;:u;:s;:i-;;;;::;;in;;;;Se::;;p;;;;te;;;;m;;:;;;;be;;;;r;:.::::::::::::;::::::;;:;;;;::::::::;;;; guard; 11 ModJeska Maverlkl of.....,....._,. Oran1e1 best mounted IJ'OUP; Betty and Ed Tlll1ky of· Yucaipa, best matcbed pair; Linda Rombaugb of Fontana, best fanq Westen equestrian lady; , '"ulerly 2.95 lb. Harold Wblte of Ontario, belt fancy equ.trlaa man; ~ I• ~, & ClDdy Vi1ll of Saata F• ,_., .. 4111': •• Sprln11, best Spaalsb open ·iF"';:~'1°'"·s~:"'~~cewtlt~fft-.a~~~~~~=i~ eqaeatri•; ..,.-, Datt,t N ... of Wm CcmDa. belt norilr....-UU.; IW lhl1DD of Loi~·--· '*'"" ......... 20% OFF i!: Pariue's Tux & Tailor's Shop !lt Weddlr~ Spec'P'I• FOtmel.., • Sall• ,....... • ' TalotW ~ • Mlinfb•. I .. -· - .... .. .. '-• Mt Cit., Cllt .... Ntl ,._,.._, Clttt Cllt ..... 811 . '· CLOSING 993.87 Wlth t.be frowti of medical apeciallzalion and virtual dlsapptarance of tk family doctor, few ol us, as pat.tent.a, maia'iain a elose relatiOMhip with pbysi· clans. 11i a fr'ater te1dency today to sue than in the past. That is dae telllNll fbr the upsurce in malpractice claims and the equally significant enormous settle· ments. · The prime reason1 however, ls medical progress which has resulted ln mcreulnely complex and often dangerous llft!lbocla of patient treatment . .......... ---~ · inii PHTUI ~ ~ Modern machines and procedures to treat illtenes formerlJ con· sidered hope· les s uh · avoidably cause injuries to patients, provide opportunities for mistakes -and the aobsequent lawsuits. Many new drues which, although of real therapeutic value, may have unexpected, unpleasant side effects. Coupled with the complexity of modem practice are greater and o~en unrealistic expectations. When the "miracle cures" promised by television, movies 9d other media do not occur. pa· tients and our f aftUHet blame the doctor rather than our illness. · Still another eauae must be the so-called con· sumer revolutJOb which bas made us more aware of our rights anct more willing to take legal action. Legal claimf ol all kinda (not ju.st medical prac· tice) are at an all·Ume bJ1b. At the same time, juries have become more 1ympatbetic to consumer claims, especially thca. at emotionally charged as medical claims oft.eh ate. AggravaUng the problem is a "contin&ency fee" system Wlder which a lawyer 1ets nothing if be loses the suit but receives a percentage or the plaintiff's award -perhaps as much as 30 percent to SO percent -if he wins. Since the plaintiff, afur expenses, may wind up with only pennies out of each dollar awarded, some lawyert are e~lled to accept and magnify the seriousness ol celS" taat lh•1 otherwise would reject as having liWe or DO rnerit. Frequently cited u contributing to the spurt in malpractice suits are "'11 grievances u patients: re· sentment of high medltll Costa ; fruatratJon with the manner in •bilb colQplaintl .re bandied, or not handled· nrioua prot>Iems or communication result· ing eitHer In mis~fotmation, or no information, about the probable Ot.Ltcome of surgery or other forms of treatment. STOCKS IN TH£ lfOn.ICIT AMdlCAN LEADERS d 't'ONC WI -8-,_. pnao -"" ~ ..... ___ .,. r.--.._,. ..-....., 94 -.... Intl 9t*Mt 2"l.6CD S'h + Vt Dome""' • 176,700 17¥. + ... W•nt I j>S,000 31\ft -Ii. =HO 1tMO 3141 -141 Pet 1111400 11--\41 IFll I 112,100 ~ -\4o ltMitrOll 111,100 11~ • '4 HouOllTr 102MO 21 + IFS lnft ,.,100 10 + 1" ~0.VCI U,100 $Ioli t 't Mttll.S SILVER N•W VOftK (All'I -H-y & H.,.,.... ·"-• ..., '10.110, .. to.1•. Eneelll.,G sllvu '10.120, up st.1', FMrluMllllNwSt0.1'1, .. to.1 ... GOLD QUOTATIONS &..IMllllll !Nnlillt fl•ffll ~ ... $2.75-~i .nw-fl•lne .... us, uo • ..,,_ ,..,.._, S*.11,ofUll.1'. ~ ...... :....,..eff IJ,00; .............. Mell4Y a ....._.: °"'' f•lly """" .-.s.• ...... ,,_ ........ : .... , delly ...... ..u.u •• ... 1S • ........ : only clOll)' ~ lll!Wk .... .............. FAMILY AFFAIR ..... Clint Ca· ble, right, 3, assisted by twin sister Courtney' aids photo- graphers in posing · newest additions to Cable family. 'l'riplets. from left, Megan, Mitchell and Molly were born last week at Memorial Hospital in Johnstown, Pa. Mother, Vanessa, had been hospitalized eight weeks prior to birth of the triplets. ..... I Paid Advertisement Wyoming Oil 'Lottery' Open To All In July! SANTA ANA, CALIF (Speclal)- Hundreds of U.S citizens wili win 011 lease rights in upcoming public drawings conducted by the State of Wyoming. Some may achieve overnight wealth by selling their rights to 011 com- panies and retainrng ltfelong royalties on any oil or gas pro- duction. Incredibly. most will risk no more than $30. tax deductible. to enter the little-known program that offers every American the opportunity to compete on an equal basis with giant oil com- panies for leases of public litnds. Entry details and information may be obta1red by wrrtrng The B Ryan Snyder Company. Inc. (011 and Oas Lease Division). Post Office Bt>x 268. 2030 East Fourth Street , Santa Ana. California 92702. Enclose $1 for postage and handling The Snyder Company will for- ward official entry cards and full instructions in time to meet the July 10. 1981 deadline o The B. Ryan Snyder Co .. Inc ENVIRONMENTAL 11116w SCOPING MEETING What can be done to improve the Route 5/55 interchange? SANTA ANA PROPOSAL The California Department of Transportation (CALTRANS) Is looking at ways to improve the Sonta Ano/Newport Freeway Interchange. Var4>us alter· natives including Transportation Systems Management anif i:rtlgnme!'t mod If ications are being studied. This Is one of the initial steps in the project development process, and It will be used to guide future studies leading to the circulation of o Otoft lin· vironmental Jmpact Stateme"t. • For further Information about this protect, c~act: Mr, -onold Kosinski Environmental Planning Branch CAL TRANS (213) 620·3755 SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Air traffic control towers at rour Callrornia airporta are among 66 nationwide that the General Ac · countlne Office says are un· derused and should be closed. The CaJirornla airports are in Marysville, Chico, Fresno and Merced. The tower in Fresno is at Chandler Airport, not the city's main air te(minal. A Federal Aviation Ad · ministratioo ofriclal in Los Angeles iaid Ttiesday the 1'ec· ommendations by the GAO, ll Congressional watchdog, are not new. In the last few months, said /J Garvis, the FAA has routine11 &urveyed California airports and reduced the number of hours control' tqwers operate. Among airwrts where tower operations were reduced from one to seven hours are: Long Beacn, Riverside, Fullerton. Chino. Napa, Oxnard, Sacramento Executive, and, most recently, Concord and Stockton, Garvis said. Hours were reduced ror periods of light traffic, said Garvis, and traffic controllers were reassigned to shi!ts during busier periods. '·We review our system periodically' and make adjust· m en ts whenever necessary,'' Garvis said. "Sarety ia the primary criterion ln decidin& whether to cut ack on tower hours.'' 'The G~O co'*plained that .. The Federal f.vlalion Ad· mln\ltration has b<>t taken ef(ec· tlv~ action to discontinue econod)lcaJly unjustified airport traffic conlrol towers or to re· duce the operating hours or con· trol towers whtQh meet the criteria ror reduced operations ..• The report said dosing un· derused towers could "save millions or do1Jars." Listed as candidates for dis· continuance were the following airports: ..... ,~.. fll••• WhlttH; Allntft, ()Me, M11nlclpal, Plalnwlew, Tun; Mer~w•lle, C•lll : Mere••· Ca ti!.; AHell, Ill.; ,r._, Gllif., o..ndler; Hol*t, N.M.; "'*-'t, Otue.; Defl¥1lle, 111.; ci. ... 11111e1 C11re ; Hew aern, N.C.; Welt Memplll1, Ark,; I( •Ille, Tenn .• Oowntowfl; MlllOI. N.O.; Gel Ill.; aenton Hertior, Mk.II.; 1!1\14, Oltle.; v , 0.., ~ l'e, N M., MerldlM, MIW.; .._.-. Teu1. Sift Al'll...a., Tu••. su- Marlen, 111., TllK•IOOH, Al• ; N. #yr11• It.tell, $.'-; St, ~. Mo.; WMel"'9, lfi.Ve.; Atllen1, ~. 8r-..lng1oft. Ind.; ,ldello ....... ldeho; Hiftrllown, Md.; SHfl......,r• LC.; GretnvUle, Mtas.1 J~Uon, Mlae., H..,.lflt; Sllrevef'Or1, L.t., Qllwntowft, L.t.t......., w.ve.; AM Articw, Mk!\, er ... wkll., (M., MclU-; O-n1110n>. Ky., P.tducell, tty,; Cl>lto, C*".1 Alu.tndrla, L.t.; JllCk.,.wllle, "•·· Cfelg, Twin Fells, ld.lllo; PIM alllff, Arlt.; c:.... GlrerclMll, Mo.; Klem.tlll l'ell1, ~e.; l"Ofte•. Pvtr1• ,.ko, Fleost.tff, Alli : Hkllwy. N.C.; Tro11tdele, O...; McAllen, Tues; ...,,.....,., Ore.. TOlllll.t, ~. 8111..-d, JOfllltl, Mf.; Mot $~tne11, Ark , Meyeg .. 1, ""9r1o Rice· ~ • II•, s.c.; 04ymi>I•. Well).; Key WKI, ff!.;; ...... P•oo • ._,IC .. S...-: VeldH, Al.U.; ~ 1111,Mo Llllff es c~tel for r~ -•Ina 11our1 -. eltpOf'U In Ali.ntown, Pe., Alll9Yll .. , N.C .. Erlt , P.t., Huntlne toni/ w .ve .. 81n9h.tn1\ell, N. Y., Cllerleslol\, W. e., ff~· tewllle, N.C., Nl ... r1 Fells, NY., UU~ N.Yw A111uste, Ge.; Col11ml>•"· Ga., Tren'°'I. H.J., 8rl1tol, Tenn., Gftw, S.C., Tell.e-.e, F'te., Wllmlnt1C111,N.C., T~o,H.J DAl.Y PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5878 Saving precious energy has always been, and ·will continue to be, a major concern of both The lrvi.qe Company and the City govern- ment. So no matter where you choose to live in Irvine, you'll see the benefits of energy- conscious planning. And as the city develops, you'll find shorter dis- tances to drive and more things to do close to home. It's all part of Irvine's continued growth to- ward the goal of becom- ing an energy-efficient, economically balanced city. Growth guided by two important factors. The City's farsighted, living General Plan. And concerned residents from the community, City government and The Irvine Company who work together to make it happen. We may not always see eye-to-eye on every detail, but the result has been, and will con- tinue to be, a city that gets better to live in every day .. Itesidential areas are being bu ilt close to business and industrial employment cent~rs. Ample shopping areas are being carefully lo- cated throughout the community. And good schools are being pro- vided within walking distance or just a short drive from home. And that's just part of the plan to save your energy. There's much more to come. For information on this growing new city, please visit or calJ The Irvine Company Information Center. Culver Drive exit off San Diego Fwy. (I-405). To corner of Barranca. (714) 551-1500. •