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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-06-12 - Orange Coast PilotFRIDAY, JUNE 12. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY. C ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS Pasebidl pla'7ers walk; gaDles canceled NEW YORK CAP> -Major league· baseball players, on strike for the second time in a decade, began negotiations to- ~Y with the owners' represen· talives in an effort to settle the walkout. <Related stories, Page Dl) Joe Niekro, player represen· tatlve for the Houston Aslros, said there was "no way'' that tonight's 12 games could be ' ' played. He sald the players bad scattered and t.llfre was no possibility that theJ' could return in -time even if today's bargain· ing proved fruitful. The tint impact of the strike, called by the union early today after 4~ hours of late·ni1ht bargaining, was felt Ln Chicago, where the National League notified the Cubs that tl\,eir game against the San Dle10 Padres had been canceled. In Montreal, the Expos 1aid tonight's game against Cincin- nati also had '8een called off because of the walkout. ·'The Expos regret the in con· ven-ience to ticket holders caused by Ute strike," a state· ment from the National Leacue club said. At the Amerjcan League office in Ne~ York, Pbyllls Merhlge, a . ·~·· .......... GOLFERS OUTFOXED -This young fox has · come a celebrity of sorts at the Denver · untry Club where he's busy every day adding to bis collection of golf balls. This se- quence, clockwise from upper left, shows the red fox hard at work on a ~-yard drive. p ymore pleads 1gqilty ' . . d 1!~ ;;anrng smqgm1g case Former Paklstani bljack )\~stage Craig Cl ymore bas p1eaded guilty to smuuling h~roin and hashish oil into the (hilted States. ·"The former Lake' Forest resi· l:lent, who earlier pleaded lnno· tent to the charges in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, N. Y., could re- ceive up to 30 years in prison and tlp to $50,000 in fines following Thursday's guilty plea. r, Clymore, 24, a lt74 Laguna Beach High School graduate, has b1f· en held in lieu oUlO million bail a the Metropolitan Corrections ~enter in Brooklyn since his re- turn to the United States in early April. The bail is reported to be the highest ever set in the Brooklyn court. Clymore was one of more than 100 hostages aboard a Pakistani jetliner that was hijacked March 2 on a flight from Kar•chl, -Pakistan, to Pieshawar, near the Afghanistan t1Qrder by three op- ponents of the Pakistan govern· ment. News reports durina the hijack· ing cited Clymore for entertain· ing fellow hostages aboard the jet · by playing his guitar and singin1. (Cats responsible ~:: 'for human plague? I i. ATLANTA (AP> -Household i.C!'•ts were responsible ror the • buman plague that killed a 47· a~ear-old woman and made a •• eterinarian ill, the national ( enter for Disease Control re- ~rted today. t Before the two cases occurred, ,..,O!IJY six cat.associated plague coes bad been reported since ; the link was noticed in 1902. , The disease is seen in cats fre- ' quently but is not often , trtansferred to humans because Most of t he cat-to-human cases of plague were transmitted by "traumatic in· oculation -a bite or a. scratch at just the right time to have it transmitted this way," Kaufman said. The woman, from Tahoe Paradise, Calif .. died in October from pneumonlc elafUe -the first case of pneumoolc plague to occur in the United Stat• out· side a laboratory .slnce 1924. · ... _ He later wrote a &oai about the in· cldent, whlch he hoped to record. But the former Orange Coun- tian did not know that he bad been secretly indicted by a federal grandjury justpriortothebljack· ing. After the release of the hostages, it took weeks before federal authorities could bring him backtotheUnitedStateatobe prosecuted. In his guil\y plea Thursday, Clymore admitted being the ringleader for eight couriers who brought drugs in to the United States. He said he arranged with friends to smuggle 4.4 pounds or heroin through U.S. Customs in the hollowed-out heels of shoes. He also admitted planning the smuggling of 2.2 pounds of the drug through Kennedy Airport by couriers who swallowed con- tainers filled with the narcotic. Two of those couriers reportedly nearly died when the containers burst inside their bodies. Clymore told the court be has made more than $12 million in the past three years by smuggling drugs from the Far East. U.S. District Court Judge Thomas C. Platt set sentencing for Clymor~on July 17. s pokeswoman, said: "Our clubs have been advised that tonight's games are off, subject to any ac- tion from today's negotiatin~ sesaion." Players, meanwhile, started to scatter. The Kansas City Royals checked out of their hotel in Detroit, where they were to have opened a series with the Tigers, and returned to Kansas City. Atlanta Braves employees accompanying the t.eam to Philadelphia for a scheduled weekend series with the Phillies were told to return to AU~ta because "there is a strike,· ac· cording to El'Jlie Johnson, one of the club's broadcasters. Marvin Miller, executive director of the Major League Players Association, did not at· tend this morning's bargaining session with management's player relations committee. Miller warned earlier that, in the event of a strike, he would let the players do the talking to prove to the owners that the players were making the de· cisions. "He's met with the other side for 18 months and Ray Grebey seems to think that Marvin is the stumbltng block." said Niekro. Onofre faces tough hearings By JOHN NEEDHAM Of , ... Dally ptMe , .... A Nuclear Regulatory Com· mission official says emergency planning around the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station will play a major role in upcoming hearings on the licensing of two new units at the facility . Jim Hanchett, a public affairs officer with the commission, said planning for a possible acci- dent at the nuclear plant could tie up the licensing of two new 1,100-megawatt reactors now under construction. The regulatory commission will hold the first licensing hear· ing on Units 2 and 3 June 22 at the Stardust Hotel and Country Club, 950 Hotel Circle North, in San Diego. On J\Ule-27 at the Stardust, the co mmission will conduct another session at which the public is invited to speak on the licensing of the plants. Both hearings will begin at 9 a.m. The San Diego hearings follow the release of two reoorts on a May 13 emer_genc)' drill which simulated a release or r adiation from the San Onofre nuclear facility, located about three miles south of San Clemente. The reports. prepared by the Federal Emergency Manage· ment Agency <FEMA l and the State Parks Citizen Advisory Committee, point out numerous flaws in emergency plannihg. The FEMA r e port said emergency agency personnel needed better training in radia· lion monitorin~ in order to AP ....... HAVING A HOT TIME -Sean Robert Parish bas fun in the fire truck while bis dad, Leoni, Mich., Township firefighter Jack Parish helps battle a stubborn brush and junk fire a few yards away. meas ure the release and spread of radioactivity from the exist- ing 450·megawatl plant al San Onofre. That plant, Unit 1, which was built in 1968, has been shut down since April 1980 when steam pipes outside the reactor were found lo be corroded and in need of replacement. Officials al Southern California Edison Co., operator and co-owner of the plant along with San Diego Gas and Elec· tric, say Unit I will probably re· main shut down until this fall. The second report, submitted by the advisory committee. said "reasonable assur ance" could not be given that state parks vis- itors near the plant could be (See ONOFRE, Page AZ> Sea lions • p e ril for fis h e r01e n SAN DIEGO <AP> -Calllng the situation "critical" for the economic futures of some boat operators, spoles men for the National Marine Fisheries Service say San Diego has the West Coast's most serious prob- lem with sea lions pirating catches from sportfisbing boat anglers . John Scholl heads the proj~t studying the longtime problem between the marrima.ts and fish- ermen, but has not come up with solutions. Marge Stinson, a fisheries biologist working with Scholl, says the situation is "critical." ''There's goir'« to be a lot of people who lose their boats in the next few years," she said. Commercial fishermen are aJ. lowed to scare off sea lions with warning shots if the curious animals interfere with equip· ment. But charter and public' rental operators do not have the same privilege. Thus. illegally or not, frustrat- ed sportfishing skippers have been reported shooting at the animals often to scare, but sometimes to kill. "They're pests, just like rats in your home," said skipper Roger Howard. ··And they could possibly r~in the sportli1hin1 business in San Diego. I'm sure people go out there and kill the seals. I can't name names, but I'm sure it goes on.'' • t..be plague organism ls not easi-ly transmitted, said Dr. Arnold Kaufman, dlrectqr of the CDC's Bacterial Zoonoses bran ch1 'Wbich tracks anlmal•associateo 4.J1eaaes. OC .Gr and J11ry Pilps l).A, sH:~riff Private boater Michael Garcia sai d b e saw an armed sportfishing crew "blaalinll <See SEALS, Page AZ) The 1to1cd Lipiuou~ · omtocnm ot tlw ,.,_mian tDOrld, IDUl a,,,_a, al Ole AMMim C°"""'*"' Cnt.r ... Cl Report calls for pri soner management . studies, probe of abuse complaints Hart, was available for com- ment Thursday on the jury's concluslons. • on the subject of alleged abuses by police officers, tbe jury said nearly au were dis· missed by the district attorney's office. "Because of the lnterdepend· ency_ of the pollce departments and tbe DA's office, It appears that the DA does not wish to push 'police' cases unJeaa there Is an extreme prepondel'ance of evldence aaalnst • partlcular Police otncer." 'l'he Jury further found that .. unexplained dl1crepancle1" often were found in ln·hou.H In· va~Ye. report.I prepared by PGllc• qecl11 In Whlcb olftcen have tlMla accused of abuae or baraaatDIDt. • IRS sei zes B illy's fie kl ATLANTA (AP> -The field where Jimmy Carter's Secret Service softball squad batUed the press corrs is amon1 Billy Carter's rea estate holdln1s seiied by the Internal Revenue Service to cover payment of back taxes. Carter plans to auction tbe land June Z1 and the sale will be allowed, IRS 1pokesman GUes Hollingsworth said Thuraday nhrht. That land, Carter'• tarnoua service station, and hla tonner- hOme in Plains are to be MW to r aiae money to pay income W• ea. accordln• to J.~. Tedd of Rome, Ga.. whole ftrm'jit •· di.hie the auclioft. H~ declined to aay how madl ._.y waaOwed. I mer ger fav o red By FllEDERJCKSCHOEMEHL 0. .. 0 ........... Orange County 1overnment of- tl c i aJs gen er ally rea cted favorably today to state Al· sem bly approval of a bill lo permit mereer of the court func· lions or the Orange County Sheriff's Department a nd Marshal'sOmce. The positive reactions were ' voiced despite the fact the bill was amended t o give the state Legislature veto power over any consolidation plan approved by th~ Ct!unty Board of Supervisors. ARABIA •Tehran ~ • Kerman AP ........ SURFIN' IN FRESNO -What do surfers do when they can't go near the ocean? In Fresno, this is a p<>pular -though illegal - pastime. Eric Holt, 18, rides a surfboard pulled by Bobby Graves, 16, in a car on an ir- r igation canal. Under the bill, authored llY As- semblywoman Marian Ber1eson, R·Newport Beach, a committee com posed of two supervisors. one s upeTior court j u dge, one municipal court judge and a filth "al large'' member would ex- plore way& of accomplishing the m erger and make a recommen- dation tothe board. IRAN SffAKEN -Bet~een 4,500 and 5,000 people ~ave died p in a strong earthquake that rocked southeastern Iran Thurs-I day, d~molishing two-thirds of the hbuses in one villaee 1 alone. 1 • f I Deputy • m safekeeping R e a c tor bombi n g Loudermilk moved from county jail for 'saf e~y reasons ' Before the final Assembly vote on the bill Thursday, , it was amended, al the insistence of As- semblyman Richard Robinson, D·Santa Ana. to empower the Legislature to accept or reject any plan the county might ad- vance. calle d ll_.S. p lo t I S uspended Orange County s h e r iff 's deputy George Loudermilk -in custody on $250 ,000 ball after allegedly harassing a woman who testified auinst him al his kidnapping trial -has been moved from county jail to Huntington Beach City Jail for safety reasons. Sheriffs Lt. Wyatt Hart said Loudermilk, a Costa Mesa resi· dent, was transferred from the medical isolation area of county jail to the smaller municipal jail Thursday because, as a law en- forcem ent officer. h e was vulnerable to attack by other prisoners. From Page A1 SEALS. • • away at sea lions " several weeks ago. "ll was shocking, very gross." Garcia said. "We were close in, trolling, when we came around the corner. We could hear the :.hots first. There was no mls· tak~' liboat it. It •as cry•tat clear to me what tHey were do- ing." - Sea Lions are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972. which made any harassm ent of sea lions by sportfisbers illegal. One skipper contends sea lions have cut hts charter business in half. •·People have told me they won 'l come out again until we do som ething about the sea lion pr oblem,•· said s kipper Bob Fletcher. Stinson said studies are under way to find a way to convince sea lions that ·•when they see a spor~bo~l fishing. •t is unwlst to come to the boat ... \ Am~.s ~e met.hOds suegest.ed is lo~ shotguos with rock salt." Skiepers hue used seal bom t>s, now illegal, which cause a slight concussion when they cxplocle in the water, but result in no pumlbent damage. The intelS)~enl a.tmals quickly dis· cerr(ed that the devices were harrilless and they lost their er- f ectivenesa, Stinson said . • Un,if some sare method ts de- vised , otfie)als beUe-ve frustrat- ed s portf{sbers wiU continue to shoo\ ll Ute animal$. ~ ... .. OnJ! veteran spOrtflsherman estimated he'd killed at least a . thous.and sea lions before it was declared illegal. I ''I'p'DOt. woud of that. I'm not ha ppr aboUt lt." said· the skip- per l ~ 'Wlsbed to remain un· idedtltll!lf. "But under the same circub\ltanc-. I would ptobably do it again." I Pajaenger s. ill· · PITCAfRN, Pa. CAP> -Mort than~ peopte abo~d Amtrak's Broalway Llmlted were taken to a'tea hospitals arter •n alcoh'olic substance that leaked near the passenger train emltted a sicllenln1 vapor, officials said t oday. The train had Just stopped in Greensburg, Pa. Thursday when a freight train passed by that was leaking octyl alcohol. · 'ln the interests of safety for everybody concerned, we just moved him." Hart said. Loudermilk, 37, was ordered jailed Tuesday by Superior Court Judge JaQ\eS Turner when evidence was presented that the convicted kidnapper bad con· tacted one of his victims by phone Friday only houn after the jury verdict was announced. Loudermilk was convicted or two counts of kidnapping and one count of felony false iJn. prisonment in conQection with three incidents involving women who said they were taken to Nixo ns p lan move t o suburb of Big App le SADDLE RIVER, N.J. (AP> -After a year in bustling Manhattan, former President Richard M. Nixon and bis wife are movtna to the su~urbs. An aide says the Nixom are buying a $1 million house on a quiet cul-de-sac in this small B~rgen County community, which has the highest per-capita income in the state and only one welfare recipient. And the new nel1hbora ap- parently are tick.led about the prospect of li ving near the former president. "He'll be most welcome in Saddle River ," s aid Mayor Dun- can H . Cameron, a retired stockbroker. "We 've never had a Democrat serve as mayor or councllman Stnce t.he beCUUUftl of time." , fitxon aide N'\cboJas 'Ruwe said Thursday the Nlxom are movina to a sprawliat tevf!lt. bedroo:m. contemporary llouae owned by Jobn Alford, alao a re- tired llodbroker. The lwo- story, wood-trimmed house with a circular drive l.s near· a peach orchard and 1urrounded by woodl ..... Altboa,gb Ruwe decline'd to give tbe-purcbue prlce1 be said the home bad been offered for $1.2 tnlllion. Among its features ar6 three built.in stereo systems, a 900- square·foot swimming pool, a tennis court and a 1,000-bottle wine cellar~ The closing of the sale la scheduled for late July, \then Ruwe said be e•pects the Nixoos to move from their .fri0,000 Manhattan townhouse. The townhouse where the Nlxons have lived a little longer than a year probabJy will be sold, Ruwe added. "The Nixons are not tired of New York. they loved tbat house," said Ruwe. "JSut a lot ot their )ife rlgbt now i• tbelr •raf\dcbildren. Four acres \n the country ftuld be spectaeular for the trandcbUdttn. "They loved Ole bod.$e llld'\le pool is very im"°rtant to Mm,'' be Hid. When Nixon decided to sell the former Western White House in San Clemente, he encountered a chnty reception •from pruspec- ti v e neighb ors at two cooperative apart~enta be con- sidered btiyl.ng la New York Clty. isolated areas by the lawman after being stopped on suspicion of drunken driving. In one case, the Costa Mesa man was convicted of abducting a 33-year·old Mission Viejo wom an and thr~atening to rape her and kill her. It was that woman who told Judge Turner Tuesday she had received a telephone call from a ma n s he id e n tified as Loude rmilk following the verdict. The defendant has been free on his own recognizance follow· ing the verdict. From Page A1 O N OFRE • • • BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> final series or efforts to save fl Iran today called the Isr aeli Saddam's fall has caused the bombing or a nuclear reactor on bombing or the nuclear plant by: the outskirts of Baghdad a U.S. Is rael and with propaeanda ctnd i The bill was sent to the ~nate plot to drum uf Arab support for noise attracted the attentions of j on a 64·3 vote. The six members or I r a qi Pres de o t Saddam the Arab nations in the region to t the Orange County delecation in Hussein. Baghdad." • the assembly s upported it, though Tehran Radio reported the al· Io other developments : J Mrs. Bergeson had argued legations, made in a Forelgn -Prime Minister Menachem l against Ro~inson's amendment. Ministry stetement which also Begin says Israel's real target in I rejected calls by the 21-member bombint the Iraqi atomic reac- The sherut·s department pro-Arab League for a cease.fire in tor was an underground nuclear vides bailifflng and related the eight-month-old lran-Iraq inslaJlation where the Iraqis al· , ser vices in the s uperior courts; war. legedly planned to build nuclear the marshal's office performs a "Imperialist America in it.a bombs. like function in the municipal "This is where they were pre- courts. In an advisory vote more paring lo build bombs, but the than one year ago, Orange County D { • r inspectors did not see it," Begin voters said the court runclions ra t s1gnup told reporters at a diplomatic re· s hould be con·solidated, a move of-ception Thursday night. I ricials say could save about Sl end forec· &st The Iraqis "fooled " spec· million per year. tors of the International Atomic · Engergy Agency who checked But requisite legislation to ac-WASHINGTON (AP> -A con-the reactor in January, he said . notified in time to avoid con-complish the merger bas proved gressional opponent or drafting -President Reaean. walking tamination if there was an acci· controversial because of dis· women for the armed liervices a diplomatic tightrope, ls re· j dent. agreements over whether the pred icls Congr ess will allow assuring Israel that its bombing l ·'This is really unplowed s he r iff's depar tment s hould draft registration to die if the or tht Jraqi nuclear reactor bas • ground in many r espects," absorb the marshal's court func· U.S. Supreme Court rules it is not jeopardized U.S.·lsraeli ties. : Hanchett said. "This is the first lions or vice versa. unconstitutional to require only while telling Arab leaders that a I time licensing will come under S~pervisor Thomas Riley. men~ register. peaceful solution to the reactor the new rules adopte<l by the h . of h t , Le al .• My read mg of C•n gress issue might have been po98ible. 'commission "'ter the Three Mile c airman t elcoun::rc s i Asked ir his Mid~le East peace ~ J d' 'al Commit ee s d he W""' makes it clear lo me that there Island accident in Penn-u ici .... efforts were .. ba k on track" i "obv1·ously pleased" with "~ will be no fem ale registr ation. Sylvania." no-after meetings Thursday with I, bl approval Or the bl·u but whatever the court decides ," Hanchett said the existence of sem Y ' five Arab ambassadors and the : a ••workable" emergency added. "lwishwedidn'thavethal Sen. Sam Nunn . D·Ga .. a Israeli envoy, Reagan replied : l management plan ls now .,.e. requirement <the Robinson member of the Senate Armed .• 1 think IO, yes." ul d , U i f 1 a mendment)." Ser vices Committee, said in a 1 q re ior cena D'1 ° a nuc ear Senate speech 'n\ursday. -The Arab League called for plant. 1 Riley, however, expressed op-Congress passed a law last U.N . sanctions against Israel as , He sald the licensint hearings limism that any conaolldation year requiring registration of the Security Council prepared to ! on San Onofre's Unita 2 and 3 plan approved locally would men, but not women, as poten· beg.in meeting this afternoon on- would be conducted by com-automatically be accepted by the tlal draftees. A three-judge the Is rali destruction of Iraq's m issio n · a PP o in led ad · Legislature. federal court in Philadelphia. nuclear reactor . minislrative law judges whos~ ..-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-· on the Atomic Safely and <c Licensing Board. "You can expect that the ques· tions of emergency evacuation and communication will be fully venWated," Hanchett said. "If there are weaknesses in the em ergency plans as they are now written tbey will be pointed out.•• If and when all three generators at San Onofre begin supplying electricity atmultaneously, tbey will pro- vide eooueh power to Ught neal' ly two milllOJl homes. But for more than a year the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station hasn't produced enough power to rtre up erandma's beat• ing pad. Edison officials say for every day Unit 1 remains out of opera- tion lt ~ts their company about $350,000 to repl•ce the loit po•er with electricity aenerated rrom fossil fuel sources. Tbe 9.1.J bllliOn project to build Units 2 and 3 ls expeeted to be completed by um. David Barron,, a spokesman for the uWity 1 said Unit 2 is more than 90 percent flnished. Workmen are now preparing the plant for fueling and operation. If all goes as planned, it could become operational by the end of this year Of early 1982. Barron said Work on Unit 3, wbieh shoUJd come ob line ln 1983, ls about 70 percent finis~. Both Unlt.s 2 and 3 are 1,000· meiaw-.tt ~acilities. Unit 1, now 13 years old, was built al a cost of $480 million and ls a 450· megawatt plant. A megawatt represents one milHon watt.s of electricity, enough to power 10,000, 100-watt llaht bulbs. Polish p remier mes s ministers WARSAW (AP> -Premier Wojclecb Jaruaelskl today dropped five ministers from h11 Cabinet, includins Deputy Premier Henr)'k Kisiel and Juatlce Mlnl1ter Jer1y Bafia, and propoeed a major Cabinet reahuffle aimed al reaculna · Poland'• crippled ffOl'lomy. JarulelalU, ln a IPffCh to the SeJm , or Parliament, atao old he wu ready to clllCUM wttb Poland'• trade unlon•, lncludln& UM ~t liDkMI Solidari· "· •• ,.lo ..... ~ of coal. ~ ~ I G .. .. •' .... 11!!\!sm::=~ ~ ~., Allsil'I s ••• ,, "" two beautiful ~IGELOW carpets made frortt : a .. a·-'~ a totallY new MAGIC carpet fiber ........ ! ~ • ANSO-IV is a new patented product from Allied Chemical Research. in which the nyJon is chemically modified, dramatically changing the surface e,,ergy of the fiber so it actually rejects and repels llQuid spills, stains iind dirt. You get long-range: toll. .... OTECTION ANS0•1\l 11etuetty '9fectt toll. trYen alter heavy wear and 1'9Pelled ctunlngs. Your carpet 11avs beautiful tonger and relPO!lda to~· Ing better. ITAIN .... OTECTION ANSQ•1v repels liquid tpltts and tlalns Pr011C1ion 11 91· fectlve e\19'1 lfter ti.avy weer end re- pNled ciHl'll"ll•· Quick remoyel can 1)1'9Vent or minimize mott 1t1ln1 -· ITAllC SHOCK "'OTfCTIC>H ANSO•tv Stattc ahOcil control 11 fully ett.cllV& and tt 11 1)41fmaMnt. Annoying i talic ahOck bulld up la virtuelly ellml· nated .... WEAlll PlllOT£CTION ANS0•1v is crefted under the lnchitlry"'t moll tt. mfllding cooetnlctlon aoec:lflcatlOtll .. urlng l!Wtl~m ruggedneu, our•· bltily Ind wear r .. latal'!Qt. I ' I I 1 . I i J • I ·----.. --1·---- ............ Postage stamps printed in honor of this gum mer' s royal wedding show Prince Charles towering over Ladfl Diana Spencer, although the two art MarLy the same he4Jht . The po1t office in London explained: Charles was standing on a box when the photo was taken. .. Former Tennessee Gov. '• 1, Ray Blanton'• liquor·license1 " conspiracy conviction cost him his right to vote but not his right to a slate pension when he turns 65. Two former aides also were convicted by a U.S. Dis· ., trict Court jury. A,sked at his home lf be ., cared to comment, Blanton said, "I'm just not in the mood." For the second time in less than a month, illness forced actress EUaabet.h Taylor lo cancel performances of "The Little Foxes," the first show ' she has appeared in on Broadway. Fred Nath an, press representative for t.be show at the Martin Beck Theater, ,, said Miss Taylor's doctor, Michael Rosenblat ll , was l treating her at her apart· ment for a "24-bour virus." .. Describing himself u a _ "centrist" and a "liberal with sanity," Mayor Edward • I. Koch of ~ew York. City an· nounced be is runnin& for re· election and aays he'll seek ' both the J\epubllcan and • Democrati~ nomlnationa. .... Blanche Baker, 1tar of Broadway's "Lolita" and daughter of actre11 CaTToll Baker, found the going a little rough recentLy aa she tmd to stay aboard a rllecMmcal buU in Santa Monica. Toll m an d raws double takea Exit 8 of the Masaacbuaette Turnpike ls becomlnc aomethlna of a tourl1t attr&c· tlon. "It's 1ettin1 to be a prob- le m . Sometimes traffic bacll1 up and people are look· ln1 over from the other lanes saying, 'Hey, wbat'i the preeident doin1 over then?' " says toll collector Paul Sotlcbeek. •'If I look ao much like the president, how come I'm here and not makint the kind of money he makes?•• be asked. Roaalyaa Carter says she and her husband have "ad· justed with extraordinary ease" to tile in Plaina, Ga., but daughter AmJ has had trouble maltlng the transition from the White House. In a letter to friend.a and former staff members In Washington, Mrs. Carter said the former president "is at peace, concerned about what ls happening in W ashlngton, but totally im· mersed in his book and bis woodworking shop." •·Although be enjoyed every day of bis presidency, he has not missed W asbington since returning home," Mrs. Carter said. "I sincerely believe, though, that the country will sorely miss him and soon." King Juan Carlos and bis Greek-born wife, Qaeea Sofia, will make a state visit to the United Slates next Sep· tember, the Spanish foreign ministry announced. This announcement dido 't provide the exact dates for the trip, which is a response t.o an invitation from Prai· dent Reasan. The Spanish monarch originally planned to travel to the United States in February, but the govern· menl crisis that followed the resign.atlon of Premier Adolfo Suare1 forced a postponement. , The Ainerican·born queen of Jordan bas borne a Jordan·bom prioce. The royal palace an- nounced that Qaeea Noor, fourth wife of Kblg B naeln, gave birth to a boy named Haelaem, after t.be founder of the Hubemite dynasty. Queen Noor, 29, is tbe former Uza Najeeb Halaby, a Princeton 1raduate. She married Buaseln, 47, ID ma. They have two children. -ain forces evacuations ustin receives 5.49 inches of rain i n 14 hour s .... WOlllllC • dramlltlc , ... "' ... Maralt d9I c.,.._ RIWf' at OtWwa. Tha~---ofU.­ tleft ... ,,...,, -y ..... ··"'· Siiia• -· a.., bl partly cleudy O'Wfflha~ Scattered tllawon 8ftd tllun· dtntormt _,. fOfKHt fw the H1tern llatt of Ille nation todey, wlttl • cNnce of ~ ac,_ tlw Oa llotu and Into Ill• "•clflc _.,,....., .. HWS,.._. SvMY .......... ll"ldle"4 f9' "" """""""" ........ Ula -Uan. TelftpW ....... ..._. .. Mtloft M mlddlly Tiurwll9y ,..._ fr9"I • laW af S/111 ............ Mlll ... Ill 91ytfle, Cllff., Giia ll9M,. AtlL, Mil Ill .. _ ... ~ Te-. Coaatal Temperature. HouslOft ·~ Jacll111vlle ,_., IC-City u.v ... utUe ltodi Laubvlllo Memplllt Mloml Mllw-Mf'l .. SL P Nallrfllte HowOr .... New Yon Norltlll Okla Cltr °"'8M Or18Mo ............. l'lloMI• p~ ... , ..... ,. f"tlalld,Or-. ltapl4Clty --ltklWMnd SaltL.aU IHttte st. Loub "P·T.,,.. St Ste Martt S..OUne T11IM WHfllfltlft CAUflCMINIA .....v .. .., llaUnfi.ct ........ ..._.... .,. ..... ..... 91~ c.tatlna (llhOf'Clt't . ..,... 1..11119 .,,_...,.. LMUstw Ulle9-" Lal .... IMl'Yff• ~ .....,.., Mt.Wlhlil ....... ......,..,, OalL&aM OIMf'la ....,,..,,._, ........ ,_....._ ......... R.-...ow --s.u---... ,_ laftlM ... WI __ .,._ SM~ ""°'"' .. ,,~---~ ......... .......... ,. 72 71 • '1 76 7• • .. " 102 11 " 7' .. ., fJ 11 " .. 71 g ,, " a • ft 75 ., 61 u n • 7t a .tt ti ., . .. 10I • ,. sa 1• M 11 • a SI a " 17 .. as • " . ?• '4 '2 17 72 • " at " 10 ., ,. f1 ti 1t1 • .. ,. ,., ,. 7' ., " • • " ., • .. • * ,. .. ., ,.. ., .. ., ,. • .. n as .. 1S '4 " • • Orange Co•t DAil. Y PILOT~rlday, June 12. 1981 . s brings invite Supervisors to appear befor e r egents to discuss bills? In a situation described aa "extraordinary," member• of the Oran1e County Board of Supervisors have been invited to appear before the University of California Board of Regente to discuss the controversy over financing of indlaent medical services provided at tbe UC Irvine Medical Center ln Orange. • The lnvijation was formally conveyed this week to supervisors Chair~an Ralph Clark from regent.a Chairman Joseph Moore. It wu not immediately known which of the supervisors would attend the regents meeting scheduled June 19 at the Los Aneeles Convention Center. A Clark aide, Stan Oftelie, said the invitation has been passed on lo Supervisors Roger Stanton and Harriett Wieder, members of the board subcommittee han· dling the dispute. The county, former owner of the medical center, and the uni· versity have been embroiled in disputes over the billin& of services for indigents since 1979. At issue is more than $11 million in bills the county has refused to pay. The county -required by law to pay for treatment or indigents with medical problems -is con· tending the university often pro· vides unnecessary services. Bills which the county has dis· puted c urre ntly are being arbitrated between the two parties. Disputes erupted shortly after a contract was negotiated in 1976 by which the university took over treatment or indigents. The regents voted on May lS to terminate the agreement, ef· fective Jan. 1, 1985, the earliest date allowable. In addition the regents asked the county to conaider necotiat· ln1 a new contract under wblch the county would pay an annual "lump sum'' for treatment of in· dlgent.a. In the letter to Clark, dated Monday, Moore said the coun· ty'a earlier request for an au· dience before the regents wu '•an extraordinary one.'· But, saying the contract dlapute likewise was a matter "of ex· traordinary importance,'' Moore extended t.be invitations. In a related development, the county went lo court Wednesday to block the university's inten· lion to stop providing mental health services for county pa· tients effective July 1. . The county failed to win a temporary order a1atn1t the uni· veralty. A rurther bearlnc wu scheduled for June 23 before Orange County Superior Court Judge Luis Cardenas. In a separate letter sent to Clark this week, UC President David Saxon said it is tbe uni· verstty's contention that the mental health servicet contract may be terminated, despite the county's contention it cannot UD· der the agreement that transferred the medical center from the county to the uni· verslty. Saxon said he wu diBturbed by Clark's alle1ed failure lo ad· • dress the larger issue of the dis· pute between the two parties. Transit worke·r convicted in theft A jury has convicted a former Orange County Transit District worker of petty theft in connec· tion with alleged thievery from buses parked in the district·~ Garden Grove maintenanc( yard. Judge Robert Knox set a sen tencing bearing for July 14 for Jeffrey Reynolds, 29, in West Orange County Municipal Court. Reynolds faces a maximum six·month jail term or ·a $50( fine, said Deputy District At torney Ed Hess . Reynolds was accused ot stealing at least $200 from buse! and carrying coins from bus fareboxes to his car in small plastic waste baskets. OCTD officials investigatin1 possible thefts said audits In· dicated that46;J,OOO in coins was missing from fares collectec; from August 1980 to la st January. Reynolds was not ac· cused or stealing all the money. Reynolds' attorney, James Thomason of Anaheim, argued during the trial that the dis· trict's accounting methods were ··slipshod" and didn't prove t.be money was stolen. Reynolds also testi(ied that he didn't steal any money. Both lawyers had differing in· terpretations of the jur y 's • verdict. Thomason said some jurors told him after the trial that the petty theft dealt only with stealing the waste baskets. Hess said that explanation was "a little bit unbelievable." He reasoned that the jury still had doubt as to the amount Reynolds might have taken. OCTD officials said Thursday they consider the $63,000 case closed with the conviction of Reynolds. Computer data dangers t~ld WASHINGTON <AP) -Mis· guided federal policies set up to guard communications could ul· timately make personal and businen data id computers more vulnerable to unauthorized disclosure and abuse, a study conducted for the Commerce Department say1. The study by SRI lnterna· Uonal, a 1ar1e conaulUnc firm in Menlo Par\, Calif., said current federal attitudes toward private research Into computer codes also eventually will give Japanese and other foreign manufacturers a competitive advantage over U.S. computer companies. The ·study. a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press, is part of an eUort to de· velop an overall goveeament. policy dehling wltb eryp· lography, the study of codes and code· breaking. For many years, codes were the province of the military and the diplomats, both of wbom concentrated on protecting their own communications from enemies and on trying to read the opposition's messages. But now, sophisticated com· puter codes are crucial to the protection of personal informa· tion on millions of Americans that is stored in computers and .. shuttled back and forth between computers every day. The study says government policy has QPt changed with the changing teohnology. The perceived conflict has lfd in recent years to various at· tempts by federal agencies to limit the research done by academics and other private re- searchers in cryptography. The federal agencies, like the National Security Agency, argue that such research could com· promise national security. But private researchers say the re· search would resµlt in better protection for sensitive informa· lion without jeopardizing na· tional security. Your p_rivate world of.pleasure )' Life at Park Newport is a com- bination of privacy when you want it, social goings-on when you'r~ in the mood. and exhil- arating recreation when you feel rusty. the middle of Newpolt Beach. I Here Is the ultimate In care- free Newport Beach living sur- rounded by ffVery convenieno8. Park Newport residents have a gourmet market. a beauty shop and dry cleaner Juat stePt away from their apartment. There are 8 lighted tennf1 co urts. 7 pools and a $750.000 Spa and athletic cfub. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12, 1981 • Ire WASHINGTON CAP> ~ It looked like just another hearing with another army of bureaucrats detailing facts and figures on tax protesters, but it ended with four aJtgry citizens speaking from the heart. Members of tbe House Gov· ernment Operations subcomnµt. tee on commerce, consumer and monetary afCairs listened, some smiling, others sympathetic, as the four Pennsylvanians vented their ire this week against the Internal Revenue Service, intla· tionary economic policies and "turkey congressmen" who talk and don't listen. The citizens readily admitted they had not paid income taxes for some years and had refused to cooperate with the IRS. But, they contended, the Constitution protects them from incriminat- ing themselves with tax forms .. "What would you call an American who willingly waives his constitutional rights -a fool?" thundered Robert B. Graham Sr., who said he has re- Cused to provide any financial in- formation on tax forms since 1975. The Holland, Pa., resident contended that the IRS makes unfair regulations, pits employer against employee on the issue of withholding taxes and ro'rces citizens to tes'tify • against themselves every time they fill out a tax form. The four , all members of the Committee for Constitutional Taxation, s aid they had driven THE SPRING TRIO Seersucker Sport Coat, Cray tropical slacks, . and White bucks. --"IVA,lt •-Tailored in the Ii · '· ~:·1 ' I •, f •t~ Halliday' s fi .,:·~: ~-' · natural , ·::{ ·. ·., shoulder style ,/,'.d · : that's always '.; ~if': : Ji :1 t: right, · · for hours to tesuty because, Graham said, others asked them to send a message to "those turkey con1ressmen." And he finally admitted. after holding up a silver dollar, that the real problem wasn't the JRS: "My probJem is you." Oespite the critical comments. subcommittee members tOOk a grln·a~-bear-..it attitpde. Chairman Benjamin ROsen· tbal, D·N.Y., at one juncture pointed at. Rep. Lyle Williams; R-Ohlo, and said wryly, "I as-sume you'fe talking to him -not me." Although the four likely would fit the IRS definition of tax protesters, au four denied they were. "I'm not protesting anything," said Mary AJlD S~irpan, a Phlladelphia housewife. "You send me a bill and tell me what I owe and I will pay the tax." George Dixon, of Malvern, Pa., said his problem was sim· pie: "I don't like giving in· formation that can be used against me.'' Earlier, a General Accounting Office official told the subcom-mittee that the tax protest movement has grown sharply in recent ,years and now "poses a threat to the nation's voluntary compliance tax system." I RS Commissioner Roscoe L . family flgain : CINCINNATI <AP> -The "We're not aoing to let Ray Southerland family, ravpged by find out1' about bis son's death, cancer for six generations, ha.a Mrs. Southerland said. "It's not lost another member to the dis-necessary to tell him right ease -18-year-old Micb~el, who now." I died ot complications from · Southerland ls makin1 a slow malian'1\t tumors that •tt-.cked recovery from surgery for "a bla spine. very malignant tumor in a very H)s mother. Jane, and· her strategic localio'1 of the brain," only surviving son, Zl·Ytar· and may not be able to com- old Stephen, who lost his left leg prehend .his son's death Cully, to bone. cancer in 1974, were in said Komblith. seclusion at Children's Hoepital, The doctor said that when1 where Michael died this week. Southerland is further re·I They planned to fly later to_ covered, he will undergo 1 1 Bethesda, Md., where Michael's chemotherapy "to hold back the, father, Raymond, is recovering growth or the tumor ... It's a1 frqm surgery for a second, close race." ; malignant brain tumor. accord· Another Soui.herlaod son, Jef- i n g to Children's Hospital fery.diedofleukemiaatage4ln: spokeswoman Pat Cocoran. 1967. Ray Southerland's 26-year·' "I don't know how they hold old sister lost a leg to the disease: together," said Dr . Paul and his mother, brother and un· Kornblith, the surgeon treating cle died of various forms of' the elder Southerland in Bethesda. ''They are remark a· ble people." ' Michael Southerland, a former Junior Olympic swimmer who had become a paraplegic, fought hard until the end, his mother said. ''He'd gone through more than any human being should have tc endure ... , " Mrs. Southerland, 39, told The Miami Herald. "For him, I'm glad it's over." cancer. Researchers have found that i cancer has s pared only onef generation of Southerlands since 1840 and say the family's tragic h eritage may help unlock genetic secrets of the disease. · ·'There is no question that they have contributed to the fight against cancer," Dr. John Mulvihill of the National Cancer Institute said last week. "Thefr family tree is the largest we pave welJ documented." .. Egger Jr., agreed the movement was having a "serious effect on the voluntary co mpliance system." Michael Southerland, (J former Junior Olympic swimmer, died this week of cancer. He ts shown with his mother. Sarah Jane, at Children's Hospital in Cincinnati. Raymond Southerland, 43, a Dade County, Fla. policeman, was reported in very serious condition Thursday at the Na- tional Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Strokes. The family has cooperatel with NCI researchers, submit~ ting to hundreds or tests and donating tissue and blood am les. ~ INSURANCE CLAIM IN COURT SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES CASE #284340 FORCED PUBLIC AUCTION A• the _ _.of the eoodt h .. o not .,... ,_.., ..,_.,., i.o.,. tN ,...,,..,.. -Y. tM'( ,. ... -for-to "'-mo-• to ,_ "'°"""' to Prf c""'lton. HANDMADE ORIENTAL RUGS Inc..-on tlllO •uc<'°" will.,. "'9' on 111 aluo -.....,.,.. Ito"' .._t "'' -1,. -•riee. All ._ In perloc1 condltjon. A C.01il-o el AwtlMnhc•ty """ ... iuu.cl for.-r>u~ FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, THE AUCTION WILL TAKE PLACE : SATURDAY, JUNE 13 AT 2 P.M. MARRIOTT INN 900 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH RUGS MAY BE VIEWED ONE HOUR PRIOR TO AUCTION Terms: Clllh/Chedl lnform•tlon: (213) 709-0026 A, A Ir A Liquld.w,.Auctkl.-.. GRAND OPENING TOMORROW, SATURDAY JUNE 13th I 0:00 A.M. -7:00 P .M. FREE REFRESHMENTS! REGISTER fOR DRAWING! CM.OH; Wa .. lllyl • YARNS • ACCESSORIES ·NEEDLEPOINT • KITS. 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AWARENESS URGED -Camille Bell, mother of fourth Atlanta child murder victim, 9-year- 'Old Yusuf, told a "Save Our Children" rally 'in Fresno this week, a more child-conscious society is needed to prevent child killings. ~aturn rings Old icy moons? · PASADENA (AP>.-Two scientists involved ·th the Voyager project, advancing a new theory out the origin of Saturn's majestic rings, said ey believe the rings .-e actually the shattered emains of ancient icy moons rather than excess alter from the planet's formation 41,.; billion ears ago. Scientist Richard Terrile of the Jet Propulsion aboratory an<J Eugene Shoemaker of the U.S . eological Survey say their idea is based on the bserved increase in disruption and pummeling earer to the center of Saturn. Cameras aboard the Voyager 1 space probe st year found that Mimas, a 240-mile diameter oon, had been dealt a near-devastating blow by metbing that left a crater covering almost a ird of a hemisphere. Shoemaker conjectured that if something, ch as a comet, bad ~n a litUe .,igeer, or bad uck Mimas a little harder, it could have split e moon apart. i Mimas is about llS,200 miles from the <:enter of Saturn. At about 93,000 miles from Saturn ~re the two so-called "co-orbital moons" that f re a common orbital track around the planet. ese moons are "good candidates" for the notion a larger moon that was struck down into aller pieces, Shoemaker said. Still closer to the planet are the "shei>herding" moons that roll inside and outside the F ring at Sf,100 and 86,900 miles respttUvely from the center of Saturn. The F ring ls the curiously lS-aided and twisted allair of three smaller ringlets discovered by Voyager 1. • Shoemaker said the ringlets and the shepherd 1fOOns, wt)ich keep the movement of ringlet putlcles in line, ought to be considered as one in· tfgral system that has been derived from a com- mon, ancestral moon. 1 Shoemaker and Terrile, who presented their findings last month at a meeting of the American Qeophysical Union in BaltimoH, aJJO said that the dlstincUy different characters of the A, B and C rings -the most prominent of the planet's half· dozen rings and the three known since Galileo'• detection of them -suggest that each may have come from the disintegration of separat.e moons. Dinosaur hunt slated by duo LOS ANGELES <AP> -It SOWlds like a "Late Show" movie. but two scientist-adventurers say they're going to search uncharted African jungles this summer for what may be a living species of dinosa\U' that somehow escaped extinction 60 million years ago. "Whether there are dinosaurs or not, we don't know. But we're going to check it out, 11 said biologist Roy P. Mackal of the University of Chicago. "l admit to havine some romance in my soul. 11 He concedes much of the scientific community u skeptical or worse, but "That doesn't bother us. You have to have a thick skin. "U they say it's extremely unlikely, tben I'm the first to agree," be said this week. "But it's not Impossible. We've got to check out the longsbots because they pay off once in a while." Meckal said in a telephone interview that na\ives, primarily pygmies ln remote areas of the Congo, frequenUy have reported encount.en with a bizarre creat ure twice the size of an elephant. Such tales, be said, were almoet always second· hand. They called the wat.er-dwelllne creature mokele-mbembe. But last year, lfackal said, he spent a month In the eon,o and "we were able to penetl'•te to an area wbere we sot flrst-banCl report.a, not just peo- ple sayms, 'My srandfatber told me about this when I waa a boy.'" He sil.kl members of dllterent trtbes and re· 1tons "Ul described .._ally the •••• tbln1. That Inda me to tlrink tbllt there ls an animal of aome klDCI out there." He uld the reaion, rarely mlted bf outsiders, hu cbanced Utile ln '70 mUlloa yean,' ao if there la a relic 1pectes, lbi1 wOU.ld bli a lood ptace for It ... Jt'1 ltke a lost world liuo ... :•.' In Lm Ansel•, cOaMaltlM ur Henaaa R•••ttta. a eo«PtaiHi:;4i IM U.rM-montb •rda torbeaii ID u.9 ~la AaP1t, tald Mackel ~.t.M ..U..s ~Of 1 •uiltJ ot •mall. Tlej iUdlly ldelltlftid tbt creature u a .,..... .. or ... ,..,.. •••• ,_ alw .aw.,. lleiltlftid .................. 81111t'• •••• • b .......... ......., ........... aur. ,,_ ialerriewt be eooducl*S an P"Ul'J'eeD· ·~ .......... wd. ··t:...a't·wute ., 1••ru .. 11e .. •1t·· Orange Coast OAtl Y PILOT,t:l'lday, June 12, 1981 s Top contributors told Business, gun owners outspent labor LOS ANGELES <AP> -Bia bu.ti· neH, profealonal ll'OUP• and JUD owners lncreued campaign spendJn1 ln California at a h11her rate than labor ll"OUPI ln the past six yean, accordini to a study released by California Common Cause, which u calllna for strict Umits on political contrtbuUons. Twenty contributors have liven a total of more than SIO mlllloa in cam· pal1n contributions to California state leatalatlve candidates over the tut six years, said the 96-pqe report releued Thursday by the public in· t.erest lobby. ·'The 14 business and professional groups l.n the top 20 increased their total ~ntrlbullons by 98 percent" du-rln& five of those years, 1976 through 1980, said Walter Zelmllfl, California Common Cause executive director. "By contrast, the five labor croups in the top 20 increased their contribu- tion total by only 12 percent durin1 the same period. The two bieeest labor givers, the Association for Bet· ter Citiz.ensbip of the California Stat.e Teachers Association and the California State Employees Asaocla- tloo, gave less in contributions in 1980 than they bad in 1976," Zelman said at a news conference at the Greater Los Angeles Press Club. "Between 1978 aod 1980 the Cun-owner ll'OUP increased its COO· trlbulkJn tQta.l by $264,903. Only the medical political action commlttees gave more in contributions than the 1un owners in UllO," Zelman said. Incumbents received slx times as much in contributions from the top 20 a.s did cballeneeri, the study said, notin1 that contributors favored in· umbellcy in their campaip con· trlbuUon strateey over political parties. The largest contributor during the 1ix-year period, Jan. 1, 1975, through Nov. 4, 1880, was the California Medial Political Actloo Committee with $1,132,611, the report said. A close second was the Califo~a State Employees AssoclaUon, which con- tributed $1,121,812. The California Real Ealate Political Action Commit· tee donated *4,Ml to campaign cof· fers. The gun-owners gl'OUP was number five on the lilt at $747 ,408. ''The real problem or campaign financing today is not the players but the rules of the game," said Zelman. "Campaign costs are soaring. Special interest groups provide the great majority of campaign money . These rules of the game force almost all candidates and legislators into ex- cessive amounts of dependency on special interest campaign contribu- :J . • Buddy Edsen as Master of Ceremonies ~ ~ • • Antique Car Parade • Official Bridge Dedication to be held on Bri dge • Dixieland Band 1906-1981 BRIDGE DEDICATION! Saturday • June 13th • 9:00 A.M. Zelman said the Guo Owners of California is the fastest growin1 big giver in terms of absolute dollars. tions, placing the public interest in !"------------------------------frequent jeopardy.'· /Fi/A;sHOP N-STORE WAREHOUSE SALE! SAT : JUNE 13th -10 a•-6 P• • 2200 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA STORE ONLY! 100% Poly. Easy care for work or play. Mach. wash. Designer Length9 60". POLY SHEER KNITS YD. VAL. TO 2.67 Cotton/Blends. Summer shorts. culottes, &. skirts. Mach. wash. Designer Lengths 45". VAL TO 2.95 C S-T-R-E-T-C-H TERRI YD. VAL. T03.95 Poly ,.cotton. Day into night dress- 1 ng. Mach. wash. Designer Lengths 80". VAL. T0 4,95 c YD. c COTTON PRINTS OVAL PRINT Poly ,<::otton. Huge aaaortment for dreues, skirts & quilts. Oeelgner Lengths 45". Mach. wash. REG . TO 2.95 Poly Cotton. Full Softs. 45" machine Wash. ~: 57 2.95 YD. ; h I can l Whef\ ~lgti°'~ politicians cdrne to Orange County looking fo~ campaign contributions, they gfUlerally know well in advance w~ere they'll go. They'll visit the big busl- nes ses, the political action g11oups, the special interest or- g4nizations and, of course, those w,althy individuals who like to koow their voices are being httard. Until recently, those Orange County donors had little to unite ~ m except for the obvious litical affillatiofls. But that left county With two conflieting pqints of view on some issues - arid virtually no united front on others. · Orange County's political in- fluence is maturing, however, and one of the latest examples of its growth 1a the formation last month of a new nonpartisan aroup called the County Club. "' The or1aniuUon was proposed by Democratic leader Richard O'Neill, but It's for the poUUcally active ol all persuasions. So far the exclusive group bas about so members who have paid from $500 to Sl,500 to join. Their goal is to gain more political leverage for county in· terests in nonpartisan issues. Money ls not the only thins politicians need to get elected; but it's hard to do without. Now when politicians visit Orange County looking for big donations, they Sl'e likely to get an extra re- minder about county needs. It may be a reminder they can't afford to forget. Myths about 1-efugees The county's new refugee af. fairs management team started off in the right direction by zero- ing in on the strange rumor mill that has focused on the refugee population. In a report to the Board of Supervisors, the team identified, and knocked down, a list of "myths" about refugees that have been circulating in Orange County. Although some seem far- f etched, it appears many of the myths are taken quite seriously and could, if unchecked, lead to unwelcome conflict. The refugee report assures us that: -Refugees are not handed $5,000 from the federal govern- ment when they arrive in the country. They sometimes get a small amount of cash to pay rent and some vouchers for food and clothing to start them out. -Refugees are not given special low-interest government loans to help them buy homes or start businesses, though some eventually may qualify for the same small business loans that are available to others. -Refugees receive no pref- erential treatment for jobs or housing though the voluntary agencies that sponsor them try to help them find jobs and living quarters. -Refugees are not entitled to s pecial consideration for citizenship. They must meet the usual requirements of five years' residence and proof of good moral character and pass a citizenship exam. -Refugees are not exempt from pre-i mmigration health screening. They are examined at refugee staging areas in Southeast Asia and may be barred if they have a com- municable disease. Those arriv· ing in Orange County are re- screened here for tuberculosis. Most absurd of the rumors is the one that contends Calif omia tries to get more refugees i-' or- der to receive more federal money. On the contrary, federal funds for refugees already have been cut back and because of the large numbers already here, an effort is being made to have new arrivals placed in other states. Undoubtedly .many of the ref - ugee myths reflect the resent- ment that seems inevitable when large numbers ot newcomers ar- rive Uuu1.area.. Those who feel resentment should remind themselves that these people, almost without ex- ception, have suffered physically and emotionally in leaving their homes, their friends and their native lands, often under threat of persecution. And that, given a reasonable chance to adjust, they can become a credit to their new communities. Toward airport q·uiet An access plan for John Wayne A.irport i1 now on the books, one that will speed the in- troduction of new and quieter jeta operated by the five commercial carrieu authorized to serve Ora~e County. ~ plan -modified subetan- tialJy 1roJll earlier proposals - will reqw.r. the carriers, unlesf they ea.a show extreme hardship, to us' quieter jell, such u the DC-9 SUpet 80, manufactured by McDonnell Douglas on 50 percent of their nights by OCt. 1, 1982. A former plan called for only a 25 • percent conversion by that date. And, under the plan •P· proved by supervisors recenUy, all flights must be nown with quieter jets by Oct. 1, 1983. . Thus, the pressure is on the air carriers to reduce the amount of noise their aircraft produce. Should they fall to do ao, they could be stripped ~ fll1bts and thus lose a share of the market. We applaud the tougher con- version formula. Residents Jiving under jet departure tracks shoUJd1 also. Opinions expressed In the space abOve are those of the Dally PUot. Otnv v iews ex- pressed Oil tnls page are thote of thelr•uthors and artists. Reader com"*"t Is lnvlt· ed. Addrnt The Dally Piiot, P.O. BoJJ 1$60, Costa Mesa, CA 92426. Phorie (714) 642·4321 . L.M. Boyd/ Fish scale glamour Glamour to the Warrau Indian women of South America some years ago called for a special belrdo. Honey wu kneaded into the halt and then iridescent flab 1cales were sprlokled over the wbole meM. It glistened. Q. What'• the lon1est-rullnini radJo serle1? A. Alistair Coote'• ''Letters from America" ln the Brltltb Broadcut- ing Corporation pro11ammint 11Dce 194f. · In caf eterlu, men. ted to pick out more ~anced m•alalbln wom.ado. beav)'Weiebta from eatlriJ too mucb at one sitting. Report la they are loa- lng abdut 15 pounds a month -down to the desired point. The operation la said to be easily revenible. Said CbriatOpber Me>rley: ·'There la only one auccess -to be able to live your lite your own way." Amonc tile m•mber• of \hat bllh school 0T1anlsatlon called Future Homemakera of America are %$,000 )'OUDI men, Sin~ Bollvta beeime a uUID 1» yean a10, it bu tied t• daanlet ln aovemment. ' Minority loan shak@-Up due WASHINGTON -Ex-President J{mmy Carter transformed the Small Business Adminhtration into a social agency whose main function was not to serve small businessmen but to help minority businessmen get established. The Carter administration granted easy credita and non-competitive bids to mil\ority contractors under the "8A" program, which became plagued with fraud, waste and inequity. Much of the money was squandered on the undeserving or the politically well-connected. As one •SBA official described the minority program succinctly : "It stinks." Yet this same official said the evils of the 8A program are the price that muat be paid if minority contractors are ever going to get a fair shake in the business world. THE HOT-EYED PV&ITANS in the Reagan administration, however, disagree with this "necessary evil'.' f pproacb. They are determined to see that the program ii made to work in such a way that both the minority recipients and the taxpayers set their mooey'a worth. It's a tall order, though: The SBA !s $500 mitlionin the red. It makes loans to "paper" companies that have no equipment, no employees to speak of - and a demonstrated inability to pay back what they borrow. l-oana and contracts are awarded on the basii of expediency or political pressure. Non -minority contractors get government help under the SA program by using minority firms or individuals as fronts. He re are two examples of what's wrong with the minority contract progr am. They were found in the SBA's .. ~ JACI 118111811 fl:~ ~ ,, own confidential documents by my reporter Judy Grande. William Roberts is a businessman who is also a Denver city councilman. His request for a $300,000 loan under the 8A program was turned down by two SBA officials. The first loan officer noted that Roberts' company lost $20,000 in 1979 and $242,000 in the first half df 1980. "Based on the earnings record of this compa(ly, this debt cannot be retired in a sattsfactory manner," the 6fficial wrote; ··Mr. Roberts bas n o business location, machinery, equipment or any of lhe normal trappings of a business." wrote another official. THE SAME OFFICIAL then went on to say that Roberts was biddinJ on a number of contracts and was about to be awarded one under SA lbat would be worth as much as $14 million. or the requested $300,000, the official wrote: "It 1s a sensitive loan from a political st:yid'point, and there is no question that an)' neg a tive decis ion would be appealed." SBA higher-ups overruled the loan omrers· refusal. even though the FBJ had determined that Roberts bad once forg'ed tus ex·wife's signature on an old loan. In fact. the councilman's firm was given a $325.000 loan: the extra $25,000 was to cover an earlier $24,000 SBA loan to a defwict Roberts enterprise. Roberts denied that his firm had no equipment or employees at the time of the loan application, and though he admits signing his wife's name to close out a loan, he said he did not think he bad done anything wrong. Anottier Colorado f'irm , Boulder B& M Quality Dry Cleaners, has had 12 yetlrs of 8A contract support. In Janua~. it got its seventh SBA loan. even though it had no collateral, has never »bown a profit and owes the govercl'bent. taxes as well as payments on the ei.rlier loans The company's latest loan app· llcalion asked for $57 .000: it was given $97,000. Sources tell me the loan was later rescinded after someone in SBA protested. but the agency would not confirm this, citing confidentiality. A company official would say only that Boulder IS considering legal action against SBA. Records on these and other minority contract cases have been sent to the Senate Small Business Committee for study. Reagan '.Fjudg~t battle just beginning One « the best founts of lnfortQaUon ln Wub.iQltod ii a restaurant on Capitol um where moet of the Sena\e staff peo- ple hug out. The other evening I wu then talking with a J~·redred aenlor llaff man for Senator Rualell Lona. D·La., who, in spite ol the Republican talleover of the Senate, is still one of the moat powerful Senators in Wublqtoa -partitularly in the area ol ta.xe1 and budcets. My fr[endL observlnc the much- ballybooed vidory of the Reqan forc:es on the budget. '81d, "lt'a only round one of a flfteela round fl.cbt. •• BE 18,. ot COQl'le, ri&ht and there ls where the Reagan people are ultimately going to cet tbenulelves buab•hacked. What bas been adopted la a budget that sets general apendlng limits, but there will be at leut siJ more 10-arounds as the Congress iets down to the details of We needed 1•1 the other day to I dron. down to George & Al's, bopln1 they'd be open aa it was only 10 a.m. "I think they've gone out of buai- ne11," said mJ wife, Glynda, dJaapPe>lnt- edly, as we drew near. "All those junked can~ 1ooe; someone'• even. hosed down the pavement; and tbe~'s a uniformed aecurtty cuant standing by the pump.'' "Wait.'' l 1aid. 'I clo beUne that'• O.or1e, himself." I couldn't be sure u tbe oob iun. I'd ever seen Oeorl• were wh4'ft J knocked reapecttally on the door ol bit cJuttared otflff to ltft OYll' t.be moaey 1 ow--·hlm for UM •~lln• l'd pumped into my tank. But, by IQUy, ltwa1~et "Oeor1e.' 1 aaicl; admirinl bll neat ktiakla and fora1e cap, "bave you been dfattedT'' exactly what is going to be cut and how much. This i.s where it is going to be brought home to e lot of voters around the na- Cllllil MAIR lion that a reduced budget means. specifically. that local bospita1, job pro· iram ot dtug center is going out of buslneu. Either Ulat, or the federal cuts will have to be off-set by increases io local taxes to keep a lot of things tolling alone that marny people want kept opera Uni. The work of the Congress m this ''Sbmething·s up," agr~ Glynda, noddihc auspiciously. And, sure enough, once Geprge bad the pump gol~g. he sidled around to the front of the car and "Geor,e!" I cried. "Stop trying to break of O\U' wipers!" l "I was only ltlting them up so could wash your windshield, sir.'' be ex· plained apotogeticaUy. •'Why wvuld he want to wash our winds hieltl?" Glynda whis .. ered. "We 've done fine just scraping' it off once a month." t "MAYBE HE'S d,veloped. • cleanli- neaa fetish," l 1U1gested. "Hold it! Now be'slWdlioc wJ\b.the~~e." Sor~ ·enough, George bad lifted the hood and waa reaching down ~ide .. I open9d the door and ')ijpped up behind blm'J "Caucht you ln the.acti" I said. " uat cheeking your Oil sa.r," h~ sal~. showlq m• the dJp ettck. 1 "Wb9 tausht you how, to do U.tt " J Hked. ••Al, 1lr. I know he'd ~e to uy hello;1 but he111n cleaning the rest l'OQm1. ·;.. "la tt July already?" I •aid. "Oh, Al likes to clean them twice ll day. Your oll'1 fine, 1lr. I'll J"'t put 1ome dlatllled watet" ht 10Qr" battery •• nitty·grltty, detailed trim-and-slash operation will probably not get a lot of press coverage because we media types fiave 'a short attention span. But. when the cuts literally hit home, back home, voters are going to know about it. And. that's when the howls will start. MASSIVE CUTS in the federal budget are wonderful lD the abstract. It is when we get down to the short strokes and itemize what will happen in your town that the whim-whams begin and the politicians run for cover. This. of course, is the strategy of House Speaker Tip O'Neill. He is going to go along with the Reagan budget cuts and, then. let the White House take the heat for the public reaction that is bound to come in a few months. lt is sort of like watching a man braid lhe rope that is going to be used at bis own hanging. thwe'd better be four when I leave,'' I said. I THOUGHT all this was too good to be true. SUre enough, after presenting, lhe bill. George came at me with a knife. "H4;re'a my wallet, you fiend," I said. "But spare my wife and cblld." "Oh, no, ail','' said George. "This gen-uine pluU~-bandled steak knife is a \oken of our appreciation for your bu.si· neat. Five ruore filJ-ups and you'll have a eomplete set." . . "Georae," I 1aid, cenuinely touc,bed, , 'thank you for restoring Ult meaning <>f 'service' tef the phrase 'service S'8· tion ' " "00Q't thti$ m•, sir," said Geor1e th aAlgh. '"thank She\k Yamani." ' ' • t I l 1 t c t i t c s \I \I i; 0 a c 11 n d ti il Ct u , ' a . ~ y t ~J ~ Lf be> Sb ill ro wi ftl i~ Ui sd La an bl1 fa. a"n tr w st1 24 an de r0t st se :JO 17 ca ne frc st fe• :;t1 CCI se eft • "de frc ve ab t>I tif m si F 1 di so d~ • DEAR PAT DUNN: I read u article re- cently Ul1t 1u1,e1ted ta.kine out lll• la· aurance to pay estate and lnberitaaee tax• . Wouldll't the lmurance proceeda lacreue the tu? p .T., N..,ort ... cb T ... A.merlcaa C.UcU tlf Liie ....._. res,_. tlaa& pl'Mtl••Mr eM ... =1 wff.kl M lar&e •:::.r .. ..._. 8M 11'1 tu tile )Jlllllcy w.W cree ..... tlae ... ,,..,re ... ,_ &Im~· II tlaat tlae .... ~ '••117 ........ meeC l&a tetal tas bW ........ ::::=.• 11erlllee y ef u.e eetate ..... llm •· u.. • TIM CODdl HP &Ida II~ la· port ....................... ~"'-lanltlMtl&a •bJed to .,.... ....... .._ are laYOIYed.. 'fte eltate mlP&; ,_ ....... ee9• •lat prl.marlly of at.eeks ................. la& at lew prke wtaea ....._._. tasea are levied, IMlt eMN be .. 111t .._. ~jut a few m.U. later. Or Ute eatJte :-:.. HUii& of a larte pleee' tlf •alultle I... ..W DOt be qtlklr.lJ ...... &M at 11111 •allle • wlalcll ee.14 _.be .. WIYIMd fw paftlal tale wltlHMI& laanalal tile property nlae. la tlleM aad o&Mr ca.a, Uae fact tlaat lanruce ·TRY THESE CLASSIFIED INFLATION FIGHTERS I GJVOw lVu Can Sell More ... with Daily Pilot PENNY PINCHER ADS Only $3 3 lines for 2 days only $1.50 a day Advertlae one or more Item• valued up to $1 ~O. Each addltl9nal llne I• only 66c for the two days. Sorry, no commerc:tal ads allotted. Charge Your Penny Pincher Ad or use your BankAmericard or Master Card f THE BIGGEST GA .. AGE SALE ON THE ORA~GE COAST t IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS , .--~-------~~-- Orange Cout DAILY PILOT ,t:rlday, June 12, 1981 ' brine before free1la1, addi.c to I.lie ••hff'al ............ MM .. HtllfJ&ulaM.ll&ie9 plaODQ. for e~r&ency caU. only the ftral JI ••• M d1ee .. .., .. ralle ,_... ltJ ~-IOdlum content. mlnutee lifter ID eartllqaake. ... ~.aUeltlle9"ateata ......... Canned and froaen fruit• alto are Dlvllloa Manager Diane DaUacla aald, t .......... 1eaerally proce11ed without •odium. But "PT&T baa made every effort to laaure tbat amall amou.nta of aalt may be 9dde4 te ;re· telephone commaaleatlon1 are kept ~ Sodium Content lUted vent the darkenlDc of 1peclftc fndta, lMllld-throughoat a quake crt1l1. Tlte compHy la& applesauce. AJl4 aome fndw are dipped eqalpmeat offlcea ltave been bull& to DEAR PAT DUNN: Where cao I find an l,n •odium hydroxide 10 tltey cu 9" peeled wlthatand atre11e1 CHted by quaket. Tiie more easUy. r twitching rackt are attached to the cellla& H inexpensive booll °!J:m= that U.U tbe well u the noor. And, they're supported at sodlum content ot v ou ot foods! No dial tone \be top and boUom by abock absor~n . W.T.,N~Beacb Company awltclll•I locatlona al10 llave A aew ltoeklet bel•I .U.trtba&M by DEAR PAT DUNN: I Vied to call a emerpaey power soucea to keep pltoees • c.rwe11 u.t .. na&y, •-ne 8edl••.c.au.t or operati.Dg even U Ute commercial electric Year....._ ...... al•Mt • 1&em1 ... tile friend right after tbe Sul Beach earthquake power II dlaruptecl." ...... nllM8t .... , ... It ...... od .. a few weeks ago, but I couldn't get a dial -..-- nallaWe "-: c-.eal DU&rlMu. Ceater, tone. I've wondered ever slnce if something • ··cot a problf!tn'> Then wnte to Pat 7 aneudr Pm_ U.aea, N.Y. 1'111. Cltecb happens to the phone liftel or equlpment ~'lol Dunn Pot """cut '"' l•p<, ...... ......,1te••P•101etoe.neu l1al•ertlty. • when an earthquake occurs. Cao you find t~ answv& and action you ued to ..... ~ ....... t ...... 11 lmtilll la out? • 1olve 1nequatae1 m government and al•Mt eyery61a1 we eai-JH'Oee.._. ud U · K.E., Huntin&ton Beacb n bwtM&s Mail your que1llon& to Pat •ree~. Boda balda1 power .... bUlal Shaky people -aot the allay eanb -Dunn, At Your Sttince, Ora~ Coa1t .... , for esam,&e, are todl .. eo•,...U. are al faaJ& la this eaM. Pacllk 'l'elepbooe Dady Pilot, P 0 Bo:r 15';0, Costa Me1t1, CA nti26. Al C.!litanm like ~b•p Ud Wor~ reports that qaaJtea .. meU•eit caue delay• man111$1ter1 aa po111ble wtJl be aniw.red, but ph.oMd , .. ee .... are M&b la todlam. In getting a dlaJ toae beeHae 11.aea are inquirw• or letteri rwt including tlw reader'• full Pn.ea •e1etablea u•allJ an ,.-oeested flooded Immediately followtag a temblor napie, oddr~u and btaineu hour$' phmae numbeT Wit.Miit ..... ••It. Bat atarday ntetablet when everyone caU1 everyoee elae at the cannot be considered Thi& column appean daily e:r· like U.a -.. er pea1 ofta ate torted la same time. Customers are urged to use cept Sunday$.·· I .. .. ) ) ,, I -:{ • J \ ·4 I K \ \. 1.l •• ! l ) . ' i> rf ) 1 .1 c .J ') ., r ' a ') d u I j : '• ., I l , II ·d )"j ,o :> I ) . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday, June 12, 1981 1980 CADILLAC · "(OUPE DEVILLE Equipment includes dual comfort power seats, Cadillac wire wheel cov- ers, AM-F M stereo with cassette tape player and many other power as- sist options. (604ZBJ). s , Outstanding Resales 1980 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM O'Elegance. (325ZBW) 5 12,995 1980 CADILLAC ELDORADO COUPE Factory two'-tone pain! (621389). 1977 ¢ADILLAC COUPE DEVltLE AM-FM stereo radio with 8 track tape player. (723VPY). 55995 - 1978 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE , fJ Wrth Cadillac wire wheel covers. (405VOZ). 57995 . . " . 1980 OLDSMOBILE 'CUTLASS SUPREMe 1981 CADILLAC ELDORADO COUPE AM-FM stereo radio w 1th cassette tape player. (1BJZ844). 517,995 1978 . CADILLAC SEVILLE Leather covered seating area (976TXK). . 5 10,995 1!78 CADILLAC · .FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM Dual comfort power seats. (1 11 UKY). 56495 1979 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD BROUGHAM Factory padded elk-gram vinyl top. (719WYB). 5 10,995 ·~ ' 1979 CADILLAC SEVILLE Equipped with all t:adillac pC1wer 8SS1SI$. (711Y80). 1979 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE· . 1976 CADILLAC SEVILLE "' Equipped wltl'I all 1980 CHEVROLET CORVETTE T-TOP . ,, AMHERST, Mass. <AP) - When student protest t urned bloody al Kent State in t970, shouts or frustration from a col· lege campus here echoed off the foothills or western Massachusetts. Stude nt leaders m arched\ They led sit·ins. They took over1 buildings. A decade has passed.\ University of Massachusetts 1tu· dent leaders still are committed to change. But they work from inside rather than outside - the system. Inside the chan· cellor's office. And inside the statehouse. The student body president to· day is a partner in the education business. He rarely need march to be seen or shout to be heard. • "Where it's available, and where it works. you have to work through the system," says Richard La Voice, co-president of the UMass student body. Instead or picketing, LaVolce and counterparts across the country are filing laws uits. Instead or criticizing big busl· ness. they run multjmillioo· dollar, student-owned corpora• lions. Instead of looking askance at the profit motive. they talk in· cessantl~ of the need to have a "marke hie" degree. lnstea of staging a sit-in at the board of trustees meeting, 1'Where it's avaitlable , and whene it works, you nerve to work thrpugh the system' LaVoace sits inside -on the board and with a vote. And ill· stead of fittil\g in silent protest i'h the .th an cellor's waiting room, LjVolce ls ushered in - without an appointment -for frank dist:usslons. The ~e who ascend to the student soapbox also have cbin.ged. Student presidents are older, as is the average student. And they are likely to be study· ing busioess or science, rather than the traditional political science. Like b is predecesaori; LllVoice still arranges 1ooncerts and fi ghts the admi9iStration bitterly ·•hen be s~ an in· fostice. Uaipg rallies.' lawsuits and boycotta. But th' 21-year-old senior also travels to Bos t·o n and Washington to lobby for more state aid for the school and its 24.000 students. And~ oversees an operaUon that includes a MU· dent fed~al loan bank, a health food reflaur3'nt, sP91"1.ing good store, btcycle s iJOP; photo service. staff or att.onieys and $0-bus tr:ansl\ fleet tha~ carries 17.000 people a day across the campus.• 1 A l l that, and a da i l)' newspa~t and yearbook. is nm from a $3.QimUliJ>n kitty fed by s tudent• fees and state and federal money, A gro>fing number of the a,100 'tudent ptesidents on American campusla are running student servlces;operations and lobbying efforts ,Pore massive tban pr~· . ·decesso~ thought possible .. "Studfnt presidents have 1one from sotial affairs directors to ~ry 1/:tant legislators - and in y cases cider tiseal officer of separate corpora. lions. if'hey're admiDls~inc multlmUlion-dollar bud1ets and signin g ever y check," say1 Frank Viggiano, executive· director of the U.S. Student Al· . 11ociatioo and student body presl· , dent at I!.a Salle In 1975., · '' Le~ng s tudents rur ~eir own is a source o power for the , bqt lt'a also a trap," says Wl am Field, dean of stu· dents ate 0.._s. "Nofiil the burea.eracy is the same 8' our bar•ucracy. We hide ~ lhJl'\IS tbe sa·me way .tttey bi e theirs. We play with ,bud1ets and they do, too." Ind , the task of nmninl a networ of student services is becomi too much tar people •y.'bo allf 'have to stud)' for tests and atblnd claet ... Student presld• alr;!f .Lare. reb'ine on d ol ••IDnal ataff m em At U lJ runruN.,. or 30 pf .. ,., ·uc~ .... . •••• M,000 hltrati aeu Moala.• ln additioJi to its growin1 ds. cal power, student goverom•t ·'has become a real accepted part or t~ university at t"te," Gah)es says. ''We're folved in almost every area 1pt decisl90-making in the um- versity." . 1 1 Daily Pilat FRIDAY, JUNE 1l, 1981 When there's disagreement these days, student leaders are willing to barter. keeping the old weapons of protest holstered - but available. "It's like running a multiple option attack," La Voice says. ''We use every method we can to achieve our end.·· Today's student body presi· dent is lobbying hard and effec- Gaines, studying econom~ and poUticaJ science, fits an e • less round of meetings il\to 40 o 160 hours of work a weelt. He hM • rull·time secretary; hie ,t.11 • St. ll1glllg. • numbers a dOzen. 1 I "My parents keep remindiof tne that this isn't how you stlllf out in the world, .. he says. hits f1· elded Gerald Savage, at age 'l:I, ~ the younge!lt member or tn evening school student gover ment at Hunter College, a 11 WI• th aplomb year·o1d school in New Yor City. He1s also the studen\ body president, overseeing an operation ·that includes a medical office, a staff or attorneys, .a book loan program and studs\! clubs. "Our st,udents take their stu· dent govVrunent very serious- ly," Savage says. Student presidents still are concerned with the sociaJ i11ues\ of the day -nuclear pqwer draft registration, U.S. aid to El \ Salvador. Sut college no lon1er Is seen as a way to avoid t,be draft. Instead, it's a requisite for success in the job market. And one cause has students' atten· t10n the economy. Will the loan or grant check arrive next semester? Will the diploma get them a job? "They don't get involved in philosophical debates about the great social issues, like we used to,'' says Viggiano. "But the economy has them worried." In that worry, they have a compatriot -the school ad· ministration. ''Our interests are beginning to come together again." says Field. the UMass dean of stu· dents. Enrollme.nts are falling at many campuses. the financial aid picture is uncertain and the ax being brought down on gov· ernmeot spending may even· tuall,,y mean fewer new eduta• tlotuil .. programs. Administrators and students have become allies in those batUes. "It's so difficult ror studenu to get jobs, and they realize that all the cutbacks in public h~herf , education may reduce the quai>: ty of their own education,'' says Lila Coyle, the 40-year-old stu- .d en t body president at &UasasoJt Community Colf e in BtoQ.k~. Mass. So recently an advers of the adlUinistration, at the end of the "generation stude nt leaders mate apologies for jumping the r ~. "Students got smart," u~·s Gaines says. "They went through a turbulent period rn the 1960s and then said, 'Hey. I we are really interested in vinC' some say we're going to h ve l(> orgarnize ourselves and ork Within tJ*system. '" I ( WENATCHEE, Wash. (AP> - The basebaJI record ror most in- nings played with a bee ln yo pants probably belongs to year-old Shawn Skinner. / "Shawn Skinn~r was outst'6d· ing on defense," noted Qach Dick 1.ornes in a routin~outh baseball game report the Wenatchee World . "H~ layed the entire firth inning Ytllh a bee in his pants." ~ The first-grader ticed an itching and stingin but didn't bumble the ba) when il grounderwashitto)im. In the ex· citement or bis te,m's 27·17 vie· tory. be sbruggitt off the an· noyance. tively More than l schools have full-time stu t·funded lobbyin g s taff in t h ei.r statehouses. And udent presi- dents trek ther a couple of times a month t estify at com- mittee hearing Ever since year-olds got the vote in 1971, ven though their voting turn t is low. student presidents ve viewed the as- sembled ousands as a huge new co uency -and source or powe ·' Peo e in California know we 'r playing big league pollt. ," Gaines says. ·'And they ave to pay attention to tba ' ile some student presidents h e grown more powerful, ers sacrificed their authority frustration. • At Kent Slate, where National Guardsmen s hot and killed four student protesters during the height of the anti-war move· ment. the Student Senate dis- solved itself an 1974, complaining that it had no real power. At the University of Texas, students abolished their govern m ent in the late 1970s. Now, a student services committee of students a nd administrators makes recommendations to the university president on spending some $5.3 million in student fees. We 've seen too many students get into powerful positions and squander students' money." says Mark Cassidy, a student member of the committee. Now '°me campus l der• 1'know the system bette thim those who created it," sa on~ a dministrator. Richard LaVoice (left) and Larry Kocot distribute leaflets calling /ot a ~tration at the UnWersity of Mauachiaettl in Fot' example, when Bax· ter's comp\iter-generated radar ima1e shows a thunderstorm pasam, a town. "Wt! can add how much. rain fall, whether hail occurred. tornadoes, U1htning, tbunclerstorm.1 '' all as animated symbols. be says. ~ Animatlona of satelllte pic- turea are comrnon on television, "tlut the imqe ls q11ite Jerq," Baxter says. "It isn't anl.rnated lo a smooth kind or way. And most people, tbe fir1t few times tbey see it, don't watch It Con· sistentJy because they really can't tell what'• happenini." Baxter says that won't be the case with his computer aaiJna. lion.' "We'll annotate the i~e to lete;e know exactly what 1' ha ." T e weattt,r man Will leek the hip and low 1)'mbol1 ud front llttes used today. AnLanated, "that's no(. n attracdv• s lnd qi thln1," Baxter says. His syateM will use 1r1da· lions of color to represent the now ol the weather. For tem· perature, the map would have brlabt blue "where lt'r ¥tfY colc1,'' putpl 1badee of Wae wh rt tbf temp atur ta warmer, and abadel of red for warm re1lon1, ranclna to a scorchinc, bri1bt red, be .. ya • ·•we could probably use 1reen for rain and aome lf•boll fOr thuftderstonnl, '' Baxter. 1111. .. =--. ..,,.,..~;;.;:.,-..=--Eaeb eoot ...... aotm.._;._ • wilt show two days' worth of clashing fronts and flowing air. sound effects Included, he says. Baxter credits the latest com· puter revoluUon ror making his system ~asible. "Because of the rapid growth in microcomputer technology, tt's possible to handle telecom. mun i~ations p roble ms and vldeographics problems with very i nexp e ns ive microprocessors, and to do useful work at really low cost, wliereas tour or five years ago )'OU couldn't hope to do this kind of job without spending man)', many thousands of dollars, and ;>robabl)' hundreds or thousands of dollars," he says. The comp\lter Baster intends to sell t.o television statlons ls priced at less than $30,000. com· pared , he sa,ys, with a price of $100,000 for other computers ca,able or handling bis weather system. Tbe staff (>I The Weather 5'.I.· tlon's partnt company, At· moapheric a..e&rcb Corp., de- veloped programs used ln Bax· ter•s stem under contracts from Ute NaUonal Aeronautic• Mid S.-ce AdmiaJ.IVat\on, the ~lt ~ and otbet iovemment a a end•. "Wt ate computer peot>le," Baxter ta)'I ol hla el•ht 1tatt rnetearOIOlitt., allot wbooi hold ,,..chiate delJ'ffl In tlae tleld. 'It 11 nol well known that meteorohtn ta a •omputer ftnn Landers allows one hard-wor~ing, angry receptionist have u her sa'll ... B3 JOB FAIR 1981 ~· • ··" .... ....,., .... .,...,..... "Our studentl take their student government very senmuly," sayl Gerald Savage, president of the ltudent body at New York City's Hunter College. Amherlt. They're current CJf1d future student body premdentl. game -almost 100 percent if you're going to do useful work." Behind the present TV · oriented effort is much higher level research "on the forefront or pure mathematics." aimed at utilizing data from weather s atellites, Baxter says. The bearded native of Monroe, La., says "inefficiency in the preparation or forecasts•• and their presentation on television and r adio led him to develop hls system. .. It is necessary to have a graduate-level education to do a really good job or forecasting the weather." Baxter says. ad· ding that most forecasters "are less prepared than that. - He says he's convinced "it's time we used what we've learned to do as good a job as can be done of informing the public of what's going to happen in the weather." One-arm bandits need 'Slot Doctor' CARY, Ill. (AP ) -Tom Stasiak earned the nickname "Slot Doctor" b y restorin1 many an ailing one-arm bancllt. Now his hObby is his profeaalon. " Filteen years ago I could f ick up one-wb..tera ror tao to $60. Today, prices s tart at 1everal h~dred," said Stulak, 31. Hit repalr or restoration fees ranse trom $UO to $5,000. An llllnoll law amend.ct two ydn ..ro permits hobbylata and ~ll!Ctorl -. bu.y, Hll and "" ilOta th.t are at leas~ 21 ,..... old, b.t th.; cannot bf operated ror pi'Oftt • St11tu, wbO flnt reatored 1 slot machine whlle a h11b school student, is sou1ht for hla r estoration talents by slot ownen throughout tbe counlry. He bu11 and sells tbe devkel, and he and five employeea reatore about four 1lota a weelr. Amona bis own favorites t. a "Mills Double Dewey" retr1ntd from a fiooded tavern. ll took him 2,000 man hOW'I to r.ior. that. "Tbb type waa made from lM to 11m ln Chica'° and tMft are oDly about. ao left bl die country ... be 11ld. It hu two 18"lncl9 wbM.11 'll)lt nlckle or quarter beta '"' _. on colOrl • • DOWN ON THE FARM DEPT. - Maybe with the exception of the good city of Irvine, we don't worry too much about protecting our rural atmoshere along thls coast any more. That's because for the most part, the issue is settled. That is, the quick~1e car washes anl:I street lighting districts have already taken over. This condition, however, isn't un- iversal inland. There still are a few· (;;, !:'-\ T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN-1,~r, places that cling to the rural life with in· trepid tenacity. La Habra Heights is one of those areas. Just consider a news dispatch that came out of that inland reach of our region the other day, where they hud- dled with a joint meeting of the City Council and Planning Commission. ONE OF THE MAJOR TOPICS see med to be the Grand Design necessary to preserve the hayseed climate of La Habra Heights. For one thing, it was pointed out by both council persons and commissioners that the "One Family Per Acre" rule is apparently being flagrantly violated by a number of unthinking rural homeowners. Some of these people are building guest houses on their country estates and then renting them out, for goodness sakes. Councilman James Littlejohn estimated that between 75 and 100 of these guest accommodations have extra families lurking within them and they're actually paying guests. THEN THERE IS the question of new developers who are raising havoc Actually, tM building hide& 2 boot~g rental& t and a tennu court with the rural nature of La Habra Heights by homes as status symbols. These developers actually have the nerve to slyly show renderings to pros- pective buyers that illustrate homes with swimming pools or tennis courts or, horrors, maybe even both. "Tennis courts are the most ill·used accessories to a house," fumed Mayor Gene Beckman. "The courts don't ap- pear at all rural . . . " Thus Beckman and other members of the council proposed that developers be asked to construct community tennis· courts so individual homeowners wouldn't just jump out there and build their own. The Planning Commission, further thus, was instructed to get up some rules that would stop this ugly proliferation of courts and pools that were clobbering up the rural atmosphere. PLANNING CHAIRMAN Ron Banco was a bit hesitant on figuring out how the planners could do that legally but he vowed they'd try .. The council and planners also made it clear they want to hone to the one- family-per-acre rule and knock off these guests houses that get turned into ren- tals. You can hardly imagine what H\lnt· ington Beach, Balboa or Laguna would look like if a one-house-per-acre rule had been in effect over the past couple of de· cades. Anyway, it may get tough in La Habra Heights if you want to build a new home and you're so anti-social as to shun community pools or tennis courts and want your very own. THE9E PEOPLE MAY have to ~et more devious and pretend that they re preserving the country f eellng of La Habra Heights. Actually. the council and planners may lat.er discover that homeowners are building sUos, then fillln& them with water for swhnming. And what looks like a barn, well, lt's really an indoor tennis court, folkt. Soviets eye ~lipse MOSCOW (AP> -Sclentl1t1 are makln• preparatlonl to mon.itor • toUl ecUpM ol tb• •DD upect.ed to be vialbl• lD tbe Soviet Un.loo July II, tbe Scmet MW1 q•c1 T.., Mid. Tau nperwd aearlJ • teleHOpe1_::_-8114l a 1peelally equi;,.d ..._..,..._ID llliiilj M UMd to obMr•• tM ...... lt·.ut lie Mble ~ a 1,-.mile art fl"9ll t.Mlleftet BIMk lei eoaat to the P•elftc. \ RULES OUT -· Former Assembly Spealter Leo McCarthy, still un-willing to commit himseH officially to a U.S. Senate ra~e . says he won 't seek re-election to the As· sembly. ... Diet doctor to sue? NJ:W YORK (AP> Diet Dr. Robert At.kln.a says he w1ll 1ue Diet Dr. Nathan Pritildn for S5 mlllion for alleged libel and a lander. And lf many more of his pa- tients call to cancel •P· polntments, Atklna say he may up the fieure. Atkins aaJd be notified Pritlkin about the im· endine lawsuit, based n televis ion ap · ~arancea in which dPrtUcln said the Atkins le\: could cauae heart pro ms, conatlpation. fatle and bad breath. Atki aald Prltlkln baa be knockina hi• diet 1 for ng time, and be · had ways looked ---------on Prltlkln a something of a joke." · CM student in N.orway But when itlkin told a local TV au nee May 27 the Atltlns et "can set you up for tl rt dis· ease, strokes an cauae death" because high levels of cboles rot , Atkl11s said he · st finally had It. treditionalty dod, our Polo intarlcx:k. ... tln ~errlnxS,~ kn\t ehlrt hrtll evzl"~ ~ to\le and hctrro1Yld- ~ibredM. a-~W/Jlr. etV6l1abla. in 25 ~ ccia:8 . if bi hoe aYZ., hcz. 1'Tlfo/ jufSt want than eU. @)~@~§@ 44 Fothlon Island • Newport &och • 714/644-5070 IOOJ We1twood Bluel.· Wr1twood VIiiage • 213/208..J273 "l I a .... {I:, I !•11 r. I Jll • • ..... ,. t •J I • A . .. .,;• Kirsten Karn Bera of Costa Mesa. a bualneaa economics major at UCLA, ls attending the University of Bergen ln Norway under the Unive r sity ol California's Education Abroad Program. Under the program, students can get credit at their resident campus while attending one of 40 universities in 18 coun· tries. ·•I fell that he ~ saying It so many lim that he was beginning believe It," Atkins said ~R-E_A_L_V_A_L_U_E_S--------------------++-v~/-/ - at a news conference, ::::~~ ~hr~~ikbi~ ahl:~ ~n items from appleS~UCe to zippers. oa·11y ,.,, 11 begun .. to be listened ' are advertised every day 1n the " to.'' - Cost Plus Furniture . . . •ALL SALES FINAL •NO LAYAWAY • •ASSORTMENT MAY VA/jY FROM STORE TO STORE ITEMS SUBJECT TO STOCK ON HANO NO DELIVERIES You're bound to find fantastic savings at our 1st ann clearanoe sale~ fine furniture. Because we're selllng It aD (exoept wicker and attan) at "'Coet Plll9 15 x•. Whether your style ls early Amer1can or chro and glass contem· porary, you'll find delectable furniture to suit your taste Choose from tables, chairs, desks, rockers, bars, bookcases and lots more. G t deals await you at Aaron Brothen' "'Coet Plue 15 X • fumltun Ale. • 1( , '1 ---·---------·-...---- ' ,_ Or~nge Coast DAILY PfLOTJ1=riday, June 12, 1981 'his _one·'s for receptionists AR ANN LANDERS: You bave n out on behatr of security euards, esses, cab drivers, butchert, meter· era, secretaries, hairdressers, hone opentors, airUne personnel schoolteachers. Now will you pll!aae sometbin1 to help out the poor, fuered receptionist? ave been In my job for 16 years and it trom A to Z. Why, ob why, do some le !eel it l.a perfectly all right to come and pester the receptionist in.stead of i down and waiUng for tbelr com· penon? Almost always 1t ls th~ men do this. Rarely is it a woman. These stand at my elbow, making small -and wone yet, telling jokes. I bave so far as to say, "I have work to . Will you please take a seat?" And y bang around. ave been asked for pencils, pens, a of paper, Scotch tape, matches. ettes and "something interesting to . " Some boors ask me to call their of. and leave messages. O:lhers have d if they can use my telephone to 111 llllfll make personal calla, Then there are the Jerkl who work fbr this company, who al holiday time, brine In presents and carda for ME to distribute. But never' is there a card or • lift for me. Thanks a millic>a tor Jettlnc nae have roy say. -I SPEAK FOa THOUSANDS Dear Speak: A.lld llOW ti.at I've prtated it, maybe you o•.W to cllp It ud keep it bandy for &be next PHt who ls laard ap for 0 aomet1U.n1 laterettlal to read." DEAR ANN LANDERS: In July I will be marrying a fantastic man. Over a seven-year period (between 10 and 17 years of age) I was physically and sexual- ly abused by my father. I tried twice to teU my mother. She threatened to kick rue out of the house for "makinl up such lies." A few years ago I was luca<y enou1h to meet up wlt.b the riebt psychiatrist. He helped me overcome the euilt and shame and now I feel good about myself. I am 28, very successful in my field and have managed to maintain a casual relationship with my family. t can handle havlne my father at my wedding bu~ I don't want him to aive me in .inarriage. How do t get around ll without squealing? I bave no desire to humiliate him. Please ad vise. -KIM FROM TUCSON Dear Kim: Pick aomeoae else to do &be beaors. Make DO excuses or apologies. If your fa&ber aetl up a 1quawk, tell hJm lo prlva&e that II be ln1l1U oo giving YOU away, yoo will be forced Co give "IM away. Tbat 1hould aettle bia baab. A no-non.fen.se approach to ti.ow to deal with hfe'1 most di/Jicult and most rnuard1ng ar· rangement. Ann Landers' booklet, ··Mamage -What to Expect ," wall prepare yOtA /or better <1r for worse. Send your request to Ann Lon- <Urs, P.O. Boz 11995, Chicago. JU 606Jl , mclo1- ing SO cent• and a long , •lamped, .elf· addrealed enuelope. -..-.-..· steners group will meet AMERICAN Shortwave Listeners Club eets Salurday at 9 a.m. in Village View School. 5361 Sisson Drive, Huntington Beach. For more information call 846·1685. SIMCHA CHAPTER of B'nai B'rith Women meets Thursday at 12:30 p.m. in at 8 p.m. Monday. For more Information call 552·1204. ADVANCED DEG&EES meets Satur· day in Temple Bat Yahm of Newport Beach at 8 p.m. For more information call 551-4535. in El Adobe Restaura nt of San Juan Capistr ano. For more information l·all 493-8391. NEWPORT BEAC H C HRISTIAN Women's Club meets at 11 :45 am Wednesday in the Airporter Inn. For more cli CALENDAR CLIPPED WINGS of Orange County information call 544-2921 meets at 4 p.m. Saturday in the home of Mrs. Jim Preston. For more information call 846-0516 MILITARY WtooWS of Orange County ·meets at 11: 30 a.m. Saturday in Reubens Restaurant of Tustjn. For more informa· the Huntington Beac h Library , G"Olttl!nwest and Talbert For more in· N E w p 0 R T H A ·a 8 0 It lion call 838-5190. : J;rmation call 960-3950. ··: PHENS COLLEGE Alumni meets • a .m. Saturday· in the home of Mrs. •. Russell Armbrust of Santa Ana. For more : information call 770-4825. • ! -~IONAL ASSOCIATION of Women in : ~~ction meets at 6:30 p.m. in Le ! Biarritz Restaurant of Newport Beach on Toastmistress Club meets Monday at 11:30 a .m. in the Balboa Bay Club For more information call 760·6078. SOROPTIMISTS of Newport Harbor meets Sunday al noon in the Costa Mesa Community Center. For more information call 957-3033. ORANGE COUNTY COUNCIL or Volun· leers meets a t 9 a.m . Monday in the Orange County Red Cross Center of Santa Ana. For more information call 879·3868. DAUGHTERS of the Britlsh Empire, Costa Mesa Chapter, meets at 8:30 a .m. in Costa Mesa for yard sale. For more in- formation call 545-6169. IRVINE BUSINESS and Professional Women's Club meets Tuesday in the Hun gry Tiger Restaurant of Santa Ana al 11 : 30 a.m . For more information call 833-5461. ORANGE COAST COUNCIL of Beta ':.' ~· e~_day. For more Information call Sigma Phi meets Saturday at 10 a.m. in :·; ~ASTLINE CHAPTER of B'nai B'rith WOMAN'S CLUB o f San Ju an Reuben's Restaurant in Newport Beach . : en meets in the home of Trudy Umles Capistrano meets at 11 : 30 a.m. Wed ..... n_e_s_d_a_y_F_o_r_m_or_e_i_nf_o_r_m.,..a_t_io_n_c_a_ll_640_·_120_· _5_. __ ....... • ' ! Certa~n ~itamins harmful • I By JOHN D. ROSEN, M.D. Dear Dr. Ra.en, I am coHlderi•I talda1 large • mollllts of ntamlu c.. there be : ~latllll! : t ~ M.L. FOUNTAIN ALLEY ; '\.• WER: Cert.a in vlYamins, :;i~ty A, D. and Kare polsonoua if t-i h:n i n excess. The B and C \if THE DOCTOR 1 : vitamins, however, are not known to ; be harmful in high doses. There is : al:SD some evidence that large amtrunts of vitamin E may interfere with flormal blood clotting. : It is an interesting fact that Polar ' £;&'.liver contains so much vitamin ; ' r. !h)t ingestion of an average size : rth>n will be fatal . . . a fact dis- ' ccweted to the misfortune of early : Arctie explorers. • . Vitamin D is necessary for bone development and maintenance. Too much of it, however. will actually destroy bone. While it l! true that if one ea.ta a properly balanced diet vitamin and mineral suppleme nts are un- nece•sary. many don 'l get a properly balanced diet. Obviously Ute poor m ay not receive adequate nutrition, but other groups as well may be deprived. Reducing diets may interfere with proper nutrition. and some of us just don't absorb certain nutrients from our digestive tract as well as others. The elderly particularly are often un· der-nourished. All in all, it iSn't a bad idea to take a daily multi-vitamin and mineral supplement. Dr. John D. Rosen, .a pracllttoneT an Newport Beach, welc~es your QtU?•· tions. Mail reque1t1 tq Ask the Doctor, P.O. Box 1560, Coata Mtso, 92626 . ! • ~c. :·~o: Consider residence ; S-aturflay. JUM 13, l'fl : 8) SYDNEY OMABR RUFFELL'S U,HOLSTERY S..•fr-1.ne.,.- lfJJ HAHOa IL YD. COSTA MISA -54a..1I5' • •••••••••••••••• ARE YOU PAYING : TOO MUCH FOR : HIALTHIMSUR.AMCE?• • $1 .000,000 : GROUP OR INDIVIDUAL e c .. fclr-9-h640-607 .. : ------------------··········••i••···· ST ANOTHER Sale on a Dad's Day favorite Pier t ·s all-weather hammock is father-pleasing. Durable poly-propylene ropes will never shrink. rot or mildew. The stretchers are solid oak. Made by hand In Twin Oaks Community in Virginia. modeled on B. f. Skinner's utopian novel Wc11den Two. Buy one today and make Dad's mood mel- low every evening for years. 48" x 82" reg. 49.99 .................... 3 9 88 , 60" x 84" reg. 59.99 .............. . ... 49ss Sale prices good through Father's Day The new Pier collections ANAHEIM -509 Katella Avenue, 772-2472 COSTA MESA -2110 Harbor Boulevard, 540-7337 MISSION VIEJO -308 Mission Viejo Mall, 495-6582 SHE PAINTS • • • . ' : AllffES 1 March 21-Apnl 191 Opportun1- ' l ,. e)C1sts to broaden horizons. to expand : operllttons but ~ wary or one who at1ve offers special counsel Be recep tive. but don't abandon your own st~le. princ iples. Short trip could in,oh·e Capricorn. Taurus and another Virgo LIBRA !Sept 23-0ct. 221 Accountin~ defines credits. debits and f1nanc1al potential. You'll have opportunit:I to 'let go" of losing propos1t1on HAIR IS HER CANVAS make' big money commitments or prom- ' 1ses Secret deals are pending , TAl"RUS <April 20 !\1a~ 20 1. Contrac ' l,WJ . ()lher legal obliutions cause dela~. .. ·--------~ HtROSCOPE , ' : create restrictions Key is to go slow. to • be patient and to become familiar with ' rights and permissions. : -~EMINI 1 May 21-June 20> · Dialogue $p'eft6 with individual who performs basic : ~ska, shares your concerns and is a : otential ally. Emphasis on special '. aly1is. speculation. ,·arlety and possi· · le change of scenery. : , CANCER tJune 21 -July 221 : Study ; Gemini message ror valid hint Accent on · ~reallv1ty. a variety of sensations and a- • l"ltatfonshJp which "heats up." .. LEO tJuly 23-Aua. 221. Pocus on ret· 1 )dentt, lon1·term leu~. special Ucense re· WDl~Dents. tax breaks and a redefining of SCORPIO (Qct. 23 No'. 21 1 Bright light replaces gloom. You get proverbial second chance. Emphasis on lndepend· ence. onginaJlty, meaningful contacts and excellent Utning. Make the request' SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22 Dec 211 Decision affecting your "destiny" 1s being made at pri\'ale conference Follow through on hunch. You win by heedin~ •·inner voice ·· One w,ho aided in past Is due to make reappearance CAPRICORN !Dec 22-Jan 191· Surge of popularity dominates J>ers onal scenario. Accent on aspirations. fulrlll· ment of desires and a ··romantic In terlude." AQUARIUS cJan 20-Feb. 181 Ambi- tions subJect to revision. Oeallngs with those in authonty may hit shag. Key Is to revise. review and rebuild oo a more \'la· ble structure. PISCES I Feb. 19-March 201 Focws on basic meanings. com rnunlcallons. abllit~ to br\dce d1staoce ahd language barners Check costs, resen·atlons and long-range plans. (OMrMd Clllll~,.. 09ff) "Release the slim, healthy, l relaxed person In ¥OU" -HOLISTIC APPROACH -CONTROL AND POWER OVER • Stress • Health • Appearance PltfS9fTIOtv; THEA REINHART, MA 8Sl-0263 UcentlCI Marrtoge. FGmlty, Child CounMk>r • and on the Artist . . . the result: HAIR MORE BEAUTIFUL than NATURE I NTENDED Sylvia has studied the "AURA EFFECT" of color about the irr dividual and has concluded that nature has not always been kind to us. To Sylvia, hair coloring is a fine balance between techniQue and art. It is techniQue, taste, movement, it is life. Each patron is carefully studied as to her color preference. self image, life style, as if she were sitting for a portrait. The end result is Hair More Beautiful than Nature intended. The great, the near great, celebrities and people like you make up her clientelle. Color by 8Ylvia. Cutting and Styling by other Hair Hunter Stylists. I I • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Friday, June 12, 1981 • • MERVYN'S ONE DAY SUPER SALE HAPPENS THIS SA TU RDA Y, JUNE 13 Doors open early at 9 a.m . with .a special night opening 'til 9 p.m. Here are sC>line of our most popular seleetions offerect at exceptionally low prices Saturday only! · I • • 1a Our entire stock of 14k gold at fantastic savings! Buy the jewelry you've always wanted or a special gift. Our selection includes pendants, charms. pierced earrings, a sparkling variety of chains, wedding bands. 10k or 14k rings. Reg. 7.00-255.00, 3.49-127.49 If you've dreamed of having a diamond, you won't want to miss this sale. Pick from a collection of rings, pendants and earrings set In 14k gold. Reg. 165.00-1295.00. sale 82.49-647 .49 In Mervyn's Fine Jewelry Department • .. . . Sele llmlled to 11oek on hand. Some 111u11r1t1ons on this page m1y be enlarged 10 1how detell. Styles very by alore. No custom order• Loolllf'.'I for th• Mtrvyn'1 •tot• neareat you? Dial our toll-tree ·~" lnfotmatton number 8'422·7314froml a.m. to11 P·"'· 14.99 8.99 9.99 each 8.99 ave 10,01 on Levi's• Action asuals in blue and tan colors. a1st sizes 32 to 40. Reg. 28.00 ale! Levi's~ 501 Shrink-to-tit ans. Durable. reliable cotton ,en1m In waist slzes 31 to 38. .01 off short sleeve terry shirts. oft and so cool for summer. With liars. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Reg. 15.00 01 off famous maker active parates. Great values in tops and orts. S-M-L-XL. Reg 14.00 each .t'oo off famous maker jeans. lfvi's · and more. Waists 29 to 36. me slightly irregular. Reg. 12.99 . Jave on knit dress shirts. They ~ver need ironing. Polyester Reg. 1• 00 and 11 .00. 5.99 and 6.99 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/t=rlday, June 12, 1981 1/3 off our women'i Cheetahs"" In 11 99 nylon/suede In champagne/powder Cushion insoles. 5-10 Reg. 18.00. • 40% off! Urban Cowboy• women's 35 99 leather boots. 5-9. 10M. Limited quantities. so hurry Reg. 59.99 • Sale! Famous maker junior size 25 orc ff tops in prints. sohds. more. S-M-L. O Q Reg. 14.00-18.00. 10.50to13.50 Levi's111 Bendover'" Mates blouses orc ff for comfort and easy care. Misses· 25 0. 0 sizes 8-16 Reg. 22.00. sale 16.50 Save 3.01 on misses', junior size 7 99 short sets. Brights. pastels in lots of styles. colors S-M-L Reg. 11 00 • Sale! Tees and tops in misses· and 3 99 junior sizes. Buy·stacks at this low one day price. S-M-L. Reg. 6.00. • •• 0 0 :1 --;::==::::::=:=::=::::::;::~v--TT-------------------------------------------------------------------'-...-ir......--------'------------~H 9.99 4.99 8.99 5.49 pkg. 12.99 99¢ 2.80 pkg. -- 30°/o off 2.99 6.99 !ve 5.01 on Mr. California shirts. hd colors with embroidery s ching S-M-L-XL. Reg . 15.00 S~e 3.01 on men's leather belts. By several for your 1eans and sl cks Sizes 30 to 38. Reg. 8.00 S*'e 5.01 on active knit shirts with cdlars and lots of distinctive trims. p•ing. too S-M-L-Xl. Reg. 14 00 M~rvyn's underwear. Bnefs. tees. A'hirts. pkg. of 3, tapered boxers, pig. of 2. S-M-L. Reg . 6:50. 4.69 S4ft! pkg. of 6 men's sport socks. T.Pe style with colorful striped tops. Oie size fits 10 to 13. Reg. 7.50 B• ts.01 aavlngs on men'1 oxford s.,es. Good looking, man-made sede shoes. In 8 to 12. Reg. 19.00 S~e! Kenner's new Fast Ill's'". Eich car has individual license'. ~rt collecting now! Reg . 1.49 T 1 not tn Santa Aou ot fremof'!t i]Yo off boys' tank tops in solids. 1pes and prints. Buy several! es S-M-L. Reg. 4.00. 2.80 1 off boys· tube socks with iped tops. Sizes 5-6'/z, 7-8'12. 11 . Reg. 6.50 pkg. of 6 ve on fashion jeans. Boys' 8-12 g .. 8-14 slim. students' 26-30. g. 16.00-22.00. 11 .99-17.99 ve on boys' jog shorts, elastic ist style. 4-7, reg. 3.00, 2.09 M-L tit 8-18. reg. 4.00. 2.79 ve on sleep 'n' play sets for 1 ants. Assorted prints. Gift xed. 0 to 20 lbs. Reg. 5.00 % off girls' sundresses, floral d other prints. Tie snoulders,. chine washable. 4-12. Reg. 5.00 rls' baggy overalls now at vings. In sizes 4-14. Reg. . 00 and 16.00. 10.50 and 11 .99 rls' shorts, 4-14, reg. 5.00 and • 3.33 and 3.99 off glrls' sleepwear. Some wns trimmed with lace. Screen nts vary. 4-14. Reg. 10.00 ve 1/3 on c:anvH totea. Lots of ckets and zippers. Convenient, tra large size. Reg. 6.00 be top1 at tremendous savings. ried styles. One size fits S·M-L. cessorles. Reg. 3.00, 1.75 Heh - Big sale! Famous Brlttania'~ jeans. 5 01 Misses· sizes 6-18. iunior sizes 5-13. Reg. 24.00 to 30.00. 18.99 to 24 .99 • 2.01 off terry shorts in junior sizes 3 99 pastels and darks. Side stripes. Polyester/cotton. S-M-L. Reg . 6.00 • Wow! Junior size nylon shorts on 25 OVc sale in super styles. colors. Stock up O now. S-M-L. Reg. 7 00. 5.25 Save! Large size blouses in plaids. 5 99 prints. solids 1n sleeveless styles. Easy care fabrics. 40 to 46. Sale. • off Entire stock of maternity wear on 30 O~ ff sale one day only. Size$ 8-16. S·M .. L. O ft' Reg. 8.00-28.00. 5.60 to 19.60. \II- StooJc .. up Hie of briefs, bikinis In 5 /5 00 sollds, prints. Btlefs, 5-7. reg. 2.00 pr .. 5/6.50 Bikinis, 5-7. reg. 1.65 pair. • Contour and underwlre bras, reg. 13 ff 5.00-7.50. 3.33-4.99. Brief, leg panties, reg. 6.50-8.00. 4.33-5.33 1 0 Save on "nit sleep tees with print 2112 00 fronts. Polyester/cotton or polyester. Sizes S-M-L. Reg. 10.00. 6.29 each • Sale! Tubular hangers in many 1 0 colors for easy closet organization. ,,,. each No snag. Regular. 1unior sizes. Sale. 't' Ultraloft'"' yarn on sale in over 20 88 super colors for crocheti.ng. knitting ,,,. ske1·n and more. Reg. 1.80 skein 't' 50% off tropical fabric for cool 1 99 wearing summer styles. Polyester/ d rayon. cotton. 44-45". Reg . 4.00 yd. • Y • Hurry in for irregular kitchen 614 99 terries with tiny imperfections. Limited quantities. Special purchase • Santa Cruz irregular bath towels with tiny flaws. Limited quantities. special purchase. If pert. 4.99 7 .01 off Cush ·n Sofr toilet seats with a vinyl cover over a foam core . Wood reinforced. Reg. 17.00 214.99 r- 9.99 Dacron" Hollotll• II bed pillows. All 2 , 13 00 sizes one price. Std .. reg. 9.00, . Queen. reg. 11.00. king. reg. 13.00 • • Charmont open weave draper~es in50 OYc ff five sizes. Natural, brown or gold. O Q Reg. 38.00-1 15.00. 19.00-57.50. Comforters, all sizes one price' Many colors and patterns. limited quantlUes. Special purchase. :i ~ • • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT ~rlday, Junt 12 .. 1981 TH£ fAMILV CIRCl:8 BIG GEORG£ by Virgil Partch (VIP) "A million, a billion, a trillion ... what comes after a trillion?" "A trillion and one." "Who's THIS cluck?" ~AR '9 :\ D l ' KE by Brad Anderson DE:\~IS THE ~E~ACE -~ • ~ /I• "l'l c -~, ...... s...-.'"" "No, no! There's not room for you to play In the water, tool" They re called the three They forgot Brownies! · b's . Bach. Beethoven and Brahms Jl'DGE P .\RKER ® MY Wo~p l AtJ AVERA~E OF Z.7'IO KIDS RUN AWAY FROM HOME MRY 2'1 HO<JRS! · SiJft ... "'THAT'S rHE "THOUGHT IHAi KEEPS MEGolN(7 ... ACROSS 1 Ugly mark 5Arbltn: lnfonnll • UK county 1'Step 15~ tlon ,. P-=e deity ,,....,. 11-lob 11w~ 20Took'"Y 22Tootulp 23 S1udled 24U.8t 25 !INIClettd 21Mf. • Meugfllln 32W..CPolnt """""' 33 Po4 .. 0 nett 34 Ont: PYtf, alHoty'ltllP -~ -37NTOOGll ·---...... 40 LOiifJ..,.,. 41 ..... ., ........ ... ~ .... I' R -v''"""-._._,.,. ~V~·: ~ llllnd 41Frwt 40 Hollywood VIP 53~ 54 Olo¥t pert 1!_ ... ~. 56 Conlt .. ltlon fr6tifPll 5e Bendlr 57 SlftOlr Paul 588*1na- ~ MT,.. eoo. 11 Axle DOWN 1Hlltentd 2 AnMd 24 Tapnd end 40 Golf goel 3.a-..i 25~""":!.),.,, UlllarpJNlln COfl'lpOUnd ~ ~ r• A Wtflt blCk at ...... dllft ~ I luppoft 11 ~elDlll 45 lgl. -: • Producld °" • ..., of llgM ... '* TTNdgl 11~ ... ....... ........ ~ .... ·~ J1..... 47YwyMd '° 9dlDOI""" • '3 Young bird Al .... 11 LM out • • 111i11 • IUrapllfl 11 °"'... ..... •111 D Cui J , ' Ir "llltUilt If It - 21 Coffl .. -" ...... nMIDMdl1 • ...._ IAlllll ..... "' by Harold Le Doux PLEA&E. AOOEY ... l ()()N"T WANT TO ~TAY UNTIL MC>flNIN6! l CAN'T ~ANO?t! PMNIJT8 o·-·--... TIJMBLE1tEED8 HUSBAND HUNT£Rl'HANDBOOK Moet men prefer a eenaible cirl for their bride: a eirl of high principles. O H, BOY, I'LL S URPRISE H IM WHEN HE COMES OUT GORDO ICE CREAM ~ t'l:~K ,. "INKER BEAN Let him know )'OU e marriage eerioualy ! ~ 1'"' ~M61it£ ~AN -ro .p 'f14t: ~1~ l1U~N(r AtW M; 11\1~0 ~A~V! by Tom K. Ryan ICE CREAM ~ by Gus Arriola by Tom Bat1uk .. by Kevin Fagan ~ lCJR<SE, 1 {,()~~ 11" ~4' ~A"f l'fi OISAO\IAN1lC,Ec;. / 1M tN1He.. CHeER\NG- SE.CTfo~t .. " .. PUBUC NOTICE • "IC'ftTtout Mttu••N IWMSTATllMHT PUBUC NOTICE ......,...,..._,,~llMINN ·-----------. P16ara "CTfT10UI .UllMHI '°Vbll"'" Or-. c..tt o.lly Pit« NAMll ITAT .. dlfT J-12, It,», Jiiiy J, 1•1 l6f1.fi TM .......... ,...._ I~ dei"9 llUsl· '------------MM H : I CALIFO .. NIA llfVESTMENT$, PUBUC NOTICE ......... It~ ll't ... IA-17'U Sll't-" CJrcle, Soll .. I(, lntlM, -----------el • C.llfw111e'2114 I . , .. .....,.. MAI,. Qerlll'd Rest .. IO, 64'0 S¥<nr f'ICTITIOUS •US•N•IS _....,..... -fltef wllfl U. Orlw, LAo1e 9McJ1. C:.llfomlo "'1S NAMe STATSMeNT C OW." Or-. OM/llt'r.,. Mey Tiiis 11u11Mu la <Oftducllld by on 111-~':..~.!~'""' pettolla ore dol1141 1 17, e1. tllwldllol. OIOITllONl.X -1 el ~ ••-.. PMBlt Mwtl RA•ello ' ••• rcn .-vw.., bMd or .... c... o.llY PileC. Tiii• .a-.....c w• flied w1tt1 ..,. S..lt• 110, ~ 9Hcll. CA "'60. ' n "-S 11. It 1911 MlHI C-t'r Clettl" 0r.,._ Ool#ll'r °"Moy SUNl.IOHT INVISTMENT COM-• ' ' 10 ltll PAH Y, ftal Blrdl St-I. Sollle 170, ' ' • "41541 HoWpor11Mch,CA~ PUBUC NOTICE PIOllll&hedOr .... C:-t Delly Pl . T.A.W. CORPORATION, •ti• -9------------May t2, n. J-s, 11. '"' ,,...1 ~~~~. ~1:o.s111i. no. Newport .UN•toacou•TOPTtta PUBUC NOTICE "''' t>lnlMu 11 con<1v<teo Dy • _1.1.~ITA\'9 OP CAUPOaMIA QeMral .,.,.._.,.Ip .... Tit• COUNTY OP HAHi SUNl.lo+tT lft u. Mettff .. tM Sunll(lllC 111 .... 1_,,1 c:oms..ny Appllultleft of l'ICTITIOUI eUllNESS JGM E. a.tda, MAH..OUPOU"ZANJANI NAMSITATllMIENT ..,........ fwc:Mftl9.,N-Tiie lcNlowlng _...Is dDl1141 IMlll· Tiiie ,...,... w• 11'-d wltll , .. ..... AMINI ""' oa: ' • County ClerlL ofOt .... County on Moy ~·IMll TO IMOW CAUi• Btoch Properties oftd CrNtlW 10, ltll. a R I A S M A H R 0 U Ltlldtra. JOOe W. c .. et Hlwoy, f'1UA1 ZAHJAHI, ""'"'-· .... flled Nt•por1 llNch, eom •• tMS. Plll>lllhecl 0rMQlt COHI Dolly .. 11 ... wttfl .... Cl9f1I " ""' C-1 Jome R. Giii, 220 "9ott StrMt. Moy 21, 29, J-s. 11, 1911 2)1).tl or • wwr <"Ofltlllll ,_1111.,.•r'• eolboo lslond, P.O. Box 1«Jf., Bolboo -------· rom MAHROU POUUANJANI Island, Collfoml• tMJ PUBLIC NOTICE HltOU SARA NIM.II. Tlllt IMlllftHI ll c-.cted Dy on In· IS ORMReo lhol oll ,.,_,. 111-dlvlduol. • ----------tod ... .,. ~Ui.d molter J-R.Glll fllCTITIOUS8USINass ...... 1111 ~ M 10 10 A... NAM• IT':!1!MaNT t S · : ~ Tiiis lb-w• lllecl wlttl IN TM IOllOWlllQ ll dolllQ Oull· 12, 1911, In 0aportm.nt I COUflly Clel'll Of 0r01199 County on MU os: ~ R°"Al.O H. "ReN· JUM I, ltll. THE F• ·OR6 L P6 NT6 •Y, .... 1 R ot ORANGE COUN TY f'16':111 ,. ,. " ... " ERIOR COURT, 100 CIYk ~-~llhed Orong1 Cooll Dolly Piiot, Summerwlllll c-t, -~ hoch, , city f/f Semo AM, ~ of UM s, 12, "· 1', ltll 2S:U-ll C:.lllornlo ""3 , ..... 01 CollfowJllo, .... , .... _ CYftlhlO L#e Mcl..ood, No. I SUM- • If lillY wfl'r tli9 petltlen tor merw•lk Court, N•wp0rt Bu ell, .,_.,_.,.. ... .,......_ PUBLIC NOTICE co111orn1o9M3 I IS f'\IRTHEfl OtlOl•EO 1Nt o -Tllll llullnns '' cCIMUc9<1 D'r on 111- _., He --te .._ ~ i. dM dulll. 111 M "Or ..... Cant Delly l'ICTITIOUS llUllNIESS Cynthie I.. Mc:l..ood llet'' o _......, "~OI clrc.... NAM8 ITATSMllNT This stet.mant wos llled with ~ •rlflled 111 IN 0r.,_ c-tr T ... lollOwlllt ,_,..,.. ore dolft9 County ClerlL ol 0r-. C-ty on Moy ...,. ..... ~. --for few_: lllnlftHIOI! 20.1911 . ..U~W .... Mttl9t'9r QUALITY OETll.11.ING, 407 lhl fl1UN1 .,. Wt petlUoft. NewPMt 8Mctl. CA '*1 Publblllcl Orooee co.11 o.lly ,.llot, led: Mey .. ""· MICllM I "· Price, 407 3ht SI., Moy n . 29, J-s.12. 1'11 2m~1 MARTIN P. lllAMO N-por1 a..dl, CA '2M&. l • ......., .. ~ Greeto•'r P rice, •01 Slit SI .• PUBUC NOTICE I 6tt ...,_. C..-o.tw ~ 9NcJI, CA '*1 I ..... tUI Tlllt Ml-le concN<tod Dy a - ..._. ...... CA .... ..-rol .. tf•ll"9· l'ICTITIOUleUSINalS (7MI ...... ~ F. Pr1c9 t1M1W ITJ'T&MaNT ,.,,.. Or ..... Cooll o.il'r ,.ltee. Tiiie ....._. -flied wltll U. TM ..._..,. ,..,_, 11 dol"9 butl· n. J-s. 11. "· '"' 2'7w 1 c:-tr e1ett1., 0r-. c-ty Oft AMv -u~ 27, 1'11. ... S. CA81NET COM .. ANY, 1020 PUBUC NOTICE -· 1 Or l'lun71 .... Ploctntlo Ave., Cosio Mtao, ... vbl lhed -Cooll o.lly P "'" Collfomlo, ..a. ----Moy 2t, J-s. 12. "· ltll Ml).11 Ernaet Soutllllll, 1616 I-• w., C•Ui PICTITtOUI 8USINllS Mou, Coltfomlo ,.._ ~' MAMa ITAHMaNT PUBLIC NOTICE n 111 bualnau It condYctied Dy .., '"" .. "f..,':oAl-"'4 _._,It dol"9 IMI_.· dlvldlto1EmnlSoulllOll i:INI MA LL, 1127 Ne w port l'ICTITIOUSeUltNllSS This ato-.nt wos flled wllll .... "."orcl, C..to Mesa, Collfornle NA.MaSTATIM•NT County Clen o1 Or-. C-ty 011 Moy 7 Tllelol_."1..,_,lldolnglluslnau 27. 1911. Jflrrla R. Nlchol•, ,. SllHJO, os: f'IUftJ tYIM , c.ttf!omlo t27U BERNICE BROWN ENTERPRISES, PublllNcl Oronge Coot! o.lly Piiot, T 11u11nfte Is <-llld D'r on Ill-'21 Croc111Cr.,C..U1Mno.CA'26.a. Moy 2t, J-S, 11, It, ltll 2•17.fl ,, 1. ..l'ftko F.., Coll. '21 eroc .. Cir.. .- Jerrie If~ eo.to-...CAm». T AoUmenC ... tlled with Ille Tiiis ...._. Is C--.1 lly Oft .... PUBLIC NOTICE ty Cler1l of OrM99 Couflty Oft dlvldwot. '· ltll Pl"* Tiiis =·c;:. fifed wltll • "~~C::::~~IS or .... C-1 OllllY ..._ c-ty Oef11el0r-. ~°"Moy The rotJ-"'9 '*''°"' ore dolne 12. 1t, ... ,.., tt06.f1. 27• "''· p~ IM!slftffl .. , 1 JO ASSOCIA°{ES. •'6 Ce.,lllo ~Or ,~ ..--. ., Street, 0.ta MtM, Collfontlo tau7 .,... .__. -.. .-.Mt. J-KlllliMfY 29 a.t WMMiw Mor n ,.1-s, ti. It, ltll · 2Al.WI Street, SlgMI Hlu.! Cal~,_, Oela'ld Soyllle, "'COW!llo Strfft, PUBUC NOTICE eono -.:~""'"'• ..u .. , ... P11bll1Nc1 Or.,.. CO.st Dolly Piiot, ur .. S, 12, tt, 2', ltll US7•t. PUBLIC NOTICE Tiiis buSlnau .. Ceftd«I .. Dy • e-............ . DalMd Seville TlllS ........... -tlled wlltl IN c-ty CIWll .. Or-.e ~ M J-s.t•t. p ...... l"vblhtwd Or ... Coo.st o.lly Piiot. J-s.12. "· 26, 1t11 ie01•t. PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITt°"S eUSINelS NAM•ltATllMaNT The IOl!oo#IN .. ,_ le doltlO butl· MUU: MARINE 11.ECTRONICS SPECIAl.ISTS, 201' AllOMlm St., C•lo MIN. CA ft62'. Cllrletopller M. erown. 201' Allollelm k.~ l!MM, CA '2t». This lluelMI• Is ctftdlK'911 Dy on 111- tlMwol. avte..._ fllCTITlOUI eUSINIESS NAME STAT•MIENT Tiie lollow\119 ..,._, It dolftl llUtl---: JAY·BEE ENTERPRISES, 17•1 Tldlln, ""'--D , Cotto Meu. C:.lllO<'llle '2627 J-W. ~re. 17•1 T111.tl11, Cosio...._ Collfemla '2IU7 Tlllt lluSIMl&,ls condUCt9cl by Oft Ill· CIMcl"°t J-W • ..,...,,.,. .. ,..,,, '"'*lllllild Or119 CO.ti Dally ,.llot, M'Y 22, 2', JWM S, 12, 1t'1 2-.1 PUBLIC NOTICE ... ,..... IUN•I• C:OUaT OP COUHTYMO•A ... I r Orange Coast DAILY PILOT~riday, June 12, 1981 • WO ne! EXTRAORDINARY OFFER BY COAST MUSIC TO CONTINUE A RECORD BREAKING YEAR , 1981 bas thus far proved a record year for the Coast Music Stores. From now until June 18, we want to completely eclipse our sales records for any year to that date. To accomplish this, we have worked out a plan - a new plan so attractive and profitable for the purchaser that we positively believe that, when it is properly understood, everyone shopping for a piano or organ will give Coast Music a closer look. Coast Music Stores have grown and become famous by giving the greatest possible value for the least money, It is needless to repear that, by buying for our three stores on the Pacific Coast in Orange County, we enjoy advantages that no one else can hope to obtain, and because we want still more to increase our volume of business, we are giving to every purchaser more for the money he has to invest. Coast Music means service. Coast Music means lessons. Coast Music means value. Here is our plan for Piano & Organ buying: TWO DOLLARS FOR ONE DOLLAR From now until June 18, 1981 we will give every purchaser of a new piano or organ a receipt for twice the 8DlOID1t of his down payment up to 8500.00. Pay 1100 and get credit for 1200. Pay 8150 and get credit for 1300. Pay 8200 and get credit for 1400 . Pay 8250 and get credit for 8500. Pay 8350 and get credit for 8700. Pay 8500 and get credit for 81000. This applies to every new piano or organ in our stock. No restriction or reservation. It applies to the lowest priced piano we carry as well as ·to the world's finest, all the celebrated makes for which we are authorized agents. Included in these are such world fa mo us pianos as Yamaha, Kohler & Campbell, Currier, Kimball and many others. Remember that at all times and under all conditions, the Coast Music Stores sell better planoe for leas money. But now your payments have just doubled the value that they have had before or ever will have again. 'lbe piano may be selected at once and delivered at once subject to credit approval. DOLLAR DOES THE W()RK OF 1'WO , 1977 D~ TSUM JtOZ COUPE 1971 DATSUN ICIMC. CAI "CIUP 4 speetl trans .. air condlhoa~ & AM.fM .-eo. (146SFU). 5 tpeed ttens • air conditioning 9fld alt fl• extras I (1 L5U3901 ). 56995 Up to five years financing with no money down on approved credit. Lease or buy. Ad must be presented at time of rchase. 53795 Sale ends Monday, June 15. 1981 All prices plus tax. license, documentary fee and dealer installed options. All cars sub1ect to prior sale. STANDARD FOUR WHEEL DRIVE 14x4J PICKUP ' BED PICKUP (700721) (701400) 55999 57584 lllMG.THIS AD IM FOR AM EXTRA $50.00 DISCOUNT :;:;_:,,., .. _ Bauer~ CMOESTSAA· ,.,. ,...., " ... ,. T,. ..... : I ~A. ~ 29'25 HARBOR BIND .·~'!;· 9---~~9,, .. ----.... z"'~oo an D~ro Fr~.-way .t.~ d .-....w.... ....... ..._ ... ..._, ... 4 ___ ..... ___ .......... _ _.. ... """*'"' ....... ~ ~ ... -. ... " . It was 'mort of a fiesta than a military opera· tion, as tM German troops drew up an hotior guard and saluted the American troops as they came in.' Lipizzan much more than just another hoss T the Royal Llpb:zans - undisputed aristocrats of the equestrian world wlll appear in Anaheim Conven- ' lion Center Tuesday, June 30, through Thursday, July 2. The Carthaginian horse was croas-bred with others to create an animal used by the Moors during their 700 years of domination in Spain. Once the Spaniards had regained their in· dependence, they exported the horses to Italy and Denmark. Around 1560, Archduke Max· imillian, who would become the emperor of Austria, began breeding Spanish horses. Eighteen years later, a royal stud farm was established near Trieste in the villa~e of Lipiua. Cheech. and Chong up in smoke again in 'Nice Dreams'. Although not associated with the well-known Spanish Riding School in Austria, where the magnificent white beasts have been trained for centuries, pro- moters of . the American-based Royal Lipizzan Stallloli Show claim the production will include all of the stunts (including the incredible "airs above the ground") that made the ~uro­ pean horses famous. The horses were ~red ex- clusively for royally and the military aristocracy . The stallions were trained to execute many of the movements that are now used for show as military manuevers. The Royal Lipizzans are natural-born showmen that might very well be called the old warhorses. IN ADDmON, the show will feature the Christiania with their miniature bone Candy Man in a comedy routine, another com- edy piece with Derrick Rosaire and Tony the Wonder Horse, and so-called "high school" acts with Arabians, a rare Danish .., Knupstrupter stallion named Set. Pepper and a palomino side saddie presentation. But the stars will be the Lipizzans, horses known for their intelligene and acrobatic abilities that stem from hun- dred• ot years of careful breed· Ing. The Lipizzans are distant descend.ants of an Arabic strain orl1lnated in Cartbaae more ~ban 2000 years ago. .. SOME OF these dated back to Moorish times. By rearing on their hind legs and pirouetting, or even hopping, the horses were remarkably maneuverable. Also, in that position they could use their massive bodies to pro- tect the riders from sword at- tack. U foot soldiers were coming up behind the stallions, they could leap into the air and kick backwards with their hind legs. This was the origin of the "airs above the around" stunta. The Rpyal Lipiuam btcame famous in this country when they were rescued from the Russians by General Patton in the final weeks of the war in Europe. However, that was not the first time the rare horses had been saved from battle. In 1781, 300 of the horses were e v a cu ate d du r i.n g the Napoleonic Wars. ln 1805, they were removed from the threat of advancing French troops. In 1915, the Lipizzans were again taken from the breeding farm because of war. The Austrian Empire col- lapsed in 1918 and Lipiua became a part of Italy. The Italian and Austrian govern- ments divided the Llpizzans herd. The Austrians took their horses to a private stud farm at 'We.'ve reached the Paci/ic,'maturity is next ·. ,, ~ ; .. .. .. By MARY l~E SCAaCEU.O Of .. Dlllly ......... T his summer: as in past years, more than 200 Orange County residents will vacation in Seattle. The acenery, while nice, isn't what attracts them, though, and they may not have much time for the usual tourist sights. They'll be joined by pilgrims from all over the world who · have come to see an opera. ALL 111E WAY to Seattle just to see an opera? Not just any opera. They'll see two full cycl81' of Richard Wagner's "The Ring," an operatic marathon made up of four separate operaa: "Das Rheingold," "Die Walkµre," "Siegfried" and "Die Got- terdammerung." "We'll have the only full "Rina' cycle in the world thiJ year," says Utynn Ross, general manaeer of the SeatUe Opera Company "and todn come lrom all over the world for what amounts to a apil'itual ex- perience." Ross bad revened the process by coJP.lne to Orange· County to teach a touter clus at tbe Festival of LearninS and ·Performing for students who uplre to blB IUCCell. Described by one Oran1e County opera fall u "the man who put SeatUe on the JDap," Ross talked about hl1 ca~eer in opera, including the 17 years in Washington. "My first experience as a stage director was in UMO in Loe Angeles," he recalled. "with Na dine Conner and the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra." With time out for World War II, Ross spent the next 24 years 'But I found an aesthetically literate com- munity open to artistic ex- periences. It was still a small enough town that followers of the arts hadn't broken up into the ballet crowd or the uni- versity crowd ... ' -Glynn Ross. as "an itineraqt stage director" ln America and Emope. He returned to bis native coun- try ln 1964 when hii four children1 approaching their teen years, snowed signs of growing up more European than American. " He came to Seattle as the first salaried employee of ~ nonexis- tent opera company which bad nowhere to go but up. "The town was divided about· 50-SO on whether it could sup- port a company," be said. •'Some people just wanted to bring tM San Franclaco Opera up each year for a few performanc~ and be done with ll. "But I found an aesthetically literate community open to artistic experiences. It was still a s mall enough to;.vn that followers of the arts hadn't broken up into 'the ballet crowd' or 'the universitf crowd.• ·'One of the reasons I chose Seattle when I ended my •gypsy life' was that it was far away from major centers." he added with a smile. "At that distance, I could do a long 'end run' before anyone even knew I was on the field." Continuing the metaphor, he said, "I'd never had an ad- ministrative job in opera, but I'd had 30 years of Monday morning quarterbacking." THE COMPANY began with " two performances each of four different operas, ·'and they almost panicked when we went to.three," he recalled. "But DOW Seattle is the highest per capita opera-going city In the country. '"The Ring' bas done more for the town than Boeing's airplanes because Americans are still considered intellectual inferil:>n by the rest of the educated Best bets for weekend LEON RUS8JU, Ea(l Scruggs and The Dillards will headline bhaecrus ni1bt at Disneyland Satu.rday. Ruaaell will appear at a, 9:30and11 p.m. on Tomorrowland'a Space Stage. Scncaa and The Dillards will play at 8: 30 and lO: 30 p.m . on the Rivers of America Stage. The park will remain open until midnl&bt. Piber in Steirmark. In 1858, the farm was taken over by the gov· emment. It was almost 100 years later that the Lipizzans played their now-famous role in world poliLics, immortalized In Walt Disney's film "The Miracle of the White Stall.ions." In 1945, the Austrians evacuat· ed their Lipizzan stallions to the northern part of the country to protect them from Allied bomb- ing raids. There a special show- ing was held for U.S. Under- secretary of War Robert Pat- ters on and General George Patton. It was learned that the mares and foals, essential to maintain the breed. were being held by the Germans at Hostau. where they were cared for by Allied prisoners of war. Patton decided to attack Hostau, freeing both the horses and the prisoners. However, a battle became un- ecessary when the Germans, who feared the horses would fall into the bands or advancing Russian troops, agreed to allow American troops into Hostau without resistance. Although there were some clashes with German SS troops, who didn't go along with the scheme, the surrender went off as planned. According to an American colonel on the scene, it was "more of a fiesta than a military operation. as the GLYNN ROSS ... 'The man who put Seattle on the map.' world." Noting that It took a •itrade school mentality" to settle the West, he said, "We've reached the Pacific. Now it's time to reach for a mark ot maturity." Ro ss credits a new spiritualism begun in the era of German troops drew up an honor guard and saluted the American troops as they came in." The Russians and Czechs at- tempted to lay claim to the horses, so they were moved across the border to safety in Germany. Soon after, some 150 mares and colts were returned to the Austrians. The Lipizzan stallions are trained today in the ancient art of classical dressage, featuring a series or positions and move· ments with names like the piaffe, passage, pas de deux. campagne and courbette. It sounds confusing, but it's beautiful. (See LIPPIZANS, Page C7> the Beatniks with a chang -work ethic aqd increased In terest in the arts. <See OPERA, PageC7) rnmv.~rn~murn~ -PLAYS---~------ "SOUTt( PACI l'IC" oPent Thurlday, June 11, ,In the new Festival Amphlthfft,. et .Gerden Grove's Vlllege GrHn' for a four-week run. C .. lt the box office et 636-7213. "TH• IOUND Of' MUSIC" 9099 on st• at the s.ddleblck Compeny Theeter Thurldey, June 11 throUah Sunay; ~uly 5. Cu,Uln et I nl9htty 2 end I p.m. S.turdeya end 3 p.m. Suo· days. For Information call 831-4656 or 495-2790 from 10 e .m. to 2 p,m. ~ay1 through Fridays. "ftAR llOR THE ~O•PS•", a new mystery- comedy by El Toro pla~r'9ht Jeck Sharkey, continues at the I rvlne Community Theeter Fridays and Saturdays et 8 r;. end Sundays at 2 p.m. throuoh June 21. t9d In Turtle Rock Community Park, SUnnyhllt Roed off Turtle Rock Drive In lrvlne. Tickets are available at the door. • "REDHEAD,'' the Oranoe county ~lere of a musical mystery, Is on at the a Mesa Civic Ptaybouse on the Orange County Fair- grounds In Costa Mesa. P9rformances will be given Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. through June 27, with tickets available by call-ing 754-5159. "THE HEIRESS" plays five more weekends at the Huntington Beach Playhouse In the Seacllff VIiiage Center on Main Street at Yorktown Avenue. The drama plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m . through July 11 . Reservations at 847-""65. "ANYTHING GOES," a revival of the 193-4 Cole Porter muslc:al comedy, Is on stage through July 5 at the South Coast Repertory, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Performances are nlghtly except Mondays at 8 with Weekend matinees at 2. Call 957~ for tickets. "THE HOT L 8ALTIMO"£" continues through June 21 at the Newport Theater Arts Center, 2501 Cllff Drive, Newport Beach. The Landford Wilson drama plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m ., Sundays at 2 p.m . Call 675-3143 for tickets. "WAIT UNTIL DARK," a suspense drama, wraps It up this weekend with final performances at 8 tonight and Saturd~y In the Saddleback Valley Community Theater, 25741-C Obrero, Mission Viejo. For reserva- tions call 495-6559. "STORY THEATER" celebrates Its final weekend with performances tonight and Satur- day at 8 at the Newport Harbor Actors Theater, 390 Monte Vista St., Costa Mesa. Tickets for the Improvisational show can be re- served by calling 631-5110. "DAMES AT SEA," a send-up of Hollywood musicals, continues at the Gem Theater, 12852 Main St., Garden Grove, through Saturday. Performances at 8:30 p.m. For reservations, call 636-7213 between noon and 6 p.m. today or Saturday. "ANNIE," the Broadway hit musical based on the comic strip character Little Orphan Annie, SEA COAST SECURITY SYSTEMS How .AbcMlt Yota7 For lllfonwatlon .... 642-3490 USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SllVICE DlllCTORY For Result Service Call 642-5671 . _bt •. JJJ THE VIDEO STATION of New,...Ulmne YIDIOCASSlnlS For RENT or SALEI IVH 2a YllHCAllUTf IDYIH 11 ITKK .. Scene from romantic ballet "Giselle," to appear this weekend at Golden West College. See Dance listings, this page . opens tonight at. the Pantages Theater In Los Angeles for a llmlted run.L~~!Uln times and prices vary. For ticket Jmormatlo"' and to charge by Phone, can (213) ~. "THE MAX FACTOR,'' e comedy starring Cesar Romero, will play one more weekend at Sebastian's West Dinner Playtiouse, 1..0 Ave Pico, San Clemente. "GUYS AND DOLLS," the popular musical by· Frank Laesser, Is on et Elliabeth Howard's Curtain Call Dinner Theater, 690 El Camino Real, Tustin. Curtain times vary. Call 838-1S40. -CLASSICAL MUSIC--- THE PHILADELPHIA STRING QUARTET will perform In the University Theater, Cal State Long Beach, on Thursday, June 18. (Ad- ditional concerts are slated for June 25, July 2 and 9.) For reservations, call (213) 498-5526 or 498-5527. -DANCE------ "GISELLE," the classic romantic ballet, will be presented In a rare full-length production Saturday at 8:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2:30 p.m . in the main theat.er at Golden West College, 15744 Golden West St., Huntington Beach. This version by the Civic Ballet of Southern California includes a demanding pas de deux segment usually omitted In other productions. Ticttets, at $4, can be reserved by calling 89.C-9885. "COPPELIA," the 11~year-old ballet about a young man who falls In love with a life-size doll, wlll tit perlor~ .. lllt ~lflu In a..1une INctt tftl1 •. "" lelt letl, WMklndlr cover, fer dltalle. . "AL.ICI IN WONDlllLAND'' Wiii bl ..,...nt· Id by the Yllll llt1rtc lallet CAlmpeJly u "rt of tM cltlldrlft'• denct tMMlr •rlel It llflta An• Cofltll llturday et t:• Ind I p.m. •nd lunday et 2:• p.m. TM Mowt Wiii ... hefd '" the Pt\1111" Hell ThNt.tr. Tlcklta •re M.JO for 1dults, $ii for chlldren1 .tenlor citizens •nd stu· dent&. CAii 6'7-3096 or •7__,, for lnform1tJon. IWaDllM, NO•Wa•tAN AND DANISH folk uncen wm eel.Wale summer lolstlce with M.y--dencH •• P11rt of South Coast Plaza VIII.rs annu11 SC1ndln11va.n Festival Satur- uy, from 11 1.m. to <4 p.m. MUSIC wlt I be pro- vided by the Alfon Bergstrom Orchestra. Ad-mission 11 fNe. ''CLAY PLUS," an exhibit of ceramics by Ken Horvath and Laura Mercer, Is on display at the Irvine Arts and Crefts C..nter, '601 Walnut Ave., Irvine, along with "Portal Serles," a photographic display by Tom Skovronsky. Hours are Monday-Friday, 10 a .m. to 6 p.m. Both shows end June 26. BECK.Y HOBBS, recording artist and songwriter, will appear In Knott's Berry Farm's Good Time Theater at 7:30, 9 and 10:30 p.m . Saturday. · SMOKEY ROBINSON plays the Greek Theater In Griffith P•rk Saturday night and Orange County residents can t•ke a special bus to see the show. The trip, sponsored by Golden West College, leaves the Gothard Street/arklng' lot at 6:30 p.m. $21 covers the ride an flrst<lass admission. ·For Information, call 893-6250 to-day. ., LACY J . DALTON will entertain at the San Diego Wild Animal Park Saturday and Sunday at 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. In the park amphitheater. General admission to the park, Including the shows, Is $4.SO for adults, $2.75 for children. The park Is six miles east of Escondido. Take the Via Rancho Parkway exit from 1-15 and follow the signs. THE ALL-AMERICAN BOYS Chorus will sing at 7 p.m. Saturday In the Plummer Auditorium in Fullerton. Seats are $7.50 reserved, $5.SO general admission. For Information, call 533-7600. "CINDERELLA" will be performed by the GEM Opera Puppet Theatre In Laguna Niguel Saturday. <See Best Bets, Weekender cover, for details). A FOUR-ACT CIRCUS featuring the largest lion act touring the world today will appear June 13 through Sept. 12 In San DJego's Sea World. Also Includes an aerialist act by Delilah Wallenda and ac robats. Performance times va~y through the week. "A pAY IN THE COUNTRY" will bring George Jones, Merle Haggard, Rosanne Cash, Alabama, T.G. Sheppard, Larry Gatlin and The Gatlin Brothers, Don Williams and Mlc:key Gilley and Johnny Lee and The Urban Cowboy Band to Pasadena's Rose Bowl for a huge con- cert Saturday, June 20. Tickets are available at all Tlcketron outlets. A Family Sliopping/Dining & Entertainment CACnter Albertson's • Bank of America • Biibo Bagglns • Coco's/Reuben's • Command Performance Dolphin Hatt"Fashlona • Edwards Cinema Fash'n Splash • Hamburger Hamlet • Ice Capades Mesa Verde Florist • Mesa Verde Travel • Mlone's • Music Ma~et • Photography by Jeffrey Sou them C.llfornla Optical •Spa Lady • Swensen'a • Vicki's Sunshine Factory FREEi A re-print of th• BEYERL Y HILLS DIETi We put 2200 people on the Beverty Hlll1 diet frM -Aak for your re-prtnt "1n excfullve" at Newport Produce, No Charger lummer Fruit 81let Everything 11 In now and tow prtceel SUHDA f "TtL 6 Phone 64>0032 11 _,_... fl:;;: -f\o c:-.. -f\o ...... TREAT DAD ON FATHER'S DAY JUNE 21et D•D LOVEI 'IM MUSHROOMS SPECIAL 8 9c FUU POUND Limit 4 Loa. w Coupon DAD LOVES 'EM LARGE THE AVOCADOS 59c SIZE! 2 5 c EACH LI.mt • W Coupon JUMBO SID! VINE RIPE HONEY DEWS 39c LB. DADL WATERMELON 1000 TO CHOOSE FROM 1.29 EAat Limit I Melon• DAD LOVES 'EM CALIFORNIA CANTALOUPES 29c D•D LOVES FLOWERS LONG ITEM CARNATIONS 2.25 DOZEN Coupon AT THelR Rft NOW VALINaA ORANGES 5 Lbs.1.00 LOWllT ~ T"'8 YEA .. NIWdM>P ONIONS 1 Oc POUND LtMlt I LM. W Coupon . I l "' Orange Coaat DAILY PSLOf~rlday. June 12. 1981 Cl lb .IEFFPAUER O( .. DeMy .......... Jn "Nke Dreama," Cheecb and Chong sell auch atronc pot that the people who smoke lt turn green, sprout u1ly tl.lls and 1radua1ly tranlfotm into 11· uanas. Like "Up ln Smoke," this is a raunchy, funny, stoned-out movie -as two dealers who can never seem to tum a profit. Thomas Cbon1 and Richard ''Cheech" Marin are harmless hipsters who aren't in i\ for the money; what they want is the buzz. Chong, who ii a closet rock star, has written a song that goes .. Save the whales, save the RMEW whales, but shoot the seals," and he wants to spend all of his money on guitars and a rest home for hippies. Cheech wants to invest in a Chicano amusement park he'll call "Vatoland," where the rides will be lowrides and gangs will fight to their hearts' content. When Chong dies he wants his ashes to be mixed with some gOOd pot so aJJ his friends can ~moke it. To them, drues aren't just a pastim~ they're the best thing in life. Cheech and Chong (they use their own names for their characters ) don't grow their :;uperweed, but steal it from a pale man who has set up a pot Eden -plants of all varieties, distilling apparati, packaging materials -under a vast can- vas tent painted like a swim- ming pool on top to fool the helicopter police. · As in "Up in Smoke,'' the only people dumber than the dealers are the cops trying to catch them. These ineffectual oolice have au the evidence they need for a buat ia the flrat fin minute. or the movie, but their cu Italia and the dealen cet away ~ithout ever ltnowlnt they've 90ld their pot to cope. The police amass enou1h evidence to bury a syndicate operaUM, but they can't aeem to corner their stoned quarry. When two beat COPI flnally run them down, they don't want to make the arrest because of all the paperwork they'~I have to do. THE PLOT, OUTLANDISH u it becomes, serves u little more than something to b.n1 Jokes on, and these jokes are what make the movie so enjoyable. Cbeeeh and Chong have mastered the slow, stoned inverted humor that pot smokers lapse into without knowing tt -sincere idiocy. · Cheech gets himself locked in- to a straightjacket and chained in a padded cell. Days later, Chong comes into the cell, looks at his partner and slobbers "Hey man, where you been? " Chong is so high when the police finally catch them that he somnam- bulistlcally recites all the ii· legalities surrounding the bust. When the cops walk up and tell the two that they are free to go, he protests: "You can't do that man, you can't just come in here and do that." It's the same kind in u haze of to1N5y-turvy humor that went over eo well in "Up lo SmOke" when a motorcycle cop who hu accidentally gotten a head full of potent marijuana smoke pulls over their truck, walks \IP to the driver's Jide window and asks the two, .. What do you guys want?" The movie was directed by Tommy Chon1 and co-written by Chong and Marin. It's not nearly so chaotic a movie aa "Up in Smoke." Chong has a good sense of comic editirig -he doesn't let the acenes run on for more than they're worth. But it's still a slapdash, mixed-up movie. The Jokea come at you from every direction and Chong does little to set them up: they jump out in front of you like jay walkers on Balboa Island. It's easy to miss the m t.oo because they're unan- nounced. SOME OF THE funniest lines come from Chong, who ls always sto ned, always unaware of what's happening, always a few minutes behind whatever is go- ing on. He's like the caterpillar in "Alice in Wonderland," forever clouded in stuporous bliss. The drug dealers· former nemesis -the hot-headed, ill· fated Sgt. Stedanko (Stacy Keach), has given himself over to the marijuana he connacates in "Nice Dre1ma.'' Lon1·baired and lookln1 very demented, , Stedanko alts lo hla otfiee amok· ing thll super pot, tumlnt slowly into an iguana. Hla moronio operatives scarcely notice tbe transformation; they think he needs grapefruit juice. Stedan.ko never leaves h1a of· 1 fice, which is a shame because Keach is a tremendously f~ actor -he's too good to tUrt\ in· to a lizard in the privacy of his own office. · ' , Dr. Timothy Leary makes a ,. cameo appearance as hhnaelf. He's a doctor irt the insane asylum Cheech and Chon& find themselves prisoners in and when they as.k him for the key to get out, he offers them L.5D. "It's the key to life," be tells them, grinning beaUflcaUy. He wears a happy face button on his white coat. His own face . tanned, grinning and handsome- ly deranged, looks even happier than the one on the button. LIKE SOME ESCAPE to the land behind the mirror, Cheech and Chong finally escape the asylum by crawllng through a trap door in the padded celL That's what the movie is -a trap door in a padded cell; we can go in, and we can come out smiling like Timothy Leary. 11 Old fashioned, romantic dinner-dancing is back in style. SOUTH COAST PLAZA 8UNDA Y BUFFET BflUNCH That's right. Just because we're 1981 yards from the water doesn't mean we don't have the freshest seafood. Look. If you want to join a lot pf tourists waiting two hours for a meal. that's your busines5. not ours. But we have everything a waterfront restaurant needs Including fresh oysters. shrimp. lobster-fresh caught·flsh from up and down the coast. All prepared by experienced seafood chefs. Plus. we have tender. juicy. flavorful prime rib In three mouthwatering servings. And every meal Includes hot tasty hush puppies. What are you waiting for-lunch or dinner- come to the "waterfront" In Costa Mesa! Mlll thc (,r.u>(J "'"'lll(t' """•ill<"''"' 2ll t"\.....-01"f' hH.'ofnflC.1c v.11h \Hur '"'"""l. mc.·nlon ~tft urll.hlljt Jinocr "'""' c~I caodkfn tahlt' M.'11111t' th•: 1tr.lmkur ol n•rtll"lt t.lhll"llk , , •1'it'f) Tlk ul11matt'~ dancnhk Ok'\ l'o\oyll Trio'' r..-.icun:J 'Thund.y lbrou1h Sat .. rday T t.o If. and""' planl11~h<T<"T1Wlp SEAFOOD CONNOl~EURS lbunda' fn<b\. \alUr\b) ~for our 'fh•lltl IJol°'Nt'f llinn<T rrall '1:unc It""'"" .,,..,..,... t-bfn.. n,,...., on fnJm lk"'UJ'I l>t~IJ<t-J ~~t·m<-r. rt'l'tt<.<'' · ~REGISTRY ''""' \lll<Nlhw "'"*'""" r141 ~~z "-~ ""' ............. ,,,.., .............. _ Start With a glass of dellclous ttd(Jlng champagne (complimentary. of course) to companion yaur select ent:m-lt mikes a Sunday effervescent. Please jQln us for many choices In a uniquely ~red French Brunch from 10AM10A~.lt'1nottcvicy-1t·s~r l 1 Sea8on lineups unwrapped ByTOMnTu Of ............... Say aoodbye to the Saddleback Valley Com· munity Theater and hello to the Ml••ion Viejo Playhouse. No, one croup isn't fo.ldint aod another start· Inc ·out. It's just that Mission Viejo'• alx-year-old theater l(roup is tbaneine lt.s name, effective tbll fall. The reason, accordlo1 to SVCT ~nident Joe Cordio, ls that playgoers have eotlen the com- munity theater confused with the drama operation at nearby Saddleback Colle1e. Also, there's a Sad· dleback movie theater In the area. So, with the outset of INT£RUISSllJN the 1981·82 season, the 1111 Saddleback Valley Com· --------... • .Jnuµity Theater becomes .the Mission Viejo Playhouse -or. as Cordlo pull it, "MVP ror short." And speaking of the upcomin& season, the newly rechristened Mission Viejo Playhouse has announced the program for its theater at 25741-C Obrero. Leading off the seaaon ln September will be the local premiere of a Jack Sharkey comedy, "A Turn for the Nurse," written under his pen name 9l Rick Abbott. Sharkey, an Et Toro resident who got his directorial feet wet with his own "June Groom" in San Clemente last year, will staee t.bia one. ··Night Must Fall," an oldie about an old lady menaced by a deranged killer, will be revived In November under the direction of Richard Drake. Then comes another revival, "The Pleasure of His Company," with Dick Vara directing, eotne on the boards in January. The first Orange County production of ''The OU.-r Frowt Flw p.m. ~-ryUy I S1uula 1 BriuH·lt Ele~n • Fokr Prime Rib au jus & Cod1t•ll. ENryd•y ,..o .. ,. r- Paula's Restaurant Gourmet Cuisine Pl~asant Patio Dining Entertainment Dinner Tues.-Sat. 6-1 0 p.m. Sat. & Sun. Brunch ResemtilllS ReCMameadid 615-4720 Deadly Game,'' a thriller to be 1t11t4 by Jlm Ryan, 11 1cbedultd for Mll'Cb, Cloaln1 out the HUOll ll Kurt VODD11ut'1 com.cl)' "HI.PP)' llrth· day, Wanda Jun.," mounted by.D1vt khaldt The IOOD•to·be MiMaon Vlejo Pl17houa1 la Jaunchlq Jta Muon ticket c1mpalp1 with special rate1 for Mftlor cau .. u . Call •IAI or llO-aaa for further details. Two other local playhOUHtf the lrvlnt Com· munlty Theater and WHtmlnat1r'1 llfttWCIH Production.a, allo b1v1 liken the wra..-off tbtlr new aeaaoaa. The Irvine playen, whO perform 1 c1l1nd1r year aeuoo r-ther than from September \o June, will kick off their, 12th alatt neat Ftbruarl. with Edward Albff'a ''A DeUcatt 81lanc1.11 Bllttn Fiahbacb will dlrect lbt PullUMr Prt11·Winnln1 drama. The West Coast prtmltre ot "Who'a on P'lnt?" by the prollftc Jack Sharkey la acbtdultd for Aprll. Then In June comea 1nother nnt (at least on th• con'lmunlty level, •Ince It'• 1lao bein1 conaldered by South Coast Repertory), "Say Goodnl1ht. Gracie," under Rob Fahey'• direcUon. A revival or the American claHlc drama "Inherit the Wind" will be 1ta1td ln Au1u1t, In· volvlna the largest caat In ICI"• biatory. The rts· que comedy "The Mind With the Dirty Man" wlU wind up the Irvine season ln October, with J . D. Relcbeldtrfer In the director'• chair. The Irvine Communlt,y Theater ls head· quartered at the Turtle Rock Community Park auditorium, and Information reeardlne season tickets may be obtained by calline 557-7297. Showcase Productions, a repertory company formed two years ago by Alex Koba, be1ins its new season in September with a revival of Claire <SeeSEASONS, Page Cl) FOR THE HOTTEST . ENTERTAINMENT .. .IN ORANG£ COUNTY ... Go to tf)e . JAMES HARMON June 12· I 3-1 4 • %406 NEWPORT BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH 675-2244 .. =~-t ;;·. -. I 1;~=11r +. ombrero Street Restaurant &t Cantina Womn of So. C.lif. Rnlntnlfl Wrilnl1 -'-' 1!17'-* 'IO CHAMPAGNESUNDAY BUFFET BRUNCH HARBOR CRUISE a &UNDAY BRUNCH Brunch et Cannery from 1:00 A.M. IOAT LEAVU AT 1t:t0 AM RETURNS12:30 FRESH LOCAL ABALONE Lunch -11:~.m. Dinner -5:00-10 p.m. HAPPY HOUR Mon. Thru Frt. •:OCM:OO p.m. ... Dttnti• .to Dreft..., .50 Free Cannery CIHl Chowder LIVE ENTERTAINMENT Hlghtty Md hndey Afternoon : 'Sl;;, ag~n , ' ·~ GENUINE CHINESE MANDMIN DISHES Specializing In Olinese A Lo C.orte Dishes Lunch Dinner Dal.t,y • Food To Take Out 4711 c ...... Ol.AMel 710.7171 • 750-5091 JOJJ ......... 4' COSTAMISA · ...... ....._ 642·11'2 • Ul-9911 & llllert •ntini 1f71 "Y" CHARDomAY • SrHl:indrifte ;Q-.c,1ur.1111 • r 01!>tmct1vr Waterfront Dmmg Oyster Bar· Cocktails 3333 W. Pacthc Coast Highway, N. It. 642-2295 A VERY SPECIAL JAPANESE RESTAURANT Award winning traditional Japanese cuisine and superb western-style specialties. Your fa vorite seafood, chicken, and steak. Delicate soups and delightful salads. Impeccable service in a most beautiful setting. Discover Yamato .~. a very spe,al dining experience. 11111Dato 60 Fashion Island Newport Beach/ 644-4811 Century Plaza Hotel ..._SMw'll ,,... , .. ,4 277-1840 ERAIEAHEAD plus JIMI PLAYS BERKELEY J 1111111• ... ..... -. .. .-... -. ~ ·-Aoec1 """ l.MCAI 'f1JI """" U'tJIDO.. MMCELLO MASTROIANNI *BARGAIN MATINEES • Monday thru Saturday All Perform1nee1 before 5:00 PM (Except Special E•pgttMntl and Hotldays) LA Ml~AIJA MAU lo Mltodo ot tos.c:ron. LA MIR.\DA WALl<·IN 99'"2'°° MmtOWt~ • OU¥111..., "MEL BR KS HISTOR "LION OF THE OF THE WORLD PART 11" DESERT' (PG) tt:.-1_,...u.1e:t1 11:-:-.,,..Mc16 (R) "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK .. IPGl , ..... ~~, ... "CLASH OF THE TITANS" (PG) 1~·--.:•11• •rM•*• '21;/5~;.;;o-) ¥AM AlA\ CAllOL 8uamTT A#TMOlrt OU.. OLNU -"THE FOUR SEASONS" "LION 0 F THE: DESERT .. tt:JM..,.._,~ 1a:a.a:C.1-11111 (PG) (PG) "TAKE THIS JOB .. CHEECH a CH ·s AND SHOVE rr· (PGI NEXT MOVIE·· (R) ...... , t:aw..1--1..-..: ..... ..;;y.n.~":-THE BLUES BROTHERS'· LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAllt IN "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK'. IPGl l~tl-f'.4-1-=41 ~fllDllO---~·LMMU.Ca-Ol.Nml "RAIDERS OF THIE "THE JAZZ. StNGER" (PG) LOST AR1'\;J~l 1-1-..-.1ett1 1~ ,... ,._,o..,,_....,_ o1 lfeoclwoy - . SOQltlCool!Mlwoy J • • . . 9 ...... 151' ''.CHEECH 6 CHONG'S "RAIDERS OF THE NICI DREAMS" (R) LOST ARK" IPG) __ ......_,.,.. J:'IM:ll-~11 .. ... .... . "'s. •W..t~•tM• IMll'OltTHT NOTICE! CMILOllEM UWOElt 12 FltH! -••••-llnfn •Sil ..... -,. Cllffl-•'lllllllMCMMllO•'lllllll .... !'If ND W. CM MllG lllTll tllll1IOlf ~ l'DlllDI --Ml llllMJ.)•ti Cllffl ---· -- ... ...,.•~n ~ ANA HEIM DRIVE·IN "THE LEGIND OF THE LONE RAHGER" (PG) "TAKE TH&I JOB AND SHOVE IT" t' •" •Al.• BUENA PARK D• Yl 11'1 Uneot11 "'" -at l:-12M070 I '1 I ~ FOUN TAIN VALUY DRIVE IN lon0te9o•rwy •~(1o) ff2·2411 "' ... ~ . . 'CHEECH & CHONQ'S NICIE DREAMS" (R) """ 'THE MOUNTAIN MEN" (RI (:Ill( " IOUtlO I "FOUR SEA,!ONS" (PG) ''THC tN-LAWS" (PO) Clllf." IOUtlO "MEL BROOK'S HllTOR OF THE WORLD PART 11" ,._ "THE FINAL CONFLICT" (R) • "OUTLAND" (R) ,._ "CADDYSHACK" (R) '*' . " IOUtlO HI WAY 39 ~·• ,, . ., .:r ,;{ " ~n1 t -' "BUSTIN' LOOSE" fRI <t' "THE JERK" (R) Ctlll •" ICMtO A "CHEECH A CHONQ'I .,_ SHOVE IT' (PO) NICE DREAMS" (R) "WHIRE~_,J! HURTlAl ''Tffl MOUNT"'AIN MEN" ' .. RAIDERS Ofl THE LOif ...... lA HABRA ri~·. • .~ . ~ ~ . LIN COLN [lWl\,'f IN ~ ... ARK"(PQ) ... "UMAN COWBOY" (PO) "RAIDERS OP THE LOST ARK" (PQ) ..... ''UMAN COWBOY" (PO) ORA N G~ L·• I, I N l ·I , By MICHAEL DOUGAN °'*......,""' .... ll'a difficult to take "Par for the Corpse" aerlously and the problem with this play ls you're not sure if you're supposed to. "Par for the Corpse," by El Toro playwright Jack Sharkey, is apparently a sat.tr. on Agatha Christie's popular "10 Little lndJans" and other tales based on the same formula -~ group of peo· pie are trapped by circumstance In a remote house, where they are murder,t!d one by one. The killer is among them. But who? If "Corpse," premiered last weekend by the Irvine Community 'theater, is supposed to be a send·up of th1s genre, it has a naw more fatal than it.a villian's knife -it lsn't funny. Nor is it particularly entertainin1 on any other level. Between the intermittent laugh and the in· : frequent assassination, "Corpse" doe~ a lot of •plodding. The story is set in the Catskill Mountain home of Al~andra Ellis, a suspense novelJst played capably by K.T. C~hill. Miss Ellis is throwing ~­ party for a few fri4!nds. including a rather 1>01.n, pous actor named Mark Taggert (portrayed by John Greenslade), when a bliszard isolates tht•m and causes. the lights to occasionally nicker. It is during these brief seconds of darkness that the guests begin to die. The play is full of incongruities. The house must have the worst-designed chimney in the world, because the snow comes right down the shaft, dousing the flames 1n the fireplace. Mucb is made of the need to relight the fire, so we assume the room is cold <and why nbt, with a snowstorm raging outside). Yet, one female character wears a bare-back leotard with no chills and another fends off the cold with a mere tube-top. As an actor, Greensladejokingly asks "What's my motivation?" sevl'ral times In the first act and, indeed. we wonder about the motivation or several of the characters. A couple at the party, played by Paul Pizarek and Mryna Ryan, are con· tinually snipltlg at each oij:ler £or no apparent rea· soo. Their jibes are not clever and, therefore, not amusing. At one pqint, Miss• Ryan says she could swear that a certain person is not the killer. "You would swear anytime," Plzarek replies. Fortunately, fate dictates a quick conclusion to this witless repartee. The murders occur early in the play and the rest of the "action" consists entirely or the SlUI· vivors sitting in the living room trying to de- termine which of them is the killer. The probe is led by Greenslade. whose authoritative demeanor and British accent enable him to play the part with some credibility. StilJ, it makes for an extended dialogue that becomes, at first, boring and then ridiculously con· voluted. Again, if this is supposed to be satire. it falls short or the mark, which is too bad because Tanya Tatum (left) and Myrna Ryan gcup with horf'or 08 Paul Pfzorek takes what may be a fatal drink in "Par for the Corpse" at the Irvine Com- munity Theater. this sort of scene could make tor a wonderful parody (Mortty Python and Peter Sellers. as Inspector Clouseau. have done quite well with it). Director Tom Titus' usual strengths are in timtns and physical gimmicks that make a play fun to watch. Neither of those talents are in evidence here. The pacing is badly orr and Sharkey's script leaves no room for anything more visually interesting than people changing chairs or pouring another drink. Nor is the acting a saving grace. Far too many lines were blown on opening night and the players. with a few exceptions, sounded like they were readin& the script for the first or second time. Th~e exceptions are Miss Ryan, a believable bitch goddess; Jo Scott, who does an excellent job as Miss Ryan's tormented mother; and Billye Wallace as the sarcastic housekeeper. Miss Cahill portrays the writer-hostess with bemused detach- ment. ' Even with all these problems, play.goers can· not help but become intrigued by "Corpses" cen· tral question -who done it? A thread or evidence (and you should pick up on this befote the cbarac· ter.s do) is provided by the intrusion or a sub·plot that has so little relevance to the unfolding story that lt is obviously significant. Gradually. this thread begins to unravel until . . . But, of course, we won't give away the sur· prise ending. We will say that when the conclusion is reached, it's clear that Sharkey has borrowed less from "10 Little Indians·• than from "Seven Keys to Baldpate." (For details on performance times. see Diversions, page C2). "€LASH OF "KILL AND THE TITANS" KILL AGAIN" f',119 "NIGHT• HAWKS" Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12, 1981 ~--~ ~ ~.eo • CHARLES H SCH NEER -"CLASH OF 11-iE TITANS" ~HARRY 1-MJNas 1r6 JUD BOM<ER f.f·n--. BURGE&S MEREDITH MAGGIE SMITH URSUlA ANDRE§ CLNRE BLOOM SIAN PHlll lPS FLORA ROOSON LAURENCE OLIVlER ~ • _,. ' .... (l!f(t; RAY HARRYr:A'J3EN ... MORENCE RClSENTµAL /, ''.3E'icC E( ,.POS.:> .. i,, CHJ..qLES H SCHNEER , _RAY rl.AHRYHAUSEI~ DESMGNC DAVIS ~~~~~.~·~~t ~~~· .'o :~ , •:! 001001Jrt srulE01 ~o H um1r.dA111s13 STARTS TODAY •COSTA MESA Eowaros Bristol 540·7444 EL TORO Edwards Saddleback 581·5880 FOUNTAIN VALLEY ORANGE Edwards Fountain Val.ev Pac1hc Oranqe Or ve In 839·, 500 558 7022 lRVlNE • ORANGE Edwards Woodortdge Ctnedome 551 ·0655 634 . 2553 •CXJl~srwor WESTMINSTER E.d wards C1nen 1 ~Jest 891 3q35 BREA UA Movies 990·4022 Indiana Janas-the new hara from the creators af JAWS and STAR WARS. ,, Orar,ge Cout DAILY PILOT/F.rlday, June 12, 1981 Kraftwerk dUc heralds era qf techno-music COMPUTE& WOU..O Kraftwerll . Wanerar.. Seven years ago1 Kraltwerk unleuhed their techno-music fury on America. lt was an album titled "Autobahn." The title track was more than 22 mlnuteS Iona. A shortened version manaaed to aet radio airplay. RECORD REVIEW The German quartet's latest d1ak, "Computer World," ls no less an achievement in the art of synthetic music: few voices are sprinkled through the LP, instrumentals are forged like precision· made circuits and mo!lt aounds cannot be found in nature. Season lineups • <From Page C4) Booth Luce's all-female comedy, "The Women." "Dear Friends," a television drama by • Reginald Rose which ls enjoying much popularity on locaJ community stages. will be presented in February. Closing out the shortened. three-play season will be one or the American theater's towering achievements, Arthur Miller's "Death or a Salesman." The Showcase group performs at the Westminster Auditorium. 7571 Westminster Ave., where Its final production of 1980-81, "Our Town,'' bows in next Friday. ' The comedy tor everyone who's had it up to here .... 1 Tbe cuta an at time• both ple.,ln1 and amus· ln& Ud certainly a hatmon.tc teet for the beat of stereo 1y1temi. The purity ol aoine of the tone• and aynthetlc alltchea ta a muterful recordln& achievement. What elae could be expected trom a aroup of muaiclana celebraUna the coming of a1e of the computer? · Recorded in a variety of lan1ua1ea, ln~ludlng edwards CINEMA WEST WISTMIMSTB 891 3935 AT GOLD .. WIST • edwards SADDLEBACK PWA B. TORO AT ROCICFtB.D B. TORO 511-5110 The story of two enterprising young me~ who make an amazing amount of money selling ice cream. Enall1h, cuts include such tramlltorlied Utlet u •'Numbers," ''Computer Love," "Pocket Calculator" and "lt'a More Pun to Compute." It's all a plaatlcued oration to the comln1 of the binary era. Members ol the 1roup aay they want to make machines their beat buddies, to avoid expected mechanized conflicts that mi&ht artae when a baa of inte1rated circuits miaht in· vlte itself over to dlpner. MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ~L am ~ 111,~M• AEC£rv1 l'Wt HM. 0# '01f! MOTl()lj PICTUAI COOi 0# UV Al!OUV.T!Ofj A Flctltlo11• a111ll\OH N•n10 Stot•ment fifed with !tie e-ty Oofll •• valid f0t ftft ,.., ofter which 11-contll\1111\g bllall\O-MU.C refile. PuMlcotloll .. MCOesety OftlJ' If lhoro •ro ChOl\fOe. Cell lflo ~ Doportmol\I tt tho DAILY l'ILOT for 11\IOrmollon end noco•~tcwme. 842-4321 !It. S32 It's difficult to take such pr01pecta for the man-machine relationship aerlou1ly. Yet the • digital rock aroup lJn't t.be first to 1ive a doom· and·aloom prediction of thin11 to come. Easy liatenint music It ls not, But under the proper circumstances and with an open ear tq apace·aae. experimental music, "Computer World" mlaht prove an unuauaJ deliaht. -Jo.IC. Don .IHIAIHll f . ' . -· ••. • Lipi~zans due in Anaheim <rro• P111et> Tb• pro1r1m fo r the Anabt lm t how will f11ture a P,U de d1ux, ln whlcb two Ltpluana rldt tbroulh a two-man exercl11 with mirror-like pl't• cl1loni a pa1 de trol1, featurlng three horaet and a p11 dt quatre with four stalllon1 ln an lntricate drill A demonstration of cluslcal tralnina wUl in· troduce viewers to the e~ments of the art. The quadrille wlll present a ballet of white stallions and their riders. Most spectacular, however, will be the "airs above the ground" manuevers, performed without riders. These Include tbe courbette, in which the horse jumps on i~ bind legs, keepln' the rorelefs off the ground, and the capriole, with the horse leaping into the air, drawing his forelegs under his chest and kicking.out violenUy with his bind legs. The "airs above the groundoi stunts are the most difficult to do, and only a few of the Llpizzans make it to tbjs advance s.tage of trainin.li(. Alois Podbajsk y, long in charge of the Austrian facility at Piber, has been quoted as say- ing that for reasons he ·doesh't understand. fewer and fewer horses are able to master the aerial THE COMEDY SENSATION! "A WONDERFULLY FUNNY COMEDY abOut pomgous fathers and youthful seduction. -NMc:yScott,sFEXAM•NER A m.an.ru m.'31. ~~ t :=ONE WILD MOMENT ......... 4a... .... -. FRENCH MOVIE RATU>(R) NOW PLAYING n. World's Brlat1st Athlete }alns llllrllll In Disney's Slmmlr Derby! ~ ~ GOIS10 MOHTIOllO It'• ... ,.,,..,,._.,_.,,,,..,...,..,. NOW SHOWING ... -• 8rOOltlllitSI m-M41i ....... OrlllOt Mall • 1137-0340 CllTA MU· Cl-Or. WMm -·Coty Ctntm1 · 1534-3911 a r... · Sacldltlllck . 511.seeG ..-• Sia40\lfll Dr~n 639-8770 FW11Ta. •aun. Ft Ya11ey • ..,,500 wdlwm · UA c.nema • ~ ._.AT -.T lllUT-.a Economy s.tiq S2.IO'til3:00PM UnleuNoted*' RAIDERS Of TrE £ST ARK (PG It 12: :DO :frl:eo10~. o ECClftomy Se1t1n1 CLASH OF THE TITANS (R) Shows et U:OO 2:30 6:007:3010:00 HISTORY OF THE '0o~~t11Ho'~~30 4:30 6:30 8:30 10:30 Chn ch & Ch9_111'J NICE DREAMS tR) Sh.PM It 1 :45 3:55 &:•u 10:15 SneatcPmiewAtl :OO Carel Burnett ~rlto'L~~,G, Sftt.M It 1 :JO 3:45 l :IO 1:1610:20 maneuv1r1. Llppl11n1 are lon1·llvtd cr11ture1, wlth an IVIHI• tlmt on thl• Hrth ol IO to as )'Hfl, They ar• u1ually born black or brown, 1radually tumtn1 pure white ovGr 1lx to 10 years. Many of the stallions in the Anaheim show were bred In America , although some were lm- Ported from Plber. ,, The American show features a performance by Patti Sc:haefer, one of the first women to ride a Liplzzan professionally. She will also ride the;nov· le horse Shiek, which appeared in "We1tworld" with Yul Brynner and recently performed with Lynda Carter in "Circus of the Stars." The Royal Llplzzan Stallion Show will be held June 30 and July 1 at I p.m. and July 2 at 2:30 and 8 p.m. Later performances are scheduled lor Cal State, North.ridge, the Long Beach Arena and the Forum In Inglewood. Evening performances are $7 and $8 for adults, $S and $6 for children under 12 and adults 62 and over. The matinee show is $7 for adults and $5 for children and seniors. Ticket.ti are available at the convention center box office and Ticketron. For group discounts, call (~13) 579-0468. 11 ••• THa SWEEPING POWER 01' DAVID La.AM'S SPECTACLE, •LAWRENCE OF ARABIA'." -KM!tlMll Cenoll, N.Y. DAILY NEWI 11 ••• A eprewUng aaga" -0-"'9111. TOOA'f a.,ow " •.. Spectacula r'' -0..W ~.NEW YOllll MAGAZINE Orange Coaat DAILY PtLOT,.-rlday, June 12, 1981 • • .Opera class <rroa P111 cu "People want to travel, p~klpale in sports, enlarge wilderness ureas, support llbrartes and learn about gourmet cooking." • To complaints that opera i• pld·fashloned, he responded "Economically, tt~ belonJB to another era. The large orchestra and cast are expensive. Perhaps TV ls the answer, or new works.with II "Nine To Flve0 "High Risk" (R) Ill "Take This Job & Shove It" "Airplane" (PG)' fewer staff members. Even scenery costs can be -----------------~ trimmed by using electronic pl'9jectora instead of making backdrops from lumber. "We're doing 'Die Fledermau.s' for television {o the fall with a number or TV 1tars, which is new ." . Ca ll Classifi ed Ad- vertising at 642-5678 to place your ad. And his own future? "I'm compulsively on the borders of where I've been," he says of his career. "J'tn not a custo- dian. U life is a series of CW'Ves on a road, then I'm hooked on the excitement of waiting to see what's around the next one. ~ Daily Pilat .... m --· A MARTIN BREGMAN Production "THE FOUR SEAS0"4S" ALAN ALDA • CAROL BURNETI •LEN CARIOU •SANDY OE~MS RITA MORENO • JACK WESTON · BESS ARMSTRONG Written and Directed by Al.AN ALDA • ExecullvP Produc.e r LOt.:IS A :-; IHOLLrn Produced by MARTIN BREGMAN ·A U~IVERSAL PllTl.'RI: r..iililllii-""' Cltll MllW Clll SIUOIOS llC ~~Ill:. ~~!:1~ i • • .. .. ~. .. .. .. •! ~ •! .. :: ~ ~ :: ·: ·= :; .. .. :: ¥. .. ·: .. ~= .. .. .. .. ·= :· ~ ·: :: ·: =· ·: Ora~ Cout DAILY Pll:OTJFnday, June 12, 1981 CHAPEL JDLL;"J-1 .• (AP) -University of orth Carolina ~i. HY tbey've discovered a ey step in the develOPment of crown tall dlaeue a =ant cancer that, attac:u fndt tree. and rosff, aus millions of dollars da~e in some states. Al b the dlacovery woo t prevent or cure he dlseue, the researchers eay It '1)ay be a step that direction. CROWN GAU disease occurs wben virulent trains of a bacttth•m att•cb tbemeelvet to UJKts on plantt and paa~ 1~c information to host cella, caSrtl a-~ !1 fol'lll. • Occulonally lbe tu.~r....,. ~· plant by cbok-1 off tu vuculet tl11u~. ~t 'blore often it slows rowth and damalea the fruit or nower produc- lon. In California, the diaeue haa been estimated o cost growers between $8 million and t1 mUllon a year. There ~ no ·accurate fleures on the dis· ease's economic hnpact 011 North Carolina. The Cha~l H\ll researche~ found the bacteria first hook onto wounds ln planu by altering the urface of cellJ near tbe wound. Then the bacteria ulckly JrOW tiny strands of cellulose anchoring em permanenUy·to the plant cell walls. •'The «i>nlY vriy the host .plant could get rid of errl once thty be&h1 makine cellulose is to digest its oWn cell walls which would obviously be fatal for it," Ann G. Matthysse, one of the researchers, said. SOME OF THE cellulose strands trail off into space to snag more bacteria that come within range. Within a few hours, enough organisms ac-CACTUS -Several makes good show cumulate to transform a normal cell in~ a tumor cell. C • • The botanists believe it may be possible one actus .. n U'riOUp attract .. ve day to control the organisms by introducing non-., e . . ., virulent bacterial competitors or by developing . substances that block the site& where the harmful Slow-irowi.na and dependable, tbe bacteria attach, . cactus la an easy house plant to live Ms. Matthysse said tbe meebanism proba bly with and care for. But a scattered wasn't •noticed before "becaUM llO one haa ever .. number here and there doesn't make looked." Most previous rese.arcbe~ ha'!'e looked at for a tt r ac U v e a cc e 11 so r i zing. whole plants where it's difficUlt to 1aola~ and particularly lf the cacti are the same study the problem. size. Gardener.'s clu3cklut • When spray in 'g They.'U bloo01 ag~in for plants be sure to hlt the you this fan. undersides of the leav~s. A decorator rule is that collections of anything should be displayed ln groups of maxi~um visual impact, {IO it folio~• ·that several-of-a.kind definitely rn.ake a better "show." Tbls seven-in-one planter from the current Armstrong House Decorative Accessories catalo& holds seven small cactus plants. Hand-formed of natural clay, the center cup is six For an unusual selection ~ dee· orative ·acc.esspries and bow to bu.y them. write for more information to Armstrong House, Dept. tSPHM, P.O. Box 3001, Lancaster, PA 17604. Start with·radishes II you'd like lo introduce your children to the wonders of plant life, get them start.ed'with the simplest of all lessons -growing radishes. They will not only witness the miracle of germination and growth, but they ac· tually taste their success. Some insects and <lilh • Why not plant a eases may escape the shade tree in that bot spray if you don't do spot? Plant this year to this. eliminate the bot spot next summer. inches in di,uneter; the outer cups, Help them prepare a bed and sow three inches each. ·two or three rows of seed. • One last planting of r----..------liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii dahlia tubers will give a ·---------fall bloom while the PUBUC NOTICE plants set out earlier are ,----------... dying back. PICTITIOUl llUllNIHS NMMllTAT ... NT , ... .....,...,_,_ .... ,. ....... : . Dlllty ........... IW """ ~ • .,.. ' A BLUE RIBBON BEAUTY -Kathy Newton poses with' her first place willJl.ing iris during the Second Annual Irvine Flower Show. Ms. Ne.acton's flower took a blue ribbon ln the Oriental design division. • If you treated yourself to a blooming chrysa;nthemum this month, cut it back when flowering is finished and set it in the gardett. CAOtuAc OfttVIE ASSOCIATH U2t Cedlllec Orl11e, Coste ,.._ .. Cellferr'Ne ... J--w. o.c:.n.. 2034 ....... ~ ..... c-. ...... Celltoml• "'26 '"'' ....... condlolcted by eft dl¥14tual. ,,.... DtCarto 1.Ja• Lil>ntiy~ Q.arde~ I ~ -Sj,ecial garden classes slated -1 Wendy Weir will conduct classes in Gardening and ome Plants at the OASIS Senior Center, cor- f Fifth and Marguerite, in Corona del Mar Wednesday. be classes will meet in Room 6 al 9:30 a.m. esdays . For more information call 759-9471. wo area 1arden clubs have elected and in- oew officers for the 198l·l2 club year. ew officers for the Harbor View Hills Garden Clu are Mrs. Millard MacAdam, president; ~rs. Har y Tukjian, first vice president; Mrs . Ronald Jae , second vice president; Mrs. James Conway, sec tary and Mrs. John Parkin.son, treuurer. rs. William R. Warren was installed as new dent of the Big Canyon Home and Garden Servin& with her will be M.rs. Rex McKit-tric , vice president; Betty Sue Mack, secretary; Mrs Donald Dotzauer, treasurer; 'Mrs. John Parr, cbll' man I; Mrs. Frank Hucbes, Betty Sue Mack and Mn. Bryan Ba:xenden, program chairmen; Mr Allen Boyer, hospitality; Mrs. Herbert Sch rt.er and Mrs. Roy Chicoine, phone committee and rs. Warren Uehllnger, publicity. DAN.IA ... ,.. Ideal Summer Color. ~ ..... NOwlt~ Property Being Sold . NURSERY Liquidation Sale All 5pecWI Wliect to Supply on Hand '"" ......,... -n.... ..... c--. a.ti" 0reftllt c..ity Oft 211,1.., •• P1 l'vbl!lllM.Or.,.._Coeet Oell~ ~ ..... Mtiy 22, 2'.-'-s. 11, ,.., ~· fUBLlC NOTICE .. .. _ Summer Plant Sale .... Indoor plants, color, fuchsias Monday , June 15 , 1981 10 :30 A.M. -2:00 P.M. . \ 2M7 E. COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR tr;/ \~) ··· ................. , ...... ··· . FRUIT TREES 5 GALL:ON: APPLE • ALMOND • APRICOT FIG • PEACH • PL.UM PERSIMMON • PRUNE POMEGRANATE I EXAMPLE: PEACH TREE I~ [1 }f .&i!J _ SOAL.REG.12.98 ·---.. __ _ . Mr. Famous Ball Player walked into Buuie Bavasl's office last winter and politely asked the general manaeer of the Angels for a small favor. "I'm buying a home In Mission Viejo and I'd appreciate it If the baJI club would loan me ~S.000," said Mr. Famous Ball Player. · "We will be happy to help," said Bavasi, whose initials E. J. stand for Economy Justified.' After ail, Mr. Famous Ball Player was one of his f-:w players who had not fallen on bis $25 hairstyle lil 1980. Bavasi ordered treasurer Frank Leary to write out the check for $45,000 as an advance on Mr. Famous Ball Player's 1981 salary. Mr. i1..amous Ball Player didn't have to pay any points or interest to the Angels. thus becoming one of about 10 Angels who have borrowed money from the club In the past year. Try that one on your local Bank of America br.anch manager. Several weeks later Bavasl sent Mr. Famous FRI DAY, JUNE 12, 1981 TELEVISION 07 Ball Player a contract offering him $275,000 tq work on his summer Job as a major le•1ue player. The player was lnsulted and ordered his agent to ln!orm Bavasl he was fUlng for arbitration. "They won the cue1" said Bavasi, a tear slowly rolling down one of his cbeel:.s. "We bad to alve him something lite $325,000. We wound up paying back ourselves for the loan Wf give him." This tells you somethina about the charming labor dispute which is beadlng for the picket lines today unless the Lords of Baseball and members of America's highest paid craft union -the average major league players' salary this season is $171 ,000 -settle their differences today. If the players want to take a hike, let 'em walk out. And ll the owners run out of mpney from their strike insurance lund, goOd nddance to them. too. The An eels· bu<tget tn1s year is about $11 million. acco.rclina to Bavasi. That _includes t~eir .. ., PttM ...... ..., CMr-....,.. A lonely Anal}eim Stadium U&her Linda Gene Lee and a cluster of empty aeatl ngrdfy atrilu i.t on. lernando homered :- in unkindest way ST. LOUIS (APl -Except for .a OyJng excursion around the 'bases by George Hendrick, rookie Fernando Valenzuela !')t:ould rank as baseball's first USl wiMer of 10 games. .. "It was a very st.range home 'run," the young Dod1ers burler iaid Thursday night after bow- j n g 2·1 to the St. Louis Cardinals. "1 think the outfield was wet. It was a sinJle that went for a home tun'." · Jf Valenzuela, 9-4. resented a • ambling bid by teammate :edro Guerrero for Hendrick's lide-the·park blow, it was not 1lpparent. however. , ... PEDao COULDN'T make lh_e play," the 20-year-old left· ll·ander aakl through an in· }erpreter, rtferrinf to a drive to 1ballow rl1ht leld which 'Jjlipptd past the right fielder to ~ore two run1, "It wasn•t• a ~r~wb~. It was a fastball he rHendrick) bit which was away. lfe bit i\ eood·" • V81emuela, after belnl vie· UJDind by Henrick'• hit in the o?eninl innin1, dlaplayed ibe fprm which earlier made him an oteraJibtsenaatlon. •• Alter the nrat inntnc, m)' coach, Ron Perranoekl, save me -tome advlce and I ehan1ed my :lbllow·throqh," NI• th• ttock1 :burler, who fanned nlne aad 7tfalkld three ln 1even lnrunp. "ID th• ftrat lnnlq, I had a few pro. blem1." enabled the St. Loula runner to score standing up . "ll looked like be <GuerTero) thought he could catch the ball, then once he saw that he couldn't catch it he stopped," Los Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda said. "When he stopped. the ball bounced on bim. You've got to play it a different way. That's the way things happen on tbat artificial turf." South favored ~.,..;r..Jn county All-star '2asketball. See D3. minor league operation, but the b.ilk' al lt 1oes to major league salaries. Ttte new batting champions are the immortal Bo Diu oC the Cleveland Indians for the American Lea1ue and the equally famous Joel Youngblood of the Mets for the National League side. "lf we 1et by the first 10 days of ~Atrllre, our club will make money," Bavasl cOQ ..... "Whal worries me is the guy wbo ~to find some place to spend bis money may decide he JWok,ie Mike Witt led the Angel pitching staff with 36 strikeQuts. just 347 short of Nolan Ryan's club record. likes the race l(ack or some thin e looked it up the other day: there ~e ma· jor leagues who all make our en· The major league home run kings ere Gorman Tnomas <Brewers) with 15 and Mike Schmidt (Phillies> with 14. Thal is the lowest leading total in Ute majors since Gavvy Cravatb hil 12 for the 1919 Phillies and Babe Ruth of .Ute Red Sox and some one named C. Williams of the Philadelphia A's bad 11in1918. tire 1952 Brooklyn team th • " Bavasi shakes his head an rec · the player who borrowed $45,000 from him, then took the team to arbitration. "He came in to see me about two weeks ago. Said he wanted to borrow $50,000 because he was going on strike." You can imagine Bavas••11 rep~y. Since the season alle~ ,ended Thursday night, as one of our continll! ~vices the The Daily Pilot's choice for the merican League Cy Young Award is Yankee reliever Rich Gossage. The Goose's 17 saves are one more Utan the Angels staff recorded last summer. Daily Pilot salutes th 1•cks who Steve Carlton. the Greta G'1rbo of· Jqc the National League Cy Young a\'Ward <See MILLER, PAGE Dt) performed nobly through thf ~. Gloont in Anahe · . Angels, Mauch 'amazed and a little sick' over strike Bv EDZJNTEL Of .. 0..ly ...... $Utt In the gloom. yes. gloom. of the winning Angels clubhouse Thursday night sat Manager Gene Mauch. distraught, COD· fused and utterly disappointed.,, Mauch held in one hm•• copy of a wire news se story that had just ml earlier been released. The told of what had and ha transpired in the baseball meeting earlier in the ev It told the news that Mauc praying he wouldn't hear. The strike was on. "I 'm amazed and a little sick," be said as he nervously ruffled his hair and sat down. There was a long pause as Mauch stared down at the floor. Then be continued. "When a bunch of intelligent people get together and they can't reach an agreement after 15 months ... " Mauch· stopped. He wiped hfs sweaty forehead as he tried to keep his emotions in control. It WH difficult. ''I can't stand to have my emotions toyed with like this," he went oo. "The strike seemed lnconcelvable to me. With so many people being hurt by the strike. I couldn't believe it would bappen. It goes beyond Ken Forsch having a good year or my success since becoming manager. How can you abuse fans and expect their en- thusiastic support?" Forsch, the guy who was hav- iag a good, if not great, season 1-.I* new team, the guy who luia iust won his ninth game to give him a sha r e for the American League lead In that department. looked like a guy who was 3·9, not 9·3. feel like everyone else, .. ch, the 34-year-old former ton Astro veteran of 10 • sajd. "It's a letdown. •trike is not easy for alll~ne lake. I thought it wo!'[lll' 't D1e to this. It's too bad ... Too bad, yet too, necessary was the feeling in the Angel clubhouse following Thursday night's game, a game in which they defeated the Boston Red Sox 7·2 for their fourth straight victory. Players;-some of them pack· ing suitcases in compliance with Marvin Miller's request for them to return home. patiently ans wered, for the umpteenth time, questions relating to the strike. ""It's mt money we're talking about, but so111ething <free agen· cy with COll'lpensation for a draft choice) that was granted to us by the c:ourts," Angels Player Representative Don Baylor said. "We're just trying to keep what is ours." Greed on the part of players? Stubbornness on the part of the owners·• No one could give a de· fm1te answer .. We ma~ have won the battle but lost the war," Angels Ex· ecut1 ve Vice President Buzzie Bavas1, speaking fo r the owners side on the matter. said earlier in the evening. Bavasi, like the 28, 19 1 fans who turned out. perhaps for the last time this year , to watch the Angels turn in another s upe r b all .around performance in a recent up· swing. felt sorrow over the mat· ter "l feel sorry for lne ffns. they·ve been through tbis before < 1972!," he said. "l justhopetbey don't desert us when this thing is settled .. l wasn't ,urprised about what happened. I thought all along that they would rule in the owners· favor. The judge was l egally and not politically motivated But now. we're hrthe same boat as everyone." There was sorrow and disap- pointment in the faces of the players, too. when told or the news . Yet all of them reaffirmed lheir strong alliance in th.el de- bate. "There were so many meet· <See ANGELS, Page Dt> • •• /!layers head home while talks go on Dodgers stranded in St. Louis? From AP dispatches "The stril:e is on." said Marvin •Iller, executive direc· tor of the Major League Players Association. But G«>rge Foster, the slug. gin& outfielder for the Cincinnati Reds, feels a baseball strike will either not occur or be of short duration. "My gut feeling Ls that I don't think there will be a strike,·· said Foster, the Reds' player representative. .. From a relia· ble SO\lJ'ce I bear there wiU not be a strike -and it there is, lt 'will just be a couple o{ day1t." DESPITE FOSTEll'8 feel· in gs, Miller said early today that "a substantial number of players have left for home, and as soon as everybody knows. the remainder will go home." All across the country, and in Toronto and Montreal. baseball players and teams played a waiting game -. waiting for the 2 p .m., EDT. deadline that was set early today by Ray Grebey, the chief negotiator tor the owners . "We are going on the .ssutqp· tlon that the team will cont.blue playing," said Fred Cl.tr., U. Angeles Dodgers vie• pre11dent ot p~blia relations * prcMOO- Uon. "But we have taken some steps to meet conlinceotJ• that could l'elDlt from a strllte." One of the contingencies would be to strand the players l.n St. Louis wbe,. lbe Dodier• jutl flnltbe4 • aerlu wttb th• Car~. The Cleveland Indians are in Oakland. where a four·game weekend series against the A's was to begin ton\gbt. •'If there is a strike, (he players will have to pay their own way home from Oakland,'' said Gabe Paul, Indians pr.esl- dent. ''The clubhouse will be locked and the players can't wo~ out with any equjpment owo by the team. They will be gi•e ~e time to get their petsbnal belongings." The possibility open'ed Gp a humorous side . .. ·. Champ has respect f.or Spinks tonight DETROIT -Three years and • three days after be won the title, Larry Holmes defends his World Boxing Council heavyweight cham- pionship against Leon Spinks tonight. Holmes wUl carry a 12-pound weight advan· tage, 21214 to 20014 for ex-champ Spinka, into the ring at Joe Louis Arena when he makes his 10th de(ense of boxin1f s most glamorous crown. · The Dokes-Gardner fi&ht and the main event between Hplme:s and Spinks will be shown by ABC·TV, beginning at 8 p.tn. Holmes. 31, has won all 37 of his career fights, 27 of · them by knockouts. Eight of those KOs came in suc· cessive title defenses alter he outpointed Ken Norton for Holmes the crown June 9, 1978. His ninth and most recent defense was a 15-round decision over Trevor Berbick last April 11 at Las Ve~as. Holmes brings a healthy respect for Spinka into the ring tonight. "I've had no trouble get· ting \IP for this one." he said. "Leon is a lot bet· ter than a lot of other opponents I've t.ad. '' .. Quote of the day Joe DlMagg1o, estimating the kind of money he would command ln today's rree- agent market: "If I were sittina down with George Steinbrenner and, based on what Dave Winfield got for bis statistics, I'd have to say. 'George. you and I are about to become partners.· Cadle looking for first PGA victory Georte CadJe, often a challenger l!I but not yet a winner, birdied four of his last five holes for a 67 and a l· stroke lead Thursday after the first round of the Westchester Golf Classic in Harrison. N.Y. At 68. a single stroke back In the chase for the first prize money are Gll Morgan, Gibby Gilbert, Bruce Douglass and Lee Elder, a former winner of this event who had a strong showing last week in Atlanta. A group at 69, two under par on the hHly course included Fuay Zoeller, Tim Simpson, Bill Krataert and Craig Stadler .... Former teacher Lyna Adams, despite a broken toe. shot her best score ever, a 6-under-par f6, to grab the first-round lead in the LPGA tounaa- ment at Mason, Ohio. The 30-year-old Texan was only one shot ahead or Sandra PGR and 1979 U.S. Open champion .lerlJ)'ll Britz. '" ftalm Spftnga, The Tennl• Club 19 MfWi"I up a pelr of Mticed ctoublff thl1 •ummer that can't be beat. The first match la $15&. .. any 5 nlghta/6 <Mya aocommodatlons •' 175 per peqon based on ~occupancy • pk.ls tax • free tennis during yoorentl19 stay, beled on .valllblllty • complimentary oodrtalt. from ' to e p..m. ~ ....... ls 135: , ,~te1/any day ol the W98k • S17.50 per penion bMed on c1oUbMt occup.ncy ptus tax • tennll at $4 a dey, baeed on avallllblltty • ~tarv'CX>Cktalls from 4 toe p.m. 9o ff~ •• your ndet. ... cow'9ng .. n. r.... a. HcMI. 80tlt peck ... •lfect!W June 1 · AAJgust 28, 1981, ••<»Pt (/It Of July Mtflkend. !7-~t:IJW . Cruz steals American League record .Jallo Craa tl ~d an American Ii Leaaue record wlth hls 12nd con-. seculive stolen base and .Jeff hr· rou•u drove in four runs as the Seat· Ue Marinen defeated the Baltimore Orioles, 8·2 Tburaday night ln American Leaaue action. Cruz slnaled and stole second In the first innina. tyina the record set by Kansas City's WWle WU•• last year. • . In other games, Harold Balaes doubled home CarJ&on Flak with the deciding run in the third inning to give the Chicago Whjte Sox a 3-2 vic- tory over the New York Yankees and a sweep of their two-aame series. Steve Trout, 5-3, was the winner, and Lamarr Hoyt earned hls seventh save of the year. Dou1 Bird was handed his Cruz first major league loss since Aug. 16, 1978, snapping a personal 12-game win· nJng streak . . . Pinch-hitter .Jamie Qalrk drove in three runs with a bases-loaded double in the eiihth inntna, while Hal McRae and Rance MaUJalb drove in two runs apiece as Kansas City handed Toronto its 12th consecutive defeat, 10-5. Former Ora!1ge Coast College and Costa Mesa Htgh star Dan Qulaenberry earned his ninth save . . . Boy Rowell homered for the go-ahead run in a two-run seventh inning and Pete Vackovlcb won his eighth straight de- cision as Milwaukee defeated Texas, 6·3, and snapped a rour-game losing streak . . . Tom Brookens slammed a three-run homer in a four- run sixth inning and Steve Kemp drove in two runs as Detroit defeated Minnesota, 7·2. ~Reds breeze behind Seaver, Foster George Foater bit a three-run Ii homer 1n the sixth Inning to back Tom sea~r to his sixth consecutive victory as the Cincinnati Reds defeated the-New York ·Mets, 5·2 Thursday night in National League action. Foster's line shot over the left· fi eld fence snapped a 2·2 tie and gave the Reds their seventh conaecutive win and eighth vie· tory in nine games . . . In other eames. Ken Reita' two-run double capped a fbur-run fiTst in· ning and Jody Davis hit his first major league home run as the Chicago Cubs beat San Fran- cisco, 6-1, behind Randy Marta. The triumph was the fifth in the last six games for the Cubs. who knocked loser Tom Grtrnn, 4-5. from the game in the first inning as the Giants suffered their fifth straight defeat . . . G8'y Carter, Warren Cromartie and Andre Dawson eacb drove ln two runs to back the seven-hit pitching of Steve Rodgers as Montreal completed a three-game sweep of Atlanta with a 7-0 victory. Rodgers, T·4, who has won five straight against the Braves dating back to August, 1977, walked two and struck out one. Horse owners win suit over tail-tying MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich. -E The owners of a racehorse, injured when its tail was tied to the starting gate before a race, pave been awarded $136,000 by a Circuit Court jury. Lorraine Guzowski and her father , Frank, sued the owners of the Detroit Race Course for injuries to the spine and reproductive organs of their b<JU.rae, Shapely Miss. The practice of tying a horse's tail to the starting gate, called "tailing." is a common one uaed to steady a horse at the start of a race. 701 West Bat'lsto Road, Palm Sprtngs, CA 92262 Telephone (714) 325·1441 • Loa Angeles (213) 211·~ • Baseball today On this date ln buebaU In 1939: The Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum at Cooperstown, N.Y. was orticlally de· di ca led. On this date in 1922 : The St.. Louis CardinaJ1 reeled off 10 bit.I in a row en route to a 14-8 victory over the Philadelphia PhJllles. Davis: Rozelle heads war council Oakland Raiders Managlns • General Partner Al Devil testified Thursday that other professional football team owners turned into a "war councU" a1alnst him when lt became clear he wanted t9 leave for Loe Anaele1. NFL Commissioner Pete Roselle waa at the bead of the councU, Davis said in bis third day on the witness stand. The LA Coliseum and the Raiders are suing the NFL. in antitrust action because the league has not permitted the Oakland franchise to be moved to Los Anaeles . . . Wayne Webb. the .1980 Professional Bowlers As- sociation ~layer or the year, won all eaght of his ma~b· play games and avera,ed 248 Thursday to move into a Rozell~ commanding 187 -pin . lead in the PBA tour competition in Torrance ... Bel~lan Jackie lckx, out of retirement to try for a record Cifth victory in the Le Mans 24-fu>ur road race. led the field In a Porsche speedster after shattering the course record during two days or qualifying for next weekend's race . . . The Los Angeles Kings have announced they have reached a working agreement with the New Haven Nighthawks of the American Hoc;key Lea~ue . . . . Honolulu's Andy Ganigan invades the mamland Saturday to battle Mex· ico's Rudolpbo Gonzalez at the Forum that will move the winner toward a title match in the 135-pound class . . . Zair.e's Clement Tshinza battered Rocky MaUloll until the Italian-born Australian failed to answer the bell In the 10th and final round of their middleweight fight in Italy. Television. radio . Following are the top sportS events on TV tonight. Ratings are: ./ I ./ / excellent; .f .f ' worth watching; I ./ fair; I forget It. ft 6 p.m •• Ch•nnel 7 v " v " BOXING: Larry Holmes vs. Leon Spinks Announcers: Howard Cosell and Chris Schenk~ World Boxing Council champion Larry Holmes (37-0) takes' on Leon Spinks (10-2·2) In a scheduled 15-round bOut from Detroit. This will be the 10th title defense for Holmes who has 27 knockouts. In his 37 victories. His string of eight straight, a heavyweight record, was stopped in his last outing by Trevor Berblck. ~Inks, since losing his WBA Utle to Muhammad Alt In 1978, has been knocked out by Gerrie Coetzee at South Africa in the first round of a 1979 bout. Since then he has three wins and a draw In a comeback attempt. RADIO Baseball -Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 4:30 p.m., KABC V90); Boston at A~ls, 7:00 p.m ., KMPC (710). (A strike of major league players wlll cancel these games,) races ·) ~ Netop0rf Sailors move up By ALMON LOCKABEY .,. .. , ................ LONG BEACH -Newport Harbor 1kippen _' moved up in the standings in Long Beach Yacht1'J Club's Race Week reaatta Thursday as 1tron1er winds and protest.a took their toll of the • boat In-.. J ternation.al OffshQre Rule fleet. . T.he rreshentna winds in Thuraday's race.·· resulted in a round or bumpings at the marks with n one collision that damaged one or the boat.I The , other minor collisions brouaht on a rash oi pro·~ tests, s_ome or which may change the standings in · the senes. . lrv,lne Loube's Bravura and Monte Liv-. mgston s Checkmate, both from St. fTancia Yacht BOA.TING rll ~ '· Oil Fitter for imonrted cars 1'111, is, z"lio~"2iss, Zl65A, ZBTOA Trailer Ball Orange Coaat DAILY PfLOT~rtdeV, June 12, 1881 J c .At;·~· ?.iii: Tl1e Gree n Machine ~t,Jir-tfot'fl\.otl"-f" f•t"Jt d'• ,,.,.,,,. SPRINT CIR Sou~h rated 11-point favorite in 16th annual county All-star basketball game l y aOGEa CA•LSON .... ..., ...... The 1ceoe bu chao1ed. but the rat ot the an· nual Oranie County All·•tar butetball 1ame, aponl()C'ed by the Coeta Mesa Klwanla, lJ e~cted to continue the aame format. Already ownin1 a 10·5 advantaae in the 1erie1 the South ii a aolld ll·point favorite to dispose of a Scott Sinek·led Northern Co11Un1ent Saturday night (8 o'clock) at Fountain Valley Hi1h. And, the women'• 1ame, which belfnl at 5:30, ir also expected to follow the same lines with the South cooaidered a nine-point favorite to maintaln ill unbeaten atatua in this, the fourth annual col· lilion featurln1 the belt of 11"aduattna talent trom Oran1e County hilh 1chool1. CO.\.Cll IAC& Eaa10N oi Corona del Mu takes W. Rebela into the same boutlq &-8 Wayne Carlancler oi Ocean View and 1-1 Jobn.ny Rosen of La Quinta as the core of an attack, which includes All·CIF selections by the handful. Errioo'a bigaeat surprise in thia, hi• first ven- ture as an All·atar coach in a 29-year coaching career! . "They've been ao easy to deal with," aaya Er· rlon. "With all the notoriety they've been 1ettin1 they sure aren't' restla1 on their laurels. ''They realize what thil came means and they're gearin1 up for their beat effort. We're not having any trouble gettin1 the ball around. You always wonder how lt'a coin1 to co." Translation: It's an unselliab unit. Errion's tentative startinc lineup includes Carlander and Rogers inside, Capistrano Valley's Wayne Call at the point and Fountain Valley's Jeff Cpristensen and Corona del Mar's Mark Spinn (6·6) at the wings. PVILIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Olben very prominent are M Westminster star Mick DeLavallade, e-s Mark J..ewlJ of Tustin and 8·5 Jeff Prtes of Corona del Mar. Pries bu bMn tied UP wlth double duty with the recent all-star baseball 1ame. Others Include 1uarda Tom O'Bri•n of El Toro and Mal Durkee of Newpori Harbor. Mi11lon VieJo's Randy Sherwood has been bothered wlth a toe Injury auatained in volleyball and Santa Ana Valley's Tony Neal <M> does not appear to be a factor after mi11ln1 aeveral prac· tices. "Everyone is Coinl to be playin1," says Er- rion. "The ~di have worked hard and we owe 'em that." TOE NOam•s MAJOR weapon b quickness, keyed by Servile Hilb '1 Sinelt, who will be operat· ing within the structure he knows belt -from Servile Coach Larry Walker. At. for the tuk at band, Errioo says, "I think we'll see a lot of pressing from the North. They ap· · pear to be quick and I would think they would want a transiUoo game, fi1urtn1 they can out-run us. "We seem to be in decent shape and we're try. inl to keep It u 1lmple u poalble with Ute em· pbula on 1ettioc a 1ood, o~ abot, but not one IO open that it'• 1oin1 to take au ntcht to ftnd. ''Thia 1ame baa a 30·second clock and )'OU can't use zone defenses." THE KEY TO 8UCCE88t "Sbootinl ta aucb a bil thina," says Errion. ''The petcenta1e of sbota made early should definitely 11ve some lndicaUon of how it's aoing to be." And bu Errton found aometbln1 he wasn't. counting on? "Wayne Call becomet more Im· pressive each day," say1 Errton. "He's Sood oo the bruit and he's 1ettint his touch down. You can tell . . . because others are tookln1 for him at the breat." The women's game features several athletes from the Orange Coast area, includin1 Estancia High's Cara Francy and Vickie Simpson, EdiJon's Shannon Meyer and Sue Randall, Fountain Valley's Marianne Belaen and Chris Wyclnowski, Mater. Del's Melinda Bauman and Teri Donohue and Marina's Colleen Berry. The South women's team is coached by Foothill Hlgh's Sheila Adams. Ba r key le a ves UCI fo r S o n o ma State Barkey. "My interest Is in being an athletic direc- -Summer Nationals SIA .. UISOI CllUCI IUlllY JACI lllWln UALAMO •SPA ... ...... DIAM TMOMOI ...., ... ....., .... Lee...... .., ..... TOllGHT & SATUIDAY IU• IZ-13, I P.M. Q ... ftk; .._.,, it.L., .._,....., ( .. ; .... s..u; ...... s.t. 11300 Vermo11t Gord en a 1213, 37 1 1100 171)1 323-I U J &Me..M 'k ' .............. ,... Miit 1--1 (s.t. o.1¥1 SllM <WWr. 112 & _.,,, ~· TICKETRPN "Where Horbor, Son 0141oo & 91 ftffWOyt MHI" Ralph Barkey, a11l1taot athletic director at UC Irvine the put two years, has been nan1ed athletic director at Sonoma State University in Rohnert Park, Cali!. tor and I think this represents a very positive pro· i--------------------fessional move. I'm particularly thankful to Linda Decnpsay (UCI athletic director) and Chancellor (Daniel) Aldrich for the opportunity of working at "I've had a marvelous experience at UCI and I am most grateful for that opportunity," said UCL" · Ironwood's Sl1mn1er Rate 1()3,4% (11.% A.P.R.) Jack Anderson I ·1y Pl.lat reveals in the II Never Again Terms on a Few Courtyard Homes. Summer finds us with a small number of smart new Courtyard condominiums. These gracious plans, in the very center of Ironwood's recreational pleasures, are privafe. convenient and luxurious ... and they are offered for the off season with the best financing in the (tesert. It's really worth the trip to have our sales representatives fill in the details about out limlted offer .. or, if you already know and love Ironwood. as so many do, you might Uke to telephone one of our sale9 Ci>unse\ors at 346-0551. ' These lovely homes with their own pri.vate therapy pools, view decks aoo rQ_any pecial features are ready for occupancy now. With a little help from our newly expanded design center', you can easily be in residence by fall. ' PRICED FROMa $156,~ . ' ~ ' J i ' I I ' ' i ' l -----~ ~ ------. ... ? ------~~""·-~·--...,._ • Despite age (46), he 's still considered one of best on NASCAR circuit 81 HOW&&D l.. HANDY 'Of............ I MaviilS crown up ln the south and in a race-oriented family, Richard Petty has been a name synonymous wltb NASCAR stock car racine as Jona as he can remember. His lather was a driver and now his son, Kyle, ts on the super-speedway circuit. He ls a seven-time NASCA!\ Winston Cup champion and has won the Daytona race this year. Petty and son Kyle will both be racing their STP Buicks at Riverside Intenia- tional Raceway Sunday in the Warner HodgdoP 400 NASCAR event that gets under way at l o'clock. PETl'Y COMPARES stock car driv- ing to other sports by saying tliat the NA SCAR circuit o n the super speedways is the major leagues and that there is no minor league to eet ex- perience. 1'Kyle f\UlS in the same race as I ~o.'' Petty says. '1He started in the m.Uor leagues of stock car racing but he doesn't run quite fast enough to lreep up r ight now. •'But he could bring on my early re- tirement. I feel I can run for another seven or eight years and it will take him three or four to get Into the fUU swing of things. Then I would take another three or four years to make sure be is doing it right. "I probably notice him more than anyone else, not only because be is a team driver but because he is my son. · He bas to learn the tracks aod this learning experience ls sort of like going to school. "It talces him longer to adapt to the situation than someone with experience on the speedways. I 'd lil~e for him to win but it is more important for him to get the experience. "A football player has four years of high school and four years of college to get that experience in his sport. In ours, you start out in the pros to get the ex- perience. "You can drive for 10 years on the short track circuit and not get the ex- perience you need.'' Richard Petty Petty drove a Dodi«! for many years under the STP banner but last year switched to General Motors to drive a Chevrolet ~d an Oldsmobile. This year he switched to Buick. ''We felt the B1,1ick was better dynamically and it has won four races this year," Petty says. He won a\ Daytona and other drivers have won behind the wheel of a Buick in three other races. Petty is certain that experience is the one big advantage he bas over many of the other d,rivers on the track. ''The older I get, the more finesse I seem to have," he says. "I can an- ticipate what is going to happen and not have to rely entirely on guts like I did when I started. I'm not brave at all but I have the experience.'' Petty's father started. racjng in 1949 and son Richard worked on the cars UD· til he wu 2J and ready to take bl.a fum behind the wheel. "l played football and buketball and then went home and worked on the race cars," be says. "Other kids bad to milk the cows or work ln the fields. "My first year tn racln1, I earned something like $700. Nothlns came over- night. For most drivers, what they make, tbey make entirely on their own. "This year ba.sn 't been the beat and if .I knew it was going to be the same the ·rest of the year, I mig4t bang them up until next year. 1 ••But that is what keeps brinlin8 you back, If I have a bad year, 1111 just keep on trucld,n'. There ls no pressure on me because we own our own team." • ,l THE NASCAR CIRCVJT is run most of the Ume on oval speedways in the South. ••A road course is more challenging to drive.," he sars. "At Riverside, you forget about the other cars and concen· trate on racing the circuit. You have to use the brake, clutch and other parts of the car much more and your concentra· lion has to be total or you might wind up in the stands or over the fence." Petty says the Daytona and Charlotte 600 races are major events along witb Darlington on Labor Day weekend. He has won at Daytona this year and is looking forward to Darlington. But in the meantime, be says: "We will just try to win a bunch of the others to get back on top again." *' Pettv•a RIVerelde tecoc'd ··~ ........ -ltu-.11; IM-26; 1,.._U; 1"7-Jt; 1M-10; l..,_1; • 1970-S; 1971-20; 1972-1; 197'-21; J'74-2; 197$-7; 1'7-U; 1'77-4; 1'71-1'; 1f7t-...U; 1~; ttt1-S. . ..._ ......... 1963-36; l~t· 1'71-13; 1'72-U; 1m-3; 1'7.._25; ' 1t7s-1; 1'7..._.; fm-1; m1-2; 1,,..._, 1w1111 Jimmy IMOIO); ltlD-I. 1'90Cltrlft 191~1, IO, 10; 1'7~. lt; 1'75-4, 11; ,,,,.....,, t ; 1m-2, s. INITR©.WUCING· J:hrlE COROLLA SRORTS HARDTOP. There's a nfNI sport in town. And one IOOk will tell you how It ptays. Fast Suie-f(JO(ed. As dar- ing as its rakish, notchbaci< roof tine. A whole S-..Wfeellng. Wide open. That's the feeijng inside the Corolla Sports Hardtop, thanf(s to the pillar- less Hardtop design. Ready to move. That's the feeling the sporty ~ _,... standard lea-. tures on the Corolla SAS Hard- top gjve you. 5-speed overdrive transmission and radial tires put you in touch with the road. Full instrumentation tells the score. And the swiveling AM'FMIMPX stereo radio does a •pivot• to- ward driver or passenger. RIM Est. Hwy.MPG, ~EMllt.MPO. . With a gas-saving 1.8 Hter 4-cylinder engine sparking depending on how fast you drive, weather conditions, and trip length. Actual highway mile- age will probably be less than the EPA "Highway Estimate .• The new Tcyota Corolla Sports Hardk>p. It may look lit<e the sport of~· But with so much TO;'Ota economy and dependabilty built in, you s::::::~~=---can afbd k> get in the action. Remember: Com· pare this estimate to the EPA "Estimated MPG" of other cars with manual transmission. You may get differe,nl mileage. · on the action too!·· PlJBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE tHlftac~~~··· ":.C:.:M:::.T .. ~':'.::. IALaOflaa&&. l•TY TM,..._.,. ....... It ... !Ml· l'AHll•-l'OP91t.ATI .. NOT1ca11"'•HY IVIN THAT -... UNNaPN:Tl"OU• --~~~ :-..~r:. -::.~.·~ coi..o"s UNt..llllllTSO. ,.. w. TM ...::.-=.~ .....,._ HI COUNTY C~lllTMOUU, ,.-~~ ltrwt, C-ta MtM, c:.t.._.... 11'1 •• M ""°""'tr• ,._ ...ua-, IVI( CINTUI 6,_IVl, SANTA ·-• t.ed ..-c;IMlefl _, ..... -NA, CM.lflOANtA. TITt..I 'TRUST Mic,_. ,.,_ lie~, •t :'r"r.! fletl.._ ...... MIN 41f~ 0110 &8,.VICI COMlt,.NY, e Oll .. tHtttet.,~,(ellfemletlHO IOUTH QDMT 6 ~IATll. 1...:1 ttlftlnU ~ .._ _.._ Tiiis ._.,_. .. <llfllMtld illY-" "'-lenJ.._, T~.~- 11.uev.-.re .... M ........ "' .......... Tllot t'<liu-.......... MIM ...... IM, CA ti• ..., .._. ....,.. MlcNet "°*"'-_, ft<r Ult...,,_.. -,.._."' II (ti&) ........ ,r-t Thia ........... WM ..... With IN .--rll ti, tmlfttMCellllty .. Qr .... , ~ l'llt\W, wltl _,I et Plllllk ~Uoft IO COUfllY °""'ti Or .... Qwlty 611.._Y 1'1111 N•-eM ..... ., tllt itllle4 I If, 1•1. ,. "'.,·ti a;,. tlMlaf fW cell\ le leWflll 1'1'DU P•ra•11 Wlt~lflt: O.llta AM, "' .. l("r ....... ~J'-~ ...... rty =~~ Pllblllllld Or= C.lt 0.tty l'tlot W•ltt, 6'27 hr!!_~ Clrc~1 -·-... _.. ... J 1 • a a ,.., ,...i •-Pt111. Ctl'*"" -lie City tJI C.ta MHe c.wtly 9f wn• 2, I ' 'J ' ...... : ._.,. ._ ..... r•111•, Sttt• ot C•llfornle, enf 1------------,.., ... ecrlllM .. ,.,....._ lo wit; t..OT 5' PUBUC NOTICE Plllllllllld Or.,. CMti Deity l'lltC, , I' T"ACT HO. wt, AS PIR MAP JllM 12, It, 16, Jiiiy t, 1"1 ..... ,. "ECOllDl!D IN 8001< 1241. ltAOE 9 , NO • MISC,LANNl!OUS MAI'S, IN 1'14E OFFICE 01' THI! COUNTY "IECOROI" OF SAID OOUHTY. 20tS IALMOML PlACI, COSTA MISA. CAl.lflOANIA. THI UNOl,.SIONIO TRUSTl!ll DllC L.A IMS ANY LIAllLIT'I' l'OR llil~OIHliCT IN· FOAMATIQN l'UANIStflO. SAi 0 ..i. wilt lie medlt to Mtlsty V. MlltatloM 19turecl w Md ---to 1119 power of .... cord•rl'9d 111 • <•r· 1•111 OHd of Trv•t .. ecwt•d by GLl!NN LICHTER AND CORI L . LICHTER, EACH Al TO AN UN· OIVtDIDONl-HAt..I' 1"4TIAEST, AS Tl!NAN'TS IH COMMON, AS TAUSTOR. .. TITLE TRUST OIEO SERVICE COMPAN'I', es Trws ... , lot 1119 bitlltflt end 1K11tlty of IAAIAAA A. DE GROOTE, M,D. TRUSTIE l'OA TME BAAIA"A A. OE GROOTE, INC., DEFINED PENSION ••• H 8-lkl..-,, Cl919d JlllY 15, 1-. end ~ • 1...in-t No. 105:M Auelllt 11, "'° Ill book/rwl 13'M, p&Qe/lmeg9 I09$, of Offlctel Ate;O!'ds Ill 1119 office of llw Goumy RKO!'der of rent19 County, St.et• of C.ltlcw11le. ••• PL.AH.••• TME tot•I •-t of IN unpeld b•l•nu 01 the uld oblloetlons, tootth•r with edvMC•, tnd •Umet.O ottl Md•~ l1$S7.s'7J,t. THAT notlat of brtKh 9f Mid CIO-ll09tlon lfld etoctlOn to ........... . p~rty -r•oni.d n '"'"""'°"' No. WM on ~ 4, 1-. 1(1 l;Mlolt/rwl 1JISt, .,.._/1'"'99 11SO, l)f Offlclel R•corcls 111 aw offtu of u. County A.corder of Or .... cow.ty, State of Cetlforllle. THAT Mid .... 11 .,,_,. wlU-t COV• •11•nt Of' w•rrtnty r999r<11no title, _..ulon or oncumbr.nc•, or n to l11t11relllllty OI tltle. THE llerWflc;I..-, « _., ~ !MrHn or pe,_. f'NIY pure-et Mid Mio. OATEOtn111thd9y of JUNE, 1tt1. TITLE TRUST DEED SEAVICI COMPANY , A CALI FOAHIA OOitP. By: IRAOL $.STILL.MAN Publtlhed 0r-. Cots1 Delly Piiot, J-12, 1',», 1tl1 241WI PUBLIC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ' PUBLIC NOTICE • ' I PVBUC NOTIClr ThePayrog l'savinp Plan is one i1( Jhe u.IH&, .. re.. wa) •to"' etaned on the ••'inC habit. ~ven if' ••'inC ha ah\a)·• teemed too clilf"icuk in p.a -..on .. A link la eutom9lic.U) tllken out of nch p!l)'ch«k coward the purchMe or U.S. S.,1nct Bonde. loo'll fW\W mm it. eo, ou·a ncv.t ..-net it. h jUIC k"91 P' in, fur eome comine llprinf. ur mt!)-.,. 111 "V'l1l ' toatirnl d~. cold" ir!Mr. lue "'9n fur ..u .. ..,na. for all American" ()tange Coaat DAILY PILOT,f'rldmy, June 12, 1981 Ange~ Do(lger games on TY:? Feuding cyclists in action Both televise games Sunday -IF there isn~t a strike Saturday's TV, radio TELEVISION (Note: A strike of major leapt pla.yera will cause canceUaUao of 11mee Usted Saturday and Sunday.) 11 a.m. (4) -8.UEBALL WARMUP. <5> TENNIS -Eddle Dibba vs. Harold Solomon in the WCT Invitational, taped in March in Sallabury, Md . 11:10 a.m. (11) -DODGEU 8A8EBAJ.L - The Dod,1ers meet the Pirates lD Pittabur•h'a Three Rivers Stadium. 11:15 a.m. (4) -BASEBALL -Tbe Kamu City Royall meet the Ti1ers in Detroit'• Titer Stadium. 2 p.m. <-'> -WOMEN'S GOLi' -Third round play in the LPGA championship is telecast from King's Island, Ohlo. 3 p.m. (2) -GOLP -Third round play tn the Westchester Classic; taped at Harrison, NY. 3:80 p.m. (7) -P&O BOWLING -The (10&11 or the Pennzoil Open. taped at Tonance. <M> - FUTBOL -Spain vs. Hun1ary. 4 p.m. (2) -SPO&TS SATURDAY -Rodolfo "Gato" Gonzalez (17-0) vs. Andrew Ganl1u (33-2) in a scheduled 10.round lightweight match, taped at Los Angeles. Also: Same-day covera1e of the start of the 24 Hours of Le Mana from France. 5 p.m. (1) -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS - Five-time champion Roger DeCOlter beads a field of top international drivers in a repeat show ing of the U.S. Grand Prix motocross motorcycle cbam· plonsbips at Carlsbad. Also: Highlights of the Larry Holmes-Leon Sp'inks WBC heavyweight tltle fight, taped Friday night in Detroit. And a preview or the U.S. Open, one of golfs Blg Four events, from Merion Golf Club. (28) -SOCCER. 9 p.m . (50 ) -SPORTS AMERICA - Highlights of the WAC track and field meet finals. Included in the competition is two-mile world re- cord helder Doug Padilla. 10 p.m. (11) -TB18 WEE& IN BASEBALL. 10!30 p.m. (34) -NASL 80CCER -Tbe Loe An11lee Artee1 va. the Sockert, taped earlier in the eventnc at San Die10. aADIO 8ueball -Doc11er1 at Plttabur1b, 11:15 a.m., KABC (790); .so.ton at An1elt, 1 p.m., KMPC (7105 . . . . Sunday's TV. radio I TELEVWON " 10 a.m. (50) -SPOaTs AMERICA Hl1hll1hta of the WAC track ud field meet finals. 10:30 a.m. (11) -DODGE&S BASEBALL - The Dod1ers meet the Pirates in the last or a three-game aeries at Three Riven Stadium In Pit- tsbureh. ll a.m. (2) -SPORTS SUNDAY -Live cov- era1e of the fmisb of the 24 Houn of Le Mans auto race from Le Mans, France. Also: Tb~ Women's International diving meet, taped at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 11 :30 a.m . (4) -WOME '8 GOLF -Final round play in the LPGA championship from Kin1's Island, Ohio. 1 p. m. (2) -GOLF -Final round play in the Westchester Clusic from Harrison, N. Y. (5) - ANGELS BASEBALL -The Boston Red Sox meet the Angels at Anaheim Stadium on Gene Autry Day. 4 p.m . (4) -SPOBTSWORLD -Frank Fletcher (11·2·1) takes on Norberto Sabater (19.0) Mlke Ba•t and Alan Cbrlatlan fltured to dominate the 1peedway motorcycle 1one this 1eaaon lona before it started. Speedway fans have DC)t been "1tappointed . Tb~ two outstandint riders have not only dls- played their •kills on the track but have built up a personal teud between them that should brine added spice to tonight's weekly show <8> at the Oranee County Fair· grounds in Costa Mesa. Bast "parked" bis bike in front of Christian at San Bernardino a week ago and Christian returned the favor at Costa Mesa last Friday night. Parking a bike in a speedway race ia the term used by the riders for deliberately stopping or laying down a bike in the path of another rider in an attempt to put him in a scheduled 10-round middleweight bout, taped out or the race at Atlantic City, N.J. Also: Survival of .the fittest Christian's ~Ucs Last and the AlAW national women's collegiate track' Friday night not only and field chamoionshios. put Bast out but the RADIO other two riders as well Baseball -Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 10:30 a.m., bil b i kl t ABC (790); Boston at Angels, 1 p.m., KMPC (710). ~ack eon fus q~w':i Jk!~ Auto Racing -Warner Hodgdon NASCAR 400 finish first. He was dis· from Riverside Raceway, 9 a.m .. KLAC (570 ). l'f' d r th inci-<The DaUv Pilot ls not responsible for late qua 1 ie or e ,, dent, however, and changes.) placed last. EACH Cle..ns 6.. shines. Hard shell finish 10 oz. #1123 SOLIDOX TORCH KIT Hf.X K£Y WRENctt SIT Ptwtable ... wlYe controled SDOCI' tofch. lndudes: tOfCh. propane. pellets. bru.e rods. gw.ses. ~hter . WIDlANGll MIRROR 3'/& If ct.meter J&j(onanie mirror #6482517 26'1~ 30!~ 33M 36e 50H KASCO -C'-olet. 6 ~*4ef. 1955· ·16 =»U5·250l EMc. r975·'76 "'4111 250 ront, 6 )tndef. 1960-'74 010-1001 o-raiet. a c~. 1~5·'68 (16s-28M07·l17) be.~ Oodlle. l'lvmoum 8 C-.lnde. 1958-'7'8 l3SO:l61· lal-400-440) l'ont!M:. a Cytlnder. 196l·'68 (Wllll ~ T.C. 8-llatel ~ ~ 6 C:Wlncler, 1900-'77 foni. 8 C)41ndef. 196M~9 (211·260-189.)02= Oodat. ' I C)lndtf. 1962-'71 (17j;318-l60) . -. -............ -----~-- ~ • . . " AMUICAN LIAOUI · ~87,ftedSo•2 ._.,. CALl .... 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Tatel~ Ae • II Mil ll8t fltt. m11n t 11 .- 2•1 • n J " .Jiit 171 21 Jl , 2S .lft D S) .0 It J2 .ato Ito U 4'I ' ZA .27S 141 " SJ ' 12 .m 40910 0 1 .29 157 11 ., J lS .v• 16404'1 •U ... .. ,,, J" .2S4 40Jt 0 S.DO J2 l 1 ' 2 ·'" • • • 0 • .214 15 ' 13 0 ' ·* 2.000 1161 S22 SJ 14l .»I ,.tTOUNO ti" 11 ••so •·l. au ~ JI " " 1-1 '·" 1CQ • " 40 ·~ 1.27 ~7)21-12..53 ~1t11n•2t. .. 6 SJ•MUO ~ JI " ,. .., S.12 ~ • 17 22 ,., *'" '911'> 100 26 ,. ,.. ,.. ~ S6 12 17 ,.. 4.tt tOll> $4 27 ,. ... J 4." Ml! 14 • S .. , a.41 Sil ,. "' 119 11-2' 3.~ CMMofYlllM.M.Y.I OMf' .. c.dfa Ollll>'tOll._., 81'11<• Dowel .. 011 Mortlft LHl!lcter Tl"111,,,._,, et.i1Stedlor •tu It'""" """" Zotl.., Doff •klltlltorver ... l!.Smllh l'ranllc-.f' Kolll\l'9f'llit J~, .... ... o.,.., ... ..,... ManAlt .. lt O.ryTrM- JoyHffl "-rmc.td "lo'td 1n lloeen IMOAMI CMrlHCood't Oo•kl 1..-nwn Mtr1l H..,_ . .., ... .._. J..-ryMco. LMIOfeMrll 11 ldlle Adllatn '---......... hlld'(GanlNr HW.rt Gfoon ... Murtft¥ i.-tl'd~ Goer ....... Miiie ""' ..... ,Mat ... JllftOoM l.aff'tZi.tiar llollllyC~ Jim SI,,_ Jim Cof'*1 C•l•ln.._.. Id~ •tttL'tlle Pet Mc°""' e111ea11 .. ltMSVcll "-•I'd lWltty ... l!a•t"""1 Merll L't9 Jl"1MY~ CwtltSIJ' .... '9fwl'tMll• M1uStnlt1> Allon Sir .... .. au 9auati Mike o-ld RlllMa ......... ......, Nlelloll oa ... ~ T-1tl• lt.H,$*- Oftor.,._ -t.:' ... ";':!...11. J .C.,..., IEd ~lorl .,..,._ Jlfll~ oa...~ .i.MSC......._ Jim.__ IC.ttW..,_ •r1111•,.,... Mffll McOlm&lor T_Wel...., LOftHIN&Je llOllert Se!""*' T-~ hll8't-Mll<•~t.w ........ OoutSMdert l!d Sebo Jt1me0onu11111 'Yim Non'lt JOMMoua 9"Co• 9"HetN l'rM~ 8nic. UttlM Joe ll'l!Mll ....... J~­,.,.., Nertfl =~·, L'tll Llltt htLIMM't ,.,Oftll ._,d .... ~ .. ...,c:.w\#tll lltfllaltltln l..lftdy Miiiot .._.... ... ~ DICK MIIJ.ER'S COLUMN • • • 114-67 ,,. ..... 1>*5-41 ~ ~ ,.,.,,._.. l2-J7 ..... ~ ~ ~ ~ »-J4.-10 1$-1$-1' ~ ,..,._,. SWl-70 V.J)-10 .,._,. ,,..._,. u.»-10 u..as-.10 J4-.P-11 U-»-71 ~I ~I »-»-11 ~· ,.....,, »45-11 »-»-11 ~' aw.s-71 aw.s-11 M-&-71 u.»-11 ..._,, ~,_,, .........,, SWJ-12 ~ 17~ -....n ~ JW>-12 17·»--n »-»-n 17-JS-12 ~· 17.u--12 1$-11-12 ~ •17-71 ~ ~ ~ --...n 11---.n ~ JWr-11 17·»-1> 17-»-n ~ »a-n ,,.........,, ~· Jf.JS-.1• ~· .....,. .. *'-". .......,. 11~-1• ··~· ____,. **-1• 11-17-14 »a-J• ~· »-»-1• Jf.»-7' .......,, ,,.,._,, ,..,._,, »-'9-U 11·Jt-7S -.sJ-u Jt.l6-1S ,..,._,, ~s ,,....,s 17.a-f5 ,..,._,, »4-lS ... »-IS .... l6-1S IW1-1S ».J7--1S ...,_,, 11.._JS ~· ........,. ~ ......,. 11.......,. ~ his 8-1 record and 2.67 earned run a\'erage. ?}:rnando Valen~uela will have to aetlle for being iwokle ot the Year. \ Whlct\ brings us to a aoberinf thought. Can Ytu plctW'e Fernando replacing Jim Palmer tn the j ckey underwear ads! ing into last. nllht.'1 1•met Pedro Guerrero wa1 leading with t.he Dod1en wtth a .830 battln1 avera1e and 10 home run1. Steve Garvey had 37 RBI. This was the season Rod Carew led the Antel1 again with a .308 battlns aver••• wbUe Dltco Dan Ford wu tops with 11 home runt and S2 R,I. The mint season produced some aurprisea. Go- allin senrices slated Funeral aervlcea are scheduled for John f allln Monday at HUaenfleld Mortuary In A abelril at 1 p.m. f0Uowin1 Mr. Wallin'• death T urlday. Mr. Wallin, 74, wu a lon1t1me coach and :l'!letlc direet.or within the Anaheim School Dil· -rct. egion 55 sets AYSO eignupe :American Youth Soccer Or1aniJatlon R .. ion 55 c orth Runtiniton Beach l will bold repatrauon s turday tro111 I a.m. to I p.m. at Murdy Park. outba, •let 5--11, are elilibl• to putlclpat.e. ya pcl ~ wbo laave not played AYSO btlore 11 ttic*ve a field r•Un1. Colt of re•lltration It For more 1DlormaUon, phone 147 .... Thia w11 the ae11on wt found that. Gene Mauch indeed ti 1 1entU1. ff• ldded hll ftnt year as the Ancett• 1ktpper wlth 1 M record. • Hawke' player UTeeted NAIL H ·U -.. 24-U-'7 U.U-47 JS-U-.. -..u -.. ,, ... _ .. U·M -.. ,,.,._ .. IM1 .. u.u-.. )4.U -" U·).1 -.. »-» .. Jt.JI .. •»-.. JJ.)ol _ .. lJ.l1 10 ,..,. 10 J,,_U -70 ,..,._70 )4.lt -70 .. »-1' JJ..16 -11 ~S -71 1441 -11 •u-11 ~J -11 D<a -71 ~-11 u....-11 ,,.,. -11 1~-71 ~-71 U.16-11 1~-71 11·lol -71 W•IT•llN DIVISION W L 0" OA 81' l"ta. ••• 21 It 11 l•U201'41 711'Dll .. t •111121J., LUT••N DfVtllOM CMmot w ............ MontrMI Toronto 12 •• , • JJ !OS asi.2112 .. •11220"" 41t1'M1'4 IOUTitl!•M IMYlltOM AtltMa e • 2' 22 2' 1• ForH • .... I 7 » 17 11 " Joc:k-ltlo , • JI 21 " • Tarn11111 ..., • I t• » JI W C•lfTRAL DtVlllOM 10 • " 11 u e •••ttn .. l •UtsttSS t\)tUtto ___,_.IT DWlllOM v~ ' s ,. '' 1' • $Nt1.. I I • 2:2 JI n Pwt1"'41 , ' 21 " • ., Ca'90ry ' ' " 22 14 .. E*'-toft • I 17 » IS Jt Sia llflrCs «• _ _.tor a ,..,.atton w -rllme vtctwy. ,.._ llOl..U tot • .......,. victory. 0... bonvt llOlllC fot •wrt .. t ""'" """". ,,_._ • lhr• ,., ...,... No bOftUS point It aw..-ct tor -.rtlme °' S'-tout VNlt: ni.nmr•k- Tw1w •. $Nitti• I T....,-•----W•tlll ....... MJaC--•llle, n t a1ear, e. ~diMMM, 11 ·~·-, ...... tat~,NYl .... IMMAtll ..ou• ~ .... Heat I -,..,,.,, 7: 15.A; t. ,.._.,, • ..,._, lie llMO; J. c.lwnMo, 7:U.I. HoM 2 - NortMa ...... 7:1U ; I.~ 1:tt.1; J. ~~ e..t, J:ZU. Women't tournament c.. ................ , TllfN ..... ..,..._ ..... 11 .... "I" ,. ~ • ISl'I ,, J2\lt IA IS\; ,, 1 !Wt ..... •.m ·~ s.m . , .... s.- S,171. uas ,. s.m. J,ltt Merline Hnratllev• del Sl\oron Weist\ .. 2, M , '--"'' 0.-1 *' In.--...... .. 2. 01, .. l . SW .. It., .... MN "~ 1 S, T·S. Oi-0.tlor def. We,.,,., Wl\lte, .. 1, • 2 . terDara "•llqul.i def Pam Tff9WM.,., .. ,. w .. MtrlO'le Bleck- d•t Jane Preur, •·l . •·•. •·2, Belay ............. ..., ... Poet ... 01 •.. i; .... J...,..,. ,._.,def Anll ltlyomura ...... 1-S. .. I • Legends cflamplon•hipa <•leer-) "'"' ....... " ..... o ...... Oe•~def. Rod'--"•· •-2 ... , Misc. Thuradey'• tranaactlona aASl.UL.L .......... 1.Hl'le NEW YORK METS -Signed Gall ,.,_, pltdwr, one1 111'11 "'"' to u n1e 1'0111 Of ti• HY•"°"" a..... SlgNCI Lowis Mer'tl,,.I, UI<-, .... _him lo ltJ"91lOfl of Ille A.p. pelaclll• LA99W· SAN QjEGQ PADRES -SI....., Fr-Ca•tro, utcl\..-, end ...,t lllm to Amarlllo Of .,.. Tea .. LAllewe.Sltned 9111 l..OftL pttc-. Mid ........, lllm le Salem Of tllt Horlll earo1111a......_ ~L....-TDll()fo4'T0 Bl.Ill JAYS -~ llw• tree •t•~•. Maril Wlllloma '"" Tim It~. tlkllen. ~ Mer1t l"oole, caki.r. 8.UCl!TaAU. .. ............... ._ .. , ... MlW J EllSEY NETS -Sold E .... r JOfttA, ctfMr, llO tt.. Detrillt Pl.-for fvtv,. .... -.._ S~TT~ ~Pt~ICS -,._.,, 11\0t ._ IC~;. esaltlOflt coocll fl'd ctilef acout, lies cleclcled to become .....ave coecti tor IN CltWIMd cavatlers. l'OOTMU. ......... ,....,.u..- CIN<:INNATI 8ENGAL.S -SltMCI J- Slm-, dllf-'" ltack. CLEVEUHD 8AOWN$ -SltMCI Gifford llem...,, detltnalw llacll. to• Ir•~,_ tract. HOUSTON OILERS -Slontd J ame1 COCNland, nftllnt !lack, Mlcllael Dur9111, Of· t.enslH tacll•; Scott Gall•, c ... ter; Brian Metltl•••, talely; Jeremy Mlndll11, ._ lens!Ye tactot: Y11et ""'lie•. 11 ... 110<11er, -Guy ~ ~ooaro. to,,...~ COftlTOCb. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS -Slgnect llOttl MJtde "'"*'.,.Jim Jol,,.r, Wide receivers, to 1 "''-llf......,.., Qll'ltracU. SAN DIEGO c:J.4AllGERS -S'9Md Dan ................... ..OCX•Y ~ ........ ....._ Nl!W HAVEH NIGHTHAWKS -Hired Donl"erryaCIMCll. c:ou.aoe eAOOl(LYN COU.EGE -H.....cl Jim Dl8enode,to, Stepl\e11 Foa e11d Jeck ltUllMr M -IAMI footbell <NCllH. Cl!NfltAL l't.OIUDA -Hemect Joe Sanclltl -·· bosketbell COOCll. MISS1$Sll"PI STATE -Hired Dwt 8°"\ekl • M auist.ant looCbell <OKI\. Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Dlvt1Jon W L Pc&. GB Oakland 37 23 .617 Texa1 -33 12 .600 1 ~ Chica10 31 22 ·* 2y, A•ltll 31 29 .517 6 Kansu City 20 30 .400 12 Seattle 21 36 .368 141,A, Mlnnesot.a 17 39 .304 18 Eaetot.taaoa New York 3' 22 .'°7 """ Baltimore 31 23 .57• 2 Milwaukee 31 25 ,554 3 Detroit 31 26 .su 3~ Boaton 30 ·26 ,538 • Cleveland 26 24 oiS20 5 Toronto 16 42 .276 lt ,........., ....... ::c'ti~T!t..t 1 ' "=~ .. ,:.::..• -"· ....... ' ............. t='t , 1~11:.=· ~J)··~·" ~·:.! Clllt ... ( ,, .. Ml e Mll-llot t~.r~i~.,,.,.. (l(aoaoNll ~),It IC ..... CllY COalt ~I .. ~•Witco• '-JI, 11 Clfte!IM CW• ... , ti 0111'-"-11Ctw911 WI. " 8oltl_. (-....rt t4) et ....... 1....-Ml " NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division I I~ I .. w L Pct. GB DOdlerW • 36 21 .632 ...- Clnt!lnnaU 35 21 .625 YI Houston 28 29 .491 8 Atlanta ' 25 29 .463 9YI San Frddsco 27 32 .458 10 San Die&'o 23 33 .411 12'h EH& DlvlslQll Philadelphia 34 21 St. ~"1· 30 20 M ontreaJ 3Q; 2S Pitt.sbUrgh 2S 23 ~ew 1'otk f1 34 Cht~af0 .. £U~ •t.Lwttt.: t Clllc ..... Sen -·-' Melltr•e0,At1MtOt • c~1, .... v.-1 Oftly ...,,..~ .618 .6()1) 1~ .54$1 • .521 5~ .333 16 .~17Ma TMrr'•._. Q .. ..,. ('!Wtlcti 4·11 ot l'ltUb•rlll C 0 . ..... '*"."·" W Diiie t .... M l 114 <:Ne..-:Kr.-041 cwic~• c..,_, ~,, " MofttrMI (LM. ..a1. 11 H-• Ctt..._..,. S-1) M Ntw Yor• Ck9tl Ml, 11 I "llonta t"'"' S·•I ot ""'1•41•1•111t (Olrl~t-1) Ian lffwil:;I-( .. lie Ml et St. ~ (Mllnla >II, 11 •• • • • lnas. It wa~ f'fdloulous," aald Baylor. "lf owners and players had been ln tb re to dl•C\.l.SS the m atter, maybe sometbina rould have been resolved. There'• just one isssue and It's compenH· lion. As tar as <Ray> Gre.vey (c hier neaotlator for club owners>. he seems to be a hard liner. I teet he didn't inform tbe owners on what was eolng oo. "Now my gut feellng Is that if the strike goes 2•3 week.s, lt could go on for a very lone time. Otherwise, it may not last long." OTHER PLAYERS, reflecting and projecting on the strike situation, talked about what they mi&ht do, now that they're away rrom the job. · "I'm not going to worry about 1t," said Rod Carew. "My kids are out of school and I'm just go- ing to enjoy mysetr ... ''J'll have to think about it for about a week and. I'll probably do absolutely nothing, .. said Dan Ford "Unfortunately ir and when we do come back, it'll be like s pring training. All a pitcher has to do 1s keep his arm in shape but hi tters lose their timing, their stroke. their sense or the stnke zone " SEVERAL PLAYERS were pr epared to return to their homes. near and Car. today. "Our contracts say we can't hold organized practices during the off-season. so how are we supposed to stay in shape?" asked Forsch. "When I was with Houston during the strike in '72. we met as a team but with the Angels that may not be possi· ble, .. he added. making a re- ference to a swt brought by the Angels agamst patcher Jim Barr during spring training when he played an a benefit softball game without asking for permission Crom the club. On at went None of 1t was very pleasant * &llGllL ..or•• WllO'll "'Ye Ille l.Aal Le ..... Depl Pllcl\er Je"'1 D'Ac ... •ta, sillMCI to• fDur· year. $! mHllOll COlltftel lly Ille Anttlf dul'lllO .. wllller, may wind 1111 et tN Ctlnhlte cot,,..,, ltlls whOle ~11011 strike mns. Sii'<• he't now • Mino< I•-IN wH -.1 -"lo Salt Leke O · ly 011 Mey 2'1. N 't .. wnPI fn>m en.,11111111 ttwt lllekH 111 ow malort ot teut aa t• 01 l\la w lory ooet ln>nlc aa 11 ..... ...i1. D'Acqwltto wlll be rew•rcled 111 • blo way for l\ovl1111 a _, ,..., montl\1 wHh "'9 ""9els, ltlal 11, II -1tr1u i. IOllCI le<m . StlNl<lflCI of 1""9·'-"' strllla - 11\e ellec:t It hH Oft _.., wllet aboOll lN - Old l•nt 1 Well, .............. IOM• 119111 "Dependiftt Oft "°"' long -1trlk•. -·11 ..... termlne -to do for ... _ lkUl llOlclt"-II It's ._, torm • .,... .. oor1ence -Id fndleete !NI ltle lan1 _.d be relmlturttd wlttl • llM 11umllor Of tkk .. s !or "'"' ... ..,., -· If ll"t IOflCI le""' .,..,, -·o do -lll11t elM •ant l ... flnet Of e rwfund Al IM at emplo.,.e el .. Anoel• ....,.1ui1on oo. Ptrf·llme ....,...._.. nu vs,,.ra -.., on I 1.000 Of 111tmJ, WOllld lie let 111. , wllll• per-.....,..,.,...-· ney. "Mostef .... ltlldlum pen.time "9iP NW lllolr -.. M<Oftci.,,, Of)K. .... ll•rw'• •I••~ Ille ......, T le ... 1 to~ TM Antelt ll-to 1eM UJl,000 ,....,. .. ret Of -..... _ ... L dw lo I,,. ttrlM -II• -City of ,....,,..,., d I-111 IN -· of 1100,000, -Oft Ille IOU OI 110.000 lens for 11\f .. g.mn FV youth football registration set I) Regis tration for Fountain · Valley Jr. All·American football : will be held Sirturday at the J Fountain Valley Recr eation ' Center In Mile Square Park and at two little league fields . ;;. Any youth 8-13 years or age may register. There wiJl be a $20 registration ree. Registration will also be con· dueled al Fountain Valley Little League North c Newland and 1 Talbert streets> and at C Field <Ward and Talbert streets). For rurl he r infor mation , phone 775-6743 or 839-5936. , ____ --_..,,.._ --------------------------. , ---. -··----- ' S:10~~411MMllM. .. , ..... .,.._WOMAN A..._.....,....~ -.Mad --ed from • ~ lit .. put up kw .-eo"" ....,_. ~ •• .OWOMO HIAVWfT ~1•• wee Ml•7RIQl!t c;nemP- on tAny ...,_ ~ 1111 tit ...... t L-8'**1, .. tomw W8A c:Nmplon. In • 16-toullct bout to be ....,... 11\111 lfom 1111 Joe Louil Anna In Detroit: In lddttlon, weo No. 3 ranlted helvy· -10111 Mlc:l\111 Ookat .... °" !uropeen '-"Y· welQht chemplon John ~ In the Ol)llllnO bout. I TIC T~ DOUGH 90001'1Ml!8 J-INltll lhll Florld1 Ill)' In • privet• holpllll lnllteed of the c:Knlc: tor • minor operetlon. •• B..8CTNC OC*'AMY<") i C:.NRWS a:ao JOICP'8 WllD ....,HIU. llenny trlee hie llMCI .. • --· I KC8T NEWl8EAT ST'UOtOI& "a.iuoa·· Blllndl .• ...,.., Beluga Wha61, trelnl II S911 OleoO'• See Wotld; two CNc:ago llldt run a llc1te- bolnl lhop: epple plc:klno lln~.(AI .. IDrTONAL 7:00 c:. .... ...... HAPPY DAYS~ Matton traneforma '*1lelf Into a Yollled bleuty wherl Iha 1Mr1 thl might IOM Howard to a younoer wom- an. CHANNR LISTINGS MAKINO MUSIC -Cbarles Martin Smith and Brenda King star u members of a hifh school band in .. Oottoa Candy" pre· miering tonight at 9 on Channel 4. I Cll P.M.WAllDtl :=:Of'IM The......_ .. ..._... bme- AltNCllOO bll Md .... Mc:tOI')': • ~ Whetl • -·· hulberld lllal!l9 ~ ..... ecv-...,.,..... .... ...,. lie ..... In~. 11a1 met 611111 t>y the recll· l:OO. Cll THI~ et and lha1 thl wlll be HUUC next. W1* worttlnO In • ~ • OVP EAIY plant, David It IUt>jecrted Gullll: )azz grMI lionll to a mMiNe alectrio ~ Hampton. dlrlc:1ot ol San tllat ~ Nm to lore- Frencllc:o'• Oeper1m«1t of -upooMlng-ta. (RI "-1th Or. MeryYt'I Sltwr· • NA"'8t VN.J.iV PTA man. (A) Slllll ~ u • hair GD MACNEIL I LEHM.R U'*1 to oet , ... on AEPOftT ,,... Aelll)'a lot c:al1lng her (I) TIC T~ DOUQH en alcotlollc. (R} 7:IO 9 2 ON THI TOWN • M0Yta Host1: Sleva Edw11d1, • • "C«i11terlelt Kiiier" MllOdy Aogerl. Vlllt Bob ( tteal Jedi Lotd, ~ Baker'• Mlrionett• The-Knlollt. An ullderc:over atrr. 1 look et VkleO Art; polteef'nan lnllltralff a ...,p1or. 1111 dMt11 o1 111e c:t1m1 mo 10 ~ the lee Crawn Paf1or. actMti. of top c:tlml lelld- Q FA*.Y FEUD ere. etHANANA •o~ ~ Attn Olmenaion. A 00fg90UI -who la Cl FM2 THE MUSIC mad about a.-trtea to • w•A•t•H wtn Ille I-white he la Hawileyot end B.J. autpec:t trying to run a conference Frank of llltlng a wounded IOI' ~ pttee\I and colonel'I entiqu1 QUI'. rabble. (R) • MACN8L / LIHMR G MOYta MPORT' • • ''Ontt One Oly Lift 6'D) ·--Before T_..-ow" (1171) EXCM.f..W Peter Duel. Sel Mineo A "Comput1re: Wave of pair of Int~ repoe- Today" E.umlne 1111 11ig11 _.try to,......, I t-f tec:ti.IOlooY ~ of ffOf'A tM -of • South the aouthland and 1111 Amerlc:ln dlc:tat.,. tuJure of,_ t~ In • AU. If THe ,AMLY 1111 thedow of reoutetory Glorie'1 24-heu+dey job obttllea. M • ,_ mottler doeerfl IMYI mudl time IOI' Miiie. eMOWW *.. "The Ralnmaillt" (195e) Bun une .. ter, t<alt\ar1M HtlpbUm. A con 8 KNXT 1CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNBC tNBCI Los Angeles e KTLA 1lnd ' Los Angeles men poelng • 1 rlllnmaker not only end• 111e «ouoht In 1 111\11 ~tern 1own. but alao btlno• needed ,_end con- ~ to • ..,.,_.,. •LoeWO-•W&K .. ~ 8 KABC TV (ABCI Los Angeles (I) t<FMB (CBSJ San Diego Cl KHJ·TV (Ind J Los Angeles 9 t<CST (ABCI San Diego I KTIV (Ind ) Los Angeies KCOP TV (Ind J Los Angeles KCET· TV I PBS) Los Angeles '9 KOCE TV 1PBS1 Huntington Beach Hoel: a.. Aobenl. • • WAll-TONWIEK ...... e:ao• u.oM Fred IMda a MWdl on dty ... '° ""*" ~ to buld 1 "--uvoup IN~. •O l'MAl90CIA. NOW ~ Nlllgfw rather ._ IUOMlt IO Ille ~· ~--<"> • P.M.WMZINI The-'d'•lllQoelll~ bell Ind ... tec:tcwy: • cowtloy *""°"' ,~ In ...., • .W-, Jen-* ..... ..__. ........ '-~ .,_: Cept. cwrot on. peMUt butt• end dlolllnO: Mn ~ lntrodvcee. ~· • WAIHIMGTON WIE< ltM"VmW ··~Wl9< "The T~ OutlOc*" ou.t: ~ o. Zlnder. ................... techo nic:ll ~. !.F. HllttClf\ ' Conlpany, Inc. t:CIO 8 Cll THe OUK8 M HAZZAllD Luk• end Ito -llftCI '° uu-'11 .,.. hlltortc: ftlOfd . (~ .MCMI • • "COllOll Candy" ( 1871) Clllll Howard. CNw1el Mattln Smhll. A Ol'OIAP Of fllt'I IGtlOCll mla- flle '°"" a l'odt ~ to _...,... wlttl Ille ac:tlool'• -.tl1hed bend. (A) ewcwm * * * * "Tiii F'9nc:h COfl.. n1ct1011" ( tt71) Gene Hecttmen, F~ Rey. TWo tough nercotlcl 1n- 11gaton loll a hl.tga llerotn deal. • .-RVGAfflN "Selull To Clive Oellla And Arlsll Rec:ordl" au.ta: Clive Devil, Aretlll Frank· Hn, Air SUpply, Gino Ven· 111111, Jim Brogan. • WAU: fTAQTWIEK "The Tec:hnlcal Out!Ooll" G.-1: Newton O. Zlndlf, Mnlor lllce prllldent. lech- nlc;al anafy91t. E.F. Hutton " Compeny. Inc: • ID VOTUr8 PINUNIE "Who Cer• Fot Ohll<lt9'I" Ho91 ·Jim Cooper end ,.... ciu-ta dl8cuaa ctllld cat9 llcilllila In Orenge County 0 MOVIE * • ~ "Ktno CreOI•" (11158) EMI Pr9My. Cero- lyn JonH. A youth ~ • amMhlno hit wt'81'1 lie ·-10 llng In • 9an91ter-ownad New Orleana nl(jhtlpe>t. 9:80. ID IACflWENTO WHK .. MVllW Ho9t: Murrey Fromaon. 10:00 8 Cll DAUM Bobby diecoYlra that an oil ,.,.., tlllt _. -not ln-.d and COUid cost him Iha pt-'41nc:Y of Ewing Oil. (RI IU.::. THPTN l"l!ITIVAl ~ FAYONTU "The Golden Bowl" Baaed on a novel t>y Henry J-. Maggie tells Alnerl- QO •tie• Iha k-of hll altelr and trlee to c:onWlce her tither to rwtum to AITler1ca with Ow1otte. (P1111 ll)(R) • ILLMOYDW' JOlMAL "Mylll Hot1Clfl, TM ~ KHJ e 8:00 -"Only One Day Left Before Tomorrow.'' Movie about an Amfrican and Wellbman trying to re- possess a Jet from a playboy. KCOP • 8:00 -''The Rainmaker.'• Classic movie about rain and romance starring Burt Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn . ABC fJ 9:00 -"The French Connec- tion.'' Gene Hackman stars in this movie about two detectives thwarting a heroin haul. " Aadlu!M .. lnteMewt MyM Honan. lduc:etot and loundet ol a ec:hool 111 T.,,,..... tMI 1..0-poor~ .... art of ~II. (PM 2) 1 ... , ..... -··:l)BIT . NITWOMNIM 11:00 • ., • Cll 0 ..wt 8TMTMK The EnterpriM blcornll I lhlp ol llatred u Ille olfl. QlrS battle t<llngona and eecll other. I NeWl. YWED GAME M•A•l•H ljawkeyot ano Hot Lipe gain 1 ,_ reepect lot Mc:h other alter WOf'klno •t en aid 11111on under i-vy fir• . • IDINYHIU Binny dlmonlttllM 11- p•o pla c:ommunlceled l>lf0te Mr Bell I nd hill llllpllonl • DD<CAVETT Oueet: Rtc;herO TllC>maa ID .-AK PMVIEW8 Rogel' Ebert ano Gene Slattll review "Take Tiii• Job And Shove II." "Out· land" and "The l eoend Of The Lone AAll'Olf . ' 11:80 8 (I) THE NOHT 8TAL.JCP An lrwwl!OA11on Into a _...of ttrange murdltl IMdl Kolchak IO believe lhll Clllcago " be4ng Yitll· Id try -1hly be4nga. (Al ., TON90HT • Holl: Jollnny C•reon a ...... s1-L.ndlaberg, ,... Fountalf\, 8Mltey et. MCNIW8 NdHTUNI D llT'I MAICI! A oeAl . ..,. **\t "WUSA" (1170) Paul New"'en, J OMM W~d. All 8lcohollc: dlac: joc:lley flndt himMll a pewn In 1 reec:ll011ary polltlc:el plOt and ........ ~lion. • DANCI~ Celeb<lty Judgll: Jonelle Allen. AAlldy Garo,_ and Tel Babllonla , Brle 11 Palrk:k Clarke. • fl!) CAPTIOHED AllC NIWI 12:00 • MOVlf * * "Tiie Muque 01 The Aed Oeelh" (1164) Vincent Price, Hant Court A 12tll- cenlury prince lllllM • myaterioul )'OUllO girl, who cwr ... Ille Red Oeeth pla- ~· Into hla caatte. •O~va G.-11 The JWll (A) D MAVENCt< "The Meveridc Line" • IWWTTA "c.1a" 12:80 Q TOMOMOW 12:.40 8 Cll MOYIE •• • "S omeone 11 WetchinO Me" (11178) Lau- ren Hutton, OeVld Birney Ai.male I~,_. dtrec:IOt II t~led by a mytlarloua men wllo -10 bl ttalklng lie< ~-· JOHN DARLING , •• ""'°'° 11111••0••'-,... --..DllYOND "Ute ei91M1Gn" ...... °"""" ~. 9lllC'Y H\lnt °'*' hMy lt\lllO-Clue~,_ to l11creeH l11telllt•nc:., melllteln 11911111 end M 1 IOllOI'. Nlltr ..... ••11•~ ...,.,,. .... 1:10• W!IOWM'T: UQC8fMIPAM Ill ADMlo-11 Melloy Ind Aeecl btMk up I Nlfc:ollc:e ring .. they IMd 1 rllld on the lljHllt· ment of 1 ~ed doCM puener. 1:80. MOYll. • 'A "OrtYe)'eld Ot Hor· (Ot'' (1171) Biii Curren, YOCMI• o,.y A m111 IMrlll Ille ~ ~It of Ille bfolt•'• ~­ence when lie i. led to 1 hlddlll c:a.... t>y • IMlncl ol 1~rMOYll * * • ._. "Ollmblf ' ( INCi) "'*1ey MacLllne. Mld!MI c.lne. A glllm«ou. girl Md .,. Englilh con man plol 10 ..... • v~ ICUlp\ut•. • MOYll ** "Of8CUll Vt Franll.en- 1t•" 111111 J. carrot Helen. Lon cnen.y tncu· la '*91 Or Fr1nk-te4n revive 1111 montter In return lot Hl•MJ•tllnlng bloodMNJn ~·NeWS e MOVIE • * ,_., "Tiie Big G1me" (11172) Stepllen Boyd. Frence Nuyen For910n governmen11 attempt to obtlln a ~ul mind· 1 c:ontrOl deYloe from Amerl- c:an aclenlltlt 2:4611 NEW8 S:008 NEWS Cl) MOVIE * • "C.,nlval 01 Crime" (11184) Jean-Pie rre Aumont, Tonia Carrero When a mlMlng -·• "°'PM 11 llnally dltc:OY· ered. lier husblnd'• butl- ,_ parlnet, whO wu lltO lier io.... oonf-10 the crime a: 18 11 EDfTOAIA1.. 8:209 MOVIE * * * "Pllinl Your W~­ on" ( 1"9) LM Mervin, Clint Eutwood During Ille Gold Ruth d1ya In Callfot· nla, a pelr ol pra.peciotl lhate 1 .ite bough! from a Motmon et an auc:11on S:JOG) MOVIE * ..... "Cloak AllO by Armstrong & Batluk Nuclear Age survival is CBS documentary topic next week By TOM JORY NEW YORK <AP) -CBS devotes an ex- traordinary five hours of prime time, an hour at a clip on consecutive nights, to a documentary project called "The Defense of the United States." Tbe series, nine months in production, con- siders the prospect of survival in the nuclear age, a question made even more timely by the raid by lsl"UU "Jets Ws week on the nuclear racllily-u.nlfer construction in Iraq. • Dan#Rather anchors the aeries, 10-11 each night, Sunday through, Thursday, with Walter Cronkite, Bob Schieffer, Harry Reuonet, l!:d Br ad.ley and Richard Threlkeld the principal re- porters. HOWARD STRINGER, executive producer of "CBS Reports" who coordinated tbe series, credits his boss, Bill Leonard. CBS News' president, with the idea for the project. "Any time you try to cover something like de- fense in an hour or two," Stringer says, "it might look good In script form, but once it's on film the Margolin is sidekick audience can't figure out what it's all about. "It's such a complex subject," be says, "you're conatanUy jumping from ooe spokesman to another, and it all becomes meaninaless after a while. "I think the series wlll demOllSlrate1" Stringer says, "that there's no substitute for good, sound .. Jovmall.un..-We haven't cut interviews to eight sffondl. and -.ve've done nothina to dazzle it up. .. IT MAY BE lnterestina, but it's serious, first and foremoat." 8-ya ~ard: "Since we began this project, the lnue bas become even more critical. The arms limitation talks have broken down, and the new Reagan admlnbtration bas pledged to spend $1.3 trillion on defense over the next five years.'' The premiere segment, "Ground Zero," con- siders, amoaa other tbinas. Soviet nuclear capability, and depictl, in rather irapbic detail, what would happen lf a 15-megaton bomb bit Strategic Air Command headquarters, near Omaha, Neb. "It's very serious," Strtnaer says of "Ground Zero." "I don't know if people will want to sit through the necessary information to get to that dramatic conclusion. We could have put the bomb at the beginning, but it belongs at tbe end of the hour." The series concludes Thursday night with on teen-a gers and guns and on the Texas "The Russians," a segment on the Soviet military Legi~ature, "and an investigative piece I can't -Cronkite's first major re,POrt since steppjng talk about. It's going to tear the lid off of one down in Marci) as "Eventna News'' anchorman. aspect of our society. Stringer says the producers of the individual "It's just the most cheerful time around here segments sought in each instance to speak with the __ l_n_s_o_m_e_m_o_n_th_s._" ____________ _ players in the nuclear game. "WE DECIDED at the start not to go to the think-tanks," be says. "Most of the people in this are the partici· pants." There JD•Y be another, more far-reaching significance in the five-hour series. "It's been a liberating experience,'' says Stringer of the project. "When Bill Leonard com- mits five hours to something Ute tbJs, you know damn well the commitment is to produce something of quality." · The project was particularly import.ant. to Stringer. in light of a trend in TV news not long ago away from the long-form documentary. "I THINK IT'S CLEAR," he says, "that there's a new value on non-fiction television, there's a pendulum swing back toward journalism. "We did the magazine stuff,'' Stringer says, "but we also had things like 'Boat P~le' and 'Teddy' that did very well to keep us in the longer form. If Saddleback Company Theatre presents A SUMMER OF FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Stuart Margolin will co-star with James Garner in NBC's "Bret Maverick'' serles In tbe fall. THE SEtlES continues Monday night with this seems it's turned around now, 1 think we'll all "The Nuclear tlattlefield," on the possibility of be very happy. THURSDAY, JUNE 18-SUHDAY, JULYS • :1 Margolin. won an Emmy as best supporting ac- tor for his portrayal of Angel in Garner's laist series, "'fbe Rockford Files." In "Bret Maverick," Margolin wtll play Stand· ing Bear, who claims to be an Indian Scout. He is always ready to serve Maverick -for a {>rice. nuclear war in Europe. Part III is "Call to Arms," "Last year was my worst in this business," be an examination of the strength of America's con· s ays. "There was the election -we lost time there ventlonal fofcea, and Part IV, "The War -and unless you really keep a documentary unit Mach~,'' considers the military-industrial com· busy. everybody tends to get lethargic." plex and its role in the country's defense. He says there are documentaries in the works .-----~-----------------------------'----~ l2ele8rities turn out to eulogize Allen Ludden RODGERS ANO HAMMERSTEIN'S AL L TIME FAVORITE THE SOUND OF MUSIC STARRING BROADWAY'S SUSAN WATSON AND STEPHEN ARLEN DIRECTED ANO CHOREOGRAPHED BY DAVID H. BELL • CLl~I EYHY MOUMTAJH •DO RI Mt ' • MY FAY01111 m..s * * • fHURSDAY, JU .. Y 16-SUMDAY. AUGUST 2 ERNEST THOMPSON'S WARM. FEISTY FAMIL ~ COMEDY I r ... -..,, .,, ---. . ... ~--::-. . --. , . -..... .,.,., ----- .-. -_ ___. I ~-----------------------· - STIC.# ALL BRAND NEW 1981 's ( J I •' I . ~. 7457 137505 $6055 $5678 PICK-UP DIESEL 7400 116552 $8120 $7458 5662 ,., ,,. ' 1Q .BBIT 6708 052259 $7680 $7120 '560 PICK-UP DIESEL 7435 128026 $8035 $7492 '543 : .. 11 RABBIT 6724 054774 $7890 s7047 '843 PICK-UP 6892 077131 S7870 $6796 s I 074 ·· . RABBIT I 6580 010851 $7620 S6872 '748 PICK-UP 6978 104592 S7460 $6766 5694 11 BBIT 6624 025046 S7620 $6873 '747 PICK-UP 7069 126621 '7715 S6905 .5810 . · BBIT DIESEL 7082 118693 S7695 s7052 . '643 PICK-UP 7063 130570 s7400 S6686 5714 6657 030316 $8445 S7621 '824 PICK-UP 7264 145291 $7210 $6551 5659 7706 105033 $7530 $6885 '645 CONVERTIBLE 7493 013537 Sl0,290 S8996 s 1294 I BBIT DIESEL 6962 086569 $8070 s7412 '658 CONVERTIBLE 7488 013617 Sl0,395 s9314 5 1081 I ROCCO 7545 022494 S9160 S7987 s 1173 · CONVERTIBLE 7419 012905 $ll,465 $10,168 sl297 I I ROCCO 7053 021803 $9780 S8627 s 1153 CONVERTIBLE 7476 013324 $}Q,395 s9458 '937 c . 1SllROCCO 7309 020478 s9950 $8821 5 1129 CONVERTIBLE 7486 007730 Sl0,350 $9396 '958 - I I ROCCO 7583 022511 $9885 S8817 5 10,8 DASHER DIESEL 6910 901448 Sl0,610 $9486 s I 124 l lsCIROCCO 7213 004158 s9535 $8483 5 1052 I DASHER llESEL 6915 901998 Sl0,610 $9486 s 1124 I JETTA 7341 287534 S848Q s7479 5 100 I VANAGON 7375 085774 Sll,140 S9892 5 1248 JETTA 7123 354214 sg995 S8273 s722 VANAGON 7348 042578 $ll,675 SlQ,354 s 1321 . ( JETTA 7604 331175 S8765 S8125 '740 YANAGON 7346 057021 $lL675 SlQ,354 '1321 " , JE TA 7403 293597 S8765 S7872 5893 VANAGON 7138 077379 Sll,700 SlQ,393 5 1307 .. 7405 322457 S874Q S7837 5903 YANAGON 'CAMPER 059596 Sl3,905 Sl2,552 s 1353 , I 71 DATSUN PU $ 4 •~. tomea cover, am/fm stereo. Only 25.000 mllea. (1 M29259) '78 PONTIAC FIREllRD. s5275 77 PONT TRAMS AM s4975 71 IAlllT E~PRIT • ~uto , ps, •IC. t.w .. t·tope. wire wheels. A Auto ps, air. A black beauty and on aele. (666SMR) SPECIAL EDITION ~utrful brrd on sale. (559VBR) • 4 spd, ae. at. ~tte, lo miles. (688WKO) 79 MERCURY CAPRI s515· I 71 FOID MUSTANG s4975 71 TOYOTA SR-5 s3975 x: ·. GHIA, 6 cyl, auto, ps. ac. Ve<y clean • lo miles. Ghia. 4 9P(I., ao•t8f'eo, poww stMrlng, only 36,000 A. 5 apd Llftback. In excellent condition and 10 miles. (1 3VWV) mllea (174780) Only (418UMY) ~ ·!7 AUDIFOXWGM 5265 , 72PO•SCH•••• 54115 7,FORDMUSTAMG 5845 , 4 pd.. radio, only 59,000 miles, runs exceptional. 5 speed, am/fm cuNtte. A olauic sports car In 4 cyl., 4 apd., ac,lat cassette, only 60,000 miles. A real (7 8TRS) auperb condition. (741ZRH) . . black dlamc>nd p/p 65395 ,, v.w. WESTFAL•A s1315 77 DATSUN •-2•0 SMJS 77 PLYMOUTH AllOW sg7 top, great condition, 4 apd with am~m & c.b. unit 2 DOOR 4 speed a/O am·fm .-.o. 1312912) 4 a~. am/fm cassette. Exc.llent transportation. ' TOI) ' ('283T JE) Only .., p ~: :!~l!~!!!tereo summertime la s5475 76 vw SCllOCCO ·s4550 77 HONDA ACCORD SAJ5 ) • • Pop Top's are 1n • ex°''11ent condition. 4 spd, fm .-eo. A beautiful allver w•tnpea and 5 speed, am/fm, driWM great. excellent condition. on ~PCQ) . cUlllom Interior. (978SEG) .. ... (890WAC) All vehicl• plus tax. lieen• & document#Y '" Subject to. prior sale. Sale ends Sunday 8(1 "4~1 Despite a sharp drop in sales and an increase 1n median prices, Or1nge County leads SouUiem Ctlifornla In virtually all categories or new housing, according to a study entlUed .. Ruldentitl Housing Summary.·· Published quarter~y by California Land Title Co. ln conjunction with San Diego-based Develop· ment Dimenstons, a research and ma.r)deting flt~; the study rePort.ed a 42.3 percent decline in saWS and median prices of tl73,781 for single-famlb hoines and $93,244 for condomlnlums. In the preceding quarter ended May 1, the sur· • v~ show¢ median price!I of $169,781 and $85,449,. res'pectively. The number of units in inventory, however. was reduced by 15.9 percent. "The key thought here." said Jack Harris. vice president or California Land Title, in a re· lease, "is that Orange County's average sales per ' development per week is still the highest In Southern California.·· Development Dimensions President Jay L. Moss noted in the same release that "Orange County had as many sales in its 24().plus develop· ments as Los Angeles County had in 600 active projects. And. Orange County retains clear-cut sales leadership despite the highest median price for s ingle-family units in Southern California.•· A total of 246 active de•elopments of 10 units or more were surveyed, including 113 si.Jlgle· family detached and 133 projects with attached or condominium units The Santa Ana-Tustin area led the county with 26 active projects, though the Yorba Liflda· Placentia and Anaheim-Anaheim Hills areas also had significant activity. The study reported those three submarkets accounted for 27 percent of all county pro1ects Santa Ana-Tustin also led all submarkets in total sales. the report noted, with Irvine a close second. Misslon Viejo exhibJted the fastest sales rate of 2.45 unita a week in its eight active develop- m~ots. The study showed single.family medl1n sales prices ranged Crom a low of $139,750 in El Toro· Lake Forest lo a high of $335,000 in Newport Beach, The sin&le·familY median sales price of S173,782 represents a 2.4 percent increase over the previo~ quarter. Co.ndomiftium median sales prices, accordlna to the report, ranged from a low of $75,864 In Santa Ana-Tustin to a high of $175,000 in San Clemente. The county's median sales price or $93,244 is 5.6 percent higher than tbe quarter which preceded it. "These price rises wilJ continue," Moss said in the release. ''because the median prices or inven- tory are $21,096 and $14 ,786 above single-family and condominium median sales prices. This is even higher than the differential which ex isted last quarter and these statistics point to another round of rising prices " Inventory fell 700 units to 3,545 during the sur· vey quarter. the report showed. Of these, 35 per· cent w~ single-family homes and 65 percent were condominium units, A total or 79 percent are completed but unsold. The report indicates this is a ve ry high level of completed inventory despite the "rather healthy pace dunng the last quarter in the face of difficult money market conditions ... The report concluded with this statement. "The most important factor to be monitored during the balance of the year is the effect or new legislation regarding the ability of savings and loans to make new loans at a variable. indexed rate with no stipulated maximum. This will have a major impact on the market's willingness and ability to purchase new housing, as will both ques· tionable economic conditions and future housing price escalations." Bonanza slow arriving Defense spending impact less than expected? F{pm the Business Wire The economic bonanza expected from in- c reased defense spending may be less than generally expected and much slower in comin,. according to three defense industry executives. Speaking in Newport Beach as panel members on "The Business Exchange," a public television forum for discussion of business Issues, tbe three agreed problems exist that the record money authorization alone can't cure. "The Sovie\s have ou\spent the United States by $200 billion during the last 10 yean," said TRW's John Stenbit, who cautioned that as now authorized. it would take three years to match what the Russians have already spent. ' Stenbit, director or requirements and group development for TRW's California-based Space & Defense Systems Group. said during much of that same 10 years there was an era of "inc~iswncy" ID procurement policies and 8 period of "anti· technology hysteria" in the United States that must also be overcome. While noting there are very pro4uctive and capable peo1>le now in the California a rospace in· dustry. Stenbit decried, for example, a current shortage of beginning engineers. He said this wn due in part to the "anti-technology" decade, and said it requires an eight-year cycle to produce a qualified graduate engineer. Panelist Dr. Nick Yaru, corporate senior vice president of Hughes Aircraft, agreed. He said whHe engineering schools are now jammed, there are not enough qualified professors to ease the crunch and prepare for the additional engineering students required. Yaru also said the Reagan administration's variable progress payment and muJUyear procure· ment policies. will help by easing lndustry cash· flow problems. However. be said Tong lead times and a shortage of subcontractors must also be con· sadered. "U J want to build something today, I ·exECUTl¥E SUITES JADE MANJ\GEMENT 881 Dover Or., Suite 14 N ewPORT BEACH 714-631-3651 -------------- CONSI'R\JCfION MOMEY AVAILABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. should have ordered it yesterday," he said of the U .$. semiconductor industry, heavily taxed by the demands of the consumer market. "vie ·are not bebind the Russians in our laboratories, we're behind the Russians to the ex· tent they have put their technology in the field," said the panel's third member, Paul Smith, vice president-program development and marketing for McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co. Smith said the lag between actual appropriation and spending runs a minimum ol two years. "Although we are seeing the very leading edge of the Reagan administration's thinking with respect to budgets," Smith said, "it will be two years before we see a large impact upon the in· dust.ry and another two years before we see much impact upon military services, where the real hardware is needed." A guest' ecotsomtst on the progTam, Ban.k of America's Karl Gra~er. a defense industry analyst, applied a different perspective to the peo- ple problem. "I thlnl' the industry will have some trouble adapting t.O &J"owth with problems of employ· menl," be Hid. ''They can't bring people in because it's t09 expensive to buy houses here." he said of California. He predicted rrowtb, "but not a boom." Panel members agreed with Yaru's claim that the l~. "will be the era lo which we produce equipment," compared to the 1970s# when the stress was on research and development. Smith said the Russians had "not only done more in technology thal we'd anticipated," but had also "been spending their money to produce equipment at a much higher rate." Stenbit said it was time to marshall U.S. technology to the defense cause and said "we have a tendency to apply it to digital watches and TV games ... more than lo our military forces." .COLLECTORS CORNER R8r• Coln• & St•mpa GOLD a Sil VEA 6-11·11 e.NC---.W .... Cl.I"-» "'"""... .!:.'. .=. IMP!e I.Nb ~"".J.s M17 .U IOOC~ ~ ..... ts JOP•-...._. t.llJM '°" Slh.W... ··"' '"·"' 70% Bank Flrtanctng IAA& t<EOUGH (714)5~ South Coat Plu:a VIiiage ......_ .. .._ .... CAc,..,,_ a.ti1"91al • USE THI DAILY PILOT ''FAST RESULT0 SERVICE DllECTOIY For Result Service Call 642·5671 ht.JU Columnist Sylvia Porter concludes her series on the malpractice crisis . . . E 2 STA.TVS SUMMAaY OF FUTUAE DEVELOPMENTS ORANGE COUNTY M1'Y 1911 ACTIVE PR().#ECTS PROPOSED PROJECTS MU .... I tNMHI NUMe•I 01" 01' 01" UMOll SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY Ptt6'8C'ft UNIT$ PllO.l•CTt CONITll. SHI Beach 1 80 1 0 tiuntlngton ~ 19 2,881 18 216 834 8 86 CostaMl!5a 11 Newi>Ort BMcn 7 1,036 8 132 lrvlne 1S 3,672 20 690 No rth Irvine 11 2,094 1 0 El Toro-Lake Forest 9 2,2S2 9 0 4, 150 1(>4 Laguna Beach/ 20 32 Laguna Niguel Mission Viejo 8 3,835 12 54 San Juan Capistrano/ 9 1,470 24 581 Dana Point San Clement~ 10 619 25 629 Subtotal 127 22,923 158 2.552 NORTH ORANGe COUNTY La Habra-Br~a area 3 317 17 50 Yorba Linda/ 10 l.364 33 72 Placentia Fullerton-Buena Park 8 487 22 42 La Palma-Cypress/ 0 0 10 94 Los Alamitos Ana heim/ 604 68 287 Anaheim Hills Orany,e; 6 844 34 70 Villa ark area Garden GrQve/ 2 76 40 812 Westminster Santf An~, Tustin 5 393 S8 440 Subtotal ., 4 Oii" ?IJ? I R67 Total Orange County -u;a 27,008 440 4,419 OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS MUTUAL FUND 4~\~c:"'~ IUJ s«n u.a NNLL :g~ t~ 1~.~ 1~ n Cenon uo 10-27 M~rk ~ NL IOS Ver '<l.U II.,. Olvld U 9 U7 Flfel IUS NI.. lftw llffll S 9S •.50 Hlln< IO.tl 11.7S G'lft SK t.05 NL. lllef l2 tJ NL Monlll t.JD 10 a tllllKO 7.11 NL Ivy Fd 10.41 NL NI WS t.n 10.61 HI Yid 10.42 NL JP Grit\ 12.'6 14.0t hFre '·'° t .:M &.I"""" 743 NL J .. lnco '·"' I.II nl Sh• 12.15 IUS P11rl11t 12.01 NL Jen!M -v•ll l\erl Fd 10 ... 22.60 S.l•m 1.47 "'L JOl)n ~MCO(k: 11p Olr 20.19 NL Thrift 9.11 NL eono 12 ... 14.07 llHlnut -vell Trend ll.., NL Gr'Wtll 11.U 12.'5 Olonlel Funds: Fl~clel Proa: 8atM I.CJ t.11 fllnd 11.2' I~ Dyne a.o NL TH Ea .... '14 Orwlll l,.SI t.JO lnoust 4... NL Keulrnn l.JIJ NL HI Yl•ld t..tJ 1 S1 lncom 1.3' NL K•m-Jt~. lncom t..a ._ts Fst '""'llW'&! llKOm 7.16 I 04 Ot>ln to.• •Us Ind AO 14.» IS.4' Grow II .. 11 n TH M9 16.tS 11.S2 OIKO 11.01 12.10 HI Yid .... Ut 111 0 111 23.U NL Grwtll 10.44 11.41 Mun 8 1.21 144 wltll AB 1.21 1,31 l[ltom U • 1.n Opln U.11 IS 10 Wlltl co 1.70 1.M N•IRes 1.22 1... Summ 10.11 21 ti p 8d 9.41 10. It Opln 6.7' 7 .f'f Tech 1J,IM 14.ll °"'' Fd 10.n 11.00 Tu Ell 1.tt u 1 Tot Ill 1u1 14.n OMOnl 21.n NL 4 Wl!"Q t.tt 10.'2 Ke~lt-Mesa: -tl"lt Gent: Wiii U t2 !fL C11s Sf is.~ 14.U l'"vnCI • 14..M U. U l"ncl Gtll S.:... S.. Cut B~ '-" II U ln<Ofl'I 6.U .. ,. l"OIH>de" G-.J ~"' ... 1.14 7.IC ¥1111 let ...., 1.n Grwtll t.M NL "' Kl 7.61 1.n Ofll '"" 11.17 IU.S lncom 1'.0I NL UI k1 .... 1 ... , .. , G 21.. NL ~ul.. 9,74 10,15 Cus SI 11.21 20.0t MitllU Sptcl C:11t S3 Cut $4 NUMBER OF UNITS l"INAL ,,... .. 0 303 89 SJ 490 0 596 936 141 495 1,344 4,447 155 1,100 494 S6 157 1,358 92 392 ·u~o• 8,251 "'"'"'"ov•o 0 1,000 1,000 .. 34 0 9S3 16 0 191 367 0 SS2 1,9 .. 3 170 3,293 360 0 360 494 16 1,106 3,295 130 4,525 2,721 0 2,916 265 0 1,341 5,525 0 ,, .. 98 15,420 1,316 .lJ, I JS 203 347 755 2,060 109 3,341 S6 194 786 6 12 168 1,891 976 3,311 l,703 368 3,499 924 179 2,007 1,669 537 3,038 R, ~1? ? 71? 1f> OI)<. 23,932 4,038 40,640 Name Mer<l'IR• Pry.,,. En z-pt Ro"'* A11<ttm WI CevnaN: RomAm G•O"-EJIJ> NEMICU U MC EI BesES"" Mlc.S.... Mllret Syntcll.., :;::..."Ta.; Synt«ll C"1Clll1 ElectTell WordTm WrdTm"" Am!Wr ~ EnzBl ' Neme ~.:r.:.n: ~~;- Amerlle. Weldlrn StormK9 Fellwtll Geotel Mlcr'pln SonlcO.v A11IOy8 An«oR 9 SttknEI Frosts AmMdPrd HIStoy WI K11s1omEI Plly•ln•' SIS.rlt g OoakPtl Prol)Cp NIO•I s McmlnR9 TIME pl u"' un '"' ~ )\o l"' ,...,, 21Wo I 1'h ~ tlWo 4 2h , ... ·~ , .. . ..,, ,,.., ,, 1 2 l-1• )\j, 414 l'lfo )~ 17 DOWNS C"9 + l • l 'lfo + ' + "' + .... + "' . '"" . '"" + ... + '"" + 'If. ...... • 114 • l + .. + I + l\ll . , .... + I +S-16 • 'lfo ... " + -+ .... + 2\lo u~1"' _ct;i, ~ -1\<o 2 -\It l -\It '" -'"' ll'J -.... ,_ -~1' ,_ -114 J -" 2 -v. 1 -v. IY> -1 3" -~ 4V. -"" 4'Wo -,.., ·~ -1 2\lt -v. ,..., -"' 14 -l\lt 6'1fo " ,... "' , ... -v. s~ -°"' 3 -"' J -\lo ~. VP 4'.1 UP OJ Up -.. Up JI; Up •• I u, ,. .. Up •.O Up U .O UP H.o up zs.o Up 2J I Up 21.1 Up lt.l Up lt.O Up II.I Up '8.l up 17.4 Up 11.J Up 14,7 UP 14.7 Up Ut..7 Up ls.I Up U.1 Up I.I.A VP 1S.J / Pct. Off ,, .. Off u.o Off ... Off "" Off 12.1 Off 1U Off 11.4 Off II.A Off 11.1 Off 11.I Off 11.1 Off 10.S Ott 10.0 Off 10.0 Off ... Ofl t.J Off t.t Off t .I Off .... Off &.S ()fl u Off l.l Off ... Off 1:1 Off 1.1 l.'O '42 ~'" SIP Ul 1.'6 NL 14 10 IS 0 SI~~':,.~ 44 NL :~ !': :: !: Bat an 21.1'0 NL II 9S ll.0. f~:~ ~rn =t" 14.74 IS 11 Sll\Spl 1i,, Nl. t..n NL l.:M E s - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12, 1981 N YSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTION OUOTAT'°"$ lltCLllOI UAotSON , ........ 'tO.•.MIOWltT. "ACIJIC, .... IOITO.,Oa"faOIT AleO c••CllOIAff tTOCtl laCMAJIOll Al!O a1110u10 ., '"' ... , .... 0 ... ,~ .. " (Loft of o three-parl aem• Oft malproctfce.J .• n ·i. I ( '' You may never ba~ been a physical vlctirrl.'~oi medical malpractice. Bot aJd\ough your own We :t not been needlessly eodanaered, you have beed' d' are a rinancial victim -for you are paying the iii~ for claims and settlements in terms of ever-rtif?& health care costs. '" Aware or not, you are paying through the hi.Ji.ff~ fees charged for medical care by phyelciana."lb\iJ geons and hospitals; extra costs of play-It-safe "de-. tensive " • medicine prac- ticed by doctors who order fal'I more tef ts. than you need ; through the re- fusal of skilled professionals to IYllll PllJll give you ''high risk" operations that could save life because they're afraid of the legal aspects. The likeliest solutions to the ne>A malpractice crisis Ue ln our nation's hospitals. For hospltals'llOW pay two-thirds of all malpractice insurance costs and 75 percent of all malpractice claims originate from treatments given within hospitab. What's more, hospitals are being increasingly held leplly responsible for the acts of their indepen-dent (uualaried) staff physicians. In addition. there is the relatively little-known finding that any or the nation's more than 100,000 hospital trult.ees and directors are also personally liable in malpractice suits. • Thia' startling revelation comes from a new ~. "Hospi~ Liability Revisited'' <Inquiry Books. Blue Cross Association, Chicago, $6). whose author. Chicago attorney Thomas R. Mulroy, argues that the liability of trustees and d~rectors stems from several often overlooked court decisions. Notable among them was the landmark Corleto vs. Shore Memorial Hospital decision or 1975, that condemned the entire professional staff of a hospital in a malpractice pro· ceeding. Involving hospital trustees to this extent well may be the most significant new move toward curb· ing medical malpractice. But many other attacks on the crisis are under way as well. -Pre-arbitration laws are now prov1dfag for re·. · view panela to sift out frivolous or ubjusUfied ~ •. before they go to trial. -States such as California and Florida are ac· tu ally t.aking• medical policing away from physidans and laking tough disciplinary measures, including the revocation of licenses. • But the basic cause of malpractice suits remajns malpractice. The new crisis warns us all : The bad, incompetent doctor·must be eliminated, the quality't>f our health care must be raised. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT 09)1 J»J!~l1 ~!_~~ •WVL NEW YOllK (AP) -S. ... T1wf'I. ptta ~ol..llwlctlly, J-. 11 • Md Mt ~ af Ille flttHft _. actM 0.-.... W. ~ IU• Y-SllDdl ~ I-. • 1..-fts.%7 1014:51 ...... I Jradl~-" • rn.-. -••. 10 Trll CU7S OU3 m.m C21 + 1.19 ....... 1,010.-411\/t + "' '' uu IGl.01 11G.J7 107.G no. II+ 1.M Amar &T 71DAGI S7 '5 Stk , ..... 1'0M *-" •.u+ 4.t.2 G1111West 716,.ICIO 20V. ~iii; lllduS • • . . . • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • s,m100 41111!.,,,_ 1°',100 SHll +N Tr.,, ...•..•.•.... 1,ur,911D blslnl'ur 631.000 13"' + " Ulll1 . . . • • . . . . . . . . . . .. t•,JllO T Co m:: ~l.... : ,~ '5 s"' . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . \,6D,.JQD f:l: ;:~ = il~ :,: WHAT STOCKS DID GellTal&l!I S'J2.IOO ll.... + "' ,tr.ml!I Pw SH,700 1"'° + W. ..,,.,.,_. .uJ,600 ,,._ • , .... T~ t "7,100 Ulll +1111 ~-Oii ....... 511i. • "' AMERICAN LEADERS Hl!W YORK CAPI -S.lel lllllf'S.. prk:e .... Mt <'-ef ... tell "'"1 .ctl ... AINfkM s.c.a; bclWflle 1-. trM INI M1Jc1Ntly .. -~L. ~Pv11 GO~ I + '-.,,..... aw;.-... lllCI ·--tOI Sfll + ~ HMOllTr lt'I..-_.., -w ~ :~= 'm :•ii .UL Res 111.-014 +I g~t.IOll tit,.. H +I .... .... lll.100 ,,... + .... ""' "'' 7',4m 11~ NEW YOAI( CAP) J,.. II AOVaMad Decll ..... UMh.,,_ Total 1-New hlllf'5 .., __ W11A T AM£X OIO Nl!W YOlllC CAPI JUll. 11 T-Jj 2AJ 164 •• • ,. Ma ALS T"'-lar ~~cents• Pollfld, II ....... UM • °""' • PoWICJ. UllC •w. c..u. PGll!ld .... , ... Tla .. -"'D-sw.M . ._._ , ... ~. """"· . Merairy MIOM11ar , .... ,...._..,.,.troy&,111.Y. ---0 - nan ....... , . .. ------------- rWho hd:rrowed t'1.e key? ! Some students use parents' cars, others earn wheels . • • I • t! • , ~DI CADENHEAD CIGlt...., ......... •:What's the well-wheeled kid 1 these days? If you it was a chateb-naned . wtth •= brakes wt • J>Ubeddooc~ aca1n. That's what the reporter was drivine. A Junch hour look at Corona ~l Mar High School's parking 1.-t week revealed an Import ftMen paradise. There were -~e spiffy BMW's, sporty , O'ahuns, a smatterins of : '-'~tcedes Benu lncludin1 a 1 bJ!~ one with a Balboa Bay I • • ' • • • • • • ' • ' : I • • • • • • ' ; ~ ' . . Club ltic:lter" and a sharp little yellow job, with a spare wheel on the back, that I couldn't lden· tlfy on a bet. Oh sure, there were a couple of heaps. "They probably belong to the servant,s kids," quipped the photographer. . "Crawl back Into your little red economy car." Gretchen Humbert, 18, was setting into he r 1976 blue Camaro. "Nice car," she was told. "You think so. You can have it. I'd like to have a new one," she said, looking at the "old Jte[!nl Haney, 16, of Costa Mesa High ~chool, rtsts against com- R{JC!,trock he earned by working a year at fast food °"tlet. , ·--• . ~)'/~ Kaa and Urida WaUU Mored the iOll of finding a pwldng -place clMe to claaae1 at Edi.on High School. one" he.r dad bought. Bob Koop, 11, paid for his own Datsun 200 SX witb savings from hts "real estate investments." He even switched the hardtop for a snap off convertible-. "Tbe car you drive is really i mportant here," said Koop. "But it doesn't matter to me," he said, climblng out of bis brown sports car . Actually, he's looking to sell the convertible so he can buy a Ferrari. Maggie Rothfelder. 16, slammed the door of the brand new gray BMW. It turned out sbe was only parking the car for a friend in class. "To a lot of people it's Impor- tant what you drive because peo- ple are impressed by it," she said . . .. As soon as you turn 16, ev- eryone wants to know what kind of car you're gqing to get. "But the way I look at it is, what do I have to look forward to when I get older ." When she's not parking her friend's can, Maggie drives her mom 'sOldsmobile. At Laguna Beach High School visitors could find plenty of classier type cars filling the school's parking lot. But there were also a number of trucks. Mark Mihaljevic, 18, planned to take his 1978 Datsun pick-up into the mountains where he'll live after graduation. "In this schoot especially they Uke to stress the importance or money," said Mark. "And the way they do it is through the car." Although he paid $4,000 for bis truck, Mark says most of his friends are given cars. "The kids don't learn responsibility that way. You take more pride in your car if you paid for it yourself." Dan Toulose bought bis 1979 Volkswagen with insurance money he received after be crashed bis first car last year . .. I'd rather be driving a Porsche," he said. "There's plenty of people around here who drive BMW 's and Porsches," be said rattling off a list of classmates. Anyone arriving past 8: lS a.m. could forget findlni a park- ini space at Edison Hieb School. The lot was crammed with most· ly non descript economy can . "Usually I park about four blocks away," said Mari Kaa. She was lucky , having found a rare spot in the lot for the Mustang her dad bought her . Mopeds were also popular at tbe l{untlngton Beach school along with bikes. Robert ~be1 18, rode bis moped ta ICDOOI because it's "quick, inexpensive and cheap on gu." · A bout 1,500 bikes were jammed into the school's crowded bike area every day. Kylene Gulick, 15, said she's surprised at the number ol stu· dents who insist on driving when they Ii ve only a few blocks away. "It's a waste of gas." said tbe 15-year-old. "I think it's stupid for pe(>ple to drive when they liye onlY, a few blockl away." Every day Gary Greenwood, 16, chauffeured five friends to Costa Mesa High School in the shiny red 1965 corvair that his father bought and restored for him three years ago. "It gets me where I'm going," he said. "But I'd r ather have something raster." . Kerby Haney, 16, worked for one year at a local Burger King in order to buy his yellow Chevy Luv truck last April for $1,700. "I always wanted a truck;' he said. "My dad just picked this one out." Julie Ralph, 18, pulled into the Costa Mesa lot slowly. Not a Jient showed on h er red Volkswagen that was back for its first day of operation. "I hit someone and It cost me $700," she said. "And I still , haven't paid off my folks for the $1,900this cost." Orange COast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12, 1981 ES "The car you drive is reallfl important at Corona del Mar High School. But it ~m·t matter to me," .ays Bob Koop, 17, who bought his Datsun 200 SX with savings from hu "real eatate inveatments." ----- Teen.-<agerr allowance• borelfl coon the co.t of gcuolhte, but~ car1-often given or borrowed from pormtl -appear frequently in parking lou on campuae1 of Oronge Cocut high 1chooU. U..Uu ltudenta arrive early they can forgd about finding a parking space. Corona del Mar High School early bifdl are, from le~. Su.an Ring, Darah Harwood, Marianna Dail and Suzi Brownaberger. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12, 1981 QUEENIE ~·1110,.-1.-... ... _,..._ "I've always painted like Piculo, and vtee veru." Edited Bible almost done COLUMBIA, S.C. CAP> -Reader's Digest editors have been condensing great books for three decades, so it was only a matter or time before they tackled the Bible. Now. the five-year project is almost complete. "We've already had all the jokes, like which commandment are you leaving out and all that stuff," says John Allen, a Reader's Digest vice president and director or corporate affairs. Allen says a staff or biblical experts has spent years creating a volume designed to supplement the traditional family Bible, not replace it. "People have been after us for a long lime to do something to make the most-bought book in the world also the best-read book, editing it so that it's more readable," he said in an interview while here to promote the magazine's writing workshops at the University of South Carolina. He said the new Bible won't be ready until late 1982, but the company will begin a direct mail pro- motional campaign soon. "We haven't cut it that much," he said. "The easiest example is all the begets and begats. There's a great deal of repetition which can be avoided.'" DEA TH NOTICES GERONDALE Sunda) school teacher She JILL ANN GERONDALE. was Deacon at St Andrews age 17. resident or Costa Presb)lerlan Church . .\leosa. Ca Passed a\\a)' on :'\e\\port Beach Ca and June 9. 1981. She \\as born tn was acll\e in the Amencan .\1ad1son. Wisconsin on July Sor1et~ or Retired Persons. 10. 196.1 She mo\ ed to the Corona del :\1ar. Ca She 1s Costa :\lesa area 11 years s un-i \"ed b) ·her husband ago. and was a senior at Henry. son Fred and his Newport H arbor lligh wife Maxine and 3 School. Newport Beach. Ca. grandchildren. Funeral She 1s survh·ed b\ her services will be held on Fri· parents Mr and Mrs day. June 12. 1981 &t l :OOP:\t Jo:.eph Gerondale or Costa at Pac1f1c \'te\\ :\fortuaQ .\lesa. Ca and 3 brothers Chapel. Interment at Pacif1r J oseph D .. Jon Mand Ja)" \'1ew Memorial Park . P all or Costa :\lesa. Ca. and Newport Beach, Ca Pac1f1c paternal g randmo ther View Mortuary directors DeMOULIN Elizabeth Gerondale Mass or the Resurrection will be held on Friday. June 12. 1981 DONALD CHRISTOPHER al 10 00 AM al St Joach1m"s DeMOULIN. JR . pa!ls ed Catholic Church . 1964 awar tn :\1ex1co Sur\'1ved Orange A\ e.. Costa Mesa. by his mother Marv Crowle\ Ca 11.1th :\fons1gnor Thomas or Beaumont. C~ . father .J Nenn ofrtciatin.1? Inter Donald De!\1oultn . ~r. of ment will be at Good Atascadero. Ca .. s isters Shepherd Cemetery. Hunt· Robin Cummin gs or Red ington Beach. Ca. Services Bluff. Ca. and Sherie Con· under the direction or Baltz teras ?r Escondido: Ca Bergeron-S mith & Tuthill Gra\•estde services will be Westcliff Chapel Mortuary held on l')iday. May 12. 1981 or Costa Mesa 646-9371 at 1 :OOPM at GoJd Shepherd Cemetery. Pier~ Brothers 3m iths" Mortuary directors. 536·6539. BENNIK ELEANOR DRAPER BENNIK . resident or Newport Beach. Ca. Passed awav on June 9. 1981. Born on October 2. 1897 m Portage I.a Prairie. Canada. Gre~ up in Michigan wttere she s tarted her career as a grade school teacher. mo\"ed to Inglewood. Ca and taught in the public school system for 31 years. marned Henry R. Bennik in July of 1929. She retired from teaching in 1958 and moved to Newport Beach. Ca. where s he was active in church work and a MUMMA FLORENCE E. MUMMA. age 97. resident of Costa Mesa. Ca. Born September 8. L883 in Stephenson. JIUnois and she Uved in Campbell. Ca. from 1910 lo 1976 work- ing as a rancher. She was married in 1908 to Maxwell Mumma and was married for 59 years. She passed away on June 10. 1981 In Costa Mesa. Ca. She is sur· vived bv 2 children. Harold Mumma or Riverside. Ca. & Betty McDonald of Costa Mesa. Ca .. a sister Vinan -----------Fore of Carmel. Ca. and a brother Forest Denhart or Pacirlc Grove, Ca. and 3 "81ClllOfHHS la.LllOADWAY • WC>aTUAIY 110 BroadWay Costa Mesa 642·9150 IAln IHC.HC>tf MTN & TVTHILL WHTCUff CHAf'lt. 427 E 17th SI Costa Mesa 646-9371 ,..c1..oneas IMTMI' WOllTUAa't 627 Mam St "'""'loton BHoh 536-6539 - grandchildren. Services wi11 be held on Tuesday. June 16. 1981 al the Chapel of the Roses. San Jose, Ca. with Rev. Willlam B. Gould of· ficiating. Interment will be at Oak hut Cemetery, San Jose. Ca. Services under direction of Baltz Bergeron- Smith & Tuthill Westcllff Chapel or Costa Mesa . 646-9371. PANT EN CLARENCE J . PANTEN. resident or Huntington Buch. Ca. Passed away oo une a. 1981. He was a member of the Masonic Lodge •699 F&AM In Lan- caster. New York, also the Harmonie Lodae In Lan- caster, New York. He was active with the Boy Scouts in Ne,,.. Vort< ror over 50 years and obtalneod a Sli ver Beavtt Award Surv1ved by hi• wife Alberta E. Panteon or HunUniton Beach. Ca .. a ion Gregory A Panten of New York, a slater Beornice Cha m berlain or El Toro, Ca .. a brother Ell1worth P a ft ltn of New York rvl* were Hid on Th\lrt• ay. June ll. ltll at u~otAM at tht flarbor Lawn M emor lal Chapel with WllHa m Grlllln ol t h e Lu\hran Ch•rch o( the Rea urrtdftn. also th• Maaonlc Servlcea undtr the Auaplcet " Lod .... ol· ftelaU.., . ......,.. wu at Harbor L•ft Me morial Park. S.rvlflll under th• r.ctklD rA fbrbor Lawa· Mount OUH Mor\ltary ol Costa M••· ~-"54. l , 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I ·F I E D • ~nnoul'K'tt~nll Car Pool IA&al NocorH ...... ,. •'""nd Pn-b• Sot..JC1wi.• 'travel• SEIYICfS FD•llS AIEFIH Cll: 642-1671 ::: lit! 1014 1• IOIM 1• 1• , .. , ... I ... IMI 1• lllJ 1097 1• IOTt 1"1 14* IOll , ... ·-1100 lJllO ID ,,.. 1400 1100 JM 1100 IM ,.,., *° uoo mo :tJOO ..,. WI --1IQO -- 3100 3300 Diil )IOO :ias 1* -we -"'° ---4(IOO 4100 O.IO uoo ~ uoo WO - I The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678 a..111.... Ho.an fwS. Ho.IH For Sak How" for S. Hom .. fw S-. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Gw,., I 002 G-..r.t I 002 CHMral , I 002 GtMNI I 002 .......................... ·······•·······••······ •........•..........•.....•••••.•..••......... EQUAL HOUSING OPP~R T UN ITY hibhher't Moffce: All real eatale ad- v e rl is ed In this newspaper Is subject to the Federal Fair Hous· ina Act of Ul68 which MEWPOIT MIMI ESTA Tl $289,000 Ttle entry leads to &lgan- tl c 4 Bdrm home ! Gourmet kitchen plus fonnaldlnin1. Sparkling pool and apa, paddle ten- nis ~u.rt! Great terms Only S42,ooo down. Ju.st Uated, ao hurry! Call 673-IWO THE REAL ESTATERS makes It Uleaal to ad---------- vertiae "any prererence, ---------1 imitation. or dis - c rimination baaed on uce. color. reli11on, sex. or national origin, or an intention to make any such preference, limitation , or dis· crimlnatioo." This newapaper will not knowingly accept any advertising ror real e.tate which ,is In viola· lion of the law. ERRORS: Advertft en lholld dltck ....... adt .. ., -repcwt .,... ron 1-clatety. The DAILY PILOT as-. labllty for HM flnt Incorrect l11Hrtio11 Oftfy. OCEMRONT 2 Bdnna, 2 ba, unfum New. S8SO yrty. IAYFllONT J 3 Bdrm, 1 ba .. unfum. Mint cond. S850yrly. CHAHHB. FtlOHT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum. S750yrly. associated BRO•Ell'. l<fA,•(lRS Jn l' 'tf'tt tt.111 "" , ' ·,., b ' SUNDECKHAS CHANNEL VIEW Only 1209,9001 Charming Newport Beach 4 Bdrm, features wood burning fireplace>. Huge over- sized lot with rear cov· ered patio. Owner is motivated and willing to help finance! Just listed. Call now,67~8550 INCREDIBLE New luxurious 2 & 3 Bdrm. Condo opportunl ty. Ir you have quallflco- tlon or caah problems. SHA.UM We have a rinanc1al partner to assist you Lo purchase or lease w1tb option. WILSON PARK COHDOMIHIUMS 380W. Wllson,C.M. Open ... '1~5 631·~ POOL S6500DOWN A quiet family, treoe- lioed area, 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, ll1ht and airy family room, kitchen overlooks sparkling pool. Great financing. Owner wants o ut, S105,000. Call 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS A. HOUSE for YOU and INCOME TOO! 2 houses on 1 lot in a very des1reab~ area. Owner will carry 1st. No quaU· fylng. 2 Bdrma each. On· ly S159,900: Call today 979-5370. ALLSTATE REALTORS POPULAR SA.taf PER MODIL Excellent owner financing, four bedrooms. 212 baths. two fireplaces, vaulted wood ceilings, three car garage, and beautiful decor. $435.000. Fee. U~l()UI: tiUMI:§ REALTORS, 675-6000 2443 U.t CoHt Hlgh1.,.y. CoroH del Mar WE HNE ~CF TiiE BEST AGENTS IN TCMIN HA.RIOR RIDGE Award wi n ning "Jodelle" estate home. 1st resale orrering on this exquisitely appoint· ed lownbome w1lh massive view 9f bay, ocean. coastline & night llghls . Offered at S885.ooo. Owner ~at• Exec. home. 4 r & pool. Assuma ble financing S205.000. 67S.1771 !:IHowesforSale !: I••••••••••••••••••••••• THE REAL ESTATERS "GIANT" 111.1•d1111_h .\: ~·,,, i~;l\:l:111 ., f' '"I~ 40 '>5b0 Anyl1mp l.1 ,lblu!f l'rof Bldq OPEHHOUSE Fri I ~2. S. 1·5 This Santa Ana Heights 3 Bdrm is absolutely 1m- m ac ulate ! P a rk•ltke bark yard, new paint in and out, n ew ~pt s Owner will help with financing $125,000 -Gw,., I 002 MESA VERDE $006 IOIO IOI) ---- 6100 )llO uoo uoo ~ woo -- 'IOll6 7117) 1100 IOOll •11 IOI) ----llOtt ---.. ~ llO!O IOU "" IOIO •1 IOI!) -IOr1 -.., ... .. --... .. .. -... -.,. -- 1110 11311 .... fl• tUI ... ...,. n• - - ••••••••••••••••••••••• $9 3. 900 VA Have something t.o sell? COSTA MESA! Classified ads do it well. Bargain 1\epublic lrt· level 5 giant bdi-ms. 3 baths, huee family room, fireplace, formal dining, owner w11J sell for 1199.SOO A must see, call S46·23U Comfortable 3 Bdrm -,-----. -.-.- family home on quiet \\hen you rail Class1f1ed street. Remodeled tiled toplace11nad,you 'reas· bath, new waterheater, sur ed of a friendly copper plumbing, con· welcome and help 1n crete driveway. Move-in word mg your ad for best condition. First time ad· responi.e. Call Now! THE REAL ESTATE RS vertised ! 646-7171 642-567!1 THE REAL ESTATERS C.M. COTTA~E Small 2 Br 2 Ba E.side home. Needs some work but hu loads or poten- tial. Auume 10% lst loan a nd owner will help finance. Only SU9,500 TR\DITIO\,\I. l~L\LTY 631-73 70 EASTSIDE! $90,900 One or a kmd 2 Bdrm cottage, 60X127' lot Fantastic financing. Owner will carry 127. 1st TD. A rare opportunity, vacant and ready. Call 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS $3 $100 all it ten i1 a PENNY PINCHER AD 3 llnl'!> for 2 dl.I\' onl~ SI so ,1 d11°\ \d\ l'rl1~c onl• or morl' 1tl'mio. \ ulued up to 8100 Eu<·h udclllionJI lint• 1., ont~· 00.. for tht• two d J ~· ~ So rr ~ . no C'omm<'rr111I ud:-1 allo~<·d ('h11rj(1.' )our Pl•nn\ 1'1neht•r \ d Cl I U ' (' \ ti U r HunkAnicnrur<t \'1sa or M.ii.li!r l'harj!{' SEE YOUR i\D IN PRINT IN 24 HOURS Place your Daily Pilot cla ssifie d ad be fore 5:30 p.m. and it will run in t he next day'"s issue. The Daily Pilot is the only afternoon County n e wspape r Orange to 24-hour offe r you this s~rvice. Stop by our office or c all 6 42-5678 and a frie ndly . ad·visor will help you place your ad. You can charge your ad or use BankAmericard or Master Charge. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 Cfftect dli DAIL 'f PILOT fol Information ~rdln1 th• oouMJ == '°' _,. • ,loftoUa -...... 41RBACKBAY s 137,500! Roomy. 4 Bdrm, 2 sty. w/cozy fireplace Very clean, Ught and airy New : dishwasher. water heater, paint. paper. 20242 Orctud St 546-5605 skylighl! Beautifully ---------landscaped patio A DUPLEX must see! 646-7171 3 bdrm. 2 bath each unit Fireplace. built ins. Ex ~:!II-~~ cellentrentalarea.Nea1 "tfiiili® ~~.~.:' S28>,000 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642 -~78 associated BROKERS IHAL TOllS ll'} I "" (I Jibt I t. 1 bl ' I I I I I I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12, 1981 El ... -....... ':~ . . ,. :' i .. · - 1.41.IOA ISLAND D&ftlX-4450,000 4 Becfrooms upstairs & 3 bedrooms down stairs with pJ,ltlo it nd deck. Covered garage and laundry 'room. Excellent for s ummer-winter rental. Just steps to the sand from the door of this excellent tax sheJter plus potentially appreciating property .. Model Homes for Sale I WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS 2111 Saft Jo ..... lh Rood NIWrORT CENTIR. N.1. 644·49 I 0 ACRE RANCH Bdrm, 3ba custom me & barn. Many enit1es. Redding, ahf. Call for details WA TERFROHT AHO ~NDERFUL gL 642-4758 __ Absol utely best buy on Newpor AFFORDAILE ~arbor. thr ee bedrooms, .thre xec elegance. Assume fireplaces. sun roof, skylights xisting 9'7. 1st TD or beautiful decor. outdoor spa, pier an hoose from 6 alternate slip, plus an income unit. $750.000 Fee urchase plans 3 BR, 12 Ba-ram rm. comm ool. tennis. '163,000. U~l()U~ ti()M~~ ~~:;:~AT/SUM 10.4 REALTORS. 675-6000 8 TortokeShd 2443 Eut CoHt Hl9h1.ny. Corona del Mar Hours: 1 pm to Spm. From $173,000. Laguna Niguel Realty: 496-4040. Homeowll9r assessment available at seles otflc:e Pnoes effective tor date of this publication. ~~(9 Cimarron Court, Laguna Niguel, CA 926n (714) 830-5050 OCEAN VIEW $50,000DN ln Cameo Highla nds! Mini mansion is pnei!d to sell at $349,000. Large a111umable lsl, plus owner will carry $100,000 2nd TD. Spectacular ocean views from living. dining and mas ter bdrm Huge lot with beautiful growids. Don't hesitate, call 673-SMO THE REAL E S TATE RS Slt,500 Charming 3 Bdrm. love· ly gardens, 11mall busi· ness a possibility. owe. Devin Real Estate, 642-6368 FOR YOUR ROUS a bit-in garage. For your Cmly a 4 br Mesa Verde beauty. New crpt is hi· lighted by lvly tile noor- ing in spacious fmly rm, din rm. kitchen, & patio areas. Super home to en- tertain special guests. 545·9t91. .. WE HNE 47 OF TiiE BEST AGENTS IN ,,.. ... X Streets. Culver & Walnut. Agt. 645-3474 Dalebout Bay &Bea Real Estate CUL-OE-SAC Try $15,000down. Owner anxious to make a deal VACANT Charming 2 Bdrm wilh oak hard~ood floors lhru-0ut Super deal at $76.000. 631-2242 OCEANFRONT REAL ESTATE Duplex 3 Br 2 Ba upper --------• with sundeck + 2 Br 2 IALIOA ISLAND Ba . lower with pnvate I Comn•rcial lldg. patio deck. Both com· 1 Pnme Marine Ave loca- plelely fW1UShed . 4 earl tion 100~ occupied. garage Take over Owner will finance. $42.5,000 loan includmg S49S 000 123.•« (fixed) for 30 ' · years. Asking 1595,000 JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 SELL idle items with a Daily Pilot Classified Ad. 642 5678. A Division of LIND.A ISLE Wide channel view from spectacular architectural designed 4 bdrm, S bath. pool home Slip for 2 large boats $1,495,000. Summer Occupancy. LIDO ISLE HOMES Featured on Homes Tours this lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm, 3 bath home1 n. ewly redecorated. Priced to sell quicKly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam C'eilings . Great for entertaining. $420,000. Best price for the money. PENINSULA POINT BE.ACHFROMT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur- ing marine room. Sl.385.000. NEWPORT CREST CONDO 2 bdrm. den. spacious Plan 8. im· maculate. Low priced at S215,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J41 Boy\•d .. Dr'"'' N Ii 675 blbl REALTORS 675-5511 MOUNT AIM RETIE.AT: clHl'l, cool oir OlftOft9 119 PIHi & c.dcrs: weU built cuatom hOfM with 6 ~OOftll .ct study. T..ro fl,..plocH, buil .. IM ht lcltch. Two adfocHt builclabM lots mtd rnmwy extra•. Ow"•" will fln•u at fantastic MnM. $250,000 or win Hll hoftw ~Y for $200,000. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2 5 I 5 E. Coast Hwy .. Corono ct.I Mer 675-5511 REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 19 COME WITH US •.• TO HARi HIGHLANDS. THREE BEDROOMS DEN .. LOVELY KITCHEN .SEPAR BREAKfAST ROOM .. W BAR .. ASSUMABLE $70,000 tST T.D .. 0 WILL CARRY 2NO T.D. PRICE REDUCED $32.000 NOW $197.500. Harbor Investment Co I !~~~~~~~~~ W<t.nt Ad Results 642-5678 Classified Ads 642·5678 1617 WESTCLIFF DR, M.I. EXCLUSIVE CLASSICAL EL BAYFRONT WITH Pl Ideal f0111lly /enfwtol......t "°"""' '*-tifYI t"Glsed deck for lay enloyme11t. , Und bt"lclc fl w.,.. woods. Lorge ,....... sufte with 110 deCJ bayvf.w. l , • ~l/~ ba PLUS s.pot"Ot• d '• •'wtft"s, NeClt" town. S 1,450,0 m close to pooJ loan, Good fina RfSIOFNTIAI RI Al I'> IAll '>~ RVIC"f S IAYSHOUS Spacious home for active family. 3 bedrooms. den & 3 baths + extra large patio for ping pong & entertaining. Could have bay view. $385,000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 IE IEDlll ELllRS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE I LUFFS Very Desirable Three Bedroom. Two Bath. Tastefully Decorated. A Highly Upgraded Airy End Unit With Sun Deck On A Cul-de-Sac. Owner Will Carry Large Second. Call To See & Submit All Offers. 759·9100. HARIOR VIEW MUS Just Listed In Much Sought After Harbor View Hills. Three Bedrooms Plus Family Room On A Corner Lot. B eau tifu I ly Maintained. Owners Are Being Transferred. Good Financing. Price $325,000. RARE ONE-UVB. Three Bedroom Home ln The Bluffs Available For Fast Occupancy. The Financing ls The Best Available & The Home & Locatio n Are Exquisite. $224,500. WATERFRONT CONDOS HUNTINGTON H RBR Purchase with 5'Z-down on fantastic terms . Brand new. cpt'd & draped . ON THE WATER. Guarded gate entry, views, 2 car gar. Pool ~d tennis. 2 & 3 BR'S AVAIL IMMEO. From 1299,000. CALL 7141556-!IGOO owe IJO/o With 207. down OWC tst TD. $129,950. at 123-in· terest. Eastside Costa Mesa 3 Bdrm 2 bath, family room, breakfast bar, RV access A bargain at Sl49,950. It's too good to last. call 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS EAST SIDE Bargains Galore! We have the right one for you. All sizes. pools too Great financing, Call for more details @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 PENINSULA Rnr Only s teps to the surf, is this> bargain fixer. Bring paint br~bes & shovels ' & cash ln on $$$Call now (IJ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631·6990 TH MONG TO~OMI? Call the speclallsta al the condominium ln- rormation center. Touchstone Reahy 963-<*7 WATllNOMT COltOMA DB. MAil FantaatJc Jetty view. One of t.la\kal '1 lOveUeat 2 Bdrm 2 bath condos. L1e lanat W/det.ailed latti~ l.rtm.. T h 1 ' p e r b contemporary rurnlahtn11 maybe purchued. Exceptional 11JrOPett1 •....... I I ¥•% -100/o LOAN * 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 795·1501or752-7373. ~ Walker &lee Real Estate PENINSULA POINT-SUPER Wale to lay & Ou• fr'Olft thh ~ beaity. Ca-...,l1tefy MW ift & CMlf wiftl loads of t"OOM for Ht. fa!Nly. Spacious 2-story with ~ & CJf'OOYed floors, IMCilM & atoifted CJlasL t._.,. 3bcl, 3 ba., kJ. fc•Hy "°°"' & din. ._ be..,.. financing. $444,500. 631-1400. CLASSIC ELEGANCE ON WATER '--ro Alhley porn & accenh plus 1MCJftHlu11t ...tfq1tH & deslcp. Two story with pri•ah mcastw suite, o total qyollty atntospMr. 111 tNs 4 bH. with ...... f-. nn. with &cJlltll hb of wood a.a.cl glon. S.porote farM dill. ""' a.-tfful patio + dock for o 50 ft. boat. SI ,400,000 fH. 631-1400. OwMr-sayt submit -pnc• & tenM ..... OCEAN YIEW~EWPORT Two fully furnlsh.d houeH In on HUllHt locotlon, 120 feet to th• oc ... froat. Gnat OWMn 2 bcl, 2 bo. frOllt house pin o 2bcl.. Ibo. ,.... ...... OwMt-will carry I at. SlSS,000. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAL ESTATE s.i.. R•nt• Prapnl'( Ma""91nwn1 24.J6 W C°"1 Hwy JJS ""'"""Ave N«WPOrt Borac:h 8a1bot t.i.rod 6ll-t400 6)Mt00 .... ..... OPEN HOUSI Sot/ S. 2·6,_ ltt5 GotattoT...,._., l"lne T.woc•, c_.... clef M8' FEE LAMD A•cNI ... for IHH, or .... op-ftoR. PmcN .-c •lew of T ...... botht. Lonly 1heltff'ed pool, 41r, l 1/2lp. For further Wor .... tloft c:dll Shlri•y MIN.r. or M9W TrudNu LINGO RE.AL ESTATE C714t 495-1720 Gettet"OI I 002 ~~~~~.~~.!~.'.~ . ..................... ·i--------- lriHOlt'f Woods 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. lrg 2 sty townhouse Super rt.'creatton fac1lluei. and excellent Easts1de loca t1on A sharp home. pri ced at $154.950 w assumable 1st TD lalboo Island Rlty 67).1700 WALK TO HACH l'alisadn~x Wood11dmg inside oul. Vaulted beamed ceilings in hke new cond1t1on. must i.et.'' Reduced SI0,000 to $169,900 ...... •• A:i' MIS s:EA.L. •• ESIAIE SpocMMll c....tom .... --~ Home 498 1040 5 Bdrm. fam rm, base ~-------­ment, wine cellar, spa. 493-0202 in law quarters. lovely Corona~ Mer I 022 treeshaded street in old • •• • • •••••••••• •• ••• ••• Corona del Mar $475,000. WA.n'ED Rt'ltrt'd l.Jusiness e)l.t:t . long t1mt-licensed bk1· developer want.s to bu) into or buy out . eslablished med sized & al'tt\'t' R E ofr 1n Newport B(>a(·h Corona del Mar area St.>nd rephe& to Ad No 929. Daily Pilot. PO Box 1560 • Costa Mesa. CA 92627 FRONTS ON FAIRWAY lnveslors Duplex on best SANTA ANA CO CLUB street. pool. h.1 income Beautiful 3 Br OW<: U w n e r S 3 2 0 . O O O Owner 540-5010 640 4999 OCEANSIDE COM DUPLEX Prime locat1on Top an come Xlnt finanl'in~ WHAT A DEAL' 644 4026 700.0140 Agt 3 year old home 2br. fenced. landscaped vie w . s upl.'1 neighborhood . adult commty I spouse OH'r 43. children 17. must sell Re<luce<I to $53.900 ii--------• 760·0998 l'OTEHTIAL PLUS BAYFRONT OpenSwt2·5 Outstandin~ V ll'W~' BOAT SLIP SANDY BEACH det·k patio brick BBQ plus largt' & So of hwy 3 UR I"• ba home Room for 2nd un· 1l. Reduced lo S23.5.000. Stephen Meyer. 760-8520 C,.CHAATEA T rnorrnms comfortable 3 bdrm & ... -------• den. 2 l.iath BALBOA CO\' ES pravatt' com munlly home $595.000' Owner / Agent 673-9187 or 675·7060 SEE THIS! 3 bdrm. family rm, beautified home on laqie R·2 lot Sl59.000. POTENTIAL Cuslom duplex with a 4 bdrm. ramJJy rm & a 3 bdrm unit. Just wa1tan11 to be a rondo con SPYwl.ASS 5bd rm home. lo\'ely n111ht light & ocean' 1ew Low down & OW C balance $649.00-0 full price 964-7522. 760-8158 -- FIRST TIME OPEH \'1ew propert) tn Broad· moor llarbor View Hill5 4 Bdrms. separate fami ly room. move m condi lion Super financing. OPEN SAT. I ·5 25011.a.ctYlew 642-5200 J PETE ' BARRETT ·,. REALTY version! Each unit has ---~~~~~~ fireplace. patio & beam ceiling Owner will help carry. $49.5.000. MAURY STAUFFER SEA LION REALTY 675-5354 FALLBROOK RANCH Assume 9°/o Loan 15 arres of bearin~ a,·ocados Custom home 1 +guest house. Hai; been subdivided into 4 sep parcels. Will trade for cond0& or other property 1n Calif. Arizona or Hawaii Full price. S995,000. Agt.. 644 9513 NO MONEY DOWN! Luxury 2 & 3 Br Townhouse project with i n compa ra b l e amenities. Located In prime appreciation )oca lion close to beach. Walk Coato Mna I 024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ownerw/Cony l•tTO MESA VERDE POOlHOME Just in time for sum- mer' Th.IS charming 4 Bdrm home features huge family mom with bar. s kylights and slaaned glass wmdows OHrlooking beautiful solar heated pool and spa And. for the avid photographer. a com - plete dark room with custom cabint'ts. sink. separale water heater, hghl sealed and ventilat· ed Beautiful wallpapers and le\elors lhruout. A unique kitc hen with cedar skyUght and re· cessed lighting This customized home i~ a 1 must to stt Offen>d at if $199,900. For an appoint·' , ' menttosee,callS40-ll51 ~ -· • »-HERITAGE t o shopping and ~~~~~~~~~ theatres. f . • REALTORS 631-0087 ScottHoln.sCo. The Equity Shanog Speclallat.s AHXIOUS SIU.EA Over 3000 aq ft of Uving tor only 1109,900. 5 bedrooms. Assumable Joan. Callln9S370now OWNEtt FIHANCED Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath h ome. beautiful wallpapers thruout Cul • de sac street. Owner will carry AITD for 7 years at 13.S't Interest. For an appointment to see, call 540.1151 · ! ,,, HERITAGE . REALTORS AL~STATE REALTORS .................. - a....1....-.. 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NIWUSTING Sh arp lr1 a Bd w/bonus rooma, pooJ. 1pa, AIC • +more . 0n11 St29i900 w l term1. P atr cit Tenore. U1·128'. RVMJ.X t ' ' I t -.. . .. .. . .. • . ~ ........... g Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12, 1981 ~····················· ..•................. . .••..•........••..•...................... ~:.~~ ............................... ~-~.~ ....... ~.~~ ........ · ..._.. .... w. ... !'~~ ... !~! ~!'~~..... ..~ ........ !~ ~~!.~:!r .. ~~ c.......... . 1024 ............. 1040 lrYlii• 104~ b........ 1041 L~·;.:;·~ .... ·j;;;i ___ ... ____________ .. _______ , MAKIAMOffl:lll ····~;~·;;;,;····· ··~~·;:;~·;;j;;.. ....................... ....................... ....................... * * BAYFRONT * * ~u==" OpeaSat/Sun l·S No quallfytn1. leaae **BEST BUY • hly palnled. ab•l1» • 2720Gannet Dr. wllh option to aha re ln Colle,. Partc 3 Bdrm FOWi.ii a .ASSOCIATIS LINDA ISLE M(WPORT BEACH 2 bath, larae yard. La 4Br + d n lrl·level equity New 2 Bdrm 2 + den, Sytatcu.ao mdl IXCLUSIVI SALIS AGBnS ~ driveway. Brlck home. corner lot, 11 story bouu. Allstate Lra hmlly kitchen, 7H·OJ07 NoUtln& .Down ft AalL&mt Our Potllloo On Thia place, S yean new . patio Sl90,000 All Rltn 843111 aleps to eomm poQl and PANORAMIC OCIAN YllW PretUfjous 88drm, 58a, 3SUp Home In Newpon er arudoul. Move In 97i-5099 park· Prteed to aell at Sea eh. MOit Detlrable Area. We Are Looldq d l U 0 0 • A 1 k 1 n I IY OW9*1 t b o u a a o d s "n d e r Brand new custom homes. 4 BR, 4~ BA. a car For A Hlah Income Owner Wbo Needs A Tb ,llOO. For an appoint· S.AVIYOUIMOHEYI 4 Br, l~ba. lge!arn rm. market Make u.a an ol 1ar .. a fplc's spacious ramJl.y • dlnlna rma, Write-Off For The ee.t Deal On n,. Bay. We ttoaee,call$60-1LS1 3 1reat coodol, try very RV access, SllS,0950. fer exquisite desi1n Ir the rlnetl in quallty Are Owners. Not Brokers. Call Darlene low down. Sellers will Approx ..... 000 .. ••uma· construction. Fln11ncinJJ avaJJ, $550,000. C7l•lfl28.l280 (Direct or Coll..,..> Olfi ,,..__ ... f HERITAGE help finance. Priced lo -"""" OP._.,. D•uy 1·5 Mon·Fri. ""' . ce "-" .. ,, bfe. Prin'conly. 847-8979 ..,... _., move rut Call now ror 1533 T AHIT1 A VI -REALTORS details. 7~64.99 ASSUME ! Plan lll llealty TERMS-TERMS- Sl5JC down 1.160/Mo. SUPER 4br, nr. S.C. Plau. Lease option possible. Owner/AGT $123.900. 67S-~ Sl0.000 DOWN. owner financing. 4 BR to/• ba. near Baker and Fairview. 194,900. Devin & Co. 642·6368 $79K at ur. 1st TD 3 Br home. close to beach . Family neighborhood . 103 down, WON 'T LAST! Asking Sl.23,900. Prine. only 541·9993 Bkr. -----· lrvllte 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * *POOL, SPA Lar&e 4 Bdrm 3 Ba ex- ecutive home in ex· elusive gabled develop- ment or Woodbridge. MESA VERDE Gorgeous patio. pool, e--:. ''·""~( tl I; I • I[ I '\ '•''I ,'(}()() WOODBRIDGE LANDING PETERS· rt.AM 5 Here if is • Loads or charm. Delightfully de· corated & landscaped. S3S9,000. 12 1/•'7< assuma· ble. 8 Sunriver Owner 551-1534. Molseed & Rylee Architect & Developers THE SH.AKES l.wwport leoch I 069 Weathered cedar ••••••••••••••••••••••• sha.kea, that is. Custom $15,000DN designed 3 bdrm. fam View Condo In Villa rm, 2 bat.bs. Extensive Balboa. A&sume Loans. use or wood glass & St37 ,500. R.ae Rodgers. ~eramlc Ute. Beam cell· 631·1266. Agt. ---I lflg, Crplc, $165,000. DRAMATIC University Mission Really OC~OHT Park Dean home 4Br (71')49'-0731. $450,000 3ba Fam c:m. AC. new This first Ume offering crpt, great loc. $245.000. BY OWNER, Arch Beach is an estate sale. One of PAITYIN OPIMSAT/SUH l·I 1812 LINCOLN LN •••••••••••••••••• HAR• VIF# Smaahln1 ramUy room with wet bar. Un · 4 bdrm, 3ba, pool. bonut le H_. rm, new crp\I, freah S• palnt. Owner motivated C.L. Toall, 549-4003. believably beautiful en· ~-------­tertalner's patio. 5 Bdrm Sommerset on ree land. Absolutely immaculate move -in condition C reative Clnanc 1ng available. • RED CARPET 754-1202 Ivan Wella CUit.om with retractable root. 4 l•rae 1100 5 Income Pr<>~rtlct £11taide Co.ta Meta. ~ down. Owner wlU carry Prlced t.oaelll •• 714 641-0743 292S Colleae Ave Costu Mesa, CA 2 on a lot. San Bemadino. Assume 9\li% VA loan Full price S75,000. Loan balance approx. $44,000. Owner wW carry some paper. 951-600l 26UMITS Ocean views. pride or ownership. Down pay ment n egotiable . :W().3666 Whelan Real Estate Executive home, 3 br, 2 spa, walk to tennis club. ba, 1 storyhome on11ulet All amenities. Call for cul-de-sac st. 1 lge bdrm s b o w i n g As k 1 n g could be converted to $281,900. make 4th bdrm. Room ror RV access or PoOI [g]\\\ludbrldge Bkr, 963-8182. ~-1311 Heights. Lovely 2 sty, 3 Newport Beach's finest BR. 2 Ba, 2 car gar .. hot views. 3 bdrms home DRAMATIC Umversity Park Dean home. 48r 3ba Fam rm. AC. new crpl, great loc. $245,000. but and many 'h I am•nitiea. hss,soo . wit guestaptor2un ts. "' Realonomlcs 675-6700 OCEAN VIEW bdrm1-very light ar o~ 1~-----c Spaclou. 4 Br Harbor home with 1parklln1 'XCITING C M.3units,2brea.2m1. View Hills with trg pool. Owner will help e to bch Try S35K dn bonus rm. newly re· w1tb financ:lng. s~.000 $15_9_.soo_. _Agt_675 5200 __ -------Ruley 551-3000 10% 19208arnnu Pll~).lttln~ 552·1311 ' WOODBRIDGE DREAM Lovely 3 Bdrm home. 213-926·6719 Tr·Plex. S65,000 Down. Great terms. Panoramic Ocean View Walk to beach. $295,000. Prin· cipals only. 499-1526. modeled "prof. decor at· A1ent: 831-0880 Jt Ivy IR Town ed in warm earthlonea. jtmlill-------•I CW est 24x60. 2Br. Best location. Beaut. ~/family rm. in yard. with new pvt !)001, MEW,OITHGTS lffills nicest 5 star spa, & gazebo. Too &ood 4 Bdr, pool, Jae .. lrg P1yrs + to qualify. to be true at $419.900. family rm, wet bar, cor· ''- • ASSUMABLE MODEL PERFECT Gorgeous Univ. Park townhome, 2 Br 2 Ba +hideaway Ion, centr. air. hrdwd floors. cov· ered patio. All the extras + assumable financing. Hurry! close to park. pool and i---------•I tennis. In prime Wood· WHITEWATER VIEW 00' to beach, 10% assum loan. May take note on your prop. as down. 4 BR 2 Ba, recenUy uparaded, w/possible in-law qt.rs. Under $290,000 indds land. Move fast! 752-6499 P rin only . Patrick ner location. S250,000 _twpar!leoch Tenore. 631·12186. !W0-3666 2\Br, l8a front kit, lg rm. oat wood In· te, To have new ex· tqupphed by seller. SHOPftlMG CEHTSt Locat ed in No. S D county, super growth area. 15,500 sq ft leasa· ble. Owner will finance Full pnce S850,ooo. Ask for Mike. $35.000 ON. Eastside, owner will help finance 3 Bdrm 2 bath. spa. Only $127 ,900. 645-9161 : OPEN HOUSE REALTY /.' Mesa Verde 3 Br. $5500 down & t.ake over pay men!.$. 645-8369 e IU\f\CH f: I ,\LI Y ~)~) 1 2000 MAKE OFFER bridge location. Take over fantastic low in terest loan. $165,950. don osen rt'.dtor.., 17TH AT PROSPECT TUSTIN. 731·3111 0 You may be surprised 2 Bd + den townhouse m SPANISH DELIGHT. 4 Turllerock. Asking b e d ro om . 3 b a t h I $235,000. Open Hse Sun showplace. Complete 1-5. 3S Rainbow Falls. with formal dining Darrell Pash. agt for room. separate family Remax 631·1266 Town©' Counlry Qt:ALTOQg room and ru-eplace. Tri level Ooor plan. Super kitchen Good sized lol $205 ,000. TARBELL. REAL TORS. 979.2390 DIRTY DAWG!!! Bring paint brush & broom & save$$$ on 2 br fixer. R·2 zoning OWC first T D. • Only $100,000 759· 1501or752· 7373 ~Walker B lae REAL ESTATE --- MESAVERDE Switch to this spacioui. 2800' home nestled in an exclusive residentia l area. All the amenities you've always wanted in an executive family home. Features country kitch. w breakfas l room, formal dining. & lrg family room with bit in BBQ Full pnce ia on· ly $224,000 w/good terms available 751-3191 c:::. <,fl !-( l -1-' Pl~OP~ H 11( <., NO QUAUFYING! Great lat time buying opportunity for young couples or 2 or 3 singles. Prime appreciation location. close to beach. Walk· to shops and theatres. 631-0087 Scott Holmes Co. The Equity Sharing Specialist.$ DmaPolnt 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 w n er w i JI c a r.r y beautiful ocean·harbor view home w/3br. 214 ba. spa. etc. $439.500. 496·3728 Fo.tallt V~ I 034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $45,000 assumes 8\ili~ VA loan/2nd . Jmmac . 4bdrm, 2ba home. Quick es c row, no qual. $127 ,soo. 839-0730. H•tlwtfow lwh I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PACIJ'lC PARADISE No qualify assumable fixed loan. Owner will carry 2nd. 3Br, 2~Ba. 1"'6 blks to bch. new 2100 aq (t home w/view. AU oUers considered . 960-3211 or (213) 592·2845 IYOWMER 103 asswnab1 loan. 2 br. 1 ba, h'plc, remod. 1'lt. ai bath, 2 car aar •• lat lol. Drive f>y. 1311 !Cupp .Drive. Open Hol&H Sun. l2-4 191,000. llA-71• ·wAMISH HAC9eA 4 bdrm. pool hOme. So. H.B. comer lot Owner will aell AJTD or coo· tract Grut lnw.tment. l•bintl on term• ...... . ~ 1'r ; 1 :,,"'\j . 1 1:\ I BOUGHT A MOTHER MUST SELL 4 Bd compl. remodeled beyond belief. Premium location in The Ranch. Asking $172.000. Ask for Darrell Pash. agt for Rem ax..631 1266 *•ESTATES See this beautiful Wood- bridge Estates Jefferson model, 2 Br + den. end unit. all amenities In quiet location across from !)001 & park. As· sumable financing Call ror showing On ly $173.900 THINKING TO~OME? Call the specialists at the condominium in - formation center. Touch.st.one Realty 963·~ FOR SALE J.M. PETERS WOODIRIDGE LAHDIMG Last avail. Plan 1. For 1orormatio n ca ll WOOOIRJDGE 3 Bdrm Danbury Mdl. upgraded thruoul. Good a ss umabl e l o an $163,500. 552-1800 WOODBRIDGE 3 bdrm condo $128,500 Assum. l()3!•'% 559·6870 LOVELY PLAM2 an Turtle Rock Broad· moor. 4 bdrm. 2 ba. with your own private SPA 1n the atrium. New carpet. tile. high tinted win dows. High assumable loan with temr1c (inane ing Charming h The Word .. for this t bedroom + lort condo in the Ranch San Joaquin Villas. Ex· tensive use or custom moldings, wall and noo coverin& throughout. For all you fussy buyers. this is a must see. $153,900. D.M. Marshall Rltr 644-9990 760.0135 55~8058. , _______ __ I SWIMMIHG & TENNIS Beautiful Northwood condo w/upgraded fioor & window coverings. Steps to pool. Assumable lsl T.D. $79,950. Mack Hanson 551·8700 (M11) Dn'Dl'll ~~a.a.-..... vw...o.r... !Mne, QA Qll'l'UI 11T!De, 04 9lmA (114) ?'llll-l41.4 ('M ) 11111--&'100 TllMS. TlaMS. TaMS Low down -owner will finance. 2 bdrm, 2 bath, delightful patio home for the sophlstlcated (dis· criminating) buyer. Adult com· munlty -community pool. spa, &r tennis For inf ormatioo call Barbara Grounds 551·8700. $140,900. CUSTOM2STY 3br. 180° Whitewater View ' Entertainer 's PtanNReatt Dream ! Open House1---------• Sunday. 12·5PM. t524 Caribbean. La g una Beach. • UHi REAL EST ATE (7141155-1I00 NEWPORT CREST T errifk Pbl I. 2 bedroom. 2 bath with assumable $79K ut TD Whelan Real Estate S2 CLASSIC WANTED s-c......... 1076 tlUHOME Retired buainess exec .. •••••••"•••••••••••••• SALES long time licensed ---------• 27ftbor.Ste206 A TR,\DITIO\,\I . Rt..\I TY 631-7370 ---------•! Priced for quick sale. bkr/develor>er wan!.$ to W AIJ( TO \.40-5937 buy Into or buy out, GOLFCOUISE 40 Units, L. A County. gross income $145,800 Total pnce Sl.450.000 Owner fmancmg. HIDf>.A-WAY I Sl55·000· Charming Laguna Cot· I *Cote Realty· established med. sized & AND IEACH active R.E. ore in 3br, home in rantastic Newport Beach/ Corona location. C reative '77 IWEST. 24x64, 2 br., serv rm . 4 ton A1rt.. 6x3 shed. Call COl<$52,500. 770.5299 tage-remodeled. on lge & I buildable lot. In the love· nvestment del Mar area . Send replies to. Ad No. 929• financing avail. Just 2 Year oJd 4-plex. Apple Valley. 11 times gross Owner will carry some ly N. End. 494-4751 AGT. 640·5777 Daily Pit«. PO Box 1560. SlJ7 •500· or7~ -SO_M_E_T_H_IN_G_S_P_E_CIAL -•_-_•_•_-~~~~~~-Costa Mesa CA. 92627 ......_ Red Wing Prop. Inv ~ NwPtach Bayside 641-2000 Custom wood and glass. ocean views. Walk to Victoria Beach. $425,000. LOCJWKI VI .. R.E 497-1761 O,EM Sat/S.. 2·5 2012 SCIR Remo Lovely ocean & hillside views from th1s 3 bdrm, 2 bath home on a lot large enough for ex- pansion. Sellers may h elp with rananc1ng. $395,000. . OPIEH SUM 2·5 25 75 A.ltamar Calofctotftfer Duplexes. oceanfront. beautiful ocean view. Perfect location. New condition. Agt. 673-7300 VERSAILLES •• ROI I RI S Vill•spac. unique 1 ------l=EAL br, aionly 673 0811 lftdntrial/ 2Br. ocn view, low dwn. ••m IAI E --,ro,.rty 2100 no qualifying. Sl29K. --... Over rs 2 Br. micro ••••••••••••••••••••••• 730·2270 ore. 642·2682 wavvc , $3.SOO cash BAY CRESr BEAUTY. 5 home. •4•98-·l·04•0---•4•9J.-0202-4 Cl640 ~rt Blvd ll19 Br Family Rm $200.000 assumable 1st. Owner ---------•I--------::..,.....,=--LAGUMA HACH Canyon ind~rial bldg near town & art festival grounds. 9600 sq ft. fully leased Gro6S annual an come S54,000 may carry s100.ooo 2nd. IRVIMETEIRACE •F&.Y,ARK• 1 year . S43S.OOO Call ,OOL&VIEW Movei>day 1978two Hedda Maroai Agent A cozy 3 bdrm home dbrmb dble wide, 646·1044. Tosee&sell! with formal dining rm w/utit dining rm. and !)001. Highly expan· a PP It any x l r as ----------· Realonomics 675-6700 $65,000 DOWN 5br !)001 home $389,500 Open everyday 1·5. Agt. 1300 Marian Ln 642-6768 dable view of harbor and CLEAN AS A $39 .~r 964 5309. STOP REKT1MG ocean. A greaf listing at WHISTLE! C ~~----Industrial condos for only S335,000. Owner will This spotless 2 bedroom Hte I sale. 1000 to 3000 sq ft c arry 2nd TD ror cottage is located in a C 1500 Huntington Beach & Sl00,000. nice neiihbotbood close ••••••• ••••••••••• Fountain Valley. Call IRVIMECOVE HARBOR VIEW 644-7211 lo the beach and shop-2 c e r Y 1 0 t .5 • Paul 545-~7. Agt. Ping. Amenities include Westmtr Me"'!or1al ._ ________ .., /.Jn NIG(L nl\ILEY & l\5SOCIAT£5 . Park. Id section A sensational home 1n HOMES this most prestigious ~ lovely ~nck fireplace worth $tach. asking Nearly new 10 Unit Jn. ~.the li~';"g ~m a~d SlOOO 'both. 714/ dustrial Bldg in Cost• private area. A large 3 • Lo•efy C..,.. bdrm. 3 bath with den. 3 Br. 2 Ba. Firsltime like new appliances in 642·9136\. M •c 000 rt 25~ the kitchen. Don't miss --esa. M>, sq_ · ornce, ronnal dutlng rm, ofrered. '267,500 Fee. superb gourmet kitchen. LEN HAYNES XLHTTEltMS lh. tt 1 1 (2) Pl •r !L · 1 down Owner will carry lS gorgeous co age .. _o .... \II Memona 1st T.D at 13% lnteres\ sauna & pool set amid & ASSOC. beau ti r u J gardens. l•---640-M--54---• s1,ooo.ooo. AVAll.ABLE 5br. 3ba, family rm. priced below market al $165,000. 1641 Orchard Dr. Santa Ana Hgts. Open Sun. 1·5 or may be shown aoyUme by appt. WIEDEMANS (8 ) 751-4293 $118,000. 498-4950 Section. _tbor Lawn. r Ph IS llivall $900/boUJ.9Gl2 or 3 years. 1 u --Realtor 548-2103 SJJ&waMlay Lingo co11do111'9ts/Tow11-Loh for s• --22_00_ Calofctotftfer U"8llAY ...... &.... ho•••... 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••ti>••••••••• BY OWNER "• ac re A large & luxurious West of Irvine Ave .. 4 home overlooking a Bdrm 3 bath home, large quiet can yon with covered patio, choice magnificent wh1te water corner loL 1213,000. 100/o, I 2 >140/o fixed JO yecr toans sgl ramHy homes m The Pinnacle Dev. loc. in Mariner 's Pt . $2$(). ()()().13i!:5. 000 onJ y 7 remain. Bkrs welcome. Paul Yoder, Lingo R.E. 498-4950 MewPleoch level. ocean/panoramic Charming,2baCON· v iew lot $129.000 DO lowest :e in "The (714 1498-5538 BluH" ar Low in ------ terest ass1oan low NewPort Beach Custom. down. Own•rin Only Home Lot SZ79,000. views 5 bdrms & family Roy McC_., Rltr rm on 3 levels sur-5 ... 7729 JS' IOATDOCI included with this exec. 3 Bdrm e<ndo w /3 ba, bit in elec kitchen, w/w cpl, drps, dbl gar. EXCEL. ASSUMABLE FINAN· CING. Full price only S335,000. rounded by decks makes 1 ____ .._ _____ •I this an acieal home lor ( 7 1 4 ) 5 . 1 3 9 o 834·9393.9-5PM eves/760-367 559-95811731-4763 the large family . $889,000. ' 320Crnc...tlay Stunning is the word for this 3 bdrm. 3lf2 bath & den home. Mirrored en· try & fireplace wall add drama to the ocean view. Totally private en· tertalnmenl dec k & garden with spa. Just a few steps from this popular beach. $695,000. ~ ... r ~~WMM?1"'-.. ll'fAt.ft~ SEAVl!W Beal buy • View oo the Hill. 760-M30Agt. THEIWFfS COMPLETE REMODEL 3br. 3ba. ram rm. formal dining rm. gourmet garden kitchen! Lge as· sum financing at good old rates! $235,000. Call Owner (714)760-9339 1-992-5310 IHIYWortd Dont. Uttle S-J .. Caph...._ 1071 • •••••••••••••••••••••• $50.000 Down. Great terms. ~ ACRE ocean BWFFS views. Secluded 4 Br. HA~ BIG lS'D New lee sim~br, 3b11 rum condo, <>View on Cham pion GI Course SlOK dwn. 15' 1t. only. Owner (71418'725 or (714)831-~ $349,900. Broker. Rare front row J plan. 499·1526. CONIK ~alft,Dfleri, RHort 2400 ·····················-· LAKE ARROWHEAD' Beaut dee home on Meadow Bay w/pvt 8th & Lake rts. Compl. furn. $262 .000 alft (714 1337-9256 : 337.3306 eves. unobstructed view or Vlf back Bay. French doors, S..ta AM I 010 OCEAN Hacienda on an acre. Al>- parquet fir. outstanding ••••••••••••••••••••••• HUNT. IL4H pie Valley entry. hor1e IAYFIONT IEAUTY decorator home. Kathie l!"ftr, 1~ ba condo, nr So. LIBERAL TR MS prop. nr town. 2 BR. IZO/ofiamtcillig Hardesty RJtr. 760-8244. Coast Plaza. ale, patio, Sl20,000 Firm.4000 formal dining rm. ra~i· N ' I . 24 hr sec. bldg. $86,900 down. O.W.C. atfck. 3 ly rm. Authentic ado'":.., ewport s exc us1ve s e 1 ~ B "'"' Peninsula Point. Newly 12% ANANCING Auum . 53•190 w . r . a .. car renovated in/out. All constructed 4 Bdrm 4 ba 11 ·373 · Coos. small 2nd eara&e. 942-l67Z charm. Barn. tack. Acr residence with pvt. boat AVAILABll.. TD.Owner.~2592. °'l!V."/. VV30 714-243·2473 ~r (714t 494-1177 dock. Sl,650,000 ioclud· JUSTS....., OPE~ HOUSE ,00 evs,245·21611 ingthe landorSl,295,000 ·--~ " ••••••••••••••••••.,•• leasehold. Owner/ TOllACH SAT/SUNl.2-5 o.tofComty LOC)ma ........ 1052 Builder Dan Bibb. 00 uu. charming 3 br. 2 6245. Rou, OWC. To see COSTAMISA ,ro,.rty J550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675·2311 ba home in Newport ia to love it! Span/-••••••••••••••••••··-~· Foxglove model in Lake 1-.--------•I Shorea. Price reduced Colonial beauty on DWILIX SUPER '• Park. 2 Br, den, 2 ba. 1• S ~Hll S10.ooo to S165,ooo for 100i14.2' lot. 2400 sq.ft.. E h id2 .. La, Ila r CAHYON LUE vaulted celling, French P quick sale! Owner will FP ·hand polished wood, . ac 1 e. rge entj Golf Course House. 3'00 doors. Assume at Jo-4. O....-.... o.t carry lat T.D. 759·1501 or rormal dine. 2 sty, 4 BR 2 rear yards. Low m!t sq.' ft. redwood in /01,9t. $154,900. owner. M•t Sel11111 Wk 752.7373 Ba, tenanceL well kept r~J Sl49,000. 679--640'A 831·7634, 759-2465 Don't miss this great op-Ba l oosing h RI t y, yard . ar&e ceme Crtunity to buv a lovely 541·53.11 driveway, new exteri lmtehff.. ..._. --------•I "V paint, new roof. Owne (iroHS 2700 1~':~!n :r~1~.:~~ REALESTATE New,ortletdt 1069 financing. ····················':9· l'RIESTICllOUS OH GOU: COUISE Enjoy serene •~Ung ln your totally u.puaded 2 Br 2 ba condo. Good lontion ror beach and shoppin1. Affordable financing. $128,750. 'AM .. YUVIM• 4 Bdtm, 2YI bath NIJUel beauty! Well kept, new· ty carpeted. Fl"'place. utll1t1 rm, pvt patio. Good localloo $1J9,500. ---------· •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• • s 14s,ooo F • waooec lng ... SS0,000 moves you (7u)"~"" 36 ,.. lo .. asaume the exlstin1 ~· .....,,.1 le home and avocado lat and 2nd. 3 Bdnns, 2 .; Evenings rove on 1.65 acres. 1~ ea, formal clininf, raml· • • A.19'&.I An um able. owe w IH ly room, aeparate euest D ~~ llM:w ,.. ... rty 2000 . 3 Bdrm. 3 ea. prime q11arten, ~I • spa. ~ ... ~ •••••••••••\' .. ••••••••• . Sl7~.ooo. Bkr Clay. 'l'behomeiabeautlrullY .,,,.~ APPUYAUIY ner/A(!ent. (7U ) landscaped and ln gn1a\ ICM:AITV Near new •·Pin. 2 -~95.;:.i81~------sbape. ban' mJaa )'OQr n~ I chance lo bey th.la home ·-..... __ bdrm, 2 bat.b each unit rlibt ... Owner want• wltb fireplace, encloeed 2100 qult k aaie. HAalOI llMI Ke~ with ratio. double 1ara1e. •••·~•••••••••••••·~·· DM .~....-·-great view•. Desl-s"'e for In· 165,000. Bill Grundy, 4Br ear Newr~rt 64~-t't't4&&07-60.0l_,.ll e•• Rllr,815-6181. 8 a -b a y iJir T' door /outdoor entertaining and --------uoo,\oo/300.000 OCEANFRONT Duplex family living -4 BRS. Fam. Rm. COSTA M&5A. Count~ home or . • Trl-Plex. Xlnt loe. Formal dining, comm. pool & ' NOW REMODELING 831·081\ P P .... --. 797s., tennis. '610,000. Call Belle Partch a. 2 bdrm••. l bdrm all 1 c ~ ,.... ..... 3br .. ..-..• ,,..,.,,,,v•ir 7c.,·1414 (M12) a oroti""'"'' '~, -l ator)'. Lotaire 100X200. goU c~vlew. Jae, Steal Ulla at S275,000. undevel 2~ acre 'l.ASTSIDI COST• MISA 3 Daya 842·U34: evea prime ar. CoedO. bed.room, 3 bath condo with a ISU81t. for Lido Ill• home. areal private patio to add to tbe o c I AM pa o MT a73-m5or\!7.all ·• roomy livability. $158,000. Tom DWI.IX i------~ Alllnson or Terry Hues 642·8235 Beautiful • Br. 2 Ba • (M13) Us>tt•lrt: 3 Br. 2 Ba • downstt..lrt. F\ftpla~ • •• ,.,, .... ~room. XIDt~. TSL lNVSTMT Ml-llOa ~ BY OWNER Xlot J'lnaDclnt I $110,000 •n-«m. <1mMMm l I ' } I • ' s t Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12, 1981 Cash· ·n on 7 or 11 ....... _.._, .... •w•tNno rot Of•no-Co4'nty itch.,.,..,._ 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 lines Daily Pilat Items totaling, $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate . .,_.,..,._ __ u .... ~ HOHi" .............. CHdD....... ~·· ....... d .................... .,.. tow11h.......... ..... taah .......... H091H UllfuA11ll1CI ••••••••••••':'!!?'•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• U11fw'lllllhed 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••• ... r 124 Mew port .._. 3269 •••••••••••••••••••••• • Newport leacll J7 6t CotN M... 3t24 Coata M... ]124 Newport a... ll•t H ..... r. lit.cl Coit. MeM l ••••••••••••--..••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Recreationa.I Newport. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• •••• • ••••••••••••••• c nd aJ.kin dis ta ce 2 br l ba a N OCC PARlf NNIPORJ BTero lllJ 2 ft 3 Bdrm. 3'sa. N erock-cpac. 2 br 6 IRVIMITBUCE t: ... ~a~b P~I s~a Decorator furnished MIWLYDICott. Avail 1if ~39; 2864 ft '" •• d I•• '""" mo CUSTOM 3br •ba pool " . ' ' To1tnhouaes '895 1 Br aas pd, encl gar · · ••••••••••••••••••••• luxurious Condo. Mi ea, a u ... ._ . ... ' ' sauna, rec rm. Lg 1 7.,..9.117 d /waaher, pool. Adults Hickory Place, Ap.t A APARTMENTS %bdrm, 2~ condo, part. wave, trash compac at . 759·1818 Carol. many extras! Lease/ bdrm. SS.SO. Todd (213l ...,. 642·S073 Open Sat Sun. S.U-0258 furn. p 1 Ir Jae. No dishwasher, dbl gar Bdrm Condo. slnale, no ~~;:1~~~SOO Mo. 240-9&77 Winter Rental $630/Mo. 3 . z Br Adults All new, f~tt/1~lda. S&OO/mo. w/opener , air co ets, Irvine S•so mo. Spectacular ocean·bay Br.28a.UpperUnil.929 2 Br 1 Ba. New carpet, private patio. 2229 . ' poollijacuzzl l800 sa.6301 Nice3brhomeinHarbor view , 2 br , 2 ba W . Balboa B l vd . lndry rac . No pets . Rutg ers . S hown COUMTRYCWI LIVIMGIM NEWPORT IEACH Mewportleoch Jl6t 642•2000or 63t-~. ----'-View$900/Mo. Versailles n>enthouse. 673-3987. S38S/mo. 271 l6th. Pl. Sat/Sun.213/675-6132 ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• • 1 d I BR condo. newly de-64()..8355 guarded adult comm. 644·002 Bii Canyon Condo 3br. Cu es•c w sea bree coraled. No pets. Must $8SO 67~ 833-7S41 --------Pr iv com rort able deeoutor fum. view, BR 2~Ba,Cplc,$800 quallfy . 5'9·3918. · or Bach with loft, refrige, tBdrm, cpt id r apes. pool, ten nis , lse s.8-416' 644·7S7S Exceptionally nice New 1 Br. Adult Condo. s tove, pool. $375. 283 stove refr& $300/Mo . An adult communJty on tt)e Back Bay. Spec· tacular Spa, 7 swim· ming pools, 8 lighted ten· nis court&, blke trails. putlin& g r een . Bac helors. l a nd 2 bedrooms apartments. a nd townhouses fro m $510.00 per month 11800/mo 64G--8999 · BAYSIDE CONDO. 2 Near So. C. Plaza. Pool ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avocado. MS-&404 1 "'~"'.""~"" · ~X~UISTITE 3 br, leach 12"1 Bdrm & view. $1950/mo & ca rport. S425i mo. G ... roJ 3102 ...., ~ Ho.nU.fwwhlwd rpc,calbedral cel EASTBLUFF. Nice 955.2669. • ...................... 2BR,newpaint.lgeyard, D•aPolat lt26 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dbl ear., pvt. 1 OCEAN VIEW 3Bdrm 2baatS1400 mo AnMTS FOR RENT encl gar. Child, small ••••••••••••••••••••••• GeMNI 3202 Ad Ila, no pets. Newly Ul>tlraded 3 br, Waterfront Homes Inc Very large 2 Br. 2YI Ba. B N B "'~ M pet OK. S43S mo. Ask for Lge bachelor w/k1lchen, ...... 47"'2 Cf H. .. . .. '"""'ta esa B ll '...,., •<V>L D ••••••••••••••••••••••• .....,. " bonus rm, retreat o 63I·1400 Eastside Costa Mesa. Something for Everyone 1 , 631·"""' laundry avail, _,,.,. ys MacArthur Village, gat· lBR&2 BRcondos masterbr,storage rm.2 Near new, beaut.decor., Bach. to 4 Br. Unfurn. 1 BR new cpts drpo 768-626l;eva498-0318 ed entrance 1 BR, to ahopa & trans. b a . $ 8 5 0 I mo · ---frpk. w/d hook-ups . Apll. Certain locations • • '" --pooJ/tennls. No pets. nei. ,,.1 .. ......, (213)92'·9421 2 Bdrm, Newport Beach, patio, garage, pool, spa 0 ff e r :· Poo 1, s Pa . paint. wallpaper, lots of H..tln«JtoR leodl 3840 S42S.64IH:fl0;6'2·2009 ... .....,. THE ""•CHM b"I steps to beach. $650/mo. incl uded . $750 /mo fireplace, laun. room , wood. $~mo. Ask for ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3b 1 ant d ( ON B.,.,. 0 1 e 675-1771 642-1603 Days, 64.2· lS31 be a med c e i I i n gs, Bill, 631-13!6 Capf1~leoch 3211 r. ge Y • en, HomeSUIOOmo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• home cul-de·sac c 4~3816 EXEC. ' Bdrm+ family Eves. garages. all built-ins. Lg 2Br, 11/!iBa Valencia. 1 Lovely Luxurious home sch o o Is S7 S 0 home. Pool & spa. 3 car Rancho San Joaquin 2br, Garden & Townhouse child OK, no pet.s S450. l(not a tract) 1600 aq ft _645_·_584_3 ___ _..1 HACH PALACE gar. 4000 sq ft. Gardener design. NO FEE. SI err a Mgmt Co. 4 Bd ( , f d d 2ba, den, gar. 3 decks, TSL MGMT. 642-1603 ,,.1_1324 Never rented. Washer. Fo.ta• Val.y rm. f11•C, oc yar • incl. Im mac. Avail 8/16. w/pool & golf rac. close. ... dryer, micro, refrig. ••••••••••••••••• kids & pets OK. $2500 lease. Ai\. ~53S7 $750/mo. 631.3111 lal>oa ltlmld 3106 --------M 3Br, 28a Particlllar for 4 Br, 3 Ba exec tri , Rentals R UtS37·RENT ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• SP AC I OUS 2 B DR choice people. $750. ram rm. 2 r1111c 1 Harbor View Knoll-El Niguel golf course 2 Br 1 Ba. deck, lndry. AlnOgaU.LsTe.rvopen. barbe.amlotsceiolr U3-06S7 t• Gard 2 Br. 2 Ba. Lagun a Condo-2br , den. end Condo 3BR 2BA S600. neartown.$595/mo. pa io. eoer r C h Wal'-lo s wood. New ,.r"""'· """" _.. I N l armer. .. unit, tennis /pool. 900 Avail7·15.Eves644-7917 675-0349 .. .,... """' "'Of'OIMdelMcr 3222 ease. 0 pe s . beach. Avail, lromed. 644-9592,631·2670 Maple St . $410/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 963-3344• 962-750i. SS.50 Mo. 497-4321. $495. 2 BR, 1 story condo. Corowa del Mer 1122 S48· 7356. 673-8803. 'Bdrm, bonus rm w/pool CAHT FIND 1 _._ M'--' 3252 CAMT FtMD ITT Adlts only. CalJ art 7PM • ••••••••••••••••••••••• tble, lg bkyard w/pool WEH•VE --r--~ WEH,\VEIT! I S49-982 __ a __ $1400 per mo. 631-4888. -"' •• ••••••••••••••••••• •• Rentals R us Ask 'o Greg Rentals R Lge 4br home m new de I ,, r ~""-RENT S37-RENT •pa-"--__..._ L-l-L-..1 3br. 2ba. bright, cheerful, 2 Br. Adults only, no pets. upper dplx. built-ins. $425. 755 W. 18th. St. ..,., velopment Mode rn "" nwtftlQ~-storage, avail 711. $750. 646·_9_507 ______ _ _64_0-_6_11_0 _____ --i 2 Br. 1 Ba. Completely re· Lge 3 Br, 3 ba, stove, H...a~leaC kit che n incl uding SEAVIEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• D/W, frplc, pvt patio. -.·-mic rowave & bar·b· 4 Bdrm. 2\"l ba, view, lalboa P'u•onla 1707 2br , lba, ga r epl. Lower dplx. 962·183S, •E•X••E•C•••3•B••••d••• q u e I range . Rec . 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631·14S6 ~-+: en facilities avail. No pets. gated commwuty, poo 1 Br. furn. Carpets. Range /refrige. Adults. no pets. $600/mo. Years lse 612~ J asmine Open daily 1·5. ---------1 fam rm, dining $900/mo. Avatl July 1st. & tennis $1.250. 644 2145 drapes. stove. refrige Lota ol tile/marble. Old ~rsatioo pit G 540-8300 days, 836·9764 eve . Utils pd. Utensils for 4 CdM. So of hwy. New n r s hops & e ves/wknds. Spacious 3 Br. v, Ba. $375/mo. 675-0680. ·3Br 2ba, frpk, patio, 2 963·5_19_1 __ ~r---Townhouse. Very clean. 2 br, l ba. front unit, cargar.S950.67S-1018 2 sty Sbdrm. f m , CONDO pool, other recreation. Col"CNtadelMar 3722 frplc, gar, yard. nr ten· On Lag Niguel Golf ••••••••••••••••••••••• nis, $600. SS2-5710 HVHM 2 bdrm & den. l r PI c • 2 c a a r · Course. 2 Bdrm, 2 ba. $700 Mo. Agent544·144o. Ve r y lge deco r a tor .New cpt. paJnt, huge SS.50/mo. 84&-$12S Mo. Leave Me11age Beaut Npl Condo. 2bdrm furnished. frplc, plush yard. S9SO/mo incl lBdrm.~ba, 1714)661·3314 2ba .. den, aplt levl, cpt'g. 1 bile to beach. Jardener. Agt. 631·1400 nr beach. cthdrl eel. lg pvt patio, ocean view. $825/lse. 408YI Acacia, 3bdrm, 2ba, ocean view, shown by app't only. 673-7942. MlssloliVlefo 3267 d 673-18S3 & wkdys Love Cottage, lBr. ca. 2-5. S900/mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• atchd dbl gar w/ oor op-2131738.1734 nyon view, nice yrd HOME FOR RENT nr. on pool & pkwy. Coata Mna 1824 ..$82S/mo. 673-1464 Owner 3 Bdrm. $675. Fenced Adult comun, $700. yard' & garage Ktds & 645·7:116or646 S:B4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEANSIDE Hwy. Lge MESA VERDE home al· priv sundeck , beaut mosphere. 2&3dlx apts furn, shutters , s mall No pets. 54f>.1034. 3 BR 3 Ba dplex. 1 car ear, comer lot. No (>ets.1..:::.=...:..:....::..:..=:...:.f--1 yr be. Refs req'd. S875 mo. Avail early July. COOL 714-675·7Sl9 Co1taMftCI Ul this 1 Bd /pool, some util J>d. Y $350, 3224 Rentals R Us RSNT 3 Br. 2 Ba. Taft •f'rplc, garage, lndry "h o Ok · ups . M ax 2 · ~hlldre n . $700/Mo . Avail. July lat. Sierra Mgmt. Co. 641-1324. ~'Br. 1 ba duplex. Crplc, _laundry, kids ok. Avail ·~1 1s. 682 J oann St. 5'3-0438. !f .. Br + home. Quiet cul· • &~-aac. Sl200 mo. Sec. depos it . Avail. 7 /l. 979-29'0. U r, l Ba, fenced yrd, gar. 'dfl a lley. S7SO/mo. lse ~ao REMf >.LS r.2ba. $725 $850 FurnS125o $900 r. 2ba. r. 2ba r. 2\.la ba. pets welcome. MS-2000 Agt., no fee. Newport t.och 3269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPYG~LEASE 3 Bd, formal dining, ram rm, lrg yard, 2 frplcs, $1600/mo. Bob & Dovie Koop. Agl. 631-1266 SAHTIAGO DR. Beautiful house avail now In elegant area. 4 Br. 3 Ba. Dinlnl tm. Living Rm. &t Family Rm. New wallpaper, cozy k itchen & many many xtras. Children & pets OK. Broker Corp. 159-8974. HARBOR RIDGE Ocean View. Lux. 3 Br. 3 Ba. Lge Master suite, den, wet bars. f.p .. tennis. pool. jac., $1900/mo. 675·4<Y78, 5'9-9099. THE BLUFFS 3 Bdrm condo w/vlew. Remodeled. like new with gourmet kitchen. 1 y r. lease. $100-0/mo. 760-9678. Nwpl Shore 4 br. 3 ba. canalfront, nwly decor. pool, tennis. 2 blk11 ocean $1,100. 962-6683. OMntEWATIR Great view oC boats & bay. Brick fplc. family room. Available imrned. ror 9moo1hs. On11 S995 mo. THE REALESI'ATERS 873-8S50 Bluffs condo. 3 Br 2~ Ba. EXEC HOME OnS.S.x La 4br, 3ba. dbl frplc. gated front courtyard. & rear patio. gar w /opener $1200 /Mo . inc l . gardener. LEASE OPTION POSSIBLE. 7S2-2S50 s.c ........ 3276 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN VIEW. Tri·level Condo. l;iew. Beach 1 i,; blks. 2Wma.ater bdrms ea ch w/baths. Powde r bdrm, ideal for mature bachelor. $395 aft 6/sat/sun. 673-2086 Co1taMna 3724 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUSCASnil Furn. l br. apt. S325 & up. Encl. gar. Adults, no pets. 2110 Newport Bl. 548-4968 btwn 8" SP M Newly decor. 1 Br. Dplx. Sep by gar. Quiet. Emplyd adult over 3S, no pets. S3SO. 548-1021 room {3rd bathl off MewpartVilac)e formal dining rm. DelWL Costa Mesa's most buUt -ins w/microwave fabulous apt. Cozy fireplace living rm. complex. Plush carpeting, sunny, Has a view jr lbdrm Cheerful lhruout. Very but not for long. private patio. Jacuzzi. S31J Enclosed 2 car garage + Completely decorator workshop. 320 Cazador fu.mished. 113, San Clemente. $850 Tennis Courts, Rec Rm Mo. lease. (714)537-64<Y7 · Giant Pool, Spa, Plush Smt JMClll Landscapmg & More! Spac1~ 3 Br $425. 2 Br $37S. Pool & carpoM. ~9556 l lrTo""""o•• Newly decor. gas pd .• encl gar .. pool, dswhr Adults. 642-5073. 2 Ir. I ldApt Newly decor. C:as pd encl gar.. pool, dshwr. Adult.a. 642·5073. Beautiful Townhouse IS25. 2 Br. l "' Ba Fireplace. Savage Wilde & Co. 675-6606. VILLA CORDOIA Spacious E. side a pts. Encl gar. patio, dshwshr & stove. Most util free. No pets. 2BDRM $450 1 BDRM S395 2323 Elden Ave. CM. 642-76(?) Capi1tn.o 3278 635 laller St. 2 Br. 1 Ba. $395. Pool. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nr. Newport Frwy Adults. no pets. Avail. 3 br, 2 ba, no pets, pool 557..0075 immed. Savage Wilde & priv. $600. Awail 7-1. 37 ... 0 Co.642-4470. 586-3734 aft. s. H•linc)toll hoch '9 -------- --••••••••••••••••••••••• STUNNING, lg 2 & 3 BR . SCHlta Ana 3210 H I •5 FINEST 2 ba garden apt. Pool ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sp~sb btate Living! 1415 & $445. no W · 18th 12 mo. lease option, Im· St ed ·1 3 B 2 B Beautiful park-like sur· -·-------m . ava1 .. r a, T d Fairview/Edinger area. roundlngs. errace Xlnt cond. ram rm on pool. Sunken gas bbq. cul-de-sac st. $110,000. s parkling fountains S7SO/mo. S57-2783 aft SP a ci o u s r oom s 6PM Separate dinfog area. · Walk -i n c l osets, lriftclhl(ids 3 Bdrm, 'lncd yard. utU pd. $4.SO. Rentals R Us 537-RENT homelike kitchen & cabinets. Walk lo Hunt· ington Center. EASTSIDE Cedar Wood 2 Br. 1 Ba. Adults, no pets. S4SO /Mo . 329 University Dr. Mgrs . Eves 548-0648. 9UIETUVIMG prime backbay v1ew, lrg Tustfn 3290 patio. upgraded. $1300. ••••• •••••••••••••••••• 644-0350 l bdrm, air, pool, extras. l Bedroom·fu.m , 5"0 2 Bedroom-furn, S.'ilO Adults, no pets. Utilities Free I LA QUINTA HERMOSA 16211 Partside Ln. 1 blk W. of Beach, 3 blks S. of Edinger . l Br. Apt. avail. now. Cathedral ceilings, prv balcony or patio, dis· hwasbe.r, frplc. pool & spa . Lndry & bbq . Adult.a over 25. No pets. $460 & up. Mesa Pines, 2650 Harla, 5'9-2447. Eastblurf condo, lge 3 br, Renta~~ENT 2% ba, pool, bale. $900. C213)S41-44«>: 640-8034 Wn .... star 3291 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• CAMTRMDm WEHAVEITI Rentala R Ua 537-RENT Irvine 2br, 2~ba coado. Attache d 1ar . Vie•. Golf, tennll, 1wlmmm1. Avail. teoo. TeNTOI ----H'*""-TOM ICM llMeMIW Pre1Utknlil HARBOR VISTA Co 8do. Lit lbdrm SSH/Mo. all am•tlla <ZU>--.. d a ya-(2U)U2·H4' ••••/•k •d • or <n•> ..... YIU.A IAI IOA 8•1 •I•• Co•do, I Mr•J1 Be.~y 111. ~ mo. .ft .di IMf al U'MIU, "' ............. M7·S441 .... port .... 176' ••••••••••••••••••••••• •eatiBAIJ AP>.ITMINJS Beautiful landscaped garden a)M. Patios or 4eck•. Spa. ffeat paid, co v e r ed p arking . Adult., no pets. 28R. 2BA. $49S 398 W. Wilson. 631-5583 Wettaide 2 Br. 1 Ba. Duplex, kit chen & dlnette, refnce. enclad aara1e. Upstaira Is ulet. No pets . $390. 7'70.5629or~ novated. enclsd garage, laundry far Walk lo shopping. $150 security S400 rent. 1910 Wallace 646·0341 or S45-6155. IAYTIMIEllS SPACIOUS l ER Lge palio. walk -in closet , OW , frplc, garage Pool & laundry Cac. 399 W. Bay St. 646-9883 Lrg 2 Br 1 Ba. great E side locauon. S475 mo yrly lse. No pets. Call Lloyd, 675-6670 Utilities pd. 1 bedroom $250 mo, quiet. adults 644·6958 Eastslde Spacious 2 Br. 2 Ba Garden Apts .. pool, encllld garage. Adults. no peta. Water & gas paid. ss10. 6'5-5TIM> • 2Br. 1 Ba. Near So. <.; Plaza. S.A. Luxury Con- do, w/pool. Child OK SS25 833-8974. Deluxe lBdrm $385/Mo New. avail. dishwshr. ga r . patio , 759-1914/6':2962 Eastside 2 Br .. garage, fncd yard. Avail. now $495Mo. Kids O K . 64S-8369. Large 3 Br. 2 Ba. New carpet. Crplc. patio & yard, enclsd garage. Adults only Avail. 1· l. SS75/mo. ~l.936 2 Br. 1 Be. Near Baker & Harbor. garage, walk to shops. No pets. Max l· chil d . $425. Sierr a Mgmt . 641·1324. Buutlful l Br. blt·lns. carport • pool. Adults, no pela. Bike to beach. $41S. lat. It last + de· posit. 931 W.190\St. st'o ADULT ....i~. LIVING • I & 1 BA PatlO APIS • 01snwul'ltt) & 880 s • Poo1 & Arc Room • C1•0tn l •"OUl 0•"9 • Jog 10 8uc11 & S11ops S I CaltS SE A ENV IRO NMENT 'lb I} Ii A Mil TON H 8 '*>i 4~00 On Jamboree Al San Joaquin Hills Road ( 714 )644-1900 Oceanfront for Winter Rentals f'urntshed & unfurn Broker 675·4912. EA.STBLUFF 2 Br. 21,; Ba. Enclsd garage $615. Ca II 64G-5296 or 54().. 7559 Westcliff large 2 Br. 1 Ba. Patio. pool. Adults, no pets. 645-81.52. Lge 2br. 2ba, 1 blk lo bch, THE WHIFFlE TREE avail 7 /t/81 $650/Mo. 230 Luxury Adult units at af· Cedar 645-6586 fordable living. 1,2 & 3 - Br. Well decorated. 2Br2 Ba lblkto bch. Yr· Olympic size pool, tight· ly, gar, adlts no pets ed tennis court. Jacuzzi. SS50 + uul.675-1706 park hke landscaping Most bt>aul1fuJ bldg. in H.B From $395. 846-0619 DELAWARE PINES APTS. Beaut Npt Condo. 2bdrm 2ba. den. spit levl. cthdrl eel. lg pvt patio. atchd dbl gar w/door opnr. on pool & pkwy. Adult rom· un. $700. 645 7 386 or 646-5384 Spacious 1 & 2 Br. Apt. Frplc, pool & lndr y lac. From S450. Adults only . BEACH YRLY REN· no pets. 19221 Delaware TALS lBr & bachelor. St. Hunt. Och 842·8807. Jones Rlty673-6210 2 BR, t •~ ba Avail June San Clemet1te 3176 12 S475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962 2S75 2 BR 2 BA CONDO On golf course $500 Deluxe poolside xtra , 492-6700 ~~~:r 21b~. ~~~ !1!~~: Sovttt LCICJlllMI 3116 Adlts, no pet.s. $450 mo. •••!'••••••••••••••••••• 536-8362. 2 Br. Condo· Oet>an vtew, pool.$500. 492-6700 MARINERS W AU< 2 Br. 2 Ba. Townhouse Apartmetllls FwWshed Apl From S495. Patios. or Unfunllshed 3900 single car garage, near ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hunt. Harbour 840-6807. S E A W I N D 2Br, 2Ba Warner & Spr· ingdale Gar. upstairs 1 VILLAGE child ok. no pets. S450 New 1&2 bdrm luxury S 1 e rr a Mgmt Co. adult apt.s In 1' plans 641-1324 from 5"0. 2 bdrm from LUX CONDO front 1 Br Pierpoint condo. n r beach. Auto gar. pool, spa, tennis, laund, patio, Crplc. $485/mo. 962-5409 --- $500 + pools, lenni.s. waterfalls. ponds! Gas fo r cookmg & healing paid. From San Diego Frwy drive North on Beac h to McFadden then West on McFadden Like new 2bdrm . 2ba , to Seawind Village. ram rm. Crplc, gar. no (7141893-Sl98. children/pets $420. Call ----- Mack: 962-7788. Rooms 4000 Call 960-2675. - • •••••••••••••••••••••• SEAi.Aii MOm • ' t • . • " . --• .. • I \ I I I 1 ~, ... ~ . ,. ·~ , . .. . ----- \ Orange Cout OAtLY. P.ll.:.OJJF.rlday, June 12, 1981 ~!!.~.~ ...... ~?!~ ~~ ......... !?.~~ ~~:'!.~ ..... !!.o W..ted 7t00 etpW.W 7 100. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -IMl•/tlmttl/ ... me. Fem. Germ. Shepherd, i. ... 111!1111111111111111111111111-.. •I ... CC,......,...... apx. 1 yr old, blk "t11n, Gre4itCn••Y "' _.., __ f 1 di 1•t •••e .__.-..A-P IT ao hr;, 1/p, air 1oaa... Rmsn•l• wanted In plush Approx UOO I\, jth Or. •••"•••••••••••••••••• ~:;~11 P~ft 2 l~1~1~: waterf~b::. N8. ·~~;-:Bi .. t SOOS r e n Y • " .,.., • SMOun. payroll. Exp In com _a_l_·l_G30 ________ , 2' Hn. 641 U180 puter t•nninat data en· BAlllNG R E w A R D . L o s t • c..;c11ec1ia lry ht!PfUI Irvine area Accou payablt. payroll, lnvolct reallter " •c· counUn1 reportt. Boat Ina knowleda• dttlr• ble Sff p,trh:k Udo Shipyards 900 Lido Park Dr. NB. 673 7272 ~. lat & tut. Paul, ----••••••••••••••••••••••• 760 7024 Sm•U l mlUI office In ex· BEAUTY SHOP (op FM/While, short hair AMIXP/MC/YU. Maouhcturina Co Newport Ct-ntcr of Po I n t er. 6 4 2 · 8 8 H ; l~~~~~=~~~I MARTRON 5'6-SS43 baa an lmmffilate ecullvt 1wte mo-mo ren tloaal> w/M\10lnln1 2br, M/Pwante<Hoshr3bdrm hi. Laauna Hilla Iba, ffmily home. Xlnt a pt w /i u y Ir •lrl S225/mo.111n -•1 comm l.lot,5%aaawn. 642·3151 AdmlniJtraUve ng (or a Bookkeeper/Part time, accounta payable. typ- ing, flexible hours, La-una ~ach location 499-<&571. • • ----lo.n A rut lnvettm nl $250/mo + utll Ci d~p. ,llMI IA YNOMT PP Ale &s U!Mss for~• Found: White medium n fANJASJ SI 000/MO male do& 6/4/81. Nr * Summt>r or Carttr BalbOa.,.., S'JHOTT. Office IPIC., Janltorl•I. Hie. (T14>e.52-763Z let It --Newport Deb by Santa . parktn1. etc. Owner rln1 ___ _ I Bdrm beach house. Ana Raver 2bd, 2ba, 5TS.l003. Real Estate Orrlce ror Brooknursl • Bolu. Secretarial. market.ins. Westminster 5"31·1.568 *STUDIO* warebowie fr other Poll Fou.nd Lh.aao AJ>IO mate lloos W~ 1lres.s neat •P Ci1fopa del Mar 3 Br. 2 Ba. awlmmlng pool, '" blk lo beach. $900/week. Avail. 6·15. 673·1600 Marlt. )Ii F.W PORT OCEAN Ji'RONT Lux, 2-4 Br. Wk· l)i. 673-SURF.673-7877. 50' from sand. Nwpl Bch Sharp, clean 1 br apt. $250/wk; 2 br, $350/wk Jun~ loquire abou1.July 6 Aug. 675-81Z7, 997.0432 aarage. 54895811 Plush offices, ~6000 sq a a I e . Comp I e t e I y Ma1nolla It Garfield, IMUtthil pearance. Must have HD •11 c II""" •1•~ r rf., ........ R--s lranspo. CaU l0am·3pm • u · a """""• 'W --" wkdays. (714)847·2422. use apt-Fall '81, to shr, 27th St. adj to row. Own br, USO mo. or s hr wl rmmate or cholct> $175 mo •'em. onl;y 644~0634 ;~0173 Rmmte toshr hse u\ H.B. non-amkr, S220 + ~ util. 963-06'70 Professional wo rking rem, German w/well behaved 8yr daughter, would like to move into existing home. CdM, or Nwpl Sch To shr rent. Ref avail 640-9494 Wed· Sat. Barbie Jennie ft, 1801 N~rt Blvd, equipped. Al locat100 in C.M. 846-9495 Newport Beach . On Found: Approx 6 m os male GennanSht>pherd. v i c . B e a c h Blvd /Talbert HR 842·0160 Airport Exec, office, phone ans, coflee, Janitor, lncl Secretarial svce on premises. S325. 9S7·9331. H•tl1M)loe1 lch 525 • carpeted, p'nelled, co n fe r e n ce room S42s lmo. 9U5647 WATERFRONT PCH. Bjorn. 640-5357 Corree Shop For Sate, Ide.I Ma & Pop opera· tlon G real location kS,000. Call Christina Los t · cat . brown fem, 557·2783or646-32SS A&t calico tummy. 1,,i white MOMy to Loe. 5025 . lower chin, nr Victoria & •••• •••• ••••••••••••••• Canyon. 645·0892 NEED MONEY? Huve investors for secu.re 2nd TD loans. Bkr. 848·500.S Lost: M Siamese cat. w/brown collar. Balbou Pen. 675·2ai8, 63l·U90 Mo~ Tl"Ult LOST: Beige Tabby male Deed1 5035 cat, neutered. Reward ••• •• •• •••••••••••••••• Bal Penln, 675-3808 Sattter MtCJ. Co. The Beach area's closest & most exotic reading studio 81.25 .Bolsa Av , Midway City (2 blocks E or Beach beb.ind 11· quor store). Open loam 3am da1lyexccptSun. 543-9243 SOOTH ING MASSAGE ror D1scnmtnaUng men Call Peter 494-4871 AFTERNOON •DELIGHTS• ADVBmSING Acct Coordinator TWO actt execut1 vu need a highly-motivated acct coordtnator with lop akills & agency ex· perlence. Ambiance is fast paced, but warm & rriend ly' with growth pqtentlal. lnlerested ., Pfease call Mary Ann 979-7000 AEROBIC Instruc tor Exp'd. only. Npt Bch. area. 759·1'58 , ..... 11 rs per weelt > rlence n ot re· -traloing will ~ ed Fargo Bank offers ndlng benems and nlal working al· ere For more an lion-please call. --4-640..6900 ~@ 111$: (ELLS ~RGO ~ANK IOOU98 FUUCHA.ltGI f'lnanctal Statements. P/R Taxes. saJea taxes. non-amkr, CPA Firm. C.M Call Mr Tracy 7~·1040 IOOtCKHrlll Pull Charge Bkkpr 1m· med1ale optnang for mature eicperlenced <Min imum 5 yrs) full ch arge bookkeepn in loan brokerage co. local· ed fashion Island area Accuracy & venalll.aly 1n dealtng with all aspects ol record keep- 1 n g Sal ary range S 1100 + . Ca 11 K a 11 e 'LA~S TAHOE·m'otion Fem rm mat~ to shr love· picture producer'• tux. ly 3 BR 2 Ba Turtleroclt 4 bdrm, < 2 maste r hme. $350. 546-3814 dys, bdrms), 3ba. 2 lrgtrplc1, 7SO..O'll2 eves. Exec uti ve Suites Prestigious locataoo Professional environ· ment. Quality Recep· tionls ts services pro- vided . Secretarial service available. Call C prol C hand ler 71 4 /846 ·5528 o r 213/592-SS l S. Peters Landing Exec. Suites 16390 PCH. Suite 200, H.B. All types or real estate in vestmentss1nce 1949. Found : black & whlw M Home/Office/Hotel dog. vie. Heil & Bolsa * 972-9773 * 640-9350 6'..port Center Dr. A gen l 's Assist a n l . )Ort Beach, Ca 8 0 0 K K E E P I N G needed, Newport/ln 1ane ppEmplm/f/h P t ame . Apply at · Spedal1itMJ lilt ZadTDs Chica. H.B. 840-2264 _ 24 Hrs. Now Hiring Found Tame Dove or 1~M~C~~~~~~V~l~SA~ Pigeon. white Vac 1- area, L.A. Times Exp. Crown Haniware. 1024 Dependable. CalJ Dave. 1.-r .. ;;;;;;;~~---t Irvine (Westcllff Plaia >. fJm rm/den w/convert.l· wanted, resp, fem rm- ble tleeptng fac. Acroas mate. to shr Irvine bme. from beaut. Burnt Cedar $170 mo. 1st, Ja.st & sec. Beach•. nr. Hyatt Hotel Avail. 711/81. M9-00SO 642·2 171 545-0611 Tustin 119lh Costa Mesa. 642·4336. ~6-_0235_ ---1• ek NB ae Cauno, Inc l i ne ~----"-----1 VilJage. Incl cable TV 2500' CONDO on lovely w j l h 2 4 I hr s of Greenbelt w/spaclous "$bowtime" movie1 patios &t s undeck, or Also avail Chriscraft pool. SS7·7883or64~339 plusure, f15hing. waler ski boaJ. SlsO/day or Fem rmmte wanted to Sl50/wk. Fine ref's a shr 3br h1e, H .~. must. (114)760-.9204, $190/Mo. incl. ut1I. -Cle•o· 892-1684 ~op, skip & a Jump from the beach. JW'le 15·30. 831· 7231 Lori or Bob We have a super vanety of summer rentals Mosl F under 25 shr 2br, 2ba condo nr S. Coast Pl. pool. spa. $237 incl ulil. Marilyn 53&-3909 days. 540-9743 eves of them walking das ---- EXECUTIVE SUITES In HBITA4H Pl.AXA New luxury office space in Irvine's busiest center! Easy frwy ac· cess. AvaJI now! Call for details. 551-1231 Want Investor k>r Npt bayCronl home. Give well secured Isl or 2nd T.D. Agt,675-6161. WIDOW has money ror T D.'s. $10,000 up! NO C REDIT ./. No pnlly Call agl. Eileen. 673-7311 Do you need Sl.SOO & up. 2nd or 3rd TD on your home or wlit. Cal}. Bkr 213/439-lb39 Found Gennan Shepherd white female. German Sheph e rd trl colored male. Also a Lazard. Newport Beach Animal Shelter 644·3656 Found: 6/9 Shep max Yng Mal e, nr Bea c h /Westminister Blvds. 893-3102 Found: Domestic rabbit, NON-PROFIT AMo•c......ts/ or YMCA. C.M., Nwpt Organ.izaUon. 52</sq fl, renotf.WJla/ I 548-0028 off Garden Grove Fwy & Lo1t & Fomld I Lost: Siamese M l'al, Beach Blvd 898-0029 ••••••••••••••••••••••• needs medication. re ANM>•c:.....ts 5100 ward, C.M 646 0649, lance to beaches. Call us Bdrm. Female only for help in cbooeing your 2S-30. 1 bloc k from "Summer Place". be a c h • B a I b o a Waterfront Homes Inc. Peninsula. Frplc, \'a ult 600 sq ft Office Suite. ground noor $600/Mo. Pacific Plaza 234 E. 17lh St CM. See Bldg Mgr 645-3120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-7932 631•1400 ed ceihng. patio S.275 Mo. 673 6438 Eves. NEWPORT BEACH 975·1024 Days Ask for Weekly renlals, block Brian. from ocean & bay -M-a-le_n_eeds--a-pl to share 631·1400 W-•-..r H 1 or Look together, N.8. -... ronl om-. nc area. s:ts-imaays Chris IEACHFROMT Female roommate ror 4 Br. 2 Ba. Completely oice 2BDRM apt C.M. furn decorator home. 5'8·4556 after6pm No pets. $000 per week --- for June. 644 9582 or Easygoing M F 20 <!S to 2131827·5109 shre 3 bdrm 34thSl. NB ,___ yrly $250 673 0118. Summer Wee~ly Rl'ntals 6.12pm. 745 l006. 4 9pm Balboa Perunsula Jbr. Reggie lba $600/Wk. 2br . lt>a - - $400 /Wk . bt'lween Freerenttoremalt'inex· bay/bch. 673-4459 change for keeping non ~ Br. Furn June S225 Week July high e r 615-2910 Open ~aguna Beach. Charm lng new 1 Br. on ocean. Furnished. No pets or kids. $800 Mo. S550 2 Weeks. 213/947 6437 . 714/499· 104.5. smoking vegetarian's N B house in order 675-0481 after6pm Foxy fem rmmte wanted to shr hse S200 Mo CM Randy 645 50'73 Frm 21 + resp non-s mkr shr 3br s210 + I J ut1l NB 631'6367 ummer Renlals from Goroqe1 $200 wk. Oen fronts from forll...t 4350 $300 wk J ones Raty ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67'3-62~--Daily shop space avail Vocotion R...tals 4250 ror rent. to work oi:i c~rs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• for body work. paantmg. or mech. Compressor LAGUNA IEACH avail. 498-0176, 498-9359 Rome or beach, quiet eves St., 3 bdrms. S6oo wkly JuJy 4.94-9638 E l side C. M., pvt, su1lable lus1M11 Rt.tal 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For store & office space at reasonable rates. 500 to 4000 Sq Ft. MESA VERDE DR PLAZA 1525 Mesa Verde E. C M. 545-4123 PRIME RETAIL LOCATION MODELS/ ACTORS Busy O.C. casting ofllce has .. afler strike" mo t 1on picture casting ac- count.s .. Non-union extra work for fun, SS. credits Interviews Fri/Sat, June 12 & 13. M/F, 18·25 yrs old. dependable transportation. no ex perience 558·86~~a_pp't Lott & FOWtd 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~!2i~· FOUND ADS OuhtGllrlftcJ Strfft ARE FREE .s .. ldetltfty. Found: Brownash black r abbit. Nr Baker & Bnstol Call Jim 752 1058 8·5 Found. Ladae's key rase nr Villa Nova & Cornell. C.M. 545-<alil SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS Boyish Lilal' Slush Damper PlJBU C Now l know why they call at lake home pay After all the deductions. there isn't much lert to spend in PUBLIC Found: Blk rabbit. 300 bllt of Broadway. CM 642-Z742 M•.W.Tenns. Cal~ FOUND:Oold bea11 v1c. Call 6 75•S662 Superior/P.C.H please 642-5678 describe Till.Je 833 5252 ----··--------·! 8·5 RETAIL SPACE 770 sq ft on Harbor Blvd in C M. Only 65' sq. fl Great exposure Realonorrucs 675-6700 For sub lease 1100 sq fl. MacArthur Square. NB. xlnl terms (7 14 )752-0089. Retail Office Space 700 sq ft WestcliH area Newport Bea c h 759·1SSO LOST Golden Retreiver Male Wht collar "King" Vi <' NB R e w ard 640 1373 LOST Wedding Ring CdM High School area REWARD. 83.1-7517 FOUND : Doberman Female VlC H B High School 963-5076 ----Penonals 5 350 ...•.....•.•........... FIRST LADY Escort. Models rarty 0-.cen. * 972-1349 * MC I& VISA Accepted for storage. $40 mo. Reward for info· Obi yellow head Amazon parrot green & yellow. famllY pet Please call, n o questions asked. 536·5763. UERTO VALLARTA ~5284.~6010 Cowrd al CONDO R...toh 4475 Lost : Parrot. REWARD. COVER GIRL * OUTCAU. * 953·0778 MC/VISA Weekly rental. 7/16 lhru Offlc• R...tal 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S pecial pet. Green 11'12 . 7/2'J thru "!''l!J. On ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnl loc . 571 W. 19th St. Amazon , r ed h ead . ~ch , pool, dally mead AIRPORT AREA CM 1600' S900/Mo. 10 Reward for Info thal 1---------rervice . restaurant, Furnished or un · parking spaces.642-5851 leads to sighting. Call Costa Vida. S4SO per furnished Executive Tito Olivares at 496-6932 week. Or trade for'> Call Suites in lrvme. walkang lndatrial ll...tal 4500 or Iv msg al 4S:J.ll71 or Dane 557.3534 distance to Airport All ••••••"•••••••••••••••• 661 1845 services a vail 2082 $675 Approx 2265. In· ----. Arrowhead N. Shore flVfl. 4br, 2ba. + loft, s l p s 12, $595 /Wk . 622-8631 Michelson, Suite 212. d us·110 ff1ce. 18101 714·752-0234 Redondo Cr. "T ". Hunt Bch. 842·2834 Lost Mini m ale Schnauzer; gry. 2 teeth m issing. CdM. Reward. 760-1644, 558-3324 * FOXYLADY * OUTCALL ONLY VISA MC * 97~1138 . SHE E S & •• SPIRITUAL READINGS l Oam lOpm Fully Lic'd. 492·7296 or 492-9034 1815 S . Camino Real. San Clem J-Speciat SS.00/0FF THE GirHriends •ESCORTS• Home/ Offke/Hotel * 972-9772 * Male Female Escort MC VlSA I won $1.100 Sat & Sun at H oll ywood P ark . I packed S 1'.:Xactas Sat & 3 on Sun plus 5 other Wtn· ners for the 2 days For $35 I wall handicap all 9 race!> for any day Call 731 6-0SS LADIES goodlook1ng white mall' 25 set•ks In· terestang work. walling to tra \ t!I John 675 -8384 A.IDIS For active retirement com munit y 3:30-11 :30pm. Pleasant. good benents. Npt. Heh 631 3SS5 A.IDES 5 11 30. P IT. Apply Newport Villa. 642-5861 ARTSTIJDENT T ahlrt printer has entry level position. $3.35/hr to start. 645-8431 ASSEMIL Y GIRL Plastics expenence pre £erred, but will tram Mus t speak Eng lash 642·1026 --- ASS EMBLY W O RK P ltime for small brass valve manufacturer nr Marine base, Irvine Woman. 30-50 yrs. 4 6 hrs, 5/days week 557 7283 betw9-lpm ASSEMBLERS Loe. Mi.ssioo Viejo co needs Assemblers w 2 yrs exp Candidates must have gd munual dexterity. gd eyesii;:hl, 8u111ne!>~ owner & dl' neat in appearance & dt> \l'lupcr JU!>l broke uH a pendablc Work IS an life ver} long relat1onsh1p i.u pport medical l'let• with an exl·ept1 onally tronacs. Gd benefits beautarul lad} Startmlo( Onl y r espon sib l e from scratl·h. have met persons seeking perma many G u·s Li .e right nent emplymt. need aµ on the beach Born ply Call · Mrs ParellJ. I 581 3830 12 30 30. 5'11". t75 bs. 1 ________ _ not rat ' Non smoker. dlampagnednnker. lo\ es lo cook candlelight dinners . beach walk & travel. Lmes life & ad· venture Nn fat ladies please' Write J eff al 2602 Newport Bird. N B 92663 or call 675 '!h11 Looel) but !>ecure. at traclt\ ('single male. 39. seek& single woman or fin.rnc1al mciependence an her 30s who as altrac tive. short 1under 5 feet 5) with nice rigurt!, intellige n t. liberal· minded yet sincere. sportsmmded tbkes lo play tennis. golf> & without children. Prefer someo11e in Lag una Beach. south coast area who has plenty of time lo share in late anemoon. early evening tennis, games . beach walks. etc No pros or phonies. Please write to P 0 Box 836, C IO Daily Pilot. P .O Box 1560. Costa Mesa. Ca. 926216 Attor n ey famalaar w l'Onstruct1on pruc tH·es, legal & contral· tual Gd background req. 642-8100 Attract1\'e female lo work part or full time on cruise promotion tip lo S120 per day Call John 714 '675·5020 Auto. body & render man. exper Own tools, earn so··~ of labor. 498-0176. 498·9359 eves. LOT A TTEHDAMT Wanted immediately! No phone calls PLEASE! Apply 1n person to Chuck Murphy at TOYOT.A·YOLYO ''""..._.,. ... c ....... .. "•O·tJOl • S40·t 4'7 BABYSITTER w al& to leach ahopping. Lag. Niguel. f'11m. 3 BR, 21>-2 BA. pool. 1•ted commW'lity. June a:2·Aug. 22. 1617 Westcliff. N.B. Want financial Inst. 70005.f. ut. Ooor. Agent 541-5032. 8.700 sq. rt. office + warehouse Irvine In· dustrial 35< triple net. Call 646-1064 or inquire Marosa Co. 16TS3 Noyes 957-9266. Brkr. Coop in· vlted. LOST: Silver, Persian. l5lh Sl on Peninsula REWARD. 675·3045 or 649-2200 C 0 R TS MODEUNG 835-91" &.Dlo~ & --------,,.;on.tioft My home. 2kids. 112 & 3, M·F 7:30am-lpm, S2/hr. Own lrans. Nr 54lh St . N B. 631-5335 4tJ.S201. 49J.6l IZ •Se...d U.illcJ* Counselors to personally ~ct your compatible rmmte to suit your lifestyle. Sbated-Livin&. 113 Dover Dr Suite 31 NB 631-1801 HEWron HACH Convenient Penin1ula location across rrom Ci· ty Hall. Executive style omces w/full services avail. From 215 sq.ft . and up. No lease re· quired. Call 673-3002. Ptestiglowi Office Space. 3 Window ofnces availa· bte tn ftdt Rrritt Lotgal Suite in Newport Center. Avail. now! 640-5640 MESA IMDUSTRAL PARK 711 w. 17ttL St. CottaMna,CGlf. '42-4461 * 1870.5650 sq. It. Umll avail for occupancy late June. •One 2700 sq I\ Warehouse & 710 sq ft orrice avalJ rot i m· mediate occupancy. •33•-35" yer sq. ft Leuina office hn. Mon thruFrlM NEWPOltT l!ACH Full service e.xec. of· fices from $391. ''On Call" exe<!. offices from $105. racld:t. a«retarial, phone ans , word pro- cessing, telex, qwip. 'mEHtADQUARTERS COMPANIES ltewtohW..t.d 4600 714/8Sl.(l681 ••••••••••••••••••••••• L..-• . $20 per hr for open space COl.f'UKATI 11.AIA for big party with live 8SO sq rt, 3 offices band, big yards. dtiv w/recepOon, plush int. waya etc. AAY wk end Ocean View. 758·1.S:iO Fri/Sat n.lahla of •um· 2400 sq f\; Nwpt Ctnt.tr 1280 aq fl·Dovt r Dr. Xlnl ralel I• Nn_port .B each. C all K lm Joet&*lan, "-• TJl. UU mertlme In non · residential area, in H.B. area or wtlhJn 10 ml. 538-8132 Brian. Pleue leaveumtlsnwnber ---------·t······················· Found: lame rabbit, Spr· lngdale & PCH, H.B. SWEETHEARTS •ISCOITS* 24HOURS Vl.aa/MC 972-9773 847·9671 wkdys8:J0.5 , ________ _ Use "'6wtf At/ service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will apl>f'ar in your classif led ad "" . we take your messages 24 hours a day . . . you call in at your. convenience during office hoUrs and get the r9'5P0nses to your ad . . . this service Is only $7 .SO week. For more ln.forma· tlo" and to place yo_ur id cell M2-S671. 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Kindergarden teachers have summer program. Reading, s wimming, field trips. Monday thru Friday 548-4115 ----· Compa ni o n . lite housework ~ per hr. or once a week cleaning S25·S3S per day Do er rands. garden. etc refs .. trans .. Barbara 548-0061 7am·6 Mao seeks interesting "work. good S. CM area. R ef's ava il. Alan 545-0346 EXPERIENCED . Mature Waitress (50) seeks employment . 548·0270 HtlpW~ 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BABYSITTER-Matyre woman to babysit mrant an our home w /rer·s CdM. Call 675-7937 8AM· 2PM Mon-Fri. in Cd~~er7 yr. 875-3907 Eve -BABYSITTER Housekeeper needed 8 : 45.5: ts Mon· Fri ror s ummer. Reliable leenaaer w/ref's OK. $90/Wk. 963-6281 PANDNEEDED for wedding. No agents, pluse. 857-2026 evs Banking TELLER Permanent. Part Time PoelLion available In our So. Coast Plan ofc. Ex per. preferred. Please c:onlact : Kathy Amburgey ~40!!6 ! ... '~ARY II IOOKKEEPER F/C Newport Beach property mgml. firm Career opp ty for bright mdi\'. with prior F IC ex per t..:all 640.0123 It L.uld enjoy work ln' lwih surround an s our New port C-ffice and can!-~~~~-~~~~ mt~ reqwremenl.5. Wt\>live us a call? r-•1•ookbeaM----·C-le•ril-• W~ currently in· Growing efectfunic dis· terv1g candidalet> tr1butor seeks highly or- wlth\\inimum or 6 ganized. aell-mot.ivt1led m o p r e \' 1 o u s person to work an Credit secr•l experienn•. De pl Ex c e 11 o P · exce typing skill& por lun1t1es & co 160 l!Wpm l and the benefits Call Amy, ab11Jt communat·ate 556·3880 errecy i--------- E x44{1t starl ing salat~ bene£1b For mot\formation, ple~•4, BOOKKEEPING Accts. lit Ten-y 7140.9321 Receivable I pegboard Strong colle<.'tions. ADP payroll. bank reconcalia- tion. some fibng & bank· ing. Call· M6-8811 CilJllERS WAMTED Irvine/Newport Beach area Early AM dehvery or LA Time s $4 .25+ mo Sturfers needed also L'all J ess 546-0235 Carriers 660 N~center Or N~ Beuch Equalbimpl m /£1 h Bankingl._ . MEW AK>UHTS REP~ATIVE Hegaster ~ewspaper has ammed. openings ror af"' ternoon auto earners in · Laguna Beal'h & Laguna Niguel ~ust be ovtr 18 years old & have an economical car Work 3 30.5 30pm week<tays. 5 7am weekends ~am SSOO-S600 monlhl> ,CaU Mr Ensle)9517113 CASHIER F IT & P T Newport Beach & lr\'ine area. Lel1c1a : 644-4460 Curren ttxi availa bl e in 'llNewport Beach di~ mus t-x peraenc~ ~ aC'cts .. Ira Keod ~rd Typ ang 40-4Sf 1 Sa' ings pos1t1ons ala veal an 1 .. ________ _ new Lag'8l.11lls ok •• Contact : JohJ\Ul 714-6'/!'(>0 LA.RIJ.AL SAvtk E.O.E. 6 • Mi f' BICYCLE MfC.\1cs & Salespersons~ for lge bicycle 1tor~me exp. pref'd. A\y in per~on only: Sl\~icy· cle World, 2146 ~port 81 .. CM -----,.__ IOAT CLEA.H~ 8 hrs per wk. l r hr. Boat in Cd~f. 83 . CASHIERS UTDTEM MARKETS For 2nd & 3rd Shafts We promote to ma.nage- ment & supervJSion from within WA NTACAREeJl? Costa Mesa 111 Del Mar 631 9421 Laizuna Beach 49'1 9'l3.1 Huntington Beach 962-9116 IOOKJCEE:rER. F.t For realty mgmt. \>. 1---------• P .T . nr Coa,t Hw 1 y/Dover. 95S-239L t CASHIER Houseware sales. /\pply i n p e r s on · c rown * 10()1(~ Hardware. 1024 rvine Accounting experi~n tWestcliff Pla1.11 >. N!._ Part-time or full tun 631-6941. CATERING Serva<* nds -------•• food prep. wQrkers. S4. hr. Working hrs SAM· IOOtCKEIPH 10 key. Ute phones a typing. Xlnt benefit full or part time. 540.714 tPM . MF Lori 's Kitchen. 'Y.111 S. Harbor Bl.. S.A .. 979.0747 for ap~·- , . ~. ) 'I '· ( I , ~ 1981 TOYOTA STANDARD BED PICKUP 4 1peed tr.nemilaion, one touch tenoate panel and this one 11 fully factory equipped. (014974). 19111 TOYOTA STANDARD BED PICKUP 4 1peed traM. factory air ~. one touch tailgate panel, chlOme bumper, MPX redio & Ultra mirrors. (014'24). 1981 TOYOTA 5 SPEED 'DELUXE STANDARD BED PICKUP This one hu a 6 speed transmillion, windOw peckege, one touch tailgate panel & is fully factory equlpC)ed. (015583). 1981 irOYOTA ~ TON LONG BED PICKUP 4 •Pffd tranamisaion, one touch tailgate panel and this one 11 fully factory equipped. (028158). 1981 TOYOTA 5 SPEED 6 1'~.~~:L~!~~l?.~!l?~~!!~. chrome bumper & Ultra mirrors. (015326) . 1981TOYOTA5 SPEED DELUXE ST Atl>ARD BED PICKUP Thi• one has a 5 speed trwllmi.llion, wtndOw package, one touch tailgate J*lel & Is fully factory equipped. {016090) ,1~1 .TOYOTA LONG IED PKXUP 4 lpeed tran1mlulon, AM.fM mono r~lo. Ultra mlrrora, chrome bumper & one touch tellgate.panel. (026188~ · INVOICE 55742~ 5747575 · Sunroof, end. deflector, metallic paint. alloy wflffla. A~M stereo. air cond. & In lmm.culate condition! (608UJY). 4 eyl .. 6 Speed trans .• pwr. -.mo & brakea. AM-FM stereo caHette, aunroof, tinted gll88. ltMI radial tlrH. low miles & look• NEW! "42&ZBX . -4 eyl.. -4 ~ tranamiaalor\ m1g wheeta, AM.fM stereo~ & morel Great utllltyl (1Y:M19$). Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12. 1981 PWS s9900 IKE'S PRICE J J I 6 cvt .. automatic trans .. air cond., pwr, ltHrlng..brake..windowa. tinted ~-. cn.ilte control, AM-FM stereo CMMtte & ~rel (031WKR). .. . .. . . e ~ . . . . ... . . . ' . • . . . • --------- ' I I , Orange Co•t D~LY PILOT/Friday, JuM 12, 1981 C.IMIS.v... oiltr .. t.r ... 1119 ••...... .. .............. \ ............................................................................................................ . lllom wlll lllJlb)'d, any Con.atruct.lon·Alll7pee e A I D I M I M • Wanta REALLY CL£AN Movlo1? TM Starvlna DB'• PAlNTlNG ROOFINGSJNCE193'7 a1e, aa1 lln M·F. my 201:::1,· FrM•t. WAMTm HOUSE? Call GlD11Nim eou.,.~ MovU,1 Int/Ht. NM&, reliable, All type1 Incl. ..-p&Jl"I Is K.B. bolM; •7112 Uc. f · MJ.llTJ Mowln1 edl1U rack· Girl. l'reeelt. "5-513.1 Co. h.a1 po;m.. lnaured refl. Dave...,._ evs 1no.wcoaU..,. State le a .. -. ;;:-.. • toi 1wHplni' Fr.. um• 1ood Hrvlce. mi.a 2S4At ~ 00 yd 1 uo8Y8ua.,...Q MU SO. iNJW tttl~at• '41·0Nt or ROBIN'SCLEANING tTIU·08 LlcenH. OOCKNEE.06PAINTf •--a.' ............ , Coalt Pleil M -. all ••••••••••••••••••••••• . · Servi....__ •~u•hJv .,,.l .,,... R -•-r '"""" ma"".., Qlft.a. IR·IMI i·-Deywall8~lallat ...s nn. cle~-;;;;~msi ... -· ~~m;im,';t. _w.:_,_seoo _____ d$-_997_ E•tractioocleanla& re Q\aal. 4 prod. New• re· UNIQUE Care ot your ABC MOVING, Ex per S• .. 111•1 vivucolor/treahneu. mod •• _...532-5541 landacaplna. We do HoueboldServicea ++ prof, low rat.ea. qulck PAINTlNG, c1utom •• .. ••••••••••••• .. •••• 117-4I01 ••lrklll apeclallzed rnalnt, d•· Tailored to lndlvldual . carefuhervice. ssi.ouo wor-. 25 yrs exp. Muy LOCALSANDSLASTER ............ ••••••••••.. tallln1. 6 clean·"-PI· Call Wk\)'. blmonlbly. Satia, "MOVIN·MAN" local ref1. Uc-. '°3Nl. Uc, tna. reu. No job too Ce ... Ac111tlc ll:LEt:TRJCIAN -prlcod ua 5!9-4117 1\Jar. Nwpt area 8 yrs. 11 careful cou.fleoul " Bonded, w. l'rff etit:l bl /1maU. N0-7908 ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• rtihl ''" Htlmate on H Our Brother's Keeper, b Pis' all642-l329 Hutcbiaon,913..oeu. Ac:OUIUC CtlUn•• + l•r"~ or 1maU Jobi •'»'-• 131·4111 (9-5) _c_e_a_p_. __ c _____ 1.._..__ W _. · ... • ' •••••••••••............ -'-11.J..-I r-., ~nef m 'J Is lnd\lltrlal Dust cuatomhandtell}~ln·· l.lc. UINMlaJ rra.035• uoMEJUPROU£U•NT Housecleanina-rellable ir-...,,,...... .. ..................... fr•e 1ale/fa1t ' Bert Uc._.. --SM --" .. .., •.:. d job• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-•-rto ...i .. t d l ..._ "' ' . ....................... llefwtle1/111t Remodelln&-Oddjobe 1ood work, atea Y • Tbe P H P 1 &11..-r ...-n es in • ~$4e-57U Broadway Data Open C ..... /~ , ...... ••••••••••• .. ••• •1rsuper. g?t-ZMS Refs.14&-7229afl.4. l.o.ata~peDec:'::r' q:i aialn~~~ance for home .... -__ -~-........a-....a-c---1--~-- Hou1e-Typln1 Word ....................... rormlc1C.:OW\ttrtope He• ..... ..._..... ·,. C'6-""7 "-1 or 0 ce. Planl It! ~ ...... __ __..._ Procesaln& Service Foundatlont1 Rttalnln1 <'uatumbullt.•lnalalled, JedlofAIT1'edtt __ .,.. &''""""•·.....,ve ... ._.. 5Sl·2'9t. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8/19181. MS Broadway, Walla, HUll1de R"tura• lat t \•Ulul'I • dulana. Call Jack, 87$-3014 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •STEVENS PAINTING --~/I--'-Skilled Staff for all Sec· ~~~~~~~~I Santa Ana. lloo Slabe Pat1oe ~· t 04041'71 DON'TBEEMPJ'Y, I · iied n .. ......-'"r-' tr'l/WP Jobi. Thellead-Bloek •Brick: l.lt''d ' tHtl -CONCRETE Ir BRJCK THIRSTY OR LONELY lnt ext. ~ item ••••••••••••••••••••••• quarter1 Companies ._......,Ser¥ke ..... ·-•v•I,,_ ...... ._ __ Ce...-. PLUMBING, ETC. Wult yourbouse, plant.a est. Neat, quality work. Neat patcl\el&lexlures IS1·0681 ....................... ••den _._, --"9W'r ,.;~;~1 •-.... Securit P~ 832 3208 S.-4.56l ._....._ t at•1•39 Professional Staff. Com· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• •••••••• 631·5433 • pew. y us. . • ~•• • .,,. .. _M_a_•_'_s_S_e_c_r_e_t_a_r_i_a_I puter ~ System. •llWICll I SOM Pool Deokt and P1th>11 l'IWT J.INO. WOOD REASONABLE 631-7587 Ext/int painting, cab. re· ED'S PLASTERJNG Siervke. Typinj, dlctat· The Headquarten Com· BulldeoSince 1947 M11onry, Sport Cou1't1, ln11tulltd/NJ11llred. Lie. PROMPT, FREE EST. Le ..... rs-. fln /stain. Prof. R1nbl. All Types lnt/~'Xt ln1. Pickup/delivery. panles I SH)881 ddll od Un Tennis Oourtl. l.I\•, It. MO Ul"fll.4995142 ALM~EVERY ••••••••••••••••••••••• F~eeest.Steve547-Gl ,..,,..,, FREEST ' • A tons, rem e •• 3'7•087. ISH1181. IMMlnM \AH ....... 258 E . . "5·8638 Azzl•c••~ plana. Free tSt. Rtaa. • ..... Deer0.-1" REPAlRNEEDED Custom Leather SandalJI F' · tin b RI hard ---------.~~••••••;:;w:::'••••••• rates. Llc. 310942. •••••••n •••••••••••••• CHETIKS-4757 The Sandalman makes me paao ' Y c PLASTER PATCHING Stock .......... GUAR. USEDREFa's M9-2l-70 Cw............. RPRIN08/11AtlDWARE H-~ooc1~ tbe best foe your special Sinor. Lie:, tna. 13 >'"of lntiext.30ynexp. •••••-•••••••••••••••• SA.LES &SERVICE Drivewa~a. P.lk • wul Auto Opcirwr1 new doors ...-uw ..._.... Deeds. Call 642-8456 !:!PPnkY N.B63. 'c1':.~omera. Neat •ork Paul 54:>-2977 Stock a. mooey market. Goode........ .,,.., ""5' PENDLETON CONST. dtcka. atrvl~ .. w1Ut1, I.le llob'•IMG·*7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •ua you. • ---------1 tax s helters Steve uuu _.." Room addJUona • ro· foundation• ln1t1ll•d HARDWOOD FLOORS &.o.t " 'I•g Johnston, .. ,... models, h'eeest . ...._, Lie, lll00.U4 t<'NfNl • .,..... CleanecUrWued ....................... COLL~~! ~~Ne!; ....................... "4-2442. ••••••••••••••••••~•·• C t ICC'•"" C~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Anytime 132-4181S A MORTGAGE MONEY exp, • 937 PLUMBING-new con· ---,.--------1 _,, .. ff ('714) 4741 CLEAN Ut"S/LAWN ' . . AVAILABLE leu ! Alex 851· l , atructlon, remodeling, Sw iltgU..0- Driveways, parkinl. ot ••••••••••••••••••••••• Maintenance Lndacp H..lltg $20,000toS2SO,OOO M2·0231 repair•: restaurant, ••••••••••••••••••••••• repalra, 1ealcoatan1. All Around Carpenter. -Free Ht. 642•9907 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ho,.._ PaywMh PAPDHAM49IH.:. electronic leak de~ec· Will instruct childrell to t~d Asphalt. 631-'199 Finish It Rou1h. ~ QUALITYCONCRltTC --Haul, cleanup.concrete UptolS/yrstorepaL 25 yraexp Freeest µon. Top Hat Plumbrna. awlm at your home. c · Eat. John '175-8082 All TYPN Ccmoni Work Qardenln11. landacaplna. removal. Dump true•. PRIME FINANCIA Fut neat reliable 636·2030 Reas RoblWe-1042 aft 7 ASPHALT REPAIRING All Types Remodeling & Im-~ tree trlmmlo11 & re· Qukkaerv.642·7631 SERVICES s7/roit&up.64S-<M!JO P_rt.hd ___ C_lrctlih--. ---• Seakoau.n1•Strtplng Repairs, top quality, l7 SAVE50"'o Wem•keolcl moval, 01""0r cltian·up, DUMPJOBS 527-3477 ....................... Tlltoriltg Comm/~id.Freeestw yrslnuea.Uc'd. concrete look new l No ~eit.752-l3'9 s aUMovingJoba AGAPEFORCE TenantProblems? ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie. Ull73S2 IUs.8 Mr. Palombo,962·8314 more cracia/1taln1 CALIF GARDEN C~MIKEMS-1391 Mel•ry PAINTINGC~MPANY Malntenancetoobigh? Highly qualified teacher l l I • 1 ,..____, ri · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Generations of ""vi""Ao Nlghtmar-'. will tutor. Reading re-ASPHALT REPAIRS ava n .. co or1 . H'"'t m clean ups ce Un u c:. """' "'"' edl · ·all IJSEALCOATING Room additions, fftlces, Ou1raoteedl Free Eat. • . , Haullng&DumpJobs. BRICKWORK: Small Pam gExce ence. Go with a professional m auon a spec1 ty. Siocel"7 Lic.282263 co~crete work, roofs. New-Crete~ .-neatworlt.6'6-4&5 AskforRandy. Jobi. Newport, Costa 839-5851 Mgmt co. and save. _543_-_6022 ______ _ 646-S900 •95-5i997 patios. Jeny675-8133 TREES 841-Mn Mesa, Irvine. Refs RENTAl.SPAINTED Single families & up. TypllNJ s.nlce •-Lplttlllg C.,,_lc Tit , Topped/removed, clean c ..... Y-•ct 675-3175 I n t I ext . prom Pt . Orange, Riverside & Sao •••••••••••••••••••••• • "' -c-.a C-lc.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l 5 ""76 -"" Bemadlno. Co. Harrison PROF. TYPING ., -...... ~ .. ups, awn renov 7 i.... w le out garaa•• 1 Brlck·Block·Stone Seaside Painting, Greg. • A p M ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• Ceramic Tlle work at re-e c an ...... 538-4806 "' ssoc, rop gmt. On IBM Selectric. die· Babyslttlng at my home 2 Shampoo & steam clean. asonkabdle prlcuiesk1QuaCUt1Y1 Sam Fukumoto YARD I ton truck. $25. S4M769 V:C,h ~27~~5~=· 951-6001 ta phone, statistical, re- yrs. and up. Call Gloria Color bri&hteners, wht wor one q c Y· a MAJNT. & Clean· Ups. HCHIMCe..mg lAIHIOW PIJMTIHG Roofing ports, etc. 979-4155 548-3314. crpts 10 min. bleach. Ron. 8'M337 Tree trimming, small ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wanted: Small Jobs Exta Intl. custom. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Witdo t'"'--'-- BA 8 y SITTING my Hall, liv.-<l.ln. rms $15; CMld c... landscaping. MS-3540 SHJPTOSHORE Brick & block. Low hrly Free Est. 642-961' Orange Coast Roormg •••••••":."';;:::::? •••• _ home. Full time days. ~h: ~ ~u~;.~~.·~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prof. Japanese Gardener Boat &HouseCleanln& rate. •99-L22l6al\. 6· RALPH'S PAlNTlNG All types of roofing. "Let TbeSuruihtite lo" 0 .. bl od C '15 $~19~K La uttin°tr .... ln·m Reliabl"'-"'-pBonded L1c'd.lnt/ext.Neat, Repairs&additions. Call S .. ft•"''-eW1'ndow ver •• reasona e or. rpt repair. yrs ~ • wn c o• ... ~ · ~-...,. ·• HART MASONRY Fast. reliable, honest. _..,...,, rat.ea. IM.Z-<1153 exp. Do work myself. Hot lu.ncb. .M. Chris-ming, weeding. 5'8-8375 Eat. &4&-23'2, 54:>-9789 All types Bricll & Block. Prompt. ~·5566 Free est. Call Dave Cleanina. Ud. 548.8853 Moth.er will babyi;it for Refa.S3l-OlOl tianPrescbool.646-5'23 Gardening,mowing,edg· Your HOME SWEET Llcl6829464S-l597 NEWPORTPAINTING 548·1733orCbris646-2389 CALLJUUO'S summer . Refs . NoSteam/NoShampoo CHILDCARE-Days / in&. hauling lrdumplag. HOME-care you de· Have something you Comm./lodus./Resid. SELL idle items with a For.Uyou.rhouse& Brookbu.rst & Yorktown. Stain Specialist. Fast E.v ea I Wknds-my Aak for Mark or Mel, serve. Reis. Kathleen, want to sell? Classified Free est Low rates Daily Pilot Classified w i ndow cleaning . 962-8636 dry. Free est. 839-1582 home. $1/Hr. 642·0162 7M·9904, !ll5.'>-0005. 833-9187 ada do it well. 642-5678, 642-612.8 Ad . 645-5689. CLEl.ICAL COMPUTEA DENTAL ASST DR y c LE AN ER s GEHERAl.OfftCI GUIJlDS Legal MA.HAG~ Med.le al/Chiropractic Soundcra!tsman Audio DATAEMTRY Parttime. Back office. Counter & assembly Souodcraftaman Audio Full & part lime. All Corporate Paralegal or Looking for high energy clinic needs sharp, ag· bas interesting position Xlntopportunitytoleam Experienced ooly. Mon. person needed Exp'd. bas interesting position areas. UniJorms fu.m'd secretary with heavy & positive attitude to gressive rront desk available with varied of· how lo operate our IBM & Wed. 499-1369. ~7 only. 963-3633 available wi.lh varied of· Ages 21 or over, retired corporate background ma oa ge sma II pro· person With heavy exp. Clce duties. typing, m. 5110 System. Must be de· fice duties: typlnJ, fil-welcome. No exper. nee Small law office. airport ress1onal copy shop. Call & app't sched .. phones. mg, phones. mail. Call tail oriented. No exper. ASSD~ALANT EdltorialAut. ing, phones, mail. Call Apply : Uni ve r sal area. Newport Beach Becky,7~. data entry 5 dy wk. (714)556-6193 nee We will train ¥OU on M>& Monthly trade publica· (714)556-6193. Proteclioo Service. 1226 Call Kathie; 833-9980. aa la ry com men. with ---------•coding, data entry & re· Dental practice needs lion needs willin g W. 5lh St., Santa Ana. ---------Manager, Office Work. exp.~. Clerical concilllations. Located help. Front. back & mid· worke r. lo assist in General Business Interview h.rs: g.12 & 1.4, Legal Secretary counter help for food in Costa Mesa near die. Experience usis· editorial & advertising SUMMER OR Mon-Fri. Exper in Fam law, xlnt.., service. Seasonal. (6 .._CCT/PURCH Airport.Call RayCullen ·tant please appl y . depts.Mustbeaccurate skills.salaryopen.Con· mo.).H.B.area.CallE. ~ for appt, :>49-2122. 644·0683 typist & have good spell· CAREER Haintylisl. 1 month rent tact Ms Winterbottom Songrath. (\14)544-5378 Medic .. Secret91 Exper. accurate & ast typi.st for busy oflicf, Must know aU front or. fl ee procedures. pegboard, ins. & phone H B area M7·2:W7 ASSISTANT ---'-~c------0 _....... log & grammar skills. Sl ODO/MO free. Progressive Shop 851·1733 or96Q.9613. """" .,..., ~ Responsibilities will in· ln La1una Hills. 770.2345 --------- Experienced. Im med. OFACE elude; proof reading. LEGAi. SEC'Y Manicurist, 1 qtonth rent SOME ACCOUNTING & opening. Excellent N.B. Gen. Dentist look· processing of classified Secretarial. clerical. Hairstylist!Man1curist Orange County branch free Progressive Shop OR PURCHASING benefits. Apply in ing for hyg. & asst. ads, Invoicing, filing, marketing.bookkeeplnl Costa MESA-Newport or P.I. Defease/Litiga. rnLagunaHills.770.2345 EXP ER RE Q · T 0 .,ersoo. 'Ille Jolly Roger. 642·52"3 typing manuscripts & & other opasiliona. Must Zee Place543-!GM tion law fl.rm needs legal M A T U R E W8UODGR EKT ~ ~Nt~N~ 2300Harbor Blvd, C.M. o~•• •SSIST editorial tape transcrip. have transpo. Is neat ap. HARDWARE SALES sec'y. Needs to be an ex· HOUSE K ["<" p ER . MEDICAL ASSISTANT for Orthopedk ofc. Must have both front & back oCc. exper. Desirable hrs. & benefits for Npt. Bcb. ore. Call: fU.4..,8689 wkdys. • ~·--tion. Send rfsumeto: pearance. Call lOam· per i enced & se If· -r T 0 R 'I· PLA C E & Cooks Ir Cashiers. Opportunity In Fountain ASM·GA. Box 16878, 3pm (714)8'7·1132 or Management potential. motivated.. take-charge private quaners. Ex· ftP!:DlTE ORDERS. for new rast rood VaUey for RDA wanting lrvine.CA927l3 (714)847·2"22. Apply ln penon: Crown individual Gd benefits. c e 11 e n l r ef· s cl TROUBLE SHOOT restaurant overlooking p/time work in a COD· Hardware, 3U77 E. Coast Cree parking. S.C. Plaza <213)332·3038. ~~PRtJ~~TED TO ocean. Fun place to genial preventive office. ---------1---------1 Hwy., CdM area. (71')6'l·O'll7. work. Top pay, good Staff i.s self motivating EXEC. SICIET ARY .:.EHERA.L OFRCE --------McDOHALD"S CALL LORNA 556-2932 SM ITH /HOAGLAND 17981 Skypark Cir Ste K Irvine. Ca. 92714 benefits. Chew-Chew and we have fwt helping Leading Newport Beach Irvine firm baa Im· HOMfMAMA~ER Train. PCH at Lake St. people. 962-2432 stock bro!'erage co. has mediate opening for 25/br week for business HB 960-9909 an opening for exec. bright , self·llartet family. Cooking esaen· --·-------DENTAL Assis tant. secretary to Pres. & person to perform a lial. Permanent posi· COOK Professional, im· p/time for Ortho ofc. Gen. Mgr. No shorthand. variety ol office duties lion. 673-1S21, 8am·7pm. med. openln1s. Call: Dental exp. needed-not Dictaphone & word pro-lncludioa xerox1n1. ln· I•--------• 714·552·'462 necessarily Ortho exp. cessing exp. nee. Call: ter-office delivery, fil· ---------• RDA. 642-599'7 Personnel. 752-0070 log, etc. Contact: Bever· Clerical C OPID OP11.A TOI ly. 641-8820.. HOUSECLEANERS To SS/hr, car. MS-5123 Cl "f" d Fulltime. Xerox/Kodak DEMTALFl.MTOFC 1~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~~ QSSI le operator. Experience Food Prep & Service now I: Housekeeper RIB in ex· Clerk Trainee not n e c es s a r Y . HELPll hiring. lf you're friend· .:.EHE:RALOFACE change for ' hrs day LKAL SICRETAllY Leading Newport Beach stock brokerage co. has an opening for Ad· miniatrative Assi•tant with. legal exp. Pos. ln· eludes secretarial sup- port to Dir. of Opera· Uona. Word processing exp. a plus. Salary comm. with exp. Call: ofs-ca. ....... (Under New Ownership> Is now accepting ap. plic at ions for day & night posiUons. PlelUe apply In person between 9•lam & Z.5pt:n wkdys at M c Donald's , 1150 AvenJda Pico. San Clem. Medical MEIMCAL lmm~iate position for Medical Receptionist & Medical Records clerk. Laura. Bristol Park Medical Group. 557-6300 Professional copy shop. • , ly, coruscientlous & de· Are you in eameat? Can clean.in&" cooking 6 day The CJ .. uified Advertis· Irvine. Call Becky, pendable we want you you think? Are you as· wk. Non amoltind, non ---------......, 752 ""'6" from 8AM-'PM wkdys. sertive? Are vou a 0 ing Department of the . ..,...... If you have ex~tlence ' drinking, aft 4PM or Peraonoel, 752-0070 FIOMr OFFICE Mature. experienced in OB ·GYN. he~vy Medic .. Sea .. wy Exper. accur1te &c fast typist for busy office. Must know all front of· fice /rocedures, peg boar , ina. le phone H.B. area. 847-2:W7. telephones. Send re· --------- sumes to Box #762 c1g MESSEHGER/bpr. Daily Pilot P .O. BOX for mctrtgage broker. 1560, Costa Mesa CA Knowledae of O.C J · · I 1 A p p I y i n p e r 1 o n . perfectlonlat? Are you Daly Pilot bas an open· COU~EllHe.• • tn insurance. co ect ons T career oriented? ·Are wkods55&1737. inaforareaponsibte.en· "' ....,... & strong phone com· Stonemill e rrac~ thualaat lc person as 11·2pm. Moo-Fri. munlcatioo abtllty, we Restaurant. 2915 r:ke:!!~'=~~.~~f.~ Housekeepers wanted. "lerk tra111· ee. If you ~an _955 __ ·37_4_0_.______ need vou. 631-1420. Redhill. CM. ~ ..... " " ' ofc. where your work re· Seaclilf Motel. 1661 S. typeandusealO.keyad· ComlwPenoa ---D-----... -.---FULL Time. P /Time. ally matters? Really ? CoaatHwy,LagunaBch. der, we will train you for U"'W•-w u b J-"' .. lllt to ....... ""17 this position. Excellent Tool & Equip Rental Co. HYft..lm.lllST Ans. serv. No exp. nee. e t en, ~ e ._. .• , has vacancies in C.M. & ....._ Call btwn 8 & 4:30PM. talk to you. Pis. send•---------company benefits in· Laguna Beach. Must en· Expanded duties Mon· 546•3333 EOE your resume to Tom Housekeeper, aide. Uve· cludln1 medical. dental. Joy working w/people & day $125/day. Npt Tompson, P.O. Box29S1, in, Sunday, Monday for Ute insurance, credit UD· have some mechanical ,_c_e_n_le_r_64().0300______ Gos AMII d rnt Npt. Bcb., 921663 e Id er I Y lad Y , non. Ion, etc. If you want t't d Good 1 'd Frr tt d •• -----------1 amoker.495-5377 more than j .. t a desk ap 1 u e. 88 ~ry. Doa Groomer, ex per., Exp · a en an ....... -------•1...:.:::::::::.:.:.=::....:::.;.: __ _ benefit pacta1e & ad· k in d requ.lred immediately.,. job and can handle a vancement oppty. Apply mature, to wor og CdM 64._5054 General Housekeeper Live lo. Non cballenain& position in person 1930 Newport iroomln1 van.5Sl·<m5 n.1.-...1ayc1ir11t smoker. Duties: clean· wlt.b opportunities for Bl d CM 11 S 1.-. ""-'--m1 Ir Jd.ry. for adults. advaocemeat, call for v · or i 7.,,5 • D1 ...... rt011 GIM~OFFtCI/ .. ...,_...,. al d an apPOint.ment for an CoaalHwyLaguoaBcb. DrfTer SECUTAIY ~':-S:,2bd. + s . 5 a. lntervfew, eG•321, ext. DATAl!MTIY P /tlme2to3dysperwk. Seeking experienced Host/Holht• 277. C,..,,..,__ Hrs flulble . Buie frontofficelypepenoo 6mo.mlo.up.req'd. Housekeeper/Companion o....,.COllll 0111 _..,d 1•-arcbltedural tkilla, ex· to handle a variety of SPM·llPM " Sun. Uvelnotout. D~-....... ce ut et·tJpe eel Sala..., ne10Uable. ieneral office duties. Brunch 833-2009 r-. 60WPM, 10 key, salary ., ..az2 · 330W. ayStreet open, noo·smkr. CPA Call 8S:J.86SO ask for 7M · Prolesalooal yet Co.ta Mesa, CA Firm C.M. Call Lynda 1_Ja_n_e_t ______ -.-... --BAl.--Ol'-fft-, _C_E_ pleasant working en· J•--------1 F.OE 754-1040 DllY.S • ._.., Skills required. llnmed. vironment. lf you are .. VICTOR I I · 1 T ~n g qualified tor tb1a posl· , ... PIOCISS Cler\a, Inventory needed DATA ENTRY/TypLtt. Wa n ted rot oca ope n in · Y Uon,pleuecallforappt. Medi~al Compone nts for Electronic dis· Appllcatlom now betna ·~rmarket delivery of acbedulinl, bvy P ea, 845·7351, Mon -f'rl. • lrlbutor located at 3170 taken for lull tl me new aaack food product. :!~~:!.•:.i~mpany t :»5PM :~:ruain:4'.W:Upe::rt~ Pullman. Coeta Mesa. operators. Mlllt type 4S Good drtvlo1, record ---------~~~~~~~~~~ capable of wol'ltina wttb .Enlry level position with wpm. No exp. nee. Apply nece11ary, re erencea Have aomethln1 you r~ • mlc~ " ~maU opportunitlee fol' advaa · ln penoo: 511 E. Goetz r•qulr ed. Permane nt "ant to Mil? Claullled par ta. Salary com - cem e nt . P lease call Ave .• S.A. ~!~it:t:J~ op. ad.a do It well. 842-5678. menaurate with exper. Hamllton Electro Sales. __ .;,..._ ______ •·""""'"-•_-__ ........ __ .__ Located in ~fiaalon Vle- (114) M l-1850 Cor in· DIUYllYPllSOM I •1y Piil jo. Co. paid proftt shat· te"'"'· ' fl'or earlt AM LA f lme. ,. • •••• 6. II • laJ, vacation Ir bolldaya h o m • de I l • • r Y • .,. pd. Medlcal/Ufe lna. Econom ical car req . QuallCled appllcanll, Adulll~.~bn/day. • plea1e call : Mrs. ~ ~= ~75~~ • Field Sales Supervisor • Pare111 •• ..., + 1•1 allowaac•.1 • Wu t mle 1ter/Oarden Limited GPen1naa available in tbe Oran,. Grove • .-........ Co.at •"f!l for •elf-motivated, career • D•uv•-o•"'•JLS orieeted Mdual who can work 'lrilll e • an• '"''"'" Field laJee r.opa., Tnm. mouvata ud • •SAL1:8 TRAINED e aet re.ult•-., ''•lion ••ion or vut hD or .,... ..... Xlat • nec...ary. I•~ earntno. pl• )ob, e opport...,. for c:oUe1e • related.....,.._ aHUaW. for tM rttM • 1 tud e at1 • m oon ~p~ U 1Gll caa llrocluce ...au, llOt lab-.1"1. Over II. &UU1 e l talk about u. call: MO-_. for e .. m 11°"'111111'. CaU 11\.1 altrvMW. AM.loi Mr ~. 4 1 • lpm , ••·4N5. G.G. ana. L'-r/Stodl Clfftl Nlgfita. Expr. Newport Liquor • Deli.~ W. Coast Hwy, NB. 543-2112 LOAM 5aVICIH.:. IOOD911l Combination assign· menf for right penoo for mortgage loaii firm ln Newport Bea c h 714·"5·1~ PatU F. Maintenance help, Mon· Sun:Days off arranged. $3.35/hr. to start. Apply at NewPOrt Dunes, 1131 Back Bay Dr. N.B. Malnt. pU$OOa needed for steam cleanlo1 co. Gd. pay, easy to learn. Foreman position avail. Must know Orange Co. Chrb 641·10'19. 92626 freeway 4yst.enu. Valid MEDIC.u Calif. driver's Jic . ,... necessary. Mon thru IECOIDS Fri, 8:30 to 5. Call Bev. TRA"5CRllER 7~ Requires 60wpm lyping. MESsa.Ga knowledleoldlctaphone 6 mornioaa a weelt . & medical terminology. )don; S:~AM to BAM, Organls.tioo. aUeotlon Tua. lbru Sat: 6:30AM to detail It follow up are to 9AM . Excell. driving very important. We of· rec. req'd. Apply: Pen- fer excellent environ-oysaver, 1660 Placentia meot. Capistrano by the Ave., CM Sea hosp. 496-5702. ---------•MeMT CO.U• MIDICAL 67 aduJt oy llllita in E. Full-tlme front office for Costa Mesa. Nice, no busy Npt. Be h or -peta. 6"-0073 thopedic office. Charts,--------- deak relief. insurance. MM4'9MM'f POSmOM Experienced only . Fabric cbaln. C.M', Is 646-5995 for app't. Anaheim. Xlnt oppt'y. GerlMf.4040. MODELS/ ACTillS Buay O.C. caatln1 office ha• "after strike" mo- tion picture casttna ac- counta. Non-union extra york for f\m, SS, credit.a. lnter vlewa Fri/Sat, J une 12 •a KIF, 11-25 yr~ old, dependab le t.ran1portatioo, no ex· perleace. HM .. hr Newspaper dellver y peraoa, 11 or over . Drlvar'• UceaH, i•· auraMe, ecmomy car. Npt k b·ln.colta 11 .. • ,.. •. , cbl ,.. wk; .... F ri, a-IPll. latllu 4·T:HAM. ApprH. -/mo. Cd ---......---~...--...--m .... ~-41 ll9l •••11.DM, AM tllr ~ &Ai---·~ . Office belp. Wed lhru Sun 9-S. Yacht Club, CdM. 6"·8530. OfflCI ATTIMDIMT P/timeSaUrSun. 4:30to 12:30AM. Tues. 12:30 to 8:30AM . Mature, reap. person wanted. Gd. working conditions. Nunes aide exp. id.., but not nee . Bayview Manor, 350 W. Bay St., C.M.842-~EOE Part·tlm om an 's RESTAURAMT Buslneat ls boomln1. We neied cooks, wait, host, bus, d!Jlh. Come to BJ's, 106 Main St., Balboa Pen. & fill out appllca· lion. clothing, da only, eit· perlence preferred. ---------1 La1una Hills. Call Larry at 77C>-1m. PART Time, ans. serv. No exp. nee. Call : 838·3333 btwn 8 & 4 EOE PEISOHAUDAY Lido Village seeks person for part/tiq,e work with aood com- munlcatiom sir.ills. Call Cheryl or Sally. 873-2902 ,.....~ ... WaQted {;;small plumbing co. Mon-Fri. 2PM ·IOPM. No ex- perience necessary. '540-!253 PHOTO LAI: Sales Printing & misc lab Excitina car_eer in duties. Will train. FIT. jewelry •ales, .Wlll train. Start S4 .2S hr, non fuU or ~time. Only smoker. Appty 10 to 3 at neat . l I gr es s Ive , Onslte Photographic. personable need apply. 3303 Harbor Bl. E-5 of Call for appt. 759-1722 CommereeParkCM. ftL.UTICS Reap individual needed to operate vacuum form· in& machine-prefer to train. Call 9AM -11AM 642-1026 PLAYGROUND SUPERVISOR Fulltime. lmmed . employment. 18 )TS or over. Costa Mesa. 64S·Sl71 Pre-School Teacher wanted, summer. Cert. req. PIT. 9-lprn. Mon· Frt. N.B. 640-3820. Telephone lntervlewa· work rrom your home. Exceptional opportuni- ty. PresU1e compa11y. High commissioo. Flexi- ble hrs. Phone 833-1017. Telephone Sales WORKATHOME Call Garden Grove 5»5220 OAIC SIDBOAltD $1500 962-7501 Antiquea-1903 oak up· ri1ht piano, oak library table & chain;, dough cabinet, old leather steamer trunk, oak icebox, camelback sofa, suede sofa, coffee tables, 8 pc:-Brown + Jordan patio set. 496-8007 Ive msg. "GOLD " DRYWASH separator machine, it worlr.s ! S195. Larson, 67S·S774 Applo..cn 80 I 0 • •••••••••••••••••••••• HARBOR AREA APPLIANCE SERVICE We buy used appliances --we sell recond, guar. appliances. 549-3077 I IUY APPLIANCES Les 957-8133 GE Refrig, frostfree, 13 cu Cl, like new, S3oo. Call 646-5766. Stove, old l.920's model, good cond works good, SlOO. 548-8513. 548-4485 Dryer, clean works good, $75. 548-8513, 548·4485 Ref, frost.free. very good, excellenl $250. 548-8S13, 548-4485 General Elec Range Sl75, dbl oven wlself clean· ing , lots or extras. 675-2345 -------Rem ode ling-built· in range & oven, SlOO; dls- hw ash er, Sl25 ; e lec dryer,S7S.548-8242 GUAR, USED REFR's SALES &SERVICE Good cond. Mi-7754 WASHER&DRYER SlOOforbolh. 556-1010 eves. Mini-washer & dryer, J C Penney, Harvest Gold, new cond, $250. 640-8023 W uber and Dryer Sl.25 each. Dishwasher $100. 646-5848 Maytag Elec. Dryer. Brown, xlnt cond . $100/bst ofr. MS-9157 1015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garage Sale. S~day 10-5 TV. aofa, love seat, GAR AGE SALE- pm. 3900 ParkG~n Or. rocker/recliner, tblea, Thura/Fri./Sat. 1oam- Coron1 del Mar. Sport Franklin Stove, lamps, Spm Many !UmJ. 21.9 Via equipment., clothes, ac-dbl 1troller, infant car San AndreuS.C. ce1sorles. seats. 4gal paint, much G _,_ J 1 .. h .. 4 · · more Fri·Sun 412 Prin· arace s.... une ~ .,. Movmg, fW1Uture, bunk ceton.Dr C td 841.8993 t Entrada W. Jrvtne, off beds, Atari, more. 13th & · · H i c k s • Y a I e , 14th. Northwood , Irvine N E I G BO RHO O D Northwood. Wicker,· 731-2726. 0 R A RAG E s ALE. trWlkS "rum. FOOD ·FUH IA.IGAIHS! 3 rd Aonual NeiabborbOQd aara&e sa le . Cypress Tree Green Belt, University Sta rtln g over, ever-ything & anything from Oriental rui $300, dln. A·Z coes. Sat/Sun ooly. set., cryat~I . other 8131 Waybridge Circle. 1ood1es. 3lOV11ta Suerte H . B . ( B e a c h & N.B. Bluffs " Garfield). Harbor Hlghland1: 80 Park, Michelson & Elm G a r a g e S a I e , Tree. GRANDMA'S ESTATE, SATURDAY ONLY! 9-5. June 13.14. 1307 Keel BIG ANTIQUE SALE Dr, C_d_M_. ____ _ 1200 Westclilf Dr . N B. SAT SUN 9-4. 2638 Vista SaUrSun.M6-2247 Omada. The Blbffs, NB. Melcahbortlood Sale Sat i4. 2233 Arbutus, Furniture, bikes, tools, much more. year large Carpenters tool chest S8S, with tools S360. Old & recent books. Christmas ornaments, jewelry. colthes plus many diverse m isc. Sat/Sun. 9-4PM 2018 Diana Lane, Newport Beach. Cash only N.B. Six wagon wheel Furn, misc. Maytag Lou of good buys 2 days lJght fixtures, color TV, washer, elec dryer. 370 only. Maybe just Satur- luggage, carpet rem-E. 23rd, NB. 9 to 12. day Ir all goes well. 9561 nents, Iota oC household Sat/Sun Caithnesa Dr. H.B. items, clothes, gifts. de----------• 962·1~. signer fabric bolts & "" SALi! --------- wallpaper, sofas, frige, SAT ONLY. Washer & Garage Sale-mlcrowave wash/dry, bedrm set. dryer S50 ea, qn sofa oven, tv/stereo, bowling bed, misc furniture, ball, camping gear, GIANTGARAGESALE some tools, clothing. cameras. digital watch, SAT.ONLY8-3 20342 Bayview, Santa much more. Sat. 9·5. 9641 Cait.hness, H.B. Ana Hts. 751-3499 1814 Fullerton Av., C.M. lndianapom/Brkhrsl G A RAGE SALE · SAT. 8-5. 717~ Femleaf, Garage Sale, Sal. & Sun. Fn/Sat/Sun everything CdM. Dishes. ceramics 9·5. 2195 Vista Entrada, goes 9am-5pm arts 'n' & goodies! Newport Beach, c r a r ts s u pp I i e s . Garage Sale-l o spd handmade dolls , FANTASTIC Merchao· QUILTERS HEAVEN; dise, records, clothes, bilr.e, furn .. etc 616 b h Id 't r Poinsettia, CdM . Sat. scrap matenals by the ouse o 1 ems, um. box . Lots of extras. 1951 Misc. 600 Orchid, CdM' 8:30-5, 640 CH9 Ne wport Bl vd . ·1· . .,... Sora, Chairs, Bar Stools, garages 17 & 18 behinds --at_/_S_u_n_9 ___ 6p_M_2S_t-.$-J5-. Misc . Items 9110 autohouse. Pelican, F V Sat 8·4. ---------1 973 Arbor St. _M_a_gn_olla & Garfield_._ IEKIHS ___ c_osta __ Mes_a ___ C! Ulil. tr lr, drafting table, record player, B&W TV. sml refng, tape re corder , electronic equip., Onan generator, & misc 898 W. 18th St, CM . Rear. 6/12, 9-4 ; 6113, 9-12. Beaut. Fr. Prov. Chaise lounge, 7' bookcase, misc. rum .. girls items. typewriter. books. lug· gage, etc. SU Cancha. CBluffg) 10.4. Furn, Toro mower. elec conduit, aquariums, and lots more! Sat-Sun 5311 Plum TreeLn, Irvine. Contents storage con· Mo•9") to COftdo talners-you name it-Selling jlink in garage. we've got It. 919 Bayside Old tube Telefunken. Dr. Garage K2 loam SIS lawn mower, bicycle, 675·8141 tent, cota, car wheels, toys, books. 851 Santiago Coppertone frost Cree Rd. CM (Mesa del Mar> refr1g. 2dr$200 Sat-Sun UM. 548-7952 GARAGE Sale-Cum, & misc. 1391 & 1397 Garl- ingford CM Sal. Sat.June 13. 10..Spm. 1221 Pembroke Ln, N .8 . Furn ., childre n 's clothing (girls), toys, bunkbeds, roll-a-way bed. pot.s & pans & lots miac. - H11geywcl .. Antique lurn, 2 twin beds, cok>r TV, China Cab, lots oC books, m•ch more. 9-2 Sat{Sun. 607 Knowell St. CM . JUSTMOYID Misc household ltems. Clothes. furn, many items. '228 Hilaria NB. Nr. Hoaa. 642-5678 IMDIAM JEWaRY PAWM 536-2995 HIS&HERS Gold wedding bands S500 673-3573 Paint spray booth, near new, must sell. Bat of- fer. 646-1234. New L2SHP 3 phase elec- tric motor, standard- TEFC. 972-9525 after B ' I \ -- - ---,__,,... -::0.....a F4 Orange Cout OAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12, 1981 IMh. Poww t040 1Mtt. s.. 9060 torH.-a. W./ Motor.Hwe. S./ T"*b 9160 .. ······················· ........................... ,s....... fl60 .... /,....... f 160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MlaHl• 11• IOIO •I •-... t1&1e.. ~_>~ ZODI V£NTURE21,Salla,twla ............................................. :• IOYWPICIUP •n•••••••••••n••••••• •• .. •••••-••••••••••• laat 11 ts IOIJI *POIT 1t.· .... ~C•*• compa .... life jacket.a. R•1ot: .. ~_.,motor bomt. Dynamite 4 •l*d wltf\ Toola, b&rdware, 1caf· Spedal&alel •••••t•••n•••••• .. •••• •••• .................. w.. trtr, 5 Jl.P. Motor, ready KUTAI. •Pl v, -c:Gll, avail. stereo. Clean, abarpl foldla1. screw·1uH, I elH p1tari be new •••NI 9011 IMfl.ATAIUIOATS to 101 SS200/0BO or RUH f/20·'711, '215 /wk . UWlJ'llO) drUla, 1awa, etc, etc. JloedO u pr0r ,.....;. •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• 2n5 Collete, Cotta MeH Trade (71•>*-""51 co~~woo '40-1585 Slffl •1no .... ..,. .... ca,,,~ Noo-pront «I oda )'out ('714)~3070 ......... TNlen, T.....t '170 JIM MAllMO KODdo 11, tuo.·8"-om tT:!raf1 ::· :!f ~c~~cn •· oweu cabin Cruiser, SABOT "dolJ.Y nased tor * O 11 ,(~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• voww A61M advuta1e.11J/eM·2Ml '5~ of boet, sa.ooo. Or racln&. 2 Mll talll. auto M ''1 JI( Tent Trailer '74, alpe '· 11711 Beach Blvd. co mp Jet• SI 5 O 0 . lffboard ccntroJ. Xlllt pull w/am car $175. 14J..2000 KAYAK, Tad. '-I an.Ur, Everythint new, Incl Cond. 1'15-9073 wkend. •RY~ 540-3471. 322 Princeton, --'----........ ...,_--brHkdwn padd)e, encl. motor. 8SMCJ111 591·2887 durinl wk. JI( c .K. I t7~DATSUH P~':=t,~Pa=~ -----,~------~OHie•,.•••• •tora1el3lOOrn.7471 New23' Penn Yan Cuddy l4'Lutr,ror1,2.Jpeople. •Yo•r L .. 1 Model AlltoSenke p_.. .... CAI ~ tea caddy, aor,.0111 Btc. wa. t '* •••Ip ' IOll Wanted Amphlbloua Cabin, au Inboard, no Oc:ean or lake. S750. MI• I WI II Met & AcceHori.s ,400 Pickup. 5 •Pffd t.ra • peridotat.onetNO-am for 1eml-lovaJld dlx ••••••••••••••••••••••• LandlntCraft,IOOOTon. outdrlve problems, 838·05CMEve.or5lll·3103 SZ25/W..tl for tt.e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ::: ... ~O:irr!:.~ =~ model 'Aml10', '1oea ADLIRDtctrtcllCTa· C1l l afttr 8PM . S22,900.(2)1)592·215i ao.tt,Slp1/ MextllWttb. Dat1un Z rinu !or US like NEW! (U,.SU3110l).· Bumper pool table, $200. everywhere, e.tw-'1er •a bl• model. Eletll. con, d: '14/MJ.om, 2,., VII I• Vee Crul•er Docks 9070 1poke1, Fulda Urea, SU>e> CStk. JD). orrer good Bar II 1too1a, $300. hr battePV. ""1·-Recent overha.al. 300. Ifft M_.....__ • D I • H 0 or best offer 87S-5613 t .. -. •/ • ''" •1501 ----·'---------•Pia.call: Ma.JIG It. --Fl)'brld1e. all lnboard, ••••••••••••••••••••••• * • • • •• ••r · 111"v 1.,-. ------18drm Set, 2 ch..U of 1 -I••••• tOJO Uke new. (21.S)Stz.2859 WANTED S4.6 M._ a. look· for"'....... MOW SJ7t5 HANDGUDERSSTHar-drawers 6:2n.lteat.andl. Manolta un Cop tr with •u•I•"•••• .. •••••••••• 26'bo t U ISS-4069 lllpMow Alltos -MEWPOlrTDATSUM ne11 6 Helmet minor eo yrda Choe. brown 1tand • tPPn>•· tlOO ln Jnnatable t•e•· S.nperll, '11 S3' Penn Yan Sport a 1 P ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Dove Street workS1756734mevea cpt'&, also yellow cpt'&. 1upplle1. X1nt 1h1pt. Q'J&. Fl1her, twin dleael, WANTED: Slip for 28' •lritMJ .. y_,. RV Ii IMPORTANT NEWPORT BEACH Set cblneae eervln1 dbl· Cott t24001 now t1oa 1171-lUS "4,too. (2U)592·21S9 Sailboat In Newport We'lidYmceyCM1 NO'I1CETO 133-1300 1r:·~ :,ig~ os~u~a~ ha for 12 ~mpJ. StHl ~>857·113i.aa1-1seoT. :-:. 4 llPJotwon Ole 21• Century Resorter. Harbor. PPMS-58.12 ~~~~f'J '77 FORD ruo PU auto, Oldsmobile 4dr auto utllily box for P · u. Ottk, ttttl 7 dr•w•rs. XI n' t . II U . Ca 1 I 1"4 t-f ab. Classic Dock apace available-up * $500 Cash The price or Items p/s, p/b, needs some $400/0BO, camper for truck. 718 Larkspur, ahtoand t'halr. IUIO. 714/ITl·u.e 873-232.8 to 40'. No mas ta. advertised by · vehicle work $2400/0B0559-7470 amallpickupmakeoffer CdM.&64·:16!8 Ma~ S175/mo.875-7lll0. •Dal•'• Has Stood dealers In the vehicle --------- MS-4493, 642·92'74 1 way rrom LAX lo Dull" ,... -1~017 '11 aluaukt 7~ 8.8. w/fuel ...... R.,,/ Few 91111ty A..t ,.... cla11lfied advertising A T T E N T 1 o N lank, lo 1\1'1 llk• nu k15. C........ tOIO loots, Speed & It For o Io columns does not In· M e c b an I c 1 & o r Antique dining tbl $165, Alrport. 1WA. lllO, d)'I •• , ............. , •• ,... frl llh ••••••••••••••••••••••• Siii 9010 9r Y •er elude any applicable Sportsman. '73 Chevy Cheat US, Desk $30, &M-'715l.ev'7•m1P__ TIOPIOAL•tlH SH _.RKSI! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Y.-s. lallet, license, transfer P.U. w/abell fully equlp Game lbl$7S,64().7167 . Prevent Bre.k·lnt e&I MUITI,&&. Ill • llW ''77 RANGER 480 fees. finance cbaraea, make offer 673-7078 eves .. -~I R , & . O R A H A M •• Pacema.ller Yacht, FORb Jet, stats 10, less Cail feet ror air pollution coo· I · TICKETS (2) Tom Jones Compl. hM ... ,..tr n ,._,,Ow 1•• IOtO FlHltl\01..AS sleepe t, for Charter! than 5hn on eng. Bimini /TODAY trol device certlflcaUona _et_r_m_g_. ____ _ Qreek Theatre July 4th stall, ~lndowa alldlnl ... , ........ •"••••••• HOWINO HtLL Sf:clallm1 l.n shark '11· top, trlr. 3 aklla, rope, v or dealer documentary '79 ~ton Toyota. red. SIS each. 497.5740 dn. 918 !l02034ht1 l'lANO. V1m1u 1.1prl1ht Bowin a a11embly. 19' h I off Catalina ltland. etc. Slsoo. 979"7295 * DAI.E'S preparation charges un· $4,000. 842-5442; Ive mag • Ladles' Schwinn blko, ~ttmp .-..\Ill walnut •h•ll • Planledoal 2l3/377-7W7. Weekdays. leas otherwise speclfled 494.5353 Remote cntrl. answra. 3spd, f70/0BO. wdl .. ' f111t1h Xlnt hlnt • wooden oars. Stilt nt~ S.marani. 2 muted 70, 1.....,.,...._ by the advertiser. --------- machine. as new SU>O-size 7 lceakatea, 114 Ml ror tl410, 11c. •· e.s. h SI 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RV• G ral 9510 '84 Ford Custom Cab,"" wuboo.~1. Wood a·· .. ar .._Mt "'f .... lfOl:ev :f7&·2408. ac ooner. P• • C •...a.../ ... Ton. Runs &ood. $1250. en w' • .._ "' Hammond Or11•n : Mln\ --children welcome. 2 ~ra. -••••••••••••••••••••••• 548-0S47 fer. 545·0'30. Aak ror t0nd MOO lffh.Peww 9040 htadl, Ml &alley, main lleilt tl20 R .... ,hlc. AUTOBROKER --------16~' fishing boat w /trlr. boo or bst olr; 4\AJ n red tail Boa snake w/cage & acces. $175/bst olr.; 1 pc ens stand, gd cond. SSO. 2320 Florida, Apt 5. H B. 96()..7201 Sue. U'7 4N ••••••••••••••••••••••• Salon, awt. dJeeel. Avail ••••••••••••••••••••••• 15092 Harvard Ave. Will Clnd you the car ol 'Tl FORD F250 Camper DRAFTINOMACIUNlt U' OWENS BRIO S/F' for Charter. (714) 10~ Camper Four Star lrvlne your c hoice -at Special, new eng, new Muon Hamlin Plano w/Newport Slip new 142·4848 or PO Box 8381 w/refrigerator & stove. 559 444· 6 W holeaale Prices! trans, s· overhead In good condltlon, BRl. '' lbctl tone, oruuden, trans as pro-NwpBch,93890 Porl·a -potty. All • 131-4621/64>0389 camperS2500540-Slll3 cleaned & re-oiled tiOO. btaut rt11\n. f75·7510 ps. Radar, pilot. bait Butane. Queen slie bed. Ask For Mr. Lissner Call eve. arter tpm. ----tank. Halon fire 1y1tem, ao.h, Sal t060 Sleeps 6. In excellent ~/ 1974 Toyota P U. w/ MS·~ Story • Clark Console '37,500&0'7248 ••••••••••••••••••••••• condition. $1500. Call Clas.aks 9520 camper shell. s2000. Plano wlbench UH. '79 Mont1omery 10' between 10am-5pm . WE CAHSB.L ••••••••••••••••••••••• Runs areal, needs 8,000 Comic Books, no re· Mlactl--S 11 v • r lo n t du I I Sl' Bertram Race Model, w/ulla motor xlnt 631·7657 YOUR R..V. 'Rf1'11EST tailgate. 53M289 as. offer refused . W..ted 1081 keyboard or1an 412 cu. ln. Chevy's, cood. MUetaell. Aakin& Moto-'-_...1 ......... _ 91,,.0 ., ..... ,...... •57y·•1RD 760·3665. WHAT A••••••••••••••••••••••• w/btnch '200. 640.1491 trailer. 1 ton truck, Sl250,callevet832-9508 ...., .... ~ ,. _._,,.. ._ Ymt1 9570 DEAL! Wanted: Jan Is vocal ft • '-d World Re ord h Ider ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMTOWM! ••••••••••••••••••••••• LP'• of '50's •· '•"'1 In &d a v pm. "'• ya; any c 0 · '7 C AUN H d E 980 "' "" Ume wkndl. Sl00,000 lnveated. s~.ooo 5 AT A Sailboat, on a xpress, 1 BEST OFFER! '78 Chev Van, ~ ton, V8, Twin bedroom suite : cond. Call Denny : firm . Call Nellon w/boat 1Jlp on Balboa $395 PURCHASE (~) auto, pa, pb, radio, xint dresser/mirror. oi&ht 545-6186 between lOam· Baby Grand. tborou&bly wkdaya: (7l4)640-881l. bland. Fully equipped, 840-1217 cond, S2250. Call Stan at stand, 2 hdbrds, spr-5pmdaily. recond . Like new. tnboardgueq.'31,000 L('l~('BACK 833-0070(~5) lne/matlress/frame M-' al MaboaanJ . szsoo . 875--4456.780-&359 NewPucbMaxiLuxe utK seu. Like nu, mst see to 1ui dNI 10,3 ( 7 1 4 ) 9 8 4 • S 7 7 6 , PACIFICA 41 !;:: ki in , 67~M. * DALFS * ~~~~ .... !~~! apprec96J.9UO. • .... .'.'; .... : .......... (2U)S92·38CM. Slt0,000 l"';;Coel Dib_paSlooprtner F 34 WE PAYTOPDOLLAR Only 30 boun use. Like um la · ee or '78 A I Mo_,. less Co mplete '"STAR" Peavey classic amp. 2 Sewa.gU1c••11 IOtZ new! leasehold. Call Brandy nge """' •RV• for lop used cars· Lapidaryequipment. 12's wilb Aulomix. ••••••••••••••••••••••• D••ldFraler 846-4774. than 500 ml. Looks li.ke foreign, domestics or Phone 642-220C $250-080 8421.994 Sewing machine operator 67~5252 sn!! • runs like new· First Has 198120, '29 Model A Town Sedan, classics. If your car is wanted, overlocklng ex-.,. Tornado Cat. 20', US #335 ~.673-6723. C 0 m mer c 1 a 1 1 Y 4 dr, ~red. Ideal ror eFxIRStraT 1 .clean , see us per neceuary,. uk for w/nu Uh trlr, race r'e· Peugeot Moped l03, xlnl Constructed student. Sl0,500. ALSO GlennH.B.118().9537. 31'CAUFOltMAM ady.$3,200.&tl-9060 cond,bi&besloffertakes '46 Ford Woodie, SportfltcJ~ lot4 '78, tw. Perk. W 's, ld'd KJTEJ878 it494-7205aft.5pm. *DOLPHINS reatored.Sl.3,500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/equip, OWC at 10%, 2 aaila, dolly, xlnt cond, MoforcvdH/ AVAILABLE NOW WATER SKIS, 1 pair •. l low dwn, alip avail. $475.548-Cm2 Scoohn 9150 On FordlKTonChassis '41 fordDttmteCpe slalom, S3s/ea or both $89,500. Bk.r Has a Chev engfn~e. f ... ,. 631 .. -.. 675 9007 """'1725 eves 14' CYCLONE Sail boat. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or..,.,. ........... · •.....,. F U b .77 750 ~ _. needs rewiring, good Store, Rntwwl, 35 ' HUNTER $25,000 Cvr " trlr. $1200. aotas c uy• •IS ....... R...t. Urea, beeds paint & re-l·328-4052evea Honda, less than 6K mi. Gwcwlff upholstering. lar lot5 Stem dr, Onan elec gen, ....................... Mansfld head, Holding OWC loialleresl Steel sbelvina. upright, tank, J im (213)547·7285, CF 41 Dal Rod ri&. 9 lmmac.-extras. ONLY <Actual Rentals Avg. Slt95. Ml.L'itsee. 673-4068 25 Weeks/Year) Cal 645-5913 to'"< etc. Ideal for atoJ"H or ('114)"'-'8M aalla. refrig. alps 7, aft warehouse. Xlnt cond. dbl. Anxious!! See & '79 RM80 modified. very rast. xlnt cond. S495 &U-2818 Call 639-7821 for info. It' S11t.a. •.a.y DE AL N 0 W ! ! J . ...,.,_ _B_ro_m_l_.e_y,_7_14_-67_3-_7_996 __ '80 Honda C8'001', xlnt TY, Radio. um d B ' HIFI, Shnto 8otl XJnt cond. VHF Radio, 2 Leeboard Sabots w/2 con ·• 5Smpg, argam. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mere 188 1/0, ~ Cover. sets of sails each. All _9_5_1·_502_0 _____ _ Model K·3SH REK·O· no trailer, in waler equip. S400ea. 552-7911 KUT ~ltdrlven turnta· Newport Beach. $4000 -'--------- blew/manual tone arm. Firm. Catalina 27, diesel, xlnt BOZAC 12" speaker. 675-4444. cond, hinged mast, Two old wood cabinet ta-1~~~~~~~~~~1 many xtr•. 840-3432 ble model radios .I· HOMDA MIMllfkES XL70 S395 SL70 325 XR75 $350 M155U 548-9788 40' PACE S.f. ll' CYCLOMI 465 YAMAHA Kenwood amp tuner. '78 Tw. dsl"s, 7 .5KW, Xlnt, $550. 846-S2l4 Make orfer. 646-5900 • • Ld 'd w/electronics, tape deck; Genesis 3 0 W C S 8 " K a l 11 ' Inflatable boat· d •pkn; BICtrntbJeaian-$ • CARAVELLE Kil& VIRAG07506weeksol tenna. SUOO. ~5 1 0 % . . . 14 5 K Bk r . w/aailB lbp o/b many w/exlras, extended war- ---------• 675-9007,960-1725eve. extras s550 551.1377 ranty etc. (save bun- GIANT COLOR TV SALE Lookini ror a home of 5$2-053l dreds) perfect machine ~to SJ,m. 2 yr wmty. your own? You·u rind • but doctor says no - Fri/S.tTSun. T.V Johns many homes advertised 73 SABOT good cond. _646-4629 _______ _ 843 A-W.1.9th St. C.M. for aale in Classified S500 Motor Homes, S•/ • _ 646-1786 every day. 644-4930 R...t/Storogl ; 160 ....._,Mew tlOOI...._· Mew tlOO AllhK, Mew tlOO Allloa, M.w tlOO Allloa. Mew tlOO •i-••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ....................... ....................... ·········1-············ ....................... . YOU MAY BE PAYING TOOMUCHI QUALITY USED IV'S •DALE'S*~ •RV• •MW's&cm.A's •C....., .. Towa •Perfect .... ttan•c• •30DayP.m ·~ •141nmdMiims •MHr W.. Prices •$8,000.S 14,000 DALE'S RV •SALES• •Taxscm..ca S7 .ooo write Orr 1st YearPerVebicle •Priu •LoodtdWlth Al Luxury Options •DoMI PaywMtll s2eoo * MotltMv PcryWM.ta 1320 Per ~o/fk> Mos. On Display ITOOAY Al: •DALE'S* •RV* R ....... 1013 N. Harbor Blvd SA 554-0433 Ask for Mr. Sandberg 15092Harvard Ave Irvine ----559-4446 Ask for Mr. Li.saner Rent 23' Lux. mtr home, fully sell cont. 156/dy. 500 free mJ. 548-0949 '79, 23' S/~xtras, sips 8, ru11 ba. lllte nu, under book $16,250. 536-8335. '62T-llrd New eng, gd cood $1800 080 548-6611 '59 Mercedes 300 SL Rdstr. wht, rd int. xlnt cond. $35,000:ws-6611 4Whee1Dmes f 550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Cherokee, eood cond, asking $5000 Firm. 642·9193 '73 GMC 4x4. Extras. S3000firm. Ca 11960-1291 '80 Toyota 4·Wbl drive long -bed . Immac . Loaded. 15,000 m i. $9200/0BO. 646-7875. Big Tires 4 B .F . Goodrich. all terrain radial TIA tins. 12RU on white 15Xl0 wheels. 5 lua. 644--4259 . Tnteb '560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BAR WICK DATSUN \an Jv1M C .JP•'tr-:Jn, 831-3311 •CHIV.MU'tl I TOMSTAICI I 12 rt. model with urtaate, duals. air cond.. H.D. e Daily Pilot sprin1t. pwr. steerlng, classifieds aux . 'tank & more! e work for workhorse complete I #I Ill 0r_,. Co.My 2925 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 979-2500 WANTED!! ca.-1..,m Top.,._ Paid!! Call JIM HOCJCl9 or MilceL• Cn•ierMotors 835-3171 TOPS DOLLARS For Clean Used Cars & Trucks We pay cash on the spot! Contact buyer at Des.th c .... ,... San Clemente 831-0510 492-8500 WANTED! Late model Toyolas and Volvos . Ca ll u s TODAY!!! ""~··· c: ......... "''46-tl0l • 14~··4'7 Tep Dollar Pail For Your Car! JOHMSOM & SOM Liiie~ 2626 Harbol" Blvd". Costa Mesa 540-5630 Premium prices paid for any used car ( Corei&n or domestic) in &ood condition. . SeeUsFintl , SOUTH COAST 1 Dadge CHECK YOUR CLOSIST DIALER LISTED HERE. Gn THiii PRICE IN WRITING. THIN COMI SEE THE VOLUME DIKOUNT TOYOTA DEAL~R 1013 N. Harbor Blvd, SA Opea 10-6 DaHy Cloeed Tues. • (3961) • • :::St.C:JI OMLYSl2,4t8 2888 11arbor Rh·d • f -• k HOW AU c.......... C~tM ~ll'11U s.ao 0330 MM'-' lOf<nA CMI 10Y<nA -.&1VTOrA 1•iwe N 10TOfA 10TcnACIMW ...WAf1VTOrA ...... .,,.,. __, YM4ff 10T0rl UllOM ftMIWA ·...-IOYGIA -°""'"* .. 8'°'lYW00910TGfA __,..,.. ......... ---· ... ,.,,.. 554-0433 Ask for Mr. Sand~ra or qui~ Dove/Quail Su . • cash sales. NEWPORT BEACH CASH FOi CARS e , UJ.OSSS 714/995-6213 ~.Mew t800 Alltol, Mew t800 ~. M1w tlOO W... Mew tlOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• . .. l' J WEIUY CLEAN CARS AMDTWUCKS COMME:LL CHEVROLET .,.,. II.tr 1 ... 11 ft 1 ,,r,j\\H \ S46-I 200 HIGHIUYBl Tcop dollars for Sport ars, Bull C s 914's. Audl"I'!' ampers, Alk foe-U/C MGR JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEN H 18711 Beach Blvd UNTINGTON BEACH 142.2000 TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR GOOD&CLUM USED CARS! We Pay OVER llutlook For Your Good . ~W. Porsche or A uda ·' , , v:·PORSCHE-AUDI 5 E. Coast Hiwa at Bayside o · Y Newport Be ch nve a 673-0900 ........ __._. ........ ~· .... Alfall~•••••••••••• ••••••••••• 9705 '63 Giuli •••••••••••• $7800/0~g•. xlnt cond. 548-2775 AllCU ••••••••••• 9707 •••••••••••• Aut!!!i~ _!~Os':ereo po_wer steering 70 • miles but · ,000 (504VBP> xtra clean! $4995 JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEH lS711 Beach Blvd 142-2000 . IMW ••••••••••• 9712 •••••••••••• For'lbe Bell Buy Or Lease Deal In Orange County ComeSeeU T ... s oday!. & SADllEBACK BMW 28402 Marguerite Pkw Mission Vie' y. Avery Pk JO (off 5 Freewy. exit ll way) 1-2040 495-4949 Closed Sundays CREV I ER I 5T 6 aaOADWAY SAHTA AMA T 835·3171 HE \ILTIMATI OlllYINO MAClflHI •1:~EDIMWs• '79320i s4f f1i < 0603> '79 . lSS!M) , 5281 S/R (1<176) 81320iA (OllS) Closecl 78 PINTO Loeded...,, ~I~ rvnnln9 .. '* thlll ... .,,. yOU ..,...ate -m...._ came and dltwe It u ... It. l~ fO/l 38 "'°""" ,.,,.. 21 . 1. oefllnd 12~1.~. eeefl "'°' U129.12 lnc:L tlDI. lie., dOC ._ on~ofyoN119l)odc:redk ... .,..- doW" mo. 77DODOIVIGll Loeded .. ~ ~ dltMlf'I ~ II ~ tof I mot t11mlW to_."*" on thlll "'-> In "'1 cond&tk:ioed oomtoct. (I 8111895' FOf ~ mofllM """ 21 .57 ~~· Ceatl "'°" 1215&.82 Ind.-. tic •• dOC tee. on ""'°""ofyoN!leood 09dlt-t 1" t1n.10 dOW" mo $2577 78 LuY A ..,...S. 4' c:yt,!'9dt0, I cll\9 lllttl wck k)Okln9 tof I Nol ........, '° .... of It In and ~.,,,._..~It wll be good 10 yOU· (2514'19l fOf 38 rnond\S APf' 21 .11. o.terrecS"'504·-C8lh "'°' 13381 .92 Ind· tllll. lie., doC tee on~ofyOUfeood~ .... ,,. doW" mo. $3177 77 DATSUN A ....,... ru""'"9 <* ...,, tt'9 fW*~voumulll_. ... ~., ...... ~-­One ontf .. .._ iow, &CJ#~· l~ FOf 30 mon\tl9 APf' 21 ,., o.twred ~11.eo. eeefl "'°" e2331 .821.nd·-. nc .. clOC tM on~tofyOU'91)od~ ., ... t92A2 dOW" mo. $2177 - ,. DoDG• "INI~*·~-­~ A~ ~~lflll\hll yOU C9f\ no# purc:ti-9 Ill I fractton of .. ~ Pf'CI. (:te11~ fOI' 38 monttW "'"' 21.1• ~ P333·•· Ceatl "'°' e4011 .a2 tncL -.1e.. dOC .... on~· ofyOU'gocldctedlt-P" t131.oa doW" mo. $3777 80 Plll'IO AuftlbOUl_. .... ....,131#' .,... on "-,,..,._..,,., ... dfr/11/fY -..._ .... 'tO'l .... ---~ ptcAllen'6 ~ For ..a mot"*" Al« 2().711 l)eielfed $5926 20 Ceatl "'°' .-1ss.12tnct.-.11e.,d9C..., on~1ot'tfJNKFOdoredlt­t2" .,,..- dO'M' two. ~77 At"l llOIUZI• n \U-:HI t IH S '1q '\Z IH-\l.t,ll • 1131 llllJ 1'1;.1;11() ,. ... ..-.... • C8lit' ,.... ....... lie.. doe ... tee25·.,· ~-1~•,,,. :io:n . °" ...,_. °' y0/11 good -- 1981a.CAR ~An.t2 ctoor~ ... ..-..~.-1nt.4 .,..cs rnefMl•I transtn'9160ftt 2.2 IW ene'M. ttnWd oia.a. and vtnvt bOctv _,. mouk11"9· 101~t1K218&8C18&449 ~OI 48 tftCM'lll'9 • C-" .... lftd. tlll. lie., ct0C ... ....,..,. ~99281.AO· """'2.0.n. °"......,.... °' y0/11 .-credl'- ,._ .. ~,,,,_, .. , .. ~.., .... C8lit' ,..._., .ae lnCIL -.11e.. dOCtMOll ----~...---- ,.Oii .. ~,,,. ,,,, .. ~....,.....<:-" ,.. .... 1.---.tc.. ....... ..,-..otyorM good -- ,$3000 01scouNTt RETA\l PR\CE $13,723 mscouNT -s300Q NOW s10,1i3 1 .· .......... &;j. n Orange Cout DAILY ptLOT/Frlday. June 12. 1981 ........ ,........ ......1., • ..w ......... airt.d ...... 1..,.rted .'•••• w ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i ~.~"! ....... !~l~.~.": ....... ~1 ~.~:: ....... !~~ ... ~:."! ....... !~ ~=. ... !?!! !~.~ .......... !?.~! ~~ ....... !?.~~ !~:.~ ....... !?.~ .~:.~ ....... !?!.~ ... tj 6 ~ 410 SL 77 PoascHI Rolla Vandeo Pl .. , Prln· 76 VW DASH• '70 VW Caut. sty ... sreat MIW ltll 4 WHEELORIVE WAGON • ·~· rldoo. heat.,, much mor.I (442730) ..... a. magnon stbaru 2418 Hnor Blvd., at Fair, Cesu Mesa 549-1457 SOMETHING DIFFERENT! OVE-R 300 - NEW AND USED CARS AND TRUCKS , RED TAGGED TO SELL ON SIGHT.I DOWN DELIVERS ANY YIHICU 'IN STOCKI (PLUS TAX AND LICINSE °" APP•OYID C•IDIT) - u 3 Sliver. leathe r, a /tn-Lat• tH autornat c. c .... needl paint, motor Dynamite z door 4 condition S24t5/olfer. cuaette. fac alloy Brorue met.We t>.auty. apart .. ,000.1542-8088. SJ>eed . so,ooo mllu, 5'l·OSUaft.'PiftDeula. wheel1 , 2 tops , (234142) T .. 9765 1llver/black, very !~=m cond. $24,800. $6-'91 .~]!•••••••••••••••••• clean! UUXNZ) V.e.e 9772 -·-JIM MAllMO 71 TOYOT sms ••••••••••••••••••••••• MGI 9744 VOWWAGIH C&ICAG~ JIMMAllMO #I VOLVODIAUR ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11Tl18eachBlvd. Automatlc. air. Low VOUSWAG.. INORANGECO\JNTY! 77 MGI 14Z·2000 mil ea, immaculate. 18711 Beach Blvd. SALIS, •VICI Dynamite '8' roadtter. 4 ·aa 912 Cpe, l'eltored, ap-(302VGN) 142-2000 AMD WSIMG 1peed, white/black. A pr. $8,000. Make ofrtr. $4995 79 VW IUS OVERSEAS DELIVERY cream puff. Must see! (213) 832·4387 JIM MAJUMO Dynamite 4 pear bus. 4 EXJ>ERTS (124278) VOUCSWAGIH speed, xtr a clean . Sl995 '70 PORSCHE 911T 18711 Beach Blvd. 1538XUT) 1AaU IKE JIM MAJUMO $6900orbestoffer. 142·2000 $6995 VOLVO YOUCSWAfHH 857·02lS; <213>4as.005l JIM MAJUMO 1966Harbor Blvd. 18711 Beach Blvd. '77 924: Silver. Xlnt cond. '69 Corona body fine, VOUCSW•A...... COSTA MESA l .. Z 2000 needs UtUe mech work. pAWU"ll • "' • Xtras. Sunroof. $8995 s30075g.1914 18711 Beach Blvd. 646--UOJ 540.9467 714/873-1.525. 142-2000 '79 MGB18K ml 0/0, Im· mac. SS,750. . 67~5548 . Toy Cellca · '74 Sspd. 75 914 silver Many AM /FM. Reg. gas, 1 '60-'65 vw ten & right xtrH. must sell. Offer ownr. S2300. Evfwknds door, '73 left door. $50 Opel 9746 M9·4721 548·2799 each Western style whl ••••••••••••••••••••••• •73 91~ l'"""'" --------• rims for Super Beetle .. 9()9'11( .... Aulomatic, completely restored. M mJ>I. See to appreciate. (Also many OpeJ partJ. > 536-3768 Pe.geot 9741 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * •· ne't' eng. "~· Toyota '73 Celica. gd $20ea 548-9744 alloy11 ,bra.xlnl cond. body It eng New paint. SS,350. 83l·9829· _ Air. auto, amffm, $1900. '6a VW, comp!. restored. '73 tllT, extreme. clean! PP. (714)559-4909. · Porsche eng &c paint. Lowered Kon.i. 7" al Everything new. Mint • · '71 Cellca GT lift bac.k, cond. See to apprec. toys, new painl/clutch. Air , auto, AM /FM . 631·4786 9'1-1291 Ala rm, cover . sac Cassette, $4750 cash. · $10,500.134-1689. 644-4440 •79 VW COMYT 79YOLV02'4 GLSIDAM Loaded with every op- tion plus more. Only 30,000 mile.. Clean ! Sharp! <065303> $7995 JIMMAIJMO YOLUWAG84 18711 Beach Blvd. 142-2000 • IJ 7'PIUCHOT 504 -a lols Royce 9756 • 1 ~ ••-••••••••••••••••••• 74 Corot a wgn, a/c, Black/Bi;lln lthr Int. German top, 2001 radio. Nardi wheel, beat there is -$11,000. 499-1919 days. OUMGECOUMTY VOLVO Largest Volvo Dealer in Oranae County! ~~~~ ·~'f !~~· <f ~~ 11'1 DEALER IN U.S.A. ~!~.s~~~.:'ai good maculate. (614671) ~==;-;;R;;0;;;:;~,;..._~ BUYorLEAsE DIRECT ExcW.ely Yot.o $69'5 JR{ :Y '77 SRS. liftbk, stereo, JIMMAJUMO CARVJR AIC, pert cond, 5 apd. '72BUS-rbltena. VOLKSWAGEN ROLLS-ROYCE 35mpg.S3700.8'&-7171 $2300 •o-lc:~rz.~c;:vd9.750 \'---Cl-os_,10~~::-. ~~::~~~:¥.~:f.; ·~.,;.-~;.::::.~le~ ~, >' ,-•• -(714)499-5701' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rolla Royce, ·1o, k>ng whl d rive train in1talled. 10120 Garden Grove Bl '79 924 Porsche. Take base, very good cond, Tri ... plt 9767 Xlntconci.S2000.496-M48 GardenGrove530.9190 over lse pymt.s. 0 On, xlnl buy, ~.ooo firm. ;;·~;••7••:;;;;·;,~~:;~· 73VW CamperWestfalla, -------- Call Gary at 676-5736 9 to C a 11 J . R . s Ro 11 s AM /FM tape car cover' loaded, AC. 1lnk, refrla. '71 v ot.o 242 DL 5,676·2912aft6pm. Servlce,9S3-<ll96dy1. xlnt cond : ss .320• ~~.~09t . 37 awning. $5900. 4 apd .. air, rust, 53,500 SHOPPING SPREE I ..,.... mi, orig owner, Xlnt .63 w· d 8 f cond., S6400fbest offer Ill ow us, sunroo • 760-3523 da . 831·2229 ev very nice. white, good - int, $3000 644-7905 1963: Xlnt cond. Runs areal Pouible Colle.c-·74 Bus, 7 pass, cleaJ\, tors 1 11350. Private. amffm ~ass. $3695. Dys 492 5100or498-8080. '77 TR-7 w/snrf. lo mi. gd 540-4058: evs~l63 -------- cond. Asking $4300. ,73 VW BUG VOLVO '74 164E auto, 6 640-4030. $1850orbeatofr. cyl. a l e , lthr, snrC. Call.,.,..9317 stereo, S3700/obo PP •71 Triumph 6S().TR6C, 1 ____ v_'°'---(714 )633-0100 good condition. Call -'--------- a fter 6 :30pm. Fred 631-4645. 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 79YWDIESB. Dynamite 'L' model. Deluxe 2 door sunroof, 5 speed. afr, auxiliary tank. (314YOL) $5695 JIMMAIJMO VOUCSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd. 842..ZOOO 79YWRAlllT DIES a 5 speed, AC. AM /FM s te reo cass .. steel radials, whitewalls, tint· ed glass, low miles. Black w/black velour. (544XJR> CW,$6695 ~·uowcw1 ~ VOlKSWAGEN. INC ~ 534-4100 13731 Harbor Garden Grove '79 VW Bug Conve rt. Atltos UMd Rare blk w/blk. intr. •••••.'••••••••••••••••• 12,000 mi. Extra clean. GeMral 990 I Mi c helina. AM /FM ••••••••••••••••••••••• S9000 or bs t orr . 213/679·333.S, 21.3/542-3789 '70BUG S700/0BO 960-3671 '77 Rabbit, aunrf, &ood cond ition, 57K ml. S3500I OBO. 772·9108 eves/wknds. '65 VW SQUAREBACK. Nds eng & body work. As is, best o((er. 642·6337, Dianna VW Bus '74. Great body Sound engine. Make an offer. 759·9327 VW Convert& e. Bugs, Square ba c ks , Notchbacks, Vans. Pick· ups, & Ghiaa, over 20 to choose from. Bu1 City Inc. 839-5224 '71 Fastback fuel lnjec· lion, good runntne. new pnt, $1195/0B0546-3888 BEACH IMPORTS NCNION HAUORILVD. IN COSTA MESA IMPORT SPECIAUSTS LOOK!!! '71 Maserali Indy '63TR.3 '78 Audi 5000 '74&'78 Alfa Spiders '78Peugeot Diesel Wagons '80Honda Accord LX '79SaabEMS '74 Peugeot 604 BEACH IMPORTS 1969 Harbor Blvd. COSTAMESA- 631-7170 9100 .......... . tlOOAlltos,M•w 9100 FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY JUNE 12-13-14 . OPIN fllDAY AND IATUIDAY UNTIL MIDNIGHT THIS ••• Wl'U PIOUD Oft IXAMl'\.f STlt. ,_ UST SUI DISC.• W1117.• CAMAROS 11 TO CHOOSE FROM AU DISCOUNTED 5700 llWN'll STK. IS1' UST S17l2 DISC. Pl SALE 11112 PICKUPS 4 TO CHOOSE FROM ALL DISCOUNTED SJOO OAW\i ITI(. 1 1'7 UST $8377 DISC. $700 SALE Pin LIST IAA#Ll aTC. - 1981.CHEV. CITATIONS 10TO CHOOSE FROM ALL $99 OVER INY(JCE ~~•n LISTllM7 OISC.11000 SALE .... 7 MALIBUS . 12 TO CHOOse FlQM ALL DISCOUNT~ 51000:: · IJIAW\.a STIC. Ha UST•DISC.• CHEV&TrES I TO CHOOSE FIOM ALL DISCOUNTED 5500 . • ' .. l . ~-~ . . . ----. AlllM, UMd Allfot, UMd Alltot, Used Alltot, UtH . 'Alltot UHd O C t DAILY Pt O ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• ••••• :................. range oas L if /Friday, June 12, 1981 F7 AMC HOI .......... 9920 C..tlae.W tt30 0od9t ttJS f9rd _...___ •••••••••• ••••t••.••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9940 _..., UtH .AMfot, Ut•d · Autos. Uied • Auto•. Used . '75 1 Hornet,,.!•..:i•· pe, '11CapriaeCIMaac.4 dr, '71 2 Door One OWQ~r. 77DODeilCOLT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• bftis ~ .. =:.. ecied, loeded, lo mi, pvt pty. Low mllaJe. Hu every Dy 0 amlte c uatom '11 Ford LTD 11 Mffcwy 9950 Meltt..J tt52 ......0 tt57 fttymOuth tt60 · -.... t0ttw .... ·m2 xtra. Saso. 642-0370 coupe. z tO choose Both Brouaham. XJnt cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •75 PAC ... · I I PrinleParty low mileaie. One~ am/fm/8.trll, Crulte ORANGECOUNTY'S '&SMUS'tANGxlntt0nd st.-.u-w '6'7 Ply. Cl ic, irum.c -., cy · Air '71 llallbU Clalalc wen · •peed, one automatic: control, air, comfort ANIST n ew r1dlall $2500 AMH•'!M'ste~pwr cond.. 1000/0 8 0 . cood . Au&caatlt'. Super loaded w/extra, lo ml: '6t Mark m C-Oatiftental Both have &Jr and both corttroJ, trailer tutch, air LJNCOLN·MERCURY 962·34 stt>er., xtot CC>4td' ll.llOO »68 08G9. Must , ... cond . ....., b500.840-0Cne ·Xln& Cond! "2500/0ftet immaculate. (724TJE) s hocki. other am. DEALERSHIP •••MUS___.T_......;_ m1 $429584t)..~IO:I • - '77 Cherokee 1ta. w1o, ,74 M alibu C laolc _!!_S~l,6'75-4471 COGOTJJ) mmltlea. Alkins S2800. --~ Pontiac 4WD, auto. air, •Int loaded, •-··. low mi•--'. Con.... S2ff5 C•ll alter 6pm wkdaye § __ _,,t.tl"6.• 3 1pd , rebulll e nr & 72 Pillo Wog. cond, S.00. ~ Xtra cle";;, Beat 0,;:;, ··~··•••••••••••••••••• or anytime wkends at ~ T~ trans. clean.~ AM/FM t-onverte1 Cd '110 rebut.I E:Um • ~ '7I 2 leU ol T tops Mtnt JIM MARINO llS7·1958. LINCOLN M ERCU RV '7S-8762 cond, '31· new, lot.I of tr... • '71C<»«X>RD ~l cond SIOOOl bst Dy YOUSWA•IN 16-lBA~CenterOr '85 MUSTANG CO 6 ---Hll ssm Alloptlona.30Kml. "70 9 pus. at.a. wan, a lot 718.220 , wknd lev. 18'711 BtachBlvd. '67 Ford Falrlane Run. SD Fwy Lk Fo~texat nv. PtyiitoWHI 9960 5 30PM $3850 831-CM71 new under th;· hood, 142-2000 &ood. S3SO or ~t otter. JRVlNE cyl, 3 spd. beaut. cond. ••••••••••••••••••••••• # &40.S93S 496·4283 810.7000 Super mpg. Blk. top, It. 78 PLYMO\ITH '67 Ft .... rdCOft•. .., llllct& t9IO runsgreat,l600.7S9-1914 •75 Corvette-Rue Ca. 9940 blue pnt., blue Int. HORJZON Xlnt $28Ml.ss16738 ••••••••• .. ••• .. ••••••• '77 Chevy Caprice. 4d.r, Rea. 4spd, ale, S5900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mustang '69, auto, 289, '72 Comet , 4dr, AC. 6 cyl, i~«88, 8-5, Mon·Frl. 'Dynamite 4 s.......i th Th ... _ ...... ,_ ••10 '78 Sltylart, ' dr, e cyl, aJ.r au•" , __ .. _, Xlnt 857·0f18 aft &PM '78 2dr Granada Ghia. full pwr, new palnt, pony 36,000mt. 11700 or Best '6:5 M Con I 0 ) 28 ooot'"'"'~ WI Ul_!ucrv...... ..,.., 87M ml hnmac orif • 'IV• --... PB, PS. AC. Am/Fm int. Xlnt mech. 12495. ofler83l·M84 uat v. Red on 8 r. n Y • malos on ••••••••••••••••••••••• owner,m~.m.4cna • cond.h:IS0,497·28~1._c-ttJJ Stereo Under 3'7,000mi 675.5304. ---re(f,bJktop.8cylauto, this cream purr. 781-Barl,i white" blu~ •• -;;:;;•••••••••••••••• S3950. 640.a5S2 Eves & 19&' Mercury Montclair. id chrome. Pony intr (561UVR) cnt . AC, AMJl''M stereo. '80 RlvlerLXlntcocd. All C._ai9r ttlS ,77 Couiar wknda. '13 LTDauto, 731< m l, $300080. Runs 1ood. 16000, $3695 PS. PB, x.lnt cond. Must optiOIU Pvt~ ... r $1.500/0{J() &U-19!M 979·5197, SS6-1474 JIM MARJHO sell S3500obo 142 17()7 ' · ••••••••••••••••••••••• SACRIRCE '78 Granada Ghla-xtra 752-6479 -------• At.762I '77 COROOBA $2,000 clean-all pwr-3SK ~I.·. '70 COLONY PARK Sta. otdtMObll. HSS • VOUCSWAGEH V~a '974 " '72 Electra. Mlnt cond. 37,000 ml, xlnt cond,· Ukenew,xlntcond.aulo, below whis t $3250 . ...,._ ri a. Wgo. Air, AM/FM, trlr. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 18711BeachBlvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Low mU-ce.OneOwner. S25ooflrm.631--4286 a /c, heater, am /fm 545.2683. ......-.. ca 9947 hitch . Sl,340 080. EstateSale 842·2000 '74 STATION Waicon, ex- 955·2117. raclio, p/b, pis, 545-2906 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 548·3773 '77 Omeaa, 4 dr. silver c<>ll ron<t $1,000. .. ---------1Cltrysler LeBaron, '79-4 or 645;0Ukl Ive messaa?e '68 FAJRLAJNE, must '74 Maverick. PB/PS, air w. blacktop, lo ml llave you read today' ~ ~ ... CoclHlec 9915 dr, all pwr assists, tilt, w/busaness see to appreciate. Very cond. AMIF)llter, auto. SELL idle items with a M-F,8-4, 759-4382 Classified Ads? If not, __:.c. - ••••••••••••••••••••••• air, leather 318V8, ~· clean. Runs great St.loo. 74,000 mi. Xlnl cond. Daily Pilot Classified )'ou're missing the bei.l Classified Ads, )OUr 4)ne--C~TIMG 645-3214. Sell idle items 642-5678 549·3112 $2100. 968-3411 Ad. Wan.!.. A~ Help? 642·5678 bargains in town• stop shoppm.c center. • CADILLAC? .... M•w HOO Alltot, Mew 9'00 Alltot, Mew--9'00 Awtot, M•w 9'00 Autot, Mew ttOO Alltos, Mew HOO Wot, Mew 9100 ~. Hew -- Wt e spec.iablbe. ln leases •••••:••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• or the usaneas ex-• ecutive Is professional. LanpS.lectto. OfNew '"' C1•ac1 Now .. Sfodd ~AW&~~ 2<>00 H.ii\X>I Blvct Co-.1<1 ~ 540 C>IOO lf61SIDAH DIVl.LI This beautiful leisure world car bas ooJy 41,322 oria?l.nal miles. Auto., ai r , power seat s . CWOMlllO) $2395 ........ ~ Bll<G ESTATE SALE '75 Eldorado. 2Dr hard top. Nds some work. Mon-FriMpm. 759-4382 '81 Eldorado Diesel, 4000 ml, leather, 2 tone brown. $17,000. 837-3744. '74 ELDO ablolute mint thruout red l ..-hite padded top·au ex $2750 646-727• '78 SeviJJe, bur1undy. 41,000 mi, sharp, a trk. $9400. PP. Dys 751-4642 ; eva 151·98'76 '73 Coupe de Ville great cond. $1700. 957-8238 '78 Cad. Cpe de Ville De Elegance. AU power ac· cessorlea. 16600. Da (213) 57~. ev (714) 644.4608 '81 Fleetwood Brim De E l eg ance, 8 cy l , moonroof, wire, tape, trunk, dk wndws, 13M. 640-5884 '79 Eldorado Brtz, diesel, fully loaded. Xlot cond. Must sell MUe 'olfer. 646-7768 after 6pm. '76 EldondoConvert New eog, trans, top " paint. Dlt brown. Equipped for phone. Sl2,500, Call 491-31169. c..... 9917 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 75 CHIV CAMAIO Dynamite Camaro coupe. A•., air, steer· In g, stereo, tilt, whit e /blue. Original sharp & clean. (7~CG) sms JIMMAllMO VOUlSWACHN 18711 Beacb Blvd. 142·2000 '78 Z 28 : Rebuilt, new brake1, ne• tires . c uatom Int. T -Top. Sanyo Bi-Amp. Stereo. $5500. SM-173'7 '76 Ca.maro, P/S, AIC, stereo, S3585. ti6-0906. Good ca.d, Saturday for Service 7amto6pm Mttnclay thru Thursday 7am to 9pm Y' Friday 7 am tll 6pm (714) 830 3388 VAN CONVERSION $8995 ·Dodge Step-aide Pickup with 225 engine e cyt., manuet 4 ·~ overdrtve tnm• mtaalon, maxmlum cooling, exterior eound control, AM redlo, rear chrome bumper, wheel covers end poweratHrtng. ID 252515 $799 DOWN $178.90 MO 1981 DODGE B·15C> VAN For 48 month•· C•h Price Incl-Tax, Uc. Doc F .. $8799.90 ·APR 17.61 CONVERSION Dodge B-150 van conversion. 6 cyl. engine, 4 Soeed 1rans1111SSIOI\ 36 gallon tank. buutlful c:ustom pain1, carpet and paneling, ht·baek seats. reafbay windows. custom mao wheels. plu$' much. muctl, more. (71251) (252513) THE PERFECT SOLUTION FOR THAT VACATION TRIP! Dodge An. 2 door with 4 speed manual ehlft. 2.2 titer engine ....DOWN t16L80MO. For 48 montha • Ceeh ~ Incl-Tu, Uc., Doc FM '8375.90 APR 17.80 Defen-ed '8801 .40 On •PPf'O'l81 of your good cNdtt. c.dlllec De VOie with, fKtoty air, full power, power steettng, power dl9C bnlk.., PoWer wln- dowe and low mlleege. In U0911ent condition, •nd ... ,., ot.n. Uc. No. 50IJLC CHA~LENGER . CONVERTIBLE $12,995 Autometlc AM FM Stereo Spedel Roed WhMte Power~ Minon 2800 CC Engine P9wer Stffftng Power Dlac 8r11k:H And Much, Much Morel COLT Dodge Colt 4 door eeden, 4 cyl., 4 apeed, end low ml!Nge. A IUperctMn •nd• ,.., ...... Uo. No. 4MWQU Ford Fie.ta with aun- roof end loaded with equipment. 8uperc1Mn muat .... Uc. No. 5e1TNZ DefemKI $9388.20 On approval of your good cNdlt. o.taun 8 21 o 2 doOr eeden with 4 cyt., 4 speed, bucket Meta,a ,..., GAS SAVERt Must Eq.uipment Includes economlcal 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed transmission, left remote mirror. max. cooling, bench seat, body side moldings, wh ite sidewall glass belted radial tires and morel (145687). . t · NEW 1981 PLYMOUTH HORIZON ' 4DOOR-AM '1 Economical 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans .. bucket seats with fold down rear seat, tinted glass, elec. clock, body ·•Ide moldlng11. ma x. cooling. glass belted redial tires and morel (1oen3i Figures are for comparison ·only as actual mileage may vary. NEW 1981 PLYMOUTH RELIANT 4 speed trans., bench ... t. body t ide molding1, max. cooling, left remote mirror, front & rear bumper guard1, deluxe wheel covers, wsw radial tires & morel (111764i Automatic tr!"! c!~!!. s...,lng & brak .. , n1cllo. luggttge reek. wsw tlr• & morel (023T0Hl. ~295 1979 CHIYSUI COIDOBA CllPE • • • • • YllR HIMODWI DAllY NPll FR I 0 A 'Y . JUN [ 1 2. I ~8 1 OHANCE COUN f Y l ALIFORNIA 25 CENTS E111ergency plan critical to Duke OK By JOHN NEEDHAM Of ... INlty "" ..... A Nuclear ReauJatory Com- mission official aays emergency planning around the San Onofre ~Nuclear Generating Station wiU play a major role In upcomlne bearings on the licensin1 of two ne~ units at the facility. Jim Hanchett, a public affairs officer with the commission, said planning for a possible acci- dent at the nuclear' plant could tie up the licensing of two new 1,100-megawatl reactors now under construction. The regulatory commission will bold the first li censing hear- ing on Units 2 and 3 June 22 at the Stardust Hotel and Country Club, 950 Hotel Circle North, in San Diego. On June 27 at the Stardust the com mission w i 11 conduct another session at which the public is invited to speak on the licensing of the plants. Both hearings will begin at 9 a .m . The San Diego hearings follow the release o£ two reoorta on n May 13 emer,genc,Y drill which simulated a release of radiation ... .., ..... IWt,.... Irene RenfTo, Jone Jmkitu, Maynard Jenkinl and Charlie Jenldnl • graduated fTom Dwyer School in 1914, '25, 'SS and '31. 'footsteps followed Huntington family knows school 8y PHIL SNEIDER MAN 04· tt.. Dally ...... S'-ff When Maynard "Charlie" Jenkins III graduated from :l)wyer Middle School in Hunt- lngton Beach Thursday, three m embers of his family sat in the audience watching a bit of his- ~ry repeal itself. i.· Cha.rUe's father, grandmother ~nd great-grandmother all .alrad·uate d from the sa me ~hool. ! The location, design and name !of the school have changed a bit Ofer the past 70 year s. and so • ~as the city that grew up around lt. · When Irene Engle Renfro, now 81, moved lo Huntington Beach ~in 1910, the town had just changed its name from Pacific City. The oil boom hadn't yet ar- •l'ived, she recalls, and the only traffic was of the horse and buggy variety. She attended classes at what was called Huntington Beach Elementary School, located at 5th Street and Oriµlge A venue, and graduated with the Class or 1914 . Her grandfather and uncle opened Huntington Beach's first silent movie house, the Crescent Theater. "My uncle, Myron Wickham, ·used to sing during the in- . termissions," Mrs. Renfro re- calls . What did youngsters do for recreation in those days? ··We used to sit on the comer of 5th and Main after school and play jacks," she says. (See "CHARLIE," Page A2) Spaniel puts bite on suspect SANTA MONICA <AP) -Lori G iov annis wouldn't generally describe her 4-year-old cocker spaniel, Fraulein. as a vicious watchdog. But it turned out Fraulein can take care of herself -and her mistress' house. Ms . Giovannis was gardening Thursday. in her backyard when she saw a man, who apparently didn't see her, s lip in to her home. She ran next door and called police. But the intruder:, meanwhile, encountered Fraulein upstairs. police said. The burglar ap- parently tried to strangle the pet, but Fraulein manaeed to clamp her small jaws onto bis hands. She eventually chased the intruder from the l\ou.se. from the San Onofre nuclear facility, located about three miles south of San Clemente .• The reports, prepared by the Feder•! Emergency Man•ce- ment Agency ( FEMA) and the State Parks Citizen Advisory Committee, point out numvou.s flaws in emergency plannin1. The FEM A report said emergency agency personnel needed better training in radia- tion monitoriog in order to measure the r elease and spread of radioactivity from the exist· lng (SO.megawatt plant at San Onofre. That plant, Unit 1, which was built in 1968, bas been shut down since April 1980 when steam pipes outside the reactor were round to be corroded and In need of replacement. Officials at Southern California Edison Co., operator and co-owner of the plant aJona with San Diego Gu and Elec- tric, say Unit 1 wUJ probably re- main sbut down untll lhla fall. The second report, submitted by the advisory c~mmlttee, said "reasonable assurance" could not be given that state parks vis· itors near tbe plant could be notified in time to avoid con- tamination if there was an acci- dent. "Th is is really unplowed ground in many respects." Hanchett said. "This is the ftrst time licensing will come under the new rules adopted by the commission after the Three Mile I s land accident in Penn· sylvania." _ Hanchett said the existence or a ••workable '' emergency management plan Is now re· quired for licensing of a nuclear plant. He said the licensing hearings on San Onofre's Units 2 and 3 would be conducted by com- m is s 1 o n -appointed ad - ministrative law judges wbo sit on the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board ··You can expect that the ques- t ions of emergency evacuation and communication will be fUlly ventilated," Hanchett said. .. If there a re weaknesses in the <See ONOFRE, Page AZ> Talks end; baseball walks Negotiations planned to resume Monday or Tuesday NEW YORK ,(AP) -Major league baseball players went on strike today, and clubs canceled some games. Negotiations broke off for the day after a 21h-hour session, and further talks were not scheduled. (Related story Page Dll Federal mediator Kenneth Moffett said the next session would not be until Monday or Tuesday at the earliest. mean- ing a weekend without major- league baseball. "They're pretty deadlocked." Well-funded OC solons identified By GLENN SCOTT Of .. OellY ...... , ... Five of Orange County's nine state letialatora, Assemblyman Chet Wra)' being foremost, are among the biggest recipients or . campaign contributions from wealthy special-interest groups, according to Common Cause. In a report issued Tbu.rsd"ay, Common Cause ranked the five leglslaton among the top 20 in receiving donations from the 20 highest-spending special-interest groups from January 1976 to June 30, 1980. Wray, D-Garden Grove, ranked sixth in the stale by re- cei ving $102,235 from the lob- byist groups. The former union or ganizer's primary benefactor was the United Auto Workers re- gional political action commit- tee, which gave him a total of $52,050. He also received $9,280 Crom the California Teachers Association. Other recipients were Sen. John Schmitz, R -Newport Beach, ranked 10th ; As - semblyman Richard Robinson. 0 -Garden Grove, 14th; former Assemblyman Dennis Mangers, D-H\llltingt.on Beach, 16th, and Sen. Paul Carpenter , 0 -Cypress, 19th. Common Cause is a non-profit organization seeking to change election laws to make elected of- ficials less dependent on sell- interest groups. Walter Zelman, executive director of California Common Cause, said Orange County is particularly noteworthy as an area where representatives get large donations from free- spending lobbying groups. Zelman speculated that a rash of competitive races for legislative seats has upped the \ocal political ante. He noted that four of the five leading recip- ients are Democrats who still had enough conservative lean- ings to attract money from busi· ness-oriented ~oupa. Big givers, He added, like to donate to many candidates. Mangers, for example, received <See FUNDS, Pa1e A%) . MoHett saJd ol the two sides. The possibility or blocking the strike by a last-minute court de- cision also evaporated, as the National Labor Relations Board announced in Washington that 1t would have no dec1s1on today on appealing a federal Judge's rul· ing. The strike did not mean an end to trades The New York Yankees and the Chicago Cubs swapped pitchers, the Yanks sending Doug Bird to the Cubs for Rick Reuschel. The American League told its 14 teams "that tonight's seven games are off, subject to an) ac lion from today's negot1at1ng session," said Phyllis Merh1ge. a leagu~ spokeswoman ::inoruy thereafter, the Torontc Blue Jays announc ed that tonight's home game against the Texas Rangers was orr. no mat ter what. "We've now decided to cancel the game." s aid Howard Starkman. the Jays' puhli,£ rela· ........... -.. ewy~ Irvine City Councilman Art Anthony hugs a well-wisher as he enters Harbor Municipal Court for hearing this morning. Wife says Anthony 'striking at world' Elaine Anthony testified today that her husband. Irvine Coun- cilman Art Anthony was "strik· ing out al the world, not me," on April 10 when he allegedly beat her and grazed her with a gunshot. "I was trying to calm him down and I got in the way as he was flailing around," Mrs. An· thony said this morning at a Harbor Municipal Court pre- li ml nary hearing for her husband. She said that as the couple scuffled in the master bedroom t10n s director "We see no chance of playing the game.'" In the National League, the San Diego-Chicago, Los Angeles- P 1 l tsburgh and Cincinnati- M'>ntreal games were called of(. T~e game in Chicago, scheduled lo begm at 11 30 a.m . PDT, was the first game on today's schedule and the only day game. Kathr)n .,·ee n ey , a NL s pokeswoman, said, "We have not told our clubs not to open llhe1r parks > " Sea lions pirate SD fishermen SAN DIEGO <AP> -Calling the situation "critical" for the economic futures of some boat operatoi:s. spokesmen ror the Nation a l Marine Fisheries Ser vice say San Diego has the West Coast's most serious prob- lem with s ea Hons pirating catches from sportfishing boat anglers . John Scholl heads the project studying the longtime problem between the mammals and fish- ermen. but has not come up with solutions. Marge Stinson, a fisheries biologist working with Scholl, says the situation is "critical." ''There's going to be a lot or people who lose their boats in the next few years ... she said. Commercial fishermen are al- lowed to scare off sell lions with warning shots if the curious a nimals interfere with equip- ment. But charter and public rental operators do not have the same privilege. (I Thus, illegally or not, frustrat- ed sportfis hing skippers have ~ • been reported shooting at the' animals often to scare, but sometimes to kill. ·'They're pests, just like rats in your home." said skipper Ro~er Howard. "And they could possibly ruin the sportfiahing business 10 San Diego. I'm sure people go out there and kill the seals I can't name names, but I'm sure 1t goes on." Private boater Michael Garcia said he sa w an armed sportfishing crew "blaatln1' away at sea lions" several weeks ago. "1t was shocking, very eroes," Garcia said. "We were close in, trolling, when we came around the comer. We could hear the shots first. There was no mis- take about it. It was crystal clear to me what they were do- ing.'' (See SEALS, Page AZ) .. .................. ...... E:alifornia headed for smoggiest summer Fair through Saturday with high.a at beaches 68 to 7.3 and inland areas 78 to 83. Lowa tonight 62 to 17. Tht Ro11al Lipbaon•, artrtocrat.t o/ the ~nan world. wm a,,,,_ar at tu Ai.ohdm C0rtutntion Cmcn ... Cl FRIDA'f. JUNE:. 12. 1 ~81 O HAN C.f COUN f Y CALIF O RNIA 25 CENTS E01ergeney plan critical to Duke OK .BY JOHN NEEDHAM Of ... ~"" hlft A Nuclear Re1uJatory Com- mission official says emergency planning around the San Onofre !Nuclear Generating Station will play a major roJe ln upcoming hearings on the licensin1 or two ne~ units at the facility. Jam Hanchett, a public affaJrs ofricer with the commission. said planning for a possible acci- dent at the nucleal' plant could fie up the licensing or two new 1,100-megawatl.. reactor s now. under construction. Tbe regulatory commission will hold the firsi licensing hear- ing on Units 2 and 3 June 22 at the Stardust Hotel and Country Club, 950 Hotel Circle North, ln San Diego. On June 27 at the Stardust the c ommission will conduc t another session at which the public is invited to s peak on the licensing of the plants. Both hearings will begin at 9 a.m. The San Diego hearings follow the release o! two reoorts 9n n May 14 emerjency drlU which simulated a release of radiation from the San Onofre nuclear facility, located about three miles south of San Clemente. The reports, prepared by the Federal Emereency Mana1e· ment Agency <FEMA> and the State Parks Citizen AdviJory Committee, point out numerous flaws in emergency plannin1. The FEMA r e port said e merJ.ency agency personnel needetl better training in radia- tion monltorloJ< in order to measure the release and spread of radioactivity from the exist- in1 450-meiawatt plant at San Onofre. That plant, Unit 1, which wu built in 1968, bas been shut down since April 1980 when steam pipes outside the reactor were found to be corroded and in need or ref la cement. 0 flciala a.t Southern CaJifornia Edison Co .. operator and co-owner of the plant along with San Dle10 Gas and Elec· tric, say Unit 1 wtll probably re· main shut down unlU this fall. The second report, submitted by the advisory committee, sald . . "reasonable assurance'' could not be given that state parks vis· itors near tbe plant could be notified in time to avoid con- tamination if there was an ace!· dent. ''This is really unplowed ground in many respects," Hanchett said. "This is the first time licensing will come under the new rules adopted by the commission after the Three Mile Is land accident in Penn· sylvanla." _ Hanchett said the existence of a ··workable" emergency management plan is now re· quired ror licensing or a nuclear plant. He said the licensing heartn11 on San Onofre's Units 2 and 3 would be conducted by com- m 1ss 1 on -appointed ad · man1strative law jud1es who sit o n the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board. ··You can expect that the ques- tions of emergency evacuation and communication will be fully ventilated," Hanchett said. "If there are weaknesses in the <See ONOFRE, Page AZ) Talks end; baseball walks Negotiations planned to resume Monday or Tuesday a.llY ............... Irme Ren/To, Jane JenlciM, Maynard Jenkim and Charlie Jenkins • graduated from Dwyer School in 1914, '2S, '55 and 'Bl. footsteps followed Huntington family knows school .8y PIUL SNEIDER MAN Of._ Dally,...,. S!Mf When Maynard "Charlie" Jenkins Ill graduated from :Dwyer MiddJe School in Hunt- l ngton Beach Thursday. three members of his family sat in the audience watching a bit of his- ~ry repeat itself. i; Charlie's father, grandmother ~nd great-grandmother all ~rad·uated from the same ~chool. ~ The location, design and name !of the school have changed a bit o\ler the past 70 years, and so bas the city that grew up around ·a. · When Irene Engle Renfro, now 81, moved to Huntington Beach in 1910. the town had just changed its name from Pacific City. The oil boom hadn't yet ar- •tived, she recalJs, and the only traffic was of the horse and buggy variety. . She attended classes at what was calJed Huntington Beach Elementary School, located at 5th Street and Or1µ1ge A venue, and graduated with the Class of 1914. Her grandfather and uncle opened Huntington Beach's first silent movie house, the Crescent Theater. "My uncle, Myron Wickham, \ISed to sing during the in- ~ termissions." Mrs. Renfro re- calls. What did youngsters do for recreation in those days? "We used to sit on the corner of 5th and Main after school and play jacks," she says. (See "CHARLIE, .. Page A!) Spaniel puts bite on suspect SANTA MONICA <AP> -Lori Giovannis wouldn't generally describe her 4-year-old cocker spaniel, Fraulein, as a vicious watchdog. But it turned out Fraulein can take care ol herself and her mistress' house. Ms. Giovannis was gardening Thursday in her backyard when she saw a man. who apparently didn't see her, slip into her home. She ran next door and called police. But the intrude(, meanwhile, encountered FrauJein upstairs. police said. The burglar ap- parently tried lo strangle the pet, but Fraulein managed to clamp her small jaws onto his hands. She eventually chased the Intruder from the l\ouse. NEW YORK ,(AP) -Major leaiue baseball players went on strike today, and clubs canceled some games. Negotiations broke off for the day after a 21.-'l-hour session, and further talks were not scheduled. (Related story Page Dl > Federal mediator Kenneth Moffett said the next session would not be unlil Monday or Tuesday at the earliest. mean· ing a weekend without major- league baseball. ·'They're pretty deadlocked,·· Moffett said or the two sides. The possibility of blocking the strike by a last-minute court de· cision also evaporated. as the National Labor Relations Board announced in Washington that it would have no decision today on appealing a federal Judge's rul- ing. The strike did not mean an end to trades . The New York Yankees and the Chicago Cubs swapped pitchers, the Yanks sending Doug Bird to the Cubs for Rick Reuschel. The American League told its 14 teams "that tonight's ~e'en games are off, subject lo an) ac lion from today's negollat1ng s ession," said Phyllis M erh1~e. a leagu~ spokeswoman Shoruy thereafter. the Toronto Blue Jays announced that tonight's home game against the Texas Rangers was olf. no mat ter what. "We've now decided lo cancel the game ," sai d Ho ward Starkman, the Jays' puhli~ rel a- Well-funded I OC solons I identified By GLENN SC01T Ol .. oeltyPOlll ... Five of Orange County's nine state legialatora, Asaemblyman Chet Wray being foremost. are among the biggest recipients of . campaign contributions from wealthy special-interest groups, according to Common Cause. In a report issued Tbur~y, Common Cause ranked the five leglslatora among the top 20 in receiving donations from the 20 highest-spending special-interest groups from January 1976 to June 30, 1980. Wray, D-Garden Grove , ranked sixth in the state by re· ceiving $102,235 from the lob· byist groups. The former union organizer's primary benefactor was the United Auto Workers re- gional political action commit- tee, which gave him a total or $52,050. He also received S9,280 from the California Teachers Association. Other recipients were Sen. John Schmiti, R ·Newport Beach, ranked 10th ; As- semblyman Richard Robinson, D-Garden Grove, 14th; former Assemblyman Dennis Mangers, 0 -Hli[ntington Beach, 16th, and Sen. Paul Carpenter, D-Cy press, 19th. Common Cause is a non-profit organiiation seeking to change election laws to make elected of· ficlals less dependent on self- interest groups. Walter Zelman. executive director of California Common Cause, said Orange County is particularly noteworthy as an area where representatives get larg e donations from free- spendin& lobbying groups. Zelman speculated that a rash of competitive races for legislative seats has upped the \ocal political ante. He noted that four or the five leading recip- ients are Democrats who still had enough conservabve lean· ings to attract m~ey from busi· ness-ortented ~oupa. Big givers, lie added, like to donate to many candidates. Mangers, for example, received (See FUNDS, Pa1e AZ) . .,...., .,.... _..,..,., ...... Irvine City Councilman Art Anthony hugs a weU-wisher as he enter1 Harbor Municipal Court for hearing this morning. Wife says Anthony 'striking at world' Elaine Anthony testified today that her husband. Irvine Coun· cilman Art Anthony was ''strik· ing out at the world, not me," on April 10 when he allegedly beat her and graied her with a gunshot. "I was trying to calm him down and I got in the way as he was flailing around," Mrs. An· thony said this morning at a Harbor Municipal Court pre· limtnary hearing for her husband. She said that as the couple scufned tn the master bedroom of their Irvine home, at some point Anthony pic ked up a .45 caliber handgun that was kept on their nightstand. He began to wave the gun around and she pushed bis arm and the gun went off twice. she testified. Her testimony came after Presiding Judge Dooald Dungan told her sh'e would be placed in contempt .of court ll sbe refused to testify. Mrs. Anthony was called as the first witness by prosecuting attorney Pattie Manoukian. f:alif ornia headed for smoggiest swnmer ~. In attendance in the courtroom was Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart, Assistant Irvine City Manager Paul Brady ana Irvine Councilman Bill Vardoulis. They were all expect· ed to be calJed as witnesses. . . But experts s_ay Orange Coast areas will escape pollution due to wind patterns Durlng first-stage alerts, ozone levela reach al leaat .30 part per rnllllon. D1Jrin1 a aecond·atqe alert. the level topf . ~ppm. In 1 flnt·ltqe epiaode, the air ts con1ldered unhealthfuJ for nnlltlve PecJple, whl&e the alr la ualiftlthful for ••eryoae durlnc • 1ffoiMI~ aa.rt. DW1.n1 such •Pitoc*t I..,• employen are or· derecl to 9-lp wotkWI form CM' poOla illDd jU WU111C•ary outaide •Ctl'tft11bouldbe CWUlled. In lffl, Oran1e CoUnty coaatal areal ll•d three flnt·1t•1• il•rll. IA 1171, one flnt·ltatl alert WU c.Ued ud there wert According to police reports, Mrs. Anthony fled her home after the alJeged i-ttack ln the late evening hours and went to the home or Irvine Police Chief Peart . While sbe was al the c:hief's home, Antbony reportedly called his political aJly Vardoulla and asked him to come to the An· thony home and Vardoull1 com-f plied. The preliminary heartna ta·be· lng held to determine whether there ii enoucb evidence to try Anthony tn Ora111• CoHlY Superior Court on t.lony char1ea of ·assault with a deadly weapon in <.'OMeclion with the at,tact <r bi.I wife. lions director "We see no chance of playing the game." In the Nat1onaJ League, the San D1ego-Ch1cago, Los Angeles· Pitts burgh and Cincinnati- 111'>nlreal games were called off. T~e game in Chicago, scheduled lo begin at 11 .30 a.m. POT, was the first game on today's schedule and lheonly day game. K at hr~n l"eeney , a NL spokeswoman. said, "We have not told our clubs not to open <their parks> " Sea lions pirate SD fishermen SAN DIEGO IAP> -Calling the situation "critical" for the economic futures of some boat operatoa;s, spokesmen for the Nation al Marine Fisheries Ser vice say San Diego bas the West Coast's most serious prob- lem with sea Hons pirating catches from sportfishing boat anglers. John Scholl heads the project studying the longtime problem between the mammals and fish- ermen. but has not come up with solutions . Marge Stinson. a fisheries biologist working with Scholl, says the situation is "critical." "There's going to be a lot of people who Jose their boats in the next few years." she said. Commercial fi shermen are al- lowed to scare off sell lions with warning shots if the curious animals interfere with equip- ment. But charter and public rental operators do not have the same privilege. Thus, illegally or not. frustrat- ed s portrishing skippers have been reported shooting at the' animals often to scare, but sometimes to kill. "They're pests. just like rats in your home." said skipper Roger Howard. ''And they could possibly rµin the sporlfiJhing lJusiness in San Diego, I'm swe people go out there and kill the seals. I can't name names, but I'm sure it goes on." l'ravate boater Michael Garcia sa id he saw an armed s porlf1s hing crew "blastln_!l away at sea lions" several weeks ago. "It was shocking, very eross." Gar cia said "We were close in, trolllng, when we came around the comer. We could hear the shots first. There was no mis- take 'lbout It. It was crystal clear to me what they were do- ing. '' (SH SEAU, Page A%) .. ..................... ...... ORltllil CDAIT llATNll Fair through Saturday .wi\h highs at beaches 68 to '1.3 nnd Inland areas 76 to 83. LOWI tonlaht 62 to 67. INSIDE TODAY The Rouar Liptuoiu, orutocrau of the tQM.CrioA world, wm appear of ,,.. A..oh.tm Con\lefttiort Cnkr •.• CJ I . .. t .• emergency plana aa they are now written they '4ill be pol..ted out." lt and wheq all three generators at San' Onotte belin s upplying electrlclty s imuJtancously, they wlU pro- vide enough power to ll1ht ._.ar. ly two n\lUioo homes. But for more than • year Lb San Onofre Nuclear Oen•ratlnt Station hasn't produced tnouth power to fire up srandma 't htat• ing pad. Edi on omctala ay for O""Y day Unit l r mal out ol opera· tion it cos\$ thelr tompany about $350.000 to replace lhe lost pottr with electricity •eneratC!d trom fossil fuel sourc~ The $3.S billion pr'QJect to build Units 2 and 3 us expecte!d to be completed by 1983. David Barron. a spokesman ror the utility, sald Unit 2 ls more than 90 percent finished. Workmen are now preparin& the plant for fuelin1 and operation. If all goes as planned, it couJd become operational by the end of this year or early 1982. Barron said work on Unit 3, which shouJd come on line in 1983. 1s about 70 percent finished. Both Units 2 and 3 are l,000. mega" atl facilities. Unit 1. now 13 years old, was built at a cost of $480 million and is a 450- megawatt plant. A megawatt represents one m11l1on watts or electricity, l'nough to power 10.000. 100-watt li ght bulbs. Nixons plan move to suburb of Big Apple SADDLE RIVER. N.J. <AP> After a year in bustling Ma nhattan, former President Richard M. Nixon and his wife are moving to the suburbs . .An aide says the Nixons are buying a Sl million house on a quiet cul-de-sac in this s maJJ Ber gen County community, whi ch has the highest per-capita income in the state and only one welfare recipient .. And the new neighbors ap- parently are tickled about the pros pect of Jivin g near the former president. ··He'll be most welcome in Saddle River," s aid Mayor Dun- c an H. Cameron, a retired stockbroker. "We've never had a Democrat serve as mayor or councilman since the begmmn~ of time." Nixon aide Nicholas Ruwe said Thursday the Nixons are moving lo a sprawling seven- bedroom, conte mporary house owned by John Alford, also a re- tired stockbroker. The two- story. wood-trimmed house with a circular drive is near a peach orchard and su rrounded by woodland. Although Ruwe declined to give the purchase price, he said the h0use had been offered for Sl.2 million. Among its feat~ are three built-in stereo syttems, a 900- sq uare-foot swimming pool, a tennis court and a 1,000-bottle wine 9ellar. The closing of the sale is sch~uled £s>r late July. when Ruwe said be expecta the Nlxons lo move from their $750,000 M adhattan townhouse. The townhouse where the Nixons have lived a little longer than a year probably wUl be sold, Ruwe added. State budget progress to kl SACRAMENTO (AP) -With "the--spirit of compromise" the byWord, the six legislators work· ing on tht $25 billion state bud~et have settled some sticky items that involve more political tha11 fiscal weieht. The cooperative atm()sphere for ihe budtet conference com- mittee's fourth day of work wu in contraat to tbtt rancor of Thursday , when Senate Reeubllcan leader Wiltlam Cam1>bell walked out and other committee members erupted in frequent aneer. Campbell, who last ~ear led the rtght aaainat welfare benefit Increases that held up the budget. unW Jilly 11, even gav• in Thursday on two pet proJeacts ~hat bad been sou&ht by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Deity ...... SUH "'Me A,erial view of San Ono/rt Nuclear Generating Station, focus of li~ensing hearing and queatioM on emergency planning. From Page A1 . SMOG T HREATENING. • • of t he WOQt summers in 20 years in tern\s of alr pollution. He expects this year to be worse because 12 first-stage s mog alerts have aJready been called and July and September a r e considered to be the top s mog-producina months. August he said is bot eJlough to burn the inversfon later, aJlow- ing pollutants to be released. Although air quaJity was good Thursday, Birakos predicted that by next week the AQMD may be declaring second-stage alerts lf winds die down aqd there is a strong Inversion. Birakos blamed tbe From Page A1 FUNDS. • • contributions from 19 of the 20 groups -the mos t of any legislator ln the state. Orange County legislators who didn't make the lop 20 raking are Assembly members Marian Bergeson, R·NfWport QHch; Ross Johnson, R·Fullerton: John Lewis, R-Orange, and Sen. John Briggs, R-Fullerton. Schmitz received $87 ,300 from the b\I spending groups. The Republictll's lartest source was United for Callfornla, a big busi· oess aroup includina Irvlne- based Fluor Corp. The group aave him $35,000. He also re· celved $ZC,OOO from Gun Owners of CaUf~ dd SS,_750 from Bankers for Retporwbfe Gcrv· ernment. Of Robinson's $83,917 total, be received $13,000 from the Fund for Insurance Education . Zelman ooted Robinson ls a m e mber of the Finance, Ins urance and Commerce Com· mittee, which be called the .. Juice Committee" because or donations members often re- ceive from ~industries. Robimon ilbo got $12,157 from tbe California State Employees Association and S8,000 from the California Dental Political Ac· lion Committee. Mangers, who lost his seat in November to Nolan Friuelle, R· Huntington Beach, received $80,700, includin& 113,SSO from the California MedicaJ Political Action Committee, 113,500 from the slate employees and $12,400 from the teathen usodatloo. The medical committee wu the sln&le tartest donor, gtvlng $1.3 million~ during the four years. State employees, at $1.2 mUlion, were nm. Carpenter received '71,900. He ·got $12 ,900 from state employees, $10 ,300 from teachers and $?,77$ trom the Fund for Insurance Education, which lncludea l>foper\y and casualty companies. Legislature for not doing enough to battle smog. He said the Legislature's failure to pass laws requjring annuaJ inspection of anti-smog devices on automobiles has added to the smog problem. He noted that cars produce about half the pollutants po ured into the atmosphere. Biralcos said he also was dis· mayed that some otricials were con sidering doing away with service station nozzles that trap gasoline fumes 'and pump them back underground. .. "If· they do away with the nozzles, it ""ll add 75 tons of hydrocarbon emissions to the air dally,"' be said. Hydrocarbon particles tum inlo smog once ex- posed to sunlight. "All this contributes to the problem we have now. We hope our predictions for the summer do not come. true, but chances are they will.'' Birakos said. From Page A1 SEA L S . • • Sea lions are protected under the Marine MammaJ Protection Act of 1972, which made any harassment of sea llons by sportfiBhers illegal. One skipper contends sea lions ,have cut his charter business in half. ''People have told me they won't come out again tmtJl'we do .omethJng about the sea llon problem," said skipper Bob Fletcher. Stinson said studies are under way to find a way to ,convince sea lions that "when they see a sportboat fishing, it is unwise to come to the boat." Amon1 the methods suggested is loading shotguns with rock salt. Skippers have used seal bombs, now illegal, which cause a slight concussion when they explode in the water, but resuJt in no permanent damage. Tbe intell1gent 1lnimals quickly dis· cerned that the devices were harmless and they lost their ef· fectiveness, Stinson said. Until some safe method IS de- vised, officials believe frustrat· ed sportfisbers will continue to shoot at the animals. One veteran sportflsherman estimated he'd killed at least a thousand sea lions before it was declared UJeaaJ. "I'm not proud of that. I'm not happy about it," said the skip- per, who wished to remain un· identified. "But under the same circumstances. I would probably do it aa"ln." Bani-Sadr protest target CteMlfled ............. 7141141-111'1 AM O«Mr .,,,.11..-........, BEIRUT <AP> -Iranian Prtbldenl Abolhauan Bani· Sadr, stripped of hla Job as the nation's top milttary com· mander, hu left t.be war frcnt and returned to Tehran wbf.re demonstrators have called for 'bl1 exeeutloa. "Bani·S.dr should be tried. Banl·Sadr should be t.H~uted. Bani-Sadr ii the new 1hab," t.b9 demoutraton chanted ThUh· daJ a1lbey1atb•ed a.tatde tbe l"'••iclelrt'• office m ~ Telran. · sourcea ln ll'M coata~ by telephone b7 Tb• At .. c .. 1ed Preti lft 8iitut delCrlbed .... lemomtutton as • ·.--.acet.I .. l • . ....... ---- BEIRUT Leb•non <AP> - lrart toda'./ called the llraeli bomblnt of a nuclear reactor on the outskirts of Baghdad a U.S. plot to drum ur Arab support for Iraqi Pres dent Saddam Hussein. Mlnlst.ry•atatem~nt which also • rejected calls by the 21.member Arab League for a cease-fire ln the ei&ht-month-old Iran-Iraq war. Tehran Radio re ported the al- luatlons. made in a Foreien From Page A1 "Imperialist America in its final aeries of eftorta tel save Saddam's fall bu cauaed the bombin& of the nuclear plant by ''CH AR LIE'' GRAD UATES Her daughter, Jane Renlro Jenkins, now 59, was a 1935 graduate ol CentraJ Elementary School. (She ~came known as "Mom J e nk i n s" i n t h e mid·1960s, for her work in send· Ing gifts to Vietnam soldiers I. She attended classes in the schoolhouse at 14th Street and Palm Avenue until March 10, 1938 -the night an earthquake leveled the building. The quake forced school of· flcials to find new places to bold classes. Mrs. Jenkins recalls that the school gym, which survived the quake, was partitioned Into classrooms for the younger stu- dents. The seventh and eighth grade s tudents were taught in the choir loft at Huntington Beac)l High School. The current Dwyer School at 1502 PaJm was finished In tlme for Mrs. Jenkins' gr aduation in 1935. I In those days, Huntington Beach still was a relatively s mall town surrounded by lima bean and tomato fields. The emphasis at school was on the three Rs, and classes began with a fl ag ceremony and a prayer. Mrs. Jenkins refers to the city beach as a popular "baby sit· ter ' • where yo un g people gathered each summer. ··our family spent three days and three night at the beach dur· ing the heat wave of 1939," she recalls. "We'd gel. up early and get a place under the pier Polish premier fires 5 ministers WARSAW <AP> -Pre111ier Woj ciech J aruzelski today dropped five mihisters from his .Cabinet, including Deputy Premier H enryk Kisiel and Justice Minister J e rzy Bafia, and proposed a major Cabinet reshuffle a imed at rescuing Poland's crippled economy. J aruzelski, in a speech to the Sejm , or Parliament, also said he was ready to discuss with Poland's trade unions. because that was the only shade." Her son, Maynard Jenkins Jr., 39, Is a 1955 graduate of Dwyer, called Central Elementary School at the time. 1t was an era when boys wore pegaed pants and tennl5 shoes, while the &iris wore pony tails, bobby sox and saddle shoes. Girls could not wear slacks, and no one came lo school in shorts and a tee shirt. Jen kins recalls the scbool '1 excellent cafeteria, whJch now serves as the Huntington Beach City School Dis trict's ad· minlstraUon bulldioa. ''Milk was only four cents and ice cream was lour cents," he says. "For 25 cents, l used to eet two hot dogs, a bowl of chili and some milk.'' The school had beautiful landscaping <removed in the early 19699 for more playground area>, fine athletic teams and a marching band that traveled too many festivals. "We aJso had capital punish· ment In those days," Jenklnl re· calls. "U you misbehaved'; the prlncipaJ would give you a swat with a big wooden paddle." There's no paddling these days at Dwyer School. The school had to lease Ila eym and pool to the city in the late 1960s because they did not meet stat~ earthqualce standards. The school n e wspaper, formerly caJled "Inside the OU Can," is now known as "The Surfrider." There are no longer basebaJI and basketl)alt teams at the school. "W e hav e a f ew cheerlead ers," explains new graduate Charlie Jenki}ls. "But they don't tiave much to cheer a bout." The school has a variety of elective courses to supplement the three Rs, including oceanog- raphy. Some things 'haven't changed much in 70 years. Today's stu- dents sWl spend a lot of lime at the beach. But Charlie's classmates have traded the street corner jacks of his great-grandmother's era for coin-operated video games. "This Is where they 'Were pre- paring lo build bombs, but the inspectors did not .-e ll," Begin told reporters al a diplomatic re- ception Thursday night. The Iraqis "fooled' .. apec- tors of the International Atbmic Engergy Agency wllo cl9efked the reactor In J Mu~, tie Mid. -President Keag~n. •alking a diplomatic tt1btroise, la re-assuring Israel that its bdrftbing of the Iraqi nuclear reactor tPls I not jeopardized U .S.·ISl'ael~ ties, ! while telling Arab.leaders <h•1a i peacefuJ solution to the )eact• j issue might have bffll pc.sible. i Asked if his Middle' East peaoe · efforts were "back on track" I after meetings Thursday with • five Arab a mbassadors a~ the 11 Israeli envoy. Reaaan replied: "'I think so, yes." I The Arab League called for l U. N. sanctions against Israel as the Security Council prepared to begin meeUng this arternOOn on the LllraJ1 destruction of Iraq's nuclear reactor. Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy demanded a joint Arab attack lo destro1 Jarael 's nuclear reat tors, sa)'lng the Arab world ''does QOt ac<'ept l Israel's existence." l IRS seizes Billy's fie lxl, ATLANTA <APJ -The tleld where Jimmy Ca~·s Secret Service softball squad batUed the press corps is among Bilfy Carter's real estate holdings seized by the lntemaJ Reverwe Service to cover piaymlni of back taxes. Carter pl ans to auction lbe land June Z1 and the sale will be allowed, IRS spokeslflan Giles Hollingsworth sald Thutsday night. ~ That land, Cartttr's. famous service statiop, aal his .,ormer home in Plains are to Ille sold to r aise money to pay in~fne tax· es. according to J .L. Todd or : Rome, Ga., -..hOIS~ ftfm I.a bQ.....I dling the auction. HoUinaswortb declined to say how rtrwch rnoney1 was owed. · ' ,. . .. I •t ~~~Q11£!, AliM'I , ••• ,,. "" two beautiful BIGEL0W carpet•·: made from · 11. · a totally new MAGIC carpet fiber .•• Anlf ! ANSO•tv is a new patented product from Allied Chemical Research, in which .,,. nylon is chemically modified, ctramatically changing the surface energy of the fiber ao tr · . , actually rejects and repels liquid spills, stains and dirt. You get long-range: . '~\ !.. ~' 1011. "'OT!CTION ANso•1v actually 1'9Ject• 1011, even alter heavy weer and r..,.11ed eleenlngs Your cerpet at•Y9 beauhful longer 1nd responds to clean· Ing better. ITAIN "tOTECTION ANSO'IV reQels liquid aollla and ttalns. Protection ii •f· fectlw .... .., atter ... avv wear end r• peeted c:IMnlnl)t. Quick remov11 cen Pf'event or minimize moet 1111ns STATIC IHOCft ~ ANS0•1v Static •hock control It lully 1ffectille and it la 11erm1nent. Annoy\111! •ta.rlc shock build UP II Vlrt~Y elltni- n111ed ftAft ,_.OT'ECTION ANSO'"N ii era~ undef tne lndU9tr)' 1 meet oe- mandino COMttucllon IC)eeltlcettons wurlng mexlmum r~•· d11n1· billty Ind W91r rettatlne.. .l . . ............. Postage stamps printed in honor of thil ~mmer' s Toyal wedding show Prince Charles towering over Lady Diana Spencer, · although the two'are nearly the same height. The post office in • London erplainec;t: Charles was standing on a bo:r when the photo · was taken. Former Tennessee Gov. Ray Blanton's llquor-llcense cons piracy conviction cost r him his right to vote but not bis right to a state pension when he turns 65. Two former aides also were convicted by a U.S. Dis· trict Court Jun. Asked at bis home if he 1 cared to comment, Blanton said, "I'm just not in the mood." :I For the second time in less than a month, illness forced actress Elliabeth Ta)'lor to cancel performances of "The Little Foxes," the first stiow s h e has appeared in on Broadway. Fred Na th a n , press representative for the show. at the Martin Beck Theater, said Miss Taylor's doctor, Mich ael Rosenblatb, was treating her at her apart· ment for a ''24-hour virus." Describing himse lf as a "centrist " and a ''liberal with sanity," Mayor Edward I. Koch of New York City an· nounced he is running for re- election and says he'll seek both the Republican and Democratic nominations. Blanche &JkeT, stpr of Broadway's" Lol~ta'' and daughter of actress Carroll Baker, found the going a little rough Cl3 she tri~ to stay aboard a mechanical bull in Santa Monica. Toll man draws doub le take1 Exit 6 of the Massachus,ttl Turnpike ls becomin1 somet.hlna of a tourist attrac· Uon. "It's aetUng to be a prob- lem. Some limes traffic backs "I> and people are look· Int over Crom the other lanes saytns. 'Hey, what'i the preside nt doing over ther e?' " says t-0ll collector Paul Sotlcb~k. '· U I look so much like the president, bow come I'm here and not ma.kine the kind of money he ~akes ?" be asked. Rosalfnn Carter says she and her husband have "ad· j us ted with extraordinary ease" to life in Plains, Ga., but dau&hter Amy bas bad trouble making the transition from the White House. In a letter to friends and former staff members in Washington, Mrs . Carter said the former president "is at peace, concerned about what is happening in Washington, but totally im· mersed in his book and his woodworking shop." ··Although he enjoyed ever y day of his presidency, he ha s not mi sse d Washington since returning home," Mrs. Carter said. "I sincerely believe, though, that the country will sorely miss him and soon." King J uan Cerlos and bis Greek-born wife, Queen Sofia, will make a state visit to the United Statea next Sep- tember, the Spanish foreign ministry announced. This announcement didn't provide the exact dates for the trip, which is a response to an invitation from Presl· dent Reagan. The Spanis h monarch originally planned to travel to the United States in February, but the govern· ment crisis that followed the r es ig nation of Premie r Adolfo Suarez forced a postponement. The American-born queen of Jordan ha s borne a Jordan-born prioce. The royal palace a n - nounced that Qaeen Noor, fourth wife of King Hu.ela, gave birth to a boy named Baabem, after the founder of the Hashemlte dynasty. Queen Noor. 29, is the former Liu Najeeb Halaby. a Princeton graduate. She married Hussein , 47, in 1978. They have two children. 1.exans flee~g floods ustin residents br acing for more rain today •Ir through S.tiwcler. Mital IOw 62, llllend '1. C4ietYll ... lftlend 7J. W41ter 1f\ •-~. -out.r •tl•n .. 11 Clemente ht•n• weat ta •at WIMI lnctNllne 11 to • ll Is tonl9'1t. Wtllds ffCNIHlll• , ... ,. S.. 5 IO I IMt. 0.twnrite, I v.,-i.oi. ttllldl nltflt ..W -11011ra becoml111 watt to -10 to u knots .., .... efwr· ,.. ... .,. Wlnll ··-t to 4 .~1-11 11021Mt. etlH Cloud& lonl9flt ..a Sel ....... y 111.,.. Sunn, Set_.,.._ .S. summary ' wre ~enm ~oo 1U i l1hnh or A u1tlft to II•• ~Md_ ...... ......., y-pwttef Te ... _.. .... JkO. "'<M!tU 11 ... cOll for ,,_.. rel11 to- 111.,. -111111 ef <Mitre! T ... WNl'e l'Mna M "fl IO e!fllt fftCllel H p1ecld cr .. u lllfii twlrlltlt et.en, offklelt ul4, N Nau-I WMINr S.rvlc:e uld Tllllf'ICle' ltlfM lllet coftdHlons red tN deWIO!lfl'IM'll ef mo,. ,..,_ 111 Souttl 9M C..lltrM •• !Ill••• wllore lht 1ro11ftf I MY llMtlltMM. o -,... ~ lftlurH 111 "'· ....... -''"*'eilltflOolll 12 ...... on IMmc>flel Dey, th• A111tlt1 Fire ~rtment UllMd croell.-.W. IWlfftW 111 tM -1 of tN dl\t " MnMllY ti Witt*"-Cr• ......... to • .... , ..... llWndln'9n'I\ activity c• ----Golorede.,,.,.. trel Ke111e1 e9d Ille To•es Mlldle. ~--elte cev- .,... mwtll of .. MUUHlefltrel r• • .... ,....... KlltlOf'M ..,....... end tllVflderllotmt ro«llod .,.., tN SolltllHlt end IN mld-Ml•IHIHI v .... ,. No de,.,... -reported from lfle torl\MOH. Sllowef"I end a few tllundarsllowffl were Widely ~ -tM Mld-dlo A tlefttk Cobl end IN upper Olllo ~~··rr.::e .:-~::..IH~k~ll~! Or090t1 Md Nottherll C.lllornl•. Severe norltll' -..-t!IM ..... ., over IN liltll pteiN Of Gotoreelo end Wyomtne to ,,,. <Ofltret ptel111 01 Ke!IMI, Hellr.U end Swth OeMtA. Sce ltere• 111owor1 end '"""' dentor-wwo •..-CIM from ti. ~N C.lt w IN _..., Ml.....,. Valley, .. Gnat LAU. elld IOUtNnl .. ... lllMM. Tom_....,_~ IN notlofl et m141fti.M l"OT ,.,... from '5 et LM· lfll Alr .... Cit ._ In L........._, 9'tlfM to .. lt1 "'-'i•,Alk. California Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT~rlday, June 12. 1981 H,,. U CI flap brings invite Supervisors to appear before regents to discuss bills? In a situation described aa "extraordinary," members ol the Oran1e County Board of Supervisors have been Invited to appear before the University of California Board of Ruenta to 1 diacu11 the controversy over financing or indlsent medical servlcelf provided at the UC Irvine Medical Center ln Orange. The invitation WJs formally conveyed this week to superv1sors Chairman Ralph Clark from regents Chairman Joseph Moore. It was not immediately known which of the supervisors would a ttend the regents meetin& scheduled June 19 at the Los Angeles Convention Center. A Clark aide, Stan OfteUe, said the invltaUon has been passed on to Supervisors Roger Stanton and Harriett Wieder , members of the board subcommittee han· dling the dispute. The county. forme~ owner of the medical center, and the uni· versity have been embroiled In disputes over t he billing of ser vices for indigents since 1979. At issue is more than Sll million in bills the county has refused to pay. The county required by law to pay for treatment of indigents with medical problems -is con· tending the university often pro- vi des unnecessary services. Bills which the county has dis- p uted cur rently are being a rbitr ated between the two parties. Disputes erupted shortly after a contract was negotiated in 1976 by which the university took over treatment of indigents. The regents voted on May 15 to terminate the agreement, ef· fective Jan. 1, 1985, the earliest date aJlowable. In addition the regents asked the cowity to conaider neaottat· 101 a new contract under which the county would pa.y an annual "lump 1um" for treatment of in· dteent.s. In the letter to Clark, dated Monday, Moore said th• coun· ty1s earlier request for an au- dience before tbe .re1ent1 w .. ••an extraordinary one.'· But, aaylng the contract d ispute likewise was a matt• "of ex· traordinary importance," )toore extended the invitations. In a related development, tbe county went to court Wednesday to block the university's inten- tion lo stop providing mentaJ health services for county pa· tlents effective July 1. The county failed to wln .- tempol'ary order a1a1nst the Ulll· veraity. A further bearln1 wu scheduled for June 23 befoN · Oranae Count)' Superior Court Judge Lula Cardenu. In a sepatate letter amt to Clark this week, UC Presklent Davld..-S.Xon aaid it l• the uni· verslty's contention that th• mental health services contract may be terminated, despite the county's contention lt cannot UD· der the aireement that transferred the medical center rrom the county to the uni· versity. Saxon said he was disturbed by Clark's alleged failure to ad· dress the larger issue of the dis· pute between the two parties. Transit worker convicted in theft A jury bas convicted a former Orange County Transit District worker of petty theft In connec· lion with alleged thievery from buses parked in the district'! Garden Grove maintenancE yard. Judge Robert Knox set a sen tencing hearing for July 14 fo1 J effrey Reynolds, 29. in West Orange County Municipal Court. Reynolds faces a maximum six-month jail term or a S50C fine, said Deputy District At torney Ed Hess. Reynolds was accused ol stealing at least $200 from bus~ and carrying coins from bu! fareboxes to his car in small plastic waste baskets. OCTD officials investigating possible thefts said audits in· dicated that $63,000 in coins was missing from fares collecteC.: from Augus t 1980 to last January. Reynolds was not ac· cused of stealing all the money. Reynolds' attorney, James Thomason of Anaheim, argued during the trial that the dis· trict's accounting methods were "slipshod" and didn't prove the money was stolen. Reynolds also testified that be didn't steal any money. Both lawyers had differing in· terpretations of the jury's verdict. Thomason said some jurors told him after the trial that the petty theft dealt only with stealing the waste baskets. Hess said that explanation was "a little bit unbelievable."' He reasoned that the j ury still had doubt as to the amount Reynolds might have taken. OCTD offi cials said Thursday they consider the $63,000 case closed with the conviction of Reynolds . Computer data dangers told WASHINGTON (AP) -Mis· guided federal policies set up to guard communications could ul· timately make personal and business data in computers more vulnerable to unauthorized disclocsure and abuse, a study conducted for the Commerce Department says. The study by SRI Interna· tional, a large consultin1 firm in Menlo Park, Calif., said current federal aWtudes toward private research into computer codes also eventually will give Japanese and other foreign manufacturers a competitive advantage over U.S. computer companies . The study, a copy of which was obtained by The Associated Press. is part of an effort lo de· velop an over all government policy dealing with cr y p· · tography. the study of codes and code-breaking. For many years. codes were the province of the military and the diplomats, both of whom concentrated on protecting their own communications from enemies and on tryine to read the opposition's messages . But now, sophisticated com· puter codes are crucial to the protection of personal informa· lion on millions of Americans that is stored in computers and Your private world shuttled back and forth between computers ever y day. The sh.ily says government policy has not changed with the changing technology. The perceived conflict bas led in recent years to various at- tempts by federal agencies to limit the research done by academics and other private re· searchers in cryptography. The federal agencies, like the National Security Agency, argue that such research could com- promise national security. But private researchers s ay the re- search would result in better protection for sensitive informa- tion without jeopardizing na- tional security. Lite at ;ark Newport is a com- bination of privacy when you want It. social goings-on when you·r, In the mood. and exhil- arating recreation when you feel rusty. Sun,moon,tide• of pleasure in the middle of Newport Beach. Here is the ultimate in care- free Newp0rt Beach living sur- rounded by fWfKY convenience . • 01 TOOAY So<Otltl lllth 7! IS It·"'• lilTUaOAY 2:••·"'· •t••-1:'41•.M· 7:411t.m. u ., SEEING TRIPLE -Identical triplets Susan, left, Lisa and Mary Donlin of Pompano Beach, Fla. stand in front of mirror on A"W.,._.. University of Florida camptis in Gainesville. preparing for graduation Saturday. Each of ' the 23-year-oldS will graduate with honors. WASHINGTON <AP) -In a fresh wamln1 to Moscow, the State Department aaya Kremlin presaure on Poland'• leadershlp to quash the country's trade un- ion movement represents In· \erfel'ence in Polish Internal af. faio and a violation of the Helsinki accor~. Department spokesman David Passaee said Thursday that the United States regrets the "ap- parenUy threatening tone" of a letter aent by the Soviet Com- munist Party's Central Commit- tee to the Warsaw leadership. •• I .. e • ... ----- • chances ot ~viet military ln· tervention in Poland beca111e of their preoccupatlon with Israel 'a raid on an Iraqi huclear reactor and other Mideast problems. "Today , a.s many are mes merited over the destruc- tion of the nuclear capability of the radical and Irresponsible re- gime in Iraq, the Soviet Union is a1ain poised on the brink of crushing the budding independ· en ce of Pol and,·• Lantos declared on the lf.ou~.e floor. •• lncunations wlll keep them from rash actions." Passage suuested at a State Department briefine tbat Red Army forces In the weateniSo- vlet Union near Poland are in a "high state of readiness'' and could probably move into Poland fairly quickly. Officials have said In recent days, however, that they have not detected any unuaual troop movements. The top-level Soviet measaee sent to Warsaw sajd a "counter- revolutionary threat" was put- t 1 n g Poland's com munist · political system in "mortal danger." Pulitzer controversy ren~wed "From what we have seen, the Polish people and government are In the process of resolving their differences in calm and in dignity without help from out- side," Passage said. On Capitol Hill, Rep. Lee Hamilton, D-Ind.. chairman of the House Foreign Affairs sub· committee on Europe, said be believes the Kremlin will have to decide soon bow to respond to Polish party leader Stanislaw Kania's reassertion of his leadership over the opposition of Soviet-backed hardliners. Rep. Paul Findley, R-111., commented, that in the long run, Moscow "simply cannot stand free expression, competition of ideas within the Warsaw Pact. They will have to alter their re- lationship with Eastern Europe very fundamentally unless they can persuade the Polish regime to put a halt on Utese changes." Hut Findley added: "I think their (the Soviets' l conservative The letter touched off a bitter power struggle between moderates loyal to Kania and party hardliners -brought out into the open during a two-day !jession of the Polish party's cen- tral committee which ended 1 Wednesday. NEW YORK <AP > -Two months ago '?he Washington Post returned a Pulitzer Prize it won for a feature story it later found ~t to be fabricat· ed. Now the Na tional News Council has criticized as "unfair" and "reckless" a story by the reporter who ulitmately won the prize. The story -an account or the slaying of former U.S. Rep. Allard Lowenstein -was one of three cited by the Pulitzer committee in making the award to Terese Carpenter of the Village Voice after The Post returned the prize. The council on Thursday found "the article to have been marred by the overuse of unattributed sources, by a writing style so colored and im· ·aginatlve as to blur precise meanings and by such reckless and speculative construction as to result in profound unfairness to the victim of a demented killer." Ms. Carpenter was unavailable for comment 1- 1 THE SPRING TRIO Seersucker Sport Coat, Cray tropical slacks, , and White bucks. Tailored in the Ii ' ... Halliday's · ' ··· natural \. shoulder style that's always right. on the Lowenstein story, but her editor, David Schneiderman, said the council report was "ob- viously partisan and irresponsible." Schneiderman issued a ~tatement saying that council staff "withheld fron1 its analysis ... the fact that Ms . Carpenter's principal sources cor- roborated to the National News Council staff the material that was the subject of the complaint." Reagan says no The Voice refused to cooperate with the coun- cil, citing its unwillingness to "encourage censure from a self-appointed group." "I think that Moscow has been embarrassed -if not defeated -by their failure to get rid of Kania," Hamilton said. He said that in advance of a special par- ty congress scheduled for mid· July, the Polish 'Situation now appears headed for a "critical period." • tax cut comproD11se The council is a private group that Issues non- binding opinions on complalnts against news or· ganiiations. W ASJilNGTON <AP> Presi· press aide, apparently assured an all-out battle when a tax-cut bill reaches the full House later this year. Ms . Carpenter received the award after Washington Post reporter Janet ·Cooke admitted she made up her story about an 8-year-old heroin addict and resigned from the newspaper. Rep. ToJD Lantos, D·Calif .. said he was concerned tha~ the United States and its allies may, in effect,_ ~e ~ncreasine~the dent Reagan. rejecting Democratic complaints that his tax-cut plan does too llltle for low-income Americans, is slam- ming the door on further com- promise ... I 've dug in my heels ... he says. The statement, relayed by ~ ''I can't retreat from the 25 percent, across-the-board" cut in personal tax rates. Reagan told a group of labor leaders Thursday at the White House. ·INSURANCE CLAIM IN COURT SUPERIOR COURT OF CA LIFORNIA, COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES CASE #284340 FORCED PUBLIC AUCTION At tM o~ of tfM .... .,..,. f'O'f ., .. tec.f•ed ..,,....,...'°" froM '""' •nwrance compenv. '"-" ~....,. .. reed to ,...._ ,,...rcftend•• eo , ... "'°"'9V t• ~ crM•tOf"L HANDMADE ORIENTAL RUGS lrK""6ed tft tttil •Uiettorl w ilt M rvtl 1n aH tilft fllltll QV.,ltli• ho"' mo9" "'I....,...,. CO<l"1""' All'"" i.. ...,."''°""'"on. A Con•flc-of ""''-'lclty wilt IN._ ... ,., •adt purch-~ FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, THE AUCTION WILL TAKE PLACE: SATURDAY, JUNE 13 AT 2 P.M. MARRIOTT INN .900 N~WPORT CENTER DRIVE . NEWPORT BEACH RUGS MAY BIE VIEWED ONIE HOUR PRIOR TO AUCTION Terms: CMh/CMdl lnform•tlon: (213) 70e-002t A, A• A llquidato,.Aua~ GRAND OPENING TOMORROW, SATURDAY JUNE 13th I 0:00 A.M. -7:00 P .M. 20% OFF. OUR ENTIRE STOCKI FREE REFRESHMENTSI REGISTER FOR DRAWINGI .... 0 .. ,111 ... e.rt • YARNS • ACCESSORIES NEEDLEPOINT • KITS FINISHING • REPAIRING ALTERATIONS• INSTRUCTIONS .. JO's Knit Wit ••••lai .._....._.aer.c.aatc•...., J69 L 17111 St .. #29 COSTA MESA -54a.2477 · HIGHER YIELD and SHORJER TERM Mere~ Savings Now Offers NEW "Repo Plans. 11* .MERG:URY SAVINGS oPNI lou o~tiora YOUR DAD DESERVES THE BEST Texas Spread 1~.8El!!F STICK•~hullt9t. SOI. $molty (smolledc,,._!Mrl. 8 OI. Edam Sllcll, 12 OL Miki Midget L.OllQtlonl, 7 ea. Ploln Gouclo, 7Yt or. IC OPPEL.ZAK• 0-. & StroWM<ry 11c1nbcN. $21.tl ff ickor1 farms OFOHtoe WESTQ.IFF PLAZA FASHION ISLAND , , .. a'"'-·.._,.,..._ .. 642-0972 M_W ... 'Tl 7 n.r.. & Fri 'Tl t W. 'Tl 6 S.. 'Tl I ....,.... ..... 640-6030 T..._.W.111 7 M-., .......... 111 ' W.116. S.. IJ.1 w ONE DAY ONLY ~ 11 Saturday, June 13 :; I 0 am· 6 pm ''""'tiJ,lt,JjWl..M-...a..-..i• ·Parking Lot *SALE BOCijxlcking ClearanCe Sale Al ... p•.t ...t t1ece1sorie1 50%0FF -. .. ..... .... . .. -..... • Orange Coast OAJLY PfLOT,f=rlday. June 12, 1981 Defect disclosure bill sidetracked SACRAMENTO (AP> -A Realtor· Durint the debate, Stirling lnaisted sponsored bill to require home sellers that persons who sold their owh to disclose all known defects and to homes could fill out the nffded dla- list all modifications without buildlna closure forms with the help of a title permits, baa hit a brick wall. Insurance escrow officer, but one In an Assembly floor aesslon le1islator after another criticized the Thursday, Dave Stlrllna, R-Haclendi complexity of the proposed dis- Heights, described hll AB888 as 1 closures. . consumer protection bill. But oppo. "This places the nller In a poeitloo nents said it would really just make of continu1n1 liability and it relieves lt harder for indlviduals to sell their the real estate broker of a substantial own homes without en1a1lng real responsibility," said Assemblyman estate brokers. Tom Bates, D-Oakland. Said Auemblyman Larry Kapiloff, The proposed Corms would requll'e D-San Dle10, "There are things in sellers to list any known defects in this bill which are consumer· their homes, such as leaking roofs, oriented. However, there are things inadequate eledrical circuit capacl· in this bill which make lt more dJI· ty, chronically clogsing drains or ricult for individuals to sell their own outside areu that don't drain proper-bomes. ly during rainy periods. "What we're saying w\th this is, It would also require sellers to • Buddy Edsen as Master ·Of Ceremonies ~ ·~ • Official Bridge Dedication ~ ~ to· be held on Bridge • Antique Car Parade • Dixieland Band 'Homeowners, we're making it so dif· either list defects or certify that all ficult for you to sell your own home appliances sold with a home are in . that you have to go out and get a proper working condition, as well as Realtor at 6 percent commission .. I li&ting all modifications made to the I 9 0 6 • I 9 8 I don't think we want to do that." structure without building permits. The measure is sponsored by the "Some negotiations have to occur. BRIDGE DEDICATION! California Association of Realtors. There have to be some amendments .... .._... before we have a floor vote," Stirling LUDDEN EULOGIZED _ Actor Burt Reynolds After extended debate, Stirling said later, adding that he expected it Saturday • June I 3th • 9·.00 A.M. left, and producer Grant Tinker leave church asked for an indefinite postponement woulld take at least a month to work in Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Los r_o_f_t_h_e_v..::..ot:...:.e_. __________ o_u_t _a_m_en_d_m_:_en_ts_·--------+======================::=·===~ . Angeles Thursday after eulogizing the' late Allen Ludden at memori~ services. Ludden, i 63, died of cancer Tuesday. <Related story, Page 07) · Manager sued in loan fraud SAN JOSE CAP> -The booming bankini career of David E. Estes apparently hlS collapsed wi_th. a _lawsuit alleging be pocketed nearly $9.5 milhon tn bogus Crocker National Bank loans. The bank removed Estes Thursday as manager af its construction loans division here and filed suit against the vice president and his family after saying negotiations to recover the money had failed. &ptisl8 hit ERA LOS ANGELES CAP) ~ Southern Baptists condemned religious groups that try to impose their own idea of Christianity on the American people through political means in one of 12 resolu- tions passed at the end of their !24th national con· vention. After objections from several men, and sup· port from women, the convention adopted a resolu- tion condemning the proposed Equal Rights Amendment and reaffirmed ··the biblical role which stresses the equal worth, but not always the sameness of function of women." Teen vote defeated I SACRAMENTO <AP > -A plan to allow some 17-year-olds to vote ln primary elections bas been turned down on a 39-27 Assembly vote, lS short of the required two-thlrds majority. The proposed amendment to the state constitu- tion by Assemblyman William Filante. R· Greenbrae, Thursday was inspired by a court rul· ing saying the primary is an extension of the general election. Quake shakes valley LOS ANGELES <AP> -An earthquake res· istering 3.8 on the Richter Scale was fell from Santa Monica to the Antelope Valley, but police said they received no reports of injuries or damage. The quake struck at 11:06 p.m. Thursday and was centered about nine miles northeast of Chatsworth, on the western edee of the San Fernando V.alley. Oil leases bloeked? WASHINGTON <AP> _. The Interior Depart· ment faces a congressional block to Its proposal to lease four basins off the California coast for oil and gas exploration. On a s-a vote Thursday, a House Appropria- tions subcommittee approved an amendment by Rep. Les AuCoin. D-Ore., intended to prevent the department from offerine four of the areas off the coast near San Luis Obispo for le~lng. AuColn's amendment would bar the depart·. ment from spendin1 any money for biddln1. teas-1 ing, exploring or developing the four tracts. High cbur~ raps drunk driver law r/}_•IL ~- 1/ll#&SHOP ~ II-STORE WAREHOUSE SALEI SAi. JUllE 13th 10 a111·6 p111 2200 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA STORE ONLY! c 100% Poly. Easy care for work or play. Mach. wash. Designer Lengths 60". YD. VAL. TO 2.67 Cotton /Blends. Summer shorts. culottes. & skirts. Mach. wash. Designer Lengths 45". VAL. TO 2.95 YD. - , Make your own swhreult & .. v, money. Mach. wash. Detfgner Lengths 46" &up. Reg. 4.9S to 6.96 POLY SHEER KNITS 100% Poly for summer dresses. a blouses. Detligner engths 60". Mach. wast\. C S-T-R-E-T-C-H TERRY. YD. Poly ,.cotton. Day into night dress- in g . Mach. wash. Designer Lengths 60". VAL. TO 4.95 COTTON PRINTS c OYAL PRINTS Poly C.Otton. Full Bolts. 45" machine Wash. Poly ,<:otton. Huge as80f1ment fqr dresses. skirts & quilts. Designer Lengths 45"'. Mach. wash. REG. TO 2.95 YD. ~~-J57 2.95 YD. ··~· ............... -.. * Or .. Cout DAILY PILOT /Frid av, June 12, 1981 I , . ew political group an boost the county ' When bigtime politicians c me to Orange County looking f campaign contributions, they g nerally know well in advance ere they'll go. They'll visit the bi& busl-n sses, the political action g oups, the special interest or- g nizations and, of course, those ~althy individuals who like to kpow their voices are being heard. 1 Until recently, those Orange Cpunty donOTs had little to unite tllem except for the obvious ~litical affiliations. But that left tl\e county with two conflicting p9ints of view on some issues - atid virtually no un~ted front on others. · Orange County's political in- fluence is maturing, however, and one of the latest examples of its growth is the rormation last month of a new nonpartisan group called the County Club. The organiz.ation was proposed by Democratic leader Richard O'Neill, but it's for the politically active of all persuasions. So far the exclusive group has about 50 members who have paid from $500 to $1,500 to join. Their goal is to gain more political leverage for county in- terests in nonpartisan issues. Money is not the only thing politicians need to get elected, but it's hard to do without. Now when politicians visit Orange County looking for big donations, they are likely to get an extra re- minder about county needs. It may be a reminder they can't afford to forget. Myths about refugees The county's new refugee af- fairs management team started off in the .right direction by zero- ing in on the strange rumor mill that has focused on the refugee population. In a report to the Board of Supervisors, the team identified, and knocked down, a list of "myths" about refugees that have been circulating in Orange County. Although some seem far- f etched, it appears many of the myths are taken quite seriously and could, if unchecked. lead to unwelcome conflict. The refugee report assures us that: -Refugees are not handed $5,000 from the federal govern- ment wtien they arrive in the country. They sometimes get a small amount of cash to pay rent and some vouchers for food and clothing to start them out. -Refugees are not given special low-interest government lo~ns to help them buy homes or start businesses, though some eventually may qualify for the same small business loans that ane 'available to others. -Refugees receive no pref- erential treatment for jobs or housing though the voluntary agencies that sponsor them try to help them find jobs and living quarters. Refugees are not entitled to s pecial consideration for citizenship. They must meet the usual requirements ~f five years' residence and proof of good moral character and pass a citizenship exam. -Refugees are not exempt from pre-im91igration health screening. They are examined at refugee staging areas in Southeast Asia and may be barred if they have a com- municable disease. Those arriv- ing in Orange County are re- screened here for tuberculosis. Most absurd of the rumors is the one that contends California tries to get more refugees in or- der to receive more federal money. On the contrary. federal funds for refugees already have been cut back and because of the large numbers already here, an effort is being made to have new arrivals placed in other states. Undoubtedly many of the ref- ugee myths reflect the resent- ment that seems inevitable when large numbers of newcomers ar- rive in an area. Those who feel resentment should remind themselves that these people, almost without ex- ception, have suffered physically and emotionally in leaving their homes, their frien6s and their native lands, often under threat of persecution. And that, given a reasonable ctiance to adjust, they can become a credit to their new commw1ities. Toward airport quiet I An access plan for John ~. ne Airport ia now on the ks, one that will speed the in- tr uction of new and quieter jets o~rated by the five commercial carriers authorized to serve o~anae O>unty. 1 The'Plaa -modified sutJ,,tan-ti~Uy :tiOin earlier proposals - win ~the carriers, unless th'y un lbow extreme hardship, ~use quieter jets, such aa the .9 Super 80, manufactured by Donnell Douglas, on 50 percent of their flights by Oct. 1, 1982. A fotmel' plan called for only a 25 percent conversion by that date. And, un4er the plan ·BP· proved by supervisors recently, all flights must be flown with quieter jets by Oct. 1, 1983. Thus, the p~essure is on the .. air carriers to reduce the amount ~f noise their aircraft produce, Should tbef fall to dO so, • they could be strtPpea of flights and thus lose a share ot the market. • We applaud the tougher oon· version formula. Residents living under jet departure tracks should, also. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Otner views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit· ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. 8o1t 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. L.M. Boyd/ Fish scale glamour Glamour to the Warrau Indian women of South America some yean ago called for a special hairdo. Honey wu kneaded lnto the hair and theq iridescent flab scales were sprinkled over the whole mes1. It glistened. Q. What's t.be Iongest·runnlnc radio series? A. Alistair Cooke'• "Letters from America" in the British Broadcast· inl CorporaUoo pro1rammin1 since 1946. Jn cafeterias, men tend to pick out more be.lanced meals than women do. heavyweights from eat1n1 too much at one sitting. Report is they are los- ing about U pounds a moqth -down to the desired point. The •ratJon is said to be easily Teversible. Said Christopher Morley: "There is only one ~ucceas -to be able to live your life ywr own way." Amons t.be member• of that hlab acbool or1anbaUon called Future Homemabn of America are 2$,000 young men. Slnce Bolivia beeanat a Gatica 155 yeatl .,o, lt has bad 188 cbaoiea in 1overnmeot. Minority loan shake--qp due WASHINGTON -Ex·Preaident Jfmmy Carter transformed the Small Business Administration into a social agency whose main fullction was not to serve small businessmen but to help minority businessmen get established. The. Carter administration granted easy credits and non-competitive bids to minority contractors under the "SA" pro1ram, which became plagued with frau~. waste and Inequity. Much of the money was squandered on the undeserving or the politically well·connected. As one SBA official described the minority program succinctly: "It stinks." Yet this same official said the evils of the SA program are the price that must be paid if minority contractors are ever going to get a fair shake in the business world. THE HOT·EYED PURITANS in the Reagan administration. however, disagree with this "necessary evil" approach. They are determined to see that the program is made to work in such a way that both the minority recipients and the taxpayers get their money's worth. It's a tall order, though: The SBA !s $500 million in the red. It makes loans to "paper" companies that have no equipment, no employe• to speak of - and a demonstrated inability to pay back what they borrow. Loans and contracts are awarded on the buls of expediency or political pressure. -Non-minority contractors get government help under the SA program by using minority firms or individuals as fronts. Here are two examples of what's wrong with the minority contract program. They were found in the SBA's Q -J1-c1-11-a-11-10-1 -~ own confidential documents by my reporter Judy Grande. -William Roberts is a businessman who is also a Denver c\ty councilman. His request for a $300,000 loan under the SA program was turned doWn by two SBA officials. The first loan officer noted that Roberts' company lost $20,000 in 1979 and $242,000 in the first half of 1980. "Based on the earnings record of this company, this debt cannot be retired in a satisfactory manner ." the official wrote. "Mr. Roberts has no business loc.~tion, machinery, equipment or any of the normal trappings of a business." wrote another omcial. THE SAME OFFICIAL then went on to say lhat Roberts was bidding on a number of contracts and was about to be awarded one under SA that would be worth as much as $14 million. Of the requested $300,000. the official wrote· "ll 1s a sensitive loan from a political standpoint. and there is no question that any negative decis ion would be appealed.'' SBA highet·ups overruled the loan offic~rs· refusal. even though the FBI tlad determined that Roberts had once forged bis ex-wife's signature on an old lo an. In fact. the councilman's firm was g1 ven a S32S,OOO loan. the extra $25,000 was to cover an earlier $24,000 SBA loan to a defunct Roberts enterprise. Roberts. denied that his firm had no equipment or employees at the time of the loan application, a nd though he admits signing his wife's name to close out a loan. he said he did not think he had done anything wrong. Another Colorado firm. Boulder B& M Quallly Dry Cleaners, has had 12 years o! SA contract support. In January, it got its seventh SBA loan. even though it had no collateral. has .never shown a profit and owes the government laxes as well as payments on the earlier loans The company's latest loan app· lication a sked for S57 .000 : it was given $97,000. Sources tell me the loan was later rescinded after someone in SBA protested, but the agency would not confirm this. c1tmg confidentiality. A company official would say only that Boulder Is considering legal action against SBA. Records on these and other minority contract cases have been sent to the Senate Small Business Committee for stud y Reagan budget battle just beginning One of the best founts of information in W uhincton is a restaurant on Capitol Hill where most of the Senate staff peo- ple hang out. The other evenio• I w11 there talking with a juat-reUred HDior staff man for Senator Russell Lons, t>-La.. wbo, in spite ol the Republican \akeover of the Senate, is still one of tbe moet powerful Senators in Wuhlncton -particularly ln the area ot taea and bud&eta. My friend. observing the mucb- ballybooed •ld.ery of the Reagan foi:ces oo the budaet, &aid, "It's only round one of a M.eeD round fight.••, BE IS, of course. right and there la where the Reagan people are ultimately going to Co them.elves bushwhacked. Wha\ bas adopted ls a budeet that sets general 1pendJn1 limits, but there will be at least six more 10-arounda es the Coneress aets down to the details of exactly what is going to be cut and how much. This is where it is going to be brought home to a lot of voters around the na· lion that • reduced budget means, specificaU~1 that local hospital, job pro· gram or <Ulll center Is going out of busioels. / Either Uiat, or the federal! cuts will have to be off.set by increases in local taxes to keep a lot of things rolling along that ma.ny people want kept operating. The work of the Congress in this nitty·gritty. detailed trim·and·slash operation will probably not get a lot of press coverage because we media types have a short attention span. But, when the cuts literally bit home. back home, voiers are going to know about it. And, that's when the howls will start. MASSIVE CUTS in the federal blldget are wonderful in ttie abstract. lt is when we get down to {he short strokes and itemize what will happen in your town that the whim·whams begin and the politicians run for cover . This, of course. is the strategy of House Speaker 'Tip O'NelH. He is going to go along with the Reagan budget cuts and. UJen. let the White llou.se talte the heat for the public reaction that is bound to come in ~ few months. It is sort of like watching a man braid the rope that Is going to be used at his own hanging. It's hard to reinem.ber 'service' stations We needed cas the other day so I drove down to George & Al's, hoping they'd be open as it was only 10 a.m. "I think they've gone out of busi- n,11," saidtny wile, Glynda, disappoint- edly, u we drew near. "All those Junked can are cone: someone's even hosed down the pavemellt; and there's a uniformed security ruard standing by the pump." AITllPPI "Walt," l aald. "I do believe tbat's Geor1e, himself." I couldn't be sure al the only times I'd ever aeen Oeorae ••r• wben I knocked respedfull)' on the door of hla cluttered office to fork over the money t o._ed blm for tbt sasoline I'd pumped tnto my taak. But, by tolb', lt w11 Oeor~e! ''Geor1e ' I said, ac!mlrlnt his neat khaki• and fora1e cap, ''have you beell drafted?" "SOQ'lething's up," agreed qlynda, nodding suspiciously. And. sute enough. once ~ge had the pump 'going. he sidled around to the front of t~e oar and f I there'd better be four when I leave," I said. I THOUGHT all this was too good to be true. Su.re enough, after presenting the bill, George came al me with a knife. ''Here's my wallet, you fiend, .. l said. "But spate my wife and child." "Oh, no. sir." said George. "This gen· utne plaslic·nandted steak knife is a t()ken of our appreciation for your buai- ness. Five JQOre fill-ups and you'll have a complete set." "George.'' l hid, genuinely t.oucfted. "thank you for testorinf the meaning of ·service' to the phrase ·service st.a· lion.' " "Don't th•nk me, sir," said Georae with a Sigh. •'Thank Sheik Yamani." . I --' - I. ' ' .... D1llJ Pilat FR I DAY, JUNE 12, 1981 I Ann Landers allows one hard-working, angry receptionist have 0 HUITllSTDI BllCH/flUITlll VllllY FEATURES 83 COMICS 86 her say ... 83 Pounty officials back law unit merger v FltEDERICKSCHOEMEHL ti.e Dally ll'ileHw" Orange County government of- c I a l s generally rea ct e d vorably today to state As · mbly approval of a bill to •rmtt merger or the court func- o ns of the Orange County .o e riff 's D e pa r t m ent and arshal 's Office. ' The positive reactions were 11('eddespite the fact the bill was ( amended lo give the stale Legislature veto power over any consolidation plan approved by the County Board of Supervisors. Under the bUI, authored by As· semblywoman Marian Bereeson, R·Newport Beach, a committee com posed of two supervisors, one s uperior court judge, one municipal court judge and a fitth .. at large" member would ex- plore ways of accomplishing the Clymore a Funding sought fo17 llB's park ,·he Huntington Beach C<>m· •nity Services Commission is trilmending that the city buy tlonal acreage to expand Cen- Park and has asked city staff r;:~::,:~ boved to ~B jail •u$pended Orange County terlff's deputy George udermilk -in custody on !'50 ,bOO bail after allegedly -:tassing a woman who testified J;llhJlt him at his kidnappinR ~l ,_ has been moved from ~nty jail to Huntington Beach (cy Jail for safety reasons. E.riff's Lt. Wyatt Harl said etmilk, a Costa Mesa resl- • was transferred ftom the rtdlCal lsolation area of county 0 t the smaller municipal jail nursday because, as a law en· J c ement officer. he was · 'dnerable to attack by other risoners. .. In the interests of safely for ,~rybody concerned, we just oved him," Hart said. .Loudermtlk. 37, was ordered tHed Tuesday b y Superior o.urt Judge James Turner when ~Jdence was presented that the !>'hvlcted kidnapper had con- iNed one of his victims by k¢>ne Friday only hours after ri• jury verdict was announced. :t,oudermilk was convicted of ~ counts of kidnapping and ht count of felony false Im· ('csonment in connection with 'h~ee incidents Involving women ~o said they were taken to solated areas by the lawman 1fler being stopped on suspicion ,(drunken driving. fn one case. the Costa Mesa tlan was convicted of abdue.&.i,Qg j J 33~year·old Mlssiop Viejo ..,Om4ln and threatening to rape fr and kiU her. · ;ll was that woman who told idge Turner Tuesday she had eceived a telephone call from a ~ a n s h e I d e n ti f1 e d a s ~b udermilk fol lowing the erdict. ~Th' defendant has been free o h(g own recognizance follow· g the verdict to pay for 1t.,. The commissioners, who make up an advisory board to City Cowl· cil on parks and recreation issues, also endorsed a recreational de· velopment proposal designed by a private consultant for the 297·acre park, which presently is a natural setting with lakes. trees and hills . Consultant John Rau, of the Irvine-based Ultrasystems Inc .. has estimated that it would cost $15.9 million to purchase an addi· tional 75 acres and to develop the park. Vince Moorhouse, community ser vices director, said that, based on an estimate of current land prices, it would cost about $12 million to buy 75 acres and expand the park to Ellis Avenue. He said the commission recommends that the park be expanded now, and de· veloped in the future Central Park is located between Gothard and Edwards streets and Slater and Ellis avenues. Moorhouse said the land purchases possibly could be funded .,Ya combination of exist· ing park acquisition funds, state bond act funds for park purchases, and by revenue from selling sur· plus land elsewhere or slowing down the development schedule for proposed neighborhood oar ks City Council members alsohave said thata voter ·approved bond is- sue probably would be necessary topurchase addition al land. The development pro1><>1al by tJltrasystems includes a 48().site recreational vehicle campgro.und and fishing lake, six·fleld athletic complex and YMCA gymnasium, restaurant, pizza parlor and ar cade center , 5.000·seat am· phitheater, horse stables and trails, as well as the existing ad- venture playground, concession stands, gun shop and youth camp· ing area. More swap meets at Golden West Golden West College's bi· monthly swap meet will be held w eekly during the summer because of what officials call a high demand for selling spaces. The current fee (or space rent· al is $5. but it will increase to $8 starting July 11. Proceeds go to campus clubs. organizations and scholarship programs. merger and make a recominen· dation tothe bonrd. Before the final Assembly vote on the ~ill Thursday, It was amended, at the insistence or As· sem blyman Richard Robinson, D·Santa Ana, to empower the Legislature to accept or reject any plan the county might ad- vance. The bill was sent to the Senate on a 64·3 vote. The six members of the Orange County delegation in the assembly supported it, thou&h Mr s . Bergeson had argued against Robinson's amendment. The shentrs department pro- vides bailiffing and related services in the superior courts, the marshal's office performs a like function in the municipal courts . In an advisory vote more than one year ago, Orange County voters said the court functions should be consolidated, a move of· ficials say could 'save about Sl million per year. But requisite legislat\on to ac· complish the merger has proved controversial because of dis· agreements over whether the s heriff's department should absorb the marshal's court func- tions or vice versa. Super visor Thomas Riley. cha1Iman of the county•s Leaal Judicial Committee said be was "obviously pleased " with As· sembly approval of the bill, but added, "I wish we didn't have that r equir ement <the R obinson amendment> ... Riley , however, expressed OP· timism that any consolidation plan approved locally would automatically be accepted by the Legislature. ·ts drug smuggling COLLEGE LEADER Rae Mills COLLEGE HO NORS Worth Keene Student honored Huntington woman claims scholarship Rae Mills of Huntington Beach, a leader in student gov- ernment, received Golden West College's outstandin g student award Thursday during com· mencement ceremonie!s at the Huntington Beach campus . The annual award, named in honor of the college's founding president, R. Dudley Boyce, car- ries with it a $1,000 scholarship contributed by the Associated Students. Ms . Mills. 45, has served in student government projects and in many community ac· tivities s uch as the YMCA·~ children's program, Pop Warner FootbaJl. High Hopes and the Muscular Dystrophy Association of Orange Countv. She will use her scholarship to continue her studies in account- ing this fall at Cal State Long Beach. Also during the commence- ment ceremonies, Worth Keene of Seal Beach, a Coast Com· munity College District trustee for 18 years, received the out· standing citizen award. He retired as a trustee two years ago. Joseph Perry, 84, dies Joseph Rogers Perry, who had a Huntington Beach elementary school named after him, has died at age 84. Perry was a World War I veteran and worked as a transportation supervisor for the Huntington Beach Ele mentary School District for more than 40 years, Born in New Bedford, Mass., on Oct. 21, 1896, he died on June 6 at Pacifica Hospital. Perry was interred at Westminster Cemetery Thurs· day. He 1s survived by his son Walla ce E . Perry , o f Wa uwatos a , Wiscorrsin, and seven grandchildren and four greal·grandchildren. HB accident victim dies A Huntington Beach woman who was struck by a car while crossin& Coast Highway In N~wport Beach three weeks ago tcktay, died Wf]dnesday as a re- s uit of her injuries. Clara M. Walker, 48, died at Fountain Valley Community Hos pital from complications folJowing the May 22 accident. Bail set at $10 million for OC man~· ex-hi_jack i·ic.tim Former Pakistani hijack hostage Craig Clymore has pleaded guilty to sm uggling heroin and hashish oil mto the United States The former Lake Forest resi· dent, who earlier pleaded inno· cent to tfle charges in U.S. District Courtin Brooklyn, N. Y .• could re· cei ve up to 30 years in prison and up to SS0,000 in fines following Thursday·s guilty plea. Cly more, 24, a 1974 Laguna Beach High School graduate, has been held in li eu of $10 million bail at the Metropolitan Corrections Center in Brooklyn since his re- turn to the United States m early April. The bail 1s reported to be the highest ever set in the Brooklyn court. Clymore was one of more than 100 hostages aboard a Pakistani jetliner that was hijacked March 2 on a flight from Karachi, Pakistan. to Peshawar, near the Afghanistan border by three op· ponents of the Pakistan govern- ment. News reports during the hijack· ing cited Clymore for entertain· ing fellow hostages aboard the jet by playing his guitar and singing. He later wrote a song a bout the in- cident, which he hoped to record. But the former Orange Coun· tian did not know that he had been secretly indicted by a federal grand jury just prior to the hijack· ing. After the re lease of the hostages. it took weeks before federal authorities could bring him back to the United States to be prosecuted. C&Wdancing taughl in HB Registration is under way for country-western dance classes offered by the Huntington Beach Recreation Department. The eight·week session begins during the week of June 15. Classes will be offered from 7 to 8 p .m . Mondays at Edison Center. 21377 Magnolia St., and from 7 : 15 to 8 : 15 p .m . Thursdays at Murdy Park. 7000 Norma Drive . Participants will learn the Texas two-step, cowboy polka. country waltz and other dances. Charge for the course is Sl4 per person. Pre ·registration is laking place at the two community cen· ters. Students also can register on the first day of class If space is still available. PLEADS GUILTY Craig Clymore In his guilty plea Thursday. Cly m ore admitted being the ri ngleader for eight couriers who brought drugs in lo the United States. He s aid he arranged with friends to s muggle 4.4 pounds of heroin through U.S. Customs tn the hollowed-Out heels of shoes. He also admitted planning the smuggling of 2.2 pounds of the drug through Kennedy Airport by couriers who swallowed con- tainers filled with the narcotic. Two of those couriers reportedly nearly died when the containers burst inside their bodies. Clymore told the court he has made more than $1 2 million in the past three years by smuggling drugs from the Far East. U .S . District Court Judge Thomas C. Platt set sentencing for Clymore on July 17. Fire rates cut for HB Fire insurance rates for Hunt· ington B~ach commercial build· ings are being reduced by about 10 percent, according to city of- ficials. The change in advisory in· surance rates is because of· fi c1als of the Insurance Services om~es of California have UP· graded the 't:lty·s fire insurance classification after looking al the Huntington Beach fire tight. ing facilities, according to city officials. Rates for residential buildings will remain the same. say city officials. nspectOrs' lives ,·changed by tw~ gift bottks By RICHARD GREEN OftMOeley~·- lrvine city building inspectors Bruce Bullard and Art Peck say they aUll can't believe what they went throu&h because of a COu· ple bottles of whiskey. · Crank telephone calls. thousands of dollars in legal ex· penses and family strain a.re just three problems tbe)' say they've encountered as the re· suit of accepting bottles of Jaclt Daniels wbi9key from a bulldln1 contractor before la,t Chrlatm ... They aay lt was the accept- ance ol the whiskey that I.cl the city to fitt them early ttUa year and also led the Orance County District Attorne7'1 otflc:e to cbar1e them with mt1dltmeaaor 10Jicl&aUon and uceptance of gratuities. Bullaril, '°· Colt• .... and Peck, 51, Anaheim. were r• in1tated to their old Jobi MOnday after an admlnlalratlve law Judie who preaided over a penonnel bearlJ\ for ttM me:n found t.Pat the city didn't have just c~.,{se for firing them. Judge William F. Byrnes f~·nd that the city couldn't p ve the men ever solicited the 1· ts lJl return for speedy build· ldg lnspection! -as the city bad charged. And the mere acceptance of the gifts isn't 1rounds for dla· /missal, Byrnes ~d in rec<>m· m•ndtn1 to City Man~eer William WoolJett Jr. that they be r•tumed to their jobs. Woollett compiled with the recQtnm~d•· lion and Bullard and Peck re· joined the clty lmpectlon c~ Monday. After quittln1 tlmf. the two men aaid in an Interview Uaat they feel eaoneraiect and ~~! hepetul that the ml9deDMuor char1es a1ain1t tbem wlll N dropped. But the)' both added that the eaptrience or tb• put il~ months .tll stay wltb th*Dl for th• rest of< their Uves. "This IU)' kept calllnt u~ my houu ancr uyln1 ·:You re a t tMeC,' " Peek said. "Well, If the guy has my phone number, I figured maybe be bas my ad· dress and I was concerned about the safety of my wife and daughter." Peck said that be has a ~on· tractor's liceme and was able to work in the construction field after being fired from the city. He 1ald, however, that he hu a permanent arthritic disability in his blp and that the work he was able to set tended to aggravate the medical problem. At the same time, the lou or hla city job meant that be bad no aiedlcal insurance for hirmelf aad Illa f amlly. 8Wlard said I.bat be wun't Ible to find I job alter betnl find from b.ll dlJ Job ud tblll the 115,000 he spent ln attone)' fffl • dralOed a collqe fund be lltad Mt up-tot h11 chlfdren. Peck ... d lie llllO 1pent ttS,000 in at· tona'1 '"' durinc clty pent0n· Del llwt.bll, B•~ause of the lesal ftea, luJllid hld tltl lf:)'HN>1d IOD, 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 s aid the whole ex· perlence was also tou1h on his 17-year-old son, Brent, who goes to Costa Mesa High School. "Kids were comin1 up to him aod sayin1, 'Is that your dad who ls the crook'?'' Bullard aatd. f • ; • . • : t DOWN ON THE FAllM DEPT. - Maybe with the excepUon of the good city of Irvine, we don't worry too much about protecting our rural atmoshere along this coast any more. That's because for the most part,, the lssue ts settled. That ls, the quickie car washes and street lighting districts have already taken over. Th.is condition, however, isn't un- iversal inland. There still are a few· (;';J T-Dl_M_U_RP-HIN-1 .~-,, places that cling to the rural tile with in· trepid tenacity. La Habra Heights is one of those areas. Just consider a news dispatch that came out of that inland reaoh of our region the other day, where they bud· died with a joint meeting of the City Council and Planning Commission. ONE OF THE MAJOR TOPICS seemed to be the Grand Design necessary to preserve the hayseed climate of La Habra Heights. For one thing, it was pointed out by both council persons and commissioners that the ''One Family Per Acre" rule is apparently being flagrantly violated by a number of unthinki ng rural homeowners. . Some of these people are building guest houses on their country estates and then renting them out, for goodness sakes. Councilman James Littlejobn estimated that between 75 and 100 of these guest accommodations have extra families lurking within them and they're actually paying guests. . THEN THERE IS the question of new . developers who are raising havoc ActuaU11. the building hitU• 2 bootleg rmtoa and a t~il court with the rural nature of La Habra Heights by homes as status symbols. These developers actually have the nerve to slyly show renderings to pros- pective buyers that illustrate homes with swimming pools or tennis courts or, horrors, maybe even both. "Tennis courts are the most ill-used accessories to a house," fumed Mayor Gene Beckman. "The courts don't ap· pear at all rural . . . • • Thus Beckman and other members of the council proposed that developers be asked to construct community tennis courts so individual homeowners wouldn't just jump out there and build . theirown. The Planning Commission, further thus, was instructed to get up some rules that would stop this ugly proliferation of courts and pools that were clobbering up the rural atmosphere. PLANNING CHAIRMAN Ron Banco was a bit hesitant on figuring out how the planners could do that legally but he vowed they'd try. The council and planners also made it. clear they want to hone to the one· family-per-acre rule and knock off these guests houses that get turned into ren- tals. You can hardly imagine what Hunt· ington Beach, Balboa or Laguna would look like if a one-house-per-acre rule bad been in effect over the past couple of de- cades. Anyway, it may get tough in La Habra Heights if you want to build a new home and you're 10 anti-social as to shun community pools or tennis courts and want your very own. THESE PEOPLE MAY have to get more devious and pretend that they're preserving the country feeling of La Habra Hei~· hts. Actu , the council and planners may later cover that homeowners are building siloe, then filling them with water fOI' •wlm~. Arid what loDb like a barn, well, it's really an indoor tenhll court, folb. RULES OUT -· Former Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, still UD· willi~g to commit himseU officially to a U .S. Senate race, says he won't seek re·election to the As· sembly. .... D iet doctor to sue? NEW YORK (AP) - Diet Dr. Robert Atkina aaya he wilhue Diet Dr. Nathan Pritikln for '5 million for alle1ed libel and aladder. And if many more of h1I pa- tlentl call to cancel •P· potntment.a, Atklna says, be may up the n1ure. Atkins said he notified Prlttkln about the im· pending lawault, based on television ap - pearance• lo which Pritlkin said the Atkins diet could cause heart problems, constipation, fatlaue and bad breath. Atkins sald Pritlkin bas been knocking bis diet for a Jong time, and be "bad always looked traditional\'>' dod, our Polo intizrkx:k. ... the~®~ a:xn2rlobkz. knit ehlrt btl\ <D.ttr~ ~toils OJ1d. hczmm2d, ~fur ecUvz. oretxtzritwmr. ~labkz. in 25 grtzdt c:rla5. if bz. hae cnz.) hz. rosy juet wonL thzm eU. --------on Pritikin as something CM student in Norway Kirsten Kam Berg of Costa Mesa, a busineas economics major at UCLA, is attending the University of Bergen in Norway und er the University of C4llifornia 's Education Abroad Program. Under the program, students can get credit at their resident campus while attending one ot 40 universities In 18 COUil· tries. of a joke." But when Pritikin told a local TV audience May 27 lbe Atkins diet "can set you up for heart dis· ease, strokes and cause death" because of high levels of cholesterol, Atkins said he "just finally bad it. 44 Faahfon ltlland ·Newport Beach· 714/644-5070 1001 Wntwood Blud. ·Westwood VIII~· 213/208-3273 ''I felt that he was saying it so many times that he wu beginning to believe It," A~ said ~R~E~A~L~V~A~L~U~E~S~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ at a news conference, :::::: i~~~1 :1~ ~1:~ on items from apples~uce to zippers. Dl.llJ Pl.I ~:~un "'to be listened are advertised every day In the Cost Plus ~ ... rurn1tnre •ALL SALES FINAL •NO LAYAWAY •ASSORTMENT MAY VARY FROM STORE TO STORE ITEMS SUBJECT TO STOCK ON HANO NO-OEUVERlliS You're bound to find fantastic savings at our 1st annual durance sale of fine furniture. Because we're sell!ng It aD (except wicker and rattan) at "'Co9t Pl• 15••. Whether your style Is~ American or chrome and glass contem· penny, you'll find delectable fumtture to suit your taste. Choose from tables, chairs, desks, rockers, bars, bookcases and lacs more. Great deals await you at A.uon Bro-.•' CC09t Pim 15 •• fumlture ul& I l 11 Dally Pilat FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1981 TELEVISION 07 DICK MILLER ,/ South favored in county All·star basketball. See D3 . A salute to those gallant joc~ Mr. Famous Ball Player walked into Bunie Bavasi's office last winter and politely asked the general manager or the Angels for a small favor. "I'm buying a home in Mission Viejo and I'd appreciate it if the ball club would loan me $45,000," said Mr. Famous Ball Player. "We will be happy lo help,·· said Bavasi. whose initials E. J. stand for Economy Justified. Atter all, Mr. Famous Ball Player was one of his few players who had not. fallen on his S25 hairstyle in 1980. . Bavasi ordered treasurer Frank Leary to write out the check for $45.000 as an advance on Mr. Famous Ball Player's 1981 salary. Mr . Famous Ball Player didn't have to pay any points or interest to the Angels, thus becoming one of about 10 Angels who have borrowed money from the club in the past year. Try that one on your local Bank or America br anch manager. Several weeks later Bavasi sent Mr. Famous Ball Player a contract offering him $275,000 to work on his summer job as a major league player. The player was insulted and ordered his agent to inform Bavasl he was filing for arbitration. ''They won the case," said Bavasi, a tear slowly rolling down one ot his cheel:s. .. We had to give him something like $325,000. We wound up paying back ourselves for the loan we give him." This tells you something about the charming labor dispute which is heading for the picket lines today unless the Lords of Baseball and members of America's highest paid craft union -the average major league players' salary this season is Sl 71,000 settle their differences today. If the players want to take a hike, let 'em walk out. And if the owners run out of money from their strike insurance fund, good nddance to them, too. The Angels · budget tnis year 1s about $11 milliooi according to Bavasl. That _includes their Delly ...... """''' QMwM...,. A lonely Anaheim Stadium usher Lin(la Gene Lee and a cluster of empty seats signify strike is on. Fernando homered in unkindest way ST. LOUIS (AP) enabled the St. Louis runner lo score standing up. "It looked like he <Guerrero) thought he could catch the baU, then once h e saw that he couldn't catch it he stopped," Los Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda said. .. When be stopped, the ball bounced on him. You 've got to plaY' it a different way. That's the way things happen on that artificial turf." minor league oper ation, but the bulk Of It coes to major league salaries. The new bau1ni champions are the immortal Bo Diaz of the Cldefa'Od Indians for the American League and the equally famous Joel Youngblood of the Mets ror the NaUonel t.eaaue side. ··u we get by the first 10 days of tbe strike, our club will maJce money." Bavasi contends. "What·worries me is the guy wboneeds to find some place to spend his money mey decide he likes the race track or some thing else. We looked it up the other day: there are~ player• In the ma- jor leagues who all make rbore money than our en· tire 1952 Brooklyn team that won a\)eg~ant." Rookie Mike Witt led the Angel pitching staff with 36 strikeouts, jtisl 347 short of Nolan Ryan's club record . . The major lea1ue home run kln1s are Gorman Thom as <Brewers l with 15 an~ Mike Sebqajdt < PhilheS) with 14. Thal is the lowest leading total in the majors since Gavvy Cravatb hit 12 for the 1919 Phillies and Babe Ruth of the Red Sox and some one named C. Williams of the Pbiladelphia A's had 11 in 1918 Bavasi shakes his head and retails the player who borrowed $45,000 from him, then took the team to arbitration. ''He came in to see me about two weeks ago. Said he wanted to borrow $50,000 because he was going on strike." You can imagine Bavasl's reply. · Since the season allegedly ended Thursday night. as one of our continuing PUbliO Sfrvices the Daily Pilot salutes the tallant jocks who performed nobly through the mini-season. The Daily Pilol's choice for the .American League Cy Young Award is Yankee relftver Rich Gossage. The Goose's 17 saves are one more than the Angels staff record~ last summer. *'~ Steve Carlton, the Greta Garbo of j()(k • is the National League Cy Young award r off <See MILLER, P~GE 08) ,.. Angels, Mauch 'amazed and a little sick' over strike Bv EDZINTEL Of *-Dally l"llec S~f In the gloom. yes. gloom. of the winning Angels clubhouse Thursday night s at Manager Gene Mauch. distraught. c9n· fu sed and utterly disappointed. Mauch held in one hand ~ copy of a wire news ser\>lce stor y that had just mi"utes earlier been released. The story told of what had and had not transpired in the baseball strijte meeting earlier in the evening. It told the news that Mauch wa9 praying he wouldn"t hear The strike was on. "I'm amazed and a little sick." he said as he nervously ruffl ed his hair and sat down. There was a long pause a s Maucb stared down at the floor Theo he continued "When a bunch of intelligent people get together and they can't reach an agreement after 15 months . . " Mauch stopped. He wiped his sweaty forehead as he tned to keep his emotions m control It was difficult. "I can"t stand to have my emotions toyed with like this ... he went on. "The strike seemed inconceivable lo me. With so many people being hurt by the strike, I couldn't believe it would happen. It goes beyond Ken Forsch having a good year or m y success since becoming manager. How can you abuse fans and expect their en - thusiastic support?" Forsch. the gu) who was ha\ i.pg a good, if not great. season for his new team. the guy who had just won his ninth game to give him a s h a re for the American League lead m th<1t de partment. looked like a gu:. who was 3·9, not 9·3. .. I feel hke everyone cl!>e, .. Ji'orsch, the 34-year -old former Houston Astro veteran of JG seasons, said. "It's a letdown The strike is not easy for anyone to take. I thought it wouldn 'l come to this. It's too bad " Too bad. yet loo. necessar:. was the feeling m the Angel clubhouse following Thursday n\ght's game. a game in which lhev defeated the Boston Red Sox 7-2 for their fourth htra1ght victory. Players, some of them pack mg suitcases m compliance with Marvin Miller·s request for them to return home. patiently answered. for the umpteenth time. questions relatmJ? to the strike. "It's not money we·re talking about. but something cfree agen- cy with compensation for a drart c hoice) that was granted to us by the courts,·· An gels Player Representative Don Baylor said "We 're just trying to keep what is ours." Greed on the part of players? St ubbornness on the part of the o" ncr<, ., No one could give a de· r1 n1tc :mhwer ·wl' ma~ have won the battle but lost the war." Angels Ex· l'C:Ul1vc Vice President Buzzie Bavas1, speaking for the owners -;1de on the matter. said earlier in the evening. Bavasi. like the 28, 191 fans who turned out. perhaps for the last time this year. to watch the Angels turn in another s uperb all-around performance in a r ecent up· ~w in g, fell sorrow over the mat· t er · · 1 reel sorry for the fans. they've been through this before 1 19721." he said. "I just hope they don ·t desert us when this thing is ~et llcd "I wasn "t surprised about "hat happened. I thought all along that they would rule in the o" ners' fa vor. The judge was legally and not politically motivated But now , we're in the ha me boat as everyone." There was sorrow and disap- pointment in the faces of the players. too. when told of the news Yet all of them reaffirmed thei r strong alliance in the de- bate .. There were so many meet- <See ANGELS, Page DC) Players head home while talks go on Dodgers stranded in St. Louis? From AP dispatches "The strike is on ... said Marvin Miller. executive direc- tor of the Major League Players Association. But George Foster, the slug- ging outfielder for the Cincinnati Reds. reels a baseball strike will either not occur or be or short duration. "My gut reeling is that I don't think there will be a • strike," s aid Foster, the R~ds" player representative . "t'rom a relia· ble source l hear there will not be a strike and if there Is, it will just be a couple of days." I DESPITE FOSTER'S feel· ings, Miller said early today that "a substantial number of players have left for home. and as soon as everybody knows, the remainder will go home." All across the country, and in Toronto and Montreal, baseball players and teams played a waiting game -waiting for the 2 p.m., EDT, dl!adline that was set early today by Ray Grebey, the chie f negotiator for the owners. "We are going on the assump· tlon that the team will continue playing," said Fred Clalre, Los Anceles Dodgers vice president of public relations and promo· Uon . "But we have taken some steps to meet contingencies that could result from a strike." One of the contingencies would be U> strand the players In St. Louis wbere the Dodte11 Just finished a series wllh the C•rdln$. The Cleveland Indians are in Oakland, where a four-game weekend series against the A's was to begin tonight. "If there is a strike, the players will have to pay their own way home from Oak.land," said Gabe Paul, Indians presi· dent. ''The clubhouse will be }O(ked and the players can't work out with any equipment owned by the team. They will be given the time to get their p ersonal belongings " Tl'le. possibility opened up a humorous side. "WELL, IT costs $118.50 for a bus ticket from Oakland to Cleveland," said reserve in· f ielder Jerry Oybi1loski. "Maybe we can get a ll'Oup rate if we have lo go home." "At least I 'll hit .200 tbls year," said Ughl·hittin1 center fielder Rick Mannine. "I suppose I'll 10 home and finish painting my house.'' sald Cleveland infielder Toby Har- rah, who missed three •em of spring tr1tinJnt after falllnt oft a ladder the last Ume be tried painting his hobse. Tbe New Y~rk Yankees also were ln a jokint{ mood. Pl'l'qtER lON DAVIS said he would 10 to worlc a\ • New York restaurant, wbUe lnftelder Bucky Dent aald he would do .. absolutely notbln 1 except stand to the unemployment line.•· "11U call up the probltlcln of. fice and aee lf I'm clean, tlle ICJ on welfare and tty to collect food stamps," lau1hed outtelder Bobby Brown wbu asked wbat hls plans wer.. "l 'm from lltiinetoU," 1akl outfield« Dave Wllifteld. wbo sl1ned a 10-year. ••WI• can, tract. "We're INJ to Min· n IOCI, 10 I'll 1tar Min· naou.•• ( ( !Ii €h amp has respect for Spinks to night DETROIT -Three years and m three days after he won the title, Larry Holmes defends his World Boxing Council heavyweight cham· pionship aeainst Leon Spinks tonlaht. Holmes will carry a 12·pound weight advan· tage, 212v .. to 200" for ex-champ Spinks. lnto the ring at Joe Louis Arena when he makes his lOlh defense of boxing's most glamorous crown. The Dokes·Gardner fight and the main event between Holmes and Sptnks will be shown by ABC-TV, beginning at 6 p.m. Holmes. 31, bas won all 37 of his career fiehts, 2'7 of them by knockouts. Eight of those KOs came in s uc· cessive tiUe defenses after he outpointed Ken Norton for Holmes the crown June 9, 1978. His ninth and most recent defense was a 15-round decision over Trevor Berbick last April 11 at Las Ve${as. Holmes brings a healthy respect for Spinks into the ring tonight. "I've had no trouble get· ting up for this one." he said. "Leon is a lot bet· ter than a lot of other opponents I've had." Quote of the day Joe DiMaggio, estimating the kind of money he would command in today's free- agent market: "If I were sitting down with George Steinbrenner and, based on what Dave Winfield got for his statistics, I'd have to say, 'George. you and I are about to become partners.~ Cadle looking for first PGA victory George Cadle, often a challenger l!I but not yet a winner, birdied four of his last five holes for a 67 and a l· stroke lead Thursday after the first round of the Westchester Golf Classio in Harrison, N.Y. At 68. a single stroke back in the chase for the first prize money 'are GU Mortan, Gibby GDbert, Bruce Douglass and Lee Elder, a former winner of this event who had a strong showing last week in Atlanta. A group at 69, two under par on the hilly course included Fuuy Zoeller, Tim Simpson, BUI Kratzert and Craig Stacller .... Former teacher Lynn Adams, despite a broken toe. shot her best score ever . a 6-under-par 66, to grab the first-round lead in the LPGA touma· ment at Mason, Ohio. The 30-year-old Texan was onJy one shot ahead of Sandra Post and 1979 U.S. Open champion Jerilyn BrtU. Cruz steals American League record Jall• Cra1 tied an American Ill Lea1ue record with hts 32nd con· 1ecuUve stolen base and Jett Bar· NMllU drove ln four runs u the Seat- Ue Mariners defeated tbe BalUmore Orlole1, 1·2 Thunday nllbt ln American Leaaue action. Ct\l& alneJed and stole second ln the first tnntna, tylnl lhe record set by Kansas Clty'1 WUUe Wit ... last year ... In other 1ame1. Harold Baines doubled home Carl&oa Flak with the deciding run In the third lnnin1 to gl ve the Chicago White Sox a 3·2 vie· tory over the New York Yankees N'ld a sweep of their two·g•me series. Steve Trout, 5·3, was the winner, and Lamarr Hoyt earned his seventh save or the year . Doug Bird was handed his Crr.u first major league loss since Aug. 16, 1978, snappln& a personal 12·&ame win· ning streak . . . Pinch-hitter Jamie Quirk drov• in three runs with a bases·loaded double in the eighth Inning, while Hal McRae and Rance ¥aU•lkl drove ln two runs apiece as Kansas City handed Toronto Its 12th consecutive defeat, 10-5. Former Ora'lge Coast College and Costa Me1a High star Dan Qullenberry earned his ninth save . . . Roy Howell homered for the go-ahead run ln a two-run seventh inning and Pete Vllcko~lcb won his eighth straight de· cision as Milwaukee defeated Texas, 6·3, and snapped a four-game losing streak . . . Tom Brookens sla mmed a three-run homer in a four. run sixth inning and Steve Kemp drove in two runs as Detroit defeated Minnesota, 7-2. Reds breeze behind Seaver, Foster Geor1e Fo1&er hit a three-run Ill homer in the sixth inning to back Torn Seaver to his sixth consecutive victory as the Cincinnati Reds defeated the New York Mets, 5·2 Thursday night in National League action. Foster's line shot over the left· field fence snapped a 2·2 tie and gave the Reds their seventh consecutive win and eighth vie· tory in nine games . . . In other aames, Kea Reitz' two-run double capped a fbur·run first 'in· ning and Jody Davis bit his first major league home run as the Chicago Cubs beat San Fran· cisco, 6-1, behind Randy Mam. The triumph was the fifth in the last six games for the Cubs. who knocked loser Tom Griffin, 4·5, from the game in the first inning as the Giants suffered their fifth straight defeat ·. . . Guy Carter. Warren Cromartie and Andre . Dawson each drove in two runs to back the seven-rut pitching of S&e.e Rodgers as Montreal completed a three-game sweep or Atlanta with a 7-0 victory. R~rs, 7-4, who has won five straight against the Braves daUng back to August, 1977 . walked two and struck out one. Horse owners win suit over tail-tying MOUNT CLEMENS, Mich. -~ The owners of a r acehorse, injured . when its tail was tied to the starting gate before a race, have been awarded $136,000 by a Circuit Court jury. Lorraine Guzowski and her father. Frank·. s ued the owners of the Detroit Race Course for injuries to the spine and reproductive organs of their hourse, Shapely Mias . The practice of tying a horse's tail to the startiag gate, called "tailing." is a common one used to steady a horse at the start of a race. Mid-Summer Dou In Palm Springe, The Tennl1 Club is .. m ng up a pair of .mixed doubles thl1 aumfMr that e11n't be beat. The first match Is $150: • any 5 nights/& days accommodations • • $75 per person bUed on double OOCtJi>aflCY • plus tax • free tennis during your entire stay, baaed on availability • • complimentary cocktails from 4 to 8 p.m. The next set Is $35: NGK Baseball today On this date ln baseball In 1939: The Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum al Cooperstown, N Y. was officially de· dlcated. On this date in 1922: The St. Louis Cardinals reeled off 10 ruts lo a row en route to a 14·8 victory over the Phlladelphia Phillies. Dayis: Rozelle heads war council Oakland Raiders Managing • General Partner Al Davll testified Thursday that other professional football team owners turned lnto a "war council'' aeatnst Mm when lt became clear he wanted to leave for Los Aneeles. NFL Commissioner Pe&e Rozelle was at the head of the council, Davis said ln his third day on tbe witness stand. The LA Coliseum and the Raiders are suing the NFL. in antitrust action because the leaeue ha.s not permitted the Oakland franchise to be moved to Los An1eles . . . Wayne We bb. the 1980 Professional Bowlers As· sociation player of the year, won all eight of his match· play games and aver aged 248 Thursday to move into a Rozelle commanding 187·pin lead in lhe PBA tour competition in Torrance ... Belli?ian Jackie Jckx, out of retirement to try for a record fifth victory in the Le Mans 24-tiour road race. led the field In a Porsche spee<lster after shattering the course record during two days of qualifying for next weekend's race . . . The Los Angeles Kings have announced they have reached a working agreement with the New Haven Nighthawks of the American Hockey League . . . Honolulu's Andy Ganigan invades the mainJand Saturday to battle Mex- ico's Rodolpbo GoMalez at the Forum that will move the winner toward a title match in the 135-pound class . . . Zaire's Clement Tshinza battered Rocky MattJoU until the Italian-born Australian failed to answer the bell in the 10th and final round of their middleweight fight in Italy. Television, radio Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: ./ ./ ' ' excellent; ./ ' ' worth watching; ' ./ fair; ./forget It. 9 6 p.m., Channel 7 ·./ '" " v BOX ING: Larry Holmes vs. Leon Spinks Announcers: Howard Cosell and Chris Schenkel World Boxing council champion Larry Holmes (37-0) takes on Leon Spinks (10-2·2> in a scheduled 15-round bout from Detroit. This w ill be the 10th title defense for Holmes who has 27 knockouts in his 37 victories. His string of eight straight, a heavyweight record, was stopped In his last outing by Trevor Berblck. Spinks, since losing his WBA title to Muhammad All in 1978, has been knocked out by Gerrie Coetzee of South Africa In the first round of a 1979 bout. Since then he has three wins and a draw In a comeback attempt. RADIO Baseball -Dodgers at Pittsburgh, '4: 30 p.m., KABC (790); Boston at Angels, 7:30 p.m ., KMPC (·710). (A strJke of major league players will cancel these games.) -. • '· • By ALMON LOCKABEY 0.11.,................ :· LONG BEACH -Newport Harber 1t1ppen· moved up in the standing1 ln Long Beacla Yacbf: Club's Race Week regatta Thursdat u attonger winds and protests took their toll of the •t boat 1n.-c: ternatlonal o nshore Rule neet. " t The freshening winds ln Thuriday's ractn resulted in a round of bumpine1 at ~ dtarb with one collision that damaged one of U. boau! Tb~' other minor collisions broueht on Ii raab Of pro-'.: tests, some or which may change the standings in the series. Irvine Loube's Bravura and Monte Llv· ingston's Checkmate, both from St. Francis acbt BOA.TING Club, Sen Francisco, came tosetber \lfbde ro'1fta. ing a weather mark. Loube aasuJlled u.e Mame and dropped out of the race antt Cbu_.,.ate coni tinued with a gaping hole in her toP1ldb. No one was injured. ' Objed of two protests. neither of which in· volved a collision, was Dennis Cboate'a Brisa, Long Beach Yacht Club, which w~ Cla•~ for the: second straight day. During an ins,.didll at tbe . club dock after the race Choate s•ld be was un; aware of what infractions were aJle&ed in the pro· tests. One of the protesters was Warren Hancock's Aleta, Newport Harbor Yacht Clu~ ... lt• tthef!', was Loube's Bravura. , • · Class B winner in the second race wi\ Ed Mc DoweU's Illus ion, King Harbor Yacht Club, moving her into a tie for first in the~taffdin11 with Gerry Simonis' J et Stream. LBYC. Barney and Steve Flam steered J'lambuoyant to a second straight win, but a ~lcaUon 1Jr the first race dropped the LBYC elW to sixth place in the class st.andlngs. Thf leaclet*with a._ firs\, and second place finish is Dick Ettinger's Free Enteryrise, Newport Harbor Yacht Club. John~ .. Arens Tomahawk. tialboa Yacht CIUb as ~d. a quarter of a point behind Free En~. • Class D was clear or ptotut1 /and !\on Melville's Bigwig, co-skippered by Due Ullman, BYC. is tbe leader with 2~ points. ;, Bert Gardner's Bingo scored a sec19nd straiehP' win in Class E but a disqualification in the fint:.': r ace dropped her to fifth in the st.aliy;JS.. The class leader is Bob Lane-ls Medlcm.f' Q, three. quarters of a point ahead or San ,l'\trdon's Renegade, San Diego Yacht Club. Standings after two races: · CLAS.5 A -1. Brisa, DeMil CbCMte, LBYC' (pending protest>; 2. Travieso, T'Wy Lingen-, felder, SDYC; 3. Ghost, John Reynolds, NHYC. CLASS B -1. (tie> Illusion, Ed Mcl)owell. ·• KHYC, and Jet Stream, Gerry Simonis. LBYC; 3 ... Roller Coaster, Golison Syl\dicate, LBYC. CLASS C -1. Free Enterprise, ~k Ellinger, NHYC; 2. Tomahawk, John Ar~&. ~YC ; ,3.'' Dogpatcb, Don Ayres Jr., NHYC. •• " : CLASS D -1. Bigwig, Ron Melvilfe-Dtv• U0- man , BYC; 2. Dust 'Em, Steven Soares, SDVC: 3-.I Shenandoah, BUI Palmer. NHYC. ' CLASS E -1. Medici.Ile M~t.ttL-.,_,b Lane, LBYC; 2. Renegade, Sandy Purdon, SDYC; ~·· jammer. Michael DraJe, LBYC. ~ ' • · • ovemlghter/any day of the week • $17.50 per per90n bated on double occupancy plus lax • tennis at S4 a day, baaed on avallabfllty Spark Plug I • compllmentaiy cock ta.Ila from' to 15 p....m. ; So If tennis la YGU'" t11cket, ateft courting at The Tennis ctub HoWI. Both 1»clcages effective June 1·August28, 1981, except 4th of July weekttnd. 3'~t!fa 701 West Barl.sto Road, Palm Springs, CA 92262 Telephone (714) 325-1441 • Los Angeles (213) 211·2955 --------- Stop for a mom~1't, and consi~r the care that your Mercedes·Benz deserves. · Simply stated, a random h to Htvtce can be harmful to the life of your Merc:ecln-Benz. CHRMP r•.1., '\• .. Gas Can J ,.110n •itlt spout . ~ j • Trailer Ball I , PVBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICB \" ' PtJat.IC NOTICB PUBLIC NOTICE ThePayroU l'saviflf&s Plan i1 one Oft~ c•11nt.1afc1t "•>•lo tct.aarted on the "''in& habit. ..:,-en if Ho( ini hu Ill\\ •> 1 -ll)C~ too difr icult in pe.tt .-ms. A littk is automll(ic:an~ takm out of e.ch Pll)~hcck lOll' vd the-purch ... o( L'.S. s.,1.,,. 8(,nda. 'itt1'll IW\tr mi.• it. tu )ou'll rle'<er 'l)Cnd it. lc jutt kKpt •rtl\\ it" for lt"'1C comine """"'· or ma)·br • "arm \ •e1liu11 d"""' • cold ,, in .... h's • "'*' for .n....,,.. .. t<w .. 'AmcA:.m. It~ .p~; "' Orange Coaet DAILY PILOTn:rlday, Juna 12. 1981 H/F DI Angel, Dodger games on TYP, Feuding cyclists . in action Both televise games Sunday -IF there isn't a strike Saturday's TV, radio TELEVISION (Note: A strtke or major learue players wUl cause cancellation or 1amea lilted Saturday and Sunday.) 11 a.m. (4) -BA.SEBA.U. WASMUP. (5) - TENNIS -Eddie Dlbbs VI. Harold Solomon ln the WCT Invitational, taped ln March In Salllbury, Md. 11:10 a.m. Cll> -DODGERS BASEBALL - T he Dodeers meet the Pirates in Pittaburch'• Three Rivers Stadium. 11:15 a.m. (4) -BASEBi\LL -The Kanau City Royals meet the Ticen in Detroit's Tl1er Stadium. 2 p.m. (4) -WOMEN'S GOLF -Third round play in the LPGA championship la telecut rrom King's Island, Ohio. · • · · • 3 p.m. (2) -GOLF -Third round play'in the Westchester Clusic, taped at Harrison. NY. 3:30 p.m. (7) -Pao BOWLING -The finale of the Pennzoil Open, taped at Torrance. (34) - FUTBOL -Spain VI. Hungary. 4 p.m. (2) -SPORTS SATURDAY -Rodolfo ''Gato" Gonzalez (17·0) vs. Andrew Ganigan <33·2) in a scheduled 10-round lightweight match, taped at Los Angeles. Also: Same-day coverafe of the start of the 24 Hours of Le Mans from France. 5 p.m. (7) -WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS - Five-time champion Roger DeCoster heads a field of top international drivers in a repeat showing of the U.S. Grand Prix motocross motorcycle cham· pionships at Carlsbad. AJso: Highlights. of ~he Larry Holmes-Leon Spinks WBC heavyweight title fight, taped F'riday night in Detroit. And a preview of the U.S. Open, one of golf's Big Four events, from Merion Golf Club. (28) -SOCCER. 9 p.m . (50) -SPORTS AMERICA - Highlights of the WAC track and field Dlfet finals. Included in the competition is two-mile world re· cord holder Doug. Padilla. 10 p.m. CU > -THJB WEEK IN BASEBALL. 10:30 p.m. UM> -NASL SOCCER -The Loe An1eles Aztec• va. the Socken, taped earlier In the evenint at San Die10. RADIO Bueball -Dodcera at Plttaburih. ll:U a .m., KABC (790); BOiton at An&tla, 7 p.m., KMPC (710). Sunday's TV, radio TELEVJSION 10 a .m . (50 ) -SPORTS AMERICA Hi1hliibt.s or lbe WAC track and field meet finals. 10:30 a.m. Cll) -DODGEllS BASEBALL - The Dod1er1 meet the Pirates ln the last of a three-game aeries at Three Rivera Stadium in Pit· ts burgh. 11 a.m. (Z) -SPORTS SUNDAY -Lille _coy. erage of the finish of the 24 Hours of Le Mans auto race from Le Mans, France. AJso: The Women's international dlvlng meet, taped at Fort Lauderdale, Fla. 11:30 a.m. (4) -WOMEN'S GOLF -Final round play ln the LPGA championship from King's Island, Ohio. 1 p.m. (2) -GOLF -Fin.al round play in the Westchester Classic fr'om Harrison, N.Y. (5) - ANGELS BASEBALL -The Boston Red Spx meet the Angels at Anaheim Stadium on Gene Autry Day. 4 p.m. (4 ) -SPORTSWORLD -Frank Fletcher (11 ·2·1) takes on Norberto Sabater (19-0> in a scheduled 10-round middleweight bout. taped at Atlantic City, N.J. Also: Survival of the fittest and the AJAW national women's collegiate track and field chamoionshios. ' .RADIO Baseball Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 10:30 a.m., ABC (790); Boston at Angels, 1 p.m., KMPC (710 1 Auto Racing -Warner Hodgdon NASCAR 400 from Ri verside Raceway, 9 a.m., KLAC (570). <The Dally Piiot Is not responsible for late changes.) Mike Bast and Alan Chrlallan flaured to dominate the apeedway motorcycle acene thla season Joni before It started. Speedway fans have not been disappointed. The two outstandlnl rtder1 have not only dis· played their akUla on the track but have built up a personal reud between them that should brin~ added spice to tonight's weekly show (8) at the Orange County Fair· srounds-ln Coste Mes . Bast "parked'' hia bike In front or Christian at San Bernardino a week ago and Christian returned the ravor at Costa Mesa last Friday night. Parking a bike in a speedway race is the term used by the riders ror deliberately stopping or laying down a bike in the path of another rider an an attempt to put him out of the race. Christian's antics last Friday night not only put Bast out but the other two riders as well while he quickly got back on his own bike to finish first. He was dis· qualified for the inci · dent, however, and placed last. Cleans &.. shines Hald shell finish Prkes llfedhe Throuah Wednesct.y, June I 7, 1981 EACH IOOL #TIB WE'RE HELPING YOU DO IT RIGHT PllO-Tt.CH -6 piece openend~wt #'6'8 7177 SA£ #6487185 MCroc HEX KEY WRlNCH SH IGNmON COi SOUDOX TORCH KIT Port.able. qlevalllewntrolled s.ooao torch. Includes: torch, prop.Ane. pdleu. brue rods. gla.s.ses, ltghter. 24!8 FOG &. DRIVING LIGHTS ·LITil.R BASKET RUBBERMAID - Beige, b&ack, ~ or blue #2991 10~2 WIDlANGll MIRROR 31/.i" dWneter sddton~ mirror #6482517 26!~ 30!~ 33!~ ~~AUTOBODY REPAIR PACK BONOO -Everything you need to do your OINll body wort< Is In this kit. Body !Iller. hardenef. primer. spot puny, mixing bo.lrd and more ............ #316\ 6!7 KASCO -~. 6 C~. 19S5· '76 ~lC>-235·250) be. 1075· 76 ""4.tl 250 rord. 6 )41ndef. 1060-'74 1110-2001 .~. 8 Cylndef, 19~5.'68 (165" 283· 30 7-321) r..c. HI-""'1orm.lnct OodJ!e. ~ e c~. r958-·1a (l~ 361· )8.J..40CMA()) l'on!l.tc. 8 Cy!lndet, 106)-'68 (Wlth ~T.C.8-Mlt) ~.Plymouth. 6 c~. 1960-'77 ronl. 8 C)lndef, 1962· 60 (Ul·l60-25.302~ Doctn. · tH 8 c~. 1962-'77 (27r:318-J60) roid, 8 C)'llncl«. 1070 UN 10711 (302· SSIWI ::!~· 191Sl-'71 (ll2·l52·390- ';t' f I .. . '. ~tcAN UAOUI. Angela 7, "9d So• 2 MliTOel CALI l'OttNIA .. ,.... .., ... • 0 1 0 c ...... Ill S I I 0 R•my, a s.1._1'"·· 1Evt1W, rf Rice, If Vtttnll, I~ LllMIN.• c;.dmtn,C Allen-,c Hoffmn,• Ml""· Cf • o ' t awMM. .. 2 1 o o • t O O LYM.d JI JI 4 t I 00 ,_, t1 • t 0 0 : ~ & o Henow, II J I O 1 I t I I Clerk, II 1 0 t 0 1110 .......... •210 1011 Ott,c •011 l 0 I 0 ""-•a J 0 I 0 :D I I I Cnlpn(i. 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Elflltll rece -FloolY Jet IC#dool, LOO, s.•. •.20; tklenlte lellt IAdlllrl, 14.00 lt.00; Sonlty tlW llull (14ertl, J .•• '2 euc:te IU l ... Id ..... '2 Pkll Sia (lf.J.7.t-1-Sl .,... $40,2..,_ wltll -wlMlftt tkut 111a 11or .. 1. a Pick Ma cOMMltloft !*d N1M.6t with 4"I wll'Wllne llcktU cnw '*'-'· Nlntll r.c:e -0.lllllnelY ICMllUAI, J..C, ut, 2.21; DMll Aeeln (Mltclltlll, t.00. UI; T•&le 0 Te ... (Creegitrl, JA, U eue111 lM l ,.CCS-.00.. Att~-6,JM. Hollvwood Par11 TMURibAY'l RHULTI , ................ , .. _..., ,.,..,.,au -Qul<ll« Gold tTe,..j, s.a, DICK MII,IER'S COLUMN • Waatcheltef CIHale ( ........... N.Y,) ~c.dl• OllllllyGllllerl lrwce Doolgi•t Gii Mor91111 L"E'*" T Im SI""*"' Cr•ltSt.-.. llH Kretaert ,.,.IY Zoeller OeveEklltl...,.... hllE.Smlth Fr••" Conner Kt llhl"ff91M Jerry,. .. , Gery~ Ste11Alle-h Oerylrlvl- JeyH-Rey-,loyd altl Roetn ltaO A«*l CllertnC..., O.vld Lwndltrom MerllH- W•YM L.rll Jerry McGee L.OuOr....,.. Rldlle MNlft L.-R.-ru ~Gerdll9f ~~ ... Murphy Lton•rd~ o.or .. ..,,,,. MlkeR.W ._ ......... Jim Dent urryZHtl• ...... c...., Jim Simona JlmCol'*1 Celvtn l'Mtt Ed Oouttwrty alll Lytle PetM<Gow., a111 c.1 ... RWI Streck Howtnl Twitty aobl!•- Merll L'l9 Jimmy Pll9CNI Curtl15V .... JefWlny Mitter Miiie SIN1ll AU11t1Str ... ............. Mllte Donald RlkM•""'9tl• 9oblly HlcNla Dew Stodltoft TOf'tl ltJ• R.H. SIMI Orl~-'­G'""-' TOf'tlmy V-.tl,. J .C. SllNd Ed l'lorl Jec:llR- Jlm H•lford C>tJ!!' Quleley J-$dlf0Nlt Jlll'la-Sc:ott Wetll"'9 arlldaryeM Merk Mc~ T-~ LOfl HIMte Aotlert Se!.,_ Tom P\1111« .. .... ,,... Mlllt Hot...., aoeShNrer Doolts.Men us-. J••-Gonulei Tim Norri• Jolln MaD.t 9ot1Gox .......... ,., ... ~ eruceU«IM J••-hitrJaitMleM AlldY NGf1ll DOii Pooley Roel Curl LY" LAltt l'•tLlndMy l'r-~ Re• Caklwitll R099rCaM" Miile t<teln Lindy Miiiet' Me" ...... ._ • • ,, . ......, ~ U.S$--41 ~ ~ ~ R..P_., u.,._.. ~ J6.~10 »-14-70 •J4-10 JS.SJ-10 i..i..--10 »-14-10 ~10 Jl·J)-.70 J6.J4-.10 M-3'-10 SWS-10 U-JS-10 ,....,_,, U.3'-11 ~-11 >J.a.-71 ·-71 u.a-11 »--»-71 ,..._,, ~I ~· .,,._,, -.u-71 J6.U-71 U-3'-11 U.»-71 *'11-11 ~ as..J7~ ,...._n f1·U-72 J6.»-72 J6.»-n J9.,J:).....12 11---12 »-»-72 '7·-72 ,...._,. 11-as--I! H41-n .,._n J6..J7~ •»-n -.ss-n u.a-n »»-n J7·»-n .,.,.__,, J6..27-n 11......n »·»-n aw7-n ·~ ,,.,._n ,.._,. ,.._,4 .....,.__,. »--_,. .......,. ~· 17~-74 41·»-l• ...,._,. ~· 11·11-14 ,.,,~. ~· »-a-J• ,..._,s 4045-15 ~s ~s •-1' J1.._1S •11-15 Jt.»-1S ,..._,j .o..u-u ,,......,j J7-~$ Jt-~S ls-41>-lS ,..._7S ,..,.__,, •V-1S •11-1S •11-n *1·»-IS ...._1, ...,._,. ,.....,. ~:: ..,,._,. his 8-1 record and 2.67 earned run average. Fernando Valenzuela will have to settle for being Rookie of the Year. ' Wbi~b brings us to a sobering thouehl. Can You picture Fernando replacing Jim Palmer tn the j~ckey underwear ads? ing into last night's games Pedro Guerr• Wat'· leading with the Dodgers with a .330 "'lratting average and 10 home runs. Steve Garvey had 37 RBI. The mint season produced some surprises. Go· Wallin services slated Funeral services are scheduled for John \l alli~ Mo"day at. Hilgenfield Mortuary in Anaheim at 1 p.m. following Mr. Wallin's death Thur~ay. J Mr. Wallin, 74, was a lonetime coach and if.hletic directQr within the Anaheim School Dls-ttict. egion 55 seb AYSO signups American Youth Soccer OrcaniJaUon Re1ion SS ortb Huntlnston Beach) will bold re1i.tration turday from 9 a,m. to 2 p.m. at Murdy Park. Youths, aies 5-11, are ell&lble to participate. ya and lirll who have not played A YSO MfOl'e lll recetve a fteld ratln1. C.O.t of re11AtraU. l.I For more lnformatJon. phone 147.-S. Tum your. unuubles Into UNIM callLCall DallJPllOt == This was the season Rod Carew led the Angels again with a .308 batting average wbile Dlsco Di!n Ford was tops with 11 home runs and 32 RBI. This was the season we found that Gene Mauch indeed is a genius. He ended bia ftrsl year as the Aneei.· skipper with a M record. Hawks' player arrested MlltllWllYM MIHC~ Jl"'WrltM ''""' ftultf 0... LtYWI Gery Wlllll ~r110'-.r• ....... le ..... lctttll"'llMll J•llMlw.11 C...r.__ o,... .. _ " ........ v_ • ......_ C.rllellWl"'9 ......... ...._ lottGli.r lltv•~ ~rlt Plell lllllrlltllfl R.W. E9'1 De.,...,, Jellfl Tr- TtnYC...... MllltGow SlllpO-y Woody alllCIJ.llum TOf'tlGray Lennlt C....._ Ar1Slt...n.._ Mlulr- aerr, JeecMI Reetle CtA"ll TornJ- Ttrry MM#lty Jim AIM Jolw\C:- JecllMcGew... JllCll "•""' IOlllHuc....,tn Crelt Wet'°" Scori Hoell Jim Kl•tY Oout.Jetw-IOll TWay K•llJMoeer Jec11s.rM11n Phll H•-ll JlmmJ l'Owell Terry DteN AlenTecile De" PoN LPGA tournament . .. -.... , Ly""AcMnlt Jerlly" ... 111 S.nclr • Poll Pet Maver• Merl_..._. OoltNCapoN Mertllel4-1 KethyHlt. GellTOUSlllll S.IH>clr•~vnl• Clllf-Anft Creed C.tlly ,..,__ Susie McAllltter Amy Atcan 11\eron Berrett Beverly Devi~ Kellly Pottl-•lt J ut1es1....., eonnl•~r N8"4:Y ~·Miii°" A,...lle ROO'• L•ure ...... Cole 11•111 Soi-- Clftdy Hiii GllllHtru Pelty He.,., Kerolyt1 K- 9.Uy Klftl a.verlyK'- AllmRll.Jmen Jo Ann~ Pet lredley TMr•MHeMlool DotO...mel" S.lly LltUe SI lvl • llenll«clnl NASL ~ .,......,, .. .....,. lt-11-1• ,...._,. ......,. ..._,. .,,..._,. ""*' • JM>-76 ...._,, 4\4-16 ~,. ~_,. ..,._,, ...,,_,, >J.-4-n 4041-11 11·*-11 .. ........,, ,......,, ,......,, ~ .041-11 ,..,....,, ....... ,, ,...._,,, ,..._,, ,..._,, ., . ...,, ... .,_,. 0 ·11-N >Ml-1'1 ....,. ...._,. -..-n '°..,._" ., . ._,. ........... ,. '°.,,._" $7-42-l't '°......, -0-11 ..... Jt-41-40 lt-4-41 lt-42-11 Jt-4-41 .0-42-12 l1·WD 3:.~ Jt.DO u.u-.. ,...~-" )4.33 -'1 lS.:13 -61 :J6.l3 -.. »-•-.. lS.14 -.. lS.14 _ .. Jl-J:J -.. ,...35_ .. J.t.U-.. U.14 -.. »-ll -.. ll-JI -.. ~-.. JS.l4 -.. U-31 -70 »-14-70 J~l5 -70 )6.)4 -70 14-1'-70 Jl.12 -70 JS.M-71 a..u-11 :a..J7 -71 J6.U-71 »-15-11 ~--11 »-U-11 u-36-11 l1·M -71 ·~•-11 IS.36-11 U.1'-71 U.1'-71 J1·14 -71 • WUTaRN DIVISION W L 01' GA aP l"b. •• JO 21 '' 11 • • 1J 10 ,. ., 7 1 " 23 11 60 61 U221J 4' ILUTeRN OfYlllC* 11 • 41 JO l3 10S 152621 22 .. •7'21»1tS.S 4 10 1tl41toll sovntaRN OIYlllC* All-• • • 2' 22 2' 14 l'ort ~· • 1 21 17 11 60 Jec:llMftYllle 1 I 20 21 II SI Tempe Bay • I 14 » 11 ~ c:aaiTRM. OIVlSIC* 104Jll1151:S ••2'1t2261 1 •nu1t" 2U tUl 11 MORTMWCST OfVlll• v~ t s 2' " 2' • S.eltl• 1 1 • n ll 11 Porll-1 • 21 16 30 U c.1oerr s • " 12 " .. Ed,,,_.., • • 11 21 u lt Sia polnb .... -·-for • r"uletiOf\.,, overtl-v1e10r,. "'-pelt!U for• -out vlctorJ. One llonus point tor every toe• 1<ored wit!\ • maxi"""" t1f lhr• per e-. No t1onu1 Point I• ... ,_ lor overtime or -tout goats· ni.w..ey'1k- T1tlU4,5MIU•I ,....,..GMtel Wulll.,..OOl et J«lu~wMle." Cel .. ry et IEdrnOflloft, n lftten:olt.giate rea•tt• t .. u-.-e.N'f'J ,R.IMMANPOU• ,.,., ...... KMl 1 -Na,,Y, 1:1$.•; 2 • ..._ylv11ni,. no time: I. Col11mblll, 7:21.1. HHl 2 - Nortlle....,..., 1:1U; t. WIK-'", 7:1'.1;'-°".~ c.... 1 :21.t. "°' ........... l'lght _,.....,.CHI 'fl41 TAPI Pro boWllng PU TOUR '1 (atftw-I " ....... ,, ,,,.., .. , II . ,.., d lll U'4 ,, " ,, " 111'> • 13111 10 ,. ........ ..-.n 1.w • ...,. ... l .Tomnyliallll .. l . Otvld Oile 4.G....,..,.,..,.. s. 11111 !kl!pr ····-·.., 1. Je y ftOb!NGI L~IAclltla t . Mlll.e A4l!by IO. E rl\lt Scllft991 .... u ~ .. ,"' ,. ..,... ., IS'°' 11 1111< l• ISYI 11 1 1tlll ~ •.m •• ou s,m s•. , .. S,111 UM s.uo 1.122 s.11• Gr•u court• champlonahlpa , ............ , Tlllflf ...... MlllMI Kevin Cur"" -ROICAMI TeMer .... ,, 1-t, "'4, JOl\n McE-del. llll Sc6n-... 3 .... ,. Henk PflJ4H Ciel. Biiiy Merli", 7·S, M . tHol• Re"' _,j)Of>l<I rnotl m•IChH) Women'• tournament fet ...... l•.Elltl-1 T ...... R..,Nlll .. I• M•rl•ne ~vretolo•• o.i Sf\e<o" W•ltll. ... ,, ..... uure ~1 det 1ve1111e M--· ... ,. •-t, .. ,, S.. llerk..-def MIW HOllO\. M , 1·S, OI-Dellor def Wendy While, .. J, 6 ·2; 8•rbe re H•llqultl def Pem Tee911erden, ... >. ... 3. Merjorl• 81•<k-d def J~• Preyer, 6 J, 4 6. • 2, Beby He;elsen oel Berllllr• Poller, 4-t, W. 1-t, Jo.nne R..-11 dt' Mn Klyom11r• ..... 1 S. .. , Legends championships let S.crt,.....tel ............... ,1 .... .. Owen Devi-def. Rod uv .... 6-2, 6·1 Misc. Thuradey·a tran1actlon1 8AHaALL NetMMIU..,.. HEW YORK METS -Si;ned Gell Arnold, pitcher. efld INll him to Litt!• Fell• t1f the HY·P-l..ff9ue. SI~ Lout• MertllWl, cetcller. --lllm lo Klngs:ton of lhe ,,.._ pe1ec111.,. LMogue. SAN Oll!GO PADRES -SllMd l'r.,k Castro, celchet', -..,., him to Am •rlllo of Ille Tel!M LNQut. SI~ 9111 LOf'Q, pllcr.r, •ncl • ........, "'"' lo Salem of t!M Hor1ll CllrollM ........ ,._...~ TORONTO BLUE JAYS -Signed lhrff fru e9en11, Merk Wltll•m• •"d TllTI Roeltert, llllCN,.., end Merk Poole, clllcller fAHITllAi..L ....... ..._.... ...... 111, .... NEW JERSEY NETS -Sold Ed~r J_., ~. to U. Detroit PlltMS lor IVIVr• c-'d«•U-. saATT\.~:..ltSOHlCS -AftnOUllC.ecl tllaJ ~ ~ rt. eulstMI coach -chief sciwl'. ,,., clecldeG 10 bKome oetenllve coach for ttw Clewtend C•v•ll•n. l"OOTULL ................. Le ..... CINCINNATI BENGALS -SlllMO JOM Sim,,,_, --IW INKll CLEVELAND BROWNS SlflNCI Gltford Remsey, -..itlw l>ec:lt, to•''" e99nt con· tract • HOUSTON OILERS SIO"ed Je,...s C-l•tlt n.Ml119 Deck, MICllMI °"'"911\. of fenllve ibi., Scott Gell••. center • .,,., Mellh•.,., Hfety; J•remy Mlndlln. ci.. ,..,,,,,.!~Ille; 'l'..s Prince, llnellec:ller, - Ouy Selttn. .,.._1..,. overd, to ''" ._, conlrecb. ST. LOOIS CARDINALS Sl(!Md 11oC11 111\fll.e Flsllllf end Jim Jol1Wr, wide recelv .... lo. MrlH of --COtllr« IL SAN DIEGO CHARGERS -SlflNCI Dan R-. --IW tnd. HOC1tav "-"'• Hoec1M1¥ Ltf9lllt N&W HAVEN NIGHTHAWKS -HINCI Oen PerryQGOKll. COL.LEO• BROOKLYN tol.,LEGE -Hemect Jim Dl8•11•dello, Stephen Foa •"d J t <ll Kn..,....,•• --IMll lootllell coeclles. CENTRAL FLORIDA -Hemed 'Joe S.ncl\ez ~·1 t1e,ll•tllell coach. MISSISSIPPI STATE -Hlrecl Do119 e.rl leld MM llffbtllftl footlletl coech Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Oakland 37 23 .617 Texas 33 22 .600 l t,.I, Chicago 31 22 .585 21Ai Aa&ela 31 29 .sp t Kansas City 20 30 .400 12 Seattle 21 36 .368 14~ Minnesota 17 39 .304 18 1 East Dlvlslon New York 34 22 Baltimore 31. 23 Milwaukee 31 25 Detroit 31 26 Boston 30 26 Cleveland 26 24 Toronto 16 42 ~.,. . ._.. ...... ,.L ....... IC-uty 10, T-S Clllc ... l. ..... Y•lll Ml .......... T._J =1.---.-2 1.e.ltlfNrtl --~ .,....,. ...... .607 ,574 2 554 3 .544 31h .536 4 .520 5 ' ~276 19 NATIONAL LEAGUE Wen Division W L Pct. GB Dodgen 36 21 .632 Cincinnati rt 35 21 .625 '-" Houston 28 29 .491 8 Atlanta 25 29 .463 9"'2 S4ln Frand~co 27 32 .458 10 Sl.\l Diego 23 33 .411 12"'2 Eaat Dlvlslon Philadelphia 34 21 St. l,..ouis 30 20 Moitrefl 30 25 Pitt9burih 25 23 New York 17 34 Chic~go 15 37 ,.._.,.,k-. St,LO!litt,.~1 ClllcltOD &, s-1 Fr1111<lsco 1 Mont,..el 1, Atl111t• 0 Clncl""'11 S, ,._'\'or" I OlllY .-Klleeluled T .. y'ao-t .618 .600 11-'l .MS 4 .521 5112 .333 15 .288 17~ Dtdltf'I (Wel<ll 4·Jl •I PltllburOh I 0 . ROOl.-.1),11 s.n 0 ..... (Wei-" M) Ill Chic._ : ICrevec Wl c1"c1n1111t1 caemy1 s-h ., "'°'lt'"' 11..H, 441, n • HCM.111111'1 (IC,...., ,_ll et Hew V•~ (Scett"'4), .... ,~,_.l • .._.. Cl'l'Oll Ml,11 , ... , (_,,.1\1~ atTW .... CTWllW), II Clll, ... lhll~ttfl S..) •l ~llwt1111!" I "AH•"'• (Perrr S·•I •t Plllledel•llle 11.erO!~n .....,._ (Olra.t-t·Sl New Y Co.Mr'J Wl .. --·-~".}-llt_,. sef1 ,.,._.._ (91wt S-J) et SL 1.o11l1 (IMl'Ull M l,11 ~ ._ It ... City 10... Ml at 094,.._ (WllCU Ml,lt ~ti, II "c ...... ,_ !WWI" M) lit ~KMUtll Wl1 I.I II f letti-. (.._rt N l el IN4 IAM!ott )'41 II From Page Di ANGELS • • • in as, It waa ridiculous," aald B1tylor. "If owners and players had been in there to diar.uss the matter, maybe somethlne rould have been resolved. There's just one 1sssue and it's compensa- tion. As far as <Ray) Crevey • t c h ief negotiator ror club owners>, he seems to be a hard hner l feel be didn't inform the owners on what was going on. ··Now my gut feeling 1s that if the strike goes 2·3 week$, it could go on for a very long Ume. Otherwtse, 1t m ay not last long •· OTHER PLAYERS, refl ecting an d projecting on the strike s ituation, talked about what they might do, now that they 're away from the JOb. · ·Tm not going to worry a bout it," said Rod Carew "My kids are out of school and I'm just go- mg to enJoy myself." "I'll have to think about it for about a week and I'll probably do absolutely nothing," said Dan Ford ·· L'nfo~tunately tf and when we do come back. it'll be like s pring training All a pitcher has to do 1s keep his arm in shape but hitters lose their timin~. their ... troke, their sense of the strike wne · 1 SEVERAL PLAYERS we~j pr epared to return to their homes. ne<Jr and far. today , "Our contra<.·ts say we can't I hold organized practices during the off.season. so how are we s upposed to s lay in s hape?", asked Forsch. "When I was with Houston durin~ the strike in '72, I we met as a team but with the i Angels that may not be possi-1 ble ... he added, making a re-t ference to a suit brought by the l Allgels against pitcher Jim Barr 1 during s pring training when he played m a benefit softball game I without asking for permission 1 from the club. , On 1l went ~one of 1t was very I pleasant * ANGllL NOTES Who II Hew the Lest UllQll i 0.01 PIUJ>er .Hiii O'AC..-... • ......, loe tou,. vur. ''mm-cOfltr.CI by the M91b-1ng lht • wlnt•r, ,,.., wind up •• the Cllesllire c .. ,,..,.. tllls f •hole _, llrlll• meu SI"<• ,,.., -• • minor l•.OOU..-thl wH ...,, _,,lo SOii U.u O· j 1y on May 211. ,,.., uempt from ""Ylhlno tllel ,,, .... In Ille -1or• ., IN tl H tar .. hi• I .. lery -· 1r0ftl< H II SlllAtld•, O'AcQUlllO will b« rewarded In • IMO wey for 11evl119 • llluay Ill>' mo11t11l '""" .,,. Anoe ... NI "· II Ille ~lrille b I lonO term Sc>NkiftQ ol t°"9·1erm sttill" -, Ille elf«I II Ml Of! ~e. W"81 •bOul the_,' old f•n•? Well, aevut shedt tome llOflt ' "O.pen<1tno on now loftQ -Jlrlke, ... ·11 • I termine what IO dO tor SHIOn lk k.•I ""'*"-If 11 • •llOrt 1«m, _, HPot<ience would l""lut• 1,,.1 ,,,. fens -.Id M •eltl'IClurMd wltll • Uk.e n11m1>er of lk.lltU tor ,.., ,.."°"'' 919me. u irt , '°"O term 119" -·e1 dO -hi"' elM ot-.g tr. 11" .. ot • refund A• ..... , •ll'IPIOye• of .... •nvell or0i9"iu1ton 90, pert·ll,... emploveff, 111111 Ulf\ett .,,., M> °" I 1,000 of t,,.m>. WCM.tkl be l•l 90. I ll'll\l •• permanent *"""'°""" -.I e1 11e y. "Meat., tM lledl"" pert·llme llelp llew ,,,.,, ,_ " Mcond•ry -• But ,,.., •• , •l••Y' llM mt- IHOv .. lo >Coul Tiw .,_ll ~-to iow '°'". USl,000 trom .... r~ of Ille BoltCl'I Mf* •IDM due lo the strl_, ...,., .. the Coty ef ,.,....,... S'*ild , .... In ,,,. ..... of '700,000, t>..ed o" lN • Ion of 110,000 lent for 1hr" ;.'""' FV youth football registration set Registration for Fountain Valley Jr. All American football will be held Saturday at the · Fountain Va ll ey Recreation ; Center in Mile Square Park and at two tittle league fields , Any youth 8· 13 years or age . may regjster. There will be a 1 $20 registration fee . 1 Registration will also be con· ducted at Fountain Valley Little League North <Newland and Talbert streets) and al C Field (Ward and Tai bert streets I. For further info rmation . phone 775-6743 or 839·5936. -----------.-..... --~-~---. ... ii) \ \ -EYBM---l :JOllLOVELUCY ....... W'2 ••WOMAN A ...... ..._. .. nwdMt wtitMecl ,_ed "°"' • .......,, ~ .. put up lot .... to N lllOl*t bidder •• W9C WON.D MIAVtWMUT ~···· wee N91orWclfl1 ~ on I.My Holmel dllfelMM hit tltle egeinat Leon 8QIMa. tn. fof'll* WBA Clhlimpklll, In • 1 kOUftd MAKING MUSIC -Charles Mstln Smith and Brenda King star u members of a biJh school band in "Cotton Caady" pre· m1ering tonight at 9 on Channel 4. bout • be '"'°"' ..... "°"' tM Joe t..oula ,._ NI Deer.,..: In ecld!llOI\, wee No. 3 t11n119d ~­ weight MlehHI Ooltel "*• on EIKoPMn helvy-welght chtllllplon JOhn Oerdner in the opening bout G TIC TAI; DOUGH eM•A .. S"H • 9000,... J-lntlst• that Florid• 1tay In • private hole>llal 1"9tMd of tile cllnic tor • minor OCJWatlon. •• ELICTNC eot#AllY <"> Cl) C81MIW8 ato 8 JOKDrl WILD G) WELCOME BACtC KOTT£R • ....VHIU. a.My trln ,,.. h•nd ... -announc«. I ICCET NIWUMT IT\.QOllE ........ Minda. • giant a.klga wNle, tr.in. at San Diego'• SU World, two Cllle9go lllds run a ..... boerd tlhoj): apple j)ldllltg lln~.(RI ... EDrTONAl 7:00 C81 HEWS ICNEWI · HA""' DAYS MMIN Marton tnnslonN '*1lell Into • wilecl ~ "'*' atle ...,.. 11'9 might late Howard to• younger -en. CHANNEL LISTINGS ·~ Hl'Mt9Y'fendl.J,._.ct "'"*of Minot~ eolonlf• .,,..,. gun. • a1'llltY8 CF IAH FtWCeCO When a ~·a hu9b9nd d~. atle,... lie flu met de&IJI by tlte tedt· .. Md tflel atle will be neir1. • OWRt.A8Y Guesta: jUZ grMI Lionel Hampton, dlrectOf ot San FrenciMO't o.,artrnent of Heelth °' JMrvyn s....,. men.(R) ID MACNlll.1 LBtMJt M!PORT Cl) TIC TAI; DOUGH 7:t09 tONTlWTOWN Hotta: s1.... Edward•. Melody Rover•· Vllll Bob Baker'• Ml'lonett• The- 11re; • !«* at Video M ; ~IN death ol the lot CrMlll Parlor IJ FAIAY~ • IHANAAA a-ta: AM t:Mmention. •FAQITHI~ AU. If THI FAia. Y Glorill'• 24..flour+4ey job U t ,_ moth« doetn'I ieeve ~ time tor Mlle• • ~/LIHtWR REPORT ........ Daf•NQll .. Computer•· Wt¥• of TOCS.y'' Examine the high ·~~of the aouthlMCf and IN • 8 KNXT tCBSI Los Angeles II KNBC 1NBCI Los Angeles O KTLA tlnd ) Los Angeles 8 KA8C lV (ABCI Los Angeles (() KFMB (CBS) San Ooego 8 KHJ-lV (Ind I Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego • l<TTV (Ind I Los Angeles I KCOP· lV (Ind I Los Angeles KCET· lV tPBSI Los Angeles I!> KOCE·lV tPBSI Huntington Beacn IU1Weof---~ln fie ....... of ,..-ory ~ (l)f'Jl ....... TN WOttd't ~t ti-. ball end bet factory: a U>u- """' ldloof wNre IW- dentl +elar In unlcycle. we(l)THI~ ..u wi.. ~Ing In • powet ~. Oevld It ~led lo a ITIMliW electric lhOck 11111 9fleblet him to IOfe- -upc°"*'O -'•· (R) 8 ~VALUYP'TA St• 1>011e M a '*< ft'*1 to get ~ on me Atllya IOf c:llllr'O hit an a6caftollc. (A) 8 MOVIE **"~kllttr" ( 19111 .Md! lord, !Hrl9y l<nlgfl1. An under<:Ove< polk:eman lntlltratH a crtiM ring to tlllPoet the KtMt• of 109 Mme IMO-... .. ..,.. A fOtf9Cll'I _, M'O i. med about a.-WIN to win 1111 t-..... he la trying to Nn a con,.,.,_ tor mlnltttn, pr•t• and rabble. IA) • MOW! • • "Only One Day L.efl hlor• Tomonow" (1971) P.-°"91. SM Mineo. • P.M. MAGAZJNI The ~· blgge9t .,..._ bell and blll l.ctory; • oowboy ~ roundup In ~a; Jur/ Jernudd goet "dllCOUflt afl09Plng for~,....,._: Capt Carrot on pMllUt butter ""' c:hc*lng; Joen Embery lnlroducat • gltafte. • MOYIE. • • • . .,,. AeWnelltt" (1t5e) 8wt Lanee1ter. ltathel'IM ""*""'· A con ,,.,.,, poling u • r1111wna1te• not Otlly ... the drought In• tmlll ~em town, but &ISO brlnga ,__..,~end con· ~toe..-- • LOI HtCM' a wmc •MYmf .... ~Roberti •w.....aTOHwmc .. MVllW MOG~ Fred 1Md1 • mareti on city ..... to proeeet ~ to buld • tr-.ey tl)f ougll ii~CMM. MOW Dlllna ....... , • .,_ "*' lllbmlt IO IN oompeny'I aeourtty lwt (1111 eTHECAROl. IU9'NJTTSHOW ew...-TOHWDK .. fllYllW • WALL fTMETWIP "T"-Tedlnk:ll Outtooli" ~· ..... o. Zlnder. --~ prtotlcMnt, ~ n1ce1 ~ E.F Huttoll -~y.lnc: t:OO 8 (I) n. OUKM CF HAUAN> Lull• arid Bo .,. hlNd to guard Ml hlt1orlc -d. {Al • M0"9I • • "Cotton Candy" (1978) Cllnt Hqjflllrd. a-. Martin Smith. A oroup of lllgfl td'C>OI ,,.,.... m. torm a roctl bend to COft!Plt• with IN tefloQl'I ettabllhed '*'<!. (RI 8 MOYW ** •• "The Frel\Ch Con· nectlon" ( t971) OaM Hadun.an, FemendO Rey. Two t.ougl'I narcotlct .._.. tlgalon loll • hlige hltOln cleel. • ....VGNFAN "Salute To Cllw Oevta An4 Arlttt Rac:ol'dli" ~II: 'Cltve Davia, Aretha Frank· tin, Air Supply, Olno Van- ntlll, Jim Brogen • • WALL STMET W&K "The T edlnlcal Outloolt" G-. Newton 0. «Ind«. l«lior vice prealdent. ·~ n1Ca1 antly9il, E F. Hutton & Company, Inc:. G vomra.....uNE "'WhO cat• FOf Chllchn" Host• Jim Cool)« and hil ou.ta dltQJaa child cere r.clltlel In Ortf\gl County. <II MCME * •.,. "King Creott" (1958) EM1 Pr9eley, Cwo- tyn Jone1. A youth ~ • amaahlng hit wn.n he•-to ling 1n • ganoatar-ownad New Ot1Mnl nlghtapot . HO. G IAOf'AMINTO MEK•MYteW H011 Murr9Y Fr-. 10;00. <I> DAU.Al Bobby~ lhet an all tenlltr tllat _. -not lnaured and COUid coat him the pretldency of Ewing ··~ n,EATM FUTIVAL ~ FAYC>NT9 ••Tfle Golden Bowl" e..o on a nowt by Henry J-. Meggie._... Ameri- gO tt-a1 .,... know9 of hll •flair end tl'IM 10 convince her laltier to ~ to Amarlca with Challolte, (Part 9)(R) CID tu MC1¥'EM' JOUNW. "'Mylel Horton, The ....,.._ _,,,.,.. _____ -- Orange Coaet"DAILY PILOT~rlday, June 12, 1981 TUBE TOPPERS KHJ e 8:00 -"Only One Day Left Before Tomorrow." Movie about an American and Welshman trying to re· possess a jet from a playboy. KCOP • 8!00 -"The Rainmaker." Classic movie about rain and romance starring Bun Lancaster and Katharine Hepburn1 ABC D 9:00 -"The French Connec· tion." Gene Hackman stars in this movie about two detectives thwarting a heroin haul. ly Aedlcer' ... ~ 1n1......._t Myi. Hotton, educator and ~of a echOol In T.,...... ._ t..,_ ~ peop6t IM wt of ...m.t. (Pan ,, • 10'.IO I ,.. IUS•IDIHT NITWOMNIW8 11:001••C1><11 ..wt . ITAATMK The EnterpriM ~ a Ihle> ol hatred .. the olli- _.. battla l(llngOnl and Md\Olhtt G NIWLYWm GAMe • M•A•e•H Hawkeye end Hot Lip• otln • new respect IOf each othtt •It• WOfklng at an 9ld elation und« heavy tire. • 9ENNYHU Benny demonttratw hOw paopl• communicated before Mr. Bell end hie t~ 9 OCKCAVETT Gueat: Richafd ThOmU ID 8NeAK PAEVIEWI Roger Eberl end 0- SWcel review "'Take Thia Job And ShOve It," "Out- land" and "The legtnd 01 The Lone Rlinoer •• 11:80 9 Cl) THE NtOHT STAU<ER An lnYelllgation Into • _._ of atranoe murder• lead• l(olcflak 10 believe that Chicago la being vtau. eel by ~Illy beinga (R) D TQNIQHT Hoit· Johnny Caraon OuMta· St-L.andeltllerg. P... Fountain. Shelley nMCNIWI NICIKTUNI G &n'I IW<aA DfAL • MOVll ••'lo "'WUSA" (1870) Paul N.wmen, Joanr>e Woodward. An alcohOllc dltc loc*ey tinda blmult a pawn In • reactionary politlcal plot and NMlll· ""'°" • DANCIE l'lVIA CelM>rity judgee: Jonelle Allen. Randy Gardner and Tai Babllonla. Brian Palrlell Clalll•. • CE!) CAPTIONE.D A8C NEWS 12::00 0 MOVIE * * "The Matque Of The Red OMth" ( 1864) Vincent Prlee. Hazel Couft A 12th· century prince tak• a myaltttou1 young girl. who carrtell the Reel OMtl'I pit- ~· Into hi• cutle U O FAIDAYI GUMt1: Tha Jam. (RI fl MAVINOK • "The Mavericll Uftt'. ., llAAl!TTA "Olrta" I 1t:e0 .. TOMOMOW 12:AO. Cl) MOVIE • • • "Someone 11 Watching Me" ( 1978) Lau- 1'11n Hutton. David Birney A tern• teleYlllon ,_. dfrec:tOf la tONl*'ted by • my1tarlou1 man who -· to be llalklng her _.,_. , •• ""°"'° 1111•1ou•1,.i.. WOM.D llVQN) "Ule !JI~" Hoitt Otmlen lilnpeoll, S*Y Hunt °"8111 ~ SN!llo ciu. dlecvtHI how to lnor•H• lntellto•110•. maintain llNHh and ~..,. • IOl'IOfl'. lullet Ille • N>IP• ICIHT NITWON( NIW8 1:10ED90WDT: MlePAll ~tt M.rloy ll'ld Reed brMll up • nwc:o41ca ring u t~ leld • raid on the epart- INnt of. ~led dop9 P""*'· 1:ao. MOYIE • * ,_. "0rt"9yald 01 Hor· rot" ( 1971) 8111 Curran, I YOCAttta Gray A man llNwna the llWful MCt9I Of Illa brothtt'I dl~f· -wn.n .... ,, led h> • hidden caYe by • band ot ~·· 1:40. MOYie • • * 'A "Gambit.. ( 1 "9) SNftey Mec:l.alne, Mlc:tlMI Caine. A gl-oua girt and 111'1 Englilh con man plOI lo steel • valuable acMplure. • MOVIE • * "Drecuta Va Franll- INlll" (1971) J Cerro! Nalah. Lon Chaney Dracu- la l}tly • Dr Franktnllein revive l'lla monster on return tOf l1le-suat11n1ng blood Mfunl llOOD NEWS ewow **'h '"The Big Game ( 1972) Stephen Boyd, Franca Nuyen Foreign governmenll •ttempt to obtain • ~I mind- control device from Amari· can llcienlll t S 2:418 HEWS l:CIOD HEWS (I) MOVIE * * ''C&rn1val Of Crime ( 1994) Jean-Pierre Aumont. Ton•• Carrero When • mlulng woman'• oorpaa 11 finally dlscov- ared, her husband"• bual· n-. partn«. wno ..., .. tlao ,.,., IOV9r. conl•-to Iha crime lctl 8 EDfTOAIAL 1:20 1J MOVIE e * e "P11n1 Your Wag- on.. ( 1969) L.. Man.In. Clint Eaatwood During the Gold Ruan days In Calllor· nla, • pair of p<ospectOfl Illar• 1 wllt bought from a Mormon at an aoc:tion S:*>G) MOVIE • *'A ·c1oak And H /F 6:N~ t:OO 811111 ID""1'Y STAATIWK OOMMUNfTY HOil: Fernando 0.. Rio. • Vl!\WOelT ON NUTNTION I .....,__ ... rrtYOU"ll••t 9:11 ~THATTIM:M 9:JO ........... THAT'eCAT rr1vou..11••1t DAW:V AHO GOUATH G) IPEAKOOT ., ROMPER ROOM &:I CAPT10NED MC N&W8 Cl) VOtCI~ AORICUlT\JM OJ) MAKINO IT COUNT 7:00 1J OUSTY'I .TAEEHOl.IM D THE FUNT8TONE8 1J PACUETTIM Hoat· Larry MoCormlck 8 0 SUPPFAll!N08 G HOTRJOGE m TUAHAaOUT 8i) YOGA FOR HEAL TH (() TV_. LOOKS AT UWNNQ 7:30 I) MARLO NfCJ THI MAGIC MOYie MAO llNE IJ BIO ll.UI! MAMLE G OIOOL.ESNORf HOTS. CD UP AHO COMINO ., OETTIN' OV9' &:I VEOETAllU IOUP Cl) l(JOIWOIW..D t:OO 8 Cl) TOM NfCJ ./EM'f 1J OOOZIUA " ntf NFl.DWf D 9 PlA8TlCMAN I &AaYP\.AB G TO BE ANNOUNCS> m CAA CAM C8fTMl. (I) 8PEC&Al. "8>PlE SI AAIN80W'I END CA) JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk Nuclear Age survival • 18 CBS documentary topic next week By TOM JORY NEW YORK <APl -CBS devotes an ex- traordinary five hours of prime time, an hour at a clip on consecutive nights, to a documentary project called "The Defense of the United States." The series, nine months in production, con- siders the prospeet of survival ln the nuclear age, a question made even more timely by tbe raid by Israeli jets this week on the nuclear facility under construction in Iraq. Dan Radaer anchors the series, 10-11 each night, Sunday through Thursday, with Walter Cronkite, Bob SchJeff er, Harry Reuoper, Ed Bradley and Richard Threlkeld the principal re- . porters. HOWdD STalNGER, executive producer of "CBS Reports" who coordinated the aeries, credits his boss, Bill Leonard, CBS News' president, with the idea for the project. · "Any time yoo try to cover something like de· fense in. aft hour or two." Stringer says, "it might look good In script form . but once it's on rum the Margolin is sidekick ' HOLLYWOOD CAP> -Stuart Margolin will co-star witb James Garner in NBC's "Jtret Maverick" series in the fall. Margolin woo an Emmy as best 1upportin1 ac· tor for his portrayal of Angel in Garner's last series, ''The Roc!klord Files." In ''Bret Maverick," Mar;golin will play Stand· ing Bear, who claims to be an Indian SC<>ut. He ls always ready to serve Maverick -for a price. audience can't figure out what it's all about. "It's such a complex subject." he says, "you 'te constantly Jumpinc from one spokesman to anotber, and it all becomes meaningless alter a while. "I think the series will demonstrate," Stringer says, "that there's no substitute for good, sound J6Urnalisrn. We haven't cut interviews to eight seconds. and we've done nothing to dazzle it up. "IT lfiy BE lnterestinl, but it's serious, first and foremost." Says Wonanl: "Since we began tbia P">Ject, lbe iasue bu become even more critical. Tbe arms Umitatioo talks have broken down, and the new Reagan administration has pledged tG spend $1.3 trillion on defense over the next five years." The premtere segment, "Ground Zero." con- siders, among other things, Soviet nuclear capability, and depicts, in rather graphic detail, what would happen lf a ~megaton bomb hit StrateJje Ajr Command headquarters , near Omaha, Neb. "It'I very serious," Stringer says of "Ground Zero." "I don't kno• if people will want to sit through t.be necessary information to get to that dramatic conclusion. We could have put the bomb at the bqinning, but it belongs at the end of the hour." TID • S2&1ES continues Monday night with "The Nuclear Battlefield," on the posslbUity of nuclear war in Europe, Part DI is "CalJ to Arms," an examipation of the strength of America's COQ· ventlonal forces, and Part IV, "The War Machine," considers the military-industrial com- plex and its role in tbe country's defense. The series concludes Thursday night with on teen-agers and guns and on the Texas "The Russians," a segment on the Soviet military Legislature, "and an investigative piece I can•t -Cronkite's first major report since stepping talk about. It's going lo tear the lid off of one down ln March as "Evenillg News" anchorman. aspect of our society. Stringer says the producers of the individual "It's just the most cheerful time around here segments sought in each instance to speak with the .-i_n_s_o_m_e_m_o_n_t_h_s_. ·_· -----·--------players in the nuclear game. "WE DECIDED at the start not lo go to the think-tanks," be says. ''¥ost ot the people in this are the partici- pants." There may be another, more far-reaching significance in the five-hour series. ''It's been a libera'ting experience," says Stringer of the project. "When Bill Leonard com- m its five hours to something like this, you lmow damn we ll' the commitment is lo produce something of quality." The project was particularly important to Stringer, in light of a trend in TV news not long ago away from the long-form documentary. "I THINK IT'S CLEAR," he says, "that there's a new value on non-fiction television, there's a pendulum swina back toward Journalism. "We did the magazine stuff," Stringer says, "but we also had things like 'Boal People' and 'Teddy' that did very well to keep us in the longer form. If this seems it's turned around now, I think we'll all be very happy. "Last year was my worst ~this busineas," be says. "There was the election -we loet time there -and unless you really keep a documehtary unit busy, everybody tends to get lethargic." He says there are documentaries in the works Saddleback Company Theatre presents A SUMMER OF FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY, JUME 11-SUMOAY, JULYS RODGERS ANO HAMMERSTEIN"S ALL TIME FAVORITE THE SOUND OF MUSIC STARRING BROADWAY'S SUSAN WATSON ANO STEPHEN ARLEN I I I ( I I· r t .-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::-1 DIRECTED AND CHOREOGRAPHED BY DAVID H BELL r r <1elebrities turn out to . eulogize Allen Ludden .. • CUMI EVllY MOUNrA.IM •DO ltl Ml • MY FAVORITE TMMGS • * * THURSDAY, JULY 16-SUHDAY, AU'9UST Z ERNEST THOMPSON'S WARM, FEISTY FAMIL ~ ~ COMEDY I t 7457 137505 S6Q55 S5678 PICK.-UP DIESEL 6708 052259 S7680 s7120 PICK-UP DIESEL 6724 054774 S7890 s7047 s943 PICK-UP 6580 010851 S7620 S6872 s749 PICK-UP BBIT 6624 025046 S7620 S6873 s747 PICK:up BBIT DIESEL 7082 118693 S7695 s7052 S643 PICK-UP BBIT DIESEL 6657 030316 $8445 S7621 s924 PICK-UP BBIT DIESEL 7706 105033 s7530 $6885 5645 CONVERTIBLE BBIT DIESEL 6962 086569 S8070 S7412 5658 CONVERTIBLE I ROCCO 7545 022494 S9160 S7987 s 1173 CONVERTIBLE I ROCCO 7053 021803 S9780 S8627 s 1153 CONVERTIBLE IROCCO 7309 020478 s9950 S8821 s 1129 CONVERTIBLE I' IROCCO 7583 022511 s9gg5 S8817 5 1068 DASHER DIESEL !SCIROCCO 7213 004 158 s9535 $8483 5 1052 DASHER DIESEL JETTA 7341 287534 $8480 s7479 s I 00 I VANAGON JETTA 7123 354214 S8995 '8273 5722 VANAGON 7604 331175 $8765 $8125 5740 VANAGON 7403 293597 S8765 S7872 s993 . VANAGON 7405 322457 S8740 s7g37 s903 ALL BRAND NEW 1981 's 7400 11-6552 $8120 s745g 7435 128026 S8Q35 s7492 6892 077131 S7870 S6796 6978 104592 $]460 S6766 7069 126621 s7715 S6905 7063 130570 $7400 S6686 7264 145291 $7210 S6551 7493 013537 Sl0,290 S8996 7488 013617 SlQ,395 S9314 7419 012905 Sll,465 Sl0,168 7476 013324 Sl0,395 s9458 7486 007730' SIQ,350 S9396 6910 901448 Sl0,610 S9486 6915 901998 ~10,610 S9486 7375 085774 Sll,140 S9892 7348 042578 Sll,675 Sl0,354 7346 057021 Sll,675 SI0,354 7138 077379 Sll,700 SlQ,393 7619 059596 Sl3,905 Sl2,552 . n , •• • t t If' ~ '·r'. : t,. :1 . s662 · .. · •t \ s543 ... 1 s I 074 : . : ·'. s694 · · ss 10 '• s714 s659 s1294 s I 081 s1297 s937 ~: ~ s . ·- 5958 . \ s 1124 s 1124 .. s1248 s 1321 s I 32 I · .. ~ · .. · s 1307 .. ; . 5 1353 ·: : :· ,. SAUDIFOXWGM 5265 , 72PORSCHE914 ~s4975 '76FORDMUSTAMG s345 , spd., radio. only 59,000 miles, runs exceptional. 5 speed, am~m cassette. A classic sports car In • 4 cyl .. 4 spd .. acJst cassette, only 60,000 miles. A real • '18TRS) , euperb condition. (741ZRH) black diamond PIP 65395 . 1 v.w. WESTFALIA ' 56315 •77DATSUN1-210 s3475 •77 PLYMOUTH ARROW s2475 • op-top', great condition. 4spd with em/fm & c.b. unit 2 DOOR 4 apeed a/c lm·fm stento (312812) 4 speed, am/fm cassette. Excellent transportation. :TOI) ' ' (283TJE) Only -fs vw WESTPHALIA s5475 . s4550 I • s4475 TOP CAMPER 4 a~atet'eo summertime ls 76 VW SCIROCCO . 77 HONDA ACCORD e • Pop Top 's are in • exc*'llent condition. 4 apd, •fm *reo. A beautiful sliver w/Strlpes and 5 speed, am/fm. drives great. excellent cond1tlon. on • 9-PCO) • cuttom lrtterlor. 1978SEG) sala (890WRC) All vehlclee plus tax, uo.n.e & documentary tee Subject to prior sale. Sale ends Sunday 6/14.61 STOCKS CLASSIFIED E2 E3-8 I , Columnist Sylvia Porter concludes her series on the malpractice crisis ... E2 ; County le <I.er in Southland housing ~:Position maintained d Despite a sharp drop in sales and an tncrease ••. in median prices. Orange County leads Southern • California ln virtually all categories of new • housing, according to a study entitled "Residential Housing Summary." ( Published quarterly by California Land Till Co. in conjunction with San Diego-based Develop menl Dimensions, a research and marketing fir the study reported a 42.3 percent decline in sat and median prices of $173,781 for single-fam homes and $93,244 ror condominiums. In the preceding quarter ended May 1, the r· vey showed median prices of $169,781 and $85 9, respectively. The number of units m inven ry, • however, was reduced by 15.9 91rcent. "The key thought here," said Jack H ris. ~: vice president of California Land Title. in re· lease. "is that Orange County's average sa per development per week is still the higijst in Southern California." Development Dimensions President Moss noted in the same release that • County had as many sales in its 240-plus ·1 • men ts as Los Angeles County had in active :' · projects. And. Orange County retains lear-cut sales leadership despite the highest m an price for single-family units in Southern Calif nia." A total of 246 active developments f 10 units or more were surveyed. including 13 single- fam ily detached and 133 projects wit ttached or condominium units. The Santa Ana-Tustin area led th county with 26 active projects, though the rba Linda- Placentia and Anaheim-Anaheim · s areas also had significant activity. The study ported those three submarkets accounted for 'l7 ercent of all county projects Santa Ana-Tustin also led al total sales. the report noted. wit pite r ising prices econd. Mission Viejo exhibited the fastest sales rate of 2.45 units a week In its eight active develop· men ts. The study showed single-family median sales prices ranged from a low of $139,750 in El Toro. Lake Forest to a high of $335,000 in Newport Beach. The single-family median sales price of $173,782 represents a 2.4 percent increase over the previous quarter. Condomlnium median sales prices, according to the report. ranged from a low of $75,864 in Santa Ana-Tustin to a high of $175.000 in San ClementJ!. The county's median sales price of $93.244 is 5.6 percent higher than the quarter which preceded it. "These price rises will continue." Moss said in the release. "because the median prices of inven- tory are 521,096 and $14 .786 above single-family and condominium median sales prices. This is even higher lhan the differential which existed last quarter and these statistics point to another round of rising prices." Inventory fell 700 units to 3,545 during the s ur- vey quarter, the report showed. Of these. 35 per· cent were single-family homes and 65 percent were condominium units . A total of 79 percent are completed but unsold. The report indicates this is a very high level of completed inventory despite the "rather healthy pace during the last quarter in the Cace of difficult money market conditions." The report concluded with this statement: "The most important factor to be monitored during the balance of the year is the effect of new legislation regarding the ability of savings and loans to make new loans at a variable, indexed rate with no stipulated maximum. This will have a major impact on the market's willingness and ability to purchase new housing, as will both ques- tionable economic conditions and future housing price escalations " .=Bo nan a slow arriving Defense spendin~mpact l ess than expected? From the Business Wire l. The economic bonanza1expected from in- : creased defense spending may be less than · generally expected and m h slower in coming, · according to three defense i ustry executives. · Speaking in Newport B ch as panel members on "The Business Exchan , " a public television forum for discussion of b lness issues, the three, agreed problems exist at the record money authorization alone can't re. : "The Soviets have !'pent the United States by $200 billion during e last 10 years." said : TRW's John Stenbit, w cautioned that as now 1 : authorized, It would t e three years to match . what the Russians have already spent. Stenbit. director cf requirements and group development for TRWs California-based Space & Defense Systems Gro\/p. said during much of that sam e 10 years there ~s an ~ra of "inconsistency" in procurem~ml poli(Jes and a period of "anti- techoology hysteria'' in the United States that must also be overcoqe. While noting th•re are very productive and capable people now f\ lhe Californfa aerospace in- dustry, Stenbit dedied. for example, a current ::.hortag, of beginning engineers. He said Uus was due in part to the "anti-technology" decade, and said ii requires an eight-year cycle to produce a qualified graduate tngineer. Panelist Dr. Nick Yaru, corporate senior vice president of Hug•es Aifcraft, agreed. He said while engineering school$ are now jammed, there are not enough qualified professors to ease the crunch and prepare for the additional engineering students required Yaru also said the Reagan administration's variable progress payment and multlyear procure· ment policies will help by easing industry cash- . Clow problems. How~ver . he said lone lead times ·.and a shortage Of subcontractors must also be COD· ·sidered. •·If I want to build something today, I .EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 8 81 Dover Dr., Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 CONSTRUCilON MONEY AVAILABLE AT ~~~MOC • ~ Buildinp: Takeout QwnmiQnent required alone with ICMea. • Land Lomu "P to one year 509& a~ I I , CONTACT: • Jdf Jobmon-tmr; Office (71'4)851-4050 should have ordered it yesterday," he said of the U.S. semiconductor industry, heavily taxed by the demands of the consumer market. .. We are not behind the Russians in our laboratories. we're behind the Russians to the ex- tent they have put their technology in the field." said the panel's third member, Paul Smith. vice president-program development and marketing for 1'1cDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co. Smith said the lag between actual appropriation and spending runs a minimum of two years. "Although we are seeing the very leading edge of the Reagan administration's thinking with respect to budgets," Smith said, "it will be two years before we see a large impact upon the in- dustry and another two years before we see much impact upon military services. where the real hardware is needed." A guest economist on the program, Bank of America's Karl Graeber. a defense industry analyst, applied a di!ferent perspective lo the peo- ple problem. "I think the industry will have some trouble adapting to growth with problems of employ- ment," be said. "They can't bring people in because it's too expensive to buy houses here." be said of California. He predicted growth, "but not a boom." Panel members agreed with Yaru's claim that the 19tl>s, "will be the era m which we produce equipment," compared to the 1970s when the stress was on research and development. Smith· said the Russians had "not only done more in technology that we'd anticipated." but had also "been spending their money to produce equipment at a much higher rate." Stenbit said it was lime to marshall U.S. technology to the defense cause and said "we have a tendency to apply it to digital watches and TV games ... more than to our military forces.'' COLLECTORS CORNER Rare Coln• & Stampe GOLD & SILVER 6-11·11 o.M C.._ ...._. 111\w Cl. Slt.:M •w s.u l<r"99ffancls wt.•..._. Matt .. l.Nh M'1.JS M11.U 100 C«-..._IS $Mt.ti JO ... _ "76.• U11M ~su ...... a.,.. m.s~ ,,,...,., 70% Bank Financi ng IRA&KEOUGH (714) 556-6850 South Coe.t Plue Vlll•O• ....._ .......... IA<nlt'-._..CMst~tau) USE THE D.AILY PILOT "F.AST RESULT" SERVICE DIRICTORY For Result Service Call 642-5671 ht.JU NU Y ASS IMAILI IMTIAIST OHL Y W 11151 DEEDS Call William B Mitchell Cell 10dey tor quote • No 001tg111on SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY SHI Beach Huntinoton Beach Costa Mesa Newport Beach I rvlne North Irvine E:I Toro-Lake Forest Laguna Beach/ Laguna Ni9uel Mission Viejo San Juan Capistrano/ Dana Point · San Cltm@nte Subtotal NORTH ORANGE COUNTY La Habra-Brea area Yorba Linda/ Placentia Fullerton-Buena Park La Palma-Cypress/ Los Alamitos Anaheim/ Anaheim Hills Orang~ Villa P rk area Garden Grove/ Westminster Santa Ana-Tustin Subtotal Total Orange County STATUS SUMMARY OF FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS ORANOE COUNTY MAY19t1 PROPOSED PROJECTS .. UMM. •UMea• MUMll«• HUMBER OF UNITS °" 0' '*'" ~•o.11cn o~ l'ttOllCTI \IN Dia "'""" CDHIT•. MAP 1 80 1 0 0 0 434 16 367 1,943 360 494 3,295 1.000 1.000 19 2,881 18 216 18 834 8 86 1,036 8 3,672 20 7 15 132 690 11 2,094 1 0 9 2,252 9 0 20 4, 150 32 164 8 3,835 12 S4 9 1,470 24 581 10 619 25 629 303 89 53 490 0 596 936 141 495 1,344 2,721 265 0 0 0 170 0 16 130 0 0 0 9S3 191 552 3,293 360 1, 106 4,525 2,916 1,341 7,498 127 22,923 158 2,552 4,447 5,525 15,420 1,316 lJ,I JS 3 317 17 50 lSS 203 347 755 10 1,364 33 72 1, 100 2.060 109 3,~1 8 0 194 786 12 168 487 22 42 494 56 0 10 94 56 6 7 604 68 287 157 1,891 976 3,311 6 a.« 34 70 1,358 1.703 368 3,499 2 76 40 812 92 924 179 2,007 5 393 58 440 392 1,669 S37 3,038 ., 4(Wi 287 I 867 1 81)4 R, s12 111? , 6 QI)< 168 27,008 440 4,419 8,251 23,932 4,038 40,f>'O /:; ,,• .. ~~r~\~ 2!:: 2 ; .. =~:~Ip ~::; t~ ~~n;.,wi ~.o···"'· ~.~:~ NASDAQ SUMMARY Jl'I• J2V. HenrdF ll ll\lt N"ctP wl llV. UV. Sllwm"I s ,., ~~ ~~ ~ HHooolot>m,,., 2\0o ,~ OilllvyM = !!~ SC•IWlr 7;: t HO<lllh l~V. •:::: g::~,~~ IW. JOl4 SwEISv ~~ ~ UV. I~ H11y~tt1111111t rn., 21 OtttrTP 11'4 11-~;"~~~ ~ l' /I.,. ~ 23~ PCA lnl IJ\lt t>~ StdMlcro I~ IO"'I NEW YORI( IAP) -The lollowlnt 11111 l~JJ II·" lnlrelnd 1111 1~ Pa1>118 I~ I~ Std Rep 3'V. JTV. 11llOW1-k~ .. ~ -er~'!!,'11 j •• tne1 __ ,:_ eo..n-t~ «>..., ~ Intel 37 )1•.t. P<G•R .• 22 22\lt StenHP :M"" l6 -• •M --· ·-·-·--U 1' lntrcEnr II~ II~ ~•uleyP t~ /414 Ster1S1 IM m~I..,., -IM ""°'1 11.tMd °" 1•v. 17\lt lnlmtGs 10 1CMll PeylsCs """ "" s1rawc1 21~ i:v. r::c~~Mnlle ·-•dleu of vollHN Jl"" J3 lnlkWll\ 13V. 13YJ P .. rMI IS 1' S..llaru ;no.., 12\lo r. "14 1 ..... lw•SoUI J1 JI~ P .... Ent IJ'.<. 13YJ S"91rEI "' '"' No M<Wll .. ''""'"' .,._ u .... Wl-011\ 41" Jetnsby 1•V. 2'"' Pent.olr 22'-22'-TIME 0C 1 -Net -119"<enl-<M-ert IN • ., ,~ Jt t•A 1 ••~ ••~ Pet II -~ •7 .,!.~ .!.. Jifterenu -Ille prevlou• clcrlS"' ·~ -, -~ .. .....,. r • -,,,·,.• •,,,~ Th•mpam• '"'" •n• ••o -··· -T--·A· ... 11e-~o-"· IS'llo """ JlllyFd S-16 VI Pettibon ~ .. ndm fl ttVt --'"":' ·--· .. --... ..... l'V. JoslynM 1' 3'11, PlllleNal ll°" JI-T-umP 2A 1414 aliSt ·~· 16 •• 11 Ple"eSS 1011\ 10\lt r;lcmA ~~ ~ 20 .... JI !(e lver J'-1~ Pinllrtn SI Sll'I fenenl s 21~ nv. 7 1U2 7Vt l(e men 1 J• ...... 2~ PlonHIB l'~ ~, TIPr•ry 21'-. 12~ llV. 111'> l(aywm ~ S\Q PIHllne ..... .,. I 11 ,, lttflySv .. Vt ''"' Pouls ,.... '"' , c.oPd ,, J2 I l 314 KMlel UV. JJ\I, Pr1t1GM :Miit UV. ~~:~FJ 11 1k, 1~:Z ~ 22 U"" l(lmllall 11 .. 2211\ ~rsSteyn r ... ~ UnM<Gll ~ 2111'1 • J1V. • Klntlnl 2:i. 2~ r09rp l111\ 11~ US Enr 11"-12 s 2'Y> 3014 KIOofG • 2111\ P1>S1tNC ·~ .. "' US Sur :M :MV. ' """ I~ w..._v 1114 11~ p.,rt .. n ~,.u. -1..,. US Trell IJ'h 1)'Q 1 IM U Ktetos 1W, 20 l'utOCap ·-•-i.lllo 1'YJ l(ull<kt 20'llt 2114 Q,..krCll 16YJ 11 UVelsll J7 37"'° I 1714 17¥ l.erlc.itln 24'1! Ul4 lll•OMPr IJY'J 1~ UpP.nP II 11 t VYt t7" LMWlllft , 1~ Reyc.llm .:! .... '""" VNIR 6114 ,,"' 10 me 12 l..llMCo .,.. .._ R•Vmnd 21 27V. ~:!,~' ~~ ~~ •121 23 U Ulnlfs 2"' 2J\I> llMvtC S1 S1"' N • LldSIM i.i• 1'11> Ro.c!Ea 49 49\4 Verco 2114 21'41 tl lllt 1 Llnlut »llo »Vt lllollt>My 4S ""' Velcro 11 11¥ 12 " ' '" J RowtOft • •~. "ktreSI ,._ tv. 1S ·-1 L....... nl4 IN .~ u~ VleleoC;J: " Ullo '' Z:W. loMli MCIC 22'-22¥ lllo..w w .,.. Ne 154 16 MGI' O 1 IN 12 .. R"sStov 16 """ e ""' II 11 • 4\0o MedsGE IMI! u" Sadllitr Jiit 411. ::::,~~~ ·~~ 1!~ 11 144'9 1S ~,.., ~ 10 S.leco ""• O lh WellG• , J2 lJ " I ' Mer:mP d"" 0 14 SIHelGd ~ JS\4 WslOrtl ,~ 7tlof. 20 IOl4 10\11 ~ RI ~ Wt StPeul JOl.'lo ~ wo.. ~ '1 21 I~ I::::,~ ! 11~ ~ kanO 1 '~" J 1-16 WHol'l 61V. UV. g "' ~ ~ulLP ;,\IJ ;s ~''""H .., U 'h WtnM~ • 1-1• ·~ u M•.<. l6YI Aqypt 2""' ~ S..-r «> '°"'> ==•Lot ~ ~ H = r ~tnO.:! IJ IJ\lo Svc.Mer IJ I~ rlglltW .-. ~ MV. l4'6 ~~I 21\lo 21" '~""' ...... 44" ZloftVta ~ l'"4 ·~ ·~ =0:1 !f:t !ra UPS AND DOWNS 1414 1 Ml~W 1• ,.,_,. ; JO 20\l MclldCep ~ llYJ l 2~ U MldlRH I 5-1' I'll! • ~ 21 ldl8k1 11 Ul'I NEW YORI( IAPI -Moll ac:Uve o,,.,.. S ~ ~ l~e';G ~~ tt: "':.~:ant.. ·~~ l~led A~ H~ ~ Mio 414 ••• I "" Sl UnTel... "'"°° ~ ~ . )lo • IO II fCol .... ' Plez:o • • •uoo '"" I J..32 + 1·16 t 2214 22'6 uCP 1M IMll T•llMa lnAO 1._ J 1'-J2 +I~ 10 lS\lo ~ rePct »14 11 UnllllO • . l]),1!!?,. S S 1·1' + 1-16 11 Z2\IJ ~ f'9RH l\lo 4 Yl-l'rt .,,,,,_ 21 2111t • "" 12 11" 22 rsnln II~ 11~ O..eyGrd 211,100 I"" It .... IJ 10\lc 11* MolCll>b 2... I ~IC . . . • 201,JOO 22-22'6 -. i. 1~ 1.4YI MIMlltr 2911> ~ ,..ppfeC • .' 174,000 J2... U + 1'111 IS Slit sv. lllerr9CP I D nv. GlooHR• 171.IOO 20 20"" .1-. .. IN,\ ,,.,. NDt• 1 2Al4 14* ANelP1 . • 111,400 I l-1' IV. ..... 17 ~~ ~g~, im !; $~ ... -.:::.::_._::.·.. ..a H 611t ~ Nlelsn I •Illa 4114 folel ,_ • • . . . • • . . >. 167 n JI JIV. NOC:.rGI llfll 12"' New hi... . .. . .. . . .. . . . .. llt U •V. "" NoE .. rO I " 11 ..... lows • • . • • • • . • . • • .. • • u 11-. 12 NwtNGI IO'h 1CW. Tolel .. ._ ...... , •"........ 34,14",100 U ~.f:"' NwstPS I~ IS N-MercllRs PrymitEn Z-PI R~ AIHftrn wt ~~ Gro""'Elll> NEn¥Ctl UMCEI lesES.., Mlcl'Sem Mltret Synt<ll un ~::.i..: Srnlac:fl CUICIKI EteclTeb wordTrn WrdTrn.., Amber ~!, Entll ' N .... KeyE"9Y $wL.M19 Mey..-HICor AmerllE• Witldlrn Storm Ko FMWN Geolel Mlcrpln Soni<°"' Autdyl AM<oll g Slllcnll Froats AmMdPrd HISto\t wt l("sllill'nEI Pllrslns 1 S1Serlt o Doel!Ptl PropCp HIO.t • M<mlnRg TIME pf DOWNS C"9 • J + 1" + I + " + ..... . "' . '"" • 1\11 + " .. ·~ .. " . .... + ..... + ] + " . ' + ..... . ,..., • 1 . ~" .. "" ...... .. -.. \It . , .... l.e>I CllQ ]llo -1'4 Polo -"" 2 -..... l YI I--11.1. Jiit -..... 2--~ .. N -111o J -.. 2 -Iii 2 -14 1111 -I ~ -411 •V. -.... ... -Vt t\li -1 2\IJ -"' 2V. -\iii 14 -1V. '" -,"' " 2'6 " S'4 -lh ] -14 l " Pel Up 46.1 Up 43.t Up a... Up '1-Up •. J Up 2t.A Up ... Up U.0 Up U .O Up 25.0 Up U.I Up JI.I Up 1U Up lt.t Up II.I Up IU Up 11.6 Up 11.2 Up 16.7 Up 16.1 UP 16.7 Up II.I Up IS.I Up IM Up tU "'l. Off fl.I Oft 2S.O Off JO.Al g:: ltJ Off 1U Off u .. Off 11.A Off n:: 8:: 11.1 Off 10..S Off 10.0 ()fl 10.0 Ott U Off t.J Off t.I Off '·' Off ... Oft LS Off LJ Off u Off LO Off 7.J Off 1.1 ~ \ l • • ., •"ll't fUui o/ G thrte-porl •mt• on malproctace.1 r ---,,.: You may never have been a physical victim Oki nedical malpractice. But although your own We hM ~ been needlessly endangered, you have been •l~l a fmanclal victim -for you are paying the blJJ"' claims and settlements in terms oe ever-risl.>J ltb care costs. Aware or not, you are paying throuah the higher fee. charged ror medjcal care by physicians, sur-, g and hospitals; extra coats of play-It-safe " fe sive " --; rned lne prac-~ liced y doctors who der far a.« .. more sts than ... Y o u ' e e d • 1y11llA PDIJll ~-.• througthhe re: i I ~ !*!; ; fusal ot skilled -Q _ = professi~als to . 1;ive you •rugh risk" operations that could save Y°'lC: hfe beca~ they're afraid of the legal aspects. The eliest solutions to the new malpractice crisis lie l our nation·s hospitals. For hospitals now pay two-thi'ds of all malpractice insurance costs and 75 percent aU malpractice claims originate from treatments ven within hospitals. What's ore, hospitals are being increasingly ' held legally ponsible for the acts of their indepen- dent <un.s ) staff physicians. " In addJli there is the r~Jatively little-known finding that a of the nation's more than 100.000 hospital trus and directors are also personally Hable in malpr~ice suits. This startll revelation comes from a new book. "Hospital Liabi Revisited" <Inquiry Books. Blue Cross Assoclat~· . Chicago, $6>. whose author. Chicago attorney bomas R. Mulroy. argues that the liability or truist and directors stems from several often overlooked "tourt decisions. Notable among them was the land.nark Corleto vs. Shore Memonal Hospital decision ~ 1975, that condemned the entire professional staff ota hospital in a malpractice pro-ceedlng. Involving bospittl trustees to this extent well may be the most sigUicant new move toward curb· ing me<li cal malprac(te. But many other attacks on the crisis are under wat as well. . Pre-arbitr.ation ~ws are now providing ror re- view panels to sift out 1nvolous or unjustified cases before they go to trial. States such as Caifornia and Florida are ac- tually t.aking medical polcing away from physicians and taking tough disciplnary measures. including . the revocation or licenses. But the basic cause of malpractice suits remains malpractice. The new criss warns us all : The bad. incompetent doctor must beeliminated. the quality of our health care must be raisid. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DI JY .. ~f 11 ~l~!~ll. ·- NEW YOltlt IAP) -Selft lllurs.. prlea ~°",,_.,., Jun 11 -Mt d\lnOll of llw fl-mo.I active 0... Hltill a.-C.... QI New Y. Ot1l SIDC.k EllChaif>Ot 1-, 30 ';\ "5.27 1016:51"9.M 1007.U+ li~ tl'adl~ ....... ty Ir!.._. -•'· 20 T 4•.15 429.Sl 421.02 .U7M+ i.n Anwr 1.010.-«1111 + -1S v IOI.GI 110.17 107.12 110.11+ 2a Amer &T 190,-51 '-J St• ..... JtO,M Jn.ti ... Ji •.'2 GulfWHt m.eoo 20\lt .. '.iiii 1nou1 ............... ...... 5, l.IOO AmEllpreM '°'·= SJ" •Nit Tr.-. .................. ... I 7,100 RalunP\K ... 1 "' • :i. Ullts . • .. • . . .. . • • • • 1-.a == Co ~:= l~1' : t~ 6} SI• ................... , 1,652,JOO ?:It~ ffii il~ L: WHAT STOCKS DID ~T~EI 522.100 JI" + ... AmEI ~ ilUOO IMll + " 8aft~ .u.-21:i. +1~ ~~J&, ~:: 1o~ !':Z AMERICAN LEADERS -I Me.-.ra 2 lta lN"AI ""' JVl-1 4 AM lfltl SKUA ~I • LTVc:P AA ,. "*kl!, ... ' ... ., .... 10 ~"'<:· u r.1 .. , 11111 It lllkGrHlll Jf t.I Cl'le~­!4 O•o.la 11 1s11..-.1" M (IRi.t,f:!!f GOLD COINS NIW ~I( (A~I -~ lllle TM~ "'ttN ..,_, ~ wltll .,...11...Va prlc.. IC,...,...... I WY ft., Mft,00, eff to.JI, .................................... Me•W. 90 .,.., 1.2 ,,..., -.. un • • .,, ... 1S • ...... . ,,_, -"" ............ .,. ... u. NEW vtRI( (AP) Jll" II AdY•"'" 0.CllMCI Un<ll•f!OM Total If~ New llJ9M New IOlil" WHAl~Ue.> \'.' I ~I I· 'i "'-.: TAYLOR CD. 10-J\Ll't>HS "11111· 1!1·1H ... • IALIOA ISLAND DUPUX-MS~OO ~oo 4 Btdrooms UJ;> tair'8 & 3 bedrooms •• ·down.tairs with patio and deck. Covered garage and lnundry room. Excellent for summer-winter rental. Just sleps to the sand from the door ol this excellent tax shelter plus potentially appreciating property. WISLEY N. TAYLOI CO •• IULfOIS 211 I S.. Joa,•nttls lood NEWPORT CINTER, M.1. 644.49 I 0 WA TERFttONT AHO WONDHRIL .•. Absolutely best buy on Newport Harbor .. three be drooms. three firepla ces. sun roof. s kylights, beautiful decor. out.door spa, pier and slip, plus an income unit. $750,000 Fee. U~IVUI: ti()MI:' REALTORS. 675·6000 'it 2443 Ea•t CoHt Hl9h1&1ay, Curona del Mar "·WE HNE ~a= ntE BEST AGENTS IN TONN I Dalebout Bay &Beach Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COME WITH US ... TO HARIOR "" Hl~HLAHDS. THREE BEDROOMS AND DEN .. LOVELY KITCHEN SEPARATE BREAKFA ST ROOM WET BAR .. ASSUMABLE $70,0001.ST T.O .OWNER WILL CARRY 2ND T.O .. PRICE JUST REDUCED $32.000. NOW $197,500. • 1617 WESTCUFF Dl, N.I. 631-7300 EXCLUSIVE CLASSICAL ELEGANCE BAYFRONT WITH PIER I~ fcmnQy/etttft'talMIWllt-.. with becMfful ri:alsed deck for lay Front Hloyment. UHd brick flr•place, w-woods. L.-,e l'Mlhr bednn wit. with 180 decJ bay view. 3 '*'1ns, 2 ¥4 ba ft LU S uparate lftald's qlMll'ters. Hear town. SI ,450,000. GASES H E D C G S N H R E N A M I H H N 0 E W W L T N G L C L Z G 0 E A R E S 0 M M 0 L B I R W G U R 0 I U R B V U 0 K 0 R 1 X Z N I I D T 0 R N A E Y C 0 A l N A R L E A N B C 0 N 0 E N 0 C A H A T V E A E I H A D K L T E 0 N W A R l E R Y C U E S R E 0 E L V Q A P D 8 R A Y U 0 TLRETNSOEORMTM l Y W S U T K W ~ I M T A Z M 0 V A L T H E L l U U M Y TMTMYAERNOLOA Q Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday. June 12, 1981 ES ... , ••...•....•.....••• •••r• toot Ho.et,_. s. Ho•n forS-. ......._For w. . ~ ..... Fors. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••rill t 001 ........ I 002 Col'Ma dtt M9-I OZJ oroH det Mor I 022 ........................................................................................... ffiiDAISLI 0 Wide channel view from spectacular architectural destgned 4 bdrm, 5 bath. pool home. Slip for 2 laree boats. · $1,495,000. Summer Occupancy. OPIM HOUSI Sat/S..2·6P"' 1911'-...... T...,...., lrYIM Ttn'OCe, c..-.. Mer fH LAMD .. Hours: 1 pm to 5pm. From $173,000. Laguna Niguel Realty: 496-4040. Homeowner aaseument available at salff office. Prices effective fOf date of this publlcatlon. ~~(Q Cimarron Court, Laguna Niguel, CA 926n (714) 83{}.5050 oc~ VIEW Chann!~13~m. love· SS0,000 DM ly 1ardens, small busi· UDO ISLE HOMIS Featured on Homes Tours ibis lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm. 3 bath home, newly redecorated. Priced to sell quJcKlY at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 p~ios. Beam ceilings . Great for entertaining . $420,000. Best price for the money. PENINSULA POINT IEACHFRONT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq . ft. featur· ing marine room. $1,385,000. NEWPORT CREST CONDO 2 bdrm, den. spacious Plan 8, im· maculate. Low priced at $215,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Jo.II H11y·.od1 Do ... N !'.. 61) blbl Jn Cameo Highland&! ness a possibility. OWC, Mlnl mansion Is priced Devin Real Eslate. to sell at $349,000. Large 642·~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ assumable 1s t , plus ---------:: owner will carry Sl00,000 FOR YOUR IOI.LS 2nd TD. Spectacular a blt·in garage. For your ocean views from living, fmly a 4 br Mesa Verde dining and master beauty. New crpt is bi· bdrm. Hu1e lot with lighted by lvly tile noor· beautiful grounds. Don't Ing in spacious fmly rm. hesitate. call 673-85:10 din rm. kitchen, & patio THE REAL ES TATERS OCEANFRONT areas. Super home to en· tertaln special guests. 545-9491. REALESrATE Duplex 3 Br 2 Ba upper 1---------w1th sundeck + 2 Br 2 IALIOA ISLAND Ba . lower with private I Co.......-clal lldg. patio deck .. Both com· 1 Prime Marine Ave. loca· plelejy furnished. 4 car tion 1003 occupied. garage. Take o~e r Owner will fin a nce. $425,000 loan including $498 ooo 12*'",{ (fixed) for 30 · · years. Ask.mg SS95,000 17 I 4t 6 73-4400 ~ACOBS REALTY 12 •u u .. iu• 675-6670 HARBOR SELL idle items with a Daily Pilot Classified Ad. 642·5678. A Divtslon of REALTORS 675-5511 MOUNTAIN RETREAT: cl.aR, cool air amonCJ llCJ PIHs & Cedars; w.tl built custom home with 6 ~GOIN CllMI study. Two fireplace• ... built-Ins In kltch. Two adlocettt ... Id... loh and .... , ...... OwRer will flRGRct at fantastic hnM. $250,000 or will sell home MpCrohly for $200,000. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Coast Hwy., CoroM dtl Mar 675-5511 Harbor Investment Co. I ~~~~~~~~~ 'want Ad Results 64~ Classif1ed ·~ds 642·5678 IAYSHOUS pacious home for active family. 3 bedrooms, den & 3 baths + extra la rge patio for ping pong & entertaining. Could have bay view. $385,000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 l!E IBDBIB ILlllS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE ILUFFS Very Desirable Three Bedroom, Two Bath. Tastefully Decorated. A Highly Upgraded Airy End Unit With Sun Deck On A Cul-de-Sac. Owner Will Carry Large Second. Call To See & Submit All Offers. 759-9100. HARIOR VIEW HILLS Just Listed Io Much Sought After Harbor View Hills. Three Bedrooms Plus Family Room On A Corner Lot. Beautifully Maintained . Owners Are Being Transferred. Good Financing. Price $325.000. RARE OHIM.EYEL Three Bedroom Home ln The Bluffs Available For Fast Occupancy. The Financing Is The Best Av,ailable & The H ome & Location Are Exquisite. $224,500. ·--,... ....... . WATERFRONT CONDOS HUNTlNGTON HRBR Purchase with 5~ down on fantastic terms. Brand new, cpt'd " draped. ON THE t't' ATER. Guarded 1ate entry, views, 2 car 1ar. Pool and tennis. 2 " 3 BR'S AVAIL IMMED. From $299,000. CALL 714/556-9600 owe 120/o With 20% down owe Lst TD. $129,950. at 12% ln· teres\. Eastalde Costa Mesa 3 Bdrm 2 bath, family room. breakfast bar, RV access. A bargain at Sl49,950. It's too good to last, call M6·2313 THE ~EAL ESTATERS EAST SIDE Bargains Galore! We have the right one for you. All sizes, pools too. Great financing, Call for more details. @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 114-631-6990 PENINSULA Fixer Obly steps tot.be surf, is this bargain (ucer. Bring palnt brushes " sbovels ' &"cash lnonSSSCallnow @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631-6990 THl«IM6 TOWMHOMl7 Call the speciallsta at I I >(40/o -100/o LOAH • HARIOR VIEW HOMES * Sensationally decorated Carmel Model in move in condition! Featuring 3 Bdrms immaculate yard & FEE land. Priced to sell al $262,000. For private showing call 795-1501 or 752· 7373. Walker Biee Real Estate PENINSULA POINT-SUPER Wal& to a-v Ir Oce• tr.. tMs tlllltgled t..fy. Cf•plthfy MW In Ir CMft with loads of l'OOftl for the f.lly. Spoeion 2-story ,,.th ,...ct Ir groofed floon. be-. • StaiMcl tlosL "-'91 3bd, 3 W,, IC). fCMlly """' & da ,. Exc.tleftt ftac.ca..g. $444,500. 631-1400. CLA1SIC ELEGANCE ON WATER L.wa Ashley papen & eccewh pm ~flcent •tlques Ir deslflt. Two story witt. pri•oh ....._. lllfte, a tot.I ....., ahwoaph1rt ht this 4 Md. with lwft f-. ""· with Eftqllsh M of wood ...a.ct CjlosL Separate fonnat clft. Mft. 111.rHM patio + dock for • 50 ft. boat. $1,400,000 fee. 631-1400. OwMt-says .._.-price Ir hnlll ...... OCEAN YIEW--llWPORT Two fully furnl1hed llo•sH ht an excellettt locatio., 120 '"" to the OUGtfl Oltf. ~Nat OWW'S 2 bd, 2 ba. frOllt houM plus a 2bd.. Iba. ,.... hoetM. OWMr wll ccny I at. $355,000. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL ESTATE Sak>s RrnlM Propon1y MM>o;\lfm<tnl 2436 W C0'1st Hwy 315 MartM AVfl Newpor1 Beoc h Balbot 1116nd '11·1400 67Mt00 lbe condominium in· 1---....:;__-~------'----'-----­formalloa center. Touchstone Rea.Jty .,..., '=~::' S<C~1A-4~~s· .... .... ..... .., QAT I. l'CM&M ----- •................ of .... ,_ ..-Died _. be- .... IO ,_,.. IN ..,..a. _... H 0 S Y 8 I I I r I I A••labM fw leote, or.._..- tioa. ftDROf' .... C YleW of f....-g bti1J•. Lo•ely shelter-4 pool. 41r~ Jl/Jlo. For ........... ----... call Shirley Mlhr, or Mel-le T,,.._ UNGO REAL ESTATE 1714) 495-1720 GeHrat I 002 ~~~~~~.! ?.1.~ • •••••••••••••••••••••• lrlttmwy w oocb 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. lrg 2-sty townhouse Supe r recreation rac1lit1es and excellent Eaatside loco tion. A sharp home. priced at $1:14.950 wt assumable isl TD. lolM>a bled Rlty 67).1700 Spaciom Custom --------W ALIC TO IEACH PallsodH Duple• Woods1d1ng an111dt' out Vaulted beamL'<i rt•11Jngs in hke new l'Ond1t1on . must sec' Ht•d 11<•e1l $10.000 lo Sl69.9CXI. ~ .... Al-o-+E~RP"r'l"t cs l=EAL ••es1A1e --· .. Honte 498· 1040 493 0202 !I Bdrm. fam rm. base· i--111111 ______ _ ment. wme cellar, spa. m law quarters. lovely Corona d.t Mar I 0,22 treeshaded street in old • •• • • • • •••••• ••• ••• • • • • Co rona dcl Mar 1475,000. FRONTS ON FAJRWAY SANTA ANA CO. CLUB Beautiful 3 Br-OWC Owner 540-5010 OCE.AMSIOE WANTED Rc11n•d husine"i. ext•1: . long llmt.• hr:ensc•d hk1 dt•\•eloper wanb lo hu~ into or buv u ut , ei.tabhshed mt.><I -;11(•d & lH' t 1' e R t-11 r ,. 1 n NewPort Lk•:.i t•h l'11nm.1 del '\1 ar area !'"·ncl rt'pht'!o to Ari :".o 012•1. Daily Pilot. PO Box 151>0 Costa Mesa. CA 9262i uwestors Duplex on lwst l..treet, pool. h1 mconw Owner SJ20 onu 640·4999. COM DUPLEX Pnmt• locution Top 1n cornt' Xlnl f1nan1 '"'" WllAT A DEAL' 644 4026 700.0140 \~l. 3 year old home 2br. fenced . landscaped . vie w . s up er neighborhood, adult com mty I spouse over 43. c hildren 17. must sell. Reduced lo $53.900.li--------· 760-0998 POTEMTIAL PLUS So. of hwv 3 HR 1 ', t.:.i --------•I home Room for 2nd un 1l Redun'<I to S23.'>.000 IAYFROMT Opett Sun 2·5 Outstanding ~ 1cwl)' BOAT SU P SANDY BEACH · ded.. µat10 lmck BBQ plus l:.irge & Stephen Meyc1 76(111520 (;.CHAAHA T PAOPEATIES comfortable 3 bdrm &ii---------den, 2 bath BALBOA CO\' ES pnvale com munity ·home $595.000' Owner / Agent 673-9187 or 675·7060 SEE THIS! 3 bdrm. family rm. beautified home on larl(e R-2 lot. Sl.59.000. POTENTIAL Custom duplex with a 4 bdrm. ramily rm & a 3 bdrm unit. Just 'waiting to be a condo con SftYGUSS 5bdrm h11 m10, lo\ t·b night h ght & ot1•ctn 'It-\\ Low down & OWl' balance $649,000 full price . 964 7522. 760·1WiH FIRST TIME OPEH \'1ew propen.} in nrnad moor Harhor V1t.>w llilb 4 Bdrms. ~epa1 ak L1m1 ly room. move·m t•oncJ1 lion Super fmJncmg OPEN SAT. 1·5 2 5 0 I Island Vi~w 642-5200 j PETE J BARRETI .... REALTY version' Eat·h unil has 1•--------f1replace, patio & beam ceiling. Owner will help carry $495,000 MAURY STAUFFER SEA LION REALTY 675-6354 FALLBROOK RANCH Assume 9°/o Loan 15 acres of bearin g avocados. Custom home 1 + guest house. Has been subdivided into 4 sep. parcels. Will trade for condos or other property in Calaf, Arizona or Hawaii. Full price $995,000. Agt. 644-9513 NO MONEY DOWN! LulCury 2 & 3 Br Townhouse project with incomparable amenities. Located ln prime appreciation loca· lion close to beach Walk Costa Mesa 1024 .......•.•.•........... •4 ----------.. 'I A Owner w/Carry ht TD MESA VERDE rOOLHOME .. Just in time for sum mer! This charmm~ I Bdrm home feature~ huge ram11Y room with bar. s kylight s anrl stained glass windows ' overlooking beautiful solar heated pool and spa. And, for the avid • photographer. a com plete dark room with custom cabmt'ts. sink . separate water Realer. hghl seall'd and \•ent1lat· ed. B<'aullful wallpnper5 and lcvelors thr11oul A unique kitchen with cedar skylight and re· ccssed lighting This customized home 1s a must to sec. orrer<'d at S199,900. For an appoint· ment to see. call 540 115 t ~ _, ~ .. HERITAGE to s h opping a nd.._ _______ _ theatres r- . • REALTORS 631•0087 Scott Holntes Co. The Equity Sharln1 • Specialists ANXIOUS SB.I.El Over 3000 sq ft. of living forr only $109.900. 5 beoroom1. Assumable loan. Call919-53'70now OWNER FINANCED • Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath home . be4u tdul wallpapers thruoul Cul de sac street Owner will carry AITD for 7 years at 13.!I~ lntemt. l''or an appointment to gee, call 540.1151 -, -HERITAGE . RE ALTORS Plan IV Realty TIRMS-TERMS- Sl5K down-$1,160/Mo. SUPER 4br. nr S.C. Plaza. Leue option possible. Owner /AGT 1123,900 675-23'5 110,000 DOWN, owner financing. 4 BR t'h ba, near Bak e r and Falrvlew.194,900. Devin & Co. 642·6368 ....................... *•POOL, SPA Large 4 Bdrm 3 Ba ex· e c ullve home in ex· elusive gabled develop· ment of Woodbrldgt' MESA VBDE Gorgeous patio, pool, Executive home, 3 br. 2 spa, walk to tennis club. ba, 1 story home on quiet AJI amenities CaJI for cul-de-sac sl. 1 lge bdrm s h o w i n g A s k 1 n g could be converted to S28t,900. make 4th bdrm Room WOODIRtDG£ LAHDIMG PETERS· PLAN 5 Here it Is · Loads or charm. ~bghtlully de coraled & landscaped . 1359,000. 12"•'* assuma· ble 8 Swmver Owner SSHS34. DRAMATIC Unive rsity Park Dean home 4Br 3ba Fam rm, AC, new crpl, great loc. S24S,OOO. 552-1311 ------ DRAMATIC University Park Dean home. 4Br 3ba Fam rm. AC, new THE SHAKES lto1ewport leach I 069 Weathered c edar ••••••••••••••••••••••• shakes, that Is Custom Sl5,000 ON designed 3 bdrm, Cam View Condo in Villa rm, 2 baths. Exte.ns1ve Balboa. Aaaume Loans. use or wood &lass & Sl37,SOO. Rae Rodgers ceramic tile. Beam cell· 631-1.266. Agt. ing, frpk. Sl6S,OOO. Mission Realty OCEAMFltONT (714)49t 0731. $450,000 BY OWNER, Arch Beach Heights. Lovely 2 sty, 3 BR, 2 Ba. 2 car gar .• hot but and many amenities. S239,500. 213·926-6719 This first Ume offering is an estate sale. One or Newport Beach's finest views. 3 bdrms horne with guest apt or 2 units. Realonomlca 675-6700 ~. HERITAGE RE.Al TORS PARTY IN u~~i~ J;5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HAR. VIEW . 3ba, pool, boou.s r new crpts, fresh Sma1hin1 famlly room ~ Owner moUvated. •••••••••••••••••••• ••• with wet bar. Un· ·~oaU,549-4003. Coata Mesa l Br trlr believably beautiful en· I-••-----• home w/cabana, 15x30 1100 tertalner'spaUo.SBdrm Adults, xlnt S6900, Sommenet 00 reti land. 'Dw.. & ~ . I 673·3826 Absolutely Immaculate -r _p '"'""'° ----- move-In condition. '1 LAGUHACUFFS Creative rtnancing ~ l1l 11 double wide mobile available. '::lJ~ home, 180degree view or • (? 681 .()680 beach and ocean, beach REDCARPET access. must see to 754-1202 believe. $1(15,000. (714) Ivan ~ls cuatom with 877·0226 Mr Alden retrac\,1e roor. 4 large Othet-...... a Income Propenlt• &Htalde Colta M a. 2Ki down. Owner wlU carry. Pricedto .. ut •• 714 !Ml 0763 292.S Collt'ge Ave Co1t11 Mesa. CA 2 on a lot, San Bemadino . Assume 9i.t% VA loan. Full price S'1s.ooo. Lo&IJ balance approx $44,000. Owner will carry somo paper 951-$>01 26UMITS Ocean views. pride or ownership. Down pity ment neg o tiable . 540-3666 Whelan Real Estate OCEAN VIEW bdrmstry light & open 1--------i Spacloue 4 Br Harbor home \th sparkling EXCITING C.M.3units,2brea.2mi. View Hills with lrg pool. Ctner will help e e to brb Try S35K dn bonus rm, newly re· with rh\cina. S39S,OOO. Sl59,SOO. Agt675·5200 for RV access or pool [Ul)\\bodbr1dge Bkr, 963·8182 . .._______ Realty modeled & ,_,,, decoral· Aaent · •,,....,.. lest.._ ift ToWll ed in wa~;lrtbtonea.~~·~~· .,._~~~~~I Gold w;t' 24x60. 2Br. SHOPPIMGCIHTER crg.t, g'°"at toe. $2.45,000 --------WHITEWATER VllW Tr-Plex $65,000 Down. 90' to beach, 10% assum Best location. Beaut.I· 2Ba wtramily rm. in Located in No. S.D. yard. with new pvt pool, MIW"'1' HGTS Lag Halls nicest 5 star county, super growth 552·1311 . -------Great tertl)S. Panoramic 1 M k WOODIRIDl'!..E Ocean View. Walk to oan. ay ta e note on 551·3000 10% ltztBarraera Pll,,.y,lr\lln~ .. your prop. as down. 4 BR DREAM beach. S295,000. Prln· 2 Ba, recently upgraded. spa, & guebo. Too good 4 Bdr, ~I. jac., lrg pk. 21 yrs + to qualify area. 15,500 sq ft leasa- to be true at 1419,900. family rl\vet bar, cor· S39,000. ble. Owner wUI finance. Prin. only. Patrick ner loca~. $25-0.000 Mewponltoch Full price S850,000. Ask Lovely 3 Bdrm home. cipals only. 499-1526. w/posaible in-law qtrs. close to park. pool and l•--------•I Under $290,000 inclds MODEL.PERFECT ASSUMABLE $35,000 ON. Eastside , owner will help finance. 3 Bdrm 2 bath, spa Only $127,900.645-9161 Gorgeous Univ. Park townhome, 2 Br 2 Ba +hideaway Ion, centr. air, hrdwd floors, cov- ered patio. All &he extras + assumable financln". Hurry! tennis. In prime Wood-CUSTOM 2STY land. Move fast! 752-6499 bridge location Take -Pia RTRe I Tenore. 631·121116. 540-3666 20x52 2Br. lBa front kat. for Mike. I lge Uv rm, nat wood in· teriors. To have new ex· ter1or supplied by seller. over fantastic low in· 3br, 180-Whitewater ftl...J[ a ty_ teri!Sl loan S16S.950. View ! Entertaine r 's I S27,500. TR.\DI TIC)\ \I RL\I T\ 631-7 370 : OPEN HOUSE REALTY ,,,,.. Mesa Verde 3 Br $5500 ---;::. II I\ N (' It ~ 1-:f .\LI Y ~ ~~>1 !000 don osen ri·.dtur., 17TH AT PROSPECT TUSTIN, 731-3111 down & take over pay MAKE OFFER fl Town ~Counlry Qt:t\L'fOQg ments. 645-8369 You may be surprised 2 ---Bd + den townhouse in SPANISH DELIGHT: 4 Turtle roc k As king b e d r oo m . 3 b a t h I $235,000. Open Hse Sun showplace. Co mplete l ·S. 35 Rainbow Falls. with formal dining Darrell Pash,· agt for room, separate family Remax 631·1266 WOOOIRIDGE room and fireplace Tri ---- 3 Bdrm Danbury Mdl. upgraded thruout. Good ass umabl e lo an $163.500 level floor plan. Super BOUGHT 552-1800 kitchen Good sazed lot. ANOTHER $205,000, TARBELL, WOODBRIDGE REALTORS. 979.2390 MUST SELL 3 bdrm condoSl28.500 Assum 10-V.%. 559-6870 DIRTY DAWG!!! Bring paint brush & broom & save S$S on 2 br fixer. R·2 zoning OWC first T D.' Only 1100,000 759-1501or752-7373 ~Walker I lea REAL F.STATE MESAVBDE Switch to this spacious 2800' home nestled an an exc lusive reside ntial area. All the amenities you've always wanted in an executive family home. Features country kitcb . w/breakfas l room, ronnal dining. & lrg family room with bit in BBQ. Full pnce is on· ly 1224,000 w/good terms available. 751·?191 c:::. •,1 1 t:-r 1 -t-' Pl{()Pf H l if-'-. 4 Bd compl. remodeled beyond belier Premium locataon Ill The Ranch Asking $172,000. Ask for Darrell Pash, agl for Rem ax 631·1266 *•ESTATES See thas beautiful Wood· bridge Estates Jefferson model, 2 Br + den, end unit, all amenities In quiet location a cross from pool & park. As- sumable financing ('all for s howing Onl > $173.900 THINKING TOW ... OME? Call the specialists at the condominium an form a lion center LOVELY PLAN2 an Turtle Rock Broad moor. 4 bdrm, 2 ba. with your own private SPA in the atrium New carpel, tale, high tinted wln dows. High assumable loan with terrific rmanc mg. Charming h The WonJ ---------i Touchstone Realt> .. for this 1 bedroom + loft condom the Ranch San Joaqwn Villas. Ex· tensive use of custom moldings. wall and noo covering throughout For all you fussy buyers. this is a must see. $153,900. NO QUALIFYING! Great 1st time buying opportunity for young couples or 2 or 3 singles Prime appreciation locaUon, close lo beach. Walk' to s h ops and theatres. 631..0087 Scoff Holme. Co. The Equity Sharing Specialists DClllCI PoW I 026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Owner will c arry beaulilul ocean-harbor view home w/3br, 2v. ba, spa, etc . $439,500 496-3728 FowttainValey 1014 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ms,000 assumes si,..,% v A loan /2nd . lmmac 4bdrm, 2ba home. Quick escrow , no qual. Sl27 ,soo. 839-0730. H ... IMJtoa leoch I 04Q ••••••••••••••••••••••• PACIFIC PARADISE No qualify assumable lilted Joan. Owner will carry 2nd. 3Br. 2~Ba, 1~ blks to bch, new 2100 sq fl home w/view. AU offers considered. 960-3211 or (213) 592-2845 IYOWMER I~ auwnable loan. 2 br, 1 ba, !rplc, remod. ld~. fl bath, 2 car gar , lie Joi. Drive by. •1 Krepp Drive Open Houae Sun. 12-4. '81,000. 1183-7186 VAMSH HAC .. A 4 bdrm, pool home. So. K.8. comer Jot Owner will .. u AITD of COii• trad. Oteet inveltm•t. Submit on ltt:m • •111.aoo I I j I ,..,· '. I .• \ ! ~ I 1 1 < ! I .,l_I)' l 1 I \ ' 28r; l~Ba Hutln1ton c .. L. Condo t7e,soo. HJab N•wnable. Quick ..... 11~2071 8kr. -- 963-0!67 FOR SALE J.M. PETERS WOOOIRIDGE LAMDING D.M. Mcrsllal Rltr 644-9990 760..0135 Last avail. Plan I. For informatio n c all 551·80S8. 1--------· SWIMMING & TEMMIS Beautiful Northwood condo w/upgraded floor & window coverings. Steps to pool. Assumable 1st T.D. $79,950. Mack Hanson 551-8700 (Mll) DlnJq ~~CclW ~VUJaetO.- lrt\De. QA llQ718 lrrln9, CA 98714 (114) 71114 41.4 (714) &81·8'700 TERMS, TllMS. TlllMS Low down -owner will finance. 2 bdrm, 2 bath, deli~tful patio home for the sophisticated (dis- criminating) buyer. Adult com· munity -community pool, spai & tennis. For information cal Barbara Grounds 551·8700. $140,900. Dream ' Open Housei---------• CLASSIC Sunday. 12-5PM. 1S24 Caribbean. Laguna Beach • UMI REAL EST A TE 17 141855-1I00 NEWPORT CREST Terrific,._,, 2 bedroom, 2 bath with assumable $79K lat TD. Priced for quick sale WANTED S•Ca.-t 1076 MOllLEHOME Retired business exec.. ••••••••••••••••••••• SA.LES lo n g time licensed ________ _. 2706Harbor,Sle206·A bkr/developer wants to W AUO "54~5937 HID6-A-WAY I Sl6S,OOO. Charming LagWla Cot· 1 *Cote Realty· established med. siied & AMD I H buy into or buy out, GOLFC~SE active R .E . ore In 3br. home tastic '77 KEY WEST, 24x64. 2 br, 2 ba. serv. rm., 4 ton Aar cond . 6X3 shed, fall colors. $52,500. 770.5299 or768·8346 40 Units, L. A County, gross income 1145,800. Total price Sl,450,000 Owner financing. Newport Beach/Corona location. at1 ve del Mar area. Send replies to. Ad No. 929, financing aV}. Just tage remodeled, on lie & I buildable lot. In the love· nvestment ly N. End.494-4751 AGT. 640-5777 Daily Pilot, PO Box 1560. Sl37.soo. SOMETHING SPECIAL Custom wood and glass. ocean views. Walk lo Victoria Beach. $425,000. Duplexes, oceanfront, beautiful ocean view. Perfect location. New condition. Ait. 673-7300 Costa Mesa CA, 92627 VERSAILLES ~ •• RCIJI ;r I S FE.AL ••rntAE LOCJWNI VIiiage R.E 497-1761 OPEM Sat/S-2-5 . BAY CREST BEAUTY. 5 Br. Family Rm. $200,000 assumable lit. Owner may carry Sl00,000 2nd. 1 year 1435,000. Call Hedda Marosi Agent 646· 1044. To Seti & sell! 2012 S. Remo Lovely ocean & hillside views from lhtS 3 bdrm. 2 bath home on a lot large enough for ex· pansion. Sellers may help with financing. 2Br. ocn view. low dwn, no qualifying Sl29K. 730-2270 ofc. 642-2682 home. IRVIME TIRRACI POOl.&VIEW A cozy 3 bdrm home with formal dining rrn and pool. Highly expan· dab le view o( h.arbor and ocean. A great bsting at only 1335,000. Owner will c arry 2nd TD for Sl00,000. 498-1040 •FAMILY PARK• Move in today 1978 two dbrm 2 ba dble wide, w/util rm, dimng rm. LAGUNA IEACH Canyon industr-aal bldg near town & art restaval grounds. 9600 sq. ft. Cully leased. Gross annual in come $54,000. Rea lonomics 675-6700 1395,000. . OPEMSUNZ-5 2 5 75 AJtaMar Cal ofc to ewter IRVIMECOVE $65,000 DOWN 5br pool home $~9.500 Open everyday 1·5. Agt. 1300 Marian Ln 642-6768 HARBOR VIEW 644-7211 appl . man y xtr-a s i--------- CLEAN AS A $39,900. Owner 964 5309. STOP R.EMTIMG WHISTLE! C ...... Loh/ Indus trial condos for This s..,..'ess 2 bed11m .menr~ 1 3000 rt ,,.,... Cry...., I 500 sa e. 1000 to sq. . cottage is localed 1 a r•• H untangton Beach &r nke neighborhood ~e ••••••••••••••••••••••• Founlaan Valley. Call to the beach and s~. 2 c em.et er Y 1 0 t .s · Paul 545·6<157, Agt. A sensational home tn HOMES this most prestigious /Jn NIGfl (}AIL[ Y & ASSUCllHES •ping. Amenities mcl" Westmmster Me~orn1al •--------• a lovely bnck firepl~ Park. Good sect o . . th U . al worth $760 each, askrng Nearly new 10 Unit In· !?lik e ~g rli~m $1000 for both. 714/ dustrial BtA~ in Costa private area. A large 3 Lonfy C....., bdrm. 3 bath with den, 3 Br. 2 Ba. First time e new app ances .,~2 9136 "6 the kitchen. Don't mu '" · eves. Mesa. 15,000 sq_ ft. 25% office, fonnal dtnmg rm, offered. $2167,500. Fee. superb gourmet kitchen, LEN HA YNES XLMTTBMS this gorgeous cottage (2) Plots North Memorial down Owner wa~l carry sauna & pool set amid & ~OC. be a utirul garde ns . 1~~~~~~~~~~~I A VAil.ABLE 5br, 3ba, ramily rm, priced below market at $165,000. l!Ml Orchard Dr. Santa Ana Hgts. Open Sun. l·S or may be shown anytime by appt. WIEDEMANS <B > 751-4293 $118,000. a.4950 Section. Harbor Lawn 1st TD at 13~c mt~rest e S900/both. 997·9612 for 3 years. Phil Sullivan ..---------• Realtor 548-2103 Ling{)o11donllahent1/Tow11-Lots for Sale 2200 Sl,000,000. I~ 532 &tetald lay •• u..... house• for sale 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ••••••••••••••••••••••BY OWNER '• a cre Col ofc to ewter UPPl!ll IA Y A large & luxurious West of Ir-vine Ave .. 4 hoane overlooking a Bdrm3bathhome.large quiet canyon with covered patio. choice magruficent white water comer lot. $213,000. 8_, 1 ••1 G/ fl d Newport hoch level. ocean/panor-amic v-ro, 6 7 4 70 xe trming2br.2ba CON v iew lot. $129.000 lO yecr loau lowest price in "The I 714 )498-SSJI sgl family homes in The ff" area. Low an· -- -views. 5 bdrms & family Roy McCcrdle, Rltr rm op 3 leve ls s ur-5 .. •7729 35'10ATDOCK Pinnacle Dev. loc. in t~st-assumloan -low Newpart Beach Custom included with this exec. M a r i n e r · s P t . d11rn. Owner Prin Only Home Lot'279,000. rounded by decks makes 1~~~~,...~~~~~~I this aJl ideal home for 1-3 Bdrm ccmdo w/3 ba, bit S250,ooo.S32S.OOO only 7 ( l 4 ) 5 2 3 . t 3 9 o 834·9393.S.SPM t.n elec kitchen, w/w cpl, remain. Bkrs welcome. ev1J76()..3675 559·95811731·4763 th e large famil y . S889.ooa. 320 Cl'fte .... lay Stunning is the word for this 3 bdrm, 31/t bath & den horn\. Mirrored en· try & fireplace wall add drama to the ocean view. TotaJ.y private en· &ertalnmeot deck & garden wilhspa. Ju.st a few steps from this popular beach. 1695,000. ~'lnter ~'-.-1ell(C• --··~ (7141 494-\ 177 LCICJIMa MICJ-I t 052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEA VllW drps, dbl gar. EXCEL. Paul Yoder, Lingo R.E . -------------- - Beat buy• View on the ASSUMABLE FINAN· 498-4950 HAWAII Mo..taift,Dnerf, Hiii. 760-8430Agt. ~~-Full price only S•caJ~..__ Ne~si~~gr, 3ba •• ~~~~•••••••••~~~~ THllWFfS 1·992-5310 ,.. .. ~ 1078 fura do, ocn view on LAKEARROWHEAD COMPLETE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cha IOll Gold Course Beaut dee home on REMODEL R~W.,..W SS0,000 Down. Great SlO 1.5% Int. only. Meadow Bay w/pvt Bcb 3br, 3ba, fam rm, formal Don · LitUe terms. ~ ACRE ocean Own ('71.4)831·0725 or & Lake rts. Compl. furn. dining rm, gourmet views. Secluded 4 Br. (714)8 ~ $ 2 6 2 , o O 0 . a g t gar-den kitchen! Lge as· IWFFS $349,900. Broker . (714 )~37-9256: 337·3306 sum financing at good Rare front row J plan, 499-1.526. eves. old rates! $23.S,OOO. Call unobatructed view or ....:...---------- Owner (714176()..9339 back Bay. French doors, Sa.ta AM I 080 Hacienda oo an acre. Ap. parquet fir, owtanding ••••••••••••••••••••••• pie Valley entry, horse IA YFROMr IEAUTY decorator home. Kathie "'r, 1 ~ ba condo, nr So. prop. nr town. 2 BR, I JO/o flll-.clltg Hardesty Rltr. 760-8244. Coast Plaza. a/c~atio, formal dining rm, fami· Newport's exclusive 24 hr sec. bldg. •900· ly rm. Authentic adobe. Peninsula Point. Newly 12% ANANCING Assum . S53•19o w . ,.m, car renovated in/out. All constructed 4 Bdrm 4 ba 11·373 · Cona. small 2nd garage. 9'2-....,,., charm. Barn, tack. Agt. residence with pvt. boat AVAi' IDI r TD. Owner, 894·2592. DtlDltxea/ VV30 714·243·2473 or dock. Sl,650,000 includ-uun.L... OPE.._. HOUSE Oalh S• 1100 evs, 245-2611 mg the land or Sl.295,000 JUST STIPS · ,.... •••••••••••••••• •••• --------- 1 ease hold. Owner / TOllACH SAT/SUN12·S p OvtofC~ Bu 11 de r Dan Bibb. 00 this charming 3 br 2 624 S. Rou, owe. To see COSTA MES.\ Property 2550 67S·2311 ba home in New~rt is to ~ove It! Span /-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Foxglove model an L!e Shor es. Price reduced Colon11al beauty on. . SUPER 1--------•1 S10,ooo to SlM,000 for 100X142 lot .. uoo sq.rt.. .21r, Ila CAMYOMLAJCE ~:~~~l !fandg~nF:e ah SpftkniHll quick sale! Owner will FP, ban~ polished wood, Each sade Large fen\(J Golf Course House. 3000 doon. Assume at l~ o.-w-. o.t carry lst T.D. 7S9·1501 or formal dine, 2aty. 4 BR 2 rear yards. Low m~. sq. fl. redwood in/out. SlS4 900 Must W TNs Wk 752.7373 Ba, tenance, weU kept fn\ Sl49 000 679-6402 83, l ;!~;rs ms Don't m'•• ... ,_ areaton. Ba toosi ngh R It y , yard. Large cemet --·--· ------ • """• • .... u .... • ... 541.5331 driveway, new exterio Ranches, fcrMs. portunity to buy a lovely paint, new roof. Owne Grons 2700 PRESTIGIOUS OM GOLF COURSE Eajoy 8erene setting i your totaUy upgraded Br 2 ba condo. G location fOl" beacb and shopping. Affordable f1nanclng. Sl.28,750. FAMILY UVIM(i 4 Bdrm, 2Ya bath Nlauel beauty! Well kept., new· ly carpeted. Fireplace, utllll)' rm. pvt patio. Good loe1Uoo. $139.SOO. llt.a440 Mew~IHd ••••••••••••••••••••••• SIS,OOODM Vu condo In Villa Balboa. •wn• toe.a. flJT,&00. Riie flod••n. 811-1111 RVM~ • , ' 1 I· home in Spyglass with ... • _ _.. fin ln loads of Ji n anc · REALESTATE newport-1069 anc g. \-••••••••••••••••••••• ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• $145,000 FAWROOK ing ... SS0,000 moves you (71•1.,~ .... 136 in .. assume the existing • .._.. tie home and avocado lat and 2nd. 3 Bdrms1 2 Evening• rove on L6S acres. lO'JI, Ba, formal dining, fami· •umable. OWC W 12<1% ly room. separate guest II MACNAB IKw p....,..., ZOOO d, 3 Bdrm, 3 Ba, prlme quarters, pool 6 spa. ~~11111:: ••••••••••••••••••••••• a~•· $175,000. Bkr Ctay. The h<>me ia beautifully _....,,.~ A,PUVALLIY ~~er/Agent. (714 1 landacaped and In great ~ Near new 4-Plex, 2 ahape. Don't mw )'OW' ._ .. ___ bdrm. 2 bath each unit chance. to buy this borne with fireplace. enclosed rtab t ... Owner want• U&• R ratio, double &•rage. qulck aak. ~10 llMI Kensington with D.M. Mlnb• Ur great view! Designed for in-is5.ooo. Bill rundy, 644-tttO 760.0IH door /outdoor entertaining and Rltr, 675"'161· •Br Ba bay r or 1200, 0/300,000 So. Count)' e or Condo. EANFRONT Duple. family living -4 BRS. Fam. Rm . & Trl-Plex. Xlnt loc. Formal dining, comm. pool & . P.P.87J.1t'17.m.ma. ~~~i4~~i~· Call Belle Partch IAYSIDI con Columbia Penlhouae we, 2+br coodo 1'/bay ew, nr Balboa 1•1•. I, spa. tlla,000. Open t. 2·5. 1011 Bayalde ve E. Debblt. ••t . ·0300. IASTSIDI COSTA MISA 8 bedroom, 3 batti condo with a great private patio to add to the roomy Uvabillty. $M8,000. Tom Allinson or Terry Hanes 6'2-8235 <M13) ¥ ..... U1·081 COSTA MESA. NOW REMODELING 3 • 2 bdrm ll4 • 1 bdrm all In Coron 1 atory. Lot size 100X100. goJI c Steal thla at S27S,OOO. undevel Oaya 842·1334: evea prime 151·988t. for Lad OCIAMfROMT ,73-8185 DWI.IX i.-............. BeauUf\11 4 Br 2 Ba. Upataln: 3 Br. 2 Ba'. downstaln: Flreplaca, ~~C:. laundry room 1'SL IN\'STMT M2·1803 83 86 Ann Landers allows one hard-working, angry receptionist have her say ... B3 Mobile hoDies due on Lagun~-lots? Residential areas in Laguna Beach might include a .scatter- ing of mobile homes If the City CouncH goes along with a plan- ning commission re~ommenda· Uon. In a unanimous vote earlier this week, the Planning Com- mission approved a measure that would allow mobile homes to be installed on any vacant residena.ial lot in the city. Acce ss to cove uppe d · Additional public access to the new Crystal Cove State Park was endorsed Thursday by a joint state Senate-Assembly Commiltee. The panel , meeting in Sacramento, also recommended appropriating up to $500,000 to r e l ocate the private horse stables 1in the middle of the 3.25 mile blufftop park between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach.J The 9int budget group's ac· tion is the final step before a vote in'both the Senate and As- sem blyl on the park budget re- Quest. f · Som~ legislators. including Asseml)lyman Terry Goggin, D· •San Btardino, have made fre- quent mplaints that the public cannot et to some areas of the new p(lrk, purchased by the ttate re* $32 million in late 1979. Whatt particularly perturbed Goggin~as an agreement which the st te's General Services Pepart ent made with the near- f l' 300 obile homeowners in El Morro obile Home Park. That~greement allows the res- l<tents stay on at the mobile park r 20 years, and also tneans those residents can sell their ~obile homes to buyers during that two-decade period. But tfle joint panel said Thurs- day no !lucb deal will be offered part-ti~ residents at Crystal Cove, e cottage community just no of El Morro. Thole residen\8 would have to vacate intwoydars. A d~slon on full·tim~ resi· dents o Crystal Cove will not be forthco ng until a general plan for the ;entire park is completed in J anu,ary. Other items approved Thurs- day in~ude the hiring bf a full· time p rk ranger by July 1, re- moval of the northernmost beach $'.loblle home at El Morro for co•struction of restrooms and showers, and removal of all "privaf!e·• signs in the park. The only requlremenl would city officials set up specific zones be the owners would have to COO· forthemobilebomes. form with a ~foot setback from In the case of Lagu!"la Beach, the road. the only place mobile homes are Consideration of wbere in a cl-located Is in Thurston Park, ad- ty mobile homes khould or jacent to the Boys Club off should not be located follows ap-Lacuna Canyon Road. proval of a state Senate blll that Ron Smith, director of com· takeseffectJulyl. munlty planning, says he That bill says cities cannot believes a specific area for prohibit mobile homes from mobile homes s hould be ing of the mobile structures throughout residential areas. He said bis main concern with mobile homes in resideptial areas 4Stems from Latuna's power of design review In Arch Beach Heights. residential neighoorhoods unless establlshed to prevent a scatter-~~~~~~~--~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- That hilltop area is one of the few areas in town where the city's Design Review Board bas the authority to enforce design standards to make new homes Dtllty,... ..... "-- Fire Captains Bill Van Hom and BiU Fergu.aon pull 7'!-year--Old hoae ca~t ~rois footbridge to Bay laland after annual overhaul, including testing holea, greamig wheel.a and polUhing bra.Ts. Iron-wheel c arts still serve 70-year-old Newport fire equipment used on isle By STEVE MITCHELL Of -o.lly l"ti.t SUft Newport Beach su,re got its money's worth back in 1910 when the fire department took delivery of three hose carts al $75 apiece. And while that might have been a good chunk of change back then. the city still uses two of the iron-wheel carts to protect the two dozen homes on Bay Island. Access to the six -acre island is by a 10-foot-wide footbridge, and residents of the exclusive com- munlty get to and from their homes by using golf carts. or by foot. "It's for darn sure you can't get a fire truck over to the island ," Fire Capt. Bill Ferguson said, tugging at his bushy white mustache. II<> the vintage hose carts are housed in two wooden sheds n~r the two fire hydrants at each end of the tiny islaM. Nobody knows what happened to the third hose cart, but Bat- talion Chief Don Jones said rec- ords show one cart was kept on Bay Islandintheearlydays. The other two were kept at a former fire station that was located on Washington Street on the perunsula. the executive of- ficer said. He speculated the department probably moved a second cart to the island when the 3tation was closed. C ~unty officials greet merger Sheriff's, Marshal's unit joining seen favorable Firemen at Station One on the peninsula brought one of the 70 -year-old carts across the bridge Wednesday for· its annual overhaul. They charged the 500-foot long hoses with water to see if it could withstand 300 pounds of pressure. And they greased the wheels and shined the brass nozzle before returning the foot- powered fire-fighting equipment to the island. about two blocks from the station. By FREDERICKSCHOEMEHL 'Of-D•!f .... StlH Ora~e County governmeot of- f i ci a~ gen er ally reacted Cavor,bly today to state As- se m bl{ approval of a bill to permi merger of the court func- tions of the Orange County Sh eritf's Department and Marst$1's0ffice. Thel positive reactions were voice<tdespite the fact the bill was amen~ed to give the state Legis~t\,Jre veto power over any conso dation plan approved by the Co nty Board of Supervisors. Und!ttbe blll, authored by As· ·sembl woman Marian Bergeson. R-N e rt Beach, a committee •com P<*ed of two supervisors, one supenor court judge, one munlcfpal court judge and a fifth "at lie" member would ex· plore ays or accomplishing the merg and malte a recommen- dation theboard. Bel e the final Assembly vote on th biU Thursday, it was amen ed, at the insistence of AJ. sem bl man Richard Robinson, •D-San Ana, to empower the Lecisl ture to accept or reject any p the county might ad- .vance The com plish the merger bas proved controversial because of dis- agr eements over whether the sheriff's department s hould absorb the marshal's court func- tions or vice versa. Sttpervisor Thomas Riley, chairman of the county's Legal Judicial Committee said he was R escue • • m is sio n move r apped Residents of a southwest Santa Ana neighborhood fo141ht unsuc- cessfully Thursday in Orante Coupty Superior Court to delay the relocation of a rescue center for indigents near their homes. Judge Robert R. Fitzgerald turned down a request by the Southwest Netgbborbood As· sociatJon for a court order requir· Ing further city council considera- tion of a use permit and variance allowing the re1cue ceqter to move into new facllitiea near the in\eraection of South Daisy A venue and Walnut Street. The unbuilt facUlty 1a to be operated by, Mluionarlea At Home Int. The rescue mtasion previously operated in a buildinl on Sycamore Street in downtown Santa Ana's redevelopment dis· trlct. That red-brtdt structure closed itl d()91'1 lut •onUa.; Resident.I in the area where the new rescue C8'lter ii planned had ftled lawwuits and complained to the dt.y councU and plannin& com· mlaslon that the facility would at· tract drunks, derelicts, dru• usere and vagrants. "obviously pleased" with As- sembly approval of the bill, but added, "l wish we didn't have that requirement <the Robinson amendment)." Riley. however. expressed op· timlsm that any consolidation plan approved locally would automatically be accepted by the Legislature. Capt. Ferguson said the de- partment replaces the 21~-inch thick lines every five years. Old-timers Ferguson and Capt. Bill Van Horn can't recall the last time there was a fire on Bay Island. Loude rmilk moved for safekeeping Suspended Orange County s h e r i Cf • s d e p u t y G e o r g e, Loudermilk -in custody on $250 ,000 bail after allegedly harassing a woman who tesWied u:ainst him at bis kidnapping trial -has been moved from county jail to Huntington Beach City Jail for safety reasons. Sbertfrs Lt. Wyatt Hart said Loudermilk, a Costa Mesa reSi· dent, was transferred from tbe medical isolation area of county jail to the smaUer municipal Jail Thursday because, as a law en- forcement officer, he was vulnerable to attack by other prisoners. "In the Interest& ol safety for everybody concerned, we just moved him," Hart sald. Loudermilk, 37, was ordered jailed Tuesda_r, by Superlot Court Judie James T\amer ~ evidence was preeenttd tlaf the• co.nvlc:ted kldnapper hid con~ tacted one of bl• victims by phone Friday only hours al\et the jury verdict was announced. Loudermilk wu convicted l>l two count& Of kldaapplnc and one count of telonx~ raise im· prisonment in connection with three incidents involving women who said they were taken to isolated areas by the lawman after being stopped on suspicion oI drunken driving., In one case, the Costa Mesa man was convicted of abducting a 33-year-old Mission Viejo woman and threatening to rape her and kill her .. It was that woman who told Judge Turner Tuesday she had received a telephone call from a man s he identified as Lo-.dermilk following the verdict. The def endanl has been free on bis own recognizance follow- ing the verdict. More 8wa p meets at Golden W. eet Gold•n Wttt Colle•e'1 bl· monthly swap meet will be held weekly durla& the summer becauae o{ what offlclaJ1 call • llJlft demind for aellina 1pace1. Tbe currat fee for apace rent· al 11 '5. but it wUl increase to • 1tartin1 July 11. compatible with the surrounding residences. Smith =said that since lots in Arch Beach Heights are ooly 25 feet. wide, the communfty could be seen as desirable for mobile homes. "Under the new (state) law," Smith said, "our power of design review on trailers is limited to sidin1 materials. roof over- hangs, and roofing materials. "We really would have litUe control over what the mobile homes looked like." He added that allowing mobUe homes In any residential neighborhood would be a ·'radical departure from the establis hed neighborhood character in Laguna." The council is scheduled to consider the matter when it meets June 16. Clymore guilty of drllg charge Former Pakistani hijack hos tage Craig Clymore has pleaded guilty to smuggling heroin and hashish oil into the Un ited States. The former Lake Forest resi- dent. who earlier pleaded inno- cent to the charges in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, N. Y .. could re- ceive up to 30 years in prison and up to $50,000 in fines following Thursday's guilty plea. Clymore, 24, a 1974 Laguna Beach High School graduate, has been held in lieu ofSlO million bail at the Metropolitan Corrections Center in Brooklyn since his re- turn to the United States in early April. The bail is reported to be the highest ever set in the Brooklyn court. Clymore was one of more than 100 hostages aboard a Pakistani jetliner that was hijacked March 2 on a fhght from Karachi, Pakistan, to Peshawar, near the Afghanistan border by three op- ponents of the Pakistan govern- ment. · News reports during the hijack- ing cited Clymore for entertain- ing fellow hostages aboard thejet by playing his guitar and.sin&ing. He later wrote a song about the in- cident, which he hoped to record. But the former Orange Coun- tian did not know that he had been secretly indicted by a federal grand jury just prior to the hijack- ing After the release or the hostages, it took weeks before federal authorities could bring him back to the United States to be prosecuted. In his guilty plea Thursday, Clymore admitted being the ringleader for eight couriers who brou~ht drugs into the United States. He said he arranged with friends to smuggle 4.4 pounds of heroin through U.S. Customs in the hollowed-out heels of shoes. He also admitted planning the PLEADS GUILTY Craig Clymore smuggling of 2.2 pounds of the drug through Kennedy Airport by couriers who swallowed con- tainers filled .,vitb the narcotic. Count y emergency services boosted Orange County government has b'anded together with four cities to improve emergency services for residents of two un- :ncorporated west county com- munities. Under the 10-year-old agree· ment ratified by the County Board of Supervisors Tuesday, county Fire Department staUons in Sunset Beach and Midway Cl- ty will be linked to an existing fire communications network of the cities of Huntim?ton Beach. Fountain Valley. Seal Beach and Westminster. I DOWN ON THE FAllM DEPT. - Maybe with the exception of the good city of Irvine, we don't worry too much about protecting our rural atm<>1phere along this coast any more. That's because for the most part, the issue is setUed. • That is, the quickie car washes and street lighting districts have already taken over. This condition, however, Isn't uni· versal inland. There still are a few· . . ~· ""' ·111 MURPHlll ,mlt ' . places that cling to the rural life with in- trepid tenacity. La Habra Heights is one of those are.as. Just consider a news dispatch · that came out of that inland reach of our region the ottier day, where they hud- dled with a joint meeting of the City Council and Planning Commission. ONE OF THE MAJOR TOPICS seemed to be the Grand Design necessary to preserve the hayseed climate of La Habra Heights. For one thing, jt was pointed out by both council persons and commissioners that the "One Family Per Acre" rule is apparently being flagrantly violated by a number of unthinking rural homeowners. Some of these people are building guest houses on their country estates and then renting them out, for goodness sakes. Councilman James Littlejohn estimated that between 75 and 100 of these guest accommodations have extra families lurking within them and they're actually paying guests. I THEN THERE IS the que.stion of new developers who are raising havoc -. Actually, the building hi&• 2 bootleg rental.I and a tennil court with the rural nature of La Habra Heights by homes as status symbols. These developers actually have the nerve to slyly show renderings to pros- pective buyers that illustrate homes with swimming pools or tennis courts or, horrors, maybe even both. "Tennis courts are the most ill-used accessories to a house," fumed Mayor Gene Beckman. "The courts don't ap- pear at all rural . . . " Thus Beckman and other members of the council proposed that developers be asked to construct community tennis courts so individual homeowners wouldn't just jump out ·there and build their own. The Planning Commission, further thus, was instructed to get up some rules that would stop this ugly proliferation of courts and pools that were clobbering up I the rural atmosphere. PLANNING CHAIRMAN Ron Banco was a bit hesitant on figuring out how the planners could do that legally but he vowed they'd try. . The council and planners also made it clear they want to hew to the one· family-per-acre rule and knock off these guest houses that get turned into rent- als. You can hardly imagine what Hunt- ington Beach, Balboa or Laguna· would look like if a one-house-pet-acre rule had been in effect over the past couple of decades. Anyway, it may get tough in La Habra Heights if you want to build a new home and you're so anti-social u to shun community pools or tennis courts and want your Vf!!fY own. .. THESE PEOPLE MAY have to get more devious and pretend that they're ' preservin1 the country feelinl ol La Habra ·ffeiabta. ACtually, the council and plannen m1y later dileover that homeownen are buildlq silos, then fllllna them with water for swlmmhij. And what loob like a barn, well, it'• really an lDdoOr tennis Court, folkl. Diet doctor to sue? ' NEW YORK <AP) - Dtet Dr. Robert Atkins , says he will aue Diet Dr. Na than PrlUkln for SS million for alleged Ubel and slander. And if many more of bi5 P•· tlents call to cancel ap. polntmenta. Atklnt aaya, he may up the figure. RULES OUT -· Former Aasemb~ Speaker Leo McCarthy, still un-willing to commit himself officially to a U.S . Senate race, says he won't seek re-election to the As-sem bJy. Atkins aald he notified Pritikin about the im· pending lawsuit, baaed on televhlon •P · pearancea lo which Prltlkin said tbe Atkinl dlet could cauae heart problems, conatlpation, fatigue and bad breath. A tk.ins said Pritildn has been knocklni his diet ror a Iona Ume, and he "had always looked _.._ ______ on Priti.kin 11s something CM student in Norway of a joke." But when Prittkin told a local TV audience May 27 the Atl<jns diet "can set you up for heart dis-ease, strokes and cause death" because of high levels of cholesterol. Atkins said he "just finally bad it. "I felt that be was saying it so many times . • . ' treditionalty dod, our Polo intiirlock. ... the ecfta&,wtrx::et a:mhtob1a. knit ehirt bill ewr~. ~toils ernd. hzm.m0:1 ~fbred:M orstrazt~. e!Val1abla. in 25 ~t a:>la:s. if bz ho5 cnz, hcz. rney juet want 1hz:m elL. @J~o@@)~@ · 44Foahlon1aland ·Newport Beach· 714/644-5070 1001 Westwood Bll>d. •Westwood Village· 213/208-3273 Jl " • I ,:;.! ·' ...._ _________________ 11!111 _________ ,, 11'.J' I '• . Kirsten Kam Ber& of Coste Mesa, a buslneas economics major at UCLA, ls attending the University of Bergen in Norway under the Uni've r s ity of California's Education Abroad Program. that be was be1l~ng to >---------.....----..-----------------------· _, -_,__ believe it,'' Atk.LM said RE A'L YALU ES Under the program, students can get credit at their resident campus while attending one of 40 universities in 18 coun- tries. ,.t a news conference, "' adding that he also on items from applesa_ uce to zippers. I .1·1y P1·1 feared Pritikin bad begun ••to be listened are adyertased every day 1n the to." , You're bound to ftnd fantastic savings at our 1st aMual clearance sale ol fine fumtture. Because we're selling It all (except wicker and rattan) at "'Coet Plue 15$•. Whether your style Is early American or chrome and glass contem· penny, you'll find delectable fumtture to suis,..your taste. Choose from tables, chairs, desks, rockers, bars, bookcases and .lots more . Great deals await you at Aaron Brotbem· "'Coet Pim 15 •• furniture ..... .' Diiiy Nat FR I OAY, JUNE 12, 1981 FEATURES COM ICS 83 86 Ann Landers allows one hard-working, angry receptionist have her say ... 83 I Qoun~y of~ials . back law unit merger By FREDERICK SCHOEMEflL Of-o.My ,.. ... , ... Orarte County government of- f l c I a IJ generally reacted fa voraJ>ly today to state As- sem bll approval or a bill to permit: merger of the court func- tl on s uf the Orange County Sheri f's Department and Marsh 's Office. The .positive reactions were voiced despite the fact the bill was a4iended to give the state Legis~~!ure veto power over any consolifiation t>lan approved by ' Access to cove ujJped l Additional public access to the new ctystal Cove State Park was e~dorsed Thursday by a joint Slate Senate-Assembly Commfltee. The panel , meeting in Sacra,ento, also recommended appro iating up to $500,000 to r.eloc te the pri~ate horse stable in the middle of the 3.25 mile blufftop park between Coron del Mar and Laguna ·Beach Tbe 'oint budget group's ac- tion i the final step before a vote · both the Senate and As- sem bl on the park budget re- quest. so;:.;/~ legislators. including Assenp:>lyman Terry Goggin, D- San Blrnardino. have made fre- quent omplaints that the public <!anno get to some areas of the dew ark, purchased by the state r $32 million in late 1979. Whl particularly perturbed Goggi was an agreement which the s ate's Gene'ral Services Department made with the near- the County Board of Supervisors. Orider the bit}. autho..-ed by As- se mblywoman Marian Bergeson, R·Newport Be111Cb, a committee composed of two supervisors, one superior court judge, one municipal court judge and a fifth "at lar1e" member would explore ways of accomplishing the merger and make a recommendation to the board. Before the final Assembly vote on the bill Thursday, it was amended, at the insistence ot Assei:pblyinan Richard Robinson, D-Santa Ana, to em- power the Legislature to accept or reject any plan the county might advance. The bill was sent to the Senate o~ a 8'·3 vote. The six members 01 the Orange County delegation in the assembly supported it, though Mrs. Beraeson had argued against Robinson's amendment. The sheriff's department pro- v ides baililfing and related services In the superior courts; the rqarshal 's office performs a , like fmtclion in the municipal courts. In an advisory vote more than one year ago, Orange Coun· ty voters said the court functions should be consolidated, a moveof- ficlals say could save about $1 mlUion per year. But requisite legislation to ac· complish the merger has proved controversial because of dis- agreements over whether the s h eriff's department should absorb the marshal's court func- tions or vice versa. Supervisor Thomas Riley, chairman of the county's Legel_ ~ ............... ly 3lobile homeowners in El Morr Mobile Home Park. Tha agreement allows the res- idents stay on at tho.. mobile park or 20 years, ahd a lso IJlean those residents can sell their obile homes to buyers durin~at two-decade period. Fire Captainl BiU Van Hom and Bill Fergiuqn pull 10-11ear--0'1d hole cart acro11 footbridge to Bay Island after annual overhaul, fncldagtutmg hoH1, gTecuing wheeb and poU.hltig fJirua•. But he joint panel said Thurs· day n such deal will be offered part-e residents at Crystal Cove, the cottage community Just xrth of ,El Morro. Those resid ts wou)d have to vacate in Iron-wheel carts still serve 70-year-old Newport fire equipment used on isle twoy s. A :c~sion on full-time resi· dents l Crystal Cove wiJl not be forth ming until a general plan for tht entire park is completed in J aJJlBrV. The1 panel will decide, prob- ably this weekend, whether it endories t he purchase of about 390 acfres in Moro Ridge for $3 milli to enhance the park. By STEVE MITCHELL Of ... Dally ...... SUtt Newport Beach sure got its money's worth back in J910 when the fire department ~ook delivery of three hose carts at $75 apiece. And while that might have been a good chunk of change back then, the city still uses two of the iron-wheel carts to protect the two dozen homes on Bay Island. Access to the s ix-acre island is by a 10-foot-wide footbridge, and residents of the exclusive com- munity get to and from their homes by usmg golf carts. or by foot. "It's for dam sure you can't get a fire truck over to the island ,"' Fire Capt. Bill Ferguson said, tugging at his bushy white mustache. So the vintage hose cart.9 are housed in two wooden sheds near the two fire hydrants at each end of the tiny island. Nobody knows what happened to the third hose cart. but Bat- talion Chief Don Jones said rec- ords show one cart was kept on Bay Island in the early days. The other two were kept at a former fire station that was located on Washington Street on the peninsula, the executive of- ficer said. L , udermilk gets j it il transfer He speculated the department probably moved a skond cart to the island when the station was closed. Firemen at Station One on the peninsu1a brought one of the 70-year-old carts across the bridge Wednesday for its annual overhaul. Ex deputy tnoved to Huntington as safety measure Sus~nded Orange County sher ff 's depu,ty George Loud milk -in custody on $250, bail acter allegedly harasM\ng a woman who testified again!f him -at his kidnapping trial has been moved from coun*t~· ail to Huntington Beach City · for safety reasons. She ff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said Loud milk, a Costa Mesa resi- dent, as transferred from the medi isolation area of county jail t the smaller municipal jail Thurs ay because, as a law en· fore ent officer. he was vulne ble to attack by other rs. e interests of safety for y concerned, we just him," Hart said. Loudermilk, 37, was ordered jailed Tuesday by Superior Court Judge James Turner when evidence was presented that the convicted kidnapper had con- tacted one of his vlctims by phone Friday only hours after the jury verdict was announced. Loudermilk was convicted of two count.! of kidn&J1,1>ing and one count of felony false im· prisonment tn connection with three incidents involving women who said they were taken to Isolated areas by the lawma.6 after being stopped on suspicion of drunken driving. ·In one case, the Costa Mesa man was convicted of abducting a 33-year-old Mission Viejo • escue center site \~~~~.~~~:~t~~ ~!~,~~~ - a A~~ltbborbood fou1ht UD· operated by Mlsslonarlef ~t succ If Thursday ln Orange Home Inc. The rescue ml&aion Coun Superior Court to delay pre¥i<>'llly operated in a build· lhe r oeaUon ot a rescue center ing on Sycamore Street in for I 11ent1 ndr thelr homes. downtown Santa Ana 111 re- development di.ltrict Tb1t red-brick structure closed hi cSoon l .. t month to make • ror • parlrin1 faclUt,f. Reaw.t.a la tbe area where the new rescue center ls planned bad. tiled lnauiu aod com- plained to tht clt.y councll and plannln1 coaamiuton tb•t tbe faeUlty would attract drunb, dertlld.I. nc u1en and arant.1. • woman and threatening to rape her and kill her. It was that woman who told Judge Turner Tuesday she had received a telephone call from a man s he identified as Loudermilk following the verdict. The def1tndant had been free on his own recognizance follow- lnc the verdict. They charged the 500-foot long hoses with water to see if it could withstand 300 pounds of pressure. And they greased the wheels and shined the brass nozzle before returning the foot- powered fire-fighting equipment to the island, about two blocks from the station. Capt. Ferguson said the de· partment replaces the 2'h-inch thick lines every five years. L3guna Beach lots due mobile homes? Residential areas in LafUlla Beach might· include a scatter- ing of mobile hoines if the City Council goes along wltb a plan- ning commission recommenda- tion. In a unanimous vote earUer this .week, the Planning Com· misalon approv41d a measure that would allow mobile bomes to be Installed on PIY vacant res- idenUal tot in the dty_. The on11 requirement would be the ~era would have to con· form with a 25-foot se\baek from the road. Conaiderallon of where in a ci- t)' mobile homes 11)ould or ahould DOl be loea~ roUowa appronl of t stat e Senate bill th~t la.Ml effect :Jul)' 1. That bill SAVI cities cannot probiblt mobile bom• from rea· ldentlal nel(bborhood• unless clty offlct111 ,._., up 1pectnc ion•• for the mobile bomea. lo °'8 Cate of Lapna Bridl, the only place mobtl• bom• are located iS In Thurston Park, ad- jacent to tbe Boys Club off Laruna Canyon Road. Ron Smilh, director o'f com- munity planning, says he believes a specific area for mobile homes 1hould be established to prevent a scatter- in1 of the mobile alructures throughout residential are11. He cald bls m1ln concern with mobile homes in residential areas stem1 from Lacuna's power of desi&D review In Arch Beach Hetpu. That billtop area Is one of the few areas in town where the eltl't O.ip Revle" Board ha the aUtborlty to lftfwce delllD ataitd.,. to malt• new~ compaUble with the •WTouilctib8 realdeneea. Smith aald that alnce loti ln Arell Beach lfet•bll art only 25 feet wide, the community coGJd be Men u de1tt1bl• for mobile born.a Judicial Committee said he was ..obviously pleased'' with As- sembly approval or the bill, but added, "I wish we didn't have that requirement (the Robinson amendment>." Riley, however, expressed op· tlmism that any consolidation plan approved locally would automatically be accepted by the Le~slature. Riley 's comments were echoed by Orange County Suoerior Court Presiding Judge Robert Rickles who said he con- sidered the amertdment •·a check· point, and that's-about it. .. He said the Legislature would be "hard pressed" to change • consolidation plan with th~ weight of local approval behind it. Stan Oftelie. an aide to supervisors chairman Ralph Clark. said, "Ralph's pleas~ the bill is out of the Assembly, but he's not pleased with the ex· cess baggage.·· Consolidation. he sa1(1, should be handled locally , not in Sacramento. Oymore guilty on drug counts Former Pakistani hijack h ostage Craig Clymore has pleaded guilty to smuggling heroin and hashish oil into the United States The former Lake Forest resi- dent, who earlier pleaded inno- cent to the charges in U.S. Dis- trict Court in Brooklyn, N Y . could receive up to 30 years m prison and up to $50,000 in fines following Thurs day 's guilty plea. Cly more, 24, a 1974 Laguna Beach High School graduate, has been held in lieu of $10 million bail at the Metropolitan Corrections Center in Brooklyn since ms return to the United States in early April The bail is reported to be the highest ever set in the Brooklyn court Clymore was one of more than 100 hostages aboard a Pakistani jetliner that was hijacked March 2 on a flight from Karachi, PLEADS GUILTY Pakistan, to Peshawar, near the Craig Clymore Afghanistan border by three op- ponents of the Pakistan govern- ment. who brought drugs in to the News reports during the hi-United States. jacking cited Clymore for enter-He said he arranged with talnlng fellow hostaget aboard friends to smuggle t.4 pounds of the jet by playing his guitar and heroin through U.S. Customs U1 singing. He later wrote a song the hoJlowed-out heels of shoes. about the incident. which he He also admitted planning the hoped to record. smuggling of 2.2 pounds of the But the former Orange Coun· drug through Kennedy Airport tian did not know that he had by couriers who swallowed con· been secretly indicted by a tainers filled with the narcotic. federal grand jur y JUSt prior to Two of those cour iers reportedly the hijacking. nearly died when the containers After the release of the burst inside their bodies. hostages, it took weeks before Clymore told the court be bas federal authorities could bring , made more than Sl;> million in him back to the United States to the past three years by smug- be prosecuted. gling drugs from the Far East. In his guilty plea Thursday, U S. District Court Judge Clymore admitted being the Thomas C. Platt set sentencing ringleader for eight couriers for Clymore on July 17. , I DOWN ON THE FARM DEPT. - Maybe with the exception of the food city of Irvine, we don't worry too much about protecting our rural atmosphere along this coast any more. That's because for the most part, the issue is settled. , That is, the quickie car washes and street lighting districts have already taken over. This condition, however, isn't uni· versaJ inland. There still are a few· . ~· I""'-'\ ·1aM MURPHINI -~it . places that cling to the rural life with in· trepid tenacity. La Habra Heights is one of those areas. Just consider a news dispatch that came out of that inland reach of ollr region the other day, where they bud- dled with a joint meeting of the City Council and Planning Commission. ONE OF THE MAJOR TOPICS seemed to be the Grand Design necessary to preserve the hayseed climate of La Habra Heights. For one thing, it was pointed out by both council persons and commissioners that the "One Family Per Acre'' rule is apparently being flagrantly violated by a number of unthinking rural homeowners. Some of these people are building guest houses on their country estates and then renting them out,. for goodness sakes. Councilman James Littlejohn estimated that between 75 and 100 of thes~.guest accommodations have extra f am ill es lurking within them and they're actually paying guests. THEN THERE IS the question of new developers who are raising havoc Actually, the building hides 2 bootleg rental• and a tennis court with the rural nature of La Habra Heights by homes as status symbols. These developers actually have the nerve to slyly show renderings to pros- pective buyers that illustrate homea with swimming pools or tennis courts or, horrors, maybe even both. ''Tennis courts are the most ill-used accessories to a house," fumed Mayor Gene Beckman. "The courts don't ap· pear at all rural . . . '' Thus Beckman and other members of the council proposed that developers be asked to construct community tennis courts so individual homeowners • wouldn'~ just jump out there and build their own. The Planning Commission, further thus, was instructed to get up some rules that would stqJ? this ugly proUferation of courts and pools that were clobbering up the rural atmosphere. PLANNING CHAIRMAN Ron Banco was a bit hesitant on figuring out how the planners could do that legally but he vowed they'd try. The council and planners also made it clear they want to hew to the one· family-per-acre rule and knock off these guest houses that get turned into rent· als. }i ou can hardly imagine what Hunt· ington Beach, Balboa or Laguna would look like if a one-house-per-acre rule had been in effed over the past couple of decades. Anyway, it may ge\ tough in La Habra Heights if you want to build a new home and you're so anti-social as to abun commwttty pools or lennis courta and want your very own . RULES OUT -· Former Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, still un· willif\g to commit himself officially to a U.S. Senate race, says be won't seek re-ele(tion to the As· sembly. Diet doctor to sue? NEW YORK (AP> -Diet Dr. Robert AtJtlna uya he will sue Diet Dr. Nathan Pritikln for $5 million tor alleae4 libel and slander. And if many more of his P•· ttent.a call to cancel ap· polntmenta, Atklna says, be may up the flaure. Atkins aald be noUfled Prltildn about the lm· pendlnc lawsuit, band on tetevtslon •P · pearancea in wblcb Pritlkin aald the Atklna diet could cause heart problems. constipation, faUgue and bad breath. Atkins said P.ritikin has been knockin1 his diet for a long time, and he "h'ad always looked traditional\y dod, our Polo intlZrkx:k. ... •u r ::1 I '' I Ji! --------on Prltikin as something >l '· CM 8ludent in Norway_ Kirsten Karn Berg of Costa Mesa, a buslneas economics major at UCLA, ls attending the University of Beraen in Norway under the University of California's Education Abroad Program. Uoder the program, students can get credit at their resident campus while attending one of 40 universities in 18 coun· tries. of a joke." But when Pritikin told a local TV audien1:e May 27 the Alkins diet "can set you up for heart dis· ease, strokes and cause death'' because of high levels of cholesterol, Atkina said be "just finally had it. @J~o~@)~@ 44 Fa.hton Island · Newport Beach· 714/644-5070 1001 Wutwood Bluel.· Westwood Village • 213/208-3273 'l ...... ___________________________ ,, 1.i:·, .,.,.·.· ' d I "l fell that he was saying it so many times that he was beginning to belleve It,'' Atkins aa~ ~R-E~A-L_V_A_L_U_E_S~--~---------~~~~~~~.~,~. at a news conference, r::::: ~~~:lk~~ ~1:~ on items from apples~uce to zippers . oa·11y p·11111 .. "; ~:.~.un ••to be listened are advertised every day 1n the . ~ Cost Plus You're bound to find fantastic savings at our 1st annual cJearance sale of fine furniture. Because we're selllng It aD (except wk:ker and rattan) at -co.t Plue 15"·· Whether your style Is early Amerlcan or chrome and glass contem· pormy, you'll ftnd delectable furniture to suit your ta$te. Choose from tables, chairs, desks, rockers, bars, bookca9es and lots more. Great deals await you at A.aloft BIOtbem' ~ Plue 15'1 • furniture eale. ...,., ................. ...,..,.,....._ TRA FIC SIGNAL -Temparary traffic si2nal control eQuip- 'me11t rested behind Caltrans steel cones this morning as moJrists lined up at a flashing red light on Newport Bou evard at Victoria Street in Costa Mesa. Police said a sou bound motorist knocked out control equipment in a 2: 3q a. m. single-car accident. tl>uderfililk moved f r safekeeping Sufpended Orange County s h e r}{ er · s d e p u t y G e o r g e Loulrmilk -in custody on $250, 00 bail after allegedly hara ing a woman who testifled • .agai t hlm at his kidnapping trial bas been moved from coun jail to Huntington Beach City ~ !or safety reaaom. Sh f's Lt. Wyatt Hart said I:.oud rmilk, a Costa Mesa resi- dent, was transferred from the medi al isoi!llion area of county jail t the smaller municipal jail Thur ay because, as a law en- forc ment officer. he was vuln able to attack by other pris ens. "I~ the interests of safety for ever y concerned. we just mov him," Hart said. Lo ermilk, 37, was ordered jail Tuesday by Superior Cour Judge James Turner when evid ce was presented that the con v cted kidnapper had con- tacted one of his victims by phone a week ago today onty hours after the jury verdict was announced. Loudermilk was convicted of two counts of kidnapping and one count of felony false im· prisonment in connection with three lhcldents in vol vtng womert who said they were taken to isolated areas by the lawman after being stopped on suspicion of drunken driving. In one case, the Costa Mesa man was convicted of abducting a 33-year-old Mission Viejo wotn~ and threatening to rape her aJd kill her. ll as that woman who told Jud Turner uesday she had rec ved a tele~one call from a ma she identified as Lo dermilk following the vert!ict. The defendant bad been free on bis own recognizance. ion to accept rmco contract binist union members vot.ed to accept a new year contract offered by co Materials, Inc. or Costa Mes to end a five-week-old strl$ at the Victoria Street plan M ian Swenson, the coD'- pan 's industrial relations r eprtsentalive. said voting amo the 115 company mem- b er or the International Brot erhood of Machinists and Aer!ace Workers Local 906 re- sult in a 48-35 vote ror accept· anc l'hursday. ~-=-~~~~~~~ The contract, she said, calls for a $2.10 hourly wage hike over the three-year period, an addi· tlonal floating holiday each year and added medical benefits. Union officials said workers were holding out for a '3-an-hour pay hike when they walked out May 8 as their old contract ex- pired. Union pickets were joined in- termittenUy during their strike by residents or the surrounding nelgh~hood who are seekin& removal of the plastics and res- ins manufacturing plant. Three homemade firebombs were thrown into the plant dur- ing the strike's tenure, but police say they have no sus- pects. In a separate incident. a picketer reportedly was struck by a Narmco truck entering the plant. Police said witnesses told varying stories regardinl that incident and that the picketer suff eted only a JlOllible sprained wd1t. The contract settlement will end demonstrations at ~ the Costa Mesa plant and the Anaheim facility where opera- tion• are being moved. lira. Swenson said coml>aDY offlciab are "plealed" wltb the contract aettlement and that un- ion membert will go back to work beginninl with the SW\day midnight shift. More swap meets at Golden Wet1t Goldri Wftt Collete'• tit- mon\bly ••ap mHt will be held weekly dul"tllt the summer becaue of what oftlclal• call • bl~h demand for ..Wns 1pact1. Tbe ~t fee for a,_c. NDl· al t• .._ bat::lt wW tncre ... to• 1ta~ JUiy. 11. llllJ Piiat FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 198r FEATURES COMICS Access to cove upped Additional public access to the new Crystal Cove State Park was endorsed Thursday by a Jolnt state Senate-Assembly Committee. The panel , meeting in Sacramento, also recommended appropriating up to $500,000 to relocate the private horse stables in the' middle of the 3.25 mlle bluCftop park between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. The joint budget group's ac- tion ls the final step before a vote in both the Senate and As- sembly on the park budget re- quest. Some legislators, including Assemblyman Terry Goggin, D- San Bernardino, have made fre- quent complaints that the public cannot get to some areas of the new park, purchased by the state for $32 million in late 1979. What particularly perturbed Goggin was an agreement which the state's General Services Department made with the near- ly 300 mobile homeowners in El Morro Mobile Home Park. That agreement allows the res- idents to stay on at tbe mobile park for 20 years. and also means those residents can sell their mobile homes to buyers during that two-decade period. But the joint panel said Thurs- day no such deal will be offered parl·tlme residents at Crystal Cove, the cottage community just north of El Morro. Those res idents would have to vacate in two years. A decision on fuJJ -time resi- dents of Crystal Cove will not be forthcoming until a general plan for the entire park is completed in January. Other items approved Thurs- day include the hiring of a full· time park ranger by July 1, re- moval or the northernmost beach mobile home at El Morro for construction of restrooms and showers, and removal or all "private" signs in the park. The panel will decide, prob- ably this we«!kend. whether it endorses the ~urchlse of about 390 acres in Moro fUd1e for $3 million to enhance the park. Ann Landers allows one hard-working, angry receptionist have her say ... 83 .,.. ........... - Fire Captaim Bill Van Hom and Bill Ferguaon pull 7~-year-old hoae cai:t ~oaa footbridge to Bay Island after annual overhaul, including te8ting hoaea , grecuing wheel.a and potuhmg bra.as. Iron-wheel carts still serve 70-year-old Newport fire equipment used on isle By STEVE MITCHELL Of -o.llf ...... S\ttf Newport Beach sure got its money's worth back in 1910 when the fire department took delivery of three hose carts at $75 apiece. And while that might have been a good chunk of change back then, the city still uses two of the iron-wheel carts to protect · the two dozen homes on Bay Island. Access to the six-acre Island is by a 10-foot-wide footbridge, and residents of the exclusive com- ~urjlly g to and from their · flOmes by ing golf carts, or by Coot. "It's for darn sure you c~'t get a fire truck over to t.ne is land." Fire Capt Bill Ferguson said. tugging at his bushy while mustache. So the vintage hose carts are housed in two wooden sfleds near the two fire hydrants at each end of the tiny island. Nobody knows what happened to the third hose cart. but Bat- talion Chief Don Jones said rec- ords show one cart was kept on Bay Island in the early days. The other two were k~t at a former fire station ~hat was l()f:ated on Washi,ngton $,reel on ttfe pfttinsula, the exep4live of- ficer aa1d. He speculated the department probably moved a second cart to the island when the station was closed. Firemen at Station One on the peninsula brought one of the 70-year-old carts across the bridge Wednesday for its annual overhaul. They charged the 500-foot long hoses with water to see if it could withstand 300 pounds of pressure. And they greased the wheels and s hined the brass nozzle before. returning the foot- powered fire-fighting equipment to the Island, abo'\t two blocks I fro the station. I C1pt. Fergusop • said the de· · partment replaces the 21~-inch thick lines every five years. County applauds sheriff-marshal merger But Legislature retains veto power over any decision by supervisors By FREDERICK SCRO EM EHL cw-.o .. 1rP't ... s .. " Orange County government of- fi cials generally reacted favorably today to state "As · sem bly approval of a bill to permit merger of the court func- tions of tbe Orange County Sheriff's Department and Marshal'sOffice. The positive reactions wer~ voiced despite the fact the bill was am e nded to give the state Legislature veto power over any consolidation plan approved by the County Board of Supervisors. \Jmler the bill, authored by As- semblywoman Marian Bergeson, R-Newport Beach, a committee com posed of two supervisors. one superior court judge, one m1,1nlcipal court judge and a fifth "at large" member would ex- plore ways or accompllshln( the merger and make a recommen- dation to the board. Before the final Assembly vote on the bill Thursday, it was amended, at the insistence of As- semblyman Richard Robinson. D-Santa Ana, lo empower the Legislature to accept or reject any plan the county might ad- vance. The bill was sent to the Senate on a 64·3 vote. The six members of the Orange County delegation in the assembly supported it, though Mrs . Bergeson had argued against Robinson's amendment. The sheriff's department pro- vi des bailiffing and related services in the superior courts; the marshal's office performs a like function in the municipal courts. In an advisory vote more than one year ago, Orange County voters said the court functions should be consolidated, a move of· ficials say could save about $1 million per year. But requisite legislation to ac- complish the merger has proved controversial because of dis- agreements over whether the sheriff's department should absorb the marshal's court func· tions or vice versa. Riley, however, expressed op- timism ·that any consolidation plan ll'pproved locally would automa'tically be accepted by the Legislatun-'. Riley 's comments were echoed by Orange County Superior Court Presiding Judge Super visor Thomas Riley, Robert Rickles who said he coo- chairman of the county's Legal sidered the amendment" a check· Judicial Committee said he was point, and that's about it." .''obviously pleased" with As-' He said the Leg1stature would sem bly approval of the bill, but be "hard pressed" to change a added, ''lwishwedidn'thavethat consolidation plan with the requirement (the Robinson weight of local approval behind amendment)." it. Ex-hostage guilty of drug smuggling Former Pakistani h ijack hostage Craig Clymore has pleaded guilty to smuggling heroin and hashish oil into the United States. The former Lake Forest resi· dent, who earlier pleaded inno- cent to the charges in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, N. Y .• could re- ceive up to 30 years in prison and up to $50,000 ln fines following Thursday's guilty plea. Clymore, 24, a 1974 Laguna Beach High School graduate, has been held in lieu ol $10 million ball at the Metropolitan Corrections Center in Brooklyn since his re- turn to the United States In early April. The baU is reported to be the blgbeat ever set in the Brooklyn court. Clymore was one or more than 100 hosla~ aboard a Pakistani Jetliner that. wu hijacked March 2 on a fU&bt from Karachi, Paklltan, to Pesha•ar, near the Af 1hanistan border by three op- ponents of the Paklstan 1ovem- ment. New1 reports durin1 the hijack· Ing cited Clymore for entertaln- lnC fellow bfs"-1e1 aboard t.beJet b)' pl_,.a JUJ aw tar and aln&lna. ff• taw wrote a aoq about the ln· ctdent, which he hoped to ricord. But the former Ounce COim· did not kno" that bt laad been tecretly indicted by a '8dlfal p-andJW')'.JUltptlortoUlffijadl· 1n1. • A fte1' th relea11 of the PLEADS GUILTY Craig Clymore I L Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, June 12, 1981 DOWN ON THE FARM DEPT. - Maybe with the exception of the good city of Irvine, we don't worry too much about protecting our rural atmosphere along this coast any more. That's because for the most part, the issue is settled. ~ That ts, the quickie car washes and street lighting districts have already taken over. This condition, however, isn't uni· versal inland. There still are a few · . ~· ~\ .TOM MURPHINl.~t; places that cling to the rural life with in· trepid tenacity. La Habra Heights is one of those areas. Just consider a news dispatch that came out of that inland reach of our region the other day, where they hud- dled with a joint meeting of the City Council and Planning Commission. ONE OF THE MAJOR TOPICS seemed to be the Grand Design necessary to preserve the hayseed climate of La Habra Heights. For one thing, it was pointed out by both council persons and commissioners that the "One Family Per Acre" rule is • apparently being flagrantly violated by a number of unthinkin g rural homeowners. Some of these people are building guest houses on their country estates and then renting them out, for goodness sakes. Counc il man J a mes Littlejohn estimated that between 75 and 100 of these guest accommodations have extra families lurking within them and they're actually paying guests. THEN THERE IS the question of new developers who are raising havoc Actually. the building htdes 2 bootleg rmtaLs and a tenn11 court with the rural nature of La Habra Heights by homes as status symbols . These developers actually have the nerve to slyly show renderings to pros- pective buyers that illustrate homes with swimming pools or tennis courts or. horrors, maybe even both. "Tennis courts are the most ill-used accessories to a house," fumed Mayor Gene Beckman. "The courts don't ap- pear at all rural . . . " Thus Beckman and other members of the council proposed that developers be asked to construct community tennis courts so individual homeowners wouldn't just jump out there and build their own. The Planning Commission, further thus, was instructed to get up some rules that would stop this ugly proliferation of courts and pools that were clobbering up the rural atmosphere. PLANNING CHAIRMAN Ron Banco was a bit ~esitant on figuring out how the planners could do that legally but be vowed they'd try. The council and planners also made lt clear they want to hew to the one- f amily·per-acre rule and knock off these guest houses ~at get turned into rent-als. · You can hardly imagine what Hunt- ington Beach, Balboa or Laguna would look like if a one-house-per-acre rule had been in e!fect over the past couple of decades. Anyway, it may get tough in La Habra Heights if you want to build a new home and you're ao anti-social as to shun community pools or tennis courts and want your \"8ry own. THEW .. PEOPLE MAY have to get more devious and pretend that they're preserving the country feeling of La Habra Heights. Actually, the council and planners may later discover that homeowners are building silos, then filling them with water for swimming. And what looks like a barn, well, it's really an indoor tennis court, folks. RU LES OUT -• Former Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, still un~ willing to commit himself officially to a U.S. Sen•te race, say~ he won't seek re-election to the As· sembly. Diet doctor to su e? NEW YORK (AP> Diet Dr. Robert Atkins eaya he wlll aue Diet Dr. Na than Prtlikin for SS million for alleged libel and slander. And if manJ more of his pa- tient.a c.U to cancel ap- polntmeotl, Atkins says, be may up the fl1ure. A lklna said he notified Pritlldn about the im- pending lawsuit. based on televlalon ap - pearances ln which Pritikin said the Atkins diet ~ould cause heart problems, constipation, fatigue and bad breath. Alkins said Prilikln has been knocking his diet for a long time. and he "had always looked treditionaly dad, our Polo intiir~ ... h fdl.aet,600.m:et crmhtobla. knitehirt ht'll <LWr~r. ~toils mid hzmmd ~ibr oc:tM. orstmzt-wmr. evei1obla. in 25 gnzat crla:s. if hz hoe onrz , hz mry juet wont ihzm elL. '1e.•u • ;>111.:• ')t ff) ": 1u 111 1• 1111. 1 I ·: 1 11 1· ... , ,· tu:· .. ·• ,,, •• i 1 ---------on Pritikin as something ,, i , CM student in Norway Kirsten Karn Berg of Costa Mesa, a business economics major at UCLA, is attending the University of Bergen in Norway under the U n i·v er s i t y o f California's Education Abroad Program. Under the program, students can get credit at their resident campus while attending one of 40 unlverslti~s in 18 coun- tries. of a joke." But when Pritlkln told a local TV audience May 2'7 the Alkins diet "can set you up for heart dis· ease, strokes and cause death" because of high levels of cholesterol. Atkins said he "jus t finally bad ll. "I felt that he was saying it so many times 00~0 @@)~@ I 44 Fashion Island · Newport Beach· 714/644-5070 1001 Westwood Bluel.· Westwood Village· 213/208-3273 t, )r. that he was begiMing to 1-: · belie ve it," Alkins said :---R-E_A_L_V_A_L_U_E_S ______________________ _;'_;' -.- at a news conference. r::;~~ ~hr~~ikhi~ ~I:~ On items from applesauce tO zippers ~;,,,un "to be listened are advertised every day in the . ' . Cost Plus l Furniture Sale! - You're bound to find fantastic savings at our 1st annual clearance sale ol fine furniture. Because we're selling it all (except wicker and nittan) at "'Con Plue 15 ~·. Whether your style Is early American or chrome and glass contem· porary, you'll find delecutble furniture to suit your taste. Choose from tables, chairs, desks, rockers, ban, bookcases and lots more. Great deals await you at Aaron Brott..• "'Con Ptua 15 "• fum.ttme ule. I I• • t , s: •11 , I ., o•u1•· FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1981 STOCKS CLASSIFIED E2 E3-8 Columnist Sylvia Porter concludes her series on the malpractice crisis . . . E 2 t!ounty leader in SOntlilPnd housing Position maintained despite rising prices Despite a sharp drop in saJes and an increase ah median prices. Orange County leads Southern C alifornla in virtually all categories of new housmg, according to a study entitled "Residential Housing summary." Published quarterly by Callfornia Land Title Co. in conjunction with San Diego-based Develop· ment Dimensions. a research and marketing rirm. tbe study reported a 42.3 percent decline in sales a.nd medJan prices or $173,781 for single-family homes and $93,244 for condominiums. In the preceding quarter ended May 1, the sur· vey showed median prices or $169,781 and S85.449. respecuvely. The number of units in inventory, however. was reduced by 15.9 percent. "The key thought here," said Jack Harris, vice president of Cahforn1a Land Title, in a re- l~ase. "is that Orange County's average sales per development per week is still the highest in Southern California ... Development D1mens1ons President Jay L. l\1oss noted an the same release that "Orange County had as many sales an its 240-plus develop- ments as Los Angeles County had in 600 active prOJl'Cts. And. Orange County retains clear-cut sales leadership despite the highest median price for single-family units in Southern California." A total of 246 acta ve developments of 10 units or more were surveyed. mcluding 113 smgle- family detached and 133 projects with attached or condomimum units The Santa Ana-Tustin area led the county with 26 active projects, though the Yorba Ltl)da- Placentia and Anaheim-Anaheim Hills areas also had sa~niflcant a ct1v1ty The study reported those three submarkets accounted for 27 percent of all count~ projects. Santa Ana Tustm also led all submarkets in total s ales. the report noted, with Irvine a close second. Mis ion Viejo exhiblted the fastest sales rate of 2.45 unlts a week in its eight active develop· men ts. The study showed single.family median sales prices raniied from a low of $139,750 in El T9ro- Lake Forest to a hiib of $335,000 in Newport Beach. The single·family median sales price of $173,782 represents a 2.4 percent increase over the previous quarter. Condominium median sales prices, accordint lo the report'. ranged from a low of $75,864 in S~nta, Ana-Tustin to a high of $175,000 in San Clemepte. The county's median sales price of $93.244 is 5.6 percent higher than the quarter which preceded it. "Tbese price rises will continue," Moss sai4 in the release, "because the median prices of inven- tory are $21,096 and $14,786 above single·fafl\ily and condominium median sales prices. This is even higher than the differential which existed last quarter and these statistics point to another round of rising prices · · Inventory fell 700 units to 3,545 during the sur- vey quarter. the report showed. Of these. 35 per· cent were sangle-famaly homes and 65 percent were condominium units. A total of 79 percent are completed but unsold The report indicates this is a very high level of completed inventory despite the "rather healthy pace durmg the last quarter tn the face of difficult money market conditions." The report concluded with this statement: ·'The most important factor to be monitored during the balance or the year 1s the effect of new legislation regarding the ability of savings and loans to make new loans at a variable, indexed rate with no stipulated maximum This will have a major impact on the market's wi"ingness and ability to purchase new housing. as will both ques· tionable economic condition~ and future housing price escalations." Bonanza slow arriving D efense spending impact less than expected? F rom the Business Wire The economic bonanza expected from in· creased defense spending may be less than generally expected and much slower in coming. according to three defense industry executives. Speaking in Newport Beach as panel members on .. The Busmess Exchange." a public television forum for discussion of business issues. the three agreed problems exist that the record money authorization alone can·t cure "The Soviets have outspent the United States r by $200 billion durin& the last 10 years,.. said TR W's John Sten bit, who cautioned that as now authonzed. it would take three years to match what the Russians have already spent. Stenbit. director of requlrements and group development for TRW's California-based Space & Defense Systems Group. said during much of that same 10 years there was an era of "inconsistency" in procurement policies and a period of "anti· technology hysteria.. an the United States that must also be overcome. While noting there are very productive and capable people now in the CaJHornfa aerospace in· dustry, Slenbit decried. for example. a current shortage of beginning engineers. He said this was due in part to the "anti-technology" decade. and said at requires an eight-year cycle lo produce a quahfied graduate engineer. Panelist Dr. Nick Yaru, corporate senior vice president of Hughes Aircraft, agreed. He said while engineering schools are now jammed. there are not enough qualified professors to ease the crunch and prepare for the additional engineering students required. Varu also said the Reagan administration's variable progress payment and multiyear procure· ment policies will help by easing Industry cash· flow problems. However. he said long lead times and a shortage or subcontractors must also be con- sidered. "If I want to build something today. I -EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Or., Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 CONSTRUCilON MONEY AVAilABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. • Residential • C-oqunes'cial Buildinp: Takeour CGmmiUnent required alona with le.el. • Land 1:.oanl up to one year 50% appnilal. • should have ordered at yesterday," he said or the U.S. semiconductor industry. heavily taxed by the demands of the consumer market. "We are not behind the Russians in our laboratories. we're behind the Russians to the ex- tent they have put their technology in the field," said the panel's third member, Paul Smith. vice president-program development and marketing for McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co. Smith s aid the lag between actual appropriation and spending runs a minimum of two years. .. AJthough we are seeing the very leading edge of the Reagan administration's thinking with respect to budgets," Smith said. "it will be two years before we see a large impact upon the in· dustry and another two years before we see much impact upon military services. where the real hardware is needed ... A guest economist on the program. Bank of America 's ~art Graeber. a defense industry a nalyst. applied a different perspective to the peo· pie problem. "I think the industry will have some trouble adapting to growth with problems or employ· ment." he sa id. "They can·t bring people in because it's too expensive to buy houses here.,. he said or California. He predicted growth. "but not a boom." Panel members agreed with Yaru's claim that the 1980s, "will be lhe era in which we produce eq~pment." compared lo the 1970s w}\en the stress was on research an~ development. Smith said the Russians had "not only done more in technology that we'd anticipated." but had also "been spending their money lo produce equipment at a much higher rate." Stenbit said It was time to mars.hall U.S. technology to the defense cause and said "we have a tendency to apply at to digital watches and TV _ games ... more than to our military forces." COLLECTORS CORNER Rare Coln• & Stamp• GOLD & SILVER 6-11·11 OeW C'-....,,,. Ml-Cl. Slt.)6 • .., Sell Kr11991r..O. .. 71.• Mii.• M1pl1 l.lllh M61 .U .. 17.U 100 Cot'-• ..... 2S "49.JS IO Pesos IS16..• "'1M '°" Sll111r a.. W .K tl1.~ 70% Bank Financing IRA& KEOUGH (714) 556-6150 South CoHt Plaza VIiiage ...,....,•t9Nrs-.. (t\CNMf....,.Selltll CM .. f'IAl•I USE THE DAILY PILOT .. FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call 642-5678 bt.U% ...... •zll1•al ...... flUUY ASS IMAILI IMTlllST OHL Y OWMH/MOMO-wt• occurt• Call William B. Mitchell Call IO<lav lot quote • No obh9at1on llonS nolionQI ~ R.H} l?!::!_l!~~=t= Subtotal NORTH ORANG£ COUNTY La H•bfa-Brea area Yorba Linda/ Pl•centia Fullerton-Buena Park La Palma·Cypress/ I.OS Alamitos Anaheim/ Anahelm Hiiis •Orange/ VIiia Park ~rea Gbrden Grove/ Westmln$ler Santa Alijl-Tustin Subtotal Total Orange County 1 19 18 7 15 11 9 20 8 9 10 127 3 10 8 0 6 2 s 41 168 llUMaft .. ,,. .. ,. 80 2,881 834 1,036 3,672 2,094 2,252 4, 150 3,835 1,470 619 22,923 317 1,364 487 0 604 844 76 393 4 OA~ 27,008 1 18 8 8 20 1 9 32 12 24 25 158 17 33 22 10 68 34 40 58 ?'3? 440 PROPOSED PROJECTS 0 216 86 132 690 0 0 164 54 581 629 2,552 so 72 42 94 287 70 812 440 1 807 4,419 NVMBER O~ UNITS 0 303 89 53 490 0 596 936 141 495 15S 1,100 494 56 157 1,358 92 392 , '31)4 8,251 ·~·· l"LA ....... 0 43A 16 367 1,943 360 494 3,295 2,721 265 5,S2S 15,420 203 2.060 56 6 1,891 1,703 924 1,669 ~ 23,932 1,000 0 0 0 170 0 16 130 0 0 0 1,316 347 109 194 12 976 368 179 537 1,000 953 191 SS2 3,293 360 I, 106 4,525 2,916 1.~1 7,498 2J,IJ5 755 3,341 786 168 3,311 3,499 2,007 3,038 16 Qt)C 40,640 OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS NEW YORI( IAPI Clrfoco NASDAQ• ~llOn& CIUSoGa 5/lowln9 "'911Ht l>ICls CllzUtA Ind lowest ott.n by CltzUtB market ....Urs It of t1erkJl Tnun Prkn oo not ClowCp tnc:lllder1tailmMlr.11P ColrTl1 markdown or comm CotG•ho• Inion 10< Tllur~y Stock BIO Ask ComCIH AEl 11\d 19 191/'J CmlSnr AFAProt 9 1011 CmwT1I AVM Cp ~ ''-ConPap Accuray 12YI 12.\oo cordos Acklls.nW IJ~• " Cro1Tr1 AdvRou 'lit 4.\oo CutlrFd 1 AlllBs.11 40y, ~ Cycltron "luAI•• -17 DanlyM Allcotnc 4J " Dtao .. Allyn& 1YI 1'11 DaY1M•I Allu .-., ~ OBeer Amaru n 22"' O.lllbA11 .A.Furn ~ 5•.; O.IC•nT AGre•I U\lt 1414 o.-yel AlnGp I •M "3 DlaCrY> A.Micro• ~ 2' DlxnCr11 ANellns I~ 1~ Do<11ll , A.OU.If 12.,_ 221111 OollrGn AAHM9 U 7.lllo OoylOB • AWelOnv M &Siii ounklnD Allaellt• 9"' 10 Ourlrn , AneSA IM!I I EIDrtef AnQAG4 ~ &54 EelllVn< Ant.Cp 1-. Econub ApldM I :l9'h 2'¥o EIPasEI "rclenGp 4 '"' E Ider Be "sdCola '2 •2 EleNucl AUGILI UVe 1 EIMOOI , AUaftlh ~ ~ EnrOe• B•irdCp 1~ 11'1'> EnrMell'od BellyPP 10!9 11 E11R1v B-HE 10lllo 11 Entwl111 811lcA1 9 14'9 t EqutSl ::~~!::1r. ~~ ~:¥; ~~Oii Beellrw ' Wt FebrlTll B..,IP\1 FermGp 1 1S-16 2 1·1 Fldlcor Bentlyl SJ"-Sol Ftlllr.Sys Bnuy wl ~ 11 FtBostn BltJLeb Sol Sol FtEmpS 8evM91 1Sl4o IS FtWnFln lllbl>Co 19 11 Fi.GBk• Blrd!ion IJ'le IMll Flk1'9r Blrtcf\f flh ,.. FltHIP 1 Blyvoor IS U°"' fleNF•a lonana• '°"' ffli Flurocb 1 BrwTom D\lo ~ f'O<HIO 811Ckbee 11"" 12 P'orm11111 Bllff•I• J7'4 ""° Fr•nkCp BurnupS 1•14 16V. F renlc E 1 CNL Fin 2V. 3 FrHSG CPT Cp S1'1fo ,. l'rtmnt 1 CelWtS11 32 ~ FilllrHB CanredH ~ ,__ G•IH\IO C..,El\9 GnA11fm 1 IS.I• 2 l·I· GnDevcs CepSwC 29\1\ >O•.; Llllt1E'1 CplnAlr t~ J\lt ioovEFn CereCp 1'V. 1714 'GrunM Cavl'llhC ~ J G,.yA<lv CnVtPS 1~ U Glllntll CrirmSh 16\lt I~ Gyrodyn CllartHo UV. ~ HemlP • Cllml11 ~ U Herdwke CllesUU 17~ lt HrpRow ClllN'wTr IJV. lS HerPGp CllUbCI 511<11 SIU. HarffHI 5'> 6 HCM9 ' 11\oo llh NOAlll 3"1•· l41/'J ~vcm ... 1'1.-t lO"-~ n.1. HelmRsc ~ s Nuco<P n in 12'-SllMed 3S\I< 3' NASDAQ SUMMARY n•. n~. H1nrdF ,. 28\1\ Nutrp WO """' IS'" s11 .. m11t s 1•~ 1Sl4 281/.t 21\0 Holobm 2•1 .. 1~ OGlh•yM ~~ f!~ SC•IWlr 100/! 1~ l2~ Jl Hoover 1314 13''1 OliloCes _..... _,,, S EIS I~ IS'h 1-.. 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Off 7.7 Off 7.7 MUTUAL FUND .. • "if CLOSING 1,006.27 ' •'•" ~ .. ... . Any solutions·-' to malpractice? f Last o/ a three-part senes on malpractice. J • You may never have been a physical victim of medical malpractice. But although your own life haa not been needlessly endangered, you have been ancl are a fmancial victim -for you are paying the billl , for claims and settlements in terms of ever-rising health care costs. Aware or not, you are paying through the higher fees charged for medical care by physicians, sur· geons and hospitals; extra costs of play-it-safe "de· f ensive" medicine prac- ticed by doctors who order Car more tests than you ne ed; through the re· fusal of skilled professionals to I -Y-lVll-PD_RT_IR-n give you "high risk" operations that could save your life because they're afraid of the legal aspects. The likeliest solutions to the new malpractice cr isis lie in our nation's hospitals. For hospitals now pay two-thirds of all malpractice insurance costs and 75 percent of all malpractice claims originate from treatments given within hospitals. What's more, hospitals are being increasingly held legally responsible for the acts of their indepen· dent Cunsalaried) s taff physicians. In addition. there ls the relatively little-known finding that any of the nation's more than 100.000 hospltaJ trustees and directors are also personally liable in maJpractice suits. This startling revelation comes from a new book. "Hospital Liability Revisited" <Inquiry Books, Blue Cross Association, Chicago, $6), whose author, Chicago attorney Thomas R. Mulroy, argues that the liability of trustees and directors stems from several often overlooked court decisions. Notable among them was the landmark Corleto vs. Shore Memorial Hospital decision of 1975, that condemned the entire professionaJ staff of a hospital in a malpractice pro- ceeding. Involving hospital trustees to this extent well may be the most significant new move toward curb· ing medical malpractice. But many other attacks on the crisis are under way as well. --Pre-arbitration laws are now providing for re· view panels to sift out frivolous or unjustified case.s before they go to trial. -States such as California and F lorida are ac- tually taking medical policing away from physicians and taking tough disciplinary measures, includin& the revocation of licenses. u" L.Mt ChQ \ 14Yt • 2 ~·~ 11\(o + 1V. .4014 + 414 ~ +11Vt ~+1Yt 14 + ,,.. 2'\lo + 2Yt 13\'J + 7 ,,. + "' 25 .. + l\lo 13,.. + 1~ ,. +10Yt llYt + 11'> IS + 1 ASY, + 314 SYt + ~ ~·. !Vt -°1. •14 -.. II -t .GOLD COINS '"" -Vr 14--' ~-,.. 4 -14 I.Vt -"" 22 -1111 '°"' -2'\11 ~-­i--14 7 -"' 1.--l't f -214 _, -tl't Pct. Up 16.0 Up IS.I Up 12.S Up 1U Up 11.7 Up 11.3 Up 10.t Up 10.S Up 10..S Up 10.0 Up 9,7 Up 9.2 Up t .1 Up u Up U HP 7,7 ~p !·J Pct. Off t .1 Off t .1 Off l.J Ofl 7.1 Off 6.4 Off •• 1 Off u Off S.t on s ... Off 5.2 §ii 5.2 s.1 s.1 si: t: Off u Off u NllW \'OAK CA~) -"'ket ~ ,.r ~ -., ~ wltll W... · • .,,.,c •. METALS :i C......-ID,.._cenll • pound, U.S. deltlM! Uons. .. LeM 31 centsa oound. > J.lto< 4 14 unts •pound, G911,,.rf!CI. , .. SUMO Metals WHll comoosll• I•. Al•m._ 7 ... cents• pOIH>d, N.V. _,e..,., $n0.00 per fl..-. ~lati-'439.ootroyos., N.Y. SILVER NEW YOAK (AP) -Handy .. HartNrl sllver todrf s10.5I0, 1AP w.,... Engalllerd sliver StO.UO, up sO.M, ••rlcated lilwr $11.21S, I.IP 90.361. GOLD QUOTATIONS SYMBOLS