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1981-06-23 - Orange Coast Pilot
., • • • • • • • Ylll 11111111 IAllY PIPll TU F S 0 A Y J U NE:. • ' l 1 ~Ill 1 ORANGE COUNTY C A L II OHN I A 25 CEN TS OC pair shot to death A 15-year-old Costa Mesa girl and a 19-year·old Huntington Beach man were shot to death Monday ni&ht in a Westminster apartment. Police arrested a U~year·old youUr who they say was angry that the girl was breaking up with him. Brena Lee Baird of 592 Hamilton St. was shot three times •t 18:55 p.m. and was pro· nounced dead two hours later at the Fountain Valley Community Hospital trauma center, police sald. William John Heinz of 16041 Craig Lane was pronounced dead at the scene at an apartment complex near Westminster Avenue and Golden West Street. He was shot once in the chest. Police said both victims were killed with a .22caliber handgin. The suspect1 whose identity is being withbela because he 15 un- der 18, lived with bis parents in the apartment, the scene of the alayinta. They weren't home during the shooting, police s aid. The youth was charged with suapicion of murder, police said. A neighbor who apparently heard shots had wrestled the suspect to the carpet inside the apartment, when a patrol car arrived, police sajd. The patrolmen, res ponding to a call, arrived at the a&partment complex in time to bear the three shots being fired . Ar WI ..... Anti·nuclear power demon&trator makes hu point at Nuclear Regulatory Commission hearings on new twin reactors at San Onofre. Onofre flap heats up ~pponents of nuke reactors cite 'quake da1"er' By DA V1D IWTZMANN Of .. O.lly,.. .... SAN DIEGO -At times Mon· day, the meeting room where a federal licensin1 panel is hold· inl bearin11 on new twin reac· ton at San Onofre resembled a 1960s student protest center. But for the balance of the time, which was most of the day, consultants for Southern California Edison Co. pressed their case that nearly completed units two and three at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating sta· lion could safely withstand an earthquake from geologic .faul.ts that plant opponents mamtam are more buardous than at first believed. Expected to spend the next two weeks listening to experts on both sides of the question is the three-member Atomic Safe· ty and Licensing Board, which was characterized Monday as a "kangaroo court" and a nuclear industry "rubber stamp" by about so hand·clapping oppo· nents who sang anli·nuclear melodies and read speeches dur· ing the board's noon recess. Many of the anti·nuclear spec· tat.ors belong to an organization called the Community Energy Action Network, some of whose members doMed monkey masks and wore signs critical of the nuclear reeulatory commission. of which the safety and licensing board is a part. However, before and after the licensing panel's noon recess, it was Edison's presentation that counted. The utility. 80 percent owner of the powerful new reactors aw ailing licensinJ, contended that the generating facilities were built to withstand earth· quakes "far more severe than any the area ia believed capable of experiencing.·· Edison consultants claim that the largest hypothetical earth· Atomic Safety Board decried as a ''kangaroo court " and a nuclear industry "rubber stamp.'~ quake possible in the San Onofre area would measure no higher than 7 .0 on the Richter scale. This is considered a powerful earthquake. Such an earthquake could OC· cur. seismologists said, about five miles offshore fro m the coas tal powe r plant site in northern San Diego County. However, the challengers in the federal licensing hearing - a retired businessman named August "Bill" Carstens and the Friends of the Earth environ· mental group -assert that new information reveals there are previously undetected faults which pose hazards that the plant's designers have not taken into account. The plant's chaUentera, or ln· tervenora as they are known of· ficially, won a small procedural victory Mondat when ASLB Chairman James Kelley •treed to let a Friends of the Earth re· ' · searcher cross examine Ed1lon witnesaes. Attomeyf\. for both the utility and the nuclear regulatory com· misaiol) objected, sayln1 th•t Glenn Barlow was not property qualified by ed~cation or e~ perience to question expert wtt· nesses. Edison's first witneas Monday , al the quasi·Judicial hearinl wu Jay Smith, a Long Beach geologist who said bis 12-year study of the area indicated that the nearest fault to the $3.3 billion plant, the Crutlanltoa1 was inactive and incapable or damaging movement. The fault is about one hall mile from the plant site, which is three miles south of San Clemente. Smith testified that it baa been about 125,000 years since the Christianitos fault bas moved. But the plant opponenu have countered with new studies by 'I two geologists which su11eat that certain geolol(ical features in an area S()utheast and off. shore of the San Onofre site could be a so-called "zone of de· formation," a lone and con· tinuous fault capable of pot.en· tially ca~ini a more powerful earthquake than that which the reactors can safely withstand, CSee ONOFRE, Pa1e A2) Wine-country i,lf erno set by arsonists :.·Custody of tot to aunt A 9-week-old baby 1irl that authorities say was placed up for sale by her father is destined for a relative'• home in Loaisla.na. Orante Cowity Superior Court Judge Byron McMillan ordered the child be placed in the custody of an aunt after review· lng a report submitted by the county Social Services Depart· menl. The child, Kathleen Wilson, has been housed at tile county's Albert Sitton Home for abused and abandoned children since June 1 when her father, Ra~y Gordon Wilson, 29, was arrested on char1es of felony child en· dangerment. County Sheri/rs Department deputies alleged that Wilson of· fered the baby for sale at a U. hour restaurant in Mission Viejo. The child's mother, Mary Katherine Wilson, is, sought un· successfully earlier thls month to win cudatody of the child. She said lt w-. her desire to return to Louialana wilb the infant. Under tbe plao approved by Judie Mdlillao, the child will IO to tbe home of ooe of Mn. Wilson'• .a.tiers. llra.. Wilson, accordUla to tM Judie, wOt stay with another sister in Loulaiana. Willon currmt1y is in custody ib Orance County Jail. ma pre· llflllAary hearint la eebeduled to btlia DUt. Wednesday in South 0....,. OMmt.y Municipal Court. llbl. Wlllon bu been residJn&. la Mluiclll Viejo. I Search erukd for bodies .,..._... Capt. BiU SJ*sk of the Gordon Vallev Fin Deparlment sum!JI• tlttt A.tJcu Peale /in WI Napa vNch hal burned %3,000 ~ and 35 to «> "°"1e1. Draft wa:rning letters sent First ones mailed to men who failed to register WASHING TON (AP> -The Selective Service System malled lta fint wam1na letters to young men who tailed. to re1ilter for a 11C>Nlble military draft, offlciala have dlscloeed. Selective Service Deputy Dlrectbr Btatton Uarrll said llooday 150 letters wen mailed in the a1ency's flnlt attempt at enforcement. Special re1a.u·at1on period' ,rere held Jut Jummer and in ' January ln w'btcll .. me 5.5 • mWlon )'(>Uni men 1l1aed _up, Harris said. He estimated that aa many u 2:50,000 failed to retlater. Men ant required to repter at local post offices wit.bin 30 days of their 18th birthday. Failure to do ao it a felony car· ryln1 a maimum ~tJ of a $10,000 ftne and flve 1ean in prison. Altbou-'1 there ia no draft, tel· iltration '-belDI conducted to t11tabll1b · a pool of names and addret1e1 for UH in tbe event of naUoaal eioer1mcy. _ _ Harris said the letters went to people about whom the agency had received complaints. For example, he said , a parent might complain that his son ligned up, but that one of his buddies bad not. The wamlns letters ask the in- dlviduala to pro'1de some sort of proof either that they have sltned up or that tbey are not amon1 thoee requlred to reg· '1ter. Harris said he expect.a about <See Da.u'T, Pa1e AJ> Veteram ·cm hunger strike Set up camp across from White ffouae to press demands Tbey ..... meted from tbe lawn of a Vete:rw ~m~tlon bo1oltal at Breatw 1 Calll. -1'11 •"""1.t IGM AIDM' -•.1wt~ "*left• clavebyard ID Olaadtle, Calif. -........ r.-......... -to CarrJ tWr lll'Gllll t0 laeaJd axpa'ttrllinrd. Cllarlllll M Ille an.nm• -~..-i-1 ii Ml ..... fa=-~ I ~:idi:J.T.: .,~ l M"icemea ol Acent Oraa1e and otlaer beltl6eklet med ln Viet· nam; (I) a new pr'Olram to care for retuned •lteran1; (4) a 1»..U..1 wttb Reaaaa; ud cs> ID blY~ IDto tM death ol , .... _ ll._ ffDl*iu. He died. a appareat 1ulclde, OD MaJ 11, two maatllt altft be crubed • JHp lato • VA boeDt&al .. Dnd ..... la pro. tell o••;a••,· •.•dlca1 certlfteatlaa .......... liiD· ,........ INmbltwar .,........ , ... ~,..Al) 23,000 acres consumed NAPA (AP) -Hundreds of firefighters battled today to hall a wine.country inferno that charred more than 23,000 acres, drove hundreds of people from their homes and sent up an im· mense plume of reddish·white smoke. Four arson·caused fires that were set around 1:30 p.m. Mon · day had linked into a single blaze by 9 p.m., raging across unpopulated grass and woodland in the direction of Fairfield, about 10 miles away. The fire was 20 percent con· tained by 7 a.m., according to fire information officer Richard Schell. He said some 1,100 men. 1.5 air tankers, 108 engines and 20 bulldozers were going to be thrown against the fire today. As for full containment. California Department of Forestry s pokes man Ed Karmen said "They're not even talking about that. They're talk· ing about where this fire is going to go and they're talking about locations four and five miles in front of the fire." It i s the largest fire in Northern California this year. Fire spokesman Nick Fowler of the Lake Napa Ranger Unit said Investigators decided the cause of the blaie was . arson because "we had four, separate fires set within five minutes of each other in one area." At least 35 to 40 homes, most of them expensive, were among the 65 structures destroyed, fore· inl hundreds of people to nee . Seven people, two of them (See NAPA, Pap A.2) Western Iran put on alert BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) Resident.a ol we~rn Iran were told to be on the lookout today tor deposed President . Abolbauan Bani-Sadr, and • Tehran radlo reperted nlne more people executed. The eucutlonl brou1bt to M tbe aumber put before flJinl squads ln three days, many ol them linked by the Tebran IOY· ernment to the tu1ltlve ,....1. dent. The re\'Oludonary proeeeutor of KermllDlhab Province on tbe lraCll border uld ln a 1tat.meat publl1bed by the aew1paper Jombouri Sal•ml t.bat Bul·s.dr po11lltlJ WH OD tbe HD ID ..... "' lrlD ..cl --people of the ...... to ..... the lookout for blm. f WHERE FIRE RAGES Napa Valley scorched Case of wine fo.,-$24,000 ST. HELENA, Calif. CAP) - A Syracuse, N.Y., wine dealer paid $24,000 for a case of wine be has neither seen nor teated, a record price for an unrele~ wine, the auction's ortaniaen said. j · -i The price Charles Mara paid for the 1979 Mondavi·Rolhlcbild Napa merlot cabernet sauvignon, which wlll be re· leased in 1983 or 1984, comes to about $333 a glass. Biddlne at the Napa Valley • Wine Auction, organized to beneftit two Napa County l hospitals by the !'iapa Vintners Association, started at $1,800. ; ' I ~' : 5 hurt in blast l. PASADENA, Texas (AP) An explosion rocked a petroleum refinery on the Houston Ship Channel early today, lnjurln• five worken and trl11ertn1 a series of fires, authoriUea said. ~ DRAISI ClllT 1111111 :. , Usual early momln1 low c I o u d s a lo n I c o a s1 otherwise faire and SW\Dy. Lows tonight in middle 601. Hi1bs Wednnday ln mld ·70s at beache1, mld·80s Inland. 111111 TllAY • • • • • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. June 23, 1981 AU. IN FAVOR -Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev (lower right) ind other memben of the ruling Soviet Politburo vote during today's opening of the Supreme Soviet, the Russian parliament, in Moscow. For~ign Minister Andrei Gromyko is at upper ngbt. I Robbins d~ni~~ d~te hid · Witness says senator claimed he d;dn t call witness J l ' I . . • I j ,, 1 t SACRAMENTO (AP) -·State Sen. Alan Robbins denied two years ago that he'd tried to gel a dinner date with the star witness against him in bis sex-with· minors trial, says the girl's form~r teacher. Orvin Roome testified Monday that be spoke to Robbins by telephone in 1979 about a letter Robbins sent him concerning Lori ferwilliger, one o( the two womeh who say they had sex wit.b Robbins when they were 16. Roome told a six-man, six- woman jury: "I thanked him for laking ber to lunch. He said, in effect, 'No problem. I was happy to do.it .. " But Roome said Robbins de· Died calling Ms. Terwilliger and asking her out to dinner, which she contends he did. Robbins, a 38-year-old Van Nuys Democrat, faces nine felony counts alleging that he bad sex acts with underage girls. Eight: charges involve Ms. Terwilliger, now 18, who says she met Robbins when she went to his office to interview him for a high school class taught by Roome. Sbe says Robbins told her she was pretty and kissed her hand, then took her to lunch and bought her an alcoholic beverage. She says he later called ber and asked her to din- ner, and I they began having an affaif. Roome said Robbins sent him a letter in mid-February 1979 asking permission for Ms. Terwilliger to spend the follow- ing March 29 al the Capitol. "This letter will constitute permission for your pupil, Laura Terwilliger, to spend the day at the Capitol on March 29 as part of your community life class," the letter said. It also said t.bet Robbins had reviewed the class program and believed that it was "truly the best program that I have seen for any high school class in California." Roome t.ofd district attorney's investigators earlier that he called Robbins and rejected the request after Ms. Terwilliger's guardian, Pat Skiles, com- plained that Robbins had called her ward and asked her out. "I told him it would be better that she did not go on the 29th of March," Roome said. "He (Rob- bins) agreed to that." Earlier, several current and former members of Robbins' staff said they remembered see· lng Ms. Terwilliger in Robbins' Senate office in February and March of 1979, when Ms . Terwilliger says she had sex with him. Two women said they took phone calls from her to the senator. And two others testified that Ms. Terwillb~er went into Robbins' private office on one or more of her visits. Gladys Keith , Robbins' personal secretary, said she saw Ms. Terwilliger in the office as many as four times, and took as many as eight phone calls from her to the senator. She said she could not re- member if she ever put any of t.be calls through to Robbins. If Robbins was not available, Ms. Keith said, Ms. Terwilliger would tell her to tell Robbins that "Lori called." She left no return number, Ms . Keith said. Judith Verhaag, a former Robbins' staff member, said she saw Ms. Terwilliger in the office five or six times. Once she came in with two or three girlfriends and t.be girls went into Robbins' privat e omce, Ms . Verhaag said. Later, the girlfriends came out but Ms . "Terwilliger re- mained behind, Ms. Vertlaag added.· "Did you see that same girl in the office after that?" asked Deputy District Attorney Albert Locher. "Yes," lb. Verb .. , aald, add- ing that she did not recall how many times she saw her. "Did you ever see ber go into the inner office?" Loeber asked. "Yes," Ms. Verhaag said. She also testified that she typed the letter Robbins sent to Roome. Ailanta home searched Preliplinary hearing readied for slaying suspect ATLANTA (:t\P) -Authorities worked . into the morning hours today sea.rchinl( the home or Wayne B." Williams as pros- ecutors Pll'P•red for bis pre· liminary ~aring on a murder cbar1e md in the death of one of 28 young slain blacks. Williama,, a ~year-old free- ' Janee photographer, was arrest· ed Sunda~ on c h arges of m~rderine N•thanlel Cater. 27, whoee strangled body was found in the muddy waters of the Chat- tahoochee River last month. The preliminary hearing for Williama originally was set for Monday, but was postponed until today at the request of bis at- torney. li'!'Y Welcome. She said Assembly OKs skater curbs SACRAMENTO CAP) -Cities and counties could re1ulate rollerakaters on streets and sldewalka, under a bill approved . by tbe Callloni.la Assembly. AB515 by A.stemblyman Larry Stirlln&, a,.san 0te10, went to tbe. IOHl'DOI' Kooday by a ~ vote on Senate amendment.. · The blll wu ICJQOt by t.be city Of San Dteto. wflicb bad restrict- ed roller-uat1n1. But tbe or- dinance wu overturned ln court oa 1rounda tbe atate Vehicle Code doel ':C: local rovern· mat. tbe ty to rel\llate pedestri-. she needed more time to pre- pare bis defense. The bearina is to determine if there is enough evidence to bring Williams before a grand jury. Ms. Welcome went to federal court on behalf of Williams this month seeking an injunction to prohibit the news media and police from linking him to the killings. Hearings were held last week on the requests, but no rul· ing has been issued. Today's bearing before State Court Magistrate Albert Thompson promised the first public glimpse of evidence gathered against Williams by a police task force and a team of FBI agents w,.ho have been prob- ing the string of slayings that began in July 1979. Much of that evidence was . gathered during a search of Williams' northwest Atlanta home June 3, but authorities re- turned Monday afternoon for another search that lasted 10'1'.i hours. Al least seven to elf.ht large paper bags~ materia , as well as a large piece of green can>et· IRA seeks march · BELFAST (AP) -Members • ol the Iriah Republican Anny, in a letter smugled out of prilon, are calline on their supporters to marcb on Belfut by th• tens of t.boutand.I Sunday to support the IRA bun1er at.rike. c ................ 1111 114/942-1111 Alf otMf dep1rtJMMa IQ..Ql1 llAINOf'Aea Uf W•tl a.y II . C-.. ,,,_.:Co\, Mell.._ '"1t11, caw MeV, c• *» ,., ... "" Orefttll c..e l"l*ltllillt ~ .... _, uwi.t, 111v•rttltM, eclllor1411 -ltr or td- ••rlltttrMllH llt•tl11 me, M , .. ...we.-w11....,1 ._ .. , ..,_...,.,,,,(...,...,,, _ .... ln1, were removed in two vans from the Williams' house as 10 to 15 officen searched the brick dwelling from the roof to the crawl space underneath. Tbey also were seen scavenging through garbage cans and searching the y.,-d. An officer at the scene, who declined to be Identified, said technicians were lifting fingerprints inside the houae as part of the search. Hollinden ends term on boards Fountain VaJley City Coun- cilman Al Hollinden wielded his gavel for the final time Monday a5 chairman -and member - of the Orange County TransportaUon Commiasioo. Also a member of the Oranae County Transit Dilt.ricl Board ot Directors, Hollinden wlll be replaced on both board.I next month by Santa Ana Clly Coun· cilman Daniel Griaet. Grlaet wu cbolen to take over the aeatl at a meeUn1 la1t week of the J..eacue o1 Oranc• County Cltlea, •bid> fl1la two of tbe five posltlona on eacb board. Holllnden'1 four-year terms end th11 mooth. He eald be de· clded not to seek reappointment becauae of the llkellkbood be won't run for re-election in Fountain Valley. 8oldin1 public office. ll a pnrequlllte to the tratllportaUoo· related poelt.lolll. • '811'1~rise' pageant due Ballet Russe heavy influence in 46th extravaganza 81 IOHN NEEDHAM Of'" ............... Tb• '6t.b annual Laauna Beach Paceant ol the Masters prom· iaea to be a briehter and less predictable show than in past years, with artist• such as Gauguin, Monet, Boech and Delacroix being featured. • About 250 press photographer• and report.en from publications ranging fr-om local weekUee to the Nation a l Geo1raphlc swarmed into Irvine Bowl Mon· day nitht to witness a sample or the 1981 offerings. The Lagwia Beach event pre · aents living models set in scenes copied from orlalnaJ art works, in effect re-creating the works wlth living people aa the 11ub jects. Inspired in part by the dazzle ol the Ballet Russe, this year's pageant fifures to provlde an element o surpru1e for even long-time pageant watcheu "The key this year will be the varying or our presentation," said Glen Eytchlaon, direct.or of the pageant. The Americana theme will be saluted again this year with a work by Laguna Beach art.lat Richard Bunkall litJed "Coney Island." Presa members got a sample of the. work featuring Marc Belanger, 10, of Laguna Niguel, Kristin Heard, 9, or Santa Ana, Blythe Callahan, 7, of El Toro and Joe Barker o f Laguna Beach. The piece shows the past glory of Coney Island, with a boy in knickers and two girls in bof!· From Page A1 NAPA ... firefighters, were injured bat· tling or watch.iq~ the blaze. Four were treated and released for smoke inhalation. Three re- mained hospitalized at Queen of the Valley Hospital in Napa lo· day. T wo had second-degree burns and one had a fractured wrist, Fowler said. A dozen air tankers that tlad bombed the fire with fire· retardant c he micals were grounded ovt!might, but 700 to 800 firefighters continued to struggle aeainst t.be names on tbe ground, said Napa sherifrs Capt. Ken Narlow. A white plume of amoke roee aevual thousand feet into the air. clearly v1alble from San Francisco, 40 miles to f.he southwest. Smoke created an eerie pink evening glow over Sacramento, 70 miles east. Temperatures of about 100 degrees and southeasterly winds of 20 mph created tinder-dry conditions, feeding the blaze and whjpping it onward. While many residents fled before the flames, hundreds more stood atop roofs armed with garden hoses to douse the rain of sparks. "I watched m y house bum from all sides. I couldn't un- derstand it. There were a lot ol explosions," said Ray mond Berendsen, who fled the names on Atlas Peak Road and huddled with other refugees in the Napa High School gymnasium. Whe n asked what she had saved his wife, Maudie Bell, replied, "This purse, that's it, and the dog." Although officials said there was no forced evacuation, hun· dreds Oed their homes as the fires advanced. Few wineries or vineyards were threatened. nets and boW9 walUn1 at a col· orful boardwitlk lee cre•m •taod to make a J)W"Ch&ae The m<>1t dramatic of Mon· day's aamplln& w H • repreMO Lalio11 or P'. PrtlH · work "The flame Leaper," wjth Coil• Meaa retldent Judi IJ)4Sro ln Mr tlrat role u a p11oant model. The sculpture 11howa en Ivory fi1ure le1pln1 ov&ir a broni.: flame , head tluna back 1nd Uahted torche1 held ln Heh hand In 11eemtn.i celebraUon. Bac kstaae . .t•ndinc befo"' blinkinai cam~r• •trobtr1, Miu Spero'• face, n ck. 1houlde111, arms and lep were cotted wllh a thick layc:r of chalky body makeup In pre1nm1lloo for t:wrr debut When •~ .. n·t wortrin1 H w- page1rnt m<Jd •I , aht! w1>rkl In OW personnel dt&,lf•tlment of Roc kwell Jnte rn1tt1tn1•I tn Newport 8e11ch M•ke up rcudy, ahe •nd • horde of pre.1t1 '*"P'-trottped upstaln to the 1ta1e whttr~ •a .. WH eeat.ed on ber untt4Uuf y perch on a m.euJ fr•m«'. wb~h wavered &.Wkr her weliht ''Are you comforhbl'"" asked director £ytl'h1~.m. whJI; those lo attenda.n<.:f' la.ulhed w1 the thought ol ~na 1 omlt>Nt~ m that poelUon From Page A l VETS •.. The protesters tald ~Y b.-d not taken eolid food for penocb ranging from 24 to ~ days Under arrangements wath the National Park Service, tbey said , tbey are permitted to erect their tent every morning as l.ong as they leave daily at 6 p.m. Gene Door or Torrance. Calif., who said he baa not taken food for 25 days, declared he would continue protesting until he died or got satisfaction. He said he has been arrested 67 times since his return from Vietnam and needs psychiatric care. Gesturing toward ·the White House, be said: "I'm either go- ing to die here of starvation or they're going to walk me into the White _House or to a nice restaurant, where we'll sit down and talk things over. "I'm either aoina to die here or violently in the streets and I'd rat.her die here," Dorr said. "I don't want to be responsible for any moreldlli.D4ts ... Crash kills cycle rider A commuter was killed this morning when two cars and a motorcycle stacked up al ll!e center divider of the San Diego · Freeway south or Seal Beach, according to the California Highway Patrol. The unidentified victim was believed to have ·been the motorcycle driver, said a CHP spokesman. The accident occurred on the southbound side of the ~reeway at 6 :15 a.m., tbe spokesman sajd. Three tow trucks were dis- pat&hed to the scene. Nuke march bqpns COPENHAGEN CAP) -More than 3,000 people began an 800-mlle march to Paris on Mon· to call for an end to all uc ar weapons in Europe. Reporters also viewed • COP>,'. ot Oau~uln's painUnc "Sac~ Spr1n1.' with Robena Cortes_ o( South Laguna and Beth Koehler of lrvlne . The colorful scene shows two Tahltlan girls seated by " 1prin1. seemingly at peace in their eurroUDd.lnga. · Others Included "Lotus Lilies'' by Charles Curran, with models l.ynell~ Webb of Laeuna Bead Mnd Barbara Eljenholm of Dan• Pulnl In a brilliant scene by • lily pond. t.hrlr Stephenson and Trot Cltim ()( Laeuna Beach appeared 1r1 "M ttrk11manahip," a scent l•k~n from a poster advertising tiuff•lo 8111 Cody's Wild West Ktv1w Thi: L•cun;, Beach Pageant of Ult' M UlA!r. w1 II run from July 14 ll> Au& ._, -.t the lrvlne Bowl. ~ [ From Page A 1 URAFT .•. '/JJ ya-t 1 rr'I. 1A thov contacted w1H t.utu 11CA. llJ tu.ve registere41 -'kt •JJ w"' lb.at .ume othen wuJ ~ ,,,, ;,M (If ""' young to be .,.,~ ...... Aw-~id 1'.!/M frAute enforce· ff#flJ ~ Karna oot.ed that </..,Vtt' • ,,_..~rlll& le&.i..sla. 16"' UJJd _,~ aJlclw the agenc)' 111 tt.~ tif,.-uJ :runty records to ttkatJ 'I ~tM /t.IUlha who have DfA tiCJM::d op St.a~ dn•t:r bc:erue record' and QtheT mtormauon allo could be uMd bl.-~ Soc:ta.l Security data woaJd be the most effecll ve met.bod &f C-ongreu approves, he said The US Supreme Court u consadenng the constilutaonality of the draft registration law, whic h covers men but not women When he proposed reinstating the draft. President Carter urged that it cover both sexes. But Congress made it clear it would not go along with register· ing women and Carter did not press the issue. Fr9m Page A1 ONOFRE. • • according to intervenor DoQ May, of the Friends of th~ Earth. • I The two geologists who dis-• covered the offshore zone ~ Gary Greene of the U .S . Geological Survey and Michael Kennedy or the state's Division of Mines and Geology -are ex· peeled to tesWy next week. The NRC staff supports the Edison position on tbe earth- quake safety of the huge nuclear plant. Southern California Edison predicts that commercial opera- tion or Unit Two could begin by the second quarter of 1982 while Unit Three could be "on line'' in 1983. Before they are fired up, however, it will take a favorable rulihg of the safety and licensing board, whose decision could be ap~aled to the NRC and ut.. Umately to the federal courts. Later hearings in San Diego by the licensing board will also focus on the adequacy o/ evacuation pJans to be used in the event of an accidental rf- lease o'f radiation at San Onofre. The hearings are being held at the .Stardust Hotel and Country Club here. ,., ....... Harry Henneberger of San Francisco relaxes with. a book in Golden Gate ~ark °' a couple o/ resident geese move in to take a closer look. AU were taking time to balk m iummer run. Denver 'fan' meets singer Two years ago, Vice Premier Fang Yl of China heard John Denver sing in • • Washington. Monday, they met on Fang's turf. The entertainer. visiting China as a tourist. met with the vice premier. who ex- pressed appr eciation for Denver's performance that night in 1979. the official Xinhua news agency re- ported. Fan g accompanied " Chinese leader Deng Xiaop- ing on a visit to the United States in early 1979. Stand by for Margaret Trudeau, reporter. The estranged wife of Canada's prime minister confir med she is considering an o rfe r of a job with television s tation CJOH in Canada. "I haven 'l signed a con- tract yet ." said Mrs . Trudeau. "If and when I do, you 'll hear about it " The job at staJc:e reportedly is that of co-host of an hour· long program of news and consum er items which f eatures l ive p hone -In • queries from -viewers. The s how . air ed each weekday morning, features five guests a day talking ''about everything from • psoriasis to lawn care." a • CJOH producer said. ,.,..._. Sen. S.l. HCJflOkmoa take• tinw to haw a rip of coffee from hU "California mug" during a preq con/er~ concerning government competition with private bulineu MondaJI on Capitol HiU. Tornadoes rip Midwest I ·;rhunderstorms trigger f looding in A rkansas.and Missouri 'tJ.S. s1tmmary TMre -e tlWMI of lM,,_ 'tlleftdey HI mutll of 0.. NortllMsl, Ille ..._,..,..., SIM"*' wllll llltfl .. ,.,.. "relures ...0 lllun09nt0f'l'li. 111 .,.. MldWetl left wldMcltMd floodin .. • ' Tll.....,_MS ~ "" 10 10 llKIW• of rein -pet1s of centr•I 4rllena.. Md •ltM "°"'" lled to De evecueied '" ._.~. Ken More ,.vec:uetloM Ml9'1C be ._ .... ,..,. Of lklel• selcl. llUI no lnj""I" -re re-Wt9d so '-lllweuk• ~IH·Sl.P N•il\•llle New Ori.-New Y0<k Norlota Okie City Omelle ~t•llCIO PlllledpN• ,,_nl• Plthtlur9" Pll•nd, Me Ptlend,On Repld C1ty St Lo.its StP·T- StSte MMle SOOll•ne Tuts• WetlllnQlft 71 70 '3 " ., " " I I .. ,, HI " .. 10 11 n • '3 •t • ,, SI 50 71 75 11 71 n ~ 71 70 as .. ff 51 SI .. 1J 4j • 77 ,. Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 Interchange meet set Caltrans to. air plans on 'most congested' freeway project By GLENN 8COTI' O{ .. o.ltf ....... The laborious plannln1 proc- ess to improve the Santa Ana a nd Costa Mesa-Newport free way interchan1e be1lns Thursday when Caltrana bolda its first public seulon on the project The meetin1 will start at l : ao p.m. in the Tustin City Council Chambers, 300 Centennial Way. The meeting is required in t.be state'• step-by -step plannln1 process for proposals to speed up traffic flow through what planners agree Is the most con· gested freeway interchange in Orange County. If all goes according to plan, the improvements could be com- pleted by 1988. The meeting is to give agency representatives and the public a chance to discuss a focus for the project. However, design constraints don 't of fer too many alternatives, according to Frank Weidler, Caltrans project engineer. He noted that a full· scale, $60 mWion improve ment project already has been reject· ed by planners because of the tremendous impacts it would have created for adjacent Tustin. Weidler said a more feasible proposal being examined at Caltrans is for a $30 million pro- ject which would feature two overpasses that would bridge the existing roads to connect paths between Santa Ana and Newport Beach. The interchange currently is comprised or four cloverleaf loops. With the proposal, two of the lesser used loops would re· main, but the two-lane 40 feet- high bridges would move the majority of traffic without the delaying circles. Under the proposal. the Ed- inger offramp from southbound Costa Mesa·Newporl Freeway would be closed and about 5 per- cent of Prentice Park, home of the Santa Ana Zoo. would be re- moved to make way for freeway ramps. Weidler said an eovlronmeota.I impact statement on the project, which will include a scenario of se veral impro vement alternatives, ls scheduled to be finished by Sept. 30, 1983. After that, right-of-way ac· quisltion and design work. will extend throur,h Sept. 1986. Construction should last about two years, Weidler said. The process is lengthy, he added, because one step must be completed before the next can be authorized. Environmental con cerns have slowed down freeway construction in areas whe re neighborhoods have grown. he observed. "In the old days, a Caltrans proj ect was perceived as something twerybody wanted," he said, adding that today, 1"we're not just building freeways in the middle of an orange grove." He added that the improved interchange wouldn't do away with the current bottleneck but wou Id transfe r congestion farther down the freeways. Budds to oppose Gates Huntington Beach resident to enter 1982 e lection By 0 . C. HUSTINGS Of .. Dellyl"tMllWtl Harry Budds of Huntington Beach, assistant chief of police for the Southe rn California Rapid Transit District, says he'll challenge Orange County Sheriff-coroner Brad Gates in next year's election. The election for the county post wiU be conducted during the June primary in 1982. Budds will be banking heavily on his educational and pro· fessional background to help him unseat Gates. The trans it cop holds a bachelor's degree from the University of Redlands and a master's in public ad· ministr ation from USC. He former- 1 y com · manded the Executive Staff Unit '5 , . ~~ ·. ( m a n a g e · •UOOI ment team) of the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office. ••• GEORGE WRIGHT, another cand1date for Gates' job. has named Dr. John P. Gruber, as bis campaign chairman. Wright, who ran unsuccessful· ly against Gates the tut time around, announced early this year he would try again. He says his campaign chairman teaches criminology at Chapman College in Orange and is president of the Western Society of Criminology. ••• E ILEEN PADBE RG ls now a partner in the Orange County political consulting firm once known as Robert Nelson & As- sociates. The firm is now known as Ne I son-Padberg Consulting. It s pecializes in political cam- paigns in the western U.S. One of Its current clients is Orange County Sheriff-cor on er Brad Gates. * * • THE UST OF Mike Curb sup- porters issued by staffers for the lieutenant governor's campaign for the R e publi ca n gubernatorial nomination in- eludes such Orange Countians as : Doris Allen. a Huntington Beach h igh school district trustee and former Assembly candidate : John E. Anderson, a partner in the Newport Beach law firm of Kindel a nd An· derson : Marci a Bents of Newport Beach, former co chairman of the Pr('s1dent Ford campaign in Orange County, Ke n Carpenter, son of Dennis. Also, Dennis Catron, former ch airman of th e California Republican Assembly and a Reagan backer; E H. Clark, president of Baker International Corp.; Assemblym an Nolan Frizzelle; Sheriff Brad Gates, and Assemblyman Ross J ohnson of Fullerton. Also. Gen. William Lyon, co- chairman of the Reagan victory dinner ; Vera Manning, presi- dent of the Republican Women for Reagan of Leisure World and former president of the Orange Co unty Federation o f Republican Women, and former Orange County Reagan chairman Willard S . Voit of Newport Beach. *. * SU PPO R TER S OF SAN Diego Mayor Pete Wilson's bid for th e Republi ca n gubernatorial nomination have a list, too. Here are some of the prominent Orange Countians Wilson partisans say are back· ing their man: Philip Reilly. president of the Mission Viejo Co.; Gavin S Herbert, president of Allergan Pharmaceuticals; Kenneth W Carlson, president of VTN Corp . Raymond R . Maggi president of the Apartment As- sociation of Orange County. Also, Bruce E. Nott. de- veloper, John M. Rau. president of David Industries of Irvine: J ohn F. Seymour, mayor of Anaheim and past president of the Californi a Association of Realtors. Also, Timothy L. Strader, vice president of the Koll Co.; Thomas Wilek. vice president of the Irvine Company; William D, Lusk of Lusk & Son Develop- ment Co .. and Harry G. Bubb, pres ident of Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. Rabies c linic 8et a t HB fire 8tation A rabies vaccination clinic for dogs will be held from 7-8:30 at the Warner Fire Station in Huntington Beach. Vaccinations will cost $3 each, according to a spokesman for the Huntington Beach Rotary North. which is sponsoring the clinic al 3831 Warner Ave. Dogs s hould be on a leash. the spokesman said. Manpo wer board gets neip director Craig Smithson of San Be rnardino has been selected as the new executi ve director for the Orange County Man power Commission Smithson . who r eplaced Robert C. Nelson , will begin his job on June 29. Nelson resigned the post in late February. Smithson was executive direc· tor for the San Bernardino Com- prehensive Employment Train- ing Act lCETA) program before his selection in Orange County. As chief of the Manpower Commission staff, he will be responsible for delivery or all CET A funding and operation or its seven major employment and train ing programs for the economically disadvantaged . The County Manpower Com- mission over sees an annual budget of $28 million. Fl-werflinto elM> -re ••-~ We rrentlN\, Mo., wllkll WM tleeft· lftt 11p from e ...-end tomedo tllel kllled • ~ -•nd crltl<elly Injured lier aon. A lorn•do elao tou<ll•d -Mondey In 1..emer, /ilt!O., but no lnjurlH «me tor elem ... .. re re-1ed. HIOll wlndl -rel11 etM> l•at.d •nd • torf\edlo wet(ll WH In •f· cl for • time for ••lre m e ... llttn\ Mttl*\lftO C4MIMY. rT~:'e11 twister J. .. reported touclllnt....., In P~ In western New Y-, 11u1 llltle defne91 -no l11J11rlo1 -• ,._-. tllrougll 11111 ewnlno U <9'11 sunny 1111••11-. CAll~•NtA AppleV .. ltT 8•1lerafle6d 100 ,. ~,~~--:-~::::::==:::::::::~~~~~~---:::;;;;;::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:;::;;;;;;;;,.;;; WJMl .... roeflofftwu•senclup. •••••tr••• In c entr•I 1118911A, end• JO.foot -lion well -tern ,,,,,., M;;rdocll Hltfl llool Ill Wlnct>endOn, Mus. One i. , en ....,,Y WOfnen, wn r•·· tel &lltMIY hur1 lly storms In r,MeN. .In llllnelt, 0••· J tmu A. _, __ lllCl.Ved Sc.,.,., .. , County dlMIW .,.., ltle llllrd ,_,, 111 1tftl lo 91( tell • deti9NU., _ ... _....... ~tllel lllH -,er--lnf11recl 12 ,,, 4 ..,._ el• toucllN doWft 111 rew, l"o., -Plttulwtfl, llut l11Jw ... or -io.. ~ -• Tornado wetcllH .. re Pou.cl dur· Int Ille ewnlno lrom WHlllnvton, O.C., Into aoulllem Now Enolelld. Very llo! _, .. , retumecl lo the Soulllwe11, where oerly e lternoon temperelur• ,_ owr 100 cl90r••, •net temperet!Wff In tM IOI efld tot were cemmon from IM nortlWrn Allentle ~I ec:,_ Ille 5out11Hst end Te-Vetloy, es well es U. aoulllorn Plelna end Ille lower "°'"'"· ~-r~fr-tlW l"ecllk --""° IN ner1Mfll •ocklff elld -u. ~n Gnat Lelle a TemporeturH et "''*''tllt POT reneect lrOll'I • tow of SI el Mullen. ldeho, lo t lllefl of lft ti Pt lM S...flles,Cellf. ScellorH tllunderatornu wen '-est far._.., fr-U. Middle Allentk c.6t ..,..... l'IOr1dl9, wltfl ~,..,.. _ .. ,.,.,_ ,_ ,,. Pklfk *"'-· Coa3ta l f oreccut ~flt C.C-ltft to ....... u .. ......, M .. Miiot -Llellt wer..._, w•-"""' .... 1Nr111119 ..... • •• ,..,. MUtll .... rty ... 16 lllltO ...... efttr-. ~.-trtto4....._ HltM tlld _,.,,.. •-clOUdl eNI '°' What do you llkt about the Dally Pilot? • What don't you like! Call the number below and ~ your mtssace will be recorded, tran1crlbtd and · ckllv.red to th appre>priate editor. De ~amt 24·hour anawertaa service may • M u~ t.o record leUMI to the editor on any topic. Ma!Jbox contrlbutort mutt lndud• tb~r • name and telephone num.,.r ror v.nncaUon. No dtftlatlan t'al .. , ple•e. ell• wla1t'1 on your mind. Temperatures Albeny Albuque Amerlllo AncllOrevo AllWVllle Allenla Allentc C1Y ee1t1m- 111n11ll)OIWll atamerck BolM 8oalon •r-vti. luff••• CMtrlllnSC :ti.r111n WI/ ::11e,.._ :lllc-.o :lftc•-· :1no1-:.iv .... Oel·l'tMI o.-Ott Mol-:>.troll )ulutll "••rM<*• ~•rtfwd ........ .......... " ...... i.n l~la Jeck1111vlle J_.u lteM(lty LHV ... l.lltle ltedl ""'••II•• :r:- " 104 100 ., ,, tS " t4 .. ,. .. • '2 .. ., as 11 18 a ,, 7t tS ti ., 71 ., n • " .. ft a '1 .. 1t 112 " .. .. ,. ••rat- e .... -e1, .. ., 81"'9p lllytM CelAlllM U C11lv., Clty 61 Eurell• •• Unuater S 1 Lone a...;11 .. LotAft991• 7J Meryavllle n Menrovle •• Monterey 74 Mt.Wiison ., "''"'" S2 "'•--' IMdl 61 OHl-7' 0111.erle eo l"elm 5'flflll ........... '7 .. _ ....... 41 Seer•,,_ $1 SellMI 10 s.a--.. U IMO .... •1 SM~rlllK~ ,. ..,.,_ M *'•AM J7 SMI•..,.._,• .a leM.ICrur 41 '-''• Merle SJ S-u MMl(.e .. MKltMifl JO T.._V .. ..., T""1Mi TetretKt y- """' ,.. n l't Ill 101 11 102 IU 70 11 M 100 • .. ,. .. 11 • llS 7J • " IU ft ,. ... • 1• .. 71 '1 .. 11 n .. 14 ,. • IU .. "' 71 ., • •2 II .. t.S SI 15 .. 70 1J ., 56 .. 11 t.S u .. n .. " .. " .., " .. .. u " S1 » ., 11 .. 11 ... " !: Su n, moon, tides a 16 TOOAY n l'lrtl .... •:t>e.m. -4.t • it1rs1111111 Jt01.m. 4.1 " *• ,_ 1:471.m. t.1 ® 6EMWISE ·. • •• I !J •I 1 ,, . • s Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tutlday, June 23, 1981 .- TJ,,urmond pushing 8 court prospects WAS H INGTON <AP) - Se nate Judiciar y Chairman St rom Thurmond ls pushin1 ei1ht poulble choices, includin1 'I three women and a federal ap- " pellate jud1e said to be the t front-runner, as the replacement for retiring Supreme Court ft' J ustice Potter Stewart. f In a letter to President Reaaan , T hurmond recom· mended Attorney General William French Smith, presiden- tia l counselor Edwin Meese III, h White House aide Elizllbeth Hanford Dole and five judges, among lbem J. Clifford Wallace or the 9th U.S. Court of Appeals in San Francisco. Wallace, or San Diego, was ' said by sources to be the favorite both with Thurmond 'T and at the White House. Smith, 1 meanwhile, has virtually ruled· himself out or consideration. Mr s . Dole is the wife of Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan. The Judiciary Committee m ust review the nom ination, , and Thurmond's s upport is therefore critical to the presi· dent's first opportunity to fill a ,Supreme Court vacancy. Other judges recommended by .... Thurmond. a South Carolina Republican, are Charles E. Simons Jr., Chief U.S. District Court Judge in Columbia, S.C.; Cornelia G. Kennedy of the 6th U.S. Court of Appeals in Detroit; Amalya L. Keane, or the 2nd U.S. Court of Appeals In New York; and C. Bruce Littlejohn ot the South Carolina Supreme Court. Thurmond released the letter Monday. Ms. Kearse la a black woman appointed to the federal court bench by former President Carter; Mrs. Kennedy is a COO· servatlve whose name frequent- ly pops up when the subject of naming the first woman justice comes up. Stewart announced last week that he had informed Reagan a month ago that he intends to re- tire this summer. Sources said the final choice will likely be announced by mid· July. White House aide Meese, 49, is known to have Supreme Court ambitions, and Smith has been a close friend and legal adviser to Reagan for several years. But the attorney general, who is 63. said over the weekend that his own name would not be among those he recommended to the president. And Smith's aides have said he genuinely does not want the job. Reagan pledged during last fall's presidential campaign that he would name a woman to the high court, but not necessarily to the first vacancy. •• Pleurisy slows pope's recovery •' .. .. ROME IAP> -The Vatican announced that Pope John Paul II has pleurisy but is "getting better" despite the chest ail- ment slowing his recovery from the Italian press for a rash of re· ports speculating on the pope's health. The Vatican said the pontiff in the past week had "signs of an inflammation of the right pleural cavity" but "is now get· ting better." MEDIEVAL SCENE -A sea of lances moses through the streets of Landsbut, West Germany, as citizens celebr ate the "Landshute Wedding" of Polish Princess Hed wig and the son . ........... of Bavarian Duke Ludwig, in 1475. Landshuters wear medieval costumes in country's biggest historical pageant every three years. gunshot wounds. · Dr. Emilio Tresalti, chief medical officer at Gemelli Hospital where the pope was taken over the weekend, said, "I would say there is no serious risk to his life. He is better today than yesterday." It said: ·'The preliminary tests following his admission to Gem e lli Policlinico Hos pital have demon s trated the regression of this pulmonary af. fli ction. His fever is going down. Other tests are being made . When these are completed, a medical bul~tin will be issued. Congressmen's notes riiay carry stamps The Vatican announcement Monday gave few details, but said the diagnosis was based on preliminary tests and criticized RILL Y ASSUMAILE IHTEaEST OML Y 2ncl IRUSI DEEDS 0 WHER /MONOWHER OCCUPIED Call W1ll1am B M itchell Call loday for quole • No oohga11on Irons notionol f\Jndlng (714) 975-1128 ==$ A lk.9nMG ••I ...... <0<111Hlloft . ®' . ~ -·· • R / • .r II CVieH<S On "--. (l~ ' en 1 i::r. J ~I..~ :~,,--1 .uenta nea t .. l ~·J1i'1 By GERALD WINKLER, D.0.1. ~· WHY A GOLD CROWN? You n o rmall y associate gold crown• with kings or qucen11. But the avera1c per•on can have a gold crown also not on his head but in his mouth. And It will probably be a lot more practical than thl' kln&'s heed piece. Cast gold r rown• cover lht' cu1p11 < chewlnl( surf are 1 of back teelh entirely 1111 well as three or more other aurfacu They rtt over the rem1lnl n1 porllun of a prepared tooth. Crowna are uHCI to restore proper tooth rorm and contour• ror the correct bllln• function when much of the tooth 11 extensively d1m11ed. Gold Is an Ideal restorative material for uae In relormtn1 the 1h1p1• •n'I rurll't 11111 ur .. tooth In r111·1. or 1111 rP11torAllVl' m1t4'rl11h1. 1old 111 the 111 rtllllll'•I and 11111'11 llinJI l1111tln1 There 11re uther re1111on11 tor lhe u11e uf 110111 tu well H llmic lite 011ld c•an provi de mu1lmum rHl11t11n l!e 1g11ln1t the rorrett of r h ewl nl( oh tooth 1urh11•e11 fl'luld11 In the mouth 1•1rnnul 11trecl goltl <fold will not ahrlnk or ••Ji•nd ottre It hos been <'t!ttlt!ttlt!tl IHlo the 11r4'pllretl •uttlce. Br ••k••e o f tht ru I oralfon 11 lu1 llkt11y Oeralcl Wl•lller, D.D.~. ' and 1bll4H'l11 .. 1401 A\'ou•. '41tttf' Mt, Stwport lleat h Phon111 '4t•41 .. \ WASHINGTON (AP> -Those letters congratulating consti· tuents for a birthday, graduation or wedding may start carrying stamps instead or just a con· gressman's name in the upper right comer. Pending legislation would bar members of Congress from us- ing free Senate and House mail service for such congratulations and condolences but would allow them to address their consti· tuents as "postal patrons" in· stead of by name . Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, said Tuesday he expects the bill to be approved by the Senate Government Affairs Committee next week. He said the "postal patron" provision would save $1 .2 million in mail being re· turned to the Senate from un· delivered letters addressed to people who have moved. Call 642-5678. Put a tew words to work tor you. If it's got wheels, you'll move it faster in a Dally P ilot classified ad.Call 642-5678 and a f r lend ly ad- vlser w i 11 help you CAJ>Y'S BAR an<1 ~RILL NOW APPEARING "BOB GULLEY BAND" Wed thru Sun. THIS SUNDAY BOSS OUR CHEF AROUND I turn your wheels Into C85h. "LOST ANGELES" Sat. & Sun. Afternoons Mon. & Tuea. Evenings CAPY'~ B AR an<l f~RI LL 114 McFedden Ptece Newport Beach 675-1094 Dancing In ana Point To Rock, Reggae, Pop, Blues Country·~ es tern .' I ,, ' AND DESIGN YOUR OWN OMELEITE WITH OUR ALL-YOU-CAN -EAT-SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCHf $6.95 We have a feast of a table. more than 30 feet long. fllled with delicious breakfast and lunch entrees. fruits and salads and breads-plus our chef (an omelette expert) stands waiting for you to tell him how to make your custom omelette. he'll cook It right in front of you tool ......................................... Come to Calabash this Sunday for Champagne Brunch -and come hungry I Appeartng Jun• n.•. 21 MllDMOI. June~H .. IHL .. OCKIRI June21-27 JERRI L YNNS I THI IKYLAND BAND .-ua, 1, 12, u GIORGI IUTTI I THI HOT CROii 8UNI 34130 Coast HI hw• , Dena Point 881-8888 Local. county. state. national and international ' events come to your doorstep lhiihl Piiat in the bright. light and lively ~~I e GAF.AT ENTERTAINMENT NIOH'ltY IN OUR SPACIOUS LOUNGEf e COMPLIMENTARY n.ESH "CRACK-AND·PEEL·rr'' SHRIMP PLAnER WITH EVERY DINNER MEAL CALABASH lANDINO a RE~AI ' 'RANT DISTILLERY ~ 1 nv n (714) 642·98SS TUE£ ttwu SAT. Oplrl t t 00 AM 171 £. 1'Nl ltrMt. COID Me& CA _, SUN: BAUNCtf t0:30 AM-2:30 PM In the Yon't Centllr at 17th 8ftd Or'lftgl 04NNER ft'om 4 PM \ r i Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 s Gavin criticizes press Ambassador says remarks.about Cuba were off the record ~ 'GREAT SHAME' > Amb•u•dor G•vln : • ' SAN DIEGO <AP) -U.S. Am· bassador to Mexico John Gavin has accused U.S. reporters who leaked his off.the-record re- mark.a to a Mexican newspaper of lacking professionalism. The former film star sai d that in leaking a report on the back· ground press section , one or more U.S. reporters "did not respect the ground rules" and brought "great shame" on the American press. After the recent briefing, ex· cerpts of his remarks appeared in the Excelsior, a major Mexico City newspaper. The newspaper quoted Gavin as ca lling th e Cuba n s "marionettes" or the Soviets. It also scolded the ambassador for reportedly telling the U.S. journalis ts that President Reagan would immediately cancel plans to attend the Oc· tober North-South summit in ( ( ~ " Newton faces jail : for gun conviction Cancun s hould Mexico attempt to "negotiate" the attendance of Cuban leader Fidel Castro. Mexican officials reportedly had agreed before the White House announcement of Presi· dent Reagan's attendance that Castro would not be invited . Speaking lo reporters prior to his speech at the national con· ference on immigration, Gavin said there were "certain inac- curacies and distortions" in the Excelsior's account but said he did not hold the newspaper res ponsible for printing the story. "What is evident -and as an American I say this with great shame is that our press, so ready to look down t heir noses al their Mexican colleagues. should think about their own standards o r professiona li sm and responsibility," he said. The newsp aper also ques· tloned the exclusion of Mexican r eporters from the briefing. Gavin said that arrangement was made by a U.S. Embassy public information officer who was "very red-faced" about the · mistake. Gavin's appointment by the Reagan administration drew .,..,,........ criticism earlier this year from APPLAUDED American dancer Joanna Berman or San t h e Mexican press, which h h claimed he was ill-prepared to Rafael earned heavy applause at the Bolshoi T eater w en serve as a diplomat. s he performed in the second round or the Moscow lnterna- o r the charge that he has too tional Ballet Competition. However , she was eliminated in the little contact with the press. following round. State aide sued over river funds SACRAMENTO (AP> -An ''outdoor" group has sued state R esources Secretary Huey Johnson to force him to pay back $337,000 it claims be im- properly spent to get federal controls over North Coast rivers. The National Outdoor CoaJi. tron filed the s uit in Sacramento County Superior Court, claiming J ohnson spent the public funds ''for Items not authorized in the state budget." The coalition, made up of groups or off.road vehicle users, rock climbers, amateur miners and the like, claims J ohnson bad no autho r ity to s pend the $337 .000 last August to get North Coast rivers into the federal wild rivers system. According to the sCljt, Johnson used the money improperly to pay for an application · to the federal government seeking to put the rivers under federal pro- tection. Representatives of the coali· tion say the 60,000·member or· ganization has no connection to timber or farm interests. who are suing in federal court to re· move the rivers from the federal system. The North Coast rivers are the Eel, Klamath . Trinity , S.mith and lower American411 ravers. The action in January by out· going Carter administration In· terior Secretary Cecil Andrus• means the federal government cannot build new dams on the rivers. State law already bars new state-funded dams there. OAKLAND (AP) -Black Panther Party leader Huey Newton has been ordered to sur- render July 9 to begin serving a prison term for his conviction on charges or being an ex-felon in ' possession or a handgun. After the hearing, a bitter Newon, who faces up to three years behind bars for the 1978 conviction. told reporters, "I feel he (Karesh> is under pressure and doesn't have the fortitude to be a man of his own ... I am surprised at the judge for not having any spine. Gavin acknowledged that he has fi!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!~!!~~~~ll a r eputation "at least in some Alameda County Superior Court Judge Joseph Karesh re· jecled a bid by Newton's attorneys to keep t h ei r client free on $50,000 bail while the con· viction is ap· pealed. K ares h ca ll ed N e w t o n ' s N•WT«* latest bid for freedom "frivolous." Abortion wait eyed SACRAMENTO (AP> -The Sen ate has approved a man· datory 24-hour waiting period for abortions. but has defeated a biU to prohibit group insurance policies from covering abor· lions. "He knows that nothmg has changed, there are still many questions left to be a nswered in the appellate court." Alameda County Deputy Dis· trict Attorney Tom Orloff, who strongly urged that Newton be ordered to prison, told Karesh, "There comes a time when the law must put a period after a sentence." In rejecting the bail bid, Karesh did give Newton up to July 9 to me further motions in state or federal appelJate courta. Newton has been free on bail while battling the conviction, stemming from the discovery by police of two handguns in bis apartment. Newton claims that at the time of his arrest his 1964 COil· viction on felony assault charges bad been overturned and he was not an ex-felon. circles, for being tight lipped. If the allegation is intended to in- dicate that I don't think I should make a major speech just any time a reporter thrusts a microphone in my face. then I accept that it's true." On that point, Gavin quoted a Spanish proverb that translates roughly as, "The fish dies when he opens his mouth to take the bait.·· R estaurant, dairy stor~ burn CORDELIA CAP> -A ~ark from a welder's torch has been blamed for a fi re that destro,yed a restaurant and a dairy plant, caus ing damage estimated at $6 ·million to S8 million. Fire officials announced the suspected cause Sunday, one day after the fire burned the Red Top Restaurant and adjoining Raley ~tores milk plant to the ground. PUC fines railroad TIRED OF TRAFFIC JAMS? SAN FRANCISCO !AP> -Safely and health rule violations on Southern Pacific r ailroad cabooses have led the stale Public Utilities Com· mission to impose a $5, 100 fine on the transporta· lion company. CA LL D E l.ANE\''S FOR FREE H O ~E OJ;LIVER\' SE R VICE. YOUR O RDE R IS UNDER COMPLETE REFRIGERATION FROM OUR STORE TO YOUR DOOR. <SS0.00 Mll'lilMUM PLEASE>. SHUTTERS CUSTOM QUALITY SHUTTERS Designed, Finished Installed I ' The fine, the m aximum under law, was levied after lhe United Transportation Union all eged that the railroad commitlf;?d 746 violations of a 1963 general order on safety and health. DELANEY'S 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY .•. AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841 or 548-1717 • " . Among the complaints were those dealing witb drinking water. first aid kits, fire extinguishers. lighting. heating, poor weatherstripping and radio communications. Simplici(y Funerals by Pierce Brothers When dignity and cost are considered. Pierce Brothers' new S1mpllc1ty Funeral is a most welcot"f')e solution And only $795. Pre· arrangement and l1nance plans are also avai- lable. Contact your neighborhood Pierce Brothers or write for add1t1onal information. rffi simplic ity lJ\[_j funerals Pll..CI lllOTHIM -HLL ~AY 110 8toedw9y, Cott• Meal 112627 (714) 642-9150 ~4i- PLUMBING ·I HEATING SERVICE & REPAIR MODERNIZATION Ti:t!t::H NEW CONSTIUCTION RESIDENTIAL-CC>ttWERCIAL Complete line of American Kohler Standard Fixtures. Moen & Price ~ftter Kitchen & Lavatory Faucets. Water Heaters, Oispcsal,. Do-It-Yourself Supplies. -St1te ContraotOfl Uclenee 1241927 -e - Slore Hours 9·6, CIMed Sundays 2920 Newporl Blvd., Nf'wport Beach 673 -5520 HEIRWOOD MANUFACTORY 1977 Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 To have Y0'4r appointment echeduled, please call NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS loc•ted In the heart of w.etclln Plaza. corner of Weatollff Drive and Irvine Avenue. Newport Beac h at 645·8505. CALL NOW to reserve your scheduling tlmel ~otography Oates: J'1ne 30th through July 3rd 3:00 p.m. • 9:00 p.m. 9·5 Monday thru ThUnday, 9-6 Friday, 9-1 Saturday. Orange eo .. t DAILY PtLOT/Tuelday, June 23, 1981 QUEENIE ~~~ Cl•••ll .. f-1~ ... -... _ "la that you, Glla mon1ter ... er ... ah ... dear!" Mussels quarantined DEA R PAT O U NN : I m o\'ed t o California a couple of months aao and was surpri ed to learn that there's a quarantine on California mussels C\'ery year from April throu~h Ot'tober ls there something wron g "ith tht-OC't'an water during these months. or "'ha t" J 0 . Irvine Thia an•••I quarantl•e is to proted e\'~ry~ from die bJ1hly tuk polsoa found la slllellrislt d•ri•I the Hmmer and fall •••tld. Eali•I toxlc·coatal•lDI mauela leads to ac•te dlstarbances of central Hn'09 f,nctJGas. The greatest baaard ls from musela, bat there's also danger, to a lesHr e:stent, from clams. Only the wblte meat of clams shoald be eaten. aams shoald be taken oaJy from areas free of sewage contamination and be tboroughJy cleaned and washed before cook· lag. The source of the poison ls the Goaya'ula C"red tide"> organism which gives the ocean water a deep reddish·brown color and is food for plankton feeders such as musels, clams and oysters. Abalone, crab and shrimp do not feed on plankton; so there's no danger of poisoning from the m. Dented can ivarning DEAR PAT DUN N: Please address yourself to the "safety" factor in pur<'has ing . dented <'anned goods sold at reduced prices. T.B .. Costa Mesa You may be taking a chance II you choose this bargain, according to the Cooperative Extension's home adviser's of· lice. A slightly denled can probably is aafe, but lids should be slightly concave and not flip up and down If pressed. The can should not show any sign of LJulg- ing or leaking. nor s hould the food s purt out of the can as if under pressure. when opened. If you do buy dented ('ans and any of the above happens. discard the product. Do the same when any opened canned foods is moldy, bubbly or has an unpleasant odor. Matche. kept dry DEAR PAT DUNN: Can you \ell me how to water-proof matches? I'm fixing up a First Aid kit for my boat, and I think this would be a good thing to include ln it. B.E., Corona del Mar The most lne:speulve way to water-proof matcllel la to dJp tltem ln llala aaU pollala. Dtp one at a time or la 1maU ba&d1ea. nla la· formation comet from Uae Girl Scoat Handbook, a wealtla of laformatloa • bae•· peulve craft.a ud aafety matertab. Old· fHlllJo.ed ldtchen or wood matclaes w"ld be moat reliable. Keep tbem la a smalJ tla bo•, aln1 with a 1trlp of aandpaper for Hre 1tr1ll· "•ei wlaen you need &o uae them. t Sleep clinica luted DEAR PAT DUN N: J was Interested In your recent item about warm milk belna a·n aid for sleep. I wi sh this helped me. but It didn't. I want to look Into being treated at a "sleep clinic," but J don't know how to con· tact one. I'd also like some basic Information about bow they operate. J . W .. Huntin1ton Beach Dodon a1ualJy refer patient• to sleep cllnlc1, IO you may want to dl1ca11 tlll1 with yoar peraoaal play1ldan. Some cllnlc1 are set ap .. part ol llo9pitaJ1; odten 1re coaaected with privately owned sleep labl and are more research oriented. Some clinics accept peo· pie on aa ln·patlent b11ll Ollly, tMlt 8'hera ac· cept bolb In· and oat•patleata. Tlte pregram VI mott 1leep cllalc1 ID· cl•des a t .. roath pby1lcal e:sam aad p1ycltolo1lcal te1t1a1 precedln& several nlsllta ot EEG mdles dartac wlllclt tile ill· 1omalac la moal&or'ed to deterelae wltat ab· aormaJJtlff exist ill Ill• tleep patten. A Hit of 1leep elllllet .. avall~ble from Dr. WUltam Demellt, AMeclatloe of Sleep Dl.Mnlen Ce•· ters, ..,_. Ualverslty Sdtool of Medldlae. StHferd. catu. MJtl, or Peter a.. 8rltlt•• Hotpllal Sleep Olalc, 7Zl Hat ...... Ave., Bo•tea. M111. nns. Florida restaurant haven fer illegal aliens \ J'ORT LAUDERDALE, ,, •• <AP) "These people 1re like lndenturtd were UleCaJ alJena. -Hour·)oq wait.a are not uacom· servant.a. They are bein1 exploited "We miaht have aet up a pipeline. moo few 1 table at Carloe and Pepe'• for the proltt of the company." We have Jobi here and there are ao l'lth Street Cantlna. But lt'a not t.be The lmml1ration Service raided many people tryin1 to work," aaid MHlcan food and 1tant mar1arttu the restaurant twice thi1 year. On LaManna. "If there waa a pipeline it that have c1u1bt the attenUon ol U.S. May 8 a1ent.a arrested nine lllecat was inadvertent. We don't recrUit immiaraUon ottlcialt. allen1. They a1reed to leave the them. They come to UJ for Jobs." Aeenta or the U.S. Jmm11ration country voluntarlly. On June 17 , La Manna aaid the two INS raids and Natura1iaation Service claim a1enta took 14 undocumented "put us ln a blnd. We'r e now t.ryin1 that the restaurant routlneJy ferrtn worken lnto cu.stody. The»e alJena to cban•e over to citizens of the Unit· llle1al aliens from CaJUomla to Fort al10 race deportation. ed Slat.es." Lauderdale to work as bu1boy1, Restaurant mana1er Steve LaMan· The popular restaurant la owned by cooks dishwashers and Janllora. na did not deny that the restaurant Califoroia·base d e ntrepreneurs Most ~e from El Salvador. has hired ille1al aliens. He 1ald the he aded by David Alderman of "It's a place where we can 10 and company, whlch employ• about 1!50 Malibu. quickly catch a handlUl of llle1al workers, requires only a Social The Fort Lauderdale News and aliens," said Truman L. Carr, acting Security card frofti job applicant.a. Sun·Sentinel report~ that the com- chief of the U.S. Border Patrol in But he aaid he did not know that pany has been fiymg Hle1aJ aliens North Miami. the Latins arrested by INS agents rrom California lo Fort Lauderdale Introducing alnce 1978. Federal ollicia.lJ conflrm the fiilhta took place, but would not di1close bow many ille1aJ aliens were Involved. The U.S. Labor Department in Atlanta orde~ the restaurant 1D March to repay 257 workers at leut $20,000 in back wases. The payments began in March and will continue through Au1uat, the newspaper 1aicl California attorney Paul Shoop, who represented Carlos and Pepe's in the dispute with the Labor Depart· ment , said the buainesa "didn't get wh e re we a re by c beaUn1 our employees." LaManna said all workers current- ly a re paid minimum wa1e. ase atta11 • • • ma11c1 ervtces. We've come to California to give you the credit you deserve. If yo u stopped by our new Newport Beach office today, chances arc you would have a Joan decision tomorrow, a homt! equity• decision usual- ly within a week. You see, we're part of ROmething bigger-the Chase Manhattan organl1..ation. That gives us the size and resources to Qffcr you loan ranging from $3,000 to $100,000 or more. A variety of these loans include personal, home improvement, car, boat, home equity,• installment loans, and.busine s loans. The reason we're so fast is because our Newport Beach lending officers are experienced decision makers with full authority to approve most loans-sometimes right on the spot. And Cha~ offers you a loan approval in ad- vance when you want time to shop around. So if you earn over twenty-thousand dollars annually, call us. After all, we're here to give Californians the credit they deserve. Call Brian Rennie, Vice President. (714) 760-2671 . Chase Manhattan Financial 5ervices. 2 Corporate Plaza • Suite 100 Newport Beach, California 92660 (Near the intersection of Pacific Coast You'll find us ~ry resourceful. Highway and Newport Center Drive.) fit --CllABE . ..... Ch.IN Manhatt~n Financia l SerYlcet, Inc. C ~ ..... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---~~ ........ ---~...:.o..--~~--~..._----....._~~--~~~__.;--~..;..;.~~~~~~~~~..a.~__, • t ---... --.-- DIVORCE UPSE'M'ING Princeu Margaret NON-ENGLISH Prince PhUip GERMAN DESCENDENT Queen Elizabeth 11 Matrimony of royalty not always successful LONDON <AP> -The wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer on July 29 will be the 18th in the royal family this century, but the first of an heir lo the throne lo an Englishwoman for 303 years. It will be the first wedding of a prince of Wales for 118 years. The 17 previous 20th century mar- riages in the royal family mosUy have worked well and happily. The royal family, like many other families, has had its s hare of matrimonial ups and downs, however -from the divorces and executed wives of King Henry VIII to the mis- tresses and illegitimate offspring of King Charles II to the affairs of the profligate King George IV, who so loathed his wife Caroline that he locked her out of his coronation in 1821. . 4, 1677, when Prince William married Mary, daughter of the Duke of York, at St. James Palace in London. William and Mary became joint Protestant monarchs in 1689. But Lady Diana is a true English rose. Her father, the eighth Earl Spencer, can trace his English fami- ly over 500 years to John Spencer, who lived in the parish of Hodnell in Warwickshire in the reign of King Henry Vl. The last wedding of a prince of Wales was that of Edward, eldest son of Queen Victoria, who became King Edward Vil. He married Princess Alexandra of Denmark in 1863. He was 21, she was 18. Victoria hailed the beautiful princess as "this jewel." Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23. 1981 ' LUS ES Model Furnishings Sale Sat. June 27th Only IOA.M. • 4P.M • 15185 Springdale, Huntington Beach ALL SALES FINAL ! 0 • I Goklnwest Edwwds E N+s w SprilMJdah Cash & Carry ~ Ho lefwtds Gr..._ Ho bc"-ges i • ~ u :I The biggest upset in more recent times was the abdication of King Edward Vlll -later the Duke of Windsor -In 1936 to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson. It caused a constitutional crisis and a deep rift in the Royal Family. They married in 1937 in France. The duke died in 1972, aged 77, in Paris . His widow sWl lives there. She turned 85 on J une 19·and is in bad health. Four-year-old Prince William of Prussia, later Kaiser William II, got so excited al the wedding that he pried a piece of quartz from a ceremonial dagger he was wearing and tossed it over the choir. He bit !:================================================; two older guests who tried to restrain n him. The title Prince of Wales is bestowed on the heir to the throne at the discretion of the monarch. Charles is the 21st prince of Wales. Another major upset was the 1978 divorce of Princess Margaret, sister of Queen Elizabeth II, and photog- rapher Lord Snowdon. They married in 1960. There have been two princes of Wales between Edward and Charles but neither held the title when they married. Prince George, later George V. was not granted it until eight years after his marriage while Prince Edward became King Edward VIII before his marriage. For 303 years, royal hel.n have married non-English partners in the search for dynastic links. The first Prince of Wales, wealt-willed Prince Edward, who became ! King Edward JI in 1307, was 1iven · the liUe by his father Klng Edward I in 1301 and married seven years later. He lived to wish he hadn't. For example, Queen Elizabeth II, great-great-1randdaughter of German-descended Queen Victoria, is married to Greek-born Prince Philip. He is the only son of Prince Andrew of Greece although abo re- lated to Victoria. Edward, who preferred male favorites up until his marria1e. wed crafty, s trong-minded Isabella, daughter of King Philip IV of France at Boulogne in France. She and her lover, the Earl of March, deposed him and had him killed in Berkeley He and Elizabeth married at Lon· don's Westminster Abbey Nov. 20, 1947, two years after World War Il. It was a time of shortages when food and clothing were rationed. Like any other British bride then. Elizabeth saved clothes-ration coupons for her wedding dress. The silk CIUDe from China. The silk worms of Japan and Italy, wartime enemies, were shunned as Wlpatriotic. Castle in 1327. Bowzer nurses wounded pride Elizabeth succeeded to the throne on the death of her father Feb. 6, 1952, and was crowned Queen June 2, 1953. NORMAN, Okla. (AP> -When a fellow is rebuffed by a lady, he likes to nurse his wounded pride in private. That's what police believe happened to Bowzer. Queen Elizabeth's father, King George Vl, married the daughter of a Scottish earl, Lady Elizabeth Bowes- Lyon, in 1923. Queen Elizabeth's grandfather King George V married a German bride, Princess Mary, daughter of the Duke of Teck, in 1893. A police alert was issued for Bowzer . a S·foot-long iguana, who turned up missing, said Larry Moore, Norman police dispatcher. The last time an heir to the lbrooe married an Englishwoman was Nov. DEA TH NOTICES --------- PUBLIC NOTICE .. .,. .. PICTITiout ll#M .. aM MMMITATa .. WT TM ..._..,. ~ It ..... liull· COOPER ~lemorial Hospital. He 1s _ .. : DAVID R. COOPER. age surn\'e<I by his wife Karen. H u T T o N / 11 o A c H 44. or Costa ~te sa. Ca 2 sons Robert and James of L.ITHOGllAPHEllS,,... "" ""' P d J 18 h h h . t A-.c.taMitN,Cellfotftla..a asse away on une . t e ome. 1s paren s u•o ..,.....,..& °'**"...._ 11K., 1 9 8 1 at Cost a :\1 es a Lawrence \Ind Cecyl Cooper • ~urpw.a-. ,_Cl llOntaS SNmfl' MOITUAllY 627 M.in St ..... ntington BHch 536-6539 PACtftC Y•W MIMOI W PAll Cemetery Mortuary Chapel-crematory 3500 Pacific v.._ Drtve Newport Beach 644-2700 NcCOb«:ll MOITUAUS Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laguna Htlls 766-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 •of Klamath Falls, Oregon. Tiiis ......._ 1. cofldUctM lt'f • c•" also sur\'l\'ed by his brother ,or•t'-';~ ""lfttlfll& Gordon Cooper, 3 sisters .. • ot11r111utllie. 11K. Janet Klein. Katherine Wl"t.ftl.l'ea•lll C.artwright and Mary Carol ==..:c•.wv Singley. Mr. Cooper was a Tfll• .....,_.. •• .. ..., w1t11 t,.,. graduate of Lewis and Clark CWfltY cien o1 Orenee c:-tv .., College or Portland. Oregon. J-''· ""· ,.~ a member of the ~l esa l"Wl~Or .... c:MttO.llyPI ... , Verde Country Club and J-u .•.J1011y1,1•,tt11 aaMt Theta Chi Fraterni t y . :\temorial ser\'iC(',.'S will be held on Tuesday. June 23. PUBLIC NOTICE 1981 at l :OOPM at the Picnnauteutu••• Presb)'t«tan Church of the llWM ITATllM9'" Covenant, Costa :Mesa. Ca . .,.!i':. .... ~ ,..,_ ••• ••111 Prl\·ate Interment at Paciric WAT111ir11o"T l"llOl"allT•H. View Memorial Park, ''°"' ,..lfk c... H..,_•v. s-t Newport Beach. Ca., I~ lieu ~~-=-..:.4!·c..1,..,,..<M> Of nowers the famll) SUg· ...... ._. tm1 c.• C.y IAftl H-.. gesu memorial contribu· ......,aMc. c..tlfwlNnwt. • lions be made to the Open J-It. ~ 2t11 J•w ,_..., Heart Foundation c o ~fesa ~=-'==~tty• c•· Verde Country Club. 300C ..., .. ._ Clubhouse Road, Costa ...._.,.,..~.11K. Mesa. Ca. wv-...,,.._ ,. .... =_ ......... 6Cff\JTI' C-IY Ctef1I 9' Or-. CowMY • LITA SCHUTT. a resident "-s, ""· ,...... or Coaia Mesa. Ca. a Ince ,...... 0r.,.. c...e o.ity ...... 1938. P~ away on J~ne ,,_ •. M. 21.-."" ..-.. 20, 1881. She ls 1urvlnd by her aon Jobn Schutt of San PUBUC NOTICE Pedro, Ca., a daughter Lella .. ---------- Pear11011 or Hat Creek. ca.. ":..'":f.:•.:r dau1hlert Belly Flora or Tfle ,.. ...... ,.,_. -,...,. Coata Mesa. Ca., Carolyn~•: Hunt ot Newbury Park, Ca., 1...1L.~:r: ~";"!"J:'!;:· 11 1randchlldren and 5 ~..,. • · sreat·arandchUdren. Rosary w11ttM1 "· ~ • .,.,. ..._ ... wlll bf recU.ed on Tunday. =-....._ .,,_..-, c:.t!fenN J1ane 23, 1111 al T:OOPM at hmll 1 c... ,_. • .._... Paclflc View Ch•t•'· om. . ...,..;..,~...,. luvlct1 will be htl on tM• ....._ •• ceMIM ... w • Wedneeday, June 24. t•t al--·=~ l :OOPM at Paclflc View Tiit. ......... _.....,. ... • Chapel. Interment al Pacific c-itrc:lft., .... CMoJty .. ..., Vltft' Memorial Perk "·""· ,._ PuUlt View MortHry • ........,._°"'°"""""' Newl)Ort Beach dlrerto._ ,.,,.. 1. •. "., • .-... Calltomla Contrmdor'1 Lloente 272113 N~a Contr1ctor'1 Uoenee tch your new floor lnst-alled by professionals,, AllD SAYE llOWI SlrOllCJ WmT..ties CJD .tth •••riorpr~b mdMl'Tlce We sell the best floors made by Armstrong, America's leading flooring manufacturer. and then install them by skilled craftsmen. We back up your new floor with double warranty coverage. •The Quality of material is guaranteed by Armstrong; •Installation is guaranteed by The John Bloeser Carpet C.O. '2?f;A New Designer Solarian Floor ..._..,,.. ~ ~.... . IMteled lR yowa•eroge f"xl2' ldtc...._ lllLOOl ,..AIATIOMAM>CO._.. IXTIA COSTA MESA 'J!1'D S. BRISTOL ta.. aoca so.°' ... ., 1714) 751-2324 ' 527900 or ta LOCATIONS IN LOIA ... US LO ... llACH PIMMIC t• AVAtUa&.I PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR: Coupon Savings, Complete Stocks, Local News and Sports, and Advertised Values. READING ENJOYMENT 7 DAYS A WEEK In the ' " ... ~· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 11 I 'II\\ ~EYSMGtc00 la• NCW8 l(UNQAJ "Tile Nlture Of Evll" I TlCT~OOUOH M•A•S•H Paydey brlngl I Wlndlell 10 HaWk..,., 1 bribe to Henry, a peal1 necklllOI 10 Hot Ups ind 1 venlll'led poker pot to Trappe< m OOOOTIMU Tile lact 11111 Willona'a new boyfriend hN I phyalcll d-blllly Ct .. t• I Vlry 1w1tw1rd ptc>Olltn eG ELECTRIC COMPAHY (R) UNIVERSAL -"Waltr Cronkite's Universe," the award-winning science program, returns for a 12-week run beginning tonight at 8 on ChUnel 2. (See story below>. Cl) C88HEW8 Q]l AllC HEWS e:ao 0 JOKP'S WllO CD WEI.COME BAa<, l<OTTEA When Weatungton g111 hooked on p<lla. Gibe and Ille S-lhOgl II)' IO help lllm g) IEHNY HILL Go abolrO 1Np wolh Benny in Charge SJ KCET NEWSBEA T «i> STUDIO SEE "BMX" A N-JtrffY teen coechel klda in moto- crou. apectlCullr sand ~lptur11. the rare lltghl • ot a S011r balloon (RI Cl) NEWS ®J BARNEY MIL.LEA A snooting oncooent leads the detec11ve1 ot tt>e 12111 precinct to ponder lhe dlf· lerence bttween sex ther1Py and prolltlullon (.s) AOABTED MWUM MAE Hanny Youngman Ille muter of lhl one-lone< and sometimes ol thl v10- lln, gell lhl rOISllng Of hll Ille from lhOw·bti gre111 @ MOVIE "Journey Back To Oz' ( 1972) Anlm•ted Vooces of Liza M1nnelll. P1ul l ynde Dorothy 11turna 10 the l and ol Oz Ind encounlen th41 llSll' of the Wicked W1tdl of 1"41 West G' 1:56 8 EDITORIAi. 7:00 I) C88 NEWS D HeCHEWS U HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Richie eno Po11te pool lhelr funds lor • sporty 1950 convertible that proves 10 be •Ii allow eno no go D ABCNlWS 0 8UU.8EYE m a.t·A·a·H Famed newscalllf Clete Roberta Vislll the •077111 tor • repott on the leellnga of the people 11atl0ned Iller• g) STAEETS OF SAN FRAHCl8CO The star wltneaa to a rot>- 1>1<)' end lhe U100ttng of • CHANNEL LISTINGS potl(;e officer dlnppeatl end Stone Question• hi• real1Mnllly 8:) OV£REA8Y Guesll Enzo Sluarll Or Rol>l<I Butler C,,.I N1raa1 OalnCI (RIO GD WACHIJL I L..EHAE.A fllUOAT TIC TAC DOUGH I]]) MERV GRIFFIN GuHll Cht<o, Joey Bilh· op (0 'M0\11E "Be<l~nobs And Broom- 11oc~s 119711 Angele Lensoory Oa"'d Tomlin· &On Ou"ng World Wer II • novice aorce<ISS t nd her three young lriet1ds Mt oll lor a magoe 1s11n<1 where she 1n1ends to learn enough about w1tchcrat1 to use It 1g11nst the Naz11 'G' 1 Z1 LOVE IS A FUNHY T'HlH(); A SALUTE TO CLAUDE LEL~ 7:30 fJ 2 ON THE TOWN ~0111 Steve Edwards Mllody Rogers Tllce • IOok 111 "older women. younger man"' rellltOn• 1lllp1. travel down Sepulveda Boul1v1rd , .. mine your l>Ody clock 1nd see how ot lunclion1 0 FAMILY FEUD 0 SHANANA Guest Sutman Crothef s D EYE ON LA Hatta Inez Pedroza. Peul Moyer A look at orgen 1ranapl1nts, a11mine the growing pt\enOmlnOn ol womtn elhietes; I reoort on blul-Oreen a1g11 0 FACE THEM~ CD AU IN THE FAMILY Archie end Edoth '" Shocked ..,,.,. ,,,..,, INrn 11111 Miki end GIOrla l\avt d«)idld 10 INYI Joey Wllh lrlln<l• In 1111 .,,.,., ol 111111 d .. thl • MACMEL /LEHRER MPORT • NEW8 Cl) 8AIOALL San Diego Padres II LOI Angella Oodot<• t;OO 8 WALT£R fJ KNXT CBS1 L "' AnlJ"'''' D IC.NBC '"BC Lo-. An w •''> O KILA Ina Lv-.A'""''' 0 M BC rv 1ABC1 Lv' An.ii>'"' J .,.fMB CBS1 S.in D·1•90 0 II.HJ T'V t lnO I LO~ An 1PIP<, ®1 JC.CST 1ABC1 San D"·go CD KTIV 1 Ind I LOS Ange1.-... Cl) KCOP TV pno I L os Angt.>li'S fl) KCE T TV t PBS! Lo'> Anq1•lf''> «i> KOCE TV 1PBS1 Huntonqton Be.ten CAOHKITl'8 UHIWM! G L090 A ring or blackm1ller1 UM lnlormetlon l..,ned 11 1 pluan m1111age counMllng and M• lher1Py cflnle to extort money from their vietlma (R) 8 MOVIE * * ·~ "The City" (19711 Anthorly Quinn, Ii G Mar- lhlll A ma)'O' In ottlet for HI yMra II thrtllened by 1 tough oC>PQntnl and • PIY· C/\Oplilh ob-..d With hll detlNCtlon G 9 HAPPY DAYS Checlll le11n1 Jo1nle'1 part In 1111 ld\oOI play •ncludes • I0\11 -with enotller 1tud4lnl Ind joins the cut to keep •n eye on , her (R) 0 MOVIE * * ''°' "Tile R9Qlng Tide" ( 1952) RIChlld Conlt, Slltllty Wln1111 Aller commllllng • murder • ractiet-aMlla ref\IQI on • ltlNng boll end "'" 10 Pin the murder on 1 lilher· man'aaon CD P.M. MAGAZINE Cl) MOVIE * * * "The Long Voyage Home· ( 19•01 Jot>n Wtyne, ten Hunter Otrecl· ed by John Ford Bu.cl on lhl pl1y by~ O'N .. 11 A er-of ..-lflere act....nture end ••dtemenl on their return trip home flll NOVA "BlyOnd Thi Milky Wly" A k>ok II t!Mlan II the gelall• beyond Whit wu o~ the cloudy t>amer of 1"41 llAHky Wey and thl aop111111ca1td technology whic:tl hN made t'*" YIW· 1>1e to NI'°"°"*' (RIO «i> MYITEAY "Rumpole Of The Balley: Rumpole And The HM")' Brlg.O." Judge Pr111cOl<l ~ more lnterMled In Horece ~·· Cleo McKern) llO\llnly appew- enoe 111 court than In Rum. pole' I ltowwilled clien1 on trial for murder (RIO INZAME• JOlln Bvr-lhowa you thing.a at••noer tllan truth, '*'Oii thin Ult, Ind zanier tt>an 1nythlng you'YI - 111n In 111111 apec:ltl encore pr_,t111ont f\'om th• Sllowllm• Blu "e hbrery MOYIE "Ooc" (197tl Stecy Keech, Faye Oun-•Y· The llg.- endaty Doc HOllidly lfe• 11111 blCk 10 Tombttone. wt1er1 lie "'"'' ,. trlln Wyatt Earp .,,. Mttlll with I pro.tltutt he .an In •:ao• "'-0 "° INtna. to '* ho(tor, that the ,..., roome ., 1119 Y.-OWAoM~~to lier 11111 to !Wldf• ded e llll.AWMI& ltM.IV ~ .. .,,. ....,,. . halldiome ooctOf wllO .. WC111a1111111> ~to Ott• dlYoi'oe. (lt)Q • CAIQ. IUNl9TT NI),...... Ouetta. It~ 1.awr-. TllTI ConwllY (l)_,..~DAHCI MMll-o-V•dCWI Md I troupe of ~ P'..-n' many of the bMI routl,_ ffom tome ol ll'le blggwt hlta Oii ·~ ti00e DUMMY The lrw 1tory of Oonekl I.Ing, I deal, 1111111 8nd •t- 1 .... bladl }'Ollth -.Md of murO.. whO euttlled tnju911ce ~ of hie II~. II dlematllld; PllUI 9oMno end l.IVat Burton lier. (A) G HIU. ITNIT ILUU Two juvwilll geng ,_,._ bef1 .,. Interrupted during • atore robtllry end tall• ho.l_!pll (A) •a THMr• ~AN'( Jeck '"" to help Cindy '°'"" • lllghl ptObllm lhl la llalling w1111 lier boM and lnllNd Oii• lier fired (R) • .,_RVGIWJ'IN G111tl1 Cllero. Joey Btal\- op, Ale1andr1 Penn1y. P..00 lkyM>n. • wY8m.v "Rumpole Of The Balley Rumpole And The HNvy Brlgldl" Judge Pr .. tcold _,,, mor• lnterffled In Horec1 Rumpole'a (Leo McKernl llovenly appear- ance In court tllan In Rum- PGll'• ll<>wwttted client on tnel for murder (RIO Ii) NOVA "Beyond The Miiky Way' A loOll II liken al Ille galulel t>eyond Wll•I w .. onQe Ille cloudy b•rrllr ol tr.. Miiky Way end the aophlltlcaled lec:MOl<>gy Wiiien 11 .. maci. 1"-<n 11111. ble IO Nlrc>nomera. (RI 0 (O)MOW "Done FIOr And lief Two Hulbltlda" (19781 Sorlie Br-ea. JoM Wilker A young Bru illan woman" boring MCond marriage ta enh\111\ed by Ille errlvet of lier ""' hUlband'• pu-lional• glloat 'R' (%)MOVIE "Bedknoba And 8roorn- 1llck1' ( 197 ti Angela lanlbul)', D•Yl<l Tomhn· aon During World Ww II,• novice sore«... end hit thrM young f~ Ml ott for a meglc lllland where 1111 lnl1nd1 to learn enough 1b0ut W1tcher1'1 to UM It egalnst the Null 'G' HO 8 9 TOO Cl.08E '°" OOMf'ORT Htnrf.QOM to thl bank to confront Sere·a ~. 1 notorlou1 wom1nlur. tnd lllilTlblel Into a rot>- bety (R) Cl)MOYIE "Thi Rote" ( 19791 Betit Midler. Alen Bat•. A drlv· en roclt 11nger·1 lite in the IMI '-IMdt her Irr-· tll)ly to diaMI• 'R' 10:00 a Nl1W) WO&.R Nero ~ the guwcll- .,, of the deugltltr of 1 11a1n mobater wld hM to 11111111 her from her lether'• anemln While hi llnda l'MI klllw. (R) l ll•G NEWS 0 HA1'T TO HM'1' Max'e ex-wife .,_ up and IMdt him into 1 delcl· ly ~ tt\81 oet• him 1'1dnapped. CRI -~ • "El TrOYldor" Antonio a-. n_.,..,. of Puerto Rico , 11 1hown In MllwlUll.. continuing the communel Pueno Rlclll trldltlon of the wendltlflO ---------~------ TUBE TOPPERS KCOP • 8 :00 -"The Long Voyage." John Wayne and Ian Hunter star in a movie about men who live by the sea. KCET 9 8 :00 and KOCE fl 9:00 -"Nova : Beyond the Milky Way." Science pierces the Milky Way to see almost 100 million other .calaxies. CBS 9 9:00 -"Dummy." Paul Sorvino and LeVar Burton star in a true- life account of a black deal youth who can't get justice because of his handicaps. poet I mlnllrel • ..mo orlgl- nllly c.HIOlrfled hlmMH mainly with the toltllora of Chriatmu. Cl) ClfllCl.I ~ STAAi "Mel TOlme, Delta,,._ .. ® WIM8l.B)()H TINNl8 Seme-dey -· ol 1111 matt pr11tlgloUI ....... , In tenril le ~led lfom England. with c;ornmenlll)' by Betry Tompkina •nd I Arthur AIM. 1 10:ao l ~ NE1WON< NCW8 811 VIC IAAOEH'S TDtHl8 '°" THE F\IT\JRE "Psycl\ology" VIC Breden lhows you hOW IO reduce ~ 11rn1 during a m1tc11 and hOW to put more tvn back into your ~"" 0 '11) THE CHRl8TIAH8 "Mlallona Abro•d" Orlg1. nalty Intended to llkt ,,,. goaptl 10 tht working cl ..... ol 1n<1u11r1a1 cities, mlSllonat ... found grN ter eppetl In fer-ott placea OAVtO L.ETTEAMAH: 1.00KJHO FOA FUN The willy corned1en trtvela to ~ unuaoal Sites In • seercll lor llumoroua aapects of some Of Ille moat ordin1ry lelaure actlYlllll 10: ... cm IHC08U8 11:00 8 0 8 Cl) l1J) NEWS D 8TARTIW< The EnterprlM t>ecomn I b1t11efleld lor two etitna whO have ~ w1glng 1 ~.000-YM/·old Wit I =..YWED GAME Mennlx oet• lnvOlvld In 1 M<lea of 14>1>11ent aoleidee eMer "41 llkM on the auignment to find out wt>y the wife of one ot 1111 ~ 11 being lol- towecl ., IEHNY HILL An AullrtHan bacllground glVff &.nny Ille opportUnt• ly lo onveallgllt out11w Mr o Ned IC.elly &l OtCK CAVETT Gueal pubhlhlr Robert G1rou1 (Part 2 of 21 (Q)MOV'IE "Tiit Senauou• French Women" ( t9791 A Pt<lalan hOUMWtle dtc•MI IO hlVI an '""' atter 11\1 dllClOV· 9'1 that her hUlband hH ~er-ting on her 'R' ®MOYIE "Thi Shining" C t9801 Jtck Nichollon. 5he11et Ouvell Directed by St1nl1 y Kubrick. A former teflooll.-Cher hired .. • winter c11111ker tor 1 remote, and 1pparenlly lleunted, COlorldo holli, 11 81\0Wbound lllert Wllh 1111 ..... Ind ctalm>yltll young eon. 'R' 11:08 (%)MOYIE "American Gr1ffitt" ( 19731 Ron HOWlrd, Cindy Wil· """' On gractu111on night In Ille summer ol 111e2. lour high school e11um1 lrom • 111'1111 town 1n Northern C1Utornla apend 1 wild IVtning In vl rloua 1ilu11Jon1 'PG 11:ao 11 ()) COUJMeO An orcl\Mtre cor>duclOf ll11ns Na mt.trtu 11 plan· ning 10 tell his wife tboul lhelt 1ttalr D THE 9UT Of' CAMON OUMll: Bob Hope, Mar- itltl H11lley. Luciano Pev11011i. Sydney Gotdttnilh (R) 8 0 MCNEW8 NIGtm.JNE 0 l.ET'S MA.KE A DEAL g) BARETTA "Somebody Killed Cock Robin" fD «i> CAPTIONED ABC HEWS 12:00 0 MOVIE * Apt Men 01 T,,. Jun· gle" ( 19621 Ralph Hudson Ritt Kl11n Hum1n1 become thl prey Of IM vlclou1 l eoptrd Men D ®l MOVIE *'It "Trouble In High Tim· be• Country" ( 1980) Eddie Albe<!. Kevin Br()phy A l1m1ly heeded by 1 proud p11r111c11 btttle union orgenuera end • powerful conglomerate trying to tal<e control or ,,,. lam1ly'1 lumber tmptre (RI OMA~ Biii end Beeu uncover 1 crooked acllemt lhal 11 lleeclng the 1own1peopl1 CD MISSION: IMP088181.E TM IMF Mii OUI to learn lhl numt>e< ol • man 1 benk account by conv1nc- HIQ him World W11 Ill hll ll•t1ed (S)MOVIE "Brubtktr" ( 1980) Robert Redford, 'l'tphel Kollo A reform-minded warden IHIC(IYlll Wldnp<Nd COi· ruptlon wtlen lie enter• his newly tlSlgned prison pos- ing H en onmll• 'R - 1a-.ao I TOMOMOW (lfU ONl~8rfOND "'al'* lfMOI" A ~ '""" lnflerllt 1111 i.tNt'• 11ta11 ~·~~ ~.,~.,_,., 1:00 e NYCHIC "tENOl8l._ THI WOfW..D llYOHO "Jour~ Ot The IOlll Through Thi Horoec;ope" Hatta Damien Simpton, Stec;lt Hunt GUMI Ray· mond Merriman ~ m111'1111e11onalllp ""th Ille *""" .MOWi • • • ·~ Thi Poatm111 Alw1y1 Ring• Twice" 1111461 Lana Turn.,. JOlln 0 1ffltld. A young woman l)loll to murder lier hu .. ~nd wllh Ille help of ant of tile tNn'• emplay-e 1NOePUaNT .-rwoN< NIWI MICK GAIUllll T AU<8 WITH 8CATMAN CROTHERS 1:11 (t i MOVIE "Tr.. Shining" ( 1980) Jack Nlcllolaon, Shelley Ouvtll Olreclt d by Stanley Kubrick A former tc;hoOlteacller hired es • wlnt"' ~tlllkt• tor a remott end app1r1nt1y heunled, Cotorado hotel. 11 anowbOUnd thl<e with 1'111 wtll 1nd clalrvoy1n1 yOung aon 'R' t:280 NEWS (R)MOVIE "Some Came Running' ( 19591 Frenl< Sinatt•. Slllfo lay MacLalnt Baaed on a novel by Jemea J~• A dlllftlilloned young men tills in with e group ot !Mlldy Char ICletl 1:30U MOVIE •'n "Jungle Goddtss ( 19~9) Wanda McKay, George Reev11 A rHCue pt<ly seta out through 1n Alrican 1ungte In March ol 1 young hloress g) MOVIE **'• "DO A (19•91 Edmond O'Brien. Pamela Britton When 1 min 11•1· lzea that ht hu bHn gi\len a dose ot time-releeH<l poison he sell out to 1oca11 Ills k111er before his Ille efldS 1:10ll NEWS 2:000 NEWS 2:10D NEWS 2: 11f S, MOVIE 'The Bliek Hole ' 11979) 11Au1m111an Schell. Robert Forater. 'l'vellt l\Alm•eu• The crew of 1 luturlatoc space1h1p d11cov111 enother vHMI perched on the edge ol 1 lormetion wnoeh pulls enyt ll1ng n11r · by onto a giant VOid wnere ume end 1p1ce cea11 to 11lsl PG 2:20 fJ EDITORIAL 2:21 fJ MOVIE • • • "Passage To llA•r· -lies" ( 19"1 Humphrey Bogart Claude R11na Eac•pNs from Otvol I 111end a11empt to loghl the Nazis along with the Franctl Fr" Forces 2:45 0 NEWS 2:I0 0 MOVIE * 'II "Oeughtet Of The Jungle" (19•8) LOIS Hall, J1mes Caldwell An Am1<1· Cln helrtll end htr -e1111y lather .,, •HCU41<1 tr om 1"41 w11<11 by I P'IOI 3:00CI> NEWS • 1:10 • WOYll I * *"' "Magic Town" (19•?1 J-st-ar1, Jftlte Wymen A Im .. , ~ IOWfl Wldetgo.9 I °"MOf IOt .,,. -lftat beltlO ~bllc*ed • • MMnPle to other town .. MO C8) wtMe&..mOH TIMll Sam.-c!1y coverege ot Ille moat pr11tlglout event In '""'" 11 .,,_,ed ll'Ofll E~. with cornmentlW) by Ball)' T Otnpll lnl and Arthut AIM 1:46 (%) l.OV'l 11 A F\JNfY ~A~TO CL.AUDI LI.LOUCH •:11e MOVll * '~ "Jungle Women" ( 1944) E.,.iyn Anklrl, LOii Col lift M'f'dnf's da11'• Da111 h1H! ltf o .,lr • ~-MORllNG- &:.s (ZJ "American G11lflt1" ( 1973) Ron Howwd, Cindy Wllflwnl On graduation night in the aummer or 1962. four high ICnoot c11um1 rrom 1 111'1111 town In Nortll11n C1lllOtni• S9lf'd • wold ....,,,no 1n •••oa• lltu111on1 PG' 11:00 Cl) • ·~ "Cr uy OYer Hora- ea" (19SI) Bowery Boys The Boys !Ind adventure at 1ne racetrack 11:30 0 ••'•"Th• Purple M1a1<' (1955) Tony Cur1i., Colleen Miller A French nobllm1n dona a mMlc and g1ln1 freedom lor the roye11s11 -AFTERNOOH- 12:00 CD * • "R11d On Rom· mel" 11971) Rlch1rd Bur- ian. John COloCOI Rom· mel's Ptnzer Ol•ISIOn 11 tnfMlrtted In Libya during World W11 II ., •••• The One Thal Got Awty (19581 Herdy Kruger. Colin Gor- don The unrelenting determ1nat1on or 1 German POW lo llCIPI lrom lhe r: Jlnelly peya oll 1:30 • ~Ad•m Ano Ev• I 501 Stew1rt nger en Sommons A gambl11 tekn on lht respons•b•llly lor his friend a deughter. onty to dlSCOVll that ht II 1n IOVI wothher 3:00'S '' My Bnll11n1 Career" ( t980I Judy Davis. Sam Neill In turn-ol·the-<:enlu· rr Au1tr1li1, en onOtpend· ent young women tr-to mike a ~'-as a Wl'ller dHO•ll social press..res lor her 10 mlfry 3:30 0 "' * '> llAISt8f Cory" ( 19571 Tony Curios l\Aertha Hy8f A poverty·Sl•ICken Doy ro11s to Success through gambling 5:00 $1 • • • "Kii Carson" C 111•01 Jon Hell Oen• l\ndrl'WS A bold po~ prottcts a C1htorn1a- bound wegon 1ra1t1 lrom lnd1enre1oer1 5:30 '~ CloM Encount1<s 01 Tiie Third Kind· Special Edlllon ( 19801 Richlrd Dreyfuss Francois Trul· laul After llgll11ng a UFO a power compeny employ· 11 l>lcomtl o~ with l•ndlng Ille llllns landing s.tt PG JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk 1 .JUSi "THINK WE CAN PUNCH IT UP A L..ITTLE. H~ AND !HER~, ,.HAi'.5 AL4! I l>Oklf 'PO' --------------------------------------------------------------------~----------------------~ Science program returns • air ·:,Walter Cronkite to •• By TOM JORY A_ ............ _ NEW YORK -Last summer's test run of · "Walter Cronkite's Universe" on Channel 2 ~as ·•' produced with no precise schedule in mind. And, says Jonathan Ward, the executive producer. "the individuaJ segments were so evergreen, so time· ~ -J• less. it made your teeth hurt. " "I think 'trivia l' is the word Walter would ' use," Ward says. "Waltec Cronkite's Universe" begins a 12· u week run on Tuesday nights from 8 to 8: 30 begin· ,. ning tonight. "This time," says Ward, "we had the advan- tage of knowing we were going to be a summer ~ series. with a set schedule. We can key specific segments to events we know are going to happen, like the s pace s huttle lligbl planned for Sep- ·• tember. "We've got a scientist predicting Peru will be ~: wiped out by an earthquake lo September." Ward says. ''If it Isn't, we have this poignant human drama or a scientist who has just seen his Ure pass before his eyes. IC It is wiped out, we had it first. (j "Somebody said you make younelr available for luck in t.hls buainess," the producer says. "For that reuoo. we've shot Mount St. Helens. even though we don't have a volcano story in the mix I yet. I keep a 1eiger count.er In the me drawer there, because Walter want.a lo be ready for the next Three Mlle1sland." The premiere program marks Cronkite's re- turn t.o the air on a regular basis for the first time alnce be stepped down as "Evening News" anchorman ln lt&{ch. The firtt prolram included ae1ments on the 1tudy d 1ea creatures who carry their own natural light in the depths or the ~ean. and on ertoru to restore artwork• and other actn1 object.a that have been subjected to the rava1es of Ume. climate and pollution. Cronklte will provide at leut one 1e1ment for each of the 13 proarams, and wm anchor "Unlvene' trom his new omce overlooldDs tbe Hudson Rlber. Cronkite, who anchored the "Eve· nln1 Newt" for lt years, ape.ndt much of bll Umt these day• at hi• home in Martha'• Vlnyatd, but Want la)'I evm \.ben , he devot41~rable1Ueo· Uoato••um.erM. •• • .,,.. ll PiOtlUal that we are rlolna t.o put - lbe air that bi bun 't at lhlt talked 1rltb ua abOut a t tome I•'!'·" the prOducs aa11. ·•we Had tilm , scripts and then cassettes or every segment we do." Ward says Cronkite bas been an important factor in providing "Universe" with Its sense of timeliness. "It's very hard to lake a warhorse like Cronkite and turn him into a soft news, documen- tary guy. "If the secretary of state makes some big an· nouncement on the neutron bomb, for example, it would be unthinkable for Cronkite to go on the air that night with a piece on the butterfly," Ward says. The univer se for "Walter Cronkite's Universe" Is truly vast, and Ward says the cor· respondent himself again plays a slp.l.ficant part in determining the type of story to be considered. "I know that It's Walter's posiUon that an in- formed electorate can play a role in deciding tough issues -will the SST destroy the ozone layer, for instance? ·'Science and scientists would like you to believe it is a simple preclslon that rules their world. But yes, there is a value 17stem in science," be says, "and I'm sure sometimes we'U bog down hopelessly in tbe politics of an issue." He says the objective nonet.hel.., la to produce stories that will do more than fill a 90-eecond slot, or even a lhree·minute hole, on the "Evening News." "I lrivialiied a piece lul year that people in lbe projed tbousht was goina to be a serious story on food .elence. We concentrated on the people who make potato chips crunchy -a piece we could have done for the 'Evenlnt News.' "We would be anfry If aomeone clld a 1t.ory on Journalllm ln America lo four mlnuta. We did rood service in four minutes, and that was wroa1." Hitler retreat filmed HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The le.hour m1DJ eerlts ."The WlDdl ol War" wiU be tbe ftnt productloD ever all~ to ftlm at tbt "Easl•'• Na t," Adolpb Killer's mount.int.op retreat al Bet'cbtn&ardeD, Wett Germany. Thi Mrl .. , band on tbe book by Herman Wouk, llan Robert llltcllum. Dan Curtla ll dlrtd· lnl f« Paramount Tel••illoa. Seen. wlll be ftl m.cl at tbe mJJ•llllb rill• • July 2'. It ll now a tourllt att:ractioa opented &y the German IOVernment. '. January~" Worlts tAllll) HYPNOSIS IS T .. KEY ' ~ -....,,.. •• """ ........ ,_ U4--lpKW= '40" 0 • 0 IHHER, MN> INSTITUTE -Sela( -~ ~ NOO·«illflC r-oltft .. 1'111 COHSUl T.ATIOH 2400 W. C..t H....-, ... s.tt. A, tU. 641-141 1 548-1961 If it floa t s, chances are you'll read about i t i n theDailJ·Pilai 642-4321 GOOd tor nlnt pltcH of Juicy, gol<Mn t>rown Kentucky Frl9CI Chicken, with four ro111, • 1aroe colt 1taw, 1 ••roe n\latled pot1tOM encl• ~lum or•Y'f· Llmll two oflM per purctleM Coupon good only tor oomoltteUOl'I wtlltel derll orw.. Cuttonter P8YI ell aoe>llcable ..... tu. 010 !Jtlc.e m1y Ytt\' at per· ttclp•tlng toc111one. Qood Ol\ly In loutMtn C.lllomla where you '" IN Clllck.tn .. nctwlcll Wl'*-lann. . I Ole ! Bowers 'holds fiesta H iatory aprani to Ute Saturday eveninC al the Bowers Museum in Santa ADI with an Early Califomia Fiesta. Guests arrived in black tie or coe· tumes from the days when Spaniah waa the of. tidal language. Nancy Gallivan', chairman for the evenin1, greeted guests al the mualve, wroqbt-lron door and presented a red rote to each senortla. Waiters passed margarltu and tequila sun- rises to the partygoers who gathered in the Wed patio of the Spanish·style museum. Such authentic hors d'oeuvres as huevos catalan, califior en salsa pimenta and tomate anchoa added to the authentic flavor of the evening. Dinner, prepared by The Ultimate Feast from Los Angeles, continued the theme befin· ning with gazpacho and proceding through ternera en limon (a veal dish), patatas en salsa verde, zanahorias eslragon and ensalada de lechu_ga. • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 Wines accompanying the diMer included a previously unreleased 1980 California Chenin Blanc from the Lawrence Winery as well as a 1973 Barbera from Papagni Winery and a 1978 North Coast Zinfandel from Round Hills Cellars. Nancy Gallivan f right ) greets Bradley Caine and Nej Simn at Bowers Museum. Mayor Ben Niel.$en (left) of Fountain Valley. with Bett11 Mignanelli and Fr ank Bryant. Tables were set with a burgundy-and-lilac color theme, and bouquets of pin.It and white snapdragons, peonies, carnations and chrysan- themums completed the rich color scheme. A dramatic "lights·out" drum roll an- nounced dessert, Frutas en salsa de brandy enflama, and waiters flamed the fruit spears on stage before serving them over vanilla ice cream to diners. Singer Ed Ames was master of ceremonies at the $100-a-person party, and dancers from Relampago del Cielo opened the program with colorful folk dances from Mexico. Ames, who lives in Los Angeles, confessed to .. falling in love with the museum and its art," and he served on the committee organizing the fiesta. (The hard workers, organized by Mrs. Gallivan, included Ducie Ziegler, Donna Karlen, Jeannette Bean, Helen Ray, Julie Grif- fin , Dana Politoskeand Herb Hansen.> The fund-raiser was a kickott tor a SS million expansion campaign planned by the museum's board of directors and director Reilly Rhodes. Finale for the program was singer Trinj Lopez, in keeping with the Spanish flavor of the evening. Among the guests at the gala were mem- bers of the late John Wayne's family, Dr. and Mrs. James Nagamatsu Che's for former presi· dent of the Orange County Music Center), Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hoggatt, Dr. and Mrs. Russell Ludwick, Mr. and Mrs. Kae Ewing, Roy Osterhout, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wilek, Gene White with Rose Tolentino and Mr. and Mrs. Nick Reznick. T he city of Fountain Valley turned out to honor Mayor Ben Nielsen and his wife with a dinner dance at tbe Mile Square Golf Course. Guests entered through a white lattice archway covered with bright flowers to see hanging baskets of grennery decorating the room and bougainvilla centering the tables. The Chamber of Commerce, headed by Frank Bryant, traditionally organizes the Mayors BalJ , whk b was attended this year by more than 120 civic-minded residents. The C of C's Women's Division. under the leadership of Betty Mignanelli , put together the gala. PartyJloers felt safe during the evening because among the guests were Police Chief Merv Fortin and Acting Fire Chief Paul Sum· mers, both with their wives. Ed Arnold, the ABC sportscaster and Foun· tain Valley resident, served as master of ceremonies for the program which toasted and roa sted the mayor. Arnold joked that the limousine service was provided for the mayor and his wife "because we didn't trust you to gel here." Mrs. Miganelli, ball chairman, introduced her committee: Pat Crocket, Margaret Kruken- berg, Dan Morton, Cheryl Norton, Marge Schneider and .Gene VanDask (a city coun· cilman.) The group had put together a program "to introduce you to our mayor" and projected pic- tures or Neilsen onto a screen showing him from age 2 to present. Nielsen, who was born in Denmark and came to this country with his family at 12, was shown as a Cub Scout, milking a cow and cam- paigning for office in various snapshots "bor· rowed" from the family photo album. In more serious moments, the mayor was presented with a plaque from the Chamber of Commerce as well as a resolution from the State Assembly read by Jim Orr, who attended representing Nolan Frizzelle. State Senator John Schmitz telegraphed his regrets for not being able to attend and sent good wishes. Mayor Nielsen, who was elected just this year, thanked the guests for attending and said. "It's a great tradition that I have to follow. What really makes Fountain Valley a terrific city is the people who Live here.·· Among the guests were Jan Wilhelms, who Interrupted a vacation in Mexico to attend, Louise Roland, Karen Holliday and her husband Dan Hancock, Juanita Armstrong, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wampler, Dr. and Mrs. Harold Kopit, Mr . an,d Mrs. Kirk Bridges, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rodgers, Sandy Roberson. Bill and Roberta OeFraga <she celebrated a birthday, too> and Louise Roland. Daddy doll didn't do much, but when he left ... When I was a little kid, a father was like the light in the refrigerator.' Every house had one, but no one really knew what either of them did once the door was shut. My dad left the house every morning and always seemed glad to see everyone at night. He opened the jar of pickles when no one else could. He was the only one in the house who wasn't afraid to go in the basemenlby himself. He cut himself shaving'?' but no one kissed it or got excited about it. lt was understood whenever it rained, he got the car and brought it around to the door. When 111111111ci ~ ... ---~~~~-~...._.. ____ _ anyone was sick, he went out to get the prescrip- tion filled. He kept busy enough. He set mousetraps, he cut back the roses so the thorns wouldn't clip you wben you came to the front door. He oiled my skates and they went raster. When I got my bike, he ran alongside me for at least a thousand miles until I got the hang or it. Husband is bombe d out sexually DEAR ANN LANDERS: l've been married six years and our sex life bas deteriorated to almost zero. Now the roles are reversed. It is my husband who says, "I'm tired, I've eot too much on my mind," and, "Is that all you think about?'' He lost his Job a few months ago and is depressed and frustrated. ·I have held a high-salaried position for many years. and he says he's proud of me. I'm sure be 111 lllllll was when be was working, too, but now I think his pride is hurt. It kills me to see him so sad-eyed. I would gladly trade places with him. Another problem -I am getting older and am wonderin1 if I will be able to lake time out to have a family. Don't suggest a marriage counselor. l've already seen one. He said the situation was hope- less unless my husband wu willing to come in, too. Well, I've begged and pleaded, but be refuses -just keeps saying, "Why do you love me, I'm no 1ood.'' AM, you were. ri1ht when you said "count your blessings" to the women whose husbands can't keep their bands off them. I'd melt if mine would grab me! We love each other but are miles apart. How can I motivate him to want me u much as I want him? -BOMBED-OUT HOPEFUL Dea.r Bombed: n l• easy to ............... , .. uemplo)'ed •u wtUa a lallll·•aluted wtfe ltaa .. Hll drive. 'fte peer PJ'• aetr-eMee.• la allot. Be doen._ Me4 ''mMl•a &lea.'' lie ..... a J9'. Tiie marrta1e ffmafftor wu rtsM. Yoe c:u•& do It alone. If your husband doeaa't care enoap about the marriage to want to help you save I&, tbe future looks grim, dear. Sorry. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Some time ago a person wrote to you about sleepwalking. Well, here is a true story. And, may I add, I am not a superstitious person. A number of years ago I worked in a girls' boardjng school in another country. The children under my care ranged from alleS 6 to 12. There were 22 altogether. Before the term began I was told one of the children was a sleepwalker. I had heard of the remedy of putting a St. John's Gospel under the sleepwalker's pillow. I ad- mit I was cynical, but decided to give it a try. I bought one and slipped it under the child's mat- tress. She did not walk in her sleep alter that. Later in the term I discovered two others who were sleepwalkers. Again, I put St. John to work. Both children stopped sleepwalking within the week. Keep in mind, none of the three children knew the St. John's was under the mattreas, so they did not psych themselves out. I have no explanation, other t.ban the Lord moves in mysterious ways. What else could it be? -YOUR FRIEND lN COLUMBUS, GA. Dear Friend: Yoar gaeu la aa good aa mbae. In f•ct. 1&'1 bet&er. I don't have one. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A young couple who attend our church experienced the tragedy of hav· ing a stillborn child -thelr first. Several of our friends sald they sent flowen and sympathy cards. My husband and I talked it over and decided not lo do anylbine. We felt it would add to their sadness. Now we aren't aure we did the right thing. Did we? -ORLANDO COUPLE Dear Couple: The 1riet ol the couple la the same as ii the child bad ~ born alive and then died later. It is indeed appropriate to aend nowen and sympathy cards under these clrcumatances. Pisces: Focus attention on asset~ We4ae941ay, J .. U, IMI 8,J SYDNEY O•Aaa A&IES <March %l·AprU ltl : Greea llaht nuha for pT01reu. removal of b.rriers and chance to 1rab pro- verbial braH rtn1. Leedershlp qualities 1ur1e to rOfffront: member or o~lte aex ccnfkta reeun11 and your morale la elevated. HOROSCOPE and meanln1ru1 communlcatfOos. VIRGO (Au1. 23·Seft. 22): New deaJ la ln olfln1; look behind scenes for aMWen to key quetUou. You are not btlnf told entire truth by one who pOlel al beoefactOI'. IB&A (Sept.~. 12): Go 1Jow, lie low, permit otbera to express t.Mlr \'lewt. Play your own •card• tloae to cheat Speculallve venture comea into foeu1 -you 1aln neceuary illlllhl.l ln unorthodox manner. SCOaPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You're aaktd to attend function promoted by th0te who 1hare your basic con· cerns. Look becyond tbe Immediate -popularity ld· cre•H• and special requut will be f\llnlJed. AGl1TA&IUS (NOY. 12·0.C. 21>: You'll bt uked to remodel. "*'1ew •nd rtbutld on a rnor. IOIJd atndure. lntplraUon comet rtom member ol oppottte su. CAPalClO&N n.c. a--Jan. 1t1: roeu1 °" bom•. prop- ertf. dtall!lP with older lndhlduall. Status quo la aha~en: written lulrvdlou reveal oppor\Wltty for,.._ thl'O\lp cbanle and \t'IVtJ AQt1AalC8 (Jan. 20-Feb. ltL lbort t.rtp ii oe aaea· da. TtJepboM m....,• atcll in clartfJln• obJed1v•. Family member talkl about budf.t, po11lble acqlUIUon of luxury Item or art obJec:t. PllCD (Feb. 1 .. Marcb •n: Take apeelal prec:a.a· ttona _...... MHta an eofteeraed, lmpbaatl on debts, In· come ~al .ad money l•rll1f'· He signed ail my report cards. He put me to bed early. He took a lot of pictures, but was never in them. He tightened up mother's saggin1 clothesline every week or so. I was afraid o! everyone else's father, but not my own. ·Once I made him tea. It was only sugar water, but he sat on a small chair and said it was delicious. He looked very uncomfortable. Once I went fishing with him in a rowboat. I threw huge rocks in the water and he threatened to throw me overboard. I wasn't sure he wouldn't, so I looked him in the eye for a whole year. I finally decided he was bluffing and threw ln one more. He was a bad poker player. Whenever I played house, the mother doll bad a lot to do. I never knew what to do with the daddy doll. so I had him say, "I'm going off to work now," and threw him under the bed. When I was nine years old, my father didn't get up one morning and go to work. He went to the hospital and died the next day. There were a lot of people in the house who brought ail kinds of good food and cakes. We never had so much company before . I went to my room and felt under the bed for the father doll. Wben J found him, I dusted him oft and pul him on my bed. He never did anything. f didn't know bis Jeav ing would hurt so much. I still didn't know why. Bloodlllohile rolls on coast AMERICAN RED CROSS bloodmobile will be in the Orange Coast area for the summer blood drive. Wednesday, blood donors may go to the Irvine Board of Realtors al 55 Deerwood East from 9:45 a.m . to 2:30 p.m. Costa Mesans c•n go to the Newport Mesa Christian Church, 2599 Newport Blvd., from 8:45 a .m . to 1:30 p.m . Sunday. On Monday, the bloodmobile will 1be at Allstate Realtors, 7466 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach from 8:45 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. CONFERENCE on the handicapped and substance abuse will be held from 9 a.m. lo 4:30 p.m . Wednesday in Buena Park. Sponsors include Sad· dleback Community College, National Council on Alcoholism of Orange County, county Human Coast women elected Orange Coast women recently were elected to posts in the Orange County Medical Association Auxiliary. Mrs. Roy Lau of Irvine was appointed for 1981-82 term to second vice president and Mrs. William Thompson of Huntington Beach will be the recording secretary. Fashion t ips with lunch Now Orange Coast residents can have lunch and pick up fashion tips when they go to the Marriott Hotel in Fashion Jaland on Tuesdays. Belinning this paat week, informal modelinl or the latest fashions from the Broadway's Fashion Island store will be held from noon lo 2 p.m. Tuesdays .in the Marriott's Capricclo Restaurant. RUFFELL'S urHOLSTl lY ""•"'-.. -... 1'2Z MAllOl lUD. COITA MI SA-141·1116 SEACOAST SEGURIT.Y SYSTEMS How:A.111•Y•7 ,.. ......... ,..542:3410 Services Agency, Advanced Health Center and California Society for Treatment of Alcoholism and Other Addictions. For infomation, call837-4730. NUMEROLOGY is the subject of a four.part lec- ture series sponsored by Orange Coast College HEALTH HELP beginning Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. For informa- tion, call 556-5880. "WHAT DO YOU DO lf You Have Cancer" is the title of a forum for cancer patients at 7 p.m. Thursday at Pacifica Community Hospital in Hun· tington Beach. For information, call 842-0611, ext. 350. MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION will offer a workshop on depression and coping skills al noon Friday in Tustin. For information, call S47·7559. "SHARED VISION : A New Way of Perceivin1 Marriage" is the UUe of a two-hour seminar to be held Friday at 7:30 p.m. in Tustin. For informa- tion, call 832-1020. INSTITUTE FOR TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS of Orange County will sponsor the sixth annual conference on physical and mental health Satur- day from 9 a.m. t.o 5 p.m. in Anaheim. Cost for the event, featuring 24 papers and workshops, is $25. For information, call 5«·8061. MID-UFE CRISIS for men and women is the sub· ject of a lecture and workshop sponsored by Golden West College at 9 a .m . Saturday. For in· formation, call 893-6250. - • SPRING-SUMMER ~ALE Beginning Wed .. June 24, I 0:00 o.m. 3415 via opo<i:> ne.u.port beach. calf: Q2bb'3 (714) blS-3201 \ . . J c I t ,... ---------... -... -- -. -----------...,., _____________________ _.... ............... -·-----......... -.--...... ,, ... ,_ ... ,_._,., .... _, .... _ ..... -.... ·-·-··--·· ...... ·-·•11"":"!1•"'"· ..... ·~, t•• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tut1day. June 23, 1981 ~OO~ITOOaJ~illIT rPillIB~ • • niversity, county eek bill agreement A concWato_ey note bu been sounded in the on101n1 dispute between the Orange County Board of Supervisors and the University of California Board of Regents over operation of the UC ble date, Jan. l, 1985. And they said they would no lonaer provide service for qualified county men- tal health patlenta, effective one week from today. ' -~!Jll lf~llllv.i Cit~FIRST RAii> pc;o ~ --=WE 5'aJJDTt4C~ A 1AU4r1X>l ~~T~ r~-~ ~ME FDR O> RUSSI.ANS r.B IPI Ol1Y' CMIHA'~ NUCL ~~r&"" ~NOl.00 ! l.D Md/£ -· "'~ABf I ···W ~J<Nt«cxn AN'S ~! Irvine Medical Center. Clearly, this business of the university providing services, then billing to county on a cue- b y-c ase basis, ls untenable. Perhaps a lump sum contract, througJl which the county would make a slngle annual payment for the cost of indigent care, is the way to go. < "'~A DEFENSIVE Representatives of both parties said at a recent face-to- face meeting they want to re· solve the differences that have r the past several years. ~tted them against one another The uni veralty runs the edical center. In turn, it pro· des medical care for indigents, 'It the county's expense. Essen- ilally, the county beUeves about $8.2 million in bills submitted by the university are excessive, and, thus, has refused to pay them. The university disputes this charge and regents responded by deciding to pull out of the in· i!_gent medical care contract, ef. lective on the earliest permissi· Lengthy negotJations are on tap and it's too early to predict what the ultimate outcome will be. But it is very encouraging to see that both sides, after years of acrimonious debate, seem willing to shelve their dlrferences and get onto the matter at hand: pro· viding adequate and cost· effective treatment for the in· digents who havf' no where else to turn. !Prevention can pay • .,. When Medicare wa1 Macted in 196S. it wH not allowed to pay for preventJve medicine. only for the care of those already 111. Last year, Congress voted an exception. After years of re· search, a vaccine to prevent pneumococcal pneumonia had been developed in 1979. The vote would permit Medicare re- imbursement for the vaccine as of July 1 this year. Pneumonia has always taken a terrible toll of the elderly. Each year patients over 65 spend about 2.2 million days in the hospital because of pneumonja. And up to 30 percent die despite the use of antibiotics. So the new vaccine was a dis· c-0very that not only could save an estimated 5,500 lives a each year, but could greaUy reduce tbe cost of treating those who contracted the disease. Each dose of vaccine costs a bout $1 l .SO . The average hospital stay to treat the disease costs $3,300. The Congressional Budget Office estimates the first three years of the vaccine program would cost $83 million. From then on there would be a net saving, amounting to $11 million in the fifth year. Unfortunately , the ad· ministration budget includes a recommendation for eliminating the vaccine program. Fortunate· Jy , Congress still has the power to retain it. This is the only rational course, both from the point of view of saving lives and even· tually saving the enormous cost of treating a disease that is especially dangerous for the elderly and that now apparently can be prevented. Local courts needed As part of its recent action in approving the $26 billion state budget for f isca l 1981 -82 . legislators called for 15 new ap- peals court justice positions. Those positions will be fill ed if Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. signs the budget package now before him. A s eparate bill in the Legislature would create an ap· peals court bench for Orange County. If that legislation is ap- proved, some of the justice posi· lions could be diverted to fill the ' newly created seats. Orange County. the second • largest county in the state. de· serves an appeals court of its own. As matters are today, at· torneys must travel to San Bernardino in their quest to over- turn lower court rulings. That seems a bit absurd. The federal government re· cently took note of the county's plight. Two days each week, a federal judge holds court in the Orange County Courthouse. And plans are in preparation to ex- pand federal court activities. The state should follow the federal government's lead and support a local appeals court. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex· pressed on this paoe are those of their authors and artists. Reader commen1 is in vit· ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone 1714) 6'42·4321. L.M. Boyd/Marital tests When a husband finds himself dis· enchanted with bis wife, he begins to question her talent ln the kitchen. When a wife becomes disappointed in her husband, she starts to downgrade his ability lo handle a car. Minor dis· approvals. these, n ot marriage breakers. But our Love and War man calls them "test complaints." Soured matrimonial mates tend to toss out small trial criticisms for awhile to see if they themselves can endure the wreckage of a positive breakup. The first day of a new century un- der our calendar never falls on a Wednesday, Friday or Sunday. Never. The first day of the next cen- tury, Jan. l . 2001, will be a Monday, incidentally. Don't miss It. Q. Doesn't the divorce rate always rise during an economic recession? •lwaya rises when the economy 1ets more protperous, and after a •ar. An assualn shot lo death Abraham Lincoln's grandfather, too. Q . What does the waitress mean when she sings out, "Bossy In a Bowl!"? A. Beef stew. Note lt reported ln print that ruards alon& the Mexican border ORANGE COAST lailJPilDt .......... _,..,., .. ...., ........ .., IC., c-.-....--..CMH ..... H .. ... ..... , ......... ,, .... have s hot down northbound homing pigeons in flight to s trip them of capsules containing heroin. Interest· ing, if true. Question is, if it's so tough lo pack that heroin overland to the north, how come il 's so easy lo pack those pigeons overland to the south? They don·t just fly down there on verbal orders lo pick up their con- signments. do they? Q. What's the largest church in the world? A. That would be St. Peter's in Vatican City. N atlonwide, a car is stolen every 37 seconds. I'm told. Q, What fish is the fastest? A. The blue shark. Al up lo -45 m .p.h . No, it's not quite clear why the lawmakers of Ocean City, N.J ., forbid therein the sale of cabbage. Nor is It plain why under the local law the merchants of Columbus, Oblo, aren't authorized lo sell com· £lakes. Surely these ordinances are jokes, aren'ttbey? Just about 98 percent of all the species that ever lived are now ex· tinct, contend the science-minded •cholars. Thomas P . Hiley PublllMr TIMNNt K•vll Edltcw ••rMr• Krelblclt Edltorlal Pae-Editor ~-WITH~EOOOO W~NI Allt ~ICE 1HE U. <;. 1111rrEAL 6Q" MY REAQ'oR COOLI>OBUTE~ATE ~5 l'LL 'BLOW HELL 001 NlK.LE'AR c>PN.lrV.' A ({)UPI.£ ($ ,\TOM OF IND1A$ NUKES• ~At4DDROP ™EM ~ rslWL '> ~10'2"'' Passport frauds boost • cnme W /\Slit NG TON 'rhousunds or ollf'M ar<• l•ntl-rinl( the• United Stall·~ t•vt•ry yN1r with IHJl(Ull document11 und many of thi>m un• not humble form wnrk('r~ or rl'st aurant hu11boy11 who want to rnuk<' un honest ll vln)( in thi11 country They'r•• ttrul( smugglers u1u1 other l'riminals who take advantol(e of the ease with which passports or t•ntr y visas <'an be obtained rt is a s toni s h1n1<ly s imple for foreigners to ~et legal entry into the Un ited States A phony birth certificate can be purchased in Los Angeles for as little as $3, and a com plete phony identi- t y can be packaged for around $300 A false passport. using the identity of a dead person or a friend, is equally easy to acquire WHILE HONEST applicants for im- migration swe at out months, sometimes years, waiting for their entry visa, crooks who have no compunctions a bout faking their way into the country are swarming over the borde r by the thousands Som e b1g·t1m e narcotics pushers have 20 or JO phony passports Federal authorities have told my as- sociate J ack Mitchell that the number of bogus passport applications received t• :u· h yc•n r (Jrf•l111 l1I v ~u q1uc;c;pc; :#),!)()11 l"'rh11ps rv1•n 1 wt<·P tl11tl 11111nlwr l\n1I 11'<1 u prPttv o.;11f1• 1(11 1•c;11 th,11 ff•W if a11y of lhf''ll' r1ltm1v """'"'llllf o.; 11r1• 1.1l11nntnl( __ Q ~ JACI AIDIRIDI to pursue legal <1c·c·upal1ons tn the L'nit ed States. What's really depressing 1s thal full) one out of Hery four passport frauds goes undelecll•d And what makes this percentage !>ca r~ 1s that. according to Ju!>ll('C Department est iml.lles. ·so per- t•c nt of the hard drugs entering the L'nit· ed States is sm uggled in by organized rings lhat make 1.·xtt-nsl\·e use of false C S pas!>1>orts and otht'r docu mcnts .. WORS E \'ET, Stale D<•partmenl brass for some reason won't let their in vestigat or s do anything about it Frustrated securit v ofricers inside the tlt•p ,irtrrwnt otrf· ufruHl fh.11 fh,. vn y in tf·~r llv 11r 1•11· 1 S 11a"llf'f>rl 11 ylltr-rn '" 1n w11rH1rtl~ Tl11•\ f1•1•I that thr·ir W'1rk '" l11•l 111c: un11f·1 rnrrwd hv l tll' p11th1·t11 f'lJIH' \Ito,, h wh11 h h11rr1r·<, "' r11ro•i11n 1iru11 .,mu~l(l•·r <i .1nil r11 h1•r 'rim1no1I' •.in "'"d k th•· "'' ,.,.,, 11f lh!ll ((JUntr) w11h \ 1r1 uulh nu d1.mc·1· •if lw1nli( 1 ilUl(ht IN F.\CT, the nood or counterfeit en try permits has touched off a biUer con t rover!>y at th<• Stale IJeSJ<trtment On 11nt· sicle arf' uprx·r echelon hureauc rats IA h11 cllm't "ant to roC'k tht' chplomall(' hnat hy lodging accusations ag;unst rounlne!> thC:tl arP matn sour('CS of 11 lt•gal 1mm1granls On the other s1df' are security offlcwls who feel they are be 1ng hamkuffl•d in their attempts to put a s lop lo tht' oulra.:eous salt' of ,·1sas and fals<.· pa!>i.ports The seturil) people estimate that as many as 20.000 ll S \'isas ure sold ea('h )'l':.tr Wh:.it worrt<'S Fol!gy Bottom of f1 tials 1s that this ill1('1t trade in ,·1sai. oh\'lousl) '"' ol \'t'S some members of th<.· For<>1gn Ser\'iCt' Whetht.'r Lhe \'!Sas :.in· ~mg tS!>ued by nal\e American c>mbassy officials or torrupt ones is. of tourse. what the in vesti~ators would I ikl-lo find out Homeowners find security vanishing When do you think you'r e a homeowner when you're really not? When you have one of the new, variable interest rate mortgages the federal gov· ernment bas recently permitted savings and loan associations to use to finance home buying. The variable rate mortgage is what is sounds like, a mortgage with interest rates that go up and down with the rise and fall of interest rates in general. Un· lit five or six years ago, interest rates moved up and down very slowly, and· when they did move it was neither fast nor rar -a quarter or a percent a time. THAT IS WHY the fixed rate mortgage could exist. A lender will only make a 20 or JO vcar loan al six or six and a half percent in a society ac- customed lo thinking interest rates are virtually nailed into place. So long and so strong was the tradition of the im· movable interest rate that it has taken lenders years or being beaten over the bead by inflation to move to protect themselves. One of the advantages of the fixed rate mortgage was the borne buyer knew how much his house payments would be every month. With a variable rate mortgage they can bounce up and down by hundreds and hundreds or dollars. Lenders, aware of such difficulties for a population taught to believe only fools and paupers rent, are perfecting a variety of mortgages to avoid monthly payments that act like yo-yos. One kind of new mortg•ge offers the buyer either a flat rate or one by which payments fluctuate within relatively narrow limits in return for splitting the profit on the house when it's resold If. as seems likely. r eal estate prices aren 'l goi ng lo do tn the next 10 years what they did in the last. that is. instead of r acing in front of inflation. they are ~oing to lag behind it. this could be a ,,...\ 11 ;' ,-•• -.-.,-, ... --~z, very good deal for the home buyer, pro- vided. of course. he doesn't sink a lot of money into improving the property. .\CTUALLY IT threatens to be s uch a good deaJ that kind of m ortgage prob· ably isn't going to be around too long. Once lenders see home prices going up at hall the inflation rate instead of twice it, they are going to drop this idea that could have saved them in the 70s but will impoverish them in the 80s. Another way of raising the interest rate on the mortgage without raising the mont~ly payments is, when interest rates go up. to add the additional charges on lo the principal. Of course. the larger the princ ipal. the more the interest, so we could end up haviog a generation of suburban sharecroppers. They would forever be paying the in· te rest so that. in practical terms, they r e ally would be renting from the mortgage holder. Their down payment would be more like the security deposit landlords often require of tenants As people who bought houses in the early years of the great inOationar} surge read an article like this, they con j!ratulate themselves on having gotten 1n early and beaten the savings and loan association . Is there anyone smug· ger than a homeowner announcing that his place 1s now worth twice what he paid for 1t and that he has a Ji m dandy eight a nd a half percent mortgage? He will be less smug when he tries to sell that house High interest rates in· evi tably force down the price of already-built hous ing. Pros pective buyers can manage a lS percent mortgage and a high price, but when the interest rates go sky high, it's the price that's got to give. WHATEVER THE p rice , homeowners are learning that it's not like the old days when selling your house meant getting your money out, To make the saJe work. real estate agents are devis ing "('reative financing" sche mes, which is a business school phrase for getting the seller t-0 take a second mortgage or second trust. You get a s maJI amount or money in cash and the rest the buyer is supposed to send you in monthly installments. What recourse you have if lhe buyer skips a few payments you can get your lawer to explain. For counlless millions buying a house has been the only practical way to save money without inflation consuming it. F'or yowiger buyers. this avenue of self· protection is being closed and older homeowners who thought they had stored up money for those rellrem~nt years in Arizona are rinding that it ls locked in a house they can't sell. Hateniongers still caDlpaign against Jews Why do ri&btwlna flakes hate Jews , but hold ucred a religion founded by Jews? Sociologists and psycbologlatl have explained it many times, but It still strikes me that ultra conservatives can· not grasp the contradictlon of their 111111 llll pblloaophical views. Tbe)' art vehement ln their hatred or Jews, but revere the rell•lon rounded by Jesus, who was a Jew and his 12 dlsctplea, wbo were alto Jew•. And, like as not, tbty are fre· quenUy thumpina and quotlnc from the Old T'tetamtnt whAdt ls atlll Jewbh. A TYPICAL BXAllPLB la the rtaht· ••lrdaa who rnake up tbe Liberty Lobb1 and lta t.laled hate monprlna Jl'OUPI. tbe IntUtul* ror Hlalorlal Review, Liberty Lifeline Foundation, Legion for Survival of Freedom and Noontide Press. The Institute was the one that claimed that the Holocaust never hap· pene d ; t hat the Nazi concentration camp gas chambers were only used lo delousei Inmates' clothing; and.· that those who died in Dachau, Belsen, and th• Othltr horror camps died of natural causes~To bolster this bit of ultra-right delusi . the lnstilute offered a SS0.000 prlie anyone who could prove dif· ferently. The Ll~rty Lobby gang can do thi~ easily, lncidentally, because they dQ a multimillion dollar business every ar in racist and hate materials. NO A LONG BEACH buslneaaman h11 c led the lnslltute's bluer. Mel Merm stein \s s uing moet or those I mentl ed above for the $50,000 Cwhkh the I tltute refuses to pay ) plus anoth r S6 mlllton ln damacea. Merm teln le • survivor of Auaehwill and II prepared to prOduce 13 more fellow •urvlvor·elew1tnetMA p1UI pilea .f!1 ht.taricaJ proo . , Well . I am not supposed to talk about pending lawsuits too much. Let me just say that, when it comes to delousing, the clothing of innocent Jews doesn't nee d as mu ('h as the minds o r right weirdo batcmongers. <Just for the record , columnist Mair is a Lutheran of German descent.> Clllllm If huo1er slrlken cban1ed t.Mtr tacUcs and started eattn• everyth.lq ln stsbt officials ml•ht be more anJdout to pacify lbem. D.11. ' J I l I I ' ' • t f \ • ~ < t ' ~ ' t 2 s s ~ t i s q i tJ t c ~ Orange Coast DAILY PfLOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 Al Helping hands honored Five recognized for contributions to public service WASHINGTON (AP) -Four men and a woman who devote tbelr tlme to ._lplne otben were being honored today by the American Institute for Public Service for contributiom to people in need at home and abroad. The five are 1moo1 the reclpi~nta of the ln· stltute'a Jeffenon Awards. 'Ibey were chosen from local award winners in a prolJ'am deaianed to spotlight the work'of indivlduala who otherwise would be unrecognized outalde their hometowns. Each winner receives $1 ,000 and a &old medallion. Also being honored, with separate Jefferson Awards, are four publlc ficures: Warren Christopher, former deputy secretary of at.ate; Marva Collins, a Cbicaio educator; Walter Cronkite and David Stockman, director of the Of· fl ee of Management and Budget. A cold medallion and $5,000 goes with each of these awards. The institute also said an award would be given to Justice Potter Stewart for outatandin1 public service. Stewart, 66, announced last week that he would retire from the Supreme Court next montti. An awards ceremony was scheduled in Washington. The Institute, a non-profit group baaed lo Washington, established the Jefferson Awards in 1973 to recognize achievement in public service. The awards for local-level work were created in 1977 under a program co-sponsored by the institute and by newspapers and broadcasters throughout the United States. The local winners are: Hank Adams of Olym- pi a, Wash.; Irene Auberlin of Detroit; David Crockett of Atlanta; Homer Fahmer of S:Jcramen- to, and Noey Somchay or Chicago. Adams was cited for "enriching the lives of many Indians" through his work over two decades as national director of the Survival of American Indians Association. The lnstitute's board of direc· tors also said Adams helped resolve two confronta- tions between Indians and the federal government the occupation or the Bureau of Indian Affairs building in Washington and the siege at Wounded Knee, S.D. Mrs. Auberlin's work to collect drugs and medical supplies for the poor was responsible for Iler selection. She founded World Medical Relief, Inc., to recycle used medical equipment and drug samples and distribute them to the poor in places r anging from GtJ.&temala to Detroit. Since 1975 alone, nearly 137 ,000 prescription.s have been filled at no cost to the recipients. "The medical profession sometimes juat doesn't appreciate the peeda of these (poor> peo- ple," says Mrs. Auberlin, who get.a no salary for her role as president of the agency and lives on Social Security benefits. Crockett is president of the Neighborhood Justice Center of Atlanta and was honored "for bis work in the organization and management of one of the most successful dispute resolution centers in the United States." The center, wblcb was established with federal aid and is now supported by the city and county as well as through private contributions, has been involved in aettlin1 thousands of disputes. • Fahner is the president and founder of Gleaners Statewide. an orcanization of senior citizens which was established in 1978 to aalvaee edible food that was being destroyed or wasted throughout California. Members spend one day a week working for the organization -pickine or collecting food and dlstrlbutln& lt tbrou&b seven stores at low prices. "Not only are we feed.in& the poor and elderly," says Fahner, "but our mem- bers are getting side benefita which may be even mor e beneficial to them. We 1et fresh air, sun- shine, mild exercise, fresh food and the good feel· ing which comes from helping our less fortunate brothers." Somchay is a Laotian refugee who bu been helping his fellow countrymen in the United States. A data processor at Sears, Roebuck and Co., Somcbay devotes his spare time to aiding the estimated 2,000 members or the Hmong tribe in the Chicago atea. He bas orgnized tutoring programs and other activities for the members of the rural tribe. "To me, this is a matter of llfe or death for my people," he says. Christopher was cited for bls work in the Actor Pryor says '#'m born agai~' NEW YORK CAP> -He starts the day with a drink of yogurt, fruit and protein powder, has taken up jogging and offers visitors apple juice. This is Richard Pryor? "If anybody was born again, I was," Pryor says in an interview with People maeuine. Since be beat the odds and survived a freak accident that turned him into a human torch in June 1980, the comedian who acknowledged dru& use in an interview with Ebony ma1utne bu moved to a retreat in HawaU. He says be is saldened by seeing peo- ple use drugs. Pryor denied police alle1at.ion.s that the fire, wbleb severely burned the upper half of hl• body, occurred when be waa mixiq ether and cQCalne. He contends the fire beean who a ll&hter ignited rum. He's maldng mov- ies acain, but seeks prlvacy. "Pleue let people know this la my last in- terview," be said in the interview at bis new· home. "Just about all I have .. my Hawallan place and my privacy. And I'm Soinl to keep It that way. "I haven't met anybody here who'• 1traotfti Tbere'• no wickedness ... When I fint saw place acain, I thanked God for lettin& me live to see lt. "You milb* mUdew to death here, but notb1D8 elte 11 eoiA1 to beppa to you," Hittite statue found ISTANBUL. Turkey (AP) -Turkl1b arcbaeolesi1ta UMarthed a bladt marble HitUte atatue ID aoutbeut Twby cl8t1aC to the Ulll tea· lury B.C., the Mml-oftlclaJ AaatoUa ...., a1ae1 reported. 'l'he a1ency eald the flpe, 30 Inches t.aU, wu d .. covered at Kahramanmaru. It Ucl a buman bead, an •aal•'• bodJ, Ucla'1 dawa md a eened tall, Anatolia NpoNd. TM Neo-Hltlltea ruled in aoutheut and central parta ol ;rutk•Y ln l ,JOO 8.C. ne10UaUona le.cling to the releue of the American b01ta1es from Iran. Mrs. Collins, principal of the West Sl4e Preparatory School lo Chica10, a private elementary school for low-lncome )'Oun11t.ers, wu honored for what the boaul called her "lnapirational efforts" to open up "new worlds for the formerly Ullterate children she teaches." Cronkite was cit~ for the lntesrtty, excellence and credibility of his reportin1 for the "CBS Evening News" andStockmanforhiaworktocontrol 1overnmentspendini. BBA•MBA Next claaae1 begin July 6 Call for your personal interview. lrvtne, 95 7-6285 MCAS El Toro, 559-3781 Loa Alamltoa, (213) 594-4714 MCAS TuaUn, 551 -2263 . ! J ti't''t-+.tt 1 atoo• . ; ~ "-'~. O'fl" ,. REAL 18TATI ~· O~e. .._c;~ \f\\e~tt>\ · TIMIE8HARING It di ..i ~ et-r ~( affordabltpractlcaJIMMrJp 0" a.\O ~ ~ 9t,oa ~ skyrockttlng resort co111. s.eect tr• s~" 6,90 ~~\'i o~ 4*«1tor furnlthld one or two bldrOOfW \A • e'i ~ wtth fireplace, color~. and gourqJ& \(O~ 'iou 9 kitchen. That week or weeks .t \"& Is all yours to use, rent or sell. fJ ~11y-~01Scl>OOlllnd~·AS.•.-•,..••~"""YC'*99 TAHOE SANOS RESORTS I F<N •color brochur• writ•: " 1 J rT'liffiA~ P.O. BOX 2392 Ortw TllbocSIMI I (J. .f , ANAHEIM,CA928<M (714) 153-1312 ..._.. ~ NI ER ITY r--------------------------.1 '--~~~~!!!!!!!!!~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!p!!~--~!l!!Bl!--B!!m!!!~-1 1 G~ Name I If it floats, chances are you II read about it I '~~er Address 1 I ,.. e~r ij in the Daily Pilat 642-4321 LJ~~:_::_ ___________ :_·---------_-_J UnitedS here Fare. or less each way with round-trip purchase (Canada, Mexico, Hawaii excluded). rrBreakaway! Big savings to more of this land than any other airline:' Breakaway this summer on Un ited for only $179 or.Jess to anywhere we fly in the United States (e xcluding Hawaii). There's never been a better time to travel. The restrictions are easy and United serves over 90 different cities. With more widebody service from coast to coast. For information and reservations, call your Travel Agent. United and Westin Hotels are Partner in lravel. Low fares available to: New York '}S9 ' fU>thtup ''-h• I 01t1 h , . .,, h "'•' "Ith round><trip pu,,.h•w Eeay RntrkUona: Make yuur n.-.crv~ Ilona and buv round-trip llC'ltt'lli 14 day11 In advan('C' <1 <bys to some <'lllot) Suiy throu1h the On11 Frida)'. up to 60 days Or 1r you ~vc on a Saturdey, return any llm<' Make any chanaca In l'CllC'rvallona at lcut 14 days In advance (7 day• to 111>mc r lllM)-Ot" return on a l!Undby bhla-or clec entire! dlllC'OUnt la io.t Scata art' llmllC'd Thew fan.'9 not •v•lleble 10 Hawaii. Canada or Mexico Tnl¥t"I muin bq{ln by Scptcmbtor 15 1981 \\ashington. nc. 51S9 ''•ht C f.Ut h • •• h •• , "hh n.unff •ritt ., .. ,. h•'4 Boston s1s9 ''•"' ( ,.., h n• h ""' .. 1th murwl .. rtp pun"""' Chkago 5IS9 "'"" ,.., "Ith mun<Mrlp puN h••~ • II 1 l I II ti " I ~· 1! l ,. ,, rf I •I l l ,. 1 q l .. I ii ,, , n 11 .I I J I -. ~II Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 l t ape Cod's seascape survives in crowded New England 1 SOUTH WELLFLEET, Mua. 'AP> -A quarter of the naUon'1 ~pulaUon lives wlWn a daf•s itrlve of Cape Cod's maenlficent ~aches and dunea, and mUlions "1ake the journey tJVery year. hailed as "the finest victory ever recorded for the cause of conservation ln New Enaland." The park was not universally accepted when it was created; even today It's at the center of a Uonal seashore stretches aJm1 the outer beach from Prov· lncetown at the very Up ol the cape down to the elbow at Chatham. fresh water ponds and historic remnants of earliest Colonial times kept the area Crom becoming a garbage-littered dump site. The only fee ls a $1 charge for a day at any of the seashore'" dx beaches, each of whi~ will bold 300to350 carloads. com mun.ity gnpes and bQa.lndary disputes. Nothing baa aneered iome cape residents more than the government's recent de· cision to restrict the use of off. road vehicles within the park. Yet atone miles of spectacular peaacape, there are no con· ilomlnium complexes, oo blih· fise hotels, no tawdry resort l>UUdlnp clustered 1n vacation 1bettos. Much of Cape Cod sur· ~Ives as a haven of sea and ~olltude. (Another in a 1em1 of article• on our national parkl.J The rest of the cape la not lm· mune to crowding and develop- ment. ln fact, it's part of the fastest growlna county Jn the elate -Barnstable. Towns Uke Hyannla, Harwich, Dennll and Provincetown are overrun In the summer. The national park must sur- vive an annual summer crunch when, on a typical day. parking lots and beaches are filled by 10 a .m . and bumper·to-bumper traffic stretches for miles at closin1 time. "There ar.e time• wben It's not that serene," says Superinten· dent Herbert OJaen. "But what you have to remember about a seashore ls there's quJte a bit of room for pla)' and recreation without crowdin1. "Everything we've done at .his park is lo w -k ey and .asteful," says Marge Burling, !ormer secretary for the Na· :ion al Park Servlc~ here. "A zouple can come here with their dds and spend the whole day and the only cost is the beach fee. It's a real bargain." Despite the precautions, the seashore is not trouble·free. Erosion is wldeapread. Visitors ignore signs and fencea around sensitive areas lo slide down the dunes. Occasional disputes arise over boWldaries since some prop· erty ls jointly owned by private individuals, the state and the park. Visitors sometimes stray onto private property, unaware that they're trespassina. What went right? Since 1961, some 27 ,000 acres pf beachlands and marshes have been preserved as the Cape Cod National Seashore, a move biller dispute over use of off· road recreation vehicles, but there's little doubt a treasure has been preserved. But the protected aeaabore, even with 5 million visitors a year, avoids bein& a garish tourist.trap. It has remalned a sanctuary of sandy beaches, majestic dunes, salt marshes , pltchplne trees, Cape Cod juts into the Atlantic from southeast MassacbWJetta like a bicep-flexing arm. The na-. Considerate visitors and early morning cleanup crews have But there are problems and pressures, too vandalism, erosion, brutal winter weather, A park ranger and hia ~hicle stand on the dime• of the Cape Cod National Seo3hore , visited by millions every year. Man h e lps kids frotn N . Ireland , FRESNO 1AP> -Vincent Lavery decided he had to do something about children in Northern Ireland leading lives of fear and hate. • On his way back from his 12th trip to Ireland in 25 years. the 45-year-old substitute teacher thought of inviting two children to his home here for a break from their nation's sectarian strife. But he liked his second idea much better; whisking a thousand 12-year-old boys and girls to the United States for a six ·week vacation next s ummer. The Irish immigrant is forming a non-profit fund -raising organization called The Children's Committee to collect an estimated $1.1 million for travel costs and some spendmg money Perhaps the man with the brogue kept a little magic from the time he played the leprechaun in a local stage production of "Finian's Rainbow." People from 45 s tates volunteered their homes within a week of his announcement. His appeal struck a sympathetic chord in places like Dunedin, Fla., Casper, Wyo., Galway, N. Y .• and Woodland, Mi ss. ·'The only requirement for any individual who d esires to participate is that there can be no politics or religion Interjected Into the committee or the project," said the Dublin native. "It would \otally defeat the Idea of what I'm trying to ac- complish." Lavery includes him1elf In the ban, sayln1 the children won't learn his own religious afflUatlon until "I'm waving them "oodbye In New York." He ch<,.e 12·ycar·old1 becau1e "they are not tintrencht.'<1 In concrett with hate and 1u1plclon and fur " Th •y ah10 were aelected becau11 the c urrent round of lntt'nse fltChtlna t>e1an the Yt.r lhcy were horn "Th••y ('ftuld "" buck lo lr1,1and knowln11 thtmr iJI an11tht-r •tylf• of llf,.," LMvor)' aald "1'h•t lul •bt.4-mrnt I• not Ju11t • i•llth1• 'rh .. •ts r hlldrll!n know bo ttth~r 11r~ .. Ill• c-rut 11vur t.11 pl•c" :dJ chlldren In uch 1t•l.4' 111run.i from 1 orn~ l<>1Jt>hlntl m1l m•nU. with 1•hlldrt-n In Nm1hnrn frnhinrl on hi• l•Utlll trip thl1 •vrlnli( •'n1 .. y Jif'riu1nlflerl th"' '"'""' y 11( • •~ yau 014 In on• mmn"nt t hf! hubhllna , &hM Jny, ~ha (llnJ In th11 ryr," ho 1111'1 "fn 1moOu1r mnmetnl, I hard w•• thn fHt , 111aplrlon, hut rt•1I untf 11t1flt1r " A ho)' MnxhttJll at.out jllltl~ otl 11 µ111111,, told J,11vory, "f horw ltu1 hu11 tf1H111n 1 lil11w 1111 1•1umnt1 homt " ''ll'• not .un ., ..... orullon It'll u llftt you ''•n'I oxplaln," he 1111ld "All you t·un '111 111 ho11,; 111 t1•I .,eoplo ll> f~ol It " Lavery hH wrlttnn vollllc••I ttnl1 rall1tcH.11 Jeader11 In North rn frttl•nd 1"'1 th~ tr1•h Ropubllt for help In the ""ltwtlon pro<' 111 lie •IJIJ plan• t.o ~rite Amerlcun iiov41rnou Hktn1 for th•lr ••· 11latance. Lavery hope• parent• with thllctren th• um• aae wlll be wlllln1 to lake In 1 C'hlld for a 11• wttk vacation 1t.arUn1 In Jul)' JfNta. He plant to appeal to th«t •1n•r•I public l~ fl nonco the trlpt and the fed ral aovtrnm•nt for help with vl111 and paa1porU. "I really want this lo be an American actlvl· ty," he 1ald. "I'm prepared \0 trav•I wherever ~ece111ry at m)' own exp nH ff there la 1ny nttd o 1et the mes111e acro11, but I don't thlnk l'll ave to." 642-4321 Df rtct « coll«t. to 1ublcrl1H> to JIOUr homtta.m poper, trae •• ' l ' e IR our ox. Watch for 1our FREE Conservation Kit to save Water, Energy & Money. We're mailing yoo a free Conservation Kit that'll help you save more than precious water. You'll save energy and money, too. The energy Orange County water suppliers use to import and process water. Pkls the costly water·heating energy yoo use at home. And as en· ergy costs rise in the future, so will you r savings. Vour Kit contains two different size lhower fk>w restrictori, a toilet tank water displacement bag. aAd d~ 'tablets to detect wasteful toilet tank leaks. ' Simple Instructions right In your Kit rriake ,lhese devices quick .. and easy to Install. · Saving water saves energy for all of us. Almost 75% of the water we use in Orange Coonty comes from hundreds of mi.les away. And the high cost of the energy used to import and process this water keeps going up. So when yoo save water, yoo also help save energy. But saving water helps you save money too, in two ways. First yoo'll save on your water bill. You'll also be using less hot water, which saves yoo money on home energy bills. So watch for your Conservation Kit in the mail. And when yoo get it use it. Answers and Advice If yoo have any questions about yoor Kit or its contents, call the toll ·free Water Hotline : 1·{714) 97-3 ·1028 or 1 (714)'' 973·1029. • Savina water saves you Energy&~. count! ·cALIFORNIA :DEPAR1MENT OF WATER RESOURCES P.O. Box 388.f. Sacramento, eA 95802 Pfoduc8d In cooperation with the Munlcl~I Water District of Orange County and Orange Copnty W~ter District. · ·"f ·.'. .... •. c f,1 \ t \b i )I ,, "' , , 1111 ' 11. ,. j " ' ,, '" .,,, '"' ,,\ •' 1 .. " I" ~I ) i 'I 11. ., .. 11. Ill •01 ni • 11. !I I ... •111 ' " ... , 11111 10(1 • lfl ' tri ,, .. , I') I 'ti 11; I 'f r1 1<11 I .. ' •' -· ------• Daily Pilat TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1981 MOVIES STOCKS 83 87 0 s a 6 a Thinking. about investing in the stock market? Try throwing darts ... B5 2 D 0 follution, ban h1111 New England shellfishing I llegal catches still thrive bkt ; haul could be poisonous ROVIDENCE , R.l. <AP> - ch lime a heavy rain washes an the streets of metropolitan vidence, Narragansett Bay llfisbermen lose thousandJ of tars. ess scrupulous fis herme n p a pote ntially poison· harvest. he rain courses down sewer ll~es and overnows the capital cl y's aging sewage treatment p ant, sending millions of iJ~~ns of raw sewage Into t he ~hen rainfall reaches a half in~h or more in 2.f h<Surs, the ~.tiode Island Department of En- v ~ o n m e n tal Manage m ent C\~omaticatly bans fishing in aijout 6 percent or the upper bay rot seven days. t he area is considered one of ~ r ichest for qu.a hogs, a h dsbell clam and the state's in shellfis h crop. A Universi- t o f Rhode Is land s tudy et· mated that 25 percent or all q a hogs taken in U.S. waters c e from Narragansett Bay. )iesides the temporary fishing btns. pollution from the sewage plant and s maller sources has P¥manently closed another 20 percent of the 116,000-acre bay t& s hellfis hing. Those areas. most of them near the plant. also are loaded with quahogs, slf id Philip A lbert, senior sanitary engineer for OEM. .The closures, to protect the p~blic's health. have an ironic t~ist. They have created a thriv- i n g indu s tr y -ill egal .s b ellfishi ng in polluted but q\(ahog-rich waters . Often work- ing at night. rishermen drag their great "bullrakes" across tfu.! bottom and s ell their fat ~it c hes to an unsus pecting ~lie . .. t 'or fi she rmen who observe Uf! la w. t he pollution is ex- ,,,~sive. 'You bet the closures hurt," ~ajd John Moran. a veteran Tlverton quahogger and former president of the Rhode Island Shellfishermen's Association. "Fishing is not a kind of busi- ness anyway," Moran said. "It's a little more t han hand to mouth. If something isn't done about this poUulion, we're going to lose the whole bay." He estimated the industry is worth from SlS m illion to S25 million annually, depending on the size of the crop. The average s hellfisherman m akes from $10,000 to Sl2.000 a year. he said. Shellrishermen are counting on a stale plan. funded by both federal monies and by a S87 7 million bond issue approved by voters last year, lo rehabilitate the sewage treatm ent plant and open al least part or the closed areas. But imminent cutbacks in federal Environmental Protec- tion Agency funds or about SlJO m 111 ion could stall the effort, said Joseph Turco, chairman of the newly formed Narragansett Bay Water Quality Management District Co mmission. The commission had planned to r ehabilitate the plant and some sewer lines by 1987, Turco said, adding. "I'm sure any loss of federal money would have som e effect on that timetable." The plant, parts of which are almost 100 years old, is too s m all and decrepit t o treat sewage properly under the best conditions. not to mention on rain y days, Albert said . Quahogs from polluted waters are considered a health hazard, Albert said . The stale de- termines pollution levels by sa mpling the waters for the presence of coliform bacteria, he said Moran, who at 45 has been s he llfishing for 16 years, said he and most other commercial fish- er men would never consider fi shing in polluted waters. Those fis hermen interviewed said the illegal fishing give the whole in- dustry a bad name and casts Crew ivorks on 2.272 bushel catch of quahogs r hardshell clamsJ from WandoRiverat Warren. R .I. doubt on the cleanlin<'SS of all shellrish sold A report of illness from one q ua hog could shut down the whole indust ry. they said But such standards are not up· held by others. most of whom are part-timers,. many or them juveniles. said Ca pt Ernest Wilkinson of the state enforce· ment squad that patrols the bay. Joseph Bennett. 29, was among those caught fishing in polluted waters las t year He was hncd SSOO ;.ind spent 30 days 1n Jail after h1!-> third arrest on th<' ehargt' Tht> state also <"onri scated his 19 fool Cape Codder His was the mo!>l s e,·er e l><.'n l ence 1n memory "There's a great deal of money to he made in polluted waters." Bennett said. "The quahogs are so thick that you can make $500 an hour. I've dug 1.200 pounds in 45 minutes t hat's S700 or S800 "I know people who go quahogging all mght long, mak- ing $2.000 to S3.000 a week. cash money," said Bennett Wilkinson said the state last ye ar h ad 332 cases or shellrishing in polluted waters that resulted in arrests From January to May or this year. there have been 101 cases. he s aid. "We can hit the adults pr etty h a rd if we cal<'h them ." Wilkinson said. For adults. the first orrense carries a fine of up lo $300 and allows the state to confiscate the f1shin~ boat and equipment T he second offense a relony involves a maximum fine of $1 ,000. up lo three years in prison and confiscation of the hoat and eq uipment, Wilkinson said. Juvenil e cases are handled hy the Family Court and penalties are less sever e. he said. ~ Despite magic, Detroit can't shake bad image · 1 At dilabled munidpal bw get1 a tow ~k to garage in Detroit. The city has overcome many past bad i1'1Qge1 but continue• to 1truggle. I i 979 divorces set U.S. record '• -.\WASHIN GTON (AP ) - Asiericans opted for divorce in 1879 at twice the rate they did 12 1eara earlier . according to a government study. ·,B ut the National Center for HOlth Statistics says couples destined for divorce courts are waltlng tonier to make the split aqst are leaving fewer chlldren ~ind from each broken mar· rC.te. ··:The number of divorces arant· ecS ln the United States tripled ln the tut 20 years to reach 1.181 .. Ul\on in 1979. Nearly a third, 411,000, occurred ln the 17 1tat.et coat ed a the South. the center ••••• every 1,000 married women (15 years and older > in the popula- tion In 1979, more than double the 11.2 divorces per thousand married women in 1967, the re· port said. The median length of mar- riages dissolved In 1979 was 6.8 years compared to 6.6 years ,1n '1977 and in 1978 and a ran1e of between 6.S and 8.7 years durin1 1970 to 1976. • While the report showed that more children were involved tn Tieka blamed CONCORD, N.C. <AP> - Eptdemlolo1l1l l:rnle Austin says concentratlona of lieu lbat he's tracked down in Cabanw County may help eradicate Rocky llount.a.ln spotted fever. Austin h• been workin1 for two years ander 1 three·ytar, '300,000 1raat from Duke Unlvenlt)' to try to determine why thin ii more Rocky Moun· taiD •Potted fever ln Cabarru1 and Rowen toanlt• tban ln 1111 otbtr area In th• nation. broken marriages -1.18 million children in 1979 compared with 562,000 in 1963 -the averagt number of children per divorc- ing couple bas declined steadily from the all·llme high of .36 in 1964. ln 1979, it amounted to one per couple. The center's statistics are based on sample data from 30 states which comprise a divorce registration area. Besides the 439,000 divorces in t he South there were 2913,000 in the north tentraJ states, 272,000 In the West and 177 ,,000 I n the Northeut. T he Weal had the highest , divorce rate with 6.6 per 1,000 populaUon. It compared with 6.1 r:r 1,000 ln the South, 5 per 1,000 the north central statet and S.8 per 1,000 ln tbe Northeast. The 1tates 7rantln1 the laraest numbers o dlvor~ea were California 1.J'7,883; Texas 92,399; Florlda •.707; New York M,dO; and OhJo 9 ,548. North Dakota, a 1tate witb one of the s mallest popul•tions, had the feweat dworcee. 2,094, Jn 1m. _, City faces b ankruptcy for second tim e in 50 years DETROIT <AP > -It had s haken its reputatio n as "Murder City, U.S .A.," over· come by the ugly memory of 1967 rioting that killed 43 people, and was learning to Ji ve with the loss of nearly a thir d of Its population. Despite troubles in the auto in- dustry, the Motor City was claw- ing its way back to respectabili· ty. It even had a gleaming steel and glass symbol of its rebirth. the $337 million Re naissance Center on the Detroit River . Republicans met last July to nominate Ronald Reagan. bring- ing 20.000 delegates and 8,000 journalists lo town to sample the new Detroit. And despite pre· convention skepticis m , de - legates left praising the struggl- ing urban giant. Yet nearly a year later , Detroit rinds itself staring ba nkruptcy in the eye for the second lime in nearly SO years . City workers have been asked to accept pay cuts and even then more layoffs may be necessary. At the RenCen, the privately financed brainchild of former Ford Motor Co. chairman Henry Ford II, some stores are closing because they can't compete with nourishing suburban malls; 65 percent of the available retail outlets have never been filled. Detroit's dream of rebirth for the nation's sixth-lar gest city has t urned into a nightmare of urban and econo mic reality: -An auto Industry plumbing the depths of depression. U.S. automakers lost S600 million in the rirsl qua rter of 1981, the most ever. -13 percent unemployment, nearly double the national rate. For every auto assembly job lost, state labor •nalysts say, live a uto Industry s upply workers are idl ed . -80 percent of the city's 1.2 million residents dependent on some form Of governpient U • alstance, frorrt aoclal 1 se<?wity and unemployment ~eflls to welfare. -Per-capiu retaU spending totalln1 S2,521 in 1979, the m01t recent year for fl1urea. Na· UonaUy, the averate II $4,005. -City nvnuet up just 18 percent ln Lhe put three yeara, while exptnMt -lktepJn1 pace with lnftaUon -,,... 40.8 per- cent. TM t•P bltWMll income a nd expenHI " ftn tf mee the national averase. Detroit Mayor Coleman A. Young has put the city's workers and residents on notice: If pro- posed tax increases and municipal pay cuts a ren't in place by June 30. the city will go broke as it did in 1933. Young proposes to double the city income tax, already one of Michigan's highest, to 4 percent. That would bring in $94 million. And he wants to cut employees' pay 5 percent lo 7 pe rcent, sav- ing another S76 million. H e is also as king th e Legislature to permit the sale of a deficit bond to cover $132.5 million in accumula ted debt. Local banks and municipal employee pension funds will be asked t o buy the bo nds : Detroit's bond rating is below in· vestor grade. "There are no hats with rab· bits in them, and no magician is waiting In the wings," Young 'Homes were . . . fit only for bulldozers.' said in unveiling a Sl .6 billion budget. "We are fresh out of m~lc and miracles." For emphasis, he adds: "If we go bankrupt, it could force the state info bankruptcy.'' Could Detroit have avoided this crisis? Probably not, say municipal finance experts. But it might have taken steps to soften the blows of inflation, un· employment and the auto in- dustry depression. For example, David Littmann, senior economist al Maoufac· turers National Bank of Detroit, says clty administrators had evidence u early as 1968 that the city faced trouble because spendint was outatrlpplng an eroding t.ax bue. The city's pc>pulatlon stood at 1.67 mllllon in 1980 and bad fallen to 1.43 mUllon by the Ume' of the 1170 census. The exodut be1an wttb slum-clearing pro- jects, but picked up aa tues 1nd crime lncreued. Me.anwblle, the rntdenttat tax bate had been decllnlnl since the ltsOI. State Rep. WUllam Ryan blames real estate 1peculMOr1 wllo Ufloi*l federal monaac• 1ublid* to aeU hom• to,... who couldn't afford to keep them up. "Maintenance s lacked. arid when they left the homes were vandalized and fit only for the bulldozer," he said. P roperty tax revenues the city's single largest source of in- come -have fallen since 1970. In the four years since the RenCen opened, 90 projects have added $760 million to the value of downtown Detroit. Some S367 m illion in building is under way. And $790 million in construction is "committed " But critics say this progress has been al the expense or neighborhoods Finally. despite the 1973 Arab oil embargo. U.S. automakers - protected by price controls on gasoline -continued to build large cars while foreigners de- velo ped s mall fuel -e rricient automobiles. In a city where 25 percent or American cars are built, the signal was not fully appreciated . Now U.S. automakers face a dif· ricult S80 billion capital rebuild· ing effort made more diffi cult by the popularity or foreign autos. Still, Young gets high marks for his efforts. Since 1973, he's cut the payroll 20 percent -to 20,500 workers. Wa lter Strecher, the city budget director, notes Young as been an outspoken advocate for big cities. And evt'n critics acknowledge that many things were beyond his control. ' A 1977 arbitration rullnJ gave p olice higher salaries that Young says cost $58 milllon a year . He 's laid o ff 2,000 patrolmen to compensate. But pollce and firefighters' state funds for this fiscal year had withdrawn when economically depre$M!d Michigan had to Cllt it.a state budget by $1 billion . And now, Yount uyl, 1''1 poeslble that state and federal ald for 1981-82 may be S300 mUtloo lesa than hoped. "It'• Important tq understand that no one apeclal event la 10· ln1 lo wipe out Detroit'• pro· blem," 11ld Robert Geter, vice presldtnt f« municipal bonding 1t Standard and Poor'• bond rat- lna 1ervlce ln New York. "A lot dependl on tbln11 tbat aren't under thelr control."' ~ ....... .,,. ~ .. ... . . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 ... PtJBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI 9USIMHI .,,.._ NAMll ITATeMllMT "'*'111Wd OrMll C-11 o.lly l'li.t, TIM fell-..1"9 !MW-ere dolft9 J-U, a , Jiiiy 7, 14, 1'11 JMl-tl l'ICTITIOUI aUllMell INll-•: MAMalTATllMllMT NEWl'O"T CONSTRUCTION PUBLIC NOTICE Tiie leill-119 ...,._ 11 ...... lluV. MANAGEMENT, 5120 llrcll $1rfft. neu ea: Ne.,_i ea.di, CA 92660. LaH "ESIEA"CH, JUI Mo11roe CIWll~ RoOert StepM111, 401 PICTITIOUI aUllMell Wey, C .... MeM. CA m». awc11ne11, C.le Mele, CA '20•. M.,.._ ITATeMllMT "•11e1t• H. Nlcl\ofl, JIJI MollrM "•llY H. Pvlaakl, JOI EICll•-. Tiie lollewl"9 ,., ...... •r• "'"' Wey, C.le Mele, CA m». N ........ a..dl, CA '2*. bwil,,.N •: Tiiis _.... 11 C9'1d1Kled ., .. Ill· Tiiis IM4ineu 11 COfldU<l•d •Y • NlWl'OltT TILE~ CA•INIET, 112 dlYIWel. ....., ............ p. N. New_. al\OL, Newpwt .. ecll, "-Id H. Nlctlol1 OWis "·~I Cefl..,flle fW! Tiiis ·-w .. Iii.cl with t• Tiiis 11.._t ... fifed wltl\ ,,_ Glt!Pe A. f<eke, ISM IE. VM ai. C01111ly Clerk of Orenee C:0..11ty °" CO\lftty Clertt of Oreft99 County °" Mr. Or.,., c.Mlfornletl666 J-S. 1"1. J-S, 1"1. Jot .. S.... CllltlOI', ISM E. VM ,,..., ,, .... •111Nr. Or ... Celfforftle .... P119flllled er.,. coe11 C>elly Piiot, P'*ll-Or.,. co.st O.fly PllOI, Men11el 0.,., •• l'elco, 01• Junet,16.2',JO,lt'1 2~1 Junet,16.2',a,1•1 2441-tl Volce11e R•••· S11ll•r Creek, Cell..,llietlllll PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI au11Mell ..,... ITAT•MllMT Tiie , .. ._ .. pot-11 ..... llutl· _ .. : 111 COMl'U-OVOTE 121 Sl'O"T·A· THON, .,,_ l'almette Circle. ,._. t.olfl Vali..,, c;.MIMr'flie .,,_ Miriam A1111 ,..,""""· tttN l'elmolto Clrcle, F-1o111 Vellev. Cellf«flle ft1ll Tltll ~Is~-llY.., lflo tllvl4uol. MlrlMftA.F- TNt ....._,,. -II ... wlVI -C-ty CleR .. Or .... CouMy .. Moy "· ,.,. , .... , PWlllNll DrMll CM1t Oolty Pltot, J-!, •. 16. n. "" ldt-11 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI aUllMlll MAMll ITATeMllMT Tiie lei_.,.. ...,._ II dol119 llluil· ....... : GltAPHIC SUPPO"T. 1571 W. Kelelle Aw., -'-Im , CA '2I02. TeroM 0 . a..rd. t1t0 Ca lMduto Aw .• w .. lmlM ..... CA '2613. Tllll _.,,._ II "1nd11ctecl •Y 9fl lflo 41vlOUol. T.._0.8Hrd Tlll1 •-wot llted will\ t• CO\lnly Cieri! of Or•-County °" J-S.IWI. ,,..,. PwltllSIWCI Or .... ~I Dolly PllOI, J-•. "· n. •. 1•1 '""' PUBUC NOTICE Tlll1 ...U... 11 c...-.ClM •v e ...... e ........ .... PUBUC NOTICE ~ .... .. PICTITIOUI au1u1eu Tllb ....._. -, .... •IVI , .. MAMa ITAftAIMIMT CO\lftty C*11 ef OrMee C:-y °" TIM i.li.wl1141 ,..._ ue dolne J-It, 1"1. ~-: .., .... ST9WART AUTOW~IESALES, "'*11111ed OrMtit c:-t o.lly l"llot. IUJ GM'Wft Grow a 1v4., o erc1011 J -u, •• Jwv 1. 14. 1'11 ll041 o,.,,..~..,.. WllllMI E . ._,_ 19'112 R-.,.r ~. Huolll.....,. ...... c.lltetftle ...... . PUBLIC NOTICE Liiiy L S. ~ 1"22 R.,..w l'ICTITIOUS llUllMell ._.,.., ...... lfllllon 9Mdl, c.lltwfllo MAMa ITAHllMMT --TM ..,,_1,.. ,......,, ere clol11t1 Tiii• ~ 11 ~, ... .., • ~-: 9Wf'el,.,_...., COMMUNITY VOLUNTEIE"S UlfylE.S..~ FO" THE IELOERLV ICVIEI 420 TM1 ...._ -II ... wltll -WHt tttll StrHt Cotto Men C-ty Oertl Of o...,.. Ccluflty .,. c.llfOl'nlata.27 ' • J-It. t"1. I'~ SOUTH COAST INSTITUTE FOR ,._..._.Or-c-t Delly Piiot. Al'PL ll!O OIEltOHTOLOGY. e J-n • J·~y 1 14 tt11 ·-•1 Colll•rfll• c.._otlOfl, 00 w. 19111 • · • · · .,_ sv..1. c.u-.., CotH......io t3U7 PUBLIC NOTICE Tllla .....,_ la <Oftduc-Illy e c.._otlofl. Sowtll CO.al tnall hit. PICTITIOUI llUllMeU tor "'-1M ~,_tofovy MAMa ITATUdMT Oii .. ......._, Tiie loltowl119 --Is ct.1119 ""91· Tr-... NU H : Thia at.lem9fll w .. llted Wiii\ llw " J ~ • WE LOI HG m J & • Coun1y Cler'll of Or .... County 011 Mey RENTALS, 2JS1 Col11Mllle Drive. n. '"'· CMto ...... c;.Mlfomle ,._ 1'16all Joell E. Boller, 2157 Col11Mllllo Pulllll"*" 0r9fllll CMS! Dolly PllOI, 0r1w , c.1e Mne. Cotlfomlo ,._ J-2, t, "· n. 1•1 2.elWI Tiii• llluNfleM .. ~ Illy ... lfl- 4tvldllel. Jecll E ..... ., PUBLIC NOTICE Tllla •--llted wltll t11o CO\lftty Clerk of Or•-C-nty Ofl J-tt. 1911. l'ICTITlOUS aUSINlll NAMa STATaMIENT l't.._ Tiie 1011-1119 penons are dol110 Pllllll-OrMll C-SI Delly PllM, lluM,,.11 H . J-U. JD,.Juty 7. 14, 1•1 27'1'41 01.AMOHD VIE'W HOMES. "" -Moc.A""'-•• ..-•• 5'111• 102, .._,, l'ICT1TIOU$ ausaMus PlJBUC NOTICE •-11• Collfotftlo ,.., MAMll ITATeMllMT 01 ......... Vt.w VII ..... o 0-.ol Tiie ......... _._ 11 ...... bull· ----,lr-~--------Por1,....ll\lp, Ill Geflef'ol PartNf', ,,.. -H: P~TIOUSMlllMeU MocAl'UIW ....... Sul .. IOI • ....,_. I'. J. P.utTY ~INO, t ,._ ........ ITATIIM9WT 9Mcll, Collfonllo .... ~.1.-,CAt'VIS. TIM ......... ~ 11.............. AlllN II. a LI""-,_,_....,, l'.-lo.Jeefl~.tl'I,.,."-· -••: lh G•Mrel Portner. 200 ,, .. _.,, 1,.,.1,,., CA trl71S. AMIE RICAN SURVIVAL COM-Ceflter Orlw, Suite >Cit, Naw ... rf Tllb lilo.-IMI• ft~-r,., 1f1... PAMY, -W ...... aNC., Mte 9-11. Collfenlle tiMO dMdllol. n., N--1 a..c11, c:.1 ........ 0..., Tllfl _,,,.., ll <Olldu<IM •Y a l'-leJ. ~ IE...,~ C>Mrllonl. ~ W . ...-.rol--ljt. Tiiis ......,,_,WM llled wltll ,,. Ceut Hltfl••Y. N•WPO•I ••ocll, ~v ... _ CO\lftly Clen of Or_,.. C-tr M CAIHOl"llle'*I oO.-ot Port_.tlllp J-J, 1"1. Tllll ...._ ll <_ .... lly 9fl lfl... 8y: ~View VIII ... "'""' 41Y._.. • General ... ,,,,., .. Ip PultllMocl Or .... CoeJI Deity PllOI, l!dWlfl 8. DMt1»or11 lb Geflotel POrtMI' J-t , t•, D. JO. 1•1 ,...,_., Tiiis ....,_ -111-S wltfl h By TM JolVI Marti• ------------C-ty Cieri! of Or .... C-nty °" ~ompa11y, PUBLIC NOTICE J-"· 1"1. • Cotllorftle <Of'POl'•llofl ....... lllGefterel PartMI' P-IMocl Or-CMlt Oelly PllM, By: Jolwl T. Mortin l'ICTITIOUSaUllMH6 J-U.llD,Jllfy7,lf,t"1 ~1 111"'"9lldent MAMa ITATaMaMT By. Ruth E. Oc- Tit. ie1i.wi,.. .,__ •re '"'119 PUBLIC NOTICE its Secretoty llUll-•: 8y: Grll«len 0e .. k19., lllC. GUARDIAN ADVllO"V COUN· • l'ICTITIOUll~MIM o Collr.nlo corporelloll CIL, ... ~ c:.eMer ~lft, Mo. llSO..-al Par1_. sat, .......... ~. Cellterfllo.... MAM ITATIMllNT ay: OcMelol l . eo..c,_ R ..... V. Gl9MI\, t ,..,. C-S, TIM ltl ....... --Is .... lluU-ltsl'rftldlflt ...._.,. 9Nc:I\, GelHerNo .-.. -••: •r: Fr-L. ,...,.. .._.. K. a.iew, St -....Ct• ADOLT MANUFACTURING & V~ l'rellcl9nt DrlH, C--•t Mor, Colltwflla DISIO'I COMl'AHY. 1'11 ~. Tl\ta l~t WOl flleCI wltll u,. tMaS c .......... Cel ....... o ftU7 CO\lfl1y Cfffll of Or-Cou11ty °" Tttll ~ II COftWCled r, 0 s-wl I.~ t..a IMMY<,... J-I "'' _..._ .. ~. ~ • ._ ............. c.lllwfll• • • ""'* ~V.G-... taM1 . ' R ...... K.-... 6 ~ Tiiie......,... -fl ... wltlt ... Tltll....._l.l~tN9'1Mi... Al'l&I ' 1&.owc:iar.w..._ c-,. Clerti .ti OrMtit c-.ty ... Moy .. ,....... ..... ,.. V. ttl1. s--4 IE. Milalt 4'ft .._......, .......... -.ettTv ... -.uo. nia........,. -,,... wt"'"" ......,.._.,~,... .......... c..-Or.,...... C-ty O&rtl .. Or ..... c-ty -l"WlllltM Or .... C.• o.lly l"lie, ........ -. ColllNlf1l6e... J-, •• ""· ~ -10, 17. 2l. Jiiiy '· '"' • 3'S7-t1 ....... r--• ......... or._ ea... o.lly l'llet .._ ...... Or ... C...t Dolly ...... J-1. '·It. n. 11111 UtHi ~ n. a. Jv1y 1,,.. ,., JDWt PUBUC NOTICE PlJBLIC NOTICE I PUBLIC NOTICE Hrtiled ...,., ONLY 527995 LAMENT -Historian Arthur Schlesinger in a commencement ad- dress t o No r th · eastern U ni · versity graduates deplored what h e terme d the drift toward conservatism among young people. .· Furnace leaks fixed A WASHINGTON (AP) -The maker or about 55,000 furnaces used In mobile homes bas launched a repair program because or the danger of le aking carbon mon oxide , the Cons umer Product Safety Com- mission reports. The danger arises if portions or the vents corrode in model MMG "Miller" br and liquid propane and natural gas fumaces. The furnaces were made by the Home division of Lear Siegler Inc. of Holland, Mich. Corrosion in the flue pipe extension and vents can allow carbon monoxide to be emitted into living areas, the com mission said. The agency report- ed il has received reports of 19 deaths associated with aucb ~r)g slnce 1989. '<- The furnaces were sold for use in mobile homes alnce 196', either as original equipment or for replalee-ment. I• · The commission said mobile hen'fe owners shouJd check their fumacn for the "Mill er" name at the ... or the louvered door . U it is a "M.iller,1· open the louvered dool' apd check the large vertical pipe. If that pip6 ls about fi ve inches across, the furance is model MMG. If you have that model, or are-nQll sure, contact the maoufactur•jb}' calling, toll free, 800 253·3874.JUhe firm will arrange for free l.rult.alletion of a new flue pipe extension. 25~~ ... " .. VIR H ll'llllClll ClltNlll• C1lor TV WITH DUAL MODE REMOTE CONTROL SAVE r s15900. 9 100% Solid Stlte Chasm 10A81406K •In· lint Picture Tubt Odr -(It\ Ngrl mr>OCI ploal\c • Autom1tic frequtn· cy Control • Automatic Color Control MOW ONLY 549995 11'~ ....... ClllP MlllllP TV • Fr11ttt foolf Ste,... 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Alter altering the coune of musical theater 1m America wilb "Oklahoma" ln the mld·Fortles, the team of Richard Rod1ers and Oscar Hammentein II enjoyed an lllustrtous career · lllefore closing out their association ln 1962 wllb 1 what may well have been their most notable ct$fort, "The Sound of Music." :ti 1 The musical as theatrtcal art has taken some 10\ber, more pronounced thrusts ln the ensuing two decades (notabty throu1h the Innovations of 11oomposers like Stephen Sondheim>. but Rodcers and Hammerstein productions have lost 1MTERUISSIQN little appeal, even though 11111 nll they are perhaps the ' most familiar in their field. These shows set a rtaln Disney·like standard for America that ually guarantees SRO family audiences. Their "Sound of Music" (the movie version ich won an Oscar and set a box office record) is 11 a winner. as evidenced by the splendid oducUon now on display at Saddleback College the first offering of the Saddleback Company eater's summer season. While few playgoers 11 be viewing it for the first time, fewer still cfn cape the overwhelming emotional sensation oduced by the strains of "Climb Every ountain,' •the climactic song of both acts. At Saddleback, director·choreographer David Bell has fashioned a smoothly workable oduction in which scenic transitions are only ::Voyle McKinney b1ighten1 ''The Sound of Ml.I.lie" in '.:hisrolecutheimpressario. " suggested and the aame basic 1etUn1 functions for all playing areas with but minor adjuatmenta. Thb premise la carried out beautifully by Wally Huntoon'• wispy backdrops and David Pecoraro'• variable ll&htlng effects which eat1bll1b the chancing moods of the show. The focus, as It must be, is on Maria, the "1"111 IOUMD Ofl MUSfe'' Am~$~·--0tc.er~l1."'-tM eftf c " "· "· mwlk -............. ~,... t... ~ ..,'TJJ.11y ......_, •ltMlftt.., oa .. ~ Pe<oran. .., aw .... c..i.ena, ..... '!--.er .._ MaloM .,_..... .., ...... teMclt OlnwlMY ,.,.._ ......... .,., ... ~ _. I p.m.. INltl-Sttwdw Mil SWM9y ot J r.·m .. ttwOUlli-iuly-j ol H l'Nlll tl-l•r al ~II Cell ... , M Mloll 111a10. ,__,,M!OM .,,....,., . Tiie Ull #!Urie , .............................................. s-we1-c.,c4111 VOft Trtpp ................ , ............. s.i-Arlell Ma• Detwtller .................................... DoyleMcKwwy ~~=.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·::.=~ LIMI............ .. ............ , ..................... Sllatl -llelt Gr..-W .. • • .. . .. .. .. . • .. .. . .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . sc-1 Marleftll '••11 Sc-.......................................... _.1 _.l!eft HY* ''•"' ....................................................... , .. ,.." '''"''"" .......... ·• ..... " .................... ~•llM<O-W LOlllM ......... , .................................... ltl-1Y lley Kllrt ........................................... S•-~ ~~~: ·:::::::·.:::::: :::: ::: : : :::::::·:::::::::::ca:.:~=-~ Gretel • .. • ......................................... CYlldl Sc ...... tlltr postulanl who ta.kes on the demanding role of governess to the Von Trapp brood only to find romance with their father. But other, stronger supporting cast members leave a considerable impression. • Susan Watson. a tiny but energetic actress dwarfed by her two eldest charges, possesses a pleasing if not overpowering voice for the role of Maria. Her rapport with the children is her strong suit. As Captain Von Trapp, Stephen Arlen is excellent, the most imposing actor to play the role in .memory. Arlen projects undisputed authority, which does not diminish when his character ta.kes on more human dimension. Tops among the featured players is Doyle McKinnev as the music festival impressario. blending lightness of character with strength or in· terpretation. Marlys Watters is fine as Arlen's fleeting name, though her duet with McKinney ("How Can Love Survive") often is overshadowed by the orchestra. Shari Moskau a s the eldest girl and Stuart Marland as her Nazi boyfriend are first rate, and Jane Westbrook lends a dynamic voice to her role as the mother abbess, exhorting Maria to "'Climb Every Mountain." Jean Hyde and Clark Jarrett (though he's a bit young) play 41fell as the Von Trapp servants, while litUe Cyndi Schreiber is absolutely captivating in her stage debut as the youngest or the children, a full.fledged scene stealer at the age of 5. Saddleback's bills will be alive with "The Sound of Music" every night but Monday at 8 o'clock, with matinees on Saturdays and Sundays at 3, through July 5 at the Fine Arts Theater on the Mission Viejo campus. ~ansbury in town for Ahmanson run : HOLLYWOOD (AP) -During the recent wed· ;~ing celebration for her son Anthony Shaw in San <Francisco, Angela Lansbury sat next to the ::Episcopal canon. "Are you sure this is roast :'bee(?" he said with a chortle. The actress gets that wherever she goes. The •. eason is that for a couple of years she has been · laying Mrs. Lovett, the infamous baker of the roadway musical ·'Sweeney Todd." Her meat s are definitely not roast beef but stem from the urderous activities of the "demon barber of etStreet ... • The drumbeat of meal·pie jokes is a small 'ce to pay for Miss Lansbury's association with weeney Todd." which she greatly admit'es. "It a marvelous show, well ahead or its time." she s. •• The British·born actress was here for a one· · y parade of interviews to acquaint Angelenos b "Sweeney Todd," which begins a run at the manson Theater June 26. Planted in a Brown rby booth, she said without complaint. "I've n sitting here all day -except for one walk und the block and four trips t.o the bathroom." • She added: "I think it's important to let poten· l patrons know about the show. It is not a sic al comedy. and it might shock those who ndly buy tickets to a show. They are the ones o might say, 'Why didn't you tell me that the ding man goes around slitting throats?' "People who like the show adore it and come ck again and again. Our best audience is young pie; they come first. then they return and bring ir parents. The trouble is that not many young pie can pay theater prices." Miss Lansbury, whose high·kicking "Mame" s a memorable performance, remarked that 'Sweeney Todd" is a more rigoro~ show to do. .: "It uses an entirely different set of muscles," :'she cited. "There is much more singing, more ·.vocal demands. I step around a little but tbere is ::no real dancing. It's the singing that is tremen· ::dously strenuous." ·. Angela Lansbury was a child of Hollywood, ::tysving come here during World War JI with her :;QlOther, actress Moyna McGUl, for a contract at : ·MGM. Long married to agent·producer Peter ~aw. she works most of the lime in the Broadway ~meater or in films abroad. She will end the NOW COSTA •IA fOUlffAltt VAil!Y FUWITON cinema Clnter Fomltv TWtn Fox 714/979-'141 71.t/962·1248 71.t/525·.t7.t7 MN1Nll.S OMV II MOST lHEMllS MOW "-AftlO ........ "-'IA ....... ...,. ... , h tt ~ YIN llllC' 4M 1&1• _,, , .... -.. .....,,..._ Nl .01' "Sweeney Todd" run here and return to England to film "Bertram's Hotel." It's another Agatha Christie yarn, and Miss Lansbury will repeat her role as the spinster sleuth Miss Marple. Last year she appeared as Marple in "The Mirror Crack'd" with Elizabeth Taylor, Rock Hudson and Kim Novak. "I 'm getting offers for other Marples," Miss Lansbury reported. "London Weekend Television wanted me to do one, but I waa involved in 'Sweeney Todd.' " It takes a bit of doing to convert the sleek. sophisticated Lanabury into the dowdy, aging Mar- ple. While the actress enjoys the role, she finds the makeup and costume depressing: "In the studio room I found I was ignored - just an old lady diminished by the cloak of age. I was a nobody, a non·person. The experience made me realize the loneliness that old people on their own must feel." Students win filill awards HOLLYWOOD <AP > -Young filmmakers from California, Massachusetts and New York were named winners in the 8th Annual Student Film Awards, passed out each year by the Oscar· awarding Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Presenting the awards at the Academy's glit· tering Wilshire Boulevard headquarters were ac· t~ess Lee Remick, actor Steve Macht. producer· director Stanley Kramer, producer·director-actor Tony Bill, actor Carl Weathers and animtog T. Hee. Mistress of ceremonies was Academy Pr::t dent Fay Kanin, who received a special trophy from Stanley J . Boulier, assistant vice president AT&T, which co·sponsors the event. The trophy re· cognized "the Academy, its support of student filmmakers and sponsorship of the student film awards program." "ENDLESSLY FUNNY" -VIiiage Voice NOW PLAYING NOW PLAYING ..a ...-T••¥UT --UA ........ fOUftUlll VllleJ O!allOI Ofwt Ill UA Ct11 Cl'*"I ll0-40n e:Jt '* $~7022 6JN911 • _,,.... .,.. -wu1T1u•11 ... 1 1tT1•111• ... WOOCllll. °'""' 1111 °'*"" .... . &40 7444 ~I M$5 63103'0 191 J9l5 • Tim 5*t0eell ~\.• I • I • .1 •.. · 1 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 2~. 1981 •• CHARLES BRONSON on the set of the recenUy completed "Death Wish II," which tells the story ol a man who searches for the killers of his maid. The original "Death Wish" was released in 1974. ..-- A Joy e affair with the guitar Laurindo A lmeida speaks out on survival of jazz By JAY SHARBUTT Af' Arta Wrffer NEW YORK (AP) In the town of Santos, Brazil. a young man with a guitar got hurt in a bar fight. whereupon the father of a young boy who wanted to learn guitar said no, no guitar for you. "I think he worried that someday I'd be play- ing in a bar and also gel hurt," Laurindo Almeida smiled. "So I had to learn secretly, by watching my sister being taught ... Almeida, that boy from Santos, is 63 now, a jazz star who learned classical music first. He's worked in both worlds for most of his adult life, as well as in the film and record studios of Hollywood. He's played in more than 300 film scores and has an Oscar for scoring a film, "Tbe Magic Pear Tree." He aJso has six Grammy awards and has recorded more than 100 jazz and classical albums. He recently was in town with a jazz group, the L.A. Four, consisting of himself and fellow jazz stars Ray Brown on bass, drummer Jeff Hamilton and sax and flute man Bud Shank, all top Hollywood sidemen. Almeida, who with Shank popularized Brazil's bossa nova sound in America in the mid·50s , didn't originally plan to play jazz. His goal was to work in the Hollywood studios and compose. Which he did, but not before learning jazz - $15 extra a week in pay was the Inducement -in Sao Paulo, Brazil. of all places, as a teen·age staff musician at a radio station. RICHARD ORVOR And CICEL V TYSON Alan Alda Carol Burnett "rT IS THAT RARITY OF RARmE~ A SEQUEL THAT READILY SURPASSES THE ORIGINAL:' RIOW\O SCHICl(EL TMW/QAZJNE "I was myst1hed when I first saw chord sym· bols for the guitar parts," he said . "I didn't know about them, I only knew how to read notes, so l used the piano parts at first.'' After World War II. financed by royalties from a song of his that had become a minor hit in the U.S .. he finally moved to Los Angeles to start mak· ing his way as a studio musician. He also spent three years, 1947·50, in Stan Ken· ton's big band. He admits it was unusual. playing acoustic. gut·string guitar, a soft sound against the big, roaring brass Kenton favored. But he somehow managed -and survived a brief fling with an electric guitar someone gave him: "I hated to carry those things, all those amplifiers And I was terribly afraid of shock. He stuck with the acoustic guitar even during the mid·60s, when rock'n'roll guitar got quite loud with the heavy acid riffs of Jimi Hendrix and such breaking the decible barrier. "It didn't affect me," Almeida says. "Because I was doing classical concerts around the world then. But in music, you know, new things come along and for some reason overshadow other styles. "But it has no real value. it's going to fade out. And jazz has sur vived all other forms of popular music, even the almighty rock'n'roll.'' A short. powerfully built man who lives in Los Angeles, Almeida's philosophy of performing is the old-fashioned kind: You play your best all the time. be the audience large or small. * IAIGAIN SPECIAL * Mon. & Tue•.--$2.00-ALL DAY • EXCEPT WHERE NOTED C!l!:i~.ta m.~~.!8) IM!m:llnndl•._. ............ ~--... •SORR Y, m NO BARGAIN PRICES FOR THIS FEATURE 1 :15 5:45 10:15 Burt lfetynolds ·Rogel' Moote nn.11 ~.Dom All..•ae • "10flltWlrrSl!NSll TIM AllllllS ltlDlr"'11f1(1Cll(/l •AliAI /ltf t/#Mlfltll '7111 ~' 1#111" ~-... IMlllMlrllll·~ ...... ·~~·---,,,., ....... •1 ntlll·Mnlf-·-S• l-~MYIN/lltJ(/lf• ~ll'Allf~IS 11//#r·-"IM/alfl/IS ._"Ml tf (tl#MI • "-""*""ti Al rN't • ll•tt S--"$1lffFf ColMr II /JIJlPIIJl/llltMJWll tiii). .. \ \ • ' -.. • ' • • • .. .. 11!11" --• -----• • ----- ----- Ora• Coalt DAILY PILOT/TuHday, June 23. 1981 A low-humor .look at 'History of the World ' a1 'IFF PAaKEa .... ...,,.... ..... Mel Brootla lovH bad Jok•. One of hi• f a.ortte rec:urrtf\I characters 11 the ttand·up oomedla' who 1lraJn1 tbrou•h a bopfleuly dumb routbM 1rlnnina ear to tar, •rovelln1 ror lau,bl. He auekl ua rlpt lnto tht comedian'• tnidety: w• watch blm 1weat. we admire hi• lmbecUlc tenuity and flnaJly w1 laush at hi• awful Une1. To BrookJ, a falled Joke l1 aJmOlt aa ~ood u one that worlll, and becaUH of that be 1 aJwaya wlllln1, even ea1er, to rt1k maktna an au of blmHll. He'• a descendant from lhe court J•ter. a bulf oon, a pro- f eaalonal fool. Mott of Brooks' comedy ort•lnate1 ~low the bell: he'• not a c1rebral comic. but a pubic one. "The t01tory of the World, Part I" .. divided Into five 1e1menta, lbe the Old Tntament, Rome, the Spanish lnqul1ltlon and the French Revolu· tlon. Unlike Woody Allen, who will craft hla 1cene1 to aet up his Jokes, Broou 1oe1 for quantity. It'• 1 shotgun approach to humor, where Iota of Uttle Joket ue packed Into a 1c:ent lnltead of a few bl1 ones. la "Rome," Brooks plays ComlcUI, a 1tand· up phllo.opber who wan .. to htadllne In the main room at Ceuar'1 palae•. 8roob PUN on the name <b• cull to a bri.t •bot ol UM famous culno>, llUJ)Chel into a bad routine to ent.ert1ln Ceuu (Dom DeLulM) who burpt in approval. There are probably t•o doaen Jok• In the thrH·mlnut.e scene. TheH'I even a b1nana peel Joke In It. Brookl' Joke bllta do.tn't 1Jv• you •re1t hllhl and lows: when they work you chuckle: when they don't you wait t.bem out. Some of the beat part• of "The History of the World, Part I" are \he quick bit• of dJalo1ue. "The people are revolt1n1," HYI the count Lo the kln1 in tht French Revolution H · quence . "I know, they 1Unk on Ice," the klnl replies. In the Rome acene, Brooks takea a Job H a waiter Lo help aupport bJa rotten career 11 a 1tend up/hlloeopher. He walks lnto a banquet room to tin the twelve dlaclplea and Je1u1 Christ prepar· ln1 for the Last Supper. Brooks looks 1l the ilum party, amlles and aaka "Everybody wan\ soup'" A Clavell's 'Noble House' is top fiction FICTION l. "Noble House." Jamee Clavell 2. "Ood Emperor of Dune." Frank Herbert 3 "Free Full In Crimson.'' John D MIC· Donald 4 "Gorky Vark," Mutln Cru1 Smlth s "Masquerade." Kit Wllllama 6 "The Covenant." James A. Ml rhener 7 "Tu Babv." Tomi Morrtaon M "l.kcnae Renewfd.'' John Oardnn g "XPO," Len Del1htoo 10 "{'reallon." oo ... Vidal NON·f'IM'ION 1 "Tttt' l~1n1 Uod Mad~ t'1 All," Jemff U.-r riot :.i 'Nt1\•t1r S-v lllel H(l{•." Rl,•hant ~h"m\Wlfl 3 ''Tht1 ltt1\•t1.rl~ Hlll41 Ol"l'" J'"h M..-.. 1 Ho llywood look t o s u111111 e r bo* · of fit~e HOU.. YWOOO \Af>I U•,.. .,.. tOn\• \\I thtt summtr attruUuns whkh Hollywood hoP" wlll brint a turnaround In the-movtl' bualneaa "The History ol thf' World. Part I." Mel Brooks and Company: "For Your Eyes OnJy," Roger Moore as James Bond: "Cannonball Run.'' Burt Reynolds. Farrah Fawcett, Roger Moore. Dean Martin etc.: "Raiders or the Lost Ark," a Steven Spielberg-George Lucas film; "Zorro, th'e Gay Blade," "George Hamilton; "Outland.'' Sean Connery; "Dragonslayer," Peter McNicbol; "Rid- ing High.'' Cheech and Chong; "Clash of the Titans, .. Laurence Olivier, Harry Hamlin; "True Confessions.'' Robert DeNiro, Robert Duvall; "Tarzan," Bo Derek; "Superman II." Cristopher Reeve; "The Legend of lhe Lone Kanger," JU111ton Spi ls bury; .. Arthur ," Liza Minnelli. Dudley Moore: "The Fox and the Hound," new Disney animation ; "Eye.of lhe Needle," Donald Sutherland. 4. "Tht..Ea~le's Ollt." Carloe Ca1taneda 5. "Co9los," Carl Sa,an 8 "Live for SucceH,' John T Malloy 1 "NolhJn1 Down," Robert All•n 8 "You Can Ne1ot1ele Anythlnt.' · llerb Coheo 9 "Nlc!e Girls Do," Irene Kaa11orla to "Survlv" and Win In the lntlallon1ry l!llMhlles," Howerd J. Ruff B'o 1iic Woman • lll d mand' uo1.1swnon \Aft ) The tr• WhCln 1tudlo11 ~"te ._ .... )' ol l'Htln• lt lovlslon 1tar11 In feature mm IH 11~11111 lo be ovt1r . l.lnduy W a1ner 11 hap· aw to noC1t ''Ynu only hnt1 to look at the names ln movlet tod•)' M•ry Tyler Moore, Alan Alda, Carol tturnotl. etc to see that the old prejudices no tonur oxlat ... Mita W•1ner observes. "Th~ business la chanJing, and television is where lhe power Is. Television namet are easily recognl11ble to theater audiences. Television names can assure a good sales (of the movie> to the networks. And eventually lhe movie ends up on video-cassettes and cable, so it all amounts lo home entertainment." As a resull or her two and a half seasons as "The Bionic Woman," Lindsay Wagner rinds herself in demand for features. Two are currently in the nation's theaters: "Nighthawks" and "High Risk." In "Nighthawks," an admirable thriller about international terrorism, Miss Wagner plays Sylvester Stallone's estranged. Some critics com- plained they saw too little of her. "I have the same complaint,'"she said wryly. "Sly and I had some powerful scenes together. I meal real, screaming, Italian arguments. MEL BROOKS' HISTORY OF THE WORLD PART I · r-'.\ •t•t IWf .. f tllMQIJlfT .... ¥ •Ot l~ 11A11 1MA PLAZA ... IOUTll COAIT DWMDI IADOUUCI Brea 546·2711 Costa Meu 54&-2711 El Toro (714) 581·5880 UWMDI MllTl•T• IUCll Huntington Beach MB--0388 ( RIGULM INCIM•INT STARTS f'RIDAY I ·-conom~ti'!! 1 tm'TCMY OF THE WDllLD,.., IRI 12:30 2:30 4:30 6:30 1:30 10:30 I ";.:.;~ ll Cito~'• ..::E-..-(RI 1 :45 3:156 1:00 1:10 10:11 I -~~ 1:1110:20 3 moment later. Oa Vi.ncl arnves with his paint.a and easel lo do the portrait. Tbe Spanish Inquisition sequence is the high point ol the movie. It's done u 1 song and dance extravaganza, complete with the Grand Inquisitor l Brooks> singing "The inquisition, what a show/ The inquisition, here we go/ We know your wishfo' we'd go away, but the inquisition i1 here to stay." Brooks plays a painful solo on lbe knees of bis prisoners with wooden bammeni, he dumps a doiesi reluctant rabbis Into a swlmmlng pool where they are drowned by shapely nuns who then launch Into a water ballet routine, and three rabbis tied to huge circular torture wheels are spun around in a itant slot machine game. It's the moet sustained scent> of the movie, and by far the funniest. If lhe other sequences In "The History of the World, Part I" had lhe blasphemous snappiness of the Spanla.h lnquh1ltlon scene, Brooks would have a gem or a comedy on his bands. But they dribble in· to ver)' old ac"uul humor that even Madeline Kahn l'Mn't breathe rnuch fun Into Brooks gets a lot or help here from Kuhn, Harvey Korman and Cloris Leal'hman. Two newcomers Lo the troupe, Gregory Hlnea und Mary Margaret Humes. lend a fresh ver utlllty lo the film Overlapping the silly jokes is tht' gravl'. Impressi ve narrative voice of Orson Welles, who sounds even more convincing than when ho's s(llflntc wino. Brooks gives us a preview or "lll11tory ot the World, Purt II" at the end. In the sequel. we 'll g('t n look at "Jews In Space" I lhl'Y lumbe r through the skies In huge Rpa re11hlf1t1 11hapcd like the Star of David) and "Jlltler on Ice," featuring a nifty Ice skating roullnl' done by the Fuhrer himself. Can't wail. •BARGAIN MATINl!l!S • Monday thru Saturday All Performence1 before 5:00 PM (hctpt Special Enp,.mtnts and Holiday11 BifjltfB lo M9;;.2~oo'on•) letl llAll411 AllO T'NOIMI CftOltO MIL llllOOtCI • -_.... ltl 111 "CHEECH & CHONQ'S 'M!L BROOKS' HISTORV NICE DREAMS" IRI OF THE WORLD PART II" !.-....... ,_ .... ,. • .. , _,, ... , .. ,.,9:1. ("I ' 'STIR CRAZY" (R) "CLASH OF THE TITANS'' "".u' • -·"'11:ol6 (PC\) . ., "---·• 111...,a·1M1-•11:• 1"PRIVATE BENJAMIN" (RI MAlllH90tl l'O'IO • IUi8lle AU.&Ji ltl f"41 AOVl#Tll'MI ~· "RAIDERS OF THE I "SUPERMAN fl" (PG) LOST ARI<" IPGI 1 ew--·•H'•11:11 ,,,..._...,,~, ..... LAKEWOOD CENTER WALK·IN 'ocully 01 Conolewood 213/531·9510 THI AOVUtTUlll ~ l'""" "':'::' ~llAM ~A .. ~~~::!~,~:1,:.G) f 'THE CANNONBALL RUN' 11:»-!:~*'•-•11:11 (PG) A y OUINll • OUVlll -I AU.II ALDA • CAllOL 9'lllWTT 'LION OF THE DESERT" "THE FOUR SEASONS" (PG) (PG) ,.,..,,.,_,.,,. ll.JO..a ___ ... ,_ LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAllC IN HAlllll-l"OllO • ICNllll AU.DI IH "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARI<" IPGI 1t:•:t.-1•1 ... 11:le HAAlll-POllO • ltMlll Au.Ill Ill' ''()041. •Nt:ll'I OAUOHTDI" (l'O) "RAIDERS OF THE a..1-.·1•11:11-,.nw 1t:--LOST ARI<" (PGI llm.Vlll AllO HOWAllO' (II) ,,,...._..,.,._,,,. ...... ~----·-7-11:11 Sovtl\ Cool! Hlwoy Ollfoodwoy 494-1514 CMOllO """"'--0 • ltAlllN AU.DI,.. "CHEECH & CHONG'S "' NICE DREAMS"(~ "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" (PG) 114. 0.V ...... 1 · :t:l_ .. ,_11 , rAtlflC THlATllU DlllYf·IN SWAr MUTS SUlf'lt• •tua IU(ll-Sl'lffO IMf .. , U HAlllDll ILVD DlllV(·IN 6 OllA•Gf DlllVf·IN 1 .. 111,.SAt-16 S-• •oc1 ·-oc ,_,," -·• ,,_ ... ttu 7'., O..• • i.1 \w• 7:U W..i If.,. 11 hit IM,ORTANT NOTICE! CHILDREN UNDER IZ FRU! IOtW .-••-M• lwt '" 6 JD • SM S... "* 6 00 Ht ~ll»ID•fllUll .. C#l-•-JIUICUI .. "" .. C#I -Willi ..,,... aa:DIOl'I...,.... ....... NlllMU.1•111.L QllHI -.. "' .. ...., ·~· .. · ~ ANAHEIM DRIVE IN " "'°*' QIC*O ... "CHEECH A CHONG'S NICE DREAMS" (R) l'LU9 "THE MOUNTAIN M!N" (RI l I ..... ~ FOUNTAIN VALLEY ORIVl ·IN ''nta ~OUll ~I" (l'OI "-119 'TMll LaQllllO M TI4C LONI llA-11" (l'OI Clllt fl- Tiii AOVIJfTIMI ~· "SUPERMAN II" (PG) -. "ANY WHICH WAY sonOM>OO'""' 011<oo-~.,..1 (SO> YOU CAN" t62·2U I Clft( " - .,... ''-41 .. 'h, HI WAY 39 Dll!Vl IN I •·,•,•• ,. ._..a, P,ir' A lA HABRA ()lllVf IN ._._11 __ ,..., .. _ 171-1162 " ·~ "' • a~ • LINCOLN ORIVf·IN ~HICOlfl A•o We ll OI WM" '21·4070 ---.......... HMlll90N l"OtlO • UMJI AU.IN 1t1 "RAIDERS Of THE LOST ARK" (PG) ,LU9 "URBAN COWBOY" (PGI llN't...o.I P'OllO • ._...AU.IN• "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" (.PGI nue ''URBAN COWBOY" (PG) OQANGE 0"1\if IN ... --~ ...---. MISSION (Jl/1111 IN . . FAT CAT Waldo, a prize Persian cat in- s ured for $2 million, gels his whiskers dulle~ by make-up artist Jack Wilson in preparation for shooting "Modern Problems," The cat's owner is reportedly worried that the movie's steamy love scenes may damage Waldo's de· licale sensibilities. AY TOMI" 1•1 ""''~"vM11tt1irrr· .., I Investment contest brokers embarrassed by results NEW . YORK CAP> -Take four top stock ;Jnarket experts from Wall Street, America's hi&h· •takes financial center. Give each $30,000 and eight week$ to make money, using analysts, com- puters and market savvy. Next take nine darts and throw them at The 'Wall Street Journal's stock market quotationa. Then throw one of the darts a second time for good measure. Now invest $30,000 where the 10 darts ~tick. , A New York newspaper, The Daily News Tonight, did just that, publishing the results from the mythical investments eveey day. And now, itb one week remaining, the darts are doing bet· ter than two of the experts. And the brokers' playfuJ colleagues won't let them forget. ''Anybody that got into this thing had to have a \hick skin and a sense of humor." grumbles Bill LeFevre, who got into the contest onJy to see his $30,000 shrink to about $25,000 -third among the brokers and behind the Dart Fund. "We had guys in our other offices caJling in and wanting to know how I was doing," be says, adding that amused officemates replied: "I think he 's a half game ahead of the Chicago Cubs." • • • •••• 0 • 0 a a --c a a 0 a ; s 222 23 33622 !li q • ------: .. , 5 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23. 1981 •• '()~lt'C) 'ITt: TK.\'S \CTl()~S , ......... • •• WI 1·•• t • • t • ~.. f ~ ... •• f.. -...... I • •• .•• ••\t••• .. u •.• IMlll'f ... ,.... Ustlngs, hasn't touched ita dart portfolio. Yet tbe darts stand at $31,19', theaten.ln1 investment strategist Ray .DeVoe, of Bruna. Nordeman, Rea, who's second with $32,000 . "These guys always sound wiM and lntelU1ent in their financiaJ newsletters. WelJ, we 1ave them the chance to show It." said Frank Lalli, the newspaper's associate editor for business news. "We wanted to give our readers a look at some of Wall Street's bi1Cest names in action." Each day's trades are printed below the brokers' pictures with an explanation of their strategy. Tonight cautions that the brokers' ac· lions are not market Ups and shouldn't be viewed as investment counseling. At first. the brokers were cautious investors, focusing largely on stocks they expected to move up in price. But as the contest heads lnto iu final week, they're buying and selling stock options with reckless abandon. Anything to beat the darta. At first I played it straight and tried to get a balanced portfolio," LeFevre saya. But when bia high technology stocks "crested and beaded south" he bailed out into money market funds to reconnoiter. Then, "I figured I'd play aggresalve,'' he says. The game is not an accurate test of bow the brokers would reaJly do in the market. They are only aJlowed to trade at the day's opening prices, which means they can't buy when securities begin to rise or sell when they begin to fall. The newspaper says its circulation increased by 5,000 in the Wall Street area, adding to the 120,000 to 150,000 readers already watching every move of the brokers. Taking a beating with all his peers watching bas been bad enough, "but I have lo read about it coming home, too ," Jokes Le Fevre, investment strategist for Purcell Graham & Co. Though hardly IC'ientific, the stock ulectionl by a New York City newspaper are making money. "Nobody in their right mind plays the market for just two months," adds Peter Kadzis, the re· porter handling the game. "There's always the chance the Dart Fund will come out ahead of you and on Wall Street. news like that travels fast," says Bob Stovall, director of investment policy for Dean Witter Reynolds and a frequent guest on public television's "Wall Street Week." "People don't remember the winners or even the stocks you picked, but they remember the losers," adds the front-runner in the "Battle of the Brokers" whose portfolio has grown to $39,200. Mike Metz, vice president of Oppenheimer & Co . and dead last in the race with $19,938 of bis in- vestment remaining, admits he gets some razzing from bis peers. '·Anyone in this business has lo be something of a masochist,'' he says with a laugh. ''But it does show you that the average man on the street, using common sense, may very well turn out to be a good speculator." To catch up, Metz has been heavily investing The Wells Fargo Gold Account is just about the most uncomplicated way you'll ever find to do your banking. You get interest on your checking account, plus nine valuable banking · the $5 monthly Gold Account fee. 2. Personalized S1agecoach checks. Wells Fargo's famous check designs imprinted with your name and address. Again, no additional charge. 3. $5,000 Personal Accklent Insurance. It covers you wherever you are, however you travel. No additional charge-your Gold Account in stock options, rights lo buy or sell stoeks within a specified time at a specified price, which provide leverage for big gains as well as big losses. "It works both ways and in this case it's been working against me," says Metz , who adds: "With such a short-term game, you tend to overspeculate and take excessive risks . 1 would never advise anyone to do what I'm doing in the game with real money." The newspaper's business news sta!f. which hned up one afternoon and threw darts al the stock Wall Street veterans "are really just sportsmen in pin-striped suits," he says. "But it takes a lot of guts to play in public and I don't know how many would be up to it." The newspaper. a young, upscale version or the morning New York Daily News, hatched the game as a way to build circulation in Manhattan. In a companion game, readers are able to win cash prizes of $1 ,000 -and a grand prize of $5,000 for picking a stock that shows the greatest profit on a given day. But the winning broker wins nothing. So why 4. S200 dally Express Stop Wlthdrawal. Double the usual limit. No charge. . 5. Safe deposit box. Stand- ard size. Yours with no annual rental fee. 7,8,9. Travelers checks, cashiers checks, money orders (U.S. Dollars) All you'll ever need, with no service charges. e. A check-cashing identift.. cation card. Good for cash- ing checks up to $200 at any office. It makes more than 380 Wells R:lrgo offices throughout Colifomia as easy to use as your own. services, including no-charge checking-no matter how many checks you write. Five dollars a month is all it costs. There's no minimum balanee required. And you may never have to worry about separate service charges again. Look whats included: covers it. ~!!l[l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I __ ........_ With the Gold Account, Wells Forgo delivers the maximum amount of bank you'll find anyM1ere for the minimum amount of your money. We've made it possible for everyone to hove on interest checking account. And to quit worrying about bank service charges. See your nearest Wells Forgo office about signing up for your own Gold Acctiunt today. 1. un11m1tec1 checkwlnMg. Write all the chec~ you want. There~ no charge no matter hoW many you use, beyond Wells Forgo started out deliver1ng gold, And we still do. Mtmller "0 t c \ -Orange Coast OAtL Y PILOT/Tueldey. June 23, 1981 ArtUt'1 concept of IM Paw Tack tar,n deftgnator -.,lteml (on beU~ of plaM) to be built by Ford Aero~ & Communication.I Corp., Newport Beach. Ford • WIDS $26.8 million pact Ford Aero.p ace It Commu.a.lcatiou Corp.'• AeroeatroDlc Divl1I011, Newport Beach, has been awarded a $26.8 million contract for Pave Tack electro-optical target designator s~stems for use on strike aircraft of the Royal Australian Air Force. Pave Tack provides strike aircraft pilots with a capability for detection and recognition of targets during day and night. and under adverse BRIEFS weather conditions. It will be used with the Royal Australian Air Force's F-111 aircraft. Aeronutronic Division has been under contract to the U.S. Air Force for production of the Pave Tack system since early 1978. The systems are de· signed for the Air Force F-4 and F-111 aircraft to greaUy enhance their precision weapon delivery capability. • • * The investment management firm of NeU F. Campbell Co., Los Angeles, has changed its name to Campbell. Reed, Conner & Birdwell Inc. The Los Angeles-based firm manages portfolios of cor- porations' endowments and individuaJs . • • * Crocker Bank, San Francisco, is underwriter of $15 million in tax and revenue anticipation notes for Oru ge County. Net interest cost of the notes. DO YOU NEED HELP? Anawtr Network can.help Increase your proflta by towering overhead. With Answer Network'• ahared-overhead concept, you will have available every office service you need, Including your own phone number and answering service ... all at a fraction of the coat of expensive facilities and atatf. COMPVTUl COMMUllCATIOH IOIYICll .. ll.Ull: 0 Anewerlng eervlce 0 Quot• prlcH 0 M•k• -i>Polntmente 0 l ettere •nd typing 0 Word processing 0 2• l'lcxir dlct•llon lpecl1lliin1 In: 0 Conference room• 0 P•yroll 0 Mall 11111 0 Telex 0 F9Celmlle o P-otno Certified H rvlce c•ll dlep•tchlng, order t•klng Md credit cl'lecldng. An1wer Network h11·• Solution, Call: lttSWER rtETWDAK 714-953-1234 .... 724 TRUST DEED INVESTMENT SEMINAR HERITAGE HOME LOANS, INC. CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO ATTEND AN INFORMATIVE SEMINAR ON TRUST DEED INVF.STMENTS WHICH WILL BE HELD ON THE FOLLOWING DATES: TUESDAY, June 23rd at 7:30 P.M. Sportama•'• Loc11e Empire Room 4234 Coldwater Canyon Ave. al Ventura Blvd. Parking entrance on Coldwater Canyon Avf R.S. V.P.: Jane U, 1181 (213) 501-m7 THURSDAY, June 25th at 7:30 P.M. RegJalry HOTEL Cotta Jin a ao.m 18800 Mac ARTH UR BLVD .. IRVINE. CALIF. Across from the Oran1e County Airport '@'• I , ?i . • I l R.8.V.P.: (714) IM-3318 HERI TAGE HOME LOANS ...,....,,.nAM1'148n81t'CIU.nATa ..... a.s.v.•. CALL 1-800·422-4244 me .. m•CB ST., BUA dated July 1, is 8.08 percent. vue June 30, 1982, the bonds are reoffered to yield 7.85 percent. The issue is avaiJable from Crocker Municipal Securities in San Francisco and Los Angeles. Co-managers of the issue are First National Bank of Boston and National Bank of North America. • • • Kyle Technology Corp., Mission Viejo·based m1tnufacturer of electrical components for medical devices and oil well testing equipment, has reported the initial public offering of 950,000 shares of common stock at a price of $7 a share. The underwriting syndicate was managed by Paulson Investment Co. Inc .. Portland, Ore. Of tbe sha res offered , 630,000 are being sold by the com- pany and 420,000 by certain selling shareholders. Net proceeds to the company from the sale of its shares will be used for acquisition of an expanded manufacturing facility, additional machinery, marketing, product development and additional working capital. • • • Bea tley Laboratories Inc., Irvine, has in- troduced the Bentley biocarbon vascular access system at the Amei'ican Society for Artificial In- ternal Organs meeting in Anaheim. The system is a no·needle dlalysis system that eliminates the pain, repeated trauma and associated complica- tions of conventional dialysis treatment methods requiring the use of large needJes in repeated vascular punctures that leads to vessel deteriora· lion. USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call 642-5671' _ht.U.J LL CORNER Rue Coin• & Stamp• GOLD & SILVER 6-22·11 o.wc .... MM.• 111-c1.11•.11 hy ... . l(rvvoer-M7UJ ..... ,. Nl<tpl• l.Hh ...... lo06.JI 1oo cor-1 ...._. Ml1M JO PH O. • "74.• ..... ~ Sii,,., 8-aft '1K 70% e.tnk Financing IRA & KEOUGH (114) S.56-6150 South Coast Pfua VIiiage ......... ~ .... CAC,_.,_._Ceete~I "'EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 88 1 Dover Dr., Suite 14 N E!WPO RT BEACH 714 -631-3651 $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • lnlff••t Oftly pavm-at • l11eo•• • Coa •onct.111 • R-6deatial • Wee~ly eoaalt-nt• • llto•t•lv f•ndlft9• • 6 -the lo S \IHH • Sotltllen1 CaUfora&. ( I 1f11tl• t •Uf loain h1fo.,..uon ••"'Ice I ., .. ur l11·1<1nc111y 1w11d• (714) 759-1515 AMEIUCAlt HOME MO'"QAGE 130 New oort Center On•e oe .. gn Plal8 Newpor1 Beac11 Calllorn•a <)266() a a tOCttt!lll! !1 ~!402 Chit .. 'Boss of the Year ' chosen l Cllarlea J. YealOll, president and chief ex- ecutive officer of both USLIFE Savines and Loan Association and USLIFE Llfe Insurance Co. of Caliromia has been named 1981 Boss of the Year by the Irvine Charter Chapter of the American Business Women's Association (ABWA). The award was based on education, business experience, community involvement and ac· complishments of the candidate, as well as on the member's recommendation. Yesson was recommended by Anita Fleming, boss night chairman and assistant vice president, ON THE JOB manager of corporate busmess development and manager of the Irvine branch of USLIFE Savings and Loan . • • • Robert J. Monte has been named president. customer ser vice division, for Irvine-based M icrodata Corp. He is responsible for the opera· lion and management of the company's nationwide service organization. Monte was previously presi· dent, field engineering, for llel Corp. of Palo Alto. * • * V lnton P. "Vinny" Froa& has joined the architectural firm or Thomas Associates, Newport Beach. as vice president of project development. His responsibilities will entail new business de· vetopmenl and overall administration. * • * Gunther E. Hertn& has been promoted from manager to vice president, corporate development and strategic planning of Fluor Corp. Hering, who jolned Fluor ln 1975, will continue to work with top management lo help identify, develop' and imple· ment the company's business strategy and growth. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS He lives in Newport Beach. . .. . Thomas M . Laugbllo has been promoted to I president of Costa Mesa-based Douglas Oil Co. ol California. He replaces Archie Dunham, recently promoted to a vice presidency of Conoco Inc. at Houston. Douglas is a subsidlary of Conoco Corn· panies Inc. • * • Frank Llanes has been appointed assistant manager or Citizens Thrift and Loan Associatio11 officf? in Irvine's Heritage Plaza Shopping Center'. Prior to joining Citizens Thrift. Llarfes worked it\ the Santa Ana and La Habra offices of Firesid~ Thrift. : * * * I Ranny E. Draper, president of Diversifie4 ; Shopping Centers of Costa Mesa, has been elected : a trustee of the International Council of Shopping , Centers. headquartered in New York City. ICSC ii ' the trade association of the shopping center in· , dustry, with members in more th.an 30 countries. * * • Chuck E. Welch has been appointed director of : marketing for lrvine·based Armor All Products, : He will be responsible for the research, intelligence and strategic planning o f alt f"arketing programs. Armor All Products, a Division of Foremost-McKesson Inc .. is the maker of Armor All Protectant. Armor All Cleaner and Armor All UltraPlate. • • • Robert Rotstan has been named assistant vice president •EL.c.H of Merrill Lynch. Pierce, Fenner & Smith Inc .. the nation's largest securities company. Rolstan is a senior account executive in the Merrill Lynch of· rice al 4501 Birch St., Newport Beach. · I 1 J • s • 7 • ' 10 11 11 11 .. 1S •• 17 11 1' Sit 20 710 ,, 1.~ n J,1t1 " "21 ,. u n ,»4,toO,. H-TIME pf KV""• TIME 0C l.08 Cp Per11.M Le¥inc,.c =·';Q' c-io.. WonlTrn V•lmnt MOOOI wt COdnt wt lnltlo Fl•HFI• Coll)y FeylnG CymM t Comoiet N~ lntTecR Al90r9a WrcfTrn un Amber s l/ollon&k ' u" l.9•1 °"' • .,,, • 1"1 11 ,_ ~ -SY, + I IV. 1Y, ,,_ " JY, • v, ~ • v, 1J•lit + '"' 2 7.1. •S.16 so •• 2~ • "" ." + v, u .. 1'h 21"9 • , .... s .... ,..., "" '"' . "' •v. • "' ...... "' ,,.. \lo 11.... + I s... • v, •tS.1' +7·1• ~.... • JV, P<t. Up 10.0 Up :II.> up n.o . Up 22.t ~= ~:1 I Up 16.1 I Up IS.• ~= UJ I Up 1J.•' Up 11 .. 1· Up 12.9 Up 12..0 • Up 11.S ~= :u I Up 10.7 , Up 10.4 Up 10.• Up 10.0 Up t.t Up ti Up t .I Uo •.> ,.., Off 20.0 Off IS I Off •>• Of1 1U Off 1U Off 12.2 Off 11 s Off 11.1 Off 11.1 Off 11.A Off IO.f °" 10..I Off 10.0 Off 10.0 Off 10.0 ' Off 10.0 ' Off 10.0 Off u Off u Off u Off '1 Of1 t.I Off t.1 g:: u I Off u ' . ' ·: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------. I . MUTUAL FUND "' -.• •• •.•,.<• .. ; ;•.s;o:;:;::w 52 $ a 55 56 I 5 .&At 4 ! I 2 Ji Orange Coast DAILY JJtLOT/Tunday. June 23. 1981 .r--------------------------------------------__; ______ _ s NYSE l'IW, 10\TON, OSUOlf .t.NO (IN(INNUI nocw Graduates dependent CSecondof a rive.part serieaon 1•1 lncometaxes.) When your son or daughter ieta out of school ud takes a job (or perhaps marries), do you lose that child u a dependent on your 1981 Income tax return! As emphasized In Monday's report. not necessarily. When your child reaches age 19. there is a $1,000 limit on the totaJ of taxable income be or abe can receive and sUll be an acceptable dependent on your return. But the income limit does not apply to a child -single or married -who is a full-time stu- dent in 1981 If your child spent any part of five calendar months in school during 1981 -for instance, if be or she went to college from January into May -the child is treated as a "fulJ-tlme ~ student" in 1981. The tax --------~:" ~ogu~i~i~rdn~=~ IYlYIA PllTIR ~~, make any -- amount of money he or she can manage from now until the end of 1981 and no matter. You can claim him or her as your dependent on your 1981 return. Key requirement: You must provide more than half of your child's support for the year if the child is to be your dependent. There ls much more to support than the obvious items -such as food, clothing and shelter. The tax rules on support <if you know them thoroughly) well may work in your favor. Example· Your 22·year-old daughter. Mary, graduated from college early in June and married Dan, also a June graduate of the agricultural school. a few days later. You paid Mary's college expenses, bought Mary a car for graduation (you are financing the purchase> and you also paid for Mary's wedding to Dan. The two already have found jobs, and after their honey- moon, they will be supporting themselves for the rest of 1981. ls Mary your tax dependent in 1981? The income test is no problem. Mary is con- sidered a full-lime student in 1981. But how about meeting the more-than-half-support lest? This is something of a standoff. You paid Mary's bills at college. Dan and Mary are laking care of the second half of this year . ., Yet, you do clear the halfway mark test because of two critical tu rulings. One ruling holds that so-called capital outlays - the gifts of cars. television sets, etc. -count as de- pendent support in the year of the gift. So. advises Eli Warach, divisional vice president of Prentice-Hall, the full cost of the graduation citr gift is support you provided lo Mary in 1981. Tomorrow: How $100 can sow you (hotuonda 1n tar deduction.a. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES Maw YCMltlllAt'I l'IMI ~ .... I« ~. JWl.12 • ..STOCKS ................... 1 ..... . • Incl ~4 =tit A::.~--~ JO Tm .Ql.61 G6.A1 4 If A) Ctl.22 + '·" IS Utl 110.01 111.JI' IOt,<ll 110.11-tM .S Slit JM.•-. .. in.to JM.•+ 1,1' ...... ............. . .... ..,..,., TrM ............ , ... .. Ulll• .... ,........ 1t1• "Stll .. ............. ... • 4.711:..0 WHAT STOCKS DID MEW vo.-1( (AP) JWI 12 NEW vo.-1( IAPI J1a1. H T-· .. , .. m 22 • MUALS __ , ,.,.. -;, .,. -, u C:...-De C9ftb • """""· U.S ......... t!Ofts. 1..N41 •-. ,..__ Zlloc46'4 ~·~ ..... ,-T•....-.~w .... c~n.• . • ........._ 1 ... c ... ba _.w, N Y Mere_, M2D.OO per llasll. P..--..a.ootroyo.a.,N.Y. . ----------~ --... . -----__ ,_ ~----·-·-----·-·-·~----------·--•--•N•~• .... •••••~·~·~· .......... ~.~=~• ....... ~c,....c••••~•~•~•~• .. u•s•e~o~s-o ... s .. u .... 2•s~c~o•s•o .. s•z~s~~ Come to the grand opening of erial Savings' new Costa Mesa office step back into the French corintryside. We've moved into our spacious new bram:h omn• at 0!)5 A11lo11 Str~t-1 in Costa Mesa, just one block away from South Cm1st Plmm Shoppi11~ Ct•ntt•r. And tu celebrate, we're inviting you to join us in ( ;nmcl < >t>t•11111~ Ft•Kt 1v11 u~s in the.· Country French tradition. You'll be welcomed in a channin~ setti11u 1 c•1111111 t-1rc•111 ol tllt• F1 ench countryside by hostesses drcs~cd in lhl· c•I hnw '·nHltlll ltit\ of I hP rum I farmlands. You'll wander through ri Fn.•nd1vilh1gt•11u11 l,c~tpli1n• w11h baskets of flowers and fruit, trellist•h, wirl,t•1 w111~n1111d dt:'lll'ill t• fl oral prints. Beneath a thatched roof canopy, rnu dwf will p1 t>IMI c• ii variety of deliciousJ10t fruit crepes for yolll t>1tjuymt>lll . Or you may wi sh to samplt' our Frenrh he1ke1 ·~ clt'lt>l·tr1 l>lt> pastries. And we invite you to visit our Europe<tn coffee bar where we'll shart: some of the< >Id Count ry's fine st roasts and blends with you. Costa Mesa is quickl y becoming the financial and cultural center of Orangt' County and Imperial Savings is proud to ht> a part of our communit y's burgeoning / , I development. Our three-day Country French party is our way of sharing this pride with old friends and new neighbors. Our new branch office is easily accessible from all parts of Costa Mesa and surrounding communities and our large customer lobby features ,,__ reading material and free coffee daily. For your added convenience, we are open Saturdays from 9am-lpm. So be sure to drop by during our Grand Opening and discover a world of refreshing checking and savings plans and other convenient services. •I I Where: 655 Acton Street. #3, Costa II I . Mesa. When: Thursday.June 25th, I I iiliiliiib:~ 9am-5pm; Friday.June 26th, 9arn-~ I 6pm; Saturday, June 27th, 9arn-lpm 0Im~!!~c~vings 655 Anton Street. #3, Costa Mesa ""· .. · I I Daily Pilai TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1981 COM ICS CLASSIFIED C4 cs Golf's big names lured to county for big money. C2 . South upset$ l the bettors 1 I G rand staff leads rout • By JOHN SEV ANO Of ... Deity,..._ It.ft • When the Orange County media established the North as a three-point favorite in the 22nd Orange County All-star football game, the members of the South s quad shook their collective heads in disbelief. How can a unit which features players from ooth 1980 CIF Big Sky finalists <Edison and Foun- tain Valley) and a squad loaded in talent from what is generally considered the toughest league (Sunset) in the CI F Southern Section be tabbed a s an un· derdog? "I DON 'T KNOW why the North was favored," said Edison defensive back Duaine Jackson imme<tiately after the Rebels of the South had ambushed the Yankees of the North , 40·12. 1980 by passing for almost 2,sop yards. 1 ln all . the guintet accounted for rive of the team· s six il)- terceptions, limiting Karsalol and hi s r eplace ment, Melodyland's Troy Bodine. to five completions in 24 attempts. "We all wanted to prove we we re good defensive backs, 1' said Edison's Dino Bell. "We felt people underestimated usu a unit and we wanted to prove we were as good as any secon- dary in the county." While the Rebel defens~ WaJ proving its point. the offense was making a case for recogni· tion. too AFTER A SHAKY start. the North orrense rolled into gear to the tune of four touchdowns in the short span of 2: 15 of the second quarter. I o.i.., ~••.....,... •• caen.. ~ I Rebels' Robert Gould f29 ) heads for the end zone to complete South's second-quarter. 28-point explosionatOCC. "We had two C IF cham· p1onship teams on the same s ide." Led by the passing and the running of Marina High's Bob Grandstaff. the Rebels struck first when the 6·0, 175-pound right hander bulled his way from one yard out to culminate a 79-yard, JO-play drive I : Borg'i s n ow determined to win U.S. Open I Def ending Wi mbledon champion says he 's always feeling the pressure "That's what got us all mad," added Jackson's teammate Troy Seurer. "We knew, or at least we thought we knew. we were better. but I guess the press and nobody else thought we were." Thirty four seconds later, following a Jackson intercep- tion. Grandstaff got the Rebels on the board again as he calmly stepped out of the pocket to his right and found Fountain Valley's Emile Harry all alone in the end zone from 27 yards out. I I WIMBLEDON, England <AP> Bjorn Borg. one match behind him in his bid to win the Wimbledon tennis title for a sixth straight time. says he is now even more determined to win the U.S .Open. It is the one major title that has eluded the 26-year-old super- successfuJ Swed e. Borg opened his 1981 Wimbledon campaign with a solid 7·6, 6-3. 6·1 triumph over American left-hander Peter Rennert and said afterward: "My biggest remaining am bi· lion in the game is to win at Flushing Meadow." Rennert hung in for the first set but was then overwhelmed by the improving defending champion, who ran his winning streak at Wimbledon to 36 con· , secutive matches. 1 Borg said· he was uoder even more pressure this year, "Al ways I'm .under pressure," he said "Even when I'm not the champion, I'm under pressure. I dpn't feel I have to win every match, but people expect it." The excitement, however. is not diminished "Every time I look forward to Wimbledon It is special. the greatest tournament to play. It is tradition. Wimbledon always a has been No I ." he said. If the seedings hold. Borg would meet volatile American left-hander John McEnroe in a repeat of last year's thriJUng five-set men's singles final. But the seedings didn't hold com- pletely on Monday McEnroe and third-seeded Jimmy Connors both recorded straight-set victories, but three seeds were defeated on an open- ing day ruJJ of s urprises. Charlie Fancutl, an Au~~ralian ranked 194th in the world. de- feated No. 4 seed Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia. 4-6, 6-3, 6·4, 1·6, 6 3 Enc Fromm or Glen Head. N . Y • upset 13th-seeded Yanni ck l'!loah of France, 6·4, 6·4. 6-3. and · texan Bill Scanlon ousted 11th· seeded Victor P ecci o f Paraguay, 7-6. 6-0, 6-0. Fancutt and Fromm both are 22-year-olds who have reached the main draw at Wimbledon for the first time. "Grass is an equalizer," Fan· cull said. "I got all fired up because this is Wimbledon." Fromm was taken aback by the attention he received from the media. He walked into a crowded interview room and joked: "I only expected a couple of people." Connors, ch ampion here in 1974, wasn't joking about his in· ten lions. ·'If m y expectations had changed, I wouldn't be here," Connors said. "I want to win it. If I didn't think I was prepared, eager and in the right shape. then l would have no business here." he sajd after his 6·1. 6-2. 6-4 victor y over fellow American Dick Stockton. McEnroe. expected to be the main challenger to Borg, was at his petulant worst during his 7-6, 7 -5, 6 3 victory over Tom Gullikson. At one stage, he broke his racket and called an officiaJ "an incompetent fool." "I suppose it was my fault because I was feeling jittery," he said later. "I was definitely wrong and I will no doubt pay for it." There are few doubters left after Monday night's disman- tling. • Before an overflow crowd of 7,000 at Orange Coast College. the South squad. under the direction of head coach Mike Milner of Fountain Valley, did almost everything right in win· ning its fourth straight. ON DEFENSE, the secondary of Dino Bell, Tim Finley, Bob Shollin, Bob Owens and Jackson threw a virtual blanket over the much-heralded passing attack of the North, led by Jim Kans.atos of Sunny Hills, who rewrote the Orange County records books in Jack son's second recovety, this tim~ or a fum ble on the ensuing ki ckoff , e nabled Grandstaff to team with Harry again as he caught the fleet· footed receiver streaking down the right sidelines for a 47-yard TD. The fina l score o f the blitz came five seconds before the half as. following another <Sff SOUTH, Page CZ> No strike answer, Ii say s Quisenbe rry r KANSAS CITY. Mo. <AP) -some investments if the Strike talks aborte d today; outlook ble ak strike As the Major League baseball keeps going. By The Associated Press There will be no baseball strike negotiations today and a number of players are becoming Increasingly concerned .that nobody will be talking or playing for a long time. strike moves deep into its second week. Dan Quisenberry, player representative or the Kansas City Royals, fears the worst "It's hard to foresee anything happening," the former Costa Mesa High and Orange Coast College s tar said i n an in· terview. "I can't see how it's ever golng to be settled. We're like two rams butting heads." . QUISENBERRY. last season's Fireman of the Year in the· American League, merely laughs when asked to predict a winner in tbe struggle that's closed down baseball. "I don't think there will be a winner. The longer the strike goes, the more devas tating it gets. The owners are growing more resolute, and the players ar e getting more bitter. "The longer it goes, the worse it gets for everybody. From the way' things look now, I'd have I.Cl s ay there is a very good possibility the •eaaon is over. The players will come back any time. But I doubt lf the owners would want to resume the seuon if it gets into Sep- tember." HE'S RAD ONLY occasional contact with a few of hla team, mates 1Jnce the 1trtke beaan June 12 and be'• heard of no flnanctal bardsblpa. "But I know every d~ my wlle and I are talklnl about waya to .. ,.e money," he taJcL "We're trytna to be •• tna1aJ u we can. Still, I 'm better~ llaan a lot ol tu)'I who have tbelr money ti.cl up ln lnvntmeata, ln Udnl• wben they ban to k4leP mooey nowtai. ADd now the)' cu•t do &.hat, and a lot of people are 1o&nl to have to 11ve up ''THE PLAYERS are losing money. the owners are losing money. Ri ght now, it's hitting the concessionaires harder than the owners and players. It's odd when you think about it, but the only people involved in this mess who aren't los ing money are the fans. They're not making money off the strike. but I guess they're saving money because they're not going to the games." For him personally. the early afternoon has become the most wretched time of day. "About 3 o'clock , or 3:30, that's when I start getting really tense and depressed," he said, "because that's when I always left for the stadium. Every day about 3:30 I feel a ll this pent-up energy swirling through me, and I don't have any outlet for it. A ray of hope glimmered on t h e h o rizon Monday whe n federal mediator Kenneth Mof- fett, who had just helped avoid a nationwide air controller s' s trike , called for another negotiating session between the striking Major League Players Association and management's P layer Re lations Committee, headed by Ray Grebey. But, three hours later, Moffett can- celed the session. ··1 just had a change of heart," , said Moffett. "I needed more time to think about things. I might do something in the next day or two." Cincinnati Reds pitcher Tom Seaver. who was a part or the aborted negotiations la.st week, said that Mo(f ett canceled the meeting "out. of fatigue. "Actually, I spend a lot of my time trying not to thjnk about it because It gets me so depressed. And look what time lt is -It's 3 o'clock. I feel awful." "I heard he had canceled the (See STRIK~, Pa91e Cl) South's Emile Harry has clear .mling after hauling fn 47-JIQrd TD pcu1. Defender i1 Todd H4rt. Horse racing? It's the true king of dulnh sports By BOB GREENE ~ ........... ,,, ~ At last the Triple Crown season 11 over. This year's Kentucky Derby, Preakneas and Belmont Sta.tea are history, 10 we won't bave to read anytina elee about bone rac:tna -t.be dumbest of all 11><>rta. Ob, hone r•ces wUI 10 on every d ay at tracks all over tbe country. But tbey won't 1et bl1 news ditplJ.)' tbe way Triple Crown races did -and tbul tM onlr people wbo will read •boat tbem wil be the social outcaata who •tudJ a.. •sate type ln the rear ol the afQrtl lffUom. Hone r•chll haa MM ol tM......, of real aporta. lUlt to U. tM meal obvlWI Ualq, tbeN la DO f ...... of h"man compeUUon. The onlJ fae&or that makes sports fascinating is the human factor, which Is totally lacking in horse racing. The Jockeys are really Ju.st along for the ride. T he drama, the excitement, the thrill of sports all come from the knowled&e COMMENTARY that tbiJ II coml)et!Uon bet-7een human belnfl. If you are at a football ,.me oc a baaeball 11mt or a basketball 1ame, lt doean't m~U. bow Iona it'• been 1l11ce 1ou wen on a playln1 rleld yOVHlf · you cu loot at t.be fact11 ol the~• wbo aie playlD1, and you ean ldt11tlf) wttll tbelr fean and dreams and aaplratlont. .I At a race 'track, all you can do is took into the race of some dim-witted beut and try to decide ti the beut ls worth bettlnc two bucks on. The hone doesn't care what you do with )'our money; all he wants to do Is 1et back to hi• stall and munch on some bay. By the way, none of tb1a should be interpreted as beln1 crlUcal of the horses. U's bGt thelr rault that mllttona or people tb.lnk lt'• fun to bet money on which of them can run faster. Hones don't volunteer to become rl!ffn; but lt'a a shame that trainers make them do lt, because lt lteepa the borM9 rrom 1trvtna the true and noble purpo1e for whlcb they wer~ put on earth: to pr0tlde food for do11 and Fren~b people. It's a sad ract that the smartest hone la dumber than the stupideat forward tn the National Basketball Aaaoclation, ii you can imagine such a thine. So a Utt.le kindness is ln order. Instead ol blamillJ the horses for the phenomenon of borail racing, we should tocUJ our attention oft the people who 10 to the tracb. Just because there are 10 many millions ol lbem doe111't mean tbat .- ha?: to consider t.bem pr~. 8 cally, theee are Ufe'a IOHn; l*>PAe • devoid of excltemeat an• achlevemenl ln lbe real world llUll lbeY mUJt 1et their k1ckl by tryiftc to tel lucky nine Ume1 a day at the track. 11* oddt are th•t •t leut once d\lrtna U. day tbey wUl have a hone ftnlU ln (8" llOUD, Pa .. Cl> f -. --.. .. . ... .. . ~ .... " .. ...... ;t; !. .. , a;;, u; •,;, ;; t,; z.z' 2 s' e e o o « e u -· - Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 -------------------~~ McEnroe concerned about his behavior. From AP cll1pakhe1 · WIMBLEDON, England -John ~ McEnroe admitted Monday he was worried about bis te mperamental on· court outbursts. The 22·year·old New York left·hander was contrite after being involved in a series of clashes with officials during his first·round vie· tory over Tom Gullikson a t Wimbledon. McEnroe accused one official of being "an Incompetent fool " and fre· quently challenged decisions. T wo penalty points were awarded against him. "I suppose it was my fault because I was feeling very jittery," s ai d t h e tournament's No. 2 seed ... I think I was definitely wrong. ··Feeling the way I do is unnecessary and only hurts McEnroe me. No one is to blame but m yself. If others can manage to keep calm, why not me?" McEnroe. however, claimed some of the calls in the contest were terrible. Quote of the day "I think going on strike is stupid. They hir'e these guys as lawyers and stuff to try to work out their problems. then they go on strike. Why hire the lawyers if they can't do the job for ya?" -13.year-old Stephea Rhodes, who was not impressed by the recent doings of Messrs. Grebey, Miller, et al. From Page C1 SOUTH. • • • turnover, Grandstaff connected with El Modena's Robert Gould on a 28-yard aerial. For his efforts. Grandstaff. who wiU enroll at Golden West College in the fall to concentrate only on baseball. was awarded the honor as the game's top of· fensive player. _ He finished his nig"ht 's work completing seven of 18 tosses for 179 yards and three touchdowns. • · 1 had a lot of great receivers who had the ability to get open," said Grandstaff modestly. "This ls certainly a nice way Lo go out." ALTHOUGH GRANDSTAFF may be putting his football cleats on the shelf, for other$ the game was only the beginning. DuaineJaclaon Carlton signed to a four-year contract Longest game wlll resume tonight The Philadelphia Phillies and the Iii PAWTUCKET, R.U. -There Iii agent for pitcher St.eve Carlloa con· were l.~ baseball.I used, 212 at ball, firmed Monday that the left·bander 59 strilteouta, 22 wallts, 49 men left on has aareed to a new contract re· baae, and 11 fans left in the st.ands portedly payln1 him $3 million over the next when the umpires said "enough" after 32 In· four seuon.a. The contract makes Carlton one or Dini•· the 10 be1t·pald pitchers In major lea1ue When they 18y "play ball" a1aln tonipt, baseall. "Steve has a lways chosen to quietly 10 ·there wW be more than 60 reP<>rters and several about his contract negotiations," said Dnt radio statlona present to record what both Laafleld, Carlton's agent. teams hope will be the end or the longest aame "He 's really never wanted to in professional baseball history. aet into a position of choki°' "II both teams are swinetnc the bat, it th~ club on th~ free agent could be over in one innine." aaJd Rochester thing. And be s definitely Red wmis Manager Doc Edwards "If neither suffered financially for that . ..--team t.s swinging the bat wbo knows?" But that's Steve's policy When it was au.a~nded after 32 innings The Dodge rs an· played April 18 and 19, the International League nounced that fans holdJna game between Rochester and the Pawtucket tickets for games n~t played Red Sox was tied 2·2. When it resumes in the top because of the stnke could of the 33rd before the regularly scheduled game Carlton trade them in for games tonl1ht Bobby Ojeda will be pitching to Dallas play~ in th~ future. Season ticket holden will Williams. receive credit to their accounts for tickets and "I'm not going to get fancy. You've aot to parking. A spokesm.an for the club added t~at go out there and get after them," said Ojeda, a.n announcement w1l.l be ':1:1a~e soon regarding Pawtucket's best pitcher, Williams, a .282 hil· t1ckets held by straight A students . ter, will watch his average plummet when the game's statistics are recorded. He is O·for·l2 Basketball coaches hit the links and counting. IOWA CITY -Fuuy Zoeller, !I Bill Kratzert, Ed Sneed and George Archer each shot 4·under·par 68s to sha re the title at the lSth Pro-am tournament here Monday. Each golfer was awarded the full $3,000 first.prize money. The biggest attraction for the record crowd of more than 20,000 was a foursome of basket· ball coaches -Lute Olson of Iowa, Iowa State's Johnny Orr, Bobby Knight of NCAA champion Indiana and Don Nelson of the Milwaukee Bucks. "It's a tremendous pleasure for me to be here," said Knight, whose team lost lo Iowa twice during the past season. "There i:iiust be a lot of people out here who don·t have season tickets for Iowa basketball games." OnJy 20 of the 41 pros managed par or better on the University of Iowa's Finkbine Golf Course as winds gusted up to 25 mph. Two-time VIP winner Lee Trevino finished one stroke behind the leaders at 89. along with veteran Miller Barber and Tom~y Valentine. Bruce Lietzke was alone at 2·under·par 70, while 1981 Masters champion Tom Watson headed a group at 71. From Page C1 HORSES. • • money; no matter that they will be throwing their cash away during the other races. What horse racing is all about is that one moment each afternoon when some poor mope can feel like a winner. Not that this is s uch an evil thing. But be· honest with yourself: Wh en was the last time you were with a person of quality, intelligence and dignity, and that pe rsoD said , "I'm sorry, I must leave now, I have to go to the race track .. ? Alouettes settle for Overstreet After several unsuccessful at· • tempts to land a premier running back, the Montreal Alouettes signed former University of Oklahoma stan- dout David Overstreet to a two-year contract . Monday with the Canadian Football League club. The 6--0, 172-pound fullback averaged 7.2 yards per carry during his four-year tenure with the Sooners . . . All·America noseguard Roa Slmmou of Florida St.ate pleaded no con· test to a charge of aiding grand retail theft and was placed on one year of probation ... The Oakland Raiders have increased season ticket prices by S3 per game . . . The condition of marathon runner Terry Fos. who is suffering from cancer, worsened Monday. Fox, 22. was ad milled to the hospital Friday for treatment of an infection . . . International Olympic Com· mittee President Juan Aa&.olllo Samaraach said he considers Calgary "a strong candidate" for the 1988 Winter Olympic Games Television, radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: No events scheduled. From Page C1 STRIKE. • • not trying to break the union, but they're trying to severely weaken it. They're not going to weaken our supportofMarvin Miller . but they want to weaken our stand,"saidSeaver. Seaver -participated in three negotiating sessions last week and came away without op· timism . '"My expectations now are the worst," Seaver said. "It's been awful. Absolutely nothing has been done. There has been no reason for any hope." Asked if he expected the strike to last longer than two months, Seaver said, "At least! .. Miller, executive director of the players as· sociation. said that be bad read through SS ideas to end the strike sent to him by fans. He also said he received offers from people who wanted to NEVER, THAT'S when. Water mediate. seeks its owri level, so the people The union was expected to file suit in U.S. Dis· at race tracks tend to get along 'lrict Court in New York on Monday in hopes of with one another, but they're not gaining a portion of lelevision revenue the owners likely to be the sorts of .(olu you collect from the networks and cable television. But would want to share a pizza the suit was not filed. Seurer and Bell are ticketed for the University of Kansas. while Jackson, the defensive player of the game, has a dorm room waiting for him at USC. Harry will spend his next four seasons catching passes at Stan· rord. Bell, who wilJ join bls brother Kerwin on the Jayhawks, didn't have an interception but he did account for the Rebels· fifth tquchdown when he blocked a South punt at the 15 yard line. scooped it up at the three and then did a ti1ht-rope act against the sidelines into the end zone. NFL asks dismissal of case with. They spend so much Ume The owners have a $S0 million strike insurance at the track because they policy that bas a 153·game deductible. which will instinctively know they belong be reached Wednesday. After that, the owners will there. receive $100,000 for each game lost to the strike. Oh, you read about wealthy As the strike continues, it may threaten the and well-bred owners of famous free agent status of about a dozen players who horses . Do not fool yourself. would reach six years of major league service this These men and women are not year. The six.year figure is the minimum required the types who hang around tbe for free agent status and partJcipatlon in the Nov· r ace tracks. They spend moet ot ember re-entry draft. Compensation for players their time at their farms and lost 1h that draft is the lone issue of the walkout. In breeding grounds, sippine mint the past, a team signing a free agenl surrendered juleps and laughing at the dupes a first-round pick in the amateur draft as com. who are supportina them by pensation to the team that loet the player. "We bad good !J>layers from every league," said Bell. "Tonieht's victory was an entire team effort.•· LOS ANGELES C'AP) -The National Football (;ea1ue on Monday asked U.S. District Judge Harry Pregerson lo dis· miss the antitrust case of the Oakland Raiders and Loa Angeles Coliseum, wbo sued lbe league because it would not permit t.be Raide:rs to move to Los Angeles. bettlng away their paychecks Those players in their sixth major league every day. And when these elite season include pitchers Ron Guidry of the New of racing do show up at the York Yankees, Sid Monge of Cleveland and Joa· track, you can be sure they will quin Andujar of St. Louis; infielders Lamar not be down at tbe $2 windows. Johnson of the Chicago White Sox and Ron They will be in their private -Jackson of Minnesota; outfielders Dave Collins of boxes, countlng their eamin1s. Cincinnati, Jerry Turner of San Diego and Tony Scott IT IS PBOOF of b<>w devoid of ofHouston,andcatcher'EdOttoftheAngels. Tourney lures . top tour pros Local event offers incentive By HOWARD L. HANDY Of ... o.lly ,. ....... It's well beyond the planning stage for the bll· gest tournament eve r in Orange County with a purse of $215,000 being offered. Jack Fleck, the 1955 U.S. Open champion and now a prominent member of the Sf'oiora PGA tour, says the event Clo be held at Los Coyotes Country Club in Buena Park Nov. S-8), will attract many ot the lop touring pros. Fleck is serving as golf adviser and consulting architect for the course that was recently· purchased by the McAuley Oil Co. of Lone Beach. The tournament will be known as the Los Coyotes Southern California Open and the four pros who won a tournament earlier this year in GOLF California will have added Incentive to play at Lo8 Coyotes. . "We are offering an extra $100,000 to the wtn· ners of the rive tournaments held in California if they win this one,·· Fleck says. That means that Bruce Lietzke <Bob Hope Desert Classic and San Diego >; J ohn Cook (Crosby); Johnny Miller (Los Angeles Ope n ); and Lee T r evi no (Tournament of Cham· pions>, will all have an extra incentive lo play in the tournament. The Los Coyot es event comes after con· clusion of the regular. s eason 1981 PGA tour and a week before many of the players go to J apan for a tournament. ··There is n o other tourna m ent that . weekend," Fleck says. Lee Trevino In addition, we are inviting LS senior pros to play in the tournament. They will all be selected from those playing well and each must have won a major event (U.S. Open, PGA. BritishOpenand Masters ) ·· ''THE TOURNAMENT is being staged to raise money for charity in Orange County ... Fleck says. "There are two or three groups we are considering through the sponsoring Vaquero Corporation which is composed of members dedicated to the project.·· Fleck adds that the course is contemplating hosting an LPGA tolftnament next year to keep the group coming to Orange County. Mesa Verde CC in Costa Mesa lost the Women·s Kemper Open to Hawaii for 1982·83 after a three-year run . Meanwhile, Fleck is playing in senfor tourna· ments and supervising the renovation of one hole completely and virtually rebuilding three others at Los Coyotes. All will be ready for the tournament in November. • THE RECENT Ray Malavasi·Heritage Bank cele brity golf c lassic raised $25 .000 for the American Diabetes Association. Because of the tremendous response of golfers and the record sum taken in at the gate. more than double that of the 1980 tournament. diabetes as· sociation officials wasted little time in selling the date for next year's event It will be held on Monday, May 17 at Irvine Coast Country Clu b in Newport Beach with a shotgun start at 1 o'clock. John G. Rinaldo, chatnnan of the board of Ame rican Home and benefit chairman of the golf tournament. wi ll serve in the same capacity next year . • * • MALAVASJ IS GETTING around on the golf circuit thjs year . Just before he opens the Ram camp camp, he will participate in the Titan Golf Classic at Los Coyotes CC on Monday, July 13. The event will b~ a scramble, mixed foursome com petition with the Cal State (Fullerton ) scholarshlp fund benefitting from the proceeds. Included in the day's activities will be a put· ting and chipping contest before the noon shotgun star.._ For further information and entry forms, phone 773·3480. Entry deadHne is July 8 wilb the fie ld limited to 144 players. Cost of the day's outin1 is $125 which includes gr een fees, e lectric cart and dinner. THE v1croaY enabled the South to cloee the North's advan· tage to 14..S in the series. The contest al.so tied and set a couple ot records: Attorneys for the league claimed there ~as lack of evidence. The plaintiffs· final witness, econoinist Louis A. Guth. con· eluded his testimony Monday, saying the Raiders would make much more money lf the team were ptrmitted to play ii) Loe Angeles, a city vacated by the Rams when they moved in 1980 to Anaheim. worth horse' racing lJ Uiat when a fellow like John Campo comes along -the allegedly colorfuJ trainer of this year's wonder horse, Pleasant Colony -be is writteh about as if be were a combination of J actie Gleuon and Winston Churchlll. Cnnpo has all the grace and style that in the real world would make a bjm a candidate for a soup line, but so desperate is the racing world for the human element that ln a matter of months Campo became its ereat celebrity. B~seball standings -the six interceptions by the South eclipsed the old mark of four set by the South in 1966, '70 and '73. -Bob Owens of San Clemente High tied the record of most passes intercepted <2>. -Harry lied the record for , most touchdown passes caught (2). -and Grandstaff tied the mark for most touchdown passes thrown (3). With Guth's final remarks, Maxwell Blecher, attorney for the Los Angeles Coliseum and Joseph Alioto, the Raidert' at· torney, concluded their cue. Attorneys for the NFL will begin their defense today. The first witneu was expected to be .. WE BAD GOOD football William Ray, treasurer for the players. obviously, .. ls bow league. He was expected to Milner summed up the lopsided testify about the history ol pro- •ictory. "More importantly, we tesslonal football, Its or110ila- ' bad a great group of kids lion and Ila finances. cbaracterwtse and attltudewise. Later in the week, the lawyen 'Tm happy foT the kids. I'd were expected to argue motions take that 1roup or defensive for "directed verdicts." backs every year; I don't SH Judge Pregerson save no in· how anybody could have bad 1 dicatlons wben be miJbt rule on better olfeMlve Une <boa.teted the NFL mot.ions for dismissal. by the presence of P'ountiln The moUona, filed over the Vailey'a Duval Love and Mater weekend by lawyers for the NFL Oei'a Larry WlUlama and Dave and Los Ancelet Rama, aaked ' U r a o I c h ) ; p o d 8 o b b y the judge to throw out the cue. Thal is about to end. though. With the end or the Triple Crown season, the decent people, of America will not have lo bear about horse racing anymore. UnW next s prtnc, the sport will once •lain belong to the men and women who gravitate to race tracks because of 1<>elal and genetic defects. The poor, dumb creatures. GoUer8' 8 0D8 lead Amateur AMERICAN LEAGUE West Dlvlaloa W L Pct. GB Oakland 37 23 .617 Texas 33 22 .600 1 ''1 Chicago 31 22 .585 2"'.i Angels 31 29 .Sl7 6 Kansas City 20 30 .400 12 Seattle 21 36 .368 141~ ~innesota 17 39 .304 18 East Division New York 34 22 .607 Baltimore 31 23 .574 2 Milwaukee 31 2S .554 3 Detroit 31 26 .544 3"'.i Boston 30 26 .~ 4 Cleveland 26 24 .520 s Toronto 16 42 .276 19 NATIONAL LEAGUE We t Division W L Pct. Dodgers 36 21 .632 Cincinnati 35 21 .625 Houston 28 29 .491 Atlanta 25 29 .463 San Francisco 27 32 .458 San Diego 23 33 .411 East Dlvlslon Philadelphia 34 21 .618 St. Louis 30 20 .600 Montreal 30 2S .54S Pittsburgh 25 23 .521 New York 17 34 .333 Chicago ts. :n .288 ~·ca-. ... _.... ~ --"' tlrlll• T.-,•1a- H• .. _.1<,..,ltll ~Of tlrlll• ...... .,. .. ._ "·~~--...... *- GB 8 91'2 10 121i l ''2 4 Sh 15 l71l! (Grandstaff) re'ally played It Defense lawyers commonly well, didn't be?" tile such motion.a, but it la rart PEBBLE BEACH CAP> Rob Boldt, Sam Randolph and Cary V01Sler, au tetft·acecS IObS of 1olf proe, led tbt par breaken ------------------------- , Few would arcue, Lncludln1 tbat Judles crant them, optin1 · lo.ins Nor1h Coach Mel Morales Lnstead to let the juriet dedde Mondaf ln the tlrat round ol qualll)"lnl tor the 10tb CalllomJa Amateur Goll Champloatbl ... ol El Dorado HJcb. ......._ the case. WASTING MOMEY? Vou Can Learn To Plen And Crute Your Own Effective Ad Campaign .. • • - 0C ALL-STAR GAME South 40, NOfttl 12 , .. 0r ... c..e~1 "_.., ....... H.nft 0 0 0 12-11 hvtll 011•~ $-Gr .... 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Sr 11-1 P -G. Vlll-o, Tel\ec~ Jr 1•1 P -D°" Htoly, 4qu1ne, Sr »-t C -Jolwl SrNtl\. 9ell c;.,.....,, Sr »t 111-Ty Werrt11. 81e lie¥ Sr W l11f-Fr-~INl,LA C-Sr GA 111f-MettMKN111W, LA 8optbt Jr ••• .410 ,,.,_c. _...., s.nte CIO•• Sr OF-Roel Hell-. IUo Mew Sr -AH OF-lloll Cownoyer, Elsl"°"' Sr OF-Jim l.outfw'..,, 44ulne• Jr • SSI .Jll Ulll-G. Mwllef, Ai...-ro Sr s.c..llT-p -Jue" Alvery, Flll..--e P -si-~. c11em1.-P _,,.,.,,., L~ll. Per•IHt C -Gii Velclu, loldwlft Peril ta-Jim_.,, T.....,._Clty 1111-H. ~. 8-111 Pe111 lftf-ICt_ IE_..,,,.,,,_, l"'-TOllyUll, T~ OF-IE-..AI .... , V ......... Dt• o .. -e. Dilenlor1t, .... -OF-A .. lt-11,"PottM Ulll-J.G,..,._ld, ltlmofWOf'tcl TlltrtlT- Sr ._, Sr. M Sr U-4 Sr. -4'0 Sr . .JH Jr. .llt5 Jr. •• Sr. AS Jr .Sit Sr .>+! Sr. -.S Sr ... P -OoNeft ~.Morro lloy St. ..2 P-Calv,,,_,V......,.Otl $r. 11-1 P -Ml ... WIM, IA s.tlt 5' • t c -s-~o • ._.. 5' _., 18-Mell 41,,.,e&. St. """-Y Jr. .111 tllf-Aencty ...._, Veltey Ow. St. .m 1111-Gree H-. £Isl,,.,. Sr -lnf-TonyLMe,2'Ptlm• Sr. * OF-SMw 8ollty, T-flelH Sr. .J7S OF-JoM 111_.a, Merv Si.r Sr. AM 0"-Stne5ouln, lltll·Jtff Sr. AJ1 OF-J-~11. Ttmo .. Cltr Sr. J1S Ulll-AftCIV ~·· Fiii,,,.,. Jr .Me Co.playen of T•er Den p.,.,,.,, Aod Htll0"41 Clllo Mewl v High 1chool ALL<l,.-SMALL SCHOOLS P... Plilyw, ~ Yr. Men P -A. Buffollno, Monl<lolr Jr 11.0 P -EdMoraltt, AloH..-Sr. t0.2 P -A•y-,8rtnlW-Sr ... , P -0 . Cerlllo, R-41 So. 11-4 1111-Tom /O\(l(ey, Monie la Ir Sr. .S5' lftf-WayneTlplOn,ROitmond Sr. .453 1111-llllllk• CkloM, Monklelr Jr 410 '"' J-Ze•-. Temoitton So SS1 1111-Mlllt S..-, Or ante t.utll Jr .400 C -8. AeQGtzy, Buckley Sr. .. OF-Roll Ce-tl, Llftflt ld CIV. Sr Sl7 OF-TOI C-. Monl<lalr Pr99 Sr S27 OF-0. Siu-.. Hesperia Ctv Jr .•IJ VIII D LtGr4'n9f, Temple Cllr. Jr. 441 Ulll-T.Ptnotroall,OUff"/A-ls Sr fft CO-t>l•rtrs of YHr. Roc~o Buffollno, Tom Mc Kay CMontclalr Prep), Wlmlll.cton MONDAY'SallULTS ........................ &Jorn llcrt ,...._.., -· ,..!tr 11-n (U.S.I, 1 ... W , .. t; l!rfc fir-CU.S.I -· Y-ldl ...... C"•~•I. M , M , W ; 11-..t Vt ft'I Hot (U.S.) .. ,. ICl ... a IE .. ,,,.,. IG«....,.yl, 6-4, M. .... ; P•I Mc.._ 14vatrell•I ••• P e wa l Slorll (CH<--•), W , M , .. J; ltkll ~ CU.I .I -· lllOll HltM-cu.S.), .. , ... t . M ; VCjey AnlrMrof 11~1 Rf. Jon ICOdN CCHCllOllOVtklel, •·O, •••• 7-S; Jahn • Mcl11roa CU.S.) clef. Tom Gullkk-. CU.$.j, t•, M , W; fltNI Te't9tfl IU.S.I def. Hkk Sewlent CU.S,I, 7·5, .. ,, .. ,; SMrW9M 5tew•rt cu.s.1 -· Jlftl 094_., cu.s .1. M. W , .. 1. W ; Aftttt G'-i CS(NMll .... J#eM..._..C~l,W,7-S,W. ltlWI ~ (U.S.) .... 8.ikll Watll CU.S.), "'I.~ '4; Ct ... WI-(U.S.) .... 1-. I...,_ CU.t..I, M, ._., M ; Ir._ Taec"'' (U.S.1 fff. lttlen4 SIHltr (lwi~.....,, .... M , W , W ; Cllarllt fl-< u 11 CAvttrelle l •al. lveft La11•1 CC.CfltNeow• .. >. "4, W , M . I .. , W : Jim-my c--. (U.J.1 ... Olck SICK-*' CU,$.1, to·1, •·J, ... , Mel fll!urcall (U.S.I •I. De .. c.lllflltl c.-...i.1. M , W , W ; _, 01llrl111 (WHI Off"'•"'' e.1. Ulrlclt _.,._ I ... ~), 7 ......... 1. M ; lui.r •II•-(lrltel11I .. ,. 111..i" Dl'y ..... l~llalll), .. 1 ............ ,: ""' Oulflll-(U~) .... O...._. .......... tit.ff),'"'· W, ..a; ,..._ """""' (U.l.J def ....... Dedliwty tU..1.1, 7•,W, ,_., 1 ... arlll -DllMll IU.LI wt • .#ff ........ (U.S.), .. ,, ..... , ....... t; W.I• fllMll ,,_..,.., •· Miili ~ H1.1.1 ....... ,,6-4. 1·J fll!ff(.i ...... CflrMCel •t. We,_ ,.,_ o.w-.1. .. 1. , ... w. 1'61 LM'ry hete11111 1u.a.> ••'· c11u L•lc"•• CA4m,_.N.I. .. t; , ... W ; ,_., Me-,w (U.S.I _,,Ille......_(..,.,_..), M. ..... H. M, M; "9114 ,......_ l•IOtl wt . ..., MMr9 (._. Mrtce), M , 14, .. t i llN •i:,:~:;, l U,1.1 e1t. Vlct•r fll!tUI t l , ... H. .. ; MM u.,.t (M- teliilJ -·,.... Dellll •~> ......... ..... W , M ; ,.._ MINllh#e ,__, ... , *'· ...... OW..-• <llJllltllf .... 1. .. , ..... ~ 14; Yldlr ~ •u1l.J ... ,.._ ,.... lM!lerle). M.,,., .., t , ... .,..,_ ,.,.,._ cu.a.1 •· ..,. ~ Metve CU.A.I, .... W , W. 1•J ....... ~ IM* ... ..,,....., ... ,u.a.1,~w. W. W 1 Wet~ IU.S.I elf, -....... (U.S.), .a, M. 1 .. : ~ C--C t.-i11 .,_ _,, ~ ,.._ CO!Mllt, ~ W. N, M, N ; TIM ....... CU.t.I •· ..,.......,., ................ W; --.. ,.._,. C"-1.1 -. .,_ ,.._. IU.l.J, .. t, .... Ml~ 01a ...... CU.A,) ......... ,~ ... , ..... Orte U.lt .... ,_ .... °"' ... Ul.U , t-1, "' ... M, M : ._ C.. ~ ..,, """,. .... cu.a.> • ...,.,. .... NAil. "81TlaN IHVIMOM 4 WLO"OA8P',,_ ••unuH ttlt1'2411 • • u >1 n 11 1 1012i1•u MO«THWIU OIVlltOtl Vt ncov-II • M ,. ... ,.,.., s-n1e 10 t " ............ • • u u u n uu .. 40 J4.., Cal90ry I 10 27 £dmontCW1 6 10 JO tlASTlltN OIVlllOtl COlmo~ WHlllneton 1S 4 so u 41 ,,, ""°"'"'' Toronlo tlit11U7S tlt1UU71 4 IJ 22 41 22 • IOUTHlltM OIVlltON All ... i. t I )4 ~t.L• ..... -11 I U Jec"-vlllt t I 24 Tampa a.y I 11 27 CINTlllAL OIVllHON ,. ... 11 JI II 2:> 21 71 . , ... Clllc-11 6 J6 22 It tS Twit.a 10 1 JJ 24 • • llllllM91oote t 1 JI JO U 11 0.11.. 2 1S 10 • ' 1t 51• llOlllU ere ewerded lot a r ..... tllon °' ovwtlme vktory. Four POlnb lot e "*"°'"' victory. Ont llof\111 Pol11t tw ,,..,., eoat Kortd with • ,....,......,, ol th,.. ,.., -· Ho llonus Point I• •wordM f« overtime or ·-•outeoeto: ........,..o- Ho oa..-~Itel T-.J'tO- Tempe ll4ly .. 411MI•, 11 Pon&o..s •t CNcaeo. ~ MOlllrNl •1 Ca ... ry," Loa Alemltoa MONDAY'S ltlMILn (4-tt•1 ....... ....-.-.. _.., Flr•I rec. -Ontrt Jok« (Mlt< ... 111. 4M, ).ollO, UO; Cermetlno CC.Ito), 17.AO. UO; Mertl" Boy 10.-1, 1 60. P .. eci. 11 .. 1 H ld .. 1 ... S.Cond rac.t -Miu TrlPoll C.iw.lrl, 7A0, 4.00, J.00; Sey Too Ttcly CCerdoul, 4.«I, i.00, MIU Jet Spka !Horii, J 00 Tlllrd rec. -CC-lt<I e11lryl Dlr9<1 Tllou9lll C&.-•I. • 00, J 20, J.00; t.lttlt Dupe (Tr .. ..,,.), J.00, ).00, IC-"<I ,...,.,, 8oy Veltntlne CO.totnbal, 6.IO, l .20, JM . •'c1utlll •«• -Flrtl Auler CHet1), tJ.20, t.60, 4.40; Wayton Wey ICllawl), S.20, J.JO; Oulltoon CPeullnel, >.20. u euci. (~31 paid IS7AO Flftrl rat -Atnenr IHartl, tAI, ...0, 2 40, 1(1'-ftlne CPllU..ton), S.00, UO, Ftr•nos £.....-. 1T,......re1. J.Jt, Shrtl\ raa -Bit Wlllfl IOW.,..tl, 21.-, ..... SA ; ....... Jet (Pauline), 4.20, l.JCI; Ml<fw•r o..ett c F.-1. .,. u eaactt CW I peldfDAI, Stwt-rece -Go J..,. ... 8or !Cr.....->, 6.21,4.Ml,2.AO; 8rlt .... It_ (Fr-), 1AO, 4 ... ; Jet Fwl IAdalrt. J.•. U tue141 tWI palcl ...... EleflOt rec• -Tu ...,..., IT,._..I, 7.20, 4.00, lAO; l.ol .. S.UI (Hat1)2).IO, 4 ; S...Cllo (Aclielr>. 6.JO. U uecle llW Ut.20. U P'ldl SI• !1+7->-S.101 paid l ,t9 -two w1Mi"9 lk wtt CM• ........ ,. U Pick SI• U flMlellOll pelcl PJUIO wltll l6 WIMlflt ll<:kol• (fl ........ _,, • Hllllll rec• -Me""' Merk CFrellOfll, 11.20. 4.Jt. l.40. OotlMro 10.....,_1, >.•. 1.00; 8..U llftAOO (Cardou), J.20. u •aecta ,,,.71 ,..Id53'.«I. A tttndance -•. 903. Cellfornl1 Ameteur Chempfon1hlp1 .......... ._., Aob80tclt s. .............. c..rvv-0.11F...._ J im l(- v1c w1111 KellllCINrw•ler Doll llllM Merk Nlor9'lfl M41tli HollAftll MOI ColllM lllllllclltll W..S. Misc. II \ ~ ~ »-1H9 ~71 ~70 u.a.10 ~71 as.•11 )7-M-11 ~71 ~71 -.i.11 • • 0 • a c o a a $06$$$$ esscas SSJSJSCUSCJ 2 3 Orange Coasl DAILY f>tLOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 Tealll8 nix Cleveland's ganie idea PUBLIC NOTICE "IC1'1'10US l"SllllUS 111.AMm ITAT•MIMT l flt fcMlawllle ,.., .. ,., era OOl"9 ~.f ....... H01tTH HIU.,S llllALTV/lftlllNf , IS41l Jett,_., k , s..tlt 401, I Nine. CA '1114. ._ o.r ... Stnlll, ti or.....,1y, lfvlN , CA '2714, tllftft Merclleuno, ,0, llllllUy Mt.O.w, lrvllllt, CA '211>. PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE f ... ,.... NOTIC8 Olll T'IUUll'S MU NO'TIC'I Of1 "tCTITIOllS 9UMMIU f.I. lltO. ·~ TllUITll'I &ALI llMMllTATS ... MT f. 0 . MlllVICI CX)Mfll!-Y .. ...,., O• Jlily e, '"'·et 11 ... A.~. '"' "4ftiWlflt ,.,... ......... -.. ........ ft ... TNIMe ~ ........... ,.,,..,.....,.. l'K--,-., •..c ... llual-•· .. terl ...... tftr\lltWfU.MU.4f • f .~11 .... 0 1v1a1,,110 ""OP'llllTlll fll!UILICAUC'TION TOTHIHIOHllT u ' ,_,, -" trlltUa -... 110 --...... , ......... ~ COM,.AMV, t1t I. ......... Wle •t 01111 "'°" CAIH .... .,.... ti ti-H , '* th<ul .. tty T"' ,1,..,.s C.O MeM. Cellfw4M .._ ' ff Mlt lfl WM\11 _., tf ._ UflltM Ore»iw, y; -.--.1111e., I, ,.._ ,,_ O'-.,e. U IS .... 1.......... ke•tl .. , rltN. lltle -lftlar• (-111 8-1 .. 1 ...... tit! tf Offlclel ...... ....,.,, ...... c:.llfwflle HMI "YH ..... -..... 1111' " -Mill ""°' .. Ill Illa tfllct tf .. c-11 ,... 111-y I .°"-· 110 I. lrlMM, 0 ••• '1 Trutt In tllt •••••rly ur .. r If Ot.,_ (euMy, c.tlflatnlo, CL EVELAND (AP} -A Cleveland Indians' project t o bring minor baseball to a major league baseball c ity bH been thwarted by the minor league players Lnvol ved. The Indiana announced Mon· day that a aam e between their C lass AAA a rrtllate C harleston Charliea and the New York M e ts' Class AAA Tidewater Tides would be played in the stadium Thursday . the first minor league contest s e t in a major league stadium during the major league players' strike. BUT PLAYERS on the two teams opted later not to play the game. The reason was not I m · mediately anno unced. Indians Pres ident G abe Paul said, "Thia has nothing lo do w ith the s trike " Wayne Garland, the Indiana' player's association r epresen · tative, disagreed. "Obviously, this is being done because o f the s trike," Garland s aid. "This is the fir s t time I 've heard of mino r s in a major league stadium this year ." G arland said from Nashville. T e nn .• that he was unaware of the minor league players' de · cision and did not try to in· flue n ce it. "THEY'RE NOT in the union . but what they think matters," Garland said. Carl Steinfe ldt, genera l m a n ager o f tt1e C harles ton team, said the p layer s' decision is. "1;>robably the mos t d isap· pom~g thing I've h ad happen to m e m base ball." "About 4 p .m . some of our players had calls fro m major league players . We were a lso in · formed by the Tidewater c lub that a M et player s aid ther e would be a pic ket," he said. "O ur playe rs met at 5:30. l m e t with them a nd explained what this game would m ean financially to C harleston . The players listen ed to me. They had anoth er m eeting," h e said. S t einfeldt said Mike Paxton, a pitcher with sev eral year s ma· jor league experience. s aid the decision was nothing against the Charleston ballclub, but that the tl!am voted as a unit n o t lo play the game. The Indians· front o ffi ce bad an- nounced special ticket prices for the game they thought was on for Thursday. Four players signed by UCI Del R ey League most valuable player Paul Hammond of St. John Bosco High has announced h e will a ttend UC Irvine in the fall and play baseball for Coach M ike Gerak os' A nteat e r s . H a mmond h it a to rrid .469 ( .510 in league) last s eason, driving in 20 runs and s te aling 14 bases. The right-hand h itting o utfielde r was an all-league selection for three s traig ht year s . Three other baseball players have signed letters o f intent at UCI. Ed Farrell. who b a tted .368 this season at Orange Coast College and h e lped the Pirates advance t o the s tate tourna- m e nt, will play for the Ant- eaters. A g_raduate o f Servile High, Farrell played o n e year at Harvard before transferring to occ. G rossm o nt C o llege trans fe r S teve Barnard is also expected to give UCI a little power a nd versatilit y . An a ll-conferen ce catcher, Bernard can also play third base. H e batted .388 for Grossmont last season. Another transfer, R on Cum - mings of Citrus. Is a lso UCl- bound. A .322 hitter last season, C ummings was an All-Mission Conference selection and an all· C IF performe r at Arcadia High. Tryout camp begins Friday A base ball tryout camp, conducted by the Major Leal\le Scouting Bureau, will be held Friday, Saturday and Swaday at Cal State Fullerton. beginning at 9 a .m . each day. Tbe purpose of the tryout camp ls twofold: 1) to sign a proml1in1 youth who was not selected i n the recent major leaiue draft. 2> to ret a look at aome ol the promtsfn1 youn1 hl1h school playen who are retumin& for their senior season. • flllt M ineo It t OtlduCltcl ltT a •-r•l~p. ~0.SMllft Tlllt tlitt--· flled wltll Ille ....,.., C1t111 o1 0r..,.. c-•• on Mer '°" .. »I. C.leMMe, CMl,.,...,e,._ flare....._~,._, WILL a••L T -·· I Mtnutl J, "1'1ntl\llarlr, l70 I , T .. USTC>tt i Hl.lllltlltT llill. ~HA(IC, ..,., 4 .-v L C AUCTION arhlt l, tulle tOI, Cott• MtH .,,,..,,,_, TO HtQ.14ffT llOOl lt fl'Olt CASH C.llt ... flle.a.116 ' •trHl,,CIAlllV: fll!ATfV 1.UM811t (p0yet11t et time ol Hit 111 lewful CO c.tlfwftl MOM'( If llW Uftl-SIAif .. ) et M1e Tllla llutll!IM ll C~IM Oy e 'e ocw,.,... f'9fll ll-If 1a1 0... SU.I, k .. -teMr•I ~ It~ ...... I){ .... II. ttn e1 IMtt .00 ·-.. ltln.t ~ J ,,.,_......,. H• 1~"' llllek 12411 ..... .., .. Of 0 • Htw-1 ~"r C.llt.,ftl• •I Pv011"'9d 0-..... (;NII DellY PllG4, Tlllt stat-w• Ill• Wiit\ lt\e llclel .. t<eriet Ill Ille efflU tf 1M 1 :OO e.m ... , r..,n, I tit -IMor"I 1, 1 .. 1 )-"· u. 20. JUiy '· "" 1144 •• c ... ftly Clerti .. ~ ..... C:-y ... ltt<or .. "Or .... C-y ........ ""VfYM. --..... ., It ~ J-I, 1"1 ., trutl -rlbas "" tel'-lftt .,.. Wld NM ol lr\111 lft Ille ,.,, .. ,.... PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICI TO ClOHU4CTOU INVITINOllO& Fou11lel11 Velley Sc:llool Olllrlcl. P 0 IO• 9110, • t LlonlllouM Lene. Fou,.lelft Vellty, C•lltorllle t2?0t lid ld9"tlfkett...-: 1110 ll·IS, CCIII· Cttl• Walk-y E~•IOM-Pof11•1 Pl•llltr Fiii iot t M:,_lt s .. 1tc1 111c1s -July •. '"'· 10 oo A M 5peclflcellon• on Ille o aroenlftO •M Purclltil"V ~menu OOVlaNINO 80Alt0 Jacll-• At ... ....,lft......,.. P"bllslltd Oronee Cotti D•llY 1>1101, June U. lO. 1•1 1ID_.I PUBLIC NOTICE .. '~-· .. lilt'f'I' lltueled 111 .. Id '"'"'" •1141 •'-• _,. 4'MrlM41M. fll!utMl"'M O'Mtlt CNll Delly Pl!«, Ltt IJ of Tr<KI t"41, Ceu11ty al T ... I port ... of Lou 1 2 -S 1 .._. JUM "· •• JUiy 1, "· , .. , Jt».et Ottf19t, SUoltof Gel"9nlle, .. Pff..... .... ' I • n -· •t<O•IMO In 8-* -· Peott 14, u .... I 1 • n T-'tlfl 1 ~II. 111.__. ------M, ti Ml'"ll_.. ~ 111 Illa oHk e West. Sel\ ... ller'dino 8-•M .... '1· PUBLIC NOTICE °''"'c-tvRK•*'"'*c-dlen.dttcrl11N••to11-.: EXCEPTING .... .,,..,. ... '" ~. COfl'l"'9nc;lne •t • Mil In "" '-'• -----11 ' 'llM., L...-Can"°" Road lft0r'll"'9 llla:ntu .,_,,_, -...C" -mlnerelt E"lll_,.t Sl.Mlefl --SS U "CTITIOUS IUSlllll• lft,"' -.......... -· -wll'-t l•ld out •"41 lmp,.wect lly ~.;._: ...,._ITATIMINT" I ... tltflltfMtryW1tlle-1Ktofl ... County,.._._ 11, 11' IS" l .. t Tiit IOllOwlne Pt<IOn• ... H l"ll , ...... '" .... to ... ~ .. INr ............. <»"'*' llne u 1'0 ...... - llualMnu :::.:i:,:.:~-:i:i.._"':.,"";,~~ NorWHlttly ctrn•r el Ille '•"• OCEAN BLUFF PAR TNERSHIP, I _,,.."-1ltll ' • dtM:rl-Ill llM ... It ""'"'-l>6 e ... 11111 SlrMI, Costa M .... ::.:. ,...,,_v ........ llro•. c._ ....... •-died ........ Ct llfotftla .,.t1 ·-· Q wt for .. 1" on lftalf'\lo l.,S Ill llOOll 54it ,.... '90 0..-,1' Oa11le1 Glllltr1, >712 Orenoew--• racordad July U, ttn In ._ corOt of ... 4 ~ ..... c.ouM,. ~ Awtnut, Lot Al•mllOl, Callforllle I02ll, P• * Offkl•I ltaore.. AO-Soulll I)" 41' 4$" Watt .,;..., Ille totJO. OAISS· 14001 CM""I Ori..., 11 Toro, Wtllerl, '*-ry of lelcl IO!'O ..... Sl-y Jee.-. n.-Ftcltret .,,,..,..,., c~~1°'"'° · '"'lo IN moat lolllrltrty c-~ of ,._ Lot An.-ltl. c.111 ..... '°°"· I If • ,,, ... -"" .... <Ofl'lmon •. lend dtl(rlllell 111 , ....... to Herry T Tlllt llu•IMU It conduClt<I lly • •lgnellOll 11 •-•tltVt, -••"""1'1' Baov•• -wife racorcl9d J-1' llmllaci ,.,.....rillfp :• give"~. to lb '°'""le'-u or COf'· , .. 1• In lloOll 1~,' peee J:2t of Otftci.i Oenj .. Gii_., •<IMH) At<ordt, "' , .. offl(.e of '"' c-v Tiii• .... _, ... ,.,., wllll Ille Tiit lltnllkwy -Hid Oetd ol AKordtr ol Mid °'"""' C-lr .... MOTICI Of' AP't'UCATIOtt flOtl County Cttn o1 0te1199 Couftty 011 rn,.l, lly •-Of Wtacll tr ..,..,II In <0rntf lltlft9 Ille ,, .. polftt of .;_.,"" CNANOatNOWNllSMfP'O.. JuM J, ltl l Ill• olllf9etlofts H CUrtd 111•relly, "'"'of'"' bou11Ary Of Ille ..... ALCOMCk.IC 81VlltAOI LIC•Ns• M•wltt & IC .... A uw ~. ntr•t .. •• •llK--dltll ... red •• de~rllled ......... ; I-• COfltlnulfll .. ,Ml 4tt11: IMrc ...... Jee-. I~. Ille unOer'119ned • -111.,. OeclerellOfl Soutll U ' '1' O" Wol t lon9 MIS To Wllom II Mer Concer11 ... c .... ...,. ...... .... of Otl•ull end 0......... fer Salt , -W•Jt•rly '"" of IM ·-of Skidmore YUENG VI TSAI ••• pp1,.,., to Ula"'"'* ••lllt111111Clc.toflltea<ll-OftlKllOll 8rot., ~·"°"· S50,60 1 .. 1 IO .,. Otper1me111 of Ale-lie S.vtr-LM A ..... C..tltenMe .._, to OuSt Ille -~.-to "" Mid mo" Soutlltrly corM r of Ille l•ft!I COlllrol ""' .• ., .. a.. SALE 1££R' ,,~ P•-•IYtoWlllJfyMldoOfloatloM,-dtKrlllacl '"Illa o.ecl loJoe 4. J•- WIH£ CPV8LIC EATING PLACE). lo Pullllilled Oranee eo.11 Delly Piiot. lllttH lter .... -...-<•-... ., •nd wlft, rt<.Ot'dtd Oc ....... 1t44, '" U ll el<ollollc llt•ttottl el IOO)t Junet, 16, U , 20, ttll 2 ... Ut llOll<t of llttecll-Oftltdlontolltr• llook 12*S, -:19, OHklal ltecOt'ft. •••m• ......... Hu11tlneton lltecll, COf'dtcl F-.-., s, 1•1 ......... Ho. 111 Ill• office Of ... C-y ltKOf'-. c e111or111e,_._ PUBLIC NOTICE "°' '" -1,.,.,... 1u. of Ulld Of ... ,do.-eounty, t11ance Nonll w PUOlltlled Or-Cot•I 0.lly Piiot llclal AKOr'dl. 21' 11" WOil el<ine , ... SouUltrly ._. J uMJl,l"I , ... , Said .... wtll lit-· -wlttloul d••r Of NICI ·-· Slt.to feet lo M SUPlltlOlt COU•T o .. CALl,OlllNIA C0¥9lltlll OT -•Mty, upreu .... Im· •"Git pojftl ....... "'. "'"'" Solnll 44• COUNTY o .. Olt4HOI PlltG, ttterdlne lltlt. -~ ...... ,,. 42' .w· wni ••one Mild Southerly lloull PUBLIC NOTICE 1•CJ.nc~or1 ... w"'-,..,..11,.~-.1o,.,111a,..,...1n1119,..111. dary, us."'"' 10 en •"II•• .,..,.,. ---~AM, Cell·'°"'la <IP•I """ ol the nolo -uract lty 1eld llltreln, llltnce Horth st' 4t' WtU NOTICI TO calDITOltl '" ...... m.rrlttt of PtllllCWler Ott<I of Tn.1st, Wllll lnlMHI .. '" .. 1c1 •long ... d 5outller1y lloundary, &». 0, IULIC ThNIP'la J ANICE NI STOUT end Rnponotlll note pro•-. advanc•, If eny, llncler fffl lo Ille"'°"' Sout ... rty comer of U., ctac~ •tet ...... 111 u.c .c.1 BEANAADG STOUT t"' ,.,,.,,."' .. 1d o..ct of TrU1t, , .. ,. l•tld -rtlltd 111 111e deeCI ,, "'B Notice h llttelly 910 11 to Ill• CASI NUMaE• 0 .u .. 11 ,,,.,, .. Aftll • ._ of '"' Trua• Zwtmtr encl wlle, recwded J-<,. a It 0,. 0 f c A E A T Iv£ SU-$1M4Rlt14GEI •ndol l .. lrvlbcrealadlly ..id OMclof '""· '" -s.302, -II OHi< MARICETIHG, IHC , Ttalllltror, lllOTICll Y• ..... -.. -4. TIM TtVll Record•,'" the oftlee o1 11M C-tr .,,.... _,..., tcldt•~ '' ttoo '°'°""' ""rt ,..., ~. 099i•I .,_•"*'-I S.ld .. ,. wlll lit llekl on W-y. Recor~ of ... d Oronea c-1v; ,,_ wa,, City • C..ta Met.a, C-y of ,_ ....._...,,. -,... ,...,.... J.,_ 14. ••1et11 oo e.m. •t '"' offlco Nor111 11 )t' ,, .. E .. 1 ••one llM Ort110t, Stale of QllfOf'nla, tllel • ""'k wllllllt • .,__ ........ 1.._..... 01 T D S-vl<e C-y. 8onll of Souc"' .. "''Y llne of \eld ,...., M n lrtftlftr Is ...... to tit -IO THE --· A"'9rl(e r-. Sulle 1110, °"' City IHI lo '"'"'°'' E••ltrly ,.,..., ;,. wlcl KEHT GROUP, Tra111fer", *"°" 4YISOI u-... .aao --· BouleverdW..t.Or.,..,Collforllle. la ftd , tlle11u Norlhttllerly lft • llu1l11tu -reu 11 4111 Wularly II trl.._.I _.. ....... c:-• U•. At Ille 11,,,. of'"' lnlllel llUOlktllllft llttlQlll llne to Ille~• Sou111trty ,.,. Place, 5ulte 201, Clly ol Newport •Ill •MltMlo • -.-UL,._... of 11111 nolk.e, Ille lotal ernount of"" nor ol t11t 1..., dn<ri-1" Ille clatd to 9tt<ll c ...... 1y of 0r ... 0t. Statt of "-.... ,,.. -...... Le• .. ,...,._ Uftpald 0•••11ce Of Ill• ot1ll11•tlo11 Normen 8. Allllwor111 -wife, ·~ Callf•,,,.1.. <lelt ... w... r.ecurtd lly ,,. ...,,,. dtK rllttd deed of <orcltd 4-1 11, Ifft, In -411 s, T ... ll'-1Y lo tit lrtMltrrtcl •• , To,,,. AHflOndtnt lru•t •lld tslin..tecl COSll t• ......... •nd PA90 16', Oflkl•I llKordi, In tllt offlc.t f'•Mrllled In """''* ••. All ll«k '" • Tiit Pt1111onH .... llled • Ptll· tdvoll(fl •• 110,odil . .o. To determine I tile Co..nty Rt<Of'-ol Uld Or- ··-· lh<turts, _.._, ond llOod lion conc,eml"V YO•., mertlttt You Ille -•"ti lllcl, .,.... mer c•ll (7141 ou11ly, -· Hortll 21· J.4' 06" Ent •Ill ol 11\0t dlSlrlflut« & t.alf't 11u.ineu mer file • written ._ wlllll" JO tJ7..,._ ••one U.. SoOlthtOl!ffly line of Hid "-" •• CREATIVE MAllKETIHG, clan OI .... 001• IMI lflii "'"'"'°"' ,, Data. -'(?2, '"' 1tn4, .. , ... "',,,. -£uterly , ... INC •nd localacl •I,.., TOtGlllO W•r. MtVN Oft llOU T.O.~~.. ""of ..... _.·~· Nortlla .. torly Cltyof Coti.Nlesa.CounlyofOr.,.., II If you lell lo 1111 • wrllt•" •NNT,_, lo Ille mot1 Soutllat1y co,.,,., ol \lie Sia It of Celllotnl•. ttl4>0llM wlllllll •Yell time, your dt• •r: Cllrit T...._, l•fld dff<rllled I" Ille deeCI to Juote T"' llulk lr.,1fer will tit c..,.....,. ••ult mar lit "'"'t<I and '"'court ~lee,.,._., Fey• ScllneOly, roconStd J-y Z2. meted on°' ofter Ille !Oii! ctoy of Julr, mey ,,.,., • ludQmenl coni.1111ne 111• 0.Cltl' 11"'4. .,.... 1-.0, 111 -'°"6, PtOt 4'2, Officio! ltl l , e l t e.m., el Ille office of jUll(ll•• or Olller ordt•s concer,.lne 0r-..,c.e.t1M1 Aecorck, 111 Ult ollk • of'"' Couftty RICHARD J. APRAHAMIAN, ..,,_ dlvhl<WI of IN'-rty, _., .. 1 s_.i, (7141.._ Recordtt of H id Or•lltt Cou111, addreu 1111121 E Fourlfl 54., Ste. 116, clllld c"'lodv, <lllld ll.IPPorl. enorney'• p.,1111"*' Oranee Coatl O.lly Piiot, 111e11c1 Nortll 21• W 06" EHi ••-.,.; City ol Sama Ana, County of ~ ..... •••. co•I" encl wch other relltf 11 June 2, t, 2'. 1•1 247Mt Soutlleaflerly llftt Of \elcl ,.,d, 4'.H Stott of Gellforlll• All Clalmt ""'''tit may lit " .... .., ..., ... C;OUrt Wiiie.ii IHI lo 114 ,,_, E•'9rly corner of Mid ... 11m111ec1 II\'July9, '"'· e1 Ult otlk •• could ''"'" In Int '°'"'"'~"' 01 PUBLIC NOTICE lttld, '°Id <-• olt.0 lltlrt11 Ille moot Of A I CHARO J AP114H4MIA"I, •• , ... , ...... of ,_y., Pt'-"'·.... Soullltrlr , ..... , ol llM •-ctttulbecl WllOM -. ll 211111 E Fourlfl SI , otlltr ttllef In Ille -IO H-J. 5<:-ldt< -Suitt I 16, City of Senft Me, C-ly of c If.,_ will!• -Illa -lo tf lllCllOW NO. Uf11IOJ Wiit , tK.,,_ Mey 20, 1"60, 111 - Or•noe. St.W of Ctllf'Oml• •••• ......, .. ...,, ...... .,... .....w lllOTICI TOCalOllOlti SlSJ, p ..... U •. Offl<lol Aacordi, '" 111e $0 fer at I• kftoMI lo tlle Tr..,.f., .. , .. N ~' .. -.,_ wr,._ 0,. auut TIUUtSflllt ollkP of lllt c-1., Recwcltr of '°'d •" .,.,,,_-. --·-.. -·-· 11 _.,, _, .. 11"4.., u-. cs.a. • ., .. ,., u .c.c.1 orenee County. tlltflc• Horth M' 47' lly '"' Tr_,,,,,, lot ltlt past W • Dated April n, ,.,, Notice 11 llertb\I ,,_.to credltClr'\ of 4'" East •I-Ult S.Ul.,.Ollerly 11M '''"ere. Lat.,, 8reMll lllt wlt11111 named parfltl Ille! • """' of old ••nd to "" MM1 Et1ter1, cor· CREATIVE MAltl(l:TING, INC., Cltrtl ' lraftlftr 11 I,._ to tit m-on Mr of said 1-. told cwner alt.0 lltlne ., IMO IOtOlllO W•y, CCKI• Me... GalSc>klultd, P•tt•ft•I properly ""''"•"••Ille mCKI Soutlltrly corner of -1- CellfOrN• a.-., dtK•lllad. ducrllltd '" Ille deed to "•"• J DAT£D:J-•. t•I aaUCI 1.0aUUUOH T ... _.,. Olld ~ OINf'•• of 5' ..... ldtr -wlle, r~ "-tl n.. «.-co._ A--r Ali.._ Illa I,,.._ IT_,_ er8 2, 1'60, lft -il~ ,_ tO, OHlc:i.1 T ........... It. Wel,,,.i UI Wttt WlllMf't ·-£ DW41t0 LAllS£H, ---1 ttecordi, 111 111t oftlc.e of lllt C:-y GtftOtal Pat1,_ ,. .. ..._,C..ft6» C•lll•r Orlve, Newport lltocfl , Recoreltr ol u ld Ort,,.. Covllly, o-telM. o..w., 11141.,..... Gellfornte 111t 11ce Hor111e .. 1er1y ata111 tllt 0-al Pat1,,.. Pullll""" ~ .... C-tl Delly Piiot, D t I 119 llus 1 llt • • t t . I .. YI H £ SouU...•twly 11,,. of H1c1 ,_ 1IO u.. F,,_J,FI-J.,_l,t ,16.tJ,t•t 2S41_.I TOWlltSCARDAHDGll'T5"0P. mOlt E-ly c-o1 .. tel 1- Gener• P_,,ner T ... _.,. -_...... --· tf Ille"~• Nortllwn1tr1T e lo1111 111'• Tr9111-. , ... lftltllded t~ ere: Not111tHWly 1"'9 of .. Id ~. '° 1•1 ltlCHAaOJ.A,.llAH-IAlll PUBLIC NOTICE AllA VlllAHI, ttA01 S. Denker to tllt ,,_, $outlltrly c-r o1 Ille A........, 4Y-. TOnwlc.a, Callfwflla "'91 l•tld 49Kr111ed In Pore.I J Of 1111 - A.._y WORICllt'S COM.-9MSATIOlt Tllel Illa prepet1y Ptt11nellf ... r ... 11 to Clert~e R IM<ll, Jr. -..,lft re •1 a. ,,_.It., 4PNAL,I NARD .. IK,._ In _., as. i1Aettflal1, ordtd ~r n, ltM, '" .;...,.. ..... l'M, ITAT• °" CAUNltMIA ............ mercMlndl ... equl-t, 7, -"° of OHl<:lal lll•cer-. .., ......... CA.,. CAM9'0.•AMAwttt lerJ ............. flslw'H, -'-'· ... offk t ol ""c-.ty RKer-... TAI:... °' llW wta t,.._ -· .-0 wtll, -... It~ ..... 0 tOft911 c-ty, t-.c:. IEallMly l'uOll ...... Or-C..11 Dallr PlteC, ........ A__ lm•row-1 -<O-IWI It llle ~y ~Ot-414lllo 1- J-2', 1"1 ..... 1 TOM OLIVl:lt, 4ppllunt. o . ""'"'''· .... It loc:•lt4 Oil ... ,,_ "' tllt ...... lo Wllllatn t. PUBLIC NOTICE WAYH(( M<MIHHIMENT, 111 ... lly Newport Ce11ter Drive, Hew,..rt rale -....... rt<onle<I J-I, 1141: VII .......... -UftlMWOd £moloye" 8NCll, Calllom&o. lft Dool! un, ..... ,.,, Offl<I•• F-. ~ Tl1tt lalcl llulll 1Tonlf0t Is '"teNIM to Records, 111 Ille oHlco of ,,,. c.u..ty -----Tiit partlat .,_.~ •llllUIN to -ts· be <Ofl.lllrnlnAtld el IN oHlce ot 9.,.i. lie corder of .. 1. Oren .. c ... 11,,. NS-71&5S .... "" of ... Awarcl ..... ,., Order, ""' Tiiie CAlrparatlOfl, 1'20 Wlltltlr• , ... M. Saulll n· 16' Ent ...... .,,. N OTICE OF DEATH OF .,._. ...,. t11e 1cw1ow1,... tact•, ..,. 8 1vc1., '--"'91M. c.tH. t00M, "".,. s-t1tar1y11111 ofuldl<Nld, 11.ul9t11• L 0 R I wel,.. Illa .._.._of u-Codie titer J11ly t, 1ttl. Int m ... Sooltllerty ctmtr of ..id,.,.., NE VICTORI NE Sactlonstl); Ul•I -for fHlne clolm• In tllfs s e ld cor"" ••u 1101111 '"• N 0 R MAND I N AND 0 F TOM Ol.IVIElll, llerll JufJ "· 1"1,. t l<•-1• J ... y. n , '"'· SoulllwHltrly Ctrlltr of I ........ P E T I T I O N T O A O . wflllt ~ •'""" tllot SWtt el Sa 1• • Is "'-I• Mk! ,,,._ K•lllflll "' t11e -10 £. Htwerd MINISTER ESTATE NO. Ceflfor111e .. 80clJ Mecll•11lc on Tranelor• Wild ,.,,......., TrMll.,•, H11rf0f'd -wtfe, "'""-.__. s. Augull , .. ,.,.., llT W•YM 111<M1 .... 1 . .,..., Ille lollowlfle _.,_, Dullnn• 1 .. 1 •... -1SJ2, peee CM, Off1ci.1 A -109207. 1nt11I -, . ..._... .... in-~• "'""'-_....... wltl\ln Ille llw• llocord1, '"Illa offk t of Ille C-y T 0 a I I h e I r s ' t err ier -111 ... 11., .,..,.....,..,, ............. _.! HO"IE Recorder Of .. ,d O•Ofttt c ...... ,,, b f I · · d It tolntd lnJurr erlJ!flt "" of .,.., 111 1"' D•i..t: J..,. 10, 1•1 cneno 5outll ... 21· tO" Eall •klflt u.. ene c1aries, e re o r s '°""' of emp1oymt11t, 1e11 '""'• ALl•Vlr.,1 Sou111er1y 11ne of seld 1onc1. onc1 •IOll9 and c ontingent cred itors o f llf19tr, tntendlcl Tr_,.,.. '"' So"'""'Y 11,. of'"' '-c1at<r111oc1 L 0 R I N E V I CT 0 R I N E Tiie l11lurr <41UtM ,.,"*""' dlt-Pullll"*I 0r.,.. Coal! Dolly Piiot, 111 Ill• de«! to Reymond L. Miiier end N 0 R M A N D I N a n d •lllllly of Uerc.ent,""' wt'lk ll 1""'9"'"1· J..,.. u. '"' lt4Mt wltt, recorded July l. , .. , , 111 '** p e r s 0 n s w h 0 ma y b e '' I•,.., .... e1 uo .,., -.,...,,..1,. --1u2. P...,. 1"· 0tfk101 RKor4s. 111 "" Oth erw ise 'interest-In the t11t111w1111. "' "" """ " .... oo. '"' PUBLIC NOTICE olotk• of,.!.,~ CouM, ""'or .... °' .... "" crtc111 '°' _,. N""""'1 1W•wlou11y ••nee ......... 1y, -•tont Ula s...tMr· will and/or estate : "'-· --1y ""'of tlle tend dt1Cr1-1n 111t-.... An 1"'°""81 tttl"9 .... -,.,.. NOTIC• TOCOtfl'lt4CTOltl 10 Herry T ....... end wlte, llfrt4,,. A petition has been filed vl<Mdly 1""4cl. CAUIMO l'IOtt 810S t1erel1111tfort ,_,_, • dlsten<• a1 by A lfred Normandin in Tlltre 11 ..-ca1 1rea-1 to curt' Sc"ool Dl1trlc1: COAST COM· rs.•.t7fttt......,...,..1u..10111e1r .. po1n1 the Superior Court o f.,..,.,..,..'""",,. tfftc•• of ... .,,,.. MUHITYeot.t.EGE D1sT1t1c r lof"9•""'"" 0 111ry 81d ONdflne: 2:00 e1c1oc11 p.m. of '"' p~ nes ,.. ,., .. , _,.... range County requesting ~lce•·•eea• .. .,..._ .,. payute '"' ''"'deyot JuAy, 1•1 or otller com"'°""'''"°"°"· The that Alfred N o rmandin be tiy def-.. tooowa: Dr. H.,.,.., Piece of &Id Rtc•ICll· Office of IN 110mt•lldeoitresaof111t-fklarrot appointed as personal ~J0,4TYC..,.,S..vlco$1t.». Pur<llHln9 Attn!, Marla" Perrin wllosa request Ille .. It ll 10 be meclt I A.""llceflt'• ett-y r~ e ,_Of COH I Comtnu11Hy Coll ... Oltlrkl, •rt Oeldtt S. E"ttrly, >410 Soutll r ep~ese ntat Ye t o ad-S7S.OO,tolllc-eflromter"'4of IJ70 Ademl 4n11ue, Cotl• MtH, lllllel11 Street,~ •·I S, s.tila AllO, m I n 1ster the estate of •••rd. c a111orn1e .,.,.. Tt tec1,,.11e 17141 ca111or .. 1o.,101. Lorine Victorine N o rman· Ot,_ 11""""''-sJt.s707 Dlre<tlonl INY lit_ .. ....,_....,, d i n c 0 s t a M e s a 111 P••m•ftl ol oultlancl ln9 ProJtct 1-.Ufk .. loll N-~ to • wrlUtfl ·-1 Wbmltt• .. Ille . • . • ""4k etl)j111. Wut Cot .... Motion Seftwrt 11t11etklary wltllffl IC cton ., .,. ""' California (unde r the In-0 ,. All••"'ll $40.00. P o. 80• 471. Pie<•"'--°"""· Ille No 100t. put11k a11on...,_ d ependent Administration Gerdt" a.-, ea111otn1e '1IM1 OlflC• 0• Jolln Potter, Directer, Sokl .... w111 lie-· -_,,,_t of Estates A ct) The peti· wu1m11111tr Pflyslc•• T"'••r. P11r11cac Fac11111te "'-'"" Tr.Cler cove11a111., -•t111y, .. "'"'or '"'· . . 14140 IUcll 81va Sull• '°' ComPI••. Diii. Admlft. 11411., IJ70 Plied, t...,-cllft(I tl11t, -"" w tion IS set for he aring in Wt1tmlno ..... QlllOml~· ' Actomt, C.ta Mete, c.tlfernle H6». tn<umlltenc.aa, to pay t11t prln(j"I D ept. No . 3 at 700 C ivic w .. 1m1,.i.rCom.......,ly Ho .. 1o1. TeltpltoM:C114>SS..5"" sumoft11tnott-urtc111ytaM1dMclof Cen ter Drive Wes t S anta 200 Hotp1te 1 c1re1•. we.im1n1ter, HOTl~e is HfltElv GIVEN 111e1 '"'"· 1-11: uo.ooo.oo • .,1111 '"'-• • CellfOf'llleflJUS I ... •IMl'9 nalfttd kllool Dlltrlcl Of ''°"' May 14, ,.., .. Ill .. 1c1 .... SW• Ana, California 92701 on CJIE,.,........WenyeMcMhw Or ..... c.-tr, Calltornla. actltlt.., vlcltd, edvanc.a1, II eny, u .... r "" J uly 15, 1981 at 9 ;JO c),m . WHll ..... l•llfllfMllnclettlltllfM41fl,._ elld lllreutfl lb o. ... rlll ...... rd, ttml .. Mid dMG Of lr.nt, f .. I , IF YOU OBJECT to the '""'· ~'"'"•f !er rafer ttct 1' •• ,,.,,.. e"4I ,.,..._.., tM true'" . , UI £~ W ll Ill _ _.11 DISTltlCT'. "'Ill rec:tl"' "" lo, W nd Of ... lnllb crut94 "" w14 4'eM granting of the petit ion , #Nffw1t11....., .. ..,..,,,,_,,.. .... 1 ••tw-..,. _, ... .,time. 1nm.c.t1,,..,..._..,,.,.._ .. you should eithe r appear •'8r1111wNc11 .. ~1 .. M1oe. M•IH Ille lot""_.. ot • c ... 11act •of '"' 11mt ot 111a flnt .....,.tc.t..,; at the hearing and state 14> WCA8 w111 wlttltclkl.,.. ••• fora:"' ... ~-~~. ·-· -"u......,.1 uoo.oo. b , I . ,U11111..,._, • MrYlc• lies lletn "'"" llY -1 • r._...ve11 '" ""' l'leu Tiit lleNflclory Ufldtr H l4-.. ot your o J~Ct ons o r file u .E.F. l•n1111tc1-·-""'"t1t--ru•1,11,,_of•W..C1twtltf.,11 written ObJections with the Detect: O.C.mt>er '· ,.., elld 1M111tk1v l'Md •loud •t 11111 --n Ill• o0t1oat1on1 MCu•M tlttretty, court before the hearing TOMOLIVllA '1'1" """-ptec•. reto•-•utlllOO -dellwtr'td to Y be. "-"'keftl T"'" wtll tit • no ~I •-'""' .,. u~ • "''"*' eec ... e11on our appearance may s s. »V~ ftr u c11 1tt of Did docum'"" to .,., • .,11 -demen4 1., .... - In person or by your at· 1*1 wu-Stl'Mt ... ,.,, ... .,. ,.."'"' "'...,. c.-.111e11 r1t•n noU0t of ..,..,.1 e"4I t4!Kt1on torney. c.taMH-.CA wllt\ln n/a deYl 9'ter tllll llld 9"111111 o .. 11 °""~ . .,.Merell 11, I F Y O U A R E A ,._ s. "-111 c1eto. "'· 1"' 1111Mnl9ftff ,..,_ •at• "'""'9y,., .._,k.,. tree II 1114 ""'" collform .,,. tit iu Of_._ e"4I tttctlon le N,. C REDITO R or a cont-._ .. ~ ,.....,.., .... .,.C0111rac1~ tf4'td111w--,-,..,.- ing ent c reditor of the d e · c..M....CA 1 «11 111c1 ....,, .. *'-'""" v1110•.-. ed t f I t17 tWt 14l'MI "" M<wlly ~ • In IN CAlltract D•I•. J-10 '"' ceas , you mus le your ~...,. CA doc"""'* ... ..,._"''• ,...,.... Plt~.;SMO..AL claim with the c ourt or ~·• ,........., auoc ... ,, • .,.,.., "£GOHVIYAHc1,1Hc. present It to the persona I UftlNwet ,,,...,." ,_ Ttt. DllTllllCT _.... '"' '""' t• .. ...., ,""' .. representative aNV>lnted l'l'l MM~....._ reJeci ... "'°' .. ,..._or .. _,,...,, 11V1t1c11e.,," 11av1 by the court w ithin-tour .,, ... .-... :,.ee:,'r,;"tt':.!!.._.....,_.."'" 1" .,.., t.t•M<Gte& PN, •"'· ·-· -·· 1201Dow14., Suite .. months from the date of i..~CA ,...._ 01"1111CT ,_ __.,. ,,_ .._...n ... tit, ce111.,"1• first Issuance of letters a s -.i "" oi,.aw"' .. '-•...,_., •~ 9llMO .,._ftfAftlrfley w.trlaf .....,..._._.._al llft'fell· (71417SJ•WW provided In Section 700 of ... AllWWbee Ill• 1119 rete • -._ ..... 1" u. "''*K11114' 0r.,.. c-oatty Pl• the Probate Cod e of A•AltO 1«e111v 111 ~w • ..-1 ..... J_1•.n.•.1• • C•llfornla. The tlm~ for Awuo •a MAoe "',_"'TOM = "' M<tl• -'""'-~ .!'!!'-.. tnw1 ,''In,. clat Ill t Ol.tv1111 ... 11111 WAYNE McMIH· -.. ,..... 1 - -<-... m s w no ex· NIMt:MT ... ou•uNOa.t0fll!4lf· t'9tt. n.... ,.... ••.,. '"' • ... PUBUC NOTICE plre prior to four months r-,.;.,., 4'INIMl"Y ~• "' 011TR1CT llMcie-.... .. Ottlc.a" from the date of the hear• ect..,.._wt:::,z•t...... PtlWtltel ,_tllltlet fll!l-1119. 117' ln~notlced above hf~ ~ '" A419"'•· Cll4e ~ ~ -w -' KC~-----J-.W. ......... Ill ....... A~ ti .... -------------OU MAY EXAMINEl '--... _ • .,, ... ,..,.... .. • , ........ ,................. fl'CTITIGWMIM•ll tht fllt kept by the court. l fl ... ~., ...... .. .. ....... TM -:::::: ....... "' --...... ITAqMl•T you ,,.. rntet.sted In tht ..... _...._,........ ..... -• ---..., .. TM ... _,,. ~ -.., ... """ ..... Ill K C ..... wftll ,.,.,. ltlillt Cl) ....... Tiit r• fw ..._., ...._.: est.ate, 'YO" may fll• • ~,...... ... -----..... ... .. .... &UNHT ~OUATIC M4111tN• qu.st with the court to ,...., ..... .,_,_. .. ·------..... CINTI' LTO~ "" a-.w HllM-celvespecJaJ notk•of theln _._._..,...,..,.,..uaev. ,, ..... _ rn • ...,. .. COM • .....,INdl.c:.t.,.flW1 ' ven=--Of..U.teessetse R•"'•.,..... ._ _.< ........ !!~ ... • -.m .. CllMrect.. '"" .. 'A"'•"< •• ,. ...... .,., "!'" r ·~-Ill ~· Wltlt ...,.. ·-_. *"' -*-lrecw ~' IM..• Gel...,_~-Of petitions, •ccoun .,..-• .-... .....,lllfl\•11111Y•.._.._ ....... "" •• ,,..., H1111t111tt• a .. t.- •nd reports described In ·OtieM:..., "" '""'I" ran .. •• •II •ar•M•11 c.1...,,._w • Section 1200 oft"' ...., ..,.,.., .,,...., .. ..,....,.111"-•-..... • r1111 .... -..1•c..-ct.4'.-,• '' ~ caMrMt. 111111 .. 1111_._, CellfomlaPrCICil-.Codl. ..,._.c.t••••• ... ....., _, ....,_ ..... .., .._-...ic MISl!ltVI!, MUM~•R A ..._...,. ..!'et11ty l•..,_..._,.. --·••0-..t•. ttUGHIS c.r ..,,.. ... ..,_ ..._.,. .. _ .. ...,_.,~ cr.ec.---. . • k""-J Offk!M..._...... A ------e .... IZMI .....,. Ir. "'91tJ. ,_.., r. o.i ... -."" ..., .. .....,...,..,.. Tlllt .._.. ._ , ......... Tbe tryout fflllon la open to anyone ttom 18 to 25 yean ol at•· Any American Lesion player la uked to brtn• a note from h1I coach or l~aJ LeCkJn commander wttb ~rmlaion to try out. CloH lo 800 attended lart Ytar'1 ump with 11 ol t.hoM 1tp1111 contra~. A total al 11 major ....... team• wm ha" scout• In attendance at tbt camp. AtNt-.atuw !!'!~....... 1 ... ......, na...--. ~'a.."°' ... c-M'f•..., S1tt C-.-Or P 0 9.Jt AW"~~ • """' •• ....... ._.-. "· ""· 7-' ' • ~ ..... .,. .. ~.._. ••ee11, IUllteAU. a MA•• • •• 0 ...... ...,.. Naw'*"-.....c Caa,tlMO .... ._.... ...,....,. ""' J "'-....._ ,,,.,,........ ---.,!..._........ .. .... _ .......... _ Publflhed OranQe Coe1t ~.~c::"' :':'.;,_ .....,..._u.. ...._ Dally ~lk>t. June 23, 14, 30, ~ar... c.e. o.ity ...., ......,.. ~ c... De:llw,.., ......_ Ortiiliilt a.......,,.._ 19112m.11. -'-9 ....... ,.M..., ...., .. .._"" .... ,,_i.,.-...... -.. • -• • ---• ----_ _.. --._ ------• • • --• ----...-------·-..--.+-w--·-.......... ..._..--.,._-._..........,._.._........,.._.,_.._ ____ ...., .... __ ..,. .................... 119111'1 .......... -...................... ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 2-3. 1981 I• ,,, "' ,, ,, .. .ii .. ~~ -;_ I ~0 . I 0 ./ - THE fAMIL't' CIRCt:8 by 811 Keane "You don't have to hug me this tim., Mommy . We wonl" BIG GEORGE by V1rg1I Partch (VIP) e ( i r JI ~ "I ehouldn't havt tattn that IHI grape." '"' '9.\R'9.\Dt'Kt; :t: by Brad Anderson Dt::\'\IS THt: ~t::\AC't: Hank Ketchum l l llf'I Jf ••• 10 .. 0 .. t •l• ... ,, .. ... ... . . •II •t. ~. Ii 0 I I i l .. "Thanks for fetching part of the paper!" l Jl.DGE PARKER GAR•'lt:LD ilTM rJAVffJ ACROSS 48 Orient 1 Cl119 47 Pro - 5 Pegeentry 49 MIM txc.v• 9 LOOI! "'PPY tlont 14 Bltttn'** 53 Sllolrwtt 15 Spelt 57 Obmtrllt 18 Gt• 68 Data godc*llt eupplled 17 8uClt Nr"olne 59 Be nom.dlc 18 Mlntfll: Su". t 1 Ul'llOf'ltd 19 "For W8l1t of !lour , --..... ea S""Ptt I 20 Fifi! • of ~1<1¥ ZIUI 14 AboUnO l.. 22 CbnOfUltY es Meet aource 24 Brttl..,Y et WlllMlan, net~ •·O· 2t Drive off e1 Ooee tlAray 27 O*«d'delty DOWN 20 COmpOttt 1 FMnOmt AOt9l'll ""POI\ C ,_ 30 8y What 2 ·Slctt ptrllOn rntlnl? 3 COIOr 33 Aptlid: 4 AlpenterQ 2.ordt 5Cotw1 37 EutCllltlft 8 Of IOIM 31 UK~ po9ftlt 3t Ot9lk llt1er 1 Go br Cir 40 -di LtOfl I Mll*d IOf "=-·= .a r,...._,: SI 10 PM•~ ~--11 ..... UMYrftlUt 12._. llONDAY'I PUZZLE IOl YID 13 wrtootY 21 Grldtl 23Sword 25 Notf'llnO 2t lmmetut'• 30 Skein 31 AtlftJ time a2w11ct~ 33~ "*'' 34.,.,.,_ ... 35 -b9lufn HPuttown a7"" o. 40Hlttllrd ' j v~ PMNl'TS H I ~ 'itXJ i¥LIST BE 1'}I E AASKED MARVEL~ MYH ? I MfMP 'ltXI 11.fRE n.AVIN6 IN THIS TOURNAMENT ... ME SORE~ FAMILIAR, DOESN'T HE! WITH THAT MASK ai, TH006M, I CAH'T ltLL WHO IT 15 ... Tt:MBLE•EED8 MYOL.'7 MAN. HE WORKSl70N A MISSISS IPPI fflVE:R~I. :'\.\~{'\' HEY, SAM--·WHAT ARE YOU DOING WITH THOSE? fT:\K 1· "l~KERBEA :'\ W€. ClOODS JUST FLOAi AAOOND ALL 0/¥.; wrrnoor A CAR£ IN THE WORLD ! ORA BB LE lilt~~. A 80-4 JUS1' (All(O oN fMt l'llDflE lS l(ilol(, f Oil '40U. DR.SMOCK ..,.H.A..,.'S PR. PIG6S ·FROM AUS'T"RAL.IA MY DREAM CAME TRUE--- HIS CAWV LOOKS FAMILIAA. TOO, SIR ... l FINALLY SAVED ENOUGH MONEY TO JOIN THE COUNTRY CLUB by Charles M. Schulz Cl•-·--.. ~~ ~·c by Tom Bat1uk wm~ GOLD PRICES BE.JN(, WHAi lHE<I ARE , OuR rof OF 60t..D Ai -me END OF 1HE RAINBOUJ LEAVES u~ ~Em WEU. FIXED f HMMM ... 1'~~ tll1"t:ft£S'fill!.I IT ~~f 14A'IE: &Eo.l (1f"~f{ RICI< OR ~AO OR ~1"£"E Or{ ... by Kevin Fagan by George Lemont. by Lynn Johnston . I i • ................ Vmtors enter one of the main buildings of Hearst Castle. After they've gone. the 50-year-Old edifice is object of massive security precautwns. Hearst Castle turns into fortress at night SAN SIMEON !AP ) -The last busload of visitors to Hearst CasUe heads down the estate's winding five· mile road and a man, wearing a gun and accompanied by a snarling guard dog. swings the solid steel security gates shut. As twilight set· ties in. La Cuesta Encantada -the Enchanted Hill becomes an armed camp. Ever since a 1976 terrorist bomb blast, the former estate of William Randolph Hearst has had its original security system upgraded with sophisticated electronic sensors and listening devices. Also. there are two recently installed steel gates in the chain-link and barbed wire fence that rings the state-run complex. The bomb was smuggled through castle gates and exploded outside a guest house, shattering priceless an· tiques and art objects. The case has never been solved. Great pains have been taken to hide the new security hardware from the view of paying visitors and the bomb-sniffing German Shepherds are discreetly leashed out of sight. A haJf-dozen park rangers make sure that every one of the day's vis· itors has headed back down the hill. Then. the nighttime security ritual begins high in the twin-spired Casa Grande, the main structure. in the Celestial Suite once reser ved for the m ost important of the Hearst-era VIPs The view of the sunset is breathtak· ing. Everything becomes very still, the silence broken only by a night breeze rustling oak and holly leaves. "It's overwhelming when you first come up here." says ranger Rick Royer , "but you get used to it. Outside, I hear the wind. Inside, I don't hear anything except a clock chim ing somewhere every 15 minutes." Two ranger-dog teams sweep the structure, top to bottom. Every door and window is checked. Every nook and cranny is inspected. Every hid· ing place where an intruder could conceal himself Is examined -first by the dog, then by the ranger. Most of the lnterior lights are turned off. But rarely is anything wrong. so WAS Jo~)>.l TR,AVOL.T,A Windows flap. Occasionally roof tiles blow orr. shattering on the con· crete walkways below. The discovery of a broken water pipe or a smolder- ing drape are major incidents. The February 12. 1976 bombing was the only terrorist act directed at the casUe -the state's most pros- perous park and in the last dee· ade there has been only one serious theft -of an antique vase nine years ago . Occasionally intruders attempt to c limb the enticing hill from the Pacific Coast Highway below. OnJy a handful have ever made it to the hilltop without being caught. None has ever actually gotten into a build· ing, rangers say. Mountain lions occasionally break security. And of course there are re· ports of ghostly visitors. "I've had people working here in the past who convinced themselves that the place was haunted.'' assert- ed ranger Roger Kellogg. "I've had people who've sworn that they heard the old man <Hearst) walking around." However. a visitor can't help but wonder if even the ghost of Hearst himself could have c leared the castle's heavy security. f Hearst Ccutle b on state Highway I about 40 nules north of San Lu'3 Obi&po I Hearings set on Colorado rafting rules SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -The public will get a chance to put in its two-cents' worth about revised rules for Colorado River rafting through the Grand Canyon. the National Park Service says. The park service said it scheduled hearings in Arizona, California, Colorado and Utah for public com· ment on the four proposals. The park service, which had begun a five-year phase-out of motorized rafting on the river, did a turnaround after Congress last year responded to pressure from Arizona lawmakers and the operators of highly profitable outboard motor-driven raft trips. Four alternative plan• spelled out in the draft plan made public all in· clude motor-rafting. They range from a plan for motor and oar use aJI year t-0 periods aet aside exclusively for oar expeditions. In 1979, the Par'-Servlce called for the motor-raft phaae out, asreelog with oar-raft alicionad09 that motor· powered rafts on the river "re generally obno:idou1 and detracted from the park experience With nolae and fumes. There are 21 commercial r~f\ini outftta operatln& on the river. Tbe pressure for a reveraal came from operator'I wb0te raftl traverse the 270.mlle stretch through the park -at feut twtce as faat aa oar rafta, and uaually carry many more. passenaen and thua earn more re· veJlue per trip. The date1 and locatlona of the public meettnaa: Oraoge Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuetday, June 23. 1981 ca Watt gaining on oil issue By THOIUS D. ELIAS For the fourth Ume in nlne yean. polltlc1 wlll apparently spare moat of the California coast from new oil exploration. Most conservationist.a feJt the a11re11lvely pro-oil stance of the secretary of the Interior James Watt, meant that efforta to 1tave off tbe oti rigs had less chance than in earlier episodes under Presidents Nixon, Ford and Carter. They even got so~e lon,Ume Ronald Rea1an supporten to join thew protest.a. But Watt's approach bas won him results. Even as he opens some new baain.a to exploration, his e xpected retreat on the most environmentally sensitive areas will be hailed u a victory ror con- CALIFORNIA FOCUS serv atiorusts. By scorning the ear- ly efforts of the con- servationists, Watt can pull back somewhat and stilJ leave them feeling they have won. His tactics are not precisely Identical to thoae of his predecessors under Nixon, Ford and Carter. who proposed oil lease sales in many of the aame areas only to pull back at politically atrateetc mo· ments. Former Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus executed this maneuver twice in 1980, first with ofr- shore Southern California tracts just before the June primary and then with Northern California areas just before the November election. Neither Andrus' moves helped hls boss, as Carter lost California by large margins both in the primary and in the fall. Watt's moves. by contrast, haven't been timed for electoral gain. Rather, Watt apparently aims to gradually beat back the opposition to drilling. And by mak· ing any of his moves appear to be compromises, he accomplishes part of that purpose. But Watts has made one mistake his prede- cessors avoided. He pushed hls oil drilling plan so far that the state and several cities and counties challenged it in federal court. And they won in a preliminary round, taking advantage of the strong states' rights provisions or lbe federaJ Coastal Zone Management Act. The lawsuit involves onJy 32 offshore tracts in Central California areas much less sensitive than some Watt still plans to lease. It is the first court test or the federal law. which requires federal activities that directly af· feet a state's coastal zone to confor m with t hat state's coastal plan. If California makes the pre- liminary injunction it won last month stand up, the state will set a precedent not only for future protection of its own coastline, but also for other stat es. That's why Alaska joined the action even though it has no real concern over the California areas involved. ••n Watt's intransigence thus may weaken his de- part~nt's entire offshore oil leasing proeram, even if the approach does open up a few more California areas. At the very least, though, the court action ensures that some of the most environmentally sensitive California a reas will remain untouched for quite awhile. Among those are the Santa Monica Bay in Southern California, with its wide beaches used by milliona every summer weekend, and the areu off Mendocino Coonty and the Pt. Reyes National Seashore in Northern Calilornia. It would be far easier for the state to make a case that drilling would damaee those areas than it was in the Central California case. So Watt will keep hands off those tract.a, giving conservationists a victory. But he'll still be able to open other previously untouched areas because the state won't challenge every proposal be makes and couldn't make such challenges stand up in every instance even if it tried. Which means the hard-charging Watt ap- proach may yet turn out to be an effective method · of opening the door t-0 new drilling. ( EUaa ia a columni.tt baaed in Santa Monica,/ EYto SUICIDE Buckmlneter Fuller Inventor considered suicide CHICAGO <AP> - Buckminster Fuller. lat· ter-day Renaissance man and inventor or the geodesic dome, felt he was "really s uch a failure" 54 years ago that he went to the shore of Lake Michigan, in· te nd ing to drown himself. But he decided instead to concentrate on right· ing th e wrongs of "planet earth," he said at the NationaJ Exposi· lion of Contract Interior Furnishings. · The feisty 86-year-old told the gathering of 2,000 architects, de- signers and technicians that by 1927, he had been e xpelled twice from Harvard, his 4-year-old daughter had died of in· fantile paralysis. he had been fired from his job and was beset b y alcoholi s m and depression. So be walked out of his Chicago apartment down to Lake Michigan and prepared to throw himself in and commit suicide. Fuller said. ··I was really such a failure that I considered getting rid of myself right here by the lakeshore," he said. But he decided be bad no right to do that. '·Back in 1927, I said to myself if I'm doing what the Almighty wants done to make humans a success, I won't have to go out and earn a living ... If I'm really doing what the Almighty wants done! I'll get on ." Since then, Fuller has gained worldwide fame a s an inventor. e ngineer, architect. mathematician, cartog- rapher, philosopher, scientist, environmen- talist, poet, world plan- ner and educator. Minimum wage laws don't touch all jobs By JOYCE L . KENNEDY Dear Joyce: Pleue settle Ulla: I say not all Job• aeed pay tbe mlnlmam wage; a frfead aaya I'm wrong. We bave jobs for tbe aammer. -8 .H., Sula Ana You're right. Contrary to the com- mon notion, there are many excep- tions to the federaJ requirement that employers pay a minimum of $3.35 an hour. Learners, apprentices and handi· capped workers may. under cer- tain circumstances, be paid lees than the minimum. A full-time student may oot be paid the· full rate tr employed in retail or service work, in agriculture or inslltullona or higher education. And by specific exception, others who legally need not be paid the federal minimum wage include: -Employees of some indivtdualJy owned and operated small retail or service establishments. _._ Employees of certain aeuonal amusement or recreational establl•h· men ta. Horse, chariot remains / ounJ, PEKING <AP> -Arcbeologl1ts have unearthed the r malnt of 24 horaea and eight chariots buried more than 2,200 year1 110 In centr~l China's Henan province, the otnclat Xlnhua news agency reported. It said the artifact.a were round lA a 115·foot·by-15-foot plt, that aJao con· talned clay fiCUret. sedan chalti and ritual vene11, all from the t.blrd een· tury B.C. Altbou1b tlae cbarlota' •ood•n part.I bave l"Othd. lbey •till have un· dama,ed brome and iron ftttlnp, XIJl.bu reported. CAREERS -CasuaJ babysitters and people hired as companions for the elderly. Anyone who suspects being legally underpaid can get the facts by con- tacting the nearest federal Wage and Hour Division office; look in the phone book under "U.S. Government Labor Department." The federal officer also may know if any state pay taw relates to your situation. If you're a student working this summer, remember that federal in· come taxes do not have to be withheld -unleas you earn more than $3,300 a year or are married with a combined income of more than $5,.00. You would not. however, qualify for ao exemption if you had to pay taxes last year. You need only write "exempt" on line 3 of Form W-4 filed with your employer. Living coeta may be deductible for 1ummer jobs away from home - meals, renl, and the Uke. Check With the near•t Internal Revenue Service office if you have questions. READERS: Still looldng /or a job? Snd for J¥C Lain KftMdV1 ~ bookllt, "~MMt: Tlw Nftttl GrittJ." S-4 '2.~ plMt o akftt tlompld, NI/· addr.,Md, long aolaUt fftt>eloof to SWt F1oture1 Inc .• Roz JQOOC, C<ardilf '10Y1. Law 8hif t proposed LOS ANGELES <AP> -Saytna the rDOV• wo"ld mean more 1berfff'1 depuU• could be out on the atr..u t11httn1 crime, the 1180·11 Loa Allltl• County Grand JUI')' bu rt· commtnd4d \bat the manbal'a otnce uaum• the Superior Court bailiff and proee11 HTVln1 dudes. Thole cbons an now bandied by the 1berttr1 dt· part meat. 1ClABll-FllD INDEX T•ftlCtY•M.Ca• 642-5678 :::=~~ ::::::::: ~.!,> M_,.tol..ooo MOM)I v.·a111«1• ~aan.Tl>a AJtNOUNCEMENTS. nJSONAlS & LOST & FOUND AnftOW'M:tnwno Car Pool LtcaJ Hotite. IMC ."°'"'" Ptuonal.1• Social Cl~bo· Tr•Y~I· SEIYICES .... ... lorl 1011 llD ID •• um IOIM ICMO 1044 lo.I IQllll ·~ 11111 109 IO'lt um ... 1111< ·-·-1100 IJDO 1300 1"° UOI uoo JIW 11" llllO llOO Jj)l)CI JIOI 2300 UlO -"°' IS.IO JIOO noo .. 2IOO .. 11110 IOI) ---Ill» -ICK) '°'° --ems .,. .,$ 111'11 .. IOI! --al --... -IOI' - •110 ,.l!O ¥1311 VI .0 IL» 9Ull 1110 11111 ttOO .......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY , .... ...,.Moffu: All real estate ad vertiaed i n th is newapaper is aubjecl to the Federal Fair Hous· in& Act ol 1968 wtuch makes it Ulegal to ad· vertise "any preference, limitation, o r dis · crlm lnation based on race. color, re ligion. sex. or national origin, or an intention to make any auch prefe ren ce, li mitation. o r d is - crimination " Th is newspaper wall not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in viola· lion of the law . HIOIS: Act.riMn llMMlld dledl ..... och dally .... report .,.. ron le11••ately. Tlw DAILY PILOT..._., labllty for ... fint h1corr•ct iRHrfio• Ollly. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ge•nlll 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COIOMA DB. MAI D&ft.EX South of the highway sits this elegant home plus income. Huge owners un it, brick courtyard leads to French doors that open onto ltahan tiled floors. Beautiful wood pegged n oors en h ance d e n an d spac1ou1 family kitchen. 2nd story hosts secluded master suite with open balcony and bubbling spa too! 3 more queen ·sil~ed bdrmA for your Uk· ing. Huge 4 car gara'e + 2 Bdrm income unit. Price reduced a n d owner is anxious. Call @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631·6990 MIWPOllTHGHTS Deluxe townhouse duplex. 3 bdrm family. 2'°' bath each unit. Frplcs , all built-ins. decks & patios. Park- 1 i k e l andscapina . SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE. $295,000! lcAoo 1aJ Prop. ....... •675-7060• E-Z TO QUALIFY 410RMS Owner will help finance! Giant garden home in Newport Riviera. Living room features : cozy firepla ce. Sweeping stairway lo private master suite. Enjo)' summer barbeque on brick patio. Shaded b) towering pine . Only Sl 31 . so o ! •ca II u s . 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATERS I. DOING ···.\': BUSINESS :::i UNDER A Jlt FICTITIOUS NAME? II rou he,,. Jutt flled ,out new Flcllllou1 •u1lne11 Heme end hewe "°' ,et ~ed It tor putlkatlclfl, ple•M don't lor9et lh•I lhe llmlletlon 11 30 d•r• fn>m dete Of llllnt. The DAILY PILOT wlll pvMl1fl row at"-nl tor SSl .10. Ou r clfcUfeltoll lftdu091 llM onllre Oren9e COHI ere• efld ..... ~ &llTH Mrw 9""1f In .. ~ In C-•J ""'.._ "'" order lo OlllHllll your ._ tlele111en1 for UTOS, 1$£1 P" llllcetlu .. nd ~·al = '"'.,,... °"' •nd • llllO -Cfleoll lo Tt41 DAILY ea .. uu •u PILOT, P.O. lea 11 .. , c.mer11 •11 Coote ...... CA ..... CW•,_ -We .. 00 h '91t. Fet =le•. = w.r--... ........... I o.-tal -lfteftltMI ...... Clltl ow-w ma 1U-ut1 &. m . s:' = 1---------~ .,......... .. '-'" -••ftf'ltk "" !:=., •........... = ...... ..l Pi,-U. ,- ,.,..lat -r.:.~.·~~ ... . ... :n ....... Ml Uae the Dat11 Pilot "Faet R•1tH" aervlct dinc:tCJrJ 1 YOU r W"ViNllOQT apeclall1 Call 141·5171 Ht IZ2 BROWSE PO a BARGAINS throu1hlhe DAILY PILOT WANT ADS associated . ~ .. ' , .... ' ..... t ' ' 4lllACllAY $1J7,500! Roomy, 4 BdnD, 2 sly, w/cozy fireplare. Very clean, li&hl and airy. New: diahw•htt, water heater, paint, paper, 1kyll&hl! Beautlr~lly laadacaped patio. A m111taee1•m1 THE ~EAL ESTATE RS COMMmCW. +UV.. Spacio111 3 bdrm. 2 bath apt. Bltins, wet bar. lireplace, atrium. Over 500 sq. It. ol business space t 4 car garage. Priced at l3:50,000. associated B ll u • ! Ii , Ii f Al • ,, Q S : : ( ""-1:1 ... r J ~ • ~ • NEWPORT IEACH $42,000 DOWN Great terms and easy quallly111g! Sparusb tale entry leads to gigantic 4 Bdrm home Gourmet lutcben pha rormal din· mg. Sparkling pool and spa, paddle~ court! Only S2119,CXX> Just List· ed. so hurry, call 673-8550 THEREAL ESTATERS Stl,000.CM 3 Bdrm I Ba. rl"plc. cov ered patio I! garafe. As· 1ume existing loans with low down payment. Needs work. NEEDSFIXIN CAMEO SHOIES Bring paint, carpet, and ideas ror this hair a million dollar nxer. It's the lowest pnce ftt slm· pie on the market by 10%DOWM WOOOlllMI llAUTY Only $147.500. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, dbl pr., aJr cood., lplc fr only 2 yean old. 7Sf.1616 RE~lTORS A HAUT1fUL HOMI Motivated ownera will finance this lovely 3 bedroom, 3 bath home situated on a huae pro- fessionally landscaped corner. The privacy, pool area and gor1eous 1ardens are just a rew ol the many amenities. $369,500. D.M.Hst .... 644-"90 760-GllS • REH TORS LIDOISU Spanish elegance at lu best .... 4 years new at the peacerul west end or Lido Isle. Community beach at each end or the street. 4 bedrooms. 3 ~ baths, gourmet kitchen w1Jled pallO With roun. lain. Super lamily · en· tertainment home. Owner crHtive submit I '625.ooo. D.M.W-1 .... 644-"90 760-GIJS Own· yoUl"OWO-Lodge Nestled ID Washington Olympic Peninsula Woods. Catch steelhead Trout & Salmon · 100 yds to river. 10 minutes to Paciric Ocean fishing. Uae as a home, Retreat, or Business with tax ad· vantages. 46' main lod&e room. s bdrms, 4.,., ba, mostly Cedar.oonstruc· tion on 10 · + acres. Lodge is lurnisbed. As· sumable mortgage at ~ $367,000 Write P.O. Box 1284 Port Angelus. WA 98382 or Phone ( 20S) 457-1956 or 37 4-6295 REAL ESTATE EXCELi.ENCE SINCE 1949 COMI WITH US ••• TO LIDO WATHNOMT. ENJOY WATERFRONT UVlNG TO THI FULL!ST .. TH! AIR IS FRESH ANO CLEAN. :nm VIEW OF THE HARBOR ACTJVJTY IS FASCINATING .. TWO SPAC IOUS BEDROOMS .. OEN .• PROFESSIONALLY DECORATED .. COMPLETE SECURITY .. PIER AND SLJP AVAILABLE PRICE REDUCED $30,000. NOW $620,000. 1617 WISTCUFP DI. M.1. '31·7l00 GOOO ASSUMAAI FtHAMCIMG Lovely completely remodeled Peninsula Point home. One block to beach. three bedroofll) and den, three baths, new Oak cabinets used brick fireplace. You 'll love it! WS.000. Fee U~l()tJI: liVMl:i REALTORS.675-6000 2443 Eut C-Hlt!Hr.,, c.-Mt Mat WE HAVE U Of THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN SU.900 IAKAIM! Super shall> 3 Bdnn 2 bath. coiy rlreplace, adult townhome. Quiet and well maintained. Only S20.000 down. Owner will carry financ- ing, act now, call 548-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS ••• Ju.Jes GUbert 4540 Park Nwpt Newport Beach You are the winner of two rree tickets tSl4 value) to the HAUOllJDGI Awa r d winnin1 "Jodelle" estate home. 1st resale offerlng o this exquis~IY appoint-ed t ownhome wit massive view of bay. ocean, coutline & nigh liChls. Offered a •.ooo. •!1 : . . \· \! . 1' '. • \ I • I ' • t• I,• .:r ,t • 1 ° 'o t: I f' 1 ~· I f I ' CHAIM-CLASS WALITOICH OlD CDM: CMI p I I ......... to ........,..,..c ......... 1..., - 2 ........ w • flt 11lut. Opie S. l·I ....... S27',500. COLI OP NIWPOU UALTOIS 25' s I. c .... ..., .. c.... .. M.r- 675-5511 \\ l '-, l ! '1 '\ 1\YLOR CO. HI.:\ l T' ) I\..... ". I j( ' 1 ! ' l f i llG CANYON COUMTIY ClUI GW T YllW-Q.150.000 Magnificent location o'looking 8th green of golf course. Call today for appt to see this luxurious Georgian Colonia l custom by owner/builder. 5 Bdrm.s , lge formal dining rm, family rm, billiard rm. refrigerated wine rm & 6'i-'l baths. Lots oC marble, finest wood paneling & custom molding, great storage, 2 st.airways, air-cond., bit-in vacuum system + many other custom features. WISLEY M. TA YLOI CO .. WLTOIS 2111S.. ............. HEWPOIT CENTll, .. '44-4t I 0 $10,000 DOWN! Fantastic terms. Owner wants out. Eaatslde Colla ..... 2 Bdrm 2 bath, 2 story townhome. 2 car carqe, pool, spa,. Oniy SUt.500. A bargain down payment. Call ror more information . 5411.%..13 THHOHG TO~ Ca II the specialists al the condominium In formation cent.er Touchstone Realty 963-4*17 5"9DOWM Roomy ' bdrm 2 bet. home oa an R2 lot wltl plaDI for~ unk. Otta E11lllde location ID• Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus C.,..~ I024 great financma. Onl: lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ••••••••••••• .. •••..... SW,500. ceilings. Gre at for entertaining. l-0•w· ... -·,..-w•MC-.-1 644-721 I $420,000. Best price for the money. Larae 4 8dnD 2 beth PENINSULA POINT lliCHFIONT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm . 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. rt. reatur· ing marine room. Sl,385.000. NEWPORT CREST COMDO 2 bdrm, den. spacious Plan 8, im- maculate. Low priced at S215,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.), "''·t '.ido Oi.v• N El b1') 1)11)1 home , beautllul waUpapen thnaout. Cul de sac street. Owner will carry AITD lor 7 yean at 13.5 lotttest. For an appollllment to tee, call $40-1151 · : * HERITAGE . REALTORS SAYIYOUIMOt41YI 3 great condos, try very low down. Sellers will help llnance. Priced to move fut. Call now for details. 75Ud8 Plan NRealty YOU CAN I PAITICUUI? 9UAUFY For l hoae w I d ls-S3000 moves you In. $1000 crlminat1n1 taste, to 111110•w-.. ·.-w·~-All-•Y• per month. Enjoy the whom location ia so im-IST most luxurious 2 & 3 portant, we orrer this bedroom, 3bat.h condo ID 11plendid home in the bl.fl MW YllDI area, Incomparable Mell Verde area. Anex· POOLHOMI amenities. next to shop. citln1 4 bdrm home. Just in time ror sum· ping, theaten. city park 545-9411 mu! nu. charming 4 & just minutes lo the ...,,.,.--rr.--.---Bdrm home reaturea beach. l'l'm l:rna:• !Ifft) huce lanilly room with WllSOMPAlll bar, skyli1hts and C~S REALESfATE stained 1lus windows 380W. Willoo, C.M. overlooking beautiful Open. .... ~5 Y .. c.,IHttw M>lar hea~ pool and 631·5065 Super dup&ex located in spa. And, for the avid LOWDOWH Old CdM. The property photo1rapher, a com· V bas a 3 Bdrm cottage plete dark room with l'rsailles I Bdrm Studio d cus·lom ca'-'--'·, sill' L , P h d I h with new paint an WUCY • ent ouae con o w t and od separate water heater, large assumable loam. carpets a m em 2 u h led and 'la Sl09,900. Call today Bdrm apt w/blt·ins. The I taea vents l· 9'19·S370. ownersayueUandhe'U ed. Beautiful wall 102• . .................... . .....,.,.. EQUESTRIAN ~ATE Thl1 diatinctively de· si1ned 4 bedroom ai,; bath estate with a deft ia a real pleasure to the senaes. With a pool. beaulilul spa. and vlewa ol the aurnit.mdinc hilll. you 'U want lo atay home year round 1 $625,000. 4'S-1112 9bingo &Toro IOll ••••••••••••••••••••••• Do you have 123,000! As- aume my low interest VA loan. No qualllylnc. Spacious 2 bdrm, 2 bath home. Prin. on.ly. Call me.SM-2119. llwlllltl•leecll 1040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Br, IV.Ba Huntington Cont. Coodo. 176,500. lli&h uaumable. Quick safe. 67).7Dn Btr. listen to all oHers I paper1 and levelora ALLS.,." TE S325.000 thruout A unique 1-------,,. ltAoaw.dlly kitchen with cedar 4_... 67).1700 skylight and recessed l~ Bath, corner lot, REALTORS I i I ht In K · Thi• euy terms. As klnl CUSlomiud home is I Sllt 900 must to see. Oflettd at · · Sl99,900. For an appoint· SCOTTUALTY ment to see. call $40-11.51 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!5!!!!!!36-!!!!!7!!!!!!Sl!!!!!!3!!!!!!!!!!!! SAYISB.000 ~ce t .. e reJu~ THE :REAL ESTATERS UDO -LOWEST PRICE on this lar&e custom built home in Baycrest. 4 bdrms. formal dining rm. ram1ly rm, huge game rm & pool. New k2S.OOO! ·, -~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS o ..... ~ With ~ dn. lmmac S br, 2"'1 ba. ram. rm w rrplc. formal dm. rm. lge backyd w/paUC> & 111 fire pit. fruit trees. pror . landscaped. Sl98,900. Owner I agl, 848-8553. SUPllDW'B BeautHul. immaculate. nicely landscaped 4 bdrm home on cul-de· sac. Spacious rooms, view of eoll course from property. Owner will help with finan(ing. On· ly 1139,500. Call now 979-5370. ~ ... of Isle .. Ullllr .... 2bd. a.., ,.tia. lrh1g offer. U 15,000. Hl·l400. BAYFRONT CONOO -LARGE More room "'-_, ....._ IWt 2W.. lM.+ .. &,aHo .... U. ... ...... ... .-tLC. loet ., ....... . ~ .. S5t5.000. MISA'YIDI Executive borne, 3 br, 2 ba, lstoryhomeonqulet cul-de-sac st. I lge bdrm could be converted to make .Jtb bdrm. Room for RV atteu or pool. Btr MJ.1112. A 1>1v1~ion of IACDA Y M.I. , .... AllA 3br. 2ba. rrp1c. 1.2-13% f111ancin1. 1100.000. Be clever. then 1-------• enjoy your pror1 ts! WOILD FAMOUS IOY AL "'12AM HOUISHOW June 30thru July 1 ANAHEIM Alfordab&e beach living! Prolessionally decorat- ed 3 Bdrm 2 bath lamUy home pha room addi· lion. formal dlnln&. skylights. Covered patio. Com.munhy ~ and tunla. F\nancm1 ! Isl lime advertised! Sl.51.000. MS-7171 ALLSTATE PANORAMIC VU--OWID AMAN. H11rbor Inveslmml Co Super private 21ty, Jbr, 2~ba , CONDO w/lge l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l lush p"tivate rear yard & BELOW VALUE $1.Jl,000 Let's Deal (213)~5159 Great assum1ble l.St TD. Call today, before it's aoJd.87~ THE REAL ESTATERS $3 $100 .. It'*' 11 • PENNY • PINCHER AD 3 li n~s for 2 day~ onl) SI.SO a da) Ad \·trtise one or more items \'alued up to StOO Earh add111onal hne 1s only 66t for the two de~6 Sorry. no rom merc11 I ads 11ll owrd Charge your Pennr Pincher Ad or use >our BankAmenrard Visa or Master Charge C .. ..., ... IH , .. , .ct ,. ,,1.t i1•1:r.-! 642-5678 .,YPllll 10% INTEREST Lovely 3 Bdrm 2 bath. spa. Easuide. Owner wtll help rmance. Fixed rate assumable. Only $127,900. ~9181 . OPEN HOUSE RE AL TY / WATllROMT Duples w/p4tt • ali~! Remodeled to new 111 1976 from curb to new pier includlq cu.atom tiled spa, stained 11us • even electr. powered draw drapes, 3 car gar w /addllional 3 car orf st . parking. Perfect loca· tion-$585,CXX>. JACOBS IEAlTY '7M670 Want Ad Results &42·5878 Con venlb:I Center Tickets are good ror June 300I performance at 8:00 p.m. and may be claimed by calling 842·5678, ext. m. WATIRVIEW FROM SUHDECI Only '209.900! Channln.c Newport ~ch 4 Bdrm. features wood burning fireplace. Huge over- sized lot with rear cov· ered patio. Owner Is motivated and willing to help ruiance! JllSl listed. Call DOW, m&\50 ,THE REAL ESTATE RS SPOTUSS 2 bdrm, 1 bl, at very ar- fordab&e price cl m.soo lor Info call Robert MUllken 631-13111 Ill ··-·-.. _ ."""""" ·-.,,_ ·-.... ~= It-,, .. ,._ :=.. ,,_ .. , ... ...... ·-==-·-...... ·-·-:::.. '== S(Cll4}~-4i~· = ____ ..., .. QA, ..... ................... .... ......-... ~ ~ .............. ... NE FA C r r 1 1 •Al Cl I' I I I THE REAL ESTATERS PEMIMSULA Aur Only steps to the surf, Is Uua bargain rl.Xf!f'. Bring paint brushes & ahovel.s & cash in on SSS Call now REALTORS "GIANT"' MESAVIRDE Bargain Republic tri· level S ciant bdrma. 3 baths, hu1e family room . fireplace, formal dining, OWMr will sell for Sltl.500. A muat ~. call ~%313 THE REAL ESTATERS SEA COVE PROrHTIES 3 I .. 990 Wbm JOU call Clauined _7_1_4_·6 __ -v ___ 1 to place ao ad, you're aa· People whonet'd People sured of a friendly That's what the welcome and belp 111 DAILY PILOT wordinc your ad ror beat S•~RVIC EDIRl=:CTORYI respooae. Call Now! is all about! MZ-5111 EE 110111 ILlllS ca. OVER 5'7 YEARS OF SERVICE SAM CLIMIMTl IMIUI Super Buy: Upstairs Unit With Three Bedrooms , Peek·A·Boo Ocean View. Wet Bar. Uving Room With Fireplace. Cathedral C-eilings. Wrap-Around Patio. Spacious Downstairs Unit With Two Bedrooms & Living Room With Fireplace. Laundry Facilities. Good Income. Owners Will Help Finance. Priced At $195,000. 75l911 uc .. ,. .... ......... c ...... 118( & WONDEllMEllT c • o i v s E T •Ii o i D £ ! H E N if S W A L A T 0 E W T Y E H E C I 0 D P I 0 S 0 A N P M Y X R 0 S D 0 S M C I HSAMSASHHERPOCYU I DH E N Q V G 0 t E Q 0 E E 0 0 0 X £ P S OIHATNHGELUNEfGZGHR C £ A t S Z A E L L F M G F A I 0 A E llVS£0TVIMOLOFM•U£11 S I T I S M 0 L U E G U A 0 C J Y 5 D t L lllL I U E l H A L T A 0 U V £ T D £DVQMPDV1LKHJIAN£ll L £ 1 D P f I E 0 S L E T N 8 L D U 1 •ADODEMUDOHDlAOllEE 0£11lVNAMSP££NMVOVOD ro1010DJSNUODAITPIS ......... 1!11 ......... ... ..... -~ ..... -----ii -............ .. _. D=f a!?, ! i ,.. 2 Cu '] " ._.. ....,.. ...... .--. ,_ ... lu•tihl decor & coordlHtect Mw aagluut to y• c• .Wt ri9lt IL lao9t ~ lltcWad ill IWt YU llom • l Mel f-. ...... ,... + ....... ...... ,. ... I-.: ,,... Ip& cMckt & belco•y. OWMEi WILL CAllY. St7S,OOO. Ul-1400. NEXT OOOl\TO NEWPOIT .............. ,... ... w ....... •l91!111rt.ud COltY..., to .. ..,,.. .................... J ....... J ..... °'""" •Y ClnJ l.t TD ..... J°"-Ulil ..,. ,., I f, a.-f4 to $ U I. 500. Hur lr•IH & JOtlt. 631·1400. WATERFRONT HOMES.INC REAL ESTATr S.t. K#nr°"' p"""'"' M.""""""""' 24.lf> W Cou1 H..,. ll5 M.tr""' Av~ ~ 8r¥h e.n.o. Island Ul-1400 '7Utoo RESIOENTIA. RI Al I SIAll srPvterc; D8.16HTFUL CDM IMIUI Owners unit with 3 BR. 2 BA. has country charm with shutters, hdwd. floors. fireplace & patio. Inviting 2 BR. 1 BA. + guest Apt. are bright & airy. Assumable loan. Owner will help finance. $295,000. IN NEWPORT CENT£R 644-9060 SIAYllW Beauty and privacy pervade in tJlil c1ptivatin1 4 B.R. home. O>mbine low maintenance yard, panled 11te, rabuloul eurtiae pool A •Pl to1ether with fantastic mumabltt, make tbil a Bm' BUY 1t '3'l1,500 . IACI IA y patio. Many other good DBJGHT reaturea. Owner/BKR Lovely 3 Bdrm 2 bath S49·054.5or&6lS34 with new French coun-By buJlder · Eastaide · H · try kitchen. and used sumable. CUit.om cood~. brick exterior. Located 3 br, 2"'1 ba, bldr s in the heartofNeWJlC)rl's model, aU uperades .. upper bay. overlociting Pro r. decor a t e d country club. Priced at $1'3,000 &G-s:n2 only $190,000. with ex-CONTRACTORS Opp<y, cellent linancmg avail•· Assume 83.000 loan. oo ble. Call 751-3191 ~.000 4 BR in Mesi TUE1\.HOCK .. GHUHDS North. Needs work . Prine. only. Devin & Co 842-6368 SHARP CCN)() 3 bdrm, 2 bath. pool, near So. Coast Plau. 1115.000. Will Lease. Broker, Mi-013' FIHDOM HOUSE 3 Br. I Ba. large yard. tas,000. "1-076.1. A s t u n n 1 n g $115,000Y.A. achievement by PolJock Sl2.50 O.P. Completely Interiors Exquisite refurbished 4 Br. 2 Ba. decorating thruout this Frplc. 341 Hamilton St. 4 Bdrm, I sty home D.S. Educawn Realty with separate dining 842-7743 • room and large master ....;;;..;;:;C"-'-'-Al;.;;,;_•--_.-,-... --- s ulte . A new and -- ex cit i n g o rr e r I n g POOL HOME $312,000. 3 Bdrm, completely re· furbished. Assume low inl·hilh balance In. Va· cant, quick escrow. Sl4S,OOO. Call Brenda Bkr. 731 ·92'78 IASTSIDI Lovely 3 !JR 2 Ba, fam rm home wl!plc, dbl 1ar. $141,500 I 006 Broker, 64M3llO ••••••••••••••••••••••• F184CM (J)UAITll COUJMS ISU 3 BR zi,., ti. tawnhouae. On a comer with boat Patio, double 1ar, OWC Ii f Pri $110,000. BJCR..Nl-dO I p out rant. VIC)', wood1, warmth, awn· LOWDOWM lap, atained and leaded No qual·No loan lees. &lau, quarry tUe and 3Br, 1'4Ba, prin only. m11cb more. lmpreuive ~1061 a&L contemporary 2 atory .:.=.-"•"'"'•=,:.~.--.-.-. -. -. -.-. home •Ith 4 Br t ... 1011rmet kitchen and cllalna rm. 11,3110,000 lee. - Wi\Tl Al MONT ltOMI' IM. REA\. ESTATE l7MIOO ....................... ~ ... For larae famllies-i Bdrm• ud hule lamlly room, coqikte rib re- fmlsbed mtcbln. Nicely draped ud carpeted. Euelleet ~ location. !u1 rnalll· tftallc• 1 ard. Sl 71,JOO . 64W200 H-~ H.-.. 1042 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IYOWIB Save money oa th11 2 bdrm , I ba with fireplace. with 10~ as- sumable lat and owner will help with 2nd. Drive b y 9391 Krepp Dr. '91.000. 90-7186 SPICTACULAI WATBYllW 2bd rm, den. 2"4ba townhome. Water view from mast« bdrm A: liv rm . Tri ·level w /earthtmea. E11ciUn1 floor plan. Seller will carry note w/$50,000 down. 121.5,000. REAL ESTATE "R" US (714)SZU120 lrtlM 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ TOWMfOMI? Call the apecialisll at the condominium in· formataon ctater. Touchstone Re.ally 9D-Olll'1 MonHWOOD llA&lrY lmmaculale 3 Bdrm home oa qWet cul de sac in Northwoods. Plu1h carpel• and cuatom draperiet thnaouL Huse patio. with aoothinc 1pa. Many ertru pl111. low interest .. umable loa.11. $167,000 don osen I I 1 ..-., l7111ATPR<J;PECJ' TUSTIN, 731-31ll Rancho Sin ...... Villa Portola llode1. mllll see mny uPCJ'llda. prin on)y SlU,500 . For appl 551.-0. J.M....S COWAH'f WOClllllMI u..• LAST AVAIL PLAN 5 P'orlnfoe.11551.W DOM1' MISS1HIS j PETE PAITt•t• OPPOl'NQ'l'Y to bu)' ....... !r.1'ect .... home.' J BARRE n REALTY 11.-•• ,.... ii.Ti.ai~ :.:!l: ~hcl hat CoamiaaltJ pool aid 1IDOll ~ l!!!!!!l••l!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I '-"· .._ ..... 1oa11. ~: uaiU W'l&h .... ~: lltl,HO. Perteet for ,...., .... ~ IASTSIDI :J~ • .. tJ •11· -wood ..... eel). 2 SM:'' I .,. . au•• tm'li.u HOt WS :. ~..:.r= 0 ... I .&.iaA.E ~:i-a "LOT. .___ .. ,' AlllJ ee-. ..... --• rlaHe ... ~ ....,, ~ . ..,MIC& ....... ..,,.. 1 ... . I ,J ,• •I .. •• .-_ ... • • Cash in on 7 or tL_ ... __ .. _._ __ _ 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 llnes Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Daily Pilat Private Parties only -no commercial businesse~ please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate. & I U. ' U~-•._. 1 •-..11 f ...... d A.-···· .......... ........ ........... S-. ....... FotS-. oe..tl........ ett.rl• .. lst• ...... 142 • t 1d n-.VCWWI w Hwe1Ua18a "'ii:f J h d ...................... . .._.. ..,. s-. •• ........ •• ••••••••••••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• , .•• • . •• . • • • •• • • . •• • •• •• ••••••••··············· :::::.:.·.:.::::·····3·2·1·· ~····~····3·2·6·,· ••••• :: •• ~ • .'........... c ....... £... ,.._ 1124 ...................... c..e. w... 1224 -..--........... ,_,.,,..,. _ - '"lae I 044 .,.,t ltecti I 06t w,,.,. ltecti I 06t c ..... , r LMI/ OO Lott for 9IMI 2200 ....................... •••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... •••1"1111 J102 ..................... .. ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• 0 • Cryptl 15 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Le• •br boa)t In.,... de· . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful Towabou1e. MODB.? BAYCR!m'BEAUTY ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• CUSTOMLOI' 2 BR, 2517 s.ta Alla. I .. d SEAVJEW-48r, 2~Ba + ·-wnFOlllMT $SU 2 Br 11,A, Ba. · be.,....,.. 2 cemetery Iota, HAllOIHILLS '550. Cpt.s, drlie, 1tove, ve opment. 0 ero ram rm, beetocn view, Ar• Fireplice.Sa~aieWUde Br. Family Rm. '200.000 "'-• ....._ Westminster Memori1I .,. b 1 •~· R 1.ar yard 548-3211 ltltcbeo inc ludinc fm)ool/tennia/aecurity. H.B., N.B., Caata Meta •Co ... " -Cou.ld be, ahows ao well. 3 Bdrm, 2 Ba, highly up- craded. Purdue Plan in CoUe1e Park. Stepa to uaumable lit. Owner "".,_ ra uousv ...... areop--'-' microwave• bu·b· ( 3 <&»3&29 Someth.ingforEveryooe ···-, may carry Sl00,000 2nd. Tb.113 bdrm home, on an Park. Good aectlo~ . pty. 6000' Just below Quiet, IOOCD'J, newer, pvt u e I r a o I e . Rec mo.21 ) Bach to' Br. Uolum. Quiet-ocean breeze. 2 er 1 year. 1435,000. Call extra wide Jot futura a worth S'7«l each, ukin& Harbor Rid&e $31S,OOO yard, 3 BR 21,A, ba, fpk, ?acllitia avail. No pets. Bhatra condo. 3 br, 2'-' ba, Apt.I: Certain locations apt. w/balcony, frplc. Hedda Maroa I A1ent completely furnished SlOOO ror both. 714 / cub only. PriDclpala on· f750 mo. 5tMlM llOO/mo. Avail Jlll'J lit. part view, leue. "75. o t fer : P oo I , •Pa, S4SO lat /lut + SlOO 646-1044. To,_•aeU! 11me roo!D · sunny 642·913hva. . ly.644.f699 Nr ou t1'0lwe 3 BR 3 Ba 54().IJOO daya, 131-'714 Avail . now. (213) fireplace, laun. room, cleanln&. Avail July 1 . • acboola, ud pools. J111t lilted. C1U Now. OCEANFRONT Duplex pat.lo. Spac!Ol.9 muter Westminster Memorial ~ORRO BAY ocean vu Pvtyard.2caret«car. evea/wkndl. 331-eNhves•wltnds. beamed cellln&•. ~63~1~·7~900='----- • Tri-Plea. Xlnt toe. bdrm. Pk 2 Plota. Call 642•8.507 Iota $12,990, walk to •Imo. lit, lut, Sec .... .-vw... J267 OCEANFRONT 1ara1es. all bu1lt-ins. MIWPOIJ ... n. e--'.·.,,i PP .., .. _............ days,64&«BZ~r7. beach. Terms avl. 7Sf.lOIS Ait7S-12M • ..,... Y"""RLY Carden •Townhouse ,,._ 388 1 ba 1 .. vo.r1v11,v1.ro101... 647.c., •-••••••••• .. u•o•u••••• c.n-• NOFEE.. 2+_..or , · Ca•••rdll l·"""" Nr VlctorlalC_1.0yoa. 2 HOMEFORRENT 3Br, 2Ba, wshr/dryr, desacn. . story owner'• ult PAIJY II ,,.,...., 1600 Mr ...... Dewt, Br.+ Den, 1 Ba. Sln&le 3 Bdrm. ll00.'1'enced 1ar, Sl150 mo. lse. TSLMGMT. 642-1&03 fence'd yd. npc, $500 HA .. VIEW ....................... ltsort 2400 1ara1e. Water • truh yard • garage. Kida • 640-2082, 67~7673 · 2 br apt. Blcny, frplc, $49-92"19 • I I\. ' ' .. J( J(J OFFICE ILDG ••••••••••••••••••••••• paid. ~ + JIOO de· peta welcome. MS-2000. S. C....... 127' Ocean Breeze. ~1:0· .=2""'B;=:r.:.::1'-Ba-.-M-es-a-:-:V-erde~ SmaahJn1 family room Irvine Terrace 3bdrm, For ule. Fee land, M.L.AUTAHOE f::,1~1~/S": Pet. Aft.,ooree. .. .................... , ~~,~-= :a1.7t'1Jg. upper Garage avan. Lefme.... with wet bar. Un· 3ba,stumroomaipool. Cout Hwy. Lacuna Developer needs cash. ·-·00 ee. Mtwport .... 326' L&e2Br2ba,Crplc,den, 1 · M50.Noc.hildrenorpets. ••••••••••• .. ••••••••• believably beautiful to· Sl0,000 down, take over Beach 1em. fully lea.sed Hu 42 lots all with 0-PoW 3226 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wet bar. Fantutir surf C...,._a..di JI II ...:833-=.·:flll=•·---~-0. ef S6llit tertai.ner's patio. 5 Bdrm payments or lease it. w /cood up11de 1~.~ sewer book-ups a, build· •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• SAMTIA60 DL view. Stepa to beach. •••••··~··••••••••••• .. Laree 2 Br. upataln S400. ef t6.d Sommeraet on fee land. m4>64.2·0l&Oeves. grou sq. ft . l.7 m1~n inc permits for single 2 BR, 21h bacondo. FFplc, Beautirul hoU.e avail $750/mo. San Clemente Ocean view 1?acbe~r apt, Downstairs IQS. Avail. Prl·m°"e Dana Point Absolutely immaculate Newer Sbr Lido Isle w/terms. Contact. Mike family residences. Will pool, spa, pr. U mo. now in eleganl area. 4 R.E. Co. 498-0300 or stove. refng, util pd. July lst. 545.4156, move-In condition. Cla yto.n , Bus anus subor_ with~ down. 497·6'55 Br. 3 Ba. Dininl Rm, t92·7082 $350/mo.861-6210 MS--S91SUPMooly. :~::·~a: ':~f:a.lo~ ~:~~~l:.e financinc ::m:pt:-~qu~Ji!f Properties ~rolterage 641-7532 enl &Toro 3232 LlvUlg Rm. a, Family 2 Br. 1 Ba. attac.bed C...... .. Mlr 3122 2 Br. 2 Ba. Townbowe. bdrm, 1 be up, 1 bdrm A party. 973-9272 days, Co., at 7S2-80l · a.ct..s. ,..__ ....................... Rm. New wallpaper, garage. covered patio. 1 ....................... garaae. 1 chiJd OK. 00 down burned clog, RED CARPET 831·57S7 eves/ Wkndsp Gro .. t 2700 HOME FOR RENT cozy kitchen ai many blk to beach. $550 mo. Nice l Br. Apt, beamed pet.I $4.50 831•11165 frplc, dinin1 area, encl. ~ 71:!J202... MIWPOITCIMTIR ....................... 3 Bdrm. '650. Fenced many xtru. OUJdren & C 1 11 eves aft ce1Un1. refrige&dshwr. · · 21!!!!!!!!: -~ OCIAMVU.IOo/oh. Two(2lrommercialof· FAtLilOOIC yant •caraie.Kldl& pets OK. Broker 6.l/'92·0646. arace. Single only 2 Br. near Balter 6 patioMS~:ReaJty XLMTmMS Exec. home w/wood Cice buildlncs totally View home & avocado pell welcome 54S-2000 CooperaUon. 7se.8974. ir_ .__ . 95S-3649. Harbor Gara&~. walk to V." ... LE beam cfilinoc, 2 muter ft of A t r --sbop1. No pets. Mu: 1 *473l A IW.J\,,D bdrms , l fr pie s n .ooo square net grove l.6Sacres $100,000 a .,no ee. OMTHIWATa C.,ntr.o 1271 2 Br. 1 Ba. prage apt. c hild. S425 . Sierra MOllMLA6UMA Sbr, 3ba, family rm, Complete privacy s pace, fully leased, assumbable al 10%. ltwt ... altecti 3240 Great view ol boats & ...................... , ran1e. refrige. Adults, M&mt.Co.&4l·l3U priced bek1w market at w/securit y system. strategic.Uy l>cated an OWt balancew/20%dn ••••••••••••••••••••••• bay Brick fplc family 4Br.2ba,ramrm,frplce, no pets. 9600 Mo. y~ars 2b l\.\b frplc iar IY ow.& Sl&S,000. 1641 Orchard ed S2:K> 000 A New po rl Cent er 3 Bdrm 3 Ba, prime HOME FOR RENT roo~. Availabte'lmmed. m.lrrore~ wardrobes; lease. 6121.; Jasmine. ~tio ad~ts. 00 pe~ Lovely 3br, 2ba, home in Or. Santa Ana H1ts. ~~rge a~2900 ' gt. <Fashion Island>. Laree area. Sl75.000 Bkr Ctsy. 3 Bdrms. aso. Fenced for 9mooths. Only 815 na ce neighborhood . 642·831'1. ~ +dennmit. S4tr7510, part like a«Ung. French Open Sun. l·S or may be -au um able rinancing, Owner / Agent yard • praie Kid! a, 759-9563 2bdrm delux apt Frplc, 276 Avoc:-~SL 21ty bloc:lta from the shown anytime by appt. POOL abundant parting and 493-95611 I u•2000 mo · Ad I ..., bea~b . You w i ll WIEDEMANS (B l high identity Great pets we come.~ . THEREALESTATERS s.hA• UIO atrtum.•tmo uts. 2 Br 1, ba, cpt/drps, I I I hi 7•1 ·-3 Spacious pool home h I d ' _.. t IHI ht.lit I A&ent, noree. 673-~ ....................... ~·2626. b 'It' dulls ...... 5 ab10 ute 'I ove t a <1 ,.., w/J'ac. Gourmet k.itch. s e ter an pnceu ~ W--"-..1 .,900 8 t 1 t Id .. _h ua 101, a . .,..,. • gorreoua home. Oak Sll2 per rt. Owner will _.._ & 1 * * * Eastblurr condo, lge 3 br, eau · m.a n. · o er Brand new I bUt from""' ZZ72 Maple,631·29Z7 floora.1ounnet llitchen,1•--5•.._--T•O--•I ram rm. 4 BR+ office. consider secondary ••••••••••••••••••••••• Casey Pyle 2~ ba, pool, bale. l900. home, orig ant wood 2br 2ba . dbl gar. ~e!!!.!==-=:..==-- 121.S,OOO 111U1D loans at S •H'D _..Y ••••CH U BR, ideal for mother financing Will sell or ex· INVESTOR WILL BUY 426 Prinmon Dr. l213)541~; 541413 paneling, built·an china W iMo. 673-91566 COUMRY WOOOS 123 A kl I $305 000 "" -or guest). 3 car iar. On· change out Exclusive YOUR HOME al 90?. ol Costa Mesa c • b 1 n el • des II • Room, private entrance, ....... 494-So57 ~!or S.0:9966 Remodeled 2 story on Jy $340,000.Bkr,64MJllO with William Cote. aprsd value Grant You are the winner ol llVtHITmACI booklhelves, tile frplc, refrige, no ltatchen. Large 2 Bdrm .. 2 Ba., days AGT lge lot. 3 bdrm + den. Broker. Call 640-5777 for Walters. 496-865!. two free tickets ($14 CUSTOM 3br.3ba, pool, separate breakfast rm, Quiet pe~ only. 1215 tort. No children or pets. Lge masteT suite with YIN additional financial de· 83l·071l_!&l_,_ ---value) tot.be many extras! Lease/ 3br, 2 car gar, .t~e + S7S. Call Answer Ad SMS Mo. 180 E. 21.st. St. N Modular Type firepla ce ind Roman (.ft tails. ...,. WOl.LDFAMOUS ~.•!!1?~;,!UOO Mo.Ce b1c k y!~1.Mnr637C179v181c IJC,&42~.:uhn. 646-4262or~954& Jo~u. leased land, tub. Newport Shores. Popular Bluffs ''Trina" t-Cote~ Realty :;~:::·F·_ .... ·.,::;...... ROY AL....a:IAM _,...., "• ....,.._, nter......, o. . 2 b r . 1..., ba . r r PI c . 1 Br Apt with patio a, Oceanfront Pk, 3 pvt msx. Unobstructed frool row ,,_. ---·-HOISi SHOW CHdDPI I patio/pool. util book·UP. yard. bchl,24aecwily,rlshlng 3 Br. 2\.;ba. Vacant. & Investment ....................... June30tbruJulyl Eueptionally niee Fwal.W 1400 adulta/nopf!tl. I yr lse. P.._.l pier from $29,900 Move in NOW! flexible 640-5777 "9w_...._. 3169 ANAHEIM BAYSIDE CON DO. 2 ....................... S.640-0519 ATM05n81 terms. '"""' Cen Bdrm & view. Sl.895/mo. H •uoa •-.. 499-3816 li!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I••••••••••••••••••••••• Convention ter EAST BLUFF. Nice "" _..,., c:o.t. Mete 1124 Dishwasher, frplc, pool WATCH ... WAVIS ...,__, RARE C·l H Newport ..... Maaeco Tickets are good for 3Bdnn2baat$1400/mo. 2br, 2ba, a/c, view, ••••••••••••••••••••••• & spa. Lodry • bbq. Have a rant as t I c l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!ll!I Proc. decorated 3 Bd June 30th performance Waterfront Homes lnc. ruard 1ate. tennis. pool, NEWLY DlCOI. 5460. M1ture aduha, no 11 . r Buch Property SO' home. Fully furnished all:OOp.m.andmaybe 631•1,._ • apa! $1800 /Mo . 1 Br g•• pd, encl gar pela. 28SO Harli. cont ne view rom VEISAM l ES frontage an prime l~a 1 · d b u-g _., 673-5Jll ... super oceanfront unit. 1 0 W .... E R lion. Ownerwlllfanance: w/gardener. montbl'J c a;:Be ext kca in d/wuher, pool. Adulll 549-244,'"'.-7. ____ _ or 2 Bd'1, 2ba. Custom " (714) 645-7221 Exclusive. Prtncipal& cleaning services and 64.2· ' · · ,1_...__ Cada•' ' I 642·5'n3. · 3 Br, 2 ba, spacious decor. ms,ooo. DESPEIATE 1 A It f 1 association fees in· Pool Home Exec 3br + .,,,.. ~ Uaha '• d 1425 Twnhme, beautifully •-vm-u Newport Beach Condo 2 IAYFIOMTllAUTY on y . 1 or rene eluded Jae .. comm. den , else lo bch. SantaAnaHtatotallyre-....................... llrTow J11 It landscaped. encl patio, ~:ma Bdrm. 1~ Bat.b. frplc 12% F14AMCJMG Loudon. Act. 631-4247 or pool and deliJhllul ram•· @15/Mo. 14f.S192 furtrilbed tane. 3 Br + Very tar1e 2 Br. 2'-' Ba. Newly decor. 1u pd.. fr pc, etc. M25 mo . ....... ----=-H""•'-=-=-='--1-05-01 f.~:!~i.=:':1ita'::I; ~!::.~l!·~t~l~!!:.~ C~~=~ilil1•1/To.. ~~,~~~'44.~e Cor N~r~:\.:~,~~: ~g'oT1' i tsp ~ai:.ilb~ ~==~s~:!. ~~-d~:::.: ~~c~1t!~~=· dswhr. -"~~. t0,;:;,;IA"'t6=-U11--IA-UL-l-lr-.- ••••••••••••••••••••••• views +2car par1tln1. conatructed 4 Bdrm 4 ............ 1700 e inl depoai t. Call ~~e~~e~~:a~ Crplc. w/d hook-ups, 21r.lhAll Built·in,carport•pool. 3 bednn ...... 2 blthl, Firm 113'2 .00 0 . ::!-': ~~~~~: ,,·.·.··.·.·.··.·.··.·.·.··.·.··.·.·.··.·, L1·ngo {21J)530-Sl.9 reserve. Ideal rornatUtt b:0~~':.':J:1i>~~~: Newly decor. C:u pd. Adults. DO peta. Bike to built·ln•. mcbed 1ard, 0 w o e r I A g e n t cludinc the land or HO~ 38r, qula cul~c. wlk lovera and Jo11er1. • 4 2 . 1S31 Ev ea " met 1ar .. pool, cllbwr. beach. M15 Mo. t31 W. paid cardener, 2 car %1J/121·7M .• L lo Weatmltr al.all llotO v Adulll ~5a73 ...... St ·-,._, r · I I-"==..=.:=------11,295,ooo leaaehold L DOWN •·~-. ' SUOO/mo. R6H lDYtSt· Weekenda · · ..ua .. _..._. ~ace. irep a cei--------Owner/Builder Dan LOWINTEREST mo.Ml-40Gevea. menta.1~2lf1 BE lit tenant. Unuaual 2Br, crpts, drpl, blw. 2br, 1380 good loc . o.:e~W:1 July l UDOSAMK Blbb.67~23U LOW PRICE ..._..U.,. • 0 d Lovely4Br.2Y.Ba,2aty,2 Newport Sllarts J Br. A· new 1 br secluded end car, adultaOflly. no pets. stove/ref. pool quiet .._-=.=,..=-,.~::::. .... -=:.--1-06-,-• ~!~h.~ ~. $10,00IDOWM Beautilul2br, l .. ba. Nr ••••••••••••••••••n•oi ;:, 1:; ';,;gi ~·~ Frame. $150. Webb unit. Sm., adJts4>nly 't1:~~~::c:3~~:;12arae/t ~d1tl~:r U3 W. ••••••••• .... •••••••••• E 11 t t HO it!rill.....,._ So, Cout P\ua. ti1•NI iardu· mal~t locl. Rulty. al·Z1'10 comples w/gate. pool, s -=:a°'y-===-=;=-.----x c e en er ms NewporlBaclt BayZ300 THl~OfACI ••••••• ... ••••••••••••• llMUll7 Beautiful s br 1111 Back cardener. Nr. S.C. Light, bri&bt, airy,• WHl'TIWATll'11W $1'12,000. i . ft. bom S.3'50 Forrentorlo;tirneabatt, · evea. Bey bluff, upauive Plau. Cntrt air, p1tio, new 2br, Zba, frplc, 90'tobucb.~uawn '71-lnt sq. · lWlury eon PalmSpriqahome,Ca· 3 br, 2 ba, close to view, man'I utras, uptradea, S'95 + utils. .aa~B.1111 mi c ro, 2 car car, loin. lla'Jtake note Oft larce comer lot near nyon Club area, SlSOO WstmstrKall.Btllcood. muat see, SlZSO/mo. W . No pets. 775·2580 ~_.. w /o peDer, p ool /· yourprop.11down.4BR CherryLakes.:4&'5Mo. PALMDISaT mo.onyrlyleueortllOO Le corner lot. No pets. 644-0350 evea. APAl'TMiMTS jac/waterfalla • ruo· 2 Ba, rectllllY upended, $185,000. Will ase op-Deep Canyon Tennis mo. on Vt lime share. 4 1700 mo. incl 11rdnr. BeautiCul landscaped runa atttmm. '150/Vo. w/pouible &..law qtn. Uon.951·973or4lH.C):J85. ctub.Spadola "A"Plan br,4ba,pool•apa.Call Mra . Gani 846-1371. S,.c ....... Vltw i.ftMNWortd carden apts. Patioa or 831-1246or'19-3371 Under $290,000 inc Ida IUJfPS 3br, 2ba, SIDcle story, Mr. Lon&. 673-1190; ~ BACK BAY BLUFFS 2 Bdrm, 2 bl. view. by decks. Pool & Spa. Heat 1 br, pvt patio, quiet. Planland.¥olVvdutReal!752-6491ty l~~~~~~~~~ Assume large ll'lb Super Greenbelt toe (213)532-7372 .,,,... 1244 3.Bdnn,2Ytba.SllSOmo Gatel4 $51-1890 paid, covered parltinc. elderlypref.AvaU.now. rmancin1 on newly re· nsrsopoooolds/ocwounr•.tsoownlcy ............ 1206••••••••••••••••••••••• Salea~ .. ~.!.~y,nooo S'95.2BR,1JatoryCconll dor. Adulta,nopetJ. 67~3335 od led 3 b 3 ba d Woodbrld •----Built t/;>WJ . .,,.,._ Adulta on y. a a t 2BR lBA "85 -:.:.;:...:::=------By Owner' I Br ,....tbousa m e r, en ·-BKR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ce ~. ' J B pools' .. -Qu' ... at D I r t .-~ "" · "-It f SU~.000 at "-"'· · b p t Tb Bdrm 1 Ba,,._._....__,un 7PM ~91123 ._,.,Van.........1,540-11626 r. """· JC' • up exes, ocean ron , con dominium , u.nlt on (reell"" • am 953-1220 l ... himd 1 e era . . ree l _...u-. . ~ ~-moapbere, carpets, beautiful ocean view. Versailles. Prin only rm ai formal din rm, · Yearly 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, bedrooms, two baths. it, partially furn. 0 .,..,., 1 BR, l ba Wlslde. Avl. drapes. No pets. Acent Perfect location. New ._5L33 micro/Convection ovens $1500 DOWN den. fplc, larie patio, Sio1le story bome in encloaed pr. On 43rd SL Uaha I ' d 1525 1mmed. Adult.I, no pets 731.6829or 548--0574. coodiUon.Al.Lf13.7300 1-=::::..:=-----in an aU new kitchen. 2b·r 2ba TUSTIN PARX .....,. ,.. oJ , .. laa• Woodbrid&e. SlOOO 9550 mo lllllil Oct I, llSOO ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• f'13-2ll3 -C II ' ' -.. o. na ..... · ., tb ~ c•" ..iya ___ _.. "-"1 ,_. · Uprraded 2brm. tar, nlae 104411"Ylae 1044 S24S,OOO. 1 owner VILLA -pool,recnn, Security depoalt. ~~y·e~ .... ., .. motlte':waY ..... ·wvv ntaAnaHeiabtJ-2br, SPACIOUS 2BDRM close O.C.C. 2814 ••••••••••••••••••¥••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,..;7:..::;80-.;..:;.;9339=·-----SSOK l at at 12~~ ·7 ·=•~•=t~---:---I uulDc"""tudas -6rtierator, 3 Br. all buiJt,.iDlv,';!.~· + den, 2 P,;ba , ,! 11 ADULT.opal beam cell· H le ltor 1 Pl. u 95. Owner will Cinance -.. ""' double canae. JUD\ JU<:. amenities, 1475/iao. · •• serv bar lota of W"t k•r IOff b 1 C 11 2 Br,2 Ba. Houle. Larie wuber. dr1er and ... 0 .... Agent ( 213) • 1• 341 s m...,. · ' _,,, _,,54$-025&;,=..=:=.o·----- MICI & MEW East side Costa Mesa -3 BR . and 2'h Bath - charming condo in a small comfy complex in a neighborhood that's close to transportation and . shopping. $135,000. Call Coby Ward 642-~ CN68> llST TUITLllOCIC LOCATION. Dramatic double f pie sepa.rates sunken living rm . from skylighted dining rm. Vaulted ceiling kitchen w /nook overlooks pvt yard. 3 BR home designed inside & out w/sty le & impeccable taste. $265,900. Dorothy Lewis 752·1414 CN78) MAllC)I ... calT -LMll- Delianed for indoor /outdoor . m&ertlinin& and f amilY livinc, a BR CaaabJanca model. Master suite access via lndoor ;ae. ·Gate ~ant~ cotnnnmily. 6 tenn11 . L. Valentine ·62'0 lNf1) ............ ~Nmillliil!I• a a n c e . a "-r I Ill r Ill . ..... per .o. .. .. . 0 r wood. New crpt.I. """' i d·· .. -""" 2 •••••••••••••0 ••••••-(114 )551 ·2921 o r pauv, some um. v · recreation ac ue1. 55Hll30. 213 823-5021 Maple St. S4l0/mo. Quet A"""' over-· (7l4)B32·a3&4 S 7 5 o u n r urn · 21 7 Joan Blrdaall, A1ent, 548•7356 6'73-8111n. Bdrm ~!" $370. sura STAITll Ol IMYISTMBfT 2 bdrm /coavenient to ahoppinc • tn.Dlporta· lion. Askin& •.soo. '31·2242 ~ ~llllh()\\ lka It' APOlena.673-0727. 640-f!Z7orat-7Dl. 2 Bdrm. 1 bl, enc gar on Apwlul•rwm1'8cl · Beaut. I pinf.. No •"l1., llOO --~-cWMlr 1222 0r•"&etree2Br1 bacon· O'ClSt. Imper mo. Oct ••••••••••••••••••••••• IHSTAMTtH! pets. LEEWARD APTS. -... 1, $525 + security· _..__._ u--3724 , ... Ba T ho 2020 F 11 rt C .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• do Adults only. Submit ---2 Br. 1"'3 . own use u e on.. . •. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Bdnn, bonul rm w/pool Oil.pets. A/C, comm ten· 5.sl·lalO ••••••••••••••••••••••• East.side. I child OK. _,63:=cl=-·0387="------- HIAl1HISMe tb1e, l1 bltyard w/pool nil• pool. Oii the late. FULL OCN VIEW-Nwpt SUSCASITAS Yard. lndry nn, Great EASTSIDE 1 bdrm, new· .....,.,..... $1400 per mo. 831-48. 1595, 644-7211 ult for CrntCoadoLg.SBr,full Fum. 1 br. apt. S32S 6 loc.'550Mo. l y remodeled. No Seconds to the water. Aalt CorGtt& Mary. ocn view, upgrades. up. Eocl. pr. Adults, no TSL MGMT. 642·1603 children or pell. S3IO Excellent 3 BR o_wner's .... J .. 2 h Univenit'J Park Terrace, ILOOO mo. at.oeec> pets. 2110 Newport Bl. IASTSIDI AnS mo. Call 6M-7'172.. ,B,1'1Rom2e·~~e·:_"f..'it !nt2 double .. race, South coa• lo(ated, channioc. Newer 5br Lido Isle 54M918btwnt•5PM :! Br.I Ba. Pool, lndry D .. P.W JIU • ""'• ,...... . HwJ Hefiotrope 9850 cheerful 2 bdrm, den oo bome. For aa)e, lie.,: FROM $125WKLY nn. 1 child OK. S400Mo. ••••••••••-•-•••••••• Ideal for home " 10 • · ~1018. Greenbelt nr pool, No llepar~'J. t72':n~"t.y' s. Amb111ador Inn, 'lZ77 TSL MGMT. &tH603 OCEAN ¥llW c~e. Clole to Newport pets, submit on children. Harbor Im. MS-4840 paerandshopl.$219,950. SnP.-C..c.4 S7SO/mo + aecurity. 131·S7S7eves/wlmda * * * Spacious 3 br, 2 be in ---1.....1.........., W-1-M. T-'-Co. EucuUve ram'Uy home. -1."'-1 BA YFRONI' HOME With St~i~ apt, W l.D. S230 ~o. Wilma GraveliM 1reat location. S'IQO/mo. _. --,.._, -r-910 .... -bd .,Lba v · ol util tncl E/Side, 1va1la· ..... La &el-11Jlor•1715 ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• .....,.. 644-4 5 Bdrm.a, S ba, bOll111 rm. For leue 950 mo, IJ'ft'D :umi!°'~. ~mo ble 1-1. ~ 426 uavue ne Melllttt-I 100 .._,,.,.,., 2000 !!nT:!°:er. Sll'7S. belt cul -de/,ac ' yrly. ~aterfrontHomes. 0-PoW J72.6 You are ~boawinner ~ ~a~~v:~. 2 ea. 2 FotS. ....................... b atarlicbt, a /c, p, • lnc,n,_.., ....................... two rree tlcketa ($14 balconies. Good loci· •••••••••••••••••••.... APPL.I¥ ALLEY Cameo Hllblanda 4 r. bdrm ' a I I a PP' I, FrelhlJ u!llnlded 4 bdrm Studio w /small refril & valuelto the lion. 21J/ .... A~:!,~, 5!/c. 2~ ~:~ Nur new 4·Plu, .2 ~m~~-=: ~=·.::.=o pets. CODdo in-The Bluff& oo bot plate, share a 1u WOILDFAMOUS Panoramic view Dana 1MO Newport Blvd. 119. bdrm, 2 t.th each unit A&t ns.5354. 1reenbelt near 1chool. SmJ deck. Avail July l, IOYAL~ Point Hartior 3 Br. 950 Call641-•. ·with fittplace. enc~ ' WOOlmlll&E ~mo. Yearly leue. ms+ ~lt.ll. HOlSISHOW Mo.A,Jente:MDDZ. patio, double 1ar.a1e. Co:l'J 2 Br. cottace on OC1l 3 bdrm, comdo feoeed JolO BlrdHll, A&ent, •• •5543 J""e .......... Ju'u 1 1-------1 Sl&S,000. Bill Grundy, aide of PCH, frpk:, no L.:.: ....__.. J76t '"'' _u .... v llwtkfK .... Jt40 EXCITING RJtrl ....... L eeu.1150mo.!7J.l73' petlo, no pell Iii!:) mo. 8'0-llZ7orlS1·7IOO. "9w,..t-ANAHEIM ......... -• .. •••••H• • • . v•--a1.oru ....................... CoavealionCent.er MAKE AM OFfll! C..Mtle l224 Decorator rurnlahed Tickets are food ror THIWMflUlm ......... ,.... •••••••••"""•••••••• ...... l!llC:..,. TOW'Dboule.• June 30th performance Ll&:lwyAdult&milaataf· Golden...C MdO, 2Br, s Income Properties MIW mW Jlllft.C ~D~i,A,f~ 1!!:t;. •tl11 1t 1:00 p.m. and may be ~~·~~t~":fco~t:d~ ::.:t~&nr:J:~ East.aide Colla Mesa. Bullt·IDI. dulls, no view.' Sl200i mo yrli c laimed by callinl Olympic me pool, U&M· ~· 21 yn +to ~~'::u!wUJ ""'·=·==·~· UMfALS ~:_.;Call Dou• :.~=~:.·Gardtfl =~:e&:.i:c=: q J~ ~.l>~:P!!'=: Jbr,~Hilll '125 -,~· ~.~1..t:c~utJ'la ~~~ tleHUful llldc. Ill M~~ • IMOpermp. Sbr,2ba -t:IPutrta e11 from .......... -N eo..11.. 1•MapleAve.AptS. Z'701Hutlar.Std0f.A ' 21!.::0.:.,11~ Or,Jba -NEWBR£ED~PTS. ~=~::·2:.0~· .. -.::: l ... tJ7 wave, tnlll~pector, 4br,J~M •ham. ~ lBR.•LOrr dawhr.1~'..u.ibuc111'. 7141641'°163 dlaltw..W, dbl praft I!: '::°t1ea ~'. BACH Aclha, 110 pN, • mo. l Bedroom tnlJen, $115 2925ColleceAve w/opeHr, alr toad., rtelor•''"~ Fromt:m ' &af.lm. mo.Avp. CostaMesa.CA poolltjacual•Mo. DIC4 ... +fm lrwncll • eao·a • FrpJc, rec room, pool:'..:.._.=.:,..=1=..._.'---W-,..-•• -!Of• lg.311C10or9l.W. bome wttll pool uchpe. ""* • Plua "'°'' jJ cu n I. u c Io u a """ ~ ,.... Tuller wltb cab1aa, UNITS, mJ,llO.-Onu &utlide 2 11r ,.t.Mt aca.r 1.,.,_, .. 1q ft. IMAT MCMA"°91: 11n1es. Gii It wll\tr l Ir, I Ar, a Ir. lwUJJlled. MIM ... to us lout. W /carry J•rda:o.r::· m• 0.,._, llM!Wld. lm· r..•Frtl ...._. pd, Ad-*. DO pN. m T......_ Afla, tr. appr1cl1te. ft,000. _., .. ftCTOW. t . Mllb. ao mielllat.e. A•aJI Ill•. (PfO&proaftotl>•1 HuaULo!.Cll.MHflL .... PaUoa. ._ear · · ~ 1 ., M 8 HMlll!Clulll•Saunt 11ra1e. near Huat, MS-n. · 1 petl, ...... .. ..... Y.•Slll • Hydromm1~1 • Hartaou ....., ·-----1111111-•IRent enm ,.,.,... Orau•• N T Co-"' ..... I ......._, . . .. Ta••• Ilda .. C.M ...... .....m"'21ir..1~ ... '58"·--...... .._ ~ .... ~m;09,;.:a: =~ Oii lflt'sgot., ...... s 21r, Ila ..... Sfr· IA...S lK "°"9-OWC It Wt.. blt·lu, I car pr. No """'9Jllll:'llm"S Acltlta, ao ,.U. Lat 1UUnN. WT'I: lCMl'tl'""' It ="· Gs, -..n 1 LaSJ ..... .., ~ m ...._,,.._ • Pw mo. WOODlllDOI: Ga.at 4 P iao.Al,:.... $intlet.,' 2 led· 11terln1 Sltr~· M::l ~ pk, ev• ._ ......... It IHOf'Pli9CIMlll --•fftim ldr•, lh, 1rlJ IX!CUTIVI llOlll oa '~nlelled DlilYPi'°' M mt drJ1t. OalJ *·"'· Locate• la flfo. 8.0 .• , .. '9e:I 1111111r, 4 •Hr.o. 1{1ttf'fro1t a.ex Jae. 4'1r, AL =·No;:::-! cl11sffltd •~1:.l0='------ (4GI). couatJ, •IPll' amrUi ldra a ~ I ear ,.,, Romi9. r.. •·•-* dM f..,W, ,.... frwt °'*' o.ey ed. c;.tl . ':°., + !'; ~ 1~ ·~ .,.. ........ ,:& ft ..... NJCll c 11111 •'" No.... ,_..._ f9Ul1114 It'* fllliO; ''° t M2..f671 Md IUl•ater ..S. Ml·liu, MOllUIDlll ~=-·~ ~-1*N ............ U• r.:r•/.-..... ~ lfrilndlY ~ ..... Me p9'1. ... !!!!!!!!!.I--••••• fiarMlk.t ........ , .. '""'""" ..:·:.;i9• ..._ .... ,... ld·vl• wtlt •rndM Av. Ir leacll 1 ' -..::: = :i =: ·.:::'::.!"or": TbeM ll'°', ada re~UJ ...... ....... -~twit tr.-.._ ...U t/~ ..... -.a•.N work I Join tbt ·~~;1 =~Ill con cat ron 011 U wide. tlr, -•• ,,.. ...... bled ana.~). ..xKJlft._.. __ ll0111&11011a .. .... I••· It JtU Ii: ..... ._. .... I U..1Dde ot cQeo peo. (7t4f 1 _.... ...s::a~m,;.....;;..;...__.~-':-1 111tttbl ••lie, I pie II *Ir arta w11o an .......... I. mt " ... ,... rt .... r a .. fl 0' 1100 ~ t..r.ittr 191) ... ..... ....... a..uw. Cd ... .. , ..... , .,. ..... ...... ,,, .. ... • ,. ,. j . ,.,. ' ·ii . ,. .. .s· ~· ?. •• .. ., .. ·:- .. ,, ... .... . . .. -..... . . . c.,.tllr"-Drywtl ... nlli1 ...... Lo--. Nlllat/P¥2.. " 'I I S.l•lllff ......................................................................................... , •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••··········· .............................................. ;r~ •••••••••••••••••••. THlllOllL~ DrywaUSpeclaU.t II i... . ca..-.-y MORTOAO!MONEY .STEVENSPAINTJNO PLUMBING naw coti· SPRINKL!~•SOD Mr.atAN'IC. Qual. •prod. New•,..... ow ... SJ0..'15-as ~ ...... AVAIL.UL£ Int/tat n... fumlltd itriaclloc, remodelln1. Trtt Remo¥al. DIG IT Homtorolftet.Fattlfn ~mod. SIMI Ha /MoriullS Wultuoutpr11•.l S30000toSISOOOO •tNta~ualltywork repaln,rHtaurant. La ta ... 7070 6: domt1tlc. Riady 7 ••11 lonlnlc • .13\.l • • · • · electronic leak dttec· 17~1111 Tape, TU\Urt, ACOUllic YARD CLEAMJPS tree TRIE/SHRUBTRJM ........ ,.,.... W · Uon. Top Hat Plwnbln1. Stoel.,... Tr a I 0. d Re DI IA l't CARPET CLEANERS ctlUD ....... tit. Kevln •ork. ln1aallon • re· Gara I ' Vll'd Clean· Up to 15/yn \o repay Ext/Int palnl.ln(, cab rt· 2030 -••••••••••••••••••••••• mecharucmoonUablln htractba~leanlnl,.. 175-17S.l.503 r.•lr frun bell 1 PRJM!P'INANCIAL rln/1taln. Prof. RJnbl .............._Cl...-...M... Stocki, money market. Allo m<llt t..-i-I· Yiv•eoii-1~. .............. _ _. andt • .-OUt SERVIC~ Frtefft Steve5C7 421J ... ...._ __,. tu 1htlter1 Steve ... _.. u.n, 117"'4N7 ___. Hi•ecle .. I 52J 347 Ftn ln~-RI h d ••••••••••••••••••••••• John1~ reu. S.~ ............... •••••••• Garcltn ~anct •••••••••.............. • e Pl Y c •r Tenant Problem•? 6".2"2 .. ~..... ELECTRlCIAN-prlctd Rt1ld /comm/lndia1 WantaREAU.VCLEAN M•Hry SI.nor.Lie, .l3yrtof Malntenancetoohllh? . ...... :: ............... C.-.., *11•ffc rtpt, free •Urn.ate oo Cln·iape 6 tree trim: HOUSE ? Call Olnaham ....................... Thhappy N.8~ruato0mtrt. IMrtlonNl(htmaru~ Sw ....... a..-•••••••••n••n••u•••• lar1tor11nalljobe. min . 0 SW BRICKWORK Sm11l ank ov.-l-44l Go with 1 proi•lonal ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~/elAPfflCS Acoutkc.lli"'9 + Uc. rJ l I tv 4147 ROBIN'SCL .. '~INO Jobi. Newport, Coit• PAPll HAMIM Mc mt co. and uve Wiii lnit.ruct chlldmi to 9""871 cuatom bandteaturinf ...._._ C'· . H uJ T-' r.tU, M I I R t ..., ....__ t Slnile famlllea ' up. 1wlm at your homr Uc._. 5RM't ,.._~ ican fP•' • .. m, Strvke •thorou1hly ua. rv ne, ea. ~yru1tp .... _... Or1n1•. Rlvtr1ldd181n R111 Rob tU 11•111 •• •. 111 ........................ c.-t/C1aa1.. ..W .................. a!id' ~~~mm~ <'IHl\ho\AM 54(),CJ157 e'f~a~t.SmallJotMa :U~if1%'~·~:.!:c, Bemadlno Co ll1nilon Pvt 1wlmml.n1 leuonJ •• w_., •• -... ....................... OOD fllMCM A-:;-_ ........... _ 01ntral tlol.INIManlna 9-1 ................. I ~ htl" AO •p ... "'ORC~ ' AHO(' f>f'09 M1mt m per wk,$ dl)'I Min 2 -........ QUALJTYCONCRETE rff . ma meucan ... -r. II Rtllabi. IWftrtO('H 11~· • .._ .. LNW I ,. ... .. ... 1161 fOOI wkl Wa&er nercl.H IDd BiaUdmSince~T AllTypesCemen. I Work '4n _ .... -pert, rtllablt,' re Owntrane. 8(12.0610 ral•.4"J.2:2118atL.,t_ PAINTINOC,'OMPANV • ........._ lip iwlm Cluies •tart Addltion1, remod1lln1. .., w_. Honablt, free at Tom, ICOUH"'C HART MASONRY 30eneratlonlot _... • ..,. J I 1 I wk.ti Sl20 11h I Free t R _. ....... , ....... •••••••• Ul au. ., LF.ANINO E1&p. All t=Brlcll • Block P1lntln• Exc.llent't •••••••••••••n•••••••• u y Ac•...... ~::':~. Llc ~3108'f:· Drlveway1, pauat, room W~"rtll yuudryltl • d11>41ndabl4t tu mttlt 1,1.. 141-LW7 ~-1 ROO,INO SINCEl937 14l l7lS ••••••••••••••••••••••• 549-2 1ddltlons. Cement' I.Ma T,.. Service h11 your ll ttd• Nori ' .8 , Alltypttlnd repal1'1 6 Tie Acct1 for am bus. PR 170 brick wort 5e6.o7 1rMn tll'\M'OOd at • 1 ••••• ................. vt7 fQtQ P'rpk1, p1Llol1 planten RALVll I AINTINO 1nowcoatln1 !kau Ur •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• qlrlie1, •alee tax, F /S. c--.......... Cust m · 1 corcl. Ph• e1per1 tree HOM K IM PROVEMP!NT llouHrlunln& ' l'lanl For a Job oone rl1ht Llc'd. lnt/nl. NHt, ~ 2''~, dll<· 00 yd Custom t.ramlrTlle .Comp I ete tel up Ii •••••••••.............. 0 1 ~crete, c;idm~. trim min . ~TRF.f;, Rtmodeltn1 Odd Job. ('ire, loul ,...,. MU324 l.arcy 750-902ll ev" Prom;>t 884 ~ 1tock m•Wfi•I New Rf'ITIOdel Repair ltl'vlce. Rua. Fran Cuatomcablnel.s,etc. :~7i::w U~~o ' .... m 2ll11Jt1tjltl' '1tDIO tlel ttro .. ncion CUSTOM MASONRY NKWPOKTPAlNTING 6"~ ~_., PrteHt Chucll~SZQI St0-5149 CHAR RENOVATING · ' I ,H .... •• T--...&..... R t Ii blcrl atotw 1oo·1 Comm tlnd .. /Rnld I .... , "' 37411 Pool Dtcb and Patlot, ....................... .,... -,__ I wlll c<ltllrl "°"""'· I» r c , , l"r11est. IAWr1w1 •w Humt ''" S..ke AMw.n.t Serftc. M11onry Sport' Ttnnla CLEAN·UPS/LAWN Call Ja<'ll1 flO aQ14 1~r ll•y, nr ioll, I\ Local ret1 Call NOW ' ~GUif ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• ....................... c..,..1,. Courta. Llc.374087 Bob. Malnten.,,....Lnd1cp l:~NCftl'fJ!ltllKlt'K <10•1/"k llltW76 ovt' 1,1tor1m11ljobtt • ff•'!"bl11tln~ RN. rom JAYITlllCAU Profeulonal Staff. Com· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll.51·19M &C7·7078 Frtt Cit 6'2·t90'7 PLUMMNO m· HOUStc• ··MIM#!L ll•P•lra, nc· ~ UJ2 DB. PAJNTINU m I .. lnd .. tn•I r>u11t T ·-I puter Auilted System All Types Remodellna 6 ~ =-----' ' ...,,_ w <.:uitom hrlrll. 11tont, lntlt•t Neat. r1U1bJ., frtf', ••ft/fut Htrt oppu1J, Pf'WI na. rt The Headqlllrters Com· Repairs, top quality, 11 1.oncrtte/Brlck. alaba, Gardenln•. landlc1pln1. ..._ Mtu lt•I• Uav• rtf• block, eoncr..te, alurro tflfa, P•ve~O-hn ~ f745 monl 'ipray1n1 IO yrs panlt1. ll.51g. ynln area. Uc'd. ~·;111j,f.~~,:, bn;~1~· treo trlmmln1 Ir re r1toRJPT~\!'E1,~ ... r ('ont1(\ 1'1m"*> llMIJ tt41f1 Yr..-"'i 54911m r• A 1NT1 N<i . r u11t11m S.crtf....,Serrlc.. !:tp 1 ,~~e~:~.r A.ei* -•--a. Mr. Palombp. 982·8314 Sm • 11 2,6 .. Bobe t · moval, major t"lean up, "' , ""'"' ... H ....._ work ~ y,.. HP Miny ....................... ' .:-:r.~.~~;:w:::-....... PENDLETONCONST. t111 Ed wer:1/::· fn:,te•I 15.2-1348 tirAW~VmYo .. ~~·••: ........... ~:!'!! ................ IOfal ' rtfa I.le 403MI Skllltd lkaff for 111 S.r ,..._... GUAR.USEDREFR's Room additions' rt· 1111·9147 ' TREES • • • l>ON'TIUO!Ml'TY, Movlnl(1 Thr Starvlni Jkmded, In• ,.,,.., ""' tr'J/WJ> )Qt» Ttwllnd ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALESfrSERVICE modell,rr!.eest.839-6297 -· Topped/rf,moved,clean Clll':1'~47~7 Tlllltl4TYOHt.ONr.l.Y Collti1tStudmla Movln11 llialrhl1vn,!N6llll qu1ttrr• <:ompanlf'J TUTOIHHG Good cond. &U-7754 Bill ClfWMc Tit ur1111, I.awn l't!IOV. 7•1 ..... u wdwood....,.. W11 alt your tw111a., 11ll1n1J1 Co. hi .. l(rown. 1n.1url'd p.....a.t-1 !161 '""' Sptlllnf , read1nl, fur1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;.r-_ " .r,•v ' "--' I I ...,. .. _..._/"• ... ..,.... All type1 ol Carpentr7. ceramlr tile. lntteu em Fultumotn YARl> •j1·~iiowooo·,.;·,;x;R.~.. Pf'la '""·unty • u11 11ml' 1101111 _ .. rvlc·r ....................... --_,, ;u;erYW d1m,.n1a1 math LS Y"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pree est GRt . Comm/resld. rates All MAINT • Clt1nUp1 Cleaned•Wued 83176111 •Tlz.t 43& l,ln!111f' l'ATllH'<tVF.K~ ;.••••••::••••••;.••••••• CarlWnn_p-7»3 Driveways parkin& lot Guarantee ary AmericanTUe~860I Tree tr1mmin1. small ~n.Jjlme,832·4.:!!flS A ltt•P 11rof mJln iv1tl •• &41 A421 llnlqu,.f}f<ill(ll lnalllll .1tm urf'u •ll1n1 W,.._Ch•hl repairs, 01ealcoatln1 ~Ull Eva. -CWWC... ---lanjl1~~_J,6'5-~0 houH alttcr. a2 ll!f00 ADC MOVING , t:11prr IOyraup :iol 11111 ~lttrallCJn11fhp11ra ••••••••••••••••••••••• SU,~dAsph1lt. 631·4199 c..,..s.ntc. ....................... Dan's l.awnServlce H..... dy1,Ml-llVl'I prof. low ratH, quirk "9tter/I.,. ~~:u~~~ in your l.ttTh4'~t11.Mln' c · ••••••••••••••••••••••• $31 . 90 /WI( Preclalon liwn ma Int ••••••••••••••••••••••• "-die.,.. careful 1rrvtrr ~Z 0410 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1·a11 Surstww W1~ ASPHALTREPAJRlNG Shampoo. &tum clean Hot lunch. ~.M Chrtl· procr•m tor •II laWDJ Haul. cler~rr~~(' ....................... "MOVlN MAN" Nul p1tC'tws•tHtUrtl Shlttn,/i...... C'ltan111a,l..l.'1 StttM."11 Sealcoatill16Strlp1111 Color b~enen. wht Uan Pmchool. ~5'23 Eapen labor, low rates. ~~~v: ~ u Renov1tlnt1 Rolotllhn« 11 t 1teful, l'tJUrteoua Ir Fr.. 11t. H l-l 4Jt •:••••••••••••••••••••• c Al.I, J L1Jf) ~ Comm/mid. Free est. crpta 10 min. bleach. Ch 'Id C -C M free eat. I05017 ,uic aerv __ . Sprtnklert·l1wnsrlnupt1 <'help PIH•llW 13211 l'LASTfo'R PAT<..iHN<' CMI your hrlmt idd Yno ll ynur hr.J\114'" Llc.!397352 145-8181 ~:~1~r,~·c::•hri~~ bo'me,ln~~~4 yrs, ------s:.~1':.~~~obs ~·u~e:;::,3 *A·I MOYIMG• lnt/e~tOOyruxp, ~t~~l~Y·•;~',.~ !'.'r >*1nd 1>~~an 1 n1 ASPHALTREPAIRS chr ~ Guar. eUm pet xlntreft.~ GA ID IN ING C llMlKE646-l3'il -Top quillty Spet"lll Neat work Paul~2t77 IZlaJi2'1S2A 6 SEALCOATlNG odor. Crp( repair. l.S yrs Lie Child Care ,;ar So. WAHTID 1 ---LHtti.r S...W. care In handling 2S yrs ED'S PIAcrt'ERING l..W. ae 811' t·1au1f1~d Slncel937 Uc.282263 exp. Do work myself. Cout Plua.0.4yni,aU Mowln1. ~ging, rack Hauling•DumpJoba ••••••••••••••••••••••• u p Competitive ralea AllTypea Int url".xt ........,.. adt trt rull7 1n111 141·S900 495-5997 Refs. $31.0101 ahlfts. 557·2140 ine . sweeping. Free Ask for Randy Custom Leather Sandals No overtime 1»1~ 645 82.M Rttt ccoa ....................... ,_.. I« i... -eaUmates. 1144.0944 or 641~ The Sandalman makes -. o SPRINKLER RY.PAI RS . ~..,.._ti) ,_.,'9 "' lluH> you rcod lod11~ 's rlass1r.e<1 Ads• If not. ~ou'rt ma.&Sinll the best bargains in tu1A11 ' NoSteam/NoShampoo eo.trectar ~S737. HAULING &utit!nt has I tbebest foryour speclal p~...... Tirt4ofwllp .. u1 Yard1rad.1na.h.aubnclr ran1.;ubl~~uT~nh1 p StalnSpecalist Fut ••••••••••••••••••••••• --1 .. L need• CaU642 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tr_y~ater. t)~as cir an upa 8y hr IJldti.cr•u•.. o pt,a" .. dry. Frees. l»U82 Coo.struction·All types Prof. JipaneseGardener 1rge true... owul I --. -The Paper Han&er Prof ~ &s12 ~ n ... 1f*' ad l't l 20yrsexp. Ftteest. Lawn cuttln1. tree trim· rate, prompt. 759 1976 WANT ACTION ' install. Decorator' qual. Have something to aell' todayM2-W'7I Want Ads Call 642·S678 Uc. J334S89. MS-59'1l min weedin . S48-8375 Thank you, John. Cla.ssir~ Ads 642 5678 Freeest. Steve $4HZ8I Claas1hed ads do ii well C.:lau 1hed Nill l'AZ.Sll1'. ~:.~~~ ..... !~.~! ~~:.~~ ..... !~.~~ ~~.~ .. !~.~ ~.~~ .... !~~~ ~.~.~ ...... ~?~ r.~!'.'! ......... !?.~ ~~~ ..... !!?.! .............. 3140S..C......, 3176BigBearlaliecablnund 1617Westcli!r.N.B.Want S67S. Approx. 2265' In· HEED MONEY LOST· Sat. H.B area COVERGIRL Co mpanion Aidt ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mammoth Lakes con-fin1ocial Inst 70005.f UIECUTIYlSUm dus'l/OHice 18101 blk twht Lab Spr1J11tr homekmaker driver Huntlnrtoo Landman l 2 BR. 2 BA. CONDO On do'a2damin.964-5712. lit.floor. en\541·5032 Avail. June 15. l.50sq ft R~ondo Cr ''T" Hunt Upto90"'oAppra.15ed mix fem . no tags * OVfCAU. * aeelll l.tve-111 Relublr Br Condo 40 year aoe window oCfice. S39S All Sch 84221134 Valuel$l2Zld3rdT.D "JINX" REWARD 953-0'711 MCtVlSA fem Nooamkr 871·'7M . · · · • gollcoune.S500. LAKE TAHOE-motion Prestl&iouaOfficeSpace. services 1vaH Ask for Loansdealdtrect -minimum. Security & 49U700 picture producer"s lux. 3 window olfi~ avalla· L 99'1 8, 700 sq, ft. office + With Lender/Bkr/RE 673-1763 -----Preventative ' Streu ilHl_ many other amenities. 4 bdrm. ( 2 m 15 t er ble in full service Leeal isa, SJ3.. L warehouse. Irvine Ln-Lost . Cockatiel. Wed af· Reducing Massaee by ._., W-.d 7100 '400 Mo. 960-1347 So.tit L..,.. 318' bdrms) 3ba. 2 Ir& frplcs Suite in Newport Center. 600 sq ft Office Suite, dustnal ~ lnple net. 1714l4t4-l 70 t er n o on , C a m e o Doris "Intro" Speci1I ' SPACIOUS ••••••••••••••••••••••• fam rm.Iden w/con'. Avail.now!S.0-5640 ground noor $600/Mo Call 646-1044 or UlQUlre Doctor has Sl00,000 mu H1ghl1nds. reward 548--28,_1._7 __ _ 2 Br. Condo: Ocean view. vertiblt sleeping fa c. "PECTACULAA P1eific Plaza 234 E. 17th Maros1 Co 16753 Noyes to lend. Any legit reason 76().07~ SOOTHlNG MASSAGE 3 Br. 2 Ba. Apt. with 2 pool. $500. ) St CM See Bldg Mgr """7 ,,,_,, n.... C s•cur-" Mr •-M-car attached gange. 49U700 Across from beaut. · · · ~ . .,,"""°· ., ..... r. oop in· " "" "' ... LOST: Shorttlaired Tab-for Discriminating men W /D book.up, patio, Burnt Cedar Beach & nr HARBOR -=-645=-'·3=120~----~i~ Ken Smith. PO BOX ZlOS by blk tgrey 4 whl paws Call Peter:t94-48'71 frplc. Small pet/child Ocunlront 1 Br. garaee Hyatt Hotel & Cuino. VIEWS 15th. Ii Newport Blvd MES* Hunlin tmBeach9'2646 chest & stomach Male •• oll. For appt call apt. S650 Mo. Lil. last lndine Villa&e. Incl ca-Good tool• vehic~ traf· "' Mo.ty W..ttcl 5030 oeutered 7 yr old cat re· SPIRJTUAL TSLMGKT MZ-1603 +security.491U8Sl. ble TV with 24/hrs of 440ht4000~Ft. fie $ii05Mo.631·32AOAsk IMDUSTRAL ....................... ward851·9897TunlerO<"k READlNGS Duplex·lBr, 2Ba, newty .,... ... ,_zl ... d "Showtime" movies. PrntipP....... forCarolynAgent. PAD b....._c.,Mal Area. ioam.IOpm. Fully Ltc 'd . decorated, dbl gar, W /D or U.fw ' Md JtOO Also avail <;:hriscraft Loe..._ 711 W, 17tta. St. S40,obo will pay quaJi.fled IADIO PACI 492·7296 ~ 492-9034 1.815 .. _ .. ·Up. Avail now . ..,..,, pleasure, flShine. water ...._ .:..--w "LI TO -·cH C ..... "-........ _ c....a.a -non S2 100 iwr -Aftth s Camlno Real San ,..,.,.. _,., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ski boat. SlSOtdiy or • _,. -..,.. ~ -...... ..._ ~. ,... · ..-....,.. Lost. Reward for loc1t· · · mo.531-0921 S E AW I N D S8SO/wk. Fine ref's a YeryAnMtT~ Ground floor. pvt bath. 642-4463 plus bonus. Fully ine sm1ll shortwave 111f•ile...,m,__ ____ _ 2BDRMXTRALGE VII I "'GE muat. (714)760-UM. y·i, 'f 'tt:· at 31.S 3rd St. HB. l250 •1870.S&SO IQ. fl Units secured. Fin1ncing radio pack lost or left in I•--------• TadWl'~.HSE, Pool, jac, New 1L~bdrm l"•ury .................. ..._ .. 300 ( I 675-86 2 permo. avail for occupancy lite 1v1ilable, llxG benefits vicinity of Robinson's J-~ ... 9"' .... --_. .. sconllALTY June •One Z700 IQ ft 631-4600111r. rant. Fashion l.slandSat Junr ss.mE()ff Hullt.Harl>our1rea aBdrmdult afrompta ~~.p21bdrman:s l ••••••••••••••••-••••• COMMERCE SJ6.75ll Warehouse & 710 sq ft. Morti•ms. Trwt 13.Noquestions. l6118S L...... 84&~1 _, Movin1! Avoid deposits IJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ office a vail for 1m· D-~ 5035 7~19119 ,.... f ...,_ •-t & cut Uving expenses! p• .... y .& ....... 1 br, dishwuber, frplc, rom -+ poo .... en-Profeulonally since ~ CdM DehJ11e Suites, AC, mediate occupancy ........................ LOST: Yellow Parallttt, Girlfriends pool , laundry, lac. nia, waterfa!.ls, J:':ds! l'71 MAKES ampl ptg, ~pd 21155 •33• 35' per sq. ft. S.....,.Me.).Co.. band on right fool, ESCORTS Adults only. S360 ~u for 1~ h;•t· HOUSIMATES .._.EWPORT E.CstH .67s-ax> ::U~C~fice hrs Mon All types~ real est.ate Balboa Perun Pt .. Ans to H * ~OMct~* 847·0956 n1 pa . rom an 132-4134 " ExecuUve 2 Office Suile ru n . inveatmerltssmce UM9. Pete . 613-:857 09t I L.-3144 Diego Frwy dnve North D £ "'CH mode bid 0 F' F I C E t s-~ la Lost : M cat, Abymman. * 9 2-97 2 * "-on Beach lo McF1dden 2500' CONDO on lovely D.l;A ale, new m g, WarehouselStorage/ 800 ,..__, M1lelFemale Escort ••••••••••••••••••••••• then West.Oil McF. adden Greenbelt w/spac1ous .AffORDABLE 2nd noor view, util Incl. ft 200 f Lof z.d11k ruddy color tit. rust). MC VISA 0r,1.ngetrll ~-~ti 2 !,':,;,; to Seaw1nd Village. patio1 & sundeck, nr A Full secl'f!WiaJ "other ~.00~17th~~ BlvJ ) 642·2 17 I 545-06 II HR!~bc>arrdV7iz~J.1s. CdM a t', a awo:w es. ~ (714)893-5198. pool. S5H!IB3or.uA ........ support services anil C M 646-~ W . f N .. ........., Mo.6Mo.lease.Nopet.s. I "000 M~/F b _..........b 475ht3360~Ft. Blinderson Plaz.a Cen-.--'-'-·----bantr invest.oh r orG _pt Lost. C.M area.Mblk& COEDS-would love to 758-1128. oo.t ., .ue em S r. 2 1 hse * J•t•W Stnlct & terpointe area Irvine. 0 FF ICE I w a rehse / ay ront ome. 1vr wht Collie/Shep mix. party with )'OU. Call Sue ....................... nr S.Cst Plaza/Frwy. al.t.IM.t.l.....bc•i•id 851-1838 storage t,<XX> sqft Ap. well secured lst or 2nd Reward 631 .isos. or Kathy anytime ~leocll 3141 Laguna Beach Motor Inn. Spa. 122.S+sbue util. vninwn-.••11• -='-==------1 ro1. lSc.C.M.~~. T.0.AKt,~161. (213)474470 SZl-718'_~~----- ••••••••••••••••••••••• 985 No. Pacific Cout 641-4913 aft 6PM. * A.._, to Airport MIWPOIT CIMTB WIDOW has r -- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ACCOUMTIMG Irvine co. has 1mmed opening for uper'd person to handle A R related functions. & general Ole. dulles Gd benefits, salary D.O E Call: 7~-1.931 Apartment Manager 20 Unit.I with pool No pets Need m1ture couple. Rent & 1tr1 income negotiated. 54US63. Applian« imtaller & de U very persoo wanted 494-0506, 494-CX'il2. APTMAMAGB Re li1ble couple to manage apt complex. Newport Beach . fullllme. Bondable, refs 2 br bome +salary Call AnswerAd 11491 &42-4300, 2.4 brs ARTIST; Port rait Sculplor needs an assis tint.· Will train II good 111 drnring or pe10ting ol portraits. (full or p/Ume). 49MIZ2. • Huse l BR.S. Cit Hwy, I H•.Y. La&una B.eacb. FZ0.2S toshr3br -Lo., • itttm ... low Pruu~· iOlll full se"lce Rent! M.G.Glsqft SZ20 TD ' noooo~r NOO LOST ; Grey/Wht Fem ATUHTIS ,,....,,.._i.. .,.._t...1a--D J W,..tv "'"·"'-•vuuu to~...&.... EXE fll J Id mo. Z944 Randolph IH. . . a .... ' p. Cat ~tg-eyes. V1'c. M••••'-• qr;-d~ v"""1'y.JUl)l1e ·~.;o"'-a1 .y, ........,, n.uuoao pool, jac, nr So. Cout * AcctM •.......... o ces. nc a CM.0'75-5116 CREDIT'· No pnlty. "3rd .. s 't"""." REWARD _..,_ ... · r · ~" · av11lable. Low winter Plaza 6 OCC, $175. m recpt, sec, 1.ero11, under· Call Ht F.ileen 613-7311 " 2112 Harbor Blvd. CM I•-------• d4·7447;2a501-4444 ratea.494-521N. 642.w,MZ-nm 83 813 vounds*'&,tele•••n· ..... W..t.d 4600 ' ' 631...:114 7/daya24brs.645-3433 Ass..£1 l Br. SS50. 1 Br. Pen-Wort.ln~mialeZS.315 G1t' I ; .. to m:llli" ,_ .. ,"II tique decor. ccal. nn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '::.~• :~ ~t g:cty~~ L...;:OS;;;.;;..T=."" . .:...C-a-t.-b-lk-11-ta-n MYSTIC u.a"S"ol!Lf ELECTR"'lllECH thoia1t S750 Inc Ids lb,.. NB,·-• .. -. for '"mu11'c1'ans" to.....,..l1~v'e ""'IWPOIT-"CH 644-71111 Phoo>gr1pber looldn1 for . . i-. tortoise shell coat. wht. ~ •• " ~ .. .......... " ---'-"'"'-'-'==·------1 studlotorentinNewport ~iaed inlen!Sl rite while c 011 a r . An 5 t 0 FrttBodySbampoo Electroalu co 1n u~dlllies. Call 4 -1057 Nonsmoke. '250. 61H706 with. Hive piano & 2 Full service uec. of· .... EW-~-Beach. Call ?34-lm. !'!~_07res63t ralel are high. "Pal"b ... ". Nr. Jumlne 113 E. St. Andrews Pl Lacuna Beactl needs an w .. ys. Female pre{. 2500' coodo cats. Need practice rices from 1397. "On " '"""' ~·-vu ~ ... Santa Ana E1M uaembler with Mtw,......_. 316' on lovely 1reenbelt space. Into Blues, Coun· Call" exec. ~fices from Excellent Newport Middle aged M. non-Seasoned UJ.600 2nd TD •5thSt ,CDM. 7eo.3uo ADULT Parties f<W attr aolderln1 • E M u I ......... IL R .. N w L ... 05 I , ..... ·-.... n·a1 Cenler er--.. ·-'·land) smoke or drink, wants Lost : Bia .... Ma'-I ·b. b'" R ui---••••••••••••••••••••••• • spaclOUl ..--•IUD· try, OC•, ew ave. •~.nc .... ...,..r., ... olfic•apa=~~&-•t room. withekierly,fix~ y~1rs'm1~~.4more v1·c.N•""'wport"'M ... e•a. openm1nded couples semvu.-eq,~ Oceanfront for Winter deek,nrpoot557-7113or t ome jau. Wendy phone ans .. word pro-.. ..., "'"' ... .. ...,........., " .. /l'b I I 11 ed. manual dexterity Rentals. Fumiahed 6 640-6338. 631-2973 cessin&. Telex,qwip. u poa u re and pre-mcome penoo(s), C.M. · 6-20·81. Eves. 63l·S&U, Utude:~7~ua · Ability to UM b&s1f test unlum. Broller.615-4912. , ,,,_ '·Je .-.1. rm, -rt P•m rmmate to ihar• TIIEHEADQUARTERS atigk>ua addreu. Space Al,64.5·241681\. 7pm. 6 • / Days 546-2363. My Btst eqii1pmt auch as power ........., .., .... '"-" "' COMPANIES from 750 to 5000 IQ ft. 3 Br. or larger. Newpon •••c• Friend. Acupressun RenexoloCY meters would be a bJ1 NO FEE! Apt.' Condo loc. 11 you hate motell new Corido by beach in 714/151..otl81 Will accommodate Hei&htl aru by Sept Ptnn±/F ""'o-"u""n""'d'"".---H-o-u-n-d-C-ro-1-1 lhua&t' offerf'd by plllS rentall.YtllaRent.111. thislaforyou..Tennbl: NewportCher)'!$4&-214t graphic duien , 714/S94-882'7. Lott&,..._.. m 111 e d ma I e , lhrearet by appt 615-4112Broker Cl bse, atept to bch Reap fem non·1mkr new Appro11. 1100 ft, 4th nr, arcbltecture,account1n· LEASeo WANTED Loc1l :·.·•,••.••c•• .. •:•,•••5••1•00•• black /white. Salukl 5"·28171~1 Wt otrtt exctll pay ' ,All _..,.., 1175-2055, 5'8-2510 l350 DOCM twnlG-hle2M7nr bch 1275 waterf~ .. ~; NB. c. "'----.-& be f ...i.-9"WJ"Ull _.._ cy, laworotherbUllneu family led.Ing for 3 Br ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• crou female. Black /••-• .. n0e.1tsyw ... ':!..-eftl-YCWI related uu1 . Call home w/yard, &araie ln tan. Setter lab rroH • • -,,.,,_ vv"'" ..... 4100 Penon to abr bM or COil· PllMllAYROMT Willl1m eou. ExdUllve Npt Hts. 642-9213 IT'S A Female. Black Doble ••••••••••••••••••••••• Co IJ 2 1111 frocn Coaat LIYM •••••••••••••-•••••••• do w /recordill& u .ec. Office apace, Janitorial, Broker. puppy , 81 a ck It an Sc ..... & ttwy ' 8 rru from 405 l Slneles, 1"2 bedroom BIG BEAR Laketront Newport1La1un1 uea. parkln1. etc. Owner t , rjttlrtd/ GIRLI female Shephard crou ._.,...._ 7005 5 Fnwys apta 'townhouea. Motel, kltchenl, 2 peo-Mu1t be intelligent " 790-"40. Cote Realty ,.._.. • Male. Black flan Yellow ..................... .. FromS510 644-lJOO ele,po.1..-.cia1 bulneu oriented . ..:..::;W~.~ ..... ---~---& lnvHtmtnt •••o•••••••••••••••••• I ab P' em a I e Pleuecallfor1ppl. 1 Br. Kitchen furn wit.b .... 4200 114 155-Dt _.11 e"c •~t ~Iv 1 S.. t 1 • . 640-5777 ..... , .. " -...1..1& K e e 1 h ound . 0 re y IMPIOY COMmY Ptnomel Dept atove refri-6 booth 1 -.1 u ~ • .. • O-a L•1t11 IOOI 0•f ~.. 1hepbard pu""y. Male. w-MAA TELONIC BEl\KtlEY ' "~ . •••••••••••••••••••••••· 28r hie-Irv w/,,..,. ""' Preetl"'IOUI locallon. '"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ,.. -' -,.... -~ blk from oc:ean ' bay. IDO ISLE cbarm.lng 3 $280 mo. + ~ ulll. • = •••••••••tt•••••••••tt• Bia k/1llver844-~ For adults. Audition• 714-494·94Ul E.O.E '425 Mo. M 34Ui. St. bdrm, 2 bMJ\, playroom. 752·1900 dys. 551·58M ProfeuQlonaJll eoRvlron· UDOVIJ.A•t ICECREAMNEWPORT +i..111• t I Found: Sml black lonl Thun .. 1/2:5, it 1pm P'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ~l-~ Alt tor Carolyn luat remodtfed. -~on-en. rt::i~t• =~rcea ·~~~ small alreoadit.iontd ol· Xlnt beach k>c. muat D~...,... haired kitty wtwhlte nea Call 144).l)llfor delalla &en . t.blr rmtal. aw a._..y, lbr N.8 ....... 9200/mo. vlded. Secretarial nee •P•ot ideal for H · 1111. $18.~ complete. PA"'-SI ,. collar Bia1hard lln· .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!~ Sell idle ttem!l 642-56114 lBr, bayfront •carport, 1'1Mlll. + l11t 6: dep. July I. Mrvlce av.U..blt. Call ecutlve + aecrttary or !I3·541H INVBSIN di Ua HBM4·3ll07 ---------------~mo. NEWPORT I Br. 1 house No 111 m ok ~. TI m , c 1 r o 1 C h a n d I e r 1m1U bUllneaa. Oar11• PllMT SHOP Found: Blk Lab Mill, Old "''" -¥00MlH 615-lllllO from .ocea Niee fum. w..ow,m.@XM 7 l 4 11 u .S521 or • validated parklnft Tbrlvlna bullneu, CJ&., Slba., 13ou 11rayln1> female So. Versailles 1 Br condo, illcl. liaem. '7U175. Fem. to sir 2 br, 2 a,. lrv. 2 U /H2·HU. Ptttn evall. SllO mo. Incl. a low ovtrtlead, Call for 201nchea La1iana. 491-0842. or penthouse, reator lelle. Weekly llelltail N.B. condo w/ipa. UM+. L1Ddl111 Extt. Sult.1. utU. LIM Rtatty detail• 115,000. Cralf Sat., JINZ, 1881 ..;.4~· =----- '550/mo. •5133 DIOweekup. .f$7·0'795,97.9l!fmtl lflfO PCH. Sialte 200, '31·0211 9:10..m. Foiand black female cat, Oceanfront . 1hm.nln1 Aceat.m-11'10 Mir ,....,.,.....,. to •lllrt H.J!. ..... ... H 1 ...... Hll'· ,J. 1hort tall. Newport wood. f: 1 Bdrm NEWPORT OCEAN 2lr •ft 1111 o.ta .... PILllh otrl*, IOMOOOaq fi:.p;:.-;,, i:.:. H1i btlarea.145-1025. ~!..~:..~ pd. Yearly PRONTl.Aa..2-68r. ft, RD t ulllfftf7W · ft, 1.IOl Nft)lort Blvd, CallPtC«tOaltl-tm Fund long haired __..,_..:.m.P lr.17J.syJU',f11.7'7'7. Two rupoulbh.1-i:;·::::M::.:.·=..:;s:=------"-""-=·""-='-""""'=--z==.__ sc•&UlrTf Dach1hiand. Vic. Ed· Nwpt Hatt, 2 br, l ba, Dlx dc>b, 1 .._. fl'Oftl •••'°{.=. rtmal•• to IXICUl'IYI ........... 4nt .....Ul'1 1n1er •Graham, H.B. yard. aar. Adulta, no otelD, avail. Jw » ...,.. IACI( IAY ....................... ......... J!!! D'l·Ull. peta. $495/mo. + dep. lulr •• I br, 2 .... pr. c ... •lprof•16oHI SUITIS '°' ·~1_!.~Cllftlt lptC. o,.libzltf IOll . Found: white • cannel 'JJITustin.86alJ HO!/wk,l2:JJ)ll1·179 wom11 •6 dauallttr. la atrt-ratal. ....................... -Chafe-do1 . Pomona • LIDO Ille 1 br, 1 ba. 1 Br 2 W lrlMd home. Poetl Jacaul, ,...... H..,MI H0 .. 4Ml11,Pt· • • * Crank-Im~-Hamilton, Costa Meta. llatvra pmonooly, llSO Close to beadl, llOO. ttD11t, .JOI/. Private P\AIA MU~! R LarryW. Padfttt My c:~':.." fo~merly ....,t4_.'2_>ttt2........, ____ _ motomo.1Dcl. llll1 nek!J. A(I.. .... or ,.,.....,.... 6 btU.. New h1.u17 aftlC9 •r.ce 16la'l'ouralne ti Fond I 20 pound male mJDIOCIOQdodehaieJ mM wit• kltcllnllaun4ry ID lnlH'I bit• .. , WSM111Vtrdll.C.M. Im. o•ntd by. ttle old AIRDALEpuppy. Uaht br. 2~ ba. Near wata. UD01Sl.I r.:Utpa, a'7I 6 • eeeCefl l'MY trwy ac· You art U. w\nntr of ~~~Yih!t;*.tu£9R. the 1n color. 54Nut Af', llar1, eo....,. hm, ar. acludu ,!.•_f11•· ~ ..... ~.~· oow! C1ll UTMIPACI tw~·-'"' tlcktta m• 1------,--..__... ............................. 1 ....... -_•1,-='"--=11--111~'"-"="'---1-11-, =:::...-----111@!/Mt.PHJ17 ,.... •• ,._._ IUI"-...-. 770 14. ft.• Harbor va->IOU. ,_ ,.. I •. l ... -Yeuly. laltlOI,.., ... rtbc ...... Blvd. la CJI OU1... WOILD..woul ......... -......... ···Fl·····s··y"-:·~·o···,···· .......... a..r, ... or ... •/pt ..,...., ON COIOHADILMAR 14.ft.Ol'Jllll.,.urt. lOfALLl'lllAM ~ :.:.::.'iH~::G. . l!e!)r1*.lll~· ......... _........... DIJlmome. RH"""""'e ffH109 MOl81HOW F• llS Escort. Mo•ls l •• 1 .._ -~~ Nwpt M; 2 llr. IN. 2 • • * u••,AIC a.taJllOftler e.-100 '~!~111111J1'!1 ..., •• ,, L l -lrt1 --bib,,_ llllld., -P:r&Wf''t' ........ I f!ffJ!O SCI· ft. "tltc8" artl. """".-llllr nft r %72-IJ41 tu HIH ••tc.llff. a. .... ,... 17111 It .N•••• .Ort ,•ucll . c. ..... c..r ~nu. * * w .man!!!I. · ,__...,,_y .. n.w IMO Tic.kt&• are pod for ...._ llC VISAAttesgd ADULTUYM leaddrill& .... "'.:11 Y• ::; ;.;:,, " J ... ID prrfonuoee .._ z lclrm. 11a. ... ,.... __ ,..... two''" tJaatt <tl4 Oflll~ at1:oep.m..Sma11111 '4J.16n •--· ·-• • Ill. I••• .. ..,..... c.l•I••• bJ ul1l1S '111!!•1!!!!!!•••• rv•• ._, ... O. -+ ___..._.... .... -.. ftllil)le -aU t•lllWI olnel, ~-m. I'" OUTCAU.OllLY llCW1tt ---,.... WomlMMOUI -1..:·~~r;uJQ..,.,~==---Liol&: Panirl"OI._. VISA MC S.C--J17 ••••MHllll 1111"1•" IOYM.Ll'mlAN Ill&...,_, ~o ... fft= bl bluk pllJtk C. ... r •fJl.11•• ....... ,.-.... , .... , LAllMAllACN ..-..,. Ttrrit7Umlllt W1 1121 Ntwport 8udl/lnlM1"!!••••••• C'8 .., i-. lfl. ,..... ....... t4 ........... , ......... _.. a r • a • L A I O 1 r= .... , ......... ,WI&. ,. ~ ,_...,.,..,. 44nw ....... WTD llWAIDI Tll·ffll • •·~ F:t;; ;:"• o.~Clllli clalllftld ·--··••••• .... -•lll _... •-' ....,llr~· ..... _.---..-1 a c o a Ts Get some experience to go with your d •. Mott employert demand tome experltnct tlong with your diploma. Whtrt can you get It? Many high school grldullts 1rt getting velutblt eldll training In the Ntrfl -much of ft cMllan r911ttd. Which ,,,..,. they ctn UM tht lklllt thty've ltamtd t ll thllf IMI. AlonG with tapet'i.nca. you'll be ..i1 peld Wh11t lwnlng, you II wn fTIOt9 than PllO a month lbefott dedUC110nt), You'll 1110 git good l'Mdlcal and dtntel banlfltl. Educational e>pC)Or1unlll•. And you II _,,up to 30 dtyl' VIQtlon ayttltl. S.W your country a you MM yourwlf CMI MtM 140-lfH S.. ,,_ 541-4761 LepM ... 76Nlll .............. ,.,... s..-Clfh•-llMJH ~· ............ -.. • s ~..._ ~ IWJ ........ -. New.port aeu~ •=•_... ~-=-~ OLii .... ...,..., fieau ~ ,.. r:: .Ill ....... lulltHO CVtlH •• ............. •ODILUfG ·••uy .... --...... Olllfllf.... ,_ ----" I • .. L __ ,-.:........ -I --'~U!IL.-. """" • ;-_,!! •· .................. a1:•~_.._,.. '•. · '"·,.;, 11•11• __ ,_ -........ ..., .... ,_ • ••LJQU#tAW .,_ Ml& It .. ,.llr+t•• 1l1t•M •µalll•S 0 •• .,.,,_. ... ,Tww• -M UD. Qmmt).. ~p111 W .. Ill Clllllllit-0 1*t,:. ... ~ ,.. ~· ftlBe •0-~ •*a.·-· WutM ... --WlllMI ---•• • _•ii•. ;;;;::;;!--------------~ , .. \ I .. ~ • I .. .. .~ SUMMER GYMNASTICS SCHOOL Coit• M111 High School Glrt'1 Gym Mon., Tues., Wed., Thur. 1..C:JO PM Starting June 29 -July 24 Clllldr°"t ·IS C•ll 842-8092 K.U1r hrwtlcll -lnltrudOf SUllllHG &l l 0 1 OllA"l<.I COUNIV l'I Co&!& Ml~A Annt1's Dt1y School & Nursery R-9sttrROWforftl lf~t1111nW~ • ~ ... """"" . 0.. Ca<• .._ l ..• ~;:~ ;~.·::~~~ ! C'1,.:~ P•o • P1<119ouno HOURS: •:JO to 6:00 E3>,\i~~ 2110 THURIN •COSTA MESA ,U'I, &t-n a.,. Vld0f1• .... ' ~ Schools and Instruction ANNOUNCING CLIBERTY CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OPENING THIS FALL KINDERGARTEN and GRADES 1·6 ·~~l'ID '1MMlll • Cl4AAACTWI -. ....,_,_""° W OMlfO •4'WtTI W IHI IU.( lljll>4(JI -IHI DCVT'OI ~~L...l\,.""''l1• • ='° ~!::' IDUCATIOll • fTtOoO ""°'° ~ o -ACAOOllC ITAHOAIUJI o ODIOHC:O '<>'I AV(l\AG( lljll MO¥I AVlAAOl ITUO(ljf5 • DOOJ.IJjT -,AQJnll • '' flllOTIC Dl""Alll Another ministry of LIBERTY BAPTIST CHURCH 5108 Bonita C1nron "°•d Irvine, CA 92715 JERRY' IUNCH, Plltot·Founder CALL 851 ·9144 .. This varftty of fiM schools could lt1t1 ~t you to a new lomot row YOUR FUTURE IS IN YOUR HANDS Lake Forest Beauty College proudly announces its Summer Progr111 for men and women who are highly motivated and seek a ve r y interesting. high salaned career. We offer the most presti gious training in the field of cosmetology. Training by experts in the "Pivot Point '' ml'lhod of hair design Lake Forest Beauty College "U.KE FOREST rt.AZA" Lab Foriut Drive at RodcfWd El Toro 951-8883 ros1S 1W'• ..., YOU • oe' 1\\.\.S wmt to....-.t G\-.~S ~\. ~ SounaH CAL.IFOIMIA '""1s~,.otiSS\ COUIGE OF MB>ICAL &: DIMTAL c .... , 'If -.l('t • In seven months or less. you can make a REAL DIFFERENCE WITH YOUR LIFE on one ot these much nee<le<l careers • lolEOtCAI. llSSISTINO fCMAI "<••_.., ___ _ • l)(Nl Al. ASSISTlHO lf!OA) ~-.., (;6111 ._., ol Oontlf r. .... _., • otlfl Al. v.BOAAfOAY l(CHNICIAH • MEDICAL SEC'V1NIY .. • E ME llOVICY WEDICAI. TECMNCWI tEWT 1Aj ~-.., °"" ~ ol-1 • lolEDICAl AECfJ''TlONISl • "°51'il Al. UNIT SECl\E l AA V • M£1)4C!AI. f AOf(I OfflC( A CAllB OF CA.Uffi llHlhs tllt red clffww• for Ma ..t w .... of ALL A.HS! Accredited Member of NATTS Eligible tnst1tut1on under the basic educallonal opportunity grants and guaranteed student loan program. f« fre. i-ct.rw. ul 17 I 4J 635·3450 111, ao ..__ ll. - Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. June 23, 1981 , ........ Dr rr chl,AM1•l1, t• 11114 ... c .... ·,,,aw ............ ,.._ Chik:lren' allet --·tre Dorothy Jo Dance Studio Ull L c•. Hwy. c.t DweltyJeAmls 24 II L CeUfwy. c.t 673-1420 STUDENT IMPROVEMENT CENTER SUMMER SCHOOL June 15 -Jury 10 DEVELOPMENTAL PROGRAMS IN: • REAO!NGIPHONICS •SPELLING •GRAMMAR •MATH •ALGEBRA Call Today! 642-9088 WORD PROCESSING SCHOOL Learn How to use Wang, IBM OS6, D1splaywnter Coll (714) 556-8604 C11•115M Tr'lililr. P1...t AssistJnce Dty1 • EYHiftcjs • Salwdcrys EAIM MOH MOHEY Become a Word Processing Specialist Excellent Career Opportunities WORD PROCESSI NG ANO INFORMATION SYSTEMS 2232 S.E. Brl11ol-Su1t1 205. Santa Ma. Ca 92707 ._..,.( __ ...,_,_~ .... - r • BALLET • TAP • JAZZ • TRIM TO RHYTHM • CHILDREN • TEENS • ADULTS ......... .-.... .. ca .... , r.~~ ..... !.!.~~ ..... ~~ ..... !!.~ CUU/TYPIST M!1~,b~~~H!efi!ble SOW pm, rompondenrt tranaportallon, " &ood 6 llte till.Ga. Someotf1re driv&DI r ecord Be exp. SUO/br Office hrs fam1llar with Harbor I · s p m • M o o · r r 1 area • willlnC to learn 6'5-2937. newspaper bu11nu1 Crom 1round up Call Rochelle rt .... ~ ......... ~--C&.mTYPIST Advanced Htallh Cenler In Newport Beach has an lmmed. opening for an lndlv. to handle gen. clerical dubes ui their Alcohol Pro&rem Dept Must be organized. de tail·oriented &i type SO·&Owpm. Ideal can· didate will be penooa· ble, have gd hum1n re· latlons sltllls & be able to work well in a team ef· fort Hra. IOAM to 7PM. Excell. fringe beoef1t.s p1ckage. For interview call Alice Tompkins, 714-97S·O'IOO. EOE M/F COU.ICTOI FULL TIME Exp'd preferred. hours flexible H.B. area. Call for apj)I. S..7260 COMM ERCIAL5. stunts. films, models. extras SCAS nttds new faces 957·0282. Comparuon 1A1des F /lime and P 1t1me work avail. now as aide:; lo disabled persons Duties incl persona l care. housecleaning & dri v ing. Some uve·m posi lions avail. Hrs nex1bte. Please call Mary, at 898·9S71 I COM,AMOHAIDE Mah1r•, for •lderfy lody. u...a WMcts. ,.,.. 541-3611 COOK,mMf 10AM·2PM t M area 64~·041L COOKS Day & rverungs , f time ~avy dlllller exp App ly tt1 person, The Jolly Roger. 400$ Coast llw). La~a~ac!t_ COOK'S Haret Airline catenng, CO!lta Mesa area Over 18 Vahd Caur drivers h(' Call Marvin Davis lOa !!'·§l>m. ~ 1001 Cosmeties ROBINSONS Is 1nterview1nR for Cosmetic Sates Expenenc~ rt-quired. xlnt opportunity with good co. benefits DRY CU>'taS Counter ' Auembler, good wages. Exp pre ferrtd. fo'ltitM. Mr Best Cleanera, rtS.3306. DIYCLIMBS Counter person. will train . Call after l0:30am Ask for Laura MZ·MM. Escrow SIC 'Y /llCEPT With some escrow ex perieoce for busy office m beach atta. Startltag salary $90 0 Call Maraaret or Linda 49'·7S3=1, ____ _ lSCIOW ,osrTIOH Immediate operung for experienrtd person Coast C1t1es Escrow ~uoa Beach 494·97~ flOMTOfRCE New ofCiCt' creates op- Portun1ty, bu1e slulls required, compaCJ) benefits Collta Meu 642·Ji90_. __ FRONT OfffCE ASSISTANT in pro· gress1ve doctors office. Chiropracti(' offi ce. Muat type, work well with people and eager to learn. Lake Forest area. Call 115!·9629 __ F/TCOOK Home style cookmg for small retirement fa('1u ty Flex hrs Satar} based o_n ~~94-9458 FULL TIME PtrlME Answering Service. No expr nee Minimum typing requirements. Call 631-0140. EOE. _ _ FURNTTIJRE FINISHERS Ex penence bel pf it I Partt1me fultllme Good Pa.r S49-~~J~(() __ Gate Guard PT semi· retired or retired. hrs 7 JOa m-5pm 2 wk s mc;>nth in H.B. 84'!:&511. GEMEUI. OFFICE Experience helpful. good typing ability. pro- f 1c 1enc y with figures. 10 key by louch Op portumty for advance- ment. Excellent com pan y benefll.5. Inform at office. C.M. Call Millie after9am atM.5-~ Apply lOam 12 noon at 2 GEMHAL OFFICE Fashion Island, NeY> port T y pi n g 1 Cu st o fl) e r Beach service. pur('bastng exp Cou......,. H ... • helpful for rut paced of· "'""' .....-hce in Medical field Mon ·Fr i Super Sala r y negot1ablr Sandwlc~~ benefits Call 536-7587 COUR I ER Oran1ee IOam·noon Coast Savings has P T General opening Gd dnvine re hcftiaa Proc:IKt r~·d. A~~elr"~~~hl;~~ Lg successful CO O'"'TIS 7S4·1801. 1700 Adams. btfl ('ampgrounds. n~s CM EOE j phone reps, no selling --·.-Full & parH1me. plush Credit A C ofc. 'A<'Ork •'lnite ROBINSONS people Call Mrs. R~ '714, 8~_1!lZ - We are inten 1c-w111~ f11r Credit c a.,h1('r So me o.pc•rtl'111·c rl· quired. should know 10.key adding marhine Xlnl co. bcn{•Cits. liberal discount' r lune po~· lion. General 811\mess SUMMER OR CAREER $1000/MO Secretariat, eterical, marketing, &other pos1· lions Must h ave lranspo & neal ap- pearance Call IOam· Apply 10am·l2 noon at 2 Jpm (7 141847-8132 or tltl y....._ A llw..._ .._.. Fashion Island. Newport 1714)847·2422._ __ __ ~W ~~ ,,.11to!P<--~ D -h ~· GEHEUl.OfFICE ' _ , -962·5440---------1 Fnr C1rculat1on Dept H~lpW.t.ct 7100 H.ipW.e.d •• 1 •• 1.~ ~!.~~ ..... !!.~ ~.~~ ..... !!.~ ~'!'.~~ ..... !!.~~ ~.~~ ..... ?!.~~ w.a..w........... 7100 DElJ eOdutdnooearrMaOCgaz1Ane1rlpocoralt • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Http w ..+eel 71 ' .....,, JW"U .a.ss .. •Lll AUTOMOTIVE Banking in IOOllCm• ............................................. Ca reer m in ded 1n Hours 9-5. Call Myrt, A g UNLIMITED NOTE CLERK Bink g Banking Full Charge Bkkpr. im· d1v1dual Min 3 yrs pre S40.4222 For boat company OP POR'""'"TJl:'C.' An opening ewts in our MEW ACCOUMTS IE r~ medi1le 0 ... 0tnd for c~~ Clerical vious expenence Ful & Some exp pref Apl>lY 'vm Lo> I · offi o...... • 1-1--... .._E "IJU uun9 r~ • "'~-r n~ 17Sl.8 rt t T r Au to leasing company rvme ce. rn:VIOUS 11:1" !W8"1••H• mature experienced ""''"' .,.,._.. · Loollillllfor pa · ime op pay or !719-936!. needs SELF' STARTER experienCt'lnworkingin Current po11lUon aveila· JOI MAllET (Minimum 5 yrs) ruu 1--------1 s--~-u top people Call bef 4 GEHEIALOFACE Experience, aood typist. for Investment Banlung Firm, lovely N B. of· fl('es . congenial cow· orker5, will train on word processing eqoip- ment Starting salary up to $1200/mo. Position available immed. For appt. call Marilyn Celley 9SS.2m> ASSIMIUIS must have own car the DQW dept or a bank ble in the Newport charge bookkeeper in c•ftllr9t Variety of temporary as-pm for inlt'rview appt, Small solenoid mrg has 49'·9'34orm~ preferred. but will ac· Beach ore. e IDOi. ex-Tfil£1ftl1Mrr loanbroterageco.locat· IWnlUW signments avail. Work ask for Danielle. unmediate openmg for cept applicants w1lb perlence; new accts.. I~ ed Fubion Island area. when you want, lop pay, 631-4404. reliable Flume person A.UTOIOUTI heavy clerical ba('k· Ir• Keogb ptt("d. Typ-Newport BalboaSavinp Accuracy ' versatility u TOTEM noree. We need· to work in prec1S1on Deliver Dally Pilot 7 gr o on d . Good tnl 40-4Swpm. Savings islffkin&imlture,welJ In dealing with 111 Gen.Ore. Typists mechanical assembly &. d ays per week In mathmaUcal skills and po1itions also avail. In groomed indiv. who lov· aspecta c:J record keep-Acctg. -Recepts. tea ting. Exper helpful. Newport Beach area. the ability to calculate new Lag\1\1 Hilla ofc. es working with people bl&. C1ll KatieM0-9350 File Clerk$ Sec'ys. Alto. opening for tem· HOURS: interest using a ~n key Contact: lo train in our Newport MARKETS Dela F.ntry~rs. Porlry person for the Monday lhru Friday addina machine needed. John Lawi Beach ofc. ExCt'U oppty lrv~~~~~&med. For 2nd• 3rd Shifts File Clerk$ Stenos summerlodo11mpleas-J:30PMtoS::llPM Experience with OMV 71~ for atable, responsible We promote lo manage-• aembly and machine SaturdayandSunday documentation pre· L.A.F9BtAL penoo to learn ' de-openln& for uper'd. ment6superviaionfrom shopwork.Callforappl. S:OOAMto7:00AM ferred but will train. SAYMS velop in a growing u-peraoo to ha.ndle AIR, within. r 6(2.8514,S.R.Engineer Eamin&s approx. $400 Neat and accurate. IOE M/F aocialion.Fullinsurance related functions ,' WANTA CAREER? In loc. per monlh. Apply io Light Typing. Salary . . . .. _ efl•• •· pa1·d ca ...... r general c:Jc. dutlet. Gd. C<11t.a Mesa person at the Dally S800to197Sdependingon ,~p?..re .. l Pis• Call· ·~.... benefit.a, salary D.0.E. 111De1Mar ASSEMBLERS. We wlll p w Ba C experience. 1'hia posi· ...-· · · C11l: 75'-1931 631·9'21 trail\. Apply ... ~A 63M . M~~.330 · y, osta tloo offers excellent Ban-lnhtua Ma(7~i• IOOll9•F/C M1cGre1or Yac • ...,, 1 1 Equal()ppl. Emplyr benefits and promo· IWUI HEWPOIT..UOA For real ellate firm in Placeotl1, Coeta Meta tionll opport&.mitles. If Permanent, Put Time IAIYSITT9 inlereated please call Potltion availlble In our SA¥1M •SILOAM Lapna Beach. Ex· L11ama8e1ch $923.1 E I. b k · ,, •o E penence on IBM 5110 ASSB••s nc is a pea an.. personnel between hm So. Co11tPlulofc. Will ""' · · ~eferred. Excellent Huntln&toftBeach Mature wom1n. Own and Spm Monday-triln. Pl ......... -•-ct: _ .. ,..., Loe. Mission Viejo co. M lrvtn ho ~--·.. neflta. Sllary opeo. -- ~VI! Jr>I< Npt Bcb 556-IS2C F.qual Opp Emplyr M /F DENT AL ASSIST ANT X·Ray exp Ile( Pd vac. & holidays 4/dys 1M Th.}.546-m>. DIHTAL Auw.tlda Short hours. benerils. GEHEIAL OfflCI _ xlnt salary for qualified Young penon wtrronl person. Send mumt to J>(c appear. wanted for Box fl 764 C/0 Daily 1ntern'l finn in H.B. F tr Pilot P.O. BOX lS60 CM recept. & gen'l office CA 92626. duties. Typing 4Swpm. DENTAL Au is tan l. ...-963-.-..-2000~..__ ___ _ p/llme for Ortho ofc. GENERAL OFFICE· Dental exp. needed-not Jewels By Joseph look· necessarily Ortho ·up. Ina for reliable person RDA. M2·5WT Im med. S4().9086 needs Assemblers w/2 1 2r3ansd. Y ~ e .. ~· Friday. US-2SCMld, ut. Kathy Arnbw'l•Y lllPl/TYPIST CaU Fay at Tumer Ju. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I d . ays ...... r...,.u. 1311 or 1319 to iscus1 ~ roe Public Ac:cowttant'a --------I ·1 p·1 "" yrs. up. Candi •tH ISl·tsfi. backcl'Olmd. c1111:1mi11 soc: .• tN-1111 Mon lhru CHUMOMTOI Clerical .... II ' I • :~r~t~~e t.·e;::r,~~ IAIYSmll CALIF FIRm' BANK • ,..__ :~·la KB. lllllt be ex-Fli. * * * ~~=r J:"!:t ~=~= l,.IC~/ •••••• " """atin awaraoce6de· needed, my bome. Part EOEm/f/h fmll 53Hlel,Ra531-37D -r ..... ._.., • • "" ~ d --t r"9UIRL BradBnm~ completecareolsirlage s--.a.•y ~ -dable. Won is In Ufe time, mmt be e.,.. .... a· ~&· ~ 1ft1· II 13 --..a bo>7' "'•l 11e 11 --·-e fi Id Sal S e ruPPort medical eler· ble. Bantm1 elST~ric.:Dr. 10 t~~b~ Ar· r::~:: P!!~'!ir~hool· 1e( !d~=cedportH::~~~ • 18 8S Upervisor ,. troolu. Gd. benefit•. 751-1.1154 mim eo.tall•,Cataa cuntetnma.hllttme. You are tbt wtnntr ol ~m ·~.or ac • lmmed. openin& for 1n -., Only re1pon1 lble BABYSrrrERforSmo. tu.LU Equ~()pport1111ly ()pptyfcliacfvanettnelll two free tlcketa <114 do 11undry, oversee lndiv . to perform • ~1m1tedopenin11sJ\111l11ble1otht'Ontnitt . =c:,=~o:s~~ okl.&irl.cb5.willaccepl ruunme c.~ BrM'ERWAYFOODS value)toU. 1oclal Ir srhcrol I t'· 1ener1I r ft'e p ·. <.:out atea, ror selrmOtl\lltt'd, r11rcer . ply. Call: Mn ParelU, Uve·lnblkpr.G14>2all P011t.ioe aYlilablein our N~.MS-aMC WOllAMMOUS ~~~E~~t 8:l tlonl1t/aerret1ri1l • ~ielndtedSa lndmdual who ran work with • , -SPll. Newport !It.Ith office. .~. 1oy.a.• •-.a.i.a ,...., du t I e 1 in t be Ir e · les Pt"Ople Tr111n. moth111t· and • Sil·-Bab7altter needed. Eitperl•~ preferred. BaakJal n-~~·ror _ ___. nre In OraateCo. OOI' PlychoJocieal Practkt .• get res ult~ Sl11t1on wa11on ur \an !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! p,..fer ~ble, de· Coatatt: •r...-TlMI ~retail .. a_,,..portlo1 , .. ood• HOISllMOW •1.m-010. Ad pd for by No dictation required .• necessary. E11cept100lll ennmas. plu:i JOb • AUTOllOTIV! pndable aitl. 17+, for R.alpllKnllnp ..,.,,., It.oft. Soee experteMe June•tJnJuly l Emp!onr. Must have 1 pleHln& • related 1*"1.1fit1 ll\11ll11blt for tht n 1thl •• : DPlll•IC• 'l'\lft •Thurs ct..11 alld e..tw Looi Newport Beacb Con ~r Cburr b Steretary penoaallty, be a Mlf. people. If you cun pn>dun· m ull!!, not I AUTOCASH99 occuaioftll evealnJ•. Savlnp • lom 11 aetll· D!'!fet'ftCl.m.ta. Ticket: •i:.= for needed"'_!:lpm, Mon· starwr, have ed. com· • ~usl talk uhout ll. cull · !H>0·0694 for ·· I Exrellellt wortin& COii• UMU2 or 541·4tl2. c11 ~l 1•1 a stlf·motlvated 8 0 0 K K £ E PI N G Junt m Uet Tbun. up. 1*tUltf. mllllcat.lolll atllla 6 be • interview A~k for .\tr l'h11n('t f 'clttiona6frtnlebenellts Gre1t p1rtUrnuummer ..---unetary wtatr9n1 P /tlme. Appl7 at: i ta:OOp.-......... .,be !/br.MIGI. dtpeadable. llllllt type 11 la'"lt1..aln1 retirement Jobi I I rnE911 ttcretarlll atllla, tho Crowa BantWar9.' 10at --u .,._ Id aJ • ::a .. 'IJ rlmllRL WlltdffPla claimed byollln1 ..... wvwpm. • CID· T .... ,., : plan. 40 bourl per we8. IANDS C..:::1•-:".:!::':, ~Tr't':! f:BU.. < u). MHm.mm, CLmCAL didate will have at ltut • JPIS1u11 • I ••tart commenturate ~"'!'P -oatral ..-C7 IMtda M:e ~· Z.ettl. • With •t leut 1 year experienre ~ wpm :9 =a~"perienu. C1ll for Al ZM0:.:::'7 :'as~t~a=: ' CA.a:-~ fut,accurw,..._for l'of lnten*r ~rttf!' • NI.ht shift. Excellent company. btnefiu· .•• ~ OccailaM ..... =_.., run 1u .... bmeftta I Dally Piiot : .~ c I a I c ! "'::.':: 1111. ofc. d"''"· Gd. Tom .... illl, "'~ Apply t·SPM . Monday thni FridtY. N · 'I.._._ -6 u I , 11l1r1 6 paid co. -........ ,,,.,,._ • otedect fot Hat UJKI• PIN CllWI' ...... • • clHSlf ifds ramW.r db PllT "'°' bta•flt•. Call: Sally. EOI .,, • ~c..t ' C tainmftt Ac*t opn· Pit caO: ortfor c:e11. llp. pnf"ll. Tem· ...... e Nit e ,, "' " 11'1 In Orant• Co. Ma.Dmlfl'utlla I W ,. .. 11 porar1 poa. wltl• •-..... d "" • -w ~·--• /1~H.111,.•M1• llT·P Your frlutlt ad C7M).... • you.'-9 ~f/1-wm. .,..pr vvYtn rtl lne -. f '1U~t ''""·1"\'1 \40•1100 .,_ 1°" oetd .. ,_rt. ..._., .. cluaifted MIWPOITIMIOA I '42·5671 A'*: p_,u"!l• ilrpil ~ rt1d Claulfitd 1d1 tvtrf . · COila Mell, CA • ..,.. or,..,..,., t11111 ••n thJ II•" IA..-ILOAM forqukk Plic!tdtAft-.• C.•. th llttl• 1d1 11 day. If 10ll hue e Equal OppOrtunity Employer • •• 81nia DlrectorY H••t"•I to stll. 1111 ..... A,... I CHIUlleos. 11M fua.t caraw tn tnt CSQllftM re11larl1. IOmllhla1 for tatt, rt· • I II Clilelfta4 to IOIYt ftlr'l Wl ,_ lllft ftll &Q& A . Wfft. .. a o.llJ Pilot AM t .. J fl•• wllat Hit tMm futllld blH• ............. . -•di•. ·-111'-I .-ClwlllodAL•-...... loildol.... -"'1.<1111-'1 I (;It Orange Cou1 DAIL V PILOT/Tuesday, June 23. 1981 ~~~ ••••• ?!~ ~.~~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... ?! •. M.&..W 7100HelpW..W 7100Afp'•c• IOIO ·~ ..... . ............................................ . -· ltctpln,,... Sale1/Kauaeawnt, pit Melp W_.... 11-Http W..... 71M w.-. 7100 Http W..t.4 7100 AUtactlve femaJt 20 to or tit, no eip. We traln. SICllTA.IY ••••••••••••••••••••••• Telephone IDltrVltWI OlabwaJW nao. Wuhtr Stcretary 1ccurate rk from vour home and Oryti>tz50botb 0 •••••••••uu••••n•• ••••••••• .... •••••••••• ••••••••• .............. •0 ••••••0 "'"0 ••••• ZS. Pleuant Newport o(. He1IU1, Nutritional ff ltc:ap:l11•1t lypbt f0t letaJ work. 30 WO ' . •5141 br wk Mr. Myera, Eitceptlonal e>pportllfti __ _, ___ _ UOUOIC..-OITll8 ftc.e. 000.85.!JOOO wel&ht control Co Grtlntll Flail tlme. 11 RECEPTICMST , fl'Ollt _54_1_-4_19_1_. ----utUIN. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I or will ~~::;.;i.;•~ Cb1lr aide ROA, Eit otrlce appearance, for SALES Costa 11.. Mir oeeds lntelll1eot. mature pert00 for pmlliiaa with varied dutJ" Heavy pbooe, typlni S/H IWlt reqd PW.I tline penna· nent po1lt1on Xlnt u lary t bentfltt Alk for Sally. e.o. 10 'r PreaUie company. Kenmore •l•t dryer. t i&h comm1uion f.1e11I wblte, 1.-d • months, OmcE Ht• Jlti Ip penoo; • W 00 St . ::d:!P d~Y 1 .J::. gr a n Se C 0 11 0 l 'I 011t1lde uluperson Ltve In, Newport Beach CM Top pay • beMfit.I for evelopers/Contrac· needed for a amaJI copy NatloDll !d11catloo on wa1.er He.Ip care for ~/s.octa.t to kUl NB MUM3 r ·;itelypiq ~ 1bop. Sharp, out1oin1. Ct.rp , one ol Orance lovely 1..tu .... ., na••--t. .,._ N • ' or 1 vancemcm. App Y entbusl11llc helpful C . la d ..,., _, r-uco NI c.i<Pf'. ewpon p•CIA.GilRS In person Hamilton Call n • ., .. y 7 ............. ounty • rcesl an Own room. b1th. tv. Liquor • Dell. ~ W ,. S h Tarnutier Coast. 2915 ......... _. ----llQOlt rapidly 1rowlns must speak Ena.liab and Coaat Hwy, NB. s.&-2112 Fem ale, 3.40/ r lo Redhill Ave. Ste f-~. ~Jesperson-laborttory cocnpanlea. hH some drive our car Rtfs ~. LO• ... -a start Ment raises. ~37 Cotti Mtsa.M'7·'1115l 101lrumeot1 Trtvel trv.ly cattllent clerical S1lo-n ,."~ MoorovlaAve N.B. -Southern C1llfornl1 em p Io y me o t op· .... 675-~ Huntington Savings ff ~--IJliiijljljwllliiilillijjji11111f R EC I:: PT I 0 ~ l S Tli s 1 1 a r y 1 t 1 r t portunlUes for quail/led --Co---. -Loan is now accepting P/TIMllVIMMGS TYPlST, uper d. fu Sl000-$1.200/mo. + u appll"•n•·. wi"th Rood Housekeeper/ mpanion f .... .,,..1tion time Newport Center G 1 • ~ L oul mum es or """ ..-Ca •11•1 '·· . penaet. rttt awortun typi111 akilll. who want ave an or · o( Loan Officer. Pleue ~644-2507 t y . Q B I C o r p 'A"•1,1 .. olan ••cit1'na _m.=.,,;2000-=--·---d t PO Bo l!-. Y_.Ctrriln R ti ·sl/T plst "'~ .. ..A • sen o. x QOH, Ad 1 llb ~ .. -t d' ., ccep on1 y . (714)54o.100. and )'n1mk oraamu. HOUSEKEEPER. Live Huntington8eacb92647_ ull .w ....... an 111 .. front ofc.,'J'ues.Sat.Pvt. lion out. S days. Sunday. • . ..ulftt attractive pe~alllles, counlry club. 644-5t04 Monday otr. Eng. pre--~ who enjoy worlnng with We have outstanding sal1.nea and employei! benefits. For i mmediate 1n terview appointment call Alicia Cbave 1 Penonnel Dept 1714)~7360 NATillAL EDl:ATION COllWTION 4400Campm Onve Newport Beach. CA rerred, Spani!b OK. Ref Exp. lmmed. hire. App-10·15 ydr old youths required. Lido Isle. ly Angie. San Clemente eveoing1 9·6PM. Call 673-7677,ff1J..j87L__ lnn. 125 F.aplandlan,San 842 4321, ext 343, HSKPR.LJVE tN Clemente. behvffn 2PM to SPM, s days, Eng. s~g. non ~-------... ~·~sk!!!!r~or!!O!!!!!lana~. ~· ~~~ s m It r 2 c hildren. MAIMT'IMAHCE r"" Sal.open Anaheim Are you a jack of all Hills. Refs. \71~~ trades? Interested m a IMMIDIATB.Y full time position' We need a service person lo P/TIMl....-,S do minor repairs for io the CaUfonua Air Na-maintenance equip· uonal Guard for men & meot. Mon thru frt women w prior military schedule EJtcell ro expr Formoremforma benefits Apply 1n PAlrTIMI Thurs/Friday 9-5, possi· ble W ednesdays Ci r c ulation Key punrhlcomputer uper helpful. but will train Apply I~ Plarenl1a Av~Cosla M~a Sales Reataurant Re I u I a r r u II t l m t MCDOMA.&.D'S schedule' swnmcr part S.C. PLA.U time for sala uaocl1tu Co. • foM tilt .._. In the following dtpart .. mentJ· our brand new store in Allto c.e.r side S C. Plaza. No u AM~ peneoce necessary. We C:..,... offer uniforms. flex Mefor ...... c .. hrs . performance & = wage reviews & promo- tions from within Ap-S ....,. phcallOllS ltt beiog ar· w~··~ cepted al our st.ore at Ma•s W. t1on call Staff Sgt Cind y person Gehrmg at 7141979-7363. J.C. PIMillY 8am to 4pm. Mon thru 24 Fashion Island. NB 3810 South Bnstol St U.. ,_. n. ,.,..._ Just North ol S. C. Phua, lo(a To deliver Daily Pilot Mon·Fn,)l ~·-G .... S.O, Fri. E O.E M/F auto route tn the Laguna ---------i W e o II er the but Beach area 7 days per benefits J>f'Otlr•m nf •n)' wttk IETAJL retail ro Apply 1n Equal ()pportunrty IMSUIAMCE Hours Moo lhru Fn ap-Put Ume clerks. person Emi*>yerMtF Lge. insuranre agency MAMAGEMEM'f proit 3 llt.oS.l>PM STOPN'GO J .C.nNM!Y lllll!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!j has the following open Positions avail. in fast Hours Sat & Sun :ip MAIKETS 24 Fashkln llland, NB ~~~ewals quote & gf.1rrmow. Ninogelmpa~~~lb~fi prox SAMt.o7A M ••oo 4555eo.tHwy., F. O.F. MtF <;IEHBW. OfftCE Irvine co. has immed. open1ng for person with gen. ofc. skills including 10.key & typing lo work in our Service Dept Eamangs approx .-N•wport IHcfl follow up on renewals. Connie ~ per mo. Call Bryan Must have lnsuranre ex· Maoir:i:ist for Beauty Holland al 642·4321 _'!ll!ll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!j S~!~~S~~d:!r1~0:9 u~; per Salon in Irvine. ex 1-: q ua I 0 PP o r I p lime year round Claims Clerk take ~: perience preferred. Employer --------•1 wtirk C11ll Mr Jones Call : 7$4·1931 17141 IU.JJt I SECllTA.IY 20/hn wedt. am, Irvine area. Shorthand. l ,pt Oil Olfi<.'!.:....'1.~2911j)~ SECll'fA.IY Sm Npt lkh Adv. Aly nef'd• office mana1er Must be aell·•llrur to take charp ol variety of otflce dutiu Somt' client coolJlct, 1.115wer- 1ng phones. media plan 01111. typm1. flhng le lite bltp1.~5191 SECITAIY lmmed11t.e pmll.IOn no• 1v11lable in a Newport Buch real estate de velopmenl office Euen taal requ1rement1 1n t"lude accurate typinit. 1horth1nd. d1rlaphone, proof reading & general omre respons1b1ht1eH For appointment & ron stderation, please 1·1111 714·851 1585 SECIETAIY Permanent partt1me Law orrire. Good typing skills Newport Bcarh GEHBW. OfftCE Looking for a very in· terestine part time job in pleasant oHire' Utial clauns reports "' •-111111!!!!1!!11!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!11•1 IOUTEWAUCR handle follow.up. Claim i·--85~7-·4686---·----------S.1·4118 ex per. helpful II PASTE-UP DISIGM JoicgersS • eham whboile you St.leswomm/m1•n SECIETA.IY File Clerk need fut MAltlCfTlNG ARTIST Jog ' 4 1 r + nus LEGAL area 675-JT72 energetir person for fit. Loan co nds Org. Co 0 .C Pubhsh1ng Co. 5thrsiday THEFB>RATB> Xlnl skills required ing rep. St200 +comm. $800 /Mo + benefits Uq~ fMnn GaOUP ulary negotiable I Full lime By appl On· S~ min office, 673-9201 ly portfolio 957 8522 Al 7~1 Clerical, for mature Paid co benefits Salary Terh. WrilerS18.600 person Location P C H , Npt Bcb Eitper 11 commensurate with ex-Exec.Sec'y. S17K must Accurate typmg. per. Call P1ultne. Clerlt~tS8SOmo 4_slie -11111111-11!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!11111!!1[111~111 Is hmng professional rt' SECIETAIY PBX 0 Sates ta al salts people for our lo adminutralDr of perat.or I rurrenl Oran°e Count• Ch t 1 ramenl ROBl~fta.tf' ARE YOUWORTII .. ' rts 1an re 1 ~ IWun.l S 12 000 MO? I locations & newest far1hty under ronstrur oo shorthand 20 hr '"!963-!llllm0941!!!11lf!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ l:vine Personnel Agy week includes Sat & Sun , • ~FlllRll!!!E!!llE~!llllll!lllll!!64!!!!2•· 111!4!!!170t ! Call. 646-7431 I...,.. Decoraton Cio ...... Offic. &H-.Docton Interior decorating. plant & garden serv1re, general matntenanre of the home business. m side & oul New from Las Vega~. service of the stars & ma10r hotels 536 2570, Calvary Churrh. H 8 Lve msg for J I C I Lows , • Superstore 1n Sa nta lion in Irvine Xlnt I'm 25 yrs old & Sl2.000 Ana Call Personnel for be n e f 1 t s and op MECHAHIC Is tntervieWUl& rot A was my tncome for Ma) a great opportunity with portunaties in an in Eitperienred & ref"s PBX Operator tn the health & buuly our growing rornpany lere~tmg field 851 16.SS Must be able to use industry 1lus month it scope. Minor auto re Full or P lime. ex should double I have a 1213)721-5100 SEClfTAIY pair. Brakes, tune·up, red 1 home on the ocean & 11 M F s.5 t:xpr sclry for savings ate S400 wk guarantee perience reqw ' x nt drive an S80.000 Clenel tea -on-n, 'l)ml and loin Challen°in° "' CO benef1t.s & bberal dlS S t X""r ror " " Graham · s Un 1 on Full or part·IJme pos1 eams ress. e ..-posit requires strong 644·7151. _ count lions avail for qualified satJ loft Ullman Sails rommun1cat1on & or selr. motivated people 675·6970wkdys un11.at1onal skills Gd MEDICAL Apply IOam·l2 noon al 2 Mark 47141SSS.3375 SEAMSTRES5 pos with typ1no & S/11 a must 1 Jl ~~r OC Airport. Good telepbooe manner. 6'1·UJO SIC'YU.ltiA..U MAG II ex~ce re- Cl!'ired. m.2322 (Linda) SIC 'Y /llCS'T. for expanding Laguna Beach R.E. office Xlnt typing required Call Harriet. 497-4844. MOD· Fri. SEC'Y /IECIPT. For Huntington Harbor Realty. Good benefits Salary commeosurute with experience Call M. Zl t c·o for app'l (7141846 0641 S.c'y-s,_..,.. PIT Costa Mesa area Juda1 r blqcd ner 968·3652 SflVICE PaSOtil Pools. SPIJI, equipment, de Ca II 4!11 4'.S9 SJe:RVICI-! l1t1 shop) Ex eel opply' benefits ror mech 1nchned 1nd1v with butc electr1ul knowledae S40-6:llO SHIPPltG DIPT. Pilcka&t & slup ~mall p1 rll for prol(rns1ve C M mtii ro t-:xrell benefit. & rit·nooac· re Vlt'W• Gd w numlit-r.1 & l(d v111on a must C>eltron ~13 SHORTORDB COOIC For sandwil'h shop, exp Over 18. Male or rem ale Costa Mesa area Call Marvin Da vis lOam 6pm ~_6-1004 SIGN SALESPERSOH Immediate openinl( for nghl pel"500 female or male. Neill Neoo Jm• , 16842 S Harbor Rh d S A;,.531 3374 S.S Mgr Expenenee re quired. xlnt opportunity 673-3320 Co rona del Mar STATIOHBY Store in Cd M needs salesperson F' lime, S days Xlnt working l'On ds Esper1ally fine chen tele Phone 675-1010 for Our rapidly upandiog 1 tn te roa tdlaJ co. is seek mg an enlhusiaslJc, self- slarl1 n g lndiv for a general office pas Gd typing. phones & fibng req'd. Outstanding com· pensation &exrellent co. benefits. Pleasant work ing environment Con· tact: Pal Mills Janitorial AAAAARDMAN The Floor Shining Specaahst needs reliable persons lO work 7 IOam weekdays weekends cleaning & polishing tile floor s 1n the Westminster area Must have car, ~eat for stu- dents or retired an d1v1duals Phone 17141 ~-6596 EOg __ RECORDS Fashion Island, Newport I !'.' " Beach SALES A\'OO part tame lge sail loft ava1 ,x Salary commensurate TRAMSCRllER rareer, meet new peo-per w /Dacron mis pre w exp r Kath I e en TAILOR Requires 60wpm typing. --------•1 pie. eam t6 ID $10 hr ferable. 5411-3466 7$4· 1801 Orange Coast S for alteration dept in apJ?J J4Mle Sc'"9ifk Dr-.g .......... 18011 Mitchell South Irvine, M7-~1. EOE GUAIDS Full & part ttme. All areas. Uruforms fum'd Ages 21 or over, retired welcome. No nper. nee Apply . Uni versal Protection Sel"Vlce. l226 W. Slh St .. Santa Ana loterview hrs 9-12 & I 4, Mon·Fn Ha irstylist Man1cur1st Co1ta MESA Newport Zee Place 548-9344 • J.AMTOI 1tnowledgeofd1ctapbone PIX OPB.ATOI Call AhceJ 966-~ _ SECIETA.IY & L EOE J rtne clothing store in & med1ral terminology Exper preferred Sales For busy R.E. Oevelon. siu-•rT••y Fashion Island Full 0 · · tt t Membership club ,.. ~~·-. time. exper English rganuatJon. a en ion 2PM to IOPM Beal the Heat. work in ment Co I man ofltre Expert ty.ptng & spelhng speaking tailor Good to detail & follow up are Pis. call·~ 7358 our atr rond. offices Must have dnt typing s~1lls rl'q d ExreU. con-salary and benefits Call very important We of Full or p1l1me positions skills & command ot the d1t1ons & equipment for appt. 9 am to 4 :.i pm fer exrellenl environ open · Incentive pro-English language Book Memory ,Of' Mag Card Mon thru Friday Ask menLCapistranobythe --------I grams can earn top keeping up Xlnt ap. exp prefd Verynex1 forTailorShopMgr ~a hos 496-~7~. P&fSION dolt a r Call Steve at pear an re Co 11 e g e ble hrs Full or pltJme 644-.5070 MB>ICAl ADMIMISTIA.TOR 951·2642. degree pref. Must be 714-752-0234 ----EJtp. Front Office Peg Rapidl y growing sales willing to drive -12)TMCl.n board & insurances pension co needs tx· $]6 000+ Kn owledge of R E Sunday School with ex Offi N per'd Pemion Plan Ad • Development Mu..t be ••SEClfTA.IJES•• peraencetobeg.inmSep. ~~'G.8:~ f~~G ~rs~ manistrator with trust BK VE RL Y .. H 1 L LS wilting to learn how to Pres/Sh90/Exct&$17,400 tember. Paid positions 1 accounting background Health & N~ Corp. operate word prorusor Pres RE/Sht90 Sl7,450 for 7th. 8th & 3rd. 4th ~· V · m.9 ui"'--Exrell. benefits. ,Irvine setting up operat>ons in & small office computer F ICBkpr/MfgS18.000 grades. Sundays only Medical wuraore and location Barbi ra. 0 C Needkey~efor Salary commensur11e LegalMagJlmOS18,000 Call 499-:nlll weekday billing clerk serretary 857 1204 SuperVISIOll & Tratnmg with up Call 675-7671 GenOfc ITm/FunSll,270 mornmgs P T or (uJl.tJme Must Pull or Part Time Will for mtervaew Eitpd Consult.ant Ours ble b1J....Pbont_m.101i_ 080. m.75113 T.Y. HOSTISS Frwm. ~ 11 cu ft. Mu 1 t be a tt r ac ll vt, Good coedition SLSO personable. T.V Procnc>-Ul·INZ lion, L A 1ru. July Refria. Fl"GI& hee. very illil!C•'l!flS 1ood. excellent W O TYPING Part ltme 5411513.~ typiat 2 3 dlya per week Dryer, 1u, clean, worb & fill in for vacations good ns. $48.1$13 or Apply Pennysavtr, 1eeo SU.'415. ____ _ Placent11 Ave . Costa Washer. clean. works ~es• &ood. W . S48·8513 or TYPIST 541:.=...-4485~-~.~--:--- G EN ERAL OFt'IC E Freeier, upnght. frost A c c u r 1 I e 3 S W P M tree, works good SUO. S.9·3942 5'8·~13 or 5'H4ll5 --------1 W111her & Dryer. old but very dependable S250 TYPISTS Register today for local temporary w 1111mentJ. 557-1145 Cr\·Llf\: II~ l'fllSOHN!l UllVICn both 642.QC aftsPM. ....._, • .., .... eon ••••••••••••••••••••••• llDWOOOJX 6'S 121 20· Iona Xlnt deck· Ulg fretb ~ load ar· nv1n11 wedtly Save at 55• ft PP call J im 1146-9815 an.JWne c ....... a. h1lp111 t IOlO 1111!!!11!1111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~1 •••• i •••••••••••••••••• Minolta XE7 with V1v1tar SfrlH I. ~ mmt2.8 + 3 filters, Flash sync 1t 119CI, S350 834-0771. Max TYPIST lmmed opening for good typist with xlnt s pelling & grammar Should enJQy working on phones & W'lth people Pleahant wurkmg conds & good comp3ny benefits Call Kelly. 549 4834 waiter /W aitrft1 Apply btwn 9AM & Noon Charhe"s Chili , 3001 Redhill, Bldg 12. Ste. l~CM WAnUSSES DCMJS 1040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• KEESllOND PllP' AKC Ch1mpaire.MIY Ptet" s how Pvt ply 2131697 1345 alt 6 m AAA HOME DOG TRAlNING. Specializing in happy owners & weU mannered dogs Evening w31treu es 11111!!!11!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 needed , exp on ly Bntlany Spaniel. male. F lime. Apply in person, 10 wks, champion bunt· The Jolly Roger. 400 S 1!1B line. 499-:5647 Co ast Hw) Lagun3 Germani;:..._ pu ..... AKC Bearh ...... ., .-papers. itlnt line lo· WAITRESS P time. 5 tellagent breed.Ing. See day wefk Newport mom & dad One white Bearh Tennis Cl ub. female this litter ISJJ.9561 979· 17~ WARIHOUSE Earn $60 da) Call aft ILA M $40. 76.S2 \\ eekend Supervisor. 4AM noon. Sal Sun 16 total hrs Pnmar) Job as being rertaan adult auto C"arrier p1rks up papers on tame & morulor & d<> h\'er romplainu called an b y customers SlOO mo expense cherk S3 SO hr to start Must be Zl or over Valid driver's hr & insuranC'e Call 540 3007 1 li\M 2PM Ask for Bob or~ XEROX 100 OPEi Top notch. part lime & 1 acat1on 64(}5470 Babyi.ltter needed Wed eves 2 r h1ldren CM 64S-53q WF.EKEND WOR K Moving Furruture &t2 4567 German Short Hair Pup. P)S ~ ~ 7?.111> __ _ ff'ff to Y• 1045 ••••••••••••••••••••••• i\KC Fem Pektngese 3 yrs old Call after SPM 846-1789 FREE Kittens to gd home Shots. Call Sue aft 4PM ~ Fwwihn 1050 ..............•........ SOFA ! Gray velvet·S85 , oak china cabinet (bent glass).$295. maple din- ing table 13 lea() Sl.95 Call <7141971·7Jg __ **I BUY** Good used f'Wlliture & Appli1nres--OR I will sell or SEU.for You MASTBS AUCTIOtil 6~6-16 tU-9625 tiikrchmdlse I IUY FUIHTUU ..... ··················! ~ -957·8133 A.atiqwt IOOS Contemp leather sora. 8'. HAIRSTYLISTS/ ASSISTANTS Prestigious Npl. Bch salon, next to the water needs hairstylists & as We have an 1mmed opening for a Janitor, full lime pos 9PM to SAM shirt Excell fringe benefits package For interview call Scott Wheeler. 714·975-0700 or apply II\ person at Ad · vanced Health Center. 1300 Br1Stol St North. Suite 100. Newport Beach EOEM1F know peg boon! system. train Xlnt rareer or I --L11 Reinders Agy, lnr TEACHR AIDE med 1 rare f o rms . Plastics Girl Assembler. supplement Call 9-5pm. 1SecretJmaJ 4020 Bard! F •• st"64EOE For Pre Schoo I In medarare med1 cal upenence helpful but Mr Zurherbrod at I' girl ofc Office u .p Newport/833-8190/Fre-e Irvine Mustbel8yrs or W.AMTB>TOIUY workmen romp forms. wall train lnterv1ev. 973.8443 nec.Mustbeselfstartrr older Experienre l 1 buy old gun s. 2"x4' Butcher bli k1tch pra\·ateU\S ~1-2200 _ S.3 ll 642-1026 -· ----& reliable Arcurate w c h 1 I d re n diamonds. l\'Ory, Jade & island w drawers & Medical back offire ass't Plastics Winted ex Sales . w figures & gd phone 1--------•1 17141552·7494 collerllbles Call 11141 cabinets SlSO. s· lgt • •• •• • •• ••••••••. ••• ••• fawn color. S500 or offer 673-4424 sistants. We have a very l1!!!!11!!!!!!11!!!!!!!1111!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!! strong cUentele plus ll to 50 new clients per wk. from wbkh you will build your client.tie. Top commission plus other benefits. Phone for appt. 1146-7451 •HEYllDS• Greal Summer Job Ea m S60 t.o S7S 1 week. ,AITTIME Openings in Costa Mesi Call 642--021 Eitt 343 between 3:00P.M. and s:OOP.M. ask for Dian• or Andy. HOSTISS Mature -Abo IUSIOY·W A.ITUSS For Am/Pmsbil\a. Private club. no tips Call for a 67~ 77ll HOTB. DESI CLRI Exp. pref Contact Crajg Presley, San Clemente I.on I 492-0 lQ2. Hotel Ft'Wt Dt* Cllrb " .. .,..::::r• Full and/or part lime. Exp. pref'd . Excell. working conditlonl. Ap. ply lo penon: Hotel San Maarten U6S.CoutHwy, La Beach LADIES Discount bout a· que needs Manager. Pis. cal l Annabelle , 11~ 7'S.4'M1 LEGAL SICUTAIY 2 associate Fashion Island corporate at- torneys seeking ex· perienced (2/yrs) secretary; gd typing & d i C l I l i 0 n 5 k i I~ ~ necessary; salary eom- m ens u rate with ell · penence; health & den- tal benefits: paid park- ing ; hl"5 9-S:ll; Wt.og Word processing hel ful. ~ '700S Patt . LEGAL SEC-Top skills. elfic1ent, organiied. self starter, non · smoker. JOS1e8Sl·9<12S LEGALSIC"Y Or1nge County branch of P .I Defense/Llliga· tion law firm needs legal sec'y Needs to be an u · perlenced & self· motivated. lake-charge individual Gd benefits. free parking. S.C. Plaza ll'H. (714)641-0217. No need to travel all over town to look ror garage sales ... you'll find them right here in Clas5ified. 1 To place your garage sale ad, cull 642-567.!:.__ forGPOfficemNB Ex penenced man w work OBWNEYOUB""'R" personality CdM •SECIETAIY• T·-..__~:............__ • 9724926&askfor0ant gBoreethnxlvnetl~ .. so."~~·77'!~ in vacuum forming co """"' _1!:44·8494. _ ,. _ _..-lllA'f;nit" ,......., .....,. .,.. per rtq. 631-Slll Blueprint reading a Total Care, ~ leader ~ SECRETARY Eitcellent oppty for Ex per.. E & Elem. * * * MEVR USED: Medical must. Some knowledge Carpet C~arun~ field IS With front ofhce ap sharp gal t.o worltin fast· units req'd Managerial Shem lngram Glass lop dinette S290, ICI( OFC ASSIST. of prototype work. In· now. seekaog. li~ns~. pearance to nm a single paced Newport Beach ability a must. lmmed 900Sealane1168 Qn bdrm set ~. Sofa PIT. 20·25 /h1"5. weelt. lervlewS.3:ll.642--1026. Vehacle/Eqwp trainmg secretary tJtecutive of comm,·1. retal ~ta~ o(d c. ~.642-0411 Coronadel Mar bed Sl40. bunks $200. Send resume to : ---------Included. Net '3·5.000 f " f d Excelent ypmg • JC· ------You are the winner of Classified Ad #81.8, Daily Pre-school Teacher want· mo Call 968-9659 Ice or • mo e rn tapbone skills required. T•lear-mft Set-¥ice two free tickets CS14 sofa & loveseat S300. 0 Bo «<•o ed P /tlme. 8:30·lpm, · . : IT engineering consulting Challenging po11tlon lor Bised"~in.Newport . 1s valueltolhe Matt/box springs: Twin Pilot, p. . ~ i.,., . Mon-Fri. lmmed open· Sahl ea. Chtu:dren s een firm. Must have general naht Jal. Call: sea re bing for attractive WOILD FAMOUS S75, full~. Qn Sl25. Cotta Mesa,93l26. in . 644·0232. N . Bch. 5 oes, r Y .+ comm. office uperience, type Lalla.133-2900 male/females who are uu-• ...... MORE! 77(}.0901 Model (f ) & assist video p S h I T h Exp. des I r ed . Top 60wpm, word processor interested in making ell-ROY--n&.AAn Oerorator Coffee Tbl Photogra....._. Volunteer re· c 00 eac e r benefits. Mr. Milter. tx""rieoce desired but b.il ha HOl.,,.,SHOW ,....... wanted, summer. Cert. New P 0 rl Boote r y. not,...r·eqw'--' . .,._,..:11.nt tra money w e ving .-SlOO. matrhin& round tbl initlally.DavidMS-3994 Prr g.1 Mon ·~&;A'""'" SECm•••ES fun Call673-2641Stnp. JunelllhruJulyl $60. 7600329 ~~· N B 6.o.,~ . 644·2464. -co. bentiflla. Salary com· AIU A·Gram ANAHEIM -~----MODElS/ESCOITS · · · · -Sales mensurate with ex· Worlt Temporary or -Convention Center ANTIQUE7'SOFA TopOollarsS27- 7 l86 PIESSIOOM Commlss1on Salesman perience Consolidated Partnme.Call· TB.IPHOMI Tickets are good (or S275orbesloffer MOMOGIA.MMla SUravtSOI for established building Technology lnterna· I I SOUCITOIS June 30th performant'l' 957.()620 Huntington Harbor Pos. requires min. 10 mater ial firm in So tional. 1714)~9-4868, VICKI HESTON Jmmed o~. Work at s·oo pm and may be OFFfCHUIM! area. S6.SO/hr. Flu. yrs. printing exp Strong Orange Couty area. Mpm. pleasant evening hrs rla1med b> calling Desk w exec chair. days & tin. M~h. ap-mechanical, technical Some upe~ n~ed SECllTAllA.L 3-9, Moo·Fn. No sellmg 642·S671!. ext 272 SISOO, 2 g.st chn '200 ea titude. 67~1S21. bltdrnd m Web offset. m door & window selling M ... IC •• •w-.u.r. CalJ 966.0JSl a~!::.!R_m_ hpl•cft 10 Io ftJe rab '400, MS-6923 Org. Cty. co. Send re-& bidding plans. Call w --ho ,. Newspaper delivery sum•·. o--•9122. 011ly 493-3110 40wpm typing accurate-Telep ne ••'*•••••••••••••••••••Bed. Lamps, Ottorator person. 18 or over. "' ....... " I F lltlme ..-rma GIEATSUMMB HARBORAREA pillows. rhest of ' l' . Pilot. P.O. Box 1560, S ... LIS"''-.,P/T y u ' ,..-. PPLIANCESERVICE Drivers Jceose, an -C ,. ~ oent. Over 1'i preferred JOIS A . drawers, chair. ~'3:1J surance. economy ear. Costa Mesa, a.92S26 Prof. pharmacy. 1-6 Newport Beach uu. SICllTAIY S immediate openmgs We buy u.5ed appliances Sit Sun Npl Bch·Lrv-Olsta Mesa PllNTIMG{XaOX Moo .-Fri BkkPCslrills' Write Daily Pilot, Boll Weekend secretary. talkingonourtelephooe. wuellrttond.guar. Trundl·~, .... bed--soll-.-d-wood-- area. 7 dya pr wk. Moo-Person lo operate Xeroit retail exp. nee. Ph. 1560. Ad. U97. Costa Sat/Sun, 9-Spm. ~/hr deep voices preferred _llillances _ S!!l>T7 melds 2 maUresses. lllnt Fri. 2-SPM. Sat/Sun 9i500 & 6500 machine 111 a Terry Grant, 642-lSllO. Mesa 92626, or call Fuhion Island locatJo.n Moo -Fri. 5-9pm Come llUY APPUAMCIS rond. $250. 642-7257 4· 7: 30A~. 1~P'::~7 high volume shop. Will SA~AtaA An s wer Ad J 49 3 . Lingo Real Estate. Ask by 1180 North Coast Les 957-8133 &;ca& end tables S300 ~i~.JM.~ for train. Call Bob: 751·2680, Costa Mesa cameu 642_.300, ~tin. for Gene Trowbridge, Hwy, Laguna Buch -WASHER AND--Recliner, S75 .. Book Lee or Bob 8am·Spm, Mon· Fri. s lore needs F IT 644·7020· weekdays after 2pm. !st DRYER SlOO/Ea. shelves, S12s. All like Production sales-rson. Retail tll· SE di h ECU RITY PERSON· come, l!l hired. rn2 7• ne 962 93J9aft 5 MUISMMorLYH Full-time person for ""r. ;-must. Good pay & LL 1 e items wit a NEL-part-time. no ex· Telephone Sales office -~"0 ---Sofw. l .t cond·· · Partllme, to work wilb ~rod. dept. ~ack!ng & peat bentfl\s. 646-2136 ~;Uy Pilot Classified r req. 559·1800 afl ~=r14~. ~~:U~C:ac~ ~~·~ w~!~~!e~~e'ic~ tr1a~sfe~. n . ON~; proctologist in H.B. of· andl lng os1ery . days(Bill). ----Jal. ""I r.Call""'"lfl8. _ 9_57.9212,957-9200 646-7474/64Hl641 lice on Fridays. ,Xlnt Crystal Creations Ap· • 1 ,. 1 A. .,, ...,,,.... · working conditions ' parel.631..SC14. S•sDlltiMor a1 y I 01 salary. (213)919-.~17 · p /time, 7 daya, 2 hrs dal· ~~~l~~cr!='fro'::? •••• • • t M.,...A.Jdtt ly, AM delivery, L.A. Health food product, • Sal-• Fu!J time U to 7, 8 paid Times. $100 per week. 5'8·l934 "" Holidays, good benefitJ La uoa Beach 494-8496. ..:..:::<-==------• T • • xlnt working cooditions. RE C E PT I 0 NIST I Sal~-L..-H .... .., • , ratnee • EOE. Call Miliasa Grant TYPIST Pltime needed --~... f Di tri t U-• BayviewCGDvffollpit1I immed. afternoons, Salesperaoa needed to • Of $ C Mll£ll' FIND YOUR NAME WIN TICKETS WORTH $14 903505 12:»S:30 for law fie. in work at store level. e 'lb.II hl&hJY aucceuful local newspaper e ·~[llllml!lll-----•I O.C. airport area. Nwpt Bcb.66-l7ll (8-5). • bas an opening lor a trainee In the e 1' NuniDf 833-1481 uUorSharoo. SALIS clttulalion department Basic skills will KIDS- SUMMER JOBS. IM"S-f'/T RECEPT/llANAGER Catch thia opportunity • entaUaupervlsloo ofJOtol4ytlroldboy • Are you Interested In w/ezper'. F/tlme for ~$100/day. Youqam· e IDd &Jrl home deUvery canien. Areu ol e staylnf in ourslng but facial plullc suraery bilious crew hu room • supervlsloo will be delivery, oollectlons • can only wort p/time? olc, N•Pt Bch. 64.2-5802 for more. Tralnblg • and aala. • Are yo11 lnternted In llC.r~T trana po provided e Selttled applicant will receive liberal wortma kt I.be fieJd of Ll'"w ... 1 0~&Shft llAM. • •t1rtln1 salary. regularly acheduled • aJcbolilm7 Raleiah Hilla ..... ...,. .. _. • rai.aes, bonus opportunillea a.nd man.y • Holp. ill Nwport Beach Ne•J!Ortam 54$-7* 01111 and falil IB aad "' fri.nae bendlta 1uch u (Omp&ny pald IW Immediate openinp llCWllGiST Parllme or fllllUme.. • dental and bu Ith 31an, 1roup lite • R... ....... ~-• illlur1nce, vacatJon an 11ck &tave. • for ,~ s, """' ..,.y Sm1ll, b1&1y Newport F1111Job. Parties, coolest • Company vehicle la rumlahed d11rlna nitbt 1lllfta Competjllve Beach otfke. Duties In· and •oocl pay. Call Mr. • worth\f boura. • ~:~~'ftio!'°:i ~::Vi~'!; cl11de pbolle1, typl.nf. Ke.Uy. 541-017. • Applicant.I mllat be over ll. have 1 good • d I e o er a I c It r I ( • . Salta drlut.... record and be neat 1ppearln1. ~1~!~.:;:,~~=~~ l7U7t0, HAIDWA194AM • Ho;;;. .. are geneully 11 AM to 9PM •• laJel&b HWa Heap., 1.$01 CHllONAcnc Exp'd. 40br ...-. MUil e Monday lhru Friday. Some overtime 11 e E. titll St. Newporl I• g 1,C 1 ' t be 1ble CO ""'*' ~· ' e 1•,v~~~lea:... quallli--' and lnlm!lt~ ln e Beacb. Cl•rietl ~ -Sun. OtlMr 111'1. CO~ ar• ,,,,,. ... ~ 1.0.tlM/P' bent. blll'/ omee. ranaed. Salary comm. e ltamlu Ult circulatlon bualnta COflt.acl e frtnclly .wr. mlllt ~ with esper. Kenn Rima e Ult Delly Pilot al 330 w. 8a,Y. Cott.a Meu e cheerful, cood ap-Katd•are.•Harbor b.rort10:30AMor arter2 PMdaJ~ . .,. ..... ~. hNJlbf. out. (lii;i'tiii1cii.11iiii.i;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii e Alt for Don w11111ma or Ken Goddard. e $!r~~i To Place ybur • ~C... • _,..._ -· "f11t Result.. • PW • •tr1 lttlpl1I Orol seniM Directory • 330 W. 1 Street • urur potullal. e Coat.aM.111,CA •• ad ... , CaU Now ..... 1 ••11 • r.qiaal Opportunity F.naployer .... ...:w •••••••• ... ••••• ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTEll Tuesday, June 30 Wednesday, June 31 Thursday, July 1 ITS EASY! look for your name •Del 1ddrt11 la today's d11sUled section. If yoa ftDd It, u.U 142·M11 Eal. m Hd we wUI arruge for rou lo pick ap Y•r tltkm. Wliuen nery day, so cHC:lr die dulifledl la late Use ,.,.,. 'II W'Jice when ptadftg your M ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear In your ct1ssified ad . • . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you catl In at your convenience during office hours arid get the responses to your ad ... this service Is only $7 .so wHk. For more lnforma· tlon Ind to ptaf9 your ad call 6a·5611. ····················~· 1...::!!!~:::c:~--~~-fiiiiiiST '17T.-O .. TOwtl IUTOMll (OCIUU) COM~H.l C:HEVROLET • .._I' • ... , .. '>4t>-I 200 Oran I Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesda , June 23, 1981 MUSTSB.L '79 Bug conven. blk lop & uphol, chrome whls. radio. cass. only 2000 mi, '!lake off~ 67~2195 ' COMMEU CHEVROLET ')I/! i''• I , 11" I\ \H 1)4b-I 200 '73 El Camino. power dnven. air eond .. Cood cood. 000. 79 IOCHIY CrTAnOH 2 door hatchback with ' cyl, auto. trans .. air cond ., PS & PB . <l32ZBW> 164'5 OeSANFIS CHEVROLET 7'M8CUIY MilqulS Brougham 4 door with V ·8, auto trans .. air cond. PS. PB. AM ·fM stereo & vinyl roor (~) 401 S El Cammo Real • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • San Clemente 75 CHEVY 831-0SllO '92-8500 MAUIU '75 Marqws Brougham. Nice 2 door equipped 59,300 miles. All power with 6 cyl, auto trans . Deluxe Aslung $l595. radio C743Nll) Call 67:.::3-6726-=.:=---- S2795 .... H52 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '65 MUSTANG Conv 6 cyl, 3 spd, beaut. cond OeSANFIS CHEVROLET S EICa . R I Super mpg. Blk. top. It 401 · m&n0 H bloe pnt., blue int San Clemente 646-4481, 8-5, Moo-Fri -~HIS@_ 4.92-&500 '64 MUSTANG V8 lspd 10 CHIV aulo~SISOO C OltVETTE ~131 Loaded with AM FM 1966 Mustang V8, 2811 stereo with CB radio. tilt stock. clean. PS, '2000. wheel. cnJ1se control & "'-P..:.P..:... 4.;:;::99-;=-::;3793.-=----- a I um 1 nu m wheels '68 Mustang, VS (289 1. llBEE7621 auto. a 1c, radio. hlr. SI l, 9U 80.000 mi. very cldn. OeSANFIS CHEVROLET 401 S El Camino Real San Clemente 831 0580 492.8500 • • • Mrs E D New1on 200 Amherst Pl Costa Mesa You are the w111ner of two Cree tickets I Sl4 \'aluel to the WOILD FAMOUS IOYALU"1ZAH HOISESHOW June JOthruJuly 1 ANAHEIM Convention Center make orrer. 552-0731 M...._.''6 One owner, 98 Classic. 80.000 m1. clean. S2950 OBO 963-071 '68 Mustang289. pb,ps,air blue S3100obo. 673-lll37. '66 Mustang 6cyl. 3 spd. all one parts S2500 IOBO 54().5192 '77 MUSTANG 2+2 V6. p S ,p b, 8 1C, 34J< mi, O- ng own 1.1750 645-1743 or 953-91'-"46"------- 66 ' MU ST A NG ' V-8. Nttds body work SHOO or best offer 645-3200 Tickets are good for C>Ws.oba. HSS June 30th performance ••••••••••••••••••••••• at 8 00 pm and may be '73 OLDS Cutlass 2dr. claimed by calling good running co nd ~-5678._!xt. Z72 Sl600/080642-5424 79 CHEVY HOYA ·75 Olds 98 Regency . Sharp 2 door equipped 2 dr, rull power. ong. with 6 cyl, auto trans., owner, 11950. Dys air conditioning, power 774·9800 /evs640-o.41 steenng, power brakes 79 OLDS CU'll..ASS. Fully & radio. t82BX1Rl Equipped. BeaulHul 147'5 cond. Sale or lease. OeSANFIS CHE VRO LE T Dc-SANFIS CHFVROL ET . i .. -,.., 644~- S.DC......Ral s..a.... . ·-.... W lAll-. '9 Ill. ale, .. ... c .......... I ' d e ,. v e I e , • l L ( ' r ' I I ' rt c a t ·~ ( --·--·------------------~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 . ' i .. • -_, , ... ____ _ ' 20 Ct~tY?. ----.. ··~s ----. VANTAGE ! ULTRA LIGHTS ~JOOs- I M e .. ,., 0\ '"'.-ICG C.0 Nellli New I , . ., , Warning: The S'" General Hes Determined That Cipmtt S ' ls Oqerous to Your Helhh. ' i Ultra LoWTar5mQ r n F ~ t I • ... _.--...._ UltRA LIGHTS. 4 mg. ''tar', 0.4 mg. nicotine. ULTRA LIGHTS 1001: 5 mg. "11r". Q.5 mg. nicotine. ev. Plf cigerttte by FTC method. I ' c r • d l, • • ~ n te "'S >n 1d 's tY ln tr ad al IY -R • ·I l. "~ ~~ ... , :E ..... .... M ,_ • ttoll !"'1'11 •la • ... .,... c1~t .... ..... Ml• ...... "' ~I . \ . J,-..- r -- • * • • • 111111 CIUT YllR 1110111 IAllY PIPll TUESDAY JUNl .'I 191l1 ORANGE COUNTY C ALIFORNIA 2~ CENTS Quake saf ~ty at San Onofre Disputed By DA YID KUTZMANN OU•Delly ......... SAN DIEGO -At times Mon- day, the meetin1 room where a federal licensing panel is hold-inl heartnp on new twin reac- tors at San Onofre resembled a 1990s student protest center. But for the balance or the Ume, which was most of the day, consultants for Southern California Edison Co. pressed their case that nearly completed units two and three at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating sta· lion could safely withstand an earthquake from geoloaic faults that plant opponents maintain are mol"e hazardous than at first believed. Expected to spend the next two weeks listening to experts on both sides of the .question is the three-member Atos:nic Safe- ty and Licensing Board, which was characterized Monday as a "kangaroo court" and a nuclear industry "rubber stamp" by about 50 band-clappina oppo· nents who sang anti-nuclear melodies and read speeches dur- ing the board's noon recess. Many of the anti-nuclear spec- tators belong to an organisation called the Community Energy Action Network, some of whose members donned monkey masks and wore signs critical or the nuclear reeulatory commission, I of which the safety and licensing board ls a part. However, before and alter the llcenalna panel's noon recess, it was Edbon's presentation that counted. The utility, 80 percent owner or the powerful new reactors awaltina licensing, contended that the pnerating facilities were built to withstand earth- quakes "far more severe than any the area ls believed capable of experiencing." Edison_ consultants claim that the laraest hypothetical earth· quake possible in the San Onofre area would measure no hlaher than 7.0 on the Richter scale. Thia ia considered a powerful earthquake. Such an earthquake could OC· cur, seismologists said, about five miles offshore from the coastal power plant site in northern San Diego County. However, the challengers in the federal liceMlng hearing - a retired businessman named Augl15 t "Bill" Carstens and the Friends or the Earth environ- mental group -assert that new information reveals there are previously undetected faults which pose hazards that the plant's designers have not taken into account. The plant's challengers, or in- (Sff ONOFRE, Pase Al) . Napa fires raging Arsonist·s inferno chars 23,000 acres NAPA CAP> -Hundreds of flJ'efighters battled today to halt an arsonist's i nferno that charred more than 23,000 wine- country acres. drove hundreds from their homes and sent up an immense plume of reddish-white smoke. An unldentitied woman died of a heart attack while wetting down her home and seven people were injured, officials said. Winds gusting to 50 mph and lOO·decree temperatures had been pushing the fire, the worst in Northern California this year. toward Fairfield and Vacaville. But at mid-morning, with the fire 20 percent con tained , California Department of Forestry information officer * * * Tom Berry said winds had shift· ed and slowed, halting the ad- vance of the names . Berry said if conditions re- mained that way. rirefighters probably would be able to clear a line around the fire by mid· afternoon. However, from the Suisun Valley School, one of the key fire camps , s moke pus h ed by westerly winds could be seen pouring over the Blue Ridge Mountains whic h mark t he western edge of the Napa Valley, about a mile to the west. Information officer Ri chard Schell said the fire had burned t o withi n eight mile s of Fairfield, located near giant <See NAPA, Page AZ> California :..~ "-WV.. Sacramento • Napa •+•F•irfleld WHERE FIRE RAGES Napa Valley scorched No wOman justice this time? Reagan reportedly set on Southern California jurist F,lame Leaper," with Costa M•a reaident .f udl Spero tn her ftnt role u a pa.pant model. WASHJNGroN (AP> -Preai· dent Reacan, apparenUy decid· inC asatmt uaine bia first u .s. Supnme Court appointment for the first woman justice, ha~ "already picked out" con· aervaUve Soutbern California Jurist J . CWford Wallace, con- greulonal sources say. JuaUce Potter Stewart reUres July 3, and sources said Reagan is likely to announce bia selec· lion for a succes&<>r by mid-July. Wallace, a 51 -ye~r -o l d Mormon from San Diego and a Republican lawyer with 11 years Irvine Co. resale off er 'no choice~ Saying the company has no re· course but to offer resale con- trols on new houses in the coastal sector, Irvine Company officiala Monday expressed sur- prise at a county supervisor's at- tack on the firm's position. The company told state coastal commissioners last week it would agree to a requirement that resale controls be placed on so-called affordable homes planned for its Irvine Coast de- velopment between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. That decision to 10 along with the comrnlsllon stafrs require· ment for resale control• brought an anary response from 3rd Dis- trict Supervi sor Bruce Neatande, who termed the com- pany's decision "a heartless motivation for profit, and in the moat oeaative sense which I call 1reed." The county has lona oppe>sed resale controls on affordable Un· ltl, but tbe coutal commission bas frequently used Ila power to impoH such r eaulations on builders alone the coast. Sayln1 the company's "de· claloo to ''-rrender to the Coastal Commiuion'a policy," dl.lturbs blm, Neataode said be believes a "free enterprise· (See &DALE. Paae AZ) TM 1culpture abowl an ivory n1 ure, leapinc over a brome Zambia ~xpels name, be~d nun1 baek and , ~::J~: ~= C:.:~.~~aeh U.S. diplomal8 .... 'Back1ta1e, 1&aadlDI before bUDklnl camera ltl'OMI, Mila LUSAKA, Zambia <AP) Spero'• face, -~ aboulden, Two senior U.S. diplomata are arm1 and lep ..-re eoated with beln1 upelled from Zambia on a thick layer of c...._r body ohar1n ~ •IWlnl for tbe CIA malleup in prepuatloq for ber ud four other Americau no debat. &oa1er ln the CCM8ltr)' hHe been Wiien llM ila-t wonsn, u a barred from returnin1, a ,....Dt lnoclll 1bt WOlb ID tbe ~,okeaman for the For•llll ,.noDD•I departmeat of lliDll\rJ Mid. aoo•w•ll lattraatloaal In Jllcbael O'Brlan, bead of the ~ ...._ U .I .. ••ba111'1 information Mall•• nadji, •~• aad a braDCla, ..ad la a telepboM in· .... " ....... ....,.. ~ eem.w oartr toda1 tbat .._ and .....,.. tD •:..,..,...-. lbe lo•• Dani PlaMJ, tbe em· wu H .... • Mr wt.ldy =·• ftnt llllJ'el,Uy, nre •· ..... • a ..W lnlM. Rieb ._.., = leaft UM (loo ... i -I _, -· . on the federal bench, "is the ad· ministration's front runner.'• one source familiar with the selection process said Monday. "ThU guy is already picked out as far u the adminlatratJon iJ concerned," said the source. who asked not to be identified. Described as a moderate con- servative by various California lawye r s. Wallace was con- sidered for the high court by former President Ford, but John Paul Steven s f illed t hat vacancy. Wallace is a member of the 9th U.S . Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. He was named to that post by former President Nixon after serving ln the U.S.-- Diatrict Court for Southern California. W aUace, who began a three- week vacation Monday, could not be reached for comment. White House spokesman David Gergen said reeorta a bout any potential nominees are pre- mature. After Stewart amiounced his resignation, effective July 3, (See COURT, Page AZ> Chase 'kid stuff' Boy, 13, finally halted in NB Newport Beach police said they did a double take early to- day when a 13-year-old boy stepped from the driver's seat of a stolen sedan after leading of· ficers on a 25-minute. 30-mile lane-changing chase. Police said the boy. who raced through four coastal cities before slamming into a California Highway Patrol unit on the San Diego Freeway. wasn't the only youngster in the car. His passengers, police said , were listed as being 15. 12 and 11. Police said the boys, all from Compton, had little lo say for themselves after being colla red. Newport traffic officers said the speeding Ford Granada, re· portedly stolen from a Long Beaoh liquor store, caught their attention around 3 a .m . That's when the car whiz.zed through a red light on Pacific Coast Highway at Balboa Boulevard. Officers were called in as the car picked up speed. By the lime Western Iran put on alert /or Bani-Sadr •BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) - Residents ol weatem Iran were told to be on the lookout today to r d e po• e d P re. s l d e n t Abolba11an Bani-Sadr, and Tehran radio reported nine • more people executed, The neeutiom broulht to M tbe number put before rlrioa aquacb in three days, many of them Unked by the Tehran 1cw· erament to the f\llklve preel- dent. The reYGlu&loaary proHcutor ol JlennUllbab ~Ana oa tbe Iraqi bonllr' aakl la a 1tatement publi1bed b1 tbe ••••paper Jomhourl ~Ula& Bul-Sedr po11lblJ wu om tbe run la ,...rn Ina Md uraed people ol tlM relkm 1o b9 aa UM lo4*out f«blln the car had left the Newport city limits police claim it was going 90 mph. Ignoring police sirens, traffic lights and speed signs, the car continued through Laguna Beach , Dana Point and Capistrano Beach. By t his time, police said, Orange County Sheriff Deputies and Laguna Beach authorities had joined the chase. A Newport police helicopter was brought in to get a bird's eye view of the action. In Capistrano Beach, officers said, the young driver turned on t he San u1ego l''r eeway and started heading 11orth. That's when the Callf ornia Highway Patrol got into the action - litera lly it turned out. At the La Paz Road offramp in Mission Viejo, the young driver slammed into a CHP unit and drifted to a stop. "We couldn't believe it at first," said one officer, "they (See CHASE, fa1e AZ) DRllCICIAllllllllll UsuaJ early a P• a low cloud s alon1 coast otherwise faire and l \U\ll)'. Lows tonlaht in middle 60s. Highs Wednesday to m id -708 at beaches, m id -808 inland. 111111 TllAY 11111 ••••• Orang• Cout DAIL 'V PILOT/Tu11d1y, June 23, 1981 .. From Page A1 ONOF RE ••• tervenors u they an known ~ flclally. woo a small procedu.fal victory Monday when ASLB Chairman Junes Kelley •Creed to let a Friends of the Earth re· "archer cross examine Edilon wltneuea. Attomeya for both the utility and the nuclear regulatol')' com· mi11lon objected, sayin1 that Glenn Barlow was not properly qualified by education or H · perience to question expert wit· nessea. Edison's first witness Monday at the quasi· Judicial hearing was Jay Smith, a Long Beach geolo1ist who said his 12-year study of the area indicated that the nearest fault ·to the $3.3 billion plant, the CristianJtos, was inactive and incapable of damaging movement. The fault is about one half mife from the plant site, which is three miles south of san Cleine.nte. Smith testified that it has been about 125,000 years since the Christianitos fault has moved. ,.~..,....... ' Ho~ing Option offered! Developer says industry should inundate marketplace : Tbe answer to the al!ordable boualnl crisis ln Ora nae County. HYI one developer, "ll to let tbe lndmtry build so many damn houses that the marketplace lll inundated with new unit.a.'' Sandy Sandlin,., executlve vice president o the Warm· ln&ton-Carma Group, told about 200 Ust.eners 1t a S.ddleback Board of Realtors panel dis· cussion Monday nieht that re· sale controls won't solve housing problems. Sandling joined five other speakers, including a county housing official, an aide to supervisor Tom Riley, a realtor, an attorney for the Legal Aid Society, and a mortgage lender during a discussion of affordable housing in Orange County. He was supported in bis state· * * * From Page A1 meot that more untts 11 the anawer to low.coat houtinl by John Seymour; lmmediatt put· president of the CaU!ornla A•· IOCiaUon of Realtors. '·Let the marketplace de· termine the question of alforda- ble housing," Seymour said. Saying that only 2 percent of the state's land mass is developed, ~ymour said government agen· c1es should "c hange density boundaries to allow more units." He said one third the cost of housing is land price and con· struction. "The other two-thirds is government regulation and over-regulation." He said inclusio'nary clauses, resale controls and other gov· ernment regulations will not solve the housing problem . , Rehabilitation of existing * * * . RESALE OFFER. • • oriented company would resist sucb an onerous infringement upon individual property rights and interference in the free housing market." . Irvine Compan,_ Senior Vice President Tom Nielson reponded to Nestande's attack by saying he is surprised by the tone of the supervisor's letter. resale controls, neither Uie Irvine Company nor the county has much choice in the matter." "It's an awkward situation, and we are accommodatingit as best we can," Nielson said. bouslng units, making more 1an'bj available for boutinfC, and "nob 1DltaWn1 a trash muber, dish· washer or ftreelace ln low-eo.( units," is the way to create aJ.,, fordable housing. ' Legal Aid Society attorneY, Crystal Sima said abe 1upporl8, regulation, such as the county'il' lnclu1ionary housing procram,. which stat.es 25 percent of ne~ housing must be affordable ~ people earning 120 percent of met dianincomeorleas. : Terming Orange County'tt housing shortage a crisis, M 11 Sims puts part of the blame or( Proposition 13, which she say' , made the developer responsibld for new roads, sewers, higbe( permit fees -expenses that ar~ passed on directly to the new, home buyer. ! Judy Swayne, a spokesmaq for Supervlaor Riley, agrees the inclusionary housing program ia necessary. : But, she said, resale controls; "is an issue that the stat«! Coastal Commission and6 th< Orange County Housin1 Authori-! ty have attempted to urrust upon; the county." And while she says the county'. is concerned about speculation'. in the housing market, resale' controls are not the solution. But the plant opponents have countered with new studies by two geologists which suggest that certain geological !eat.urea in an area southeast and off· shore of the San Onofre site could be a so-called "zone of de· formation," a long and con· tinuous fault capable of poten· 'tially causing a more powerful earthquake than that which the reactors can safely withstand, according to intervenor Don May, of the Friends of the Earth. Anti-nuclear power demonstmtor makes hU point at Nuclear Regulatory Commission hearings on new twin reactors at San Onofre. "He knows the position we're in," Nielson aaid. "As long as the Coastal Commission has the overr:Jding authority to require "The alternative, of coune, is t.o refuse to accept the Coastal Commission's requirements for resale controls. This would re· suit in rejection of the Irvine Coast plan, which in tum, ob- viously means there would be no affordable housing on which to impose any controls." Begin q u o tes U.S. p a p er The two geologists who dis· covered the offshore zone - Gary Greene of the U .S . Geological Survey and Michael Kennedy of the state's Division of Mines and Geology -are ex· "i>ttted to testily next week. The NRC staff supports the Edison position on the earth· quake safety of the huge nuclear plant. Southern California Edison predicts that commercial opera· lion of Unit Two could begin by the second quarter of 1982 whiJe Unit Three could be "on line" in 1983. Before t'hey are fired up, however, it will take a favorable ruling of the safety and licensing board, whose decision could be appealed to the NRC and ul· timately to the federal courts. Later hearings in Sah Diego by the licensing board will also focus on the •dequacy of evacuation plans to be used in the event of an accidental ce· lease of radiation al San Onofre. The bearings are being held at the Stardust Hotel and Country Club here. From Page A1 From Page A1 ARTS ... wavered under her weight. ''Are you comfortable?" asked director Eytchison, while those in attendance laughed at the thought of being comfortable in that position. Reporters also viewed a copy of Gauguin's painting ".Sacred Spring," with Roberta Cortez of South Laguna and Beth Koehler of Irvine. The colorful scene shows two Tahitian girls seal ed by a spring, seemingly at peace in their surroundings. Others included ''Lotus Lilies·' by Charles Curran, with models Lynelle Webb of Laguna Beach and Barbara Eljenholm of Dana Point in a brilliant scene by a W:t POnd . Mark Stephenson and Troy Clem of Laguna ~each appeared in .. Marksmanship," a scene taken from a poster advertising Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show. The Laguna Beach Pageant of the Masters will run from July 14 to Aug. =->al the Irvine Bowl. CO URT NOMINEE. • • Reagan dangled the possibility that bis first Supreme Court ap- pointment might go to a woman. He said be was "always" on tbe lookout for someone to POsslbly From Page A1 NAPA ... TravlJ Air Force Bue. The blue, Mt by an artonllt, be11n arowwt l:JO p.m . M~Y • at four 1epat1&4t k>UUoM •Joni the famed 811v•-rado Trttl, of. Oclal• Hid. By • p.m. Ute)' had joined Into • •inflt mH1ivt blaze, ra,Sn1 acroH unp<>pulat td 1nH and woodl•nd ln thf' dlrection of Falrfl•ld. Tht flre , which 1pared the area's 18 wlnerl11 ind the Sllverado Cowttry Club, w111 20 percent cont.amed by 1 a m., ac· cordlna to Schell, who uld some 1,100 men 1n two 1htft11 l5 1lr tankers, 108 onalnH and 20 bulldo11r1 were 101n1 to be thrown a1alnlt the tlrt today. Al tor full containment, CDfl' spokesman Ed Karmen said, "they're not even lalklnl about th1t. They're talktn1 about where this nr. la 1otn1 to 10 and they're talklnl about locations tour and ftve ml1e1 in front of tb• ,... .. l"ln 1 ...... an Nlck Fowler ol Uae i.-Na.,. Ranier Unit said lnfflllaaton decided the cau... of die blue wa1 arton becauae "we bad four, Hparatt flri!a' aet wtthla ftve mlnut.1 of each other ln one a,..1.' • become the court's first female member. Oct. 14, then-candidate Reagan said, "I am announcing today that one of the· first Supreme Court vacancies in my administration will be filled by the moat qualified woman I can pos1lbly fiDd.'' Jn a letter to Reagan, Senate Judiciary Chairman Strom Thurmond, R·S.C.. 1uageated el1ht peopt., lncludinl Wallace and three women, H po11lble candldat.M to 1ucceed Stewart. 'rn 1ddlUon to Wallace, Thurmond I UHHl4.!d Attorney General WUUam French Smith; pr11ldenUal counaelor Edwin Mteae HI ~ Whit~ House aide Elisabeth Hanford Dole ; ind three Judaea. Ch1rle1 E. Simona Jr.1 chief U.S. dlatrkt Judie In Co umbla. S.C .. Cornella G. Kennedy ot the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Ap.,.111 ln Detroit; Amal)'• L. Keane, of the 2nd U.S. ClrcuJt Court of Appeals in New York, and C. Bruce Llt.lle· John of the South Carolln• Slate Supreme c.ourt. Jud1• Keerae. a· native or Thurmond'• South Carolina, la a black Ytoman named to the bench by former Prealdent Ca~tr. Mn. Dole ii Wle wtfe of Sen. Bob Dole, R·Kan.; and Judie KeMtdY la trequently IUHHted .. • po11lble flrat woman JuatJ~. The Whlte Houle pree1 ottlce Hid Smith and Meese have ulctd not to be con.aldered. • MAINOPPtea uew•t1~11 .c....-..,(A Mell...,_ ... ll!!r'9tl ... CA ..... ~·'""" "'' Ot...-C...tl ......... "' c...... ... ,,..,,, Utt•• llllltlr•~ .. 11or1e1 mtlttf er H .,.ftlH-t Nnlfl -y .. r .. reevtH .. 11- i..ct.1 ~tf <NY'ltlll-• Robbins witne s s cites dinner date SACRAMENTO (AP) -State ing Ms. Terwilliger in Robbins' Sen. Alan Robbins denied two Senate office in February and years ago that he'd tried to get a March of 1979, when Ms . dinner date with the star witness Terwilliger says she had sex against him in his sex-with· with him. minors trial, d ays the girl's Two women said they took former teacher. . phone calls from her to the Orvin Roome testified Monday senator. And two others testified that he spoke to Robbins by that Ms. Terwilli~er went into telephone in 1979 about a letter Robbins' private office on one or Robbins sent him concerning more of her vi.ails. Lori Terwilliger, one of the two Gladys Keith , Robbins' women who say. they bad sex personal secretary, said she saw with Robbins when they were 16. Ms. Terwilliger in the office as Roome told a six-man, six· many as four times, and took as woman jury: "I thanked him for m81l)' as eight phone calb from taking her to lunch. He said, in her to the aeoator. l effect. 'No problem. I was happy She said she could not re· to do it'." member if sbe ever put any of . But Roome said Robbins de· the calls through to Robbins. If nied calling Ms. Terwilliger and Robbins was not available, Ms. asking her out to dinner, which· Keith said, Ms. Terwilliger she contends he did. would teU her to tell Robbins Robbins, a 38-year-old Van that "Lori called." She left no Nuys Democrat, faces nine •return number, Ms . Keith said. felony counts alleging that he Judith Verhaag, a former had sex acts with underage Robbins' sta!J member, said she In addition, a spokesman for the company said today Nestande was aware of the com· pany's intention to resolve the resale control question with the commission a day before the coastal panel met tut week. Nielson said the company's decision to go along with the commission requirement was ''motivated solely by a desire to win approval of a plan in which we, the county and numerous other agencies have invested an enormous expendi~ure of time, energy and talent.'' In his attack on the company's move, Nestande said "you have acquiesced in a policy that con· tinues to keep the poor perpetually in low cost housing by denying them the economic right to take full advantage of tbelr bome equity and move u~ ln the world. "That's economic slavery." JERUSALEM (APl -Prime Minister Menachem Begin told an Israeli parliamentary com· mittee he has a U.S. document showing the United St.ates knew of Iraqi plans \0 build atomic bombs, a senior official said to. day. The official, who insisted on not being Identified, said Begin disclosed the top-secret docu· ment's existence to the Foreign Affairs and Security Committee at a Monday briefing. Begin referred lo the docu· ment two weeks ago in a letter• to PresidenC Reagan explaining' Israel's Jtme 7 bombing of the Iraqi nuclear reactor . the of· ficial said. N uke march begin~ COPENHAGEN (AP> -Mor& than 3,000 people began an: 800-mile march ~ Paris on Mon-: day to call for an end to alt nuclear weapons in Europe. Family argument ends in stabbings girls. saw Ms. Terwilliger in the office Eight charges involve Ms . five or six times. Once she came A family argument in Villa Donna Rae Kuykendall, 4", were Terwilliger, now 18, who says in with two or three girlfriends Park erupted into violence Mon· tr11ted and released at t~ she met Robbins when she went and the girls went into Robbins' day night when a husband aJ· hospital for minor stab woundj, to his office to interview him for private office, Ms. Verhaag legedly stabbed bis wife and Spratt said. • · a high school class taught b¥ said. three in-laws before be was sub-• The violence began aft.er Lhl Roome. Later, the girlfriends came dued by a hammer blo• to the two Jensens beJan ar1uin& in She says Robbins told tier she • out but Ms. Terwilliger re· bead. their home and ~!metbenniaql was pretty .and kissed her hand, mained behind, Ms. Verhaag Albert Francis JeDSen, 46, was sbe was going tq s~ iidt then took her to lunch and added. booked into Orange County Jail with the KuylCendalls, Spralt bought her an alcoholic "Did you see that same girl in on suspicion o f attempted said. beverage. She says he later the office after that?" asked murder in connection with the 10 While she was packing a bat. called her and asked her to din-Deputy District Attorney Albert p.m. inci4lent, said Orange CoWl· Albert Jensen apparently went ner, and they began having an Loeber. • ty Sheri!rs Sgt. Dan Spratt. berserk and began attacking t&e affair. "Yes;" Ms. Verhaag said, add· others, Spratt said. Roome said Robbins sent him ing that she did not recall bow The suspect's father-in-law The incident ended, be addeljt, a letter in mid-February 1979 many times she saw her. and brother-in-law, Do~las and when Mrs. Jensen bit ber asking permission for Ms . "Old you ever see her go into Randall Kuykendall, ·were both husband on the head with a ham· Terwilliger to spend the follow-the inner office?" Loeber asked. in serious condlllon today at mer. Ing March 29 at the Capitol. "Yes," Ms. Verhaag said. Western Medical Center in Jensen was tre•ted for the iJt. "This letter will constitute She also testilled that she Tustin. jury al UC lr\fine Medidl permiulon for your pupil, Laura typed the letter Robbins sent to Karen Jensen, 27, the aus-Center before being tra.nsferrelll TerwllU1er, to spend the day at Roome. pect's wife, anti ber mother. to Jail. the Capitol on March 29 as part _.:..:_ ___________ -...!:..=.::.::....::..~==~=::~~...::;;~=.:...-__.,_;_ _______ -:--:-- of your community Ufe class," the letter said. It also said that Robbins had reviewed the class program and believed that It was "truly the beat program that I have seen for any high school class ln Callfomla." Roome told district attorney's investigators earlier that he called Robbira and rejected the request after Ma. Terwilli1er'a 1uardlan, Pat Skiles, com- plained that Robbins had called her ward and uked her out. "I told him It would be better that she dld not 10 an the 29th o! March," Roome 1aid. "He (Rc)b- blns> a1reed to that." Earlier, several current and former members M Robbins' atatf aald they remembered~ From Page A1 CHASE. • • were Just kids. I mean kids." Officers said lt was amaiinc that no one wu lnJa.rtd iD the cbaae. But police were reluctant to credit the 7oulb'1 drlvlnl abWUes for lbe lack ol bJJu.ry, Police said autbortUe• •• bave I.be Job of eontact1nc the boJI' ,.,...... and t.rJlnl to es· plain UM &it~. BOmhmg repot1ed I ISLAllABA.D, Paklatan (AP) -....... bombed ,.., 1troe11tolda •.·parta ol Kan· dabar, A11baalataa • 1 1ecood laq•t ~. Md ....... ol ,.... ..... beUend k.WM, ... Alpan wllo eltalmlMI to bave ... t.he bom'*'I r.ported. " "' ·~ l f ~ l I I ,.,....._.. Horry Henneberger o/ Son Franca.co relaxes with. o book in Golden Gate Pork cu o couple of relident {}4!ese move in to take o closer look. AU ~e toking time to bcuk in summer nm. Denver 'fan' meets singer Two years ago, Vice Pre mier Fang YI of China heard John Denver sing in Washington. Monday, they met on Fang's turf. The entertainer. visiting China as a tourist, met with the vice premier, who ex· pressed appreciation for Denver's performance that night in 1979, the official • Xinhua news agency re- , ported. Fang accompanied Chinese leader Deng Xlaop· Ing on a visit lo the United States in early 1979. Stand by for Margaret Trudeau, reporter. The estr a nged wi fe of Canada's prime minister confirmed s he is considering an o ffer or a job with \ television station CJOH in Canada. ''I haven't signed a con- tract ye t ," sa id Mr s . Trudeau. ··If and when I do, you'll hear.about it." The job at stake reportedly is that of co-host or an hour· long program or news and con sumer items whic h f eatures live phone-i n queries from viewers. The s how. aired each weekday morning, features five guests a day talking ··a bout everything from psoriasis to lawn car e," a CJOH producer said. ......... Sen. S.l. HOJIQkau;ia take• time to have a rip o/ coffee from hil ''Colifornja mug•• during a praf con/erence concerning government competition with priVCIU budneu Mandell on Capitol Hill. ~torms spawn tornadoes ~O i nches of r ai n f orce 108 f ami lies to f lee Kansas homes .: ll.S. summary J· .. s. ...... tllundtnt«m• •ncl record '\empueturet produced tornedou n,..r Por1elH, N.J , encl N-o.1 .. n1 :!:II• r••ld •nts ot C•fltr•I HHCllUMtl• wo-red wlletll•r re WH • twl1t.. In the fierce plnclt 11\el r1Pc19d -llne1 •"<I deme99CI "°'"" Al leest 10 lncl>H of rein lore.a 10I j'tml 11.. to fl• Marldev I rom the Ir • ttoltllt(lton. 1<8'1., ,_ ! 'Tiie Port•ln twlllilr IOU<hed -n •ltt • 19erMIV _.,ieted •ru end Oeteroye<i two bMftS end • '1or•ge tlled. In New OrlHnl, • t~o IOUCMcl down In Ill• suburb of Al9lers, Mme99<1 ...... 1 ~ -1<'-1 i.u.1 .,Cl "*' slll~ ecrou .,,. Mlululppl Rlwr, del'l\9911'19 • cl1y wtl<lrf end• llhl!llllr19 ofll<e. In Hi.bberclttCll\, ~s., crews -e -111"9 to r•ll1Dre electrlcily .iter y'I ltoml. MMy SudOI, ... WM IDie condition •t Henry HeywMd l•I H"-"i.1 In Gerdn .. w,,.,. WM Mmlttecl --~ -oelnl •fter lier ...... Wft de• ,.....,, n Wlnchendlln, -. ... • »toot tlen M well Oft IM ~ story of II HI ... Sc,_ W• _,, out 700 I~ ~ on UM ~ .. .,of Ille teltlo4 llH1n. llllllOI' Gov. Jemet II. Tho~ .. ,.. ~ Quoty • di-Mr llKlllJ• .t I ~ IOmedD IOllM -... lfllwed ,, Ill Ut· ~., tllutldltntorm1 cont111u.t to- .,. , lt\e H1lor11 TMntHM .~~dolWU. norlll Atleflllc Coell ••Q1on, We111ln9to11 end Ill• nortllern Ro<lllH. Coastal forecast ••rty mor"ll'lll -clouds ne•r cOMt. S-y -w""' WeclMMllly. COHl•I. l11l•fld Iowa mid ..... ¢oeltl l llllfl mld-1'0f,, Int-mkMOI. ..... n. . .,_..,., l}tllt .,.,,.... w!Nfl ........... ,,_,,..,. ~ •omlflt _..,iy " ........ ......_, ... "-· TWe ...... wind __ ,,. llftilnl-• .... tWf'll,,... s.ut""""' -.112•a...._ '-,..,.,....,..,. "*""" "-'-~ ~, •.. ·----------..,...,,, California t..oulsvlll• .. •S Memphll .. n Mleml tO 71 71 Mllweuue 11 SI .01 Mpl .. St P 70 S1 M•lllvllle ., •s ... !Mw Orluns ts ,. •S Hew YO<'k " .. 01 ....,rlolk "' 11 <>Ille City .. 71 o.,...,. t 1 .. Or1efldo .. 1• SS Pllll edt>hl. ., .. . o• ""°9fll• 111 ts Pittlbvrgh ,, ~ OI Ptlend, Me ., 60 ,, Ptlend, Or• 10 ~ Reno •3 " Al<lllnOnd " "' S.tt Lake '3 67 s.no1-IO 10 S.n Fr•" ,. SS S.•tl .. ., 50 .01 SI Louis 11 .. St P·Tampe • , . SIS• Merle ., «) 10 Sllok•N ., 44 ... Tuts• • 13 Wetl'tlnvtn t1 71 01 "' few eflt,_ c--r• ••· pecttd 10 howr OWf lht -t•ln ,,...._ w .. tller llloulCI rern11ln werm wlUI 1119t11 In .. ll'llCI IOI to'°'- TM oew r11 .... 9JCPK1ed to bit MWIY end hat Wednnd41y end e llttle bli.tttrv. Wlnclt of 20 to >O mpll -r• Pf'edk led IOf' the~ -ew· nlno llourt. H '9hJ _,. lorecftl IO bit llllOvt 100, reedl"'91111n Ille lo-rele- •'11. CAU "°""IA Temperatures HI Le~ •• .S6 O:.I ICM 72 lCIO 11 t'J 65 ts 11 " .. .. 65 .. 71 1• n tO S4 .. 67 ••• t'J ,. " " .«I es " .01 t7 $4 71 u a • n .s. 71 Jt " ,, t1 ., .. . 71 .S6 4J .. t7 n ,. ~ tit .. .. . , " 71 8oekenfleld 108 11 81y11M 115 " Ei.,.11• .. Sl "'""° IOI ,. Ulfl<atlllr 100 IO Mlry1vlll• 108 u Mofllllrey 11 ~ ........ us Oeltl-12 " .. _ ... , .. 100 u ""' ''"'' 105 70 ,_.,,~Cllv '7 .., S.Cremento 101 ,. s.111111 IO » Sertla .. rtNre n " hH:llton 10I -Thtrmel 112 IO Uttllll t2 " ........ 111 71 ..... , t1 ... llllllOp 102 •2 CNllll• 70 .., L4ft9 IH<h • .. ,,,,,.,.,., .. .. ., New"'1 ... <h 1S 4J Sun, nioon, iitU?a . #1111 llP.llT ... ... ... ... ..... ~ , • ti I I ta I • 11 1 • ,. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23. 1981 H /F Interchange meet set Caltrans to. air plans on 'most congested' freeway project lh GLENN SCOTr Of•INltY ........... The laborious plannln1 proc- ess to improve the Santa Ana and Costa Mesa Newport freeway interchange begins Thursday when Caltrans bolds its first public session on the project. The meeting will start at 1:30 p.m . in the Tustin City Council Chambers, 300 Centennial Way. The meeting is required ln the state's step -by-step planning process ror proposals to speed up trartlc flow through what planners agree is the most con- gested freeway interchange in Orange County. Ir all goes according to plan, the improvements could be com- pleted by 1988. The meeting is to give agency representatives and the public a chance to discuss a focus for the project. However. des ign constraints don 't o ff e r to o man y a lternatives, according to Frank Weidler, Callrans project engineer. He noted that a Cull· scale. S60 million improvement project already has been reject· ed by planners because of the ~emendous impacts it would ave c r eated fo r adjacent uslin. Weidler said a more feasible proposal being examined at Caltrans is for a $30 milUon pro- ject which would feature two overpasses that would bridee the existing roads to connect paths between Santa Ana and Newport Beach. The interchange currently is comprised o ( four cloverleaf loops. With the proposal, two of the lesser used loops would re· main, but the two-lane 40 reet- hlgh bridges would move the majority or traCfic without the delaying circles. Under the proposal, the Ed· inger offramp from southbound Costa Mesa-Newport Freeway would be closed and about 5 per· cent o( Prentice Park, home of the Santa Ana Zoo, would be re- moved to make way for freeway ramps. Weidler said an environmental Impact statement on the project, which will include a scenario ol se veral Improvement alternatives, la scheduled to be Clnished by Sept. 30, 1983. After that, right-of-way ac- quisition and design work will extend through Sept. 1986. Construction should last about two years, Weidler said. The process is lengthy, be added. because one step must be completed before the next can be authorized. Environmental concerns have s lowed down freeway construcUon in areas where neig hborhoods have grown. be observed. "In the old days, a Caltrans project was perceived as something everybody wanted," he said , adding that today, ··we 're not j u st building freeways in the middle or an orange grove." He added that the Improved interchange wouldn't do away with the current bottleneck but would trans fe r congestion farther down the freeways B ·udds to oppose Gates Huntington Beach resident to enter 1982 election By 0 . C. HUSTINGS Of .. Delly -Me" Harry Budds of Huntington Beach, assistant chief of police for the Southern California R apid Transit Distric t , says he'll challenge Orange County SheriCC·coroner Brad Gates in next year's election. The election (or the county post will be conducted during the June primary in 1982. Budds will be banking heavily on his educational and pro· fessional background to help ham unseat Gates . The transit cop h old s a bachelor's degree from the University of Redlands and a master's in publi c ad- minis tration from use. He former· I y com · manded t h e Executive Sta(f U nit (manag e -8UDOI ment team) o( the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office. ••• GEORGE WRIGHT, 'another candidate for Gates' job, has named Dr. John P. Gruber, as his campaign chairman. Wright, who ran unsuccessful· ly againat Gates the last time around, announced early this year he would try again. He says bis c ampaign chairman teaches criminology at Chapman College in Orange and is president o( the Western SQ<:iety of Criminology. ••• EILEEN PADBERG is now a pa rtner in the Orange County political consulting firm once known as Robert Nelson & As· sociates. The rirm is now known as Nelson-Padberg Consulting. It s pecializes in political cam· paigns in the western U.S. One of its current clients is Orange County Sheriff-coroner Brad Gates. • • • THE UST OF Mike Curb s up· porters issued by staffers for the lieutenant governor's campaign for the R epublican gubern atorial nomination in· eludes such Orange Countians as: Doris Allen, a Huntington Beach high school district trustee and former Assembly candidate; John E. Anderson, a partner in the Newport Beach law firm of Kindel a nd An- d e r son, Marcia Bents of Newport Beach, former CO· chairman of the President Ford campaign in Orange County; Ken Carpenter, son o( Dennis. Also, Dennis Catron, former c hairman or the California Republi can Assembly and a Reagan backer ; E. H. Clark, president of Baker International Corp.: Assemblyman Nolan Friztelle: Sheriff Brad Gates, and Assemblyman Ross Johnson o( Fullerton. Also, Gen. William Lyon, co· chairman of the Reagan victory dinner; Vera Manning, presi· dent of the Republican Women for Reagan of Leisure World and former president of the Orange Cou nty Federation of Republican Women. and former O r ange County Reagan chairman Willard S. Voit or Newport Beach. ••• SUPP O R TERS OF SAN Diego Mayor Pete Wilson's bid for the Republi ca n gubernatorial nomination have a list, too. Here are some of the prominent Orange Countians Wilson partisans say are back· Ing their man: Philip Reilly, president of the Mission Viejo Co.: Gavin S. Herbert. president o ( Allergan Pharmaceuticals: Kenneth W. Carlson, president or VTN Corp.; Raymond R . Maggi president of the Apartment As- sociation of Orange County. Also. Bruce E . Noll, de- veloper; John M. Rau. president of David Industries of Irvine: John F. Seymour, mayor of Anaheim and past president of the California Association or Realtors. Also, Timothy L. Strader, vice president or the Koll Co.; Thomas Wilek, vice president ol the Irvine Company; William P . Lusk of Lusk & Son Develop- ment Co .. and Harry G. Bubb, president of Pacific Mutual We Insurance Co. Rabies clinic set a t HB fir e station A rabies vaccination clinic for dogs will be heJd from 7-8:30 1t the Warner Fire Station tonight lo Huntington Beach. Vaccinations will cost $3 each, according to a spokesman ror the Huntington Beach Rotary North, which is sponsoring the clinic at 3831 Warner Ave. Dogs should be on a leas h, the spokesman said . Manpower board gets new director C r aig Smithson o( San Bernardino has been selected as the new executive director for the Orange County Manpower Commission. Smi thson, who replaced Robert C. Nelson. will begin his job on June 29. Nelson resigned the post in late February. Smithson was executive direc- tor for the San Bernardino Com- prehensive Employment Train· @ 6EMWl5E ' ing Act <CETA) program t>etore his selection in Orange County. As chief or the Manpower Commission staCf, be will be responsible for delivery of all CET A funding and operation of its seven major employment and t raining programs for the economically disadvantaged. The County Manpower Com- mission oversees an a nnual budget or $28 million. . . .. I 1 { I I t I I ! .. . . . H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. June 23. 1981 I • , , Reagan upset over l ~ tax cut hill 'stall' WASHINGTON <AP) -Presi-members will ratify a new con-t d e n t R e a g a n a o d t h e tract that falls far short of what 11 Democrats' chief tax writer in they sought. 'l the House, already at odds over A tentative contract agree- the shape of a tax cut, are feud-ment was reached in the pre- • in1 ancrilY now over bow quick· dawn hours .Monday, just two • ly Congress can deliver one. hour s before the controllers : Reagan , who wants tax scheduled a strike that could '' legislation on bis desk before have crippled the nation's air • Congress begins its August re-transport system at the start of ~ cess, was described as "rather the summer travel season. livid" Monday upon hearing a c prediction by R ep . Dan Rostenkowski, D-111., that it 1 might take until the end or Sep- tem ber for both the H9use and the Senate to complete action. r. Rosten.kowski, who chairs the Ways and Means Committee in the Democratic-cont rolled 1 , 1 House, was no less chafed by ad- ministration inferences that he and other Democratic leaders are 1tallin1. Oil companies cut imported oil cost NEW YORK (AP) -Some American oil companies have cut the price they pay for crude oil as Mexico ran into more resistance to ita hopes for increased prices. Debby Boo~ hart in Ohio accicknl · LOOI, Ohio CAP) -Actress- singer Debby Boone, daughter of entertainer Pat Boone, was in good condition today after a three-vehicle accident that also injured her husband and the family nurse, officials said. Miss Boone, in Ohio to star in a Kenley Players' production of ··Seven Brides for Seven Brothers." suffered bruises to her head in the accident. Mount St. Helem back to normal CONNED OUT OF HOUSE AND HOME -Three of at least eight fa mill es are shown in front of a Houston house they all rented from what authorities say is a con artist who has vanished with $5,900 in rent and deposits. Three families who stayed in t he house Sunday because they had no other place are from left, Don and ~heri Cook an<l their three .,.......,.. children of Cincinnati; John and Marge LaTourneau and two children from Minnesota; and Jay and Linda Reese and two of three sons of Denver. The Cooks and the other families claimed to have signed a lease and paid deposits of from $400 to $1,200 after reading an ad for the house in . Houston newspapers . I Philli ps Petroleum a nd Marathon Oil Co. cut by Sl a l barrel, to $35 Monday the price J, \bey will pay domestic producers , 1 for high-quality crude oil. That re· duction, the second of the year, bas spread through most of the oil industry. VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP> - Tremors beneath Mount St. Helens have subsided to near- n or ma 1 following renewed growth or the Java dome in the volcano's gaping crater, scien- tists say. But scientists have been una- ble to determine how much growth occurred during the non- explosive dome-building erup- tion that began Thursday. Housing pushes up inflation rate Economists encouraged by low gain in consumer price inde± ' In Paris, a spokesman for Cie. Francaise des Petroles said the French company will cut its Mexican imports in half, to 50,000 barrels a day. beginning July 1. Air controllers to ratify pact? WASJilNGTON <A P ) -The president of the air traffic con- trollers union predicts his 14.~ MX missile said no good till 1990 WASffiNGTON (A P> -The MX strategic missile will not be able to effectively replac.e the Minuteman system until 1990, no matter how it is deployed, con- gressional researchers say. Analysts in the Office of Technology Assessment made· that conclusion AIU Y ~$SUM.AILE IHTHISt OHL Y 2nd TRUST DEEDS OWNER /MOMOWNER OCCUPIED Call Wilham B Mitchell Call today tor quote • No obhgatoon llOns notioool llJndlng WASHINGTON (AP ) -A sharp r ise in housing costs pushed the nation's annual infla- tion rate to 8.4 percent in May, more than three points above the previous month's rate, the government reported today. But for the· first time since early 1979, the two-month gain in the consumer price index was less than 10 percent -a further bolstering of economists' predic- tions that the double-digit crunch is finally at an end. Prices in May were .8 percent higher than in May 1980. May's rise in housing costs - primarily refl ecting higher mortgage interest rates and house prices -accounted for most of the .7 percent monthly increase, the Labor Department said in its report. Declin es were posted, however, In gasoline and food prices. The May data means that for the first five months of the year, inflation also rose at an 8.4 per· cent annual clip, well below the 12.4 percent rate registered for all of last year. SpecificaJly, the department's report said : Housing costs rose l.3 per· cent, boosted by an increase of 2.1 percent in mortgage interest rates and .9 percent in house prices. Rent rose .8 percent, the largest gain since October. Housing pri~es overall rose . 7 percent in April. Gasoline prices continued declining, falling 1.5 percent, after a 1.4 percent drop in April. -Food and beverage prices declined .2 percent. Grocery prices were off .5 percent from April, reflecting a sharp drop in prices of fres h fru its and vegetables. Prices of new cars rose 2.4 percent, partl.)1-as a result of American manufacturers' end· ing their rebate progr ams. Medical care costs climbed .9 percent. led by rises in doc- tors' fees, up 1.1 percent in May. Charges for medical services rose .8 percent. while hospital • room fees were up .3 percent. Entertainment prices rose .5 percent after a slower gain of .2 percent in April. Costs for apparel and up- keep were down .2 percent, after rising .2 in April and 1 percent in March. {714) 975-1128 === A II_. r•I et-. corporaUcw' CAPY'S BAR and GRILL THIS SUNDAY BOSS OUR CHEF AROUND I ~iew.S On ®' r.:~ ~ental Healtlf.f!rk'>; t::.' By GERALD WINKLER, 0 .0.S. ~) WHY A GOLD CROWN? You normally associate 1old crowns with klngs or queens. But the average person can have a gold crown also -not on his head but in h.ls mouth. And it will probably be a lot more practical than the king's head piece. Cast gold crowns cover the cusps (chewing surface> or back teeth entirely as well as three or more other surfaces. They fit over the remaining portion or a prepared tooth. Crowns· are used · to restore proper tooth form and C<Jntours for the correct blllng funcUon when much of ,· the tooth la exteruilvely · damaiecS. l Gold Is an Ideal '.1 restoraUve material for uae In reforming the t sha\>e and function oi a tooth. In fact, of all restorative materials, gold is the strongest and most long-lasting. There are other reasons for the use of gold as well as long-life. Gold can provide maximum resistance against the forces of c hewing on tooth surfaces. Fluids in the mouth cannot aflect gold. Gold will not shrink or expand once It has been cemented lr)to the prepared surface. Breaka1e o f the restoration Is l e11 likely. Gerald Winkler, D.D.!l. • and ~lates 1401 Avocado~l\uJle 515. Newport Be1c1t Phone: 84t·41N\ ' 'I If it's got wheels, you'll move it faster in a Daily Pilot classified ad.Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- viser wlll help you turn your wheels into cash. NOW APPEARING "BOB GULLEY BAND" Wed thru Sun. "LOST ANGELES" Sat. & Sun. Afternoons Mon. & Tues. Evenings CAPY'S BAR and GRILL 114 McFadden Place Newport Beach · 675-1094 Local. county. state. national and international events come to your doorstep I llil .._. in the bright. light and lively I •J ri•UI OJ ' ; AND DESIGN YOUR OWN OMELETIE WITH OUR ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT-SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCHI $6.95 We have a feast of a table. ·more than 30 feet long. fllled with delicious breakfast and lunch entrees. fruits and salads and breads-plus our chef (an omelette expert) stands waiting fur you to tell him how to make your custom omelette. he'll cook it right in front of you toot · Come to Calabash this Sunday for Champagne Brunch-and come hungry! e GREAT ENTERTAINMENT NIGtm.Y IN OUR SPACIOUS LOUNGE! • COMPLIMENTARY FRESH "CRACK-AND·PEEL-rr'' SHRIMP PLAM'ER WITH EVERY DINNER MEAL. CAI ~hDASLI U\NDING & nL.nU H DISTILLERY RE'~AURA.Al'r' (714> 642-98SS g 1 n r11 "11 TUES. ttwu SAT. Open ,,:so AM 1711. 1,_ StrWt. COlta Miii. ~ *'7 SUN1 BRUNCH 10:30 AM·2·30 l'M In the Yon"I Ctntlr It 1'7tlt Ind ~ DINNER fhlm 4 PM • I I J I ,l • i '· .·. ., . ' . ,. 'I . I • II ~· • ( ' I• ~ ~TI ill TI~ First body exhume d in hos pital d e aths LOS ANGEL~ CAP) -Alter an extensive inveat11atlon Into the causes of at least 28 suspicious hospital deat.M, the Loa Anaelea County coroner's office exhumed the first of perhaps many bodies to be unearthed, authorities said. The body of Isabelle T. Randall was· exhumed Monday from Green Hilla Memorial Park in San Pedro, a Los Angeles area community. Coroners officiab said she died at 3 a.m., Feb. 17, at Centinela Hospital. Natural causes were listed on the death certificate, said Assistant Coun- ty Coroner Richard Wilson. For the past couple of months, San Bernardino, Riverside and Los Angeles counties have been in- vestigating a series of mysterious deaths that took place at several Southern California hospitals. Board of F.ducation would have to follow in approvtn1 textbooks which school diatrtcta could purchase with state money for klnder1arten throu1h 8tb 1rade. U cit y bus /ares to be increased LOS ANGELES CAP) -City bus fares will go up to 85 cents per ride starting July 1, after a 20-cent bike was approved by the directors of the Southern California Rapid Transit District. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuetday. June 23, 1981 H/F Al .. , .......... . . Plan to cut mortgage rates OK'd by panel SACRAMENTO <AP ) -A measure which could dramatically reduce home mortgage Interest rates by letting lenders share expected profits from the future sale of the home has passed its first legislative test. Despite a long list of unanswered or only partially answered questions about "shared appreciation mortgages," the Assembly's Sub- committee on Financial lnstitutions sent AB2168 by Assemblyman Jim Costa. D·Fresno, to the Finance. Insurance and Commerce Committee on a 6-0 vote Monday. "Ninety-five percent of all Califor. nians are frozen out of the housing market by high interest rates," Costa s aid . "S h ared appreciation mortgages offer an alternative for persons who cannot afford the high inte rest rates.'· Costa said the idea is. a lender would cut the interest rate charged the home buyer by one-third, and would collect one·third of the capital gain on the home when it is sold ·'This is intended to attract money . from pension funds and individual• i into the housing market," Costa said. , Ubder Costa's plan, the loans t would be written so that monthly payments would pay them off In 30 years. But lenders would have the op-l lion of requiring that they be re-t financed after 10 yet.rs at prevalUng rates, so they could be paid their share of the profits. Among problems cited by the California Association of Realtors and other critics: -Who sets the market value when the lender wants his share of the profits and the owner wants to keep the house? Does the original lender have to offer the refinancing mortgage? If the owner sells the house for less than the lender thinks it's worth, how is the disFute resolved? Whal if the home owner has made improvements to the house? Are selling fees such as termite inspection work and real estate saJes I commissions all paid by the home owner. or s hared by the lender? According to a Riverside County coroner's report, lethal doses of the drug Lidocaine -used to treat cardiac patients -was found in two 1 • patients who died in Riverside County. In actions Monday, the direct.ors also voted to increase the special fares for senior citizens and the han- dicapped by 10 cents; and students under age 19 will pay an increase of 15 cents, while fares for vocational students will go up 20 cents. The in- crease, aimed at offsetting $34 milUon in additional costs this fiscal year, is the RTD's third rate hike in as many years. WELCOME, DAD -Andrea Sandovan, 3, con- gratulates her father, Salvador, formerly from Mexico, on his naturalization as an American citizen. He was one of 10,000 people who took the oath of allegiance Monday at the Los Angeles Coliseum. the largest naturalization ceremony ever held. That would reduce the interest from the current 16112 percent to 11 percent, cutting interest payments by nearly $350 a month for an $80,000 mortgage on a $100.000 home In that example. a person with a $20,000 down payment could qualify for a $100,000 home with a $26,000 an- nual income instead of $37,000 now required. Is the lender 's profit considered income. or capital gain which is taxed at lower levels? Will these mortgages create "red· lining" situations in which shared appreciation mortgages are onerea only in neighborhoods with high capital gains potential and not in older. lower-income neighborhoods? 'R ight, wrong' text bill backed P iper aircraft closes p lant But 1f that home has doubled in value when sold. the buyer would get only two·thfrds of the profit, and the lender one-third SACRAMENTO (AP ) California's public school textbooks would have to advocate "universal values of right and wrong" under a bill that has advanced from the As· sembly to the Senate. The vote was 46·31 Monday on AB399 by Assemblyman Bill Leonard, R-San Bernardino. The bill would set standards that the state SANTA MARIA (AP) -About 800 production employees arriving at the Piper Aircraft Company for work were shocked to find they didn't have a job. The company, which earlier in the year bad said production would be stepped up, suddenly closed its plant Monday and immediately fired its workers. Pre paid tuition plan set b y U SC LOS ANGELES (AP > -The University of Southern California may get a financial windfall by promising not to raise tuition. The catch is that students must pay their full four.year tuition in advance -a $24,000 tab. Currently such loans are possible between individuals. Costa's bill would aJlow a wide var iety of rinan· .cia l institutions, including banks, savings and loan associations and various brokers, to issue such loans and reseU them to pension plans and other investors . Costa's bill proposes crediting home buyers with the cost of im· provements in excess of $2,500, but said that issue is open to more negotiation. I The subcommittee approved th bill . leaving all the other questions t~ be resolved in later committees an~ in m eetings Costa said he would con• duct with lobbyists for real estate In·, terests and various lenders. , Smog impection bill backed I ·:New measure weakened from previous. a~tempts SHUTTERS CUSTOM QUALln SHUTTERS I · ' ~ SACRAMENTO CA P > -A long-stalled pro-tor handle ins pections at various sites, saying this t ' posal to require annual inspections of auto would be more effective and easier Lo regulate. Designed, Finished Installed ' i i i •' · l I ' I ! • ' emission systems in smoggy areas has reached the But strong pressure from service station floor of the state Senate. owners, who contend a current centrally managed But S833 by Sen. Robert Presley, 0 -Riverside, inspection program in Southern California has is somewhat watered down, compared to the bill been mismanaged, forced Presley to propose let- that has been rejected by the Legislature for the ting the stations run the program. last three years. But thars probably why it -.on the bare· majority 8-6 vote Monday of the Senate Finance Committee. The fede ral government has frozen $850 million in bjghway and sewage treatment funds for California because or the Legislature's refusal to require annual vehicle inspections. The Reagan administration is considering pro- posals to weaken the Clean Air Act. But Presley said California can't regain the money without re· quiring inspections. His bill would cover the Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Santa Barbara, Ventura. Sacramento and Fresno areas. Pre-1960 model cars would be exempt. The bill would go into effect in January 1983. The inspections would have to be at specially Licensed service stations. Local air quality officials could veto the re- quirement, but state Air Resources Board Chairwoman Mary Nichols said they-favor it. Presley said the inspections would cost $10 to $15. If a tuneup or repairs were needed, the bill would limit the additional cost to $50 -which could be increased to $100 at local option -unless the owner had deliberately tampered with the equipment. The ARB had favored letting a single contrac- Simplici~ Funerals by Pierce Brothers When d1gn1ty and cost are considered. Pierce Brothers' new S1mpllc1ty Funeral is a most welcome solution. And only $795. Pre- arrangement and finance plans are also ava1· lable. Contact your neighborhood Pierce Brothers or write for add111onal informa11on rffi s implicity L_)\[j f uneral s "fltef IAOTI4flll-NLL lllOo\OWAY UO B•oectway, eo.ia M-. 112827 17141642-11150 ~Xi..i- PLUMBING . • HEATING SERVICE & REPAIR MODERNl7ATION 7'1!:':" NEW CONSllUCTION RESIDENTIAl..-<X>MMERCIAI. C.Omplete line of A merican Kohler Standard Fixtures, Moen & Pr1oe Alister Kitchen & Lavatory Faucets. W•ter Heaters, DlspOSals, Do-It-Yourself Supplies. -State Contracton UCenM 1241127-e - L.M.Boyd ln~~r~ llllY. Pilal That change removed service station opposi- tion, leaviJtt the California State Automobile As- sociation as the bill's principal opponent. Jack Harrell, speaking for the CSAA and the Automobile Club of Southern California, said the inspections would cost motorists several hundred million dollars a year. ''Th.ere is no scientific data which indicate that there will be a demonstrable reduction in smog," be said. But Ms. Nichols said studies show that a prop- erly run inspection program can redu.ce emissions of hydrocarbons and nit.rogen oxides. TIRED OF T RAFFIC J AMS? C ALL DELANEY 'S FOR FREE H0)1E DELIVERY S ERVICE. YOUR ORDEK IS UNDER COMPLETE REFRIGERATION FROM OUR STORE TO YOUR DOOR. CSS0.00 MINIMUM PLEASE>. DELANEY'S Store Hours 9·6, Closed Sundays 292t Newport Bhd .. !'llewport Beach 673-5520 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY ... AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841 or 548-1717 HEIRWOOD MANUF ACTORY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 . To have your appointment SC:heduled, plea1e call NEWPORT BALBOA SAvtNGS located In th• heart of W.tcllff Plaza, corner of WHtcllff Drive and lrvln• Avenue, Newport Beach at 645--6505. CALL NOW to reterve . your tchedullng tlmel Photography Dates· Ju~ 30th through July 3rd 3:00 p.m. • 9:00 p.m. t t ' I i I ' I • .· • -~-____ ._,_--~-------------------------------------------............. ~ - "· Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/Tueeday, June 23. 1981 QUEENIE .!--~~ ~,.,...,. ___ ... __ _ "Is that you, Gila monster ... er ... ah ... dear~" Mussels quarantined DEA R PAT DUNN : I moved to California a couple of months ago and was surprised to learn that there's a quarantine on California mussels every year from April through October. Is there something wrong with the ocean water during these months, or what? J .D .. Irvine This annual quarantine ls to protect everyone from the highly toll.le polson found In sbellflsb during the summer and fall months. Eating todc·contalning ma11el1 leads to acute disturbances of central nervous fanctlons. The P.eate1t hazard ls from mu1sel1, but there's also danger, to a lesser extent, from clams. OnJy the wbfte meat of clamc shoclld be eaten. Clams sbooJd be taken only from areas free of sewage contamination and be thoroughly cleaned and washed before cook· Ing. The source of the poison is the Gonyaula ("red tide"> organism which gives the ocean water a deep reddish-brown color and Is food for plankton feeders such as musel1, clams a94-oysters. Abalone, crab and shrimp do not feed on plankton; so there's no danger of poisoning from them. Dented can warning DEAR PAT DUNN : Please address yourself to the ··safety'· factor Ln purchasing dented canned goods sold al reduced prices. T.B .. Costa Mesa You may be taking a chance If you choose this bargain, according to tbe Cooperallve Extension's home adviser's of· flee. A slightly dented can probably i• ufe, but lids should be slightly concave and not ntp up and down if pressed . The can should not show any sign of uulg- ang or leaking. nor should the food spurt out of the can as if under pressure. when opened. If you do buy dented cans and any of the above happens, discard the product. Do the same when any opened canned foods is moldy, bubbly or has an unpleasant odor. Matche. kept dry DEAR PAT DUN~: Can you tell me bow to water·proof matches'? I'm fixing up a First Aid kit for my boat, and I think this would be a good thing to include in it. B.E .. Corona del Mar The most lDexpeHlve way to water·proof matches ls to dip tlaem lD UW. •all pollsll. Dip oae at a time or la small batc91es. T'1.I la· formation comes from tbe Glrl Scoat Haadbook, a wealth of laformatloll oa lees· pea•lve craft.a aad safety material•. Old· faabJoaed kltcltea or wood matclaes wCMlld be moat ttllable. Keep them la a small t1a boll, aloag wltla a strip of sandpaper for sue atrlk· •111 whea you need to ue them. . Sleep clinics listed DEAR PAT DUNN: I was interested in your recent item ·about warm milk being an aid for sleep. I wish this helped me, but It didn't. I want to look lnto being treated at a "sleep clinic," but I don't know how to con- tact one. I'd also like some basic information about how they operate. J . W., Huntington Beach Doctors usually refer patient• to aleep cllalca, IO yoa may want to dlscua &bis with your penonal physician. Some dlalc1 are set up as part of t.o.pltal1; otben are connected witll privately owaed sleep Jal» and are more researcb ortellted. Some cUalcs accept pee>· pie oa u la-patle•t basis oaly, btlt otben ac· cept both a.. Hd •t·patleat.t. TM ,....,... la most •leep cllales ln· chadea a &lloro.1b pbyslcal eum aad p1ycllolo1lcal &e1Ua1 precedl•I 1everal nlgll&s If EBG Mlldles darlag wlllell &tie la· tomalae II moml&ored to deter•lae wllat ab· nor•alldn edit la bll sleep pa&&en. A Ult of 1leep elllda II available from Dr. WW .. • De•eM. .u.edatloa ol Sleep D1Mrder1 Ce•· ten, 8&..,_,. tJalvenlty Scllool of MHlet.e, StH..., Callf. HJM, or Peter Bell& Brtsll•• u .. pl&al Sleep Cllalc, 7Zt H..U.,._ AH., Bot ......... 111. Florida restaurant haven for illegal aliens FORT LAUDERDALE, P1a. (AP) -Hour·lonf walta are not uacom· mon few a table at Carl09 IDd Pepe'• 17th Street CanUna. But it'• not the Mexican food and 1iant mar1artta.a that hive c1ught the attenUon ot U.S. immlsrat.ion offtclala. A1enta of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalliation Service claim that the restaurant routinely ferrie• illegal aliens from CallfomJ1 to Fort Lauderdale to work as busboys, cooks, dishwashers and Janitors. Most are from El Salvador. "It 's a place where we can go and quickly catch a handful of illegal aUens," said Truman L. Carr, acting chief of the U.S. Border Patrol in North Miami . "These people are like lndentund aervanta. 'Ibey are belnt exploited (or the proftt of the company.·· The Immisratlon Service raided t-he restaurant twice thi• year. On May 8 a1enta arrefled nine ille1&1 aliens. , The)' 11reed to leave the country voluntarily. On June 171 agents took 14 undocumented work en into custody. Thole allena also face deportation. Restaurant manager Steve LaMan· na did not deny tbat the restaurant has hired illegal aliens. He said the company, which employs about 150 workers, requires only a Social Security card from job applicants. But be said he did not know that the Latins arrested by INS agents were llle1aJ aliens. •·we milht have set up a pipeline. We have jobs here and there are 10 muy people tryln1 to work," aaid La Manna. "II there wu a pipeline it was inadvertent. We don't recruit them. They come to u• for job8." LaManna said the two INS raida "put us in a bind. We're now trying to change over to citizena o( the Unit· ed States." The popular restaurant ls owned by Callfornia·based e ntrepreneurs beaded by David Alderman of Mall bu. The Fort Lauderdale News and Sun-Sentinel reported that the com- pany has been flyin1 illegal aliens from California to Fort Lauderdale since 1978. Federal official.a conflrui the filghta took place, but would not disclose how many lllegal alien• were involved .. The U.S. Labor Department in Atlanta ordered the restaurant in March to repay 257 worken al leut $20,000 in back wages. The paymenta began in March and wiU continue through August, the newspaper said. California attorney Paul Shoop, who represented Carlos and Pepe's in the dispute with the Labor Depart· ment, said the business "didn't get where we are by cheating our employees." · LaManna said all worken current· ly are pa.id minimum wage. Introducing ase atta11 • • • ma11c1 ervices. /·----- . We've come to California to give y ou the credit you deserve . If you stopped by our new Newport Beach office today, chances are you wotild have a loan decision tomorrow, a home equity• decision usual- ly within a week. You see, we're part of something bigger-the Chase Manhattan organization. That gives us the size and resources to offer you loans ranging from $3,000 to $100,000 or more. A variety of these loans include personal, home irnproveµtent, car, boat, home equity,• installment loans, and business loans. ' The reason we're so fast is because our Newport Beach lending officers are experienced decision makers with full authority to approve most loans-sometimes right on the spot. ' r And Chase offers you a loan approval in ad- vance when you want time to shop arou~d . So if you earn over twenty-thousand dollars annuany, call us. After all, we're here to give Californians the credit they deserve. Call Brian Rennie, Vice President. (714) 760-2671. J Chase Manhattan Financial Services. 2 Corporate Plaza • Suite '100 Newport Beach, California 92660 (Near the intersection of Pacific Coast You'll find 1's very resourceful. I CH..•B• Highway, and Newport Center Drive.) ,e · ~~ I 0 l981 ni. Cha• Manh1ttan Corponidc_in • l • •r . . •,,I t 1 DIVORCE UPSETTING Princeu Margaret NON-ENGUSH Prince Philip GERMAN DESCENDENT Queen Elizabeth II Matrimony of royalty not always successful LONDON (AP) -The wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer on July 29 will be the 18th in the royal famlly this century, but the first of an heir to the throne to an Ensliahwoman for 303 years. It will be the first wedding of a prince of Wates for 118 years. 'l'be 17 previous 20th century Q)&r· r iages in the royal family moe'1y have worked well and happily. The royal family, like many other families, has had ita share of matrimonial ups and downs, however -from the divorces and executed wives of King Henry VIII to the mis- tresses and illegitimate offspring of King Charles lI to the affairs of the profligate King Georgee.IV. who so loathed his wife Caroline that he locked her out of his coronation in 1821. 1952, and was crowned Queen June 2, 1953. Queen EJizabeth's father, King George VI, married the daughter of a Scottish earl, Lady Elizabeth Bowes- Lyon, in 1923. Queen EJlzabeth's grandfather King George V married a G._erman bride, Princess Mary, daugbter of the Duke of Teck, in 1893. The last time an heir to the throne married an Englishwoman was Nov. 4, 1677, when Prince Willlam married Mary, daughter of the Duke of York. at 1St. James Palace In London. William and Mary became joint Protestant monarchs in 1689. But Lady Diana is a true English rose. Her father, the eighth Earl Spencer. can trace his English faml· ly over 500 years to John Spencer, who lived in the parish of Hodiiell In W arwtckshire in the reign of King Henry VI . The last wedding of a prince of Wales was that of Edward, eldest son ' , . • if' • • • r " • # ., .... • • • r Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23. 1981 H/F LIS Model Furnishings Sala Sat. June 27th Only 10 A.M. • 4 P.M. 15185 Sprlngdale, Huntington Beach ALL SALES FINAL s '1 • I Gotdnwest Edwwd1 E N+s w SprilMJCMle IXI Catlt I Carry Mol.._. Gr ...... Mobce..g.1 Af\ ... The biggest upset in more recen times was the abdication of King Edward VIII -later the Duke of Windsor -in 1936 to marry American divorcee Wallis Simpson. It caused a constitutional crisis and a deep rift in the Royal Family. They married in 1937 in France. The duke died in 1972, aged 77. in Paris. His widow still lives there. She turned 85 on June 19 and is in bad health. of Queen Victoria, who became King I;;::============================================ Edward VII. He married Princess n Alexandra of Denmark in 1863. He was 21. she was 18. Victoria hailed the beautiful princess as "this jewel." Another major upset waa the 1978 divorce of Princess Margaret, sister of Queen EUubeth II, and photog- rapher Lord Snowdon. They married ln 1960. Four-year-old Prince William of Prussia, later Kaiser William II, 1ot so excited at the wedding that he pried a piece of quartz from a ceremonial dagger he was wearing and tossed it over the choir. He bit two older guests who tried to restrain For 303 years, royal heirs have married non-English partners in the search for dynastic links. him. The title Prince of Wales ls bestowed on the heir to the throne at the discretion of the monarch. Charles ls the 21st prince of Wales. For example, Queen Elizabeth II, 1reat-great-granddaughter of German-descended Queen Victoria, Is married to Greek-born Prince Phlllp. He Is the only sob of Prince Andrew of Greece although also re· lated to Victoria. There have been two princes of Wales between Edward and Charles but neither held the title when they married. Prince Geor1e. later Geor1e v, wu not sranted It unW eight years after hla marriage whlle Prince Edward became Kint Edward Vlll before his marriaae. He and EUubeth married at Lon· don'• Weatmlnater Abbey Nov. 20, 1947, two years after Wol')d War II. It wu a time of shortages when food and clothinc were rationed. Llke any other BrlUah bride then, Ell%abeth saved clottas-ration coupons for her wedding ctr•s. The sUk came from China. The ~Uk worms of Japan and Italy, wartime enemies, were shunned as "'1P•triotlc. Elizabeth succeeded to the throne on the death', ol her father Feb. 6, The first Prince of Wales, weak- willed Prince Edward, who became Kine Edward lI in 1307, was given the title by his father tnng F.dward I in 1301 and married seven years later. He lived to wish he hadn't. Edward, who preferred male favorites up until his marriage, wed crafty, strong-minded Isabella, daughter of King Philip IV of France. DEATH NOTICES Rebuffed SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -A Los Angeles RAaVEY 1ident or Oran&• County ror woman has lost her fight STEPHEN 11. HARVEY. so years. Memorial services to overturn a law that Nlldent ol ea.ta lleu, Ca. will be held at the Fairview prohibits a wife from fit. Born In October 1901. Community Church 2525 ing an injury claim Puaecl away on June 20, t•1 Fairview Rd., Costa lleu, against her husband 'a at t.be a1e ol n. Hell 1ur-Ca. at S:OOPll on Thursday, automobile insurance Ylved by his wife Alma June 25, mi. co m pan y . Haney, CoU Mesa. Calo; LalMYE ----::::::ta~ G~:ne JU D S 0 N ALB ER T PUBLIC NOTICE lodebed; ol •-t.. Valle La HA YE, formerly or --------~ Y • Briqeport CoanecUcut and MVttO • Ca., Marjorie Grn• of Su-Montebello Ca Paued P1CT1T1ousau11MHI ta Aaa Ca Carol Helin ol • · ...,.. naTSJM•T Cap lit r; no Ca l . 4 away on June 21, 1111 in TM...._....~•• llMt lllMU-• · • Newport Beach. Ca. aft.er a -.. : IJ'aDclchlldre -2 1reat-Ion Uln He ii urvi eel " u T T 0 " I It 0 A c H 1randelllldren. He wa~ a b ~ ~· llary ~ ~th LITH001ta,.Hus, .,. 1tH "'" member" tbe Elb, Santa <~an1roi~ LaHay:aand •-::io=·~=~~ .. Ana. Ca., IOC' • yean, a re-c:bll4ren u.a lil1let Judlon •o.we&e~._ Louh and Cat.berine' Andrea, ~:!'._......_ 1• ~.,•cw- ~--------IJ'aDddaupwr Nicole llUes ,~,.,....,.& and a brother Lee Lou1a L Dl*...,.lne. '"'" PAc.ec YllW MllMOalAL PMI CetN•ert Monuary Chapel-ctem1tory 3500 Pacific V..w o,.we Newport 8HC:h 844·2700 McCOIMICll MOITU.U.I Laguna Beach 494-0415 ~'· San ~ C.pttlrano 496-tn& LaHaye. Redtatioa of tb~ :=:..a:.:::• Rotary wW be held on Tuea-_. ~ day. June 23, 191 at l :OOPM T"h ............. -me11 •'"' • 1 and l(ua ol tbe ft.enrrec-C-ty Clel1! 9f Orlflllt C-ty all Uon on Wectne.day, June 24, J-"· *'· ,..._ 1111 at 10:30All both at Our ""*'.,,.. 0r .... c-s11>e11, ,., .... Lady of ML Carmel Catholic J-u . •· Jiiiy 1, ••. '"' ...., Church, 1441 West Balboa 1 Bl•d., Newport Beach, Ca. wlth Interment at Good PUBUC NOTICE ...... rd ~. Runt• '::.."::::."::' Ii.CIC• BeMla. Ca. 'ftle faml-TIM ... ....,.. ~-•r• .. ._. ,.. ..... la ... ol now.n ----: utloaa .. , be seal to St. WATUf'ltONT ftltOftaltTIH, Vlaceat'1 t:!::!'&; 1105 ,...,, "•lfk aatt HltllW9Y. '-' ...... Rd c ...... Cal ............ -• '' L 8 , LaV-HerYINll, a Cal.._..<•· orC.-11.eeearen,c/o ., • ._,.... c.. .. Cay~ • ...,..., oa1 Hospltal, Newport .,..... IMdl,callNnlla,..... llMell Ca ~undert.M J.-. ic. ~ lftt Jawi It..,, i.Brlldllo' n Vt llalta Berteroa-C:.::.'::.'':'C::.: ~ • c.-lmltla fr Nlllll Wfftcllfl ,.,.,._ ~~~ of Coata Men. ••~11111..,_-1''"':'4 ... ~ 111<. TMt _,...... -fltM wllll .. VANU••.a c-•Y OWtt., °'-.. c:-itY • aOIA VAN HASJU.SM, ,,_•,•· ..,_ ... •· P.-.l awa1oa1.. ,.......°'...,a.. Ditty NII. If, ltll. hnlY .. by 4 ,_t,'6,D,a,ttlt .... dallO&en Halen ...... o1t-------"~--- , .. ,.1 .. 4a1 Ca., LllllH Pl18UC NOTICS · Z• ••h o Laa Ve1a~ • ..-.----=-------......_ ~H--.. NTHt-••nW ....... ,....,, ol II ... Mute TM .......... .,, ............. 0.-..ol ~.1 ......... : -Walt« VM ol ,Jn-::=. OUTTalt IU""'-Y, Co • c or d , C a . , t ~-Dftw, .,,_ .... ••l•"f W .. T..... ....P.o.ee.,11m-... .................... ~ ...... ._.... c:.t ...... ............. ',... •11 •:Wll ...... ....:...~i.w::-= .... ,., .. ,.... Tiiie .................... . arr Cll•t.tl. 1111 =:ft.,, ~., .......... , '* --......... ftl =~ la CilllllY °"" .. Or .. e-tY •• fl,.._.. ~\Ju 1t, ..,, ...... u. c .... , ,_Or-.~Ollt;3 ............... __ ...., ____ .... ................ J-........ .... tch your new floor Installed by proFesslonals, AllD SAVE llOWI Sfro.g Ww I •lie• «JO .... .... r1or ,,... •• mdMnlc• We sell the best floors made by Armstrong, America's leading flooring manufacturer. and then install them by skilled craftsmen. We back up your new floor with double warranty coverage. •The Quality of material is guaranteed by Armstrong; •Installation is guaranteed by The John Bloeser Carpet C.O. "~.liA New Designer Solarian Floor ts• ..... d .. ,.... ...... .-.12·111tc1Ma. fll.OOa ........ noM Ate CO~ UTIA . €0STAMESA 'J!1Z1 S. BRISTOL CO.. ILOCll IO. OP IAl81 17141 751·2324 OT ... LOCATIONS IM LOSAMMLIS LOHeAACH ...... "' . -..... . Orange Cout DAIL. Y PILOT/TuHday, June 23, 1811 11 I· 'I> \' -EVBM-l:OO•G• HIWI K.UNQ l'U "The NllUte Of Evll" I no TAC DOUGH M•A'8'H Payctity bring• a windfall to Hawt<eye. a b<lt>e to Henty. • peetl necklace to Hot Lipa and 1 v1nlehed poilw pot to Trapper • OOOOTIMU TM fact lhll Wlllona'e l\9W boyfriend h.. • phyak:al diaatliNty c;rHIM a Vert awkward P<Obiem • '1l) El.ECTRIC COMPAHY(R) UNIVERSAL -"Waltr Cronkite's Universe," the award-winning science program, returns for a 12-week run beginning tpnight at 8 on Channel 2. <See st or y below). Cll C88HEW8 0 A8CNEW8 t:aO &IJ JOKER'S WILD ID WELCOME BACK, KOTTER When WHh1ngton gall l'>Ooked on pma Gab41 and IM S-elhOgl try IO ~p him tit BENNYHIU Go aboard ahlp with Benny 1n charge &!) KCET NEW88EAT ~ 8TUOIOSEE "BMX" A New Jersey leeri COKhM kid• In molO· CIOH. apectac:ular Hnd sculptures, the rare lllght of a SOiar batlOOn !RI Cll NEWS Q1l MANEY MILL.EA A sr.oottng 1nc1den1 teaca the detect Iva• of Iha 12th preclncl to pona.r Iha dlf· lerence between ••• therapy and prostitution (SJ ROASTED MEDIUM RARE Henny Youngman. Iha masler of the °"*""'- end somelimM of the v>O· Ion, gets lhe roatl1ng Of h•a Ille from thow-b11 great• (ff)MOVIE "Journey Beck To Oz ( 1972) Animated Voices ot Ltu 11A1nnelh, Paul Lynde Dorothy returns to the Lend ot OZ and encounters the sister of 1ne Wicke<! Wo1Ch of Iha WHI G &66 IJ EOfTOfUAl 1:00 1J C88 NEWS D N8CNEW8 &J HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Richie a,,d Potlie pool their funds for a 'l)O<ty 1950 convertlDle that proVH to t>e all allow and no go D ABCNEWS 0 BULL.SEYE m M'A'S'H Fame<! newacaS1ar Ctete Rot>ert1 "'"" the 40771h for a report on Ille leelings ot lhe people ltat>Oned ,,,.,, CD STREETS Of' a.AH FRAHCl8CO Tiie ttar wit-to a rob- bery 8nd I he ahOOllng Of a CHANNEL LISTINGS po4ICI officer dluppqr1 and Ston. quntlon1 hie r"l ldentlly ft) OVER EASY Gu"ll En10 Stuart1, Dr Aot>ert Sutler, Chef N1rse1 OaVld (R)O '1l) MACN£ll. I LEMMA AEPORT TIC TAC DOUGH ®J MEAV GRIFFIN Guella Charo, JC>e)I 81111· op IQ)MOVIE "Bedknoba And Broom· 111ck s ' (197 1) Angele Lan1bury. 01111d TomHn- aon OurlflO WO<ld We.r ti e novtce aorce<HI and ,,., tllrM young lrtends Ml oH tor • magic 1aland wl'lefe sh• 1ntenda to leern enough about witchcraft to use II against the Nazl1 'G' 'ZJ LOVE 18 A FUNNY THING: A 8"1.UTE TO CLAUDE LEJ..OUCH 7:30 1J 2 ON THE TOWN Holla Steve Edwarda. Melody Roger1 Talle a 100!< at 'older woman· younger man" relation· alllpa, tr avel down Sepulvede Boulevard, a.amine your bOdy clock and -now 11 tunct1or>1 D FAMllY FEUO &J SHA NANA Gueat Sc•tman Crothers D IEYEONLA Hotta Inez Pedroza. Paul Moyer A IOoll at organ tran99lan1S. eumine the growing phenomenon of women athletes; a rfl9()rt on blu..-green algH 0 FACE THE Ml.$0 Q) ALL IN THE FAMILY Arc;ll1e and Edith ••• IN>c:ked -ltoey INrn 11181 Mike Ind Gloria l'lave declded to INve Joey ""''h trlendl In the.,,_, of the4r dHlhl fii) MACNEll / lEHRER REPORT l~l ~.., Diego Pedru ., LOI MQelel Oodgef's ~II WAl.TP 1J KN' J CB :::.1 l .., Anqo•I•· Cl l\NBC NBC.. Lo An 1•• , • ., ">\1LA ,,,, L .. A··1· I D l\ABC. IV 1ABC l "An ~f''"' T .,,rMB 1CB::.1 S,1r D l"'l • a l(HJ TV nno 1 lo., An !PIP<; If}' KCS T I ABC1 San 011>qn .., KTTV 1lno I LOS Anc.wi·· m '<COP rv tlnd I lo~ Anqttlt"> al KCE T TV t PBS1 Los An<J"'"" '1i> KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hunt•nQIOn Be<.1ch CA<>Nt<m!'S UNIVl!MI D l.080 A ring or blackm111er1 UM Information leerned et • pluth maulege oounMllng end M X lherapy cttntc 10 eJClor1 money from their vicllrlle (RI " MOVll **~"The Chy" (1971) Antl'IOny Oulnn, E G Mer· 111811. A mayo< In otltoa for 16 yeara II lhrMlaned bye tough opponent and • pay. Chopeth obMNld with 1111 deetructlon. D O ~DAY9 Cllaehl learnt Joenle'a part In the echoot play •nctvdea a love -wllh Bnolher all.ldlnl 1111<1 Join• the c:ut 10 keep en eye on , her (A) 0 MOVIE * * ·~ "The Raging Tide" ( 1952) Richard Conte, Shelley W1ntera Alter '°'1\mlthng e murder, • racilel-Mella refuge on a llstung boat and I riet Io ptn the murder on a fi"'9r· man'taon ID P.M. MAGAZJNI CD MOVIE * * * "The Long Voyage Home" f 1940) John Weyna. Ian Hunter Direct· ed by Jottn Ford 8aMCS on Ille play Dy Eugene O'NeoN A Cl-of -11\ere advanlUt• and .. cltement on their return trto home fli) NOVA "Beyond The Miiky Way" A look la taken at the galulea beyond what wu once Ille cloudy t>errlet or the Miiky Wey and Iha aophis1tealed lecflnol<>Qy whlCh has made lhem v191- l>le lo ea1ronc>n11<11 (Al O el) MYSTEAV "Aumpole Of The Balley Aumpola And The HMvy Brigade" Judge Pre1tcold _,... more inlerMted In Hor-Allmc>Ole'• (Leo McKern) llOvenly ~ ance In court 111an In Aurn· pole'• liowwlllld Cll9nt on trial tor mordet (A) O 8&ZAJIW'9! • Jottn Bynet 111ow9 you thing• stranger lhan truth. larger than Ille. and llM\let than "'YllllnO you·.,,. - ... n In theM epeclat enc«• pr-tatlona lrom the Sllowtlme Bizarre Nb<ary MOYIE 'Doc" (1971) Stacy KNC!h. Faye Dun-.y The llO· endary Doc Hollld8Y ,, .. VII• back IO Tombetone. Whal'• he 'illalte Illa lrlen wy1n E11tp and aett'" Willi • P«l&llWt• he -In ... N> ;ie .,.,.., t• '* llOt,.,, tllet the ,... rM1M It Ille YIMeW "'91 "'9rll '* " 2 Jl' !-..... -. u..U.W/11141 ....,.., .... dllllnt • llendtOlft8 dOo* w110 II ewppoudl) 111oui '° o-t • cllYotw. C"I Q • CAIQ..,......,. """ ........ OuMI•: Si-~encf. TlnlC-tty (J) 411..:AN OANC9 ~-o-V•OOf'I ltld • troupe of d-• .,,_. ,,,.,,.. of ltle beet r~ from -of the blOgetll lllte Oii 8r~y. 9:008 DUMMY The I~ etOfy Of Donald Ulng. e dNf. mute Md INt- t•ale blade youtll -.oeecl of murder 'lllho eu~ ~Uc;e ~ of Ille tlendlc:ape. It drema11nc1. Paul SMvlN> and l eV er 8ur1on tlar. (A) G HIU. 8TIIUT Ill.UH Two Ju_,,,. gang mem- ber• ate lnlam.iplld during • 11or1 robbery and take hOll~ (A) a o THMra CJOtMIAN'f Jaclt lflM to help Ctndy llOlve e alight ptObllm etle 11 llevtng with '* boea and l!'ltlMd geta ll4lf flr9d (R) • MllWGNmN a...... 0.110. Joey 01111. op. Ateunora Penney. PM boBryaon ....... TPY "Aumpole Of The 8ai1cty Rumpole And The Heavy Brigade" Judge PrMICOid -• more lnternted 1n Horace Aumpo4e'• (Leo McKern) alOYenly •ppa•r· anc. In cout1 '"-" In Rum. pole' 1 llOWWll led client on trlel for murder (A)O GD ..OVA 'Beyond The Miiky Way A looic II tel<en el the gelulcH beyond Wll•I WH once the cloudy t>eule< or the Milky Way and the toptllll!Ctled technotogy Wlllc;h hU made them via« 1>141 to utronom.a (A)O (JDMOW "Oona Flo< And Her Two Huebende' ( 19711) Soni. Ortga. JOH Wlllter A young 81azlllan woman 1 boring aacond marnage 11 enllvenecl Dy Ille 11rlv11 of her llrll hUlbend'I PH· alonate ghoat 'R' (l)MOVIE "BedltnoD• And Broorn- &1lck1" ( 1971) Ang•I• Lanabury. David Toml1r,. aon O\Klng World Wer 11. • noYiCe aoreetHI end her thrM YoVnQ lr>enda Mf on for • magic Island where 1h• Intend& to learn enough about wtteh«att to UM It agalnet the Null 'G' .._., 8 (Ill TOO CLOIE FOA COMFORT Henry _goea to the bani. to confron1 Sat•'• man8Q8f. • no1orloua woman!Hf. and tlumblle Into a rob· t>ery. (RI (l)MOYll "The Roaa" ( 1979) Bene Mldlet. Alan Bet .. _ A d(IV· en roc;lt alngat't Ille In the I , .. , ,_ IMCla her "'-· llbly to dllaetw. 'A' 10:00. N8'0 WOl.R Neto ~ the guardi· Ion ol Ille deugtl\er ol a tleln mobater and nu to theller her from her lather'• enemlee Wlllte he llnde hie lllllet. (A) •••• NEW8 8 9 HART TO HART Max'I ea-w1"9 lhowt up and IMde llltl't Into • CIMd· ly myttery that 09!• Nm ltldneppad (A) • '5 llBtTl "El Trovaclor" Ar!IOnlo 8-. ~tlvl of Puerto Alco. 11 lhOwn In Mllwlull.. conlln6ilng Iha communal PU.no Rican tr.ottlon of the ~ TUBE TOPPERS 1------------------------------KCOP ·• 1 :00 -.. Tb• Lona Voy11e." John Wayne and Ian Hunter 1tar fra a movie about men who live by the sea. KCET 8 8 :00 and KOCE It 9:00 -"Nova: Beyond the MiUcy Way." Science pierces the Milky .Way to see almost 100 million other .calax.ies. CBS 8 9:00 -"Dummy." Paul Sor vino and Le Var BU.rt.on star ln a true- Uf e account of a black deaf youth who can 't get justice beca use of bis handicaps. poet I mlnelrel, wt10 orlgl· nelly c:unoatned hlmeell mainly with the lolltlor• of Cllrl81maa. (I) OIACl.l CW 91' AM "Mel Torrne, Delle AMM" (ff) WIMIUDOH TINtM s-d•y cov .. age of the moel P<Mllglou• event In tannll le pt-led lr()ft) England, with commenter, by Bltry Tompllln1 and Arthur Aahe 1G-.IO·~ NITWOM..wl • VtC IMOIN'S TaHHll f'OR THI fJUTUM "P1ycl'tology" VIC 81ade<1 lhOw• you llOW •o •educ• ~ '''"' du11ng a match and how 10 put mo(e fun bac:t. Into your ;_-C) llD THI ~NITIAHI 'Ml111ona Allrnall' Orio• tlalty lnl•ntllld to l•k• lh• g~ to Iha working c;IH-of 1ndu111111 GlllM tnlMl-On.,lcH IOUNJ gteat., ep~ in ••• on !JI-• IH10AVIOl.ITTI~ LOOt<tHO '~ fJUN I t>e ""'"V comed1ar1 tr avt11 to .om. urtukial 1Uu '" • ••••c h ln o llumorou• HP*GI• ()f •om• Of lh• moat ordinary l•lau•• acflvll'" UUel Ol lNCUllUI 1 t:OO I D. (() (])) NlW8 STAR TAD< The EnterptlM bec<>mM a balltelield for lwo ••-• WflO have Dean wao1ng • 50,000·year-old w11 I =.x'tWED GAME Mannix gel• Involved In a M<IM of apparent ..,>eldff aller lie tel<M on ,,,. a..ignrnent to hnd oul why Ille wile ol one of the dec.ued II bllng IOI· lowed ., BENNY HIU An Au1trallan bac:kground gives 8-ny the opl)Oflunl· ly 10 1n,,..11gare outlaw hero Ned Kttty SI DtCK CAVETT G~t. publ1shet Aol>et1 Glrou• (Part 2 Of 21 ©)MOW "The Sen..,ou1 Franch Woman" (197111 A Par111an nouMwlla decldel 10 111ve an eHetr •lter etie dllCOV· en lhll her lluaband hu bean ChMllng on het 'A' (8)~ "The Shining" ( lelO) Jack Nk:holton, ~ Duvall. Directed by Stanley KuDrlclt A lot mer acl'IOOllMC:hel hired M • winter careteker for e remote, end apperenuy haunted, Cotoredo hotel. 11 enowbound lllet• with hie wrla and ct.irvoy1111t young ton 'R' 11 :OS (f l liot()Vll "Amwican ar111111· ( 11173) Ron Howerd. Cindy Wll- llamt On gt1C111•t1on night In the eumm« of 11182. lour hlgl't l<lhool cnum1 lrom • tmall town In Northern Calllornla apend • wtld evening 1n varloua alluatlOnl 'PO' I 1:90 8 CIJ COUJM90 An orc1>es 1 rt1 COflduclor learn• .... mlllrHI II plan· n1r>g lo lei! 1111 wlle about lhltr •H•lr 0 THEIUTOf CAMON Gu9tlt Bob Hope, Mar· ltll• Hartley Luciano Pa verolll. Sydney Goldamlth (R) D O AeCNIWI MGKTUNl II &ira MAK£ A DEAL ., IAMTTA "SomebOdy Killed Cock Aot>jn" • QI!) CAPTIOHED A8C NEWS 12:00 Iii MOVIE * · Ape Man Of The Jun· gte ' ( 1962) A8lph Hudaon Rita Kle(n Humana become the prey ot the vtc><>ut Leoperd Man D O MOVIE • ·~ 'Trouble In High Tim· t>er Country" (1980) Eddie Albert. Kevin Brophy A ramify headed by a P<oud patriarch ballle union organuera and e ~ul conglomerate trying lo rake controt or the fem11y a tumt>er empire (RI 0 MAV£AICK Bart and Beau u~• a crOOked IClleme lh81 oa fl4N1Cong the townspeople ID MISSION: IMP06818LE The IMF MIS out to leatn 11141 numt>er or a m.,, s bank account by con\llnc· ong him World War Ill has alerted ($,MOVIE · Bruoeker" (1980) Robert Redford, Yapllel Kono A ref orm-minded werelan uncover• wtdnpreed cor· rupllOn when IM ..,,.,, h11 newly uelONd ptlaon poa. Ing u an 1rwn11e 'R' JOHN DARLING 0 11118 ' "*°MOW ..Q. , lltO. MCMI _.,.. I ••lit "M•1•• Tewrr" I ............ A ~ (tl4P) ,,...... l lftlr1, _,. ~ l'tlt ""-'t JIM ~ A lfNI, --~·~ ....... '""'"' ..... . _,.old~ IMM•. .._..."'Wit .... .... , ... N'fOHIO I .... PtJUllll• • "' ,. t•IOuetA. THI •llMlt* 10 ot1M1r towM, WOM.DllY~ k•CIDww.tooN ~ "Jo..1nay Of T1141 Soul 8-d•Y aoverage of IM Through The HorOICOjM" "'°'' 1>'Mllglou1 avant In Hoete: Damien Slmj)tOll, tennla le P<-lld from Steere Hunt Quea1 ~-Eng!Md, wllh c;ommenfaty mond MetrlrNln dlacu.... by h ry Tompltlnt and m1111'1 r•tloNl'olp with the Arthur Alhe hal..-1:44 LOVlllA~ • MOYll n..G: A IAU/TI TO * * * ~ • The Poettnllll ClAUOI L.lLOUCH Atwaya F11nga Twice" 4:11 e Movie ( 19411 Lan• Turnat, JOhn * ~ "Jungle Woman" Olrlleld. A y()Vng women (19U ) Evelyn Anileta. lOlt plOtl to murder haf hv•• COiiier b#ld wfll't 1119 help of orwi of 1"8 man'a enif)loyeM • INOOINmNT NeTWOMNIWa (l) "**<WWI T.w<a WrTH SCATMAH CfllOTH€M 1'11(%.)MOVIE The Shining" ( 1980) Jac;k Nicholson, ShaOey Ovvell Directed by Sllnlay Kub11ck A lormer achOOlteac:ller hired u a winter c:ar•t•kar lor • remote. and 1poar1ntty haunted, Color ado hOlel oa snowbound '""' with hit wife and clairvoy•nt yOU"Q aon 'A' 1:211 9 NEWS {R)MOVIE "Soma C•m• Running' ( 1959) Frank Sinatra Shir· ley Maclaine BaMCI on • no...i by Jamaa Jones A dialltu"°"9C! young man fella 1n wtlh a group or Medy c;harac:tera 1:30 9 MOVIE • ,_., "Jungle GoddHa' ( 19•9) Wand• McKay, George Reevea A reecue party ae11 out through an Alrlealt )Ungle 1n March ot !_10Ung ll•ras• W MOVIE * •'• · 0 0 A (190) Edmond 0 Brian P8m4118 Brtllon When a m•n real- IZH .... , he ,, .. been glvl<'l • doN or um.-releHed potaon, he Mia out to tcicate hta killer Delore hit Ill• ends 1:IOG NEWS 2;00 0 NEWS 2:10 D NEWS 2:111 $ MOVIE The Black HOie (19791 Mu1mllian Schell. AObe<I Forater. Yvelle Mlm<euir. The crew ot a lutur1111c •P•C•Shlp dllCOvers anoth4tr vHsef perched on the edge or a rormatoon which pulls enytt11ng near· by Into a giant vOtd -• time and space ca•se 10 ax1a1 'PG 2:20 IJ E.OITOAIAL 2:211 IJ MOVIE • • • "Passage To M•r- Mlllea" ( 1944) Humphrey Bogart, Cllude Rains Eac:apees trom 01v11 ' 1srand attempt 10 f10ht the N1111 along w1111 the Freoc:h Free Forces 2:46 &J MEWS 2:50 &J MOVIE • '" ··oaughter Of The Jungle" i 19411) Lota Hall JamH Caldwell An Amer•· can helren and lier we•lllly rather 11t• raacued trom the wdd.a Dy • pllOI a:00m NEWS We-dn~•da11'• Dayfi111r Hof'h•• &46 'l . "Amerlean GraHill" ( 1973) Aon H-••d. Cindy W1lllama On gradu•t1on night In Illa aummer of 1962. lout high school chums from a email •-n In Northern Ca11torn1a Spend a wild evening In VlllOut llfUlllOOI PG' 11:00 CD *'It Cruy 0,,., Hora· .... (1951) Bowery Boys Tiie Boyt find adventure 11 the raulrac;k 11:30 0 * * ·~ "The Purple MH k" (19551 Tony Curtta. Col!Mn Miiier A French noblemen dona a muk and gelna lrHdom for the royeloatt -AFTERNOON- 12.-00 m * * Raid On Rom· mat ( 11171) Atchard Bur· ton, John Co11eo1 Rom- mat'1 P1nH• Otv1a1on It inloltrated In llbv• durtng World W•r II tit * * * * TM One Thet Got Aw•y ( 1958) Hardy Kruger Coton Gor- don The unretentong datermonallon ot 1 Garman POW to •ec•pe from the Alllel litlllly p1y1 off 1:30 fE) • • Adam And Eve· lyn · ( t9SO) S tew•rt Grenoer Jean Sommons A gambler l8ke1 on thl respon11D1totv for h11 '"end • dal.tQllter only 10 doscove< 11111 he oa on love with her 3:00 $ 'My 8fllll1nt C•rMt' (1980) Judy Dav11. Sam Neill In turn-ol·tlle--oentu• ry Australia. an 1ndepend enr vou"Q woman tries to make 1 c:arM • u • wnler daapne SOClll pressures for her 10 m1ttry 3:30 0 * * '• Moster Coty' 1 tll57) Tony Curll& Martha Hyer A poverty-atrockan boy rlHt to success through gtmbllng 6:00 $1 • • * "K•I Carson· f 1940) Jon Hall Dane Andrews A DOid poonee< protecu a C111torn•e- bound wagon train lrom Indian reodllfl 5:30 H CIOM Encounters Ot The Thord Kond Spectal Edlloon f 1980) RICl'iard Oreytuaa. Fr8nc01s Trul· raut Alter ttghtlng a UFO, a power oompany employ- ae t>ecomes ol>Meaed w1111 fonding lhe Illa!'•' landlf'll ltte PO' by Annstrong & Batiuk l .JUS~ ,-HINK WE CAN PUNCH IT UP A LITTLE. HS::U: ~D !HER~, "THA1''..S AU..! • PC)kw 'PO' ~--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Science program returns Walter Cronkite .to • air By TOM JORY A_la ... Pnolt Wr!Wr NEW YORK Last summer's test run of "Waller Cronkite'!! Universe" on Channel 2 was pro,duced with no precise schedule in mind. And. says Jonathan Ward, the executive producer, "the individual segments were so evergreen, so time· less. it made your teeth hurt. "I think 'trivial' is the word Walter would use," Ward says. "Walter Cronkite 's Universe" begins a 12· week run on Tuesday nights from 8 to 8:30 begin· nlng tonight. "This lime," says Ward , ·•we had the adv an· tage of knowing we were going to be a summer series, with a set schedule. We can key specific segments to event.s we know are going to happen, like the space shuttle light planned for Sep- tember. "We've got a scientist predicting Peru will be wiped out by an earthquake in September," Ward says. "If it Isn't, we have lhis poignant human dra m a o( a scientist who has just seen his life pass before his eye11. II it is wiped out, we had it fint. "Somebody said you make yourself available for luck in this business," the producer says. "For that reason, we've shot Mount St. Helens, even though we don't have a volcano story in the mix yet. I keev a geiger counter ln t.be file drawer there, because Walter wants to be ready for the next Three Mile Island." Tbe premiere program marks Cronldte'1 re- ivm to tbt air on a regular bull for the first time alpu be 1tepped down as .. Evenln1 Newt" anchorman in March. 1'e ftnt prosram included aeamenta on the tud1 '11 M• creatures wbo catry t.betr own natural Uaht (n the deptbt of the ocean, ud oa efforta to restore artworks and other •11"8 object.I that have been 1ubject*9 to the rava1ea ol tlmt, climate and pollution. C,.Jtite will provide at leut one "f ment for eacb of th• 13 pro1ram1, and wll anchor ·•unl'Nl"M' trom his new offtc. overlooki.D1 UM Hudaoa JUber. Cl'onklte, wbo antbortd tbe "Evt· ninl Newt'' for lt years, aptnda much ol b.l1 Ume these daJI at his bomt ln Mar1ha'1 Vlnyard, but w atd aayt even then, he deVOWI eaulcknbJe atten· lion to ''UnlttrN.'' ••n.ere ta ~lal that w arer!to pu& • the air that he bun't at least talk • aboUt at t0me lfnClb," the producer .. ,.. " e Hftd lalm scripts and then cassettes of every segment we do." Ward says Cron.kite hu been an important factor in providing "Universe" with its sense of timeliness. "It's very hard to take a warhorse like Cronkite and turn him into a soft news, documen- tary guy. "li the secretary of state makes some big an· nouncement on the neutron bomb, for example, ii would be unthinkable for Cronkite to go on the air that night with a piece on the butterfly," Ward says. The universe for ''Walter Cronkite's Universe" is truly vast, and Ward says the cor- respondent himself again plays a significant part in determining the type of story to be considered. "I know that it's Walter's position that an in· formed electorate can play a role in decidinc tough issues -wtll the SST destroy the ozone layer, for instance? ''Science and scientists would like you to believe it is a· simple precision that rules their world. But yes, there Is a value system in science," he says, "and I'm aure aomeUmea we'U bog down hopelessly in the politics ol an luue. · • .. ' He says the objective ~1 .. ll to produce stories that will do· more than fill a 90-second slot, or even a three-minute hole, on the "Evening News." "I trivialized a piece last year that people in the project lhoutht waa 1oing to be a serious story on food science. We concentrated on the people wbD make potato chJps crunchy -a plece wt could hav. done for the 'Evemni News.· "We would be angry U aomeoM d.ld a story on JournaUam ln America in four mlnuta. We did food service ln four mlnut-.. and th•t wu wroa1." Hitler retreat filmed HOU. YWOOD (AP) -The 18-hour mlnl 11rt" "The WlDdl ot War .. will be I.be tint producUoo ever allowed to ft1m at tbe "Saale'• Nett," Adolph HIUer'1 mouatalDtGp retrut n Bercbt-carcl•, We1ta.rm_,. The Mri•, baaed on u.. bee* bJ Hermu Wouk, ltan lobe.rt llltdtum. Da Curt{a la direct· tna for Paramoant Telerilica. &c.... wtU bt ftlmild .a lllil ........... ftlla on July 21. It II now 1toUrttt1tttadkm operat.d bf \.be German IOftmment . January's ... ,," HYPNOSIS IS THI IEY Nall Worlcs ... ~ -.......... .., ...... ,_Life -lpKWA~ 140" 0 • 0 INNll MIMD INSTITUTE H-Sac of 8cv..,._ -~ ~,toe ftO hll .. NII COMSULYAT10t4 J4ff W. C...t H~ ... wta .. M.I. 645-411 541-1961 If it floats, cha_nces are you'll read about it in the Daily Pilat 642-4321 Chic -------AIOU'f I $1 t'I" GREAT. I ~. DINNER (") g Good tor tlWM ~ 01 juicy. GOiden brOWfl ~tudey "O '''eel Cfllclltn. plut alntl• N"'fnta of OOI• tltw, mun.ct O potet089 and grevy, and a roll. Ulnlt two off" per Z JKIJCllMt. ~ ooocs onty tor oomt11net1on Wf!lttldeltl I °"'9ft. CuMof!W .,.., • .,, IPPl!otbl• ..... tu. DtD Off«M.Pl,..Jutyl, t•1 .. , I I t • 0 0 u . -. . . ::1111111111 lllCH If 1111111 VllllY . • o o c a ; s cu 1 Dally Plllt TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1981 MOVIES STOCKS 83 87 0 s a iaass 2a s sscsscsss:2222 Thinking. about investing in the stock market? Try throwing darts ... BS 2 Editor criticizes fireDien 's response By PATRICK KENNEDY Of .. IHlly .......... The owner ol a small weekly newspaper in Westminster claims that city firefishtera re· aM.ed slowly t.o a suspicious fire tbat 1utted bis building and destroyed his printing presa Fri· day ni1bt. Lloyd Thomas, whose Westminster Herald has ..Sitorially called for the Westminster firefighters t.o back down from their contract de· QC pair shot io death A 15·year-old Costa Kesa girl and a 19-year·old Huntington Beach man were shot to death Monday night in a Westminster apartment. Police arrested a l&-year-old youth who they say was angry that the girl was breaking up with him. Brena Lee Baird of 592 Hamilton St. was shot three 1 times al 10:55 p.m. and was pro· ~unced dead two hours later at ~ Fountain Valley Community :ffoapital trauma center, police Hid. : William John Heinz of 16041 Craig Lane was pronounced .clead al the scene at an apartment .cpmplex near Westminster Aivenue and Golden West Street. .He was shot onc.-e in the chest. Pelice said both victims were kWed with a .22caliber handgun. .The suspect, whose identity is b«ng wtthhela because be is un· «*' 18, lived with bis parents in ~ apartment, the scene of the s1*yings. They weren't home during the shooting, police said. The youth was charged with in11picion ol murder, police said. ···A netthbor who apparently hlaard shots bad wrestled the l\a4pecl t.o the carpet inside the .,.rtment, when a patrol car atrived, police said. . The patrolmen, respondinl to a eall arrived at the apartment ·compiex in time to hear the \hree shots being fired , authorities said. .. The man waa found dead on the bedroom floor and the girl waa discovered mortally wounded oo the fioor of the liv· inC room, police said. .; Officen say they do not know 1rby tbe two victims were•at the apartment of the alleged gun· "an. Canal project endorsed by HB Council .. · The Huntington Beach City -Council has endorsed the pro· · posed peripheral canal that would divert Sacramento River water from the San Joaquin . Delta to Southern California. ·-.The endorsement urges Gov· :es;nor Brown to put the con· :iroversial issue on the earliest .p911ible statewide ballot," which would be in November. " .councilmen Bob Mandie and John Thomaa voted against the · retolution. Mayor Ruth Finley . a11d c;ounbera Roa Paltinson1 Ruth Bailey, DooMacAlliater ano J ~ck Kelly supported the concept. I ~cept. • ·Some Northern California la.'Wm akers say the proposed •mile canal would cause. en· •lronmental damace to the ·10.000-acre delta estuary by re· , , 'riNtint water a.round it lo the ·~n California Aqueduct and then t.o Southern Calilornia. But mOll Southern California :i..ttlaton contend the delta en· ,'9ronmfnt will be protected and l.Ml tbe water lt needed because ..-out half tbe state'• Colorado ~er supply will be allotted to ·Arisoaa la 19 wbeD tbe Central ·Aftloaa pl'Oject la completed. mands for increased pay, said Monday he believes "it was coincidence that the fire hap- pened the same day as the editorial ran. 11 "But I will say the firemen could have moved a little faster getting water on the fire. They seemed t.o be standing around very casually and I think we suf· fered extra damage that was un· necessary . "I've been covering fires for 35 years as a reporter and was a volunteer fireman for 14 years an<l we volunteers would have gotten water on the fire faster," Thomas said. Westminster Fire Chief William Knowles said he arrived at the scene as the fire was be· i.ng controlled at about 9: 15 p.m. "I would have to disagree with Lloyd," Knowles said. "The firemen did a terrific job getting water on the fire and getting it extinguished. "And I'm sure that the fire· men's association had nothing to do with st.a.rlinJ the fire," the. Fairy tale for real 'Cinderella' wins pageant By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of-Oally ...... tlMI For the past month, Gina Rivadeneyra of Huntington Beach bas been working at Dis· neyland, donnine a wig and a costume to mingle with the youngsters as Cinderella. Last weekend, Gina's own fairy tale came true when she wlls crowned Miss Huntington Beach in the annual beauty pageant sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce. "I wasn't in it t.o win," she says. "When they got past an· nouncing the second runner.up, I thought, well, this was really fun, but I didn't count on my number coming up." Gina, at 17 one of the youngest of the 24 entrants. was shocked, then ecstatic. "I still haven't co me down," she says. Despite her Disney portrayal, Gina is no beleaguered scrubgirl waiting for a prince with a glass slipper. She's a bubbly blonde-haired beachgoer who was a varsity IODI leader and Queen of the Courta at F.diaon High School. She plans t.o attend Orange Coast Colle1e in the fall and eventually wants to earn a degree in speech tberapy. The Mlss Hunllntton Beach contest is Gina's first beauty paaeant. She entered mainly 11 a lark. Gina and a friend saw an an· oouncement on a school bulletin board and decided to compete together. Though her friend dropped out, Gina decided to slick with the contest because she says she enjoyed the people involved. She dismisses feminist criticism of pageants, saying she was judged on personality and inner beauty, not just her physical appearance. "Inner beauty is a lot more important than just being a pret· ty girl," Gina says. And nothing makes her an· grier than being pegged a "dumb blonde. 11 (Gina gradual· ed with a 8-plus average.) "Everyone wants to look nice, but if you have nothing impor· tant t.o say, people will just pass you by," she says. For the moment, Gina is look· ing forward t.o her reign as Miss Huntington Beach and wants to continue workina at Disneyland. "Sometimes I have t.o play one of the Seven Dwarfs -Grumpy, Doc or Happy,'' Gina explains. "U you're Grumpy, you usually get beat up a lot by the little kids. "On Friday, l'm doing Alice in Wonderland. I think I'll like that better. I'm a more high-strwii out1oing pen1qn like Alice. CUl- derella ls more shy.'' chief voHmteered, saying he felt the ·statement was necessary because ol rumors that firemen allegedly were involved with starting the blaze because of Thomas' edit.oriai stance. "I just can't believe that," the chief said. Knowles said he's asked for a second opinfon from the Orange County Fl.re Department arson specialists' because of the con· troversy over the fire starting the same day as Thomas' editorial against lhe firefighters' demands. "With the situation being as ll is,•' the chief said, •'I thought we should get a second opinion (on the arson issue)." The fire department report states that the blaze was brought under control 12 minutes after firefighters ar· rived. The fire apparently started on the roof and caused an estimat· ed $150,000 damage to the print· ~ log equipment and $30,000 damage lo the building, on Westminster Avenue just east of Beach Boulevard. Thomas said his building was insured but his printing equip- ment wasn't. However, be said his 35·year· old newspaper, with a weekJy circulation or 3,000, wouldn't miss a deadline because he plans to have it produced by a private printer until he replaces his equipment. County budget soars Proposed spending plan for 1982 up $68 million By FBEDE&ICK SCBOEMEHL Of .. IHlly ...... 11.tt A $711. 7 million 1982 budf et that is more than $10 miJlion out of balance is now in the hands of members of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The proposed spending plan, submitted by county Ad· ministrative Officer Robert Thomas, is up about $68 million from the current fiscal year's budget. F\scal 1981 ends next Wednesday. In a letter to supervisors, Thomas said the board has three options lo bring the budget into Hollin den ends term on boards Fountain Valley City Coun· cilman Al Hollinden wielded his gavel for the final time Monday as chairman -and member - of the Orange County Transportation Commission. Also a member of the Orange County Transit Di.strict Board of Directors, Hollinden will be replaced on both boards next month by Santa Ana City Cowi· cilman Daniel Grisel. Griaet was cboeen to take over the seat.a at a meeting last week of the League of Orange County Cities, which fills two of the rive positions on eacb board. Hollinden's four-year terms end this month. He said he de· cided not t.o seek reappointment because of the likelikhood he won't run for re-election in Fountain Valley. Holding public office is a prerequisite to the tranaportaUon·related positions. balance: divert federal revenue sharing to the $231 million general fund ; make a cross-the· board cuts, or make selective cuts in certain programs. Supervisors will consider the proposed budget al a meeting at 9:30 a .m. Wednesday. Action on the final budget will not occur until after budget hearings scheduled to begin in mid-July. The proposed spending plan would include $33 million for capital improvementa and $2.8 million in supplemental money for various county programs. Analysts in the administrative office say about $28.7 million in fed~al revenue sharing money could be made available to balance the budget. "This alternative 1s a <le· parture from previous years in which revenue sharing funds have not been used t.o support operating programs, but were used primarily to fund capital projects and social programs." Thomas said. He cautioned that revenue sharing funds could only be used to balance the budget for ooe year. since revenue sharing en· tillements t.o counties are ending after the upcoming fiscal year. Fo?tbat~ason, Thomas said, "I believe the only viable prac· tical alternatives are either across-the-board cuts, or selec· live cutbacks in program are.S. "In examining these options once again each departmen· /agency director must identity mandated programs and de· termine those programs which are the highest priority,'' he said. Orange County is facing something of a budget crunch, anlllysts said. because fewer dollars are available from the state and federal governments. Thomas said all county de· partment heads have been asked lo re.examine individual budgets for possible cuts. As has been the case in past years, the mammoth Human Services Agency , which ad· ministers health and social services programs, would re· ceive the lion's share of the budget,. $237 .5 million. Cyclist dies in crash near Seal Beach A 3l·year·old Midway City motorcyclist was killed today in a four.vehicle collision on the San Diego Freeway just south of Seal Beach, the California Highway Patrol reported. The name of the dead man was being withheld pending notificatfoo of his next of kin. CHP officer Jim Larkin said the accident occurred at 6: 10 a.m . when a Ford LTD sedan driven by Charles Leroy Dennis, 40, of Anaheim, swerved left from the slow lane and struck the motorcycle. Dennis' car continued swerv· ing left and struck two autos driven by Scott Mcclanahan, 24, of Bressel Lane, Huntington Beach, and Wilton Sidney Blank, 44, of Redeye Circle, Fountain Valley. Larkin said. Alter striking the two cars,· Dennis cootinued swerving left and veered into the center divider, Larkin said. He said Dennis, who was treated for minor injuries at La Palma Hospital, has been ar· rested on suspicion of manslaughter and driving under the influence of drugs. Victim crawls for help A 35-year-old Fountain Valley man with back injuries crawled up a 40-foot embankment in Newport Beach Monday night t.o get help after his female Valley slates rabies clinic A low-cost rabies vaccination clinic for dogs will be conducted from 7 to 9:30 p.m. Thursday at the Fountain Valley Recreation Ceoter, 16400 Brook burst St. The charge will be $2 .50 (cash) per vaccination. By law, all dogs 4 months or older must be vaccinated against rabies and be licensed. County animal inspect.ors will be stationed at the clinic for dot owners wbo wish t.o purchase or renew their pet's license. The rabies clinic fa beint sponsored by the Fountain Valley Woman's Club, members of the Orange County Veterinary Aaaoclation and the Oran1e County Health Department. companion's car plunged into a ravine. When police arrived, they found the 26-year-old woman driver in the twisted wreckage of the car which bad flipped off Jamboree Road and landed in a ravine just north of the John Wayne Tennis Club. The driver , Deborah Swarthout of Newport Beach, was taken to the trauma center al Fountain Valley Community Hospital where she's listed in critical condition. The Fountain Valley man, George Horsburgh, ls listed in serious condition at the Fountain Valley hospital. Newport officers said the 11 :30 p.m . accident occurred when the car, traveling south on Jam· boree, spun out of control, plowed through a fence and Valley budget • session set tumbled down the embankment. Officers said that Horsburgh, despite back injuries, pulled himself up the side of the em· bankmenl and crouched beside the road until he was. able to flag down a motorist. United Way gives grants United Way of West Orange County has awarded $62,000 in one·lime grants to several local community service and human care agencies. These awards were de· termined by a cross section of volunteers who currently serve on United Way committees and on its board of directors. Among the groups named to receive the United Way grants were the Dayle Mcintosh Center for the Disabled, the Boys' Clubs of Westminster and Huntington Beach, Casa de Bienvenidos, the Garden Grove Community Adult Care Center, Turning Point, In· terval House and Services for the blind. V ~ey urges civic pride The Fountain · Valley City Cou.ncll will conduct a public study aeuion tonltht with It.a five-member cituena advisory committee to d.lscuu lbe 1roup•1 recommendations on bow to balance the city's budset. Tbe meetiq belin• at 1 p.m . tn tbe council chambera at City Hall 10300 Slater Ave. Class slated on tear gas Fountain Valley Mayor Ben Niellen is laltlatlDa a ..n.. of monthly 11189dnp .nu. a.Merl of local aerylee club1 and laomtownlr cqanlaaUou, a.. = to lmliroft eammunicailoa W•• ~;Rall and the COID• mualtJ. Tbe ma,or-al.lo bol* t.o C'Clll- rinc• local orpnlutlom t. t.lk• o••r 1ome f11ndln1 re~t•aalbllltlH for 1oelal ~ .. •eMl&MtmaJIOOll IOle IWr *1 allea&klial. "I fM1 tbln'I ID mtapped ll08ffe -&MN tn Ult ... muilr .'' .NWHG said of .,a.e 11.te lf'GUll9o "I wut k"1 PfOYldi •• a•1aa• for escbaba• of .... :· About • IDYltaUon• have been Mill to •a.riow club leaden for tb• m110r'1 ftrat breakfast •••tl••· 1lated at I 1.m . W•4•••d•J at Brewster's RMa•l'llL Amoa1 tboH la•lled were ~"' o1 tile Sib Club. Uon1 Clab, .f AY•HI and UM a.amber ol Commerce. Tbe ftnt 1D"'"'I WW feattare a ........ ol t!Mt CltJ'I budaet ,..,., ........... tald f1ltun ...,.,..... di flc1ll • t.opCI tuela, ~u .· dYil 4WmDM and tbt e1t1:1 ••• cable televl1ton •JI.ta•· Ta. • .,.. iald ... alao ..... to llll tllil etrie ,.... ll \My cu .... , ..... fUlidl for .... arams aucb u W•Tip, which Mekl lnfonnaUon on criminal acU•lty, and TLC, whlcb de· liven mffla t.o aenlor cltllens wbo cannol prepare food for them Ml .... Seclal lftll'UDI ol this type bAYe f'ff9iftd CkJ ~fUDdj ID the p11t but mat lot• tbla ald beea\IU of..._ ...utcUou. Nlel1n 8llo uld lmpro•ed commualeatloa with local Mntff e9lllll =-baH pre-vented till ~ that •w· faced ta ,... a 1 rt" when tbe Lloa1 ••• :Ilka planned canlnli tliill a. Mt eeafon11 to lM tl&J .. IHe IO•trallll .......... Alter conductln1 aeveral public meetiDC• and cittulatlnt a quetUoanaire, the committee earlier um month made 'artOGt C01Jt.cutt1Dc 11lQHtioDJ, includ· lDI a reduct.loa In ctty tmplo,.. overtime. dlmmla1 of 1treetllahts aocJ additional recreation 1 ... PlaDA apRroved • la OH ol lta 1ut adloal Mfon lt1 1ta.. cbaltel" rum out. UM Soutb Coat Reatonal CoMtal Coamluton bas approncl U.. coant1•1 land H• ela•• tor L•l•Da Nltuel aad IUDltt Buell; .. Be1i1tr1tlon la under way for a tear 1u tralnlna class t.o be held from 7 '° 9 p.m. Tuesday, June IO, in the counctl cbamben at Hu.ntlnlton Beach Clty Hall, aooo llaJ.n a . · · Proeeedt from the clua will beaeftt the Jlualloston Beach ~ Wat.ell Oraao.lu· doll, I e.U. pnventioe 1roup. Tbe CO.t of tM COWH lj SIO. Af'41r eomp&eUaa U.. clau, partlelpant. wUl' r .... •• a permit to -, and ~ two '1Pet of ._., 1u, At ....... tH~ I*' canl1t1r1 ••1 be pu.JCWe4. A plac. ID tbe claal can be re-e'ened bJ ealllnc 511 •t , --· -----~-------~·,,_..-·"":""-._...._...._,,..._.. ...... ~ ................................ s•s~s•a .. a~c~a .. a•a•a ... a~a~a .. •s•t ...... 2•2121212 .. 12 .. 212121212111~ I - PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. June 23, 1981 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE flt.aul ~llMll Or .. CMtt o.llJ Pli.t. J-t, ltl, U, JD, lt fl 261MI ,.alT'IOUI ault .. HI .. AM41 ITAT•M9 .. T P~ITIOUl•UllN•H Tiie 1o11 .. 1ne ""'"" .,. ctol1111 li&AMaSTAT•M9NT IHlllMUM' P UBLIC NOTICE Tit• followlne --· •re dOl119 A & 0 aAKlltY CO 1151 H Euclid M•ntll IMMlou~.9!.... .. ,. .. A ............. -.~:cA'2ti1. PtCTITIOUl9UllNHI " ...,, H5ft'$ KE• E,., ltlS Ar MM Yellll,. 1"9 Port EdWMf Pt.. MAlll9 STAT .... NT Twllll ,. ..... a ... s..i .. A·W , c..i. H•--199Kll. CA,,..., TIM ,......,.... --we ... 119 Mffe,CA-.U. itl<ll•rf O. 11.,0ey, UOI VI• -....i-•: Ge'l'I• M. 9ollM.,, UO le.,rd••• Marin•,..._, .. Kl'I. CA '26'0. l(Al KAH, 11'02 Von K•r-c.:i. ~ .. CA~,. A ,_ Tllll IH.tllMH 1, <Oll<tu<lef by • Ave-, lrvtlw, c.llforftU ""4 -,,_,. • -.. -• 2 ..-I• gefttr•I ~Ip. K•I Kall ...... Inc .•• Oel•w•re MeM, CA ..v. Amolf YMll cor111•r•llell, ,,.. E. t4111 St••••·1 Tiii• M IMH ,, COnctlKIM bJ • This ..... _. w .. fllef will\ ,,,. VwMft, c.tlfor!N ... eeMr•I ~. Co11n1r C~k of 00"119 CGllllllY on Tlllt ........ Is<~ b'I' e CW•! G4lyte M. ... ._ J-12 1"1 -·•loft. Tllla ..,._ -llleol wltlt "" ' ,,.-, K.i ICM!.._., IN:. C-t'I' Clertl of Or .... C.-y °" ,.11Clll"""' Orenet c-tt O.lly Pllol. H • ..._..,, J-5, ltfl. J-"· D, •• Jwly 1, '"' J,_,.I Vice~ ,,..... -----Tiiis• ............ -,. ... """' -l'llbil"""' Or .... Coe•• Dell' l'llot, PUBLIC NOTICE COii"'' Clertl of Or ..... C:.W.IJ Oii Jll/M t, "· Jl, », 1 .. 1 1to!MI J-11, 1 .. 1. PUBLIC NOTICE ,., ... l'UlllllMct 0r-.. CO.It o.11, ~ .... NAMS ITAT•MaNT J-2l,». Jwl' 1, 14, 1111 2Ml-11 Tll• 1o11-1ne "'"'"' ••• doing PICTIT10UI aUSIN•IS ltwsl,...• • • MAMS STAT•MIUllT NIEWlllOIH CONSTRUCTION PUBLIC NOTICE Tiie , ... _. ... ---I• ctolne """· MANAGEMENT. S120 Blrcll StrHI, MU •t: NewjlOrt a..o., CA '2tll0. laH RESEARCH, 3UI Mo"'" C1trl1100M< R-rt Slep1ten1, -PICTIT10UI a u11N•S1 W•J. C•te-. CA flt•. BwcllMll, C.te Mew, CA m•. .. .... ITAT•MllNT RoNllf H. Hlclloll, JUI Monroo Rolly H. l'vlHkl, JDI IE~•n-. Th• lol-lfte ,..,_ •• ,. delne W•y. c ......... CA m•. N••lllOrt llMclt, CA nw. lluSINU •= Tiii• ~It COftdvc1M by ... In· Tiii• ..... 1 .... , ., conct .. cled bf • HEWl'OftT TllE & CAalHET. ,., CllVIClll•I _ .. --.wp. H. He.._t a1 ..... ~ ...... R-ld H. Nlitholl Olrl' R St.,,..,.1 C.llfornle tlill6! Tiii• ,...._, wn flied wllll llw Tiii' ....,._, w• Ill.ct wltll llw G_,. A. P.tce. 191 IE. \IOft a l• CHiiiy Clerk of Or-CovnlJ on C011nh Clerk of Or•noe Co..11ty on -·Or ..... c.lltorftle .... J -5, 1 .. 1. J-s. '"I Jwoe Seu! CNIW, ISM E. Ven Plu.91 l'IUMI 81 ....... Or_,.., C:.llfllmle nM6 PuOlllMct Or .... C-ll OellJ Pllol, PubllsMcl Or-Coell Delly Piiot, M•n11•I Ger•rfo Felco, Diet J-• .... n.•.1"1 U"-'1 J-t .... n.»,1"1 2 .. 1.,1 ~;~,:;:o· s .. 11., Creek, PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS aus1N•H llAMa ITAT•MllNT TIM fCll-1"8 --h Oo1119 ..,,1. ....... : (11 COMPV-OUOTE Ul SPORT·A· THON, 1111» Pelll'l4tlo Circle, FOlln· teln Velley, c.11tom1e moe ""'''•"' Ann "•'"""'· 1110. P •lll'lello Clrcle, "°""tel11 V•lley, Cel llorllle f71tl Tllla _...,. 11 COftducted by .., if>. ctivktval. Miriam A. F•r....., Tlllt llet-1 Wei filed with IM C...ntJ Cl«ll oll Or enge County on Mey 7'.1 .. 1. Pl ... 1 Pvbll.,... Or .... C-al Delly Pllet, J -2, •• 16. u.. ,.., 24J4.fl PUBLIC NOTICE P11a1nous •us11Ne 1S NA.lid ITAT•MeNT TIM lot~ .-r-la ctolftt ""SI· MU•.t. GRAPHIC SUPPORT, 1511 W k•t .. le Ave., -m. CA '2902 TereM 0 .... ,ct, t760IC•l-I• A ... , WHll'niNlor, CA fHG. T1tl1 ~ 11 conflKtecl by .., In· Cllvlelllel. hrewO.a.•rct This .....,_I Wei fllect wlllt llw Cou"t' Clerk of Or.,,.. COUl'lty °" JlllMS,1 .. 1 Pl ..... PVbtl-Or-Coast O.lly PllOC, J-•. ••· n. •.1 .. 1 t•1NJ PUBLIC NOTICE fl1CTIT'IOUS llUllM•• IUMSSTAT•MS .. T Tiie ...-.,.. --Is ....... DWI· -.. : f'. J. l'AATY ~. t .,..,.. lrldlte, lrv!Wle, CA mu. l'•mel• J_, w1c""""'· • Fllntr1oee. lrvlM, CA '211S. Tlllt llullnffl Is c-teel by en In· dlvlctuel. ,._,. J. WI<""'-' Tltls -Wei filed wltll Ille COUfllJ C*k of Or.,.. C-IJ °" J-J. ltll. PUBLIC NOTICE Tllh IMKINU 11 ('.Oftducte<ll b'( • _._ .... -..... Glllll9 A. Fel<e l'tCTITIOUS au1u1•u Tiiis .._. -filed wltfl 11w IUMS ITAT•MllllT C..,nlf CIWll of Or ..... C-tJ Oft Tiie foll-1"9 -IOfl• ere dol119 J-It, H•t. 11u11 ....... : ,.,_ STl!WARTAUTOWHOlE$AllES, P"blllMct Or-Coul O•lly Pilot, IU2 G•relen Grove a tvct., Ger den J-n , •. Jiiiy 1, u, '"' 2M2-11 Gr.,,., c.llforllle nM4 Wllllem E. s-rt, 1"22 R- L•ne, Hllftll""'°" 9eech, Celllon>I• ,,... PUBLIC NOTICE l lllJ IE. S. S....rt. 1"2:1 R....... PllCTITIOUI aUllMEU L-, H-l"llllOft llNcll, C.llfor11le .. AM. ITATEM•NT m.. The tollowlne pert.c111' ••• Clolng Tiii• _, ....... (-\KIM by • IM.tSIMU•: 9"Mr•l.....-nNP. COMMUNITY VOlUHTIEIER!> Ully IE.$. 5"wen FOR THIE ElOIERl Y ICVEI, 420 Tiiis st-.--n1eo1 wltll Ille Wetl 1t111 Street, Coil• Meu. c_,, O.•k of 0r.,,.. c:-, °" eetllonll• t11u1 J-lt, "'1. Pt.._ SOUTH COAST INSTITUTE FOR .......... Or c-tl>ell Piiot, APPUIEO GERONTOLOGY,• J-u • JYll ~4 1,.1 '21_..1 Celllornl• c~•llOft, 420 W, tttlt • • ' • • __ Street, C.1.11 Mew. C.ltlwnl• tJU7 Thts 1te'-1 11 conctuc:t.G by • PUBLIC NOTICE CO,_•llOll. Sovlh Coest lnllllllte PICTllT'IOUS •UllM•U tor Ajlplled o.ro..10109y ,. llMM•ITATaMllNT Oii"-· TIM fol._ ... __, Is doi"9 ....,. T'-9r -H : Tltlt se.1-Wei liloct wlllt Ille II J & a WELDING Ul J & 8 County Clef1i oll OrlflOI Coullly on Mey RENT Al5, 2557 COlllll'lbl• Drive , 11, 1 .. 1. C.I• MMe, Cellforlll• t3'Jt PIUUJ Jeck E. B•ker, 2U1 Columbl• Pul>ll.,... Orenge C:O.st 0.11., Piiot, Drive, c.w Mew. CeUforlll• ,_,. JIMM 2, •. 16, n . 1"1 2..,_.1 Tlllt ........ ltC~D,en ln--------- flvldllel. Jeo E ..... ., PUBLIC NOTICE Tllla .......,_ -filed wlU. "" - C°"flly C*'< ot 0r.,... C:-y °" J-lt. "'1 lli1iled Slffly ONLY s279ts LAMENT -Historian Arthur Schlesln&er in a commencement ad· dr ess to North · eastern Uni - versity graduates deplored what h e termed the drift toward conservatism among yo~ng people. F urnace leaks fixed ., WASHINGTON CAP> -The maker of about 55,000 furnaces used in mobile homes ha,a launched a repair proaram beuuse of the dan1er of leuktna ca rbon monoxide, the Con1umer Product Safety Com- missloo repof'U. The danaer 11rlBe11 It portions of the ven u corrod " In model MMG "Mlller" brand llquld propane and natural 111 furnaces The furnaces were made by the Home dlvl1ion of Lear Slealer Inc. of Holland, Mich. Corroelon In the rtue pipe extension and vent.I CIUl allow carbon monoxide lo be emitted Into llvln1 area.a, the comml11lon aald. The aaency report- ed It hH received rtportl of 19 deaths associated with s uch poh1ont11 since 1969. ~· The furnaces were sold for use in mobile homes since 1964, either •as original equipment or for repl ment. The commission said mobile bothe owners should check their fuma~ for the "Miller" name at the top of the louvered door. If It la a "Miller:· open the louvered door and check the large vertical pipe. If that · pipe Lis about five Inches across, the furance is lnodel MMG . If ,you have th al model . or are 1f!>t aure, contact the manufacturer Jib calling, toll free, 800 253-3874. tie firm will arrange for free lnstaJlatton of a new nue pipe extension. 25~~ .. VII 1 IPll~Cllt ClllPllll• C111P TV WTTH DUAL lllODf REMOTE CO•TAOL SAVE 5 15000 ' 100% Solid State . Cheuis 10AB1406K • ln·lin• Pictufl Tube •Automatic F11qu1n- cy Comrol OCllt llrlWI on ltlQI\ lmOod Oloc1lc: • A11tom1tic Color Control NOW ONLY s499ts 11 '~ .... fl .. C1l1r M11lt1r TV • F1~11n Food Stor.,. Com· tJlltllttllt • 2 lct'n hfY • Treys WITH ,ROGR'flll'lllAILESCAll RllllOTf COllTROl •Door Shelv" for •ws. milk, 1111 llonl" • Ollltrtz Electro11ic THitte-91 Ch1111111l 1 1110% Solid Stitt Chlnis I In-lint llacll Matrix Pictur1T11M 1 C•I• AIMy Mi411MHI Cllet!MI Selectien c-.•itity w ............... on h"" ._, e>I•• •Only 21" wide, 11" htth ONLY s399ts • 111 cu fl. n<>froot ~IC•tat.or • 1124 L'\J fl. f)w-z.er • lqwpport ft>!' opuon&1 •utoma.uc: liotma.Jl•r .. .,.,~-~. .,,.,_ • CovoNcl ,,_. pan • lntf'ltll •lr@t flWll.Clt '" nc>r~· poe1t.ton Ml1>11 L'Ul aptr&llJlC OOe1. • l>....i tempo...wr. oonv-oia ., ... ,...._s..~ ·~~ S~•HiP F~elity~ier • OllWU lllcttfftC T ......... t c ..... .- e E-.,c-..~ S.W St.te u- ••• l-"-* .a.u ... 'ct•rt Twt 25" dtCICJOIMll COLOR TV / 2SEM2107P MEDITERRANEAN STYLING c abinet constructed of a combination of genuine hardwood solids. wood composition board and simulated wood accents. ~ -----· .... lttlr AWT•ATIC CHKlll COIITTIOI e 4·CydeWuh Slllection includi111 •lltflY sav11 dry option • 2 WHtl levels •Solt Food Dliposar • Dull Dtt"ltnt Distl111wr 1 Sound lnsul1ted '••lu ••• AUTOMAT IC COOK I NG CONTAOl..--folo nffd I o 1 e t 11 111 e , .............. Ot!ICMW ltvel, I UIO,,,l llCllly IClllAI• lor d1ner•n• -ollooct With 1h• GE apac•-maker Microwave Ov.n. and your own range, ~ hev9 a oomple1• cooking ctnterl s599ts • 04044 a s as sass 5J &J a ssccssucs2 JS ti SS 2 1 . .. . . .. . . .. .. . ,. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23. 1981 H /F •• rn~~rn~~~. l.__....art throwers beating -Wall Street experts Investment contest brokers embarrassed by results NEW YORK (AP> -Take four top stock 'market experts from Wall Street, America's hl1h· atakes financial center. Give each $30,000 and eight weeks to make money, us1n1 analysta, com- puters and market savvy. Next take nine darts and throw them at The Wall Street Journal's stock market quotations. Then throw one of the darts a second time for good meas ure. Now invest $30,000 where the 10 darts stick. · · A New York newspaper, The Daily News Tonight, did just that, publisbinc the results from the mythical investments every day. And now , "'1th one week remaining, the darta are doinc bet- ter than two of the experts. And the brokers' playful colleagues won't let them forget. ''Anybody that got into this thing had to have a thick skin and a sense of humor," grumbles BUI LeFevre, who got into the contest only to see his $30,000 shrink to about $25,000 -third among the brokers and behind the Dart Fund. ' "We bad guys in our other offices calling in and wanting to know bow I was doin1." be says, adding that amused officemates replied: "I think he's a half game ahead of the Chicago Cubs." The newspaper says its circulation Increased by 5,000 in the Wall Street area, adding to the 120,000 to 150,000 readers already watcbhig every move of the brokers. Taking a beating with all his peers watching bas been bad enough, "but I have to read about it coming home, too," J okes LeFevre, investment strategist for Purcell Graha m& Co. "There's always the chance the Dart Fund will come out ahead of you and on Wall Street, news like that travels fast,'' says Bob Stovall, director of investment policy for Dean Witter Reynolds and a frequent guest on public television's "Wall Street Week." "People don't remember the winners or even the stocks you picked, but they remember the losers," adds the front-runner in the "Battle of the • • -~' Brokers" whose portfolio bas grown to $39,200. Mike Met.z, vice president of Oppenheimer & Co. and dead last in the race with $19,938 of bis in- vestment remaining, admits he gets some razzing from his peers. ··Anyone in this business has to be something of a masochist," he says with a laugh. "But it does show you that the average man on the street, using common sense, may· very well turn out to be a good speculator.·· To catch up, Metz has been heavily investing the $5 monthly Gold Account fee. 2. Personalized ~h checks. Wells Fargo s famous check designs imprinted with your name and address. Again, no additional charge. in stock options, rights to buy or sell stocks within a specified time at a specified price, which provide leverage for big gains as well as big losses. "It works both ways and in this case it's been working against me," says Metz, who adds: "With such a short-term game, you tend to overspeculate and take excessive risks. I would never advise anyone to do what I'm doing in the game with real money." The newspaper's business news staff. which lined up one afternoon and threw darts at the stock Ustlnp, hasn't touched lta dart portloUo. Yet tbe darts st.and at $31,lN, theatenin1 lnveatment strategist Ray DeVoe, of Bruna, Nordeman, Rea, who's second with '32.000. "These guys always sound wiM and lnte1U1e.nt in their rmanclal newsletters. Well, we 1ave them the chance to show lt, ·' said Frank Lalll, the newspaper's U90Clate editor for bualneu news. "We wanted to atve our readers a look at some of Wall Street's bl11eat names ln action." Each day's trades are printed below tbe brokers' pictures with an explanation of their strategy. Tonight cautions that the brokers' ac- tions are not market Ups and shouldn't be viewed as investment counseling. Al (int, the brokers were cautious investors, focusing largely on stocks they expected to move up in price. But u the contest beach into lta flnai week, they're buying and selling stock optiona with reckless abandon. Anything to beat the darts. At first I played lt straight. and tried to get a balanced portlollo," LeFevre says. But when bis high tecbnoloey stocks "crested and beaded south" he bailed out into money market funds to reconnoiter. Then, "I figured I'd play a11ressive," he says. The game is not an accurate test of bow the brokers would really do in the market. They are only allowed to trade at the day's opening prices, which means they can't buy when securities begin to rise or sell when they begin to fall. "Nobody in their right mind plays the market for just two months," adds Peter Kadzls, the •· porter handling the game. Wall Street veterans .. are really j ust sportsmen in pin-striped suits," he says. "But it takes a lot of guta to play in public and I don't know how many would be up to it." The newspaper, a young, upscale version of the morning New York Daily News, batched the game as a way to build circulation in Manhattan. In a companion game. readers are able to win cash prizes of $1 ,QOO -and a grand prize of $5,000 for picking a stock that shows the greatest profit on a given day. 4. S200 daily Express Stop Withdrawal. Double the usual limit. No charge. 5. Safe deposit box. Stand- ard size. Yours with no annual rental fee. 7,8,9. Travelers checks, cashiers checks, money orders (U.S. Dollars) /:>J you'll ever need, with no service charges. 8. A check-cashing ldentttl- catlon card. Good for cash- ing checks up to $200 ot any office. It makes more than 380 Wells Fargo offices ~ throughout Colifomia as The Wells Fargo Gold Account is just about the most uncomplicated way you'll ever find to do your banking. You get interest on your checking account, ptus nine valuable banking services, including no-charge checking-no matter how many checks you write. Five dollars a month Is all it costs. There's no minimum balance required. And~ may never have to worry about separate service charges again. Look whats included: 3. 55,000 Personal Accident Insurance. It covers you wherever you are, however you travel. No additional charge-your Gold Account eosy fo use as your own. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!91_......._ covers It. With the GOid Account, Wells Fargo delivers the · maximum amount of bank you'll find an'yWhere for the minimum amount of your money. WfJve made it possible for everyone to hcwe an int~rest checking account. And to quit worrying about bank service char~. See your nearest wells Fargo office about signing up for your own Gold AccOunt today. 1. Unllmlled checkwtlllfig. ' Wrtte all the checks you wont. There5nochargenomatt~ how many you use, beyond Wells Forgo started out delivering gold. And we still do. ~l'OIC Office• In: C<>tta Mesa, Fountain V1lley, lrvlne, L~una Niguel, Newport Belch. Orange, Santa Ana. -Orange eo .. a DAILY PILOT/Tuelday. June 23, 1981 ArlUC'• concep of the Paw Toclc kJrgd deftgnator ~ttem1 fan r,.u11 o/ ploM) to be built f>ll Ford Ano~ & Commtmtcat1onl Corp., NftDPOrl BftJCh. Ford • wms $26.8 million pact Ford Aerospace ai Commu.alcallooa Corp.'1 Aeroautl"Olllc Divt1IOD, Newport Beach, bas been awarded a $26.8 million contract for Pave Tack electro-<>pticaJ target designator systems for use on strtte aircraft of the Royal Australian Air Force. Pave Tack provides strike aircraft pilots with a capability for detection and recognition of targets during day and night, and under adverse BRIEFS . weather conditions. It will be used with the Royal Australian Air Force's F·lll aircraft. Aerooutronic Division bas been under contract to the U.S. Air Force ror production or the Pave Tack system since early 1978. The systems are de- signed for the Air Force F ·4 and F -111 aiTcralt to greatly enhance their precision weapon deli.very capability. *. * • The investment management firm of NeU F. Cam pbell Co., Los Angeles, has changed its name · to Campbell, Reed, Conner & Birdwell Inc. The Los Angeles-based firm manages portfolios of cor- porations' endowments and individuals. • * * Crocker Bank, San Francisco, is underwriter of $15 'million In tax and revenue anticipation notes for Oran1e County. Net interest cost of the notes, DO YOU NEED HELP? Anawer Network can help Increase your profit• by lowering overhead. With Answer Network'• •hared-overhead concept, you wlll t"i•v• available every office service you need, Including your own phone number and an1werlng service ... all at a fraction of the cost or expensive racllllles and 1taff. COMPUTO COMMUNICATIONS ""YICla AVAIL.Alli: 0 An1werlng .. N ice 0 Ouot• prlcH 0 Maka appolntmant1 0 Letter• and typing 0 Word processing 0 2• hour dictation lpecl1l11tn1 In: 0 Conference room1 0 Payroll 0 Mallll1t1 0 Telex 0 Fac1lmll1 o Paoino C.nlfled MNlce call dl1p1tchlng, 0<der taking and credit chec9'1ng. An1w1r Netwont has a Solution, Call: lttSWER N£IWClRK 714-953-1234 bt.71• .TRUST DEED INVESTMENT SEMINAR ~ · HERITAGE HOME WANS, INC. CORDIALLY INVITFS YOU TO ATTEND AN INFORMATIVE SEMINAR ON TRUST DEED INVESTMENTS WHICH WILL BE HELD ON THE FOLLOWING DATES: TUESDAY, June 2~ at 7:30 P.M. Sponamaa's Lodce Empire Room 42:W Coldwater Canyon Ave. at Ventura Blvd. Parking entranc&on Cqldwater Canyon Ave R .S. V.P .: .June 19, 1181 (213) 501.Q87 THURSDAY, June 25th at 7:30 P.M. &e1Jatry HOTEL Costa Mesa Room 18800 Mac ARTHUR Bl.VO .. IRVlNE. CALIF Across from lhe Orange Col.Inly Airport . . ll.S. V .P.: @ . I . (714) IN-3318 -HERITAGE HOME LOANS ~n.......,Aft'WteM.,...,au..,• · a.8.V.P.CALL 1-800-42 2-4244 im s. aram IT., ••EA dated July 1, is 8.08 percent uue June 30, 1982, the bonds are reoCfered to yield 7.8S percent. The issue is available from Crocker MunJcipal Securities In San Francisco and Los Angeles. Co·managers of the issue are First National Bank of Boston and National Bank of North America. * Kyle Technology Corp., Mission Viejo-based manufacturer of electrical components for medical devices and oil well t~sUng equipment, has reported the initial public offering of 950,000 shares of common stock at a price of S7 a share. The underwriting syndicate was managed by Paulson Investment Co. Inc., Portland. Ore Of the shares offered, 630,000 are being sold by the com- pany and 420,000 by certain selling shareholdel's. Net proceed,s to the company from the sale of its shares wilJ be used for acquisition or an expanded manufacturing facility, additional machinery. marketing, product development and additional working capital. * * * Bentley Laboratories Inc., Irvine, has in- troduced the Bentley biocarbon vascular access system at the American Society for Artificial In· ternal Organs meeting in Anaheim. The system is a no-oeedle dialysis system that eliminates the pain, repeated trauma a nd associated complica- tions of conventional dialysis treatment methods requiring the use of large needles in repeated vascular punctures that leads to vessel deteriora- tion. USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Servi'ce Call 642-5671 . .Jd.32.2 LLE T CORNER Rare Coins & Sta mpe GOLD & SILVER 6-22·11 e.w c-.-.• u1 ..... a . •te.u . ..., .... 1Cr11999r-M1S.7S ....,, M.apt. Lffh Mk• I04• 100 Cor_, ...._. Mii M 50Pesot • s.11._ ...... 90% Sii~ 8-17ft t1~ 70% Bank Financing IRA & KEOUGH ( 714) 556-6150 South Co•l1 Pleu VIiiage .................... c1oc,_.._..,..ee. .. ~1 ~EXECUTIVE SU1TES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14 N f WPORT BEACH 7 14 -631 -3651 $50,000· to $500,000 INCQME PROPERTY SECONDS • l ntereet Only pev--L • llK- •Co•••rdal • R .. ldential • w .. 1&1v co•••·-·--• lllontlilv f•ndl .. • • 6 -n dl• to S vean • So•thern C.llforn&. t 11fll1Jl I •••H loan lafo.--tlo• ••rvk• t '' ""U! fin""' 11111 n.-.. d• (714) 75SM515 AMEIUCAH HOMf MORTOAGf ?JO Newoort Cente• 01t•e Oe11gn Plan Newoort Beac1> Cohlo1n1A 92660 L .M.Boyd informs in the YHa01t 'Boss of the Year ' c hosen Cbarles J. Yesaoa, president and chief ex- ecutive officer of both USLIFE Savings and Loan AssociaUon and USLIFE Life Insurance Co. of California bas been named 1981 Bosa of the Year by the Irvine Charter Chapter of the American Business Women's Association <ABWA >. The award was based on education, business experience, community involvement· and ac· compllshments of the candidate, as well as on the member's recommendation. Yesson wa.s recommended by Anita Fleming, boss night chairman and assistant vice president, ON THE JOB manager of corporate business development and m a nager of the Irvine branch of USLIFE Savings and Loan. • * • Robert J . Monte has been named president, c ustomer service division, for Irvine-based Microdata Corp. He is responsible for the opera· lion and management of the company's nationwide service organization. Monte was previously presi- dent, field engineering, for Itel Corp. of Palo Alto. * • • Vinton P. "Vinny" Fro•t has joined the architectural firm of Thomas Associates, Newport Beach, as vice president of project development. His responsibilities will entail new business de- velopment and overall administration. * * * Gunther E. Hering has been promoted from manager to vice president, corporate development and strategic planning of Fluor Corp. Hering, who joined Fluor in 1975, will continue to work with top management to help identify, develop and imple· ment the company's business strategy and growth. OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS MUTUAL FUND He lives in Newport Beach. • * • Tbomu M. Laughlin has been promoted to president or Costa Mesa·based Douglas Oil Co of California. He replaces Archie Dunham, recently promoted to a vice presidency of Conoco Inc. a' Houston. Douglas is a s ubsidiary of Conoco Com· panies Inc • * • Frank Llanes has been appointed assistan' manager of Citizens Thrift and Loan Associatio~ office in Irvine's Heritage Plaza Shopping Center1 Prior to joining Citize ns Thrift, Llanes worked irt th e Santa Ana a nd La Habra offices of Fireside Thrift. • • * Ranny E . Draper, president of Diverslfie~ Shopping Centers of Costa Mesa, has been 'electe4 a trustee of the International Couneil of Shopping Centers, headquartered in New York City. ICSC is the trade associat ion of the shopping center in· dus try, with members in more than 30 countries. • * * Chuck E. Welch has been appointed director of marketing for lrvine·based Armor All Producls. He will be responsible for the res earch, intelligence and str ategic planning o f a ll marketing programs Armor All Products. a Di vision of Foremost McKesson Inc , is the maker of Armor All Protectant. Armor All Cleaner and Armor All UltraPlate • • * Robert Rotstao h as been named assistant vice president w1u;tt of Merrill Lynch, Pier ce. Fenner & Smith Inc , the nation's largest securities company. Rolstan ts a senior account executive in the Merrill Lynch of- fi ce at 4501 Birch St • Newport Beach ...... TIME pf ltv Ptl • TIME OC L08 Q> PerfU. LevlroQ>C ~~ CllffiOv wordTm Velmnl MOOCll ""1 Codnl w1 lnlllo FlaNFla Colby Feylnd Cyn..t ' Comoiot NLa mp1 lnlT~R AIQOru WrdTrn un Amber SIMo<1B<t • ....... ~~:,\~Cl l'lncllnc MorchR' WarrRtt O RIOV«d Nor-Qlt Cl Oen-T e yt«Ov lnt .. Ent Excollb FINIS<lp AlpMIC AllllnC&I v Comdaf Hor bib RcllMIE G11ordOI OllM11n SIS.r11 11 ArlOkSY GtrWolh Pry1TWE" Syncor W'I N•FrPlr XCOR Ull'S l.HI Cha Pel. 4Vt + 1~ Up 50 ~ 17 • "° Up a.> J-+ -. Up UO Sli't + t Up 21.1' I Vt • tVt Up 21 • .C: Jft • '-Up 1' r' 2Vt • Vt Up 14 1 J.\lo + Vt Up U4 U llo • 1'1rt Up IS.2.. t 1·1' •S.\6 Up 14 7 SO + • Up 1>.• ,.,.. + 14 Up U.J ,... • V. Up 12 • 1' • 1Vt Up 110 11... + 114 Up 11.S S + V. Up 11 1 2'1t • 14 Up 11 I '"'° "'° Up 10.7 •V> '-Up 10 6 10• • 1 ... Up 104 2.._ + 14 Up 100 1114 + I Up t.I ' s... + 11> Up •I 4 IS.16 •I 16 UP • 7 ,..,, • 1V. Uo t J' OOWltS '-"~' 3"\ Ott P<'io.o, S"" -t Off IS 4 '"°' -IVt Off t:U '"" -1 Off 1u. :,. =1~~ lB 2" -"' OH 11 S 1 -\It Off 11.I' • --Ofl 1111 '"" -1.,.. Ofl to t, 2.... -14 Ofl 10.S l'lrt -t OH 103 IJY, -t"" Off 100 2\lo -14 Off 10.0 UV. -'"" Ofl 10.0• .... -"" Off 100 2\lo .... Ofl 10.0 ,... -14 Ofl " J... " Off .. .... Vt Off u ; s Vt Ofl '·'· ,..., -14 Ofl • 1 "' ... Off " ,..., -14 Off .... •Vt -" Off •.•• l ... -... Off .. I - . .. . ~ . . . . ,, ' I • ·-· 0 0 0 • OU a 5 a 5 as a sees s a 5 uucsssscc22e 1 2 2 2 a 2 t Ji Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 ti/ F 117 COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OUOf ATl~S IN(l.uO• tllADU ON'"' .... YOAll, MIDWllT. ~•Cll'IC. ~··· I OSTON, ouao1T AlfO Cllt(ll0t4YI •-rpc• ia,MANOU ANO Wll'OUtO IY '"'NASO ANO INITll .. l \ are Graduates dependent (Second of a five-part series on l981 income tax ea.) When your ton or dau1hter get.a out. of 1chool and takes a job <or perhaps marries), do you lote that child as a dependent on your L981 income tax return? As emphasited ln Monday'a report, not necessarily. When your chUd reaches age 19, there ia a $1.000 Umit on the total or taxable income he or she can receive and still be an acceptable dependent on your return. But the lncome limit doe• not apply to a child -single or married -who is a full-time stu· dent in 1981. lf your child spent any part of five calendar months in school during 1981 -for instance. if he or she went to college from January into May -the child is treated as a "full ·time ~ student " in 1981. The tax -----i::<#_;Z significance : SYlllA PBRTIR ~ Your child can make any amount of money he or she can m anage from now until the end of 1981 and no matter. You can claim him or her as your dependent on your 1981 return. Key requirement: You must provide more than half of your child's support for the year if the child is to be your dependent. There is much more to support t.han the obvious items -such as food, clothing and sheller. The tax rules on support (if you know them thoroughly) well ' may work in your favor. Example: Your 22tyear-old daughter. Mary. graduated from college early in June and married Dan. also a'June graduate of the agricultural school, a few days later. You paid Mary's college expenses, bought Mary a car for graduation (you are financing the purchase) and you also paid for Mary's wedding to Dan. The two already have found jobs, and after their honey· moon, they will be supporting themselves for the rest of 1981. Is Mary your tax dependent In 1981? The income Lest is no problem. Mary is con-• sidered a full-time student in 1981. But how about meeting the more-than-half-support test? This is something of a standoff. You paid Mary's bills at college. Dan and Mary are taking care of the second half of this year. Yet, you do clear the halfway mark test because of two critical tax rulings. One rulipg holds that so-called capital outlays the gifts of cars. television sets, etc. -count as de· pendent support in the year of the gift. So, advises Eli Warach, divisional vice president or Prentice·Hall. the full cost o( the graduation c"r gift iJ.su port you provided to Mary in 1981. Tomorrow: How JlOO can aave 11ou t mh tn ta:r deductioM ~~~~~~~~...:,_-r~~~~~~~~----il STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT ~OW JONES AVERAGES NEW ytMIC(API l'lMI 0...-1-.,,.._ IOt __.,, J .... tt. I •STOCKS ..•••••••.•..•.•.••... •· ·•• ·· .a.. .... '--c .... ~ • llld "7.0 1Glli..1t ............ 1.ft 10 Ttft 422.62 4M.47 •It.II 412.%2 + 1.9'1 1S U ti · , 110.117 111.ll IOtA 110. It-tM t.s Su.. •Ma.• m.• m.•+ 1.14 ~~· ::::::::::::::::.:::. : . ~:=:: Ullla .. . . • .. . . . .. .. .. . . .. .. 1.0..-'5 Stll ......... ....... ....... •.7111 ... WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YO"ll CAP) J .... 11 TOIM,. IU ca •m .. • NEW Y<>l'IC CAPI JWll. 2J METALS · 't~ .. "' m 22 • c;...., 8)-ll e»l'lh e po..,d, U.S. Otstln•· ''°"'· ~ •Jt ,_,. poWllCI. 11-c .. V. uru e POIA'ICI, dtll-. Ti. $6.Ml' MaQls WMll <omcioMte lb ANtlllllllf'll 7...0-e pou11CI, N. Y ~<•rt '420.00 per fluk. l't•tlum 1«2.00 troy or •• H Y SILVER I H•IMIY A HM,,_, J10.2' per troy ounu GOLD QUOTATIONS I J ' • ·~ -)- Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 Come to the grandopenjng of Int erial Savings' liew Costa Mesa office step back into the French countryside. We've moved into our spacious 1\l'w hrunrh uffin• ut 655 Anton Street in Costa Mesa, just one block away from Sout h Con~t Pl 110 ShoppinR Center. And to celebrate, w~'re inviting you to join u~ in (~mud OptminJ.( Ft•st ivities in the Country French tradition. You'll be welcom din n r ham1inA St'ttint.t l't'lllin1~,·tmt of tht.• French countryside by hostesst.~s dn·sst1d in lht• -.•thlHl' l'O:-tl\lllWH of th' rural fannlands. You'll wandt.'t' thn,u~h n Ft t'Hl'h \'illu~~ Ill \I kt•tplncc with baskets of flowt>rs and f111it . t t'l·llis l'S, w1l'hl'I wm t'S m<I cll'lirnte floral prints. Beneath n t hutdwd t'out r .mup\', rn11 d1C'I will Plt'lllll t' 11 variety of delidou~ hot tr\lit t'l'\'l)(':-: h11 '"''" t•1uoynwnt. Or you may wish to ~unplt· nw Ftt·twh t tkt•1 ·~ tlt1h•rt11 bl\· pastries. And Wt' invitt• ~ 'll tn \'1:--ll ou1 Eut\11\c ' 1u coffee bar wht•ft' wt-'11 shcth' :\\\ll\f' ,,1 ttw (>Id Country's fint>st roasts <lHd blrnd~ with \'Ull. Costa Mesa is quirkly ~·omu~ tht· financial <md cult m·al l't'lltt't t>t < )1 rtt ~t' County and Imperial N:tvt~s \SP• oud to l)(• .1 part of our co1ru11t.mity's btu-~t'\>nn~ ' , development. Our three-day Country French party is our way of sharing this pride with old friends and new neighbors. Our new branch office is easily accessible from all parts of Costa Mesa and surrounding communities and our large customer lobby feature s ; ..... _ reading material and free coffee daily. For your added convenience, we are open Saturdays from 9am-lpm. So be sure to drop by during our Grand Opening and discover a world of refreshing checking and savings plans and other convenient services. • • I Where: 655 Anton Street, #3. Costa I I Mesa. When: Thursday, June 25th, I I 9am-5pm; Friday, June 26th, 9am-~ 1 6pm; Saturday.June 27th, 9am-lpm IJ 0Im~!:!~~t~vings 655 Anton Street, #3, Costa Me sa / ·./ ¥:! " .. ·. " . . . ' 0 • .. • 0 -0 0. 0 4 • 0 a DlilJ Pilat H I F TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1981 COMICS CLASSIFIED C4 cs 5 s a &US!LS!U&U&SZD!SSSZ iii 2 3 . . . Golf's big names lured to county for liig money. C2 . South upset the bettors Grandstaff leads rout • By JOHN SEV ANO O( .. Mty ........... When t he Oran ge County media established the North as a three-point favorite in the 22nd Orange County All-star football game. the members or the South squad s hook their collective heads in disbelief. How can a unit which features players from both 1980 CIF Big Five finali5ts (Edison and Foun· taln Valley) and a squad loaded in talent from what is generally considered the toughest league (Sunset) in the Cl F Southern Section be tabbed as an un- derdog? "I DON'T KNOW why the North was favored," s aid Edison defensive back Duaine Jack.son immediately after the Rebels of the South had ambushed the Yankees or the North. 40-12. 1980 by passing for almost 2,500 yards. • In all , ,th'l! quintet accounted for five of the team's six irt. terceptions. limiting Ka rsatqa and his repla ce ment . Melodyland's Troy Bodine, tb five completions in 24 attempts. · "We all wanted to prove w~ were good defensive backs.'' said Edison's Dino Bell. ··Wi felt people underestimated us aa a unit and we wanted lo prove we we,e as good as any secon· dary in the county.'· While the Rebel defense wu proving its point. the orrense was making a case for recogni- tion, too. AFTER A SHAKY start, the North offense rolled into gear to the tune of four touchdowns in the short span or 2: 15 of the second quarter. Deity Pt•,......, a.n.. ~ Robert Gould ( 29) heads for the end zone to complete South's second-quarter, 28-point explosion at OCC. "We had two CIF cham- pionship teams on the same side.'' "That's what got us all mad," added Jackson's teammate Troy Seurer. "We knew, or at least we thought we knew, we were better. but I guess the press and nobody else thought we were." Led by the passing and the running of Marina Higb 's Bob Grandstarr. the Rebels struc~ first when the 6-0, 175-pound right-hander bulled his way from one yard out to culminate a 79-yard, 10-play drive. Evert, Navratilova, Jaeger • Will easily Thirty.four seconds later , following a J ackson intercep- tion. Grandstaff got the Rebels on the board again as he calmly stepped out or the pocket to his right and found Fountain Valley's Emile Harry all alone in the end zone from 27 yards out. Mandlikova also advances to second round of Wimbledon tourney There are few doubters left a fter Monday night's disman· lllng. WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -Chris Evert Lloyd, favorite for the Wimbledon Women's singles title, began ber bid today by easily defeating Australian left-hander Chris O'Neil, 6-3, 6-0. . Lloyd played from the baseline and treated the center court crowd to an immaculate display or ground strokes. Three of her main rivals for the title also won in straJght sets. Hana Mandllkova of Czechoslovakia, seeded No. 2, had most trouble. She defeated Corinne Vanier. the 17-year-old French left-hander, 6-3, 7·5, 4nd ~bowed no visible signs of the back injury that bas been bothering her in the last 10 days. Because of the injury, Man· dikova earlier withdrew from the women's doubles and the mixed doubles. Fo u rtb-seeded Martin a Navratilova, who won here in ' ~ 1978 and 1979, downed Amerian I Joyce Portman, 6-4, 6·0. Andrea Jaege r . the pony- tailed 16-year-old prodigy from Lincolnshire, Ill.. cruised past Nerida Gregory of Australia, 6·1, 6-1. Jaeger is seeded filth. It was another hot, sunny day and thousands swarmed around the grounds or the All· England Club. The second day or the tournament is traditionally ladies' day, but 17 first-round men's singles matches had been left uncompleted from Monday and bad to be fitted into the schedule . O'Neil, a tall, willowy player. showed more aggressive tactics than Lloyd. But it did her litUe good. She went eagerly to the net looking for volleys, but the American, playing from the baseline, passed her repeatedly. Mandllkova led 6-3, 4·1 and ap- peared beading for a quick vie· tory. But the French girl fought back to knot the second set at S-5. Serving from the advantage court, Vanier played Mandlikova's backhand and the . J No strike answer, ! says Quisenberry I KANSAS CITY, Mo. CAP) - As the Major League baseball strike moves deep into its second week. Dan Quisenberry, player representative or the Kansas City Royals , rears the worst. "It's hard to foresee anything happening," the former Costa Mesa High and Orange Coast Coll~e star slaid in an In· 1 terview. "I can't see bow it's ever going to be settled. We're like two rams butting heads." QUISENBER&Y , last season's Fireman or the Year in the American League. merely lau1hs when asked to predict a winner in the s tru11le that's closed down baset>aJI. I "I don't th.ink there wlll be a winner. The longer the strike goes, the mOt'e devaatalini it gets. The owners are crowing more ret10lute, and the players are getting more bitter. some investments if the strike keeps going. , "THE PLAYERS are losing money, the owners are losing money. Right now. it's hitting the concessionaires harder than the owners and players. lt'a odd when you think about it, but the only people involved in this mess who aren't losing money are the rans. They're not making money off the strike, but I guess they're saving money because they're not going to the games." For him personally, the early a fternoon has become the most wretched time of day. "About 3 o'clock, or 3:30, that's when I start getting really tense and depressed," be said, "because that's when I always left for the, s tadium. Every day about 3:30 I reel all this pent-up energy swirling through me, and I don't have any ouUet for lt. "Actually, t spend a lot of my time trying not to thinltl about lt because It gets me so depreued. And look what time it i~ -it's 3 o'clock. I feel eWful." Czech, winner or the Australian and French Open titles, had pro· blems. Then Mandlikova put on the pressure and finished orr the match with a superb backhand service return down the line. John McEnroe and third-seeded Jimmy Connors · both recorded straight-set victories Monday. but three seeds were defeated on an ~pening day full or surprises. Charlie Fancutt, an Australian ranked 194th tn the world, de· feated No. 4 seed I van LendJ of Czechoslovakia, 4·6, 6-3, 6-4, 1-6, 6-3. Erle Fromm of Glen Head, N.Y., upset 13th-seeded Yannick Noah of France. 6-4, 6·4, 6·3, and Texan Bill Scanlon ousted 11th· seeded Victor Pecci of Paraguay, 7-6, 6·0, 6-0. Fancult and Fromm both are 22-year·olds who have reached the main draw at Wimbledon for the first time . Strike talks to resume Wednesday By Tiie Aasocla&ed Presa A new round or negotiations was scheduled for Wednesday in the stalemated major league baseball players' strike, which entered its 12th day today. The office of federal mediator Kenneth Moffett today an- nounced a 2 p.m. EDT starting time for talks to resume in New York between the striking Major League Players Association and management's Player Relations Committee, be aded by Ray Grebey. A ray of hope glimmered on the horizon Monday when Mof· fell, who bad just helped avoid a nationwide air controllers· strike, called for another round of talks today. But three hours later, be canceled the session, saying, "I bad a change of beart. r needed more lime t.o think about things." Cincinnati Reds pitcher Tom Seaver, who was a part of the aborted negotiations last week, said that Moffett canceled the meeting "out of fetlcue. "l beard be bad canceled the <See STIUKE, Pa«e CZ) "Grass is an equalizer," Fan· cull said. "I got a ll fired up because this is Wimbledon." Fromm was taken aback by the attention he received from the media. He walked into a crowded interview room and joked: "l only expected a couple of people." Connors, champion here in 1974, wasn't joking about bis in· tenlions. "H my expectations had changed, I wouldn't be here." Connors said. Before an overflow crowd or 7,000 at Orange Coast College, the South squad, under the direction or head coach Mike Milner or Fountain Valley, did almost everything right In win· ning its fourth straight. ON DEFENSE, the secondary of Dino Bell, Tim Finley, Bob Shollin, Bob Owens and Jack.son threw a virtual blanket over the much-heralded passing attack of the North, led by Jim Karsatos of Sunny Hills , who rewl'Qte the Orange County records books in Jack son· s second recovery, this lime of a fumble on the e n s uing ki c koff . e nabl ed Grandstaff to team with Harry again as he caught the fleet- footed receiver streaking down the right sidelines for a 47-yard TO. The fin al score of the blitz came five seconds before the half as. followinf another (See SOUTH, Pa1e CZ> South's Emile HO"J htu cl«ar aailing aft.r hauling in 11-JIGrd TD poa. Defftldn ii Todd Hort. ·'The longer it goe1, tbe worse it •ets for everybody. From tht way tblnp look now. I'd bave ~ say there is a vny 1ood possibility the aeuoo ii over. The players will come bac~ any lime. But r doubt ii tbe owners would want to resume the seuoo if it •eta into Sep- tember." Horse racing: It's the true king of dumb sports eg•a BAD ONLY teculonal conuct wtu. a few of bll team: mate• aAnc. llae 1trtb becan June 12 and be'• heard of no flDand .. ...,....,.. "But I know every day my wife ud I are talklal about way1to1ne money," be Uld. "We're ~ to be u frqal u ••cu: Still, I 'm bellei' oil Ula a lot al""" wM Uft tWr ._.,tied up la blYlltm_.., ID ~ ... .., ..... to_, IMIMY flaWtal. AOd now tbey aa"t • uaa. Md • lot of people .,. .......... e to ...... that makes sporll faacinatlna la the human factq{, which i• totally lacltlnt In bone racin1. The Jockeys are really jult alone for the ride. . The drama, the ncilelDent. the thrill of sports all come rrom the knowled1e COMMENTARY At a race track, all you undo ls look Into the face of tome dim-witted be11t and try to decide U tbe beut ii worth bettint two bucu on. The bone doesn't care what you do with your money; all be wants to do ii 1et back to b.ll 1tall and munch on some bay. By the way, ooae of UUI abould be Interpreted aa beln1 critical of the borMll. It'• not their fa ult thlt mUUom of people think Jt't fUn to bet moMJ on wblch ol them can nan fut... fforHI don't voluntMr to become r.....,..; but lt'1 a shame that trainen mau them do Jt~ became It ll:eepe the bOrHI from 1ervt111 tbt true and noble ...,_. t... which they were put on earth: to pro.Ide food for do11 and· P'reHla ...... It'• a sad fact that the smartest bor'M la dumber than the stupldeat forward In the NatJonal Basketball AMociaUon, ii you can imaatne tucb a thine. So a lltUe ll:lndnesa la tn order. lnatHd ol blamJn¥ the bones fOf' the pheaomeaon of bone 'racln1, we should tocua our attentJon Oil the people wbo 10 to the tracb. Jutt becauae there are 10 manr milllODI of them doesn't meu that we have to eonalder them pralHwortht.' Butcally, tbae are lile'1 later1; peopk so devold of excU•meat and acble....._t ln the real world tlMlt tblf muat ,_ tMir klcu by~ to pt luct, nlat tlmet •day at IM~-Tlil!lt odcll are that at leut ...,. ....., !!, da)' ~will have a Mnit ._.. -~ , ... ., .... ,, ... a> . -·-,,.,,. ~---------------"!• Oou t DAILY PILOT/Tutldl Jun• n 1H 1 Carlton 1tan•d to a four-year contract Tht PhUadtlphla Phtlll• IDd tbt .. l ltnt tot pttobtr .... , Cutt. COD· nrm~M Us1\ Ult left·b&Dder h11 1 to 1 new ooatraet rt· port 1 paytq him • mJ1Uoll OYtr tbt Dllt rour 1HIOftl. TU oontraol mll&• Carlton 001 of tht 10 be•t·P•ld pltthtrl la m1Jor IHIUI b1111U. 111&tv1 hu ah1t111 ahoun to quittly to about h1• conltaat n11oU1Uom," aald Dav• McE nroe concern e d about h is behavior. Laafteld, Carlton'• 11tnt. "Ht'a really never wanted &o &et Ln&o a po1JU00 ol chokln1 the club on the tree aeent thlna. And he'a definitely suffered financially for that. But that's Steve's policy The Dodgers an- nounced that fans boldin1 ticketa for games not played because of the strike could From AP dllpatchea WIMBLEDON, England -John ~ McEnroe admitted Monday he was worried about his temperamental on-Carlton trade them in for 1amea played in the future. Season ticket holden wlll receive credit to their accounts for tick eta and parking. A spokesman for the club added that an announcement will be made soon regarding tickets held by straight "A" students . court outbursts. The 22-year-old New York left-hander was contrite after being involved in a series of clashes with officials during his first-round vie· tory over Tom Gullikson at Wimbledon. McEnroe accused one official of being "an incompetent fool" and fre· quenUy challenged decisions. Two penalty points were awarded against him. Basketball coaches hit the links "I suppose it was my fault because I was feeling very jittery," said the tournament's No. 2 seed. "l think I was definitely wrong. "Feeling the way I do is unnecessary and only hurts IOWA CITY -Fuzzy Zoeller, l!I Bill Kratzert, Ed Sneed and George Archer each shot 4-under-par 68s to share the title at the 15th Pro-am tournament here Monday. Each golfer was awarded the fuU S3,000 first-prize money. The biggest attraction for the record crowd of more than 20,000 was a foursome of basket- ball coaches Lute Olson of Iowa, Iowa State's Johnny Orr, Bobby Knight of NCAA champion Indiana and Don Nelson of the Milwaukee Bucks. , McEnroe me. No one is to blame but myself. If others can manage to keep calm, why not me?" McEnroe. however, claimed some of the calls in the contest were terrible. "It's a tremendous pleasure for me to be here." said Knight, whose team lost to Iowa twice during the past season. "There must be a Jot of people out here who don't have seaaon tickets for Iowa basketball games." Quote of the day •' l lbinJc going on strike is stupid. They hire these guys as lawyers and stuff to try to work out their problems, then they go on strike. Why hire the lawyers if they can't do the job for ya?" -13-year-old Stephen Rhodes, who was not impressed by the recent doings of Messrs. Grebey, Miller. et al. Only 20 of the 41 pros managed par or better on the University of Iowa's Finkbine Golf Course as winds gusted up to 25 mph. Two-time VIP winner Lee Trevino finished one stroke behind the leaders at 619, along with veteran Miller Barber and Tommy Valentine. Bruce Lietzke was alone at 2-under-par 70, while 1981 Masters champion Tom Watson headed a group at 71. From Page C1 SOUTH. • • • turnover, Grandstaff connected with El Modena 's Robert Gould ( on a 28-yard aerial. \ For his efforts, Grandstaff, who will enroll at Golden West 'College in the fall to concentrate only on baseball. was awarded the honor as the game's top of- fen sive player. He finished his night's work completing seven of 18 tosses for 179 yards and three touchdowns. ''I had a lot of great receivers who had the ability to get open," said Grandstaff modestly. "Thls is certainly a nice way to go out." ALTHOUGH GRANDSTAFF may be putting his football cleats on the shelf, for others the game was only the beginning. Seurer and Bell are ticketed for the University or Kansas. while Jackson. the defensive player of the game, bas a dorm room waiting for him at USC. Harry will spend his next four seasons catching passes at Stan- ford. Bell, who wlll join his brother Kerwin on the Jayhawks, didn't have an interception but he did account ror the Rebels' fifth touchdown when he blocked a South punt at the 15 yard line, scooped lt up at the three and then did a tight-rope act against the sidelines into the end zone. ''We bad good players from every league," said Bell. "Tonight's victory was an entire team effort." TJIE vtcroaY enabled the South to close the North's advan- tage &o 14·8 in the series. The contest also tied and set a couple of records: -the six interceptions by the South eclipsed the old mark of four set by the South in 1966, '70 and '73. -Bob Owens of San Clemente High tied the record of most passes lnt.ercepted (2). -Harry tied the record for most touchdown passes caught (2}. -and Grandstaff tied the mark for most tou chdown passes thrown (3>. "WE HAD GOOD football players, obvloualy," is bow MUner summed up the loptlded vl~ory. ''More importantly, we had a great group of kids characterwise and attltudewlse. DuaineJack&on NFL asks disinissal of case LOS ~GELES (AP) -Tbe National FootbaJI League on Monday asked U .S. District Judge Harry P regerson to dis- miss the antitrust case of the Oakland Raiders and Los Angeles Coliseum, who sued the league because It would not perlilit the Raiders to move to Los Angeles. Attorneys for the league claimed there was lack of evidence. The plaintiffs• final witness, economist Louis A. Guth, con- cluded hi.a testimony Monday, saying the Raiders would make much more money if the team were permitted to play in Los Angeles, a city vacated by the Rama when they moved In 1980 to Anaheim. With Guth's final remarks. Maxwell Blecher, attorney for the Los Anaeles Coliseum and Joseph Alioto, the Raldera' at· torney, concluded their caae. Attorneys for the NFL will begin lhelr defense today. The first witness wu expected to be William Ray, treasurer for the league. He was expected to testify about the btst.ory of pro- fessional football, ill oraaniza. lion and its finances. Later ln tbe week, the lawyers were expected to ar1ue motions for "directed verdicts ... Judge Pre1ersoo 1ave no in- dications when he ml•bt rule on the NFL mot.tons for diamlual. The motiom, filed over the weekend b!iawyera for the NFL and Los eles Rams. uked the judte to ow out tbe cue. From Page C1 HORSES. • • money; no matter that they will be throwing their cash away. during the other races. What horse racing is all about is that one moment each afternoon when some poor mope can feel like a winner. Not ~hat this is such an evil th in g . But be· honest with yourself: When was the last time you were with a person of quality, intelligence and dignity, and that person said, "I'm sorry, I must leave now, I have lo go to the race track"? NEVER, THAT'S when. Water seeks its own level, so the people at race tracks tend to get along with one another, but they're not likely to be the sorts of folkB you would want to share a pizza with. They spend so much time at the track because they instinctively know they belong there. Oh, you read about wealthy and well-bred owners of famous horses. Do not fool yourself. These men and women are not t.be types who hang around the race tracks. They spend most of their time at their farms and breeding grounds, 1lppin1 mint iuleps and lauabing at the d upes who are supporting them by betting away their paychecks every day. And when these elite of racing do show up at the track, you can be sure they will not be down at the $2 windows. They will be in their private boxes, counting their eaminp. IT IS PROOF of how devoid of worth hone racing is that when a fellow like John Campo comes along -the aUegedly colorful trainer of this year's wonder horse, Pleasant Colony -be Is written about as if he were a combination of Jackie Gleaaon and Winston Churchill. Campo has au the grace and style that in the reaJ world would make a him a candidate for a soup line, but so desperate is the racing world for the human element that in a matter of months Campo became its great celebrity. That is about to end, though. With the end of the Triple Crown season, the decent people of America will not bave lo hear about horse racln1 anymore. Until next sprio1. the aport will once again belona t.o the men and women who gravitate to race tracks because or social and genetic defecta. The poor, dumb creatures. GoUers' 8008 lead Amate ur PEBBLE BEACH (AP) Rob Boldt, Sam Randolpb and Cary VOMler. all teen-a1ed ICJOI ..._. __ _ Longe1t game wtll re1um1 tonight PAWTUOK&T, a.u. -'Rlrt .. Wirt 1M bUtbaJll Uled, IU It bltl, 11 1trUctout11 a w1ll&1, 4t m111 left oa b111, and 11 t1n1 left ln Ult 1tandl when Ult umplr11 H id "IDOUP" alt9r a ln· ntn11. When th•)' 11y "play bill" 111in tonllbt, 'thtrt w{U bl more than eo reportert and 1tvera1 radio 1t1Uon1 pre11nt &o rt~ord whet both teams hope wlU be the end of tbt lon1eat 1ame Lo profesaion1l bueball btatory. "U both team• are •winlinc the bat, it could be over In one lnn1nf," said Rocbeater Red Wint• Mana,.,. Doc Edwarda "If neither team ii 1wlnatn1 the bat, who know1?'' When It was suapended alter 32 innin11 played April 18 and 19, tbe Jntematlonal Leaaue 1ame between Rochester and the Pawtucket Red Sox was tied 2-2. When it resumes in the &op of the 33rd before the regularly acbeduled game tonight Bobby Ojeda wUJ be pitching to Dallaa Williams. "I'm not going to get fancy. You've sot to go out there and get alter them," said Ojeda, Pawtucket's best pitcher, Wllliams, a .282 hit- ter, will watch bis average plummet when the eame's stallstics are recorded. He ii O-for-12 and counting. Alouettes settle for Olerstreet After several unsuccessful at-• tempts to land a premier running back, the Montreal Alouettes signed former University of Oklahoma stan- dout David Overstreet to a two-year contract . Monday with the Canadian Football League club. The 6-0, 172-pound fullback avera1ed 7.2 yards per carry during bis four-year tenur.e with the Sooners . . . AJl·America noaeguard 1loa Slmmou of Florida State pleaded no con- test to a charge of aiding grand retail tb~ft and was placed on one year of probation ... The Oakland Raiders have increased season ticket prices by S3 per game . . . The condition of marathon runner Terry Fox, who ii suffering from cancer, worsened Monday. Fox, 22, was admitted to the hospital Friday for treatment of an infection . . . International Olympic Com- mittee President Juan Antoalo SamarHch saJd he conslders Calgary "a strong candidate" for the 1988 Winter Olympic Games Television, radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: No events scheduled. From Page C1 STRIKE. • • not trying to break the union, but they're trying to severely weaken it. They're not going to weaken our s upportof Marvin Miller. but they want to weaken our stand, "saidSeaver. Seaver participated in three negotiating sessions last week and came away without op· limism. "My expectations now are the worst," Seaver said. "It's been awful. Absolutely nothing has been done. There has been no reason for any hope." Asked if be expected the strike to last longer than two months, Seaver said, "At least!" Miller, executive director of the players as- sociation, said that he bad read through 55 ideas to end the strike sent to him by fans. He also said he received offers from people who wanted to mediate. The union was expected t.o file suit in U.S. Dis· trict Court in New York on Monday in hopes of gaining a portion of television revenue the owners collect from the networks and cable television. But the suit was not filed. The owners have a s:;o million strike insurance policy that has a 153-game deductible. which will be reached Wednesday. Aller that, the owners will receive $100,000 for each game lost to the strike. As the strike continues, it may threaten the free agent stat~ of about a dozen players who would reach six years of major league service this year. The six-year figure is the minimum required for free agent status and participation in the Nov- ember re-entry draft. Compensation for players lost in that draft is the lone issue or the walkout. In the past, a team signing a free agent surrendered a first-round pick in the amateur draft as com- pensation to the team that lost the player. Tbose players in their sixtl'I major league season include pitchers Ron Guidry of the New York Yankees, Sid Monge of Cleveland and Joa- quin Andujar of St. Louis; infielders Lamar Johnson of the Chicago While Sox a nd Ron Jackson of Minnesota; outfielders 1'ave Colllns of Cincinnati, Jerry Tu mer of San Diego and Tony Scott ofHoustoo,andcatcherEdOttoftheAngels. - Tourney lures . top tour pros Local event offers incentive By HOWARD L. HANDY °'' ... Deltf ........... lt'a well beyond the plannin& stage for the big- gest tournament ever in Orange County with a purse of S'll.5.000 being offered. Jack F1eck. the 1955 U.S. Open champion and now a prominent member of the S4-niora PGA lour. says the event (to be held at Los Coyotes Country Club ln Buena Park Nov. 5·8), will attract many of the top touring pros. Fleck Is serving as golf adviaer and consulttne architect for the course that was recenUy purchased by the McAuley Oil Co. of Lone Beach. The tournament will be known as the Los Coyotes Southern California Open and the four pros who won a tournament earlier lhls year In GOL F California will have added incentive to play at Los Coyotes. "We are offering an extra $100,000 to the win· ners of the five tournaments held in California if they win this one," Fleck says. That means U.at Bruce Lietzke (Bob Hope Desert Classic and San Diego>; John Cook <Crosby); Johnny Miller (Los Angeles Open); and Le e Trevino (Tournament of Cham· pions), will all have an extra incentive to play in the tournament. The Los Coyotes event comes after con· clusion of the regular- season 1981 PGA tour and a week before many of the players go to Japan for a tournament. ''There is no other tou rnament that . weekend," Fleck says. Lee Trevino In addition, we are inviting 15 senior pros to play in the tournament. They will all be selected from those playing well and each must have won a major event (U.S. Open, PGA. British Open and Masters).•' "THE TOURNAMENT is being staged to raise money for charity in Orange County." Fleck says. "There are two or three groups we are considering through the sponsoring Vaquero Corporation which is composed of members dedicated to the project." Fleck adds that the course is contemplating hosting an LPGA tournament next year to keep the group coming to Orange ~ounly. Mesa Verde CC in Costa Mesa lost the Women's Kemper Open to Hawaii for 1982·83 after a three-year run . Meanwhile, Fleck is playing in senior tourna· ments and supervising the renovation of one hole completely and virtually rebuilding three others at Los Coyotes. All will be ready tor the tournament in November • • • THE RECENT Ray Malavasi-Heritage Bank celebrity golf classic raised $25,000 for 'the American Diabetes Association. Because of the tremendous response of golfers and the record sum taken in al the gate, more than double that of the 1980 tournament, diabetes as- sociation officials wasted little lime in setting the date for next year's event. It will be held on Monday, May 17 at Irvine Coast Country Club in Newport Beach with a shotgun start at 1 o'clock. John G. Rinaldo. chairman of the board of American Home and benefit chairman of the golf tournament. will serve in the sam~ capacity next year. • • • MALAVASI IS GETflNG around on the golf circuit this year. Just before be opens the Ram camp camp, he will participate in the Titan Golf Classic at Los Coyotes CC on Monday, July 13. The event will be a scramble. mixed foursome competition with the Cal Stale C Fullerton) scholarship fund benefitling from the proceeds. Included in the day's activities will be a put· ting and chipping contest before the noon shotgun start. For further information and entry forms, phone 773-3480. Entry deadline is July 8 with lbe field limited to 144 players. Cost of the day's outing is $125 which includes green fees, electric cart and dinner. Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Oakland 37 23 .617 Texas 33 22 .600 l '1!1 Chicago 31 22 .585 2'h Angels 31 29 .517 6 Kansas City 20 30 .400 12 Seattle 21 36 .368 14 '-h ~innesota 17 39 .304 18 East Division New York 34 22 .607 Baltimore 31 23 .574 2 Milwaukee 31 25 .554 3 Detroit 31 26 .544 3'h Bost.on 30 26 .536 4 Cleveland 26 24 .520 5 Toronto 16 42 .276 19 .......,. . ._ ... ..,_ldlMlllM"*-.. _'" T..,-1--. No .. '""ac ...... i.c-9' tlrlke ., .,. . ._ No..,....,..... lllK_ tf IWIU .. NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. Dodgers 36 21 .632 Cincinnati 35 21 .625 Houston 28 29 .491 Atlanta 25 29 .463 San Francisco 27 32 .458 San Diego 23 33 .411 East Division Philadelphia 34 21 .618 St. Louis 30 20 600 Montreal 30 25 .545 Pittsburgh 25 23 .521 New York 17 34 .333 Chicago 15 37 .288 .......,.,.._. .......... ~--9'1lrlk• T-.r•e-He..,._. ICflMIHM...,.. 9' llrlM • r ,..,.,._ NO ....... ~MC-of llrlk• GB ., 8 9'-h 10 121.., 'Tm happy for the kids. I'd lake that group of defensive backs every year; I don't 1tt how anybod)' could have bad a better off enalve liDe ( bol1tered by the presence of Fountain Valley's Duval Love and Mat.er Del's Larry Williams and Dave Uranlch); and Bobby <Grandltaff) really played it weu. didn't he?" Defense la•yera common.ly flle such motions, but lt ii rare that judiet a:rant t.bem. optina Instead t.o Let the Jurie1 ct.dde the cue. or coif pt"OI, led the par breakert .------------,..-..---.,..---.,...-----,---.,..--- Monday ln the llnl round al qualll)'inl for the 70lb Califomla Amateur Golf Ch1mploubl,p1. Pe• would arcue, lncludln1 lotlDI North C:O.eb Mel Morales of !l Dorado ff.lab. • "• W~STIN& MONEY? You Can Learn To Ptan And Create Your Own Effective Ad Campaign C'" Creative Solutions ~ _....._.... 111-1611 (. 1. 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POlnt lw .,,.,Y ...,, KO<ed wlttl • rnulmum of ti\,.. .,., -No bonut point II ow•r-10< ovenlmt Of' U-lout OMll: ....... ,..o-. No ~,_.~led T ... r'IO-. T •mpe Boy •t AllMle, n Pon1on0 •t CNcoeo. n MontrNt •I C.IQAry. n Loe Alemltoe MOMOAY'I llH41LTS IUNeftl ....... ~N-.ellle) First roc. -l>Her1 Jollor (Mltc,,.llJ. '·•· J.40, 2 ... ; Crmttlno IC-tro), 17.AO, IAO; Mortin Boy IQ9tom0e), 7,to, '2 Hklo 1141 peldM1.IO. Second reu -MIM Tritlotl !Adelrl, 1M, 4.00, J.00; Soy Too Tidy IGerdW•I. 4 .•• J.OO; Ml•Jee~ !Hert), J..00. Tlllrd f"Ke -CC-IH tntry) Direct Tl\o119llt 1ero.11, •.00, ).JO, >.•; Utt .. 0.,.. CT,__..), J.M. JOO; IC_...,_.,1 eo, v.....,,_ 1o.iorr-1.••. J.20. J.OO. F-111 '"ace -l'll"llC ~ IHW11, II.JD, UO, 4.40; ._..,.... W•Y (0..,,.t). S.20, UO. Ouoi-(.....,llMl,J-21, Ueae<to (4-Jl ..-ill w .oo. 1'111'1 fll" -111naM IH«O. I.AO, UO. 2.40; K._,. (Pllk-...1, S.00, JM; Fly~ E-.-IT-,.l. l.20 Sl•tll reu -91e WI• ICM,,.tl, 21.-, t . .O, S.40, l'wN J9t (Peull,..), • 20. I.JO, Mldwoy ~ IFl'Ht.nl, 600. '2 eucte IMl pelclllUO. s. .. 11111 r.ce -Go J.,,,lar B., (Cr....,). •.zo. •..o. >AO; en11101 !lover c Frett.nl, 1..tO, 4.00; Jet Feet. Ca.s.lr). J.20. '2 tU<\e IW I POld M0.00. Elgl\ttl roce -Tu A...,.11 CT_..,.,, 1 to, 4.00, MO; LotM Soul !Hon). J.IO, 4.10, Sonc;l\o (Adelr>. 6.20. $2 euclo I lo..JI ...id m.10. U Pick SI• 11+7 ~).IOI peld ,11.t9 #Ith two •Inning lkkels Illa _ __,) $3 Pl<ll SIK consol•llon peld UJt.00 wllll » winning ll<kels Cllw .__, . Ninth rec• -Monus Mortr. l"rt'10lll, II.to, UO, 1.40; DonMro 10.lomlloel, HO, l .00; 8•rts ,,,..... ICMdoul, J.20. '2 e..c:ta tS.71 pelO .-.40. Atlenoenc.-•,toJ. , .. ...._..._ .. , RobBolcft S.mll.,_.,,, CoryVouler Otnl'- JlmK-VkWllk 1(•1111 c...,_., Don Ill• M., ............ Marll H .. ._ IMlCeltlM Mltc,,.ll Wede Misc. ~ ~ ,.,.... J~10 ~,. ,.....,. J~11 U...-71 J7..)t.71 J6..1$.11 ~11 Jl.D.11 •• • 0. 0 4 0 a '-:1' H/F Q sac c 2 a 3233$£££2£32 2 2 2 1 2 2 2 4 5 Orange Coast OAJL Y PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 Team.s nix Cleveland's game idea PUBlJC NOTICE -----------fl1CTIT10UI IUMlll•N NAMa ITATllMINf Tll• l .. IOWI ... "e'Wftt •rt .. Int ...... __ NO•T11 HILU i.IALTY/l"VIHI, 1M1S Jeffrey • ._, lulte 401, ltvlN, CA 0 114. Su.-~ lnlllll, 11 Or_,tty, lf'WIN, CA "2114. l!ltt n M•tel\tuno, JO, Ml•IY IN-. ll'YIM, CA '211) PUBLIC NOTIC& PUBUC NOTIC£ ----....,.. ltOTICS CW HutTSe'I tALe lllOT'ICI CW T.S.-•9N TllUIHr,~e l'ICTlnous •VM"•11 r o .. •v1ca CIOMl"ANY • ..,., 011 July •· 1tt1. •t 11:• a.-.. T ... ,!~ITATa ..... T H I ...-.11 ... T,......-.r ............ l"rtl ....... ..._, .. o , Ill<.,. tlll!M-•":"."9 --•ere Ill ._riw.-..e1""°"w1t.t.SCt.LAf •111y ....... ..,... """" ""*' 01111 01v1a111'1ao P•O .. •"Tlll PUILICAUC'TIONTOTH8HIOHllT _._. ...... " lNM ..... ~I COM .. ANV f1t L 8fltW ....,_ •1 l lOOll• l'Ofl CASH ,_ ..... llMe U , I .. elllf<vted ff Tiie Si9"tl c:.tJI.....; '91""""-U ' ., Mle In lowNI -Y., h VllftH Gt ... , u. _. rectireM Moy I,••. .JeM O' ...... , ttlJ Ntot~ Slo"•I ell rlfllt tltlt .,._.,.. .... CM-111 ·-1•1 ...... 11)1 Ill Otfklll .... ....,.. .. _, _ .... W II~ NW lltcertll In.,_ efllu Ill .. -y rt ..... N-1 .. ec:ll,CMlfOrnle 0••• ti Tr111t In Ille 1re1erty cww Ill Or.,.._ °"'"-'41'. CllllW ... , ._,,I ~. "'s. lr'-1, ~~ _..__rl._,. -·1 -. CLEVELAND <AP) -A Cleveland Indians' project to brln1 minor basebaU to a major lea1ue bue ball city baa been thwarted by the minor lea,aue players involved. The Indiana annowiced Mon· day that a game between their Class AAA alfillate Charleston Charlles and tho New York Mets' Clan AAA Tidewater Tides would be played In the s tadium Thursday, the first minor league contest set in a major league stadium during the major league players' strike. BUT PLA YEllS on the two teams opted later not to play the game. The reason was n ot im- mediately announced. Indians Pres ident Gabe Paul said, "This has nothing to do with the s trike." Wayne Garland, the Indians' playe r 's a ssociation repreaen· tative, disagreed. ''Obviously, this Is being done b ecause of the s trike ," Garland said. "This is the first time I've heard of m i nors i n a major league s tadium this year.·' Garland said from Nas hville , Tenn., that h e was unawar e of the minor league players' de· cislon and did not try to in· fluence it. "THEY'RE NOT in the union, but what they th ink matters." Garland said . C arl Steinfeldt. general manager o f the C harleston tt:am. said the players' decis io n is "probably the most disap- pointing thing I've had happen to me in baseball. .. "About 4 p .m . some of our player s had calls from major league player s . W e were also in· formed by the Tidewate r club that a Met player s aid there would be a pick et," h e said. "Our players met at 5:30. I m e t with them a nd explained what this game would mean financially to C harleston . The players lis te n ed to m e . They had a nother meeting." he said. Steinfeldt said Mike Paxton, a pitc h e r with several y ears m a - jor league experience, said the d ecision was nothing against the C harleston ballct.ub, but that the team voted as a unit not to play the game. The lndians ·fro nt office had 80· n o unced special ticket prices for tt:.e game they thought was on for Thursday. Foor players signed by UCI D e l Rey League most valuable player Paul Hammond of St. John Bosco High has announced he will a tte nd UC Irvine in the fall and play baseball for Coach Mike Gerakos' Anteaters. H a mmond hit a torrid .469 ( .510 in league> las t season. driving in 20 runs and stealing 14 bases. The right-hand hitting outfiel d e r was an all-league sel ection for three straight years. Three other baseball players h ave s igned. letters of intent at UCL Ed Farrell. w h o batted .368 this season at O range Coast Colleg e and helped the Pirates advance to the state tourna- m e nt, will play for the Ant· eaters. A g_raduate o f Servile High, Farrell played o n e year at Harvard before transferring to occ. Grossmon t College transfer Steve Barnard is also expected to give UCI a little power and versatilily. An all·conferen ce catcher, Bernard can also play third base. H e batted .388 for Grossmont last season. Another transfer, Ron Cum- mings of C itrus, is also UCI- bound. A .322 hitter last season . Cummings was an All-Mission Conference selection and an all- C J F performer at Arcadia High. Tryout camp begins Friday A baseball tryout camp, conducted by the Major League Scouting Bureau, will be held Friday, Saturday and Sunday at Cal State Fullerton, beginniq at I a .m. each day. The purpose or the tryout camp la twofold: 1 > to 1lsn a promlslng youth wbo waa not selected in the recent major lea1Ue draft. 2) to 1et a look al aome ol the promialng youns hlf b acbool players who are return.lns for their aen.lor a.eaaon. The tryout aeuioo 11 open to anyone from 18 to 25 yean of 11e. Any American L-e•lo.n player 11 uked to brtn1 a note from bl.I ooecb or local Lesion commander wtth permlulon to ti")' out . T1111 -•nen h ~U<leo lly • -••I ,.,,_lfllp N4'll G. 5'111th 1411"•1.c.ta-..c.ii......,....,. 'T~unOA-:Hu1uT M 5HAC•<. ~JL~1~~T·~IOM~1c"°~~";; Mo11 ... 1 J. At,,,.llftrll, JtO S. etl"9I•...... .. ~• I ~ ... I 1-·J ••httl, 11111• IOI, Cttt• Muo, ll'Nll,.IC:IUY; PATTY LUM••• :::::.: ........ ~ ~~ .. u:; Thh •'-'-' Wot Ill• with the "'"'Y c-of 0r.,... c-1y on 1o11o, 7,1 .. 1 ,.,.,,. Callternlt_. co •c.t~~ .. ..,., front••-ef IJOI 0.... Strwt. "''" Tl\:• 1 ... slllen 1' <~teo by o ,..~.,..._ OtlMW II, 1'71 •• ,,...,, .... H•w-1 lleo<ll Collforftle ol ..... =':t,_.1, Ne.1w-.1n-.1,.ta,...lts7ef0f. 10.00 ··"'· .. , ''-"· 1l11e -lflltr•t Puell.-C>-Coett O•HY ~ltot, June "· tJ, JO, Jiiiy '· '"1 ,,.,. It Tllh ~· ... 111 .. •1111 , ... 11<1•1 "Ker•• In ti-. 9ffl, ... "" (aflVtYM .. --tleld .. ., II .......,. C-1 Cltfll of 0. <:aunt °" .. K ...... Ill Or.,.._ C--,, .. Id ..... H id -of lru.t In ,,,. pr-ny J-1" ttlt .,... Y et tru•I flal(rllltl 1119 lelMwlftt ..,. •llvettd In u ld cewnly eflCI •••te PUBUC NOTICE , Pt"1tf "'1r · deKrlllad ff: Pui.tl"-11 Or-<AoJI O.lly Pli.t, Lei IJ of Trect .. .,. C~nly ., Th•t -11Gft"' I.ob I, , -, II\ Mt· NOTICe TO C:ONT•AC:TO•$ INVITING llD' J-u JO Jlllr ' " 1t11 ~t or.,..., ~•tf C.I~•· n per....., tlon ta, II\ T_,.,,ltl 1 Sout11, 11..,.. t • • • ' r.corMO In laOOlt *• ..... , 24, U olld WHI 1tn Wnetdlno B--Mer1 Fount•ln V•lley SCllOOI 0111rlc1. P.O. BH 1$10, •• UQf\tMuM I.one. Founl•ll'I Volley, C•lltornl• '17ot Bid ldenllllcetlon· BIO It t~. Con• c~tt• we11<woy EIClenslOM •no P.,1101 Pl•nltt Fiii iii'• t<hOol• Seeled bid• -July • ltll, 10.00 AM. SP•<lfl(ollont on lllt G••O.nlng end Pure-Ing ~menh oov••NtHO IOA"O , .. ~ ... Ac11111S--t ......... Pubtt"'4cl Or-Coo'I Dally Piiot, June u, 10. 1t11 11u.a1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Nl1ttU PICTITIOUI IUllNISS lllAMa ITATllMIMT The lottowl"CI per .. n1 ore dOlno buslneuos. OCIAN BLUFF PAllTNERSHIP, J:IO Eut I Ith Str .. 1, Coll,. M•••. Cellltr"lt '2•11 Oenl•I GllDtfl, 3212 Or•""""'-AYtfluo, L°' AlomllH, Colltornle '°''° Sl-y Jee-. tt41 F-rel A..._. LOI AllQalel, C.lllornle .-.. Thlt l>uslneu h conduct .. by • llmltect -1ne"'NP OW\l•IGllbert ----Thi• ,..._\ was 11100 wllll tne NOTIClloPA""'-.ICATIOl>e'°• Co..nty Clerll Of OrM99 County on CHA*MIMOW.l•IMIPOfl JuM J. 1 .. 1 AL.COMOL.IC ••V•UOI LIC.NH Slevin a ""A LA• ear.. .. IMt Ane: Mon p_, Jec:Me, '"· To WllM'l llMeyConcern »4tC.......,Pot11Eatt YU ENG YI TSAI 11 •pplytng lo ,,,. klle tll Oepert-m of AlcOltoll< .. ,,.,_ Lee A ....... Col.....,• -7 Conl,.I tor "41"' OH SALE IEEll I. fll6Jm WINE ll"UBLIC l!ATIHG PLACE>. lo Publl"*I Oronge Coos\ Dally Piiot. sell olcol\ollc t>evtreoet •t tOOJt June•. "· 23, JO, ttll >MS-et Ad•m• A...,w, Hunttrteto" •••<h, ------C•~~:;:.C,"';a..oe Coott Ot tly ~llot PUBLIC NOTICE Ju~2J, t•1 ,..._., ---- SU PE RIO. C~•T Of' CALIPO"HIA PUBLIC NOTICE COUNTY 0,-OR ANOE 1M Chrk c.ter Ori,,. w .. 1. -....... Cell·'9nllo NOTICll TO c••o•TOi.I In r• the morrloga of Petitioner Of' IMILIC TRANIP•• J ANICE M. nour -11......-nt: ts.n. ""-"' u.c.c.) BE A NARO G STOUT Notice 11 t\erebp ol•en lo the CASIE NUMlllR O·t•tt c r ed It o r t o I C R E A T I VE SUMMONSIMA•RtAOIE I MARKETING, INC, Trel\'l•ror, NOTICl'I Yew ..... llMll -·TIM whOse ~I-'"' II IMO Toronto CMrt m.ey --, ...... , yew wlUMoot Wey. City of Coate MeM, County Of reur ....... .,..,_-.a Yff ,......,. OrW\99, Stet• of Colllornl•. 11\ot •bulk wlUll• • ,.,._ II--l.,_etleo lr•ntl•r It .-.. to lie ...... to T11E .. -. KENT G"OUP. Tren,,., ... Wl\oM AVISO I u-....... ...,._, llutlfl•" eddreu " o tt w .. 1erly Ill trl-1 _.. -lflr c_,o U.._ Pl•ce. S<llt• JOI, City ot N••PG•I ... •ffleMlo. - -u ... r-8•etl\, C-ty ot Oronoe. St•t• Of M ,_,,. .. • f&eo. Loo ta 1111er .... Colllornl&. clM -"-· Tiie pr~y to be trMsterreo II I To the R•"'°"*nt dltKrl-In Qenertl •• All •loca In • TN petltloMr IW• filed • .,.u. Ir-. llatUrtt. ecavl-1 -OOOd llon conc.,..lne your .....,,IOQll You wtll ti tl\et distributor I. Mia buslnn• mo rue • wr"IM rn-will\ln JO llnown •J CllEATIVE MAlllCETING, d•Y• ol the-· thel lllh ....... moM ,, IHC •nd l«ot.o •• IMO Toran lo Wo. Mrv•O on ..... City Of Coeto MelO. C-IY of Ot-, b It yo.. 1•11 to lttt • wrlllen Slot• of Colll-• ,._ w1tt11n such lime, your do- T,.. bulk lrMtl• will o. conwm-foutl mty be --•nd lM tour1 m•l•O on or tfler tr. IOttl Mr Of July, m•y .,..., • 1uoo-n1 <Oftl•lnlng In· ttt l, •• t • m., •I the olllce ol junct11,. or other _,. concerftlno lllCHAllO J. APllAHAMIAN . .,....,.. dlvl•lon OI .,,_,..,, ._ .. 1 •--1. -••u 11 toll E ,...., .... 54., Ste 11•. child <uttodv, cNIO ~. •ttorney'• Clly ol Soni• an., Cbul'ly Of Or-. f•1, CCKll, -1ucl\ otMr rerlel •• Sl•te of Colllornl• All clelm' """t De mo o. Q(onlecl Dy tr. cour1, Whkh wbmltted tly Jiiiy t, ttll, •I tilt olflGfl could ••wit In lhe oornl$1\menl of ol "ICHAllO J APRAHAMIAN, ••oe•.la lngotmorwyor pr..,.r1y,or •hOse ecldress It 2021 E F..,rtfl SI., otn•r rellet Sult• I ... City OI Sonto ...,.., C-ly of c If yew ..... • ---Ice .. Orenoe, Slete of C.lllornl•. 11t1 •t'"'-Y loo t1o11 --· Y• -So rer .. I• k-to tile TrenllerM, • M ,,_.., .. --wrlttell ell buslMU...,,.... •net -••MH u..O ·-·It MY, INIY .. llfeel.., time, by lhe Tr-leror 10< tr. pest 11\r• D•lt<I Aprll 21. lt1' yurs ore. Lee A. Br Aneh, CllEATIVE MARKETING, INC., Cler• •• IMO •orontt ... .,, Cott• Mose. Gel Sc>lc:llord, C.lllornl• Otpvly DATED J...,.20, ltll IRUCI' l'.O•U•AU011 The Kent Gr-AfterMy at I.Aw T-. •. Weta In" UI .............. ·-o....r .. Pot1ftM f'lllle"°"-Co t»IJ Cherlet M. 0.My (71•1 ·~ Generel PMlftM Publls-Or .. Cool\ 0.lly Piiot, Fr-J. Fl...... June 2. t , 16, n, ltll 2S.1 .. I 0-.-el Part,,., Tr--. P UBUC NOTICE "· .. MIKtll-• ""-· II' ""afflco dl•n.' •K•lllecl .. Ion-' oft ... CN!ty•ecw-ofHHtC-y. COMMOnclng •I • llOll In , ... Wfllet EXCEPTING ~l'Oftl •II Oii, .... line .. L..-C...yon "-....... .... ltydrecer-. wlltlenctt MCI mlNr•" Enol"""'' StoOon ..., -U.U, .. In, on - -..... lencl,...,. wlt!MMll told eul •nd l"'41rev9d bJ or ... .. ,,,. ,, .... "'entry Oii Ille WrfK• .... COllnly. !NM• _,, 11• "' U'' E .. . ·-.,In -...... IUMutfe<e t..... lone M IG CAftC• llM, U.10 , ... to, ... to •,.,..,. 9' •feet'""" llM tuned Norwt,hrh <Orner ol ,,,. leftd ror tilt ,..,,.._ llfl eap1or1,. '°'· dl'lll> cletcrl-1,. Ille _,, to Sll14m-lflt, _.,,. .....,.etl11ter ,_,,Intl Mid ••os. c ..--e11on, r.cordld ..,._, t. -·-· OI let lor1'I 111 °" lfl•lru-tf2S. In "°'* )'6, -l'O. Owcb, re-,,,.,.. r~ Jiiiy IJ, tt1' In 9M« CO<Ol of Mid Or ..... C-y, tlleflCO 10211, P ... 6C OffklOI ll4C.or .. AO. Soutll u• 41' 4S" Well e l .... llW O"ESS. 2AOOI Cermet Ott..., IU T0<0, Westertr '*"-"'of Mid-•...... Collf«nlo. fMt to 11\t "'"' s.uni...1., cor,..r of Ille "I II o street -.... Of' <omrl\Oll de· 1-O.te:r1-In 1'--10 11arry T ~1ontllon 11 ""'-.OOvt, no .... renty BNOU -wife, racordecl J-I, I• olven •J to II.I <_..I._ O< <O" 1'47, In DOo11 IUD, -m of Offlclot ••<lntHl ·• II.cord.>, In tilt offkt of the Countv Tile lltfwfklory -Mild OMO of llecorder of Wld 0r..,.. C-ty, .. ._ Tru•I, by,_ of llA«h or dltl..,lt In corner being lht true poi"' of Mtj11o lh• 01111 .. 110"' H Cured thereby, nlno ol tilt llouno•ry of 1"9 I•,.. IW'91tfor• •-utod -o.u ... ..., lo delCrl-,.,.In, !Ilene• COlltln"l"t tile .... ,,,."*'•written 04clor•tklfl Soull\ IS 41' O " Wttt elono .. rd of Oefeult -~ for Sole, end W .. lorly Une of U.. I-ol Sllktmor9 written fllllklt of -h -ol elec:ttoft Bros ., C..por•tklfl, SJO • .O Met IO tM lo <tUM IN -llonecl lo Mii Mid moU .s,utherly COf',..r Of 11\e llnd pr-rtytosetlSIYMIClobli90.tlon&,..,.. dete:rlt*I In lhe-lo J .. A .H- lllerulter tr._......., c•-..id •nd wtl•, recordltd O<-•. tk4, In notlceofllt'Mcl\-of•lec11ontober• -llti, -ut, Oltkl•I llec.orot.. cwdltd F-...y S, ltlt u IR1tr. Ho. In 11\e ott~e of 1IW C-ty Recor-Of '7111 In -11'Jt H9t 1Sl4 of ,.,d OI· Mid OrOftllll County, lllen<t Hortll W ll<l•l llec-. 21' It" WK\··-the Souttwr1y llOUOl- Sold Ml• wlll De -· but wltl\oul O•ry of tald 1-. S2t.t0 l•t to ., covenem ,. w•rrW\ty, .,.,.,..s 0< Im· •no•• pe)jnt therein, 11\ence Soul!\ U' Plied, ·•-dlftll lllle, _ ......... or .... .,. 40" WHI ••ono "'4d Southerly llo- <umDrencK, topoyther•melnlnoprln-dory, U S.JS , .. , to en •no•• POlnl tlPOI """of the llO .. NCU,..d lly Seid th•rtln, lhtnc• North ,.. 4t' West 0.94 Of Trust, with lntOf'esl ••In Mid elono Mid SoulNrly t>ouncNry, °'·" not• pro•-. eclvenca. II W\'f, _, IMt to the most Southerly corner Of tt1t the ltrmt of .. Id 0..0 of Trust, '"'· l•no cletcrl-In ,,.,. _,, to 11enry cl\oro .. -•JCPtn ... Of the Trutt• Zwtm•t -wile, rec0<dltd J.-24, endollr.trU1i.crHleclby..idOMdof 1..0, In -S302, ~ II Offkl., Tru•I llec.ordl, In tr. otlice Of• the Coumy Sold Y I• •Ill De held on w-.....ev. llecor.,., of YIO Otonge County,•- J IHW 24, 1t11 et 11:00 e.m. tt the offk• North 11· St' 11" EHi •lono t,,. OI T 0 S..vlce Compeny, IMll of SoutheH19rly ..... Of Mid ·-· M.Tt Amer le• T-. Suite t t 10, One City Ifft to the moot Eoslerly cor,..r of "Iii loul• .. •dW..1.0t..,..,C.llfonll•. lt l\O, thence NOrlh••Uerly In • At the time Of the lnlll•l SM*k elklfl \lr•IOlll lifte to the most Souttlerly cor· of lhl1 '*ke, U. totol _, of I'-ner of Ille,.,,., OKcrl-\f\ tilt cMe<I llD uftp•ld b•leftct ol lh• oblloetlon Normon B. Almwortll -wife, r• >ecureci by the-... O.tcrlDed dlted of orcteo ~ 21, 19", In -411 S, trust •nd estlmaltd c•ta eapenvs, -po09 7••. Olfl<IOl !l«cwdl, in tilt off loo Od•en<H IJ $10.00S.d To O.tormlne Ille C-'Y Recor ... of H icl Or- 11\t -ltlO bid, you mey coll Clt•l County; thence -71' M' oe·· E•tt tll"°"4 ··-Ole ~lerly line of .. ,. Date !My 22. ttll 1...0, •1 t•t to IN "'°'' Eoll•rly tor· T.D.Senlco~, ner Of 1eld I-; ti.nee N.,_ .. l•rly M aM T.-. lo llM ,,_, Soul-ty co,.,., OI 1,,. ey: Olrll T-. l•nd -·•-In ... -to .Huie ............. ....., .. .,. Sc-y .•• ..-J-y tl. O.Clty.,,,. .... t. t..O, In -'°"'· -412. Otflclol Or-.., ca. flMI llecord1. In the olflCe of U. C-r 17\41~ llecord•r ol iOld Orenge Couftt'(. Pulltlllled Or ..... COHI 0.tty Pttol, thence North ,. ...... EW •I-... J u,.. J, t , M, '"' 247MI. Southe•M•rly tine of Mid 1-. 4'.U PUBLIC NOTICE ffft lo lhe most E .... tly c-r of Mid l•nd, Mid C06Mt olso Delng lhe - Soutl\erly comer of .,. •-deKr- '" the -lo H-J Scl\MIO.r -llSCltOW MO. W17/DJ wlte, rKordtd _, 20. 1'60, In -NOT1CI TOC•llDITO•I U.U, p-156. Ollklol Records, In tllt Of' IULK T"ANlf'•• olllce ol the County lle<Of'-Of Hid Cleca.•Wt4•V.C.C.) Oronge County, thence Nortl\ M• 41' Notice 11 r.reby91,.... lo crMlton of It" E•n •long u.. Souttlll .. torty line tilt wlll\ln notMd pertltt tl\tl • bulk ol H id IOl!d to the""°'' EHterly <or· tr•nsler I• lnlencled to be m..,. on no r or Mild •-. wld ,.,,.,.., olM> being per>Ontl property h•reln eller 11\t motil Southerly cor ... r OI Ille IW\d dtt<rlb4d. d .. crlbtd In lhe de•O to Hefti J T,,. ,,._ -Dutlneu ecldrn1 of Schnelder -wife. ,.ec:ordtd Aueull ,,,. lntenoecl transl-ere. 2. 19'0, In -~. -'O, Olflclol EOWA•O LAllSEH, SCIO H __ , Records, In 1he oflke of tr. C-h Center Drive . Ntwporl 8eecl\, llecorO•r of Hid Or•nve County; Colll0<nlo lllenc• Horl~•Uterly •tol\9 11\e Doino bu•lntu e • tllVINE Soutl\e .. torly line of Hid 1-'°IN TOWE•SCA"OAHOGlnSHOP. mO'I e .. torty ,_Of Mid t•nd; Tile ,.._ -_.,..... -ess of lhenc• Ho•th•••l•rly •IOl\Q 11\e tilt lnl-Ir......,...,., Nortl\ee-ty 1"'9 Of Mid •-. SO l•t AZIA Vl ltAllll, UA01 s. o.ntl•r to , .... "'•" SoutNrly COl' ... r ...... RICHA•O J. APRAM-tAN a-..y ..... -.... •-. Torranu, Collfornlo ttiel lend de.c:rl-In Pu col J of the - •O•Ka•·s ~•NSATION T ... I ... ,,._,., -'IMf'lt ... '"°I• to Ct•r•nc• II. tleck, Jr. -wife, re-0.terllMCI In geNrel .. -teri.!1, coro.o ~, 22. ltlO, In bootl ..... "'· ..-..a-.CAft19 Tef:....._ Publl-Or ..... C..Jt Delly Pli.t, J-n . 1t11 ,....., PUBLIC NOTICE IT::.~~...;::.,... IUppll•" mtr<l\ondlM, ....,, __ ,, .l421. -1tO of Otfklal llacwdl, In CAA'MO;aA"A'1ttt Cerl h#nlturw, ti-. _,_,, ,,,. ottla of uw Oka'itf ._., • ., ten• a _... tr-... -• ...., wttt, -· .. ~ Mio or.,. County. -.. &11.-1., -lm,ro•-11 •net coveftOftt -le to II\• S...0-Stef'ly corftM of UM I-.......... Aw-compett. •11• h tocet9d et: HO r....., In IN -to Wiili.., L TOM OLIVElt, Appllc•nt , "'· •Owport C•nlet Orin , H•wPOrt r•IQ end wlft, r....,,.._ J-I, 1'47, WAYNE M<MIHHtMEHT, 111-tly 8ffcll, c..11om1.. In booll IS)), P•ve "'· Ofllcl•I Unlnw,..,, -Untnwreo Employers Tl\ot MIG bulk trMlf• 11In.._1.0 lt•cordl, In IN 9fflce Of IM C-y ,.und, ~. .. consummallDCI ot "'office of lltll· Recorott of ,.,d Oron .. Caunty, T,,. _.... ~ sllputote to -,.. ""' Title ~etlon, Jtto Wllllll,. th4n<• Soutll n • ,.. Ettl el9ftt "' NS-71155 •11•11<• of M Aw-•ndtor OrO.r, Blvd., Loi .,..._., Collf. •10. on or SowtNrly 11ne of'* •-. '1 .7S fMI to N OTICE OF DEATH OF .. ..., -"" 1111-•no I.cit, ..,., otte<J111y t '"'· tile mo.t ~,.,.......,. .. wu ._, c V CTOR INE w•l .. t11e._.i.-ttofloborCodt LH l ..... lor llllng cl.,m1 lntl\la 1e ld cornt r •l so belno tll• L 0 R I N "° I Se<1TOMlon SJIOl.Jl:VER _ J 1 _ •-• KCrowhJlllyl, 1•1. Soutl\westerly corner ol lh• loftd N ORMANOI N ANO OF • -n uy ••· -Soter .. ,, k-to Mid IM...-ed dtt<rl-In Ille -10 E. -•d P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A 0 · orhlle ""'*"'" within ,,,. State of Trent!-Mid 1114..-frMlf.,• Hur1ord -wtle, rtcordltd Auoull S. MINIS TER ESTAT E N O . c ei1tornl• .. llod't.t:-~"~~1.!.~. u-1r.1o11-1ng 001tltlonot businns' 1'41. In -1m, -404. 0tt1ci.1 Auou" II, 1'7', by Y ,..,,.. .. -_,..... wltftln "" 1,,,_ R.cord•. In 1r. office Of -c-.ty A·109207. ment •-<-M\1111\ ln-.an<• Y..,lffft-I NOHE llecord•r ol sold Orenge Co..ftty, T o a I I h e l r s , <•"'" ... 11199011' ..,,.._"· •-oet9CI: J..,.10 '"' 111•nc• Sou111"·11• 10" e .. 1 •lono.,,. bene f iciaries, c r e d itors 1•1"" lnlury •rising cwt of-in tlle A11e v1r.;,.1 Southerly llne of wld •-. -•lono I f ~lour:• ol e mpto:m•nt. I.ti Ind•• 1"4enoM Tr-ler• tile Soul""''" 11,.. of 11\t I.,,., dn<rlbed and contingent cred tors o ;-:. lnJ....., ,..,_ ""'"""-nl di.. Putillthecfar..,.. eo.si 0•11., Ptto1, 111 111e -•o Reymona i:.7M1111er~ L 0 R I NE V IC T 0 R I N E ,_ ..... 1 i~-r June 2·J 1t01 ,......, "'"•· rtc0ro.o Juty J, t-• " ,_ N 0 R M A N 0 I N a n d •blllly Of l ... n:ent, .... _.,(I\ ·~·~. -' --ISlJ, H9t '"· OOlcl•I Record>,'" tile IY 11 .,.,..,.. •• $10 .,., -• 11e91Mlno otlk• ol 111e Countv Aec:or-of '*d p ersons who may b e lortl\W1111, In IN tum ot "30.oo. Itta PUBLIC NOTICE O••no-c..,,,1,, -•lono ,,,. SoutMf. otherwise Inte r ested In the crMll , ... wo:ll .,.,_, prevlOu.My lyllneOft .... 1-dHcrl-lntl\t- i 11 nd/or est at"' m-. NOTIC• TD COt>ITRACTCMtS to Horry T. ~ -wife, ,,.,...,._ W a "'' An IMornwll retlng l\os ... n II'• CAL.UNO l'Otl llOS ... relnO.tore mtnt-, • dlt1en<e OI A pet.tion has been f iled •IOu,ly luued. Scllool Ohtrlct. COAST COM· 156• 17feet ,,,.,.OrlKl. IOll\etruePOlnt by Altred No rmandin In Tiier• 11 "*"<Al '"'•llntnt to cur• MU~ITYCOl.LEGE 01sT"1cT 1ot 1>e91nn1~ the Superior Court o f ., r•ll-'"""IN -0 of Mid In-81d o..otifte· 2.00 o'clock ··"'· Of IM property,_,,., ...... _,..., 0 C t ti l.,,..,. ttlallll\deyefJuty,ltlt or otl\er COtnfTIOn dellon•tlon. Tl\• range oun Y reques ng Mec11c.i . ._1.,._ ••• "°'"'• Piece of B1c1 Aac•ip4 0ttice °'.,.. "•,...•nd-ft1of1Nbenef1c1 ... , .. that Alfred Normandin be br dtf-.. fol!OW$: Or. HMklfl PurcllH lno a"nt. Morl•11 P•rrln .. -~ "" .. ,. 11 ID .. - appointed a s personal ~.ATY~Servke'1&.SS. i.of CoH t cornmun11y eoti-oe 0111r1<1, ••• D•ldr• s. b 11 .. 1.,, lAtO s....111 rep r e Sent at j Ve t O ad· A119lic-ultorney ._, 11 • -of IJ10 Ad•tns Avenue, Cott• Mete, Mein Street. Apt • ..as, S.ftte Ant. · · t th t t Of S7S.OO. tewc-""" .,. Cellfornlo t7'1•. h lt Pl\On• (714) Colllornlot2107. m 1 n Is e r e es a e •w•nl s»-s101 01r.c11-,,...., o. GMMned __ , Lorine Victorine No rman· Ot ..... Alput .. lont Project ld4ntllk etlon ......... Gol-to . written ,_. ..... mltted to,,. d I n c 0 s t a M e s a ( 11 f'e ymenl of t Uhtendlno WutCotl ... MoclonS..-.Bld. , .. "9nefklery wltf\11\ 10 c1Ay1 of ... first • ' · ( d th I ' -.tk olbllls Plo<•Pl-or•.nlll• Offk•efJelWl...e>lk•tlon,,...... California un e r e n -or All•w.,.. t<tO.oct P. o. ~· .,,, Potter Dlractar Ptt'flk .. ,..ciut1es Sold .. 1e ""'" oe madlt, t1ut w•t'-t dependent Admin istration G•rO...Grow,Collfoml•nM:J ,.1.""1~ Trel~ Carnpl9 .. Dist.,,.. ovenon1 or -rMly, •....-.,Im· of E states Act) The pet I· W•ttmlnt•r """•1c•1 T,.....,.,, 111111. 111111 •• 1J10 A4etns, c.1o -... llM , ,._rdlno mi.. POMHSlon, "' . ·h . . 14HO Buell Blvd., Sulh IOS, C•lllorlll• .,,,., T•l9111\0ne: 11141 ncumor-n, to .,.., Ille .,1n<1pe1 tion IS set for earing In w .. tmlnetor,ColltorftleW0.00. s.st.SJOt wmoftl\e-~by,eldONdof Dept. No. J at 700 Civ ic w .. 1m1 ...... Convnul>lty HotlPltot, HOTICI! 1s HEllC!IY 01vl!H ,,,., 1rus1, 1-1t: ••.oao.oo, wttl\ ,.,._, Center Drive Wes t Santa Joo Hoplt•I Cir<••· Wfltmlnll., • 111e • ........_"'" k-0111rkt •I rrom Moy 14, •• os in w kl no1e pro- , Ctlllernlo$1J1AS Or ..... c.....ty C.atlfllrnl• Kline tty •lded odven<H If eny .,,..., -Ana, Califo rnia 92701 on Ul EmployorE•yneM<MIMI-•nd tllrout11 its 0o ... rn1'no Boerd, term~ Of Mid .;..., of irust. , .... JUiy 15, 1981 at 9:3() a .m . WHtt ..... lyunlnulA<tettNtl,,,.ofln·1h .. e ln•lttr relerred to •• hertes and H-Of l ... INS ... IF YOU OBJECT to the '"'Y,·. E_.__ .~11 ~ ~-att "'OIST•ICT", w111 rec:tl,,. ..., to, but no of .,. tnals crMt• 11y Mid deed ti f th till ., .. ..,....,..., H .. -.-·-· ~"°' ..... -.... .-....~\eted tlmt, flt111t C•t•.•-•ndedVen<•, gr an ng o e pe on • M•v•d "'"" 1UP111e11ons -lt\ell ,,. Mel9CI 1114a,., n. •-•d of• contrect , 01 tilt time of ,,,. tlrtt l>Ullllutlon you should either appear 20d•y11nwllldlto011Jectto-. ,., "".11o ... proJe<t. •r•ot • .,.. •• 11,,.....oet "'°°-OO. at the hearing and st a te 14' WC.AB wm wlttlteld ,,,. ••• BIOt 11\tll be rece1...o In ,,,. p1ec:e T"• -1<1.,, unoer 1.id,.... of Your objections or file un~i PAlllof MrVk• ,.., ....., lllecl.., 10.111111ec1 -.... .,,., .,,.11 be..,._ ru11, by,..._ .. • l>rH<" .... -... " • u ....... .,,., PYtllkly roed ·-.. the •w· n ti\• ........ on. IOCUfK ....... y, w ritten objection s with the O•tec1: o.c.,...,., s, '"° ''•'" 11rne •l\dpl10. ,.101ore n ecu1ec1 ..... dell•-to COUrt before the hearino. TOMOLIV8ll Tlltf'e wUI be a no tlltpotlt ,._..,...., he un*"'°"" • wrlttell declertU011 Your appearance may be ._lc.nl ror .. ,,, ut of bid documents to clel•utt -demand 1w u1e, ...., , S. $. ~-4Ut ..,.,.,. ... I'-rttllm h'I toed c¥n4111klfl rltttn no4.lce of dtfeult arid election 1n person o r by your at-'*' wu-scrwt w1111111 "'••"...,tile bid ....,1,.. o sell .,.. ,,.,......,, on Mtr'<I\ 11, torney. c.i.-..,CA de•. tt1, ,,,. u..-rs10 ... d c•uM4 ,.., I F Y 0 U A R E A ,......, s. 1<-11• E e el\ llld mutt <•nterm •n9 lilt tk• of defeu1t -etec11on to 11e , .. CR E 0 I TOR Or a Cont• Allor,.yfftT-..IUl'tl .. ._..1 ..... l'-Cetltrec:I~ ordod In tile -y ....... IN pr._.,. , ...... er ..... , IEec:I\ .... ff\ell • WC~ .., y 11 lo be sold. ingent creditor o f the d e · CMYMaM,CA .,,. M<urlty ,...,,.. ..... ""<Mtrect D•t•: J-IO.'"'· ceased you must flle your 1111""",... dOCu......,....,. iw 111o 1111.,...,...... P•OPustOHAL ' I t ..._,llffdl.CA Mlll<Olltraw.. •EOC1NvEVAHCt,1HC. clalfTl wth the cour o r ....,...,l"""9¥ff T1Mot1ti.iCT,.....,t11er1tM1• ...... ,"" .. present It t o the personal UllllNwMI.,,.._""'""° ,..1ec, .. v.,a11Me ... 1owe1,..,..y ..,,.k11en1 s.i-.111 representative appointed ..,,.,.. ... ~ ,,,....,,.111ee., ""'°"""'"._ 1,. .. Y t/o~o..• Pw,1nc. h Ith' ' 107$. ......... y, tliftfl'lntM.._., lJ010....Sl.,Sul .... by t e c ourt w n our "-.-s T"' 01sr•1CT ,_ ....,,... ,,._ ,...,.,..,.. ... e11. C•t1ltr11I• months from the date of .... .,..._,CA .,. oe..eew.,-. ~ "' •~ -.o first Issuance of letters a s ,_, ""9tr1e1 ......,. .. ....., .. ..,..,.... oi.11sz.su.1 Provided In Section 700 of ---·~Y 111t , ... •,,., ....., •..-. '" '"' ""°11.,_ 0r..,.. c-t 0et1y ...... « ~ --· taullty .,. "'11<11 ..... --.... -J-''· u. •. 1'91 the P robate Code of •••"o ,.,.,.,._,. ,_ M<fl craft er..,.. ., Cellfornla. The time for AWA•o 11 MAO.1n •-.,TOM _.._ .__ .. •.c•.,. _ ,I I I I I t OLIVli. ... 1Mt WAVHl McMIH• VKl. TltMe , .... er• Ofl ... M tM Ing ca m s w II n o ex· MIMINT, .. 10U•IHOSHO,..,: OISUICT fM(o ......... Offlc. .. -----------p lrtt prior to four months T-.v.., ~ ............, 1ft ,._,,,, .. "ac11"'" P1-1,., 1110 from the d•tt of the hear-acc.r,__.. •• _..,..,., .. -. c...-... ~ ~ • i ti ....o .._ .._,"'-" ...._.....,, ~ Ill ........ 111,......., A c..,. fll ..... ng no c'""• ..... ve. acc.,__wf'91..,.., ... ,....,.. ,-........ ~-.. ........ .-.. -,,--........ , .. YOU MAY EXAMINE! L_ ... _.,.,,, ... ,..... t;;;;;;:;---...';';;'._ M'M.nAnM .. T thefllekfotbythec.ourt. If ""«'lt't etliWwY .. -ru1 .. •1 ............... -.. _, .. TIM 1 .. ltwlllt ,.,._.we Millt you are rnteresttd In the ·~'!!,."~-,........,_..._ wt9I ._ • ...._. CIJ ...... n. , ... tw ....._Y '-'-•· t t fl.. • --,_ --8M ........... .._ Wll • M .._. IUNllT AOUATlt MA"tNa H • t, YOU ~y PWfl 1 ....... .. .... _..... CIMHlt, LTO., ,_, ~. HWt· qutst with the court to ~111111er ..-c.e ......._. "'ac· 11.,.."" •• r..-i•ClOH· lflf'lll9Mct\.~...., ctl~e~lalnotlctoftheln <~,,.:_."""i;:.~,,:._-;:,..,.1 T•Ac:TCNI ""'*"' .. -..rect 11 h11Ht ••u•Ut ••11• .. 111•"' --l'ltoryofestat••s.seU• •• .. .,_,,. ....... ..., .. ...., •• o-.. 111e., • c..i...,.,...,..,... .. ,. Hflefllft lfl -~ wlttl ,..,. .. _..,,._ .. _,,....._._. ... ._.. lftl l•lflttr, H1t11Ulltt• .. etJt, of the petitions, accoun .,._ .. ....,., _.....,, .... .,.. •• o • ._.,..., c:aittem1e-.. end r..,orts dfferlbtd In DetM= ~ ':,.,.., • ..,...., .. -9rac1. n11 ... .,.. 1a ~-.., • Ste lion 1200 of th J-· 11"'1 ... ..-i.,. C.llfomlaProbet9Code -.,..c.... '"" ,......_.....,......, ...... ~-.....,.~ MISllRV• MUM~alli a .._..,..:J :.::.., tel)::.._.,,_.. =:t~~. IM. MUOMU -~~ ~ 11...,. 111 A .. ,...... .:::S • ,.,,., : •w ......,., Sc~ J .......,___ --~,,-.. TMt ...._._,.,_wit!\ ... If: l,.....J, ...,., r. ON:Mer-."'1 ........... n.,.,._.._. <-t•OlftetOr-..CNllJM.., A...,_YMLft _,.:=._....,. .......... ...,......,..,. 11t ... "· ""· ,,, c..,.... Dr. P.O .... :... MOii. -.... "' .. __,., --........ ••••ALL • •A•· 1m , • , • ,... :•:er-: = N.w...niNC'~.t2'6t :.:.:--r· ==~-.,i_,._ • PUBUC NOTICE CloH to 800 1ttended Jut year'• camp with 11 of tboee 11snlnl cClatnctl. A total Of 11 maJw i..cue taamt wtu have 1cout.1 I.JI attendance at tbt camp. C11 .. ) 711 wa._..._CA.. ~ ............... ..,._ Publllhed Orange Co.at nit ""'9--,,........--::... o.e Olltt ...._ ............... OIMI ..... ...._ O•llY Ptio.., JUM 23, 2•. 30, ......,..°"91191 c:.. o.i".::':i ..... ,. -.t ,,_ .. ,.-.a."" _.. t91U82U1. '-11..,,,_,, w.."" . .. .. .. .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 • THE f.\MILl' CIBCt~ by Bil Keane "You don't hove to hug me this time, Mommy. We won!" BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "I shouldn't h1we e1ten th1t l11t grape.'' n ~.\R~.\Dt:K•; by Brad Anderson Hank Ketchum ' ., ~ U I IJ- ••• •• • o • •II ·1 I I " 11, !• •I 'I •' .. , I' ,, , " ·: "' I . ' .. I .. . ' I 0 i I I i "Thanks for fetching part of the paper!" Jl"DGE PARKER GAR•'IEl.D ------JTM C'AVf!1 MONDAY'S PUm.£ ICM.YEO 13 Wrtgoly 21 Grldel 23Sword 42 l<lnd 43-V""8 44 lerrow boV 41 Wooctwlnd 48Wentup \ 'But when I eat slow, I get HUNGRY between bites'" by Harold Le Doux 25 Hothlne 28 imrnatuf• 30 Sllelft 31 Al Ill'/ time 32 Wiid growth 33Common 50 OM, IO tofnt "-'"..,_.,.._...,_.,_ 51 Chtmlctl • \ "*' 34 e.fllnd llrM 36-~ 3f Put 10 work 31"" o. .0 Hll lllld - compound 52Coeletrll• 53 Strlll• 54 llo. 1Ubf. 55......,.L.tt. M Ptl-eo ,.._. ~ PEANl'T8 HI ! l{OO /tWST eE THE AASl<ED MAAVELL.M~? I HE.UP '1t>ll "8E rLA\"lN6 IN ™IS TOORNAMENT ... HE SURE LOOl<S ~AMILIAR, DOESN'T ~E? WITH THAT MASK~, THOU6H, I CAN'T TELL WMO IT 15 •.• Tt: M BLEW EEDS MV'OL..CJ MAN. HE: WORt<E:V' 01\J A MISSISSIPPI R'IVE:R.~I. --"""flillT"'lnl i I I ~Efi~l HEY, SAM---WHAT ARE YOU DOING WITH THOSE? MY DREAM CAME T RUE--- 1 FINALLY SAVED ENOUGH MONEY TO JOIN THE COUNTRY CLUB by Charles M Schulz by Tom K. Ryan by Tom Bat1uk Fl'NK \'. "l!\KERBEi\' W€. CL.0006 JU6T FL.DAI A~~D AU... ()A(t' w1-rnour A CARE IN iHE WORLD ! 1Hfff'6 ~ C>J£ ~ HAVE A~ F1NANC.IAl CAXl~£5 ! wm~ GOLD PRICES BEJNG WHAi fHEY A~E. I OUR FOf OF 60L.D AT fHE END OF !HE. ORA BB LE l&lf.~Q'i, A 0ai Jl,)51' CAllEO o+I ~f't\OfE lS~1ij(, fOll 'iO'J. RAIN&:XAl LEAVES US PREf1l; WEU. FIXE.D ! llMMM •. 1'14A1"~ 1ll1'C.RES'fill<. I l'f Mil.MT 14A"(. &££.N E1f~f.~ RICK Oft 6RAO OR S1'f-JE O~ ... by George Lemont I AP ......... Harry Henneberger of San FrancUco rela:us with a book in Golden Gate Park as a couple of resident geeae move in to take a closer look. AU were taking time to bask in nimmer aun. ... Denver 'fan' meets singer Two years ago , Vice Premier Fang Vi of China heard John Denver sing In Washington. Monday, they met on Fang's turf. The entertainer, visiting China as a tourist, met with the vice premier , who ex - pressed appreciation for Denver's performance that . night in 1979, the official : Xinhua news agency re 'ported. Fang accompanied Chinese leader Deng Xiaop- ing on a visit to the United States in early 1979. Stand by for Margaret Trudeau, reporter. The estranged wife of Canada's prime minister ' confirmed she is considering an o ffer or a job with television station CJOH in 'Canada. "I haven't signed a con- tract yet," said Mrs . Trudeau. "Ir and when I do. ~ you'll hear about it." ·• The job al stake reportedly ,, is that or co-h05t of an hour- ,. long program of news and ' consumer items which f eatur es live phone-in queries from viewers. The s how, aired each weekday morning, features five guests a day talking •·about everything fro m psoriasis to lawn care," a CJOH producer said. u-...... Sn. S.l . HCJflCJk.moo taUI time to ~ a lip of CO/tH trom his "California mug" during.a pro. conference concerning gbvermnmt competition 1Dith prlwte bulineu Mondofl on Capitol HiU. Storms spawn tornadoes ... 10 inches of rain force 108 families to flee Kansas homes U.S. summary !Severe tllu'*"IOl"rM and record ftrMperat11res proCIU(td lorned.,.s ,.., Portales, N.J • and New Orle.,s wJlllt re s idents of c entral ""'41Hchusetts wo,,.,.rtCI whether """' wu • twister In the litlrce W!nc:t• 111•1 rioc-ci -lines and ~"°"'"· At ltHI to lndles ol rain forced IOI I l•IJ'lllts to flee Monday from their 1 H04slng1on, I('""·. ,,.,,._ " ' T'-PorUIH twl"9r touchtel OOwn ; 11\,e sparsely -ulattCI aru anc:t ~ ~5'roytcl two bM'llS .,.Cl a stora(lt slltel. In New Orl..,s, • torNldo loucheo •\ down In the suburb of AIQltrs. ., ,. 10 SS OJ ts st 07 11 S4 71 Sl 82 SI n 5' 78 S9 " 73 " ., 13 SI 71 5' u ... 10 " 11 1t u ,,, .. 90 ., " 71 " 6) " n 90 71 ,, 11 SI 02 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 L -Interchange meet set Caltrans to. air plans on 'most congested' freeway project By GLENN 8C01T 0( .. ...., ........... The laborious planning proc· esa to improve the Santa Ana and Costa Mesa Newport freewiay interchange begins Thursday when Caltrans holcb lts first public session on the project. The meeting will start at 1: 30 p.m. in the Tuatin City Council Chambers, 300 Centennial Way. Tbe meeting is required in the state's step-by·step planning process for proposals to speed up traffic flow through what planners agree is the most con· gested freeway interchange in Orange County. If all goes according to plan, the improvements could be com· pleted by 1988. The meeting is to give agency f't'presentalives and the public a chance to discuss a focus for the project. However. design constraints don 't offer too many alternatives, according to Frank Weidler, Caltrans project engineer. He noted that a full- scale, $60 million Improvement project already has been reject· ed by planners because or t.he tremendous Impacts it would have created for adjacent Tustin. Weidler said a more feuible proposal being examined at Caltrans is for a $30 million pro- ject which would feature two overpasses that would bridge the existing roads lo connect paths between Santa Ana and Newport Beach. The interchange currently Is comprised or four cloverleaf loops. With the proposal, two or the lesser used loops would re· main, but the two-lane 40 reet- high bridges would move the majority of traffic without the delaying circles. Under the proposal, the Ed- inger offramp from southbound Costa Mesa-Newport Freeway would be closed and about 5 per- cent or Prentice Park, home of the Santa Ana Zoo, would be re- moved to make way for freeway ramps. Weidler aaid an environmental impact statement on the proj~t. which will include a scenario of several i mprovement alternatives, is scheduled to be finished by Sept. 30, 1983. After that. right-of-way ac- quisition and design work will ex tend throur,b Sept. 1988. Construction should last about two years, Weidler said. The process is lenethy, be added, because one step must be completed before the next can be authorized. Environmental concerns have slowed down freeway construction in areas where neighborhoods have grown, he observed. "In the old days, a Caltr~ project was perceived as something everybody wanted," he said, adding that today, "we're not just building freeways in the middle of an orange grove." He added that the improved interchange wouldn't do away with the current bottleneck but would transfer congestion farther down the free ways Budds to oppose Gates Huntington Beach resident to enter 1982 election By 0 . C. HUSTINGS Of_o.lfy,.... ..... Harry Budds of Huntington Beach, assistant chief of police for the Southern California Rapid Transit District, says he'll challenge Orange County Sheriff.coroner Brad Gates in next year's election. The election for the county post will be conducted during the June primary in 1982. Budds will be banking heavily on his educational and pro- fessional background to help him unseat Gates. The transit cop holds a bachelor's degree from the University of Redlands and a master's in pub l ic ad · ministration from use. He former- 1 y com - m a nded the Executive Staff Unit (manage -auoos ment team) or the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office. * * * GEORGE WltlGBT; another candidate for Gales' job, bas named Or. John P . Gruber. as his campaign chairman. Wright, who ran unsuccessful- ly again.st Gates the last time around. announced early this year be would try again. H e s ay s b i s c a m pa i g n chairman teaches criminology at Chapman College in Orange and is president of the Western Society of Criminology. * * * E ILEEN PADBERG is now a partner in the Orange County political consulting firm once known as Robert Nelson & As- sociates. The firm is now known as Nelson-Padberg Consulting. It s pecializes in political cam- paigns in the western U.S. One or its current clients is Orange County Sheriff-coroner Brad Gales. * • * THE LIST OF Mike Curb sup- porters issued by staffers for the lieutenant governor's campaign for the R e publi ca n gubernatorial nomination in- eludes s uch Orange Countians as: Doris Allen . a Huntington Beach high school district trustee and former Assembly candidate ; John E. Anderson, a partner in the Newport Beach law firm of Kindel and An- der son ; Marcia Bents of Newport Beach, former co- chairman of the President Ford ca mpaign in Orange County ; Ken Carpenter, son of Dennis. Also, Dennis Catron, former c hairman of the Cali fornia Republican Assembly and a Reagan backer; E. H. Clark, president of Baker International Corp.; Assemblyman Nolan Frizzelle; Sheriff Brad Gates. and Assemblyman Ross Johnson of Fullerton. Also, Gen. William Lyon, co- chairman of the Reagan victory dinner; Vera Manning, presi- dent or the Republican Women ror Reagan of Leisure World and former president of the Orange County Federation of Republican Women, and former Orange County Reagan chairman Willard S. Voit or Newport Beach. * * * SU PPORTERS OF SAN Diego Mayor Pete Wilson's bid for the Republican gubematoriaJ nomination have a list, loo. Here are some of the prominent Orange Countians Wilson partisans say are back- ing their man: Philip Reilly. president of the Mi ssion Viejo Co.; Gavin S. Herbert, president of Allergan Pharmaceuticals: Kenneth W. Carlson, president or VTN Corp.; Raymond R. Maggi president of the Apartment As· sociationof Orange County. Also, Bruce E . Nott, de- veloper; John M. Rau, president of David lndustries of Irvine: John F. Seymour, mayor of Anaheim and past president of the California Association of Realtors. Also, Timothy L. Strader. vice president of the Koll Co.; Thomas Wilek. vice president of the Irvine Company; William D. Lusk of Lusk & Son Develop- ment Co., and Harry G. Bubb, president of Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co. Rabies clinic set at HB fire station A rabies vaccination clinic for dogs wlll be held frqfn 7-8:30 at the Warner Fire Station tonight in Huntington Beach. Vaccinations will cost $3 each, according to a spokesman for the Huntington Beach Rotary North, which is sponsoring the clinic at 3831 Warner Ave. Dogs sh ould be on a leash. the spokesman said. M anpoWer board gets new director Craig Smithson of San Bernardino has been selected as the new executive director for the Orange County Man power Commission. Smithson, who replaced Robert C. Nelson, will begin his job on June 29. Nelson resigned the post in late February. Smithson was executive direc· tor for the San Bernardino Com- prehensive Employment Train- ing Act CCETA ) program before his selection in Orange County. As chief of the Manpower Commission s ta ff, he will be responsible for delivery or all CETA funding and operation of its seven major employment and tr aining programs for the economically dis adv an tag ed. The County Manpower Com- mission oversees an annual budget of $28 million. l damA91d s .... eral rous.s anG K-1 ' bulH .,.Cl !Mn ll<lpped across lt>e MIUlnlptll RI-. 119~1\Q • city -.rf and • 1111~ off kt 8<GWMVlle 8'Jffalo C~r1J1n WV Cheyenne Chkaoo Cincinnati CleVttand Columbus 0.l·Ft Win Oenvtr DHMolnn Detroit Du•utn J.cksnvtlt Kans City UIS Vt9411 L1111t Rock LolAnQtlU Lowl1vllla Mempflls Miami Mllwauue Mc>l.-St P NHllVlllt NtwOrlun. Ntw YMk NorfcHk 10 St ::;;:;:::;:::=:=:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::~~~~~~~-:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;::::-~~~ '1 u ~I~~~--::::::::::::::::-~~~~~~ 9S 74 4S 91 ... 02 .. 11 In Hutit>arCl'lton. Mass .• c.ews wtre ] -•klr19 to re•torw ttt<trlclty alter y•1 1tonn. ~ Sudol. 66, was -cendltlon at H.,ry Heyw.,.CI lat Ho1pllal In Gardner -• north A1 lan11 c Coot region, Wasr.lnoton and Ill• nortllern llockles ,t s admln.cl with abrasions and ] pallM attw ,_ "°-w .. Cle· Coastal foreca-Sl ~ r ~ I .:.· • ' _, • I i Siied. WtnclltNIDn, Mass., a »1001 lloll of wait on ,,. -ond story of doO Hlllfl Scllaol •• 111-n out 700 ~I *tMrtt4 on IN 10.yoftMK-term. t'IMll Gov. JtlNt A. ThomptOn racl Sc...,.,_ C-ty a CllNstar lllec-OI a ~ torNOD kllltCI -Md lftl4#M 12 In lit• .. ., tllundlntonM COfttlnu.d to- onr the ustern TanntHff • SUttoHW "-" CIOtted llW Early morntr19 IOw ctoucts near coHt. Sunny and warm WtdNt4ily. Coe11e1, lnlend tows mlCl-•OI. C:N•at hlllfl mlcf."°" Inf-mld-eo.. w .... n. l!t-llere, tlllflt v .. 1a111e winds nleM ~ ,,_,.,,. r-1 ~omlnt M'lttf'ty IO It • llnllls ......_., .t- '-'-· T-flo 4ofoDI wllld w-In ...__. al'll ........ Sovlllwfft _,,," J ...... "-<loWdl ....... ..,. "'°"' tnv t1ours. lwrw'rf Weclnesclar af. M-i~~~~~~~~~-,twlloon. ...., .... Dtl .. wy .......... mi!IOM..,.,ndrt ,, '°" CIC> not -~lil't030pm callb1Ve7 if Ill -your oooy .. 11 "'o.ii-te1 ~_..,_, Md SVnd,, II you CIO not t~ '::'/ voZ, ~~'" ... u~ ""*eel California P:atr weather wH forecalt for Wllclnftday, nCtPt tor''"' ntllflt and -ly ITIOl"nl"O tow do11cll Mtt ltl8 (-t. U.. Net..,. WNlhtr Service Mid. Lltllt c""91 111 temperoturws ,..spreCllCtff S1111ny a 11• conunued warm •••ther Wal ••P•<l•d In LO• Aneeftt. HltM _,Id be In tl'te 11.,.,_ .... Tiit valleys"**' tit"°' al'd -nr Wed11ueey wltll 111911 l•m· 119falurea rafltfflll lrom tlW -tOt to tOt. ' a We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? c_,.11 the number Mlow and ,our message will be recorded, transcribed and tllvered to the appropriate editor. TM 11ame 24·hour aoawerta• ttrvlte ma)'\ Uled lO record letters to tM editor oa any le. Mailbox contrlbulon mutt lnclud• tbelr ame Md telephone number f« v..-ffitaUon. No ca&, pleue. 'hll m wlult'• on your mind. A few aflt,_ c-. ,...,. •• PK.a.Cl to --~ rnow1tain areas. WNllltr lhould rtmeln warm wltll hfOl1t In IN mtCI IOS to 90t. TIMI dtMrtl ..... expecled to bt tunny and hCll WlllNmay -• llttl• blu•tf'r. Winos Of 20 to 30 "'"" ,...,. .,,.dieted for the eflfflMIOn .,d •V•· nlno hours HIQM..,. forecast to bl -· 100, readll"Q tllln ,,. ,o .... r Cit •rt• Ollla City Om.ha Or1al'ICIO Pt\llMphl• "'-"1• Pitttburor. Piiand, Me Piland, Ort "-Rl<hmonCI " 11 ., .. u 1• SS ., .. °' 111 u ,, S4 °' ., 60 79 10 Sol '1 ., .. ., Ten1pe ratllres Sun nioon, tides HI Lt ~. ' Albany AltluQut "'"'-"''° A"-llle Attent• Atlafttc C ty ... ttmora e1nn lneflm a1tmarek ..... ......, 11 5' .03 TODAY 1cw t2 S.Cond tow 1:47 p.m. l.7 100 11 'IHDMIUOAY ., u l"lrsl "'"' 2:• .. ,,.. •.t •s 12 l'lrtt IOW •: tU.m. o.s It .. S.Oftdllttfl •:Up.m, 4.J .. u S«Oftd lew IO:tl jl.11\. u '6 11 Sufi .... 1:01 "'""' rfMI ~ 14 52 Cl9y S:Aa e.m. 'Cl S4 Moon rl•1 WtdNIMy U :• a.m., ., '1 .Al IHltt:ltp.111.. lllf RIPllT T=: T_.,...a ..... ....... ... . ... .--.. .... T ..... ,.. .. 1.. C' ,. , .. ,. ~t .. ,.. .... n -.... ,, I -,.., ra I -,..,. " I -,..,. n H -fair n , -. .., n N .. -.. ,, " ... fllUll• ,, ... .. '" 9kkllll ... .. , .. .... = ·~ M ·-" ..... .,.... " .... ::: " -,. .... " @ 6EMWl5E camera and waan·t sure how W1811 I was handling It . , . but they turned out pretty well. .. . .,, I I. . . ·1 I i ·--------------------------~------·----~ ................. ! .. .. A4 H/F Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 ~illU~OO~ Reagan upset over tax cut hill 'stall' WASHINGTON <AP) -Presi- de n l Rea1an and the Democrats' chief tax writer in the House, already at odds over the shape of a tax cut, are feud- ing angrily now over bow quick- ly Congress can deliver one. Reagan, who wants tax legislation on his desk before Congress begins its August re- cess, was described as "rather livid" Monday upon bearing a predicti.on by Rep. Dan Rostenkowski, D-111., that it might lake until the end of Sep- tember for both the House and the Senate to complete action. Rostenkowski, who chairs the Ways and Means Committee in the Democratic-controlled House, was no less chafed by ad- ministration inferences that he and other Democratic leaders are stalling. Oi l companies cut im p orted oil cost members will ratify a new con- tract that falls. far short of what they soueht. A tentative contract a1ree· ment was reached in the pre- dawn hours Monday, jUJt two hours before the controllers scheduled a strike that could have crippled the nation's alr transport system at the start of the summer travel season. De bby Boone hurt in Ohio _accident LODI, Ohio <AP) -Actress· singer: Debby Boone, daughter of entertainer Pat Boone, wu in good condition today a fter a three-vehicle accident that also injured her husband and the family nurse, officials said. Miss Boone, in Ohio to star in a Kenley Players' production of ··seven Brides for Seven Brothers," suffered bruises to her head in the accident. Mount St. Helens back t o normal CONNED OUT OF HOUSE AND HOME -Three of at least eight families are shown in front of a Houston house they all rented from what authorities say is a con artist who has vanished with $5,900 in rent and deposits. Three families who stayed in the house Sunday because they had no other place are from left, Don and Sheri Cook and their three AP..._... children of Cincinnati; John and Marge LaTourneau and two children from Mtnnesota; and Jay and Linda Reese and two of three sons of Denver. The Cooks and the other families claimed to have signed a lease and paid deposits of from $400 to $1 ,200 after reading an ad for the house in . Houston newspapers. · NEW YORK <AP) -Some American oil companies have cut the price they pay for crude oil as Mexico ran into more resistence to its hopes for lncreased prices . Phillips Petroleum and Marathon OiJ Co. cut by Sl a barrel, to $35 Monday the price lbey will pay domestic producers for high-quality crude oil. That re- duction, the second of the year. bas spread through most of the oil industry. VANCOUVER, Wash. (AP) - Tremors beneath Mount St. Helens have subsided to near· normal following renewed growth of the lava dome in the volcano's gaping crater, scien- tists say. Hou~ing pushes up inflation rate But scientists have been una- ble to determine how much growth occurred during the non- explosive dome-building erup· tion that began Thursday. E conomists encouraged by low gain in consumer price i ndex lo Paris, a spokesman for Cie. -Prices of new cars rose 2.4 percent, partly as a result of American manufacturers' end- ing their rebate programs. Francaise des Petroles said the French company will cut its Mexican imports in half. to 50,000 barrels a day. beginning · July 1. MX missile said no g ood till 1990 WASHINGTON CAP> -A s harp rise in housing costs pushed the nation's annual infla. lion rate to 8.4 percent in May, more than three points above the previous month's rate, the government reported today. But for the first time since early 1979, the two-month gain in the consumer price index was less than 10 percent -a further bolstering of economists' predic· lions th at the double-digit crunch is fina lly at an end. Prices in May were .8 percent higher than in May 1980. primarily rerlecting higher mortgage interest rates and house prices -accounted for most of the .7 percent monthly increase, the Labor Department said in its report. Declines were posted , however, in gasoline and food prices. -Housing costs rose 1.3 per· cent, boosted by an increase of 2.1 percent in mortgage interest rates and .9 percent in house prices. Rent rose .8 percent, the largest gain s ince October. Housing prices overall rose .7 percent in April. -Medical care costs climbed .9 percent, led by rises in doc· tors• fees, up 1.1 percent in May .. Charges for medical service~ rose .8 percent, while hospital room fees were up .3 percent. Air con tro llers to ratify pact? WASHINGTON <AP> -The president or the air traffic con- trollers union predicts his 14,ln> WASHINGTON <AP) -The MX strategic missile will not be able to effectively replace the Minuteman system until 1990, no matter how it is deployed, con· gressional researchers say. Analysts in the Office of Technology Assessment made· that conclusion The May data means that for the first five months of the year, inflation also rose at an 8.4 per- cent annual clip, well below the 12.4 percent rate registered for all of last year. -Gasoline prices continued declining, falling 1.5 percent, after a 1.4 percent drop in April. -Food and beverage prices declined .2 percent. Grocery prices were off .5 percent from April, reflecting a sharp drop in prices of fresh fruits and vegetables. -Entertainment prices rose .5 percent after a slower gain of .2 percent in April. -Costs for apparel and up· keep were down .2 percent, after rising .2 in April and 1 percent in March. Rill Y ASSUMAILE INTEREST OML Y 2ncl TRUST DEEDS OWNER /MOMOWNER OCCUPIED Call Wilham B Mitchell Call today tor quote • No obltgation trans nohonol funding (714) 975-1128 ~~=~~ CTT· WW~ 0 @' [,,:-~~~, -views n J-.~ 'Vental HealtJiV~\ ; ' By GERALD WINKLER, D.D.S. ~J WHY A GOLD CROWN? You n or mall y associate gold crowns with kings or queens. But the average person can have a gold crown also not on his head but in his mouth. And it will probably be a lot more praclical than the king's head piece. Cast gold crowns cover the cusps <chewing surface> or back teeth enlirely as well as three or more other surfaces. They m over the remaining portion or a prepared tooth. Crowns are used to restore proper tooth t form and contours for the correct biting function when much of · the tooth Is extensively ·damaged. 1 Gold is an Ideal '1 restorative materiaJ for use In reforming the ,, shape and function oC a tooth In fact , or all restorative materials, gold is the strongest and most long-lasting. There are other reasons for the use of gold as well a~ long-life. Gold can provide maximum resistance against the forces of c hewing o n tooth surfaces. Flu.ids in the mouth c-a nnot affect gold. Gold will not shrink or expand once It has been cemented into the prepared surface. Br ea kage of t h e restoration la· less likely. Gerald Winkler, D.D.S. ' and Associates 1401 Avocado, Suite 515. :Stwport ~ach Phone: 640·41 .. 1!f ay's rise in housing costs - Specifically. the department's report said: If it's got wheels, you'll move it faster in a Dally Pilot classified ad.call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- viser will help you turn your wheels into cash. CAPY'S BAR and GRILL NOW APPEARING "BOB GULLEY BAND" Wed thru Sun . "LOST ANGELES" Sat. & Sun. Afternoons Mon. & Tues. Evenings CA P Y'S BAR and G RILL 114 McFadden Place Newport Beach 675-1094 "i ti: ......... Dancing In Dana Point To Rock, Regg~~J Pop, Blues Country· Western ·~····~······························ Appeertng JUM22,21,21 llRDZEIROS. June 23-21 RUIL ftoa<ER9 JvM21-27 JERRI LYNNe l THE UYLAND IAND · Jutyl, H, 13 GEORGE IUTT8 & THI HOT CROii IUNS 34130 Coast HI hw• , Daria Point 661-6688 Local. county . state. national and international events come to your doorstep 1111111 .. ._. in the bright. light and lively IJ, rll9I THIS SUNDAY BOSS OUR CHEF AROUN ! .' I., ' j . " . \:; AND DESIGN YOUR OWN OMELETTE WITH OUR ALL-YOU -CAN-EAT-SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH! $6.95 We have a feast of a table. 'more than 30 feet long, fllled with delicious breakfast and lunch entrees. fruits and salads and breads-plus our chef (an omelette expert) stands waiting for you to tell him how to make your custom omelette. he'll cook It right In front of you tool Come to Calabash this Sunday fur Champagne Brunch-and come nungryl • GREAT ENTERTAINMENT NIOHTLY IN OUR SPACIOU~ LOUWOI! e COMPLIMENTARY FRESH "CRACK-AND-PEEL-rr" SHRIMP PlAITER wrrH EVERY DINNER MEAL. CALABAC!LI tANDING & ~ DISTILLERY RESTAURANT <114> &42-9Es TUES. ttwu SAT. Open 11 :30 AM 1'11 1. t71ft ser.t. Cailm 11111. CA llG'7 SUN: MUNCH 10-.30 AM ·2:30 PM 111 t111 '1111\'I c.ntllr' mt 17th tnd Or9nge DINNEA ftom 4 PM l Daily Pil~t TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1981 ' Thinking. about investing in the stock market? · llliUll lllCl/lllTH 1:1111 MOVIES STOCKS 83 87 Try throwing darts . B5 Citron lashes hack at grand jury Orange County Tax Collector· 'llreasurer Robert Citron has de- nounced the Grand Jury for a re- port in which the panel was highly critical of the mana1e· ment of the $300 million county employees retirement fund. The jury, in one of three re- ports scheduled to be released this week, said more empbuis abould be placed on increasing Ule rate ol return on investment and urged coWJty supervisors to OC pair shot to death A lS·year-old Costa Mesa girl and a 19-year·old Huntington Beach man were shot to death Monday night in a Westminster apartment. Police arrested a 16-year·old youth who they say was angry that the girl was breaking up with rum. Brena Lee Baird of 592 Hamilton St. was shot three times al 10:55 p.m. and was pro- nounced dead two hours later at the Fountain Valley Community Hospital trauma center, police said. William John Heinz of 16041 -Oraig Lane was pronounced .<fead at the scene at an 1apartmenl complex near Westminster Avenue and Golden West Street. lie was shot once in the chest. .Police said both victims were :killed with a .2'lcaliber handgun. ·The suspect, whose identity is being withheld because be is un- der 18, lived with his parents lo ~ apartment, the scene or the ·~IJlyings. They weren't home dliring the shooting, police aaid. The youth was charged with suspicion ol murder, police said. A neighbor who apparently beard shots had wrestled the gu:spect to t.be carpet inside tbe apartment, when a patrol car arrived, police said. ·'• Year-round ~hool plan ~ignups held ·. ·.Registration is being taken for the year-rowld school program for 1981·82 at the Ambuehl glementary School in San Juan Clpistrano. Any student in the Capistrano UnJfied School' District who will ~ lo kindergarten through slxth grade ls eligible to attend. Stu- dents living outside the Ambuehl school attendance boundaries must provide their own transportation. The year-round school pro· gram at Ambuehl consists of 45 drys in school and then ts days o vacation four times a year. 'l'be school year will begin July 31. ·. For more information or to reg- ·lster call Charles Bossard, Am· ·buehl principal. at661-0400. ·Poets plan fund-raiser , . The Laguna Poets organJza. jlon will bold a fund-raising din- p~r Wednesday at the home or Marta Mitrovich at SSS Agate St.- in Laguna Beach. The SS dooaUon will be used to btlng poet Galway Kinnell to the ¥$>ult.on Community Playhouse tOr a reading of bis works tbiA rau. The dinner will begin at 7: 30 p.tn., and will include poetry ~dints and music. For more in-~orm a tion call •94·8375 or ,..955(), Stop-smoking .clinic a lated .. "'Smokeri wbo would !Ute to kick the habit may enroll ln a •P smokinc clinic wlllch begina luly e at South Coast Medical .center ln South Lap.na. •' 'J'he three·•eek clinic, ottered ~ the boepltal nuntn1 depaJ't. .,ent '1 tnnrvlc:e educational "°"'am, ts 1daed"1ed to meet twice a wetli: from 7 to t p.m. ID ri811room 3 al the medical $ter, hl'IJ Cout Hlabw'ay. TIMi'e Al a SlO fM for tlM cllnlc. a...-.... and 1c1c1Jttc.Ul ID· .,. available b1 call· 1111, ---911. • tM an CHHf hclety at ..... consider blring a full-time ad· mlnlstrator to nm the fund. Too much money, tbe panel said in a 14·page report, is locked up in long.term bonds. Citron, whose office oversees mana1emeot of the retirement system, said steps have been taken to improve the rate of re- turn. Citron said about $60 million have been invested lo stocks as opposed to bonds and that the 8.8 percent rate or re· tum clt.ed ln the jury report ls increasln1. Much of Citron's ire was directed at the jury's suuestion that the retirement fund ls pay. inl a disproportionate share of the salaries ol Citron and hia top assistant, Ray Wells. Twenty five percent -$13,447 -of Citron's salary ia charged to the retirement fund, as is SO percent -$23,539 -of W elJs'. Citron said that while it may be true that he does not devote 25 percent of his time to retire- ment tund matters, the charge is proper because he possesses the experience necessary for mak· ing proper investments. The jury also was critical or a change in benefits under which employees who retired after June 30, 1979, were denied cer· tain medical benefits. Citron defended the charge. "The reaaon we did it was the solvency of the system," Citron said, pointing out about $40 million would have been lost lo the next 10 years ii the benefits had not been dropped. "We said the system could not withstand that kind or expense." Citron said. Citron said he did not un· derstand the jury's tecommen· dation that a full-time ad· mimstrator be tured to run the program, since such a position exists. The jury, however, said the position should have greater independence and report direct- ly to the county's nine·member retirement board. "As with several other reports issued in the last month by the grand j~ry. this has similar con- tent. It leaves much to be de· sired ," Citron said. County budget soars Proposed spending plan for 1982 up ~ million Summer pedaling not a 'joy ride' ISy RICHARD GREEN Of .... o.lly ~ ... s- Pedaling a bicycle for days on end in the searing heat of summer must be anything but a joy ride. Yet, as sure as the temperatures soar in J\Dle, bicyclists hit the open road this time of year, seem- ingly determined to pedal until they drop. I have never been able to understand what possesses these people, but with a mixture of dis- belief and admiration I have dutifully attempted to document these adventures: And -although the summer is young -I have already beard about four bicycling adventures. Hans F.ckert, who had to abort a cross·country bike trip last year when he came down with saddle sores and beat exhaustion in the des~ ert, called recently to tell me his friend, Len Vreeland, was planning oitu" to break the coast·to-coast recumbent bicycling record. It seems that Vreeland specializes in the riding of a bicycle designed to be pedaled from a reclining posit~on. And remember Clint Worthington? He is the 21-year-old Irvine bank teller who last year beat the Postal Service in a race from Phoenix to Irvine. Clint is now planning to beat the seven-day bicycling record from Seattle, to San Diego. He leaves J\Dle 24. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Pando a nd their two daughters, Laurie, 13, and Stacy, 10, are planning a bike trip from Florence, Ore., to Washington D.C. "We are going to dip one wheel in the Pacific Ocean and the other wheel in the Atlantic Ocean," declared Mrs. Pando. Huntington City Beach lifeguard Carl Pierce, 32, recently completed a 57-day trip from Huntington Beach to Washington D.C. He says he encountered a frigid sleet storm in New Mexico and 40 mph head winds in Kansas. There's a multitude of things that can hamper bi~yclists, I have been told by this breed of thrill· seekers. Coyotes, breakdowns (of the physical and mechanical variety), saddle sores, heat exha~tion, colds, inclement weather, unfriendly police officers and mix-ups in directions are just some of the possi- ble impediments to a successful bicycle trip. One bicyclist was telling me that be actually got thrown in jail on a trip. when police discovered that the recreational vehicle being used by his entourage was stolen. The bicyclist says he unknowingly rented . the vehicle from a disreputable party. Bicyclists will say that all of the problems they've encountere<t have been worth it, but that is a point that could be disputed by the non-bicyclist. I'll continue to document these feata of derring- do, but as for myself, I'll take the poolside bmge chair over the narrow bicycle seat any summer day. By FREDEJUCK SCHOEMEIB. 0t .. o.11y~-.ett A $711.7 million 1982 bud,et that is more than $10 million out or balance is now in the hands of members of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The proposed spending plitn, s ubmitted by co un ty Ad · ministrative Officer Robert Thomas, is up about $68 million from the current fiscal year's budget. Fiscal 1981 ends next Wednesday. lo a letter to supervisors, Thomas said the board has three options to bring the budget into balance: diyert federal revenue s haring to the $231 million general fund; make across-the· board cuts, or make selective cuts in certain programs. Supervisors wiU consider the proposed budget at a meeting at 9:30 a.m . Wednesday. Action on the final budget will not occur until after budget hearings scheduled to begin in mid·July. The proposed spending plan would include $33 million for capital improvements and $2.8 million in supplemental money State panel OKs county coast plans In one or its last actions before its state charter runs out, the South Coast Regional Coastal Commission has approved the county's land use plans for Laguna Niguel and Sunset Beach. But the commission, which will officially go out or business July 1, turned down a land use plan for Santa Ana Heights in an 8-1 vote Monday because or pro- posed plans to extend University Drive North past Upper Newport Bay. The California Coastal Act, which went into effect Jan. 1, 1977. and under which the coastal commission was formed , calls for the state's six regional commissions to be disbanded Ju- ly 1. Both the Laguna Niguel and Sunset Beach plans were ap- proved lo unanimous votes by the commissioners with litUe discussion at Monday's meeting in Huntington Beach. However, on the plan for San· ta Ana Heights. which lies , ge nerally, between Upper Newport Bay and Orange Coun· ty's J.o~ Wayne Airport, the comm1ss1oners voted in favor or conditions wtuch, if met, could lead to its approval. The first condition was for the county to delete the proposed ex· tension of University Drive between Newport Beach and Irvine. Though the county has no im· mediate plans to make the ex· tension, officials of the county Environmental Management A1ency said traffic congestion on arterial highways surround· ing the area ls becoming more prevalent. -JOHN NEEDilAM Unwanted tot gets home Girl goes to relative; father remains in jail • cbaf'PI al lek>QJ' child en· daqerma. Coullty Sbertlr1 Depart.meat depaU .. allepd Uaat •u.oa of. I~ the baby for 1ale at 1 U. bour rHtauraat In lllJ11ton Vl!Jo . 'fbe ehUd'1 motbn, Mary Gr.ante given Uiatted w_, of W• Oraap COunt1 bu ••lrdM •.ooo m ODe·Ume arant.a to aeveral local eomm&mltr ""tee Md human care.,.._. Katherine WUaon. 15, souabt UD· 1uccesalully earlier tblt month to win cudstod.y of tbe child. She l&ld lt WU her detln to return to Lol.ll.liana .tt.b the lnlant. Under the PiaD approved by Judie McJOJran, tbe chUd wW '° to the bomt ot ODI of Mrs. Wlllon'• llltera. llra. Wllaon. aeeordlllf. to tbt Judce, will al.Q wltb anotbar .._ In Loultlana. WUloe ~ ll In CUltodJ lD Orance o.., .lall. Hll pre- Umlnary ~Nla1cluled to belia Hiil ln SoulJI OrUce ~ • Court. •lln. Wllllll U. -.. raldlq ha ........ Vie.to • for various county programs. Analysts in the administrative office say about $28.7 million in federal revenue sharing money could be made available lo balance the budget. "Thts alternative 1s a de· parture from previous years in Supervisors get $711 . 7 million county budget which revenue sharing funds have not been used to support operating programs, but were used primarily to fund capital projects and social programs," Thomas said. He cautioned that revenue sharing funds could only be used to bl\lance the budget for one year, since revenue sharing en· tillements to counties are ending after the upcoming fiscal year. For that reason, Thomas said, "I believe the only viable prac- tical alternatives are either VICE CHANCELWR WiUiam J. LiUyman Dr. Lillyman appointed to new UCI post Dr. William J . Llllyman has been appointed vice chancellor for academic affairs at UC Irvine. Lillyman, a professor of German, bas served as dean of the School or Humanities at UCI since 1973. The vice chancellor for academic affairs is responsible for ins truction, research, academic planning and academic personnel on campus. Llllyman , a native of Australia, received the bachelor of arts degree with flrst·clus honors in German from the t;niveraity of Sydney. He re· ceived the doctorate in German from Stanford University in 1984. Alter teacbin1 at Stanford and UC Santa Cruz, be came to UCI ln 1m u chairman of the Oeputment of German. The following year be •11 named dean of bumanitles . Llllytnan'a primary field of 1cbolarsblp baa been German literature, particularly ol the Htb century. He currently dlrectl tbe UCI Focuud Rese1.rcb Profram oa Goethe. Tbe appointment of 1..UJ.rman u vice chancellor for acad•mlc attain ,....,...... a relftlUtuUon of tbat po•ltlon. The po1t formerb waa held by DT • .lallMI L. llcOaqb. wboH UUe wu 9.aqtd to eucutln vlce cbM· ctllM In 1171 to tndlcat. •• •· paula. ol blll NapcuibtUU... l.W.rmm ia a l'llliclent of VWa Part. across-the-board cuts, or selec· live cutbacks in program areas. ''In examining these options once again each departmen· /agency director must identity mandated programs and de· termine those programs which are the highest priority ," he said. Orange County is fa ~ing something of a budget cru'nch , analysts said, because fewer dollars are available from the slate and federal governments. Thomas said all county de- partment beads have been asked to re ·examine individual budgets for possible cuts. As bas been the case in past years, the mammoth Human Services Agency , which ad- ministers health and social services programs, would re· ceive the lion's s hare of the budget, $237.5 million. The En· vironmenta1 Management Agen· cy would receive $36. 7 million ; General ~rvices Agency, $42.4 million. About S6S million would be directed to gene ral ad- ministration and $121 million to community safety. Laguna cuts 3 school . . . pos1t1ons Laguna Beach Unified School District trustees have approved the layoff of three more district employees in a unanimous vote. The most r ecent wave of layoffs follows the termination of eight teac her.s and two class ifie d 1non -t e ach1ng l employees last month. The three people approved for layoff Thursday lnc1ude a high school secretary, a library. media assistant and an instruc· tional aide . The layoffs are pa rt of an aus terity drive in the district to erase an expected S540.000 del- icit for the 1981 -82 school year Last month the majority of 'the t rustees voted to close Aliso Elementary school in South Laguna to help balance the dis- trict budget. Hospital sets Monte Carlo The South Coast Medical Center auxiliary will bold a Monte Carlo-Wild West Roundup Night Saturday to raise money for the South Laguna hospital. The event will be held from 6:30 p.m . to 11:30 p.m . in the lower level of the parkin' garage at South Coast Medical Center. 31872 South Coast Highway. Ticke&s are $15 and include a buff et dinner and $10 worth of chips to play carnival games. There will also be 21 dice tables as well as roulette. There will be a drawing at 10:30 p.m . for the grand prue of $1,500 in :uh. Door prizes will alao be given out. Western dress ls optional. Information and ticket res- ervations are a.vallable by ca11· l na the medkal center at 499-1311, or 488-1262, extension 844. Incoming students get orientation ., Orange Cout OAJL V PILOT/Tueeday, June 23, 1981 P UBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE P\JBUC NOTICE ,, ... l'tc:TITIOUI I UllMIU ...,..,.,_.Or .... C..11 D•llY Pllo4, MNIUI ITATIMIMT J-tJ a . JYIY7 t4. ltlt _.1 .. 1 Tl1• ,.,,_1.,. ... ,._, ••• ....... . . PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUll UllMlll ll<nil\Ht•: MAMISTATIMIMT Hl!W,.Ol'IT CDHSfl'IUCTIOH PUBUC NOTICE Tiie followlne --•• dolne 1141111· MANAOEMINT, SIM llrcll Str..t. MU H Haw-1 9Ndl, CA tJMI. LIH lllESIAl'ICH, JUI Mol\rff Cl1tl1 ....... i.011ert St•plle"'• 40e PICTITIOUll UllMIU Woy. COiie Mtw, CA tt•M. lwckMll, Celle~ CA t2'2• MAMa ITATSMSMT ....... d H. Hl<ltOll, JUI MOMff i.olly H .... 1 .. 111, >01 EIPl•n-. Tll• ,.. ................. •r• ... ... Woy, C•le Mtw. CA m2'. H•wpott INcll. CA.,,...._ llUNMM •: Tllh llul.IMM It 'ondw<tecl by .,, In· Tlllt llolsll\Ht •• conducted by • NIW"°"T TILE .. CAllNl!T. HI dlvl..,•I. ..-.. ~-.tp, N. Nowpot1 II~ •• Newport .. ocll, ,__Id H. Nl<llOlt Olrlt Ill Sl.--S ColllonN t*3 n11 --• wos lllod wllll tllO Thl1 --t ••• lllod wllll 1llO G11lpo "-P'oko, 1!.M E . ..,., 11._ CCHinly Cl•rll of Or-Covnty Oft County Cl•rt. of Oron .. County CHI lier. OrOftllt, Callfomlo 9*' J..,.. s 1t11 JllllO S, 1t11. Jw .. ._.. CNAo<. 1!.M E. VOii • . ,., .... 1 PIUMI II .... Orel\tlt, CallfornM tlW6 P11011-Oronoo Coo1I O.lly PllOl, ........ "*' Oronoo C:0.•1 0.lly Piiot, 11-. .. ,, •• G ....... l'olce, Old J-t i. u JO 1t11 ,,,._., J-t 1 .. U JO.ltll tMl .. I Volco110 Rood , l11tt., Cr•••. • • • • _. _. ---Collfw .... ftlll PVBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI IUllNIU NAMa ITATaMaNT ,,,. lollowlng _ .... 11 dolnt .... a1. ....... , Ill COMPU-OUOTE 111 SPORT-A· THON, 111 .. PAlllWl1o Circle, "-· '°'" 11011~. CallfOt.V. t270I Mlrlom A11n Farnum, 1110t Polmotto Circle, l'ounloln Vallo, c.llfor.V. n10I Thi• _...__ 11 condUclecl bY .., In· dlvl-1. Mlrlom "'-... ,,_, Tlli. ltot-1 Wot fllod with Ille c_,1y Clorll of Or-COUftlY on ~Y P UBUC NOTICE Tllll lluslMH 11 COft41uel .. llY o ...-.. ....-.... ----------Guldt"-P'oko l'ICTITIOUI I UllNlll Tlllt .,._, -llled wltll IN MAMa ITATaMllNT c -tr CMf1I .. 0r.,,.. C:-ty CHI TM foll-Int ,..,..,,, or• Oolnt .l..,,. It, ltlt. llWl-ot: ,., .... STEWART AUTOWHOLESALES, PlllllllMd Or ... CoMt O.lly "llo4, 11'2 Gorden Gron Blvd .• Oorden J-». >O, JYly 1. 14, 1"1 2142 .. 1 Gr-. CAIHoml• t2'M Wllll.., E. ~ lfftJ 111 ..... r LoM, H...,11 .... 0ft -II, Collforfllo """ PUBUC NOTICE Liiiy E. S. S-ert. lfftJ i.oneer l'ICTITIOUS I USIN•U L•M, Huntl"flOft h«ll, Colllornla NAMI ITATIMUfT ,_.. TM loll-Int porso111 ore doing Tiiis IM4!Mu h <_1.., by • IMlalnoas M: ..... rol __ ,..,,., COMMUNITY VOLUNTEERS Liiiy E S. S.Wwt FOi. THE ELDERLY (CllEI, 420 l'IUft' Thia ....,._ •• fl'41i11 wtlh ttlo Wul ltlll SlrHI. Co1to M .. o . PvOll-0r.,.. eoo11 Dolly Plio., c-ty cior1i of °".,... c-w °" C.lllON\lo f2'27 "·1•1 J-1. t, 1', n, ltll J4ff.el J-1', ltll. ,...._ SOUTH COAST INSTITUTI! P'OR ~I-Or ... CMst O.lly Pllo4. APPLIED GERONTOLOGY. 0 PUBUC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUI I UllNllSI MAMa ITATllMINT Tiie loll0wlfl9 ,...._, 11 1101n1 .... .i. ......... , G RAPHIC SUPPORT, IHI W. l(otoflo Aw .. Allohelm. CA '21112. T.,e .. D. loord, '760 C.l.,,dulo Avo., WHtmlMlo+'. C.A t26G. Tiils llUilMa ll <.-.ct.cl by Oii lft. dlvlehlol. T...-D.l .. rd Tiiis ~ wet lllod wltll 1119 COilftlY Clffll of 0r•"99 Coul\ly Oft J-'· 1"1. ,, .... P11bllllled Oronoo Cooll O.lly Piiot, J-t , "· 21. JO, ltll hlCMI P UBUC NOTICE Ptc:TIT10Ut I VMNllS MAllllMllTATIMalfT T,,. fOI_.,. --It dlDfll9 OWi· ........ P. J . PA•TY l'\ANNING, t P'llfl. trlCllO. lntlM, CA t271J, P._.• ,,_, ~. t FlT.,.rl4ge. 1rv111e, CA mu. Tlll1 IMMI""' 11 c.-tHI by °" ,,.. dlvic...1. ,,_ .. J .Wk lvNn T"ll -wn lllOd wllll lllO c-ty o-of Or ... C-ly Oft J-l.ltl1. J-u. a. J· .... 7, 14• ltll 17~1 C•llfornlo c..--ollOll, 4JO w. ltth -• Strffl, C.le Mow, C.OllforftlotMV PUBLIC NOTICE Tlllt ~ It <Olldu<IH by o corporotkll\. Solltll C:O.lt ln1Ulu1e l'ICTITIOUS IUSINllS 10' ""41od Gononlology MAMllSTATa .. NT OUw--, TM IOl-"t ""°" It dollle Outl· T.-., ....... , Tiii• --WM fllod •1111 .,. 11 JI. I WELDING U1 J 1. I Cou11lyClerllofO<'-Coun1yon~y RENTALS, JU7 Col11mlllo Drive. 2t, ""· co.io-. Calltomi• ... ,.,._. Jeell E. Doller. US7 Colwmblo PuOll-Or-C:O.SI Dally Pllo(. 0.-1 .... C.le MeM. C.lltorfllo ..-J-1. '· ... u. 1"1 1.S..1 Tlll1...-..11~1>y ... 1,.. dlvldllol. JKllE.IMM PUBUC NOTICE T11i. ..._,. wM lllod wllll 1llO ------- '°""'Y Clffll of Of' ..... Counly CHI J-It. 1"1. ... ' LAMENT -Historian Arthur Schlesinger in a commencement ad- d ress to North - eastern Uni · versity graduat es deplored what he le r med the drift toward conservatism among young people. Furnace le aks fixed~ WASHINGTON (AP> The maker of about 55,000 fur naces used ln mobile bomes hu launched a repair program because of the danaer of leak Ing carbon monoxide, the Consumer Product Salety Com · mission reporte. The danaer arises If portions of the vents corrode In m odel MMG "Miller" brand liquid propane and natural 1aa furnacea. The furnaces were m•d• by the Home division of Lear Stealer Inc. of Holland, Mich. Corroelon In the flue pipe extension and venta can aJlow carbon monolllde to be erQJtled Into living areaa. the commlaalon aald. The a1ency report· ed It has rtcelved reports of 19 . d~alhs usoclated with S\.ICh poisoot.ic since 1968. "' The furnaces were sold fOf' uae in mobile homes since 1964, eithernM orl1inal equipment or for replMe· ment. ·n · The commission said mobile horh\! owners should check their furnaeee for the "Mlller" name at the to~·of the louvered door. If it Is a "MUler,'' open the louvered door and check ~ large verticaJ pipe. If that pipt •ts about five inches across. the furance Is model MMG. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii If you have that model, or are~ sure, contact the manufacturer.At> calling, toll free. 800 253-3874. 'He firm will arl'8nge for free instaJlation or a new nue pipe extension. Hniled 11.,ty ONLY 527995 • 100% Solid St1t1 Chassis 1 In-line Pic:tur• T11b1 • Autometic F1equ1n· CV Control • Automatic Color Control 10AB1406K OClfl _, on hlQrl mooct plQOllc MOW ONLY 549995 o hrlo,,,._ SHIM • s, .. •ff s .. "4 Syit.,.. & Hifll F 1delity Am,iifler e O..o EIK1,.•oc Tu11l .. -ll Cllunetl • perFormance TELEVISION 25~~ .... -Vll Il ll'DlllClll ClltPGlll~ Colar TV WITH DUAL MOOE REMOTE CONTROL SAVE s15000 • lHIJY CHICIOU\ Sol .. S1a1e C~mis •lo l-llec• Mm11 '•ct\lre TMt ONLY 5549'~ 11'~ ........ 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AllTOllATIC tOHIH CO•T-01 '•t l u1 ot AUTOMA TI C CO OK I NG OONTAOI.~ -10 ••• llme ...__._ 1ev•I. 1u1om•11c111r ........ tor dlftt<Olll --OllOoel With the GE space-mak81 MICl'owav1 Oven, and your own range, VoU have a complete cooking center! ONLY 559995 4 .. ...... ·-. ······~· IRVlll r;itron flay s j ury repq rt Orange County Tax Collector- "rreasurer Robert Citron has de- nounced the Grand Jury for a re- port In which the panel was highly critical of the manage- ment of the $300 million county employees retirement fund. to the retirement fund, as is SO percent -$23,539 -of Wells'. Citron snid that while it may be true that he does not devote 25 percent of his time to retire· ment fund matters, the charge is proper because be possesses the experience necessary for mak· ing proper investments. The jury, in one of three re- ports scheduled to be teleased this week, said more e mphasis should be placed on increasing ihe rate of return on investment and urged county supervisors to consider hiring a full-tlme ad- ministrator to run the fund. \ Too much money, the panel The jury also was critical of a change in benefits under which employees who retired after June 30, 1979, were denied cer- tain medical benefits. Citron defended the charge. said in a 14-page report, is locked up in long-term bonds. "The reason we did it was the solvency of the system," Citron said, pointing out about $40 million would have been lost in the next 10 years if the benefits had not been dropped. Citron, whose office oversees management of the retirement system, said steps have been laken to improve the rate of re- turn . Citron said about $60 million have been invested in stocks as opposed to bonds and that the 8.8 percent rate of re- turn cited in lhe jury report is increasing. Citron said he did not un- derstand the jury's recommen· · dation that a full-time ad· ministrator be hired to run the program, since such a position exists. The jury, however, said the position should have greater independence and report direct· ly lo the county's nine-member retirement board. Much of Citron's ire was directed at the jury's suggestion that the retirement fund is pay- ing a disproportionate share of the salaries of Citron and his top assistant, Ray Wells. ··As with several other reports issued in the last month by the grand jury, this llas similar con· tent. It leaves much to be de- sired," Citron said. Twenty five percent -$13,447 -of Citron's salary is charged . '• . ,• Summer pedaling not a 'joy ride ' Uy RICHARD GREEN Of .. Dall'f ~-s- Pedaling a bicycle for days on end in the searing heat of summer must be anything but a joy ride. Yet, as sure as the temperatures soar in June, bicyclists hit the open road this time of year, seem- ingly determined to pedal until they drop. I have never been able to understand what possesses these people, but with a mixture of dis- belief and admiration I have dutifully attempted to document these adventures. And -although the summer is young -I have a lready heard about four bicycling adventures. Hans Eckert, who had to abort a cross-country bike trip last year when he came down with saddle sores and heat exhaustion in the des- ert, called recently to tell me his friend, Len Vreeland, was planning ottnN to break the coast-to-coast recumbent bicycling record. · It seems that Vreeland specializes in the riding of a bicycle designed to be pedaled from a reclining position. And remember Clint Worthington? He is the 21-year-old Irvine bank teller who last year beat the Postal Service in a race from Phoenix to Irvine. Clint is now planning to beat the seven-day bicycling record from Seattle, to San Diego. He leaves J.uneU. Mr. and •Mrs. Lee Pando and their two daughters, Laurie, 13, and Stacy, 10, are planning a bike trip from Florence, Ore., to Washington D.C. ••We are going to dip one wheel in the Pacific Ocean and the other wheel in the Atlantic Ocean," declared Mrs. Pando. Huntington City Beach lifeguard Carl Pierce, 32, recently completed a 57-day trip from HunUngton Beach to Washington D.C. He says be encountered a frigid sleet storm in New Mexico and 40 mph head winds in Kaosu. There's a multitude of things that can hamper bicyclists, I have been told by this breed ol thrill· seekers. Coyotes, breakdowns cot the physical and mechanical variety), saddle sores, beat ahamUon, colds, lnclement weather, unfriendly police aftleen and mix-ups in d1rectioal are Just IOme of tbe pOUl- ble impedtmenU to a 1uccwful bicycle trip. Orie blcycUat wu 1elliq me tbat be actulllY sot thrown In Jail on a trip wben police cilacovend" that t.be rffreatlonal vehicle belnl UHd by Ilia eatourqe wu atoten. The blc1cli1t says he unknowtnalJ remed the yeJalde from a disreputable party. Blcycliata will aay tbat all of the\problema tlae1'•• mcountered ba•• been wGrtb l~ bUl tUt la a ~ tb.t eould be cHlpuUld by tbe DOD-MeJdljt. J'D eammue to doCUIDmt tbeM fuu ol Clln1i!il· clD, bt1t u for m,_lft..1.'D take tM poollldl 1Dm1e dWr OYS tbe urrow DICJCll w t ..., ••mer clay. a 3 s !ES&OS& 2 2 1 2 1 . . .. \ . . .. . . . . .. . . .. . . .. . . .. . . . .. .... -.. . . . . Daily Pilat TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1981 MOVIES STOCKS Thinking. about investing in the stock market? 83 87 Try throwing darts . . . 85 Two Orange County firefighers battle flames in Imne 8toroge yard Monday evening. County budget soars Proposed spending plan /or 1982 up $68 millian By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL oc .. 0.11,,.......,. A $711.7 million 1982 budget that is more than $10 mllllon out of balance is now in the bands of members of the Orange County Board o f Supervisors. The proposed spending pllln, submitted by county Ad· mioistrative Officer Robert Thomas, is up about $88 million from the current fiscal year's budget. Fiscal 1981 ends next Wednesday. lo a letter to supervisors, Thom as said the board has three options to bring the budget into balance : divert federal revenue sharing to the $231 million general fund; make across-the· board cuts, or make selective cuts in certain programs. Supervisors will consider the proposed budget at a meeting at 9:30 a.m . Wednesday. Action on the final budget will not occur until after budget hearings scheduled to begin in mid-July. The prope>sed spending plan would include $33 million for capital improvements and $2.8 million in supplemental money $22.9 m illion budget eyed in I rvine The Irvine City Council will meet tonight lo consider ap- proval of a $22.9 million municipal budget for the 1981·82 fiscal year. Other items to be considered at 7: 30 p.m. in City Hall at 17200 Jamboree Road include : -A proposal by the Irvine Com- pany that an assessment district be formed to pay for road im- prove meota along Harvard Avenue from University Drive to Main Street. Under the proposal, residents moving i.nto the assess- ment di.strict would have. to pay for the roadway improvements. -A reJ¥)rt by City Attorney Roger Grable on the city's legal effort in opposition to a county plan to place a landfill north of Irvine. -A report on affordable home lotteries held in Irvine. -A req~est by tbe Irvine Police Department that the City Council aut6onle the expend- iture of $.10,000 to buy the depart- ment• computer system. Incoming etudente get orie ntation lhldnta plaanlD1 to attend Wdlebadt OJI.... In Mlatlon Vi.to ta the fall are Invited to • l&uclent orltntatloD Aue. 5 in the rlM Arta bulktin1 Oft the cam· pus. TH orielatioa 'lfW be81n at t :IO a.m . ..a 1att. uatll 12:30 p.m. IPnt bat dol• ud drinb WW be ierftd. Applleationl for \M fall ....... an DOW MID• aee...c:: ... u. Offtc• of Ad· ml iaad lecOl'dl. ca ...... ...... A ....... for various county programs. Analysts in the administrative office say about $28.7 million in federal revenue sha ring money could be made available to balance the budget. "Tbts alternative 1s a <1e- parture from previous years in Supervisors get $111. 7 million county budget which revenue s haring funds have not been used to support operating programs, but were used primarily to fund capital projects and social programs," Thomas said. He cautioned that revenue sharing funds could only be used to balance the budget for one year, since revenue sharing en- titlements to counties are ending after the upcoming fiscal year. For that reason, Thomas said, "I believe the only viable prac· tical altero~tives are either across-the-board cuts, or selec- tive cutbacks in program areas. "In examining these options once again each departmen· /agency director must identity mandated programs and de· termine those programs which are the highest priority," he said. Orange County is fa cing something of a budget crunch, analysts said, because fewer doJJars are available from the state and federal governments. Thomas said all county de- partment heads have been asked t o re -e x a mine individual budgets for possible cuts. As has been the case in past years. the m am moth Human Ser vices Agency. whi ch ad- ministers health and social services programs, would re- ceive the lion's share of the budget, $237.5 million. The En- vironmental Management Agen· cy would receive $36. 7 million; General Services Agency, $42.4 million. About $65 million would be directed to general ad- ministration and $121 million to community safety. Baby gets home Girl goes to relative; father in jail A 9-week-old baby girl that authorities say was placed up for sale by her father is destined for a r elative's home in Louisiana. Orange County Superior Court Judge Byron McMillan ordered the child be placed in the custody of an aunt after review- ing a report submitted by the county Social Services Depart- ment. The child, Kathleen Wilaon, has been housed at the county's Albert Sitton Home for abused and abandoned children slnce State panel OKs c~unty coast plam lo one ol it.a last actions before lta 1tate charter runs out, the South Coast Regional Coastal Commission has approved the county's land use plans for La 1una Ni1uel and Sunset Beach. But the commia1ion, •ich will officially to out ol buainet• July 1, t\U'DICI down a land use plan for Santa Ana Hellbta in an 1-1 vote llonda1 becauae of pro- poeed plant to extend Unlvenity Drive North pall Upper Newport Bay. The California Coattal Acl. wbJcb went into efftct Jan. l , 1917, aad under wtalcb tbe c:outal ecJG1t•wton ••formed, calla for IM ..._., • reaiooal comm..._ ta b9 dllM.nded Ju. ly l. June 1 when her father, Randy Gordon Wilson, 29, was arrested on charges of felony child en- dangerment. County Sheriff's Department deputies alleged that Wilson of· fered the baby for sale al a 24- hour restaurant in Mi ssion Viejo. The c hild's mothe r , Mary Katherine Wilson, 15, sought un- successfully earlier this month to win cudstody of the c hild. She said it was her desire to return to Louisiana with the infant. Under the plan approved by Judge McMillan, the cblld will go to the home of one of Mrs. Wilson's sisters. Mrs. Wilson, according to the judge, will stay with another sister in Louisiana. Wilson currenUy is in custody in Orange County Jail. His pre- liminary hearing is scheduled to begin next Wednesday in South Orange County Municipal Court. Mra. Wilaon has tieen residing in Mission Viejo. Police nab e scapee, 14 A 14,year~d e1c1pee from the Paradise Creek Boya Ranch in Etcondldo was apprehended Monday afternoon in Irvine, police 111d today. The boy wu arrested at 2:~ p.m . arter lrvlne patrolman Robert Kludt dlacovered him drivtnC 1 Molen car near the in.· t.eneeOoD ot Myford Road and UM Senta Ana !'Newey. Police Hid the boy had been nnt to lbe boys ranch 1n COGMC· Uon wttb aUIOmobU• thefta ln the Loa A.ntelel area . $1 5 0 ,0 00 I rvine fire probed Investigators were trying to determine this mornin g what caused a fire that did $150.000 in damage to the storage yard or an Irvine furniture manufactur ing firm and threatened to ex plode a propane tank Monday evening. When firefighters arrived at 5· p.m .. flames fueled by stacked lumber were shooting 25 feet high and li cking al the edges of the propane tank . witnesses said. "We were in there starting to spray water on the fire when we heard th e relief valve blow on the propane tanJc." one fireman said. "We dropped our hoses and got the hell out of there." After the fire was sprayed from a fire truck nozzle for about 30 minut es . th e firefighters returned with hand lines and eventually put out the fire three hours after it started in the Casablanca storage yard. 17322 Murphy Ave. The threat of the exploding propane tank led to a 75-minute long evacuation of 15-0 persons working within a 1,000-foot radius of the fire. The single alarm fire was handled with three fire engines, one ladder truck and 20 firemen. Casablanca Furniture Co president Joe Barrak said the pro- pane was used to fuel a forklift used in the storage yard.· Dr . Lil lyman appointed to new UCI post Dr. William J . Lilly man has been appointed vice chancellor for academic affairs at UC Irvine. Lillyman. a professor o f German, has served as dean of the School of Humanities at UCI since 1973. The vice ch a ncellor for academic affairs is responsible for in struction , research, academ ic planning and academic personnel on campus. Llll yman, a n a t ive o f Australia, received the bachelor of arts degree with first-class honors in German from the University of Sydney. He re· ceived the doctorate in German from Stanford University in 1984. After t.eactting at Stanford and UC Santa Cruz, he came to UCI in ur12 as chairman of the Department or German. The followtn1 year he was named deanofhumanitiu . Llllyman'a pl'imary field or 1cholarabip has been German Uteratur•. particularly of the Utb century. He cu rrenlly d irects tho UC I Focused Retearch Prosram on Goethe. The appointment or UUyma_n .. vlce chancellor for academic atf aln repraents a reinstitution of that potltlon . Tbe post formerb Wat held by Dr. Jemet L . llcG•ucb. wbote tltl• was t ..... ed to Wee CW• ceUor la uni to aa o · pension ol hi.a re1 ----··---·---r~·-·--·-·-·-· ........ ~·~ .............. ~ ............... a .... u .................... s .. -.o•t•t•: ... u•z•a .. s•s•s .... •t•tlJIJl!lillllilil! .... ~ .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. June 23, 1981 P\JBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE .. , ... PICTITIOUI IUllN•ll P'*ll ... Or ..... Coell o.tty Piiot TIM i:=..:T:.=··~• dolnt J..,,. U. ».July 7. 14, t•t 2M1~j l'ICTITIOUI IUllN•ll lllitlneu M : MAM91TAT•M•NT NIEWPOIH CONSTRUCTION TM ... ._........., II dOlnt 111;~. MANAGEMENT, Jl20 llrch Street. PVBUC NOTICE ,... as: Neopot1 lekll. CA t'JiMO. LIH IUE$1EARCH. JUI Mo"'" Cltrll~ Rollen si. ........ -PICTITlOUIMIMN•ll Wey, <Mt.I M9M, CA.,... IUCllMll. C.-la-... CA ma. ....... ITAT8 .... NT ROMld H. Nkholl, JIJI Monroe Relly H. l"vl .. 111, ., Est>le-. TM ...... !fie ,...IOM ... dolne Wey, c ......... CA,,... Newpon a..ci.. CA""°· .... .,,,.N •: Thia MINts la conducied by .. In· Tllla lllislneu 11 conducted by e NEWPORT TILE & CAllNIET, 111 dh•lduel. ..-.1--....11. N. Ne._t llW., ~ a..dl, R-ld H. Nl<Jlola OwlS R, ~ Callflwftla t*2 Tllla ...._, w .. llled wltll Ute Tllll st.I-WM flied wlltl Ille G~ A. l'al<O. tDt IE. v ... II._ c-ty C1e'11 of Or-County°" County Clffll of OrM>ee c-ty.,. w ,0r.,...,c:.tltonN'*' J..,,. S, t•1. June S. t•t. Jw .. S... Oii-. ISM E. Vtllt ,.,..., l'tUMI •• ....,.,Or ..... Gellforftl• .... PublllMd 0r.,.. eo.11 Dally Pllof. Put111.-Orenot Coall O.lly Plto(, Menuel Oererdo l'elco, Old J-t. "·"· J0, 1tfl 2s-.1 Junet ... ,.,, a .1•1 ~ ~:~,::,:.;•d, SuUer Creel!, PVBUC NOTICE fllCTITIOUI MlllN•ll 11tAMa ITATSMtrNT TM tC11towl119 --ts dolne !Mill· llOMH: Cl) COMPU-OUOTIE m SPOltT·A· THON, 1'10. Pelmotto Clrcle. "'- talft Veltey, Cal!Wni. n10I Mlrtem A11n Fernum, tlt06 Palmetto Clrcte. Fountalft Valley, Calltornle t2* Tllla llutlneu 11 condu<tM by en In· dlvld<oal. Miriam A. Fer"""' Thh ....,_ -fifed wllll Ille C.....ty Cler1I a10r.,.. ~Oft AUy PVBUC NOTICE Tlll1 .....,_ 11 c~IM •Y e .....,. ............. 0.....A.l"ek• l'tCTlTlOUI IUStNma Tlli. .....,_, -flled wltll I.lie NAMS ITAT•Mll•T c-ty CltB of OrOll99 c_,., °" Tiit foltowl119 --ere dolnt J-tt, ttfl. IMMIMU .. : Pt ... STEWART AUTOWH<>t..ESALES, ..._,I...., Or .... C-t Dally Pilot, tJSJ Otf'•n Oro,.. llvd .• G•r•n J-D, •• JMly 1, t4, ttfl act-41 Gr-. CellNnlleftM4 Wllll.., L s.-n. t9'U R~ L-. Hlllltlf111$11 INcll, Celttorlll• ,,... PUBLIC ~OTICE • Liiiy E. s. s .... en. t"22 R....... l'ICTITIOUS IUllN•ll LOM. Hllfttl ...... leecll, CellfOnlle NAM8 STATU"&NT ,_.. Tiie lollOwlnt tierMlfla are doing Tlll1 -·-11 COl!dU<tM by • llutlN14 M: ..,,.,.,~. COMMUNITY VOLUNTEERS Liiiy E. S. S....art FOR THE ELDERLY CCVEl, •20 fltuttl Tiii• .._ -flied wltll ltle We11 tttll Street. Coate Meu. Put111.-0r.,. eo.1t Oelly Pllof, County CIMll of OrM>ee Count., °" Celllomla f»17 2t. t•I. J..,,. 2, t. 1', D, ttfl 24Sf.tt J-It, t•t. · SOUTH COAST INSTITUTE FOR ..... ._Or Coast O.llflt= APPLIED GERONTOLOGY, • PVBUC NOTICE ~ITIOUI IUllN•ll ...... ITATaMeNT Tiie ..,IOwl"I ,.,._ la dolnt IMlll· "9HHt G ltAPHIC SUPPORT. IS7t W Kalalla Ave., Aftelwlm, CA t2t02. Terew o . 8eard, '1.0 Caleftdul• A .... WeRmiNtar, CA ttm. Thia _....._ is <OftCRK1ed by en ln- dM~I. T ...... o.a.erd Tiiis -was llled wlltl Uw Couftly Clerk of 0r.,. County °" J..,,.S, ltfl J-~ » JMI ~4 i•t Y2-.. j Calllornla <orpor•llon, 420 w. tttll -• Y • • ,_ SlrMI. C.-ta Mele, C.lltot'nl• t1l21 PVBUC NOTICE This ... ......,,. Is COflducled lly • 'VllOF atlon Soulll Coall lnJlllllM l'ICTITlOUI IUllN•ll '°' Al!Plled GerontOlotY NAMC ITAT•Ma•T Ollw --.. Tiit IOI-.. --Is dolne !lull· T,_..,., neaJ es: Tiiis I~ w .. filed wltlt tlle 1l J ~I WELDING (1) J & I C-tyCler1taf0r .... CowrtyonMey RENTALS. US7 Columtlla Ori••· 29, 1•1. C•le MKe, Gellfomle n.a Pl..U J a<k E. Oeker, U57 Cotumbta Pu1111.-OrMgt eo.11 Deity Pltot. Orlvt. Cas\e ..... Celltot'nl• '""' J-2 ••• "· u. IWI 241541 Thll ...,,,._ II <-.Clad by en lft. .. dlvlduat. JeckE.laller PVBUC NOTICE Ft6»tt Tiiis ..._ wes !lied with Ille Putlll.-Or .... Coaal Oelly Piiot. County Cie'11 of OrOll99 County on PICTITIOUI IUSIN•U J-t . 1', n . ». t•I UIO~t J-It, ttfl. NAME ITATeM•NT l'tMm The tottowlnv o.rson. ••• dolft9 PuOllJlwd Orenot Coast Oe'lty PllOt, llUJlMIJ H : PlJBUC NOTICE J-n .•. JMly 7, t4, ltfl 27'1~1 DIAM()tjO VI EW HOMES, •m -Ma<A,_ llvct.. Suite 102. N--1 l'ICTITIOUI I USIN•ll MAMC ITAT•MaNT PUBLIC NOTICE Bee< 11. c.i tfornla nwo Tiii IOllowWtt ,.._ Is dolnt !Mill· - Mii H : Diamond View Vitt-. e Genefel Pertnertlllp, Ill Gene<at Pa'1Mr, 42'9 l'ICTlTlOUI IUMN•SI MecArlNW 81YCJ., Suite 102, Newport MAM8 ITAT•Ma•T B .. < ... Callfornl•tlWO P. J. PAltTY PLANNING, t Fl..,_ ........ 1.W.., CAtl1U. Tiie .__,,. ~ 11 ....... ...,.... AlllN II, e Umlled Par1nenlllp • -e•: Its General Partner. JOO Uewport Pemate .-. Wlc...,,._, t FllntrldQll. '"''"'"·CA mu. Tllla _,,,... la conducted by en ln- AMERICAN SUIWIVAL COM· Cente r Drive. Suite JOt. Newtl<)r1 PANY, alS W. ..... 81Yd., Sul .. a.ac11. CA!lfornla t:IMO dh•'-'· P-laJ.Wk - m . N""'"'1 le«I\. eai-..aa t..a Thi• llV!llnesa Is conducted llY • E-._ .. , ~. 441 W. oener•l ,..,,,.nlllp. Tllls ~I ... llled with Ille County Clerll of Or-c-ty on Coell Hl9llwey. Newport leach, Diamond View Horn" Call fer Ille tM1 a o..-el Pen,,., anlp Tiiis lluliftMa II C-.Cted by en lft· ly. ~View VIiia_. 1'16*7 div....... •~el P•'1nerllllp ........... Or .... c.Msl Oelly Piie«. Edw4ft •. ~ Its~ .. P•r1ner JUMl,l•t. J-'· ... n . JO,,., 1'441 Thlt .....,_ ... llled wllll -By: TM Jolin ,,....,," Caunty Cieri! of 0r..,.. C-IY on 1.ornpa11y, PVBUC NOTICE J-"· ttfl. • CAllfoml• <Ofl1Dr•l"111 l'tMm 111 Gefterat Penner PulllllMd Or .... Coast o.lly Piie«, By: J«wl T. ~In l'ICTlTlOUI '4ntNa1& J-n . •· J..i., 1, t4. tttt ve..11 '" PrftlCMnt NAM&ITAT•M8NT ly. RutJ\E.Oclloa Tiie ,..._,._. ...,_ er• H ine p• ...,UC NOTICE 111 Secretary bull-•= U D By; Crlwton OeWloP .• Inc. • ~l,L•:!'.:~~~ .. A:,.:=I • lt~I;~.:: P=•:i:::.:.~11 :.~~=lloft -· ....,.n a , Gel fomle,... By: Ooneld e. Bouchet It.wt v. Gifleeol, t ltut C-1, Tiie ,......... ...-11 ....,_ INtl· 111 Pnaloent Newpot1 loecll, c:.tltonw. '2MO NII n : By. Fr-L. FeftM .._.,I( . .__, SI -.tecl• ADOLT MANUl'ACTUltlNG & Vk ePr-elldellt Drive eor-dtl Mer C..lltornle DESIGN COMl'AHY. MU Pl«Of'llle, Tllla ste'-"-t wes llled with tlle tK2S ' • C-. MeM. c:.llfemla taZ7 County Cie'11 of Or$1199 County on Tiii• -lnu1 la conducted tly e s.r-1 IE. MIDl1. 1"92 S-ycr-J..,,. a, ••• . ..,,.r•t penren~ Lene, Hunt!,...,. IMcll, Calltcwnle R ... ttV.GIMon "'47 • ..._,,l(.....,l &_rt.....,. l'tU7 .. Thlt sUtement -flted wllll 1t1e Thlt ......... 11 ~ llY., In-A,.,......_, Law C.-eeMll C-ty Cten af Or .... C-y on #My dlvMluel. s.tta t• t1, l•t. ~IE. MIOfl 4Jtt .._...,....._,,.,._ ltOl••T 11 ... ..,.., .... Thlt __,_ -flled wl .. Ille ....._.., ..... CeMlwMa .... .......... C... Dr., .... UI C-ly C1e'11 of Or-C-ty °" PllOlllMd <Wenot Coalt Dally PllOJ .._..,. e..ca, ~ nw:.iu. J-"· ttfl. ,.,...,, J~ne 10. 11, n. Jut., t, "'' 2w .. t P'*lllwd Or.,.. CO.II Dally PllGt, ~llNd Or .... CO.st 0.lly Piiot, J -2, '· "· u. "'1 ~· J-n. •. Jiiiy 1, 14, ttfl ...,., P\JBLJC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE l'ICT1T10UI IUltN•ll l'ICTITlOUI MlllN•ll MAM9 ITAT•M8NT lllAMll ITATeM8NT The foll-Int perlOM ere dol1>9 Tiie ... _.,,. _...., dol"9 llutl· llwlnelles· MN a1; • C USTOM DRAPERY CCH SCIENTIFI C, USI TREATMENTS 201tl Crown RMI Weslll119ten Avenue, Coste Mue, • C.ellfwftla ..... ~· Huntl ..... llM<ll. Callforftle ~I "· ...._.., Jl'9 WOllll""°" V attrle JHn G•ll•tller tOltl A,.._, CWU Miu, C..llfornle t»» Cl"OWn ltw La,,., Hu!ltlntton 'a.ec11, Thi• ......_. 1• <OlldlKted tly Oii ln- Ctllflwllla ,._ •v...i. 0.Mla Gelletlfter, 201tl Crowt1 CM1 R. Ha"'9dl Reel Lene Huftttneto" auch Tlllt ~ w• flied wlll\ IN Callforllle --• C-t'I' Clerti .. 0r.,.. C-ty ... Thl1 _....,. le <Mducted tly en in-J-n , tttt. dlY...... ..,..,. Veltrle J. Gtllegfttr PWll.,_ Or .... c.Mtt Delly PllM, Tiii• a~ w .. fifed wltll 1f1e J-D, •.July 1. 14, 1"'1 ~ c-ty Cten of Or .... c-ty OI\ • IMy "· "''· PUBLIC NOTICE l'16alM ,._...._Or .... Coast Deity Pllt4, J-2, '· "'n. ttfl ~' PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Furnace leaks fixed -~ A llnwted St.,ty ONLY 527995 1 100'4 Solid Stata Chmi1 •In-line Plctu1t Tubt • A11tom1tj' f1tq11tn• cy Control 1 Automatic Color Control NOW ONLY 549995 LAMENT -Historian Arthur Schlesinger in a commencement ad· dress to North · eastern Uni · versity graduates d eplored what h e termed the drift toward conservatism among young people . WITH PAOCAAMMAIU SCAll REMOTE CONTROL 1 Fro11n f'vod Stor•tt Com 111rtm1111 • 2 tce'11 hsv , Tr1y1 1 Door Shtl¥ts lor•ltl. milk. tall bonles e Quartz Eltctrvnic Tuni ... -11 Cll111fllls 1 1110% Solitl State Chauit , 111-liM lllCAI Mmix ricturt Tellt 1 Callte AMY Midlt111d Cht11MI Se6tctio11 C•lflility Wet....,1 l1n1tti on httl\ '"-' c>I•• 1 Only 26" w1d1.61 .. hifh ONLY 539995 • 111 cu n. no-I,..,... "'fNConuor • II a4 cu n. ~r • Equipped fr>r opUOr\&I AU\OlrAt.M-IOllm&ller ·••rh~lewl~l>le lhel- • CoveNO mo&&. p&n.. • ,,....., ..... , '""tell "' l'IC'rm&I" s-11.1on helpe .... ~-t • Dual i..m""""'-""' cont.role ONLY s599•s 25~~ .. o··· VIR ll INlllClll CGltrolle~ Color TV WITH DUAL MOOE REMOTE CONTROL • 'wi•rm-SoulMI 4S,Ml<tr s • ., ... Sysuma Hitlo FWelity A,..iif lef • Ou.u Electfoec Tll•Uit-t1 ci.. .... SAVE s15000 • E Mlf\' COltKIOU' Seli4 St.ti Ch un e I• l-Bladi Metrt• 'onur• T11be " perFormance ONLY 1 ' T ELEVI S IO N 5 549'~ 25" dlCICJOMll COLOR TV / 25EM2807P MEDITERRANEAN STYLING c abinet constru cted of a combination of genuine hardwood solids. wood composition board and simulated wood accents. ~ -----·---Ill• AVfOMATI~ COOllH COITROl e 4-l:ydt Wash Stlec:tivn includin1111tr1V savtr dry option 1 2 Wash ltvth • Soh hod Diltl_, • Duel Ottlftlftl Disttenw 1 Sound lnwlettd F1e1 urea A UTO ll;IA TIC COOKI N G CIONTllOL-No need 10 1e1 llm • ....,..,.....°'_ 1 ... 1. autorna11catty adiUll• IOr dllfet'elll ~ollood , With 1he GE apace-maker Microwave OVen. and vour own range, YoU have 1 complete cooking centerl 5599' J .... .. , ,,. ,. 1 ·1 11 , .. -------- DRllll ClllT . . . . . . TU ESOAY, JUNE 23, 1~1 MOVIES STOCKS 83 87 Thinking. about investing in the stock market? Try throwing darts ... B5 University Drive coillpletion pushed fn a move expect~ to draw widespread reaction. Newport ~each City Council members have agreed to take steps toward preparing environmental. documents for the completion of University Drive. The long-planned but much· delayed road p roj ect has • ~come a political hot. potato in recent years. Even with two councilmen who are opposed to the Universi· l .. ()C pair shot to death A 15-year-old Costa Mesa girl and a 19'-year-old Huntington Beach man were shot to death Monday night in a Westminster apartment. Police arrested a 16-year-old youth who they say was angry that the girl was breaktng up with him. Brena Lee Baird of 592 Hamilton St. was s hot three Umes al 10 :55 p.m. and was pro- nounced dead two hours later at the Fountain Valley Community Hospital trauma center, police said. William John Hein1 of 16041 Craig Lane was pronounced dead at the scene at an apartment complex near Westm inst er Avenue and Golden West Street. He was shot once in the chest. Police said both victims were killed with a .22caliber1hand_Jun. The suspect, whose identity is being withheld because be is un· der 18, lived with his parents in the apartment, the scene of the slayin1s. They weren 't home during the shooting, police said. The youth was charged with suspicion of murder. police said. A neighbor who apparently h~rd shots had wrestled U\e sUipect to the carpet inside the apartment, when a patrol car arnved, police said. Tbe patrolmen, responding to a call, arrived at the apartment complex in lime to hear the· three s hots be ing fire d . .. Former Mesa Mayor Jonlan • • eecuperatmg Former Costa Mesa Mayor )Villard "Will" Jordan. now in ~seventh week at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, is on the road lo recovery and may be re- leased within two weeks . ·.A hospital spokeswoman said Jordan was ·'admitted for a serio1i1s illness for which he had surgery, and he is now on the road to reeovery." She would oot elaborate further, except to s~y that Jordan is listed in good ~ndition today and that he has been undergoin g physical therapy. . Jordan, now first vice presi- d.el'll of the Costa Mesa Chamber bf Commerce, was both mayor and vice mayor of the city dur- bic an 11-year tenure on the City Council starting in 1963. He also t)u served in numerous other ci· ty posts. Nate Reade, chamber n - ecutive manager a nd close fciend, said today the family sa1d Jordan bad undergone sur- gery for colili5, an inOammation t ot the colon, and that he had been confined to the hospital's lnlensive care unit fo r two w~ks. ;ordan reportedly is planning & September trip to Alaska from ~ hospital bed. ·. Girl found Unconscious at Newport ty project absent from the Mon- day evening meeting, the vote was still close. Council members John Cox. Phil Maurer and Evelyn Hart voted for the environmental study. Mayor Jackie Heather and Ruthelyn Plummer voted against it. Councilmen Paul Hummel and Don Strauss, both critical of the road completion, are on vaca- tion a nd did not attend the meet· ing. "This issue has dragged on and on with lots of excuses and l' m tired of waiting," said Coun· cilman Cox. ··1 think we should stop talking and get on with it." University Drive, envisioned by some as a vital transporta- tion corridor between Irvine and Costa Mesa, currently comes to a halt on each side of the Upper Newport Bay. For years the chief stumbling block on whether the road will be completed has been the lack of proper environmental impact studies. Tbe issue was put on hold in 1976 by Newport council mem- bers. "I just can't stand still for postponing this any longer," Cox said. "We can't let a few people who are so concerned abo4t hav- ing a road in their backyards push us around any longer." The main objection lo com- pleting University has been that o.11, ................ Balboa Jal.and laundromat owner Dante Velpignani stands next to hia el.«tronic lkill games that hove been earning him problem.I aa weU a1 mofWJI. Newport &och cit11 offlciaU have on:1emt the machines unplugged. Machines washed up? Newport Council orders la~dromat games unplugged By STEVE MARBLE Of .. 0.11, .......... Dante Vespignani, the Balboa i Island laundromat owner who has stocked his business with electronic gamff as well as washers and dryers. bas been orde red to unplug and remove his s pace-age skill games. V es p i gnani , who acknowledges that his popular lames have brought complaints rom business neighbors, wasn't n hand Monday evening wben tne Newport Beach City Council handed down the order. But he says it doesn't matt.er. He has no intention of shutting off the juice to the machines - Asteroids . Star Castle a nd Scramble. 'Tm not trying to be a wise guy," Vespignani said today from his Santa Ana Heights home. "It doesn't pay to be a wise guy but I'm just not com- fortable with what's happen- ing." Several of Vespignani's busi- ness neighbors showed up Mon· day claimin g they aren't comfortable with what's happen- ing at the Goldenwest Laun- dromat on Agate Street either. Gene Baum, president of the Balboa Island Improvement As· sociation, told council members that because of the electronic games, the laundromat has become "a public nuisance." In a re port prepared by Newport police, it was stated Dante claims machines keep kids off street that the 24-hour laundromat was attracting a rough crowd of youths who drink and use pro- fane language while slipping quarters in the machines. Councilman Phil Maurer, who lives on the island, urged re- moval of the machines. He sug- gested "the city must protect the e nvironme n t for t he children. But Vespignani says, as far as he knows. his machines are not causing a problem. "Of course the machines at- tract kids -why else would I have them?" he asks. He claims that, if anything, his machines keep youths off the street. ··Parents call down there and ask me to send their kid home a nd I send him hom e ," the- laun.dromalownersuggests. Vespignani says he didn't al tend the council session because he thought he'd worked out a compromise. He claims he offered to keep a security guard on duty at the laundromat from 7 p.m . lo mid· night and to equip the machines with an automatic shut-off de· vic e that would bec ome operative at the stroke of mid· night. But cowicil members, unan- i mou s I y aRreei n g th e machines were not good for the health, safety and morals of the island, voted that the m achines must go. Whether the machines will go remains to be seen. County budget soars Proposed spending plan for 1982 up $68 million By FREDERICK SCHOEMEBL Of .. Delly "'9 _.,. A $711.7 million for 1982 budget that is more than $10 million out of balance is now in the hands of members of the Orange County Board or Supervisors. The propoeed spending plan, submitted by county Ad· ministra\ive OHlcer Robert Thomas, ls up about '88 mlllion from Ute current flacal year•a budtet. Fiscal 111111 ends next Wedneaday. In a letter to 1upervl1or1. Thomas said the board bu three opOona to brin1 tbe bud1et iD1o balance: divert federal revenue aharilll to tbe $211 million ,-eneral f\md; make acro11-tbe- board cuta, or mu• Hleetl" ~ ID ceNID prosrama. Supentlon wW ......... propoeed ==.• meettn1 at t :*> a.m. W •1· Aetloa on tbe final bud&et wU1 not oecs until after budaet bt1rin11 le.Mda:r iD mld.JulJ. Tbe --=.... plaa ...... .. mllliH .., =~ .. and-= ,... ........ ..., .......... . AM1"U lit t.be .-.... .u .. oftlee NY ..... , a,.._... ,.. .......... ....,eoaldlie made available to balance the budget. "Thls alternative is a de- parture from previous years in which revenue sharing funds County faces something of budget crunch have not been U5ed to support operaUq programs, but were uMcl prhnarUy to fund capital pro~tl ,net social pro1rams," Tbomaalaid. He cauUoned that revenue lbarilia ,.. eou1c1 onJ.J be used to bA1aiaN tbe budpt for one JUJ'., 11Dee reYeDm lbariDI ea· tltlem"'8 '° ........ .,.. eftdJnc after tbe \Q)eOdliDI ftleal year. ror tbat ....... 'lbomu aaJd, "I believe the oab viable prac· Utal alternatlHs are either acrau·lM-board cuta, or aelec· tin e""**9 Iii prosnm areu. .... .,_...,. tbeM optlont once a1alm eacb departmen· tl .. •eJ cllnctor mUll lcleDUt.Y maadatecl .....,... •• , ••d de-tenabM dme ,.,.....,, wblcla an Ult bl .... t prlolit1:• be laid. Orange County is racing somethine of a budget crunch, analysts said, because fewer dollars are availab1e from the state and federal governments. Thomas said all county de- partment heads have been asked fo r e -examine Individual budcets for possible cuts. As has been the case in past years, the mammoth Human Se rvices Agency, whic h ad· ministers health and social services programs, would re· celve the lion's s hare of the bud1et, $237.5 million. The En· vironmental Management Agen- cy would receive $38. 7 million; General Services A1ency1 $42.4 million. About 965 million would be directed to 1eneral ad- ministration and S.121 million to (Ommunlty safety. -JOHNNIEDHAM Countr)r dance signup& t Registration " under way tor a countr)'·W•lern danc:e cl&11 sponsored by the Costa Me11 Recreation r>.pertmtnt. Thoee lnt ... ted ma1 rt1l1ter at the IAtswe Servlqa Office, 77 Fair Drive. Rt1l1tralion by mall a1ao l1 av1U1bl•. the construction of the road will be an environmental menace to the sensitive back bay area. Of- ficials from the state depart· ment of Fish and Game and the California Coastal Commission are on record as opposing the road job. Mayor Jackie Heather said she opposed Monday's action because ''the timing is rotten.'' She said state coastal com- missioners are preparing to re- view local coastal J>lans that s how University on road maps. M'ayor Heather suggested the council would be wise to wait un- til this process is completed. Newport city officials pointed out that it will be several months before a firm can be selected to prepare the documents and that council members will have op- portunities to back out of the deal. * * • SA Heights . plnn nixed In one or its last actions before its slat.e charter runs out, the South Coast Regional Coastal Commission has approved the county's land use plans for Laguna Niguel and S unset Beach. But the commission, which will officially go out or business July 1, turned down a land use plan for Santa Ana Heights in an 8-1 vote Monday because of pro- posed plans to extend University Driv e Nor t h past U ppe r Newport Bay. The California Coastal Act, which went into effect Jan. 1, 1977. and under which the coastal commission was formed, calls for the state's six regional commissions to be disbanded Ju- ly l. Both the Laguna Niguel and Sunset Beach plans were ap- proved in unanimous voles by the commissioners with little discussion at Monday's meeting in Huntington Beach. Howe ver, on the plan for San- ta An a Heights, which lies, generally, betwee~ Upper Newport Bay and Ora ge Coun- ty'• John Wayne A. port, the commissioners voted Javor of conditions which, ii met, could lead to its approval. The first condition was for the county to delete the proposed ex- tension of University Drive betwee n Newport Beach and lrvine. Though the county has no im- mediate plans to make the ex- tension, officials of the county Enviro nmental Management Agency said traffic congestion on arterial highways s urround· ing the area is becoming more preva lent. But the commission said a four-lane highway such as the county is proposing would be too disruptive to birds and other wildlife that live in tbe area. The commissioners also called for a specific plan to be pre- pared fo r Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve restorations. including the construction of dikes. dredging of silt and any filling of the shoreline. The third conditfon deals with new building standards, such as height limitations in Santa Ana Heights .. With commission chairwoman Ruth G alanter casting the lone diss enting vote. th e co m - missioners decided not to in· elude a condition recommended by the coastal commission staff that resale controls be included tn the plan on all new affordable housing units. In their written recommenda- tion to the commission, the staff said the resale condition should be included so low-cost housing "will l>e protected from the presslfres of the speculative market. .. " Citron raps attacK of retirement fund Orange County Tax Collector- Treasurer Robert Citron has de· nounced the Grand Jury for a re- port in which the panel was highly critical of the manage. ment of the $300 million county employees retirement (und. The jury, in one of three re- ports scheduled to be released this week, said more emphasis should be placed on increasing the rate of return on investment and urged county supervisors to consider bi.ring a full-time ad- ministrator to run the fund . Too much money, the panel said in a 14-page report, is locked up in long-term bonds. Citron, wbo6e office oversees management of the retirement syste m, said steps have been taken to improve the rate of re- turn. Citron said about $60 million have been invested in ............ ,.... .... NN .. 11111lfORIWMIR'TW9' HACH - Jody Qualn1 a Newport Harbor H11h School araduate, WU named lliu. Newport Beach in recent ceremonie1 at the Newporter lnn. 9mTeaU1 a student at Oran1e Coaat Colle1e, 11111 Qualn ••• lpoGIOred by TbomMD A.Ir Charter. Runnen·up wen SbUDOD Cleye and Gretc:bm C.Olu. stocks as opposed lo bonds and that the 8.8 percent rate of re- turn cited in the jury report is increasing. Muc h of Citron's ire was directed at the jury's suggestion that the retirement fund is pay- ing a disproportionate share of the salaries of Citron and his top assistant, Ray Wells. Twenty five percent -$13,4-47 -of Citron's salary is charged to the retirement fund, as is 50 percent -$23.539 -of Wells'. Citron said that while it may be true that he does not devote 25 percent of his time to retire· ment fund matters, the charge is proper because he possesses the experience necessary for mak· ing proper investments. Victim crawls out of ravine to aid driver A SS-year-old Fountlln Valley man with back injuries crawled up a 40-root embankment in Newport Beach Monday night to set belp after bis f e male companion's car plunged into a ravine. When police arrived, they found the 26-year·old woman driver ln the hrilted wrfftase ot the car wblcb had nipped off Jamboree Road and landed in a ravine jUlt north of the John Wl.)'lle Tennla Club. The drJ •er. Debora h Swartb~ ot Newport Beacb, wu tak• to t.be trauma center •t huntaln VaUe1 Community llotpllal where IM'a Hated in crtUul t'ODdldGD. Tit• f'OUDtala Vall•1 man. Georse Horeburtb. la .... ln llrioUa COiildltilM at t.M f'auntab\ V.U.1"°"*81- Mewporloftleeri Mid tM 11:30 p.m. aeddliat oec•• UM ear, tnftllftc 10Ull~ · boret._ lpull: out ii ro•1 • plowea uaro..-. a feace ua tumbled dOWD the ........... \ - 1 - , t II ., I 1) r1 • • • 0 0 0 a d USP 4 0 a 5 5 5 0 as I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 \ PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE ~...., .. 11lllllMd Or .. C:O.ll Dellr PllOt, J-'· ... u ... "" 2-.1 f'ICTITIOUI aUllNHI NAM•ITATaM.NT ~ICTITICIUI MlllNHS The lel!owl"O per•OM are doll\I PVBUC NOTICE MAMS ITAT9MaNT lllllllMtt •· Tiie , ..... 11'111 --· are .. Int A• O aAltlltY CO. IUI H. E11<lld N..,.tll ~~u::,TH"'lt'S w"'"'P"'lt 1,,_ Aw.,S..lteH,-lm:CA'2tOI. flfCTITioutaUllN•ll • ""''"' "' • -Arnol4 v...-, 1'19 Pw1 EdWard ""·· llAM&ITATC ... fltT Twtltl ""'··cs .. Suite A·143, c.. .. H•w,.rt 9M<h, CA fH,60. TIM ....... "' --., ........ Meu,CAtMV. IUCherd o. St11clley, UOI VI• Ml--; G•.,1••M. hllMll, JJI "'°"''"'· M•rlft<t,........,. .. acll. CA"*-l(AL KAH, t7J02 v ... K•r-~ ~ ... CA1'!!!7.:.~ ••• ,._1 Tith -IMU It '~tecl b., e Aw-, ln!M,Cafffcnll•'*' _, • -,.,_., "' ..,_ • -••I ~tNt>. Kel ic.. ,...._ llllC., a ~·--llMM, CAftU1. Nnold Yenll cor .. erett.n, JJM E . 44111 StrHt.1 Tlllt bualMll 11 conclllcteo llY • Tiii• .ut-• wet 111ec1 with tM v-~-...,.,., __ ,.,_. c°""'" Clerll of Orange c-tY on Tiiis-.,.... It~ b., • c•·1 Gorte M. ... ._ JllM 12 ,.., -••left. Tllll ....,._ was fllOd wltll Ille ' · '1.-S IC.el Kon Feoda, Inc. C_t,, Clet1l Of Or .... County .., PubllllhM ()r009 Coetl Oolly PllOI, H. HellloU, JltM S, 1•1. J..,,. 16, U, JO, July 7, 1•1 210Mll Yiu,,...._ fll...S -----Tlll1 ....,.._, was fifed wltlt tlw .....,I .... Or009 Cool! Dolly .. ,lot, PVBUC NOTICE C-ty Clerk of Or ..... county ... JllM t, 1', U, JO,~ltll 2400-tl J-II, t•1. PVBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUI aUSlNSSS ... ... .... bit ..... Or .... CoNt Dolly ....... NAMS STATSMSNT J-U JO July 1 14, ltlt lMl .. I The loll-Ing persons ••e dolr19 • ' ' f'ICTITIOUS aUSINSSS 1111.tneu •: NAMSSTATSM•NT Nl!WPO!tT CONSTRUCTION PUBUC NOTICE TIM IOll .... "I pertoft IS doing llllll-MANAOl!Ml!NT, Sl20 llrcll StrHt. MU et He~ lleocll, CA t'H60. LaH RE$1!AACH, JUI MonrM Cllrlt~ It~ SlellMns. t011 f'ICTITlOUlaUllN•ll Woy. c .... MHA. CA ma. IYC""-"· C.M MHo. 'tA ma. MMM ITAT91MNT Aon•ld H. Nichols. JUI Mon•oo lhlly H. .....-•• JOI f:lf'I~. Tiie ....... 1 ... --· ore ...... Woy. c ... Mno, CA ma. He•-1 lleecll, CA.,.... .... ., .... •: Tlllt ~Is ,_led l>Y., In· Tllll """""' It co-tH by e NIWf'OttT TILi! • C.AalNIT, Jtl dlvl .... •I. ..-.. _...,llllp. N. Ne.....,, a1..._, *-'1 .. ocll, It-Id H. NkllOll Chrlt It. SletlMM Coll'9rllio...a Tlllt It.Iii-I WM 111..S with Ille Thll --1 was llled """ tlW 0 ..... A. "oko, UM I . VOfl •t• County Cler' ol Or-COllftlY Oft COllnly Clerll Of 0r..,._ COlll\ly e11 llor, Or ... , c.llfcmlet ... J-s. 1'11. J..,,. S, 1•1. Joret SN Oii-. tD4 I . y.,, "'""' .. , .......... Or ..... c..llfontlo,.... Publl.-Or<NI09 c ... 11 Dolly Piiot, P11b11.-Or.,,.. c ... st Dolly l"llot. Mon11ol Oer.,do Falco, Old JUMt, 1',U,JD, 1•1 JS,.., J-·· 16,U,J0, 1•1 , .. , ... ~:.:~.::~ ... Sutter CrHll, PUBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUI auStNEd' M~STATSMSNl' The lollowl"I ...,_ It doi"I lllni· ....... , Cll COMPV~TIE 121 SPORT·A· THON, 1'10. P .. -Circle, F- tolr1 veu..,, Colllomlo tlJOI Miriam Arin Fa rnum, 1110• Pelmotlo Circle, F011t1loln Velley, Colllo,,.t• '17111 Tlllt -lnoM It Condllel.cl by 011 II\ dMclllel. Miriam A. F•r""'" Tlllt _ _, wu fllecl with IM C-ly Clef1! Of Or antt ColllllY on Moy Tlllt ..... 1 .... Is c~tecl by e ~ .......... . PVBUC NOTICE 0.....A.Folco fltCTITIOUS aUMN•ll Tllll ....,_. -llled wttll Ille MMM ITATllM8fltT c-ty Cler1t flf Oraft90 C-ty °" T .......... 11 •• --ore ....... J-"· ""· _,___ ....... S TEWA AT AUTOWHOt.ESALl!S. ...... ..... Or-c.est o.tty fltlOt, 11n Oar-Otwvo llvd., Gar-J-n. a , Jwty 7, 14. ,.., aa .. 1 Gr..,., c:.tlfomlo ...... Wll"-E. ~ 1'"2 It ....... 1.-. H .... I,...., ao.ch, c.l'"""a ,,.... P UBUC NOTICE • I.Illy I . S. s...n_ 1'"2 It..., f'ICTITIOUS aUSINaSS Lano, HllMI,..... llM<I" Coll-• NAME ITATSMUtT '2t46 The lollowlng pertofll ore doing Tiii• blnlnett 11 cOftdllctecl by • buslneu .,, _,.,__..... COMMUNITY VOLVNTF:EltS Liiiy I . i. S.Wort FO!t THE 11.0l!ltLY (CVE I. 410 F1 ... I Tllll -WM fifed Wltll tlw Woll ltth Street, (Otte MOH, PllbUIMd Or009 Cofft Dolly Piiot, C-IY Cterll of o,...,.. c-ty °" C .. lfon\le fMV 1', 1•1. J-2, t , 1•. 13, 1•1 14Jt..tl J-"· ltlt. ,,.._ SOUTH COAST INSTITUTE FOR ........... Or c..stOoll l>I..._ A .... LllEO Gl!ltOHTOLOGY, • PVBUC NOTlcE f'ICTITIOUS ll.>SINEIS ..,....STATIMl:NT Tlw 1o1-,,. -'°" It delng bu~· MHH; OltAPHIC SU .. POAT, IS11 W. Kllello Aw .. -•m. CA tam. Ter•N o. Beard, '760 Celend11I• Avo .. Wearn1111to<, CA t'?tll. Thlt ~-It conduct.cl by Oft In· dlvl...,•1. Terew o. Beard Thi• ~ was llled with tlle C011r1ty Clerll of Orel\ge CCM1nty on J-s.1•1. ,,..,. Pllbll.-Or-Coe~I Dolly Piie!. J-t, I•, 23, JO, 1•1 llllMI PUBUC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS 9UMNSSS NAMSITATrMEMT The lellowlng -11 dlDl"9 bllal· ....... : ... J ... AATY 1'1.ANNIHG, t f'lfft.. trldge, lrvlM, CA '2HS. ,.•moloJoen Wlchmon, • FllntrlOgo, lrvlne, CA '271S. Thlt llWlftMt It cOl\llllCIH by en Ill· dlvldllel. ,._,.J.Wk- Thlt ~ WM lllecl With Ille (Ollftty Clerll of Or009 COllftty Oft J ..... J, lttt J u a Jul~. 1_, Y2,.,..1 Collfoml• ~llofl, 420 w. lttll -• • Y • ... Street, COS.. Mno, Colllomlo t1IU7 PUBUC NOTICE fltCTITICIUI 9VSINalS MAME STATSMl!Nl' Tiie ,..._.,,. ...,_ It dolftl 1111111· -·••: II J • a WELDING UI J • I RENTALS, 1U7 Columbl• Orlve, c..10 Meu. Collfwnlo tMa J•cll E. DKor, US7 C.ol11mble Orlve, c.u Mew, Coll1wni• tMa Thlt ....,,,... It c..-.c1ocl by .,, lft- dlvlclllol. J8'1l£.aa..r Tlllt ...,._ woa lllod wltll U. C01111ty Clerll of Or-COUftty °" J-"· '"' Tlllt .......,_ fl c-t.ci ltY • ,..._., ..... Sowtll CoMt lnstllllla fer ,..fed 0o,_1o1oqy Ollw"""'-. T- Tll lt llat-1 wOI 111.0 wllll llW c-ty Clen Of Or-C-ty on Moy 21, ""· ,.,~ P11bll"'9d Or ..... Coetl Dolly Pllot, J..,,. 2. t , 16, 23, t•I ZAIS-ti P UBUC NOTICE ONLY ~279 95 LAMl!NT Historian Arthur Schleainaer ln a commencement ad-d r 11 to North · eastern Uni · veraity graduates deplored what he termed the drift toward conservatism among young people. Furnace leaks fixed WASJDNGTON (AP> -The maker ol about 55,000 furnaces used in mobile homes bas launched a repair prottram because of the danger of leaking carbon monoxide, the Con1umer Product Safety Com -mission reports. The danger arises if portions of the vents corrode in model M MG "Mlller" brand liquid propane and natural gas f4f'Jlaces. The f'Urnaces were made by the Home division of Lear Siegler Inc. of Holland, Mich. Corrosion ln the flue pipe ext.en11ion und vent.JI can allow carbon monoxide lo be emitted into living areas, the com mission said. The agency report· ed it bas received reports ol 19 death& associated with such polSODl~g since 1969. The furnaces were sold for use 1ln· mobile homes since 1964, either ,_. original equipment or for replatt ment. The commission said mobile hor.o e owners should check their ruma~o1l for the "Miller" name at the top of the louvered door I( It Is a "MiUerv'' open the louvered door and check the large vertical pipe . If that pipe ls about five Inches across. the furant'l is model MMG. • If you have that model, or are .al sure, contact the manufacturer Ii' calling, toll free, 800 253·3874. Tk firm will arrange for free installation of a new flue pipe extension. 25~~ .. o"" VIR D Braa~Cllt Clltralle~ Color TV WITH DUAL MODE REMOTE CO NTROL SAVE s15000 • 100% Soli4 Statt Cheuii 10AB1406K • In-line Picture Tulto oaa -on NQtl "'l)OCI OIOlllC • Automltic Frequen· CV Control • Automltic Color Control NOW ONLY s499•s 11'~• .. 0nM Cllll' MllillP TV • Frer111 foed Star.,. Ctm· 11.tl'tllllllt • 2 lce'n Eny • Trey1 WITH ,ROGRAMMAIL( SCAlll REMOTE CONTROL I Ooor Shtlltft for""· m1ll1, l .. I btnlft 1 Ou1ttt Electronic T Hitlt-91 C .. 111Mh 1 I 00% S9'ill Stnt Chann • It•· Li .. lledl M.trix Plc1ure T vllt 1 Ce.it RIMy MMlllelNI Channel Selection C9'111iffty Welnul ''"'"' on 11111" •mc>KI o••• •Only 21" w1llt, II" """ ONLY s399ts • 111 ru fl not:m.l ntfl''4•.,..,,r • f' 24 OU t\. f,,_......er • • fqu1ppllCI (~' Ol>UN\AJ '-UCl.>mauc IOlma)ter ·•IJ)l1t..1 ..... ~1· •twt .... • ea...,..., m-t PIM\ • lnero •"r 9W'ttch "' n<'m\11" pc»IUOn holpe C\lt_,,,,_, • Oual"'mpo~ l'0'"1'0ill • 'lrl•""-s .. 1111 4S,Nll°' s .. 1111 lyne1n l Hjp FWtli!V A111 .. rf1tr • Oueru Electronic Tu.1 ... -11 CllHNb 0 perFormance • (MffY Coritet•w• SolHll Suto Cllour1 I lo LIM II.ck Mttu• 'icturw hbo ONLY TE LEVI S ION 5 549'~ 25" diagonal COLOR TV / 25EM2107P MEDITERRANEAN STYLING cabinet constructed of a combination of genuine hardwood solids. wood composition board and simulated wood accents. 1 4-Cyclo W111h Stlec:tion ineludin1 tntrtY uver dry optton 1 2 Wuh ltvtls • Soh Food DiSllMe• 1 0 u1I 0 tte19tt11 Oi,ptnstr • o Sound ln,ul111d ONLY 5 24995 ~~ ,. ~~s --·--•'-• •lW An .. AllC: C:OOCMlt c:tll H l I" 0 • I II ' 0 S AU T O ... AT IC COOK I NO OOHT~-10 te l llm e ..._......°'_ 1eve1. 111IOf9111ce11y Mllltll lot different _,,...Oflood With the GE space-maker Microwave Oven. and your own range. you have a ~te cooking center! · ~ , 5 ssuucssc 2 2 3 , .. ••I .. .. ·-t ---· .. • YDIR lllDnl DAILY PIPIR TUES DA 'f .JUNE .' J 1 ti H 1 ORAN GE COlJN 1 Y . CALIFOR N IA 25 CENTS Quake safety at San Onofre Dispute d BJ DAVID KtmMANN Of .. Dell' ""' .... SAN DIEGO -At times Mon- day. the meeting room where a federal licensing panel ls hold- ing bearings on new twln reac- t.on at San Onofre resembled a 1960s student protest center. But for the balance of the time, which was most of the day. consultant.a for Southern California F.clison Co. pressed their case that nearly completed units two and three at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating sta- tion could safely withstand an earthquake from geologic faults that plant opponents maintain are more hazardous than at first believed. Expected to spend the next two weeks listening to experts on both sides of the question is the three-member Atomic Safe- ty and Licensing Board, which was characterized Monday as a "kanga roo court" and a nuclear industry "rubbe r stamp" by about 50 hand-clapptne oppo- nents who sang a nti-nuclea r melodies and read speeches dur- ing the board's noon recess. Many of the anti-nuclear spec- tators belong to an· organization called the Community Ener1Y Action Network, some of whose members donned monker masks and wore signs critica of the nuclear reeulat.ory commission, • of which the safety and licensing board ls a part. However, before and after the licenalng panel's noon recess, it was Edison's presentation that counted. The ulllity, 80 percent owner of the powerful new reactors n aitln1 licensing, contended that the generating facilities were built to withstand earth- quakes "far more severe than any the area is believed capable of experiencing." Ediaon consultants claim that the largest hypothetical earth- quake possible ln the San Onofre area would measure no higher than 7.0 on the Richte r scale . This la considered a powerful earthquake. Such an earthquake could oc- cur, seismologists said, about five m iles offshore from the coastal power plant site in northern San Diego County. However. the challengers in the federal licensing bearing - a retired businessman named August "Bill" Carstens and the Friends of the Earth environ- mental group -assert that new information reveals there are previously undetected faults which pose hazards tha t the plant's designers have not taken into account. The plant's challengers, or in- <See ONOF RE, Pa«e AZ> Napa fires raging Arsonist·s inferno chars 23 ,000 acres NAP A (A P ) -Hundreds of firefighters battled. today to halt a n a rsonist 's infe rno that charred more than 23,000 wine- country acres, drove hundreds from their homes and sent up an immense plume of reddish-white smoke. An unidentified woman died of a he a rt attack while wetting down her home and seven people were inj ured, officials said. Winds gusting to so m ph and 100-degree temperatures had been pushing the fire, the worst in Northern California this year, toward Fairfield and Vacaville. But at mid-morning, with the fire 20 percent contain ed. Ca lifor nia Departmen t of Fo restry information officer * * * Tom Berry said winds had shift· ed and slowed. halting the ad- vance of the flames. Berry said if conditions re· mained that way. firefighters probably would be able to clear a line around the fire by mid- afternoon. However. Crom the Suisun Valley School, one of the key fire camps, smoke pus hed by westerly winds could be seen pouring over the Blue Ridge Mountains whi c h mark the western edge of the Napa Valley, about a mile to the west. Information ofCicer Richard Schell said the fire had burned to with in eight miles or Fairfield , located ne ar giant <See NAPA, Page AZ> California :=-"-V-.a Sacramento • Napa ... F •irft.ld WHERE FIRE RAGES Napa Valley scorched No woman jus t ice this time? Reagan reportedly set on Southern California jurist WASHINGTON CAP> -P resi- deot Reapn. appareoUy '1ecid- ing a1almt using his first U.S. Supreme Court appointment for t.Jle first woman j uat.ice, has "already picked out" con- servaUve Southern California jwilt J. Clifford Wallace, con- greaalonal IOW'Ces say. Justice Potter Ste wart retires July 3, and sources said Reagan is likely to announce bis selec- tion for a successor by mid-July. Wa llace, a Sl-year-ol d Mormon from San Diego and a Republican lawyer with 11 years I rvine Co. r esale off er 'no c hoice' Saying the company has no re- course but to otrer resale con- t r ols on new houses in the coastal sector, Irvine Company officials Monday express~d sur- prise at a county supervisor's at- tack on the firm's position. The compa n y to ld state coastal commissioners last week it would agree to a requirement that resale controls be placed on so-c alled affordable homes planned for its Irvine Coast de- velopment between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. That decision to go along with the commission stafrs require- ment for resale controls brought an angry response from 3rd Dis· trlct Supe rv is or Bruce Nestande, who termed the com- pany' a decision "a heartless motivation for profit, and ln the moat negaUve sense which I call greed." on the federal bench. "1s the ad· m inistration's front runner," one source fa miliar with the selection process said Monday. "This guy is already picked out as far as the administration is concerned," said the source. who asked not to be identifi ed. Described as a moderate con- servative by various California law yers. Wallace was con- sidered for the high court by former President Ford. but J ohn P a .u I S t e v e n s r i 11 e d t h a t vacancy. Wallace is a member of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco. He was named to that post by former President Nixon aft.er serving in the U.S. -- Dlstri ct Court for Sout hern' California. Wallace. who began a three- week vacation Monday. could not be reached for comment. White House spokesman David Gergen said re1;><>rts about any potential nommees are pre- mature. Arter Stewart announced his resignation, effective July 3, <See COURT, Page AZ> Purs uit on c oas t 13-year-old leads wild chase Newport Beach police said they did a double take early to- day when a 13-year-o ld boy stepped from the driver's seal of a stolen sedan after leading of· fi cers on a 25-minute. JO-mile lane-changing chase. Police said the boy. who raced through four coastal cities befor e slamm ing into a Califo rnia Highway Patrol unit on the San O,iego Freeway. wasn't the only youngster in the car: His passengers, police said, were listed as being 15. 12 and 11. Police said the boys, all from Compton, had little to say for themselves after being collared. Newport traffic officers said the speeding Ford Granada. re- portedly stolen from a Long Beach liquor st.ore. caught their attention around 3 a.m. That's when the car whizzed through a red lig ht on Pacific Coast Highway at Balboa Boulevard. the car had left the Newport city limits police claim it was going 90 mph. Ignoring police si rens. traffic lights and speed signs. the car continued through Lag una Beach . Dana P oi nt and Capistrano Beach. By this tame. police said. Orange County Sheriff Deputies and Laguna Beach authorities had joined the chase A Newport police helicopter was brought in to get a bird's eye view of the action. In Capistrano Beach. oCficers said. the young d river turned on the San U1ego r reeway and started heading north. That's when the California Highway Patrol got into the action - literallv it turned out. At the La Paz Road offramp in Mission Viejo. the young driver slammed into a CHP unit and drifted to a stop. Brighter Lag.u.na pageant d~e Works of Gaug~, Monet , Bosch to be featured The co1.mty bas long opPOSed resale controls on affordable units, but the coutal commis- sion has frequently used its power to impoee such regula- Uons on builders along the coast. Saylnl the ~mpany's "de- cls lon to surrender to the Coutal Comm.inion's policy," diaturba him, Neatande said be believes a "free enterprlse- OUicers were called in as the car picked up speed. By the lime W est ern Iran put on a lert for B ani-Sadr "We couldn't believe it at first." said one officer. "they <See CHASE, Page A%) ORANlif COAST llATIHR Usual early mornin1 low c l ouds a l on g coas t otherwise faire and sunny. Lows tonight in m iddle 60s. Highs Wednesday in m id -70s at beaches . mid-808 ltl.land. Flame Leaper," witb Costa M•a resident Judi Spero in her nnt role u a pateant model. Tbe sculpture lbowa • iYOrY • fi1ure leaping OYer A broue name, head nu1 back and U1bted torcbea beld ln each band ID t•mlnC celebradoa. (8ee aSSALE, P•l•A2> Zambia expels U.S. diplomat8 Back'lta1e, 1taadlal befo ... blinkiDI camera atr'Obel, Miit LUS~KA, Zambia (AP) Slero'1 face, Deck, tboulden, Two Mnior U.S. diplomata are U'1l1I and lep wwe coated wtth belna expelled from Zambia on a U.lek layer el cbalkf Wy cbar'" ol •PJinl for t.be CIA IUbaP a pnpuadoa for ber and four other Amertcaa1 no ..._ loqer ID tbe eountrJ hue been Wiien the Ain't Woltial a a barred from returnlDI a. ,......t model IM "°"8 Ill tlae 1pok11maa for the l'ore\•n t•noaael d•••rtmea& of Mialltrr ...... Rockwell lateraaUoaal ln MtclaMI O'Brtan. bead of UM lfew,oet 8IMIL U .8. &mMA1'1 U.fora1tl011 MU-~O H4 o -· -la I .... _ Ill· boftt<ol -tnaped tentew ..,_ taiUJ e.. IM and .....,. .AJ;; --. • Jolla Daftl' ,.. .. ,. tll• em· wu ...... • r _.. .. , MllJ'• ftnl .........,, wen or· .... -1111111.......-...., ...... ..., ~to ..... tbe (Isl_., ... Al) couatrJ WtuD • boUn. l BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - Ret ldents ol western Iran were told to be on the lookout today for deposed 'President Abolbau an Bani-Sadr, a nd Tehran radio reported nine more people uecuted. The e1:.ecutlona brought to :W the number put before flrinl 1quacll in three day1, many ol tbtm linked by the Tehran gov· ernment to the ru1klve preal· dent. The nwlulloDarJ proHCutor ol ~rmamb.a. pro.me• oa tbe Iraqi border Mid ill • atat.ement publl1bed b1 tile newspaper Jombouri r.1aJDl tbat Banl·Sedr po11lbl1 was on tbe run ln ....tern Iran and urpd people ol tM ...... to be• tile loc*out IGrblm. INSIDI TODAY Waller CroMitt ii bad on t4W1rilion lordght . Or llJCJI lw ever QOn•7 Sn~ Al . , .. \ f -----·----~------,~---~~-,-~-~----------------.--------------------........... --....................... .. # A2 ••••• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. June 23. 1981 From Page A1 ONOFRE .•. tervenora as they are known ftt. ficially, woo a small procedural victory Monday when ASLB Cbalrman James Kelley a1reed to let a Friends of the Eutb re- searcher cross examine Ed.Lion wltne11e1. Attorneys for both the utility and tbe nuclear reeulat.ory com· mission objected, saylnc that Glenn Barlow was not properly qualified by education or ex- perience t.o question expert wit· nesses. Edison's first witness Monday at the quasi-judicial hearing was Jay Smith, a Long Beach geologlat who said his 12-year study of the area indicated that the nearest fault to the $3.3 billion plant, the Crislianitos, was inactive and incapable of damaging movement. The fault is about one half mile from the plant site, which is three miles south of San Clemente. Smith testi!i~ that it bas been about 125,000 ~ears since the Christianitos fault bas moved. But the plant opponents have countered wilb new studies by two geologists which s uggest that certain ~eolo~ical features in an area southeast and off- shore of the San Onofre site could be a so-called ·'zone of de· formation." a long and con- tinuous fault capable of poten- tially causing a more powerful earthquake than that which the reactors can salely withstand, according to intervenor Don May, or the Friends or the Earth. A .. WI ....... Anti-nuclear power demorutrotor makes Iris point at Nuclear Regulatory Commission hearings on new twin reactors at San Onofre. Housing. option offered ; . Developer says iiadustry should in~e marketplace Tbe aASwer to tbe affordable boualn& crisis i.o Oranae County, HYI one dev400per, "ls to let the lndustry build so many damn houses that the marketplace is inundated with new unit.a ." Sandy Sandling, exe cutive vice president of the Warm· ington-Carma Group, told about 200 listeners al a Saddleback Board of Realtors panel dis- cussion Monday night that re- sale controls won't solve housing problems. Sandling joined five other speakers. including a county hous ing offi cial. an aide to Supervisor Tom Riley. a realtor. an attorney for the Legal Aid Society. and a mortgage lender during a discussion of affordable housing in Orange County. He was supported in his state- * * * From Page A1 menl that more units ls the answer to low·cost housin1 by John Seymour. lmmedlat.e put- pnsldent of the CaJllornla As- sociation of Realtors. "Let the marketplace de- termine the question of aflorda· ble housing," Seymour said. Saylng that only 2 percent of the stat.e's land mass is developed, Seymour said government agen- cies s hould "change d ensity boundaries to aJlow more units.'' He said one third the cost of housing is land price and con- struction. "The other two-thirds is government regulation and over-regulation.'' He said inclusionary clauses, resale controls and other gov- ernment regulations will not solve the housing problem. R e ha bilitation of exi s tin ~ * * * RESALE OFFER. • • oriented company would resist such an onerous infringement upon individual property rights and interference in the free housing market." Irvine Com)$ny Senior Vice President Tom Niels~p.upooded to Nestande's attad by saying be is surprised by the lone of the supervisor's letter. "He knows the position we're in," Nielsoo said. "As long as the Coastal Commission has the overf'.iding authority to require res ale controls, neither tlfe Irvlne Company nor the county has much choice In the matter." "It's an awkward situation, and we are accommodalini)t as best we can." Nielson said. "The alternative, of course, is t..o refuse t.o accept the CoasµJ Co mmission's requirements for resale controls. 1'his would re- sult in rejection of the Irvine Coast plan, which in tum, ob- viously means there would be no affordable housing on which lo impose any controls .'' houslng unit.a. making more 1anQ available for bousin", and "not! in.stalling a trash muher, diab • washer or ftreelace In low·cost: units,·· is the way to create ar · fordable housing. Legal Aid Society attorney Crystal Sims said she supports regulation. such as the county's. inclusionary housing program.~ which states 25 percent of new housing must be affordable to people earning 120 percent of me· dian incomeorless. Terming Orange County's. housing shortage a crisis. Ms. Sims puts part or the blame on Proposition 13, which she says made the developer responsible for new roads, sewers , higher permit fees -expenses that are passed on direelly to the ne w home buyer. Judy Swayne, a spokesma~ for Supervisor Riley, agrees the: inclusionary housing program is necessary. But, she said, resale controls.' "Is an issue that the stale< Coastal Commission and the Orange County Housing Authori- ty have attempted to thrust upon. the county." And while she says the county is concerned about speculation in the housing market. resale controls are not the solution Begin quotes U.S. pape r The two geologists who dis· covered the of(shore zone - Gary Greene of the U .S. Geological Survey and Michael Kennedy of the state's Div.ision of Mines and Geology -are ex- pected to testify next week. The N RC stalf supports the Edison position on the earth· quake safety of the huge nuclear plant. From Page A1 ARTS ... wavered under her weight. "Are you comfortable ?" asked director Eytchison. while those in attendance laughed at the thought of being comfortable in that position. RObbins witness cites dinner date lo addition, a spokesman for the company s aid today Nestande was aware of the com- pany's intention to resolve the resale control question with the commission a day before the coastal panel met last week. JERUSALEM I AP1 -Prime Minister Menachem Begin told an Israeli parliamentary com- mittee he has a U.S. document showing the United States knew of Iraqi plans to build atomic bombs, a senior offi cial said lo· day. The official. who lnsisted on not being identified, said Begin disclosed the top-secret docu· menl's existence to the Foreign Affairs and Secutity Committee at a Monday briefing. Southern California Edison predicts that commercial opera· tion of Unit Two could begin by the second quarter of 1982 while Unit Three could be "on line" in 1983. Before they are fired up, however. it will taJte a favorable ruling of the safety and licensing board, whose decision could be appealed to the NRC and ul· timately t.o the federal courts. Later hearings in San Diego by the licensing board wiU also focus on the adequacy of evacuation plans to be as-ed in the event of an accidental re- lease of radiation at San Onofre. The hearings are being held at the Stardust Hotel and Country Club here. From Page A1 • Reporters also viewed a copy of Gauguin's painting "Sacred Spring," with Roberta Cortez of South Laguna and Beth Koehler of Irvine. The colorful scene s hows two Tahitian girls s eated by a spring. seemingly al peace in their surroundings. Others included "Lotus Lilies" by Charles Curran, with models Lynelle Webb of Laguna Beach and Barbara Eljenholm of Dana Point in a brilliant scene by a lil~ POnct. ' Mark Stephenson and Troy Clem of Laguna Beach appeared ln '· Marks mansh.ip," a scene taken from a poster advertising Buffalo Bill Cody's Wild West Show. The Laguna Beach Pageant•of the Masters will run from July 14 lo Aug. JO at the Irvine Bowl. COURT NOMINEE. • • Reag_an dangled the possibility that his first Supreme Court ap- pointment might go to a woman. He said he was .. always" on the lookout for someone to PQssibly From Page A1 NAPA .•. Travis Air Force Base. The blaze, set by an arsonist, began arowid 1:30 p.m. Monday at four separate locations along the famed SUverado Trail, of· ficials said. By 9 p.m. they had joined into a s ingle massive blaie. raging across unpopulat· ed grass and woodland in the direction of Fairfield. The fire, which spared the area's 18 wineries and the Silverado Cowatry Club, was 20 percent contained by 7 a .m .. ac- cordlng t.o Scbell. who said some 1,100 men in two shifts, 15 air tankers. 108 engines and 20 bulldozers were going to be thrown against the fire today. As for full containment, CDF spokesman Ed Karmen said, "they're oot even talking about that. They're talking about where this fire is going to go and they're talking about location! rour and five miles in front of the fire." . Fire 1pokesman Nick Fowler of the Lake Napa Ranier Unit said lnvestigaton decided the cause of the blue was anion becau1e "we bad four, separate fires set within five minutes of each other In one ire a." become the court's first female member. Oct'. 14, then· candid a.le Reagan said, "I am announcing today that one of the first Supreme Court vacancies in my administration will be filled by the most qualified woman I can possibly fand." In a letter lo Reagan. Senate Judicia ry Chairman Strom Thurmond, R-S.C., suggested elght people, including Wallace and three women, as possible candidates to succeed Stewart. In addition to Wallace. Thurmond suggested Attorney General William French Smith; presidential counselor Edwin Meese III ; White House aide Elizabeth Hanford Dole ; and three judges, Charles E . Simons Jr., chief U.S. district judge in Columbia, S.C., Cornelia G. Kennedy o( the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Detroit; Amalya L. Kearse, of the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York, and C. Bruce Little- john of the South Carolina State Supreme Court. Judge Kearse, a native of Thurmond's South Carolina, is a black woman named to the bench by former Pre1ldent Carter. Mrs. Dole is the wile of Sen. Bob Dole. R-Kan.; and Judce Kennedy is frequently suggested as a possible first woman justice. ' The Wbl'-Ho~ preaa office said Smith and Meese have asked not to be considered. O"ANOI! COAST Diiiy Piiat Claesfhd ~efnt 714/M2·M71 All oth9f dlpertrnents M2..a21 Thomae P. Haley ~.,., ~ 1-.ti.. °"'°" Robert N. Weed .......... M. Thomae KMVO ... MtchMI P. Harvey ........... ~ l l(ey~z11 a..-• ~~oddlrd Jr, T~'$· Mvrphlne !::!' lchulrnan a.tee H. LO:>I ............. .._ MAIN OflflCf QOWe.ia.ysa,c .... -..,CA ~u .--... '*· eai.-.., CA -. .. ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -Slate Sen. Alan Robbins denied two years ago that he'd tried to get a dinner date with the star witness against him in his sex-with· minors trial, says the girl's former teacher. Orvin Roome testified Monday that he spoke to Robbins by telephone in 1979 about a Jett.er Robbins sent him concerning Lori Terwilliger , one of the two women who say. they had sex with Robbins when they were 16. Roome told a six-man, six- woman jury: "l thanked him for taking her to lunch. He said, in effect. 'No problem. I was happy todoit'.'' Bl.at Roome said Robbins de- nied calling Ms. Terwilliger and asking her out to dinner, w,hich she contends he did. Robbins, a 38-year -old Van Nuys Democ rat, faces nine felony counts alleging that he had sex acts with underage girls. Eight charges involve Ms. Terwilliger, now 18, who says she met Robbins when she went to his office to interview him for a high school class taught by Roome. She says Robbins told her she was pretty and kissed her hand. then took her to lunch and b o ught her an alcoholic beverage. She says he later called her and asked her to din- ner, and they began having an affair. Roome said Robbins sent him a letter in mid-February 1979 asking permission for M s. Terwilliger to spend the follow· ing March 29 at the Capitol. "This letter will constitute permission for your pupil, Laura Terwilliger, to spend the day at the Capitol on March 29 as part of your community Ufe class," the letter said. It also said that Robbins had reviewed the class program and believed that it was "truly the best program that I have seen for any high school chlss in California." Roome told district attorney't; investigators earlier that he called Robbins and rejected the request after Ms. Terwilllger's guardian, Pal Skiles, com · plained that Robbins had called her ward and asked her out. "I t.old him it would be belt.er that she did not go on the 29th of March," Roome said. "He (Rob· bins) agreed to that." Earlier, seveTal current and former memben of Robblns' staff sald they remembered see- ' From Page A1 CHASE. • • were just kids. I mean really kids." Officers said it was amadn1 that no one wu b\,lured in the chase. But police were reluctant to credit the youth's driving ablliUe1 for the lack ol lnJUQ'. Polle• aaid autborlU11 now have tbe Job of coni.c:Un1 t.be bo)'I' parenta and trJIDI to U· plain lbe altuaUoo. Bomh!ngre~ ISLAMABAD. P&ldlWi (i\P) -Soviet .... bombed ,.. •tron1a.o&da ·la .. pan. ot Ku· debar, A11baDi•taa'a HOOIHI lar,..t dt,, Md bUDdNCti al DeoPi. ..,. belined kllled. an A.f lhan no c~aaed to bave teen the bombml reported . ing Ms. Terwilliger in Robbins' Senate office in February and Marc h of 1979, when Ms . Terwilliger says she had sex with him. Two women said they took phone calls from her to the senator. And two others testified that Ms. Terwilliger went into Robbins' private office on one or more of her visits. Gladys Keith. Robbins' personal secretary, s aid she saw Ms. Terwilliger in the office as many as four times, and took as many as eight phone calls fl'Om her &o the senator. She saJd •he could not re· member ll she ever put any of the ~Us through to Robbins. U Robbins •u G<>t avail!lble. Ms. Keith said, Ms . Terwilliger would tell her to tell Robbins that "Lori called.'' She left oo return number, Ms. Keith said. Judith Verhaag, a former Robbins' staff member, said she saw Ms. Terwilliger in the office five or six times. Once she came in with two or three girllriends and the girls went into Robbins' private office, Ms . Verhaag said. -Later, the gtrlf rlends came out but Ms. Terwilliger re· mained behind, Ms. Verhaag added. "Old you see that same girl in the office after .that?" ask~d Deputy District Attorney Albert Loeber. "Yes," Ms. Verhaag said, add- ing that she did not recall how many times she saw her. "Did you ever see her go into the inner office?" Locher :isked. "Yes," Ms. Verhaag said. She also testified that she typed the letter Robbins sent to Roome. Nielson said the company's decision to go along with the commission requirement was "motivated solely by a desire to win approval of a plan in which we, the county and numerous other agencies have invested an enormous expenditure of time, energy and talent.·' In his attack on the company's move, Nestande said "you have acquiesced in a policy that con- tinues to keep the p •or perpetually in low coat housing by denying them the economic right to take full advantage of their home equity and move up In the world. "That's economic slavery.'' Begin referred to the docu ment two weeks ago in a letter to President Reagan explaining Israel's June 7 a,mbing of the Iraqi nu.clear reactor. the of· ficial said Nuke march begin COPENHAGEN CAP) -More• than 3,000 people began an, 800-mile march to Paris oo Moo-: day to call for an end to all• nuclear weapons in Europe Fllmily argument ends in stabbings A family argument in VUla Park erupted into violence Mon· day night when a husband al· legedly stabbed his wife and three in-Jaws before .be was sub- dued by a hammer blow to the bead. " Albert Francis Jensen, 46, was booked into Orange County Jail on suspicion of attempted murder in connection with the 10 p.m . incident. said Orange Coun- ty Sherifrs Sgt. Dan Spratt. The suspect's father-in-law and brother-in-law, Douglas and Randall Kuykendall, were both in serious condition today at Western Medical Center in TusUn. Karen Jensen, 27, the sus- pect's wife, and her mother, Donna Rae.Kuykendall, 44, were treated and re leased at the hospital for minor slab wounds. Spratt said. ! The violence began after tbJ two Jensens began arguing in their home and Mrs. Jensen said she was going to spend the nipt with the Kuykendalls, Spral said. While she was packing a bag, Albert Jensen apparently went berserk and began attacking the others. Spratt said. The incident ct,nded. he added, when Mrs. Jensen hit hes husband on the head with a ba~ mer. Jensen was treate<t for the in· jury at UC Irvine Medic1'1 Center before being transferred t.o jail. D1llJPlllt TUESDAY, J UNE 23, 1981 MOVI ES STOCKS B3 B7 . . Thinking. about investing in the stock market? Try throwing darts ... B5 University Drive coillpletion pushed , I I I l l ~ ' I l ' ' I l ' ' ' ' ' 1 f ' J • In a move expected to draw wJdespread reaction, Newport a ,ach City Counc il members have agreed to t a ke s teps ~ward preparine environmental dicuments for the completion of University Drive. The long-planned but much- de la y e d r oad proj ec t has become a political ttot potato in 1'8cent years. Even with two councilmen who are opposed to the Universi- • oc pair shot to death A 15-year-old Costa Mesa girl and a 19-year-old Huntington Beach man were shot to death Monday night in a Westminster apartment. Police arrested a J.6.year-old youth who they say was a ngry that the girl was breaking up with him. Bre na Lee Baird o f 592 Hamilton St. was shot three Umes at 10:55 p.m. and was pro- pounced dead two hours later at the Fountain Valley Community Hospital trauma center, police s"id. William John Heim of 16041 Craig Lane was pronounced dead at th~ scene at an apartment complex near Westmins t er Ave nue and Golden West Street. I S He was shot once in the chest. ' P.olice said both victims were ! killed with a .22caliber lhand_gun. ! ·.lfhe suspect1 whose identity is ~ Wtng withhela because be is un- "' .. d4'r 18, lived with bis parents in : tt2 apartment, the scene of the : slayines. They weren't home ~ during the shooting, police said. • The youth was charged with : sUJpicion of murder, police said. ~ A neiehbor who apparently t heard shots had wrestled the 1oi soapect to the carpet inside the ~ apartment, when a patrol car ~ afrived, police said. ~ The patrolmen, responding to ""~ a call, arrived at the apartment complex in time to he ar the· three shots bei n g fired . ~Forme r Mesa ~ !~Mayor Jordan Ar • S recuperatmg ~ Former Costa Mesa Mayor ~ Willard "Will" Jordan, now in ~: bis seventh week at Costa Mesa ~. Memorial Hospital, is on the f: road to recovery and may be re- leased within two weeks. · A hospital spokeswoman said 4! Jordan was "admitted for a ~~ serious illness for wh.ich he had •II surgery, and he is now on the li road to recovery.'· She would dQt elaborate further, except to say that Jordan is listed in good at c:ondition today and that he has been undergoiog ph ysical tllera py. Jordan, now first vice presi- dent of the Costa Mesa Chamber or Commerce, was both mayor and vice mayor of the city dur-U\I an 11-year tenure on the City C9uncil starting in 1963. He also w,a served ih numerous ot~er ci- ty posts. Nate Reade, chamber u - e:c-utlve m ana ge r a nd close fflend, said today the fa mily sa'd J ordan had undergone sur- gery for colitis, a n inflammation 0t· the colon, and that he had been confined to the hospital's if•tensive care unit for two 1 weeks . Jordan reportedly is planning •'September lrlp to Alaska from ~ hospital bed. • • UDCOD8CIOU8 at Newport •• ~ 7•YHN•ld Lawndale &lrl ia IA.ertllcal eoadlUoa today after bliDI cllaeov..-d llonday noon flqa t1n1 lD t be water at Ute 8ewport 0..,.. recreaUoa park la "'"'°" a..c~ ·.wie11W'dl wbo found 10Cllll 1fi11MU. hlter after ,.•eral of d9I llrl'a Mindi ~ported ber ...... N6d tM 11.rl WU mt- .. Sl.,.Mlll.leill't.I09I-llMl 80t bnethtn1. .~ ~~_llowt•• IUCCH lfa1 r•· .... tllll .... 8t tM .-. a wu tu•• '° Koaa ... ... .. Qlw..I fl on.a c..itj. ......... uli ....... NU-~ ~e park wtua a .,, ........ • ty project absent from the Mon· day evening meeting, the vote was still close. ' Co uncil members John Cox, Pbll Maurer and Evelyn Hart voted for the e nvironmental study. Mayor Jackie Heather and Rulhelyn Plummer voted against it. Councilmen Paul Hummel and Don Strauss, both critical of the road completion, are on vaca- tion and did not atte nd the meet- ing. "This i.ssue has dragged on and on with lots of excuses and I'm tired of waiting," said Coun- cilman Cox. "I think we should stop talking and get on with it." University Drive, envisioned by some as a vital transporta- tion corridor between Irvine and Costa Mesa, currently comes to a bait on each side of the Upper Newport Bay. For years the chief stumbling block on whether the road will be completed has been the lack of proper environmental impact studies. The issue was put on hold in 1976 by Newport council m em- bers "I just can't stand still for postponing this any longer,·· Cox said . "We can't let a fe w people who ar e so concerned a bout hav- ing a road in their backyards push us around any longer." The main objection to com- pleting University has been that Diii., .......... ,... Balboa bl.and laundromat owner Dante Veiptgnani ltand& next to hU electronic lkill gomu that have bem earning him prob4nu as weU °' moMJI. Newport B«Jeh Pl11 officials have ordered the machines unplugged. Machines washed up? Newport Council orders laundromat ga mes unplugged By ST EVE MARBLE Ot .. Delly"*"""' Dante Vespignani, the Balboa Island laundromat owner who has stocked his business with electronic games as well as washers and dryers. has been ordered to unplug and remove h.is s pace-age skill games. V es pi g n a n l , wh o acknowledges that his popular ~am es have brought complain ts rom business neighbors . wasn't n band Monday eve ning when Ute Newport Beach City Council handed down the order . But he says it doesn't matter. He has no Intention of shutting off the juice to the machines - Ast e r oids . St a r Castle a nd Scramble. "I'm not trying to be a wise guy." Vespignani said today from his Santa Ana Heights home. "It doesn't pay to be a wise guy but I'm j ust not com- fo rta ble with what's ha ppen- ing." Several of Vespignani's busi· ness neighbors showed up Mon- d ay c l aiming t hey aren 't comfortable with what's happen- ing at the Goldenwest Laun- dromat on Agate Street either. Gene Baum. president of the Balboa Island Improvement As- sociation, told council members that because or the electronic games, t he laundromat ha s become "a public nuisance " In a repor t p repa red by Newport police. it was stated Dante clai ms machir~s keep kids off str eet that the 24-hour laundrom at was a ttr acting a rough crowd or youths who drink and use pro- fane language while slipping quarters in the machines. Coun cilman Phil Ma urer, who li ves on the island. urged re- moval of the machines. He sug. gested "the city must protect t h e e n v iro nment for th e children. But Vespignani says, as rar as he knows. his machines are not causing a problem. "Of course the machines at- tract kids -why else would I have them?" he asks. He claims that. if anything, his machines keep youths off the street. "Pa rents call down there and ask me to send their kid home- a nd I send him home." tht> laun-dromatownersuggests. Vespignani says he didn't at· tend the council session because he thought he'd worked out a compromise. He claims he offered to keep a security gua rd on duty at the laundrom at from 7 p.m. to mid· night and to equip the machines with an automatic shut-off de· vic e t h at woul d bec o m e operative at the stroke of mid- night. But council members. unan- imo u s I y ag r ee in g th e machines were not good for the health, safety and morals of the island, voted that the machines must go. Whether the machines will go remains to be seen. • County budget soars Proposed spending plan f or 1982 up $68 mi llion By F&EDEIUCK SCH<>EMEBL Of .. Dellr Nllt .... A $711. 7 million for 1982 budget that is more than $10 million out of balance is now in the bands of members of the Orange County Boar d o f Supervi.Jon. The propoeed spending plan, s ubmitted by county Ad · ministrative Oflicer Robert Thomas, ls up about '88 million from t.be current fiac:al year's bud1et. Fiscal 1981 ends next Wednesday. ·In a letter t.o 1upervi1ora, Thomae said tbe board bu three opUona to brinl UM budlet lnto balance: dlvttt federal revenue 1bartn1 to tbe ·'211 million 1enera1 fund: make acrot1-tbe- board cw, or make teleet.lve cuts iG cmaln proJr&IDI. SUpervilon wlq eCIGllder the /propoMd budlet • a naeetin1 at t :IO a.m. Weane.ilay. AcUoa OD the final budaet wW not occv untll a fter bud1•t bearin11 ldMduled~ In mld.J,... ~ Ta':r.it ~u:,. for capital l~ ud •.1 m010em.....-...aa1__, IDr vane. ,.,........ AUi,... Ill Mliltniltr.UTe omee 1a1 ablul •·' ID ,.._... ,...... ...,.. ~ COUid .. made available to balance the budget. "This alternative is a de- parture from previous years In which revenue s haring funds County faces something of budget crunch ha ve not been \Ued to support operaUn1 programs, but were med prlmaril)' to fund capital projects and aocial proerama," Tbom aaeald. He cautioned that reveoue lharta1 f\IDdl could only be uaed to balance the budeet for one year. alnc:e rewnue 1harin1 en· tltJement.I to countlel are endtna att.r UM upeomJn1 ftlcal year. r or that re ..... TbomH laid, "J t..UHt the only viable prac· llcal alternat1ve1 are either eel'Oa·u.bovd cuta, or Klee· U.. eutbaeU ID pro= area. ''ID exa••niq opdom OQH •laia eaeb departmen· ttac•e1 dlredor m•t lde..uty mandated pro1ram1 and d•· t.ermlne U... procramt wbJCh are tb• ...,..._, priority," be laid. Or a nge Co unty is facing something of a budget crunch. analysts said, because fewer dollars are available from the state and federal governments. Thomas said all county de- partment heads have been asked t o re·examine i ndi vidual budgets for possible cuts. As has been the case in past years, the mammoth Human Services Agt:ncy, which ad- ministe rs health a nd social services programs, would re- ceive the lion's share of the bud1et, $237.S million. The En· vironmental Management Agen. cy would receive $36.7 mlWon ; General Services Acency, $42.• million. About $65 million would be directed to general ad- tninlatration and $121 millio n to community s afety. -JOHN NEEDHAM Country dance signups 8et Refislrallon ia under way for a COWttry·wa tern dance clue sponsored by UM Cotta Mesa Recru Uon DeP11rtmeat. Thoe• lnterated may re1t1ter at the Urilure Servlc• Office. 77 Falr Drive. Re1l1tratlon by mall also ii n lilabl•. the construction or the road will be an environmental mena ce to the sensitive back bay area. Of- ficials from the state depart- ment of Fish and Game and the California Coastal Commission are on record as opposing the road job. Mayor J ackie Heather said she o pposed Monday's action because "the limmg tB rotten." She said state coastal com- miaaioners are preparing to re· view local coastal plans that show University on road maps. Mayor Heather suggested the council would be wise to wait un- til this process is completed. Newport city officials pointed out that it will be several months before a firm can be selected to prepare the documents and that council members will have op- portunities to back out of the deal. * * * SA Heights plan nixed In one of its last actions before its state charter r uns out, the South Coast Regional Coastal Commission has approved the county's land use plans for Lag una Niguel and Suns et Beach. But the commission, which will officially go out or business J uly 1, turned down a land use plan fo r Santa Ana Heights in an 8-1 vote Monday because of pro- posed plans to extend University D ri ve No rth pas t Up per Newport Bay. The California Coastal Act. which went into effect Jan. 1, 1977 , and unde r which the coasta l commission was formed, calls for the state's six regional commissions to be disbanded Ju- ly 1. Both the Laguna Niguel and Sunset Beach plans were ap- proved in unanimous votes by the commissioners with little discussion at Monday's meeting in Huntington Beach. However, on the plan for San- ta Ana Heights, which lies, g e n erally, between Upper Newport Bay and Orange Coun- ty's John Wayne Airport, the commissioners voted in favor of condit.iona which , if met, could lead to its approval. The first condition was for the county to delete the proposed ex- tension of University Drive between Newport Beach and Irvine. Though the county has no im- mediate plans to make the ex- tension, officials or the county Envir onmental Ma nagement Agency said traffic congestion on arterial h.ighways surround- ing the area is becoming more prevalent. But the commission said a fo ur-lane highway such as the county is proposing would be too dis ruptive to birds and other wildlife that live in the area . The commissioners also called for a specific plan to be pre- pared for Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve restorations, including the construction of dikes, dredging of silt and any filling of the shoreline. The third cond ition deals with new building standards, such as height limitations in Santa Ana Heights .. With commission chairwoman Ruth Galanter casting the lone dissenting vote , t he com- missioners decided not to in· elude a condition recommended by the coastal commission staff that resale controls be included in the plan on all new affordable housing units. ln their Written recommenda- tion to the commission, the staff said the resale condition sbould be included so low-cost bousing "will be protecte d from the pressures of t he speculative market. .. " Citron raps attack of retirenient fund Orange County Tax Collector- Treasurer Robert Citron has de- nounced the Grand Jury for a re- port in which the panel was highly critical of the manage- ment of the $300 million county employees retirement fund. The jury, in one of three re- ports scheduled to be released this week, said more emphasis should be placed on Increasing the rate of return on investment and urged county supervisors to consider hiring a full-lime ad- ministrator to run the fund. Too much money, the panel said in a 14-page report, is locked up in long-term bonds. Citron, whose office oversees management of the retirement system, said steps have been taken to improve the rate of re- turn. Citron said abo ut $60 million have been invested in ....., ..... ..., ..... Mll8 N1•1M-1POR-Mw.. 81ACH J od y Quain, a Newport Har b or Hl&b ·Sc h oo l araduate., w.s named Mtsa Newport Beach ln recent cer em o n ies a t t b e Newport.er Inn. CwrenU7 a 1tudent at Oran1e Coaat Colle1e, 11!11 Quain wu aponeored by TbolDMll Air Charter. Runnen-up wen Sbannoo Cle)'e and GretcbeD Coles. stocks as opposed to bonds and that the 8.8 percent rate of re- turn cited in the jury report is increasing. Much of Ci tron 's ire was directed at the jury's s uggestion that the retirement fund is pay- ing a disproportionate share of the salaries of Citron and his top assistant, Ray Wells. Twenty five percent -$13,447 -of Citron's salary is charged to the retirement fund, as is 50 percent -$23,539 -of Wells'. Citron said that while it may be tr ue that he does not devote 25 percent of h.is time to retire- ment fund matters, the charge is proper because be possesses the experience necessary for mak- lng proper investments. Victim c rawls out of ravine to aid driver A 3S-year-0ld Fountain Valley man with back injuries crawled up a 40·fool embankment in Newport Beach Monday nilht to eet help after bis female companion's car pluneed into a ravine. When police arrived, they found tbe 26-yea r·old woman driver in the twisted wrectace of the car which had nlpped off Jamboree Road and landed ln a ravine JUlt no"' of the John Wayne 1'ennia ClJJb. The drive r , Deborah Swarthout of Newport. Beach, ••• t.aktn to the trauma ct!lter at Fountain Valley CommU.nU,y Holplt.al where she'• listed ln criUcal capdltion. Tbe Fount.ala Valley man, Oeor1e Ronbur1b, la lilted ID MrloUI eoaditlon at tM f'ountaln ValleJ ........ Newport offteen aakt UM U :• p.m. ~eddmtoce•• .. .._ tM ear, lT•••Unl · bor••~ 1pun o l plowea tb~ tumbled cloWll ._ ~~~·~~~~~~.-. ........ ~~~~--~~~-~~ .................. ~ ..... -0 ............................ .._~.!"""'• .................... """." ........ ..., ..... ~ ................................ ..,.~ • ...i...is,..c11111111110 .. a ... SQ• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981' PUalJC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSl•SSS teAMS ITAT•MSNT Tllo lollo.I .. ...,._ 11 CllOl"9 DUii· ....... , L 9H llEIEAllCH. JUI MonrM Wey, C.Y M9N, CA,,.._ lton•I• H. Hl<lloh. JIJI ....,..,.. Way, cai.-. CA m-. Tllll lllalnoM 11 condll<ted l>Y M II'· dlvlduel, R-ld H. Nl<llOll Tlllt it.at-I wat lllod wlUI tlls Count., C lff'll ol Or -Cbllftt' °" PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS au11•sss "'~ IUMll ITATH .. •T l'YMI-Or .... C.Jt o.llr ....... TIM loll-1"9 --ere CIOl119 J-U, •• Jlllr 1, 14, lt$1 taf1~1 IMdlMH•: PUBUC NOTICE NIWPOIH CONSTltUCTION MANAGEMENT, 5120 91rcll StroM, lffw-1 llMcll, CA '2MO • CIWll......, "' ... '1 St.,...... 40I l'ICTITIOYI au1uesu auckMtl, C-• Meu, CA 926a. ........ fTATS-•T •slly H. l'vl-1. JOI E ... ..,... TM 191i.ww.t l'W-t ere ...... N--1 9Mdl, CA ftMO. lluM-•: Tlll1 -·Ml· 11 <0"411<19<1 l>r • NEWll'OlllT TILE" CAalNllT, 111 .. ,,., .. ,..,._llllp. N. Newport a1..c1., ~ .. eclll, Clwb "'· ~ , .......... '*' Tllll --· ... lllod wltrl Ills Gvlllle A. ...... lf.M IE. VOii aii.. COlll'IY ci.r• Of Or ..... C011nly °" Mf, ~ ..... Celllerftlo ,_.. J-$, lt$1. .Hr9' Seu! Chltt.r, lSlol I . VM .. ,..., ...... ·~.a...... c.llfiemle .... P11blllllo0 Or..,.. Cootl O.lly l'llot, l'vl>lllllod Orongo Coast O.lly Piiot, Menuel 0•••••• l'e lco, OICll J111'41 '· "''· J-•· 1•. n.•.1•1 ts..,, J-•. it. n. •. 1•1 2'41 .. 1 ~.:::_:,:::,::••· l11ttor Creek, PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE "1;1111 w.lnou 11 <OftltlKIM Dy • ............ _,,.,., 0.....A.l'•k• l'ICTITIOUI au11••11 l'ICTITIOUI au11••u Tiii• .._. -,.. ... wllll Ills IUIMSTATIMSNT IUMllSTAT ... •T c-•Y c .... Of Orenee C-ty ... TIM fll-4111 --II doh" DUii· Tllo 1411-1119 --...... Int J-It, 1t$1, ..... __ , ... .... MUH: Cll COMllU-OUOTE 11) Sl'ORT ·A· THON, II* l'el-Clrda, -· Yin Ve li.,, Cellforftle t210I Miria m Al'ln l'a rl'l11m, 11106 Palmetto Circle, l'Ollnlall'I Volley, Calllomle ft10I Tllll Wllnotl h COfldV<tad DY an ,,.. dlvl4uel. Miriam A.. l'er..- Tlll1 ............ w• llled wllll Ills c_, Clof1I o1 0r.,.. C-Y ... _., STIEWAllT AUTOWt+Ol.ESALES, "'*II .... Or ... c-1 Dally ...... . IJJ2 G•*tl Gr•.,. 91,,d., OerllOfl J-n.•.Jllly1, 14, lt$1 ._., o ...... Callfemle ....... Wllllem E. ~ 1"22 11..,... l..-.o, HuMlflllM 9Ncll, c.llforftl• .,... PVBUC NOTICE Liiiy E. S. s.-1. 1"22 Re-l'ICTITIOUS IUSINSU ~· HllMI"""" BM<lt, c.I...,,,,• NAMS STATSMaNT Tttl1 walnou 11 cOftducleCll Dy • DU~':~°!~'nv "°"0'11 ••• dolf111 ,._,el,.,_,.,.. COMMUNITY VOLUNTEERS Ully E. $.Siewert FOlt THE ELOERL Y CCVE>. 420 Ft"9tl Tlllt ~ •• flied wllll ... Weal 19111 Slrul, Coale Mo .. , ,....,.,.. 0r.,.. CMst Delly Piiot. c-IY Clof1L Of 0r.,... ,_., °" c.111omi. '36%1 Jt, 1 .. 1. J.,.. 2, t , 14, n. "" 1~1 J-If, lt$1. ,,.._ SOUTH COAST INSTITUTE FOR APPLIED GERONTOLOGY, a ,....,.,_. ar.,.. c-st Oellr l'llot, Ca llfor"I• <Clf1IO'•llon uo w 1tt11 PVBUC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI euttNaU teAMS ITATSMtr•T Tllo IOllowl .. _._ 11 CllOl119 DUAi· ...... ., GRAPHIC SUPPORT, 1$11 W. ltelalle A .... ~m, CA '2I02. Tero .. D . .._,..,, ""° c.1 ... c1u1a A .... w.tll'nlfllMr, CA nm. Tllll _...._ 11 c411d11ctecl by Oii I,._ dMdual. TOAM0.9Mrd Tiiis .....,_ we1 lllod wllll llW County c1or11 Of Ore,... County .., J-s.1•1. ,, .... P\*11-Or .... C-lt 0.lly PllOI, J-t.14,D,llO, l•l ltlMI PUBUC NOTICE J-U. •. Jlll'f 1, 14. Hl1 VO.I Slrffl, cai. MtM, Collion.la tlr.?7 P UBUC NOTICE Tiiis ,.........,. II C.ondwe'lM Dy e <"'-etlon· Seulll C-•l ll'lllllllla •ICTITIOUI aull•UU tor """led Got'OlllOlclQ'f llAMS STATSMa .. T Oii .. ,,,.._, Tllo followlfll llOt"IOll 11 ..... buM· Tr-.. Mii ot: Tlll1 ~-wet lllod wltll Ills II J & 9 WELDING 12) J & , COIHllY CJorll ol Or .... County on Me'I RENTALS. HS1 Columble Drive, lt, 1•1. C.le MtM, Cellfomle... 1'1..U Jedi E. Bellar, US7 Cot11mble Pwblll>ftecl Or .... C.0011 Oall't Piiot, Ori.,., eai. Mote, c.llfoml• "'*' J-2. '· ••. u. 1•1 241Wt Tllll .....,... 11 coMYcted by en Ill-- dlvlWel. JKllE.aaller PVBUC NOTICE T1'1l1 .....,_,. -fifed wlltl UW -------- C-ty C ...... Of ~ ..... COIHllY Oii J-"· ""· ....... ..... I ... Or ... eo.tt 0..1, ....... -J-·· '· "n."" t4fM1 PtJBUC NOTICE H11iled .aw'Y ONLY 5279'5 • 100% Solid St.ti Clltuis • In· line Picture T 11b1 • Autom1tic Frequen- t'/ Control • Autom1tic: Color Control NOW ONLY 549995 LAMENT Historian Arthur Schlesinger ln a commencement ad- dress to North - eastern Uni - versity graduates deplored what he t ermed the drift toward conservatism among young people. Furnace leaks fixed .· A WASHJNGTON (AP) -The maker deaths associated with such poisonln,g of about SS,000 furnaces uaed in since 1969. ,8 mobile homes has launched a repair The furnaces were. sold for u.s.,ln program because of tbe dan1er of mobile homes since 1964. either as leaking carbon monoxide, the orlainal equipment or for rept~-C~n ~umer Product Safety Com-menl. •ft. m1ss1on reports. The commission said mobile hcMw The danger arises if portions of lhe owners should check their furna&ts vents corrode in model MMG for the "Miller" name at the l<Jl(llol "Miller" brand liquid propane and the louvered door. II it is a "Mill~r';" natural gas furnaces. The furnaces open lhe louvered door and chec~ the were made by the Home division of large vertical pipe. If that pi~"b Lear Siegler Inc. of Holland, Mich. about five Inches across, the furriiee Is model MMG. 11" Corrosion in the flue pipe extension tr you have that model , or are net and vents can allow carbon monoxide sure, contact the manuractureit: to be emitted into living areas, the calling, toll free . 800 253·3874. ti e com mission said. The agency report-firm will arrange for free lnstallalll ed it has received reports of 19 of a new flue pipe extension. iiiiiijiiji-lii e, ....... -s.. .. 4 s,..1i .. s. ... SY1tt111 a Hip FW.iity A111tllifior e 011wu Eloctrult Tu~i .. -11 Cll1n..is • perFormance TEL EVIS ION 25~~ ... "'' VIR Il Bl'1lllca1t Clltrelle~ Color TV WITH DUAL MODE REMOTE CONTROL SAVE s15000 e E IM'fY Co1uc1e111 Soli4 Sutt Cllam1 I I a line lltcli .... ,,. 'ict••• Tfte 11'~ .... ~., ClllP MlllllP TV • Fr111n Food Stor ... Com paftlltent • 2 lce'11 Env • Treys alodll TllPI 9" ONLY WITH PAOGR~AILE SCAll REMOTE COHROl •Door Shelves for •ws. milk. tell llonla • Quartz Ea.ctro•ic Tu11itit-'1 Ch111neh • 100% Seli4 SUt• Cllmis • ln-liM lledl MltTix Picturo Tulle 1 CMilt RM4y Mi4ll1n4 Cha11"'I St1actlon Cep•ilitv Welnut ltntth on ll•Clh "''""'" pl"' •Only 21" wldt, 11" """ ONLY 539995 • lllau t\ no~ Ntncerat.or • ca .. cu ft fl'f't&er • ICqulJ>l*I (Or Ol)(JOrW 1utoma11r .aemaMr • 4 lpllt.1.Vol ~IAbl• •ti.Iv. •C.-Ndn_.pan • lrwl'CY •Y9r ewttcll 1n ncrm&J pmn.ion hf>lpe l'\I\ operaunc ._, • Dual IAml>Otaturt coritrOla 5599'5 ----·,,,_.,_,.. 25" ctiGCJOMll COLOR TY l 25EM2107P MEDITERRANEAN STYLING cabinet constructed of a combination of genuine hardwood solids, wood composition board and simulated wood accents. o 4-Cyd1We1'1 Slltc1io11 incl11dl111 tMrty uvor dry o'tion • 2WHh lwlll •Soft Food D~oser • 0 taal 011tf10flt Dklt11ser • Soun4 lnwl1ttd , .. , ..... AUTOMAT I C C 0 0 1<,1 H 0 COHT~-1 o e O I I 1 me .........,,..,,_ • ..,.,, evto-lle••ly ....,.., lb< Oltt.11111 -olbod With the GE apace-maker Microwave ~n. and yaur own ranoe. YoU hive a compfete cooking center! rl,.. ,., "f""•2•2•2•s•e•c•s•s••s11121110•211121110•a• ... •s .. a••a .. a•a ... a ... o•• ... •,.. .. •~s,..• .... • ... • .. ••• ... • .... • ........... 1111 ........ _, ... _ ......... ____ ..,._ ..... ________ ....... ~ .... -.-_ • ___ • _ • • _ • ··-··· .. -··-· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, June 23, 1981 N - NYSE COMPO ITE T RANSACTIONS OUOTATICMIJINCl.UDl l•AOUON TNl NOW YO•IC.MIOWUT, PAC1•1C P •W. IOtTON,OIUOIT AttO CllKllflfOI ST~tl CltCMAMOIJ ANO lll"O•tlO l 'I' TMI NAJD AND INSTINll Dow Jones Final UP + 12.46 CLOSING 1 1,00l.U ; ' Graduates d e pe nde nt (Second of a fl ve· part series on 1981 income taxes. > When your son or daughter gets out of school and takes a job (or perhaps marries), do you lose that child a.s a dependent on your 1981 income tax return? As emphasized in Monday's report, not necessarily. When your child reaches age 19, there Ls a $1,000 limit on the total of taxable income he or she can receive and still be an acceptable dependent on your return. But the income limit does not apply to a child -single or married -who is a full-time stu- dent in 1981. lf your child spent any part of five calendar months in school during 1981 -for instance, if he or she went to college from January into May -the child is treated as a "fulJ-time ~ st udent " i n 1981, I The tax ------~~_; ' sig nificance: SY(llA PDRTll _ Your child can Z make any _ amount of money he or she can manage from now until the end of 1981 and no matter. You can claim him or her as your dependent on your 1981 return. Key requirement: You must provide more than half of your child's support for the year if the child is to be your dependent. There is much more to support than the obvious · items -such as food , clothing and shelter The tax rules on support (if you know them thoroughly) well may work in your favor. Example: Your 22~ear-old daughter, Mary, graduated from college early in June and married Dan, also a June graduate of the agricultural school, a few day.slater . You paid Mary's college expenses. bought Mary • a car for graduation (you are financing the purchase) and you also paid for Mary's wedding to Dan. The two already have found jobs, and after their honey- moon, they will be supporting themselves for the rest of 1981. Is Mary your tax dependent ln 1981? 'l'he income test is no problem. Mary is con· sidered a full-time student in 1981. But how about meeting the more-than-half-support test? This is something of a standoff. You paid Mary's bills at college. Dan and Mary are taking care of the second half of this year. Yel , you do clear the halfway mark test because of two critical tax rulings. Tomorrow: How $100 can Mlw-you tlwusan.cU m tar <Uductiona. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS AllOILl>S I Ex•Of'' 18M Tell Utll Col9 Ptlm Softy CWP DIM'llShm CM'tll., l"~llMll TeJC ... vlf I ~t.Swce w Sdls .... ,"'' =~" UPS AND DOWNS GOLD COINS P<I. Up 11 0 Up U Up I 2 Up t t Up ,. Up 7.l Up I 2 Up I 1 Up '·' Up U Up •.I Up 6S Up U UP •I Up •.O up s.a Up S.7 Pel Off ••• ()ti • J Oft u Off .., fi()tf u u s.s s.o Off s.o ~ ::~ gi; 2'.A Off '·' Off u °" u NIW '10111( CAP) -Prlc .. ••• Mondlly -.... ~ .. '*"'"'" wtfl ..... .,, ptkt HEW YORK IN'I -...... "°"" .,,, .. -....,..,,.,,._,,_,""',.._ &cfWloo -".., ... ~lt-ly ., -,, OomePttl s Intl 8nkl\OI "'91• Corp Chi~p Ho lnlrCtyG1 o MooQ A I Hulily(X; "-rOll Gvlf'ten o ~slOli p METALS lU.100 IU,300 126,<IOC) as.a IJ,IOO IO,CIOO 71 IQD '2,700 .i,300 ~.eoo c...-a.as cel'llls • _.,, u s c1e~1n tlofls. YM .. ,. cents•~ %Nie 4t'lt cents• pound, O••l•ered Tl11 ~ .... n MM•ls Wtek comPCJSlte ID. • • Ah1mla11m 7..0 cents • PO<Md, N Y M«Cllf'I' '4211.00 per fllllll l"l•tlflllm i«:l.00 1'11'( OJ N Y SYMBOLS •I l•I • 1 "l! <;· It o v w + • O # 0 U 0 s s s s s s a s aassss us usaoccs st! 222ss2222sc12122z ~ -· ..-... .... ...__ ___________________ ' ___ , ___ _ . I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/TuHday, June 23, 1981 Come to the grand opening.of Im erial Savings' new Costa Mesa office step back into the French countryside. We've moved into our spacious new branch office at 655 Anton Street in Costa Me sa, just one block away from South Coast Plaza Shopping Center. And to celebrate, we're inviting you to join us in Grand Opening Festivities in the Country French tradition. You'll be welcomed in a charming setting reminiscent of the French countryside by hostesses dressed in the ethnic costumes of the rural farmland s. You'll wander through a French village marketplace with baskets of flowers and fruit, trellises, wicker wares and delicate floral prints. Beneath a that ched roof canopy, our chef will prepare a variety of delicious hot fruit crepes for your enjoyment. Or you ma y wish to sample our French baker's delectable pastries. And we invite you to vis it our European coffee bar where we'll share some of the Old Country's fin est roasts and blends with you. Costa Mesa is quickly becoming the financial and cultural center of Orange County and Imperial Sav ings is proud to be a part of our community's burgeoning development. Our three-day Country French party is our way of sharing this pride with old friends and new neighbors. Our new branch office is easily accessible from all parts of Costa Mesa and surrounding communities and our large customer lobby features /--reading material and free coffee daily. For your added COflVenience, we are open.Saturdays from 9cun-lpm. ·" ~ So be sure to drop by during our Grand Opening and discover a world of refreshing checking and savings plans and other convenient services. •I I Where: 655 Anton Street, #3, Costa I I . Mesa. When: Thursday, June 25th, I I 9am-5pm; Friday, June 26th, 9am-~ . 6pm; Saturday, June 27th, 9am-lpm 01m~~!~!c~ings , tm~Anton Street, #3, Costa Mesa • • ' , t ' " . . "•,. ,