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1981-07-08 - Orange Coast Pilot
'l ~ I I I ..._ ___ _..---~--------..------·-------.... . ....... . ... ............ ,,,,. .... • • • • • • DUl81 CUil YOUR HDMITDWI DAllY PAPIR WEDNESDAY . JUL Y 8. 198 1 ORANGE COUN TY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS NEWPORT .TRAGEDY • • wo · oys e 1n cave-m Man gets 3 years in theft Robert Cunningham was sen- tenced Tuesday to three years in s ta le prison ror embezzling public funds while director or a federal job training program in Huntington Beach. Orange County Superior Court J udge Everett Di ckey denied Cunningham's request for pro- bat ion in li eu or a prison term. Cunningham was convicted by a jury March 16 on two counts o( embezzli ng $16,000 for his personal use from the city's Comprehe nsive E mployment Training Act progr am. Although he later paid back the CETA funds, Di<.'key said the seriousness of the crime was not reduced. Father given probation in child sale try A man who offered his child -for sale al an Orange County restaurant has been placed on three years' probation afte r pleading guilty to a misde· meanor cha r ge or child en- da ngerment. Described by his defense at- torney as being mentally ill but bearing no malice, Ra ndy Gordon Wilson, 29, Tuesday was released from Orange County Jail where he had been held in custody for 37 days foll owing hi s arrest. Wilson was cha r ged with felonv child endanie r ment after hi s a rrest by Orange County Sheriff's Department deputies who claimed he attempted to sell or give away his then 7- week-old daughter, Kathleen. The child is now living under the care of a materna l aunt in Louisiana. The child's mother is living nearby but does not have custody or the infant. Wilson pleaded guilty to the reduced misde meanor offense as part or a negotiated settle- ment approved by South Orange County Municipal Court Judge John Griffin. Gr iffin conditioned the proba- tion on Wilson not seeing the child unless welfare officials and the maternal aunt are present. But Griffin placed no restric- tio n on Wilson tr av eling to Louisiana. One quartet's fine -second 'guarded' SAN DIEGO (AP> -Two of four healthy sons born July 1 to a San Diego couple may be go- ing home by week's end, but 5· day-old quadruplets delivered 12 weeks prematurely in Gole(a probably will remain hos pitalized for about three months. Marsha and David HllJ's three boys and a girl remained in "guarded" condition Tuesday. .. 811111 CDllT WIATillR Fair through Thursday but low clouds night and morning hours. Highs 74 to 77. Lows 66 to 70. 111111 TIDIY I• a /tar o/ ~· Ploldsng womn back tn America? &e Pog. AU. 11111 1 Rescue efforts • • 1n vain By STEVE MARBL E Of Ille Dally ~ileC Si.ff Two Newport Beach boys died Tuesday evening after a tunnel th<:y were digging in a sand em· bankm<>nt near the ocean caved in on them. leaving them buried for at least 30 minutes. A uthorit1cs 1denl1fted the boys as 12 year old Jeffrey Reinker and Russel Mark Beaumont, 14. Both were pronounced dead at lloag Memorial Hospital shortly hefor<> 8 p m A<.'cord1ng to poltce, the two } oungstcrs had left their homes earltcr tn the evening to play in the sand close to 59th Street in West Newport Se veral witnesses reported sc<>mg the boys digging the tun- nel 1n the 4·foot·high embank· ment close lo the water's edge. Poll<.'<'. though. were unable to find any witnesses who saw the tunnel collapse Newport Beach lifeguards and paramedics work on beach at West Newport i n vain effort to revive two youngsters. M 1<.'hal'I Slade, a 20·year·old Newport resident who was play- ing padclleball on the beach with his gi rlfriend. said he sensed trouhle when he heard one or the boys· p<Jrents start screaming. Accompanied by pol1ce offiar, farrdl11 member1 leave t'M beach at Weit NtwpOrl after uMUCcenful effort to reacue young1ter1 JeffrerJ Rdnker, 12, and Rut.el Mork Beaumont, 14. 44 .plant tests ordered San Onofre nuclear reactor included in NRC order AUGUSTA, Maine (AP) - Federal officials, concerned that the steel fuel containers ln aome older nuclear reactors may be more vulnerable to craclu than anticipated, have ordered 44 plant operator• naUonwide to test the t.ou1bnes1 of tbelr reac- tor veaela. One of tbote nucle•r plant.I that the U .S . Nuclear Regulatory Commi11lon aaya It ia concerned about la the San Onofre Nuclear Generatlq Sta- tion, lotated 'ln San Dle10 Coun· ly three mllea aoutb of San Clemente. A severe overcoolia1 and reprnaurisatloa accident la· volvlna a weak vesNl la one of the Pl'9IMll'lled·•ater read.on could naM u.e ·ruc:tor v-.a - which ('Cllltalm tbl r8dloectivt fuel rodl UMd to ........ beat and el9drtdtJ -to erect Oise a bot 1lU1 Jar tllruit lato eold ( water, officials of the Nuclear Re1ulatory Commission said in interviews Ulla week. Operators of the pressuriud- water reactors also were direct- ed lo review cooling control ' 1y1t.ema, according_ to Tbomu Murley, director of the NRC'a safety dlvhion. NRC re· aearchen ln Oak Rld1e. TeM., and Wuhlncton were aaalined to atudy the problem, he said. The NRC la particularly con- cerned about 4 older plantl, ln- cludlq the Maine Yankee reac- tor ta nearby Wlacuaet, Murley aaJd. Alto on the Uat la unit No. 1 of the Three Kile laland plant near Harrtabur1, Pa. That fa the compankln U.Ul to tbe No. 2 re. actor that wu abut down folJow. l n1 ttM natloa'a worst com- mercial nuclear acddent on II arch a, im. No immediate corrective, mea1ure1 were ordered. although Murley s aid some steps are likely to be taken within a year. However, a dis- sentlng NRC safety en1lneer has ur1ed that some older planta be shut down pending the study. The phenomenon that has caused concern la known as ·'pressurised thermal a hock" and hu lon1 been a concern of nuclear sclentlatl. If a crack breached the ellht· Inch-thick steel wall of the vessel, allowln1 \be coolln1 water to escapet lt could cauae the fuel to ovemeat. Fuel rods then mi1bt melt throucb the ve11el lnto the plant'• concrete containment bu.lldiq, very like- ly caualna a releue of redloac- t lv t material Into the at· moephen, Murley aakl. The order was luued la1l month after a .June 11 meetlnl In W aahburton durtn« wblcb Nile ( ... ONORS, Pa1e Al) ' \ \ \ Costa I \Mesa \ \ ! \ l ---1Newpor I Beach I ; j :'Y'i-f SITE OF DOUBLE TRAGEDY 59th Street Beach HE SENSED TROUBLE Michael Slade Hawk on cabinet T E L AVIV, Is rael CAP) P rime Minister Menache m Begin has decided to override opposition inside his party and a ppoint Israeli war hero Ariel Sharon as defense minister in his next Cabinet, two Israeli newspapers reported todav Police said they were told the parents \\Crl' v.aiking down the bl•ach looking for their son when the) saw a leg protruding from the sand • · t ran over there and started digging right by the leg and helped get the first boy out, .. ex- pla tncd Slade "It took only ·a l'OUplc of seconds Then I ran to m) house a nd ca lled the paramedt<.'S." SI a<;le said the second boy was unearthed by the time Slade re- turned to the beach. He estimat- ed that both boys were buried in about two feel of sand . He said it took less than a minute lo pull them out · · 1 know CPR so I started giv- 1 n g lhl•m mouth-to-mouth.·· S lade recounted .. But they weren't breathing at all. Thei r f:Jces were blue." By the time paramedics ar- rived . several surfe rs had propped up their s ur fboard to hold ba<.'k v. ater that was creep- ing 1n with the tide. Slade said a medical doctor "ho lives 1n West Newport and "as Jogging in the area also s hO\\<'d up a nd provided p;iramcd1<.'s with assistan<.'e and drugs that \\ere used in the at· tcmpL'> to renve the bovs. /\ va<.'at1on1ng couple from M 1ssour1. St e\"e and Cheryl Lov. ell. also JOtned in the re· susc1tat1on e ffo rts befo r e paramedics arrived P olice s aid paramedics worked on the boys roughly 10 minutes befor e transporting them to Hoag Hospital where they were pro nounced dead a bout 20 mi nut es after arrival. Newport authorities said they believe it is the fi rst time anyone has died from suc h an accident in the bca<.'h city. Last March, they said. a 13- y ear old Ne wport boy was buried for 10 minutes when a bank of the Santa Ana River col· lapsed where he had been dig- ging. In that episode, the boy was rescued by a man who had seen the river bank give way. But this time, police said, they weren't so lucky. "I tried my best." said Slade. "Everyone really t ried It's a sad ending " $2. 9 million asked for Nixon NY home NEW YORK <AP) -Former President Nixon '1 four-story Manhattan townhouse has ione on sale with an a11king price of $2.9 mlllion, the real estate a1entaaid. If the askinl price were re· celved, it could brin1 bJm a Tiet profit ol up to a . u mllllon. The Nixona have boucbt a aeven·bedroom house on four acres In Saddle River. N.J ., and are expected to move there lbia month. The purchase price of the J ersey property was not rt· vealed, but the asking price wu $1.2 mllUon. The former president moved Into the Manhattan townhouse a lltUe QVtt a year ago. He bad been absent from New Yort fOf' nearly a doien yeara alnce he went to the Wb1te Houae aft« the 1968 prealdentlal elecUoft. (See NlXONS. Pace Al) (, • • • • • • O.range Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, July 8, 1981 ... Arizona Judge Sandra O'Connor, Prelident Reagan'• choice for the SuprtfM Court ii 1hoton with.,,,.,_ family. From left are Soni Brian, Scott and JaJJ, and hulbond John J. O'Connor Ill: Court pick 'brilliant' Mrs. O'Connor praised on both sides of political fence WASHINGTON <AP) -With praise across the political spec· t rum , Sandra D. O'Connor seems headed for easy Senate confirmation to take "her place in history" as the first woman ever on the U S. Supreme Court. From the moment President Reagan's choice of the Sl·year· old Arizona appeals judge was announced Tuesday, senators applauded her legal credentials as "brilliant" and "eminenUy well qualified" a nd hailed Reagan's fulfillment of a cam· paign pledge to appoint a woman justice. Republican leaders promised to heed Reagan's request fo r swift confirmation ··so that as soon as possible she may take her seat on the court. and her place in history." It may be Sep· tember. however, before hear· ings begin. Public opposition came from the fundamentalist group Mora! Majority and the National Right to Life Committee, both normal· ly Reagan allies, which bitterly questioned Mrs. O'Connor's rec· ord on abortion and vowed to t ry to defeat the nomination. But Sen. Barrv Goldwater of Arizona, a leading Republican conservallve, said anyone who wants to fight Mrs. O'Connor's confirmation will have to fight him. Al a news conference in Ph oenix. Mrs . O'Connor declined to answer questions on abortion and other substantive issues pending the confirmation process. But deputy While House press secretary Larry Speakes said she is truly against abortion. and Reagan said he was "com· pletely satisfied " on the matter. Mrs. O'Connor was the onJy candidate whom Reagan in- terviewed personally to replace Potter Stewart, who retired Fri· d ay, and become the 102nd justice in the Supreme Court's 191 ·year history. ··one or the reasons Reagan was attracted to her was when he looked at the total woman," said deputy White House chief or staff Michael K. Deaver. "She had not been an activist on either side. She had taken a moderate position." Congressional sources, however. said Sen. John East, R·N.C .. who is leading the fight for anti·abortion legislation that may ultimately be tested on con- Tipsy youth enters 2 homes by mistake A 16-year-old Santa Ana Heights boy is reportedly "sleeping it off" today in Orange County Juvenile Hall after he al- legedly entered two Costa Mesa homes early t his morning., startling women as they slept beside their husbands. Police arrested the hung-over youngster for suspicion or bu rglary after Costa Mesan From Page A1 NIXONS. • • Later, the Nixons lived in San Clemente. Nixon bought the townhouse on a quiet, tree·lined block bet ween Ma di son and Firth a venues through Sotheby In· lernational Realty for a reported $750,000. It is being offered for sale through the same agency, a real estate subsidiary of Solheby Park Bernet Inc .. the fine-art auctioneering firm. The 12·room townhouse has six wood·burning fireplaces, high ceilings with an abundance or natural Ught, an elevator and a wood-paneled first -floor library that opens on a flower garden. An official at Sotheby Interna- tional Realty. who asked that her name not be used, said con- tracts for such a sale uaually cover a two-year period, but that the property actually is sold on ·an average of nine months after the initial offering. ORA GECOAST Ri chard H. Kimball . 39, cor- nered and held him at butcher knife point in the Kimballs' borne at 296 Rose Lane. That, said Costa Mesa officer Gerry Stukltle, was at 3:-45 a.m., more than three hours after a youth resembling the young burglary s u spect fled a neighboring home on his bicycle with a sleepy-eyed Santa Ana police officer in pursuit. The unidentified off-duty San- ta Ana officer, Stukkle said, was awakened shortly after midnight by his frightened wile. She told her husband someone bad been wiggling her toes, Stukkie related. Her hus band spotted the youth jn the couple's bedroom and lurched after him. Stukkie noted. The youth's capture, nearly -4 hours later, came when Mrs. KimbaJJ, the second victim, told her husband she was awakened by a cold band on her leg. The couple, Stukkie said, passed off the incident as a dream until KUnball got up for a drink of water and spotted the youth c owering under a bedspread that bad slipped to the bedroom floor. The Santa Ana Heights boy, Stukkie said, told officers he bad entered the Kimball home look- ing for "something of value." His house haunting episode followed a beer-drinking blnge with friends that also led to·" mass Ive hangover, Stukkle said. Daily Pilat CIHatfled edvertlaint 7141f42-M71 All other depertmenta 142.-4321 Thoma P H•ley ,...,._ -C"'91 ~ °"- Robert N Weed "'""""4 M ThomHKeevll ·-Michael P HatVey ........ °"'9(: .. L K•y Schultz ow.toiol~ Kenneth N Godd1rd Jr. ci.-o.ww Thomu A Murphln• ~·-Be<nard ktiu1m1n ~ cn.t.H Loos --.....1.- 0lfol A Moore ....., ... MAIN Of''1Cl QO Wttl .. , S4 , CM~ MnA, CA Meil ~eM ha IMO. C•te Mew, CA nt1' COPY• ..... 1911 OrM9t CNlt l'11bll1llfl•t C-V N• ll•wl \IOt!tl, llh11lr•llOlll, HllOtf•f mottt•r or ed •••ll>t,,,.llh " .. •In m•f II* •tP•OdlKH wit"°"t lOH •• , ,.,,.,.,_of'""''""' •• ,,.., s.t-<••u PMI• IMI•• ., CO\I• Mew Celltotllt• I U 1'$ I .. «IOI S"°"rtpl '°" by t•1'le• lUO '"°"'"'' "' ,,..,, li jO ""°"4111y m 1111erv dt11t,..11o111 }' 00 lftOlllllly , ... OrMel C-1 o.llf ,.,.., ..... wt\1(11., ~ '"" ,., ... "'•n. ., "*'lfttt ev ,,,. er.,. co.11 l'\IMIJll"'t ~ny k-•tt NII-I ert ,....,_ MOllllt f ~ ,, ... , ttf' CO\lt Mht ,._,.,., .. t<ll """"""Oft IHUI ·-·•·n Veno ....... . Utllllill -..Cll lolilll CN ll A •11191<1 ,.. ...... 1 ..,!loon h 1111611 ..... $e411t .. y• ... ""'4ev• fht ptlNljNI ,.._.l\lllftl !l'<IM It al lJI Wol l•Y ~l•t•t, ,. 0 ... '* c.-.111tw. ce11•-• .,,,. VOL. 74, NO. 1• - stitutional grounds before the Supry:e Court. would.. assail Mrs. 'Connor's votes on the is· sue i the Arizona Legislature. East was considering annouoc· ing his opposition to the nomina· tion, perhaps today. Speakes told reporters this morning, however. the "early indications are that she will be confirmed.'' The spokesman said the presi- dent met with Sen. Jesse Helms. R-N .C., leader or Senate con- servatives, at the White House on Tuesday, and bad spoken by telephone with other senators. Helms was quoted today as saying he and "at least five or six others" in the Senate are "skeptical" of the nomination. Praise came from senators as divergent in their outlook as Democrats Edward M. kennedy of Massachusetts. Joseph Biden of Delaware. Alan Cranston or California and Dennis DeConcini of Arizona and Republicans Or- rin Hatch or Utah. Goldwater and Strom Thurmond or South Carolina. Goldwater lashed at critics or Mrs . O'Connor's positions on abortion and the Equal Rights Amendment. "l don't buy this idea that a justice of the Supreme Court has to stand for this, that or the other thing," he said. "And I'm getting a little tired or people in this country raising hell because they don't happen to subscribe to every thought that person has.·· In his nationa lly broadcast an· no uncem ent or "the most awesome appointment" a presi· dent can make, Rea~an said Mrs. O'Connor was not selected just because she is a woman. He ca 11 ed her "a person for all seasons." From Page Al ONOFRE. • • officials discussed overcooling accidents in California and Florida and the discovery that steel in the Maine Yankee reac· tor at Wiscasset was aging more rapidly than anticipated. No plants were ordered shut down because "the staff doesn't think that any of them are in bad enough shape now, that is for the next year or so, that the vessel would crack," Murley told the com missioners. A reactor vessel is designed to withstand great pressures. But. over time. exposure to radJation makes the metal more brittle and subject to a greater risk of cracking, Murley said. Under normal operations, the pace of cooling is adjusted to compensate for the calculated Joss of toughness in an older vessel. Thus, the change does not ordinarily pose a problem. Last year, however. scientists conducting routine tests on the steel vessel at Maloe Yankee found that their calculations dJd not match actual changes in the metal and that minimum cooling temperatures for the plant were incorrect. Befort! the error was dis- covered and new calculations were made, the Maine Yankee veasel wu cooled nearly to the minimum acceptable tem- perature, Murley sald. There wu no damaee. · Then last winter, aclentlata at the Oak Rtdee National Laboratory concluded that a 19'78 overcoollne accldent at the Rancho Seco nuclear plant in California probably would have cracked an older, mor• briWe react.or veuel. Rancho Sec:o waa new at the Um• o1 the accident, 1n which a control 1y1tem f athare caused by a ahort·clrcu.lt overcooled lbe con by about aoo de1ree1 Fabrenb•lt ln one hour. Tbe ve11el al.o repreuurt1ed. ~ Prison steaks stir flap Solon says state paid too much for meal SACRAMENTO (AP> -State Sen . Dan Boatwri1ht. D· Concord, is complatnJne that the state paid $4.90 a pound for T - bone ateaka for a Mothers' Day dinner at the JruitituUon for Meo at Chino. Boatwright demanded Tues- day that the auditor general ln· vestlgate the "outrageously ex- pensl ve" meal. He said Los Angeles marketa were selling T· bones then for $2.59 to $3.09 per pound. He sent reporters copies of his correspondence. John Babich, chief of procure· ment for the General Services Department, confirmed that the steaks cost $4.90 a pound, but s aid they were part of a $170,000 contract for beef for six months at Chino . He said the bid by Specialty Meat Products of Long Beach was $10,000 under the second lowest of the three bids. Babich said he welcomed an auditor general's investigation. "We've cooperated with them on other investigations, and will Strapless romper. white or. lilac. S-M-l. S23.00. White V-neck romper with crochet tnm sized S-M·L S28.00. Matching vest S24.00. Sized S·M·L print short romper with he shoulders. 3 prints with SWtmwear to match. S24 00 be happy to make everylhlni available to them," be aaid. Qoatwrlght said Chino Food Manager F.D. Llsenbery aaid he could have bought the steak.a for $2.99 a pound. He said Lisenbery did buy the "traditional" Mothers Day T·bones outside the contract in 1979 and 1980 but this year was overruled by the General Services Department. Babich confirmed that Llsen· bery bouibt the steaks separate- ly in previous years, but ex- plained that this year he was late with bis request. Boatwriibt said be also wants the auditor 1ene ral to in- vesti1ate why 3,500 steaks were ordered and 3,916 were de· livered, when there were only 2,960 inmates and either 32 or no 1uesta -presumably in· mates' mothers -depending on whose count you use. The . senator said Llsenbery told him Genera! Services al- lows contractors a 10 percent leeway, and that the prison can't stop inmates from going back for seconds. Lisenbery says the extra steaks are in the prison'• freezer awaiUng another special oc· casion. Boatwright said such Incidents "undermine public confidence In our admlnistratloo of penal in· slitutioos at a lime when we are telling our constituents we must somehow come up with the money to construct additional prisons. "I am hard pressed to explain to the families I represent in Contra Costa County why the State or California is paying $4 .90 a pound for T-bone steaks, or why the state is even buying T-bone steaks in the first place," Boatwright said. Peron to depart BUENOS AIRES. Argentina <AP> A federal judge Tuesday gave ex-President Isabel Peron, freed after more than five year s or house arrest. permission to travel to Spain for three months. } lomp into Summel' ... With our fun. gcranywhere rompers. See our great selection. including styles shown at Bidwell's Boutique 3467 Via lido. Newport Beach 673-4510 • Parking Lot ntrance Now is the time "Our Sumrrer Sale'' is in full swing! ·- All of our quality lines are reduced for this event. Special orders are also drastically reduced. Stop in soon for the best selections. . . .. . . . ------~-----..--------------. . . • • • t • • .. • .. •• ·~ ' • • • .. • • • • • • • .. • • ... .., • • ... # , .... 19 • • ••,,.• ... ~·••tr••••• .. .,..•••• • • • •J .:. • • ., .. •.-• .. -. •• .,.....-_,.._.._ .... . . . . . ..... . . . .. --.. . . . ' • • .. # • • M . . . . ,. . . ' -.-,,,..-..-.. ,._ _____ - ; ............ Jon ''Clipprr'' Hoger1JJ, right, Glorio "Pmnf(' Wa.tera, aftd Kirbtl "Slq/ Kmg" Grat, non o/ llw 1950'1 populorte~ wrWI, Of'•~ for,,.. /trd H7M in 25 lfCCI'• Oft ABC'• "Good Morning Amnico." Mayor to seal promise in pool Mayor William Donald Schaefer of Baltimore often wields the official seal -but next week he's going to be the official seal. Last January, the mayor said if the $21 million dollar National Aquarium did not open on schedule July 3 he would jump in the seal tank. So, when aquarium of- ficials, blaming some minor pr oblems in adjusting the facility's life-support system, put the date back to Auiust 8, the mayor was put in a position of having to sink or s wim with his promise. Schaefer says he plans to go a head with the dip into the 70,000-gallon seal pool. It's scheduled July 15. Doris Loh, dethroned as Mi ss Hong Kong 1981 because she fibbed about Iler age, said she won't appeal the decision by the pageant's organizers. Miss Loh, 25, said she is sorry for the problems she caused, blaming the incident partly on an erroneous birth certificate issued by govern- Singer Larry Gatlin invit- ed another, less famous Larry Gatlin to a picnic to make up for the inconve- nien c e or s haring the Gatlin name. Gatlin, known for s uch coun· try music hits a s .. All the GATUN G o l d i n California" and "Broken Lady," read in a Nash ville newspaper that the other Larry Gatlin was bothered at all hours by phone calls from people wanting to speak to the famous s inger. So the singer invited the other Gatlin, a lumber company manager, to a picnic on the s inger's farm s outh of Nashville. The condition of convalesc- ing singer J erry Ltt Lewis was upgraded from critical lo serious, but he was kept in intensive care while he re- cuperated from emergency stomach surgery. Gov. Wiiiiam O'Neill of Connecticut prefers to go rambling to do his gambling. The governor says he's "absolutely" opposed to l e gal i zed casino gam- bling in Con- ne cticut. And he is willing to take that me s sag e anywhere, in- cluding to the National Gov- ernors' Con- O'NllLL ference next month in Atlantic City, N.J. the Las Vegas of the East Coast. O'Neill said that he is look- ing forw a rd lo visiting the casino city. He made the statement after s igning a bill establishing a state program for t he treatment of chronic gamblers . As ked 1f he would visit c a s inos during t h e con- fe rence. O'Neill replied: ;. m ent officials in Hong Kong. A spokeswo m an at Methodist Hospital South s aid Lewis, 45 , would stay in the i n tensive care uni t serveral more days. ··When I go to a theater, I go to watch the picture. When I go to a restaurant, l go to eat. If there 's a gam- bling facilltyintbehotel where we're s taying, l won't say that I wouldn't participate.'' l t -- Parched Florida periled Kentuckians mopping up after disastrous flooding Comtal f orec<Ul T e mpe raturetJ POINT C~CEPTIOM TO THE MEXICAlf llOltDER OUT till MILES -WI,_,.._. .... ...,.,..,,.~ -tly ...,. -_.... .._.. lec.elly ~ ........... tJ lllWb wttll 1 ,.,,_....,-.wi...w..,,... ...,...,_~1o-..1ote 11 k-L sew• uta 11 _.. 1 10 2 , ... •lft9111 --.. s !wt ~ ......,.._ '--< .......... fll9M .... .... ,~~~fl·-· oM t1ieM _...,. .... ly efter- Molln -~ w~ ..,.,._, .. lolr .,_,..,... tNA•adlt-,. U.S. 1ummary • , .. a-.... """ l(etlb«lly,...... .....,_ ,_..,. .. ,._. ...... T,..._,. Olld Ute ._ .... ,, ......... ~~ ..... .,...,.. lo. rocor.I -· ,.....,. .. tlM'H I of _.. WtMr.,.,...... ftOll\ Wlflt ... Tllo IOllo, ...-P:lorteo'a laKll .. D.-, ,.. hl•wy .......... 4 Mono.,_Frooay 11 you do r>O! ,_. _. -· t>y r. JO p m coll bototo 1 pm anO your COO'/ ..,11 be dol.-eO !Mlurdev anCI S..n01y II you 00 PICll =~1~m '=' ~' ~!.,"'.,,11': ··-.a 70 .. Albony AllluCl<'9 A,.,..r1110 Anchor ... AllOflt.e AllOftl< Cty a.111- ••rml"""" 81.,,,0rC'll llolM l0tton luftolo CMrllln SC CMrlstnWV Cllk ... Clndnnotl , .. ,, .. _ Colum- Dol·"I W1l't O.t1Yer 0.111\olnn wn.r ...,.,. i.tl " M,• i.t, u. lt1 ~.owl_...,,.,, d fire 11\et Detroit •-st IMce r.:~ .,.._.. In consllnMCI 40 ocr"OS of 1.-nt ~ Dululll Ille Hrly ttaaL ovt ol cOfllrOI In U. nort,.rn -Folrbonas "Tiie 11tuot1on la Yery, very ottout 30 '"II•• norlllwo•I ol Honolulu _._._ .. MW s.ut11 P:lor!Oo Woler MllllMCut, -..e offklolt Mid. HOV.Ion MM--••A Ol*kt ..,...._ "II lelU •_..,.II moy cllt-'CIP lnelflee»lh E• .. A ..... "Ufllelo .. ·~ lfllO • lolrly .. ,, .... lire,.. ••Id Jeck-Ille 1,.....-. 1W111 wlMer c°"'4I -o Ker-w...-.rn, ...,US__, for JIHMOU vory .,,_...lftt llw.tloft ,.,. In ,,. ,._ 09porl~t of C...-••· Kon• City ...tll l"IOt'lda." llOft. us Veo- lfl l(OflNclly, .. c-... ...... ,_ T-94\lrft _,OCI -180 IPI Liiiie Ro01 ,........,. lfl _ .. _..,.,. ~lot ,..,.,. ol .. _,.,,, Oollotn, _,.. LOI A._i.s ......-. fl_.••"" <-.cl ovec:,.. sllowon oncl llluncle rslloworo Loul•vlllo t!Ma_....,,.,.._...... .. ..,_. rum•l•cl ocrou Arllon101 encl Momtlf\h oftcl er._.. .,. '*"*"· auto olflclola Loulslono Mid _, •Ollom T•H• Mleml aalel. -0111411wN. Mllwo..W "TllO ~ we llecli wtlMfl llWlr Thore _.. tclltttrod <iwdl oc;,_ llillt>la-St.P crooll boMa -:· w lel OorclOfl ,,. '"'of llW ~ wltll _11, H•tltYlllo Hldlets, ' 1-'I tor IN Uto'I -y .... lrem .. cenlrol ll'ocHk How Or.._ DIYlllOfl of Emor...,cy S.nkH . cootl to INCOfltrot •oe111oL How Yotll M9tl of tflOM ... oc-• -,.. Tom _ _,,... wCIYlllll .. notion ot Oki• City ~----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.~-:: .... :.:·~INtr=~-:'":•:·~,_:.::M: .. ~· --) p.m. EDT ,.,.. from • low of 41 Omeho • In ONfftftWlll, -., too llltll\ of IOt PllllOdpN• lt1 GMle. S.D. PhMftla We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Daily Pllot? What don't you like? Call the number below and your message will be recorded1 transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. ' Sco ttorecl allo••rt encl tll11t1-Pl~rwll •n-_.. fWw<.ost ....._., ,.,,_,Mo ,,.,,, ~ T-to Mkhi ... -P11oftll, On lrom ,,. 0 1111 Cooat to P'lorh•o. R- si.-n olto ww.. llllOly ...... tr. Ric ........ nortttor• P•clllc cooat oncl I• $olt Leu ~---Sot1Dlo9D "1911 ....,.._... tr'Or'I IOIS to IM Sotl P'rOlt wore ••'9<1•cl ovor 1110 desert 5oottl• ~ wttll I'll -.. •IOftt tllo SI Loula COllf#ftlo c_. Olld lt1 .. PocHIC SI P·T•""'8 HotW:aAL ....... lft U.,.... of .. SIStolMrto neti... -·~ .... lfl .... ,.....,. OM .... w1tt1 ~oo t~ TUllO ,...,...la-.. "9W IE,._. Wollllfl9W\ . -0 .. ti ., .. ,,. ., .. ti 70 " ,, ti " 101 70 61 SI t4 7S .. " ... 1S . .. ., S1 17 ., . .. " .. to n " " . .. ., .. u .. u • • 7S u ,. " 70 •• n u 41 .. 10 101 a ti 71 to n " 74 ., 17 .. '2 .. ff " 71 .. 71 ts n .. ,. .... " 11 ti 71 '°' 11 '' .., • u .. . 11 47 tJ 11 .. 74 " 72 1S 54 .. ., " ,. ,, ,. • J1 .... . ,, t2 14 The same 24-hour answering service may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors mwit lnclud~ their name and telephone dumber for verification . No circulation calls, please. Southern California surf report Tell u! what's on your mind. 642•6086 ... .... J • • ... .... It It II II .... ....... A"I Mia oer I t flt# I J IW 2 • SW J • .. . r--; -----------------------------------------1 U1 ,004 Is what yov con sov• on vocouon lodgtng ov•f m. n.xt 20 yeors If you of• now spendln9 $1 ,000 for 0 IWO wffk vOCOtlon (Ouumlng O 10% WloclOn tOC.). HO'tn 'tt'lch TlrM-Shot1f'9. o dromatlC Idea thot enobl•~ you 10 own o sltcit of prime VOC10tlon time r~eemoble en ~'90s of ~"UfY '~ In CollfomlO ond around thewOftd It's t""'-you cosr..G In f0< o llfetlme ot gvorontffd low-cost IVitUfY voa>llons. Coll lntemauonol ~rt 5ha11ng. C~erpolnte 1. 1~,(7i~)712-Uli CoHnow ... Tim.SN>rtng combines 011 me ~n<.09.s of owntt19 -~ ro.c ~llfM-wtch lotal lock ol ~ J . 1 ~ ec,cmbetOwwhac)'OU'd•xp«itopoytoro ~., ........ ,..._ \L~~·-- - --- - --------__ :_ ___ --- ------- --' Orange Coast DAIL 'f PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 s Commuter airline OK'd County grants Imperial five daily flights from airport A second commuter airline bas been granted authority to serve the John Wayne Airport in Orange County. The County Board or Supervisors agreed Tuesday to allow Imperial Airlines t-0 make four fllghts per day to Los Angeles International Airport and one to its home base In Carlsbad. Imperial will fly Brazilian· made 18-paasenger Bandeirante twin-engine turbo-prop aircraft and will temporarily use the facilities and c r ew of rival Golden West Airlines. However, Imperial vice presi- dent Marie Harmon said Tues- day his company hopes to set up its own operations at John Wayne In about five months. lmperial's introduction -ltB first flights are scheduled for Friday will create a head-lo- head competition between the two commuter lines flying into Los Angeles Harmon s aid his a irline will char ge $31 for a one-way trip. Golden West . which runs 17 flights per day rro m J ohn Wayne, cha rges $34 Neither of the two airlines' flights is calculated in the coun- ly 's allo wable l i mit of 41 average dally comm ercial Jet departures becau e their plane•, a re not considered noisy cnou)!h to make a difference to au J)Ol I neighbors "You don't hear our plum .. ., whe n they come in ()r leuvt• s aid Harmon. Imperia l was started us 1 charter company 14 year-. u1" and began e xpanding lhri··· yea rs ago, Harmon s aid ft , primary route is bct1AN•n San Diego and Los Angeles The airline currently usl's r1 ~ •' of its year-old Ba ndetrantt·s u11d has fi ve other comm uter '17" I aircr aft on ordt>r, Harmori saul Moguls gather in woods 'Greatest men's party' will attract pickets SAN FRANCISCO <AP> The Bohemian Club, whos e mem - bership includes the rich and mighty up to the president or the United States, begins its a nnual two-week encampment in the redwoods Friday, described by Herbert Hoover as "the greatest men's party on earth." C lub pres ident Mi c hael Coonan said some 2,000 men - the club has no female members will gather at the Bohemian Grove 00 miles north of here out- side the Russian River town of Mo nte Rio for the annu a l re treat. Besides President Reagan, the c lub's me mbe r s hip in cludes Vi ce Preside nt George Bus h, Defe nse Secretary Caspar Wein· b e rger. Atto rn ey Gen e ral William Fre n c h S mith and Senate Foreign Relations Com- mittee Chairman Charles Percy, R-111. P ast encampments have been attended by former presidents Richard Nixun and <:c·rald 1-w I as well as Secrclan of ...,1,11• Alexander Haig · Industrial titans 1n the 1111 ser vatively orientl•d c-luh , ,. po rtedly inc lude L<'tindr d " Fir estone , World Bank l'rl dent A. W Clausen and Ju ... 1 Dart of Dart l ndustrw~ Club officials C'onf1rml'CI th.:1 Reagan and Bush 1Aould nut .1• tend, but no list "'a' J\ ;.11lahl1 I t hose expected to C'Oml' State backs tough The romp in the n•d"' oml., ti lows capt;.uns of 1ndustr~ :..r11t heads of government to let th1 ·1• hair down away from thl' p1 • s ures or every da) Ith: Thl• 1 .1 campment features :rn o!J""'"~ r itual with the burning of :all "' fig) on an altar. a ..,taiw 1 ' travaganza known s1mµI) a' ti Grove Play and a di splay of buf foonery called ··Low Jinks · • measures on cr101e SACRAMENTO <AP > - Speeding toward s ummer vaca- tion, the Legis lature has a p- proved a passel of anti-crime bills, including one to toughten penalties for drunken driving The Assembly moved at a speedy pace, passing hundreds Senate OKs notification on abortion SACRAMENTO CAP> Doc- tora would be required to notify parents of unmarried girls un- der 18 before performing an a bortion on that child under a bill approved by the state Senate Tuesday. Sen. John Schmitz, author of SB1S4, said he dropped earlier provisions of the bill requiring parental cons ent, adding that he believed notifying parents "has basically the same effect." Arguing that parents should at least be notified that a teen-age daughter is seeking an abortion, Schmitz, R-Corona del Mar. said abortions and veneral disease t reatment should not be treated differently than othe r medical ca re for minors. "To get a band-aid in school. you need parental consent. But somehow the pro-abortion peo- ple have gotten this m ajor ex- emption through,·· Schmitz com- plained Sen. Diane Watson , 0 -Los Angeles, criticized Schmitz' measure as "a little oCCensive." But no othe r senato r s poke either for or against the bill before a quick 23·3 vote sending it to the Assembly. Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Cert1fu•d Gemulollillt, A GS GARNET Noah'• light" It Is said that Noah hung a large garnet in the ark ror light. Whether or not that is true, It Js cert ain that this l ovely gemstone has served mankind down through the ages. The ancient Egyptians considered it to be a perfect antidote for snakebite or food pol1on1n1. Taken to bed, It was suppo1ed t o protect a s leeper from ntahtmares, and lt was aald that, if one dreamt of gamet, lt meant that a rreat mystery would soon be solved. Nowadays, ••rn e t la a aometimes-overlooktd source of 1reat t>e,auty ln Jewelry. Though most people Wnk ol carnet u a red atone that la not quite u colort\ll u the ruby, there are 1or1eous apeclment that are a deep, clear ireen. In fact, theM are the moat valuable apec.lmem of &arftet-But 1arnet com• In &Imo.at every color but blue. Thll II becaae It ls made aap of vartOul ml.neral element.a, ancS the euct composiUon of a apeclftc specimen deddet tbat 1~lmen'1 color of bills Monday a nd Tuesday to adjourn early for its fi ve-week recess. There was little debate on any items. The Senate kept at its usual slowe r s peed and planned to work today as well before quit· ting. The recess was scheduled to begin Friday Lawmakers re- turn to Sacra mento Aug. 10 and adjourn for the year on Sept. 15 The crime bills approved by the Assembly did not include the con troversial m easure t ha t would raise the stale s ix cent sales lax by a penny for one year to raise money for prisons. Jails and law enforcement. The autho r , Assembly man T erry G o ggin . 0 -Sa n Be rnardino. said he would wait until Augus t before moving his AB246 and ACA32. which are de- signed to go on the July 1982 ballot. The drunke n drivin g bill. AB 5 41 , w o u l d "m a k e California's the s tHfes t laws in the nation." s aid the author. As- semblywoman J ean Moorhead. D-Sa cramento. Currently, a person convicted or a first drunken driving of· fense could get a 48-hour jail sentence, which could be sus- pended. This bill would make it a mandatory 48-hour jail sen- te nce or a 90-day driver's license suspension. A second offense now bnngs a 48-hour jail sentence. which can rarely be s uspended. The bill would increase that to either 10 days in jail . a fine and a one- year li cense suspension. or two days in jail, a fine and a one- year alcohol treatmeqt program and license s uspensio1t The bill was sent lo the Senate by a 72-0 vote. T he 109-year-old duh ha!> h•·I 1ls annual outing s tn<"t· thl' tur of the cent ury. but tn rl'l'1•11I year!:> has run into cntk1sm 11 activist and feminist gr,iups On Frida). for th•· 'it'I or.i. str aight )t·ar, p1ckt•ts v. ill 1111• t he route leading fro m ~:.in• .1 Rosa airport 35 mill's t11 th•· ... ,,, where most of the l?lll'"'' \\Ill .11 rive from throu~h11111 lhl· 1·1"11' t ry "To the pubhc. th1• llc:h1·mia11• are simpl) enJ0~1n.: ;1 11111 •:1 from the ·cares of ctlltl11:ril\ .111 I respons1b1ht) In n•.al11\ th e ncampment 1s a loc-;:11on of 1•111 venience where thest· men make pohc) dec1s1on' ;wd ~u ta in contacts th;it oftl·n h,,, · catastrophi c <'ffects on our <laih lives," said Tom li 1d1111;ir, s pokesman for 25 ~rM1µ~ non prising the Bohemwn <'luh 1\1 lion Network. A group or anti nll(''l'JI 111 " onstrators will ~rt·t·I J.:ll(""'h 1 the gates or the G111\t .... 11 l Richman Coonan said thl· 1!11h1• 111 io111-. are undaunted by lt1t• 1H11h '' adding. "I don l think rhl· d 11 has anything to do '' 11 h .11 nn11 e n ergy I don 't kn11" v. h 1 they're trying to do N o w o m t• n h ,, ' ,. h 1• 1• r em ployed at lhc Cr<•\ 1• .1~.1111 this year, said Coo11u11 ·1ht.•1ss: • or the club 's n~ru ... ;il t n ht I women there is currt.•1111~ hd111 t he Fair Employment 1'1 ,11 11<., Commission In February. Admm1~t1 atl\• Law Jud~t· Robert K<'ndJll rul• th at the club had a lt•i:1t1m.1t defense" 1n not h1r1nii v.om111 lie noted that club m<.'mb1 1 ·urinate tn the open "'ithout <'\ c t he USe Of rudimCflt3f) lOllt I facilities,' and said the pr<'srnn of women would ·alter th•· behavior or the members . MEMBER AMERICAN Gt.M SOCIET'r 1823 N(WPORT BLVO COSTA MESA 3& YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION 811n11Ama11earo Ma11e1 Charo• PHONE &41'3401 ( . . ~I .... s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 Kansas ready for h~at But offi cials hopeful there w on't be repeat of 1980 KANSAS CITY, Mo. <AP> - This time lut 1wnmer, the aun beean a merciless uaault on the Great Plains. . Day after day, temperatures topped 100 deirees. Farmlands were baked brick-hard, and crops worth billiona of dollan shriveled. More than ~ people died in the Plain.a stales. Nationwide, the death toll was 1,265 -6~ limes the average - most of the victims poor and elderly. And heal was a con· tributing factor in hundreds of other deaths. Should another beat wave strike this summer, officials say they are ready with emergency procedures to prevent fatalities. But it looks "more and more like we won't have a repeat of last year," said Phil Shideler, Kansas state meteorologist. "That doesn't mean we couldn't have above -normal tem- peratures and below-normal precipitation." Spring and summer rainfall across Kansas this year is triple that of a year ago, when the state, like its Great Plains neighbors. was having a drought. RainfalJ for this May and June is 150 percent to 200 percent above normal, Shideler said. ''So whether we have a hot, dry summer or not, we're .going to have a much more comforta- ble summer than last year." he explained. Beside the drought, the culprit last year was a high-pressure system over the Southeast that remained stagnant, blocking the flow of moisture from the Gulf of Mexico to the Great Plains. So far, there's no such system in the picture this year, although one could develop, said Ed Ferguson, deputy director of the National Severe Storms Forecast Center. "We're in for a bot" July and Au1uat, Fer1U90n said. "But I would be surprised If we had a repeat of last year." Independence Day 1980 marked the start of a 17-day run of 100-plus readings in Kansaa City. Before the muggy rains and 80· and 90-deeree readln1s ar- rl ved in August, 100 people had died ln Texas, 134 in Kansas and about 550 in Missouri. Missouri Gov. Joseph Teasdale ordered N atlonal Guardsmen to go door-to-door, telling the poor and the elderly how to cope with the heat. Jeep. loads of fans were delivered In Kansas City and St. Louis. But many who received the fans wouldn't use them, fearful of soaring utility bills. Dead bodies were found beside unplugged fans. "We found one older adult ly- ing half dead In front of his open refrigerator, while bis wife, de· lirious with the heat, was dust- ing the furniture," said St. Louis Mayor James Conway. Many Kansas City residents refused to go to air-conditioned centers for fear that their homes would be robbed. Others, wor- ried about burglars, kept win- dows and doors locked, and their homes became ovens. Kansas City police, called to a s weltering nursing home where the owner had told nurses to turn off the air conditioning to reduce utility bills, ordered nurses to keep fans running. "The heat wave didn't kill these people," said Kansas City Police Chief Norman Caron. "Social neglect is what killed them. Mother Nature just cleaned the slate." To prevent deaths this sum· mer, City Health Director Dr. Richard Biery has suggested an early warning system that would track temperatures, beat- related Ulnessea and deathl. Precautionary alerts would be issued if temperatures of 85 degrees and above persisted for three nights in a row or if hospitals reported a rash of beat-related problems. . If a heat wave occurs, city of. ficials plan to a.sk utilities to al· low customers to defer par,· menta, and swimming pools will stay open longer. They also will ask state officials to preuure nursing homes to maintain cool temperatures. During the emergency last summer, the Kansas City police command post compiled in· formation on 4,000 of the city's poor l\lld elderly. This summer, those forms would be used to zero in quickly on those who might need help in a heat wave. Group Want8 of tre atme nt BOSTON (AP ) -The Arthritis Foundation s ays pa- tients suffering from rheumatoid arthritis s hould beware of a controversial blood- c I ea nsi n g treatment called apheresis, which is similar to kidney dialysis. In a statement released at its annual meeting, the foundation said the treatment is experimen- tal and should be used only in carefully controlled hospital tests. "We are concerned that some practitioners have rushed in and set up storefront operations of· fering these blood-filtering treat- ment techniques under condi· tions which may be life· threatening." said Dr. Frederic McDuffie. a foundation vice pre- sident. FIESTA BEGINS -Young Spanfards run in front of bulls through the streets of Pamplona on the first day of the annual San Fermin AP..,._ fiesta. The bulls are accompanied by steers which has a calming effect. Pre ssure builds on Carter He's being asked to speak out on Reagan policies ATLANTA (AP) -Some Democrats think it's time for Jimmy Carte r to speak out against Reagan administration policies, says a top aide to the former president. "People have talked to him more lately" about commenting publicly. said Jody Powell. who was Carter's press secretary in the White House. "and he's ex· pressed a feeling that he can serve a purpose within the party as someone who doesn 't have a political ax lo ,grind " The former president has been living quietly in Plains, fishing, woodworking and writing a book about his years in the White llouse. He has refused to comment publicly on his s uccessor's policies, "because he has a basic sense or fundamental fairness," according to fo rmer While House Chief of Staff Jack Watson. According to The Atlanta Journal and The Atlanta Constitution, Carter is telling friends privately that Reagan has had enough time to adjust to the presidency and that he now should be held accountable for his policies since the Jan. 20 in· auguration. In their combined Sunday edi· lions. the papers quoted Carter's friends as saying he intends to criticize Reagan's policies on human rights, environmental is· sues and nuclear arms control, the same concerns he addressed during his farewell speech Jan. 14. Sears Huntington Beach EACH OF THESE ITEMS ARE AVAJLA8l.E FO" SAl.E AS ADYERTll~D ) PLUS STORE We sell first quality and discontinued merchandise from Sears Retail and Catalog Distribution. HOME-N-SHOP VAC Save 50°10 8 Gallon Capacity was 59.99 NOW 2949 WILSON RACQUETBALL RACKET & CASE was 34.99 NOW 1749 Save 50o/o -· Save 60% LADIES TANK TOPI 100% COTTON were 2.49 I "Was·· prices quoted are the regular prices at which the items were formerly offered by Catalog or in many Sears Retail stores around the country. Eftec:tlwe 7/1111 • 18" TWIN BLADE ELECTRIC ROTARY LAWNMOWER #91 411 was 155.99 'NOW7749 Save 50% . were 6.99 I Save 50°10 EXERCISE CYCLE #2891 was 129.99 NOW 6449 5/16" 9 only STAPLE GUN & STAPLES was 16.99 TETHER BALL a POLE SET wu12.99 ·Save 50% 11...U.gtoa Rfoach IMS Acl&Mli t\da•li Mapolla C714•1'1·- ·non~·· ==== ............. ....---..--..-..... -----._----------------r---·..--····~ . '"'"':t'_ .. __ ~~-~·~·-· .. -· ... -4. -,., .,._. "i ..... • •'-' t ,. • ._., e• •, • I • # ' • # ~ • "• ' , ......... ......... . .. .... ... . . .. .. . . . ·-.... ..-. .... .. .. . ~ ..... "' ..... ............... ,-..:~·····-............... ,., .. . . ' ...... .-. .,. ........... .,...,. -·. EASY RIDER -"Pussy.cat," Patty Butler's cool cat makes like a high flyer on her back as the 24·year·old Salinas woman hang glides ............. over the ocean near home. The cat has been hang gliding for three months, sitting in a nylon pack. . • ortapower... · L. 10 ~ 1ttle Cleaner ••• Big Power~ •Home ~ •Auto •Boat s5499 suO:fb .95 One of the most powerful mini· cleaners ever! It's got the power you'd expect from a full size canister. Goes with ydu everyplace yoo clean. Easy to change dust bag ... use it as a blower . . . extra-ling power cord . . . ultra· compact and portable. PrlcH good thru Sun., July 12, 1H1 CROWN IYH~YOUWAMTIHAMAIOWAUSTOll Westcliff I 7tll k ... ,,..,.,.. . 1024 Irvine Ave. • Newport Beach 64~1 llJ • OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Corona del Mar 3107 E. Coast Hwy . 6llU.5'Mlltlof'*-• '7J.Zllt . I Harbor View Center A<rosa from It°"" O«dlM 1614 San Miguel Dr Newport Beach '4Wl70 Newport urf and Sport JULY 9-12 IONLYJ .. ml!!!~IJi'l"ll!"'I~~-........ se..2 2 101/2 ......... An. ............ 67).112' I 0:00.t:OO D9ty -Shre l South Coast Pima COlhlMtM 641-0523 Mal Haws D.aty Ca II Classifi ed Ad- v ertising at 642-5678 to place your ad.llilJ Pilat with a t/aily Pt lot fenny 1/ih;tler M ~l . . ,. . -~ ... . ... , . . -. . . . . -. --. . . . ' . . .. , . .... ... :.!., ......... ~ .. ~ .. J J : •• _ .... ._.,. · .. .. . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 s Al Airline takeover fight rages L obbyi sts vi e in Continental employees' bid for control Com modity Futures Tradlna Commiaalon. . ... SACRAMENTO (AP) -Some of Callfornla 'a most powerful lobbyists are doing batUe over the question of whether Con· tinental Airlines workers should be al· lowed to bypass state law and purchase con· trol or their employer. Lined up on behalf of Continental are Donald K . Brown, one or the state's top lobbyis ts whose two dozen clients have included Summa Corp.. Dow Chemical and Burger King. Also lobbying on behalf of the employees is Jeremiah Hallisey, a San Fran· cisco attorney who is treas urer of Gov. Ed· mund G. Brown Jr. 's U.S. Senate campaign committee and a major fundraiaer for Assembly Speaker Willie Brown. The battle center s a r o und a little·known state Jaw which could scuttle the employees' thus far successful drive to make Continental the nation 's largest employee·owned firm. The employees began their move for self· ownership in the face of a takeover attempt by Texas International Airlines. Texas International is trying to block the new offering so it can gain control of Continental. Tl CWTenUy OWllJ 48.5 percent of Continental's stock, but sale of the stock to the employees would dilute that voting power by halr. Representing Tl are f ormer Assembly Speaker Pro Tem J ohn T. Knox; Willie Barnes, the former corporations commissioner who also is a member of the politically powerful Los Angeles law f irm headed by Democratic National Committee c hairman C harles Manatt; and former As· semblyman William T. Bagley, who served as chairman of the federal Continental employees • want to be exempted , from a state law requlr· i ng De partm e nt ot Corporations approval of a $15.4 million share stoc k sa l e to the employees. Department approval is needed because the New York 1 Stock Exchange has said it would delist Con· tinental 's stock if the company allows t he e mployees takeover without a confirming vote by stockholders. Continental has asked the NYSE to reconsider its decision. Suit against OPEC falters Action ch arges oil producers' cartel of price SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has supported a decision that tossed out a lawsuit accusing OPEC oil producers of price fix· ing untler the Sherman Antitrust Act International law bars federal court jurisdiction in the suit brought by the International As· sociation of Machinists against the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, said the panel. The union appealed a fter U.S. District Judge A. Andrew Hauk held that federal courts had no jurisdiction in the case. In December 1978, the IAM brought s uit against OPEC and member nations demanding tri· pie damages and injuhctive re· lief under U.S. law. 0 P EC refused to r ecognize federal court jurisdiction and failed to answer the charge. Finally, after extensive hearings at which OPEC was represented by various other parties. J udge Hauk h e ld that be l acked jurisdiction, and that OPEC did not fall within the meaning of a defendant in antitrust law. Cable car, cab mishap hurts 8 SAN FRANCISCO IAP) At least eight people were injured slightly when a cable car lurched after an emergency stop to miss a taxicab, a Municipal Railway offi cial said. A woman suffered a broken arm and seven children were treated Tuesday for minor in- juries al Mission Emergency Hospital. according to a hospital s pokeswoman. Railway officials said six other people were taken to hospitals to check for injuries. "It seems that a ~ble car and a taxicab had a conflict" at about 9:42 a.m ., said Walter 1 Weir. manager of the Muni's ca· ble car division. The accident occurred near the intersection of Leavenworth and Washington streets. Get Two Sundays a eek Unneeded items taking up pl ace in your space? Sell it all and put cash in your pocket with the new Daily Pilot 8·Day Week. We can put you in touch with more buyers because our classifieds have an extra day to sell every week. Get results with the ads that last longer. Get the 8·Day Week special classified rate. Call 642·5678 today! For an EXTRA day, call today <. 642·5678 .. -Open a to 5:30 Monday-Friday, a to noon Saturday. The new Doily Pilot 8·DoyWeek it~ a PLUS "· • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday. July 8, 1981 Dog flushed from sewer at-<ZaSZ fbr b::>ys ... Rescuers have struggle with pooch roaming Riverside pipe fiA RIVERSIDE (AP) -There's a German shepherd here who reaJly knows what lt's like to be an underdoe. Thls pooch roamed the storm drain system under the city's streets for at leas t a day, then thwarted eight rescuers for more than three hours before being foreild out. No one knows how long the canine· had been wandering around in the pipes. And it was oot without some difficulty that the Riverside Humane Society finally got him out of his subterranean hideout. Huma ne society officers climbed down manholes to block escape routes in the maze of drain pipes. The police balled most traffic through the intersection of Magnolia and Madison streets. And the city water department literally bad to flush the dog out of his hiding pipe. "I'd rather get a cat out of a tree," said Humane Society Offi cer John Papp, one of eight peopl~ involved in the rescue QUEENIE irlHHl 1r 1A\1·• \Vt 1~1@~1[)'f '11 ~)\UK~Alll lr*'-'l"(IAAl!r:l~llf ll .@/A\l~I ~@o Disability tax refunds idle l SACRAMENTO c AP J -Wanted · Three , million Californians to split up $200 million in over· • pa 1d state taxes, at up to $91 apiece. For six months there have been practically no takers for the money, which is lying unclaimed in the state Disability Ins urance Fund Virtually all private employees in California contribute to the fund, which pays benefits to peo· pie who can't work because of illness or injury. Because of an unexpected surplus, a 1979 state law authorized $600 m illion in refunds The maximum refund was $91 per taxpayer, which was 80 percent of the maximum contribu· lion at the time of $114 a year. The maximum con· tribution now is $89.40 a year. State officials said they refused $396 million in 1980 to fi ve million persons who checked the proper boxes on their state Income tax returns, say- ing they had paid into the fund and wanted refunds. But officials say they have refunded only another S5 million since then. The Employment Development Department says it believes at least three million wage earners remam eligible. They have until April 15, 1984 to file amended tax return~ or make written requests to the state Franchjsc Tax Board. With the prospect that much of the money may never be claimed, several bills are pending in the Legislature to distribute some of it by increasing disability benefits. Republic's Smart Stop, .. Fares save up to 40% on selected flights that make one or more stops' No complicated rules. although seating 1s limited one-$209 way llW10RK LaGUllDIA ::.;-$246 Just call your travel agent and say you want to fly Republic. Or call us any time at (7 14) 540-2060. ~ The dog's plight wH discovered when a man and his son heard barklna and flnally peered down through the barred drain openins QLllKSILVJSIR .... c An anxious dog face was looking back. Papp said the dog had to have entered the drain from another part of town because the pipe openings In this area are not big enouah for a dog to fall through. He s urmised that the dog wandered through the drains until he saw lhe light at the in· tersection grill. .smrte and ew1TTl'Mlar, th<Z. hott<z.st thing g_J1aj People watching the rescue told Papp they had heard the dog barking through the previous nigbt. Papp climbed down a metal ladder into the drain, but the dog refused to come out and backed into a narrow side pipe. "We tried calling him and <'Oaxmg him out," said Papp "We put some food down canned dog food almost under his nose, but he wouldn't have any We tried banging on one end of the pipe with a flashlight to drive him out He didn't budge " So Papp called for reinforcements and the police and city sewer <'rews arrived with a water truck. While Papp went down the corner hole and held the dog's attention, other rescuers blocked off three other potential escape routes. The water truck was positioned over a manhole m the middle of the street, but the dog was at fi rst saved by a s loping pipe that kept him high and dry. Then the truck moved to a more strategic opening and tbe German shepherd was flushed out The dog, who wore no coll ar or tags, was cart· ed off to the pound. He is considered a stray, but Humane Society supervisor Helen McGee said that during the rescue at least 10 people asked about adopting him. Cigarette f raud told PEKING I AP> Some peasants are hand- @)~@@)~@ 44 Fashion Island· Newport Beach•714/644·5070 1001 Westwood Blvd.· Westwood VLllage·2131479·7727 rol11ng rigarettes and passing them off as China·s leading brands, a letter to the Communist Part" newspaper People's Daily alleged · REAL VALUES Such nationally known labels as Chunghua. M utan. Fenghuang and Tach1enmen are being fraudulently used on the imitations, the letter said. on item s from applesa u ce to zipper s D .1 p·I .. are advertised e v ery day in the II J I DI The writer complained local authorities help the counterfeiters by providing them with shipping document~ and ignoring the offenses as long as laxes arc paid The stre~th of Atnerican! Reserves r:'ver twice legal requirements 6 MONDI T-Blll CERTIFICATE $10,000 minimum 1 2 % e I llntl\t \111111.11 \kid % e \ 111111.tl H.1t l· Rate aftllable July 7 through July 13. 1981. SHI,()()() minimum A11nu.1I dkl '" l" \ 1dd i' ha..,nl 1111 rl"lll' t 'I Ill\ 111 111 prtll dpal and lntt·n:M at tlw ':um· ratt· tor .1 ~<14i lla) ) l·ar Hatt'' .1rt· 'llhWl I 111 l·han~l' :.11 (1·month rt·nl.'wal. Fnkral rq~ulalinn~ pr11h1hit tlw l 0111p1n111d111~ of lnu:n:M :111d rn1ulrt· a '""'tan ti.ii 1w11.1lt) for 1.'Jrl) "llhllr.I\\ .ii Insured safety 30 MONDI TREASURY ACCOUNf No minimum 12. % I lln t11 l· :\111111,11 \idd 12. % Rate available July 7 through July 20, 1981. :\:o 111111111111111 RJtl·. 'l'I hi \\l.'d,ly h) tlw I ..., li'l".l'llr). i~ ba..,1:d on till' yidc.J ol lrt·.1,un !'ll·t'uritil·=" lntt·rt·,t b nimpounlk<l J:11l). lnlt'fl'~I raw av:dlahle .11 till" lillll' t hl' au:ount i~ opt·•ll'<l n·maln~ In l·ffn·1 for the :.in·ounf~ full tl'rlll h ·1kr.1I rqt11l.11io11' rl·q111n· .1 '11h,1.11111.1I pt·nahr on funlb withdrawn prior 111 111.1111ril} Insured safety-pays more than any bank AMERICAN SAVINGS SAFE SINCE 1885 •ASSETS OVER $9 BILLION • RESERVES OVER TWICE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS Over 100 American Savings offices to seroe you. Check the white pages of your telephone directory for the office nearest you. Accounts now insured to $100,0001 ' I .!-.f, I I ' I I I j. _.._,~yrt1-...... ...,.... •• ,,...... • •'•' •1•• I t ,.,. t t•• • ••• •• t• •• • • • • -••.,. W•• • ·-•" • •,,., . . . . .. • • • .. ,,. •••••.• ,,. ......... ,_ ..... , • ,,. ........ ,._ .• .. ···~·····-"-· ••••••• ~.;. ....... -.....-..+-........................... ... . -,..... .... . . . . Logging life of 1880s no bed of roses LONG LAKE, Wis. CAP> -The oortbwoods lumberjack or the 1880s needed to be like the mythical Paul Bunyan to overcome a low-protein diet, sleeping "cheek by jowl" and a tiny income. Even now, there are an "astronomical" number or mosquitoes and deer rues at what re· mains of a Wisconsin logging camp some 200 miles north of Milwaukee, says archeologist David Overstreet. He and a nine-member team trekked a mile in· to the woods, carrying equipment and supplies, to excavate the lumber camp in the Nicolet National Forest. They recovered nearly 1,000 pounds of artifacts in a two-week project. Overstreet says their efforts have shed light on the life of 19th century lumberjacks: "During this era, it wa& a pretty Spartan existence." He said the artifacts are examples of pine log- ging technology and comprise the· "best collection of pioneer logging gear in Wisconsin.'· A bunkhouse was among the main buildings at the site, whi ch is about seven miles northwest of Long Lake. Overstreet estimated it housed up to 70 lumberjacks, and that they slept three to a bed in three tiers of 4·foot·wide bunks. "They were really packed in there cheek by jowl." he said. The camp wash house and privy was a mere 8 feet by 12 feet. and had one dry sink where the men "probably performed what few ablutions lumberjacks performed," the archeologist said. What the team found disputed the lumber· jacks' hearty diet. Meals were often prepared with rice, beans and £lour, Overstreet said, and oc · casionally with salt pork or salted fish. Only a few animal bones were found, and there were no cans or bottles. Records indicate alcohol was not permitted. but the excavation turned up evidence lumber jacks were allowed "good old Doc Spencer's cherry elixir," which generally contained 40 per· cent alcohol , Overstreet said. The remedy ··may not have treated what they had but it helped them forget the symptoms." he said. Overstreet said the logging camp was owned by Menominee Bayshore. Many lumberjacks were immigrants from Sweden, Norway and Finland. and they were paid only a few pennies a day The loggers of the 1880s cut only white pine, as they did not have the technology to remove hardwoods from the wilderness area, but pine could easily be noated out on rivers. Logging is still a major industry in Wisconsin. Overstreet is director of Great Lakes Archeological Research Center, a Milwaukee con- sulting firm set up with state and federal funds in 1974 to survey possible sites for excavation. He un· dertook the study of the lumber camp at the re quest of the U.S. Forest Service. The study of the lumber c.amp 1s likely to lead to its protection from logging operations in the sur rounding forest, Overstreet said. He said life in the northwoods presents d1f· ficulties even now, what with the mosquitoes and deer rues. "It was a miserable two weeks we spent out there," be said. Reverse 01ete r costs Illan $1,8~0 SAN DIEGO (AP> -A judge has ordered Michael Schwartz to pay Sl.860 to San Diego Gas & Electric Co. as restitution for electricity he al· legedly got free by turning a meter upside down so it ran backwards. Schwartz. a 39·year-old public accountant, pleaded no contest to energy theft and meter· tampering. A grand theft c harge was dropped, but Schwartz was put on two years' probation and fined $200. The utility's electric meter was re moved periodically and then hung upside down , court records showed. Leave now, save now with our low "K" fares. No planning ahead. no advance ticket purchase necessary It pays to be spontaneous! WCCMllTY10: SAIJLAIEOTY :~$52 PllBX 5111111/TKOMA HOllUOll BVIR one-~ way flV on•-$110 way one-~ way fll.I on•-$129 way Just call your travel agent and say you want to fly Republic. Or call us any time at (71 4) 540-2060. ,.... t Thi Y ou've decided you want the lowest tar m enthol available. But with the "lowest" claims being tossed around by dW'erent brands. the search has become quite confusing. Some tar conscious Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 A7 .,, ......... FLOAT -Joe Couler, leg is cast, takes his ease on a rubber raft in a gravel pit near Janesville Site back ed SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Superior Court judge says it's okay for the state Public Employees Retirement System to build a 15· story headquarters near downtown Sacramento. The building, to be on the site of the old Lin· coin School al 4th and P Streets , bad been challenged by the En· vlronmental Council of Sacramento. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 842-5078 C • • •l• .. 1,1tD\' t.C "" smokers think they're smok- ing the lowest tar menthol. When. infact. they only th ink they are. We've set out the tar numbers. side by side, in the chart below. The chart will tell you who's the Ultra Lowest Tar'M brand of all menthols. We've done some- thing to end the corif usion. .-There's only one-Now. NUMBERS DON'T LIE. NO CIGAREITE, IN ANY SIZE, IS LOWER IN TAR THAN NOW. NOW CARLTON TR UE menthol 85's lmg l mg* 5 mg* menthol j lOO's 2mg -~ 5 mg Bmg All iar ~mbers are av per ogaretre by FTC methoo except those asterisked (; -Mi1dl are av pei ogarene by FTC Aeporl May 81 T1;le lowest in tar of all ~s. Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Heelth. SOFT PACK 85'ti MENTHOL 1 mg. "tar.-0.1 mf.nico-SOFT PACK 100'a. MENTHOL 2 mg. "tar", 0.2 mg. nicotine. IV. per c1g1rettt by Flt mlthod. . .. I --_ .... ___ ...,._ ..... . -.................. 0¥0$ CAO + a a c z w ;s ;; 4 a a o a t¥#_. N ;40 U I ~ ... ~· • Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 INCREDIBLE Wayne Silvas of Salinas stares at wreckage after he was awakened when these vehicles slammed into his home. A car ran off highway. hit a pole knocking out Since the road plan for the C ity of Irvine was fir'it envi..,ioned, .,afetv and convenience have been foremost in the mind.., of tht• planners. That's why main roads go around residential areas so the majority of the traffic is kept out of your immedi- ate neighborhood. And away from children. Implementation of the planned road sy..,tem i~ another t'\.ample of Irvi ne's.continued wowth toward the goal of becoming an energy- Banker quits after loan audit Crocker Bank could lose $4 .3 million in alleged deals SACRAMENTO (AP > - Crocker National Bank, the na· tion'a 12th largest bank, could lose up to $4.3 million because of loans and overdraft.a made by a Sacramento branch manager who quit alter auditors quea· tioned his loan procedures, bank officials said. The disclosure marks the second such case in the past month. The first Involved $8.8 million in loans obtained by David Estes. a former Crocker loan office manager In San Joee, who bank officials say has "Our 24th yeitr" S1( Auto & Homeown&rs a1reed to repay the money The allegedly imr.roper Sacramento loans, total ng $4.3 million, were made by John Bahr Jr .• 34, who quU his post in July 1980, a rew days arter bank auditors raised questions about transactions he handled. The loans were made to area developers, including Sacramen· to attorney-developer Stephen Syrtestad and contractor Vern Dwyer. AJI three have denied wrongdoing. Crocker spokeswoman Betty Lattie said the tranaaclions were discovered in June 1980 during a routine credit audit. The FBl has investigated the case, but no action h as been taken. Crocker officials say they have not filed any court action to recover the money. Ms . Lallie said the bank moved to secure first trust deeds on real property and asaeta of Syrtest a d 's firm , Wheel Development Co., and expects to make full recovery. Crocker has also written otr an unapec1fied amount of the potential loss. ............ power to 3,000 houses, tore through corrals and finally hit a parked truck and smacked into house. The driver and passenger were hospitalized. ~ ;:--• Quotes By Phone FAaMEIS INSURANCE GIOUP 541-5554 or ll5-l07 ttt4 ~·Colt•M•H ., ef fiden t, ~con om ica II v - ba lanced citv. Growth guided bv t\vo important factor.,. the Citv\ far- s ightl•d, li ving Cenerill Pian. And concerned re~idenb from the com- mu nitv, City government and The Irvine Company who work together to make it happen. We may not always see eye-to-eye on ever y de- tail, but the result has been, and \-viii continut• to be, a city that gets better to live in every d,iy. That\ whv we are co- opt·rating \,\;ith tht• City on many new rot1d pro- jects to keep heavy traffic o ut of your neip hbor- hood. Why we re also contributing over $2.4 m illion for immediate de- velopment of roads that follow the plan for safe, convenient traffic pat- terns. And why there's much more improvement to come. For information on this growing new city, please visit or call The Irvine Company Informa- tio n Center. Cu1ver Drive exit off San Diego Fwy. (1-405). To corner of Barranca. (714) 551-1500. • PRICES PREVAIL: WEDNESDAY. JULY 8th THRU SATURDAY. JULY 11th LYSOL DISINFECTANT ~!s~~t-JJ '>49 Etunin•tn Odon 18 oz. SIZE ~ u BASIN/TUB & TILE 1.3 9 CLEANER (Aerosol) Oeoclorizu & Cleans 24 oz. SIZE TOILET BOWL CLEANER Squeeze Bottle 16 "·SIZE 69C DEODORIZING 13 9 CLEANER Cuh Cruu 28 oz. SIZE • SPECTROCIN from SQUIBB FIGHTS SUPERFICIAL Building according to plan keeps the traffic out of your neighborhood. j ~ ~ SKIN INFECTIONS A moderate an1tsep1tc for first aid use 1/2or.229 TUil l'iiiiiiiii===-=iil CA LAM A TUM RELIEVES ITCHING FAST SPRAY Soothes lhe minor pain and 1r111a11on of skin bites. sunburn etc II forms its own Bandage LOTION CUTTER INSECT REPELLENT SPRAY TOUGH ON BUGS, YET NICE ON YOU Incredibly effective ask any camper, hiker. fisherman or hunter Cut~er gives longer. stronger protection against mosquitoes. black Illes, gnats. chiggers, and other v1c1ous biting Insects 11'.GULAI or EVHGltHN SCOT I if I .. AGE, PLEASE Nancy Reagan Nancy;'s ' • age in dispute WASHINGTON (AP> -First lady Nancy ReagaJ) has celebrated another birthday. The only questiOh is: which one? The number 58 has been mentioned. Mrs. Reagan says she was bom in 1923, and her spokeswoman, Sheila Tate, said, "It's definitely 1923' • -which would, indeed, make her 58. But records at Smith College in Northampton, Mass .. her alma mater, give her birthdate as Ju- . ly &, 192'1, according to a spokesman quoted in The Washington Post. That would make Mrs. Reagan60. And NBC News re- ported that it had found a copy of Mrs. Reagan's birth certificate, No. J2579 at a New York City library. s howing that she was born in 1921. Cursing crusader • gives up CAMBRIDGE, Mass. <AP> -After five weeks or trying to set up C u rseaholics Anonymous, Paul White is throwing in the towel and saying the beck with it. "It's just a total loss," he · said. "Our dreams are kind of crushed." T he organization, which consisted of White and a few friends, got started when be got fired from his job as a parking lot attendant . He said the firing was prompted by a customer's cursing, to which White responded by throwing something at her car. White bad predicted that CA mem- bers someday would be "picketing the streets, the highways and a lot of state capitals." He hoped t o make swearing a felony. Of the 2,000 or so telephone calls received on the Curseabolics hotline, White said a fourth were from reporters and about half were from "just idiotic people who didn't take us seriously." "We did have a coµ· ple of callers who were goina to cuss us out. However, we got talking to them and helped them out," be said. "But then we got calls at 2 a.m. telling u1 we were nuts." Sewage gain SAN DIEGO CAP> - nJuana ii preparing to a11ume h alf of Its aewaae dllposal capaci- ty after winter storms a n d heavy floodln1 closed down the borderj clty'1 plant 1\AI years a c o , a f e d e r a 11 1poke1man hu aald. _ ---·-·--~---__,..-...... -~----~----• • .. • • -<# • ' • ... , -~ '. ". t • ... --. . . . . . .. .. , ... , .... , . . . ~ .. ...... -• .... II" f" .,,. ... r I ••• , ... A,_.il. • ., • .,...#1' :.·.-..-......... "'9't••·••;.t'fT•t-•\f"ll;.-....-+-.~t" ... ;.._,,,~ :. f• ! • '· • ... .. . . . . . . .. .. .. .. • t I .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 Tobacco finn accused of plan to discredit smoke peril LEXINGTON, Ky. <AP) -The nation's third-largeat tobacco company planned advert.llt.na to "sow doubt and confusion" about the huards qi ciaarettea, accord· tna to a newspaper's report on secret aovernment findinas. pacltaaes were ineffective. But tbe HeraJd-Leader aaid lo a copyript atory that tome of the FTC's find· ln&a were not made public. FTC report. The newspaper aald it obtained a copy of the report. The report alleaed , the newspaper aaid, tbat Brown & Williamson: ci1arettes were aafer than othen. -Toned down ada for Fact, a short-lived brand that wu low in eases linked to heart disease, because the ada drew attenUon to the gues. and heart diaeue. It cited an Aua. 21, 1988, Internal memo from J .W. Bur1ard. Brown " WUUameon's vice pret1ldent for marltetlna, aayin1, "Doubt la our product since it is the beat meua of competing with the bocly ot fact that exist.a in the mlnda ot the general public. It la also the means or establlsbina a con- troversy." The Federal Trade Commission released a report· in May saYt.na government-required health warn· in as on cigarette ads and A federal judae sealed a section of the report that contatned docu· ments subpoenaed in 1979 from Louisvllfe.based Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., the newspaper said. It said It bued lts article on the sealed aecUon or the -Tailored an advertislna cam· paign to entice young people to smoke. -Promoted lta beat-sellina brand, Kool, by exploitin& the mls· taken notion that mentholated The FTC report, the newspaper said, comcluded the tobacco ln· dust.ry "bu actively attempted to discredit" medical research UnJt. Ing ci1arette smoking with cancer SPECIALI SPECIAL I Green dlshw1sn111g hqu1d 1n the clear plastic bottle. SAVE2ae REVLON MILK PLUS 6 SHAMPOO PLUI CONDITIOND IN ONI Superior det1ngl1ng clean COndtltOntng SAVE •t .OO TO POL I MOKlrl TOOTMPOLll H Helps remove superhc1al yellow tobacco stains from your ttflh Mini or FkJ011de SAVEaoe VISINE A.C. AUllGY & COlDS OlDIOPS Rehtvts llChtfl!I, burn1119. water1no llnd redness ~1.39 Contour shaped tor • custom ht Solt absorbent lln1no Ml-llm 5gc_ SAVE38e S2u. AD PRICES PREVAIL: WEDNESDAY . JULY 8th THRU SATURDAY. JULY 11th ~. ·1.•. t'•,. ,. ,, OUI PllAIMACllTt 11111 .. l TllAI A 4-YUI Cllllll IEllH Cnoose your p11lmac1s1 hit you would clloose your doctor Tiit ph1riqc1S1 1s an important mtml>tf ol you1 l'ltalltl tare leam and you sllOuld select Oflt IS you would a doctor Our phlrmac1sls Ill ptOl1Ut0nals wllo tllt aboul you1 llaalln and will g1v1 you thttr pt1son11 allenuon to your 1>resc11phons and ttlaltd hullh llffds 5l~W..~ BRUSHES A DISNA -• • t2N'7•) 8 tin.Gel COAllD I I • COOl(WAI( (»4411) C .... -(1 .... . mm.a),....,, • £.11" PATIOUUSM& ~ MAlllDll camn ~ SPECIAL I &AVE•2.oo 18" PICNIC BRAZIER OTUDUP BLUE ICE r:::::#=~ COOLER No ice needed 1us1 lreeze ltdl 112111 .99 BAVE28e ~ ,,. \. Heavy gauge 9.9 9 bowl with rolled rim for lddltlollal 111t1 strength SPECIAL I ~----i UNION ~7·4·!AJ tan.en PREMIUM OIL •••• ~~ MOTOR OIL FILTERS JIWT. Choose from a large uaonment of fllltr modtl• JAi WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT! II VISA' a VITAMIN B-6 .... VITAMIN E 200 l.U. ~ 1.99 COUNT YASYA VODKA ::,.69-9 FOSTER CREEK '"'"'°"' IM>UlllON WHISK•Y ..... 9 ~=-LT.899 MACKINNON'S SCOTCH u-.a.269 12PU POQml TtUICOPIC. 8% ". FIUllWATD ROD 8PBCIALI METAL PHOTO FRAMES WlllTllM'I AIR BONS PUff'Da.Y SPECIAL! L'OllUL !!Y~§J!OIDE ~~~ ~ '1 ... ·1 \ ._ I Now utra condil1oners tor more shine. more con1rol -~ .. • 7JllJnde 2 9 5 ULTllA •ICH coeanou • ..1.39 SAVEaoe ~JlftJNE MOUTHWASH AQAllGU SAVE •t .2& Eftect1v1 and lono 11111no with Cullcle Cond1t1oners Assooed Scents & Regular SAVEeoe ...... ~ .... Htlps lose wtigllt I Ht.. t2 llOllf formula wltnoul prttcrllllion .. _......,,. _ --... -...-~--.-~~~-.._...,.._.-44 ,. •, ... • ••••••Feww o •••=•• uv .;awc•L•w•••• uzw ••••444 •=+•• ••• >+c••ucu:( • ._.. "'. * Orange Collt DAILY Pfl.ot JW1dnt1day, July I, 1981 ' Urgent steps needed for Soc,ial Sec.urity · The bad news la ln on Social Security. Just u we feared, the system will go broke by the end ol next year unless benefits are cut or new funds produced. The word comes not from some fear-mongers on the tell or the right, but from the Soclal Security trustees themselves - Treasury Secretary Donald Regan, Labor Secretary Raymond J . Donovan and Health and Human Services Secretary Richard Schweiker. couts~~ the Magali ,~tra-1 tion OIMOUlty haa to ftnd new ln· i · come ~ either ~uih ,lntreat•' " ing paytol( deductlofll Ot' ..,. 111· ina income tax revenfta. ' Obviously that's bad n~ for the 115 mllllon workers contrtbut· lng to those two funds. The payroll deduction rate for Social Security purpoees ls now 8.6 percent on incomes up to $29,000. Current law escalates the rate to 7.6 percent over the next 10 years, along with a cor- respondlnl jump in the taxable income ft,ure. So to save the entire program -the old-aae payment.a, tbe dia- ablllty insurance and health tn.. sun.nee -Confl'etS either will have t-0 take a deeper bite ~re or shift much of the funding burden to income taxes. I • , . •• In fact. there la no choJce between cutUnc benefit.a or raia· ing taxes. 'Ibe roof caved in lut month when Prealdent Rea1an proposed a series of benefit re- ductions. When the smoke bad cleared, be, and every single member of Congress, had re- ceived a clear message that here was the last place the American public wants the budget cul. "It· s nothing more than a wholesale assault on the economic security of America's elderly population," stormed Democratic Congressman Claude Pepper. If that makes you weep, save some tears for the next gmeta- lion of wage-earners. Considettn1 Social Security's chances of sur- viving until they reach benefit status, their outlook is bleak in· deed. DOE bungle benefits big oil Ninety percent of the citizens who responded to the White House or Con1ress apparently felt the same way. Having backed off that • No matter how unpopular any cuts would be politically, Reagan made the correct 19ove by pointinf to the $150 billion yearly cost of the Social Security System abd wondering befl much longer t.hiJfgs can go on this way. Price increase on tap When government gets in the way of free marketing practices you can bet the consumer will come off as loser. Until a few years ago this beld true in the sale of wine and spirits. So-called (air trade laws established fixed ~ces on all liq- uor and wine' in Calllornia', no matter whether the retailer we.ht· ed to offer a bargain. The beer industry, with the help of some well-primed friends in the Legislature, is rushing to fill the gap. They've proposed a bill <AB 429) that in effect simply replaces the existing provision. WASHING TON -The scrooges wbo now control the federal purse strings could hardly wait to cut off benefita for the poor. But they failed to shut down a subsidy program for oil operators after the reason for it had ended. Some oil barons happily went oo ap· plytn1 for multimillion·dollar benefits that were no longer justified. These abuses became so obvious that federal t>fticials fmaJly woke up and cut off the handouts. But their tardinesa will cost t.Ke tupaym millions. ' What the administration wu so slow to abOllah was a subsidy that had been added to the fine print to encourage ' , d~mestic oil production. Under U\U pro- g.ram .. oiJ companies could collect up to $20 million for each oroiect that re· covered oil that otherwise would have been prohibitively costly to extract. -hen oU price controls were in effect. Without a government subsidy. no oil producer would s&)end more to extract a barrel of crude than be could seU it foir. But the need for such a profram db· appear~ on Jan. 28, when President Reagan decontrolled oil prices. That gave tbe oil tften what they had lobbied .· . G ...... Jict~~y~,,.~-. -- for : they got the monkey of pric trots off their backs. Overnight, what heretoft>re wouJd have been marginal operations became af>undantly profita· ble. Yet, incredibly, the Department of THE SUBSIDIES, known u "tertiary Energy neglected to end the subsidy incentives," were available ln the form program. For reasons that confused ol credits. They were approved with even Industry executives, companies v1rtually no oversight and quickly ran were allowed an extra 60 days to apply up to almost $1 billion. my associate for muJtitnlllion-doUar incentives. Some Jm M.itcheU has learned. of the bfraction projecta that were be· The, incentive program made aeme iAg uadec1mtten mi11bt not be complet- ),, • J . rt , f I %1 D e oeJe Qt rt ) 6 ; a • ed for years -long after such projects : wo uld ne ed any further pricing sweeteners. OIL COMPANIES that allegedly benefited from the extension, such as · Am oco and Arco, insisted they were 1 merely holding the government to promises it had made earlier. But in fact, the government was alert-1 ed to the flood o( new applications by ; executives of the oil industry itself. • Representatives of Exxon and Cities Service told the Energy Department it was being taken for a ride. At one bear· . ing, a senior executive of Exxon went so 1 fa r as to accuse fellow members of the petroleum club of hypocrisy for seeking ' government subsidies after price decon· trot. The losers in all this bureaucratic shilly shallying, of course , are the tax- payers, who still support even other s ubs idies to oil companies that simultaneously charge OPEC·level prices. Footnote: Investigators for Rep. Toby Moffett, D·Conn .. intend to examine DOE's bumdin~. When removal of (air trade laws was being debated, the li· quor industry piou5ly lamented the fate of the mom-and-pop stores. The big operators, went the argument, would drive them out of business and lower the value of liquor licenses. While they're using the same argument about fretting over the mom-an•·POJ> operatota. ·tt's clear that the Beer Wholei'1ers Association and the Retail Uquor Association ha\'e anoUter ~ec tion pli8n ta ~,.A. naftlyltfo- tecttng the ~aleh n,,ftl bat· ing to.cut their proftt margiM f« large..quantit)' purchases. · The ctuuns already martet private-label beer at discount prices anyway and we don't see them cornering the beer market by offering sale prices on bt'and labels. I • • r: ~ ' ~ • ~ '• :.r ' ~'' ' 'liistitntioii of i'm.arrilige ton1 down Well, that didn't happen. The smaller operators found ways to make mass purchases and stay in the ballgame with the chain store outlets. Here comes a rerun of the same scenario. The product this time is beer. California's Alcoholic Bev- erage Control Department says that come January it will have to void an existing provision that prohibits beer wholesalers from giving merchants discounts on large purchases. The pract1ce violates anti-trust laws, says the ABC. Thanks no doubt to plenty of campaign contributions tossed around Sacramento by the liquor lobby, the biU looks Uke it's going to pass -the consumer be damned. Orange Countians milht pay special attention to the two stalwart beer-lovers who helped the bill along: Sen. John Briggs, R -Fullerton, and Sen . Paul Carpenter, D-Cypress. May tb~r next quaff be warm and fiat. It uaed to be said one Ol.llbln't to have sex without love, but according to Julia Perles, a lawyer specializing in the in- tricacies of matrimony. now "you shouldn't have love without a contract." Ms. Perles bas reference to the fact that at any moment a court may declare the lovers or former lovers to be, if not married, contractually yoked. The famous Michelle Triola Marvin palimony suit wasn't a single, freakish court decision but the act of creation of something that ls now referred to as cohabitation law. Pond preservation plan Since the Marvln case there have been m0re and more such suits being entertained by judte•, where once Ute case would never even have gotten a · bearing. What started in a California sute court has spread to tbe federal courts and u far away as New York where Penelope McCall Is suing ber former significant other, rock musician Peter Frampton, for approximately half his worldly goods, or what will probably amount to some rnilllona of bucks. The value of a wetlands habitat should not be overlook~. A pond or marsh area not only is a refuge for wildlife but a setting to help calm even the most urban aggravations. In a t"uriotls twist, one 1ma1t wetlands area in Newport Beach has become the source ~ such aggravation. It-is a two-acre marsh that lies just off the path of a proposed extension of the Corona del Mar Freeway. State guidelines prohibit destruction of wetlands without well-documented reasons, so Caltrans planners have trod lightly by devising a freeway de· sign to avoid the area. Their solu- tion ls a plan where the wetlands will be inside a triangle formed by the freeway, MacArthur Boulevard and Jamboree Road. • Preserving a pond and then allowing it to be surrounded by major thoroughfares seems a lit· tie like serving K-rations with ex-IN NEW YOU CITY, where rent pensive wine. But the concern in controlled apartments are at a pre- this project hHn't been for the mlum, a court hu decreed that if one aesthetft as lftuch _,s:"Jot tile ~~er in an unmarried couple dies. timely • r •. • i-' \ ;• U.t at.Mt lnberl\a Ute apartment a a • , 1 • .. ~~ • ·...SO• Of• .t06'ttfr wouJd. A fedefal To chaHenge ~te ttaU: ct>uf\ tis nai._ af•t it ls a vtolataan 6f guidelines or to build' a case ' ii~ Equal Credit OpportubitJ ~ct for a against the uselessness of savillg bank bbl to count the salaries of both the wetlands would have taken persona in an unmarried relatioaabip in months _ more likely years. determining mort1age ellglblllty. In Local planners for Caltraftl were New Jersey, the surviving member of such a yoking can sue for damages if a wel~ ~dvised to find the most ex-deadpartnerwaltilledduetonealisen.ce pediti~ solution so the freeway ,,homethlrdparty. extension can be built as soon aa Wherefore comet all tbb lltiaatlon possible. that never would have been permitted a Considering Orange County'• day in court 10 yeara aao? track record with freeways, the pond probably will dry up by then anyway. Opinions expressed In the sp•ce above are those of ltM Oally Piiot. Ot11er views ex- pressed on tnls page·are those of tnelr authots and artltts. Reader cemm~ lft~lt ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Cost• Mesa, CA 92626. P <7h) b~2-4321. L.M. Boyd I Slogan •aved In 11J8, the world'• cbamploa bot caller of lbe time, name now un~ remembered, saJ4: 1•You'vt Sot to have appeal u w.U u power ln your \lolce. You've tot to convince the bo11 you baYe 10methln1 fOf' UMm." An advertillq exflCUU•• HW n& to frame ~· meH•I• and llanl It behind bla delk. To thll day lt re- ma.lm a wall decoration in eoma ad a1n.ey olflcn, I'm told. Womm In Iceland keep lbalr own llll IWMI eftel' tbey llllJTY • . Is not becauae everybody ln a black robe goes home to a closet at night, but because the American bar bas a built-in propensity to fiddle. finagle and chanae any polM bf law thst appean fixed, set· u~ and almJlle. Just u the lawyers bring homosexual marrtqe into existence by puttin1 aults like the Kin1-Bamett argument In the cotlft.a, they are obliterating the civil deflllitic>na of hetero.exual marriage. The married state is no longer one en- tered into by concrete, definite act and, we trust, some thought and reflection. We no longer get married; some of us. at any rate, simply become married. It just happens somewhere aJong the line when one shares an apartment, a house. or perhaps even just a motel room with sotn eooe else. AT 11IE MINIMUM lhJs lessens the personaJ and social importance of getting married. Marriage is now something that happens to you or is done to you at no specific time or place. All done without so much as a burp of approval or authorization from any legislative body ln the entire Republi c. Where ooce everybody in America knew the legaJ definition of marriage, now nobody does. To find out, we will pay more dimes and more dollars and there's no need to say to whom. Volunteer loses 01eaning I have recenUy returned from a trip to WubAngton, D.C., where I attended a conferen~ Oii tbe topic or "Volun- lee111~". Otle c:A tile flt9t tames the 8 •• fiJacllQ.I another W .. • I~ • ')' ,: : .. i leet"n~Oftb"fatls to des~rthe ·tM1 cllvene' actlvfUes of people ln the fteld, but it also has picked up aome&Naa C1I a negative character. ll Ii someone ~ doesn't 1et paid, who ii an atnate•r, perhaps a neceaaary nalsance. Our admiration 1oes toward the true "profeeak>na.l." Yet ~evllle, !n bl• brllllant anar)'lla IA= ,.,1 merlta, wrote, "I be•• the ntreme 1kill Wltb .=I lnhabittnta ol the United Stat. fUCceed ID propoelq a coml'Mft object f« the exertklm of a rreat many men and lndudna them voluntarily to punuelt." almost all our public services -and in other countries as well -had their bis· torical origin in voluntary service. · UniversaJ education in the Western na- tions began a full century before there were any publicly provided schools ; and teachers wtte trained for more than half a century In voluntary teachers' colleges before the state en· tered the picture. 1 MUCH THE SAME is true with 1 medical services, which betan on a private, volunteer basis well before their was any govemment participation or certification. The earliest l.Blurance companies were fratental; the trade union wu begun u a type ol voluntary association; all pbllanthtoplc bodles were organiud on the same basil, when IOVernmeDt "charity" WU oeClieible and paupertam wu· rele1ated to the workho\de or tbe Jail. Just as "charity'' hal IOll the mean· ing lt bad from St. Paul down tbroulh to modem times, so have many other •orda like "volunteer" become de· valued in their connotaUou. If yoa can th1nt of a btUet word to descr1be such belpen, drop me a note and I'll paaa it aloa& &o lbt eonfennce leaden. It may be 1QUr Gilb' voluntary deed this montb. .. -........ ... .. , .... -..... .... . ., -........ ..._, . . . -.... . . . . . ..... ,"" f ; .. ••••••• ....... ••••• •• ··-·~ ..... . • • •t . . . . . ~ . -. . •• t ••• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8. 1981 . ,. . . .. .,, . .. ···~~~ I I -. ~·· --'Cinderella Compkx' stirs flap Author $ays women, however liberated, still wait to be 'rescued' BEVERLY HILLS (AP) - Colette Dowling, author-on-lhe- road, recalls clearly the panic or learning abe would have to travel the country giving in- terviews about her controversial boo k , "The Ci nderella Complex." "I'm aware that doing t.binia for the first time in my life makes me unusually anxious," she says. "When I knew I bad to go out and do this book lour I sat in my New York apartment for three months chewing my fingemajls. . "I got into thls victim frame of mind, thlnldne, 'Why are they makingmedotbis?' "Obviously, no one was mak· ing me do anythlng," she adds with a smile, now enjoying the luxury or a Beverly Hills hotel Man's monkey put to death MARRERRO, La. (AP> - 1Columbo, the monkey. Is no 1 more -despite his owner's .-Pleas that the animal was pro· voked when he bit a woman and her young son last week. John Coleman of Metairie. Columbo's owner for three years, sat quietly Monday as state Judge Wallace I. LeBrun beard nearly three hours or testimony. At the end, LeBrun lifted a 'temporary restraining order. and veterinarians put the Capuchin monkey to sleep and : beheaded him to test for rabies. I• .-. ·-·~ as part or the tour. But her first reaction waa symptomatic of what she claims is a prevalent feminine mental state in America today, a rear of independence she hat dubbed "The Cinderella Complex." Women, 1 she says, whether lbey are high-paid executives or housewives, harbor the aame hidden wish she once had -to have someone else take char1e of. their lives. "Like Cinderella,'' abe writ.et, •·women today are still waitin1 for som ething external to transform their lives." Often, she says, lhe external force is a man, lhe fantaaiud Prince Charming who wlll "save" her. "I think this is tbe main lhinl holding women back today," says Ms. Dowling. It is statements such u that which have stirred controversy around her book. A feminist group in New York denounced the book , saying that it is "blaming the victim" instead of attacking the real problem of in· equitable wages for women do- ing the same work as men. Ms. Dowling has been accused or blaming women themselves for their poor wages, implying they don't want to achieve more. "I'm not saying that we don't need to have changes in the system," says Ms. Dowling. "The fact that probably haU t.be women in this country want to be ta.ken care or. don't want to work, affects the entire economic picture," ahe says. And it la economics, sbe believes, which will ultimately force a cbange ln attitudes. "Women have been sold a bill of goods by being told that they have an option to choose a lifelong role of homemaker," says M s. Dowling . "Economically, It's not a viable option." Ms. Dowlln1. 43, a freelance maguine and book writer 18 years, tells or her dramatic con- front\liOO with the hidden need to be dependent. In 1975, four years after end- in1 a dismal marria1e to an emotionally ill man, Ms. Dowl· ing, a self-supporting divorcee with three children, moved in with a man who still shares a bome with her. "What I hadn't anticipated," she writes, ". . . was the star- tling collapf(e of ambition that would oc~ur as soon as I began sharing> my home with a man again." -They moved to the country, 90 miles from New York, where she retreated into housewifery -cooking, baking, laundering, chopping wood. "The moment the opportunity to lean on someone presented itselr I stoppe d moving forward," she writes, "came, in fact, to a dead haJt." • was aupportin1 her three children while she made beds. She consulted a psychotherapist and from the in· vestleatlon of her traumatic drift into dependency came "The Cinderella Complex." Ms. Dowling Illustrates her theory with Interviews, case studies obtajned in lengthy re· search and some statistics. She traces all women's prob- lems back to childhood and a subtle form of programming which leads girl children to have less self-confidence and be more inclined to lean on others. "There has been a taboo on talking about these dependency feelings," she says, expressing hope her book will help enll1hten women about their weaknesses. "We're supposed to say bow strong we are and not talk about fear and anxiety. ·•I think il 's absolutely essen- tial for women to look at how their upbringing is interfering with what they want to ac- complish intellectually," she says. Only by identifying their problems can they erase them, she says. ··If we keep hiding this, there's no way it's going to be dealt with." ., ....... But she insists that a number or women are "sabotaging themselves" by limiting their career goals in hopes that mar· riage will ultimately rescue them. That period ended only when her man complained of the ine· quality of their situation -he "I feel like I have come to terms with the fact that I am responsible for myself," says Ms . Dowling. "It happened about three years ago, and there was a tremendous feeling of ex- hilaration and inner security that came with it. I feel now that I'm in a better place in my lire." Author Colette Dowling soya tromen's fear of independence ii t¥ main thing holding them back. a: 0 m a: c( :i: ii.I :c I- Li. 0 "' c z ::::> 0 "' 0 L&J a: L&J ~ tn ................ a.- l.M ....... C..., 11611 San Vicent« Blw. MINIMUM requires the lowest minimum balance of any 5X% checking account in Southern California. And that's probably why we rate ..!.,.~..__.... ........... -..---iiiiiiiii0 so high with our customers. You see, while our competition is demanding as much as $2,000 for interest-earning checking, we're delighted to offer you the same 5X% account for just a $100 minimum. With no service charges. Plus, 150 free personalized checks. And even though we have the minimum minimum. we don't short change you on service. Check & Save is available with CNerdraft Protection to save you the worry of being overdrawn. You get an instant duplicate check system that auto- matically records every check you write. When you're 62 or older. the service and all your checks are free no matter what balance you maintain. We'll even save you the trouble of storing cancelled checks by keeping them safely for you. Or, if you prefer. your checks can be returned when you maintain just $500 in your account. So before you sink the maximum balance into a check- ing account somewhere else, think about how much you can get for so little at Pacific Federal. It should be obvious who has your best interest in mind. ·--"- PACIFIC FEDERAL 2710 ~ Bllld 3435 Wllslm ~ Manha11an Buell. CA Q0266 Los ~al CA QOOIO <2131 546·3455 (213) ·I 71 12335Venice11\/d 0.-.,.C..., SAVlt\GS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION CHARTERED 1890 Our Interest starts with )QU. .. ........... c.-tr 1019 8toedWa! 35144 Vuca1; 81\/d 34100 <:oon1y Unc Rd Needlt.s. 0. 9 ~ Vuca1pe, CA 399 Vucelpa, 0. 923W <7141 326 4561 (714) 797 1101 1714) 795-2521 I S EucHdAve ...... C...ey Comer ol' Avcnlda de Aceaas and El Tonio To open 1n 1981 ........ c.-tr 1.ot Ali~. CA 90049 Los Ali~. 0. 00066 tee6 'II Katclla Aw 1!!04 E. Hlihl•nd Aw OnlMO, CA 01761 1431 Camino def Mar 68·327 Hwy Ill (213) .0406 1213) 18211 ANhe!m CA ~l804 San Bnnlrdino. 0. 92404 (7t'4) 986·&771 ~I Mar. 0. 92014 C.1htdrll ?7l.. 0. 02234 ll!fiJl Vm1ur1 8llld 2505 Uncoln ~ (714) 776-4761 (7141889·0231 1JO N OSI (714)7550231 (714) 324 I Endno. CA 01436 Senti Monlce. CA 90405 2388 w IJncoln ,.,, 185 E. 40lh Strut San ~tl'WUdlno 0. 02405 7«i0Fe~w 46-020 Monro. SI (2131981 5311 (2131 ;»g.3295 ~CA92806 Sen 8cmudino. CA 92404 (7141tl80 0231 u Jail•. 92037 lrldio. CA 92201 IDN C'MMNAvt 12711 Vtmun lhd (114) 535 5640 (714) ~·0231 301 Redlands Biid (714) 454 I '714) )47.2761 GMndl&c. CA OUOG Studio Oty. CA 91fJ04 234 !. J!!~ SMtt 701 N ESt Rldllndt CA 92373 l~Peria~ot) J2795 Hwy 111 • (213) 241 11'8 (2l31 Q85 0611 COMI CA 92627 Sen Btmardh>. CA 92403 1714) 798..zJG9 14309 f'ft\l~IAlot Or Plllm ~CA 92260 t:=ttri::. lll PllaAvt <7J416JI OIOO (7141815 0231 201 E &.t« LIM Sin r:r 92129 C714l 346-!Sll ~ft,£~ -leoo? ~ S. 909<>UMW Avt -Ale!IO. CA. Q2l76-. ('71'4) .5910 JOOS ,..,,,~Or .. Cil31463-4t4J l 146 ~8-fl.CA9264t Montclw CAOl76.1 171'41874 °'411 him~ CA. 92262 1865 N Wt:illilril /M 1951 Senti Moni(a lhd 11141 llSS 17141 &21 5021 14250 XYtnth S1 (71413 5 471 Lot~· CA Q0027 Los Ali~ CA llOOtl9 eeC> ~Ccn1cr Or W 501 N Moun1 Vtmc>n VkloMh. 0. 92392 5225 Can'y'Ol't Ct.ti Or (2131 7 1123 (2131 701H ~" h.CA92e00 r,n BnnlrdtnO. CA (12411 (714) 2"5 7757 llN'ettlcM. CA 92507 ( 644 76)() 714) (lf!Q 0231 (7141 ?el 8080 • .. 'l I INITIATIVE PUSHED Paul Carpenter Habitual cri01inal law eyed SACRAMENTO (AP> -There 's a new habitual-criminal in· iUative drive under way, says Secretary of Stale March Fong Eu. Ms. Eu gave the green light lo the Initiative by state Sen . Paul Carpenter. D-Cypress. The initiative parallels Carpenter's proposed constitutional amendment, SCA36, which is stalled in a Senate committee. Both specify a list of felonies for which a third conviction would cause an offender to be "adjudged an habitual criminal," meaning a life sentence with no parole until after 20 years. The initiative needs 553, 790 s ignatures by Nov. 30 lo qualify for the June 1982 ballot. The qualifying felonies include murder, vo luntary manslaughter, mayhem, rape, robbery, first· degree burglary, forced sodomy or oraJ copula- tion. kidnapping, lewd acts on a child under 14 , burglary with ex - plosives, and ass:tult with intent to commit murder, rape, sodomy, mayhem or robbery. Others include arson, certain exploding of destructive devices, cer· lain assaults and other violations by inmates, th e commission or con- spiracy to commit a crime punishable by death or life imprison· ment, and felonies com· milted with firearms. The previous crime- related initiative, begun las t month, deals with punishment for robbery and burglary. 7 Navajos leave unit CAMP PENDLETON <AP) ~ Seven young men of an original group of 52 have left an all· Navajo platoon being formed In the Marine Corps, a s pokesman said. A weight problem re- por tedly dropped two from the Indian unit. Another four were dis- charged for fraudulent enlistment and one for medical reasons. the spokesman said. After two weeks at the recruit depot in San Diego, the Navajo pla· toon made up of 45 men began mar ksmanship training Monday at Camp Pendleton. Later In the week will come gas mask drills. Prexy quits DENVER <AP > Metropolitan State Colle1e President Donald Mclntyre has re· 1l1ned to accept a posi· lion as pr esiden t of Canada College in San Mateo County. USITHI DAILYPILOT '?'AST ' llSULT" •Y1C• WCTOIY For Renk Senice CaU 641-1671 .... . Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/W•dneaday, July 8, 1981 fllST QUALITY, POl TESnl-flLUD Giil T BEDSPREADS •UNY IOOM·fUMllNG PAmltlS NUSIU ........... 1t." 14'9 ... sm ......... M.ft TWIN •um .......... It." 5111 Sov• w-r ond t-r HG. 7'' 9.99 TWiii Siii H G. ll.tt 11 ff JUUSIU .... .. . . • llG. U .tt 13 ff OUUM SIZI . . . . . . • HG. 11.H 1, ff. l l*i Siii........ • MONTICELLO® 01 VllURA MATfl!i BATH TOWELS IN SOllDS, SRIPIS, ,.um 01 JACQUUDS If '•rf•ct 2 99 3 . 99 to 4.29 C::. SPllNG MILLS' PIQU01® PERCALE SHEETS WITM DISTINCTIYI flOUl lllloel PA TillN F1eld1 of flOfol ~tt on white 3 99 background. Flot or flll•d TWIN SUI HG. •.4' 11G. 1.n 1•uu SIU .... '·" llG. 11.H/OUUM sm . '·" llG. 1U9/l1MG SIU .. IO." Thick ond th1flty collec11on of both tow•I• with the luxu,.ou• look ond ·drying power' you wont I llG. •.o "llOWCASI J.N ./ ... 69 llG. '·" llMG CASI J.N ./4," 'EVOLUTION' QUll TED MAnRESS PADS Ou1h1on1c·bond.d tor comfort Ruwe<' with r•1nl0<ced edge\ :~~9 4~' SIU llG. 1.49/fUll SIH . . . . . S.t t HG. 9.4'/0UUM ltll. .... 6." llG. 10.49/l lMG Siii ... 1." PINWAU CORDUROY CAPTAIN 'S CHAIR PADS SAU 2899 ,.ICI FOR Rugg.d ond durable. with t• tlnng Gold Avoc.odo or ~ 'HOLLANDll' PATCHWORK QUILT COMFORTER HG.1499 19.99 With 2-lb C•lon••• Fortr.i• ftll 72•90 Twin ond full COLORFUL 27"X4S" CORONADO AREA RUG l lG. 8'9 10 ... B•ou••fuf d•omond pattern ond deep pile Hurry •n """._.. YALLIY •WCt ........ & ..... .,,... ...... le.-, ... ,... .... . • SUPER VALUE! FLOUR SACK DISH TOWELS llG. 3 s2 n · IA. FOR Tt1•y r• gr•ot for drytng Of' pol1t h1ng 8"( 221t'.'.8. sire 100% COTION TERRY KNIT DISH CLOTHS PAClOf 99c 3 FOR Your cho1c• of 1ol1ds st11p.-s Of' ~lu '" ro•nbow of colon -. ,, .... ....__..._.. ..... ,.,_...., .... ·~----·· ,,,.. ........ -...... -...... _ _. -...--- I UY 2 & SAVI 2.99 TO 4.99 POL YlSTH FllllFIU BED PILLOWS REG. 2 599 2 FOR STUIAID 1.91 FOi sm QUHM SIU llMG Slll tlG. 1110.u 2 ... 6.H •o. 1112.u 2 .. 7.H With cotton t1ck1ng , cord•d •dg• & plump poly· ••t•r fil l Non·oll•rg•n1c A dr•om of o buy! WIHMHISTU S'llNG MILLS 'STUDIO LAa' PEQUOT® SHEET SETS HG. 17.'9 12!1 Siii ,~\ I HG. JS.H /JUll.. 17.ft I I llG. U .99/0UHM 22.ft ; llG. >7.H /ueG .. 21." . ..,, ....................... . ..,... .. t . , ,. • •••; •• • • I ,. •t ;,.. Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, JULY I, 1981 FEATURES BS M OVIES 86 TELEVISION 88 . .. '. . . . . . . ii. . . , • . . . .. -.......... , ...... ,, ... . . . • #'" --• ' ••••• t • ' .. . . .. . -. ... .. ., . . ' . . . . . . ' . D 0 Mountain goats moved in experimental project MOTHER AND KID -A mother mountain goat with her small kid looks across a meadow near Klahhcyie Ridge in Olympic National Pa rk. An experimental program has begun to remove a bout 60 non-native mountain goats from the park. AWAY THEY GO -A workman runs from un- derneath a helicopter after hooking up a cargo net containing two captured mountain ... wi.....-. goats in separate shipping crates. Copters are used to remove the captured goats from the ridge in the park . .. CONFRONTATION -A mountain goat on Klahbane Ridge in Olympic NationaJ Park, wearing a game management- study tag in its ear, comes face to face with a human visitor during goat capture operation. BEFORE THE CATCH -An unsuspecting mountain goat stands under a capture net, lured to the site by common saJt blocks, moments before ropes are puJled which drop the net from poles onto the surprised animal. SEDATIVE ~Tory Stevens gives a tagged and blindfolded •goat an injection to help calm the animal after its capture in Olympic National Park. Bicentennial returns for 200th anniversary of Yorktown siege YORKTOWN. Va . (AP) - Bicentennial is coming back, with 4,000 costumed vqlunteers, mlabty warships and Chesapeake Bay sailors, campfires and cannon fire, fifes, drums , pollliciana and 1k7roc.keta. The occuioo is the 200th an- n lv er aa r y of the siege of Yorktown, the · campaien that finally won American indepen- dence alter more·than six years of almo.t hopeless war. President Rea1an i• scheduled to deliver the keynote speech, Jnc1 newly elected French Prell· d•t Ftancola Mitterand says be may come. Britain l• understan· dably reluctant about cetebrat-lnl one of ill more embarrau-tnc defeats, but Prince Cbarle1 already baa vlatted nearby I WUHamabura. Aldloucb July 4 .. celebra(ed as I••• &lmce Da)' ud tbe c•ntrJ'• offtdal blcent..aal w .. e.&1brllted in 1t7t, ....., blatoriau and patriot• from Geotte W~ to tbe ..-. eat 'blak tbe vlctorJ at Yonton oa Oct. 11, 1111 waa tJ'8 real bbtbdate ol Am.inn lndependence. In his orders of the day for Sept. 30, 1781, the day Lord Cornwallis withdrew British forces to the inner fortlficaUooa at Yorktown and the sieee began in earnest, Washington said the outcome "will decide American independence." That was more than five yean alter the Declaration of lndepen· dence. Unlike the official national Blcent.ennlai of 1976, this one la bein1 planned and carried out by private initiative and the states involved with a minimum of federal support. But it may do what the first one failed. For four days in October this antique toW1\ which bas been an active community for three and a haH centuries will become a living festival, the closest tbi.nc to a bicentennial fair the country wiJI see. Mock soldiers in Revolu- tionary garb will march on the city and catnp around it as Washington's Continentals and their French allies did 200 years aeo. Mi1hty warships will ride the swells of Chesapeake Bay and the York River just u a French fleet sealed the waterway and closed the trap on Cornwallis. Some of the costumed troops will "march" all the way from. Rhode Island as the French army, joined by Wasbinatoo's out.aide New York, did in 1781. One contln1ent will com- memorate the march from Wllliamabure. the 18th century staainc polnt, dra11ina bauaee and horsedrawn ba11a1e behind. From Oct. 18 tbroulb the Oct. 19 finale the simulated army will camp lo revoluUonary era tents, cook revolutionary food in revolutionary pots over campfires. A thousand tents will be pitched in nine camps, creatine the largest 18th century style en· campment in America since Washington left. The art of siege craft and soldiery will be exhibited daily, using 1,000 pounds of black powder for cannon and sie1e 1una and 200,000 rounds of musket cartridges, In addition to mUitary paaean- try, there will be an 18th century fair, depictina civilian life of the Indianapolis mayor opposes auto race INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - lla7or WUUam Hudnut baa alked tlae State Fair Board not to 1 .... tM.faiqrouDda f« next 1ear•1 "Street llachlne Na· tionall" -an nmt be said tbe cltJ would be "better off wltlaoat." HMllllt told Eitel Callab•, muaaier of tbe board, that tblt year's event, held June 19-21, at· tracted 5 ,000 entries and tbouaandl ol flftl from acrou tb• cowit.ry. Dw1q tbe ..... tbe streets of nortbeaat ID· dianapoUt were turned into clral 1trlpa and Hudnut said UM 9¥..t baa beeome ••a IJ'OWiDI c:eDeer1l tn Ute PMt tn ,.an to law •· f orcement otnciall, r .. ldmta of the Nortbeut.llde and the com- munity u a whole." Tbe event .. 1ponaored by Car Craft m&1aslne, publilbed by Petersen Publlahlnc Co. ol Loi An1eJ•. "Tralftc bu become lmpoui· ble," be said. "Alcobol and druC abue bave become rampant. Netabbiclri do not r .. 1 safe ln thelr homes. The unruly condi· Uon1 which exist represent a dla· aater waltiq for a Um• to bap. pen wlth unfortunate circumstances foT all." The tllllie9 an can, nm and U1ht trucu on wblcb tbouaanda of dollars in cuatomi&lnl work ll done to produce one-of·a-ldnd vehicles. times. Each of the 13 original :itates will have an exhibit. The 16-acre fesUval will in- clude a livestock exhibition, trading post, Indian village, col· onial auction center, early American home and manufac· turing arts, an Ethnic Showcase, quarterborse racing and jouat- in1. • Special assistance ls belna given by the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation wbicb operates the country's lar1e1t restoration project at Vlrlinia's colonial capital just 13 miles up the Colonial Parkway. At the other end of the drive, 10 miles beyond William1bur1, lies J ameatown, where the first 1ur- vi vi n1 £n1llsb settlement in America wu planted ln 1907. Meanwhile, Yorktown'• bl•· toric waterfront wtll become a llvina museum of Ute on the Chesapeake, featurina a new Waterman'• llueum, tall aall-.inl abipa and little wind-4.rlven fhbln1 bo1t1 and oyster dredc•. Also there will be ab modern day U.S. wariblpe aDd two from France. 112 .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, July 8, 1981 --~' ~'• ~ Giving us the Willies aJCKY TICKY POLJTIX: Willie Brown, the noted Democrat from San Francisco who currenUy ls Speaker of the California Assembly, only yesterday pledged to pop down here to get Orange County straightened out. Who knows? Maybe be will. The current problem that Willie Brown is interjecting himself into the ~ r.\ ,-a.-.-u-RP-HIN-1 .~~ middle of involves Orange County gov- ernment and the operation of UC Irvine Medical Center. Actually, the hassle really involves money. It always comes down to that, doesn't it? In event you missed the last two or three episodes of this continuing fight, however , the battle goes something like this: IN TAKING OVER operation of the county's old medicaJ center, the un- iversity people joined county govern- ment in a contract whereby the UC medics would take care of the county's poorer patients and bill the county for this care. The county has thus been billed for $8 million worth of this medical care where county government has declined to cough up and pay the tab. County of- ficials ·claim they've been billed for medical work that they shouldn't have been tagged for. University of California officials, on the other hand, have screamed foul, claiming all the billings are legit and Orange County government is acting like a deadbeat. THAT'S ABOUT WHERE it stands. Assembly Speaker Brown jumped into the fray just a time back when be got some language added to the state budget that denies $10 million to Orange County government unless it pays up to UC Irvine. T}Jis came up as part of the subject only yesterday when Orange County legislators and Orange County govern· ment officials gathered for a parley in Sacramento. Willie Brown showed up for part of the session. At one point, he was ques- tioned about the apparent secrecy sur- rounding his action to whack off Orange County at the pocketbook to the tune of 10 really big ones. BROWN SNAPPED JN answer, "I don't have a requirement to tell anyone anything.'' Now that sounds fairly arrogant. It must be a disease that infects every legislator who ever became Assembly Speaker. You remember Assembly Speaker J esse Unruh of yesteryear? Unruh, currently our soft-spoken, easy-going state treasurer. was always getting accused of running roughshod over California back when he was As- sembly Speaker. Some legislators even called him ''Big Daddy" in those days. IT WAS WIDELY believed that Unruh gave the then-governor fits by c harging off into a lot of legis lative Sir Ronald charging o/f to battle The Dr~aded Unruh bullrusbes without telling anybody anything, just like Willie Brown isn't re- quired to do. Columnist Art Hoppe used to be so delighted by Unruh's giving the gov- ernor fits that he would characterize the governor as Sir Ronald, upon his white charger, out thras hing about in the bullrushes in an effort to find and destroy the wild beast known as The Dreaded Unruh. But Sir Ronald ne ver found him. He never got beyond just hear ing The Dreaded Unruh thrashing around, bellowing and no doubt creating havoc for the then-Republica n administration. THE THEN-GOVERNOR HAS now gone on to thrash around in a lot heavier governmental underbrush. And Unruh seems at peace. counting state money every day. Meanwhile, current Assembly Speaker Willie Brown will come down here and thrash around in the Orange County bullrushes and try to mediate a heavy hassle. You do hope when it's over, Willie wilJ tell somebody something, whether he is required to or not. Host families sought Host families are needed in Foun- tain Valley and nearby communities to house 40 high school students from England and the five adults who will accompany them on a visit to Orange County later this month. The group includes 31 girls and nine boys from schools located in Surrey County near London. The stu· dents are traveling under the auspices of the British American Schools Exchange Club. Formed in 1974, the club provides for a non-profit exchange of visits between schools in England and the United States. The English youngsters will arrive July 28 at Fountain Valley High School and will need homes through Aug. 7. The youngsters will be gone Aug. 3-6 on an excursion lo the Grand Canyon. Medical releases have been ob· tained for all students, and the vis· itors will be covered by medical and accidenlinsurance .• Families interested in providing housing for the visiting Engliab slu· dents should call Lois Woods during daytime hours at (213> 484-0220 or collect at (213) 242-5555 during eve· nings and weekends. Water budget to • rise Riainl energy costs, inflation and additional employees will increase Mesa Consolidated Water District's Mesa Hig h accre d it e d for 6 years Costa Mesa High School'• ac· creditation baa been extended aix years, to June 30, 1987. u the result of a survey by the Western Aasocla- llon of Scboola and CoUe1ea. Max Zook, Costa Mesa Hlth chairman of a team cooducUni a alx- montb self-study or the acbool, aald tbe full alx-year accreditation followed an accrediting commlulon vialt ln April. • 'Tbla continued accreditation," Zook said. ''meana that the condl· tiona for «rective education exi1t ln tbla school." The Weatem Aaaoclation of School• and Colleces ls retponaible ror ac- creditation of aecondary ac:boolJ and inatituUOnJ of bi1her education ln California, Hawall , Guam and American School• ln t.be Far Eut. budget next fiscal year by about 4 percent, directors reported this week. The board. which oversees management of the district serving Costa Mesa, a part of Newport Beach and some county.governed areas near Costa Mesa. approved its $6,595,000 budget for 1981·82 early this month. Included in the document are funds for addin1 an engineering aide and lncreuln1 the hours of a part· time clerk-typiJt. Project.a acbeduled for the new fiacal year include increa1ln1 water production of one well, putting another ln operation and beCinninc work on drilling another. the aixth In the diatricl. Other project.a include ,..plac:lna 4,800 feet of older water main.I and compleUn1 a new feeder pipeline syatem. Lease exte nded VICTORIA, Seychelles (AP) -The lease on the U.S. Air Foret 11t.elllt.e tracklnc station on Mabe, the main Island in tbla lndlan Ocean arcbJpela10. hu been ext«MStd to 1990. ,._ I , .. ,.._ ............... .. lot,,,.., ._ __ r_.,,,_o-te.-_.._,,_.,..J ~ ....... ,., . ........... ___ ,., ---....... ...................... , Frllll erpll111f 111•. ••1111Mli ... ., 111-, Iii ft•tlf MILY "'°' a.ASSIRID ADS ..... A State Office of Emergency Pre- paredness estimate says 4 00,000 people could die from radiation poison if San Onofre has a melt· down. That same study says 1 0 million people would have to be evacuated . for at least 10 years. We'd like to know how will they evacuate us7 This May 13's disas- ter drill was plagued by communi- cations breakdowns, faulty equip- ment and poor logistics. The Fed- eral Emergency Management Ad- ministration called the drill inade- quate. But the NRC ignored this problem in their final environmental impact repor t You don't have to be a sc1en· tist to be concerned about radio- active sand on San Onofre State Beach. You can speak out for our community's future. On July 1 1 you will be .able to speak to the NRC about your safety concerns. Join your neighbors in protecting our American Heritage. Speak out. Your Chance to SPEAK OUT against licensing t he na tions' largest NUCLEAR Facility at San On of re OFFICIAL NRC PUBLIC HEARINGS Saturday, July 11 9 a .m. -5 p.m. San Cl e m ente Hig h School {l-5 South to A v enida Pico , e a st v4 mile.) W e ca n conv ert San O n of re to safe na t u ra l gas. ----------------------------------------------------------- Yes. I want to do more than a ttend the hearing. [' Yes/ Here is my contribution of $ -------~ [ 1 Yest I want to volunteer. r~ Yes! Put me on your mailing list. Name ------------' 'hone Address CitY-------------"ip _____ _ Alliance for Survival 331 N. Orange . Orange, CA 92666 1199 7-9922 U•LEAN• Not;ovu 1l% fa.t GROUND BEEF -= 1'~ "' • t • . ...... . ., . ·-· ........ ,."'." ~ ........... ' ............. ~ ... . . . .. . . .. , . . ------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 •a ,,,.. ______________________________________________ ..,. - INJURED -Ron Reagan, Jr., the pre- sident's younger son, had to postpone a ballet appearance in Becket , Mass ., because he hurt his back m ovi n g furniture in his New York apartment. Term stands SACRAMENTO CAPJ -A state appeals court says a convicted robber car r ying a g un that didn't work can't be sent to jail for an extra year. A unanimous t hree- member panel or the 3rd District Court of Appeal ruled that the one-year increase for possession or a gun by the defen- dant or a co-defendant applied only to a gun that could shoot. C•ll 642-5678. Put • lew words to work lor ou. DEAR READERS: The Federal Trade Commission has announced the latest data on the energy costs of operating clothes washers. Under FTC's Appliance Labeling Rule, this Information must appear In washer labeling and advertising beginning· July 1. In several washer categories, the figures establish the range between the annual energy costs or the most and least efficient machines now available. Ads and labels for each machlne must give its annual cost and s how its standing in that range. There are listings for both compacts and standard-size washers, and for ones m which water is either electrically or gas heated. Ap· pliance manufacturers supplied the data .to FTC after testing t he products according to Department of Energy procedures. Fo r electrically hea ted compact washers. the range is S27 to $111. For gas heated compact washers, the range is $9 to $28; and for gas heated standard washers, the range is $13 to $42. Business guides listed DEAR READERS: The U.S. Department of Commerce has published five guides for s mall businesses and consumers which offer practical techniques for managing consumer relations. The guides were prepared by mem- bers of the National Association of Consumer Agency Administrators and the Society of Consumer Affairs Professionals in Business The titles, with their cost , are : "Product Wa rranties and Ser vicing" ($2.25): "Ad· vertising, Packaging. and Labeling" ($2.25}: ··Managing Consumer Complaints" ($1.75); "Credit and Financial Issues" ($2.25); and Our new name is Mitsui Manufacturers Bank. And it spells good news for customers of both Manufacturers Bank and The Mitsui Bank of California. As well as for business and professionc;d people around the state. Because adding the top-flight capabilities of Mitsui to Manufacturers already highly successful operation gives us more bank to offer you. More offices. More capital. More expertise. I But the best news fe what hasn't changed. "Consumer Product Safety" ($2.SO). The guides are available from the Superintendent of Document.a, U.S. Govern- ment Printing Office, Washington . D.C. 20402. If you would like more information about these guides or activities at the com- munity level that relate to the topics covered in the guides, write to the Office of Consumer Affairs, U.S. Department of Commerce, Washington, D.C. 20230. Cruise not deductible DEAR PAT DUNN : My alma mater is advertising a combination business seminar and cruise to Mexico. The information I've r eceived about this claims that the expenses of the cruise are deductible. Is thls allowed by the Internal Revenue Service? P . L.. Huntington Beach No. Effective Jan. I, 1981, the IRS code states that no tax deductlona will be allowed for seminars held aboard crulae ships. In ad- dition, only expenses which are considered reasonable wiJI be allowed while attending foreign conventions, seminars or similar meetings. DYNAMIC! INTERESTING ANO STIMULATING' Well known H•I Morris te.iches Cre•tive Fin•nc· Ing to re.ii est•te agents, lawyers .1nd CPAs throughout the United Slates.. An investment banker and re.ii estate entrepreneur, Hal Morris knows the way to help finance even the most difficult pro perties in the lightest fnoney market Morris has a Master's Degret' from Pt>pperdine Univt>rsily •nd is a graduate of the New York Institute of Financt'. Gol o prohlem·1 Then wnle to Pat Dunn Par will cul red Jape. getting the answers and action you need to solve inequities m government and bus1Mss .\>fail your questions to Pot Dunn, At Your Sermce. Orange Coast Daily Pilot. I' 0 Boz 1560. Custa Mesa. CA 92626 As many letters as possible will be answered. but phoned inquines or lellers not including the reader's f ull name. address and business hours· phone number cannol be conSldered This column appears daily er cepl Sundays · ~--------------------------- Keep an eye on local gover~~r~! Daily Pilat Leonard Weil, president of Manufacturers Bank, is president and chief executive officer of Mitsui Manufacturers Bank. And the same people who've been serving you so well are still here to serve you now. We still specialize in meeting the needs of small to medium-sized businesses and pro- fessional people. With the same experience and fast decisions you've come to expect. Only now we can accommodate compan- ies of any size, because we're backed by the $52 billion resources of Mitsui Bank, Ltd. And we can offer you greater access to foreign markets-through Mitsui's network of branches and agents in 40 countries. So, by merging the energetic banking philosophy of Manufacturers with the dedicated service of Mitsui, we've created a bank that tops both. A bank you'll be hearing more and more from in coming months. Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/Wtdne1day, July 8, 1981 PUBUC NOTICE P1JBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Pteft'°*" ........ MTG fW HutTH't tAL.t 1Mn'IC8-T8"Ttlll"t ...... ...... 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Wlf9I\, Jr. .,. itr..c ...,_ -...., <-s.i. .... will • ,....., llUI wttMut , ............. -........ -............... -. ......,,_...,._ <--·-·-,,..._,_.,_ CewltYCIMle/IOr .... Cewitye11J.;, ...... will • ........................................ ~ • ., t. 1"1 ,_ ...... W _...,, .__er IM· ftCUfftWM< .. , le "' l.M IMIN .. ~ ,. ... , ......... tMM, ........... w Ml...U ti "'9 --_., .-, ,._.....,Or ... C.-o.11, ..... el\CllMWM<H, le ,.., IM llfl,.ICI o.ect of Tr\111, te-wlt: a1t,1J•M, I,._ Jllf,I, U,12,lt, t•1 Jt'J'Ht llelM<e ell .. llRlllJ -urect IW Mid cludl ... M -i.ct lft Mid ....... .,._ Puauc NOTICE OeM ., T,,.., ...it: a1t.J14.IS, ,,.. ·-·· 11...,, -o. •-ot Mll4I Cl, ....... ,,_ ....... _c.>. ... o.ect of T ......... c-..-••. ¥Mee•, H -· -tN -of M1ct ,._ell OW T.,... -of 1119 1t1,.11 o.ect of Ttwt, ..... dler9n ...i P · reelocl bl' w64I ~of Trumt. ltOTtea W TYWST..,J:.;.1 &M.8 ,._ of IM TNA9e -ef 1M INtb Tiie ...-1e1et, -.. lct 0.. of T.I. ... J crNtM""Mlcto..lofTrw*. Tri11t lleretotore eu<utect ellel cte- Oft fllurlM'r, .JWy a , 1'11 et 11:• TM IMftlfklery -.... DeeC1 of ""'"to IN_....., a Wttn.I ...... ALAMITOS SSC:tlOW, -... , Tru11 ...,......... t.M<UIMI -... Declw.U.. .. Oefeul1 ... ~ ..,,......,. T.,.... .-r.,.. ,_.,_ 11.,.rect '° .. uNllnilMCI • _,.._ fer Sale, -• wrll...., N.Ckt e4 te DMct TNll r--.._, 11, t•, Oeclwetilll ., Oef ... I ... Oefft.w 0.1 ... 11 -ll«tleft to Sell. TM - .. IMt. .... 1 ... lft .............. fer Seit, -e wrllltfl Natkt of Cltr<n-6 ceuttd UICI Notice et l~~~~~~l~~i8l~~ii~~ .... et Offk.111 _.,. 1ft .. ""k• et 0.1 ... n ... t:l«tletl 10 s.11. n. ..,.. Deta<111 enct lladlon 1.0 Sell le lie ,... tN Cewily ~., Ot.,.. C-. dtrtle,,.• uuNil _.., Nollet of corded 111 IN ~ ;"-'• IM rMI ly, Cel"'"'6e. Def..,11 -EMctltn '°Sell '°Ila ,. -"' b ~. WILL. MLL AT "'et.IC AUCTION ,.,., ..... ~If -· IN ,..I Trvsl• or _,., <-tlfte ..-: A .. ..._.. TO HIGHl!ST 1100«• fOR CAJt4, ,,....,, .. .__, TITLE INSUllANCI ANO TllUST F W '-~-P J934 ll d by le t t lf lf CASH II.R'S CHECK O• Cl!,_T.,11!0 Trusi.t «-"r c-11.. .... COMf'AN Y, JMO WllllHA .......,,.,.,., armernear aynesvl110, a., uses mowerpu e mu s ocu a a a cHt:cK. ,,.~ .. ,._., ... "' TITLE 1NsuuNcE ANo uusT Los A,...., c.11....,.. •11: At111: -----------------------------------------------T=====:::::;;::::====1'ewful ~., .. Ulll• SU...) et COMPANY vw.-,.. ..... : nm ...... )( 1n1. PUBLIC NOTICE IM *"" ·----.. tM ON u. WlllNrt ....... ALAMl'l'OI ucaow. AS Taun•• Ot ..... ~ C..-......., Ill L.et..,,...., CA•tO av:,,_.__._ Ole tll ateck ef W..1 S.Me ..... Attfl: V-Pf... T.-~. ._...,.,.._ s-te A1W. CelMwllle , all (llal ....... XZ117 9' 't-....... NOTiCllO.TltUSTll'llAU rleftl, 11tie ... ,_.... ~.. OATEOJu1,ao. ltll. Oele: J ....... "'' T.I. .... ,..-.,,. --1wtC11W II -lillCI DMCI ef ALAMITOS ESCROW, AS PuDll.,_. Or .... C.oest Delly f'llol. Oft ~. JllA' a , 1'11 et 11:• Trutt II\ tM ,,..,.n., .. ...._ Ill UICI TltUSTEE J11h I, IJ, 12 .• 1•1 -.1. e.m., ALAMITOS ESCROW, ft*"' c-,, .... su.CIM< ...... M : a,: Tlllel,,_91\Ct-- Imports of gun parts • on rise ._.,.._Trweee_.,.._._... L..-1t .. T•11C1-•.•~-,.. TNll~.Ao9<11 PUBLIC NOTICE to OeM ti T ..... ~ Me' ti, <.,_, Ill .... 14. ..... 1S of Mh-V.,_ f'lneCIA ---------1•. e1 11\at. No, ·-· !ft .... 1JMS, <•lie-Mejle, Ill .. o«ko of tlw PutMllll9CI Or-Coe.M o.ll' Pilot, NOTICI OP TaUITla'l IAL& ,... "'., Offklel ....... Ill .. of. cwnt, "-*'., ..... c-t,. Julr •. U, 12, ltll *IMI T I. ... 1 ·-1 • Influx of handgun assemblies blamed for crime increase WASIUNGTON (AP) -The United States appears to be im· porting an increasing number ot parts to be assembled into the small handguru; that gun-control advocates bhtme for much of the country's crime. But the ITC study did say: "Approximately 10 percent of domestic production cons~t.s of pis tola and revolvers assembled from foreign parts on a domestic frame or receiver, primarily in Florida. These assembly opera- tions exist, in effect, to circum· vent tbe import restrictions on small finiJhed pistols and re- volvers under the Gun Control Act of 1988. The recent produc· lion increases in pistols and re- volvers are at least partially due to the growing demand for these weapons for use in personal pro- tection." ported revolvers have a barrel at least 7.S centimeters -a little less than 3 inches long, to make them harder to bide. But it does not restrict imports of parts to build revolvers, however s mall. Such parts will become cheaper because duties on them are declining under an iotema· tiooal agreement to 8.4 percent in 1987 from 21 percent in 1979. lie• of u. c:-ity Rtcordlet .. Or.... Tr1111w °' tKOtd OWMr: HUN· . . --C9Uftl,, Cellfemlt, WILL SELL AT T I N G T 0 N H 0 a I Z 0 H Oft T_.....,, JvA' IO, ltll et II:• .. U.LIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST INVESTMIENTI. 'm. ALAMITOS ESC.-OW, " ..... ., ••DOEii FO• CA$H, CASHIEll'S Tiit .,.... ........... -com--PUBLIC NOTICE .... II ... 1.--... --· CHECK 0" CE,.TIFllD CHECK, -.. ...,....,, If ...,, of 1M ,.., lo OeM fllf TNll reur-11\e'r 11, 1-, .... et ti--.... 111 lewNI --'1, ctaec .............. 11 _____._.. t•, H ~ No. IJIM, II\ -I.OS. ,.... ,... __ -,_ _ •OTIC& OP T"UITla'l IAJ.I Peee "'2 of Offklel "tc•dl Ill ._ ef. m-y of tflO Uftl• StM•I et Ille le •: 76*5 ca.., A-. H....U....... T.L -1~ llct of tlw c:-tll' .._., ... ti Or .... IOOltll 1.-•rence '° tM OICI Ot .... llN<ll, Cellferftie. Oft ~y JtA' 10 ltll et 11 ·• Cou111,, CAI ......... WI.LL SELL AT C-ty ~...., 111 tM * Tiie .,.....,_. Trw .. ••lelms ALAMITOS UCltOW• ~ f'U9L IC AUCTION fO HIGHEST Meck ef w..t Senta N"9 ........ 5Mte e11y llMlltlty fer MY !ft<~ of~ ...... T,..._..., .... ·,::.._;:.. 1100111 FOlt CASH, CASHIEa'S AM, Col!Nnlie, ell rleN, lllle -.... tlle street --__, <-le DMC1 of TNll rt<Ot'dect Mey U CHECK Olt CEltTIFIEO CHICK, -~yMtll--llefct..,11 ~.llMY,.,_, ...... ,., ttlO HINt.No llN7 ll\llook1Jt0S (peyelllt el 11-of Mft In lewful Uftcter Mid °"911 ti T""' lft tile..,_.,. Seid .... ""II Ila ....... -wl-...; "' ell Offklel 11.:C-In tflO e1'. _, of IN Ullflect S-1 et 1119 t' •ltuelell ........ ~ .... ..... (-., _,.....,, • .,.,_ ., Ifft. lie• ., .;. c.euMy ......, ., Or... ...,. .. ,, ... wMeflee .. .,. ~Or .... Last year, U.S. Imports of pistol and revolver parts were valued al $6.2 million, more than a third since 1978 and 16 percent ahead of the 1979 value, accord· iog to a report from the U.S. In· ternational Trade Commission. Tbou&h previous efforts have failed, several bills now before Congress seek to tighten the im· port provisi0ns of the 1968 law. But President Reagan, who was wounded by a handgun in March. bas long opposed new laws and bas said be still feels that way. Clft<t .... •: .............. title, r I .... W C-ty ~ C-ty ~ ~ 111 --LM1tefTt'2tNe ..... ,.,-•11e11mw-. 1e ,.., ,,. .,...... WILL KLL AT l'VaL1c AUCTION *<ll • .... s...&e Me a.w.. s...c. ,__, Ill ... 14. ..... 1S .. Ml• ....__ fl ...... ICwW "" NICI TO HIGHUT llDOE" ll'O" CASH AN, c.lllwftie, ell '""'-llllt .... i... <el'-..... !ft IN elflce fl IM DMCI el T,,., ...... : t1',.S7UIS ... CASHIER'S 041CK 011 CE,_Tl,.EO -_,..Ill .... -lltlCI IW II C...ty,__...,9/feeNl<eUffty. ,,.., lllC-..... .. ,,..,.... Ill NW C.HttCK (....,.....el tlfM of .... 111 .... , .... o.ctofTrumtlll lM-· Tr11atw., rec.,ct .. ,,.,: HUN· llMe.~H...,,~tllet-lewtut -...,., 1119 Uftltect StMM> et '' ,,.....,.. lft NICI c.ft'.,.. 5tete TINGTON VISTA INVUTMENTS, e el u lct 0-. of TfWil, ...._ <Mt'IH IM -,...,. _,..,,.. .. 1119 olCI ctHcrl ...... : """'" ........... .... ........... ,,_ ---.. ., ..... _., <-...... ... .... 11,of 1111Cl No.-· .. ,.,"'"' The largest 1980 sb.ipmeota, $2.61 million worth, came from West Germany. Italy was a fast· rising seoond with $2.2 million. Brazil shipped $799,000 worth. more than twice as much as the year before. U.S. civilian handgun produc· lion rose from 1.89 million in 1976 to 2.17 million in 1979 and 1.8 million in tbe first nine months ol 1980, the'report said. The 1980 figure represented an increase of 16 percent from the comparable period of 1979. His wife, Nancy, said before the inauguration that her husband bad shown ber bow to use a "tiny little gun'' that she kept 1D a drawer near her bed. Tiit .,,_. ............ ..._, -lnolta ,,.... "" .... ~ ef Tnat. Ille IOI llltck of Wt1I S.llle AJ'.! rtc ... 41M Ill ... U, P ... 1S of Mlt--.......... If .,,..,, ef .,_ ....i Tiit ..... lclery -w64I ~ el lloule•-. (""-!' 691 Sllall 511te ull-"-'• 111 tN offlU of llw ,,...n, -.-... ...... II ---Tr111t llentofon HKlllect eM de· AM. ell ,..,._ tllle end lftter• c..-c.-t' ~-Mid~.,. 1• M : , ... 0.., A-. H....,_.. 11-ecttetlle~•-•-of np<lto..,,;;..lwtct_.,tt.-ruld Tru11., °'record owMr. HUN· 9M<ll, Gel...,.,,.._ Oefeull -0etNM fer S.., -• OMdof T.-1ft -~ Mluetect T I N G T 0 N H 0 It I l 0 H TM w•o li9oct T,_ Cllt<lellN _,,_ -.C. ef Def.it MCI EleCU"' '" .. kl Coul'ltY • 51.--~ M : I H V E ST ME NT S. e I Im It• Cl .,,.., lleMfjty w -•-rec-el .. Sell. Tlw -••• •• ~ Mid Let 1 ef Trect ..._ • ",.,,,,.,,... pet!~ tM 1tl'WI ..._. _.. ..,_ -N«ke -' Oef .. I -IElectleft w Sell ,.,..... kl ... U ... 1S ti Ml.-TM -......... MCI __, c...... ........... H.,..,,._......... .. .. ._....lfl .. -ty ...... celi-...... I~._ ottko ti tM -............ If errf, of IM rMI lelCI ... will M ....... llUI wttMul l'ffl ,,......, .. ....._ C_t, ,._., .. MICI c.ft,. '"""Y-rllled -11 ~ The report gave no figures on the number of weapons that could be made from foreign parts. The 1988 law requires that im· c--.t. _,_,, ...,_., ~ Trvs ... ., ...,,,, 'ertct1KU111 .... Tt1111 ... ., recffd _,,.,. HUN· It ... : 7tl5 Orf A-................ ............. Utte, ,_ ........ ., TITLI! l•MJ-ANCE ANO TltUST T 1 N GT 0 N V I E W .. o I N T hedl, c:.1........_ tllCufftlWeMff. te ,.., Ille -.elct COM .. AHY, .. Wlltllln......,,.,.., INVl.ST~NTS.. TM .... ,..,_. T,,... dlaclel,,.. ...._., .. -Cll IKwW"" M6CI La ......... Gel""'1M"'1t; ....... TM ..,... -*"& .... __, um-.,.., ll*llty w .,, 1--f//f DMCI el T,,., lo1lffl: a1t,.J7U5 • l!•L tm. -........... 11 ..., _, .... ,_, tlw 11,_ ........... -etl'9t ~ ,,_,_,..,.,, """*" M ,,..,._. Ill ALAMlftll alCIMN, a T..... ......-t'f ....... ~II,..,_... ~ H _,, .,_ lltnlft. .... Mlie(I),...,,..,... If ....,, .-r ..,'* .__... .. ... ,.,... ~ ~ Hwlt· ......................... wliMut .. ..,_ti .... 0... ef Trwt, ..... TNllc:-.-r ...... ; I-a.di, GeiHwll&e. ' < .......... er -r.-Y, .._..... w Im-~ ........... el ... Tna• ,,_.._.. Titt ·-...... Trw .. ._ ... _ (Iii.., ......... lltie, ,....._., w -• .. trWb <,........,. MN o.ct o.te: '-• H11 ...., llelltllly .., .,,.., IMitr•ec;-of e11cufftw-.e1, le ,.., 1M IMP•" el T..-. ............. Or-.. C.... Dell' f'llGll, IM etreet .,._. ... .._, c-INIMU ti Ille -(I) IK-.., .-, Titt -..nd4wy -MN ~ ef Jiii' t, U, 12. 1'11 · -..1 . .._........,. It -....... "'"9lt1 DMC1 el Towt. ...... 1: a1t.JJUS -Tru1t lie,...,...• eirecut.ct MMI Cle-S.ICI Ule'wt11~OM9,11u1 wi..ut proxliMlllV, 111<111111111 "~..,.._I" ..... ,... .... "' ......... _...,. PUBLIC NOTICE (--., ...,.-y, ..,,_., ~ .... llRlhl.---.. H ....,, - He pulls 'disaster watch' NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Surrounded by muted radios a.nd a clacking weather teletype, Danny Newton sits in a 16-by·l8-foot command center and waits for disaster. watch on Tennessee's roads, airways, forests and nuclear plants. In front of Newton, 14 radios murmur con- stanUy, enabling him to monitor channels ran1ina from those used by the Tennessee Highway Patrol to those belonging to state wildlife officers and to the Army Corps of Engineers. Oecler...,. ., OilfMI .... o..NM (lllM ............. ttoa _....... ., IN .. ,,_ell uld ~of Trwl, ~. , ... Sele, eflCI • wtlU.,. N.Ck• ef •"cu·.,..,_.. .. .. y llw .... p..,. <Nr'" ... .._... of tM Tl'Vlllt Defwtt .., 1.ltCtWI t. Sett. TM -NS-71197 MleN:• ., 1119 ·,... ucwed _., Yl4 .,.. ot "'° 1.-a ,,_., _., Nl4 Oeecl ctenle,,.. ceuMCI ••" Netlct •I NOTICE OF DEATH OF DMcl of Towt, '° wit: att,.S7US, ~ of Trust. Def .... I ... llltctlGtl to Sell te M ,.._ !WI ... a .,......_ Iii Mid ..-. .._ Tiie ....... lclery ""*' ..... Oeec1 of ,.,_, 111 .. c...,iy .....,.. t11e ,.., HAROLD M. FRODSHAM ' If ..., o. -.,· .... ,,.,.1 ,........,, uec"'" -oo. ,,....... .. ~ AND OF PETITION TO =~ T:t_ ...._ clW9n _, .... 11 .. ,.. .... ....,..,_. • _,._ The hours lick. by slowly for Newton, 31, ii Tennessee's weather is good, firefighters stay on tbe job and tractor ·trailers ferrying huardous wastes remain on the road. Two television screens nearby are keyed in to tbe Tennessee Valley Authority's Sequoyah nuclear plant near Chattanooea. Newton said, al· lowing him to gather up-to-date information in ca~e or nuclear emergency. ~uc:i.ow ADMINISTER ESTATE ,....nfll .. T,,....,.t1t11e-11 o.1cwetleft t1 o..eu11..,. o.-.ct .. ...0 a 1_..1 ,,....,. .,. MICI O...of T""'-ftt Sele, -• wr111., Nollet of Tll'° I _ _..... n • ,.. • .,..,_ • Tiie ....... klery ...., M1e o.ct' ef Det ... 11 -Elect._, to Sell. Tiie _,. = ~. T 0 a I I h e I r s • Trull Mrttofw• •ucll1ect ........... 1, .... UUIH .... Notice of v_,.,,... beneficiaries, creditors .... ,... "' ........ ,.. • """"" o.i ... 11.,. El«1lerl 1o s.i1 to •,.. ,,.....,.,.., ..__ and contingent creditors of OKI••...., .. i>et•1 .,.. DeoMM _... "' .. -".....,..IN ,.., But if something goes wrong, Newton, an U · sistanl operations officer for the state Emer1ency Management AgenCY\ is one ol the first to know. TITL.I t..UllA*a .. D Harold M Frod· .. -m and ,., , •••• -• wtllleft N.Clct .. ~y .. _..... · :><-Oef..,11 ... Electltft le Seti. Tlie -ALAMITOS UC:ltOW :::.=-.::.': persons who may be ''"''"" u11Mct uict Neun., •T~ '--......., ~ _.. otherwise Interested In the o.rou1t .,. E1tctltft • s.11 t• • ,... nu. •-once MCI Tennessee's EMA still is commonly known as Civil Defense, and Newton is one of dcnens of peo- ple across the state connected with the agency, a non· military section of the National Guard. To his right is a shelf containing nearly 50 volumes, half of which are about hazardous materials. Any Ume a private plane goes down in Ten· nessee, a wildlife officer ls shot at, a tornado strikes or mountain roads are flooded. it is the job of Newton or whoever is on duly lo coordinate communication. ......., ... "" will and/or estate: ~"' .. ':..:"' .....,.. • ,.., !.":.~. Dftt: '-• 1., A petition has been filed ,,.,.._ ., .-rtv c_t1,. .... ....,. J~~ ~ c:..i 1>e11ya:,':; by Andrew L. Ersek and TITLE tNIU,.ANCE AND '"un v-,.._ . • G R Phltll I the COM .. AHY, .. WlltHrt..,..,,.,,.. ,,......,......,c 0 --eorge . ps n L• ......... Gel ........ •11; Allft: TITLI UllUllAICI. T"UIT CQM. Superlor Court of Orange v_,.....;11m...-•tm ..... v "Civil defense was set up a long Ume ago lo deal with mosUy war·and-peace·type tb1ng1," be said. "Now we've gotten involved in so much other stuff, such u toxic waste." County requesting that Auu11HT011tc11GW.asnvtna ,... • .....,........_... Andrew L. Ersek and a,:n..e--... .........,ca ... '90T'tCSIWVm .. atDS T,_.c:-.-r,MlllT ........ a&l'n7 .. D1Tuueo.• George R. Phillips be ap. v_,._. oew:J-ao,1t11 NOTIU II HE-••v GIVl!N .... p 0 I n t e d as per s 0 n a I D•lect: , __ , 1tl1 "'*'' ..... Or .... C-lt Dell' PllOt, PUBLIC NOTICE In a concrete block command center 1D the basement of Nashville's National Guard armory, New~oo and bis colleagues maintain a 24·bour Weather poses the most frequent problem. be said . ...... ,,,....... w+11 .. __.,,....,representatives to ad-,.,..,.,...0r.,..eoutDe11,,..-. '"''1,u.n.1t11 JOSW1 t11e ci1ye11cauMMe..•wt1:n.ci. minister the estate of Ju1.,a.u.12.1t11 •1~· !!.,C.:::·.::, '!:" .!~-:= Harold M. Frodsham, El --------- ., 11:• a.m..,. ""'*'· '"'' 11, ""· Toro, California (under PUBLIC NOTICE ltOTICllWHUSTH'llAU PUBLIC NOTICE ~················· ~• All YOU rAYIMQ. : TOOMUCHFOI • ... LTHIMSUllAMCl7: St .000.000 : GROUP OR INDIVIDUAL e .:c .. fw9Mte640-607,.: ••••••••••••••••• 1. McCC>aMta NORTUARIH Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 HAl90I U.W.._MT. OUYI Mortuary •Cemetery Crematory J 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 5'0-5554 ,_Cl•OTHHI llll•OAOWAY MOaTUilY l 10 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 lALT%11R61RO .. IMTH & TUTHtlL WUTCUfJ CHAM 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 6"4e-9371 NAc1110nm1 SMITMt' MOITVAIY 627 Main St l-«Jnt1ngcon Beach 538-6&39 Traffic DEATH NOTICES deaths Grants OK'd 111M11• .. ,.._....,,11y.,..,...., the Independent Ad· T.a.-.Mll9-A cter •• *"""' 1111 1t1ct te tM cttJ ministration of Estates '" """ .---. My a. "" e1 11:00 CIM'tl'a Ofllce"" .. ,...,., •=--...., , _ __, .......... wlll .. .-..Cly .... -A.ct). The petition Is set few •OT.a.,. TIIUSTH'l IAU ....... AL.AMl10S uc:..ow ...... ., SACRAMENTO <AP> ,... ._. .. 11:• .. ""-., • -hearing In Dept. No. 3 at °" ~~J~. e111:• ~0: .J': == ~ -Tbe state is award.int ~""•...=11 ~ 700 Civic Center Drive •·"'· AUU11110S He~ .. ....., 1• ... .._ .... 1•1. "' .... 1..s, ....... million in ,,..ants to city H-.C, 11 '*Ort.,., c:-. -... West, Senta Ana, CA 92701 ..,,..,.... T,_. 111111er ..-,... M7," omc1e1 ~ '" ..... -,. a• c:MltenN wa w .. ..,......... ti J I 29 1-1 t 9 ..,. te ~ of Trwt ,_.... Mer 1S. tic.e ti t11e c..ity 111tC«9t et o...,.. ID• crease j m p r 0 V e p U b 1 i C Ll.ASHVIEHJCL.I.. • «!nM U y ' ""' a : "" t•, .. INL N9. t»G, "' .... 1 .. , c-itT. ~. WIU llEL.L AT MEEHAN t rt ti f tb ....._. .... ., .. .,_lftc.lill9lll .... . ,....,,.,0Mc1e1 ~.,. .. .,. f'UeLtc AUCTION To HIGHEST HELEN I. MEEHAN. retl· ranapo a on or e _, .. ....,.. .... OffQ".. IF YOU OBJECT to the tic.• .. '-*'....,..,.,°'.,... 11Dou '"°"CASH, cAsH1u·s dent of Balboa Island. ca. NEW YORK (AP> elderly and bandi· ~ .,._ .. 11 ,.., om.. nrantl""' of the .-uuon, CWM.,, Gii...,... WILL HLL AT cHecll 01t c1RT1tr1110 CHIECK, d B l C.. ..... ~ ... .._... .. "' • .., -.. UaLIC AUCTION TO HIGHIEST (,eyeltle et ti-ef .... Ill lewflll Passed away on Jilly 5. 1981. Mount St. Helens and a ca PP e · us n es s. ...__. .... .._..." .,. °"' you shoUld either appear e1oou 1<0.-CASH. cAsH1u·s _, ., .. Uftl• Sle4HI .. • Survived by her sisters and Las Vegas bot.el fire did Transportation and c1er11 ....... '* "-'"""· 111 •at th• hnrlng and state CHIU o• c1•T1tr1ao CHICK, ._...,,......,_ ... 0tct0r.,.. brothera·in·law J. Wealey their share, but the big· Housi ng Secretary ....,__,.,....,.._.,. ...... your objections or file!:::;":.~':.:.;:..!)':-= =~~':..-:;!~a.!! and Nanette Fletcher and gesl cause of accidental ~mo A. Schenk said sa ==~, ... _....,...., .. written objections with the _.. .,.__._ .... ..,o...,... .,., ~ .,1,.,., '"".,,..,.. WUllem and Dorothy Levy, d th . lb u · t d projects were selected •ec11 .., _., ...-clfY .... -court before the hearing. c-., ~...., "'• • ..,.. .. _.,.. 111 --lltlel.., 11 nephews Robert Beeker and ea an e DJ e · f lundi ....,., ........... ..,.,11 ... ..-lfke. Your appearance may be .... et ... ..,...,. SNw.,.,.., ~MICIO..etTMllllllllN,,...,· Joseph Fletcher. niecea Slates last year wa1• or ng. :=-...:=_...,,..: ~=:.:: tin person or by your at-~:: ~ -!':;.-.: :.C,.'":.:'.~...,. c..wity...,. state Marthe. Victoria. Susan and auto accidents, as usu a · 111 .. -. _.....,, • ... ..,. _, orney. ----""11..,..., o..• 1..et u. " Trat ..., • ... ..., Mar1a.ret Fletcher, Patricia Tbe annual grim re· 11o"' 111 ... ..-ffl<M'-..... , .. I F Y 0 U A R E A '""" "' .. ~.,..... 111 MN -. ,_.... 111 ... '\. ..... u of ~urray and Carolyn and port from Metropolitan P\JBLIC NOTICE er::::,~.:~ ..... Mi CREDITOR or a cont-ct:'J:;=:-.:=.-:,:,,.,.. :.-c:=-..=.,':.w.c.:.~~., Cynthia Levy, also survived Life ln.surance Co. says ---· .._ ... ,........ ., .,. ~ lngent creditor of the de-~ i.. ..... .., ,.... u ., -. ''"'"" ., ~ _,: HUN· by many lovlna frienda. 106,000 Americans died MO'nClllwvtmee .. oa .,..,.,......._...111 .. ---... ceased, you must file your eet'-..._, 111 • etnce., ... TllfOTON VISTA tNVIEITMllNTS • Roaar" will be held at in acci'dents last vear _ .....!!!!''.,• ,~ ..... ~~ ... ~ ........ .,.~_. .. clalm with the court or c:-.ey......,.,...,c.-.ty, .. ,,......,._,..._ I I --·---_., .. ~ .... u.. -.. TtVllW ., ,..,. _,: HUN· TM ...... ...,_ ... ..., -7;00PM today at the Cabot• 800 f 1979 _,.., CMtea9 OtWict ., ~-.. .. ..,.....,.....,., .. __.......,. present It to the personal , 1 N 0 , 0 N v 1 • w po 1 N T -........... " ,,,,.,, ., ... ,.., Son• Chapel, Puadena, Ca. up l, rom · c:..iey, CIMllnN, ... , ,_.. ...._ ............. _. ._ -_,_ representative appointed 1NvasTMaNTI. .,...,,. ...,... ...,. .. ,_.... Ma11ofCbrUUan Burlalwtll One glimmer of good --:r•11:•-..,,_,,.,. ... 1111111 ••t11. rt•••,.,•• •v •by the court within four TIM..,.....,._.,.....,<_" M: 1tm o.i---..,_, H- .. A on w....11--""-y, July a. news wu the drop of 80 !!!! ,~1119 ~ o.-•.:.•,A_! C....,.., • • ...,.. """"'"' .... months from the date of -...,., ....... " _,, • .. ,... '"""' IMOI. ~ .... .,.,.,_.. - _ ............ -_ .... ..._ .... -.. ,,,..,..,-.C,..-.Wll,..,..,... tlle ......... r.....-....-1981 et 9:30AM at the Holy percent ln dealba from AU"'• •un, CHt• ...... ,.,.._.. ... ..,.---."'if' .. first Issuance of letters as 11 i.:,... 09' A-, 1tu••• ,,,,.,........., • ..,.,,.. .......... Family Church , South civUian aviation. Tbt ~ .. __...._..., ....... .._., •• • .... ~., provldtd In Section 700 of ...... ~ .vwt...._ ... ...,_ .... Pasadena, Ca. Interment study said there was not .. ~.~~=~••TY _..,.., ._ ... ......_ -the Probate Code of :...:=":""..;=::...-: ~=·:::...-=:·....,. ResurrecUoo Cemetery. a single fatal crash of a COLI.IOI 'A"""" stT• :".:.'=-::.."*: .... ~': Callfornla. The time for ... .,_..__...__ ~ • ...,..,..,_.,..,.. Donations may be made to ta.roe ,,..._....01er plane in •:c.=':t ........ __.....,.. ............ ...._........_"HA flll"9 claims will not •JC· ... 1., ... ., .. -.,...._--. ....-............... : .... ., Ute American Cancer Sode-1..,.: ..---......... ...._ ------1t11e t1et1ti-..,...., .. ; ,,....._, filre prior to four months '* ... ,... • ..... wi ...._. •11<11••~ ..... "Y •• ....ict .,.,.., _.....,__, ---....._ .. tkW-._........ .._ ~ . ..,...., ................. _ ....... ,.,~.., ..... ty. Cabot• Sona Mortuary. 1 · addition deaths ,..,...,..~"'*"--...,..-....,..,.u_.....,......,. rom the ..... te of the hear· ,..._,....,... .,..., ,1111..,"'-., o.. "flWt. ...,.., •1'..114.11 .... Pasadeoa,clirectora. n • .,., .... ,.,.. .. ..,... ..... .,,_. ,._ ..... 0r.._c.uttr...,_, Ing noticed above. .,.,".,..,_... .. ,.y 111e-.... """HNWIY.~ .. ,,,.........111 EaJCKION from cataatrophe, such "._ll'Wd\9tfle._..,_..~ 111 cw"' •••••4 *"*... YOU MAY EXAMINE ....._.,IM ..... .-.-.., MN...,,......,,.._...,"_,, ..... WALE ERICKSON, re•l· as the Mount st. Helens ":'.:-~ ,... ........ .-.. ,....... " • ~. t.c"*'l. the flle klPt by the court. =..: ~ •..; ::,O.!:;:. :r..,..~ :.=: .!.~~ dent of Costa Meu, Ca eruption and the MGM IJJN•C9181r'•c:e.a.--..dl9d. 'i; ... c:;=..,--:-:.a.,,.,c...e. lfyouarelntetestedlnthe .-.,.,...,,_. .. .._., ...,., .. .,,...c,.......,, .... o.M Pa11ed away July z. 1111 . Grand hotel fire, were :.,w:r.:.:.":'~C:.: ._.__ .. ,.. .. ,..._,_,estate, you mey flle •re-~,,,:,..., ,...,.... _ __.. 11:._.~.,. '* ~., Born on November!,. 111os lr1 down by a>Q. 011tr1c1....,. .. T::.V:... 111 ... "':!:.:=-,,,_._... Quest wtth the court to re· _.._,,,.... ... " .. ,,..u '"''' .... ....,. ·-.-....,. ... Helalnld, Flnland. ~urvlved But beat-related __. ........... ...,.,.,._...,,., ~0r .... c.-.o.11,..., celve speclal nQtlca of the ..,...,OeetP•T,.., .. ...,... ........ ...,.. • .,........, by bl• •lf• Glennl u, deaths were up to 1300· :=,-=.-..:,•=::-,,::.:: •"""'"" ...., Inventory of estate Htets n........,.,....,.._ ~"' ON111t .. ~ dau1h• Waleeft G. AnUeta most from the se~eri ~., • -.. ...,... .. and of thl petitions, ac· =::,-;•="'.-...::~.... ::..!:. .. a..~:"' ... ~,:',:. or K ..... O\Y. Klaourt, a of ....... •• .............. ...... .... c 0 u n ts • n d rep ~Ht I Oec..,..... "' °"""" ... ..,., ........ ..-.... Netlce .. 1randebUdnn, Eric, Melody beat wave last sum· .. -" ---.. .. __.... "' • USI THI dffcr1bed In S.Ctlon 1200 ,., ........ • .mlM ....-. OelMi* .. ~ ...... • .. ,... and Ct1'41. brotbert wuuam mer. And 53,500 people :::.:: C:: =-=-~.,:: DAIL y PILOT of tn. Calltomla Probate ::!f'..:' ,S::: ::.:-:t .. ~ :.!" .. :.:"' .....,.. .. ,... EridtlOft, &-. of Wentworth, died ln car crubes, the ....,... .. ..,.__.allrtd. ST Code. .,....... ..., ._........ ..... A&.M111ousc.,. Wla~ and Oa. Ericklcln bl1hest fiaure since •--:_,.....,_ .. _..., "PA ASTO~L. PMtLLIPS & --. 111 .. ......, ...,. .. -~ ot DWUl.b, MlMeeota, sister 1913. :.:= ... .::.-:J:.:....., llSULr' SAVOI"" "=-":':,--.... .... : =-~ .... Irene Gou Of CoMectlcvt. Tile ._. • ~ ,...,,_·.. • SHVICI •ft.!~1~1Nel• '''"• 1..-u.-ANCI AND t•u1 ._ hneral Mn'l4* wUJ be held • .,....., ,......., • •.... A at Law COM~ ... ...,... .,._....._ oo w•·~· JulY •. 1•1 :, •.= .. ~:.:.:,.::-..:.,:: DlllCTOIY ms.. ......, W• ~.!J' :.,..~~=; .. 1 ~~~:ir.= ..• ':&:-. al ll:OOAlll at Pafilte Vin [ 041LY ~ I ;.....,. ._,... FOT Result 1711 M.Mllftl MftWT'll :': ~=~·M=:~aAUl.J!'D..,fD' :T:!--: SttviceCall t:a~tCA,.,1 't..":'T:z~ =:a-St. .... Park, "9wport ••ch, Ca. . -o.ai.-1e1" 642-1671 PubUtNd °""*Cont o.i...:!:': -.1.-.:'.., Pacific Ytew Morha1r1 .........,Orw-.Ce111De1ty....., a.t. Hl O.Hy Ptlot.July7rt.~ ,........_ClllMIDelty ......... --..c..o.r._, dlrecton. ,_.,.,,.,,.. ...., "'' iRl ..... .,.., · .,...,.,,$. .. ,.. ....,. ·--.-:,,.. ..... ·~-..... , .. .. . .. .. I• .. .... --................ . ·- . .. . . . . . ... , .... ·-"····~·-·-···· .. . . . . -, . . . ...... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 Bl Marriage took all the excitement out of sex DEAR ANN LANDERS. l realiie lbe odda against getting my letter in print are about 10.000 to 1, but I'm tryine anyway. I hope you can help m e understand something. My wife and 1 were engaced for nearly three years. During lbat time we had a won- derful s exual relationship . It was almost as if we had invented it. We were both convinced tha t no one in the world enjoyed sex as much as we did Almost immediately after we married, my wife lost all interest in bedroom activity. Since it was no longer forbidden fruit, it wasn't fun anymore. Why ? -PARADISE LOST Dear Lost: Usually this sort of U.ia« hap- pens to males. It Is called t.he Madonna-Whore Syndrome . IUlclt sex Is exclU.ng. KespectabJe sex Is dull. How people tblnk about sex goes back to their childhood . ApparenUy your wlfe was turned on by the daring, rtaky, sneakln«·around upect of pre-marital sex. Once It became respectable, It lost Its zest. Too bad for her-and for you. ANN lANllll DEAR ANN LANDERS: My sister walks in her sleep. She has been doing t.his e.ver since she was very little. She doesn't bother anybody, but she hides things when s he is sleep-walking, and the next morning she ha s no idea where they are. I have heard it ls dange rous to wake up a person who Is walking in his sleep. ls this true? Js there any way to get a sleep-walker to stop? What causes It? I would like to help my sister. TRANCED IN LOS MOLlNOS. CALIF. DEAR TRANCED: No one k:aows wby peo· pie walk in tbelr sleep. There are all sorts of m yths but no scientific explanation It's also a myth that It's dangerous to awaken a sleep-walker. We do know, however, The wedding picture Mr. and Mrs Hallet Ha lle t-Brenneck e Suzanne Marie Brennecke of Palos Verdes Peninsula and Raymon William Hallet Ill of San Diego exc hanged wedding vows in the Neighborhood Church. Palos Verdes Estates. A graduate of San Diego State University. the bride is the daughte r or Mr. and Mrs. John Edward Brennecke or Palos Verdes. The bridegroom. son or Mr. and Mrs. Raymon William Hallet Jr. or San Diego. graduated from Pacific Palisades High School and Washington State University Mr and Mrs Moore Moore-Urli ng Laura Lee Urling of Phoenix. Ariz .. and David Moore of Costa Mesa were recently married in All Samts Episcopal Church. Phoenjx. The bride, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. •Herbert R Urling is a graduate of Arizona State Universi· t y. Tempe. The bridegroom a tte nded schools in Phoenix and ts employed by the Daily Pilot. Grandmothe r s set Thurs day 01e e t Slmcba Chapter of B'nai B'rit.h Women meets at noon Thursday in the Huntington Beach Library. Talbert and Golden West, Huntington Beach for "Summer Fling" lunch For more information call 536·9950. Newport Harbor Grandmothers Club meets Thurs- day at 11 30 a .m For more information call 673-5648 Mesa Harbor Club meets at 8 ·30 a.m. Thursday in the May Co. Restaurant or South Coast Plaza. The CLUB CALENDAR a m m Ll ltle J oe's Restaurant of Newport Beach. For more information call 960·2087. Women Lawyers of Orange County meets Monday a t 11 JO a m in the Saddleback Inn of Santa Ana. Fo r more information call 951 ·1707 J e wish 8W1loess and Professional Women's group m eets Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. in the Board Room of the Jewis h Federation. 12181 Buaro St .. Garden Grove. For more information call 530·6636. Orange County Chapte r of American Society for T r aining and Development meets at 8 p .m . Wednesday, July 15, in the South Coast Plaza Hotel. For more information call 547·9969. Career Development Division of the Orange Coun- ty Chapter or American Society for Training and Development meets Thursday at 6 p .m. in the Orange County Transit District Offices. Acacia at Euclid. Garden Grove For more information call 847-7376. IKNOW W~EN l'VE ENOUG~ PAIN1 HAD i.v A SHLEIGH •BRILLIANT that It ls unpleasant for anyone, walking or not, to b~ shoaled at or shoved •wake. Tbe sJeep·walker 1hould be awakened 1eat· ly and guided back to bis or her bed. DEAR ANN LANDERS Homo1exuallty has received much attention LO your column. However, no one ever mentions the family of a gay person. When my brother came out of the cl~et, he brought the whole family with him. I realize Bob is t.he one who has to put up wit h the odd glances and snide rem arks, but many narrow- m lnded people direct their prejudices toward the family as well. I hope you don't think I am criticizing homosexuals, but It shocks my friends when I bring them home and t.hey meet my brother who is so unmistakably gay. What do I say when people are unJcind and mention it? I feel like an -INNOCENT VICTIM DEAR l .V.: Make no apologies for your broU.er. Simply a1k anyone who makH aa u.a- klad remark, "Wo1.tld you Uke to talk to It.Im about it?" Tbat should aettle lblnga lD a bllll)'. Food chenricals not harmful By JOHN D. ROSEN, M.D. DEAR DR. ROSEN: Why don't you doctors ge t together and do something about all the chemicals they're putting in our food. It seems that every time l read a label or ingredients I see mor e and more artificial additives. I am sure that our bodies are being poisoned by all thes e things. I am a working woman and do not have the time to keep going to the natural food store to reed my family. B.T., COSTA MESA. ANSWER: The first thing you must realize 1s that companies do not add chemicals to food products for m onetary gain. It cosls them far mo re to manufacture these items with chemical a dditives than it would to package the food "as is." Wh at with the constant barrage or advertising abo ut the advantage or .. natural" foodstuffs the co mpanies would pro bably be be tte r off econo micall y to Jump on the band wagon. The chem icals that are added to foods Call into two basic groups The first group is included in food manufacturmg as a preservative and serves to lengthen the time of freshness or any given food bot h at the market and in your refrigerator or pan· try l'hc second group serves to either enhance flavors or create n avors which were otherwise not present in the item tn question. A third but rather Capricorn: ThurJ>day, July 9. 1981 By S YDNEY OMARR Don 't ARIES 1 M<1rt·h 21 Arm l 191 Avmd being rushed into snap dec1s1ons Time 1<> on your side Pia) 14 a iting game espec1all~ 14'hrrt• pubhe ap pearances and legal a rrairs enter p1rtun• I.on.: rani.te project I!> near fulr.llmenl . but f1111shmi;t touthe)o an• required TAl Rl S 11\pnl 2(1 Ma) 201 Opportunity ex1:.ts for ne" ~tart!>. important rontat'b and a meeting 14htch could lead to "!tOmelhing big · Mem ber of opposite sex does tare ond ~111prove1l Wo rk m ethods improve GEMl!"oll 1Ma) 21 J u ne 201 Follo14 through on hunch mlu1tl\ e mtt>llecl sen cs .is rehable guide Learn b> leal·hinJ! fam1lv member lends !>upport and m<1n) SINGLES CALENDAR Barbecu e, potluc k set OUTDOOR SINGLES have scheduled a barbecue and potluck at 5 p.m . Saturday in Huntington Be ach. On Sunday the group will have a beach party and picnic in Laguna Beach. For informa· tion. call 544-8276. PAR ENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS Orange Coast chapter have planned an all sports day at 1 p.m . Saturday in Fountain Valley. For information. call 559-0846. PEOPLE SAMPLER led by Emily Coleman will be held at 8 p.m Saturday in Anaheim For in- formation. call (213) 828·8949 1ns1gn1r1cant group would be the chemicals that ar e add~ to enhance or change color. This may come as a s urpnse to you but it is extre mely difficult to poison the human body. The liver which has many functions a lso serves as a detoxification center. It has the ability to break down otherwise destructive chemicals which enter the body and render them completely harmless. A familiar example or this would be t hat it is the live r where a lcohol 1s broken down and ren· ASK THE DOCTOR dered non-poisonous I re member as a medical student being amazed at the ingenuous chemical reactions which take place in the liver and render otherw1~e toxic substances into a totally harmless fo rm It would be an out a nd out he 1f l told you that all chemicals floatmg around our e nvironment a re harm less Those used as food additives however should 1n no way '>'OrQ or concern you. Dr John D Rosen. a practtlllmer in Newport Beach. welcomes your questions Motl requests to Ask IM Doc· tor P 0 Beu 1560. Costa Mesa. 92626 g et discourage d \1ew!> will ht• \lfld1rnu•d f:mphai-.1~ also on change. \'arlel). l·hildn•n :-pet·ul!JtlH' vcntun•s and excitement or d1SC'OVl!r\ C<\N{.ER '.lun1: 21 Jul~ 221 \1·~·l'nl on :.ot·1al hfe , ~pec1al calls. l·nmmun1rul11111 .ir11,tu· endeavor' llome HOROSCOPE ba!>t' 14111 tw 'bU'llt'r than U!>ual \l'>1tors relattves and me!>senger~ bll'nd into t•xr1tint? '>t'enano Display humor \ er~al1lll\ but don l low <,1ghl of basic obJerttves LEO • .lul\ 23 AuJ! 221 You II be asked to re\1se, re t·on-.truct .1111l 1t·bu1ld on•• mun· 'ohd ba:.e Stud\ Cancer mt:,..,Jl!l' fu1 \ahd hint \ l\lh -.hnrt lnp-:. close ne1.:hbor!> .md rclJll\ e-. pl." c;111111f1rant roll's One 14 ho !>enl'c; as finanr1al .1d\1.,1>r 14111 turn table<; b~ seeking ) our couru.el \'IRGO 1 Aug 23 Sept 22 ' Guard \ aluables. refuse to give up som t>lhmg for nothing. def me terms and avoid self·dccepl1on )11ssmg document will be located Change pro\ e~ benef1c1al LIBRA 1Sept 23 0<'1 22 Famil) harm ony will be rl'!>tored lmpartanl that \ 011 make intelligent. creath e conl·ess1on:. C}Cll• h11<h .ind \ou'll be at nghl place at crucial moment SCORPIO 1 Oct 23 :"\O\ 211 At'C'ent on m yster y gla m our and "priv1ll•g(•d tnformalwn " You may be vis 1ting one confuw ll 111 hnnw ur hospital Clandestine con rerc~nce has direct t•fft>c t on \'our potential Protect self in <?motional dmrhl'~ SAGITTARIUS 1 No\ 22 Der 211 What begms as a ·m lld rclu11<1nsh1p .. "111 dc\•elop Into mlense alliance Empha!>t~ on fulfillment. i.uCCl'!>Sful career venture and w1shl'!> that "tonw trul' CAPRICORN t Det· 2<! Jan 191 1-'1111sh rather than in1t1ate pro1ect You an• on threshold of major discovery and wider rl•cogmtmn Hefu'l' to be d1!'.couraged by en \'lOus associates AQl'i\Rll'S 1Jan 20 Feb 181 E mphasis on com municatton ~1th one tn foreign land Nev. deal 1s orrered m c·onnel·tton v.1th publl-.h1n1<. l'Clurat1on a nd long.range proJerl lk' a" arc of rontral'luctl obhgat1ons and insist lhal prOml'eS tk• fulf1lll'<1 l new officers are Mrs. Robert Gray. president i Mrs. Bob Anderson. programs: Mrs. Bob Hundley, programs. Mrs . Hal Jenks. ways and means: Mrs. Don Rhoades, membership. Mrs. John Clark. re- cording secretary: Mrs. Leo Ragen, corresponding secretary; Mrs Joe Sc roggs, treasurer, Mrs. Robert Arthur activities and Mrs Harry Southron, publicity. Fo r more information call 557-1576. GeneraJ Federation of Women's Clubs and Orange District California Federation of Women's Clubs meets at 8. JO a.m in the Garden Grove Communi- ty Meeting Center, 11300 Stanford Ave .. Garden Grove. for annual Summer Workshop For more information call 738-8704 WOMEN IN TRANSITION, a new singles group. will meet Monday al 7 ·30 p.m in Newport Beac h. Fo r information. call 646·5355 PISCES 11-'<'b 19 )htrt•h 2th You gain tn·depth vtel4 One 14ho had hl•en n•t1cenl about revealing h nancial • Irvine Toastmistress Club meets Monday at 11: 30 HERE'S GOOO MEWS! MO MORE FLEAS! OH YOUR ,ET otl IH YOUR HOME rROVEH EFFECTIVE ACiAINST: FLEAS ROACHES RATS MICE FLIES SPIDERS MOSQUITOES CARPENTER ANTS BEES. WASPS CRICKETS MOTHS WATERBUGS • EconomlGal Malnten1nce Free Operation • Proven More EffKtlve Thi n Pofsons • Uses Only 4 Watts of Power • Pests Eliminated In 2 to 6 Wffks • No SPKl•I Installation Required M..fectwwd bJ '•••Ofl'f Dl1t1 ..... 1d ",...a.. S.. C7141661·fltl C714t 760.7251 Ail "5V•"x2\4i" • 10&-120 Voltt AC 4 Wattt USA •A I ST. 14'4162-l"OZ Starting a New BuslneH A c cco •d l ng \o Calllornl• eu1lntt1 and Profe11lon1 Cod41 (Ste. 17900 to 17930) all per1on1 doing bualntn under • llcllllou1 name mu1t Ill• a •l•ttmtnl with Ille County Clerk end llnt II publl•ll•d four tlme1 Jn a new1p1~ Mtlllng Ille area In wlllcll the buelnen I• locelad The 1111emtnl I• required by lew •nd le necHH'Y In protecting ,our bull'rl tH nemt. Moel btnke require ptOOI of tlllftt to open cornmtrdel eccounte Tiit DAILY PILOT provide• both ltllnt •nd publlc•tlon -lllclff. We have •II Ille ~•H•ty IO•m• •nd melntaln • d•llY H tYlct to lh• Orange C ou nty Cout1h-. IMhtr flop bf on• ol our con•enlant olllcee or pho n • lht LlQAL Ol,AATM£NT 14t·•S::n. f.111. S~I fo r rnor• lnfor111atloll lfttf IOfrna. BALBOA SKJ CLUB will play volleyball Tuesday in Newport Beach. For information, call 752-0128. status \\111 nol4 "open up Kno14ledge 1s gamed which 14 111 ultimately lead lo profit ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : .. WHAT'S A POPCORN PARTY?": : l1'e oric)Mlll, -•t .. Cltl'"J .ct ,.,..,. ~ ,._ Ill Celf. : • ORiy fw led!••· •-• fJDOlht ............. li'"Je"•, -. • • flA Ci.-crny llM peckegtd It! pWi. Aad Wt fwwllh ffw • P AN ACHE U I M.n-.1.._ l.a.d 67l-1110 un1or & Contemporary clottles Bathing Suits OPEN TILL t ,.. ..... IM 0ma~ CUSTOM FRAMING Open 6 Days A Week M on.-Fri. 9-6 5at. 10-4 1803 Newport Blvd. Costa Mesa · 548-4511 : popconll : • GI•• •~°"bee.-• l"opc.,,,. Ledy • 11------------' : POPCORN PAmES UNLIMITED : 1---------"---------'-------- : CALL (7 I 41 556-2330 ! ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• RROR LD Largest Credit Mirror Company ALL CM'DIT OK'D MGANK.a•a OP ltUT CRm>rT MO llOIS'/ DOWN MIRROR SLIDING S~!~~~L 2 paMls ( 36ll 100 laell) (T rlml'llld t.o yt1Uf ctll "II lltlQftl) •• ,, s 14 9 ~~.Ht.- FREE OOOA MIRROR W11 H t:VEAV CUSTOM MIRROR INST Al l A 1 ION MIRROR - · DESIGNS l MIRROR DOOR falll'lltA Flllllll'lf Celtn, ,._ .. JULY SALE fRANCic£>-0RR FOR ANY ROOM =~~. • a. MlrfOl'I •Bathroom •c..fllnp •8~ •Antique •A~ •BloCU •Bronze •OOld Vein •Mirror & Wood • ~al1tt Strtpe SHOP AT HOME SERVICE-NO 081.IGA TION (11 i) 14~3112 • (114) 1-.1111 Ml 1 W. W A~. IAITA All fine ~tat ionery corona de l mar > , > .. -.. ...........•• r a.,,. •• • . . "' . . . . . . . 'I! ..... "' • • • • • -Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 Korean singer still looking for GI wlw started him on his career PERRINE. Fla. (AP) -When the rtrat American soldJera marched into Tae1u. South Korea, after the United Stat.es entered the Korean War in 1950, city folk were frllht.ened by the ab:e of the white·sklnned troops. The adulta sent 12-year· old Lee Sohn u their official ireeter. "I don't know why, but I wasn't scared at au and, besides, they looked friendly to me," recalled Sohn, a professional singer who says he owes bis success to an American soldJer. As Sohn accomp~ied the troops to their tent city set up outside Taeeu that day, a friendship that would dramatically change his life beean. "I was fascinated because be bad blond hair and blue eyes," said Sohn. "I talked to him in Korean and he replied in English. We didn't un- derstand a single word we said to each other.·· That particular GJ turned out to be an Army radio announcer, a corporal whose first name was Bruce. ··1 forgot bis last name, and I bad trouble pronouncing bis first name. I called him 'Bluce.' " As time passed, Bruce taught young Sohn lo s peak English. "He told me the best way lo learn to speak without an accent was to sing songs. The first one be taught me was 'You Are My Sunshine.' " From that ditty. Sohn went on to learn the top U.S. tunes of tbe 1950s. He sang them aJI day long, unaware how pleasing his crystal-clear voice was to the troops so far from home. The fighting ended July 27, 1953, and most of the U.S. soldiers left. The enusing years were tough ones for Sohn. Bruce was gone, bis father was dead, the family home was destroyed and Sohn was the breadwinner for his mother. four sis· ters and a brother. Drinking bla01ed for cancellations NASHVILLE (AP> Country music singer George Jones has developed a drinking problem again and has canceled his personal appearances for the next month, bis manager said Tuesday. Paul Richey said in a telephone interview that Jones was hospitalized for exhaustion for about four days last week in Beaumont, Texas. Asked if Jones had suffered a relapse in a his· tory of drinking problems, Richey said, .. Yes.·· Richey said he talked with Jones by telephone Tuesday. but would not say where Jones was. He said Jones was not under a doctor's care. .. You can·t tell much about a person over the phone.·· Richey said. .. We moved to Seoul and Uved in a hut that I bulll. I raised chickens and pip to support my family. But, I kept on •lnllnl a lot -mostly American pop son11." lJ.S. music prew ln popularity in Korea, brlnaina an array o Korean vocalists trylne to imitate their American coun· terparts. By 1955, Sohn was 17 and studying a1riculture ln Seoul University. He still worked his small rarm, did odd jobs and sane. One day, hia campus friend.a secretly arraneed for him to slng in an amateur hour at a swank teahouse in Seoul. "I remember I bad holea in my pants and old cowboy boots on. I sang an old western ballad I've since foreotten, 'Love la a Many Splendored Thine' and 'True Love.• I brought the house down and the owner gave me a Up that was more than I earned in a month. And he gave me a job.'' Sohn was an overnight hit and in a year he was the most famous pop singer In Korea. By the time he was 22, be had made 20 movies, his records sold In the millions. and he was rich. It was then he came to the Un.ited States. ·'I bad reached the top and there wu nowhere left to go. Besides I bad always wanted to be an American," said Sohn. His sister Mihija won the Miss Korea beauty contest that year and was to compete In the Miss Universe pageant in Miami Beach. "I took what money 1 could and chaperoned my sister to South Florida. I remember I bad a suite of rooms In the most expensive hotel on the beach and then went looking for a job." He soon found his Korean fame meant nothing in the country he loved from afar. But be landed a job at Place Pigalle, a popular Miami Beach nightclub at the time. From there, be performed in big-name nightclubs around the Un.ited States and on national television shows. Sohn, citing loyalty, remained as Place Pigalle's headliner all these year s and, through marriage, is now related to the owner. Harry Rich. "Success is nice and fame is flattering," said Sohn, philosophical at 42. "l quit all the traveling a number of years ago when I came home one day and looked at my family and they were strangers to me." He's been married to Martis for 20 years and the couple have a 17-year-old son and a 13·year-0ld daughter. Now he stays close to home with only an OC· casional short trip to perform elsewhere, and is concentrating on composing. He said he hopes to have some of his music published soon. But Sohn does have one unfullilled goal. ..I'd like to find ·etuce.'" he laughed ... If it wasn•t for him, none of this would have hap- pened." Space isn't infinite for 1novie stars HOLLYWOOD CAP) Stars and celebrities of the future, take heed. If it's immortality on the sidewalks of Hollywood you·re after, it would behoove you to become famous within the next several decades. Nobody ever said those star· studded sidewalks would be available for'ever. Now comes the word from the Chamber of Commerce that the Hollywood Wallt of Fame is ex· peeled to run out or sidewalk spaces in less than 60 years. Those who want to have their names em· bedded on gold-colored stars along the strip with movie greats, and some not-so-greats, have only 786 chances to do it. llWllllll' llDOUUCll (I Toto~·~ IRUH'•IT• Cosli 11.u ~0 IH4 Ill CITY ct•MA l)<angt 63" J'll I "Make way for the greatest dragon yet." -Kevin Thomas. LOS ANGELES TIMES I Theresa Wells. spokeswoman for the chamber, says that only 786 spots are available out of the 2,519 in the Walk of Fame. And they're going fairly fast, she said, with about a dozen being given up to celebrities each year. This year will see even more people hitting the pavement because there has been a backlog, she said. What happens when all the spaces are filled? Well, there's always the possibility of pointing the trail of stars eastward beyond Hollywood, creating the Hollywood-Glendale-Burbank Walk of Fame. • IOUlll CO&ll MUii MIU 'LAU I to.Ii lino '>49 ll~I 8't~ ~19 ~3)9 owu.·111•uuca • c1•DCMK (1 1.,0 ~' '>NO I °''"Of &14 1~\l •l1Wu.·1c•uwt1T ·--Wt••m.nsrrr 191 393) ,. '* __, PIC1f1C•1 IOUlll CUil l~Vlll flM<• 49' l)U .. , .. ~ LlllCOl• .. ., .... e~ ... ,,,. a1 • •010 • W.a.+@pt t JOm"\S-.ffl!Caii lMpM,. Bwt lfttynolds • ~Moore Fenwh Ftlwcett • Dom Del.uiH • &flllfl /WMSI lff(SltlS "*"IUf J ltl/llllr1'11Jt1«fl(Jll ·I /IN 11(/f/llAJ/fUI "'f1ll~llflr fJI S1Mn>W It.tit llM"1t • IMl#Y AOIN. M. AIMlllll# IAMIAll • .IAJJll( MM rtHr .,,,.,,_ • •t fll 111 • ""'/DI t:llAlf • MICAACI #Ill I-,,,_.,, AA'1l/Olll#tll(IW• "*•Of N.lfffT S llVOlll" • _ _,, ltfllff r.lllS ,,,_.,llAI #llfllWI· lll1111t:~tfAI rNf'S lllilrttS--1tSl/Hf"'1#fTT llMT<lf111NMllAl!J ~ ........... __._~. Jack Anderson I ·1 p·~ reveals in the II J l•1 ROGER MOORE as JAM ES BOND 007"; FOR YOUR EYES Entertcuner Lee Sohn's career has spanned four decades the both h emispheres of the globe The silver· throated Korean now lives and works in the United States. ~ ON LY Umted Artists I Mel Brooks' "History of The World'' (R) au••• Anal1e1m Cl< rve In 879·9850 nu UA Movies 990 4022 NOW PLAYING COITI M(U •coau MlU WUTMlllSHR Hd•l>Or 811s101 H•qnw•t J'I '""' 6J1 3~1 ~·o 7444 e'l• lb'll ll TOAO OIUllGl WUTMlllSTfR s.ioo1to..c~ Crneoomt I '""''" W• • !18 1 ~880 bJ4 7~~i d~t llJ' ....... , -a ........ •c.llliif•• • (XJI oca..raTWmJ 1· [ M•tl,_a D•llr •I Moel The•trH J II .. Nine To Five" "Take This Job & Shove It" Alien" (R) THE BEST ENTERTAINMENT VALUE ANYWHERE AT THE ORANGE COUNTY FAIR AdmlHlon price of $3.00 Includes all entertainment except motorcycle speedway. rodeo and carnival rides. Amphitheatre shows at 7 & 9 PM DON McLEAN FRIDAY, JULY 10 RICK NELSON SATURDAY, JULY 11 /eaturmg SURFER STOMP with DICK DALE and the DEL TONES featuring JEANNIE, and the SURFARIS WEDNESDAY, JULY 15 ANDRAE CROUCH THURSDAY, JULY 16 RAIN -A TRIBUTE THE ASSOCIATION FRIDAY, JULY 17 TO THE BEATLES SUNDAY, JULY 12 El VIN BISHOP MONDAY, JULY 13 ROB GRILL and THE GRASS ROOTS SATURDAY. JULY 18 DICk CLARK'S GOOD 'OL ROCk & ROLL with DICk CLARK, FREDDIE CANNON, BO DIDDlEY DAVID FRIZZELL &: SHELLY WEST SUNDAY, JULY 19 \ and THE COASTERS TUESDAY, JULY 14 MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY FRIDAY. JULY 10 MONTEZUMA'S REVENGE JULY 10-16 PRCA CHAMPIONSHIP RODEO JULY 17. 18, & 19 HYPNOTIST · VANDERMEIDE JULY 11·16 Come on out for a "touch of country" fun. The~'• carnival rldts, contHtt, Jive· 1tock, txhtbitt of floriculture, crafts, home arts, new products, award winning wines, award winning Hims plus country music every night In Country Meadows. JULY 10 • 19 FAIRGROUNDS. COSTA MESA Adulta: ss.oo 6·12yean1: 11 .00 (under 5 fnle) Frt .• Sat., Sun ..•. 10 am to mldnlght Mon. thru Thurt .... Noon to mldnltht .. ' .......... . -~ -~-·.----------------,...__----. -, .. Studios announce coming attractions HOLLYWOOD (AP l J ohn Travolla and Nancy Allen star in Brian De PaJma's thriller "Blow Out." The movie is about a motion picture sound man who witnesses what he believes to be an automobile accident. Later, when the accident turns out lo be a sensational murder, he is caught in a web of terror. The production from Filmways Pictures opens July 24. Michael Crawford stars as an inventive comic book writer who com es involved in bis characters' fantasies in Wall Disney's "Condorman." The comic caper also stars James Hampton as a CIA agent, Barbara Carrera as a Soviet KGB agent who is trying to defect, and Oliver Reed as a menacing Russian agent who tries to prevent her defection. Charles Jarrott directed from a script by Marc Stirdlvant, based on the book "Game of X ·' by Robert Sheckley. Lynda Carter bas received the 1980 "Two of Gold" award as South America's most popular television actress. The award was made on the set of the NBC movie "The Baby Brok~rs." in which she stars, by Orlando Urdaneta o f Car acas, Venezuela, Television Miss Carter, whose Mexican concert tour last •COSTA MIU ff11\t01 ~n/"u CTPM.11 Cyrns CIMrN 82 1660 ll TOM Soddlellit• ~'~ fOU•TAIN H ILU OllAllGt WUTMIUTUI ~~q'·~~,.; v, , , ;~·nr,.~·, ;g~"~l9 0t ~, 1r flllUllT• OllAllGI WU TMIHTCll Fo1 St101um Ot1ve 1n o• M•tt ~2~ .,., bJ9 87 /0 ~~ l ()'>4~ lllflllt: OllAllGI ~~;~Qf' ~~,r:~'~,~·~~'4 •CXJlcxawl'Nmr l Moll-Daily al Moel TIM1lr11 j a: 0 m a: c( ..... :I: LI.. 0 (/) c z :::> 0 (/) 0 L&J a: L&J 1- (/) FROM Fash ion Island Newport Beach year drew standing-room only crowds, has been of· fered a record seven-figure sum to return to Mex ico for a week of performances thls July. Lucie Arnaz and Richard Jordan st ar an the CBS movie "Was hington Mistress." Peter Levin is directing the movie on location in Washington for Lorimar Productions. Audrey Davis wrote the screenplay. Pearl Bailey is the voice of wise and lovable "Big Mama," an owl In the Wall Disney animated feature "The Fox and the Hound." ... Richard Dawson, hosl Qf "Family Feud," has signed a con- tract with Rastar Television to develop programs in a ssociation with Columbia Pictures Television. . . Madge Sinclair will be hostess of the Miss Black America Pageant lo be held in Kingston, Jamaica, for later broadcast. . . The Miss Universe Beauty Pageant will be held for the firs t time in New York City on July 20, to be broad· cast by CBS. J obeth Williams and Craig T. Nelson star in MG M's .. Poltergeist," a contemporary, science- horror movie. Tobe Hooper directed the movie, from a script by executive producer Steven Spielberg, Mark Victor and Mi chael Gr aise. MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE ,,.. ~k·~ oJ rt-. '•Dngi.l ',0 ~"' ~·pnn •OOUI tne 1&1t•OIAF)-OI IT'OV!fl9 ~fW' 1()1' ., • ..,..,9 bf,,..,, C1'#d'•fl ® ..OONl UNDER'' AOMlllfO lAQt! IH?hl "WI f w•r; "CA'l• n ••••-'• All K3 fl•£! ANO @ rtl"'S l<ECEIVl ll<[ SlAl <X HI( "40 1tON PIC. TUR( COO£"' sur REGULA llON To pld<'t' \OUt .iii m th" <·11lumn 1'.111 In 70mm/Dolbyl ~., u. a.-,., .. tPGI 11 :30 2:00 4 :30 ?:00 1 :30 No f:eonomv Su Ung MEL BROOKS IN Hht4N')' .. u. WolM flWt I (R) 12·30 2 :30 4 :30 6 :30 1:30 10:30 I Pre\enteo 1n DOLB Y DRAGONSLAYER (PG) 1 :00 3 :15 5:30 7:4 5 a. ===10:00 = I In Dolby! No P1uu SUPERMAN II {PG) 11 I 5 1 •55 4 ZS 7 I 5 9 :50 • No Economv s .. 11n9 c=== In Dolby Stereo FOR VOUllt £VIES ONLY (PG) 11 00 I 35 4 15 1 00 9 .30 BILL MURRAY 1n STRIPES {R) 5now> •I I :00 3:20 S:40 •·oo a. lO:IS C:LASHOFTHE: TITANS (Pct) I g.ai;r;,:S:_A,~~ {PC) Plu>I STAR TREK (C) I RIC HARD PRVOR 1n BUSTIN' l.DOK (R) c nucn • cnon9·1 Ne,.1 Movie {RI c=== JOHN BOORMAN'S EXCAU•Ullt (R)•nO HAPPV BIRTHDAV TO M£ (R I BILL MURRAY In STRlf'IES (R ) At>o WHOLLY MOSES IPG) "111v• lru Opon & 00 PM Wttkd•y1/W••k~nds 7 lO Un J"' 12 .. re~ UtU•u Noted ~ng<john8i}ver~,. Shrimp, FishK. Chicken Special $2.99 Thru Aug. l Dig tnlO a JeliciOU<; dtnnl'I' W~ ~iVl' you two tasty <.hrimp our cmpy fr.h f 1llet and a bonele!>s wh1temeat Chicken Pl.ink . plu'> fre.h w le slaw mmdiy hushpupptes and golden fryes It':; a weal meal "' .1 i.recial pnu-•! 3095 H_.... -.cf... Co• Mfte Juat South of San Diego Fwy. Acrot1 from F4Klco NIY .. TMIU lmYICI 4¥AM.Aal Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 •1 CAUGKf IN A WEB of political intrigue is John Travolta in the new Brian DePalma thriller, "Blow Out." The picture, written and directed by De Palma and starring Travolta and Nan- cy Allen, is set to open in late July. *BARGAIN MATINEES• Monday thru Saturday All Performances before S 00 PM (ucept Special Eng1gements and Holidays) IA MIRADA MALL LA MIRADA WAlK·IN ......-:mn.• ... .......: 'CLASH OF THE TITANS" (PO) ,,.....,., ... ~, .. MM1911 ..,,.,.. M ...-1 aCMe _.. • 'FOR YOUR EYES ONLY" IPG) ·····••i••'• ........ flOllll!O ......... MUJll ... RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" IPO) ·~·-·••tt'•• LAKEWOOD CENTER WAlK·IN mL. ....,,.., • ooe ......,_ • MEL BROOKS' HISTORY Of TiiE WORLD PART I" (Ill ............. ,., ... AA.II.,...... WIUM.9 ....- S.O.B. "JRI ,, ....... , .... n.-AOr'lllfT\Mil~ SUPERMAN II" IPG) ' •••• ,. .....• 1 culty 01 Condlewood ") 213/531·9580 ............ ,.,,.., ........ 0... ....... ,,. AOW'IWT\llal (_..,,... THE CANNONBALL AUN" SUPERMAN II" IPG) , ........ .-. ._. ....... .,....,... "' STRIPES" IRI , ...... ,. , .. t\ ,, LAKEWOOD CENTH SOUTH WAL•·IN focu11y "' 0.1 Amo ___ 21_3.:.../634·9211 ~ llOt'O. Ulill-1111 ~. RAIDERS OF THE LOST 4AK" IPG) 1 a1t111tt.4it"'• LAGUNA (PG) , .......... , ...... ,,,. M.MfM.AA ·~~ THE FOUR SEASONS" (PG} ., .. ._ ..... , .. .......,..,.. ~ ...... AU.a.II• RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" IPO) •>•1•1ttr ... l .. .,..,,. ............ ~--... OA4GONSLAYEA" (PG) , .......... .. so. COAST WALK·IN Sout" Coo1t H1way 01 arooowov 494-1514 81LL MUllllAY IN STRIPES" IA) ......... .-.. ~ ~ • llN'D AU.ta• RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" IPO) I" 4. , ..... •Jt: -. • I lO I 1S ·-"' •· IMPORUIH NOTICI' CHllOREN UNDER l1 fRH• "•'D~ .~. W•rne• Mt" 0111i1 ff, t. lO • ''' htt ""'It 00 ,.., C~ II M>UllO ••Do••" CAA llAll() 1!i •QUO ll'IMI~ .. NI &M i.P ~ W"ot ~ A(((U(lltl f'OSl'f'Ot -t.llf f'OlllMU •All CMR IJllM-4ljJ IDO Oii UI MIJCI ANAHEIM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN hee•OV ., QI lef"Of\ \t CHEECH 6 CHONG S HICE DREAMS" (Ill ..... USED CARS" (POI 179·9150 CtHI "\OuHO -......~ .............. -' ---.. -.--· THE CAH~A~L AUN IPGI F<>f' YOUR E~~S OHL y (PO) HARDl y w'O':KING" (PO) l FINAL COUNTDOWN" (PG) /lilt-·~--, ... •·"414.J" --- 9UINA PARK BUENA PARK 0111vMM ml. 911lOOCI • 00. M .._._ • MEL 8ROOKS' HISTORY OF THE WORLD PART l (Ill l1ncolf\ A•• W'HI OI l nOtl 9'\..li9 121·4070 THE FINAL CONFLICT'' 1111 fOUNIAJH nc AOVl..,,.I C.MT ..... SUPERMAN II" (PG) ..... FOUNTAIN VAWY DRIVE· IN So• O••Qo ,,..., o• l •oo•"""' f~o ANY WHICH WAY YOU CAN" (PO) 962·2•81 •I • u•C WI SlMINSllR HI-WAY 39 DRIVt·IN s 0 .8 ."1111 ..... THE POSTMAN ALWAYS RINGS TWICE '1111 1 C!Nl' ~0 - ......... , ...... Ul"C CLASH Of THE TITANS -WAllLORDS OF ATLANTIS" (PC) fltOlf'I l t"O \fl VI w1oen Ct•O'ft J•tt•O• 891·3693 M>OI• tllOOtll .. ,,_.., .... .,. .. FOR YOUR EVES ONlY" {PO) .. ... FINAL COUNTOOWN (PG) .1flft It $.OU-HO ~~ ............ --............ THE CANNONBALL AUN" (POI ..... HARDLY WOflKINQ' (PO) ttfljf h SOU'1tt:;;__ __ ..._ Ltllff ,. sot.IMO;.;.;_..:_ __ _ U1 HABRA ---~-..,_ ..... ..,. LA HABRA ORIVf ·IN FOR YOUR EYES OHL Y" (POI ,., ... ...... Of"-"*"" ..... " HotOl• t-•d FINAL COUNTDOWN" IPG) 17H l62 ----------~.--:-....... "41A1111f 8UINA PARK RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARI(" LINCOLN DRIVE·IN (POI ..... HANGAR II " (l'Q) h"< o•n ,..,.. ••'' 011no t1 121·4070 ORANG! ORANGE DRIVE·IN S.A~ JUAN CAPl\UtANCJ MISSION DRIVE·IN 771-7711 UUNliNt.TtlN al Al H WARNER OlllVf·IN WO•~•' A~• We•t ., .. O<ft '"°O M7•Htl People all along ·------DRAOONSUYUI" (P'<Jl -STAR TREK" (0) ----f'ICAIUMA MUICANA ~ DOI" CO.. UI HORA OSL .IAOUM" f:'.00 "• CA.11\0AD I the Orange Coast rely on the Baily Pilat 642-4321 -- ..__EVENNG-= t;001•• NaWI ,, KUNG l'\I c.ine 11H n .. , dMlh, bo111 Ma boy and .. a man,•• 1'1he pUI me<gM With lhe future I) TIC TAC DOUQH at M"A08"H Tired of the GI dial of llYer 1and 11th, Hawkeye ~· 10 Clllcago tor an ord., ol rib• m OOOOTIMES Wh41n all old glrtr1end vtai11 J J Ille bring• along -upMlllng ,,_, fJll ~ !.1.ECTRIC :COWPAM' t"I (I) CBS NEWS '@ A8CNEWS :Q!NBCNEWS ;OMOVlt! ('RHurrecllon ( 1080) •Ellen Buratyn. Sam Shep· :aid A"ll< a n .. f lalll aulo :-CC1<1en1. • woman t1nd1 ~hat Iha hal Ille abllily 10 '1IM! olh.,• but 11 oar· ~uled ~auH ot ,,., ~elu111 to claim • divine ~ntluence 'PG' 8:*! JOKER'S WILD "' ALL IN THE FAMILY rchl• tries In vain to pra- SVent • black l•mlly lrom :mo111ng into Iha nlllghl>Or- •hood '• BENNYHILL ~Benny <lecldH 10 give his ~ICk • holiday In the ...,n 'fin l<CET NEWS8EAT .m STUDIO SEE ·0t1enl-lnQ W•lch a Nenlucl\et men make ·kit•. take e look at lne ot orlafl\Nring CR) (l!NEWS BARNEY MIL.LEA :The dalectrvea have 10 :cope wllh •n irate lend !l<><O • muskeMOlll\Q old· •11er and • blind shoptl"ar ~MOVIE • • • •, ·1. Mobs111< ( IOS8) •sieve Coch•an. Liii Milan :A e>angll., makes •clean •breall ot h1111te :(H THE BEST Of :c<>N&UMERREPORTS f'Hlghlighll ot PHI 1pec1als ;pr_,,I valuable buying ~nform1t1on on tood. medl· .,cine, household products ~•nd sat&ty devices. 7:00;1) CBS NEWS 0 NBCNEWS 0 HAPPY DAYS AOAIN :c11ach1 1eak1 Fonzie s •aav1ce on how to ~I Joan- •19 to lake htm senously :0 ABCNEWS '0 BULLSEYE ~ M"A'S'H :An amb11ter&<I pttv••• retu.., to heed Father ;Mulcahy ~ coun1e1 )>ecau" the P•IMI haa 'nevf'• e¥i>e<lenced Iron I ltne duly .., STAUTS ~SAN FAAHCleCO When a rughty rMpecle<I cop learns he 11 • dytng man rwi <l&c:ldM lo lalla I s_,,1ngly unconvictable !r'<l1ca1a bOIS w11h n1m .W OVEREMY Guesta John Henry Faulk, C8flCef l(>ec .. iist D< Mar- :gar et Deanea1y Jack .,Lalanne (R)O 6ti) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT CJ) TIC TAC DOUOH . ttJ) MERV GRIFFIN "Tha Hit Mike,.· Gueell • Kii Ruoman, John Schne1d.,, Roaanne Cash, •• Robbie Dupr" Orange Coasl DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, July 8. 1981 FAMILY PORTRAIT -A cheetah family looks for prey in the Na lion al Geo· graphic special "Etosha: Place of Ory Water" tonight at 7:30 on Channel 50 or 8 : 00 on Channel 28. MOVIE Candleshoe" C 1077) JO<lle Foat.,, David Niven A str .. t·wt" tomboy from LOI Angeles 1u<1<1enly find• he<Mlt tne ,,.., .. , 10 • tatte<ec:I Englllh manor 'G' ©)MOVIE "Oh Godl Book II' (108()) George Burr•. Suzanne Plftllette. GOO Mleeta en un&uapeollng young glrl and charges her to come up with • tlogan that wfll help keep Hie name in Ille publle con1eiouaneu 'PG' :Z)MOVIE 'The Go<llllhet. Pan II" C 107~) Al PllCltno, Robet't Duvall. MIChHI Corleone Haumet hl1 Illa lather's lhrone a/Id ~ as he l>eeomet the new head or the Maha 11n<11rw;i prob- lems with rival factions and lhe law tnroughOut 1111 reign R 1'30 8 2 OH THE TOWN Ho111· Steve Edwar<11. MelO<ly Rogers Witness en eartn-shekong m1ssfe launch at Van<lenbe•g A1r Force Base. take a took at lhe poah wor!<I OI polo, meet the musical Chung temily wtio play with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Cl Q! FAMILY FEUO 0 SHANANA Guesta The Coaatar5 IJ HOLL YWOOO SQUARES 0 FACE THE MUSIC Q) ALL IN THE FAMILY The Bunker home ii rev11ged by tire •· then by Archie .. in an etlort lo cot- lecl more insurance mon· fb MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT '1!) NA TIONA.L GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL Etolha Piece Of Ory Wale< utreor<11naty en1- mel behavior •s observed 1n 11111 film rec:Of<llng lhe w11d1tla ot Etosna. a P<• eerve sorroun<11ng • hUQe dty lake 1n the sou1h-I African country ot Nam•· b<e (R) P.M. MAOAZJNE A. retored pllot wno helps people COf'lqu« ,,,.., fear ol flying, a wornan who HIS grass. bark an<I llo--• 8:00 I) CJ) MOVIE • • 'll "fhe P1ratt-" 11976) Franco Nero Anne Archer An Israeli rl iMd by an lnfluenllel Atab experlenc- aa 1 connict of loyaltle• when he Is entruated with the management ot his country's oll fonunes. (A) Cl Q! REAL P£0PLE Featured 11 gethettng of Laurel and Hardy fans. • woman who can rud and wrlle backward and for- ward, handleapped akietl a man whO c1a1m1 he cen contrOl lhe -•lhef (R) 0 MOVIE * • e * "HerP« I 1066) Paul Newman, Julle Harri• A wealthy woma/I hlrM 1 prtveta 1nvfftlgalor lo lino h., milling huaband IJ CHARLIE'S ANGELS Krta t>ecomea lhe b81t 10 trap e con man et hll own Q!me (R) U MOVIE • • ·~ "Legend or The LOii" ( 1057) John Wayne, Sophia Loren Two men and a woman ae&rch the Sahara for e lost clly con- taining e large treaaura at P.M. MAGAZINE A ra11re<1 pllot wno help• people conque< lh9'• In• of !tying 1 woman who eats gress bark and 110· -• Chel Tell hllels 11sn the Shedd• on how lo lino 11me 10 11ay 1n love Cath>e Mann "'''" Ille world I largell costume laclory II) MOVIE e • • '• H•gh Noon ( 1952) Gary Cooper Grace Kelly A murderer and h11 brothers a11empt 10 even Iha score with Iha sner111 who Mnl him lo pt1100 Eil) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL "Elosha Ptaoe Ot Ory Water Exlraor<11nary an1 mal behavior 11 oblM!rve<t tn 1n11 lllm recoro1ng the woldllle ot Etoana • pre serve surrounding e huge dry le~e in the 101Jthwe11 Alrocan country 01 Nam1- b1a (R) OJ) MANCINI AND FRIEND8 01anann Catroll And Petet Nero C MOVIE Auaull On Prec1nc1 13 I 1976) A.ullln Stoker o a,..,,n Joston Po11eernen llnd COtlVIC\I we forc.d 10 1oon logethef 10 prevent a •een·•oe o•ng lrorn com p1e1ety occupying a police station R $MOVIE More Ame<icen Grall1h ( 1970) Ron Howard Paul La Mat A."11< gre<1ue11on e group or high school t11and1 experience Iha cna11enges ot adullhOO<I on lhe SOCl81 upheaval ot the 1060s PG l§IMOVIE The Gootalher Part II ila MOVll • • • "Wtllte Line F_ .. (1976) Jtn-MICllNI \fin. ~t. l(ay Lenz A yOl.lng t rucllw fight• the ~OOked cooolomwate whlCh COf'I trOlt the Alli.on• freight buell-. (Al • ......., CMW'F'lH "The Hit Meker1" ~ta l<al Rudman. John Sott"411<1tt. "-CUh Aool>le ~-. Slec>/\911 8lllhOp • ID llU MOYEA8' JOUMAl "A Vi.II Wllh Oeme Rebec· ca" 8tltlsh writer Rebecx:e WMI dlteueaee her work and he< vlewa ori polltica, 111.,11ure end phlloeoQhy. CJi)MOVll "Tha Human Factor" (1 Dao) Nicol w11111.m10n. John Gielgud. An eo-nl ot the Brttlth Secret Service la CO<lro.e<I into giving IOC>· secret Information to hll Rutalan countetpar11 In Ille KGB. "R' (O)MOVll • e 'II "Blow-Up" ( 106el Oevl<I Hemming&, Vaneau Redgrave Directed by Mlchelangelo Antonlonl When • young London pno1ographeor hU so.me ot IHI plClures btown up, ha d•ecov.,1 whit appeara 10 l>e a mut<lef t:30 a a THE FACTS~ LIFE Tootle end Natalie go lo Burtelo 10 vtllt Tootle'• aunt and while lhay are lhefe I dornHllC CtlllS arises (RI (Cl MOVIE "The Orphan' (1080) Peg- gy Fury, Marl< Owens A young l>Oy g09S to ltve with 1n eunl attar he Is orphaned when hla mother klll1 l'tla tell'ter and then heraell 'R' 10:00 a a ou1NCY Quincy and e team or experte eumlne a ~k•l&- 1on and 1hrOU<l 1>el1ave<110 be thoM ol • 17th-cenlury .. lnl (R) eum NEWa Eil) BACK WARDS TO BACK STREETS So.me or the d1su1ets ot community mental health care •• well as aome ••ceollonel l)<ogrems that p1ov1<1a care tor <l•s· cllarged menial patients in lhe Untied S111aa are au- m1ned '1!) F\.AMBARDS ·Ledy Bounltlul Feeling responsible I<>< Oock"s <111· missal from Flambar<ls, Cnrisltna lfles lo hetp him and hll 1am1ly (Perl 3) (R) ·~,MOVIE The Wort<I IS F1.ll 01 M••· roed Man"Claud•a. a se•y model. OUICOV8tl Iha road 10 tonune 11 paved 10:30 Q) NEWS II) INOEPt!NOEHT NETWORK NEWS I Zl MOVIE Animal Crackers" ( 1030) Mat• Brother&. Me•garet Dumont Captain Spaul<I· 1no. Iha African explorer telurns from a recent eaped1\lon 10 wreak havoc et a society ma1ron's #Mken<I party 'G 11:00 ea o (]) ttJl a ~ D STARTREK Whtie gathertn<,j vegetahor1 samples on a _,,,ngry lranqutt p11ne1. 1C1r11 end Spock w11,_. an ambush U NEWLYWED GAME Q) MAHHtX ··comesUpRoM II) BEHHYHIU Benny portrays Te. Cym- b81. Iha Golden Boy ot Pno ED OICI( CAVETT '1!) WOfW> CHAC*ICLE tC MOVIE Tunnel Vl11on' ( 1976) Laualne Newman, Chevy Ch... tn 1085, televlston programming contln..,.s 10 follow hackneyed formulas bul becomes 1ncreas1ngly more blZlrre In 111 subjaCI mane< ·R' (l{) MOVIE TUBE TOPPERS KTLA e 8:00 -"Harper " Paul Newman an<l Janet Leigh star in a mov- ie about a private detective looking tor a woman's missing husband. KOOP C8 8:00 "High Noon." The town marshal races a killer in this movie starrlng Gary Cooper and Grace Ke lly. ABC fl 9:00 -"While Line Fever." Jan-Michael Vincent, Kay Lenz and Slim Pickens star in a film about corruption in the Arizona trucking industry. D MOVIE 'The Greal Rlvle<a Bank Robbery" ( 1979) len McSha/18, Warren Clarke Faaclst r1dice11 ano ptO- tesalonal cr1m1na11 1oon torcea to pull ott lhe peor feet" cr1me 11~8 MOVIE •et;, 'Tne Spiral S1a1r. case" (1977) Jacqueline Bluet, Chrlatopher Plummer A bellulll\JI <leat- mute 11 le<rorlJ.ed by • mytlll<IO\ll klllet who lurka tn the 1ha<loW1 autrouno I~ an elegant man11on U Q! THE BEST OF CARSOH Guea11 Llbetace, Andrea McArdle, Oiclc Ven P111en (R) IJ(t)) A8CNEW8 NIOHTUNE 0 LET'S MAKE A DEAL m STANLEY SIEGEL -mm CAPTIONED ABC NEWS -Ml>NIGHT- 12:00 D MOVIE • • T 11po1t' 119501 Mau reen O'Hara John Peyne The Matlnet flgn1 Iha Trip· ot1 pir•les 10 ra1M the A.merocan llltQ on T ttpoll 1n 1805 IJ ®) LOVE BOAT Never Say Goodbye Jiii Wl'letan. A New w oman Gale Storm· Tt1el Romance Vic Tayback Joann Pllug (RI 0 GUNSM()t(E When Matt attasta • young 11agecoach robber hll no1or1ou1 older brother and hi• gang pvr1ue the marshal Q) MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE A lralned falcon It sum moned when Ille IMF 11 endange<e<I by a trallor • 111e.aa1nallon plot (Pen 3) II) 8ARETTA Tony become• • 1arge1 when ha Mii out to link a drug shlpmenl to the top cttma 1 .. oet 1n the ctly (i_ AME.RICAN DANCE MACtilNE G-n Vet<lon t n<I a troupe ot dancers 1><esen1 many ot the l>MI rouhnet from some of the b!Q0891 11111 on B•oe<lway 12:16 l MOVIE Coal M1neor s OaUQllte< I 1980) S1uy Spac.tc Tom my L" Jones Bu~ on LOfella Lynn s aulObtOgtl phy A. yc>ung girt from a poor ramify 1n rural Ken· 1uct..y mlf[IH • much Old ., local l>6y whO eng1nee<1 her rose to 111r<1om 1n lhe music lndu11ry ~o· 12:30 0 Q! TOMORROW Evang<SI Gerner Teo A.rmllrong, part lhr .. OI A report on the elterallects ot the V1elnam WM (C,MOVIE • • • Hll ( 1973) Biiiy Dea Wllllam1, Richard Pryor A black lecle< al egent b11ter over 1111 <1aughlar·1 OUlh MIS out IO trap lh• gang ot FrenCh d•ug 1mugglers he l>ellevu to l>e respona<ble 12.40 0 MOVlE Stone Cot<I 0.a<I I t9701 Paul w 1111ams R1cnero Crenna A cop and • small· llme crwne bou 101n IOfces to lino the man reapona ... ble I<>< • ae11e1 of protll· tute killings R 1:00 0 PSYCHIC PHENOMENA, THE WORLD 8EYOHD • The Sllenl Pulse" HOSIS Damien Simpson. Stacie Hunt Gueat George Leon- ard Q) MOVIE ••• "A Song To Remembaf'' j 1945) Paul Muni Cornal Wilda Cno· pin s heatl breaks ovet his love lor George Sano. the boau111u1 novallsl II) tNDEPENDEHT NETW~KNEWS r .. BA.ARY MANILOW One or the loremo" names 1n tha an1er1•in· menl wo11d appea1s in 1 concett perlo1mance ol his grea1es1 h•ls 1nclu<11ng It 1 A Miracle Manoy· $11<1 Looks Like We Made II $ MOVIE Seven f 1979) Wilham Smllh Barbara Le1gf US intethgenoe nires a 1aam or spac11hats to destroy a croma &yn<11ca1e R 1:10 I) (]JJ NEWS IJ MOVIE • • 'Summe• Holiday ! t963l Cllll Richard La1m Peters A group ol you"g lrevelers are artas1e<1 1n Athens t>«ause 01 11'18 ettons ol the mother of one ot them 1:3011) MOVIE • * * Champagne For Caesar' (19SO) Celesle Holm Ronald Colmar> An unemployed genius plans to een<I a qu11 show 1n10 bankruptcy 1·40 I) EDITORIAL 1'461) MOVIE * • • Man On The Out ••<la C 197S) lotne Greene James Olsen A pohce cap11on comes out ol r<remenl to tracit oa....n a gang or mOb5tet• resoon Sible tor ••ecuhng his son and aOduchng his grand· M)fl 1·1160 NEWS 2:00CIQ!NEWS 0 MORECAMBE & WISE Ernie onhet1ts a fortune while Eric CIUM him 1n on how 10 1nves1 11 2:200MOVIE • • • • The Go<1fa1her f 1972) Marlon Brando, At Paclno Oirecle<I by Fran- c11 Ford Coppola Based on the novel by Mano Puzo A.n aging Mafioso JOHN DARLING -the bamer1 1>411- hll idyltle lltnlfy Ille and lhe l>Artn reallll .. ol N8 t>u.U-b<Mk down u Ille ton• l>9come Iner-. lnofY Involved In the VIOient worklnga ot organ11e<1 cwne ..lJ ··r · ~ Ofi THe ...... 2._, 8 MOMCAM81 & WIM Ct le and f 1n1e Olay et ack vOiunlMtl In Iha ~·· Uk-.i.. <leler>dtng India • lrontler trom hungry nall\OM CZl MOVll "The Godfather, Par1 11 (1074) A.I Pecino, Robet1 Duvall MIChHI Cortaon. Ue<Jmee hle 1111 talhef'a throne and power H ha be«>,..,.. Ille new head M Ille Mtf1e, ll11d1ng prob- lem• with 1lv•l lact1on1 and the tew throughoul hi• reign 'A' 2:66 fil NEWS 3:00fil MOVIE * * Tt11 Creck1m1n ( 1065) George San<1911 ChlltlH Drake An •-Pit'• Ulac;tac;k9' findt tllmMll 1n heavy demand IJ II) NEWS C MOVIE A.Haul! On Pree.net 13 ; C t9761 Aulltn Stoker 0 8tWtn Jollon POiice.men and convoc11 are lorcec:I 10 JOln log&lhet to prevent a teen-age gang from com- plelety occupying • police •t•llon R 3:10Gt MOVIE • • * ' A OamHI In Ot•· 1rn1" ( 1037) Fred A.attire Joen Fontaine A Broll•" halren II w00&9 by "n American dancer who belle••• the 11 • chotua Qtrl 3:30 rs' MOVIE "The World 11 Full Ot Mar rte<I MM"Claudl8 0 W•Y modal. discovers the ro11<1 10 fortune 1s paved 4:30 r C MOVIE Tunnel V111on I 19761 Larraine Newm•" Chevy Chase In t98S tete•1s1on programming COf'lhnuea lo follow nackneyeo lormulas l>ul becomes 1ncreas1ng1y more bizarre tn •ts subf8C1 maner R T hur#dotf• Doyf hn_. .Hot·i~• -MORNING - 8:00 C The Ge111ng Ot Wll· dom f 1978) Suunnah Fowle In lurn-Ol·lhe-cen- IUry AuSI• all& a young wornan l1om the Outback hll d1111Cully •<l1ull1ng IO Iha sedal& proproely 01 an h clus1ve gtrl&' &ehoOI Z Animal Crackers !1930) M••• Brothers Margaret Oumonl Captain Spaul<ltng the A.lrtcan ll•Plorer return• trom • •ecenl e•P•cllltOn 10 wreak havoc at e 1oc1e1y mptron ~ weelceno pally G 8:30 S Wozeras (1977)Ant· malecl Directed by Relph Bakshi In a workl of the lulura sorcery pleyt • maj()t rote on the ballle~ or two g•e•• conthct•ng •rm1es 8:00 C * * '> 0 1 Human Bon<1aga f t964) K•m Novak Laurence HeNey Based on the novel by W Somer1e1 Maugham A young me<11cal 1tuoan1 with a '8t1oua oetorm11y 1&111 1rag1cally In ft,ve wllh • prornoscuous wa11reas S "My Bfllllanl Career ( tOto) Judy Oev••. Sani Ne!M In IUfrM>I l ... -<*11U• ry Au.lrella. en lndeQend .,,, voung ~ lrlea 10 ....i.e e c.,._ .. a wfilat IM99il• aoclal II'-• for her 10 marty 10'00 CCI "The CelatnOUllt 1<111- '"9 Hot1t lklalhoQ, AM WedgewMh TWo ~ wt1o plOtted • rootNwy murder lh• men they lramed for the crime 11;00 Cl) e ,_., 'Hold Thal Une" ( 1os21 Bowery 6oye Leo Gorc.y I he Boye oat 1nv0111ed in GtOOked •port• QOJT\btlng (SJ e e e 'Blaclcboatd JungHI" I tOSS) Glenn Ford Anne Francis A dec:lk:atecl young IHCher 11tempt1 to ret1tora orde< In a l>lg'city 1ra1n1ng 1chool where lew>·age lawteunMt and v1oienca have taken rool 11:30 0 * * • ·Men Who Could C!\u1 Death" (10501 A.nton Otttr1ng, Cflfiatoptlet Lee A man becomes • mur<le<et all., 1e11rn1no the M>Cret ot •gland opeoreuon which can keec> him .,.,. nally younQ C • • ~ Tha Loved One f 106S) ROl>efl Morse An1enette Comer The nec>"ew Of e d-llM<I HOl- lywOO<I 11ar 1ocur1 some oebll ano headachet when 11 comes lime to maka Ille lunerel ar1enge- menta -AFTERHOON- 12:00 Q) e * 'The Bedford lnc1- oen1 · I t96S) Rieharo W10- mark . S1<1nay Poitier World peace hangs on lhe decl11on1 a naval com- rnan<ler musl make when he encounters a foreign submartne wh1ie on patrol Ill • • '• The fh1rd Day· t 196S) Geo1ge Peppard Elizabeth Ashley A.n amn&s•ac •s accused by his wire and cousin 01 murder- ing a woman and ner Chilo 1'00 $ • * • Ransom 119S61 Glenn Ford Donna RIMtd When his son •s kta nappe(I a wea11ny Du*'· neuman musl decide whet he1 IO pay lhe 11111som Of WOik Wllh the PQltCO 2 00 c Thi! Gelling 01 WIS oom 119781 Susannah Fowle In turn-ol-the-cen- lury Aullralta 8 young woman trorn lhe Outback nas <11tfocully e<11u&11ng 10 lhe sedate proc>t1ety or an exclusive girls schoOt 0 lntetnaloonal Laoy· 3:00 ~ • •', 'The Ctthcal list' ( 1978) Lloyd Bfl<lges, RObefl WltQner A hospital olrec101 slated lor a go•· ernment position learns lhal members of nos stall are telling pray to a sharp malpre'11ce lawyer 3:30 0 * •• The Ma!ll< Of Sheba f 1969i Walter P•<I· geon lnget Stevens A search parly seeks m1SS1nQ members of a saran who have w1lh them a priceless goto statue $ Wtlar<ls 119771 Ant· mateo O.recled by Ralph Bak1h1 In a world 01 the future SOtcery plays I m1j0< •ole '" lhe ballles ot two great conll1c1tng arm19s •:30 0 Fatso' (1980) Dom Deluise Anne Bal'lCroft A l)Oflly compuls1Ye eate1 l1n<1s that notn1ng can dampen his desire lor food unhl he tails on love PG 6:30 0 Urban Cowboy ( t980) John Travolta Debra Winget A btue-col· lar worker who fancies h1m1111t • modern-day cowboy falls 1n tove with a girl he meets In a popular country-end-western bar 'PG by Armstrong & Batiuk CHANNEL LISTINGS ( 1974) Al Pac1no. Rot>erl Duvall M1Chae1 C0tl110ne 111vmes h11 late tether 1 throne •nd po-r 11 ha becomM the new head of the Malla, tln<11ng prob- letnl with rival tact1on1 and the law throughout his reign R' 8:30 Q) THE 000 COUPLE Oacer and Felix •Pefld a lets-than-happy vacation In e Caribbean IOUrlsl lrap '1!) TIME EXPOSURE Lowell Tho.mu narrates the lite ano worlc1 or nolecl phOtograoher WMllam Hen ~Jeckeon The Island' C 19801 Michael Caine, Oavt<I Wartl., WhlHI investigat- ing • rash of ship dleap- pea1anc. In Ille Bermuda Triangle. 1 )0Urna11sl llum· btes KIOU an l10lelecl. 400-yeu-old colony ot pi(atH ·R' 'L KNOW '!'.OU. C.AN SEE 1'HAI, SARAj:f.~. 13UT IHE SiUDIO EXE.CU'TIVE& CAN'T/ SUI IHe.N I Ane.~ ALL, YOU'RE ELE'JEN "1EARS OLO.' . ~ I) KNKT CB St LO'> Anqel.,., 0 KNBC tNBC LO:. AnqelPS 0 KTLA Ind LOS Ange es 1J K.ABC TV ABC1 L o s Anqe1.,._ T o\F'AB 1CBS1 San Otego G KHJ TV 1lnd I Los An•1Pli><, !J KCST 1ABC San D·t'QO Q) t(,TT\i find LO'S AngPlt' .. Cl) KCOP TV 1ln1l LO'> Anqe11•c. fD KCET T'11PBSJ Los l\nQP es '1!> KOCE rv I PBS1 Hun I nq1on Beach l:S6 0 CAPTAIN MOM e:OO Cl Q! DIFF'RENT STROKES Mr Drummond aeeka Arno1cf1 aovtce atte< 1>e1ng turned down IOI • date by • bullMH executive (RI 0 MOVIE 'Rocky tr' ( 1978) Sylv9Stet Staltone. T811e Shire. Att., lor.ing htl bout with the world champion, an ambl· 11001 t>oaer Ir aln1 tor • MCOn<I chance at the lltle 'PG' Montalban 's life no fantasy By FRED YAGER ••-111 ............ NEW YORK -"After so many years of life. I don't fantasize anymore," says Ricardo Mon- talban. star of ABC's, "Fantasy Island,'' a prime- . time. series set on an island where people go to live out lheir fantasies. '"In Hollywood, you can fantasize your life a'lt'ay," says the Mexican-born actor. "but that on- ly makes you unhappy. Once the dreams are des\royed, you become a professional." "'l'he notion of being abJe to act out fantasies apperenlly is appealing to plenty of people bec.'-UJe "Fantasy Jaland" ia about t.o enter lta fourth seuon in lbe fall. Mootalban, w ho play1 Rouke, the laland'a mysterious bolt, says be'a happy about that. even if be prefers t.o look at life · frov.a a more reallalic al ant. ~ .... fee.I very fortunate that I'm atlll function· Inc," aaya the 61·year-old entertainer. "Now I can really HY I've achh1ved lon,evity aa a.n actor, whJch ls aomelhing denied to quite a few." Montalban'• entire workinC llfe baa been dedicated to acUn1. Sta~ out in lMl matiq movl• ln lluJ.co, be aaya ti. a·nevtt bad t.o take oa. anot.berjobt.o support t\lmaeU. , "Somet.I mes," he aaya, "thinl• would 1et slow I and r had to Ugh ten the belt. But J kept ap. pl1Je1 myself and it paid off. I have tenacity, but . ' 6.42-5678 Put a few words to work for you 1 " the DlilJ Pilat ...... -.......... .. .. the element of luck is a very major part of why I made it. "The chances for success are so negligible," he says, "and acting is such a volatile profession. You have t.o be someone with a passion who's will- ing to sacrifice a great deal for it." Montalban says he considers this the most ac- tive point In his life, working on ·"Fantasy Island" nine to 10 months of the year. and doing com- mercials for severaJ advertlsers. Last year. he even took time to work on his autobiography, a book called "Reflections, A Lile in Two Worlds," which not only documented Mon- talban's professional life, but also revealed a very spiritual and religious man. ••Religion has been a very strong guiding light," he says. "I need it because I bave great weaknesses. II l were a stronger man perhaps I wouldn't.'' The book also explains Montalban'• reuona for belna a strict disciplinarian with his children at a time when many parenta were takln1 a more liberal, permiasive approach. · "1 used to teU my kid.a, I'm not your friend, I'm your father," he 18)'1. "You wtll have many friends, but only one father. I waa willing to sacrifice their love for me by beln1 strict. That's how much I love them, and I know they sense that. "Besides, sooner or later you learn that without discipline, there la no frpdom," be add.a. · "Without U you have cbaoa. I remember bein.I ln Paris, ln a taxi at one of the traffic clrdea, and all the at.op Ll.lhtl went out. Nobody moved an lnch." In the early 1970s, Montalban cot involved wtth "Noeot.roa," a Loa Anaele.·baMd acUYlat 1roui> dedicated to c.banODI t.M lmac• of Mu · fcan1. "I wu told I'd be crucified," be recallt. "M an ac:toc, you are not auppoMd to 1et lnvolved in IUcordo Montalban of •• F'cml48fl laland." an)'thlnt or ma.kt any 1i.tement.a. Any Ume you do, you please tome people and alle.uate others. I still felt It wu .ort.b the ritk and I helped open a lot of doorl." CBS • • WIDS again LOS ANGELES <AP> CBS maintained its stranglehold on the television r atings for the past ~ek, even though second-place ABC look the top three spots and five of the Top 10, the A.C. Nielsen Co. reported Tuesday. ABC's "Three's Company" was the most- watche<t show for the week ending JuJy 5, with a 20.5 rating. That means 20.S percent or the nation's TV -equipped homes watched some part of the show. Nielsen said 16.4 million homes were tuned to the show. "Too Close for Comfort," JIJ.4, and "20-20," 20.0, completed the ABC sweep. but CBS still maintained a 13.7 overall rJting for the week. The Nielsen Company said that in an average prime time minute, 13.7 percent of the nation's homes with TVs were tuned lo CBS. ABC trailed ror the week with a 12.6 rating, while NBC contlnued in last place with a 10.8 mark. Repeats of two once-powerful mini-series ended up near the bottom of the heap this week. with "NBC's Friday Night Movie: Be11arman, Thief, Part 2, finishing 64th with a 6.2 rating, while ··Roots: The Next Generation, Part 8" waa '5th with a 5.9 raUng. Roundln1 out the bottom five were NBC'a "Sanford," ln 62nd position with a 1.4 raUn,, ABC's "Ei1.bt ts Enough1" 7.2 raUns. and "NBC'a Saturday Night Movie: Wood.stock ... 'Re·Llved" in 66lh and last place with a 5.3 ratln1. Nielsen said only 4.2 million households wattbed the last-place show. The remainder of the top 10 included "80 Mlnutel," wtth a raUna of 19.8, on CBS; "MASH," which fell to No. 5 with a tt.s ratin1 alter headln.1 the raUnp for several w6eu. CBS; "Hart t.o Hart," 1t. l, ABC; "HOUM Calla,'' 19.1, CBS: "Traptr John, M.D.," 18.1, CBS; "Laverne and Shirley," 1'1.1, ABC, and "Dlfrrent Strokes," NBC, 17.1. ...... ~~·~·~-····-··· .. ., •9'\r••·••••·-.·~· 4' ••· . .. . . . ... . . . . -. .. . .... .,, ........ Cable N~ Network ~gon bwineu ooer a year ago dUtrlbuting newa to the nation ooer ~ .yrtfm&I. Cable hurting networks? EDITOR'S NOTE: The opportumt11 to creole pro- gramming for speciol audience• on cabU TV ho.I Jiu.tied· out doz.ena of ideoa -from the high·l>row to the com. mon. In the 1econd of a five-part &erie1, AP writer Tom Jory looks at the programming parade on cab~ TV. By TOM JORY NEW YORK (AP) -1975. Cable TV is un- worthy competition for the networks. A company named Home Box Office is struggling to sell pay· TV movies and sporting events. Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier are fighting in Manila. Enter a satellite orbiting 22,300 miles above the equator and three cable operators -in Florida and Mississippi -willing to pay about $100,000 for earth stations to receive satellite signals. In its firs t two years, operating via a microwave tower atop New York's Pan Am build- ing, HBO has gained about 57,000 viewers. It is Sept. 30. Ali beats Frazier in the "Thrilla in Manilla" as HBOs look oo. lo New York. In Pennsylvania. In Florida. In Mississippi. It was HBO's first satellite program. and sud - denly, a national cable network was possible. Ca· ble operators were offering programs not found on network television. Within a year , HBO, a Time Inc. subsidiary, added 200,000 subscribers. And when the Federal Communications Commission the following year lowered the cost of earth receiving stations, cable took off. Today, HBO serves more than six million homes. At the same time, more than two dozen cable networks have grown up. including all-news Cable News Network, all-sports Entertainment and Sports Programming Network and ethnic-oriented channels like Black Entertainmeiat Television and ·Spanish Interna tional Network. · .. In Columbus we went from four channels to 30, and filled all of them almost immediately. Now, we don't have enough channels there," says Gustave M. Hauser, whose Warner Amex Cable Communications Inc .. has used the Ohio capital as a cable innovations test market. There is a family entert~t -for exam- ple, the Home Theater Network CC$entrates on G and PG films -and adult-oriented fare. Two networks, Escapade and Private Screen- ings, offer R-rated adult movies. Penthouse magazine will join the soft-core competition this fall with the Penthouse Entertainment Television Network. Such ofrerings and the nuditJ and violence ln uncut movies shown on other cable networks have upset some legislators. In Utah, & aew law makes it a crime for cable companies to distribute anything defined as ·'pornographic or indecent." HBO and four cable companies are chalJenging the law as unconstitutional. A result of the boom is that cable is chipping away at network TV, whose ratings fell about 7 percent last year. The major networks and Public Broadcasting Service are entering the race to fill the upward of 100 channels cable operators plan to offer. ABC's Alpha Repertory Television Service, billed as "the first nightly cable television service devoted to the performing and visual arts," pre- miered in April. CBS Cable will debut with "Twyla Tharp and Dancers," produced expressly for the new service. PBS' Public Subscriber Network pro- poses a "grand alliance" with major cultural in· st itutions for programming to begin in 1983. ~~~~~~~~~~--,r-~~~~~~~~~~....-~ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE MS.MH l'ICTITIOUUUMMISS NOTICE OF DEATH OF l'ICTITIOUUUSINIEU MMMllTAUMUtT ROBERT WAYNE COLE NAMaSTATIMIENT Tiie 1011-1"9 P9rMlfts •re dolno AND OF PETITION TO Tiie followlnQ pertons •redol119 buSI· -lneuas: ,,.n .. : FULLEllHllM PAATNEllS, ADMINISTER ESTATE VIDEO ETC.. OF IAVIHE. u n LTD .. JI Abelo. Irvine, C.lll0<nle NO. At09365. Jeffrey A-. s..11e E, ,,.,,,,,..CA t27u n7u T o a I I h e i r s , NOT I ca Of' ......... IESl'Oell1 a1UTY Hotke II ...,..., .,_ -... -... ,,,.,,.. ... -.. ,._., .... ... ... ., ...... ,.. ..... 11 ... ~ ...... lly _,_ dlf ... ,.,,,...,, Clft -.. ... U•hMle. Delecl .. .....,., Jtlly, 1"1 .. Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 •• Officers become actors BEVERLLY HILLS <AP> -"I uaed to be a policeman," Offlcer Dlclt Rowsell Joket. He still ls, but ever 1lnce his crime prevention unit "went Hollywood," he's a.lao become a script writer, film editor, cut coordinator, prop man and actor. · In fact, the Beverly Hilla officer's time these days ls devoted to productni a series of TV pro· 1rams, which made its debut on a local cable TV channel ln April. It iJ Lbe department's new crime prevention erlort designed to teach vlewen bow to protect tbemseJves and prevent crimes. The half-hour pro1rams, broadcut four times daily five days a week, use minidramaa, with of- ficers and other actors simulaUo1 real crime situations and demonstrating bow to react. "I wanted to avoid getting just a lecture·tJpe thing,'' Rowsell said. Tbe first program, with a three· to four-week run, focused on the use or guns for seU-defense: the problems and dangers of guns, the l~,al safety aspects and the psychological effect o using a gun. ·'Gun sales are way up. We got a lltUe nervous about everyone running around with cuns in lhi• "EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Pr .. Suite 14 N ewPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 CONS'IRUCTION MONEY AVAILABLE AT HERITAGE BANK. .. •Residential • Commercial Bui.ldinp: Takeout Commianent required along with leases. • Land Loans up to one year 50% appraisal. CONTACT: •Jeff Johnson - lrvine Offire {714)851-4050 THE UNCONVENTIONAL BANK Herit~e B~£1F~ !=) IO!Ml-L•ND•" Jack Anderson D ·1 p·1 ' reveals in the II J I ~ city," Rowsell said. "Most people can't live wtth bavln1 kUled a perlOll," be added -thus the proeram'• empbull on the psycbologlcal upecta. In one aequeace, u actress plays an an1ry woman who 1rabt a kitchen knife and lun1ea toward the camera. Sbe ia shot from oft acreen, so that "it's like the viewer ls pulling the aun." Rowsell •aid. Other sequences depict a child find.in_' a 1un in a closet, and the dilemma of a man boldlnt a IUD as hb wife ls grabbed by an ijlruder wbo putt a gun to her head. The procram carefully avoids moraUzio,, at· tempting rather to point out the kinds of sl&uallona that can a.rise with guns, Rowsell said. ln the first week the series was broadcut, be said, ''the response was incredible. We 1ot 200 calls the lint day." He said the calls -some from as far away as New York -came from viewers, police and other agencies, judges and people who volunteered "to act or help on the programs. "Il worked out beyond our wildest dreams." said Rowsell. lee-Oii ogotnst 1nnot10rt """' ~·s llOllOl)IG '..... plut i' C9ftftcolle Eon P'lOgnest monltlly IOtes ""th !tie peooe cJ rrond cJ 0 guooonleed onnuol lfl'-'! IOl8 """"""""' •""8Slrnefll cJ $5 CXXl IMltl 12·ti0 month l8lmS Western lhnfl. "'8 llf'IOnCIOI 1ns11tutlon Thal QI-Yes VOU MOii money fOf VOUI ~- ~ _,,..,. .. ,..,.._ .... .,..,,.,.. --~-r--· w •1~·\ "'Mfil\C". ~. l()h (1"f(<r¥.#'H···~ ·...N"f •to.11AO'I, •••' l· 'J •-'• a ., .... .. ... AA. "" ' ,,.~. ~ 4. • ,, • Orono-1111 E. Kot.ao Ave. (714) .. ,.,JOO Tononce 182011 Pfolrie Ave. (211) N2·l010 Long 8eoc:tl ~1 Poe. Coast Hwy. (211) 4tl-»01 eo.to Meeo 2000 Hotbof Blvd. (714) Ml-llN C:O.te MeN • ~ • Fremont • ,,..,-.o • ~le • &...ono 8Micf'I • Mo.arn•n V1 ... • Otet199 • A~•• • SK•-10 • S... °'-Soon•...,..,.• S... 0-• MttM\M • S.,. Joeit •St~~ • f~ • TonflftC4 • ........... • V1ct0"¥tl._ • Wl'l4N9f PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE 111cr1nou;;us1111-;;--I NOTICE OF DEATH OF 11~~':!~:.i.::s HOTlc':'ff::::::r:.•,~ .. 11>At NAMISTATUHlolT VIOLA AGNES KIRBY TllelOllowl"9-•r•dol110h<lsi· Ille......,.,~._.. .. .,..~ ,,.~"::~'°"1119"r-•r•C1o1119 11U•1· aka VIOLA A. WELLER: neu•a: o1 °"-· se-. Of Cellf«fll•,,,...., THE ESCAG0.1~SllwerStr•t. aka VIOLA CURLEY PACIFIC SOL.AA, r:io11 Moulton AltMlwllofl ....... llwDrddr(OfJ-. 8 P .... U..IUO Perllwey, Sw•• °"· L.eoun. Hflll, CA ltl1. clKI--lb, ........... lo --... ~NH MAI NGUYEN 7~ Sii AND OF PETITION TO mu. Ill• terrllO<y d•url-.. ,_ •• Slr•t.e-P-.U.-20. .,., ADMINISTER ESTATE THOMAS w. HOOVER, -H. D<'lft99 C-.,Sb*I L~ ...... MEL H08LE. "''-ridge J-s. ,.,,.. ... co-.. Penner, . i L•ne.Scw1naven.,,cAmn >• Abeto, 1rv1ne. cemom1et21u beneflciar es, creditors GARY LEX, 2SJ.11 Juniper orr..... Jofln w ,.,..,,., o....ra1 P•rt,,.,, and continoent creditors of MlsslonVlejo,U.'2••• tJt Veron• Drive , Fu ll erton, ROBERT WAYNE COLE MELH08LE, TrU!ile«U/AVIDE Celllorl\le ~ d h ETC. OP: IRVINE TRUST. 901 Tiiis buslnet.s h conducleCI bye an persons W 0 may be MudowrldVe une. Sc>rlnQ V•ll••· CA O<tMr•t 1Mr1,,...llllp. otherwise interested In the ==-une ............ u. .. Publl._. or.,. CN.11 Delly Pllol, July l,l, l.-4,1"1 JOI0-41 PUBLIC NOTICE TOV·OIE.M THAH·TllOHG. * NO. A109354. SyrK11• . ....,.lm.CAt211DI. tMMC.e Olllrlcl Ne. 10,..,. -"-9 w. c ... -. ._1. •. Or•noe. CA T 0 a 1 1 h e 1 r s ouv c. ALEXAHOE1t. 11" c1r<1e .. ...,._.,,.,.. ""'Clrf Of Jt/IY, l.,~, '2MI. • • • Or Ive,....,,.,., .. ec:ll, U. .,..,_ at IN -Of 9:» o'cledl •·•·., .-~ HUV NGUYEN-TU 100 Sllwr beneficiaries, creditors CHERYL I.. ALEXANDER. ,,., dey In .. ~ Of......... I s1r .. 1, •-P .. k, CA .0.10. and contingent credl tors of c1rc1e Drtw, Hewpon hec11, CA 9*l. s.,.,.r111-s •.,.. C-y ot °".._ ·~ DIEM-PHUONG TRAN, uo2 H. Viola Annes Kirby aka T1111 butlMu " conouc1ec1 by • 111e H•tt Of _,.n111retl0fl, 10 0111c Klno •D7 S..leAl\e CAt270l. " ' -r••P«tnerslllp. Cenl.,. l"leu, S..t• Ane, c...11-., ' non. Jemn s. PllelPS, <>-r•• wi II and/or estate: Tiiis bu•l,.eu I• conducted by • PertMr A petition has been filed l'ICl'ITIOUS aus1NISS oenerel perinershlp Tllh ~ was fll«I willl Ille ..... ITATIMINT GARYW 1.ex c ... ntr c•-01 0r.,. C-ty on by CARRIE COLE in the T"9 ,........ ..,_ts dDlnQ bu~ T111s st-n• w., 111ec1 w1t11 111e J..,,. u , 1t•1 Superior Court of Orange ness • ., CO<lnly ClenofOr-CountyonJ-Le Offka 1'1M611 County requesting that CA80 "'co WEST COAST, INC., n, l'9L ,,,.~ AO':.aw,MILLH &CUL.SC* CAR RI E COLE be ap-•Sltverl-lrvlne.CAt2l1'. ~ ICAlllN P. BURDSALL. • Published DrenQt COHI Delly Pllol, =.le~ T=---p 0 i n t e d a S p e r S 0 n a f Celllornle <""-ellon, • Sllverfern, o..M u ' HQr.I.,.... 1U, sirwr Str•t. Viola A. Weller, aka Viola GurAie-r ., 11w 11-enc1 111ec:e tor 111e _.,.. '"'""' Pwll.CA•» Curley and persons who Tiii• __ , ••s 111eo1 "''"' 111e ......,. 111e _..'°"Of .... _ut..., 0'*'0 "°"""· 1t02 H. rc1ne. •01, may be otherwise interest-cownlyC1ett10fD<'eno-CowotyonJ..,,. .... •11 all+ec:I'---· .. ....,. s...te Ane. CAt'11°' t>, l'91 lllM •1111 plec:. ell ............... --Tllla ._.,..•lsc-..Cledby• tlmll· ed in the w ill and/or 11164115 mev--•-c&. ec1per1nen11tp. estate: Publl"-10r-. c:o.st De11., Pll04, AAkllt'-,.,._.,,....,. ,,..., 11e-. °""'IN9U.,... A petition has been filed Junel1,H,Ju1r 1.•.1•1 '"1-t1 '•'""'"""G.K.SM ..... .,....... Tiiis •W-1 .... llled wltll Ille by Mary Bouchard In the PUBLIC NOTICE Al ... ., -tw'or lo.,.. tl!M ,._ Cownlr Clert "'0r.,.. c-ty on Mey for llHrlna. aoly 1--tMrMM June11,1•,Ju1v1.1,1•1 2nM1 N~a.dl.e.t...W.twe representative to ad-1rv1ne,CAmu. Publ1-0r-.co .. 1oe11y P11o1, minister the estate of PO!:::on~..._1scone111etec1by1eor· J..,,.24,Jut,1,1.u,1•1 ns1-t1 ROBERT WAYNE COLE K.erlnP.8unue11, zt,1911. Superior Court of Orange mey11tew1t11ttwC1entOftM ... ,...., ,,,._. County requesting that ,1CT1nouseu11Nas '-"1_.. °' u. ~ °' o...,.. • Pu1>1llhed 0r.,. Coe•• O.lly Pltoi, Mary Bouchard be ap-NAM111TAT11 ... NT -111 ... ~ 1o 11w ~ -' P UBLIC NOTICE -----<under the Independent v~- PUBLIC NOTICE Administration of Estates Tllil -wes flied Wiii\ Ille Act). The petition is set for counr, CMo °' Dr•-Counly on J-11.1•.Juty '·I. l"' 1749-tl po. t e d I T,,. lott-1119 -Mfl• .,. 6-lno neutloft, -a91«1..._ wltl lie< ... 1 n a s p e r s o n a NIMH ... ll*r..i "' .,.. eoer• Of s..M ...... PUBLIC NOTICE representative to ad-WE MAKE sciNTS 15212 111e11me-..-.11 ... ,...--. m i nister the estate of s100...n0r1we,Ho . .s,~H1Ha, 11~.:=,.~:r.:.:i::.~. Viola Agnes Kirby, aka Cell~te~ ec1 Ju,.. u . 1911, of 111• ... rd., "C'TITIOUI aUllNllS June It, 1"1. MAMl ITATIEMINT 111CT1r1ous auatNHs hearing in Dept. No. 3 at ,,1_4 Tll• 1ot1-1n11 perM1t11 .,. c1o1no T ,:.=• ITAT•MINT 700 Civic Center Drive PubllShecl Oreno. coe11 D•llY P1101. buslMM": .,. . "',.._ 1• 11011" 11usi. West in the City of Santa June l1. 2.4,Juty 1•1· 1"1 ~1 •1amou1au11111ss Viola A. Weller, aka Viola Hueve ·~ on~ =~1;.!:1 S..n1-., on Ill• wlt111N CIM1!., ,..._STATIMINT Curley (under the In-c.11tor .. 1 .. 2•11 · • tMh«V015-v""".T,_twr...., aAl.eoA ISUIHD SWIM & ltEC MU... 1 CENTER JDS,,..._ k-lslend J .EA HI! TT E. S DE HT AL Ana, cafifornia on July 22, Celllonil~9*i ' ' HYGIENIST REP'ERllAL H!RVICE, 1981at9·30 Tiie ~°'._.,,..,.._,is Clolft9 11u.i. dependent Administration Me.-1 OK.. ~. u111 1•t:::::.::'.;:~.,:.::-~.- ,.. .. ~~111 RENAI SSANCE. 1101 of Estates Act). The petl-~T,:..vu:=.,,onw. uewne Hi.-., ,,_ .. .., i.uo ec:"'" .-.... PVBUC NOTICE L•--D. ic-•• Jr., 10S ~~~l~r~!u~· Wey. 5•111• All•, IF vo"u OBJECT to the A .. ::.n~'~!for:•= JHnette E•••ne Termen, u"' granting of the petition, aetlloe 1.._.."c.tllornle tit.2 . ~Incle w..,, S..Ote Ane, C.lltornle YOU Should either appear l'ICTITIOUUUllNIU ~~1:.~~·:..:~rt· ... y, ••. Mlulon tlon Is set for hearinq ~n Wretlle Arlene M•<hY. um :::,1!i;':; :::.~~ ~~ ..._ ITATU ... NT LINDA JEAN GENNETTE l40lt Dept. NO. 3 at 700 CIVIC Stock~ Drive, Ho. U, ~ Hlll1, IOWtllMICcltr llmltuf lrvlfle. ""'' buslnets 1• conc1u<1ec1 by • Tiit• IMlneu ,, c.Oflduttec1 .. ., ... 1,.. at the hearino and state T11e tot••lr>e ,.rl<M'la er• dotno Plover u... ~ N•o.,.1 u.'2611 Center Drive, West, in the C•i~:W111.!,:rs3 1 Oelff: ""'nni My ot J-. Hl1. 11u.ine1n1: Thi ~ 1 · · c I t y 0 f s a n t a An a ' ""' ' c.onc1ucte.s 1ty • av OROEA OF THI! llOARO °" llmtte.s~ rc <11v1c1ue1. your objections or file SUNGllOWTH VI. l 110 Pe< If le c11v1..!.1 1 condu<tecl by en fn. . ' ...,.,., ...,_,..,..p, SUl"ERVISO~ OF OAANGIE COUN· CoHt HI..._.,, Hunllft9\on 8.,c11, UnN J c;.n,,.tt. California on July 29, 1981 Slllrter L LMftder., TY, CALtFOltNtA T1111 ---... .;.,. ~ri:.r·.,. n.is :::::::,..E. T"': 11~H written objections with the c ..... ,., c1-.i 0r..,.. c:-1., on co..nir ,,_ °' ~-:.,.. c!.!:'Y •: court before the hearing. J ..,,. 22· ,.., ., ... 11 J-"· "'' Your appearance may be ~1 ... 0r-. c-a 0.11, Pltet, Pvbll"-1 0r.,.. eo.t.t 0811~':::' In person or by yoor at- C.lllomla... Tiii• ste,....:,,, WM flied wllll llw at9:30A.M. Tllll ~ -flled wltll... JUNl&LaJIUUtO.lt W~H FINANCIAL, 11:10 CounlyCi..tio10r.,,..countvonJ._ IF YOU OBJECT to the own~ f::" ot on,. c ..... t., °" a.. .... ._..., Peclllc CllltM HI.,._.,, Hwnllfll\en 12. l•t. grant inn of the --tltion .,,,. ' · 1'1'41111 14 •lw•• 8ffCJl,CllllwMe.... fll.-i ''1' t'-I Or .... ClatJ,~ J-24, JUiy 1, 1, u. 1t11 Ja.41 Jwrw 1 1 15 22 11111 -... ... 1· torney. .... _ o. 1c111ey, ..., Her-... Pllbllslled 0r-. coesi 0,11., PllO( you should either appear ~'"'" 0r.,.. c...a Deity P11ot. ,.,,..1.,... 0r-c..tt o.i1., PIMt. Ko c1rc1e, Hun11 ... 1on &e•cll, J..,,.11,u,Ju1y 1,1. l"' 2162 .. i at the hearino and state "1Y 1· I, IS.12. •t11 ,,.._., Ju1~1. u, 1"' "94t ' ' ' ' ' ,,_... I F Y 0 U A R E A ce111orn1e,.. your objections or file Gr..L.0Mtfw1,'2225Nwwtl>y ,_ --ltt obj ti PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE CREDITOR or a cont-ingent creditor of the de-Drive, ... "'', 9Hcll, c.ii1on11a PVBUC NOTICE wr en ec ons with the .,.. ~ court before the hearlno. •~-..... ceased, you must file yoor •-....n.tWTW9..._ ... ..,_ claim with the court or WTll9~.,_.,.., .... ,..91ft91CT present it to the personal MQM-lftMrn""91'9all ..,.,... Tiii• ~· <_c..,. 11., • Your appearance may be .... ,.. • llO\'lCS Of'"....... I b t . • o. Sc ..... ., NOTIU IS HIERIE•Y 01v•N tMt tn person or y your a . Tiff• . -"..,. •"" .. ""._...,,...,..,._.. .... '-"Y orney. •••WlnMnllK'ft-.1-..IA representative appointed County C... Of 0r.,... C-CY ., " Ot-IMll9, ..,.. Of Cellflwnl•, ,_.. .., I F Y 0 U A R E A J-u.M ,, ..... ,. ""9twt1t11.....,111e1ar,i...,.,J_, CREDITOR or a cont· WM•HM. ........ ., Olfldwt .. -00 .. Mt ... 11 ..... IMlllrtlt by the COUrt Within foor ,..,.o, ._ ............ '""" k I Dlllrtltt .... a ... M -months from the date of ::12• =..--;-:: °""""...,.... 1 • k .. ...., 12• first lssuarKe of letters as I -1911, 4K*'9d lta ·~ .. -· I t _..It f t--P1>1t11..,0r.,.. CNtC Detty Pltet. 111• t•rrttery Mscrl..._ 11ei-•• ngen c'""' or o ,..,. ....,. .... ...,.,. • " .......... ., .. ...,..., Dftdlf'I "• n• .-provided In Section 700 of J-1•. Jwr 1. 1, u. 1t11 mu1 °'...,. c-icy Sttwt UIMI,. ...._. ceased, you must fl te your ------~·-----t.Mftc;e0tsrkt .... 1 ...... ,..,,_ claim with the court or 11111111 ._.,.....,, ... ~ the Probate Code of •=V..~=:.:.=:.=-., _. ... ......., Callfornla. The time for P\JBUC NOTICE -.. .... , ... ""'...,., Jw1., 1t11. present It to the personal :~"::~-:-.:;"'..:,...a.: representative appointed ...,.,...,.., .. c-ie.,.,0r.,.lft by the court within four .. H•ll ., ~--. " er"" months from the date of C•w ....._ ._. AN, c.tltoml•, first lssuanca. of letters as ..... t.,....",. .. ......._., • ..... " Dhdllrt" 1 a 1•11 flllng ctalms wlll not ex-.,..1°" COUllT ~•wna =•'*'""'--• .. -. pl re prior to four months ottCAu~•ua. .-a.n..a .... -.n•111 •-·-~=1,,..1 •11.,.. from the date of ... _ ... -ar-~Of'O.AN• IMllrtetl........... .............. , ..... .... -a."Tlldt .. ....., • .-.........,., ............... ln~notlcedabove. O•NUOIMOWCAUU"" ,..,.... ..... ,.,,,._.,..._.,....._., ...... .,.....,. OU MAY EXAMINE ~Of'MAM9 ... ._ 1-....... Ill Ille ~ .. ._ .-...ic..t ...... i:M.-...... ": .... ~"""';;.::.=:..------· the flle kept by the court. MUOAllU •OIALIE ANOU _._.,,.. • ....-c ............. _ .. ..,_~ ..... If you are Interested In the JONH W&LO•N. •w c ........ .. ..,_,............,....,.......... -....._ _,..._, estate, you may flle a re-N•-·CMC_.• .... ..., ;::._~ ... ..::.,-==:.., .... ~::.,':'.:!:.~~ quest with the court to re-MA•o•111t 1101.L1a ANO .. .,_, • celve SPKlal notlc~ of the JOHH ~H 111o1 ,..., • "'"'*' ADCN'T9. ....... MOA#llOt•o .. ,. • .,.,... ""· Inventory of estate assets 1111111._.,. .. .,.,.1'-'flt ... 1-:.=::=:.."=".. and Of the petitions, ac-~ .. ":~r.~":"tos':L':T..~':7 .. _._. •• .., .. ....,.._. counts and reports JONH WM.MN .. 1..H AMo•• AnaTl described In Section ,200,5 .10 ... , ...... ,., :.."~ of the C.llfomta ProtMte 1..!!i1:.=,==.,111mt~ ................... CocM. ,.., ....... UWI ... o.,. ........ .. n ·~ _,_... RMrt A. ••stman, ~·· ....... ,.._~°"' .. ..... • ITAT90f'CAL.IP'OMIM ... ...., .. Law ., Dover .... ~ -..... tt. OOUWTYOf'ou.t: Drive, #Jl,1 Newpert =::,• ~ .. ==.~-= ._...,.~._.~., ...... .,....,.., .. 9Ncfl.,CA9*1;tet.(714) ...,.._ .... ., _ _...._ n =-=-~=~~~ .. -=:.-:::::::::: 611P.u7~6.I•.._ O r ...... t .. , It ... •C4"fJI ....... .__ ........... .,... ..... _.__ "'...... ranve ....... s .... _.. .. ,_ ........... .... tlmt ............. ....,.._ "" ....... 111e ...... ., .... -•"" provided In Section 700 of .,.. ... .,...... ..,...., .. wt11<11 the Probate Code of ''-.... .._ ............... ..._ Callfornla. The time for ~~ _, .. ,.. flllng claims wlll not ••· ...... .,_o,ic ........ u••..,.. plr• prtor to tour months At ...., .._ ~ "• tlfr'9 11 from the dlt• of the tte.r-•~ ....._ .,.., ,_. ... ""' I ...., ed bo 1Myfllu1111! .. Cleftttl....... ng nvuC a Ye • .,._19"., .. C11u11tY., 0r._ YOU MAY EXAMINE :=., ~-:.':t:':. "': the flle k~t by tM coun. ..._._,._...,..,1•1 ••• If you are ntensted In the .. ,._.,..,._,._.._...,.... estate, you may file a,... • ....,. ..,..._ •.... quest wtth the court to r• " ,_... 111 -.... .... " cefve Sptelal notice of tM ;:: ·'='' ~ :·.t. ":.-=: lnvtntory of "tat. aswts .. ...,..., .... ••L TlleWY and of thl petitions, ac-,.=-~-==';"~ coun,ts 11 nt_ reports ,_ ... , M.n .,.. .. ...,. • cMscr bed n ~tlon 1200.5 -"' .-• ,,...,. ......--. of the C.llfornla Probate rt.::. Y• ._Ill .. --c Code PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE 1 ....., A. ~ ........ IK,...,., .. -....... oer..rt ., -MOu1.,_...iou•1.. •TH OtlUICT, • ...___, ..... .......... ........ _ .................. Oll'lldll9 .............. . ....... .................... ., .. '-""· ....... _ . ................... : ................... l 0.lly Piiot, July 1.l.-~!. ~I '" Tiii ~ ..... • 1••• "' af AY .... ...,_. IUCL' ....... MU. UllOTTI ........ 19'1 lft«Hl '9NffJI ~ .... '" W. .. ,,.. ...... VAkQ I ' C-.Y .. --· • .... tw ... .,.._:/::;.,....,.,.,., ""· 9'~.t K.-..1 A MW• IY ~OI-OI' 1'~ toA,_O , ................ M Lew, w~altY...,.cw ON.Noa couH 4Hl M.cArU1ur aav~ •• &Yll: Ol•ICTORS MH:IC, PtO•tl, ~ Ul!On'8, ._ ......... 1' IMtJtt, W!W.,_,.. • :.,-:.; ..----------~ .... ,,. ...... .. ._... .. ,....... ... I ....... .....,.... .,_ ---=··=--~ ........ _c-. .... ~,..... ......__ _________ .., c........,,c:. TY, CMJ ...... A.. , ..... 111, Ne -.t 9Hcll ~=-=• CA UUI; •r.t t714f .... ..... 7ft·lm. -=:: , Put>tl.lhld Orenge coest ..........,~C&MI 111111'1 O.lly Piiot, July 1, 2, 11 .,.. ...... ,.. , .. , 2'61 .. 1 • .'4. h •• '-••,./'-••• NCMlll Of·~---· ·i A ... MT1 CM~N0Me • .... ._ .,...... .. ,... ...... _..,. .... ........ ~ ...... ....................... ......... Or-..Clllll °"" ....... _, '·'"" I J .. .. • • ... .. • ... • • t • I { -... ·-·------..-----~,.,. ~----~~-.... _.._.. .... ,.._ .... ...._ ......... ___ ... ___ .. _.. _____ .......... ,.., --...-~-·------------- I O~ Cout DAILY PILOT JWedneadey. July 8, 1981 New index needed now By JOHN CUNNIFF .,. ........... NEW YORK -In a mockery of IOUDd economics, the COil or Uvtnc lndex la ahnott cer· talnly lnllatlooary. It ia Wliversa11y recoenlied as marred lo coo· cept. Various economlau point out that lht boualn& cate1ory, which makes up '5 percent of tht lodex, carries /ar too much weight, at leul under current condition.t. In practice, any exaHeration in meuurine Uvine costJs ls immediately compounded by cost- of-living adjustments written into union and pension con- tracts. And so the index con· tributes to what It alleaedly measures. And that brings up -before Congress this week -the sub· ject of the cost of living index u it applies to Soci&l Security's 23 million rec ipients, who benefltted this month from an 11-percenl pay raise. ~'""'' Did the cost of living for Social Security re- cipients really rise 11 percent? Or was it less? For the years gone by, the question is academic. But in the future, a more accurate in- dex, it ls argued. conceivably could save the Social Secunly retirement fund, and the government. many billions of dollars . The more accurate index would be one that ( 1) more accurately reflects changes in livine costJs, and (2) Is more attuned to the cost! of living of re- tirees, who make up the bulk of recipients. Fountain Valley Four Plex S 199,500 Fwilt Price, $40.000 DoWll Mo 2nd 12>/4 fllfenst Electric range & ovens, dish- washers, wall to wall cpts .. drps.. air cond., pool. spa, covered parking & tully occupied. Open 12 to 8 daily 17140 San Mateo, F.V. CriUc• of lhe Index ••Y a mor. accurate measure would put bou1ln1 1n It.a place. Despite today's hiih prtcea and interest ratu, only a small fraction of homeowners are experlencl.01 t.bem. Moat people, upeclally retirees, bou1bt t.beir homes years a10. when pricca and mort1a1e rates were much lower. Tues and repairs except~. major c:oets are fixed. Rental cost.a are another matter. Rent.a in many arHli have risen fa1ter than the overall In· flatlon rate, a reault ln part of the low level ol multifamily hou1ln1 con1t.rucUon over tbe put few years. A more accurate lndex would adjust for these fucton. And 1t would M f\.trt.ber refined to refiect chances not iutt In the overall coat of Uvine but in the specific llvlna costa of the elderly as a eroup. ls the coat of Uvln& hl1her for older people? Or lowtir? Clearly, many of the factors ln the overall cost of Uvinl don't apply in the same wel1ht to the elderly. Does it, for lnalance, cost more to feed a re- tiree than lo feed a family of 1row1ng youngsters. Who must spend more for clothing? ·How much more does a retiree spend for un..iJUured medical care? The purpose or studying the cost or living In· dex, and the adjustments made on the basis of it, are not to reward or deprive any group, but simply to develop and implement a sensible criterion for payments. T-bill rates rise WASHINGTON (AP) -Yields on short-term Treasury securities rose nearly half a percentaee point this week , continuing a month-long pattern in which rates have seesawed above and below 14 percent. The Treasury sold about $4 billion in six-month bills at an average discount rate of 14.050 percent, up from the 13.621 percent of one week earlier, of- ficials said after the weekly auction, held Monday. About $4 billion In three-month bills were sold at a n average yield of 14.4 percent, up from 13.909 percent a week ago. Beginning Tuesday. banks and savings institu- tions may pay as much as 14.3 percent interest on their six-month savings certificates. up from the previous 13.871 percent. Interest on the $10,000- minimurn certificates is limited to one-quarter percentage point above six -month Treasury bills. The new Treasury bill rates were the highest since 14.491 percent for six-month biUs on June 1 a nd 14.982 percent for three-month bills on June 8. The rates dropped June lS, rose June 22. then dropped again last week before rising Monday. COLLECTORS CORNER R•r• Cotn1 & Stemp• GOLD & SILVER 7-7-11 ca.NC .... .._,. ......... Cl.SLM .., .... 1tr1199rr-J4U.• ICD.J:S SIZE llAllllE CLARITY COLOR Mat! .. L.Nft ..... .., .... IOO Gor-.... ~ MIP•-...... 111...- D F I II 1 ct. Fllwleu Sii.DOi S7,HI SUDO SUIO YYS-1 11.0IO 5.700 UIO UOI YYS·Z 7.%50 uoe UIO UM VS· I UH uoo UH UGO fl1w1tu ...... 11.0IO 1UOO 11.000 2 ct. VVS-1 ZUIO 1s.• 11.0IO uoo VVS ·Z ll• 11.000 UIO l.llO vs·-1 1UIO 1.000 I.ZOO 7.411 Fi.w1tu n.MO u.no %1.ZM !UM 3 ct. YYS-1 U.711 !UH !UM 1UM VVS·t U.711 !UH 1U50 11.100 VS· I !1.7141 17.250 11.HO 1UOO All pUr~ .,. -on t.o<•.Cl.0 ....glll -""'9 10 QOl1ofQIM Oy s.;..tofl( Ge<no1o9< .. l •botetOt .. a "" 0t tne ~ tn11n111e Of A.-.ce p,_ -on,,,.~ __ .,, AOUffQ BAIUIAHT TA8l E "' " 90 OVU\All DEPTH .... ~9 61 GtRDlE fHIColHESS h<tH MEOtVM CUlCT ~l-lol(OtlJM flVOAESCEo«:E l'f0 Hf ~AIHT BlU1' GR/olHIHG NII " ,,.. Cllemot'CI ,.... "'"' to ... tt • 0111eten1 "''• "' quellty 0t not ""'""' ,_ -·""".,' .,... .. <ell t0t '"" Pf-,.. -~ ... '11W.~ Of SQenuftc Gem U0S IOt -tfleellOn Of QUM11 .,..e1ym f9'Jllf0"'9 IM IJUftf\..., -oe p..o o, uni_.., °"""""" 1n<1u111,.. "'-~ 10 ....,.. -10 _.. .. 11uc1uet1Qn . ' ( \U'f;R.fil:U . Dl . .t ffO.\D l\Dl STRlf:S 2 9...,. .. ...,N.. .. "91t, 201 H .... .,.,_ ..., .. •z.....,. ~~ ~ ~...,._.,.,_.. .. , '"'"' 71t ..,.., J. .. ,._. the no hassle second Why complicate a simp le idea. At Warmington Financial we d on't . Quick funding on the equity In your home with pay back terms to meet your needs. Call and ask for the no hassle second at .. WARMINGTON FINANC IAL CORPORATION l19tA AIRPORT LOOP COSTA MESA. CALIFORNIA 92626 (714) 540· 2635 "A Southem Collfl::>mlO FomHy Helplng Soutt'8ftl Collfomlons" '°" Sii-.... ltl"A .,..... foo/o Bank Financing I RA & KEOUGH (714) 556-6850 South Coaat Plaza VIiiage S--.t-Sta. CA<,.. l..m 5-tlll C-d l"WUI "T'he Payroll I ' Savings Plan is rn~ oft he: easiest, sufn t "U) 11 to &e!I 11arte!d on the: Sil\ init hahil. E \en if llfl\ in& hu uJ" U) s sue med loo diffM:ull in pu11t 11t:mim111. A little is uutmn11ticoU) tulu:n oul of each llll)'Cht..'Ck '"" l'rd the purchalM: of l '.S. Sil\ inj{!I Bonds. 'ti111'll nc:,·c:r mi111 it, 110 p111 'II never 11ix:nd it. It j1111t kccrtfl ltro\\ i11j{ for 'iOmc coming 11rri111t. or mu)'he ll \\ urm \ w.:111ion during a cold "intc:r. It's o plan for all 8Cll!Klns. For 1tll American!!. "IH'U ,,. ... '"'' '"'"' .. , '"'"' ,,,, ! .. &!, fHfrt f ' \m fUJ.:' /'C11m/\ ltf1U ff /11 /111111,1 r •• /111l/1/ 1r /11111/11t • '"'"" ,,,, .,,,,,, • ''""'' ,, ,,.,,/fut ,,.rnrv II .> ,. . .... . ' ... -·· .. (conoco) RALPH E. BAILEY EDWAR.DG. JEFFERSON Du Pont shareholders wary NEW YORK <AP> -Ou Pont Co. is launching a major invasion of the energy business with ita plan lo buy Conoco lnc., glv· ing the giant chemical and plastics company guaranteed access to the petroleum that is the raw material for many Ou Pont products. The merger deal, which would be the largest corporate takeover ever, has won the endorsement of the beleaguered manage- ment of Conoco, which was scrambling for a m erger partner to avoid an unfriendly takeover offer. But the deal, announced Moo· day, wasn't as enthusiastically received by Du Pont stockholders. The merger would create the seventh- 1 argest industrial company in the nation. Conoco ranks 14th on the list, based on sales, one place ahead of Du Pont, which ranks first in the chemical field. The current takeover record Is held by Shell Oil Co., which paid S3.6 billion for Bel ridge Oil Co. in 1979. Conoco, a major oil company and owner of Consolidation Coal, the nation's secood- largest coal company, has been fighting an unwelcome $2.SS-billlon offer from Seagram Co Lld. of Canada for 41 percent of its stock. Seagram, which is offering $73 a s hare, declined to comment on the Du Pont offer. MUTUAL FUND .... .. ..... .. ' .. --'.,.. . Du Pont stock fell 14.875 a share, to $46.375, in active trading on the New York Stock Exchange Monday after the deal was announced. At the same time, Conoco stock rose $7 .375, to $77. The drop in Du Pont stock cut the value of the deal to $6.8 billion from the $7 .3 billion price tag originally put on the acquisition based on the price of Du Pont s tock last week. Du Pont proposes to acquire 40 percent of all Conoco stock for $3 billion In cash, at $87 .SO a share, and to acquire the rest at an exchange rate of 1.6 Du Pont shares for each Conoco share. The value of 1.6 Du Pont s hares feU Monday to $74.20 from $82. Jack Henry, an analyst with E. F. Hutton & Co., said some investors have been en· thusiastic about Du Pont's growing ventures in health care and e lectronics products, which would be proportionately less impor· tant after Du Pont swallows the larger Conoco Like most oil companies, Conoco is already involved in chem icals. Last year, it reported $1 billion in revenues and $44.3 million in profits from chemical operations. which included a joint venture with Monsan- to. a major Du Pont competitor ' ..... ,,. ..... -... -.... D0W"I -TIME pf TIME DC CmoMcr lntll'ft '"'"""' SllknEI ' "°""""' Sc'-E"' AdvSY111 Am--"E• C111".:Mn s ... 1,,.. ., .... = ~ ~r:~· Grlll\P\r EM,._ Gr-hi> gs PlcSv' "'"n:lllh Ulll 0. 2 -J\ll 1 -114 ._ -·~ , ..... -s 2V. -.... , .... -.... Sl<I -I , .... -.. IOV. -IV. 4411 -.. J S..16 -S..16 1V. -I J \It , .. . -.... s -"' J -Iii 2 -"' 1014 -'"' ·~ .... ,.. _,_,, ,~ -"' J~ -IQ 17 -J ..... -1111> P<:t. Up .. s Up UO Up 111 VP JU Up llJ Up 17.l Up U• Up ".l Up 14.J Up t&.l Up IU Up 14.J Up IU Up IU Up 11l Up lU Up IU Up IU Up 12.0 Up 11.0 Up II.I Up II 1 Up 11.S Up 1U Up 10.S Up 10 S Pct. Oft SSA Ott SJ.• Ott JD.O Off "·' Ott "·' Off I .. , Ott 1U Off 1J.O Off 12.S Off 12.S Off "·' Off II.I OH 11.1 Ott II.I Ott "·' Off "· t Ott II. I ()ff II I °" 10.• Off IU °" IO.I Off ,.., Off 10.J °" IO.s Off 10.J ' ... -. . .. . . .. . . .. • I •• ~ t •• I '"" ",-.. ' ........... . •,. IP ................ . ..... . .. .,. .... .. ... . s One of tht.• most 1m1>ort1mt dl'<'1s1on~ ~ <'Ompan)· can make is wht.•rt.• to place itB headquartt.'rs At l~•"'t it's Cl'rtu1nly 11nportant to the Jlt.'OPll' who work for lhe com11any and to the community the comp;my 111 Joining or leaving Many compunicll rem:un Pxactly "'ht·r~ they started Cocu Cola In Atlanta. H J Heinz In Pitt"' burgh. Wrigley in Chicago, Proclt!r & Gumplc tn Cl ncinm1ti , Hoc•ing In Seattle, Anheuser Busch m St Louis, Du Pont in Wi lmington. Del., RCA in Nt>w York. Bul many get restlesll and look ror dllferent climes Their reason~ vary. In 1970, 118 or the companu.'' on Ult' Fortune 500 ll~l had their headquarter:. 1n Nl•v. York City Today. uni y 7fi or the f'orturw 500 t·umpan1es arl' b<lll4:d m New Yt>rk Thal '!I what you m I g h t t· a 11 J mass 1 vt• no c·onf1dcn<'t.' \'Ole To~ surt.', <• number of lhf' desertc•rs from . MllTDN MOSKOWITZ 4;iie Nt•w York dl<l not venture vt•ry far Th&-y JUSt 1011rocyt.od to lhl' suburbs. General Ele\'lr1c went lo Fairfield. Conn Texa<:o to Harrison, N Y . Com1<:11 to Stamfonl Conn , Amen<'an Can to Crct•nv.u·h C'onn U111rc>) ;11 lo Middlebury. Conn . \& P lo Monholt> N J . "Jab1sco to East HanoH·r N .I AMF to Whitt· Plains. "l Y llow<.•ver . some did pack up and move far a"' a} Arrwnc·an J\lfhm•s relO<'ated from '11·"' York 111 tht· IJullas·Fnrt Worth Airport Shl'll U1l moved frortl ;-.;cw York tn I lou">ton . And Atl:tnt1c R1l'hf1l'ld tn·kkt•cl t•lt·ar at·rns~. th1• rountr:.. from "lcw York to I.us AlllWh•<. Aml'rtt .in Airlines expla1nl'd that 11 "a-. 11111t1• lo~u·al for 1l lo he based in the t'£>nll'r of th1· 1·11u11tn than 1111 the Easll'rn seaboard Om· ('l)OW(jUl'll<'l' or lh r 1•l11(·att0n Y,jS tht• d1srupt1on of a 20} car rt'l<1t111n-.h1p Y.ith 11~ udn·rt1sing agen<.·y , 1>oyl1• Oam· £lc·rnbaeh whi<.•h si11d 1t c·ould not persuade• C'rt·<il 1v1• 1woplt• le, mm·c· to lh!ll:is lo work on tht• al'<:ounl There· has llt'f'll 00 flight O( ~ld\ll•rl IStng il~l·nc·1cs OUt 11( I\ I'" York <.'Jl} Atlantic l{1ehf1eld s moH· to Lo!. Angt'll-" riut th•· 1•ornpa11' t lost•r to its 011 stnk<· 1111 tht• :'llorth Slopf' uf Alaska Hut thl• move had mor1• lo do v.1th lht• .in l&palh) of Ill--t•hairman, Robert 0 Anderson. lo ~(·Y> York City Los A11gelcs 1s ubo dn:wr lo 1\111h·rson s ra11t•h 111 NC'v. MexH·o. Pt•rsonal reasons oflrn ha"' ;1 lol to du "1th lhl~ mil\ es Tht•n·':. a saying thJI <'umJ>Jllll'' usually mo\ l' in lht• direction of lhl· chairman~ h"nw That v.as t•1•rl;11nl) the case m 1971 Y>hPn Grt>)hound mo\ cu out of Chicago lo Phoenix v. ht'r t• G~ratd Trautman. head of the company air 1 .11h hat! a resi dence. Sptl\' '>OfTll'li mes c·onH•., 1nt11 it l11,1mon d Sh<imrcH•k lr;rn:.ferred 1t c; hl'adq11 .1rl1•: .. fr •11n Clt•\elm1 cl to Dollas. t·1tini: . .imong 11lllt'f r ... 1 ~1111~ a d1stustt• fur tht-altitude-. .ind pol11·11·" 111 llit• th•·n· OlJ\Or or ('ll'\l•land. Denni!> Kunmch STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORK IAPI ....... Tuu prlo eno ~• cn•noo OI ,,.. 1111eo" MO\t •<t .. ~ New V0t._ Stoc._ E•cl'\ltnQI" l\\ut\ tr•Olno n•t•0t1•Hv •t f'f"W)f"f '"'" ,, ru•~u11' t fl:llOOO ~l'• Conoc.olnc t lllO .00 tS\o Cillo.Svc,. ~ 400 \t• • Mot>ll. t6f'IOO lll'I PrlmeCm 111 . .00 1'1>. . •'• ... l" . '· ... ""Pon' n1 teo ... • • it"J Corp ::.~ ~ • t '. MaretOll -400 •1 • 7 Eo.o" • 001 6GO l4~ • "' Pf'nntoH W..800 \1'.._ •1'• NEW ¥0Ak•~J f ''••• l" w '°""' for Tw•d•y Jul · STOCK! JO Ind 10 T• 1S UI• •)SI• '"°"' Tr•n Ulll1 .S St• WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YOfH AP Ill! Mlrw Ptrl • SA• 'IOO JOI, • t • 4mer T& T 01100 U S.ersR~b O• MlO 11• • f(lll)il; ~, .. 0•· c-..n Motor~ '1l •00 d 1. I' AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS NEW YORI( (4PJ TN-1011ow1n9 1111 >hows the N..,. Yor~ Sloe~ Each•not' noos end ... ,.11111 ,,..., l'lnt ~ ue> ti.. most •NI ~ II\~ mo.I t>M..s M i:,r<•~'.,::O~~M'l9<' "'9'1rdlt\I ot volum.. .,:: ~~,~~ ,::,o!,'1.;~:.~~~,.:~ !lltte ... nce __ ,, IM P"'""''" <IO>l1>9 ci-tu eno ioa.v' ~~m prlu Ne'"" U.st Cho I P!IEI 4 ~ olO'. • •'• Up JI I 2 TUQll :rf', tit, •1l , Up 159 ! ~:t1~~; ~'· :'' ~~ :~: s Emr•R•d ,,.. 1-i,, uo 9 • • AmW•tt ~8 ''• '• Up 9 1 A.dv•nc«t O.cllned Un<1wn~<1 TOUI "'"•' Ntw 'UOh~ H•* lo•~ ........ •v• .. NEW YOPK "' .... "'' .. , ...... • .. Ju• I H ... I .. IOCS.O• Actv•nc..i 'U t••r• ·~· l4J O.cllnocl Un<n•~ll To~I l\\U#' New hlO'" Jrlff'w low\ l•ons Luf:>tconl••- ,, /Of ..... • ,, Zht< ...... cenh• PoUnd dflll1~•'td Th• M S5,. Mltt•h w .. k conip••,.1• lb Altllftl-1...-0<tnll • "°"''° N > J.Urc..,.., '4H 00 pu 11 .. k P'lat-~ 00 troy 01 N V GOLD QUOTATIONS l y Tlot 4-WI"°" ....... S.••ctoe1-.1d90tdpr1<t\ ru .. ,,., ·~ •• .. ' 1 FeberQ~ Inc 17'< I Up 9 6 I All le d Corp "8' / • ~ Up 9 J ' Suev•S-t1 I Up t 1 10 GenAmOll 0 , • J"' Up I I ~ "'°'"'"9 f•••"9 ..Oi 00 W \I n L••ll... •fl••noon ll>1ng '•OJ /\ 1111 It UMC lnCI 11 1 .. Up I l 12 GruMd WI J"' • • • Up I 0 IJ ~wPtrl • JO , 10, Up I 0 ,, Trlco • I)'• I Up 1 I IS FtClly Prop S • • -. Up 11 16 V&ndO Co rxw!~s • 1 • Up ! ! LAst GOLD COINS ,.. .. 14' JO .. H JI U'• 1l'• s • n 11'• u ,,, '°" ,,, l' 2•'· r~\ .. ,, . ..... 2'4 7"-, ... "" .. I l '• JI() .. I .. ". , .. Pct Oft 11.• 011 10. Ott 9. Oii l .S &"t IJ 1.1 ()It • s g:: • s •• ()If •• g:: ., ., Off 67 ()If •l 011 •O Off SI NIW YORI( i API PrlC.•t i.c• ~f ot 9014 colfts, <-ed wltll T--,.·, 11'1(• "~ 11,,,., Oi • "°' "·et! •t> "° ,.....,_ .,..., 1 troy ti, MU U, efl iii tS. .... ic. ,0 -· I t lroy o; , ito1,1J, etf '"so AHl"9oe 100 ,,_,.,, M7 lf'Oy 01., MOI OD, ""'' 00 "' JS "••••· .,.,.,.._ l•••nv '41' •• uo u Ho .. , ... ...., ..00~ 01 uo " 07 Z•rlclt 1,.t• f •ttnQ ti•O• 00 uo ~f 00 ..01 oo .... .., Me1111y • ".,,.... Ml' tl•llY Qvt>•• ..O~ 00, ""'' H I~ .. -. only 0•11~ Qll<ll• ...OS 00 ~ ,,,1S 1...-i-. <l"IV .s.11, QUOI• l•b<t<el.O J.01 JO, 1.111 Jl JD 1SYMBOLS d .... .,.._,,., ~ ""N•• .. _.,.,fl J" ~ ot"-fW'I .. "'(M.0 •••• 1f 4-v..,,t-> •"" ~ ~1• be.., o~ ••• ••' o~, °' ~ ~rt~I de~ll'll•Ori ')ti• a "' ••'•• ' ::,::.:, ~:;'~~~,v~:,·.~::.~::: • ~r .. I I Atto t'1fa Of, •"t'U b Al"•H•• ,.,,. ,.,,,. •'-•., ~ o-•1Qv1dtt•f\.\} f)•¥t09n11 O.C11110 or 011d 1n OnHtfl+n\1 1J mantr' ~..,..,,Of petel •••• , 1t0<i. 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"• ..... .... ................ , .. , ). = Sale DALES '-Jc r NC;)K~ SHOES&MGS Sollth Coast Aozo Vt1!0Qe ~7 1 •) Q7Q 9 252 Manno PoclflCO VtloQe ~onQ leoch (2 I 3) 598 454 7 BARE TRAPS s1&.97 N#l) UP CANDIES '10.97 AN0 UP SBICCA s14.97,.,., UP 9 WEST $14.97 ANO UP • THE JEWEL CONNECTION Making People Happy Is Our Business 15% OFF ON STERLING SILVER JEWELRY 10% OFF ON CUSTOM DESIGNED DOLLS 20% OFF ON HOLLY HOBBIE JEWELRY PLUS MANY MOii UHl9UE ITEMS GREATlY REDUCED MERCANTILE BLOG. S.C. VILLAGE (714) 557-4052 .. The only glass and crystal store you need to visit" 8§!h ~ca&-' ~~6lmaVmcb (714) 540-4991 Holly Landers Sloneware ANNUAL JULY CLEARANCE COME EARLY -UMTB> SB.ECTION L AMPS ... han d thrown ST O NE WA RE , M ed . Size . LAMPSHADES Med. & Sm., incl. Pleated Burlap. WINE GOBLETS - stoneware -one of a kind. SMALL GIFT ITEMS -Good Sel ec t i on . LARGE WOOD LETIERS -Entire Stock Reg. '1000. SM ALL WOOD LETIERS & House Numbers. ALL SALE ITEMS 1/2 PRICE PH. 556-8165 ' ·~ By O FF E RING JULIETT E PAP E R WAN' FOR THE MONTH OF JULY Located In C.Olten Hair International 979-5851 ~urn -M i ;;}.n1port1 SOlTT'H COAST VILLAGI: (MERCANTILE BUILIJING) San SS on anrstoclced and discantn.d merchandise ~ j I l0°o · 50°0 OFF on selecled qualtty ch1naware gilt sets and plates , I l OFF olt bronwar• 1 l OFF lodlH' bl"OCode col11 I"''"'" Lal"'IJ• RecJ. S 12.00 Sale $6.00 Slftall RecJ. SI 0.00 Sale SS .00 Many 01her gift items on sale at huge savings Shop ear1y lor t>est selection as quantities are sub1ect to stock on hand 556-7944 Natural Grocery South Cout VM'-ge 957-1880 (FOAMERl Y EREWHON) • ~·· . ..... ' ...... • • I ; I Daily Pilat WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1911 SLIM GOURMET C4 SPECIAL DIETS C6 SUPERMARKETSHOPPER CS Cold plums make for refreshing treats on hot days The pleasure of cold plums comes only in the hot summer when California, producer of more than 90 percent of the country's plums, harvests a rainbow of varieties. Put this season 's bumper crop to refreshing use by trying these frosty treats to your lighter summer meals. The Oat Cooky Cup's lacy, crunchy texture con- trasts deliciously with the ice cream filling and fruity plum sauce. The perfect ice cream to spoon into the cooky cups is Homemade Fresh Plum Ice Cream, an exceptionally creamy and "plummy" ice cr eam. Gourmets have dubbed it "the great dessert" after Chinese, Japanese or Indian food . However, if only low-fat desserts are allowed in your diet, Plum Sorbet is brightly colored and richly flavored with plums, creme de cassis and oranges. For a richer frozen dessert, whip up Plum Fresh, a delicious blending of fresh plums and peaches, cream cheese and chopped walnuts. Fresh California plums come in all sizes and col· ors : the blue or purple .. European" varieties are smaller than the bright red, crimson or yellow "Japanese" varieties. Each plum has its own special flavor and quality and that's a wide spectrum of flavors since California ships more than 140 varieties of plums each year. A slightly soft tip end is a sure test of ripeness ; select plums that are full colored for their variety. For example, a Santa Rosa should be purplish-crimson. a Nubiana black-red. Plums not quite ripe when purchased will ripen at home in a loosely closed paper bag or ripening bowl in a few days. When they're ripe, refrigerate them if you don't eat them at once. Ripe plums can quickly turn to overripe plums. Overripe plums make wonderful smoothies (add yogurt), milk shakes (add ice cream) or dozens of other drinks, toppings and sauces. All you need is a blender, halved and pitted plums and for a little varie· ty, spices, citrus peel and sugar. If you're planning to branch out in plum cookiog, you should know what varieties of plums are best for specific cooking techniques. Santa Rosa, Casselman and Queen Ann are best for jams and jellies; El Dorado, Nubiana, Santa Rosa and Queen Ann for can- ning and freezing; Kelsey, Nubiana, Laroda, Queen Ann , El Dorado and President for cakes, pies and tarts; Siroka, Laroda and Santa Rosa for sundae top- pings; Nubiana, El Dorado and Friar for compotes; and Laroda, Nubiana, Queen Ann and El Dorado for salads. Make more of your own frozen finales featuring fresh California summer fruits. Send 25 cents to Frosty Fruits of Summer, P.O. Box 255627, Sacramento, 95865, for an attractive six-page brochure featuring plums. peaches, nectarines and Bartlett pears in a myriad of cooling creations. OAT COOKY CUPS WITH ICE CREAM AND PLUM SAUCE 14 cup sugar 2 tablespoons corn syrup 2 tablespoons butter 1.4 cup quick-cooking oats 11. cup flour Granola, plums and honey make a nutritious break/ ast . . . C7 ... 11. teaspoon cinnamon 1 quart vanilla ice cream Fresh Plum Sauce Add a frosty finale to summer parties with these frozen plum desserts. <See PLUMS, Pa1eCZ> By definition Ice creams and water lees crossed the Atlantic at the lime of the early colonial settlements and were enjoyed throughout that period of American history. The first known advertisement for lee cream appeared in a New York newspaper in the late 1700s. The ftrst ice cream parlor in America also appeared in New York during this era, located on Chatham Street and operated by a Mr. Hall. EVEN GEOaGE Wuhlneton was favorably lmpre11ed by, Hall'• delJ.&btlul "cream lees ' and later bouabt a "cream m1ehlneformaklb1ice." DoUy MedlMn, our fourth first lady, frequently served "cream lcea'' both to friend.a and atate 1ueata. Indeed, it waa Dolly MadllOft ~ dlacarded the term "cream lees'' ln favor of "Ice cream." By 1114, • Baltlaiore dairyman named Jacob ..._.. WH ~f\llly maaulaeturtnc lee cream ln tllrH cltl" Baltimore, Boston and New York -which he sold at an average price of $1.25 per pint. Today, of course, packaged ice creams, sherbets and ices are readily available at reasona- ble prices in any supermarket; lee cream parlors abound, and frozen,refreshments have become almost as traditional and popular as "mom's apple pie." AN ICE, the oldest of the frosen refreshment.a, la simply a frozen mixture of fruit Julee or fruit puree and a sweetener mixed wilh water. Most Ices are atlrred once or twice durtnc the freezing process lo aaaure a smooth-textured yet firm result. A PRAPPE, on tbe other bind, la frozen only to a mUlby puddina-llke con.alatency, and la aerved ln that form, while a 1ranlte la an Ice froaen firm with little 1Urrin1, 10 that the final texture remlinl rou1h and Icy. IC& C&EAM b11lcally la froaa cream wltb ••MUGiDI <•u•u, boney or artificial sweeteners) and fla vorings added -this ls sometimes called Plain or Philadelphia Ice Cream. For an extra rich result. en yolb are added to the basic mixture. producint French or Frozen Custard Ice Cream . In addition, commercial Ice creams often contain stabilizers to improve the creamy con· sistency and lo give the ice cream some resistance to melt· Ing. ICE MILK resembles ice cream but generally contains leas milk fat and total milk solids. PA&FAIT served ln the French style starts wlth a base of bea~ egg.a into which a bot, cooked syrup la beaten. Fruit.a aad whipped cream are then folded ln, and the parfait ia lroaen in a mold without stir· rlnc. An Amerlc1n parfait. however, con.alat.a of aJtemaUn1 layen ol Ice cream and fruit, sherbet, Jam or 11uce1 piled bllh In tall narrow 1la11ea1 called parfait 1luae1, ofteJl topped wttb whipped cream and garnished with nuts or a maruchlno cherry, or both. SHEUE1' ls a popular frozen refreshment that la made from a mixture of fruit or fruit Juices, water and sweetenen, to wbJcb milk, beaten en whltea and gelatin are often added. Sherbets are amoothtat If atirred once or twice durlnc the freainl procea. And ln 1eaeral, they contain fewer calories thu ,.. tular lee cream. A comblnatJon Frozen refreshments are ~ popular as apple pie. or various fruit juices or flavors . In one sherbet ls now called a sorbet, although sorbet was originally used to describe a water lee mixed or flavored with wines or 1plr\ts. MOUSSE is the name of a mouthwaterlnc frozen refresh· ment made ot fruits or navor· in1s folded into sweetened wblpped cream or thin cream and gelatin, then frozen ln a mold without stirring. If a s pherical or conlcal-ahaped mold is used, and a layer or ice cream lines the mold, a mousse becomes a bombe. .~aOZEN YOGURT, a new en· try In the frozen refreshment re· pertolre, ls similar to lee rnUlt or sherbet but its maJn lnfredient ls. of course, yo1urt rather than milk Naturally, it has a tancY yoaurt navor """"'-:-:--""'"'.""""' ___________ ,_,_._..... ____ .._. _______________________ ----------------------- I 4 ·. * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 • • • Plu,,-is make refreshing treats (From Page Cl) For Cooky Cups, combine sugar, com syrup and butter in saucepan. Bring to boil over medium heat, stirring constantly. Remove from beat; stir in oats nour and cinnamon. Drop batter by slightly rounded tablespoonfuls, about 6 inches apart on lightly greased baking sheet. Bake in a 375-degree oven tor 7 to 9 minutes or until edges are Ught brown. Remove from oven and let stand on pan 1 to 2 minutes, until firm but still slightly pliable. Lift with spatula and drape each over inverted 4-lnch d.iameter bowl or cup, molding gently around outside of bowl. Let cool. Store in airtight container until ready to serve. To serve, scoop lee cream into Cooky Cups. Spoon Fresh Plum Sauce over. Makes 4 or 5 servings. FRESH PLUM SAUCE Combine 1 cup sliced fresh plums (about 2 medium plums), Y.t cup orange juice, Y.s cup sugar and 2 teas- poons cornstarch in saucepan. Cook over medium-high heat, stirring constantly until mixture comes to a boil. ' Boil uncovered for 1 minute without stirring. Remove from heat. Stir in 1·tablespoon brandy (optional). Cool. Makes 1 \'3 cups. HOMEMADE FRF.SH PLUM ICE CREAM 4 cups quartered fresh plums, pitted 2 cups milk 5 eggs, separated 21A cups sugar 2 cups whipping cream 1 tablespoon vanilla 1/4 teas~n salt Careful handling About 10 pounds cracked or crushed ice 1 ~ to 2 cups rock salt. Puree 3 cups quartered plums in electric blender. Stir in milk ; set mixture aside. Finely chop remaining 1 cup plums and add to pJum·milk mixture. In a large mixing bowl, beat egg yol.Jts with 2 cups sugar until thick. Reduce speed of mixer and slowly beat in cream, vanilla and saJt. Pour into 1-aallon ice cream If you'r e planning to branch out in pl um cooking, you ·should know w hat v arieties of plums are best for specific cooking techniques. cannister. Mix in plum-milk mixture. Using clean beaters and bowl, whip egg whites until stiff, gradually beating in remaining v. cup sugar. Fold egg whites into ice cream mixture. Insert dasher and assemble freezer. Layer 2 to 3 inches of ice in bucket around can- nister. SprinkJe with 3 tablespoons rock salt. Continue layering ice and salt until bucket is filled . Chum 20 to 30 minutes or until ice cream is softly frozen. Rinse outside of cannister, remove dasher and put cannister in freezer compartment of refrigerator or spoon ice cream into plastic freezer containers. Freeze until firm. Makes approximately 1 gallon. essential Cleanliness during f ood pr eparation thwarts bacteria toxins reach high enough levels to cause illness. The longer food lingers at a comfortably warm temperature, the greater the opportunity for bacteria to multiply. PLUM SORBET 1 pound fresh plums, pitted l"' cups orange juice 1 cup water ~cup sugar V.. cup Creme de Cassis or sherry ~ teaspoon grated orange peel Combine plums, orange juice, water and sugar in a saucepan. Bring to boil, reduce heat and simmer un· covered until plums are tender, approximately 10 minutes. Cool. Puree mixture in electric blender or press through a fine-meshed sieve. Stir in Creme de Cassis and orange peel. Pour into 13-x 9-inch metal pan. Cover and freeze about 2 hours or until frozen 2 in· ches in from sides. Tum into electric mixer bowl and beat until smooth. Cover and return to freezer. Repeat procedure one more time, then freeze until solid. To serve, let soften for a while before spooning into dessert dishes. Makes 1 quart (4 to 6 servings). PLUM FR ESH 2 cups cut up fresh plums :Y.. cup sugar 2 packages (3 counces each) cream cheese 1 cup finely chopped fresh peaches (about l large peach) l/:J cup finely chopped walnuts Combine l lf.i cups plums with sugar and cream cheese in electric blender. Whirl until s mooth . Finely chop remaining Y'i cup plums. Stir into blended mixture along with peach and walnuts. Turn into freezer con· tainer. Freeze until firm. To serve, scoop into individual dessert dishes. Top with whipped cream and fresh plum slices if desired. Makes 6 servings (31t'i cups>. When the pleasures of a leisurely picnic are spoiled by a bout or food poisoning, sick pie· nickers are quick to blame the food. Seldom do they realize that the cause of the sickness is more often the handling of the food rather than the food itself. These micro · organisms can be transferred from un· clean work surfaces, utensils ·or ingredients to picnic salads or sandwiches. So cleanli· ness during preparation is an essential factor in reducing bacterial growth. Scrub hands and all work surfaces and utensils well before preparation begins and then, to reduce the likelihood of cross· contamination, scrub between uses. So cooked ingredients like chicken, potatoes and ham should be refrigerated as soon as they stop steaming. <Allowing food to cool to room temperature before refrigerating en· courages bacterial growth.) tu"res during initial preparation rather than waiting until the last minute. The acid con· tent of homemade mayonnaise may be too low to create compara· ble protection. -------AIOUT --------· AIOUT Take mayonnaise in salad mixtures. for ex· ample. Contrary to what many people think, the salt, vinegar and lemon juice in commercially made real mayonnaise actually aid in protect· ing foods against the growth or food poisoning organisms by creating an acid·s alt environ· ment. The r e al cu lprits are certain bacteria I microorganisms) that have had a chance to grow and multiply in the food until they and their Bacteria that are present can multiply to dangerous levels if given the right condi· tioos -principally, tem · peratures between 60 and 125 degrees F and a neutral (not acid) en· vironment. Refrigerator·chill all perishable food before packing and transport it to the /icnic in an in· sulate container. 1f the re's room in the refrigerator, chill the container, too. Because a neutral en· vironment provides a beUer growing medium for bacteria than one that is acid, add com· mercial mayonnaise to salad and sandwich mix· PEOPLE COUNT ON US EVERY DAY FOR: Coupon Sav ings, Complete St ocks, Local News and Sports, and Advertised Values. READING ENJOYMENT'7 DAYS A WEEK .. lnthe,...,l'llt ' ,, At the picnic site, keep food out of direct sun. To reduce trafftc in and out of the picnic container, pack foods to be eaten first at the top of the container. 1$199GREAT I 9 DINNER () ·~~99ol~:1:I z 0 Cl. ::> 0 u Don't be tempted to carry home leftovers. Bacterial growth is not always signaled by ob· vious changes in color, taste or odor, so plan to discard food that bas stood out for several hours. When next planning a picnic, remember the basics: scrub, chill and insulate. And don't hold the mayo. 0 c Good tor three pieces ol juicy, golden brown Kentucky -o Fried Chicken, plus alngle aervlng1 ol cole slew. mashed 0 p0t1toe1 1nd gravy, al\d a roll. Limit two offers per Z purchaM. Coupon good only tor combination wh1te/d1rk I 0tdera. Customer paya all aPQllcat>te ulea tu 020 Good tor none pieces ol 1u1cy. golden brown Kentucky Fried Chicken. with lour rolls, a terge cote slaw, a l11ge mashed po111oes a~d a medium gravy. Limit two offars per purchase Coup0n good only tor combln1tlon white/ dark orders Customer pays 111 1ppltcable aatea taa Oller expires July 19, 1981 P"ces may v1ry 11 par 11c1p111ng loc111ons Good only on southern Ca1otorn11 where you see tile Ch•cken Sandwich W'"dow Binner 1at1:1 NESK IOHElESS I · s59s STEAKS ~ l.69 SALMON FILETS •. 10~ SWHTTASTY SANTA ROSA PLUMS MEDIUM SIZE 39c •. ORANGES I 9c •. NESH PICKED GREEM BEAMS 39c •. HONEYDEW MELONS 29c •. LOCAL &ROWH PICKU• CUCUMBERS 29c .. CWe cwry dll ....-> MISHrtCKED CARROTS • •.c• GROUND BEEF 98c •. FRESH SHARK s I 9~. MAllMATID BAKERY CH~C.K STEAKS 5 I 0Z. Freshly lab el IR ttw o•tM of Califontla Ra.ch ~ IAHAHA aot·1ss PORK ROAST canacur PORK CHOPS TOP SIRLOIN STEAKS MAllHA TIO IEEF BACK RIBS FLANK STEAKS MAllHATED K-BOBS T-IOHE & PORTllHOUSE STEAKS .··a·,1··:·1 UYIMAIMI NUT LOAF s I 79 STREU SAL s I 1,t. COFFEE CAKE PRUHE. IRAH & ILUEIHRY MUFFINS 5 ~ s I oo s3oz. 89 WHEAT BREAD c 1•1~MI SWISS CHEESE Slc•d s3 29 •· OUROWH . s I 98 ROAST BEEF .. Cooked°" Ow,.......... IOILED I lb. loaf s32z. HAM s21: ------- POTATO SALAD LOBSTER . T ......... IYe wwe wtl s59s ••• .............. BEEF STEW .._tH..t&W ,...,... ..... ,... ...... • mu SWHT SHDLISS RISH Rm GRAPES 49c.. SALMON STEAKs'49!. IOASTID&SALTID GROCERY f--siHfoicifliiis ___ l CASHEW PIECES527i CELER 29c 1 · COUPON 1 . y ... 11 I MOMDAYTH•W9NISDAY I ALTAOIMACATlllMG HIW CROP WHtll 1051 I •"4 My ... 14 & .. .., I ICE CREAM s I !~ POTATOES I 9c .. I s1oo OFFAMY I MtCHILOI s219 .,.. ... ,...,...... 1 _'JJ; .... m.J!UJlCHASEJ BEER ,, .. ACIOSS FIOM l.-MAIT, MAGNOUA AT GAlfBI 714-f6M212 Huntin~on Beach £a:QIO' owrMd Ir aa.omatl STOii HDtllSc ::.~: SUN.l·~ I \I • produce meal .. ,.. .•. . to1111I011 ..,. .... Mef lca~ .,,. ""' ... ,..... S9t. ..... ----49t. ·~k o• ~,.! ffff~ ~+ ,,.. .. s •· .. .. .. .... $'195 shark ~71•. lleef pilliel IOI ht 1111111 I~ .. *1 98 I~. ........... IMilf ,,_ ~ $100 dlrfl4 $189 nd ~ ... L ... 11111• -.llllh ., , ... ,., chicken hreallt '· sa an *298 Ht . ....... , ..... ,. •• ,.,..,. .. ,... 79+ gante hens *149 ""' grlfle A 1991 •••• 1 ~ of L el 1 •· haHbut steaks ........ • •• .,. *145 *398 I~. rH onions 251 • •lfftre.t ,,..., ............ "'• i•. · hindquarters *165 ntahl ntahl I •lfflrelt frHzer p11b ft •••••• fn• 1•· ..... ,. •.. ,.. valenell Julee °""" 6 ..... ~oo __ __;;;;,..._ .... .,,,... 11111hroom1 ...... .. ,. ..... , • •. •• $44 981. lflW ..., .... S.tt "" 9 $119 •••·• t ... •· al Mend oH ,... us "" *239 .. ,.. .,. vitamins ............. ·•··• •II .... I t1. "I· uo talad drmlng tt 11. 1111 $127 Grk tinning lollon ..i. *279 IM•ptt•'• ...._ " ti ..... ., .• ,. •• ,. pemftlllt nu raisins ,... u1 "" ~24 outlle Mp "I· S.00 ~le $966 "'911ftl ' ::.~:::., t61 ... ..,.,. *989 hre1d ... u ti. "" 69• ,.... ......... ,. ...... ,. •. ,.,.,,. .... . ~ ._ ... LI.la ti .... $181 llrl ... 6 •· =-;;_:;·7 .. ..:" . arliohoke hearll .... 89• ~ t'IS _.... c .... l61 ... ~ bakery tap ••Illy "I· l.6t I•. •rwolone eh... ..,, *3 29 -----I~. 111 .. "' •••• turkey hreast ,... 4.49 1•. ..1, *398 I~. coleslaw •••• 1rtt• ••u.. "I· t.ff t•. 1111 98 ~ _'"---I~. ..,.,... .,..., hMrff Oheelt "I· UI 1•. 1111 *31~ ... ••NHllll 1ttt• 11r1 fro• the INhtt ,. ... ••Hy ................ , .. "' , ..... ,, 11llhr1ll . •••• 11 ... try ~ •lfftrtlllt . ...... ""·· .... ... 6ll-4404 t4111.,.,. ....... ...tast ............. ,,. ...tm \. ............... ' •·•··• ~··· ---~-------~~--------~-------.--..-------~~ -----------------_________ _.._._.._ ..... _._._ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday. July 8. 1981 Real culprit in rice salad is fat, not starch By BARBARA 2 cans (6~ ounces Combine peas and ollvea 2 teatpoona fresh OalENTA.L CIDCKEN 5 tableapoona low· GIBBONS each ) waler-packed water in a saucepan. SLIM GOURMET ltableapoonralaina thyme (or v. teaspoon ANDaJCESALAD calorie mayonnalae H you like potato or tuna, undrained. Oa.ked Heat lo boillna. Remove Sall or 1arlic .aall drted thyme) 1 cup diced white &,A, cup plain low.fat macaroni salad, you'll 2 c ups diagonally from heal and 1Ur in the and pepper Optional~ a few bay meat chicken, cooked yo1urt probably like rice salad , sliced celery rice. Cover and allow to with tomato wedaea. il 1 larae vine·rlpe leaves 3 lableapoona aoy Optional : 1 cup too. Rice salad needn't 4 tablespoons sliced cool. Combine with re-desired. tomato, cul in wedaes Combine salad lngre· sauce alfalfa sprouts be avoided because it's Spanish green olives main~ lns:redlents ex· TUa&ISll COLD 1 tablespoon pine dlenta, except tomato V.. teaspoon 1inger Stir chicken with soy starchy. The real culprit 1 red bell pepper, cept botUed salad dreaa-PILAF SAIAD nut• ( Pt1nollaa) or and nwa. 'Add drea1ln1 1 cup fresh (or sauce and 1in1er. Cover you need to avoid is fat seeded, thinly sliced in g . Ch 111 in t be 2 cups cold cooked silvered almonds i n1redlenta and mix frozen) peu and refirgerate. Com· in the form of oil or 1 red onion, th.inly refrigerator. Stir in rice (plain, or cooked Dreuln1: well. Marinate in the 1 cup water bine peas and water ln a mayonnaise. Today, 1 sliced, (or Va cup sliced salad dre11lng Just with lbayleal) . Z tablespoons olive refrigerator several lcupinatantrice saucepan and ·heat to s ha re some super · scallions> before serving; add salt 1 small red onion, oil hours. Arrance on bed! 1 cup diagonally boiling. Remove from speedy tips ror making If• cup olive liquid and peppe r to taste. mlnced , 3 tablespoon• olive of lettuce and garnish sliced celery heat and stir in rice. s avory rice salads the Cfrom jar of olives) Makes six luncheon·slse 1 bell pepper, diced liquid (froin the con-with tomatoes and nuts. &,A, cup a 11 c e d Cover and allow lo cool. Slim Gourmet way. Y:i cup bottled low-servings, 225 calories 2 tablespoon• talnerofoUvea) Makes 8 servings, ap· scallions Stir in remaining lngre· TUNA RICE SALAD calorie Italia n salad each. Arranie on beda minced fresh parsley 3 llbleapoona lemon proximately 100 calories \4 cup diced red or dienta <except sprouts) 1 c up fresh (o r 1_d_r_e_s_si_n~g-·~~~~~~-of~l_et_tu_c_e~a_n_d_;;;;g_a_rn_l_sh~~~8_t_o __ 8~p~i_tt_ed __ b_l_a_ck __ ~J~u_lc_e __________ ~~~e_a_c_h .~~~~~~~~g_re_e_n_be~U_pe~p_pe_r __ ~~~an~d_c_hlll __ . __________ _ frozen) pe:tS l "7 cups water l 11'z cups instant rice Co oking classes set at fair Ice carving, Chinese stir frying, microwave cooking, Italian cui sine and bread.making are among l'echniques to be demonstrated in the Gourmet Gallery at the Orange County Fair which opens Friday in Costa Mesa for a nine· day run. Culinary artists from throughou t Oran ge County will be on hand al 1 30. 3 30, 4 and 5.30 p .m dally 1n t h e gallery, which is part of the Home Arts Depart ment Laguna Reach resi· dent Ka y Pastorius will lead off the cooking dem o n s trat1on~ at 1 30 p m f'nday by showing how lo master Chinese stir frying. She"ll be followed at 3 :30 pm Friday by Car yl Gonzales of Ha· c1enda Heights who will COOKING WITH CL ASS feature "Mi crowave Cooking with Waves of the r'uturc .. ON S AT U RDAY , "We ight Watcher Menus · wall be dem· onstrated at l 30 p.m. hy Sue Be1gbeder . ··Scandinavia n Christmas Spec1alt1es" will be featured at 3·30 p. m by Laurie Ennen and ice carving will be demonstrated at 5 30 p.m by Mark Oaukas Sunday's schedule m- cludes ··Gourmet Cook · ing" at 1:30 p.m. by members of the Orange Empire Chef's Associa- tion, "Art1 st1c Cake Decorating from the Daily Bread" at 3:30 p. m by Charles Fin· negan and ice carving by Daukas at 5:30 pm.- Shelly Wellans will show how lo cook for one or I wo persons al l : 30 p.m Mondav followed hy an Italian cooking demonstration al 3 30 p.m by Janet Fiala ON TUESDAY, there will be a lemon pie and orange cake contest at I . 30 pm and a dem· o n s trat1on ca lled "Fall Baking with Bridgford Frozen Breads" at 4 p m by Sharyl lleavins. Next Wednesday's schedule includes a 1. 30 p.m. demonstration on Cillo dough appetizers by Ms. Pastorius and a 3:30 p. m session on Southern cooking by Ann Bryan. Thursday. July 16, a salad-making contest will be held at 1:30 p.m. and Ms. Heavins will re· peat her baking dem· onstration at 4 p.m. Friday , Jul y 17, gourmet recipes will be demonstrated by Vince Paris at 1·30 p. m. and "Cooking for One or Two" will be the subject of Shelly Wellins' 3:30 p.m. session. SATURDAY, July 18, Vi nce Paris wiU dem - onstrate gourmet rec· ipes at 1:30 p.m., Sue Beigbeder wtll tell about "Weight Wateher Menus" at 3:30 p.m. and Mark Daukas will dem. onstrate Ice carvlnit at 5:30 p.m. Sunday, July 19, Bon· nie Heather of trvlne will demonstrate "Specialties from the Three.Star Restaurants of France at 1:30 p.m ., Caryl Gonules •W dia- cuu "Microwave Cook· in1 wit.h Wavea of lb• Future" at 3.30 p.m. and Oauku wlli do more Ice carvln1 at ~:30 p.m. Selection AValue ... that's Ral USDA Choice Beef Chuck New Zealand Family Steak Granny Smith Apples 2!~ .5 9 ~ USDA Choice Mix or Match Lake To Lake Beef Chuck-Blade Cut Red . Black or Green From Wisconsin Chuck Sweat Juicy Sharp Chadda Orange Stea k Pl ums Cheese Ju ice Limit 6 Cans per per 6oz. lb~ lb. 29 can I I I I • 9 oz • . . • . .pkg. • Beef Ralphs Frozen-8" Ra~hs PLllNWRAP. Imported English w/ prayer Ball Park Egg N' Honey Pepperoni Beefeater Hamburger Window Franks 169 1 lb. ...... Buns .59 ~ .c::i: ... ... .... "" . :::.:: . ,,., .. ': ·~;= ... .. -· ·-,,., ... ... ,.,, . :!=~ ..• ,,. .. , ... . ,. .. .,. ...... ,. .... ··~ --··- :H3~ .... ,... . =~~ i; . ..... ... .. , ~ ... ,;: Pilla Gin Helper Cleaner .99 :. 86t, • btl. .89 ~ . . 88 s. Prlce1 Effective July I thru July 15, 1981 ~copyright, 1111 by .. ..,.. Grocery Compenr. AH Rlghta R ... rftd. We NMrY• the right to Hmlt or ,..... ..... to commerclet ct.eleracwwhOletelera. h•lftte , ..... to P'"lew ..-•• ,_..,... pttce, or ._--:.C: to lnfflel pt1oe ~ ••~• o4 _,..,., .. d or prMtOtleMf Adwdead ....,_In INe ..t .. ..__ ..._.,. ... .,....., 1n .. ......., flTtoee...., .__ ~r ....-. mar • .,., •• , ......... -..~ ooet .................... ...... -~---=----.. ;-·--. ... ,,...,.. "!'.! ~IW 1•-.-.1 ·-·· _, .. 411ll9.---~•tMl•IUCI ...... .ll9M9I R If • -. .Uln 1JI R... c• 1111 A I U 1-. ._......, . 11C11l Mt t I, w1•e --··-N-- • ' I . I I .... ·---·-- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8. 1981 ca Pl11m good beverages Here are l w <> H Ea B ED PL u M off excesa water. Com· ed herb syrup. Fill Tall ref res b in a Plum COOLER bine with 1 cup water, glass«s (10 to 12-ounce desserts. 2 (2·incb) sprigs sugar and salt ln small size>% fuU with crushed SPICED PLUMADE fresh mint saucepan. Bring to boil· ice. Add about \.'J cup 2 cups water t (2·inc h ) sprig ing, reduce heat and plum base to each and v. cup suaar fresh basil or tarragon si mmer 5 m inut es. top with club soda. Stir 3 sticks cinnamon l cup water Remove from heat, cov· gently. Decorate with 2 teaspoons whole % cup sugar e r a nd let stand until herb sprigs. Makes 3\.'J allspice ~teaspoon sail cold. Strain syrup and cups plum base, s uffi· 1 teaspoon whole 6 fresh plums ( 1 discard h erbs. Slice dent for 6 to 8 servings. cloves pound) plums from pits t o Variation : Add 2 'h t e a s P o on V. cup lemon juice measure 2\.'J cups and ounces ( v. cup) chiUed c a rd am o m see d s • Finely crushed ice turn into bl ender jar or rose wine to each 12· crushed Chilled club soda food processor. Cover ounce glass of ice and 6 fresh plums < 1 Herb sprigs for and process smooth to plum base. Top with pound> decoration make 2 cups puree. Stir c I u b s od a and stir Spiced Plumade , Coconut Plum Cooler and Herbed Plum Cooler ore re/reahing summer bever~•· 'h cup water Rinse herbs and shake ·in lemon juice and cool· gently V. cup undiluted .~_::.:.:::.::..::..=~=-.:.:..:.:.:.:.:_..::.:.:.....:.:.=:.::::...::=:.::....:.:::.:....:.:..:::..:__:.:..:.:...~~~~~~~~~~-=====~-==-.:::..=========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- frozen lemonade concen· tr ate Finely crushed ice Chilled club soda Plum wedges for decoration Combine water, sugar and spicea in saucepan. Bring to a boil, reduce heat and s immer 10 minutes. Remove from heat, cover and let stand until cool. Strain out and disca rd spices. Slice p lums fro m pits to measure 2'h cups and turn fruit into blender jar or food processor. Cover a nd process smooth to make 2 cups puree. Combine puree with spiced syrup, water and lemonade concen· trate. Cover and chill until ready to use. Fill 12-ounce glasses ~ full with crushed ice. Add about 'h cup plum base to each and top with club soda. Stir gently. Decorate with plum wedges. Makes 4 cups spiced plum base, suffi · cient for 8 servings. COCONUT PLUM COOLER 3 medium-size fres h plums 11'.l c u p c a n n e d cream of coconut 1h cup milk• 2 tablespoons lemon juice 2 cups ice cubes Mint sprigs for de· co ration Slice plums from pits to measure 1 1/• cups . Turn into blender jar and process smooth to make 1 cup puree. Add all r emaining in~re · dients, cover and proc- ess smooth. Pour into chilled serving glasses Decorate with m int sprigs. Makes 3112 cups plum base, s ufficient for 4 servings. Note :To prepare In food processor, s ub· stitute 2 cups coarsely c rus hed ice for ice cubes . •can substitute low. fat milk. Spiced yogurt Iced and Spiced Plum Yogurt is a revitalizing and refreshing sum · mertime treat. Made with plain yogurt . a pound o f fr es h California plums and a choice of spices, this frozen plum yogurt can be substituted for ice cream in your favorite milk shake, soda or sun- dae recipe. ICED AND SPICED PLUM YOGURT 1 pound fresh plums (about 6 medium), thin· ly sli ced 1 cup sugar Y• teaspoon allspice, cinnamon or nutmeg 1 quart plain yogurt Stir plums, sugar and spice in heavy saucepan over low heat until juices flow. Bring to boil, stirring: then sim· mer 10 to 15 minutes, stirring occasionally un- til plums are lender and s auce has thic ke ned s lightly. Cool. Stir in yogurt. Chum freeze in band crank or electric ice cream maker follow- ing manufacturer's in· structions. Serve al on· ce. Or, freeze firm and let stand at room tern· perature 15 to 20 minutes before servinJ. Makes about l 'AI quarts. VIENNESE PLUM CAKE For an easy version of the summertime favorite plum cake, add a lllUe. su1ar lO your ravortte biscuit recipe and spreed the douCb In • abaUow baklnl pan. Spread top with IClft but· ter and CO¥er wtUt Ilic.cl frHb pluma. Sprlnlde witb clnnamoD·M1ar an4 bake ID a model'aa. 17 bot OTID N to 40 mlnut•. S.rve warm wiUl a lpocd\aJ OI lee cream. 100 FREE TRIPS PLUS YOliS DOUBLE COUPOliS \I I I \-, 1r1 \\1'1llf Ii PRODUCE \\Wf(' "'°""0 Fresh Brown Onions Lii .33 ~f'\Jl'<l'ITOfOCX» [A . 10 Fresh Umes onic" T'( "Vl\<Olt F~ah Ii.Ian Squash l 9 .39 ~ CAUi'°""' . 29 Hua Avocados [A ~"""' .69 Large Mangoes [A '°""~DIS>< .49 YeltowChll l9 •r<HPOT Blooming~ ~.99 MEATS TNIU'lll'OCll!IU~-CV<T'l!''l.._COT 139 Chuck Stuks or Roaall le IAllll t\M"C K{{CHUCll 1 98 Bonelesa Famlly Stuka 1.a t::J:,~t~-o~. } 99 1-.l ¥!0 M.o-llCUOOaoo.tl.US 2 59 Slrloan T1p Staka 1.11 ~e,obeSt.uka t.a 259 ~"'4."' P""'-C>Oal'IOT UCC(O US'• I 184 LHn Oround Bur Patttu1.1 UI J 15 UI 119 I.II 119 UU ClllOW!'l--'*""'llell. t!4IO* lllltAsT 1 2 3 Combo Chicken Pik'*1119"" UI P'r:i.~~anu; UI 169 179 SWEET & JUICY ~-39 UMIT &Ibo (Purdw-~ llml '"II pnct lb .89) DELICATESSEN l.HU '"'"' ,.<t<X.£ QQ •'Al.Yr.\ Claussen Kosher Pk:klu llf.Jl , .... 69 j6-0/ (f°'I Jerseymald Sour Crum i&OI ;•• • llllllClitf.~ Bob s Salad Dressings 110UNC1 O/IMU.T Wlf"'£11\ Hof'fy Beef Franks ••Ol ""'" <;4.IC£D-Oll~r Vons Beef Bologna }09 .89 .89 139 159 }69 l:l#Jli:I B1•JWi1•4 l~ -ll(C-UOOE.-!P!Cl 121 Mennen Speed Stick Deod. ~=~·euce H*Cob 2 88 399 199 Ml:0@=--1 :t.1i•I•l •) ~lmons;.ka l8 2 99 ~~f'llet U1 179 s::. Sole;.... U1 2 89 l i:.t•t'i~li(•I•l•~ ... }79 .73 .79 LIQUOR '"'""-'lli'U" Paul Masson Rhine Cast.le .... , ... fk·~» SmlmolfVodka 1; '"-""1' 1P4' " Pabst Beer 't•A\ \~'''"'~ Chateau La Salle I 1\1 lft M Seagram's 7 Crown Vt'-"."""'''.,,.°"""' 5CUCfl r"! Chardonnay Wine 259 999 349 299 ] ) 99 269 1} 99 HOT BAKERY VONS BAKERY ~T~o-~ 169 o~~'B..ct .85 ~Oum Pound c.he 1 Ol ~~. .92 ,-----------------------------------~ , .. vw ..... vw vw vw ... vw vw ........ -........ •I •332 I• !I DOUBLE COUPON 1! : I Ptaent 11\la coupon along wkh any one manufoctum s "cents<lff coupon 1: and get dout* the ao111ngt from Vons Nee '° lrdJde ~. free C<lUpelM, coupons greeeer lheo one dollar or ex«ed the VII~ ol the item : I Umll Ofl• coupon per ,,..,,.,,IK't..,...·1 coupon ond lmlt 4 coupon1 pct 1: 'I cut1omtt. bc.ludln9 lqUOf. to4>ec:co 01 fluid mlk pn>clucta. I'· I Coupon OOod July 9 to J~ I !I. 1981. I ~~ !!'!~~!"!.!'!'-~-~-~W?'!.~?!'!~~~.!'!'-~~ .-......................................... . i: ooasu~'CoaPoN :1 I Praent this coupon along With any one manufactu~r·s "centt<lff coupon I 11 and get double the tavlngs from Vons. Nee '° lndude ~. free coupoN. : coupons grellCef tl\lll\ one dollar or eiccffd the val~ ol the Item : I Umll OM coupon pcr menulKturer't coupon ond lmll 4 COl>f'O"I pcr I: 'I cuatomtt. bdudlrl9 lc!-. toO.«o 01 flu:ld,,... producU. I' I c-OOod .1u1y 9 10 Ju~ "· 1981. I . ............................................... . r-----------------------------------4 ..................................................... i::, _ ~ P2~1!!-~'S22!?.9-!:!. ... _,_ 11!. and get double the savings from Vons Not '° ~ retailer. free coucions. roupons gl'elllef lhan one dollar or exceed the va~ ol the item II u.n. °"'coupon pcr rNnUllK't....,.01 coupon -llmll 4 couporu pci 1: 'I cutlomct fAdudlnt lqUOf. tobKco OI _., ,,.. p<Oducta. I' I Coupon OOod .1u1y 9 to Jul)' 1!1. 1911 I ......................... -..................... . ·-----------------------------------~ ................................................. i: DO(JBli'CoaPON :1 I PreHnt this C«JPOO along With ¥'<Y one maoulecturer s .. «nta-oll' coupon I' 11 aod get dout* the savings from Vons Not to ndude reuier. free ~ 1 I c:o..apori. ~then one dollar or excttd the V11lue ol the Item 1 1 I Um• ono coupon p11 ,,..,..,{.ctw~•• coupon -lmll 4 c_. ~ I 1 'I CutlOM<t ucNdlng lq-. lolle«O Of"""' .... P<oducU. • I' I Coupon OOod Jill)' 9 to .1u1y "· 1981. I ...................... -........................... . ------------------------------------· ' CAT FOOD 6 I 20Z CAMS-...SSTO F\.VRS U'llT 6 IF'urcNM a.« lmlt'f'09 pnce .371 GROCERIES GROCERIES 11 l.11 II Tl II,.. tJOOl OR ()IW..:;f Gatorade tlOUI<[ !IONU rf'IU"l' Hollywood Dressing VOU~I \A,.. Nestle Chocolate Qulk li'~)f't4 t J"R Vons Coffee Creamer NtAlt'fl ( t -""" PIJRP\.[ Oregon Tran Plums .59 110 157 275 147 .49 JO ?/""'I ~.,.. Uboys Fruit Cocktail !f-Ol llTI. llf.Cl l..EMO' uystal wtUte Uq. Det • <l()()(J!'t(t 'IP.· POWOCllUJ Clorox 2" Bleach <IOCOUHT '"CIVoGt Vons Toddler Diapers 1 0 0 FREE 'l'RIPS PLOS l 00 FREE SHOPINQ SPREES WUOU!ll9 WIU. HAY AT 11UI S a.Aft n.utc:J8CO HOUDA Y llOl8 ·Ooklen ~ •UMoft~ ·Coo-•doft ·n.henMn • c..t. WMlf ·"'-doll DWtkt VOft8 WIHHW WWII lllA110NAL BRTAI. CAM You deMrW MadcwW IHientlon .79 .89 ] 26 )43 .78 499 .U:...~'"° ~oow~o 129 \'~.Mee .79 ;:~c:;.:. .93 8Allll10NIDIUGHTATaBU:CTDSl'Om ,_ IPl'tCTM ..... f*O .._ M.Ye 1'0111.Y I!.. 1•1.tMA.(JIJ)n.1•.oaUXAl"IOll OI •TOM~ l'OIL "°TAU. -Niii 'M:ll" nte 116 ~AT"'°"" UM W. "°" It. I.Ct N009.a. IMW l'IClO k llO. lO. ...... 1'11 ._""'Ito t.0t _.._._,_-............_ tiunttngto" IHch St22 !dln .. r I l_.rtr19dele Co1taMe11 ttS t 17th lttH! inf Oran .. Awe M.O 111 ISTM. QQNmTD oi..• "'°9T r"*8 Of9I I NA n>....-n l ~I'll A~ Hufttlngton •••ch lrvlne Hunttngton •••ch 210H 1 .. ch Blwd. 181 Atta"'• 47)0 leffanca llld. S1n Juan C•ptllrano :92051 Cemll'O C.ol•tr•M & DelOttlapo • '°""' .. " .., .... , 11101 "-"*. ~ CapltltflM hed\ 3401 t Oo"•ny 9'ef'll 0.. I Ytctott• F....e•v.-.y 111M ••lfll••• & Ta~ 1 .............. 24941 Mae ....... ,. "°" j 2 2 2 222222 22ssss a sass ssssss 0 4 socs •••• 0 ·-·-• qt . ······----· • Orange Coast DAJL Y PILOT /Wednesday, July 8, 1981 Drastic weight loss said primary sympton to • anorexia nervosa B1 JUNE aore that this oondiUoo wu that anything la wron1. Anorexia Nervose Ls a once considered to be a 0 n t e they de v el o P aogerous eatinc dis-rare disease, but ia now Anorexia Nervosa, they rder that a ffects ret:otnbed aa being lose touch wU.h any no- bouaands of young widespread and definite-tion of aiio or welcbt," merlcan women and ly on the increase. Felnsteln explained. me young men each According lo Dr. Other symptoms may be ear. Sherman Feinstein, a excessive exercise, The most obvious member of the ANAD sleep disturbance and ymptom is a drastic Advisory Board, anorec· c es sat ion o r the oss of weight, and un-tics can lose 30 to .0 per-menstrual period in ess the illness is detect· ce nt of their body women. early it aa lead to weight. The condition is suffi· if e -loog problems or For example, a 110-ciently alarming to even early death. pound woman drops her cause parents to be alert The sight and smell of weight to 70 pounds. but when their teen-age food becomes repulsive has no recognition that children go on crash to those who suffer this she is too thin. diets or fad diets to lose illness. with the result __ .. _T_h-'--e,,,_y_h_a_v-'-e_n_o_no_t_io_n_w_ei~g_h_t _in_a _h_ur_r_y_. _ that e maciation sets in , SPECIAL DIETS Weiaht goes onto the body over a long period of lime and should come off the body in the same way to prevent biochemical disturbance and psychological damage. A one-lo-two-pound loss or weight is con- sidered to be a s afe amount to lose each week. When the weight goal 1s reached slowly it is more apt to remain lhere 1s a marked dry ness or skin and hair and •the pallor reflects the malnutrition effects or starvation. These symptoms are :accompanied with personality changes that include withdrawal from Lower I friends and family, in· creased compulsiveness and striving for perfec- tion. ··Anorexia Nervosa may very weU be a s ub· v ariant of major depress ive disordeu, and therefore s hould be treated with respect to lhe depressive complica· tions," said St. Louis psychiatrist Gar r y Vickar. Medical doctors are uncertain as to whelher Anorexia Nervosa is a consequence or im · balanced rigid dieting fo r weight loss or whether it 1s contribul· mg to it. Vickar said , "Studies suggest that Anorexia Nervosa JS a resuJt or a distorted sense or body image and a dis torted perception or stomach ,fullness. The palient per ceives a s ense or satiety with very little food. and therefore slips into practices that cause malnutrition." Informatio n rrom ANAD (Anorexia '. 'Nervosa and Associated D i s orders, In c ., Northfield, Ill.> reveals Chili cooks get ready · Ch1lt cooks are ready ing their recipes ror the a nnual South Orange r ounty Chili Cook-orr. according lo Roger La r sen of the Sad- d l e back Valley Ex l hange Club. This year's cook-off 1s '>el ror noon to 5 p. m 1 Aug 16 at the Orange County Inte rnational Raceway j P rocecds of the cook· 1 off. with advance tickets selling for $4 per person and tic kets at the gate at $5 per person , will benefit the Foundation •for the Prevention of Child Abuse and their loc a I youth projects For entertainment. f s quare dancers. c log ge r s and bluegrass pickers have been lined up. The Harold Hensley Trio. which is a country w est e rn band, will perform as will Al "Red Dog " Weber and Cus ter's Last Band For information, con· tact Clyde Stewart at 830· 1303 RICE IS NICE Mix 1 1,~ cups h ol cooked ri ce with 1 tables poon each finely chopped green onion, g r ee n p e pp e r and chopped fresh minl or pars ley. Add 1 cup chopped fresh plums. Stir in 3 tables poons melted butter. Serve as accompaniment to meat loaf. hamburge rs or grilled fish. PLUM RELISH HONEYDEW MELONS ITALIAN SQUASH ~~ Rom11nc Lettuce ~~ 16 l'lool lou•b•• Ancient Age c 70c OFF LABEL ... 39 u .39 1~0 4.99 "'' All OUAHJln RIGHI$ R(S(RV(O HO SAl( 10 O(Al!RS OR f OR RfSALI OM rOMMI Rr 1•L U~I HORMEL SPAM Oii Melt* •to Tomato Sauce llWllll a.1111 ••o Sweet Relish 12-lll CH ~tt 10 Ptool '°"''°" 'ui5 10 .49 .,. ~ "" Or ()ri.11 0- Jim Beam ~~ Potatoes ~l~ L~ov Vodka I 75 6.99 "' r..,. fllcll °'tn9I Or 11111 ·•~ Popsicles Rtl'Pll o~ sou~ C~£AM ' OHtOH that way, and a main lenance diet can be uUl h.ed lo stabilize the weigbl If you suspect that lhc dieter has lost all con trol or perception or size and shape. is not eatuig a balanced diet and con tinues to gel thinner than the body structure seem s to need, gel help from your medical doc tor as fast as possible. The rate of cure is mixed. American women who became anor.-ct1c in their teens are now 1n their 208, 30s and even older Whtle they have been helped to make an adjustment to the ill· ness. they continue to s uffer from eating dis- orders which can aHect the remamder of their lives. Here are sensible. low calorie recipes that should be served with a variety of vegetables. POACHED SOLE 4 sh"es fillet of sole 1 cup waler v. cup lemon juice 1 s mall bay leaf 1 sprig parsley ~ cup c hopped scallions 2 peppercorns Place fish slices in a large s killet Pour water around the hsh. Pour lemon juice over fish Add bay leaf, parsley. scallio ns, a nd pep pe r c orns . Cover and simmer 5 to 8 minutes, or until fish Oakes easi· ly . Serves 4. About 236 calories per serving. BROILED CHlCKEN PARMESAN 4 boneless chicken --------------~ breast halves 4 teaspoons lemon JUiee 4 teaspoons grated Parmesan cheese on teaspoon paprika '.-'l teaspoon onion powder Arrange chicken breasts in a broiling pan. S prinkle with lemon ju.ice, then with cheese. paprika and onion powder. Broil 10 minutes. then tum and broil 10 minutes longer, or until cooked through. Makes 4 i;ervings. About 167 calories per serving. ices Overall 139 l'Hlt .37 can n~ 1.19 "' .99 Jl'91 ~ .45 6-d plg Triple-The-Difference --- Guarantee! IUt I\ Cuff I 1111 .. 1 tlfllll\ WQl h1 $10 0" •O•t '' lllU•t I U1•1 I '"'t 111 ,Q tQ hi 1 ar .. t• tOfiwf .. t101ut ivrt:uu111111 o n CO•'"'' 'l1tH 1w1s "''" ollj ... , )1w1 lf(lill~ O•,•O•f Qf lAtto1 1,ltill ..,.,, .. uuo1-.1 .. 1 CQllllPU 1H11t I hli• tOll\ •S tOllflli .. n.t •Ou• 11(tii•l fO ......... 11\111 Al(j,t\IU UPt ·-t ,,.. Chit!' \IO•t .s ,. cu 10 ... ,, 1 U\~· f ••HI WI #Ut ,,. •Ou Ill"' h•t 0 I ft .... n tM CAIM . . ,,. .. ,,. ···~··· • •W I t PRIU~ ffffCJIVI WIO JULY I I HAU rurs JUL ' " 1q11 $ 59 IHCl UOlO IH PRICI 10 OH lABEl BEEF CHUCI< .. 138 IVORY LIQUID 32-0Z. BTl. f'Vrft . .., Bleach ~ Or ktr'dl S¥1 0. Mor• •to Green Beans A& .. AMlti ·~ Jell-0 Gelatin -~""' •to Cup O' Noodles 129 OI . 75 bt .43 1641 (Ml 6~ .62 Ille 1MI .56 plg 7-BONE ROAST Mllktl 8Hkll Corn@O ·~ Beef Bris ket Frn~ W~ote ••0 Stewing Chickens . 11111-11 au-11 l~I(~ ~.., Sliced Bacon , fro1tn •~••U hw•• lu•U• ~·~ Drum sticks lb 1. 59 lb .39 lb 1. 29 .•. 49 Combine thinly sliced cucumbers. s weet r ed onion and fresh plums. Mix with an h e rb· flavored oil and wine vinegar dressing and en- joy as a relish with fish o r meat or as a sandwich go-along. OIMUS IOllGUllO't OR WI !IOU CRllAll MT. WINE 1.1 lTI .. 239 OAOOY CRISP POTATO CHIPS 4.5-0Z. CAI .99 UNSWEETENED PINI< .79 SUUIST GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 41-0Z cu tHITH,_ LOIM SLICED llTO PORK CHOPS J49 STUFF A PLUM Pit and halve ripe fresh plums. Put hal vea back Loaelber wltb cream cheeae ruunct al· lowing a rim of cbeeae to show. Chill. then cut In crosswlse sUC!es to serve with a f avorltt> cracker. Beal • llttle fJrated oran1e rind •nd honey lnlo cheeH for d•· ltute flavor. -rr you're toUnS food lo the creat outdoors. you'll want to try thl• in· ex~nslve way to ltup foods cold. Simply rm plaallc conta1nera wlt.b w1ler and fNeH for take~atoaa r•frt&er1Uon. RINT FILM DEVELOPMENT ON STANOAAO COLOR PAINTS AOO 25 ,o~ ASA •on w. UH Kodak P•P•] for a 900d look R!t "'o • _ PR I ti PRICI 12 EXPOSURES ~ 2.29 20 EXPOSURES ~ 3. 69 24 EXPOSURES ~ 4. 29 36 EXPOSURES ~ 6.29 SAVE UP To,+•:~30% WITH NO-FRILLS A PRODUCTS &11 tftl•. 111• °" o~t;;9l;~1 1Jlhtt1u 1 l't•U .... -.r 1.47 .99 X 11·01 Jllf B-B·O Sauce .89 . 79 X •t-01 Cfft Tomato Juice .81 .66 ~ t-01 t.11 Tomato Sauce .22 .17 ~ F·:~it Cocktail .65 .56 °fi P;p;~ Plates 1.45 .99 MEAT FAMILY PACKS REDUCED 5c PER LB. OR MOREi f AMIL Y PACI< "'' l••• ~~ Sirloin Chops •' . FAMILY PACI< 1 8o•t . ·~ Chuck Steak .lA FAMILY PACK IHI"'' eon•1tu • f~ Spencer Steak ., F~MIL Y PACK '"' . ° Cube Steak FAMILY PACI< ~•tlM '~ Pork Chops FAMILY PACI< r , "• • 'l! Chicken Breasts I~ 1. 54 " 1 . 43 II 3 • 73 .. 2.53 "1. 54 .• 1.49 •Ov(~ff$(011(111 •v•rLUlllll GUA~ANlfl t•t • OI t•Ut lfU~' ~\ tfltttU If l l10tlf.t U61\A41 •Ot \Alt ,_ lt t• •U1t' U \dt ttCt" a\ l'H~lt(A11 t lltt•tl tit ftt4\ 41 tt at M Ill• W t ft n t~tlf1,tl 1ftlll WI Wtl\ tffU 1'0\1 fo;/lt f "•lft 0t I (OW,011\f 1tflll Wttfll OA•t•tu "'"('"'• '"' ••• , ,,,~H •••• , ..... (l 1-.ttt\filit6 ••w ,. f\Hlfd \f l•f tltflf·\tl Ill• t i f•I &0-tt hlU "'ft WlllJJ " l.U\ Lower Prlcea Overall GuaranteeCI! , . .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 C7 Granola, honey and plums Nutritionists today re· tart lightful puree perlect quart o f f resh plu m commend that we eat a Fresh plums not only over tee cream, as a h alves. Spoon sugared variety of foods One provide good eating but sauce or in milk shakes. plums, i ncluding any way to assure variety Is they're also a good Sim ply puree halved syrup that forms. into lo select foods every d ay source of fiber and low and pitted plums in the freezer containers, seal, from each of sever al m calories two more blender until smooth , label and freeze. major groups. good reasons for adding add sugar or honey to PLUM ALPINE P l u m A I P i n e fresh plumis to your taste Be adventurous, BREAKFAST BOWL Breakfast Bowl offers a family'sdailydieL loo. Add a favo r ite Jcupsgranola bo nus of t hr ee food To pick a plum. select spice, a dash of vanilla 2 cups plain yogurt Top your morning with t~ tart, tangy taate of fresh plums. Try Plum Alpme Break/cut Bowl. groups in one healthful fruit that's fuH colored or grated cit rus peel. 1 p<>Wld chHJed fresh and la.sty morning lr~at for its variety. It should Refrigerate until serv· plums, pilled and sliced -cer eal , fruit and be firm except for a ing lime or freeie for (about2'h cups) yogurt. slightly soft tip l!nd a longer storage l/4 cup honey Research studies in-good indication of ripe· F r eezing plums is In individual ser ving dicate the importance of ness. easy, too. J ust add a bowls. l ayer gr a nola , starting the day with H plums accidentally mixture of ~4 to 1 cup yogurt a nd plums ; breakfast. An d one as become overripe, they s ugar and '• teaspoon drizzle with hon ey . las t y as Pl um A I pine r~c!a~n~be~b~l~e~nd~ed~~in~t~o~a~d~e~-:_~a~s_:c~o~rb~i~c~a~c~id~t~o~e~a~c~h~M~a~k~e!s~4~s~e:_rv~i~n~g~s:.._. -----~'.!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t;~_:_J!I Breakfast Bowl is a sure way to get your day go- _J ing . Fresh plums ar e l ayered betwee n c runc hy granola and smooth, tangy yogurt. A drizzle o( honey adds just the right amount o( sweetness. Fresh plums belong on m ore th an just your breakfast menu. Enjoy them for a late morning p icku p out o( hand, blended in cooling sum. mer drinks, tossed in salads . nestled in tea breads or brig htening the top of your favorite cheesecake or fresh fruit #JfJe~ LIDO We accept ALL coupons from other super-markets! l!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~ COUPON •ULU: I hpired coupons not accepted 2 Continuity promotio ns & grocery purchase coupons not occepled Artichokes for entree Cottage ch eese, a versatile n utritio us dairy food, is turning up in a variety o( exciting recipes . No lon ger restricted to the dieter 's salad plat e . cottage cheese gives a protein lift to numerous main dishes as well. PuH y C heese and Art ic hoke Pie is a vegetarian entree that has both family appeal a nd gourmet styling. Ma r inated a r tichoke hear ts add a touch o( elegance to this cheesy pie, while simple cook· ing steps make it the perfect anytime choice. For added convenience, frozen patty shells are rolled to fit a standa rd 9-inch pie plate and bake to form the flaky top and bottom crusts. With food costs conti· nuing to skyrocket. en tertaining g uests has taken a tum away from formal dinner par ties and given new populari- t y t o t h e weekend brunch. Set the mood for this late morning meal with baskets o( fresh flowers, a bright sum· mer tablecloth and an order for plenty or sum- m er SWlShine. To com- plete the menu. serve A r tichoke Pie with sliced fruit. bacon or sausage and tall glasses of icy cold milk. Protein-rich collage c h eese a dds flavor , m o i stness a nd h ig h nutritional value to this Artichoke Pie. Crea~ style collage cheese is a favorite in casseroles. as i't blends easily with a variety o( foods. Served with salad. it is a well known diet choice . per 3 ta bl espoons minced parsley 1 jar (6 ounce) marinated artic ho ke hea rts l package ( 10 oun ce) frozen patty she lls. thawed 1 egg, beate n with 1 ta blespoon water Beat cottage cheese with cream cheese, egg, flour. P ar mesan, tar- ragon, salt, pepper, and pars ley. Drain artichoke hearts and cut up sllght- 1 y . Gently mi x i nto cheese mixture . Stack t:1ree patt,y shells. Roll out 1>n very lightly nour- dusted surface to 13·lnch round. Fit Into 9-lnch pie plate. Tum filling Into shell. Stack remaining patty abell1 and roll out to 12·lnch round. Place o n pie. Fold unde r ed1es, aeaUn1 top and bottom putry to1ether. Flute edcea, hooktn1 ed1• on plate to prevent lt from 1Uppln1. Brush top with ~·water mix· lure. Bake on bottom nck of oven at 42$ defr.. for JO mlnui.t or uaUI coldn and puffed. Muea e to a aervl.np. ,., ..... ·~Rl~ltvto .. o~··' IQ 0MMlt( .. , 01•11• '-'' -A .. .., t')1.1ta~ '>0Ml "°" ottlN•!I ... or .... 1,•81.f ,..,. JtNt J"• c ,.,,.,, 1111> 1d only elfe<llve 01 Hughe• El llond1 and HughH lodo 3. Only monufocturer's coupons of $1 00 or less con be doubled. 4 Substitution of items on monufocturer's coupons prohoboted by low 5. Volue of oil items on retailer coupon determined by our shelf price 6 If we do not stock the item speC1f1ed on other food market's coupon, we will substitute on item of equivalent value. 7 liquor, tobocco & do1ry products excluded. 8. Sub•ect WI WILCOMI FOOD IT AMP IHOPPIRI to limited imprinted on each coupon 9 Offer Good July 9-15, 1981 l8 1.89 U S 0 A Chooce Be-!f Round SWISS STEAK l8 1.75 US 0 A Ch<>Ke e.,,,f Son"""• Ealro Leon LONDON BROIL U S 0 A Cho•<• Center Cut BEEF SHANKS ROUND CUT BONELESS LB. l8 1.29 U S 0 A Cho•<• Beef 8onele" Round 18 2 .49 RUMP ROAST E II llonch STYLE BACON l8 FRESH ALASKA .97 E II SwMt & Hot 1.69 ITALIAN SAUSAGE l8 Our Own Por~ W11h Seoi.onong BRATWURST... l 8 1.69 E II Cenle• C.,t Woler Add"d 1.69 l8 8Y THE PIECE STEW MEAT 18 2 .49 SOCKEYE SALMON CENTER CUT STEAKS 3~: WHOlEOll 299 LB. Cooked & Peeled Fro1en/Oefro•••d Fre\h Fillet BULK or PATTIES GROUND BEEF ENGLISH SOLE Fr~•h Poc•foc Fillet RED SNAPPER l8 3.89 l8. 1.89 COCKT Al l SIZE SHRIMP l8 4.99 Northern Ready To fol SMOKED HALIBUT l8. 2 .49 1.89 IEAN DOES NOT fXCEEO 22% FAT CONTENT LB. CRISCO OIL LIMIT 2 lleo • D•et 2 LITER SHASTA 8e•ly (rocke• S ''> or NOODLES ROMANO FF Mo1her'1 3 Vonehe\ BAKERY WAGON COOKIES 46 oz Con DOLE PINEAPP LE JUICE Spnn9foeld 300 Count 6 4 oz Ind '25• Off COSMETIC PUFFS .89 .75 .95 .09 No Colfeone '2 llr R.C. "lOO"·<:OLA Sprongfoeld '28 oz CLUB SODA ICern't 18 oz STRAWBE RRY PRESERVES Oelv•e Fudg@ 22 l 0 1 PILLSBURY BROWNIE MIX Cornohon 11 01 COFFEE MATE 1.43 .53 1.13 1.29 AQUA- FRESH 1.19 .99 .69 ,(, FRESH 51 ART ~·;3:·29 1.29 APPLESAUCE MOIT'S 15 OZ JAJI ()fy t0Ht l""Q 04' U""'•"• ' \ "' •OU.Oii Jo,.>bo ti 01 •~• h tt 11 01 C.of'ld1to0,.._~, ST. IYll IHAMPOO ............. ._., .................. ... 1tt •• ,..h. C:...t .. 1 -·~ ..... , .. ACM 1.53 3.19 MIX OR MATCH •RED •BLACK •GREEN MILD BROWN ONIONI ............ . 18 .19 r.~~omon '1 Ciol ... SOY SAUCE ,.3.29 2 .19 ... 65 fOOCS flf' t'tft fJ~£~ CA"-oMOf' .. ,. M"'" 10 or 8tl SWEET COOK. SAKE .. 1 .65 IN OVI llH\M N()Ou(I DO I C olj)o<o 11 '01 9'I SOFT DRINK l~Y......,,_Sobo lboa l'\9 BUCKWHT. NOODLES 1 .OS 11 OUl<f ti'odo Mo<h.°"o 16 or lo• SWEET RICE FLOUR . WOllTON 55 ••••• !•. AGAR AGAR ChldiMtUli •A MIAl .. 11 .......... 35 ~11\tollrl ... AHi Vor. ,6 oa cna• .. •• ..................... 1.99 An t. Vorletle1 I 0 1. •ONIONl INIRlll ............... 89 Strowber~ ot Che~·~!!,.1. MOllTON CllUll CAKI ....... 83 lI51@U~ 81 ... ci..... 1601 BO•'• I 29 DRllllNG • Shofor ICother 12 01 IFllANKI Oii KNOCKI. Alfi. Vorletle\ o4 l'tt. IWlll Miii ltUDDINGI 1.99 .98 Meol ot e..f I lb. HOnY WllNl•I ........... 1.69 Huj"-' Mo11ter!!..~9i: C111 ... lkndom Wt. 2 28 IACK CH••I ................. La. • ..... ........ t.Ae.AMU .............. •vwm --·••AK ... """' ........ . "--• e"4 Hvr,.wt9left '*'"-" c. ..... 1 U•• I Mwlt.., ,_,kwey !Mewl!.,. ,.,~wey Plet•l ................ .... ,___ ... _ u .. , • .,t11y •"" MttMt..,. ~~·~ ..,,._ c.,., .. , ............. ......... ......... .a... . ....... nu 1.,,~1.,11 o. ... u s 0 A Cho1u w .. 1.rn Grow" LAMB SHOULDER RO AST US 0 A Cho•ce Lomb We.tern Grown 181.59 l8 2.89 LAMB 0 -BONE CHOPS U S 0 A Choice Shoulder Cul LAMB STE W l8 .99 SHOULDER CUT LAMB CHOPS WESTERN I 89 G ROWN LB. e ~--(l'U!iw.;91~,. ;, __ ..... l '2 Pock l l 01 NII 8ottle1 LUCKY LAGER l 75 l•ll!'r 2.29 PLAIN LABEL GIN Dork or Whole 750 Ml PLAIN LABIL RUM 6.99 3.59 'llCU ffftCll\/t 1 OMS ..... """"....,. °""' W"4 ...., I) "" >4U v,. l'4e o.,..,. 0.. n.. ,.,...,,vie w .. ,,.._.,"~"'" ........... Mall! Ut W c.i ...... ...., II ef Ot•"I• O.no) , ........... .., ...... C.11l•r1 TMIS AO ONLY EffECTlVf ~T MVOlifS El U NCtiO LI limit rioho re1ef'l'ed No .. IH to deolert f _ __,_.._..,..-=...,•-•...._w...,u.--.. ~ .. _... .. .--.~ .. _....wr-ww~w.,.......,._~_._ -._ ------._ -- -.._ ._. -.._ -._ -_. ------..... ., -._ ----__. ---------------4 • ;s jii',......,•, ~ • • -.. - \. OI Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 Shoppers winning the coupon war By MARTIN SLOANE l am happy to report that we shoppers are winning the war against coupon mess. A.C. Nielsen's latest coupon survey in· dicales a decline in the leading contributor to coupon mess -the use of the kitchen drawer to store coupons. Nielsen reports that '1.7 percent of the shoppers who use coupons now throw them into kitchen drawers. This is a substantial decline from the 38 percent who did so in 1975. How do you know if coupon mess has stricken your household? You probably are a victim or this afflic· lion if it takes you 20 minutes to rumble through a kitchen drawer filled with coupons lo rind the 10-cent coupon that you are look· ing for. Your case may be acute if half the coupons in your drawer have expired. Coupon mess prevents a shopper from enjoying the full benefits of coupon savings. The cure is relatively simple. however. All you have to do is take the coupons out or the PluDIS show class in crepes F R ESH PLUMS SHOW CLASS IN CREPES Almost every cuisine has them. In America they're called pancakes; in Mexico, the tortilla; ln Chiria. the egg roll; in Russia, the blini and the French version, the crepe, is fast becoming an institution in the United States. too. Cre pes enjoy a re· markable range of pre· sentation from appetizer dishes through desserts. These Ice Cream Crepes with Spirited Plum Sauce combine every- one's favorite dessert :_ ice cream -with the sum m er goodn ess of fresh plums all rolled up in a neat individual package. As plums join the pan· cake p a rade , they march through the season in an array of col orful costumes . Select from the bright Red Beaut. the black- red skinned El Dorado, t he mahogany-colored Queen Ann or a green variety known as the Kelsey. The s pirit in the plum sauce comes from the optional addition or port, s h erry o r brandy blended into the warm and syrupy plum mix· lure. When making the plum sauce ahead, add th e port or other favorite liqueur when reheating the sauce. I CE C REAM CREPES . WITH SPIRITED PLUM SAUCE 2 eggs 2 egg yolks Iv); teaspoon salt 1 cup flour 1 cup milk l tablespoon melted butter 1 pint vanilla ice cream Spirited Plum Sauce In blender container. add first 6 ingredients. Blend 1 minute. Scrape down sides with rubber spatula and blend 15 seco nds more . Refrigerate 1 hour. Onto li ghtly buttered 6-inch round pan, pour 2 to 3 tablespoons batter for each crepe, rotating pan quickly to coat bottom evenly . Cook until brown, about 1 minute. With spatula. flip crepe over. Cook until light brown. Remove and cool on rack. Remove ice cream from carton; cut into eight equal portions and wrap one crepe around each. Freeze on cookie s heet. (Freeze re- maining crepes for other uses.) Remove frozen filled crepes fr om freezer and let stand 10 minutes . To serve, plce crepes on dessert plates and top with Spirited Plum Sauce. Serve at once. Makes 8 servings. S PIRITED PLUM SAUCE 112 pounds fres h plums (about 9), quartered 1 to 1112 cups sugar. depending on tartness of plums used and sweet- ness desired 1 tablespoon lemon juice 11~ teaspoon allspice 2 tablespoons port. s herry or brandy (OP· tionall Stir plums and sugar in s aucepan over low heat until juices flow . Bring to a boil , stirring; then simmer 3 to 5 minutes, or j ust until plums are tender but still hold their s hape. With slotted spoon, re· move plums to bowl. Add remaining ingre dients to syrup and cook ge ntly over medium heat about 6 minutes, or until syrupy Do not boil. Return plums to syrup. Serve warm . Makes a bout 3 cups. Food tricks fussy eaters F or gener a tio n s. mothers have been ac- cused of forcing children to eat foods they didn't necessarily enjoy . 1n 1 cup lhinly slic·ed rooked green beans f<Hh Regula• S-lb. Chvb ao,,.,, .... _. lovnd, ~II Cenlor Cul kitchen drawer and organize them into pro· duct groups. Here are my 12 coupon product groups, which correispond to the refund listings that appear ln this column: 1. Cereals, breakfast products, baby pro- duclS. 2. Dairy products, oils, margarine, diet foods. 3. Soups, snack foods, candy. 4. Vegetables, starches, fruits. 5. Seasonings, sauces, sugar, syrup, salad dressings. hes. 6. Meat. poultry, seafood. other main dis· 7 Baked goods. desserts. 8. Beverages. 9. Miscellaneous food products. 10. Cleaning products, soap, paper pro- ducts, bags, wraps. 11. Health products .. personal products, cosmetics. beauty products. r------------------------------------1 CLIP 'N' FILE REt'lJNUS v .......... turc; ..... ,,,,.. .. C11p °"' thl• fll<t end l1fftl II with •lmllar c.oSIMiff <OOiPOfl• --... retllM ofl«t wltll ...._ ... coupons, tor eum.pte. Sten collectlno u. -prooh ot pu«llNe ""'II• -•no tor Uw Aqlllrecl-. fUlld for..,. ot ow -rmertiet, In "'""-' - m•prlnet, ond .._ tr••ne with friend&. °""' 4'n•Y not be ov•ll .... Ill •II ., ... of uw ~"'·Al· ·-10 W..U 10 recel .... HCll relllnd. Tiie ._... eften we_.•~ of ... n. TMa ............... , ...... ., .. ,. .. -....... ........ AMERICAN llEAUTY Poat• and T-Ofter Receive•'-to< AlnerlCAll ltMuty E99 _._. M llbo-Ronl end a COllllOll for tflY brtlld of ....... Sand the reqlilred refund l<w'm, ttw ln>nt ,..,,.., ,,.. cludln9 ,_ end na1 ... 1g111 tl4l•mt11ls ,,..,, ,_ Amerlc.,, a.-ty -ktoel oMl4 the efttlr• •-•• In cludlnt IWl-'9111 at-menu '"°"' two ""'' of tUll•· Expl,... Oct. U , 1'11. AMERICAN BEAUTY Pola Co11Pl)r> Oller. Rec•I~• • ll>«ln<• -ktoe of Amer!<., lleouty Shel· Roni, llbo-Ronl w Elbo ~ttl. Sand tlW r• qvlreo ,.._ form end the lront ..-11 lncludlft9 rou1 011d 11tl·••l11ht •l•l•monh from three Amerlc.,, llaeuty _.,toe._ Eaplret Nov. 21, 1•1. GREEN GIAHT CO. AKel ... '' WOt1ll Of coupon1. Sand Iha ._ • ...., rot-form end ,_ 1...,.,...,, l•O.ll from ..,, <omOIMllOfl of Gr..., 01.m Me• tun Bren.I with "-"· Wiii .. Corn, ~ 0f-8Hnl or PMt .-Id 0<\1-. Ellplrel M•y St, 1'112. GREEN GINIT co. Rec.Ive .... 0 (tint of lluflet· ''" veoetltllft. Send ,,. r.qvl""' rel-lorrn •nd lour lt19'9dleftt ,..,.,, Ir..,, ""1 Gr"" Glent Bwttet Vt9et.blft. E•ot,.s ~,JI, 1'tl. MJ 8 Ref-Offer. RK•lve • ,, ref-. s..ld '"' required refund lorm and Pf'OOf> of P'H'C,..M from '""' dlll.,..nl • .,1.1 ... ol Nt.J8 Ric• MIHS ot Stlll· Ung Miu" EaotrH CXI. II, 1'11 PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH Reulve ~· r• Cl~l Ond JS ~nit "' C-t. $encl the r-lred •• 111'\d form, llW c-1119 direction• from two-~ ol Ptnnsylvenle Dutch E99 Noodl .. end -lbl lrom • cen of tune. EQ>lru S.1>1. JO, ttll. TONE'S Cul>lloard Gorden. Rec:elve e $1 rtlf- S.nd Ille reqvlred ref-form end the •-cenl., p0rt1ona of t-Jer 1-1• .-1no the product-l9'11 lrorn CUl)CIOOrd Garelen Clellydr•l9d v~~' or .. l•d toii.>lnvs. Eaplrff W..y JI, ,,., llonv•I Thia offer doe>n't require• form: WINTER GARDEN Refund Offer, P.O. lloa tJIO, Maple Pl•ln, MIM S~. At<tlve t $1 rtlf.....S. Send '"'" Proof> Ol 1>Urche'9 from 1M>vnco PolY i..oa of ~~~tor GrMn Froa n V-1•1>1"' Ex!>lrff OK 31, 12. MiscelJaneous non-food products, pet products, tobacco. ·------------------------------------- ·2 Pack ca-Cola Refreshing and Thi"t Quenching! Take 1ome along on picnics, to the beach or just enjoy at home! Mn. Wrlt hf'• ..... -· -. 24-01. Loaf J:l.oz. 8ottle (UM!t 2 .. ,.,.-.. o. .. U...h 11 •71 Red Ripe Tomatoe -..& •.-.o•• -. 6 ·01. Can l"··~·· ,. ~ . ....,.,.. -. 85 Sq. Ft. Roll There are ways to com bat this uni versal problem. Ways which of- fer unpopular food items in dishes that taste j(ood to even the most fussy eater. Oh. ca rrots~ Heal 2 tablespoons butter in saucepan until it browns lightly Then add I cup shre dded carrots und 1 cup uncooked rice and P 1 eups chicken broth. Bring to a boil , rover and simmer 15 minutes. Before serving, stir in a das h of Worcestershire sauce QUALITY MIA T! GROCERY LIQUOR BUYS! FRESH PRODUCE! FILJYl DEVELOPING SOPER Summertime Saving at Safeway A good solution is to ~ombine rice with some 6f the "critical" foods Because it has litlle flavor of its own. rice. When mixed with other items such as peas or carrots dilutes their flavor ... making the unpopular (if it is) taste less strong . . . and iherefore more acceptn· ble. ~ Don't like peas? Try 1his : Saute \-!I cup chopped onion in 2 tablei1poons butter, Add 1 cup Un· cooked rice; cook and- 1 ti r until lightly browned. Add 2 c ups beer broth, bring to boll, tover and simmer for 15 tninutes. Add 1 cup ~ooked peas and 1/4 cup "Iced pimiento and hul through. Makes 6 !'lerv. in gs Green beans not a tavorite? Oook up ooe of f.he seasoned rice mix.es. \Ut before serving. stir Here's a good one £or bananas. Melt 2 table· spqons butter in saucepan with 1~ tea· .,jpoon curry powder. lilice 1 banana into the curry bulter mlxture and stir gently just to cont banana slices with mixture. Lift bananu from· pan and place on a :small plate. Cook rlce .In that same pan , adding bananu at the last m inute. Serve with chopped peanuts aprinJdcd on top. ttow about eating milk Instead of drinking it? In a saucep~n. place equal amounts of cookc:d rice And mUk. Cook eently, stlrrlna frequently, until mixture thic.kens. This wUJ truce about 20 minutes. Add a table· 1poon or two of 1u1ar and 1 dHh or vanilla. Thia la greatforbrea.kfaat, too. Wh I B fT . T' ..:::::~ ..... 5219 _... M I C O'I 1-··'1 29 --B d'R _. o e ee n· 1ps .... ,, ... ..... • ...-. azo a orn 1 =• acar 1 um ..... • ~ 1999 Premium Russet Pot., toes . 39' London Broil Steak"".:!~·· , 5239 ~ Purina Cat Chow 10 .':, 5599 =:.Seagram's .';":". '11 99 Sweet Red Grapes Boneless Tip Roast .. ~~~.. ~ '229 ~ Detergent ~=· +::'1 29 r!.Z. Whitelaw Vodka !!' .. ::. :~'599 Fresh Egg Plant Beef Cube Steak --er... ,. 1249 :;:t Chlorine ~~· r..::.. 1299 :Fi"ChristianBros~~~ 2 . ..,_ s5oo. Crisp Bell Peppers Chicken Fry Steak ~=.::.-:.. 1239 :z:*t' Sunkist Juice • .= .. ~ 79' ·:;=t Heineken Beer 6 ~ '399 Golden Delicious Apples Rib Eye Steak ~:.-::= '359 :z=t Mayonnaise '::::!" 11,: 95' 3C Mlchelob Beer 6 ;:.•220 Yellow Onions ~;...":..' Fresh Pork Steak =.. • '179 t7i Tender Vittles ...... Farmer John Sausage ':: :..~ '119 ~Diet Shasta ,,., 25' BAKERY Crisp Carrots ,.t"..., Yellow Peaches .~ 79' '39' "69' . 39' 29' 2..:. 39' .49' Premium Ground Beef ~~ ,. '119 Fresh Hen Turkeys '~~'!; ,. 99' Sliced Beef Liver ~ • 98• DAIRY u=&· ScotchBuyBread~ ·~.; 39• ~, Chooolate Miik ~ =.1231 ::21 ·Graham Bread'"~ .. ~.'::; 89' HEALTH & BEAUTY Safeway Burritos .. ~-1.~ 69' DELI & SEAFOOD Chunk Bologna ..:='.t;.. Braunschwelger ..:.:Y-Y::.. Brfaded Fish Cakes CS' Salmon Roast "'r:"'" .. 99' .99• . 89• .'3" 2t Fruit Drinks ,_"' =89' :-i>ClnnamonSchrecken...'::r.~1°0 •shower To Shower ~ '1 87 ti-{, WhlpplngCream•::::=: 65' m;.eoconutoonuts::=.:\1119 ~Stayfree Maxi Pads J\ '318 •Lucerne Yogurts i;: 1109 •cheerios Cereal 'C." ·&.~ 1131 •cepacol Mouthwash ~ 1189 __ ...... ,, ...... __ , __ ..., ___ , _ .. _..,._.., -_.,.,.. 12 exp. )18( 1.99 20exp. J8{ 3.49 24exp. !318( 4.09 38exp. • 5.99 ~u.-..,tae. ~ • --· • 1000 ..,_.Or-.-_,.,...._,. • U• NII. c.... ........ .._.... ._. • 24~.., ..... S...1...-· • S_.. ._,,...,,,_,•Le Pa ......... 'llte • JH t k lrttlllL ._. A8i • I 44 I 7 C..... Dr .. el W..,_, '""'9 # • • r •~ • • • • •• • • -·-·---·--..--- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. July 8, 1981 What's in a name? Willard Sharpe of Bake in 400 degree oven depending on tartness or ring; then simmer 3 to 5 Vacaville named the 40 to 50 minutes, basting plums used and sweet-minutes or ju1t until fruit be d'veloped aller with juices occasionally. ness desired plums are tender but hJs old girlfriends. When To serve. arrange 1 tablespoon lemon still bold their shape. be ran out of girlfriends, chicken breasts on juice • With slotted spoon, re· he named his fruit after plates ; spoon plum ~ to v. teaspoon move plums to . bowl. California counties. sauce over chicken. Ac-allspice, cinnamon or Add remaining lngre-· A plum ia not just a company with rice . nutmeg dients to syrup in pan. plum. A fresh plum (the Makes 2 servings. 1 to 2 tablespoons Cook gent I y over kind you are most likely ALL PURPOSE PLUM brandy, port, sherry or medium heat about 6 t o see a t y o u r SAUCE Kirsch (optional) minutes or until syrupy, supermarket since l 'h pounds fresh Stir plums and sugar Pour over plums. Chill. California produces p 1 um s (about 9 in heavy saucepan over Makes about3cups. more than 90 percent of medium), quartered low heat until juices Uses: (1) Good as a A plum Un't Jwt a plum. It'• OM of more than lfO vorietje1 of plums with name• nch a.a Santa Roat, Burmoaa and Govora. the total U.S. supply> is 1 to l 'h cups sugar, flow . Bring to boil, stir-(See NAME, Pace CU one of over 140different .~~..:.....:::::......::..:..:.....:..::£.:.....:..:~;;..:_....;:.;;..:_;.;_:_..::.:.:::~:..:;_::..::..:.:.!.....::..=.::.._..:::..;....;_--~--=-~=-..;..;..:......~~~~~~~~~~~~__;;:=-~;...:=-~~~~~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- vari,eties. Behind each one or these plum varieties is a Willard Sharpe and years of painstaking work cross- ing and recrossing fruit to come up with a win- ner. Sometimes you can look at a plum's name and trace its ancestry. Dr. Claron Hesse, plant breeder with the University or California at Davis, combines the parental names when naming a new variety. Burmosa. an early- season variety, comes from the now passe Burbank and FormQsa plums. Gavora comes from Gaviota and El Dorado. Hesse says be picks a name "short and euphonious. One that won't be misspelled." Plant breeders work to produce better varieties with improved eating and shipping characteristics. Another great advancement to their credit is a longer plum growing season - you 'll find fresh Calllomia plums at your grocers in a rainbow of colors from mid-May through September. Put these versatile fruits to work in Chinese Plum- Glazed Chicken, Plum Mousse Pie, Sugar Plum Cookies and other plum recipes included here. Researchers at un· iversities are also work· ing with breeders and growers to develop fruit that can be picked riper and still survive the rigors of packing and shipping. Plums are picked mature, though firm , to survive a long journey to midwestern. southern and eastern markets. When choosing fresh California plums, look for full-colored fruit, slightly soft at the tip end. lf they are not as ripe as you'd like, simp- ly place them in a ripen- ing bowl or loosely closed paper bag at room temperature and wait a few days. But watch them carefully. These soft sum·mer fruits can quickly turn overripe, so refrigerate immediately. What's in a name? When you're talking fresh California plums, you're talking dedicated people and years of hard work. One bile of a San- t a Rosa (a Luther Burbank variety named after the California city) says it all. PLUM PATIO SALADS 2'h cups (1 pound) sliced fresh plums % cup sugar v. teaspoon salt 2 cups dairy sour cream \4 cup chopped pee ans or watnuts 1 banana. sliced Lettuce leaves Pineapple, peaches, strawberries, seedless grapes, papaya In saucepan, stir plums, sugar and salt over low beat until juices flow. Bring to boil; simmer 3 minutes or until just tender. Cool. Fold. into sour cream atone with Auta and baaana. ~ lnto paper-lined mutftn tiu. Freeze. Remove from freezer tS minutes before servlni . To serve: line salad plates with lettuce leaves; place frozen salad cups in center. Attractively arrange sliced freab fruits ol choice around salad cups. Makes 12 cupa. C HIN ESE P LUM - GIAZ.ED OUC&EN l pound fNllb plums Caboute medium> .1.4 cup1uaar "" cup oran1e juice 1 leupoon lemon Juice l whole cblckea breatt, wltb bone, balved Salt , pepper, paprika 8t•med rt« SUce plwm into 1ma.U baklna pma; lt1r in ..... ar aDd Julc11. kUoa c blcken bre11t1 wlUI •a lt, pepper aad ,.prtb. Art_,. OD lop ol , ........ aide u.p. UARJOI #EeMU BEEF DUBUQUE FllUH 'I" CHUCK CAllNID .""' ..... LI '""" fllOZEN Flll ET •17• STIAK HAM n•aOT ll BLADE CUT J.LB FllEIH fllOZlN • 1 ff s 109LB. ss••EA CA Tl'ISH STIAK l• 'llUH FllOllN l l '2" DOYl•SOU MllOUO ll•3•• HALl•UT --------IUF CHUCK l.•1•• lff.f CHUCK llOAll •1•• ·--7·•0•ISTIAK ......... "'tfl• .,_h(OI vt&t ,, LI ( 0 .,_ ... f 0 .. 6 I ' HEF I ONEIN l.•1•• IUFCHUCI< •1•• (;.U•"i• .. UtU ttJ .,\.__.,t •OU•DaTIAK , .... l.OAST •OU1tft •CJVHlllOHC•flllolt1 LI llt .. tf•uuu • HfJU"IOf't> IEEF llOUNO eGfjf IN ---IHF CHUCK IOHElUI '2" •1•• '1111:11 EffB SMOULDI• STIAK LI •UMP•OAST ll IHf llOUNO IONll.US •2•• IUF lAllOE lND •1•• 1-RllJ MYS TIPSTIAK l l ••••OAST l l HIEF JIAY '·ti ''" CUalSTIAK l .•2•• HU CHUCK IONEUIS • 1 ff SllOULDI• .... T LI t i=i1sii'iS . I · COME'N GET IT 'I DOIFOOD ...... . t KITTY LITTER t ciiiii1os I Fiiisisf~RGENT ... e.s.oz 3 IC 20-LB •• 2 • .HHB ' I 6~ .15-0Z • 1 •• 65-0Z •2•• I FREE'I SOFT ~llf~ER t TUF'I READY l~~~EOCO~OR I GLAD BAGS ,'~~st t SILK NAPKINS ASSORTED 28-0Z sz.17 • LIPTON ICED TEA ~!~~lAA ~·20l sl .89 M & M's :l"t'N OR PEANUT I 160Z 52.09 Wl Ata,f"T tffTI f08I STAWS llnlllNU --·---MJ•r ALU v.u39c COUSLAW AlU El.SOW v..u39c MACA ... I HOllMEL lOAf •• C HAM&C•-v.u I UCEO lO 01111£11 IH l 'I" PASTIUUll lllCHI IUCED lO Otl~ll • 17• TU•••Y .. l&ST V.•ll IUOOIG U<>Z .. VAlllETIU EA ••• SUC•MUTS DAJIOLA &.OZ EA ••• HAM HElllfW NAllONAl 12.QZ u •2•• SALAMIC•a ltl.lA DONNA SWEET Oii HOT '2" ITALIAll UftA .. l• OUIUOUIE J LI l'UU.lllAN EA'I" CA•-•AM I CLEANSER 'AJAX .... 14-oz 36c I FACIAL TISSUE 3·PL v 134-CT 73c ~·o-0z 51.79 6/lt-OZ 51.49 I R.C. COLA ~!~~LAR I FRUIT PUNCH l':!~1~::twA I a--0z 89° AUOllTEO VAlllETIU, VOIY FULL. EXcaLLENT s 3 9 9.., OUAUTY, HANOINO 011 FOii TULE USE IEPHTHms aalllm ••NPOT ·vERA ..... I CLEANSER . COMET ... ........... 14-0Z4 IC I STAYFREE REO . •211 . MINI PADS ............. »CT GEHERAl MIU.S • WHEATIES 11.Ql., •• K1110$FORO CHARCOAL ··~1.1•2~· NO DEPOSIT NO AElURN R.C. COLA 100 I 2-lt I 3s STATER BllOS SLICED & WRAPPED CHEESE FOOD 1&-0Z•11• BLUE 80NNEl OUARTERS MARGARINE f ,a-0z6Sc. ST ATER BROS SALAD OIL I '3-0Z• 17• I AYAI~.!!'!~ !!'!LINDA ' MILLER LITE BEER 8112-0Z CANS 81.79 IROOlllDE WllE Cl'iABLl~\RHINE OR AOSE SuAVE 1.6-L 12.29 MIYlll•~~ ................... ,.~11M ....... ~ .................. 11" ... Eltl-.......................... •TM. 111• ' I BSAARUCEB ~AIS. PITTS 79c AEOUU.R IO.OZ 111.Af CllJ ""ll'OH PUAtN• • U-Ol 11.&5 m CllU 11.0t.STOH PURINA • •1oz s114 -CllJ ... urOH P\JRtN• I •e-oz s1.31 .. CllU 11.0l&fOHP\JRIHA ·• ••-OZ 11.87 I tYA'l'lll tAY-Mft Y• MO•Yt .................... """"'.._._,...,....,.,..,.,. . ....,._....,,........... ........... ~ fM tWlft ............. ~ .......... ~ .. ,_ ..... ,,....._ ..... ..._ .......... ....,,...,frie: .. I CAllADA llY "'o.°"oi~ $1 79 T1llC WATU ::8"WS::. '"o.oz • SPAGllTTI l'WtCTM)N I )JOI '1.15 I ,~II' ~- ' \ ' j I L . Or.iz £out DAIL y ftlLOTIW · •dnelda J • f ~ I ¥· ,uty8, 1981 t l ... c 'it. " . . t ' ,, ~ .. ., ~ ' . ' ~ .. " ,, . . ·~ r . \ HoW a~out ... a reliable mother'& t\wtpet .• ~e ,tttat comes to your hdine regularly, every day. one that otters' new Ideas on child rearing and teaching. Household organization, time l management and budgeting. Food, 11utrltion and health. consumer issues and saving money. And one that's always . · . ·: ,aval)&ble, at your convenience: Where can you find a mother's f' A · · 1 • r,e~r .\h~t terrific'? You're looking at one! This newspaper ls a · " • feal f\df P \d fiOm&rtta~ers . ; . b~Ote. lt'.s filled with practical • • ·' ' ' )Iii • .. . .J ,., Information that mat<es the job Maslef."ln.d a_a'\19$ time. Of course, you'll also keep up with the neWS in this community and around the world. Like most busy women, you can use a little mothering. too . So turn the pages and help yourself. Wh•t'• In It tor you? Th• ana••r appear• on every page ot ai 642-4321 I I ; . ~. ·' ...,. .. ,,,. ..... ,,,, .... ~. • --- . Some new ideas for hot dogs As the budding cookout seaaon comes into ruu flower, the gang at your house will welcome some fresh new ideas for dress- ing up those often-served hot dogs and ham· burgers. VEGGIE-CHEESE TOP· PED BOTS 1h c up chopped ••• Name (From Page C9) syrup over Ice cream. (2) Fold chilled plums into whipped cream . celery ~ cup chopped ereen pepper in c up c ho ppe d radishes 1 cup grated Cheddar cheese v. cup mayonnaise 1 tablespoon pre· pared yellow mustard 8to10frankfurters 8 to 10 frankfurter rolls Combin e chopped vegetables. c heese, m ayon naise, and mustard. Grill, broil, or pan fry frankfurters. Toast rolls. Serve hot dogs in rolls topped with two generous spoonfuls of the ve1eta1le-cheese mixture. Makes 2 cups relish, enou1b for 8 to 10 frankfurters. M EX I CAN·STYLE CHEESEBV&GERS 1 e nvelope ( 114 ounce) cheese sauce mix 1 cup milk 2 tablespoon s chopped mild gr een chill peppers v, teaspoon c hili powder l ~ pounds ground beef 2 lar1e tomatoes Comchipe Prepare sauce mix UI· ing milk accordin1 to en· velope directiona; atJr ln chill peppers and chill powder; keep warm. Us· Inc 1round beef, shape and cook 6 hamburgers. Slice tomatoes into thirds. Serve ham - burgers on tomato sllcea topped with cheese sauce and sprinkled with corn chips. Serve immediate· ly. Makes 1 cup sauce. e n o ugh for 6 ham · burgers. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. July 8, 1981 (;I I Veggie-chee1e Topped Doga ti a f re1h idea /or your barbecue. 11 Use. as lopping or freeze for a quick jce cream. (3 ) Fill ~ or pastry shelJ with pudding into which plum 1 sauce has been swirl ea. ( 4 ) Good as a sauce fur pancakes or waffles. GREATER SAVINGS WITH NO LIMITS ON KEY BUYS. i i . , PLUM MOV~E PIE 4 in cups quartered fresh plums (about t in pounds> 11/, cups sugar 1 envelope ( 1 tables· poon) unflavored gelatin 2 tablespoons lemon juice 3 egg whites l c up whipping cream, whipped 1 baked 9-inch pie shell Chop plums, a few at a time, in blender. Empty blender and repeat pro- cess. (There should be a bout 3 cups chopped plums). In saucepan. mix 1 cup of the sugar with gelatin. Stir in plums and lemon juice. Bring to boil, stirring until sugar dissolves. Cook 5 minutes. Cool; then chill until syrupy. Beat egg whites until foamy. Gradually add rema ining 11, cup sugar a nd beat stiff. Gently fold whipped cream into meringue; then fold in syrupy plum mixture. Pour into baked pie shell. Garnish with plum halves and nuts. Chill. Ser ve with whipped cream, if de s ired. Makes 6 lo 8 servings . SUGA R PL U M COOKIES 1h c up butter o r margarine 12 cup sugar 1h c up f i rmly packed brown sugar 2 eggs 1 teaspoon vanilla 2 1ill cups flour 1'2 teaspoon salt •,. teaspoon baking soda Plum Filling Egg glaze Sugar Cream butler and sug- ars. Beat in eggs and vanilla; stir in sifted dry ingredients. Chill dough 1 h our . On flo ured board, roll lo 1 a-inch thickness: cut into 31h· inch circles. Place 2 to 3 tables poons filling on ce nte r of h a lf the circles. Top with second circle. with I-inch hole cut in center . Crimp edges with fork . Ar· range on cookie sheet. Brush with egg glaze ( 1 egg lightly beaten ) and sprinkle with s ugar . .Bake in 400 degree oven •lO to 12 minutes or until golden. Cool on rack. M akes 8 to 10 large cookies. PLUM FILLING 1 pound fresh plums, thinly sliced in cup sugar 1 tablespoon butter 2 tablespoons corn- starch 2 tablespoons water 2 teaspoons lemon a juice ( s a p In saucepan, s tir plums, sugar aod butter together over low beat until juices flow. Bring j• to boil; then simmer 3 n• minutes or until plums ff . are almost tend-r when I . pierced. Add corbstarcb b1 • mixed wtth water. Cook )lntU fllixture is clear In ~nd thickened. S\i.r in tll ').!man juice. Cool she.ht· • fi1 ly. Makes 2 cups. 13 FllESR PLUM' ICE l ~ lo 2 cups sugar pr (depending on sweetness pr of fruiL) lol 1 cup waler on 1"" pounds freab ve ripe red plums <about 9 plum•> Po re1 le Wt Ge ~ pie 1,51 lee Di( ll.I ~m , .. , s l"l top troi •••• Am ftnb e rep.lar·alled lee cut... 1 t.e11poon lemoo juice In qucepan. mlx auc· ar ud ••ter. aUn1n1 watll .....,. '8 diNOlwd. Add plums. BriDI to I boll, reduce heat and slmme:r, uncovered, un· tll plum1 are tender. about 10 minutea. Remove pits. Pour mix· ture into blender con· talner. Tum blender on aad add ice cubes, one at a time, bJendinl u.ntll amooth. Stir tn lemon juice. Pout lnto rreeier tray aod freeze until flrm. Maka 1.quart. !"MINUTE MAID 49 A ~o~~E!!!~'?2~z can• l!egul¥ Of Pink BONELESS 177 ~2~~eJ,TEAK lb WHOLE BEEF BRISKET Bonet@SS 8onotcl Betf 1 9 lOS Bill'bfqUe TtUS scv~ .. 148 LADY LEE CHUNK TUNA light Mot 12'h0Z Can water or Off Pack 149~ .... PINEAPPLE 79 JUICE 00t1' •6 oz cane .\ !LAKE TO.LAKE 129 s~~~E 9 Oz Pk~ f" LUCKY 229 ~ ~~ER BE~~ Bf~ /'fo """" tounsavln§'. Rather 1h1n hrnO "'II«"''" and l1m11 ~r ..avina' v.c pl11cc no hmih on •he number of Hem' you c1n bul' So v.hcn you~ Key Buy 11om' offered 11 extra i.avlf\f\, you can 11ock up. l~ IOlll l',l'lca. tn,tclld ol 1 few Wttk 1)-•pttial~. acr~\•IM·board low pr1C1n1 nin rcdua your O\'Cllll food bill ' f"LADY LEE 79 A ~l~cYERAC~~r Btl • BLADE CUT .108 CHUCK ROAST Bonoec:I Btt t LARCE END .. 198 RIB ROAST Bonoeollftf LEO'S SLICED MEATS Tl14n 3 Vaietles 2 S Oz Pkg . 37~ !" CHEEZ-IT 89 '~~CKER~ozeoxe ptWISHBONE 119 i e~~~~Nc 1601 Btl Italian or Dtluxe Frencn I BARBECUE 69 ~~R'!-.,E 1101 1t1 • or~v K~8uys man ulla •vl"IJ'. Key Bu)'l •rc lltlll• prl(ed c~cn lower than 1hc1r C\.tr)d•y d1~un1 prict H 1 "''ult ol manufuturcn' temporuy promo11on11 1llo••ntt~ or CllC'CpllONll purcha~ Vouil Ond hundreds of Key Buy ilcm• c1.-cry llmt you ~hop ., omea I -• f" FOLCER'S 519 A ~Cr~fEE 48 0z Can !"CRACE AA 55 A~~J>IUM ~~9c~. BONELESS RUMP ROAST s1r1oin Cut Bondeo Beef Roon<! TOP ROUND STEAK BonetMS Bondeo Bttf Round ,~~-- ~...,.-' .. \ ' . . ,t) .. . WHOLE WATERMELON ICut 13 lbl. lb • / __./ POTH OS PLANT E-Z CUT .. 197 CUBE STEAK .. 239 BOllMO Bttf CROSS .. 197 RIB ROAST .. 198 eonel~s Bonded Beef Chuck JUICY ORANCES JUICY NECTARINES l¥V-. sweet. l b • 1 COLDEN BANANAS 111pe 11eaov to Eat lo .25 ~ ... luscious. Sw.t , lb .29:.. ............... Jt·•··· .... , ..•. _ ............ ~ \ • ------. -~...-w w. -~ .... --_....,._ ·---~-_...__ -· ~~·-------------------------.................................. __..~"" Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 I Your favorite recipe could • If you like to cook and have a "favorite" recipe, it could be worth a shopping spree at Irvine Ranch Farmer's Market , or you could win one of eight $100 gift certificates at participating merchants. It can all happen in the 1981 Daily Pilot Favorite Recipe Contest, and it could happen to you! Even if you don't w in a top prize. your recipe could be published in our "Eater's Digest" special section in the Daily Pilot Aug. 20. Daily Pilot food editor Sandie Joy wi II supervise a panel of food judges who wt II name the best recipe on the Orange Coast. Winning recipes will be judged on originality, ease of preparation. and of course, taste. So get cooking. Read the rules carefully and send us your recipes as soon as possible. Entries must be postmarked no later than Friday. July 17. Mail your entries to: Daily Pilot Favorite Recipe Contest, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Remember: Entry Deadline i8 Friday, July 17. \ -sponsored by - or one $ J 00 gift certificates! -BUT HURRY, DEADLINE IS FRIDAY, JULY 17- '"Favorite Reeipl.~ Co11test'' ENTR'1 CATEGORIES: I. Desserts Let's see what you can do with c hocolates. gelatin. butter. flour, whipped cream and other favorite goodies. 2 . Fruit , Vegetables & Salads Including vegetarian dishes. And don't forget the out-of-season treasures in cans and in the frozen food section. 3. Soups. & Appetize r s Meal spreads, zesty dips, munchies and any kind of soup, be it the main course or the entree. Take your pick. 4. Main Dishes Whether it be hamburgers or coq au vin, the best chicken sal ad or roast duckling, everyone has a favorite recipe for the mainstay of the meal . < 5. Cheese, Eggs & Pasta Enter your favor.ite cheese dish, snack or salad; or maybe your homemade linguine is o utasight. Or sho uld you enter your seafood quiche? Ethnic Dishes From chow mein to enchiladas to baklava maybe your family has a recipe from the old country? 7 . Breads & Grains Californians have discovered the fun of making their own wtlolesome breads and cereals. Or how about that homeblend granola? 8. Microwave Cooking Like to cook but hate to wait? On-the-go Orange Coasters know it's not the time spent in the kitchen, but the taste on the palate. Hurry. please! CONTEST RUl .. ES: 1. List all ingredients in order of use. followed by clear, concise directions and the number of servings Remember. originality counts. Submit your entry on 81/2 x 11 " paper and print clearly 2. Only one entry per person per category will be ac- cepted. If more than one entry is received for any single category. all entries for that category will be d1squal1f1ed Judges reserve the right to properly categonze entries 3. Recipes must be complete, and may not be changed after submission Incomplete recipes will be d1s- qualif1ed 4 In the event 1dent1cal recipes are submitted by two o r more contestants. the first received wtll be the one considered for judging 5. The contest 1s open to all residents of Orange County, except employees and their 1mmed1ate families of Orange Coast Publtsh1ng Co 6. Indicate on each recipe tn the top left-hand corner. your name. address. telephone and category en- tered using separate sheets for each recipe. Mall to "Datly Pilot Favorite Recipe Contest. P 0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. or bnng 1t._Jo 330 W. Bay St.. Costa Mesa. ALL ENTRIES MUST BE POSTMARKED NO LATER THAN MIDNIGHT, FRIDAY, JULY 17. 1981 . or received at the Piiot off ice no later than 5 p.m July 17. 1981 7 Entry of a recipe constitutes agreement that 1t becomes the property o f the Daily Pilot. and may be publtshed with acknowledgemt!nts (no street ad- dresses or phone numbers will be pubhshed) in the Dally Pilot and Coast Life newspapers. 8. Entries will be d1squallf1ed tf they fall to comply with the contest rules. All judges decisions are final. All prizes will be awarded CONTEST ENDS JULY 17. 1981. 6 42-4321 PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92826 Daily Pilot ' ____ ·J .... ~ ·~ ..... 'Iii -··--..... Daily Pilot WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1981 COMICS 04 CLASSIFIED 06 Baseball • IS not dead It's very much alive in a town called Cooperstown By ROGER CARLSON o( .. omty .......... COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. -Major league baseball en- t-ered its 27th day of inactivity today because of the players' strike, but here in the foothills of the Cat.skills, the game goes on. For basebaJl's Hall of Fame and Museum, it's busi- ne11s as usual as fans continue a pilgrimage that began 42 years ago -paying homage to the game's brightest stars and moments. Here, Babe Ruth is still calling hia shot to center field, Bobby Thompson Is still being mobbed by his jubilant New York Giants teammates and Ted Williams continues that fluid and graceful swing. It's all here where the mood of the 40's and spirit of the 20's prevail. THE ONLY REAL EVIDENCE of today's turmoil is the television production of "This Week in BaeebaU," a short film narrated by Mel Allen, which usually spews out information on such items as Pete Rose's quest for another record, of the week's hitting and pitching stars and spectacular plays. These days il offers insight into the r amifications of the strike and the alternatives some are turning to because . of the lack ol baseball. A San Diego radio station has been of· fering day-by-day "games" and to the de- light of the Border City fans the Padres have won every game ... much to the amusement of Cooperstown visitors. Opinions differ in this area about the strike, renecting a nation's attitude. Says Fred Stiglic, one of 14 attendants at the town's big attraction: "You don"t ever hear them (vis· itors > talk about the strike. The only thing we worry a bout is the game." "'The game" is the annual Hall of Fame game. scheduJed for Aug . 3 between Oakland and Cincinnati at Doubleday Field, located a couple of blocks away. TOM LYON, ANOTHER attendant and resident of this township of 2,500, disagrees with his fellow worker's as- sessment. "The workin~ man supports baseball and he wants it back," he says. "He just wants it to resume. He isn't real- ly on the s ide of either, the owner or the players. "The general sports fan doesn't really realize the in- tricacies.'' There are, of course, no comments forthcoming from the 176 plaques located in the Hall of Fame gallery, honor· ing the game's past. Although today's beat is scattered, yesterday's are all here. The Babe, Double-X, The Meal Ticket, The Georgia Peach, Big and Lltlle Poison, The Boy Wonder, Saleh, Lit- tle Napoleon, The 1919 Black Sox and the \ words (circa 1906) -Tinkers to Evers to Chance, they're all here. WIDLE S PECIAL TREATMENT is of- fered on each of the Hall of Fame's induc- tees, the museum itself is so thorough and in such depth that you can be assured if anyone should claim to have seen it all, he is probably mistaken. There is a myriad of posters, gloves, photos, momentos, rings, bats, bubble gum cards and information. In the basement, where each of today's major league teams has a display of its lop stars, the Seattle Mariners' ex- hibition includes a large photo of Mater Dei High product Dan Meyer. Not all in this section is entirely up-lo- date. however, such as the Red Sox dis· play. Boston's five photos include Manager Don Zimmer (fired ). Butch Hobson <Angels), Carlton Fisk (White Sox), Fred Lynn <Dodgers ), and Dennis Eckersley (still at Boston). The third noor has an extensive dis· play of Ruth's endeavors. but the man who broke his record of 714 career homers, Hank Aaron, com· mands liUle in the way of extra special treatment. "Aaron? ... says Stiglic. ··Nobody ever asks about him. He's forgotten already." BACKING UP that statement to a degree is a display case down the road in a souvenir shop adjacent to Double- day Field ·There a baseball with Joe DiMaggio's autograph sells <See BASEBALL, Pa1e 0%) BUD TUCKER Dave Wilson is no longer a fighting Illini. He's now. a pro. See D3. ........... IT'S THATAWAY -Golfer Gary McCord (right) might be oointin,g out the best direction for the baseball players to end their strike -but he isn't. Instead, he's giving Milwaukee relief pitcher Rollie Fingers a few pointers while practicing this week for the Greater Milwaukee Open. Plucknett shatters own record • I don't want to burst anyone's balloon, hut ... STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP> Ben Plucknett, a one-lime bar bouncer from Nebraska , cracked his own world discus record Tuesday night and then de· nied rumors that he had used a banned muscle-building drug. "I have never used anabolic s t e reoids, ·· the 27 -year -old American said after bettering his former mark set May 16 at the California Relays at Modesto by a whopping 3-feet, 9 inches. to 237-4 (72.34 meters) John Holt, a spokesman for the Inte rnational Amateur Athletics Federation IAAF, re- fused to say if any charges had been filed against Plucknelt. Several othe r athletes. including discus throwers, have bee n suspended for using anabolic stereoids. Five East European female athletes were banned last year, but the IAAF voted to let them compete in the Moscow Olympics. The use of anabolic stereoids is still believed to be widespread in track and field. But nobody . really knows if it has increased in recent years. Called Gentle Ben by his fellow throwers, Plucknett is 6-7 and weighs 291 pounds. Speaking softly, almost whispering his answers, he said he felt a big pressure before the meet. "I wanted to prove it wasn't just a fluke in Modesto. I was so nervous and it was an amuing feeling to break the record here. I really felt good tonight,'' the .bearded American said. Plucknett. who now llves in San Jose, has been throwing the discus -one of track and field's most ancient events -for 13 years. ••My strength and speed is pretty good, but I can still im- prove rny technique and J need a lot more experience. Thie was only mJ second meet a1alnlt the very bmt," be saJd. Fellow-A merican John PoweU1 one ol four former world record boldets in the dilcus con· test, was third at 217·1. Wolf1aa1 Schmidt of East Germlllly,... ~f!. at ZJl.'7. Sebutl• Coe, Brt 's Obm· plc Champion, mllHd the world 1,500·Jllllter mart .., Jut o.• aecondl in winnin1 the coveted Dickaon Trophy in J mlnutea and Sl.95 leC!Cll>ds. It WU the fut.t Ume ot the year and the t.b1rd fastest ever. Steve Scott, a former UC Irvine standout and America'• top miler and winner of tht trophy the lut two 1tar1 one. ·a11ln failed to beat Jim ~·· American record from 1M7 nntahlnc second In 1:34.17. t • LOS ANGELES -Nobody came in on the noon balloon from Saskatoon and asked me, but .. . It went almost unnoticed, but the most significant development in the Oakland Raider-National Football League anti-trust suit was testimony that the Raiders· Al Davis and Los Angeles Coliseum manager Jim Hardy had talked about signing up two million pay TV homes at $10 a game for the Raiders at the Coliseum .. That's S20 million a game. In the baseball strike, history will record the classic mystery as to wh y the issue was not placed before arbitration at the very outset of the walkout by the players. ... When Georgia Frontiere, Madame Ram, finished on the witness stand at the anti-trust trial, she looked somewhat older than her S2 years. . . . The radio sports talk shows have been reduced to the same callers asking the same questions and getting the same answers. . . . It is the uncluttered view from here that the homosexual population in women's sports compares with the long ball hitters in golf ... the woods are full of them. ... Defensive end Fred Dryer says it was more fun playing for the Rams when the late Carroll Rosenbloom was running the team but that "you really bad to watch the old man because he was constantly playing financial games and didn't mind stretching the truth a little bit." doesn't mjss baseball may not be telling the truth. . . Jockey Ralph Pauline. one of the better riders at Los Alamitos, has an agent named Sheila Hart . . his mother-in-law . . . Fred Dryer's grandfather was from Germany . . . where he was called Herr Dryer. . . . A short time before he gave Magic Johnson a $25 million contract, Laker owner Jerry Buss said, "Salaries win stay within reason in pro basketball because it is a team game and in· dividual superstars are not wanted." . .. The 1982 strike of the National Football League Players Association will be longer in duration than the bas ebalJ walkout and far more bitter. . .. The Oakland Raiders say that if they win the court battle with the Na- tional Football League, they might stage their home playoff games at the Los Angeles Coliseum ... In which case. the city of Oakland might declarP war. . .If one had to make a guess in the above mentioned case. he would have to say the Raiders are ahead on points. ... A baseball fan who says he .. Los Coyotes Country Club is <Stt TUCKER, Page D2) f- Christine, Merlin in Transpac battle By ALMON LOCKABEY Dally ...... -.. ..... Most of the 70 yachts in the 2,225-mile Los Angeles to Honolulu race today were in the northeast tradewinds that are expected to speed the fleet on its downwind slide to Diamond Head. The battle fo r first lo finish has developed into a see· s aw contest between Fred Preiss' Christine and Nick Frazee's Merlin, but neither yacht appears to be in position to break the elapsed time record of 8 days, 11 hours, set by Merlin in the 1977 race. At Tuesday's rollcall Christine had resumed the lead and wu reporting a position 1,312 miles from Diamond Head with Merlin about 10 11\ilea astern. Both yachts were salllng on about the same latitude. Wlnda rep0rted from various yacbta ln the fleet ranged from l4 to 18 knots, motUy from the north or north -northeast. Thia la the area ln wblch the fleet en· countel'9 frequent aqualla aJona with following aeH built up by the trades. Tbe overall fleet corrected Ume lead continued to switch from cla11 to class wltb the Cla11 B yacht Uln Na Mara, skippered by Jim Barnhart of HawaU 1bowtn1 a po11ltlon 1,488 mllea f1'9m the fin11h. Racy, the prevlom 4ay'1 leader in Clu1 D bad dropped to second ptace. Tbe three yachta which have abandoned lbe race becauae ol sear and riutnl f allure were re- ported matins slow l.rorreaa back to the mainlan . Tbtre were no further mishaps Tues- day There has been no talk about removing the six crewmen from the wrecked catamaran. Chat'd Eau, from the yacht Westwarci which rescued them in heavy seas the first night of the race. At Tuesday 's r o llca ll Westward was. 1,534 miles from Honolulu. Handicap leaders in Class: CLASS A -1. Zamazaan, Zamazaan Syndicate, San Fran- cisco: 2. Native Son, Robert McLain, San Franclcsco; 3. Macobi, Harold and BUI Aisley, Marina deJ Rey; 4. Natoma, Don Dalziel. San Francisco; S. Christine, Fred Preiss, Marina del Rey. CLASS B -1. Uin Na Mara, J im Barnhart. Hawaii: 2. Sister Di vine, Mike Gayner-Toot Delfino, Newport Beach; 3'. Shamrock, Roy Disney, Los Angeles; 4. Bravura·87, Irvin& Lou be, Richmond; 5. Zia Zaa. Gilbert Jones, Los Angeles. CLASS C -1. Moonshadow, Tom Walinski, Hawaii; 2. Oi. Alvin SchuU, Hawaii; 3. Free Enterprtae, Dick Ettinser, Newport Beach ; 4 . Scaramouche, Rolfe Croker, San Ftanclaco; S. Tomahawk, Jolm Arens, Newport Beach. CLASS D -1. Racy, Robert Maaoon, San Franclaco; 2. Audadom, Miile Kenned)', Loi An1elea; J . Shenandoah, Wllllam Palmer, Ne•port Beach; •· Jubilation, Ron Md Gary Brownell, Redondo Beacb; 5. BroW'h Sucar, Weble et ai, Sauaallto. I • I l ( 11 11 Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Wednesday. July 8, 1981 .-----------....... --------~ Nothing could stop this tennis match ASPEN, Colo. -Former ~ Newport Ha.rbor High tennis stan- dout Brad Bauman and bis partner Len Allen looked pretty silly wearing trash baa• while playing a few matches in a torrential downpour recently. To be exact, Bauman and Allen played 1" sets of tennis consecutively -need.in& 108 hours and 20 minutes to break the Guinness re· corctfor such a feat. The duo downed 54 gallons of thirst quencher and 2.5 pounds of chocolate cookies in the process. They started plaYinl June 27 and finished July 1. When ll was all over, Bauman had woo 76 sets to Allen's 68. "We ended up playing a little over 1,300 games, somewhere in the neighborhood or 20,000 points," Bauman said. Sixty of the 108 hours were played in such a heavy rainstorm that the opponents bad to volley at the net without letting the ball bit the court. "There was so much water, it wouldn't bounce," Bauman explained. The bead pro at the Plum Tree Tennis Center. Bauman said the record-br~aklng effort was a fund·raising function lo assist the Deaf Camp of Aspen. McEnroe. Connors head Davis team NEW YORK -John McEnroe, ~ bia lrlumpba and woea of Wimbledon behlnd blm, and Jimmy Connors wtU spearhead the United States team ror this weekend's Davis Cup tennla serlet against de rending champion Czechoslovakia. "Jt'a pretty h•rd to switch iean" from the grass courts at Wimbledon to the hard cou:ru at the National Tennis Center, where lbe Davia Cup match will be played Friday. Saturday and Sunday, McEnroe said TueadfY· "But I'm sure l'lt be ready." McEnroe and Connors will play the sinalea. while Stan Smith and Bob Lutz of San Clemente wlll team up for the doubles on Saturday. Two sln&les matches will be played Friday, wlt.h McEnroe and Connors switching opponents for Sunday. Czechoslovakia, which captured the Cup last year, defeating Italy in the rinals, will re-. taJiate with Ivan Lend!, Pavel Slozil, Tomas Smid and Stanislav Birner. . Nuggets lure English back·to club DENVER -The Denver Nug- gets on Tuesday lured star forward Alex English back to the fold with an m o ff er matching o n e from the Seattle SuperSonics that was worth more than $3.5 million over five years, Nuggets President Carl Scheer announced. Sch~ would not detail what the Nuggets were paying English. who became a free agent al the end of the last National Basketball As· sociation season, lo stay in Denver. He said only that English had signed a multi-year contract matching Seattle's offer. Quote of the day Former Baltimore Colts lineman Art Donovu, who weighed 300 pounds when he played in the late 50's: "I'm a light eater ... As soon as it's light I sta.rt to eat." From Page 01 BASEBALL .. for $40. A Hank Aaron baseball goes for $25 Admission is SJ.SO and park· ing. if you can rind any, is free in this pleasant. s urprisingly non commercial resort com- munity. As many as 3.000 visitors a day are handled during the busy season c July and August>, but in May and June, you can breeze through the four levels without the sardine effect (1 ,000·1,500 visitors a day). At $.1.50 per ticket. it has de· finitely k ept pace with baseball's bleacher seats -a bargain. BIGGER THAN LIFE posters hang in one area to give visitors another look at some of the bis· Lorie moments -such as Williams swinging away during his .406 campaign of 1941, Ruth belling one of 60 in 1972, Harvey Haddix firing away during his 12 perfect innings in 1.959, and Don Drysdale coiling in bis ~ in· nings of shutout pitching. DiMaggio's 56-game hitting streak, Lou Brock's theft of one of 118 in 1974, Thompson still be· ing mobbed after his '51 playoff homer. Sandy Koufax's perfect game of 1965 <Chicago's Bob Hendl ey was the l ·O loser despite a one-hitter>. Aaron's 715lh, Lou Gehrig 's 2,130th straight games a nd .Johnny Vander Meer's back-to-back no- hitters of 1938 are seen. Today's vanity license plates are nothing new as evidenced by the 1942 New York plates of Gehrig (l =LG > and the '54 Ohio plates o f Cy You n g <C =511 =Y>. \: I!. KEEPING HIM HONEST -Kansas City Royals manager Jim , Frey, left, uses a hole and a ball to check the length of .. Baltimore Orioles mana·ger Earl Weaver before playing a For the baseball addict, it seems no stone has been left un· turned. From a bucket of dried mud used to scuff up the ball in the 1890s and old mitts, to the Gold Glove and a ll-time records, to detailed accou nts of Pawtucket's recent 33-inning victory over Rochester, baseball is chronicled. ) round of golf. The two are good friends and found the baseball I ;~:u:·;;~~: picture ' brings· in Kuhn NEW YORK (AP )-Com- missioner Bowie Kuhn teatilied Tuesday that a $320,000 figure he reported to be the projected average baseball player's salllfY for 1983 may have been low. A speech by Kuhn last winter wbicb included that figure wu one of the it.ems cited by the strikina Major Leafue Pia.yen AlaoclaUon in an unlair labor practice charge against the 26 club owners. The players claim that if baaeball is suffering financial Jr. All-American 8ignop8 8et in 118 Re1Lalratlon for the Hunt· lnston ~•ch Jr. All·Amertcan football Pf'Otl'•m wtU be held Saturday from t a .m. to 2 p.m, at Murdy Park in Huntlqtoa Beach. A MeCJnd reC)atratlon WU.I be beW SMurday, July 18 (t-2), al.lo. at M...tJ Park ( OoJden West ....... ). A ~alkle f .. ol '15 WW be cbaralid And u1 boy or lii'l 110laa ~· la Uk*9 to brt.q • blrtla .U.Ocat.. T1M a.cue ll •i*lall)' look-lil.I fOf' lJ and 1'·Jear"°"4b to ftU a new weiCbt dM•loo. problems, then the books should be opened so that the union can alter its demands in coUecUve bargaining. Management's posi· tion is lbat high salaries are causing no financial problem, despite Kuhn's warning, and none bas ever been claimed across lbe bargalnlng table. Testifying at a National Labor Relations Board hearing, Kuhn was asked if be believed the pro- jection be cited in a December 1980 speech reaarding baseball economics was accurate. "I think they are low," the com mi11loner aald of lbe utlmate provlded by the certlfted pub.lie accounUn1 firm of Enu..t and Whlnne7. "I lb1nk lhe salary rate bas cone up faster than t.beir estimate." The NLRB and tbe unloo are seeking to force the clube to open their financial record1. Chlef admlnlltraUv• law Juqe Melvin Well• la hearln1 tbe ca1e and wUJ dfflde whether to aeek an enforcement order ,.. qulrtnc the clube to eompty. The NLRB and tbl anion alJo have ctted lia tbe eue MYeral quotH from new• hJtenlftl wiUa varioUI OWMn, dllcw.., baMbiall'I ftnadal eoildlttall. T1M ttrtk• ..... tbioqb I!' 219tb day ,.__.,, uriai wtped out a &otal ol IM 1am•. And al the rate things are go- ing In today's game, perhaps another nook and cranny will be devoted lo 1981 's saddest words Miller-to-Moffett·to·Grebey. From Page 01 TUCKER. • • bringing back the Southern California Open, a former PGA event, and has already sold enough $10,000 sponsorships to cut the nut for the $215,000 event Nov.3·8. . . . Asked why be is of the opinion Pat Haden is a better quarterback than Vince Fer· ragamo, Tampa Bay's John McKay says, "Pat zings it in there better" . . . It is the auspi· clon here that the Old Coach would like to have either one of them. . . . World Team Tennls is back u simply Team Tennis which leadl you to suspect the league l• operatJna on a smaller scale. . . . Many places of business which stay open evenings near the team'• Fullerton traininl ump &N oWJlnl for lbe Loe An•elea A1m1-to acqulu quarterback Dan PaatorinJ. • • . The beat lln• of an ot.herwtse forlorn baseball sum· mer came from a Chicaco Tribune writ.e-r when his paper boulbt the Cvbl, "we alr.ld.Y ba ve a very •ood compaay eoftbaU a.am.•• . . • U t.be Oak.laod Balden are .tetortoua ill court, we maot hue Natlcln&I Football Leaaue teamt ln the Colilewn, the lt.oM 80•1 and Dodier Stadham, t Baseball today Reds boycott proposed by fan On thls elate In bas ball in 11Nl : Ted WUJlamt cracked a lbfM.run, two.- out, nlnth·lnning home run off Claude Passeau to give the American Leaaue a laat·1aap, 7-5 victory ln the All·star same at Oetrott's 8rlegs Stadium. The National.I carried 1 ~3 lead lnto tht ninth. but singles by Ken Keltner and J~ Gordon, and a walk to CecU Travis loaded the bases. Keltner scored when Joe DiMaggio hlt Into a force at s~ond. And then Willlarru put a Passeau pitch into the right field upper deck to end the aame. Williama· heroics wiped out a superb showing by Plttaburgb shortstop Arky Vaughan, who became the flrat man In All· star history to hit two homers in one game. Williams, Billy Herman and Lou Boudreau each had a pair of hlts, while DiMaggio scored three runs. Today's birthdays: Houston Astros catcher Alan Ashby is 30. Astros outfielder Terry Puhl is 2.5. U.S. swimmers sweep gold medals TEL AVIV, Israel U.S. men a swimmers made a clean sweep of gold medaJs on the first day of the I llh Maccablah Games Tuesday. Among the women. two Israelis and one· Mexican carried off the lop swim prizes. Chris Weissman, 19, of We.stport, Conn., captured the gold medal for completing the men's 100-meter breaststroke in l minute, 6.68 seconds. He was handed the prize by his own congressman. Rep. Jack Kemp,.R <N.Y.>. who has been visiting Israel. Eric Kaufman. 18, of Orinda, Calif., posted a 58:40 time in the 100-meter men's backstroke to win his gold medal. The quadrennial Maccabiah sports competi· lion brings together more than 3,400 Jewish athletes from 34 nations . CINCINNATI -A lormtr Can· EiJ cinnati Bengala football player i1 c ~ propoetna a fan boycott of ClnclnnaU Reds games When the m.Jor lea1ue bueball players' strike ls aettled. Neal Cralg, an aaent for prolessional loot· ball players. said a local baseball fan croup that he formed has received about 600 inquiries, even though he has not advertised the organlza· lion. "'No one has spoken about the fan," said Craig, a Bengals' safety from 1971-73. "No one baa spoken about the Utlle people, the guy who sells peanuts and beer at the stadium to supple-ment his income.·· Craig said The July 1 Club. formed last month in hopes the the strike would be settled by that date. is proposing that angry fans turn in their season tickets and boycott Reds games when the strike is settled. He said the 600 names were sent to the Reds and negotiating teams for the players and club owners. Leonard-Hearns set for Sept. 16 · Sugar Ray Leonard and Thomas Ill Rearm will met for the undisputed welterweight championship, Sept. 16 at Caesars Palace in Las Vegai' ... The Aug. 9 fight between former light and welterweight champion Roberto Duran and junior mid· dleweight Nino Gonzalez is committed to Cleveland's Public Hall ... Dethroned heavyweight boxing champ John Tate will fight Jody BaUard of Jacksonville, Fla., under the lights at a baseball stadium in Knoxville on Aug. 8 Quarterback Mike Krunek, who gave up a seat on the bench of a champion Pittsburgh team to play for the Washington Redskins has been waived by the NFL team. Television, radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Salt Lake City at Phoenix, 7 p.m .. KMPC 1710) Service clu:h won't quit Kiwanians want to change soccer colors from red to black ByCURTSEEDEN Of , .. Deity " ... Maoft The Costa Mesa North Kiwanis Club made a rather bold move three years ago when it decided to s ponsor an all-star soccer game between the north and south squads from Orange County high schools. How bold was it, you might ask? The first year. the club was forced to dip into its own coffers for $1.200 alter the receipts were counted up. Undaunted, the club sponsored a second all-star game last year. That one left the club just $.500 in the red. Things were looking up. THE 1981 VERSION of the Orange County All· star soccer game ror the first time held at SOCCER Anaheim Stadium with the cooperation of the California Surf netted the Kiwanis Club a big SlOO That's not much, considering all the work and t hat goes into producing such a game. But it was enough to convince the club to try again. So. some time next April look for the fourth annual all-star clash, again with the backing of the Costa Mesa North Kiwanis Club, and again in all probability preceding a Surl game at Anaheim Stadium. "Our intent is to give young soccer players an opportunity to be recognized:' explains Ray Stewart. who three years ago volunteered to "get the ball rolling" on an all-star game for the Kiwanis club. "THE IDEA WAS to provide a s howcase for college coaches with recruiting ideas," Stewart continues. "We send out complimentary tickets to about 100 college soccer coaches in the area." Fifty Orange County high schoola are con- sidered in the choosing of all-stars. All are graduating seniors who have demonstrated "ade- quate scholastic qualifications," Stewart explains. Stewart and the Kiwanians don't take all the credit for the formidable task of turning an all-star soccer game into a modest money-making event. The Orange County Soccer Federation, with former Surf goalkeeper Dave Jokerst at the helm. "has been very helpful," Stewart says. •t We had a banquet a week prior to the game and the foundation helped defray pa.rt of the cost of that," Stewart says. BECAUSE THE GAME ~ played during the school year, the two teams mu.st be coached by persons other than high school soccer coaches, ac- cording lo CIF guidelines. Last year, former California Surf Coach John Sewell and former California Sunshine Coach Derek Lawther directed the all·stars. Meanwhile, each team had five "honorary coaches." In the South's case, It was Ocean View's Paul Kollar, Edison's Dave McLeish, Mater Del's John Masson, Irvine's Ken Jahns and Capistrano Valley's Ron Willms. When the North and the South get together next April, the South will be trying to even the series. The North took the first two games, while the South scored its first two goals of the aeries lut April in a 2·1 victory before an estimated 3,000 fans at Anaheim Stadium. • • • PETEil POC&LJNGTON, owner ot the Ed- monton Drillers, aays be made a mlatake in flrint Coach Timo Liekoski So, Pocklington simply re· hired Liekoski 10 days after he rired him. "I may be impetuous but I'm not stupid," not· ed Pocklington last week after lhe reversal. The Drillers got off to a 6· 10 start. They i m· proved their record to 8· 12 with a 2·1 victory over lowly Dallas Saturday night But, they're still lodged in last place in lhe NASL's Northwest Division • • • . THE WASHJNGTON DIPWMATS will have J ohan Cruyff with them when they come to Anaheim Stadium Saturday night, but the 34-year· old Dutchman may not be in the lineup. Cruyff made his first appearance with the Diplomats July 2. playing the final 10 minutes against the San Diego Sockers. He is still ham· pered by a groin inJury Cruyff came to the NASL in 1979 and played one season with the Los Angeles Aztecs. He then moved to Washington where he played the 1980 season with the old Diplomats. He signed with the new Diplomats <formerly the Detroit Express ) on June 16 Can the Surf stop the Kidd? Since Brian Kidd arrived in April lo help the Atlanta Chiefs. he has managed lo attain his first suntan and drink his first pina colada. The 32-year -old veteran forward, on loan from the Bolton Wanderers in England, has also become the No. 2 scorer in the North American Soccer League with 16 goals and four assists. bettered on- ly by lhe Cosmos' Giorgio Chinaglia. Kidd's s tabilizing effect on the Chiefs ' youngsters. combined with the presence of high. scoring Paul Child and Coach Dave Chadwick. has boosted Atlanta into a tie for first place in the Southern Division with Fort Lauderdale. (97 point.s). ' 1'bal's quite a turnaround from last year's Atlanta squad which won just seven games. Tonight at Anaheim Stadium <7 :30). Child will be looking for goals 99 and 100 when the Chiefs tangle with the poinl·hungry California Surf. The game is lhe first of three consecutive home games for the Surf which is trying to shake off back-to-back defeats on the road (to Tampa Bay andSeatUeJ. The Surf is forced to play without the services of veteran defender Carlos Alberto who must sit out tonight's contest because of an ejection for fighting at Seattle. "I think we'll be OK, though," says Surf Coach Laurie Calloway. "(John) Craven is fit now and we• ve got Paul Cahill as well." Calloway says he's more concerned with lhe importance of coming out of tonight's contest with nine points (a victory and at least three goals). From that standpoint, the Surf ls ready. Graham Oates is healthy after suffering a calf strain; Ossama Khalil haa managed to soore on four of the five shots he's taken this year; and Steve Moyers and Laurie Abrahams are healthy after bouts with the nu and a cold, respectively. In addition, 21-year-old Charlie Greene bas found the scoring touch, tallying twice against Tampa Bay and again ln Seattle. EUenberger: 'I'm not through' ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. <AP> -Former Unlvenlty of New Mexico basketball Coaeb Norm EllenbttJer waa foU8d 1uUty Tuetday on 31 of 22 counts ol fraud and fllln• falae public voucbera. ot.trtct JUdle Pbilllp Bala.mollte aet sente.nc· ln1 for Wednesday momlq. A MVen·man Rvt·woman dletrtct court Jury returned the vet;bcu att.r deUberatlni for abou1 t~ houn over a t"o-day period. · EJlenber•er and bi• attomey, Leon Taylor. said the)' would appeal. "Thia ta not rllht. It ltn't rtpt. We're not through yet," Ellenbel'&er ta.kl 11 bt left tM courtroom. "Maybe we've Jmt betu to ftpt. Wt have tbt opportunity to ao back and~ thll in our mlftdl. It 11 wroaa, UUa la an ablolute wtoai." Taylor' said, "It'• not over yet. 'l'llere'a an IP· peal COlll'llq. A wroq baa betll commltted •••tut thJ1 man. It Will be revened." ' The former coach was found innocent on one count ol fraud over $2,500, a lhlrd·dearee felony. • Tbe 21 counta on which he waa ~victed are all fourth·detl'ft felonJea, which could carry max· lmum penalUes of 18 months in prison. Aa the judge read the verdict for each count, Ellehberter sat attentively, but dld not. abow any emotion. Ellenberger waa indicted by a 1tate arand Jury ln May 19'IO on 12 counts ol maldna false pubUc vouchers, one count of fraud lo exceta of $2,500 and nine coun1S of fraud In exceu ol $100. The cbar•es 1temmed from an lovettl1atloD Into t.be UNM basketball profnm, trigered by 1 recru\Un1 scandal tbat eventuJy led to ElleD· ber1er'1 nrm, at lb• outlet al ot the tm-IO 1ea100 ud ripped apart what had been considered one of the naUoD•a stroaceel buetball )rocram1. l I l LPGA money l••d•r• .,...,.... ffitr I ) I. N-y U.-t-Mtllon ., ... _. 2 .... .,...., "',.,, > Jo.._c:.-in.us •. 0-~ ,,,,.,. S. Amy Alc_. 101,Jllll •· s.11, un.. "..J'3 1 ICoU.VWN~ •.111 •• ..11'1 Oelllel &S,152 •· J-e1o1«" 11,1,. 10. J1111 ,....,.._ n.m 11. S.'*• ,_, M,010 U. Potty.._.,.. Ss.1• U. ~·Pat,,_ SUD> 14. H0411a 5'«y s:i,llU IS. CoU.V • ..,,.... l2,• 16. Potty~ ~ 11. Corot.,.. Hiit '1,Ja 11. Dot Gennoln o. ns "· O.llillle~ 41,»4 JO. '-"*• "°"""' ··'" JI. 0.llillieAlalln •,Ut n Po1 •"" J7.0IJ U. J....., R-ln "·m 24. Doto L""'*llMll M,~ u. a.111~ u.m 1'. Kotl\y ,,_,_•It n.a 21. Jo4MW.-n JJ,4'7 :It. JonetColea· JJ,111 n . 411<• M111or n,.. JO. Myre I/on -Jt,Jt7 JI. Cindy Hiii• 27 ,27' n . All<• •tumon 21.101 :U. Cotl\y SMr1I 26,717 M. Mor1ho H_, 2'.71S "· Berber•-..... 26,lM :It. 8eby King lt, 110 JI SNt tr, Homl In U,.J50 •· Mory Dwve• u .2• Jt. Kotlly Hiie 2A, 1'1 40 J-AIOa U .... 41. Marlene Floyd u.- Q . Siivio ~<lnl 21,a 43 S.ndr. S..Wkll J 1,11.2 44. •••-• Mlrrll'll• 21....., 4S Jerll.,,, 8rlU 11,JM .. Julio 5'°"9f' Jl.lC 41 l/l<klT-JI.ID 41. Col"Y -JO,Q50 ., ,,.,,,,, ""'' 20,GJO SO. Clwl•.1-.... lt,l61 SI. Cotlly-"·'" n. Lori Get-.i 11~ Sl. S<lti. MtAlllAet 17,AtO M I/IOI F"91'1 16 .. J U Mor-H-16,IO 5' LyM-1',li' S7 Kollly Morllll It, ICU se JOY<• Koimienlrl 16,049 St. J""yCIM1! 14.Bf Ml 8onnte ~ 14,'17 PG.A atetlatlca I T'1llreollll J • y SI SC:OIUNO LaADaltS 1. Roy Ftovd .,.., Bruce LleUlle, 70 10 Tom Kite, 70 II 4. Jol\My Miller, 70 ll Tom Wotton, 70.43 AYaltAOa D•IYINO DISTANC• I. f'rN c:..upie•. Jlt.6. 1. Don Polll, 1/t.4 J. Tom PurU•, '74.0. 4. Fuuy Zoeller, 273-1 s. 00110 Ou'91ey, 212 2. DltlYINO Pa•CaNTAOlf IN "Al•WAY I Colvlft Pwi., IOl 1 Miile Rekl, 174 J JKll R~, .74S. 4. Biii R-n. 740 S. LO"Y Helton, ,,, 01taaNS IN ltl.OUL.ATION I J-Y Miiiet, 721. 2 Jec:ll Hkkl- 121 J Brvc. Li.tike, lU 4. Cetvln -· 101. S. Tom Kite •no ft.twlY .......... AVa•AGlf PUTTS Pia •OUND I. Ton. WotJOn, 11.46 1 Alon Tople, Jt.10. J. Morrl1 H.UIYf, Jt 12 • Tommy Mran, 21.... S B"' Allin. Jt.'1 Pl•CllfTAOa 0" Wa.PAa NOLIS I Bruce u.tlke. DO 1 Tom Welton, m. J J•ffY ....... 21• 4 "'°' ,. . ...,..,. 212 s ~ dy .. on. JIO IAOLI LIADlltl I. BrUCce Lteu1<e, t 1 L_..rd T,_.,.,_, Merk Ho.,.., Boll Clompell end Bruce Dout l•n I. 6 Lonny Wodklni, ._, WolUI, Kolltl ~. 1 ll•Dll LIADlltS I ''"'• LleVU, M , Jorry Pola, ,,. 1 Tom Klt9, W. 4 L.orry Hel_.,, U. S. tllO'r FIOyd, UJ NASL WlflTlfltN DIYIJION W L G" GA 9P "'9 Loa Anotle!I ll t :rt )4 2t " S.11 Dleoo 11 10 Jt JJ JO tO ~ I 12 ll !' 17 1S S.n JOM I ll 11 4' 2t 74 NOltTHWIST DIYISICHI V on<°"Wf 1S 6 .. 1S 41 IJ:J S.ol11e IJ 11 SI 4J 4J 111 Col .. ry 10 11 JJ l2 Ji M Por11ono 10 10 JO 1t :It " Edmon-I 11 • .. J:J 10 IASTlltN DIYISIOtil c...,.,... w."' l"VIOll Montreal Toronto 11 S Ml J2 • ISO 10 10 " )4 lD .. ' 10 ,, JO • f:I S IS >t •7 it 5' SOUTMl.•N DIVISIOM Fort Le....-0019 IJ I JI n JS t1 AtllllltO II t .cl )4 J3 '1 Jec:Uorwllte 11 11 1' JO 14 M Tampa ..., t IJ " 47 JI 11 CINT•AL DIYISION CllltotO IJ I 0 te U 111 Ml,.,..IOle U I • )4 JJ ti Tutu II 10 • JO J:J '1 0.llH 1 1• 14 4' I) U Sia POlnta ••• •••-lor • ,...,._,IOfl or ovenlme vktory. ,_ POlnU for•.,_,. vlclory. One -u• polllt for every ,_, acorecl w"fl • moatmum of .,.,.. per .. -. Ho -point 11 • ........, for ownlme or tMolOUlfOllll: ,....,,.1e .... J e<llMnYllle 2, SNttlo 1 T•'(aO.- AtlOfllo ot .... n S.11J-olTo""'°loy Cotmotot T-to. 11 Clll<OOD ot Dalles, n Miii-•t £-ton, n WUlllfllllDn flt Por11end, n TlllMotV-.n Wclfw'•betlllelttelt __ ,_a. ... T.._T .... , ........ ._ UMM ...... WIMI 0,,-.,. ............... ,...... ...... , ... ,.,c.....,, ~ . ' ., . Uttle LHgue TOUaNAM .. IT Of' CMAMPIO-S DtllrtCt U T.....-1• C•tL ...... k...._M ......... e..111 T .... Y'l~k- O<HllYlew Notlonol 14, ..... 0 I lllek Ulmer pllelwd • ,..,.Ill• wltl\ IJ 1trlll- 1or Oc.eonvlewl. T.......-•o-Fount•ln l/oll•Y -111 n . weatMlll ... , Amer Icon, s: JO ,_....y'IO- tllOOlllWOOCI Vi. ~view Nollonol, t JD ,.,_, .• o-Oc••" View A,,_kon n l'-tolft l/ellOY Morll\·We.lmlll~le• A_..kon wtnn.r, S. JO ~Y'•OCl\omc>IOnlNP. I p.m. Minor League 1tendcng1 1A1T•IN1..a1oGu• , ............. s....1 ,_ • L Weter--, • l WettHow ... ' 4 ••ectlne • ' 9rlatol s • - ~L GI 717 .,, 461 J as 4 HOlyolle Glo111 Fe!ll Buftolo LyM 1 soo 1 soo . . .,, • I m T~ak- BrlUol l~J. Wftl Hewn W Wotertiurv s. LYM J Buflolo 10, RNdlng t Glens Fell1 I. HOlfOI<• S T ... '(aO.- Wotorbut)r ot Brl1tol Hotyae •1 Butloto 11 .. <11ne 01 Glens Foll• WulHovenotLym INTl.ltNATIONAL LIAOUI Cotum- Rlchm°"" Tldewoter fllochnter Tol- Powluckot Syrocute Cl\orletlon W L l"Ct.. G9 $4 JO ,MJ 44 •• ~1 2 • » .SCIO 12 40 4J .., ""' ,, 43 .41• 14 • ., .... l4V. )7 4) 0 1 I. J4 44 .t:lt II T_..,.,"- Powtuo.ot •. l l-•l•r 1 Rl<,,-S,T-0 CllorlnlOn S, Roclwsler I SyrK.-11, Columb.n • T ... Y'tcr- 111<"-ot Tldewoter lloc-er et Cftorleiton Syre<..-ot Columon Tol-01 P.wtuc:llel IOUTMEllN LEAGUI. 1.-..oi.11i- • L S.••nnell " s Cllorloll• I 1 OnorOCI 1 10 Col11mOIA s II JO<UOn•llle S II ..,...,.Olv.._, Btrmlngl>om 10 s HHhvllte 10 6 Memphis • 1 C"91141-1 • ltRO•vllle I • Tl•"9f'•k-or10.-7, Knoollle 1 c ... r IOI~ I, Columl>u• l Birmingham •. Cftone~ 3 So v onnol'I 6, Momc>lli' l T ... y·1 ~ J ocluGwllle •t S.vonNh Orlondr>el Cotum- Cl\orlOtle ot BlrmlnQtwm Mempl'lll 01 Hosftvlll• Cllel1~ ol Knon1lle TEXAS UIAGUE ISo<-Mollef~) ..... Pct. GI .. w , ..... •11 4V. JU • JU • .. , 6JS "' S6l '"' .. , J .. , ..... Sllr•veport Atken .. t , .. , .. ff L ~L GI • 1 »J -' , w J O<kSon • ' 411 IV> I 10 41J lY> Mldlond EI PeM> Amor II lo S.OnAnl..,.. • 1 ' . 1 1 . ' T-f'•Sc-SPlrtveoort •. Je<klOft l A•I<•-•. Tulw J El Po10l,Arnerlllo S Mldlend 4-2. 5-n Antonio 1 I T ... .,.,_ AmorUIO at El P•to Midi-o1 S.... Antonio Tulw ot Artoonw1 ~l\rev-1 ot Jee:"-' AMtlltlCAJll ASSOCIATICHI Eost Ev•nivllle lndlonepollt Sc>rlnoti.ld low• W L ""L GI 4S 40 .S:rt - ,, 4A .•10 s ll 0 4SI ...... ,. S4 .)41 u ..... Wert Omo"9 M Jt W - Denver 44 3' Ml •"' Wl<llltt 41 • Sit 10 OkloftOmo Clly 1' 41 4'I 11'1t T-Y'•Sc-Oenvet 10, ()lo.lo"°""' City l Omol\o 4, Wl<l\llo 1 low• 1, Ev-vtlle l lndlenopotl .. , Sc>rlnvfle14 J TeMf'a0- 0.nver ot Olo.le-City Omofto o1 Wlchllo EwOMville .. lowo Sprlnqllelcl 01 •...,l•noooll• PACl"IC COAST Ll.AGUa Toe.,,.,. PorU-• v ancovWt Hewell SCIOll.OM EdmontDn -Olvlt ... W L IJ 4 ,, ' . ' I 10 • ll S II """"9nl Olvll ... ~L GI IU - 10& I 411 s ,444 s ..... 316 • JU '"' Al""-<-11 0 I 000 P,,_nl• 1 S .Sil S Solt Ltll.e S II JU • T uuon • 11 uo 10 T_,.,.,~ h<or'M II, 5'1ok-0 P._nlx 7, Seit I.Ilk• 2 A lbuQuerque 12·•. T"' '°" S.. Yell<-•., E-ton CPOd . , •• ,,, Hawofl •. Port!..., o T•,'•G- Ponl-•tH•••" $POk-•llK- l/onc-ol Edmonton Alt>~ ol T"'.,,, satt uu ot ..._..1. t..OlllO l&ACM 10---a ._., -IM •"91efl I .ieKere, 4 Mffo< .... , 1 -·· l.OJt ..... Mlt..lllollllllUt taAL e1AQ1 -•• ........ 1,000 MM DOH, ,._ ..... I, $-•OC .... OANA wtCA•f' -tlS oneie" NO -...... t lller'riK ... tS llen!W. t ro<IL CM. 446 mo<kHet, I -k -...... 111.ANOtA -n ~ .. ...,,..,.,.., I~ Mnl\o. ST7 Nntll NH. 4tO -•eret, J NO<od,lhollW.. IAN Otl•O (MIN L•••••t. "'•~· en111•'a ....... '--I SH 011tlen. n. •I-ore, I> y .. lqwloll, "" ro<ll. <Od. '" llonlto, "Mm•<"""· Lo• Alemlto• TU .. OAY'S aalULTI , ........ .,~ ......... , l'lrtl r-u Moy -Ootot CAdeir), 13.40, 10. 10, S 00, Tlmeto G•ltone I Blevlnt), to ... , ••• , '°'1'1 I-(CMdOH), J.60 \J eucto 1~21 paid '2Ql.IO So<end r--ltO<..._ (Pllkonlon), U .00, 12 .... SM; Molto A lld (Fl..-.11, I IO, 4.e, Slrfwl-ll'rycMy), S.60 Tltlrd rec• -1.-lto 8olle CAdOlr). S.MI. J .60. J.JO; Fllr11<" (Broohl, 4.IO, J.MI, llle .. l't P-IMll<MllJ, S IO. l'ounll roc.e Hin! Of Mint tBroobl. t Ml, S 20,) 10, Tlclv Wln•b (Hort), 6.60, 4.JO, Rone td'a 111.0<ket ICllovotJ, 1.MI. U eA«le IH I .,.Id I.SI.JO. Fiith rou -Miu Form !Hon). I.Ml, 4 JO, l :tO, Joenle llot> ICMOOIOl, l .MI, J Ml, -·· lnglell E_. l.WlCMlll, J.MI. Slatl\ •oc:e -,.,.,1 Br_., (MJl<,,.111. t.a, J.MI, J 10, Soy Teo Tidy cc.-.1. 1•. > eo, c°""' -FIN* Cl',_on,, uo. u ••· 1<141 lf..S) paid UJ.40. Sov•nlfl rec:• -E•llY N O•Y C C.,OOIOI, t.eo, s .c», uo; Pr ... l'ocl Polky CMltcl\elH, I 00, 1 40. Monut Mort< (FrHtonl. S.IO. SJ oaa<to 11•1 POkl SIS.JO. El9llll\ rKo -II-Kiii-CCMdOU), 14.00, 1 00, t .00; Folr Trip CPllkonlonl, UAO, Zl.IO, Mt. 6or From HOime IT reo•ur•I, 10 10 U eaocto (WI paid U12 20. $2 PIO Sb ll·l-7· .. l·l> paid $1,111.40 wttll 21 wlnntne. ttcu u Cllve "°''"I. U PIO SI• contolotlon paid ~.60 •"" 11l ""'""'"' llOels Cfou< l\otwt). Hl11th rec:• Orongoutong Don ICtortawl, I .to. 4.40, l.20. Monsieur Lo Rue ICreoeit•>. 6.>0, •.20; Fl .. I Pole• CArmstronQI, 110 \J uocto 17·11 paid SSJ.JO. Allt-• •,141. HorM .:.!~ atendlnga I J•y SI .IOCICIYS _.. ... tllll ........ Plnuy M<Cerron 0.1-... .,. Howley Coroero Fell S-mou• A""\fttieft M1011ore Mepl• 111 ISi IU .. ,414,227 761 UI 1• 4, IJ0,"5t 160 144 uo J,Jlt,S41 •" 1i. a> 1, 1n,1u llO 111 Ill ),OU,IM 1JO IJO Ill 1,990,103 MS '1 n 1,aD,OSI tit lot ti 2,SS4,JD2 '" 144 121 1,4'7 ,16S WO 111 76 J,410, 164 T•Allfl.ltS Wl\llllnghom M<Ano11, l'ronhl F M•rtln Ct mPO G Jone• O.Bont• Houlton Hough Stephen• PtuMont Colony E levtn Sltttl\ea JollnHonry Tempe•-• Hiii Summing Cotermon Woyword l.OU Heovenly CO..V PHI ForG1tl1lt19 Prlnc•t\ Karend Si.-Ill tllll ...._ 101 43 )4 Sl,l60- 1U " !' 1,6Jf,111 J.U .. .. 1.s.1 .... 440 1' U l,3'7,51S ns i. •s 1,m;m 101 •S 2• 1,102,701 * " •1 1,a.a.wo S4' 110 IO 1,009,M ,,, ... u 1.00. ... , 126 1' IS 9'0 S17 HOUl.S Storb Ut -• J I 7 S I ) 0 ) t 10 • I II 4 0 II S 1 • • 1 I • • l ~ .... 19~ "'4,IU S.Q,.JSO *·°'° ,....,. )40,100 w,,,. 1:11.111 JOS."1 2'2,IU lnternetJonel meat , .. ~. ...... 100 I Owe.,.. E,..,.. lU.5.), 10.26; 2. Wiiiie Gault CU S.J, 10 :r.; l . Stofon NII_, ISw-). I0.4S. .00 I. Enc J•)o cs-.-1. UAJ; 2. H-•rd -., IU.S.J, U.'3; J. KolNfl Hu'°n 1'--l ... 14, •. Zelle .JeffonGn CVS l, 46 JJ, S. Jo&lp A-(Y_.tevle), ••.14. 6 Jent Smeoet .. rd 10.nm•tlll, ... ••. 1. Eddie Correy IU S.I. 41.51. 1,SOO I. S-Sllon Coe CBrltoln), J:ll.ts; 2. Sieve S<otl CU.S l, J M.11; J. J-LUii Gonrol•• ISootn), 3 M 41; 4. Mike loll IKenyol, ):34 ... ; S. E•monn Cot"l•n Clreloncll, .a .... ; •• J-All01<ol CSc>oit'll, J Jt >I. 1 Andreu Boronakl IWttl Germony), J 1' •. I. Roy FlfM C Ireton<!). J.42 .. S,000 1 CllrlJIOf H1t1 .. CWHt G..-mony), IJ u "· 1. -c.em,,,..,1u (U.S.). IJ:2A n . J. JoM TrNC'r tlrOllltldl, 1J:te.4S, 4. Dan C••r, cu s .1. u .2'.lt. s. Ft11>er1 •••' tTonronlo). ll JO M, 6 Tl\omH Weu- lngf'leOe IW..I c;e.,.,.,,y), U 111'. •OO hurdl•• I Fro nt M•I•• 1swtuerlo11dl. so H . 1 Roll Koplto r CYUQOllovlol. SI.SI Dt1cu1 I .. n Ptu<llnell (Us 1, 2J7~ C World record, prevlout record 2u 1 h P1uone11, 1ffll, 1 Wolfo•no Sc:llmldt IEAltt Oof'monyl, t»-7, J. Jdwl Powell CU 5 I, JIT-4....,, 4 lmtlel\ B- ICuclloalovoklel, 216-J....,, S Morkkv T-llo lf'ln!Mml, 21WV>. t., KllVI Hjol .... (Norwoyl, JOl.t ...... 1 Mee: Wlll<lnt CU S.I, >00-tV. Pole vault -I Kellll Stock C Britain), 1M Y>, 2 Wl~ow ICo~•lewkr (Pol-), IMY>; J. Merlu• r Kllmuyk CPol-1, IMVI, 4. Eor1 Boll (U.S.). IM V., S. J-. Ml<"°' llellCIC IFronce).17-41"' .._ 100 -I. -l•lne Mennlnt (U.S.). J 01 14, J. Sllv-CNCloto (Italy), Z :112.J7; l. Frond,. o.ndr'on tC:-1, J:IM.u ; 4. l•M•tw ~ (Fr1111<e), 2:05.10; S. ~ lellt\GlttlU.S ).1:05 ... J,000 -I. lfllel'! WeulntPl•t• CWHI Gormony1, t :Dt.1'; 2 Monico Joye•. (Brl- 101111,t :Ol.'7, J.Getl FltchCConodol, •:II.Ji. Hlg" luMP I Ulrlke Mol'f•rlll CWotl G•rmony), ~J. J LOUIN Riii•• CU.S.), ~. Misc. Tueede~::.,::i-ct1on1 ,.__.. LNllllil CHICAGO WHtTa IOX -Si9ftM Jlfft lotr. ~. ORlt _.....,him to I(._. -eftNll'llitHkC-~ • ............... t.AN 'llANCllCO OIMCTI -FlrM H. I , "S'ec" •kNr-Mn, YI<• '"HIMnt of MMNll ...,..._ ,.. ""'ociM 111"' W11'1 T..,. Hellw, 411f'OC•of pljlyOr •n1+1•11.. &AICCTUU. ................. ..__ ...... DINI/lit NUOOan -~-.... Ale• '"'""" torwM. Md ......... ._ Oft • "'"".,_. coMt1Kt. P'OOTULL c...... .............. MONT!tl~L 4t.OUITTl5 -511!1M ICeltll Olf'Y, llfOMfw tM Ml .... 1 Wtft llkk .t .. Ml'\.'1 ... ...,,.. .... ,., • • ""'10erU!llr••· ....... ..-..w..- WAIMINOTO" ltlDSICINS -Wei"" MIUlt~.~IL flOCICIY ........ ....., ....... ST. '-<)UIS ILUH -$+tllM ..,<I.., .......,, ........ _._.. T0.0NTOMA~I LIAlll-....... 0... c.......-.. _ .... ClllctllNtl "-'".; .. C...• ""'8IPI u..-. ~L.-e UNIVIQlfY Of' .. l'VADA-alMO -.._....,. ........ ~ .. .. -··--_ .... --.. ~-.. --. ---·-_ __._.,.-_ -.....·~··-· ·-·------~ "; ;;. a.pt ~ .. ., Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8. 1981 DI Saints pick player of future N ewOrleans gives up first round -pick to get Wilson NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Seizing a rare op· portunlty, the New Orleans Saints used a first· round choice in the National Football League's supplemental draft to pick a "quarterback of the future" David Wilson of Illinois. No NFL team had ever given up anything higher than a fourth-round choice in a supplemen· tal draft before Tuesday "Generally, there just aren't going t.o be any outstanding players in a supplemental draft," said Harry Hulmes, director of football operations for the Saints. "It's a freak thing." In 1977, Sealtle gave a fourth-round choice for Al Hunter, wbo de· cided alter the regular NFL draft that year to forego his final year of eligibility at Notre Dame to turn professional. " Wilson became eligible for t~e draft two weeks ago after losing a court fight for a final season at IUlnois The s upplemental draft is open to all col- lege athletes who became eligible following the re- gular draft "We feel that Dave is definitely a first-round choice," said Saints Coach Bum Phillips. "We have added a top quarterback t.o our roster." Hulmes said the Saints had feelers from other teams about a possible trade for their choice, re- Double Bullet leads Transpac Bob Hanel's 65-foot catamaran Double Bullet logged a 322·mtle day's run Tuesday to place her at the half -way mark in the Multihull Transpacific duclng the element or risk by eivln1 New Orleans a strong indication that other clube were abo will· Ing to risk a first·round choice. The Swnts had lo bu11e the choice on such lo dications. s ince teams are not obliged to take part m supplemental drafts or announce their lnten· lions to other clubs This draft was conducted over the league's telex. with 10-minute waiting periods allotted ror each participating team. Phillips left ins tructions for Hulmes to use the firs t pick in the draft to gr ab Wilson, dictated a prepared statement for use after the draft, then left t'or a vacation in Texas. The choice, although used to pick a player for this season, will cost the Saints a first-round pick trl 1982. "We don't plan on having the first pick in the entire draft next year ," Philhps said The supplemental draft was conducted in the order of finish in the 1980 season. The Saints picked first by virtue or a 1·15 record -tbe mis- erable mark that gave New Orleans the first choice in trus year's draft With that first choice in the regular draft. New Orleans chose Heisman Trophy winner George Rogerio, the South Carolina running back. Whtie Rogers 1s expected to be an instant starter. Wilson 1s expected to get some seasoning as an unders tudy to veteran quarterback Archie Manning, 32. who is entering his 11th season. Hulmes said he expects Wilson to be signed by Monday, when Saints rookies report to preseason camp at Vero Beach. Fla . "We've sort or reached somewhat or a ten- tall ve a~recment with him, and we expect a fo~mal signing before the week is out," Hulmes said race from Los Angeles to Honolulu ,---------- Double Bullet's 1 p m position would place her about 200 miles ahead of the monohulls sailing the Transpac race to Honolulu. Hanel , whose catamaran broke down within 24 hours or the start of the 1979 multihull race, is out to better the elapsed time record for the crossing set by the monohull Merlin in the 1977 Honolulu race. The re· cord is eight days and 11 hours The mult1hull race is co·sponsored by Seal Beach Yacht Club of Long Beach and the Outrig· ger Canoe Club of Waikiki and 1s entirely separate from the TPYC monohull race Hanel s aid Double Bullet was sailing in a 20· knot northeast wtnd in choppy seas. WRIGHT'S HARDWARE PARKl.HG LOT SALE! SATURDAY, JULY I Ith 50°/o OFF:~"=:;. 25°/o OFF 25°/o OFF Olltilhwdw.,... .,._ ....... °" .. atock lot -............ HEW DEPT. -ANTIQUE IOOKS 126 Rochethr, Costa MeM • 541-7745 J.d ............. .,_ w..t loy• COMPUTER BALANCE s2000 A orate & Balance 4 Teres Mosl US Cars Specialty 'Mleels Extra A Flcllllou1 Bu1lneu Nome Slolemont llled wttlt 11\e Counl'I' Cl•rk la ~•lld lor five yoo11 ofter •"lcl\ lime continuing bu1lneno1 mu1t rollle Publlco llon It noconery onl'f II there o re chengu C11t lho Legol Ooperlment ol 11\e DAILY PILOT l o• l nlorm•llon a nd n•c•n•"' lorm1 642-4321 hi 332 IMPORT UHIROY AL STEELER CAR SPECIAL MEDIC FABRIC STEll 155-12 S2U5 S3l95 155-13 S27.95 S35.95 155-13 S2U5 SJS.95 165-14 S3U5 S42.95 tis. 14 S34.15 $45.15 11$-15 $35.15 S4U5 METRIC Al.PHA PRICE NUMERIC P 115/IOR i) Cl71alJ 163.97 t.97 ~lt5/7Hl4 871114 68.95 2.33 ,105j70114 71114 73.91 2.31 P'105j7Hl4 R71a14 75.6& 2.48 PZOl/75115 R~la15 72.59 2.57 P215j7511S 711L15 10.79 2.75 ,.ZZ5j7HI 5 15.52 2.93 '2Hj71l15 1'1llf at.t l.11 I 00/o OFF STIBBS ,~ L~----- HEAVY DUTY SHOCKS 5 17!~ SUPER IMPORT SPECIALS Blackwall Steel Radials 175/70R13 ..... $35.95 185/70Rl3 . 185/70R14 205/70Rl4 SS.95 S3U5 S45.95 HOURS: DAILY 8-6 SAT. M Q.OSED SUNDAY Orll'tgl Cout DAILY PtLOT/Wedne~ay, Julv 8. 1981 THE FAMILl' c1act1 BIG GEORGE by Vi(gil Partch (VIP) by Bil Keane "She's comforting him, not burping him." "Now that's what I eall follow·through!" by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum "I found two gray hairs and you're to blame!" HER NAME'S LANA WE65TER: IT 5HOULD MON THE NEXT PAGE : rou KNOW, I HAVEN'T HEARD fROM HER !?INCE e»if MET YOUR FRIEND 006 HERE IN THE ~oTAURANT THAT DAY.' --,..... lJO .. l ~ I I I ~ I & I I 0 ''Okay, pal, you're not tooling anyone. The television Is still warml" 0()1NG! \\ by Harold Le Oou x bv Jim Davis I D1'7Ni ALLOW FOR MV RE91LIENl NATURE PEANt:TS Tt: MB LEW EED8 !HANKS FOR -rnE RIPE, cowoov ... 1 NEEDEV™A'f IORELAX. .. 7~8 SHOE IM(l ~A ttaen' ~~TKt>~tu ~t.e~t·· ~i\NC\' NANC~ GO 10 THE STORE AND GET A DOZEN EGGS BRABBLE DR.SMOCK ARe YOLJ UP ON .AU.. KI N~9 OF Me!C'ICINS, 91" ~ o·-·---.. AND DON1T RUN WITH THEM l(EAH !"TMl5 15 M15AA, -mE WHAL.£ IVE: AOOPT'ED! '™'~' omtt. ON\SIOK 11\M& USI&~~ At& 8' '-Y.mMe.L 'i PEMAt40INt:,! 11' ~Kf S A L01' O~ CoNCtN'1U 'f!Ot-l ' T•f t..W 5END IN A CONTRIBUTION AND 1HEY 5END lXXl BAc.K A PIC:TllRE. CF ~ WHAL.£ AND .50ME BI06RAPH ICAl INR'.>RMA1lON f by Charles M. Schulz SULKIN6 IS SPOILEP WMEN '(OU CAN'T 6ET COMFOOABLE by Tom K Ryan Jh by Kevin Fagan I eic,a114 M.1~ "M~Pf'{ ~s .. •NQ r1ti11S~&O MALr. llo)~'f 1'~t4 ~ f.Clt&E 'S COtt'f'AM'i ~ I" fJ) by George Lemont j;'M K INPA POW N ON 1'l-tA 1" ~ROWN GUNK W11"H 1"He! ~1$HY "T"AS~I!! ~ WONPeR IF OL,' eARON "1C>e t.-l 9"T"e~ KNE!W WHA1" He! W.A5 0 POIN ' WHl!!N He 0 POPLJt.-A~IZltP 1'M IS POC. Tc::>R 9 1 <5 tt ., .. FOB BETTEaoa t'•• ••••£ by Lynn Johnston -H~ITIS ... MY ~T"(OLD BIKINI . LET '8 see IF I CAN SllL.LGETINib THIS THING. ----..·~------~ ----~-----------'-..._...;:-._~-------""·----· .... -...__. ________ . ____ ....... _ ........... _. ___ ._ ..... __ ._._ .... _______ --w -=----------- Orange Coast DAILY PILOTM'ednesday. July 8. 1981 D& • PUBLIC NOTICE P\JBLIC NOTICt: --------·-·-·--· -lllOTIC8 ~ Twun••·· SALi .. ICTITIOUS IUllllllU T,S. ... t...,.... lllAMa ITATIMIHT On ,......,_.,, JVl't' ». IWI, 411 11:00 Tiit loJIOWNlg Ptrton II OOlng IN" t.m., ALAMITOS IM:fltOW, •• ouly M\a•a: •_.int• Trl!Met Uftdtf -,_.,_II\ Ill ACCENTS, t2) ACCENT!> IY It 0..0 Of Tl'\ltt. rec.,..... May ti, Cl>ll!RYl., n11 Maro.,.•• Orlvt. t•, U ""'*· lllO. ,..,._In ltOoll IMOf. Nawp0rtllHCll,CAt'l"-', ,... ·-°' Offlci.1 ·"'-In th9 of. JOHN s APGAR, Utt Meroer•t II« of .. C-ty RKOt'O.t °' Otenoot Or Ive, N..._-t 8ffCll. CA.,~, eou11tr,Celffornlo 1'111\ bual,.'6 IJ (ON!vtl..S by an In· WILi. Sll.L AT "VII.IC AUCTION dlvld11a1 TO HIOHl:IT llOOE• FOR CA$H, JOIVIS ""941• CAIHlaWS CHICie Oa Cll aTl ,IEO Thi• atat""""t we• 1111141 with Illa CHECK, (tl9yalllt •• tlmt Of .... Ill County ClerkofOranueCO\llllYOllJun• leWful .-y o# h United S.•'"I at 12, 1911 Ille MMICtl f,_I enlt_. It Ille Old PtMt7J Publhllolel Orenoit CO.•I OaHy PllOI, o .. ,,.. Clawlty ~. I_., '" tlle lOO ~-o# Wfft ~AM atvd., llOtll\trl't' W..16W. $t,_tl, Stolte Ant, Calllorllla, ell rltN, 1111• Md Int~•• conveyed to Md -hei. liy II ullOet w ld 0..0 of Trut.1 tn Ille pr-rty tltu•t•d Ill Miid County and State 0.Krlb9d• Lot ?)Of lracl No 2115, H per"'~ recoroecs In Boat. t•, Pag11 tS of Ml1· <•ll•n-INclt, In IN Office of the County R~ of said c-h. Tru•IO# or record owner-HUN TINGTON VISTA INVESTMENTS, a llmltad ~11\lp. Tiie ,,,_ eddirftl ef>d Olher com- mon dell-tlon, It •nY. of ti• •Ml P'-rtY dolkrlbad -... I> purport911 to Ila 1'2.41 0.1-..-e Str•t, Hlllll· lngton llMdl, C.lltornl•. Tiit ~IOMd Tt'\Kl .. dl>el•lrnt anr llal>lllly tor any Incorrect,." of tlle alrMt ~ ..S other CeftlMOf\ dealgnatlon, II any, '1-.. herein June l7, 24, July t, a. 1,.1 l~'HI PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTI flOU• IUSlllllU MAMI $TA TIMI MT .I Tll• foll-1111 ~ la Going llU•f. f\et• .,. WOOOEH HtCICEL SOf'TWARE, •n HOiiow 8rooll. Cost• ~ ... CA "2U6. JAMES WILLIAM AAHOlO, fU Hollow 8rooll, C.Mle Mew, CA tU2' Thi• busl,.... ll conduct911 bV tn "" dlvldu•I J ArnolO Thi• •ttt-1 wet rnao wltll t1'e CO\lnly Ciera ol Or-COUnly on J11ty 1, 1 .. 1 ,,~ PubllsNcl Or-Goatt Oally Piiot, Jul• I, U, 2l, 1', , .. , J011.e1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l"U•L•C 1aRv1ca 11111 lllOUUCIMllNT Tiie c111-.1"eca ~ tnc .., -•• ttw _...,,... o1 tlW OWkl Cera foed ,..,..,_, MeeU Wiii M •v•ll•llle •I "" ..,.., ... cllar .. IO •nrollH clllldren. ft• .. Wiii be no owrt 1-lflt.atlOn ol CIWl*'en r.ealv· 1119 f'" -redllceel IWka !Nell -,,...,, wlll lie ~owld9d wllllOUI r..-rd to ree., c-. or natlonal 0<IOfn. P\llllllMCI Ortl'IQll CM1t Delly Piiot, J wly a. '"' -." PUBLIC NOTICE ... PUBLIC NOTICE PUBL.IC NOTICE "ICTI TI OUI IUllMOt lllCTl''10UI all11MIA MAMI ITATIM.IMT lilAMa ITAT·•MalllT Tiie loll-Ing per-I• 0.1119 tiu•I· Tiit IOllOWll'lf --· are Oollle MU•&: blllll!AU fl: Aat:HJ l'INE ARl , 1"2 .. IKOCll. THE •w•o1.ow OROUP, n1n Co.I• Mete. C.ll!Ol'nl• ••11 Wtt tarl\ A-. OM..,. Oro~, CA Jotln f . ,.,,._, 111 Al~ '''"'· ~. Nawptrt llM<ll, C.lll0<nl• •~ 5Wl!OLOW, INC., • California Tlllt 11;n1,..., It ~ondll<t9d by an In· c.,,.,.u.,,, ttttt 'WHLar11 Avenw, dlvlduat. Oe.-0.n ~. CA._,.J J-E Ar- U la ...,_. I• c-19" by • tor· Tllh t\11....,._I w•• 111.0 wltll Ow poratlcill. (.ountr Clan. of 0••11119 County on 5WIOLOW, INC JIHI• >O, lftl. Jlltll Goold, flU$1U VIC• ~I Pllbll.-Or-Coa•I Dally Piiot, Tllll ..._.,_, -lllM •1111 I,_ JUiy I, t, IS, tt, ,,., Hs..tl County C..,... ol Or-CGUl'lly on July----------·--• U:~,.,.,c.. PU8UC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF (t0'-DAMD90U> ,.,,..1nous•u111u1n tMS-a.-.-,on... ~· JANET ELIZABETH ..... , ...... ,CA.11 lllAMllSTAHM&NT K O E H L E R A N O O F l'tUMI T11t tollowlng pe,_, it oo•llil bu•t P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A 0 • P\iblt-Or-CMtl O•lly P11q1, ""'• o : J uly a, u, 22, 1', , .. , J07l .. 1 COVERl!O WAGON SALOON, MINISTER ESTATE NO. 2&J1 Brls1o01,Colta1Nw,ce111orn1• A ·109421. G•••ld l 8ehe, U04 ltotQency T 0 a I I h e I r s • PUBLIC NOTICE Circle, Fult.rlon, Calllornl• TPll• bu61M!t~ I• <Ofld;Kl.0 by an In beneficiaries, cred itors ----dhlldu•I a nd contl~ent c reditors of "~~~':::::~·:::' Thi• ;:~~i 8:::•111..s •1111 the Janet Elizabeth Koehler Tll• 1011ow1ng per""'• are doing c011111~ Cl••'-ot ora11119 County on and persons who may be bualneu as: J11n• ». ,,., o therw ise Int erested In the ALZA DEVELOPMENT COM· ,.~ P11bllllltd Or-Coast Oetly Piiot, 'II d / t t PANY. 111·F Alversld• Avenue, w 1 a n or es a e: N••OOrt e..c11, CA n..s. A petition has bee n filed J AIME ALCALOE. Prttlclent. JDS July I, •. IS, n , "" Ziell.fl by Bank of America N.T. ::,1~••w A-."'" G-1e1, CA 1 & S .A . in the Sup erior JULIO ZAPATA. 1110 Pratldent, Court of O r a nge County JQj w. -Y A-, s.n Gllbrl••· request ing that Bank of CA •171•· PUBLIC NOTICE "'CTITIOUI •USllHU HAMll $TATlMllNT PlJBLJC NOTICE MOTICI 0 .. Taun1a•s $At.• l.oan No Jt.ll!n/l'OWE \.L TS NO~ NEWPORT HOME LOAN, INC eJ duly •PCM>lnteo Tr11''" 11ndt r Ille lollow1ng OeKrl-da-0 Of'"''' WI I \. Sill Af PV8llC AUCTION ro fHI! HIGHEST 81DDER FOR CASH (pay•bte •• time ot "'• In ••w'"' mOMy Of lhe Uj\1\ad ~lateal all right, tltlt and lnter-.1 ,on.,.yeel to and now Mid DY II ...... r \Aid 0..0 of Tru\I In lM property IWtaln•ll•• da.c.rl- T RUSTOR. GE.NE I:, POWELL, •II 11nm•rrlea men llENEFI CtAAY. NEWPORT HOMEl.OANTRUST •2 R•co•ded A\111\1>1 U. 1'71 tt l11ttr No. J1'1) In boot< tte14 ""'°' 1910 o1 01 11<1•1 RKOrd• Ill ,,,. Office ol Illa R !corder of Oranoe County, talG deao of lru•t dltcrlbes the tollowlng pro- p.rty · A Con_,,lnlum CotnPOMlll ul PARCllL 1' Unit No l?, In ti.. City Of Nawpor1 8uch, County of Oran99, State ol Catllornta, •• •llOwn •n<I dtlc<loed In the Condomlnlllf'I Pten r•corded on O<toblr 26, 1<116, In OOOk 11911, -}1', OlllCl•I RKord•, 01 tald Co11nty Said .. ,. will b9 -· but w1ti-1 coveNnt or warranty, express °' 1rn. pllt<I, ._dtno tltla, -.uion. o• enc11mbrencu , 10 P•Y tlM unpaid balenca ol llW no•< 1) t«\lfed by w ld lllCTITIOUS IUSIHllU HAMI STATllMllllT Ame ·ca N T & S A be T1111 bu•lntu •• conducted llY • ', rt • • • • Q•Mr al -1,_n/llp, appointed as personal Ju11o ~1a Tnt lollowtllQ perMH\ IS clOlng bu•I n•n •• PARCEL I An 11ncllvldod one •IQllly tNrd 111131 llll•f .. I •• • tenanl In cornrnon "' lne , .. lnttratt In •ncl 10 Ille <;ornrnon Aru of lot t ot Tract k44, •• per m<IP Iliad In OOOk 114, pegu Jq to 4) lnclu•I••, Mltcell•MO..• M•p•, rKO<d• ot >ald County, n •uch tern\ 11 dllltwd In Ille Arllcle enllllad "Oellnltlont" of tne Declerallon of COv•n•nh, CondlUon• •no Re\tr~< tlont r•cordt<I °" Octooer u , 19,. In bOOk 11q37, -.0.. Olllcl•I Record• ot >•Id County lllle ·o.c1arat1on"l, and •nY amef1drnent> or anM••tl0<1• thereto 0..0 of Tr·ust, IJ>.Wll t t•.S14.eS •P proalmatll4y, lnc:luctlno •• ~ovlded In Mild noto(tl. ecrvenc~ 11 any, under Illa terms ol .. Id 0..0 ot Trust, ..... tMfOU -e._, o1 the Tru\I .. and of the trwu c r.ateCI by talo Oeed of Trust. rlt• -kl•ry under •aAd 0..0 or Tr11t1 Mrttolore aucutad and de· Hwr•d to the ~llQne<I a written O.UarlWllon of Oef..,11 -a.mend tor Sate, and • written Notice of Oal•ult -Election to Sell. TM \In· dertlonad c•usad .. id Nolle• ot Oaleult -Election to s.11 to be re· cordtd It! Ille c-ty _,..,. Ille •N I property II IOC•tad. AL.AMI TOS ESCROW e1 TrustM Tit• lnwranc• ...o TrvstC~ny, """"' v.,._Plnecla ,,.. .... ....,., <-II .. MN TITLI IHS41aAHCtf AHO TRUST COMl"AMY u .......... -..... lft A ..... , CA •tt -..... ..... 27t1 Oete: .J-JO, 1•1 Publla'*' 0raft99 Coal! O•llY Pilot, JUl'f I, IS, 2:2, 1•1 JOs..al PUBUC N()TICE P'ICTITIOUS •USIHIESS "AMI" STATllMlllllT Tll• IOll-lng pe,,.,,, I• aomg ..... , n.u.•1 H. H. HARDING a. ASSOCIATES, 11J01 Pln•trH Lana, H11nllngton 8aec". CA n.. HERBERT HAM ILTO N HARDING, 11)01 Plrwtr" Lane, Hunt• 1noton e..c,,, CA n .... Tllh buslrwu I• u1nducl*d 111 •n 1n-dlvlduat. H H. Herding Thtt Jlat-t Wat fllecl •111'1 the County Cler1< al <>+-•'9 County on .July 7,lML Tii t foll-Ing l>"rto"• art doing t><nlneu as: PROFESSIONAL SERVICES, U301 RldOa Route Orio, SP •·3, ~•ourw Hlllt, CA~ JEUE C. llUSBIN, llJOI RldQa Route, No. 4l, Leouna Hll", CA Alt.SJ T 1111 buslowu It conouct911 by •n In dlvlduet. J-c. Busbin Tii i• st•t-t w., Iliad wltl'I IM C°"ntv Cler1< ol Or-County 0tt July 1, "'' 1"16'Mt Publl.,_., Or-Coas1 Dally Piiot, J\llY t, U, 22, 1', , .. , >01UI PUBLIC NOTICE HOTICll 0" T•unllll'5 SALi" T.S. .... JUJS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, IMI on Wed""""'' July ?'I, 19'1, at t ·OO o'ctoc-a.m. of .. Id 0.Y. In the office or REAL ESTATE SECURITIES SERVICE, tocat•d •• 1010 NOrlll Bro.away, 5'111• :io., In the C•t• of S.n· ta Ana, County of O•-. State of Calllornta, EQUITRANS, a C.llfO#nta corponllon, .. duty ~nt..i TrustM under -pU<.....,t to the -· of ule confeq 911 In IMI certain Oead ol Trust uecutad by MANLEY .J FEOUCIA& OENEtGE 0. FEOUCIA, huU>•nd -wife, ra<orcl9d 0<1-r 2, UICI, In 8-13111 of Otfl<lal Record• ol .. Id County, at -•7, Re<or<kr'• 1nu r11!Mflt No 1112, by r••-' of • Or••ch or dttf1'1lt In payme nt or performance of the obttgallon' ...:ured ,,...~, lncluclltlil tlwt IWH<ll or dala\111, Motlu ol w11101 w-. r.- cordad -""" t. '"'· In 8oolr 1400$ of 011"1•1 Rac0<<k of .. Id County, at p•g• 1244, Rac:CH'.,.,.'t 1n1tr11-M No ISO., Wilt.. SELL AT PU8LIC AUC· TION TO THE HIGHEST 8100ER FOR CASH, law!11I -y of Illa Unit "UMI •d Stilts, all payat>le at lN II-of Publl.,,.., Orat1119 CoaJ1 O•lly Piiot U I•, Jiii •IQl>I, Ull• •nd Int ..... now July I, U, n. 1'. ,,., JCI07.f1 held by It, al Trust ... In -to llWlt r• P UBLIC NOTICF. f'ICTITIOUS IUllMU$ NAME STATEMllNT Tiie fottowln11 perton• ••• doing ll\ISln•Ual. ACE SPORTS &OUTIOVE, 1"°2 Broollllurst StrMI, Fountain V•ll•Y. CA "110I. MACI( M. Ml'l'ALAl(I, 30f.l Coun· lry Cl11b, Coate Me .. , CA '762'. SACHIKO M. MIYAZAKI, ~3 Country CllA>, C:O.ta Mffe, CA '1t.2' Tr.II Wilntt• II Conc!llC'lecl bY all llt dlVldu•I (H"*"" & Wife) S.CIMko M. Mlyaz.akl •I prol>"rtY "''-.. tn wld (OU/llV -Stale, dHCrlbtd at loll-•· lot 1 ol Tract No '710, In the City of Newport a..ch, •• thOwn on • m •p re corded 1n 8ootl , ... -" of Mlt· callane«a ~. tn Ille otllce of 1he c ounly rec0<.,.,. of wold c.....,ty The str .. t Midt ft\ or otP'lrlr common deslgNllOn, II ally, of -, .. , o•-·· ly ll•relnebow dM<rl-Is P\lr_.1ac1 to be 1.,1 $.Intl-Ortw, Newport BaacPI, C..lilomt• Tiit ~'9nld hereby dltcl•lrn• •II llablllty for •ny lncorrKIMn In said ,,,.., -r• or olllar common oaslgnttlori Said WI• wlll be rn«M wllhoVt war· represe ntative to a d · T1111 ttat-1 •• 111te1 with,,.. mini s t e r the est a t e of ~.~~~Y , .. ,,. of °'an99 County°" July Janet Elizabeth Koehler ,,u.., (under the Ind ependent Publl.,,.., Orange c...>1 oa11y Pilot, Administration of E s tates Julye, u, n , tt, '"' ,,....., Act). T he petition is set for P UBLIC NOTICE - h earing in Dept . No. 3 at 700 C ivic Cente r Drive, - West , in the City of Santa sH~~~~c,,~~:~ •• Ana, California on July 29, couNTYOP:ORAHGE 1981 at 9 :30 a.m. HOTICll OP' SALll IF YOU OBJ ECT to the 0u,,":~.~~~g~:l grant ing of the petition, BACK BA Y GAR0£N S you s hould either appear HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION, ate at the hearing and state P1a1n1111"" WILLIAM E OLIVA,•••• Oefenoan1 Numo.r :M·7•U. your obj ection s or file 1, 111, under\lgnac1, &r•d G••o , w r itten objections with the Sllar111 Co•-• counly ol Oranoa. court before the hearing. Stttt 01 C.tlforni•, ao her•bY certify Your appearance may be lllatbY•lrt..,.ofOacreeofFo...ctowr• end Sate In the St.iperlor Courl ol UHi In person or by your at-county 01 Or•nQ9. Statt of ca111orn1a torney, lenltred on Ae>rll 2, 19'1, ana recorded I F y 0 U A R E A Aprlll,t .. 1,lntheebow•ntltlaoacllon, CREDI TOR or a cont-~:~:~'.:r,8:,~,.~,::. •GC.~~1~.;;1! ingent Credito r Of the de-"onprofilcorPOtallon,lllaabOwnarntd ceased you must file your Platnlllf, obl•lned • juclQment •nd . ' . dee rte of lorectowre Ind .alt agalnll C:l a1m With t h e COUrt Or Willl•mE Oll va,defanclanl,f0<tlluum present it to the personal 01TwoT110uwndOneHunctrtdSannty· representative appointed two ThouHnd Ooll•f\, 1awiu1money01 by the court w ithin fo ur ~':'.~t.;:~~~~~·::t;;,11'.:r,~.0;.:;:..::, months from th e date o f Apr1.,,1981,1•mcommanc1tdto••ll•11 first issuance of letter s as tnt propertv in 111t COU<1tv. of Orar>oe . provided in Section 700 of ~~1~.!!,,0f C•lllorn••, do>cr11><1d " th e Pro bate Code o t l oll4 o1Tracl '.Ml3••1>ermapre- California. The time t o r corded In Boot. 171, Pagft 411 to 50, In· filing c laims will not ex-clutiv•. of Mh<etoeneCNt Maps, r• . coro• of Orange County, Ca•llornll p 1r e prior to four months Property ,. more commonly 11nown from the date o f the hear-as. JJ4 Reim• 1...1 .. , unit ,., cost• ing no ticed above. M• ... c .111orri1• YOU MAY EXAMI N E 1.~::!~: ·~.~:,:~.~,1~~~-: :~· the file kept by the cou rt. purten•nc~ owrtunto bel-ltlil or 1n II you are interested inthe •nywlMP •ll9<>rt•ln1no f. PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY estate, you may 1le a re -c;ivEN 111.1 on Thu•w:t•Y. J111y Jl, quest with the court t o re-'"'· •• 10 oo o«lock, • rn 01 that o•r Ceive Special notice Of the •t M•ln L.-y, CO..rl-. 100 Clvk inventory of estate a sset s cent•r Drive West City 01 Santa Ana, , . I will >ell Ille ebow de><rlb9d pr-r a nd of t he pet1t1ons, ac-ly, under .. ,d .,,,, •nd clKree, or to c o u n t s a n d re p o r t s rnucll ,...,.fOf as m•v be necn...-v 10 described In Section 1200 s ••tl•ty ... d 11/dQment with 1n1arnb of the Califo rnia Probate :::h c~:'~~ ... 1·~~ ~:":;~,::; Code. s11tes O•tedat s.nta Ana, Calllornla,J unet, Colonet S. H. Franklin , Attorney at Law, 324 Gr-.nd Canal, Balboa Island, California 92663, (714) 548-1111. 1'111 8RA0 GATES. si-ertll·Coroner County of Or.,09, C• B• R Tunstall. S.roHnl -s.GMctmM MANAGEMEN T SE AR CH CONSULTANTS, IJOI Oova. Newport Bee<ll, Calll0<11la '2..0 Geo•Qe M. Harri•. 119 Via UnGIM, N•wPO<t e..c11, Calt!Of'nla q,..3 Tiii> °""'""'' I• condu< lad by an In dlvlOUll GaCH'OI M Harrla Tim •l•t-1 was filed with the County Clerk of Orenoe County on EXCEPT THEREFROM •II oil, O•>, m tn•r•I\ •nd Otnet f\ydrOC•rbOn,. Dalow • depth ot !lOO 1 .. 1. •llhoul Ille rlQnt Of SUriKe t!ntry, •\ fe\ierYed in 1n~irumtnt\ of r•(Of0 PARCEL J: Ea...,,ent(ll ., tuCh ••,•me"l(\J l\/•r• p.trt1cul•rly sel rortll In 1119 Art•clt entltteo "Eata mtnh of 1119 Oacl•rallon unoar the S.CllOt\ llHdlnQl•I It\ >UCh Arl1tl• en P't.SOU 1111ed H lollowt VtllltleJ", ·'Stlll•· P11b11.-Or-Coa•I Dally Piiot. :;::~·A~:: ::::= .. ~'.""nl" •nd Corn Jun• l•. 19'1 J11lv I,'· lS, u. l'il 7t3l-81 12 Se• lliMIO Ori••. Newoort Bt•Cn PUBLIC NOTICE K~ltUI OltAltlGll COUNTY 5UPER10tl COUltT CA tl'60 ··c If•'''"' 11tddr•\.i ot common Ot •IC1~•t10<1 I> •i'lown •bo••. no w•rr•nty '' Q•Yen ., to lb c.ompl•ltne-» or cor r~tnenJ " Ttlt benellciery u.-O.r ••IO Deea of T ru,t, by reA\On ot 6 Or••<h or det•utt 100 Civic c.n1 .. Orlw Watt II\ Ill• ob1tgat1on> \•t11reO lh•rtby, s...c. AIM, Cell...,..• n111 ll••tlofore ••ecuted •l'l<I del1ver.o to PLAINTIFF .JANA MA HLER, etc the un<1en111MO • wrlllen Otcl•rellon c R 0 s s . c 0 M p l A I N A N T 01 Otf<IUll .,., Otmand for Seit, •nd MAR ILYN SUE MEREOITH wrtoten notice ot Dr@aCh eno or ~•ectlO<I OEFENOANT EOWARO VINCE lo , ....... ttw undo"IQN!d to .-11 ,.,d GRIJALllA. el al property to ;.a11sty said oDllQellon• CROSS.DEFENDANTS EOWARO ano 11\ettaller tilt uf\Ck'rOIQnad <41u .. d VI NCE GRIJALllA, ROOOt.FO seldnot1ce otoruch •ndolele<t10ftto GR IJ ALVA, MRS RODOL FO be Recorded M.orcll ll, t'ltt •• 1n>1r GRIJALllA, -OOES I lhrougtl XX, No 19033 In -l)'ltt Qage .. 77. ot lnct111lve .. 10 Ofllc1al RKord• llJMMOMS OH c aou.<:OMPLAINT C.AH lllUM•t!• JI MU NOTICllt Y• l'lave loMll &W41. TIM ,.llrl may llKUll ... lllJI Y• WI-I "'" ...... _,.. .... ". , ... r..-. wlUll• • tllyL ,._ IM lftlertftatl• ...... II rou wl.,, to -k Ille Odvlce of an allorn•y In 1111• ""'"•" you llloulO clO •P promptly to that yo11r wntt•n ro ponsa. II at1•, ma y be !lied "" 11- AYISO I u.-. Ila -............. llt ,,,_,,..... -••tr c•tn u•. Mot·~·--u ... r--· N •etttn .. • '91ea. L .. I• lftl-· Clett .......... SI V•l.0 -· tohcllar el conw10 de 11n ·~ .,, Hit nunto, deberla h.acerto fr\mtdlat,mente. de '''• m •nlf"A, SU '"""9''-" •Ktilti, 'i h•'f alg11na, Puede 1otr reglttr-• tlarnpo, I TO THE OEFENOANT A clvll complelnt Ila• -1111141 by the plain· 1111 aoAIMI you. II you wllll to ckl•nd lllh taWWll. you mu•I. within lO O.n alter tllh wtntnC>M i• •arvad on you, Ille wltll tllb court • w•ltl•n ,._. .. to lllf complaint Unlttt you dO M>. your default wlll be entered on •P PllUll011 ol the pllllnllll, and tllh court mey enter • l~t eg•ln>t vou for 1119 relief --In Ille complaint, wlllc" could rewlt In gam1t11me<11 ol w•OH. 1••1111 of '-'0 or P•-11 or olll•• rellaf •-lad In ttw t omPo•lnl OATEO Ai><ll 17, 1'90 LEE A B"ANCH, Clark 8, IMrflyn "'°"In, Otcluty !talO S•I• will be m.O., 11\11 wltl><>ut cov•tt•flt or •• ,,.,,,.,, eXDftt\ or 1m piled, r19ArdlnQ till•. PG•J.eSlion, or ent.umt>rMK:•~, to pey t~ rema1n1n9 prlnc1pll wm OI 1119 nolt(>l •e<ured by u 110 OMd of Trvst. •ltn interest .a\. 1n s,•1d not& prOYloed, •dY•nt .s1 1t any, undtr th-. term\ ot \aid OMO of Tru)t, tt•\, ch•rQf'\ dnct ~-~n\•$ ot th~ Tru•ttt and or t~ Hu•~ cr .. 1ac1 by said Offdof Tru.i S.1d salt will "" Nld °" l tiurtdtv, July t•, 1~1 •I l 00 PM •I the Chap. man Avenu. entr•nc~ to th• Civic Center 8ulld1ng, 100 E•sl ChaPm•n Av•nua, In tne City of Or-. CA At th• 11rne ot 11\e Initial P\lbllcallOft of 1111' Rolle< the total •mount ot th• unpa id b•t•nt • o• tn• obftQ•t•ori le(Uftd tly t~ •OO•t destrll>ecl dffd 01 tru\t •nd e\ti""4tf'd <OSch, e•Pt'nw ,, •nd •dv•nc.-1> "43,000 U. ro 0•1"'m1M trw ooen•no O•O. 1ot.1 ma1 call P IO <137.-. O•le June It, !'let NEWPORT HOME LOAN I~. •• .. Id Trust .. 8y T 0 SERI/ICE COMPANY .aQanl By Chri\ T•l•fus, AS\1)tent Secretary One C1tv 8o<Jltvard Wt>I O+-anoe. CA '171>98 1/14) IJ~718 Publh....., Ntwpor1 Harbor N~w• Pren combfned with tho Oranoe Coa•I Oally Pllo<, .J"""' 1• . .J \llY 1. I. t91t 179'-11 PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE lllOTlCI O' &M.9 CH' allM. f'llOl'I a"TY AT NIYATa loAL.A "°'-IUl"l•toacou"' °"TM• iTA Tl Ofl CAU f'04tNIA l'Otl TMll COUlfTY 0 .. LOI AHOILH In Ille nwlW f/I trw 11\ele of OOH MAltRY THATCHER, O.C..eM4, NOTICE Iii> HIEltEt'I' OtVl!H tllal tlle IH\Oer~llt'H will sail •• ~lvat• .. It, to ti. "'919tt lllddltr, -Ille larrna -c-llon• llatelNolt.ar ,...,,. tlonad efld IVbje<t to c.Of\ltrlNtlen by Ille Mid ~110< G9'1'1, °" o< ef tt• ti. Jhl dey of Jiiiy, 1tt1, at Ille offlu ol ttou w. an.....,...r, to E .. t Pal-I• •oulev•rd, P•lmcMlt, Coumy o1 l..ot Anoatn , Miiia of C•lllo<nl•, all tlle rlglll, IHlt -l"'wnl of ••d cit• cHMd at tlW ,,,,,. of oeatll -ail rte"'· 1111• -lnt9'etl 11'1.i ,,.. .... ,. ot u ld de'MMd h•• ac.qulr•d Oy oc>erallon OI l•w 0< Olherwl .. , OtlWr 11\an Of i.1 addillOn II) N I of teld cit· ~••Md. el the 11,.,,. ol ci.a111, In and to all Iha urtaln -rty altuated In the Count• of Or .. , SC•I• Of CAlllOf'nla. r>artlcul#I• -.r1bed •• fOltow•· PARCEL I An undivided 1't Intern! In the W.\I 'II of 11W NOrt-\I \lo ol Illa Sovthwftl 'f• (}/ lht So\ltll l't Of Loi •, In 8100 It Of Tract t•. Co .. I aout ... ard Fa•-· In the County of Orange, Stale of C•lllorn1a, at .,... MAP tllereol recorded In llOOlo 10, at Pao .. 35 and 3', of MIS<allanMua M•P•, racordt of wtld Oret>Qe GOVl'lly, IC19tllltt Willi all •t-U for SITH I ""'--tor laying -maintain Ing pll>" 11,., on, over -aero• otll9f IMldt In 8i0Cf(j 11, ti, 1• -JO In .. 10 Tr•ct .. 0< any ,...,bdlvlalon tMreof llare1ol0<a crNtad -now aalatlno IO< lht -Ill of WIG lend flrti at>o ... deKrlDtd.. PUBLIC NOTICE ,..,., .. ICTITIOUI •uslNU.$ NAMI ITATUt&llMT 'n• 1011 .. ino °'"'°" 11 •Ing bUtl· " ... ., Ol'ttC;Al l'AiHIOH CENTER NEWPORl . 1411 Vie 1..100, N-port 11,.,,., ca11fo.n1a fl.al l •llO Modnlek, Ital '•"nlnO Jl•Ml, l.OI AnQltlH, C:allfO< nla '°°2 .. Tiii• DUotneu I• c-.<1.0 by an In OlvlClual lallgMoctn•O 1 "'' , .. ,_, ••• mao w1111 the (o.inty Cler' of <>+-•not County on J""• ,,, , .. , .,,.,_ PuOlllhad Or•nge Co.ut Oat11 Piiot, J11M 11, 14, J11ly 1, l, 1 .. 1 1160 .. I PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS •U1tN•SS MAMI &TAUMIHT Tiie to11-1ne perton• are doing IN•lneua: THE BOOKKEEPING PLACI!, IWU Jellrey R-, Suite 121, trvlM, Calll0<nl• t2714 l •UY J ""•r,._, 22"2 C•m•nllo Froro , ~ Hiii•, Calllornla A2W Nency A, Bf\H.S, 2'136 Sally Drive, El Toro, C.tllornla"2UO Tnlt ll\l•ln9'> h conducteo bv • 99neral 1Mftllef'll\IP. t.M.ty J Plo•tmM, P•rtner Thi> •tat-I was lllH wltll tlw Co11n1y Cler' or OrenQ9 County on Jun• n . ,,., "' ... " PublltlWd Or.net Goasl O•llY Piiot, lt1nt t•, July I, I , U, 1•1 ll2MI. PlJBUC NOTICE P'ICTITIOU$ IUllHUS MAMIE STATllMlllllT fll• following penon• art Oolng Ou•lnc,,•• COAST ELECTRIC SERI/ICE, in PARCEi. 1 An undlvl-YI In lerot In Ille NorthH ll II+ ot the Southwest V. qi ttw Sovtll V. of lot • In 81o<k 1• of Tract "· Coat! llO<llevarO Farntt, In tna Count• of Oranoe, Stalt of Callfornla, ,. -Mao tlMraof , .. corded In 8ooll 10 •• P-• )5 -,., NtwPOrt 1101111va1d, Ntwpol'I 8HCh, of Mltc•ll-"'89>, ra<ordt of wld Calllornl•t16'l Ortno• County, IOVtllWr wltll •11 ffM· W•yrw RICM•d J-t. 11SJ Rllrat. rn•nb f0< atrtel pur~ alld fO< fay Cott• Mew, Calllornl• 92•'1 lllQ and ,.,,.lnteinlng pipe line• In, over Oella Jeanne J-•. 21SJ Rural, 8f\d tcrou oUwr 1...0. In 8IOOl 17. tt. C0>ta ""'w, C.lllornla 91•17 1' and 10 In said Traci ... 0< •ny rnul> Tiii> buslnen 11 concivcttd Dy •n In· dlvhlon lllaraol, llaralolore er .. ,.., d1v1du•I and now axl~.lng for the -Ill of Yid Wayr>e R J_, land llrll abl>,.. d111crl-T"I• , .. ltmenl WA\ lllad with the PARCEL l : E tll YI or tna County Cttrk ot Orange Counr-v °" Hort"•"' "'of l1w Sou1hwut •i.. ol ttw June 11, ,,., So11t11 .,, of LOI 4 In Blcxk 19 of Tract "' Coast eo...1•v•rd F•rmi, •s per Map ra«>rde<I In Boole 10, Pll9ft U 1no :M, of Mlt<ell..-S Map\, Record> ot wold c.....,ty, tovettwr with all N.a menu lor '""' purpow~ and 1or l•Y ing and malnt•lnl"ll pipe tine• on. owr ,., ...... Publl•hed 0r.,. Goal! Dally Piiot. .Jun• H . July I, I IS, , .. , 2IO$ .. t P UBLIC NOTICE and acrouotllar lanch In Bloch 11, 11, 'ICTITIOUS•USIN£SS 19and101n Wld Tract"· or any rHUC>-NAME STATEMENT dlvitlon t,_.raol, llaretofort er H ied 1 "•101f.,..lnQ ~·-••• d"'"ll bull and now olsll"ll for the benefll of ••Id nen •• fond lint abollW cltt<rlbed 810 lllSION 1'11 Margart! Oflvt Terms ol w it cath In 1...iu1 money NtwPGfl 8e•<ti CA 92 .. 3 · of tne Un•t911 States on canflrmatlonof CARL~ A CE RI/ANTES, ,,.,,,. t •I•. or P•rt ,.,,.. and b•l•nce totnStreet Newport8••ch,.CA9'2'63 tvldencecl by note -11rad by Oead Of JOHN 'i APGAR, 2111 Margaret '"'"on'"" property Miid. Ten pe<Caftl 011va ....... oon a .. ,h CA "1663 llO') of •r-...t !Md lo be dlpostl911 T n1 ~ b11••nen 1$ ~ond11c l•d bv • with bid 81<ts 0< ofter• lo De In wr ltlnQ gen"r•t .,.rtner\llip •nd •Ill De received at Ille •IO<asalo Jonn s Apgar 0111ct ti any Um• alter 1"• llrsl CorlO>A Cer~anlM P\lbllcallon IWreof ..,d befon d•lt ot Thi\ •ttlemenl w .. llitd ••tn tne wl•T E _ County (lor• of Onnoe CounlV on June OA 0 .July 1, 1,.,1 17 l</ftl 11/ Oorvw J Enllad, · AOmlnl\U •trla w ltP\ W itt ,,, ... ,, Publl\twd <>·~ Goal! O•llY Piiot, Annexed ot Oon H•••Y oac .. ..., Tl••lcne•. lu~~•1.7• Julyl,l,l<ltt U Sl·ll PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS •UllNIEU NAME STATEMENT Rnaw ............ AHw ... yMt...ew MJll.l"el-lallM Pal,,,Nla, CA tlS5t c•s> M1->111 PuDll\/Wd Or-Coa•I Oeil' p1161 The tollow1ng pe<1on> •rt doing l I ' 1'81 l03S--ti OY\ln•u •'4 J uly • • 4• FtBERGt.A~ CENTER, Jcl(Q 8 P UBLIC NOTICE P:ICTIT10US •USI NIEU NAME U AT l!MllNT The loll-I"<! e»tlon 11 dO•nG bU•I nen •• J ASON TRENT 6 COMPANY (Jf6 CI, 10 .. 1 Edll>Qltr Av•nue Foun lain Valley, Calll0<n1• "2IOI K •nt E K•ll•', 1°'" Eo1no•r l\we11we. F°'-llf'\t••n tJ•ll•V. C...Uto•n•• 9l1()t Thi' buS"MH I\ <onc>u<t.-ct oo; •n 1n al\lld11el. l(.,,t E Keller Tl'll\ ltalemant ••• llled wllll Ille Co11nly C1erk of Or•noe CO\lnh on t out Hwy, Oen• Point. California nu• Amer1Can s-iv Co tnc C•lll , ISO \lanaer. Corona. Celltorn1a 91120 Tiii• ~"'"'''conducted Dy• cor oo••""" •merocan Suopty Co In< O.v1dS l<t~ \/IC~ Pr t-s1oen1 .,.,.. .......... ,,,..,,.Qt, Thi> ltal-1 WH 111911 with ti. County Clerk or Or an111 County °" J11no 22, l'ill "'""' Publo.,_., 0r""llt Coal! Dally Piiot June H J_,.y I I U, 1911 ,_., PUBLIC NOTICE Tiii• Jla~I .... lllt<I •111'1 lllo County Clert t1I o...,. Co\lntr on July 1, lttt l'USM4 PuC>llWW<I Or-Coal\ O•lly Pllo,, r•nty, ·~u °' lmpti«I, r99erd•nv title, ponHslon, CH' encumbrencff, to uthfy tilt ewlnclpat balance of Illa Nole or other ClbllQallO<I ..curocl by Hid OHCI of Trvll, with lnterHI and otM• wms H provided therein; plu• •dvence-s., It •ny, unde'r 1M t1rmt tllareo1 -'"'et"ff1 on WCPI adYan<M •nd otu' t.H, t t\erQH •nd ••P9'ft~ of Ille Tr11ste. and of 1119 lrut~ <,...loci Published Orange Coa s t Daily Pilot, July8,9 , 15, 1981 111t He. Melt! St., W lie 504 S-.. AIM, c.. '1101 l'tal•lft'• At""•Y Lilt! A SOUJMOH iCMILL& DILAMIER tMltl Mellts.n.t.He.7 .. ,. ......... CAiiier•• P'ICTITIOUS •U"NllH June 11, l~I _ ----- NAMll STATllMllHT l'tUtJl NOTICE OF DEATH OF July I, IS, 22, 1'. 1,.1 >00'1 .. 1 fl•• IOll-lnQ per_.. ,, dotng bU•I· P11bll1/WCI Or.nea Coa1I O•llY Pilot, J<Jty r,e, is, u. ,,.1 29.S·ll A 0 0 LP H J 0 S E ~ H Publl._ Oret>Qit C...U Dally Piiot, 3067-81 Publlthad Orange Coast Dally Piiot, JUM 14, July 1, I, 1'•1 Jt11 .. I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE by utd Deed of Tru'1 Tiit total -- -amount of w td otMl~Uon, lnchHSJni; • Teact reuonab1y u1lm•1w '"'· charoa1 NOTICE OF DEATH OF NS-71119 HOTICEOP'TRUSTEll'UALli and u-of Illa Tru•lff. •I Illa H E LEN L 0 U I SE NOTICE OF DEATH OF T.S.No 1.11 101°' llm• 01 lnlll•I publlc•lion of thi. FLANAGAN ANO OF ESSIE SIEVERT ANO OF On WtoneSO.y Julv 2', 19'1, at 11 Notice, ls '21,0)4,53 o'ctock A.M., at South Front Entr"'"c• oated .July>. ,,.1 PETIT I 0 N T 0 A 0 · PETIT I 0 N T 0 A 0 · of llW OIOOr-County CourtllouH . EOUITRANS MINISTER ESTATE NO. MINISTER ESTATE NO. In Illa 200 81ock on WHI S.nla Ma • C.lllwnl• CO<'PCH'•tlon A· 109416. A· 109325. Blvd . In Ille City of Sant• Ane, n Tnnl" T I I · Calllornl•, FI RST INTERSTAT E By REAL ESTA TE 0 a he Ir S, T 0 a 11 heir S, &ANK OF CALIFORNIA, Tr1111 .. or SECURITIES beneficiaries, creditors b e n e f iciaries, c reditors tucces-TrustM under 111e o..o or SERvicE, •C.11t0<n1• a nd contingent c reditors of and cont ingent c reditors of Tru•lma41tbyG9or09M.Anlhony •nd CO#PO<allon,lbA09nl HI L . Fl E . s· rt d trm• 8. Antl'Ony -recorded May 11, ey o J , "'°"Qit' e en ou1se anagan ss1e 1eve a n persons m•. as IMlrvmtnt Number 1"'3. 1n "' Prnldent and persons who may be who may be otherwise in- Book 1uo Po• $19 or 0111c••• ?020 N. er-•y o therwise interested in the te rested in the w ill and /or Records ot Or.,Qlt County. California, Sult•'°' WI 11 and/Or estate: estate: given to .acurt •n fndtDt•-u In Sent• AN, CA"''°' favor ot united c.111ornl• 8ank. • r.1...,. uui ,~,_ A pet ition has been filed A petition has been f iled ca111orn1a torpor•llon by, .. _, 0111W PublllN<I Or•-Coas1 Dally Pllo1, by Kath I een VI rg in i a by Patricia L. Mitc hell in brHcholcma1nob41~t1on>tae11r9ll Julyt,is.n .1"1 JO».ft Sellers in the Superior the Superior Court o f ti>e•tby, "°'1" of •lllch t>rNCh .,.s Court of Oranne County Orange County r.,,.,uestlng recorded Jan ... ry ll, 1"1• •• tnstn1-PUBLIC NOTICE " ~ ... mtnl Number 2Sl90, In 8ook 1)'13 reQuestlng that Kathleen that Pat ricia l. M itc hell PA11t 1S63, o1 .. ,d ou1c1a1 Rac0<d1, --V irginia Seller s b e ap-b e appointed as per sonal will H li •I PUbllc •ucllan 10 U.. lllQl><ltl HOTICll OF TRUSTEE'S SAL£ · t d I t t · bldd•• for ce111, payabl• In iawru1 Loan No.n •1BRENNAN po1n e as p e rsona represen a 1ve t o ad· rnoneyofthaUnltadSt•t•uttnetl .... TS.No.~ r e presentative to ad-m in iste r the estate of Es· of u 1e, or by cest11ar'nt>K• dr..-bv GEORGE MAYER .n duty appoint· mini s t er the e s tate o f s I e Sieve rt, Fountai n a bani! ""9AQld In ti. 99,.r•I i..tnklng ~d T ru•lu under l"e lollowlng H I L I Fl V II C l'f • ( d bu•lneu In uld county, s .. te of ~ucrlb9d C1ae<1 of tnal WI LL SEll e en OU Se anagan a ey, a I orn1a Un er c et11ornl• ... ,d .. ,. ,,..11 b• 11e1d AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE (under the Independent the Independent Ad· wllllo\11 werr•nly as to lltte, HIGHEST BIOOER FO R CASH Administration Of Estates minis tra tion Of Estates poueulon M encumbr .. cos, ,,,. In· lpa yabl• •• ",.,. of Ule In 1••1111 Act). The petition Is set for Act). T he petition ls set for tere•I conwv.d to -now llald by money of Ille Unlt..i State>) •II right, wld Tru11 .. ....,.r1etddMdottr11u 1n t1tte andlntare.tconnya<1 to•ndnow hearing in Dept. No. 3 at hearing in Dept. No. 3 at tha pr~Y situate in Oran99 County "•td ov 11 unoer wld Offd of Tr ... tt In 700 Civic Center Drive, 700 Civic Cente r Drive C•lllorlll•, c1n<rlbtd., 1111 property11ere1na1ttr de1<rlbed · West · n the Cit y of Santa w t s t A Loi No 13ol Tr•cJ No Un,•• per TRUSTOR· NANCY BRENNAN ' I e S ' a n a n a / mep r<te.otded In 8oot. 2)9, Page• 22 8 EN E F I c I A" y c E I Ana, California on July 29, California 92701 on July 22, and 13 ol Mlsc•ll~ Maos. In Ille INVESTMENTS 1981 at 9 :30 a.m. 1981at9:30 a .m . olllca of ti. County Recor.,... °' uld "•cordfcl Juty ta, 1* •• •n•tr. No. IF YOU OBJECT to t he IF YOU O BJECT to the County. E•c• therefrom all oU, o•~ 1<1716 In -1:164'1, p-601 ol Otflclel t • f t t 't' mlnar•I• -otr.r 11ydroc•r1lon wo. Records 1n 111e office of 111a Racoroer gran 1ng O he pe I ton, granting of the petit ion, tte nco tying .,.1_ •depth of $00 '"' 01 Or•n99 c-•Y. w lo c1ud or tru•• you s hould either appear you should either appear wlll!out any rlQl!tlO enter upon Illa tUf• dUCrlbft the following pr._,.rty; at the hear ing a nd State at the hearing and Sta te ltce or the s...'*"1ac• of .. 10 lenO Lot 10 of T,.oct No. 1368, In the City b ' t · f i I ebOva • o.iitll o1 500 fMt, as prov10e0 of co>1a 1N .. , coun1y 01 oranoa. stat• your O iec ions or e your o bjections o r file In 1nstrumantsof record. or ca11torn1a, u per rn•P racor<Md In written objections with the written objections with the T11a m •t adclrn• eno ot11ar com-1100-47 P•oe 21 of M1>ce1111nuus court before the hearing, c ourt before the h ear ing. mon detlQMllon, II fny, of '"" real Maps, In Ille offlu of Ille County Your appearance may be Your appearance m ay be proc>arty OH<rlbed _,,_ I\ pur_.tad Recorder of .. Id County. 10 o.: ""' Pl>rtefln• or1ve, Minion l9'Ra1cam,C01taMau,Ct llforn•• in person or by your at-in person or by your a t- v1a10. Calll. tt•H. "< 11 "••reet eddre" or common de· torney. torney, Tllot "'*''ltMd Trust• dl1<t•lm1 Jlgnauon Is s-.. above, no warranty I F y O U A R E A I F y. 0 U A R E A any 11.oiuiy 1or any lnc0<rectneu of It 01ve11 ••to It> comptettneu or cor· C REDI TOR o r a "'Ont-CREDI TOR or a cont· the tlrffl Ndf ffJ end other common r•<lneHl." TM llenefl<lery under Sffd " O.tl911allon, II any, lllown her•ln. 0 .. d Of Trust, bV rea1an of a br .. ch or i nge nt Creditor of the d e-in gent Creditor Of the d e· Said Wit It to bt helO for IN C>Ur-t dahult In Illa ObllQatlont \ecured Cease d , YOU must f ife your Ceased, YOU mus t fife your ol peyl119 Ille lottowlng obHoatlanJ UHtraby, lleralofore uatuted and Ge· MCure<11J'YwldO..dotrr ... 1 ilv•r•d to t11t unctet1lgMc1 • wrlllan c laim with the c ourt o r claim with the court o r 1. F"" <haro-1 .,., ••oansat 01""' oec••r•Uon of 0ereu1t en0 O.m•nd present it to the personal present It t o the personal trl .. lfft, HllrnMed to b9 t ... J\lm of IO< Sale, -written notl<e of l>r .. tll representative a~rnlnted representative appointed tt,'71,ft and of •lectlon to c•uH Ill• un-i . A11v.-... -the terms of "'" dersie ne<1 10 salt u ld pro""rty 10 by the c ourt w it n four by the court w ithin four o.H 01 TNll In IN •mow1t of $ -o .. osfy wld ot>t11141uo,.,, .,., 111er .. 11er months from the date of months from the date of s. lr119'ffl on ,.Id advlNIUS •• -"' ,.,. undll'tlQM<I uuHd .. kl notice of first Issuance of letters as firs t issuance of letters as PER ANNUM FROM -untll --bru tll -of •te<llon to be Rt<orded , .. ,.1ea11teldMl•1 Merell 13, 19'1 ., Instr No. 190)1 ln provided In section 700 of provided In section 700 of • Tiie -•d prlMlpal balanu ol bOOk 11"1 -14ti, of uld Offkl•I the Probate Code of the Proba te Code of uo.oeo.oo Racoro•. California. The time for C allfornla. The time for s. ,,,,_, Oft IN unpaid prlndpal Said Ml• wlll be m.oe, 1>11\ without f I I I · I I t N IMCa lrom 1+.o to,,,. !lat• of ,.,. coven•n• Ott w•rrtnty, .. "'•".,. Im· 11 ng ca ms w I no ex· flllng c laims will not ex· •ttMr .. uns~--um. p11ao, ,_rdlno uua, poueu1on, °' plre prior to four months p lre prior to four months Oa-: J.,,..n, 1"1 et1c11mor-lo pay Illa remelnlno from the date of the hear• from the date Of the hear. '1MT IMTIMTAn BAHIC pr1nc111e1 111m'o1 .,. no11<•> NCur.ci Ing noticed above. Ing noticed above. O"CALIFORHIA, ov said°'"°' TrUJI, wltll tntera\I •• YOU MAY EX AMI NE YOU MAY EXAMINE TRUSTal In HIO noteon>vtci.d, e<lvell<et, 11 eny, "' "' l'Oi=:T. Unltacs under ,,.. ,.,_ o1 said OMd o1 Tru.t, the flle kept by the court. tht file kept by the court. ~.v.a::i::uccHa ~r~;.~'::9!. ~;:: •="~,.!.~~ •:: If you are Interested In the If you are Interested In the AAltlloffHll SIONhK• ,.1, a-°' ''""''· s..ic1 .. ,. will 11it estate, you may file a re· estate, you may file a r e. L•ut .. •• 101 W11t111t• 1 1vc1 .. LM 11akl on MMNv, J111v 10, '"' et 2100 quest with the court to re-quest with thtt court to re· "" .. 1"· Cellfarnl• *"· 1.e..-P.M .. •• tilt c11e.,,.,.n Ava11'" •n· c eive spKlal notice of the celve specl1I notice of the (JU) ., ... t. Tiii• ...... KfleWltll lo tF1nce, to "" Civic C:.nltr lulkllnQ, Inventory of tst•t• assets lnventort of estate assets Ila llald.., H.,... S. tewr, Trwt 01• ~ latt ~A-. Ill Ille City "t fl<tf or t11M111tt1 At.ce1111, Aulatan1 Of or••, CA. end of the petitions, IC· and of he petitions, at· h<,. .. ..,, At '"' tt!N ot t11e w11•1 DU0•1<•UOI\ c o u n t s a n d re po r t s c o u n t s a n d re p o r t s ftWMI.,_ C>.,,.. ON" OellV ftllo\, of \1111 notice,,,,. totel •mo..,1 of -d lbed I "~11 1200 S d SC I..__. f Sectl 1200 NI' I, .. IS,,... ~· .. ,.,, ••• N l•llU OI lllt OltlltUIOl'I escr n ...._. on • • r uwv n on -----------1tec11miw1i.t.-.-dt1er111ao .. e1of of the Callfornla P robete of the C.llf0rn 11 Probate " o e • o r ct I 11 I t o tr11•• _, .,.,,,...., cvtt.t, e""""'· Code. Codt. C.llforlll• lwinut •11d allCI ldv-lt ~.SU.to. J-1•. July 1, t , IS, 1911 HSHI PUBLIC NOTICE NS-79409 ,,.,, ., PRODUCE ANO SEAFOOD MART, 1140 Plac;entla A ......... Co.ta Ma ... C.li ...... nl• 92617 Sung Hwan Cllo, llJJ 8ryan Avtnve, TIAtin, Calllornla t2* Thi• buSlneu It «ondlleted by an In NOTICE OF DEATH OF dtvldu•I J OHN C. MCANNALLY TPlls •ta=•:.,c~ad with t11a ANO OF PETITION TO County Clerk 01 Or•n~ CouMy on ADMINISTER ESTATE June U,19'1 NO. A -109402. Fl- ' P11bll'1Wd OratlQlt Coast Oally Pilot, T 0 a I I h e _r s • June 2•,J ulV 1.I IS.1911 2m.e1 b enet1c1arles, c r editors - - and continge nt c reditors of PUBLIC NOTICE JOHN C . M c ANNALL Y _ and persons who may be I P'ICTITIOUS IUSINUS otherwise interested in the NAM• STATIEMENT w i II a nd/or estate: Th• fot1o.tng per_. I• 001no 1>ut1 A petition h as been filed ntt\•~e COMPETITORS -LITHO b Y AMEL I A M C A N · PREP, 1°'2S "E" Ka lam• Rlv•1, NALLY In t h e Superior Fountain valley, C•lllCH'nl• n1oe C ourt o f Orange County l.u A. 5'1•dduck, 2ois1 K•Mn requesting that AMELIA ~-=· Huntlnoton 8e•cll, C•lllornl• M c ANNALL Y be app oint· Tiii• ~ ... u "condv(tW bv •n •n· ed as personal r e presen-dlvldu•I tative tO administer the Tiiis !t:~a::·lllad wlll'I Illa estate of JOHN c. M cAN-CO\lnly Clerk Of Onnoa County on NALLY, Irvine ,. CA (un -Juntn.1•1 ,,,._,,. der the Independ ent Ad· Publt.,,.., Oranoc coatt Dally Piiot, m in lstra tlon o f Est a t es July 1• '· n. 22• '"' l90t-tt A c t). The petition is set for he aring In Dept. No. 3 at PUBUC NOTICE 700 Civ ic Center Drive - --.,. .. ,,. -- W est , Santa Ana, C A 92701 lllOTICll 0,, sAL1 on July 29, 198t a t 9 :30 Ol'UALl"aOl"UTY a .m . ATl"alllATISALtf I F YOU OBJEC T to t he In t11e s.-~~ :'!f ,,,. State of granting o f the petition, ca111ornle, In eno 10< 111a county o• you should eithe r appear O••noe. at the hearing and s tate in 111. Metter of 1111 E, .. ,. of Your objec tions or fi le PHYLLIS L. OUCLOH, ..... PHYLLIS OUCLON, OKH~. written objections w ith the Hott'• h ,,...t«IY g«van tll•t the un· COUrt before the hea ring. O."IGIWCI wlll Mil at Private Sale, to Your appearance may be ,,.. ,.,.,_,_.,."DI-.-. 'ubJec1 •o conllrmetlOn of wkl 5-lor eour-t, In person or by yo ur at· onMa!WU..1St11t1ayofJu1y.1Mt,a1 torney. 111a oHlea. a1 s11,,.rtiero, Rown, L_, I F y O U A R E A & Beftr, Aftbrtwy• at L..t•, 202' C~· C REDI TOR Or a Cont • t11ry l"•rll l!ut Suite ttOO, L.0t Aneele~ c:.wnty (If LOJ Anetto, Stalt lnge nt c reditor of the de· 0t callf-• llOOt7, •II ..,. r1""', uu. Ceased OU m t f' I encl llltWtlll Of Hkl OKH.Md et the , Y us 1 e your tlm• of dNlll 111 Md to •II 111e c•rta111 c lalm with the court or rHI property ,,1.,.'" 111 1,. City of present It to the personal trvln•, County of Oronge, stet• of representative appointed Callforftl•, ,_.1cu1ar1y oe11tr1-•• by the court within four lotlows, ltllllll: months from the date of .t:.~c~· ~M·.,::, T,:ec~!~·: first Issuance of letters a s P• .. , u tlll'll t4 ., Ml.c•1t•naov• provided In Section 700 of Maps in ttw «tk• o1 lflt racor•r o1 .. p Wld(;~y tne robate Code of ftAaCEI. 2: A non•aciuthr• ..... Callfornla. The time for m.nu..,,,_110 w.ld ,..,c•1t - fillng c laims will not ex-: ~· .~ '!.:~i~: ~E plre prior to four months ..,. .... ~t. .. tat'°"'" ,,.. from the elate of the hear-0e<1erat1tn "' Rattr1e11ons rec ln~notlced above. In 11to11 "™ -t,.. ot on1e:1.1 Ou M A y EXAM 1 NE Rtcord1 ef Orllltlll Oluftt\t, CaUtwnla, "' allf 111 leoll 11714, Net I* of Oftlel•t the fife kept by the court. "-'°'" 0r.,.. c,u..t1, ea11IOl'111• If you are Interested In the --::~:·~==~:=~ ••: •• estate, yOJ may file • ,... TenetrlN, 1rv1no, ca111en11a ,,,u, quest with the court to ,.... , .... ..-1y w111 11a .... 811 -" celve specl1I notice of thct '*'"'6 •ma, 11a eec......,. •"" 11n> I t of t • .-.. MnltflM IM IN ....,_!er Ctwt, 1111 nven ory es a.e as.-.s ,... ,.,., If lfMIA'll _.. t• "'..,.., ... and of the petition•, 1c:· ilJfltllll4. c o u n t s a n d r t ports tin "' ....,. '° • 111 -"::'3.t _.. descrlt.d In Section t200 ::1:i..~==·=~:W::1e .. : of tht C.llfornla Probate o1 "'" •• _, .-. _....,. ..... ,rof•uloM C.-l .. C, Dela: JIM 11, 1'01 17100 to t?UO) •II GIOAGaMllYa" Cod•. ...1 •• John"' --. . ......__, a111s and Mottlson By· Na·--& Mtletlc" At• o. .......... .,,u-·"'1• \... ~-.--,, .......,....,.. t • -·-• 01 .... W.Ouclelt & Penney~ AtlOnMJI It ~ry H. ems, Attorneys torn•Y• at LIW, ly : MIMl .... ;J per .. ftlt ~ .....,_.11 .... ldTM .... 11ncli91 • flcllldove ft8111t ty T .O. 'Efnl ICI! lflltM flt. .......... "' E~::X;w:"' Will\ l"-C.111)' ~0111 MIN!tt ~fy onlf ...... It ptibll•INtd ON City 11..-. W..1. 10111 ll f!ltl In I 0r.,.,CA.,.._ ,, ••• ,..,., -~ tit• 71~ , lfU fn *111091 011 ...... .._.°'ti: CMtt D•1¥ ftf~ ~-----n_o_ .. _._._ .... _ _... ____ _.J11M J4,J...,t,I, WI t1'M Law, 1471 Via Udo, Sutt. at Law n• arooeci.unt RlcMrd A. MuMcft, uu1 ......... .. 2Ur Newport aeaclt1 St,_.,~116, f'lllfttalft Pa ... ell Midi, sut• 1•, an.vu ..... ao .. ':'~::"~ C•I forttl• '2663. (7141 V11fey, c.alfontl• H70I. LatUftl Hllll, CA "'~; ...... • 671-11•. T .. : (714) "2·2A1L .... (714) tS1-ta:L Ml!Mmt.W I .. ., Pub41\hed oranoe COQt Pubftsl!ild oranoe Coat Publllhed Orange eo.11 -=~,,. DallyPUot, Oalfy PU°', July 1. 2.. 81 OallV Piiot, Juiy 7, I, 1-4, ,_.,..,°' ... c.. OeJiy -. ... . Julyl,9 , '5, 199' ~' 199' 296Mt, l911 3031 .. t JIM,•· t.1. •"1 ,. ... , 4 41 I • 1 , t.# • Du FAULT, aka ADOLPH PUBLIC NOTICE J . OuFAU'l..T aka ADOLPH Ou FAULT AND OF PETITION TO AO '~~T~~!:~::::r MINISTER ESTATE NO. Tl'I• loll-Ing perwn It doing O<lli· Al 09364. neu.. T o a I I h e 1 r s , EXPREss10Ns, llon com· b enef iciaries, c r e ditors ~,"c,',',..~~is San Juan, upim at>o, and contingent creditors of P•mal• 8 Orl-n , lll>U Com A D 0 L P H J 0 S E P H modO#e Court, s.n Juan Caplttr•no. DuFAULT, aka ADOLPH C•;~~;:S~! ,. condu<t•d by an 1,.. J . D U F A U L T , 4l k a dlvodu•I. ADOLPH Du FAUL T and Pame1a e. O•·-•• I p e r sons wh o m a y be rtll• ttal.,,_I WAS lll.O with Illa Otherw ise interested fn the ~=~:~t f:,r~ ol Or ange County on Will and/Or estate : P:t M611 A petition has been filed Publ1.,_.,0r_Coa•I Dally Piiot, by ARMAND DuFAUL T J un•"· July 1• '· u, 1"1 ,..,, .. ,. in the Superior Court of P UBLIC NOTICE N~1-P'ICTITIOUS •USINESS NA.Ml STATllMENT T~• fnllOWIRIJ person IS doing OU>I· "•U•i KVO'S BROTHE"S. I ilmlttd 1>41rtner>hlD, 17S Av.,nida l o Cu .. la, San Cltrnente, CA 91672 C"engSen 8 Kuo, 17S Avtnlda La Cuella, San c1e,...n1t. CA '2472 This business I\ conduct&d by ' llrnlf· •d p1rtner1l11p CllenQS.n 8 Kuo Tiii• llate,,,.,.t wat Iliad wllfl, tht County Cl•"' ol Orange Co..,,ly on June ti,,,.,, Orange County requesting that ARMAND Du F AULT be appointed as per sonal representative to ad minister the estate of ADOLP H JOS EPH Du FAULT, aka ADOLPH J . DuF AUL T . a ka ADOL PH Du FAULT (un der the Independent Ad ministrat ion of Estates Act>. The petition is set tor hearing in Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center Drive, West, in the City of Santa ,,,..._ A na, California on July 29 Publill>eel 0r•"9f Coast O••tv Pilot, 1981 at 9 :30 A.M. June11,24.Ju1y1,1.1<1t1 m 1 .. 1 IF YOU OBJECT to the PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUltlllll» HAMii S"TATIMENT Th• fotlowlng pe,.on• ar• dolno t>uelnauu : GO PROPERTIES THE 8LVFF 11, lMOO Main Sir•• If ISO, HlllltlnQ1on 8H cll, Calllornla,,.... H•r.,.y I!. Gomllero, t'301 Helntl< Cr .. HunUntlOfl 8H <ll, C:•llfornl• n••• 8. RlclltrO Go11IO, 1oe Pt•v•. M•wport 8-.11, C.lltoo-nte ttMO Tlll1 INslMU I• conducted by • llmlt•d ,,_,,..,~p. HMwyE.~g Tlllt •1•*'-1 we. 111911 wltll tM county Ctefll ol <>+-•"Git County °" June t2, t"1. "1M6U Publlllled 0r..._ Coast Deity ftllOI, IUllf 2•, Juiy I, e. U, IWI ,.,.._.1 PUBLIC NOTICE NW... ITATUUNT 0, AIAHOOMMa1n 0" UU O" fllCTITIOUS 8UllNIU HAMI Tile follcMll'IG jlttf lOilt MW eMn· 00...d IN UM Of "'-11(11\IOll:S IMIMMH nem • IR\/IHti 8U$1 NfSS f'aO,.l!aTIH at 100 I . B•lor Str•I. Cati a Mete, Callf«nla , ••. Tll• fl(tlttwa bllt«neu 11•mt ra. ltrrtel IO •-wM lhad Ill COvMy on 1'·20·" Oary lrllldeUOfl, IU Emtrtl41 ••Y, l.99\IN '"'"· ea11w1111 •as1 M•t1y JOntt, MO Vlrtlnl• l'arll Circle, L..-IMCll, Calllor11le ••s1 Al OavlMll, UI ll"'ueld lay, ~•tllN tH<ll, c:tllfoNlla HU\ Tlllt -.a-wtl <OtlidUC'9CI Oy a 0tM'81f191'tNr O«-f l r·i-non, ,_ . ...., . Tiii\ ....,..... "' llltO wlUI ... COOltlh (1~11 tf Of_.,. ~., 9"'t ,,_,.,, .. Pl .. "111111.,_ Otffltlll c.t\I Dally l"lllt.o JUM H, 2A, July I, I,"" t194t granting of the petition you s hould either appear a t the hearing and s tate your object ion s o r file written objec tion s with the court before the hea ring Your a ppearance may be In person or by your a t torney. IF YOU ARE A CREDIT OR o r a cont in gent c redito r of the de ceased, you must file your c laim w ith the court or present It t o the personal representative appointed by the court within four months from the date of f ir s t Issuance of letters as frovlded In Section 700 of ht Probate Code of California . The time for fili ng claims wlll not tx plre prior to four month$ from the elate of the hear Ing noticed above. Y OU MAY EXAMINE the file kept by the court If you are Interested fn the estate, you may tue a re· quest with the court to re- ceive special notice of the lnV'entory of estate useh and of the petitions, ac c ounts and reports described In Section 1200.s of the C.llfornla Probate Code. Car1 E. ReMftCIUl1t At· torney at L1w u1u I Beach Blv•., su\te 202_, Hu"tht1ton Btactt, CA tlM7. Publllhld Orange Co.s Oallv Pf.!_~1 July 1, 2; 8, 1911 ~.., - w • + w ~~-••-•'"'-_..W_'+_..,,., ... _W_A..-.w-•.., .. -.. ..., .. ..--w .. •-•-•-*4"" _ _.,.._...,......._.,.,._. ___ +_w_W_W_W_W .... :Pl"lllll4""'0111W-11!$110 .. f11114•4•U•ll~0Pli4~0Plt$1111'1110111110 .. $ ... C .. @ .. Q .. QI,--~ -----. --..... -· --... -....-......... ·-·--~ .. --.. ... Orange C9aat DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, July 8, 1981 PUBUC NOTICE -----------fttcn.,..,. ltUll ... ..,._ITATa••T , __ ......,. __ ........ ..,... ,... .. ! CHHTNUT HILL INTSIUCMU, tU1ota .. ..,.,_.,..._1t1-, c.lltiwtH...., '~ LM Teylef, IU\'t IHt .. yfr-. ...... 111...-. c.llfwM ...... T111t-...-1tc.-. ... 1t,Mlfl.. ... ~ ...,_i.-Taylwr Tlllt.....,...-11 ... wllll- C-t' Ci.A .. OtM9t C-ty ... J-•.1•1. ltt.aal ~ltlltNf °'""" caa.-oeu, ,., .... Jiii' •• u. n. "· ,., ..... PUBLIC NOTICE •OTlca °" T•un1a·s IAA.¥ PUBUC NOTICE -·------------ftlCTt"WI eutfMM ..,.ffATWM91fT Tiie ... tewifte .,.,_, ar. ...... .... I-•: CUllNaU l"•OTaCTIYI SlltY"I, 01 ~ Mel" "'"'· Ot .... (.11 ............. l•l'tta IOl<MtMt, .a ... MM ~ • C..ta ..... ~ ... L•11l1 0 I"•-· ... S.11111 Watlll"9f..,, .... llet1941, Ca111erftle "'** A ............... ..00--:11 """'-1.W., c.e ......... ft7H Tiii• .... 1,... I• t--..C-.,. • ..-.1~ l.AYllO ,._ Tlllt ......_.. -fj ... wffll .. Ct-11"1' c .. t11 .. Ot.,,.. C_t, _., J-•.••t ....... l"llltll"*' °' .... CMtl 0.11, l"llet, J111, •. u. n, "· ,., ...,.,, T.L.._t..,... ·' 0.. ~ J\14' ao, 1•1. at II :IO e.M. ALAMO'OS lrSC:ltOW, •• dill' .......... T,,.... _ -,..~. PUBUC NOTICE .. ~ "' Tf\111 , • ....,. Me' 1a, ................ , ... "' ..... l»Oj, ,.... "'· ., OH\clal ......... '" -... lie• ..... c.witf ........... 0r-. C_t,,CelNwftla, WILL iaLL AT l"VIL.IC AUCTION l'O H10t4EST llOOUl 1"0111' CASH, CASHlllt'S CHIC:K Olt CEltTll'll!O CHICK, ~ .. llma af UI• II\ ._ ... _," tM Vftl._ 54.W.) et Ille s...tfl ,,..,.. entr-.. t1w eld Of~ 01YMY C..W-IOUMcl II\ '"• uo 1t1ac11, •• w .. 1 '-"'• An• lawleward. (l'ormerly W•tl 61~ Str•O ,.,,... -. ell rllllf, 1111e - '"'""'~ .. Md-lleMI..., II -r ..Wo.ctef Tnatlft-,,_.r. ty •I-In Uolct c:-nty ..... Slftt dM<rl-..•: L.ol •efTrectNo •.H-~r .. ~ lft ... 14, ..... IS of Mlt· <•lie-~ '" -aflk• ef .... c-1, "-*'.,Mid c:-, Tr11U., or record ownor . HUH· TINOTON SEASC APE INYHTMINTS. Tiie '"'"' ............ otller <-mel\ ....,.....,,, II M y, of tr. r•I 11'...,-t' ClllKrilltct Mlowe la purllOf'led to lie: lfm Huntl,..on s1 .... 1. Hllftl· '"''°" IM<ll, C.llfoml•. T,.. ~.....-Tr1At" dltcl-4m• .,., lleOlllly tor MY lnconoctl\OU of Ille tlr•I lllldrftt encl ot.., <- dnlfll•llen, If°"'· .,_ herelft. lt!CTl110US IUSIN8U M-.ITATlllUINT ,,,. fol_......,.. 11 ...... lllonl· ,,. .... , HAZEL'S PUCE, 2052 ~ ....... -•• c:.ta Mne, c.allfonll• .,.,, Hanl .,_,.... .. V ...... I, .,.,_ HI· lr•y Orl1te, Cotta MeM, Call~ftle m21 Tllls..-..U l•c......--b,.,, .... ctlwi.o.1. .._. .,.,..,., ve'l...t1 Tllla --t •• "'-' •I"' tM Cou11ty Clertl ef Or-County°" July .. "" "'..,,,. Pvltl'*-Or-Goaat Dell' l>llOC, Jul' I, U, n, 2', ltll .... , PUBLIC NOTICE fllCTITIOUI IUllNCU NAM¥ ITATUAaelT T~e toll-1"9 _ _., er• Ml"I ............ : ETCHINGS ETC, 7512 A(acla Anll"•· Garden Grow, Callf9'ftla ...... Dawe~. 107" .....,... c-t, l'euntalft Yel'-Y, Celltornla.,,. J ecll R. w..dft, *'21 EHi 4111 Strffl, L. .. llNdl, c:allfwflla tGl14 Tlllt ll<dl,,... II cOftdu<t ... lly a nnn Oewe C,_.. T11l1 ......,_, ... """' •1111 tN c-1, Clertl of 0r-c_,.,. July 1, "" Sold .... •Ill lie ....... bllt •11'-t COWMnt OI w«rMly, O•ptffl CW Im· plied, ,....,....,,. 1111•. potMUlon, or enc"mllrencu, to pay I,,. 11npeld llalal\CO of U. llDtO MCUl'9CI l>'f Mid o..ct of Trw, to-wit. 11t,l14.15, ,,,.. c1uc11,,. • PtOWldild 111 .. kl Ml•. ed· ,,...,., •enc••· II .,y, ....... llle terms of ... d PwlllilNd Or-c-0.lly Piiot, 0.... of Tr ... , i.1, thereK •"" H · J111, t, I~. 12, 2', 1"1 • I0"/041. POl\MS of IN T....-..... of Ille tr"fla croetad tty ..id o..d of Tr .. 1 '"° llll•llc1.,., ...,..., aald Oaed of T rwtl lloretoforo ueculad and do· llwered to U. ..,....11....., • wrltt.., O.claratlan .,. C»fault -o.m- lor Sale, alld • wrlll•" Notice ol 0.1 ... 11 and £1.ctlon to Sell '"° ..,.. d•ttltn•d <•u Mct H id Notice of 0.1 ... 11 and E1«1'°" to Seti '° tie re- cor-II\ .. ~Y -· tlle , .. 1 ...-rty •• loulud. Trutl• °' ,..,,, c-..CllllQ w1e TITLE INSURANCE ANO TltUST COMPANY. SS«> Wll'111r• ec..1ewerd. L.ot A ........ Celthwftla tCIOIO, Altft v.,_ Pl""8, nm .._._ x 2n1 ALAMIT09 .. CllOW,ASTltUSTll ., Tll9t ·--· ... T .... ~ ...... IJ:V..-1"1 .... Oal•·J-•.1•1 Pu1111"'9d Or-Goa1I O.lly Piiot. Jwly t . U, Z2, 1'11 ~I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE fllCTITIOUS IUSH•IU NAMI ITATIMllNT Tll• lol._"11 __, Is OOlllQ bonl- ne11 •s PACIFIC GARDENING. 1421 Yori!-A--. H..,Ungton tla«ll. Calllornl•,.... ltonald O H•w-ln1, 101 Yotk-A--, ......,.,...,. hacll. C•lllor"'• ..... Tiii• tlutlMU I• ConduClecl lly • 09Mral ~p. "-ICIO.Hawk!M Tlllt Slatlfnenl Wft flied with tr1e County Cler-of Ora,. Coul\ly on J-JO. 1•1. """" Pullll"-0 Or-Coast Dall, Pllo4. July t. U, 21, 1', 1•1. ~I PUBLIC NOTICE OltDINANCa NO. 111 AN OltDINANCC Ofl THI ICNtlltO Of' DlltCCTOaSOfl COUNTY SANTIATION DtST•ICT te0.1 a1TAILISHINO SANITAaY HWllt HltYICa CMAltOH T lie 80erd of Olrecws of Coutlly $611ltatloll Dlstrkt No. s of 0r._ c .... ly, Cellfomie,-. llel'My ORDAIN H lo4..._. S.C._ t : ......... Tllo pur-of ltllt Or""'-ce ls to -1.111 ••Y'S'-' of Military -Mnlo c,..,.oes ,....,,,..., lo lie palcl l>'f ~ _,.. tor Ille Mrwiu. and fKlll1 ... l11tnl.-llY IN Olltrkt II\ c-tloro wlUI II• wnltellon trwtnwftl ww\t and-... collecllon JYAtfft. R•--..1--Ille prowl•'-of .. Is~ -II .. UMCI tor Ille acqytsltlan, contt""tlon, racOMtrucU...., mal-• -_.,..,. ol - MW ... C ... lectlGfl la<llltlH ..... watt .. -I,..._ -dl-l fKlll11" ef 1M Ol•trkt, ..,.._, wllll cosb of a4mllllJIFllUorl --kklfls for .--ry .. -..... S.C._ 2: -...._,, S.-Mntca ca.we. Eacll percel of, .. ,_ part' loc-.cl wlllllft tN OIJtrlcl •"kll II 1 ...... -wltll ~-.......... '°' ~ei. comme~i.1 °' ,_., .. , ... -~ •1111"" 01wkr1 .......... "'911 NY • ...,11ery -r -.tea c-.. be-... -..... of - •••r -w ~ II\ IN """ w .._ ft ... -In T..,._ A al Ws Ordl-. ..._ J: ~ .. OrdlMM9. Tllo pr....ts.loM of .. ,. Ordlllellc.a -II lie '" Mlllllon to Ordl-.. Hos. JOe and 510 al Ille OIJ1Tlc1 .-11Nn9 ,... ... llel\.t ,., ... of Olstrlc1'• ...... lacllltt.., lllCIUdlllt ,......,illolls kw,...,_.,. c,..r .. 1 or...,, ... ..., tllereto. S.CU.. 4: ........ Tllo Pf'OWllloM of -OntiMftu -II -'Y lo e ll _. ... '" Ille Ohtrkt, ...,. no .. u,clan -1 lie prow._ tor ~, .. _.., .. ~ •.a"'llt tty prowlllGfll of N SI-. CAwlltltutlarl or -· wcll., ...._.. ... _,..."' .Cller l>l*!k ~las or ta• .. .,...c or9M1zatfoM. ucopt u •apr....i, ""°"ldild In Section 5 ,_..,., s.c .. •: ......................... '" f'OC091\1tlofl -<-"' ..... pare••• of rMI --1Y u lll wllllll\ ttlo Obtrkt wt\lcll ere Mt c--ta tllo Olstrl<I ,.,..... --otller ..,_,,..,acquire CONlder.-iy ereeter pee,. Ill• ••tar._ la w1Uma•1y dltcllef99d '°IN Olstrkrs .,._.,, 11 It.,. lrit....i of tlle Olwlct INI MICI parc•ll lie ...... toe.ally °' ... pat1 from -,...,_ of,,.."'"•• prexrllled '-'•"'· Any ..,_-ty _, ,,..y ......... U. •--... IM Clw'llH -..... ti • claim tor r_.• to tlw Olstrkt on ltlo forms -rllltct -_._ l>'f tlle Olttrlcl , wit,.... -llundred .....,IY 11201 un ~ Illa.,._, ~ ta• 111111 .... met .... .,., tr. 0r.,,.. C_t, T•• Cllll«w. All _.ketklM '°' ·-· of .,. ._...... wlll lie Clelerml...O by -Gaflwal ~ of tlle Dlstrkt. 'Who may 11"..t •partial or 11111 r-1• « .,.l~t of tlle clle,... -on,... celvlno sMJ•ectory ~ INll .,. 1-lty Hiib .. ._ -_,,.or•- maftl -IN .-C.,. wes•••ter dlK,..,.ted • -OIJtrkrs •'l'Sffm. S..Cll 1-IUM may ll'ICludlt, ""'ere l\of. llmlted lo: el Ille-of c-tlons on tllo ..-cal d~ from tlw -; Ill no •rvl<a c-11ort lo tr. Olllrkt ,.,._ H ists from U. -eel _. ....... : () .... lnC:fflel WMOI' 11W II ..,kultyral di ... ,~ -_ .. ,,Ille •-t .. --tMKll«lllCf .. _Dis-trict'• ,.,.,.. ,, tltlllf~IV Ifft°"•,....• llnl• -Ille -t of~ ••t•r recal-• -rad tty Ille motff on tlw .,_,,.,. S.C._ ~ .__ ..... • l'lKM Yw . Tiie Mftltary -r -vk• c,..,. .. ..._.l.ll'ecl "' Wt ar..11-e -II .. for -ft-.1 -c--lftt J111, I --1111 J-•._,.,..,."*I lte no-•tien of suc"<'-9"· S.C... 7: ........ ~ --.... MllMr!IJ .,_..., C.llfo<flle _,, -S."1y Gode Socllort J41J, all c-... .._..,.._. ......... -11 tte <alf-'411 on .. c-w Tea""'' Ill ---·.., h -,_,_Md 9' Ult_,,. Uma ea, .._._ -..... Mt..,_....., ff'em, 11s ...... rel '-· Tiie c-t' Tu Colla<W It_....... ..... l\el'W¥ onlwed lo ....... Mid ~ Ill a<<orGenu ..... Ille ........ -(tlftdltlolla ef ...... malltt ......_..IN C-y of o._,.. -INS Olltrlct. 111 u. .,,.., Olstrkl _,.,ml,... -.....,.. or 1,_,.ti.. exist Ill llW •-' ef c...,.... le • collec..., tty n. ~ Ta Coll«w, Dllltkt me, wllmll • 11111 tor en, di~ <llrectl' •Ille.._,.,.-· Seid "'- _, IMlt • ._ •"" ,..,_ wltlllfl thirty<•> MY'S flf 1""'9k.a Mte. S.C-..1: ~ ._. ,..._..., ...,,.,...._, Acrecllt .... II lie ellawed '°ell dls<lw,..,.. _.,.,.,... --1 le Artkle l +f Ord!-No. -1w Ula__. Yllllary -Mtvke CIWw .. es.-llNd lty lf>lt Or.._. In llW -- ,,., es credit I• •I._ tor M waio..m tuft --"' Soctlell *-• of on11-. .... -. lac._ t r ., .. ,._ .. __ linty. II en' prowltlonl of 11111 Or'dlMftca • tlle ...,."-' llort le .,.,, .....,. • <lrcvmstenca It ~ lnvalt<I w .,.... of c-1, Ula ,... mal~.,..,. OrWlnel\Ce or Ille •""'k etlen al_,.-'"°" le.._, ~ or otllerdrc~tllall "°' • ~. Sec-. Ml • ......._ DMa: Tiii• ~ IMll ._ eftwctlw I~ meclle ... y ~ ltl ~'-'tty -of '-'"'lnltof tlw ,,_....of ttle ...,._ s.c .. 111 Tiie Sacretary tMll certify • tN ._...., • lllls ~· aftd NII,_ .. -.. lte l>l*li.Md Ill a.,. • .,.,., of -•I (lrcllletloft '" ,,.. oiwict" ,.....,.. ..., .... l"ASIEO MID ADOf'TaD ttllt 19' My tf Jiii,, , ... AnlST: Jec-41,.H.-W (Mlf',,_ J, •• ., ... .,,.....,. Secret.en< 642-5678 Put a /tw WOTds to work /or you .... in the ...., ..... . ,. - I 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 INDEX Hw.M"\ f'\lrN•Mid tiw'f'll \.ftfu.rnt\ft..O tkiu-"" •1ii1rft04' lA, C ONiomttwi.m• t"urn c. ondiom1twu.m• \ "' To .. l\huuw. .~"'" To-n.howw• l "' l>uptt/i.tt Y\i r n l~t•••• lnl -'P'"' ."'" Apb l.nfwn Aph r...rn Of t '" Ruom" Hoon1 • Ku•rd Ufllleb Mou l• liw••l ltomn :rwmm-r Rental• \'au11M1 H .. n11t\ fh·nu1.rnv..,,.. '~•'••-~ '°' Kenl Otf1tt fhnhl B~lnt"U fbnt.I IMw•l,.11 kw,.t.I ~:C .. ,: "•nt..d ..... ,,. "'" .. '-" BUSINESS, INVEST MENT. FINANCE tkt\llW'U !?Jtpon' t\.w"n.'U 'Vi •"'"" ln'tH lmtM ~t 'f lft\f'\U'Pl«M ltft eA4"9 Mllft«)' IOLo•n Norw) '61Mf'd• M<..f\f•&tt TO ' ANNOUNCEMENTS, 'flSONAlS l LOST l FOUND ANwllWM~lt\it'ftl\ t et Poot ,,,.1 '°''ff'' u..i ......... VH....,•h• ">r1•I ( lwt•• Tr••rl• SU VICES 'W-l'\ttf'l>\rn1'H',. EMPLOYMENT l m,AHTION ~Ntuhlt1i,lr~'~ J1•t>W.n1r1t• th·f~-. •ntf'CI \t ta. t MERCHANDISE Amt~vn Appl1•ftO\ A~hf-'\ :~r:,~; ~hltruh ( •Mf'tlt. • •.qu1pm.n1 t ..ih Ooc• »" 10 'tcw f'Url'UllH't <,-''-If' \.al• ""'-~"-· Jn.-lr> "'""*k Mtif'""M''J M1w.tl•~ Mt•c-.U•AHUJi \Ii •Mtd Mwwt'al "'•\rvnw~h Ofht·t fur,. • ._.qwp ..... t.~~~~~~\ Spon ... G-• Slon lllnt•~un& S..r l:·r..-.. .,,y, \l•rf'O BOATS l MAllllE EQUlrMENT G~al &oeh MatM "wt\lff &o..il M A11M t..q.w1p eo..h p.,.. .. , 8o•U Reftt ( h.,ln lo•h ..... , 8o•h Ytp. tJtw-,, t:::~,!"' TUNSrDIT A TION Air• r1rt '-•mprn ~•Ir Kf'n\ t!&Hint f er\ Mot.It Uomr' NMOr C,ttff. Af004•n • Matot Umi. !\al,. R•nl Tn 1lf'n Tuvtt !~~!.~'!"i.," AUTOMOBILE llrn•r.I A/ttU4Y4'-' \.'In"~\ flHre•U~ \. f'hll lh ~" tt.,,. Hu1h ' "1ur1•r• rr .... u v .... AwWL..n•A~ Avl06 Wantrd AUTOS, IMPORTED . .... , .. AU• Ru"""u ,..,, .\w..l•n Hr•lf't llllW '-•Pf'• ~ 0.thVA t fftffl ... , UutitJJ• , .. ._., Jr'"•" k .;rm..n"''"'• ~.,.. .. v.,n. 'CC'rtf It" tf-"' iu. MlfK """I P•M•I-P•6.tllft'\H "'"'"' "' Ktn•'-'H Hou. tcy)i • Htnft ~iHb f.t: .. ro104• rm .. t\ph Volll•••lll'1t Votvo AUTOS, NEW tJefM"r11I \ AUTOS, USED 4..tMr f l Alll' ...... c .... 11., l"em1ro "'"'-~ ... ,,..,,., c._. t.°.oMlM•lAll '--·lf•4'fl• c-., ~· IMji.h •I ........-. Ma.•n~ll ,..,,..,) ::.~:t.,, ,.,_ P1)-.i•" ~ '"'"' v ••• ·~ ... ~ .... Sell wtth EASE! It's a BREEZE laa11'1ed ds IOU! 111111 ICIOI .... 1• Ulll 11111 IUI ltlM UNO ·~ 10.. IGOO IGQ 11111 IOllf 11111 11111 "*' 1-. 1• llM 1100 1100 l3AI JMj )400 -1* )~ )~ )Q)O 311111 .llOO l9llO 4000 ·-tlUO ti)() •2'>l ·~ uoo •ll'l ''°" 11.lO •lOO ·~"' ~ - -..;IQ 'IOIO )()1$ !o<YJ $G1$ ~ lt(W )It<> )ISO '40 U)) usu )4(JO )430 - !ill» ;in) l it.I ..... $ llOIU 111m ll030 "°'° IOlO trm lllMO #K> -~ ---111!) ll01I -llllll IOG -.., -..., --.. .. WIU -tOJOl --~ ... 10 -«*) •110 till> •1)1) ..... tllO WINI 'flTO tlMI MOO •>lu ~ '6JU ·~J -~ ~ru -. ~ ~l'VI •1..S ~ .,, .... flll 1111) t1M nr1 '#!Ill •1U "1l) >117 in~ "1ll ttll$ tnt 11:JI Vltu "7'2 in•• 11744 »141 •1• YJ:,O inu ,,, .. t'7$! '19'1 t'ISI t1'2 vi..-inn "710 f'ln - M l -WIU •u 11111 --.en -----IMl ...., ...., --... .. ! ---""' The~Maltlltplmc• on the Orwwe Coact DAILY PH.DI' CLASSIFIED ADS Tew Can W II, find It, TrMt It W-lttl e W• M (842•5878] 0... c.I .. ,.,en......,. .......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ........... Motic•: All real estate ad- vert 1 s ed in thi s newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Hows· tng Act ot 1968 which makes It illegal w ad vertise "any prererence, limitation, or dis crimination based on r ace, color, r eligion, sex. or national origm, or an intention to make any such preference. l1m itallon, or dis crimmation ... This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in viola lion of the law. ERRORS: AdverlfHn shotlld ct.ell tt.ir ads dally-=·~ ron h•na . TIM DAILY PILOT as.._.1 labllity fw the flnt Incorrect lnHrtlon OllJy. ••••••••••••••••••••••• General 1002 I ••••••••••••••••••••••• , _______ _ COMMBCIAL + UVIMG Spacious 3 bdnn. 2 bath apt Bltins. we t bar. fireplace, atnum Over 500 sq I\ of busmesi. space + 4 car garage Priced at S350.000. associated BROKERS RE Al TORS 10 1' W Soibofl t.'' J6t>I STEPS TO IEACH 2 bdr m each unit + room & bath orr 2 car garage. Good w /s rental area. S2501000. associated BRO I-'. £RS REAL T(JPS l !JJ' w f;olb Q 6'' 1et.t1 $3 $100 oll it tabs Ii a PENNY PINCHER AD .I l1n .. , lul • •I•"' 11 n I 1 ..; I ~11 , 1 d .1 ' \11\1•rl1,1• tllh' t•I 11)1111' lh'rll' \ .1h11•d up tn $11111 t-:.11 h .1dd111nn,tl 1111 .. '' 1111 h fi4~ fur t h1· t '"' tlJ\" ..;Oii\ 11 0 (' t1 Ol OH• I l'I ,ii .11h .1 11 11\\l'd l'h.tlj!t' 'our l'~·nn' f'in( h1•r \ti 111 U "I' \ 0 IJ I H.1nk,\nwrwJrtl \'1,a or :\I a:.h•r Ch,11 I!<' C otl today Clftd SH your od "' pri1tt tOfl'lorrow! Cell M-o.y """ F.-ldey l :OOAM •o S:JO,.M fw Ma.I dcty't ,....._. OI" C .. by ftO-Oii s.twcM, , ... s.,..••Y'' ,... .. 642-5678 Daily Pilat A fllCllllOYI 11111"111 ""'" lt•t•mtlll rll•d wlttl ltle CouMy Cteftl •• Htld fOt 111'9 ~Me ltftlf wfllch Umt citMl1111lflt __,..,..,_..,.., ..... ~lltlllCrioft le -MMy o"ly If lh•rt ut clte11pa. Cell IM "981 De,1t1111111t et Ill• DAILY "I.OT tet ..... , ......... ••d ftffelMfJ..,__ M2..a21 bt.m ..-. .... • • -# ,,,. ........ .._ • • ,. • • •• ~. • • ... • ••• -• <Jranye Coast residents bought 42% of all new cars sold in the county last year even though they comprise only 30% of the county's population. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~!.~~.~ ........ ~!!:.~~.~~ ........ ~!!:.~.~ ...... . ~~~!'! .......... !?~~ ~~~!'! .......... ~?~~1 ~~~~!'! .......... !~~ 1002 • •••••••••••••••••••••• filAMT FfXElt REALLY CLOSE 5 Bdrma, 3 Ba, pool, RV acceu. 2 frplca, and great rinanl'ing Call now ror mort' mform;a tlon FulJ price $164,000 lo beach 3 Br, 2 Ba + lort for k1d.'S w plav' I\ ~ I fantastic bu~ j\ only $170,000. PLUS t<'rrnic JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 PENINSULA Fixer 18000 to Move In Very lrt( 3 llr condu 111 ,..tn V ly Has Ir,: ui. llUmablc loan C:1ll Ann McC:a11l&nJ 631 1.266 Only steps to the surf, 1s this bargam fixer Bring paint brushei> & s hovels l•---------and <'ai.h tn on SSS. Call l IDRM + boat sip now @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714·631-6990 THINKING TOWNHOME7 Call the specialists at the condom1n1um 111 formation center Touchstone fil'a ll y 963-~7 CORON.ADEL M.ARDUPLEX South Of lhe highway SltS this elegant home plus income lluge ownt.>rs unit . brick courtyard leads to fo'rench door!. that o pen onto Italian tiled floors Bt.>aut1ful wood p<•gged floor ., e nhan <·e d l.'n and spacious fom1l> kitchen 2nd story hosL'i secluded maste r s uite with open balcony and bubbllni: s pa too' 3 more queen sized bdrms for your hk ing Huge 4 car garai;:c + 2 Bdrm 1ncome unit Price redun •d .incl owner 1s anx1ou.'> Call @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631.6990 No ru:t•cl to lra\'l'I all O\l'I town to look for i.:~1rai.:•· sales vov'll find th1•m right hert· '" c 1":.!-1f1t·d To place your i:aragi: sale ad, «Jll &12 5ti7K Sp acious Condo. ex cellent lot·ut1on. It\ 1th i.llp for 40' hoat b sumablc fmannn.: A~k ID R S299. 000 SUPER DUPER Bcaul1ful. 1mmal'ul .. 1t-. n1t·ely land~l'illJl'd I bdrm home on cul do• !>llC. S 1ian ous room,, view of golf l'OUr..l' from propert y Ownt•r "tll help with f111anC'111~ 1111 ly $13!.l,5()0 Call rto" 979.5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS HARBOR RIDGE 1\ It\ J r d " 1 n n 1 n I( · ./(l(h:lll'" estatt horn•· Isl re1>ale uffl'nng urt lh1~ exqui.:.1tel) appotnt ed townhuml' lt\l th massive ''e" of ha\. ot'Pa n. l·oa.~t lint· A ml( ht lights C>fferl•ll at ms!i.UOO i!i~Eillltl\S ,'\: Qu., -' -•.!u·altur!.i Ring 6 40-5560 Anytime Eastblulf Prof. Bldg. Tl1t·~1· lit1ll· ;ub 11•:i ll' " 11 I I-' .I tt I 11 I h I' thou:-,11Hb 111 11th•·• , ..... Jlh• Ill lh1-. all'.I \\hlf ,111• It• j.( IJ I .1 1 11-.1• I -. ii I I 'IJ'>.,11 ll'•l t .di 1111r ,rd t.1k1•1 al hi:! tl•il! RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES VIEW! VIEW! VIEw. Spectacular 180 ocean Catalina view from this professionally decorated P lan 111 in Newport Cres t w/3 BR. incl m aster suite. vaulted ceilings. fireplace. wet bar. 21.i BA. decks & amenities galore. Community tenni s. pool & s pa . Excellent financing. $240.000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 TM TM.1" ,..,, .. JtYM »Doolt :i.u.,. .. -.. •ttree •H )J Vow r• .... .... _ 40To •t()f u oo t)"*nf .,,,.... ,.~ ... Good ,,~ •.SWIM .. .,. .. v ... t' A4ttwM ,., eow .. ,, CoftoltloM ... o.,, ,,,..., .. a .... ... .._ II-ttf>- Dlelt• U-11~ .,_ .. ,.. .. .. . .._.. ........... • ....,..,._. Mu.it~ '"-tlTo ..... ·-,.,.._ ., .. ,. . ,.. ·- ®""-- ------..... ,.,«A, • •• _ ... _ ....... °' .... •-acro...Oled -.t. b. low 10 I-lour ""'Illa -da I DOSMET I I SWHAA , 1, . I 1 I I 1· . "OI .,, .. u_ .... _ : ~.:;r... •. ~~~!1.-t 11~"°4 M•n11 ·-'°""'" ,,,.,...,. TJe..oot ,, .. _ ,._ ,.~.,.., ,.,.... . ,, °'°" .• ,. .. ,,,_. ...... .... u-l:lbtf.., ... "1 ........ ·-· -~ .. .,;.W"I ........ .. ..,..., .. -... ()~:.ml I .:'. I A P 0 I T _ Thi nice P"' about cold air Ii I' I I conditioning la, you lln•llr . . • . . know whit 10 do with 111 your I winter clothH In July --· -• l RAW8EE _ .... -...,, .. ,......,., --.-1--rl":'"' ..,,r--1 0 c: .... p .... "'• (~11(~1. QVO<<td _ _ • bv hlllfl9 lft "'° "''~ _.,, ......... _.._~_ ..... __ "°"' __... ,,_ -Na ) below ... .._ ' ........ ~ . HARIOR VIEW IROADMOOR-VllW! Nl'W uff ering in t his lovely 4 bdrm homl' with a great view of bay, ocean & bri~ht lights. New prof. landscaping front & rear. Lg e family rm. formal dtnrng rm & 21 i baths . Great location. Lca1'>dH>ld Sl'c today. $410,000. WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS 21 I I Son Joaquin Hll Road NEWPORT CENTER, H.I. 644-4910 HARBOR RIDGE--fREtl:H MANOR 180" VU OF lay. ~cean • MttJli' Mph. MOCJftlfkent quality & detal tfrougho.t thJs 5700 5q, ft. r.sldence. Sttl .._ to MIKt your own decor for tNt fonMI hotM with 4 bed, library. formal c1ninCJ rm., lmrMnH fam. rm. .ct 9C11ftCM ous master suit with fireplace, ~ smma & spa. lmprusi•e and a.tom fw the particular homeowner, in th• best tradition of this LCK1is XIV MCMOr house Sl.995,000. 631 -1400. BALBOA ISLAND OOPLEX Channin<J 2 story home 5 houMs frCMll bffch with 3 bdrms .. 2 bCL. rftMdeled kite Mr!, bay window, brick, fireploce, open beams and a p.-oduc:itc) 111DCodmnia nut tree in your fro1tt yard plla a 2 bd., Iba. 9arCICJe aporlmettt. Priad for a cpck 5ale of S450,000. 67~900 . LIDO~OWEST PRICE Quiet ..,d of isle Oft ctfthr strodo. 2 bdrm, 2 ba, patio. lrin9 offu. S3 I 5,000. 673-6900. WATt:RJ-RONT HOMES.IN< let Al l '"A fl ~ .. H. t I I•·'"'" ""' ·••ft 11l4 1 t ~' ttt \\ t ''''"' H ... , r"u1t.\f"'''' B, m ~ 631 -1400 ii•• M M 11h A \.t 11,,lt•.., l>lond 671-6900 ~~~~~!~~~ -<::71 SCWINC CVIOf. FOR I HE ......__,~ CAL ON IH[ CO ~ For an Ad i1t w~·, Wortd Cool, Cool, Coot! ,, Ho.Ms ForWt Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8. 1981 ., .................•.... ' HMMt••••••••""°• •••Wt••••••••••• ..................... 0W.•••••••••••j ~••••••For••• •Wt•••• HMMt For W. ~ u~~--R....-.r........ eor.-.. Mw I OZ2 Hotlw• For S9t H.Mt For W. ~.._...For W. ..._.. ._.Wt ""' .._. rvr -........................ c··o·.· .. •• ... •• .... ··········,·o"z"•" 1·"·· .. ···············,·o··.·.· ·•· ... ···············1·0·.··.· '..,···.,,.,. .. ••••• ..... ·········,::.:.,· I 111t• I 004 I .e 00 •••••• • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •• • . .. &i _, I J .,.,... IOOJ '"-rlll 100 ~ r.e IOOt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••... Nearly ne• duple1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• l•t CM+lt• ....----------....................... T b re e 1 n 41 t w o 50 O. Completely remodti.d <..a..n.an•x.a.n.a.<a<wl4~ bedrooms Three i.nd MISAYllOI T..... '"-~ w111 f~1JJ!vucondol.o wiUI 11lyllpu. at.lined D 1 I bout two balhs Ideally de Executive home. 3 br, 2 TOwtl IOMl1 8Hutlful J Br condo on VIiia BaJboa. Aalwnt ,, ... •indOwl and wood a e w ~ ·s. _}( sicned for l\lall. Larae b1, latorybomeonqulet Cati the 1pec1aliltJ at ly llOOO lo Wu.mt io.n loan•. '134,500 Ru panelUoa. Frtt!l paint 'l assumable Isl and ruldeucst llgebdrm the condominium 1n SllUOO Noquallfylnc RodaenaM• thnaout. Oil sn•t CM R2 Bay & Beach a tel' • in.a. own er Will carry Znd could be converted to form1t100eentu 831-6238. A lot. Oe_ly IUU OO. --"6 T 0 Call Roaer Bar make 4th bdrm Room Tourh.stooe Realty WOODBRIDGE 751-llfl Real Estate & .A ~~17~ n9 t243 or ~kr.~=~ or pool TUR='oc• C<m'AGE RVMJ.X c:.·,, I '' I ..,.,,,~,1 \, .• •<'1• '1 PUICHASI OPTION New fantut.lc 3 Br 3 Ba. Condo, IZ500 move. you in. 11000 per month. <Why pay nmt). Next to au shopping. theaters & puk, juat minutes to beaches. Ward Manacemenl Co m 1.505o5 IA YNOMT COHDO First time ortered for sale! « feet on the bay View of the jetty and Balboa Island Bridge 2 bdrms and 2 baths Wide bayfroot terrace. Spacious 1575.000 A Dl\'1'>100 or II arbor lnn·~I ml'nl l'o ~ Find out about the h1gh- eaming real estate sales career opportunities with THE REAL ESTATERS. Licensing school fMS completely refundable to school or your choice. Extensive sales training. For lll· formation, call 751-6191 P•t v• "'Estate Est 1890 restored 4 Bd 4 frpl +guest~. acre 1595.000 Uruque homes Sharon /Kathy 675"6000 MEWPOITHGHTS Deluxe townhouse duplex. 3 bdrm. f1m 1ty, 2\"J bath each unit Frplcs. all built ins. decks & patios Park· like landsc aping SELLER WIU.. HELP FINANCE. $295,000' llltoo l.y Prop. lNlon •675-7060. STEAL IT $85,500 2 B d rm . 11'1 b a t h . fireplace Close to beach and shopping. Hurry! &1.5-9161 . OPEN HOUSE REALTY /. Teachers.. Why Pay Tues' Use innauon to your ad vantage. Free consulla· lion w /teachers who bold Calif. Dept of R E licenses & Calif Teach 1ng Credenlla Is VA, FHA purchases. no down payment, or no monthly payment purchases, partnership plans etc Call now, It's a buyers market D.S. Educators Riiy 141-6354 6l9·06J 6 Ill RHLTORS Pichn PtrlKt Profes sionally landscaped front and re ar. Very private enter· taining patio & pool are a 3 oversized bedrooms and 3 baths. Large kitchen /family room combo. Owner will finance. SJ69.SOO. D.M.M.nWHr 644-tflO 76o.oll5 SAMDDOUAIS This 3 Bdrm 2 Bdrm duplex presents a gre1t investment opportunity in West Newport. Tbe location ol this property (only 2 lots from the ocean end steps lo the bay ) coupled with the unbelievable financing make this olfering re· 11islic and smart. Ask· Ing only ~000 . ........... .., 67U700 ASSUME 10.IZS'A. lou, 4 Bdrm. ltJ family nn 1124.000 M111taeU.5* .. Whelari' RealEstate 111115 !! DUPLIX: J 1' old. ,_.. aumable tU0.000 In, IZU,000 .(>raaie I UHlTS: lllad nu<. t:l•1000 loan. sass.ooo San Beruntino. LOT 1" DANA POINT. It" dOYI, wilt l•b· ontil• --S.. c.I. - • I•••••••-I s.8' 2br. 2ba, family rm, cor II~ '! I' ''' ' .1. .1.0C EASTSIOE Coodo. Open Townhome, lrg lot. 2 Hd ner lot. a.uumable ut t.lt.I • Co1taMtM 1024 daily 1·4 413GlouctSh:r + den, ownt>r 's will wil l conuder 2nd REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949. ••• •••••••••••••••••••• o r u n 1 q u e are a r.531900, Ml·lJ.13 negotiate ~.000. Oar ~ -p.25,000. ~ ~S-~ rell Paih s:IH.266 ......_.at •f Oupluea, oceanfront • beautiful ~ean view. Perfect iocation. New conditJoo. A&t. 87S. 7100 BAY CREST BEAUTY. 5 COMI WITH US ••• TO WISTCLIFF. Rill WATHFIONT "JIWB." VA MISAVllDE A WI~"' ATTRA CT l V E Ji' OUR BEDR OO M Piff/AMt-50'1oat POOl LHOME Save your down pllym't $129,000 HOME .. COUNTRY KITCHEN WITH EATING Prest igious Npt S ch offers the finest Lovet~ 3 Bdrm home I S3000 moves you sn. 3 The owner hu really AREA .. OAK CA BI NETS .. ALL NEW unequalled eharm of "French Coun-!eaturmg master bdrm Rdrm home For more 11venthill3bdrm.2ba Br. Family Rm. SZ00.000 auumabte lit. Owner may carry 1100.000 2nd. 1 yur. $435,000. Call Hedda Marosl Agent 646· 10«. To see 4' sell! APPLIAN CE s . NE w c AR p ET s try" decor in tht's truly beauti'ful home with open beamed re1l lnfo 673 6607or&l.S-8l69 Amhurat Model in tht!' THROUGHOUT CUSTOM DRAPES AND uo mgs and Ben Franklin ---Rancho SanJoaqwn Villa Garden Homes a lot o WALLP APF:R .. SELLER EXTREMELY w/4BR or 3 +maid's. Cobblestone fireplu·e. den. and MESADELMAR PortolaModel.must:<ee car e Almost new MOTIVATED PRICE RED UCE D courtyard. expensive Calif. stone ex· library1studyofr master 38r28a $126,SOO mnyupgrades,pnn onl)' rarpet, new drapes $15,500. NOWS299,500. te rior. French bric k flooring & peg/. bdrm Elegant formal 4Br2 Ba Sl.32,SOO $169 .500. For appt Profes51on11lly dining room overlooking s nr 3 Ba, pool Sl.64.000 landscaped groove floors w/plush custom Hrea pool and patio Assuma sBr 38a, lmmar Sl.76,000 Ml~· OCEANFRONT Duplex ft Tri·Plex. Xlnt toe. P.P 67J.76n,873"7871. 1617 WISTCLIFF DI. M.L 6ll-7l00 REALTORS 675-5511 llOADMOOR ELEGANCE: GorcJ-ot11ly dtcorattd pool tto.e ... o--. Hdor View Hiib. 4 bedrootla, f11111y room. 2 fireplocff wftti lo•a rod!~ Priced to ..... Sl70.000. COLE OF NEWPORT IEALTOIS 25 I 5 E. Coast Hwy .• eoro.. cllt Mor 675-5511 VIEWRXB Reduced to S33S.000 Cameo Highlands on fee land Agt 673-7761 , 760-1397 AFFORD AIU DlUM 3Br. l-..,Ba. 189,900 Take over exLSl.ing FHA It's time Lo buy call s.56-1732 a t. CE IEDBIE ELllllS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE L.AUREl POINT. COSTA MESA J ust What You've Been Looking For. Three Bedroom . Two Bath Condo. Ne ar South Coast Shopping. Spacious Fee ling With Skylights . End Unit. Assumable First Trust Deed. Priced At $134.000. Owner Will Accept A Lease-Option At $189.000 MESA VERDE "Luc k y You. And It Has A High Assumable , T oo~" Beautiful Cont e mpo rary Home In Costa Mesa's Best Area . Features Include Five Large B e drooms, Two Impressive Fireplaces. Gorgeous Livin g Room & Family Room, Skylights. Wall Coverings, Wet Bar Fantastic~ Price. $229,500. 759-9100 #2 Corpor• Pina ... wport Cttttef' THE RAMCH/IRVIME $215,000 Charming and s pacious 4 BR 3 Ba. on private, wooded lot w /pool and s pa . Several skylights and s tained glass windows. Assume loan at 13,.'i-. WOODIRIDGE/SIR Roomy, comfortable floor plan for the growing family. Near the lake and pool. Pvt courtyard and 3 car garage. Plus, fantastic financing make this a buyers c hoice. $299,500. 9.96,,o ASSUMAILE LOAM Lovely private 2 + den aondo with cathedral clgs. and lots of deck ing. Security gated Arbor Lake /Woodbridge. $175,000. 759-1616 C T S H T A I E H G 0 H 0 E C M A U R S C T l S U E H A C l A C 0 0 N E T T U M E F J B B~A C R Z Z M A W W J T I I Y Y R E T R A L A R 0 M E F E M A I B N R E U S C G L A M A S E I H E R Q U A 0 R I C E P S F E M 0 R I S N S E l C S W M 6 N I R T S M A H R T C A A A E M ~ I 8 T W R 2 T S R 0 H 0 0 l T V E E N S A Y I N X E C T t Q 0 R B I R M 0 N l W E W 8 M I U G S U N T 0 C U B 0 L E R R Y H I A H Y L T S S N R E D E V R E N C I T A I C S A M AENMTAR STUMGHX fR TRS 8 $ E A C H I L l E S T E H 0 0 N S S 0 T P 0 P L I T t A l A ll T E R Y A C rugs . Rough-sa wn, white-washed ble f1nanr1 ng ali.o All have attrartivt! CUSTOMIZED cedar walls & beam s . Sort green i1Vailable Asking rimmri.ng 4BdhomeinT'heRand1 k 't h b' I . . h d $165.000 For an appomt Owner's bought another 1 c e n ca mets w artis tic a n · menttosee,call~1151 Painted "Trompe o'1Je" depicts fruit, Will consider any offer ~·HERITAGE $172.000 Durdl Pa)h vegetables and pottery. Den w/rich 63H266 stai ned oak b eams, panelling, bookcases. French d oors and s hutters. Xtra lg HIS/HERS walk-ins. Com- fortable MBR & bath exudes the a rtis tic wannth of "Chinoiserie" hand painted d elicate rlowe rs on walls & , cabinets. Offered at $1 ,795,000.00 Call/write P.0 Box 572. Corona del Mar, CA. 92625 WAL TEI S. KIMG & ASSOC. 17141541-7716/644-5917 . • REALTORS 10%00WH Gorgeous 3 Bd 21, Ba condo end unit ... lrg fr pie , 1.'0Z} step down llvlllg rm & spa Onl\ $139.SOO OR Darling 2 Rd I', Bu bargain al SI 21 ,000 Joyce WalUe631 I~ RVM~ REA i.TORS SPIC &SPAN Lovely Easts1de 3 br, 2 ha , ram r m homt ... frplr, dbl gar $149,SOO BrokerL.646-UIO FRENCH QUARTIEI 3 BR 21'2 ba townhouse Patio, double gar. OWC Ji 10,000 BKR 646-4~ Dana Polftt I 026 WM~ Rf:r\l.TllHS COlONY Lrg 48r, 2•2Ba famil) home. LO Colony Club Walk to pool. tenn1:0. New financing avail Call for details -=-;. HANCH ~REALTY ~ SSl 2000 LINDA ISLE Exciting Oppty ! Wide channel view from s pectacula r architectural designed 4 bdrm. 5 bath. pool home. Slip for 2 la r ge boats. $1.495.000. Summer Occupancy. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1--------s pr u w 11 n g 4 Rd rm HEW WOOOIRIDGE RANCll Large pnvate M.adowlarti JPoplar LIDO ISLE HOMES Featured on llomes Tours this lovely lrad1t1onal spaC'tous. c ustom 3 bdrm. 3 bath home. ne"' ly redeeorated Priced lo sell quickly al $475,000. Must see. Ne"' ly remodeleo 3 ho rm . 2 b<1th plus lge recreation room & 2 pa11os Beam ('e1l111gs Greal fur t·ntertCttntng. $420.000 Best pm·<' for the money PENINSULA POINT BEACHFROHT Panornm1t• bav & otean view at wedge. from pnmt· large lot. 4 hdrm. 3 bath C'Uslom horn(' 3700 sq. ft ft·alur ing marine room $1.385.000. NEWPORT CREST CONDO 2 bdrm. den. s pacious Pla n 8, HD· maculate. Low priced at $215.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bov\1Jt·Or1v1· N 8 675 6161 WHA rs UHtQUE AIOUT UNIQUE ••••••••••••••••••••••• SO.OF HIGHWAY SO. OF IA YSIDE Duplex, assume $270,000 ui loans. Asking $400, 000 Ideal for builder remodeler Darrell Pash. 63J.l.266 RVM~ Rt'.Al.TORS MOVEIM COHDITIOM Sharp 3 Bdrm. ~ year~ new, la,rge open kltC'hen . lo\•ely atnum. eanhtont· carpets Askin.it SIJ.t,900 Call S40·1151 ~HERITAGE REALTORS )&rd minutes to Mel Marina Owner will Great local.Ion. Avail for rmanre c1t good rate or1:upanq beginning Sl6S,000 Aug 1 Call regarding l09U"a Vllaqe R.E. fmanring 1161.990 Call 497-1461 8S7·21_~ for lll(o" OCEAN VIEW IRVIME CONDO S20IC Oft. 8} Owner Northwood Ai.s ume 12', loan 3 I Bdrm. frpk. foll> '!J: Bdrms bonu!> rm graded &decoraled . o p 39,500 $fi6.W Agts _11rn,_~ _ 494·0269 S%DOWH ! Fo&111taillva1ey 1034 *•GOLFERS~ Roomy 3 Bdrm 2 bJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rancho San Joaquin home on an R2 lot -.11h STRAT~'OR() Park s br. "San Mateo" mdl on plans for 2nd unit 1; re.it spa. 3. IOO SQ ft 3 car Rreenbelt near pool, spa Easls1de location and l(araRe alllrm in andgolfcourse'2pa11os. great hnanrmg Onl) tl.'r~uhm · ~d\~k~~0 ':· end unit Seller Wiii pa) SlS2,SOO ~o:n>~ t'~~~as u.!.::r l' will pomts and or carr~ hark hn Makeofr 964 7585 large note Ii) appt unh I 1 • Huntin«)toft ltoch I 040 . f'""'"f'" ....................... (~~)\\\uldhrldq< Ot·eun ~le'" 4 Br 2 Ba AHDOMHOUSf lndry rm. hot tub Really :I Br. I Ba large yard USS.OHO 1146 40BO . 55 1 :IOOO JIS_,_000 641-(1763 964 5412 19?011arranra I'~'". ln11w LEASlOf'TIOM BY OWNER Luxurious custom rnn l'ymb of Sl400 mo. **WOODBRIDGE! do 2.500 sq rt 2 frplr~. 4 $MOO() dn 2 br, 2 ba. condo Two level, 2 Br attached bdrm 2i,., baths SllSO in Villa Parifir Custom home. Vacant and ready mo p9S 000 642 4623 frplc 1 mi 10 beach 3 In go' Owner anxious :.: -vooh., tenrui., Jac. sauna OpetaSatlSYt 12·4 rlubhouse ~3395 .rnd great finant·1ng 3 Barm, 1~.0a. dbl s1dl•<l avallablt• Call now rrplc. sun nn. 111... ml EMTIEIT AIMIEl'S Sl21.%0 assumable. low do ... n DWGHT !! owe S127.eo> 336 Pnn Just h>tOO "'""'"'"' [~i]W.•.ihrldq< ce t on Dr fdl l model or the Dune 213 373 4787 homel> l'on~erted to a 2 RcalltJ bdrm with large fam1I~ I 55 1-:1000 Newport HrJh Area rm Hurr) on Lbis one l'21.I Baf'ranu ""'"' lr\111r Brand new• F1n('~l $148.SOO • __ quality condo' 3 bdrm" 631-2242 COOL POOL 2l2 ba Fanllisllr rinanr Large family home Ill 111g Call now for det.i1b beautiful CoUege Park 4 w·an if j ,m M ~~g:c'°t>!,n':m~.s~are:. I ------·-~ home for entertasnmii flARKIRJSTOl 3 br, ba '• St09,SOO 2 Bdrm rondo. So coast rerms avail Scott Real Assumable hnanr1ng available Call for de Plaza $84 ,000 Rita t) ~36 7S3.1 tails. BA RGAI N Of T HE WEEK Fabulous view. secluded North Laguna, 2 Bdrms, needs your de coratlnit ideas rwo.ooo lnvesto_rs_Du_p_le-x-on-best _!Ynter Agenti...752 5710 SUrER CONDO street. pool. tU income. MOVE-1M COMO. Rtduud $1,000!!! e RANCH RE: ALTY 551 2000 Owner $320,000 Entertain on li<t'. 1·m •, m1 to bt>a1·h1 Im ~4999. ere d pat 1 o N r w ma<' . highly upgraded 1 drapes rpt paint bdrm ~den ~uesl rm . I i+513 CAMPU' DI· fRVlfiE NORTHWOOD IEAUTY Immaculate 3 Bdrm home on qwet cul de sac in Northwoods Plush ca rpets and r ustom draperies thruout Huge patio, with soothing spa Many extras plus, low interest assumable loan $167,000. don osen rt•altor" 17TH AT PROSPF.CT TUST~.._731 3111 LGCJmG 1.-.. I 04 •••••••••••••••••••••• PAITY IN HAIBYIEW Smashing family room with wet bar Un· bebevably beautilul en· terta1ner's pat.lo. 5 Bdrm Sommerset oo fee land. Absolutely 1mmacul1te move-in condition . Creative hnanciog available • RED c:AAPEf- JS§:.1202._ THllL.Wf flLAM'"X .. 3 bdrm. din. rm., liv. rm., tam. rm .. F /P, 2"'1 ba, xtra large porcelain tub w /ceramic tile walls & noor. 4 covered patio areas. Price a>.000, 53 down, asswne $t0,0001st trust deed at 7~3. Xlnt land lease 1853.00 per year Can't change until year 2003. 14~ int. ooly 0.tofSic)ht 2nd trust deed due Otlt of Mlitd 1.9116-87 Call owner tor Prime Dana Po int appl dally after 11 am. duplex on corner lot .<!!!7!!!14!!11•346-1!!!!!!5880••••• near D«na Manna 2 -:: bdrm, I ba up. I bdrm down beamed ring , frplc, d1nsng area. encl patio $144,000 MtSsson Really 49'.(1731 Ne w Modul ar Type Homes, leased land. Oceanfront Pk. 3 pvt bchs, 24 secunty. fishinl! pier from $29 ,900 499 3816 New wood glass. spa, solar, 6 dks, 2 frplts 3 + '3 + close unobstruc tableipanor v1llg \'WS. ~99M PIP. 494·7631 OCEAHVIEWS EnJOY country like privacy within waUung distance to beach This stunning 3 bdrm home has many amenities in· --------clud111g lovely gardens UDO SI 15,000 w1lh Ko1 pond & spa plus Pric• .__._ decks s:m.ooo On thts 4 bdrm dream EMHALD IA Y home Fe1turing grand A Jewel or a home in this proportions & refttSbing lovely private area open ness Ne wl y Totall) remodeled with finished Too good to new famtl)' lutchen. new last bathrooms & ocean view decks See t1us one and fall m love' MB7.SOO uM01mucno. ocean \lews A ReJh1ll O-~Ik.1!11. 1;~:; ;::1111 fabulous bwldlJlg site in lll!!!!!!!!!!m!!!!!!l!!I!•••• quiet area This pnce for ·-------• this double s1U'd lot lll eludes plans & permits for 3 3SOO sq rt homl' $205,000 T~,r~r ·:\~~iailh:~ .. fl Town (?5 Country QtA L 'l'OQ$' OCEAN VIEW DEL I G H TFUL DUPLEX Two, 2 bdrm units with skyltl(hts & bay views Walk lo beach $450,000, assume S290.000 at 13' 2', P ARTHEISHIP range Nr schooll>, park &. '•bath Pools. Jaruz11 , DUPLEX p o o t s 1 zed } a rd tennis. rlubhouse. wet --------1 $160,000per.Nt. Pleasant surmundin1ts bar. fprk Perlerl for COLOHY 300Pk 171414'4·1177 Prest1g1ous tri·level beauty 3 or 4 bdrm Newport c.ondo. Formal dining rm, wet bar, frpl r . $214.500 w !assumable loans Lower 3 Arch Bay Great ocean view. pvt area 4 BR beach h.se $3144 552-1100 Tll E FIN EST IN WOOD BRIDGE 4 Bdrm . 2 ba , neur Stonecreek Park. moun talll views. dehghtrul at $189,000 The p e rfect dual Est a b I 1 she cl ~gl or rouple $110.SOO An extremely sharp 4 ownership property with neighborhood 5br. 3ba. Owner anxious eeds bdrm. I am rm home 2almostequal2Bdrm,2 $162 ,000 Assumt' Jst financing to ex1st1ng with formal d1n1ng . ba units with master OWC Bob & Dovie Koop SIS.000 Owner '"Ill help ' brick firep1t. centntl ai r loci-a M'9-1 I 052 swtes. stone firplc and 631 1266 Open Sat. Sun l S Bkr and pool s1U'd }3rd All ••••••••••••••••••••••• wood beamed ceihngs ·-------•I :-Jon Coop 536·1600 . showing like a model "'"¥- LUSIOPTIOM 3 bdrm Harbor View. Sl5K down, $1000 mo Quail Place. Steve. 752·1920 II · lot 9688341 home Isl time on a on an oversize MESA VBDE with private patios and l"ift• 1044 market S179.900 decks $320,000. IO'i mt A SSUMAILE •••••••• ••••••••••••••• 644-7211 SPARK LING CLEAN CITIH OME 3 Bdrm. 212 ba. f1replare, end un 1t, 2 car garage. move in cond . S240.000 financing Nice 3 Bdrm 2 bath M.llB Cal How 644-7211 home New roof, nea r DUMP rT I schools and shops Ai.k Out of town owner wants I LJ: 1ng $129,900 For sn out Woodbndge Gables _ , • s 1 • formation, rallS4().llSI Br 1 d g e port m d I --------~ BIG CANYON BROAD MOO R Re ally be1ufltul 4 Bdrm. homr. newly decorated, pool & s pa . Low price or 1685.000. LAST YEAR·s PRICE Jmaglne living in a Sun Joaquin model, lower unit. 2 Bdrm plus den for only $170,CO> THAT'S WHAT'S UMlqul AIOUT UlllilOOf OOMlS Realtora. 675-6000 MIW USTIH6 IM SIAVllW 4 Br l·•try view home. U&bt • 1lry thru out. Cloled ln brick atrium. L1e m1 tr suite . 1313.000 Owner will -~-"• HERITAGE . • REALTORS P AH LOCAT10M ...Ut w/fin1nrln1. l•------- 4 br, pool. Mesa Model Home. Aaume IB0.000 firat at 14~. with 40 K do OWC Hcond Jl49,500 Davtd 540-~ Spec~=:r'to~-400llr6 RI JlA\ lY 4 Bdrm home, tucked ~~~· ~~;.__··-..._~=· away in 1m1U comniunl-, ~ i::... ty. E1tcellenl condition · and ready to move In. I'======== I Communlty pool and II playcround. llASTSIDI 642-5200 2 HOMES On lar1e lot. A 3 Bdrm 2 TeWn1 tbl moat people batb.1. 2 f»lc'•· patio, poulbl• ii lmportanl to PLU:; z Bdrm ~•••· the IUCC'CU Of U)' $115,000. ~Cini by &•nie Nie. Mae llln ontr. in. 1 OU" I 1 111 led l D ,_· ••ll!llillilllill•I .., ~Dr. c1u11Ued, pbou1" f41.n2' Ml·a'fl ltlJ WI tt= ttHA $219,ooo Darrell Pash Lillie iS Big!• -Ciassfr1N! 631 1266 ads are really small WM~ Rf:Al.TORS "people to people .. sales calls with big readership and big results! To place your classified ad, call today 642·5678. MORTHWO OD PAltlC . Highly upgr;,aded 3 BRS home w/den & family rm located on lovely c u 1-de-s a c . Prof ess ion aHy decorated in earthtone colors. central air cond, secluded garden patio. Excellent financing available. $174.500 Belle Partch 752-1414 (P48) YOUR OWH HlllT AtH. Can begin w /thls charming 3 BR, 2 BA single level townhome In beauUrut Heritage Park. U>vely setting facing huge green park. Immaculate w /earthtone decor. Fireplace, used brick patio and double garage. $129,500. 'Marian Hanson 551·8700 (P49) ' A SUPER STARTER II Located m a terrific family neighborhood. thss 3 bedroom 2 bath Pacesetter home offers VILUIAUOA 10"'2'l loan. 30 yr. 1 bdrm den. 'llew. fplc. micro. upgrad cpt, lino, t ile, etc For info 673-6607 or 1-8113-4303. easy financing and an --------easy location. close to schools. ahoppsng and transportation SlS0.000 fir All ktill 4~·1720 eblQ.gO . - Cala D~ AD- 642·5&11 Newport hodl I 06t ••••••••••••••••••••••• '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!! ·~ OCIAHNOMT OPPOaTINTY in Laguna Beach. Com e & see this rare property on the bluff above Wh iskey Cove . A truly spectacular location on a quiet cul·d e·sac st. 4 BR fam rm. 2 fireplaces $895,000 Barbara Aune 642-8235 ( p 46 ) HMIOI VllW HOMlt l.<>vely 8 BR, 2 bath Carmel model located in Phase UI close to comm tennis & p o ol. $259,500 land lncl. Jennlrer Suchomel 644-&m CP47) A • • .. .. .. I . .. ·---~-0-,.,,.-..·-·-~-·-·-~-Al-L·-Y-~~1:-o-T-/W~·-.-~n-:a~·-·--.Y~~-J·-ut-;;·:----~~;;;,,----··~:~-.:=---· ---..... -. . --... ---........... ·-·---............ -....... _.-.............. -.... 4 ..... 4 -.so--·--·,...1- u.-----..__ """'11. -• 1411 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ....... s. 0....1-... U.-~tl>.. .. • • ..... t..-...11 ....................... I "'-"Ila .~ •-&.-~ ·~ ~...................... -~v•YW r I uaard•-8£ lat~ Uowi1&1l C... .. Mlr JIU ~· ... •••U..W.. s •• ., ..... 4200 vnM;f -4400 ~•-Mtw,..t .._ I Mt ••••u• ••••-•-•0 ••• ••••••••• •• • ........... 0 •••• .......... •••••n new 1 br 111Ciudecs aMI ..... • ................. 0 • • .. ' •• • ............. •••••••• .. •00•••••• ........ •••••••uu 0 •••• ••• ................. , .. ........ -............. lllcwPr;:e tr JIOO MtM Jll4 ....... JH4 llDlt. Sm .. adltJ-oeJ(. 8o OfHl'1Jway Upll&Jn llwf ..... •IMO ll40 LIDO ISLE charmln1 3 UECU1'1VI OC AtlrOIT/C.M. OC1AM••1 ......... .. ...................................................... complex •t1ate, poo . 2Brlba,lal.l>drynu,no ....................... bclrm.2bath,re;1room a..o· prune 2 ttJ or __ 1.,._,.115a MAKI AN OU Kl l .... 21& •Br, zBa. S100 mo. Avail aarduer Nr. s.c. aaraae No cblldrtfl or THIWHlfRITUI J~o.st rernodf ed Moo· SUrTIS Uct11warebol&Je. t /c, ..-._ n.,.._ r(P. D/W, Yd, Blt w, a.1 Plau Cntri air, petlo. pete. ssoo per mo Lllxu.ry Adult unltut af· rental Bill Grundy, In cpt, 0 H door. etc I r~W1cnll home, l blk 5 Income Properties Ad.l\.J, No peU. ~-$40.nU up1rada, -+ lltlla. 673-1 fordable llvinf 12' 3 f1 4!61. HarTA61 Subhue ... 1337 1~ ~c~~and bay. Eut.alde Coet1 Meta. rmo. Zbr 1~ ba 2lt do S.U. No peta. TIS.2580 ,. __ &... ._.__ llJ4 Br Well deco;ated NEWPORT OCEAN P\.A%A ~n)'!ime ..ara• • uu.mt, i Crpl<'I ~ down Owner will DLX CONDO 2 B I . ' ~'":_:I_" Y. roo • evtt. ---Olympl lilt ...... 1 II ht FRONT Lux 2-4 Br Wk· Ntw hua1ry omct apace c ...... •nd more Only 4 yn carrv P~to1tll' ,_. , + ,, fenced~. child OK, ....................... ed f. .......J. I ly 873-SURF m1m ID lrv1nt'• bu11ut ~ MW All I.I lo .• , "'" Br z~ Ba frplc, 144. '1$-LHI .. W.td MIWL y DICOI. tennu rourt, acUHI, -I -QlO IQ rt Ground rJoor Utter l~ .. :::,Znd rar., ate. H• 177$ ~ransetreelBr z Bdrm 2ba view by 1 Br. au pd, encl aar park like landlcapU\& Newport Buch 1 block renter! F.11.ty frwy 1c Coaa t u1ihway and ownt; wtU ur .j 17 5411or _ te 4' • .1asc) dJwuhcr, pool Adulu Mott beautifuJ bJda 111 toocean.Avlll.bywtek cesa Av&JJ now ' CaU Rulonomiu Corp 3r4,..0n1y DSOOOO c!fi Townbou.M, I year old, S ld>llo. IASTR.lllF H B 7 11 to H~ 87$-~ &r fordetails 87H1~ tod.ayl79-5'70 ' Br. 2 Ba. 1lcyll1ht1, S. 1.8 ~!0'73· From M6 06UI 1{737-5131 551-Ull _ frplc muter bdrm NOR'mWOODS Threc8dnn,2~ba,end llrTtWlllU.. Deluxe poolluJe xtra 1285perweekavall oow. Cd M DeluxeSWtes. AC. 4475 ALLSTATE sul.te: commty pool. Exec. Home3Br. 38a 2 ::~·u~ood ;;"Uoo and Ntwly decor 1as pd ., larae 2br, 2 .. ba. bltns, sleeps 4. on large pool. ampl pk&. ulll pd 28S5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1,.. 114 541 0763 S4J. Story Laree family rm • n. per mo encl car .. pool, dswhr dawhr. I~, miles buch ocean view. 631<0064 ~._Ct!.HJ9: Sl.~ 312 to l2JSO .,, tt Sink 2925 Culle&t Avl' £A.STSIDE Cute 2 Br + w•ter t gardener paid. Weell: daya 7~75 Adulll 642-5073. AdJt1, no peb $450 mo .., REALTOR& Cobta Mda. CA •1&nroom. frplc, stove, aso. 54S-2ml Aat .. no Two8drm,2bath,del~e "Ir. I le~ ~_m. ~~'l°~~=~Pocean t41WrOITC&ntl fronlt31ec~nder~qft refr1C W/D 1,1 yard l!L_ McClair coodo al B11 ., M"'Rl...aEIS W"'LK Preat1110111. full service Ii§ ~-S48--=.:.7=-- PetsOK . .Otmo.Joyc~ leech l241 Canyon. Poo!. ~enniJ, Newly decor. •• pd. 2 '& "r w "' -~=:n~~~~~~0~week EXEC omcea lnclda ..._lrWI...., 4500 109/oDOWH •----••••I Walt&e 631•12118 Aft 5 •••••••••n••nnn•••• security, avad 1mmed encl ear .. pool, tl!ihwr. 3 B , To nho~se re'cpt, aec, xerox, under· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ONLY 1219.8150 for lhia 3 rn. of OiMr.W. M&-0329. · • Spacious newer 3 SR. 3 8"·9:184 Adulll. $073. Apts. from 5195. Palloa, Hunt Bch lrg 3bdrm ground pk'e. telex & an· 1)75. Approx. 22&' In· ' Br 2 Ba Harbor View 20 units, E.alde c.M". 7 Ba. dine/rm, fam 1rm. 3br, 2ba, 8/Cloewly pnt lt4STAMJIM1 single 'double rar W/&pa.Near bearh.Aug Uque deror ronr nn. duli 'l/Otrlce 18101 Home near park and yrs old. 30% down . LUSIOPTI~ fplc, Bia Y»rd, Oce»n ed. ve ry c eantaharp, 2 Br. t i.; Ba. Townhouse a11ra1es. near Hunt. J!n!y. 960--5715. 6-Y·7189 Redondo Cr "T" Hunt pool. Motivated owner Overall flnanclnJ 10%. Wh y P•Y rent!????!? Side of Hwy No. upper unit Woodside Eutilde. 1 child OK. Har..~ur.IMC).68<Y7 NEWPORTBEACH Custom.exetullveoff1ce. 8£h~·~ wilt Haist in flnancin1 Hurry! Call Kevin. New, rant.uUc, well loca Laguna Av at I. now. Village. no pets, avail Yard, tndry nn Great Sr ACIOUS I 00' "-s.d 400 sq ft Pvt bath with 8, 700 aq ft office ~ and q u lck escrow. ted 3 Br., 3 Ba. new Con· 400 mo. A . 494·7S51 7 /lS 1575 55e·6221 or loc. S5$0Mo. 3 Br 2 Ba Apt with 2 J Br. July $275/Aug S300 shower Balboa Penin warehouse Irvine In Hurry, won'ttut do, l800 per mo, next to Top of the World Com· $45-8445 TSL MGMT 642-1603 car attached garage 2 Br. July 1375/Aug $400 P5 mo M2-4623 dustr1al 35-' tnple net a~shopDU!.C.631·~. munlty. 3 Br 2 Ba. Lo•ttr..._.C_. Spacloua 1 Br Garden w tO hook -up, patio, Newly dtt'd. & sharp Otrlce /Store/Busines~. Call 646 t044 ur 111quire RCTaylorCo ( .: I ' ~I bc.,.._.v .. • OllL~ This 3 bdrm home, on an extra wide lot features a completely furnished game room·aunny patio. Sp~cioua awter bdrm. Redh1ll¢~ReJJty f ;~ :: ~: ;1111 STB'STO SAMDYIEACH Remodeled 2 story on lge rot. 3 bdnn + den. Lee master suite with fireplace and Roman tub Nrwpo11 Shores. S12!1K Redh1ll~ReJJty li7:{. 7;~1 HI Quiet pvt area, great 4Br, Gorgeous ocean view. Beautlfui'"'Ocean and Apt. Pool & rec All utils frplc Small pet /child 7 1 4 6 'I 5 · 8 I 2 7 or 14'~X40 :.>19-A Harbor Muos1 Co 167~ Noyes ZBa. rns mo. 6'5·9161. Main Beach, Catalina. Bay View. 2 Bdrm. 2 ba paid.Adult.nopet.s ok. ForapptcaU J.!4·997-0432 Blvd, Costa Mesn Avail !t57 V2.166 Brier Coop tn 979-1942 San Clemente. On the Penthouse. P rivate El Puerta Mesa TSL MGMT 00.-1603 LagU11a beach!ront I br Au!_~ W 549-1366 vlted MESA DB.MAI h 111 above La 1 un a earden, adult commWli· 1959 Ma Ave A t 5 Ouplex·3Br, 28a, -;;;i; home on Sttluded polllt, Rttttab W..t.d 4600 Beautiful 3 bdrm. 2 ba. Beach Freshly oainted ty S850 mo 2 Br I ba. cpl td rps. decorated. dbl gar, W 10 steps to P'1 beach, llOO MEWrOIT C&nEI ••••• •••••••••••••• • ••• Heated pool and apa. 111 •out ll60 Mo 30(9 833-7s.t!Weekdays built1na, adults S395, hookup Avadnow t650 day,2 wkrrun49S~l1S Excellent Newport Prof cuupledesirelor2 Walking distance to Zell Or 4117·&33o ll:HTALS! 2272Maple,631·2927_ _ mo. ~00'21_ __ Vacatioti ._.. 4250 Center tFasruoo lsland1 br apt, rum or Wllum . sch o o Is & stores Imm~ ~u nr 1 Bdrm (&) 957 2740 1 2 & 3 ••••• ••• •• .. ••••••••••• office space wt th 1ireat t»n orcupy no~· Aug. Beautiful c~. m1r Cottage, I Br wJfrplc, 2br.lstoryadult condo. apt. . T'o ..... 0 BtgBearLakecabinsand exposure and pre Sept or Oct MF. 9·!1, rored closets. m1n1 gar. shade trees Adlts. ~~d~501~ i b;a~~~ ~6f:a: ~OM Quang 2=~ES Mammoth Lakes con sttg1ous address Spurr 7!19 OIS5 <Mr. Wtle1 I E'Slll C.M. blinds. sunny kitchen no u. S 494-6942 do's 2 da mm 964-5712 from 750 to 5000 sq ft M 35 seeks 1 br apt on WJ~~~~~~~~~ with oak cabinets. No .,... HkJet' 3252 SA~mo 549-9823 MEWPOIT AVAIL NOW 2 Br 2 Ba BIG BearCablll Ideal for Wal I accommudatl' beach. Nwpt Balboa, . pets. SB?S Mo. ~1650. ....................... ArAllTMIMTS. downstairs, O!.hwr, gar. flShlllg , h.lk.lllg, baking or gr a Ph 1 c des t g n ~t ,,l r round ~·9424_ 12 UMh • S575.000 $200,000 minimum down. 22 Units. E. Blurts. 3 Br Condo $600 4brhomelllnewdevelop 2·2Bd rm I !Bdrm lndry Water & trash just getting away arch1tecture,arcounlan Wanted TorentEast.side $.1,S<I0,000. net to seller Fireplace, dbl garage, ment, modem kitchen, From S270 mo + ullls patd I chi.Id OK. no pets Wknd & Wkly rates cy, la"" or other bllStness C M 2br as>1 Call afler 752·2:584 atrium, pool , spo rec rac ava.il, no pets a.o.r..-.. 3707 Nochtldren,nopel>.no $475 !1452ml Agent.no 545·691~ related u~es Cull fil>m 5452836_ 1145-9494. !140·8300 day a, 836·9784 ••••••••••••••••••••••• waterbed.s. Lee Ocean f ronl New po rt William <.:ute, Exclusive Room wanted for mature Du, M WLn"'· /eves Cheerful 2br, 2ba dplx 2450 N'""""rt Blvd 8 b & lBd Broker LD • IGY A•t esa Verde. Lovely 38r _a ua _ racmg Bay Beach, Sept. C~taMesa New Hunt Beach Condo eac . 2 rms. r u 11 y em p Io) ed . BALBOAPE.1-JIN. 2ba family home. 1675, MiuloaV"lo 3267 l3-June 1. lio!iO. Adults, 3 Br 2 Bo +amenities avail weekly Call t Cote Realty responsible l!I yr old Two2bdrm,assumable 848·l660 ...................... , nopelll.67~ 2Br IBa571WJoAnn. S800Mo.TI4/848-~or 5«·1161~-~ &ln\·ei.tmPnt male ·11! Sept l loan 11W7... Good renter. 3 BR TOWNHOM E Max 1 child No pets 2131592·!!-62 :'\lewpurl. Costa Mesa T I · SJ50000 Eastside 2 Br. 1 Ba Co1taMtM 3724 S37!1 Sierra Mgmt WAHTB> 640-5777 lrvme Call 6316762 art op· o~ai'r1rucn:S · Yards, carport. Will con· Luxury, 2"'i ba, pool. ••••••••••n••••••••••• 641_1324. Large 2 Br · fenced yard, Newport on Ocean ren· ; 30 PM Johll PAVILION REALTOR sider 1 pet. or 1 child, 50 mo. ~3 SUSC"•~AS 2-BR 1-8-a. Up""r tn garage Avutl now. $US tal wanted Clean J l-111111111!!1!!!!1!!!!!!!!1!111!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1!!!!~ SS25 Mo. $t75 security HOM ES FOR RENT -• ~ + S300 secunty 963 7600 bdrm, 40th St to 6!1th St 675-llZO deposit.63l-031B 3 Bdrms S62S ·S700. Furn I br apt SJ25 & 4Plex LaWldry rac No Evesur6'5-8J69 area First Ooor Reas Offiu,IW~ ll!!l!!!!!!!!!!•••l!!!!ll•!!ll!!!!I 2 Br. House. Adults on.ly Fenced Yards & up. Encl gar. Adults, no pets Adults preferred. HEAR IEACH rate Fvr ranuly, quiet f'or lease New carpets ' al 814 W. 16th St C M garages. Kids & pets pets 2110 Newport Bl 271 16th Pl SJIS Mo Hunt Harbour area and will live dean. 4 wks & pa111t Nr A1rpurt& all Lo+sforS. 2200 Pleasecall714/S48-8951. welcome !145 2000 S48·4968btwn8&5PM 644·002 2bdrm twnhse SSIO or mo July 82 ,, Freeways Avail now ....................... · Agent,nofee FROM Ji9WKLY -several years) Will de Call S44-6500or7&0-lJ77 Unique lot Ill Nwpt Bch. Eastsade 2 Br 1 Ba Ambassador Inn, 2277 .._.'--fi1-L..1 f~ tav~nadults 846 3541 posit 1 wk now Reliable OfflCE SPACE w tBack Bay view 20.000 garage, lrg fenced yard Newport hach 3269 Harbor Blvd. 6'5-4840 I ••ESl ICiLI -~ -675 1.274 K 0 LL F' 1NAN C1 i\ L sq rt S275,!IOO. Agt No pets. SSOO Mo 2297 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New decor 1 Br. Op~ I FAMILY AnS~ Lge 2br. Iba. v.lk to h<'h ----C'E.Vl"ER ...............•....... ....... , Opportwiity 5005 ....................... PRIMTSHOP Chnstina,851·5117 ' Orange Ave. 646-:r104 SANTIAGO DI. Seperated by gar Quiet Brand new beautiful lrg 5425 Mo Retttoll to Shan 4lOO 0 C AIRPORT -~ I 076 Mo..toill DeMtt 2br CONDO pool. Jae, 2•-, Beautiful house avail Emplyd adultover35, no apt for families with 1 ~5001 ;;~:;;;;·~·\·;.;td~·.;~~ ••••••••••••••••••••"• le1ort • 2400 ba. washer dryer. nov. tn elegant area 4 ~t.a.~.S48-Ul21 or2ch1ldren Near park lrYilte 3844 & cut hnng exjll'nse~· Ideal small wnrk areas Thriving b\11iness. C M low overhead Call for details SSS.000 Craig 631 1266 SPECT ACUL.il YU Of Saddleback Mountain & back country from thlS 3bdrm home on quiet 1 cul-de-sac Impeccably dean! Spacio\11 rooms. xlnt noor plan. assuma ble 91 ,r; loan P06stble 80,..., loan at 1 3~.1 : Minutes to beact\ $150,000 ~ ........ -EER~ ..... ,~s FEAL •• ESIAIE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2frpks. 1113Sandt Lane Br 3 Ba 0111mg Rm 1 BR. comfortable. pvt. Heat patd Nopel.5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Proress1onally since by the month for Real 1---------1 Em~9~2 :KRpl 2 Bd ~1~ingN~: w~ll~~~~I:. cpts. drps. water gas 2::: .i ~Ison 63 ;:f O~=~::.~~ a?~~~d I:~ 1971 ~!!~~l'al;e,l:ctl~~et'r~ GET AWAY as I e u ex. rm. cozy kitchen & man) ~· 646-9t29 -t_ '-"-' I HOUSEMATES NOM rr ... I I l ba yd gar l\50 8 B Sh II ) rly 675 4000 ur 67:1111121 cept . conrerenre cor ~ · ·67~2an many xtras $1750 mo Newport leodt 3769 3 r 2 a 779 a mar ev Rod Maxim 832-4134 ree storage, etc Gil Brand new luxury Pahn Broker Cooperation ••••••••••••••••••••••• New carpet, upstairs r7l4l9!15 1~ Springs home with 3 EASTS I D E 2 B R 759 8974 I lboa •--CL..L. No pets $450 Sierra I Br. 2·::.t} townhou~e. bedrooms. 312 baths Dollhouse. good loca a -r -M mt Co 641 1324 The Lakes. ~ pool. ten '•Ro4i..W.~fs1tc . lea.i bee Wt. F I · h lion no pets Aug! $475 OHTHEWATSl Bachelor apt. fully nts Adults no pets $>25 ~~ ••t, .,, am1 y room Wit 64 jg37 . . Great view or boats & furnished Amenities Stunnmglarge2Br2Ba mo 714 7307201 art "fi_'·Fi11d. ca11_t ll86sqrt atHuntington ~11~~~~~.ce~l~~o~~~:~ , 21~r 1 Ba. Condo Mesa bay Bnckrplc. ram1ly avail Lease Sl.200/mo. Garden Apt. Pool & Hee 5 30PM, 213 '7114 7947 ~ _ •. ----;::Ju~~v~:;~gp;~~su: oven and trash compac Verde Chi.Id OK Sew room Available 1mmed 642·l802 area 7_~1~. l8lh. Sl LOCJUllO ltoeh 3848 Qld~t & lan1~1 agenq Call 640 8712or847 6S5S tor Also uicludes pool decor. . 833-89'7..i_ for 9monlhs Only 119S 2br, renced ya rd. ga ••••••••••••••••••••••• m Calll'suicfl!nt and spa . on large lot. E S d 2b 2b f 1 mo h 1 d () rK, I Br, parkmg Nr beach Cre its ABC.NBC \CBS, DLX 2 RM STE. Fet land. Excellent · 1 e r, a. rp c. THE REAL ESTATE RS c 1 re n pe 1 s Adult SJ25 mo No ""b Cosmo, Phil Dunanuc Pvt outside entram·c & financtng. St.25,000 with S650iM o~~I 673'8550 SS OO .Mo 2223 'A' Ava117.fl5,,494-0942"" toallwh~~:~iaplat·e pkg+ ampletllentpkie S360,000 assumable 1st. d d .,ed Pomona Way 64!1 $480, Brand new deco ore m e T l232 I B rm 1 Ba elac., Un· 645·2042 1 Bdrm i!PI. zis. util tn N Be h 641 IK99 small. well ma ml 'nd ' AskforBIUCote •••• ~~•••••••••••••••• al, partlally furn Apts. 2br S400. !Bdrm eluded Nr Be:H·h ~~~~all~~eS Coast contemp prof bldg , t. Cote Realty HOME roR RENT ~~~d !!'(.1 ~14fdiJc $350. Refng,Stove. Gara_ge 494·99:1J Ga rden Grove,89S 3482 sec svc + copiera\a1I . 4911-10.0 493-0202 & In vestment 3 Bdrm . t62.!I. Fenced m_o + s_ecunl" S!it 1690_ 646·0341aft2PM Studio apt, '21. ulll incl. ut1I incl AC pd 1 mo ~-•••••!Ill~ LA,.5777 yard & garage Kids & ,..... YEAR·ROUNOF\Jfj· 2Br, 2Ba twnhome , Nr Victorin Beach 111111!!!!!!!•!!!!!!!•!!1!!1•!!!!!!!~ free rent S280 mo QOtV-pet.s welcome 5'5·2000 EXEC 41dM+fcR Social •·t•"•ties 0, beautifully lndsc pd , 494 9938 642 9347 Santa Ana ,,.. • Spectacular view. securt 1 A . no lee. home with pool and spa. ieclOf • F1ee Sul\day fr pie. gar, lndry. etc t Y gate. poo I. spa Prof B dg 1670 Santa Ill Several Restaurants for sale Prime locations from MS.Wl tu ~.000 S!ll ~117 ICE CREAM NEWPORT X Int beach loc .'d u~t sell Onl> $19 .500 I !133 4242 l1tve1hftettt Opport.ity SO 15 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F'REE BROCHCRE PAY taxes yrs later Earn safe IS • Call 642·8494 Monty to Loan 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JUST $IOl,SOO For llus 3bdrm home Just minute's from • bea\ftlful area beaches, try S25.ooo down owe balance A&umable 8"-o 1st TO o.tof S.. Fo.taill v..., 3234 3 car garaJe 4000 sq rt Brunch • BBO s • $490 mo Adlts no pets M.wport leodi 3169 prestigious Harbor Ana Ave_, C M ''°__., 2600 •••••••••••.•••••••••••• Gardener lllrluded Im Parties • Plus more 546-4016 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ridge $550 per mo CAHHERY YILUGE Up to 9()<( Appra1Sed •••••• '::::~•••••••••••• HOMES FOR RENT maculate Avail 8 16 GREAT AECftf.ATIOtl Ute, bnte, airy, 1 Br apt Oceanfront for Winter 760-9307 450 sq ft space avail Au~ Value lst 2nd3rdT D NEED MONEY DIVORCE FORCES 3 & 4 Bdnns. S'l~S'l!IO ~lease A.&!_646-535B7 [:":•Floe~~ with balcony or patio, ~r~~lsB,:auer:''#,te4~1t Shr-ne_w_2-brCMhomew I $47S ldealforsmbus1 Loansdealdirect SALE Fenced ya rd s & Spacious 3 Bdrm . 2l1 a 0 pro 1 P • cathedral ceillng, pool & --- -absentee owner Quiet ness or reta1 I shop With Lender Bkr RE K d r K.d •· t Townhouse Very clean. Health Out>s•Sauna spa, lush ta--'·capmg NO FEE1 Apl & Condo · 673 "<22 17 1 .. 1 .. 9 .. 1743 ~ . auat con o. urn , garages 1 s "' pe s • Hydromasuoe . '""' • · I ~oo.mo 642-0835 ..., ,. ,. ..-p30,0000rofr 542.5290 welcome 54S 2000 pool. iogg111g, etc Jl()( Swimm.no • Gou Adults, no pets $460 & rentals V1UaRentals M 1 r----;b-zbah-5 ""or St or Wash prop •n. Agent, no ree ~.!> A_.Jent 544-1440 -011 .. ino Range up. 549·™1-61S 4912 Broker a e em r. Sl' H111ttiltcltoft leach Homeowner L111111ns •• RI a+ PIS FEAL .. EBIAIE ,.. ... ---Co Plau f'rwy Spa OCEAN ~EW Approx N ro call Arleen 12 ac tt.ti9CJt.leocll 3240 Wt1klffGro .. s BEAllTlf\JL APTS. 2 Br Eut.s1de I child PARK NEWPORT g2.!l+shareutll 6414913 300 sq rt l'ttl pd forAnyPurpose com inc nr IS Negotia ••••••••••••••••••••••• Brand new never lived Singles 1 & 2 Bed OK. No pel.S 2!163 Elden Slllgle fem Parent look I rn~ mu ~ 7!>42 fast courteous service ble tenns 714 '752·7667 .New 48r, 21>8a. 3 blks to in 3 BR executive borne room,. Furn•shed "B" S4!10 831 806S, COUMTIYCLUI lllg to shr w rem rmmte P7l: SH 0 f'r 1 C: ES GlbrattcrHo.Mlas At bt'b. 2 car gar. ,;95 mo w1wetb1r S19SO mo ~,'!~~:--~ 8211~3 UYIHG ~ly,C_~ 12131SS8-86()1 500 6000 sq ft 1801 RKR (7141642-2715 493.0202 498-1040 IHI hhlh 848-6378 975·1262 - - -Models Open Daily IMMED Barhelors, l&.2 bedroom Male or Female share Newport Blvd, C M Ph ..M HoW:!_ l!J!!l!lll!l!!ll!!l!!!!!l!ll•!!ll!!!!!I!•• bc"-c)t 2100 2story,38r.11~Ba Con· Newport Crest 3 & 4 9106 OCCUl'AHCY! apts&townhous~ plush home with I 646·9495 STOBORROW$ --" •••••••••••••••••••• ••• do Pool & rec S.SSO Bdrm liruts 115() Sll)()( Oakwood 2 Br 1 Ba. A"' Beam Fro~l_O-644 L900 Nl'~ i>Ort Beach Exec 2 STO LENDS s-t.AIMI 1010 867 VilJ Park 846-4~ 1146-4366 Mo OCEAN VIEW "' E Bluffs 2 Br 2'2 Ba ' Newport Center 3 suites C II Ed Bk 848-5005 ....................... acres nr a . • Gar~ Apartment• ce11itlgs. laundry rm. blocks from beach with on 16th fl oor. Union a _r __ S9.200Down Orange, ready for sub· HOME roR RENT 631 046(! pool Adults only. no Pool Encl gar li75 Mv pool& teM1Srourts S3SO Bank Bldg, ocean & golf Mo~ Trwt d1v1Sion. Will exchange 3 Bdrms. SlOO f'enced NEWPORTCREST H=~=11~· pets. 640-!1296or~l.~ + 1st & last Call Paul course view 2.041 sq rt. Deida 5035 Classy Coudo Spacious 3 bedroom un 1t Nearly new carpets throughout. Just paml· ed Air conditioned. Located close lo pool 1!2,000 CaJl 979·2390. TARBELL, REALTORS for oceanfront.9~m377e or yard & garage Kids & 4 Bdrm, m>sq ft Condo 1714) 645•1104 TSL MGMT 642 1603 760-7024. __ 993 sq . ft, 1.446 sq rt ••••••••••••••••••••••• _!!lcome urut.a l· .... l pets welcome. 545-2000 Close lO pool and tennis 1 Br Garden Apt. Stove & AD ULT LIVING M 1f' to share spar 2 BR 2 Month to month or up to Agent,nofee. 1125 lease. Agt 64().!IJSi 17C~~:~.~=~,~~1h1 refrige. Adults. no pets· 2 Bdrm. 1 Ba No pets Ba apt. NB Pool & pvt S yrs Sl.75 per Sil rt AllSt~o~a~tate Rtwtola WALKTOBEACH or64~0313 _ _ (7H)642·5113 ~!148·1377 _ $54 0 Mo Isl , last beach S400 Dottie Full service lease War· 949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Exec 3br 2ba. ram rm. 60 I LIDO Spacious 2 Br dshwshr, +security 631·2093 Johnson 7 60 t 966 ren McNear_760-0404 inve~=~ ~ Ho.Ma Fwllllllltd dining rm. fantastic 2 Br 2...., ba, hi ·rt~e patio. enclsd garage 1606 Westclirt Dnve. 675-6000 ______ Beoutiful New orr.ce ,..._TD__,, ••••••••••••••••••••••• home & area. BQ.5191 waterfront. Available HAllOlt lllDGE $400 Mo No pets. no Newport Beach Woman . cluld OK Big spa<'e avail Ill one or 2"d • LAMJ-oltocll 3141 3 br + den, frplc, nr Sept.~.752-S?l.L_ Brand new View children S@.9al4 condo, pool. Lennis, etc Nl.'wport's flllest orrtce 642·2171 545-0611 S~~~~·te:;;u~·;,~:~ Beach & Talbert. 1635. PENIN PT :> br. 3...., ba. Decorator rum. 2 Br. 2 Upstairs 2 Bdnn, all bit 3 BR 2 BA $250. 645-5123_,_~5165 bu 1Id1 n gs N r OC Want investor for Npt , OtMrleal&tah ....................... partially furn Pvt l.at,last+dep.892-9539 sunroom. din rm, lrg Ba. 11900 sq fl.I $1800 ins. 765 Hamilton $490 YEAR.LY l)S() Roommate wanted MllSl Airport. ~900 sq ft bayfront home Give Mobllt HolMt 1100 beaches. pool. pier & Large 2 Br. fenced yard. pal.Jo. $1400 mo Betty. mo 67" <"11 mo. Call 631-4402 days or Like new, ground unit. be neat S250mo + ut1l 1 WI th or with o u l weU secured 1st or 2n<l For Solt clubhouse. Ocean side garage. Avail now $435 A t 673.9060 .;rOM 760-0734 Eves fireplace, bwll·lllS, near block from beach. f'em Secretenal Service Call T D Agt, 67>6161. Ad•;l~;·;;~:·;-9;~·,;.;;;; w/full view. 6to12 mos. + S300 security. 963-7600 Quiet 2 Br Unit. ll1 B; S. C.._.. l776 S).40 mo 1 br. pool. pall; :h p~\~!~kn~~!~~ pref. over~.548-98_!§__ [ordeta~ 833-0440 wave, A(;, $3500 cash lse mo. e.5269 Eves. or 6'5-83&9. Condo, frpk, pool, spa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adults No pets 325 J Avail 7 10 213.'331·9904 Spyglass 4 br. pool. spa. BO AT SLIP 1640 Newport Blvd •l9 l"M 3244 patio, 2 car gar. t650 Mo 2br. Zba . overlook mg 17th Pl 646-5137 Arter 11 fem. prer.121. refs req it Call "d ...,,.. Newport.._. l 169 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Pat 675-6303 ___ ocean, 1750/Mo AM Best Bay View & Beach SZ7S mo Doug. 760-1232 ilcw.d yow lecne .,._._.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 545-9911 upper duplex. 3 br 2 ba, rt 7 wknds whttt yo. clloow os HTATISALE lt .... W..CO WOODllJD(H Cozy 2Br 1 ba C'Otlage NICE ' 2 br 1.., ba . garage Adults. no pets a · pm, --dHtxt ISOO to 4000 Prof derorated 3 Bd A detached Sycamore Redwood decks. bnck private palJO, enclosed t90C> Mo Yearly 225 l9th Resp female to shr home 1966 Maie:ic l~a~ed ::' home fully furnished Model. 4 Br. 2~ Ba.. walks. gar Avl 8 11695 gar,. No pets. 5'50 Ask St Inquire 233 l9th. St. tn Irvine. SHO mo Avail Mt-ft. Cal.- Hffd A ZlldT.D.? COMPETJTIVERATF.S Delta Pantie Mortgage 171418Sl·2060 Licensed R E Broker Laguna eac ar d h fenced yard, cul·de·sac. 645·6825 for Bill63H316 llC, 67!1·0236&67~7092 tmmed lSt & last & sec --675-1662 ·Near Ocean Week days w11ar ener. moot ly hed ••••••••••••••••••••••• rd · S58.605() AMomc.....ts/ 7!19·~7!1 cleaning services and commty pool. attac IA YAlOHT Gntr.t ll02 • 2 Br I Ba Mesa Ve e S. Ci.....tt )176 ...:;..;.;'--"-"=-----Pt~/ auociation fees in· garage. sss o Mo Great view ol boat.a & ••••••••••n•••te•••••• ~pperl. ~~K S450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• oh°rd6~11liJilrare house Small ort1ce. ample Loat&Foti.d •COOLlllEZIS• eluded. Jae., comm. 752-1282or l 492·~ bay. Brick frplc. family ArTMTSfOlllMT ope . 2 BR. 2 BA. CONDO On c I 831-1Z7 496-2969 parking, ea.sy access ....................... . "78 Hillcrest dbl wide. iv°' and delightful fami· RancboSanJoaqwn room New carpets, H.B .. N.B .. Cosld fesa SPAPCIOUS golf course. zoo. U2S mo Agt 548-7729 HaDDy Ada 5120 fully ure1raded. hu IS· y living Lease for 2 b~ condo, 2 ba. d~n. 3 fresh paint. Avail. Im· Something for Everyone 1 & 28DR~ _Adult open 492-6700 Fem want.ed lo shr 2br •• ;-;~•••••••••••••••••• sum-beloAn. (SM'924 > SISOO/mo 444-7020 patios wJgreat view, med. for9months Only Bach. to 4 Br. Unfum. beamed ceiling, lots of "'....,..lllhF Mslwd apt. All amen Si!lS tMo. 2 IRVINE Suites. mo APR o(onlyl2.69% e avail. 7/12, 1825 /mo $79S mo . Broker Afta. Certain locations wood,servingbar&lge ...,.-U f, ~ 3900 C.M.S57·Ul6 2801 rental. no sec dept re ""'o~i.~':... · 752-6961 673-8550. 0 re r : Pool , 5 Pa. kitchen SJ'5 & $410 no .. ~: .. ~.~ ............. VW mechanlc, 28. seeks q 'd , pho~e , desks. ,.. Ll·ng'Q Calif. Homes. Sl92 Yearl· NEWPORT CREST fireplace, laWl. room, pets . 22ss Map I e S E .._ W I 11i...1 D house/apt to shr w1stn· xerox. secy I. avl 180 & ,,7 .. 610 lng. 3 Br. 2 Ba F~m. Agent hastwobeaulifu.I beamed cei lings, 548·73561673-IBXI A n bleperson.11»~ 200 sa It Quiet win 1 Br. Trailer Home . llulbm• Rm. A IC. new pa mt. llllilf for n:nt. 645-0295 ~a rages. all built-ins. VILLAGE M 28, nonsmoker, desires do we ores · s.i25 to w/cabana. C.M. Adults. WateAr & ~rdn1~...,incld VILLAl ..... 0.., arden & Townhouse H.tMw& New 1&2 bdnn luxury lo shr your condot1lse. ~l~~a ~~2:· Douglas Xln''. '58(1() or trade for NEWPORT CREST 5. ent ... ·.-. ---design. NO FEE. d I · I lrv, NB, CM. Lk Forest. 1 • --'· bom View, beautiful 3 Br. 3 BR 2 Ba, lmmac. In & 1 Bdrm & den Bay TSL MGMT. M2-1663 ,.,.,.. ~':i!i ~~~ ~. ~ ~~ F pref.531·3772 Luxury. full service. Sep 8~~wN'£'R67:i~dbl. vln. $975 /mo. Agt out. W/D, refria. stove. ~lew. Micro. Upgrad. lelboel"-d ll06 ~e~~e.'~~Au~a~11~/::~ from ~35. Townhouse ONTHEBEACH -mretarlalarea, wide 2 br, 2 ba In nice N5-0295 avail. July 15. 1725 mo Cptt, drpe, Ule, etc. • ........ •••••••••••••• dep. $S10 mo. David 9600 + pools. tennis. M /F. pvt nn & ba. $.125, 851-699'j adlt park, San Juan Call Pee Dameron 67U607orl.-.ao:I z 8 1 8 f 1 540.4Qf7 waterfalla, ponds! Gas lst&last.631·2434 ullllhll 4450 M----U • _._........ 552·2000 • Laree modem duplex. 3 r, a w garage, for cooking & heating C. rano. ~3»2813 ~ •tw•-WOODIRJD~E Br. 2~ Ba., frplc, blt·na. blk 1rrom bch15 . UN mto. Wanted rem1le room · •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ••••0 ••0 ••••0 ••••••• w In Newport Hill p on yr e o pe 11 paid From San Diego mate to share with For store ' office space c...aery lAtt/ fle•rtil lJOZ 3 Bdrm ecndo, ftnced Mo. Zlll. 759-0685 Frwy drive North on same. 2 bdrm rondo in at ruaonable rates. c....-1500 ............. , ........ , peUo, no peta 1125/mo. ,.__..._" )210 z Br. l ba w/garap. l blk Beach to McFadden Huntington Bch. Non· 500 to 4000 S. Ft. •••••••• .. •• .. ••••••••• 2 sty SBr. dbl garaae. _,. "N from bcb. p mo on 1 then West ca McFadden smoker SIJS:I mo + ,., MESA VERDE bR IDUCB) patio. pool, Coodo 1525 u••••••••0 ••••••••••• yr lae. No pets. Ask for to Su wind VIiiage utilities 964-7167after 10 PLAZA 2 metery lots, mo.55C-1'7321fl EXECUTIVEHOME Tom Callister da 71 3.5199 p.m WS MesaVerdtE.CM S h d """ -etory ' bdrm Zb1, 1U ' · w Par Good hep er LIASMNBDS new cpt, drapa, pelnt, c.,..,_ .... Jiii clean. sm mo. m ............ ••••••••••• room in houst. Close to IETAI. SPACE MAKE IOMEONE HAWY MAKI IOlltlONl MlllE Place 1 HAPPY AO In this cotumn for only SUS. (;a U 642-5478 wlmster Memorial RA.ay-• or So. Coast Plau. Z 9116-1818 Eve75MIBS lBr, attached gar, super IOMt 4000 Chruttan man will rent 54M12l sec n • worth $'160 CALL appll ances. Grdnr ' ................ .._..... Wilson, ~181J Room with full houae beach. mo 538-7533 770 •Cl· ft on Harbor uc 1:s~\t=~~~or CA.RLENEMORRELLJ UMrALS water pd. LI yard Split level twnbae, yd. 1 bdrm apt avail Im· t1:~~~~~1 Newport Offtct ltlllll 4400 Blvd. In C.M. SIOQ. Great •LUCW• 67'-lnl 3br.111.ba. 9650 91SO;mo. l.Jl/laat, sec C\lltom bit, ZBr, 2"'8a, mediately. Nr So Cat 2SOO' CONDO lo 1 ....................... expoeul'f. ~~ ...... !~!! RAU C·l·H Newport ; Property. 50' 1• In prime iq(a· wner wUJ flnan~ 11Yt. Prlnclpalt o Aak ror Irene , ~&11447 or &JI· c 4br. 2~bl. tlOOtum dtp. Call Alt Sandy webr /dryr. •oo mo. Plau 'OCC Elect lnd. G b ll on le Y 1617 Westclilf. NB Want Re1lonom1ca 81HTOO I truly !oyoou.Bud Anahetml:lllla 131·2242. MJ.2171. upetaln 1.1\it :u: 1 .:,:::::, 0~: financial l.nst. 7000..f. Retall!Offict So.ee. 700 Lott•,... SJOO 3br. 3ha. 95 HOMES FOR RENT Cerw .. Mw JIJJ 'I :00t.P7·'11mor640-e339 ·floor. t54l·5002. aq. ft. WestcDff arta ....................... . 4br Colt.a Mesa t850 3 &Irma. f510. Ftnced ....................... E/Side, etove1 refrl1e. Pvt ho 1 ...,. balh mid Prettlgloua Ofnct Space New p ort Be a ch. ·Iba. yanll fr aaraf•· Kldt It EaJo)' fllmmtr Uvlna 111 quiet, utila Inc, IMO mo, dJt·ai':ct •~~man· 3 window omces avalla· as • pet.a wel~. MS-2000. year. Walt to CdM pref. rem. ffH*l. C M l2001me ~U • ble In full Rl"Vice Le11I Office W.. A1Ht,nofee. beach. 2 Br., fire~l•ced 0-P.W Jl2' xbi· · l!:JlP t Is Suite fnNtwportCenltr. NptBuch ..........,.. • _ ,_... lar1e deck, enc oat ....................... "'· l nr ... !L~ ,.;.t vall. ~ Small execi.tlve office. _......,,..... ·-parklnJ. 1·•50 Mo., Bach Ju,. 91115, Laun· ... , no • /unn"'"'. a.a1-01T-"CH ....................... t-~ Ko. Avail Atlfust dry '• -"1n1. AnJla. . •1 " "..--xlot addnu, •!Mo. • • • llACHHOUSI 1. CallmM ble on 4H ·03U, L11uu Beach room, ~:~'. a;:;;:\;r· .. 0~ Ttm m42m.uN tbdnn, elm. (rplc, 11800. Zbr, Iba. pr. apt. Adlta. 7 l manllvt entrance, pool, Call" uec. omm from HT Af. WACI ~~ Montere1. no~·':,:o•YnlM. 111111 ..... .._. H4G coot ·*·44.W ll05.Inclda.eecretarial, Wi°aq-f:icaNwptBlvd. ~d ~d .. ~. MZ-1131'1. •••••••••••• .. ••••••• .. 2,h&mlabedc l'OOINMnr 405 phoae ana .. word pro tn c. 3or-.0 at u · fft!"·......,..._..._ W11b 'n t• Htl Yl'f!I •&-· 2 8 1 8a. D'ab "-" rw1. oata eu. malna~~ •• qwlp. po11&re . S 5 0 mo ~llllEl"T~, ....... , .............. 2 Bdrm 1 Ba, f!plc. 9!00, ~ ~ulilld S.lhrm privil. Ftmalt TREHl'.\l\Ulil\IA.RTERS lmmed.Ott\ijJY. ..,..IM&i-....--.tor_..1 __ iliiliit__._..,Oi HOMlrolRl!NT trtJ no •1t.lllld us g• o, pnp. c anl1. 1 •ISM ent.ranct COMPAN'l~ Ru!oqomlg !THIOO A.,_c,,· !lkl Small bird CJft 1\la 112:11 Harbonlt• Homu . New ort Reward . ,,,., on Yoe'U ft14 a 84rm. •· heffd 1r11,'avall'A111.SetS.t 1.0° ptt•. f:.15· r• eetb.W.lm 114111•1 NtwportllodtnlSWt me11..._ INIUIM ,.,., •,.,..... IUcll • 1fll,10AJl,.12. Ht-·-:."!l\a;.., 2room.tlaK8. 800/mO. iiiL Wle ha. wtth a or olc n.r palt olc 9'SO. TtlCk ~old ttuft foe for Hat la ClwJftad JN = ..... WIMM._. IOMTI ~~._.,...,. .Jobo Oall.J' PUal ClualtlM 541 a /f. US/4'1·1001 at• a"41u wlOi • ---------M . l..lg a..an.tad.ta.g ' , 1 ---'9 ....... ............ .. . -· ..... ' .. ~ ' . . . .. . . ' ... --Orange Co111 DAILY PILOT/Wldlwday, July 8, 1981 • i\ fi,;•:f ,i,~~";~"' 1)~ ~IJT~I :· i '--~ 1 :~(-)'~..;~ "')l:<tf )i';!ll} ~·~) •u .. £....a... . ~~~ c.Mc.. · .... ,-·, ti••, • H ........ h -----... ..._ ...... ....,._. -..... -..... -· ~, ·-··,. "10 .._, ~ •······················ ................................................................................................................... ~ .................................................................. .. fllNll ASPHALTREPAJRS Shampoo• 1tum cltan. CKILDCAR£ ~·UPS/LAWN REASONABLE £sperllaeRaulebepUi1 BllCKWORK: Smatl PAINTING. cu1tom 11001 PIHCLllNC1 ~I!!}._ «UIR. •SEAU:OATING Color britltenm wht Day/eve /wkod . My Maioteoaoce.Llldscp PROMPTFR!IEST. Dependable.~fl. Jobi. Newport, Coel-a work,JSyncsp.Maay A t.111t1-····-~· Jl .. !IJ Sll'ceim uc.azau crpts 10 mln. bleach. C.M. home: U /br. '1]t11\. 942:!01 ALM<iTEVE.RY S&&pplle•fWP: Nl«P Meu, lrvlae, Ref1. locaJ refa. Ut. 40*1. 1aowcoaU,...LL.8!:"' ll!.i AM.Win ~ Hall, Uv.•. mu SIJ: M2·0112 GardeaJu &aadstaplng REPAIRNEEDt!D Quality ffoUlecleanlni 171.1175 Boodtd. m . J'roee at. 3111U. 25 .. -· oe 7 .. '1 AU.you Y .. ,....... aha rm gJO; ~ $10; haNtllt tree tr[mmln1 ' re '. Cfl!TMHf$7 wit.II Pel'IOGllToucb. Frpb, patkJa plutera. Hut.tbbon 8IUIU. It.Ott material ...,, fora ....................... ~SSCrpt~ mi.$ pet ....................... :!!!+ maJot clean·up, C1rpt0l1'1·lfuonry Frttnt. B!tb5$6-0151 For a job doM rlpt Olympic Painting -•HOO '°1nda.Yad BABYSITTING my exp ' Do Vl'Ol'k ~vs!:l *WAT9M.1.S• .MUw Rooft.aa ·Pl1wbiftl ttpuucluner •peal! LarrvT50-_...,. l.Dt/Ext.J'tee.U.Utn. 5"ti1tl'I 1 E nthc bome lnta.u OK Nr R -.· ' . C ft d r I ni i• • J ukumoto YARD l>rywaU -autco·Tile !n1U..h -' --"• e.1p CUSTOM MASONRY Good qu.al work, low n•••••'•-•••••-.... DAILY Vldorla.C.M.~ ·eiStt.Hl=QlOl ti!!td!rt :f.C:,,~.c~ed~ 11 ~· 6: C~Jn·Upt. •moa. J.B.•9890 •own t~~jj U:e to-Brtcrr. blochtone.100'•· rat!d5J=ll!l3 Catm Dreu lllkl•I Pl.Or N:U~amlHoSbampoo StoneAieCttalion.t , trlmmln&, •m•ll t•noed..... ~ Local ref.a. CaJI NOW & RENTALSS::~lality, Alteratlona/Repalu SllVICI Wtn Spedalial, Fut NZ..f.Pltevetl'7>l231 1• ••""'•.a.t~~ ....................... H aave! L•eoumall L.),.. Int/ext. Paint· CooaultaUoo hi your DlllCTOIY ....................... dry.Freeest. &»!SH ----.... La Servi HARDWOODPLOORS nl•....... RM.air:,.,. ~u In• Pro• int_~-.-borpe.7...,. ••waaSOH °'•"" I .,, ce CJtaMdAW eel ....................... . m _ ....... ",4....-. 00 IT NOW! Bllllden Since 1947 ••u••••••••••••••••••• Prada loo lawn malnt. U DON,. 8£ EMPTY Cua tom bric Ii, •tone, INT EXT PA.INTING •• -, ........ Atk,_s..h Additions, rflllodeling, ~~ l/J OfflHMY ~rat:n for 111 lawm. Anytlme,UMlllS.A. THIRSTYORLONELY bloct, coocme, IWCCO. G£Nl!RALREPAJRS, .................... .. You.rDally Pilot plana. Pree est. Rua. Oraperiel by Giovanni ~~t l!~s(i~w rates, ..... Ilda. Freeeat.Nl-NIZ LRAERASGEOPRRSO~ALLPT C.:~Jt~11. ~~-· Utdi!_ Servicel>lrectory Lk.310N2. 51~%110 Also mlnl·bllnds " ... ·nr ...................... , "Security Pl111" will sit Mefflt .• ... , RepwtaUve CONSTRUCTION CARPET CLEANERS le velours. ~2:21..S Prof. Japanese Gardeoer Haul, cleanup, concrete your house, plan ta Ii ....................... JERRY US=fJSl It I 11 Fret e • t. 642·5'11.td JU Add /remodel, concrete EJt.racUon cleaning tt· "--Lawn cutting. ll'ee triJD· removal Ownptruck. pet1. Bondab1e, ref1. llloviog? Tbe Starvln• HOUSE PAINTING <213>RtR FreusUet-&150 aft. S v1ves color /fl'tibnela. ... r .. ti mil&. weed!M. 541-8375 Qu!cherv. 842-'la 131-7H7 eoue,e Students Mo~ Teachers need 1wnmer s.19- MctutL Roou ADDTTlONS •. 157-4507 ... o:..:·~w··.·11······1.·Lis~·t···· ~linln.~115-f!. s DUllJlUPJ,2~J-.... Reap., mature lady will Co. bas grown, 1111 wort. Roo.-.cu4. ::::.··.·t:r·-... pool····~~.·~.:·,· ••••••••;:?............ .. • ·~ ... u 1/Moving.._, ma _, ..... .,.. houseslt. A111T Sept? ume good service. 1be PAPER PUSHERS ""' "'. ""' .... Accta for am bus. PR :!~t~~c~~ro~~~ C!fPd.oo lna~aml .. ~~!!~.!'·!~ ~C:S1:" :~~re-YA754-RD"°'c ~Maril CaU MIXE146-151 Oct! Nwot. (Q )W7-H!O #Tl24·438 License. Wallpaperlfta ' Pa.Int· Hve rilmamergycoata-qtrlles, •ala la.I. F JS. i l l I ..... ~ .. ......, .... ..,., LL1V~v.-.. tree H I.In L ""·-ft J ..... ReUable N--07--·--... l!I 141·1427 Ing,, Free est. eau Cindy ••In tu credita. Free C I " s en o comp et on. vacantonly.8'2·8140 Tape, Texture, Acous~c . • auung • ..,'™.., o.... ., .. .....,....,... orTeret1SU.az3I at548-1618 omp ete set Vi FamUy cootnct.ora for -ce1Un11. Freust. Kevui work, lmpUon ' re· AsUorRandy. will care for hie ls g ABC MOVING, Ex per --=~~=----- service. Rua. nn 30 yrs. Reu. rates Fr ~Acemtlc &7}90ll8/113-150.1 ~air, green belt 641-8427 for approx 1 mo. from prof, low ratet, quirk l0%DISCOUNT ........ s.tG-5834 Hts. Allen EJohnsoo ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• --.....&-1-· nd9c1pe.l5l--OU9 HAUUNG-&udeat bu midJulr.K}l532 cvefulsemce.~U-OUO O&DCuaomPaintin1 ..................... _ BOOKKEEPING 301007, Call 840-5656 or AcouatlcCeiting.s+ ~~ GardenMaintenance largetruck.Lowest L.-dsc_._ •A.ol~• Jntl!Jt.Guar.m-32113 SPRlNKLtRS6SOD For small business. M0-4127eves. cust.ombandt.exturing ••••••••••••••••••••••• Resid /comm /indus . rate,prompt. 7~197& •••••••~••••••••••• ......., .. __.. Tree Removal. DIC IT Reas. relilble.831"'583 J.uco CONS•. Llc. 389944 532-5549 E~ECTRICIA~-prlced Cln·upa ac tree trim· Thank xou. John. COLORSCAP!OESJCN Top quality. Special ....... ~:;r.::......... Landacaee,648-7070. "" . ' n&ht, (ree estJmate on min,. lnatant color* clean· up. care in handlin&. 25 yrs r-. ............ ..... Addi lions. Remodeling c ..... /(Mtt:lete lar&e or small jobs. 840-lBlS; evaM&-4!M7 c....., y., Ad FHt s•rv•~ . ....,9,.,. exp. Competitive rates. Neat patches Ii teslllttl ••••••••••••••••••••••• "CUJtom Homes. Llc ••••••••••••• .... •••••• Uc. #3966%1 673-0359 GARDEN MAINT We clea.n out gara.aes. 1 :!!: ... ,, ,,, ... uv Noovertl ...... 730-1..353 Frtt ..t. ltJ.14Jt •••.rii.EiN'SfAiLw••• M11nalte. paint, clean, •~4. 675-6044 Driveways, patios, room Rn ood yd clean·up. Tree trim· &on truck. m . GJ.1983 Reoovatilll·Rotolilline Sunshine Maven Put a PLASTER PATCHING AU Kinds. Guaranteed. decks, cement cr"'c ,._,,,__ 1ddit1ons. Cement & w Sprintlera·lawna·clnups sml'-In W>t•r move-no l"l/•"" 30.,,..•xp. o-•-. J-"-, _,. ,.,... • ,,_, .___ b ... ...... """"'n ....................... min1.S43-l7Qt(4-8pm) ~&...&.... D ..... .u ... ...,.. ""' ,~ ........ ~··~ n<;Q ...... _ ..... ._, carpentry, weld. plumb. nc .. wo..,......,,,,..., W••uta·l-unt•dryi't'. --- -. •-----, .,.,,_._,,. !Aht""amall.u."·1"nll Neat wort PaW~2'T7 r •--'--B'rad 642 36S'Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cus ~'" J-YllRIE4f ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bud ...,...1 ..,..-,.....,.. · • THECAKESURPRlSE! tom concrete, compl Lee's Tree Service has •~ Want1REALLYCLEAN 1 __ ·~•~ .................. , "" U lq S•rv1'c• 0 -mo-old ... r1 -·--' -.A __.. -~ --~ r-..... , • ..,......, •t& a ...................... . Afpl••ctllepllr n ue flavored cakes "' ... J\C' ... • .. ,. green ro:wvuu at tllS a Top~Jremov~. clean HOUSE? Call Gingham --....................... ....................... J Yl-C"'- ....................... delivered w mowers & stall new. Uc. Ms-851.Z cord. Plus expert tree upa, lawn renov. 751·3476 Girl. Free est. Ms.SW ....................... lbe Paper ffan&er, Pror. J .D. Hom Refinilbing A •-w CUAR. USEOREFR's amiles. lll00.548-~ Pool Decu and Patios, trimming.640-TREE. JapOese Gardener ROBIN'SCLEANING Cust.om Leather Sandals install. Decorator qua!. Antlques.Klt.cibineta. Toppin&. pnantng, re- SALES '-SERVIC"' C Masonrv,Sport&Tennis L.-1-JTL d · t R . The Sandalman makes y-...-t c:ta1y1~u7 ·-1 ""-•-•'-• ..... -..... moval&1pnyin1 lOyn • ... .,...... ., ~•1 ·-gar .e~ m11n . el· Servace-athorougbly the bttt foryou.r swi1l '"""'•. .,. ._ C!U!P!•1n:111&· ....,..._ f . F Goodcood. ~7754 ....................... Courts.Llc.374067.Bob ........................ comm.and Free est. cleantiouae.$40-0857 need.I Caua.u.MSl"~ FinepaintinJbyRichard .. ••&•....&. up. _Local rea. ree ....... All Ty ...... Remodelin• & 851·19641.M1·71718 Formica Countertore 646-1431 Sieve . C•n•ral u---•·arun· g Lo... Sinor Lie ans 1l yrs ot • ~ est. Llc. otl588. S.930I ..-~ • CU RANT""ED "' "' nuuooa:oc: . ' . ••••••••••••••••••••••• TREES .cUl:>UBSTR'u ••••••••••••••••••••••• Repairs, lop quality, 17 A r. Custom builti1nstal ed Aloe Lawn and Plant. Reliable-References happy N.B. cwtomers. General Services no Job '""'"" ... Driveways, park.Ing lot yn in area. l.Jcensed. Bloc Ir walls. brickwork, La teat C-Olors/Designs One time or service, Own trans. 962-mto n••••••••••••••••••••• Thank vou. 631-4410 too am all. Fr~e est. ~emove, ~ul. clean·up, repairs, sealcoating. Mr. Palombo,962-8314 slabs. driveways. Rers. Freeest. 646-4871 licaced. 988-98m O&J HOUSECLEANING MORTGAGE MONEY Ext/int painUng, cab. re-Reas. Call AnswerAd dirt, etc. JimS3l-4.SIO S&S Asphalt. 631-4199 M•lerC.uft_m• Reas. rates.953-8255 Aoorco...-, ; ... ru1 ~ SpecialiJedServices AVAlLABLE (in/slam. Prof. Rsnbl. H53,64%-0X>,or63l-ll37 W..w a. ... , Llc'd. Speclaliles in fmlsh & C«Omk Tit ••••••••••••••••••-•••• ••M••••••••••••••••••• to meet your individual $20,000to '250.000 Free Ht. Steve 547·"281 aft. 5. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ASPHALTREPAIRlNG remodel'R".Xlntref. •••••••••••••-••••••• CRPT-LIN~WOOD ~mtino Ii garden-needs Reas 4113-4886 Mol..._P.,.... DB'sPAIHTlNG Pl · ""'---ifj•.....t dis "LetTheSl.mhlneln" SealcoalinJ&Stripio.g 4;.31(k5 Ceramic t!le, int/ext. lnst.alledirtpaired. Llc. illlr5 yra• pro(. exp. OU. . . Upt.o UJynlorepay lot/ext. Neat. reliable. .:ce~:y1~all°:.:1yoiu CaUS_WllhineWiodow Comm /n$1d. Free est SELL idle items with a ComD? /reS~. rates. All 1369260 Greg 499-5142 Profnpt. IMir. S.5992 H SECLEANJNC PRIME FINANCIAL rers. OaveM5-0Jll9 evs phone. Give l&S '': call. Clean me, lJd St8-B3 Llc. #397311% 69-8181 Amencan Tile~ "-II things rast ··-'th D11'ly Rell able• . &ood wo rk. SERVIC~ Daily Piiot Classaried ..,., .. , Have something to sell! :.t,,e_ 7 a 228 d y Job. Refs. 527-~477 ClasaifiedAda,yourone· We'll do the rut Find what you wut in Want Ad Help? 842·5678 Ad. WantAds Call ~5678 Pilot Want Ads. Classified ads do it well. ...., •.> et.op sboppin,c center. · 64%·5678 Daily PiJot Clwifaedl. Lost&Fo.d SJOOLost&FCMM 5300 Loat&Fo.d 5300 PtrtOllOk 5350 HtlpW..ted 71001HeolpW9116td 7100 HtfpW..W 7100HetpW..W 7100 HttpW..W 7100 HttpW..W 7llO •.••.••..•••••.••••••..•.••..•.•.•.••.•.•....••..•......••••......••••.•••....•...............•••••..•............. , ..............................••...............................................................•...•....••..•...... LOST: 6tz1 Male Airdale :..Ost vie. Magnolia & FOUND Dental re tur Attractiveremale&male BOOKKEEPER Full DENTAL ASmST, PIT)- blk/brwntnnt, vie. l8th Tustin, C.M .. green par· Lainers, 40Lh St. beach. lllf1L needed lo deliver Tele-Bankina Beauty chg. P/time, long term CLERK dys, no Sat. RDA prer. PCH HB Reward rotw/bluehead,tame& Newport Ms-4339 E S C 0 RT S & grams Fun p0sltlon. l(GIMlll HAIRSTYUST tmplymt. Flex hrs. Carman861-2290 980-993 loved.Reward.6423298 FOUND . Sm. grey MODELING Good aupplemen~ In· UIVU. We are proud or our MUJtbaveCPAfirm ex· If you pouess an ap-Dental . I Lost Shellie <muuatureJ shepherd. 7 S Vic 135-919' come. Call The Slnpper flOAJEI salon & stylists! Busy eer. 963-5839 tltude for math. have ftDTlln Lost_rema"'blacklab. VIC collie, remale. Brown. Magnolia & Adams. HB - -Telegram Service. 1714J Npt. Bch. saJoo is grow. UEAIFASTCOOI had 11 least6monlhsex· UIUllU lrvme a~ Del Mar. Sub-blk /w bl Npt Penn 963-7316 aft 6. .,IM'S -"OITS 673-:264l Position will be based l.D ing again. otrmng: top -rience as a cashier or ,ect to se1zwu. Please 6 7 3 2 9 " ~ UT our C05La Mesa ornce, & Full time-permanent. ~ call631·3328 . . 7 1, 87S -0182. Found remale black 9AM·3AM 63S-8554 A OMOTIVE will work in various pay -retirement-MUJt have experience. bookkeeper with a Lost· Striped f l I 642-1603 Poodle puppy. remale E x P e r i e n c e d UNLIMITED other Northern Orange medical " dental-Apply in pe.raon . Jolly thorouJh knowled&e of 19t.h St em. CcM . REWAID! black Elkho\lod, female Acupressure Massage OPPOR1VN1TIES County branches as vacation plans & much Roger. 400S. Coast Hwy, balancing, you may be Reward.~;. . Lost. Black cockapoo gray /black Malamu~e. Therapeutic Relaxation = 1:~t;.gs¥-°~~aE~ needed. Teller ex per :;.%t,~~mpa~ourge ~~ Laguna Beach. the one for us. We are a ( f e m a I ) N female copper & while Te c b n I q u es Sunn Y ' prer'd. Own transport.a· .. major savinfS & loan Lost·Smooldwh.iterem "Kadn "<~o2ll02ame Malamute. remale 631•6317 muat have own car llon....,.'d.Cootact ot.her salons. Increase CAStm seekin1 an mdividual Poodletrerrler mix. red ey '"" cream color Afghan. -4M-9434or83:U635 ·~JackCl.ark your following & earn-F tr & PIT. Newport who wiU act in asupport collar, Mesa del Mar Found Husky Shepperd multi-colored Pigeon & W~ED * "'UTO•"" H inp potential Apply in Beach & frvme area. runct1on ror a loan area reward. 557·9654 puppy. (Male) 3 or 4 mos female tan Cockapoo 28 overweight people ~D ~ 7l4-S46-2300 person: Leticia: 644-4460. service unit. Duties wtll o Id . Ba I boa Area 644·36S6. Newport Beach 83J..7630bet. 9&Spm AH LIA.--! cll llNMlll J .C. PENNEY CASHIER incl\Mle balancing cally REW~ID 640-2510 Animal Shelter. Dl•oru-1¥-Mal County growth reqwres ALlflllUWft 24 Fashion Island, NB work, reamcilement of Los t Man s 5 spd Found small wlute and F d 2 p nots from Wl t7Hl'42·7030 oar aales staH U · ff'ftnlt E.O.E. M/F ' r:uspe::!!~alesc:::l~ rejected checks and Laodcrusler bike (red I tan Lhasa Apso Found ~un B h~ :d · -~· ti« set for the IKllN. lhrd· Co verifying credit reports New NDlHrts. S43-4258 nr OC Fair ....... ..A. E\• ' c. us ams, Massage Therapy by dlapificent '821! Neat C-'-a & , ~ ware, 3107 E. asl We provide excellent Sbor't hair Pointer. 5 -MOJ, da&Sl-12.211 Found: gray kitten. white 1Gam·7pm~2817 Wayne <Oranae 2'100R.irtlor Blvd Banking ~cl'~8!~ dental, opli~~ Cba1r side RDA, E.1- panded dut..au. 1 year mln exp. 4 day week. Top pay & benefits for lop skill. NB. 642-6443 DIHTALUI Opening.s in Onsta Mesa Orthodontic Lab. Ship- ping & rettiV1111. l«hni- cians. Wall train. gd. benefits. 'lSl-4442 DENT AL ASSIST. ORTHO: RDA with ex- per prd Excellent wage. 552-7llOO ~ ... · •I • I -., . - L 0 5 t . Fem c er m 7 1 111""."'"" H.B. 962-C78 Margaret. Appl only I: 1tore ID exciUn& ..,.T'."!'P. -Hwy, Cd~ pa.id benefi Leath. collar, no tag. Lost: Largedesertturtle. markings. Baycrest Preventative & Streu J ) Airport C?m· ColtaMesa lftD ClflllrW and dependent cov 960-8725 1016 Delaware East bluff Area. Reward. area, N. B. 646-1183. Reducing Massage by l)iex will add 3 combma· Equal =unity IUD IWIWUW erage. Please contact HB. REWARD. ' 644•1548 Found: Crown Valley vie, Dons. "Intro" Spttaal! Uon sales~raons now Em yu OPPOITUllTIES Personnel for an ap· Lost. July 2nd Male FOUND :_ Malamut.e 7/4, older Spa.ruel male, 548-2817. lOAM-SPM for EZ alr11~ sell and u T1JTE M pointment.~ Cb~. Labndor.' 2 yrs Shep. mu, male. vac tan body, white race. Trcnl 5450 leue. Cenierom pay·~ ...... ------ * Ol.IYllS. Person with tood dri~· ' ,. in g record. lllUllt • 1 18/yrs or age, te drtv . I company car making .... l deliveries Start al SJ.35 /hr No summer .. 0 . Ir " 22nd & Orange C M 6616004 demo pt.,.. Auto. ex • "''-' .. "' .__ • S HOME 1c ens , Npt Hts. 64&-822l • · -· ••••••••••••••••••••••• perience not required Banking -·--.._. Children grieving. Found: black miniature "SABRA". world famous • previous sellini • * • OMCI fEDED •L Reward 675-1304 or ~UNO Swimf111s,lden· Collie. male, 4 white racing yacht, going ...,.. SeeSa.laMgr Cilium Bank ot Colla For~~Sbift.s s•vl;l\.Al .... GS 646-8556 ury. re.et Vic H.B. shopping rruil.i.ng, 8/1/81, to MOWADCl.nioW Men bu the ro11owing EXPERJENCED Startlngttupto $4.SO. " ...,. Lost: Bei~rem. Tri col· 67~·307?letnng. center.~3330-Haw111. So. Seas & N.Z. DovelQuailSta. ltnmediateopf.ll.lnp: POSITIONS We promote lo manaee--& LOAN help accepted. Call Mark at 751·3680. Sam· Spm, Moo· Fri. or "Lady · Moved from Found· Mixed fema le Found: male neutered Gourmet accommoda-NEWPORTBEACH •M........ ment&aupervtaloo rrom Oesc anso to 13962 Shepherd. Newport Dalmatian. brown & UOns. WANTED: attr~c-•TIU.RS S..:.wfwf within. DltlVa Party equipment ~ bospt. supplies. Costa Mes a a reL 13.tO l1lr. t.o stan. Phone&U-U18. Yockey, G.G 897-0700. lsland.67~1.JM white. Vic Irvine & Uv~. unencumbered, U?· Babyslttertor2 dlildren, Experienced WANTACAREER, Reward. Found St Bernard & Orchard. S.A. Hts 22161 teWgent remale for this 3days weelr:,IOIDeeves. +Tlltr CoaaMeaa Equal Oppartunlty Employer Lost Fem Chin Rtvr Newfoundland mix rem. Orchard Or. I yr or moreodyasey AU Maet be 18 or over NCR OP9ATOI 517 W WibonSt MI~. 7 1i N r VI c. Fairview & Baller, CM. Lost: Basset Hound & r"rnse~,. ~-sft!~Jed Ba640-Mbyaa·77tt:r _.......... . Mon-~Jtperienced TRAINEE 631·9IO DRIVERS WANTED Part time dell very. Ear- ly moming, L.A. Times. Irvine I -Newport Beacll area. Must be reliable 6 have dependable I.ram. KSO. CaU Jeu: 54l-Q23.S toria /Placentia. CM . ~·8182 Austr. Shepherd. Beach 0 mter ie • .....,, "' •wm&U POSmONS• Reward . 964 -1741. Found . Cray male cat. &AUanta,HB.536-8128 --......~& Fri.9-S.2boya:lage9,l •LOAMSICllTA.IY •I.ct...._... Laci.ma Beach 494-9%33 CUll~-Perm .• part time, Tues. Wed., ThW'S. 8t.oS. Call. Balboa Mar i ne Hardware. 549·9671 , EOEM!F/H n _ _.___ · • '~ 81D01.6G?S9anytime. ,... 646-9029....,.,...a whl c hest & fee t LOST IL AC I( •"FWWW E1tperienced Found. Cat. Westminster Clubhouse Ave. Npt Bch : ••••••••••••••••••••••• BABYSITrER needed area. Young. lovable. 673-6049 __ COCKAPOO, 6/YIS. H.lp Wmhd 7100 ror Stewardeu w/l yr We offer a good starting salary and excellent company paid beoerlts Including attractive work apparel. For in· terview appointment pleate call: PAT •Teltn <Part-nme> Huntingloo Beach £9116 Red /gold Angora. Found· German Shep OLD. AHSW'EI~ TO ....................... :!ddid./.::ni!:Ji,/' ex -Neutered.~1-4018 male. Harbor & Vic-HAMI OF '"TAHYA". Acc~unting --r-: CUii TYPtST FOOD S11¥1CI Lost: blue Persian cat. toria , CM. 714 nite. VIC.OF SANTA AHA r1t1mePayrol1Clerkforl•-------• vie Eastblurr area S48·0S33 AVE. & S.lHTA insur ance agency . Banking TUSTIH OFACI EXPERIENCED POSITIONS •Teltn Personnel Dept. 537-4840 Typist/Receptiooist pos. WOlla I · 1 S M Salary commensurate CIOIJ Pease call 640·0?67. FOUND: Male Chocolate A IE L , C . • with experience. Call Reward. no questions L 1 b . VI c Co a s t REW ARD! 6424216. Lmda 963-{841 yr•ff(I/ lm••••••••I with homeowner·s H · DUTIES include serving soc Limited secretarial muls. 2 patients, cleao-Clean Up Person. run time. Apartments . Newport Beach, Costa Mesa area. Experience required. TSL Mgmt. d ut ies Som e bk p~ ups & general aaaislance knowledge prefd. Bil· to kitchen. F /lime. ingual desirable Salary Capistrano by t.he Sea based upon exper. Vaca· Hosp. 4Jl6.S702. asked. Hw y /Balboa Blvd LOST: 714 Fem. Blk & · I.Ill LOST: Small blk Fem 646-0467 wht. terrier mix. Vic. LQIM lllf'IM~n CITIDHS IAHK 2970 Harbor Blvd. (Part· Tune> Cockapoo, 7/4th. Vic. FOUND : Vic . Baker/ Fajrview & VanBuren, ACCOUMrAMf F/C M UhlDUll~ H u n t i n g l o n S t . Harbor Male Dachsund CM Reward. S46-0720 or Poa. w I Npt. Bch. invest· Position available in our Suite 20S Costa Mesa (714) m-4200 Equal Opp Empl m J1 /h •C•'-' Ser¥b (Part-Tune) 64%·1603. lion, sick pay, health FULL&PARTTIME • ·SA DI E · · Rew a rd 7 /4 543-20tS menl firm. Resp. for dai· Coasumer Loan Dept. in """'9722 u" ,.._..., ..=...::=-=:..=::..-----ly financial transactions Colta Mesa. Related ex· Clerical Ins. 644· 171M. 8 to s. Mon· Answering Serv. No exp Expanding corporate Fri. nee. Min. typing req'd _,. ....,..,._, Found Small young & computerized C/L's. !J preferred. typing LOST: Mixed Breed FOUND : Male Kitten shepherd mtl~ remale Analytical minded 5:0wpm required. Shepherd Sacramento vie 22nd E.St.CM. Mag&Adams848-1660 person, exper req'd. lags. Fem. vie. Santa 642-0lOO Found : Black Lab Call: 64G-0123 • 1 Duane Biegel TRAINEE beadquamn needs (2) COM II ERCIALS. stunt.a, Call 133.3333 F.oE BanklD• POSmONS• more starr: an Ex-film•. modell. extr11. FURHITUllSTOll 111$1 .. $1 •Proof".__,_ ti & .. ta it.h SCAS needs new races _,. ecu ve ,_,11 nt w · _ _.. Need exp er i e o c e d ' Ana Ave. REWARD FOUND· Standard Male female. July Ct.h. Well lw!!!!!!l•-----1 54&-ISlO "OSA .. 646-61118 BI k Po o d I e . Vi c -trained. Broadway /San· word proceuine ex -~1·--.. person in furniture 1...··,' •Rec1,ffamlf perience & a Recep-COMPAMOM-AIDI sales, salary 11()0() t.o ~ LOST: Shepherd Blk WestcllH J uly 4th taAna,CM.548-7148 Male. vie. 19th/Harbor 9'19·1100ext276Candy tlltt UIUM n '1RLAll • •M1&1thave6moolhsof· Unusual opp'ly with da ys. Permanent Tues /Sat 10·2, 1931 , AOYEIJISING CAUf,_.1 MOMTH fll l•JI tioniat/General Ofrlce. ror t.otal care oC male. s start. A~y in person I 1{3. REWARD 543-1493 Malamute found Vac Lost:Parrot,QietaMesa 19th /Pomona.CM says "Groucho". Ronor 675·7812or&f6.3262. Julie SS7~Met62Sl Found l medium Desert LOST: Sib. Husky, blk & Tortoise. Vic. Elden St & wht.. blue eyes, 1 yr. ~d. 845-9510. :n~•rd Mike 631·01m want Ads Call64%-5878 use """"M service when placing your ad ... a Daily Piiot ad number will appear In your classified ad . . . we take your messages 24 hOurs a day ... you call in at your convenience during off ice hours and get the responses to your ad •.. this service Is only $7.50 w"k. For more Informa- tion end to '-lace your. ad call 642-5678. -.w fEDAI. fice1_ cub bandli.ni or di veralrled company_ 646-0U.4 after 6 pm. Newport Blvd. CM. 5300 1 .a.a• ... •..... public cootactex-r. Calll31-88110or4&W303. National Company with --·--~ ,,_. c--...._...W General · ••••••••••••••••••••••• omcea in most major S.•~&Lem o-clS -,-~ b ......... c ... FOUND: t..ge ~ CdM · · · _ _..,_ 2 2700HirborBlvd.m We orrer ,rowth op-Clerical Experience prif. not * -·-. HI-* bel"h, call c ra'•ty cities, 11 :M:ICW•g ex· portuoili•s, •xcellent necesl'I"". Part time. Lrg. s~cmrul co. owna ~ " per'dsalespenoosM(F CostaMesa E ..... ---.i0n1 " "' TYPIST ., btfl c • d 752·669%~eves lo work with USC root-Equ.l=unily • .,... ........ _. Y workln' conditions, RefRequired. amp.roun a. Found: •laua in blk ball promotion. •-ads Em .,... salary & benefits. Call: CLER.K II 760-l07laft2PM Needs pboM rept, 00 • ....., i-•0,. "' OMur C I Th m.4204 adliog. Plw.b a /c office. case, Alta-den.a Dairy, provided, h.lgb weekly •••llilllil••• · -1'° uyna, 5e1mry t'79te COUNTERH~P Work wtnlce people. BakerSt,CM.SS6-11S7 earnings w/m1nage·1--------••.-a.. .. "'o•u~A•u.-$115) Mo. Full Ume. Gary 1 Deb, Call Mn. Reed, tam·l2 F 0 u n d 7 / 5 : b I a c k ment oppty. Advertising ..._., ---ExperieJ: lypist CdM, flS.2193 roe appt. noon. g.. w:z. Dachsbwad. vie. 21st & or past direct sales ex· For Clluified Ad E.O.E. needed. Ex~Uent CllBM'T Westminster, C.M. per preferred. Call Vice ACTION •St-. T9'1r,1¥.. benefit. Cd hone manner to IS· G~llM.OMCI 541-7381 President or Sales O·~.!.... *81KESTORE• · sist~redn Mtr.wlthcol· Rehable, m_alure , • 5350 Edward RarriJ collect _, .-.-For Interview, call AN 't, Mgr. 6 mechanic Apply Immediately lertiooa. Amnle typ-person. Good tYJ*l. Use ff'MI (802) 264~ AO.VISOR ~'!!...~~~ for Schwinn dlr. Sal. . d dW Ex 10 key adder • boolt-••FiRsfiADf ... A~p ~~~.1~:01~~ &G58'18 ~-:i~~·in:~ :;~ ~! couMTY oF ~~;~~·~:u ~::: ~=::=~~.all Es*~_.,,ortail~S *Is A•~t{fn;tT.ilto1:.:,c~ .. ;.Ee_.1'!!i!S!!!!!!!!!!!!!:•!!!:•!!!!!!!!•!!!!:•~ .... _~l•l•l.ly--Pi•.•1a•-:1• =*~=n':r. 2~~ 8:1i: Kdb.1:.\.~ary . CluailledMa IQ.5171 tn ~ -~ in ~ nce.1:1p,reg,eT.sis1. m~~:· -••• -••• -... 11·111· .... MC' VISA Accepted teoace Jrod, 9SM$51. IOW a Sanll Ana, Ca 12701 ~ rJltll COVER GIRL AP~LJANCE lDlta1lu • For Laauoa Beach (114l&Mat • • deliverl penon wanted. Public Accouotln& ~~C:-* OUICAU. * 881 G enneyre, Lag.1 • Assis.._. Tl:. flrm. Clieat write-upt, m_,,_ e fii.W t .. 1-SUDl,W.. • ~07711 MCNISA lkb,4N·Cl!G8·~ • ...u computer PQl'OU, ballk·------. RAU~ ,,.... • An MAMA8a c...a llMWPW !::-'.!:!:i.t~ Typing'. CLELROIC_..~ -1 .• Limited openings 1~1ll1ble In lbe Oran•e • •FOIYLADT• llature couple to INl ~Ill .• r phones ~-·-c t r If · • ' OUTCAJJ.ONLY m1n1•e •"' complex, • WlU prepare bani! d...._1ta and • 171u.,..l500. -·-• orloaa area, or " ·motivated, Clr'fff • • ... _.... ._ •--ented Individual who can WOf'li with • VISA MC N • w po rt Beu ll , ! ·-¥t credh and bUliAI IX'Ob'la, :· •loc.IK ... lmmtdlatt ~ In • Field Sates People. Treln, mCJt.ivall! aad • * '7J.l IJI * flllltlme. M~, oo • 2 111r1 credit uper wllb 10 kty~tGuch. Ac· Loao ,,......,. Co. for • l t t resull1. Station waaon or vu ••• l••••••••I Maintenance a commercial account•. Good curate • Ex~lleot ecatn ltvel loM ll«Yk• • ntcmary. Elceptlonal t1minp, plua w. • neeeuaey. bJe, ft· ICCOUlltiftt 1rru11. lDcludlfta type*> opportu 7 wtth fllt· clert. Amnle tnln1, related 1>enent1 il bl 1 ... _ l"V SO<n1UNGXASSAOE ftrnc•. 2 bdrm born• wpm IDd 10 by by ~b. Jlult be 1rowln1 compaaf. atlutloo to dtta11 • • ava • t °' Uft' right • for Dilcrlmiftttln4 mm + 111aty. Ph. MMIH I dllliomatic and ar1cloua In dealiq • ,..,. ._.u abUltJ to eope .tMl pre-J:Ple. fl you tan produce l'f:IUlta, OOl Call Pnrr • .-.......n 1tam.1trlm ••"•""' wflb tbe ,.bllc and sllet rWf. e u., • tt 111 ti a I. e 1111 l1~ about ll, call: 980-0IM for e COEDs-would ic>ve lo OllnpedtJtt ealary aid ,.,.. • USI THI pat /~_O:_~•ll laUt • lnttrv-. Alli for Mr. C.:hanrt. 1 pertJ .~ ,_ Call Sue ASS••• ~ loeludhl1 eompeay p01 • , . , or katbJ 111t1me Loe. 11..._ Viljo eo. e health. llle and dent.al lmUnDce. e IAILY PILOT J H 1 ~ gt.nlf n...S• Awmbltn •fl • Call U2·U%l , ut 271 for •• , ..,AST for C&8 e J'9S11W ~ " Aft.Mftll yra. asp. Caodldal•• 1 ~. _ I . IUW.T" lla.~1t ~: e :'~a!~:ti~:::!.ot !!'-'~·•wpm. 1 t MUI'.. m•t blft ad. maul ' lap. 11111 •· WW tnAll. • AIPIJ •SPll •eed11 ~ -.nta .• 2w HdDr M.cl ell 4'tltlrtt1, .... .,._, • •~ SllYICI A"'1 It• Plleialltll • 11· l £ft11J!&•MP auta•...-we•• ~ Celit I DlllCTOIY Awa.=c.111 ~· ~C.-e R __ ...... 1 ....... Wart ii ... Mft . .... ror R.-.. .. • ... • oo•, _.. .... , aaar-1. Hpport medical ta.t• DOW av~ • _...., 1--·----Co•PHlnelllp aod lroaln. Gd . balfk.11, ,. __ ,.~ -Service Call C& .. • 11 e DOW. 1 .,... e !::::.:1'~ =?,.'7•= ~ .... Opportunity...,,_ •• M.m •~111aNlw • " Lost' Fo.d r llJllt lloutlHJl11. Oal1 ~nalbl• ~ ...... _. _,..,. ..... A • 64··1671 ................... , Colla .... c· ~ lurll artt.t·•• r. lib -Pvlll. • ~l•t., A"l7: I EqUll ~••tw4tJ I 5)1;• .,., .. a ..... at 111:...: ..... cw eee.eeeHeeee• ,.11.w-.ur"••iil; r-..~r=b• .... eteeeeeeeee . tt --I ;-1' ' •. '-~ ! --. ........... ! --. -• ···;" • ;c o ,_;;,;·,. --' - l Jet \t'lJ 1gh prt lt'S ... a go ee Its nn Vt- nd ed I ~ ·d :e 'l l' ( in ll l >f I d r ; . I g , e ,, -·-·---·-- .,... ' -°'!2Cll8I DA11.YPILOT/Wodnotd1y.Juiya. 1981 !~!.~!. ... ?!!!. ~.!~."?!!!" "" . ~?~ .... .?!~~.~:-!. ... ?!~ ~?~ .... .?!~ ~~~ ..... !~!! 3 to ~:.,~~County Mc~AI:.. ~~~ ..... ?!!! ~ ............. ! ... ,~.~ ...... !!!~ ~.~~ .. ~~! ~ T•1-••. MOMCI tMS4•tJCI i!~~-•Allla'Ll.B~ PriD~· ChlbCoov.Holpt .. lll:m MC etr0Cpollt1a '1 T•1h•°'1!t • -~'-ASE!!! .. ._....., ~OD~~°& ITElffW'AY Mdl S • tP OH_,tf Pllll 6 AC'C'OUallalCllrt Ala· .......,,._ • Ofhet"'••• Santa Ana Ave .• S.A. orporate lovtatm.nt Au. ttrvlct. Oaytlme we -....,_,,•IA-'J:d s.'Cii'M ·Sa Walaut lab1 Graod ' lDt ...,...._., CaU q e x p er I t n e e back 2'.tlC!· Cf·llOI bp'd. 2nd Preuman. M•u ua..-1 olfte. a 1rviDe II cur· 1hllt aa 3rd St., 1c, pupa · a~~ E .. s Oft· t S'H ". Bk la M . betur H~ Ploor CoverUia MCtlllary. ~ com· WIDICAL llC9'T Gou Commuatt1 4 unit. Salad prep chd aeeded re 11 t l 1 • • • t I 11 I • • .11•una a,..;,... ~ i r.w 11· PM tJw1 ..,, Recently re· • lorlftt!trip.fl}A, mnnrate with n · Verybuymediealprac· Apply · * Pla~ntla iaptr uruury Stc:retary to wilt the ,,,,..ST ,.... .. ,. I M I ESTATE SALE : Tuea Oo11bed. Unm.at' very •••MOMCI Derietl« Contad Janet Uce hi Ftllbkle lalaDd Aye .. C.11. Ml.nlmwa II yn ot aat AdmlDl1traUve AHll· '•n ....................... Uu'u Frt.41>Abb&eWaf• rare llf.CIOOfirm. Ham COod •ortlnt condl· liltodo1.1a&Jay6 Ren· Keavypbanel,aoodtfp'. ,.--.--.. Apply ID penoo only. 1 lant la performl111 Permanent parttlme. Jtyr old tJi..color rernaJt C.M hnl., •ppliloct• mOtld ~ • Plano u... Good Handi. trp. N•PS Beh.f&M!I!!. ln& referffit Cindy -·~ PM to • PM T\lfl Um! varioua cterlcal duUee. U&.bt, pltlUlll won. Sbtlty wltb papen. ..... Ctat.r. . "'-8'30 A/P . AIR. ~rtlon -~ • ' ASS9im.T Sat HO AVE PlCO, San M111t be a.hie to type SO Or1&lnalRedPlateCo. Nffda bl& 11ant t.o run. fantutlc Baraaina ' ~ o r t\ltomotlve U • IMSUIAMCI .... .......:. .. ~ •. ..__... Win' c,able aaembly. Clement. wr9!l N~~: r.llllta )CM.A !WA.5131t LoviJl•dM.'"-1880 Furo, cloltlet. boob, Btabmti.cll Baby.Grand , per I f d , • In -.,._. • Profrttt vt lbop wanu • qu r • TYPIST 45 wpm/R«ep. rr 6 k lilfu.I Kltttent api>I coUedlblet, ner Plano IOtyrt old anti .,.1::~ trre · ..... 1111'111('1 llfllCY !apertenctd front • 10meone to srow wllh ~AUSC:l on word proceuln& Uonlat. lnl'I tradl.01 • b a<*i c 11 ' )'tbuia aoea! t.5 Sal/SW\ • Needit ' k. I • huUltfollowtn1011t11· back. NH·lmoker. company. Please call E~dfullorpartUme. equipment. Eaellent co/I r vine Perm .:.:~ •2 a cot Jul y 11 ,12 sll \,"jf1 HIJ t.o":d_.~e Graveyard Clerk wanted, Inca. Salary open. 540-g71, 1714 )7u.·11.tt S.~ Piasa, 1H·7590 opportunlt.y for qualified p /time 2 day wk. · Coronado Balboa Penln -~. 11..1Lnt1 an vu me 1·11 Stort. Ex_perienced Reoewa11-quote It Individual who wbhte to ~•·30PM ~ h '3 llitUlll, S wetk.a old. • emerf!d.CaUW.om. follow-up on renewall. MIDICAL PIODUCTIOM SALIS rejoin worUorce. We of· cailNorm'a m.:io r Siamese, ttr. Looa balr B~at lequ~f:1 \ ~"rci Sto,....e..da 1094 ' .u,,,_S M1&1t have lnaurance ex· E1p'd front office Cor Llabt uaembly work. COM .. -w. I .I. fer 1 aood atartlna ' 548-2980 P ~11• e, et'ce ~14 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -per. G.P. ln Fountain Valley. Faat·&rowln& company -'-ulary and excellent TYPIST Re&latered Uwa APto t ea. etc. Wlo ch 270 w /scope. ~ Full 6 part timt. ~II Flle Clerk-need rut m.9111 need• person with Tired of aelllnl houses 7 Company btnetiu. Call GENERAL OFFICE adult female free to 1 r1 13e Ave ' Ralbou 121SO. 20 JI dbl barrel 1re11. Unlforma furn d. eoer•etJc penon ror fil. MIDICAL mechanical aptitude. daya a wetlt! We need Mra. Ellls 7~ml for 10 Ac c u rate u w p M &ood bome SS&'. 7271 -1 an · Sp• .. ~ .. Matador S270 Ages 21 or over, retired 1n1. Salary commen1urate one Ucenw to leam lbe interview EOE 549·39t2 · July 10 ' 11 Gu dryer. ~-welcome. No exper. nec. llC9'TIOMIST with ability. Call Mike, akUlatomanage,brolter · Cute 2 yr ~Id Auatr. bar•atooll,muchmlac '• APP I Y : Un Iv er 11 I Paid co. beneflta. Salary 81&1y ortice exp'd only, 9$7·932hft. 2ptn, commercial reaJ estate. She~rd max, spayed, 8552 Salt Lake Dr HB n • ',T.'t; lotl Protection Service. 1228 commensurate with ex· Phones & a PP ta . P/f CLmlCAL Income from ma mt SIC Alt TYPISTS all a · 84.H!l9 Nr Yorkt~~wl~nd Hl • Sleno . W. 5th St., Santa Ana per. Call: Pauline. Newport Center while you learn. Super * llT Y• R I ........ Shepherd/Lablovetkids, ~Table ' hll 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lntervlew hrs: IH2 ' 1.4. 963-0'4l 644·0970. Clerical varancy, 4 hrs benefits ; life insurance; Eacellent oppt,y. for ec 1ter ...,...y for local med u , houtebroken 17~n A Rer c M ir 8e1utJrul c.olor TV, 2 yr Moo-Fri. MIDICAL dally In loM brokerage heaJtb insurance & den· sharp aaltowottl Ln fut· temporary uaicnments Fem. 11 mo1. &ood home f · f~ ~~c wrnty Prtt delivery ~l HAIRDRESSER F Uo company In Fuhlon tat plan Contact Ken, paced Newport Beach 557 MJt 758·951Seves um . c [IJ. IL48 8*1716 . • . o "'!· -Immediate position• Island. Typln&. com· .flOO comm'I. real estate ore 'VVt'1 Ga race Sale Fn. Sat, lS" SONYT l •na. prer ~· Crick el s IHTBIOl open •. full time appl putatlooal skills eye for 67$ . Excellent typina ' die· en Lln-Free kittens. 2 remale. 1 7 / l 0. 7 /I I 2 0 4 4 2 nru ron Ha~r Dea11n. Vlllaae DUMM& secretary ' medical re· detaila Call' Katie tapbone lkilla "!CJUlred • -male, lo aood home. Ravenwood Ln . H R ~l F11r Mall, Lac Brh. Experienced person rords clerk Laura. M0-93:IO •SAl.fS.IOX• Challenfinl poeluon Cor -l twbold.Call$4.S-ll60 <Broolthur1t1Adama 1 4M-UIOO need by daip ftnn Cor BR IS T 0 L PARK p /lime kitchen hel Set up distributors from ri&ht ca . Call: TUM'Oll~H'lnoNHll SlMCU Chihuahua. Iona hair, l\'t Clothing, bikes. bll 1n Puvey 1~ watt 4 rhan HAllDllS5aASS1 model home work. CaU MEDlCAL GROUP. wanted wiUU'am Cag HBtoSJC.Newrevolu· LaiJ..,&33-2900 l72l llrdl5tnet lbs. 4-S yrs. lovable. elec ranct top, nel mono P.A Amp Coametolocy, Lie re· Michael for appt . M7-U>O afterll~m:S7S.lorM. tionary product ui pest MewlOrlleodl watch dog Shots bedspread. r urta1n1. :1tbe;~~.~~~~ln~ quired. Studio5. Ask for 714@2lm MIDICALllCB'T. P1ume Secmary for ID· root.rol. Good com· t .O.E. 645-9441 .!!L_. spkrs ea S4SO OBO " Jlldy 640-6443 lntenor Pegboard account in&; aurance office WllJing mla11ons. Must have re· 51Cl£T A.IY 3 yr old Fem Lhasa $48-~1 anvtune • H llSTYUST ,..,Mmlt some insurance re· lO train Call Scott or liable car. Call Var . p ....... ..._ Weftff/W........ Apao. to good home Honn 1060 • A Full time po;ll1on rta Four day .:Veek Din h·7~11 7141661·9191 Hourfy pay + bonus. Exp'd., part Ume eves. 714 n~eves ....................... lo.tt&M.W ~,i .... b .. ~1!-1 .. h~,: Ceaxu· available. Co. vehicle ~orth Costa Mesa. QUA.LI.TY CO.NTROL Sales/Management. p/\ bondable. NaUonal or· h N PUREBREAD Pigmy •78H01 RSETRA11 2LEhoR ~p••• · foi "u~ .. ""~'""""· health insurance. start M7·1910, or r /t, no exp. We train. Ii. r · 0 tips Pvt GOAT l yr. to loving mpena • rse, ••••••••••••••••••••••• r anot. 9GllS7 Lmmed. Ask ror Wendy Foreman. Must have ex· Health, Nutritional &c rnization. N~io,. ~ country club. 844-$404, bomeonly. land em w /la~k rm GtMral 90 10 HARDWARESAL~ will train 7»&4e0 MHSIMGll ~er ln hand l~yup, we11ht ronlrol Co n~~:,o ~~:~::,"·ph~e Wed lhruSun. 957-8170 Elec. brakes .. Daily Pilot ••••••••••••••••••••••• Perm., full or p,,1me For busy 0.C. Aatncy. fiberclau techniques 547·4191 ' number, job experience Wflktw /WfliltNu Credit Union re po l~t Yow Tan Applylnpenon.Crown l••~Cllrt Muslbeorganbed/reua· 3401 Fordham. Santa . tolndependentRepPro-Apply blwn 9AM 'r;:-:u~.iltL~sv!i1~00: Sealedbidsarebeingac· Non-pror1torganiuat1on j. Hardware, 3107 E Coast Needed for electronic hie. full time. valid Ana, 9'79-9361 Sales gram . Enrore Produc. Noon. Charlie's Chill, housebroken. 6 & 8 cepted until July 10 nda your boat. plane, ' Hwx .• CdM __ distributor located at ~allfo rnla drivers RADIATOR Repairman, lions. Inc. 1Z7l Sim~ 3001 Redhill. Bldg. •2. weeks old. CaU aft 6pM M.•Y be seen at DaW car. et.c. uberal tax de ' Hotel 3170 Pullman. C.M. En· license. &c good driving torch or welding exp. Way Escondido 9202:5 Ste 1226 CM 494.3698. Pilot Auto Shop, 330 duction advantage Ml.<l!!.HT"'UOFrOlt try level position with record. Start im Willing lO learn trade. QfRC( Cahf.orcall714rl4J.~ll Window Washer,ft"lme. Bay St., C.M. or eall 213/654·2341 '• """ "' oppty for advencement. mediately. Call Susie 631·9424 - -1• English Sheepdog Pu.p-6t2·4321, ext 296. Mon. -Full lime. Computer ex· Please rail Hamilton 556-0460 PRMllf'fS SECIETAIY R.L Must have reliab e car & pies Free to loving thru Fri. 8am·SJ!!!!. Riverchaser Kayak hy per.,ref'd.Salaryopen. EI e c l r 0 s a I e 5 RECEPTr.:IEC 'Y IMftl Se 1 . 1 ·r min. 1/yr experience. home 847-3624. u. .. .: ... ,.~ ...... 1065 Hollowfonn. new never ~ Sur 'Sand Hotel. 1714 16411850 ror JO· MH~MMT~SITIOH ~·ray lab training.for SAL£S acU~~a~~'b~~l~~ $4 2S /hr to s tart Free mulli·colored kil· :!::~=~.':::':.':' ...... used.1195.~1287 Laguna Beach,67·S313 terv1tw. ~anbahn .. rlmrhaXlnlO,l co.pMp.t'y& rll1.~hbt"pep?°"s1.•'UsCale~~:· REPRESENTATIVES Realtor's olfice Front 646·9780· --lens. tiger-striped grey, Plush crpt, wood nr. cer. loGh, M•tc:ALZ•/ ~ Geri &46.4'Mo · '"' r •,'l.o., e"'x n 0 i office position requires Mere._.. white, orange &c black. tile & Uno. Guar anslall S.Mlu f 020 JOv::iEELEANERS Fud~~!~~k in · X Y ~~ good telephone volre ........................ Call~·6219aft.4pm. Bar alns.528-CXSlll ....................... '· To ~/hr. car. 645-5123 bta utirul Dana Point MOD&SASCOITS neceuary. Join the progressive and l Y Ping• SH & a P .......... 1005 Benji-type small dog, Used. but not worn or 8 0 A T C I e a n 1 n g Harbor $3.50 per hr. Ap-Top 0oiw. 52'7·71116 REC ErT /SEC. Y r a s t e st g r o w i n g pearance Real estate •••••••••y•••••••••••• fem, good watchdog for spotted, 100 ydJ nylon Inside ,Out Reasonable ' Ho•....,.,. ,Cool! ply Tues. thru Sat., MCYTEL Desk clerk. Day Restaurant cle51c~· firm. wholesaler in the orrire expenenre helpful bul WANTED TO IUY sgl person. 548-lSOtl crptg. asstd colors. 67pr~c3e1s03 Wltly Monlhl) Femalepref linoontoS DanaPointMannaCo .. shift. P/lime, F ttlme haslmmed.operungfor produr ts industry not essential Prefer I buy old guns , SiberianHIL'lkywtpapers p /yd.Cd~~2Z8_ .,. • pm.Monlhr\IFn.SCper 24701 DanaDnve.Dana Nr. Orange Fair· dependable s ha.rp Several account ell· local resident. For an diamonds, ivory, jade& freetogdbome w1large SUPEISHAIPIHB loGh,Power 9040 hr Own trans English Po111t grounds 645-TIOO. Jean· person w11ood typing erutive ~s1tions are I lerv1ewcall Mrs Duhl collectibles Call 17141 yard 642·6258 ....................... • speak..ing, non smoker Ki tr hen help wanted rue skills Able to handle now available 1n lhe I Wffiey H. T.ylor Co. 972-49218 'uk for Dane · 1050 Sharpens ANY blade. New 23' Penn Yan Cuddy i 556-1737 rorrespondence. riling, California area In· ltalton "44-4910 . · fwwitwt e~en serrated edge Caban . all anboa.rd . no H9USEKEEPER ~:~j:'~i::,n~~a~r~;. Newapaper delivery adding machine. er duslry knowledge and Late 1800 V1ctonan style ••••••••••••••••••••••• sc15sora Sobengen steel outdr1ve problems. Ltve-ui, '°'mature cou Thur 5 . M 0 0 San ~~~!~~:5 1~c~~s:.v~~ rands. busy phones & sales ability essential *SECRETARIES* settee 642-ST70 wkdys, * * I BUY * * rrom German)' Fan ~ 900 C213)59'l·2859 pie. Refs, please Call Clemente lM 1.25 Ave rront omce. Congenial Send resume in ron 548·0294 evs Good used Funuture & taa~c val~ Send ~P~ 40'0w ENS Tri cabin all uam mZJ12 surance. ~my car smaU office located in fldenre to· Worts Te .. ar•y Lee exec desk. Sl50 OBO . -OR I II to uper rpener T h l N I • I . Es laoade. Npt Bch-lrv·~la Mesa Irvine industrial rom c.__ 5 dwr man's dresser, Appliances will se Box 8088 . Newport a I 1an In Pl s JP • Housekeeper !Companion LANDSCAPE area. 7 dys pr wk Mon plex Xlnt medical/den· G ~ 1 t'Xll OBO. 642,6880 or SELL for You Beach CA 92660 6t2 4644 __ _ for elderly couple. Live· MAIH. Fri , 2·SPM Sat/Sun lll package Orange "'91 190 • IVJCKJ HESTONI Brahmbach Baby Grand M•STEISAUCTIOH ----29' Vi lla Vee Cruiser in. Must speak En&Llsh fOllMAH 4·7:30A M Approx County Restaurant Dt 646-1616,lll-'625 .Mw•lry 1070 Flybndge, all mboard. "( "have valid dnver's ur Exp. in all phases of ~/mo. Call S40.3007 Services. 2801 Daimler ScdH t1•1get 1 Aaaoclatet PianoN~ old, an~· ....................... uke new Creative fin Refsreg.548-079'. landscape maint. incl bel.llAM·SPM.A!kfor St Santa Ana U.Mted Specialistsln Wi~I sell lO~e~~e· llUYFUIHITUIE $800 worth Genuine ava11 t213J59'l·28S9 \ HOUS~ER1 ~:!io~~~~:;p·~! r~; Lee or Bob (714)641·5732 _ l•l TemporaryClemal l'S..~. 548-~l anvtlme. Les 957-8133 i;1~~~::;. ~~Ids, 35' VllOMG s.f. ~ Live in . Needed ror advancement E.0.E. HUISESAIDES HCEPTJC&r'Y s•~rs Personnel Oak dining table, S2'1S. 20SOFAS.new.Mea It'---1071 '80, Tw. Cats.; 7"1KW. •1 r .1 'th bo (7141546·78.43. 1920 S. Co nv. hospt. Beach E 1--:-d-T LIUUHllli 54B.0400 Beaut1ru1 li&htoak Ad· L5Loveseats.$7Sea Moc _,,,,, ld 'd w1eler , sli p, JO"', ~ ... &c dental. Free CRT 60wpm . shorthand d SECIETAIY 960-MIO e~ing ac ines .. S129K . Bkr 675-9007. a~d1ly~). ~rr~ <J;ido. Vale, S.A. area. Free 11\lr. medlral x pe rience . y8e sa·· mirality desk. SOSO 957·S7mlor~".Cl.llO •S•h••••••••M•••••h••••••:~ dwn O.W C balanre loving woman over 39 training. Top salary benertta. Start SJ,050. 3007 I L Im med. opening for NEVIi USS>: Vanous meuil. equip. too 960.1725 eve. ~ Exper, ref. English Legal 6(2~ PC.M.833-3313. t r lh •....a...c" 1010 QueenbdrmSS40.bunks numerousLolisl Form ---"'-'-'----spealting.642-2990 CotpoHh~ . IECEPTlOHIST M ..... Del rt• Mea~~=era:C~a~;Ungt ~ ................. $200. sofa bed S170, mat· !0646-1234 . New 23' Penn Yan Cudd y Hskpr AtteodanttAide to *To Sll,000-* For p/llme ,.,,,,.ition m CA. 902'1 Business Development I IUY A.Pft.IANCES tress/box spnngs. twin --Caban. aU inboard. no live.in for lady in Fantaslicopply. for ex· Nursing Chiropractop;' orrice 2134224724 Must have exrell Les 957-8133 $75.fullSBS.queeoSl.25 Mlsctl•u• 1010 ~t900drivl2e13)P~!!,!!,ms. l \ Wheelch·•·. Som• exp. 'd • ·t hrthd P/flMIOIOllLY t · 1 b 1 •· MORE ! 770.0901 ....................... ,..., .~·-..... "' p . secy. u e s . Must be dependable, ef· . sec re aria • ver a ex Stove. quality, O'Keefe & -===..:.----'-=-= Refs. Spanish speakuig Lovtly Fll.Shlon Island Tues. & Sal., llAM to ficlent & have good of. E\ual()pportwuty wnllen commun1rauon Merritt SlSO. 548-8513, Queen Sz Water bed Pirtfitd~ PAITHllWAMTED \ ok.~1.11. ofc Workfor01TofweU ~~ ~~'m:~f:nr:: rice skills. Non-smoker mployerM tF slt1lls Typ1n11 &c $48-4485 frame$2S W.terSerrke 1979PennYan26'Sport • ff_.,...,. I 4-22 known nat'I co. lOO'k form atioo: Visilin d oreferred CaU63l·S690 shorthand req'd Gd op. G.E. Upri"t..l Frost Frtt 642-7131 All you want, S2 SO wkly Fisher. N B sbp, 210 hp 'l r--Free Call. Mar1orie " · · Sales People wanted Cor portunity for a career .,. Rallan courh&cchrs5'00. Sample bottle dellv turbo-diesel Great for "' .-d ~ Sullivan. S4().SOIJ1, Snell· Health Servics, 9fi6.088S IECIPTlOMST part or ru11 time sales. minded individual. Ex Freeur $185. While cab for stereo SlOO free. Disoatch 731·2727 cruu1ng or fishing Im· ~ forefc*-1ng & Snel11n1 or OIDBHSIC Possible eamimg ~ cell. working cond1t100s ~ 631-1338 llDWOOOlX 6'S mar & loaded w eler :i Y .. E~. Newport Beach Agency , omce·aales, lift store. SmaU ple11anl office 10 per week plus. Serio~ & co benefll.S. For ID· Refnc. frost free. IX· 8' Beige Sola,~. 2over d k lronirs. 25 'k equity .. 4340Campas Or .• EOE Lido Villaae. Exp. req Santa Ana division of hard wor1ung people will Lerview. contact. Dana cellent, works good stuffed swivel rockers, 2' to 20' loq. Xlnt er . $3500 do + $15S mo Saloeen. ~. 11,.,,e E~ Com A advanre rapidly. Call Corre 11 . Em It a y ~ $48-&'513 $48-448S -ea 661 .... n in&. f'reab lnldt load ar 730-6620, eves557·9327 If you hve 1n the Newport.Mesa area. are between ages 14·22, and are looking ror parl Ume, full·time. or tem· porary work . we can help you fmd a job LEGALSIC'Y N B. Law Firm. Good skilb, word processing experience helpful. salary commensurate with exp. Good benefits. call Nikki or Art 955-2411 Job counseling LEGAL SECUTAIY Workshope Typan& .90wpm.MAG II. J Interview ttthniques corporate, ~al Estate No charge to you or lo exp. desirable. Jean over 1,000 employers we 641-1331. ____ _ have on me. It works Lii.,,, ..... ,,. throuch the United Way RARI"'" and volunteers who DOCUMEN'l'CONTROL care. U you're Jookina Full time po1, witb civil for a job, take YF..5 for engineering & land plan· an an1wer. Call us to-n 1 n g r I r m . So m e day, or stop by our office Lib rarian skills desired. at 542 W. 19th St . Suite Apply in person. to Mr. B, in Costa Mesa Fuentes at Robert Bein. Wt'r. William Frost & As· YES! ~iates. 1401 Quail St., Npt. Bch. .ctwe'refne! UHGUAIDS Youth Emp..'._oyment 968-0311 Servit.. Trainee Program or tbe Harbor Atta LIQUOR &i Wane clerk. 642-0474 part lime Irvine area. Open 101.m.·3.~p m Exp'd only :>51·8601. 9 Monday thru Fnday _,to=5 ______ _ Yes . we help employers. uquott C L.Ill( too! Full-lime. mature. exp. INS. AGENCY or will train Apply In Peraon w /IOfM co. or pel'10n : 895 W 19th St .. a1ency eap. Type 50 _,,C::.:.;.M=-. ------~ • &ood 00 tele. Will Maintenance man. exp. train. Xlnt future &c In plumbing carpentry beneflta. Jim Toby' electrical. Pamling ro~ 754·781.2. motel 1n Lacuna. IMSTALLBS 494·6"3 ' TIMPOUIY NMd extra money? No experience neceuary. Car a must. Apply: Teleprompter Cable TV, ten w. lath St., Newport Beach, 6G33llO or et or • MASOMWOU Brick It block mason. Muat have 5 yean ex· perlence. Accept.Ing ap- pllcallont Immediately. Soutb Shorel Cooalr\l.C· lion Serricn. 831·9231 M·F 10.1. / ORTRO~ '" .,.. M E 559-5812 D I l Co D le It ,.,.., "" riv111g weekly Save al manufacturer of picture rs. ippe.r, . eve o Pm eBn h. roodyer. 1u. We anhr. wol r s Kil r hen lab I e w '4 $S• rt pp r a II JI m 16' 0 B f'rbgls w n5hp RDA Will train. 7 .30-12 frames. Typing, good Sales New Po r l e 1 c • g • S7$. s · r ean· 6'6·9118S anvtl...-Evmrude Trlr. rover. Mon-Thurs . Newport with hguru/customer P t1me-F1t ime key 714·'33-8680,M tFEOE works good $85 tughback swivel chail'1, 16th & R1ve1"11de Plare ~ 6t2·2626 relations. Xlnt benefits salespeople needed to 548-8$13, 548-448$ chopping block, rormira Must sell•! K.ang Siied CM 67$.8317, 631·3199 Part time offire 11rl 2 Call Jackie Brown 17141 train &c supervise people * •SECUTAllES• * Washer & Elec Dryer p . 646-2230aft 5PM Waterbed • Refrige B h R Do 14• days 1 week Flexible & 836-6623 __ ___ an new health &coutrillon Sht.80tFashllSl8.000 like new $1'50/Bolb Gold GOLD LEAF 42" round :ffe~ 1~:=1 cond Best x~~~ co~:'"~so 7>Bo dependable. 646·7417 Recept.lonist company. Call Mr LegalM.,C.ardS18,000 __ SS9551 glass lop coc:ktail table 673-1763__ __ \ Mon/friS.5 S1tlin& prelly as Davis for interview Recpt/f~/AnahS14.400 SEARS Gas Range . 4 $1S0.'93-tl004 HOTTUI 181 33·peMYansportfls Part Time RECEPTIONIST in our app't at(714Jll!N-8798. Pres/REtSh90Sl.9,200 burner. Broiler /oven Available now! Brown Sx4 redwood w /aU op. her. lwin diesel S79.000 ~ Up To deaign center. Duties ID· Sales Exp Consultant Oun like new, 3 yrs old 1150 playpen sofa, Imo old lions. 1 yr old. pd $3500. l213) S92·2859 4t elude JreeUng people. Pailt ,14crdwcre Lil Reindel'1 Agy, lnc mcl aas line 64.S-0944 or tr.on. Call now• 964-64S6 asking p;oo. 857·2298 -) $8 PEI HOUR answering phones, typ-Exp preferred. Must be 4020 Birch.Est'64EOE ~so__ Like New Queen Si Mal· Ex-rishing boat w moor ,. ing SOwpm . Caradro able to wort Sat.&Sun. Newport.C.8190/Frtt RerngtFreeier.autoice, tress & Boxspring Lo••l•11• ing. Days~7-6561.eves OR MORE. P /time Pacific. 2221 So. Stan· Other hrs. to be ar· xlnl cond. PlO Crown (f irm) $150. 759-9516 Helium Bouquets de 631-1096. - EvesandSalurday dard,S.A.957·Cll22. ranged. W•gesbasedon Security OHicers. molding25</ft.7S0.8099 eves livered. Perteet for loGb,R...t/ AT HOME! RecepUoni!t. Active Real exper. Apply in person: Homeowners Assoc., 19 lfl '' Si de· by . 5 id e Girl's White Antique every occasion. Clt.+er 9050 ~ Ideal for housewives or Estate orfice. N. Irvine Kerm Rima Hardware, Npt Bch. $4.50 pr hr Fri&idalre Refrigerator Bdrm Set incl twin bed &73-'4l9 -•••••••••••••••••••••.•• retired persons or han· Telephone. aome typing. 2666 Harbor Bl., CM Prefer rel.ired. 67HI01 rxil 556-1936 good cond. $'22.5. 7$9-9516 Nothin& to lose but lbs * * • • • * * * ** * * • dicapped. National or· General orrice duties SALESWOMAN Lou Kaa. Refrig. 8 mos old Frost eves lO lo~ lbs in ~days * * * • * * • * * * * * • ganization needs several Co benema. 731-1888. _ p tr mature woman with SEC'Y ~KKPR free $400 LEADED Glass Top Oak Call BobS. S48-7582 •Fr'S SMAITll• ? representatives in your I ....a...&..t some knowledge or Anti· For N.B. b{terior design 641-lm IL"'7.21SS Cocktail tbl ~" x 60" Genuine leather luggace •TO CHAITEI• area. Notblng to buy. no K~~ ··-~ d' SI Mfg Silver Annie nearly 3 P<' malclung set S75 Gob k 50 · t • ob . All for publishing Co lo ques to WUI• in reputa· firm 9S5·2033 1989 War s cnature. ~ ,.... 646 0466 ft 70 ac ye~ in 1me ligation. contacts Irvine, ~neral orrice bleslOte.1142-nMS avocado. 16.$ cu fl new 5.5.2-l~ .·. a ~ --to the era of Sir Thomas byphone.Nopriorexpr. duties, or&anlze events 5 .,,ESW""'"'~ Sec1y-S,.11a9I' rerri11.1100.M1·1698 Assorted custom made ~~111 11~1 1 D.~11 Litho Lipton and the Van nee. Send name. ad· column. Good detail ~ V90IU"I P(f Cost.a Mesa area drape s . VERY b!Jllf1ghter $1200 re· derb11ts while sailing dress. phone number lo skills needed Call Contemporary retail Jud11c bkgd ner REFRIGERATOR FOR REASONABLE tall. Sacrifice $750 aboard the elegant 12· lndependant Rep Pro-store needs talented. 968-3652 SALE Sl25. 846-0934 53$-5$95 s <' h 0 0 n e r a ram Encore Produc· 957·8522 -dynamic, ma lure 831-7231 IS"! c r M /W refng 19" TV Portable B/W S35 "SHEAR WATER "Fttl liona. Inc. 1271 Simpson women with min. 5 yrs SllVtCETICH. Rerria. 1225. Washer &c Almond 10 mos old C1n1Ster Varuwn. rom· the thrill "Ted Turner· Way, Escondido. Calif. ReceptlOOJlt retail sales exper. Only Photo & elttUiral exp Dryer Sl25 ea. Dshwshr $350, corree table & end plete S20 Work good experiences while or call 714{7G5Sll s-119 Al n. Way career-minded need ap. required. Field lllllalla· noocau ~$148 table. u.Cill both. 673-4743 846-1525 __ you're at the helm or the Part lime ltitchen help To11w ... ! ply. Salary plus comm. uonltrepair.89l-0290 REFRIGERATOR, apt. Swimmln& Pool 3' X 12' famous 58' Sparkman & wanted -will train. !003 Free Be the front Pis apply In person or SE RV ICE S l 1l1 on site. Kenmore. 14 mos C • 1 to• d u I CJ" e r New liner + all arcess Stephen's Ocean Racer S7S-10IM ore. sunshine In this call : Apropo, #29 employee. Apply at Likenew,mustseUS13$. ~ 9111.646-0310eves "GESTURE." Cruise P/flMllVB•l&S beaot. airJx>rt ore. ln· Fashion Island. N. B 1.5922 Pac. Cst Hwy, H B. •2795 Living rm. dining rm. Unique pohahed b~ the channel Islands with ·-='* trnat'I. co. Great 644-2&2.EOE 213-592·15'11 Garrers •Sattler gas mstrbdrm.suigle~. "Noodle cart" from Joe Minney aboard his C 11 I beneflls locludin& sav SECUTAIY Sewer It drain cleaner stove, 30W x 3SH, Just patio rum, csl.m child s Thailand 1!5D ~.7027 gold plated 48' Yawl YOIAc.rien In&• plan, pension, + Occidental Lire or wanted. Utt plumbing serviced ~.$4.S-~l bunlt beds wtmatching · · "TYPEE." These boaL~ Adults with OUlltanding tuition plan. Some typ. Newport Bch has an reg. 964-4122. Frlaldalre Refri&. gd dresser/bkcue & dealt. ~Gal. A9uanwn c:ompl are at our docks NOW " attractive penonaliUes, in&. To Sl,000. Call : Kay open in& for a secretary CHIMI cond. Sl50 or best offer by 644-7556 " I ca~ In el· pumps. and available for your who enjoy womnc wltb Basan, 640-SOIJl. SnelUng We are looking for so-SIWIMe MA Saturday. 979-18S3. after DANISH Dresser w /mlr· planta-f1sh·SZ2S. 646-2231 inspection. Skippers & 10.15 year old youths Is Snelllna of Newport meone witb a pleasant OPllATOI Som. ror 195. 3 bar slls S30. Brus Canopy King Sz crews are atandmg by so tvenin11 S.9PM. Call Beach Agency, 4340 personall~, who is well Experience In 111lm1k· Corr. tbl Sl.5. En~. oak tbl ~ .!~mpleU. MSO. call come on down and see 842·021. ext. 343. Campua Dr., EOE or•anize to ""'rrorm in& a must. Small, grow· For ule: Brown counter •. chrs _,,,. Ca I aft • .._ . ....,1 the boat!, spin a few bet 2PM to cp M .. ..~ i 'I I ft e de a top stove Gu 4 bmr ... .-.. . ... ween " , clerical type duties. We ng aa1 o n e · · 642 0063 SCllU I rT'f yams, have a toddy or 2 ukforLori. offer nice sWTOW1dings ueady employee . Vaed.~.80-SIOZ. Li"~ted wio bin ..n.l.hl andarrangucharterin PAYIOU.eual &as a branchomce. we S'i/hour,up. Thompeon lkyct.1 IOZO ·"'' c ca et.an· AYrwrH afinewoodenyacht. II._ 'd F U R. E. Sain partklapale in our com· Sails, Newport Beach. u•h••••u•••••••••••• tique areen, $250. 2 lge Mftl.A.l C A L I F 0 R N I A ... exper. req a. u Hf!! .... N I 631 • ....,. W ... ~ storace cabl.nels, t65 & Mod t A h CRUISES lime poe. Moa-Frl., 9 to for ~al .Ute acbool. pany'a affirmative ac· ._,.,, ,_,_ J75.642-0Zl'7,MZ·lm ea -wu 2S37W Coast Hwy 5. Apply: 1M PltttnUa Don't p-··'-a•-•. tlon procram. E.O.E. Shippln& • recelvln& Vted Unicxcle847·83'17 8. Blk Na·= .,_,1 •-PawtloEAR-BewTHaEreM -· A C .. '""' -uu "" Call Brenda 152-2W. tr a In ee needed In ...,_ ~ .. Nwpt Bch (710 548-4191 ve. . . ClllJMMI adhnlve m.anulacturina Meo'a SR 12 apd Racing Loveuat cond. $100 The nice part about cold When it cbmes to m ATTMAMT SICllTAltY plant. 15.:JT Monrovia, K~~·D'.':! :;;'1g:,i1,~&hl 84M720 air condlt.lonlna ii. )'OU rharttring. we wrote the Buay L•&llDI Beach llST"'1.,,,.,_ XI , kLIEGll AL Ired N.8.W.5125. SoUd Oak Game/Dinette finally know what to do ~-~k . 30 years same keuel.Start .. 7$/bOur. __ _.., n. • • requ • Set beaut cond ltb II yo I l ""'ation. ~I" a.s HtlH !1p'd. Dlnlnl Rm. Mar. 11l1ryrn~=l -1 !~.~-~!!~:~~.~!!.~ p!O/OB08GU . ;lothe: In Jui;~ i~AeR A Minney Family L1. rt1ta11nnt, Ors. mano ce,v•r SH.,..Wf, UOWOOOZX''S CHINACABlNETlm THEM. Organiu.Uon PHOTO~ Cty. Forallllt. call btwn SIC111'AIY ~ Ht ~l7'6..es ....... ************* • :0ro;~~!r~ 2•5.7.o.otu co~>::1°Y ~~~lu ~~1...:t. ~·~~i :~ut:" 2f~a~0:~rr:r:: SACRIFICE-4 r1bu1ous -t:~h IOll ~::0•N•D•A~·~ -~ lo0ttn1 for ltn Income, Church J>tOftulonal . be Sood with nwnben. weekly. Savt at MC/ft. anUque wtckeraide chn •••••••••.............. .. '-INN •I train eow for a potlUoa Ratauraa qualilicatlolll attradlve CM. DtlttCJDlc,54.S-04U ~:vth:!I Jim S4f.9'85 ~ ......... ~':';~!~n~~~~dllt~·. :-~• c!:.S~ie:' :Jo with PriY,~jN"· Dt.ia,~ compeuation peckl1e. -..,. -IOH s • o o / o Bo e 11 1 cub. MS-mt eat *· '0 '· JUmt 0il ........... -... 1555.1~1nttttie?. s..-.... ...., c• 1011 ....................... S45-7Mtlf72o• s.1-1Mh,. ~~.cau~~. ruu :'~~ p09t. 91~~Rr~lm~~"~~f.1~~ T':~~;;s~mmt PtiiR~;ECii:v··;;;~~ Ar:~75=~-otktF•llst& SHARllS!! I • ., I l I KIDS ..SUMMER Earn S30-l80 per week. Tripe I Priz. c.I ... ·a •• • ''''''' .. tlou uall. Ideal brt&ht, ~. aelf· IDCGGM~·ptpt,l\lmt pvn-... bred1 .. ~c ~'!! ft'ahrldryr$lOOea.L11y 14 I; 111 · t•S a · Paetculler Yee~ ,.llllOOM acbedule. Excell co. t t "'on 1 oker 10Ul' Slam, IJU8W ,._ J ~~ Nie chr tl50. ....................... 1~ • • .......... _ beaeflt.I wbkb Include 1 ., '~,~ • m · bull wtth aWti. msml 14 o ·•no w ~· tM C..rUu•• 1 1"".,. '"' '°' " .... .... ~ dluo1111t prlvlloau. JoeldS · bulln•· Call Tor appt. HidHWrntl!Y91 Xlllt concl 1rtt.b mult.iplt gi:iall&lllwl ftt. '°'·a m:~0 mec11ca1ldmt&IJ •tew., ••cretar1a1 P9•1u0111 557¥15 • "--,~ ES It SM.£ documtnta ,_, au.ach· ... ~'-w~1!~· 1"· G I>.""'-' prol1& lllarinl • .,_.1on avail. ID Saft Clemate ;ft -. .,_ TA ...... , •• ··•••· !!Mel!· mec Hlca t..technlcal I ApplJta~· for lndJ~~ wtU> ea· T.....,tc.., i....................... . me11u .• ~11,,lec~•.· -C-....AIOAM ~srnd· iD wtb olfNl. p an. C • ..ei'f celltnt lkilJI, Hn. t-5. Expel'.,, E II tlem.llt!ESHONDPQl..AKC. JllrlJ. 1/9/IO ahelvet '°i.b7ua ..... "--OrJ.Cty.co.AaalY:lllO J. · 1_. _ _.NB C•ll f o r appl. unltlreq ~.Manaaerial Chamutre.M/r.r.u 1116,._ cptttc:.• BU~t~7achtER • ·-_ .. 1A .. ."MI M PulUOll -·ti.IP _lM/... 1bWl7 a m\lll. tmmed. Ibo w . P v l pt '1 · AMAJ•t IBM eltetrlc lJpeWriter. nA:n ~ 1.0.I , lecrt\.lritl 2Pf!la1.f9'0tll JUM'l·lfl!l\l1!9l. Vic • Ball 6 Euc.Ud Xln'l coed .•. 080. - 4 ... 1 . .• • lllOXHICftl T .. C•6.·-'fi ':,' c:,=.,-:;:~: VI t·~~J.... ,:>MOM t•J ~~ ....... ,!~ n:r~-111 \:...:~ • ::a=b, ,.it tme 6 ~~11-~ .• ~·~ 6 .Ph hll. Lllt" cll~:'c:~".::~· ................. •••••• ISTA11WI ~"· -Part~cllcb. ~ MHfl!' I ftlf ,otllloa. latlt qud.rn.... •l•t•a• clot, ... ,,: Wrouatit lroa Cast ma CMallu 2'' Good .;.,, Aw ~l!lll. 11 .......,., .._. Tn._ frtad Ill ... ca~ laltf ~ NM Ult tanJture, ell and ..U· w11t.aad ......, perch c:oM WMk claJI t*• ............:. -~ ·~ ITGl'lf.90 Part tliae. Newport NCrMU. • lliolk Cl111lntd 1d1 tvtrJ .. Ila& lAlll ti .W .,,. .. Mt for lp ._.,. call -.-.. Hirt .._ M' iii ll..cll ... ,....., ...... ,.. 41 If Oil hn4 Wk-a·llnt, lw ud ... .._,,lll lWilDwfD:W! L• , . 1 _ ·~ ~ 11l,f7 1 !!'~~~ ·-4111Celll"""' •• '._ni l ~•: ~~J!, _:....., t: ..... re ~VIM 6 •c ~ Pair ~~ f~ litft Catallu II, •l•ttl. J~~~.;... ..ll!i_.;_,......,_._..,.._._.__ .. ., __.. .... ,....... ---............ •-...,... .................. flll ... !Ma IC~. Mr*; .. IMMI tall • l'iMI. UI ... ' bl& I ..Ill .. m , •• Amt "all-.... nH wUt JOI ftlll Soi-Terrace Dt., waa a ·--=-"'"--. ........... -. .... ..,._,·-H iit, etc. SH,IM. II -~ .. ::...· ... ·""'~0.... DtU,PUl&a..~. ~ ~ ....... wq.~-·----.......,._ ..--.. .... . ..,, .~ .. . . ---. . ... •• ,., .... ",. r' ... , ..... ~ ._ • # • • ... • .. • • *"'"..., • • • .. • • ,..,,r,_ ..... -,. J .f&:. ,. • ,. • .,., • ~ ••••••• ,.. ••• ' ••• ... . .. • " .. . .. .. • .......... .. -. ... • •. ! ... I• ,, - l Jet 'cs W(h Ort a go ee l8 an ve nd l'd ·d (' n It I I( I d r I ~ ,. I .. ,. ,. " .. " ,... .. r .. 14' Starcnft w/trlr, fiber&laaa, twill bull de- ; Ii .540-ea SABOT by Schock Mra. almost new, muat aa tfice . 613-?177 30' sloop, 12 bags. 1lpa 4 $14,000 or trade up & T.O. P. 673-WO 13' 9" Saltrllih. X1nt cond. Make offer. 6'2·9274 or 645. 3. 18' Sol Cat w Jtrlr. $1000 [13-78111 60' MOOltlMG 1979 O'Oay 30 diesel, whl. hinged mast, xlnl cond, incl. N.B moor U1 000. l· l 31!.l Catalina 22' 1980 Xlnl cond. Fued keel. w ,trlr P>® 0 BO 642-6057 SABOT. Mekrart Race rigged. Xlnl cond S900 /o(r 644 5754 , ~().8770 Racing SABOT mint cond ! 2 sails, new mast. banana boom & racing rig, huU refmished, 1800 675·3CJl9 loah, Slpa/ Docks 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '10 SUZUll 4SOI With fairinc. like new Sl275.~ WANTED Honda Mln1 Tratl 70 -~--'<'00-37..,.42.._ __ '78 Honda 7SOF, 7:.>0 m.i, xlnt cood., tuned, $1400 !OBO, 67~9227 '76 YAMAHA MO, l'\lnS great, loob cleah, lo mL 50.Ar 5 ~8 Motor"-'. Wt I .... /S.... ft60 ------ ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE PAY WE CAM SB.L TOP DOLLAR YOUR R.V. FOR USED CARS SS&-004 ALAM MAGNOM For Sale: '71 WIM. Class A 38K mi, 4KW generator, roof air ~ . 646.4693 Trol!Hs. T.,..tl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1978 Tauru1 Vacation Trlr. 24'. sips 8, incl bunk bds, new cond , 000.842-8429 Troiltn, UMlty ti 10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4' X 4' Cloeed UUlity Trlr. Good Ures, good road. aslun 84&<1243 A.to Sertb, , .... &Ac~ 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SSAVI SAVIS wtTH US8>PilTS Imported car parts lkPORT AUTOSUPPLY 101 N. Manclwtter Anaheim n&-9900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTANT NOTICE TO READERS AND ADVERl'JSERS The price of Items advertlaed by vehicle dealert In the vehicle d111lrted advertlsln& columns does not in- clude any applkable taxes. Uceme. tran.srer reea. flauce cllarae1, rea far air poUudoo coo· ttol devlte ~callou • dealer doa&meotary preparation charsa un· lei.a olberwile 1peclfled by tM tdyerti!tt. ... , .. "" ••••••••••••••••••••••• COMM ELL CH EVROLET .°!U' llMl••r H >d • 1'-"I \ \H.'>I 546-1200 HIGHIUYll Top doUan for Sports Cars. B~. Campers, 914 's, Audi s AsklorUi<:MGR JIMMAllMO YOLISWAGIH 18711 Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH 42-2000 TOP DOLLAR PAIDFOI GOOD&CWM USEDCAIS! miracle mazda 2150 ....... ltYd. c:.. MtM 64~5700 CASH TODAY We •ill come to you MllCIDIS WAMrm CaU for lmmedlate appointment Allll for Ma rlr Sacbl-Buyu 131. mo d5-J100 MISSION VllJO Wlt9 YOUllXO'nC llllTISHCAIS ,. -. SADll.EBACI BMW 28402 MarJUt!nle Pkwy M isst0n Viejo Avery Pkwy. exit Cbfr 5 Freeway) U l-2040 4t~4t49 Closed Sundays CREVIER $1 ST •UOAOWAY SAHIA AMA 835·31 7 1 TH( lllTIMA Tl OlllVtflQ MACHIHl •USEDIMW1• '77 320i S /R (1864 > '77 320iA SIR (0'74) '78 320i s /R (186'/) '79320iS/R (SlllM) "79 52111 s /R {1('76) '81320i SIR 1811931 Closed n.. MOit l:ldl"'9 P.tOfY_. IMWPwda 10r LffMC.-.le Mcl.,..IMW!! ~°" ..... 11 ow,...,._1 (71 ' MUST Sfil! 1967 VW Blja B~·ln ex cellent condition S2000 00 Mim sell Lhts week! Call 546-2619 1tn vw is Honda Wp MK ml, SC•OCCO Sl750/080as la. Limited F..d!Uon ! s speed ___ llSl_-8000~---i tr1ns .. AM /FM stereo. '79 Accord, 4 d.r!. tllver, air cond .. alloy whffls. li&hlly US«!, 24•. fully factory black with black aaraaed. orig. owner. Interior. (GJYOU>. A auto, a /c, Uke oew in • 1te1l at • S.tes.S.rv1ce-Lu.sin1 .....,.,.1.1 l...ll:U~~ca.--OML Y = lot c.,.,.-_ '80roo1Pr1etudt/f. auto, 12t~· M21~~Bl·~ A RollllloJft BMW • In m CMI, •· .-nu-•u_ 1148Jambone ~.tJS=•tft.1pm, COSTA MW Henortllldl .............. c:.rL tOIMI. 9I08/ofr . .1·••m1 Wbat a Wtndlrful World ot SboP"'*•· n•bt at yoar fllltrapa •••r1· do! DllllJ Piiot Clulltled ~. To place 1tW Id, t•U tu ....... ~Ad· Vllor belp )'M. COMNEll CHEVROLET .'101 J l,.rhur HI' <l c c tiT ·\ ~H:SA 546-1200 5 199~,~D ~QW,~ LICENSE , DELIVERS AMY MEW OR USED VEHICLE IM STOCK • HEW IM CALIF.? unuORMo CIEDIT7 • SHORTOM DOWN,._ YMEHT7 • MEW OH YOUR JOI? • MILITAIY7 SLOW CRB>IT HISTORY? 2919 175203 1972200 169 3 300 1980 PINTOS 7/47 186867 2761 186674 2467 162065 5860900 1849400 1804400 '831500 1981 FAIRMOMTS 0108 117623 1811300 17 I 4800 0177 123025 1707500 0550 171381 '777100 00 0520 167761 '660600 1599900 1981 LTD'S 0097 0631 0153 106118 126476 109767 71~1 700082 116363 732748 1972 FORD PINTO Eov·oM•"' ·AC"'"#" on 1~., f.E'cno ... • .. 1"100'111tOn ~·~ I *4loO f'Wlt \11 ffltA U .. ' ""O'I 11J6391t ,Sa-oe69.\ r,,•il .,,, '&-a'1AI><• IC)t O"~ 51695 1974 DODGE DI 00 PICKUP E~~·~'''*1 ,.. VI "'9"'t __ .,....,.,. or.Slol4!11s" P•21Tl 52595 1978 FORD FIESTA E~oment on M ._, O'*' &t\lttf •"<...,.._ • ,. IQIHd 1ran.t"'h ... O'\ and • rid.a £ co~ef ann _.,..., C8S!1 .. I IS'<_.,__, 1978FORD COURIER PICKUP .,.,.....,,. ........ _, __ .""' ~ io. -_,., & -· c»•ODIJ ~ OOlAT) 53695 1980DATSUM 310 HATCHIACK ,__ ..... ~ ...... ·-_4'WW_..,._.. . .,._, -Ollll\I 54795 1 11.51000 1990900 110,40500 'i07700 '10.115" 1884900 '8213" 18038" '8127" 1972 FORD LTD II WAGON llloo,., 'O' r • •" ~ • ,.,. , Aw! "1• lll~r\Hfl"'ll ~ _,.,. "'"ij pr-.,,. t.;.~jlll~ •-'1•V W\J(;•tlf II('• • ""~:Wf ~1~1. <:1. PM.. .. ,, .. 'Of~ 1977 PL YMO\I rH VOL.ARE WAGOH c;.._,,.. t-,1 _ .. ........,.,< .. _ ::: .. -:;:, ::..~·,:-t11.n:· 52795 r'79FORD PIMT02 DOOR fqu~~ lil"IC'udll In k °"°"'o(• l)lt '*'~0 A cy11,,... "'II .... """'' ,..,.., • .., .. "'d -· 12,1>00119111. 1'4'011 53195 . 1979DODGE ' OMHI , 4cyl ........ ._,._ 4M"M--•-9 .... ......, , .... _ C'"°IGI "" l'•Ja • 53995 1971 FOID • F2 50 414 PICKUP ( 111-............. -. ...... ...... ._._c_...,..,....,.,....,, ... 1-.ICSA•*t "->Hl · 55995 .i: ' ..; :~ • .) " ~· . . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /WednHday, July 8, 1981 GIANT SELECTIONI FABULOUS SAYINIS ON CARS TO FILL YOUR EVERY NEEDI BRAND NE 1981 CHRYSLER ... _. ......... -NEW YORKER SEDAN $2000 OFF MANUFACTURER'S RETAIL STICKER PRICE loeoedl fQu•pt1Wnt tnclvoet \ii, aUlt!OnWtic tr~ au cond1Hontng, detU1.• wfnd•h1eld ••P•r•. body 110. mo4d1r,p , power 1te~1no & br••••. v~oetJne. dU!M ••de mtrl'Of'I., 1NM•n•111Ca tr• b9'19ty, body lldl a ~ood lltl-iun<ool ......, _ bOOr Mitt--· -· ... , & -locl<a AM·FM ·-.. ltt --_... & <lee-·-t~t -· --......0 ·-"'9 -pMded LMtda.u Vtnyil f'ool 'Mt'9 ..... CXJ¥Wa. ,.., ... ,., .. ' """"' (11211>'1 ............... ~ ,.,, OflCO -11J.•1 (I) PLUS •• • CHOOSE FROM ONE --..F ORANGE COUNTY' ~I LARG,EST INVENTORIE ~ -.OFTOPCi)UALITY ~I USED CARS! ........ •111.Mlll. m.1• • Equ ip ment lncludH 4 cyl. engine, twin ttlck 4 •P•~d trent., body tide moldlngt, radio, Whffl trim rlng1. wtw tlrft & morel (501167). 1•1 "'""'" 6 .... 9 • c~'~"fAC1peeo Irani .. max . coollng, bucket teats With fold down rear seat. tinted glass, elec. clock, body side moldings, radial tires & morel 108773 . IUMDMIW 1•1 Pl.YWITll lbJMT 2 -Equipment includes 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans.. left remote m i rror , ma x . cooling. bench seat, body side moldi ngs. w sw radi al tires & morel (145687). IUMDMIW 1•1 Pl.YMOUlll IUAlfT •AC.ON Equipment I ncludes 4 cyl engine, 4 speed trans .. bench seat. max . cooling , body sid e moldings. radial tires & more• (172999). MAMDMIW 1•1 CHIYSlEI I UIMOM2R 6 cyl. engi ne . automatic trans .• max. cooling. power steering & brakes. bench seat. metalli c paint. body side str i pes & moldings. radial tires & morel (161766). NAMDMIW 1•1 Pl.YMllTII t AlllWPllUP Equ i pment Includes 4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans.. rear step bumper. wheel trim rings. mud guards. body side moldings. bench seat, 18 gallon fuel lank & more • ~1129). MAMDMIW 1•1 cmst0 A "'91'2. • Equipment i ncludes V8 . automatic trans , power steering & brakes, bucket seats. body side & deck stripe, wsw radi al ti res & more! (136529). IAAMDMIW 1•1 PlYIMTH . 6 wrm f a 9 llDIYCM Equipment Includes 4 cyl. engine. S speed trans .. power steering & brakes, bucket seats. road wheel package. rad ia l tires & morel (502026) 18AMDMIW 1•1 Pl.Ymfll • mAGOYMI 9 Equ i pment Includes V8, auto. trans .. bucket seata, 36 gal. fuel tank, radio, pwr. steering & brakes. radial tires, max. cooling, t inted glass & much morel (258429). -------- - ----~.......----...--.... ------.-10-........ --··------··-~-·~·,..-- SH OUR SHV1CI DEPAltTMINT AIOUT RIHTIHG A '11 CHRYSLll OR PLYMOUTH. .... ··-······ t' ...... ,. I ' • , .. • -4 -.. • • * • • Yllll lllRlll llllY PIPIR WEDNESDAY . JULY 8 1981 ORAN GE COUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS added to Crystal Cove fund· 1 By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL °' .. ....., ........... SACRAMENTO -Orange County, its issues and its representatives, were much in the spotlight Tuesday as the Legislature moved to wrap up a backlog of work here before starting a month-long summer recess. In the Assembly, bills were passed to the Senate that would : -Increase by $1 million the amount of money available for the development of Crystal Cove State Park on the coastline between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar. -Create a new division of the Fourth District Court of Appeal that would be based in Orange County. The closest division ol the court now is located in San Bernardino. -Add one judge to the 46-member Orange Co'unty Superior Court bench. The state Judicial Council said 11 a dditional positions were needed. In the Senate, action was taken on a bill that would permit consolidati on of the court-related functions of the Orange County Sheriff's Department and Ma r s ha l 's Office. The bill, authored by Sen. Paul Carpenter, D-Cypress, will be in direct competition with differln1 merger legislation previously 'approved by the Assembly. Under a bill authored by Assemblywoman Marian Ber1e1on, R-Newport Beach, money generated from residential leases at Crystal Cove and Moro Cove will be placed in the budget of the state Parks and R ec reation Department for park development. The park land was purcbued by the state at a cost of $32 million, makin1 it the state's most expenalve park buy. Included are 1,898 acres of land located west of Pacific Coaat Highway and in Moro Canyon or north of Laguna Beach. Le1islalion authored by Assemblyman Richard Robinson, D-Garden Grove. if passed by the Senate and 1igned by Gov. Edmund G. Brown lr .. would bring four appeals court judges to the county. Tbe 1981-82 state budeet, previously 1igned by Brown, calls for 15 new appeals court judges statewide. Robinson's bill contains a proviso that money to purchase law books and equipment for the appeals court comes from local funds or private donations. (See RECESS, Page AZ> Two Ne ort boys die in cave-in ......................... Newport Beach lifeguards and parap:iedics work on beach at West Newport in vain effort. to revive two youngsters. 'Trespassing' charged Jury begins second day of deliberations on airport noise Juron wbo are to determine wlwtber jet.a trom John Wa,yne Airport .... ''tnlputlnl'' ..... uae, fb ewer llomes In SaDta ~aa lfei1bta and Newport .. Hla, Ms• a Meoad daJ ol ........... ...,. TW )Iv wu ne•HCI 'IWI· .., ...... folloWtq~ ar1•.-. ID tM 10-wMk-Gia UM 18 wllkla a poup ol ..... .... allelltbef ..,. ...... ........ dlltrw from ld&Yltr at the airport, operated bJ tbe Oran~t.J JOYerDment. Al • people an lulaa operatcn ~ tbe alrport, .. 0r...,. County Superior Court Jada• Raymond Vlaeent told tbe JU1'J to examine tbe euea Ol anly n .. people. -TIM ftn~1•a&lffa ....... M are RM obn, Pauf Ku!:i SdWiD Hall, Jsrr Dal..._ Sdward 0 .... AU are Ne.,art r•lden&a acept Hall no ,. aides in the Hellh\a area. Vlneent aakl be narrowed the neld to llmpll(J tbe Jury'• t.IA but added tlYll t.be Jury'• de· etalon could 1erve •• a ''benc:bmark'' for computhi1 compmaaUoD fot otller plala- Wh. Jer~•• rade•, , ... 1aat1 Monica attorHJ ,..,,......... tller..W '1,Wd.....,.a..,... Diil ................ ...... ( .. AIUGllt' ..... Al) . \ HE SENSED TROUBLE Michael Slade Father given probation in child sale try A man who offered his child for sale at an Orange County restaurant bas been placed on three years' probation after pleading 1uilty to a misde- meanor charge of child en· dangerment. Described by bis defense at· ·tomey as bein& mentally W but bearln1 no malice, Randy Gordon Wilson, 29, Tuesday wu released from Oranae County Jail where he bad been held in custody for 37 days foUowtnc bis arreat: Wilson was cbar1ed witb felonv child endaqerment after hl1 arrest b? OranJe County SberlH'a Departtnent deputin who claimed be att.mpted to sell or live away bil tblD 7· week-old daucbter, Katbl .... The cbUd It now Uvtna mdel' the care ~ a maternal aUlll ln Loulliana. 'nte child'• m.._, ii Uvhl1 nearby but cto. not ban cu1toc11 ol tbe lnlut. Wlllon plaided pllt1 to tbe red•oecl ....... DOI' .... aa part ol a •lotl•W ..W.. mat 11111'0...S .., 8oUlll ~ ~ ....... Court, .... J•Grtmn. l Tunnel collapses By STEVE MARBLE Of tlle IHllY ...... , .... Two Newport Beach boys died Tuesday evening after a tunnel they were digging in a sand em- bankment near the ocean caved in on them, leaving them buried for at least 30 minutes. Authorities identified the boys as 12-year-old Jeffrey Reinker and Russel Mark Beaumont, 14. Both were pronounced dead at Hoag Memorial Hospital shortly before 8 p.m. According to police, the two youngsters had left their homes earlier in the evening to play in the sand close to S9th Street in West Newport. Several witnesses reported seeing the boys digging the tun· nel in the 4-foot-high embank· ment close to the water's edge. Police, thou1h. were unable to find any witnesses who saw the tunnel collapse. Michael Slade, a 20-year-old Newport resident who was play- ing paddlebalJ on the beach with his girlfriend, said he sensed trouble when he beard one of the boys' parents start screamin1. Police said they were told the parents were walking down the beach looking for their son when they saw a leg protruding from the sand. ''I ran over there and started digging right by the leg and helped get the first boy out," ex- plained Slade. "It took only ·a couple of seconds. Then I ran to my ho use and called t he paramedics." Slade said the secood boy was unearthed by the time Slade re- turned to the beach. He estimat- ed that both boys were buried in about two feet of sand. He said it took less than a minute to pull them out. .. I know CPR so I started giv- ing them mouth-to-mouth," Slade recounted . "But they weren't breathing at all. Their faces were blue." By the time paramedics ar- rived, several surfers had propped up their surfboard to hold back water that was creep- ing in with the Ude. Slade said a medical doctor who lives in West Newport and was jogging in the area also s howe d up and provided paramedics with assistance and drugs that were used in the at- tempts to revive the boys. A vacationing couple from Missouri, Steve and Cheryl Lowell, also joined in the re- s u scitation efforts before paramedics arrived. Police said paramedics worked on the boys roughly 10 minutes before transportin1 them to Hoa1 Hospital where they were pronounced dead about 20 minutes after arrival. Newport authorltJea said they believe it is the flnt time anyone bas died from aucb an acci~t ln the beach city. Lut March. they aaid, a 13- year-old Newport boy waa burled for 10 minute• when a bank ~the Santa Ana River coJ. lapsed where be bad been di1· ctna. \ . \ \Costa l \Mesa I \ j \ I . . \ l-., -· .New !Beach I i SITE OF DOUBLE TRAGEDY 59th Street Beach O'Connor selection supported WASIUNGTON CAP) -With praise across the political spec- trum , Sandra D . O'Connor seems headed for easy Senate confirmation to take "her place in history" as the first woman ever oo the U.S. Supreme Court. From the moment President Reagan's choice or the 51-year- old Arizona appeals judge was announced Tuesday. senators applauded her legal credentials as "brilliant" and "eminently well qualified " and hailed Reagan's fulfillment of a cam- paign pledge to appoint a woman justice. Republican leaders promised to heed Reagan's request for swift confirmation .. so that as soon as possible she may take her seat on the court. and her <See COURT, Page AZ> Services hel,d for lwo hero WASHlNGTON <AP> -Rene A. Gagnon, who as a teen-aged Marine took part in a flag. raising on lwo Jima that was captured in the most famous photograph from World War II, was buried in Arlington National Cemetery. a few hundred yards from the statue that com - memorates the event. Gagnon died Oct. 12, 1979, of a heart attack at age 54 and his body wa s placed in a Manchester, N.H .. mausoleum after his widow. Pauline, was told he did not meet eligibility standards for burial in Ar- lington. He had not died in service, been a career soldier, won major decorations or been a top federal official. • ·111111 CUil lllTilll Fair through Thursday but low clouds nlgbt and mornlnJ hours. Highs 74 to 77. Lows 86 to 70. ;111111T•Y 1 I• a fear of ~ holding women back ht America? Sn Po(le All. 11111 I I Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT /WednHday, July 8, 1981 .• ' Arizona Judge Sandra O'Connor, Prendnat Reagan'• choice for tlw Supreme Court, ii 1hot.on with ... '' 0 · family. From left are sona Brian, Scott and JOfl, and hutband John J. O'Connor Ill. '• " " ·. .1 From Page A1 COURT. • place in history." Jt may be Sep· lember , however, before hear· ings begin. Public opposition came from the fundamentalist group Moral Majority and the National Right to Life Committee, both normal· ly Reagan allies, which bitterly questioned Mrs. O'Connor's rec· ord on abortion and vowed to try to defeat the nomination. But Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, a leading Republican conservative, said anyone who wants to fight Mrs. O'Connor's confirmation will have to fight him. At a news confere nce in Phoenix, Mr s. O 'Conn or declined to answer questions on abortion and other substantive issues pending the confirmation process. But deputy White House press secrelary La,rry Speakes said she is truly against abortion, and Reagan said be was "com· pletely satisfied'" on the matter. From Page Al AIRPORT. • • figure to be awarded lo his clients. From Page A1 RECESS FOLLOWS BILLS ... Those coats could total S300,000, accordln1 to the Auembly Office of Research. · The 1tate'1 coat of providint the Judtes and support staff and other expe nses would total $440,000 dwinl the tint year ol operation, the office said. Robinson dre w boos and hisses when noted that tbe judicial councll recommended 11 new positions on the superior court bench. The Assembly, however , vot ed 56 to 14 to approve the addition of one post. The new position would not be c r e ated until n ext July 1. Further, it was specified in the blll that the position only be created by reducing by one the numbe r of juve nil e court com missioners. As a result of Senate passage of Carpenter's court functions merger bill, the stage has been set for a showdown with the Assembly 'over the Assembly·approved merger bill authored by Mrs. Bergeson. Carpenter's bill provides that judges would determine how to consolidate the court functions of the shenrrs department and marshal's office if the countv Strapless romper. white or. lilac. S.M·L S23.00. White V-neck romper with crochet tram sized S·M·L. S2 8 .00 Matching vest $24.00 Sized S·M·L print short romper with tie shoulders. 3 prints with swimwear to match. $24.00 Board of Supervisors made a determination the move would 1a ve money . It bas been estimated by county offlclals that about Sl million could be 'Cold spo~' gets the heat INTERNATIONAL FALLS, Minn . CAP> -Air conditioners and bathing suits have been pressed into battle against an un· expected beat wave in this town, where bitter cold temperatures have established a nationwide re· putation and a cold spot in American's heart. International Falis, which is near the Canadian border, is almost a fixture on weather maps during winter, but this week it's stretching its mercury to new bei~hts. After reaching a record · breaking 97 degrees Monday, it was 93 here Tuesday , just 3 degrees short of the record for the day. saved If the two operations were merged. Mrs. Beraeson's le1lslation - which has the support of the county -would c reate a flve·member panel made up of two supe.rviaors, two Judces and a fifth mutually aareed upon member who would recommend a merger package . Carpenter's bill has support or a s tate wide marshal 's organization; Mrs. Bergeson'• does not. Phone rates to go up 3% SAN FRANCISCO (AP)- General Telephone's customer bills w\11 go up three percent as a result of approval by the state Public Utilities Commission of a $13.5 million rate hike. The PUC said Tuesday the in· crease will recover the costs of $100 million in mortgage bonds, and the contemplated issuance of $275 million of long-term debt and preferred stock this year. lomp into S&&mmCP ••• VVith our fun. gcranywhere rompers. See our great selection. including styles shown at B idwell's Boutique "I won't tell you how much," he said to the jury. "That's for youtodecide.~~·syour~b." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Fadem told jurors that the county is playing "Russian roulette" with people living un· der the airport's takeoff pattern. 3-467 Via lido. Newport Beach 673-4510 • Parking Lot ntrance Supreme CouTt ;u.tice-detignate Sandra D. O'Connor poled for her photo°' mrior clau preticlent at Stanford University (above) .. when &he 1008 Sandra Day, in 1950. Photot below at Stanford are 1948 (left) and two from 1950. :.; Prosecutor targets 1.Robbins witnesses · ·. SACRAMENTO (AP) -State ; Sen. Alan Robbins' prosecutor is i' hoping that la s t ·minute , , testimony by a documents ex· : pert and an attorney will dis· . · credit two key alibi witnesses in :• Robbins' sex·with·mlnon trial. !( Tuesday's appearances by j state documents examiner Lyle 'I Fowler ·and Riverside lawyer Al· ! ten Falsetti came as defense and · prosecution attorneys appeared ;! to be close to wrapping up their cases. lJ Co mpletion of tes timony i would clear the way for final I arguments and jury deliberation I in the six-week trial. i Fowler, who works for the state Justice Department, said be found erasures 9n a cruc.lal date in Assemblyman Bruce Young's 1979 appointment book. But Fowler also aald there II were numerous erasures j OAA GECOAST Daily Pilat ThomelP Ha .. y ~-C!Mll_Olf_ RobertN,WHd ,.,.... M. Thomaa Keevlt ldl40r MlehMI P. Hervey --.,Ow-* L. !Cay Schultz ~-~ Ktnnett'I N Goddard Jr. ~~ Them• A Murphlne .......... ._ S.nerd SChulman c.... • QwWH LOOI ............... , ..... C.OI A Moon• .__...., e lsewhere in the book, and Young denied altering the key entry to aid Robbins' defense. "I. recall the meetint," the Cerritos Democrat said. "I did not erase the book. I am telling the truth." He said bis secretary took care of the book and erasures were common. Fowler was asked to examine the entries In Young's book for March 20, 1979, after Deputy District Attorney Albert Loeber s aid there appeared to be erasures and new entries on that date. Thal may be the day Robbins allegedly aave Lori Terwilllaer a $100 bill to buy a birth control device. Youn1 said he was meet· Int with Robbins on March 20 at the time Robbins supposedly eave Ms. TerwUUcer the bill. He said r esidents have "serious and legitimate" con· cern for airport safety and the possibility of a jet crash. L~uis Goebel, one of the private attorneys representing the county, challenged Fadem's remarks and suggested be was exaggerating the safety issue. Fadem went on to reiterate testimony from several wit· nesses who made cJajms that jet nolse interrupts sleep, family conversations and r esults in stress. Pulling a rubber band in bis hands until it snapped, Fadem said residents also are enduring stress and pressure to the ··breaking point.'' "People feel trapped in their homes, they feel e mbarrassed when they have friends over and they feel like fools for believing county supervisors," Fadem told the jury In the hour-long closing argument. He said a number of plainlilfs had received written and verbal promises from individual supervisors that jet activily at the airport would not increase. Goebel, though, said be had found no evidence in his ques· llonlng and research of any such promises. Fadem said the county is gull· ty of trespass by flying jets over homes. He said the county also Is guilty of negligence by permitting the continued opera· lion of the airport and by allow· ing private jets to "take off ail hours or the day. "It's negligent to allow some playboy going off to Las Vegas for the evening to disturb bun· dreds, even t housand s of persons." Goebel stated that the county was not net1i1ent and bad agreed to certain rules such u limiting dally takeoff• and en- f orclng curfews for the benefit or realdents. · Tbe lawsuit bad its firlt Mt· back earlier thls week when Vln· cent ruled that residents could not collect damacea from the county on the allegation that Jet noise haa devalued~property. Tbe emot1onal dl1trus claim ls 1lmllar to a law1ult won th1I year by homeownen llvin& near Loi Anaelea International Airport. In that case, the 'U.S. Supreme Court upheld a lower court rul· Ins that Nltdefttl be COIDpeDNt. ed for emoUooaJ UUurJ . P'adHD WH the attotney repre.-tlftl UM homeowners In that cue. • • Now is the time "Our Summer Sale'' is in full swing! --.... - All of our quality lines are reduced for this event. Special orders are also drastically reduced. Stop in soon for the best selections. , ! t -......... Jon "Clipper" Hagerty, right, Gloria "Pfttnfl' Wtnltta, and Kfrbsl "Slctl Kmg" Grom. 1tor1 of tM 1950'1 popular teln>l.non """'·ore m.ftted /or tM first time in 25 JIC'Of'• on ABC'• "Good Morning America." Mayor to seal promise in pool Mayor William Donald Schaefer of Baltimore often wields the official seal but next week he's going to be the official seal. ·Last January, the mayor said if the $21 million dollar National Aquarium did not open on schedule July 3 he would jump In the seal tank So, when aquarium of f1cials, blaming some minor problems in adjusting the facility's life-support system. put the dale back lo August R, the mayor was put in a position of having to sink or !>wim with his promise. Schaefer says he plans to go ahead with the dip into the 10.000.gallon seal pool It's scheduled July 15 Singer Larry Gatlln invit· ed another , less famous Larry Gatlin to a picruc to make up for the inconve nienc e or sharing the Gatlin name. Gatlin. known for s uch coun· try music ruts as "All the GATUN G o I d i n California" and "Broke n Lady." read in a Nash ville news paper that the other Larry Gatlin was bothered at all hours by phone calls from people wanting to speak to the famous singer So the s in ger invited the other Gatlin. a lumber company manager, to a picnic on the s inge r 's farm south of Nashville Doris Loh, de throned as Mi ss Hong K o ng 1981 because !.he ri bbed about her age. said she won't appeaJ the decision by the pageant's organizers. Miss Loh. 25, said she 1s sorry for the problems she caused, blaming the incident partly on an erroneous birth certifi cate issued by govern- m ent officials in Hong Kong. The condition or convalesc· ing singer Jerry Lee Lewis was upgraded from critical to serious. but he was kept in intensive care while he re- cuperated from emergency stomach surgery A spoke s w o man at Methodist Hospital South said Lew1s, 45, would stay in the intensive care unit serveral more days Montanans bundle up Sn owstor m hits Glacier Park; tornadoes stri ke Texas Co asta l f o rPrast f'alr tlvougn rr.urws.y Coattat -.. ,,,,_ .. c-..i 111911 11, ,,,,_ 17 Et-Nr•. 119111 v•rl•OI• .. tndl tonlthl •nd Tttursctey morning WIMS durtnv •11•rnoon llO•ifl Tllur\- day •nl lo "°"'"-" 10 lo 1• k""l> .. 1111 1 10 • 1-••vu SoutNHI s .. •llS 1 10 l Nel ~ C-IM~I nl9111 and mornl"V '~"' bKomlnv per11y \\WIV durl"1j •fl•r,_ Tllur1- d•y V.S. sitnima ry Wiiiie high ~r•turn Olhlered Ill• Hort1Wr11 Pl•lnt. worloen •t Mo1t1•ft•'' Gf•c.ler P•rk were ....,,clllne ""-4mt • ~IOf'm - thunderitorm1 wtre \O•wni"O lorn-In Tu•• Wloel' ic:ettered Ul-rsl0tm• •e re t ape<led locl•y •<rOU I ... Gre•I Pl91111 •nd Ille MIUIUIPC>I 11•11••· $llower1 were predicted for norlllern H•w En9l•11d •11d Ille nor111ern Palfle cooost, wt.lie .....,.., 1kle1 were forec•1t over lht '°"111••,l«n •Ulln and the HSlern llllrd ol tM """on In tlle Northern Pl•ln•. lemo-r••-Tllftdey ,..,..., 110 II\ toma .,_ •-'••. • """" •• 10 IMl!Hof .,_ lell lft Gled ... P•n , in nort--.ta,.., eflCI wind• 9 Ulltd to 90 mpll In 11111 llltller ...... , loM .. 1119 Mrk. Te mpe ratures MATIOtf "' L.e ~ • 60 o ••• JKUnvll• K•nt City L•SV .... little Aocll LMAnQielet L.Oul1vlll• Mampl\ls Ml•MI 11111 .... u. """''St P HHY,,llle H•wOrlffn! He .. Yo,., Honot• Okla City St lowt• St P ·Tampe SISt•~rle 5-•M T•• Wetll.....,. CM.IPOtlMI& ..... ,,,...., lly- eu .. ll• l'rHllO lMi<-•llff ~rys•lllt Mon'9,.y N ...... O•k..,,. P-A~ R•d Blufl R"--Oty S.C:ra...-o •• c ....... S.llnas S.nt.a a.--. Stockton 100 IJ TIWrm•I .. IJ Ullah 107 .. .. ,.,_ " 74 a11 e • ., '° 11 811"°9 '° 14 l kArr-n ,. L-IH<ll .. 7t Monr°"le • 11 Ht•por1 IMKl'I " ,. Ontario to II P•I"' Sl>flno> 9S 74 Sen 8er...,.dlno " 11 Sent.a,.,.. to n .. ,, 01 tO ,. n 11 .. M .. 11 .. J! .., " 110 tt ts ts " ,, ,.. ,, .. to • tO I) " ,, 107 .. '°' .. .. IS to t1 ,. u 110 u .. .. .. " • u 71 5' ,.. -• ,.. 71 " ,. !O u -" u • SI 60 SS •I u .. .. to .. .. Alt.rnoon 1119"1 -.. to o. i11 1he 70. In Ille ~~ and .. _ - Pe<lll< CMst, wt.lie t"9 rnt of N>lloft WH to ,,.,,. l• ...... retv••• In Ult .. end'°' 'llbeny """''"'° &IMvllle " .. Omaha u .. Orl•ndO " 11 S1t11, lllOOll, tides .. 74 On T-v. ,,..,., 111...-rstorm• Ill lM TeMI P.,,,..ndle _,_ a lorf\41do ..... IN IO-Of O.•n - OOfl·bell \iJe i..11-Her-cl. A llHll ,_ .... <h continued 111 t lfec1 for portlom of toU11'1-Cefttr•I TUH Dtlily r 1tot Dtti•trt h G--'ttd Mono1y fud1y II .,.ou (JQ "'-1' h..h'f'! ~ o.>et t>y • 3U o "' c.•H tJiefor .. 1 0"' Ind VO-,, U, w-•U ~ d-Ah~e<) SafufO•Y 1no ~rnJly 11 you l1o not 1ece1ve 10v' C.OPY Dy ' a'" ~I btfOfe 10 • m •~ vou, cc•py •If~ det•vttt.0 All•nl• 'lll•nl< Cly 8•1tlmore B1rm1.....,,_ lllsmarclo 801 ... Bost°" Browns vii• Buff•lo C,..r11tnSC Cllarl1t11WV Cheyenne Clll<- C lllC lnn4ll 1 Ctevetend Colum- Otl·Ft Wth Denver 0.1Molnet Detroit Ovtuth H•rtford ..... ,.. Honoh11u HO<lst°" -----------lndftapll• fl IS " n to 11 t1 II 101 .. ., 40 •• 11 • ,, 03 13 ll t4 to .... U SI ,, 11 n n . ., " .. to ,. " .. 22 • 7J tl 10 .. ,, t3 70 70 42 .02 " IS .. ,. 11 " n We'Te Listening ••• What do you like about the Daily Pilot? Wh at don't you like? Call the number below and your message will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answering service m ay be used to record letters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include. their name and telephone number for verification. No circul ation calls, please. Tell us what's on your mind. 642•6086 $~1 004 b whet you con save on voc.otlon lodglng ov~t th• next 20 year.. 1f you ore now spending $1 ,000 f0< o two week vocotlon (ossurntng o 10% lrtfladon rote) HOW? W1(h Tim.-Shortng. o dromotle ldeo that enoblel you co own o slice of prim• vocation time rede•moble at hunchds of luxury resons in Col"omlo ond around the world Time-Sharing comblnti oil the odvontoges of owning Phll•d!IN• 91 11 p,_,.,. 10. .. TOOAY Plll1bur9'1 II •1 s.c oncl 11¢ 4 JO p m . 4 l Pll•nd,Me .. .. S.<oncl '-10 S1 pm 1 I Piiand, Ore .. •1 01 THURSDAY A•plcl City 10. St l'lr111110" 4.11 • m . J4 Reno II 4J Firtt low 10 U • m . I 4 Rich...-., Tl S.concl 1119" S lip m 4. Salt '-•Ila .. S4 Sun MO I 07 pm , r11~ T11unci.y San Ot.9o ,. Saft ,.,.,. 1S S.•tue u 10 S •t •.m 51 Moon sell 12 SS •.m. Tl111rMl•Y. 41 rlWS I J9 p"' Thurwo SURf RIPDRT T-y·1 AYW/lillla. 1-1 1·J M J.J 1 2 1·2 I l ·J 1·2 1 , I t .., ..... ....... -lelr , .. , , .. , -----poor ---- A• ..... T ..... 10 .. .. .. .. .. •2 u ., .. .. .. It's time YQU COl~ In for o lifetime of guaranteed IOW•COSt fvJtury voc.ottoiu. Coll lnternotlonol l\esort Shoring, Centerpolnt• 1. IMM (714) 75~~121 Cell now ... ---~ ------1----~~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 H IF Commuter airline OK'd County grants Imperial five daily f lights from airport A eecond commuter alrllne has been granted authortty to serve the John Wayne Airport ln Oranee County. The County Board of Supervisors agreed Tuesduy to allow Imperial Airlines to make four flichts per day to Los Ancetes lnternatlonal Airport and one to its home base in Carlsbad. I m perial wil l fly Brazlltan· m ade 18-passenger Bandelrante twin..engine turbo-prop aircraft and will temporarily use the facHities a nd crew of rival Golden West Airlines. However, Imperial vice presi- dent Mark Harmon said Tue~ day hls company hopes to set up its owo operations at John Wayne ln about five months. l mperial's introduction -its first flights are scheduled for Friday -will create a head-to head competition between the two commuter lines flying Into Los Angeles. Harmon said hJs airline will charge $31 for a one-way trip. Golden West, whic h runs 17 flights per day from John Wayne, charges $34 Neither of the two airlines' flights is caJculated in the coun ty's allowable limit of 41 aver age daily commerclaJ jet departures because their plu.nes are not c·cms1dcred n011>y enough to m ake a difference to airport ne1~hbors . "You don't hl·or our planes when they cornt• in or leave," s aid Harmon 1 mperial was started as a charter company 14 years ago and began expanding three years ago, Jfarmon said. Its primary route 1s between San Diego and Los Angeles The a1rlint.• currently uses fi ve of tls year old Bandeirantes and has rive other commuter·sized aircraft on order. llarmon said Moguls gather in woods 'Greatest men's party' will attract p ickets SAN F'ANCISCO (AP)-The Bohemian Club, whose mem- bership includes th e rich and mighty up to the president of the United States, begins its annual two week encampment in the redwoods Friday. described by Herbert Hoover as "the greatest men's party on earth." C lub president Mi chael Coonan said some 2,000 men - the club has no female members will gather al the Bohemian Grove 60 miles north of here out· side the Russian River town of Monte Rio for the a nnual l'elreat. Besides Pres ident Reagan, the d ub's m embers hip include!. Vice President George Bush. Defense Secretary Caspar Wein berger, Attorney General William Frenc h Smith and Senate Foreign Relations Com mittee Chairman Charles PC'rcy, R-111 Past encampments have been attended by former presidenti. R1t'hard Nixon and Cerald Ford <1!. ~t'll a:-Secret:.iry of State Alexander lf:.i1g lnrlustrwl titani. 1n the con servall\t>ly orit•ntt•d club re portt>dl~ 1ncludt• Leonard K F1re:-.tone, World Bank Presi dent A W Clausen and JLV>ltn Darl of Dart lnduslnes Club offtc1:.ils l'onf1rmed that Rt•agan and Bus h would not at- tt•nd. but no list v.as a\a1lable of those expected to come State hacks tough The romµ in tht· rt•dwoods al- lows captains of industry and he:.tds of government lo let their hair do~n a \\ay from the pres sures of C\'t•r~ dav life The en campmenl fraturl's an opening ritual with the burning of an cf r1io on an altar. a stage ex travaganza known simply as the Grov(• Pia) and a display of buf foonery caltt>d "l,ov. Jinks" • 01easures on cr11ne SACRAMENTO (AP > - Speeding toward summer vaca· lion. the Legislature has ap- proved a passel of anti-crime bills, including one to toughten pen allies for drunken driving. The Assembly moved at a speedy pace, passing hundreds of bills Monday and Tuesday to adjourn early for its five.week recess. There was little debate on any items The Senate kept at its usual slower speed and planned to work today as well before quil- ting The recess was scheduled lo begin Friday. Lawmakers re- turn lo Sacramento Aug. lO and adjourn for the year on Sept. 15. The crime bills approved by t he Assembly did not include the controversial measure that would raise the state six cent sa1es tax by a penny for one year to raise money for prisons, jails and law enforcement . T he author, Assemblyman T e rry Goggin , D -San Bernardino, said he would wait until August before moving his AB246 and ACA32. which are de- signed to go on the July 1982 ballot. The d r unken drivin g bill, A8541 , would "make California's the stiffest laws in the nation," said the author, As- semblywoman Jean Moorhead, D-Sacramento Currently, a person convicted of a first drunken driving of- fense could get a 48-hour jail sentence. which could be SWI· pended. This biJJ would make it a mandatory 48-hour jail sen- tence or a 90·day driver's license suspension. A second offense now brings a 48-hour jail sentence, which can rarely be suspended. The bill Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRIES Cntif1Pd Gemologlll. AGS GARNET Noah's light? It is said that Noah hung a large garnet in the ark for light. Whether or not that is true , lt ls certain that t h is lovel y gemstone has served m anldnd down through the ages. The ancient Egyptians considered it to be a perfect antidote for snaket>ite or food poisonln1. Ta ken to bed. it was supposed to protect a s leep er f rom nightmares, and It wH uld that, it one dreamt of 1unet, it m eant that a great m yatery wo ul d soo n b e 1olved . Nowad ays, aarnet la a sometimes-overlooked source of great beauty ln Jewelry. Thoulb most people tMnJt ot camel u a red stone that ii not quite Q colorM u lhe ruby, tbere are gor1eous specim~ that are 1 deep, clear 1reen. lD tact, these 1re t he m os t va l u able tpet lmens ol 11.met . But carnet come. ln almo9t every color but blue. 'Ibll ii beeaUM lt la m lde t.ip of variom 1nlnera1 elements, ad UM u act compoe.lUon ol a 1pectnc specimen decides that 1Pffl 8*' •• colot. would increase that to either 10 days in jail, a fine and a onP year li cense suspension. or two days in jail, a fme and a one year alcohol treatment program and license sus pension The bill was .!.ent to the Senate' by a 72·0 vote Senate OKs notification on abortion SACRAMENTO <AP> -Doc- tors would be required to notify parents of unmarried girls un der 18 before pei-forming an abortion on that child under a bill approved by the state Senate Tuesday Sen. John Schmitz. author of SB154, said he dropped earlier provistons of the bill requiring parentaJ consent, adding that he believed notifying parents "has basically the same effect." Arguing that parents should at least be notified that a teen-age daughter is seeking an abortion, Schmitz. R·Newport Beach . said abortions and veneral disease treatment should not be treated differently than other medical care for minors. ''To get a band-aid in school. you need parental consent But somehow the pro abortion peo pie have gotten this major ex em ption through, .. Schmitz com plaine<t Sen. Diane Watson . D·Los Angeles. crit icized Schmitz' measure as "a little offensive " But no other senator spoke either for or against the bill before a quick 23·3 vole sending it to the Assembly The 109 year·old t'lub has held its annual outing sin ce the turn of lhe centur~. but in recent years hai. run into cnt1c1sm b> activist and kminist groups. On Friday . for the second s traight )t•ar pickets will iine the route lt•ading from Santa Rosa airport 35 mile.., to the cast . wh£>re mo!.l 11f the guc:s ts "'ill a r rive from throughout the coun- tr\' "To the µublt c:. thl' Bohemians are s1mpl) enJo~ mg a retreat from the can·::. of ;iuthorit~ and responsibil1t~ · In reality. this encampment is a location of con- venience where these m en make polic) decisions and sus· lain contacts that often have catastrophi c effects on our daily lives." s aid Tom Ri chman . s pokes man for 25 groups com· prising thl' Bohemian Club Ac· lion Network A group of anti nuclear dem- onstrators will greet guests at t he gates of the Grovl'. said H1chman Coonan said the• Bohemians are undaunted by the protests, adding. "I don't think the club ha:-. anything to do '' 1lh atomic en l' r g y I don· t k now w h :.t t they're try ing to do " No wo men ha\ e been employed at th<' Grove again this year, said Coonan. The issue of the club's refusal to hire \\omen there is currently before lhe fair Employment Practices Commission 1 n February. Administrative Lav. Judge Robert Kendall ruled lhat the club had a "legitimate defense" in not hiring women. Ill• noted that club members urinate m the open without even the use of rudimentary toilet fa<'ililies,' and said the presence of women would "alter the behavior of the members." MEMl3FR AMt: RICAN Gt M SOClt 1 Y 1823 N WPORT Bt.'VO COSTA M ~ 35 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION BankAmerlcard-Master Char~ PHONE 54&·3"4>1 • • • -.,ti&. • •(• ... H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 8, 1981 Police quell riots dn 3rd English city ¥ l)j LONDON (AP) -Rlotlna ~lkoke out In a third English city today when hundreds of youths itooted and set fire to shops in lfManchester. Hundreds more lliampaged through a northern London suburb. -tn Police reported no rioting in 111..iverpool for the first time In l&hree nights. About lSO youths stathered and jeered police but d<t.iere .. very quickly dispersed," iosaid a police spokesman. He said •.>!6 people were arrested for dis- b4)rderly conduct. ,, Roles stage hour's ~ming strike' WARSAW , Poland <AP) -:~ a i I i n g s i r e n s c a 11 e d ~Qockworkers in Gdansk and 'other major Polish ports orr 1~beir jobs for a one-hour warn· a\Pg strike today to press de· b\'1ands for improved living and working conditions. ' Spokesmen for the indepen· f: ent union SoUdarity said the rotest was carried out without cident, and they tried in their omments to play down its irect economic effects. Carter raps cui.s ~n federal budget I. ATLANTA <AP > -The 1fiederal budget cuts proposed by 1Ahe Reagan administration are NAMED-William H. Waltrip has been named president and chief executive officer of Pan American World Airways Inc., succeeding William T. Seawell, who an- nounced he will retire. "ill-advised" and probably wtll force local and state govern- ments to ral5e taxes, former President Jimmy Carter said in a letter to his former aides. The letter, in which Carter breaks a 51h·month-loog silence on bis successor's policies, was sent to his former Cabinet of. ficers and onetime senior White House officials, Tbe Atlanta Journal reported today Iran beefs force on Turkish border BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> - Iran reinforced patrols alone Turkey's eastern frontier to pre- vent fugitive ex-President Abolhassan Bani-Sadr from fl,e· ing the country, a government spokesman said today. The spokesman for the Korn· miteh, Iran's revolutionary police command, told The As· sociated Press in Beirut by telephone that authorities were certain Bani-Sadr was biding in Kurdistan, a northwest province seeking autonomy. Solar Challenger crosses channel MANSTON. England <AP > The Solar Challenger, an American-built and piloted aircraft. on Tuesday became the first solar-powered plane ever to cross the English Channel. The flight took 51h hours. The plane lifted orr into a cloudless sky at 11:30 a.m. - 2: 30 a. m. PDT -at Cormeilles· en-Vexin, France, about 25 miles northwest of Paris, aod landed at the Manston Royal Air Force base in Kent. on England's southern coast. Democrat upsets Reagan candidat,e JACKSON, Miss. (AP> - Democrat Wayne Dowdy says a heavy turnout by blacks was "very, very helpful" in his slim upset victory in a congressional race over a Republican who was backed publicly by President Reagan. Unofficial returns today io Mississippi's 12-county 4th Congressional District gave Dowdy 55,512 votes to 54,486 for Republican Liles Williams, a spread of 1,026 votes. ... ..._.. EJECTED -Chicago policeman carries dem- onstrator who had gone limp after being asked to leave McC~rmlck Place prior to an appearance by President Reagan Tuesday. ffiA hunger striker dies Street fighting breaks out in Belfast after death BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -Joe McDonnell, the Mh lrisb nationalist hunger st.riker to starve himself to death in two months, died before dawn today in the Maze Prison at the start of his 61St day without food. Fierce st.reel flgbtlog broke out in Belfast within hours, leav· ing at least one person dead and five wounded. The Britlsh 1ov- ernment told seven surviving guerrilla hunger strikers at the Maze Prison it would make no concessions until the protest ended. The death of the 30-year-old Irish Republican Army guerrilla halted a Roman Catholic media- tion attemot that looked as if it might be about to break the deadlock between the British gov- ernment and the guerrillas. Five Roman Catholic priesta and laymen had been attempt· ipg to negotiate an end to the fast and the 410 protesting Mue prisoners had reportedly been ready to approve a settlement package. But the Britis h refused to change prison routine as long as the protest continued. Hum- phrey Atkins, the Northern Ireland secretary of etate and Britain's top m1n11ter an trie province, issued a statement say- ing no conceaaions would be granted "under dureaa." Souf'ces close to the 11\A bad stressed that ll McDonnell died before some form of a1reement waa reached, the hun1er at.rike demanding that guerrillu be treated as polltical prisoners would continue ·'for the foreseeable future," with the prospect of more deaths. The news of McDonnell's death was spread through Catholic districts by tbe ritual baoaing of 1arba1e-can Ucb and blowing wbiatles. British troops opened fire on a truckload of 10 men and youths attacking soldiers with gasoline bombs out· side a bus station in the Anderson- town area. The Army said 16- ye a r -old John Dempsey was killed. A Catholic mother and a teen· ager were wounded by plastic anti-riot bullets fired by police to quell rioting, police said. Masked youths hijacked al least a dozen cars and buaea, aettlne them afire and usin1 them for burning street barricades. Two aoldiers and a policeman were slightly injured by a homemade hand grenade In the New Lodge district. Snipers fired a half-dozen shots into the Woodburn Army base but no ooe was hurt ln that attack. People hurled gasoline bombs at securi- ty forces from their windows of the Divis Flats housing complex in the Falls Road section. More violence was feared dur· Ing three rallies and a half-day business shutdown strike in Belfast this afternoon which the IRA or~anized before McDon- nell's death to "keep up the pressure on the streets." Seven more men in the prison outside Belfast were fasting, and an eighth was expected to join the strike in McDonnell's place today or Thursday. Sinn Fein, the outlawed IRA 's political front, said more than 100 of the 600 guerrillas of the IRA and its splinter groups in the Maze have volunteered to take the places or those who die. Newark rations water McDonnell's wife. Goretti, was at his side in the hospital wing or the prison. McDonnell was serving a 14· year sentence for possession of a handgun. He was arrested in 1976 with Bobby Sands, who launched the hunger strike on March 1 and was the first to die. Mc Donnell joined the strike when Sands died. Thirsty city juggles supplies after vandalism "The main cause is old age, but it was started by van· dalism," he said. NEWARK,N.J . (AP)-Cityre- sidents have been ordered to use as little water as possible after vandals spun open pipeline valves loosing a cascade up to 100 million galJons that ruptured mains and cut off the city's prinicpal source residents and the 150,000 resi· dents of Wayne Township, Bloomfield, Belleville and Pe· quannock Township. The Pe· quannock Township watershed, where the break occurred. usually supplies 50 million gallons. Repairs will take four to six weeks. accordi ng to city spokesman Doug Eldridge, who called the cutoff "the most serious interruption we have bad in the water system since it was opened in 1900.'' Deputies lose bid of water. Mayor Kenneth Gibson declared a state of emergency, prohibiting all non-essential uses or water, including car- washing and lawn-watering. The action came as the city faced its biggest heat wave or the sum· P appachen said today that while the open valve triggered the flooding the age or the pipes, estimated at 80 to 100 years, was lo blame for the rupture. Vandals apparently got to the valves late Monday or early Tuesday. SAN DIEGO CAP) -A Superior Court judge has ruled that San Diego County can withhold paychecks from 800 striking sheriff's deputies. who refuse to pick them up in person. mer. Just a few months ago, Newark and most northern New Jersey cities were under strict rationing Imposed by the gov· ernor because of a drought that lcrylkM ,.._,..ocy .. Purveyors of Oldt1me Neighborliness .. 1016~Dr.· M_,....IHcll 760.0111 began last year and brought ~========~ reservoirs to perilously low levels. A wet spring eased tbe danger, and the restrictions that threatened to close major in· dustries and recreation spots were lifted. But now Newark must "juggle supplies around so we can keep In service," said ci- ty civil engineer Jim Conley. "It was a major catastrophe," Cooley said. But the city lost no time ar· ranging hook-ups with other water supplies, aod Andrew Pappachen, a chemist with the Newark water s upply system, said it was unlikely taps would run dry. The Newark water system uses about 105 million gallon.a daily to supply the city's 330,000 l?c::Jc:::Jc:::J c=JCJCJ CJCJ CJc:>t:J' ··acu 0 0 rn. ~·~ o .i.rauliions ••• B start at yo~~ .. ~~~~~,~~~~: Q •Spiral sliced for easy ser 111ng 0 •Whole or half hams For a great treat • Natlnnwlde shipping service 0 take a honey baked •Full sen'lce Delicatessen ham on vour boat to • Old Wortt1 Cheese Shop ~ ' .0tfnfllf'lr. ·· • Sendwtches to go U Catallna. .:i y Q • Party trays a ~llaJllS H J700 l . COAST HWY~ c-.. ..._ f'HOHI 61l·tOM 24601 aA YMONO WAY .t Ill TOIO ID~ ll TOIO. "40MI I J1.JIU 0 0 0 a 0 0 a 0 0 a D 0 0 0 0 ltOH IUCH IUD . .t •AlAILD. HUMTI ... TOM MACH. f'HOHI 141-tSU ~ 0 Also Anaheim Orange. Rancho Mirage La Habra San Otego Lakewood D n '('estlake Village, North Hollywood. WOodland Hiiis, Santa Monica. Pasadena - ~cx:JCc:x::x::JCOOCooc:x::x::>c:x:ooCJCJQQQ~ Sears Huntington Beach l!ACH oF THESE ITEM• ARE AVAILAIN.E. FOR sALE Al. ADYERTll~D PLUS STORE We sell first quality and discontinued merchandise from Sears Retail and Catalog Distribution. HOME-N-SHOP VAC Save 50°10 8 Gallon Capacity was 59.99 NOW 2949 WILSON RACQUETBALL RACKET & CASE was 34.99 NOW 1749 Save 50% . . Save 600/o LADIES ~~)1 V ·j TANK TOPS ~ ~ 'y j 100% COTTON ~ ~ ' were2.49 r· NOW ggc • "Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which the items were formerly offered by Catalog or in many Sears Retail stores around the country. • 18,. TWIN BLADE ELECTRIC ROTARY LAWN MOWER #91411 was 155.99 NOW7749 Save 50°10 . were 6.99 ' Save 50% EXERCISE CYCLE #2891 was 129.99 NOW 6449 5/18 .. 9 only STAPLE GUN & STAPLES was 16.99 TETHER BALL a POLE SET waa 12.99 ·Save soo;. Jury gives • patient recordsUDl ... SAN DIEGO <AP ) -A Superior Court jury bas awarded a record $4.8 million to a woman who testified she auf· fered psychological damage after her psychiatrist seduced her during therapy sessions. .The 10-woman, two-man jury deliberated four hours Tuesday before returning a unanimous verdict in favor of Evelyn Walker, 41, of San Diego, plain- tiff in the civil suit a1ainst Dr. Zane Panen of La Jolla. Marvin Lewis, attorney for Mrs . Walker and an expert ln psychiatric damage cases, said the award was the largest malpractice award in San Diego County history and possibly the largest award for psychiatrir in· jury ln the United States. Lewis, who had asked the jury for a $6.9 million judgment, argued that Mrs. Walker lost her first husband, the custody of her two children and her share of the commun ity property because of Parzen. In addition, her mental condi· lion worsened and she attempt· ed suicide more than 30 times since Parzen broke off relations with her, Lewis said. Parzen admitted during the trial he committed "medical and ethical malpractice" by having sexual relations with Mrs. Walker. When he referred her to another psychiatrist in January, 1977. after 2'n years of sessions, he said she was a .. borderline psychotic." WINS $4.6 MILLION Evelyn Walker After the verdict was an- nounced. Mrs. Walker, who once said she .. will always love" Parzen and reluctantly filed suit against him, tearfully hugged some members of the jury. • Portapower.. · · t<\~ Little Cleaner~ ... Big Power~ •Home ~ •Auto •Boat s5499 Sugg~l;..15 One of the most powerful mini· cleaners ever! It's got the power you'd expect from a full size canister. Goes with you everyplace you clean. Easy to change dust baQ ... use It as a blower . . . extra-ling power cord . . . ultra. compact and portable. Pnce• good thru Sun .• July 12, 1111 CROWN HARDW tv•~YOUWAMTIMAHAIDWAIHTOll,- Westcliff 1"" St., .-ll'VIM 1024 Irvine Ave. • Newport Beach 64J.l IJJ • ....... 222= .. d. M 8"ch • a,.7174 t :•t:OOhly OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK tZ Corona det Mar 3107 E. Coast Hwy. • • llh. South 1111 1*"'11\ur 67~JIM store 2 2101/2 ...... A••· .......... 67).7126 I 0:00.t:OO hlty Orange Collt DAILY PILOT/Wedntlday, July 8, 1881 H/F ~UillU~ Del Mar might buy off shore oil areas 'Sin tax' rejected by solons SACRAMENTO (AP)-Aftera Penthouse-wavlne. Bible-quot.lfta debate, the Assembly rejected a $400 million bill to raise cigarette and liquor laxes. and impose Ute sales tax on monthly magailnest DEL MAR (AP> -City of· ficials ln this San Diego County community think they have a way to thwart the Reagan Ad· ministqltion 's penchant for opening more California coastline to offshore oil explora- tion: They say they'll buy up their part of the ocean. The Del Mar City Council Monday night unanimously vol· ed to offer $25,000, or 50 cents an acre, to the federal government for purchase of 50,000 acres of underwater land off this four· mile-long coastal area north of San Diego. A spokesman for Interior Secretary James Watt, who would have to approve such a sale, said there is no precedent for the sale of federally owned underwater property, and Del Mar's offer would probably be rejected. Patty H earst loses round in court SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A federal judge has waived the at· torney-client privilege between .,newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst Shaw and lawyer F. Lee Bailey to help the government fight Mrs. Shaw's efforts to have her robbery conviction tossed out. Harbor View Center ,.,,_ ,,...,. "°"'" Genl9ns 1614 San Miguel Or. Newport Beach '44-1170 I I ·-~-------, I I I I I • I ~.~J~ ~~IR_: Stlanl SCMlfhCoalf~ C_..MeM 641-0523 Mal Hows Dally U .S. District Court Judge William Orrick ordered Tuesday that the rule of cqpfidenUallty between Bailey and Mrs. Shaw be dropped so that the govern- ment -fighting the reversal moves -can question Balley and partner Al Johnson on their discussiorui with Mrs . Shaw on trial matters. Mrs. Shaw said Balley lnade· quately defended her because he signed a contract during the trial to write a book about the sensational case. Gay Scout loses reinstatement bid LOS ANGELES (AP) - Timothy Curran, expelled from the Boy Scouts for his avowed homosexuality, has lost an at· tempt at reinstatement and col- lection of damages. Superior Court Judge Robert Well ruled Tuesday that order- ing the Boy Scouts of America to reinstate Curran would violate the freedom of association rights of other scouts. Car insurance bill gets Assembly OK SACRAMENTO (AP> -The state Assembly has voted to re- quire motorists to buy auto in· surance before registering their cars. The 66-10 vote Tuesday sent AB104 by Assemblyman Richard Robinson, D-Santa Ana, lo the state Senate. TO AmAE -Glenn Dumke, chancellor of the California State University and Colleges, announced he will retire as head of the nation's largest four -year and graduate college system next May on his 65th birth- day. KKK pickets city council PARAMOUN T <AP > -A small group of Ku Klux Klan members demonstrated al the Paramount City Hall to urge ci· ty council support of an anti- cri me patrol lhey want to form . No disturbances or arrests were reported at the Tuesday demonstration The members of the lnv1sible Empire Knights of the KKK, one of several Klan organizations na- tionwide, want to set up a crime patrol that would confront lawbreaker s , sa id Klan spokesman Mike Lyons. He said he wrote a letter to Ci- ty Council about the proposals but was denied a spot on the aj?enda. The vote Tuesday was 19-Sl ftr AB1321 by Assemblyman Dick Floyd, <D·Lawndale). It neededa two-thirdsvoteof54. I The bill would have doubled the 10 -cent per·pack tax qn cigarettes. It would have 111 · creased hard liquor taxes from '2 to $2.75 a gallon, dry wine taxes from one cent to three cents a gallon, sweet wine taxes from two cents to six cents a gallon. and beer taxes from $1.24 to $2 a bar- rel. \.. lt would also have imposed th«ftl percent sales lax on monthl.y magazines but not weekly magazines. The bill would increase sta~e revenues by S300 million a year and local government revenues by $90 million. " Floyd called his bill "a mode5t measure,'· which brought hools from the many Democrats arid Republicans alike who are resiSt· ingtaxes. He listed the many ''very needed services'' that lawmak-~SS have had to reject because ... 1e s tate is short on money, inclu~ programs for the disabled, elder- ly. schools and children. He said that cigarette and l~ uor taxes have not been in· creased for many decades aifd .. have not kept up with the infla· tionary spiral." · "Magazines are exempted fdr no good reason and for no social purpose," he said. He held up Cosmopolitan and Penthouse magazines -''whicb not many people on this noot read" -and said they are exempf. from the sales tax Unneeded items taking up place in your space? Sell it all and put cash in your pocket with the new Daily Pilot 8-Day Week . We can put you in touch with more buyers because our classifieds have an extra day to sell every week. Get results with the ads that last longer. Get the 8-Day Week special classified rate. Call 642-5678 today! For an EXTl\A day, call today -C.642·5678 .. .. . Open 8 to 5:30 Monday..frtday, 8 to noon Saturday. The new Daily Pilot 8·DayWeek it's a PLUS ~· * Orang9 Coa1t DAIL V PILOT /Wedneeday, July 8. 1981 Dog flushed from sewer at-eaaz fbr bJys ... Rescuers have struggle with pooch roaming Riverside pipe ftA RIVERSIDE <AP> -There's a German shepherd here who really knows wbat it's like to be an underdog. Thia pooch roamed the storm drain system under the city's street.a for at least a day, then thwarted eieht rescuers for more than three hours before bein1 forced out. No one knows bow 1001 the canine bad been wandering around in the pipes. And it was not without some difficulty that the Riverside Humane Society fmally got him out of his subterranean hideout. Humane society officers climbed down manholes to block escape routes in the maze of drain pipes. The police halted most traffic through the intersection of Magnolia and Madison streets. And the city water department literally bad to flush the dog out or bis hidini pipe. ''I'd rather get a cat out of a tree," said Humane Society Officer John Papp, one of eight people involved in the rescue. QUEENIE lflHI( IE~~W 1~1@~11t.1~ '11001®1111 lf>A'Yf'l~ln;l~lif lt::.@/A\l~I <G@o • E f,4SY M<)elEY FORMERLV ™ c.()MIWN EASY M-nACl'IT L<>N4 Disability tax refunds idle SACRAMENTO (AP > -Wanted. Three million Californians to split up $200 million in over· paid state taxes, at up to $91 apiece. For six months there have been practically no takers for the money, which is lying unclaimed in the state Disability Insurance Fund. Virtually all private employees in California contribute to the fund. which pays benefits to peo- ple who can't work because of illness or injury. Because of an unexpected surplus, a 1979 state law authorized $600 million in refunds. The maximum refund was $91 per taxpayer, which was 80 percent of the maximum contribu- tion at the time of $114 a year. The maximum con- tribution now is $89.40 a year. Stat.e officials said they refused $396 million in 1980 to five million persons who checked the proper boxes on their state income tax returns, say- ing they had paid into the fund and wanted refunds. But officials say they have refunded only another $5 million since then. The Employment Development Department says it believes at least three million wage earners remain eligible. They have until April 15, 1!184 to file amended tax returns or make written requests to the state Franchise Tax Board. With the prospect that much or the money may never be claimed, several bills are pending in the Legislature to distribute some of it by increasing disability benefits. Republic's Smart Stop·· Fares save up to 40% on selected flights that make one or more stops! No complicated rules. although seating is limited one-~ way ~l.V7 on•-$246 way Just call your travel agent and say you want · to fly Republic. Or call us any time at (714) 540-2060. ~ The dog's plight was discovered when a man and b1a son heard barldnc and fmally peered down through the barred drain opening, An anxious dog face was lookina back. Papp said the dog had to have entered the drain from another part of town because the pipe openings in this area are not biC enou1b for a doc to fall through. He surmised that the do1 wandered through the drains until he saw the light at the in· tersection grill. Qlll~SILViR . .: sh:>rts and awirmn.ar, thcz. hotttz.st thin~ ~irxJ People watching the rescue told Papp they bad heard the dog barkln1 through the previous nlgbt. Papp climbed down a metal ladder into the drain, but the dog refused to come out and backed into a narrow side pipe. "We tried calling him and coaxine him out," said Papp. ··we put some food down -canned dog food -almost under his nose, but he wouldn't have any. We tried banging on one end of the pipe with a flashlight to drive him out. He didn't budge." So Papp called for reinforce ments and the police and city sewer crews arrived with a water truck. While Papp went down the corner hole and held the dog's attention, other rescuers blocked off three other potential escape routes. The water truck was positioned over a m anhole in the middle of the street, but the dog was at first saved by a sloping pipe that kept him high and dry. Then the truck moved to a more strategic opening and the German shepherd was flushed out. The dog, who wore no collar or tags, was cart- ed off to the pound. He is considered a stray, but Humane Society supervisor Helen McGee said that during the rescue at least 10 people asked about adopting him. Cigarette fraud told PEKJNG <AP> Some peasants are hand· @)(eo@@J8~ 44 Alshion lslaru:l· Newport Beach•714/644·5070 JOOJ ~stwood Blud.·~stwood VUlage•2J314 79·7727 rolling cigarettes and passing them ofr as China's leading brands, a letter to the Communist Party news paper People's Daily alleged. REAL VALUES Such nationally known labels as Chunghua, M utan, Fenghuang a nd Tachienmen are being fraudulently used on the imitations. the letter said. on item s from a p p lesauce to zippers D ·1 p· • are ad vertised every day in the II J 1101 The writer complained local authorities help the counterfeiters by providing them with shipping documents and ignoring the offenses as long as taxes are paid. The streMth of Alnerican! Reserves over twice legal reqUirements 6 MONI11 T-BILL CEKflF1CATE $10,000 minimum % r=trn·tin · Annual 'idd % Annual Ratl· Rate a....Uable JuJy 7throughJuly13, 1981. SI0,000 minimum. Annual dfcctivc )'kid 1:-. hascd on rl'inve~trnc.·nt ofprln· c.:lpal and inll'rl·st at the: !\amc rate for a .~6t; day )'Car. Rate' .irl' 'uhjn:t Ill c.·hangc at 6-month rl·ncwal. Federal regulations prohibit the compounc.lln~ oflntcrc.-st and require a sub:.tantial pcnahr for early wlrhdr-.iwal lnswed safety 30 MONI11 TREASURY ACCOUNf No minimu m 12. % F.ffn·th e Annual 'kid 12. % Rate available J aly 1 through July ZO, 1981. No minimum. Rate, set hl-wcckl)• hy the l' ~. lrl·a.'lurr. llt ha.'l'c.l on the yidd uflka.'lury Securities. lntcrcM I!> compountkc.l J ail)'. lntl·rcst natt· avallahlc :at 1hc rime thc al·count I~ opl'nt:J remains In dfn·r for the account's full term 1-ec.lcral rt:gutarion!\ n ·quirl' :.1 'uh:-tanual p<:nall) on funds withdrawn prior to maturil)'. Insured safety-pays more than any bank AMERICAN SAVINGS SAFE 8 1NCE 1885 •ASSETS OVER $9 BILLION • RESERVES OVER TWICE LEGAL REQUIREMENTS Over 100 American Savings offices to seroe you. Check the white pages of your telephone directory for the office nea~t you. Account• now Insured to $100,000 • • .. I t I 1 •-• I " HUITlllTll BEICH/flllTlll llllEY Dally Piiat WEDNESDAY, JULY I, 1911 FEATURES MOVIES TELEVISION BS 86 88 Du Pont.and Conoco: (4 ~Inside the proposed Conoco: billion dollar merger ... BlO • ID HB fraud CET A chief gets 3 years Robert Cunninaham was sen· tenced Tuesday to three years ln 1atate prison for embenlln1 • public funds while director of a federal job tralnin1 proaram ln 4 1 Hunlinltoo Beach. Orange County Superior Court ~ Judae Everett Dickey denied Cunningham's request for pro· balion in lieu of a prison term. Cunningham was convicted by a jury March 16 on two counts of embezzling $16,000 for his personal use from the city's Comprehensive Employment Training Act program. Although he later paid back the CETA funds, Dickey said the seriousness of the crime was not reduced. ••Punishment in prison is necessary, as I look at lt, to de· ter other persons from trying the same thing," said Dickey. ABORTED MISSION -Experimental Beach 1n Huntington Beach June 26. The platform was dismantled and hauled away Tuesday by Long Beach construction firm. designed to repair underwater got stuck at Bolsa Chica State The judge said he probably would have allowed only proba· lion for Cunningham if the em· bezzlement was or private funds. Re said the law is most strict when public money is involved. He said during a lengthy ex· planation of the sentencing that CM hacks county • marina Support for an Orange County government plan for a public marina at Bolsa Chica northwest of Huntington Beach has gained official support from a fourth city council. Costa Mes a council members unanimously adopted a resolu· tion supporting the plan proposed by SignaJ Landmark Properties calling for a major m arina and preservation of a part of the sprawling marsh as a wildlife reserve. The Costa Mesa council sided with the Orange County Board of s upe rvisors Monday against efforts by the state coastal com mission to reserve more of the wetlands in its natural stale. Other cities favoring the county's plan include Santa Ana. Anaheim and Ora nge, all or them passing similar resolutions earlier this year. Costa Mesa council members have been pushing for several years for construction or a similar small boat harbor near the mouth of the Santa Ana River several miles south of the 1 ,600 -acre Bolsa Chica marshlands. State Sen. Paul Carpenter, D -Cypress, has authored legislation now in an Assembly committee which would bypass the state coastal commission in approving still to be finalized Orange County plans for the coqstal region. Yacht 'lost' in Transpac The battle for first to finish in the Transpacific Los Angeles to Honolulu yacht race was a mystery today as the yacht Christine failed to report at the 8 a .m . roll call. Merlin, Christine's principal rival, reported a position that place her 1,058 miles from Honolulu, Ragtime had 1,095 miles to go and Secret Love was 1,204 miles away. This means that the lead yachts have passed the half-way mark. The leader on handicapped limes was Audacious skippered by Mike Kennedy of Dana Point. See earlier story Page Dl. Cunningham's admitted em· beulement went beyond the bounds of merely taxing money because it might make tax- payers reluctant to support pro· grams for the disadvantaged. Cunningham initially was in· dieted by the Orange County Cagey bird has hunters up a tree Pancho. a 4-year·old macaw. had been known as flighty. But hi s latest break for freedom. was .. his greatest escape yet," says owner Jim Langston of Huntington Beach. His 24 hours -0n the wing ended at 4:45 p.m. Monday in the 8400 block of Heron Circle, about a mile from home. But his hiding out in rive neighborhood trees had raised quite a flutter or rescue activity during which Langston: Climbed a 24-foot extension ladder. -Called in Ski. the Bird Man of Newport Pier, whose macaws and other feathered friends ut· tered mating calls. Was assisted by wife Helen and son Jimmy, 11 . in trying to talk their pet down from lofty perches. -Put another macaw in Pancho's cage in hopes he would Grand Jury on Oct. 10, 1980 and was bound over for trial during a preliminary hearing I>«. 26. He sat quietly during the sen· tencing and threw a last wave at his friends after Dickey denied a motion to delay his incarcera· lion until Sunday. After a day of taunting humans, Pancho troS captured and held by Jim Langston as Sia, Bird Man of Newport Pier. chpptd his wings. fly in to reclaim hi s territory and shoo the visitor. For his final appeal, Langston climbed on to a neighbor's roof and offered a banana. Pancho came down a few branches, Langston grabbed him and liiki immediately clipped his wings. Valley budget cuts proposed Fountain Valley officials have proposed cuts ln city services, Jobs and government spending totaling nearly $1 million in an effort to balance the city's 1981-82 budget. Tbe specific proposals, out· lined at Tuesday's City Council meetlnc by council members and City Manaaer Robert Vollmer, will be comldered for act.Ion next Tuesday. Tbe budget itself 11 slated for a vote on July 21. A1tbougb the new fiscal year be.an July 1, the city baa con· tinued lo pay its bllls under the terms of an interim finance measure approved last month. City Manager Vollmer, who told the council the curre.nt SU.3 million budget carries a deficit of $763,000, proposed a package of cuts totaling $495,000. He said the remainder of the deficit can be made up throuah new, moeUy one-time revenues, plus $120,000 from the city's reserve funds. The new revenues include the sale of a city-owned land parcel and a street sweeper, plus new recreation fees. Chief among Vollmer'• pro· posed cuts were six full-time cl· ty Jobe and one part·Ume poet, plus a Sl00,000 cut In contractual tree·trimmin1 services and a $178,000 reduction in expend· lturea for street, curb and sidewalk repaln. Vollmer said the Jobi would be taken from city adminiatraUon, 1overnment bullclin& workers, the DevelopmeDt Servlcea Department, public .orka, and non-poUce workers ln the Police Department. He declined to dis· cuu 1peeUlc polltloaa, howeYer, .. ,... • '-*' DDt Jet apoan with ,tJie poleatlal17 affected wodMI. Parks, Maintenance and Public Works departments to save some $75 ,000, plus possible changes in city mileage reim· bursement policies, proposed by Councilman Eugene Van Duk. -A possible reduction of $160,000 In the street llghUng budget, elimination of the citv Bike-riding thief sought in Huntingt~n Huntington Beach police are searching for a bicycle-rldinC aunman who robbed a local dairy store of $1,700. The holdup Occurred at 10:50 p.m. Mondar at Calva Dairy, 159'2 F.dwarda St. Lt. Merle Scbneblin •aid a man in hla early 20I, with loq' blond hair tucked under a blue and wblte bueball c.,, entend tbe store, kicked a clerk tn the ahiDJ ud pulled a blue '*-1 ,. volver h'om his walltband. The 1mpec:l took IDOIM1 fl'oiD the clllb retilter and ra•iebd aa offtee for additkmal eOl9 Md ltllll, wlalda be pla4!ed ...... blui n1loa '**padl, pollee aiMI. Tbe mall fled OD a 1UYS aDd blue lCHpeild blc7cle, acconlbll to~ce. newsletter to save $13,000 and the start of a subscription service for paramedics, pro· posed by Councilman Al Hollinden. -An order to further reduce tree-trimming services lbat would save $75,000, plus less fre· quent mowing of grass in city parks, proposed by Mayor Ben Nielsen. -EllminaUon of pay and sub- sidies for the City Council and Ci· ty commissioners, elimination ol all travel reimbursements for tbe council, elimination of the clty's crime laboratory and several other cuts for a total savlng of about $125,000, pro- posed by Councilwoman BatblU'a Brown. Mr1. Brown said the crime laboratorf la unnece11ary because 11 duplicatea a service provided by the county. HolUDden said he advocates a 1peclal 1treet Uabtina .....,_ ment because annual eleetrtc;tty coata for street U1bUn1 bav~ rllen SlS>,000 since ltT8, and the lacrea1e ls burdenlna tbt budllet. Hi aald after the meetln1 tbat ... would adYoeate returalat 1treet U11tUD1 tund1q to Its lrrl lnel of ...,,Goe If the apectaJ u - HHm•t 11 aol accepted by YOten lD NOvember, and tumlnl ruD1 out ln Januar7 or Pebnaar). College district faces money Woes By PHIL SNEJ..OEaMAN Of .. ...,,.. .... The Coast Community College District has been dealt a double whammy by the finance bills approved last month by state lawmakers , accordin1 to CorreUan 1bompeon, exttuUve vice chancellor for bualneaa. First, the district, wblcb includes Oran.1e Coaat, Golden West and CoaaUlne colleaea, learned lut month It will not rttelve enouah money from the state to cover It.I expeDHll for the school year that Just ended. In tact, TbomptOD aayi, the dlttrlct la belna peaall11d financially beuute more 1tudent1 enrolled ln Coast cou.,e ~ ..... than bad bala anUdpaWd. And tor the comlna 1cbool 7ear, \1111 dlltrtct a1lo wUl be recelYlat le11 llloa•J Uaan It anUclp.teid from tlae ttate. Tbompaon Hhl tlae 4lltrtct will baft to dO a balQClq act to maintain its present enrollment level durina the comina year because a drastic drop or Increase could result in more financial penalUes. Because of the state fundiq cuts ror laat year and tbe current year, the collece diJUiCt la now facln1 a $"1.4 million reduction in available funcb u it prepares ill 1911-G bud1et. Tbe cutbacks will be apreed amona tbe three commu.nlly colle1ea and tbe dlatr-lct adminltt.ratlon. Tbe mlnimum cla11 the IMY be lnCl'Uled from 15 to 11, 101De claulfted empao, .. (iaeludbll' malateaance and eter•cal ""lamel) ... , be laid off, 8Dd actdltblal •u.rlall , .. may be ~ for, ....... ud cl ..... ... . . .. ... . · . . . . :~ ·> :· . :· ·: . . :: .. . . . ·: . . . •• .. :~ • ... 1 ; .. .. > J . . ! .. ·~ .. t • J ' I '! I • • s a 4 ; Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT /W1dn11d1y. July 8 , 1981 RICKY TICKY POLITIX: Wlllie Brown, the noted Democrat from San Francisco who currently ls Speaker of the California Assembly, only yesterday pledged to pop down here to get Orange County straightened out. Who knows? Maybe he will . The current problem that Willie Brown is interjecting him.self into the ~ /"«" T-IM_M_U_RP-HIN-1_~~ middle of involves Orange County gov· ernment and the operation of UC Irvine Medical Center . Actually, the hassle really involves money . It always comes down to that, doesn't it? In event you missed the last two or three episodes of this continuing fight, however, the battle goes something like this : BROWN SNAPPED IN anawer, "I don't have a requirement to tell anyone anything." Now that sounds fairly arrogant. It must be a disease that infects every legislator who ever became Assembly Speaker. You remember AHembly Speaker Jesse Unruh of yesteryear? Unruh, currently our soft-spoken, easy-going state treasurer, was always getting accused of running roughshod over California back when he was As- sembly Speaker. Some legislators even called him "Big Daddy" in those days . IT WAS WIDELY believed that Unruh gave the then-governor fits by charging off into a lot of legislative . ..., IN TAKING OVER operation of the county's old medical center, the un- iversity people joined county govern- ment in a contract whereby the UC medics would take care of the county's poorer patients and bill the county for this care. Sir Ronald charging off to battle The Dreaded Unruh The county has thus been billed for $8 million worth of this medical care where county government has declined to cough up and pay the tab. County of- ficials claim they've been billed for medical work that they shouldn't have been tagged for. bullrushes without telling anybody anything, just like Willie Brown isn't re- quired to do. University of California officials, on the other hand, have screamed foul, claiming all the billings are legit and Orange County government is acting like a deadbeat. Columnist Art Hoppe used to be so delighted by Unruh's giving the gov- ernor fits that he would characterize the governor as Sir Ronald, upon his white charger, out thrashing about in the bullrushes in an effort to find and destroy the wild beast known as The Dreaded Unruh. THAT'S ABOUT WHERE it stands. Assembly Speaker Brown jumped into the fray just a time back when be got some language added to the state budget that denies $10 million to Orange County government unless it pays up to UC Irvine. But Sir Ronald never found him. He never got beyond just hearing The Dreaded Unruh thrashing around, bellowing and no doubt creating havoc for the then-RepubHcan administration. This came up as part of the subject only yesterday when Orange County . legislators and Orange County govern- ment officials gathered for a parley in Sacramento. THE THEN-GOVERNOR HAS now gone on to thrash around in a lot heavier governmental underbrush. And Unruh seems at peace, counting state money every day. Meanwhile, c urrent Assembly Speaker Willie Brown will come down here and thrash around in the Orange County bullrushes and try to mediate a heavy hassle. Willie Brown showed up for part of the session. At one point, he was ques- tioned about the apparent secrecy sur- rounding his action to whack off Orange County at the pocketbook to the tune of 10 really big ones. You do hope when it's over, Willie will tell somebody something, whether he is required to or not. Host f amities sought Host families are needed in Foun· lain Valley and nearby communities to house 40 high school students from England and the five adults who wiU accompany them on a visit to Orange County later this month. Tbe group includes 31 girls and nine boys from schools located in Surrey County near London. The stu., dents are traveling under the auspices of the British American Schools Exchange Club. Formed in 1974, the club provides for a non-profit exchange of visits between schools in England and the United States. The English youngsters will arrive July 28 at Fountain Valley High School and will need homes through Aug. 7. The youngsters will be eone Aug.~ on an excursion to the Grand Canyon. Medical releases have been ob- tained for all students, and the vis· itors will be covered by medical and accident lnsurance. Families interested in providing housing for the visiting English stu· dents should call Lois Woods during daytime hours at (213) 484-0220 or collect al (213) 242-5555 during eve· nings and weekends . Water budget to • rise Riling energy cosll, infiation and additional employees will increaH Mesa Consolidated Water District's Mesa High accredited for 6 years Costa Mesa High School's ac· creditation has been extended six years, U> June 30, 1987, as the result of a survey by the Western Associa- tion of Schools and CoJleces. llhx Zook, Costa Mesa Hilb chairman of a le.am conduct.ing a six· month self-study of the achool, said the full six-year accredltatlon followed an accrediUns commlulon vlalt ln April. "Tbla continued accreditation," Zook said, "11\eana that the cond1· lion. for effective education exist in thit acbool." Tbe Western Alaociatioa of Schools and Colle1es ls responsible for ac· crKltation of aecondary acboola and luUtutiou of h1Sber educaUoa ln California, HawaU, Guam and American Scboolt ln I.ht Far East. budget next fiscal year by about 4 percent, directors reported this week. The board, which oversees management of the district serving Costa Mesa, a part of Newport Beach and some county-governed areas near Costa Mesa, approved its $6,595,000 budget for 1981-82 early this month. Included in the document are funds for adding an engineering aide and increasing the hours of a part· lime clerk-typist. Projects scheduled for the new fiscal year include increaslnc water production of one well, putting another in operation and ~finning work on drilling another, the sixth in the district. Other projects include replacing 4,600 feet of older water mains and .completing a new feeder pipeline system. Lease extended VICTORIA, Seychelles (AP> -The lease on the U.S. Air Force satemte tracklq 1tatlon on Mahe, the main llland in lhh Indian Ocean arcbipelaco, hu been nteoded to 1980. • . A State Office of Emergency Pre· paredness estimate says 400 .000 people could die from radiation poison if San Onofre has a melt· down. That same study says 10 million people would have to be evacuated for at least 1 O years. We'd like to know how will they evacuate us7 This May 13's disas- ter drill was plagued by communi· cations breakdowns. faulty equip· ment and poor logistics. The Fed- eral Emergency Management Ad· ministration called the drill inade· quate. But the NRC ignored this problem in their final environmental impact report. You don 't have to be a scien· tist to be concerned about radio· activ e sand on San Onofre State Beach . You can speak out for our community's future. On July 1 1 you w ill be able to speak to the NRC about your safety concerns. Join your neighbors in protecting our American Heritage. Speak out. --·--------...... -._ ....... -------.. -.... Your Chance to SPEAK OUT against licensing the nations' largest NUCLEAR Facility at San Onofre O FF ICI A L N RC PU BLIC HEARI NGS Saturday, July 11 9 a.m. -5 p.m. San Clemente High School (1-5 South to Avenida Pico, east 1/4 mile.) We can convert San Onofre to safe natural gas. ----------------------------------------------------------- Yea. I want to do more than attend the hearing. Yes! Here is my contribution o f $ -------- Name ------------' 'hone Address Yes! I want to volunteer. [l Yes! Put me on your mailing list. City ____________ _,._ip _____ _ Alliance for Survival 331 N. Orange, Orange, CA 92666 11997-9922 £X•LEAN• Notovu 2Z% fu.t GROUND BEEF ~ 1'~ "'~ seecues~ JPIS ~ . \ .. . ., ~ ~,~ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS QUOTATIC»tl INC~VDI HADU ON THI NIW VO••. M10.-1u. ltl(l"C. l'IW, IOUON. 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" N t ~ -t• ..., •~ I I ' •' t t It 'IE· " 1' J "'l Jtt! ~ ij::.'i. :;~s r. • 14 ... ,·!t ;: m 1m.,... .. ~ ~·" ~ \11 'i D nE.~ ' .• ' IM' "~·u 11 .J 5 'i m -~" ~ ... , ... • > 1 ..... 1:.ii 1 as m;.: ,....,._A ~~ 1~11 ~ , w :: mi .. j" .J ~· ~ 3• ..... u~ ,..!! ~ ~ 1~·~ 2 .... s : 'r'~··· .. , .... :: MJ •'i..::::; ~· ' .. ~-···· ""' .. , 19 • ,..:·-. ' : ,. " ... ii ... ~ 19 :! ~M ff-· i: ,\': ::•i.11 lit:• -• ,;: ;i .: ~··~ 0 J ~ :;·~ Yte:•' W 4t » -~ 1114 I. 1 i. 14- .. ' ' .. 4"10 . "" , .... '°' iw-.... ':J •"" -.. t: MGM pro&; ta t.j:J .~ •'-i ·t t17 :::i.: '"'.11:::1: ll!~-; .. ~l>ft~l ;i 111f ,.::;·· \f 11!~. 'J • ,.,. Hr J ,j : • =· ~ t t ~ • ,,,_ .• ~ ~::·: ~ .1w iA .! •"'·•··· l ~ ~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Melro-•"''-''~"'·-':li .. • ::::: i I .i -lt I. 'iii 1 =-·I ''llu m, !hf."• I= OoldW)'D·Nayer P'llm co .• •llbouib U:tt .l .. =! t.•· 1 ... ._ "'' 1:1 t.,:: t;·: " : • t suffuln• lo.UH in it.a television 't,; , .=::.~ ,. ~ae·: :1:. . ~ 1 .. * '1 1 ·1 ···~ ~~:=· .=-~· ,r:~ ~= L" ut.:..~ ~AL •• 1 •I • .. .,: n:t: IMW ·; i::~ c;;e.rall ror the quarter enctinc MQ l••~l'~-~~~~ • :: : . .'4' .,wt H -; .a:: ', ~ 3L ' ~. " ti 1 • ~ • ... :: ·::.: Mo&Joa picture Income more lha11 !I' t L! t' ·" com})tnaated (or the company'• •r ,•::; '!;: '4' loun ln the televillon am .• t.' wh Y. • compames mo~e ., . ~ One of the most important declalont a companr can make is where to place lis beadquart.en. At leut it's certainly importa.nt to the people who wort far ,, the company and to the community the company (a, Jolning -or leaving. Many companies remain euctly where the)' started-Coca-Cola in AUanta, H.J. Heins in Pittl• burgh, Wrigley in Cbicato. Procter " Gample "' Cincinnati, Boeing in Seattle, AnbeW1er·Bu.acb ln St. Louis. Du Pont in ·wllmlniton. Del ., RCA In New York. But many get rutle111 and look for dlffereot climes. Theil' reasons vary. _L In 1970, 118 of the companies on the Fortune :iO() list had their headquarters in New York City. Today.11 only 76 of the Fortune 500 companies are based \n New York . That's what you ~ m ight call a massive no· ~r~ 0 co nfiden ce 1 vote To be sure. 1-llT_l_l_l_l_l_lll_ITI_:.._,,,, ~ a number of the ~ deserters from New York did not venture very far. They jutt, journeyed to the suburbs. General Electric went W Fairfield, Conn., Texaco to Harrison, N. Y., Conoco to Stamford, Conn .. American Can to Greenwich, Conn., Uniroyal to Middlebury, Conn., A&P to Montvale, N .J .. Nabisco to East Hanover, N.J., AMF to White Plains, N. Y. However. some did pack up and move far away. American Airlines relocated from New York to the Dallas·Fort Worth Airport. Shell Oil moved from New York to Houston. And Atlantic Richfield trekked clear across the country, from New York to Los Angeles. American Airlines explained that it was more logical for it to be based in the center of the country than on the Eastern seaboard. One consequence of its relocation was the disruption of a 20·year relationship with its advertising agency, Doyle Dane Bernbach, which said it could not persuade creative people to move to Dallas to work on the account. There has been no flight of advertising agencies out of New York City. Atlantic Richfield's move to Los Angeles put the company closer to its oil strike on the North Slope of Alaska. But the move bad more to do with the an· tipatby of its chairman. Robert 0 . Anderson, to New York City. Los Angeles is also closer to Anderso ._ ranch in New Mexico. Personal reasons often have a lot to do with the moves. There's a saying that companies usuallt· move in the direction of the chairman's home. Tttrl was certainly the case in 1971 when Greybou_,, moved out of Chicago to Phoenix where Ger41t; Trautman. head of the company, already had a ret\t dence. • Spite somet imes comes into it. Diamon-' Shamrock transferred its headquarters fror4, Cleveland to Dallas, citing, among other reasons, if distaste for the attitudes and policies of the then- mayor of Cleveland, Dennis Kucinich. 1 A good example of how these weighty corporatt decisions are made can be found in the recent pere·~ grinations of AM International, a company that used to be known as Addressograpb·Multigraph. Thia: maker of offset duplicators and addressing machines was based in Cleveland until Roy Ash entered its lifl in 1976. Ash headed the Office of Management and. Budget Ln the Nixon administration and, emergin1 from Watergate·torn Washington, was looking for a. new challenge. Addressograph-Multigraph was it; The company had not been doing too well, what wit1' competition from Xerox and others. Ash took over ~ chairman and promptly moved the headquarters ti Los Angeles. • Ash said the reason for the move was to get ~ company closer to the electronics business in California. Unmentioned was the fact that Los Angeles is home to Roy Ash. He cofounded Litton In· dustries there. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES HEW YORIC(APJ Fine! Oow.J-~ •~os. Woc~r4'•v, Jul. 1. AMERICAN LEADERS HEW YORK IAP). S.lel, T~t. ptke ena nel <11•'9 Of tne t.,, most •ctlvt Am.rl<•n Stoo Exe,..~ lu..a lradlftG n•llONllV 41'1 mo•• l,..n SI. ' DomePtrt s 245,SOO ..... • •.• W1t11Pos1 113,100 2S 1"-HouOllTr 121,.500 ~ -1 lnll Bnknot 117,500 S¥t + V. W•no e 111,600 ~ "' JO Ind <>rsr ... :r."to ~. ~~• ~ 20 Tm 400.M fQ3.&:J J'IU6 N ,71-1,..0 IS Ull IOS.M 107,IJ IOS.2S 106,lh 0,41 65 Slit )67,tl 371,6' ... ot 3'1 ... + o,ac '"""'' j , 104,300 Tr•n .... ,, ,, . .. . . 1.•1s.100 U111t .•. "".... . . " . ". l lf ,200 6.5 Slit . .. • . . . . . . 1,1'2,600 WHAT STOCKS DID NEW 'l'OAK (API Jul. 1 Prev. AOvenc:ed T~ ciys Oecllnei! II• 11'3 unc11tnged >9S m T-1 lu""• ''°' 1117 lffw 1'11111'1• 14 6 Hew lows ,. n WHAT llMEA DIO HEW YORK IAPI J ul 1 Pt9¥. fl4'tlft<ed T°"ff, ~L Oecllned m 412 UIKlllftgeO 207 llO Tot.II I-,.. I05 New l'llgf11 4 s New Niwa 2S 26 -.,.,Pltl'I s 76,tOO 1tv. -111 BowVell•'f n.aoo 1914 + v. •-----------=..-.---PetroLew .0,000 "" • \,le R•noerOll )2.f00 UV. -.... 'tubOlM.. ...,JOO t!lo -,_. UPS AND DOWNS HEW YORK IAP) -Tiie follOWl119 1111 _, Ille ,._ York 5Co<ll Exe...,.._ ,Coclll Incl WllTllll• llwll lllve llDM ..., IN most •nel dow<l llM most b..cl on 1)9tC9ftl Of dllftge "'Cl'lrcllea6 of YOl-,Of' T llffd•Y. ..... ~! MH:urlU.. 1rldl119 btlOw SI .,.. IMI· ._.. Ntl end ~leOt Cl'lllnvtl .,.. Ille lllHtrwnu bilWWft IM PfYYICMit c1o.ina prlc• •11<1 toc1t'f'• tun· Pflca. Ne!: Ut111 CllQ P«. I El f . 40\lo .+ a~ Up 21. 2 e:xtlf 171\ft +2W. Up U., 3 +;.!ltllltlf t ml! + 6"' Vi> IU 4 l.AM!Ld t:xp J9 + • Op 11.4 J Em""" ·~ • 1~ u!I' :.e • AmW1tr ora '"' .. -. uo .1 1 l'eb9r~nc 22:W. + 2 Up u • All'" rp 111'1 + $ Up t.J 9 Mlle$ l2 • I Up t, 1 'i OenAmOll 43\lo + ~ U11 U 1 G1'9Yllnd WI ,_ + \lo Uo 1 UMC 11141 """ • " Up H' It ~Mftbol I JD\lt + 2Yi UO . ,. rl<o • tSl\ + I Up If tClt'tProp $14 t .. Up p 16Vtlld& ~ ~+ 111 ).!P Z·~ tN -°1\ ,b.t GOLD COINS J:'_,. , .. "=i~ 11 u -214 f: tt _ ,.. • U!A -,.. ' tf14 -I.. ,) d~-" M t = 't u. ---= l ti w = r; u METALS HEW YORK IAl'I -$ttol '*""-INtab _,.ie.. T-.,: ~ ~ Cl9flb • pot<rld, U.S. -11-llant. ...... "<efttt. --'· ZIM 4614 Cefttt e ,.._, d911-W. T .. ~ MllU!l WM4c c..,,....it. 111>. A....._7t411c.fttl •--· N.Y, Menwy ~.oopiw "-· .... .......... Wy Oil., N. V. GOLD QUOTATIONS .,.,...._ ........... 5ei.<liMMrlf9M41,,k"tM9y: ...... ,~r111,...-•,.tttt~ ~:...._ff-.l11t...,.1S,efft7.JS. f'eftt:~flJllfleMMleff .... ,, .................... . z.rtclll ..... flldllCI '""°'.., ......... .... MINY & ManMe1 ~ly 41elly "9te . "97.7S, 9'U1.U. • ....... , enly ... ., ...... "'1.1$..., p ,u, •....-.: ... , dlllly ..... ·~ .. ,,. ...... .,..... . ·~~~~~~----~----SYMBOLS wwww • Coaat DAILY PllOT/WednHday, July 8, 1981 THE JEWEL CONNECTION . Making Pe ople Happy Is Our Business ~um-Mi ;}.mport1 , SOlJTH COAST VILLAGE (MER CANT I LE BU I LO I NG) Son SS °" onntock•d ond d lscontillUl'd 1Mrehoftdl1e , 11> OFF .. ..,. .... .,.. BARE TRAPS 15% OFF ON STERLING SILVER JEWELRY 11> Off l.dlH' broc .. coi. pwwt L~ s1&.97 N'I) UP Sale CANDIES 510.97ANO UP SBICCA DALES s14.97 N#O UP 9 WEST i cx;T .NC ')K'J $14.97 AN0 VtOES&MGS South Coos• PkJzo V1l!OQe UP ~1U)979 9252 .... Manno Poctlico VllOQe • l QnO 8eoch (21 J) 5Q8 454 7 10% OFF ON CUSTOM DESIGNED DOLLS 20% OFF ON HOLLY HOBBIE JEWELRY PWS MAMY MOU UMl9UE mMS 611A 1l Y llDUCED MERCANTILE BLOG. S.C. VILLAGE (714) 557-4052 . lO"fo • 50% OFF on selected quality ch1naware gift sets and plates. ... $12.00 Sal• $6.00 s-n lfiJ. SI0.00 Sal• $5.00 Many other gift items on sale at huge savings Shop early for best selection as quantities are sub1ect to stock on hand 556-7944 "The only glass and crystal store you need to visit" 8oliffl, ~ ~~~lJ)fb '--' (714) 540-4991 Hollv Landers Sloneware ANNUAL JULY CLEARANCE COME EARLY -UMTED SB.ECTION LAMPS ... hand thrown STO NEWARE . Med . Size . LAMPSHADES Med. & Sm., incl. Pleated Burlap. WINE GOBLETS -stoneware -one of a kind. SMALL GIFT ITEMS -Good Selection . LARGE WOOD LETIERS -Entire Stock Reg . s1~. SMALL WOOD LETTERS & House Numbers. ALL SALE ITEMS 1/2 PRICE - PH. 558-8185 By OFFERING JULIETTE PAPER WAN' FOR THE MONTH OF JULY Located In C.Olten Hair International 179-5851 Natural Grocery Souetl c... v-.. 957-1880 (FOAMERl Y EREWHON) LIVE ENTERTAINMENT DAILY FOR INFORMATION CALL 751-6595 WIN!! Knotts Berry Farm tickets. Dinner at Crazy Horse Steak House. Enter Best Dressed Cowboy Contest on Sunday. DlllJ Piiat WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1981 .... Du Pont and Conoco : lllilll llll:l /11111 ClllT . FEATURE6 BS MOVIES 86 TELEVISION 88 .! (conoco) Inside the proposed billion dollar merger ... BlO I i Panel orders nuclear plant vessel test By JOHN NEEDHAM e CN .. DIMy .......... Fearing fuel rod containers in 4 some older nuclear planta may be more vulnerable to cracking than had been expected, Nuclear Re gulatory Commisaion orficiala have asked plant operators to teal for "pressurized thermal ~shock." Included among 44 nuclear plan ta throu&hout the U.S. ~ the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, a 14-year-old facility located three milea south of San Clemente. No plants have been ordered to shut down, and no Immediate danger is predicted. However, if the wall of the 8-inch·lhick steel reactor vessel were to crack, pressurized water used to cool fuel rods would escape. The fuel rods cpuld then over· beat and melt through the vessel and into the concrete contain· ment building, causing a leak of radioactive material into the at- mosphere. NRC spokesman Jim Hanchett said after years of exposure to beating and cooling, steel reac- tor vessels gradually lose strength. That loss is calculated In the design of the plant. But he said the containers ar~ suspected of becoming weaker at a faster rate than scientists had anticipated, especially in older plant.s which have welds with a high copper content. Hanch e tt described the gradual weakening of the metai as "pressurized thermal shock." He said over years of plant ope ration the weakening is routinely calculated and the pace or cooling is slowed down to compensate for the loss of strength. ''This Issue is something we DeltyPe. ........ .., ............ M11ltet"JI hou$e gue6t lit• atop Debby Ludwig'• head m Lagufaa Beach home a3 delighted tot Allegra • looka on. Bird flew m Tuelday morning and made a cl4y of it. Her home for the bird Feathered friend too friendly , finds a 'nest' in Laguna By STEVE MITCHELL Of ............... The visitor arrived early Tuesday morning, landing on young Benjamin's bead as the boy sat in the patio. -Watched Mrs . Ludwig wash dishes from a perch on the lcitchel} sink. -Stolen more of Benjamin's sandwich. -Dragged soft cloth toys from t he upstairs bedroom to the living room. By late afternoon, the brown and gray bird bad the run of the place, and Debby Ludwig said her winged house guest appears to be settling in for a long atay. -Left messy evidence of his presence at several locations in the once-tidy living quarters. "I just wish he was potty trained," Mrs. ''It's so friendly it must have been trained by somebody," the 28-year-old Laguna Beach woman said. Ludwig sighed. And whJle It has all been a barrel or laughs for mom , Mrs. Ludwig hopes the owner comes around to claim the bold bird. And hungry? Bird ate its way through half of 3-yeJr-old Benjamin's peanut butter sandwich for breakfast -despite angry outcries from the lad. In the meantime, she ordered hus band Mark to stop by after work and pick up a cage for the temporary guest. Aod some bird seed. "I took It a little bowl of water because it looked like ita tongue got stuck to the roof of its beak," Mrs. Ludwig laught!.d. "If you can believe "I don't know how long the bird would last on Benjamin's peanut butler sandwiches," she said. that." , But instead of sipping the water, the bird hopped into the bowl and took a bath. And there's no telling bow long Benjamin's pa- tience would have lasted. Anyone who might have a line on Bird's owners should call Mrs. Ludwig at 494-0282. By mld·afternoon the bird bad: -F1own in and out of all the open windows at the 1pacloua Temple Hilla home. If you get a busy signal, call later. The blrd might be using the phone. Ex-inspector admits guilt late last year after police aJ. leged that he waa presaurtna a bulldinC contractor for liquor, overtime pay and food. Police said that lf lbeae itfta weren't given, Linares would nit-pick and slow down the con- struction appl'OVal proce11 on a project bein1 built ln the Irvine Industrial Complex-East. Jim Eldrtd1e. n, ~ner ot We1tem Commercial Contrac- tors Inc. and former director ot tbe Coata Me,a ctty Public Servic:et Department, brouibt the matter to Ute attention ol l"lne QtJ PubUc Work• Dlrec· tor Br•nt lluebOw, whq &old lnlne paaee. S lclrhll• cooperated wttia autbortUn, poUce utd. fte bulldtal ID queedoe at tJM lD· du1hl1I eomplex •11 re· impeded aild fOUDd to COlllPl'f with city regulations, city of· ficlals said . In addition to Linares, city bulldinl inspectors Art Peck, 51, of Anaheim, and Daniel B. BuUard, 50 ol Colta Meaa were criminally implicated. Peck wu char1ed with three counta ol ac· ceptlJ\I 1ratu1Ues and Bullard waa charted wttb two counta. Louil hrley, M, of Midway City. QUit his Job u a 1upervi1- ln1 bulJdinC lnapector aft« the clty be1an da.minal proetld· int• a1alnat him tn condedion with the pa1off scandal. Lowell Sbepard, 5', ol llWM, Hpervltlftl l111peetor for tM foor otMr men, wu demoted. Liaans, Bullard aid PMk .,.,. ,.,.., Bullard ad ...... pealecl Ulelr dl1mt11al1 la a pertODMI heartnt befoH ad- ~v• law Judi•· have had our eye on for quite some time," Hanchett said . ''We don't feel there ls any danger, and we are simply asking some operators of older reactors to supply us with information." He said after a review of the data, some operators may be or· dered to modify procedures and make physical changes in the plant's cooling system. Russ Hawkes, a spokesman for Southern California Edison Co., operator and principal owner or the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, said the loss of metal strenith was well * * Ale rt syste m soug ht * Installation of an alert system that would notify r esidents within a 10-mile radius or a serious problem at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Sta· lion has been endorsed by the Orange Co unty Boa rd o f Supervisors In an action Tuesday . s upervisors approved an agree- ment with Southern California Edison Company, major owner or the generating station, that will permit installation or siren· type devices that would sound within 15 minutes or any major problem. The purpose of the s irens would be to signal the 100,000 res- idents living within 10 miles ot the plant to tune their radios to s tations broadcasting emergen- cy information, not to im· mediately evacuate, county of· ficials said. SCE, which will bear the cost of installing the system , hopes to have it operating by late August. Sirens will be installed In San C l e m e n te and San Juan Capistrano and portions or Dana Point, Laguna Niguel and Mis- sic.n Viejo. Installation or such a system is being required of Edison by the Nuclear Regulatory Com· mission. Archit ect s t o h ear Brown Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. will address the Orange County C hapte r o f the American Institute of Architects Saturday at an energy fair at Rancho Carrillo, just east of San Juan Capistrano. The fair will feature a debate on nuclear energy, information about other energy sources and a tour of a wind -powered generator. Entrance to the fair, which begins at 9 a.m .. is restricted to those over 16 years of age. Price is $15 for institute members and $20 for non-members. Tickets can be purchased at the falr or at the institute office, Room 401, 3850 S. Plaza Drive, Santa Ana. · • known when the plant was buHt. "Th.is was a pioneer plant," Hawkes said. "What the NRC ls doing is taking a look at the technical data compiled when the plant was built to see if it Is sta nding up over time." He added that the NRC's re· quest for information was part or ongoing technical research re- garding the aging or steel in a reactor vessel. '·Nuclear plants are overbuilt to compensate for the well- known loss of strength that re - s ults." Hawkes said . "Weaken- ing o( the reactor is closelv Dallf ~ ... -- M AYOR 'S LEAV ING - Laguna Beach M ayor Wayne Baglin has accepted a job with Aramco in Saudi Arabia and will be leaving the Art Colony with his wife, Faye, and two children July 27. The mayor was to an- nounce his intention to re· sign bis City Council post to· day, bis wife said . Subdivisio n in Laguna panel top ic Laguna Beach planning com- missioners will meet tonight at 7 p.m . in council chambers to con· sider a proposal to subdivide 24 acres into 16 residential lots ad· jacent to Park Avenue. The applicant is seeking a ten- tative tract for the subdivision adjacent to both sides of Park Avenue, westerly' or Bem Drive and easte rly or Thurston In· termediate School. The panel wall also consider a five-lot subdivision located along the north side or Temple Hills Drive, westerly of Dom Court. lo addition, commissioners will begin discussing a Local Coastal Plan for the city. monitored throughout the We of the plant." Meanwhile, NRC licensing hearings continued today in San Diego for two new units at San Onofre that are nearing comple- tion. The topic or the hearings is the plants' ability to withstand a major earthquake centered near the nuclear facility. Edison is expected to call numerous witnesses to the stand to testify before the three- m e mber Atomic Safety and Licensing Board throughout the rest of lhe week. Bay wood d e lay approved Laguna Beach City Council members have granted a third reprieve to the development firm seeking to buy 62 acres of Sycamore Hills for SS.4 million. In a unanimous vote Tuesday, the council extended until Aug. 18 the deadline lo conclude a purchase agreement with the Baywood Development Group, which proposes to build 300 townhouses on the parcel, and Rancho Palos Verdes Corp., former owners of the property. City Manager Ken Frank said re presentatives of Baywood, Rancho and the city have reached an oral agreement on a ll issues reg arding the purchase. He said, however . that specific language or the agreement is still being written and it will re- quire at least another month for all three parties to agree on the precise wording or the docu· men ts. Conclusion or the land sale will leave Laguna Beach with a $1.5 million debt to Rancho Palos Verdes Corp., and more than 460 acres with which to raise that amount. Frank said under oral agree- ments already reached, the city would be given fou r years to pay orr that debt. with a portion of the Sycamore Hills property be· ing held for security of payment by the city · Laguna Beach purchased the 522·acre Sycamore Hills proper- ty between Laguna Canyon and El Toro roads more than two years ago for $6.4 million to end a series or lawsuits between the city and the former owners, Rancho Palos Verdes Corp . Al the end of June. the city owed Rancho a principal or SS.4 m illion and inter est in the amount or $1.4 million. The city has been negotiating with the Baywood Development Group or Newport Beach for more than a year for sale of about 62 acres in Sycamore Hills for SS.4 million Negotiations became s nagged earlier this year when t he city refused to take a subordinated note should Baywood be unsuc- cessful in its venture to build 300 townhomes on the land. I I .............. :~ .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/WednHday, July 8. 1981 " .. .. .. RICKY TICKY POUTIX: Willie Brown, the noted Democrat from San Francisco who currently is Speaker of the California .Msembly, only yesterday pledeed to pop down here to get Orange County straightened out. Who k.nows? Maybe be will. BROWN SNAPPED IN answer, "I don't have a requirement to tell anyone anything." The current problem that Willie Brown is interjecting himself into the Now that sounds fairly arrogant. 1t must be a disease that infects every legislator who ever became Assembly Speaker. You r emember Assembly Speaker Jesse Unruh of yesteryear? ~ ~\ T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN-1.~~ Unruh, currently our soft-spoken, easy-going state treasurer, was always getting accused of running roughshod over California back when he was As- sembly Speaker. Some legislators even called him ''Big Daddy{• in those days . middle of involves Orange County gov- ernment and the operation of UC Irvine Medkal Center . IT WAS WIDELY believed that Unruh gave the then-governor fits by charging off into a lot of legislative . Actually, the hassle really ·involves money. It always comes down to that, doesn't it? In event you missed the last two or three episodes of this continuing fight, however, the battle goes something like this : IN TAKING OVER operation of the county's old medical center, the un- iversity people joined county govern- ment in a contract whereby the UC medics would take care of the county's poorer patients and bill the county for this care. Sar Ronald charging of/ to bottle The Dreaded Unruh The county has thus been billed for $8 million worth of this medical care where county government has declined to cough up and pay the tab. County of- ficials claim they've been billed for medical work that they shouldn't have been tagged for. bullrushes without telling anybody anything, just like Willie Brown isnttt re- quired to do. University of California officials, on the other hand, have screamed foul, claiming all the billings are legit and Orange County gove rnment is acting like a deadbeat. Columnist Art Hoppe used to be so delighted by Unruh's giving the gov- ernor fits that he would characterize the governor as Sir Ronald, upon his white charger, out thrashing about in the bullrushes in an effort to find and destroy the wild beast known as The Dreaded Unruh. THAT'S ABOUT WHERE it stands. Assembly Speaker Brown jumped into the fray just a time back when he got some language added to the state budget that denies $10 million to Orange County government unless it pays up lo UC Irvine. But Sir Ronald never found him. He never got beyond just bearing The Dreaded Unruh thrashing a round , bellowing and no doubt creating havoc for the then-Republican administration. This came up as part of the subject only yesterday when Orange County legislato~ and Orange County govern· ment officials gat hered for a parley in Sacramento. THE THEN-GOVERNOR HAS now gone on to thrash around in a lot heavier governmental underbrush. And Unruh seems at peace, counting state money every day. Willie Brown showed up for part of the session. At one point, he was ques- tioned about the apparent secrecy sur- rounding his action to whack off Orange County at the pocketbook to the tune of 10 really big ones. Me anwhile, cu rrent Assembly Speaker Willie Brown will come down here and thrash around in the Orange County bullrushes and try to mediate a heavy hassle. You do hope when it's over, Willie will tell somebody something, whether he is required to or not. Host f amities sought Host families are needed in Foun- tain VaJley and nearby communities to house 40 high school students from England and the five adults who will accompany them on a visit to Orange County later this month. Tbe group Includes 31 girls and nine boys from schools located ln Surrey County near London. The stu- dents are traveling under the auspices of the British American Schools Exchange Club. Formed in 1974, l\le club provides for a non-profit exchange of visits between schools in England and the United States. The English youngsters will arrive July 28 at Fountain Valley High School and will need homes through Aug. 7. The youngsters will be gone Aug. 3-6 on an excursion to the Grand Canyon. Medical releases have been ob- tained for aJI students. and the vis· !tors will be covered by medical and accident insurance. Families interested in providing housing for the visiting English stu- dents should caJI Lois Woods during daytime hours at (213 ) 484-0220 or collect at (213) 242·5555 during eve- nings and weekends. Water budget to • rise Rising energy costs, inflation and additional employees will lncrea11e Mesa Consolidated Water District's Mesa High accredited for 6 years Costa Men Hiah School's ac- creditation has been extended aix years, to June 30, 1987, as the result of a survey by the Western Associa- tion of Schools and Colleaei. Mu Zook, Costa Mesa Hlab chairman of a team conductlnt a •lx· montb 1elf-atudy of the school, tald the full •ix-year accreditation followed an accrediUna commluloc visit in April. . •'Thi• continued accreditation," ZOOk tald, "me&DJ that the condl· tlont for effective education ex!Jt ln thla 1cbool." The Western Attoeiatton of Scboola and Colle1e1 11 reaponalble for IC· cred!tatlon of aecondary ac.boolt and ln1tltutlon1 of hiCb•r education In California, Hawaii, Guam and American Sebooll ln tbe J'ar t:ut. budget next fiscal year by about 4 percent, directors reported this week. The board, which oversees management of the district serving Costa Mesa, a part of Newport Beach and some county-governed areas ne ar Costa Mesa , approved its $6,595,000 budget for 1981·82 early this month. Included in the document are funds for adding an en1lneertna aide and lncreulng the hours of a part- tlme clerk-typlst. Projects scheduled for the new fiscal year include increasinl water production of one well, putting another in operaUoc and belinnint work on drillinl another, the 1ixtb in the district. Other projects include replacln1 4,600 feet of older water malna and compleUn1 a new feeder pipellne system. Lease extended VICTORIA, Seycbellet <AP > -The lease on the U.S. Air Force satellite tractlnl 1taUon on Mahe, the main hland In tbll Jndlan Ocean 1rchlpelaco, bu been estended to lteO . ..... flew c.... 644-77JJ ........................ - A State Office of Emergency Pre- paredness estimate says 400,000 people could die from radiation poison if San Onofre has a melt- down. That same study says 10 million people would have to be evacuated for at least 10 years. We'd like to know how will they evacuate us 7 This May 1 3 · s diuas- ter drill was plagued by communi- cations breakdowns, faulty equip- ment and poor logistics. The Fed- eral Emergency Management Ad· ministration called the drill inade· quate. But the NRC ignored this problem in their final environmental impact report. You don't have to be a scien· t1st to be c oncerned about radio- active sand on San Onofre State Beach. You can speak out for our community's future. On July 11 you will be able to speak to the NRC about your safety concerns. Join your neighbors 1n protecting our American Heri tage. Speak out. Your Chance to SPEAK OUT against licensing the nations' largest NUCLEAR Facility at San On of re OFFICIAL NRC PUBLIC HEARINGS Saturday, July 11 9 a.m. -5 p.m. San Clemente High School (1-5 South to Avenida Pico, east 1/4 mile.) We can convert San Onofre to safe natural gas. ----------------------------------------------------------- Yea. I want to do more than attend the hearing. O Yes/ Here is my contribution of Name ___________ Phone $ _______ _ Address '"J Yes/ I want to volunteer. 0 Yes/ Put me on your mailing list. City ____________ _,._1p _____ _ Al/lance for Survival 331 N. Orange, Orange, CA 92666 # 99 7-9922 £)(·LEAN• Notovu 1Z% ~t GROUND BEEF s: 1'~ ---·-· ---.-.... .....-.......--·........._.:_..__.,..... ...... ___ _,_,......_. ___________ _ 111111 bllyPUlt WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1981 FEATURES 85 M OVIES 86 TELEVISION 88 .,, .. . . .. .... -... (conoco) Du Pont and Conoco : ·u Inside the proposed billion dollar merger ... BlO ~Panel orders nuclear plant vessel test • 18Y JORN NEEDHAM ed., .. °"" .......... th~ Feartn1 fuel rod contalnen in 401some older nuclear plants may N h more vulnerable to crack1n1 .,.~tban had been expected, Nuclear meReauJatory Commission officiab have asked plant operators to (test ror "presaurlzed thermal tb~bock." T<) Included amona '4 Quclear ho11>lants throuibout the U.S. la the tb~an Onofre Nuclear Generatina -.station, a 14.year-old radllty located three miles south or San Clemente.' No plants have been ordered * • * to shut down, and no immediate In the desien of the plant. have had our eye on for quite known when the plant was built. danger ls predicted. However, if But he said the containers are some time," Hanchett said. "We "This was a pioneer plant," the wall of the 8-inch·thick steel s uspected of becoming weaker don't feel there is any danger, Hawkes said. "What the NRC Is reactor vessel were to crack, at a faster rate than scientists and we are simply asking some doing is taking a look at the pressurized water used to cool had anUclpated, especially in operators of older reactors to technical data compiled when fuel rods would escape. older plantl which have welds supply us with information." the plant was built to see if it is The fuel rods could then over-with a high copper content. He said after a review of th~ standing up over time." beat and mellthrough Ul~ vessel Hanchett described the data, some operators may be or-He added that the NRC's re· and into the conc~ete contain-gradual weakening ol the metal dered to modify procedures and quest ror information was part ment building, caus g a leak ol as "pressurized thermal shock." make physical changes in the of ongoing technical research re· radioactive materia into the at-He said over years of plant plant's cooling system. garding the aging of steel in a mosphere. operation the weakening is Russ Hawkes, a spokesman reactor vessel. NRC spokesman Jim Hanchett routinely calculated and the for Southern CaJifornia Edison • "Nuclear plants are overbuilt said after years of exposure to pace of cooling is slowed down Co .. operator and principal to compensate for the well· heating and cooling, steel reac-to compensate for the loss of owner of the San Onofre Nuclear known 105s of strength that re· tor vessels gradually lose strength. Generating Station, said the loss suits," Hawkes said. "Weakeo- _s.;...tr_;e_n_.,gth'--._T;:...;h....,a....,t_l..;..os,;_s;.,_;is;._;_c a....,l ..... cuJ.;;.;..:.a ..... ted.;__ __ • ..... ·T~his=_;i:::;ss;;.;u;;.;e;...::is;.....:s~o~m::..:e:..:tbi=· n:!:gt.......:.:w;..=e.;___o,;_f;__m_....,,e_t a,;_l_s_t_r e_n.....;f(:.:..t_h_w......;;;.a .;..s _w_.;..e_ll in g of the reactor is close Iv monitored throughout the life of the plant." Meanwhile. N RC licensing hearings continued today in San Diego for two new units at San Onofre that are nearing comple- tion. The topic of the hearings is the plants' ability to withstand a major earthquake centered near the nuclear facility. Edison ls expected to call numerous witnesses to the stand to testify before the three· m ember Atomic Safety and Licensing Board throughout the rest of the week le rt system sought Ex-inspector pleads guilty Installation of an alert system hat would notify residents ithin a 10-mile radius of a erious problem at the San nofre Nuclear Generatine Sta· ·on has been endorsed by the range County Board of upervisors. In ao action Tuesday, upervisors approved an acree· ment with Southern California f:dison Company, major owner the generating station, that ill permit installation of siren- ype devices that would sound ithin 15 minutes of any major roblem. Tb~ purpose of the sirens ould be to signal the 100,000 res- dents living within 10 miles of he plant to tune their radios to ·tations broadcasting emergen- Y information, not to im- ediately evacuate, county of- icial1 said. SCE, which wiU bear the cost f installing the system, hopes to ave it operating by late August. Sirens will be installed in San :lernente and San Juan apistrano and portions of Dana oint, Laguna Niguel and Mis· ion Viejo. c hi t ee ts o h e ar Brown Gov. F.dmund G. Brown Jr. :will address the Orange County •Chapter of the American t1nstitute of Architects Saturday i t an energy fair . at Rancho arrillo, just east of San Juan , apistrano. The fair will feature a debate n nuclear energy, information bout other energy sources and a tour of a wind-powered 11\ enerator. Entrance to the fair, which egina at 9 a.m., is restricted to ~hose over 16 years of age. Price & $1S ror institute members and 20 for non·members. Tickets • can be purchased at the fair or ~~-~he institute office, Room 401, j(J850 S. Plaza Drive, Santa Ana. , ~Peace Corps i,lo visit U CI A representative of the U.S. kPeace Corps will be on the UC \;Irvine campus on July 15 and 16, .11seeklng applicants for the in· r-ternational volunteer prorram. '\.1 Peace Corps volunteers re-t' celve a 90-day cultural and lang\laee orientation before l.hstartln1 a 2-year asslanment in a foreip country. After com- pleting tbe assignment, each t volu~r receive• $3,000. ~ Fot more information call Tony Wilde at (213) 824-1742. J Seniors get fr ee .................................. Myatery hou.ae gue1t ms.atop DebbJI Ludwig'• head in Laguna Beach home as delighted tot Allegra look& on. Bird flew in Tuelday morning and made a day of it. Her home for the bird Feathered friend too friendly , finds a 'nest' in Laguna By STEVE MITCHELL °' ... ....., ........... The visitor arrived early Tuesday morning, landing on young Benjamin's head as the boy sat in the patio. By late afternoon, the brown and gray bird had the run of the place, and Debby Ludwig said her winged house guest appears to be settling in for a long stay. "It's so friendly it must have been trained by somebody," the 28-year-old Laguna Beach woman said. And hungry? Bird ate its way through half of 3-year-old Benjamin's peanut butter sandwich for 'breakfast-despite aqgry outcries from the lad. "I took it a little bowl or water because it , looked like its tongue got stuck to the roof of its lbeak," Mrs. Ludwig laughed. "If you can believe that." But instead of sipping the water, the bird hopped into tile bowl and took a bath. By mid-afternoon the bird bad: 1 -Flown in and out of all the open windows at the spacious Temple Hills home. -Watched Mrs . Ludwig wash dishes from a perch on the kitchen sink. -Stolen more of Benjamin's sandwich. -Dragged soft cloth toys from the upstairs bedroom to the living room. -Left messy evidence of bis presence at several locations in the once-tidy living quarters. "I just wish he was potty trained," Mrs. Ludwig sighed. And while it has all been a barrel of laughs for mom, Mrs. Ludwig hopes the owner comes around to claim tbe bold bird. ln the meantime, she ordered husband Mark to stop by after work and pick up a cage for the temporary guest. And some bird seed. "I don't know how long the bird would last on Benjamin's peanut butler sandwiches, "!she said. And there's no telling how long Benjamin's pa- tience would have lasted. 'Anyone who might have a line on owners should call Mrs. Ludwig at 494-0282. II you aet a busy signal. call later. The bird mi&ht be usln1 the phone. Bird's BY RICHARD GREEN or ... o.11-, ~-Sutt A former Irvine city building inspector has pleaded guilty lo one misdemeanor count of tak- ing payoffs from a building con- tractor whose project be was ex- amining. Manny Linares. 34, of Corona. entered his plea Tuesday before Harbor Municipal Court Judge Donald Dungan arter Deputy Di strict Attorney Rudolph Lowenstein agreed to drop the other eight misdemeanor counts against him. Linares faces a maximum sentence of six months in jail and a $500 fine. Judge Dungan is to hand down a sentence Aug. 12. He was charged with nine mis- demeanor counts of "solicitation or acceptance of gratuities by public officers or employees" late last year after police al· leged that be was pressuring a buiJding contractor for liquor, overtime pay and food. Police said that if these gifts weren't given, Linares would nit-pick and slow down the con· structioo approvaJ process on a project being built in the Irvine Industrial Complex-East. Jim Eldridge, 39, owner of Western Commer cial Contrac- tors Inc. and former director or the Costa Mesa city Public Services Department, brought the matter to the attention of Irvine City Public Works Direc- tor Brent Muchow, who told Irvine police. Eldridge cooperated with authorities, police said. The building in question at the in- dustrial complex was re - inspected and found to comply with city regulations, city of· ficials said. In addition to Linares. city building inspectors Art Peck. 51, of Anaheim, and Daniel B. Bullard, SO, of Costa Mesa were criminally implicated. Peck was charged with three counts of ac- cepting gratuities and Bullard was charged with two counts. Judge By rnes found that Bullard and Peck did nothing more than each accept one bot· lie of liquor before last Christmas. He recommended that the men be rehired and Irvine City Manager William Woollelt Jr. complied with that recommendation. Woollett also r einstated Shepard to his old job as supervising inspector. Bullard and Peck, however, still face potential criminal orosecution. Bullard and Peck have both expressed confidence that in the wake of Judge Byrnes' finding in the personnel bearing, the dis- trict attorney will recommend that the criminal charges against them be dropped. r, legal counseling Le1al counsellng will be pro- vided free to 1enlor cltlsens 14 from I a.m. to 11 a .m. on the mfint and third Wed1'esdaya of Irvine Ca. seeking new hotel ' o• eacb mootb 1t tbe lrviae Senior The Irvine Company. undaunt- 191 Center. N Sandbur11'ay. ed by city recommendation• a A repr11eatative of the Le1al that it not be allowed to build a Aid Sodety of Oran1e CoGnty 400-room luxury hotel In will be on band to aHlat wttb Newport Center, ls boldinC ta1b r.1e1al prol:ffms ln aucb areu u wltb a CIQCllan nrm It hopel ,,he• b1aeftt.11 wtlla, houllnt, may nm the planned botel. pireti"91MDt lDQ criminal mat· Company offtclals announced ten. TbOM lntere1ted 1bould that Four Seuon1 Hotel•, a ;!call 75'--tor ao appoJntment. Toronto firm tbat opuate1 ~Race yacht 'lost' ( llMUe for ftm to f'bliA In Honolulu, Radlme bad l,C* UM Lot ~ to mU• to'° Ml leent Lot'e .. Ho al• 1ae•t race wu • l,J04 mllil ... ,. m7 Wi•J u "9 111i1M TllJa •--tut Uae lW • .... tlO ~.... Jffllte ..... ,..... .... Ulf • ..., a. mulls. - TIM leader Oii UadlCa;Pll UID• WM AadHl:om lkl ..... b;MlllllK-111JofDw'Pall&. ......... ...,,.,.01. or the lmprovements the Irvine Company ls aeekiq permission to make ln the circular 1bopplng and bullnee1 center. In all, the development firm wani. to conltrucl 900,000 square feet ol ofnce space u well as t.he hotel. This would In· elu de two hlah-rlae office towen. Adclitlonall-1, a Ul6·room ex· pamlon of the Marriott Hotel ls betn1 aoupt. A1ked about th• tlmlnc on the announcement of tb• Can..tlan INMI firm, lrvbM Company of· flclal• Hid tlley PUl'POHl)' telltdulecl talb prior to tb• eoa.cu---· ............. , tb• bot.i ls tlO " ...... ad the qullty IPOlYed ·are all .... ua1 con· lldlritiolll tide .. .., .... '" , ..... fflutbl•, .. qld JerfJ Colllil, a IDC*•m• for UM Irvine Company. He said the hotel firm ls the Irvine Company's pumber one candidate for operating the pro- po1ed bot.el bUt bu not fol'maily been selected. C,onstrucUon of hotels baa. ~come a bot potato of an tsaue lo Newport Beach. Objector• contend hotels will cornpouad trafftc problem• and wtll put new dernand on John Wayne Airport lot more dally Jet de· parturet. D@.iry r obbed Hwattnston ~acb pollce a-r. sHrclai for a blcyci.·ridln1 cunmu who robbed • loe1l dairy at.ore ot Sl,700. The boldup oieCUirid at 10: 50 p.m . ::::S, at C&lva Dalry, 19'2 St. D e puty District Attorney Lowenstein rerused lo say Tues· day whether he intended to pro- ceed with the prosecution or Bullard and Peck. That decision will be made public after a Monday pre-trial meeting between Lowenstein and the attorney for Bullard and Peck, Lowenstein said. "Linares was the guy we were really interested in," Lowen- stein said. "He was the one who didn't appeal his dismissal from the city." I rvine ntan hits cit y \\i th c lai nt Alleging that the Irvine Police Department assaulted, battered, slandered, libeled, defrauded and kidnapped him, a real estate agent has filed a $3.2 million damage claim against the City of Irvine. Brad Bradetich. 50. of 3 Southbrook, Irvine. also claims that Irvine police officers abused their authority, misused the ir poli ce powers and participated in coercion. fr vine Assistant City Manager Paul Brady Jr. said that the claim will be routinely denied by the City Council. (Such claims are required before the filing of a lawsuit against the city.) Bradetich's allegations arise from his arrest on charges of trespass, contempt of court for allegedly violating a restraining order and interference with an officer in the performance of his duties. He was arrested after a JO. year-old choreographer with the lee Capades Chalet contended that he was harassing her at her Irvine home in violation of a Superior Court restraining order she had obtained against him. Karen Jane Groba alleged in a Harbor Municipal Court trial for Bradetich that he continually a s ked he r out for dates throughout 1980. despite her re- fusals She alleged that they met early last year when he knocked on her door and asked if she wanted to sell her home through the real estate firm with which he was employed. He subsequently showed up at her house at odd hours and kept as king her out, she alleged. A Harbor Municipal Court jury found him guilty on three misdemeanors : contempt of court for violating a restraining order. interference with an of- ficer in the performance of his duties and trespassing. He is to be sentenced oo July 15. Assistant City Manager Brady promised that Bradetlch's charges against the city will be Investigated. • Univer s ity High wins University Hiah School In Irvine bas won rint place honors ht the Third Annual School Guitar Awards Proeram, co·a~ed by tbe Guitar and Acceu.,r)' Manufacturers As.- 1och11Uon and Music Cit.y N ... Ma1ulne. The award wa1 baHd • u · cellenc. ln tehool guitar ~ and cun1cUlum. Ualverett1 HIP Scboo&'I ftnt pla" award ID· cludel a -'7SO cub PrtM to be .aied fGr tbe puttbaee of new sultat 4111UIJ>1D•. A total-~of uo atudeata partldpate ln UDl..,.lty fflcb Scb0ol'1 pdtar Pf'OIJ'&m • .. ·= .. :· .. · .. ~ • :~ ' -1 ~ t ... . .• .~ . . .. . . •. . .. •. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/W1dnt1day, July 8, 1981 us the Willies RICKY TICKY POLITIX: Wlllie Brown, the noted Democrat from San • Francisco who currently is Speaker of the California Assembly, only yesterday pledged to pop down here to get Orange County straightened out. Who knows? Maybe he will. BROWN SNAPPED IN answer. "I don't have a requirement to tell anyone anything." Now that sounds fairly arrogant. It must be a disease that infects every legislator who ever became Assembly Speaker. You remember Assembly Speaker Jesse Unruh of yesteryear? The current problem that Willie Brown is interjecting himself into the Unruh, currently our soft-spoken, easy-going state treasurer, was always getting accused of running roughshod over Calif omia back when he was As· sembly Speaker. Some legislators even called him "Big Daddy" in those days. middle of involves Orange County gov- ernment and the operation of UC Irvine Medical Center . IT WAS WIDELY believed that Unruh gave the then-governor fits by charging off into a lot of legislative Actually. the hassle really involves money . It always comes down to that, doesn't it? In event you missed the last two or three episodes of this continuing fight . however , the battle goes something like this : IN TAKING OVER operation of the county's old medical center, the un- iversity people joined county govern· ' ment in a contract whereby the UC medics would take care of the county's poorer patients and bill the county for this care. Sir Ronald charging off to battle The Dreaded Unruh The county has thus been billed for $8 million worth of this medical care where cotinty government has declined to cough up and pay the tab. County of· ficials claim they've been billed for medical work that they shouldn't have been tagged for. bullrushes without telling anybody anything, just like Willie Brown isn't re- quired to do. University of California officials, on the other hand, have screamed foul. claiming all the billings are legit and Orange County government is acting like a deadbeat. Columnist Art Hoppe used to be so de lighted by Unruh's giving the gov- ernor fits that he would characterize the governor as Sir Ronald, upon his white charger, out thrashing about in the bullrushes in an effort to find and destroy the wild beast known as The Dreaded Unruh. THAT'S ABOUT WHERE it stands. Assembly Speaker Brown jumped into the fray just a time back when be got some language added to the state budget that denies $10 million to Orange County government unless it pays up to UC Irvine. But Sir Ronald never found him. He never got beyond just hearing The Dreaded Unruh thrashing around, bellowing and no doubt creating havoc for the then-Republican administration. This came up as part or the subject only yesterday when Orange County legislators and Orange County govern· ment officials gathered for a parley in Sacramento. THE THEN-GOVERNOR HAS now gone on to th'rash around in a lot heavier governmental underbrush. And Unruh seems at peace, counting state money every day. Willie Brown showed up for part of the session. At one point, he was ques- tioned about the apparent secrecy sur- rounding his action to whack off Orange County at t,he pocketbook to the tune of 10 really big ones. Meanwhile, current Assembly Speaker Willie Brown will come down here and thrash around in the Orange County bullrusbes and try to mediate a heavy hassle. You do hope when it's over, Willie will tell somebody something, whether he is required to or not. Host families sought Host families are needed in Foun- tain Valley and nearby communities to house 40 high school students from England and the five adults who will accompany them on a visit to Orange County later this month. The group includes 31 girls and nine boys from schools located in Surrey County near London. The stu· dents are traveling under the auspices of the British American Schools Exchange Club. Formed in 1974, the club provides for a non-profit exchange of visits between schools in England and the United States The English youngsters will arrive July 28 at Fountain Valley High School and will need homes through Aug. 7. The youngsters will be gone Aug. 3-6 on an excursion to the Grand Canyon. Medical releases have been ob· tained for all students, and the vis· itors will be covered by medical and accident insurance. Families interested in providing housing for the visiting English slu· dents should caJI Lois Woods during daytime hours at (213) 484-0220 or collect at (213> 242-SS.SS during eve- nings and weekends. Water budget to • rise Rising energy costs. inflation and additional employees will increase Mesa Consolidated Water District's Mesa High accredited for 6 years Costa Mesa High School's ac· credltaUon has been extended six years, to June 30, 1987, as the result of a aurvey by the Western A.uocia· Uoo of Schools and Colleges. Max Zook, Costa Mesa Hiah chairman of a team conductma a slx· month self-study of the school, said the full six-year accredltatlon followed an accrediting commlulon vlalt ln April. "Thia continued accreditation," Zook said, •'means that the condJ· llona for effective education exist ln th11 achool." The Western Association cA Scbooll and Collqes la respon.slble fM ac· credltatioo of ~dary tcboolt and inatitutlooa of higher education ln California, Hawall, Guam and American Schools in the Far But. budget next fiscal year by about 4 percent, directors reported this week. The board, which oversees management of the district serving Costa Mesa, a part of Newport Beach and some county-governed areas near Costa MKa, approved its $6,595,000 budget for 1981·82 early this month. Included In the document are funds for adding an engineering aide and increasing the hours of a part· time clerk-typist. Projects scheduled for the new fiscal year include Increasing water production or one well, putting another in operaUon and beeinning work on drilling another, the sixth ln the district. . Other projects include replacing 4,800 feet of older water ma.ins and completing a new feeder pipeline system. Lease extended VICTORIA, Seychelles (AP> -The lease oo the U.S. Air Force satellite tracklna at.aUoo on Mabe, the main isl and 1n this lndl an Ocean arcblpelaio, bu been extended to 1.9IO • "'-l I Ill .... ,_. ............. II l4 ,,,.., _..._,_ ...... o.. ICtll ..... -1...,._ ewta--'41·1• ........... ........... ,. ,,..~ ••Ir , ... •11t1W11 .. ,, 11.~., -... aip ...... .-. .... , ---~., ' A State Office of Emergency Pre· paredness estimate says 400,000 people could die from radiation poison 1f San Onofre has a melt· down. That same study says 1 O million people would have to be evacuated for at least 1 O years. We'd like to know how will they evacuate us 7 This May 1 3 • s disas· ter drill was plagued by communi· cations breakdowns, faulty equip- ment and poor logistics. The Fed· eral Emergency Management Ad · ministration called the drill inade· quate. But the NRC ignored this problem 1n their final environmental impact report. You don't have to be a scien· t1st to be concerned about radio- active sand on San Onofre State Beach. You can speak out for our community's future. On July 11 you will be able to speak to the NRC about your safety concerns. Join your neighbors in protecting our ,4\merican Heritage. Speak out. Your Chance to SPEAK OUT against licensing the nations' largest NUCLEAR Facility at San On of re OFFICIAL NRC PUBLIC HEARINGS Saturday, July 11 9 a .m. -5 p.m. San Clemente High School (1-5 South to Avenida Pico, east 1f4 mile.) We can convert San Onofre to safe natural gas. ----------------------------------------------------------- r ( Yea. I went to do more then attend the hearing. Yes! Here is my contribution of $ Name ___________ Phone Address Yes! I want to volunteer. City ____________ _,._ip Yes/ Put me on your mailing list. Alliance for Survival 331 N. Orange. Orange, CA 92666 #99 7-9922 £.X•LEAN• Notovu1Z% fu.t GROUND BEEF ,.; 4'~ I I I IRllGI CUIT llllyPlllt WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 19'1 FEATURES 85 MOVIES 86 TELEVISION B8 (conoco) Du Pont. and Conoco : Inside the proposed billion dollar merger ... BlO u ) \ 111-vine Co. pushes for 400-rooin hotel The Irvine Company, undaunt-tatlves to meet with civic and pany wants to locate in the and bWliness center. hotel firm, lrvine Company of· Irvine Company's number one ed by city recom~endatlona business leaders in Newport financial section of Newport In all, the development firm ficials said they purposely candidate for operating the pro- that it not be allowed to build a Thursday. Center. wants to construct 900,000 scheduled talks prior to the posed hotel but has not formally dT 400 -room luxury hotel In The Canadian firm currently The Newport City Council, square feet of office space as council session. been selected. • Newport Center, ia holding talks operates such hotels aa the which begins public bearings well as the hotel. This would in-t.tu~ with a Canadian fa.rm it hopes Pierre in New York City, the next Tuesday on the company's elude two high-rise omce "We feel the way the hotel is co"nstruction of hotels has 40~ may nm the planned hotel. Rita-Carlton in Chicago and the plans to expand Newport Center, towers. to be operated and the quality become a hot potato or an issue Ne· Clift ln San Francisco. could overturn the recommenda-Additionally, a l6S-room ex-involved are all essential con· in Newport Beach. Objectors wit Company officials announced But Newport Beach city plan· lions. pansion of the Marriott Hotel is siderations -this is information contend hotels will compound ml that Four Seasons Hotels, a nets and city planning com· The 400-room hotel is only one being sought. we feel is valuable," stid Jerry traffic problems and will put (Toronto firm that operates missioners already have recom-of the improvements the Irvine Collins, a spokesman for the new demand on John Wayne rtotels in Canada, Europe and mended against construction of Company is seekin& permission Asked about the timing on the Irvine Company. Airport for more daily jet de· thi the U.S., will send represen-the hotel, which the Irvine Com· to make in the circular shoppinJI: announcement of the Canadian He said the hotel firm is the partures. To~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-.;__- hot tb4 ..., ........ ,.... ............ Myltny houae guelt .U1 atop Debby Ludwig' I head in Laguna Beach home°' tklighted tot Allegro loolu on. Bird flew in Tue«lay morning and made a day of it. .. y STEVE M.ITCllELL ................... -Watched Mrs. Ludwig wash dishes from a perch on the kitchen sink. The visitor arrived early Tuesday morning, Canding on young Benjamin's head as the boy sat 4in the patio. -Stolen more of Benjamin's sandwich. -Dragged soft cloth toys from the upstairs bedroom to the living room. By late afternoon. the brown and gray bird ~ad the run of the place. and Debby Ludwig said her winged house guest appears to be settling In (or a long stay. -Left messy evidence of his presence at several locations in the once-tidy living quarters. "I just wish he was potty trained," Mrs. 1 "It's so friendly it must have been trained by ~omebody," the 28-year-old Laguna Beach woman 'said. Ludwig sighed. And while it has au been a barrel of laughs for mom, Mrs. Ludwig hopes the owner comes around to claim the bold bird. And hungry? Bird ate its way through half of tJ-year-old Benjamin's peanut butter sandwich for ~reakfast -despite angry outcries from the lad. In the meantime, she ordered hU5band Mark lo slop by after wort and pick up a caee for the temporary guest. And some bird seed. "I took it a little bowl of water because it \naked like its tongue got stuck to the roof of its \eak," Mrs. Ludwig lauahed. "U you can believe piat." r But instead of sipping lbe water, the bird opped into the bowl and took a bath. "I don't know how long the bird would last on Benjamin's peanut butter sandwiches," she said. And there's no telling how long Benjamin's pa- tience would have lasted. By mid-afternoon the bird had: Anyone who might have a line on Bird's owners should call Mrs. Ludwig at 494-0282. , -F1own in and out of a1l the open windows at :,he spacious Temple Hills home. Il you get a busy signal, call later. The bird might be using the phone. f Center ·backs limit • on use at airport The Newport c,nter Asaocla· lion, an organisation repreaent- in1 property owners and tenants in the Newport Beach 1boppln1 and businesa cellta', baa voted to take a 1tance to limit ex- pansion of John Wayne Airport. Otnciala for the association, formed in i•. aaid members have a1reed to endorae the clty's po1itlon that dally de· par:ture1 be belcl at 41, Under a recently adopted muter plan for tbe·airport, tbe •umber of dallJt departure• cMl4 be ....... '° 55 b)' 195. ~.,,... ..... ol t.be ............ llMIDbln are reeo••••dla1 t11at ........... iibipaf\ .... be ..... '° ... ,.... eaiamerdlll • tra ............... tJ. ••w• ""''' .. tbat .Jolla •• ,.. AtrPort taDDOt eoiu.. . -1 to meet the increasing airport needs of Orange County,'' be aald, adding that his iroup feels there la a need to reduce jet noise over Newport Beach. Yticht 'lost' in Transpac The battle for ftnt io tlnlsb ID the Transpacific Lot Anaeles io Honolulu yacht race ••• a my1tery today H tb~ya ChrtlUnt failed lo report at a.m. roll call. ......... Cbriltlil•'• r:tnl, reparted a PoiNUOG plaee lier 1,0ll mllu tro• H..ol91•, &alUm• Ila• t.• .... ., liill SKNt i.o.. .. 1 ....... ...,. .._ ..rtie' ltGr'J P ... Ul • 3 coast colleges face budget woes By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Of .. DliltyNltlUft The Coast Community College District has been dealt a double whammy by the finance bills approved last month by state lawmakers , accordi ng lo Correllan Thompson, executive vice chancellor ror business. First. the district. which includes Orange Coast, Golden West and Coastline colleges, learned last month it will not receive enough money from the state to cover its expenses for the school year that just ended. In fact, Thompson says, the district is being penalized f inancially because more s tudents enrolled in Coast college classes than had been anticipated. And for the coming school year, the district also will be receiving less money than it anticipated from the state. Thompson s aid the district will have to do a balancing act to maintain its present enrollment level during the coming year because a drastic drop or increase could result in more financial penalties. Because of the state fw:ading cuts for last year and the current year, tbe college district is now facing a $7.4 million reduction in available funds as it prepares its 1981-82 budget. The cutbacks will be spread among the three community colleges and the district administration. The minimum class size may be increased from 15 to 18, some classified employees (including maintenance and c ler ical persoMel) may be laid off. and additional materials fee51 may be charged for some la~ and classes. ''I would say we're in a finahcial crunch," Thompson said. "The reason is that we did not receive from the slate in 1980-81 our full s h a r e of apportionment for the total number or students we served." He said the three local colleges served 35,000 full-time equivalent students last year . CA full-time student takes 18 class hours per week ; part-lime students are added together to reach the full-time equivalent total.) The district was paid. however, for o nly 32,500 full-time equivalent students. Thompson said 11tate legislators last year expected the entire community college system enrollment to grow about 2 percent and funded it accordingly. Instead , the statewide enrollment jumped about 8 or 9 percent. In distributing tbe resulting deficit, the Coast district, which registered a 15 percent enrollment growth , was penalized, Thompson said. In planning for the coming year, college officials' projections also were upset because the community college system received a s percent funding increase for inllaUon, not the 8 percent received by the K-12 school system. The district's tentative 1enera1 fund budget for 1981-82 ii now at $81 million, and Individual colle1ea are examinin1 ways to cul their bud1ets. Bruce Wllllama, a spokesman for Golden West, said bla campus expects to eliminate 20 to 25 clualfled Jobs throu1b layoffs and atlriUon, and ftve faculty vacancies will not be fUJed. ' Aho. noa·credlt counea such .. CODtlDUlDI education for aurHI wUI tMa ottered on a Hlf ·IU"""11DI fee bHll, be said. "Pr.evloualy, theae ,....,.... ..... rr.e. R•mod•llna and txpan1lon alM d be f\lltall.ct at Goldell ·-WUllam. Mid. Slmllar ~•t• are belna considered at Orange Coast and Coastline colleges. T he reduction in funds to the community college system reportedly was accepted as an alternative to proposed tuition fees . Yet the days of a free community college system may be numbered. "Philosophically. I'm opposed to tuition at community colleges because I believe there should be at least one tuition-free segment of higher education available," Vice Chancellor Thompson said . ··But realistically. within two, three or four year s, we will probably have some sort of tuition in the California community college system," he said. Spanish flavor due for downtown Mesa By JERRY CLAUSEN Of .. DellY ...... Mllff Downtown Costa Mesa, at least the areas surrounding the Fidelity Block redevelopment project, would eventually look like a picture-book impression or Spain under plans proposed by city Redevelopment Agency stafr members. The proposals. the first draft of architectural design and re- design guidelines. are scheduled for preliminary review tonight by the Redevelopment Agency, actually City Council members sitting as the special board. The design scheme was or· dered two months ago after downtown jewelry store owner J .C. Humphries sought agency approval for renovating three stru ctures be owns along Newport Boulevard between 19th and 17th Streets. The board balked at the Hum- phries proposal and ordered its staff lo come up with architec- tural design criteria that would apply to all of the downtown area surrounding a proposed city-sponsored shopping center bordered by 19th Street, Park Avenue and Harbor and Newport Boulevards. Humphries. his plans placed in limbo for 90 days, told the board to forget his idea. He said he would abandon the renova- tion project if he had to wait. Later. the board approved a plan for remodeling just Hum- phries' jewelry store structure. Proposals to be unveiled at the 7: 30 meeting tonight in City Hall, 77 Fair Drive, closely parallel a City of Fullerton plan calling for construction or re- modeling materials such as roof tiles. wrought-iron grill work. subdued stucco tones and other Spanish-style a r chitectural materials. Outlawed, if the proposals are approved , would be such m alerials as reflective glass, plastics or other "modern" look· ing materials. Tipsy youth enters 2 homes by mistake A 16-year-o ld Santa Ana Heights boy is reportedly "sleeping it off'' today in Orange County Juvenile Hall after he al· legedly entered two Costa Mesa homes early this morning., startling women as they slept beside their husbands. Police arrested the hung-over youngster for suspicion of burglary after Costa Mesan Richard H.\ Kimball, 39, cor- nered and held him al butcher knife point in the Kimballs' home at 296 Rose Lane. That, said Costa Mesa officer Gerry Stukkie, was at 3:45 a.m., more than three hours after a youth resembling the young burglary suspect fled a neighboring home on his bicycle witb a sleepy-eyed Santa Ana police officer in pursuit. The unidenlifled off-duty San- ta Ana officer, Stuk1de said, was awakened shortly after midnlght by his frightened wile. She told her husband someone had been wiggling her toes, Stukkie related. Her husband s potted the youth ln the couple's ltedroom and lurched '&tter hJm , Stukkie not.ed. The youth's capture, nearly 4 houri later, came when Mrs. Burglars hit CM glider company Cotta Meaa police bell••• bur1lan UMd a crowbar to P"1 open the front door to ·S.U Wle1and'1, a 11••1-~ 1Uder manufattver at 11eo lloerovta Ave., eartr lloadaJ .-.... Tbe W.... •• ,_. Wttil the 1aU1 for elPt ~ Gftleaw Hid, and a lmall CaJtWaW, The 1tolea fOCMll ftft valued at •bOUt•• ... Kimball. the second victim. told her husband she was awakened by a cold hand on her leg. The couple, Stukkie said, passed. off the incident as a dream until Kimball got up for a drink of water and spotted the youth cowering under a bedspread that had slipped lo the bedroom floor. The Santa Ana Heights boy, Stukkie said , told officers he had entered the Kimball home look- ing for "something of value." His house haunting episode followed a beer-drinking binge with friends that also led to ·" massive hangover, Slukkie said. Bike-riding thief sought in Huntington Huntintton Beach police are searching for a bicycle-riding gunman who robbed a local dairy store of $1,700. The holdup occurred at 10:50 p.m. Monda1 at Calva Dairy, 15942 F.dwards St. Lt. Merle Schneblln said a man in bis early 208, with IOQI' blond hair tucked under a blue and white baseball cap, eotered the at.ore kicked a clerk ill tbe 1hlna ;;;i pulled a blue 1teel re- volver from his waistband. The 1uapect took money ftom tbe cub Naitter ~ r&Macked an om. lot addiUoaal colna and bllll. ~di be p&ac.d 111 ldl blue nylon .,._,.ck, pollff aalcL Tbe manned on• 1U"1" and blue 10.~ blcnle. accorcHnc topoUce. ~ , • . I l I J • i ' ~· ,;: .•. t~ .... ::~ .. . ••• ·= .. :· ·: :: •.. :: . . .. 4 ·~ . •• I .. •• .. .. .. . . . ,. ,,. ~ .. ·:. .. '• . . . .• . . . . . .· ·: -· . ·= ·= .. . . .. Orange Coatt DAILY Pll.OT/Wednt1day, July 8, 1981 RICKY TICKY POLITIX: Willie Brown, the noted Democrat from San Francisco who currently is Speaker of the Callf omia Assembly, only yesterday pledged to pop down here to get Orange County straightened out. Who knows? Maybe he will. The current problem that Willie Brown is interjecting himself into the ~ I"'-'\ TOM MURPHINI ,~~1 middle of involves Orange County gov- ernment and the operation of UC Irvine Medical Center. Actually, the hassle really involves money. It always comes down to that, doesn't it? ln event you missed the last two or three episodes of this continuing fight, however. the battle goes something like this: IN TAKING OVER operation of the county's old medical center, the un· iversity people joined county govern· ment in a contract whereby the UC medics would take care of the county's poorer patients and bill the county for this care. The county has thus been billed for $8 million worth of this medical care where county government has declined to cough up and pay the tab. County of· ficials claim they've been billed for medical work that they shouldn't have been tagged for. University of California officials, on the other hand, have screamed foul , claiming all the billings are legit and Orange County government is acting like a deadbeat. THAT'S ABOUT WHERE it stands. Assembly Speaker Brown jumped into the fray just a time back when he got some language added to the state budget that denies $10 million to Orange County government unless it pays up to UC Irvine. This came up as part of the subject only yesterday when Orange County legislators and Orange County govern- ment officials gathered for a parley in Sacramento. Willie Brown showed up for part of the session. At one point, he was ques- tioned about the apparent secrecy sur- rounding his action to whack off Orange County at the pocketbook to the tune of 10 really big ones. BROWN SNAPPED IN answer, "l don't have a requirement to tell anyone anything." Now that sounds fairly arrogant. It must be a disease that infects every legislator who ever became Assembly Speaker. You remember Assembly Speaker Jesse Unruh of yesteryear? Unruh, currently our soft.spoken, easy-going state treasurer, was always getting accused of running roughshod over Calilomia back when he was As- sembly Speaker. Some legislators even called him "Big Daddy" in those days . IT WAS WIDELY believed that Unruh gave the then-governor fits by charging off into a lot of legislative Sir Ronald chargmg off to battle The Dreaded Unruh bullrus hes without telling anybody anything, just like Willie Brown isn't re- quired to do. Columnist Art Hoppe used to be so delighted by Unruh's giving the gov- ernor fits that he would characterize the governor as Sir Ronald. upon his white charger. out thrashing about in the bullrushes in an e ffort to find and destroy the wild beast known as The Dreaded Unruh. But Sir Ronald never found him. He never got beyond just hearing The Dreaded Unruh thrashing around, bellowing and no doubt creating havoc for the then-Republican administration. THE THEN-GOVERNOR HAS now gone on to thrash around in a lot heavier governmental underbrush. And Unruh seems at peace, counting state money every day. Meanwhile, current Assembly Speaker Willie Brown will come down here and thrash around in the Orange County bullrusbes and try to mediate a heavy hassle. You do hope when it's over, Willie will tell somebody something, whether he is required to or not. Host families sought Host families are needed in Foun- tain VaJley and nearby communities to house 40 tugh school students from England and the five adults who will accompany them on a vistt to Orange County later tttis month. The group includes 31 girls and nine boys from schools located in Surrey County near London. The stu- dents are trave ling under the auspices of the British American Schools Exchange Club. Formed in 1974, the club provides for a non-profit exchange of visits between schools in England and tbe United Slates. The English youngsters will arrive July 28 at Fountain Valley High School and will need homes through Aug. 7. The youngsters will be gone Aug. ~on an excursion to the Grand Canyon. Medical releases have been ob- tained for all students, and the vis· itors will be covered by medical and accident insurance. Families interested in providing housing for the visiting English stu- dents should call Lois Woods during daytime hours at (213) 484-0220 or collect at (213) 242-5555 during eve· nings and weekends. Water budget to • rise Rising energy costs, inflation and additional employees will increase Mesa Consolidated Water District's Mesa H igh accre d it e d for 6 years Costa Mesa High School's ac- creditation bas been extended six years, to June 30, 1987. u the result of a survey by the Western Associa- tion of Schools and Colleges. Max Zook, Coat a Mesa High chairman of a team conducting a slx- month aelf·~tudy of the school. said t h e full six-year accreditation followed an accrediting commission villt in April. "Thia continued accreditation," Zook said, "meana that the condi- Uona for effecUve education exist ln lhla school." Tbe Western AuoclaUon ol Schools and Colle1es la responsible for ac· creditation of secondary schools and institutions of hither educatlon ln Callforola, Hawall, Guam and American Scbools ln tbe Far East. ..c:•,.... ,.,. ...... o-.e ..... _ ... M._I COSTa-..141·1• , . ..._. ... -u:w•"'1 ------............... , budget next fiscal year by about 4 percent, directors reported this week. The board, which oversees management of the district serving Costa Mesa, a part of Newport Beach and some county-governed areas near Costa Mesa, approved its $6,595,000 budget for 1981·82 early this month. Included in the document are funds for adding an eneineering aide and increasing the hours of a part- lime clerk-typist. . · Projects scheduled for the new fiscal year include increasing water production of one well, putlinc another in operation and beginning work on drilling another, the sixth in the district. Other projects include replacing 4,600 feet of older water mains and completing a new feeder pipeline system. Lea se ext e nded • VICTORI A, Seychelles (AP) -The lease on the U.S. Air Force satellite tracklni station on Mabe, the main ialancf in this lndlao Ocun arcbipelaeo, has been extended to 1990 • A State Office of Emergency Pre- paredness estim'ate says 400,000 people could die from radiation poison if San Onofre has a melt· down. That same s tudy says 1 O million people would have to be evacuated for at least 1 0 years. We'd like to know how will they evacuate us 7 This May 1 3 's disas- ter drill was plagued by communi cations breakdowns. faulty equip· ment and poor lo91st1cs. The Fed- eral Emergency Management Ad· m1n1strat1on called the drill made· quate. But the NRC ignored this problem in their final environmental impact report. You don't have to be a sc1en- 11st to be concerned about radio active s and on San Onofre State Beach. You can speak out for our community's future. On July 11 you will be able to speak to the NRC about your safety concerns Join your neighbors in protecting our American Heritage. Speak out. Your Cha nce to SPEAK OUT against licensing the nations' largest NUCLEAR Faci lity a t San Onofre OFFICIAL NRC PUBLIC HEARINGS Saturday, July 11 9 a.m. -5 p.m. San Clemente High School (1-5 South t o A ven ida Pic o, east 1/4 m ile.) We ca n conve rt San On of re to safe natu ral gas. ----------------------------------------------------------- Yea. I want to do more than attend t he hearing. [.J Yes! Here is my contribution of $ 0 Yes/ I want ro volunteer . 0 Yes/ Put me on your mailing list. Nam~~----------_.Phone Address CitY ------------.J-.'P Alliance for Survival 331 N. Orange. Orange, CA 92666 11997-9922 , : • i • . I I I I i t I ------..... ,,.,. ..... ~-·--·~,. IRllll l:lllT ~.._.__,....,. ____ ~-----~~~~~--~--....... llllyPllll WEDNESDAY, JULY 8, 1981 FEATURES BS MOVIES 86 TELEVISION 88 Du Pont. and Conoco: (conoco) Inside the proposed billion dollar merger ... BlO e Co. pushes for 400-roo1n hotel The Irvine Company, undatmt· ed by city recommendations that it not be allowed to build a 400-room luxury hotel in Newport Center, is holding t.alll wlth a Canadian firm it hopes may run the planned hotel. Company officials announced that Four Seasons Hotels, a Toronto firm that operates hotels in Canada, Europe and the U.S .• wlll send represen· tallves to meet with civic and business leaders in Newport Thursday. The Canadian firm currently operates such hotels as the Pierre ln New York City, the Ritz-Carlton in Chicago and the Clift in San Francisco. But Newport Beach city plan· ners and city plannln& com· missioners already have recom· mended against construction of the hotel, which the Irvine Com· pany wants to locate in the rtnancial section of Ne.wport Center. The Newport City Council. which begins public bearings next Tuesday on the company's plans to expand Newport Center, couJd overturn the recommenda· lions. The 400-room hotel is onJy one of the improvements the Irvine Company is seeking permission to make in the circular shopplna ..., ....... ,.... .............. Myit~ houie gueit lit1 atqp ~bby Ludwig' a head in Laguna Beach home aa delighted tot Allegro loob on. Bird /U!w in Tuelday morning and made o day of it. er home for the bird Feathered friend too friendly, finds a 'nest' in Laguna 8y STEVE MITCHELL itt11eD1111y .......... 'l'be visitor arrived early Tuesday morning, !anding oo young Benjamin's head as the boy sat ln the patio. -Watched Mrs. Ludwig wash dishes from a perch on the kitchen sink. -Stolen more of Benjamin's sandwich. -Dragged soft cloth toys from the upstairs bedroom to the living room. By late afternoon. the brown and gray bird had the run of the place, and Debby Ludwig said .her winged house guest appears to be settling in for • long stay. -Left messy evidence or his presence at several locations in the once-tidy living quarters. "I just wish he was potty trained," Mrs. Ludwig sighed. ''It's so friendly it must have been trained by somebody," the 28-year-old Laguna Beach woman said. And while it has all been a barrel of laughs for mom. Mrs. Ludwi& hopes the owner comes around to claim the bold bird. And hungry? Bird ate its way through half of I -year-old Benjamin's peanut butter sandwich for aireakfast -despite angry outcries from the lad. In the meantime, she ordered husband Mark to st.QP by after work and pick up a cage for the temporary guest. And some bird seed. ''I took it a little bowl of water because it looked like its tongue eot stuck to the roof of its "heak,'' Mrs. Ludwig laughed. "If you can believe that." "I don't know how long tbe bird would last on Benjamin's peanut butter sandwiches," she said. And there's no telling bow long Benjamin's pa· tience would have lasted. 'But instead of sipping the water, the bird hopped into the bowl and took a bath. By mid-afternoon the bird had: Anyone who mi1bt have a line on Bird's owners should ca.ii Mrs. Ludwig at 494·0282. -Flown in and out of all the open windows at the tpacious Temple Hills home. If you get a busy signai. call later. The bird might be using the phone. Mesa backing Bolsa Chica ni!Jrina plan_ S•pport for an Orange County 1oimment plan for a public m l na al Bolsa C h ica no ._ of Huntinaton Beach .... 1a.ined official SUPPort from a f city council. ta Mesa council memben lmoualy adopted a resolu· 1upportln1 the plan 090.ed by Slpal Landmark • calllna for a m~ a and preservation o( a ot the 1pr1wUn1 manh u a e reserve. · c.ta M"a councU tided *I Oraqe Couty Board ot r:Yleora MoadaJ •l•ln•t bf tb• 1tate eoutal Dtl11d va to reeene _.. till _. ... tn It.I natural ..... u eltlea f aYorl•• t•• '1'1 .... lneludes.ataAU belm uil Orn••· all Oi ,....... llaallar NIOlutkiinl ertlayear. Center backs limit • on use at airport The Newport Center Associa· tlon, an organization represent- ing proper1,y owners and tenants ln the Newport Beach •bopptnc and businesa center, bu voted to take a stance to limit ex· pansion o( John Wayne Airport. Officials fOf' the aasoclatJon, formed ln 1969, said memben have a1reed to endor1e the clty'1 position that dally de· partures be held at 41. Under a recently adopted muter plan for the airport, tbe number of daily departur11 could be lnereued to SS by t•. Bernard Scllaelder, pr ...... of the Milodatba, Hkl memben are recomme11d1D1 that • ....... *1*t .... be ..... tOmMt,...~ilr traHI needi ta tbe eomt\J, .... fHOIDlH that Jo•• w ayae Atrpert HDDCK «IDtA8ili to meet the increasln1 airport needs of Orange County," he said, adding that hls 1roup feels there ii a Deed to reduce Jet noiae over Newport Beach. Yncht 'lost' in ~rarnspac The batUe for fint to ftldlb IG the T .. anapaclftc Loi A'n,,... to Honolulu yacht ract •H a mystery today H tbe 7aclit Chritllne failed to report It IM I 1 . m. roll call. lle..W.. Cbrtltine'• prtm-.a rl•al, rworWI(: • poi&UC. . tMt fl::J J•a· ,1,•1• mll•• rro11 •. aa1t1m• bid t.• mU. to 10 ....-~s.ent LoYe WM 1 ... mu.PIJ. I ltee Wt6tr ltor1 Pace U1. and busineaa center. In all, the •development firm wants to construct 900,000 square feel or office space as well as the hotel. Thia would in· elude two high-rise office towers. Additionally, a 165-room ex- pansion of the Marriott Hotel is being sought. Asked about the timing on the announcement of the Canadian hotel firm, Irvine Company of· fi c lals said they purposely scheduled talks prior to the council session. "We feel the way the hotel is to be operated and the quality involved are all essential con- siderations -this is information we feel is valuable," S\lid Jerry Collins, a spokesman for the Irvine Company. He said the hotel firm is the Irvine Company's number one candidate for operating the pro· posed hotel but has not formally been selected. co·nstruction or hotels has become a bot potato of an issue in Newport Beach. Objectors contend hotels will compound traffic problems and will put new demand on John Wayne Airport for more daily jet de· partures. 3 coast colleges face budget woes By PHIL SNEIDERMAN Ot .. o.Hy,.... ...... The Coast Community College District has been dealt a double whammy by the finance bills approved last month by state lawmakers, according. t o Correllan Thompson, executive vice chancellor for business. First. the district. which includes Orange Coast, Golden West and Coastline colleges, learned last month it will not receive enough money from the state to cover its expenses for the school year that just ended. In fact, Thompson says, the dis trict is bei ng penalized financially because more students enrolled in Coast college classes than had been anticipated. And for the coming school year, the district also will be receiving less money than it anticipated from the state. Thompson said the district will have to do a balancing act lo maintain its present enrollment level during the coming year because a drastic drop or increase could result in more fmanciaJ penalties. Because of the state funding cuts for l ast year and the current year. lhe college district ls now facing a S7 .4 million reduction in available funds as it prepares its 1981 -82 budget. The cutbacks will be spread among the three community col leges and the district administration. The mlnimum class size may be increased from 15 to 18, some classified employees (including maintenance and clerical personnel) may be laid off, and addilionai materials fees may be charged for some labs and classes. "I would say we're in a financial crunch," Thompson said. ''The reason is that we did not receive from the state in 1980·81 our run share of apportionment for the total numbeT or students we served." He said the three local colleges served 35,000 fuU -time equivalent students last year. (A full-time student takes 18 class hours per week ; part-time students are added together to reach the full ·lime equivalent total.) The di strict was paid, h owever, for only 32 ,500 full-time equivalent students. Tbomp&on s aid state legislators last year expected the entire community college system enrollment to grow about 2 percent and funded it accordingly. Instead , the statewide enrollment jumped about 8 or 9 percent. In dislribuUn11 the resultlni deficit, tht Coast district, which registered a 15 p ercent enrollment growth , was penalized, Thompson said. In planning for the coming year, college officials' projections also were upset because the community college system received a 5 percent funding increase for innauon, not the 8 percent received by the K -12 school system. The district• s tentative general fund bud1et for 1981-82 is now at ttl mllllon, and lndlvldual colleges are examlnlnt waya to cut their bud1et1. B~ WUHama, a s~esman for Golde• West, said his camput expedt to elJmlnate 20 to as cl111lfled Jobs throu1h layoffs and attrition, and five faculty vacancies wm not be fllled. Alto, OOll·cndit courses such 11 eontlnutn1 education for aura" w\11 be orf ered on a Hlf •tu_ppoftlq fee b'Hll, be 1ald ·•~l'l'evlou1ly, thue .............. .,... ReliledeliDI ud expallllon allo wW tie tunalled at Golden .... WWbiml Mid. llmA&.r eutt are betn1 .. t considered at Orange Coast and Coastline coll eges. The reduction in funds to the community college system reportedly was accepted as an alternative to proposed tuition fees. Y et th e da ys o f a free community college system may be numbered. "Philosophically, I'm opposed to tuition at community colleges because 1 believe there shouJd be at least one tuition-free segme nt of higher education available." Vice Chancellor Thompson said "But realisticall y, w1than two, three or four years. we will pr o ba bly have some sort of tuition in the Ca lifornia co m munjty college system," he said. Spanish flavor due for downtown Mesa By JERRY CLAUSEN Ot .. Delty ........... Downtown Costa Mesa, at least the areas surrounding the Fidelity Block redevelopment project, would eventually look like a picture-book impression of Spain under plans proposed by city Redevelopment Agency staff members. The proposals, the first draft of architectural design and re· design guidelines, are scheduled for preliminary review tonight by the Redevelopment Agency, actually City Council members sitting as the special board. The design ~cheme was or· dered two months ago after downtown jewelry store owner J .C. Humphries sought agency approval for renovating three s truc tures h e owns along Newport Boulevard between 19th and 17th Streets. The board balked at the Hum- phries proposal and ordered its staff to come up with architec· tural design criteria that would apply to all or the downtown area surrounding a proposed city.sponsored shopping center bordered by 19th Street. Park A ve nue and Harbor and Newport Boulevards. Humphries. his plans placed in limbo for 90 days, told the board to forget his idea. He said he would abandon the renova· tion project if he had to wait Later, the board approved a pl an for remodeling just Hum· phries' jewelry store structure. Proposals to be unveiled at the 7: 30 meeting tonight in City Hall, 77 Fair Drive , closely parallel a City of Fullerton plan calling for construction or re· modeling materials such as roof tiles. wrought-iron grill work. subdued stucco tones and other S panis h -style architectural m aterials. Outlawed. if the proposals are a ppro ved . would be s uch m aterials as refl ective glass. plastics or other "mode rn" look· ing materials. Tipsy youth enters 2 homes by mistake A 16 -yea r -old Santa Ana Heights boy is reportedly "sleeping it off" today in Orange County Juvenile Hall after he al· legedly entered two Costa Mesa homes early this morning., startling women as they slept bes ide their husbands . Police a rrested the hung-over youngs t e r for s us picion o f burglary after Costa Mesan Richard H. Kimball. 39, cor· nered and held him at butcher knife point in the Kimballs' home at 296 Rose Lane. That, said Costa Mesa officer Gerry Stu.kkie, was at 3:45 a.m .. more than three hours after a youth resembling the young burglary suspect fl ed a neighboring home on his bicycle with a sleepy-eyed Santa Ana police officer in pursuit. The unidentified off-duty San· la Ana officer, Stukkie said, wa s awakened shortly after midnight by his frightened wife. She told her husband someone bed been wiggling her toes, Stuklde related. Her husband spotted the youth ln the couple's bedroom and lurched after him, Stuklde noted. The youth's capture, nearly 4 hours later, came when Mn. Burglars hit CM glider company Coat• Mesa police bel\eve bur1Jan uaed a crowbar to pry open the front door to • Sutan Wle11nd'1, a b ani slider manufadurer at 1790 lCOIU'O"'• Ave.,_..., MaadaJ monatq. Tbt tblnei effaped wltfi the ui11 for ellht &Jlden, oftlten said. and • 1mall calculator. The 1tolen aoodl were valued at about a,eso .. Kimball, the second victim, told her hus band she was awakened by a cold hand on her leg. The couple. Stukkie s aid. passed off the incident as a dream until Kimball got up for a drink of water and spotted the you th cowering under a bedspread that had slipped to the bedroom floor • The Santa Ana Heights boy, Stukkie said, told officers he had entered the Kimball home look· ing for "something of value." His house haunting episode followed a beer-drinking binge with friends that also led to ,I\ massive hangover, Slukkie said. Bike-riding thief sought in Huntington Huntington Beach Police are searching for a bicycle·ri,dlng gunman who robbed a local dairy store of $1, 700 . The holdup occurred at 10:50 p.m . Monday at Calva Dairy, 15942 Edwards St. Lt. Merle Schneblln said a man In bla early 20I, with tooe· blond hair tucked under a blue and white baseball cap, entered \he st.ore, kicked a clerk in tbe ablni and p~ed a blue i t.eel ,.. volver from bls walatband. The IUll)eet took money from tbe cub register An4 ranaacked an ofnce tor addWonal colns and buts, wbJc.h he ~ In bla blue nylon beckpack, Miit• said. The man ned on .,._ aDd blue IO.speed tricycle, ~ to Police. · • :~ ~ .. ••• ~ •• ~·· ~ • . .. l!!!J!l!U!E! 5 &&&££a au a .... , ... :· .. , Orange COaat DAILY PILOT tWedn11d1y, July 8, 1981 ( ~Gl. . h w·11· ~\i• 1v1ng us t e 1 1es . . . • . . . . . " . . . . •! , •• ·: .. .. ~: =· . . .. .. .. .. .. · . .. ·. .. ·. .· .. RICKY TICKY POLITIX: Willie Brown, the noted Democrat from San Francisco who currenUy is Speaker of the California Assembly, only yesterday pledged to pop down here to get Orange County straightened out. Who knows? Maybe he will. The current problem that Willie Brown is interjecting himself into the (;) /'-\ TD¥ MURPHINI .~~ middle of involves Orange County gov· ernment and the operation of UC Irvine Medical Center. ActuaJly, the hassle really involves money. It a lways comes down to that, doesn't it? In event you missed the last two or three episodes of this continuing fight, however, the batlle goes something like t his : IN TAKING OVER operation of the county's old medical center, the un- iversity people joined county govern· me nt in a contract whereby the UC medics would take care of the county's poorer patients and bill the county for this care. The county has thus been billed for $8 million worth of this medical car e where county government has declined to cough up and pay the tab. County of- ficials claim they've been billed for m edical work that they shouldn't have been tagged for. University of Cali fornia officials, on the other hand, have screamed foul , claiming all the billings are legit and Orange County government i6 acting like a deadbeat. THAT'S ABOUT WHERE it stands. Assembly Speaker Brown jumped into the fray just a time back when be got some language added to the state budget that denies $10 million to Orange County government unless it pays up to UC Irvine. This came up as part of the s ubject only yesterday when Orange County legislators and Orange County govern- ment officials gathered for a pa rley in Sacramento. Willie Brown showed up for part of the session. At one point, he was ques- tioned about the apparent secrecy sur· rounding his action to whack off Orange County at the p<>cketbook to the tune of 10 really big ones. BROWN SNAPPED IN answer, "1 don't have a requirement to tell anyone anything." Now that sounds fairly arrogant. It must be a disease that infects every legislator who ever became Assembly Speaker . You r em e mber Assembly Speaker Jesse Unruh of yesteryear? Unruh, currently our soft-spoken, easy-going state treasurer, was always getting accused of running roughshod over Calif omia back when he was As· sembly Speaker. Some legislators even called him "Big Daddy" in those days . IT WAS WIDELY believed that Unruh gave the then-governor fits by charging orr into a lot or legislative Sir Ronald charging olf to battle TM Dreaded Unruh bullrus hes without telling a ny body anything, just like Willie Brown isn't re- quired to do. Columnist Art Hoppe used to be so delighted by Unruh's giving the gov- e rnor fits that he would characterize the governor as Sir Ronald, up<>n his whi te charger. out thras hing about in the bullrushes in an effort to find a nd destroy the wild beast known as The Dreaded Unruh. But Sir Ronald never found him. He n ever got beyond j ust hearing The Dreaded Unruh t hrashing around, bellowing and no doubt creating havoc for the then-Re publican administration. THE THEN·GOVERNOR HAS now gone on to thrash around in a lot heavier governmental underbrush. And Unruh seems at peace, counting state money ever y day. Meanwhile, c u rrent Assembly Speaker Willie Brown will come down here and thrash around in the Orange County bullrushes a nd try to mediate a heavy hassle. You do hope when it's over , Willie will tell somebody something, whether he is required to or not. Host families sought Host families are needed in Foun- tain Valley and ne1rrby communities to house 40 hi gh school students from England and the fi ve adults who will accompany them on a visit to Orange County later this month. The group includes 31 girls and nine boys from schools located in Surrey County near London. The stu- de nts are traveling under the auspices of the British American Schools Exchange Club. Formed in 1974, the club provides for a non-profit exchange or visits between schools in England and the UniJed States. The English youngsters will arrive July 28 at Fountain Valley High School and will need homes through Aug. 7. The youngsters will be gone Aug. 3·6 on an excursion to the Grand Canyon. Medical releases have been ob· tained for a ll students. and the vis· itors will be covered by medical and accident insurance. Families interested in providing housing for the visiting English stu· dents should call Lois Woods during daytime hours at (213) 484-0220 or collect at (213) 242-5555 during eve· nings and weekends. Water budget to • rise Rising energy costs, inflation and additional employees will increase Mesa Consolidated Water District's Mesa High accr edit ed for 6 years Costa Mesa High School's ac· creditation has been extended six years, to June 30, 1987, as the result of a survey by the Western Associa· lion of Schools and Colleaes. Max Zook , Costa Mesa High chairman of a team conductin1 a six· month self-study of the school, aaid the full six-year a ccreditation followed an accrediting commission visit in April. "This continued accreditation," Zook said, "means that the condl· Uons for effective education exist in this school." The Western Association of Schools and Colle1es is reapomlble for ac- credJtation of secondary schoot. and lnstiluUons of higher education in CaUfornla, Hawaii, Guam and American Schools in the Far Eut. budget next fiscal year by about 4 pe r cent, di rectors reported this week. The board, which oversees management of the district serving Costa Mesa, a part or Newport Beach and some county-governed areas near Costa Mesa. approved its S6,S9S,OOO budget for 1981-82 early this month. Included in the document are funds for adding an engineering aide and Increasing the hours of a part- time clerk-typist. Projects scheduled for the new fiscal year include increasing water production of one well. pulling another in operation and beginning work on drilling another, the sixth in the district. Other projects include replacina 4.600 feet of older water mains aoG completing a new feeder pipeline system. Lea se exte nded VICTORIA, Seychelles CAP) -The lease on the U.S. Air Force aat.elUte trackina staUoo on Mabe, the main island lo thil Indian Ocean archipelago, has been extended to 1990. .... I lllU~ ... -...... •• lte rtltt7 ...... ._' ·-.. ·-°""' ICMl...,,._Y_'°'"l c ... a-M1·1211 ... -.......... ---... --------.......... ...., """'I ,,..~ lfllllnllf , ... .. ,.11w. .. ., Ill~ 1lll 1'1n~1, IWLY PllOT QASSl .. ID ADS .. , . ..,. ...... Yliw c..... 644-77JJ 16%1 S4ill Drfft. llMW._.. IHcll a e e • • • a • ____... ...... ----...-----l • ---··-·~··· ....... ..,. .. ~~.... ~ ... ~ ..... ....,.. ...... _ .. ~---.......... ~ .. ..........,. ........ ..._._., A State Office of Emergency Pre- paredness estimate says 400,000 people could die from radiation poison if San Onofre has a melt· down. That same study says 1 0 million people would have to be evacuated for at least 10 years. We'd like to know how will they evacuate us? This May 1 J 's disas- ter drill was plagued by communi· cations breakdowns, faulty equip· ment and poor logistics. The Fed- eral Emergency Management Ad· ministration called the drill inade· quate. But the NRC ignored this problem in their final environmental impact report. You don't have to be a scien· t1st to be concerned about radio ac11ve sand on San Onofre State Beach. You can speak out for our community's future. On July 11 you will be able to speak to the NRC about your safety concerns. Join your neighbors in protecting our American Heritage. Speak out. Your Chance to SPEAK OUT against licensing the nations' largest NUCLEAR Facility at San On of re OFFICIAL NRC PUBLIC HEARINGS Saturday, July 11 9 a .m . -5 p .m . San Clemente Hig h School {1-5 South t o A v enida Pico, east 1/4 mile.) We can co nv e rt San On o f re to safe natural gas. ----------------------------------------------------------- Yes. I w an t to do m ore than attend t h e hearing. 0 Yes! Here is my contribution of Name ____________________ _ Phone $ ---------------Address 0 Yes! I want to volunteer. 0 Yes/ Put me on your mailing list. City ______________________ _ .Zip Alliance for Survival 331 N. Orange. Orange, CA 92666 11997-9922 £X·LEAN• Nocovtr 11% ro.t GROUND. BEEF s: 4'~ "1pSO"' seecUes~ JPIS e • • i • • • ~ • • •• ' ., ' " . . .. t~ e+ 5 sezzg ::ts cast ••• •••• a a as a s 0 p z 0 • • • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/w.dnesday, July 8. 1981 N NY E COMP,O I TE TRAN ACTION QUOtAttOIUIN(l.UOI "'"OU ON fN( .... YOIUl, i.1owur, l'AC.,IC ..... 10\TON, oU•O•T ANO (INCINlllAfl noes fK(NANOU ANO lll'OUIO I Y THI lllAlO AND INUINl'f DOW JOnes F1 Off -0.66 953.48 One of the most important dec1aions a company can make is where to place its headquarters. At leut it's certainly important to the people who work for the company and to the community the company 11 joining -or leaving. Many companies remain exactly where tbey started-COCa-Cola in Atlanta, H.J . Heinz in Pitt.a· burgh, Wrigley in Chicago, Procter It Gample in Cincinnati, Boeing in Seattle, Anheuser-Busch in St. Louis, Du Pont in Wilmington, Del., RCA in New York. But many get restless and look for dillerent ' climes. Their reasons vary. -. In 1970, 118 of the companies on the FortQe 500 list had their headquarters in New York City. Today, only 76 of the Fortune 500 companies are based in New York . That'i; what you m ig ht call a m assive no · co nfid e n ce vote. To be sure, a number of the deserters from ~ -----------__,,r I "' t MllTDI llllNIU 4'Sr New York did not venture very far. They just journeyed to the suburbs . General E lectric went to Fairfield, Conn., Texaco to Harrison, N. Y .. Conoco to Stamford, Conn .. American Can to Greenwi ch, Conn., Uniroyal to Middlebury, Conn .• A&P to Montvale, N.J ., Na bisco to East Hanover, N.J .. AMF to White Plains, N.Y. However, some did pack up and move far away. American Airlines relocated from New York to the Dallas-Fort Worth Airport. Shell Oil moved from New York lo Houston. And Atlantic Richfield trekked clear across the country, from New York to Los:. Ange les . ·• American Airlines explained that it was more logical for it to be based in the center of the country than on the Eastern seaboard. One consequence of ilt relocation was the disruption of a 20-year relationshi)t with its advertising agency, Doyle Dane Bernbach. which said it could not persuade creative people to move to Dallas to work on the account. There has been no light or advertising agencies out of New York City. Atlantic Richfield's move to Los Angeles put the company closer to its oil strike on the North Slope of • Alaska. But the move bad more to do with the an· tipathy of its chairman, Robert 0 . Anderson, to New York City. Los Angeles is also cl06er lo Anderson's ranch in New Me xico. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES . HEW YORK IAP)· s. .... J pm. prlo HEW YORICCAP> Fl~ Dow.J-s fill' -net Chenot Ill "" ,,,,,.... -ec11.... !Qr TUffd•Y. Jul 1 ...... Yon 5'o<k E•chenoe IH .. ,. STOCKS OMfl ..... Law c-a.. ltedlt19 Miion.iiiy 91 ,,_, !hell Sl JO Ind ts1 .. "1.'° "1.., 9S4. IS +-' 13 ~OlllC "2,,700 " • ,,. 10 Tm ..... 403 a ,, .... 191 71 1 .., ........ ~Z'T tt!:!: m: _ ~ IS VII !OS ... 107' 15 10S.2S 10UJ •~g:•1 ~Inc "2,100 ,,... + :: ~t1k 3'711 J71 .... llM.OI 367 ~~· ~ AmerHtU ... ,500 JO~ "· Trtll 1;.. 100 Mesa Ptt I l 61.lOO JO w Vtll I 100 ~reton '11,.ao ..i~ .. 1"' u 5~ 1 aoo Euon s •11, 100 )I~ • "' • MoOll S «ll,000 JI + 1 ~~p ~:: = ! I l'o WHAT STOCKS DID OWPon1 •S.000 .. l'o "° Cll .. sSvct )'1,'00 ~ Jl"t tnetqUll s D7,IOO S.. • Pwn111011 n 1.ooo .. .., 1'• UPS AND DOWNS HEW YOllllC (AP) -The followlne llst -• tM ...._ Y-Silock Eu,..,. Ao<u w>d •Wref'lb tNt flew 90M "" !fie ,,_, encl .....,. IN mott ~ on J:;<.,~: . .<llenOt r@9Mdltss of volume Ho 11cur1tle1 tredlni> .. ,_ 12 ere Incl· \IOICI. Ifft encl ~ CllenQtS ere !fie dfff9re11Ct .,.._ Ille Pf'9VlollS clo.ll>Q pric. -todey's t~· price. Heme lMI ChG Pct. I WalUlm pf ..... + llo Up 11,j 2 KeneOSvc: 2AV. + '" Up t .S a OttleGe P.1 7 + Vt Up 1.1 4 ftelOrp pf8 lliWI + 10 Up P s Rkll•rftll n + 11111 Up 1.0 6 TOICOCp ~ + 11'> Up 6.t 1 OMlall .... I »1111 + IW. Up '-S I I'~~ U V. + 2 U11t 6.4 t Ouqll 2.10pfA It + I Up S.9 10 ~019Pel pf JS + '"' Up S.6 11 . n<pe 4'4 + l'o VP S,6 ll l'lltnwY .Japf S + Wt Up U u o.icecp u 11> + 1v. UP s.2 14 Jo:ie • .-+ 1-. up s.1 IS It 2441 + " Up S.0 " Piii! .. " ,. • ~ U1> 4.t HEW VORI( IAP1 Jul 7 A4vencod Oocllned Ul\Cl\e1>91td TO\el luu•• ..... 111911• Htw lows ¥11>4Af ..... (&()O HEW YOllllC !API Jul I AAtwencod Oocllf>ed Uncllell9fd TOUll l)IUttS ..... lllOllS ..... '°"' rocir1y• 317 107 "' • u Prev d;r, 11n :m 1177 • 11 Pre• ~I, .a1 1IO IOS I ,. MET.LS HEW YOlllC (AP) -St>OI " _,,.,.,._ -·· llt"leff , ....... Cop,.r ll~IS <tllU a POlllld, U ~. dntl"e~ LeM 1' Centt a ....-. Z.llK 4'\Co <.-. e peound, •11-od. Tia 16.S711 Me\el1 W.. c~te lb. A....,._ 7...a (JlflU a POUl>d, 14. V Mottwy .-u.oo -''"'-.... .._MOS.GO trev 0t H. Y. SILVER Ma.., a --· t.1.2'0 per lror -•· GOLD QUOTATIONS .,,_.._. ..... .,... $e1Kllld .w1CI ~ prk " .....,, ~ ..-Nn9"•'"''* ..... ~,~~ ~: .._ flal"' pt'7.7S, '1ft V.lS. .. em: an..-"•'"' ..... ., ott ..... ,.,e...,.: ..oa.ooett ,,,..,, %Wlcll: , ... ""'"' ""6.00 °" ........ , .. ...... NeHy a Nari.tea· ..,,, •elly •-• $J91.1', afU7 .U I a \ • • • ,, . : I ! .. DOWNS •• l..Ht CllO Prt, • ........ l ... , .... ., ~ pt'7.7S, ... • I • 'l"" -4 I b.u:·' , = l~ r.J It -" 1711> -,..., •. , 1214 -"' s. J\olo -" '·' 10\'I -,. u "" -... u :r-= = ~ r:i !i :I~~ h ,.:: : It: Off S1 v.2s. :• ......... , eftly Nlly .-,.,.ta.. ti $411 ....... .,.s.. ~ I SYMBOLS , .. Sale DALES f OCTWO RKS VtOES&MGS <;ouftl Coast l'tazo V1l!o9e ~7 1 •)970 9 252 MoMo PocitlCO VtloQe LonQ leach (21 3) 598 454 7 BARE TRAPS s1&.97 N«J UP CANDIES s10.97 ANO UP SBICCA s14.97 _,., UP 9WEST $14.97 ANO UP • THE. JEWEL CONNECTION Making People Happy Is Our Business 15% OFF ON STERLING SILVER JEWELRY 10% OFF ON CUSTOM DESIGNED DOLLS 20% OFF ON HOLLY HOBBIE JEWELRY . PLUS MANY MOU UMl9UE IDMS GllAnY llDUCED MERCANTILE BLDG. S.C. VILLAGE (714) 557-4052 "1-lum-Mi ';J.mport1 SOlfT'H COAST VILLAGE {MERCANTILE BUILDING) Sa•e $$ on oYerstocked ond dlsc.Oit'fiwcJ !Mr'ChondlH lO°lo • 500/o OFF on selected quality chinaware gift sets and plates , 1/1 OFF .. breuwere 1/J OFF leda.1· broc.-coltl l"f"H L_... a-. Sl2.00 Sole $6.00 S-• a-. SI0.00 Sale SS.00 Many other gilt items on sale at huge savings Shop early for best selection as quantities are subject to stock on hand 556-7944 "The only glass and crystal store you need to visit" Holly Landers Sloneware ANNUAL JULY CLEARANCE c.oME EARi. y -UM1B> SB.ECTlON LAMPS ... hand thrown STONEWARE, Med. Size . LAM~SHAOES Med. & Sm., incl. Pleated Burlap. 'MNE GOBLETS -stoneware -one of a kind. SMALL GIFT ITEMS -Good Selection . LARGE WO OD L£TTERS -Entire Stock Reg. 1 •~0-: SMALL WOOD LETTERS & · t*>use Numbers. By JULIETTE PAPER . WRAP FOR THE MONTH OF JULY Reg. '18 NOW Sl 4oo Located In Colten Hair lnteniational 979-5851 Natural Grocery South Coeet Wlege 957-1880 (FOAMERl Y EREWHON) LIVE ENTERTAINMENT DAILY FOR INFORMATION CALL 751-6595 WIN!! Knotts Berry Farm tickets. Dinner at Crazy Horse Steak House. Enter Best Dressed Cowboy Contest on Sunday.