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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-07-09 - Orange Coast Pilot* * • • • •
Yllll HlllTDll llllY PIPER
THURSDAY . JULY 9 l lHl l OHANGt <:OUN TY CALIFORNIA 2~ CENTS
OC d1·ug dealers using nmrke • ski11s
Orange County sheriff's in·
vesticatora are displaying drugs
seized during a recent raid in
Santa Ana Heights to show the
public what "Goofy acid" looks
Like.
The drug with the dis·
organized name actually Is LSD
that has been dusted on the
backs or tiny postage-type
stamps . On the front is a
m iniscuJe color print of the Dis-.
ney cartoon character or some
other design.
The drug is taken orally by
licking the back of the stamp,
Whal makes the popular sam·
pie noteworthy. sheriff's Lt
Wyatt Hart said. is its reliancE
on marketing skills to hide its
true function -and also to sell
the product in underground
markets.
··Drug dealers are Into the
marketing business just like the
people who sell shampoo," ob-
served Hart.
Although the acid comes with
(,RELATED PHOTO, .U>
several designs -including
the innocent visage of Mickey
Mouse -Hart said investigators
call all types "Goofy acid"
because Goofy was one of the
original desiJtns.
Almost 3,oOO doses of the acid
were confiscated Tuesday when
narcotics agents used a search
warrant to raid a house al 2431
Zenith Ave. in Santa Ana
Heights, Hart said.
Also seized were two kilos of
marijuana, 78 grams of hashish,
82 grams of cocaine and a small
quantity of psilocybin
mushrooms. Hart said street
value ot the drugs is estimated
at $26,000.
Three shotguns and five
handguns -or which two were
believed stolen -and $18,900 in
cash also were taken by agents
from the Los Angeles and
Orange County sheriff's depart·
ments. he added.
Arrested in the raid on suapi·
cion of possession or marijuana
were Joseph Thomas Kent. 34.
and J0el Douglas Kadln&. 27, '
who both lived at the house, and
Jacquelyn Ann Johnson, 27, of
Costa Mesa
The raid, he added, took place
after Los Angeles agents had
staked out the home searchinl
for a criminal fu.giUve. After ob-
serving the acUvitles. however,
they obtained a search warrant
and made the bust, Hart said.
Three held in Newport gem fraud
Medfly
battle
begins
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -As
many as 1,000 National
Guardsmen prepared to join
h omeowners today in a
desperate attack on the Mediler·
ranean fruit rty, hoping to drowh
a cry for aerial pesticide spray-
ing while protecting the nation's
largest farm industry.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.,
snubbing demands for aeriaJ ap·
plication of the pesticide
malathion . ordered all fruit
trees stripped of their produce
by Monday in the h eavily
populated 80-square-mile heart
of the medfly infestation north
and west of San Jose.
In response, the state Senate
quickly voted 28·0 to require the
spraying -despite warnings the
governor can veto the bill -and
----£outhern agriculture officials
asked for a national quarantine
on unlum.igated California fruits
and vegetables.
"The sense of well·being and
the security of 500,000 residents
of Santa Clara County" are at
stake, the governor said.
Counties and cities in the area
located about 50 miles south of
here have sued to block aeriaJ
sprays, claiming the pesticide
could cause cancet. premature
death or the elderly and birth de·
feels. State orricials have said it
is relatively harmless.
A s imilar eHort of fruit·
stripping, ground-spraying and
releases of sterile flies in the fall
and winter cost $22 million.
State experts had cautiously
predicted success as late as last
month, just before more than 100
medfly larvae were found.
Most of the flies have been
found in yards, none in com·
mercia l farming operations,
which are located far from the
infestation, Santa Clara County
farm officials say.
Rural lawmaker s were in·
censed by the governor's move.
and threatened that failure to
use aerial sprays could en·
danger the state's Sl4 billion
farm Industry and lead to far
more extensive pesticide spray·
Ing lat.er.
"With the hot summer
weather, there simply is not
enough time to control this ex·.
tremely fast-breeding insect,"
said Assembly Agriculture
Chairman John Thurman, D·
Modesto. "ll takes only one un·
detected ferUle female medlly in
the San Joaquin Valley to totally
disrupt our entire No. 1 in·
dustry."
Brown ordered the CaWornia
Highway Patrol to search for
fruit in cars leaving the 620-
ttquare-miJe quarantine area to-
day, and he ordered residenta lo
the 80-square-mile iafestatlon
area -under threat of misde·
m4eanor charges -to strip their
backyard trees.
Several hundred workers al.lo
were called ln ·to spray I malalblon from the ground.
'!Ag una m e ans
summe r fun
The "Art Colony" of L•IUD•
Beach celebr•tea each summer
with several apeetal eventa -
Fett1val ol Arla, Pa1eanl ol lbe
Muten, Sawdust PeaUvaJ and
Art·A·Falr.
Stories and pictu~es on Ulla
aum mer'a exr,erlence are
featured ln 'Summer in
Llf~1" a • .,. •• t•blotd Uuit
naAI toaay ln lbe l>aUy Pilot.
Tb• &ablold lncludea lnlorma-
tloo on pl8Cel to e.at, plac .. to
lee and places to abop.
'.\
County ·Fair royalty Romy Lea Guerrero. Carrie Turigliatto. Shannon Cleye and Kristin Moe will greet guests .
Sente n ce set
in d e ath of
coa s t priest
Ronald .. Bud" Spring, the
man convicted of killing a Seal
Beach priest by slugging him in
the forehead, has been sen-
tenced to lS years to life im·
prisonment by an Orange Coun·
ty Superior Court.
Judge James K. Turner de·
nied a request from Public
Defender Ronald> Butler to
1;>ermit Spring to remain free on
$10,000 bail whiJe the case is be·
iog appealed. Turner also turned
aside a request that Spring be
placed on probation.
Spring was accused in the
Feb. 9, l~ assault on Father
Felix Doughtery lo the rectory
of St. Anne's Catholic Church.
The priest was struck once in
the head and sought treatment
for a small wound. He died
several weeks later from brain
injuries.
Testimony during Spriog's
trial indicated he believed that a
girl he had dated only once had
entered a convent, and that the
Church somehow was interfer·
ing with his desire to rind her.
Spring was convicted of
second-degree murder. Turner
had ruled before the case was
submitted lo the jury that •
(See PIUF.ST, P•se ,\.%)
...............
SLAYER01' PRIEST
RonaJd •Bud' Sprflrg ,.. ( ..
Touch of country
theme of OC F air
Hayrides. horseshoe tourna·
ments and homemaking dem-
onstrations will herald the
"Touch of Country" theme for
tttis year's Orange County Fair.
Festivities begin Friday mom·
ing at the Costa Mesa fair·
grounds with 4-H and Future
Farmers of America judging for
rabbits and breeding sheep.
Handicraft exhibitions are slat-
ed for 10 a .m . In the Home Arts
and Crafts and Hobbies build·
ings.
New to the fair will be
horseshoe pitching tournamen~.
which begin at 1 p.m . with
women's and junior class com-
petitions.
Throughout the day, fairgoers
will be entertained by such col·
orful a nd sometimes zan y
characters as Travis Parry,
man of many impersonations.
Professor Gizmo's one-man
band and Flash the Clown and
Harriett. Flash Zingo Society
will bring their whimsical brand
of jazz music to the Country
Corner stage.
The Heritage Stage in the
main mall area will be the site
of continuous dance and musical
entertainment including such
country singers as "Dusty" Roy
Rogers Jr .. with performances
al Sand 8 p.m.
Opening the fair's mainline
entertainment in the am·
phitheater will be folk singer
Don McLean, best known for his
early '70s hit single ··American
Pie." McLean's show, which is
included in the (air's general ad·
mission price. will be held al 7
and 9 p.m.
The amphitheater audience
will be treated to the death·
defying Swaying Bilros. who
perform acrobatic stunts atop
twin 100-foot poles. Their shows
are set for 6:45 and 10 p .m.
The grandstand facility wiU be
the !.iile of roaring engines and
clouds of dust as the fair hosts a
motorcycle speedway at 8 p.m.
The sporting event carries an
additional charge of SS for
adults, $4 for juniors and $1.50
for children.
Black woman new
president at CSF
Biologist Dr. Jewell Plummer
Cobb, a granddaughter of a
slave, will become the next pres·
ident of Cal State Fullerton.
Dr. Cobb, 57, was chosen
Wednesday alter a final round of
interviews before the board of
trustees ol the California State
Unlvenlty and Colleees System,
which met in Long Beach.
She said after her aeledJon
tb•l the will take o~r dutiea ln
the fall, probably alter classes
start on Aug. 31. She will earn
more Ulan '50.000 a year.
Wben ahe assumes ber poal·
lion, Or. Cobb will be the flnt
black woman to hud a m~or
public unlvenlly ln the western
Ull1UMI States, accordlnc to uru·
ver1Uy aya~m officials.
Dr. Cobb wUJ vacate her pott·
Uon aa dean or Oouclua CoUe1e,
the women'• arm of Rutcen
Unlveraity in NeW" Brunawtck,
N .J . Sbe hu held tbal Job alnce
1978.
She succeeds Dr. L. Donald
Shields, who in January became
president at Southern Metbodiat
University lo Dallas. Or. Shields
had announced his intention to
leave in October.
Dr. Cobb waa one of three
finaH.sta. Otben we~ Dr. Leo
Goodman-Malamuth U , presl·
dent of Governors State
University lo lllloola and a
former vice prealdent at CaJ
State Lon, Beach; and Dr. Judy
Ann Sturnich, a vlce president
at Southwest Stale University ln
Minnesota.
A total of 130 candidates ap.
pUed for the job, said unlvenity
Director ol PubUc Affaln Jerry
Keallftl.
He 1.td Or. Cobb vlllted the
campua duriq an earlier vlllt
and lmprelMd the tt.aff u "very
anlculat., very lnteJUtut IDd •
~non or proven leadenhJp, .. r -. ..,.~.,~-· ..
Nomina tion
pus h es up
• cou r t m o vie
LOS ANGELES <AP> -The
first woman U.S. Supreme Court
justice is an attractive blonde so
conservative that one colleague
dubs her "the Mother Superior
of Orange County" -at least in
Hollywood's version.
A day after President Reagan
nominated Arizona Judge San·
dra D. O'Connor for the high
court, filmmakers at Paramount
Pictures were pushing up dates
for .. First Monday in October."
ln the movie, Jill Clayburgh
plays the role Judge O'Connor
will fill if the Senate approves
Reagan's choice.
"It's one of those rather happy
coincidences," Laurence Marks,
Paramount's vice president of
West Coast m a rketing said
Wednesday, "It's sort of nice to
take advantage or something
positive in the world. It's so un·
chic to sound positive, but it Is
the case."
"First Monday" had been
s c heduled for release next
February or March , said a
studio sookeswoman. but
Reagan's announ ce ment
prompted Paramount to give
Clayburgh's movie an edge on
olbers starring the likes of Burt
Reynolds and Faye Dunaway.
"The movie is ready to go,"
she said, "but it's important to
give each picture its fair due,
and .we have nve or our most
enormous pictures remaining
for release in '81."
(See SVPAEME, P•ce ,\.%)
Lag una g rass
blaze que lled
Fire burned about a half •ere
of 1rassland adj.cent to El
Morro Elementary School near
Laguna B each Wednesday
mornlnc.
La1una Beach Fire Depart·
menl apok. eam•n Tim Rosen
said today that the blue broke
out about I a .m . next to Cout
Hl&hway at the north end of the
achoo& property. loeated oo Lbe
lnJand slde ot the roadway.
· Ro1•n aald lt took firemen
le11 than three mJnut.. to U •
Uncullb the nn. There were no 1Q.Jur1• and no major dama ...
The cauae ol the nn ii under ln·
veet11•~on.
•
3 autos
trade d
• 1n c a se
By STEVE MARBLE
011 .. 0 .. 1, r!IM SUH
The 42-year-old owner of a
Newport Beach auction and
gallery firm has been arrested
along with two others on charges
they conned a prominent
Newport resident out of three
expensive cars for a handful of
gems worth only a fraction of
their stated value. police said.
Robert Ogle, who police claim
is the owner of the Newport
G alleraes at 2542 W. Coast
Highway and a resident of 507
Morning Star Lane. Newport
Beach, is being held al Orange
County Jail on $250,000.
Joella Jean Seliga, a 37-year-
old Costa Mesa resident, and
Judi Crickett Messick, a 32-year·
old Newport resident. also were
arrested Wednesday and are be·
Ing held on $100,000 bail.
All three face c~piracy to
commit grand theft charges.
Police have refused to release
the identify of the victim wbo
told police be traded his ex·
pensive cars for the gems in
May in a transaction at the
Newport Galleries.
Ogle, police claim. told the un-
identified victim that the gems,
mostly diamonds, were worth
hundreds or thousands of
dollars. Ogle allegedly produced
documents to prove his claim.
police said.
Following the transaction, in·
vestigalors said, the victim took
the stones to a gem expert who
determined the gems were
worth only a fraction of their
purported value.
Police did not release any
figures and declined to identify
the types of cars that the victim
allegedly gave him in the trade
deal.
Ogle. police said, is the target
o( at feast six lawsuits dating
back to 1974 in which persons al·
l ege they were victims of .
s imilar trade deals involving
tems .
In all the cases. authorities . ~ •
s aid, the alleged victims stated ~ i. ,
they had given up money of. >
other possessions for gems that.
turned out to be worth rar les$ '
than claimed.
Police in Hawthorne also are"
investigating a 1979 case involv-
ing Ogle in which he told officers
three gunmen robbed him of $2.2 ~
million in diamonds, officer•
said. '
In this case. Ogle told officers
he was on his way to Los
Angeles International Airport to'
transport the diamonds lo Saudi ·
<See GEMS, Pa1e AZ> •
DIAfHil COAST llATHll~~·~~:
Fair through Friday but '
low clouds night lttrough
mid-morning hours. HJgha
at beaches 72 to 77 and in-
land areatt 82 to 88. Lows
66 to 70.
111111 TIUY
Aton ClcTld.iMn could Mor
hi• bona cnmch C1I IM oJ.
Uootor bet . Sn Page 83
11111 .. ., .......... ......... Cl 'LJIL .... .. ....... CM .......... ~ ·~ =·~ Cl ..-.. ....... """ a Cl ,...,
....._ C1
........... Cl
l'*' I 9 ..
1#---0utdated by current events, the movie "FiTd Mondai/ in Oclober''
-about the first woman julfi« on the Suprnn.e Court -ii ~
pushed up for earlier releo.le. Jill Clc1'Jbvroh Cl1ld Walter Matthau i star in the film.
IBegi~'s b loc
1one seat up
I . • • ~on opposition
( TEL AVIV , Israel (AP> -
1Pri me Minis ter Menachem
IBegin's Llkud bloc won 48 seals
•n Parliament. one more tban ~he opposition Labor Party, in
he June 30 elections, the Na·
ion al Election Commission or.
icially announced today.
Begin's Likud bloc won 718,941
popular votes to the opposition
!La bor's 708,536 votes, for a
!10,405 vote lead that translates
•into the narrowest gap -one
iParliamenl seat -between the
lpolitical antagonists in the 33·
year history of Israel.
t. Arter the 1977 elections. Llkud
llad 43 seals and Labor 32 seata.
The official results published
today, nine 'days after Israelis
went to the polls. had been de-
layed because of band·counting
~nd absentee ballots of the
military and merchant seamen.
The totaJ number of votes cast
was 1,954,609 or 78 percent of the
electorate. "
Begin has said he is already
assured or a 61 -seat majority in
.the 120-seat Parliament and ex-
pects to be aske~ by President
Y1tzhak Navon to form a coali-
tion government.
'Goose shot
brings fine
WAUKESHA, Wis. (AP> -An
18-year-old man who shot an ar·
row into the air and made
Gertrude the goose a cause
celebre has been fined and
forbidden to go hunting for a
year.
J oseph J Heckenkamp of
Brookfield apologized in
Waukesha Circuit Court on Wed-
nesday for shooting the Canada
goose He was fined $117.20 -a
$S60 rine, a $7.20 state penalty as-
sessment, a $5 fee for court costs
·and a $45 Department of Natural
(Resources assessment. f The goose. nicknamed
'
Gertrude by would-be rescuers,
was shot in April and managed
to elude the nets and doped food
of the Department of Natural
Resources until a 14-year-old
boy caught up with her June 29.
The arrow was s till sticking out
of her thigh. It was removed and
•lhe bird recovered. ' 3 planes damaged
SANTA MONICA <AP) -A
would-be-pJane thief maHged to
start up a Piper Aztec parked at
the Santa Monica Airport, but,
apparently reaU2in1 be didn't
know how lo fly the twln-englne
craft, leaped clear of tM movin1
plane when It began lb in.fllct
heavy damages on two other
planes.
ORA GECOAST
From Page A1
SUPREME • •
No exact debut date was
given, but the spokeswoman
confirmed "First Monday"
would premiere In early Oc-
tober. almost a year after on·
location shooting began in
Washington, D.C.
Walter Matthau plays
Clayburgb's liberal nemesis on
the bench, dubbing her "the
Mother Superior of Orange
County." The reference lo
Orange County is a reflection o(
the California county's reputa·
lion for conservatism .
An early confrontation in·
volves a test case on movie
pornography: Matthau cites
First Amendment freedom ;
Clayburgb decides to see the
film before ruling.
"First Monday" won't be new
in Wasbln1ton . The
spokeswoman said the stage
version, written by Jerome
Lawrence and Robert E. Lee,
opened at the Kennedy Center in
December 1977 with co-stars
Jane Alexander and Henry Fon·
da. The play appeared at the
Cleveland Playhouse in October
1975 and premiered on
Broadway in October 1978.
The authors -noted for
"Inherit the Wind," based on the
1920s Scopes evolution trial -
wrote the "First Mo nday"
screenplay.
Paramount declined to djs.
close the film's budget, although
the spokeswoman said a movie
lot replica of the bigb court's
chambers cost $500,000. The mm
was co-produced by Paul HeUer
and Martha Scott and directed
by Ronald Neame, whose pre·
vious credits include "The
Poseidon Adve nture," "The
Prime of Miss Jean Brodie,"
and "Hopscotch," Matthau's
last comedy.
From Page A1
P R IEST • • • first-degree murder charge was
not appropriate because there
was no showing of premedita-
tion.
Buller had unsuccessfully
sought during a recent hearing
to have the charge further re-
duced, lo that of manslaughter.
Turoer denied that request.
Spring willl spend the first 90
days of bis sentence al Chino
Stale Prison . where
psychiatrists will determine
whether the 33-year-old Lone
Beach man b emotionally capa-
ble of remaining in prison.
Turner said be fell Spring prob-
a bl v should be sent to a state
facility at Vacaville, where a
psychiatric unit for prisoners ls
located.
The judge said be would not
permit Sprinl to remain free on
bail because of lbe defendant's
unpredictable character. Turner
said Spring could go out and
have "a few beers or whatever ll
is he bu" and faU into an attack
of r11e.
Daily Pilat CIHltfted edv9ftf .. nt '1141M2·M?t
All other _.l't!Mftte M2..ta21
Thomas P Haley
"'*'-""" c:-hee-Of•-
Rober1 N Weed ,.._
M. Thomat Keevll
ldllOt
MlohMI P Harvey -...o..-
L Kay S<-hUltl
ow.tDi "°""-· K.nneth N Goddard Jr. ~0.-
ThoMaa A Murphll,t ~(-
Bernard Schulman ~
Chll'ltl H Looa
~ .................
Carol A Moore ....
• • ID S U it .
LOS ANGELES CAP) -
Declaring "nude isn't lewd," al·
torneys for the Clotbin1 Optional
Society plaMed today to seek a
court order preventio1 Los
Angeles County sheriff's dep-
uties from arresting nude sun·
bathers until a trlal can be held
on the legality of anli·nude
beaches.
Stephen Yagman and David
Kestenbaum of the American
Civil Liberties Union filed suit in
U.S. District Court on Wednes-
day, challenging the April 1980
ordinance banning nudity on
county beaches.
Yagman contended the law
violates federal freedoms of
speech and expression and con-
flicts with California's constitu·
lion.
The Clothing Optional Society
sued after sheriff's deputies ar·
rested 26 members on Malibu
beach June 28. They face a $500
fine and six months in jail if con·
victed, Vagman said.
·'The main purpose of the
First Amendment is to protect
the communication of ideas," he
said. "If people are seeking to
communicate through the pre-
sentation of themselves with no
clothing on, the Constitution says
they can." .
The society was founded five
years ago by Lynne Hensley of
Sherman Oaks, a 38-year-old
government employee. Most of
its 500 members "are people in
their 40s and 50s who work In the
aerospace industry, government
-not a bunch of 17-year-old
children running around desir·
ing to show off their bodies."
Yagman said.
·•We're mad," said Mrs.
Hensley, describing herself as
··a closet nudist for seven
years" before she formed the
society.
"I was arrested last year on
Malibu beach for the same rea-
son, but my case was dropped.
This year the arrests are out-
rageous. I feel there's enough
beaches in the Los Angeles area
-there are plenty that are
clothed beaches. If anti·nudists
don't want to see us they don't
have to."
Yagman criticized the or-
dinance's complex wording in
defining beacbes where nudity is
prohibited. In part. the Jaw cites
· · . . . that portion of the Pacific
Ocean beach . . . bounded
westerly by the westerly line of
lot 96 in tract No. 1369 as shown
on map ... "
"Where is that beach and how
can any person of average
sensibilities know where they're
not supposed to be nude'?"
Yagman said. "Courts have
ruled a person is not criminally
responsible for his behavior un-
less he knew what be was not
supposed t-0 do, and where."
He also contended the or-
dinance conflicted with state law
because "state law says nude is
now lewd.''
Deputy county counsel Fred
Bennett said he thought the law
would be upheld.
·'I would hope that we will
win. The problem (nude sun-
bathing) bothers a lot of peo-
ple," Bennett said.
The case was assigned to U.S.
District Judge A. Wallace
Tashima.
Mrs . Hensley said the societv
plans to celebrate "National
Nude Weekend" at Malibu
beach this weekend. Police are
prepared .
"Until something definitive
comes down." authorities will
arrest nude beach-goers, said a
sheriff's lieutenant who refused
to identify himself.
B andit no
Clyde Barrow
MADERA CAP> -A
Bakersfield man arrested here
for investigation or robbing a
drive-in movie theater reported·
ly was upset that he didn't last
as long as Clyde Barrow. legen-
dary holdup man or the
Depression.
Robert Glenn Huffman, 23,
was cJptured shortly arter Park
View Drive-In Theater was
robbed of $152 Tuesday night by
a man armed with a rifle.
The money and rifle were re·
covered, and police said Huff.
man admitted robbln1 a drive·
In movie ln Sonoma on Friday.
Officers said be-Ulen added:
••Bonnie and Clyde did It for
years. I did it twice and got
cauabt."
From Page A1
GEMS . • •
Arabia where a buyer wu wail·
~oUce aald Ogle reportedly
stopped off ln Hawtbornt f«
dinner and waa met by lht
.cunmen out.aide • restaurant.
Llo1dl Of LoDdon, th• flrm that
had U.ured the diam~. n-
fUHd to pa)' olf tbe loll and 11 ln~ the C8H, polte. bl
IUWthllne Clatm •
,
Swam ped
schooner
probed
BATH, Maine (AP> -The
Coast Guard b investigaUn1 an
accident that occurred when the
masts of a 36-foot schooner
crewed mainly by saillnl sb>
dents struck a highway br1d1e
over the Kennebec River and
capsized.
The skipper and seven teen·
age crew members were qulckJy
rescued Wednesday by small
boats, and none was injured.
The swamped schooner, the
Vernon La.ngille, was towed to
the Bath Iron Works shipyard
and then back to the Maine
Maritime Museum's apprentice
shop, where it was built tbree
years ago.
Museum official Steven P .
McAllister Identified the skipper
as Fran.It Simon, 37, and said the
crew members, all betwffn 16
and 18 years old, were sailing
and boatbuilding students at the
museum.
...,,... ....... The Coast Guard's Marine
Safety Orfice in Portland is in·
vestigating the accident. or.
ficials would not speculate on
the cause of the accident at the
Carlton Bridge, which carries
U.S. Route 1 traffic across the
river.
Licking these atampa could drive you goo/11. They're LSD-laced
miniaturea aeiz.ed in a raid in Santa Ana Height•.
Vandalism cuts supply of water
NEWARK, N.J . <AP) -It will
take at least 10 days and $2.S
million to repair a •·minor acl of
vandalism" that cut off the ma-
jor source C?f water ~o the stat.e's
largest city, offtc1als said
Wednesday.
Mayor Ke nneth Gibson
declared a state of emergency
after two pipelines collapsed,
spilling millions of gallons of
water that ripped a deep gorge
down a hillside.
Mc Allister said the vessel
went orr course when the wind
suddenly died, and the schooner
was th e n pushed by the
powerluJ, tidal current toward
the bridge. Its masts hit the
bridge about 50 yards from the openin2.
SLA V I C K 'S .JE WELER S
announces our annual
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3 Days Only
July 16, 17, 18, 1981
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Newport Beach, Calil. 92660
644·1380
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of diamonds if desired. Now is the time to select for Birthdays,
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selection of unique dials and bezels for our Rolex.
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Rolex puts
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beautiful
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B. Man's Day-
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'i'
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The distinctive
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Day-Date with
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bracelet.
A. Unadorned,
$7,950.00
8 . With
diamond
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C. With
diamond bezel
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a diamond
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Fathlon Island, N.wpe>rt Center, Newport 8Hch I (714) 144.1aeo u .. _.,...,....,_,.......,.. .. _.,._.._,.,._.VllA.•..-~
Memtwr F'flw Jftllelnt G..tld
\ '
... ... w .. .;. . . .. . " ....... , 1 ··----~
,,,...,...
Am~ conductor Sarah CaldweU of the Bo.ton OpmJ con-
duct• a rehearaol with the Central Orcheatra of Ptlcmg. Mw
Caldt0tU woa invited by the Miniltf'JI of Culture to conc:Wct the
opeTa "La Tnnriata."
RFK Jr. inherits
apartment in NY
Kirk LeMoyne BUUnga, a
New York advertising ex·
ecutive who was a friend and
political ally of the Kennedy
family, has bequeathed his
apartment on the Upper East
Side to the late senator's son,
Robert Jr.
In a will filed in Manhattan
Surrogate Court, Billings,
who died at the age of 65 in
1978, also left his papers and
memorabilia to the Johll F.
Kennedy Library in
Dorchester, Mass.
Billings and John F. Ken·
nedy were roommates at the
Choate School and Princeton
University, and Billings was
a frequent visitor to the Ken-
nedy White House. He also
was a trustee of the Kennedy
Library.
The apartment is a duplex
cooperative on Eas t 88th
Street near Central Park.
More than JOO people of·
fered their last respects t.o
veteran actor Ross Martin,
who died of a heart attack.
Funeral services for the
CO·Slar of "The Wild. Wild
West" television show were
held at Mt. Sinai Memorial
Park in Hollywood.
Comedian Richard Pryor
is offering to donate $200,000
to a private school in Watts if
youth gangs agree to a cease·
fire this summer.
"I'm here because I want
people to stop murdering
each other
... I'm will:
ing to offer
you $100,000,
S200,000 out or
m y own
pocket to get
you to stop,''
Pryor told
eight gang
members at a
"•Yo• m e et in g at
the Sheenway School.
The $200,000 would be used
to start an educational self·
help program at the school.
which was the scene of al·
leged gang.related violence
I ast year when animals
raised by students were
slaughtered.
Vice Adm . Edward C.
Waller m has been named
superintendent of the Naval
Academy in Annapolis, Md.,
swapping assignment with
Vice Adm . Wlllhm P .
Lawrence, the Pentagon an·
nounced.
Waller has been serving as
commander of the 3rd Fleet
at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, a
post Lawrence wiU fill.
......... hlln. ln·
VtDtot of tM teodelio domt,
tum1 • luntd&1. lo tt'I DO turprile that be waa quite •W'PriMd when ldl 1tatf threw him a aurprttt
party.
Accompanied by actres1
Ellen Bantya1 •• Fuller en·
tered the Franklln Institute
ln Philadelphia thlnking he
was goinJ to show his staff a
new exhibit, "Patterns,"
which includes bis famous
dome.
Instead, he wu greeted by
the cb~rs of friends and the
flash of cameras.
Mayor Beraucl s .. den ot
Burllnatoo. Vt., an avowed
socialist, says be was
amazed to open his
newspaper and see himself
lampooned in the nationally
·syndicated comic strip
"Doonesbury" by Garry
Trudeau.
Sanders was shown bring·
ing "greetings from the
Peoples' Republic of Burl·
ington" to a television talk·
show host, and then Uniting
the recent election of
socialist Fren~h President
Francois Mltterand to bis
own.
"As goes Burlington, so
goes France," remarked the
cartoon Sanders.
Said the mayor, "You have
to remember it's just totally
fiction."
Maureen Reagan, eldest
daughter of President
Ronald Reagan, is scheduled
to address the annual dinner
of the Li ncoln Club or
Colorado next week.
Appearing in Denver a lit·
tle more than two weeks
after her father, Ms. Reagan
will speak at 7:30 p.m., July
16 at the Marriott Hotel.
Ms . Reagan is chief ex
ecutive officer for Sell
Overseas America, the As·
socialion of American Ex·
port, and executive editor of
Showcase USA, the associa-
tion· s international journal.
She is recognized as the as·
sociation's chief spokesman.
Q"eeo Mother Elizabeth
concluded a successful tour
of Ontar io with a fond
fareweU from thousands of
affectionate Canadians.
Her six-day visit came to a
close amid stringent safety
precautions.
Hai~ • rain hit Tex™
Flash flood warnings follow seven-inch downpour
V.S. summary
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•l"'ost "v•n l11t1M1 ol re l11 Ol'I
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El"...,'· rain wes llllfll In mcKI
~ ••-llw neuon n •110w•t1
al'ld lllu'*'llorms •••• 1<alttrtd over perll of Lo..lafene, FlorlCle,
Georgie, MMem Colortdo -lht
OO OIH .
hm-acw'" -. ..., ... Uftebly
high In -~st. 111111"9 llw "'kl to
.,..., tOI -ll'lo l•te altlr.-trom
10Utherl'I New Englend lo the Ohio
V•ll•r . Pr0Yld1nu, R 1 •• hit tt
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hend, Ille Mf'ly ..-nlng low WH Diiiy
U ••gr"' at Y .. lows•-. Monl.,
et>d JI al ~Y. 1-.
Te"'P«elllrll er-IN MllOfl at
"'ldl'llgM POT ,....,.. Mwn e -of
S4 et c~ City, tell! • 10 a hlllfl If
10111 H ....... Cellr
For todlr. rein wes lortcHI lor
both IN Nor'll>MSI -Nor1h-t,
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a .. ln, _.Ill Ill.,_ In New E"91...cl.
IN Gr•eC LM'" -"-lt<lll-
l'ltar 100 HltN -90 were prffict·
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V1110. mld..Wu lullltll Velley end
from IN "'-11'11 to tlw Roal'".
Miid '-'•turwt _,a upected In th• Poc;llk Nwthwllt •lltl highs In
the '°"· -to • ..,,,. the c.111 .... 11
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1 55i,004 Off :
S51 .004 Is what you con sove on vocation lodgtng
over the next 20 years If you ore now spending
S1 ,000 f0< o two weef( vocation <assuming o 10%
Wlotlon rote)
HOW? 'tllth Tlm .. Shortng. o dromottc ldeo thot enobl••
you to own o sllee of prime vocation time redeemoble
ot hund~$ of luxury resorts In CollfornlO ond around
thewol1d
Tlm•ShoMg combt~s oil the odvontages of OWnlnQ
lf's ti,,,. you cashed In for o lifetime of guoronteed
low·cost luxury vocations
Coll lnternollonol Resort Shonng. Centerpotrne 1.
ltvlne,(7i4) 752-H21 Coll now
-lncludlng tox ben41ftu-wtth tocol lod4 of responsl-••
bOlty-ot o COS< below what you'd expect to poy for o All.,.._ •. ..._,_ '7
medlum-pt'lced car • L-~------~-----~---------------------~~--
(
Orange Coe.st DAILY PILOT/Thursday. July 9. 1981 8
--------------------------JI--------------------... Resale
control
proposed
By GLENN~ °' .. ....., ..........
Oranae County Supervisor
Roaer Stanton thinks he hu a
better idea for preserving tbe
county's supply of affordable
homes financed through its low·
interest loan program.
Under his proposal, buyers us·
lng the special loans to purchase
hom,s in unincorporated parts
of the county would be en·
couraged by financial consldera·
lions to hold on to their units.
Stanton said the system,
which is based on keeping the
homes at market value, would
discourage the speculation he
thinks is implicit in the county's
current resale program.
His plan is geared !.olely
toward housing units financed
with money raised by sales of
tax·exempt housing revenue
bonds. It does not involve the
county's inclusionary housing
program, where no resale con·
trols are imposed by the county.
Stanton gained support Tues·
day rrom the county Board of
Supervisors for a 9C).day study of
bis plan by the county's Housing
Revenue Bond Advisory Board.
Under the current resale pro-
gram, Stanton said, families US·
ing the special loans are sup-
posed to sell their units to other
qualified buyers. The county
Housing Authority is responsible
for screening and finding such
applicants.
If they find qualified buyers.
the selling price will be lt:ss than
the market value. Stanton said,
because the annual increases in
property value are tied to in·
creases in the county median in·
come.
However. if the h o usi ng
authority can't find a buyer who
can qualify for the low interest
loan program the sell er can un·
load the home for a big profit,
which Stanton says is subsidized
by lhe county
Under his proposal that
couldn't happen, Stanton said.
His key is the use of a second
trust deed that must be refunded
to the county by the owner if the
new buyer does n't qualify for
lhe speciaJ loan program. The
deed is equaJ in value to the diC·
ference between what a buyer
would pa y in c umulative
monthly rees for the home with a
low interes t loan instead of a
market rate· loan.
It theoretically would serve as
a penaJty to counteract profits a
seller could make by removing
the unit from the loan program.
The refunded money would be
placed back in a county fund lo
be used for making new low·
interest loans. Stanton said this
system would regenerate funds
for the loans which in turn would
help make more homes afforda·
ble.
Accordmg to an example he
offered, a $65,000 home bought
this year would be worth about
$104,683 in fi ve years with a 10
percent annual rise in property
value.
As long as a buyer used a low·
mterest loan. he would not be re-
quired to make payments on the
second trust deed. which would
dissolve over 20 years But if
after five years he sold the home
to a oonquahfying new buyer, he
would pay its value. $23.293.
back to the county. He would
still earn about $24,000 in profit,
an 8 percent annual yield.
Stanton admitted his proposal
is still rough and said a flnanc·
i ng plan s li II needs to be
clarified for cases where the
home is purchased by a buyer
who qualifies for the loan.
By the way, where
is Bob Badham?
B y FREDERICK
SCHOEMEIU..
Of-Dalt, ..........
No trip to Sacramento is
complete without a stop al
David's Brass Rall.
And so 1t was Tuesday
evening that I found myseU
in this well·
k n o w n
tavern, one of
the mo s t
popular
watering
hole s f or
legisl ators,
lobbyists,
newsmen and
followers or
ca p ita l
events.
I was wailing to catch a
shuttle bus to the airport;
David's was a good spot to
bide the time because from
my perch at the bar l could
see directly across the s treet
to the shuttle stop in front of
the Senator Hotel.
David l don't know hJs
las t name asked how my
day had gone. We started
chatting about various peo.
pie and I couldn't resist br·
inging up the name of Robert
Badham.
Which brought up an inci·
dent that occurr ed seven
years ago at the Brass Rail,
when Badham was an as·
sem blyman representing
Newport Beach.
Seems Bob and about 40
other s including some
m embers of my professional
class were at David's well
after the 2 a .m closing time.
The cops came and busted
the joint.
The Sacramento Bee and
severaJ other newspapers, in·
eluding this one. had a field
day with the s tory ,
particularly over the asser·
lions vehemently denied
tha t Badham s lipped inlo a
restroom sla11, unscrewed a
hghtbuJb and stood on top of
a toilet to avoid detection.
Badham would only admit
that he entered 1 a restroom
s tall until tbe commotion
died down.
The patrons, David re·
called during our brief con-
versation, weren't charged.
But David was. He went to
court, was found guilty of
slaying open beyond the
legal closing time, and was
fined $100
..Not too bad, no?" David
said.
David's still running the
Brass Rail , helping e ase
Sacramento's thirst and clos-
mg on time. Badham 1s now
a congressman. representing
Ne wport B eac h in
Washington, D.C.
Apparently that news had
escaped David.
"Wh ere is Badham ,
anyway?" he asked me "I
haven't seen 11.im in a long
time."
Bears coming; farmers irked
CHATSWORTH, N.J . (AP) -
State wildlile offi cials are plan·
ning to reintroduce JOO.pound
bears to southern New Jersey.
des pite complaints from berry
farme rs and beekeepers who
claim thei r crops will be in
danger
Stephen Lee , who f arms
b lueberr'ies and cranberries.
"They'll soon wander to the
private Jands."
"Sure they'll release the bears
on state lands. but come on now,
bears don't read signs," said
Bears haven't been seen in the
1, 700-sq uare -mil e wooded
Pinelands area for 70 years.
Eventually s tate planners hope
to bring the southern bear
population to 150.
We're Listening •••
What do you hke about the Daily Pilot?
Wh al don't you like? Call the number below and
your message wi ll be recorded. transcribed and
delivered to the appropriate editor
The same 24·hour answering service may
be used to record letters lo the editor on any
topic. Mailbox contributors must include. their
name and telephone number for verification. No
circulation calls, please.
Tell us what's on your mind.
642•6086
~
TUDOR
FOR PEAKS IN CXlAA-GOING
PERFORMANCE: CHA.W>l~IP
SURFING ANO TlJ)(R SL8MARIM:RS
Blue-water reliabllity is built Into thl• b,.wny
Tudor pair. Left: the Tudor ~ ()ysterda• Sub·
mariner In ,talnle" ateet with revolving .,apaed
time bezel lfld matching tnoelet. Nit-winding
and preaaur&-proot down to 330 feel hlow: the
Tudor Submariner Prince Qvster In ettilnle ..
steel with revolving elllPMCI time ~lei and
matching Fllplock bracelet, Mlf-Mndlng and Pr9-
aaure-proof down to 8eO fMt. Both modele
feature the Twlnlock winding crown and ire
available with blue 0< black dial and bezel
'
-
·--;,-'lit fiJ .....
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Th ur1day, July 9 , 1981
Firms ready
for drilling
WASHINGTON (AP) -
Despite the• claima of some oll
companies, the oil service In·
dustry la ready and wllllq to
meet the larce speedup In off·
••ore drtlllnc belne proposed
by Interior Secretary James
.Watt, industry representatives
said Wednesday.
The manpower and equipment
LI available to meet Watt's eoai
of offerlne virtually the entire
U.S. and Alaska coastline for
le"e over the next five years,
officials ol the NaUooai Ocean
Industries AsaociaUon said.
The usociaUon represents •1s
firms which do the preliminary
aellmic work, supply the ciant
drilling rip and provide other
support services for oil com·
panies' drilling efforts.
Watt's five-year plan baa
drawn ftre from state offidaia,
enviroomentallsll and even oil
companies who claim it t. too
am bilious. Several oil com·
panies have said the plan will
strain their resources because
they do not have the necessary
equipment and penonnel.
However, NOIA officials, who
supply their services under COD·
tract to oil companies, disputed
that contention.
•'The accelerated leasing
schedule is ·well within our
dpacity," said Paul Kelly of
Zapata Corp., which operates
offshore rigs. "We are ex·
periencing an unprecedented
boom in the construction of
• seismic vessels, oillleld service
vessels and drilling rigs."
Between now and Ul85, NOIA
said, 260 new drillinl ii11 will be
built, representing a 50 percent
expansion in the worldwide
fieet.
Kelly said that an addiUooai
100 rip could be built annually
by 1983 by U.S. sbipyarda, which
are facing a slump In merchant
marine construction.
The oil service officiaia said
they believed many of the oil
company responses to Watt's
plan had been taken out of COG·
text. They said their reading of
the industry was that it 1enera1·
ly supported Watt's moves.
Exxon, Mobil and Atlantic
Richfield were among the oll
companies voicing reservatioos
about Watt's plan.
Atlantic Richfield said, "We
do not believe the Industry can
respond effectively and effi·
ciently year after year to such
extensive offerings.''
The U.S. and Alaska coutline
is divided into 22 planning areas
ranging in slze from 9 million to
160 million acres. Watt proposes
offering entire planning areas
for leasing instead of following
past practice of having oil com·
paniea nominate tracts in which
they are interested and then
leasing much smaller areas.
Wall's goal of offering
bet ween 200 million and 300
million acres for lease each
year compares to about lS
' million acres that would have
been offered under the Carter
administration plan which Watt
is seeking to change.
NEW LOOK -The Village People, a rock band known for
outlandish costumes, demonstrates current look at New
York's Underground Club. In foreground is Ray Simpson,
,.,..._...
while from left are Felipe Rose, David Hodo, Alex Briley,
Glenn M. Huges, and Jeff Olson.
.Reagan faces heavy schedule as vacation nears
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi·
dent Reagan bas a lot of work t.o
do in the next four weeks if be
hopes to clear his desk before
his summer vacation.
Reagan has cleared one hur·
dle -winning House approval of
his efforts to reduce budaet lD·
creases -'by dint of his political
persuasiveness. He cleared
another one by naming Judge
Sandra D. O'Connor of the
Arizona Appeals Court to fill a
vacancy oo tbe Supreme Court.
But pressing in on him are de-
cisions oo such di verse topics as
L
EXHIBITION AND SALE
OVER 300 SELECT PIECES OF
HAND MADE ORIENTAL RUGS
ALL "'9CeS REDUCE> TO NEAR COST
PRICES LIKE THESE HAYe NEVER BEEN SEEN IN LAGUNA HILL.I BlrFOREI
the MX missile and a manned
bomber, extension of the Voting
Rights Act and the Clean Air
Act, and a new immigration
policy.
In addition, he is anxious for
Congress to finish work on his
tax.cut proposal before the
beginning or August -and he
will spend considerable time in
the corning weeks lobbying for
it. He also faces stiff ~pposilion
on bi s proposal to sell
sophisticated radar planes to
Saudi Arabia.
None of the major issues on
Reagan's agenda must be de-
c ided upon in the next few
weeks, but he and his aides have
made it clear that they are
working toward decisions. Each
issue is sticky, and it is possible
that the president, in several
cases, could make decisions that
will anger some longtime sup-
porters.
Before the decisions reach
Reagan, however, options will be
put forward by Defense Secretary
Caspar W. Weinberger, who is
said still to be weighing recom-
mendations.
THIS IS NOT A LIQUIDATION SALE-WE NEED TO RAISE CASH
FREE RUGS FREE RUGS
We will be giving FREE to the
first 2.5 people (one to a family) a . . . . . .. ~ ... 1' x 1' B<*hara worth $30.
'. I ' .
y
'-)
R1.19s of all sizes and description:
S' x 3' from $ 100
6' x ~· from$ 200
9' x 6' from $ soo
12' x 9' from$1100
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, THE SALE WILL TAKE PLACE
SATURDAY, JULY 11 FROM 10:30 A.M. TO I P.M.
HOUDAYINN
25205 LA PAZ RD., LAGUNA HILLS
Information: (213) 709-0026 A, A & A Oriental R s Inc. ,_, c.111a.c11
Semi Annual Sale
Starts
Thursday, July 9
10:00 A.M.
die
Spring and Summer
Merchandise
Open Mon., 'Tues., Wed.
Fri., Sat. till 6:00
Thurs. till 9:00
er non
··SPORTSWEAR I "' ,._ ~
SHoRTERG
ANDllIGHER
If you're looking for a sweeter deal months' forfeiture of interest or reduc·
... pick a Plum instead of a plan. tion of your original investment.
Plums pay higher interest than The Commercial Credit Plum. It's
FederaJ lAwallowsoncomparableplans a sweeter deal . Available to California
at banks and savings & loans. Compare residents only. Thrift certificate rates
theratesyouseeabovewithwhatthey may change Tuesday.
are offenng right now and you11 see -
what we mean. ,,,,---.._ '
Plums also come with short tenns A Pick a Pl um '' that don't tie UJ> your money for 2Y2
years or more. We offer a low $1,000 Instead of a Pl.an. . '
minimum on our "90 Day Wonder" -0 Please send me more anfonnauon. \
3 month thrift certificates. Just ~ 0 Here"s my check or ITI()Ot'y order for ----
$500on 1 year thrift certificates. / Plan: D 3 months D 1 year D Super Thrift \
And, if you want a plan I Type of account. 0 Individual 0 Jomt Tenancy \ with paSsbook flexiQihty, ' 0 Trustee 0 CorponitKln
our Super Thrift Plum pays I lnthename<s1or \ t~owpnntl 8~3 annual interest on I M s· 1 $500 7C17 all y 1gna u~ or more ... /o annu y Co 0 • s·gnaiu-I l than $500 •• . WM I ....
on essAll thrift . rtifi te ' Accowit Address I ce ca City ·State Zip Plums offer quarterly com·\ Phone ---I poun~ and pay a lilizh 63 \ MySocillSecurity/Tu 1.0. # -'--;........,..------annual interest even wTaen you /
withdraw early. There is no 3 ' CoMMl:RcJAL ClmT
·:::i,:, ::,;'!t~~w':J~e rate. ' COMM£ROAL CREDIT PLAN, INCORPORATED I
"()I~., compounc:11111
' ___ ..," _____ _
. .
. , .
,;. ...
I
1 ·
~-~-._.--.. ~ --......... --. --., .. . . , . , .
Orange Coaet ~AIL y PILOT/Thuraday, July 9, 1981 .s
State to extend. ban on apples?
Maggot infe1tation mars exporting of fruit from western Oregon
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -
Callfomla la coulderlnl at.Ind·
ln1 lts year-old embar10 OD
backyard appl• and pean from
western Ore1on to include com·
merclal 1bipments from that
area, a state olflclal 1ald Wed·
nesday.
The commercial quarantine
would attect moaUy the area
around Medford and Klamath
Falla, u1d Art MWecan, chief al
the exclmJon and detectlcm MC·
lion ol tbe CalUorn.la Depart-
ment ol Food Ud Aptculture.
Tbe backyard quarantine wu
eatablllhed Jut year, be Hid,
becau.ae ol an lnfeataUoo al ap-
ple magots, the larva of a fnatt
fiy that baa moved west from
the New Encland ital.ea.
Mlllecan said the pest ii not u
Salt water
for north?
CONCORD (AP) -The water
supply for 260,000 people livine
just eaat of San Francisco Bay
may grow so salty by September
that il will be unhealthy for
many residents, water officials
say.
Directors of the Contra Coeta
Water District were to receive a
report Wednesday on the pro-
blem, which officials say ls
linked to saltwater lntrualon
from the bay.
Consumers In Concord, Pitts·
burg, Antioch, Martinez and
parts of Walnut Creek and
Pleasant Hill could be affected.
ducerom u the lledltenaneao
fruit .Oy because it reproducel
only once a year, wblle the
Mediterranean Oy recenerates
every 30 day1. Tbe apple mauot
lnfeata apples, pears and or-
namental hawthorn 1brube.
However, MUlecan said ex-
perience bu 1hown that the ap-
p 1 e ma1eot 1pread1 from
backyard t.reea to commercial
crops.
Tbe maggot was fint found in
Ore1on two years a10 in
backyard trees in the
Willamette Valley near
Portland, Millecan said. Last
year, scattered lnfestations were
dilcovered in other counties.
The California quaraDUD•
started Jut year al blshway ID·
1peetion 1tatlon1 near tbe
Ore100 border. Fruit I.I excluded
from eome counties of weltern
Ore1on and one county ln
W a1biqtoo -Clark, north al
Portland, MWecan said.
Orecon official1, beaded by
Wllliam ~esan, admlniltrator
of t he plJnt divi1lon of the
Oregon Department of
agriculture opposed tbe com·
merclal quarantine at a two-day
bearing, which ended Wednes-
day.
M ill~an said the decllkln on
whether to enlar1e· the quaran-
tine will be made in several
weeks.
Citified falcons
Five to be fre~d in Santa Monica
LOS ANGELES <AP> -If
you're new to the city it's pretty
tough to make a start here -
especially if you're looking for a
place in Santa Monica -but
some five-week~ld falcons will
be trying to do just that this
week.
The birds, an endangered
species, are now "nesting" in a
cage atop a 21-story building in
the city, and, when they appear
ready to make their first fiigbt,
officials of the California
Department of Fish and Game
will open up the cage. Scientists
anticipate poesible nesting sites
will include the city and adja-
cent wilderness areaa such as
tbe Santa Monica mountains.
·'The first week on their own
will be critical," u that ii when
the birds prove their survival
abilities, said Ron Jurek of the
Fish and Game Department.
This trial of the falcona ii part
of a series of experimenll in the
United Stat.ea and Canada to aee
whether the endangered apeclea
can make it in a bie city. So far,
peregrine falcons are doln1 well
after being set free to test their
wings ln Washington D.C.,
Baltiinore, New York City and
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
FOUGHT FOR ANIMALS -Gladys Sargent,
who has walked the halls of the Capitol in
Sacramento for years advocating the rights
of animals, doffs her hat to members of the
Senate as they honored her for her work. At
left is Sen. Marz Garcia, R-Menlo Park.
The salty water may present a
particular dilemma for the old,
for the young and for thOH wbo
must restrict the amount of salt
in their diets, said Lee Aldridge,
chief of the district's treated
water division.
Currently, the birds are adult
sue, but they still have baby fat;
and it's that extra tissue which
is expected to keep them going
until they learn to bunt.
Largely ~au.se or food ccm-
tamlnation and loss of habitat,
the peregrine falcon population
has fallen steadily since the
1930s until last year, when only
39 pairs were known to have
nested in California. The small
birds upon which the falcon.a
feed have been contaminated by
pesticides.
·fuchsia
Show/Sde
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
842-5878
~., .. u ,.,. St.,,.., •our OOOt
fC1H Store,..., .. , "fOVI Art1•
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$c"" ..._ u..i ...... cs.s.u.1 Q'ltl ~,/'.. I/ 1
• ~e le.p
U.F .O.'s -TETOEOM -HUMAllTY 7>ze-,,"
U.F.O.'S = TETOEll1 TETOEOM = HUMANITY
SEMNAR PRESENTATION
MY MIND TO YOUR MIND
The foundation on which Tetoeom is built. Tetoeom ii built
around the expanded theory of evolution of mankind, that there
is a supreme force Tao that created the advanced society in the
universe (GOD), that the advanced society (GOD) created
homosapiens on earth through genetic technology by
restructuring neanderthal man. That the Tao Is the natural
energy force that created all. That bomosapiens is a hybrid
created by GOD. That GOD created aU living religions on earth
for the benefit of mankind so they may have a guide to live by
and that all point to Tetoeom. Tetoeom is the center to which all
can aspire to.
By the use of common sense and t.ecbnology we may arrive
in time to save mankind from itself, and this will benefit each
one by enabling the individual to live lile in an atmosphere free
from the dangers imposed by a world operatine lo an
irresponsible manner ' 1111
for one person can be
worth 10,000 if they work toward influencing a situation while
the person who does nothing to promote the mans to the end
solution will not achieve their goals, for they want others to do
this for them and -only by direct involvement can we achieve
the salvation of mankind.
We need people, we need you. We need your abilities
whatever they are to achieve our goals. We need support from
you in whatever way that you can benefit us. Peraonal
involvement by simply talking to other people about Tetoeom,
or through organizational management, worltine in the
management end of the Tetoeom Faith, or, throueh
contributions of money, for money is needed to promote our
Faith. But what we must have ls dedication to achieve our
goals.
So, come share with us this burden that we endure, of
brineina forth this awareness aa to where mankind can be lo the
future. Tbroueb technolon, common sen1e, coupled with
responaibtllty, the yoke of oppression will be litled from ua.
Thia seedling will grow to command 1reat reapect
throupout this world and beyond. The fruit that will irow will
be our advancement into tJie hither realm ol con1cloumeu; tbe
leaves the people; the branehel different culture and 10elet1;
the tnmk I.I Tetoeom; the roots all livinl reU&lom and poUtlcal
pblloeopbiea.
T~toea•ho~of~..tof .....
Ma Ha Re He Siie STiii
Directer If tlll Td111m FIM
HO·ll
HMllfllilllll_,
417 ... S1rlet
111.,art ... CA 12113
,... 714 -175942
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IS
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In Less Than An · Hoar
Now you con hove your 110. 126. ex 135 color prints In USS THAN eG JllUNUTE9 with lndMduol quollty control given to
every shot. You con also get superlost service on al of ycxx other photoftl"Uhlng needs. Even better. Just bring In
2 rolls of 110, 126, or 135 prtnt ftlm with our apeclal coupon to any IN & OOT PHOTO STORE ond you wtll get
the third roll developed ond prtnted PRDI
You con even replace yoi..1 rol wttti fresh KODAK PIUI that Is now on sole fa ZS"' OPP and receive
odcttlonol discounts when you retun It to us fa devek>plng.
GRAND
OPENING
IN
NEWPORT
BEAC
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Bayside Cent4Zf
1048 Bayside DriV'l
(714) 759-8056
IMNE
Hcrttoge Aozo
14252 QMf Ortw
(7W) 851-0161
WUJLOS~
l036C ~ Blvd.
(come d Vena • MotOf) (2\3)~
PW:ORMRA Pico Rtveo Aaio
8826 E. WNttltr Blvd.
(2\3) 692-6904
COii fa stcxe ho\6s
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FOR INFORMATION CALL 213-731·2395
''·
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-..-u~ ::s:::w -c::' tt ...,. w :cw v « 1 • v ;:c u e a o • + • • • • • :e~ , .. ..._ :W • ¥ ¢ 1¥ W CVV-W "'S~ T ~ .. . -.. ---. -.
oranoe Cout DAILV i-11..0T/n1ur1d1y. July 9, 1981
GSA. lease trans/ er
blunder needs remedy
By most accounts, it was an
incredibly ill·conceived notion for
the state to ofrer mobile
homeowners at El Morro
transferable leases.
And now a joint legislative
panel in Sacramento is looking
into undoing what the state's
General Services Agency did
when it granted 20-year resala·
ble leases to about 290 mobile
homeowners at Moro Cove, in the
mids t of the new Crystal Cove
State Park.
The way st ate legislators
originally envisioned things, the
residents would be allowed to
stay on at the mobile home park
for 20 years. At the end of that
time the park would revert to
state park uses.
If a resident were to move
out or die during that two dec-
ades, the mobile home would be
removed and some public use of
the mobile home park could be
accomplished before the 21.st ceQ·
tury.
In its unannounced decision
to offer trans fera ble leases to the
•
obviously delighted mobile
homeowners, state officials inad-
vertently blocked public acceas
by keeping the area private.
The move can also l>e
described as a gift of public
funds , because the mobile
homeowners now have a com·
modity which they can sell or
t'ransfer -a far more lucrative
deal than they had before.
The mobile homeowners are
not to be blamed for the GSA
foulup. Many will probably re·
main in their mobile homes for
th~ next 20 years.
The mobile home park ls
located right in the middle of the
3.25·mile state park-where the
best beaches are found.
Now legislators, led by As ·
semblyman Terry Goggin <D·San
Bernardino) and Douglas Bosco
( 0 -0ccidental). want to find out
if there is any legal means of
remedying the GSA blunder.
That certainly is understand·
able. It's a blunder that cries for
a remedy.
Colleges in squeeze
While local school districts
are battling funding losses
because of declining enrollments,
the Coast Community College
District is coping with budget
problems for the opposite reason
-its enrollment grew more than
had been anticipated.
The district , which includes
Orange Coast, Golden West and
Coastline colleges, received word
last month that the state would
not provide full reimbursement
for all of the people who took
classes at the three colleges dur·
ing the 1980·81 term.
Compounding the. district's
dilemma was the state funding
package for the coming school
year, which gives commµnity col-
leges a 5 percent inflation in·
crease, rather than the 8 percent
g rante d to the K -12 sc hool
syst em.
As a result of these finance
bills, the Coast district is now
confronting a $7.4 million reduc·
lion in available funds. The dis·
trict's tentative g e neral fund
budget for 1981-82 is $81 million.
The necessary cuts are likely
to include classified employee
layoffs , an increase in the
mini mum class size. higher
materials fees for some classes
and new charges for non-credit
courses.
The continuing enrollment
growth in the state community
colleges is not surprising. As
private and state university tui·
tion charges climb, more people
are opting for the free communi·
ty college classes.
A community college tuition
fee was adv<tcatecl by some
legislators in this year's fmance
discussions. As ·california cities
and K-12 school districts continue
to demand a larger piece of the
state's fmancial pie. the senti·
menl for community college tui-
tion is likely to grow.
Scrutinize efficacy
Art Anthony. having pleaded
no contest to a misdemeanor
charge of assaulting his wife,
continues to serve on the Irvine
City Council while awaiting a Ju-
ly 22 sentencing date.
He faces a maximum of one
year in jail and a $1,000 fine .
Anthony has the legal right to
continue as a council member un·
less he is convicted of a felony.
However, while he can legal·
ly serve, how effective can An·
thony really be in view of the
circumstances of the shooting in·
cident?
This question will undoubted·
ly be answered long before the
end of Anthony's council term,
which extends through June of
1982.
•
He has said that if sentenced
to a jail term, he will resign from
the City Council. He should prob·
ably take the further step of
agreeing to r esign if he de·
termines that his conviction has
damaged his efficacy as a city
councilman.
It may be that Anthony can
take the conviction in stride and
continue to deal effectively with
the many problems of the grow-,
ing city of Irvine. An assault con·
viction would certainly become
an issue if Anthony ever sought
re·election to a new council term.
If it also becomes a major is·
sue as he fills out his present
term. he should seriously con·
sider resigning.
Op1n1oos expn•ssed 1n the space above are those of the Da11y Pilot Otner view!'> ex
pre'>Sf'd on tn1s page are lhose of their authors and art 1sts. Reader comment is tnv1l ·
eo Addrev. The Daily Pilot, P~O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa , CA 92626 Phone 17141
641 4371
L.M. Boyd / Party lively
Nothing enlivens a social gel·
together more than the threat of a
squabbling married couple. So says a
hostess of lengthy experience. You'd
think a matrimonial argument would
make everybody uneasy. Bu~ lhis
authority claims it prompts other
husbands and wives to become sym·
pathetic not only toward the battlers
but toward one another. A good fight
tends to make everybody lovable.
How do you account ror the fact
that the men out.number the women
among stamp collectors by about 50
to one?
The smaller the town, the more
likely the householdel' wUl tlave •
gun at hand for protection.
Happiest wtvea are married to men
four to 10 years youn•er tb1n
themselves. That'• not our Love and
War man'• conttnUoo. NOM odMr
ORANGE COAST
llilyPilat .
""9111.-. """ ..., " 11111 ywr • DI w..i aey tl. ~ ... ...,, .. , , ..... ~ .....
l)ef, c;.4M MtM. (" '1•»
\
than the renowned Dr. Lewis M.
Terman of Stanford said it yea.rs ago.
The late Dr. Terman was among the
first and best of the social science re·
searchers. His findings checked oul
Car better than most.
The hotline between Washington,
D.C .• and Moscow iln't a red phone.
It's three teletype machines ln a lltUe
room. Insiders call it the "Mollnk."
More females than males have
been depicted ln the nude by painters
and sculpt.on la every soclety except
that of ancient Greece.
Am aaked the whereabouts of the
richest topsoil ln the nation. The
Smithsonian 88)'1 low1.
Claim is that within tbe next 20
years all the aalmoo ln the Paclnc
Northwest wltl tome from
hatcheries, none from lhe native
wild.
Thomas P. Haley
Publisher
Thomas K•vll
Editor
B•rNr• Kr91bich
Edltorf•I P-oe Editor !
™E P~ING Of ~D SIL~
GSA overspends on refugees
W ASHJNGTON -Al the General
Services Administration. waste and in·
competence are routine. But when an
emergency arises, the GSA spendthrifts
really outdo themselves.
Last year. Jimmy Carter pledged that
the United States would "provide an
o p e n heart and open arms·· to
thousands of Cuban refugees Oeelng
Fidel Castro's little Gulag Archipelago.
To this the GSA bureaucrats added "an
open pocketbook."
THE FIRST OF several internal
audits on the refugee program d1scloses
widespread extravagance in GSA's
handling of nearly 15,000 Cubans housed
temporarily at Fort McCoy, Wis. "The
justification for many items and quan
l ilies procured for the Cuban refugee
em ergency was questionable," the
auditors reported, with massive un-
derstatement.
GSA records show the following ques·
tiona ble purchases:
10,000 checkers games and domino
sets -one for nearly each man, woman
and child lo the camp -at a cost of
$30,000.
-$4,500 worth of Frisbees; $62,576 for
other toys.
-$1,400 for Ping-Pong tables.
-$56.2S2 for Bibles. missals, commu-
nion hosts and religious services.
-172 two-way radios at a cost of
$402,000.
$17,837 for basebaJI caps and equip·
ment, basketball backboards and other
sports gear.
Air freight charges of more than
$4.000 to rush Spanish-English die·
lionaries to Fort McCoy -where they
then sat in storage for several days .
Three videotape macb.ines, costing
G.
-JA-Cl_A_ID-IR-SD-1 -~
$2,685. used for recording network news
progr ams.
$20,000 for a public address system,
even though the Army and other gov·
ernment ex~rts on emergency pro·
cedures s uggested renting the equip·
ment.
JN THE MATTER of necessities. the
aud itors did a little comparison shop-
ping and found that GSA could have
sa v ed the taxpayers thousands of
dollars.
For example, the auditors report that
if GSA had solicited ambulance services
"on a sounder basis than using the
Yellow Pages," they could have saved
$63,000. The GSA paid $1,200 a day for
ambulances. while the Army paid $960 a
day.
Furthermore, the audit notes, "GSA
personnel did not adequately monitor
ambulance ser vices contracts.
therefore GSA has no assurance that
services were performed." Instead of
checking the ambulance bills by ex·
amining ambulance log books, GSA
contract om cers simply ·•verified" the
claimed services verbally.
Other GSA records indkate that the
contract officers could have saved the
government $6,270 on its purch.a.se of
rain gear and $8.552 SO on folding
chairs.
In what h as become a familiar
refrain for GSA audits in recent years.
the investigators concluded that the
Fort McCoy operation "lacked ade-
quate controls to prevent fraud and
abuse " In fact. the auditors reported,
nearly one·th1rd or all the supplies and
services provided for the Cuban ref·
ugees lacked proper review and
do cu mentat1on
GSA'S R EGIONAL administrator in
charge of Fort McCoy told my associate
Tony Capaccio that the aud1tors· report
"failed to recognize the unique nature
of the resettlement oper ation.'·
GSA procurement officers "don "t
question the items that the emergency
experts ask for." he said. ··They come
in and say, 'This is what we need.' We
say. ·we will procure if for you.' "
Sen Orrin Hatch. R -Utah. is not
persuaded that this is the proper way to
conduct government business. He's
planning to investigate the GSA's han·
dling or the entire Cuban refugee pro·
gram.
Social Security hail-out proposed
To the Editor:
As long as there are so many wealthy
people who pay no taxes (legally! ) .
millions being s pent on political cam·
paigns, thousands of special breaks for
congressmen, and more thousands ror
all kinds of boondoggle plans, I know
Social Security can be bailed out if the
people in power want lo badlyl.~nough.
Everytime we hear or read aiscussions
about the horrible debts of our govern·
ment. some bright soul blames It on t.he
MAILBOX
people on welfare. We have "workfare"
which is supposed to punish these peo·
ple and d1scourage them Of course.
there are violations.
l wonder how much money the gov·
ernment is cheated out of by those who
falsify income tax reports compared lo
those who falsify welfare claims.
HOW ABOUT SOME workfare for
congressmen who get discounts on
almost everything they do?
And for those who get price supports
or pay for not growing or producing?
Further. a few good raffles could
bring enough to help the SoclaJ Security
fund tremendously. Don't raffle off only
a few million-dollar amounts, for which
the odds would be too discouraging; raf·
ne off thousands of prizes from Sl.000 to
$.500,000. No one would be forced to buy
tickets. Only those who want lo would
s upport the new fund.
There are many answers to budget
problems if you look. We could even
pass a law requiring that anyone donat·
Ing to a political campaign must give a
dollar to the Social Security funds for
every dollar used by the politician.
J. DENNIS
Options offered
To the Editor:
Perhaps Third District Supervisor
Bruce Nestaode could use a lesson in
temperance as the Daily PUot (Jul)' 2 )
puts tt. Perhaps we 111 could, even
though his asse11menl of the Irvine
Company's motivaUon for developin1
the J rvine Coast is conecl -•'greed ana
proflt." But if Mr. Neatlnde and thote
)ournaUstlc giants of put yeart lllte
Westbrook Pealer and H. L. Mencken.
ind ordinary DeODl• Ilk• lll)'leU can
stand eooVici.ed ot ·wriuai ln&emperant·
ly 1 It seems to me that the 'Dally PUot
1tand1 convicted of a mucb more
1eriou1 Journ.allstlc crime.
superfidal.lty.
In tbe same edltorhl about Mr.
Ntstude'1 criUclam of the ftrm'• de·
• cisloa to otter "9ale control& cm about
400 low·cost unit.I, a at.ate Cout.aJ Com·
mission require ment. the Pilot says.
"Strong words to describe a decision in
which the company had no other op-
tion "No other option? Come on!
The Irvine Company could decide not
to put 1,000 more temporary and perma·
ne nt residents in this coastal area ; it
could decide t.o cancel its plan for an of·
fi ce build1ng complex; it could decide to
scratch its request for widening roads
and highways ; it could decide the land
could turn a "profit" by converting it lo
ar gricultural and recreational uses. The
Irvine Company d id and does have
other options.
Pe rhaps there is yet time to hope that
the Irvine Company will, as it bas in
the past, reconsider unworthy projects
that would have diminished the quality
of life for area residents and withdrawn
them
TOM ALEXANDER
Trash concerns
To the Editor:
I read with concern the item regard·
ing dumps filling up. In this state we
simply toss away SO million tons of
trash each year, and it costs us $1.6
million to bury it in landfill dumps.
Is n 't it lime that the conservationists
cam e up with a really good idea which
would prevent this?
Or one day a cartoonist is going lo
draw the ultimate cartoon -showing us
a ll drowning in a sea of our own
garbage!
. EDITH 0 . COPP EN
'Disarm or die'
To the Editor:
As an aftermath of the Israeli pre·
emptive strike th.al demolished the
Iraqi facility for makipg atomic bombs,
there has been a bliuard of discussion,
In government agencies and in the com·
municalion media. about setting up an
International mechanJsm that will out-
law the strikes. TbJs idea is so simple·
minded that people of good sense should
be ashamed to propose i\.
The modern technology of war makes
pouible destruction so fast, and on such
a vast scale. that an entire nation can
be paralyied by a single 1trlke. And It
does not t.ake an atomic bomb to do It.
Any nation that hat a powerful air force
can do it. JaplUl did it at Pearl Harbor:
• Ltl!f>rt from rtadsri arr WflcOm' Thi'
1'1Qhl to candensf' letters lo fil ~' or
fltm1na1e hbt>/ 1s rtstrved U llers of 300
word• or ltu will ~ ghlf?I prtft1'mu. All
ltttera mwl include lignoturt and mathng
oddress but namr• maN be wlthlttld on rt·
qut!t II 1uf1icttnl rraron 11 opportnr
Potll'JI well nor ~ pubhthfd Ltttffl moy M
ltltphonfd to f42 6ot6 Namt and phont
"'""~Of lhf conJributor 1711.111 M gion for
vtnltcohon p..rpou1
-ti-o·--------·-·
Hitler d1d al in Poland ; Israel did it
against Egypt in the 1967 war; Egypt
and Syria did it against Is rael in the
Yom Kippur C 1973 > war: and lately the
Soviets have done it 1n Afghanistan.
There is only one effective way lo put
a stop to the pre emptive strike -keep
the level of prevailing armament below
what it takes to do it with. As long as
countries have the armament that
makes a pre-emptive strike possible,
they will use it. No amount of threat of
sanctions. by the U.N. or any other in·
ternational body. will s top them.
In short. the technical im~rative is
loud and clear. and it applies lo tM
whole world Disarm or die! ·
HYMANOLKEN
Be lutniane
To the Editor.
We continue to read more and more
about the views of people who approve
or disapprove of the use of pound
animals or any other source -for
medical research. :
Some say animals "raised for the
purpose of research" should be used.
Being huma n e doesn 't depend on
whether the animal was intended to ~
treated humanely.
"It will be killed at the pound
anyway" they say when they advocat.~
such research.
Better it be injected permanently
than tortured.
I do not want al any time any animal
tortured so that I can reap medk~
benefits. Of course, there are some
types of tests and ex~riments that are
not severe and do not cause animals tt
suffer. ln order to permit those we woul8
have to have definite guidelines and re1·
ulalions about the degree of sufferint ,
which would be difficult to establisb:t
enforce.
With the use of computen. 1ma ·
sc ienti fi c accomplishmen~ can be made. What has bumanit
gained in its purs uit of humaneness fi
people lf it must torture animals -an
kind or animals'
D.COO
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S1cramento double talk: The Auembl
wut conaldn 1 blll Jlvlnt atat
aecretutes the aame 1 ary u ala
tree lrimmen If akJUa aDd experlee
are compar1ble
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0r•nge Cout DAJL Y PILOT/Thursday, July 9, t981
Experts debunk connn11nist origin of rules
For the lut 10 yean, l have been re-
ceivlne tbe same lilt in the mail from
people ot ultra-conservative persuuloo.
The lilt l1 called "The Communiat
Bules for RevoJution." It replarly ap.
pean in varioUI rl1ht-wtn1 public•·
tion1, and whenever it does, people clip
lt out and send lt to me. Thelr point is
that all the tb1np that have cone Wl"Olll
in Ute United Stat.ea ii due to a 80-year-
ol8' eommunilt muter plan.
By now I have seen the llat so often
that I can usually tell it'a in an envelope
jut from the writing on the outside. The
people who aead me the llat always say
the Commun.lit Rules for Revolution
were discovered "in Duueldorf,
Germany, in 1919 by the Allied Forces."
Now, the correspondents tell me, the
Reda are close to realizing the goab
they set out to achieve so long ago.
BE&E ilE the Communist Rules for
Revolution:
"l. Corrupt the young, get them away
from religion. Get them interested in
sex. Make them superficial. Destroy
their ruuedness.
"2. Get control of all means of
publicity.
"3. Get people's mindl off their 1ov·
emment by focualna their atteotioo oo
athletics, sexy boQka and plays, and
other trivialities.
"4. Divide ,the people lnto bolUle
aroups by constanUy hal"Pinl on con·
troveralal matten of no importance.
"S. Destroy the people's faith in their
I l l Clllll
natural leaders by holdin1 the latter up
to contempt, ridicule, and obloquy.
"6. Always preach true democracy,
but aeiae power as fast and aa ruthlessly
as possible. •
"7. By encouragine eovemment ex-
travagance, destroy its credit, produce
fear of inflation with riain& prices and
general discontent.
"8. Foment unnecessary strikes in
vital industries, encourage civil dis·
orders, and foster lenient and soft at-
titude on the part of government toward
such disorders.
• '9. By •peclOUI araument cauae the
breakdown of the old moral virtues,
honesty, sobriety. cootioence, faith lD
the pled&ed word, ru11edneu.
"10. Caute the reailtratJon of all llreanm on aome pretext, with a view
to contlacatio.1 them and leavina the
population belpleea."
THE .. &ULES'" conclude with an
omlnoua warning:
"Take time to tblnk -seriously -of
all of the above. Then draw your own
concluaiClDI. Fri1htenin1 bow far we
have pennltted them (the Communilta)
-even helped them -to pfOIJ'eU, isn't it! ..
The other day, a newly-printed
veraion of the Communist Rules for
Revolution arrived lo my mail. I
glanced at the rules, and wu about to
toss them away as usual.
But then J realized that it was time to
put the "rules" to rest once and for all.
So I checked with a number of
scholars, historians and experts on
communism and Soviet history.
All of them said the ·'Communist
Rules for Revolution" are a total fraud.
They n~er existed.
The expert.a and hiatoriana said there
la no record that the "rules" ever were
written by the early communista. Their
consensus was that the list ot "rulea" is a fraudulent reaction by modem rigbt-
wln1 Americans who want to blame lbe
weakneesea of present-day society on
someone, and who have chosen the com-
munista.
"The rules are an obvious fabrica-
tl on," said David Jorauvaky, a
Northwestern University profeaaor who
has studied and written about Soviet
history extensively. "They're not com-
munist in their origin."
Jorauvsky said that many of tbe
particulars ln the rules are contrary to
true communist beliefs -and that
anyone with even the moat rudimentary
knowledge of communiam can read the
list and know it is a fraud.
"IF TIDS WAS an authentic docu-
ment of the communists, I wouJd have
heard of it," Jorauvsky said. "It is a
fabrication that pushes the fears and
wishes of an ideological group."
J effrey Brooks, an assistant professor
at the University of Chicago who
specialius in Russian history. said that
the document was "impou1ble and Im·
plauaible," and had never exlated.
•'It la an lmplau.sJble ccncoctloo of
American fears and phobiu," be aaid,
and has nolhin& to do with the re.al at-
titudes of Soviet revoluUonary ~aden.
.\&CA.DIVS &ARAN, a proleuor of
economics and history at the Unlvenity
of Chlcaeo who bas spent the tut ~
years speciallzlne lo Soviet history, said
one would have to be an "id.lot" to
believe the communists ever published
such a llat.
"People who believe in a 'muter
plan' to be used over SO or 80 years are
very naive," Kahan said. "If there's
anythln1 to worry about, it's that the
communists will chanae their tactics. If
they bad one master plan and atuck to
it, then we'd have nothing to worry
about. This document never existed. It
is a forgery of a very cheap sort."
So . . . the famous Ust is a fraud. The
Reds never had anything to do with it.
Although I'm kind of sorry that th1a is
so. I always wanted to meet a com·
munist who was carrying the list
around, so I could ask him what "oblo-quy" means.
Garage sales. yard sales, rummage sales, street sales ... no matter what
you call them. the idea is the same -TURNING THINGS YOU NO LONGER
NEED INTO CASH. When yoo get tired of fighting your way into a crowded
attic or garage, or when you need a little extra cash, have a garage sale! So
get into the act, clean out those unwanted items, and make money doing it!
It's fun, it's profitable, and following th4tse 10 steps will make it simple.
1 Decide on dates.
Look at a calendar and set the dates and times of your
•
sale. Weekends are usually good, but many successful
sales have been held in the evening. just after work.
Check the weather forecast in the paper, and watch for
any other large event that may attract potential buyers
away, such as fairs .or community events. Have your
sale run at least two days -some people may not be
able to come on any single day.
2 What to sell.
Everythm I That 1s, everything you haven't used 1n the
• last year. ?tan item has antique value, or 1s brand-new.
or has unusual value. be sure to ask a healthy price for
it. Get a pad of paper and search your whole house.
Look everywhere. and hst everything.
4 Where to advertise.
Place your atj where 1t w ll bt seen by people who hve
in the area -most people shop close to home. The
• Daily Pilot is read by 88,CXX> adults in Costa Mesa.
Newport Beach, Laguna Beach. Irvine. Huntington
Beach and Fountain Valley-guaranteeing you wide
exposure. And with the Pilot, you're not paying for
waste circulation in Los Angeles or Anaheim. Plan to
run your ad 3 times or more. and start it a few days
before the sale so bargain hunters can have plenty of
notice.
5 Make a sign.
To help make yo ur sale successful, make a few signs
• from cardboard and letter with a magic marker. A good
sign size 1s 1'4 " x 22".
BACK BAY LIQUOR
Fwwilwt . This is your main attraction and your
best source of income. Be sure to place furniture
where 1t can be seen from the street. Price
furniture low enough to beat auctions and
secondhand sales (check the classifieds for
comparisons~ but high enough so you can come
down a httle when someone· shows interest.
RockinQ chairs. chest of drawers. tables and
chairs are all very successful at garage sales. so
feature them in your ad.
6 Placing your siCJl.
The morning of the sale. but not before. place your
signs. Be sure and add your address and any
• directional arrows. This should be done about a half
hour before the sale starts. Place your sign where it Invites you to experience the new
August Sebastiani Fine Country Wines.
ONLY
57 CALORIES
P• IOOML
5-Ylllg
Coca-Cola
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Light Country White
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"O.UI A
Bottle in
Our New
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W elnharcl's
12 ,-s499
.,......_ Smaller antiques should be grouped. and
kept close at hand where you can watch and talk
about them. Nostalgia items are very popular -
display them well. C1otW1MJ. Make sure clothing is clean. and mark
the price way down. Put as many things as
possible on hangers. Separate kid·s things by age.
Display adult clothing by sex and age group. Low
prices are a_, on clothes except for unusual
items. which should be tagged with an
explanation (like, "hand-embroidered flowers.
dress worn by Mae West~"
..,_., ... These will sell for a talr price only 1f
they work. No one will take your word for 1t. Have
an extension coed so they can be tested. or better'
yet, have radios playing, old TV sets turned on
etc. Make sure buyers understand they are sold
"as is".
......_ These usually go fast. but keep them out of
direct sunlight. A good idea is to name your plants
before the sale (Spider Lady, Cousin Jasper,
Maggie~ and write a line or two on the
name card about how to care for them.
3 Write your ad.
Here Is a suggested ad: "Garage Sale -desks.
• Bentwood rocking chair, toYS. lnfantl' clothing, 1922
Victrola In original cabinet, nny gadgets, lots of
unusual items, rock collection, planta. Refreshments. 8
a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday .-ld Sunday. 1234 South
Anyatreet, Yourtown . .Mt wett of Main and 2nd."
Use this sample ad as a guide. Be aure to lltt unusual
items. Be a specific as poeaible. Gr.. direction• If
needed. Don't UM a~ -many people won't
bother to decipher them. CAUTION: Don't ad"9rtlM
anything you don't really haw. Every ii.m In the 1d
must be on hand at the start of thl Nie.
can be seen from both sides ot the street by passing
cars and pedestrians. CAlJTION. Some towns have laws
that restrict the placement and duration of garage sale
signs. Please check with your town·s 'Planning
department or clerk
7 Marking prices.
Mark prices where they can be seen clearly. Office
•
supply stores have varo1us sizes and colors of stickers
that work well, or you can use masking tape. However
you mark them. -. prices low. Garage sales are for
bar~ain hunters. Remember. v.tlatever you can't sell
you II have to drag back in the house and store again
for another year.
I Serving refreshments.
This doesn't have to cost much, and creates a friendly
• atmosphere. II also encourages people to stay longer
and perhaps buy more. You .could even charge for
expensive items hke donuts. or the kids could go 1n
business for the day. with a lemonade stand.
9 Display.
Make sure everything can be seen. Have card tables or
• boards used as shelves between two chairs. Don't
cause people to bend over unless you can't help It. Use
one table as a desk where you can see everything and
take money. Use only one cash box (tin cans or boxes
work fine) and make •ure someone la appointed
"cashier" at all times. Arrange beforehand for a friend
who can help answer questions. relief for lunch, etc.
Check your neighbors and
friends.
S.. If any want to join your sale. This will glv. you
eomeone to share expenaea v.4th and lncreue lnterHt
6 4 2 5 6 7 8 In yout ..... H othert join you, be eure to lnclu<M this In
# • your td (example: "th,....famlly sate." "neighborhood llily Pllt __ ......... __ .. le"~-'Group .... satea a-realo-t moref-un, too __ .
-w a · GOOD LUCKWITHYOURCM.UGESAL EI .-. Bir t., Cotta Meta, CA. CC ·een 1 Open &6:30 Monday thru frlday, Satunt1y a-noon. MAY rr IE IU E~vt AND FUN!
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 9, 1981
Some ThingS 'Aie Predictable
I
On July 14, the Newport. Beach
City Council will begin to consider our
plan for completing Newpo~t Center.
No one can say precisely, or
even generally, what the final ?Ut-
come of these deliberations will ~e.
But some things are predict-·
able . This is one of them: .
In the end, whether we hke
the decision or not, a majority of.
Council members will take an act.ion
which they honestly belieye ~o be in
the best interests of a ma1onty of the
community:
Another prediction:
After the decision is made, and
whichever way it goes, a good many
of the people who had ad~ressed the
Council about the plan will be very
disgruntled, to say the least. .
That's how it is with any big
decision made by this or any other
City Council. It is guaranteed to le.ave
some people unhappy. A.nd they will
grumble mightily abo~t 1~.
One more prediction:
The Councirs decision on
our plan for completing Newport
Center-whether yes, no or maybe -
will not cause the city's roads to
become one great big parking lot. Nor
will it cause the sun to be blocked
out by massive jet convoys, nor. the
city to go broke, nor the polar ice
caps to melt. It will do none of these
monumental things.
What it will do, however, is
substantial enough. For it will have an
impact, one way or another, on some
major needs of Newport Center and,
more important, of Newport .Beach.
A better road system 1s one
such need. Having an economically
healthy, well-kept, well-served city
is another.
We think our plan does a good
job of meeting such needs. .
We think it serves the best inter-
ests of a majority of the community.
It meets, in other words, the
ultimate requirement for approval.
That's our opinion. Here are
some of our reasons for having it:
Newport needs the road
improvements that come with
the plan.
The 20 percent increase in
office space and new hotel. we pro-
pose for Newi:ort Ce~ter wil~ neces-
sitate, according to city studies, some
$3 million in public road improve-
ments. Under our plan, we will pay
not on1y for these improvements
(which would be fair), but we will also
pay for $5 million i~ additional road
improvements (which would be
. unprecedented). This $8.2 million
~~The Council's decision on our plan
will have an impact, one way or
another, on some major needs of
Newport Center and, more important,
of Newport Beach!'
program will help complete the
city's masterplan for roadways. At no
public cost. .
An important point: The extra
road improvements we,re goin~ to
provide will serve regional traffic,
which will Increase whether or not
Newport Center is completed an~
whether or not the road system 1s
upgraded. So the work .rea~ly has ,to
be done. The only question is, who s
going to pay for it? We're wil!i?g.
Another point: In add1t1on
to these road improven1ents (mostly
along MacArthur Boulevard and
Jamboree Road). our plan calls for a
transportation management pro-
gram for Newport Center employees.
It involves staggered work hours,
van pooling, bus subsidy programs
and other incentives to reduce peak-
hour commuter traffic. Transpor-
tation experts tell us the program
should keep Newport Center's future
employee traffic volumes either at
or below current General Plan levels.
Our plan will provide
millions of dollars in critically
needed city revenues.
Newport Beach, everyone will
surely agree, is a pretty nice town.
It takes money-tax money -to .keep
it that way. A lot of it. And th~t is .
precisely one of the principal c1ty-w1de
benefits of our Newport Center plan.
The additional developments will .
provide the city with more than $1 n1tl-
lion yearly in surplus tax reve~ues.
In all, between now and 1990, 1f New-
port Center is built-ou~ a.s w~ propose,
it will generate $25 million 1n net
city income. This means after the cost
of city services has bee.n deduct~d:
In summary, while most c1t1es
are facing severe revenue cutbacks
(and consequent slashes in s~rvic.es),
Newport Beach can soon en JOY sig-
nificant revenue increases. That's
one of the promises of our Newport
Center plan.
The new hotel will enhance
Newport Center while having minimal
traffic or airport impact.
The hotel we have in mind is
a 400-room low-key, low-scale, luxury
hotel in a g~rden setting. It will be.
the finest in Orange County. We think
it belongs in Newport Bea~h -. and
at Newport Center, where 1t w1l~ con-
tribute markedly to the prospenty
of local merchants.
Equally important, it will .
have little effect on local automobile
traffic. fur one thing, it will have
no convention facilities. For another.
all studies show that car trips by
hotel guests aren't concentrate~ dur-
ing peak hours. They occur at differ-
ent hours throughout the day, so the
impact on traffic volumes when every-
one else is going to and from work
is very minimal. . .
As far as the airport 1s con-
cerned, there is no question that a
number of guests at the new hotel
will be arriving and departing from
John Wayne. They would use the
airport no matter whe.re t~ey stayed
in Orange County. This will happen
until there is another, larger atrport
built somewhere else. (We're work-
ing with various agencies to help find
a new airport site, a need that every-
one recognizes.)
In any case, the prop~sed
new hotel will not cause a big increase
in local air passenger traffic. It will
be minimal. Our studies show that a,
daily average of about 35 of the h?tel s
guests will arrive or depart by atr.
That adds up to about one percent of
the airport's curr~nt daily ~otal of
passenger trips, either coming or
going. . . .
These hotel v1s1tor tnps, of
course, would be made wherever the
hotel is built. And we happen to
believe strongly that it should be
built here, where it will match the
beauty and proud ele~ance of the
surrounding community ..
There you have it. Some of the
reasons we think our plan for New-
port Center deserves to be approved.
There is one more reason. It encom-
passes all of the others. It is this:
Eventually, Newport Cen-
ter will be completed. One way or
another. No one denies that. Ifs only
a matter of when, and which plan.
Our plan, today, of!ers som~ very
important community .ben~f1ts. We
have mentioned them in this ad . They
are made possible by this particular
plan at this particular ti~e. They are
needed now. We can begin to pro-
vide them now. But only if our plan
for Newport Center is approved n.ow.
Otherwise, all of the benefits,
and the future of Newport Center,
must remain unpredictable.
Thank you for letting us share
with you our thoughts about Newport
Center, the City Council, and the ;1
community they both serve .
i> .,
1
c
1HE IRVINE CDVI~
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Daily Pilat
A .........
TM n(we of St. Paul's Cathedral, loolcing tot.Dardl tM High AUar, •how• where some of 3,000 gunts for
tM royal wedding ceremqny will be uated.
Britons fall for Diana
She slips through rows between palace, news media
LONDON CAP) -Lady Diana
Spencer is Prince Charles' girl.
But the British nation has fallen
for her, too.
It was love al first sight nine
months ago when the papers
leaked news of the romance
bet ween the heir to the throne
and the youngest daughter of the
8th Earl Spencer, and that's the
way it's stayed.
Furious rows have raged
between Buckingham Palace
and the British news media and
between the media and Lady
Diana's family as the hothouse
atmosphere surrounding prep-
arations for the July 29 wed-
ding has built to steamy in-
tensity. .
But Lady Diana has slipped
slim and daintily through it all,
the sweetheart. of everyone from
her future mother-in-law, Queen
Elizabeth ll, to the doorman at
the London apartment block
wb.ere she lived before her
engagement.
The very worst that's been
said of her is that the suit she
wore when the palace an·
nounced the engagement Feb. 24
was "safe, predictable, middle
aged," but probably chosen by
the palace anyway. With "youth
on her side . . . she looks her
most delightful in a plain cotton
shirt and a worn-in pair of
jeans," wrote woman's editor
Anne Robinson in the tabloid
Daily Mirror.
So much for the criticism.
More typical headlines are "Di,
the royal superstar.. and "A
budcllnl roee wit.bout a single
thorn."
••Diana is a very 1enulne
person, ooe of the nicest,'' aaid
her step-father Peter Shand
Kydd in leu flowery terma, and
the nation •"'"8·
Her youthful seat, modest
1lmRllclty, freth·f aced cbarm,
read1 lau1bter, 1Um l·foot·t
n1ure and tendency to bl ...
taave dell....., Britom.
Sbe dilpl91ed mature dllcre-
tlon, 1-..lllaence and a cool·
beaded ' ablllty to wlth1t1nd
1'ffU under ale«e by tbe newa
'GENUINE'
Lady DMma
media before· Buckingham
Palace took her under its ·wing.
All t his has reassured the
British pepple and the palace
that she's the right girl for the
job.
The 32-year-old Charles and
Diana, who was 20 as of July
1, say the age gap between them
is no problem.
"I' have never thought about
t~e aae gap,'' said Diana.
"Diana will certainly keep me
young," said Charles.
One press label that t.bose who
know her say ia Just not true ls
the "Sby Di'' tag. Tbe tabloids
bunt lt on her #hen, wtth polite-
ness and a smile, she refused to
say a word to the 30 reporten
and cameramen camped on ber
doorstep about herself and
Charl• before t.be enaaaement announcemmt.. .
A palace spokesman recount·
ed one lncldeut #hen Diana wu
cornered by a posse of pbo·
toarapben while aboppina la t.be
Weat Endol Loodoa:
A band ol UPpet•CNlt fellowl
spilling out 9f a tavern ·rec-
ognized the lady in distress and
gallantly galloped to her aid. A
"punch-up" ensued. The ph;o-
tographers were routed. The lady
sensibly fled for refuge into a
shop.
••Lady Diana is no\, repeat
not, shy," said the spokesman at
a news briefing.
"No one calls her Di and she's
certainly not shy," echoed 21-
year-old Anne Bolton, one of
three girls who shared the apart.-
men t with he r before the
engagement.
The apartment in the
fashionable South Kensington
quarter cost Earl Spencer
100,000 pounds ($200,000). But
for a woman who was to marry
a prince, Lady Diana liyed an
unspectacular life, sharing a
bachelor-girl existence and the
household chores with three
friends.
She went out on dates before
she and Charles clicked but bad
no love-life past for the press to
dig up. ·
She taught part·Ume at a Lon-
don kindergarteri, sped round
town in a.small red British Mini
Metro car, favored sweaters,
jeans and low·heel shoes and
shunned the de~tante set.
AU that changed on Feb. 24,
when the engagement was an·
nounced. .
Lady Diana gave up her job
and was whisked first to live
briefiy at Clarence House, home
of 80·year·old Elizabeth \be
Queen Mother, then to Buck·
ingham Pala,ce ltaelf.
She's taken to it all. Her flnt
public appearance with Charles,
a glltterin1 charity a ala last.
March, was a sensation. i..tty
Diana stole the scene in a dar-
int. low·cut eveninl ton, and
palace anxieties that •be mipt
1bow nervo,....a evapol'ated.
''I:~ t.boqh lbe ii IO JGma1
and quite inexperienced ln
public life, lbe bad that apeelal
appeal so vital ol ro1alty, a cer·
tahl IODltblDI which made peo-
ple wvm towardl ber," a n>yal
atde wu quoted u ••1'DI·
.. ,,... ....
City governments always seem to
be the watchdogs of architectural
design and good taste. But are they
c:ilways right? See 'Just Coasting'
on Page 82.
D I
~
0
Prince proving popular
Poll shows Charles well liked as wedding day nears
LONDON (AP> -As be enters
into marriage with Lady Diana
Spencer, Prince Charles is at a
peak of popularity in Britain.
In one opinion poll, 66 percent
of those questioned picked him
as a favorite royal. Princess
Anne, his sister. got 3 i>ercent
and his divorced aunt, Princess
Margaret, 4 percent.
Groomed since birth to inherit
the throne once occupied by
Henry VUI, Prince Charles bas
grown from a shy, sheltered boy
into an adventure-loving man of
32.
He is a polo player,
steeplechase rider, aircraft
pilot, w.arship skipper, deep-sea
diver, parachute trooper and
downhill skier, but resents being
called an "action man."
The 21.st Prince of Wales often
seems to have a dual nature.
,From his mother he inherits a
dedicated, even solemn, ap-
proach to his place iri history.
On state occasions, he is turned
out immaculately, straiiht-
backed, his gaze steady.
B1,1t he also possesses the fun-
loving, irreverent nature of his
Greek-born fathe r , Prince
Philip. Recalling his investiture
as Prince of Wales in 1958,
Charles said: "The next morn-
ing I woke up to find I was wav-
ing in bed."
Addressed. as "Sir" even by
friends, and not above an icy
response when chumminess is
overdone, he is also a giggler
who has invited the stars of Bri·
tain's wacky radio ~·Goon Show"
to his wedding at St. Paul's
Cathedral on July 29.
He goes to great lengths to be
un-royal at times. When made
honorary colonel in chief or the
Royal Air Force Parachute
Regiment, he demanded to be
included in jump training and
leaped out of a plane at 1,200 feet
along with the junior officers.
He descends coal mines to
chat with the workers, or stops
for a cup of tea in someone's
house when on a royal visit.
Yet he admits to a strong dis-
like for the popular press and
believes that the monarchy, to
·survive, must maintain a cer-
tain "mystique."
"I'm not a normal person, in
the sense I was born to be king,"
he once said.
His fa\'.orite newspaper is The
Times of London, and he is
patron of the Royal Opera, Cov-
ent Garden, where he recently
introduced Lady Diana to
American soprano Grace Bum-
bry, whom he calls .. my favorite
opera singer." ·
For a decade before his
courtship of Lady Diana, he dat-
ed a sequence of titled and un -
titled ladies.
"I have fallen in love with all
sorts of girls and I full;Y intend to
go on doing so," he said at one
stage.
One of bis dates was Lady
Diana's older sister, Lady Sarah
Spencer.
The hottest favorite before
Diana was Princess Marie-
Astrid of Luxembourg, a green-
eyed blonde who roused marital
speculation to fever pitch in
1977. But she is a Roman·
Catholic, an insurmountable dif-
ficulty because Charles, when
king, will be temporal head of
the Church of England.
Photographed on the beaches
of Australia and Florida being
kissed by bathing beauties,
Charles bas covered the conti-
nents in a barnstorming career
encouraged by his parents in
recogniijon of the changing role of
the monarchy in a changing Bri-
tain.
Pageantry is not enough.
Royalty.must really care about
the problems of ordinary· people,
the motto seems to have been.
A socialist L11bor government
was already in power Nov. 14,
ADVENWRELOVER
Prince diaries
1948, when Princess Elizabeth -
now Queen Elizabeth II -gave
birth to the first of her four
children.
The days of British empire
were waning and wartime ra-
tioning was still in force. Com-
moners outside Buckingham
Palace were anxious for a better
life and anti-monarchist voices
in Parliament complained of
having to pay the royal family's
upkeep.
Although Charles began life
swaddled in silk and lace and co-
cooned with nannies, tradition
wa~ quickly shattered when he
was sent to Hill House private
elementary school in London's
exclusive Knightsbridge district
at the age of 7, mixing with
other boys.
No longer pampered at home,
pocket money was just five shill-
ings (50 cents) a week and it was
often his job lo empty the rub-
bish.
He followed in his father's
footsteps in attending Cheam
prep school and then Gordona·
toun, a rugged secondary school
in Scotland. He .had two adven·
turous terms at Tlmbertop
school in Australia before enter-
ing Cambridge University to
take a Bachelor of Arts degree
in modem history, becoming the
first Prince of Wales ever to at·
tend prep school apd later gain a
university degree.
Life outdoors has given
Charle.s a ·ruddy complexion,
although be retains nervous
mannerisms such as poking a
hand in and out of · his suit
pocket.
After graduation ther e was
Royal Navy service for five
years, finishing as skipper of a
batter e d 20 -year-old
minesweeper, HMS Bronington. ·
By now 28 years old , Charles
launched himself into a full-time
career as His Royal Highness,
the Prince Charles Philip Arthur
George, heir to one of the
world's wealthiest monarchies.
His income derives from the
inherited title of Duke of
Cornwall, which gives him
ownership of 130,000 acres in
fertile southwest England and
London, producing 300,000
pounds ($.585,000) a year, half of
which he returns to th-e
Treasury.
Although he will retain his
three-room suite at Buckingham
Palace, he and Lady Diana have
been decorating their new
Gloucestershire home, nine-
bedroom Highgrove House,
which the prince bought fo"r
nearly one million pounds ($2
million ).
Supervising the Duchy of
Cornwall is a job the prince
takes seriously, and he makes it
clear through palace aides that
he does not expect his mother,
now 55, to abdicate in the
foreseeable future.
.... .,...
-
The Very Rev. Alan Web!ter, .Deon of St. Paul' a Cathedral, will .
conduct the royal wtdding cer~ with the Archbilhop of Can-
terbury.
Lady. to break with · tradition ,,
She won't promise to obey Prince in their vows·
· LONDON (AP) -In a brealt
witli tradition, Lady Diana
Spencer will not promise to obey
Prince Charles in their vows at
St. Paul's Ca~al on July 29,
Buckingham Palace announced.
But like most other EnlliJSh
. brides, she will pledge to "love
him, comfort him, honor and
keep him. in sickness and in
health . . . so 1001 aa ye both
shall live."
~•vinl out '1obey" wu the
couple'• decision. said
Archblabop of Centerbury
Robert Runcle, wbo will
perform tbe ceremony.
He delcribed the aervl~• u a
Church ol ED&land alternatlve
rlte ln which the words "to
obe7" wve optional. .
Tb• palate cltaclOHd detalll ol
the C9'91D01l1 and the bo.....and·
... .
\
carriage. procession to and from
St. Paul's, through streets ex·
peeled to be lined with a million
sightseers.
The announcement came on
Lad1 D'ana•s 20th. birthday,
whi~h she wu celebratinl at a
family· dinner party at the
palace. ·Well·wiahen aent blrtb·
day cakes, cardi, ·1lfts and
nowers to the earl'• dauititer
who wiU become Prlnceaa of
Wales and one day queen con·
sort of Kin< Charles m.
Lady Diana waa "dell1bted
and . touched'' by the warm
wlabea, said a palace
•Poll•man.
The Very Rev . Edward
Carpenter, dean ol Wettmt...W
Abbey, where moet royal wed-clinf• baq been celebrated tbia
century, welcomed the omb.sion •
of the words "to obey." 1
•'Traditionally· the obey vow I·
has been talten at royal wecl~
dings. 1bia is a new departure, l '
am delighted to hear it and it 11.'
absolutely right.
"Marriage is· the kind of rel•·
tionsblp where there should be
two equal partners, and Jf tben l ia goillg to be a dominant
partner it l'OD't be settled bJ .
tbia oath. J think this 11 mutt.
more Christian," Carpenter· ·
said. t
At the last wedding in ~ l
Elisabeth JI'• immtdlate fanit·
ly, that of Princeaa Anne to com·
moner Maril Phillipa in 1m, UM ·
qaten'• spirited daushter pro.
mlHd "to obey" ber buaband. a
aolt·•poken farmer aad
tquettttan. r
PASSING PA&A.0£8 OErr. -You
walt around Jong enouah after the
parade passed you on tbe etreet corner,
and lt'a likeJy tbe band will come toottni
by a1aln some day. So lt seems with
municipal planning along our couWne.
Only yesterday, one OI tbe wap be.re
1n the newsroom quipped, "Hey, look at
this item -they're loin& to turn Coeta
Mesa into San Clemente.''
He made reference to the tact that c.-
tain Costa Mesa municipal planners are
~ /.'&\
TOM MURPHINf ,~~
advocating a Spanish motif for bulldlnp
within Mesatown' s redevel~meot area IA
the old central business district.
Downcoast, some hall a century a10.
San Clemente got started wltb an
architectural dream lbal dictated all
buildings in the metropolis should be of
Spanish design with red tile roofs and
white stucco walls.
THE DICTUM HELD up for a few
years until one brazen developer came
along and took the city law to court. He
won.
After that, San Clemente aot shin&le
roofs that sometimes burned and other
GI-looking · housing development. You
look at San Clemente today and you may
actually wonder, with the mish-mash of
architecture, who really won and who
really lost on that city planning law bat·
tie.
Now Costa Mesa is apparently on
the street comer waiting for the passing
planning parade. If the Jaw dictates
Spanish, you can be sure, sooner or
later. some builder is going to come
along and demand the right to erect Ear·
ly French Cape C-Od -or somesuch.
CITY GOVERNMENTS, however,
always seem to develop a heavy urge to
control architecture and design and
guard against bad taste. This even ·in-
cludes how you paint or decorate your
shop or business.
~ ol. our coastal communlUes
that worb bard at lhi• ls Laguna Beach,
eomeUmes called tbe A.rt Colony. In
Laguna, city 1a van ta want busln4!81es
th al display the proper decor.
RecenUy, Laauna municipal aovem·
ment came down hard oo a lady who
painted her dress shop lavender without
flnt clearlna the color with the city's
15Jmm•111on. J. -.er reaiated and is now
ap aded for court and will
batUe out tbe taste question again.st the
municipal attorney.
MEANWIDLE, LAGUNA has some
buildings that are painted red with fire,
gold and green, bilge split-pea, runny -
burnt orange and all other assortments
of this or any other rainbow. Some build-
~s in the Art Colony fairly glow in the
dark. Others appear that if you scraped
off the vintage peeling paint, the whole
apparatus would fall ap~ like the one-
hoss shay.
By comparison to some of the inven· uv_e color' schemes trotted out on Laguna
structares, the Lavender Lady's busi·
ness house looks like pretty tame stuff.
THAT'S TO ME, anyway. You might
not agree, figuring they ought to call out
the fire department lo spray the place
down.
That's the thing about it when gov·
ernments start trying to legislate taste.
What tbey like is always in good taste.
It's what I did that is really ghastly.
7 4 7 loses power in • air
All four engines quit over Pacific ; jet lands safely
WASHJNOTON (AP) -A
UnJted Airlines jumbo jet carry.
lo& 32S people lo.t power ln all
four enllnes and dropped U 000
feet toward the Paclllc S~ay,
but each enstne was restarted
and the plan. landed aafeUy In
Honolulu, authoriUes hive di.I·
closed.
Ao lnvest111ter for the Na·
tional Tranaportatlon Safety
801rd bu interviewed the crew
of the Boelna 747, but so far oo
reason baa been found for tbe
engine failure, board 1poJteaman
Brad Dunbar aaJd Wednesday.
Each ol the eneines baa been
inspected and was "found t.o be
completely trouble free," FAA
spokesman Fred Farru added.
United offlclala said the
airplane, which landed safely ln
Honolulu, is back in service.
They said while the enainea
were out, lbe plane elided ln a
gradual descent and lbe
passengers probably were not
even aware or the problem.
The incident over the Paci.fie
Ocean about an hour east of
HonoluJu involved United Flight
35 which was flying from
Newark, N.J ., to Honolulu with
a stopover in San Francisco.
Reports t.o the FAA 1nd the
safety board revealed that the
Boeing 747's No. 1 engine staJled
as the plane was cruising at
39,000 fe et about 3 : 10 a .m .
Honolulu ti me Sunday. Wit.bin
seconds the other three engines
also flamed out.
The crew attempted to use
normal procedures for restart·
ing engines during flight but
were WlSuccessful . The captain
dipped the nose or the jelliner
slighUy to pick up speed and, US·
Ing "ground start" procedures
got the No. I engine started
again, authorities said. A short
time later the other three
engines were restarted.
FAA and safety board officials
could not say how long the
engines were out.
But Unit e d s pokes man
Charles Novak said in Chicago
th a t the No 1 engine was
restarted "within seconds " and
all three engines were running
and stablUaed ln 1e11 tban 5
minutea. The plane &lided from
an altitude of 39,000 feet t.o 28,000
feet while the enelnes were be·
log restarted.
United ofllcials aaJd a Boeln&
747 can be nown and landed with
only oae of lta four enatnea.
Novak aaJd the plane's 308
paHenaen apparenUy were not
aw1re ol lbe enelne problem al
tbe Ume the eneines were out aa
the plane continued a gradual
descent. He sald the captain told
the puaen1era afterward that
some engine problem bad OC·
curred and had been solved.
Dunbar said the safety board
would cooUnue lta inveaucaUon
Into the incident.
He sald the likelihood ol all
engines of 1n aircraft namJ.na
out dwinl IUpt la extremely
rare and that ln recent yean be
recalled only one other such in-
cident, involvin1 a jetliner nytna
oft the Florida coast aever1I
years ago.
In lbat case, Dunbar added,
the safety board's loveaUaatioa
revealed that a crew member
bad been "fiddllnJ wltb some
controls" causing' the enaine failure.
So tar there is no indication ol
·a cause in Sunday's United inci-
dent. Dunbar sajd.
Jutlge backs suit
in King palimony
LOS ANGELES <AP) -A
judge refused Wedn esday to
throw out a "palimony" suit
filed against tennis star Billie
Jean King by a woman who was
once her lover. But he cleared
the way for Mrs. Kine to seek
eviction or the woman from a
Malibu beach house.
Superior Court Judge Leon
Savitch said he believed there
was sufficient cause to support
the lawsuit filed by Marilyn
Barnett.
Savitch based his decision on
the landmark case of M icheUe
Triola Marvm against act.or Lee
Marvin, which established the
right of unmarried livin1 com·
panions to sue each other for
property settlements.
Mrs. IGng's lawyer. Dennis
Wasser, argued that the Marvin
decision did not apply because
''what the Marvin case is talking
about is a man and a woman
who lived together as husband
and wife.
"In the Billie Jean King case,
there is no allegation they lived
together for a number or years
as in Marvin, or that. they held
themselves out as husband and
wife," Wasser said.
But Savitch said he believes
the Marvin case does not specify
the question of the sex of lhe UD·
married partners.
"There have been commenta
that the Marvin decision Luma
on contract law and not con-
sideration of the sexes of the
partners," the judge said in de·
nying a motion to dismiss the
entire case.
Mi ss Barnett, 33, a former
hairdresser who worked as Mrs.
King 's personal ass istant.
claims that she and the tennis
star were lovers and that Mrs.
King promised her a Malibu
beach house and support for the
rest of her Ufe.
Mrs. King, 37, concedes there
was a love affair, says it is long
over and denies emphatically
that she ever promised to sup-
port Miss Barnett.
Miss Barnett, who is now a
paraplegic as the result of a fall,
has refused to leave the house
she has occupied since 1974, with
Mrs. King and her husband
Larry paying the mortgage.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Item-pricing
effort told
Feeling mighty pleased with herself after
passage in Sacramento this week of AB 65 -a
meas ure regulating individual prlcin& on
supermarket items -is Shirlee Earley of Hunt-
ington Beach.
Mrs. Earley is Orange District chairman of
consumer concerns of the California Federation of
Women's Clubs. She made appearances before city
councils, boards of supervisors, civic organiza-
tions and the State Legislature.
"Th.is is fantastic. They wouJdn't have passed
it without our efforts," she said Wednesday.
The bill, approved by the Assembly 31-5 after
a «-29 vote earlier. in the State Senate, would al-
low stores that use electronic scanners at
checkouts to remove individual prices from only 15
percent of the items .
• * * * Gov. EdmundG. BrownJr.wUlpayavisittothe
Orange County Young Democrats' voter
registration booth at the Orange County Fair Satur·
day atabout3p.m.
While in Costa Mesa be also will be present to
attend groundbreaking ceremonies for tbe am-
phitheater to be built on the fairgrounds.
• * • •
U.S. Sen Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona and
son Barry Jr., congressman from California, wiU
attend a fund-raising event to aid the Orange
County Republican Party.
They will be featured speakers at a $100 event
at the Santa Ana Country Club Crom 6 to 8 p.m. on
July 16.
• ••• Assemblyman Cbel Wray, D·Weatmluter,
says he will attend a cont.lneotal breatlut July M
to be hosted by Westmloster Mayor Kathy Bucboa
and the city of Westminster.
The breakfast is for representatives or the
cities in the 71st Assembly District.
Mayors, city council members and city ad-
ministrators from Huntington Beach, Fountaln
Valley, Westminster, Anaheim, Buena Park,
Cypress, Garden Grove, Stanton, La Palma and
Los AJamit.os have been invited.
•••• The California Republican Party LI boldlq a
number of campaign seminars to lD1 truct
Republican voters in political campatan techni-
ques.
The next seminar is scbeduJed Saturday at the
Town and Country Hotel in San Dieeo. Others are
planned July 18 in Long Beach and JuJy 2S lo Palo Alto. 1
Slander brings jail
PEKING <AP) -A Peldfte chemical f•ctol7
worker bu been sentenced t.o ab moatM detentiola
for putting up wall posters 1landerin1 1 woman
nei.bbor, the Pekinc Daily reported.
The paper said the woman took the wall
posters t.o a lotal court ln December, wber• tbe
case was beard ln clo.ed 1euion.
The court trl-4 t.o persuade the def eodant,
ldentlfted oaly at Pane. t.o apolop .. and Htk
fortlvene11, the paper Hid, but be refuHd and a
public trial wu IMld June 5, tM MWlpaper aald. It
did not report what the poeten aa1d. Lut year, tbe
JOHrnment banned waJJ potten.
642-5678
Put a Jew words to work /or you
m the Daily Pilat
• I
I
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uara
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n
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...
'Heard hones crunch'
·Survivor of. alligator attack describes moments of terror
Ill ELBOURNE, Fla. (AP) -
Alan Clendlnen said he could
bear bis bones crunch when an
ellhl·foot alll1ator clamped lta
Jaws onto his arm, pulled him
underwater and thrubed him
around "like a wet ra1."
Clendinen, a 27-year-old boat
repairman, was snorkellne in a
lake near Merritt Island when
the 200·pound beast suddenly
surfaced behind him and latched
onto his left arm.
The gator cle nc hed Clen·
dinen's arm in its jaws and
pulled Its victim under the
brackish lake water.
''He was thrashing and turn·
ing me like a wet rag," Clen·
dinen said from his hospital bed.
··He could have drowned me."
Then, recounted, "I started
hearing my bones crunch un·
derw¥er."
A state wildlife offi cer said the
gator probably thought Clen·
dinen's arm was "a duck or
something."
pusbtng orf the lake bottom. but
said the animal was so big he
couldn't surface to cry for aid
until be finally broke free.
Officials said the incident In
the east-centr al Florida lake
was the third, and most serious,
reported alligator attack in the
state this year. There were three
reported attacks ln 1980, said
Col. Robert Brantley, executive
director of the Florida Game
and Freshwater Commission.
"The problem Is that we've
got so many people who live on
the water that these alligators
have become very conditioned to
people. Some of these big al·
ligators aren't afraid of them.
Mail to Canada
being sent back
and that's bad," said Tommy
Hines. spokesman for the state
Division of Wildlife in
Tallahassee.
After the attack, Clendinen
was helped to shore by a friend
and was rus hed to a local
hospital for surgery on the
· mangled arm.
Cl endinen wa s initially
hospitalized in serious condition
In intensive care, but his condi-
tion was upgraded to stable.
He said he faces further
s urgery alter a mending period.
The gator, as part of Florida's
program for "nuisance alligator
control," was d estroyed .
Professional trappers hired by
the state kill an estimated 2,000
"problem gators" that have got·
ten too close to humans each
year.
Although officials quote the
odds of an individual being at·
tacked by an alligator at "a
million·to·one," t he wildlife
division has documented three
fatal alligator attacks since 1973.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Thursday, July 9, 1981
·~·~
Clendinen, whose arm sus·
tained multiple fractures in the
incident, said he tried grabbing
the alligator's jaw to pry bis
arm free. The gator just held on
lighter, twisting Clendinen as he
tried to reach the surface to get
some air.
WASHINGTON (AP >
Because of the Canadian postal
strike, the U.S. Postal Service is
returning first-class. registered
and priority mail recently sent
to Canada.
Hines said gator atta~s
usually occur late in the evening
while the victim is swimming.
There's no sure defense, he said.
EARNING THEIR STRIPES -Tiger yearlings celebrate their first birthday . The big
Alligators often don't know ex·
actly what they're trying to eat.
Martha, Abigail and Dolly (in no s pecific or· presents for the occasion were si x
der> get together at the Philadelphia Zoo to two·foot·long animal bones.
Clendinen said the attack oc·
curred just off shore. He tried
The mail, which has been held
by the Postal Service since June
30, will be marked "mail service
t e mporarily s u spe nde d ."
Postage refunds will be made on
request, the service said.
"Whatever hits the water,
they want to eat it." one official
said.
People all along the Orange Coast Da1·1 Pl.IOI~ 21 rely on the 642-43
~¥-7'c#V 1-.. 1~ , ~ SATURDAY, JULY 11 , 1981 "!!H
I ·. ~ You Are Invited ! -
·NEW
SHIPMENT OF
ANTIQUES!
1 from New England
Door Opens Promptly At 10 A.M.
Don't Miss This One
Bargains Galore!'''
ANKE WILL SERVE
COMPLIMENT ARY REFRESHMENIS.
-July 11th only -•
( Bring this ad in for your free gift• \
OLD WORLD'S ROSENJ<A VALIER
·~SS. "'"'°"''"L ·-A-&MIP<T .. UNIOU& ...... l.'T •• l"LANT•
7 561 Cenm Or., No. I 2 Huntington ~ach 9264 7 ( 714) 891 -1100
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY II AM. T09 PM. -SUNDAY 11 AM. T06 PM
Al SEACaJn: VILLAGE 'I
THE "MISSING
PERSONS" SING
Camel Sights and
Sounds. a full service
record and video store.
ce lebrates their Grand Opening in Seachff Village
on Saturday, July 11 by
presenti ng the "M issing
Persons." The band will
play a two-hour set from
12-2 pm that will Include
their hit "I like Boys."
There will also be drawings
for records and concert
tickets throughout the day.
PAI H.UEll •llS.
Athletic Attic, a new store spe·
dalizlng In -thletic footwear and
accessories, will also celebrate their
Grand Opening on Ju!Y 11.
Los Angeles Rams Quarterback
Pat Haden wll1 be stgnlng auto-
~aphs and "'talking footbalf' from
12-4 pm.
Athletic Altic will be holding
drawings every half ·hour for a free
pair cl athletic shoes and other
~~and
a free T·ihlrt wdf be In--duded with ewiy shoe
'
WHITE PORCELAIN
ESSENTIALS
FROM OUR
OPEN STOCK
SELECTION
From Japan
10'1• •DINNER
PLATE 2.59
6'1• • B&B
PLATE 1.39
"GRAPHIC" EARTHEN·
WARE SALT I PEPPER
SHAKERS
From Taiwan
SALT 4 1!. •
tall 2.39
PEPPER 3'!. •
tall 1.59
Natural purse 1s cotton-
hnecl and has plas11c
piping and zippered
tns1de pouch
a· x 1r 4.55
Clothing Section
BULK FRUIT TEAS PAPER COFFEE FILTERS 4".a Flavored black teas are From France
, f~:..ia ' delightful hot or cold
l .. -c: 1/8 lb 1/4 lb ~\VI'._-· Strawberry • 70 1.40
Peach or Apricot .64 1.28
Black Currant • 73 1.45
Offering several varieties TOBY REFILLABLE TEA &
and over 30 of our own COFFEE BAG From England blends from the great coffee •
growing areas of the worlo •
All the popular roasts from
regular to the dark and zesty
espresso are available.
DELIGHTFULLY
DETAILED COTTONS
From India
Crisp and cool ( and goOd·
looking ! I
WHITE
BLOUSE WITH
CROCHET TRIM '°'~
S·M L XL 9.66 IA
SUPREMA EXPRESS
ESPRESSO MAKER
From Italy
Cast aluminum pot Is
Quick and
easy
COPCO
BISTRO
COFFEE
MAKER
From
ltiSJlq:~~ Denmark
Plunger·
rype glass
pot makes
41.{) cups.
Clear glass with plastic
fittings and metal plunger.
8" tall 23.88
BRASS OR
COPPER PLATED
3-TIER WIRE
MESH BASKETS
From Taiwan
HANDCRAFTED
NATURAL TEAK
CARVING BOARDS
From Thalland
WHITE PORCELAIN
SEA SHELL
NAPKIN RING
COLLECTOR THIMBLE WORKS
Nicely
glittering
baskets for
fruit
display or
vegetable
bath.
35" total
length
4.33
each
Beautifully crafted
teak at 11s
handsomest and
handiest
a· x 1211>·
2.99
g· x 141 1/r "
3.69
11•;,·x17•
6.99
NATURE'S OWN
PLACEMATS
From The
Phlllpplnee
From Taiwan
Neat chic for the
table
This accurate, ancient
computer Is
beautifully
crafted ol
hardwoods
with metal
corner detail
and red beads.
5• x 911.· 1.88
INSTRUCTION
BOOKLET 9
Sizes
approK.
12"
deep ,,.
wide
1.49
14' • deep
20· wide
1.99
SILJANS
KNACKEBREAD
From Sweden
17.6 oz. 1.33
BIRO'S DESSERT MIX
From England r.iiiiiirl'J Famous custardy
dessert for trllle
or great alone.
12 oz. 1.97
-----""---"'--...----------1 Handsome, •wn•11111·•~ NATURAL MURAH REED NATURAL TEAK durable HARDWOOD & CANVAS FOlDINO
SAFARI CHAIR
From Singapore
Comfortable
clasalc la at ~~~ home
on the
hearth
~••t or In the
Jungle.
Natural
frame
with
beige
or brown
canvaa.
ROUND
BACK
CHAIR
~·tall
39.99
FURNITURE From India OCCASIONAL rugs go
Sturdy combination of TAILtS neatly
murah rffd tubing and From Hong Kong natural In
natural cord form Trim, oriental atyllng any ~or.
comfortable and with grooved teak
handsome aeatery. veneer top on aolld
12• dla.
15" tall
4.99
teak 1901.
18" )( 18" 1a• tall
32.88
20· )( 20·
20• till
38.44 28.88
DIRECTLY ACROSS PROM sourH COAST PLAZA
SLIGHTLY WEST OFllUSTOl AT 1113 SUNFLOWER
(TAKE llUSTOl EXIT OFF 406 FREEWAY)
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK '
MON. TO FRI. 10 A.M.-1 P .M.
IAT. 10 A.llJ-7 P.M.
VISA • MAITH CHARI! • MO Tlll'"4*1 OI MAIL HOHi • AMPlf 'llU f'AlllOMI .... 11 ····-· '·"'·
. , . • • ,. • "' # .... .. ............... .
Orange Cout DAILY PtLOT!Thured•y, July 91 1981
DEAR PAT DUNN: One ol my boatinl
friends told me he read there'• been a cban1e
ln le1aJ requJremenll for outboard moton.
He didn't know the details, but I'm thln.kin1
about buyin1 a new outboard motor and am
curious .
J.E. Corona del Mar
Tile Department or Traa1portatlo•'•
Coa1t Guard baa adopted a ftaaJ nale to re·
qalre outboard ea1laea capable of de.eloplal
a static &llrut of 115 poaada or more to laave 1tart·la·1~u pro&ectloa < mecllaallm1 or de·
vices). Tbe reHOD ror till• replatloD ii to re·
dace aecldeat1 cau1ed by oatboard
mo&orboata belal 1tarted la aear aJNI caula1
lbe boat'• oecupuatl to ehlaer faU lallde tM
boat or be thrown overboard. Tbe effective
date 11 Aug. l, 118%.
Vegetarians need protein
DEAR PAT DUNN: I am lhinkinl about
becoming a vegetarian, but have beard con·
m eting ston es about how this eating style re-
ally acrects a person's general health. Where
can I get some objective information on uus
subject? A.L .. Irvine
To help you sort out lbe pro1 ud eoa1 of
ve1etarlanllm, order a free copy of
"Vegetarian Diets" from &.be Couamer la·
formation Center, Dept. WJ, Pueblo,.Colo.
81009.
For a autrlUoaally balucecl approacla to
ve1etarlan,lsm, e1:pert1 reeommead yoar
dJet Includes Je1umes -eapeclaUy aoybean1,
which are rich In protein, 8 vl&amlal and
Iron; 1nln1, for carbobydrate1, protelaa,
thlamln, Iron and trace mlaeraJ1; aata aad
CONVENIENl; DISPOSABLE
COLOPLAST· BRAND
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
~ '"'"" .irrv tne <O'"P'e'e l OlOPLAST .,e -t"t'
lc!rgf'\I <,t>ll•ng d1\0C><.dt'le '~fCW-, clOO •elf'( l''> n l"e
wotlo E ,...ryth•nl( tni roio\ton d"l"> 1e-SO"'c'ltes ana
unno•y ostonlclle\ clll w•tl"I COl'•l'"-t'"t r0t.OP\.AS i
o·soo~o.1 l'f COLoPl AS T •e'·clO • ~ -p ,s cc1se oack economt
l:'e <ou•e to cl 1()1 fOv' r RH . °" _., •N::.1GH IS-
lhe OUDlocarlO" l'tlcll ., 11.1Sl '<>' yOU cl ... cl~ ""'~
coupon~ t0t ''N' 'lclmoies 711-3114
MOUL TON PLAZA PHAllHIACY
23e65 Moulton Per1twey. Legune Htlll
(Ne11t to El Renc:tto MerkMI
A BARD HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER
Chill-Cheese Omelette
Only S3.5C>
Huntington Beach
Pacific Coast Hwy So of Pier
Newport Beach
1400 Pacific Coasi Hwy
Now Serving Beer & Wine
15 Convenient Locations
~ Payroll Savings Plan
,J'is one of the easiest, safest ways to
get started on the aving habit. Even if saving
hM alway seemed too difficult in past
seBJOns.
A litde i automatically taken out of
each paycheck toward the purchB8C of U.S.
Savings Bond . You'U never miss it. so you'U
never Spend iL
It just keeps growing for some coming
eprina. or maybe a wann vacation during a
cold wint.er.
h's a pion for all 1CUOns. ~ ~
For all Ameticant. ~~ ~ ~
•·--....... --..:. m' E. 11:1-1 .. __ c.._ ................
otlaer Medi, wlalela prow141e tac ud ... ,.,
aad a •ltamlu, la adcUU. lo pn&ela aH
lroa; aad a loC of dark 1reH, leafy
ve_JeCab&es, wlalcla are aov~ ol eaJel••·
rl11totlavla aad earoceae ( .. ed Co •ate
vl&alllla A). Ve1etarlaa1 a1lo are advbe4 to eat two 1ervla11 a day of laJp.pn&ela meat
al&eraatJv•, 1acla H dried beau ud peH,
aa.,, peuata, •II• aad dairy prodacta.
$1,000 or 11IOl'8-4,8, 12 week•
Jlet aid requirement told
DEAR PAT DUNN: Ia there a minimum
disabllity raUne a veteran mU1l have in or-
der to be eU1ible to receive Veterans Ad·
ministration vocational rehabilitation as-
sistance?
. J.W., Coeta Mesa
An11u11/ Ha/1•
1hdayl! uitert'~t r.ot\·
1<uarantt•t'd for
tlw term b)
An~·ri;:~n -;11,·ui11,
The VA 11y1 a ve&eraa mut laan a
1ervlte COGDect.ed cU.1abWt1 ol at leut It per·
ceat for buk eUllbWty. ou.er reqw.lremeatl
are a dlaeJaar1e or release llllder odler tl1an
dl1laonorable coedJUou aJNI a Deed ror TOCa·
Uoaal rehabllltatloa to overcome the
handicap of lbe dl11bWty.
American Savings pays high interest with safety.
• ·Got a problem? Then wnte to Pat "-1 Dunn Pat wall cut red Jape . getting
• the ansWt!r.s and action you need to
~ ul\e~tment 1~ boKkt'd by Se~unues u( the U.S or U S Gu~rnment Agenoes °iJUt pnnopal plu§ 1111ereM will be paid by
Amenl'an SaVllll(ll at rnatunty. an:l «rt'dltt'd 10 )1lUI' Amencan
Savv11ts l"~ssbook or lntl'rt'SI Earrunl( <.:heclunl( Accoont.
Short fet"ftl fle•Uty-fhrecl rates.
Amcnuuii ~ured Money FWld 111tere11 rate 1;s 6ud oo thr day nf your lll\'estment fur I.ht: full term. NO FEE, NO SERVICE
CllARC.E Tlll8 OULIGATION IS NOT A SAVINGS
A{"t'Ol lN'T OK m :P(>lollT ANU IS NOT INSl'REU BY
T IU: Fl!:m~RAI. SAVINGS ANI> LOAN INSURANn: l'OR~ORATION.
•
.solue 1nequ1ttts in govemmenl and
,.... bu.nntss Mail your queslwru to Pat 1 I Dunn, At Your Sennct. Orange CoaJt
Dally Ptlot . P 0 Ror 1560, Costa Mua. CA 92626 As
many ll'lli'rs aJ possible will be an.nuered. but phoned
mq111nes or lelters not including the reOller's full
naml', addre.u and bu1antu hours· phone number
cannot ~ consldtrtd Thl!I column appears daaly er·
cep! Sunday., · ·
AMERICAN SAVINGS
SAFE SINCE 1885 •ASSETS OVER $9 BILLION• RESERVES QYEB ~ LEGAL REQUIREMENTS
Over JOO Anurican Savings offices to serve you. Check the whitt pages
of your tt/eplwne directory for the office nearest you.
South Coast Plaza Village's
SUMMEl\ ''l\OtJl~-tl'P''
July9-12
CALL FOR ENTERTAINMENT SCHEDULE AND INFORMATION. (714) 761~.
Mosy on over to South Coast Plai.a VIiiage's semi-annual
sale where the bargaJns are truly "the best In the West!"
Swing your pard'ner alongside the nlgti-steppln' J.W.'s
Cowboy dancers to the sounds of a continuous corral of
Country, Western, and Bluegrass bands.
Winners of the Best Dressed Cowboy and Cowgirl contest
arfd of dally drawings will receive prizes Including VIiiage
merchandlse, dinner and concert tickets at the Crazy Horse
Steak House, and tickets to Knott's-Berry Fann for
"Summer's Biggest
Show 'N Hoedown!"
Remember Thursday,
July 9th through
Sunday, July 12th for a
"Round-up'' of bargains.
.. =~
•• •• ··-..-: --. -. or.,....--~ .,~~--..... -~~ ....... -~-------..... --......... _...._ _____ ~-~..--~---------·-·---------------, f " --------
QUEENIE
e, ... ....__.,._,, .... ---.
I
Baby skunks'
fate pondered
LOS ANGEL~ (AP) -Tbe CaJifornla Flth
and Game Department will uk a Municipal Judie
to deal with WeaaJ lmmiaraota: 21 baby 1kunb
seized from a would-be salesman.
Game wardens coofi1cated the animals at
Brady Will 's home in Pomona. Willi bad import·
ed them from an Iowa farm for sale u pell, 1aid
bis mother, Jmo1eoe Robertaoo.
"They're de-scented rt&bt there oo the farm,"
abe said. "They're really cute. They're clean and
affectionate and they just follow you around."
But Capt. William Shetllo, county flab and
game supervisor , countered that tbe critters
"don't make very good peta u they 1et older" and
said poaaeaai.og them la Ulegal in Callfornla
because "skunb carry rabies."
"Dori't you think everyone will know you're on the
warpath without 1llJ1inl lhil 'Geronimo'?"
The animals were beifle held lo an undisclosed
animal shelter, Sbeflin aald, uoW a Judie can de-
cide their fate -possibly a death sentence.
I S firms aid 'Sequoia' fund
They pledge cash to keep ex-presidential yacht. afloat
W ASIUNGTON <AP> -Fif.
teen major corporations have
pledged at least $25,000 apitte to
lteep1 the former presidential
yacht Sequoia on the Potomac
River for use by Presldent
Reagan and other conservative
l eaders, an officer or the
Pres idential Yacht Trust says.
But Edgar Skinner, bead of
the trust and a fundraiser for
the conservative American En·
terprise Institute, refused to re-
lease the names of the com·
pani•· He said they included in·
s urance, manufacturing and
banking firms.
"We're not going to be
publicizing the names of our ma·
jor donors automatically until
we get permission from them,"
Skinner said. "It's not that they
a r e being kept secret. It's
respecting the anonymity or the
donors. There's· no intent for
secrecy."
White House aides have said
that in view of his proposed cuts
in social spending, Reagan bas
"no immediate plans" to use the
ship, which has been newly re·
furbished with silk brocade
drapes, emerald-green carpet·
ing and silver candelabras.
The 105-foot yacht, which
ser ved presidents from Herbert
Hoover to Gerald Ford, was sold
by President Carter in 1977 for
$286,000 as an austerity move.
Carter called the Sequoia "an
unjustified and unnecessary
frill."
The trust , directed by con·
servative businessmen, bought
the yacht in Florida last month.
The new owners said the ship is
a part of American history that
should be preserved and made
available to Reagan and future
presidents.
Potential contributors were
taken for two July Fourth
cruises down the Potomac, but
Skinner said the trips were to
show off the ship, not press for
donations.
"We didn't do any arm·
twisting," he said.
Skinner said that by mid·
September , the trust expects to
reach its goal of signing up 50
corporations and executives to
pledge $25,000 a year for up to
five years. At that point. be said
he anticipates the list of con·
tributors will be made public.
The trust plans to raise more
than $5 million within five years
to cover the ship's $1 .1 million
price tag and establish a $4
million endowment to pay for
future maintenance costs.
Besides the 15 corporations
that have pledged money, Skin·
ner said two individuals have
agreed to donate $25,000 a year
and about a dozen other ex·
eculives were ''fairly e n·
thusiastic" about the fundrais·
ing effort.
The onJy donor whose name
has been made public is Richard
W. Arendsee, the owner of Four
Winds E nterp'rises, a San
Diego-based moving company.
Arendsee advanced the $1.l
million to buy the s hip and
pledged $25,000 for five years.
Skinner said the Presidential
Yacht Trust would also appeal
to the general public for con-
tributions. The trust ha s applied
for t ax-exempt status so the
donations can be deducted from
taxable income.
The yacht will also be used for
seminars and meetings ar-
ranged by Dale Tahinten, a
senior scholar at the American
Enterprise Institute, a con·
servative think tank.
M ic ha el D o ud Gill, a
Washington busi.ness consultant·
and member of the trust, said
that because of the generally
conservative make-up of the
trust 's board of directors, he ex-
pects many of the Sequoia's pro-
grams to reflect a conservative
point of view.
"You don't find too many peo-
ple with a liberal bent who want
to get involved in this sort of
thing," said Gill, a nephew of
the late President Eisenhower.
Although having served presi·
dents for about five decades
before being sold by Carter, the
Sequoia i.s perhaps beat remem·
berd as President Nixon's fre-
quent retreat during the days of
the Watergate scandal.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 9, 1981 ••
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 0 years
We'd like to know how will they
evacuate us7 This May 13's d1sas
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 sc1en
ust 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 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.
Yes. I want to do more than attend the hearing.
Yes! Here is my contnbution of Name ___ --------Phone
$ Address
LJ Yes! I want to volunteer.
U Yes! Put me on your mailing list.
City Zip
Alliance for Survival 331 N. Orange. Orange. CA 92666 11997-9922
QU1£T TAKEOFFS AND LANDINGS.
There are times when people
who live near airports say:
"Quiet please!"
Well, at AirCal weve heard
their request. And weve acted
by finding ways to reduce air-
port noise. It's just part of
our style.
THAT'S OUR SM£.
our new McDonnell Douglas
DC-9 Super 80 jets are the
quietest Jet airliners in their
class. In fact, when a super 80
takes off the noise around the
airport is cut-drasticalfy -by
as much as 20 percent com-
pared to similar aircraft.
Quieter on the outside
means quieter on the Inside.
And that brings added passen·
ger comfort. so do our new
wider seats and handsomely
appointed interiors.
our new jets also are the
most fuel efficient jets in their
class. conserving fuel is one of
the ways we·re working to keep
the cost of flying down.
In fact, everything we do is
part of our new style that will
keep you flying with us, again
and again.
so fly AlrCal. Experience the
style that's winning the West.
1
. ......,._~----....,._. _ _..,..~~·.-~~,.. • ...,. r r -• .._ r .-' ~ ,. ~ • • • ., .. -"' . .-~--Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. July 9, 1981
W.rmng: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
~ IMI •.J. 111\'N~Oe TC>a•CCO CO,
This is your world.
This is your Winston.
Smootli. Rich.
Taste it all.
KING 15 mg. "tat.1.1 mg. mcoune.100's· 15 mg. "tar".1.0 mg ntCOllnt. IV. per cigarette by nc mttbQq.
(
I
l
.. • '+' USO _.._ .... pu wwwp po q p
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 9. 1981 * Cl
Black ties
at Santa Anita
By MilY JANE 8CAaCEILO .... ...., .......
r. and Mrs. Randall Presley of Newport 111"' Beach served 11 co-chairmen of the l t.I. Santa Anita National Horse Show's
black tie dinner dance.
Gueata at t.be clubhouse enjoyed a dinner of
prime rib al tables set with purple linen and
decorated wtt.b nowera lo soft, complementary colon.
Slnte the party occurred midway durina the
sbow'a competition, planner s arranged for
trams to take everyone to see some spectacular
jumpln& events before diMer, and afterward
the Clatk Keen orchestra played for dancing.
M~t of the details for the gala evening
were atranaed al a luncheon for the cemmittee
at the California Club in Los Angeles.
HAPPENINGS
Proceeds from the dance will go toward the
horse abow, the Arcadia Music Club and the
United Stales Equestrian Team, which ls
apl)ropriate, because Santa Anita will be the
site of equestrian events for the Ul84 Olympic
competition. JOANE EVANS Randall Prealey (from le/i), Mra. CUf Graham and Clement L . Hinch.
T he Oran•• county PhilharmoGle Society
hu eleci.d Joane Evam to a MeODd
W'm u pr11lclent at tbe l'7tb ADD\lal
mMtlnl Mld iD Newport .. aeb.
S.rvtn• wllb ber will be Jltcbard Cole,
Richard Sebwanenatein, Richard nu. Louil
Knobbe, Kitty ICooa, Susan Beecb.oer, Jean
Taodowaky, J . Donald Persuson. Nancy Potcb,
Mary Gleuon and Lola Tlnller .
Tbe aoclety accepted the realpaUon of
Director Lome Huyke with reiret, 1lnce be baa
served for many yeart 11 • dlreetor, president,
concerts arran1ement.a chairman and chairman
of the board.
The oraanlaaUon also announced two
additional concert.a ln the 1981·82 season by the
Loa Anaelea Phllharmonlc Orchestra, brin&iftl
the total to 10 concerts.
S outb Coast Repe rtory baa declared,
"Now, Everytbln1 Goea ! " with a
triple-threat fund-raiser complete with
a flea market, silent auction and live
auction Saturday evenin1.
Gueata will enjoy dinner around the outdoor
fountain and patio area u well as a variety
show on the mainataae durio1 the busy evenln1.
Ticketa are $30 and include an auction
catalog U.tiog such exotic ltenu as ao "Urban
Cowboy" poster autoarapbed by John Travolta
and the privilege of bavina a street named after
the first or last name of the hlpest bidder (u
long as it's not over 10 letters).
Ticket information is available by caJlinl
SCR at 957-2602.
Motherhood • lS definitely not for sissies
Want to see a mother fall apart before your
eyes?
Just f.'atch her when she asks a child what he
is doing ahd he answe~. "Nothing."
Children usually do "nothing" in a room
where the door is shut, a dog is barking, water is
running under the door. a sibling is begging for
mercy, there is a strange odor of fur burning and
there is the sound of a thousand camels running in
place.
Most mothers refuse to face whatever it is
they're not doing so they simply yeU, "Do you
want me to come up and see what you're up to? ..
Surprise! The answer is always "NO!"
IRMA llMlll:I !.....---
Some of the more famous childre.n who were
doing "nothing" when they were asked are Da-
mian in "The Omen" when be wu ridina his tricy-
cle on the balcony, Patty McCormick in "The Bad
Seed," Lizzie Borden, wbo just wanted to go to the
orphans· picnic and Caln when he was annoyed
with his brother Abel for "stealing" the banana
out of his school lunch.
There is possibly only one thing that is more
frightening than a room with children and noises.
That is a room of children in silence.
When a child whispers behind a closed door.
get a SWAT team and be prepared for anything.
Among the more memorable times my
children were doing "nothing" were:
The time they dressed a stray cat in my minJt
bat and I was the only woman in town who wore a
flea collar for costume jewelry.
The time they floated a miniature navy in the
bathtub and it floated to the jilchen before it sunk.
The time they ironed a sheet for home movies
and burnt a hole in the rug and we had to live with
a s mall table in front of the closet door.
The time they opened alJ their Christmas pres-
ents on Dec. 19.
The time they direct-dialed grandma in Ohio
and got a shoe store in Mexico.
Motherhood is not for sissies. Oh sure, it's
easy when you can open a door and in a glance as-
sess the damages. But it's when you bear two
voices and a hammer behind a door and they
swear they're doing "nothing'' with "nobody" that
makes your blood run cold
Capricorn: Let
go of the past
av ASHLEIGH
#BRILLIANT This guy likes flying solo
Friday, JuJy 10, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21·Apr1l
19): Puzzles are solved
you could win a contest. Ac cent on debts, credit cards
-and integrity of partner
or mate. Leo, Aquarius and
another Aries play impor
tant roles. Spiritual insight
also is emphasized You -will see beyond the im-mediate.
TAURUS <April 20-May 20): Accept delay as bless-
ln1 in disguise play wait
·HOROSCOPE
Ing same, study legal
aspects, build pro1ram
aimed al improving public
relations Focus also on partnershjp, special agree
ment. and marital status.
Guard security!
GEMINI <May 21 June
20): Obtain valid hint by studylng Taurus message.
Avoid confrontations. check
various routes. don't make
commitment to one who
constantly com plains.
chides and makes empty
promises. Accent on health. employment. popularity
and Iona-distance com·
municationl
Brisk dialogue occur& with
family member Focus on basic values, long-range
transactions. property and
assertions or loyally
Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons rigure prominently.
Change of scenery may
provP necessary.
VIRGO I Aug 23·Sept.
22 1 Relauve who had been
recalcitrant will now make
gesture or reconciliation
MAVE VOU CONSIOatED M~
AS AN ALTl'"NATIVE
~ TO SIN J9UL PL£ASURE'f
~
\, lS "'
E m p h II s I s 0 n ca 11 s. ~==============~~~~===~ messages. visits. s hort t r1 ps. Taurus. L1 bra, Scorpio natives play impor-
tant roles Money news will
be encouraging
LIBRA 1Sept 23·0ct 221.
Obtain hint from Virgo message Emphasis on pay-
m ents. collections. op-
portunity to increase in·
come potential. Insist on
definition of terms. Avoid
self deception by seeing
people and places as they
actually ellist.
CAPRICOllN l Dec 22·
Jan 191 · Focus on emo· tional responses. fresh con-
cepts. new contacts and re·
a lization that you are
indeed capable of love
Wi s h comes true. you
benerit by letting go or
past Avoid lifting heavy
objects Member of OP·
posite sex cares!
show that you have re·
gained sense of direction.
Focus oo 1tandln1 In com-m u n ll y, prestige, pro·
fessional obli&ations and an ··honor'· bestowed by
peers.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your reply to
"Badgered," the guy who resented friends and re-
latives fixing him up with girls, did him no good.
ln fact, your suggestion that he not discourage
matchmakers -that someone may come up with
"the girl or bis dreams .. -showed that you are as
bad as the rest.
Why can't you compulsive fixer.uppers get it
through your thick heads that some people enJOY
the single track and the freedom that goes with it.
You obviously belong lo the aroup of in-
sensitive clods who must be insulted before they
understand that some people want to be left &Jone.
I am starting a "Joiners Club" for you and your
busybody readers who want to run other people's
lives. After joining, you can bother one another
and leave us slniJe and happy people alone. -
SOLO IN PHILADELPHIA
Dear Solo: SonJ I Mt a W IMIU.., Bu&er. I was _,, &ryta1 &o kip. < Famou last words.>
Ttaere are a lot of people CMlt tllere (~ male ud
femaJe> wtao woeld dearly love a laelplal laaDd
wltii &Ids barrea aspect of u.etr lbH. Tltoee wllo
reseat tlae "belp" alaoald be gp.froat aboal t.llelr
feelhap. It wouJd be a 11lame to •Hie a cl.ream
itrl Oii tlae llkH of yoa.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I had a child four
years ago as a result of an extra-marital love af·
fair. It is over and I have teamed my lesson.
My hU&band is a devoted father lo our son,
and is threatening to tell everything. He is also
pushing for vlsitation righta.
I have told him he has no legal rights to the
child and any interference on bis part will destroy
the happy home life the child now knows.
111 lAllEll
What should I do? Am I ript about the law? -
DISTRES.5ED
Dear D : WomeD wlao become prepaat w"1Je
carryta1 oa u aftalr oftea ma.&akea.Jy auame tile
cllUd beJoa11 to t.lle lover. CG.ut> Accerdla1 to tlte
law, yov llubud la t.lle boy's fat.a.er. Raa1 la
tllere and doe1t aUow yCHll'MU to become la·
llmldated.
Diaoovn how to ~ date bait IDlthout falling hook,
line and rinker. Ann Lander.' ~t. "Dating Do'• and
Don't•," wUl help J10t1 ~ more periled and nire of
yourielf on date1. Send 50 cent• along with a long,
stamped, ul/-addre11ed envelope with JIOllr re~1t to
Ann Landers, P.O. Boz 11995, Chicago, IU. 60611.
SCORPIO cOct. 23-Nov.
21) · You'll have opportuni· ty to vindicate views. Em·
phasis on production.
responsibility. authority
and intensified rela-
tionship Taurus, Vi rgo.
Capricorn persons figure
prominently Lunar cycle
at peak -you make cor-rect decisions at right Ume
Take initiative!
AQUARIUS IJan. 20-Feb
181: Promotion possible if
objectives are outlined
Follow through on hunch
PISCES (Feb. l~Marcb
20 1. Emphasis on travel.
publishing, spiritual revela-
tion and a new understand· ing of abstract principles or
law and universe. Initiate
correspondence, make ln·
quiries concerning over-
seas holiday or residence. who believes he is his own. The problem is that the ,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l-naturaJ father believes the boy has a right to know I
In memory of Mrs. Carol Bright
* • * Attention ski buffs.
Before you go schussing
down the mountain, try
this neck and shoulder
warm·up exercise from
SAGITTARI US (Nov. the United States Twirl·
22-Dec. 21 >: Emphasis on ing Association. Stand
secrets, confidential erect. s h oulders re· material, "conression" taxed. hands at side. from one who has been a
SAMUELE. GENDLER, MD
General PractU
18700 Main St.. Suite 102
Huntington Beach, Ca 92648
(714) 897-2576
(Sept. 16, 1939-July 2, 1981)
"you .tiU won't ~ victonoua, even though
you unleash death -your final blow -~cauae
the IUaurrection of JelUI ChrUt 1tanda QI the
vindication of God's intent to denroy death once
nd for all. Even though we are .tunned with
sorrow, we are united with God, and Ufe ii 4
continuation. It is not QI you would Wee "' to
~lieve, in JIOUr evil guise of cancer-the end!
Dying UtlS agony. Deat!.i ii gentle."
Ww, ~
t l •
·. ·. ·,
CANCER tJune 21 -July 22): Restrictions no longer
dominate your a~tlons You gain freatet control of your
own destiny . Imprint style,
take chance on creative
capabilities and show affec-
tion t.o children without be· Ing Intimidated by them.
confidante. Aries, Libra Slowly drop head to
and another Sagittarius right side and roll it
figure prominently You'll forward toward the left.
finish an important task. Return to right s ide.
Self-doubt is due to Repeat exer cise eight
__________ _,_ ____________________ ,
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) ·
Jan~~" Mbr~
.. w,.c ~ '40"
....... kwlllt--Holo-/llC tlOlfl a•W.C....H._.. .... A. M.I. 641-l4ti
evaporate times. I
Announces that the office will be closed
tor vacation froni July 20 through July
24. Back up physicians are arranged for
any emergencies.
SICK
.l\~D TIRED?
IF SOMEONE YOU
LOVE IS HURTING
(And you are hurting too)
Because of
LCOHOLIS~l
or other chemical dependency
Learn how you can help nowt Yes, ther• Is something you can do -even If ttw victim
~on't seek help.
Attend Our Free
Community Education Alcoholism Intervention Progr•m. Every
Saturday Morning, 10.m tll Noon
Breaking FrM Is the 1mash hit that
btendl th .. ter wtth mottvetton.
You'll hear Dr. Toni Grant and other
women speakers who you will be able
to identify with. You'll discover how to
shed your frustrations and expand
your horrzons.
It's the kind of show you won't
want to end ... and the best part is
that It doesn't: It goes home with you
Housewives and career women
equally sing the show's praises.
Learn the Diet For Success. Put
harmony and direction into your life.
Call (213) 4G-7380.
Breaking Free
Star1i119 ·
Dr.Joni Grant
Maureen Reagan
~---------------~--~-~---~ Sunday. July 19/J;OO P.M. to 6:00 P.M.
P..adtna Civic, Auditcwtum
Show tdwtt 1NJ bf dwrpd to ~r 0 VIM or
OM...-rCh.vat Fii n ~r
An-ount n11"'61tr £.p Ditt---11 Jr ~ Mv•fl(t Tlel.t R_,...•tlont ilJY ~ nwd. "Y ~ 'dieds ~ $41.0Q
w...ttl~~~ ..._ ..............
17 •....._om.. s.... Aa4 CA '1"111 WAKING,_. PJ........,.. ...waa,. 1or tkti.tt ~ 11 t•ei 1111.-w ............ •me1n-t101
, \
Orange Cout DAILY ltlLOT/Thuraday, July t , 1911
'Lost Ark' idea stolen? e
Rader files stdt cla~ming archeologi1t wrote work n LOS ANGELES <AP) -ataaley lladtr, tbe
former treaaurer of tbt Worldwide Cbur~h o1 God,
baa filed a law.ult clalmlq that tbe Idea for tbe
bit movie "Raiden ol the Lolt Ark" wu atolen
from blm and a friend.
In the $100 mllllon ault ftJed Wed:Mlday ln
Superior Court a1ainat "Raidtra" producer
Geor&e Lucu and director Ste.ea Spielber1 and
others, Rader claima arcbeolo1l1t Robert
Lawrence Kuhn wrote a movie treatment several
years aao and later reworked it lnto a screenplay
and an unpublished novel about an arcbeolot.lcal
explorer. The work was called "Ark."
Rader claims be wu developina bta film
version ol Kuhn'a work and tbat be submitted his
project -whlcb be envlaiooed u a religious·
themed motion picture like the pseudo·
documentary "In
Search ol Noah's Ark"
-to International
Creative Mana1ement
talent aaency in 1977.
ICM also represented
Spielbera and once
represented Lucas.
Spielberg and
Lucas have said they
got the idea for the
movie, which baa
arossed more than $46
mlllion in its flrat 24
days of release. while
sitting around a swim·
ming pool in Hawaii in
T 1977. $100 MIU.ION SUI Spokesmen for
Stanley Rader Paramount Pictures,
the company that financed tb'e film , and
Lucasfilm, Lucas production company -both of
which are defendants in the suit -declined com·
ment on the action. , But Thomas Pollock, Lucas' attorney.
responded, "The charges are rtcUculous. Every
time you have a successful movie, there'll be peo-
ple who come forward who claim it's theirs.
"As far as I'm concerned, they're insects cooi·
Ing out of the woodwork," be said.
"Never bas there been so much secrecy sur·
rounding a project" as there wu around making
••Raiders of the Lost Ark," Rader told a news con·
ference in explaining why be has waited until now
to file the suit.
"We didn't learn of the movie until just six
weeks ago," he said.
Rader claimed the film exploited an important
religious theme to make as much money u possi·
ble. He said be wants to use a "substantial por·
tion" of the money from the suit to set up a non·
Officers clash
with McCloskey
SAN DIEGO CAP> -It was the toughest
public appearance of his political career. It may
even have been easier on Rep. Pele McCloskey Jr:
back in the Marines.
A longtime opponent of the Vietnam War, the
Republican congressman from California strolled
grinning into a three-hour coofrootatioo with 80 re·
tired officers who helped devlae U.S. strategy in
Vietnam and led its forces.
McCloskey invited the debate, sayin1 bis
Senate campaign depends on the military vote and
his shedding a "liberal" image.
"You seem to be an appeaser and I can't vote
for an appeaser," he was told by retired Vice Ad·
miral John Victor Smith.
"I tbinJt perhaps you're applying to today's
world the standards of the military P<>wer that we
had coming out of World War II," Mccloskey told
the luncheon group. "You're operating from a
base in which America could 10 into any country
in the world and say who will govern here and who
will not govern here."
Retired Adm. U.S. Grant Sharp, commander
in chief of Pacific operations for the Navy in the
early years of the Vietnam war,
repUed, "What you really said
is that we're a bunch of people
living in tbe World War U con·
text and I don't like that."
Sharp distributed a three-
page analysis of McClosltey's
voting record in Congress. sug-
gesting McCloskey's arguments
were "not credible."
The lawmaker from Menlo
IMA Park defended his support for
gay rights and criticized "the Israeli lobby" in the
United Slates for preventing an "even banded"
U.S. policy in the Middle East. Mccloskey was
casU1ated by his audience for opposition to the
escalation ol U.S. aid to El Salvador.
Why did he support an amnesty plan for draft
evaders in urn?
"I know I committed crimes when I was a
seaman second class," replied Mccloskey. "I
know that most of my colleagues did. We once bad
a commandant of the Marine Corps who had
syphilis twice when be was stationed in China as a
second lieutenant. I would forgive him that years later." .,
Sharp told Mccloskey: "You were wU.llnt to
desert the South Vietnamese and tum all of Viet·
oam over to the Com111WU.St1. You were wiliiat to
accept defeat for the United States."
Smith said afterward that McCloekey burt
himself in meeting with the former offlcen, COG·
tendlnt "he's a defeatist -he's not &ood for the
country."
Sonollla fair
DJanager fired
proftt ortaniaaUoa .. to tell tbl real 1tory of tM Ark
of tb• Covenant, II
''The mm la dama~ to the mlndl ol )'OWll people," Rader aald. • Ou.r story la a IOUDCI one,
bated on reMardl ud bJatory MMI Judeo-Ot.rlaUan
llterature and doctriae."
Rader aenes u eseeut1ve vkle Pf'elldeDt of
tbe Ambuaador International Cultural PoundaUon
and as a personal advl .. r to Herbert W.
Armstooa, •. patriarch ol tbe Worldwide Cburcb
of God, a Puadena·bued tundamentalltt sroup
that receives some SlOO million annually from ltl
100,000 members.
Rader said the 1ult bad .-.bh'I to do !fjt.b the
church. But be said~ the AmbuHdor Intern•·
tlonal Cultural Or••nilatloa
was non·proflt and non ·
sectarian and would be 1ulted to
play a role In admlnl1terlD1
that part ol money recovered in
the lawsuit to be used to
"educate the j>Ubllc about the
inaccuracy of• Raiden.' "
---------~
'1 SL99GIEAT
0 DINID
o~ Good for .... ,.... of juicy, ootdlt1 brown ~lucky
'fled ChloMn, ptwe ~ MtVlnge of~ ataw, mulled
potatoee Md 9"WY· and a roll. umu two °""' '* Z ~. CoupGft aooct onty for oomblnetlon wtlli.ldartl
orden. ~ pey• all IPC)llcabl• ulM tax. •
' t -----•,. . I AIOUT · s5 •t .-.,.,. . .., ~·; '. t Good tor nine pl-• of Juicy, oc>ldtn bfipWfl ~
Fried Chicken, with tour roll1, 1 large colt "-, a I#
melhecl pot1toet1 lltd •medium orevy. Ulnlt two _....ta>
per purctlaM. Coupon gOOd only for cemblNUW)ll'JW 0 .
dirt! ordl<a. CultOtnlf peya 111 apc>llcMI• ~ u.. ,, · • • ·
Offer explr11
July 19, 1081 020
, T~ ~
Rader'• law.ult ouWnes the
plot of Kuhn's work" Arlt." Ar. in
"Raiders," tbe prinfipal
LUCM • character is an American UD·
ivenlty professor and archeoloatst about. 40 years
old wbols "something of a rosue."
OfflfexPhMJuly 19, 1981 1 Price• m1y •llY at I PrlcH may vary II Plr·
panlclpaUr>g IO<ll· llclp1tlng loc1t1on1 Good
Ilona. Oood only In only In Southern
louthern C1lllornla 1 C1lllornl1 where you see
Like the character Indiana Jones in the cur·
rent film, Kuhn's professor firat finds bis
1irlfrieod ol a decade before and then finds the
Ark of the Covenant in the Middle East in the an-
cient "Well of the Souls."
"It's not plagiarism per se," Rader said.
"This baa to do with an area of law dealing with
the protection of ideas."
Ille Clllc='U,:' .. = Ille Chicke n S1ndwtcn
Window Benner .;;-.;-.· .. · ...
REAL VALUES
on items from applesauce to zippers
are advertised ev ery day in the DailyPlal.
CUSTOM C'LLllG.
FORAIYOIE WHO CAll'T STAID TO BE TIED DOWI. ·'
•
. "
.
I~
If y~'re the kind of person who really uses the Dtione, but
can't stand to be tied down by it, Pacific Telephone has four
easy ways to help. We call them Custom Calling Services~
If you don't like hang!gg around wai~ for imperta:nt
calls;'Cail FOl'Warding is made iust for yo\LUst a $2.ooper
month service charie gives you automatic transfer of
your calls to any numbe.r you wish, 24 hours·a·day, in or
out·of-town.
If.you like the idea of being in more than one place at a ~ou11
want 3·Way catfuli. You can call one mend across town and er friend hail way around the world and all three of you can talk. What a
great way to get together for just a $3.00 per month service charge.
~If
If you're on the hone a lot and others can't reach you, ~rou1l wan~l aiti • 80ft beep tone lets you kliOw someone 19 can stay on top of tirings without staying
calling. sunp e press of the button oonnects you to the other call, while tied to your phone.
COSTA MESA C.. Meta Vlllap 3033 Briatol
250 Osle Street
BAST ANAHEIM , &lltAMWm ~Ave.
GARDdi GROVB 11271 Gerdetl Groft Blvd.
CLl!Nill'LI 111 S. C..... Avt!M
RAWntoltNI i**-......... Plllli'
HOLLYWOOD '1
U4t N. C-Sa'C
taaeN ........ A._
H~I
DtGLIWOOD I \UM La.__._
@Paclftc'lllapOOne
. ')
... ..
..........
..
. ' ·'" .
. .,.
••• i ' ..
•
Aciors named
in fraud rap
CHJCAGO (AP) -Five people bave been ln·
dieted ln connection 'llfitb an alle1ed $400,000 phony
advance-fee loan scheme that victimized two mov·
le actors, an llllnol.a university and a New York
cbu.rcb.
A lplcial federal grand jury returned indict·
menta a1alnat the five, cba.rlin& that they collect·
ed more than $400,000 ln advance fees to secure
loans that never were made.
· •Amoei the victims of the allesed acbeme were
acticin St•art Whitman and Fred Williamson, both
of --..er• Hll11; Lewis University of Romeoville,
and Holytriinlty Baptist Church of Brooklyn, N. Y.
Accordin1 to federal prosecutors, the five told
the \1ctJaba that for a fee pald ln advance, they
could obtain loans that in most
cases amounted to more than Sl
million. The defendants-con·
vinced the victims that they bad
influence with major Cinancial
institutions, Including t he
Mutual of Omaha Insurance
Co., proeecutors said.
The indictment named Hoyt
Torrey, 42, of Chicago, who al·
. legedly masterminded the
.... I scheme; Clarence B. Jones, 49,
a New York lawyer; Gwen P. Barrett, 39, of New
Vodt; W-.Jter French, 34, of Miami, and Erik Nori·
il\g, 46, of Beverly Hills.
Prosecutors said Torrey represented bimseU
as president of R.A. Financial Corp., with offices
in ~ca£. According to the indictment, Torrey
claialed at Jones was responsible for financing a
$40 milli building project in Saudi Arabia, a $15
million housing project in Newark, N.J., and the
sale of a life insurance company for $20 million.
Authorities said Torrey had been living in the
Netherlands for two years and wu arrested last
month when be returned to the United States to
testify before the grand jury. He was charged with
22 counts of fraud.
Charges against the other defendants included
mail fraud, wire fraud, interstate transportation of
stolen property and perjury before a federal grand
jury.
The promised loans ranged from $175,000 to
$39 million, prosecutors said. All but one were over
$1 million, assistant U.S. attorneys Scott Turow
and Victoria J . Meyers said.
Bro\Vn' s staff
probe target
SACRAMENTO <AP) -Accusing Gov. Ed·
mund Brown Jr.'s top aides of destroying and
altering evidence in a political corruption probe,
the Fair Political Practices Commission formally
has recommended criminal investigations of
Brown's staff.
The Democratic governor was not personally
named as a target of the requested investigation,
but at least a half dozen top state and Campaign
aides were.
The FPPC on Wednesday uked the district at-
torneys or Sacramento and Los Angeles counties to
conduct criminal investigations.
The watchdog commission -created by a
political reform initiative drafted by Brown -also
asked the State Bar to review the conduct of Legal
Affairs Secretary Byron Georgiou and bis assis·
tant, Mo Jourdane.
The report also names repeatedly, without
specifically charging them with wrongdoing, chief
of staff Gray Davis and Brown
staff aides Jacques Barzaghi,
Walter McGuire, Sandra Sears,
Jodie Krajewski , Gayle
Prousalis and Phil Oppenheim.
The FPPC's seven-month
investigation stemmed from al·
legation that Brown's top aides
leased a computer with state
funds and used it to compile
pol1tical mailing lists.
oav11 The FPPC said it found "in·
sufficient evidence to warrant any formal com-
mission enforcement action," but charged that
members of Brown's staff "served to impede the
investigation."
Among other things, the commission said in a
149-page report, a key memorandum had been
withheld from FPPC Investigators "because
Brown's attorneys bad deemed lt was 'in·
operative.·
•'The investigation was delayed because of a
lack of cooperation by the governor'• office in pro-
viding complete and accurate documenta relevant
to the investigation," the commission wrote.
··A!. discussed ln detail in the body of this re·
port, some evidentiary materials were destroyed
by personnel in the 1overnor's office, other docu-
ments were altered, and yet others were withheld
until the staff bad independently discovered their
existence."
At a news conference on another subject, Brown
refused to comment on the FPPc.report, saying be
wouJd answer questions "when I've bad time to re·
view the material ... " ·
"I'll get back with you," be told reporters.
FPPC official.a said the investigation began in
December followiot a story ln the Loa An1eles
Times which reported that Bf9wn's office was us-
ing a state·leued computer system to compile
llata of poltlcal support.en .
The lista were developed to advance the gov·
emor'a candidacy for future political office, tbe
newspaper reported.
The FPPO bu uie authority to impose ad·
mlniat.rative ftaa of up ·to 12,000 for violation.a aucb
u dotnc political work on state tim e. It may a1Jo
seek h1aber penaltiet in civil court, or refer cua
to tbe dlatrict lttol'My or a~y 1eneral.
Seattle merchant
tell it like it is
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Thursday, July ~. 1981 Cl •I
'Dallas' star won't fight nude photos
'UNDERAGE'
Victoria Principal
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Victoria
Prlocipal, an actress Oft the "Dallu"
televialoa aeries, bu decided not to ob·
ta1n a court injunction a1aioat public•·
Uon of nude photographs taken ol her l.D
1988.
The actreaa sought a temporary
restraining order against Velvet
maga.zine to atop the distribution of lta
September luue which carries the nude
photos, said Lanny Sher, a spokesman
for the maguine's distributor, Flynt
Distribution Co.
However, Miss Principal's attorneys
declined to post a $500,000 bond which
U.S. District Court Judge Terry J. Hat·
NO DEALER
SALES
AD STARTS
THURS.
TEAK PARQUET FLOOR TILE
I !7
rr
' A cla...v looking floor.
12"ill'" tiles. Looks
even better with age.
(Okay, no jo.k .. about
the mother-in-law.)
TEXTURE T 1-11 5/a"
EXTERIOR SIDING
13~?
Give your house a n•w look
and incre&M ita value at the
a.une time. Grooved 4 inches
on center.
THE
BELLFLOWER
THE
SANTA AHA
ter llsted u a condiUon for the restrain·
lng order, Sher said.
The actress will pursue her lawtuit
a1ainst Velvet magulne and it's
publisher. Eton Publisblnl Co., Inc ..
her attorneys aald. Jn the suit, Mlsa
Principal asked for an unspecified
amount of damages for publication of
the pictures claiming they constitute in·
vaalon of privacy and would cause her
personal and professional harm.
Miss Principal said she was under-
age when the 1968 photographs were
taken and she allegedly was drugged by
photographer Len Camp during ihe
photo sessiop.
"We obtained the pictures of Mlr>!t
PrinctpaJ lealtlmately," said David
Zetner, publisher of Velvet magazinC'. •
"We have a leaat. alped model releas1l:
and a written statement from the pho ·
tographer, Len Camp, indicating that he·
saw 6er sign the release and that !-ht'
was over the age of 18 when she slgnea
We intend to defend the damage at't1on
vigoromly."
Miss Principal was reatured lo a nude
layout in the September 11773 issue of
Playboy magazine.
Miss Principal 's agent, G t•O r l'•'
Kervey, said she was born Jan. 3, 19~
SCREEN DOORS
THE
LA MIRADA
THE
PEACOCK
Includu the silent door clOMr, the
hinges, the adjusting channell, the
knob, the latch, and the instructio~.
Leu the stuffy and stale air out and
fresh awnmer air in.
THE
BELLFLOWER
Mill Fuwh.
30", 32". or 30••
THE
LA MIRADA
Mill FUU..h,
30", 32", or 36''
129
1997
i~:.:~"·29 97
THE
PEACOCK
Gold f'inilih,
36"
3597
HIRSH 8 FT. WELLER 100/140 WATT I
SOLDERING G11N KIT t WIDE PLATFORM
SHELVING 12~8~PK BEHR NWF
NATURAL CLEAi
WOOD FINISH
7~
6488
ITPR-96
H.avyweight steel poets and support
aird•n for 40 5 · ft. of storage apace.
fnclud .. %"al2' particle board shelves.
Includea dual heat
soldering gun, soldering
tipa, tip changing l
wrench, flus brush, ~
soldering aid tool. aoldf<T. f
and C&M. l
Bring• out the natural grain of the wood
and givea it a rich oiled appearance (kind
of like one of those guy• bom Tez.u ) .
HEAVY DUTY 16-3
SJT OUTDOOR
EXTENSION CORDS
25FT.
SOFT.
100 FT.
3.44
5.55
8.88
For power tooll or lawn JllOwera or for the
patio. ( You could even run your electric
choo choo on the driveway.)
INDOOR OR OUTDOOR
LIGHT CONTROL
YOUR CHOICE
4 97 ·~12
EA. OLC-S
Automatically
turns Ughta on "'-'•W when the •un goes °"' \ down and off when it
rise•. (Sound•pl'9tty
smart. How doe• it know
how to do that?)
•1·8901
YOUR CHOICE
777!
MURRAY
BICYCLES
MEI'S Z6"
10-SPEED
ILLUllOIS lllE
Stem mounted gear
Mlectlon, n de ~
bnkM. and 36'd W'
blackwall tin& 8-hawll Blue finiah.
01 20'' nm
DDCllDlllE
Hu aclJmta.bJ. rou.r
type WNllon, .peecl. om..-I oclom.ter aNl
a large wldJ.~
SUNBEAM
GAS GRILLS
SINGLE BURNER
Broll tantalia:ing mol'Mll on
one of th .... Ha. 250 sq. in.,
a 20 lb. tanlr., and lava rock.
18,000 BTU'a. Limited to
stock on hand.
87!!
'IWIN BURNER 127 .77 •9330
CALIFORNIA CLIPPER
GAS MOWER
19" 3 HP
97~~
Thi9 ia our own
brand. Th ... guys
have to paaa 110me
rigid test.a before
we'll Mll 'em.
Good mower at a
good price.)
.... ,.. .....
WYDRIVER
8 PC. ROME &
AUTO TOOL KIT
I
• '
Gr.at little gadget. Wor!~~ I
screws, •lotted screws, and drives atand.,rd t
and metric socket.. l
ALLISON
SUN VISOR
1~2~
Stop 9e1uinting. Thia'll
k .. p the brig!\t glare frotT>
st.raining your •Y" ( unl ... you c&n lift
yourMlf to ... beyond the horizon ) . ·
ALLISON AIR
COOL CUSHION
I ~~102
Have you ever Mt
down on a hot car se&t
in the •ummer and then
stood up real fut? Well, maybe you n eed
one of th ....
;ou~KER
.1 STATE
·~
\fOTOR Oii
QUAKER STATE
MOTOR OIL
30WT. 77:r
20W/50 WT. 83!r
A word from the wiM. Check your oil
f.Nctuently to ... if FOU need to add more
or changoe it. It 'll ... you ln the long run.
EAILE 1-
WIU WIDL
CLUlllC llT'
l!a~oe-12
•.
j • •
'
l
---~~·-..... -~------.--~---~~--..... ~~~·..-_.. .. ...., .................. ; ..... ~ ....... .....,.,..... • ...,.40 ........ p...,.,_,p.....,.; .... ,......-........ ~w_...4.,..,.~F.-.-+ .... _...••~~ ....... ~ ~--··~1 .. ,
PlJBUC Nal'ICE
P'ICTITIOUI IWltN•JS
HAMllTATllMAMT
Tile IOllOWlnO __, It Min9 t.itl·
"•'-'••: IHS AHO OUT$, 2* Hel!My 114 ,
He•pert a-:11. CA.,... I Sendra JeMI SltNw, 1• Hotllley
AO , He-1 a..tll, CA t2MO I '"'' ......,... •• ~...-w .,, .., In· dlvldwal.
; Tlllf !:*~j S~':'m.o with \tW
1Counly Cl4r1r. of 0.MQJe CountyonJwly ,, '"' , .. , .... I p.,bf,_ Or-Coe.SC D.llty PllM,
I'"'!'· "·~"" aot1••
'I P~BLI~ NOTI~
P'ICTITIOUI aUllMIU
MAMI ITATIMeltT
f ll• lollowfnt Pi'M>nl •re d•h•t
t>utln•u•: Of'I EHTEllPll1$E5, >n u "9rl4
Pllta. C•li MeM, CA '2611. lfp1Mr1 G. He.itell, U1 Le P.,le
P14u, C•li Mesa, CA 92U1. ,...lhrY" L. Hat&ell, J71 Ut P9rle
P•4*•. C•t.o AMsa, CA nu1.
1"1• bllllneu la conoucteo &p a ,., _....,..,. ....
R_,G,HatAell
Orange Coat DAILY PtLOT/Th1.traday, July 9, 1981
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI •UllMIJS
MAMS STATllMIHT
Tiie lellowlnt fM'MHlt ere dOlfl9
111111 ....... : ' C)O,.Ol'S OIEll, 7UC 8a-er
Stt .. t, C•t.o -· Callfwflle flUI T-~. 401 I West Al ....
Sanla AN. Calltornl• tml1 Clll--.i Kawel, 4011! W•ll Al•, * .. Ma, c.tl!ot'nl• tf701 Tllla MfftMI II Con411K1tcl llY all !ft.
dl•ld\lil.
CNl\JW111(awel
Tllll ~--t -· 111.0 •IUI IN CW"IP Cltrtl of Or•"9' C-ty M
P\JBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTIT10UJ at1MMaU
IUMll ITAT8MeMT
Tiie 1e11aw1ne ,.,_,, ••• "'"' .....,~ .. :
POWlll COHV81tSIOH &ALU c;()MPANY, IOlt LAU Mrwt, H11111> I ...... 9-11, CtfllOml• ....
PCIC. INC., Calllerftla. 1011 UM $tr41t, Hun(l ...... llHCll, c.11 ........
tiMI
Tllla •--111.0 w1111 -c-ty ClllA ol Or.,..~ en JlllY
1,1 .. 1. J-··1"' .. , .. Ml P'1UID
11'111111-OrMl9 CO.ti elly Piiot, l'vi.11111ed Or.,.. Caeat o.tly Pllet,
J11ly 1, '· ••• u. 1•1 1tS2 .. 1. Jiily J, '· 16, ta. "" Hlft .. 1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOUI tUltM•U MAMa ITATIMIMT TM _,,. ,.,_ II dOlne llusf· ....... ,
Siil HOUH EHTEllPlllSES, tu
CMll VI-, ~ 9NCll, Celltornle
m.s1
Slllrley S. Ult<ll, IU C..lt View, La1111M ...,,, C.lllonll• ..,,
Tllla lluil"9S1 It <_ ... Illy en In·
dl,,ldllal.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTIT10UJ atllf 11811
IUMll ITAT9MSMT
Tiie f"'*-iftl ........... '°'"' _ .. ...... :
AHOEllOUE'S IHTEAIOll, 4S
Wul 1ttll Str••t, Coal• Meat,
Ct lllern&e taV
Antell C.-, '*' UtPla Street. Gardt11 0.-, Calltorlll• Tllla ............ c..iwc• lly M Ill·
elvl-. Wrley S lillCll .,,..._ c;,_
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
-------------r--
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS tUllltlH
MAMI ITATIEM8NT
PICTITIOU. tUllMall 'II• lollowlft11 ...... n, ere "'"O MAMalTATIMaMT t.ltlMOM
Tiie fell-1"1 IMtMnt era d0ff19 SOLAlt IHTEllPlllHS. ltO WHI _, __ : Vele i.-, 1,...,tne, Calllo<ftletl714
aouzy ltOUOE. JllO "'*"" L41 l.8ft111tY, 1t0 WHI Y•l4 ... _.
Avon..a, ~ llHC:ll, C•lllornl• INIM,CillfOnll•tn u
nMo> t111a bull-I• <-..Ci.cl 111 .,. In· TaUiYln, Inc. ,. SllO•I Orlv•, Cllvldllal.
Corona dal -· Callfornl• 91W, • ._.. ~ley Caff!O<ftla Cet'jlllfallon Tlllf ,..._, wM llllO with IN
Tiiis ......,.. 11 <~ •v • tW· county Clfflt Of Or•-~-IY on -•tlen. Tel»lllf'I. Inc. J-M, 1'1l. Ant......, Hermann, Preti-P'IUl4t <*Ont PubllllwCI Or...,.e CMll Oellf Pll04,
Tlllt -•• Iliad wllll 11w J 11ly 2, t, 1', U, 1tl1 2'l0-ft
C-ty Clitll o1 Or ..... c-ty on Jiiiy ----
1, 1,.1. PUBLIC NOTICE
-----------
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF P\JallC AUCTION OF
P£11SOHAL PROPERT Y lllEMAI N ING OH VACATEO
PllEMISD OF FOllMIEll TENANT
INC
PVBUC Nal'ICE
Cort K toke, Pre• !Oenl l(atlll•n Heap,
AH'I Vice Pr .. fdtnl
Thi• &1.ete..,.nt wi\ 111.S wltll IN
Cownty Cl9rk of Orenoo County on J-•··"'' ~·..,.,
Publlll\eCI 0r""9' Coast O•HY Piiot,
Juno ... JS. NAY 2. '· .... ,,, ......
PUBLIC NOTICE
'1CTITIOUS aUSINIEH •AME STATll'.Mll'.NT
Tiie lollowln9 p;rsont er• doln9
1111•1 .......
ISlAHO FASHIONS, lUB MirlM
Aven11•. Balboa OlillO, Celllornl• ., .. ,
Gre90rlus Enterprla .. Inc., •
Calllornl• corporation, *" ~111 In· Ola11• Sl,..I. Los A119ile>, Calll0<nle
tOOl> Tiiis bullnftt It c-...: ... by • <or·
w et Ion
Pr .. 10.n1
Or990th>1 ElllWP'IMI, Inc Kerl Gre9orl11t. M 0 ,
Tiii\ llil-1 w" Ill.a wllll llle
County Clerk ol Orenoo County on
J\,I ...... "" P'1-PuDll"'90 Orange Coetl Dilly PllOI,
Juno ti, 2S, July 2, 9, 1t11 ,,,._.,
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICT'ITIOUJ atllf .. ...
MAMll ITAT9 ... HT
'"• lat ....... ,.,_ .,. -"· ...... _.,
COITA NIA TCHMll Cl.Ut , -Jw.1"'9 om. c..ta .... CA.,._,
PltOl'ltllOHAL TlfNH1$
PltOOIU.IM INC., • c.lttwnla Cet•
-··'-'--.I~ 0r1 ... c:.la Me.a,CA--.
TlllJ ...,_ IS ~ttcl •'f e COt· .. , ....
,.,..,....,.ITtMla
~-·llC MkllMIT.0.-., ............
Tlllt -*• II._ wllll Ult c:w11tr C:ler\ e4 o..._ county on
J-U,"'1
"'""" P...iltNd Or-Coe .. Dilly Pfl04,
J-u. Jwly 2, t, ••• ltll Jl».t1 --------
PUBLIC NOTICE
llCrTI" IMYITI ... 8 IOI
Hatlee h llerelly 9lv•n '"'' tlli ... ,_ of T.-ol IN HWlll .......
tHcll Unlan H19'1 Sc-OlatrlCI Wiii rtC•I .. M•li<I &Ids for tUHIYlnO
HHVY OlltY T\WI Millwer ,,_tint or
"111il 1o "" 1119<fffcatloM.,. 11 .. In -Office Of Mid Ohlr Id.
•ldt llli ll II• c leerly merlled
"HMVY Ollty Turf #oww, tld H•.
-', -to Allyn IE ll_ .. y,
Pwrc11e11n1 Man•11er, Hu11t1neton laec'1 Union Hf911 klloof Olatrlct,
IOU1 Yorktown Ave .. Huntln11on
laacll, Cillloml• nMl, -received
al or.,.,.,,. J:OOp.m., l'rlHY, July 11,
'"'· •• ""'1kll ..... -,. •• blch *'" ... .,.,cHkl'( ---r-Ee<ll bid -• ,...,.In .. 110 for • per\,pd ol JO days alter Ill• d•I•
tlM< llf ed for IN ...:tllle Of bill&.
Tiie lloen:I of T..-INll ... Ille
sol• ,...,.. ol --Illy ol -·-1 ollereo and,_,,,,.. u.. ri9111 to ••IKI
eny or •II lllcls -to welv• eny Ir· , .. ullflty .,_,.In.
Sf9ned. Allp11 E 11-l•Y Pun;,_lng itMneo-r
P11Dllstwd Or-Coast Delly Pltot,
July 2, t. 1•1 1*41
·-P UBUC NOTICE
l'ICTlnOU'I M*••u
llAMll ITAT&Mll'M,. Tlli ..,,_.._ ..,...,, ere ... nt
w.r-.. :
P & M MACHINING, TIS W '"" Mtffl,UllilA,C.teMeM,CA*V
tAVC• ,llAHCO, 11111 011.n
Strwt. ANNl"lo CA ..... JAMIEI M HAMii.TOH, UOI OM-~-1111,CA.-S. Tlllf _._ Is cendll<IM •Y a
.. nere1_,,., ...... ..,..,,,_
Tllll Mt4-I WM lllall wflll ..
C..,nly Clerll .,t Or ..... C-IY .,.
J-u. '"'· .., .....
"'*41-Or-C..sl O.lly Piia«. JWM U , Jttly J. t, 1•, 1"1 ....
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF DEATH Ofl
HELEN LOUISE
FLANAGAN AND OF
PETITION TO AD
MINISTER ESTATE NO
A ·10f416.
To al l heirs
beneficiaries, c reditors
and contingent c reditors of
Helen Louise Flanagan
and persons who may be
otherwise In terested In the
wl II and/or estate :
A petition has been filed
by Kathleen Virginia
Sellers in the S uperior
Court of O range County
requesting that Kathleen
Virginia Seller s be ap
po inted as p ersona
representative to ad
minister the estate of
Helen Louise Flanagan
(under the Independe n t
Administration of Estates
Act). The petition Is set for §rlllere C. HUll•ll, Sit Vie LIOO , N-' 8ae<'1, CA f2IU
II Slat-I •U Iliad wllll I"' ~ly Clerto of Or-C_.y on Jwfy !'· .,.1.
Tllla -I was flied wllll IN Tllla ...--C WM lllall Wllll Illa County C .. '11 of o...,.. C-y on Jwfy County Clerll of Or-C-IY en
I, 1 .. 1. JWMJ1,1tll. P'ICTITIOUJ aUllNIEU
NAMll ITATIMIMT
1cc1teel PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE hear ing In Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Cen ter Drive,
West, In the City of Santa P'161m Hollco h MrillY 9lv•n on Jwly __ _ , ........
: Pl.tblllllt<I Oren~ CO.II Oelly Piiot, PubtlSllPd Orenoa C:0.$1 Dally Plio., PlMN7
Publl-Or.,. Cont Delly PllO(, TM lollOWl"ll _.... 11 Oolno INsl·
MHel'
U , ltlt. al 1:>0 p.m .. •I JOHYI P'ICTITIOUSa UlllllSS Newpof1 lolllevAf'd, In Coeta AMM, HAMa STATIMIHT PICTITIOUS a USINIU MAME STATIMll'.MT vu1f '· ••· u. JO, 1t11 JOtO.tt July 2, t, 16, n, 1"1 l..,..t, J-H, Jwly 2, t, 211, 1tl1 JMIMI CHAISTY MAT & FllAME, 1 .. 1
Grwetlte 0r1 ... S...Ca AM, Callfornl•
f270J
Oren .. c-.tv. llli ..,...al.,,... •Ill Tiie 1041owl"9 "'''°" Is Ooift11 INtl Mii at ll'bk eucllon IN ,.,_,., 9'<>-neu " TM IOl-1"9 ,_,_, 11 dol"9 Dusi· ... u.,
Ana, California on July 29
1981 at 9; 30 a .m . I • -
I !PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 119ry loll 11'1' T.o l(n19ht Salo pr-rty SECONOS TO NONE, .. Sunriw
conslth"' Ho<Mflo!O ~· Salo '"' ""'' Cate,,..., Callforfll• mv OUT OF THE WOOO !.. UU
Monon• Ori,,., L.a Maw. Celllornl•
t20•1
IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition
you should either appear
at the hearing and s tate
your objections or file
written objections w ith the
court before the hearing
Your appearance may be
in person or by your at
t orney.
• -------------~ P'ICTITIOUI IUSIMIEJS
HAMIE ITAT•MaHT
Wlllla m c . M<HO•ll, U l•I g,.,,.,, .. 0r1 ... '->ta,.,,. 91705 tlon wlll lie mede _ _..t to 1M Pl'<>-J~n c. Fii,.,. ., s..nr1w Cl•·
•l•lons of Section t• of Ille Civil <I• Coste MitM c.e11iornl• '2'27 I ,.ICTITIOUlaUllMIEU
MAMIE ITAT•MIHT
r~· 1011owfn9 perJon• .,. 001110
bu•lnuses·
Tiie lotlowtt111 119'10f1 la Wt"9 l:llltl• ....... ,
P'ICTITIOUS aUllHIEU
MAM• STATIMalfT
Tiit I011owt"9 penon Is dof"9 IM.fsl-
nen e1·
Tllll ....,._ la <onMlid &y en In·
dMlt\lal. COO. Oat.oJ:.:.t~ This bull...u'11 conduttea by •n 111·
11 .. 1 ,.._.., U119 Ullll C lll•ldual.
z M 1"-nnvl !.4-•. mj MOnone Drive, u -••. C•lltor11la tJ:MI T~11 Dutlneu h conclutled by 111 1n-
01v1oue1 MAllTECH. 2111 lla yslloro . WllllMI C. -Howrl JONI C Fllndera
f My Pl.ACE, SU2 Canwnerclel Or ,
~ .. 1111n91on 8NCll, CA n'41
q>•rlH ._, llOOt e.nbo<tw. C••
llli CAtlltt.
Newport a.ac11, Calllomli t*l Art1111r Wllllem Tunnell, JIM
• .,.,,.,,..., .._, le.ell, Calllonll•
91"3
EPSTEIN$ IOOY SHOP, Ull
Am erlcen Ave1u1•. Cott• Meta,
Ca lltornla '26»
Jolln Epstein, Jl•J Amerlca11
A••n.,., Coate #NM, Calll«nl• tll1'
Tlll1 bulinffa la Condllcled by ... In·
dlvldllil
Tllla ... ._, -Ill.a •1111 ,,.
County Cl-Of OrMIQi County on
J..,,.U,ltsl
P'IWll
l'lllllllllecl Or.,. Coell Delly Piiot,
H ........ ._ .. ,Ce .......
PullllSllPd Or ..... Coell Delly Piiot,
Jwly 2, t, '"' 197._.1
Thll ,,.l_I WU 111.0 with llli
Cou11ty Cler11 of 0rM19' Counh on lune It, ltll
P.nny!.4-1 Tllh stet..,.....t wM 111.a wltll 11'1
Cou111y C••r~ of o,.n99 County on
P UBLIC NOTICE ,.,_ J ........ ltl1 PwOll.,_. Or-Coell Oi lly Piiot, V\11cent a-r, llOOt •-· Cow
Jnl CAttm.
Tllls .....,._. la ,__. ... Illy on ..,_
dlvlo11e1 J-U , Jlly 2, t. 1', 1tl1 JIJIMI JUllO JS, JIAy 2, '· 16, 1 .. 1 ,...._., 1'1 .....
PuDllthe<I Oren99 Coest Oelly Piiot. IF YOU AREA
C R EDITOR or a cont
ingent c reditor o t the de
ceased, you must file your
, h bllslnHt la COlldUt led by • Jii• rel --nlll9. I 0-lts W. 8tdCMr
T)ll1 ,,.i.n.nt wH 111.0 wltll Ille
Ct>11nly Cler1l ol 0r.,... County on July
) 1'11. P'1U'U
~wbllt!WO Or-Coal! Delly Piiot,
July t, "· 21, JO, '"1 JOit.ti .
• PUBLIC NOTICE'
A. w. T"""'" John e.,.1e1n Tllla -• •• 111.0 with IN C-ly C .. t'k oA Orenge County on July Tlll1 a ... lllment wea IJllO wllll Iha
Cou111y Clerk Of Ori ll11' Cov11ty o"
P'IN!M Jwne 1', 1"1. 1, "''·
Pv&ll-Or .... Coeat Delly Piiot, P'IMJtl
July 2. t, t•. u . 1111 2'10-tt. Publl"*I Oranea Coest Delly Pllo4, Ju,.. 11. U. Jwly 2, t, t .. 1. 2'lM1
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOUI •UllH•ll
P UBLIC NOTICE
PICTIT10US aUllHIESS
MAMIE STATIMINT
Tiie IOllOWl"9 perM>ns ... dolllO ..... , ........
PICTITIOUS aUSIMIES$
NAME STAT£MIENT T 11• loll-Int petSOM •re doln~
b\illneu es I( F 8 PARTNERSHIP,•
Genorel Per111ot1n1p, 10S1 Pitalllll
Drl¥t, C.C.lA, Mil'-'ie, CafUOfnte. P 0
801 I I 120, Coste MHi, Call lornle .,.,,
Ketlly S. CrofOOC, S>IH Pine Grove
llOiO, L.• Pl,,., 0.eQOn tl73'
-----HAMalTAT•M .. fT P'ICTITIOUI aUllHHJ
HAMI STATIMUtT
HESSE llEAl ESTATE EHTEllPlllSES, ,.IS llue l(ey,
C0<on• del Mar, Callforn4• uns
J019P11 C. Hftle, ll>U 81.,. Koy, Corone 0.1 Mar. Calllor11le U•U Fr.Of!. Chesley, 11111 M<l'-n,
fl 12, Tu1tln. Calllornl• 92.-0, P 0 .
801 1°'>0· Cosli M•H. Calllor11le ,,.,, HOTICI OP' Tiie lollowln9 IMfMHIS are deln9 Tiie lotloWl"9 Pi"llon la •1"11 INal· Bonn .. II. H-. :llU 111111 l(ey,
Coron• dit -. C•lllOrnl• '2t2S •PR , P\JlllC HIAltlMOS INslneu M
NOTICE IS HEAEBY GIVEN INI NEWPOltT PltOTECTION ..... H : Tnh _,,_, Is CondllcleCI Dy ill Ill·
•~• City Covncll er>CI Ille Plennlnt SYSTEM$, 1J14 LoeM, C:.ta Mew,
colr>m1u lon of 1M City Of u11..ne Celllornla,_.
l(OE.lZEll, lAY NE & AS· dhlldvil.
SOCIATES, llOOI Slty Peril Clrcle, ....., .. a. Heue
Slllle "l ", lrvlM, Calllornla t %714 ~ C H .. w
w1111..., H Cllftley, 1os1 Peran111
Ori••. Coate #NM, Celllornl• t1U7,
P.O Boa 1~7. Colla 'MH, C6111ornli t2'17 11uc11 will hOld Pvbllc Heerlnp re 81111 811t'k&, ti 11 l(ap-., Hlllll· WllllMI Koalur. MO laker. Ho_ Tiiis s ... ...._. wes 111.0 .. 1111 tlli (14'tcllng 1M C:0.>1el PIMI for 1111 City lntlOft 8-11, Callletnle ,_
01 l.•9une e.ec11 conslstlno of• 11111 Ml1111I• llalla ro, SS20 II Iver
d«pt•ll>ln(I iHUft ttl•lfve lO biKll K · Avenu•, H~ e..c11, Call!Otllt• <•J•, blutt prolectlon, vecent lend de· ~
A21', Costa Mna. Calltornla t1':16 Cou11ty Clerk of Or•n9' Coutlfy on Tnh buslneu I> conoucleo by • venerel _.i,..rar11p Tiiis b\lfl...U la c,oncl\lclid ~Y en In· J uM tt, 1"1.
dlvlOua l. ,.,...,.1 Wllll"" H C'-l•oy
•'lloPment standerds, arc11eolo9y, Tiiis IMlsl,,.H la conductid .,, • Wllllam Koeller Publllllecl 0r.,. eoeu Dilly Pltot,
Tiii• ,_ ... 111.S Wllll IN J-••• "· Jwlyl, '· 1 .. 1 1nw 1
Tllh ital-I wes llleo wll n 1ne
Co11n1y C•••lt ol o .. n~ County Oii Ju,.. 1', ltll Jll<t pools, -lcult .. 11 •-ar>CI -9'M••I __.wp.
fl•O• uw •-. 111 conlunctlon •ltll • MIMI• llallMO CouMy Ct.rll Of Orenea c-rr on
mf p Oepklin(j future •-lltft In 1"' Tiiis -• WM flllld wllfl -
(1t>r Covnty c1..-1t ol Ou nea C-y on ,.,.,._ J\IM "· '""· PUBLIC NOTICE l'IMUS PwblfllliO Or ..... C:0.11 Dilly PtlOI,
A
AIO PVBUC HEAAINGS •tll ... J-"· ,.., Publl.-0r•"9i COHI Oally Plio.,
'" 0 •• loll°""' MGNl4iy, Aug111t ), P'IMM6 J-II, U, Jwly 2• t, '"1 J10WI P'ICTITIOUS aUSIHIESS l 1 I et 7·00 p.m Jolnt Study Session -Pubtllllecl Or ..... COHI Dally Piiot, HAMI ITATIEMIEMT
JUM 11, ll, July l, t, 1911 '7S1 .. t
PUBLIC NOTICE •CllY Covncll, Plennlno Commlulon J-U, Jwly 2, '· ''· 1'11 USCMI. PUBLIC NOTICE Tiie 1011ow11111 ,..._, 1, <*011111 butl !•iti Clt11en Taia Force, Wedl>ildey, _ ,..0 " ---
·Aol!lu\I s, 1t11 et 1 00 p.m. Plannlno PUBLIC NOTICE CAl-OllA LIMI TEO, esn w-n SUNltlOll coun OP TMll'. • •C ..... mlu-Publl< -1"9, and Mon-P'ICTIT10UI aUMMIEU A-. a.-Perlt, Calllofn4a aJO STATS opr CALll'OalllA 1·~· A-" 11, '"' .. r.oo p.m. City • s MAMalTATUllUT OO<ls A. Wetermen, 220 .... ,,., P'O• TM•C:OUlfTY OP'OltAMGll :~;::,~: ~:~~·t~":11~~~·.:~ Th• ~o!?-!~!~!~·~~!: oo•n• ... ~!~:;:::::::~7s:: ~r~NS!'~~11<~~:;:~~ 0~~~~':·
'C4'11ornie. butlMn•: Adams Av1111u, Coste M•••, DorlsA.Wet.erlTIMI •-----•I , ' V..-NL.Aollln9er WESTGROUP M•~l(ETING, Ca lltornla,_. Tiiis s~t wet Ill.a wltll Ille ~..._.
I CllyCl•rk ~~: Sky Perk, lrvlne. C•llfornl• Han.-, J. ""'"· "°° Net>I-. county Clerk of o .. n .. Cou11ty on CU MIS INSURANCE SOCIETY,
J>ubllshed Or111199 Coest Delly Piiot, Hew-' llaedl, Calll-• f2t6l J-1'. 1"1 INC., Plalnllfl, vs EllN EST ( July t, ... 1'11 1'92 .. 1 BilH, lleugll, Wey, Aoaler '"° Tlllt _,_It <..-.Clacl lly M In· l'IM!n Cll OSS, and DOES I tllro119ll X,
__ Cllerwller Corp · Calllofnle llOOS Slty OM-1. Publlillict Or-Coe1t o.lly Piiot, tn<IUM,.., Oaf ...... b. p BLIC NOTICE Per1t,lrvl,,.,Calllornle t'7H Har .. yJ.Smllll J..,,.1a,n ,Ju1y2,t,1,.1 174.Ml. TO O EFENOAN T, E'IHEH c .
I 1 U This DUtlnftJ 11 <oncluct.o by i <or· Tllh ~ -· lllef wttll Ille CltOH.
H• ,.-,.. ---•llon. e.ies. lleuQll, lloeler. Wn Covnty Clerll of Or-County ... PUBLIC NOTICE YOU. ANO E.ACH OF YOU, .,. • • J-21, 1"1. -•bY ........... to -111 tlllt Co<lrt
FICTITIOUI aUSIMIEH -Chandler Corp. Plwtrl In Oapertmenl 24, et llli County
MAMIE STATIMIMT Jo/WI 8ates, Prttldent Putlllllwd Or ..... Coeat Delly Piiot, Covr111-, 100 Civic Ci11tw Drive
fllt loll-ln9 1Mrton1 •u oolno Tiiis stat.....,.t wu filed wltll 1M J-U.Jlly2,t.2',t"1 _...1 NOTICE OF DEATH OF WMI, Santa Ana, Calllornle, on~.
b\itl u Coullly Clerk or Oun9' Cou11ty on J a N ET E L I l a B E T H '-"'I ' 1~10H~·OAVIO KI NG & AS Ju,..1',1"1 .,. .,. Z2,ltll, .. t:JOe.m .. totl,...,Y __
SOCtAYES, tJQ> er-llYrst, Suitt E, P'1..ut2 PUBLIC NOTICE K 0 EHLER AND 0 F ~:.; :"e:.,."::' !"';'.:,::!':
G•den Grow, CA.,..., PuDllsfllld Oranoe C~11 Dally Ptlo4, P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A D • Plalnlltt In IN ~katlon, , <OPY o1
JOHN OAVIO l(IHG, 20111 Her-Ju ... ''· 2S,Julyl, '· '"' 7'«M1 P'ICTITIOUS aUSIMISS MINISTER ESTATE NO. wtlkll Is-...... to lhh Order. Als•
h it l e,.., Huntlnoton 8H Cll, CA HAM41 STATIMIHT A ·10f421. etli<llecl -.0 i. ._ HOttce reqo,lkid • .,._.. PUBLIC NOTICE n e 1011ow1no Ptraons ••• dolft11 T 0 a I I h e I r s , 11y Se<tlon •>1 °'tr. c.atllornl• ~ ~ WllLIAM J. FlEMING, !961 11va1 ... u as: ol CMI ..........
I 8r~n11en O.lw. Huntlnqton BiKh, CA HOTICI TOCOMTAACTOAI llEHE MOllOINI GAllERY, "'24 beneficiaries, cred itors t>ATIEO J-D, 1 .. 1
92•" CAU.tHO ...,. a1os via °"°"° • '· N-port Bi•11• c.11 and c ontlnvent creditors of E.__ J. we111n. 1 T~ls lkltfneu h conoucte<I Illy • Sc-I Olwkt. OCEAN VIEW 9*l Janet Elizabeth Koehler J-..dlNSwe<lor C.OUrt ,o•'ftrel peortnerthfp. o' e4 llENE lOUISE MOllOIHI. •n LAWOPPtcaJ
I JomO l(lne Bid o.d!llW: 2·00 '*" p.m. Milone ~etlon, U1 0c ... View, and persons Who may be SPAAY,90UL.O&.OW•H T~h 'c~ !::~ Ill.Sc wllll IN 1~:~:o:y:l<JJ::c;:: llull-Of. H••port llN<ll, CAfM J. otherwise Interested In the A,.,., .... _, c-,.r ..... !~~=~~ ,::•"' "''1199 ounty on 11ca,Ck-V1eW5c'-4Dlatr1<1.t...O ,.:::~~1 1"onc1uc*'&yacor-will and/or estate; -•1t1t11 .. w..c.-11•11Mr
, ' · ,I.Wt a Street, Hu11t1n1 ton tucll, llENEMOllOIHIGAlLERV A petition has been filed ~.~
• P\lbllsfllld Orenoa Coeat Delly PllOI C•lllomla. R-Mordini, b e k of A I N T I July J t .. 2J ltll J"l .. i ProJKI 1......i11<atlon Name: To rt· Pretldtnl Y an mer Ca • • P11lllllllecl Or ..... Coast Dally PllOC, i .. _._. ----"''·"--"""-·or'""'1Ke Tlll1 ~Wit111.0 wllll '"' & S .A . In the Superior J11NU,JulyJ,t,lt,tt11 __ ~1
...... 11 ~ •• ""'"Olttrtct Sc ..... County Clerll of Or-County on Court of Orange County ' PUBLIC NOTICE I P'ICTITICIUJ •UllMIEJJ
I MAMlllTATSMaNT ~· lollowln11 perMH\t are doln9
I Du .~~~~·:COAPOllATIOH DIA
t
Uf'ilTEO YACHT aAOl(EllS OP'
CA,LIFORNIA, UOI Via o,ortll,
Newport llM<h, Calltwnla '*I
' H erol<I F. Otllenl, In· F llf VW'llo. I A•~nue, N~ BiKll, C.lllornle
92163
1 Jecquefln• C. Oallorn, 1'1·P
111ersl<*O AV•llllll, N1111port 8eetll, C llornl•'*J
1111 bllalnen la conductid by • 11rf11.0~p.
HorOld F. o.llorft
f'lls ~ -flltcl wltll "" c+nty Clef'lt of °'""' County on J -U, 1"1.
' ir-t~ P .. bllillict Oranoe Coeat Delly Piiot.
J une U. Jlly 2, t, 1', '"' _. .. ,.
~ PUBLIC NOTICE
il~m '"'-.,.on u .. : <><-v ... J-'•· '""· ,.,._ requesting that Bank of PUBLIC NOTICE
ScllOOI Dlwtct. ._._ Otfic•: Pu1>ll1NC1 0r..,.. c:oeit Dally Pltet Ame r ica N.T . & S .A . be CPP.-·~~~~=-~~'~"~I J-11.U,JulyJ,t,1 .. I 2"4 .. ; appointed as personal MOTIUOP'TltUSTU'SSAll
1,,. •&ow-M,,,.. Sc,,_, 0111,k t 01 r eprese ntative to a d -T.S.No.Ft0S/Ho1t
or.,. eo..ncy, c;a11tot111a, ec11na"' PUBLIC NOTICE m i nister the estate of on Ju1y "· "'' '' 10:00 A.11111.
and tllr0\11111 Ila C)overllll\9 Board, • Janet Elizabeth Koehler tUCl(EYE RECOHVEYANCE COM· .... ,..IM"9r, ,...,.,... •• "Olatrkt," PANY •• Callforlll• Corporation .. Ou-•fll rK ......... t.o, llUI noc , ... r ,,_ P'ICTITIOUI 9UllMllS (under the Indepe ndent ly e ppolnt•d Trust•• wnd•r •nd uw ,...,.. ...._time,_._. &WI,., NAMtl ITAT•MaHT Administration of Estates ,.,rsuant .., o.ci of Tr..-1 dated July
.......... ol . CAlllract..,........... TM 1ot1oW11111 --Is ..... IMlal· A ct). The petition Is set f or JI,,.., recor-AllQllll IS, 1•. H In·
proJect. neu •a: hearl"" In ~t No 3 at •• No 1St2t, •n -,,..., ~ tn4, thh _, ... ra<el¥H In 1M piece C) • ..., • SWEEPING SE•VICIE, • .. .......... • • of otflcl•I lleconn In IM ottlc• of ....
l0ent1nec1..,....,aftd11\all w ~ noo •rvlM llouteverd, Space uo. 700 Civic Center Drive, count\' A«-. of Oreft90 County.
.,.., pulllkly ........... ., ........ lrvlna, Callfornl•t171' West, In the City of Santa Sl•I• of Calll«n4• WILL SE.ll AT
at.otAHI lltN end plau. t l<J ..... Ina ltobart P. end Oera1411W F. Undl, Ana, California on July 29, PU8llC AUCTION TO HIGHEST may M • ...., al D11trkt's °""°"· UOO lrvtne tcllllev-. s.. m , ,,,,,,,., 8IOOEll FOii CASH (payeC>te et 11 ....
1Ea cl1 111• '""st conlerm tlMI M Calll0tllla 9t'11• 1981at9:30 a.m. of Sile In lawfllf money of Ille Unltid
,._,, .... to lf1e ~rat die-.. Tiiis IMl,_a la <~ Dy M Ill· I F YOU OBJECT to the St•t•O .. tlli front°"'''* ..,tr'"'• of
EKll 111o1 -I Illa K<OfftlN'lllMI &y dlvlclllal. tlrvt Of the petition lht Conti-I H-loen Bulldfll!I ii tMM<wlty~t.o lntlMcMtract G«altil11eP.Len01 gran ... ' n• South £11<110, Anall9fm, CA•"
MC .......... end try IN llat ol..,,....., Tiiis '"*""" WM lllef •1111 '"' YOU Should either appear ;19111, 111 .. Mid trrteretl conwytcl to
Mlkontractorl. County Clerk Of °'-COOlnty on at the hearing and State tM "°"' 11110 &y It under Mid Otid Of
Tlli 01ST1t1cr ,..,,,.. uw ri.M to J...,. ,., l"1. your objections or flle Tru•• 1n II• propany a11ue1e0 In sild
reJKt """••II Ille or to walw fifty PllOllSl!ecl 0r..,.. c.tst oeu"::= written objections w ith the Count, •ndStateOH<rlll9cla•: ~';'~~·~ .J'_J~lll ... In any J...,. II, U, Jll" J, t, l•l . ~..-_.j lot 104, ol Tred No . ..., In Ille Cl· --m vw-• ._ • .._ c ourt before the hearing. 1yottrvlne,C-yolOr ...... s.t.1eOf
Tilt Dl*lct Mt...,,..,,.,... -Your aS)pfYrance may be Celllornla ... -map r.coro.o In
• ---Olr•CIW of tilt o..et1-' .. 1... PUBUC NOTICE I b at ·-UJ, ....., Jt liO ., lnchnl .. Ot
I MOT1c• °' w.trl•• ,.. .. ..,. 1._ _._. .. _ ... ,. n person or Y your • Ml_11_ ......, In ti. ofllca ot ~llUCM8A•l ... I 11\1 reta elf,., ............ 111 tllt torney. llleC.-tyRac«dwolMldCounty.
HOT 1c£ is HIE•e•v C)tVEN ,,,., ,.. r.c•llty '" ~11 ""' _. 11 " w lttCTlnout 11U1t••1t I F y O u A R E A execuTEO a v : 110H1n l!U>OH
dty c-11 -ti. Pl-lftt Cam·,_..,,,..,., • ..,, er.rt., t.,.. Of lllAMlltTAnMaMT C REDITOR or a cont-HOLT AHOSOHJA MMIOA'lfTANN ll!l•lfOft d lht City f/f l..tfllM llH<ll -llmM _..,It •lie<-1119 -TM ........... Jl'f19ll K........ HOlT, Hlllbend-Wlfe .-o llold P\IO!lc ""''"" ,......11..,. lr9't, -.. : lngent creditor of the de-TM s.,_ "'°'"' _, ... ,,., com-
J
..,..11on of IN.._..,. IE•-• to• A ,.,., .... _...,,.11..,. r•" 1a.,. c•OWMS av o•~AH J ., ttao c•ased, you must file your mon ·~uon, 11 eny, o1 1111 rMI
Cll'n•r•I P1a11 a1 La111n• t H cll, fll••l lNObtrkt...,....,.._Of • ....-11W1twt.lt4.F-..M1Vell..,, c lalm w ith the court or prop...tydHcr111.e-w 1._..,._1e41
ii.1111t11111t ... 11, ,..1c1 .. -..... Ike .., c.Mr«Wrt ,..""--Ill-CA tt11L .... M ....... present It to the perCAft•I to.,., :N.11 ciar......,., lrvlf'li. CA t2tu lidotlle<ll ........ ~ ......... i... ,.,......... OlllOltAH --ft ... HMA.H, _,,_ TM_.....,.... Tr\ltf .. dlaclalm•
l '"" .. '· T11e •1-• "'~ • 11 ... , .. _..,.., ...... -c-.-1ttt1 ,_.. '--· ~ .._,., r e presentative appolntltd a11y 11e111111y tor a.11 lllC-eN'Kt,,." of """•·'ffff K llOll '4eft CtMt"'llllMH • trHttr It WMl'll Ille ca11tract ii CA .... ~..._.__. .._ ._ ~ by the Court Within four IN tlf"fft ...,_ alllll tlller C-
c.bnierw, r....i11te1t r-ine """' ... ,...__.....,any Mllc..trM..,. • n .. -.. <~ •• an..,. of dtalonetlon, If.,..,., s'-n ..,..In.
i
i 1 ·d m .. t , ....... , -llnt -··· ""*' llllft, ..... ., -'-""" -......... months from the date S.ld .... wlfl .. -· -without .. 11111n the Eltme!tl i. an l!flwl,_ "" ._..,... ,.., • a11 _.,,_ 09Wllll J, ~ first lssuanc• of lelter$ IS CioveMnt er warranty, .. ,,.. ... ., IM·
1•11mpect R.,.rt <•1111. _,...,.,.,"""''" • •-""*' .r Tiiie .....,._. -" ... wttt1 ... provlct.d In Section 700 of plleo, , ...... .,. 1111e. -uian, .,
PU•1.1c; H••••NOS w111.,. 1Mct11tr.ct. c;-ty c:i.n." Ol'-.a c:..t't e11 tht Probatt Codt of encwmbf-.., 1.0 S-Y IN""'"'"'"' ........ : ~ c-~ ... .., _., .......... -... J-Q , ""· C•llf-nl•. T-ti-for !"'lfl(lpal wm .. IM llOtthl _., Mew A4llMft 16. 1•1 at 7:.t e ........ II( fWty fn.. (41)...,. llftlt P1MliM .,. ,,. .,.. try aat• 0-.. of Truel. •"II IMll'"I
111111 Otv ~11, '= ..._ • ,... .. ..,.,. __.....,..._ ....... ..,.. °'-. CIMl O.U. "'9lt. tnlng dalms wfll f'Ot t>e· ""'-· • ~....., in aald "°'9lal, ""'.,;.:;.':,.•c!!:~: ~=:::';=:= J-as.NYt.• .... "" ..., plrt prior to four months :!;';.·~:;i,r;.r:=.'=-;-~,:
,,, .. , An11u•. 1.a1un• a .. c11. Uell f/f .. Cl9Mf9tt. TM,_.,....._.. PUBLIC NOTICB from the datt of the Mar-n119111et o1 "" Tr--..1" ano 9f u.
C'111orlll• INll .. Ill .. """ ... ,.,. Ill "" ,,,noticed abovt. INl11cl'Ntedlly141141 DMo .. ,,.,..,
/t/V-L. llolll,... c.1,ecteer...,..,.., OU a..aay EXAMINE Tile loial ame11nl at Ille 111111•1• c1..,eten1 ••• MCU•tn .... -.... , .. lfAT8..wfOI' ~-'" ~ .... _ ., "" .... , ... ten _ ...... by ~I.,_, Or-CiM9t C)Mly ..... t<Ul'll-tlll•• •Y t ttrllllH er OP vt11 OP the fll• f(tpt by the COUM, tM l"'tlMftY .... lllN W ~
\llyt. I'-,.., ,_..., c9'fllar'• dllca ............ Di. PICTl'fttus9Ulf•••IMMll If you •rt lntef'etted I~ n llm•'" Wilt., .. ,._.. •lld ...
1rtc1 • ., • Nllil•..-Y ... ._. 111 T11e ...,...... ...,_ ,.... .,... tstatt, you mey tilt • re-.,.nco •• 111e urne e1 111e :1:1•1
PUBLIC Nal'ICE ::' •"" _::~·~ eo:c.::.: =i ..... "-. lie"---.. q~t Wtth the court to re-::,'~~:," ., 1111t -ie. ., 1'
-a•rtlr ,....,_., e1 111,.ly, I• M tHaOIAO•WATlltC:OMl"ANY, C•IYt special notlC:t of the flo1e ._...~..,_.,. llMff Ml• 0-. at
l'ICTmOU. Ml~•IU .,,._. ,_ ... tM11 tft f/I 1111 -11 UO Tell1ert AllelltN, P~11\fl~ lnvtnt~of Htet. UMt.S Truu llat'9t0f-u1c11tec1 •1141 *• ltAM9 fTATa.MIHT 1-..... ti ... M . ,,,_ Clllc'tt Iii Val~ elf....,..""' nd -6 11 .. raf .. IN .... itt*I t wtll\ ..
TM 1e11ew1ne ~ ~· ,.,"' ..,._. ...... .,_ ... ..., .... Tliel'~ ...._ .._,... • .,. petitions, tc· ~1 .. .u..., 0ttwn w OMl<tild llvtlfle~ •; ..... ...., INll --.. C-twt'M ...... -fllel la Or .... C 0 U n t I • n d ( f p 0 ( l SI ,., i •le, -i wrlU•ll lfatlca .. Alt. •••••CAN r1L1, tttt .,.. It• .. _.... .. ...,. 111 ~ c-cy.,,.,...,. ,.., described In~ 1200.5 0tt ... 11 -EJeclMll ..... ,. ,... -
' o ... , 041.,., AMMlm. Cellfatlll• ........ "' ..... ~. .. co••••c;• l'U•o. INC., ..... ·-,._,,._ •• ---· .. ••rtltM• UllM• H141 Mtll<a ltf '.,.... _. .............. _.., ... Ir ~ ........... me T..._, vt uw "99 ~'"' ,..., __ o.t ... 11 .... io.ct• tt lell .. Iii,... c;,....,.... a . ...._ "" °'"' .... _.... ..... ,.,. ..._ • ..,..... ~ v.1...,, ~ Cod9. Ut'9M 111 v. t......., wt.He .. ,.... Ortw,......,..C.....,,.•t91 ',...._._., .. _._..,, .. _..,. .,..n-,ltlec...._ Mk-a . ...-.1Wf._.,.,_. .. ,.._, ..... _..., ... 1'111..__,__.....,. C....._. I. H fir~ Oett1'"11.1•1 • 8 .. a ~..-. c.1""'1111fN .. ,_..... • .. OISTlllC'T ... ~..... -• e U C: .. • '"''--..ta c••c• iw • .. ...., • .._.,. ~" c-iw........... Att•r••Y at Law, H ttlCOHV«YMICa ~-:;=. ', _... ........... "" • 1 ....... ....._ •r••• caul, ••IH• :::"'~
T1lla -........... =:::::=r-... ·--T1llla .= -............... C..lfetilN ..... .. .. llNI ..
c.-; c:.n If ..... ~.. •• ..... =· ic-t.'f an el Or-a..,.._ (7M,..,,H. ....._CA ........ . ,.... = ..._.,. ~,..... ....... .... °' ..... CoMt :="" ..
f. _.,..._. _...., '-" ..__ Cielll...,,..., ........, ~--CllllEI ._:5 DetlyflH•, ' ,..... IM'llt c--o.11, ~-1.M.~~-.~· ~--·L,,...,.,,,...,,,.. ~ ,.. .. a.-a.t.• !Julya;t,tJ,1•1 *1-11 ,,....,.,_,.,_.,,.,.. r~
Ju11e II. U, JUly 2, ,, 1'11 1717 .. t
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI aUSIMISS ----claim w ith the court or
present it to the personal
representative a p pointed
by the court w ithin fo ur
months from the date of
first Issuan ce of letter s as
provided in Section 700 of
the Probate Code of
California. The time for
filing c laims w ill not eic-
p lre prior to four months
from the date of the hear·
Ing noticed above.
MAME STATll'.MINT NOTICE INVITING a lOS
'"' 1otlowl1111 ,..._, '' Oolnv llv~I· Notice 11 hereby 9lnn 111•1 Illa 11"' as loerd of Tn•-ol U. HWlllnvton THE MOPPET TS (lc:AN IHG llH<h Union HIOfl Soc-District Piii
S£11VICE, tit Pr .. ldlo Orlve, Cott• receive_,.. bids for WOP1Ylft11 Gym
Mesa, CA t2U., Floor Ae41nlslllnt ,,_11,.. or _, lo
CAllOL YH Bl.ACI(, "' Pri\IOlo Ille -lfl<Allons on Ille In tlli office of Orin, Coate #NM, CA '20l said Olllrl<t.
Tiii• ~ I• concluelid Dy •n "" 810• ....... lie CIH rly rnerlllld "Gym
Olvldllil. Floor llellnllllllng. 81CI No ...... -
CarolY" lllaclo. ortt-to AllYft E. A-le\t. Purellel-Tlllt lta-1 •• 111.0 wl111 IN Int Ma,...., _,,..... 8Hc'1 Uf\lorl
Cownty Clerll of 0+'""11' County on HIQll So<-' 04atrlct, 10151 Yorll-
J-1J, 1"1. Avo., Huntington Baecll, Celllornla
P'IM6tt ., .... and rec.el-et or llelor• 2:JO Pub11.-Orenoe Coe1I Oelly Pllol, p.m .. Frldey, Jwly 11. 1 .. 1. et wlllcll
J-H . July J. '· ... '"' Ja2 .. I 11 ..... ,.., pie<• lllcta Wiii ... pul)llcly _ ... -.-.
EKll lllcl "'911 ,.....in velld tor • PUBLIC NOTICE ,.,1odot»oayutter1"'oe1e.,_11..., __ fortMr~ofblda.
CPPS.-
NOTICI OP' TltUSTIEl'S SALi'.
T.S.Mt.7"1•
TllUSTOR: Steven 8eleny Ill 01.,.0.hleny
On J"lp n, ltl1, 91 10:00 e.m., H-
Of Morl9'9fl Servke Corp. M duly -
pol11 .. d Trust• ..... -1111r-liO o .. e1 of Trust rKordtd s.t""ller U, '"°· •• 1ns1. Ho. wn. 1n 11001o u1•.
TM lloerd fJf Trustltft INll lie UW
sol• Jud111 oA -QllilllY of iCIUl-t ollere<I .,. .....,,... tr. rlolll to ,.JKI
e11y or ell lllcls •nd lo welve eny Ir·
r...,1.,1rr therein. Sf9ne0· AllY" E. llowley,
Purclleslft11 MiMgar Pullll-Or-Coast Delly Piiot,
Jwly 2, t, '"' ""'41
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the f ile kept by the court.
If you are inter ested In the
estate, you may file a re-
quest w ith the court to re-
cel ve special notice of the
Inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, a c-
counts and reports
described In Section 1200.5
of the California P robate
Code.
-..... of Olflclal llKords In tlli of. PUBLIC NOTICE flee Of the County R.cor•r ol 0r.,... co11ntp, St•t• 01 c.111ornfa, W•ll John C. Penney; Penney
SEll AT PUllllC AUCTION TO & Penney •ttorn•ys "'t HIGHEST 8100Ell FOii CASH PUa&..1cs••v1c• , ... ... -
cpon•• ,1 11,... o1 ,.,. In 1awt111 AMllOUMCIMaMT Law, 3471 Via L ido, Slllte
mono °' tM un1t.o Stetasl at '"' Tlli c111-P9ice Foo.ftletlon inc .,... 2 0 3 , New Port 8 ea c h
me111 entrance'° H-Of ~ _ .. ""-"''Pol'"' Ollld California 92663. (714)
Service Corp., 20. S Plecentle, (ere F.-1 "'"°""" Mffll wlll M 673 7120 Pli<..,lle, CA mJO, ell rlOM, 1111• -avalleble ii no -•I• Cllerga lo ' ' lnterH t<onwyect 10-now Mid 11y 11 enro11tc1 c1111c1r-... T,.,.. •Ill .,. no Published O range C oast
uneler sald o.ciot Trwt In '"' pr-r· overt 1-llkatlon ol cllflOren recelv· Daily P ilot,
ty sltweled In Mid CoU111Y end Stat• lft11 lt41 end"'"""" prlu meals -July8 9 15 1981 3066-81 oaacrlbicl as: meel• will be pr00tlded wllllout r999r0 • • •
Thole poruan:1 of L.ot t of Trect Ml7 to rKe, c9'or, or,..,._.., «..-n. -------
In tll• City ol lrvllW, County of Orenea. PllllllslWO Or-Coast Dally PllOI. PUBLIC NOTICE
$tel.e of Calllornla, U Pl" ft\iP rt-JlllY t , 1"1 JOU.It
<«dtcl "' -lit,....,. -)7 ,,... --
Clwsfn , o1 ""'"'"-• ""-· ,.. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH O F cor6td ln -mu-1oos,01tlct•1 ANN S. BELL ANO OF R'::~El 1 unit n .. •-n •"" •t,TITtOUS auSIMIU P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A D
oaacrlll9cl In IM Condomlnh•m Plen HAM£STATIMIMT M INISTER E STATE N O .
recor-on ...,..11 t, 1'1S, u lnstru· T'1• 1011-•nci ,.,_, Is <*01119 bUll· A-l09373
ment '°"In -11>74• -lUol, Of-neuc•~HllEHT•OH EHTEllPRISES T o • a I I h e i r S llcltl llac0<01, of Qren9' Covntp, c.e111orn1a. UNllMITEO, o r Co•um&ua Clrc••. beneficiaries, c reditors
PAltCEl J. An 11n11M o.o -al•· Coro;:,:,~':~ ... •II coiumous and cootlngent creditor s of
tylourtll lflt-t H • TeNnt In Com-c1rc1a, cor~ ~1 ... ,-.u Ann S . Bell and persons mon In 1111 IM lnterHt 111 and to tlle ---~ " Common Arai ol Mtd L.ot of Mid Tr9'1 Tiiis bullnass Is Conducted by e11 In• WhO may be Otherw ise in-H ... ,II""" fJ <*OllneG'" ... Artie II Olvlduel. a •• ~ •• A P•len terested in the Wi II and /or
e11lllle<I "o.llnftlons" ol Ille Oocler• --E t t lion of covenen1'. COfldltlons, a nd Tiii• ... 1 ....... 1 WU Ill-wllll ,,,. s a e .
Rulrkt'-recorded on""'" u , 1tn Coun11 Clir-°' o,.n .. Covnty on A petition has been filed
111 -11315. ,... 1S10, of 001c1e1 Ju,.. 1', ttlt. •tM.112 by Hilton S . Bell in the
llacorda °' Oranea County, Cell10t11t•. PubtltiNd 0r-coett oa11y Piiot, Superior Court Of Orange •IMI any_.......,... -...... I th t IXCl!l"T THEAEl'AOM •" 011, 011 J""' 11.u.Ju1yJ.t, 1t11 113'-tt. County request DO a
r11111a, mlnerala, miner•• r11111a, ._ Hilto n S. Bell be a6P(>lnted
11atura1 ... r11111u, •nd 0111ar PUBLIC NOTICE as personal representative
llydrourbOn• by wll•tnar naM• to administer the e s tate of -nown 11\at mey.,. •ltllln or -r tlW >------------Parul al lend ..,..lnMow O..Crlbicl, c:PPM9t Ann S . Bell (under the ln-
t ... IMr w1111 "" -1119tual r111t1t o1 •OTICIE °" nun1•·s SALi dependent Administration
•r1111n1, "'lnln1, Hplortn11. and T.I. MO.,_ of Estates Act). The petl
-""' tflef9fw --11\1 Ill -HVITOA: n rtfl"levlftl - -lrwn Mid I-Of o..llK.o.Mette tlon is set for h earing I
•nr otller 1-. lf'l<Wln9 t1w ,..,.. to ....,.L.~ Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
wlllPtlKll w dlrectton.lly or1111 ..... 1a On Juty n , 1•1, at 10:00 a.m. "-Center Drive W est in the .,.. tllilU Into, ll\t'oulll, or ecr•s 1119 Of Mo,,..._ Service corp, ., duly . S ' •
111111wrface of l"' lend -•lnabow '"'°lnted TNltee --pur-111 C I t Y 0 f a n t a A n a
ducrlbid a11d to &ottom """ 100NdofTrwtrec:ordedMerc11r.1•. Callfornla, on July 29, 198
wlllllUOCUll or dlrec:tloMllp drlllad H Intl. Mo. '512, In -1U2', -at 9: 30 a .m .
wella, to rec1r111, re111nne1, "'"'P .. 140, °' Offtcial itec«dS tn u. oflk• of IF YOU OBJECT to the melntal11, '"*'· --end ,..rato tlle c_.iy ltcardtf ol er.,.. Coun· •111 •uc11 -"• or m1,,., wltllollt ty Staie o1 CallfOrnl• WllL. SEU. AT granting of the petition,
11e .. .-.a.'rf111'11to dr111,m1ne,st.,.'. PUtllC AUCTION TO HIC)HEST you s hould either appear
••Illar• .,. ~·to t~ ,,. wr· a100111 FOft CASH CP""" •t time at the heari"" and s tate IK• or , ........... so .... ol .,.. WC>-ol .... In ......... _, Of IM Unltoel .....
1wr1au 01 111• land llar••n•l>o•• se.1111 •• n.tr011tontrat1<eof .._your o~ect1on s or f i le •;c~~L ~: Hon ... c1ut1 .... , .... ;: Morl~~klc;.i':!;;,. ~written Jectlons w lth1the
rne1111,., u11111i.., ac:ceM, ,,..,_, •1~=iit1e.,.,i:c""4c_.,..t• court before the hear ng.
..,.. ... """*"'-'. or-... . .,. .,,. _,......, 11 ""*' .... o... o1 Your appearance may be
...,,, •• tor ---. ell .. Truat 1n • ..,....,,. .. _._ 1n ta1ct In person or by your af-::,:,~-::-:.;:-r:=. ~ = CWMy .,.,.. MMt 4111Cr*M •= torney.
Anlc1e eMJtltcl "&-ta" et lfle Lot 11 94 Tract "°' f'ff, u "-' 911 I F Y 0 U A R E A.
0tc1aratlonMf't11111t1ew-.cr1Ded. :.:;:::i.=:.:-~i;:-...:c REO I TOR or a c ont·
Tlla atrwt ...,_ antt atM4' cMt-e1 °'•• C-Y. c.i11en11a. lng ent c reditor of the d• "'°" • ...,..,..,, ,. -· ., ... , .. 1 TlltH""4Mllr_aM_<_ ceased you must file you "'°"fty Oi«rl .... -we la ,..,.._,._ tlltlBN'1911. If al!Y, at IM , .. , ,,....,. ' r to .,.. t .,.,._ M., 1rv1M, CA ty •te....., ..,,.1, --1tll 1e w· claim w ith the court or "~~ _....,.. ,,,..... d•111t•••m• tit4W.........,•-.C•t.aMele, p resent It to the personal
t11Y 11M111tt 1tr _, tncerHclMtl .. ~:::-..::,.., T.,,.... 01111tl•1ntt represent•tive appoint.ct
"'• •t••...,.... .,,, ...,., <-...,., ll*'lt'f .., any lllcen'et-of by the court within four
MlltMllOll. 11 ... Y • ....,. ,.,..,11, 111e '''"' .--_,...,., c-months from the d a te of
'411d Nie Wiii Ila-. llUI wltlleul 4"1fMtlon,ffMy .._.,......,,. fl t I of lett c•veMflt w _,..,..,, • ..,,_ w 1m-"" .... w11i .; !Met, we wi...... rs ssuance ers as
IHIH, ,....,..,. IUle, ,.... ...... .,, , .......... ., WWTeMv, .,..,... ., Ifft· provided In Section 700 of __ ..,_.., • ,..,. "",....,...= '"'"·,...,.. 1111a, .......-. .,, th e Probate Code of ~~=: :._,....: =...... ::.CV::..-..:.i:.:= Callfornla. Thi time fOf
...,_, • ~ 111..., ..,..,.,, aaill o... of trutt, •1111 111-..-..t flllng clalms will not tic~
"" __ ..," .,,, ....., .. ttmw 11 ,,..,_, .. ~1111•.,-<•> .... p lr• prior to four monthS
N ill o...i 11 Trwt. ,.._<Mr..-""' ,,_,, 11 _,, ""*' ,,.. terme .... ., from the date of th• t..r-•• .,._ 1111 • Trwaet 91141 of tilt o... at TNM, ...._ ,...,... """••·
'""'" ,....,.., .-o...et"""4. _... " .. ,........,,, ..... trwt. Ing notlctd above. Tlla ••1 ~of tilt 1111,.i. creatMIW...,~TNIL YOU MAY E X AMINE
... _. " • ••• ._.... .., T11• , .. a1 -• .. oie """" the file kept by the court. ""'"'..-tr•• ... .,.,_ ....... ttM• " .. .._..,. • ...., _., I 011"'•'• c .. tt, • ._._. .., .... """""•• _..,. .. ,_.,, If you •r• lnt erestltd n the
.,."' .. et 0 11 11-at ,,.. 1111ua1 n11"' .... teat&. • ...,... 9M .,. estate, you may flt• • ,.._ tr~;,• ., "" .,..1« 11 ..., 11 •aneet 11 .. ...,.., --~ quest with the court to ,...,
,.,,. ~1ery _.., .-. o... 11 '*'n!' ::=::: -.:::;:·"' ctlva special notice of the
T"utl .,.,.....,.. l llK-""' ... ,,,,,, ............ HKIMll llM ... Inventory of nt•t• au.ts
•lwfM .... '"=r* • ........ ,,.,.., • ......... ,..,•"""""and of the petitions IC· ::''=:.-"..: • .,.,.=-..::.-= ::''::"" _: :a=:~ .... °':': c o u n ts and rt po r t s
o.e.wt • ..._ • ..... ,,.. -0otM1t ... ...,.... " ..... ,,,. -. dtscrlbtd In Sect ion 1200..5
tltt"r:: .C.WM Mlll lfallct af ••ttlt"ff (ff .. f H lf ltatlu af of the c.allfornla f>robatll .,.._ .., ........, .... , .. •,... o.tM11t.., ~ .. "" .. •,... Code ,., ........ _. ........ ,..., ~lll .. <*1111'( ...... ,... • ........,., .. .__. ~ .. ,...... MartlMeu&K...,._ o.•:~..-,--;, 1 -on11 .i--."" n• wtllolllre a1¥d. ::;=.~.... .._5:.!~75~ L•=:.~"'17
~ 09 .... • C7'4U21·~
:;-..:,::.,. -.":....-:.. PublllfWd Oran91 coast
........... ..,.. CllM Olltt ....._ ~ °'91111 ~ Oellr ...._ O.lly Pt'°'-July 1t...Jt .!.t
, .. ,~.. ... _.. , ... , ... , ,. 9"NI. ''" ~
\
..
THE
f,\MIL"
CIRCt:S
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
by 811 Keane
"This is a mommy stringbeon! It hos little baby
beans inside."
'IARMt\Dl'KE by Brad Anderson
"I'm off duty. Take a police car home!"
Jl'DGE PARKER
r:::===========:i::r----;':7 Y~s ·· 11 M
A REQl..1151 TION FOR
A CoPYIN<& MACHINE?
CL.i::ANING
OUT Ot.JR.
Ol.D FILES.
ACROSS ~Vipers WEDNESDAY'S
1e.1110..1 SS Arguers PUZZlE SOLVED
5 SltOngbOJC 59 Grand -
tO Obttruct ~yo range
1• Talented 93 lrtllnd
15 TPU 64 GuldlnCe
"eprNd" 6e Coetlng
11 Habitation 67 Non•worket
11 ~-ea Prevloutly 2 word• 89 Ooc:e
t9 Eden/I• 70 Saturl1•
20 Work of lf't 71 Denied
21 Scontrt DOWN
23 Formerly 1 Tlt1 r00tns
25 Noblemen 2 Nlwtpaptf
21 "Thi WNI· Item Int Of -3 a.a plant _.. ....,.
30 llrttlquall• llCICOU!ll
3-4 Roe*•. 1,g. 6 Helvy 8 Doctor •9 C111nd1r
35 Alall(a Qlt)' d1991f 27 lmS)9tuotlty abbr
37 ~garb e ONneee 2a tntr\lbt 51 Flower•
N lupelial!Vt dynuty 29 !tnlnlnt 53 Gift's name
ending 7 Aemn~a 31 Ctrdey'e 55 Skin Comb et.....,_ 8 Spectd ¥1ctlflt rorm
•2 Scold 9 Menect » leCtUte 68 Bullalo'• ,.. cs To - -; 10 "°'4on'• as H.,..._. 57 Stltekll
Nghe on ttvlt M "A¥e -" .58 NICI
"4 Or• n ON bodr 40 s~· eo "Don'1tt1I
.. Poltry muN 12 -l(Nyytlft '*OflbOtl ln14"" • ,attic 13 ..... .. , Mt-' 2 WOfdl
50 "-All a 2 It~ U ~ 81 Dtllghtkll
62 WWII "9Ml!'0 22 ""'* 41 --OM'I 62 Wtnt 1111 • t•~ ...... tsi..ttw
"George. you've got to knock off• few pounds."
Hank Ketchum
..
"You mean he doesn't have a twin brother?
You mean that's him EVERYWHERE?"
by Harold Le Doux
lF )OU 00 DOWN HERE TO THE
5TOP LIC,Hl, TURN LEFT! HtEN
YOU'LL COME TO A FOUR· WAY
5TOP !llQN.' THAT'!> ,___...._-.J
!;UPEICIOR.. JV~T A MINUTE.
MARC?f.'
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
.AND NATURALt.Y W~ WANT A
COfli OF EVfRYTHIN<; We l'H~oW
OUT·· J USl IN Cf;..S~ ...
~
I
------------..._
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 9, 1981
PEA~l'TS
WELL. AS LONG A5
'(OV'RE JlJST SULKING.
WOULD VOU MIND IF I
WATCHED ™E TV ?
'.\.\'.\('\'
WE ARE---._¥"_'-
NANCY, I
THOUGHT
YOU ANO
5LUGGO
WERE
PLAYING
SOLDIER
BRABBLE
ME'f, ~'I\., LIS"ft:N 10
'™'~ lNClt~'f CUR£
foR "U~ME~ ...
DR.SMOCK
ICieH'ff
1'HI~ I~
loJO .JOe
FOC. ~E;M~ ~!
rT' NEE~
LO\'INC.
CA.~!
f;lf()f' tl'l,·
1.1L..L 00
11' Fat -«:>V!
so, ee1NG A
POOR FAMU ... Y',
YOLJR MO"T"HE!~ Pt..AN Ne C' O N
AL.WAY S 1-4.AVt NG
YOU weAR MAN~Me -t::>OWNS ...
.JUST
LIKE THE
REAL
ARMY
THAI MOVIE CHAN6ED ('(¥.(
L.IFE !
FOR BETTER OB .~oa ftORSE .
LOOKATME.l
l'M NOT A5
SKINNYAe I
OOEDToBE
El'Tl-1ERt
.... ,,.. ... "'-'"' .......... ,.,.. ... . .. , ...... ~ ...
by Charles M. Schulz
~EN VOV'gE SOlJ(IN6,
'(OU NEVER COOPEAATE
WITM ANYONE !
by Ernie Bushmaller
I'M AWOL
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Batauk
WHO l<JJOW5 WHAf (AX)()L.D
HAVE HAPPENED IF I'D HAVE.
6CNE TO .stE THE MU~
('fQ.JIE UKE I'D ~NNE.0:
by Kevin Fagan
by George Lemont
by Lynn Johnston
OHWELL .. AT
LEA5fWERc
1MG
RTTtE
SP1ME.
Rffle.
" ..
-. -. ' ... 0 ......... ··-~
Oranv-Collt OAtLY PILOTIThuraday, Juty 9. 1981
I rn~~m~~~
loring cable TV's vast time-savings potential
~DIT'Olt'S NOTE: Eftt~ " tlw MM ~ ...... ue of coble te~. M tt 'ftOll llOI r,. U.. MM ~ a. Hnw. '" tllc third of o fM·porl ...,...,, AP " noma. RUiio uploru t1w ~ •'-dn>tdc
.. kdplacc.
"put their own toodl on sale, sort ol like classified
ada," says spokesman Jerry Undauer.
Some analysts believe there could be re·
aistance to Olli emeretnt marketplace 11 con·
sumen are not etven an incentive to use lt.
duce their overhead by doint away with paper
checks, subsidize at-home bank.int, while retailers
may offer discounts to cuatomen who ua~ com-
laws, industry spokesmen say.
Nevertheless, Deanna C. Nuh, pretldeat of
Colllnawood Associates, a Waabinctoo cooaultlq
firm lhat studied the lasues for the Federal TraM
Commission, says more 1bould be done .
puters. .
a, TllOll.U alUO
COLUMBUS, Oblo <AP> -Lovell R. Tiptoo, a
retired Army colonel, was etven a allmpse of the
9iectronle marketplace, and he's easer to shop
tMre.
"1bere are many people for whom that 30-day
wait for the credit card blll to come I.a eaaential,"
said industry analyst Antbooy Hoffman of A.G.
Becker.
Bank fraud i• "the scariest part of It all," said
Hoffman. But those dev.eloplna electronic at-home
systems think they've got the problem beat with
personal identification numbers and passwords.
Privacy alao baa been dealt with already. in
consumer protection, privacy, fraud and bankint
She notes that data collected when peopl-P•1
billa or watch TV mlebt be used to crellle a
psychological profile of a consumer that could be
used -or misused -by advertisers and
merchants. Hoffman expects to see banks, which would re·
"Look, lh1I thine'• creat," be said after a ~-month trial ot t.be ~-llnked Channel
•· a home bankint, bookkeepina and inform•· tlGb service teated here bJ Banc One Corp. and
Olio Collece Library Center Ine.
· Ualnt a telephone line and an adapter, Tipton
• 20Q other Columbus reeidents could view their Mat and department store balances on their TV
sthena and, using a calculator-size keypad. pay
WBa and shift money between bank accounts.
Tipton used tbe system to keep track of bis ~arch dues. And be spotted a bUllnc error before the credit card company's bill arrived.
"I don't see any limits on that thins," be said.
''la fact, I think it's 1oing to be necessary in order
tO f\lnction in the future."
Tipton bad a peek at the fut·evolvinl business
of at-home television shoppins, banking and bill·
pa)ing; and land credit liants like American Ex·
press and cable giants like Cox Communications
ate ea1er to explore.
"Imagine the potential," said Sandra Meyer,
president of American Exprea' Communications
'You can expand services
for almost anything -
travel services, investment
advice' loan awlications.'
division. "You show a product oa the screen and
all the viewer has to do to order I.a puab a button oo
the TV screen. Computers t.alte over from there -
recording the order, printinl the labels, 1ivin1 the
sbtpping instructiom and send.ins out invoices."
American Express, partner with Warner Com·
municatioo.s in Warner Amex Cable Communica-
tions Inc .. will begin retail teats using its "interac-
tive," or two-say, QUBE cable system next year.
Bankers, who already transfer money elec·
tronically via pay-by-phone systems and
cli1tomer-operated 24·hour bank' terminals, see
home banking as a way to cut paperwork and
overhead.
"Your imagination can run wild," said John
Russell, vice president and director of marketing
at Bank One. "You can expand services for almost
anyt.bmg -travel services, investment advice,
loan applications."
Manufacturers Hanover Corp., a New York
bank holding company, says It will offer inform•·
tion on second mortgages to cable subscribers in a
San Dieeo experiment Cox Communications is
spoMOring.
In Knoxville, Tenn., United American Bank is
offering home banking, includins updated in·
formation on interest rates, money market funds
and certificates of deposit. It is developing fman·
clal and tax planning services.
Nationwide, S,000 people are hooked into a
home computer marketing system called Comp-U-
Card that gives them .access to 10,000 goods.
Comp-U-Card spokeswoman Caren Utzig says
the company, which gets a 3 percent to S percent
colDtllbsioo on sales, is planning to add lS,000
items to Its electronic catalog and hopes to llnk up
with cable TV systems in addition to the telephone
links it has with home computen.
It also Is offering a Comp·U·Star service -
for an additional fee -that allows subscribers to
do comparison shopping at home.
With Comp-U-Card, consumers can get price
quotes, place orders and charge purcblaea to
aedit cards. A disadvantage is they don't see the
item they're buY1n1.
But there are cable shopping channels.
The Chicago-based Home Shopping Channel is
telecast lo 3.5 million homes via the Modem
Satellite Network. Sales representatives discuss
their wares on the talk show-style program as a
toll-free telephone number fiashea on the screen.
A Los Angeles Times Min'or Co. subsidiary ii
testing The Shopping Channel that also lets
ftewers place orders over the phone after seeing
<\lsCOWlted products displayed and diacu.ued.
Another Times-Mirror channel lets cuatomen
'Cigarettes going up
LONDON <AP> -The price of cigarettes la
1olng up six cents, to $1.10 for a pack of 20,
, "9eause of increased taxes on tobacco and eam·
· _.Ing to offset a reduction in the tax on diesel fuel.
WEARE A
~·l'TION Tu;\}·
After you have decided
where you will go and for
how long, follow these
suggestions to insure
having a better vacation.
Visit your physician for
a check-up and advice on
which medicines you
must bring wath you for
any regular or emergen·
cy need. At the same
time aet the Important
"Booster Shots," to make
certain you are protected
against the serious
catchable diseases. Also,
get a dental check-up.
Next. drop in and let us
help you select a good
first aid kit. an anti-bug
lotion and your other
personal products wlucb
YOUR DOCTOR CA~
PHONE US when you
need a medicine. Pick up
your prescription if
shopping nearby, or we
will deliver promptly
without extra cha rge. A
great many people
entrust us with t heir
prescriptions. May we
compound and dispense
yours~
PAU UDOPHAaMACT
"-Dthwf J51 ........... ...........
641-1 ..
HOLLOWAY
Once, parents tried 'to
bring up their children.
Now they try to keep up
with them. •••
Vacations a r e great
levelers. The person who
takes one returns just as
broke as the person who
stayed home because he
couldn't a fford to go
away.
•••
Bumper sticker: "Fight
poverty -: stay sinf(le."
•••
A s uccessful person Is
one who went ahead and
did the things Uie rest or
us never quite got around
to. • ••
.<""lown IA usually divided
by a railroad, a main
street, and a lot or
opinions. ••• He re's how we see it:
you'll find Uie best selec-
tion of quality Ures right
here at nre City, 1950
Newport, ~ta Mesa.
~Office Condominiums For Sale
Onemllewest
of South Coast Plaza.
~
Ll\KE~
Superior Quality two-story office condominiums offer 1,500 to
15,000 SQ ft. of flexible, easily customized space fo r purchase.
Design features incl ude patios, balconies, individualized air
conditioning. continuous perimeter windows, and preferred
executive parking .
The 33 -acre. 750.000 SQuare foot pro;ect, blends lakes, streams
and landscaping in a prestigious, professional setting close to a
variety of restaurants, freeways, shopping and services.
Lake Center offers the tax benefits and advantages of owner-
ship along with 85% financing at low Interest rates. Broker
cOOPeration invited .
FOft IH'°"MATION CALL FftOtT lf'eHCI TitlNIN 714 641-1111
A ~nt of California P9cfflc Properties
Save
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79~~
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non-add key. With one roll of thermal paper.
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SEC Commi.!sioner Barbara S. Thoma&
Carter civil
suits dropped
Merger. atmosphere changes
WASlllNGTON (AP) -The Justice Depart-
ment has dropped two antitrust suits filed by the
Carter administration, demonstrating what of-
ficials acknowledge is "a more favorable at-
mosphere for mergers" under the Reagan ad-
ministration.
The decision to drop the two cases was made
by Assistant Attorney General William Baxter.
whose appointment as chief of the department's
antitrust division in March marked a virtual ball
to the filing of major new antitrust cases.
The first case dropped on Wednesday was a
civil antitrust suit challenging the 1979 acquisition
of Glen·Gery Corp. of Reading, Pa., by Ibstock-
Johnson Ltd. of Great Britaln. Both companies
manufacture facing brick. Glen-Gery controls 14
percent of the Northeastern U.S. market while
lbstock-Johnson, through a subsidiary, controlled
about 6 percent.
Combining firms of that size violated the an-
titrust guidelines used by the Justice Department
since 1968, but Baxter decided that .. the level of
concentration in the market involved was too low
to support any reasonable prediction that the
merger would serve to lessen competition."
The second case dropped was a civil suit
against Mack Trucks Inc. and its National Dis-
tributor Advisory Council. The suit charged Mack
with setting up a vertical price-fixing scheme with
the council. which represented the independent
distributors appointed by Mack to sell and service
Mack trucks and replacement parts.
The Carter administration had alleged that
Mack's arrangement with its distributors involved
eurtailment of competition, since Mack also is a
distributor of its trucks and parts.
In dismissing the case, Baxter said be did not
consider that .vertical pricing arrangements, such
as arrangements between manufacturers and dis-
tributors, necessarily "impair the efficiency of
mark~ts or lessen the welfare of consumers."
Furthermore, he said manufacturers can have
their own distribution channels without necessari·
ly engaging in competition with an independent
distributor.
Department spokesman Mark Sheehan said
Baxter had reviewed the two cases at the request
of lawyers for the defendants. Other cases under
review also m ay be dismissed in the future,
Sheehan said.
Only four new antitrust cases have been filed
since Baxter took office, according to department
records. That compares with 25 filed by the Carter
administration during the comparable period in
1977 and 14 brought by the Nixon Justice Depart·
menl during the same period in 1969.
The four Reagan administration cases involve
price-fixjng charges against highway pavers in
Kansas and Tennessee and resulted from in·
vestigations begun by the Carter administration.
''There's no question that businesses see a
more favorable atmosphere for mergers and ac·
quisilions," said one Washington lawyer who
specializes in antitrust law.
"I'm having to restrain the enthusiasm of
some of my clients for mergers, by reminding
them that even if the government isn't likely to sue
them, private firms still can," said the lawyer,
who asked not to be identified.
Baxter agreed. "In many senses, there is a
more favorable atmosphere for mergers," he said.
The staff of a Cabinet-level task force bas
recommended that the White House drop an an-
titrust suit against the American Telephone & Tele-
graph Co., but Baxter bas vehemenUy opposed halt-
ing the litigation. A final task force recommendation
has not yet been completed, but a decision is expect~
edsoon. .
If the case is dropped, "I think you'll see
widespread resignations in the antitrust division,"
said a department staff attorney, who asked not to
be identified.
Some economists contend that the antitrust
laws, based on concepts of the 1980s, are now hin·
dertng the ability of American fl.nns to compete in
world markets.
Baxter sald Tuesday that the small number of
antitrust suits flied since be took office should not
be taken u an Indication that other cases won't be
brou1ht in the future.
He said be didn't think the number of cues
filed "la greaUy significant. The work here tendl
to be reactive. It respondl to what corporations
do."
Baxter said it wu ponibfe that hil prect.
ceasor, Sandy Lltvack, "P\Wbed to 1et tbe deck.I
cleared before he left. I 1lmply haven't bad many
recommendations from tbe staff."
The antitrust chief bu received fewer pro-
poaall for lawaulta becaue be and Attorney
Geae.ral William French Smith have iDdlcated that
they will reject proposalt that ml&bt have been ap-
proved tn the paat, aatd the atatt attorney.
Baxter ttu sald he object.a to several featur•
of tbe Carter admlniltratlon'• antitr'Ult POUcl•,
partJcularly thole hamperiq mer1en. between
firms ln unrelated lndu1trln and ''vertical" mer1en, where a nrm ..U to acquire another
firm bl a separate branch ol tbt 1ame t.adultrJ.
Tbe Reacan admlniltradoa'1 ftllnc of four new
anUtnllt suit.I aloce llarcb compares 11itb JS ru.ct
b)' tb• Cuter adminiltradcm durtnl tbe compara·
bl• period In lm and 14 broul)at y the Nl100
Juaice Department durtq the .. • perSod in i•.
ac er son
reveals in the
--=---• -• -.. -... ---.. ----
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 9, 1981
~lition of insider trading sought
BJ 'ODI CADENHEAD ..................
The flnt priority of the Securities and Ex-
chanee Commission should be to abollah stock
trad.lnl by "losiden" who have unfair conlidential
information about a company, Comml11ioner
Barbara S. Thomae told a Newport Beach au-
dience Wednesday:
Speaklne at a Newport Harbor Chamber of
Commeri:e luncheon at the Balboa Bay club, the
:W-year-old commlsaloner said that insider tradin1
has left many people with the lmpreaalon they
don't stand a fair chance in the stock market.
"At the moment the market looks like a race
track and people don't 10 to the race track without
a tip," aaid Ma. Thomas.
Callin& the fight against in.sider tradine an
"unwlnna6le battle" Ma. Tbomu promised to
make It her No. 1 priority and to try and convince
new SEC enforcement chief John M. Fedders to do
the same.
Also oo the list of prioriUea oullined by the
commlsaloner is the simplification of corporate
dlscloeure requirements so small bualness can
enter the pub.lie market more quickly and poten-
tial investors can better understand the rtau of
buying a company's stock.
By the end of summer the SEC hopes to
p\iblish new regulations that would enable email
businesses to complete sell registration pro-
cedures wit.bin two days instead of the current six
months, she said.
An honor graduate from New York University
School of Law, Ms. Thomas became the second
woman to serve on the commitalon durln1 ltl
year history. She was appointed last October
then President Jimmy Carter to succeed Robe
S. Kannel.
Ms. Thomas piade an lmpualooed plea f
young lawyers to join the SEC, saying that many
are being lured away from the public sector by the I
substantial salaries offered by private law flrml.o\ ~
During her three-day stay on the Weal Cot~
Ms. Tt\Omas sald she hoped to encourage at leatl "'
couple of experienced attorneys to join the SEC. •4
Pu t a few words to work for you '''(f1
m the Daily Pilat~
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Heritage Bank would like to thank you for helping us become
$212 million strong. So to our founders, directors, stockholders
and depositors, thank you for your support. Thank you for your
loyalty. And thank you for your confidence. Thanks to you,
Heritage Bank has grown to become an eight branch system
with $212 million dollars in assets.
THE UNCONVENnONAL BANK.
.... , ........ # ....
Herit~e Bank
Member FDIC
'
..
'
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·--·---~· . ... . •" ••••••• , ..... '"'9 .~
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday. July 9. 1981
' HOT OFF THE PRESSES -Treasurer of the
: United States Angela Buchanan and
: Treasury Secretary Donald Regan hold a
sheet of the first $1 bills to carry both their
A,.~
signatures. The bills came off the press at
the Bureau of Engraving and Printing in
Washington.
S&U suffer legal setbacks
' . SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -A series of state
:appeals court decisions allowing five property
;buyers to assume old, low-interest mortgages on
:their purchases have dealt a major blow to the
•federally chartered savings and Joan industry's
:legal battle against the practice.
In rulings covering a broad range of issues
:raised by the industry. a 4th Appellate District
:court of Appeal panel here found unanimously that
.a federal charter does not exempt a savings and
Joan association from pertinent state law.
. While acknowledging the'Federal Home Loan
I Bank Board's congressionally delegated authority
•to regulate federal S&Ls, Justice Marcus Kau!-
• man's opinion added: .. It is another thing entirely
!to say that, by virtue of its federal charter, a
!federal savings and loan association is not re·
lquired to abide by the state law of real property
'" .
,
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Nev/PORT BEACH
714 -631-3651
..
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Open 1'2 to 8 daily
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Aaw tr...._ S.---... C• w
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TRAINED •••
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CONFIDENCE
·• Dncrtbt'I Our Cutt omen• f nlJnp
About TAB.
I
TAB OPERATORS W1U .
• Ta.kc M.s'Mga • Ta.kc Ordtrt • Quote Pr1cn
• Rct.y Ca lit • Make A~polntment1 • T eltit· •
and f .almllt S.hlic. • Secpcrs for an
Southern California • W•k•·up Service.
Rota ond Savi« to At Vour Nttd.
and mortgages in which it does business."
The San Bernardino court round specifi caUy
that the federally chartered S&L's must adhere to
the state Supreme Court's 1978 Wellenka!Y'p ~e·
cis1on which proh1b1ted state-chartered saVJngs tn·
stitutions from endorcing almost all "due-on-sale"
contract clauses. which require a mortgage to be
paid off when the properly 1s sold
Attorneys for all parties agreed that they im·
proved chances for a home buyers' victory on the
issue in the state Supreme Court. especially since
they follow by less than a month a similar ruling
by a San Francisco appeals court.
The state high court has not yet decided
whether to hear any cases on the issue. and if it
declines to do so the appeals court decisions would
effectively become law.
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an lhe ~ Piiat
... . . ... ,. . . '
-~
Inflation rate easing I
creaaes ln meat prlces. " ( WASHINGTON CAP) -Economlata are en-
couraged by the latest government report abowln1
inflation euina at the wholeute level, but they
warn that food price• probably will cllmb more
tbla year.
"We certainly are seelnc lnnatlon coming
down gradually," said Sandra Shaber. senior
economist at Chue Econometrica.
"It's senerally good oewa on lnfiatJon," said
Allen Sinai, vice president and senior economist at
Data Resources lnc. In Lexiniton, Mass. "It con·
firms that we are clearly into sln1le-dlglt territory
-probably permanently."
The report, released Tuesday by the Labor
Department, said wholesale prices for flnlahed
goods -goods ready for sale -roee 0.6 percent ln
June, oo a seasonally adjusted basis, for an annuaJ
rate of 6.9 percent. That was an increase over
May's 4.6 percent annual rate.
Food prices, showing almost no net change
from Noverrtber through May, were up 0.5 percent
in June for products ready for retail sale
Analysts had been forecastlne that overall
food prices would climb this year to ren ecl in-
"We can expect Lo see food inflation accel••~
over the second half of the year," aald Ed...-d
Yardeni, cblef economist and vice president o(tbe
brokerage firms of E. F . .Hutt.on & Co. lnc.
Wholesale prices rose 10.2 pe.rcent for the
12·month period ending last month, the depart-
ment said. They increased 11.8 percent for a\l. of
1980.
The 1967 -based Producer Price Index for
finished goods the measure of inflation at t.bt
wholesale level -rose to 2119.9 ln June beflDli
seaaonaJ adjustment. That meam aooda co1t.b•
$10 at wholesale ln 1967 cost $216.99 lut month. ~'
Energy prices, which fell ln May for the
time in more than three yeara, gained a 1maU 11
percent last month, the department said. ~·
heating oil prices rose 0.4 percent alter a 1.2 #f·
cent decline In May. Gasoline prices were downJ.a
percent, less than May's 1.8 percent decline •• In-
creases were reported in prices of natural 1aa.' ..
Those prices should s tay Oat or decline ifl..fcbe
months ahead, Sinai said. "Energy prices s~ld
beh ave quill' well during the rest or the year .'' • ,.
·.
Cable TV verdict reversed ..
HOUSTON (AP> A federal judge has thrown
out a S6 3 million damage award to a cable
television company that complained it had been
unfairly squeezed out of business here by the
mayor, the city and another cable TV company
Last February a federal jury agreed with
former Texas Democratic Party Chairm an Bill
Goldberg and his Alntiated Capital Corp., saying
the defendants cons pired to profit from Houston's
lucrative cable TV market in such a way as to ex-
clude Ci<>ldberg's company.
But U.S. District Judge Carl 0 . Bue reversed
the monetary damages Tuesday. saying he could
not follow the jury's logic However. Bue did not
exonerate defendants in the case.
Goldberg said he would appeal Bue's ruling to
the 5th US. Circuit Court of Appeals.
The jurors found that Mayor Jim McConn, the
city and Gulf Coast conspired "in unreasona·
ble restraint of tr ade to limit competition" in
violation of federa l Jaw. But they also decided that
Gulf Coast Cable Television did not violate federal
antitrust law when it divided the city into five sec·
tors with other companies.
Bue sajd the j urors had no evidence for a find·
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
ing of conspiracy if they did not object to the pt~
to divide the city •1l '
·'The evidence demonstrates clearly that ,t,j\J
mayor and the city not only supported the lob~I
efforts of Affthated's competitor but aleo manipulat~ certain aspects of the conspiracy.''
the judge said
But he added, "This court rinds no evidtnce
ap<irt from the boundary agreements of a con·
sp1racy which caused harm lo Goldberg."
Jn settling a squabble that dated back to 1973,
the City Council agreed three years ago to allow
fi ve companjes to divide the city into sectors, 'With
each company getting its own territory.
Gulf Coast won the contract for the
southwestern section . the area sought l>Y
Goldberg, who then sued .
Bue said there was no independent evidenee ol
any conspiracy that damaged Goldberg presented
at the trial, beyond what was rejected by the Jury
when it decided that the boundary agreemeny
were not part of a conspiracy. •
The entire cabl e television deal In HoustOn is
now under scrutiny of a federal grand jury, wMch
has been holding secret sessions since June of ""9·
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--
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 9, 1881 s
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
1U01ATICNtl l•C1.111• THDHOll , ....... \'OH, ....... ,.,.,.,,,,, ..... ., .... HHOIT .... ClllCUtllUI noc• liCllAllHI AllD • 'Oltfll l'f fMI llAH AllO llllTllllf
anks' hooks
open to owners
TMI ii the conctuno.a of a hoc).pGrl N1W•.
U you own control ol the oel&bborbood bank
where I do all my major financial bu1ine11 -•
maintain my personal and (ii any) bualne11 deposit
accounts, arranee installment loam, have my home
morteage, etc. -you can ft.nd out all you want to
know about my financial setup witb.i.o minutes. My •
financial life is truly an open book to you and the
subordinates you desienate to investigate me.
You need uk no one's permission nor need you
discl«>1e to any authority that you are seekin1 t.hb •
information. The books of the bank are at your
disposal and I
am in those ~ books.
So it goes
for the tens of i:-·a. __ :, millions of ··~
others who are gynna PllJll customers of LIUI
U .S . bank s
from coast to coast.
There la no accusation ol wrongdoing, explicit or
implicit, current or future, in these comments. You
could play a game of dirty peek-a-boo with my
financial affairs whether you are a bank officer who
is a descendant of • 1eneral in the American
Revolution or the brilliant soo ol a wealthy Arabian
, with a superb U.S. education.
But while I may trust neither of you with intimate
knowledge of all my financial affairs, should there be
an international crisis, would I trust you, a
fellow-citizen, more than I would trust you, a citizen
of a potential enemy of my eountry?
If you, the foreign bankers who have boueht
control of my local bank, want to conceal any facts
and figures about your own bank at home from my ~
nation's regulatory agencies, you may do so -
·without fear of censure or Wltlavory rumors. We
cannot demand you pubmb figures you presumably
don't even have to reveal to your own government!
<We're trying, but so far without results.)
Yet, of course, our own U.S.·controlled banks '
must disclose those same figures to our own .·!"
regulatory age.ncies.
We can force our U.S.-controlled banks to
disclose how financially sound they are to our
regulators so steps can be taken, if necessary, to
keep them sound . We cannot compel
foreign-controlled banks in the United States to
submit to the same disciplines. Nevertheless, our
regulatory agencies continue to approve foreign
takeovers of U.S. banks without obtaining the facts
that seem essential to the safe management of any
enterprise.
If you are the members of a board of directors
which sets the policies of my neigbborbOod bank, and
my town (city, county, state) needs the bank's
financial s upport for a highly desirable
improvement, we -your friends, customers,
suppliers, neighbors -can compel you to come
through with your support, or else.
But would this bold if you, the board members,
were citizens of a foreign power? Would you be so
sensitive? Maybe yes, maybe no.
On and on I could go with these poison-tipped
questions about the scope and persistence of the
takeovers.
------------.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 9, 1981
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. 1
Daily Pilat
THURSOAY,July9, 1981
Team tennis is off
to a decent start, MOVIES 05 says Larry King. See D2. TELEVISION 07
,.,...,......
Man who killed baseball?
Owners' representative Grebey in national fishbowl •
By WILL GRIMSLEY The owners are demanding "com · puffing man wtlh steel-gray hair, eyes to
•• ...... c.n1a , r mensurate" compensation for players lost match and a tough skin that comes with
The baseball strike bas created a great on the open mart. The playera are resiat-more than a quarter of a century of bang.
national void, changed the social lives of ing any change that might inhibit bidding ing beads with union bosses across a clul-
millions and even affected WaU Street, but tered table.
for one man in the middle It's been a "liv-ing heU." 'J ff d d [ b ·z He had been with General Electric, one
"1 don't mind being caUed 'tough,' I am 0 en e . 01 of America's industrial giants, for 20 years
don't mind if they say I'm a management inside. I can't desc""1be before he was plucked by baseball's
representative, but when they caU me a 1 " hjerarchy to handJe the free agency hot
'liar' and a 'snake' and cast aspersions on how h 't h rt ' potato in 1978.
my integrity,'' said Ray Grebey, the direc-mUC l U S · He had no Idea what he was getting into.
tor of lhe club owners' Players Relationa His earlier negotiations were held in
Committee, "I am offended. 1 boil inside. I for talent. Thus a 28-day midseason relative privacy, and even lhe 109-day GE
can't describe how much it hurts. stalemate. strike by electrical workers in the 1960s
"And my whole family suffers with "I am a labor negotiator, in the went virtually unnoticed -except for
me." employee relations field /or 28 years,.. those involved until it was setUed.
Grebey is being harassed as "The Man says Grebey. "f am only doing the job for Now he finds himself in a fishbowl, in
Who Killed BasebaJI." which f was h.ired. And that isn't to have the glare of a national spoWght, attacked
He is the spearhead in lbe current drive Rusty Staub (New York Mets' player by a segment of a frustrated public,
to regain for club owners some of the ad-representative) say, 'What a nice guy Ray maligned by the press and abandoned by a
vantages lost to free agency by arbitrator Grebey is. Look what be has given us."' panicky fraction of the 26 club owners who
Peter Seitz' ruling in December 1975. Grebey, 53, is a slightly built, pipe-(See MAN, Page 02>
Grebey's
schedule
loaded
NEW YORK <A P > -ll
figured lo be another long day
for Ray Grebey. chief labor
negotiator for major league
baseball's club owners.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---';.._:_~~~~~-
Transpac
skippers
half way
By ALMON LOCKABEY
0.11, P'Mtl ...... WrOw
TENNIS ANYONE? -Former soccer star Pele cuts loose
with a backhand while playing tennis at his soccer camp
at Manhattanville College in Purchase, N. Y. The former
Cosmos star was taking a break from instructing young
soccer players.
Grebey was due back on lhe
witness stand in a National
Labor Relations Board hearing
on an unfair labor practice
charge. Then. he was to meet in
late afternoon, and probably into
the night, with the 26 club
owners who had gathered for a
briefing on the negotiations, or
lack of them, and the four days
or hearings.
Brisk northeast trade winds
picked up the 70 boats in lhe
Transpac Los Angeles to
Honolulu yacht race Wednesday
as most of the fleet were sailing
close to the half way point of the
2.225 mile course.
The race for first to finish
bet ween Fred Preiss· Christine
and Nick Frazee's Merlin was a
question mark as Christine
failed to report at the Wednes-
day rollcall.
Surf kidded around
-and it cost theDl
The NLRB, acting in behalf of
the striking Major League
Players Association, is seeking
to force the clubs--to open their
financial records for examina-
tion by the union because or re-
peated statements by various
baseball officials concerned
about the sport's economics.
Chier administrative law judge
Melvin Welles is hearing the
case.
Race officials aboard the
escort vessel Jubilee said it was
believed lhat Christine was hav-
ing radio transmission problems
as her signaJ had been weak for
the previous two days.
AT LAST REPOllT the two
yachts were fighting a see-saw
battle for the elapsed time lead
with Christine holding about a
15-mile advantage. But as the
yachts encounter the trade
winds with their sometimes
huge following seas, the advan-
tage was expected to shift to
Merlin, an uJtra-light displace-
m ent yacht capable of surfing
down the big seas.
Controversy mars 2-1 loss to Chiefs
By CURT SEEDEN
Of .. DM!y,.... .....
While baseball bas been dead
al Anaheim Stadium for nearly
a month, soccer may have bad
the cord pulled on lt.s life support.
system Wednesday nieht, com-
pliments or the Atlanta Chiefs.
The California Surf, victims of
two strai.mt road defeats, bad a
chance to get well in a hurry
with three straight home games,
starting with the Chiefs.
But Atlanta, and in particular
Brian Kidd, did just about every-
thing right while the Surf suf-
fered through one of its more un· .
SOCCER
inspired performances in a 2·1
setback.
''I thought we played poorly in
every aspect or the game," a
glum Coach Laurie Calloway
said foUowing the loss.
THE DEFEAT left the Surf
wjtb an 8-13 record and Ued for last place In the NASL's Western
l>ivision . with the Sari Jose
Earthquakes. And only a goal by
Jan Van Der Veen with 30
seconds left on the clock gave
the Surf the necessary point lo
avoid holding down laat place by
itself. Yet, despite the numerous
problems encountered by the
Surf, both offensively and de·
fensively, and the Chiefa' ability
to control the same, it took a
hlshly disputed soal to provide
the difference in the final score.
Kidd. wbo bad talUed at
26:4' lo ctve the Cblefa a 1-0 ad·
vantaee. may be the first player
ln lbe NASL to aulfer from SOC·
cer elbow.
At leut, that'• lbe contention
or moat of tbe Surf players.
· e1peclally 1oalkeeper Alan
Mayer, who claimed Kidd'•
aecond •oa.J -the eventual wlo· aln1 tally -wu batted ln by
Kidd'• arm.
THE PLAY occurred at 55:40
With the Surf 1tlll wlthln ea11
Jtrlklq distance ot the Cblet1.
With lttul Furpbjh ••Ddlnc a .... tn front • of t SQrf net.
IUdd and a couple urf dtfead·
ert aU ...t for tbe baU at the
aametlme.
Wben tbeJ came ctowa. Kidd tud..t in tbe '1cbdty ol UM pl
line wtua I.be ball btDeat.b blm. 1t
appeand &Mt bid Dudod tail
MU tau U. Mt wtt1a lafe .....
wblcb II t...acau, a baacl NU. ror a ma wtua bla Ja• wind iht • ....., to a lradure a leW
...... ...,. ba4 pl~ to .. , ............ ,.
"Kidd fell backwards and
bumped it -probably not inten·
lionally -but he still hit it in
with h.is arm," explained Mayer
after ~e contest. "I looked over
at the linesman and he had h.is
yellow flag up. So I started a
quick counter attack. But the ref-
e ree rules it's a 1otoal.
"THE REFEREE went over
to the linesman and he (the
linesman) didn't say anything to
him. He didn't have the guts to
tell the referee," Mayer con-
tinued. "If be hasn't put the flag
up ( wh.ich would signal either an
offsides caU or the hand ball),
that's fine. But he definitely had
it up.··
·'That ball was already in the
goal ," countered Kidd who
picked up his 17th and 18th
tallies or the year. "I was
already in lbe net when it (the
ball> bounced in."
Asked why he was credited
with the goal if it bad already
crossed the line, Kidd said,
"Well. I bad touched it just
before."
THE GOAL basically nailed
the lid shut on the Surf's coffin,
but CaUoway refused to lay all
the blame on the controversial
score.
"You can point a finger at It, I
guess, but we still played poor-
ly," he said.
Kidd, the No. 2 scorer in the
NASL tbis season with 40 points,
kept Mayer busy most or the
ni1bt. With barely half a minute
gone on the clock, be blasted a
shot wbicb Mayer smolbered.
Thirteen minutes later, be
took a shot polnt blank at the
Surf keeper, and again Mayer
(See SURF, Pa1e 0%)
GREBEY SPENT the entire
day testifying Wednesday, deny-
ing the accuracy or saying he
was unable to recall a number of
articles in which he was quoted
about the failing financial condi·
lions of some teams.
The cross-examination by
players association attorney
George Cohen traced Grebey's
early days as director of the
Player Relations Committee,
bargaining arm or the owners.
Cohen asked about discussions
Grebey had with various club of·
fi cials as part of the negotiator's
orientation and introduction to
his job a nd subsequent in-
terviews printed in a number or
newspapers.
Each time. Grebey said be
either could not recall or vouch
for the accuracy of quotes at-
tributed to him in newspapers
s u c h as the Boston Herald
American, Los Angeles Times
and Chicago Sun Times.
G&EBEY DID SAY be bad
discussed baseball's escalating
salary scales with a majority of
lbe clubs after he was hired and
said the conversations had
'·reflected resentment and con-
cern." ,
He said many of his dis·
cussions centered on "keeping
player salaries from escalating
the way lbey bad."
When attorney Cohen asked
wby, Grebey said, "That seems
obvloua. To control costs."
The players association bas
argued that mana1ement's pro-
posal which would supply a ma-
jor league player as compensa-
tion for a ran.king free aeeot
1isnln1 with another team ls an
attack oo the barSainln1 power
and moblUty of the players.
. ,.,...,.....
Jimmy Connon will be stroking for the U.S. in Davis Cup play.
Connors' decision
boosts U.S. chances
NEW YORK (AP) -"I've
always been a loner. I'm not a
team man in any way," says
Jimmy Connors. But Connors'
decision to join the U.S. Davis
Cup team for the first time since
1976 bas boosted his country's
chances in this weekend's series
against defending champion
Czechoslovakia.
Connors and Wimbledon
champion John McEnroe will
play the four singles matches for
the U.S. team, while veterans
Stan Smith and Bob Lutz ol San
Clemente will play the doubles
in the best-of.five quarterfinal
competition at the National Ten-
nis Center. Two 1ln1les matches
will be played Friday, tbe
doubles Saturday and the re·
malning two sln,les matcbea
Sunday on the ut, cement
court.a.
"There's a lot of experience oo
our team," observed Artbur
Ashe, the noa-playlnJ captain ol
the U.S. squad. "All tbe playen
we have here are used to pres-.
sure situations and play well on
cement. Jimmy won the Open
here in 1978 and John won it here
the last two years, so they've
shown they play well here."
Czechoslovakia's key player is
22-year-old Ivan Lendl, who is
ranked fourth in the world
behind McEnroe, Bjorn Bors
and Connors. Tomas Smid,
Pavel Slozil and Stanislav
Birner complete the
Czechoslovakian team.
"We have two strategies,"
said Ashe. "One strategy Is to
beat Smid twice in singles and
win the doubles. The other
strategy is to try to win 5--0. But
Lendl is so good it's not out of
the realm of reality that he
could win two singles. That br·
ings us back to our first
atrategy."
And that strategy relies on
winning the doubles, where
Smith and Lutz have a 12·1 re-
cord in Davia Cup competlUon
dating back to 1968.
Merlin was reporting winds of
15 knots from the northeast with
three to four foot seas from the
same direction.
Other yachts in the fleet were
reporting winds from 12 to 20
knots, depending on their posi-
tion.
The first yacht would have to
cross lhe finish line off Diamond
Head on lhe island of Oahu by 11
p. m. (POT) Saturday lo equal or
better lhe elapsed time record of
8 days, 11 hours set by Merlin in
the 1977 race
BUT FROM ALL reports, that
record ls likely to faU lo the 65-'
foot catamaran, Double Bullet in
the Multihull Transpac race, an
entirely different contest than
the Transpacific Yacht Club's
ra ce for monohulls. Double
Bullet, skippered by Bob Hanel
of Los Angeles, was last report-
ed about 200 miles ahead of
Merlin.
The two races started at lbe
sam e time July 3 near Los
Angeles Harbor.
As the race neared the
halfway point the corrected time
standings began to take on more
significance. The leader at Wed·
nesday's rollcall was Mike Ken-
nedy's Audacious from Dana
Point Yacht Club.
THE YACHT Drifter, wbicb
dropped out of the race Sunday
with a damaged rudder was re-
ported back In her berth in Lona
Beach Wednesday. Drifter, tbe
elapsed Ume winner In 1!179 was
one of the contenders for the
first to finish in lhls year's race.
Judge says Ellenberger was a cog in the machine
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -Tbe
Judie called convicted former UnJvertt·
ty of New Mexico ba1ket.ba1J Coach
Norm Ellenbet•er a co1 in the ma·
cblne, Ind did not put hlm ln JaU be·
cau1e b• refu1ed to be part or
"hypocrily ...
rled • maximum sentence of 2·10 yean
ln prlson.
commeota, aaid, "I wa1 amued at b1t
perception." He Hid Baiamonte'1 com-
ments were what he had wanted to
and Hid the former coach would not be
required to make reatltutlon.
It wu t.be 'ODlY tblnl &Uenber•er
liked about tbe trial, ud be aald Wed·
Deida)" be 1WJ plau to appeal h1I COO·
YieUoQI.
A diltrict court Jury returned IUilty
ftrcUdl ,..._.., • 21 couota ot lraud
Ud m• .... , .... pubUc vouebert, all
1~re1on1 •.
l'M JWJ al8o found EU•berlW luo-
CMl • .. ....._t ol rraud o.er •.JOO. • Wnl...,._ feloe)' Utat tould baft car·
t'Tbe queaUoo la bow fair la it to ln·
carcerate ln prlaon a man tor cloint
what almo.t euryooe in tbe community
wanted blm lo do -nameJy wln buket·
ball ••mes at whatever COit.'' DUtrlct
Judie Pbllllp Baiamonte 111.d befor.
pronouncln• sentence.
"I'm belnc uk..S to •entence a mu
wbo wu only ooe co• in the entln
macblne calJ..t coU .. e ba.ll. I'm belq
uked to MDtece • mu beca ... be sot
cau1ht, not beeaue bi.I CODdUct wu UD·
aceeptable.'' Balamonte 1ald.
Tbe Judie caUed Uall "la1'POClta1"
and 1aJd be WCMlld not be a perb &o lL
ll:Ueaberpr, uked about tbe Jud,.'•
come out ot the trial. ·
"f'm not auJlty. The com~1ioa ot
the court didn't cban1• that," Ell•·
ber•er 1aid ln aMOUACLDI he would
puraue an appeal. •'I doo.'t ..,... J 1houJd bave a.. ....
tenctd al all. r do not believe 1l er ...
t.be Cao.I Md .... tat ltill OG top ol 'fll1
•bead. I'm ~I to do eve~ pou,l·
bl• to= lt, .. be 1ald. Bala defernd Hntwe I« oae
year and 1ald t.bal at Ute tad ol ua.t
period, aU COUD&I ac•t &&l9blqer
would be ctilm.l.ued. Ke abo placed "ti·
lenber,.r on unaupervlHd probaUoD
Ellenber1er, '8, could have recelved
maxlmum prison sentences ot 1·5 yean
OIJ each count.
"I cou.ld have received 105 yean. I
feol a lot better about tN1. I'm certa1n1y
pleaHd with Ulla part of t.be trlaJ. Some
other partl dld not ent.bu1t me too
much.'' a 1m1Uq EUenbeftW told re· portera 11 be emeried from tbt
coartroom.
BalamoDt• 1penl HHraJ mlnutn
bl11tlnf ..... eOIJ•I• aw.ties la Ulte
United Statet, cb1racterlu•1 lt 11
"minor leque but' Dl'Of•1toaa1.'. H•
Hid £U4Dber1er bad ~ ln a "b!P pr•11~er1lmoepbere.
-1
-. ~.. ..
D2 Otange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thureaay, July 9, 1$81
______________________ .,
Minor r o le on tap
for Cey -in movie
LOS ANGELES -Tbird • baseman Ron Cey or the DodCtn
could be making ht. acting debut
soon although he's been betore t.be •
public as a professional baseball player el.nee
1968.
··Baseball to me ii the most Important thing
in my life and I hope to play Just u 1001 as I
can," said Cey, who has been asked to t>lay a
minor role in a movie en·
UUed ''Serpent, the Ultimate
Thriller."
He'd be the detective
sidekick to Davlct Carradine,
who pJa.)'S the main role in
the mm, which was written
and ls beiDI directed and
produced by Larry Cohen,
who has bad the same triple
C role rune ttqles in the past.
ey Also i.n the movfe, beiq
filmed by Larco Productions, are Candy Clark,
Richard Roundtree and Michael Moriarty.
"I really don't know what kind of a role I'll
have, .. said the 33-year-old Cey, the man wlilo in
1973 finally solved the Dodgen' problems at
third base.
"I haven't bad any acting leaons and don't
have any experience, but I've been before the
public a lot."
Asked what might bappen if the players'
strike is ended, he said Wed.Deaday: "We'll
cross that bridge when we come to it. But moat
of the filming will be here, so I don't th.ink It will
be a problem."
Cey said the offer for the acting role "juat
came out or the blue.•·
Christenson undergoes surgery
Pblladelpbla PbUUea rlsbt· •
bander La.ny ~ bu UD·
derfone IW'IU'Y to repair a deviated
1eptum suffered when bt. OOH was brolten dur·
lna a bar fllbt ln St. Loull April t . . . New
York Yankees pltc.ber T .. •1 I.a. aaya be
teela the m-.Jor leape 1lrike will be over within
three daya becau.ae of ht. boa, Geerae S&ela·
breawr. "l lhi.nlt George can do it," aald John
. . . CbJca10 mayor la .. Byrae la tryin&
to arral\Be a benefit bueball game lh1J summer
betweeft' the CUbs and White Sox, but the idea
may die tor lack ol aancUoo from the White Sox
. . . General Mana1er Rau Pe&en of tbe
Baltimore Orioles 1u11e1ted that major league
teams be allowed to temporarily increase their
rosters beyond the 25-member Umlt once the
players' strike ia over, in addition to
propoaln• a two-tiered playoff ayatem to decide
the league championships and the participants
in a del&yed World Series . . . The San Diego
Padres may be a financial exception to the old
ada1e that evervbody loses in a strike. The
strike-insurance check for $38,000 comes every
day. Although t.be payments end Aue. 8, by then
the Padres' share of the $50 million policy tuen
out by t.be major leaeue owners wilJ be nearly
S2 million.
Quote of the day
Edmootoo Drillers owner Peter Pocklla·
toe, upon rehiring head coach Tlmo -
LlekoMI. 10 days an.er he bad fired blm:
"I may be impetuous, but I'm not stupid."
Italian. Kenyan share golf lead
Muslmo MneW of Italy and Ke·
nyan-bom Gary caJJen each fired a
four-under-par 68 Wednesday to
share the first round lead in the English Classic
golf tournament. American Tom Slet:~mann
was one ol eight players at 70 ... Gene LlttJer,
Arnold Palmer, Sam Snead and BWy Casper
are among the entries for tb'e 191Jl Senior Open, which begins today in lhrmmgbam,
Mich .... loAlule Caner says she enjoys jok·
ing with the spectators while competing on the
Ladles Profesaiooal Golt Association tour and
with 30 pro victories the '2-year-old isn't about
to chance her game, she says u she await·
ed today's opening of the Mayflower Classic in
Indianapolis .
JK-ing's big goal:
f respectability
' ! T earn concept gets decent start
~
% By EDZINTEL f Ol_D...., ...... MMt
I Judging by attendance figures
for the first two nights of Team
: Tennis this week, the league baa I got orr to a moderately SUC· t cessfuJ start. t Opening night al Los
Caballeros Racquet and Sports
Club in Fountain Valley drew
l ,724 fans to see the California
Oranges upset the Los Angeles
Strings, 31-28.
The following night, 1,600
turned out at the Forum to
watch the same two teams play
I to the same results, with the
I Oranges winning, 25·24. The
same night, over 3,000 went to
the San Diego Sports Arena to
watch the Oakland Breakers
1 edge the San Diego Friars. 23-22.
I In order for the league to I break even in its first season,
behavior at Wimbledon last week
has been mixed among Team
Tennis players.
Martina Navratilova or the
Los Angeles Strings feels that
the fines of up to $14,750 along
with a maximum three-week
su.pensioo are much too atroog.
"I don't think he acted that
badly," Navratllova, the out·
spoken native of Csechoalovalda
said. "The Engllab press blew it
all out of proportion. 1 think
Wimbledon bad it In for him.
"There are others on the
outside courts calling officials
worse things than what John
bas. J think maybe be should
learn when and when not to say
certain thinp but be didn't de·
serve what he got."
Ray GrebeJI
Oranges
can't s top
Billie J e an
l rENNIS ·~
Navratilova, ranked No. 3 in
the world, mentioned Jimmy
Connors and Ille Nastase aa ex-
ample5 of players who have got·
ten off easier than McEnroe.
OAKLAND <AP) -The
Oakland Breakers, led by Billie
Jean King , handed the
Baseball today
On lhia date ln baseball in 1988:
After retirtni the first 25 Crucaio Cube'
batten be faced, New York Meta ace Tom
Seaver saw his dreams of a perfect 1ame
ended u Jimmy QuaJls lined a nint.b·
lnnin' ain1le to left field. Seaver wound up
wlth a ooe-hitter as the Meta topped I.be
Cubs, 4--0, before a crowd of S9,083 at Shea
Stadium.
On this date in 1968:
The National League scored a 1-0 victory
over the American Lea1ue l.n the AU·atar
game at the Houston Aatrodome. WUlle
Mays scored the game's only run wt>en ht.
San Francisco teammate, Willie McCovey.
grounded into a double-play in the first in·
ning.
The winning National League team col·
lected only five bits, while the Americana
bad just three. ll was the first 1-0 came in
All-star history, as the two pitching 1talfa
combined for 20 strikeouts.
On this date in 19'6:
Ted Williams collected four bits, includ·
ing homers off Kirby Hilbe and blooper
ball specialist Rip Sewell, in the American
League's 12·0 All -star game rout of the Na·
tional League at Boston's Fenway Park.
Other AL heroes were Charlie Keller,
Vern Stephens and Joe Gordon, who bad
two RBI apiece. Bob Feller pitched two-bit
ball over three innings to pick up the vie·
tory, while Detroit ace Hal Newhouaer
1truck out four batters in three innings.
Today's birthday:
Kansas City outfielder Willie Wilson is 26.
Vranes basketball's newest millionaire
Danny Vranes of Utah became m basketball's newest millionaire Wed·
nesday when the top draft pick of the ·
Seattle SuperSonics signed a four-year contract.
Chosen fifth in the National Basketball Aaaocia·
lion draft June 8, Vranes signed a contract
estimated at $350,000 a season -a total of $1.4
million ... The Philadelphia 76ers have been
sold to the owner of a nutrition company. The
new owner is Harold Kats, 44, who owns and
operates Nulri-Systems, Inc., which markets
diet plans and reportedly earns $45 million an·
nually.
From Page 01
-------------
Banks records 57·7 triple jump
The triple )ump .. hardly track m
and field'• mott taahionable event,
but extrovert WUUe 8allb made lt
an excit.lna Oftl Wednetday aa be •ailed to tM
third lonaeat Jump In bl1tory, 57.7 (lf.55
met.era>. lt wu ooe lncb aborter u.an Bua'
American record aet two week• a10 tn
Sacramento. Tbe only other man to Jump
farther la Bruillan Joao de OUnlra, who wetlt
58-8~ in the 7,800-foot aJUtude ol Mexico City
six years ago . . . &&eve Oveu of Britain woo
tbe 1,500 meter race of the )(llan track meet ta
3:31.95, a half-eecond off h1I own world NCOl'd
. . . 'h'ack and Field received a bi' flnudal boost Wednesday when It wu announced that
an Italy-based clothln1 manufacturer wa1 pour-
ing more than S8 mUUoo lnto the sport over UM
next eipt years to outfit tbe United Stalel teamt.
The company, Robe di Kappa, HYI lt will provide
unitonm for the American men'a and womea'a
teams in all intemational compet.ltiom throu•b
~· includln• the '84 and '8801ymplc Games.
Rams sign No. 4 draft choice
The Rams signed Georpe LUJa • of Michiean, their No. 4 draft choice,
to a National League Football
League cootract. Terms of the pact for the 8-4,
2~0-pound lineman were not divul11d ...
Former heavyweight boxlna champion llalaam·
mad All says be is returning Lo the ring to provt
his last fight, a loss to Larry llol•ea, waa a
tlu.ke. The ex-champ is 39 . . . Harry Oar&en,
a world champion rodeo rider in the 1950s and
'60s, has died of cancer. He wu 56 ..• Veteran
hockey cent.er Bobby SbeebJI, who amassed 81
points during the 1978-79 season with the New
Haven Nighthawks, bas signed with the Loa
Angeles Kings·Nightbawks or1anization ... A
proposed sale of 36 percent of the New York
Islanders hockey team to a group whieh would
have included a cablevision company baa been
cancele<J."
Television, radio
No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Salt Laite City at
Phoenix, 7 p.m ., KMPC (710).
FRIDAY RADIO
Tennis -United States vs. Czechoslovakia
in quarterfinal Davis Cup matches, live reports,
3:50 p.m .. KNX 0070).
MAN WHO KILLED BASEBA LL? • • •
~
hired him and pay his salary.
A newspaper in his home town
of Chicago referred to both him
and the owners as "vermin" and
s aid, "Grebey dodges issues and
hides behind lies with the stealth
of a graverobber squirreling a
fortune away from his mother."
Another Chicago paper caJled
him a "snake" and a "liar."
A New York newspaper hlnted
that Grebey was after Com ·
missioner Bowie Kuhn's job
while another sought out mem·
bers of the electrical union in·
volved in the long GE strike to
paint him as being an "offensive
personality" with a "rigid
stance."
A "rigid stance" was just
what baseball owners were look·
ing for when time approached
for renegotiation or the Basic
Agreement.
"A friend in New York called
and asked how I'd lil<e to work
for baseball." Grebey recalled.
"l told him 'No. thanks.' that I
was very happy with my job
with GE. But he insisted that I
come to New York and have
lunch wi th som e baseball
peopie. I did.
"Then in December of 1977, J
got a call from Hawaii. where
the winter baseball meetings
were being held, and 1 was told
that the major league directors
bad voled unanimously to hire
me.
"I had an assignment to finish
for GE in Washington, D.C. So in
1978, I took the job, succeeding
John Gaherin. I have a contract
in my safe. I haven't looked at it
since J signed it.
Grebey inherited a mixed bag
of e mployers -some militants,
some mode rates, some e<>n ·
servatives -but all of them con-
cerned about escalating salaries
under free agency. He was told,
··Be tough.'·
When he did get tough, some
or the owners got jittery.
Edward Bennett Williams, dist·
inguis hed Washington, D.C ..
lawyer a nd owner of the
Baltimore Orioles, and Eddie
Chiles of the Texas Raneers, set
up a meeting with Kuhn. The
New York Yankees' George
SleinbreMer was invited to sit
in.
Williams said, "Baseball is in
the biggest crisis since the Black
Sox scandal." Chiles, rapping
Grebey, said, "Jn Texas, we
have Line workers. If they don't
do their job, we get new line
workers."
··As far as I know, Steinbren-
ner bas never said a bad word
about me," Grebey said. "Our
com millee reeeived mesa aces ot
support from 24 owners -all ex·
cepl Williams and Chiles.
"J am not concerned. I am do-
ing the job I'm paid to do. I have
never lied or done anything un·
derhandedly. My father gave me
a good name. That name is
worth more to me than anything
in this world."
~it's estimated that the average
I draw per match will have to be
around 2,000.
* * • Navratilova bad another com· California Oranges a 30·22 de· ~~~!~~~~~~ feat at the Oakland Coliseum ~
But Larry King, president of
j the new league, figures Team
Tennls doesn't have to break
even for it to survive.
: The main goal, according to 1
1
King, hus band of Oakland
player-coach Billie Jean King, is
1 to establish respectability for I the Team Tennis concept.
I If it can do that by continuing
, to draw the kind of crowds that
i. have so rar paid the relatively
high ticket prices, then in time,
Team Tennis will begin paying
for itself.
To accomplish that, there bu
been the usual public relations
g i m mlcks to bring in the
curious.
Monday night, the Oran,ea
gave away free seat cusblooa to
ease Lbe pain ot bavln1 to·ait OD
wood bench grandstands.
In the VIP room abon t.be
5tadium, a jau band cbumed
out sort sounds aa the well-to-do
sipped cocktails and at.e from
plates of hors d'oeuvres.
Meanwhile, the tennil wu u
exciting as could be expected,
considering several of tbe
p"yers had just returned from
Wimbledon, at leut one 1W11ut.-
ferlng from jet taa.
The hlthll(fbt, perhaps, came
during the womed'I doublet
match. Ahead five f••• to
\bree, t"e Oraa1e1 . Sharon
W alah had one of bet 1boel at·
cldentally slip ort durtq a rally.
Tbe Oran1et woo tbe pcUt
and whal would have bffa the
aet bad an umpire Ml caupt
1i1ht ol the IOOH aboe.
Upon tl)Ot.tlnC tbe 1boe. U..
umpire thouahl lbe 111au.v otW
for a le• .. cood1, UI• •·
DOUDced Ulal tM po&at .......
b ave to be ,....&arid.
The StrlDp ..._.. ... w'T' I
I.be point, the , ... ..S two,..
ceedln• 1amH before t'•
Oraoeea ftnalb' woa tM Mt••.
lle·bteaUi' • A C1lrious call llillllld,._. IW
Nd . .,....bei'i GI..._ Ch =· ht:flM • _.. la01 SOM
Jll•tda. • •
ReMUoa Lo'*
plaint to make Monday night
after playing three sets on 1.o.
Caballeros man-made turf.
"It's dqeroua," she said, "I
hope they decide to take the turf
off because it's too easy to get
hurl."
From Page 01
SURF ...
came up with the ball.
Then at 4J>:66, Furpby tripped
Van Der Veen In the penalty
area, giving the Surf its best op-
portunity of the night. However,
Chiefs goalkeeper Graham Tuti
dove to bis left to deflect Paulo
Cesar's penalty shot. It was the
aecon4 time th1a season Cesar
baa 'tni'lnd a penalty 1hot
a1aln1t the<!blefs.
Ktdd then scored bia first coal
on an aulat from Brian
Alderson at'Jll:'4.
The Surf 1pent tbe next 30
minutes mluina on Ill puaes
and trying to keep Kidd and
Paul Child trom flncllnl the net
a1aln.
0 Wbenever we tried to auert.
ourHlv•, they (AUanta> would
set too mucb 1paM to break out and counter on ua," Calloway ei_ptalned.. ••A tot of Ute ~
lem1 ._v.a~ becaue Kidd
and AJdenon ;.., farther up.
''We plqed a very fOOd team.
Tbe.y work "">' bira for ucb
othe•. 1'beJ -.ened to wtn,"
Calloway edded.
Tbe .tctarJ moved &be Cbltf1
lnto sole ,.. .. ,ton ol ftnt place
In the 9oatbern Dlvilloo with a
11·1 nmtd and IOI polnta. Fort
Lauder4a1•, Idle WednetdaJ
ll!Ol~ ..... wltb" ,.... ,'"9 9*f iDUlt baH ..... f..i· ial a IMdl deja YU followtal tM
eoetM. TM lut time llle two
cJaM ma -ID AUuta tM
Cbltfl ... a.1 .............. Hored bJ IJdd, and Cuar ....... .., .-llh1 kldl ..... ........ ,. .............. _ '·"' ........ , ..... , .. AulJMlla a.dtam Uld s.• la
MIMta • , .....
'
Wednesday night.
The Breakers won the first
four sets of the match and led
24·15 going into the fifth and
final set, women's doubles.
At that point, the Oranges
came back as Barbara Potter
and Sharon Walsh scored a 7.5
win over King and Ilana KJoa.
Tbe defeat ended Kini'• five-set
team tennis winning streak and
forced the match into overtime.
The Breakers won the first
overtime game and the match
on King's serve.
Oakland got the upper hand
early when King and John
Austin teamed lo defeat
Barbara Potter and Sherwood
Stewart, 6-t, as Stewart had hi•
serve broken twice, in the sixth
and loth games.
Autin, playini for the injured
Peter Renner, also teamed with
Friu Buehnlng for a 6--3 men's
POCKET
PAGER
COVERS
FOUR
COUNTIES
~·co .. LA. co.
SAM l lAMAaotHO CO..
IJVHSIDICO.
s2000 :,::.
ALSO CAI P'HOMIS
doubles victory over Stewart J,..::!!!~~~~::::==:i;
and Marty Riessen. .
The Oranges, 2·1 on the
seaaoo, return to action Satur-
day nilht at Los Angeles.
Volleyball
tourney n e ars
The top '22 rated teams will
coover•e at Malo Beach in
Lepna Beach when the Laauna
Open beach volleyball tourna-
ment la held July 25-2e. D•f~nt world chamJ>lODt
And1 Fl•bburn and Dane
Selmldl an amon1 the teama
that wtU vt• for f1 ,000 ln prlJe
mo~•J in OHD1e County'• bis,
1e1t and rtchett beach event.
Th• nteran duo of Jim
Men1et and llatt Oa1e ar•
Meded MCODd beblnd n.bburn Ud Wmlet. Menees It a lbJ'ee..
time •t1t llVP a.Del I••:: UH ~ With a career wtu. 0., at M, lt tbe
Md ODe ill tM moet IUCC 1 llflll ,.,., .. -u. buch drritt.
Ac1Acil .... under: w~ at I a.m. .... dQI. SpeCtjtofl an
9dTlMd to ant.. earli foi tM
bmt ....
WHIT1 •
BUYING ..
SB.LING
Tlllh ll ., ...
DAILY PILOT
IOATMAIT
,.~,... ...
.-.642-5671
PHELPS
JULY SALE
Up to 50%0ff
An lncredible selection of our regular Sprtng and Summcc
merchandise ls now on Sale; name brands you know and truttt,
such as Cole Haan, Sero, Majer and Corbin.
Suits
Regular up to 8345 ......... J uly Sale, from 8159
Sportscoats
Regular up to 828~ ......... July Sale, from S 99
Trousers
Regular up to 8 86 ......... July ale, from 8 29
Shirts
ReguJor up to 8 40 ..... , ... July Sale, from 8 19
Cole Haan hoe
Sclccted Styles ...•••..•.•...• July Sale, 10% OFF
' Plu a Fabulou Selection of Sportwftar
'
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Juniors top
weekend's
calendar
Nineteen junior match racing
teams started competition today
in Balboa Yacht Club's Gov-
ernor's Cup series. The regatta
continues through Sunday.
The Governor's Cup -pat-
terned alter Long Beach Yacht
Club's fame d Congressional
Cup, ls limited lo s kippers and
crews between the ages of lS
and 19.
The host Balboa Yacht CluJ>
has won the event three years in
a row and is defending this year
with skipper Mark Whitehouse.
All of the crews are sailing San-
tana-20 sloops.
Entries are from California,
Wa s hington, Texas and
BOATING ·~
Louisiana. Out of state clubs are
the Seattle Yacht Club, Fort
Worth, Tex. Boal Club, and
Southern Yacht Club , New
Orleans.
In addition to the host club,
local clubs entering teams are
Bahia Corinthian and Newport
Harbor Yacht clubs. Other
California clubs are Alamitos
Bay. California, Corinthian
Yacht Club of San Francisco,
Coronado, Del Rey, King Harbor,
Long Beach, Mission Bay, Mon-
terey PeninsuJa, St. Francis, San
Francisco, San Diego and
Southwestern.
Before the series is ended,
each team wiJI have faced every
other one in two-boat matches.
Balboa Yacht Club is also con-
ducting a one-design regatta lhi.s
weekend on inside and outside
courses. Other local competition
includes the fourth, fifth and six·
th races of South Shore Yacht
Club's Hi -Point Series for
Performance Handicap Racing
Fleet and International Off-
shore, RuJe yachts, and a pre-
dicted log race for power boats
out of Bahla Corinthian Yacht
Club.
Huntington Harbour Yacht
Club wiU stage the first race of
its Bolsa Chica CoUection Satur-
day.
In other Southern California
Yachlin~ Association areas:
Double Bullet
leads field
for multihulls
Bob Hanel's SS.foot catamaran
Double BuJlet was sailing so fut
in the Multibull Transpacific
race to HonoluJu that she sailed
out of radio range with the other
multlhuJls in the race.
The catamaran Star Trek,
communications vessel for the
multibuJls said it appeared that
Double Bullet bad logged
another 300-plus mile day, plac0
ing her severaJ hundred miles
ahead of the other catamarans
-and even the monobuUs in the
regular Transpac race.
Double BuJlel bas averaged
over 300 miles a day since the
start of the race rrom Los
Angeles last Friday. Hanel is out
lo break the elapsed time record
for the crossing held by the
monohuJJ Merlin, which is com-
peting in the regular Transpac
for mooohulls.
Mike Kane. veteran muJUbuJJ
sailor and owner of the S3.foot
trimaran of the race, said, bar-
ring a mishap, Double BulJet
should finiab late Friday, more
than a day ahead of the record.
Tbe Multibull Transpac ls co-
sponsored by Seal Beach Yacht
Club of Long Beach and the
Outriuer Cano Club of Hawaii.
There are five muJUhulls in
the race wbicb started off Point
Fermin lut Saturday at 1 p.m.
Lifeguards
vie at MV
Nearly 200 llle1uard1 wll1
aatber for t.be •econd all.Dual
SOutbern CaJlfomla Llfetuard
competitkln Friday at Lake 11.11°
1IDn Viejo be111nnln1 It. p.m.
Tblrtetn team• from Lot
An1el• County lo Saa Dlqo
will tCllQlte ill varicMal ntllltl
IUCb U coe-milt lwtm ud _,....
dJeboud r.c., a one mUe darJ
-race, a four·maa 1wtlD relaJ and
an .... ~;n· Lat ,.., Loi Countj
took ftnt = Newport Beacbna'rMCGilld. c~ .. ., ... .-... rrom O'Nlilll . loed ta .....,.
VleJO.
•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. July 9. 1981 ••
JIM NIEMIEC
Early deep sea rewards
An explosive salt waler big game fishing
season bas gotten off to a very early and reward·
ing start for those who have lhelr boats, tackle and
reservations in working order.
LocaJly, Helen Smith at the BaJboa Angling
Club has weighed in two marlin with many more
being spotted. Veteran Newport angler Dick Bar-
rett took the first flag honors for his 121-pound
spikeblU, which he caught last week while fishing
the outside edge or the AvaJon BanJt. A second
marlin for the young season waa weighed in at
Avalon last weekend as weU.
BOTH MARLIN WERE TAKEN on jigs, which
seems lo be traditional for early s~ason catches.
Whitey Ellsworth at Anglers Center reported that
many returrung fishermen have spotted striped
marlin in our channel waters. But even though
bait and water conditions are ideal, the biiUish are
st.JU not settled down yet. There appears to be
plenty of mackeral locally and this should be a
good indication of great bill fish angling to come,
added Ellsworth .
No broadbill have been hooked thjs season, but
there are some berng spotted in our channel
waters.
Gary Myers of Newport Beach lqok first flag
honors for the Albacore division at the BAC last
weekend when he weighed in a 24 th-pounder while
fishing some 65 miles southwest of San Diego.
Also, J erry Thompson of Corona del Mar recorded
the first locally weighed in yellowtail for the
Pacific Anglers Club.
renlly on hand, there is also a fair bile on Pacific
Big Eye tuoa tlllng place between lbe 191 Spot
and the 43. A record in the l2·pound clu1 was poet-
ed Sunday at the Marlln Club ln San Ole10 with
Walt Gutjahr landing a M 0 pound Paclflc Bil Eye
on 12-pound test line. This bis tuna bit live bait
some 20 mJ.Jes, 265 degrees off Point Loma.
There hu already been talk amoo1 veteran
anglers that this could be a quick lontfin season.
Fish arriving this early. findln& very warm water
FISHING
and not a lot or bait, might decide to move north
very qwckJy.
It is suggested that anglers gel out th.is week if
possible to get their first longfins ln the freezer
and then sit back and wait and see how the sea.son
progresses.
Even if these vagabonds of the tteep decide lo
head to cooler waters off Oregon and Washington,
there stiU could be excellent fishing for yellowfin
and bluefin tuna (providing the commercial boats
don't begin wrapping them with their ugly nets).
Also yeUowtail and dorado could be numerous un-
der floating kelp patties just off shore.
Most are optimist.Jc at this time about the sum-
mer and early faJI season, but the key will be
waler temperature. If it doesn't surpass the 88 to
70-degree range, then we could be in for a seaaon
which could duplicate the overaU superb fishing
enjoyed by anglers during the early '50s.
SPEAKING OF ALBACORE, a record for .---------------------
Newport Harbor was established last weekend
when Ernie Schonert weighed in a 47 pound, 2
ounce longfin al the BAC. There are many big
albies in our ocean waters now and more Ugbt
tackle records could be broken before the longfins
depart.
In addition to the great albacore fishing cur·
WRIGHT'S HARDWARE
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(714) 898-2534
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642-5678
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Newport urf an Sport
JULY 9-12 lO•M~L~Y~J ~~~
t
• C' •'
•
·'
Orange CO~ O~LY PILOT/Thursday, July 9. 1981
AP .........
SIGNING IN -A dog looks over the menu at a roadside produce sign in
Fresno offering an array of fresh fruit and vegetables. Each sign was
painted a different color.
Maiden voyage tricky
SOMERVILLE, Mass. CAP) -
Ylannis Perris spent six years build·
ins bis dream boat in his backyard.
'As lt neared completiOll, be re·
alized be had a problem: The boat
bad grown to a width of 13 feet, while
bis driveway. hemmed in by houses,
remained only 11 feet wide.
Perris, 34, said that in the last six
years, the boat has been torched
twice by vandals and rebuilt. In 1979,
when be was working on it, he cut off
four fingers on his right hand with a
power saw.
To lift. the 48·foot-long boat out of
his yard, Perris had to rent a crane
and boom, lower the boat 40 to 50
feel down a stone ledge behind bis
house, and place it on a flatbed
trailer.
He originally wanted to name the
boat the "Margo P ." after hls wife.
But now, Perris, a native of the
Greek isle of Chios, calls the cruiser
a "taleporia." That's Greek for
"hardship" or "suffering."
Perris, an electrical engineer, said
he has traded the bad·luck boat in a
complicated deal with another boat
owner for a commercially built craft.
Now it's off lo nearby Everett,
where the final touches wUl be ap·
piled to make the craft ship.shape.
Then, Perris probably hopes be will
never see it again.
··Everything is Perfect now." he
said.
Train heist spoofed
HUMBOLDT, Iowa
(AP) -It was a great
train robbery in the best
tradition of the Old
West.
The bandits took
nothing from
passengers. except
kisses from the women.
But, they made off with
Dennis Lee, president of
the Eagle Grove Lions
Club, demanding an un·
specified ransom. or course. it was all in
fun : a good ·n atured
spoof of the train rob·
beries of days gone by.
part of the centennial
celebration of the Iowa
community of Eagle
Grove.
The three -car
passenger train began
making six daily
roundltips between
Eagle Grove and Hum·
boldt lo mark the cen·
tennial.
The train was stopped
by nine men on
hor seback. The gang,
identified as members
of the Dakota City Lions
Mc:COltMK:IC MOlTUAlllS
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capistrano
495·1776
HAAIOl LAW.,._MT. OLIYt
Mortuary• Cemetery
Crematory
1626 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540-5554
P1HCIUOTHHI
llUUOADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway
Cos1a Mesa
642·91 50
IALnlMGROH
SMITH & TVTHtU
WISTCUH> CHANL
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
846-8371 ---
.-ctllltonas SMfTMS' MOITVAIY
827 Main St HUntlngton Beach ~
•
Club, said they were
taking Lee because the
trains were crossing
Dakota City without
permission.
The bandits had
names for the occasion:
C huck ''Doc" Hinkle,
mayor of Dakota City;
Herb "Bad Breath" Zin·
nel; "Gentleman" Jim
Gronbach; Ron "Kid"
Cassens; Doc "Trashy"
Breeden and bis son.
"Trash Jr."; Gilbert
"Slick" Schulte: Jerry
"Ace" Knight; and Ron
"Messy" Clutter.
'Talking cat'
gets license
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP)
-Blackie The Talking
Cat is not just a cur losi·
ty. He's a bona fide busi·
ness. ·
Black:ie's owner, Carl
Miles, said be and his
wife have been walking
the cat on a leash in
Augusta for two months,
accepting ''donations''
from people who want to
·bear Blackie "talk."
According to Miles,
the cal says "I love
you" and "I want my
mama" fairly clearly
DEATH NOTICES
ASH
JAMES F. <BILL> ASH,
resident o( N~wport Beach.
Ca. Passed away on July 6,
Ul81. He ls survived by h.ls
wife Lola Ash of ~eWl>Ort
Beach. Ca. 2 sons Paul Ash
•Of Newport Beach. Ca'. and
Thomaa Aah of Pomona,
Ca .• l •liter Alice lllldred Jacobsmeyer of Riverside, Ca. Funeral services will be
held on Thursday. July 9,
1981 at 2:00PM at the Church
or Our Savior. San Gabriel,
Ca .. with Father Warren
Raasch otrldaUn1. Inter·
ment at San Gabriel
Cemetery. Friends may call
at Pierce Brothers 'Bell
Broadway Mort).lary on Wehesday. luly 8, lt81
rrom 3:00PM t.o 9:00Pll. Jn
Ueu or nowera contributions
may be made to the Buaett
Unllled School Dlttrlct. 904
North Wiiiow, La Puente, Ca. tl7.S. Plettt lkotben
Bell Broadway llortuar1
direct.on.
llUSANTB
ALBERT J. MUSANTE, palled away on July I, Ull.
He la IW¥tv .. by lall mece
Mary C. 1•1•• o1 1"1M,
C•· ••cl aeveral otller
ec!te ... DIPMll· Re ... a Y..._ ot u..·u.s. Mav1
la Wcirtd War J. Gra...ade
""1~ wUl be ..... -Prt· d1.y, Jib 10, 1•1 at l :OOPV at lbe klven!de NatJooal
liUllW7 c..wy with .... rau.ra.... 8clilulta ol It.
and has been featured
on national television.
After pollce said Miles
and Blackie were solicit·
ing and ordered them off
the streets, Miles and
bis \Vife, Elaine, paid $50
to set the cat up as a
businQn. Miles, blind in
one eye, said the cat is
hia only source of in·
come.
City officials said it
was the first "talking
cat" license ever Issued
in Augusta.
J.,.:;;;;..........-:-~i!ir'!"~-T-:"~-tC~ C...,.. a.ur.11 oMelaUns. a.r.1cw _.,
tile dlrutloa of l1tta ..,, ... __. . ,..... ..
Wembft a.,.. Mort...,. of COllta ....... .,,, ... ------~~~~---1
Few recall
• entertainer
NEW YORK CAP) -Jean Sablon strode
through the hotel lobby unrecognized by the people
walting to speak with the 7$-year-0ld ent.ertalner.
Two days later. singlo1 in concert with orchestra,
Sablon sounded 20 years younger, too.
In the 1930s, '40s and ·:;os, Jean Sablon was a
familiar presence on American radio, in chic New
York nightclubs and on Broadway. He toured the co~ntry -and the world. He turned down movies,
sang novelty songs, gave lessons in French,
performed songs or romance. Women crowded
'round.
The last lime he performed in New York was
19 years ago, at the St. Regis Hotel and on a
tele vision s how with Tallulah Bankhead and
Milton Berle.
The most r ecent concert was not the start of a
com eback. be said .
"I stopped to sing about 10 years ago," Sablon
said. "I think I'll stop now I'm here and will dis·
appear the same way, as nice a way as possible.
You have to stop someday.
"'But it's very hard to say farewe ll. Arter , if
you feel like doing somethin~. you can't do it.
· · 1 Just do a fe w TV shows in France Because I
think it is something for our time," Sablon con·
tinued. "We go to the home of everybody inside the
country. I accept wlth pleasure to do TV until I· m
too tired to do it. I think if Bing were still living, he
would sing once in a while for TV."
Explaining why he agreed to the one concert,
Sablon said. "George Wein heard two good one·
hour shows on me on French TV the day before
Christmas a year agb. He called me and said why
don't I come to America. I said, 'I expect to go
back to visit friends but not to work.'
··He came back last summer when he brought
some jazz musicians to Nice. w, had dinner and
he said, 'Come for your birthday.' I told him it's a
very old birthday and I'm sure people won't re·
m ember me, but he convinced me.
··1 see he was right. Some remember. I did the
TV show 'Today' and had calls from everywhere.''
Sablon made his singing debut at 17 with Jean
Ga bin. Then he made a movie with Gabin.
· · l was very thin; they put a little mustache on
me . When l saw me, I almost fainted. I said. ·1·11
never do a movie again ....
In the early 1960s. Sablon sang in Japan.
Australia, the Philippines and Hong Kong.
"l didn't know the Far East at all. I took m y
job as a pretext to see it. I know some French
artists who went to Japan for the maximum or
money and the minimum of time ...
The one Broadway show that Sablon was in
was "'The Streets of Paris" in 1939. It had Carmen
Miranda, Abbott and Costello and Bobby Clark.
Gower Champion danced in the chorus. Sablon
was the only Frenchman.
He also sang at the Capitol. a 5,000·seat movie
theater on Broadway, 11 a.m. to 11 :30 p.m .. five
shows a day.
"They had a two-floors apartment with a big
piano in the building for the star of the s how."
A radio show that Sablon had in the early 1930s
in Paris. with singers passing through the city as
guests, brought him the offer of the first of many
seasons of radio shows in America. starting in
1936. He spent World War II in North and South
America.
"I thought, France can export perfume and
courturier, why don't we export melody also?"
Sablon said. ··1 tried to find nice melodies where
you can dance with it slow. With a radio show. you
can plug one song each week.
"I introduced many French songs that were
well known after, like ·Autumn Leaves,' ·c·est Si
Bon; 'Ma Mie.' which became 'Suddenly My
Heart Sings."
Ui 1951, t'rencb com posers made $700,000 in
royalties from the States . "They don't offer
anything to me, but it's not bad.··
Pisa tower to tumble
PISA, Italy (AP> -This city's famed Leaning
Tower will keel over in 30 to 40 years if it keeps
tilting at its present annual rate, two researchers
say.
"The tower is in no immediate danger of fall·
ing, but it's clear that something will have to be
done to prop it up," said Gero Geri, one of the re·
searchers.
He and Brunetto Palla. professors at the
University of Pisa's Jnslitute of Topography, sub·
milted their findings to local officials after con·
eluding an annual study of the towr. They found
that it had slipped another twentieth of 411 lncb.
about the same as ln previoU5 years.
PVBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
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PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
"'CTITIOUI aullNesl •AMe lfATllMS•T . NOTtC• o• IALa O• Tiie IOll-lftl POttoftS are Clolftl A I A .. 0 0 • e D IO e • I 0 .. A L .....,,...,. M : P~•TY
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Tiie loll-l"9 --hove •ball· Tllo -1Y to De lr-lerrell It clontd ,,. -o1 1,. FkU-alftl. dea<rlbad lft Qlefte•al aa: All tloo. lft
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Publl-Or .... C.0.ll Delly PllM, July t. "· n, JO,'"' JOHM1
PUBLIC NOTICE COAST °CUSTOOIAM SElllVICE, ::!!.:'..~~=I~;:::'!:: ~';· ::e::.:1-SI.(~. Fl. Coala •• '" w. 17\h St. ...... A, Uftll '11, 1u ... •1m COUlllT Of' TM•
Thi FlctltlOli• 811a1MU Name ... ~~. ~. ~~-=:· c.untr ol OrM... lfAT• Of' CAU"°4t•IA !erred to .....,. •• 111111 111 Orat1oit The --lranat.r will be <Oii_,.· •Oil TMa COU•TY OP otu•ee County., l!Mr<h S, ltlO. "'•led °" or 1111er ,,_ nt11 day ol July, O•Dll•-:-0 = CAUH lllCWMld M. SMn, 561 W. WlllOft SI. 1 .. 1. al 10 00 A.M. al ,,_ olfke of l'OltCMAllllaOP 19AM1 (4:1. i~= =,.,;' ~ Wllaon llltllttd J. Apull\.,..IM, """°'° M · In Ille Mol:lar of 51 t:,.L ,., Catt.a~ CA nu1 drtH II 2011 E. M SC .• • 116, CllY of ,,,. Appll~UOll ol . ' ' ' Stnle Ana. Couney ol Orange, Stale ol JAE HO CHUNG •Y Mt,..,..._ Thia --.u WM conducted "' • Colllo•lll• All Cltirn• -.. ..,.,. KEE W°'4 OtUNO ...,.rol ~~'"'" mlllecl b¥ July~ Ul'I. ot the olllcn Fer ci...,.. Ill"-
-Ill Rlcl\ttl J. ""'-'"'· -M · The .... kotlOll of JAE HO CHUNG Thia --was llled with llW dre» h 11111 IE. 4th SI., •11'. City of lly Illa mM!ler, KEE WON CHUNG fer CouftlJ CI00"1< ol OJ-C-ly °" Jiiiy Sonlt Ana, C-IY of OJ-. S4ate of CNft .. ti -1111 ..... -llltd lfl •. '"I. C•ll lOf'nla. COlirt, -It.....,..,,. ,,.,,, Ml4 • ....... So ,., ft ,,..,_,, 10 IN ,,.,, ....... pllcellOll .... JAE HO CHUNG lly .... Publl....., Qr ..... Coest Dally Piiot, tll l>ualnns _.,.. -tddf'.-uted malller. KIEIE WON CHUNG -lllMI Julr t, It, 2l. JO. 1tl1 ...._ _ _ >*-ti by .,.. Tr_,.,,., tor 111o post lltt• INI ....,,.lc.otMfl .,...--.1 i.i. ,..,...
PUBLIC NOTICE yurt ore .. Clll"ttd lo ~AlllO JAE HO 711 WKI 1111\ SlrHI, 8ulldl ... A. CHUNG. Unll •11, Colle INN. CA N-. I......_. II It......, or..,oct
NOTICE OF DEATH OF U21 WeSI Mte:Arlhur '°"ltworll, and directed, ll'lol all _ .... lfttt<Ht· Sonia Ana. CA td lft told """'°' .. _., l>tfwe lhla
HELEN E. ZELLER, aka HELEN ZELLER,
aka HELEN ERMEN·
TRUDE ZELLER AND
OF PETITION TO AD·
MINISTER ESTATE NO.
A · 109467 to all heir s, beneficiaries creditors and
contingent creditors of
Helen E. Zeller, aka Helen
JSOO Soutl\ 5.uMn sc ...... 5.tnl• M •. court lft .,..,.,._. J WI a.."'" .. ,
CA Of All .... '"' .. 10:• o·c100. AM., UIO W.S.Coaal Hlgh•tY. N--1 ol tolll .. yto.,._c_wtlr...chap. Beach. CA pllcatlOtl tor C-.. of ,..,... "-'cl 0•1•11: Jl/A y •. 1 .. 1 1101 ... 9'"anted. RMS ELECTAOHICS CORP. II II ..,._ ordered -a U•Y ol P*'I IE. Stary IMa Or.., lo Sllow ~ be ............ Via,.....,_,, In the OlllANGE COAST DA ii. Y Transl-Pl I.OT, a ftewtptper ol tafteral P1.11>ll.,... Qr-Coeat Oollr Piiot. clrc111all011, printed 111 wld county, •I Julyt, 1"1 >071-tl ltasl _. NCI\ -lor lour WC·
Zeller, aka Helen Ermen· 1 P UBLIC NOTICE trude Zeller and persons
who may be otherwise In· 1o10Tice Toc111eo1TOH
terested In the will and/or o, aul.ll TRA•11011111 estate. c-... 11114111 u.c.c.1
A · I • Nolle• h llereby give" lo the pet1t on has been filed ~roctllon o1 JOSEPHINE M cuL P.
by Ora S. Riggle, Jr. In the Tr.,.••-. -bualneu .odrna la Superior Cou rt of Orange 1n t:tnt• St .. City of Cata *'°· County renuestinn that ,_,,of 0r.,,.., Stott of Ctlllorftla . .. "' Ulal • buHl .,.,.,., I• al>oul to l>t Ora S. Riggle, Jr. be ap· ,.. •• , to RICHAlll O e. KEENAN,
po i n t e d a s person a I Tran••-. -111.-ineu ...., .. , •• r e p r esen t a ti v e t 0 ad. ust1 vnw1a. ctty of '"''"""' v1e10. COUlllY of Oronet, SUile of Calll-o. m I n st er the estate of nt pr-rty 10 11e tr-••rrwo 1a
Helen E. Zeller, aka Helen oiucrtbad 11o ..,..,., ., All 1100 '"
Zeller, aka Helen Ermen· ~~~111~~~-.:::ai::! trude Zeller (Under the In · .......... NOAH"S HAIR SHOP . d e pendent Admlnistra· 1ou1eo a1 m c;a..ter st .. citr 01 cooia
t ions Act). T~e petition is ~o~~.:;...~ .... 111y ol Oran ... 51•1• ol
set for hearing in Qept. '"• ""'" 1 • ...,,., will "' '°"_,.. No. 3 at 700 Civic Center ,.,.1111 °"or., ... a.. -oo, o1 Ju1r. Drive, West, in the City of 1tt1 •• 10:00 "M. •• EM11111 v Santa Ana California on EScttow .• ..., .. ao11rta• •• 1100A • HatDot loulvd., Coal• M•••. August S, 1981 at 9: 30 a.m. c1111orftla. Thll t ... 1 .. 1 dlttt ,., llllftt I F YOU OBJECT to the c.lalma In lllt HUOW ,.,.,.,.., 10 ,,.,.,,.
granting of the petition, 11~1~1~1:'.;,_10 1119 Tr.,,~. you should ei ther ap· •11 1111a1 _ _...._...,_.,..
pear at the hearing and "' ,,,. rrmnr.1wor tor .,,. ,..,, '"'• state your objections or ,.., .... : -·
file written objections with 0•1•0~~'::.!'e~':!:...... the court before the hear· T,....,.,...
uulwe -prior to Ille dty of aolll ht0rlng. Oated lllls ... dty ofJwtr, 1'11 ,._ .. _,.,._
J ...... of ..... S..Wlorc-t
Slier• M. Y .1-, a.._ Kwoll&O.,A......,.acLaw , ........ __. ........... m
i.o.A...-.~ .... . ,...,._:cni>•·.-
A......,,..~ P111>tlalwd Or-Coest Dally Piiot. J11tr t, "· U. JO. 1t11 ,.._.,
PUBLIC NOTICE
"'CTITIOUI •Ulf••u •AMlllfAn-•T Tlla loll-lftt __ , are llolftll .............. IZZV"S lllESTAUlllANT. UU Fairview ltll.0 COOC. INM, CA '7U7. Jell A. Miller, n1 A.at•• Or .• coaia M .. o,CAtJ"21.
Jon w . .._. mt IE,,,,,_. cw .. Fountain Valley, CA '1101
Jolln W. Utoll, •n YUllM. CMla
Maao,CA~ Thot'll• J. l.aur, 18"1 CarMb¥ I.ti., H11ftllft ..... llKll. CA t2MI. Tllla lluslntU It COftOUClell bJ a ....... ,..,_..,... J.AMlllOr Thia ............ -llloll wllll 1119 Countr Ciotti of Orenge COufttr Oft J11ly 7, lt1'1.
"1""611 Publlalwd Or .... (-' o.lly l"llol. July•. 16, n. •. ltll •• 1-t1
Ing. Your appearance may 11v1111-0r-eoest o.11, Piiot, be in person or by your at· Ju•r•.1t11 JOIH• PUBUC NOTICE
torr~· y 0 u AR E A PUBLIC NOTICE--•ICTITIOUSMl .. ••SI
9'NM lfA'l'WMaMT CREDITOR or a cont· ----Tt.e1o11_..,._...,,...,..~. ingent creditor of the de· "'cnnou1au11•aa• ,... .. ,:
ceased, you must file your Tiit lol=·::.:.--:::...11 ..,.,. CONSTlllUCT1°'4 Sl!RVICl!S, .. "'CTinouteVM••• claim with the court or ....... : w.aattoo,N....,,,••ICft.CAttMO. Jomu C. WM14. "' W. ea1..,., IUM91TAHMll'" present It to the personal SWANK MOOl!U. ,,, Wftl ""' Mtwpof1 lloKh,CAttW. Th• ,.,,.,.,,., ,__, .,. ffl"• representative appointed '''"';:,.~~ ::;,~1~~~1.S. Tiii• ....,,... '' "-tec1..,.,. "'· ~~~;a;NTl!"NATIONAL, 101 by the court within four 12• wnt 1M1t st•"'· c .. 1. Mesa. dt•ldu•~-c.wtnd
.. ., ... '!~i .. """""'1011 ... , ... months from the date of ct1110f'ftl•'2627 nm ~ •• 111ec1 w1111 • Calllorftl•YJML fl t I f I tt ltlcllord £dwlft s. ... 11.. 71' West c-ty Cleft!., 0r..,.. C-4Y on Julr J•M sc11e111r, 1ou1 51 .. ., Aw., rs ssuance o e ers as itt11 Street. c.o.1a Mato, c.iuor"'• ,_,.1 .. va11..,,eaa1tw111atna provided In section 700 of m11 1• '"'· "'""' l'ranclt D. llrocl.alt, 1001 Sitter t he pr 0 bate C 0 de 0 f Tlllt ~II~ •Y tn lfl· P .... 1.-OrMat C:-ll Dally Pli.t, :,~;.· ,._,.,,. V•ll•Y. c:au1 .... i. Ca I lfornia. The time for dMdll•I. lllkllarll a.'--J111r '· "· n. •· 1t11 >OK-ti
T1tia ._,,..., 1, coMu<tu ,,, • tiling claims will not ex· Ti.11 •-• •• "'.,. .1111 111t -..,..,.1,_..,.,,.._ plre prior to four months •c_,1,c1ono10r.,,..c:-.e1at1July PUBLIC NOTICE
Jeftll11Mta1r from the date of the hear· 7• 1 .. 1· ,.,. __ -----------"'"........,. _ 11.._....., .. i ti bo -c.-T ow-.,,°' ... Clwlty ... Jwty ng no ced a ve. .,..,..,._ 0r.,.. c.M °"'' ....... IUNMOll couaT
1,1"1. YOU MAY EXAMINE Jutyt,i..n.•.1'11 •1w1. OPCAUNllttlA
,.,...., the me kept by the court. ~ c::::::,•
"11t41"'" °'.,... c-t Daltr.!!,~ If you are Interested In the PUBLIC NOTICE .... ...,c....,.. Jtllr t, , .. u. a."'' __..., estate, you may file a re-•LAt•T"'"" LO"•"' 111A11111.
PVBUC NOTICE quest w th the court to re· ,, ...... "~~ ....... a. •ci;:, ... oANY: MICHIL& 1.IA ctlve special notice of the -·· -· ---LANc:tNA. NOaL" oou1..a, ooas 1 I • 91MM lfA.,._., 1twwt11 xx, lflCN11w L.8e.AL ...,..,. nventory of estate and of '"• fm11owt11t ,.,., .,. ... "' aur 'MS llOTIC90ILAVAU~ .. un the petitions, account$ and ....,_..: c--. ...
W...UM. ...... , reports described In Sec· T & T ASIOCIATES, '*' Cllffyl NOT'ICl!I Vw -.... -Tiw •0T1cm " H•H•v oivaN ..,.. t I on 1 2 O O . S o f t he W.y, •1 r-. Clllfwfll• ..... <-1 1'111¥ _.. ....... ,.. _.._. IN ,,_ -.AIM• AM1aa4 It_.,, TAMM)' ................. IMe1 Oleryt .,_ ............ -... JW ....... ,. ... .._"·"--~,_ Ctllfornla Probate Code. w..,,_.,.,.,c..Hfenl6a,--. .. 111111 ·~,.... .. ...._...... .. 11111, • ..,._. ,.,. ••• • rtr ._ JW A. Duncan Jo111" Teri ""''"-HM1 CtllJ"1 NW ,..,...,.._,..,,, .. ,. ........ '10 Nt~_1cen11r Dr ••• , •• ,T' ... ~..a ,,,...._.,_. .. ..._.t ... etllle,........,t.,_lllle41McelW Sula. •SJD Thia__,_ II <...-CIM •Ya oltWMJlll'*IMlllr,,_.._... .. llt'"'llM '11tt119 , ..... ~ ......... r.:~:-.... ---.. ,10 •r•,,_.,, M tflll ,_ wrltltfl
..... ,,_ 11• 1..11\, • t:• •·""· .-, Ntwport ... cit, ca. 92"0 ,~. ,...,. _,_~ ,........, ".,,,,,...., .. ,..,. ... tl!M.
a1tJ ''"-... ,......." w1111111,. Publlsh9d Oranat Coast -~-AVllOt u.....,. .,. ...._ ...,..,.., .... ., ... ,...",....,TM Dally Piiot, July 9,. 810 16r Tiii• .... e!NM -,., .. •0" .. 11 ~,.... • .., c..,. u.. , ............ ,,,_._.. lfftc.-le._.... c:-ty ci.r-• Or..,.. c..Mty• Jljjr.,.. .-...11 a --u.. ,.._. el OI Pl•ta, M••••rt tHc •• 1911 . 1·81 I. lttt. .. ........ • .... Lee II...._ Cll...,,,.._ n......,.......,," ,., ,._..,. .....
.. ,.....,.llMIMO........ PUBUC NOTICE P'# ..... Or..-c.-Oaltr ,..,.. 11 u .... -...-..... ~.
.._........Or-.. c:.. Delly"""' J .. , '· , .. aa. .. "'' ...,.., -...... "' ......... ....... Jjjfyt,ttlt •M•------------.----------·--llHertt ,_..,,._.., • ttt1
--a...&-wi~~'::T.:... PUBUC NOTICE -•;:..r:---~..:..: PUBLIC NOTICE ,.4 .,.__,.°"u"'" ~ Ml ot:Z:~1 A awt1 vwa..uww , ......... ._...,.,...., ... ......
MHneuel I -• allll•MMll ll~Tl-Mlt .. U llfl ...... ,_lf,_ ...... .._. ..... .,..~ r,._......,...,_._.....,_ ...-ITATIIM9'9T llllt ........ Y ............ ..,.
.... . H a t•Mrtl .. MMr lraM Ult Tiit ......... Mr-are ...... .,._, .... --11 ..... M ..... , ............. w--...................... ..., .. ttc. ....,_II! , ... """ .... ~ ........ ,...
11: Ut1111t •111l1t•tt AIMI tf '"" LA VIOl.ITTA 01 •A,.MA .... ~ U.. ,_ •-.
tAa•ATf l•YINI, U1U •artMf't, •lrt c-.-°""· t, ""~ ... ..,_A-• .,_ ................. • ... art~ .......... ,..... .....~..... , ....... ~.~-.atllill .................. _. 1c11•-9M TM..,......,.. -.....,. M9'Y......,......,. MM, -_y._, ............... ,_,. ...,........,..~ ... ,....,.. .. ....,._,..111 C.lalt ._,,._._v .. ...,, .. ,......_... ... .,..,..._,
na..,...Clfa.. ..... , .. .,.... "'--'· ""••CM1t¥•0r... c..... Mlktl c..-,.... 111 .., ... "'.'., ~ .... ,...~•a..-.~ r111e ""' -.. ,...... "• A,._.• Mert, ... c•-MM....., ..._ .. ~ • ...,.,,., • , ..,._., we :su11c .. 1 ,_..,.! Av-, ,._..... ~. ~ _.., ,...,, ,........ Ill .. <4M-
,_...._ ........ .,,. ar. -.~A. ................. '"" ......... • ....... i..-.....~ ,.....~ .. ~--· Wl~Jt,t• ........... ~.... ........ i..A.er-~-.: ................. '.I,_ __ -..... .... .. ................. • ........... ,... ...... -........ c-.aa-r10r ... ~---.,. ....... -.... ... ~ C-. °""" ......... •IWf ....... ,............ r.:" Olfllel°""'ttc..ttf M '=A =::a
l. ""-.... ~--,__.._ C1111111 D19t..... ~':?i"---~..... ....._. °'9111C..0..,...... .........._ CIMI Daltt ,_,
,,... .......... "" ......... ,.., .. 9'• • ....... """ •. ,, ..... "'' ..... , ..... It. ... "" .......
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------------------------------------------------------------------------------0ra ___ ng_e_eo __ .. __ ,o_AJ __ L_v_P_1L_ar __ l'Th __ unad __ 8l-..·J_u.1y_e_._1_ee_1 __________________ • __ a -:~
N~il Simon's 'Srmshine Boys' gets gloomy treatment
11.J TO• ftft18 .... ...,~ ...
An1GDt wbo believes that tbe plays of Nell
Slmoa are foolproof, that all the acton bave to do
la to abow up and deliver tbe lloes, lbouJd take a
look at W'bat'a toinl on at the San Clem111te Com-
mll.D.ltj Tbeater.
Net only bave they come up with a procluctloo
ol "Tbe SUDlhine Boya" that's not particularly
funny, they've made it almoet tiresome. The
familiar map-crackle·pop style of America'• moet
popular playwri1ht la simply 1011y in San
Clemente.
The play centen on a famoua vaudeville team
(baaed on the careers of Smith and Dale)
beckoned for a reprise on national television. Tbe
only problem la, the old troupen can't stand one
another and their reunion scrapes the scabs from
some 10..year~ld wound.a.
Nevertheless, they once were the bat ln their
bu1lneu, and the actors playtq these roles must
convey the rat-a-tat tiJn1n1 that these two old pros
would poaesa. Tbls la the m.ior fallinl of the San
Clemente production, which seems continually to
"bold" for lau1ba that never materialize.
Robert J . Hulings, who eave an impreuive
performance ln the central role of Willie Clark five
years a10 at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, bas
............... -' .. -··
~AIOS r.,_ •Country ond Q.Zone
s.,fboardt., C...stom\ Avoolable
~fa Wetwitt
WAllC-1!.~
u..d bcod. ~i• P"C"
• c:otTA •U llllSIOI ~074U
CTP9lll twf• Clnenll m.1eeo
HlllllT ... YAWT
FOilnll•n ViJley
139 1!>00
l'lt.UllT• fGI
S2!H747
CIUllQI WllTIMllSTUI ~rn.~•'I ~1f'jl&l9 OfM I•
IMWl9l wtlTil .. ITlll
S1'41um Oll'lt In UA M~
639·87 70 893 ~6
8TIM ~k HltM OMllll
!111 seeo ~;:r ~~.C:J.~·~ ·cn--r
I Meti-o.11)' et Moel T11ea1,.. I
Piiot Logbook -I ·1 p·1 ' Candid commentat'Ws
e:cclwively in the II ' I DI
taken on the uaipment .,aln, and cbc»en to
direct the show u well. It appean to have been b1I
uodoine, alnce both hll portrayal and lbe pace of
the 1bow itlelf come off quite spotty.
The other ball of tbe team, Tbomu Adams u
Al Lewis (the role that woo Geor1e Buru the
Oscar), attempta to •bore up the aetloa with b1I
deadpan humor, but be'a only partially aucceaaful.
And Rick Koabab u Hut.1n11' a1ent-nepbew wbo
arran1ea the last burrab, ii the weakest link ln the
cut, particularly in the lnt.enninable opeo.Uia se-
quence.
Of the supportin1 players, Pat Sbaw 1eta ln
some good Ueki u the candy-chompln1 reliatered
nurse ln the Jut scene. Barbara Hollil u the ae:11:y
nurse ln the TV skit bu a sreat future behind her
(and that's not a derogatory obaervatioo).
"The Sunahine Boys" baa hilarious potenUal,
but it'a far from realized at the Cabrlllo
Playhouse, where the show will be on slqe two
more weekend.a. Curtain is at 8 p.m. Fridays and
Saturdays and 3 p.m. Sundays at 202 Ave. Cabrillo,
San Clemente.
*
THE COSTA MESA Civic Playhouse bu an-
nounced its 1981-82 season, the 17th for the Orange
County Falrground.a·based community aroup -all
Bun~. /fogel' Moore
Hnah F.M'Cett • Dom f>el.ca.
a "11/Jilf llAMST INSl•fS«llMlf•I S fl//DtJ1""1tllX/'IOll A ICC/ MftJIWil f//11
..,,.~,--
C.~IEAJI ... ,. • IAllll'f Mllll. ... ·~ -. JA//#-TrMtr //AAllllMI ,., 1l.lJI . JA&IOI OWi _,, _
f-fWatM/11(/1/f)CllQW· ,..,,_,,,MIU/ S WU/Jtlr· _,,M«I tAllS
,,,_,,, "41 111/fltlMI ·II-~ .. Al CllNS • .,,_ S-,.e "Sii/ff t:AMffi
PG. Will /!lJlJJIIIIlMIJ -(ii).
TOMORROW
MAJOR HOLLYWOOD SNEAK PREVIEW
OF THE SUMMER'S FUNNIEST MOVIE
A Rollins -Joffe -Morra -Brezner Production
DuclewMoore • jza l&VJ&li John Gielgud
"ArtNr'
Music by Executfve Produce! Produced by wntien and Otflcied by
Burt Bacharach Charles H. Joffe Robert Greenhut Steve GQrdon
1
EARN ~ND LEARN! ..
Dellver.,the ""111111111 ·Boys and girls 10 or older -1
• . , Call 142"4321 cind apPI Y today. 11111 Piii
under the dlrection ol Pati Tambellin1, who or-
ganUed the theater in 1985.
Lead.lna off the aeuoa wW be the Oran1e
County premiere of "Cbeaten," a comedy of
criucroaaiol lnftdellty. Terrence llatltan'1 drama
"Separate Tables" wlll be the second entry,
followed by Bernard Slade'• new comedy.
"Flln1."
"Where's Charley," the lyrical venloo of
"Charley's Aunt," wtll be the playboule'1 musical
for the year. The aeuon cloaea with a production
of the comic farce, "Not Now, Darlln1."
Further information on the Civic Playhouse
may be obtained by ca.llln1 the theater at 75'-5"8
weekdays unW 5 p.m.
*
CAILllOOD -Tbe Weslminlter Community
Theater will bold auditions Monday at 7 p.m. for
Paddy Chayefsky's romantic drama "Middle of the Niitit" ... director Jack Secord will be loot-
ing for three men, eight women and one teen-a1e
girl at the tryouts. aet for the theater, 7%72 Maple
St., Westminater . . . the show opens Sept. 11 and
plays five weekend.a ...
BACKSTAGE -A special benefit
performance of "The Heiress" will be presented
* BARGAIN MATI l!EI *
Monday thru Saturday
All Perform•ncet ~fore 5:00 PM
lb• S~ fllfltlllltlltS IM Helldey1)
---··CLA8H OF THE
TlTANI" (flGl ,...,, ....... ___ .. ....__ ...
··'°"YOUR
EYU ONL VU lflQ) ........... ,,. ..... .-........... ~
··s.O.B." IR\ , ........ ,... .... .,,. __
"SUPERMAN II .. lfl'Q) ......... ,....,
·----... THE CANMON8ALL RUN"
"SUPERMAN II .. IPG) ,_ ........ ,, .. -
-.&. .... ,.
"STRIPES" IR\ ,.. ... ..,,,,.ltitil
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALK IN
(flQ) _____ ,,,,.
MM MM• c.wa.-...n
''THE .1'0U" IEAIONI"
(PG) .............
._._. C.--MAat•
"IWDl!Ra OF THE
LOST ARK" IPQ) 1kll .. "11'*\W ._.,_ . ..._...,.,.. I
''IWOEAIOFTHE ·------LOST AM" IPQ) "~.l\'t' (PG) , ......... ,... .
01 lfoodwoy
-
SovtflC-•I Hlwoy )
~ 494-1514
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'""O"TAH llOTIC(! CMllDIUll lllCK" 12 f"H! ......... •w--I ... fn 6:» • S.I hi -•:• rtl Clllf."-·-llllCMl-1$-~
-... CM! -MllO -_., ..-i-. -1111...-.i I-AU Qlll.fl -· .....
............ ~
ANAHEIM ORIVE·IN ,_ti Of l•-$t
.,. •• IO I Cllll ,. -........................ I _..._..._.._---.............
'"TIC CAN..o':':tL RUH'. (N I "!'OR YOUfl ~·ONLY"' (PO)
"HMaY =-ING" (N) ··ANAL COUHTOOWN" (N)
Clllf flSOUllO C"'l ••-
B JI ... A ~ • "•
BUENA PARK DRIVE IN
I _;l 'II ' A .....
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"IM.L MOC*t• 14"TOft'f M
TlC WORLD "AM I .. (l'I -"TIC 1'1MAI. COtWUCr !ftl ---IUNRMAN II .. INl -FOUNTAIN VALLE'/
ORIVl·IN So~DleO• ,,.,., 0, .,_,.....,, c:so:"Alf't WHtCM WAY YOU CIM'• (Nl
H2·2 ... I CINI ,. -
.... o.a."~I
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NNOS TWICa" lftl
Cllll "-----'CU9f4 M Tita mNW" -'WAllL.0fl09 M A nANM" Clltl ,._
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LA HABRA ORIVI I~ ---·-.... ·--17MN2
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MISSION [llll\d IN . . .
ton11bt by the Buntin.ion Beach Playbouae wtth
proceed.a 10101 to llra. Carloa Bra1a, wbo1e
husband wu slain by a k.nile-wteldlni robber re·
cently ... curtain ii 8 o'clock at the playboule, ln
the Seacllff Villa1e center, Kain Street at
Yorktown Avenue, Huntinetoo Beach ...
I
I . ' ..
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Trudeau play set ~ ~
for Off-Broadway ~! :~ i ·!~ l TORONTO (AP) -"Magie and Pierre," the
acclaimed one-woman play about Prime llinllter
Pierre Elllott Trudeau and bi.I estran1ed wife
Mar1aret. i11cheduledfor an Off-Broadway run.
Garth Drabinaky aald Wednelday the comedy
atarrinl Linda Grilfit.ba will be tried out somewhere
in New York state before opening ln New York City ln
October.
Drablnaky, a lawyer who co-produced several
award-wtnning films in Canada, said be became in-
terested ln "Mante and Pierre" durtn1 the Toronto
internatlonal theater festlval. He was festival
chairman.
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Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Thuraday. July 9. 1981
Irish author Brendan Behan gets N. Y. tribute
91 I AY SBA&llUTI' ·~--NEW YORK (AP) -Shay Duffin la upalaln at
Sardi'•, tbe famed theater-folk resteuraot. He
bol1t.1 his 1las1 and in a rich lrllb bro1ue HYI:
"Well, here's to New York. And Brendan."
1 All toast lbe memory ol Brendan Bebao, the
rollicking Irish novelist and playwri1ht who died
at •1 back home In Dublin, in 1964. Bef\an wouldn't
have liked lbe contents of Duffin's llHs. Tomato
juice.
He also might have frowned at Du!fin'a con-
fession that "I'm not much ol a drinker. "But not
all is Lost.
The man does down three pints of 8ood Guin·
ness stout each night during his one-man 1bow.
"Shay Duffin as Brendan Behan,•· which recenUy
began a seven-week run ore-Broadway.
His "Behan," which be bases on Behan's
works and assorted sayings. first was performed
here, to critical acclaim, in 1973 at the now-defunct
Abbey Theater.
He's sporadically toured with it ever since,
between motion picture and TV jobs that range
from "Raging Bull" to a role as a rabbi in a TV
tableau about Jesus. Mary and Joseph.
"I've aJso been in a ll or Behan's plays except
'Richard's Cork Leg,"' he says. "Up in Canada, 1
was in 'The Hostage.' 'The Quare Fellow' and 'The
Bors tal Boy,' which I'd love to do again."
Duffin. barrel-chested, blue-eyed and fast with
the jokes, bears a n uncaMy resemblance to lbe
writer he plays on stage. His home's in Redondo
Beach, Calif. -"Sunshine. I sunshine," -but he
hails from the same secHon or Dublin as Behan,
and knew him, in a way.
"I was a kid then, he was a uyui. not famous
yet. He'd be weaving his wax home when the pubs
closed. He'd join wilb us, playing football.
"Then, when he'd be leavina, he'd put his
handa tn hi• pockets and ll be had anytbin1 left, a
few coppers, a few ~nnle•. he'd Ju.st throw 'em au
lo the kida. A 1reat IUY. ''
Behan first made b.ll way in lb1J world u a
house-painter, not a writer. Duffin, in contrail,
a lways wanted to acL. But he aot there ln a
roundabout way. as an upholsterer in En1land.
Even aot a royal appointment lo upholster Prin·
ceaa Margaret 's toilet seal. He tell! 1t UtlJ way:
"Like Brendan, I quit school al 13. J used lo 10
to the movies every day and 1 like to aay f 1ot my
education from Hollywood. Unfortunately. I sot
nabbed at· DeltinaUon Tokyo.·
•'So my parents packed me off to apprentice
as a n upholsterer . WeU, at 20, my apprenticeship
was over. So I went to England and 1ot sent to
Warwickshire, where Princess Mar1arel had a
summer residence. Which is where J dJd the toUet
seat." ·
He didn't r est on his laurels. thou1h. He
packed up and moved to Canada.
There, while upholstering what.ever needed up-
holstering, he got launched In his true callln1, act·
ing, putting In five years with the all-Irish
Eme rald players. doing Sean O'Casey plays.
"A marvelous training ground," says Duffin,
who eventually got lo Hollywood as planned after
a massing various credits on Canadian television
and in plays produced in Canada.
One, an Vancouver. was Behan's ''The
Hostage," in 1963, when the author still was alive
Dumn went to audition for It and, he reports, the
director promptly recoiled in sboclt.
"He said, 'My Cod, you frighten me, you look
so much like him.' So I got cast as Brendan, and
sat in lbe audience. shouting up at lbe actors as he
did, then going up on stage, which he also did."
But that wasn't the orig.in of Dutrln's one-man
"Behan." Jt really beg,an up in the Yukon, or all
places, in Dawson City, when ht was tourin1 with
a government-sponsored trou~.
Between showa, he'd repair to a tavern fre·
quented by tourlall to drum up bualneaa for the
show, recitln1 the poetry of Robert Service, lnclud·
ln1 "Tbe 6bootlilg of Dan McGrew."
One day, between shows and recitations, he
happened to bear an old radio interview of Behan
that CBC had taped, "and the first note• of the
Behan show were written up in the Yukon."
He reread all of Behan'• booka, coruulted alt
available news clips and feature stories about the
m an, and even wrote the author's widow,
Beatrice, tor additional details.
In time he bad his show, plus "a pair of his
shoes his wile sent me -they're 7~. my sue -
which I wear on st.age.··
The show's current edJUon dlffers Crom the
or iginal in a few ways, he says. "Before. it only
had 19 characters in it. Now I've got 38.
"I also only used to drink one pint or Guineas
during the show." He sigb5 unconvincingly, "Now
I've got three big imperial pints. Been other
changes, too.
"I've got more on the Northern Ireland
troubles now, which I stayed a way from back in
1973 because people were not so much aware of the
problems or Northern Ireland as they are now."
He also now refers to Behan's campai&ning for
John F. Kennedy in the 1960 presidential race.
He also mentions, he says, "the Dubliner's at-
titude towards Brendan. They weren't too
enamored or him while he was around. He was like
a black·sheep cousin they shoved under the carpet.
Or the sawdust.''
The actor periodically returns lo Dublin -"I
have to go home to renew my accent." But he rues
the changes modern limes have brought to that
fair city.
Shay Duffin
"Brendan would hate the Dublin or today,'·
Shay Duffin says, almost mournfully. "ll's not ttie
fun town it used to be. All the characters are gone
and that's the s hame of it."
Carmine Coppola scores, conducts four-hour 'Napoleon'
Enthusiasm , extravaga nce in the Co p pola tradition
By BOB THOMAS _... .............
HOLLYWOOD CAP> -"I think I should def-
initely qualify for t he Book of Record5," says
Carmine Coppola, "for the longest film score ever
written."
Indeed, there seem to be no contenders for
Coppola's claim. Who else would have the op-
portunity or the stam ina -to compose more
than four hours of continuous music, as he did for
the 1927epic "Napoleon."
Coppola, talented father of equally talented
children, film maker Francis Coppola and actress
Talia Shire , will be conducting a 65-piece or·
ches tra ot movie studio musicians at the Bastille
Day premiere of "Napoleon" at the cavernous
Shrine Auditorium. He has also conducted his
score at Radio City Music Hall in New York, and
in Columbus, Atlanta, Chicago, New Orleans.
Kansas City and other places where the Abel
Gance classic has pla yed.
.. And what a conducting job it is!" says Cop-
pola wonderingly. "When I conduct for film
scores, I have marks on the screen and click
tracks to give me the c ues. With 'Napoleon,' all I
have are sight c ues -by watching the screen. It is
exhausting for me and for the musicians; I wrote
in some organ interludes to give them a rest."
The younger Coppola's Zoetrope Studio invited
the press to visit With Carmine and see a 1966 fa.lm
made by Kevin Brownlow about "Napoleon" and
ROGER MOORE u
JAM ES BOND oor.
FC)R YOUR f~\·~~S
~ 0 NL\'' United Artists t
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''Make way for the greatest
dragon yet."
-Kevin Thomas, LOS ANGEUS TIMES
.... Brookllurit 772-64•6
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its creator Gance. Brownlow, the British film his·
torian. spent 20 years reconstructing Gance's
masterpiece, which had been ignored after its
Paris debut. Zoelrope is producing the U.S. tour.
Carmine Coppola is a balding, stubby man
who enjoys discussing his lifetime devotion to
music. He recalled as a boy of 11 visitina the film
palaces of Times Square in his native New York.
All had orchestras to play background music for
the silent movies. Hearing music" for Douglas
Fairbanks' "The Thief of Bagdad" was "the ex-
perience of my life . . . I left the theater in a
fairyland."
He often told son Francis lbal he would like
the experience of com posing and conducting a
silent-movie score. The opportunity came when
Francis bee a me inter ested in presenting
"Napoleon,'' a film that introduced a Cinerama·
like screen and other innovations.
The composer said he contemplated whether
to attempt a contemporary or a romantic score
and decided to attempt the kind of music that was
heard in Napoleonic times: Beethoven's "Eroica"
symphony which was dedicated to Napoleon,
French Revolutionary songs, a bit of Mozart.
'·But every once in a while Coppola and his
emotion comes through," he added, estimating
that 90 per cent of the score was bis own music.
How does the "Napoleon" score compare to music
for a current film?
"Well, the average 90-1.20-minute film contains
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from 30·50 minutes of music. 'Norma Rae' had on-
ly five minutes or music ...
Despite the enormous job and the rigors of
conducting, Coppola admitted that be bas had the
lime of his ljfe. "After conducting for four and a
half hours the first night at the Radio City Music
Hall, I found myself still wanting more. I played
some exit music -and ran into overtime for the
mus icians. Very expensive."
"Napoleon" wall continue louring in its present
form. later will be released with a recorded score
and a version suitable for conventional theaters .
Coppola will conduct per formances at the
Coliseum in Rom e in Septe mber . a nd other
performances are being planned for Manila, Tokyo
and Paris, where Abel Gance. 91 and in frail
health. will be able to see his great work
performed as he has long dreamed.
Ruth Batch~ quits n e tWork show
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Ruth Batchelor has
left "Good Morning America" as West Coast en-
tertainment correspondent, it was jointly an-
nounced by Miss Batchelor and the ABC
Television Network.
She made her final appearance on the show
Friday morning. No immediate replacement was
announced for Miss Batchelor, who succeeded
Rona Barrett six months ago when she left to join
NBC.
··By mutual agreement of ABC and Ruth
Batchelor. Miss Batchelor has departed 'Good
Jack Anders.on Dll.IJ Pl.IOI .... neveals in the
Joi11 9 4
KIK-FM
Ope11i11g
Night
July IO
at the
Morning America· immediately," said an ABC
spokesman.
"ABC believes Miss Batchelor is very talented
and has a positive future in television and she will
be discussing possible proJects outside of 'Good
Morning America' in the near future.''
Miss Batchelor said through a spokesman, "I
felt too restricted, having no control over my seg·
ment."
David Hartman is host of "Good Morning
America," which ABC launched in the early
morning time slot in November 1975.
SIGNORET ··covr
"4E L BROOKS IN tellory of U.WetWI ""'1 I (RI I 2:30 2:3 0 4:l0 1 :30 1 :30 101J O
I Pre .. nled rn OOLllY
DRAOOtesl.AVltR (PG)
1100 l :15 5:JO 7:45 • 10:00
I In Oolbyl No PUHi SUNRllAlll 11 (POI
'1:15 l :S54:2S7:U ~;SO , NO Economy 5.,11n9 c:=
lllLL MURRAY In STRIPES (R) SllOWf
II 1 :00 3 :20 5:40 1100 . 10:1$
STRDIUm .~1
Screen Drivcz~fh
coll 6l9 8770
~
Ol1ne~•1 ... aAKY ""IDAY (Q) Herbie
Goll a.nanu (01 Clllld• ,.,.lees•
CLASH Of' TitS TITANS (Pct)
I Dr_11oru W•r• RHI DRAGONS&.A VIE" PO I Plull STAR TRl:K (\;)
Ora11ge -I !"CHARD PRYOR In e UST ... LOOS& (RI
CllH cll • Cllont'I N••t Movie (R)
c== •
I
Cou11ty Fair for
COORS WESTERN
NIGHT at Costa Mes a
Speedway.r£ieket good
for free fair
JOHN eOORMAN'S UCAutlUll <"l•nd HAl'l'Y elRTHDAY TO M• (R)
Ori-.. Ina ()pen e·OO P'M W•ltdayllWMkelld.a 7 . 30
Un.ter 12 f"" V.U.• Hol..S
~
USI THI
DAILY PILOT
"PAST
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~rMnhowtok•.
I TIC TAC DOUGH M•A•t•H
wtlh • ~ goea on lot • doe tNt bit Redel',
Hewk~ de"-Ffenk to
tllll• C8fW ol • -of hye-
t.nc:.I paralyllll. .8000,...
RUNAWAYS -Brock Peters (left) and
Kurt Ida have a river adventure in "The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn"
tonight at 9 on Channel 1-
Fed up wlltl '*"" .,..., Ilk• • ...,.,,, by ,_ 181'111-
ly, Ronde ~ • lurldl-
-lmttlltlon "°'" • men. •• IUOT'NC
I~== f.:NIW8
81QWt8LAHD
Ml.OR
Trudi-IJlile lhW klda on
lti.roed.
(8) Oft. IHI IGGIJE8: THI
NMANCA8l.a f10GETY
NYlft
.AA1matec1. 0r. snuoo ...
(llOlcle by P«ar Uatlnov)
trewta to outar IC>-lo
llnd out wtlO 11.. ~
11Mling the oc:Mna lrom
Earth.
())MOYE
• • • "Somebody Up
Thwe Ult• Me" ( 195e)
Paul Newmen, Plat Angeli
Aodty Grulano. • N9w
Yont 11um boy, r1Ma to
'--·~ bo••· '=*'I JC>KEW8 WllD AU. .. THE 'AMll. V
Edltfl eccepta • call to Jury
duty and ~ lhe lone
dlaeanttng furor In • mur-
det c.-. •....vHU Benny pottreye Tex Cym-
t>W. the Golden Boy or
P°". • ICc.T NEwueAT
• ITUOK>8U
"Mualanga" Join aome
Colorado cowt>oya In •
wlld mullang roundup,
ride tu~ down the Farm·
lnglon River In Connectl· cut.,,
fl .:=MILLER
A "think tank" report critl-
cel of del«l1,.,... upeet•
the 12th~ and Wojo
thr•ten1 to raalgn lrom
11\e fore. when he !MrM
he'I haYe to..,.. • beet.
(B)MOVIE
"Jumt You Md Me Kid"
( 1979) George Burne,
Brooke Shield• A 7()...,...,.
old man ,..,.. In • 14-
yeer~ Ju~ delln-
QUllnt. Oeaplt• the prot•i.
ol Ille maddllng r•ti-.
'PO' 1:111 IDfTONAL 1:00 c...we
.CNEWI
• ~DAVI AGAIH
Richie .. laced wtth •
dll9nvna ...... he .. Ml9ct·
eel to De• lqUld ~tor
ROTC.
I MCNEWI
~
Exh-ted from 24 hour•
of duty, HIWk9Y9 and Col.
Pottar ~ lo a dea-
parata call tor torgeona
ffom • K~ army hole>l-
tll.
• STNJrTI CC' IAH
All•NCllCO
St-and K ...... llunl I
~ dat In IN 11.y Ctty.
• OYIRIAIY
Oueat-Getlldlne AUQlt·
8611.IRlO
CHANNEL LISTINGS
• MACNa / LEHMl'I
~
CJ) TIC TAC DOUOH a...w~
Qu.et1: Robert Stacik.
Chariaa Hald. MlehMI
Warran, Oenleca Wiiiiama,
Qelaey Klndand.
(C)MOYIE * * ·~ "The Lolled One" ( 1985) Robert Mor11,
Anjanette Comer Th•
~of a deQeaMd Hol-
lyWOOCI lllr lncura some
dabt1 end h11dache1
wtl4N'I II comM time to
make thl 1u,,.,11 1rrwige-
men11
©)MOYIE
"F1t10" ( 19801 Dom
Oet.u!M, Anne Bancroft. A
portly c:ompulalve .. ,.,
find• that nothing can
dllfnPlll l'lla cs.ir'9 for looO
untll he 18111 In !Ow. 'PO'
(%)MCME
"Petton" (1970) George C.
Scott, Kllri Maldlll. The
ear.-of World Wiii II gen-
eral George S. Piiion la
traced through the North
African, SldliMI Ind Euro-
~ eampllgna .........
.. Illa conflict• with other
otllcera. 'PG'
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Hoata: Steve Edward•.
Melody Rogers. See some
of lhl unu.uel thing• tor
rant In Southern California:
8Jtllnlne Ille 1&11 of Iha
t>uckerooa and their dying
1
111
.. ~FAMtl. y FEUD
aHANANA
au..1: Bobby Rydell.
• ~OHL.A
Hoell: tn41i Pedrou. Peut
Moyer. A bllc:katage look
11 -of L.A.'I mo.I ~
Iller muelcala, "I'm Getting
My Act Togetti« And T 111-
lng It On The RoMI"; lllalt
tl'll New Otani Hot• In Lit·
tie Tokyo; go for 1 ride
with the .. ~ ... the
guya who atell Clf'I becll
when '"* --forget to pey oft the ln8unlnc;e
compeny. Ill FAa THE MUl.c
• AU .. THEFAMl..V
A leta-nlght argument
~ Gloria and Miile
reautt. In • ~ of
atrenga bedfellows.
• MACNEll. /LEHRER
~
4ll!) NEWS
()) P.M. MAGAZINE
An lnt9Maw with CQamo.
pojll1n publisher Helen
Gurley Brown: a 32-mlle
race for human-powered
ve111ci..
l:OO 8 THE WAL. TONI
Cindy and Ben malll a
palnlul trip to Wuhlngton
lo attend her father'•
funwll. (RI D a ...c MAGAZ»E
WITHDAW>~
• MOYIE
* • *'A "The C4llne Mutl-
n y" ( 1854) Humphrey
Bogar1. JOM Ferrer. 8uld
on the rlO¥ll by Harmen
WOUk A ClfOUC> of omc-.
8 KNXT tCBSI Los Angeles Q KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles a ICTLA (Ind 1 Los Angeles
8 KABC·TV (ABCI Los Angeles
CJ) KFMB (CBS) San Diego D KHJ-TV (Ind I Los Angeles
0 KCST (ABC! San Diego
I KTTV pnd I Los Angele<,
KCOP TV (Ind l Los Angeles
• KCET-TV I PBS! Los Angel f's 8!> KOCE TV 1PBS) Hun1ing1on Beach
Prizes awarded
....
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A televiJioo movie on
maintainina dignity In the face of death. a low-
rated police TV series and a biJbly rated situation
comedy joined a documentary oo miarant farm
workers as winners of the Seventh Annual
Humamt.u Prises, it was announced.
Tbe award.a were preMDted by rum director
Jlobert Wise in luncheon ceremonies held by
Pather Ellwood Kieser'• Padflc Pallaad~bued
Haman l'amlly l..DIUtute. A total ot $50,000 lD cub
prises are awarded each yur from an endowment
lrom the Ell Lllly Co. of lndianapolil. Ind.
The awant. were eatablilbed to recopin
tbme TV abowa tllat. "ln addtUoo to their artlllr7.
moat fully communicate enrlcblnt human
; valu•~=-d Humanlt.u Prlle aecutlve cllreetor ,.., ro....wa,1 .............
• lllebae Cri1tofer'1 TV adaptatJon of bla
P\allU. PJi.M,.wlllDl.q pJ.,-•• .,,.. 8badow Bos."
aboat tennlnally lU P90Ple faetq deatb, WOG ID tile
to.mbmte Of' lcJqer cateaorJ. n. A.IC·TV allow
wu cited for''* dra1nau1.-ot tlae power of lne to belp •face our f-.n and dal wttb death ln .. opm llld afft.raWal • ., .••
la IM •mU111te cateocrJ, the prtle weat to
11V•• PIJVap : &aptalm the Atom'' ;r:o-al
CBl·TV'I "WOP ta ctoelmulli." IJtOw.
wlllcla .,_ wrtua bJ HQlll WU-. na ell.a b ..... --•e.a ,. .......... ,.,,.., .. al ..
IDU'IIQJILJltoU..DMial ....... '' 1"ft9 DI II 11 • To 1111" 111111•1 al IQC.'IV1 ''Hill ........................ ~ ,
.. ,... .. Jiii ,....., al tM Ill= ii ,.
_.... ............. W1~•• .................. , ..... ...
nwtlny llOMWI their ~
tlln, dllmlng that he II
mentllly un.tab69.
•O MONCAHO ...,.,
Mindy Nla -of Mor11'1
gourmet dellghi. and turne
lltto 1 wec;tcy Oftlan. (RI
DMOVIE * * ~ "0.tlny Of A Spy"
( 1888) Lorna Greene,
Anthony Quayt9. A pllr of
agenll working for din.t-
ent eounlrlM prove that In
• llt. of denger _, aplea
are .ubjec:t to low.
• P.M. MAGAZINE
AA lnleMaw wtlh Coamo-
polltan publlah« Heletl
Guttey Bfown; a 32-mlle
race for hum~ed
Yehidll; Chef Tiii mllc•
mayonnelle: Judi MllMlt
Ilea i-c-. for aiMllng;
Joyce l(ultlawtk hu the
lat•t In teni.
• M<ME * * * "Return Of The S...-an" ( 1 tMle) Yul Brynner,
Rober1 Fu41er After one of
the "MagnlflCenl s.-i" la
kidnapped, hi• former
COITlledee come to hie r-
eue.
• T.N.R.C. PAE.8EN'T8 ...
"The OrNt Am«lcan Wiid
Wuta Show" The T'""'h
Night ~ory Company
•~ on the c:orwerv•
lion of naturll -gy
90WClle on.ting 1 veuct.-
vllle-atyle variety ahow on
Ille t1leme of trUh Ind
Q!'b8ge. . a MAGIC METHOO CW
Oil PA#ITING
"lndlan Summw"
CJ) THE IAlCTEM
"Bottome Up"
(B)MOWE
"The ~ And The
Dlrtwller Foll" ( 18781 •
Georg• Segal. Goldie
Hnon. A danQe-f\all gin
who _._ raepect and •
COfl man who lec*I ni-
embattl Oft • pertloue jout·
ney ffom San Frlndloo to
Salt l-"• City. 'PG'
())MCMI
"Aodly II" ( 1871) S~er
Stallone, Talla &t*e. After
lollng .. bout with Ille
world dllmp60ft • .,.. ~
tloue boll• tr8lnl lot •
~ c:hanoe al Ille 11tte.
'PG'
gMOWE
"Beyond Evll" l:30. «I IOeOM .....
Kip lnvtt• Sonny to -
In with him and Henry anar
her roomrnete throwa her
out.(R)
•nt1000COUP\.E
After their epartmenl 11
robbed, Fell• tllka Otlc:ar
Into moq Into "Security
Arma."
• IHI.AK flMWWI
Roger Eber1 and 0-
5111<.. review "The OrN t
~Caper'' and ''For
Y04K e,._ Only "
• JUUA CHLO NfD
~NI'(
"8uf991 For 18" (R)
CJ) ~ T1N ....,,.,..
N08 (J)~ ......
AYe llltle ac:hool gltla !We
Magnum to find their mi.-
Ing tMCher (Al
88MOVIE
''TM ~MW Of Huo-
kleb«Ty Finn.. (..,.,.,.,.)
Kun Ida. Forr.t T\dar
Merk Twain'• cla11lc
account ol the eacapedel
of • MlllOurl farm boy 111
retold. •a IAME\' MtUDI Hlfl1I le Ullgl'9CI to write,
produce and dlr«:1 • por-
no fllm for pollc. UN (RI
• MMVGM'PIN
av..ia· Ct-eon w ......
~ w..,,.,, 8....,. ,_.,.._
• ecucl9TAM
"Pablo Cr\Alll'' .-.M .........
llloQllF °*' end 0.. .... ,..... '"The ()1991
~ Ceper'' and "For
"-~~." (t)MOVll • • .,. ··or Hwnan 1onc1-
..... (1 .... ) Kim "°"'*·
Lair.-...,....,.. 8Mld
on !tie now! by W. S-·
eat Maugham. A ~
meodloll ltlldMt wlttl •
aerlOvl Htormlty fall•
traglcelly In loft with •
Pf~waltt-.
CID THI"'°' WIOHA&.I "The Unloucllablel" The ~15 eat•. trap tor. Nth-
.... ~ Who .. pre>-
tected ffom !tie llw .. •
~diplomat.
e-.ao•O TAXI ~ .. llMc1ed by ,.
~··-· .. ·-Ing wife to De her c:lendel-
llnl tov.. (R) Q
• AMPICAN INDIAH
AlnWTI
"°"81• LOIC>tna" TM
Hopi lndlen ......., -the triadltloNll ._. Ind
MOltfs ol IN lftdlan aoutt..
.... In -Wl)'I. (RI
©)MCMI
"PattOft" (1970) George C .
Soott. Karl MMd9n. The
car.. ol World Wer II gen-
erat George S. Petton le
traced through IN Morth
Atdcan, 8iolllll'I and Euro-
P9W' ~ ... well
.. hie conlllc:ta with othw
offlclrL 'PG'
10:00 8 CJ) KNOTI LAHOIHG
Gary Ewing la pyt In a
touctly lltuatlOn by the
Mcoholk: he le IPC)n90f'lng.
and Rldlard m•• br1llen
~ al Abby In front of
LAurl.(R)
I ... NEWS (fl.,,.,
u.a. CtW)NICt.I
"ASSCAM Md The Phlll-
ClefC>hll Story" Jim Llf\rer
reporta on PhMldelphla'a
hletory of polltleal corrup-
tion and lta role In the
A8SCAM IClndal
®MOYIE
''Smollaoy And The Bandit
II" (1880) Burt Reynolda.
Jadcle OINolon. Sherttf
Buford T. Justice cab In
Illa two I~ brothen lo
atop I retired bootlegger,
Ule Bandit, from treneport-
'"9 a baby e61pt\ant. 'PO'
Cl) 9IZAMI )CC
John Byner ehOW8 you
thing• 1trenger than truth,
lerger than llfe, end z.anilr
than enythlng you've --· gMOWE
"Roedl•" (1980) MHI
Loaf, Kalil Hunler. A rock ""'* roedll let1 nothing
get In hit w.,. In 1111 pureutt
of the gin of Na dr-.
'PG'
i LOMTTA
10:80 ..we
INDDIN>IHT
Nl'TWON< NEWI
• AUBJCWt
PIMf'ECTNE: AHOTHE1'
WlW
"W-Md Wort" The
expanding rolaa and con-
trlbutlonl of -1n ma
nallon'• -" for1» are
upb'ed.
• WCIGll
''Hammlr Of The Norttl0
'
The~and ..... of
IN legeildal y Viking Qll..
ture -eicplONd. (R) Q
Cl) W'E'U. -MGKT MCK
AW/rf ~Ind Criatl-
na Ferrw9 '-1 thll look 11
-of ,,,. molt unfor-
gettab69 -clela -made.
11:00 ••• CJ) 0 Cit
NIW8
• ITMTMK
WMn the Enterpriel Is
damaged tn "" Ion 11orm.
one -II klllld, and Captain Kirk le energed
wtttrhll murdet. I :::....VWIDGAME
"Who'M Dig The ore-?" • ....,HU
Benny portrW)'9 • qulck-
Cherlgll artle1 .
I DIC*CAWTT
ntl TOM COTT\.I
IHOW
"My Body. Myellt'' Two
-... openly about INmlno to eccept the
lmpeitecllooe of tNtr bod-
llL
(C)MOVIE
''The Getting Of wtldom"
(1878) ~ Fowte. In
tum-of·l~tury Aue-
tralle... ~ -from !tie Outbadl ti. dllfl.
wtty adj\dtlng to the
--propn.ty of Ill\ _........ gif11' ac:hool.
(%)MCMI
"Coll Mlnar'a Oeugnter"
(1880) 51111)' Speoel(, Tom-
my ~ Jonel. 88Md on
-..... ·-~·
,·------------------· --------··---
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 9, 1981 D7
TUBE TOPPERS
KTLA e 8:00 -"The Caine MuuDy."
Humphrey Bogart stars in a film based
on the novel by Herman Wouk.
KCOP e 8 :00 -"Return ol the Seven."
The "Magnificent Seven" team up again
in a movie starring Yul Brynner.
KCET D 8:00 -"The Great Americ~
Wild Waste Show." The Twelfth Night
Repertory Comp~y offers a vaudeville·
style show focusing on trash and
garbage.
l.ONtta Lynn'a arto06ogt ..
phy. A~ glr1 ffom a
poor femlly In rurat 1<9n-
NC*y mam.. • muc:ti old-., loci.al boy wflO .,.,_.
,_ l1ea to at111dom In the """* lndultty 'PO' 11:ao•(J) nt1JGSL40NI
The WIMll '. formula '°' • better ~ almolt
r'*'8 the Jtiftereone' mer·
f1IOa. (R) ea nta .ar"'
CAMON au.ta: J-Gamer,
LlfTy Qatlln, Lelley AM
Werrwi, Bulter Crlbbe
(RI •& MCNlwt
NIGHTUNI 0 LErl MMCE A DIAL
I ITAHLEY MOIL IDCA~MC
NIW8
11:41®MOYIE
"The Shining" (19801 Jaclt
Nlcflollon. Shelley Duvall
Directed by Stanley
Kubrick. A lormer
ld>oolteacher hired .. •
winter caretakar for 1
remote. and •Wlf.,.lly
hlunted, CotoredO hotel. "
enowbound there wtth hie
wife and c:lllNo)'ant young
eon 'R' .MOVIE
.. ~ .. (1880) 8111
Murray, Rodney Danger-
lleld. The demented
groundl-kMPW of a IWatl·
ky country c;lub wegea -
agllna1 ttle gophera Inha-
biting 1111 turl 'R'
-alDflGHT-
12:00 • ()) HEC IWotlEV
A tonner marahal rldel
Into town to c:INr hit n1rn1
of murdar dlargea.
• t.tOv. * *'A "The Clll Of The
Wiid" (1878) John e.e1c.
Bernerd Freuon. 8eMd
on lhe 11ory by JIClt Lon-
don. Two men pocn 1d
by gold '-battle Ille
96ementa In the troan
KlondMte. •a~• ANQB.8
K9'ly le ICCldentally lhOI
by a cNld~I
~.(R) a GUNIMOICI
A n.w1 on the Dodge Cl1y
1>91* forcaa three dMper-
... twmen to reeon 10
roObefy.
• .-c>N:
W'Cll Iti Pane 1e totced to ,........
lnOlhw -·· peat ..., tlw IMF~ lot llolen
nuc:te. maten.i.
• MMTTA
Tony'1 penner le ACCUMd
of lhoollng • ~ and
Tony tl1ea to deer him.
())MOVIE
.. ~ ... (1980) Robert
Aedford, Yephet Kot1o. A
relorm-mlndad werden
--wldelprMd --ruptlon ...... he ant-1111
~ ..... pr1eon pol-
ing M an 1nm411e. 'R'
t2:1118 Cit TOMOMOW . The roc:lt group The ,._
c:illtlon; eonc:lualon of the
..,.. on the attereff«:ta
of the Vietnam W11.
©)~AHO CM>f'TI
"°9tl 8-la and Cfofta
pr-I a werrn and Infor-
mal ln-atudlo apee111
.... urlng A,_ Murrey.
~ Rankin and PIUI
W9am• .
1:00. N't'CHC
.... 101eu., THE
W0NJ> lllYOND
"Pldr9 Pio" Hoata: Dem-
ien Slmpeon, StKte Hunt
OU.ti. F1ther Joaeph
Glynn. Fattier Alber1 Negri.
• MOY1l ***'A "Mlljorle Mor·
nlngirlar" ( 1958) Gene Kal-
ly, Nllalle Wood. An
lmpr...ionat>la young girl
flM• In low with • mlOdt.
egad aongwr1ter only to
dlecover that he le • 1111·
• INDEPENOE.NT
NETWOMNEW8
(C)MOVIE
"The Cet1mount Kltllng"
Horal Buchholz. Ann
Wedg9wor1h Two people
wtlO plotted 1 robbery
murder the man they
framed lor the crime
1:06(%) 'T ' ~OF
THeA-.
1:108 MOVIE • * • "Five Oelpetet•
W-" (1871) Anjanette
Comar. Rober1 COO<ad.
Outing • COiiege reunion
held on an llland. the for-
mer ctu.nat11 ere target•
tor murdet
9 ..WS
1: 15 (%) litOVtE
"Patton" ( 1870) George C.
Seolt. Kart Malden Thi
e.reer of World War ti gen-
arll George S. Patton 19
tT'ICed through the North
African, Sicilian and Euro-
peen campetgn1, u W9ll
u 1111 connlc11 with other
ottloar1. 'PG'
1:21eMOYtE
"11.yond Evil"
t:aom MOVIE ••'n "lmpec:t" (11M9) Bri-
an Oonlevy, Ell• Ralnee. A
welt-c:onc:elved plot by •
woman and her peremour
lO dtepoN of her hoaband
via In "ICCldenlal" dellh
badcnrea Ironically 1or the
IChl/l'llng pair
1:ta• NEWS
~1aNewa ~&WISE
Ernie 11~11 to cut down
SW laaac Newton'1 IMnOUa
,,.. and Eric; ~ ditty
lllme.
2:101=
"OM1h Race 2000" ( 1975)
Devlcl Cerradlne, Simone
Orftfllh. In Iha V-2000
A. D., hlt-and-4\#'I dtMng la
• n1t1ona1 lpott "' which
lemale vk:tlml -worth t.,. pointl. 'R'
2:.tO e MOMCAMeE a WISE
Erle and Ernie learn to do
bird c:afq; Ernie Cl'Mml
Eric In • lennll maid\.
(C)MOVW
"Olvtne Medneaa" ( 1980)
Bette M6dtlr. The Hiii •
...._ Thia lllm record of
MldW'I concert perfor-
mll'ICll et Ille Puedena
CMc Auditorium In Febru-
ary. 1MO, r..turw • varie-
ty of aooge, from CM1P
JOHN DARLING ·
tUndlrOI to rooti blllllde.
~by•--ol
r9UnGfly ~ 'R'
...... • IDfT'ONAL.
IM. MOVIE ** • "My N1me la
Nobody" (1974) H.nry
Fonda, Ter-Hiii. An
aging gunlgfllet l\oC)lf'IQ to
,....,. Into ~ II
ttrwarted by an arrcioant
young drifter WhO hU
. ottw plll'la. a:11e NIWI
···~ * • "Unknown Wiid«· _ .. ( 18731 Two teen.age
t>oya axptore the mountain
reglona of Wyoming and
Mont.,... In -di of • t,_,,. reputedly burled
th«e. ....
• MOVll
• ~ "The lalat>d Of l.Mng
HofTor" I 18881 John Alh·
l•y. Kant Taylor. A
.-di team In~·
Ing plant and animal ~
tlOna due to 1tornlc tea11ng
dlec:o¥era a human mut ..
lion
Jc: 11 • MOVIE * • • • "Ounga Din"
( 1839) Cary a,.,,1, Douglu
Felrbat*1 Jr. Bued on tl'll
1tory by Rudyard Klpltng
An lndlan w1terboy
becomN lnvOlved with
8rl1111h mtlhary action In
the mountalna of nor1hltn
lndll.
a:ao Cl) llZAME )CC
John Byner ehOW8 you
thing. 11ranger than trulh,
larger than Ille. and z.anler
than anything you've --· .C:OO Cl) MOVIE
"Brubal<er" ( 1980) Robert
Redford. Yapt>et Kono A
reform-minded werdan
uncover• wldeac>rMd eor·
ruptlOn when he enlfr'I hll
~ ualgned prladn POi-
ing u an Inmate 'R'
4: 15 (%) MOW!
"Coal Mlner'a Oeughtar"
11eao1 St1ay s~. Tom-
my L• .ion.. 8aMd on
Lorett• Lynn'• autobiogra-
phy. A young gW1 from I
poor family In rural Ken-
lucily marriea 1 much old·
., IOeal boy who ~·
hit rlM to 1tardom tn Ille
mueie lndu11ry 'PG'
4:ao!:
• • '-'\ "Of Human Bond·
aoe" (198A) Klrt1 Novell.
~ HllW/Y 8aMd
on the novel by W Somer-
.. , Maugham. A young
~ 1ludant with •
aerlou1 deformity 1a111
traglcally In love wl1h a
promlaeuoua w11tr ....
f'rfda11'•
Day• i•e Morie•
-~
..,CC) * * * "The Young In
Heert" ( 1838) Oouglu
Fa1rb1nka Jr . Paulelta
Goddard A ne'ar-<'e>-,.....
f1mlly of eerd allarp.
dlartnl .,.. old lady WhO
relorma lhltn
(I) "Urban Cowboy"
(1880) John Travolta.
Oebr1 Winger A bMKol·
lar worker whO lanciel
hlmHll 1 modern-day
cowboy 1a1i. In love with a
girt he meeta In 1 popular
• eountry..n<l--tem bar.
'PG'
l.'GO CC) "Shimmering Llgf\11"
8e1i1 Brldgea. Lloyd Bridg·
... A young man dropa out
of Illa tither'• bu..,_
world.
t:00 Cl) "Dead Man'1 Float"
t:30 CC) "Troeadero 8leu
Citron" A 10-yeer-okl boy
11 amlttlt'I with 1 Hiiie Qlrt
wtlo -blllde him •
Troc.edlto
0:00 • • ~"Hal SMta"
( ttM) eo..y '°VI· HUnU
Hiii. T"9 9o)'t gel ln"°"'8d
with •phony~ CC) ''The Fourttl WWI" The
angulehed 1911\er of •
l ... kemll ·l ltlCkeft" l>Oy
•t'*"C>ll to entkltl Ne
-·· .... dey9 by granting him tht .. prOfftlell. (I)•••• "Of"'-
8ondaoe" 11tS..> tettt
D1vla, le•ll• Howard.
8aMd Oft IN noWll by W.
80<T*NI MMlgllarn. A
young mecllclf 1tudent
wtth 1 -lou• deformity
fella traglollly In IOw with •
promllcuoua wait,.....
U:to D • * "Bruahllfe" I 1882)
John Ireland, Everett
Sloane. wtwn c:ommuniaU
hold two )'OUng Americ-
11 h0etll09, I group of
freedom hghlera la orga-
nized to..-them
-AFTERNOON-
12:00 ••• ·~ "Don't RalM
The BrlOge, L-The
River" (1884) Jerry L.ewll,
Terry-Thomaa. An Ameri-
can eontlnu.llly attempt•
rldlculoua ··ge1~··
9Ctler'nea. -•Ulfly -Ing Na 8rlUlh wile to IN.,..
him • *** "AlongC-Jonea" ( l945) Gary Coo-
par, l.Of911a Young. A cow-
boy mlelll!an lor 1 notor1-
oua killer II hunted by •
poaM and hi• look-alHc•,
therelloutl1w
1:00 CC) * * * "The Young In
Heart" ( 19311) Oouglu
F1lrbenk1 Jr • Paulette
Goddard A ne'er-do-well
lamlly ol eerd aharp1
Charma an old lady who
feforma them.
(S) "Urban Cowboy"
( 1880) John Travolta,
0.0.1 Wlngar A blU4H:OI·
lar worttar WhO lanc:IM
hlmHll • modern-day
cowboy 11111• In love wtlh •
glrl hi rMell In I populer
country-~tern bar
'PG' 2:00.., "Can<lleahoe" ( 1977)
Jodie FOii«. Dlvld Niven.
A tomboy frOln the •tr-•
of LOI Angalea W>erita a
tattared Bf"llll eatate. 'G'
1:00 8 * * * "Thi Baeat Mull
Ole" (1973) CIMn Loci<·
halt. Peter CUlhlng A mil-
IOOl'lalra IC>Oftem/11\ lnvtt•
I Mlec1 group of people to
hll remote IOOge dUl1ng •
lull moon lo ..-1 tM
-ewolf among them ~ "Troc:adero 8leu
Citron" A 10-)'Nr-old boy
11 emittan wtth 1 Miiie git!
WhO raeea bealda him at
Trocadero
$:acl Ill ••• "Battle BenNlh
Tile Earth" (11168) Kerwin
Mii"-'. Vhf•-Ventura.
The Chlneae prec>are to
attacic America by tunnel-
ing lhrough Earth and
placing mdeer -pon•
under major U.S. c:lllea.. cs:J "Deed Man'a Float"
.C:30 CC) "The Fourth Will\" Thi
angulahed lalhlt ol 1
laukamla-atrlcken boy
attempt• lo enrich Illa
eon'1 IUt oaya by granting
him thrM promi-.
• "The Godfather, P111
11" (1974) Al PllClnO. Rob-
ert Duvall Mlchael Cort.
one uaume1 1111 late
la1'1er'1 throne end poww
.. he becomea lhl ,_
1-o of Ille Malla, llndlng
problem• with ,....... llC-
tlone and the law through-
out hie reign 'R'
l:IO ®"Alo Bravo" ( 1959)
John Wayne, Dean Mll1in.
An Old cripple, a IOfTnet
deputy-turned-drunk, 1
young qulctcdraw ounallng-
., end a girt help a ~
to OUtlmlft A powerful
rancher who went• to gel
hi• kUler brother relelMd
from prlM>n cs:J "Urban Cowboy"
( 1980) Jolln Trevolta.
Debra Winger. A l>fue.<ol.
ler worker who lanelel
hlmHll • modern-d1y
cowboy lett• In love with 1
girl he meat1 In • popular
eounlry-ano--tem bar
'PG'
by Armstrong & Battuk
------~--~~~~~--
Critic's love affair with TV
By TOM JORY "-.............
NEW YORK -Don Freeman watches TV for
a livinc, furtbermore lrom a deli1bt.edly ~itive
pera~ve.
'I once beard there are two Jobs on a
newapaPel' worth havlnt -sport.a editor and
publisher," Hfl Freeman, t.lev1aloo editor for tbe
San Dlqo Unlcm wbote column ii syndicated lD
more than 100 newapapera.
"I think that my job ii a contender," Freeman
aaya.
"I think I write to bave full, ud fOf' tbe reader
to have fun," 1a11 the man wbo coulden the
· world -and not juat that part ol it conllned to tbe
lt-tacJl boa-41.,_..-bia bNt.
.. I'm • Joun1H1t, bumoriat, eetaylat -•9'YlblAI 1 want to be/' bt 1&)'1, "and tMre'a
OOCblRI I CM't 1'rtte aboat ll I WllDt to. Tbere'1 a
TV ....ie 1a almolt ••erJtbilll. '' net -IDd • ~......., brtlllt ..... -
HU tbe Nae .... 0.. ......_at work.
1 'To tue rv too HrioUIJ it abHrd,'' ..,..._..,.,••a. TV .... ._ ... m9dl lmpaet,
alfecta too...., ...... to be&-.. npuy.··
A ••ata. il·rr..maa•1 .... .-k, lM.h9diq matert.I tW ptntouilJ :r::r: .. dill Unloe udw ......... .._~lli•Mlkcalled
"ID a ,.._., Na"1: A Clttle'a IMe MU' wttb
Tell..._." paNt ..... IMl JW. Prn maa cndltl ,.,.. Allml, tlMi OW·tl .. ........................ 1ll11 .... w.u .. t1ae
...... " ... llnt ..,. ii ........... .... .. ................. .
"That subtitle really startled me," he recalls.
"Suddenly, I reallied I'd been havin1 a love affair
with television. And then I thou&ht. but these peo-
ple have to undentand, America ii bavina a love
affair wlth television, too."
Freeman conaldera tbe subject with t.bat in
mind. "I like televiJlon even while seelnC it.a warts
plain," be 1ays in tbe lot.roduct.lOG to "Ill a Flea's
Navel."
"The lnfertor, the abaUow. the trite, the banal,
the triviallUee, the tabloid ~ut.a. the dreary
aoap operas, the 1appy altcoma -they aN there,"
tbe introduct.ort U.OUpt CCIDdalaal, "bat attentloa
muat be paid aa weU to ~ualtty and lt cu be found
with judlcle>m Ml~OG.'
But do1l't ctt the Idea Jl'rMman la prot.teUve of
tbe mediwn be 1avon. "U.U no. I'm protective only 1taiDat the
t.levl1lon ,_,.,.who ne.er watch -ptople who've
never teen 'R.umpole OI the Ball•)'' or 'Barney
Mlller' but pNtaum• to crttld.M wtlat TV bU to of.
fer.
"One tblftl I don't like about t.eJevlaioll,'' be
,.,, wtu.out a peuae, '1la tM WQ tbe artilta an
treated.
...... All• CJDce told ... be ... srateM to
f'red SU\C1DAD for putt•na bim GD tbe air. I told bha, .,,.. ..... , ....... be srat.ttua to JOU
fOf' a-a-.......... '' ...... . .
.... •••.• c ......... "'°.,.,, ....
CbkAID ........ Ml WW 0 If• nns tMn,
maf '-Mlt'll:Dowli '8 iolk19 I .. rta•n dkt fcwbll·~ltlleW ..... WIL
••• ,,.
··"
Ith
~' he
IP-
OC
at
•x-
i•·
la
~ e
te ,
ib
'· Id
II·
>r u
or
;.
d ..
b
t.
I I
~ I
r
I
j,
~
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 9, 1981
JOB WAITIN G -
James Brady's job as
presidential press
secretary will be
waiting for him when
he gets out of the
hospital, President
Reagan has assured
Brady's parents.
Mansion death
charges told
NEWPORT. R.l. CAP> -A New York fman-
cial consultant has been indicted on charges that
he twice tried to murder his wife with insulin in·
jections during Christmas visits to their Newport
mansion on "Millionaire's Row ." She has been in
a coma since January.
"We allege, that Claus vonBulow, knowing
that his wife was hypoglycemic, injected her with
insulin, knowing that could be fat.al," said Daniel
Hackett, spokesman for the state attorney general.
The indictment charges that Martha "Sunny"
von Auersberg vonBulow was iJ)jected in December
1979. and December 1980.
On both dates, Mrs. vonBulow. 49, and her
husband were spending the holidays at Clarendon
Court, their 18th century English-style stone
mansion on Bellevue Avenue, a strttt of fasbiona·
hie homes known as "Millionaire's Row" that
overlooks the Rhode Island Sound.
Relatives of Mrs . vonBulow's became sus·
picious and went to state police after she fell ill for
a second time during consecutive holidays in
Newport, Hackett said.
Since January, she has been in a coma from
hypoglycemic shock in Columbia Presbyterian
Hospital in New York. "with no medical prognosis
for improvement," s aid Richard H. Kuh, her
family's lawyer.
"If you have diabetes, which is high blood sug-
ar, you are given insulin to break up the blood sug-
ar," Hackett said. "If you have hypoglycemia,
which is low blood sugar. and you are given insulin
to break it up, you are in dire straits."
"I am totally convinced that he did not do it,
and I don't think anybody did it," said vonBulow's
lawyer. John F. Sheehan or Providence. "Medical
reports s how no evidence of antibodies in her
blood, which if there were injections or insulin, you
would have.
·'On the first hospitalization, the report says
there was ingestion of alcohol, which would cause
a lowering of the blood sugar count and could
make you go into hypoglycemic coma," Sheehan
said. ·
Sheehan described vonBulow as an indepen-
dent financial consultant who worked for 15 years
as the "right-hand" man to the late billionaire J.
Paul Getty.
The indictment handed by a Newport County
grand jury charged vonBulow, S4, with two counts
of assault with intent to commit murder Dec. 27.
1979, and Dec. 21. 1980. Mrs. vonBulow was taken
to Newport Hospital on both dates. Hackelt said.
"On the second occasion she was transported
in a coma to Columbia Presbyterian Hospital in
New York," Hackett said.
Sheehan said he did not know where vonBulow
was but that he would surrender for arraignment,
tentatively set July 14 in Superior Court in
Providence.
VonBulow, vice president of the Newport
Preservation Society since 1975. could not be
reached for comment. Sheehan said his client was
"devas tated" by the indictment.
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan association
OPEN MON.· FRI. 9 A .M . 6 P .M .
SATURDAY 10 A .M .·4 P .M .
Ex•culfve Offices: 7812 Edinger Ave ..
Huntington Beach, CA 926-i7
Soothfwn Calllom1a Regional Office•.
5877 E La Palma Ave .. Anaheim, CA 92807
8955 Valley View St., Buena Patk, CA 90620 165e Arnelfl Rd., Camarillo, CA 93010 20715 S. ~veton Blvd., Carton CA 90748
23021 Lake Center Dr , (l4kl FOfHt), El Toro. CA 92e30 1001 E. tmperlet Hwy , La Habra, CA 90631 G:t 4140 Long Beach Blvd .• Long Beach, CA 90807 • 22931J H1w1110rM Blvd., Torrence, CA 90605
1095 Irvine Blvd., Tualln, CA 92680 IOUAl
235 N. Citrus Ave., Wiit Covina. CA 91793 HOUSING
"Mercury Room" n all1bl• on• r11erve<J bu/1 lfl•OC~
Business Gifts
That Say
Something
Extra
8.D. HOWES and SON
NEWPORT BEACH
J.412 VLt Udo/6?s-2n1
lOS ANGllU I lllUAIM NA I MHlA IAllAU
MlM ININGS I $AH flANCliCO f "llWllll
Polish joke s uit nix ed Group hits Boone
remark in speech Court battle <>ver Reynolds film ends
CHICAGO (AP) -A Juctae bas
ended a two-year court batUe over
Polish jokes ln a Burt Reynolds mov·
le by diamiuint a Sl million libel sult
aeain.lt the movie'• producer and dis·
tributor.
Cook County ctrcult Judee Warren
D. Wolfson ruled that jokes in "The
End," a comedy starring Reynolds,
may have been In bad taste but were
not libelous.
The suit was liled In 1979 against
Reynolds Productions and United
ArWta by Chicaeo resident, Leonard
C. Tarcz:ab, on behalf of himself and
r
have a l1ld-b1Ck summer
Multi-position banana chaise
made of strong, comtonable 7 • 8 vinyl strapping over steel
frame. Reg. 14.95
a new twist In drllll
13-plece drill bit set from
Master Mechanic. High speed a•• set alzed 1/18 to 'I• tnchea. #M·
13. Reg 11.99
two to choou ,,_ ................. 12•• ,,,.. ..... 21." ............. .
=·=~~ ............. 34••
an estimated 4 mllUon other Pollet:
Americana.
Jarczab said the comedy "was not
· entertainment. It waa malicious deni·
gration."
The suit claimed the film was
"malicious and false" In depktine
Polish-Americans aa "depraved,
filthy, lewd, unpatriotic, stupid, the.
equivalent of human excrement and
totally lacking in any virtue or re-
deeming quality."
Mark Sableman, a lawyer for the
defendants, s aid the words in the
movie were , al worst, "name call-
ing." JOKES NOT LlBEWUS
Burt Reynolds
HOBRO, Denmark <AP> -A 1roup proteatine
U.S. involvement in El Salvador bu flied a com-
plaint aea.inat entertainer Pat Boone. who called
them "children who need a spanklne."
Hobro Police Chief Kaj Harne said Wednea·
day that The Committee on El Salvador filed a
complaint calling the July 4 Incident "a sharp
situation when a foreigner comes to our country
and breaks the law." Boone was accused of incil·
ing a crowd to violence.
Boone was this year's speaker at the Danish·
American Independence Day celebration in
Rebild. H.is speech, to a crowd includln1 Queen
Margrethe II, concerned the importance of family life.
roasting up a feast
Charbroil propane with cast aluminum bottom
and top. Stainless steel single grill and burner.
#GG700. Reg. 139.99
by the light of I tllll torch
Tiki Torch the origlnall
Complete set includes 2
torches and poles to extend 4~!
to heights up to 6-l eet. -· Choice of colors. Reg. 8.95
WD-40 atops squ eaks. 1 9"
protects metal, looaena ¥
rusted parts. 2 oz. Reg. 1.49
tea., .... Ut .................. UI
12 et., .... 2." ................. 2.21
don't 11¥1 It, Clft Ht
Heavy duty 30-gallon truh can 7•• with lid. Won't warp, ruat or
clatter!
-.
water delivery
Rugged garden hose 1s 75 ~
tong, °"" diameter for even 1 I 88 flow Brass coupl ings.
#FLEX0-4. Reg 14.88
spred the satin
Famous latex flat wall paint
from Glidden. Beautiful flat
llnl1h. scrubs clean. Stays
color last. easy water clean-
up
OM goad tum ..............
Delta deck awlvel faucet
8~
with I'' oeni.r and bright 24•• chrOtM-platlng. #100WF.
R9g. 37.95
CHAR -
BRO/t.~
top a.vice from serves•
Servess 19" rotary lawn mower with 3 h p
motor has compactly 114'' folding handle and
side ejection chute
f1ntaat1cally apredMle
Exterior spred latex glou House & Trim
paint lrom Glidden. 11 •• Goes on wtth ease.
Quick drying plM
.. ...,
In llot ••• .,
3().gellon Wit« Meeitr with •l'lergy 11vln9
temper.tut• lhut..off.
11411
............. 114.•
,. ............ 114.11
SANTA ANA
HDUa: WEEIDIYI I ID I • 11 .... IY AID IUIDIY I to I ............. ,., .. ..
~~;;==~·Clettcel= ~w,_..._
.
""
Whether you're looking for a grass
shack or a palace at the beach, see
classification 4200.
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EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
,.........,,, Metiu:
All real eslale ad·
vertised in this
newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Hous·
iog Act d 1968 which
makes it illegal w ad·
•lilt vertise "any preference,
1n limitation, or dis· l!: crimination based on
•• race, color, religion. 1: sex, or nation.al origin. t:: or an intention w make
mi any such preference. i: limitation. or dis
: crimination "
!lilt
1).lQ -111»
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
ZM advertising for real
estate which is io viola· := t:=:.. :: -=tioo;=-.o=f..:;:lhe=.::::la=w-'-. __
~:!:~~ ;::. :: , ________ ,
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lalHlty for ... first
lacorrect iHtrfio•
Oflly.
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MEMT,AllAllCE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ==-: PEMIMSULA ::::'~==~~) = Fixtr :::: ~!:'.:. ;:: Only steps w lhe surl. 1s
11o11&11n rn • -this bargain fixer. Bring MlllOllNCEMENTS, paint brushes & shovels PBSlllW.S & and cash in oo SSS. Call
lOST lflll1UI 00
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SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
COMliaCIAL + UYIMG
Spacious 3 bdrm, 2 bath
apt. Bltins, wet bar.
fireplace, atrium Over
500 sq. It. oC bus mess
space + 4 car garage.
Priced at m>.ooo.
associated
s11c1 ~ Ells Yf A, •r ~s
4 .' 'tit! £11 r. 1 ,... ,.
CORONA DB.
MARDUPLU
South of tbe highway sits
this elegant home plus
inc:om~. Huge owners
unit, brick courtyard
leads to French doors that open onto Italian
tiled floors Beautiful
wood pegged floors
enhance den and
spacious family kitchen.
2nd story hosts secluded
master suite wilh open
balcony and bubbling
spa too! 3 more queen
si1ed bdnns for your Uk·
ing. Huge 4 car garage
+ 2 Bdrm income unit.
Price reduced and
owner is anxious. Call
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
714·631:6990
HAUOllJDGI
Award winning
"Jodelle" estate home.
lst resale offerm1 oo
this exquisilelY appoint·
ed l ownhome with
massive view of bay,
ocean, coastline It. njghl
lights . Offered al
Sl85,000.
i!1 ! t•: :: \ ~ •· . ' ' ' ••I '
µ r1, •,,\ ,. • ',•,,,i '' •·
f I I 1 11f Ir '; j: 0
STIPSTOllACH
2 bdrm each untt +
room l blth on 2 car
garafe. Good w/1 rental area. SZ501000.
associated
B"' • • " "' • ,., • ~ ~ . .· .
~
NIW
IUllNESIMEN
Co1ttect 19'• DAILY
PILOTWltlfilf'Mllr ,...,.. .. °""" , ..... , .... "'' ,.,
utl"I I flctfOHI
Olld ............... .
REALTORS
675-551 t
LOOKINCi FOR A CARIER IM REAL
EST ATE? CCHM le .ct clscml yow ..._..
witt. -. Wt offw y• good COlllllllHU..
achtdlllL ProfffaJoMI .-...Ct. Always
ovClilcllM. Htat office!
COLE OF MIWPOIT REALTORS
2515 L Cont Hwy .. C..... .. Mar
675-5511
UMDAISLE
Exciting Oppty ! Wide channel view
from spectacular architectural
designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home.
Slip for 2 lar ge boats. $1,495,000.
Summer Occupancy.
LIDO ISLE HOMES
Featured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditionaJ spacious, custom 3 bdrm. 3
bath home, newly redecorated. Priced
lo sell quicKly at $475,000. Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for entertaining.
$420,000. pest price for the money.
PENINSULA POINT BEACHFRONT
Panoramic bay & ocean view al
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm, ·3
bath c ustom home 3700 sq. ft. featur·
ing marine room. $1 ,385,000.
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm. den. spacious Plan 8. im-
maculate. Low priced at $215.000.
BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR
3·!1 fl11;' d· D• ,. NII o7'J 6161
WANT ACTION? IHave something to sell?
Clauiled Ads 642-5678 Cluaified ads do it well.
* HAI.IOI llDGE * This serenly beautiful home is
set against a changing
backdrop or green & golden
slopes, long shadows &
twinkling lights! Featuring 3
bdrms + a spacious library,
fo rmal dining & gourmet
kitchen for memorable days
thruout the years. A dramatic
s tairway that 's wrapped
around an atrium leads to a
hideaway master suite with
study & frplc for those chilly
evenings! For a private
s howing of this s uperb
residence call 759·1501 or
752·7373
* UNIVERSITY PARIC *
Sen s ational 3 br home
overlooking the greenbelt.
Special financing available.
Call for details & private
showing. Only $162,000. 759·1501
or 752·7373
* COZY con AGE *
SOUR HU TING
Sensational 3 bdrm home
featuring upgraded interior,
french doors & spa in xtra lge
yard. All for Sll0,000. Owner
will carr y large 2nd T.D.
759-1501or752·7373
MIWrC>RT IUCH OFACE
2670 S• MICJMI DtiYt
(714) 759·1 501 C7 t 4) 752-7373
~ Walker &lee
Real Estate
':::t' S~\t~lA-4t~s·:
-----~ QAY .. Nl&M----
•
....,.,.. ._.,el h ,_ llCnl•led _. ti. i... • ._,_,... ....
·~=''fitl I I I I l J 1Cl•Mi1.111•wa1 .. Ct11r 111 llM
Walter S. _}(i"f
& .A66oc.
llAU WA TllROMT "JIWIL"
Pler/Aotlt-50'1..t
Prestigious Npt Bch offers the finest
unequalled charm of "French Coun·
try" decor in this truly beautiful home
w/48R or 3 + maid's. Cobblestone
courtyard, expensive Calif. stone ex-
terior. French brick flooring & peg/.
groove floors w/plush custom area
r ugs. Rough-sawn, wbite.-washed
cedar walls & beams. Soft green
kitchen cabinets w/artistic hand·
painted "Trompe o'ile" depicts fruit,
vegetables and pottery. Den w/rich
stained oak beams, panelling,
bookcases, French doors and shutters.
Xtra lg HJS/HERS walk·ins. Com·
fortable MBR & bath exudes the
artistic wannth of "Chinoiserie" hand
painted delicate flowers on walls & .
cabinets. Offered al $1 ,795,000.00.
Call /write P.O. Box 572, Corona del
Mar. CA. 92625
WALla S. KIMG & ASSOC.
C714J 541-7716/644-5917
EE
llDlll ILlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS Of SERVICE
SUPER lASTILUFf CONDO
Former Model With View Of Big
Canyon. Three Bedrooms Plus
Convertible Den, 212 Baths. Wet
Bar . I ntercom . L ovely
Appointments Throughout
Community Pool. Best Value In
Area. Priced At $198.000. A ''Joy Of
Newport" Listing.
ISLAND LIYIMG
Move Into This Bright Four
Bedroom Lido Island Home With
Only 20'7(1 Down. Assume the Large
1st Trust Deed At 12'# And Owner
Will Carry A Second At 12"". A
Fabulous Opportunity To Own
Property In One Of Newport
Beac h 's M ost Picturesq_ue
Communities. An Excellent Buy.
$475,000.
(!) --... ... , .. "'
OCEAN YIEW~EWPORT
Two f•llY furftl1hd llOtlHI ht H
exullnt location, I 20 ft.t to tlle
wf1 ONt. Great oWMn 2 bd, 2 bo.
frONt i.ou.. ,.. o 2bd., Ibo. ,... lloMM.
OwMr-wil c.-ry I st. $355,000.
OCEANFRONT AXER-3 UtlTS a.. fewtf woiff'") to bt cut for M
... ! s.d. ... & .... aw..r-wil
c~ I tt T.C. et 121/i°lo l•terest .
$675,000.
BAYSHORES BAYFROHT--VU ....... _.. ...... , ...........
witt. -*tnlcttd vu of • ..,.......
adMty. Yenatfle adllff -f-'Y ._.
"""' al ... c .... ' ClllCllitY of Newporl. °"" " IMOOtllly floWf .. toor ,... .... 11kJ1t pffchtd bt• ctl ... htk p••lllMJ
.... ,,..... brick Wtrior' ,.... wfttt
~ 0.. ..... witta 5 ........ ....
""' + .. "'"' ... .,. -... lay. Sl,lS0,000
WATERFRONT HOMES.INC.
REAL ESTATt
s.i. .. R•n•.ok ,.,..,v ~1
2431> W Co.JI Hwy 31$ M.mne Aw
~ &.ch &tbo.l lslallcl
Ul·l40t '7Uto0
C k 8 L U I T A C T H E Y E 8 0 R 0 S
E S C 0 I P C K 0 A R I 0 A 0 W 0 0 C
C 8 H I N 6 l P 0 E S R E H C T U 8 C
Y R A N R 0 A U K C .A 8 N A U H C A H
H c u'z c 8 c Kc 8 A II c 0 0 R r t 0 I A S H Z U W 8 U l C S 0 R C H H P
L U l U 8 Z l S I 8 S I R S 0 A G R
0 C I R N Z E A T 0 R K 0 l C N N U
L N K S A L R T S R l E S W K I 0 T C
OBA WHEPCAYCHOPALEO
OAHECYOHRHRONOMKTIU
R E C H 0 E C L 0 L £ J C D E 0 H t T
Q U T 0 U T C L l 1 8 Y N Y L Y W K L
CUKIUOEOLZOADHOOICA
IWSQORSOCCBRCOP1 N915
: ............ _,.... ... . .... ........ ~ ............. "", =· = ~= .. c..... ..... ... c.-.... Mt .......... T_,a...
WI· ~l I· Y '\
TAYLOR CO.
IU.i\l.JqJ:-.. .... 111 • l~l·lli
2·STOIY DUPLD~IWPOIT IUCH
STIPS TO IUCH-OWta ANAHCE
Call today to see this fine duplex! Live
in one unit & rent the other. 4 Bdrms,
deck & 2 baths in upper; 2 bedrms & 1
bath ill iower. Fireplace in each.
Some view of ocean. OWC 1st T.D. &
note of $247 ,000. int. only, $52,500 down
pmt. No loan fee. $299,500.
WESLFf M. TAYLOR CO .. HALTOIS
2111 San J~ Hllh Rood
MEWPOIT CEMTH. N.L 644-49 I 0
'
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949.
OPEN HOUSES
FRl·SAT-SUN 1·5
1921 TRADEWIHDS LANE. ELEGANT
THREE BEDRO O M. TWO BATH
HOME DEN AND FORMAL DINING
R O OM . SHOW S LIKE A
MODEL $32S.000 .SEE PIA D'AURIA OR
STEFANI STE\'ENS
1716 WESTCLIFF DRIVl #1. LOVELY
ONE BEDROOM CONDO COMPLETELY
REFURBI S HED .COMM U NITY
POOL ONLY S9S.OOO SEE VIRGINIA SWAN.
1617 WESTCLIFF DR, M.L 631-7300
TOTALLY REMO DB.ED HOME
Great financing. assume lst and owe
very large second. Spotless inside and
out. terrific outside spa. and three
spacious bedrooms. Very well priced
at $279,000.
U~IOOf ti()Mfi
REALTORS.675-6000
2443 EMt C...C Hll!lw.,. Coro.a !kl Mar
WI HA YI 4J O' THI llST A.-cTS IH TOWH
THHOMCi
TOWHHOME?
Call lhe specialists at
the coodomirlium in
formation ceot.er.
Touchstone Realty
963..o)67
AESIO~TlAl REAL ESTATE SERVICES
UDO ISLE-JS FHT
Street to street. This lovely
remodeled home having 2
bedrooms, 2 baths & a large
family room is only three
houses from one of the most
beauUful beaches on the
Island . Owners hav e
purchased another home, so
must sell. S ,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
18UCID
$100,000
OCIMRONT
Choice comer duplex. 3
bdrm, 3 bath up, 2 bdrm,
2 bath down. Cao con·
vert to a larger home. SELLER WllJ.. HELP
f'INANCE AT 13<",.
$'795,000! ..... ..,,,.. .....
•675-7060.
YllWFfXS
Reduced to S33S,OO-O
Cameo Highlands on fee
land. Agt 673·7761 ,
760-1397
I 00' TO llACH
3 bdrm, 2 ba, new paint.
oew carpel, fantastic
locatJon. Only $249,500.
Good financing.
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670
ARE YOU HOT?
So is this property. Ex·
ecut1ve 4 Bdrm pool
home in an excellent
area Creative financing
available Only $178,000
Call today 9'19·S3'70.
,ALLSTATE
REALTORS
MESAWOOOS
Auume the large exist
ing 9....,% loan and the
owner would consider a
small 2nd. New drapes,
some new carpeting.
jacu121 & garage door
opener are so m e
amenities or this 3Br.
2Ba home with an add
on family room orrered
at a real value at
Sl&S.000.
$8000 to Move In
Very lrg 3 Br condo Ill
Ftn Vly. Has lrg as
sumable loan. Call Ann
MrCasland63H266.
AIMORMAL
Cao you fllld a property
four doors from the So
Bayfroot with a 45x85'
lot on Balboa Island
where the owner will
consider anything or
value.stocks, cash. land.
IAc«IAY
DBJGH'f I Lovely 3 Bdrm 2 Ba with•
new French co1U1try
kitchen and ieed brick
exterior Located In ~
heart of N~'s up-
per bay. overlooking
country club Pri~ al
only $190,000 with ex·
cellent financ111g availa·
ble Call m Sl91
C::. '>El HT -t-' PHOPH~ I 11 'I
IAYSHOUS
FAMILY HOME
This large 4 Bdrm 4 Ba
hom e is J~t steps away
rro m the private
beaches of this gate
guarded community.
The h ving room with
heavy wood beams,
paned windows. and
shutters open to the sun·
ny brick patio great for
eotertauung Owner will
ass1)l with ftnancmg or
will rons1der trades.
SM9,SOO
D.M. Monhal RJtr
t.~4-9990 760.0835
$91,000.C.M.
3 Bdrm l Ba. covered
patio & gaarage. As·
sume exisung loans with
low down payment.
Needs 1'0rlt
TR,\DITIO\,\L
RL\l.TY
631-7370
Pvt Vila Pk &tat.
Est 1890 restored 4 Bd
4 frpl + guest ~.acre
SS9S,OOO Unique homes
Sharon Kathy67s-MOO
STEAL IT
$85,500
2 B d r m . I ~'2 b a t b .
fireplace. Close to beach
and shoppmg Hurry!
64.S-9161
i. OPEN HOUSE
. REALTY
it!'
THCMt-
WhyPcryTaxn?
Use 1nnat1on to your ad·
vantage. f ree ronsulta·
lion w teachers who ,
ttotd Calif Dept. or R.E.
li c en s es & Calir
Teachtng Credentials \IA, FHA purchases, DO
down payment, or oo
monthly payment units, you na~ it and purchasell, partnership
the owner will trade plans etc !
lorludes plans for a ne" , Call no"'. it'~ a buyers
duplex. A.sk111g~.ooo market I lot.oo I.a.ct Rtty .
673-1700 D S Educawrs Rlty '
PURCHASE Of'TIOH 148·6 3~4 639-0616 •,
New Faota.sllc 3 Br 3 AFFORD AIU DREAM
Ba. ~ondo, $2500 moves JBr.112Ba, Sll!l.900 Take ~
you to, $1000 per month over ex1slioR fHA It's ,
<Why pay rent >. Next to lime 10 buy call 556-1732 all shopp111g. theaters & !&_t •
park, just minutes lo -
bearhes. WINU[Dr II Ward Management Co nu\'1 ••
714/631·~
Find out about the high
earning real estate sales
career opportunities
with THE REA L
ESTATERS. Licensing
school fees completely
refundable w ·srhool of
your choice. Extensive
salet training. For in
fonn1tion, call 751-6191
IA YFIONT COHDO
First lime offered for
sale! «feet on lhe bay.
View or the jetty and
Balboa Island Bridge. 2
bdrms. and 2 baths
Wid'e bayfront terrace
Spacious. S57S,OOO.
1714) 67l ... 400
IJ Ill Ul-ZIZI
HARBOR
Dt;PLEX I yr old As· !.
sumable SlS0,000 In,
1 S215,000 · Orange
6 UNITS Brand new. j
$168.000 loan, S25S.OOO
San BernardlllO
LOT IN DANA POCNT, :
29'< down. will sub· I
ordinate. Sl4S,OOO.
So. CGlf. by
546-5605
~ 7st.1111
WOOOlllDGI
COHDO $151,Sot
3 Bdrm, 2111 ba with dbl
attach. car . air cood. t wood bununa rrpk and
only 2 yrs new Super
HUMTIMeTOH fln1ocin1 w/10'\ don HAllOU• forqu1Ul\ed buyers.
Daven po r \ la I and • "'!!~1!!7!!1!!"'!!!!1!!!!!6!!!!!16!1!!!!!!!!!1! custom 3 Bdrm home r::
with &3' or bayfront, IUCHCMl'UX
boat dock, 11una and Tw · H\ • P a , ex q u I • I t e I 1 o 1or1tou1 Wilts • i
appointed. shutleu, blocks to btacblnd Mly Pu~uel floortna. 2yearsold Ottanv~. 2 6 3 bdrm units. ~ I
pant ina. rich to11t bdrm ls C:tt•t '°' =· ll\ruoul. Owner w/cmy 1\ 14~ wllb S1'75,000 occupant On1Y DOO.
cub. ll'• 1m11hin11 Callnowf'.7'"170
•.ooo. 'ALLSTAT
RIAL.lOM
..
..
I
·~
,..
I
I
~
---Orange COiit DAllYlilLOTlThur1d1y, Julye. 1981 H••tfer w. Me.Mt -Wt ...._. ,_ ·
....... .., w. f :::::.:-:~·····1··0~ ;;;;.::w···io6f w·.·:.:.:.:.· .. ···ioa6 Loh·····~~~·:.:..· .. ···2·2··00·· :.·::::~-:..-:·· .. ··:·2·2·i ·······::...::::. .. ···)·;; ....................... ~.~~ ............. Wt ~,.,s. -----P"""'" .......... ----• ~ -..................... . ................................................................................................................................................................ .
..... ..... I C..W... 1024 P1 t I Y~ llM 1044 Lower 3 Atth Bly. Grt1l VIUAIAUOA HOMI + IHCOMI Ullillue lot In Nwpt lkh. EASTS IDE a BR Avail. July 15tb, lbr,
......... -.......... 0 •••••n•••n•• ........... _ ... ,.,.,..~'"" ocean view. pvt area ' 101;\')'o loan. 30 yr l Le• comer lot. Cb.ann· w/81ck Bayview. J0,000 Dolthout, &004 IOU· 2~ba , bty w/oc••ri ........... ._ l"BA"9> t WCW ~a~411f.3144 bdrm den, view, fpk, IA& bome with wood tq.ft. 1215,500. A&t. Uon, no pett, Aus 1. 147$ view, tea/mo. drive by _..,.CANAL Brad •t..-1 · rt1t1t .,., .a.•~ ly O.W Nonbwood p~ micro, uptnd rpt, Uno, noon, oeun vlewt. j.vt Cbrlelilla,&'51'5U7 Nl·393'1 1075 Norla In Arch
Lov.OM1Y ,wa}1Ja1'1 .. om• '~t1ty1,,~!..!~.· f::c~•:·. :.•,'11:~0•0~·. l8drm. frplc, fully up-HOl1MCOAST til~ttc .!~Wnto pallOI olus epark 01 M••t•o..t, E Side 2br. Zba. rrplr. Burb Hau . Call ... " •q.,, 1111u••"· 1w..... f.•ded 6 &econ~. No WH_..,..,..1 _67.J--2 or1.....,.__ unit with fire place Inert 2400 IS50/Mo cau W.t&Mor7 evn
with 4 bdnnt 61 bdrm Ina. C1UnowfordetaiJa wotbbop. RV pte + ••. 110-. ...... -........ ~·-U ICUTlYIUAl....6• 1219,000 ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• 81 ,_....._. J212
1 •• ,,._ ........ , ,,_ u ... ot .... 1 4 bdrm newly deeor1t .... S JI ....... _ 1 b on ••••••••••••••••••••••• apt Little l.\lud "uitt i~• ma.ny eit.ru. Ownr. wlU .. _, .,... -ISi.A.MD VllWS ~ L ~I.I. -..--......,......
..... auvuw1ud.le(ortwo ~-~·-;,...rm IUJ ... ee r.-. **Mrraff 38drm.faml.lyrm,a~ ed. ~000.Aasumable 4'7·17 I SIT4WAY ml 'uwm, •• 4brbomelnnewdevelop-u· boata. w .ooo ·--!~~ma I .......... .._. 1040 .,,,-Ul.J. 81. W01/f.1275,000 loan or lit sm> per mo flOMrT AU CA.:sil~~M. A~ Aus 1 m.at modem kUtbtn,
3 BR, frplt", i,. yard. K ••••••••••••........... ~s::h:..~;. J~d?u!: Open no1111Sat/Sun lH. or luae as>tJon. Asent Ottter IHI.... 8rl.Od new lwniry Palm Hurry, nu adlt condo.2 rec 'lac avaU, no pell ,....._ ·~ IMIUX a11um. lou. 1115.000. IY ow.a ..... It pool 8'5 K1tella. 175.5320 642.f7A ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sprina• home with 3 Br .. Ba. nr So Cout 540.UOO days, 8JS.1'7M ... oerm1Dl2 ........ home. ._., ,, ... -.i.. -•y p f 1 OO/ Sretn...-Dear , 191. wltdya, 1•1.D wltnd & u-t..111... u~ ' ~ ....... 1 .. v• Jue• a ou--ee'• fro-..:2'!::............... ymte o 14 mo, and It 12 Uoa HOU S --.--bedrooms. 3~ baths. Pl u 551·~ ... !:. ..... ~_:o..;"':.=-----
bea;h."a Bdrm, 2blu;, ~v .. ~·~.__. .s~~~pay evn. NTW~ GdSE l'w s.t 1100 F1mlly room with · ,_.._Ylafe 3267 od led kit hta bl .. w. POiat.udorcarryb1ck IYOWIB 9wpl its. .~5rm9Ka. ••••••••••••••••••••••• fireplace, '1ourmet 2br House l ~ba. 138 •••••••••••••••••••••••
rem e c ' y V SW&C~ frpk 1 a t0 fars• •ot•. 8y appt Lovely2story3Bdrm,2 .J ..... o.:ner. I ·AdultaS5-+,2Br,mlcro kitchen micro-wave AlbertSl.CM.~tMo 3BRTOWNHOME :s!:!0~a':::~re:1;:: $116.tOO PoOU'. tftllll,Jet,~ eety. ba, M1ny amenities. as· ...., . ......., wave. A/C, saoo cub. oven and trash compar· Avalll/llll M0-20IN Luiury,2~ba.poo!.
duclna Macadamia nut VA MONO * ..tl!!} .& · aumableloan. IZ'a.500. OPINHOUst 1640 Newport Blvd. #19 tor. Also includes pool POOlHOMI f750/mo. 131·1J73
.... 1n -'""'' r•nl • H............... (~~]llllo<l•r•d•· ............. ., LIDOISU C•ll........ .... •••. "'b<se .... c.11 ........ ' ... ... HOllESPORRENT PLUS a 2 bd.fm, 1 b1th to VA. Don't miss lhls CONDO Huntln•ton 11t (7H)32'1·'7106 111 VIAnHACA •COOLUMZM• fee land. Excellent Ba . Large backyard·. J 8drms. M25·S700.
1ar11e1pl. Priced for a rare opportunity. 3 Landmark. lbd, elec. Rtallu Mtwport ltadt I OH FRl-SAT·SUN lG-8 .79 Hlllcmt dbl wide. financing. "25.000 with Completely uparaded. Fenced yar ds le
' quick 11lut $4.SO,OOO. ap1ciou1 bdnnl, 2 baths. garage door, aecurlty 551.3000 •••••••••••• .. ••••••••• KING SIZE BARGAIN fully upgraded, hu 18. $360,000 assumable I.st. $850 Mo. Pool main· garages. Kida & pets
r1mUy r~, frplc, and cua rd . rec center. ~!t arraau '~"'>'·"\'lor $13,450Dtt Sll5.000 REDUCTION sumableloan. (SM.n4). AlkforBWCote. tenanr!llncld.979-7295. welcome 545-2000.
:-\\•\llHtHo'll formal dininl nn. On 536-1284 . · will buythisvucondoin' Priced tor immediate A P.R ofontyU.m.. '*Cote Realty 4br .. 2ba, frplc , dbl ear, A.tt!!!.nofee.
tlOMI, Inc:. quiet tree·lintd street. * * ·-AP(I Villa Balboa. Assume action on this <l bdrm Htritogt 1 patio. lmctd yard, no • 3bdrm, 2ba, ram rm, ~ R(ALESTATE I ASAP! Piute call bkr 3 br, ba ... $109,500. ua • loans. $13•.soo. Rae newly flniJhed dream MobltHc.et & Investment pets lat/last .. $200 frplc. gd view, gd up.
17M900 for details. Terma u.U..ScaU a.u. two level.Z Br attached Rodgers631·1.256 home -owner very ,,7..,610
1 640-5777 1725/mo. 64§:~ grades. fncd yrd. 1675.
31...U46 lYatliP a.om.. Vua.nl and ready motivated submit of SpotlHs 3bdnn 111'tba. lld .:640-=562t=::....· -----'!!!!!B•l!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!l!!i~ ... -1111111.._llllll _ _. SU,_C--fO'JO! OWner auioWJ fer now tomorrow I Br. Trailer Home C M neighborhood .... _ port•-.......r.. 3•69 C.,... .. Mm-102iillll .... ..._.................. -10 sreat fihncing maybetoolate.V1rgmia w/cabana C M Adults. •o.tofSte Avail 711.s 1!oSO + ser rww -6
h•••••••••••••••••••• 1.-.ctSl,000!!! 1vailable Call now O'Brian,Agt Xlnl $6800 or trade for 'roperty 2600 dep New paint, new •••••••••••••••••••••••
S l•-------•I \.'J mi. to beach! Im· $111,950 673-1323 motorhomt.673-3826. .. .................. ~ .. ra>lS, b1gyrd 549-9696 SAHTIAGODI. .
OSO. 0. OfFHtGHWt•ytt.fEY , ... LOCATION mac .• highly uparaded 1 Duplexes, oceanfront, Harbor view Home BY OWNER Nice dbl. For St. of Wuh prop in T 3"32 Buu.llful house avail
"' -4 br pool M"a Mod<I bol<m + d<n/-t'"' t [~· ir-•brld M B b d ., b 2 ba In i fo. call Arleen. 12 BC' II oro .. now m elegant area. 4 Duplex , assume S270,000 Ho~e ~wne 8>.000 &r • ·o. nu uu CJC beautiful ocean view. onaco y owner 3 r, w1 e ' r. n ce comllnr nr 1.5. Negolla· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Br 3 Ba Dllling Rm.
in loans. Askinll $400,000 first at 14~. with 40 K te:;,~~lh~l~=~~~t Realry Perfect location New 2 ba • ass um Sl72K adll park. Sao Juan bit terms. 714n52·7667 HOME FOR RENT Lmna Rm Ir Family
Ideal for builder/· dn OWC serond bar, fprlc. Perfect for 551·3000 condition.A 673-7300 Shows Like model' Ask ~BJ!!SJ.l'!....00 21J.J30.2813 t. 3 Bdrm li2S Fenced Rm New wallp1per,
remodeler Darrell $1•9,<N\DaviduA•,_, s•l or ..... ....ia *'10""" BAY CREST BEAUTY S ing S2l9.500 Ulcl land IHI&.........._ yard & gsrage Kids & ro1y lt1l"hen & many • ~ ............,, • • ~~"'· .. ,JON. l'zt lhrr•M• Pk•.,. lr.a11~ 71!/\9u"' "-·-A'" ...,... I u• 2000 ~ Pash. 4JJ.12116 Owner IJWOOS. Needs Br Family Rm $200,000 -""" ....,., '!W" ~ e EXCITING e h ..__ 2100 pets we come '"" many xtras Sl750 mo. 400tl7'"~ RMI ALL financing to exi1tinr assumable I.st Owner IY OWHEI ••••• ~:::;.•••••••••••• ~t~n<! ftt Broker Cooperation c.M MW $38,000, Owner wiU belp! COOi. 'OOI. ml) <'BIT)' Sl00,000 2nd LecrM """'-I H t ~ii ToWll 8 67 acres nr V1llu Park, Fowttall. V.._ JZ34 7S9·897•~·-----
~~ VV"'n • ......._ ..... _... ·~ -~ · Harbor Rtdae CONOO 20X60-1969 lking Home. Orange. ready for sub-••••••••••••••••••••••• OM THE WATEI ·~-=. · .. · .·." ·_ n..... Sat "'·-l·• ....._ Lar-t·-11~ home 111 1 year S435 000 Call -r-.-_,
Non-Coop. 536·1'00: beautUalColletePsrlt 4 ~~~ •. ~;!5~5~nfnt 2br. ·Zba. h1Bhly up 2Br. 2Ba. ra m rm dlv1s1on. Will exchange ~OMBESd FOR!!:! Great view cl boats"'
--------• 961-83'1 Br pool home, spa + araded, $450,000 With w enrlosed porch for oceanfront. bome or } 4 :;ns •• d ··~ bay Brirk fplc family lnvestors Duplex on best 11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~1 END Of THE hhuge bor nus nn, ,&real ~.ooo Cuh. 64().~ m.soo 10come units.1·93'7-1377 en re Ya r 5 room Avillable'ammed street. pool, hi income EASTSIDE Condo, Open ome or entertamina. HARIOR VIEW -garages Kids & pet~ ·
Owner. S320.000 daily l ... 413Gloucester RAl .. OW Assumable financing 24x50.1971Keywe11t2Br, ltetah welcome H5 2000 for 9months Only 1}95
640-4999. Dr. Unique a rea ~~t~:' 4in8dm_I t~ ~vl~llable Call for de· L ~!!.. ..2!r"y~ur4:~~S~>' 2Ba.S34.500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A_gen!,nort't! ~l~ER EA!.ESTATERS t~-Agt.675-5200 d me qwde cu, a s. o• ... , LI-·--· F _._......._. Lease 3 Br 2 Ba frplr, 673-M50 e s a<'. Pr 1 e o 3 Br 2 Ba. Financing re n ling s e P 8 rate 24"60 1971 Goldenwtsl ~ ,,__., r h •-2 Nearly new duplex
Three and two
bedrooms. Three and
two baths. Ideally de·
signed for guests Large
assumable Isl a nd
owner will carry 2nd
T.D. CaU Roger Bar
qulsl , 759 -1243 or
131·7300.
COIOHA DB. MAI
200 Blk So. of Sea view
4 8dnn. 2 Ba Home
on 40' Lot. I Va blks
to Ortan or Bay
$427.500
Owner Broker
~3-9041.._ 7~6827
3216 OCUMILVD.
For sale by owner
Jbdrm, 2ba, 40'Xl3S' lot
Call f'1eldstead & Co
975-0117
(shown bl:'. aw 't only J
Costa Mftel I 024 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MESAVBOE
Executive home, 3 br, 2
ba, l storyhomeonquiet
cul-de-sac st 1 lge bdrm
could be t'Onverted lo
make 4th bdnn Room
for RV access or pool.
Bkr, 96J..81.82.
50/o DOWH !
MES.A v•DE ownership homes in lov-avaulable $:1£7,500. Fee. bachelor Wlils You l'rl ••••••••••••••••••••••• $rleOSOO paMuil, o rar lg2ar6
Save your down paym'l ely Goldenwest Estates. LEN HAYNES joy rront 2 bdrm house 2Br, 28a w ramily rm & ConNtadetMcr 3122 ° ay S3000 moves you in. 3 Large family room with &ASSOC Reduced toiwll ! wet bar. all 3 in Laguna ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2131877 26216. E\'es art6
Bdrm home. f'or more wet bar and c 01 Y 640-6454 631-2242 1111111 n1ceal 5 star park 714/964-4298 lnfo673·6W7or~8369 fi repl~ce. Sparklina 21 yrs + 10 qualiry SUMMBl&n'AL Hwttf1HJf011leach-l 240
SPIC & SPAM aourmet ~a, pllollb '".._ u... OCEAN FRONT Duplex $39,000 CLASSIC WALK TO IUCH •••HOM.E°FORR.ENT•••
Lovely East.side 3 br, 2 cnpeta. 1!12$0. Beautiful I Br condo on & Tri Plu Xlnt loc · MOllLf HOME Charming 2 bdnn pool 3 Bdrms S700 Fenred
ba , ra m rm home lyS8000tDassumeloan PP 6737677•67.J-7813--5uu home.Fullyfurrushed 6 yard & garage. Kids & s 3 900 N I f ~ houses from Ore an ~ ~~c. dbl gar. Sl49.500 11 • o qua 1 y1ng PARTY IN 2706 Harbor.Ste 206 A Blvd. Avail. summer or pels welcome S45-2000 ~oker1 646-4380_ 831-3238 A_g_t. IMTHEllUffS 540.5937 annual lease !"4ewly Agent,nofee
FRor. .... CHN• ... •--WOODBRIDGE fflRDnD VIEW Lovely large "E" plan painted&c""""ed WALKTOBEACll R TV""'hc: 17TH ATPRaiPECT CO'ITAGE " DUR with rountry k11rhen Mobile home, IOXSO. ~.-· Exec 3br 2ba. fam rm. i:i10,2~:iu':::e~=. OW~ __ T-=-U::.:S=..:TIN=-='-'7-=-31::..;·3::..::l~ll'--_.. 2br, 2ba. rarruly rm. cor Smashing family room Rert>ntly remodeled porch & awrung Newly dining rm Fantastic
$110.000 BKR ,,.,, •31JO 1":..... I 04.. ner lot, assumable lst w Ith wet ba r Un with pnvary plus on a pa1nt•d Must s•ll. make home & area. 963-5191 _ ......,... ...... " bebevabl• beaut1ru1 en· quiet ~u1 de sar F:.irl• • "' wi ll consider 2nd ' • · • ' olf•r Debbie 642°u"_ _ 3 b d f I By Ovrner 3 br. 1 ba . ex· ••••••••••••••••••••••• $ lertainer's palJo. 5 Bdrm BI u rr s lor at 1 on. 3 • ~-r + en, rp c. nr
tra lrg yard. Highly up-DUMP ITI lS3,900~1183 Sommerset on fee land bedroom and ra m1I) ClfMffrylots/ Beach & Talbert. 1635.
graded 1•-, m1 to beach. Out of townownu W1J1t.1 l•-------•I Absolu tel> immaculate room. large lo:in a\'a1l:1 Cryph I 500 lst, lut ~892-~
See to app $111 ,000 out.Woodbrid&eGabln COLOMY 300"'-movt in cond1t1on ble $298.500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LocJ-aleoc.t. 3 141 Large2Br fenredyard. 646-~ Bri dceporl mdl All extremely sharp 4 Creal 1~e hnanc1ng D.M.Mcrshal Rltr REDUCED ••••••••••••••••••••••• garalle Avail now $435 --------.i $219,000 OarrtU Puh bdrm. fam rm home available ,.., 644-9990 760.0835 2 c em et e r Y 10 1 5 , Spac I Br mobile home. + $300 secunty 96J. 7600
63)-1266 With formal d1n1n1 .• REOCARPET ~ --Wrstminster Memorial partially rurn Pvt Eves.orfKS.8369 USTSIDE Df'LX
3 bedroom 1 bath & 2
Bdrm l bath unit on
la rge lot. Large assuma-
ble loan. Sl~.000
RVM*
R t:Al.TllttS
BURR WHITE
REALTOR . IHC.
67S.46JO
THMIMG
TOWHHOME7
Call the speci.U.ta al _____ .;;.......;;;;;::;=="-• the condomilliu.m in·
fonnationcen~. COLLEGE PARK
2 BDRM28aCONDO
Sl!S,900
675-1771
Touchslooe Realty
983-<1167
TURTLEROCK Townhome. lrg lot, 2 8d
+ den. owner·s will
negotiate. S23S.OOO. Dar·
rell Pash 631-12166
bnrk f1rep1t, central air Window 0.. Tht World bearhes. pool. pier & Quiet 3bdrm, cul de sac.
and pool sued yard All _ZS!-J..202 The answer Lo all your ~ea:t~onG~o~~~p~~~i rlubbou~e. Orean side xlnl to e $6SO + seC'
showing hke a model --------.i dreams' ThtS remodeled l'ach. asking $1179 for w full \'leW. 6 to 12 mos + dn 848-4042 eve + home Is t 11 me on THE ILUFF Portor.no IS tn Phase 111 both 714 642,9136 eves lse SMO mo. 499 5269 wk ends
market $179.900 P' ...... ''X" or lhe most popular area -.... _ rt •-L 3169 -, .... 721 1 UU'O in Newport Beach 4 Commercial ::"'wpo -... l"IM 3244 ..,..,. 3 bdrm din rm IJv p 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• ••••• · · · · Bds, 4 Ba. a sweeping roperty I • rm . ram rm . FIP, 21, vieworOrangeCounty& ••••••••••••••••••••••• e..t.Monaco RanchoSanJoaqum /Jn NILfl
IJAILEY &
A55UCIATE5
MINT
CONDITION
ba, xtra large port-elain murh. much more• Call RARE c 1 H Newport Prof. decorated 3 Bd 2 br condo. 2 ba, den. 3
tub w1c.-eramic Ille walls for rmancmg delluls BeHh Property 50' home. Fully furnished patios wtgreat view,
& floor 4 covered patio $479.000 frontage in pnme loca· wtgardener. monthly avail 7112, $825 /mo
areas Pn~ m>,000, 5'1 lion. Owner will finance cleaning services and 752·6961
down. assume S40.0001st ExC'lusive Pnnripals assorialion lees 1n -Calif Homes 5192 Yearl
trust deed al 7~,'1. Xlnt only Ask for Irene duded Jae .. comm mg 3 Br 2 Ba Fam
land lease ~3 00 per Loudon, Agt, 6314247 or pool and delightrul ram1 Rm A IC, new paint
wilh localJon to matrh 4 yur Can't change until 631-7300 ly living. Lease ror Water & Grdnr meld
bdrms, 21, ba Fordham 2yenadr 2003trustl4"'d'e~dl odnulye·--------•1Co11do11tl11i111MjTow• $1500 'mo.644-7~ £175 A..senl541·5032 Model m Village 11. ' •· • Univ Parlt Numerous 19116-87 Call owner for C AREAH UYING houses for Miit 1700 WOODIRIDGE
upgrades 11\Stde and out appl daily after ll am OH UDO ••••••••••••••••••••••• . L1'ngo 3 Bdrm condo. renced
Superb view and 1714)346-5860 In this 3 bdrm. rozy P.ALMDE.SBT palJo. no pets ~Imo
pnvacy 1176.500 Seller --111111!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!111111!!!1~1 cha-mer on extra ~1de Deep Canyon Tennis •• ""!' .,.,...... 631 ·0213
3 Br all built·ins, I story,
double garage. Xlnt loc.
S850 per Mo Agent
M1·6130. -----
EXEC 4 ldrwl + '-
home with pool and spa.
3 car garage. 4000 sq ft.
Gardener included. Im·
maculate Avail 8116.
~lease. A 640-5357
Spacious 3 Bdrm . 2i..; Ba
Townhouse Very <'lean.
pool. JOg&Jll&. etr. S700
Mo Agent 544-1440
Ne wport C'resl 3 & 4
Bdrm Urut.s '950-SlOOO
Mo OCEAN VIEW
631 0460
NEWPORT CREST
4 Bdrm. 2CXX>sq rt Condo
Close to pool and tennis
m2S lease. Agt 640.5357
or 642·0313 ___ _
Quiet 2 Br Unll, 11., Ba.
Condo. frplc, pool. spa.
patio. 2 rar gar, S6SO Mo
Call Pat 67S·6303'-_
IAYRlOHT Great view of boats &
bay Brick frpk , family
room New carpets.
fresh paint Avail. Im·
med. for 9 months Only
S795 mo Broker
673 8550
NEWPORT CREST
Agent has two beautiful
units for rent 645·0295
VILLAIAUO.A
1 Bdrm & den Bay
View Micro Upgrad
Cpts, drps, tile, etr
Room y 3 Bdrm 2 ba
home on an R2 lot with
plans for 2nd umt Great
Eastside location and
great f1n1nr1ng Only
$152.500
u~n1 1
offerin1 aenerous terms IA YROKT lot w largt patio Extra Cl ub Lovely 3br. 2ba "1111• 1111"' 1--------•'---------1 &olattproupurch.ue parkmg space or small "A .. Plan Great G~n ASSUM..W.f RanchoS.~VJlla RtdlictdSl00,000 boatstorage belt Loe SS()()() down NEWPORT CREST
_ §73 6'i07 or 1-883-4303 ...
FIEEOOM HOUSE
3 Br l Ba. large yard ses.ooo. 641-0163.
LUSEOPTIOH
Luxunous custom ron-
do. 2SOO sq n 2 frplcs .•
bdrm. 2~ bathJ. Sll50
mo. $195,000. 842-4623.
FIHAHCIHG Portola llodfl, m-' "* 5600 sq ft ol quality ron-owe sins.ooo at l2'1-View. beautiful 3 Br.
., .... STSIDE mny up•radet. prinonly st ruction on 114 ' or _BKR 9S3-l220 view $97S mo Agl """' • water Owner wLll carry -545.0295 ~aut1ful 4 Bdnn plus Sl69,SOO For a ppl financing $1.4SO.OOO lltcCMM p---tv 2000 •~rl. 2Ba. S'/00 mo Avail r I r l 551·6890. • "'r''. J ... a m 1 y ea u r 1 n g A g e n t . D :i n R 1 b b • ••• • ••• •••••••••••• ••• ~ 7114 ~~~~~~e~~!i:yae;d 4 ~~o~~~~ch 67S·23ll,~jf£S llll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lll!!!ll!!!!!~ MAKE AH OffER! ~~.~~•••• 2 br. ii. ba. 2 sty cond o.
with Ko1 Pond and lovely Owner's bought another EXEC CONDO Getterm 3202 re-need palJO, child OK.
Palso Very open with w·11 rr 4 bdrm. 2 ba. 2600 sq ft 5 ,.. ..... ,.. .. or S Income Proptrlles ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sl600 644 s.s6S.6759484 1 consider any o er w-~ E t d C t M lots of glass. Asking 4 s 7 V 1st a Tr u <'ha f' II · 1 k as 11 l' os a esa 2 sty 3Br. dbl garage. Ibo.ft'• •s .1..,. .,,,., "' . t 63Sl71·21,26SOOO. Darrell Pash 't523 CAMP\15 ft...·/R''l"'E ..,.,5 000 Bk 771 6SSO u size P ua super wor 20'~ down Owner will t. pool Condo .., ..,.. '""" "'·"""· ror an appo111 · ua ., " ... , , ~ ".,_ _ _ _ spat·e and more park f' ed II ' pa 10, . .,2S 3br I'• ba ..,rn
Large modem duplex 3
Br 211 Ba .. ffl>lc, blt-ns .
In Newport Hgts. S8SO
Mo _645-2111.
HUGE 3 br. fam rm. 2
rrplcs, Redlands Dr
S875 inc gardener
642·8663=-----
EASTBLU Ff' 3 Br. f'am
Rm $1100 Mo Laule
Enl Wc...:-....Sc:..=:....· __ _ ma"tto1eecalJ54(}.lJ51 carry nc tose mo SS61732 "' ' ......., "'-'' 30 Stept To leodl mg. 1n low mamtenanre · -_aA':... -4br 2'"1ba llOO rum ~.._. I04I Water view. includes r ear Customized J ConNtadlfMcr 3222 Anahe1ml{1lls leaut.ligC..,-................ land. lOo/c assumable Bdrm . 2'1't bath home J ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jbr Jba $895 Beautifully redf<'Orated -! : • HERITAGE
. • REALTOR':> · ""-'':t: b with many attracti ve II• El Dorado model 3 loan, 4 drm. 2 ba . NEJ1 ~CI::D bate Option Co61.a Mesa Bdrm. 2...., ba. wet bar. o.tof w 1poss1bl e guest featur6es4·2s:ss5.2
000
00· \.Alli.l\ 3 Bdrm in Jasmine 4br 2ba S8SO parquet firs. Securit:9
Prime Dana Point quarters. Call now for COHl/k:IHYI 1~ Creek. Guard gated, gated, view. $1200/m.q
Opn W{s. 12·4
3 Darm, l"4ba. dbl sided l'!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!l!l!!!!!!!ll!ll!!!!!!!!!!!ll"===::::::::==:=:===
lrplc, sun rm, low int. ASSUME LOAN Super COlOHY
usumable, low down. two.story lort model Lrg. 4Br. 2~8a family
OWC. S1Z7,000. 336 Prln· townhous e ! Has 2 home. in Colony Club.
c et on Dr Ca 11 bedrooms and 1s arcent· Walk to pool. tennis
duplex on corner lot details. 7~6499 f'-1 pool. tennis , etr S1400 lse. Call Donna Sutton ~~~.~II~! u~,a~l'l:tr~ 1Qijlillf4;@1Ed 714 r~11 1t16J 7S9-917J __ ___ 5H ·9076 or Henry
down beamed ring . 2'JZ~l'olll'l(eAH• 2 Br Dplx. $600 Mo. 552-5895,Bkrs .
213-37M187 ed w ith cradling New financing avail.
fireplace Tastefully de· Call for details.
• -------• l'oi.lu Mc~.i. l'A Clean. new crpt, atrium or ......... •• 3210 rrplc, dining area, end ~ "' patio. 5144,000 Arail. immed. 558·2626. • .................... ..
EASTSIDE
2HOMES On larce lot. A 3 Bdrm 2
bath, 2 fplc's. patio.
PLUS 2 Bdrm cottage,
Sl&s.000. f\na.nc1ng by
OW'lltr. ~.
.., Mee.cit. Ur.
, .... 7729
St1rtlng
1New
Butlneaa
A gceoro1110 10
CaUtornl• lulllMH 11'141 ,.,. ... ..,. c.. 1e.e.
f7t00 to 11UO) 111
,.rtOlll dtfflt bullMH
11nder • ~· "'"" "'"" fll• 1 •11tl11Mnt Wltll tll• Cou11t1 0111•
e110 111we 11 pv1111wo
f o 11 r I I 1111 I I 11 1
111Wtp9'19f Nt111fl0 Ille 1t•• In •lllcll 1111
butlllHI II louted.
T111 111111111111 It
,. .. 11h.O lily IP 11\d le
MC"Mllifl~
''"' tu1t111u 11a111t.
111111 ''"" re411lre ~Of ..... .,.,,
-~ ICCOllll4• fllf DAILY "I.Of
,,. ......... 111111 alld
~9lofl .., ........ ..... ..... __,.,
llflH aM Mliflllill I
dtllf fftWIC• la Ill• Or1111• C111111r
Cff.,...., ""* ... ., .,. •• , lllt
CHH "llM efflffl It
plllU 1111 1.IOAt
DVAlmllNT MMm,
lit Ul 111 IRln
....... llM ....
rorated. All offers
heard I Call and see.
SH.500, TARBELL,
REALTO f1t.23ll0
MeMV ..
Owntr wlll cvry AITO
3 bdnn. pool.spa
l•st Home for...,_., $118.500 VA or FHA 4
bdrm or 3 plus paneUed
den Lana.I, lrg gar &r
workshop. Remod kltch,
worlds or cuboards.
Pnvacy on cor lot.
ASSUME
81~1"e> finL Bil at 12~%.
3 bdrm condo. Bell loc.
Close lo WutcllU
S1'5,SOO. Agent 646-3255,
eve• §42·2225 o ... , ... 1026 •••••••••••••••••••••••
A FAM.ILYDEIJGHT
Tbil 4bedroom,1i,;, bath
home offttl a temlly '°°"', )oft ar'ta Ind a
la r1• lot wtLh plenty ol room for a Y~eta-le 1a~n or frill tttea.
IAJOJO..lerlt ...... deck "lb llllt tab ..
OCtl l ••, I perfect MttJn1 for .wrtalnift1. -------~I Auumablt tlnancln& avallablt . uas.ooo. -..u
Mission Realty ~ lll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ji--------1 New 3 Br 2 Ba. dbl aar. EXECUTIVE HOME • ---~~3~1-_ y ioao PrideofO....~ So. Hwy-Heliotrope nr So Coast Plaza % N'" 1f od11llr Type 'J1 ~ ~~•~••••••••••••• 2IO unit~ E.s1de C .. 7 . sn-1018 story 4 bdnn 2ba. all
........ ed land, own\!:} Counlry 1--------1 b~!r:1! ftn~;~:01~ CosteMftCI 3224 'f523CAMPCl5Dt·IRVl"E new cpl, drapes, paint.
_,. Pit. 3 pvt QfAL'T()Q6 ASSUMAILILOAH Hurry• CaUKevill ••••••••••••••••••••••• apphancdes LGrdnr d' bells, ~ l«flrlty. f1Jhlng DWC CONOO 2 Br + lrg Orangetree I Br w 8 t er P g Y 8 r ·
pier from $29 ,900 OC.,.. .... V1EW H09UA1JFYIHG loft Br 2~ Ba. frplc. S.OOMo S850 mo. 1st/last. sec .._3816 ~ Freshly painted, sharp 4 gar., a /c, new $775 546-2IOl8 dtp Call Agt Sandj
New wood /glass, spa.
solar, 6 dks. 2 frplcs.
3-+ /3+ close/unobstrur·
table/pa.nor/Ylllg vws
99M P P. 494·7631.
FAIULOUS ASSUMAILI
~~la &Jae Qfilbbor'bood of Tur t'eit, enjoy this
1P•ck>us 3 BR 2 BA 'V'llta home with custom deck and spa
adjacent to the master suite.
Assume both 1st and 2nd Trust
Deeds. $299,000 Fee Jennifer
Suchomel 644·6200 (P52)
Prestigious tri-level Bdrm 2 bath. large ya rd, 631 ....... 673·5"89or96:Hl377 NOR~ooos -=,_,·~="-·-----beauty 3 or ot bdrm new driveway Brick • "" HOM~"' ""'R RENT Newport Condo. Formal fireplace. 5 years new Townhouse. I year old, 3 Exec. Home 3 Br 3 Ba 2 c:.> r v dining rm. wet bar. Ownera1Wous Mo\'ein Br. 2 Ba. skylights. Story.Largefamllyrm .. 3 Bdrms. 15SO. f'enced
frplr S214 .SOO cond1lion Ask i ng frplc, master bdrm water&gardenerpaid yards&garages.Kids6
w/assumable loans Sl.29.900 For an appoint· suite. commty pool IB50 ~200> Agt . no pets welcome. S45-2000.
552.1100 menl to Stt, call 540-1151 . 642·2134 fee Agent, no fee. '
EASTSIDE Cule 2 Br + University Park Terrace So• L.,.. 321,
--' • HERITAGE 3 ~f!SEH~~iew. ['SIDE C.M. . • REALTORS
$15K down. SlOOO mo. l'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!-1 12 Ullffs • $575,000
sun room. frplC'. stove. 3 B r 2 8 a end ••••••••••••••••••••• ..
ref rig. W ID. lrg yard. townhouse Good 10<' No • • • HACH HOUSI
Pets OK. '550/mo Joyce pet$ 1750. bt & la st + 4bdrm, den. frplc, Sl800.
Wallie 631·1266. Aft s. security.213/4»M42art 31331 Mon t erey;
646·0339. 8. ...:•99~-=·2986=·:....._ ___ _.
LUSEOf'TIOM WooclwicllJIT...._ Wnh .. Hhr Ut•
~-~~~.Place. S~eve. Mewportltoch 1069 ':1·:=~t':.':d:ou~~·
•••• • •••••••••••••••••• Owner A 844·'7122
HIWPOIT HEIGHTS. Two story 4
BR charmer on a quiet cul-de-sac
street . Fam . rm . ror
entertaining. Deluxe hot tub in
spacious back yard. 3 car-garage
with room Cor extra parking.
Assumable Clnanc lng! $'l49,SOO
Joyce Edlund 642·8235 <P50)
tWtlOI llMI Kensington with
ereat vtew I Designed tor lndoor /outdoor entertalnina le
family Jiving -4 BR. Fam. Rm,
formal di ning, comm. pool le tennis. $610,000 Belle Partch
752.1414 <PSI)
20UHrTS
Excellent Ea.aUfde loea·
t1on. Pride of ownership.
Rent lncreHts due.
Ownu motivated. Bring
ll.300.000
Why pay rent??!???? Sharp 28r, l\\Ba. dbl •••••••••••• .. •••••••'°"
New,fant.astk.wellloca car 1ar w /opnr , HOMEFORRENT ·
led 3 Br., 3 Ba. new Con· wahr /dryr, stove, ref rig, 3 Bdrm. 11125. Ft11c~
do, SllOO per mo. next to AC . End unit, wall yard Ir g1ra~. Kids•
all ahoppll\&. W-5055. paper, earthtone color$. pet.8 welcome. S45-2000.
Quletpvtarea,great4Br. Adlte, lse. S725 mo. A&ent,nofee. :::is!I's mo. MS 9181, ;·..:·SW 3241 ~=l::t:2 3425
MISA DIL M.AI •••••• ••••••••••••••••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••• Buutllul 3 bdrm 2 ba. Sp1clo111 ntwu 3 BR. 3 BE let llClant. Unusual
Reated pool an~ spa. 181, dBln1e/rm, fa~nn. new l br 1«luded end
Walking dlatance to rp\c, I Yard. v.:ean unit Sm . adlta-onl.Y
schools ' aloru. Side of Hwr. No. compltll w/1ate. pool.
Beautiful cirpeU. mir· L11un1. Avail. now 1ardentr Nr SC
rored clo•ets, mint· 400mo.A $7551 Pl1u. Cn&l1 air. patio •
blinds, sunny kitchen ;rop of t.bt World Com up1rada. 1415 + ullls
160 C) n with oak cablntta. No m unity. 3 Br z 81. W . No pets. '71S.2:SIG ptt.s.875.Mo.56&-7650. Gor1to111 oce1n view : .... •,_.VH...,.._. _____ _
22 Unit•. & Bluffs, 3 Br Condo. uoo. Main BeKh, Catalina. Jbr, 2ba, a /c, newlY pnt.
ll,540,000, ntt to 1tl.ler Fireplace... dbl praie. San ClelDll'lte. On the td. very clea.n tiba~
752· itrlum. pool, •P•· ~~.11c .. •. ~~.!--••1nu•~ upper unit Woodeldt
DC .. r ·--v· pa _, VIII••·· no petl, avail FOi SAU &4$>9494. In • 'Out. lllO Mo. *' 7 /15. SST$. w.m1 or · IYawt• Neta Venlt. Lovely SBr Zell Dr. 01.uao. 54$-~ 1,
HJatortcalCMdSpanllb 2ba famib' home. 11151 Jmmtcl. ompn9x. • -~w.a,._...._.
(I) Unlit Sen CJemnie Mf.lMO Cottaae, 1 Br w /frplc. -~ -rtDov1ttd, CM to bcb, luuldt a Br . l Ba. 1ar, efltde \reel, Adlta Bt ntl ul Ocean ana, iuo.ooo. 10~ do.to, ~ar11e, ~yard. ggO!tf. l@.•M ' J!~~h~~·.!.8d;;t·v2at:'
!WC. 7 l o pell. Mo. Z2r7 Mew Ille. a.t &ard•, edull tGnun•
h ~~~"' Ora e Ave. VICTORIA BEACH l'I •mo 2100 ftirCONDOpool. iic, l~ Octtn1kteolhwy nr 2 m.oow
....................... ba , w11her/dry1r, bl oceu'1ewl idteb Sa C ...... ar I=
• 14 ft bldl CID -lq ft atrplct llll !Mdi Lane. b ' .. · f ' I • lot r ttel 6 ~I k f'lMNM u m1 , roh r•k . -~·ft. '*"81ott .... Q-.... !utalde ..... Jldnl, =·r:-.:.:.,1.e=· ·----.: ~-'1f1110Mo 1ba.1d, .• tue11.Do.o..; ' WAHTACnOfO , I cw ......
... ,... S.-. CIAIC.. ..._C..... H1•tde•hl ..._ .-....;,...... .......• ~..... ...................... ....................... ...................... . .......... , ................................... , .........••..................••••..•••.•....
BABYSITTING IDY llwnpoo ........ cltu. CHILDCARE CRP'r.tJN().WOOD PRlVAT! Pla.oo/Oraan HOVSYA:L!ANlNG MORTGAGE MONEY E1t/int paintbt1, cab le• ROOFlNOSJNCt1117
home, .....,. OIC. Hr. Color ~. wbt Da1 /tvt/wllnd. My lutallied/~. lJc. Jnatructlon lo Your Reliable, 1ooct work , AVAIJ..A.81.E fln /atain. Prol. Ranbl AU lypet Incl rtpaln t Yldoria-Pl.t@• crptt 10 mlo. bleach. C.11. bome. SI /hr. W Cl'tlla5142 Homt.CallTom~l428 atudy job. Rth S20.000IO Sl50,000 Freteat.Steve~ anowcoatlq State lie.
LAwlq .U. .._to HaU. UY.4n. rma '15: f4J<tla h• • 1 H•...,•• 64&-n:zl No,.._,....,. DB's PAINTlNG 282283. ~-on yd
bab111t ......... Nlia· avarm ff.IO; eo&aehSlO: c..... . ............................................ Expe~e~eeplng Uptol.5/)'ntorepay lnt/Ht. Neil, reliable, ::~· . .,...,
ble, C.11.ff..O'lgtY!I cbr IS. G111r. eJlm. pet •••u••u••............ CLEAN-UPS/LAWN REASONABLE Dependable, ref.s. PRIME FINANCIAL refs. D1ve~ev1
•••ua odor. Ct}ltrepalr.1.Syn Cu.1tom Brtclk, Block, Jhllltenuce-1.odttp PROllPT.FREEESr. Su lleafum. 8'1·4970 SERVICES PAINTING. cuatom Stw ... /Allf ......
............... •••••••• Hp. Do WOft myMU. Tllt. Patloa, Walka, ftff at. "2-980'1 ALMOSTEVERY QualityHol.mecleanlng 527-3477 work, 25 )'r1 exp Many ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. wtcl&SOM Refl.Q1.Ql01 Drives, Covm. Deeb, GardecliD1. la.ndlcaplna. R!PAlRNEEDED witbPtnooalTouch. local refs. Uc '°3Nl. C1lm Dreu M1kl_n1
NoSteam/NoSlwnpoo Ca!port1, • Fenua. tree trimmlnc 6 re· CHETMS-4757 rreeeat. Bet.bS56-0U6 Metll'J Bonded, Ina Fret eat. Alteration1/Rep11n d!~lldmSIDcelM7 St.alDSpedallll.Fut Llcd.J>o!wMl-0761 moval, m·"-clean-up, Can.-ntry.u ·--·y H 1 .. •••••••••••n•••••••••• Hutchison ~11 Con1ult1tlon in your A ... ,ou, mnodelln&. dry rree• 1»1512 "--~ """' "II"' ........... ouuc eaner SJ>eha BRICKWORK· Small . I • • • bome.76"370 plua.l'rteelt.Reu. -· -· .,_,....,,.., freeeat.6048 Roofuia·Plumblng Engl.lab good refs, exp J b N t c t Olympic Painting -
Uc. a1-. Mt-2170 ....................... Sam Fukumoto ARD Drywall-Stucco· TiJe & own ti-am. Cail me to-,1 •· :w':°r ' R 0~ a lot/Ext. Free estimates. SWttn""°"""
CONSTRUCl'lON •WATWAU..S• MAlNT. • Clean-Ups. •more. J.B.64&-9990 da ! 64&-6387 61:~:is rv nt, e •· Good qual work. low ••••••••• .. u••••••00••
Addlremodtl.«JDCftte ra . I -. Crafted from volcanic Tree trlmmln1. small JACKOFALLTRADES HOUSECLEANING . ratesSSt-1900 Cool J;our home. ·~d
Frtt ett.111.-0all. 5 --::I~ bou.ldera~lld·CCJataill. ed. labd.sca · NS-3540 Plum bing, elec, heating Good rers. own trans. ~~cs~ ~~~o~~ao~~t RENTALSour special_ity, :~c~ dy, s;~ee ':" ~ 11 f ·
ROOM ADDITIONS ' CARPET CLEANERS St.one eCreallona , Dan'al..awnService oddJob1. 6311--.o&& ga.(UI -'826 Larry7S0-902Beves ~t/eat. Sea.aide Pamt (213>:iz4-6624 .
REMODELING Quality 842-6331 eveam.12218 Precision lawn mainl. Hwdwoo4Aoan ~ .!!!&·Prompt. 536-4808
construction from de· ~J~5~~· Dr•ril• e~!!°rtaml borfor alllowlar~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •oo•••••••••••••••••••• BCriUc~. b~~~s•-eNR, l~'s INT EXT PAINTING $oW ... II . I I LAr-I ·~ • IU\:A. ~· GENERAL REPAIRS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..CCI& Wj lllD to comp et on. 117-4507 ....................... f eat eG.sOIT ' HARDWOOD FLOORS DON'T BE EMPTY, Local refs CalJ NOW & • Hot water+ pool heitma netu••••••••••••••••• Family eoatracton for 1/JOflF ..... JULY · Cleaned&Wued THIRSTYORLONELY save.' LoeorsmallJO. bs LARGEORSMALL A I b PR n~-'" p l J G--"-" REAS PROuPT save riling energy costs· ccta or am ua. 30 yn. -· ralel. Pr Carpetahamp. llOOsq. ft. DraperiabyGiovannl ro · 1p111e1e ...... ne.r Anytime,832-41181S.A. "Security Pim" will sit Repalrs,etc.64S-8Sl2 ·· "~ gatn tax credits. Free qtrUea. aaJes tu, FIS. esta. Alleo E Jobnaoo. # •c 00 Incl .... _ .. ~ 11u Alao mlni·bllnda & Lawn cuttin1, tree trim· .._._ your house, plants & C b . k JERRY64S-4757 t ~.a 1688 Complete Ht up ' 301007 Call ~5&56 ..... · Wll.IUU'Wit .-•-el min wtedin .548-8375 •--. e d bl f ustom ric • stone, HOUSEPAINTING """""""'_..-=-=~----Hr~lce. Jleu. Fun 840-4meve.. or vacanton1y.IGl140 ""v oun.502215. Mowin&SlG-~SZ5 ....................... f:1~~Sa7 on • e, res. block. concrete, stucco. Teachers oe«l summer Spriilk~
M0-5114 J .... CO c-.as ,. ...... Ac ntllc Dryw.. Hiulina/Jlovlnt SZ5 H11ll, cleanup, coocrete Refs Free est 549-~92 work. Ron, ~&244. .. ................... ..
• BOOKKEEPING !In _.. T. :.:::? ............................... ~······· 754.9904 OOll5 Mark removal Dumpt/Uck. Rhe:~~e;rl~t~,l~d§e::~ Mo•IRt The PAPER PUSHERS SPRINKLERS&SOD
. For a mall buslneu. Add1Uona· Remodelln& AcouaUcCellinp + DrywaUSptciallst YARD CLEANUPS, tree Quickaerv.6'2-7638 Oct! Nwpt. (~)967·8490 ....... •,••••••••••••.••• Wallpapering & Paint· Tree Removal. DIG IT
Reu relia~ 831-&583 'Cuatom Hornet. Lie. cuatom band texturing Qual. ' prod. New' re· work. lrrigillon ' re· DUMP JO~ -Moving . The Starving Ina. Free est. Call Cindy Landsca 646-7070.
' 12fi374. 675-eOM Lie. 389N4 532-5549 mod. #W SD-5549 pa i r . Cree n be It Small Moving Jobs L.dtc.... College Students Movlllg or Teresa 54l·<rl39 Tiit Afaluc•..... C-.. Tape, Texture, Acouatic 1--.1-... 1,.,-Call YIKE6t6-l.391 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Co bas grown. lnsured ---....................... e...t/c.cr.te rtllin11 Fteeeat Kevui ...,..cape . .,...,.... COLORSCAP£DESIGN same good service 10% DISCOUNT ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mai 'te A•'-t, le •u•••••••••••••••••••• ....................... · · Garden Maintenance Haulinc •Dump Jobs. D&D c to p lt TILE INSTALLED dee:'' c~~t ~rp~:· 'IHE CAKE SURPRISE! Driveway•. patios, room 87S.90ll/673-1S03 Rea id I comm /Ind us Ask for Randy Instant color & clean-up. II T 124 . 436 L1 cense us m iun ng All Klnd.s. Guaranteed.
carpentry weld ' plumb • Unique naVOtt.d cues additions. Cement & Bectric.. Clo·upa & tree trim· 641·8U7 Fut servlre. 979-9196 &41-IM2'7 --Int/ext. Guar. !183·l263 Refs. John, 893-1667
Brad '4.Z·Ma ' . delivered w/flowers ' brickwork.~53 u••••••••••••••••••••• In HAULING-Student has Renovating-Rototllling ABC MOVING , Exper Ploahrflepolr 5---t-.-·--' smlla. JU.00. 548-4364 "·· I ELECTRICIAN-priced m MI· I Sprinklers·lawns·clnups prof, low ratet, quick ••••••••••••••••••••••• T,... n-~ Af•lnce...... c.. tlf ....... tom concrete, comp1. ri&bt free estlm1.te on °'1815mvs&t6-4S47 argetruck. Lowest Dave6'2-48S3 carefuherv1ce. SS2·0410 Neat patches &textures ..................... ..
....................... ~ service Remonold, ln· I • -·""''-GARD MA.INT. rate.prompt 759-1.976 Bud646-8481 Fret t ltl-14lt JAYETIEECAH GUAR USEDREFR' ....................... sWlnew Uc ~12 ar1eora~""'"'. yd clean-up. Tree trim Tbankyou,Jobo. •A·I MOVIMG• ti . Topping, prun1'ng, re· · 1 All Tyypea Remodellng & . ' Lie. •398Gl 873-0359 · .,.., ..,08 (• a ) Brothers Constructors PLASTER PATCHING SALF.SltSERVlCE Repaln. '""quality 17 Pool Deeb and P1Uoa, m-~--..1 mmg . .._..i .. -opm c--..YosAct l660SantaAnaAv,CM Top quality. Special moval&spraying.lOyrs
Goodcond. 6'2-7754 · '-..u~--'· Masonry.Sport•Tennis rww-TRHS We clean out darages care in handling 25 yrs lnt'ext ~yrs exp exp Local refs Free yrs 111 area. ...~. Courta. Uc. 37to67. Bob, ••••••••0 •••••••••.•••• T -A/ ed I • P 1 ant 5 • 1 n l /ext exp Com""''t1ve rates _Neat work Pa\!!S45-29'77 "•"9""" ..,._. Yr.Palombo,962·8314 .,<1.1 .... ·~·?""" Wecutit-vni•dryit! op""'" remov .cun tontruck. .831·1993 Landscaping, tree sur ""w Rt.a...'-lt'--est.Lie~ .,..,,. __ J<IO_ ....................... °" .....,,,..1 vio ,_ ues,lawnrenov.7Sl·3476 Ho.lee~ gery, sprinklers Noovertune.7»t~ Tllll,....., TREEStSHRUBSTRIM
DriYew1y1, park.inc lot M•hrC.aflJ • GUARANn:;ED ~~~~~ea:-: J1paneae Gardener-....... ::=:? ......... 64S·OSSS Sunlh1ne Movers Put a 000•••••••••rt~·h••••• Remove. haul. clean-up.
repalfl, ae1lco1ting. Specializes in fl.niah ' Block walls. brickwork. cord. Pl111 expert tree 11rde~ ma int. Res· Want a RE.ALL y CLEAN CALL US! We do rototill· smile in your move no J. : Hom Re ims ing dirt, etc. Jun631-4SJO
S.S Asphalt. 631-4199 remodelll\i, Xlnt ref. slabs, driveways. Refs. lrimmln". 640-TREE. comm· Ind. Free est. HOUSE? Call Gingham Ing, sprinklers. lawn in .i9b too small 642-1329 Antiques. Kit. cabmels. --u.c'd. •nm Re s ra•-1153-ms !! ,,.,, .~ .. 1..,.. Fine pat.ntioA.. 645-0664 Wiltdow ~
• • <QJ, .....,......., ~ve Girl. Freeest.645-5123 stall. clean-ups. It haul-'oiletlRt/P.....-i ---•••••••••••••••••••••••
ASPHALTREPAJRJNG c.,.ts.r-nc. CermcTlt ~!~••••••••••Aloe l.1wn ind Plant ROBIN'SCLEANI.NG lllg Free consultation ••••••••••••••••••••••• RttlMHkl&Rtpalr "LetTbeSl.UlSlune ln .. ~1leo1tioi•Strlpin1 ....................... ....................... F One time or service. Service-a thoroughly TonyorRay,5"4&-06S9 The Paper Hanger, Prof .................... ~.. CallSwishineWindow
Comm/raid. Free est. We Care CrplCleaners Cenmle tile, int/ext. c::~~i=red llcenced. 968-9111li clean ~.546-~7 ucrtfMr S.CW. install. Decorator qua I. General Services, no JOb Cleaning, Ud. ~8853
Uc.13'71112 NS-8181 Steamclean&upbols. Comm/resld. rates. AU L Colon A--'iR~t--Freeest.Steve547·4281 too small. Free est. Look' f bo f Tru"lr l 't American Tile 535-8606 atut /Desigrui _,.... _.,...,._ General Housecleaning •••• ••••••••••••••••••• Reas Call Answer Ad mg or a me o ASPHALTREPAJRS ,-mo1.11 uru Freeest. ~4871 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Reliablt·References Custom Leather Sandals FinepalntingbyR1cbard •4S3,S42-4300,or63l·ll37 your own! You'll ftnd l SEALCOATING Work iuu. 64S-3'7le SELL Idle items with 1 Ext. pa.intina & garden· Own tuns 962-ClSIO The Sanda.Iman makes Slllor Lie. ins 13 yrs of aft 5 many homes advertised
Si.nee lt37 Lie. a22l53 SeU lhinp fut with D1.il.y D1ily Piiot Classified H1Ve something to sell? inc. 5 yrs prof. up I the best for your special happy N.B customers ror sale in Clusihed
Ml-SIOO -.S897 Pilot WIJlt Ads. Ad. Clusllied ads do it well. Prompt. P/br 640-5992 1 Want Ad Help? 642·5678 needs. CaU 642-l456 Thank ou. 631-4410 Want Ads Call 642·5678 every day.
Cad1mt r Apeitwabu.tww. U.fa lit d 1425 ..................... ..
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ hlmd ll06
IM.ALS• •••••••••••••••••••••••
2 b l slo du.It. condo 2 Br, l Ba w/ gar1ge. l r, ry a · blk from bch. J)35 mo. HB $450 mo l br. G1ted on 1 yr lae. No pets condo. lNl • Fairview 759-0685 SA mo. 549-9823 ....:.=;"-==------2 Br. l ba w/garafe. I bill
from bch. 16.15 mo on l
yr lse. No pets. Ask for •
..... , ........ 3707 Tom Callister da
.... •• • ............. •.. 966· 1818, Eve 759--068S.
Cheerful 2br, 2ba dpll Lmu ISi.AHO
f1cln1 Bay Beach. Sept Channing, ~y. newly
13-June 1• IS50. Adults, decorated 1 Br. l Ba. Up-
no eeta.17W per Apt. Private sun· Co• MIM l724 deck. pus thru k:itcMn.
•••••• • ••••••••••• •• • • • Complete with da wsh.
SUSCASITAS gt d. refrlge. Qu iet,
runi. 1 br. apt. S32S & mature tewit only, no
E I Adults pet. Avail. approx. up. oc · iar. ' no 7 · 2 7 · 81. S4 5 0 M o. pell. 2110 Newport Bl. 54M988 btwna•5PM +security 1875. By appt.
N d 1 B D ,_ only. Lemar Mgmt Inc ew ecor. r. P'-'· 771.2380 Seper1ted by gar. Quiet . ..;..;..:..:=------
Emplyd adult over 35, no Ctpistr.o leocll ll 11 pelt. $.'125. 548-1021. .. ................... ..
•--.............. 3741 Split level twnhse, yd,
-,--._ c111tom bit. 2Br. 2'h81, ................ ~...... wsbr td ryr. S600 mo.
Stltdlo. Pool. patio. No. 661·2871 L11un1. Reap 1in1le ---= ...... ·-------
work IDI adult only. CoroM .. Ms _ l122
G11/wtr pd. Summer ••••••••••• .. 0 •••••••• r1te $400, fall S300/mo. Enjoy summer living all
lst/l11t + $100 dep. year. Wilk to CdM
49'-2874 beach. 2 Br., firepl1ce, ........__..... •...--L 3769 lar1e .deck. enclosed
....... ,...... • -parking. l·S650 Mo., ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• 1·$800 Mo. Avail. August lcAoo lay Cllb 1. eau 61s.s.w
Bachelor apt. fully 2br, Iba, 1ar. apt. Adlts, fur~ilhed. Amenities no pet.a.~ mo. yrs lse
ava.il. Leafe $1200/mo. 6121,IJ Jasmine. 642-8357
&U-1802 Open dally 2-4. -,
THE I
"GOOD
LIFE"
YIM~FUM:
Soclll AcllY•1* Dt·
rect« •frM Sunday
Br11nch • eeo·1 •
P1rtle1 • Plue mor•
QMAT A!a!EATIOM:
2 Bdrm I Ba ; frplc, $500,
yrly, no pets/child. 433
Iris, avail Aug 1. See Sat
T Ill. 10AM·l2.
So. Of Highway. Upstatn
2 Br Iba, laundry rm. no
garage. No children or
pets. $500 per mo.
673-1181
3 Bdrm. 2ba, front
duplex. So. of PCH.
Frptc, D/W. p1tlos,
ll.50/mo yrly. Ava.II DOW
516 Dahlia Ave.
Apel tuw.ts u.tw.. Ape tua .. 1 ... u.fwa. Apel Iwata u.twa. Rooms 4000 R..tah to sa... 4300 Office Rlfthll 4400 lttslatn Rltlfal 4450 a.iuu ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••41•••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••• •••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Opport.ttr 5005 Cost. MtM 1124 Cotta MtM ll24 L.,... hadl 1141 Female to shr 3 Bdrm Male Fem Sbr, 2ba hse S CdM Deluxe Sui~s. AC. Rn AL Sl'ACE •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••0 ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• townhouse. C M. Avatl Co Plaza frwy Spa. ampl pkg, util pd 21155 SOOOsq. ft. on Nwpt Blvd Several Restaurants for MEWPOIT • 2 Br. 1 Ba. Mesa Verde Studio apt, m . ulil incl, 8/1. $220 incl Ulii. W/D, ~+sbareutti 641-4911 EC: H &75-6900 Hi trarftc. Great ex· sale. Prime locations.
A,AITMINTS. upper. Child OK. $4SO. Nr Victoria Beach. garage. 545 ·1473. Spyglass4br,pool,spa. ~EW•t.OIT. C_..,,.. posure $3500 mo From S45.000toS500.000.
2-2Bdrm. l·lBdrm . Noeet.s.m.8974. ~-9938 833-9704daya. fem pref t2l. refs req " ,. m•""' lmmed.orcupy 851·5117,5.57-2783 __ _
Frorp 1270. mo.+ ulila. SPAPCIOUS M.wportltadl 316 New condo 10 Costa S27S1mo Doug. 76'}1232 Prestigious. full service Realooorrucs _§75-6700 ICECREAMNEWPORT
No children. no peta, no I &r 2BDRM Adult open ...................... Mesa . pool. courts art 7pm, wlcnds. EX EC offices lnclds Newport Modem Store Xlnt beach loc Must
waterbeds. . beamed ceiling. lots or Oceanfront for Winter S200/mo. lit. last + sec. Resp female to shr home recpL. sec. xerox. under· or orr nr post ofc $450. s e Ii On I y SI 9. 500
2450NewportBlvd. wood,servingbar&lge Rentals. Furnished & Ca n make arrange· inlrvine,Sl70mo.Ava11 groundpk'g,t.clex&an· 548 5 f 213 477-7001 1·533-4242
Coata Mesa kitchen 134.52 &MS4101 no unfum. Broker. 675-41112. men ta. 67~96. immed. 1st & last & sec ~~;1~ecor con! nn Jerry IR•tstMtllt
3 Br. 2 Ba 779ShaJimar. pets . 2 56 ap e. NO FEE! Apt.' Condo Hohls,Mohta 4100 559·6050 Custom.executJveoffice. CMOMdefM• Opporti.ffy 5015
New carpet, upstairs 548-73S6/67~ rentals. Villi Rentals. .. ..................... Fem wanted Lo sbr 2br 400 sq. ft Pvt bath with 4200 sq ft. Ground noor ..................... ..
No pelS. MSG. Slerr1 NEWBREEDAPTS. 675-4.912Broker Yearly on the beach. apt Aliamen.1215/Mo. shower Balboa Penm C oast Hi gh wa y FREE BROCHURE . :=~~:::·::.-2Ba. ::~~rec room. ::. PAii llWPOIT :it:b::ie~~ ~ ~ ~ ~M~~:=~.2:~ks mo.ll42-4QJ"---~~-~~~nomics Corp ~Z7n l::f~5 rs~ ~~~f~
Garden Apt. Pool & Rec j a cu zz I . enclosed COUMTIYCWI security deposit.~ W house/apt to sbr w 1sta· 642·84~-arei. MU. garages. Gu • witer UYM Ocean froot. Newport bie person II»~ .FOffil cefW....+toee STOREorOFflCE lOOI. YIB.D
710 W.18tb. St. pd. Adult.a. no pets 393 B1chelon. 1'2 bedroom Be!lch. 673-4~. M 2.S~on.smolter. desires or ease Nev.· carpets Several rentals ava1la G UA ~EED
Apta. 2br MOO, !Bdrm IUmUton,CM.M>4ll. apt.s•townboules. s--r-..... 4200 to sbr your condo /hse. ~::e~ti~~-~:r~o~u t1i~l~ng::;:i~ ~~~ On any amount of
$350. Refrig,Stove. 2 bdrm, 2 ba, centr11l 11r, From 1§10 &44·1900 ....................... Irv, NB. CM. Lk Forest. Call64-4·6500orl6C}l3'17 T.D.'s. Also able to cash
648-0341 at\2PM pool, sp1, private patio. E. Bluffa 2 Br. 2"'1 Bi. UDO ISLE charming 3 F pref. 531 3772 mo. out in 6 monlM 1r you de-
2 Br. 2Ba twnhome. Child OK. Near So. Pool E clpr 9675 M bdnn,2bath.playroom. ONTHEBEACH lt01tlEucs.ift sire Call Dem.sonAssoc. Coast Pllu. $C95 mo. ~ · 0 · · o. Just remodeled Mon· M F & 1186 sq ft. at Huntington 673-7311 for exc1tmg de· beautifully lndscpd, Ask ror Bill&31·12118 52MorS.0.75.59. thly rental. BUI Grundy, •·t' •-'lapsvtt. nn631 .... ~.3· m . Executive Partt Pick up ta1b frplc, g1r, lndry, etc. 67s-616i. ..,, • .....,.. ood ""-------
$490 mo. Ad.lls·no pets. Nu 2br 2ba award win· ADULT LIVING Wanted female room-g remamlng lease MoMy to Lo. 5025 546-4016 ning condo or So est NEWPORT OCEAN mate to share with Call640.8712or847-65.5.S Plaza. S750 mo. Aft6. 2 Bdnn, I Ba. No pets. FRONT Lux. 2-4 Br. Wk-PLUSH 0 FF ICES . Co,...ercW ..................... .. Lite, brite, airy, 1 Br apt. .,,,.,. -.,.,. SHO Mo. Isl , last ly 673.SURF 6'1J.7677 same. 2 bdnn condo ln coo 60 0 r .._.EED M~EY with balcony or patio, .,.,.._.., +security.631·21113 -• Huntington Bcb Non· " · O sq l 1801 Rt.tols 4475 f"'ll Vf"ll
cathedra.l ceilinc,pool • .,_,.., 3126 l806WestcliffDrive, S21Sperweek avall.now. smoker. S263 mo+ Va Newport Blvd, C.M Pb ••••••••••••••••••••••• Upto!IO'kAJ'tr11sed
spa, Lush landJcaping. •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• Newport Beach. sleeps 4. on larce pool, utllities. 964-7167 after 10 a.6-9495 __ 312 lo 1260 sq ft. Sink. Value 1st 2n 3rd T.D
Adults, oo pets. $460 & Bach, large 1295. Llun· ocean view. 631-«IM. .m Newport Center·3 suites frontage. Under SO' sq ft Loans deal direct
f EIS"d CM <•0 7"•9 With Lender/B.kr/RE up.5'9·2447. dry & parting. Avalla· lBR.2BA. Completely furnished Christian man will rent on 16th Joor. Union _1_e~...!"'--1714,49._1743 2 Br. Eutaide. 1 child ble now. 498·0318, YEARLY ·ZSO HBbeacbcottage room In hcMe Close to Bank Bidg.ocean&golf ..._tricttR.W 4500
OK. No pets. 25413 Elden 7118-QI Ute new. ground unit. 5311Hts6 beach. mo 536-7533 course view 2.041 sq ft. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Home1wner I.ms
"B". $450. 831-8085. llwllafl• lwll ll40 ri~place, built-ins. near Newport Beach ocean· Slngle puent would like :!n~-toll,;,o!;:or~p ~~ S6d7u5s, A1 P0Prorf·i"ra221;518' 1
1
0n1 F Any p 821·1793 ........... •••••••••••• 50t.b.St.lblodttooce1.n. frontS780weekup. to shr home wtsame, " or urpose No kJng ti k c M .,,., 9 72 63 199 5/yrs 11.75 per sq. rt Redondo Cr "T" Hunt Fast courteous service. IMti&
OCCUPANCY!
2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt. Bum
ceilin11. laundry rm,
pool. Adult.I only. no
pets.
TSL MGMT 642-1603
1 Br. Garden Apt. Stove &
relrige. Adult.a. no pets.
$335. 548-im.
Spacio111 2 Br. dshwshr,
patio, enclsd garage.
MOO Mo. No pets, no
children. 548-9CB4.
S340 mo. I br, pool. Pillo.
Adulta. No pets. 325 J
17th Pl. 6t6-Sl3'1. Alt.er 11
THEWtWfl.ITIH .Par 'no pa 0· Bayview2 brli00wee · · . ._·I ' l· 1 Fullservicelea.~e War Bcb 842-21134 GlbraltsHwLM Luxury Adult units at af· Avail. MO. 2U /3Jl·9904. A ent 675-8170. Proffem ~40. to shr pre· ren Mc Near 71»-~
fordable living. 1,2 & 3 STUDIO across from lfUflt. Bch lrg 3bdrm stig1ous 38r, 2"'2Ba Btautiful New office 8.700 sq ft office + BKR. <7l4)642•2715
Br. Well deconted. beach. $380/mo yrly w/spa. Near beach. Aug Turtlerock Home Frpk. warehouse. Irvine In· 24 Houn
Olympic slze pool. light· Pool, encl cir. lauodry only. 960-S?U microwave, w /D, total space avail Ill one of dust rial. ~ triple net. S TO BORROWS
ed tennil court, Jacuzzi, 210 Cedar, Npt Shores. NEWPORT BEACH upgrades. Nori.smoker. Newport's flMSt offire Cali 646·1044 or mquire STOLEND S
park Like 11.lldacaping. ~5078 IOO'"-s.d no pets. 752-2836. $340 + buildings. Nr. OC Marosi Co. 16753 Noyes. CallEdBkr848-5005
Most be1utiful bldg. in Best Bay V~w & Beach 1 Br July $275/Aug $300 "'1 uUJ. ~i~~-0~~ l~~ ~tt 967-9266. Brier Coop in· ~ Trwt
H.B. upper duplex , 3 br 2 b1, 2 er: July S37S/Aug S400 Female Chrullan to sbr Secreterial Service. Call vited ---Dffdi 5035
From$85.Ml-0619 11r11e. Adult$, no pell. Newly dtt'd & sharp C.M home Nice area fordelails.833-0440 Rttttals W..ttcl 4600 ...................... . MAllMEISWALK 9800Mo.Yearly.22519th 714 ·675 8127 o r Responsible63l·S693 ....................... SaHttrMhJ.Co.
2 &r 3 Br. Townhouse ~lc·, 167n21:!!! ~!9l1'7,,.;., St. 714-997·0432 Dana Point share house Sm a II office, ample Bachelor 50• low wage All types of real estate
A •· r .,..,,. p t'-" · .,.,,_,•vi .... ""~ La '--hf b child OK Bill earner needs bving Qtr 1·nuestm ..... ·slAce ,,..9 .p..... rom ....... a ""'· guna ...,.c ront 1 r · parking, easy access. 1 t f t · • """" u .• "" single ' double Cir Oceanfront. yearly , home on secluded point, 831·12S7/496-2969 w s orage or res onng s-&.&.&...ia lbdnn modern wood ' SUS mo. A.gt. 548-7729 car boat, C.M area. will ...-~ gu11es. near Hu nt. • steps to pvt beach. SlOO Liberal male rmmte I f WTI>s
IUrbour.840-8907. class apt. Util pd, no day,2wkmin.~3015 w1nted. One blO<'.k to 2 IRVINE Suites, mo. f;~ uti . 646 3647 at 642·2~71 545-0611
S, ... CIOUS pets. '800/mo, 67S.3823. N.B .. steps to ocean. Cute beach. South Laguna. rental. no sec. dept. re·
3 Br. 2 B.. Apt. wit.h 2 18' yearlY ttntal 2R Br, gar. S3SO pr wk. 499·563S. q 'd .. phone. desks, Pb7f~:~ur~~~;r~i~~ ~~~trr~nn~es~~!~r c!t~!
NICE I 2 br 1 i,; ba. car attached garage. 67r:i~:it enate 646-7171 Room~ate wanted to sbr xerox. secy'! avl. 180 & can occupy now. Aug. well secured 1st or 2nd
private petio, enclo6ed W /D book-up, patio, iR-· Yecetto. ...... 4250 house ID Hunt Bcb. Non· 200 sq ft. Quiet Win· Sept or Oct. M·F, 9-5, T.D. Allt.~l&l.
AM
TIMIS•Freei.-
(pro • pro sllojl) • 2
Httlt/I Oube. s.une
• Hydrom1111ge •
Swimming • Goll
OrlvHIQ Ainge
IUUTFUl Al'TI:
cu .. No pets. $4SO. Ask frplc. Sm1.ll pet/child -c..... . ll76 ....................... smker962-7464 dowed oles .. $325 to 759-0lSS (Mr. Wlley ) •••••••••n••••••oo•••• for BUI 631·Ul!6 ok. For appt call 00•R••••••••000
••••••• Big Star Lake cabins 1.11d Offkt R.t.I 4400 $425. • Ste 230• Douglas M 3S seeks l br apt on Mtecl AMT .D.7 HIWLYDICOI. TSLMGM'J' 6'2-1603 2 Bil. 2 BA. g:roo· On Mammoth Lakes con· ....................... Plua,851·2120 beach, Nwpt /Balboa. COMPETITIVE RATES
3124
S1ngtH. 1 6 2 e.d·
rooma • Furnlthed
• Unlumilllld • MAJ.I,
Living • No P1t1 • Moffit Open Dally
11 toe
Oekwood Glrdln~•
NewllOft leech N. aeo 1rvin. "' 1f1h' (714) 145-1104 .
MlwPoft leedl •.
f700 ~ St (!)oyt< 11 tellll (11.4) M2·5113 •
HAllOI ....
•rud uw. View. Decorator f1arn. 2 Br, 2
1a, OJOO -a. ft.l .moo mo.
1 Br. 10 pd, encl gar i---... -_._-•1--• Duples·3Br, 2Ba, newly go coune. · do's 2da min. 864·5712. 1617 Weatcliff. NB. Want Luxury. full service. Sep. gar., yr-round 0 ·9'24 Delta Pacific Mortaige
d/wuher, pool Adu.ha ,_._. decor.ted, dbl gar, W /D 41U700 BIG Bear Cabin. Idea.If or Cinancial inst. 7000s.f. secretarial ana. Wanted : To rent Eastside l114)8Sl·2(M()
842-5073. ,.,. ...,. hoot·1&p. Avail DOW. IBSO ......... fw dilled fiahinl, hilting, biking or 1st. floor. A ent 541·5032. 8Sl.Ql99 C M. 2br apt. C1JI after Licensed R.E. Broker 2br,l~ba.aar.lyea.r mo.SlMIZl · orU.fw .tid ltOO juat gettinf away . PresUgiousOfficeSpace. l11W.17thSt.,CM Wet 6pm.54$-2B36 l!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
l lrTew hull lease. lat/Wt plus sec I 2 & l.... s····E······w·····,··i:.: .. o·· ~~~-• Wk y. rates. 3 window olrices avail•· bar, cpl.' drps. 39' sq. Room wanted for mature Need to create 3rd T.D. Newly decor. gas pd.. dep. $510 mo. David TOWNHOM~ A f"'ll ...... v.16 ble in full service Lego.I ft. 642·"6.1 f u 11 Y em P 10 Ye d . on single family re·
encl 11r., pool, dawlrr.· 540-4087 213@7202 . v1• I .. GE Oceanfront Newport Suite in Newport Center. Share office. low rent. responsible 19 yr old sidence in Dice area.
Adulta.MJ.5073, iM 111 ~ Beach, 2 & 3Bdrms. Avail. now! 640-5640 Beach Blvd Hunt. Bcb m 1 1 e ·ti I Se pt 1. PI ease submit. Jlr.lle~ 410lll9"e ""'.:A ~ew8 H2WllBaBeach+--~· New 162 bdnn l\lx1.1ry avail weekly. Call MIWra.TIUCH 4 desks 1v1il Broker Newport, Calta Mesa, (714)631~.
N l .....__ pd c.1.--., r. • aun:w._.. adult 1pta In 14 plul 1 5'4..0S14 3232 M2·1418. Irvin•. c-11 631.., .... aft ew Y ..._.,. • u · A . , . ..... 900 Mo. n4,._51187 or Bdrm from S4415, 2 bdnn Full service exec. of· ~ au ~1-WIDOW bas money for
encl 11r., PoOl. dlhwr. •• 2U/582_.IQ. from 1535, Townhouse WAMTID fices from $397. ·•on THE RIGHT T:30PMJohn 2ndT.D.'1Slo.ooo•up!
Adlllt.a, '4UOT3· i..w!!!!!!!!m••••-Laree 2 Br., f~ yard. MOO + pool•. tennis, Ne.rport on ~an ren· Call" exec. otnces rrirom SPACE .__.,,,...._./ E·Z CREDIT! No pnlty. IMSTAMT14t I'!! 1.,..1 •. Avail now. 1435 waterfal.11. panda! Gu tal wanted. Clean 3 1105. lnclds 1ttreta al, THE RIGHT ,.-. C1llA1tEilten613-73ll
2 Br. l~ Ba. Townboule lBr, attacbed pr, •UJltl + $I001ecurity. iU-7600 for cookinl • heatln1 bdrm. 4Clh St to 65th St phoae ans .. word pro--W"'E ••••••••••••••••••••••• WlrAYTHIMOST Eaat.alde. 1 child OK.' dean, 1175 mo. m W. Eves or.-. paid. From San Diego area. First floor. Rea.1 ceasing, Tdex,qwip. '"'""" .__., For your T.D.'1 •Noc.es
Yard, lndry rm. Great WU@l,16-111! Frwy drlve North on rate. For family, qu!et THEHEADQUARTERS GUAIAMTB! 0 I It 5005 at Denison Assoc.
loc. '550Mo. t bdrm apt avail lm· H MWH llAbo CH Beach to McFadden 1.nd will JIJv.~1cle~.' wkl c701~PAN11,_ ~1 r..-..,...., ... of. .... ~~.~'.!:!':?......... 673-1311 TSLMQMT, 142-1803 medlatelY. Nr. So Cit unt. ar ur area then Wetton McFadden or mo. ...y 82 • C? .. ..._ fl I u t --Plait•. occ Elect incl. 2bdrm t•DllH, $510. to Seawled Village. aevual yean). Will dt-u~•IW'nl1 CH I newpor PllMT SHOP • s.t•cloul l Br. Gardea upminuDlt Pool,Jac,ad\llla. {114)19Nl11. poaitlwknowReUablf. $1E'\ipVU1T151tv ~et..i!ht Thrlvln&buaineu.C M .. A-a•lltM•llCAc-•h/
pt. Pool•rec. All lltlll 756«9 181115LfM 14H!Wl •--4000 175-1.2'74 ef ......... low overhead. Call for rtn11n•/
pajd. Adlllt, nopett. Lee 2br lbl wJ.k lo bch -In T ..... ...... details '65,000. Cr1ig. Lost I,..._.
EIP..ulleta E/Slde, ~e1 rtfri11, ./Ill. • • ..... ••••••••••n•••••• ....... .._.. 4100 HmTAM ••••.-..... '31·1286 ••••••••••••••••••n••• lNMM'tA!t.Al!U. quitl,utlll1DCJ,tlMOmo, o.•5001 Room wllh full house ....................... Pt.Ali •111•c1m1 ti SIM
2 Br 1 ba. cpt/drpa, JI'!(. fem.MM41l · prMle1• ID Newport Movtoc? Avoid deposit.I CllT~ ..................... ..
llulltlH, adllltt . ._, 2 Br. 111111•1* Ave. MIAllMCH.mlM Beada.MMU 'c11t llvine expeuesl ~e•r~':i~·~::~ (714J67H662 scallllrft Nr. Ql4 a., 910D/Ko. 11'7211ult.--~Adaile ~·no Crpq, dnriatrn·• bil bil a, at· E11lllde Colla Meu. Profe11lonall1 tlnce ~hl :......a.a ----•·bd &.K..MH • Jl7l ceate.r l F.uy lrwy IC• .......... 44H 1..._ .,,,.___ l Bdrm •-.r: •'7·2'140 ~ . Siem 1mt. "' Jat. ·~· Nice la.r•eroam w~lc HOU*ATIS een. Avail. now! call .......... ~............ WWUY
S.Ch h J77' aft~ rorQlaPf, ~Ml·~ .. ..__._-MIAlllACHdmlM ~:~~~~t~ fordeullt. hntorelotnc.apece BUIUJ -Qlda-
_. ..... -........ Wff ,~.M. •"•• •-llt>.JDa~drpl,pr. lutmo.NQ.Aft«Spm •alt or hmale abaR I I• ll atrH1onablnec.. OVERWEIGHT· Need Johr-AdlllJ-. aw. ah, tyttlooklDI aar.1 a..mW.JcWm.' Spattom,rlP,dw•hlr, •·~ M=P7S P.lu•b home with 1He.4IOIS.ft. M :cztt for""' P">-l..OCXS ..... .,./llO. ... 1 dlAld. No ... l'ISAtt.Rtm .,.,... Jl44 ht bome,"' bet.II, mid· Newport a.di Este. 2 MIWPOIT c•n• •SSA VDDlbR ara.m lothar.111 Com It CGIU 10U alloul UM lf&1 UU. Sierra II amt. .. ..................... dJe.a~ae l>locb ftom bucll wllb luellut Ne~~t PLAZA J>&ll.l prdlla. H3a-'"7 Nmt to Ive tn elU. u MJ,•Ult. r-::--.. • <>rucetr-OailllD. 1 Br. M ~ • poo1•.-• Ctnter (,....,I ) im111 ... v .. !,C.lll. or1n.r1pm-.1m ll does In tbt tullurlla. •:::::.. ~ ~~~d ~,·.a...N•.• ~~lllt~·Pul :'!';:,•r,:::: ~ 1 1 O...rovown.Jtaa.,_ ~~~~';.:. !:;.!s:
OOJn>alPOaUHJ n .a.IMp ba, IO•-*'*'*/llJt. -atJaiM ....._.Space llTAl.WACI OfferiD1aDtbuat.1oa&t. ... LOCU.~~--.....-..---aar 0.,l~la: E 8 ..,.,.,.. ..... _ .... ll/PIO .... epec.2812 from 1IO lo .. aq ft. no aq. ft. OD Harbor lY llnownbnada1uchu ........... IHI · t .._ 1 r, l•ltf ' L11a11 ltaell -o-la apt, HI. "°'' ~ WI 11 a""'ommodate Bl•d laC II 8111 Great Jordacbe Vaedtrbllt ..., 21r •• i.t-. 'J'be LIM, wtpool. ttD· '•...:i' bucll. '4H. Donte h"'" a~un.'. · · · • ................. _. ~lrif' Ira fell lu 8'1. AMI M = ~ :;r. .;:.-• I ohaoD TU· UH; ~. ~~: 1 '!'. JtaJoDMilcs mtM0 ~.~ll t.!t': ~:.; !•------• r• ..... ·,, ••. fl41T• •1 I ' w l7tM r,.a. ............ INU~ "° ,. Olhr br11d1 1••• .. =•"· •,...• ' lim·Jllllt!lfl. 1,••'• c.-•v• ••• cMN Olt lie relald •111, Call ... ft. aru. su1soo.oo lut9du ...... a...::..a.: .. rw1, Hl• HI. -..a,. ..... !'--"' ... ~ ..., .. _ I , ....... I -1'• ---... """' ....... -....... -· ,_, WUuil a..~ " •• , 0 rt I •• t II .,,.. II •• ll•t1tor1. -. ~ a llioeb • .................... •· i •/Jft ..uw.. •· llfW '"*''· 119. alrfan ror a " u.. .,. ii tf".iS '!t,E;-:: ~~:=. i:ll!o'S~ \f.'~.~.'!t °"==-' :~~:
-.a l l*a·--... ... Ma 11'11.IW&--~sm .......... elke. L o I ! ' I I I I l·--·--· ~-.-.~c•. •••• ... ~.,,;:·Inell . 9M ---.... ' * 9l{lk ••••-• r ti rm :L;.~llli!!!!!!!!::====::::3~---~ .... L.; ... llli.11 (ll)Mt. ......
.. ..
p 0 4 a cccsosuscc
use """"M service when placing your ad ... a
Daily Pilot ad number will
appear In your classif led ad . . . we take your messages
2~ hours a day ... you call
in at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to ypur ad •.•
this service Is only $7.SO
wffk. For more lnforma·
tton and to place your ad
c111 6G-S678.
I lllJflll
css uzs SU 0 S 0 A •
•SA'IUO'l•
llt 11p ctilDitMon from
RB to SJC. New revoha· tiooary produft lo Pitt
coatrol. Good com -
llliuk!M. lllllt bave re-
liable car. Call Vic,
1W/tll=fll1
Offl:E PMETS . SALES
IEPIESENTATIYES
Equal Opporturuty
Employer M /F
t
COMMH.l
CHEVROLET
. ... I I • I'
r, I I \I I '
S46-1200
HIGHIUYll
Top dollan for Sport.I Cara, Buaa. Campen.
lll•'a, Audi'1
Ad torUfC MGR
JIMMAllHO
VOLISWA ... 18711 Beach Blvd,
HUNTINGTON BEACH uwooo
TOP DOLLAR
PAIDFOI GOOD&CWM
USEDCAIS!
miracle
mazda
JISO...,._.ll•d.
COtfe MN 645-~7~
CASH TODAY
We will come to you
MBCIDIS
WAKTID
g
.....
iCR EVI ER
$1sr a~Y
UflllA """ 835-3171
fMI WllllAl1 llllWllO llAC._
•USB»IMW1• '77 DOfS/R Cl.IM)
'77 l20iA SIR (0'14 >
'11320iSIR(m7)
'7tD>tS/RCYMl
"ft S211SIR0071)
'81 S20I SIR (93) c
$1,~000
OFMEWIMW'S Sales and Le11ln1 at
competitive prices. EJ.
cellent service and part•
dept.
Good selection of pre-
vloualy owned BMW 6
other fine can in n ·
cellent condition.
We alto have a lease
company that leaaea
other makes or autot,
trucks and vans. For ad·
ditlonal information on
leastng please call ...
114/972·lZ70 114/661·9811
Call for immechate For a good deal and good
appointment &er saJes service see: Ask for
Mart Sachs-Buyer
831 1740 495-1100 CREVIER
MISSK>H VIEJO SALES-SERVICE-uASING IMPOITS 208 w "'·SANTA ANA 714~171
ClOSEDSUNOAY WEHHD
YOUIEXOTIC
&llmSHCAU 1q
31oo·w Coast Hwy .
Newport Beach
00.94a>
TOP SDOUARS For Clean Used
Cars & Trucks
We pay cash on the spot'
Contact buyer at
DcSANFIS
CHEVROLET
Sao Clemente
131-0510 4tUSOO
WANTED!
Earle Ike
TOYOfA·YOUO
Tap Dlllar
Pid
For Your Car!
JOHNSON & SOH
Lillc•U1rcwy
2626 Harbor Blvd'
Costa Mesa ~5630
W1P!l OVER .......
For Your Good
VW. Porsche or Audi
'"c* OltJB~
VW PORSCHE AUDI
~s E. Coast Hi way
al Bayside Drive
Newport Beach 673-0000
Premiwn prices
paid ror any used car
I foreign or domestic )
in good condition.
See Us Finl!
TIM Molt Exdtilc)
Port Of Yow
IMWPlnll•eOr
LffMC.Wle
Mclo,....IMW!!
lwyOrLHN .,o ....... ,..,
( 14) 52Z,.53Jl
OIAHGE COUNTY'S
OLDIST
Sales·Servlce-Leasing
Roy C.-.fl',IK.
Rolls'ltoyce BMW
lS..OJamboree
Newport Peach 64()§H4
·79 320i. air, sunrf, stereo,
Rae. seals, 3SK ml.
548·4136 days, 646-5127
eves.
12 BMW Bavaria, 4Spd.
air. moving, must sell.
Sacr ifice S3000 fi rm
S36-"822.
15 BMW 2002. Snrf, air,
AM /FM, new tires. MeU
blue. $§999,644=6034
'1S SJOi · Silvn /blue in·
tenor, stick 4 speed. air. ru II power, sunroof,
lambskin covers. new Mlc h eli ns XVS .
m o dified engine.
Blaupunkt amlfm
cassette & rtcorder.
$7400. Call673-S8116~-
·so BMW 321l, 13,000 mi,
loaded, cashmere color
673-5242
'71 2002 BMW. wht, rm
Blpnt cass Xlnt cond
$4000 080 Call Liu
1173-9395.
06S BMW !Im RW\S good
Must sell' 65.
--~-4636.~· ---
Capri t71S ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Capn, am1rm cass.
good cood, WOO. Wkdys
963·9711 tLi.nda/
'14 Capra 4·cyl, 4·1pd,
runs well. clean inside '
out. 900/080. 964-6436
'16 Capri V6. 4spd.
am /fm cass, good pot,
xlnt int. great cond
080760-1.:.13
• A. TLA.5 CHRYSLBt-PL YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 546-1934 3 blocks
south of San Diego Freeway otl Harbor Blvd Complete
body shop Siles Service Parts Service Dept. open
Monday thru Friday 7 30 A.M to 5 30 P.M end 8 A.M. to
5 P.M. on Saturday.
• IEA.CH 1..-oRTS
848 Dove Street. Newport Beach Tel. 752·0900. Call us,
we re the specialists for Alta Romeo. Peugeot & Saab.
• THEODQRE ROllHS FOllD
Mdm sales. service. parts, body, paint & Ure depts
Competitive rates on lease & dally rentals 2060 H1rbor
Blvd .. Costa Meu. 642-0010 or 54C>-8211
• JOHHSOH Ir SOH UHCOLM MfltCURY
26215 H1rbor Blvd., Costa Mela. Tel. S40-5630. ST Veart
of friendly family service -Oran~ County'• oldest Lin·
coln·Meroury dealership.
SOUTH COAST DOIMH .
2188 Harbor Blvd., Costa MesL Tel. 540-0330. RV Mrvic•
.cpec1111111, custom van conY9tllons.
MIWPOU MOITS
a100 W Cout Hlgt11uy. Newport Bueti. Tel,
"42-9405/540-1764. The Ferrari HeldQuarwt
-w 4. 5 ••• a z c es a a • ••••=••• o es ussscsscacssczsstsscss2 Lij
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • NEWPORT DA. TSUN
888 Dove Street. Newport'Beach. Tel 833-1300 At the
triangle of Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol behrnd
V1ctori1 St1tlon. Siles. Se!v1oe, Leasing & Parts. Fleet
discounts to the ~ublic.
• HOW A.RD C .. VROLET
Dove/Quall Streets, Newport Beach. 833\0555. We
speci11ize in Corvettes! And oor ~Y shop is one of the
best! Excellent body 1nd paint shop for 111 m1kH 1nd
models I
• DAVID J. P .. LLIPS IUICX..p()NTIAC-MA.%0A.
Siles • Service • Leasing
24888 .Allc1a PlfkWIY
Laguna. Hiiis
• MA.RIC HOWA.10 VOUSWM84, IHC.
13731 Harbor Blvd .• Garden Grow. Tel. 534-4100. Large
stock• of n'9w Volkswagens 1t unbeatable prlon.
• A.LAH MA.6HOH POMTIA.C..SUIAIU
2480 HarbOr BIVd .. Cotti Mita. Tit 549-4300 S.I•.
Service, L• .. lng. ''Mr. Goodwr•och "
• IAIU Ill TOYOf A-YOLYO
11M Harbor Blvd., Cotti Meta. (714) t<tl•t303 or
M0-9417. lf1 Volvo dHler In OrlnQI County tnd wtl•n
you_. for 1 Toyotl et Elfle llcO, you 09' Ill
• • I 01 LOHGrttE PONTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster. Tel 892-6651 Or1nge
Court(y s oldest and l1rgest Pont1ec dealership Sales.
Service. Parts
• UHIVIRSITY HOHDA.
2850 H1rbor Blvd .. Costa Mela. Tel. 540-9640. 1 Mlle
South 405 Freeway. S11es. S8'Vlce, parts & leasing
• SA.MTA. A.MA DA.TSUH
2001 E. 17th StrMt, Santa Ana. liel. S5(H811. Your
Original Dedicated Dataun Dealer.
• MIRA.CU MA.DA.
2150 Herbor Blvd., Cotta Mesa. Tel. 645-6700. 11 dealer
In So. Calif. See the all new 1981 GLC.
• A.LLIM-OLDSMOIUCA.DILLA.C
SUIAIU-GMC TIUCIS
San Otego Fwy. at .A~lno c.p11trano In
t.gun1 Niguel. Tel. 831
• SAM DI SAMJIS CHlftOLIT
401 S El Ctmlno AMI, Sen Ci.men•
S•'"· Service, LIMlno And Perta ar.,.. County's NEWEST C~ 'dell«: "OrowlflQ
Your Wf!Y." E•ll El Camino off-ftml),
131-0UO 412-t6GO
COST A. MESA. DA.TSUH
2845 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa Tel 540-6410 Serving
Orange County for 16 years. 1 Mile So. 405
SUHSET FORD, IHC.
(Home of Wiiiie the Whale), 5440 Glfden Grove Blvd ..
W.tminater Tel. 636-4010.
• FRA.HIC PROTO UHCOf.H.MBCURY
Servloe and P1rts O.p1rtment alwsys open 7 d1ys a
week 7 .30 AJA. to 6:30 P.M. 848-n39.
• COMHB.L CHIYIOLlf
2828 Hart>or Blvd., Costa Meal. Ovw 20 yeara Mrvlno
Orenge Countyl Sal ... leMlng, MrVlce. Call 541·1200;
special parta llne; 5*9400; body lhop line, 754-0400.
• CHICIC IVBSOM roasc.-.AUOl-YW
415 E. Co11t Hwy., Newport Beech. 673'0900. The only
dHtetahlp In Or•noe County with t,_. """ greet IT1IMt und9r on• roof!
• I
IOY CAIYll IOLU IO~W
11MO Jambof'M AolCt. Newport Beech. .............. a.Mee. Pwta And LMeing
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, O'R TO BE PLACED
ON THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR DAILY PILOT REP.
f
I •
t
t
r
f.Lt..IMl'!,,~a~EVE .
Lapnans have their own litUe
job about local cttiMnl arri'rine at
the gates of heaven, H)'ini 1tbere
they have come from, tbea being
told, "Okay, you can come lD -but
you probably won't like the place."
Residents of Southern Callfomia'•
picturesque little art colony are by
no means the only ones who retard •
their bailiwick u a paradise, 11.nce
lt bu become a mecca for vlaiton
from fu and wide -from around
the world, in fact. Each year, tbey
arrive lD droves to enJor its many
deUcbu, wbicb tnclude a near-
perfect climate the year around,
plua milet ol sand)' beacbea, aafe
swimming, a cliff.top park with
Riviera-like vien; even 1urfboard-
in1. clean air and peaceful, art·
·oriented atmo1p~ere. F 1ood
mealUl'e, Laguna even has free4um
from high-ri.ae structures, the city's
heiaht Umit being set at a modest 35
feet. Its citizens, incidentally, de·
light in beinl called La~tics.
Right now, tbesmall community-
population slightly below seventeen
thousand -la about to emerge from
its quiet period, its famous annual
Festival of Arts being au set to open
for the 46th season on July 14. The
· event, which began very simply
back in 1932, still has as its basic
purpose the display of work by local
residents. At the start, the work
consisted of nothing but paintings,
but nowadays the exhibits range
alphabetically from acrylics to
wood carvlngs, and include a rlcb
assortment of ~er items, too.
Specifically, ll)e festival includes
the display of oil and watercolor
paintings, etchings, drawinp and
serigraphs -along with other
items under the heading of araphict
-as well as ceram ics,
leatherwork, slained glass, weav-
blgs; even rurniture, model ships,
jewelry and photography.
· All items exhibited are for aale,
and al.nee business is brisk. it
follows that the display changes
from hour to hour, items tallen from
the grounds by their proud new
owsaen beint. replaced promptly by
other goodies.
Altbough the exhibitors are all
residents of the immediate ·coastal
area, they represent many parts of
the country -and even U»e world,
since moet were born and trained
far from Soutbem California. Tb.ii
year's exhibit.on include natives of
Canada, Denmark, Germany, Gl'eat
Britain, Hun1ary and fbe
Netherlands, as well as native-born
clUaens of the United Stat.el who
hall from hometowns from coast to
coast.
The art and craft display is by no
means the only attraction on the
grounds. Also on hand to delight
visitors is an aaaortment of work by
students in art classes around the
country -arranged grade by
grade. The pick of the crop, these
are often of such bigb quality that
Festival 1oen want to buy tbedl,
and are duly referred to the scboola
concerned. Another display la of
work by scholarship reclplenta.
The Featlval of Arts awards
acbolanhipe reauJarlY. Not only in
art per ae, but also in da nce,
theatre, wrlUng and photography. -----------
by The Gdl1ry and 1111.t Betty and the
Artists
Wt ..,.....,. In ~ne. llt ua _,.... lft oNdft\11 gift med• eepeclalty fOr ygu « )QK piote.-On by WOf'ld ,.,_,.., lrttlta.
• Fine Arts
• Portraits
• Sales and Repair
• Rntoratron
• Penonallze4 Gifts
• AutheritiC Inclan .Jl\Wlry
• Art Lessons
• Seminars
"We Sell the best -we restore the rest"
Other re•Ofta f~ enjoylag a visit
to the Festival include a quiet pic-
nic area, a rettaurant, a quick-meal
cafeteria and a marionette abow
presented by Tony Urbano, who is
internationall~ acclaimed for bis
colorful productions which appear
on television regularly.
Small fry have their own litUe
spot where they can try their hands
at creating their own masterpieces,
with materials, easels and advice
all offered free. Some exhibitors re-
call having made their very fll'st al·
te mpts lo create graphics at the
junior studio decades earlier.
The money-making and completely
unique feature of Laguna's famous
Festival of Arts is the Pageant of
the Masters under the 41ir~Uon of
Glen Eytchison. In the pageant
great works of art are re-created
with live models in a two-hour pre·
aentation each evening at 8:30 p.m.
Staged ila a tree.girt bowl adjacent
to the exhibition grounds, the "liv-
ing pictures" have been a sellout
success for many years, ever y
ticket being sold months before the
first performance. (Even so, some
are usually returned to the box of·
fice for resale, so that would-be
pageant-goers can usually get in.>
The pageant began aa a simple
sideshow in 1933, the second year of
the festival. Through the years It
grew in quality to become the
technical masterpiece it now is, al·
tracting not only television crews,
newspaper people and magazine
writers from any countries, but also
technicians and producers from
stage, screen and TV who marvel at
the effects obtained.
The nof,.so-secret secret is light·
ln&; that, plus the expertise of one
Carl Callaway who bas devised
countless ways to lmprove the show
so that audience members now aee
exactly what they would see if they
were looking at the actual works of
art being reproduced.
Besides ligbUng, the Pageant also
owes its success to experts in other
realms, includln1 costuming and
makeup .. Even that's not all: highly
stUled artists tum themselves into
honorable foraera to reproduce
backirounds exactly 11.ke those in
the orilinal works. They also paint
the costumes. As a result, cast
memben blend into the scenes U ·
actly as ii they had-been palnteCI
there. N. for statues -well, im·
308 NO. COAST HWY.
LAGUNA BEACH, CALIF.
494-3023
955-0141
RESERVATIONS
-------~·· ... . ... ·~ -----.. --~-". ,.. /
mobility , ... body mak e u p
transform human beings so convin·
· dngly that a pigeon once landed on
a shapely mcMlel, in the tradition of
pigeons the worW over. Surprised
though she was, Ute cast member
dldn 't move a muscle.
The summer also sees
two other festivals in operation, in·
cluding Art-A-Fair, which features
mostly paintings in traditional
style. Sometimes called the "con·
servative festival," it dilfers sharp-
ly from the th ird event of its
general kind, the Sawdust Festival.
At the very first glance,
"Sawdust" ls quite unlike both Art·
A· Fair and the long-established
Festival of Arts, featuring as it does
all sorts of distinctly unusual struc-
tures its exhibitors build each year.
Many are whimsical and highly im-
aginative, in line with the "dare-to-
be-differenl" philosophy of the
Sawdust group itself. This is Its fil.
teenth year. Its grounds even in·
elude a waterfall.
On dis play and for sale at
Sawdus t are paintings, wall hang-
ings, shoes. mirrors, raku, candles,
procelains and a wide ranee of
other items. all created by lOcal res-
idents. Impromptu entertainment
provide d by vocalists and In·
strumentalists adds to the carnival
atmosphere. Both of the "other"
festivals are hall a mile farther in·
land along Laguna Canyon Road
from the Festival of Arts.
U Laguna is special duJint -the
summer season, its also well worth
visiting durlng its quieter periodl;
in fact, many residents insist it's at
its best in wintertime, when the
island of Santa Catalina is often YU·
ible some 26 miles offshore instead
of beint masked by summer haze.
On realty clear days, Laguna also
offers a glimpse of another island -
San Clemente, over fifty miles
away.
Right now, however, the spotlight
is on Laguna and its famous
Festivals and Pageant, which
promise to be the best ever.
On the Cover
Backstage at the Paaeant of tbe
Masters, models tint receive make
up and are then positioned to
achieve the final effect of "Uytq
art."
BREAKFAST
LUNCHEON
BRUNCH
DINNER
NOW FINE WINE and BEER
''Home 1tyle cooking aerved •n ·a half-century old ~n.1 landmark home.'' . . . ..
I
•
--------------
Experience Summer In Laguna -Advertising Supplement to COAST LIFE, July 8, 1911 & DAILY PILOT, July9, 1981 3
.-_--~----~<t #fr~=--~--:------------
.~ ~~~ ~~ ~~ . ~ The Most Unique Crafts .t ~ (J
And Fine Arts Festival in the World· '
Featuring:
Non-Juried Arts and Crafts By Laguna Beach Artists
ENJOY
ARTISTS AT WORK FREE ENTERTAINMENT
FANTASTIC FOOD AND SELECTED WINES FROM THE
VINEYARDS OF ALMADEN
s
A w
D
IJ s
T ·
'8~
•
'
Visitors to the Laguna Arts
Festival can park once, eQjoy a
leisurely dinner, and then walk a
short distance to the festival
grounds.
Tivoli Terrace Restaurant, 650
Laguna Canyon Road, overlooks the
festival ground.I. .
According to Tammy •~lanson.
manager or the restaurant, many of
their customers are festivalcoen.
Tivoli Terrace, owned and operat-
ed by Terry and June Neptune,.
serves fast foods in the downstairs
portion or the restaurant while
salads and sandwiches are featured
for lunch and stew and halibut are
featured dinners ups\airs.
Outd oor terrace dining enables
diners to enjoy the view of the
festival grounds. Beer a nd wine are
also served oo the terrace.
In 1975, the Neptunes obtained
permission from the Festival board
or directors to use the Terrace
grounds as a wedding chapel during
the offsea.soo.
Weddings oo the terrace can ac-
commodate anywhere from 400 to
1,200 people.
A picturesque chapel and recep-
tion room are decorated with Vic-
torian antiques and stained glass.
In case of bad weather, tbe in-
terior can serve as a rehearsal area
or alternative to planned outdoor
activities.
All food for the wedding recep-
tion, including the wedding cake, is
prepared oo the premises.
For more inforll)alion, call
494-9650.
Long lines form for .pancakes,
omelets at Cottage Restaurant
"We're known for our standing
room only breakfast and lunch."
That's what part-owner Harry
-Moon had to say about his Cottage
Restaurant located at 308 N. Coast
Highway in Laguna.
The Cottage Restaurant is the
former Pancake Cottage
Restaurant, but Moon said the Col·
tage Restaurant still features the
original pancake and warne recipes
from the former restaurant.
Breakfast is served from 8 a.m.
until 3 p.m. every day featuring old
fashioned pancakes and unique
omelets such as the Melvin.
The Melvin is named after the
cook who invented the omelet filled
with sauted steak meal , sauled
o nions, mushrooms, tomatoes,
swiss cheese and topped with a
Spanish sauce.
Moon said his restaurant also
serves a Sunday.style brunch ev-
eryday.
The Cottage Restaurant is also
one of the few restaurants offering
junior breakfasts and dinners for all
ages.
A family-style dinner of meat,
fish and vegetarran entrees is availa·
ble from noon until closing.
New items to the restaurant's
menu are fine California varietal
wines and beer.
Moon describes bis restaurant u
...
a "byline of homestyle cooking an a
landmark half-century old Laguna
Home built in 1913."
"I refer to the Cottage not as a
r estaurant, but as an institution.
The Cottage is unique lo each
person," be said.
The Cottage Restaurant's hours
will be 8 a.m. to midnight every
night during the summer. ReguJar
hours are 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sunday
through Thursday and 8 a.m. to
midnight Friday and Saturday.
Pasta, antipasto
dishes specialties
at The Pasta Shop
There is one restaurant in Laguna
where passersby can watch the food
being prepared.
The Pasta Shop, 427 N. Pacific
Coast Highway, ·specializes in pasta
dishes such as egg and spinach lin-
guine, cheese ravioli and cheese
cannelloni. The pasta for these
dishes can actually be seen being
made from the street.
The restaurant also specializes in
antipasto trays and doubles as an
Italian deli.
The Pasta Shop is open Monday
through Saturday from 11 :30 a .m.
to 7 p.m. and Sunday noon to S p.m.
Je~~E; Alktt
A ONE MAN EX HIBITION
Pai ntings, Drawings,
and Origi nal Prints
7 June through ll August
featured During Aug ust
O rigi nal Rembrandt
Etchings
Tuesday through Sunday 11-6
Poor Richard's
offers waffles,
omelets, ocean view
A casual atmosphere with, outdoor
patio dining and an ocean view is
what patrons of Poor Richard's will
rind.
Located at 1198 Coast Highway on
the second noor of the Village Fair
Mall, Poor Richard's opens each
morning at 8 a.m. with breakfast
favorl~ such as Belgian waffles
and omelet.es.
"We flX omelets 'in any combina·
lion from a great list or ingredients
s uch as fresh mushrooms, three
kinds of cheeses, Ortega chili or
ham, and they're served with one of
our fresh waffles," Richard
Stenger, owner of the restaurant,
s aid.
Fresh st.rawberry waffles with
whipped cream is another favorite
al Poor Richard's.
"A soup-and-salad bar at lunch
offers two kinds of homemade soup
and 12 salad garnishes every day."
Stenger added.
Also available at lunch is a tradi·
tional sandwich caJled "Broodjes"
(pronounced broaches). Broodjes
are made from a selection of meats
and cheeses on a sheepherder's roll.
Another luncheon favorite at Poor
Richard's is the peasant lunch.
Dinner entrees start with Nicoise,
made or fresh vegetables sauteed
with cheese and include such de·
lights as New Orleans seafood gum·
bo, Jrilled halibut steak, brochettes,
bou11labaise and local swordfish
when it's in season.
Poor Richard's is open until 9
p.m . through the week and 10 p.m.
on the weekends.
San Francisco
\i(L orRe!
al 9J lLO lT1Hal
326 Glenneyre
Laguna Beach, California
New York
"'
Experience SUmmer in~ -Advertising Supplement to COAST LIFE, July I, 1911 & DAILY fl LOT, July 9, 1911 S
5;gnature of a Master ... As Distincti.ve as Where it can fJe, found
.. TH~ Leading Distributor
of fine Art
-
~ • ~
'·
Laguna miracle worker and designer
helps shop patrons look their best
If the saying "wbeP you look bet.-
ter you feel better" baa any troth to
it, then Unique Boutique ls a
therapeutic miracle.
And the resident miracle worker
for the Laguna Beach ladies'
fashion shop is owner and noted de-
signer Jeri Holmes.
''My clothes make people loot
better and feel better about
themselves," said Holmes, a self·
proclaimed extrovert who puJJ.a no
punches in advising customers bow
to accentuate the positive and
minimize the negative aspects of
their figures.
"Some customers come in di.a·
gusted from not being able to fit
into clothes that are designed to fit
tall, skinny models," she said, ad·
ding that such cues result from a
predominance of men buyen in
women's fashiODI who simply di.a·
regard the vast variety of female
shapes.
"I make the woman look better
with what she's got," she aald.
"When a gal walks out of here, she
walks taller, lite a model. And it's
because I care."
Caring bas motivated Holmes
THE HACIENDA
In Santa Ana
Nos1algic
early California
courtyard selling
1 7:?~ College Ave.
714/558-1304
throughout her career; which began
in New York city as a buyer for
Saks Flft.b Avenue. Later, she re-
cel ved national acclaim as a de-
signer when she opened a manufac-
turing business in Los Angeles.
Holmes bad her own fashion
division at Jantzen International in
Oregon and bas spent much time in
Rome working with such famous
designers as Pucci and Valentino.
She brings an international Oair
to Unique Boutique,~ displaying
c lothes found on ber annua1
globetrotting. An example is col-
orful embroidered silk jackets from
Shanghai.
Although Holmes' boutique
sounds expensiv.e, the fashions are
affordable, and they are sup-.
plemented witb free fashion
coordination consultation, allowtn&
mix and match techniques t,p max·
imiie the number of looks that can
be achieved with a minimum of
clothes.
Unique Boutique is located at 384
Forest Ave., on the upper level in
-the rear ol the Lumber Yard sbop-
pine cent.er.
Call49'·2377.
Ezperience a world of exotic gifts in Kn.talle, the natUTal hi8-
to111 gallery with a /lair /or the unique at 332 Forest Ave.,
Laguna Beach. Decorator and collector minerals, fossils,
shells amidst a dazzling ctilpZay of gemstones are available.
Love Leather features unique
leather goods not usually found
(
Eleanor and Wally Brees travel
the nation in search of leather &oods
not regularly found in department
stores.
The owners of Love Leather, at
384 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach,
carry an extensive range al leather
goods in their shop. Leather items
include key chains and the beat
leather jackets made.
-
Most goods -90 percent -are
made in California, but a selection
of belt buckles derives flavor from
throughout the United States.
Love Leather also features many
styles of western and banana bats
with matching western vests and
coats.
For more information, call
497-3210.
TIVOLI TERRACE
Festival Restaurant
July 14-Aug. 30th
In Laguna Beach
Lovely hillside
selling on the
Terrace of the
wortd-renowned
Festival of Arts
650 Laiuna Canyon Rd.
7 I 4/494-9650
Luncheon
ON THE UPPER TERRACE UNDER THE TREES
FRON J2 NOON TO JPll *DAILY
SPECIAL GROUP LUNCHEONS ANY DAY
BY ADVANCE RESERVATION
Dinner
UPPER TERRACE DINING UNDER THE
STARS 5 TO H'M Niglatlr
, .~ "Winter Wedding Special"
PLEASE CAU EARLY FOR RESERVATIONS
BECAUSKOrcuRTAlNTlllK ANIHJUR
UMITED SEATING, WE ASK THAT YOU
BE MINDFUL OF THOSE STIU WAITING
Dec .. Jan. & Feb.
(exception: Valentine's Weekend)
'12.50 per person
... Wedding Cake -Champagne -Hors d'Oeuvres,,
A Total Catering Concept
June & Terry Neptune/Have Kitchen Will Travel. Enterprises
~;~~~
TOBE SERVED
eEER *WINE. CHAMPAGNE
Available at both Snack Bllr and
Restaurant Levels
•
2 ----· -
Experience Sommer in Laguna -Advertising Supplement to COAST LI FE, J uly 8, 1911 & DAILY PI LOT, J uly 9, 1981
Enalish threesome combine their
wild talents in art studio openina
A "must see" slop in Orange
County next month should include a
visit to a small art studlo called
MGB Wildlife.
The studlo is run by a threesome
o( talent -each man doing bis own
original art works.
Max Thompson hand-carves
wooden ducks, Barry Scott sculpts
bronzes of international acclaim,
and Graham Wilmott paints wildlife
watercolors.
All three men are from England
and met recently in Orange County.
Scott was born in Windsor,
England and educated at the RoyaJ
Free. He began sculpting in early
1972, and within six years had com-
ple~ed his acclaimed series of Euro-
pean military figures which are
now exhibited in a British Military
Museum.
After producing a number of
pieces for the Sladmore Gallery in
London, Scott was then com·
missioned t-0 do a sculpture for
Pope John Paul II.
Since moving to America. Scott
has been able to produce some fine
bronze sculptures. One of his latest,
a bronze bull buffalo, has been
chosen as a wedding gift for Prince
Charles and Lady Diana.
Wilmott was born in Canada and
educated in Canada and England
where be attended the Winchester
School of Art. Completely dis·
illusioned with the methods of
teaching, he decided to join the Navy
and traveled for four and one baJf
years.
After owning bis own gallery for
eight years Wilmott gave up bis
successful business to paint
fulltime. After a year of hard work,
he was offe red one exhibition ,
which was followed by three more
quite successful ones.
Thompson is a frustrated film
producer and advertising man who
decided one day that carving limit·
ed edition ducks was more fulfilling
than the fast-paced life of advertis-
ing.
Born in London and educated at
Chelsea Central St. Martin's School
of Art, Thompson began working
for Ogilvy and Mather and Benton
and Bowler. This was followed by
work with other advertising firms
and then a move to Hollywood.
In Hollywood Thompson began
filming national commercials for
companies such as Max Factor,
Miller Beer and Toyot.a. He then left
for Colorado to work in live theater
and ballet.
Throughout this time period
Thompson's hobby was wood carv-
ings. The hobby grew into an OC·
cupatioo which now gives him more
free time and fulfillment. His
signed and dated ducks are now be·
ing marketed through clients such
as Neiman-Marc us , Tinderbox
Stores and International Gift Shops.
These collector's items -the
wooden ducks by Thompson, the
wildlife bronzes by ~tt and the
paintings by Wilmott -will be
available for sale at the studio after
August 1.
.~,. '( .,..
. ~I
l ' Ruth Knights shows off item from one of the largest selections
of decorative shell and coral on the Coast at Faum Memories,
at 1150 South Coast Highway, in the Village Faire shopping
mall, Lagund Beach.
Corne see t he exhibits of over 130 of southern
California's most talented artists. Admission $1.
Lagµna Canyon Road & Canyo n Acres.
I
F. .
I r .
Going places? Go In Style with
The Unique ·Boutique
INTERCHANGEABLE FASHIONS . 'THE •
DAILY
NOON TO 4:00 p.m.
CLOSED
MONDAYS
•••••tOOl.JPON••••
IFllEE c..u.lt•t&.11 tdt• Dnlp..-I
• FIGURE ANALYSIS I
• COLOR & CO-ORDINATING 1100.00
• ACCESSORIZING VALUE I I . WARDROBE PLANNING I I No. 21 Lumberyard Plaza 494-2377 I I ·384 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach 962-1498
i••l.-rf Hal.w•' IJnfq .... Bo1dfq...-I
Custom Made Hats
Straw Hats
Charlie Twedcle Hats
Fine Leather Goods:
Beautiful Purses and Luggage
A Complete Line of Belts
Sandals Sandals Sandals
Fancy Belt Buckles
Wallets Key Cases
• Moccacins • Indian Made Only
EverythillCJ in Leather At:
LE AT HER
Wally,
Eleanor, &
Marty Brees
384 Forest Ave.
L...-leach·
497-3210
I Places to see I
Step-Up Gallery located at 376 N. Pacific Coast Highway in
Laguna Beach features the finest quality art work at realistic
prices. Step-Up welcomes everyone to come in and browse.
Visa and Master Card are accepted. For more information
call f714J 494-4131.
Exotic landscapes of Jesse Allen
displayed at Vorpal Gallery
A major retrospecti"e or the ex
otic landscapes or the celebrated
California artist J esse Allen will be
featured at the Vorpal Gallery from
June 7 lhrough August 31.
According to Norman Bryson of
the London Times, the impact of
Jesse AIJen's work over the past 15
years has been like a contained ex-
plosion. This explosion of interest
reaches beyond California to en-
compass a ~rowin1t international re-
putation.
Part of Allen'!> renown stems
from a unique vis ion that sets him
apart from any artist1<• school or
movement
Allen's prints and pamtmgs have
been co mpar ed t o P e r s ian
miniatures and to the naive ..rt of
Henri Rousseau
But Allen h as developed
artistically in accordance with his
own mlernal logic and feelings . His
landscapes ren ect an art which 1s
well outside the mainstream of
modernism.
An influence on his work can be
traced more lo artists and vis-
ionaries from past centuries, such
as Botticelli and Blake. than to any
twentieth century movement
Classicall y ed u cated as a
philologist, a calligrapher and a
naturalist, Allen lends his eye for
beauty and symmetry to many sub·
jects. His most obvious innuence is
t he lush beauty of the African
landscape of his youth
Born m Nairobi, Kenya, in 1936,
his ancestors were English gypsies
and immigrants to the Cape in 1820.
lie was educated at Oxford and
taught English in Italy, then French
and Italian at Stanford Uni\'ers1ty
until 196.5.
Allen had his first one man ex·
hibit1on in San Francisco In 1964.
His worked has gained strength and
momentum, as evidenced by the
1 impressive hst or museum exhibi-
tions since that time.
•''
lbperience 9ummer tn L.-..na-AdwrtiSh'fl ~· teCOAST Lafe, July •• 1911 .. DAILY ftlUR, Jutf 9, "'' • ,
Explore the world of art and
· ign;. ~isit ~ Jocal gallery
• "---.. -.. • ~: 'l~--. --....-h• ·~11 .,.
.,. .. worm f• ita~u f1J "tbe • aBeadt .t ,. ·f~<tlon ol allf .-..·
CfUf Dri•e <Opea 10:30·•:N)', tl6$111 M
r..ua · •Hk, ldoot of Aft. 2222
L~ Canyeo Rd .• Lagau a.a~
494-~.
),
aad mU1eU4111. • ,... flts coUecti• lft~ viettor a ~de ranee ot · c6ooee
from. There •e mU¥ exmiples ot
modem or primitive art in UH! form of
paintings in watercolo{, oil or
acrylics.
Graphics, such as etchings and
lithographs as well as sculptures in
bronze, marble and wood are abun·
da n t in lhe colony.
Here is a listing of galleries located
in the Laguna area, enough to fill
many an afternoon of aigbtaeeing.
For current exhibits of special in·
terest contact the specific galleries.
Tile Art Center Gallery, 149'l S. Coast
Hwy., Laguna Beach, 494-9550.
Back Door Gallery, 1406 S. Coast
ff wy., Laguna Beach, 494-9162.
BenaeU Bradbuy SWdJo, 1476 S.
Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, 499-2132.
Blaebird Cealft Gallery, 384 Forest
Ave. (L"mberYard Plaza>. Laguna
Beach,497-5377.
Benard GaJJertes, 1410 So. Coast
Hwy .• Laguna Beach, 497·3076.
Callforala FIDe Art.I, 1402 S. Coast
Hwy., Laguna Beach. 494·2415.
Tbe Center Art Gallery, 298
Broadway, Laguna Beach, 497·2497.
ChalU1 Galleries, 1390 So. Coast
Hwy., Laguna Beach, 494.2497.
Cove Gallery, 1400 S. Coast ffwY .•
Laguna Beach, 494· 1878.
Cromazoae PIMKG1rapllic Ari, 38'
Forest Ave., <LumberYard Plaza)
No. 23, Laguna Beach, 494·5072.
East/West Prlmltlvea, Ltd., 384
Forest" Ave. (Suite 17), The Lwn-
berYard Plaza, Laguna Beach,
49'7·5515.
EP Ware Gallerle, 662 S. Coast
Hwy., Laguna Beach, 494·5301.
EvangellDe Ud., 332 Forest Ave.,
Laguna Beach, 494-2335.
Flae Arts Gallery, 384 Forest Ave.,
#22 <LumberYard Plaza>. Laguna
Beach. 497·5911.
GalleryOneolLapaa, 1220 N. Coast
Hwy .• Laeuna Beach, 494-4444.
Gallery Xyat, 1412 S. Coast HwY.,
Laguna Beach, 494·9137.
Hag1enmallet Galleries, 372 N.
Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, 4!M-2675.
ne llldlu lloom, 14-405. CoastHwY.,
Laguna Beach497-0123.
ID&a FIDe AIU, 1152 S. Coast Hwy.,
Laguna Beach,497·2775.
ne h1lla Aft Ce•ter, 1294 S. Coast
Hwy.,LagunaBeach,497-4077.
Jim SeUle'1 Art Gallel'J, 1420 S. Coast
Hwy .. Lag\Ula Beach, '94-6286.
Laaua Beacla .Muet1m Of Art, 307
t.pM Ortcta• 8~, llO N.
Cou&Hwy.,LquaBeach,.._2011.
Leslie B. DelUUe Gallen., W32 S.
Coast Hwy., La1una Beach. 497-1050.
lkCudy Gallery, 384 N. Coast Hwy.,
Laguna Beach, 49'1·2288.
N• Jac:elleee Ft.e Ari Stadio, Appt.
only.484 435.1.
Newport Barbor Art Mueam, 850
San Clemen~. Newport Beach <Open
12 .... >. 759-1122.
Ora•&erie, 1492 S. Coast Hwy.,
Laguna Beach, 494-5656.
Quoram Art Gallery, 374 N. Coast
Hwy., Laguna Beach. 494·4422.
&altnt Gallery, 354 N. Coast Hwy ..
Laguna Beach, 494-1001.
Rasla Galle6)', 31014 Coast Hwy.,
South Laguna, 499-2834.
Reanllo Sc1llpUatt Galleria, 1465 S.
CoastRwy., Laguna Beach, '97·3250.
&oaer Folk Gallery, 4.22 N. Coast
Hwy.,LagunaBeach,494·18'7.
Rogaa Gallery, 1465 S. Coast Hwy.
(Suite D>, Laguna Beach, 194·3639.
Rada .Mayer Gallery, 550 S. Coast
Hwy .• Laguna Beach, 494-8185.
Semi•'• l11De Art Gallery, 305 N.
Coast Hwy .• Laguna Beach, 494-9665.
Sherwood Gallery, (mid-level
ViUage Fair), 1118 So. Coast Hwy.,
Laguna Beach, 497 ·2667.
Shirley .Meyen Art Gallery, 1951 S.
Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, 494-4586 ..
Step Up Gallery, 378 N. Coast Hwy.,
Laguna Beach, 494·4131 .
The Studio Gallery, 775 Laguna Ca·
nyon Rd., Laguna Beach, 497-2668.
Studio Five, 274 N. Coast Hwy.,
Laguna Beach, 494.0053.
Tallamaa Prtata, 1435 GleMeyre,
Laguna Beach, 494·7400.
Tanar Gallery, 2139 Laguna Canyon
Rd., Laguna Beach, 497·3833.
Tree ol Ufe Folklore Gallery, 1192 S.
Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, 494-6277.
The Watercolor Gallery, 14185. Coast
Hwy., Laguna Beach,494·9103.
Van Gores Stadlo of Flae Art, 119'l S.
Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, 494--4318.
Vara'• Ort&111ab, 322 Forest Ave.
Laguna Beach, 494-2232.
Vision Gallery, 1120 S. Coast Hwy.,
Laguna Beach, 494·2232.
Vorpal Gallery, 326 Glenneyre.
Laguna Beach, 494-9441.
Wm. Kennetb Gee Gallery, 495 N.
Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, 494-1820.
Wood Gallery,. Coast Hwy., Laguna
Beach, 494-2794.
Yoaalef Import Gallery, 1186 S. Coast
Hwy., Laiuna Beach, 497·1033.
~~a~ ~~ar ~~~
~~~SALE!
Why Is a sale at tbe Sbop for Pappagallo
different from other sales?
Became at a Shop for Pappagallo sale,
you get the Pappagallo look for less.
Save up to 500/o on the I.op quality,
diatinctively designed ahoea and
acceasoriea for summer. Come in soon
while the •election is beat.
·•
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r
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10 Experience SUmmer In ~ -Actwerttslng Supplement to COAST Lt FE, July I , 1911 & DAILY Pl LOT, July 9, 1911
.
j
Lasuna ·,
Beac
,. .....
ART·A·FAIR
FESTIVAL
SAWDUST
FESTIVAL
July I 4-AuQ. lO
Experience Summer In L..-gune -Adwerttstftg Supplet1 .. 1t to COAST Liff, Juty4, "81 & DAIL y PILOT, July •• "" 11
SOUTH COAST HWY.
~ PACIFlC OCEAN ~
Laguna
Beach
~OFF STREET PARKING
SOUTH TRAM ROUTE
South •
Laguna
.... )
.....
l
-J.-,-....----· i .. _ . . ' ~ . . ~
12 .~_,.~su.wner lttl..lllllM -MYM~~ient .. C~T J~1. Uet& ~y PILOT:Juty9, ~ .• ~ • f
/ Featuring Images of Nature By
WILLIAM R. CURRENT
Alio Individual Works By
From July 14-Aug. 31
g..5
-IPla<t=Jto •]
'\I • ' ,. -· • ' .(. t. ·,.. ct. • ti • ! ..,, Art.!A.-fair~~~· to n9w loC911on
'n. 1.Stb ........ ... -'talr adA ~ Ua\J~ between the · cbyntown
IM beld ia &MW 16c~ 'ear. ~ M e• and' the ~l'OW\cb. Tber•
-...... dl9wl l!be is QI) •e <'t>r.er of wiU als. be ••ed fM'king in • · Canyon Acres and i..,.na Canyon perll'heral parklog lot.
Road, ooe lot south of Ute show's
previous location.
Originally part of tbe Sawduet
Festival, Art-A-Fair was a..ved
rrom the Sawdust in 1977. Art-A·
Fair c hose to leave Sawdust
because Sawdust favored an open
participant show while Art-A-Fair
wanted lo retain the jury system
and open the show lo Southern
California artists instead or Laguna
Beach residents only.
Over 300 artists competed for en-
try into this year's Art-A-Fair.
Works or the 130 exhibitors holding
the highest scores will be shown.
Also on display in this year's
show will be the commemorative
and collectible show poster for 1981.
The show runs from July 14 until
August 30 with grounds open Sun-
day through Thursday from 10 a.m.
to 11 p . m . On Fridays and
Saturdays, the grounds will remain
open until midnight.
Admission is $1 for adults and
children under 12 get in free.
City shuttle buses will run con-
Two sisters supply
fashion needs
Two sisters supply the fashion
needs for Laguna shoppers this
summer.
Dolly Henderson and Madeline
Farber are co-owners of Dolly et
Cie and Pappagalla, both at 384
Forest Ave., in the Lumber Yard
shopping center, Laguna Beach.
Dolly et Cle offers designer
sportswear, accessories a nd
jewelry.
The shop specializes in coordinat-
ing women's wardrobes. Personal
attention is provided at no charge.
Pappagallo presents an easy, re-
laxed atmosphere for shopping.
Shoppers are invited lo slop in and
have a cup.or coffee while admiring
unique shoes, accessories and tradi-
tional clothing for women.
Shoe selection runs from a casual
flat lo very dressy styles. Stylish
Bermuda bags also are available.
The bronze scuUures of DANI will be displayed at Haggen.
maker Galleries located at 372 North Coan Highway in
Laguna Beach. For information call (714) 494-2675.
KITCHEN
OCEAN VIEW & PATIO..OINING
ofunc~ IJ,..aLfw1 ~,.
SIMSllLI FOOD AT llASOHAILI NICIS
, .............. w ....... ~ 5-pl. w.1 lllH9t ..... di ...
••" "" _. s.ct .... as. ..... ...._. s,.11•11.
..,._ W ........ C:.1..., SelecW'
OPIM DAILY• I A.M. TO 10 P.M.'
Two LeHh ef ..... , ....... WH1i1 , .......
1198 S. C~t Hwy., LCICJllfta leach
lnext to Poffery Shacld
Tel. 497-1667
I
E>eperlence Summer. In ~ ~rtlslrw.S~Uo CO.AST L.I fE. J.uly ~\911 &,QAI L '!.PlUl..Y., J&aly 9. 1'81 J3
Hot summer days bring flocks of residents and tourists to
bask in the cool breezes of Laguna Beach. Off-shore breezes
blow out much of the haze and smog that usually collects in-
land leaving the Laguna Beach clear and a prime location for
hot days.
· Where the Artistry of
l~rted Baskets CA>rnbi'ne
With the Natural Beauty of Plants
See the Beautiful Outdoor Gm dens
•
Featuring
• Wiiow P1111o ,__, .. t
•C.tl
• H-.chirO'f• PWtitd I loo v .... • rerc-..-.
•,.....c.tAoww1
FRIENDLY PERSONAL SERVICE
2011 s. c .... Hwy .. L•,. I ....
494.1074
Difficult pose requires a dancer's
style in Pageant of the Masters
Since 1933, people from all walks
of life have re-created the figures of
great works of art as "live art" in
Laguna's Pageant of the Masters.
There have been attorneys, gas
station attendants, teacher s.
secretaries. students. bank tellers,
electricians, and even store clerks,
but never has the occupation depict·
ed in the art work been duplicated by
a model or the same occupation -
until this year.
In past years, anyone could
represent the fi gure in the painting
just as long as the two matched in
size and shape and could hold still
for a minute or two.
But this year, a little more was re·
quired for the live re-creation or art
work.
To adequately portray the dancer
depicted in a sculpture, a dancer
was needed because the pose would
be too difficult for anyone else.
Laguna resident Andrew Buleza
will portnry the dancer in the
sculpture, but his recruitment into
the Pageant was purely accidental.
Pageant director Glen Eytchison
was in the Lippe Warren Fine
Crystal showrooms in Laguna Beach
one day and found himself dealing
with Buleza, a crystal expert.
Buleza recognized the Pageant
director and asked about the
Pageant. Eytchison replied he was
having trouble finding someone to
fill the dance spot. ·'Someone with a
build like yours," he added.
So, the spot was filled
Buleza began dancing seriously at
the age of 15. when be studied under
Barbara Weisberger, artistic direc·
tor of the Pennsylvania Ballet Com·
pany.
While studying English at Du·
quesne University, Buleza danced
not only ballet, but was lead
w member or the school's Tam-
buritzans. a folk-dancing group
which toured each summer.
While on a tour of Eastern Europe,
he appeared as a lead soloist in a
group that performed under the
sponsorship of the Russian State
Department.
While living in Texas during the
seventies. Buleza worked closely
with such luminaries in the ballet
world as Marina Svetlova and
Nat halie Krassovska. pr1ma
ballerina of Ballet Russe.
Buleza says his first experience as
part of the Pageant delights him.
Like all other cast members,
Buleza will donate his lime and
services to the Festival or Arts,
which presents the Pageant.
Buleza's contribution as a living
representation of a sculptured Ni ·
jinsky. the original of which was
created 10 bronze by Demetre
Chiparus, is the first item to appear
in the program.
The Pageant runs from July 14
through August 30. All tickets are
sold, but some are returned on con-
signment for resale by the box office
each d<i y
The presentation is sta·ged in the
Irvine Bowl alongside the Festival
s howgrounds. Curtain time is 8·30
p.m
Haggenn1aker Galleries
Fine 1\rt fr Gruphic.s
DANI • DeWinne • l Frasca• GILEE • L. Jones • S . Krause •
Hosmer • A . Murray• R. Page• J. Pincus • R. Sipos• S. Simpwn
Gallery hours are Daily 10:00 a.m . co 5:00 p .m.
372 North Coasc Hwy .• Laguna Beach, CA
(714) 494-267 5
. '
-
...
. -
Mar ene' s Ga eries
LIFETIME BUYER'S MEMBERSHIP
................... ,
50 % Discount on any item anrtime
VAL.IOATC.0 •T
NON TRANS~ERABLE
c
c::>
0• z
BrilgAd
Ftr FREE
25% llscount
Menmmslip
Offer Expires
JUly3t, 1~1
Q&lll Worlb l'lllage
STORE #24 -7561 CENTER AVENUE
(714) 895·1773 • OP" Daly &c.,e Wed.
Huntington Beach
Roger J. Thomas, ASID & Assoc., Inc .
INTERIOR
DESIGN
Residential /Commercial/Copsultation
014) 494-3675
-, .. ==:5' .. '-
Shop helps people enioy plants
To say that The Garden Palace's
aim is "to help people enjoy plants
in their home," as co-owner Will
Treat does, is quite Indisputable.
Yet a newcomer to the shop al
2088 South Coast Highway, Laguna
Beach, might view such a stale·
ment as comparable to saying the
space shuttle's aim is to leave the
ground.
Upon entering the rustic SWTOUD·
dings , the onlooker is immediately
greeted by such offerings as count·
less plant varieties, imported
baskets, cut flowers, silk flowers,
Jlower arrangements, porcelain,
patio furniture, paintings, prints,
fountains and caodJes.
The center of attention is a
squadron of ...peach.face love birds
also for sale.
Such a bountiful selection re·
quires commensurate supervision
and quality of service. The Garden
Palace has this too.
Treat a nd co-o wner Philip
Stephens are professionals. Treat
has a backgrounsd as a teacher or
horticulture and Stephens has a cor-
responding degree.
The business is new, and the
owners are introducing a variety of
special services that have been met
with enthusiasm from the com·
munily.
Complete florist facilities are on
the premises. Delivery is available
too.
For easy coordination and group·
ing of indoor or outdoor plants, the
plants are divided and displayed in
separate formal, country-western,
oriental and color sections.
Plant rentals are on hand at a
monthly fee or 25 percent of the re·
tail price plus a monthly service
charge for maintenance. By the
way, Treat and Stephens assure the
shopper that their prices are as low.
as can be found anywhere.
Additional features include wed·
ding facilities in The Garden
Palace's picturesque display area
behind the shop. Treat and Stephens
one day plan to open a restaurant
on the premises.
For · more informaiotion, call
494-1074.
Marlene Lewis, owner of Marlene's Gallery in the Old World
Village Shopping Center, Huntington Beach, displays some of
the artwork available for sale at her shop. Among the work is
the gallery's latest in Indian artwork.
THI
PHFECT SOUVIMll First-Edition Autographed
Award Winning Book with a
history of the Art Colony
CllTICS ACCLAIM:
"A labor of love. charming personal
aflnotations for each contributor.
Appealing recipes, rich folklore.
Printing and style make this a true work
of art in bookmaking." Friends of UCI
Library Awards.
Awarded first prize for non-fiction by
California Press Women.
Nominated for R . T. French 's
Tllfemaker Award.
.. -----------...... -·----·----~----------·------·-·---·-·-----·-·-·-----•
acal artists display arts and
crafts at Sawdust Festival
"The mo1t unique arts and crafts
show in the world" opens July 14 in
Lafuna Beach when 200 artists put
their works on display in the 1Sth
Annual Sawdust Fine Arts and
Craib Festival.
Each year, the es bi biting art.lSts
dealsn and build the Festival's
boustnc from the around up in a
lhree-aC?t_e eucalyptus grove at 935
Laau.na Canyon Road. The village ls
composed ol wooden structures de·
si&ned to resemble the Old West.
All exhibitors are residents art.he
La..-una Beach area offering such
items as jewelry, paintines,
sc u lptures, blown glass ,
leathercrafta, furniture, etchings,
quilts, and lost wax cut.ings for
sale.
Strolling musicians, mimes,
clowns. jugglers.· acrobats and
magicians are fixtures at the
Sawdust Village, providing free en-
tertainmem.to visitors:-
A wide variety of foods will be of.
fered, ranging from gourmet
sandwiches to Mexican enlrees. A
health food bar offers natural or-
ganic treats and Juices. Popcorn,
pizza, bot baked potatoes, soft
preue.la and soft drinks have been
added this year.
Artists and craftspeople will dem·
onatrate to onlookers how their
creative ideas are transformed
from raw material into art when
sµcb a thine as a lump of clay ls
transformed into ceramic beauty and
metal becomes jewelry.
In the 15 yean of the Sawdust,
more than 4.5 million people have
attended the show. More than
250,000 are expected to wander
through the village this summer.
,. Although the Sawdust Village ls
dismantled after each summer
session, the traditional Sawdust
landmarks are rebuilt each year.
Among the landmarks are the
windmill, the waterfall, the water
wheel and the wishing pond. Cow
lo8sed into the wishing pond help
the Saw,dust Scholarship Fund
which assists in paying tuition for
art students' classes.
The Festival will run from Jul_y 14
through August 30. The grounds will
be open from 10 a.m. until 11 p.m.
every day. Admission is $1, children
under 12 are free, and a season pus
is available for $5.
Orange County Transit District
buses will run from Fashion Island
shopping center and Laguna Hilla
Mall to the Festival grounds until 9
p.m .
Images of Nature by William R. Current will be diaplayed
at the Contemporary Arts Gallery July 19 through Auguat 31 .
The Gallery is located at 499 N. C008t Highway in Laguna.
A,. .JIUllbJ;o,. lo 'UJJI
1~. 'fkw,,1 J.w.I
in I~. Of'(lltt~• eOIAtt lf C,./t,.,../ e.,.f.,.
Galerie Andree
:J;,.. Ar11 /°" ''• col/.c1.,. anJ ittwilo,.
e ... ,_,,._,, g,.,J.10, .s.1,1.,.,._ P.i .. 1;..,J .,., e.;1_ ~ .. ,,.,
0 .. 11.. p.,1, ,,. 1,. J,,.r".I B.,., O,.;/J1,.,
695 ~ .. e.,.," ::brw.. e°'1" m .. , c.14.,,.,. 92626
TU:DORtlJBBSE
ANTIQUE ad FINE SILVER
Antique
and
Fine Silver
Sterling Silver·
Ships
'500 -15,000
4fM-9888 •
,
•
eQueensHea
Antiques ,
NEW SHIPMENT OF
English P in e
£n3lish Housekeepers Cupboud
drc.i 1800
American
Antiques
and
Gifts
Fine
Old
Engli~h
Anti~es
497-1791
ALL LOCAT£0 INTllE CAPE COD BLDG.
•
•
I
1
. -
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•
16 E>eperience Summer In U9UM -Advertlslng5upptementtoCOAST LIFE, July I, 1911 & DAILY PILOT, July9, 1981
Master Chorale performs again
Following its successful ap-as a violinist -when he was five.
pearance on the Festival or Arts At eight be was a soloist in a boys
grounds last season, the lrvlne choir; at 13 he was organist and
Master Chorale wiJI present four c ho i rm a ste r a t Trinity
evening programs again this year. Presbyterian Church in Fort
The programs are scheduled for Lauderdale, Florida in charge or an
July 20, 27, August 3 and 10. Start-all.adult group Of vocalists.
ing time is 7 P..m. and the pro-• At 18 he was a conductor at
gram will be held on the central Oberlin College and made a two·
lawn at 650 Laguna Canyon Road. roonth tour of Russia in the same
Acclaimed on both sides of the capacity, under the sponsorship of
Atlantic, the ·vocal group includes the State Department.
140 singers under the direction of There wiH be so to 60 singers ap-
J ohn Alexander. . . pearing on the Festival grounds this The group was est.abl~shed an summer. Their program will in-1~. and has perf~rmed .with many elude both classical and popular
ma1or orches~as, mclu~mg the Los musical-show numbers. Angeles Ph1lharmon1c and the . . . . Pasadena Symphony. Adm1ss1on fee to the Festival tn·
Two years ago the group gave eludes the Irvine .~aster Chorale
several concerts in London, includ-pro~ram at no add1llonal cost. The
ing participating in the 900tb an· festival grounds are ~~.n f~om 10
niversary program with the London a.m. to 11:30 p.m. Fac1ht1es mc.lude
Symphony -Orchestra •in England's a picnic area, a restaurant, a hghl-
Winchester Cathedral -the only meal cafeteria and the display of
non-British group to do so. ~ork by school students of ~e en-
Director Alexander bas been a lire county -plus a manonette
musician since a tender age, having show and concessions run by
made bis first public appearance -charitable organizations.
Tony Urbano's marionettes
return to the Festival -of Arts
Today Urbano's Emmy-winning
marionettes will return to the
Festival of A~ in a lively musical
revue, "Mediterranean Holiday."
and a children's workshop.
Urbano's wizardry in marionette
productions has won awards for the
excellence or his handmade "little
people," rus well as for direction,
creativity, characterizations and
costumes.
M arlonette counterparts of
popular celebrities including Bob
Hope, Phyllis Diller and Carol
Channing will appear with rerord-
ings or their duplicates' voices.
Urbano's latest creations have
appeared on the Barbara Mandrell
Show, and commercials reaturing
Crocker Spaniel. Waller Le Cat with
Tony Ur~ba· shown With one of hu E my Award·
winning ~·.nnl
Chamdng.
nine lives, and swinging musicians.
His puppets have also appeared
on Dusty's Treehouse, the Mothers-
in Law, and the Dean Martin, Shari
Lewis and Red Skelton shows.
Urbano began his puppetry
career at age six, putting on his
first puppet show in his native San
Francisco. Alter graduation from
high school, be joined t h e
Turnabout Theatre in Southern
California as a puppeteer and
dancer.
After duty in the Army. Urbano
returned to the Bay Area where he
directed over 28 puppet plays in the
Children's Fairyland in Oakland.
Urbano's two-hour puppet show
and workshop features costumed
dancers in a lively and colorful
musical setting.
During \be workshop, children
will be taken backi\age at \be
Festival Forum Theatre to view the
puppets, thelr controls, and Jeam
production secrets.
Children will be provided with
materials and Instruction for the
creation of their own puppets which
they may take bome as .gouvenirs of
the workshop.
This special show and workshop
are being ofrered by reservation
only for the first four weeks of the
Fes~ival, Mondays through Fridays.
The price of admission is $2.25 for
children and $1 .50 for adults. This
includes the supplies, admission to
the Festival arounds and reserved
seats for the puppet production.
The worksb0p beginl at 9 a.m.
each day. Parents and teachers are
required tb accompany children
a nd provide 1upervl1lon . Ordera
may be malled with a chedt paya-
ble to Tony Urbano Productiona,
Festival of Art.I Box Omce, 8'° La1una Caoyon Road , La1una
Beach, Callfomla, *51. A self·
addreued at.amped eovel~ lhould
be 19claad_,
• ·---l'~Wdti,.•U...-•U
<W> ... m4 or <tlJ) -~ •
...
John Alexander, conductor of the Irvine Master Chorale, leads
Orange County's talented singers, who will perform on Mon-
days, July 20, 27 and August 3 and 10 at 7 p.m. on the F'estival
of Arts grounds in Irvine Bowl Park.
$87,000 budgeted
Scholarship program grows
The Laguna Festival of Arts has
budgeted $87.000 for its scholarship
program to be dis tributed to
graduates of Laguna Beach High
School this year.
The scholarship program for the
high school was started 25 years
ago and scholarships amounting to
SS,000 yearly were distributed to
arts and crafts students only.
I n 1971. the program was
broadened to incl ude dance. drania.
music and writing, also increasing
the scholarship grants to $8,350. In
1977 . the awards totaled more than
$25,000. The next year they toJ)ped
$42,000 and last year more t han
$65.000 was awarded.
Since 1971, when the five new
f1 e ld1 were opened up for
scholarships, 551 graduates of
LagUlla·seach High School have re-
ceived nearfy $300,000 in grants. re-
ports Glenn Vedder. chairman of
the scholarship comh\ittee.
"ll is because of the many hun-
dreds or dedicated volunteers who
loyally suppOrt the Festival of Arts
and the Pageant of the Masters that
such aid is possible." Vedder said.
This year 62 students aided by the
Festival of Arts scholarships are
studyi ng in colleges and un·
iversities. .
Scholarships are awarded for one
academic year and are extended to
four years if the recipient maintains
big~ quality work leading to a
degree. Scholarship award~ are
chosen on the basis of academic
grades, references and creative
ability as judged by professionals in
the respective categories.
Judges are chosen for each
separate category. In art, judges
are chosen from artists exhibiting on the 1''estival grounds. Local
authors judge the writing appli-
c a n1s. Area colleges and un-
iversities provide jurors for dance
and music. while drama critics come from the Laguna Moulton
Playhouse.·
The Festival also gives $2,000 an-
nually lo lhe Laguna Beach School
o f Art and the Univ ersity of
Clflifornia at Irvine. and $700 to
Saddlcback College. These institu·
tions disburse these sums to their
students as Festival scholarships.
FINI ABT
IBSiOR4TION
R~TO~.'E I ~T A"->t> 8~11=\VT\P-(
'(Ol>R. 0\.0 O' '-~ •t->T,t.)C:r-S
974·3771
R:>tlt 511\~
~t.>D F'1tJ~ p"~RuJeu.>"'T>
1~"'·· .. ~~-r ~~~~~~~~~
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A..._ MGB ~CALIFORNIA ~wildlife sb.1dio
MAX -n<M5Nwi.CIN ~AHAM WILMOTT A BARRY 9CD I i
Woodell DKoyt-..... , ............... Scillpt•••
ITALIAN DELICATESSEN
Specializing In
FRESH PASTA
• Fettuccine • Ravioli
• Linguine • Lasagna
• Cannelloni • Sauces
Antipasto Trays
Lasagna and Cannelloni Squares. . .
Sandwiches . • catering
THE PASTA MACHINE
AN INVITATION TO
OUTSTANDING INVESTMENTS
Gemstones have proven to be one of the best and
most profitable investments over the last several
years.
Example: ... WMOUSAUNICI: 1'79 WHOLHALI NICI: 1H1
led .... $ I 00. per c_.at $ 2,000. per c .. at
My $3,000. per c_.at $1.000perc_.at -1 .. plaire $ 500.perc..at $ 2,600. per c .. at
D/ft Dlcmoed $20.000 per c•at $50,000. per c..at
NAVARATNA. INC. is Orange County's direct mine
representative. 'Nith buyers traveling year-round in
Asia, Europe and South Africa to insure our clients.
either wholesalers or private investors. the best
prices possible.
A.•alable Ill LCICJllM leach at:
LLLIRA
JEWE1.£RS AND GEMOLOG~ TS Centl-~·-0-·f-~-"' 31MA-C-Hwy,t_..a-11•-c.. .... cal, or write fw ow RH 12 pege broc...,.. "Cffflftcate
Dl•ulh & Colored se-. fw .............
CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY
10 R.ffi.-3 P.m. Every Sundoy BRUNCH
EL LUGAR
NEXICAn
RESTAURAllT
55.25
.
LUNCHEON
DINNER
COCKTAILS
Dolly from 11 A.m.
ALL ffiFIJOR CREDIT CARDS
Reservottons
FOOD TO GO
213 OC~N AVE., LAGUNA IEACH
I
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18 Expef'ience Summer In LAguna -Advertlslng Supplement to COAST LIFE, J uly 8, 1911 & DAI LY PILOT, J uly 9, 1981
Exotic Thai paintings such as this are available at Allura Jewelers, 354-A North Coast
Highway, Laguna Beach. Allura brings together one of the largest selections of Siamese art
in Southern California.
Specialists mdce the
difference in a "good''
or "great" design Co.
A design company composed of a
team of specialists make the dif.
ference between "good" a nd
"great."
Roger J . Thomas and Associates
are capable of taking a design
problem from its inception through
development to completion.
The company utilizes the ex·
pertise of Roger J . Thomas, presi-
dent of the Los Angeles Interior
Design Society and member of the
Board of Directors of Lagwia Art
Alliance Commission; John Valle,
associate architect; and Ka111biz
Sharifpour, space planning and in-
terior design specialist.
"Historical design is a statement
that can produce more energy for
mankind and has lasting value
evolving from its environment to
its statics and function," said a
spokesperson for the company at
1006 South Coast Highway. Laguna
Beach.
Statics are the results of honest
application of design criteria.
"We abhore fashion (onJy to be
rashionable) and fads (which are
transient).
"Through creativity. selectivity
and sensitivity, we can make the
difference between wi!_at is good
and what can be great ." he said.
For residential and commercial
design, by appointment onJy, caJI
Roger J . Thomas and Associates at
494-3675.
IQDI & Dau Leicht
332 hrast lla.:#1
La1aaa Daach, Calif. IZBSI
exolic gems and jewelry. minerals
for the collector anc;j decorator. bizarre
fossils and relics. remarkable ctmosities . .
uniQue gifts.
MON.-SAT.10-5 SU N. 12-5
(494-7695)
"•Jr">. ~. ~'H" .• --,--
# ~ ....... •
.. .., , >. ... t.~ .. ~ :S·
' -. . -.
" . . ' -.... -. -_........,._ _ --&
Located in the Cape Cod building on Broad.way are three of
Laguna Beach'• finest antique shopa -The ~en'a Head,
with English cowatry furniture; Ttul.or Ro1e, featuring antique
ailver ad gi/ts; and COMntry Emporium, with American anti-
ques mtd collectabU?s.
Pottery Shack has reputation as
a purveyor of quality pottery
Since its opening 44 years ago,
Pottery Sluck bas be come
respected both foi its reputation as
a purveyor of qYality merchandise
and as a Laguna landmark.
Occupying 65 percent of a city
blocki the Pottery Shack presents a
viaua playground of tables piled
high with pottery and statuary.
"The founders could not have
guessed the success that would be
achieved," said a spokesperson for
the shop that erosses U million
annually. The Pottery Shack is open every
day excep~ Christmas.
WE1VE EXPANDED
·~
. Ben Brow~· s prize winner
for . fifth y·eor in a ·row -
The Laguna area boasts a prize·
winning r estaurant.
For the fifth year in a row, Bea
Brown's Restaurant has rttelved
the Southern California Restaurant
Writer's Silver Award for service
and food.
The restaurant is part of Ben
Brown's Aliso Creek Inn and Golf
Course, 31106 Coast Highway in
South Laguna, a 60-unit hotel with a
nine-hole golf course.
Breakfast and lunch patrom may
enjoy patio dining overlooking the
golf course. There is dancinc
available in the cocktail lounge
Wednesday through Saturday from
9 p.m . to 1:30 a.m.
In addition to bFeakfast, lunch
and dinner, Ben Brown's serves a
t ha mpacne Sunday brunch fro•
10:30 a .m. to 3 p.m.
"For brunch we have 11 different
entrees, but we're especially proud
of our crab omelet," a spokespersoa
for the restaurant said.
Ben Brown's originated •finach
salad tn the area, according to the
spokesperson. and it is still a
pepular item on the restaurut's
continental dinner menu.
Hours for the restaurant are 8
a .m . to 10 p.m. Sunday through
Thursday and 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. on
Friday and Saturday.
El Lugar features
Mexican food for
Laguna patrons
El Lugar, located at 213 Ocean
Ave. in Laguna Beach, features
such foods as enchiladas and a
special chimichanga -beef, pork
or chicken rolled in a flour tortilla
and fried to a pastry-like nakiness, •
topped with cheese, lettuce, sour
cream and scallions.
Many egg dishes as well as steak
picado and zesty appetizers also are
presented in the atmosphere of a
sidewalk cafe in Mexico.
Imported Ule floors, wood ceil·
ings , stained glass and lush
greenery create an inviting setti11g
for south-of-the-border dining.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .... # •• ~ t • • i BEAUTIFUL ART AT BEAUTIFUL PRICES i
• • • • • • i ~ OOf?f Bll,~ ! • • • • • • : FEATURING THE WORKS OF 9 PROMINENT :
: ARTISTS WHOSE STYLES RANGE FROM :
: TRADITIONAL TO IMPRESSIONISTIC WITH A :
: SELECTION .THAT INCLUDES OIL , :
: WATERCOLOR, ACRYLICS, PASTELS, ANO :
• LIMITED EDmON PRINTS. • : . • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
When you're in Laguna -for the summer, or
just for the afternoon -don't miss stopping by
i ~~~ lIDfPf ®1!111~ ! • • • • . ·• • • • • • ST...-. • • J76 MCJITH COA """ •. • :. LA.....-..cK. CA&Jf. . :
• t714t 4t4-41 JI · • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • , FEATURING: CLAIRE PESAVENTO, HEIDI 0'81REN. FAA'N 81'00000. e ~-_,, .... _.!i-1!"!'-\flli~ilii--.......... ~~.,,~'flll~'l • MICHAEL ALLEN, BARBARA FIEBER<i. E10NNA BRAMAN, 5 ANDV • 11~--lffl-~;..-.. ~l.i-iiilmil .. i!li~.:.:.liilllliiilll}!llllili•iii'!i-.~d .. : ANTHEATON, JES,StE AU88EAU1 SANDY l~ROERON. . . :. ·················~···· .. ······························'· .
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20 Experience Summer In Laguna -Advertising Supptement to COAST LIFE, July 8, 1981 & DAILY PILOT, J uly9, 1981
The POITERY SHACK Presents
A SUMMER DINNERWARE SALE
& CLEARANCE -SAVE UP TO 61 %
.
Now's your chance to purchase first quality stoneware,
Ironstone, and semi-porcelain ~rom famous name
manufacturers at Pottery Shack prices.
FRANCISCAN
Russet Brown, Peachy Pink, Blue Skies
MIKASA
Shangri-La, Victoria
Cote D' Azure, Sheffield
NIKKO
Solar, Amber, Dorado, Stellar
Mfg. Shack
Price Price
45pc set 160.00 $69'5
45 pc set 335.00 5 12995
Yellow Poppies, Wintergreen, Carnation Rose
45 pc set 100.00 s3995
INTERNATIONAL
Kentshire
JOHNSON BROTHERS
Friendly Village, Indies Blue
Rose Chintz, Regency
SANGO ·
Shadow, Vista Blue and Brown
45pcset 100.00 s59 95
. ONALL Save 20-40% oPeNsTocK
45 pc set 140.00 $69 95 .
45 piece set consists of 8 each; Dinners, Cups, Saucers,
Salads, Soup/Cereals. 1 each; Platter, Vegetable Bowl,
Sugarand Lid, Creamer ·
....
~·to•
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1212 South Coast Hwy., l aguna Beach, CA
. . . . t • .,., •• • .. • # # '-' -....... -• .. I e • -• ..
• • • • •
IUIJll 'CUIT YDll HDllTDWN llllY PIPIR
l HURSOAV .JUI V tJ l'IHl ORANGE COUNT V. CAL If OHN IA 25 CENTS
Huntington Blan _cited in waste dUinping
By PATRICK KENNEDY Oft•De61r ,........,
A Huntington Beach contrac·
tor allegedly ex posed six
employees to cancer-causing
asbestos before purportedly dis·
guising the material In non-toxic
trash and dumping it al a
landfill near Irvine that ls un·
authorized for hazardous
wastes, state officials said
Wednesday.
E & G Contractors Inc .,
operating out or a private res·
idence with a post omce box
address, bas received four cita-
tions from the Occupationa l
Safety and Health AdmlnJstra-
tion (OSHA) in connection with
handling asbestos wastes from a
demolished building in Vernon
earlier this year.
State health officials in charge
of hazardous materials today
<iaid they are investigating al·
legations that the toxic wastes
were illegally dumped in Coyote
Canyon landfill near Irvine.
Walt Taylor. owner of E & G,
has appealed the OSHA allega·
lions to the California OSHA Ap·
peals Board In Sacram ento.
Taylor was not available for
comment.
Shah Bains, senior industrial
hygienist for OSHA. said today
that two ··serious" citations
were issued against the contrac·
tor in March for allegedly expos-
ing workers demoUshing a build·
ing in Vernon to airborne
asbestos without respirators or
s afety precautions.
Bains said on June 18 and 23,
"serious, willful" citations were
issued against E & G for al·
legedly breaking open several
dumploads of bageed asbestos
and mixing it with non-toxic
, wastes on a Wilmington dock.
again exposi ni workers to
asbestos poisoning.
The mixed loads then were re-
portedly buried at Coyote Can-
yon against state regulatlorui,
Bains said.
The OSHA official said two
"serious" citations carry fines
of $1 ,000 each, because it's al-
leged the contractor knowingly
violated state safety standards.
Doctors say excessive ex·
posure to asbestos results in a
high risk of contracting aabestA>s
scarring of the lungs and lung
cancer.
Miller Chambers. southern re·
gion supervisor of the State
Department of Health Services
Hazardous Waste division saJd
today that criminal charges
could be brought against the
contractor H allegations are
proven t hat he knowingly
<See ASBESTOS, Pa1e A%)
Three held in Newport gem fraud
Aborti on
foes w in
a round
WASHINGTON <AP > A
Senate subcommittee voted 3·2
today to approve legislation de·
fining life as beginning at con·
ceplion, taking the first con·
gressional step toward overturn·
ing the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court
decision legalizing abortion.
In a major victory for oppo-
nents or legalized abortion, the
Senate Judiciary subcommittee
on separation or powers ap-
proved a bill giving unborn
fetuses full rights under the
Constitution. The bill also would
prohibit lower federal courts
from considering challenges to
the anti-abortion legislation.
Critics say such legislation, ii
approved by Congress, would
make a woman who has an abor·
---tion subject to prosecution for
murder.
But Sen. John East, R·N C.,
the s ubcommillee chairman.
said the bill was merely an at·
tempt to send the abortion ques-
tion to the states for their con·
sideration.
As approved by the subcom·
mittee in a partisan vote, the
so-called human life bill will be
delayed on its way to the full
Senate Judiciary Committee un ·
til a subcommittee on the
Constitution can consider an
alternative constitutional
amendment banning abortions.
Sen. Orrin Hatch. R-Utah. who
heads the Constitution subcom·
mittee and is a member of the
East subcommittee, denied that
his vote for the human life bill
was obtained in exchange for an
agreement diverting the bill to
his subcommittee.
Besides East and Hatch, the
other Republican voting for the
bill was Sen. Jeremiah Denton
of Alabama. Democrats Max
Baucus of Montana and Howell
Heflin of Alabama voled no.
East said the bill was designed
to resolve a "riddle" that the
Supreme Court declined to re-
solve. "namely. when does life
begin.''
Denton called it "a first and
partial step toward protecting
innocent human beings ...
Heflin said congressional ap-
proval of such legislation would
be fuWe because the Supreme
Court inevitably would strike it
down and refuse to reverse its
8-year-old Roe vs. Wade decision
legalizing abortions.
In the eight years since the
Supreme Court affirmed a
woman's right to an abortion
during the first three months of
'pregnancv. there have been
several successful attempts in
Congress to limit federal spend·
in& for abortion. But no previous
legislation to prohibit abortions
bas survived any congressional
committee.
I/ Me rlin le ach
ya cht race
The Tranapaclflc yacbl race
trom Los An1eles lo Honolulu
U1btened up today with tbe
yacbl Merlin reportine a poel·
\ion three milea ahead or
Cbrl1Une.
Merlin had 761 mHea to fo and
CbrlJUne 78'. Third on e •PMd
time wu Raattme with 117
m1Juto10.
Mltce Kennedy'• Audacious
from Dana Point held the cor· reeled Ume lead for LIM Hccad ••1 ln a row. For earlier-•tory see SpoN,
Pa4-Dl.
DeMy "-..... ., 94lrT .......
3 autos
trade d
• 1n c a se
By STEVE MARBLE
Of l ... Dell1 ...... "-"
The 42-year-old owner of a
Newport Beach auction firm and
gallery has been arrested on '
charges he traded a handful of
gems worth only a fraction or
their stated value to a prominent
Newport resident ror three ex-
pensive ~ars
Robert Ogle. who police claim
IS the owner or the Newport
Galleries al 2542 W. Coast
Highway and a resident of 507
Morning Star Lane. Newport
Beach, is being held at Orange
County Jail on $250.000.
Joella Jean Seliga, a 37-year·
old Costa Mesa resident. and
Judi Crickett Messick, a 32-year·
old Newport resident, also were
arrested Wednesday and are be·
ing held on Sl00,000 bail.
All three face conspiracy to
commit grand theft charges.
County Fair royalty Romy Lea Guerrero. Carrie Tungliatto. Shannon Cleye and Kristin Moe will greet guests.
Police have refused to release
the identify of the victim who
told police he traded his ex·
pensive cars for the gems In
May in a transaction al the
"'lewport Galleries.
Guardsm en
j oin a ttac k
on Medfly
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -As
many as 1.000 National
Guardsmen prepared to join
homeowners today in a
desperate attack on the Mediter·
ranean fruit fly, hoping to drown
a cry for aerial pesticide spray·
ing while protecting the nation's
largest rarm industry.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr ..
snubbing demands for aerial ap·
plication of the pesticide
malathion, ordered all fruit
trees stripped or their produce
by Monday in the heavily
populated 80-square-mlle heart
of the medtly Infestation north
and west of San Jose.
In response. the slate Senate
quickly voted 28-0 to require the
spr aying -despite warnings the
governor can veto the bill -and
Southern agriculture offi cials
asked for a national quarantine
on unfomigated California fruits
and vegetables.
"The sense or well-being and
the security of 500,000 residents
<See MEOFLY, Page AZ>
Touch of country
theme of OC Fair
Hayrides. horseshoe tourna·
ments and homemaking dem·
onstrations will h e rald the
"Touch of Country" theme for
this year's Orange County Fair.
Festivities begin Friday morn·
ing at the Costa M e~a fair·
grounds with 4-H and Future
Farmers or America judging for
rabbits and breeding sheep.
Handicraft exhibitions are slat·
ed for 10 a.m. in the Home Arts
and Crafts and Hobbies build·
ings.
New lo the fair will be
horseshoe pitching tournaments.
which begin al l p.m . with
women's and junior class com-
petitions.
Throughout the day, fairgoers
will be entertained by s uch col·
orfu l and sometimes zany
ch aracters as Travis Parry,
man of many impersonations,
Professor Gizmo's one-man
band and Flash the Clown and
Harriett. Flash Zingo Society
will bring their whimsical brand
of jazz music to the Country
Corner stage.
The Heritage Stage in the
main mall area will be the site
of continuous dance and musical
enterlammenl including such
country singers as "Dusty" Roy
Rogers Jr., with performances
at 5 and 8 p.m.
Opening the rair's mainline
e ntertainment 1n the am·
phitheater will be folk singer
Don McLean, best known for his
early '70s hit single "American
Pie." McLean's show, which is
included in the fa1r's general ad-
mission price, will be held at 7
and 9 p.m.
The amphitheater audience
will be treated to the death·
defying Swaying Bilros, who
perform acrobatic stunts atop
twin 100-foot poles. Their shows
a re set for 6:45 and 10 p.m.
The grandstand facility wlU be
the site or roaring engines and
clouds of dust as the fair hosts a
motorcycle speedway al 8 p.m.
The sporting event carries an
additional charge of $5 ror
adults. $4 for juniors and Sl.50
for children.
Dead boys 'inseparable'
Young victims of cave-in warn~d not to dig in embankment
"They were inseparable -
lwo Utile beach bums who loved
the summer and spent every
moment t.oeether. • •
That's how Shirley Reinker
described her 12-year·old
stepson Jeffrey and bis 14-year·
old pal Russel Beaumont.
The two boys died Tuesday
eventn1 after a surf ·1coured
sand embankment collapaed on
lbel\" backl near the waterlloe at
~9th Street in West Newport
Beach.
"It's 1ttanie," she went on,
"because I nw them playlns in
the sand and I was so happy
they weren't lo the water. The
waves were blt and looked
dan1eroua.'' ,
She aaJd •be JraUted out to tbe
beach lhortJy before th LraledY
arid wamed them not to d1c near
tbe t-foot·blJb embankm.nt. She
told them that cou l d be
dan1erout. "r •fl rtlhl there -rilbt there a( the lpot,''ibe Hid.
The boys apparently kept di&·
ging a hole at lbe Cobt or the em·
bankment which then collapsed,
pinning them under about two
feet ol sand.
Greg Reinker. JefCrey's
father, discovered them a short
time later. He told authorities be
went to the spot where the boya
were dillinl· After be found the boya,
several people came running to
help. A vtslUng dodor rrom New
York City, wbo bad been Jo1&ln1
In the area, rode to Hoa1
Memorial Hospital wlth the boys
after reauacJtatlon effort.a f alled.
The doctor, who letl town to-
day and didn't leave bJs name
with hoapllal authorttles.
worked oo both of the boy1 at tM
hospital. Tbey were pronouneed
dead 20 mlnut.et after their ar·
rival.
"He wanted to be a
veterlAarlan," explained Mrs.
ReJoker 0( Jeffrey. "Re loYed
anlmola, •-lally lllll.•Ha I• J
set up a new aquarium on Mon·
day."
She said Jeffrey. who lived ln
Miami with his mother, visited
Newport every summer for two
months to be with his father.
Russel, a Newport· Beach boy.
was his best friend.
··Last year they took surfin1
lessons together and built
rockets and f ort.s and lb101s llke
that.'· she said. "They loved the
beach.''
Newport life1uards aald t.he
sand embankment.I, commoo to
the West end of town where surf
carvet out the mlnJature cWfa,
are attracUve to kid•.
Memorial aervlcee wut be be.Id
tonl1ht for both boys. Services
are to be held at. St. Jame•
~pl1copal Church. aot Via ~
Newport Beacb at 7:JO p.m.
The body ol Jeffr.7 l1 to be ,...
turned to lltaml for burial.
-Sf~V&MARBU
'I .
Nomination
pus h es up
court m o vie
LOS ANGELES <AP> The
firs t woman U.S. Supreme Court
justice is an attractive blonde so
conservative that one colleague
dubs her "the Mother Superior
of Orange County" -at least in
Hollywood's version.
A day after President Reagan
nominated Arizona Judge San-
dra D. O'Connor for the bigh
cour t, filmmakers at Paramount
Pictures were pushing up dates
for ··First Monday in October."
In the movie, Jill Claybureh
plays the role Judge O'Connor
will fill if the Senate approves
Reagan's choice.
"It's one or those rather happy
coincidences," Laurence Marks,
Paramount's vice president of
West Coast marketing said
Wednesday, "It's sort of nice to
take advantage of something
positive in the world. It's so un -
chic to sound positive, but it is
t he case."
"First Monday" had been
scheduled for release next
February or March, said a
studio spokeswoman . but
Reagan's a nnouncement
prompted Paramount to give
Clayburgh's movie an edee on
others starring the likes of Burt
Reynolds and Faye Dunaway.
"The movie Is ready to go,"
she saJd, "but It's Important to
give each picture its fair due,
and· we have five of our most
enormous pictures remaining
for release in '81. •·
No euct debut date was
given, but the spokeswoman
confirmed ''First Monday"
<See SUPREME, Pa1e AZ>
Ogle, police claim, told the un-
identified victim that the gems,
mostly diamonds, were worth
hundreds or thousands or
dollars. Ogle allegedly produced
documents to prove his claim,
police said.
Following the transaction. in·
vestigators said, the victim took
the stones to a gem expert who
dete rmined the gems were
worth only a fraction or their
purported value.
Police did not release any
figures and declined to identiry
the types of cars that the victim
alleged.Jy gave him in the trade
deal.
Ogle, police said. is the target
o( al £east six lawsuits dating
back to 1974 in which persons al· lege they were victims or
similar trade deals involving gems .
In all the cases, authorities
said. the alleged victims stated
they had given up money or
other possessions for gems that
turned out to be worth far less
than claimed.
Police in Hawthorne also are
Investigating a 1979 case involv·
1ng Ogle in which he told officers
three gunmen robbed him of $2.2
m illion in diamonds. officers
said .
In this case. Ogle told officers
he was on his way to Los
Angeles International Airport t.o
transport the diamonds to Saudi
Arabia where a buyer was wait·
ing.
<See GEMS, Page AZ>
OIAIGI CIAST lllTHll
Fair through Friday but
low clouds night tbrou1h
mid-morning houn. Hl1hs
at beaches 72 to 77 and ln·
land areas 12 to 88. Lows
66 to 70.
Lag una m e ans llllDI TIDAY
f Ahara Clcndiftm couJd Mor summe r un hf• boM• cnmch QI tlw ol-llgator bit. SH Pol1f BJ.
The "Art Colony" of La1una •
Beach c:elebratea each aummer llilf I with several special eveni. -II
Festival 0( Art.I, Pa1eant or the
Maaten, Sawdust FeaUval and
Art·A·Falr.
Stories and plcluret on th1I
s um mer'• expert enc• are
leatured In "Summer ln
La1una," a »pa1e lablold Lbat
runs today ln the Dally Pilot.
Tb• t.ablold lncludet lnforma·
tlon on places to eat, pl•~ to
'" anclpla.~ to •hop.
~~~~--~-----~--.._.--------~------:--··~· ....... _._.... ____ ........ __ .,._._.. ... ~ ....................... ~ .......... ._.. ............................................................ ~ ... ~ -------------
•••••• Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thur•day, July 9, 1981
·Swamped
schooner
robed
BATH, Maine CAP) -The
Coast Guard ls lnveaUaalin& an
accident that occurred wbea the
mas ts of a 36-foot schooner
crewed maioJy by sallloa stu·
dents struck a highway bridle
over the KeMebec River and
capsized.
The skipper and seven teen·
age crew members were quickly
rescued Wednesday by smaJI
boats. and none was injured.
The swamped schooner, the
\ ernon Langille, was lowed to
the Bath Iron Work's shipyard
and then back to the Maine
Maritime Museum's apprentice
shop, where 1t was bu.ill three
years ago.
Museum official Steven P .
j
€lo u d of gas
sparks suits
Two s isters hav e filed
separate lawsuits seeking $25
million each for damages they
claim from exposure to a tox.ic
cloud of gas from a manufactur·
ing plant Ln Orange,
Begiflt's bloc
one seat up
• • on oppositwn
One or the sisters. Sylvia
Leyba, said Wednesday that t.be
cloud from Fiberite Weit Cout
Corp. oo Cypress Street on June
1, 1979, caused her baby to be
born prematurely and de·
formed.
She said in the suit ftJed in
Orange County Superior Court
that she was attending a COD·
tinuation hlgh school for preg-
nant women, when she wu ex-
vased to the cloud.
Her sister, Magdalena Leyba,
said ln her suit that she wu in
class at Richland Hlgh School.
Both say their exposure to the
chemical fog created stomach
aches, fatigue and respiratory
difficulties.
McAllis ter identified the sklpper
as Frank Simon, 37, and sald the
crew members, all between 16
and 18 years old, were sailing
and boatbuildang s tudents at the
museum.
.,..., PMee ..... -
Newport Auction Co .. on C003t Highway, owned by suspect arrested with two others Wednesday
TEL AVIV, Israel CAP> -
Prime Minister Menacbem
Begin's Llltud bloc won 48 seats
in Parliament, one more than
the opposition Labor Party, in
the June 30 elections, the Na-
tional Election Co mmission of·
fic1ally announced today. Magdalena Leyba said her son
was eventually born with ab-
n ormally small limbs and
webbed hands as a resuit of lhe
exposure.
The Coast Guard's Marine
Safety Office in Portland is in-
vest igating the accident. Of·
r1 c1als would not speculate on
the cause of the accident al the
Carlton Bridge, which carries
U S Route l traffic across the
river.
M cAJlister said the vessel
"ent off course when the wind
suddenly died, and the schooner
was then pushed by the
powerful, tidal current toward
the bridge lts masts hit the
bruige about 50 yards from the
01Jt>nin1?.
From Page A1
ASBESTOS • •
dumped hazardous material at
Covote Canyon.
Chambers said the asbestos
probably does n't pose any
dang.:r if it is burled, but that
s a f e l y r eg ulations forbid
asbe:.tos from being mixed with
other loads or being allowed to
become airborne during dis·
posal '
in grand theft case
From Page A1
GEMS. • •
Bolice said Ogle reportedly
stopped off in Hawthorne for
dinner and was met by the
gunmen outside a restaurant.
Lloyds of London, the firm that
had insured the diamonds, re·
fused to pay off the loss and is
investigating the case. police in
Hawthorne claim.
State would aid
toxic cleanup
SACRAMENTO CAP> -The
state would help pay lo clean up
toxic waste dumps, under a bill
passing the California Senate.
It would authorize the state
Department of Health Services
to decide whether "corrective
action" is necessary to force
toxic waste dumps lo take action
to clean up their sites.
Jury in jet noise
suit deliberating
Begin's Llkud bloc won 718,941
popular votes to the opposition
Labor's 708,536 voles, for a
10,405-vote lead that translates
into the narrowest gap -one The sisters claim the cloud
Parliament seal between the was caused when a 300-ga!loo
political antagonists in the 33-vessel of epoxy resin caught fire
year history of Israel. at the Fiberite plant and emitted
Afler the 1977 elections, Llltud toxic chemicals.
had 43 seals and Labor 32 seats.
Jury deliberations continued the residents were not entitled lo The official results published Several other people who today run. e days after Israelis either responded to the fire or today in the Orange County monetary damages on their as-went 'to the polls had been de who were exposed to the cloud Superior Court action in whlch sertions that jet noise has limit-• · · layed because or hand-counting a lready have filed lawsuits seek-265 Newport Beach and Santa ed the amount by which their and absentee ballots of the ing damages and payment of
Ana Heights residents are suing properties have appreciated in military and merchant'seamen. medical expenses. . ~~~"og~e~t°f!h:~:;~~~?:;,';.:~ , __ v_a_1_u_e_·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Five representative cases in
which resid ents are claiming
they have suffered emotional
distress were s ubmitted to the
jury Tuesday afternoon. The'
jury's decision on those cases
could affect the outcome on
claims of the remaining 260
plaintiffs, according to Judge
Raymond Vincent.
Deliberations followed a 10·
week -long trial in whlc.h several·
residents claimed their lifestyles
were negatively affected by the
noise or jets departing from the
airport.
Vincent ruled before the case
was submitted to the jury that
SLA VICK'S JEWELERS
annoa.nces our annuaJ
ROLEX WATCH SHOW
3 Days Only
July 16, 17, 18, 1981
18 Fashion Island
Newport Beach, Calif. 92660
644·1380
Newport Beach Rolex Agent
Because there are no homes in
the 1mmed1ate vicinity or the
landfill, Chambers said that
workers who allegediy dumped
the hazardous material were the
only ones exposed to a potential
health threat.
By allegedly using the Coyote
Canyon landfill, E & G Contrac-
tors saved a lot of money. Cham·
Ntide isn't lewd? Don't miss this opportunity to purchase a world famous
Rolex watch from this large collection. We have styles for
men and women' in 14kt. and 18kt. gold, with the elegant touch
of diamonds if desired. Now is the time to select for Birthdays,
Anniversaries, or other Special Occasions. Also. see a
selection of unique dials and bezels for our Rolex.
. . ber~ sald Dumping at the facili-
ty is free, while it would have
cost aboul $100 a ton to use a
Class I landfill authorized for
hazardous wastes. he sald.
Clothing optional group files suit in LA
OSHA official AM Anderson
revealed the citations during a
Wednesday meeting of the Los
Angeles Board of Public Worts.
In a notarized statement pre-
. sented al the meeting, E & G
· employee Peter R. Richardson ~ said after the asbestos arrived
LOS ANGELES CAP> -
Declaring "nude iso 'l lewd," at·
torneys for the Clothing Optional
Society planned today to seek a
court order preventing Los
Angeles County s heriff's dep·
uties from arresting nude sun-
bathers wtlil a triaJ can be held
on tile legality of anti-nude
beaches.
Stephen Yagman and David
Keslenbaum of the American
Civil Liberties Union filed suit in
U.S. District Court on Wednes-
day, challenging the April 1980
ordinance banning nudity on
county beaches.
at the Wilmington dock, it was
"dumped into the normal wood
and concrete trash from this
dock demolition job ...
R 1chardson s aid the "The
plastic bags of asbestos were
I <1 bl· led Contains As bestos
Fibers Avoid Creating Dusl-
Breathing Asbestos Oust May
C:ause Severe Bodily Harm."
Richardson said he and two
olhl'r m e n unbagged one
truckload of asbestos during the
mixing operation.
· 1 wa~ ~1 ven no safety inslruc·
lions or l'quipmenl when work·
ini:t with asbestos." he added.
(Hficia l s of the United
Brotherhood of Carpenters and
Joiners of America also were at
thl' Wednes day meeting .to
testify against the non-union
contractor
Yagman contended the law
violates federal freedoms or
speech and expression and con·
From Page A1
MEDFLY • • •
of Santa Clara County" are at
stake, the governor sajd.
fAe rial tanker
!crash kills 2
Counties and cities in the area
located about 50 miles south of
here have sued lo block aerial
sprays, claiming the pesticide
could cause cancer, premature
death ol the elderly and birtb de-
fects. State officials have said it
is relatively harmless.
A similar effort or fruit -
stripping, ground-spraying and
releases of sterile flies in th.e fall
and winter cost S22 million.
Stale experts had cautiously
predicted success as late as last
month, ju.st before more lban 100
medfly larvae were found.
i
l FRAZlER PARK (AP) -Two
men whose plane crashed while
rly1ng a fire-flghting missioo in
the Los Padres National Forest
we re killed before they could
make their fire retardant drop
on a one acre fire. an official
said.
Most of the flies have been
found in yards, none in com·
mercial farming operations,
which are localed far from lhe
infest.at.ion, Santa Clara County
farm officials say. ~art Clayton. public informa-
tion officer for the Los Padres
National Forest, identified the
two men as 53-year-otd Lowa
Remschner or Pboeab:, Aria.,
who piloted the C·l.99 tanker',
and the co-pilot, Ted Sveum, 25,
of Crescent City.
Rural lawmaken were ln·
censed by the governor's move,
and threatened thal failure to
use aerial s prays could en·
danger the state's 114 bUlloo
farm industry and lead to far
more extensive pesticide spray·
lnl( lat.er.
iiilif Pilat
Thomas P. Haley .. _ -e-[-ut1 .. ()1110et
Robert N Wffd ..._...
M. Thomas KHVll
ldllOf
MIChMI p Harvey
~~
L Kay Scllullz
o...ctor•~
Kennelh N Goddtrd Jr
C--....Oo-Tnomat A Murphlne ......,,.,_
Bernard 6chulm1n c--
Charlet H LOOI -~1-C.ofA Moore
~"' ... •
Ct1111fted edvert19'n9 11~142·H71 Alt o\Mt d9pec1ment1 142-4321
MAIN OFFICE
UI •••• t.y St , C-4• ~ •• CA ~I .-..u ... IMe, (Uole MHa. CA .,.,.
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llMlfl\111"' ~.-.! lo ti la W•\1 en "'"' I' 0 ... !Mt c.-~ C•llf0tftlt•lt,.
VOL. 74, Ni>. 1io
flicls with California's constitu·
lion.
The Clothing Optional Society
sued after sheriff's deputies ar·
rested 26 members on Malibu
beach June 28. They face a $500
fine and six months in jail if con·
victed, Yagman said.
·'The main purpose of the
First Amendment is to protect
the communication of ideas," he
said. "U people are seeking to
communicate through the pre·
sentation of themselves with no
clothing on, the Constitution says
they can.'' . .
The society was founded five
years ago by Lynne Hensley of
Sherman Oaks, a 38-year-old
government employee. Most ~f
its 500 members "are people Ln
their 40s and 50s who work in the
aerospace industry, government
not a bunch of 17-year-old
c;dldren running around desir·
ing to show off their bodies,"
Yagman said.
"We're mad ," s aid Mrs.
Hensley. describing herseU as
··a closet nudis t for seven
years" before she formed the
society. "r was arrested last year on
Malibu beach for the same rea·
son. but my case was dropped.
This year the arrests are oul·
rageous. I feel there's enough
beaches in the Los Angeles area
there are plenty that are
clothed beaches. If anti·nud.isls
don't want to see us they don't
have to."
From Page A1
SUPREME • •
would premiere in early Oc·
tober, almost a year after on·
location s hooting began in
WashinRton. O.C.
Walter Matthau plays
Clayburgh's liberal nemesis on
the bench. dubbing her "the
Mother Superior of Orange
County." The reference to
Orange Cowtty is a reflection of
the California county's reputa·
lion for conservatism.
An early confrontation in·
volves a test case on movle
pornography: Matthau cites
Flrat Amendment freedom ;
Clayburgh decides to see tbe mm before ruling.
"Flnt Monday" won'l be new
In Waahiniton . Tbe
1poke1woroan said the 1ta1e
version, written by J e rome
Lewreece and Robert E. Lee,
opeoed It t.be KeMedy CetlW' ln
December 1977 with co·1t.ar1
'1aM AJ~r and Henry roe·
da. The pa.y appeared at the
CleYelucl PlayhouH m October
1175 and premiered on
Br0Adw1.1 lla October 11'79 , •
Rolex knows beautiful wood
improves with time.
Rolex puts
genuine walnut
aials in these
beautiful
18 karat yellow
gold watches.
With hidden·
clasp bracelet!>:
A. Lady's
Datejust, $5,850.
B. Man's Day·
Dcite, $8,100.
'f ROLES:
With Rolex, diamonds are right on time.
• JlOUS
SLAVI C K'S
Fine Jewelm Since 1917
The distinctive
18 karat yellow
gold Rolex
Day-Date with
matching
hidden clasp
bracelet.
A. Unadorned,
$7,950.00
8 . With
diamond
dial, $8,700.00
C. With
diamond bezel
and diamond
dial, $12,575.00. Or
add to your
own 18 karat
gold Day-Date
a diamond
bezel
for $3,875.00; or a
diamond dial
for $750.00 ; or
both for $4625.00 .
Fasbian laland, Newport Center, Newport Btacb I <11•> 8"·13IO v .. _ tf .. "8'1 _.......... ftla~ "8M et Aftltftt• C.-, vtSA. M..W. CMrp
Member ""' 'fUlflm Gvlld ,. j
........
American conductor Sarah CaldwU o/ the &mon Opena con-
duct• a ~lwor«JJ with tM CenlrCJI OrcMmo o/ PekinQ. Mw
CaldweU um invited bl/ tM Mmut111 o/ Culture to conduct the
opera "l.JJ Tnwiata."
RFK Jr. inherits
apartment in NY
Kirk LeMoyne Bllllags, a
New York advertising ex-
ecutive who was a friend and
political ally of the Kennedy
family, has bequeatlled bis
apartment on the Upper East
Side to the late senator's son,
Robert Jr.
In a will med in Manhattan
Surrogate Court, Billings,
who died a~ the age of 65 in
1978, also left his papers and
memorabilia to the Jobn F.
Kennedy Library in
Dorchester, Mass.
Billings and John F. Ken-
nedy were roommates al the
Choate School and Princeton
University, and Billings was
a frequent visitor to the Ken·
nedy White House. He also
was a trustee of tbe Kennedy
Library.
The apartment is a duplex
cooperative on East 88th
Street near Central Park.
More than 300 people of-
fered their last respects to
veter an actor Rosa Martln,
who died of a heart attack.
Funeral services for the
co-star of "The Wild, Wild
West" television show were
held at Mt. Sinai Memorial
Park in Hollywood.
Comedlan Rlcbud Pryor
is offering to donate $200,000
to a private school in Watts if
youth gangs agree to a cease-
fire this summer.
"I'm here because J want
people to stop murdering
each other
... I'm will-
ing to offer
you $100,000,
$200,000 out of
m y own
pocket to get
you to stop,"
Pryor told
eight gang
members at a
"00• m e e ting at
the Sheenway School.
The $200,000 would be used
to start an educational self·
help program at the school,
which was the scene of al-
leged gang-related violence
last year when animals
rais ed by s tudents were
slaughtered.
Vice Adm. Edward C.
W a lier Ill has been named
superintendent of the Naval
Academy in Annapolis, Md.,
swapping assignment with
Vice Adm. William P .
Lawrence, the Pentagon an-
nounced.
Walter has been serving as
commander of the 3rd Fleet
at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, a
post Lawrence will fill.
............ hller, ln·
ventor ot UM 1eocSMto dome,
turnt •Sunday.
So lt'• no 1urprtae that be
wa1 qulUl •W'PrlHd wben b1a
ala.ft threw him a aurprlle
party.
Accompanltd by actre11
ltUta B•ntya, Fuller en·
tered the Franklin lnatltute
in Pblladelpbia thlttkint he
was loinc to 1bow hit 1taff a
new exhibit, "Pattern•."
which locludea bia famoua
dome. ;
Instead, be was 1reeted by
the cbeen of friend.I and the
flash of cameras.
Mayor Benaard Saaden of
Burlington, Vl., an avowed
soclallst. says be waa
amazed to open bla
newspaper and see himself
lampooned in the nationally
·BY n di ca led com le s trip
"Doonesbury" by Garry
Trudeau.
Sanden was shown bring-
l n g "greetings from the
Peoples' Republic of Burl·
lngton" to a television lalt-
show boet, and then llnlting
the recent election of
socialist French President
Francola MIUerand lo bis
own.
·'As goes Burlinaton, so
goes France," remarked the
cartoon Sanders.
Said the mayor, "You have
to remember it's just totally
fiction."
M aureea Reagan, eldest
daug hter of President
Ronald Reagan, is scheduled
to address the annual dinner
of the Lincoln Club of
Colorado next week.
Appearing in Denver a lit-
tle more than two weeks
after her father, Ms. Reagan
will speak at 7:30 p.m., July
16 al the Marriott Hotel.
Ms . Reagan is chief ex-
ecutive officer for Sell
Overseas America, the As-
sociation of American Ex-
port, and executive editor of
Showcase USA, the associa·
tion 's international journal.
She is recognized as the aa-
sociation 's chief spokesman.
Queen Mother Ellsabetb
concluded a successful tour
of Ontario with a fond
farewell from thousands of
affectionate Canadians.
Her six-day visit came to a
close am.id stringent safety precautions.
Storms slam Kansas
. Three inches of rain in 90 minutes; 60 mph winds
U.S. summary
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l'elr -o.r iw•••lled °""' n.al Of Ille nel et -Miion, will\ CIMr
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f'lelna.
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l I I l I .,1,004 Is whot you ccn sove on vocotlon lodgl"9 l(s tlm• you coahed In for o llfttlm. of gvoront••d I . I ovtr th• nt.1u 20 Y•Ors If you ore now spending low-cost luxury vocotlons. I i I S1 .000 for o rwo wee+< vocotlOn (assuming o 10% 11. trllotlon rote). Coll lnttmoUonol Resort ShotlnQ. Ctnterpolrtt• 1, r
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medlVtn<p<leed car. t L.r-~----------------------~~--------~---~-1
Orange Coast OAtL Y PILOT/Thureday, July 9, 1981 H / F A8
------------------------~--------------------.. Resftle
control
proposed
81GUNN8C01T o1 .. ....,,... .....
Oranae County Supervisor
Roaer Stanton lhinb be baa a
better ldea for preaervtn1 the
county'• supply of affordable
homes financed throu1b its low-
lnterest loan program.
Under h1I proposal, buyers ua-
inl the special loans to purchue
homes ln unincorporated part.a
of the county would be en-
coura1ed by financial conaidera-
Uona to bold on to their units.
Stanton said the system,
which is based on keeping the
homes at market value, would
discourage the speculation he
thinks is implicit in the county's
current resale program.
His plan is geared !>olely
.toward housing units financed
with money raised by sales of
tax-exempt housing revenue
bonds. It does not involve the
county's inclusionary housing
program, where no resale con-
trols are imposed by the county.
Stanton gained support Tues-
day from the county Board of
Supervisors for a 90-day study of
his plan by the county's Housing
Revenue Bond Advisory Board.
Under the current resale pro-
gram, Stanton said, families us ·
ing the special loans are sup-
posed to sell their units to other
qualified buyers. The county
Housing Authority is responsible
for screening and finding such
applicants.
If they find qualified buyers,
the selling price will be less than
the market value, Stanton said,
because the annual increases in
property vaJue are tied to in·
creases in the county median in-
come.
However, if the hous ing
authority can't find a buyer who
can qualify for the low interest
loan program the seller can un-
load the home for a big profit,
which Stanton says is subsidized
by the county.
Under his proposal that
couldn't happen, Stanton said.
His key is the use of a second
trust deed that must be refunded
to the county by the owner if the
new buyer doesn't qualify for
the special loan program. The
deed is equal in value to the dif·
ference between what a buyer
would pay in cumulative
monthly fees for the home with a
low interest loan instead of a
mar ket rate-loan.
It theoretically would serve as
a penalty to counteract profits a
seller could make by removing
lb'! unlt from the loan program.
The refunded money would be
placed back in a county fund to
be used for making new low.
interest loans. Stanton said this
system would regenerate funds
for the loans which in turn would
help make more homes afforda-
ble.
According to an example he
offered, a $65,000 home bought
this year would be worth about
$104,683 in five years with a 10
percent annual rise in property
value.
As long as a buyer used a tow-
Interest loan. he would not be re-
quired to make payments on the
second trust deed, which would
dissolve over 20 years. But if
after five years he sold the home
to a nonqualifying new buyer, he
would pay its value, $23,293,
back to the county. He would
stiU earn about $24 ,000 in profit,
an 8 percent annual yield.
Stanton admitted his proposal
is still rough and said a financ-
ing plan still needs to be
clarified for cases where tbe
home is purchased by a buyer
who qualifies for the loan.
By the way, where
is Bob Badham?
By FREDERICK
SCBOEMERL Ot .. DlllJ,,........,
No trip to Sacramento lJ
complete without a atop at
David's Brau Rall.
And so it was Tuesday
evening that I found myself
in this well-k D 0 W n
tavern, one of
the most
popular
watering
b oles for
legislators,
lobbyists ,
newsmen and
followers of
capital
events.
1 was waiting to catch a
shuttle bus to the airport;
David's was a good spot to
bide the time because from
my perch at the bar I could
see directly across the street
to the shutUe stop in front of
the Senator Hotel.
David -I don't know his
las t name -asked how my
day had gone. We started
chatting about various peo-
ple and 1 couldn't resist br-
inging up the name of Robert
Badham.
Which brought up an inci-
dent that occurred seven
years ago al the Brass Rail,
when Badham was an as-
sem blyman representing
Newport Beach.
Seems Bob and about 40
others -including some
members of my professional
class -were at David's well
after the 2 a.m. closing time.
The cops came and busted
the joint.
The Sacr amento Bee and
several other newspapers, in·
eluding this one, had a field
day with the story ,
particularly over the asser·
lions -vehemently denied -
that Badham snpped into a
restroom stall, unscrewed a
lightbulb and stood on top of
a toilet to a void detection.
Badham would only admit
that he entered a restroom
Reagan hears
WASHINGTON (AP> -Pre11i·
dent Reagan, saluting youth In
the arts and managin& a pitch
for his tax cut. listened lo the
Ame rican premiere of a sym-
phony written by Mozart when
the genius was only nine years
old.
"Nobody appreciates youth
more than I do." said the 70-
stall until the commotion
died down.
The patrons, David re-
called during our brief con·
versation, weren't charged.
But David was. He went to
court, was found guilty or
staying open beyond the
legal closing time, and was
fined $100.
''Not too bad, no?" David
said.
David's still running the
Brass Rall, h elping ease
Sacramento's thirst and clos-
ing on time. Badham is now
a congressman, representing
Newport Beach in
Washington, D.C.
Apparently that news had
escaped David.
"Where is Badham,
anyway?" he asked me. "l
haven't seen him in a Jong
lime."
young Mozart
year-old president Wednesdav.
"I've had quite a while to ap-
preciate it."
At the ceremony under a tent
on the south lawn of the While
House, Reagan sat with 17-year-
old Amanda McKerrow of
Rockville, Md., America's teen·
aged ballet star.
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642·6086
~
TUDOR
FOR PEAKs IN <XlAN-OONG
PERFORMANCE: OWN>ICNiHIP
SURFING AND ~ SleMARlhERS
Blu.-wat., rtllablllly 11 buln Into thi. brawl\J
Tudor pair. Left: tht Tudor ~ ()yaterdltt Sub·
manner In 1t1ln1 ... etMI ._."' l'eYOMno tlllPMd
time btztl and match4ng braoel9t, ttlf""'11ndlng
and prttaur9-f>roof down to 330 flNt. Btfow~ tht
Tud0t Submarlntr Prince ()ytttt' In ttaln'"8 ttffl With rtvolvlng tlac>Md tlmt betel and
tNtchlng Fllptock ~ltl ... ,_.ndlng and pr.-
uor•Proof down to MO ffft, Both modtla
ftatur• the Twfnlock wlnctlno orown and are
available with blue °' ~ dial and t.z.1.
"
HI P Orfnge Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thursdav. July 9. 1981
-,
O'Connor critics rapped :~~
Conservatives urged to let nominee speak for herself
Besieged bobbies
quell new rioting
',MANCHESTER, Eneland
<AP> -A mob of 1,000 yout.ha
sck-eaming "Kill! Kill! Kill!"
ttesieeed a Manchester police
station in a new outbreak of riot-
ing despite an appeal for calm
from Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher.
Jn a sixth straight night of
street violenc~ Wednesday night
that police called "guerrilla
warfare," the mob smashed
windows and set fire to police
vehicles and private cars lo the
station yard . Truncheon·
wielding bobbles, protected by
plaslic riot shields and rein·
forced safety helmets, drove the
youths off, a police spokesman
said. ·
3 more lef tist s
executed in Iran
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -
Iran has executed three more
leftists, and Ayatollah RuhoUab
Khomeini hu chosen a personal
representative to keep an eye on
the nation's military, Iranian
authorities announced today.
Meanwhile, the clergy.Jed
Is lamic Repu blican Party,
Iran's dominant political fac-
tion , h as publicly supported
Prime Minister Mohammad Ali
Rajal as its candidate for presi·
dent in the July 24 election to
rep I ace deposed President
Abolhassan Bani-Sadr, the IRP
newspaper Jomhuri Eslami said
today.
Be l/ ast h e ats up
a/ t e r s tri k e d eath
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
<AP J -Snipers and bomb
throwers attacked troops and
police in Belfast today in retalia·
lion for the firth death in the
Irish Republican Army's hunger
strike.
The IRA's Provisional wing
scheduled a military hero's
funeral Friday for the dead
guerrilla, Joe McDonnell.
Ba nk loa ns O K'd
for Latin nat iona
WASHINGTON CAP> -1n a
reversal of recent policy, the
State .Department will support
international bank loans for
such South American regimes
accused of human rigbta viola·
lions, officials say.
The decision affects U.S. votes
on almost $520 mHlion in loan
applications from Argentlna,
Chile, Uruguay and Paraguay.
All are run by mlHtary-
domlnated governments.
Polish worke rs
hold new str ikes
WARSAW, Poland CAP>
Restive Polish workers dJsrupt·
ed national airline flights and
halted public transport in
Bydgoszcz today in separate
warning strikes that escalated a
union-government _confrontation.
A one-hour str ike by an
estimated 46,000 dockworkers
seeking improved working con·
ditions closed Baltic ports
Wednesday and broke a four-,
month period or labor peace as.
Poland's Communist Party pre·
pared for a crucial party con·
gress next week.
Ita ly seek in g
marke t stability
MILAN. Italy (AP) -Italian
banking, business and govem·
meot officials were meeting in
private today in a bid lo find
ways to stabilize stock trading in
Italy when the markets reopen
Monday.
The government stepped in
Wednesday to halt all stock trad·
ing in Italy for the rest or the
week, after a selling wave that
has seen prices tumble more
than 40 percent in the last five
weeks.
ONE DAY ONLY
EXHIBITION AND SALE
OVER 300 SELECT PIECES OF
HAND MADE ORIENTAL RUGS
ALL PRICES MDOCED TO NEAR COST
PRICES LIKE THESE HAVE NEVER BEEN SEEN IN LAGUNA HILLS BEFOAEI
CRIME FEAR -FBI Direc-
tor William Webster says
that crime is such a "grow·
ing fear across America"
that parents give their
children "mugger money.''
He says the Reagan ad-.,
ministration is dedicated to
reversing this.trend.
TESTED -Joh.n W. Hinckley
Jr., accused of attempting to
assassinat e Presi dent
Reagan, was taken to a
hospital in Durham. N.C.,
for "routine tests." He was
returned to prison in Butner,
N.C.
WASHINGTON CAP> -Preal·
de.n.L Reagan is teUins anrry
conservatives to let Sandra D.
O'Connor speak for herseU on
abortJon and other iaauea before
declartni her unaultable for the
Supreme Court.
Her turn may come at Senate
hearings later thit month.
But even a.a Rea1an tried to
douse a political brushfire
sparked by the nomlnallon,
White House and con1resslonal
leaders predicted that the Sl·
year-old Arbona appeal• judge
would be confirmed with no prob·
tern s as the first woman
Justice.
Sen. Strom Thurmond. R·S.C ..
a ranking conservative and
chairman of the Senate Judiciary Commtttee, aa1d
Wednesday that he hopes to
beein hearings by late July. A
confirmation vote could come in
September, after Congress'
midsummer vacation and before
the Supreme Court's fall term
begins in October.
·'I would say the Senate will
confirm her unless 5ometbing
comes up that we don't know
about," Thurmond said.
Nevertheless, Reagan waJ try·
ing lo calm a storm brewing on
the religious and political right
wing over Mrs. O'Connor's
views on abortion and women's
rights.
•The objections concern Mrs.
Draft reinstatement
mulled by Reagan
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Despite its commitment to an
all -volunt~er military, the
Reagan admirustration will con·
sider re·lnstituling the draft to
increase the armed forces by 10
percent over the next four years,
a senior Pentagon official says.
A draft wiU be among the pro·
spective manpower policies that
are to be considered by a new
task force headed by Defense
Secretary Caspar W Wein·
berger.
The administration estimates
that It will have lo add some
200,000 troops to the current
military force or 2.1 million by
1985 to meet its strategic objec-
tives, said the orricial, who dis-
cussed the tas k force at a news
briefing Wednesday on the con·
dition that he not be identified.
The Wa s hington Post ,
meanwhile, reported today that
the Army has expressed doubts
in a secret report to Weinberger
that its manpower needs can be
met under the voluntary concept
instituted when the draft ended
in 1973.
The secret report did not con·
lain a recommendation for a
"draft" or "conscription," the
newspaper said. But the Post
quoted unidentifi~ Pentagon
sources as saying The Army is
counting on a draft eventually.
We inberger t old the Post
through a spokesman that "the
draft is not anything anybody is
considering.··
The strategic objectives cited
by the Pentagon offi cial who
briefetl reporters include provid·
ing the United States with the
ability lo fight a lengthy non-
nuclear war and respond to
crises around the world.
The official said it was possi·
ble that some of the 200.000 new
positions could be filled by .
civilian Defense Department
employees or contract person·
net.
Although acknowledging that
the task force study could en·
courage speculation that the ad·
minis tration is backing away
from its anti-draft stance. the of·
ficial said, "These questions
have to be faced one way or
another."
A White House statement said
the task force "will provide rec·
omm endations to the president
lo increase the effectiveness of
the active and reserve all·
volunteer services." But the of-
ficial said that wording should
not be interpreted to mean that
the Weinberger panel will not
consider the draft as well
The task force 1s to study a
range of matters a ffecting
personnel.
O'Connor' a votes a1alnat several
pieces of anti-abortion le'111•·
Uon while she wu a member ot
the Arizona Senate.
White Houee oftlclah,
however. Insist that she oppo1es
abortion. Spokesman David
Gergen aaJd Wednesday that the
president hopes that "thoee who
have expressed concern about
Judie O'Connor's vlewa will
keep an open mind until they
have a chance to hear her ex-
press her viewt and a chance to
fully examine her record."
Reagan tried to convey that
message after the nomlnation
was announced Tuesday, when
he met at the White House with
Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C._, and
t le phoned the Rev. .1erry
Falwell, the fundamentalist
leader of the Moral Majority.
Helms. however, said he and
"al least five or six other"
senators remained "skeptlcaJ."
And a Moral Majority
~pokesman said Falwell did not
commit himself to Reagan's re·
quest to "reconsider" his
criticism or the nomination,
which Falwell said all Chris·
lians should be concerned about.
Other conservative leaders
said the nomination of Mrs.
O'Connor to succeed retired
Justice Potter Stewart could
cost Re~an their backing.
·'The president is going lo be
suffering a degree or political in·
fluenla from which he will not
easily recover." said Howard E.
Phillips, chairman of the
Conservative Caucus.
·'It will be a costly fight with
people who have been his mdst
faithful supporters,'' added •
Phillips, who said the nomina-
tion could affect conservative
support or Reagan's economic
program.
Richard Viguerie , whose
direct-mail organization has
been associated with the growth
of conservative strength. also
criticized the nomination.
"We feel we've really been
challenged on this," Viguerie
s aid. "The conservatives
weren't consulted They just
said, ·Like it or lump it.' I
haven't talked to a conservative
yet who wasn't disturbed by
this."
Conservatives were hardly
united against the nomination,
however.
THIS IS NOT A LIQUIDATION SALE-WE NEED TO RAISE CASH
FREE RUGS FREE RUGS
We will be giving FREE to the
first 2S people (one to a family) a
1' x 1' Bokhara worth $30.
Rugs of all sizes and description:
s· x 3' from$ 100
6' x 4' from$ 200
q' x 6' from S SOO
12' x9'from$1100
FOR YOUR CONVENI E NCE, T HE SALE WI LL TAKE PLACE
SATURDAY, JULY 11FROM10:30 A.M. TO 8 P.M .
HOLIDAY INN
25205 LA PP. RO., LAGUNA HILLS
Information: C213) 709-0026 A, A & A Oriental R s, Inc. r ....... : C•MC'-<ll
Semi Annual Sale
Starts
Thursday, July 9
10:00 A.M.
die
Spring and Summer
Merchandise
Open Mon., Tues .. Wed.
Fri.. Sat. till 6:00
Thurs. till 9:00
ernon
I
_, If you 're looking for a sweeter deal months' forfeiture of interest or reduc ·
... pick a Plum instead of a plan. tion of your originaJ investment.
Plums pay higher interest than The Corrunercial Credit Plum. It's
Federal lawaJlowsoncomparableplans a sweeter deal . Available to California
at banks and savings & loans. Compare residents only. Thrift certificate rates
theratesyouseeabovewithwhatthey may change Tuesday.
are offenng right now and you'll see ~ _.. --. ......_
what we mean. ~ ~
· Plums aJso come with short tenns ~ Pick a Plum ',
that don't tie up your money for 2Yi I d f Pl
Yearsormore. Weofferalow$1,000 nstea o a an. '
90 D W d r'' -0 Plea~ send me more infonnation. minimumonour" ay one _.. \ 3 month thrift certificates. Just 1 r 0 Here's my check or money order for
$500on 1 year thrift certificates. ' Plan. O J months o l year O SuperThrift \
And, if you want a plan I Type of accou nt. 0 lnd1v1dual 0 Joint Tenancy \ with passbook flexibibty, O Tn1stee D Corporation
our Super Thrift PlUJTl pays I lnthenamdslo( •plo~pnnll •. ,
8Yl% annual interest on I My Signature ______________ _
$500 or more ... 73 annually Co·OwnerSignature I
on less than $?00. •• , \ Acxount Address J
Alt thrift certificate City suice Z•P---Plums offer quarterly oom· \ Phone /
poundins and pay a high 63 \ MySocialSec:urity!TDxt.D.#--------
annual interest even when you ~ /
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d> .. . .,.
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. . . -. . . ..
Orange Coast DAIL y PILOl'/Thuraday. July 9, 1981 H /F Al ·-
1 San Diego deputies -I
1 hack on job today J sex witness 'tearful'
I
Woman denies bribery over bQyfriend i n Robbins' trial
SACRAMENTO <AP) -After
31 daya ol cloeed meetings, jury
selecUon and.. often X·rated
tettlmooy, state Sen. AJan Rob-
bina' fate la about to be placed in
the hands or an elgbt·man, four·
woman jury.
Defense and proaecutlon at·
torneys called their last wit·
ne11es Wednesday in Robbw'
sex-with-minors trial, clearin1
tbe way tor final ar1umenta to-
day and tbe start of jury de-
liberations.
Robblna, a 38-year·old Van
Nuys Democrat, is facing nine
felony counts allegin8 that be
bad sex with two young women,
Re1tna Culllmore and Lori
Terwilliger, when they were 16.
He faces up to six years in
prison if convicted.
The end of testimony in the
often slow-moving trial came
after a tearful appearance by
Ma. Cullimore, now 20.
She said she waa assured by
Robbins' p rosecutor. Deputy
District Attorney Albert Locher,
that her boyfriend would not
face charges too if she
participated in the case against
the senator.
But she said the assurance did
not amount to a "bribe" in ex·
change for her testimony.
··I told him (Locher> that ii
there was any threat whatsoever
of my boyfriend being prosecut-
ed, I would not risk testifying for
the prosecution," she told de-
fense attorney Michael Sands.
She said Locher told her he
"understood how I would feel
DENIES 'BRIBE'
Regina Cullimore
.............
that way and that I needn't
worry."
''Did you understand him to
mean that if you testified
against Senator Robbins, your
boyfriend would not be prosecut·
ed? '' Sands asked.
. "The way you said it makes it
sound like a bribe and it was
not,'· Ms Cullimore replied.
She said she understood
Locher to m e an that her
boyfriend would not be prosecut·
ed "regardless of whether J
testified against Senator Rob-
bins or not."
Sands apP.,.enUy was tryln8
to 1tve jurors the idea that Ma.
Culllmore bad been pressured
into testllying aaainat Robblna
with tbe threat tbal ber
boyfriend would face charges ii
she refused to cooperate.
But under cross examination
by Loeber, she aald ahe bad
never been told that her
boyfriend. who was not Iden·
lilied, would face charges if she
failed to testify.
And she said Locher told her
that about the only way her
boyfriend could face charges
would be if she testified against
him. Ms. Cullimore said she was
concerned that her boyfriend
could be charged with having
sexual intercourse with a minor,
one of the charges faced by Rob-
bins. ii she took patt in the Rob·
bins case.
When Sands asked her if she
also feared that her boyfriend
could face other sex charges,
her eyes became tearful and she
said : "AJI of those things that
you are saying did not enter into
my mind. I love my boyfriend
very much. I lost him because of
this (tesWying)."
Ms. Cullimore was apparently
concerned that if she said she
had sex with Robbins she would
also be forced to admit having
sex with her boyfriend when she
was under age.
She said she raised the issue of
her boyfriend after s he,. was first
interviewed.
EARL'S ' fuchsia
Show/Sale
Huntington C.enter
Fri thru Sun. July 10.12
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642·54578
IDOEOM FOUNDATION
..__ .. ,_ ___ .......,
St lt< 71 'M~
5•t•t<• f~ 5,.,, •• , y°"'' ()oaf
tC• Saore Heltftl "°"" .,.,,
COSTa-141-1219 ... ...__
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<$'.,... ~ ""' E>.r. . #Ce, Tit. SoclolcHJlcal Soca.ty of -1. 1.-~ 1.-;,-e 0 ~~
$C"" tlw u.iYerM lS.$.U.f Q'lQ% ~lj,e_'/
U.F.O.'s -TETOEOM -HUMAllTY e~~;
U.F.O.'S = TETOEOM TETOEOM = HUMANITY
SEMNAR PRESENTATION
MY M IND TO YOU R MIND
The foundation on which Tetoeom is built. Tetoeom ls built
aro4nd the expanded theory of evolution of mankind, that there
Is a supreme force Tao that created the advanced society in the
universe <GOD), that the advanced society (GOD> created
homosapiens on earth through genetic technoloey by
restructuring neanderthal man. That the Tao is the natural
energy force that created all. That homosapiens is a hybrid
created by GOD. That GOD created all living religions on earth
for the benefit of mankind so they may have a guide to live by
and that all point to Tetoeom. Tetoeom is the center to which aU
can aspire to.
By the use of common sense and technology we may arrive
in time to save mankind from itaelf, and this will benefit each
one by enabling the individual lo live life in an atmosphere free
from the dangers imposed by a world operating in an
irresponsible manner.
t • ' (
for one person can be
worth 10,000 if they work toward influencing a situation while
the person who does nothing lo promote the mans to the end
solution wiU not achieve their goals, for they want others to do
this for them and -only by direct involvement can we achieve
the salvation of m1111kind.
'I ,,,........,..
KKK CUA88 Sen. Diane
Watson, (D·Los Angeles)
narrowly won support for
her bill aimed at allowing
state cour ts to intervene
against planned violence by
groups such as Ku Klux
Klan in Senate vote Wednes·
day.
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Sheriff's
deputies are back on the Job to-
day, authoriUes aay, endlnt an
eleht-day strike marked by
evaded court orden and bitter
accutaUODS.
The surprl1ln1 end to the
1trlke Wednesday could mean
tbe resumpt.ion today of formal
contract neaotiatlona between
the county and the Deputy
Sherllf'a Aasoclatloo.
Sheriff'• spokesman Lt. Jack
Drown said the first deputies re-
turned to work less than two
hours afler county Board of
Supervlaora chairman Paul
Eckert said DSA president Doue
Newkirk announced the strike'a
end to a joint news conference.
Bond bill failure
lwrts e lection bid
SACRAMENTO (AP > -
Prospects for a s pecia l
statewide election in November
on Issues including the
State smog check
legislation loses
IS
to require such in.specUons, the
federaJ government has taken
steps to freeze $850 million in
highway and sewer funds. Oppo-
nents of the Inspections say they
hope President Reagan will re·
verse those steps.
One opponent, Sen. Newton
Russell, CR-Glendale), said
many motorists con!Uder inspec-
tions as an unneeded govern·
ment burden. He said the cost lo
motorists would be too high.
IS
Peripheral Canal dimmed wbeo
the Senate rejected • f49S
mlllion prison bond construclfoo.
bill.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. wu
prepartn1 to call a special elec·
lion on the prison bond meuure
if it paased. Such an electJon
also would have covered all oeti·
lions that have quaillied for tbe
ballot, including a referendum
on the $1 billion canal.
Oil firms given
second dri ll bid
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
House Interior Committee voted
Wednesday to give a group of oil
companies a second chance lo
drill for oil and natural gu in
the Santa Barbara channel,
although their drilling rights ex·
pi red eight years ago.
The committee approved
legislation that would restore
the balance of a 5-year drilling
lease lo the PauJey Group, a
consortium or 11 oil companies.
Mobile home bill
·curbs city control
SACRAMENTO CAP> -Cities
and counties would have to treat
mobile home parks like com·
parable types of housing, under
a bill ($8484) ~Qproved by th&
California Senate.
The biU would prevent a local
government from requiring
more land per bome in a mobile
home park than 1t would in a
similar housing tract.
We need people, we need you. We need your abilities
whatever they are to achieve our goals. We need support from
you in whatever way that you can benefit us. Personal
involvement by simply talking to other people •about Tetoeom,
or through organizational management, working In the
management end of the Tetoeom Faith, or, throu9h
contributions of money, for money ia needed to promote our
FaiUl. But what we must have la dedication to achieve our
coals.
In Less Than An Hoar
So, come share with us this burden that we endure, of
brinai"I forth tbia awareness aa to wbere mankind can be in the
future. Through technolo&y, common sense, coupled with
reaponaibillty, the yoke of oppression will be lilted from UJ.
Tb la . aeedlin& wlll grow to command areal respect
throupout this world and beyond. The fruit that will arow will
~ our advancement into t.be hither realm of conscloUJHSa; tbe
leaves the people; the branches different culture and aoclety;
the trunk la Tetoeom; the roota all Uvln1 relitlona and political
philoeophiea.
Teto•._ It • pNdllct of God mot of._.
Ma Ha Re He Siie STONE
Directlr of the Tetom Fil
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,... Orange Oo11t DAILY PILOT/T'hureday, Juty 8, 1981
Games ban attempt
lacked preparati o n
The Fountain Valley Clty
Council's recent attempt to ban
electronic gamea from liquor
stores turned into quite an em·
barrassment for the elected of·
f icials.
The city already requires a
conditional use permit before any
stort! or restaurant can install
coin·operated games.
The Planning Commission
has rejected several permit re-
quests from liquor stores, con-
tending the machines would draw
youngsters into otherwise adult-
oriented businesses.
The commission urged the
City Council to adopt a new law
forbidding game m achines in
liquor stores.
The new ordinance was pre-
sented to the council June 9 and
was approved unanimously, with
little discussion among the coun-
cil members and no comments
from the audience.
Three weeks later, when the
law was presented for its re-
quired second reading, local
game distributors a nd liquor
store owners argued their side of
the issue.
The objectors called the new
law discriminatory because the
games would still be permitted in
conveni ence markets and
r estaurants. AJso, the law would
prevent adult liquor store
•
customers from playlng the
games at these locations.
The liquor store owners
claimed they supervise young
people more closely than moat·
other businesses.
One li·quor store spokesman
argued that any problems as·
soclated with game usage can be
controlled by existing laws gov·
e rning truancy, loitering and
c urfews.
Queried about whether they
had received any formal com-
plaints about electronic games at
liquor stores, the city's police
chief and planning director ad-
mitted they had not.
The council then reversed
itself, voting down the proposed
law 1-4. (Barbara Brown voted in
favor of it.)
After additional debate over
whether to send the game or·
dinance back to the Planntng
Commission, the council finally
voted to drop the whole idea
pending more solid evidence of
problems associated with the
game machines.
The episode dis plays some
careless work by the city staff
and the elected officials.
In their haste to solve a
problem ,with new regulations,
Fountain Valley officials forgot
to find out if the problem exists.
Colleges i n squeeze
Wl).ile local school districts
are battling funding losses
because of declining enrollments,
the Coast Community College
District is coping with budget
problems for the opposite reason
-its enrollment grew more than
had been anticipated.
The district, which includes
Orange Coast, Golden West and
Coastline colleges, received word
last month that the state would
not provide full reimbursement
for all of the people who took
classes at the three colleges dur·
ing the 1980·81 term.
Compounding the district's
dilemma was the state funding
package for the coming school
year, which gives community col·
leges a 5 percent inflation in-
crease, rather than the 8 percent
granted to the K ·l2 school
system.
As a result of these finance
bills, the Coast district is now
confronting a $7.4 million reduc-
tion in available funds. The dis·
trict's tentative general fund
budget for 1981-82 is $81 million.
The necessary cuts are likely
to include classified employee
layoffs, an increase in the
minimum class size, higher
materials fees for some classes
and new charges for non-credit
courses.
The continuing enrollment
growth in the state community
colleges is not s urprising. As
private and state university tul-
tion charges climb, more people
are opting for the free communi-
ty college classes.
A community college tuition
fee was advocated by some .
legislators in this year's finance
discussions. As California cities
and K·l2 school districts continue
to demand a larger piece of the
state's financial pie, the senti·
ment for community college tui·
tion is likely to grow.
Ordinance changes due
The Huntington Beach City
Council has formed a committee
to make numerous technical
changes and one major overall
change in the city's election cam-
paign ordinance.
The major change is to make
the ordinance enforceable. City
Attorney Gail Hutton says the
present ordinance isn 't
Therefore . sh4! says, at's worth-
less.
The present ordinance attka
to limit Individual campaip con·
tributions to l200. But becauae of
several loopholes, lncludJne no
limitations on money don"ted to
a committee worldn1 .. on behalf"
of a candidate , the donation limit
isn't enforceuble and is ea1lly
abused.
City Council me mber& have
decided that they want a simple,
easy-to-read ordinance that does
what it's intended to do.
Reasona ble llmltatlons to
•
financial donations have been
discussed by the city officials but
the overall direction of the pro-
posed revised ordinance hasn't
crystallized.
However. the council mem·
bers seem to agree that an en·
forceable ordinance should be de·
vised before n ext spring's
municipal election for four city
council seats and the city at-
torney's office.
It appears that the council
also agrees that donations made
in the final days of a campaign
should be reported before elec·
lion day. That way voters have a
chance to -see who is financially
supporting the candidates.
Both seem to be good points
that wtll serve the best interests
of the voting public.
And, finally, the City Council
has decided to repeal the present
ordinance, which leaat analysis
Indicates is useleSB anyway.
Op1n1ons exprt'ssed 1n thE-<,pace above .isr~ lhO\e of l he Dally P11ol. Otner v1ew'I ex
pre!tsed on lh•'> oage art' 11"10'><' ot their authors ano arl11tls Reader comment is 1nv11
ed . Address The Daily Pilot, P.0 Box •~. Costa Mew . CA '2626. Phone 171 41
bAi-4321
L.M. Boyd I Party l i,vel y
Nothing enllvena a aoclal l tl·
toeetber more than the threat of a
squabblinl married couple. So HY• a
hoateaa of lengthy experience. You'd
J.b"1k a matrimonlal ar1umem would
make everybody uneaay. But thla
authority claim• It prompta other
bu1b1ndl and wives to become arm·
pathetic not only toward tbt batUen
but toward one another. A tood flCht Lends to make everybody lovable.
Amona the prime time televlslon
1how1 In the People's Republic of
China 11 a aorl of ahow-and-tell
prut ntaUon on how to raise
chlckena.
Claim lt that within the next 20
years all the uhnon In the Paclflc
Northwest wlll come from
hatcheries, none from the native
wUd.
Tllomu P. H•lty
PublllMr
Tlaomu K•vll
Editor
aarMr• Krelblc"
Edltorlel P ... Editor
-.
GSA overspends on refugees
WASHINGTON -At the General
Services Administration, waste and ln·
competence are routine. But when an
emergency arises, the GSA spendthrifts
really outdo themselves.
Last year, Jimmy Carter pledged that
the United States would "provide an
o pen h eart and open arm a " lo
thousands of Cuban refugees fleeing
Fidel Castro's little Gulag Archipelago.
To this the GSA bureaucrats added "an
open pocketbook ...
THE FIRST OF several internal
audits on the refugee program discloses
widespread extravagance in GSA 's
handling of nearly 15,000 Cubans housed
temporarily al Fort McCoy, Wis. "The
justification for many items and quan-
tities procured for the Cuban refugee
emergency was questionable," the
a uditors reported . with massive un-
derstatement.
GSA records show the following ques·
lion able purchases :
-10,000 checkers games and domino
sets -ooe for nearly each man, woman
and child in the camp -at a cost of
$30 • 000.
-$4,500 worth of Frisbees; $62,576 for
other toys.
-$1,400 for Ping· Pong tables.
-$55,252 for Bibles, missals, commu-
qion hosts and religious services .
172 two-way radios at a cost of
$402,000.
$17,837 for baseball caps and equip·
ment, basketball backboards and other
sports gear.
-Air freight charges of more than
$4,000 to rush Spanish-English die·
tionaries to Fort McCoy -where they
t hen sat in storage for several days.
Three videotape machines, costing
JACI AIDIRSDI
$2,685, used for recording network news
programs.
$20,000 for a public address system.
even though the Army and other gov·
ernment experts on emergency pro·
cedures suggested renting the equip·
m ent.
IN mE MATfER of necessities, the
auditors did a little comparison shop-
ping and found that GSA could have
sa ved the taxpayers thousands of
dollars.
For example, the auditors report that
if GSA had solicited ambulance services
"on a sounder basis than usjng the
Yellow Pages." they could have saved
$63,000. The GSA paid $1,200 a day for
ambulances, while the Army paid $960 a
day.
Furthermore, the audit notes. "GSA
personnel did not adequately monitor
ambulance services contra cts.
therefore GSA has no assurance that
services were performed... Instead of
checking the ambulance bills by ex·
amining ambulance log books, GSA
contract officers simply "verified" the
claimed services verbally.
Other G$A records indicate that the
contract offi cers could have saved the
government $6,270 on its purchase of
rain gear and $8,552.SO on fo lding
chairs
ln what has become a familiar
refram for GSA audits in recent years .
the investigators concluded that the
Fort McCoy operation .. lacked ade-
quate controls to prevent fraud and
abuse." In ract. the auditors reported,
nearly one-third of all the supplies and
services provided for the Cuban ref-
uge es lacke d proper review and
do cu mentat1on
GSA'S REGIONAL administr ator in
charge of Fort McCoy told my associate
Tony Capaccio that the auditors' report
"failed lo recognize the unique nature
of the resettlement operation."
GSA proc ureme nt officers "don't
question the items that the emergency
experts ask for." he said. "They come
in and say. 'This is what we need.· We
say. ·we will procure if for you.' "
Sen. Orrin Hatch. R-Utah, is not
persuaded that this is the proper way to
conduct government business. He 's
planning to investigate the GSA's han-
dling of the entire Cuban refugee pro-
gram
Social Security hail-out proposed
To the Editor:
As long as there are so many wealthy
people who pay no taxes (legally! ) ,
millions being spent on political cam-
paigns. thousands of special breaks for
congressmen. and more thousands for
a ll kinds of boondoggle plans, I know
Social Security can be bailed out If the
people in power want to badly enough.
Everytime we hear or read discussions
about the horrible debts of our govern-
ment, some bright soul blames it on the
MAILBOX
people on welfare. We have "workfare"
which is supposed to punish these peo·
pie and discourage them. or course.
there are violations.
I wonder how much money the gov-
ernment ls cheated out of by those who
falsify income tax reports compared to
those who falsify welfare claims.
HOW ABOUT SOME workfare for
congressmen who get discounts on
.almost everything they do?
And for those who get price supports
or pay for not growing or produclne?
Further, a few good raffles could
bring enough to help the Social Security
fund tremendously. Don't rafne off only
a few million·dollar amount$, for which
the odds would be too discouraging; raf-
fl e off thou.sanda of prizes from $1,000 to
$500,000. No one would be forced to buy
tickets. Only those who want to would
i.upport the new fund.
There are many answers to bud1et
problems if you look. We could even
pall a law requiring that anyone donat·
Ing to a political campaign mull live a
dollar to the Social Security run& for
ever y dollAr used by the poUUclan.
J . DENNIS
Options offered
To the 11'.ditor:
Perhap1 Third Dlatrlct Supervlaor
Bruce Nealande could UH a letaon ln
temperance aa the Dally Pilot (July 2)
put1 It. Perhapa we all could, tven
Ulouch his a1ae111ment of th• Irvine
Company'• motJvaUon for dtvel09lna
the Irvine Coaat la correct -"treed and
profit." But U Mr. N'eatande and tboH
Journlllltic ctantJI of pail yeara Uke
Weatbroolr Pe1ler and H. L. lltnclltn,
and ordinary people llk• myatll can
1tand convict..cl of wl'lllnl tntemptrant·
ly, it ... IDI to me that the Daily Pilot
1t1nd1 convicted or a much more
11rlou1 Journallatlc crime,
• 1ur.rftdallly.
• Use umt edltortal about Mr. Nnti.Dde11 crttldlm of U.. ftrm'1 de·
cl•IOft tO offer ....ie eoatroll OD about
too low·eoet \Dllta, a Ital• CouW Com· -.
mission requirement, the Pilot says,
"Strong words to describe a decision in
which the company had no other op·
tion." No other option? Come on!
The Irvine Company could decide not
to put 1,000 more temporary and perma·
nent residents in this coastal area; it
could decide to cancel its plan for an of·
fice buJld.ing complex; it could decide to
scratch its request for widening roads
and highways; it could decide the land
could turn a "profit" by converting it to
argricuJtural and recreational uses. The
Irvine Company did and does have
other options.
Perhaps there is yet time to hope that
the Irvine Company will, as it has in
the past. reconsider unworthy projects
that would have diminished the quality
of life for area residents and withdrawn
them.
TOM ALEXANDER
Trash concerns
To the Editor:
I read with concern the item regard-
ing dumps filling up. In this state we
simply toss away SO million tons of
trash each year, and it costs us $1.6
million to bury It in landfill dumps.
Isn't It lime that the conservationists
came up with a re ally good idea which
would prevent this?
Or one day a cartoonist Is going to
draw the ultimate cartoon -showing us
all drowning in a sea of our own
garbage!
EDITH D. COPPEN
'Disarm or die'
To the Editor:
As an aftermath of the Israeli pre-
em pU ve strike that demolished the
Iraqi facility for maJdpg atomic bombs.
there bu been a bUzzard of discussion,
In government agencies and in the com·
munication media, about settin1 up an
International mechanism that will out-
law the strikes. Thia Idea iJ so simple-
minded that people or good sense should
be ubamed to propoee It.
The modem technolo1y of war make•
possible destruction so fast, aod on auch
a 'tlll scale, that an entire nation can
be "paralyzed by a sinale strike. And lt
doea not take an atomic bomb to do lt .
Any nation that has a powerful air force
can do It. Japan did ll at Pearl Harbor:
• l.tll•ra from rtodcn art welcome The>
right to conden1t lttt•ra 10 ftt tpOCt or
thmlriott libel 11 rt•trvtd Ltltt11 of 300
word• or ltu wm be git1f1l prlftf'enct. All
l.tlltra miut iricl&IU 1ionoturt and malling
oddrtp but nomtt ma11 bt IOfthhtld on rt· q11Ht If 1ulf1cl•rtl r.0101' 11 opportnt.
P~trv WI not bt 1>Mbli1hed. L.dttr1 m4JI ~
reoltphofwd to "2·'°'8. Name and plwm1 '"""btt of IM cOlltrihtor m.uf bt gt"'" tor
IHM/ltGlton pMrJIOftl
Hitler did it 1n Poland ; Israel did it
against Egypt In the 1967 war; Egypt
and Syria did it against Israel in the
Yorn Kippur < 1973) war; and lately the
Soviets have done it in Afghanistan.
There is only one effective way to put
a stop to the pre·emptive strike -keep
the level of prevailing armament below
what it takes to do it with. As long as
countries have the armament that
makes a pre-emptive strike possible,
they will use it. No amount of t hreat of
sanctions. by the U.N. or any other in-
ternational body, will stop them
In short, the technical imperative is
loud and clear. and it applies to the
whole world · Disarm or die!
HYMANOLKEN
Be humane
To the Editor:
We continue to read more and more
about the views of people who approve
or disapprove of the use of pound
animals or any other source -for
medical research.
Some say animals "raised for the
purpose of research" should be used,
Being humane doesn 't depend od
whether the animal was Intended to be
treated human6ly.
"It wlll be killed at the pound
anyway" they say when they advocate
such research.
Better it be injected permanently
than tortur ed.
I do not want al any time any animal
tortured so that I can reap medical
benefits. Of course, there are some
types of tests and experimenB that are
not severe and do not cause animals tO
suffer . In order to permit those we would
have to have definite guidelines and ree·
ulalions about the degree of sufferini1 which would be difficult to establiJh and
enforce.
With the uae or computers, ama&ini
scie ntifi c acco mpl lsbmenti
can be made. What has humanity
gained in Its pursuit of humaneness for.
people ll It must torture animals -any
kind of animals?
D.COOK;
Why do BunUnatoo Beacb olftclall 11J
low tar1e trudu and OCJ'D ~.11t1 to;
dHtroy the beau\)' and Hrcl\1 ol llatnl
Street? no.n•t anyone notice mOlt oft
the bUMI a.re empty? F.O. • ---~--c-.. ..................... ... -.s.;...~, ............ ,.,, .... ,., --·· .......... ""' ,
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WEDNESDAY,
JULY 9, 1911
-... -. -.. --.. . . . . . • 4
0
a
lllTlllTll lllCH /flllTlll VllllY
City governments always seem to
be the watchdogs of architectural
de sign and good taste. But are they
always right? See Page 82.
I
Coast Colleges • m fund crunch
Panel orders
nuke testing
Surge of students blamed
for shortage of state aid
By PH1L SNEIDERMAN
OfltleOally ...... ._
The belt-tightening meuures
now being planned in the Coast
Community College District are
needed largely b eca use
California's community colleges
last year drew many more stu-
dents than bad been anticipated,
resulting in a funding shortage.
m ent growth, was e na llzed,
Thompson said.
Jn planning for the coming
year , Coast college officials'
projections also were upset
becaWJe the community college
system received a S percent
funding increase for inflation for
1981-82, not t he 8 percent re-
ceived by t he K-12 school
system .
By .IOllN NEEDHAM °' .. ...., ..........
Fearing fuel rod containers in
some older nuclear plants may
be more vulnerable to cracking
than bad been expected, Nuclear
Regalatory Commission officials
have asked plant operators to
test for "pressurized thermal shock."
Included among 44 nuclear
plants throughout the U.S. is the
San .Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station, a 14-year·old facility
located three miles south of San
Clemente.
No plants have been ordered
to shut down, and no immediate
* * * A l e r t
sy stem
soug h t
Installation of an alert system
that would notify residents
within a 10-mile radius of a
serious problem al the San
Onofre Nuclear Generating Sta·
tion has been endorsed by the
Orange County Board o f
Super visors.
ln a n action Tuesday,
supervisors approved an agree·
ment with Southern California
Edison Company, major owner
of the generating station, that
will permit installation or siren-
type devices that would sound
within 15 minutes of any major
problem.
The purpose of the sirens
would be to signal the 100,000 res-
idents living within 10 miles or
the plant to tune their radios to
stations 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 l1 operating by late August.
Sirens will be installed in San
C l eme nte and Sa n Juan
Capistrano and portions of Dana
Point, Laguna Niguel and Mis·
sion Viejo.
HB to p u sh
parking h a lt
for sweeping
The Huntington Beach City
Council has adopted a new pro-
gram for neighborhoods that
want to reduce curbside parking
on street.sweeping days .
Resident.a now mav petition
for the installation of signs des-
ignating no parking on street·
sweeping days and for enforce-
ment of lb.is policy.
Accordine to the city's public
works department, the council
will grant such petitions if they
are signed by a majority or resi·
dents on the street. Strict en-
forcement then wiJl be ordered.
Information on pelitionina for
the parking bans may be ob-
. tained by calling 536-5432 or by
visiting the public works depart·
ment at City Hall, 2000 Main St.
danger is predicted. However, if
the wall of the 8-inch-thick steel
reactor vessel were to crack,
pressurized water used to cool
fuel rods would escape.
'the fuel rods could then over-
heat and melt through the vessel
and into the concrete contain-
ment building, causing a leak or
radioactive material into U}e at-
mosphere.
NRC spokesman Jim Hanchett
said after years of exposure to
heating and cooling, steel reac-
t o r vessels gradually lose
strength. That loss is calculated
in the design of the plant.
But he said the containers are
suspected of becoming weaker
at a faster rate than scientists
bad anticipated. especially in
older plants which have welds
with a high copper content.
Hanchett described the
gradual weakening of the metal
as '"pressurized thermal shock."
He said over years of plant
oper ation the weakening is
routinely calculated and the
pace of cooling is slowed down
to compensate for the loss of
s trength.
•'This Issue is somethin~ we
have had our eye on for quite
some time," Hanchett said. "We
don't feel there is any danger,
and we are simply asking some
operators of older reactors to
supply us with information."
....................
licking these stamps could drive you goofy. They're LSD-Laced
miniatures seized in a raid in Santa Ana HeiQhtl.
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.
OC drug de a l e r s
u se m a rket ski lls
Russ Hawkes. a spokesman
for Southern California Edison
Co., operator and principal
owner of the San Onofre Nuclear
Generating Station, said the loss
of m etal s trength was well
known when the plant was built.
''This was a pioneer plant,"
Hawkes said. "What the NRC is
doing is taking a look at the
technical data compiled when
tbe plant was built to see II it is
standing up over time."
He added that the NRC's re·
quest for information was part
or ongoing technical research re-
garding the aging of steel ln a
reactor vessel.
'·Nuclear plants are overbuilt
to compensate for the well-
known loss of strength that re-
sults." Hawkes said. "Weaken-
ing of the reactor is cloaelv
monitored throughout the life or
the plant."
Me anwhile, NRC licensing
bearings resumed Wednesday in
San Diego for two new unit.a at
San Onofre that are nearing
completion.
The topic oi the hearings is the
plants' ability to withstand a
major earthquake centered near
the nuclear facility.
Valley's trustees
to study budget
Orange County sheriff's in·
vestigators are displaying drugs
seized during a recent raid in
Santa Ana Heights to show the
public what "Goofy acid" looks
like.
Th e drug with the dis·
organized name actually is LSD
that has been dusted on the
backs of tiny postaae-type
s tamps. On the front is a
miniscuJe color print of the Dis·
ney cartoon character or some
other design.
The dru,g is taken orally by
lick int lhe back of lhe stamp,
What makes the popular sam·
pie noteworthy. s heriff's Lt
Wyatt Hart saJd, is its reliancE
on marketing skills to hide its
true function -and also to seU
the product in underground
markets.
••Drug dealers are into the
marketing business just like the
people who sell shampoo," ob·
served Hart.
Although the acid comes with
several designs -Including
the iMocent visage of Mickey
Mouse -Hart said investigators
ca ll aJJ types "Goofy acid"
because Goofy was one of the
original designs.
Almost 3,000 doses or the acid
were con(iacated Tuesday when
narcotics agents used a search
warrant to raid a house at 2431
Zenith Ave . in Santa Ana
Heights, Hart s aid.
Also seized were two kilos or
marijuana, 78 grams of hashish,
Fountain Valley School Dis-82 gra~ or cocaine ~d a sm~ll
trict trustees have scheduled q u a n l 1 t Y or P s t Io c Yb• n
two study sessions for review ol , mus hrooms. Hart said street
the district's 1981-82 budget. value of the drugs is estimated
The first meeting will be held al $26,000. .
tonight and the second on Mon-T h ree s hotguns and five
day. Both begin at 7:30 p.m. in ha f!dguns -of which two we~e
distric t h eadquarters. 1 beheved stolen -and $18,900 10
Lighthouse Lane. cash also were taken by agent.a
from the Los Angeles and
Orange County sheriff's depart·
ments, he added.
Arrested in the raid on suspi·
cion of possession or marij uana
were Joseph Thomas Kent. 34,
and J oel Douglas Kading, 27 ,
who both lived at the house, and
Jacquelyn Ann Johnson, ?:7, of
Costa Mesa.
tfart said further charges wi ll
be filed against the trio.
The raid, he added, took place
a fter Los Angeles agents had
staked out the home searching
for a-criminal Cugitive. After ob·
serving the activities, however,
they obtained a search warrant
and made the bust. Hart said.
The three suspects were
booked at Or ange County Jail.
bail was set at SS ,000 each, he
said.
Grass fire quelled
Fire burned about a half acre
of gr assland adjacent to El
Morro Elementary School near
Laguna Beach Wednesday
morning.
Laguna Beach Fire Depart-
men t spokesman Tim Rogers
said today that the blaze broke
out about 8 a.m.
That's the view of Correllan
Thompson. executive vice chan·
cellor for business in the dis·
trict, which includes Orange
Coa s t . Gold e n We st and
Coastline colleges.
Revising his budget in the
wake of finance bills approved
last month by state legislators,
Thompson says the district faces
a $7 .4 million reduction in
available funds.
"The reason is that we did not
receive in 1980·81 our full share
[
of apportionment for the total
number of students we served,"
he explained.
' Thompson said the three local
colleges enrolled 35,000 full -time
equivalent students last year but
received state funds for only
32,500.
A fuJl ·time equivalent student
takes 18 class hours per week:
part-time students are added
together to reach the full-time
equivalent total. About 146,000
people took classes in the Coast
district dur i ng the fall and
spring semesters.
Thompson said st ate
legislators expected the com-
munity college system's enroll-
ment to grow about 2 percent
last year and funded it accord-ingly.
Instead, the statewide enroll-
ment jumped about 8 or 9 per-cent.
In distributing t he resulting
deficit, the Coast district. which
m e nt growth, was penalized,
The district's te ntative
general fund budget for 1981-82
is now at $81 mallion, and in-
dividual colleges are examining
ways lo trim their budgets.
Bruce Williams, a spokesman
for Golden West. said his cam-
pus expects to eliminate 20 to 2S
non-teaching jobs. Five facuJty
vacancies will not be filled.
Also, non·credit courses such
as continuing education for
nurses will be offered on a self·
supporting fee basis, he said.
Previously, the programs were
free.
Remodeling and expansion
also will be curtailed, Willfams
said
Similar cuts are being con-
sidered at Coastline and Orange
Coast colleges.
The reduction in funds lo the
community college system this
year reportedly was accepted as
an alternative to proposed tUi·
lion fees.
Yet the days of free communi-
ty college classes may be num-
bered.
··Philosophically, I'm opposed
lo tuition at community colleges
because l believe there should
be at least one tuition-free seg-
ment of higher education availa-
ble," Vice Chancellor Thompson
said.
"But realistically. within two,
three or four years. we will prob-
ably have some sort or tuition
in the California community col-
lege system." he said
Blac k w-01Da n new-
preside nt at CS F
Biologist Dr. Jewell Plummer
Cobb. a granddaughter of a
s lave, will become the next pres-
ident of Cal State Fullerton.
Or. Cobb, 57 , was chosen
Wednesday after a final r'ound of
interviews before the board of
trustees of the California State
University and Colleges System.
which met in Long Beach.
She said after her selection
that she will take o•er duties in
the fall . proba bl y )liter classes
start on Aug. 31. She wiU earn
more than $50,000 a year.
When she assumes her posi-
tion, Or. Cobb will be the first
black woman to head a major
public university in the western
United States. according to uni-
versity system officials. •
Or Cobb wa ll vacate her post·
lion as dean of Douglass College,
the women's arm of Rutgers
University in New Bruns wick,
N.J She has held that job since
1976.
She succeeds Or. L. Donald
Sh ields, who in Janua ry became
president at Southern Methodist
University in Dallas . Dr. Shields
had announced his intention to
leave in October.
Or Cobb was one of three
fin alists. Othe,,rs were Dr. Leo
Goodman-Malamuth 11. presi-
d e n t o f Governors S tate
University in Illinois and a
former vice president at Cal
State Long Beach; and Dr . Judy
Ann Slurnich, a vice president
at Southwest Slate University in
Minnesota.
A total of 130 candidates ap-
plied for the job, said university
Director of Public Affairs Jerry
Keating.
He said Dr. Cobb visited the
campus during an earlier vlsit
and Impressed the slaf! as "very
articulate, very intelligent and a
per son of proven leaders hip."
Priest's killer g ets 1~5 y e ars
Blazes kept
Huntington
crews busy
..., ..... _ ....
&A Yl:ll 01' PRJE&T RollaW • .,,. ~
Ronald "Bud" Spring, the
man convicted of kUling a Seal,
Beach priest by slugging him in
the forehead, baa been sen·
tenceC! to 15 years to We lm·
prisonment by an Oranee Coun·
ty Superior Court.
Judae James K. Turner de·
nied a request from Public
Defender Ronald Butler to permit Spring to remain fre. on
'10,000 bail while the case ls be·
Ing appealed. Turner also turned
uide a request t.bal Sprtna be
placed on probaUon.
Sprlng waa accuaed In the
Feb. t, 1* ..,.ult on Father
Fells Doulbtery In t.be rectory
of St. Anne's Calbollc Cbuttb.
Thi prt.l WU ltruek one. 1D
the bud and IOU.Pt tnetlDIDt
for a em ail wood. Re dled
.. veral week.a latw from bnba
~inon1 durln1 Spr1 ... •1 1 lrial lndlcatld he blllnld tM& •
1lrl he Ud dated only once fill
entered a convent, a.ad that tM
Cluarcb 10meho• wu ~
lDC wttb bi.I deliN to ftDd .....
Spring was convicted of
second-degree murder. Turner
bad ruled before the case wu
submitted to the jury that a
first-degree murder cbaree was
not appropriate becau1e there
was no showlne of premedlta·
ti on.
Butler had unaucceufuJly
sought during a recent bearing
to have t.be charge further re·
duced, to that of manJlaupter.
Turner denied that request.
Sprinl wUll epend the lint IO
days of bil tent.ence at Chino
Stale Prlaon , whe r e
pochlatrlata will determine
whether lbe 33.year-old Loni
Beach man ls emotion.ally capa-
ble of remaining in prison.
Tumer aaid he felt SprlftC prob-
ablv lbOUld be aent to a ti.ale
f acUlty at Vacaville, wben a
iilQ'CblMriC wUl for prtlonln ll
raocated.
Tbe Jwlct Hid be 1ioU.ld DOt
CrmJt SprlQf to remata tree OD au biic ... of tbe ct.t1Ddut'1
mapnidldab&e ebaracter.
.
HEALTH QUIZ -Oranae County Public Health Services
volunteer An.iko Petheo mdmini.sten health and nutriUoo
qu.i& to seott Hiland of Huntinltm a.eta ualAt 10.foot hip
came bOard Mt up near Huntmiton Beaeb City Pier. Qull la
part ol a eounty effort to brine health and fitne.A lnforma·
Uoa to youq1len frequtft~ local beache1. Count)''•
mobile health van wiU vlalt HunUqton Beafb from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m. each Wedn~ ln Julj.
Firefighters were called to 12
building fires, 19 grass fires and
one refuse bin fire in Huntington
Beach during the Fourth of July
holiday week, June 28 throuJh
July S, accordin1 lo a report re-
leased Wednesday by the Huot·
lnglon Beach Fire Department.
Total loss attributed to these
blHes was $182,550.
·'The m-1ority of the fires P>·
volvlni buildings ori&inated ~
the roof and were caused by
children di1char,1n1 lllecal
fireworks," aald 1'~lre Captain
Roaer Holmer.
The motl ae:r10U1 of the local
blasea wu 1 $125,000 home fire
at 11531 BrookJJne Circle °" July
•· lnveatlfat«t b1Uev1 It ... trl11•red ltJ • bottle rocat
landlnc on the roof, Ha.mer
1ald.
He •aid tbe dollar lonee dli·
tn1 the year'• boUday WMk .._. much ~ t.b.an lut ,_...,
altboUCh tbe nqber of buillllll
firet declined.
PASSING PARADES DEPT. -You
wait around long e nough arter the
parade passed you on lhe street corner,
and it's likely the band wiU come tooting
by again some day. So it seems with
municipal planning along our coastline
Only yesterday. one or the waas here
ln the newsroom quipped, ··Hey, look at
this ite m they 'r e going to turn Costa
Mesa into San Cle m e nte ..
He made refe re nce lo the f acl that cer-
tain eo.-.to Mes a municipal planne rs are
(;;,
T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN-1 ~'-
nd vocatmtt a Spoms h m otir for buildings
within Mesatown':i; redevelo~ment area in
the o ld central bus1n~ss distncl.
Downcoast. som e ha lt u century ago.
Ssn Cle m ('nt l' got s t arte d with an
arc h1le<'turnl dream that dictated a ll
buildings 1n the m e tropolis should be of
S p a nish design with red tile roofs and
whilestuccowa lls
THE OICTl'M HELO up for a few
vt.>ars unttl on e brazen developer c ame
a lo n g a nd look th<' rily 13W to court. He
"'o n.
After that. San C'lem('nte got s hmgle
roofs that som e times burned and other
G l-looking ho us ing development. You
look at San Clemente today and you m ay
actu ally wo nder. with the mish-mash of archit~ture. who r eallv won and who
really lo.5t on that cit y p°tanning law bat-
t le
No" Cost a Mesa is a pparently on
the s treet corne r wa iting fo r the passing
planning parad e . If the la w dictates
Sp anish. you can be sure, soone r or
later. some builder is going to come
a lon g a nd de m and the right lo e rect
Early Fre nch Cape Cod -or somesuch .
CITY GOVERNMENTS, however.
a lways seem to develop a he avy urge to
control a r chitecture a nd design a nd
gua rd against bad taste. This even in·
eludes how you paint or decora te your
s hop o r business.
Item-pricing
effort told
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Ot IM o.lly ~·· Slatt
Feeling m ighty pleased with herself after
passage in Sacramento this week of AB 65 -a
measu re r egul ati ng individual p r icing on
supermarket items -is Shirlee Earley or Hunt-
ington Beach.
Mrs. Earley is Ora nge District chairman of
consumer concerns or the California Federal1on of
Women's Clubs She made appearances before city
councils, boards of super visors. civic organiza
lions and the Stale Legislature.
"This is fantastic. They wouJdn't have passed
it without our efforts,·· s he said Wednesday.
The bill. a pproved by the Assembly 31·5 afte r
a 44·29 vote earlier in the State Senate, would al-
lo w stores that use e lect ronic scanners at
checkouts lo remove individual prices from only 15
percent of the items
• • * * Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. will pay a visit to the
Ora nge County Youn g Democ rats' vote r
registration booth at the Orange County Fair Salur
day ataboul3p.m.
While in Costa Mesa he also will be present to
attend groundbreaking ceremonies for the am·
phitbeater to be built on the fairgrounds .
• * * * U.S. Sen. Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona and
son Barry Jr . congressman from California, will
attend a fund-raising event to aid the Orange
County Repubhcan Party.
They will be featured speakers at a $100 event
at the Santa Ana Country Club Crom 6 to 8 p m. on
July 16
* * *. Assemblyman Chet Wray, D-Westminster,
says he will attend a continentaJ breakfast July 24
lo be hosted by Westminster Mayor Kathy Buchoz
and the city of Westminster .
The breakfast is for represenlativ~ of the
cities in the 7lst Assembly District.
Mayors. city council members and city ad-
ministrators from Huntington Beach. Fountain
Valley, Westminster , Anaheim, Buena Park.
Cypress. Garden Grove, Stanton. La Palma and
Los Alami tos have been invited.
* * * * The California Republican Party is holding a
numbe r of campa ign seminars lo instruct
Republican voters in political campaign techni·
ques .
Tbe next seminar is scheduJed Saturday al the
Town and Country Hotel In San Diego. Others are
planned July 18 in Long Beach and July ~ in PaJo
Alto.
Slande r brings jail
PEKING (AP) -A Peking chemical factory
worker b.as been sentenced to six montha detention
ror 1Wtling up wall posters slandering a woman
neighbor, the Peking Daily reported.
The paper said the woman took the wall
9P1Lers to a local court in December, where the
~se wu heard In closed session.
The court tried to persuade the defendant,
Identified only as Fane. to apologise and ae.t
torelveness, the paper saJd, but he retu.ed and 1
publlc trial was held June 5, the newspaper Hid. It
did not report what the posters aald. Last year, the
eovemment banned wall posttta.
642-5678
Put a few words to work for you
, in the Dlily Pilat
in mouth
Another of our co astal communities
that works hurd at thJs is Laguna Beach,
some times called the Art Colony. In
Laguna, clty savants want businesses
that display lhe proper decor.
Recently. Laguna municipal gove rn
ment came down t\ard on a lady who
painted her dress shop lavende r without
rlrst clearing the color with t he c ity's
good taste commission.
The lady owner resisted and is now
apparently headed for court a nd wlll
ba ttle out the taste question against the
municipal a ttorney.
MEANWIULE, LAGUNA h as som e
buildings that are painted re d with rire,
gold and green . bilge split-pea, runny-
burnt orange and all other assortments
Native! are fond of unique architectural works m
Laguna Beach
of this or any other ra inbow. Som e build -
ings in the Art Colony fairly glow in the
da rk. Othe rs appear that if you scra ped
off the vintage peeling pa int. the who le
appa ra t us would fall a part like the one -
hoss shay.
By compa r ison to som e or the inven -
tive color sche m es trotted out on Laguna
s t r uc tures. the Lavende r La dy's busi-
ness house looks like pretty tame stuff.
THAT'S TO ME, any way. You m ight
not agree. fi guring they ought to call out
the fire d epa rtment to spray the p lace
down.
That's the thing about it when gov-
ernments sta rt trying to legis late t aste
Wha t they like is always in good taste.
It's wha t I did that is really ghastly .
~------....... --------------------------------------------------------~-..·· .· • air 7 4 7 loses power in .·
All four engines quit over Pacific; jet lands safely
WASHI NGTON <AP > A
Unltt!'d Airlines j umbo jet carry-
ing 325 people lost power In alJ
fo ur engines and dropped 13.000
feet toward the Pacific Sunday,
but each engine was restarted
a nd the plane landed safetly in
HonoluJu, uuthorlUes have dis-
closed
An investlgater for the Na-
tion a I Trunsportalion Safety
Oourd has interviewed the crew
of the Boeing 747. but so fa r no
reason has been found for the
engine r:ulure. board s pokesman
Br ad Dunbar said Wednesday.
Each of the engines has been
inspected and was "found to be
completely trouble free," FAA
spokesman Fred Farrar added.
United offi c ials s a id the
airplane, which landed safely in
Honolulu, is ba ck in service.
They said while the engines
were out, the plane glided in a
gradual d escent a nd the
passengers probably were not
even a ware of the problem.
The ancident over the Pacific
Ocean about an hour east of
llonolulu anvolved United Flight
35 whic h was fl yi ng from
Newark. N.J .. to Honolulu with
a stopover in San Francisco.
Reports to the FAA and the
safety board revealed that the
Boeing 747's No. I engine stalled
as the plane was cruising at
39,000 feet about 3 : 10 a.m.
Honolulu time Sunday. Within
seconds the other three engines
a lso flamed out.
The crew atte mpted to use
normal procedures for restart·
sng engines during fhght but
were unsuccessful. The captain
dipped the nose of the Jetliner
slightly to pi ck up speed and, us-
ing "ground sta rt " procedures
got the No 1 e ngine started
agaan. authorities said A short
time lat er the other t hree
engines were restarted.
FAA and safely board officials
could not say how long the
engines were out
Bu t Uni t ed spo k esma n
Charles Novak said in Chicago
that the No. I eng ine was
restarted "within seconds" and
all three engines were running
and stablllied in leas than 5
minutes , The plane glided Crom
an altitude of 39,000 reet to 26,000
feel while the engines were be-
ang restarted.
Unit.ed officials said a Boeing
747 can be flown and landed with
only one or lts four engines.
Novak s aid the plane's 308
passengers apparently were not
awa re or the engine problem al
the time the enaines were out as
the plane continued a graduaJ
descent. He said the captain told
the passengers afterward that
some engine problem had oc-
curred and had been solved
Dunbar said the safety board
would continue its lnve1U1ati(fl
into the incld nt.
He said the IJkeUhood ot aJl
engines of an aircraft namlng
out during flight ta extremely
rare and that in recent yean he
recalled only one other such in-
cident, involving a Jetliner O)'tne
oH the Florida coast several
years ago.
In that case, Dunbar added,
the safety board's lnvesuaation.
r eveaJed that a crew member
had been "CiddlJng with some
controls" causing the engine
failure.
So far there is no indication of
a cause in Sunday's United Inci-
dent, Dunbar said.
Judge backs suit
i n King palimony
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
j udge refused Wednesday lo
throw out a "palimony" suit
fil ed against tennis star Billie
Jean King by a woman who was
once her lover But he cleared
the way for Mrs King to seek
eviction of the woman from a
Malibu beach house.
Superior Court J udge Leon
Savitch said he believed there
was sufficient cause to support
t he la wsuit fi led by Marilyn
Ba rnell.
Savitch based his decision on
the landmark case of Mi chelle
Triola Ma r vin against actor Lee
Marvin, which esta blished the
right of unma rried li ving com-
panions to sue each other for
property settlements.
Mrs. King's lawyer , Dennis
Wasser. argued that the Marvin
decision did not apply because
"what the Marvi n case is talking
a bout is a man and a woman
who lived together as husband
and wife
"In the Birne J ean King case.
there is no allegation they lived
together ror a number of years
as in Marvin, or that they held
themselves out as husband and
wife." Wasser said.
But Savitch sajd he believes
the Marvin case does not specify
the question of the sex of the \Ul·
married pa rtners.
"T here have been comments
that the Marvin decision turns
on contract law and not con-
sideration of the sexes of the
partners," the judge said in de-
nying'a motion lo dismiss the
entire case.
Miss Barnett, 33, a former
hairdresser who worked as Mrs.
Kin g's pe rson a l assis t a nt,
claims that she and the tennjs
star were lovers and that Mrs.
Ksng promised her a Malibu
beach house and support for the
rest of her lire.
Mrs. f(jng, 37, concedes there
was a love a ffair , sa ys it is long
over and denies emphat1eaJly
that she ever promised to sup-
port Miss Ba rnett.
Mi ss Barnett. who is now a
pa raplegic as the result of a faJI.
has rerused to leave the house
she has occupied since 1974, with
Mrs . King and he r husband
Larry payin~ the mortgage
Invest in a Bank of America
Money Market Account::
uara
• I
I
Annual Rate
Annual Yteld ..
(Rate 1hown abovt 11 In effect from July 7 through July 13, 1981.)
n
These days, it's important to choose just the right investment.
And, right now, you'll find few investment opportunities that
offer you the high interest. short maturity, safety and guaran-
teed return of a Money Market Account at Bank of America.
Invest $10,000 or more today and you earn the highest inter-
est rate allowed by law on these accounts. Your rate is guar-
anteed for the full 6-month term~ And you'll get the safety of
California's largest bank. For your convenience, your Money
Market Account funds-including interest-are automatically
reinvested for you (up to nine more times) at the rate in effect
on your maturity date. Or, if you prefer, you can withdraw your
funds at maturity. You can invest in a Money Market Account
right n<:NJ at your nearest Bank of America branch.
If you invest: In 6 months, you will receive:
$10,000 $10,722
15,000 16,084
20,000 21 ,445
25,000 26,807
•Federal regulation prohibits the
compounding of interest on !Mae
accounts. Substantial Tnterest pt(l<y for eal1y withdrawal BANKOFAMERICAm
•
0Effectiv9 annual yteld baaed on deposits end Jntel'MI being 191n-
vested at~ um. nite Ill 11\Munty..
Rate •ubftct to~ at metwrlty. -..
.. ~
Aciors taken
infrqud case?
CIDckOO (A .. ) -Five people have been ln·
dJcted ln connec:tioft with an a1Je1ed S.00,000 pbooy
advance-fee loan lfbeme that victimJaed two mov·
ie act.on, an llllnOia unlveraJty and a New York
church.
A aptdal federal 1rand Jury returned Indict·
menta aP!nst the ftve. charlln1 that they collect·
eel more than $400,000 ln advance feet to secure Joans that never w•re made.
Among the vtc•m• of the alleted 1cbeme were
actors &laart Whit.flan and Fred WUUamaon, both
of Bevuly Hilla; Lewta Univen.lt)' ol Romeoville,
and H~~ty Bfptiat Church ot Brooklyn, N. Y .
Ac to federal ~rosecuton, the five told
tbe victims that for a fee paid in advance. they
eould obtain loans that in most
~ases amounted to more than $1
million. The defendants con·
vlnced the victims that they bad
influence with major financial
institutions, including the
$utual of Omaha Insurance
Oo .• prosecutors said. ·
...! Tbe indictment named Hoyt Ji ·i;orrey, 42, of Chkaao. wbo al·
~ l~gedly masterminded the
., .. ,...... stheme; Clarence 8 . Jones. 49,
a New York lawye~; Gwen P. Barrett, 39, of New
York; Walter Frend>. 34, of Miami, and Erik Norl-
ing, 46, of Beverly Hills.
Prosecutors said Torrey represented himself
as president of R.A. Financial Corp., with offices
in Chicago. According to the indictment, Torrey
claimed that Jones ras responsible for financing a
$40 milli9Jl building project in Saudi Arabia, a $15
million housing pro1ect in Newark, N.J ., and the
sale of a life insurance company lor $20 million.
Authorities said Torrey bad been living in the
Netherlands for two years and was arrested last
month when he returned to the United States to
testify before the grand jury. He was charged with
22 counts of fraud. ·
Charges agains~ the other defendants included ·
mail fraud, wire fraud, interstate transport.ation of
stolen property and peTjury before a federal grand
jury. ,
The promised loans ranged from $175,000 to
$39 million, prosecutors said. All but one were over
$1 million, assistant U.S. attorneys Scott Turow
and Victoria J. Meyers said.
Brown's staff
probe target
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Accu.siog Gov. Ed-
mund Brown Jr. 's top aides of destroying and
altering evidence in a political corruption probe,
the Fair Political Practices Commission formally
has recommended criminal investigations of
Brown's staff.
The Democratic governor was not personally
named as a target ol the requested investigation,
but at least a half dozen top state and Campaign
aides were.
The FPPC on W~esday asked the district at-
torneys of Sacramenlo and Los Angeles counties to
conduct criminal investigations.
The watchdog commiasioo -created by a
political reform initiative drafted by Brown -also
asked the State Bar \.:> review the conduct of Legal
Affam ~etary Byron Georgiou and his assis-
tant, Mo Jourdane.
The report also names repeatedly, without
specifically charging them with wrongdoing, chief
of staff Gray Davis and Brown
staff aides Jacques Barzaghi,
Walter McGuire, Sandra Sears,
Jodie Krajewski , Gayle
Prousalis and Phil Oppenheim.
The FPPC's seven-month
investigation stemmed from al·
legation that Brown's top aides
leased a computer with state
furtds and used it to compile
political mailing lists.
DAv11 The FPPC said it found "in·
suffi cient evidence to warrant any formal com-
n:>ission enforcementi action," but charged that
members of Brown's staff "served to impede the
investigation.·'
Among other ~gs, the commJssion said in a
149-page report, a Wey memorandum bad been
withheld from FPPC investigators "because
Brown's attorneys had deemed it was 'in-
operative.'•
''The investigatioo was delayed because of a
lack of cooperation by the governor's office in pro-
vidJng complete and accurate documents relevant
to the investigation,•' the coouniasion wrote.
·'As discussed in detail in the body of thia re-
port, some evidentiary materials were destroyed
by personnel in the governor's office, other docu-
ments were altered, and yet others were withheld
until the staff bad inclependenUy discovered their
existence." 1
At a news conference on another subject. Brown
refused to comment on the FPPC report, saying he
would answer queitions "when I've had time to re-
view the material ... ''
"I'll get back with you," he told reporters .
FPPC officials said the investigation be1an in
December following a story in the Los Angeles
Times which reported that Brown's office was us·
inl a state-leased computer system to compile
llats of political supP.r.ters.
The llsta were de,eloped to advance the 1ov-
ernor's candidacy fo future political office, the newspaper reported.
The FPPC baa tae authority to impose ad-
minhtrative fines of up to $2,000 for vlolaUom aucb
as dotna political wor~on state time. It may aho ·seek higher penalties civil court, or refer cuet
to the dlatrict attorney r attorney ieneral.
Seattle merchants
tell it lihe it is
I
SZA'ITLI! (AP)~ a.m.mber lb.at Uled·car
de.11• on JOW' bloU "bo trt.s to lure cuaamen palot.IDI bait words din t.be wtadlbMJdl ol w. •• ,..., IUCb .. ··a ........ , ... ,...... .. aad "Ult•
New?" I
..... In Seattle. tew .,. • ., .... baft &rted.
clUhnllt approedt, wtu. ..... mod'f• aad .... Rita,..,,..,......,. .k ... t.be .....
TM S..Ule Tlmea fomd tlllle:
-1 ..... 1111 Hoieet 0.ft't, u appltaDN
dial•.
-Qw 9'ouO ~' a butJdi•I COD· tract«.
-TM Dld17 llU6t. U1110 tmdoir.
-lbcl Doc~ ............... . A.lid,., .......... ~,..., ... ~
- -• 1' -•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. July 9, 1981 H I F
'Dallas' star won't fight nude photos
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Vlctorla
Prlnclpal, an actresa on the "D.Uaa"
televllloo Hrle1, hu dedd.cl not to ob-
tain a court lnjuncUon a1alnat publlca-
Uon ot nude pbotovapba taken ol her ln
1968.
The actreaa sou&bt a temporary
restrainini order a1aln1t Velvet
ma1uine to atop the dlttrtbutlon of its
September ltaue which carria the nude
phot.oe, said Lanny Sher, a apoteaman
for the ma1uine1s d.ialrlbutor, Flynt
Distribution Co.
'UNDERAGE'
Victoria Principal
However, Mias Princlpal's attorneys
declined to post a $500,000 bond which
U.S. District Court Judie TelT)' J . Hat-
NO DEALER
SALES
AD STARTS
THURS.
TEAi PARQUET FLOOR TILE
·•·
I ,
l .
:l l , '•" ,,,.._,, ..
~ ~ ,,
I ?i7
rr
A c~ looking floor.
12"z12' tU... LOoka
even better with age.
(Okay, no joke. about
the mother -in-law.)
TEITURE T 1-11 s;,"
EXTERIOR SIDING
13~.?
Give your hoUM a new look
and increue ita value at the
same time. Grooved 4 inch•
on c.nter.
BEHR NWF
NATURAL CLEAR
WOOD FINISH
7~
Brings out the natural grain of the wood
and giv .. it a rich oiled appearance (kind
of like one of thOM guys from Texas).
HEAVY Dun 16-3
SJT OUTDOOR
EXTENSION CORDS
2s rr.
sorr.
loo rr.
3.44 s.ss
8.88
THE
BELLFLOWER
THE
SANTAANA
ter Usted u a condition for the restrain·
ln1 order. Sher aald.
The actress will punue ber lawsuit
aaainst Velvet masastne and ll'a
publisher, Eton Publ11bin& Co .• Inc.,
her attorneys said. ln the suit, Miu
Prlncifal asked for an unspecified
amoun of dama1es for publication of
the pictures claimina they constitute in-
vasion of privacy and would cauae her
persooai and professional harm.
Mlas Principal said she was under·
age when the Ul68 pbotovapbs were
taken and she alle&edly was drugged by
photographer Len Camp during the
photo session.
"We oblalned the pictures of llJu
Principal legltlmately," uid David
Zetner, publllher of Velvet matatlne.
"We have a le1al. siped model releue
and a written statement from the pho-
tographer, Len Camp, indJtaUna that be
saw her sian the release and that abe
was over the ace of 18 when tbe 11ped.
We intend to defend the damaae action
vigorously."
Miss Principal was featured in a nude
layout in the September 1973 issue of
Playboy magazine.
Miss Prlncipal's agent, Georce
Kervey, said she was born Jan. 3. 1950.
SCREEN DOORS
I' ' } I J
lnclud• the sil.nt door clo.er, the
hinq•. the adjusting channel.a, the
knob, the latch, and the instruction..
Leta the stuffy and stat. air out and
frah •unun•r air in.
I\
'""'"
THE
LA MIRADA
TIE
BELLFLOWER
Mill Finish,
30", 32", or 36"
TIE
LA MIRADA
Mill FlnUh. 30", 32", or 36"
129
1997
SUIBEAM
GAS GRILLS
SINGLE BURNER
Broil tantalbing monela on
one of th .... Hu 250 91q. in.,
a 20 lb. tank, and la•a rock.
18,000 BTtrs. Limited to
stock on h&nd.
87!?
WELLER 100/140 WATT
SOLDEllNC GUI llT
12~8~PK
lnclud• dual h-t
soldering gun, soldering
tip11, tip changing
wnnch, fluz bru.h,
90ldering aid tool. solder.
and C&M.
EASYDllVER
8 PC. BONE&:
AUTO TOOL llT
9!?.a
Great little gadget. Work. for phillip•
-.ere ... •lotted screw.. and drivu standard
and metric sock.eta.
For power tool.a or lawn mowel'8 or for the
patio. (You could even run your electric
choo choo on the driveway. )
TWIN BURNER 127 .77 •9330
ALLISON
SUI VISOR
INDOOR OR OUTDOOR
LIGBT'COITROL
YOUR CHOICE
4 97 ·~12
EA. OLC-S
Automatically
tur'l\9 light. on
when the sun goe.
down and off when it
riMa. ( Sounds pretty
•mart. How do. it know
how to do that?)
MURRAY
BICYCLES
NEl'l 26"
10-SPEED
ILLUSIOIS llU
Stem mounted gear
Mleotion, sicl• oull
hNW, and 28"'al~"
bladnrall Ur..
s..hawk Blu. finiah.
01 20'' WIEIL
DEICllD 1111
Hu ~\&8tahla roli. tn-~..,..cl
°"'""'I oc1om.-UMl ...............
CALIFORNIA CLIPPER
GAS MOWER
19" 3 HP
97~~
Thia la our own
brand. Th ... guya
Aaftto pau eom.
ri9id t..u befon
we'U .. ll 'em.
Good mow.r at a
good~.)
·~2~ Stop 91quinting. ThU'll
k .. p the bright glar. from
straining your •Y• ( unl ... you can lift
younelf to ... beyond the horizon ) .
ALLISON AIR
COOL CUSHION
I ~~102
Have you ever Nt ~~~p~-down on a hot car Mat
in the •ummer and then
stood up rMl fut? Well, maybe you need
one of th ....
{QUAKER.
·" STATE
~
\HYTOR Oii
QUAID STATE
MOTOR OIL
30WT. 77!r.
20W/50 WT. 83:r.
A word from the ..U.. Check your oil
&.ciuentl1 to ... if you n..d to add mon
or chan~ it. It'll .... J'OU in th• lonv nm.
EACU l ~ wmnm
CLUllllm
2~!oe .ia
~..---~--~~..-~_...-•"":'"'~++-'+..-w_...4,...; .... 00"W .. U~4 .................................................... ,.. ....... ~0Pllllll~
' rfA H/F
PVaUCNOTIC&
~
Orange Cout DAILY PILOTIThuraday, Juty 9, 1981
"18UC HOTIC& PV'aUC NOTIC&
.
PUBLIC NOTICE
.
PVBUC NOTICE
., ... ,_..,_..Or.,.. Ceetl OlllY ......
J-u. J¥r '· •. 14, "'' ... ,
PVBUC NOTICE
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
Ha LIN LOUISI!
110T1ca111vn1 .. a10. F LA NAG AN A ... D 0 F
Htllct It ,,., .. ., 1lw11 tllet Ille P I! T I T I 0 N T 0 A D
... ,. ., y,..._"' ... HW11t"'9Mft MINISTE R ESTATE NO .. ~II Ullltn Hltfl k'-' Oltl•lct wllt a 1_,.1, rece1.,. MtlM •I•• for t11pptyl"I ,.. v-•
....... y !My Turf ,....., .._. .... w T 0 • I I h e I r s ' PICTITICXJS au1t•H• _, .. ._ ..,..i11ea1....,.,.111e 111 IN benetlclarles, creditors NAMalTATHWMT PICTITIOU1au11M•U etfke"'MldDllVkt. d t i t edlto of 'ecttTIOUS avt1••11 Tll• 1o1i.w1119 ._,...,, .,.. "'"' •AMa JTAT•MaNT 110 a11e11 " <, .. ,,., "'.,,,. an con noen er rs
.....,.. ITAT .... ..., --•: 111• 1011ow1no "''°"' ••• 0 1110 "H••v., CMy r..n -...... ai. .... Helen Louise Flenegen Tile 19tltwlftl --· are ... .,. IOLAR ENTEllPRIH•. ''° -· lllltlMUet ....... --.. All'rll I . ,_...,...,, and persons Who may be
....__: Yale L .... l,..,lne, Callfomla 91714 IS LANO FASHIONS, JUI Merine P11r<llH l119 Meneear, H1111tlftllt4I th f f t t-1 the I OUZV llOIJOa, 1110 NewjlOft l.ae LlllleMY. ltO W..I Vele 1.-. Avenue, a ell>Oa Island, C•lllor11la •Hell IMIOll HI ... S<Nol Olttrkt, 0 erw se n eres ~ .. n AQftve, ..._,, 9-11, Callfemla lnol.,.,c:.1"9nlt•'2714 r.1662 tOUl Yor11tow11 Avt ., HIHlll"llon Will and/or estate: . "*' Tiii• ~It c.~ llY M 111. Or•"''"' hterprlM• Inc., • 1 .. c11, Cell,.,.,,.•.,..., -,_.,_ A petition has been filed -PUBUC NOTICE TH•w111, lllC. u 1Ma1 Ort .... di•..._• e a111orn•• ,..._ .. ,.,..et• s...111 111 •• ,., .....,.•2:00p.ll\., Fr!My,JOJAy 11. by Kathleen V irg in i e ,.CTITICXJS 11U1tM•11 PUBLIC NOTICE c-.i MM, c:.llfenlla nus, • LM LMllMY .. .,.. k-•. ~ Anoelfl. C..lfl«rll• 1•1. •• ~ tlffte .,. ,. _ _... wlN
MAM91TATSMa•T ._ c.11tw•--•1en. Tiii• -•• 111M w1t11 .. •oon 11e"9!1c1,,..,.__....._ Sellers In the S uperior r111 1e11ewlfte --· •
1
• •t1
11
1 P1C11TiOUS11U.,••• PtCTtnOU111UMM•t1 T11i.......,...,. _.., • c.or· c~nty citn e1 o.-eo.;,ny ... Tiii• bw&l'-• I• 'Ofldll<teo oy • cor· Eec11 llld 11w11 ,_.., •••1e1 1« • Court of Orang e County
IMitl-•: MMM ITAT•llMMT llAMa ITAThl9NT -••left. T....-. lllC. J-•· ,.., ,1 .. 141 Ptr•tkln H rlod of • ••n att•r tll• •••• requesting that Kathleen • o,. EHTER"UMS, ,,, La Pwtot Tllo .......... ....-It ...... ...._ T11e ,........_ ...,_ 11 ....,. MA. ~ ... .._Pr"'" Gf900l'l.,.Ent.,r>rlM1.1nc. -ll1Mtort11e rec•t11t"'Mee. Vfrnfnla Sellers b e ep Plect,C..UM9M,CA"'21. ,,. .... ., ....... , ~ • PvblltllMOr.,..C..ttOelly Pli.t, Karl G••OOflut,M D .• Tlle ...... lllT"*"tlMllllelftt • • ll•INrt G. H•llletl, 171 La P•rlt Siii HOule l!NT•R,lllHS, as ANOll.IQUa·s INT•lltOR, .. Tlltf--. ·-lllM Witt! -J11lf2,l,14.U,ttl1 29)0.41. PrH ICltnl oolt Jll4ett11111t..i1tvt11e.,lpmen1 poi nte d as p ersona
P•ec•,c.taMIM.CAttiJ
7. CoottY,...,Uewna._11.c:.llfwllla Wu• tttll llrHt, C•••• Mota, c:-1,ei.rti•0r .... c--, ... J11Ay Thi• •la•-•••• 111.-wllh 111e Offerect.,...r--u.,..,..tort1«1 representative to a d
• KllllrYft L HMQtl, "' ... "9rle ""' Calll•t•--',,., ' PUBLIC NOTICE County Clttlr. OI Or.nee CCKlnt.,, on •11' «all t114111 -to •-'•• eny ••. minister t""e estate 0
,.
lece, c...-... CA .V. $111r'ley $. "9ltlecl'I. 1U Ceao1 View, .. ..._.. ~ 1_,1 , .......... lf-...o ' ' Pl .... I J""' ,., Itel roeulerlty ...... n. "
L•!,..,.,. c. ._. .. , S2t v1a LIM ut-9Mdl.G11~tas1 o.,;.~~ ........ ·-.. 1""911.._.o.-.,...c..11 o.i1.,"..._ Pi.-. S1eM11·A1i,,..E.1t-.., Helen Louise Flanagan
-N...-tlaadl.CA'2'61. Tlllt lMIMst l•<~..,.,.fflo Tlll• ......... l•<"""<-•ran ..... JwlyJ, •• 1,n,1t11 ~· NOTICI! OF PVILIC AUCTIOH OF P11bll"*IOrenoec...10.11yPllot. l'\wc.halftl~r (under the Independent
Tiii• ... _, •• c...-..Ct"' h • dM ... 1 ......... -p I II s 0 H A L p R 0 ,. I " T y J11ne ... u. Jlllv 2, •• ltl1. J13WI ,.,, .. ,.,., Orango C..lt 0.lly PllOt, Adm lnlstratlon of Estate-s .. -·•-IMftftlp,. WrtrrS.Leltcll ...,.....e-PUBLIC NOTICE "EMAIHING OH VACATED July2,t,1111 ,,....,
"*'1G. H-.ii Tiii• ...--•• ,, ... """' .. T1111 ........,.. -,, ... ••111 "" PREM1su o" l'ORMIR TaNANT..---__ A ct). The petition Is set for
·Thia --••
11
'" •
1
1t1 ... c-ty0trtlof0r-.cewncya11Jw1., c-1., e.1 ... 11., 0r..,.. c_,,,"' -·----------7""4. 1cc1•1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO·TICE hearing In Dept. No. 3 at j:Olllll'f CIH1ltt0r .... C-yw.Julr 1 ,,., J-U 1"1 PIC11110UlllUllM•ll Notice •• her•bY o•v•n on Jiiiy -·--------·--700 Civic Center Drive,
•· ""· u... . . ,,.,.. . . ,.,._, NAMlllTATU..fltT 17, ""· •• 7:Jo P.m .. •• 2on111 PICT1nouaau11Nau -•1CT1T1ou1·au1111a11 -West, In the City of Santa I P·· .. ·1-~ Or-c:.talt o.11'y ' ... ,... ,.., .. ,.,., 0r.,.. Coelt Dally Piie!. P\IMllflM Or .... c... 0.11., ....... Tiie ,........ --It .. "' ~ New-1 ..,..,, __ In C:.la -... ....... STATaM .. IT ~
Jyty"r. µu,.-;--ii1 .... , Jw1y2,t, 1t,u, 1111 2"Mt. J-u.Jwya.•.•. '"' ..,.., ....... : 0t..,.. c...ty,"" llftdlW..,... •Ill r11e , ......
111
__,,,*"no._.. NAMaSTAT•MaMT Ana, <:allfornla ort July 29
... CHRIJTY MAT & I'll.AMI, , .. , Mii ai ~ -11 ... tfle ,..._... -.... .. Tr.. 1o1-.no ---It"''"' ....... 1981 at 9: 30 a .m . P UBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI aUllN•U MAM41 ITAHMaMT Tiit loll-lftl PWMnt ert Cloln1
INMftH•at: MY PLAC~ SeSI c:-.i.rclal Of.,
H11nll""°" a...11, CA '""1 Cherin......,., 1,.. -..-. C:O.·
Illa, CA t11U.
Vine..,. a-. 11009 -....OW. c .. -
11'1•, CA t11U.
Thll IMl•I-It onOllcttd •1 a ·-••lpeN ...... ~-W.9-Tlll1 ... .._. -llled •IUI IM County o..ti Ill 0r.,.. c-.tY.,. JllAY
J, 1N1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE
PICTITICXJI 9U_,N•ll llAManATaMaMT
Tiie leli-lftt --II dolftl llutl-netoet:
MAllTECH, 2111 laytllor•a.
N"'"" 9Mdl, CallfWnle t1Ml Art""r Wllllam t1111ntll, H te
••Y....,_, "'-1 .. ac.11, Cefllornle
'*' Tlllt ..,_ I• <atldwcleel by a.I lft.. Cllvl...,.,
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITICIUI au1111•11
MAMm nAT•MllMT The follow!"' _.., It dltlftt IMlll· neuu :
EPSTEIN$ I OOY SHOP, 22U
•m•rlceft A.,,.n.,•, Cott• M.,a, Celltornle,_.
JOllft Epttel11, 22U A"1•••<•n
Awnw, COila MeM, CalllW!lfe t2'» Tlllt bwlne• 11 <°"""<lad by Oii lfl. CIMClvel.
PUBLIC NOTICE
~onw,S..C..AM,Cellfemj• ,.,..,..,._,,T•tWeM.s.tcipr_...., Sl!COHOS TONOHE.M s-r1w ,..,.~~T 0 ,. THE wooo·s • .,., IF YOU OBJECT to the
Wlllf•m c . McN•wn, 1•u 1 ,_ltta ll~~S.lfauc· Clrc1e.c.1aMoM.c.at11orn1en.JJ ""-• 0r1.,,., u Mew, c.111wn•• grantin" of the petition • tloll wlll lie mtde --• 10 tfle Pf~ J-c I'll-. ., S-.IM Cir· "
0n....i1e Drtw, s.c. AM nm •l•lons of Secllon t• 01 ,,.. Cl•ll c1e, Cost• Mn.. caiiiwn1a nu7 "°41 you should either appear
Tiii• --
11
'°"41uctH lly .., lft. COdt. o.teoJ-1t, l"1 Thlt ~-,, ~ondllcttd .... .,. ,,,. Z.M. '"-1111Y1 SI-•. tltj Monone at the heart""' and state dM4111al. ,_ 1.A1ae I .... •• Drive, Le Mow, Call!ornle tllWI '"'
Wllllal'll C.Mc--. , ... 1 ~u.uattc dv1-e1. Tl\ls11ut1neu •'<ondueleoby e111n. your objection s or f ile
T111t .....,.. -,. ... •'"' .,,. "........., ... ,ca.'"'" Tiii• ... t=::; ~~~ ,.1111 .,,. e11 .. 1e1ua1 written objections with the
c ... 11ty ctertt .. 0r1111111 c-ty .,. ~,,,_,er.,.. co .. 1 o.11y P•tot. '°""IY C••f'll of 0r.,... c-tY on Tllh ... =::;,SI::• 111., wnn ·~ court before the hearing
JWIO "· '""· ·1~ ~Illy 2, '· 1'11 "74-41 ,_ ''· ..... u~ You appea a e y be
r ---PlMIM County Clerk of O<onoe Co..nly on r r nc ma ~,.,.. 0r .... ca.. o..1y ll'li.t, CE J...,. ••. "" in person or by your at J-u, Jwr 2. '· 16. '"" -.1. PUBLIC NOTI · ,..,DI,_ 0r-. c..tt o.11y "''°'· ,.,..._. torney.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITICXJ1 au11Na11
NAMa ITATaMaWT Tl•• 1o11-1ne .-non• ••• Nine M l-. .. :
HESSE REAL l!StAtE
l!NTERPRISES, UIS a111e Ker, COf'one dltl Ml>r. c:.111or111a ••u
"C'Ttnous IUSINHS lfAME ITATEMaNT
J-u. Jwlr 2, '· "· 1111 JIM.ti. Publl-OrM91 Coe" Dally Pllo1,
___ Juno 11. u. Jlllr 2, t, "" 2122•1 I F Y 0 U A R E A
PUBLIC NOTICE Tiie 1o11-1no P"'°'" •rt 00111~ DYJIMUes: --P UBLIC NOTICE 1( FI. PARHIER$HIP. • PICTITIOUlaUllM•U
G•ll•••• Perlne~IP. IOU Ptrt.11111 NAMll ITATaMalfT NOTIC• INVITINO ••DI Drive, ~. Me>e, C.lllornle, P.O. Tr.. IOl'9owtft0 ,..,.,.. It clolftO IMl•I-Notice 11 r..r•by 0,.,,.11 lllet ,,,. lo• 11 IJO, Coste Moe, C•lllornle ,,_...at; loent of T .... "' Ille Hlllltlnv\Oft
'2627 THtl MOPPETTS CLEAN ING ,,.,_Sc 01 k I K•llly s.. Crolool »MS Pine Gto .. SE RV IC.. tll _, ..... Ori.... C•l• I HCll Ulllerl H.., -•Ir t. II p=::::::.-::-PICTITIOUI •u11 ... u c.:...-:. ~ ~.0.:~' .:: ic • .,.
NOTIC• OP Tll• le!l-1"9 --• ar• del119 llAMa ITATUUINT 11-i. I . .._, M IS a111e Ker,
PU9UCMRAIUNOS NI-•; The ......... --It dDlnl bvol· Corona dltl """· Galllornl• n..u •PR NOTICE IS HEREaY GIVEN INI NEWPORT PROTECT ION MM••· Tlllt ....,,,_.II c--by.,. 11'1-
• "'• n'""' • rKeln Meltd bldll IOf' WCll>lyfno Gym Road, La Pine,°'-t711' Mua. CA.,..._ Fl-Reflnltlllng -une Of' -· to Frtdlj Clletley,17111 Mcl'llCleltn, CAlllOLVN II.ACK, tel p,_.ICllo IM..-CllkelloNOftfllot lftlfteolftuef • 12, T11tlln, C•lllornl• tlleo, P.O. Orin . c:.c.. MMa. CA "2lla. Mid Olatnct
l oa to.», C..le "'-u, C•lllornle Tllll .....,,... It c_..., lly M lrt· lldt _,,·lie clMt'ly ,,_....., "Gym
CREDITOR or a c ont
lngent c reditor of the de
cea sed, you must file your
cla i m w ith the court or
present It to the personal
representative appointed
by the court w ithin four
months from the date of
f irst issuance of letters as
provided In Section 700 of
the Probate Cod e of
California. The time for
filing clalms will not ex-
pire prior to four m onths
from the d a te of the hear-
ing noticed above.
llle Clly C:..-11 -, ... PIMnlftt SYSTEMS, 1J74 LollM. C.la Mn.a, KOELZER, LAYNE & AS· div..,...
CommltVcln o1 , ... Clly of La9'1na c.tllwftla... SOCIA TES, llOOl Sier Park Circle, ........ .._ Beecll will llold l'llllfk HMrlfl9& ,.... lelll lwtu, '111 K-. HIHll· S..lte "L", lrylfte, C..llfornla 91714 _,... C. H-~rCllng the Coattal l"len •« tlw City '"''°" 9-11, c..llfwtlle nMt w1111.,.. Koelu r, MO .. -.,, Ho. Tlllt ·~ •at llleo wllll Ille ol L•o-llMc:ll <OMl•Uno of • text MIMI• lallarCI, SSJO ,., •• , ""'· C•la,,..., Catllomt•flUt County Ci.rt of Oret>ge C-ty Oii Cle1<rlbl119 ,_ rtlau .... IO .... ,, ac· AVtll11•, ..._., a..c11. Calllorlll• Tiii• bull-It CClftd\lcted by M Ill-J-16, 1"1. <Ht, bluff ll'Ol«tiof\, vacant I-oe. t2'4J e11v1e1 ... 1. ~-1
'2t27 OMelllel Fi-Reflni"""'-91e1 No ........... w1111 ...... H. °'""'· 1017 Parklllll c.rotY11 •1«t ClrHMd lo AllYll E. R-tey. """<"-Orlv•. C.la Mewl, Cellfornle ttU7. Tlllt lte--t •• ftled wlltl Ille lno Me.....,., Hllflli"lllton llMcll Vrtlell
P.O. loo IOS.7, Co11a MeH, Cellfornle COYnly Clerk of 0..anet C-ty on HIOll Sc,_ District, 11111S1 Y-l-
tli17 J..,,. 2J, 1"1. Ave., H1111tlneton 9ffch, C..llfomle Tiii• 11 ... 1neu Is COlldUCltd Dy • Pl-92646, •nd rec.I .... at« Mfor• 2.JO
oenerel -1nenNp. Pvbllatwd Orenoe Coast Delly Piiot. p.m .. Frleley, JllAy 11. Itel, et wt.Id\ t •lopmw.1 • ...,, ... ,Ch. ••ell ...... .,. Tiii• lluslneu It <-cl"' •Y • WIMIMI Koelzer Pul>fl"-1 Or ..... C..•I o.11, PllM,
JlelO PCIOlt, -1<ul!Wll land -...... .,.._,., -"....... Tlllt Ntement wa flied Wllll U. J-11, U, Jwly 2, t, '"" ,,,.., w1111.,.,., H. Cr.iler J..,,. u , JllAy 2. '· "· '"' :iai•1 11-end Piece bldll .. 111 .,. pulllkly Tlllt ,.....,_I was Ill• wllll Ille _.., -l"Md. ••nd ., .. I ..... In CWIJWldloll wlttl • MIMI•......... Co..nly Clenl of Or .... C-ty Oft
,,.,._. Clee>lctlng fvtwe 1-lllft lft llW Tlllt ..__ -ftled w1UI 1119 J-It, ltel. PIMm
):Uy. C-ly Cl-of 0reft99 C-y Oft PybflalWd C>enge C.0.St Dally Pltel, • SAID PVILIC HEARINGS wlll lie JllNH,1111. ,,_ J-lt,",JllAr 2,t,ltll 210$-11 "•'Cl •• follows: Mofteler, • .,...., >. ~tl1 at 7:00 p.m. Joint StYdy Seulon -Pllllll"-I Orango eo..t Oell't Piie!.
£11y c-.11, P1ann1no CommlukM J11N u , Jwly 2. '· 1', 1"" -..1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE
Co11111y Clerk of Oren91 COYlll'r on ---------EKll bid ttwll retftalft .. 11d I« •
J-
16
· "" PUBLIC NOTICE 11trtoc1of•c1evsefl•rt,,.c1atupe<1t1.ci l'IMUS tortller~of....._ PYbll-Oanoit COH I Delly Piiot, ---CPP ._,. Tiie ...... "' T,,,,.._ tllell Ille U..
JIH\t "· u. July 2· •. "" 2HH1. NOTtc• OP T•U1T••·1 uL• IOI• Judge Of""-"'" of -lpmertl PICTITIOUS aus1NaU r-----T.I. .... 71114 offered Md -Ille rleflt to reject
HAMa ITAtaMalfT PUBLIC NOTICE TllUSTOR: ~ .. ,.,.y 111 .,., « e11 llldl -to ... ,... .,.Y Ir· Tiie lof-ng ...,_ It doiftt lllltl· OIMa 0 . htMy ,.....1artty tllertln.
PUBLIC NOTICE
•nd CUI.ten T-F«ce; W"""4a.,. 4'1Y011tt I. 1"1 at 7:00 p.m .... _ ....
.£0ft'lmlulofl P\elk _,,., -MM-
.,., , AYO&S 17, '"" at 7;00 p.m. City • ~II "'*lie ........... •II to lie IWICI )n Ille City C-11 C11am11er1, 505 ~ore1I A••nue, la911ne l ••cll.
,.... ••· ~ Oft July n . t"1, et to:• e.m .• ....,.. 5'i1Nd; Alfrtit E. "owtey, CAL.ottA LIMI TEO, esn .._..,,, IUN••• COUllT 0' TM• °' ~ Stfvka Corp ... ...,, -Pwc1wo1111 ~ 'ICT1TIOUI 9UllN•ta A-. .._Pen, C.Ollfwnl• .... ITATa OP CAUPOllNIA p01fttff Trwtw ...... ---1 to PvDllatwd Or .... Coast Delly Piiot, 'ICTITIOUS 9UllN•ll ....... ITAHMllMT Oorlt ... w-....n, :11G .... at.... PO• T'll• COUllfTY OP OttANO• 0.... ol Trwl l"KoNoct ~ u. July 2, •• ••1 ~ NAMa ITATaMaNT The ,..,...... ,.._ It ....... llllt'-UM,"-' .. ad!, C..llfomle 11MO f1tO. D4MI 1'10, H IMt. No. U117, In -117•,
II• 1011ow1n9 "''°"' •r• c1o1ne ASSEMaLt: ClllAl'T, 1541.0 llmltodpertftWllllp. ..,,_.,.,.... llu ofllleC-«rAecw.,.ofOranee T ,.,. "' Tlllt llutlnets 11 <Oft•..c:ted by • OttDall TOIMOW CAUla ~,.,.,of Offlcltl Re<welt In°"'-'· . PUBLIC NOTICE
YOU MAY EXAMINE
the file kept by the court .
If you are Interested In the
estat e, you may file a r e-
q uest w ith the court to re-
cel ve special notice of the
in\lentory of estate a ssets
and of the petitions, ac-
counts and report s
described In Section 1200.5
of the California Probate
I·.
'Calllornla.
• YetN L. Rofll .... r City Clerll
PuotltMCI Ol'ango Ceo•I Dei ty PllO(. J11ly '· ... ,,., ,..,.1
PUBLIC NOTICE
COde.
bu1l11eu•: Adami ... nu, Co•t• Mttt, 0or11A. waterman ,__._..,.._. COYnly. s1et• •• celllomla, WILL John C. Penney; Penney
WESTGROUP MARKETING, Cell,.,,.,.... Tiii• ..__ --flled wllll .... Dwlelo...... SELL AT PUILIC AUCTION TO PUllUCH•v•c• & Penney, Attorneys •t llOOS Slty Perk, lnolne, C:.lllornla Hen., J. lmltfl, uto ,...._, County Cl«lt of Orange C-ty Oft CU MIS INSURANCE SOCIETY, HIGHEST l lOOER FOi. CASH 1 ~w t71 Vi• Lido Suite
'2ll4 _..,,a.d\.c..11......,.~ J-"·'"' l•C., Plelnllff, wt Ei.NEST C. (peye•ta 81 time of Mle In ltwf11I A....,MCaMaWT -' ' ••tn. ........ w., ....... •nCI Tlll•...._ia ~..,1111 11\. PlMm CROSS, •t1• DOES I lllro119ll )(, mert•Y"' ... Unli.ct Slat•) .. Ula The CN ................... "'·-203( ewport Beach,
Cllendlw Corp., Cellfwlll• 1.0S Sky div.-.. PvOll-Or-C..tt Oatlr PllOt, ln<lvtlw, ~... meln _,enc. IO~ of Monaoeo• -·· "" ....,_........ "' IN CNld C• I fornl• 92663. ( 714) PeTrllkl•,1:-'~~llsfOf'nlc_!~ .. we cor. HarlrtJ.Sn1Ull J -ll.U,July?,t,1111 JUWI. TO OIFt:NOANT, ERNEST C. Se rvice Corp., 2M S. Plectnlle, Car• Food Preer .... Moelt wlll lie
6737120 -·~ --.-v, Tllh .....,_ -lllM wllll llW CROSS: PlecentJa, CA n.10, ell rllfll, llllt -evellablt at no MPOrat• <llMoe t:o -•
P«•llon. Covntr c1er11 01 0r.,... C-ty"' vou. AHO EACH OF YOU, ••• 1ntor .. 1c......,.1o_now,,.1c1-,11 •11•011• ,,,....,..,., Tiwrt w111 11e no Published Orange Coast NI""' a.t.ft, .....,,, Roel.,, W•r J-u , 1111. PUBLIC NOTICE ...,.MY...,..,, t• __. '" 11111 CMwt under u ld OMO of Trwl In,,,. p,..,.,. owrt ...,.lfic.tkM ol clllf*., r«elw· Daily Pilot,
PICTITIOUlaUMM•U ancl CllOneller Corp. Pl.... _ ~ In Dtperlm•ftt 24, et 1111 County ty 111 ... tecl '" wld C-ly orid Slate 1"9 lroe Md rMllc:ed IWke ,,..., -J uly8 9 15 1981 NAM• ITAT•MaNT ~ a.t.n, PrMldenl ............ Or .... CMlt Deolly Pitel, C~rt...._, 1'D O•k Contw Ori_.. dtt<r .... a · ,....,, will be.., ........ wl~ ,..._,.. / ' ' Tll• 1o11-11111 pertont ... Cl•ln1 Tllll ·~ WM llled •ltll .... J-U.J1111a.•.J6. I"" mw1 NOTICE OF DEATH OF ..... SMla AM, Cellfonll•, ... 5-t. TllOM ,.,,,_"'Loi J of Traci IMl7 to •IC•,~ ... Ntlanel orteln. ____________ _ 3066-81
..... -•: Coullly Clerk o! Oret>ge c-ty •n JAN ET ELIZA.ETH 12, Itel ........ 1'11., IOllW M'r ..... lnlll•Cltyaf lr¥1M,CowttytfOr.,.., '"'*llllM Or ..... eo..t Delly....... PUBLIC NOTICE JOHN OAVIO l(IHG & AS· J-1'.l"1 P UBLIC NOTICE KOEHLER AND OF ,__...., .. c-1,,_ld,,..,_ Stet•"' cei1-. ... ---~ J11lyt.ltll ..... ·---SOCIATES, 12dl .,_,_.,., S..lte E. 1'16Ga p TI ION TO a D • Writ "' e.-i ... • ,_.... -, c......, In -M peen• and »,,,. ---
Gardt11 Gro¥e, CA t2MI. 1>11111t.-e>enge eoetto.ityll'l10t,-E T ,. -Pletnt1fftnt1w~e11e111.•u11r "' ctuatv•.•Mlacell-Meps, ,... PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICEOFDEATH OF JOHN OAYIO l(ING, 21112 He.-JllM II. U.Jllly J, t, ltll 21atM1 P•CTITIOUS 9UllN•U MINISTER ESTATE NO. wtlkll It an.c11oe1 to tllh OrelOr. AIM cor-lnbooll IUUpage 1005, Offlcltl ANN S. BELL AND OF
h ie Lene, H11ntlnoton IH<ll, CA · NAMa ITAT•MalfT A·10'421. etlaclled IWnte Ith Holk• •-•reo Recorelt. -p E TI T I 0 N T 0 a D
nM6. · PUBLIC NOTICE Tiit 1011-1,.. ...,. .. n• ••• c101ne T 1 1 h 1 ws.c11ort•.J1of111e c.at11omte Codt PARCEL 1: u"u S7 n •-...., PICTIT10U11u11Nass ""
WILLIAM J . l"Lt:MING, "" ' IMIMMUA: 0 • e r s ' "'Cl•ll "'-....... Cletcrllled In Ille ~I-Pl... HAMalTATl:M•NT MINISTER ESTATE N O. ···-Ori .... , HvntlnotOfl .. acll, CA • ltOflca TOCl*'T•ACTOttl lllN• MORDINI GALLl!RY, ~ beneficiaries, cred itors DATEO-'-D. 1"1. flKOf'ded .. """' '· 1'7S, •• lnttno-Tiie followtno _._, ,, "°'"' """ A -109373. nw.. CA.UJ,,.. P01t a i1>1 "''• a-1o •7 • ...._, .. ac11. CA and contingent creditors of Eciw..J. we1111'I. .....,, ..,., in -11J7•. -14)1, Of· 11eu a.·
T111s llusl-• I• <ondv<t.ci •r • f2'6J Janet Elizabeth Koehler J..._. .... ~., C-'1 11,,.1 111ecore1s, 01 ora.1oe c~"''· coHYEHTION EHTERPR1$ES T o a I I h e i r s , ---··~ k"'-IOUillr~:~UHYlllF# of "ENE LOUISE MOlllOIH I, .,. LAWOPPICSI Celllornle. UNLIMITEO, •17 Collffftb<n ClrCI•, bene ficiar ies c reditors ""°' o 1tl110 •
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• O'ci. •·"'· ,..,,, .... __.....,, ut 0c-..,..,., and persons Who may be IPllAY, eouLO & 90W•11t ,AllCEL 2. "" undlvldtd -•I•· cor.,.. ••,,,.,mu nd c orttl""'e t' editors of This .......,.,.,, w• 111ee1 •"" 111e ""
17111
...,.,Jwy, ttll. H••-19Mc11,C.Af'2MI. otherwise Interested In the •~•it 11_1 ~..._ tylourtll lfllor•t., • T.....,t 111 c-. a • ..._. A. P••en ••1 eo111mtM a .. ,. n er
County C••n 01 Or•ne-c_.., ... Plac•flf llCI Rec•: 9llllMu Of. Tlll•~t•conc1yc-bra cor· wlll and/orestate: _ • .....,...__11 • ...., m011 In .,,. IM lntertst In anc1to 1,,. c1rc1e,Coroneci.1Mtrnus Ann S. Bell a nd persons
June u. 1t11. 11<•. O<-..,..,. Sc'-1 Dlttrkt, , .... pore11on. La......_ ca..,. c ..... "'°" Art• of u lcl Lot., u l• trec:t Tiii• lllnliwtt t• conducted by •n In· who may be otherwise In · ,, .... Sir•••· Ht1nll
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... Ch, lllEH• MORDINI GALLElllV A petition has been filed T ... (nJI....,.. ..... ,II"""",. defined In .... Artl<I• CIMdu•I terested in the Will and/or Pvbll.,,... 0r.,... Coa•l Delly Pllol, c.lll«llla. R-Montllll, by Bank of America N T PW!I.,.. 0r-. ca.at Oe11., PllOt, •nllllect "OoftnKI-" of "" Deeter• lerller• A. Paten E
Jyly J, t, 16, u .1•1 29't1•1 "••led ldoo'ltlllultteft "-: Tt r• ........... & S .A . In the S uperio; J-U.Jllly2,t, 16. ,,., 217M1 llon ol COYell•nU, c:.Mltlon•, .... Thi• Sla'-t .... , Ill-wllh ,,.. s tate.
pelr, •--,..,. ••• or rMWfaca Tlllt ~ •• IJted wltll u.. _ ""trlcU-r--.o., ._,II u, ms Countr Cltr' of 0••"98 CCK1nty 01 A petition has been filed
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PUBLIC NOTICE
PtCTITIOUI llUll N•ll "AMEITAHMaMT
Tiit lelltwl119 perMftt er• clol119 """""••: C.O. CORPORATION OaA UHITEO YACHT a llOKEllS OP
CALI l'ORHIA, UM Vi a OP•rle, N•WllOrf ...... Cel'-a tlMJ
HI ...... I'. ~. 1n.p "'"""'" Avenue, ~ 9Mcll, Galllwrtla ,,...,
J acq11ellnt c. 01kr11, 177·1"
lltw•rtldt "-· ,,...._.,.. had!, Catlfomla....,
Tlllt llWI-. It ~ ...... <lM -., a
''"""" INrtl• ...... ......... ()-.,,.
I Tlllt ----ll!M wttll -Co..nty Cltnt ef Or.,.. c-ty 911
:i->l. '""· • Pt'41'94 • Pllt>llatwd Or .... C8MI Oally Pllo4,
J-u. Jwly 2, •• "· ,., ,....,_
a.,._.11 ....,.,. at""" Dlttrkl ScMo1 co..nty c1er11 "' 0r.,... C-ty on Court of Orange County E In ....., 11• . .,... mo. of 0t11c1e1 J une"·'"'· ""'* by Hiiton S. Bell in the st~~ • ..._••°" lltot; ~ ..,.._ J-"· 1t11 Pt .... requesting that Bank of PUBLIC NOTIC ".:°'• :'~C:O:::~"lorftl•, P11D11.,,... o..·.,. Coe•• oe11y Piiot Superior Court of Orange
k,...0t•1ct,...,_.Offke,1 ... ....,.,.,.._.ar._.c.o..to.uy~'°' America N.T. & S.A, be --·.~~P-TT'HEW11tOM~uou 011 June11.u .. Jutv2,t ,•"' 11JW1'.county request ing t hat ·~~m~E~~,~~. J-11.U,JllAyt,t, "" 2114-4i eppolnted as personal NOTIC•OPc::: ••• llALa r11111t, mln•r•••. ml11•r•I rloi.tt Hilton s. Bell be apPolnted
IM·---kllwl Dlllrk t of 'representative to ad-T.S.No.f toSIHOll llllurel OU rl9lltt, end Otll•r PUBLIC NOTICE as personal representative 0r.,... ~. cei1--. ec:u,....., PUBLIC NOTICE minister the estate of on J1111 16, '"' •• 10:00 • M. llydrocerllon• "' •11•1• .. , ner,,. to admin ister the estate of I 114 ... II. J t Ell beth Koehl I UCICEYE RECONYEYANCE COM known ..... ,,..... ... Wltllln w -u. =.':.~~--~~~..... ane H er PANY,•Celltorftle c..._8t1on .. ci..: Perce1"''-florelrMlbow*'<r1.... cPrMft Ann S. Bell (u nder the ln-w1u rKetw,. ... ..,. ,. ~ tllaft P1CT1TIOUl11U11Ma11 (under the Independent 1y eppo1n1•e1 Tr11 t1 .. 1111e1er e11e1 1~ """ .. _......... rlt!M., NOT1ca0Pnu1n••s1.&u dependent Administration
"" ............. "-· -.... for NAMa ITAT•Ma•T Administration of Estates PVriwatino OMO of Trvat Cletad Jiiiy drllllne, ml11l111, npl•rln9, •11d T.I. "°· ,_ of E states Act) The peti· .,,. --"'•_.act fer IN...,.. ..!::.~ ....... ,..,..... 11
...,. IMI-Act). The petition Is set for 21• n 111 rec.ordllCI A119141 u, ,,., .. in. ::~~ .e"'.!;. ~ '*:':,!:.-": TkutTOtt: ti on Is set for hearing In ":l: ....... 1 ... ,~In -.... G -I SWEEPING SHVICE, hearing In Dept. No. 3 at :·~ic~:~~~':.".;"'='o:~,:; .,.., .v;; ,_, lllC ...... .,. rteM lo =·i.:.= Dept. No. 3 a t 700 Cl\llC
l0ont1f1M.._.,..,. ... 1 ._.,..... noo 1rv111e aau1nerd, S••o 120. 700 Civ ic Center Drive, county RecordH.,, Or•noe c-tr. wt1IPM«k«dlrtcU-11rdr1111-•• 011Jwyn,1,...,e110:111e.m.H-Center Drive West in the ,,,. pVllllcly ,..., ...._et ""-.w ,,.,,,.,., CellfOf'nlattJt• West, In the City of Santa Stat• of c.a111orr11e w1u SELL AT a11c1 lllefb Into. ltwwlfl. « •r•• ,,. Of ~ ~. Ow'P. " ""'' c i t f s ' t ' A
...... ''"" .... ~·· ... ---·-P.MdGerelCllM f .Le ... , A c llfor I J I 29 PUILIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST IYMIHfaca of .... ·-hff•INllow ~t•T--~-,..,._nl y 0 an a na. m•rlle• ...... •tOIWkt'•....... ~=:atll, S,. -,,.,,.,,., ne, a n a on u y ' alOOl!lll FOR CASH (peyeC>lottltlme Clucrlhd .... 10 h llom 111(11 llOO....ofTrwtl"Kortl9CIAUrc.111.1• California, on J uly 29, 1981 ••<II .u ....,., '-. '"" ...-• Tiii• _ _.___ 1, ,_..._ ......... _ ,_ 1911 at 9: 30 a .m . of s.1e 1n ·~ _,., ,,.. u111._. •lllpttec-.-« dlrKt1aM111 w111ec1 .. IML ..._ un, 111 ....., 1an., ,... at
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: 30 a .m •
re......i111e t• h~acteecr ti. ------• ~ ~ IF YOU OBJECT to the stateo e1,,.1.-0llWclt entrence of ••II•, •• r"''"'· "'-'· ""''·· ••. tf omc1a1 ,._.,. 111 ""effk• of 1 F YOU OBJECT to the lach 11611 IMll • ace~ -, cii .. ..._., ti of t""-tltlon ,,. Cwittr-.lal H-L-. 11111e11"' e1 .... intalft, ,..,,, ..._ and .., ... Ull COVflly ,.._ Of 0r..., eo-. .
""tacw1ty,.,...,.... '° 111 ... Ulltrect ~-... "· ..._ g r an ng '""' pe ' .,. Sovtll l!uclld, -""-'"'· CA •II eny •uc11 .... , or m111u wlltlollt, t.,, Statt., Celltomla WILLS.LL AT granting of the petition, ._.....,_,,tM ll•t11.,._.. Tlllt ~Wat flltll with Ille YOU ShOuld either eppear rltlll, tllle encl lfll•r"1 '9nvefed to lltWe_..r,111trlof!jto drlll,mlne,1tor"t, PUILIC AUCTION TO HIGHl!ST YOU Should either appear
...-c...iractors. Cou
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t' c1tr1t ot Or-c_., .., at the hearing and state -now 11t1c111'1' 11 _.., u ld °"" o1 Hpi•• ...., ..,.,. •• '""°""' tM 111r-llODl!R l'OR CASH lpeyallM •tu..,. at the hearing and state '
... O'ST•1cT ,~ ...... ,._. ~ J-16· 1"'· :t ti flle r-·•t In'"' --.11 ... 1~ 1n ··'d lee• or Ille.,...,. 50 ,.., of ... ..-. ., .. ,, 111 -... _.,of.,. u11111ed •
" ~~-,...._ PIMM your o ec ons or ·----··· '"' -•11rl•<•••t11e1111d 11ere1" .......... ,>~---~·--tf11w.Your o~ectlons or file r•J«t an.,., •
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w"" l'ubllatwd er.,.. eeott o.i1y Plttt. written Jectlons with the c-y •nCI s1a1ec1tKflt11ec1 .. , dt9C 1..._ -~ ..... ...... _,. * s ltt J ti Ith th ~~lie .. ~,.,.,,,,."''" 111 .. Y J-le.u ,Jwy• '· '"'· 2..__ 1 L01204,ofTrac1 No. .... 1nu.c1-r "',...,. ..... Sorvta c..r,.. . wr en ec ons w e PUBLIC NOTICE --~ ~-.. ·-· court before the hear ng. tvof1 .. 1ne,c-.,.,0r.,.,51a, • ., PAllCl!L ,, ,,..,. ... c, ... ,.,,. ..... P1acW111e, Plec>tf'ltle. c.11tom1• ..n court before the tlearlng.
• TIM Dttlrtct "" ........ ,,_ .,,. Your eppeerenc. mey be IC•1trorn1e, .. -l'NP 'KOf'Wd '" mentt for vtllltlft, ace-. •"'9r-. •II r1t111t t1t1e t1t11c1 1..._t cionw.,.. to y " be ' 01re<1w., 111e O....t,,_t., '"" PUBLIC NOTICE 1 b t ...., U), """,.to 4 1nc1uo1 .... 01 •"'-_,_......,,., .......... -,.,..,;...-~ 11-........w DaMtf our appearance ma,
• MOTIC• OP w.1r1a1 R.iatleN 111e ..,.... .. .,,. ... 1. n penon or 'Y your • -Mltc•n-.-~ "' 111e tfllce ., ..,,, _,. fer --.-.. •II •• '""' 1n .,.. ~ t111M-1n .... In person or by your af-' PUaucMua1 .. 1 ,,.. ,., • ., ... r-...,....,. 111 1111 torney. 111tc°""'Y.-tcon1trof .. 1d cOW11y -11 .---. -,_.... iw u. c-v ,,,. ..... -.u-...., •: torn,r
'NOTICE 11HE11aav01v111 lflal tfle i.c:ai1ty 1n wtlkll ""' _,. 11 .. lie PecttTIOUllMl9'..,. I F YO U A R E A l!XECUTIEOIYi .-011111.r ELDON befwflt., w •"""lit-..'""" LoUI Of Tract,,.. mt .. .,,._.,
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;cur C-11..., 1111 Pl-Ille cam. purfWINd lw .. ell crtft.., '"° ef IUMlllTA,.._MT HOLTAHOSOHJA MAftOARIETAHN Artkle 91\UllM "a-tt" of llll •map,..,.._ In· ....... P ... "tcREOITO R 111o •m1u1ort .,.,.o..,.,,...._..a.ac"'-.-_..,,,,_ ....... '-t ............ ,.,_ .. ..,.. .... C
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REDITO~ or e~0!!.!· HOLT,H-.w-w~ o.c .. ,...,...,..1,..., • ._,,.., Mdtttf~u-....._,...c.,.. or ,. cont-
; •Ill "°111 "'*" HMrlflel ,....,..... tract -,~av DHCHIAH J ._ ngent cred tor of t ... ....-n.e •trwt ...,. _ _. .,.,,.. ~ ,,.!,." .::-• ..,,::"":' ::::-:':. ~ .. Or•• c-ty, CllllfMN. I ngent creditor of the de-
• ...-... ., .. ..._ • ._. .. "" • c..,"' .. ..,......,"" ,.,... ,, ., ·• ceesec:I, YoU must file your "'°" •tloftelton," ....... • ,,. , .. , -., .-......'.:.... .. .::::.: .. ____._... T11es1toot..._..,....,_c_1Ceased "OU must f ile """r , o uere1 P1a11 tt 1.Ate•n• , .. ,11. 111 ..... Dlllrtct ~lltlM Of. .,..._., ...... ., "-Ull!Yal...,. clelm with the court or ,,_..,Y c1ttu1_ .._. ,, -...-~ ......... -·------~ 11 an.,,"' -,..., ~-·-' '1 •-· ....... ,.....,....._.-.c._.-_ 11c• * c-~,....... .-~ CA':"'aoMH ~ MAitCMMAN present It to the per~I te1ta:)Ulcw.m..,1,.,,111e,c.nm t. "' 2 ~ ..._,,,....,.,CA 1y-.,... ...... ~ ...... ic1a lrQ w th the court or :""" .. ~fer.....,.,..,.......,,,..,.. T• ,_ .... .-.. .......... .: The....,,..,.._ Tl'llAlt d1tc1aima n,1~ ._.__,__ T·-...... 1_._. a.n•W-......r•-.eau1a-..: pres-nt It to the personal , "'"-· Tiii II_.,. ,,.,.... • tt lllall • flWMla ... r....,. INC:--,_.. ...... __ ,' 1 4*• -... representative appofnted 1111., llilM!lty tor.,.., lllCtr~-et .... -•....-·--... ....,. C..lfwfllot1U7 t ti I ted
• 11 ... y • ., • .., ,... _ .. ,,....,.. 11t tractor " •flt"' 11111 ce111ract 11 CA .... ~_.__ .... #--.......... ~ by the court within four tM '''"' ....,_ -ttlltf ,_ a11y "*""' 1w ...., IMon-ec:"'"' ., t11t .. ...,
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.,.., Trw.. dlecl..,,._ represen a ve appo n · c.., .. ,.,,. . .....iu .... ....,..,.. 11111u .. .,.._ _....,...., ......,. • ..,. ..... -.. __ .., •.... f ... cie.1....,1on, 1t .. y, •'-"1tert111, tM ••r• ..._.,. ...... ,_ .,.., ,........, .., _, fllcMnc ..... .t lbY the court within four
; •11d "'"' , .. ._1 1tau•1119 l!Wft, .,...r lllfl\ .. ,.., ... ._ IMft ..., ...,,....,, months rom the ... tt of s.ld .... will 11e ,,..., 11111 w1111tut ••IMllefl. If llllY • .,._ "'"""· tfle ....... ...,_ ..., ...... ,_ months from the date of
I Wlltllfl ............... an .,,,,1_ ........... , ...... all ---°""""•'·-Cf••-first Issuance of letters as c•Yeflaflt w _,allty, ._... w '""' s.i. .... will .. ,.,..., ... •ltllatll ~ If...., ..._......... f I t l f I t t a s
'•1a11ft._:t"-'"C••11). ......,....,..,,,111111t._-. .. TMI ~-Or ~~IN provldad In Section 700 of ~ .... ~ ut1t, _...,, w ca_._.....,,..,_.,,.,.. ........ · .. 11..;..,..,_,.wt._.Prs 1~•,nc~~tle e7rs00 of I SAID li"UILI( HEAlllNOS •111 ... --~ C-tr -· • ... -.... th• p f ---..... .... , tM rema1111,. ,..... ,....,.... ., ... ,..... ..... w c--..t., __., ..... w""" rov ,_.., n ~ Ofl
: lleld••....._: ,...,..,.c.-11..,, "'...__,,.,.._ ....... fer J_n.,.. • .,,._.. e robete Code 0 ,,-111<1.,.1-"' .. ,,...,ll _..,.. ~V:-:=-.,•_:Y,.t,.i;~ p11oc1, ,.._.,,. ttu.; rm1....,,,., the Pro bate Cod e o f ~:~"':1~T:"'.~~::W.:'.::7.:..=.:=..anw ,......Orw111ta..De1tr.._ fi~~~~!1.nsn:.1r: ~~~ =.=. :-~ .. ,~ :: =-~~: .... o..e1 ,.._,... =-.. ::=~:.i:.:=cellfornla. The tim e for ~1MIM,,, ""•':•"""'._. .... ,.,,..,_...,.. .... 11114 .... "*•• J-~.HVt.•.~ -w plre prior to four months M'lwM, w ClllY,....,.....,. ..,_., ....,_,•~"'..._,...,,,,Mid o.." Tr1111 w1t11 111••""4 flllng clalms wlll not ex-
,,,,.1•111 .. 0lfC.-:N~• --•• .. ,.....,,.. .. _ from thect.te of the heer-~~ .. "!.....,.?-~ .. ·~= ~-=:~--=.:.::=-..: ,,.,...,.,,........1.i .... ,....,.,,.._ plre prior to four months ·,.o•••• Avo1111e, L•1•
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.1• .... _..._,,_..,,.......,.: PUIUC NOTICB ,. ..... _ ..... ·--... -IN ,..,.........:..._..., ...... -"·"llllY,......,..,.......,.., .... from the date of the heu-'"-·1·-~. ... ... , •ti. .. ---"""Ill.. l,,notl,-a-.-. trvst1c,....,-,,.,c10tad"Tr111t. ••PllftMI • ·---........... "'y..-...... ,.._ _.. -
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,_ bo -'"" ..... ,..,._ L •""'11-= . ..--=-=.:" ... ....., .,.,,,... trvtb ,,..... ........ 0..el Trw\. ==--;._-Ti.:=.:=.!':"---,,..=; nQ ~Ot --... e \le, ,.,. .... . ._.. --·-... _ OU MAY EXAMINE Tiit tt11I •11101111t .. Ille .. nPOl4' ... _.._.. __ ·----.. -• --"".:::::. _ --.:::~=':;. ":':.:"r.~ :: ""'-":.""~"~"""""' , .. Ill• -"' u. court. ::=, ":::= =.:: .J!:. "::' ,.""::;:..:, '!:.:::".: ·~=::".=::';.-.., -'": 11~ ~,v.,ef.:'t.:!'J.
.Jlll1't,i,.tt11 ,,...I , ........ ~~ ..... .,... PlntnouteWH••Meew tf you a,. tnw.sw tnthe ••II-IN aata, .. .._. ....... !:1::-'c::~·-~ ..... ~IN .. ~ .. -.... .., tf y o\lare Interested In the "'<t. w • .. ....,., .., ...., 111 ,,. ......,.. ,..._ ,..... .._ nteteJ:' rney flle e ,... wa•ce• 11 t11o """ tt 111e 111111.1
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Pu•••c NOTICE •-e1•0t1Ta1a-.-...,1N ....... _ ..... "' ..... ....._. q·-t • -, .... ,,.-·r1 •or• ~tc....., •"" Netico • 1a1e 11 •a11u• •t , ,,.. flf t11o 11111.i nu_..,. cea11, ,...,.._.,..,.. estete, you may , e e r•
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Daily Pilat "I
THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1981 H /F
Team tennis is off ~ MOVIES 05 to a decent start,
TELEVISION 07 says Larry King. See D2 . ~
Man who killed baseball?
Al" ..........
Owners' representative Grebey in national fishbowl
By WILL GRIMSLEY
A .. -..Clel CmwJ f I
The basebaH strike has created a great
national void, changed the social lives of
millions and even affected Wall Street, but
for one man in the middle It's been a "liv-
ing hell."
"I don't mind being called 'tough,' 1
don't mind if they say I'm a management
representative, but when they call me a
'liar' and a 'snake' and cast aspersions on
my integrity," said Ray Grebey, the direc-
tor of the club owners' Players Relations
Committee, "I am offended. 1 boil inside. 1
can't describe how mucb it hurts.
"And my whole family suffers with
me."
Grebey is being harassed as "The Man
Who Killed Baseball."
He is the spearhead in the current drive
to regain for club owners some of the ad-
vantages lost to free agency by arbitrator
Peter Seitz' ruling in December 1975.
Grehey's
schedule
loaded
NEW YORK (AP ) Jl
figured to be another long day
for Ray Grebey, chief labor
negotiator for major league
baseball's club owners.
The owners are demanding "com·
mensurate" compensation for players lost
on the open mart. The playen are resist-
ing any change that might inhibit bidding
'I am off ended. I boil
inside. I can't describe
how much it hurts.'
for talent. Thus a 28 -day midseason
stalemate.
··I am a labor negotiator, in the
employee relations field for 28 years,"
says Grebey. "I am only doing the job for
which I was hired. And that isn't to have
Rusty Staub <New York Mets' player
representative) say, 'Whal a nice guy Ray
Grebey is. Look what he has given us."·
Grebey, 53, is a slightly built, pipe-
puffing man with steel-gray hair, eyes lo
match and a tough skin that comes with
more than a quarter of a century of bang-
ing heads with union bosses across a clut·
tered table,
He had been with General Electric, one
of America's Industrial giants, for 20 years
before he was plucked by baseball 's
hierarchy to handle the free agency hot
potato in 1978.
He had no idea what he was getting into.
His earlier negotiations were held in
relative privacy. and even the 109-day GE
s trike by electrical workers in the 1960s
went virtually unnoticed -except for
those involved -until it was settled.
Now he finds himself in a fishbowl, in
the glare of a national spotlight, attacked
by a segment of a frustrated public,
maligned by the press and abandoned by a
panicky (raclion of the 26 club owners who
(Sec MAN, Page 02)
Transpac
skippers
half way
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Dall, .. II .. a.Ml .. Wnl«
TENNIS ANYONE? -Former soccer star Pele cuts loose
with a backhand white playing tennis at his soccer camp
at Manhattanville College in Purchase. N. Y. The former
Cosmos star was taking a break from instructing young
soccer players.
Grebey was due back on the
witness stand in a National
Labor Relations Board hearing
on an unfair labor practice
charge. Then, he was to meet in
late afternoon, and probably into
the night, with the 26 club
owners who had gathered for a
briefing on the negotiations, or
lack of them, and the four days
of hearings.
Brisk northeast trade winds
picked up the 70 boats in the
Tr a n s pac L os Angeles to
HonoluJu yacht race Wednesday
as most of the fleet were sailing
close to the half way point of the
2,225 mile course .
The race for first to finish
between Fred Preiss' Christine
and Nick Frazee·s Merlin was a
question mark as Chr istine
failed to report at the Wednes-
day rollcall.
Surf kidded around The NLRB, acting in behalf of
the striking Major League
Players Association. is seeking
to force the clubs to open their
financial records for examina-
tion by the union because of re-
peated statements by various
baseball officials concerned
about the sport's economics.
Chief administrative law judge
Melvin Welles is hearing the
case.
Race officials abo ard the
escort vessel Jubilee said it was
believed that Christine was hav-
ing radio trans mission problems
as her signal had been weak for
the pre vious two days. -an·d it cost thein AT LAST REPORT the two
yachts were fighting a see-saw
battle for the elapsed time lead
with Christine holding about a
15-mile advantage. But as the
yachts e n counter the trade
winds with their s ometimes
huge following seas. the advan-
tage was expected to shift to
Merlin. an ultra-light displace·
ment yacht capable or surfing
down the big seas.
Controversy mars 2-1 loss to Chiefs
By CURT SEED EN
Ottllle&>elfy ...........
While baseball has been dead
at Anaheim Stadium for nearly
a month, soccer may have had
the cord pulled on its life support
system Wednesday· night. com-
pliments of the Atlanta Chiefs.
The California Surf, victims of
two strai1tht road defeats, had a
chance lo get well in a hurry
with three straight home games.
starting with the Chiefs.
But Atlanta, and in particular
Brian Kidd, did just about every-
thing right while the Surf suf-
fered through one of its more _un-
SOCCER
inspired performances in a 2·1
setback. ·
"I thought we played poorly in
every aspect or the game," a
glum Coach Laurie Calloway
said following the loss.
THE DEFEAT left the Surf
with an 8-13 record and lied for last place in the NASL's Western
Division with the San Jose
Earthquakes. And only a goal by
Jan Van Der Veen with 30
seconds left on the clock gave
the Surf the necessary point to
avoid holding down last place by
itself.
Yet. despite the numerous
problems encountered by the
Surf. both offensively and de·
fensively, and the Chiefs' ability
to control the game, it took a
highly disputed goal to provide
the difference in the final score.
Kidd. who had tallied al
26: 44 to give the Chiefs a 1-0 ad-
vantage, may be the first player
tn the NASL lo suffer from soc-
cer elbow.
At least, that's the contention
of most or the Sur{ players,
especially goalkeeper Alan
Mayer, who c laimed Kidd's
second goal -the eventual win-
ning tally -was batted In by
Kidd's arm.
THE PLAY occurred at M:.O
with the Surf auu within eaay
1trikinc dl1tance of the Cblefa.
With Keith Furpby stncJJu a
pall in front or the Surf net,
JCldd and a couple of Surf defend·
en au ~nt for the ball at the
HmeUme.
Wh• tbe:y came down. Kidd
landed ln t.be vicln.lty of t.M soet
Une with \be ball beneath him. It
appeared tNt Kidd nud1ed the
ball Into the net with hl1 arm,
which I.I technically a hand ball.
For a man wttb hit Jaw ~
•but, u..nta to a f rae&.ure a few
1am• qo, M11• bacl p11ft1J to
IQ about the pl1y.
"Kidd fell backwards and
bumped it -probably not inten·
tionally -but he still hit it in
with his arm." explained Mayer
after the contest. "I looked over
at the linesman and he had his
yellow flag up. So l started a
quick counter attack. But the ref·
eree rules it's a izoal.
"THE REFEREE went over
lo the linesman and he (the
Unesman) didn't say anything to
him. He didn't have the guts lo
tell the referee," Mayer con-
tinued. "If he hasn't put the flag
up (which would signal either an
offsides call or the hand ball).
that's fine. But he definitely had
il up."
·'That ball was already in the
goal." countered Kidd who
picked up his 17th and 18th
tallies of the year. "I was
already in the net when it (the
ball) bounced in."
Asked why he was credited
with the goal if it had already
crossed the line, Kidd. said,
"Well, I had touched it just
before."
THE GOAL basically nailed
the lid shut on the Surf's coffin,
but Calloway refused to lay all
the blame on the controversial
score.
··You can point a finger at it, I
guess, but we still played poor-
ly," he said.
Kidd, the No. 2 scorer in the
NASL this season with 40 points,
kept Mayer busy most of the
night. With barely half a minute
gone on the clock. he blasted a
shot which Mayer smothered.
Thirteen minutes later, he
took a shot point blank at the
Surf keeper, and again Mayer
(See SURF, Page DZ>
GREBEY SPENT the entire
day testifying Wednesday. deny-
ing the accuracy or saying he
was unable to recall a number of
articles in which he was quoted
about the failing financial condi-
tions of some teams .
The cross-examination by
players association attorney
George Cohen traced Grebey's
early days as director of the
Player Relations Committee,
bargaining arm of the owners.
Cohen asked about discussions
Grebey had with various club of-
ficials as part of the negotiator's
orientation and introduction to
his job and subsequent in·
lerviews printed in a number of
newspapers.
Each time, Grebey s aid he
either could not recall or vouch
for the accuracy of quotes at·
tribuled to him in newspapers
s uch as the Boston Herald
American, Los Angeles Times
and Chicago Sun Times.
GREBEY DID SAY he had
discussed baseball's escalating
salary scales with a majority of
the clubs after he was hired and
said the conversations had
··reflected resentment and con-
cern."
He said many of his dis·
cussions centered on "keeping
player salaries from escalating
the way they bad."
When attorney Cohen asked
why. Grebey said. "That seems
obvious. To control costs."
The players association has
argued that management's pro·
posal which would supply a ma·
jor league player as compensa-
tion for a ranking free agent
signing with another team Is an
attack on the bargaining power
and mobility of the players.
Al"W ..........
PLODDING ALONG -While the baseball strike plods along,
so does Texas Ranger player representative Jon Matlack,
leading daughter Kristin, 11, and Danny, 6, atop Charlie
Miller at a stable in Arlington.
McEnroe denied
club membership
LONDON (AP> -Wimbledon
champion John McEnroe will
not be invited to become a
member of the AH-England
Lawn Tennis Cl ub because his
on-court behavior "brought the
game into disrepute," the
Wimbledon Championship Com·
millee announced today.
The honor is traditionally ac-
corded to aU Wimbledon cham-
pions, but the AU-England Club
decided Wednesday night to de-
ny membership to McEnroe
following a series of outbursts
from the 22-year-old American
during this year's tournament
which finished Saturday.
McEnroe, preparing to play
for United States Davis Cup
team, could .not be reached for
comment, but his father, Jo.bn
P . McEnroe Sr., said his son had
not been made aware of the de-
cision.
"You just informed us now,"
he said by telephone from his
New York home.
The elder McEnrbe, a familiar
grandstand figure al most or his
son's prestigious matches. re-
fused any further comment.
The New Yorker further out·
raged the Wimbledon establish-
ment by failing to attend their
champions' ball held at Lon·
don 's Savoy Hotel a fte r
McEnroe's four-set final victory
over defending champion Bjorn
Borg.
The fiery American was fined
$1,500 after calling an official
"an incompetent fool" in his
first round match against fellow
American Tom Gullikson.
He was fined another $750 for
accusing a turbaned linesman of
racial bias in a doubles match
between McEnroe and h is
partner Peter Fleming and the
Indian brothers Vijay and
Anand Amritraj.
Merlin was reporting winds of
15 knots from the northeast with
three to four foot seas from the
sa m e direction.
Other yachts in the fleet were
reporting winds from 12 to 20
knots . depending on their posi·
ti on.
The first yacht would have to
cross the finish line off Diamond
Head on the island of Oahu by 11
p.m. <PDT> Saturday to equal or
better the elapsed lime record of
8 days, 11 hours set by Merlin in
the 1977 race.
BUT FROM ALL reports. that
record is likely lo falf to the 65-
foot catamaran, Double Bullet in
the Multihulf Traospac race, an
entirely different contest than
the Transpacific Yacht Club's
race for monohulls. Double
Bullet, skippered by Bob Hanel
of Los Angeles. was last report·
ed about 200 miles ahead of
Merlin.
The two races started at the
s ame lime July 3 near Los
Angeles Harbor.
As the r ace neared the
halfway point the corrected time
standings began to lake on more
significance. The leader t.t Wed-
nesday's rollcall was Mite Ken-
nedy's Audacious from Dana
Point Yacht Club.
THE YACHT Drifter, which
dropped out of the race Sunday
with a damaged rudder was re-
ported back in her berth in Long
Beach Wednesday. Drifter, the
elapsed lime winner in 1979 was
one of the contenders for the
first to finish in this year's race.
Judge says Ellenberger was a cog in the machine
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) ,_.The
judge called convicted former Universi-
ty of New Mexico basketball Ooach
Norm Ellenberger a co1 ln the ma·
chine, and dkl not put blm ln Jall be-
cause he refu1~d to be part of
rled a maximum sentence of 2-10 yeara
ln prison.
l 1The question is how fair la lt to ln·
carcerate In prison a man for doln1
what almost everyone in the community
wanted hJm lo do -namely win'buket·
ball games at whatever cost." District
Judae Pblllip 81l1monte said before
pronouncing sentence.
comments; said, "I was amued at his
per ceptlon." He sald B•i•monte's com·
ments were wbat he bad wanted lo
come out or the trial.
·'I'm not guilty. The compassion or
tbe court didn't cban1e that," Ellen·
beraer tald in annollftcin1 he would
pursue an appeal.
and said the former coach would not be
required lo make restitution.
Ellenberger, 48, could have received
muimum prison sentences of 1·5 yean
on each count.
"J couJd have received 105 years. I
feol a lot better about thl1. I'm certainly
pleased with lhla part of the trial. Some
other parts did not entlluae me loo
much,•' a 1millnt Ellenberger told ,...
porters as he emerced from the
court.room.
"bypocrily... .
ll waa the only thine Ellenbercer
liked about lhe trial, and he said Wed-
nesday he aUll plans to appeaJ bis cotl·
vlctJom.
A d.lftrict court Jury returnect 1WJty
verdJctl Tuesday on 21 counts of fraud
and mum, f alte publlc vouchers, all
rourth:odelf'M lelontes.
The Jury al.lo found l!Jlenber1er lnno·
cent on °"e count or fraud over $2,500, a
thlrd·dearee ftloDy th1t could bave car· .
f •
"J'm bein,g asked to sentence a man
who wu only one co1 in lbe enUre
machine called collece ball. t'cn belq
asked to sentence a man because be tot
caufht, not becaute hi• conduct wu t,an·
acceptable," 81i11nonte tald.
The Judie called tbla "~riay"
and sald he would rtot be • PVl)' to lt.
EHenberpr. ulted 1bout the Jud1e'1
''I don't a1ree I should have been sen·
tenced al aJI. I do not believe It eruea
the cloud and weisht atUl on top of my
1he&d. t'm fOinC to do tVtrythlnl polll·
bJe to cbanae lt," he 11ld.
Balamonte dererred tenteace for one
year and said that at the end ol that
period, all count.a aaaln.at EUenber1er
would be dllmlued. Ht al90 placed El·
lenber1er on un1upervl1ed probation
Balamonte •~nt several mlnuttt
blastlnj major collese ath.lttJca In the
Unlttd States, cbarac:terl&lns ll u
"mlnor leacue but Pl'Oleaional." He
11Jd EllenberJer h1cl been la a ''blah
pressure-cooker a.tmoepbere.
-
•
..
J'
p • 0 u u a a a as as ?XQ o see ass socs cs a s a a a £ s 2 2!2 2 2 '
Orange Coat DAIL y PILOT/Thursday, July 9. 1881
.-~~~~~----------~~ Christenson undergoes surgery
Phlladelpbla Phillies rl1bt· Ill bander Larry ~...._ ha.a UD·
der1one 1ur1ery to repair a devlated
Minor role on tap
for Cey -in movie
septum .aulfend when biJ non wu broken dur·
lnl a bar n1bt in St. Louis April 8 . . . New
York Yankeet pitcher Tom•1 loM 11ys be
feela I.be major league strike wW be over within
lhree ct.)'a because of hil boa, Geor•• S&ela·
brea.aer. "I think Geor1e can do it.'' said John
. . . Chica10 mayor JHe Byrae la tryin1
to arrange a benefit baseball 1am lh.i.8 summer
bet ween the CUbl and White Sox, but the idea
may die roe lack of saocUon from the White Sox
. . . General Mana1er Rull Peten of tbe
BalUmo.-e Orioles su11ated that major league
teams be allowed to temporarily lncreaae their
rosters beyond the 25-member limit once the
players' strike is over, In addition to
propoaln1 a two-tiered playolf system to decide
the league championships and the participants
in a delayed World Serles . . , The San Diego
Padres may be a financial exception to the old
adage that evervbody loses in a strike. The
strike-iNurance check for $38,000 comes every
day. Alt.hough the payments end Aug. 8, by then
the Padres' share of the $50 million policy taken
out by the major league owners will be nearly
S2 million.
LOS ANGELES -Third Ill baseman Ron Cey of the Doclltrs
could be making his actlna debut
soon although he's been before lbe
public as a professional buebaJI player since
1968 ··Baseball to me Is lhe moel important thing
in my life and I hope to play just u lone as I
can." said Cey. who has been uked to play a
minor role in a movie en-
titled "Serpent, the Ultimate
Thriller."
He'd be the detective
sidekick to David Carradine,
who plays the main role ln
the mm. which was written
and is being directed and
produced by Larry Cohen,
who has bad the same triple
role nine times in the past.
Quote of the day
Edmonton Drillers owner Peter P~kUn
ton, upon rehiring head coach Tlmo
Llekoekl, 10 days after he had fired him:
"I may be Impetuous, but I'm not stupid."
Cey Also in the movie, being
filmed by Larco ProdllCtions, are Candy Clark,
Richard RoWldtree and Michael Moriarty.
Italian, Kenyan share golf lead
Massimo MaoelU or Italy and Ke-
nyan-born Gary CuJJeo each fired a
four -unde r -par 68 Wednesday to "l really don't know what kind of a role I'll
have," said the 33-year-old Cey, the man who in
1973 finally solved the Dodgers' problems at
third base.
"I haven't had any acting lessons and don't
have any experience. but I've been before lhe
public a lot."
Asked what might happen if the players'
strike is ended. he said Wednesday: "We'll
cross that bridge when we come to it. But most
of the rilming will be here, so I don't think it will
be a problem." .
Cey said the offer for the acting role ''just
came out of the blue "
s hare the first round lead In the English Classic
golf tournament. American Tom Sleckmann
was one or eight players at 70 ... Gene Littler,
Arnold Palmer, Sam Snead and Billy Casper
are among the entries for the 1981 Senior
Open, which begins today in H1rmangham,
Mich .... JoAnne Carner says she enjoys jok·
ing with the spectators while competing on the
Ladies Professional Golf Association tour and
with 30 pro victories the 42-year-old isn't about
to change her game. she says as she await-
ed today's opening of the Mayflower Classic in
Indianapolis .
i
rKing's big goal:
frespectahility
~ :. T earn concept gets decent start
·By EDZINTEL
Ol ll>e Dally ...... Si.H
J udgmg by atlendance figures
for the first two nights of Team
Tennis this week, the league has
got off lo a mode ra tely suc-
ressful start
Opening night a l Los
Caballeros Racquet and Sports
Club m Fountain Vall ey drew
1.724 fans lo see the California I Or~ngei; upset the Los Angeles
Strings, 31 ·28.
Th e following night, 1,600
turned out at the Forum to
watrh the same two teams play
lo the same results, with the
Ora nges winning, 25·24. The
same mght. over 3,000 went to
the San Diego Sports Arena to
watr h the Oakland Breakers
edge the San Diego Friars, 23·22.
In order for the league to
break even in ats first season,
fTENNIS
·it's estimated that the average I draw per match will have to be
I a round 2,000.
But Larry Kang, president of
the new league. figures Team l Tennis doesn't have lo break
' even for it to s urvive.
,, The main goal, according to I Kang, husband o r Oakland
f player-coach Billie J ean King. is
j to estabhsh respectability for
I the Team Tenms concept.
If 1t can do that by continuing
: lo draw the kind or crowds that L have so far paid the relatively
high ticket prices, then in lime.
Team Tennis will begin paying
for itself.
To accomplish that, there has
been the usual public relationa
gi mmi cks to bring in the
curious.
Monday night, the Oranges
gave away free seat cushions to
ease the pain of having to sit on
wood bench grandstands.
In the VIP room above the
stadium. a jazz band churned
out soft sounds ps the well-to-do
s apped cocktails and ale from
plates of hors d'oeuvres.
Meanwhile, the tennis was as
exciting as could be expected,
considering several of the
players had just returned from
Wimbledon. at least one sUU suf-
fering from jet lag.
The highlight. perhaps, came
~ during the women's doubles
match. Ahead five games lo
three, the Or anges' Sharon
.. Walsh had one or her shoes ac-
: cidenlaUy slip off during a rally.
The Oranges won the point
:· and what would have been the t· set had an umpire not ca'l&ht
• sight or the loou shoe.
Upon spotUnt Ute abot, the
umpire thought the rnatter over
' for a few seconds, t ben aa·
oounctd that lbe point 1fou!d
have to be r-eplayed.
TheStrtn&1wound up wt.mdna.
lhe polnt, the aame and two •uc·
ceeding games b•fore the
Oranges n.naUy won the Mt bl a
Ue·breaker.
A curious call lnct.ed• OM t.lult
had member• ol tM o......-
baflled lor word.I lo~· I.bl
matctL • * • R.eacUon to .John Me&nroe'•
behavior at Wimbledon last week
has been mixed among Team
1'.eonis players.
Martina Navratilova or the
Los Angeles Strings feels that
the fines or up lo $14,750 aloog
with a maximum three-week
suspension are much too strong.
"I don't Uunk he acted that
badly." Navratilova, the out-
spoken native of Czechoslovakia
said. "The English press blew it
all out or proportion. J lhin1t
Wimbledon had it in for him.
·'There are others on the
outside courts calling officials
worse things than what John
has. I think maybe he should
learn when and when not lo say
certain things but he didn't de-
serve what he got."
NavratiJova. ranked No. 3 in
the world. mentioned Jimmy
Connors and Ille Nastase as ex-
a mples of players who have got·
ten off easier than McEnroe
* * • Navratilova had another com·
plaint to make Monday night
after playing three sets on Los
Caballeros man-made turf.
"It's dangerous," she said, "I
hope they decide lo take the turf
orr because it's too easy to get
hurt."
From Page 01
SURF ...
came up with the ball.
Then at 20 :66, Furphy tripped
Van Der Veen in the penalty
area, giving the Surf its best op-
portunity or the night. However,
Chiefs goalkeeper Graham Tutt
dove to rus left to deflect Paulo
Cesar's penalty shot. It was the
second time this season Cesar
has missed a penalty shot
against the Chiefs.
Kidd then scored his first goal
on an assist from Brian
Alderson at 26:44.
The Surf spent the next 30
minutes missing on its passes
and trying lo keep Kidd and
Paul ChlJd from finding the net
again.
··Whenever we tried to assert.
ourselves, they (Atlanta) would
gel too much space to break out
and counter on us,•• Calloway
explained. "A lot of the prob-
lems develoP.ed because Kidd
and Alderson play farther up.
"We played a very good team.
They work very hard fol' each
other. They deserved to win,"
Calloway added.
The victory moved the Chiefs
into sole poaesalon of flnl place
in tbe Southern Division with a
12 .. t record and 105 polnll. Fort
Lauderdale, ldle Wedneaday
niabt , la aecond with VI pol:nll.
The Surf muat have bffn feel-
ing a Ult.le deja vu foJlowlna the
contest. The tut time the two
club1 met -ln AUanta -the
Chief• won, 2-1. 8otb goalt were tcored by Kldd~ and Ceaar
missed a key peaaJty kick. Even
lbe at1ea4ances wete aimlla.r -
5,915 Wednesda1 nlall t l a
Anaheim Stadium and 5,831 in
Atlanta on June 14.
Ray Grebey
Oranges
can't s top
Billie Jean
OAKLAND <AP ) -The
Oakland Breakers. led by Billie
Jean Kin g , handed the
California Oranges a 30-22 de·
feat at the Oakland Coliseum
Wednesday night.
The Breakers won the first
four sets or the match and led
24-15 going into the fifth and
final set, women's doubles.
At that point, the Oranges
came back as Barbara Potter
and Sharon Walsh scored a 7.5
win over King and Ilana Kloss.
The defeat ended King's five-set
team tennis wiMlng streak and
forced the match into overtime.
The Breakers won the first
overtime game and the match
on King's serve.
Oakland got the upper hand
early when King and John
Austin teamed t o defeat
Barbara Potter and Sherwood
Stewart, 64, as Stewart had rus
serve broken twice. in the sixth
and loth games.
Austin, playing for the injured
Peter ReMer. also teamed with
Frltz Buehning for a S-3 men's
doubles victory over Stewart
and Marty Riessen.
The Oranges, 2-1 on the
season, return to acllon Satur-
day night at Los Angeles.
Volleyball
tourney n e ars
The top 22 rated teams will
converge at Main Beach In
Laguna Beach when the Laguna
Open beach volleyball tourna-
ment is held July 25-26.
Defending world champions
Andy Fhhburn and Dane
Selznick are among the team.a
that will vie for $7,000 in prize
money in Orange County's big-
gest and richest beach event.
The veteran duo of Jim
Menses and Matt Ga1e are seed~ second behind FiJhbum
and Selmick. Menges ls a three·
Ume beach MVP and lea~c
tlve player with 43 career
wins. o.,e, at 34, la the oJ est
and OM of the mott HCCeNf\.ll
players on I.be beach clrcult.
Act.loo 1eu under way at t
1.m. botlt days. Specl.aton an
advJ1ed to arrive earl1 for the bat view
Baseball today
On t.hiJ date In baseball lo 1988:
After retirina the firtl ZS Chica10 Cut»'
batters he faced, New York Meta ace Tom
Seaver saw hla dreams of a perfect 1ame
ended u Jimmy Qualls lined a ninth·
inning sin1le to left field. Seaver wound up
with a one.-bitter as the Meu topped lbe
Cubs, 4-0, before a crowd of 59,083 at Shea Stadium.
On this date lo 1968:
Tbe National League scored a 1-0 victory
over the American League in the AJl-atar
game at the Houston Astrodome. Willie
Mays scored the game's only run when bJ.a
San Francisco teammate, Willie McCovey,
grounded into a double-play in the first in·
ning.
The wi.nnin1 National League team col-
lected only five hits. while the Americana
had just three. 1t was the first 1-0 game ln
All-star history, as the two pitching staffs
combined for 20 strikeouts.
On this dale in 1946:
Ted Williams collected four ruts, includ-
ing homers off Kirby Hlgbe and blooper
ball specialist Rip Sewell, in the American
League's 12·0 All-star game rout of the Na-
tional League at Boston's Fenway Park.
Other AL heroes were Charlie KeUer,
Vern Stephens and Joe Gordon, who had
two RBI apiece. Bob Feller pitched two-hit
ba ll over three innings to pick up the vie
t.ory, while Detroit ace Hal Newhouser
struck out four batters In three innings.
Today's birthday:
Kansas City outfielder Willie Wilson is 26.
Vranes basketball's newest millionaire
Danny Vranes of Utah became m basketball's newest millionaire Wed-
nesday when the top draft pick or the
Seattle SuperSonics signed a four-year contract.
Chosen fifth in the National BasketbaJJ Associa-
tion draft JWle 8, Vranes signed a contract
estimated at $350,000 a season -a total or $1.4
million . . The Philadelphia 76ers have been
sold to the owner of a nutrition company. The
new owner is Harold Kata, 44 , who owns and
operates Nutri-Systems. Inc., which markets
diet plans and reportedly earns S45 million an·
nually
From Page 01
-------..
Banks records 57-7 triple jump
Tbe trtple Jump la hardly traeji m
and Odd'• moat tublonabLe event,
but extrovert WIWe 8..U made It
an e•citln• one Wed.nuday u be aall.cl to U..-
th I rd toniest jump tn b_latory, 51·7 (11.SS
meters). rt wu ooe lncb lborter tbu Baab'
American record 1et two weeks a•o l D
Sacramento. Tbe only olher mu to Jump
farther is Bruillan Joao de OliYetra, who went
58-8 ~ in the 7,800-foot alUtude of Mexico City
six years ago . . . Steve ()yeU of Brilain woo
the 1,500 meter race of the MUan &rack meet In
3:31.", a batr.second off hiJ own world reeord
. . . Track and Field received a bi1 11.Dandal
boost Wednesday when it wu &DQOUDeed that
an ltaly·baaed clothing manufacturer w11 pour·
Ing more than $8 million into the sport over UM
next eight years to outfit the UnJt.ed Stat.ti tallll.
The company, Robe di Kappa, 11ys It wtU provide
unlforms for the American men's and women'•
teams in all International compeUtiom lbrouits
~988, lncludlngthe '84 and '8801ympicGames.
Rams sign No. 4 dra~ choice
The Rams signed Georpe IJJJ• • of Michigan, their No. 4 draft choice,
to a National League Football
League contract. Terms of the pact for the 8-C,
250 -pound lineman were not divul1ed ...
Former beavyweitbl boxing champion Md am·
m ad AU says he is relurnini to the rilli to prove
his last fight. a loss to Larry Holmes, was a
fluke. The ex-champ is 39 ... Harry Cllanen,
a world champion rodeo rider in the 1950s and
'60s, bas died of cancer. He was 56 ... Veteran
hockey center Bobby Slleeba, who amused 81
points during the 1978-79 season with the New
Haven Nighthawks, has signed with the Los
Angeles K1ngs-Nighlhawks or1anization ... A
proposed sale of 36 percent of the New York
Islanders hockey team to a group which would
have included a cablevision company bas been
canceled.
Television. radio
No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Salt Lake City at
Phoenix, 7 p.m., KMPC C710).
FRIDAY RADIO
Tennis United States vs. Czechoslovakia
in quarterfinal Davis Cup matches. live reports,
3.50 p.m .. KNX (1070).
MAN WHO KILLED BASEBALL? ••• ..
hired tu m and pay his salary.
A newspaper m his home town
or Chicago referred to both rum
and the owners as "vermin" and
said. "Grebey dodges issues and
hades behind hes with the stealth
of a graverobber squirrellng a
fortune away from his mother."
Another Chicago paper called
ham a "snake" and a "Liar."
A New York newspaper hinted
that Grebey was after Com·
missione r Bowie Kuhn's job
while another sought out mem-
bers of the electrical union io-
vol ved in the long GE strike to
paint rum as being an "offensive
personality" with a "rigid
stance."
A "rigid stance" was just
what baseball owners were look·
ang ror when lime approached
for renegotiation of the Basic
Agreement.
"A friend in New York called
and asked how I'd like to work
for baseball." Grebey recalled.
"I told him 'No, thanks .' that J
was very happy with my job
POCKET
PAGER
COVERS
FOUR
COUNTIES
OIAHGI CO .. L.A. CO.
SAM I H HAIDIHO CO.
llVllSIDI CO.
s2000 ·-, .... c...
ALSO CAR rHOHES
WHITHH
BUYING
tW
SELLING
nhhYow
DAILY PILOT
IOATMAIT
Te,._.,_. ..
u1642·S678
with GE But he insisted that I
come to New York and have
lunc h with some baseball
peopie J did
"Then tn December of 1977, I
got a call from Hawaii, where
the winter baseball meetings
were being held, and I was told
that the major league directors
had voted unanimously lo hire
me.
"I had an assignment lo finish
for GE in Washington. D.C. So in
1978, l took the job. succeeding
John Gaherin. I have a contract
in my sare. I haven't looked at it
since I signed it.
G re bey inherited a mixed bag
of employers -some militants.
some moderates, som e con-
servatives -but all of them con-
cerned about escalating salaries
under Cree agency. He was Lold ,
"Be tough."
When he did get tough, some
o r the owners got jittery.
Edward Bennett Williams. dist·
anguished Wa shington, D.C.,
lawyer and owner or the
Baltimore Orioles, and Eddie
Chiles of the Texas Rangers, set
up a meeting with Kuhn. The
New York Yankees' George
Steinbrenner was invited to sit
in
Williams said. "Baseball is in
the biggest crisis since the Black
Sox scandal." Chiles, rapping
Grebey, said. "In Texas. we
have line worke rs . If they don't
do their job, we get new line
workers."
"As far as l know. Steinbren·
ner bas never said a bad word
about me," Grebey said. "Our
committee received messages of
s upport from 24 owners -all ex·
cepl Williams and Chiles.
"I am not concerned. 1 am do·
ing the job l'm paid to do. I have
never lied or done anything Wl·
derhandedJy. My father gave me
a good name. That name is
worth more to me than anything
in this world."
PHELPS
JULY SALE
Up to 50%0ff
An lncredlble selection of our regulor Spring and Summer
mcrchandJsc ts now on Sale; name brands you know and trus~
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P lu a Fabulous Selection of Sportswear
•
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Misc.
' I
Juniors top
weekend's
calendar
Nineteen Junior match ractnc
teams started compet!Uon today
in Balboa Yacbl Club'• Gov·
ernor'a CUp aeries. Tbe r.,atta
continues throutb Sunday.
The Governor's Cup -pal·
terned after Long Beach Yacht
Club's famed Con1re11lonal
Cup, ls limited to ak1ppen and
crews between the a1ea of ~
and 19.
The host Balboa Yacht Club
baa won the event three yean in
a row and la defendln1 thla year
wllb skipper Mark Whltebouae .
All of the crews are saJlin1 San·
taoa-3> sloops.
EnlrJes are from California,
~asbln_ston , Texas and
BOATING
Louisiana. Out of state clubs are
the Seattle Yacht Club, Fort
Worth, Tex. Boal Club, and
Southern · Yacht Club, New
Orleans.
In addltion to the host club,
local clubs entering teams are
Bahia Corlnlb.ian and Newport
Harbor Yacht clubs. Other
California clubs are AlamJloa
Bay, Catifornia, Corinthian
Yacht Club of San Francisco,
Coronado, Del Rey, King Harbor,
Long Beach, Mission Bay, Mon·
terey Peninsula, St. Francis, San
Francisco, San Diego and
Southwestern.
Before the series is ended,
each team will have faced every
other one in two-boat matches.
Balboa Yacht Club is also con·
ducting a one-design regatta this
weekend on inside and outside
courses. Other local competition
includes the fourth, fifth and six·
th races of South Shore Yacht
Club's Hi· Point Series for
Performance Handicap Racing
Fleet and International Off·
shore, Rule yachts, and a pre·
dieted log race for power boats
out of Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club.
Huntington Harbour Yacht
Club will stage the first race of
its Bolsa Chica Collection Satur·
day.
In other Southern California
YacblinR Association areas:
Double Bullet
leads field
for multihulls
Bob Hanel's 65-foot catamaran
Double Bullet was sailing so fut
in the Mullibull Transpacific
race lo Honolulu that she sailed
out of radlo range with the other
mullihulls in the race.
The catamaran Star Trek,
communications vessel for the
multihulJs said it appeared that
Double Bullet had logged ·
another 300-plus mile day, plac·
ing her several hundred miles
ahead or the other catamarans
-and even the monohulls ln the
regular Transpac race.
Double Bullet has averaged
over 300 miles a day since the
start of the race from Loa
Angeles last Friday. Hanel la out
to break the elapsed Ume record
for lbe crossing held by the
monohulJ Merlin, which is com·
peting in the regular Tranapac
for monohulls.
Mike Kane, veteran multihulJ
sailor and owner of the 53-foot
trimaran of the race, aaJd, bar·
ring a mJshap, Double Bullet
should finish late Friday, more
than a day ahead of the record.
Tbe Multihull Tranapac la CO·
sponaored by SeaJ Beacb Yacht
Club of Lona Beach and the
Outrl11er Cano Club of Hawaii.
There are five multlbulJa in
the race which started off Polnt
Fermin la.et Saturday al 1 p.01.
Lifeguards
vie at MV
Nearly 200 llfe1uard1 will
1atber for t.b• second annual
Southern Caltfom11 Llfepard
compeUUoa Friday at Lake Mll·
1lon Vlejo beliMlq at 4 p.m.
Tbirteen team• fro·m Loi
Anf •lee County to San Dteio
wU compete lD variOU9 tvtlltl
1ucb u one-mile awim and INld-
clleboud race., a one mile dol-7
'face, a four-mu 1wtm relay and
I ftY•maD NICue~l • Lui year, Le» • Count1
toe* ftnt .=ace th Newport Beaeb n DI HCOGd.
Competitlon may be Ylewed
fN)m O'Neill Road 1D M•u&cm
Vlejo.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurtday. July 9, 1981 ••
JIM NIEMIEC
Early deep sea rewards
An explosive salt water big 1ame fiablng
aea100 bu 1otten off lo a very early and reward·
ln1 start for those who have their boats, tackle and
reservatiOM Ln workinl order.
Locally, Helen Smith a~ the Balboa An1lln1
Club has wellbed ln two marlln with many more
beln1 spotted. Veteran Newport an1ler Dick Bar-
rett took the first flag honors for his 121-pound
spikebiU, which he caught last week while fltblnl
the outside edge of the AvaJon Bank. A second
marUn for the youn1 season wu wei1hed in at
Avalon last weekend as well.
BOTH MARLIN WERE TilEN on jigs, which
seems to be tradltional for early a~aaon catchea. Whiley Ellsworth at Anglen Center reported that
many returning fishermen have spotted slrlped
marlin in our channel waters. But even though
bait and water conditions are ideaJ, the billflsh are
still not aetUed down yet. There appears lo be
plenty of macker'l locally and this should be a
good indication of great bill fish angllng to come,
added Ellsworth.
No broadbilJ have been hooked this season, but
there are some being spotted in our channel
waters. Gary Myers of Newport Beach took first flag
honors for the Albacore division at the BAC last
weekend when he weighed in a 24Y'l·pounder while
fi shing some 65 miles southwest o( San Diego.
Also, Jerry Thompson of Corona del Mar recorded
the first locally weighed in yellowtail for the
Pacific Anglers Club.
rentJy on hand, there la a1lo a fair bite on Paclflc
Bia Eye tuna takin1 place betwNo the ltl Spot
ana the 43. A record in the JJ.powld cJa11 wu post-
ed Sund•)' at the Marlin Club ID San Dle10 with
Walt Gutjahr Jandint a M·]IOUftd Paclflc 811 Eye
on 12-pound test line. Thll bit tuna bit live ball
some 3> miles, 2SS dearees olf Polnt Loma.
There ha.a already been la.l.k amoa1 veteran
an1ters that this could be a quick loollin MUOO.
Fish arriving lb.i• early, fi..Ddlnl very warm ••"!!
FISHING
and not a lot of ball, mi1bt decide lo move north
very qu.ickJy.
It ls sugaested that an1ten 1et out thl• week U
possible to get their first lonlfina in t.be freezer
and then alt back and wall and 1ee bow the aeuon
progresses.
Even if these v11abonda of the deep decide to
head lo cooler waters off Ore1on and Washln1lon,
there still could be excellent fllhin1 for yellowfin
and bluefln tuna (provldin1 the commercial boat.a
don't begin wrappinJ them with their u1ly nela).
Also yeUowtall and dorado could be numerous un·
der floating kelp patties just off shore.
M06t are oplimjatic at thiJ Ume about the sum·
mer and early fall season, but the key will De
water temperature. If il doesn't aurpua the 118 lo
70-degree range, then we could be in for a 1eaaon
which could dupllcate the overall superb (lsbln1
enjoyed by anglers during the early 'SOs.
SPEAIUNG OF ALBACORE, a record for ..-------------------
Newport Harbor was established last weekend
when Ernie Schonert weighed in a 47 pound, 2
ounce longfin at the BAC. There are many big
albles in our ocean waters now and more light
tackle records couJd be broken before the longfins
depart.
ln addition to the great albacore fishing cur·
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IM H /F Orange Cout ONLY PILOT/Thuraday, July 9. 1981
A,. ........
SIGNING IN -A dog looks over the menu at a roadside produce sign in
Fresno offering an array of fresh fruit and vegetables. Each sign was
painted a different color.
Maiden voyage tricky
SOMERVILLE, Mass . <AP> -
Ylannis Perris spent six years build·
ing his dream boat in bis backyard.
As it neared completion, be re·
a lized be had a problem: The boat
had grown to a width of 13 feel, while
his driveway, hemmed in by houses,
remained only 11 feel wide.
To lift the 48·foot·long boat out of
his yard, Perris had to rent a crane
and boom, lower the boat 40 to 50
feet down a stone ledge behind his
house, and place it on a flatbed
trailer.
Now it's off lo nearby Everett,
where the final touches will be ap·
plied to make the craft ship-shape.
Then, Perris probably hopes he will
never see it again.
DEA TH NOTICES
Perris, 34, said that In the last six
years, the boat has been torched
twice by vandals and rebuilt. In 1979,
when be was working on it, he cut off
four fingers on his right hand with a
power saw.
He originally wanted to name the -
boat the "Margo P." after bis wife.
But now, Perris. a native of the
Greek isle of Chios. calls the cruiser
a "taleporia.'' That's Greek for
"hardship" or "suffering."
Perris, an electrical engineer. said
he has traded the bad-luck boat in a
complicated deal with another boat
owner for a commercially built craft.
"Everything is perfect now." he
said.
STROOT St root both of Qumcy 11 Catholic Church. 1147 West
EDcAR H. STROOT , res•· ltno1s. also s grandchildren Discovery, San Marcos. Ca
dtVit of Lake San Marcos. Rec1tat1onofthe Rosary will Requiem Mass will be Ca Passed away on July 6. be held on Thursday. July 9. celebrated on Friday. July
1981 He was the owner of 1981 at 7 OOPM at St Marks 10. 1981 at 1o·OOAM also at
the Crestview Shopping St Marks Catholic Church
Ce nter. Costa Mesa. Ca Mr. with Father Curtis 0Htc1al·
Stroot was 82 years old al DEATHS ing Interment will follow at the time or his death He Oak HHI ~metery. Escon·
was born on August 22. 1898 dido. Ca. V1s1tat1on will be
tn Quincy, llhnotS. Moved to ELSEWHERE on Thursday, July 9, 1981 Newport Beach area in 1949 from 9:00AM to S:OOPM at
and moved to Lake San Allen Brothers Mortuary. ~tarcos 9 years ago upon his 1350 South Santa Fe Ave., re tire m en t from th e BELMONT. Mass <AP 1 Vista . Ca. <714 1 726-2555 Al-
hardware bustness. He was George Egan. 58. who in len Brother s Mortuary
u former member of Costa 1967 received one or the na· directors. ~lei.a KJ'>\ams Club and a t1on ·s first s uccessful MUSANTE
member or the Lake San kidney trans plants. died ALBERT J MUSANTE.
.Marcos KJwams Club and a Tuesday. The cause or passed away on July 6, 1981.
member or the Knights of death was not discussed He 1s survived by his· niece
Columbus and the St Marks Mary C. Reumont or Irvine.
Catholic Church 1n San SALT LAKE CITY fAPI Ca and several other mttes
Marcos, Ca. Survived by his .Utah Supreme Court and nephews . He was a wire Magdalen B Stroot. a Chier J ustice Richard veteran of the U.S. Navy in
son Robert W Stroot of Maughan, 63, died Wednes· World Wa r I. Gr aveside
!'lewport Beach. Ca . he had day of cancer services wLll be held on Fri·
another son Edgar H Stroot. day. July 10, 1981 at the . Jr who passed aways years M IAMJ (Al» Ervin Riverside National Military
ago He is al!l-0 survived by s Rouse. 64. lhe fiddler who Cemetery with Rev. Father
i.1sters Rosalia Kollmeyer or composed the bluegrass Cha rles Schultz of St .
Freemont. Nebraska. Helen standar~. "Orange Blossom Catherines Catholic Church
Wcnsing of Quincy, Illinois, Special. died Wednesday oHtcialing. Services under
Loretta McT1gue of San the direction or Baltz J ose. Ca , Edith Kohl ol LA JOLLA <AP I Be rgeron-Smith & Tuthill
Few recall
• entertainer
NEW YORK (AP) -Jean Sablon strode
through the hotel lobby unreco1nlzed by the people
waltl.ng to apeak with the 7~year-old entertainer.
Two days later, singing ln concert wit.h orchestra,
Sa bl on sounded 20 years younger, too.
In t.he 1930s. '40s a nd '50s, Jean Sablon was a
familiar presence on American radio, ln c hic New
York nightclubs and on Broadway. He toured t.he
country -and the world. He turned down movlea.
sane novelty songs, gave lessons in French.
performed songs of romance. Women crowded
'round.
The last time he performed In New York was
19 years ago. at the St. Regis Hotel and on a
television show with Tallulah Bankhead and
Millon Berle.
The mos t recent concert was ·not the start of a
comeback, he said.
"I stopped to sing about 10 years ago," Sablon
said. "I think I'll st.op now. I'm here a nd will dis·
a ppear the same way. as nice a way as possible.
You have to stop someday.
"But it's ver y hard to say farewell. After, if
you feel like doing somethin(Z. you can't do it.
'' l JUSt do a few TV shows in F'rance Because I
think 'it is something for our time," Sablon con·
tinued. "We go to the home of everybody inside the
country. l accept with pleasure to do TV until I'm
too tired to do it. I think if Bing were sllll living, he
would sing once in a while for TV."
Explaming why he agreed lo the one concert,
Sablon said, "George Wein heard two good one·
hour s hows on me on French TV the day before
Christmas a year ago. He called me and said why
don't 1 come to America. I said, 'I expect t o go
back to visit friends but not to work.'
"He came back last s ummer when be brought
some jazz musicians to Nice. We had dinner and
he said, ·come for your birthday.' I told him it's a
very old birthday and I'm sure people won't re·
member me, but he convinced me.
"I see he was right. Some remember . I did the
TV show 'Today' and had calls from everywhere."
Sablon made his singing debut al 17 wit.b Jean
Ga bin . Then he made a movie with Ga bin./
"I was ver y thin; they put a little mustache on
me. When I saw me, I almost fainted. I said. 'I'll
never do a movie again."'
ln the early 1960s. Sablon sang in J apan.
Australia. the Philippines and Hong Kong.
"I didn't know the Far East at all. I took my
job as a pretext to see it. I know some French
a rtists who went to Japan for the maximum of
money and the minimum of time."
The one Broadway show that Sablon was in
was "The Streets of Paris" in 1939. It had Carmen
Miranda. Abbott and Costello and Bobby Clark.
Gower Champion danced in t.he chorus . Sablon
was the only Frenchman.
He also sang at the Capitol. a 5,000-seat movie
theater on Broadway, 11 a .m to 11 :30 pm., five
s hows a day
"They had a two-floors apartment with a big
piano in the building for t he star of the show."
A radio show that Sablon had in the early 1930s
in Paris. with singers passing through the city as
guests. brought him the offer of the first of many
seasons of radio shows in Ame rica. starling in
1936. He spent World War JI in North a nd South
America.
"I thought. France can export perfume and
courturier, why don't we export melody also?"
Sablon said. "l tried to find nke melodies where
you can dance with it slow. With a radio s how. you
can plug one song each week.
·'I introduced many French songs that were
well known after. like 'Autumn Leaves,' ·c·est Si
Bon,' 'Ma Mie,' which becam e 'Suddenly My
Heart Sings."
In 1~51 , t 'rench composers made $700,000 in
royalties from the S tates. "They don't offe r
anything to me. but it's not bad."
Pisa tower to tumble
PISA, Italy (AP) -This city's famed Leaning
Tower will keel over in 30 to 40 years if it keeps
tilting at its present annual rate, two researchers
say.
"The tower is tn no Immediate dan1er of fall·
ing, but it's clear that something will have to be
done to prop it up," said Gero Geri, one of the re·
searchers .
PUBUC NOTICE , _________ --
PICTlnO&K Mollllllll llfoMlll .,..,. ...... ,
Tll• ,.. ... ltol ...,_, .,, eelne _, __ :
HINDI•~ INVUTMIENT At• IOCIAYH, IAHJOH INVHTMENT AUOCtAT•s IY, IAH Jot• INYHT ..... T AUOCIATH V, SAN JOta INVUTMaNT AUOCIAT•t YI, IAN JOSe lllVtflTM•NT At· IOC IATIS VII, SAii JOI• lllVllTM•HT ASIOCtATIEI VIII, IAN JOla INV•STMINT AS· IOCIATU I)(, .OS J ............... 14;11• 110. ..._. ._, c...u.,....
ft .... L.,an CMilef elllfl, • Cellltnlle uw • 1119'•0lfl, 6il2S J.....,. RNll. lull•
11t, Nt---' ""°'· CMlltfftla t'JMI. Tlllt ~nHt I• t9'1fu~l•4 by e llmlte• ~,..,..,.,
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'· ""· Pt'9NI ,. ..... 11 .... Or .... CMlt Delly ,.. ... , July ..... » .•. ltll ,...,
PUBlJC NOTICE
,.cnnous au1u1•u •AMalTATaMaMT Tll• l .. IO•lng "'""' .,. doing
1:0. .. 1nn1•: D I AM O ND ST•IET P•O,.l•TIH, 1401 0..... Str"I, s..lle
UO, Ht...., ...... Calllomle tJIMO. CA•,.INTE• & AUOCIATES, • Celllernla corperellon, UOI Dove Strut, S11llt 00, Nt•PO•I le.ell, Calllorllle nMO. STIVI MOO•E a. ASSOCIATIS, INC., e Cal llomle tot'PO'ellOft, 1401 Dove Street, s.i•• UO, N..._I INcll, Celllornla nMO. Mew-· & MtoclelH J-s·-· ~-Tiii• at.t-1 ... llltd wllll Ille C-ly Clerll al Or.,99 County on Jiiiy •,IMI. .... , .... Del, • .....,. .. u..
PtJBUC NOTICE
lllO'llCI lll'VITI .. 81DI NMIO It ... , • ., tl•ell tllet IM ... ,.. ., Tt\Mtet ti .. HllM ...... ...<JI UMM ..._. ICMll Ollllkt wttl rntlvt Malelt Ill•• 1., ,.,...,1111 TraUtra ter Ott"' ~ Ullltl
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·-· Callfwlll• .,..., -........ •I or..,.,, J:• p.m., ,,. ... ,,July u1 ltll, et wNOI time -.4 lllt<• bl4e wll
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mtnt tllarM -""""" IN ''"" to rtJKI lflY W all ll6dt -la wal.,. -IN'ttul..-lly ....... n .....,., .. "' ... -... ~ ....... ,.ul>ll"'" ()' .... Coetl a.tty Piiot, J111y '· ... 1tl1 _,..,
PUBLIC NOT!CL _
MOflca OP &ALI OP A•A•oo••D ,.,.,O•AL "•Ot"a•TY Nollet h _.., t1van 111e1 .,,... and ...,,_, to SKtl"" n• ot "" Calllor11le Clvtl COdt 1119 ,,.._.,, 1111·
•d i.1ow ... 1 .... c1 •lilt --•d 0y PATR ICK COODY -., AMY •L LEN WAin -l•t -"' •M Utz Stn J11en Slrttt , T11•lln, c .. llomle "*· #lll bt Miid ti llUllllc •11ct1011 ti UtJ Stn Juan Streat, Tu1t111, Cell,.,.,,.t tJMt. on July U,
1911 at IOO'cloU A.M. OHC•ll"TIOH OF PROPERTY
A 1n1 Ho1111a Motarcvcle 10• C817fe00n7 Calllorlllt Lktnw Ho /HUU Otltcl 1t111 tOltl dty o1 J-. ltll E. 111 Otftoft Publl"'9d I>-Coeat Delly Piiot, J11ly t , 1', lf'1 -WI
PUBLIC NOTICE
'1• ~ ._ .. ,.tn MOTICI TO t••DIT'O•S ,. ... Olfka ... 1111 OP !WU( T•ANaPa• Mt•~ a.di, CMlf ..... • tlMJ lieu. Utt-t111 U.C.'-1 0141 ~ Nolle t h hereby 9lwtn to ll1t P16.UM c rtd llort of AU 01 OM08 ILE P11bllW. 0r...-C.out Delly PUOI, co•,.ORATIOH, Tr .. ultrM, ...... J11ly t, 1', U, JO, 1"1 >Ot2-tl b11•lntH eddrn• I• Ill WHI 11111 -----Street. 8ulldlno A. Unit •11, City of
P~LIC NOTICE
PUBlJC NOTICE
"CTtTIOUI llUll••ll .... ITATUMl•T Tiit lol-lnt --· ero ... Ill ... .......... INTIE•TAIN MeNT CONSULTANTS ANO MOO.LS UNLI MITIO, 1U4 llt•••rl ae111nard. C.te Me••, Celllernl•
t2U7 Marlo Tambtlll nl, 21 Slt•INI, lrvlM, Celllornla 'VU ,.llyllla Do•nu, :&/ SllklHI, lrwlna, Calllomla ftlU
Tiii • -·-• It c""llllCltl lly t ................... Mlp. MarloT-lllnl Tlllt MM.,_I •• Ill .. •1111 IN c-ty Cleft of°' .... C-y"' Jwly
I, IMI ,, .... P11llllt-!> ..... CM'1 Oelly ,.llOC, J11ly t, i., JJ, JO, 1111 IOll .. I,
PUBLIC NOTICE ---------
"CT1nous auso1•u MAMalTATllJIMMT
T"o follOwlftO "''°"' art dol"t 11<>1lnn1 •· SU NSH INE CYCLE AC· CESS0•1t:S, IUU le.ell ...... wercl, H11nllnetaft BMcll, c.tllonlle tM7 Ell""GWt•. Ull SM,.,,...., MS, Huntlngl.,lltecll,Colllomltt!MI
Tllll -11\eU It t..iutttd lly "' In·
PUBLIC NOTICE Coste,_.. .. , c->ly of 0r.,,.., Stttt o Ell_, Gllll• ~=:·~~·~;•-.II•.:.~:. i:1-..~;"~~,e~' Thia Mee-•• 111• wlU. "'8
Olvld11a1.
ITAT•MaNT OP AUMOO.MaMT TRO NI CS CO RPORATION , Counly Cl-olOr-C-..ylf\Jwly I, lffl. OP Tranaltr"· -bu•lntu addftu h Plut.17 ua• OP PICTITIOUa •UllNISt Ill WUl 1711l Slrt•I. llllldlne A, unit Publl"'9d Or ..... Coe•• Oelly ,.llot. llAMa '11. City of C•i. Moe, COUftlY of July t, 1', U. JO. lttl >OIMI Tiit lo0-1119 .,.,_ ,...,. -· Ortn ... Stateo4Ctlllcwnlt
,,.,..d t,. ... of "" Ft<tlll-•"-'· T"• -h to Ile tr-1trrtd la nan ... _, ducrl-In _ ... '" All llOO In PUBLIC NOTICE COAST CUSTODIAN SE RVI CE . trade, 11•1"'91, IH!<Hpm.,t 9nd good _ LTD., Ml w. wt1-. SI. (Apl F), c .. i. •Ill of -tulamollilt ........ bYalnau MeM. CA '2W anoe11 •• AUOIOMOBILE and loui.d TM Fl<llllOU> 8US111Ht N•lftt rt· ti 111 W. lltll SI., Bldf. A, Unit VJ.
lwr•d to -... ... fllell In 0r .... CllY of C.ta MHe, c-ty of 0r .....
C°""'t' on MMcll '· "'°· Sttt• of c:.tllomla. •onald M. Skim, SM W Wll\Oft St T ... lk>lll ,,.,.,., •Ill Ile c..,......,. <4'>f. Fl, eo.i. Maw, CA nw m••• ""or.,.., 111e n.11 ciar of Jiiiy, Paul J-l.anlltotO. Ml w. Wll-1te1. •I 10 00 A.M. •I IM oflkt of SI. IAPI Fl, c.i. -.a, CA t2UI. Rlc,.ard J Apr....,..I.,, -H · T"I' butlnHt ... condueted by t drtH I• 20'11 E ttll SC .. •11'. City of ••"•rt1-1Jltnhlp. s ... 1. Ana, C:-ly of 0r ..... Slate ot R..,..lclM 81""' Ctl llorl\la All claims -Ile wi.. Tiii• --t ... flied eltll U. milted by Jwly 21111. IWI, ti -oftlCH C°""ty o.n of 0r .... Coun4Y on Jiiiy ol Rlc,..,d J Aor......i ... -•cl· 6, IMI clrtH II 1021 E. M SI , • 11', City of Pl»M4 Sant• Ane, C-ty of Or., .. , Slate of Pul>ll.-I>-Co .. 1 Dolly Pllol, Calllornlt
July t, "· u, JO,"" -'" So tar••••..._ to tM T,.,,.,., .. ,
PUBLIC NOTICE tll lk>lllln> ------11..0 by Ille Tr..iwor lot uw pell tllr• , .. ,, ., ..
111 WHI ll'tll Street, l ulldlnt A,
NOTICE OF DEATH OF un1u11,C.1.tMe~CA HE LEN E. ZELLER, s.1:,!1A:_~~ MM.Art""' eouiovarc1,
aka H EL EN z E L LE R' JSOO SolltJl ~ SlrHI, S6rlt• 4"•,
aka HELEN ERMEN · CA TRU OE Z ELLER ANO UIO W••I Coe•t Hltfl••Y. N-porl 8HCll,CA OF PETITION TO AD· oetod Ju1r 1.1t11
M INISTER ESTATE NO. RMSELECTRONICSCORP
A-109467 to all heirs PeuiE.s1..-y
beneficiaries creditors and ~:.:7.::""'1
cont ingent creditor s of Pu1>111"9cl 0r..,.. eoe .. 0.11, Piiot,
Helen E. Zeller, aka Helen J"''''·'"' JOTHl
Zeller, aka Helen Ermen·
trude Zeller and personc: PUBLIC NOTICE
who may be otherwise in· .. cmca roc .. D1To•1
teresled in the will and/or o, auu u..-aPu estate. 1s.u. •m-t111 u.c.c.1
A petition has been filed Notice " hereby v•••n to tll• ~rtdllon of JOSEPHINE M. CUL,., by Ora S. Riggle, Jr. in the Tre• .. fwor, -IMtlneu -n• I• Superior Court of Orange m c ... i. si.. c11y of c.i. INM, County requesting that c"""'Y of°'-· SCet• ot ca111ornl• lllt t • bulll tr.,ator I• tbOul to Ile Ora s. Riggl e, Jr. be ap· med• to RICHARD • KEEHAN,
p o I n t e d a s p e r son a t Tr.,.,1,,..., -'-'" ... .ctdr•• •• representative to ad· 1ut1 v-1e. City of "''"""' v1e10.
SUN•1oa cou•T °"TM• IT AH Of' CM.I P'OtUllA PO• TM• COU•TY 0,. OtlAMae -AllMll o•oa• TO tMOW CAUM PCMI C_,... CM' MAMa
'" u.e Maner of tllt ._lu ll .. of JAE HO CHUNG by Illa.......,,., KEE WOH CHUNG
ForC,.,_of_ TIM .... lu ll"" of JAE HO CHUNG by hi•-· KEE WON CHUNG tor c11an1• of -............... ,.. .. '" Coo;rt, -II __ .,.. ''°"' Mid _.
pllUllOft -JAE HO CHU NG by "'' mouwr. KEI: WON CHUNG .... "'"' "'•-.11c:eu .. "_... 111e11111 ,,._ b• <ll•"fltCI lo EOWA•o JAE HO CHUNG. H-, l!Wnfert, It ll lltrttly M-and dlrKtecl, ""' all --ll'l(tres!· td In Mid,.,,.. dO _ ... btfwo 11111
court In ~t l °" "" lttf• "'' of A119111t, 1"1 al IO:JO o'cloc• A.1111.. ol 1tld day to 1t1oe c-""'' W<ll ep. pllctllbn lot c,.,... of ,.._ -Id nol btll'-. II •• lwtller __ .., -• , .. , of
1111• OrdH to si.w Cwte bt .,.....,...,.. In lllt ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT, ....... paper of t•ft•••I clrc111et1"", printed In Mid ,_,, at 1oas1 -.. _,, ...... ror ,_ Moe· Cttalvt -. f"'kw IO ... cley ti Mid llttrlnt. OatedlN1tt11ciayotJuly.1t11. R-lclH.P!'-
J .... ol Mid
s.-lore-1 MlarMM.Y.a.-,•--. KwMI& 0.,A--Yt•IUW
IMJW ... Of,.._ .. ..._, .... UI
U.A ....... ~-· ,...,._, tnJI •·DM A........, ... ~ Pllbfl ...... Or .... CoHI Dally ,.llot, J11ly '· ... u, JO, ltll ,....,
PUBLIC NOTICE
. COUf'llY of Or-. Stele ot C.-tllorNa. minster the estate of Tll• P•-""' to c. ,,_,.,,..d 1, P1CT1T1ousauatMeu
Helen E. Zeller, aka Helen dncrlbtcl 1n _,.1 •• All •tock 111 NMWITAHMeMT
Z II E 11 d 11 1 1 ..,1 -....., Tllo folloelng _...,., tr• dolnt e er c.. aka Helen rmen· .. ~.~,,,!,~~.~~LOH...,",,... 11<>11,.euu: trude Leller (Under the In· llnoo" .. NOAH'~ HAIR SHOP -1zzy·s RESTA URAN T. lJU de pendent Adm in i s tr a · 1oca1ed •• ,., C.nt..-SI., c11v of C•ta Felrvl•• •o .. c .... -. CA n.i1. lions Act). The petition is Mua, county 01 Orenee. St•t• 01 Jell A. Miiier. n1 Az•IH or .. Coai. C 111 nl MoM, CA t26A set for hearing In Dept. ·T .. :· ea:. ,,_ .. wlll bt COft""'" J°" w. -· ea. E-Cir., No. 3 at 700 Civic Center "'''".,,.or.,..,. 111e *" c1ey of Jwly, Founte1 .. v .. 11v,CA'210J. Drive, West, In the City of "" •1 10:00 "'·"'· e1 EMl•Ev JoM w. LI11011. JOn y.,11 ..... eo.i. Santa Ana California on escRow .• ,.. .. eddreu 11 2100A M•M.cAne.a. ' Ht rbor e oulvd., Coale Mua, Tllom•J.L.uM,112'11C.natl¥1.11., August 5, 1981 at 9: 30 a.m. eeiuornia. n.tt 1t1t ••• ... ,. fw 1111,.. H1111llnlil0fl BMdl. U!n.& IF YOU OBJECT to the Clelm• In u. ncroe rttwr.o to ..,..In Tiii• boltlnau h COftclucltd lly •
granting of the petition l•J11'' 21, it11. 91,..,J~i·-· ' So ltr u 11~10 the Trtft1ltree, ........ ~ YOU Should either ap· allbutl,,..1na,,_Wlcladdr_.u .. d Tiii• l&t-1 •ft llltd WIU. IN pear at the hearing anci by ,,,. Tr8mleror lot IN ""' UW• county Cl•ni ol 0r.,.. cwnty ...
s'tate your objections or ,,., .. ,,. ...... Jiily'·'"' ~'MMD
file written objections with 0•1tc1 R::,:'i~':'-,, P11blllhM 0r.,,.. coe.a oe11y """· the court before the hear· T'.,""" July'·"· u, JO."" >011•1
ing. Your appearance may Publl"'9d 0r-. Coe•• oe11, Piiot,
be In person or by your at· Jui1•.1"1 lOIJ.11 PUBLIC NOTICE
torney.
He and Brunetto Palla. professors at the
University of Pisa's Institute of Topography, s ub-
mitted their findings to local officials after con·
eluding an annual study of the tower. They round
that it had slipped another twentieth of an inch.
about the same as in previous years. IF YOU ARE A
----CREDITOR or a c ont·
PUBLIC NOTICE ,.cr1nou1au11N•U NAMalTAT•NNT Peoria. Ill1no1s and Carlene George F. Wiison, 78. a Westcllrr Chapel Mortuary
Stroot and a brother August former radio executive who of Costa Mesa 646-9371
helped organize the Mutual -----------------------~ PUBLIC NOTICE ingent creditor of the de· PtCTtTiousaut1Meu llAMaSTATUldMT ceased, you must file your Tiie 1o11o.1ne .,.,_. 11 dolfte wtt·
Tiit lollowlnt ~ 11 llllille llUtl· ........ .,;;;;::==:;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Broadcasting System. died r McCOltMtal MOITUAAllS" Tuesday
...
Laguna Beach
494·9415
Laguna Hills
768·0933 San J.Jan Capistrano
495· 1776
HAAIOI LAWM-MT. Ol.IYI
M<>l1uary •Cemetery Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
540·5554
'IHCI UOTHU5
llU llOADWA'f
MOITUAAY
1 tO Broadway
Costa Mesa
~2 9150
IA&.TllB .... OH
SMITH A TUT'Htt.l
WISTCUJf CHAl"I&.
427 E 1711"1 SI
Costa Mesa
646*9371
,_Cl•OTHIH
5MITHi' MOITUAIY
627 Main SI Huntington Beach
5~
.
I~ ' DAILY "'°' -aASlfflllD ADI -~ .... ..,.
1~·
PRINCETON. N.J IAP1
Or. lludolpti Macb, 58, a
leading authonly on Arabic
manuscripts and professor
o ( Near Eastern studies at Princeton University, died Wednesday.
SELMA. Ala. <AP> -Joseph R. Blbb, 86, a voter
registrar •• died Tuesday.
Bibb and olher members et the Dallas County Board of
Registrars were the focus
of civil nghts demonstra·
lions that led to lhe passage
of the 1965 Voling Rights
Act-
SAN DIEGO tAPI -£11
OJeddah, 69, a manaae·
me nt cons ultant' who
rounded La Jolla University
for mature adults, died
Sunday.
Diamond
discovered
KIMBERLEY. South
Africa (AP) -A 40·
year..-S dialDODd proe·
pector attack ll rJcb
with tM cUKovery of a
1'8·Clfll. ltlftl" dollar·
shed diamond, tbe
South Ali'tc• Pr.a At· 1oclat1oa reported.
It =-1M protpec· tor, Soa.Denberf, aa sayta1 the flaw HI
diamond II wotlb 1bout MS0,000.
Tbere WU QO iDdepen·
dent contlrmatlon of
that ftp.re.
----l'OINT BOUND -Huq Vu 17, of Queem,
N. Y., LI one ol the flnt two V.etaam retuceea
tq be accepted Into th• U.S. MIUtar1
Academy at Welt Point. WbllD be arrl•ed In
the United Stata ln 18'75 be was unable ~ Hy
even "yea .. and 0 no'' ln EnlJlih,
P1CT1nou1au10•111 clalm with the court or MAMa ITAHM ... T present it to the personal Tll• 1011~1111 .,.,_,, .,. •01n1 representative appoi nted !»uf;~S-iNTUNATIOHAL, .... by the court within four Hero11 Cr., Huntlneton IHcll. months from the date of
C•J~=-':,::.!,, llMlt Slat ... A¥e .. first Issuance of letters as ,...,nu.in va11ey, c..ilfwftl• w• prov lded In section 700 of
neuu: SWANK MODELS, 72' Wnt IH• SlrHI, C•ta Mffe, c.tllomle ta21 SWANK INDUSTRIAL MODELS, ,,. WHI '"II Strut, Costa MtM, Calllornla mv Alc ..... d E"""n sw .. k. "' Wnt Utll Slr"1, Cotta Mne, C.lllornle
tJU1 Tllh ~·It corldu<le4 by aft In·
CONST•UCTIOH SERVICES, .ot W. l elboe, N-1 letc:ll. CA nMO. Jemn C. Wencl, 681 w. ••Ibo•,
N••port lleecll, CA ftMO. Tlllt ..,._. I• C:OflclUC .... lly lfl Ill Olvlcluof. J-C.W-Tlll1 Ila-... llltd wllll IN cw11ty c._ of 0r..,.. c-tv ... Jiiiy
'·'"" Fre11c11 D. ""'' .. '· 11MJ1 Sl•ter the probate cod e of dlwl!Wel.
,, ..... ,..,.II...., Or ..... c:.a.1 Oetly P'li.,
JUI''· U, U. JO, 1'11 >OK-tt :,~;.· ,_taln vell•r. ealllorn•• Ca II fornia. The time for Akllard E. s ....
T11i1 11vt1neu 11 co11ovc:1ec1 "' • filing claims wlll not ex· Tiii• .i.--1 -111e11 .1111 -• ...,.,.,~. plre prior to four m onths countyc._o10.-c-ty.,JY1y
Tllla :._.=•e1: .. lllad .,,1111 tM from the date of the hear· 7• '"' ,,,.,. -----------
PUBlJC NOTICE
e-ty Oef11 t110.trtet c.....iY"'Jw1r Ing nollced above. P111111_ 0r.,,.. eoeu oe11, ,.11ot, suN•tCMtCOUH •·'"'· YOU MAY EXAMINE Ju1y•,u.u.JO.tt11 JOl•-tl. O~c:AUflCNIMIA "*" the flle kept by the court. COUWTYDf'OtlMH
,... ... ,.,... «> .. c.oe.t Delly l"'ltec, ff you are Interested In the PUBlJC NOTICE =:_~..=;; Jllfy •• 1 .. n.•.1•1 ...., . estate, you may file a re· ,.LAINTIPF: LO•EN MA•llE
PUBlJC NOTICE quest with the court to re· PtCTin:U ..... u K•;:PENDANT: MICHEL• LEA celve speclal notice of the .... ITAHN•T UNCINA. NO«L H . OOULa, OOH I
&..seM. MOTICI Inventory of estate and of Tll• fe11_1,,, .,.,...,, .,, ... ,., '""""'xx, ':tr:' .... ren
•onc•Df'AYA1L.Aa1un the petitions, accounts and !Mdln ..... , c..-.a•• OP ..... A&..ll"OltT reports described In Sec· T " T AUOCIATH, J.Hlt CMryt NOTICll Yell ............... Tiie NOTICI II Hl .. •Y GIVEN "'91 t I 0 n 1 2 0 0 . s 0 r t h e Way, !Et T--. C.llroffl• '26». C-1 m.., .......... ,... ... ... :-.::".--:~~~:;: Cattfomla Probate Code. T_m, ,...,..., ""'"'msi a.,.,i ,_ Miiie....,. .,.._,... ,__. -• J--a Du ·~:;.!'tT~I~~·= Clltryl wflMA -~ ...... lf'lf•n,..lelt
........ • ,rt¥eM ,_... ..... .., .... "'"' ... ncan wer. •• T-. c..i1fw'lll• ...-. ....... .. aiw1 .. •",;.~,•.!:.,.~~=:= '10 Newport Center Or. T11I• """""" ,, confuct•cl •Y • lfyau ... _.,,. " 911
ln .. a<t*' ...,.,.. ";~I':: ........... Suite 1530 I....,.,.. •tt•MY "' .. lllMW, ,... ._.. • _, ,_,. t:• a.111. .. s:• '·""· ., Newport .... ch, ca. 926'0 ..,._,. ,._, Miiien,........ ,. ,,.,,.tty " tllet ft-.,u...,
""d"-... .._..." ....... 1• Pubflshed Oranr coast J..-c.T.-1,... '•:1"~":':..":.:.,"-· '8ysaf111Wectaft1Mt_.~ TM 0 I Pll t J I 10 16 Tlllt ettt-c -"1• "'"' 111t •1 ,,.._., ,_. • ._., ~· u .. PNMel .... ljllrtlK"91affl<tltleeie•' • ly 0 I Uy 1 ·:J. ' ~yCl«titlQr ..... ~yMJuly tlll~le•--U .. f ..... •I Ht ,.ltte, New,art 8Utll, 1981 , 3~1·81 I, Ult. lie,...,_,.•• ..... ua le.....,_
c.llfMlla. n. ,.._.,.. __... .. -,.......,.. er.., ea.at .,.,1:•: clM ..-..... •..:..~:...~·=-l"'ltet, PUBUC NOTICE J"'''· 1., n.a. '"' ...,.t ,..11 :.::-:: ==-=: Jllrt, Ult "1M1 •------------• Ila< Hit 1_..le.-lt, .. Hie
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.. -
PUBlJC NOTICE =-=~1-'::':\.::.:: I, TO TMtl 08~ NCMUn! A (1¥11 Ptennaw ..,.. .. ,.. ,_,.... ........ ,...."' .. ,..._ ...-ITAT••lllT tiff ...... ,... If yw ...... ....... ltltl• ....... .,. .......... ..,. Tiit Mii....._ "'-' .,. Mlllt lftW ... _,_ 11 --911 ,,_ ..,.,......! me ... 1111 C11Wt • ..-,.__ &.A VIOL&TTA 01 ,.A.MA .... ~ we-yw ... . •.• '°"""' ..... ·-·-· y-.......... -...,.. .. .. ~.-..•v...,,~,.,. ....... ., .. ........,, ....... -'
Mery .................. -_.,.....,.,............,.....,. .. ~r lU A-, .._.. Vlfley, .. ,.... ..._.._. ll -a 411111, c:.t...,,.• ,.~ ftl<ll ClllM nlllM • • •111 a' ., Art-le ,._,, .. __ ...._ ...... .._., ......,., ..,.....,.,
Av_, ~---Vlfteyi ClflfWllia ellMt ....... ,.,......_. 111 tM ~· ,.,. ..... , ............. ~ ... ., ....... .,....,,_., ... _
-~ L.-A. lr.O. '·"" .................. .., ...... """"" TMl ......... -f......... .....,
Clltll!tY awtt -~ C.-y 911.lllly ..... ,. !!t 1, "" .... ,.,._..,_lliij .-. .. -......... ~ c-a Giffy~ .......... _ <..-~""""'
July •• ,, a, •• '"' ... ,. ,, ... t, , .. " .. "" ....
llG
,,
v
j
I ti
(!
i.
,, .,
. • . I ? t . ' t }
v-..... ..... • .........
~~.!!~ ..... ?~~ ~~!!~ ..... !!!! ~!!~ ..... !~~ ~.~!~ ....... !~.~~ ~.~ ...... !!.~~ ~.~~~:!!!' ..... ~!!~ b Orange Coa&I DAILY PILOT/Thursday. July 9, 1981 H • F El
,,. SALl!IC• m Secrttarlal _.__ S.. .......... 3/yr old tri-color female MOVlNO SA.LE·SO'l Ott! ESTATE Sa~ New a· , Powwr t040 Atltot for Wt 4aftot Wllllltd tHG Wot, .. pcwtld ·.}."' ' • X•OXIOOOPll !JI r.m~ Shtlty w.lthJapera The 2NO HANDER 120 blutvelvettota•.411" ............................................. , ..................... , , ..................... . _.. :.!~or!'" tJtnt, Top eotcb, Pl.I\ Ume 41 T·-.._-;.,._ .._ Nffda bt1 ~ie'ee Nn E. 23rd St CM Mon.Sat md. roa~tbl, 4 leata 4i Ex ft.tblna boat w1moor· l~cmPORT!-NT WI IUY IMW 9112
· vacatJoo ~l.,.__. v · · filP S mate chra rm. S' In& Daya S47·M61, eve• ~ CETO _.1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~70 ElJ)fr., r-cE 6 Elem. Frff5Beautlfu1KiUttna. ESTATE SALE· Tuu n11.1&b a $1.50 Misc 83 ·II* HEA~ERSANO CLIAHCA S $1 f!!!OOO • .., . , SALIS ....... ,_ 1 T . 11Dft~ rtqd Manasenal t Wffb old. 2 CaUcot thru Fri 4llOAbbie Wav, end tblt 6 lam!>' 411" 31 · Owens. '$1, twin ADVERTISE~ AHDTIUCIS • CO~ I.I. ~ret.lry, IC'.p fllnff ability a tnllll lmmed. -. . C M Fum appllance1a maple detll $100 Antq. screw. dbl =· very The pr1r1• or items r lnven ., ~ired or eelllna houst. 7 Part time. Newport Oj)ftll(l1.•0tu Realatered Lhaaa Apio elr · • linaenechest $l50. Twn ~ood cond, H1.1t1t l!dv1irt1sed by v"h1rle OF ._.EW IM' W'S
'd"ya 1 -·~L'· W• n~ Beach T .. ,. ""'-............ adult re-a•-Ir ..... to F · i 8 1 bed l.10 Sat .. 91 only. 1 bou••li" ""'"9134 . de11ler3 in the vehlrlt " • .._. " """ .-1 •YP!rW . ., clC, ,... antut c arc•tn•' 322 &hrl&old. Cd M 1 .. """ clasalfled advertislna Salu and Le .. 1n1 11 ~· Uc~toltam the Ana. ttrvice. Daytime hom .5.56-7271 Furn, clothu, books, CASH' lotita,I•/ columns doea not 1n competlU\e prlceJ Ex
alUlt to manace. broker SICllTAIY shirt. 312 3rd St . IC. Sbephtrd/Ll.b loves ltlda. 11ppl, col1'rtlbles. ever Be · 4.,_.. h SM C.._..,. tOSO tludc any apphrublto cel~nt ff1'VIC. and pil"U
('()lllmerctal rHI estate. LEGAL La una Beach med u , houaebroken )'thing rots! 9-S Sat/Sun 0 au~h tti:r • h Ir · ••••••••••••••••••••••• tuu, ls("('nsc. 1ran11f"r dept
-:. 1locome from mimt Xlnt sklllt required, Tow T~ "-I•-Jo'em, 11 moe. good home J u I y 1 l . 12 . 3 1 8 an roc1 & c a • SH •RKSll roes. f11111nr" <'haraes.
:·
evhlle you leam. Super salary neaollable I .,_ 'd P.._.,.,..Oood .. '· 15dMl51hves ~oronadoBalboaPenin S30. Sma 1 air rom· ~ .. fet•fora1rpolluUun con HICiHIUYB ~ntflt1 ; Ult lnsuran«: m1nollic1 92i01 • r.&P · enn uc C ~ --prenor, 15$ 8/W TV 38' Paeemalttr Yacht, Id r· T d II r S ht Ith IN 11 ~ -Xlnt aalary ·, comm' blhuahua, lon& hair, H; Boat equtP.m t, hooks. $40 10 spd bike sso 1 6 r ''b rt , tro ev1re t't'rt1 1ra1JOl\li op o ars or port•
tat1 plan 'C'.::ct KC:. SICllTAIY Larry Hwst Auto Center. Iba. 4 5 yra. lovable. plan~•. bike. baehold Hoover upnght vat·uum, 'eeps • or " a er or dealer documrntar> Curs. B~. Camper.,
675 •... 00. LEG•• ...... 3000 wat ch do1 Shots. goodies. etc, etc llC -. 7." 1 SpechiUtingin •h1rltfis· £r"p1.1rauonth11r.:t'~ un 91•·1,Audi •
VI ~ ..::: ..... ==:.a.::i==·--.... ..... La I 8 lb ---· VV" • hin& orr Catallr111 Island h ,,,..... A1k tor u c M,. R For prtstlalous Newport '"" .... 1 mar nt Ave.. a o1 213'3111897 Weeltda ~. ess ot l'rwu>e spec ,.... ' ..., Beach firm ~hr work TYPIST 3 yr old Fem Lhasa Island. •IAU.OOHS = bytheadwt1m JIMMAIJHO •SALIS-fOl•
Stt up dlstnbutorl from
HB to SJC. New ~volu·
\IO.llary product In pest
~on trol. Good rom
minions. M~t have re·
liable rar Call Vic.
714 /S§!:!!!L.
wuk $1500 /Mo Permanent paru1me Apso. to good home Julylo"ttGudryer, 81~thday1, Weddinas. WILCOMEAIOAID Gflterof 9510 VOL.KSWA~IH
Bentley-Hayes ' Assoc L1gbt, pleasant Vr'Ork. 1!!Q_I0-6782eves. bar & stooll. much misc. delivered anytime. Pvt salling yacht ....................... 18711 Beach Blvd ~9-3825 OrlitnalRedPlaleCo. PUREBREAD Plgmy W2 Salt Lake Or, HB BalloonsofNewport BURN'S CHARTER 'II OB.OR.UH HUNTINGTONBF.ACH
SICllTAIY Costa Mesa. ~5139 GOAT 1 yr to loving N~low!!/.f'i.ewiand ~n_ow. 84.W445 616-2.Slii Slick 11141731 2-434 142~2000
Ptrmaneot 9 am·IZ TYPIST 45 wpm1Recep.. homeonJy. Round Table & chairs G M diesel part." fl71 loah, Sol 9060 •'""'-I TOP DOLLAR
M F llonisl lnt'I trading 9SHll70 $75 Apt Refnge Misc blower, pwnps, tatnl & •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• -.!.~•• p _.10 FOR fi:~·Goc:'.ty~~kll~: co / I r v1ne Prrm , free Kittens-to good furn clot~.642·~ J!!.Q!t!!!.CIC~ Catalina 30, diesel. CICtnlct 9520 "'
SALES. Interior Design,
full or part time Xlnl
entry level job Fleqble
brs 586-3334
Newport Beach area P /time. 2 day ~·k · tiome Lovablt> & Garage Sale·Frl, Sat, 19"TVPortableBlk1Wht refr1g,· 110 gen. 1 bag ••••••••••••••••••••••• GOOD&CLEAN
675·3772. 9·4 30PM.~.perhr housebroken 6 &8 1 110 1 111 20442 $.15,CanisterVac·uum sails. etr S33 .500 PHTTllST USEDCARS!
:· .... -----S.lea '•
'loin the progressive and
fastest grov. ing
wholesaler 111 the offtce
produrts industry
Several account ex ·
ecut1ve positions are
now available in the California area In
dustry knowledge and
sales ability essential
Send resume 1n con· ridenre Lo
Urited
Statianers
S11~0. 1007 IL
MorillaDtt ty.
CA.902'1
211-822-1724
Equal Opponunsty
Employer M F'
Call Norm1t,83J.89'70 weeks old Ca ll itfl 8PM Rave~wood Ln. H B Complete S20 Works 546·7506 _ •57 T..alRD
SIClETAIYU TYPIST 494·3698. IBrookhurst Ad ams > good 846 ~ 14 ' Starrraft ~ •trlr, IMTOWH!
SecmanaJ position in GENERALOFFICE English Sheepdog Pup-Clothing. bikes, bit in Musical • fiberglass, lWlll hull de IEST OffER!
active Newport Centcr At: r u r ale 3 5 W r M pies. Free tu lov in R e I e c ran fl c t o P • t..1trwall1 8011 sign .. '650. ~81158 -~VKZ>
Realtor'a office. Front 549.3942 home. 847.3624 bedspre1111 , cu rtain~. •••••••••••••••tttt•••• 30· sloop. l2 bugs, i.lps 4 office poslfion rtqu1res -- -etr Musirman K0112 tOOw •1•.000 "r tr~de up •-od l I h W-U. /W-&&.........-f'ree mulli·rolored k1l • , v a "' go e ep one voice, .-ref' ~• G I A N T amp, xlnt rondttlou, To p 673-1350
t yping. SH & IP· Exp'd ,parttimeeves tens.llger·stnped~rey, NE I G llBORH OOO $400 /0llO Htll 13'9"Sa1llls h.Xlntc11nd.
pearance. Real es tate $6. hr. No tips. Pvt. white, orange & back. GARAGE SA LE Must 645-7349/~m.l MakA of'er ""2·9""• or
experience helpful bUl COUnlry t'IUb. 644·5404, ~Oii ~·11219aft !P.11!.:.__ Sell beddtng, king 52 Office lr...-1&..-.. "' I' ... ,.,, 1mamaa11m not essential Prefer We<l_!hruSwt BenJ1 type small dog, bed d h ~ 645·4493 IO<'al resident f or 1n fem, good watrhdog for sprea w mate mg EqMI,...... 1015 18' Sol C11t w Lrlr SlliOO
t . all M D hi Wolt.rfW....._.• l S48-1506 sheets, drps. ktnl( ~z •••••••tt•••••••••••tt• 673-78(17 '29 Model A Tuwn Sedan. erviewc n . u Apply btwn 9AM & 5 rson. -pillows. De<.'Qrator1tems IB M electm· typewrller. 4 dr. restored Ideal for
W.sa.yH. ToriorCo. Noon. Charlie's Chili, Siberian H~ky w/papers rrom modtl homes Xln't cond $5(1() ORO 60' MOORING student SI0,500 AL.SO
Reolton 644-4910 3001Redhill.Bldg 112. freetogdhomewl&rge Kitrhen pols. pans, t7l4J 840-6248 19790'Day30d1esel, '46 F ord Woodie
St •226 CM 1ard 642~ bowls. cookers plare ---whl h ed t l t 1 ·• St 3 '11'1 SECRETAIY fbec. Outstanding opponumty
for the President of a
real estate company and
Chairman o( the Board
of bank Must be able to
type 80 wpm, and take
shorthand at 110 wpm .
Salary open Call Mr
Geor e. 714 873-1600
_e_ "'"-·-F'reek1Uen.s, Manx mats, cloth uapkin:. Office f'urn for rt'nt. ~ond. :~~I. Nm;i. ~~~ res o reu ··' '
Window Washer. p time Also inrlut.led Many very reasonable. '!l&• '39,000. 1·9413171 675·6161 Musthavereliablecar & 64>26'2 misc hshld ilems. 83l·ooa} JlModel "A"f'orcl
min I /yr experience. German Shepherd, 2 yrs lamps, books. games. Sophisticated Sony dictu Catalina 22· 1980 Xlnt 95', Restored
$4 2S hr to start (black I, gentle. very persona l items lhut uon system & m~r of cond Fixed keel..,. trlr $9500 640-2004 ~-9"180 §_mart 7Sl·Bn6aft 1 e.~! women want & don l fice equip ~OBO~ 6067 Rec~otiond
Mere~ FIREWOOD want lo pay store prices P P8:J'1·5§1S SABOT Melcraft Rare VtltlclH 9530
....................... Free toyou.646-90&0 Fri IPM·5PM. Sat SAM Pets 8017 rigged Xlnt rund ..................... ..
•-"--• 8005 SpnngerSpaniel, abo-ul 1 4l'M (Uruvers1Ly Park) ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• $900 ofr 644 5754 STEEL Tl.:BF: Hugi:> .... ,....,.... 17891 H~n1.1ns ln1nu w hl I (' _!4Q8770 _ Frame SandToysspot ••••••••••••••••••••••• yr no pa-rs """ · ~ roug ron aRe SECIETH•ES w• ... TEDTOIUY ' ,_. •Culver & Michelson. w stBnd hanging ~rch Ral'1ng SABOT mint welded. need~ sand * Ml * "'" ~3686 at·ross rmm the Alphll w 1dishes fo r lge hartl rond ! 2 sails, new mast. 1 n ll Pr 1m1 n g SI O 0
I bu Y 01 d gun 5 • Fwwl._;--8050 Beta Shoj>1!1hgcepter1 '150642-7137_ _ banana boom & rJelng 642 l~S
ivICKI HESTONl
& AMOCiatH
Specialists in
TemporaryCleriral
Personnel
540.0400
SECIETAllES
diamonds. ivory. Jade & ~ · h II fi h"" ••"'" collectibles Call t114 l •••••••••••••••••tt•••• fri Sat Sun 8-5 al 5051 Dusky Cooure Parrot rag, u re uns ""· """"' 4 Wh.el DriY" 9550
9'72·4926 &ask for Dane * * I BUY * * Cher) I. HB Nr BobJ Young, tame. w rage t.75 3089 ...................... . -----.-----Chica Edinger Furn, ~ 5465427 25' Coronado Sloop 6HP JEEP '81CJ5.4cyi. 12K Lile 1800 V1rtor1an sly le G~ used furniture & housewares riothC's -o U, 4 hags satlt.. trlr m1, radio. p1b. P s. S8000 setlee 642·5770 wkdys, "ppUances -OR I will sell boat new cu ' · 1 riaeoa & OnJ-s 8090 ps<l(I AV646 9000 l'ush orlakeover pmnl!> ~-0294evs or SELL for You "--....................... -PPS45·5726e's --MA.STEISA.UCTIOH IRVINE TERRACE 2S VENTI:RE ~e~ an Lge exec des~. Sl.SO OBO 11arage sale S..t. S-3pm. I '78 Stored for 2} r' Sip~ Trucks 9560 5 dwr man s dresser. 64+·1616 llJ..9625_ Sun 9·12 1824 Marapata. STE IN WBAbV r.G~ d I S S 6• 2hp Evan ftadio ....................... . -..ioBO 642-6980 Walnut a y rand ~---· I IUY RJRHfTURE CdM _ 5·1+ .. Bit 1n 1948. bt•ller lrlr. main & Jib 1\11 1980TOYOTA Br?hmbac~ Baby Gran~ Les 9578133 fantast11· antique & than new Recentl) re equipmt Like Ill'" SR5PICICUP
Piano, 80 yn old. anti 20SOfAS.new,118ea household ~ale Spr finished, 1mmar & \er) l!JI 5232 or4947803 1.ongbed model ."1th
a,ue Needs some work 15 Loveseats, S75ea 1ngdale & Talbert. H R rare Sl4,000 firm Ham LEHM AN 12 · r a cl' AM fM stereo, bul'ket 111 sell to gd home 957 57~or 554·4180 Fri & Sat. 9 5pm June 10 mond Organ & Piano r1gi:ed, 2sails, $475 ~eaL~ & lhis one'b reull) Register today for local ~· 548-3151 anytime & 11. Center CdM. 644-8930 (,IJ.~41 ~halJI ' 172471)
temporary uslgnments. Oak dining t.able, S27S HEYER USEO: 2 e.-L G S• ----locrta, SI-/ ONLY S5495 557-0045 Beautiful liJ!'.t oak Ad· Queen bdrm~. bunks , ...... , ,.. Brahmbach Baby Grand Docks r-9070 MIRACLE MAZDA
m 1 ra I ity esk. S650 5200, sofa bed $170. mat A..+iqiln, Misc Piano. 80 yrs old , anll ....... ................ 2150 Harbor lih tl
SA.LESPBSOH r-n.. L'n-960-SMO tress box spnngs, lwm furn . r ~ t' o r d i.. que Needs some work COSTA M~I\
wanted for altra~tive U \• 11 --&-.II 10 I 0 S75. full~. QUl'en Sl2S silverware 8 6 Sat on!y Will sell to gd homt' Hwpt Sip AYoil. 64"5700 • _,.....CNtc:ft MORE! 710-0901 3112 Van Buren. 3116 ~548-3151 an>11me 675·4'~vs673-3329 ~ _ -
9570
F:s~,~~·~1:!:3eF~~p~~ n~;::;::;:u ";;;;;·~;;uz;ci;" Queen Sz Waterbed Van ~uren,CM <~Gooda 1094 23' Formula. Iv.in 170 '76 Datsun PL' auto.
P/time Expr pref 'As ""'7.8133 rr1meS25 Le1n•1ng State. ever _,_..,...., \'olvo's.newtra1ler xlnt am fmdr::-;~i., s1he111. 86dK 640-7810 HewDOrtlNcti _...,.._ __N --642-7137 ythinggoes,Yearsor ac •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• cond. w42' Ba~ moor m1. rC11.u:.. xn con
Sales People wanted for t .O.E. Stove .. quality, O'Keere & Rauan rouch ii chrs $400 cumulat1~. 893-~_ W~h 20 2g72. d~I s~!,~I in& 54004aloft 7pm ~1·9129~821 ll40 J2900
part or full time sales. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Merrill $150. 548·8513, White cab for stereo $100 Honu I060 Span Matador $270 T ,..... CUSTOM '72 Ranchero
Possible earmmg ~ SECUTAIY S48·«85 ---6311338 ....................... 540-2382 ra111poa-unOii GT loaded' Nev. brakes.
""r week plus Serious Im med opening for G E Upright F'rosl Free 8' Beige Sota SM 2 over HORSETRAJLER ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• tares. a r. elr etc. Musi .... r th f'reeier SLSS ' '78 I I 2 h TV, Radio, c--n ~_._I i.ee I $3200 Or trade for hardworking people will secreta ry or e slurred swtvel rockers, mpena . orse, HiFi,Sfirreo 1098 -•r:-.~ 'l•T Van 642 Sl fiO
advance rapidly Call ManagerofMarketing& -645-0490 jlOea 661-2477 tandem w tack rm Rtftt 9120 6"69"180 ·fol £' 559 5812 Business Development Refrig. frost free, ex Elec brakes Daily Pilot ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
_..!! ~ · Mu st haH excell II k d Kitchen table ~ 4 l: d l U Beautiful Color TV. 2 )r 1011 Camper f'our StJr Che' '80 Hca\} 12T l'L' Sales re ent, wor s goo h1ghbark Swt\el chairs, re I n1on re po wrn1 ) f ree deh\Crv ·r Ibo & k ... ()("I p tirrie.f time key secretarial. ve rba l & S2SO.S48·8Sl3,S41t448S_ chopping block. form il'a Sealed b1dsarebt'mgac Sl4B 646 17116 / w rern~eraLOr & ~ltwe 1,~ 17~41 ~a~~82 "'' ,.
salespeople needed to written rommunirat1on Dryer, gas, rlean. works 1g:5 646-mlaft 6PM cMepledbe until JulyD IOI IS" S<lNV Tnn1tMn HPuotarnl o.a' ... ~·~nt ls}1'10 I~~.!, I '75 F' d skills. Gd opportunit y good, S75 Wshr. clean· ~-.. ay Sl't'n ut a1 ~ •v , "I'""' ' "" or I lon p1rkup u;o train & supervise people for a career minded an w 0 r k 5 11 ood 58 s GOLD LEAF 42 round Pilot Auto Shop. 330 W " $;M Slet'ps 6 In ext'ellt'nl eng. 12 .. llrt'~. l20oo in new health & nutrition dividual Excell work 548-8513 548-44!15 glass lop cocktail table Ba) St . c M or call _ ~ 7051 rond1t1 on $1250 l'all 894 ~
company Call Mr ing cond1llons & ro --" ---150 493-~ 642 4321, ext 296, Mo Puve} l.ll wall 4 rhan bet '".een 10 .. m 511m 121'7fl GMC I ltll'l. fla1 lied
Davis for interview benefits. for interview. Washer & Eler Dr)•er Available now• Brown thru ~n,_ .. Sam 51!.ffi _ nel mono PA >\mp 631 76S7 w h\'Y duty rott'k 45-1 .i ~·1al.(_7.!!)89487911_,_ rontacl: Dana Correll, like new ::0~8fh. Gold playpen sofa', Imo old. HoeneholdGooda 1065 w reHrb Complet~: C11mper for ~mJll 1'1rk j spd i1Jrk. SOM m1 ~Kl
Sales Emka y Development ---· --.@lO Call now 964·~-•••••••••••••••••••••••! with 2 rolumns. 141 12 l'p All wood. !>lldml! ea 8lM 05M
Poi.t.M.ctw.-e Co . Newport Beach. SEARS Gas Range 4 LEADED Glass Top Oak Plush crpl, wood nr. cer I spkrs ea s.ISO OHO .,.1ndows. bark dour. VGM
Exp preferred Must be 714·&33·861Kl, M F EOE burner. Broiler oven C""'ktail tbl .ll" x 60" ule & lino. Cuar install ~·33Sl an~me sleeps 2. Makt-offer Uke n•w 3 yrs old Sl"' ~ ~·2 9.,.,4 or.,., 4493 ••' • •• • •••tt••••• • • • • •• able to work Sat & Sun. " · "" Mfg Silver Apple nearly Bu&~ins 528·0581 loob & MstM '" " -....., . Other hrs. lo be ar incl gas line 645-0944 or ... 00«., .,.., p 1 11 1979 YW IUS ••SECRETAllES•• ~9750 .!l_e_w.., ~:!....., Used . but not worn or Eq.i,....,.. ramo camper ~ \l' 7 passenger model ~1th
ranged Wages based on T60 Advant:eS12,000 r · F Assorted custom made spotted. 100 >ds nylon •••••• ••tt•••••• ••••••• '" boot mini lruc·k $250 auto m ;,1t1 r t rans . ex""r Apply in ""rson Re ng reezer. auto ice. d 1 G 90 or best o .• ., ilO'" "'" ,,.. Sht801fashlsS18.000 xlnl cond """"' Crown drapes V ER Y crptg, asst ro ors, et1erol 10 . .,._"".ro ,\M FM stereo l:ipe, Kerm Rima Hardware. ......., 'I d CdM 675 '>'>Ca c H bo Re<'pt T5S AnahSl4 ,400 molding_25' .Jhl60-8099 REASONABLE " Y _ , ~ tt•••••tt•••••••••••••• am per. ~lps 4 a I'. po1rt two.tone pa.mt & ONL..Y I 21166-~1 1 CM_ -Pres lREISh90S19.200 ll46-!S34 SUPER SHARPENER RtdMc. Yow Ta.ICU putt) stow. n•lrai:. s.rx10 1!1.000 mile:.• t113S91
S ·LESW,..,._,,... Exp ConsullanlOurs 1912 '' Side·by -.s ide 8 r M Uf r N r !1'79226S O .... LY $7575 .,. ...,,...... Frigidaire Refngerator l ,, c " re rig Sharpens ANY blade. on.pro 11 organ1ut1on "
miracle
mazda
21SOH..Wll•d.
Coda Mesa 645-5700 -CASHTOOAY
We w1ll l·ome 10 \OU
MEICEDES
WANTED
Call for 1mmed1utt'
appointment
Ask for
Mark Sach.'l·Buver
831-1740 495 1700
MISSIOH VIEJO
l~O@!S
WE MEED
YOUR EXOTIC
&HmSHCAIS
l~w~iiNJ
JlOOW C:oast II")
Nt•wpon Beath
l?-'2·9405
TOP SDOLURS
For Clean Used Cars&Trucks
We pay rash on the !>POI '
l:onlart buyer at
DeSANFIS
CHEVROLET
San Clemente u 1_.0590 oi..a5oo
WANTED!
Late model Toyota~ and
\' o I v o s C a I I u s
TODAY'"
Earle Ike
TOYOT.&·•OLYO
TOJI Dollar
Pad
For Your C:ar'
JOHHSOH Ii SON
lialcoh-Men:ury
2626 llarbor Bh tf
L'osla Mesa 540 ~JO
WeP~
OVER
llut look
for Your Good
\'W, PorscheorAud1
.r=HICK ~VE RION
Good lflttoon or pr~
vioUily owned BMW &
othtr ftne cat'i in rx
rellem concht1on
We 11110 have a luse
company that leasu
other makes or 11uto.s,
trucks and vans For ad
dltlonal 1111ormatlon on
leiuinc pleasecaU
714 V72 IZ70 714 641 9611
f'or a good deal and good ~ "''"'"''"'" CREVIER
SAlES-SEA'llCE~EASING
208 W tst SANTA ANA
714/83>3171 CLOSED 5\JNOAY
Tht Most bcttiatcJ
Port Of Yow
IMW Pwchae Or
LeawC.Wa.
McLaret1IMW!!
luyOrl..eolt
IJ Ow Pt.oM f'laal!
17141522-SJU
ORANGE COUMTY'S
OU>EST
Salt'~ Service Leasing
Roy Carwer,lttc.
Holls ltoyre BMW
IS40Jambort'e
!°lleWjXJ11 ~<!Ch 64().6444
·79 3201. air. sunrl, stereo.
Rat• i.eats. 3SK m1
548 4136 days, 646 6127 eves
'72 BM W Bavaria. 4spd,
air. mo,·mg rnu:.t sell
Satr1r1ce s:iooo firm
~ 4822
'76 BMW 2002 Snrr air,
AM FM ,newt1res :.h'tl
blu~ $.S999_.. 644.G0:14
'75 5301 Slh er blut• an
tenor. slick 4 spet'd. air full power. sunroof.
lamb~kin rO\t'rs. ne.,.
M 1c·hel1n.., X\'S
m odif ied t'ng1n t'
Blaupunkt am rm
l'.ISSt'tlc• & re<·order
F 400 Call01_3 5886
80 BMW J20I 13.000 m1
loaded l'ashmcre rolor
67H242
'71 2002 BMW. whl fm
Blpnt I'll!>.'> Xlnl l'Olld
54000 080 Call l.1sa
673-9395
Capri 9715 ...•.••..••.....•...•••
73 Cdpn. am fm rass.
good ront1. Sl500 Wkdys
96J 9711 I 1..Jnda I
74 Capri 4 t)I. 4 spd.
runs ~ell. dean inside &
out Sl900 01!0 9&I 6436
'76 Capri \'6. hpd.
am rm l'ass. ,llood pot.
xlnt ml. great rund ~00 OB0_760 1593
OatslM 9720 ...••.•...•........•...
some knowledge of Anti 4020 81rchf.at'64EOE -556 --S350. coffee table & end srissors SolaenRen steel car. etr Liberal tax rte Shl'll. '17 SZ2S 548 150!1, 2150 Harbor Bhd
. Ptrmaturewoman w1lh L11 ReindenAgy.lnc ~ 1.936 Almond 10 mos old "'en serrated edge nds )Our boat. plane. Perni. \alle} Camiit'fl MIRACLEMA.l.DA
\'W POllSCH E·AL'DI
445 E Coast H1"a' al liays1de On'l' ~ e~ pon Becirh 67'.111..100 111...,...,....r.n...iP'P..'!""ll
ques lo work tn reputa Newport18J3.8190 Free Refrig 8 mos old Frost J_aJ>le ~bc_lth 673-4713 rrom Germany Fan ducllon advantaRt> 645 8020 {'()~IA M~:S/\
: ble swre.642,79-1S free. $400 C 1 d I ta~llr value' Send s.5.SO 213 654 2341 Ford "• ton tmµr 1ruc·k 64S-5700
; .--;-:-SA LHWOMEH -ffi·l3'7S,8S7·2W .... ~..:::.. es CJll•r to Super Sharpener PO '76 42'Vega Comml•rrial Siesta telt'" op1nl!
1969 Ward's Signature . .....,, Box 8088 . Ne ~·port Plshing Boat Xlnt l.'ond camper ne.,. \'II lrnt' Faiitasticbuy! ~~~~e~redsar1~1:~::~~ •SECRETARY• avorado 16 5 cu ra LIVlng rm. dJnmi: nn. Bearh CA!r.!iOO _ Swordfish. Albat·ore. end. t1rh 70 Che'y Step, window
i1 y n am1c . m a ture Ex cellent oppty ror re[ng_.JJ00.~1~ ~ast~~~~\~~~I~~~~ Jewelry 1070 Sha rk $150,000 Call $2650 6460000 van 17·18 mpg fo'resh
womenwithmm.Syrs sharpgaltowork intast· REFRIGERATOR f'OR bun.le beds wmalching •tt••••••••••••tt•••••• 714 1_540-~a(l.lfl\t Holido" 8,, triH·k paint Uruquc interior
retail sales exper Only ~~~e~/:e~f°:ia~e~f(~ SALE S~1 7231 dresser bkca.se & desk $~0~ wborth ECenu11;e Se1kod1ver's watrh. $100 ~p~r ~lu\t', n•rr1J? f:~~r~e~at~ :r,t ~1 rareer·mmded need ap-Excellent typing & dit· --644 7556 _ _ o om 1an mera s. Ka.yak. needs patch & 'l""" ODO 962 21124 _I stereo ra,selte Ne""
ply. Salary plus comm taphone skills required Refng 1225· Washer & DANISH Dresser w mir pG_pr:_s_tone 640-~ J?a_mt..,po 646-_~ Motorbtd ••s 91411 Goodvear :.teel belted
Pls apply m person or Challenginl( position rnr Dryer Sl.2.5 ea. Dshw~hr ror S95 3 bar slls S30 Macltliiery 1078 loats, M•tfi1C111Ce/ ~...................... /\ I I' W c u 1 h e r
Premium pnre~
paid for an) ust'd \'ar
1 fore11m or dome!>tu• 1
m good rondiuon
See Us F'l rst •
ca 11 AP ro P 0 • 11 29 right gal Call flQO Call 646-S848 Corr lblSl.S. Eng oak tbl ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Se"lc' f 020 79 Peui:l"<ll sr100 grrt>n. tires ch ams :-We" but
fashion Island. NB Laita.m2900 REFRIGERATOR. apt &rhrsl'IZ>Callaft 5.Shenng Machines & ••••••••••••••••••••••• lom1.S3506311715.!lto manirotd ' muffler _liXSll.111 •• ,11 .. 1
· 1!'4·2652 EO~ s1ie Kenmore. 14 mos 642 0053 Vanous metal equip too B O A T CI e a n 1 n i: ~.Pm Depend_able 759 OZ71 1 •:_I.• °U'''·' "" 11 1 ~1
, SECRETA.lY Like new, musl sell $135 L--ht d -b 1 numerous w list Form insid e Out Reasonablt' '79 PEL'GEOT M<WEll · 7 6 o o D c ~: v a n
: •. Oer1denlal Lire of Sec ur ity Officers. 960-'Z795 t~u:g~:i~c~ne2·f:e fo646 1234 prices ' Wkly Month!} SZ75 l'ustom1z.et.1 . ma1t
Newport Bch hu an Homeowners Assoc . GaHers & Sauler iias storage cablllets. $lS & Mku~ 1010 67S·3103 ~5 wheels. am rm stereo
Trude 77 Buick wagon tor
older C.:he\) UIJtt•r
1714 ) 840 471Yl
dpening for a secretary Npt Bch S4 SO pr hr slov!. 'J<JW x 36H. Just _fil 642-0ZJ7 642 lm ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ocrtJ M..-'79 Batavu., ~foJ>e<I new brakes & sunroof
We are looking for so-Prerer rellred 675-6101 serviced~350l 8. Blk N~e Sofa & hrffied DriRkincJ ~........ 9030 Xlnt cood. nso $2795 0~0754 1850 A.utoa, Im~
meone wrth a pleasant Lou_Kaa Fr1g1da1re Refng. gd Loveseatgoodrond SIOO WaterW.ice •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• 644459-1 '&1FORDVanru.nsgootl, ...................... .
personality, who ts well SEC 'Y/IKKPR cond. $50 or best offer by 848-4720 All you want. 12.so wkly M to tH/ looks good S2000 OUO Getttrol 970 I
organized to perform for N.B. llllenor design Saturday 979-1863. after Solid Oak Game/Dmelle Sa mpl.e bollle dell~ 12' Aluminum Fishing ~c!!C 91 SO ~2·l293 4PM 7PM _ ••••• .. ••••••••••••••••
clerit:altypedut1es We firm 955-cm.3 6 m _ Sel beaut con d free ll!s.2!_tch731·27Z7 _ Boat seldom used orig ............. ••••••••••AlltosW-.d 9590 BEACH
olfer nice surroundings For sale Brov.-11 counter J200 OBOM2·JIJll REDWOOD 2 X 6,5 r.osl S399, must si;ll S200 '78 Honda 750f. 7300 m1. ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• IMPORTS
&asabranchorftce.we Sec'y-SyttOl)Opt losp stove ... ~as. 4 bmr CHIN ACABlN ETS l2S 2'to20'looa Xlntdeck rirm673-7724everungs xlnt rond. tuned w~:PAYTOPDOLLAK "'OWON ·partir1apate1nour rom· PT. Costa Mesa area U ed ~ . .._.5807 , F h" kl d ___ SJ400 080 675-9227 ror top used rars •• ' pany's affirmative ar· J d · bkgd --· ---631-l7'6e•H mg res true oa ar· · · H ... Rl,_ILVD. • E 0 E u a 1 r n er lfcycle1 1020 ---nving weekly Save at loah. Power 9040 '76 YAMAHA 6.'>0. runs rore1gn, domrst1rs or .,. """
t1on program · 968-3652 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• SAC~I F'ICE --4 fabulous 55q t pp ca 11 J 1 m ••••• .. •••••••••••• .. •• great, looks clean, lo mi classics H your car 1~ IN ~ ••• call B_re_nda_752-2lll __ SERVICE Slallon atten· Men's SR 12 spd Racing antique wicker side r hrs 64G·988S~ime New 23' Penn Yan Cuddy $750. Aft 5~s.'i6·6378 extra clean. see 1a COSTA MESA
SECUTAIY dent w 1exper. Gd. ref's Bike. xlnl cond. Bright 644-4577 . Muatsell ! ! Kl~g Sized Cabin, all inboard, no Custom 750 Honda M:my FIRST'
, PASTOR'S EXEC Also Class A Mech. with Red Dave 675-3103 Maple twin bed wtrrame. Waterbed & Refri&e outdrlve problems . extr as Lir ,2F8884 ~ IMPOtlT
• · -Commly Presbyterian lir Apply at 4018 Cam· 11 •• u.u ... ~Wsrklh I02S malch1ng 6 dwr chest. Both in good rood Best _l?2_._900_(.2!11S92·~ ~-5633 SPECIAUSTS
f hurch professional £~0r.N B ~••••••••••••••• ~OBO.S51-Jll2 __ orrer.S49·980l . 40' OWENS Tri-cabin MotorH-c:...a..v 1_
• qll.alifkatlons auraruve 51:11y1e1 'PIU"H. Twin bed with mattress -----Tahitian in Npt slip. ....-... -K IE •CH IM9 0RTS
• ti;" ·~ HDWOOO 2 X 6'S • · HOT TUI R1 .. t/Storap 160 "' ,.. , i~7~~~~e~i~'!:.ge. Photo & electrical exp 2. to 20. long. fo'resh S2;5 4 red & while round S•4 red Wood w /all op 642·4644 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1969 llarbor Rlvd
required. Field install•· truck load arriving p111 o w cha Ir . SSO. lion•, 1 yr old. pd ... ct1n, 29' Villa Vee Cruiser WE C ..... SEU 111 141 ~ c~ COSTA MESA S ECRETARY Airport t.ion&re 'r.898-0290 weekly. Save at SS' rt ~-1098. 0 ..,.,,.,., Flybridge. all inboard. "'" 2936Harbor81vd 631·7 17_0
law firm. Top skills. SE RVI CE Station pp call Jim 646·9885 Furn. We're redecorat· aaktng $2!!00.8S72298 like new CreaUve hn. YOURR.V. COSTAMESA AHoR09M
• bPght, organized, self· employee. Apply at: an lme Ind, BR s~. formal din Lo•t laloCMlt !.vail. (213)592-2859 ~~130_1 O '705 t t N k a ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• -• a ar er. on·smo er 15922 Par. Cal Hwy, H 8. C....... IOJS r1;11 . organ, con&0le TV. Helium Bouquets de 35• YtkJHc. S.F. For Sale i l Winn Class ALPHA 67 GTV New
' ie8Sl·9025. 213-592-1571 ..,.. h1dabed stel'fO & more. livered. Perfect for '80 T r-•· 7•·KW A 3 8 K m I , 4 KW 17"' Fl -g ~· WeL·-. . . •••••••• •••••••• ••••••• to 1-~.,, -Ion • w. .....'° . ...... . JV "' -..,.., " Jetutarial pos1t1ons Sewer & dratn c~aner PURR-FECTLY beaut. .............. ,..... everyO<'cas . ld 'd w/elec .. alip, 3Cn generator.roota1rssooo Mic be l1n s. ATEs.
.vail. in San Clemente wanted Ute plumbin& pure.bred, Lilac Point S~ART QualJly Walnut 673-4419 dwn. O.W.C. bah1nce. 646·4693 _ __ dlvorre sale, roll before
tor individual with ex· reg. 96H82Z. Siamese kittens. Mary Dining table & 4 rhrs Nothing w Iese but lbs. Sl29K Bkr 675·11007, T..-ten, y,...tf 9170 SAM or an 8PM $3400
'.· -eel lent aldlls. Hl'I. N . SIWIM41U11tACI •• 64 0 . es 5 0 w k d a y s $185, (2) Malrbing OUve 10 to 30 lbl lnJO days 960-1725 eve. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 494·3141
6. I I I r o r Q P P t __. S.5/4J3..llM6eves/wkndl Green Club Cbrs S75/Ea. Call BobS 548·7582 New 23' Penn Yan Cuddy 11178 Taurus V ac1Uon Alldl
"f..4/M.ftJaS. Eitpe~~~. Dots I040 ~-~essers SlS/Ea ~_rbia1111~ahlt D.~11.1200L1tho Cabin, au Inboard. no Trlr. 24'. sips II, incl
SICllTAIY . . ... Small _ •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• u 11: er . • rt· outdrive problems, buok bds, new cond, 'J,.'"" I 1 u... '°' • m-. ... --· KEESHOND Pups AKC ~ S. IOSS tall. Sacrifice S750 900. 213 S ·28se 000. 142>8'29 v-~· .M•h ••• luWYW Intl •d•il loft aeedal • Champ1lre. M/F' P•t.; ••••••••••••••••••••••• sas.~ p.t...u•w ... ......_ T......u....-a111m.. etr o p olltan '• 1 ea y em1101tt. .. Swt In Pool 3'X12' .,."'" _..,.., ..-~ ........ , • rporatt lnve•tment 115/boUr It urp. 111om,.. • b o • · P v t P l Y mm I · lr7t Penn Van 218' Sport •••••••••••••••••••• .. •
,... ce In Irvine 11 cur· Sallt, Nft'PM Beath. 213/88'Mff,5afU em. ESJAJE SAi.£ New Uner + all access. Flther N.B. allp, 2l0 bp •' X 4' Closed UUUly Trlr. · ···r:e o ti y u e k In 1 a 831-4MO. PL~EI! r • 646·0310eves turbo-dlt.1tl. Great for ~r;! tires. IOOd cond.
Sttrmry to •ilt Ole Shlpplnl It r.etMDI we need homft . Mixed J1'!'11'/IO ~~lque polllh~. brau cnaiain1 or~. lm-OW
'· Mmlnlatrallve Auls· tralou nuded tn pupe ·JmoSIO 32',._ Noodle cart from mac. 6 loaded w/tlec-AltoStnkit.P ...
tent In perform Ina adhftln mMufactvrinl SSS. Ev AMAi•• Thtlland.SU0.•702'7 tronks. 2S~ equity,
'1"'9U dlrical dut.iet. lant 1Sl7 Wonrovla BRITTANY A.KC Pupa Vlt: BalllEucUd ~Gal. Aquarium compl. S3500 dn + $15$ mo ....................... .
·! 1l111tbtable~type50 · s 'x.lntCHICOCt5wklold tAMt.SPM w/ublnet·pumpa-_llO-&ao;evqM!-981 SSAftSAY1$ WEP_.Y
'!.. WPM. NOSllorthand re Mal~ SJOO /,tm S225 Victorian furniture. a ·filh-.641-l '14 Carver ZS'. brlatol WR'HUSIDPAITS "'
f 707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "18 Audi 500>, white, lo
ml, sunroo(, auto, l8000
~7 tY..,..es...._ __
IMW '711 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
For The Besl
BQJOrlnRDtal
In Oran County ..
ComeSttUAToday'
-& ..
• Wnd. will be tnlntd 1 cblna cabinet, lamps, Brau Canopy I.Ins Si coed. 22S Olevy OMC 1 TOP DOLLAR ~ .... ~ word prouu1n1 SH .... DIPT. 2SHELTIEPUPS vlntace clothH, Br. bed complete. "50, u ll drive, IOfW aux motor. mpol~R~arts FOi USID CAIS fl. nl!'lf
•. • lpmelll Excelle11t ~ AKC, IUJ'll, FttOO. flamkura, M and anti· . -all xtras, By owner AUTO SUPPLY ALAM MAIMOM M--'°""""
•• · ultyforquallfltd txctll co. btnelltt. 1. Que &laa. ~ ol old Newport Beach Teftnla I 101 N Mancheat.er M
fYuaJwho...._to Sttedy ""·She""* · l>r'!c.a·brlc, lilMN and Club family Ihm Brit.ltb Rowlnl Doi'} 14' nahtlm PONTIACJSUIAIU 2MOZMerl\lfrilePby.
{ 1 ";'!~a~t1~ , r.•~iu:.= ~ i:::!"!s A:1:; :'c':r.r • llC tards benhl Vay ftUOM xlnl cond-"501080 1f7 Cbe""'v"'-y_po_we ... r""'a""'u""'d=t . 24r~,td· MloionVltJo
ar1 aad 11ulleal Lo1t and Found rol· H M01 •• b · · 17 Trana .J~~l!L..I" 14 Avery Pl~.exli o.a,_, btMllU. CaU waaa fttl'a whtn ,_..-v SILL hnt .._ with a 'tl 13• Pena Yan sport tis· ~ . Coif$ F'tfltwa1)
'1111'75Zelroru bs w1a u.,·.. 01111 Pilot ctualntd btr, t•ill dAeMl m.ooo . Find •h•t 10U want n lll.JMI 4'Mf4t
wal ftantM,,.. ffHm Ad. Jl.UJ. ~ OallyPl1ot<.iau1r1eds ClotfdSund•t•
-I
'70 2402
768 5837
'75 Dots. 2102
Fully loaded Had10.
stereo casselle Wirt'
whech SS.500or h!tl ofr
( j 14 l 6454628
80 200SX Hatrhback.
Blk Grey.22Km1 .~
642 6968att4PM
'69 Roadster Mn\ :-ieeds
)-Ome "ork lfa\e 'ome
parts SI 100 646 9S68
'76 Dat s un B2 10
llatrhback. 5!1pd, reg
us Must sell 497 5991
or957 5515_
·;3 240Z :llK m1 rblt eng,
am rm stereo, "ire
r aps bra S350(1 OBO
962 7369 e~es
80 DATSUN Anniversary
280ZX Ltd ed1t1on.
Blk Gold like new must
su. x1ras. lom1. 645 8996
~aj's, 7609295eves __
Fiat 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·73 124 Spyder New top.
seats. baller) Cstm
whls l1res Trans nds
overhaul P-600 640-4!?9
~-.. DOING
BUSINESS
UNDER A
FICTITIOUS
NAME?
II yo11 ltl'ft 11111 Hitt
yo111 11ew Fle11t10111
lvt ln•u H•111• tnf ..... l'04,.. .........
" ,., p11~11on ......
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ll1111i11ton la ~ ••r•
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DAILY "I.OT •Ill
pvMlah '°"' • ...__ tor I U .ao , Ou
e1rc11t1tioft lndll4M Ille
ullrt Ort nte CoM• .,.. '"' ..... ...... .,.,..,111 ...... .
order lo ..,..._,. rMf ............ ,
1111 •ttu 11u 1111•
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"1LOT, '·0. ... 1•. c .... -...c:A--.
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-
• ATLAS CHRYSL.St~YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 54fH9J.4 3 blocks
south ol San Diego Freeway oll HarbOr Blvd. Complete
body shop. Sales Service Parts Sel'Vlce D'pt open
Monday thru Friday 7 30 AM to S 30 PM and 8 A.M 10
5 P M on Saturday • IEACH IMrORTS
848 Dove Street. Newport Beach Tel 752-0900 Call us.
we re the specialists lor Alla Romeo Peugeot & Saab
THEODORE ROllHS FORD
Modern sales. service. parts, body. paint & ltre deptl.
Competitive rates on tease & daily rentals 2060 Harbor
Blvd .. Costa Mesa 642·0010 or 540-8211
~ JOHNSON & SOH UHCOLN MHCURY
2626 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mele Tel. 540-5630 57 Years
of friendly family service -Orange County 1 oldest L1n-
cotn·Mercury daalerah1p
•• SOUTH COAST DODGE
1888 Harbor Blvd .. Colla Mesa. Tel S40-0330 RV .. rvlce
1P9Clalists. custom van convertlone.
• MIWP'ORT IMPOtrTS
1100 W. Cout Hlgtiway, Newport BHcl'I Tel.
t42·9405/M0-171W The Ferran HMdQuarters
_,, • WCQ • o •• p• • ¢Z4¢FWOZ •• C u 4U •OS&Q$$ a a a:: ; ; 4 I
MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • HEWP'ORT DATSUN
888 Dove Street. Newport•Beach. Tel. 833-1300 At the
triangle ol Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol behfnd
Victoria Station. Sales. Service. Leasing & Parts Fleet
discounts to the l\!Jbhc
0 HOWARD CHEVROLET
Pove/Oua11 Streets. Newport Beach. 833-0555 We
spec1ahze in Corvettes! And our bOdy shop 1s one of the
bestl Excellent body and paint shop for all makes and
models•
• DAVID J. P .. LLIPS IUICIC.flOMT'IAc..MA%DA
Sales • Service • Leasing
24888 Alicia Parkway
Laguna. Hills 837-2400
• MAltlC HOW ARD VOUCSWAGEH, IHC.
13731 Harbor Blvd , Garden Grove. Tai. 534-4100. Large
stocka of new Volkswagens at unbeatable prlcea
• ALAH MAG HON POMTIAC-SUIAIU
2480 Harbor Blvd .. Coat.a Meaa. Tel. s.4~. Salaa,
Service, LHs1ng. "Mr. Go<>Owrench."
0
'UILl 111 TOYOTA-VOLVO
1968 Harbor Blvd .. Coat.a Mau. (T14) 8441·9303 or
~7. tt Ve>Wo deai.r in Or.-.ge County and wtlen
you ..-for a T oy0t.a at Earle Ike a, )'OU get Ill
• • IOI LOHGPU roMTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd., Westminster. Tel. 892-6651. Orange
County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership. Safes,
Service, Pans
• UNIVERSITY HONDA
2850 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-9640. 1 Mlle
South 405 Freeway Sales, S8fV1ce, parts & teasing.
• SAMT A AHA DATSUN
2001 E 17th Street, Santa Ana. Tai. 556-7811. Your
Original Dedicated Datsun Dealer.
• MIRACLE MAZDA
2150 Harbor Blvd .. Colla Mesa. Tai. ~5700. 11 dealer
In So. C.111. Sea the all new 1981 GLC.
ALLEM-OLDSMOlfU.CADILl.AC
SUIAIU-GMC TltUCIS
San Diego Fwy .. at Avary Exit °" Camino Capistrano In
Laguna Niguel. Tel. 831 ·~.
• IAM DI SANTIS CHIVIOLIT
40t S. El Camino~. Sen Clemen"
Sat ... Service, t.Mllng And Parta
0rllt9' County'• NEWEST Cl'leWOtet ~: ''Growing
Your Way · Exit El Camino of1"'111'11P· 831 .058() 4t:MIOO
COSTA MESA DATSUN
2845 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Tel. ~10. Serv1ng
Orange County for 16 years 1 Mile So 405
\
• SUNSET FORD, IMC.
(Home of W1llte the Whale). ~ Garden Grove Blvd ..
W9stminster Tel 636·4010.
• RtANIC PltOTO UHCOLH-MHCURY
Service and Parts Departme(lt always open 7 days a
W'Hk 7:30 A.M. to 6 :30 P.M. 848-n39.
• COHMIU CHEVIOUT
2828 Hart>or Blvd., Coll• Mela. Oler :ZO YNl'I aarvlng
Orenge County! Salft, laMlng. M!Vlca. Call 546-1200;
apec:lal pat1a line; 546-IMOO; body shop line; 754-0400.
• CHICK IVIRSOM POltSCHl-AU0'9YW
41& E. Cout Hwy .. Newport Beach. 873-0900. The only
dealership In Orange County With thaM thl'ff great mekes uAder one roof!
• IOY CAIV• ltOLU ltOYCNMW
1&40 Jambor" Aoed, Newpof1 a.ch. ~ s.tea, 9afvlce. Part& And LMeing.
FOR FURTHER INF0RMATION, OR TO BE PLACED
ON THIS AD, CONTACT YOUR D~ILY PILOT REP. 642-5678
--------------------------------------------
~ I~ ... .. ..
·~ .,
' • ' ' ' .
.,
' I
I ...
.·
,,
Thia ta t~ conclusion of o two·J)Orl ..ma.
If you own control of the nel&hborhood bank
where I do all my major financial bualneaa -
maintain my personal and (if any) business deposit
accounts, arrange installment loani, have my hom6
mortgage, etc. -you can find out all you want to
know about my financial setup within minute&. Mf
financial life is truly an open book to you and th., ·
subordinates you designate to investigate me. '
You need ask no one's permission nor need yo~
disclose to any authority that you are seeking this
information. The book11 of the bank are at your
disposal and I
am in thos e ~ books.
So it goes
millions of : for the tens of ---------~~.;'
others· who are SYlVll PIRTIR ? customers of ~ •.
U . S . b a n k s • ~;! from coast to coast.
There is no accusation of wrongdoing, explicit or
implicit, current or future, in these comments. You
could play a game of dirty peek-a-boo with my I
financial affairs whether you are a bank officer who '
is a descendant of a general in the American J.
Revolution or the brilliant son of a wealthy Arabian ·.:~
with a superb U.S. education. l
But whlle I may trust neither of you with intimate . 1
knowledge of all my financial affairs, should there be ·~ !
an international crisis, would I trust you, a ~~
fellow-citizen, more than I would trust you, a citizen ~~
of a potential enemy of my country? ~~
If you, the foreign bankers who have bought !;:<;
control of my local bank, want to conceal any facts
and figures about your own bank at home from my
nation's regulatory agencies, you may do so -
without fear of censure or unsavory rumors. We
cannot demand you publish figures you presumably
don 't even have to reveal to your own government' ·,
(We're trying, but so far without results. l
Yet, of course. our own U.S,·controlled banks
must disclose those same figures to our own .•:
regulatory agencies. • •
We can force our U .S.·controlled banks to ·
disclose how financially sound they are to our
regulators so steps can be taken. if necessary, to
keep the m s ound . We cannot compel -:•
I foreign·controlled banks in the United States to s
submit to the same disciplines. Nevertheless, our
regulatory agencies continue to approve foreign
takeovers of U.S. banks without obtaining the facts
that seem essential to the safe management of any
enterprise.
If you are the members of a board of directprs
which sets the policies of my neighborhood bank. and
my town (city, county, state) needs the bank's
financial s upport for a highly desirable
improvement, we -your friends. customers,
suppliers, neighbors -can compel you lo come
through with your support, or else.
. .
But would this hold if you, the board members.
were citizens of a foreign power? Would you be so •'
sensitive? Maybe yes, maybe no.
On and on 1 could go with these poison-tipped
questions about the scope and persistence of the
takeovers.
Yes, the tactors in favor of foreign bank
ownership expansion in the United States are many
and varied. The trend does promote competition and :~
broadens the range of our choices of bankinf .~
institutions. In New York state, for instance, there ~
were only 66 foreign bank branches and agenciea •1:
with less than $11 billion in assets in 1970 ; by 1980. r.
there were 170 such branches and agencies with more
than $138 billion in assets. We're not hurting as a
result. The result instead has been to strengthen New
York's position as a world financial center. ;~
.·
..
~--------------------____,....... ___ _ .. --. .. ·-----__...,....._.__.~ ------. . . . ..
------------~----.
Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT(Thur1day, July 8, 1881
. : '. . . : .
. . .
. ~. · ..
I ' .
Research consistently proves MERIT taste
equal to-or better than-leading higher tar brands.
Five years ago, low tar MERIT sparked Millions Endorse MERIT Tuste
a whole new era in smoking by deliver--MERIT continues to win higher tar
. : .. ~ng taste way out of proportion to tar. smokers with its unique combination
· Until MERIT, no low tar cigarette had of taste , erue of switch, and l9ng-term
· · been able to prove it could match the ~ satisfaction.
:~~taste of higher tar brands. _~_.,Tr.r.. A combination that
:~~ · MERIT: Taste Success /~' ~ :--~?.:·,. __ ~~-----.,;:-appeals to millions of
~~(: Switching·studies con--· smokers who have
;··firm it. 90% of smokers · M ERI T switched to-and stayed
(switching to MERIT are M E RIT Menthol with-the first proven
~~ corning directly from Filter taste alternative to higher
~~·higher tar cigarettes. , tar smoking.
~§;:-Fact: Since its introduc--The momentum builds:
f:B!tion, MERIT has gained MERIT is changing the
~~Jn ore smokers than any future of smoking.
~other low tar brand! ~.k.. ~ •.?,;. rJJJ ... •.• ' .... . ,• ... .
,;• ::· . .. ;i;~·--~"'···· ;It~-~~~~~----~--_-.;..;.;_' ~~-. ' ~J. : ~arning: The Surgeon General Has Determined .,.....,..,., ... '"' ~; • hat Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
.... :
"
Kings: 8 mg "t•C 0.8mgnicoaine-100'1Reg:10 mg "tar:' 0. 7 IN nlcotine-
100' 1Mtn:111111 "tar:·0.811111ticot1n11v.per cig1r1u1.nc R8pon DA'.79
•