HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-07-21 - Orange Coast Pilot" .......
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Naked untruih
Store clerk forced to strip
A 20-year-old clerk was left
standing near-naked In the mid·
die or a Newport Beach depart-
ment store thls weekend after a
telephone caller said he was pre-
pared to kill a store employee
unleas the young clerk started
undressing.
Police said the J.C. Penney
clerk, an East Coast college stu-
dent visitin1 Newport for the
summer. was tricked into re-
moving her clothes article by
article until she was wearing on-
ly her panties.
At one point, a pair. of shop·
pers in the Fashion Island store
approached the clerk to ask for
directions, but made no com·
ment about her scanty attire.
The Friday night Incident
began when the clerk received a
phone call from a man who said
he was in the store's credit de·
partment and was robbing the
store.
. He told the clerk that he had a
gun pointed at th head of a
store employee wh m he was re-
ady to kill unle the clerk did
he said.
Police said the clerk was told
that the caller and "his partner"
were seeking to escape the store
and needed to create a
diversion.
The deep-voiced caller, police
reported. began by telling the
worn an to remove her blouse
and then her bra. She complied
with the orders.
He then asked the clerk to
describe any customers in her
area. The clerk described one
man. The caller lnlormed her
that this man was his ac-
complice.
The clerk then was ordered to
re move the rest of her clothes,
which she did except for her
panties.
Standing nearly nude in the
middle of her department at this
point, the clerk was told to sum-
mon the male customer she had
described on the phone.
Police said the man came to
the phone acting unsurprised at
the clerk's condition. The shop·
per later told police he picked up
the phone and said hello, at
which point the caller hung up.
The male shopper then walked
to a nearby cash register where
he told a store employee that the
near-naked clerk might need
help.
The man, police later de-
termined, was not involved in
the prank and likely kept his
curiosity under check so as not
to embarrass the clerk.
Police said when they arrived
the young clerk was extremely
upset and was' resting in the
store security area.
Officers said they believf' the
entire episode was a hoax.
• • • • • •
Ylll lllf llH. llllY PIPll
111</\N r.t ( (llJNI '( , 1\1 11 <>HNI/\ l '> Cf NI'-)
TUCKED IN -Fourteen-year-old Robert Empfield of
Newport Beach awaits the starting gun in the Southern
California Soap Box Derby held in Laguna Hills over the
weekend. For more on the race, see Page A3.
Free ride hack
OCTD reinstates bus plan for seniors
By GLENN SCOTT
Of Ille DellJ " ... ~
Starting today. senior citizens
can again ride Orange County
Transit District buses for free,
except during morning and
evening rush hours.
The free fares were reinstated
Monday by county officials who
said they hope it will clear up
the confusion that apparently
caused many seniors to reduce
their use of the public buses
after fares were increased in
June
It was then that the price for
seniors Lo ride a bus increased to
a dime during off-peak commut
ing hours, from 6 to 9 a. m . and 3
to 6 p.m.
Even though the 10-cent hike
seemed minimal. senior citizen
ridership declined sharply two
weeks into June, from 10 percent
of total passengers to 6.5 per·
cent.
That ratio had climbed to 7.2
percent by the end of June, but
officials still were speculating
that many former riders must
have misunders tood the new
fare rates. thinking they had
gone up substantially
Under the new plan, the fares
for seniors will be free dunng
offpeak hours and 35 cents dur·
ing the rush hours . According to
OCTD guidelines . a seni or
citizen is anyone at least 65
years old.
Before June. the prices had
been free at the so-called "slack
time." and 25 cents at rush
hours The June increase had
made fares 10 cents during off
peak hours and SO cents at rush
hours
The change had its cost.
however The Orange County
Board of Supervisors agreed to
chip in an extra $455,000 from
federal revenue sharing funds to
~ubsid1ze the :.eniors' rides.
The county already was pay-
ing $936,308 in subsidies. That
money wa s to run out in Sep:
tember Thus. the county will
pay about $1.3 million over a
21 month period to continue the
free off.peak rides for seniors.
Retrifl'ving his hat
co t man his life
A passenger on a motorcycle
was killed Monday when he ran
out on the Orange Freeway in
Area to retrieve hi s hat that had
hlown off
Jerr:-AJlen Hagen got about
half wa} tnlo the freeway at
II 05 pm ~hen he was hit by a
car driven by Leland Bowen. 56.
or Fullerton. said California
ll1gh\\a:-Patrolman Axel Mil·
th or
Postal workers remaining on job
Tighter credit
p~licy vowed
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Federal Reserve Chairman Paul
Volcker told Congress today the
fight aeainst U.S. inflation is so
important that the board will
further tighten its rein on the na-
tion's credit and money supply.
even though that means near-
record interest rates will prob-
ably continues.
Volcker, Federal Reserve col·
leagues and top Reagan ad-
ministration officials believe
that a rapidly expanding money
supply would fuel inflation. And
they see that as an even worse
danger than that posed by the
high interest rates which have
stifled economic activity in the
United States. especially in the
housing and auto industries. and
brought protests from European
nations.
U.S. interest rates. which have
greatly strengthened the dollar
at the expense of many foreign
currencies, have been a prime
topic at this week's economic
summit in Canada.
Volcker said the Federal
Reserve Board a1lll aims to hold
the growth or the money supply
known as MlB -cash plus
checking accounts -to between
3.5 percent and 6 percent this
year, the same range he an·
nounced in February.
But he said today that the·
board will pursue policies aimed
at keeping MlB growth to the
lower edge or that range rather
than the mi~le.
111111 CIAIT lllTllR
Patchy late nlsht and
early momin1 low clouds,
otherwise fair through
Wednesday wllh some
high clouds In the after-
noons. Hilha Wedne.day
ran1lna rrom mld-109 at
the beaches to upper 809
Inland. Lowa tonl1ht 58 to'
88.
1••11M1
Gr...-U., Olde>, .. now tlw
ofllclol blrtlaploc:e o/
tho,.,,.,.,,_, A,_, OolrNv.
.S.t PG.,M. , ••.
In addition. he said. the
Federal Reserve tentatively
plans to try to bold that money
growth to between 2.5 percent
and 5.5 percent next year.
Testifying before the House
Banking Committee, Volcker
said that "turning back the In·
flationary tide, as we can see, is
not a simple painless process.
free Crom risks and strains of Its
own.
.. All that I would claim is that
the risks of not carrying through
on the effort to restore price
stability would be much greater
Dealing with inflation is essen-
CSee RATES, Page AZ >
Uppe r c rust
'd e flowe ring'
raises furor
LONDON CAP) -Debretrs
Peerage, which for decades con·
fined itself to the finer points of
etiquette and noble ancestry,
bas caused an uproar among
Britain's upper crust by s~ggest
ing their unmarried daughters
are unlikely to be virgins .
Queen Elizabeth's chaplain,
the Right Rev. Michael Mann,
has challenged Debrett's
managing director, Harold
Brooks-Baker to prove bis claim
bf nobility's sllppin1 morality.
Mann said the reputation of the
royal family could be sullied.
"He is entitled to his views,
provided he makes it clear they
are only views." Mann said.
'·He should not put them
forward u facts ...
Debrett's Etiquette and
Modem Manners, published tut
month, su11e1ted virginity la
rare and unfashionable amona
the aristocracy and boateaaea
should put unmarried couples In
the same t>ecin>om when they
came to stay.
"I revet very much that tM
•orld hu evolved tbla way,"
Brooks-Baker said Monday.
"But our Job lJ to document eti·
q_uette and the peera1e . • . and
11 the world t. upeld• down. lhe
world it upeide down."
'·ff a flrl came to LondcJn for
tbe aeuoa abe waa carefully
chaperoned. Nowaday1 lt t. not uknown ror a slrt to be allowed
toHtlMnllfaplaaftMlaa ...... •. -··· ...... . .,.,.. .. .,. ..... ---..... . .,..... .. ..... ===== UHltrtei.
l
-~--Moe Biller (left), prelident of the American Po1tol Workers
Union, and Vince Sombrotto, prelidmt of the National. A•aociation
of utter Carriers, shOwn in Wcuhington hotel after rejecting
Postal Sennce offer.
Boys big spenders
Missing pair found after spree
While parents and police
searched Monday for two La
Habra boys, aged 7 and 10, the
missing chUdren were having
the time of their lives at a local
shopping center.
The boys, next door neighbors.
4 injured
in bus fire
SVLMAR, (AP) -A church
bu1 fUled with elderly people on
• relllioua retreat cau1ht ft.re on
a freeway Monday, auttlnc lbe
bus and rorc1na Its 38 paHeqen
to scramble out wtndow1 at
names blocked tbe emeraency exit. Four people were injured.
Tb• bu1 was '•a complete
burnout ,"' HJd Ted Aquaro,
=mao for tbe Loi A•lll• TIM~M ...... .U •••Mrl of ti• Pwlmlll• Naaart•• ell•rela. ••fitted
1194*1 ...._...._hi IM U:•
•. Ill. lndctlDt
were reported m1ss10g Monday
when their parents couldn't
locate them after the boys rode
away on their bicycles about
noon.
Police sent out a description of
the boys and what they were
wearing. They searched such
hangouts as the local Boys Club.
A police spokesman said to-
day, however, that the boys
were found about midniaht at a
pizza parlor In Whittler after a
clerk became· suspicious that
they were unsupervised. The
boys had a lot of money.
The spokesman said one of the
boys t)ad lllted $400 from hls
mother'• purse and they simply
had 1one on a s hoppln1 spree.
He said the boy• twice mana1ed
to cash StOO bills.
What did I.bey buy? Well, can-
dy and tood, T ·shirts and
writt•atcbel. Sv111 tboqb tbe boys were
fairly dale to lliiale, t.be police
dhta 't loeate ~atr bl cycles .
ftat'I ....... dilt .. Meided =Wllll •••••• "°" .... left ... tM lalal bike 1bop for .
Tentative
contract
rejected
WASHINGTON CAP> -A ten·
talive agreement to avert a na-
tionwide mail strike coll apsed
today after union leaders said
the final Postal Service wage or
rer contained "a serious in·
consistency" with what they had
accepted two hours earli er
Postal workers remained on the
job, however.
As the negotiations resumed,
leaders or the two largest postal
unions said there were no im·
mediate plans for a strike by
their half-million members.
The unions threatened to pull
their workers off the job at mid·
night Monday, when the old con
tract expired.
Moe Biller. president of the
American Postal Workers
Union, told members today "lo
hang in tough."
Biller and Vincent Sombrotto
of the National Association of
Letter Carri e r s said they
thought they had reached agree-
ment about 2 a.m. on a tentative
three-year contract
They announced that to the un·
ions' rank and fil e on a taped
telephone message anci even rec·
ommended ratification. But
n ve hours later Som brolto said:
"We are now in a position where
we don't have a contract.
"At approximately 2 a.m., we
made an agreement. We brought
that down to our rank and file
a nd our executive bodies for
their attention and approval ...
and we put In motion our
telephone network," he said.
"The terms and conditions
... were discussed at length"
in a caucus with top union
policy-makers. Sombrotto said.
It was then that "serious ques-
tions about it" arose, he ad~ed.
''Then we returned to the
bargaining table. When the
CSee MAIL, Pa1e AZ>
Teen killed
on coaster
DENVER (AP) -A teen·a1er
was killed aft-er he stood up ln a
roller coaster at Lakeside
Amusement Park and then fell
25 feet to the ground, authortUea
said.
Wltnesses told police that the
victlm, Ronnie Viall, 19, of
Denver, stood on hi• seat on the
first bill, re~ated the stunt Ob
the HCOnd hlU and then fell.
VitU wu dead on arrival at St .
AnlhonY Holpltal. Jlm Pall, a private ottupti•
tlonal Hlely bMWt HnlultaDt,
aald It wu t.be ftrlt amuaement
park deet.h ln Deever In •t le..t
U yeara .
•
CONTINUES TALKS
Postal Sermce's Bolger
I
Rai n visit s
co astal area
~ but briefly
Ram that sprinkled parts of
the Orange Coast this morning
did nothing more than wet the
ground and left behind some
high clouds expected to be
around through Wednesday, ac-
cording to the National Weather
Service.
The forecaster said any
chance of significant rain passed
with today's sprinkles. He said
the high cloudiness will decrease
Wednesday afternoon.
Temperatures In the mid·'10s
alons tb4t coast and near 90
degrees inland will increase
humidity and make the air
mugg y Wednesday , the
forecaster said.
Clouds moved over Soulhe,n
California last night as part of a
cloud system that developed In
the south overnlaht, according
to the weather bureau.
Singer improving
MEMPHIS, Tenn. CAP> -
Sln1er Jerry Lee Lewl1, who un·
derwent two stomach o.,.rat.lana
and lln1 red near death for Mar.
ly lhrM weeka, bas been taken otf
the crlllcal llat.
..
. •
.!
. . . . ...... '2 d
u ••. * •• Orange Coatt DAILY PtLOTfTuHdly, July 21 , 1981
.Texas lifts· quaranthie on CBlifor.nia produce
eooflned to three San Franct.co
Bay area countlea and doesn't
affect eomJnerdaJ f arma. The federa~ 1ovemment already has
its own quarantine ln effect ln
the t~ countltt.
LOS GATOS CAP ) -
California produce rolled anbln·
dred lnto Texa1 today after a
federal Judie temporarlly lifted
a quarantlne lmpoeed by the
Lone St.a,r State ln respome to
California's problems wlth fn.alt
flies.
Ca lifornia lawyers ,
meanwhile, were preparin• to
ask the U.S. Supreme Court. ~ssibly today, to bait similar
stringent quarantlnes that al.lo
went into effect Monday lo
F lorida, South Carolina, M'la·
slssippi and Alabama.
As hellcopt~rs completed the
flnt daytime aerial apra.rina ol
the peetlclde malatbloa Jlonitay
1outbH1t of San P'rancl1eo,
a&ate officlala expanded the
aprayln1 tar1et zone to 227·
14uare mUee from 175 aquare
miles to battle lnfeatauona of
Mediterranean fruit mes.
The next aerial aaaault on tbe
mes, whk h destroy about 200
varieties of frulta and
ve1etables, includln& peppers,
tom atoea and peaches, is
scheduled to start Wednesday.
Jn Dallas, U.S. District Judie
Patrick HlHinbotbam 1ranled a
t emporary restraining order
r.µ.eagan agrees
I
to trade meet
MONTEBELLO, Quebec <AP)
President Reagan, in an ap-
parent concession to American
economic partners, agreed to-
day to preparations for "global
negotiations" lo help poorer na·
lions in development and trade,
knowledgeable summit meeting
sour ces reported.
Until now, the Reagan ad·
ministration refused to commit
itself to global negotiations on
the ground that the concept wu
too vague.
The final communique of the
seven-nation summit of major
Shelling
e xchanged
in Mideast
TEL AVIV. Israel (AP> -
Israeli and Palestinian cunners
exchanged fire across the
Lebanese-Israeli border today.
and Prime Minister Menachem
Begin's Cabinet met to consider
an American call for a cease·
fire to halt the escalating at·
tacks.
The Israeli military command
said gunners returned fire into
Lebanon after Palestinian
rockets and artillery shells
struck Nahariya on the Medite-r·
ranean coast and points .in the
Galilee panhandle 20 miles in·
land. Several people wer e
wounded in the Galilee, Israel
radio said.
The Palestinian news agency
Wafa said Israeli artillery fire
hit Beaufort Castle, a major
guerrill a base in southern
Lebanon four miles north of the
border. and the guerrilla·
controlled village of Aychieb.
The latest exchange broke a
brief respite from overnight
artillery and rocket barrages.
The U.S. government decided
Monday to extend the delay ln
shipping 10 F-16 jet fighters to
Israel because of "the escalat-
ing cycle of violence," Secretary
of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.
announced at the seven-naUon
sum mil conference in Mon-
tebello, Queb«.
In Jerusalem, Begin was to
confer with U.S. presidential en-
voy Philip C. Habib, who la try.
ing to bring an end to the cur·
rent round of fighting and to find
a peaceful solution to Lebanon's
other conflicts
.. Biting be ar
• gets reprieve
MOUNT VERNON, Ill. (AP>
industrial democracies conclud·
ing today indicates that
"mutuall y acceptable
circumsiances" will have to be
found for worldwide talks.
But Canadian sourcea at the
summit said the qualified U.S.
commitment ne verthe less
r e presente d a si1niflcanl
breakthrough in the s talled
dialogue between wealthy and
poor nations. Canadian Prime
Minister Pierre ElHott Trudeau
is a leading advocate of global
talks on the rich-poor issue.
One U.S. official who requesl·
~d anonymity said the United
States was satisfied with this
agreement and said, "We're
willing to talk about talking."
He said the standard for
engaging in such talks would be
"a reasonable expectation of
success."
The section of the communi·
que on "North-South dialogue"
says, "We a r e r eady to
participate in preparations for a
process or global negotiations in
mut1.1al l y acceptable
circumstances offering the pros-
p_ect of meaningful progress."
Third World nations have been
demanding just such a broad-
based forum for impr oving
economic cooperation and aid
programs between the wealthier
countries or the north and the
unde rdeveloped south around
the world.
The s ummit sources, who
spoke to reporters on the condi-
tion that they not be identified,
said negotiations on the North·
South language were completed
Monday ni1ht, and the wording
was accepted by Reagan and the
other heads or government at
this morning's formal summit
session.
R eagan is sco ring a
diplomatic victory at his first
economic summit by persuading
allies lo consider restricting
high·technology and military-
related trade with the Soviet
bloc.
Participants in the three-day
summit in this village outside
Ottawa also are borrowing a
hard line from the Jteagan ad-
ministration ln condemnin1 ''the
continuing buildup or Soviet
military power" and declaring
that "we ourselves ... need a
strong defense capability."
Polish m eet e nds
wit h appe al
WARSAW <AP> -The Polish
Communist Party's emergency
congress has ended with an ap·
peal to all Poles to unite behind
the party's leadership and save
"the motherland in need."
"The secure existence or the
nation and the future of the state
are threatened,·· the coneress
said in a statement adopted at
its final session Monday. "Let us
join efforts to avert the threat
that hangs over Poland."
1ou1.bt by a coalition 01 abaolutelydoneeverylhlnalc•
CaU!omla 1rowers, Unlnc the to protect Texu Interest.I. Now
Texaa ._uaranUne. His order it 11 out of my handl."
came after trucks laden with T'ony Cl marustJ, an aide to
frulta and ve1etablea were Callfornla Attorney General
1topped at Tex•• roadblocks to O.orre OeukmeJlao, aald Moa·
check to see that produce was day night the state's lawyers
fumigated or grown in areas were preparing to 10 to
free of infestation. A court hear· Washington today to seek action
Ing on a permanent Injunction 11 from the U.S. Supreme Court on
set for Saturday. the quarantines ln the other four
"We removed the roadblocks, Southern states. which rear the
but we are still terribly con· tiny Cly may spread to their
cerned the Mediterranean fruit crops.
fly is spreading," said Texas CalifornJa and the federal 1ov·
Agriculture Commissioner ernment have sou1ht to aaaure
R e a 1 an B row n . • · I h a v e the states the medfiy outbreak la
Before l11utni hia rulln1. Hl1·
glnbotham was told by a U.S.
Department of A1rtcullure at·
torney ln Wa1hln1ton that the
d4'partment w11 "On the ver1e"
of lsauini a propoeal that would
exi.nd the three-county federal
quarantJne over the entire state.
But Harvey F'ord. deputy ad·
mlnlatrator for USDA '• Animal
Plant Health ln1pectlon Service,
,.,......,.
uid he had merely made a
technical chanee Monday, one
that would not affect the quaran·
line area. He said the area
would oot be expanded unless
new medlly finda were made.
The first medntes were found
a year ago in Santa Clara Coun·
ty. An Intensive ·ground-based
erad ication effort started in
January. ·
Gov Edmund G. Brown Jr
re luctantly ordered aerial
11praying two weeks ago after
U.S. Agriculture Secretary John
Rlock threatened a statewide
quarunlme.
College
sch e dules
tock pile d
IJt' Wf'lf.VY.MARffl,F. ,,,,_._,,..... .....
''"'' 1111• i.t lil'>ld4:n West f.oll-.fCI• In ff1Jnt1n1eton lkuch, re·
•''"''" '''" i;ti.111111,. po11lul s trike. t1•¥ .. •''" ~J!l h-11 IU'2,000 (all class "hr fJ ulMt that w1•fl• to hll the mail
lhhWl•r t
<:1111"'1('' J'rMt1d•·nl l.t·e Steven:..
011t1nr tt1~1 111 '"'' m1ul in reg
l•lrallt..r1 ''""'" .,,..,, were to be m lf llf"1 tt1I• .,,.,.ti . Ab 1d Cl strike
r<Ju lt1 ha1r ,. ,,.,,,,u11 conse
<1urnr~11f>fAll,.m•1llmt·nt "
M 111lrf"1ffl rAt11 1cil" Cit the Fluor
C'orv 1n Irvin•· <1nt1t•1pat10g a
~tal \lrtkf' ... 111•<1dy have 1n
crea"·d th"" u1w "' private me111wn.cn 'l"f \11"1•11 t" get out im
port ant mi11I
Governor Brown (center) and B.T. Collina (~ft), director of the CalifOT'TUa Con1nvotion Corp•, board a
helicopfer to mrvey the medflt1·infe1ted area of Los Gato•.
B<>b Van S<·hoyc:k. head of lhe
fo'luor ma1lrnom. i.a1d the firm
also will begin Ill> own tn·house
courier service to Los Angeles
Budget nears balance He said department heads are
being asked to scrutinize mail and
to set aside corresponde nce that
is not of top pnonty.
County within $200 ,000 of pla~ned expenditures Meanwhile. employees at 4
Speed Delivery Service in Jrvme
have been told to expect longer
work hours if a s trik e
materializes
Orange County government's
$780 million budget for fiscal 1981
came within $200,000 of being
balanced as supervisors complet-
ed their fourth of six days of
budget hearings .
Supervisors opted Monday to
use a bout$11 million of $34 million
in available feder al revenue shar·
ing to balance the record spend-
ing program that will fund county
operat.ionsthroughJuneJ0, 1982.
The board agreed to spend
more than S8 million in revenue
sharing -money collected by the
federal government and returned
tolocaljurisdictions -for capital
improvement projects, including
$1.S million for acquisition ol land
for a road that will go for a new
county landfill in Bee Canyon
north of Irvine and Sl million for
design of new courtrooms in the
Santa Ana Civic Center.
Additionally, the board budget·
ed close to $1 million for comple·
lion of the first and second floors
of the county's S9 m illion Hall of
From Page A1
RATES • • •
Administration in Santa Ana, and
s~o.ooo for fu rthe r corrective
work on the structurally weak
building.
Revenue sharing also will be
used to fund about $2.3 m illion in
equipment purchases. including
about Sl.5 million in new vehicles.
a $150.000 bus for transportation
of Orange County Jail ii;imates
and $303,000 for apparatus for
lhe county public health depart·
ment laboratory.
As a result or the board's ac·
lions. about $2.9 m illion of rev-
e nu e sharing money still is
available. Under a formula ap·
proved by the board. 25 percent of
that amount, or $725,000 will be
made available for social pro·
grams operated throughout the
county. with the remainder still
available for other county equip·
ment, land acquisition or opera·
lions expense needs .
The board left about $8 million
m revenue s haring untouched
··for future county needs.··
Among the expenditures ap·
proved by supervisors was $46,()(l()
to improve security at the max-
imum security men's jail in Santa Ana.
The money will be used to pay
for modifications des igned to
make it impossible for prisoners
to escape through a false ceiling
above the public lobby area .
Supervisors wasted no lime in
approving the expenditure after
being told prisoners who might
gain access to plumbing and elec·
trical conduits in the building
<which has occur red in the past>
could get lo the area above the
false ceiling.
"The secret 's out ... we've got
to gel it fixed," quipped
Supervisor Roger Stanton.
Golde n G ate
toll lowere d
* * From Page A1
MAIL •..
*
wage proposal was presented.
we noticed there was a serious
inconsistency with wh at we• had
agreed to" orally.
The union leaders refused to
elaborate on t he dis crepancy,
but Biller said, "We don't view
it as a misunderstanding."
The unions had said the agree-
ment would continue unlimited
cost-of-living protection and pro-
vide base pay raises of $750 per
worker the first year and $&>() in
each of the next two years. It
SAN FRANCISTO (AP> -The a I so w o u I d pro h i bi t an y
Golden Gate Bridge toll will employee from being forced to
temporarily stay at Sl. it was de· work more than 10 hours a day
cided Monday, the last day of a for five consecutive days , the
trial to see if cutting the toll unions said.
from $1.25 reduced traffic snarls First word of the collapse
at toll booths. cam e from federal mediator
Commuters between Marin Nichola s Eldandis. who
County and San Francicso had emerged from the bargaining
complained the Sl.25 toll was room to tell reporters wailing
mainly responsible for tieups at for the formal announcement of
the toll plaza. Extra time was a settlement:
tial to our future well·being as a D JI b d needed to rumble. and wait for. ''There's no agreement here.
nation, pd the Federal Reserve 0 a r 008le change, drivers contended. The I've still got people in there laJk-
means lo do its part," he added. LOND0N <AP) _ The dollar, toll was raised from St on March ing."
By adjusting Federal Reserve buoyed by U.S. interest rates. 1. Postal Service officials re·
requirements and various inter· rose sharply against major Euro-Under the direction of John fus ed to comment, indicating
bank Interest rates, the board pean currencies today. Gold, Molipari. president of the they d id not want to s a y
can make credit more expensive pushed back by the higher dollar . Golden Gate Bridge Board, the anything that migh t cause
and harder to find, presenting a rates, opened around $4 an ounce toll had been lowered to Sl for a further problems at the bargain-
sometimes severe pr oblem lo lower. nine-day test. ing table. builders, home buyers. auto ~~~:.._ __________ -=.:.:..:..:.....=.:::::.......:==..:::.._ ________ .....::.. __________ _
dealers and others.
It Is a price Volcker i~ con··
vinced must be paid to Wring
chronic inflation out of the U.S.
economy. He says a light rein is
necessary to hang onto this
sprine's tentative gains against
inflation.
Tommy the Bear, who bit an
11 -year-old boy at a summer
camp, has won a brief reprieve
as a prosecutor tries lo spare it
from being killed for a rabies
'lest.
The bear, which spends its
days lolling in a pen at the
Be lleville Catholic Dloceae's
,Camp Ondes1onk, s tirred up
strong emotions after bitine
Scott Burrelsman of Fairview
Heights.
Figure in CIA flap
reported missing
Siding with the boy and bis
•parents and their lawyer, who
want to spare Scott from a pain·
~fut series of rabies' test.I. Scott
1already has been 1iven one ot
'six s hots. On the aide of the bear
are State's Attorney J . Lout.
Wingate, the head of the een.
traJia atate Animal Disease
Laboratory and 500 children at
1the summer camp.
NEW YORK (AP) -Samuel
F. McNell, wboee alle1at1ooa of
fraud prompted the real1nation
laat week of Max C. Hu1el a.1
chief ol clandeatlne operaUona
for l he CIA, ha• been reported
milling by hb company, The
New Yotk Times reported to-
da . ·
trtad Eneray Corp. an-
nounced Monday that McNeil,
Cle ....... ...,..,.. .... , 1141Ml·M11 Ml...., .... .,., ..... Ml..,
MAIN ~ ............ c ... -...c •. ,_..,...._ ... , .. ,C ... MfM.CA .,._
. . . . --. ~....,_
its president, had disappeared.
The concern also halted trading
on its stock, The Times said .
In a statement, Triad said it
requested the National Associa·
Uon of Securities Dealers to
cease quotations on its atock,
while lt tried to find McNeil.
McNeil haa been mlsain& slnce
last week when he and bis
brother, Thomas R . McNeil
made accuu,tlona aaalnst
Huael, accordina tQ the New
York·bu6d company.
Tbe FBI and New York Oty
police aaid they had not been
notified of the dlaappearance
and were not searchtn1 for
Mc Nell.
T he McNeil brothers ran a
amall brokera1& flrm in the ear·
ly lt'70I and cbaraed that durtna
that tlme, H!fel llle1ally 1ave
them "lnlider • lnlbrmatfon on
two companltl.
Hunl dlllMd UM Cbarllt Call·
lDI tiem "uidounded" W.,_ be
rHlpedlUtwffk.
Trllld't .. ~-: wl offtdala wen aat av for eomllMllt
and failed to return telepbone
cell•.
..... .,.....
Brooke Shields. Left, star of "End.less Love," chats with
Elizabeth Taylor, child actor Ricky Schroder and Franco Zef·
firelli, director. following a prevWw of the mow in New York's
Gemini Theater.
IRS to tak e most
of giant jackpot
While the biggest slot
machine winner in history ia
savoring a check for Sl
million, the Internal Revenue
Service is awaiting its op-
portunity to take a hefty
chunk of it away.
Slot winner Jeff &alldel'*'
who hit the giant jackpot at
Caesars Tahoe casino, ex-
pects the IRS to take $500,000
to $600,000 or his winnings.
"I'm single and l don't own
an ything. so I'm going to
jump right into the 70 per-
cent tax bracket." Randolptr.
a Delano attorney, said in a
telephone interview from his
office. "But what the heck."
h e added with a lau gh,
"Who's complaining?"
He planned to meet with in-
vestment counselors to de
cide how best to manage the
money
Marvin Mandel was back
in his old booth at Chic &
Ruth's Delly in Annapolis,
Md., after s pending more
than a year at a federal
prison in Florida.
The former governor re·
turned to Maryland on a five-
day furlough from the prison
at Eglin Air Force Base near
Pensacola, Fla .. where he is
serving a three-year term for
mail fraud and racketeering.
Mandel, .his wife Jeanne
and stepson Paul paid a
breakfast visit Monday to
Chic & Ruth's, where a booth
Mandel us ed to frequent is
known as the ·'Governor's
Office ..
Mandel must return to the
lockup by Wednesday night.
Wendy 0 . Wiiiiams and her
punk rock group, t he
Plasmatlcs, have canceled
their scheduled weekend con-
cert in a hassle over permits.
Yormer Congressman .Jolm
Jenrttte of South Carolina
sued hls estran ged wife,
Rita, and her parents over a .
dispute lnvolvlni ownerahlp
of an Austin, Texas bowlina
alley.
Jenrette contends in the
ault that C.H. and Reba
Carpea&er and hls estran1ed
wile are conspiring to deny
hlm hls inte rest In the
Brunswick Capitol Bowling
Cen~r.
Jenrette resigned from
Coneress last December
after he was convicted of
Abscam conspiracy-bribery
charges.
Charles "Buddy" Ro1en,
widower of silent screen star
Mary Pickford, will marry a
Los Angeles real estate-agent
at the home of her relatives
in TJcoma, Was h .. friends of
the t ouple sald .
Rogers, 75, will marry
Beverly Rlcono, 50, on
Weddesday. The wedding
had been rescheduled a cou-
ple of times.
Miss Pickford, known as
··America 's Sweetheart''
during~er heyday in films,
was married to Rogers 44
years, before her death in
May 1979.
The couple plan to live In a
$700,000 house Rogers had
built on the edge or the
Pickfair estate that Miss
P ickford and her first
husband, Douglaa Falrbanb,
Sr., built In the 1920s.
TO WED WEDNESDA Y
Actor Buddy Rogers
Pennsylvania gets wet
Thunderstorm activity heavy in western portion of state
~oastal fo recast
Point Concec>llon to the ,,_.•ICM
border DUI 60 mtle• L19"1 varlaDte
winds IMOUOfl tonlOM UCepl •Httr·
ly 10 lo 1' lnoh 1111• allt rnoon
So..tllwnl •-II I to 2 f .. t. I.ow
<'-1 -~I too on "-ni911I end
mornlnv '-• Moslly wnny '"'' ef. It moon
U.S. summary
1 Tllundtrllorm• heve dropped
lleevy r.in on WHttrn PwnnsylvMlt,
tl0fl9 wlll\ wt"" vusuno up 10 u mpll
In AH~ County
A severe lh••nOtr\lonn ••tch wes
In eftecl l11to -., eve<1lng lo<
"'"'" of .,. 1w11 ..... • 11-11ooc1 ••tell WH In tffe<I tor most of
-Slffll PwlnsylVMlt H•••Y lhundt ,.form1 1110 de·
velOped over Ille mldlll• Miutulppt
V•ttey. A lorneoo IOU<fleO oown nu•
Oellfteld, WI• • -another IOUCMCI down In nor11WMlern ltllnoh.
A NWft .,_rstMm walcll Wt\
l•ued l<W _....,.n and _,,central
llllnott, centra l a11d 1outhe rn
Wisconsin, norlllwHlern 1nc11ana, northeastern l(•nus, central •nd
_.u.wnMn\ Ml-I and nlreme
IOVIM•sl«n Hebr•lka si-n •nd
t._under 1torm1 w1r1 num1ro11.11
ac:rou "-Nllon -funnel c louc:h -•• slQ!lled over FIOr Ida.
EIHWMrt, lllert were llol•led
SllOWtr\ •ncl 1nuno.nnowtt1 over wulern Tuai end the northern
Pleat .....
Tempera1 .. rn •bov• 'IO degrH•
••"""" N.-Or .. _ promc>lecl ult Illy
offl<la ls to -t mllllon ,..,,.1 •HI·
-b 10 ..-.Ct IM4r U99 Of .W c-1
II-rs • lfw lwle'S tlltrd-l•rOHI
utltlly IOlt -r from -Of Its t-119Mra1ors..
T•m-tlurn •round 1"9 Miion el
,_ MOl'dey r.,.a from • tow of St
., HOwgl'llOf\ Mich .. lo • "'°" of IOS .,
Fort Siii, Oki•.
For lodey, K •ltwecl ,_,. and
lllundertlortnt -• lore<HI from
.,.., .... hi • ..-,
1 ........ ~
MpnNy-frtdllV II• 'IOU do l\ol -'°"' -bY $ 30 p m call 11e1ote 1 p"' -...,.., coor woll De d•h-eo
Stilurd1y 11!d &undey II You oo nol ,_,,. rout COCl'y Dy I I m afl
tlelort 10 I m and You• CCDY "'II lie ..... eel
N1wpot1 9MCll 7S .,
Oekl•nd 70 " Ontario '°" u
P•lm 5'wl• !Cit ,.
Pa~M ts 60
Pno Rotllet 100 n
Red 91uff 1411 ..
ReO-Clly 71 S6
R-" .,
Sa<remento " St s.11 ... , 10 SI s... eernanllno 10. S7
S.n GeDr .. 1 ts " San Jose 11 u
Sant• Ana II " Sanlt8-r• 14 " Sant• Crw .. u
""''' Marie 11 j4
Saftl•-u ,. u
Stockton 101 .,
M•nottA.t WIAIHtl \0¥t<I Ta-Vetlty II J1 90 MOAA \I\ o.,_ -' <-.. Torr•nc:e ., 60
IM tulem Gull CoHI to Ille •-•• P-11 106 11
Grt•I L•kts region e no lhe Plll1 .... r9'1 11 11
NorlhtUI T"unoersf'\owen were Reno ., 42 PANAMl•tt'eN
lorecast ac:r-Ille mldlllt end "-' Rl(hmond .. ,, Acapulco .. 71
Mlulntppl V•tley and nortllern Sall L•k• .. u B•r"°°" IS ,,
Plelns. S.n 01-00 u 70 8ermudA .. " Hlglli In llW IOl -r• predlelt<I S.n FrMI u '° 80901• u S1
from '"' llP!llr Mlu1uiw1 V•llty SI L°"I' t2 " Curac.o • j4
through IN GrNI L ... ft region end Tulsa 101 ., o .. .., ••• , ... .. " u-r Olllo Vetlrr to nortllem New We'1tln¢on ., IO
o .. _,_ • 7t
En111eno. -100 cle9rt9\ lrom the WICllll• 101 IS l(l1191to11 ti ,,
Sout-nt -ru ..:,,., He• -· Mon1990e.y • , .
ICO to -1fllrn --lltrn TuH. CALIFO•NtA _,.,..., • "' •nd In 1"9 IOI end'°' el..-rt Apptt V•lllY 102 SI Me1l<e Clty 11 n
••kHillelo 10. ,. Naswu ti " .....tow IClt 14 San J uan.P R ti 7t
Temperat11;res Buumont 10. S1 St. Kiii$ 'IO ,. 8 1g8ur IS 42
81~ 102 w r.11 .. d .. llN II ..
At Duque 101 .. .. 9 1ylllt '11 .. Trlftlded " 14
I
Ame rlllo 102 10 CaltllN 14 ., Vere Crut " I• AShtvlllt 'IO ., c .. 1nr C.lty II .,
Allente ts ,, Eurek• JI u 8a1Umore .. 14 ,,,.sno 107 .. Blrml,,.,..,., 100 11 IAMaSlff 102 " Sun, moon, tides Boise .. ,. 1.ono e1ac:11 ti u eoston 11 •• Monrovle 103 S6 TOOAY 8rown1vlll• tt ,. Mofllellello .. 60 Flrtt low •:11a.m. •.o Cllerleston, SC " IO Monterey ., St First hlQfl 1:4p.m. 4.4 ClllC•llO • 7S Mt. Wiison .. .. Se<ond low 7:0Sp.m. u Clnclnnlll 17 •• NHCll .. 112 • Second lllgh 12:47 p.m. u Del FtWlll 101 ,,
Oeftv•r ,, JI
FalrMMS " SJ
HOftOl .. tu • ll
Houston tS IO SU Rf RI PORT Je<klOIWllte u 14
K•nw1 City 'IO 14
LH V-"" ,.
Lllll• Roo 100 1t
l.M Afllllltl .. ..
lAulnlll• '2 " Memphis " ,,
Ml•ml '° .. Valldto•p.m todey
.... 11 .. 111. H 7l .... .... ... ..............
H-0<-.. 11 ilffcll ..... ..... .... ... Mu ow
NtwYortl • 11 z ...... t J 12 a SW NorfOlk tJ 1S
Otlle City '" 11 $M~Nlllnlu a J 12 I -"""1*19Hcll J a 14 I IW
~ ...... .. 1S S.n D ..... c-ty a 4 14 , SW
Phlt-tptlie " 74
Orange Coast DAILY PllOTfTuesday, July 21 , 1981
DelfY .......... ..,a-.-.
Robert Empfield, 14, of Newport Beach. work& on hi& Soap Bo:r Derby entry, which finished third
in the senior division.
Homes for workers
F luor developing houses near firm
By GLENN SCOTJ'
Of .. .,...., ...........
The Irvine -based multina-
tional Fluor Corp. bas burst onto
Orange County's expensive
housing market by pioneering a
plan in which major employers
supply housing to their workers.
The plan comes at a time
when more and more top ex-
ecutives are publicly decrying
the serious effects of hjgh hous-
ing prices on their efforts to
recruit and keep highly skilled
employees.
At Fluor . wh e r e 6 ,000
employees work at its imposing
headquarters on Mic he lsoft·
Drive, the personnel needs are
acute, according to vice presi·
dent Jay Reed.
Speaking last week to a meet·
ing of the Building Industry As·
sociation, Reed described Fluor
as a business where "we sell
brains."
company has an agreement lo
buy up to 60 condom iniums pro·
posed to be built less than a mile
from its headquarters.
The 350-unit development is
proposed by Newport Develop-
ment Co. It would be located off
Von Karman Avenue behind the
Registry Hotel. The project has
preliminary approval of the
Irvine City Council, final con-
sideration will be on July 28.
Lanny Eberling, a partner in
the development firm. said he
has met twice with Fluor ex-
ecutives about selling them un-
its. He said he expects that other
major employers also will be in-
terested in the development .
"We believe that part of our
market is companies like
Fluor," he explained.
Eberling said the units are de-
signed for people who work in
the surrounding industrial com
plex. Most homes in the three-
and four-story complex will sell
for about $100,000, he s aid.
60 compete
i n Soap Box
Derby event
Organizers or the 1981
Southern California Soap Box
Derby say more than 60 youths
participated in this xear's com-
petition in Laguna Hills.
Jim Garrison, derby director,
said Monday the winners in the
junior and senior divisions will
compete in the national cham-
pionships in Akron, Ohio, next
month.
The senior division winner
was John Van Dyke. 14, of SWl
Valley, Garrison said. Second
through fourth place finishers
were Christina Fairbanks, 13, of
Villa Park; Robert Empfield, 14,
of Newport Beach, and Terri
Hathaway, 15, of Fullerton.
Finishing first in the junior
division was Jo Ann Brower, 10.
of Lakewood Placing second
through fourth were Diane
Ber glund. 10, of Tustin ; Ken-
ndell Dupree . 10, of Mir a Loma,
and Beth Bowman, 11. of Mis -
sion Viejo.
Garrison said the fifth place
winner in the junior division was
Todd Lambert. 11 . of San Diego
Michale Ward, 12, of Torrance
finished in sixth place.
The corporation specializes in
engineering and construction or
energy systems, Reed said, and
it e mployes a high percentage of
technical experts who could
easily find jobs elsewhere if
their job or living conditions
were distasteful.
Thus, Fluor has to keep them
happy, and that means ensuring
that they like where they live.
·'Because of the people-
intensive nature of our business,
coupled with our genuinely high
regard for their well being,
housing is a key ingredient in
our ability to grow and be pro-
fitable,·• he said. To address the
problem. Reed said the com-
pany is becoming directly in·
volved in the housing 'market.
All is not rosy in Irvine.
however. Representatives of the
Registry objected to the de·
velopment , at the last city coun-
cil meeting. lfhey said the re-
sidential project, if used heavily
by nearby corporations. could
s tart supplying the short-term
housing that the hotel provides.
Eberling said he understands
tbat Fluor. for example, would
rent their units to workers for
from six months to two years.
Awatds for best construction
went to Karey Hazewinkel. 11, of
Newport Beach, and Empfield,
also of Newport, the third-place
race fini s he r in the s enior
division.
The corporation already has
leased 50 condominiums in an El
Toro d eve l o pment . The
furnished units are rented to vis-
iting workers for $S50 per month
for two people, he said. The cost
includes maid service.
Now Fluor is ready to embark
on the most aggressive housing
program so far. Reed said the
Motorcyclist killed
Harold Michael Barton, 39, of
Whittier, was killed Monday
morning when his motorcycle
went out of control "!ld crashed
into tbe center divider of the
transition road from Seventh
Street to the northbound San
Gabriel River Valley Freeway
in Seal Beach, the California
Highway Patrol said.
Ovef' the put few years. there
h«W been a number of very ex·
citing pre·Columb•an gold
thows trevellng around the
world. The most recent of theM was the lmpreulve El Oorlldo
Exhibi t. About eighteen
months -sio. the Los Angeles
County MuHum of Natural
History wH approached by
Clara Yust, LA'a Colombian
Conaulat• General, who
ex~ diuppolntment that
the El Dorado Show had not come to Loa Angelet, en .,..
which bo .. ts a population of
about ao.ooo Colombltna.
Mrl. Yuat offered to help put on t lhoW of mljor lmporiance
In Loe Angelff In conjunction
with t h e Loa Angel••
a+centennlal In 1 Mi. Her aim.
..,. Quite almple. She Mid
tNt IN would Ilk• to haw the
largeat 9old ahow ever
preeenttd outllcM Colombia.
end atle thought It might be
poeeible to Include emerlldl In
the ahow. Aftlf all el'Mtalde
..,.. of greet fmpof1anQe to the
lndlana aa well H to th• &c*'lth Conqulttedora.
Accomplllhl"f Mra. Yuet's
I entailed four trlpa to
IO ntOC>flett with the
Since the development hasn't
even received final approval,
Fluor obviously hasn't made
permanent plans. But the com-
pany is continuing to consider
ways to offer mor e housing
services to its workers, Reed
said.
One consideration is to find a
way that the company can use
corporate profit-sharing assets
for mortgage funds, he said.
Garrison said representatives
of R.G. Canning Diversified Co ..
the sponsor of the derby. pre·
sented 20 youngsters with youth
achievement awards.
Garrison said derby cars cost
from $150 to S200 to construct,
and are made of wood and
fiberglass. The wheels of the
cars are owned by the Southern
California Soap Box Derby As-
sociation. and are loaned. The
race was Saturday and Sunday.
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liiEM WI5B
Mary Barr, C'Art1f1ed G•mo•oo•at
CHARLES ff. BARR
642·6086
been out of Colombia. and they
aren't even on display In
Colombia today, let a.lone 1n
the United Statet.
Alter over a year·eno·
one-half of negotiations, the
show entitled Sweat of th•
Sun, Tear• o f the Moon· Treaauret o f Colomb/a
opened July 4 In Loa Angeles.
The exhibit conslsta of over 500
pieces of pr.COiumbian gold
and almoat all known ITllifof
emeraldt that are available fOf
public dlapiay today, .. well •
""9f'8I that have never been
diaplmyed before.
Mot1 of the fantaatlc gold
obj ects made by· the
or.-Oolumblan Indiana p.-.d
Into oblMon 11 they wet'•
mett•d down to flll th• European con.,. with ~ion.
M ...-ntty aa one hunchd
~ aoo. ev.n the ltnk of
l!ngtand continued to melt
down pr..Columblan lncll1n
ookl aottctt to produce gold
6ulllon end COIM.
Mlt1Cutouety. a amen pert of ,
the gold and treesur.. hal
aurvrvtd. end the world'•
t•rOff' collectlon of theM
obj«* (eome 11,000 of ~
.. found In ~ ~ M~ Mueeum, IN 8a•k of the Aepubllc, private colltotors ,
encl ..... raid ••portert. ~ -.....: .,,
emerllda were a particular ._... • ._ ~. = TI'llt cottectton le tM IOO pteca9 ol tM
,..,,. of Cofufnb .. ~ The..,_.bltwtMruntttrough&ep-....,.,OOft'tMlltltl pn)t)ltm "'* tMJ Met '*" 17• & In .... WaAdff ,._ ... ., .. ....
r
...
'
A4 s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT !Tuesday, July 21 , 198\
~mu~rnm ,
Bush rejects charges
Urban League told difference in roads , not goals
WASJUNGTON (AP> -Vice
Prealdent Georse Bush has re·
Jected in strong terms charges
from National Urban League
President Vernon E. Jordan that
the Reagan admin1straUon lacks
compusion.
Speaking before a polite but
cool audience at the league's
convention Mooday, Bush said
there may be a communications
1ap between the Reagan ad·
mini1tration and its criUca. But
he added: ''The differences
between the administration and l~ crtucs lie not in the goals we
seek but in the roads we take."
Bush began by recit1n1 some
of the charges Jordan made in
his keynote convention address
Sunday evening. He noted that
Jordan c laime d "this ad·
ministration has no vilion and
no compassion, especially for
black Americans."
But the vice president offered
no apologies for the economic
~proach President Reagan bu
taken and claimed that some of
the charges '•were not only
wrong but also unfair.
"Let me remind the critics
that the old policies of the put
have failed," Bush said. "The
Western summit
slightly uptight
MONTEBELLO, Quebec <AP)
-They c h i t c h a t a r.e u n d
breakfast, cruise the manicured
grounds on sporty golf carts and
share the fireplace late at night.
At first glance, the six middle-
aged and elderly gentlemen and
one lady who gathered at the
Chateau Montebello might have
been vacationers or conven·
lioneers unwinding in the
northern sunshine.
They are not. And despite the
jellybeans and the best efforts of
their casuall y clad host. Pierre
Elliott Trudeau, the Montebello
economic summit of seven ma-
jor industrial democracies was
not destined to be a relaxed
retreat among the pines
Two thousand jittery secunty
m'en, the weight of a world full
of troubles and -perhaps most
importantly -the age-old bar·
rier of language made it im·
possible.
Some of the spontaneity of a
country weekend is lost when
one head of government asks
Japanese Prime Minister Zenko
Suzuki. "Did you have a good
night's sleep?" and both the
question and answer must be
filtered through a nervous tn·
terpreter.
• Trudeau, the Canadian prime
minister , welcomed his fellow
summiteers to this secluded
riverside r esort in a light
sportcoat and open-necked shirt.
He is determined to dispel the
stuffy atmospher e of recent
summits.
Besides the personal touches
-stocking President Reagan's
rustic, furnished suite with his
favorite Jelly Belly jellybeans,
for example the Canadians
drew up a fairly unstructured
agenda to discourage the presi-
dents and premiers from arriv·
ing with set speeches prepared
by bureaucrats.
To further enhance this am·
biance. they tried to Limit the
time spent with interpreters and
aides. an effort reportedly
fought by the White House.
"The whole thing was de·
signed to aJlow them to get away
from line-management functions
and get down to serious dis·
cussions." explained Canadian
s ummit organizer Lawrence
Smith. " .. To say, here are
the general attitudes we wish to
pursue, then it's up to our in·
dividual government ministries
to put them into pr ctice."
-------AIOUT
1 s199G.EAT I 9 DINNER ()
Idea that the federal aovern-
ment ta the MOlea to lead ua to
the promhed land bas cnMl.ly
raised and then dashed the
hopes of millions of Americana."
Bu1b said the doors of Uie
White House always are opea to
black.a. But he admonished b1a
listeners, "Don't brine ua an old
agenda that bu failed . . . that
bas led ua to the 1tatua quo. n.e
tederat-1overnmeat-can-do-it-all
itPProach la not the anawer." •
Bush aho pledted tbat
8eagan would "do the ritbt
tbtnt" to see that all Americana
can exercise their rt1ht to vote.
But he did not say specifically
what the admlntatratlon po1itloa
will be OD whether to extend the
Voting Rights Act of 1M5.
He cited some of the actions
taken by the administration
which he said should indicate ita
commitment to fair treatment
for black citliens: apeclal
federal aid in the search for
murderers of 28 black Atlantana,
attempts t.o reach settlement in
Southern college deaegregatloa
cases, and efforta t.o see that the
Virginia legislature is fairly re-
apportioned.
·'The civil rights of Americana
will be protected, re1ardle11 ol
color, and, u Preaideot Reaaan
bas said, at the point of a
bayonet if necessary:• Buth
said, drawing applause from hla
li.'lteners.
Reagan, who addressed the
annual convention of the Na·
tional Association for the Advan-
ce m ent of Colored People
earlier this month in Denver,
was in Canada Monday at an
economic summit conference.
Jordan, in the keynote address
to the league's 71at annual con·
vention, s aid Reagan as a
person is good, courageoua and
compassionate, but as president
he is the first since Herbert
Hoover "willlng to sacrifice
millions of people on the altar of
an outmoded ideology.
"The adminiatration's refusal
to temper ideology with com·
passion makes it a clear and
present danger to black people
and poor people," Jordan said.
g Good for three pieces of jutcy, golden brown Kentucky
,, Fried Chicken, plus 11ngl• servings ol col• slaw, mulled
i 0 p01a1oea and grevy, alld • roll Limit two offers P9f
Z purchase. Coupon good only tor combination white/dark I orders. Customer P•Y• ell eppllcabla u lea tu
GOOd tor nine piece• of Juicy, golden btO'MI ~
F'rled Chicken. wtth lour rotle, a larva col• tlaw, a latge
m11tled p0ta1oe1 and• medium OrrlY· Umtt two off9r'I
per purchaN. Coupon good Ol'lly for comCllnatlOn wf\1181
dart! orders. Customer pays all apclllcallle aaJee tu.
030 OtterexplreaAugust2,1981 I OtterexplrH
Auguet 2, 1981
Price• may vary at 1 Prlcea mey very at par·
Designed,
Finished
Installed
partlclpallng looa, llclpatlng locallone Good
Ilona Oood only In only In Southern
SoutM•n Celllomla I Callfornla where you see
the cni.::::=.~ the Chicken Sandwich .;.ndOw.;~ ...... W.llldow Banner.
..... -............ .
TRUCK STOP -Texas state Department of
Aertculture offUa.ls be1an checking trucks
entertn« the state at El Paso on Monday for
Mediterranean &ult fliee. Durine the fint
AP .........
hour of the check, three trucks carrying fruit
were stopped, but bad papers showing the
load was free of the insect.
Kid robber's parents warned
Judge suspends ruling on whether boy delinquent
NEW YORK <AP) -A Faml·
ly Court Judte bandlin& the cue
of a boy who held up a bank with
a toy aun' at the ace ot 9 bu de-
cided not to rule on a question
that mitht have aent the cblkl to
. a juvenlle cletentfbn center.
Instead, tbe judae told the
boy's parents to ·make 1utw be
goea to school and 1tay1 out ol
trouble.
Judie Pe111 Davil aaid that
she would 1ua"°d for one year
a rulin& on whether the boy is a
juvenile delinquent.
Rehabilitation would be more
likely if the boy were liven "the
poaaibillty of a clean 1Iate at the
end of a year or two," sbe said.
A NlinLJ::t the child la a juvenil• ueat would have
made blm liable to aa much u
18 months ID a juvenile detention
center. ·
"Robert M.," who ia now 10,
wu not in court Friday because
"public attention has created
specific adjustment problems,"
the J1,ldge said.
In earlier appearances, the
well-groomed boy appeared at·
tentlve, well-behaved and re-
laxed.
The jud1e told, the boy's
parents to make sure he attends
school re,Warly, receives reg.
ular counaelina, attends a
supervised cultural and recrea-
tional proeram during the sum-
mer, com mi ta no act that would
be a crime if he were an adult,
and obeys reasonable regula-
tions of any school or s ummer
program in which he ta enrolled.
She also directed that Robert
be enrolled in a ''remedial
course necessary to compensate
for bis lack of formal school·
ing."
The judge had ruled on June 8
that Robert bad "intentionally
committed acts which would
...
have been criminal had he been
16 or older" when he took $118
from a midtown bank.
The boy, whose full name bas
not been released, held up the
New York Bank for Savings in
Rockefeller Center on Feb. 25 by
saying to a teller, "This is a
holdup!"
The boy's lawyer, Mel Sachs,
contended that the child was
"only playing" a nd that be was
"a victim of television and a
broken family ." Ro bert's
parents are separated.
Robert bought himself ham·
burgers, French fries and a
musical watch and treated
himself to a movie after robbing
the banlc, according to Sachs. He
gave S3> to his father when be
arrived home .
Sachs said he told his father
be had been "playing in a bank
and a woman gave him the
money."
ALL AMERICAN
JULY SALE
FINAL WEEK
. July 18 thru 25
Ralph Lauren Women's Wear
Reg. NOW
1 Polo Silk. Blazer .......... $378.00 $150.00
Polo seersucker Slacks . • • • 110.00
Polo Bib Front Dresses . • • . 298.00
·Polo Blouses • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 49.oo
66.00
208.00
34.30
. Po.lo Shetland Blazers ... ~. 358.00 150.00
FREE GIVE AWAY
FOR FIRST 25 LADY CUSTOMERS
"Rolph
--------
Fa.ke_ marriages sifted
Investigators play form of 'Newlyw"eitaame'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Newlyweds of dltferent na·
t~nalltiea wboae marrlaaes
mlabt draw scrutiny from
federal offtclals would do well to
remember whether thelr spouse
sleeps nude.
The question ls one lmmill'•·
Uon and Naturalisation Service
invest.icatora sometimes pose in
a bureaucratic version of TV's
''Newlywed Game." Instead of
chlna or d.lsbwasben, winners
can earn freedom from prosecu-
tion by officials anlfflng out mar-
rla1ee ol convenJence.
The U.S. At1omey's Office in··
dicated three people last week
on fraud and conspiracy
charges, alleting they arranged
marriages for prom between
U.S. citliena and Filipino aliens
easer to obtain permanent
residence status here.
The ring which purportedly
operated ln Lons Beach is ooe ol
only "30 to 40 waiting to be Ln·
vestlgaled," says Ken Wila<la,
chief of \.he INS fraud division ln
Los Angeles. ·
Facin1 arraignment before a
U.S. magistrate are Norma
Reyes Fel.llilmino, 50, of Rancho
Palos Verdes ; Rosario
Aguinaldo Balbas, 48, an INS
employee from Carson; and
Gerald Charles Gallentine, 29, of
Los Angeles.
Investigators describe Ms .
Fellismino as the ringleader and
Gallentine as the recruiter in at
least three marriages.
In one January wedding, the
indictment charges, Katherine
Bergman received $250 of a
$1,250 fee due from Gallentine
immediately after she promised
everlasting love to immigrant
Eduardo Llmjuico. Neither
Ber1man nor the other two U.S.
marriace partnen were indict·
ed, but prosecutors said their
spo•es probably would be de·
ported.
Sifting such fake. marriqes
from the real thlne can be dif.
ficult, Wilson admits.
•'A lot of time it involves
friendship -a boyfriend or a
girlfriend -and tb~re's no
money involved," he said.
"It may involve a foreign stu-
dent who doesn't want to go
back after he graduates," an in-
stance officials say was common
among Iranians who wanted to
avoid Ayatollah Khomeini's re· gime.
WHICH ONES'S HOT? -When Nuclear
Regulatory Commission inspectors tried to
pass two guns through security at the Diablo
Canyon nuclear power plant in San Luis
Obispo, the .25 caliber automatic pistol at
AP, .......
right got through, but .22 caliber revolver on .
the left did not. The guns were encased in
epoxy to look like paper weights to the x-ray
detection scanner in the security test.
Custom Tailored
~Q~~~
collar 'ft cwff er.. w ... .,,, '-' .~ :, c ........ 6424711
llVUI PACIFI
COIP.
hen iMhl1d
SEA COAST
SECURITY
SYSTEMS ..................
642-3490
EVERY
THURS.·
9PM
•JULY 23
THE MODEANAIAES
with Peula Kelly.
Jr" Henry
Brendon"• Bend
•JULY JO /
TEX BENEKE 6 HIS
ORCHESTRA Music
In the Miiier
M•nn•r
•AUGUST 6
GISELE
MACKENZIE with
H•nlY lrendon"s
I lg Bend
•AUGUST 13
HENRY BRANDON
SYMPHONY
fMturlng THE
YOUNG SINGERS
OF LYRIC O'EllA
•AUGUST 20
CONNIE HAINES
with Henry
Brendon's
Orche1tr11
You can help your newspaper
carfler collect at times
convenient to You by having
your money ready so lhe
earner won·1 have to call back
Because this young person 1s
1n bu11nesa for himself or
herself. please be ready -and
watch !hat btg slT'lle which
says .. Thank you ··
Daily Pilat
......................
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 21, 1981
H11's paid
for doing
'nothing'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -'Bl11
Fuqua studiously. colorfully and
meticulously does nothine -and
earns up to $1,300 an hour for lt.
He was doing nothing Satur-
day ln the window of a Glendale
department store, dressed ln a
full Indian h eaddress and
Western attire, and arousine a
considerable amount of interest
among passersby, who wanted
to know if the motionless man on
tbe fake horse was real.
Fuqua geta paid an average ol
$300 an hour and up to $1,~an
hour for keeplnc still at private
parties, car dealerships and con·
ventlont all over the world, be
said.
The 38-year-old's credentials
as a professional do-nothing ln·
elude bis place in the Guinness
Book of World Records for
voluntarily keeping still al one
lime.
He's held the record for the
past 13 years, with a lime of six
hours 31 minutes, but was told
by Gulness officials that a man
in Australia had recently passed
seven hours and l wo minutes
without malting a move.
With the deadline for the next
records book edJtion fast ap-
proaching, Fuqua went out · of
action and spent eight still hours
in the department window Satur·
day, allowed by the rules only to
breathe, swallow and blink.
The slender man has been
practicing his feat since he was
14 years old in Fort Worth, Tex-as, when he became transfixed
at a Christmas display.
AP .........
Bill Fuqua holds the Guinneas Book of World RecOTdl mark /OT
length of time voluntarily keeping ltiU, eight houri. He eam.t up to
$1 ,300 /OT being motionless.
Layton jury selection due
SAN FRANCISCO (A?) -The
federal judge conducting the
murder conspiracy trial of
former Peoples Temple member
Larry Layton says individual
questioning of potential jurors
will probably be closed to the.
public.
However, Chief U.S. District
Judge Robert F. Peckham said
he wonld hear arguments
Wednesday against closed jury
selection from news media or-
ganizations before he makes a
final decision.
Peckham's decision will have
no effect on the initial jury selec-
tion process in which he asked
general questions as to possible
hardships to some 520 prospec-
tive jurors. From these, about
200 people will be asked about
100 questions in the individual
interrogation process.
·---~---
'
,
. . . . .. . . . .
:----........ -------
I
~· OrancM Cout OAtLY PILOT/Tueaday, Juty 21. 1881
~----------------------------------------------------------------~---------------------------------. · ~rn~urnm~mrr .ITJffirn~·
Youthful crimina&
don't deserve favors
The population of tbe
California Youth Authority's
eight f acWties for youthful offen·
dera bas been IJ'OWlnl at the rate
of 100 admissions per month this
year. now exceed.int the capacity
of the institutions by more than
400.
Instead of helping young peo.
pie in the ~to-17 age range, the
CY A finds itself coping with
bard-core criminals aged 18, 19
and even older -to the detri-
ment of its efforts for the
younger teen-agers.
Many have been convicted in
adult criminal courts, rather
than in Juvenile Court, but re-
manded by judges to the Youth
Authority because of their age.
Now CY A Director Pearl
West has decided that the
toughest of the young, incor-
rigibles, especially those con__~ct-
ed of serioua crimes, must be re-
jected by the CY A and aent back
to the crlmimal courta to relieve
the pressure on exlsiting
f acllltles.
TbiJ is as it should be.
The idea of the CY A WU to
provide ' middle ground f Of young off enders who bad not
responded to efforts to help them
in Juvenile balls or youth camps,
but who seemed too young to be
sent to adult pridons without a
further effort at rehabilitation.
Unfortunately. more and
more young people today are in·
volved in serious crimes. and the
balance in the CYA is being
tipped in the wrong direction.
Older offenders, sentenced
for adult crimes. should not be
granted the special CY A handl-
ing at the expense of younger,
more malleable inmates.
Gesture too costly
County Supervisor Roger
Stanton senses he's getting
ripped off by, no less. an agency
of Orange County government.
Stanton has decided to fight
back.
At issue are the fees charged
by the county 's in-house
reproduction and graphics de-
partment whenever a supervisor
requests an in-m e moriam
certificate be issued to the family
of any person of note who dies.
The 8-inch square certificates
are pre~printed, and, thus, cost
little. But it is not unusual for the
requesting supervisor to be billed
upwards of $60 for having the
county's reproduction people
print the name of the deceased
person on the certificate. <Such
expenses are paid from the in-
dividual supervisor's office
budget.)
Stanton was aghast when be
learned of the printing bills,
particularly after be determined
that it takes only about one-half
hour for the names to be added.
Clearly, Stanton was correct
in questioning the reasonableness
of the charges. If there were
more questioning of such charges
-for printing or what-have-you
-costs might be lower.
And Stanton was on target in
asking the county Administrative
Office and the General Services
Agency (which oversees the print
shop) to conduct a study on the
feasibility of turning printing
work over to private shops.
Dare say it would be hard to
find a shop on the "outside" that
would be in business very long by
charging $60 to set and print one
line of half-inch tall type on one
modest piece of paper.
Freeway nerves valid
Rare is the California driver
who has not muttered, on spying
a huge truck bearing down on
him from behind, ''Hope that guy
has good brakes! ''
A recent surprise inspection
project by the California
Highway Patrol indicates the
driver may have reason to be
nervous.
In a five-hour period out on
the Antelope V alJey Freeway, the
CHP stopped 41 trucks for inspec-
tion.
Twenty of the rigs were or-
dered off the road immediately.
Of the 56 citations issued, 44 were
for faulty brakes, some in such
bad shape the truckers were not allowed to proceed without re,
pairs.
A hand! ul were cited for
overweight loads and 17 of the
drivers' logbooks revealed they
had been on the road without rest
stops longer than the legal limit.
•
They were told to pull over and
get some sleep.
If the ratio of equipment and
driver impairment that showed
up in this relatively small inspec-
tion project is typical of the
behemoths barreling along our
freeways it's not good news for
the ordinary Joe driving to work
or taking the family on a vaca·
lion trip.
Apparently the worst off en-
ders are truckers on local runs
that don't take them through
fixed inspection stations too
often.
The CHP would be well ad-
vised to continue these surprise
inspections at ·random spots
along the freeway system to en-
courage truckers to pay more at-
tentioo to their own and others'
safety. It's enough to have them
pounding the pavement into bits,
without endangering the lives of
fellow drivers.
Opinions expressed 1n tile space abOve are those of tile Daily Pilot. Otner views ex·
pressed on tllis page are those of their autllors and ar tists. Reader comment 1s 1nv1t·
ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (7 141
641·4321.
·L.M. Boyd/ Seme of security
Elephants have nightmares. They
trumpet sometlmes ln their aleep.
But not when chained, peculiarly.
Chains around their ankles evidently
give them a seoae of security.
Elephant keepers lo India put straw
cbainl around their elephantl' anklet
to atop the nightmares.
Q. Does your Love and War man
know bow Iona the typical love affair
lutl? I mean outside marrtaae.
A. About 18 moat.bl la known to be
aver ace.
Am aurpriMd to bear lt only taka
approllmateJy 21 days to Cive that
special tralnln1 to a l\rlde doe for a
blind penoa.
Q. Qtbenl ol wbat COUDtrJ r .. d
the mOll boob T
A. Jctiland. Per capita.
A1'1umeat coaUauea over lb•
numw ol atbleUc coatMtl ta wlddl
the patld .... IDClY9 be"'• ..... 1teail ol tonrarde. Start wtdl tq o•
ORANGE C°Bll.f. · 111111 "."~'
,,_.....,..,, ..... ..., ...... .., •.c... ..... --...,... .... ... ..e,C..-..,CAtlla "
war. Add rowing. That's about lt,
what?
Q. How do you explalo the claim
that a basketball player'• Marini
isn't u keen at the end of a fame IJ
at the begt.nn.Lni?
A. Li&ht exercise sharpen• the
beartnc, 1trenuoua exercl.ae dul.JI it.
And basketball qualifies 11
1trenuoua. does it not7
Q. la It true th.at Seorplo women
cry euUyT
A. That's the contenUoa ol the
1tar1uen. Leo women do llkewtaer
they oy, particularly lo matnmoma1
arsumenta. The Libra women are
more lDcUned to ault, they oy, ud
the P1lcel 'women are apt to deliv•
1arcuUc remarb.
Q. la lt lefal to lDlllt CID a mnrd tw tbe mum ol 101ne •&luabM ttaat you'n fom:MI?
A. On1J ll the OWDel' bM ofttnd
IUtb a .... ant pu=-ou....tie, lt's ........... u .
ThOmls P. H1t1y
Publisher r
ABC board outlives need
The ABC Appeals Board is composed
or three members, each paid $24,004 a
year. The board meets once a month to
bear appeals from the administrative
decisions of the Department of
Alcoholic Beverage Control.
Last year it received 119 appeals
wbicb gave it an average of 10 cases per
month to review. It sometimes whips
through its cases in one day, seldom
more than two.
Considering lbe time required to
fut.flu the duties, membership on the
board has long been considered the best
plum in the governor's basket of ap·
pointments. One or the lucky ones to be
favored by Gov. Jerry Brown with such
a plum was Peter Finnegan. an ir·
repressible Irishman from San Fran·
cisco. His foremost qualification for the
job was having attended gramm ar
school wtlh JelT}'.
EARUER THIS VEAR Finnegan, in
an unguarded exubera nce. made light
df bis sinecure. Some of the jocularity
had to do with an observation that the
hardest part of pis job wu picking up
his $2,000 pay check each month.
It got back to Assemblyman Art
Agnos, an ally of former Speaker Leo
McCarthy. Once staunch supporters of
Brown, neither bolds a brief for him
any longer. Agnos wondered out loud
about paying such a salary for so little
work and suggested a pay cut for the
board members. Re publican As ·
semblyman Ernest Konnyu went to
what be perceived to be the heart of the
matter. proposing a constitutional
f -•• -l .-.,-1.-1 -ii
amendment to eliminate the board. It
failed to get any support.
But Konnyu was on the right track.
He should have proposed eliminating
the entire Department of ABC and then
there would be no need for the Appeals
Board.
THE FACT IS THAT the department
has long since outlived its need. if in
fact there ever was one. It was created
to take over the responsibility of licens-
ing liquor dealers, both on·sale and off-
s a I e as well a s wholesalers a nd
manufacturers. the latter also being
licensed by the federal government.
Such duties had originally been U ·
signed the Board of Equalization upon
the repeal of prohibition. But some aJ.
leged scandals gave an opportunity to
an obscure San Francisco As -
semblymen to conduct a headline gr ab·
bing investigation.
Not much in the way of scandal was
uncovered but it provided the excuse to
wrest liquor control away from the
board and the Assemblyman, Cupar
Weinberger, seized upon the situation to
author the legislation creating the new
agency. It was before Weinberger, now
the Secretary of Defense, became the
budget cutter.
IF HE HA.D possessed the penchant
for budget slashing that he later ac-
quired Weinber~er would have ques-
tioned the need for state licensing of Liq·
uor dealers at that time.
He would have pointed out that prior
to prohibition groeers, druggists and
other retailers sold packaged liquor and
saloons operated without state license.
And the pretense that ABC exists today
to police the industry is more fiction
than fact. Most all of the policing is
done by local law agencies.
As it l.s the department operates on a
$12 million budget. half of which is
spent on determining whether a license
shall be granted and the other half is
spent in attempts to prove the depart·
ment was wrong in granting the license.
Such an operation has been described
as a cat-rat factory. one hJV)d feeding
off the other, creating probfems which
then need to be solved.
Drug use prevalent in military
WASHINGTON -Members of
Congreaa revealed last month that
traces of narcotics were discovered in
the bodies of some of the sailors killed
ln the landing accident aboard the
aircraft carrier Nimitz. The Navy
claimed that drug abuae bad ootblng to
do with the tragedy, however.
Alarmed by the possibility that our
service personnel are functioning under
the influence of drugs, concreuional
investigators traveled recently to
Germany and Italy to look into the
situation. The investigators' findin11
were not encouraatng.
MAaJJUA.NA SMOKING and huhilh
usage are common among 80 or 70
percent of American military personnel
m Western Europe, an informed source
told my associate Jack Mitchell.
What makes this particularly
disturbing is that the congreaaional
investigators found that soldiers and
sailors admitted ietUng high on druaa
as readily while they were on duty as
off -duty . Not only that. the
congr essional sleuths uncovered
evidence that aug1eats widespread use
Jll:I 11111111
of the U.S. mails to transport narcotics
aboard ships at sea.
The administration bu now agreed to
let military investigators heJp civilian
authorities track down narcotics
violators. It's not a bad Idea: At leut
130,000 members of the armed services
are estimated to be booked on either
alcohol or illegal dru&a, and almoet one
in five junior penonnel have reported
thal they have been "hifh wblle working." .
Despite the apparent possibility that
many of our soldiers, sailors and
Marines are zonked-out on duty, the
Postal Service hu ruled out the use of
mail openings and drug-sniffing dogs on
m 11 ltary packages unless posta l
inspectors are present -an obvioua
impossibility on the high seas.
THE SITUATION is so bad that
military authorities fear foreign
customs officials may start interceptina
mall deliveries to U.S. service
personpel in hopes of cutting off the
smuggling of illicit drugs into their
countries.
One congressional exper t. while
acknowledging that there is a "high
recreational use of druga, even on
duty," insisted that "it's not a military
fuU of Junkies."
Footnote: In the Navy's most recent
tests, 50 percent of the sailors examined
bad used marijuana shortly before
being tested .
Our language needs a rescue operation
One can only greet with gratitude the
wire service report that p~eaota and
graduate students at the I1llnoil SUte
University have set up a "IJ'ammar bol
· line" to deal with querlet.from thote
wresWng with the En1ll1h 1anaua1e.
Enalltb profesaon at the unlvenlty
/,.:. ~' t '
l:-Ul-Ul-l-1:Cll-I ~tv
report t.M bot 11lle bu attracted "an ua·
common amount'' ol lntanat from ID·
auranee companlH, retail 1tore1,
'newa.,.pen, HCretariea -and evea a
few ltudeDtl.
Tbe 1tate of 1poten and wrtttn
h,u.b la lo appallllll dlaarray. One ot
tbe cbiel tmit.IODt ol laleotrapben
tbH•· ct.p la IDcorporaU.., 90l9Cilllll
into llM tan,u.a,e oa the jromd Uaat
thele mtllaUI ~ leptimll&e ... .,. ...
.. To crWque'' 11 admlu.,I • • verb
1lmpty becaUH IO ma.Q1 people bH•
UM lnlttaken Idea thal It ll om. Tbe ...
of "bopetul.lJ" for ''I bope" .. bf DOW
Dlp ...... al and Mm1tted .... -.... brolld ad mlltU• .... . .
the thioldng thus produced la applied to
the manufacture of automobiles or tbe
writinl ol bhtorical novels.
Legal pollution la the worst of all, of
course. ObecuriUea and circumlocutiooa
in legal English are said to derive from
the andenl days when acrivmen were
paid by the word. Tbua the wbolly UD·
neceuary ••whereas" came to be the
moat used word ln the leaal armamen-
tarium.
Of late, public opinlon bu been re·
volUn1 a1al.nsl the polntleu and often
dllbone1t verbosity of mo.t leaal writ-
los. Letal writlna is deliberately false
and mllleacliq, u moat lawyen have
enouch ~ucatlon to write a lucid and
aim pie M.Dtence lf they are forced to.
Aad they are beln1 forced to. At leut
four IUI* now have laws requlrlnl conaumer contractl to uH wordl wit&
••common and everyday meanlns•."
New York 1tat., I am told, bu been
espedally 1~ in aettllll t.be lelal
eacl• to elev up their wrttlal ad:
People should be tau.aht to write and
speak as if their lives depended on
it, as lo a sense they do. It haa been said
that good prose should resemble the
conversation of an educated and
civilised man.
By this definition food and careful
speech should take precedence over
writlo1 aa a skill. Skill lo speech can be
acquired by practice. You must always
speak aa thou1b aometblq were at
1t.ake, as Indeed It la.
Debatlog la an excellent way to clear
the fl.II out of your bead, and I wtlh
more emphuia were plactd on It lo our
public acboola. In debatinc you learn to
speak IO that a arammar ICbool kld or
a collese profesaor of mathematics cu
follow the thread of your arpmeab.
Tbat verbal skill la uHf\lli and perba,.
lndlapenaable, wbu you take peDdl or
pen or t,ypewriter to band. Muddle la the
enemy.
)
' t
a
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l • . r
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a (
l ~
DEAR PAT P,UNN: I keep getting more
junk mail all the tim e. How do all these mail·
order companies get my na me on their mail·
ing lists? How can I get it off?
· N.J., Dana Point
Many companies, including catalog
firms, credit card companies, publishers,
professional organizations and others rent or
exchange their customers' names to other
companies they think would be of lnterest to
their customers. they do rent their customer
Ust, many firms also offer their customers
the option of not rentlng or excbanglng their
name and address. This ls called "voluntary
disclosure," which means a company volun·
tarlly lets their cus&omera know bow they
wlll make use of their name unlesa the
customer notifies the company ot.berwtae.
When subscribing to a magazlne, making
a maU order purchase or donatlng to a chari·
ty by mail, request at that time that you do
not want your name or address rented or ex·
changed with any other company.
II you receive mall from a company that
is not famUiar to you, make sure you enclose
the maUing label tbey sent to you when re·
questlng to be removed from their malling
llst. Or try to identJfy which organization
may have rented your name.
If you want to reduce the amount of na·
tional advertising mail you receive, write to
the Direct Mail Marketing Auoclatlon, and
ask for a Mall Preference Service (MPS>
form. MPS cannot eliminate all advertlslng
mall and you can't slngle out lndlvldual com·
panles, but It ls a fast, convenient way to get
off many malling lists.
For more lnformatlon on maillng lists,
.9end a legal·slze, seU·addreued, stamped en·
velope to Direct MaU and Marketing Assocla·
tlon, 6 E. 43rd St., Dept. AL, New York, N. Y.
10017. Request the booklet, "How Did They
Get My Name?"
The oldest tree
DEAR PAT DUNN : J always thought the
oldest living thing in the world is the giant
redwood tree named the General Sherman in
the Sequoia National Park. A friend claims
there is an even older tree in the Wh ite Moun·
tains of California . Is this true?
J .E .. Corona del Mar
Yes. The 3,000-year-old General Sherman
redwood bas yielded to a much older and
smaller tree In the White Mountains of
California. It ls the brtstlecone plne. Here
there are dozens of trees aged 2,000 to 3,000
years; nlne trees more than 4,000 years old;
and one tree 4,600 years.
The ages of trees can be accurately
ascertalned, without dolng any harm, by use
of tbe Swedish lncrement borer. This re·
moves a thin cylinder of wood from the
trunk, whose rings can be carefuJJ y counted.
Jellyfish stings
DEAR PAT D UNN : I moved t o
California last s pring a nd enjoy swimming in
the ocean as often as I can. Everyone tells
me to watcb out for jellyfish stings. I'd like to
know where I can expect to see jellyfish -do
they swim underwater or what? Also, if I get
stung, is it serious and what's the treatment?
A.G., Irvine
JeUyftsb Roat oD &be surface of th wa&er
or walb up oai.o beaches. Tbetr ltlaailll cells,
nemotocya&s, are on tbe ten&aclet, ••d can
remaba active for week• after a jeUytlab ....
been beached.
Upoa coatact, a Jellytull dlscllarlet lta
atlngen ln1o the akin, lnJectma venom. Some
1tlll1ln1 ttlla tlta& bave not yet dlH1tu1ed
may 1Uck 1o tlte akin. ID&eue, benlllll paln
la lmmedla&e. The injured area wtll 1ppear
H awoUea lash marka, aometlmet puple.
Palaf.a breaUalng, aweatillg, tearta1, •ntal
· coafuloa alld an lnc.reaaed Mui ra&e alto
CID oeev.
A jeUyftah •dal alloald be dOued wltll
aleoW or amm_.a H 10011 u ,...Sble la or·
der &o a.actlnte tlle ve••· TeataeJea ..W
1Aerta1 &o lite tllla allMW be H•OYM
carehlly .-a towel or otller oltjed. A meat
lellffrller ~·-•1 pap ... wUI llet; rellen
die pU. II aprtUled over tM wad. la ea•
of brea&kl•I dllflcalUet or eUMr tenre
aymp&oma, seek ~mer1eacy medlcal llelp.
"Got a problem? T1Wtt !MU• to Pal
Duma. Pat &OUl ctd 1*I ,_,., """" the a"""9r1 and Cid• ,.. IM to
IOlw trwq..Uw• ill '°"' •Wid ad fJulWH. MaU J1011r ,,.._,.,to Paa
Dufttl, Al Ye>11r s.mte. ~ COMC
Dat111 Ptloe. P.O. Boz '"°· COllG 1i1 .. o, CA nae. Af
ma11 &tant °' poe,.f* IOlll bf~. b.t plaolNd
fnqtdrill "' ,.,,.,. "°' .,..., ,,. ,..,.,. • '""
.,,.. . oddNal """ ,,..,..... ,..,,. ~ "'""""' COllMC bl~. Th£1 cohnM CIJIPfGr'I dtdl11 •z· H,. Jlind¥ ••
..... . ...
Orange Coast DAIL Y PILOT!Tuesday, July 21, 1981 A7
American public more concerned about crime
NEW YORK (AP) -Americans
overwhelmingly say they are more
concerned about crime now than they
were five years Ago, an Associated
Press-NBC News poll says.
However, the majority of the 1,599
Am e ric an adults contacted by
telephone July 13-1' said there was
no area within a mile of their homes
where they would be afraid to walk
at nl1ht.
In response to tbe question, "Are
you more or less concerned about
crime than you were five years ago,
or hasn't your concern about crime
changed?" 85 percent of the respon-
dents said they are more concerned.
Only 2 percent said they were less
concerned about crime now than five
years ago, while 13 percent said tbelr
level or concern had not changed.
Federal statistics indicate there
has been a significant increase ln
crime the past five years, capped by
a 10 percent increase in all crime and
a 13 percent increase in violent crime
in 1980. A recent U.S. Justice Depart·
ment report said about 3 of every 10
American households was touched by
crime last year.
THERE'S A SHRIMP
H'ELPING AT OUR
SAIAD BARI
Lots of shrimp to pile on your salad for
lunch. That"s what you get at our
'Sowder Bar:· (Sowder means salad and
chowder.) You get two soups tool A
steaming bowl of meaty clams and
regetables in a creamy broth. It puts
other chowders to shame. Or you can have
a bowl of our delicious soup of the day.
Here are some of the ingredients t hat
make Calabash"s Sowder Bar what some
people call ··too ·good to be true."
There·s shrimp. and mixed Romaine
and cabbage salad and broccoli and
cauliflower and sliced carrots and
mushrooms and sllced zucchini and
jlcama and cottage cheese and fresh
fruit and string sliced beets and raisins
. and sunftower seeds and cracked
pepper and chopped egg and three
bean salad. g1rbonzo beans. pannesan
cheese. croutons and even more surprises.
·Sowder Bar ls for lunch and dinner. So
walk that thin llne to pleasure at
Calabash Landing. Come to the waterfront
In Costa Mesa.
e ORF.AT ENTERTAINMENT NIOHTLY IN OUR SP.ACIOOS LOUNOEJ
• COMPLIMENTARY FRESH "CRACK·AND·PEEL·fT" SHRIMP
PLATTER WITH EVERY p1NNER MEAL.
CA' ~-·ASH bANDtNo a l41U . DISTILLERY RESTAUR·~ (714) M2-988S • r11-. ·~TUES. ttwu SAT.~ 11130 aM
1111. '""' ltrWt. CClilel ..... CA 912'7 SUN I 9RUNCH 10..30 AM ·200 PM In ttle YOn'I ~ M t?ttt Ind ~ DINNER ftom 4 ~
now than three years a10 to be atrald
to w a lk a t n l ghl in t he l r
neighborhoods.
The rising concern about crime
cuts across sex, age, race, education
and income characteristics, the poll
said.
Increased concern about crime
was registered by 88 percent or the
women, for instance, and 81 percent
of the men. Likewise. people who live
in cities were only slightly more like·
ly than people living in rural areas,
87 percent to 81 perceot. to say their
concern about crime had Increased.
The poll said 59 percent of the
respondents aald there was no area r
within a mile of their home wbere
they would be afraid to walk at nl1ht.
Forty percent said there wu an area
near their homes where they wouJd
be afraid to walk around at nJiht. ,
One percent said they were not aure.
WhUe concern about crime is in-
creasing, the AP·NBC News poll also
said Americans are no more Ukel
Those results are Identical to
responses the last time the AP·NBC
News poll asked that question ln Nov-
ember l978.
A Summer Tradition
The Palm Springs area's newest luxu ry resort at only $32.00 per day.•
Much lower than our normal summer rates.
Spend a day in the sun. Relax, unwinQ. and enjoy the resort's sparkling
pools, 25 championship tennis courts. 27 holes of golf, bicycles. game
room, gift shop and much more.
Uncomplicated? You betl Rancho Las
Palmas Resort la the place for
Your Day in the Sun.
Advance Reservations Required
Space Available Basis ·~Rf~Ho
Call 714/568·2727 or
Toll Free 800/228-9290
LASPALMAS RESORTTM
•Plua taa and gratultlea. not applicable to groups
a sli~ Xt life
New side orde r
atonly75¢.
~
at ii Real
Rancher Style
Bar-B-Q Dinner.
Nightly thru AU.gust 15.
Tonight, bite into big pieces of tender Bar-B-Q
chicken, or a healthy slice of salmon steak. Every
Bar-B-Q style dinner comes with sweet, buttery
corn on the cob, plus smoky baked beans. Tonight,
have a Real Rancher Style Bar-B-Q.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY • SANTA ANA •
GARDEN GROVE • TORRANCE • CERRITOS •
LAKEWOOD •ANAHEIM
THE BEST
J
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fl
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was
!rer.
that
t he
ldD't
1pOr·
e all
tiine
her.
htd
ports
up a
turns ate a
min&
>f the
were
and
knew
p We
1d we
to be
r said
found
from
or all
do."
1d get
every
l time
n the
IS the
up to
be big
"that
1m s. a
dining
houae
)(fy in
' says
dinner
:ether.
fun. It
>r the
o work
n pull·
undred
1t up a
one of
3.
lazy, I
a book
·s. Bon·
watch
y thing
, and I
>0 busy
watch oo TV.
I hog.'"
t,liss PlU1
hers read ~ale , aln1 retty ....J:ot.
1 1 o~r ln UUI
t I iqulat.a ....
. I . •
1hODti Ill.
.ly fl p,..S
101 one.,,
and bUdld a ban ..
1 noae and a
e a pair cf
aldmatW·
1et to ~
. . ------______ ...._._ .. . . . . . . . . .
* Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Tuesday, July 21, 1981
SNOW USE -A motorist encounters prob·
lems even to turn the car after summer
snowfalls and broken trees blocked the road
REAL VALUES
.. ~ .........
on Furka Pass in Switzerland. Heavy
snowfall jammed all the traffic in the moun-
tain area.
Shooting star honored
Ohio toum now officially the birthplace of Annie Oakley
GREENVILLE, Ohio (AP>
On Nov. 3, 1926, a 66-year-old
wisp of a woman ten cr ippled by
train and auto accidents died in
her sleep near her Darke County
birthplace.
lt was Annie Oakley's last bow
lo a world she had captivated
with her sharpshooting feats and
charmed with her grace. The
feminists' ans wer to th"e rifle·
toting fr,ontiersman, she was 98
pounds of pluck on a 5 foot
frame.
Today in Patterson Township,
a marker was being dedicated at
the location of her birth.
Lester J . Shultz, chairman of
the Annie Oakley Birthplace
Committee, said that until last
year . when documentation
proved the location of her birth,
there had been dispute over the
spot.
Every year, Oakley en-
thusi as t s gather at her
graveside in Brock Cemetery.
This will be the first time for an
observance at her birthplace
marker.
"She had a natural gift of lim-
ing and a fabulous coordination
of eyesight and skill with her
hands," llavighurst said. "Some
of her most remarkable shots
were made with a shotgun."
Annie was born Phoebe Anne
Moses in a Jog cabin Aug. 13,
'She was a soft-
s poke n and
modest woman
who became a
world celebrity.'
1860. Iler rather died when she
was 5, leaving seven orphans,
the oldest only 15
At 8, she taught he rself to
shoot with her father's old 40·
inch cap-and-ball Kentucky ri·
fi e. Her targets became family
meals rabbit, squirrel, quail
and other game.
She also sold the game lo Cin·
ci nnali hotels and restaurants,
bori ng the anima ls neatly
through the heads and leaving
no shot in the meat
Buller reallied that a pretty
girl who could tattoo alx toNed
balls before they hlt the cround
was a bigger attraction than be.
So he gave up hia career and U ·
slsted her when ahe performed
on tour, eventually becomin1
one of the major attractions of
Buctalo Bill's Wlld West Show.
Tragedy struck Annie "1 UIOl,
when her s how train collided
with another train. She injured
her spine when she was thrown
from her bed, and the nerve
shock totally whitened her hair
in 17 hours .
Then in l922, she broke ber hip
and ankle in a car accident in
Daytona Beach, Fla.
After that accident, Annie
believed she had only a short
time to live. Thfbking no one
would want her shooting medals,
she had them melted down and
sold the gold for a little more
than SlOO, which she gave to a
children's hospital.
Jn 1926, an exhausted Annie
Oakley took a train from her
New Jersey residence back to
Darke County, where she died
within the year. Butler, who was
ill at h is s is ter's home in
Ferndale, Mich., died 18 days
later. Both are buried here in
Brock Cemetery.
MEIDHILP?
on item s from applesauce to zi ppers lll.IJ Pl.lat
ar e advert ised ev ery day in the
Despite her gun-handling, An·
nie Oakley "was s urprisingly
femin i n e ," said Walter
Havighurst, Oakley biographer
a nd professor emeritus of
English al Mi ami Un iversity
"She was by tradition a Quaker.
She was very soft-s poken and a
rather modest woman who
became a world celebrity."
Her skill entranced the great
Indian Chief Sitting Bull He
called her his adopted daughter,
Little Miss Sureshot
As a teen-ager at the German
resort of Shooter's Hill, s he
cha llenged and defeated Frank
Buller, billed as the world's
gr,eatest marhman And she
captured his heart along with his
title. They married
Help yourself to a Heaping selection of
Quali'1ed Hopefuls
tn the DAILY PILOT
HELP WANTED ADS
~ a:
0 m a:
c(
I:
L&J :c
1-
I.I.
0
"' c z
:::::>
0
"' 0
LI.I a:
LI.I t-
"'
FROM Fash ion Island
Newport Beach
Unite d's
N. t Coach fares
to -Chicago.
As Iowas
Headed to the Windy City? Well.
don't bust open the old piggy bank
yet. Its as low as $144 each way when
you fly round-trip to Ch icago. on
any of Unitcds Night C-oach fligh ts.
Some restrictions apply, and seats arc
limited, so call your Travel Agent.
Partners in Travel with Westin Hotclc;.
Easy Ni~ht Coach R<'slrktions. Ju:-1 rnal..t· \Olli"
rl'Sl'f"\ al ion:-.111d pure ha:-<' I iekt'ts at lt•a:-.l I I d.1vs
i11 aclvann· Stav 1hro11gh a Frida\ night or a:-.
long u:-. sixty davs Ir you ll·avc.· cm a Saturcl.t\.
ret urn any day Make .fm changC's in n·~<'na·
lions at lt•asl 14 davs 111 ad\ arwc. or f'<.'lurn 0 11 .1
s~tndby basis. or the c·nllrc d1s<:ount as lo~t.
Night Coach to Chicago
From Los Angeles Int'I Airport
Leave
10:20 p.m .
12: 15 p.m .
Arrive
4:00 a.m.
6:00 a.m.
eachway -
whenyoufly
round-trip.
Dally Pilat ~ .. D I TU ESOAY, JULY 21 , 1981 EI ficiency and effectiveness must a COMICS
TELEVISION
FEATURES
84
B6
812
be measured to determine product
ivity ... BS
'!Jest of both wor~ a career and 11 children
CHlLLICOTHE, Mo. (AP> -
Berniece Bonderer's days are an
ever-changing jigsaw puule -
ijlere are always new pieces to
fit into a picture that focuses on
her 11 children, her husband,
~d her fulltime career.
The d emure, unassuming
woman who's lived most or her
49 years on a farm can butcher a
hog, pluck a chicken and bake a
mean apple pie. But she's also a
crackerjack nurse who~rsees
400 births a year al lhi mall
town's hospital. One r. ent ar-
dval who gave a first cry in her
arms was her granddaughter.
For nearly a quarter of a cen-
tury., Mrs. Bonderer has kept
her balance with one root plant-
ed squarely in the homemaker's
camp and the other one in the
career woman's workplace. She
firmly believes that despite the
outpouring of public agonizing in
trendy fashion magazines,
'today's women can have it all -
.a husband, a home, children,
~nd a fulltime job -if they
Pwanl it.
· "I don't think I'm anything
Special. But then I've had a lot
of help," said the lady with short
brown hair showing only a trace
of gray. "It all comes together
and works if everybody pitches
in."
Her boss, Hedrick Medical
Center Administrator Paul
Shelton, says she 's remarkable.
He says she's a first-rate ob-
stetrics nurse with a far.flung.
reputation in Livingston County,
an agricultural center in north
central Missouri.
"When women come in here to
have their babies and they see
Berniece beside them , they
know she knows what she's do-
ing," says Shelton. "She's been
on both sides of the fence often
enough to be a genuine expert."
Rose Wa!Jcer echoes Shelton's
assessment. Al 1:17 p.m .. Mays.
she delivered her first child,
daughter Brooklyn Nicole. The
nurse who held her hand and
wiped her face during labor was
Mrs. Bonderer -who also hap-
pens to be Mrs . Walker's
mother.
"She was wonderful, a loving
mother and yet a professional
nurse all at the same lime," re·
calls Mrs. Walker , 21, the fifth
Bonderer ch.lid. ·'She helped me
-............... ......
Berniece Bonderer r r ightJ. with huspand Al and nine of her 11 children. combines motherhood with career.
breathe. made me comfortable.
let me squeeze her hand as hard
. as 1 couJd. When my perfect lit·
tie girl was born, she cleaned
her up and laid her on my arm
It was a moment l 'll never
forget."
Mrs. Bonderer decided to be a
nurse when she 'was 8. She con-
tracted scarlet fever and com-
plications brough t on men-
ingitis. She was a· patient at the
Mayo Clinic in Rochester ,
Minn .. three limes in six years,
and underwent four major
operations.
·• t remember being so sick,
and how people at the hospital
were so kind and gentle to me, ..
says the slender RN with a soft
voice. "The nurses were
especially good to me, they
seemed so dedicated. and they
always smiled.
··From then on I grew up not
wanting to do anything else ex-
cept graduate from nursing
school as fast as J could."
She got her cap at the
University of Kansas Medkal
Center in 1953. the same year
sh e married farmer Al Bon-
derer.
But her nursing career soon
got sidetracked. Her first child,
Mike arrived in 1954. Pam came
along a year later, and Tasl, the
year after that. S h e was
followed by David. now 23 ;
Rose : Mark, 19: Susan 18, Anne
16 ; Joe 14 : Barbara 11 , and
"baby" Tim, now 9 All were
born in the hospital where their
mother is now head nurse.
After a seven-year hiatus in
her early days of motherhood,
Mrs. Bonderer eased back into
her profession as a private
nurse. But soon she was eager to
go back on the job fulltime. That
precipitated a famjly conference
an d some se riou s soul ·
searching.
''At fi rst it was hard for my
husband lo understaod," says
Mrs . Bonde r er, choosing her
words carefully. "But eventual-
ly he came to understand my
needs, to know that being a
nurse was something I simply
had to do to be happy tr he
hadn't understood, [ couldn't
have gone ahead with it. He had
to back me all the way, and he
truly has."
Mrs . Bonderer hired on as a
nurse at Hedrick, stayed there
for nearly a decade. then
worked as a county health nurse
for nearly two years before re-
tur ning to the hospital as the
maternity and delivery room
head nurse last November.
·'Early on l realized that the
key to keeping the house runnin~
smoothly or at least without
too many major crises -wu
logistics," s ays Mrs. Bonderer.
"I convinced everybody that
you can never get all the
housework done, so we shouldo't
worry about it. The most impOr·
tant ttung was to make sure all
the children got plenty of time
with Al and me, and each other.
"Nearly all the kids had
somethmg after sct1ool -sport.a
or music so we set up a
schedule. The girls look turn.
cooking dinner, one week ~ a
time. They also had cleaning
chores. The boys did a lot of lbe
Car m work, but also were
responsible for the trash and
their rooms."
Susan says, "Every body knew
they had lo pitch in and help. We
all knew Mom was busy and we
JUSt did what we saw had to be
done. It was no big deal."
But the high school senior said
her active mother "still found
time to bake cakes from
scratch, or make bread, or aJl
those thlngs other mothers do."
Berniece and her husband get
up together at 5:30 a.m., every
morning "to have our quiet time
together. to talk and plan the
day's routine.··
Then Lhe rush is on as the
children still at home line up to
use the one bathroom in the big
old ramify farmhouse "that
seemed to grow with us."
There are seven bedrooms, a
back porch and living and dining
rooms but the heart of the house
IS the 28-by·l4 foot kitchen.
"I love having everybody in
there while I'm cooking," says
Mrs. Bonderer. "Sunday dinner
usually finds us all together,
making noise and having run. It
s tarts me out right for the
week ··
Her idea of relaxing 1s to work
m the huge family garden pull-
ing weeds. or can a hundred
quarts of tomatoes, or put up a
mess or fresh peas for one of
the family's three freezers.
"If I'm really feeling lazy, I
may sit down and read a book
for a hair hour," says Mrs. Bon-
de rer . "But I don't watch
television. That's the only thing
J don't have time to do. and I
don't miss 1t. My life's too busy
to s it passively and watch
somebody's made-up life on TV.
I'd rather be butchering a hog."
Renta Yenta ca1Tying silliness to new heights
New York women pert ect the art of gimmickry into profitable profession.
NEW YORK <AP ) -So.
You're feeling depressed, right?
The big party's tonight and you
hadda work late. Everybody's
gone home and there you sit,
work piled on your desk. and
such a headache you could die
from.
more than Sl,500, according to
Lynn Stemerman and Liz Woolf.
the genies of gimmickry who
dreamed up that and a thousand
other stunts like it.
twins who gift-wrapped a
Madison Avenue executive for
his birthday.
You got yo ur si nging
messengers, your balloon bou-
quets, your belly dancers. There
are shaggy donkeys for delivery
lo corporate types in pinstripes
and are you ready? -cupids
in Pampers all set to go for next
Valentine's Day.
So quit kvetch ing. Renta
Yenta.
A looseleaf notebook records
the past capers of the two New
York women. whose business
professes to do it all -provided
"it's legal and it's kind."
Carol and Izzy did, and doncha
know, they felt better. With their
blessing, a rented helicopter
rained 2,000 ping pong balls on
the bash, each with a message:
"Sorry we can't be there.''
What price glory? In this case,
There was the "Happy Relire·
menl Ida " sign on Tim es
Square, the brass band that
stood knee-deep in ticker tape
belling out "76 Trombones" on
the fl oor or the New York Stock
Exchan.ze. the c hes ty blond
Business is booming.
Go figure it
The schlock's piled high on the
streets of New York, and human
gorillas are dropping like mes.
What's the average life s pan of a
•
Navy foils a drug ploy
Malingerers used ruse to avoid sub duty
WASJUNGTON CAP> -The Navy is trying to
discourage malingerers from avoiding tours on
nuclear submarines by making false last-minute
claims that they had used drugs.
Capt. Leo A. Cangianelli, a top Navy drug and
alcohol abuse control officer, said this was the
purpose behind canceling a "Drug Exemption Pro-
gram" and s ubstituting a plan dealgned to clote
loopholes.
"We have had a problem with malingerers
among nuclear submarine crews manipulating the
system to avoid deployments," Cangianelll aald In
an interview.
"If a person wu unhappy about going on a
deployment , all he had to do wu walk up to his
corn manding officer or executive officer and say,
'I smoked a marijuana cigarette laat night,' and
turn himself in for rehabilitation. In thoae cases,
the man automatically was eHmpt from deploy·
me-.L" Thia lJ because there is what It called a "zero
tolerance" for any form of dru1 uae amon1
nuclear sub crewmen, aJJ ol whom are vol\lftteers
for 1ubmarine duty, Can1lanelll 1'1d.
In tbe non·nuclear part ol the Navy, be aald, a
sailor would not be. summarily removed from his
crew but would Hil with the lhlp and would re·
celve countelinC whtle carrytnc out hll dut1•. The new approach la ln conformity with a con·
1rea1lonaJ mandate requlrlftl the services to prp.
vide "an avenue free ol pUDIUYe act1oa to pel'10U
who volunteer tMIDHlv• tor rebabtlltaUon and
treatJMDt,'' Canll&MlH 11lcl.
However, be Hid a number of featvea have
bHn built into tbe new Pf'Oll'lm for 1ubmarlners
tn an llfort to make It moN dlfftcuJt for a nuclear
1a.Uor to~ an =:meat by putttn1 ln a pboay
clal• t.Mt be bad clruo. A ... ....., thillal, C ... anelli Hid, I 1aJJor
would bave to tn•k• bla claim to a medical olflcer
or a qualified drug screening specialist and un-
dergo what was described as "an objective look "
to see whether he needed rehabilitation.
It is not clear what wouJd happen in a case
where a sailor actually used drugs, but only as a
device to avoid a particular tour of duty rather
than on a continuing basis.
Cangianelli acknowledged that the policy
"doesn't close the barn door" to malingerers and
that it still would be possible for a sailor to avoid a
deployment by entering a claim or drug use.
However, Canglanelli said rules bad been writ·
ten that would expose the sailor to punitive action
if lt. turns out that his claim is false.
·'They will have to prove that they need re·
habilltaUoo," Cangianelll said .
Furthermore, he said a sailor can no longer, in
effect, get some of his buddies out of a deployment
by lnformln1 his superiors that friends had used
drugs.
"He c an't name anybody e lse," said
Can1ianel11, "so he can't open the barn door to let
other people out." .
Thil altered approach ia part of a broad plan
ordered recently by Adm. Thomu Hayward, chief
of naval operations, for stricter enforcement of the
Navy'1 ban on dru1 use by sailon.
Joint, r e s e a rch set
BU..,.ALO, N.Y. (AP) -Unlveraltlea ln New
York and Pftln1 have drafted a preliminary
a1l'fflDIM to carry out Joint retearcb actlvtUea
and nchanc• ec:bolara ud atudeata.
Prealdent Robert L . Ketter of the State
Unlv...tt)' of New York at Buffalo aald poaaible
Joint r11earcb with Cblna'a Pekln1 Municipal
Unlnnlty System could Include lludl• ln tduca·
Uoft, culture, I.be IOCllal IC!eDCtll r m'41ctne.
dancing banana? Ms. Woolf and
Ms . Stemerman know , and
they're here to tell you · not long .
But the ladies who bought
Renla Yenla from two West
Coast women in 1978 have made
a good living while perfecting
the f i ne art of whoopie
cushionry.
"We have seen them come and
die,.. Ms . Wootr said of other
purveyors of pulchritude ,
pageantry and panache.
Renta Yenta endures.
The two resident yentas
Yiddis h ror busybody -believe
it 's mostly a matter of
credibility.
"People know we'll be here
three weeks from now." said
Ms. Stemerman.
Clients are also lured by the
sheer variety of exploits availa-
ble -from S50 per delivery of a
basket of cookies to
?????????????
Visitors to the offices of Renta
Yenta expecting to find what the
name implies are in for a big
surprise.
"They expect little Jewish
grandmothers," Ms. Stemerman
said with a grln.
J ewish, yes. Grandmothers,
no. Both women are in their ear-
ly 30s , and are stylishly slim and
attractive.
They have much in common:
both immigrated to the city at
about the same time, Ms. Woolf
from Poland a nd M s .
Stemerman from Elmira, N.Y.
Both worked In real estate. then
in insurance. Both wanted to try
something new.
They also had been to a lot of
bad parties.
"They tasted the same and
they aJI looked alike," said Ms.
Woolf, who felt she could do bet·
ter., They agreed to go Into busi·
ness togethe r a nd beaan
sear cbin1 for a forum . Ma.
Stemerman heard about Renta
Yenta one day at the dentist,
and they decided to buy up the
name. "To me, it means somebody
who undentandl how to aet the
thlni done." Ma. Stemerman
Hid.
Gettln1 the thln1 done can
ran.. from hoverin1 over the
bouH palntera to make 1\.lre
they don't. mlu a apot to de-
co r attn 1 a four ·bedroom
townhouae from scratch In M
hours nat. They did it for Stevie
Wonder, and It remaln1 their
moat Herculean task to date.
They classify themselves N
succesaful , but prefer not to
divulge, the net worth of thelr
business.
"We've done parties for
$30,000 lo $40,000 a shot, but
there are no mtlUon," Ma. Woolf
says. Not yet, anyway.
Ma. Stemerman then ncUMd
herself to tab a call from the
M&M twt~1 tdenUcal be•utl•
who apeclau1t In donntn1 bot
panta and taU1 and 1tn1in1
"PutUnc oo th• Rli.."
Renta Yenta can draw from
300 such talent., ,who dr ... up
Uke Charlie Chaplin, Ml11 Plto
and Mae West. Others r .. d
palms, perform maalc, .....
son1s or simply look pretty -iot
handsome -u needed. •
But all ls not 1lamour in thli
fast·lane of venlrlloquiatl tDd
vaudevilUans. .
Back from th• phone, Ks.
Stemerman abeently flipped
throulh a file deplcUn1 on= ro maribou feath•ra and
pantl, another with 1 b
peel 1playtd over hi• noae and 1
third -*to looked Uke a pall' cl
Slant Upe.
..You lme>w," she said matw•
of .factly, "this can cet to 1 M
awfully rwUne."
·~-~-~-------~-------~-~-~----~--0 2Q 0 0 0 0004403 0 5 5 5
Orange Cout OAIL.V PILOT(Tueaday, July 21. 1981 -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less water to cost Mesans more?
Chamber warned of rising rates in -pitch for proposed Peripheral Canal
THROUGH SLEET, SNOW, ETC • ...:_ Certainly a lot of
folks in our region were wringing their bands Monday
when it became clear we faced the threat of a postal
strike.
People who are expecting a lot of bills in the mall
were wringing their hands in glee.
Others, who were looking for a check from Uncle
George in Antioch, who'd owed the $125 for two years,
were wringing' hands in frustration.
· Further, it was in·
• terestlng how some of • r-the local postmasters of --------~· our Orange Coast re-JDI IURPHINf ,W it fi!~~tiit!~!!~Un' to
They all said the
mail would go through anyway. But bow?
WELL, COSTA MESA Postmaster Lyle Verplanck
flatly declared, "The mail will go through one way or
another.''
Now that was an interesting choice of words. That's
how numerous people feel about bow the mail goes
through under normal conditions.
One way or another. that is.
Meanwhile, Huntington Beach Postmaster James
O'Hara suggested, "At this .stage of the game. I don't
know what to expect ... "
Alas, that may have confirmed some other suspi-
cions.
Most of the Orange Coast postal authorities said there
was a contingency plan for getting the mail delivered.
But none of them seemed to know what that plan is.
Well, now we can probably all agree on that. It's like
''No wonder the sergeant pul me on thu mail delivery route''
The decreued Up water
available lo 1185 will co.t Cott.a
Meaans about 24 percent more
than U)ey pay now, water of.
ficlala have warned In gain·
lng Chamber of Commerce 1up-
port for the state's proposed
Peripheral Canal.
But aetUn1 the amount of
water each Mesan uaea every
day, about 180 gallons, may be
impossible, aald Karl Kemp,
manager of Mesa Consolidated
Water District.
The average household pays
about $11 a month for water
now. The bill will be closer to
$13.65 in 1985 and probably
higher in later years.
Kemp and district board
member Henry Panian predict·
ed water raUonin& during dry
years -about every fourth year
-even lf the city's population
remal.M statlc.
Cost.a Mesa, they explained to
chamber directors last week,
imports about 75 percent o( lta
water needs.
That water nows through the
state aqueduct from Northern
C alifornia and from the
Colorado River via Metropolitan
Water District feeder llnes.
More than half the waler im-
ported from the Colorado River
will go to Arizona beginning in
1985 as the result of U.S.
Supreme Court rulings on water
rights, Panian noted.
And, he added, there is a good
c hance that much of the
Northern California water that
supplies Orange County might
be diverted in future years to
Los Angeles County.
The reason, Panian said, ia a
lawsuit filed by c'onservation
Statue unveiled
RIVERTON, Wyo. CAP) -A
bigger-than.life sculpture of the
famed lndian guide Sacajawea
bas been unveiled on the campus
of Central Wyoming College.
The bronze sculpture was shown
for the fi rst time by artist Harry
Jackson, who works out of his
Wyoming Foundry Studios in
Cody, Wyo., and Camaoire ,
Italy.
aroups who are attemptin1 to
curtail Lo. Anltlet' water Im·
porta from the Oweoa Valley,
wh ere M o no Lake 11
diminishing.
Los Angeles, he said, wlll tum
to the MWD for wat~r ti the suit
ls auccesaful. And, he added, Loa
An1eles has the votes on the
MWD board required to divert
Orange County water.
Panlan said Cost a Mesa's
water supply could be cut at
least 20 percent.
That would mean some form
of rationing.
The possible silver lining to
the water cloud, both agreed,
would be state construction of
the controversial $6 million
P eripheral Canal.
The canal would divert water
flowing lo sea, through the
HEADS RECRUITING -
Capt. Glen M. Robbe has
been named commander of
the U .S. Army's South
Orange County Recruiting
Area. He will s upervise
recruiters in Costa Mesa,
Huntington Beach, Laguna
Hills, Santa An a and
Orange.
Feather and Sacramento
rivers, to the slate aqueduct
1y1tem and on to Southern
Callfomta.
T hat canal, ln tbe plannin1 for
15 years oow, baa been approved
by state leaders and conteated
by Northern California 1roups.
Northern Californian• fear
water diversion will cause ocean
water to seep lnto the river's
delta system, rulntng crops and
the water required for many in·
dustrles there.
Conaervatlonilts and wildlife
advocates.also fear the etrect or
ult water intrusion on f\Jh and
anii:nala.
The Peripheral Canal iasue,
considered by Panian and Kemp
to be critical to the clty's future,
goes to st.ate voters as a referen-
dum measure either In Nov·
Plaque due
for bridge
in Newport
A $900 bronze plaque is to be
mounted on the soon·to-be com-
pleted Pacific Coast Highway
bridge in Ne wpo rt Beach
although several city coun-
cilmen doubt any motorists will
have tim4) to read it.
"It's a mystery to me why we
need it," asserted Councilman
Paul Hummel. "Who's going to
read it?"
He suggested that the bridge
contractor or the state should
pay for the plaque, not the city.
Two other council members
agreed with him.
''It's their bridge so if there's
lo be a plaque it should be their
obligation," he said.
But Hummel ended up on the
losing si<4e as the council agreed
to purchase the 16·bY · 18·inch
plaque which is to bear the city's
official seal and the slogan.
"The Porthole of Time."
ember or next June.
The date depends on a ruUna
by Gov. Brown, Kemp noted.
Canal or no canal, whatever
water is uvaila ble for lmport by
1985 will cost dearly, Panlan
added.
That's when contracts for
Hoover Dam e lectrlcity ,.
negotiated In the 19305, are up
(or r enegotiation.
Las Vegas, Phoenix a nd
Tucson seek much or the power
now used to pump water ovft'
mountains for the downhill now
to Southern California.
"MWD pays SS an acre foot to
pump it now,'' Panian noted.
Conservative estimates In-
dicate the price will go to al
least $45 an acre fool, but son1e
estimates double that figure.
NEW DIRECTOR -Art Luna,
a 1976 USC graduate, has as-
sumed the post of e xecutive
director of the Orange Coun·
ty Housing Authority. Luna,
picked from a fi eld of 115,
tak es over f o r J o hn
A vita bile, who resigned last
J anuary.
a lot of contingency plans. Somebody has it, somewhere.
But who? Who?
Clearly, a postal strike is really going to put a crimp
in the style of a lot or people who are getting dunned for
overdue bills.
Park development
plan draws support
Sever al city officials later
opined that traffic generally
moves so s lowl1 through the
area that many drivers would
likely have time to read the pla·
que.
7 awarded
scholarships
Seven area high school seniors
ha ve rece ived $1 .000
scholars hips each from the
Irvine Company in recognition
or outs tandin g comm unity
leadership.
Mesa to fund
outreach for
adult center
With funding from the city or
Costa Mesa, a day care center
has started an outreach pro·
gram to see if the city's
chronically ill are in ne~ ol
ser vices provided by the Harbor ·
Area Adult Day Care Center .
HOW IN THE WORLD are you going to be able to tell
them, "Oh yes that ... Well, I just put your check in the
mail ... "
A $16 million development pro-
posal for Huntington Beach Cen·
tr al Park ha s be e n
recommended a s a way to
gen e r ate future r evenue to
maintain the cit y's SO-park
system.
Another statement of lasting interest came out of
Washington, D.C., Monday when Postmaster General
William F. Bolger expressed great confidence that there
would be no postal workers strike. The c ity 's Co mmunity
Services Commission, which
recommends parks and recrea-
tion policy. has unanimously sup-
ported a private cons ultant's pro-
posal to put recreational attrac-
tions in the 297-acre park.
He declared that the people should still continue to
use the ~.S. Mail. ·
Now, I aslf you, what did he expect us to do? Kick
over to hi s competitors? Would we all start mailing out of
Ca nada overnight?
DOES BOLGER TWNK the pony express is still run-
ning him a heavy race? Wells Fargo retired the
stagecoaches a long time ago and went into banking.
The proposed attractions in-
clude a 111-acre golf course, a
hotel complex and conference
center, a six-field baseball and
sports complex, a YMCA gym-
nasium, a restaurant, a recrea-tional vehicle campground, a
fishing lake, an arcade, and a
pizza parlor, as well as the exist-
ing shooting range and adventure
playground.
Some reports had it that if all the postmen and
postwomen strike, the government might call upon the
U.S. Army to deliver all the mail.
You can jus t imagine how that might work out. AU
the majors will stay in the post offices. The captains will
get to drive all the trucks. The lieutenants and sergeants
will run out with the platoons and assign the routes.
The commission also recom-CORPORALS WILL GET all the routes with sorority
houses and saloons. Privates First Class will deliver to
fiat residential areas. Mesan named
to honor roll And the yardbirds? Why, they'll be delivering at all
the places up the hills where the sign on the gate says : Dean M. Schmidt of Costa
Mesa has been named to the
chancellor's honor roll for the
spring semester at the Universi-
ty of Colorado, Boulder.
"Beware of Vicious Dog!"
NEWS
from all over California is
rounded up each day in the lailyPilat Therbonor roll recognizes stu-
dents who earned a perfect 4.0
grade point average for the
semester.
·•' #o -0
0
~
HYPNOSIS IS THI llY ......... .., .... ., ,_.Lit.
IMMH MM» IMSTITUTI
... c:a.&TATIOM -.......
~==~~~==========~~i
~· 9iwtXi..i-
PlUMBING . • HEATING .
SERVICE & REPAIR
MODERNIZATION
7'~:.. NEW CONS11UC110N
RESIDENTIAL--..~
O>ms>lete line of Americ:an Kohler Sfand
(Flxturn •. Moen • & Price Phttter Kitchen &
Lavatory Faucets. Water Heatera. Dtapoula,
Do-It-Yourself Supptlel. ' -Stt!• Cootrw.1onJJoen• 1241927 -
CV'iew.SOn ®
r::IJental Healtlt,
By GaftAU WINKLIR, 0.0.1.
WHY A BRIDGE?
11 tt really necessary
to replace adult's
ml11ln1 teeth with a flJced brid1e or partial
denture! The answer Is
a definite YES! The rea1on1 are quite
almple. When a tooth la loet,
the adjacent leetb and
the tooth (above or
below) .aitch ac:tl u t
bllln1 partner, ION the
1upport, •trenfth and 1tablll1ln1 Influence whlcll tbe lost \oo\b
once. ~rovlded . Tb•
rematmnt t...th wm be
1ubJ•c:t to many
problem• such •• drlflln1. abnormally
eapoHcl deca1-prone
ll't•S and, want ol all,
periodontal dlHaH.
(Tia• aln1l• lar1eat
ClllM al \oOtb loN lft
adulta).
The loss of just one
looth, ll not replaced by
a fixed bridle or partial
denture, wUl more than
likely, ultimately came the loea of more and
more lHth. In many patlenta, It 11 only a
matter ol Ume unlU the
dutruct.lon la complete.·
The dental arch was ddlcned by nature to
have a complete aet ot
teeth -one helptn1 and
protecUn1 the other.
Repl1cln1 mlutn1
teeth wHh a dental
appliance wUJ malnt.ln
Um de91p u weU u
your smile and abtlily
to eat propef'ly. . •
me nds an equestrian center with
rental horses available to the
public.
The City Council will hold a
public h earing on the con-
trove r sial developm ent pro-
posals next month.
A group of nearby residents
oppose deve lopm ent in the park.
located off Golden West Street
between S la te r and Ellis
avenues . The park presently is a
natural setting of trees. shrubs,
hills and lakes.
According to the proposal by
Ul trasystems Inc., or Irvine, the
development plan requires ac·
quiring 75 additional acres near
Ellis Avenue. Proposed attrac·
tions would generate about $12. 7
million over the next 10 years.
according to the consultant.
City officials say voters would
have to approve a bond to pay
for much of the $16 miJHon de-
velopment costs.
Four of the scholarships have
been awarded to Irvine resi·
dents Christopher Cassady and
S uz y Krueckeberg fr om
University High School and
Ma ry C. Egan and Elizabeth
Denney of Irvine High School.
Newport Beach scholarship
recipients include Ma rk Evans
and Linda Timmons of Corona
del Mar High School and Joanne
M . Martin of Newport Harbor
High Sc_hool. I
Dorm adviser
Debby Benevento of Hunt-
ington Beach has been selected
as resident adviser for
dormitories at the University of
Redlands.
Although the center serves the
Orange Coast area, the new out·
reach service is restricted to
Costa Mesa residents.
Under the ser vice, a center
representative provides assess·
ment interviews in places such
as mobile home parks and trains
per sons there to provide refer-
rals to the adult day care center,
according to Dr. Dan Sands,
director.
The center provides care for
mostly elderly patients who are
isolated due to confusion, dis·
orientation, suffering memory
failure, have had st rokes or
other similar problems, Sands
said.
He said of t he center 's 26
clients. 14 are Costa Mesa resi·
dents . For more information,
call 548-9331.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9iii .... iiiiiiiiiiiiii
$1,000 or 1110re-8, 12 weeks
%
Amllf11/ Hull'
1iid11y\I interest ratr
11Unr.1nlt'~·d for
the tt'rm b~
Amefll an Sam1r1
American Savings pays high interest with safety.
,... •lr••1lll of A•••·• • ..,,. ..................... .
Backe~ by Securities oft~ U.S. or U.S. Government
Aatncies. TH lS OBUGATION 18 N<n' A SAVINGS
ACCOUNT OR DEPOSIT AND IS NOT IN UREO
BY THE FEDERAL SAVINGS ANO LOAN
INSURANC~; CORPORATION.
Prindpal plu1 mtercst paid by American Savings at
maturity. NO FEE, NO SERVICE CHARGE. Available
to California relident1 only. lnterest ntcs ~ set ·
Brtq any buk or aavtnp ,..OOOk. We'll tranafer
UMtunda.
AN SAVINGS
SAf! 8INCe 1•. ASSETS OVER •• I ION
Owr J(J() ojfitu lo $tlW you. Clttclt It~ wltiU "11/f$ fel' olfi« n«Jmt you. w ............ ,. ............... ,.. .....
. ..
....
Orange Coast DAILY PfLOTfTueaday, July 21, 1981
.... 1...,....
County spends $1,000
in $1. 98 prosecution
FREMONT, Ohio (AP) -J oseph
Frymire s ays Sandusky County
authorities wasted taxpayers' money
in spending more than $1,000 to bring
him back from California for stealing a SUMI bottle of wine.
The officials, while conceding they
did spend that much, say they had
good reason to do so.
Because t h e wine theft was
Frymire's second theft offense,
authorities said state law required
that his case be handled u a felony
rather than the petty theft misde·
meanor it would have been had he
had no previous conviction.
Besides, said assistant county
prosecutor AJfred Cooper, Frymire
had been given many breaks but
abused them aJJ.
"T he guy has thumbed his nose at
t he system right down the line,·'
Cooper s aid. .
According to court records,
Frymire has been convicted of three
felonies.
In May 1978, he was sentenced to
one to five years in prison tor break-
ing and entering. Less than two
months later , he was released on
s hock probation.
In January 1979, F rymire, 22, was
sentenced to two to 15 year s in prison
on robbery charges. After 22 months,
he was paroled.
Sargeant accepted Frymlre's plea.
He suspended the man's one-to-five
year sentence, placing him on four
years probation One of the terms of
probation required Frymire to admit
himself to a drug and alcohol treat-
ment program tn Toledo
Three days after the court ap-
pearance, Frymire showed up at the
program headquarters with alcohol
on his breath, according t o a
counselor He was refused admit-
tance and taken to the Sandusky
County jail for violating terms of. his
probation
Although his probation could have
been r evoked, Sargeant gave
Frymire another chance. He was ad-
mitted to the treatment program
March 23, but walked away a week
later An arrest warrant was issued.
Sher iff Joseph Kindred said a local
informant told him Frymire was in
Sacramento Frymire was arrested
and held there.
Two sheriff's department officers
flew to Sacr amento. at a cost or
$1,100 to bring Frymire back. His
fate rests in the hands of his parole
board and Sargeant.
EVER ALERT A Wh itetail doe and her spo\ted fawn keep a wary eye
as they forage in the Everglades' Sherk Valley. some 50 miles west of
Miami. Everglades deer are normally timid animals. but the pro-
spect of new grass shoots kept these two out in the open for the photo-
graer,er.
On Jan. 21 of this year, Frymire
was arrested a nd char ged with steal-
ing the $1.98 bottle or wine from a
grocery store. Frymire told Common
Pleas Court Judge Harry Sargeant
J r. that he had a drug problem and
wanted treatment for it.
Parolt.> officer Dave Knepper said
the p<1roll• board could revoke
Frym1re's parole and send him to
prison Sargeant could impose the
or iginal onE'·lO·five year sentence if
he delermmcs Frymire violated the
terms of his probation.
In a letter to the Fremont News-
Messenger , 1-'rymire said tax money
was wastc<t on his extradition
/J(an to share
nf:ilitary pay
...
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Sayin~ a recent U.S.
Supreme Court decision could consign divorced
military wi ves to a life of poverty, a newly retired
Navy commande r and his wife said they are sign-
ing a document guaranteeing her half his pension
1f they ever end their marriage.
The action, intended to inspire other military
couples to follow suit. was taken Monday m
response to a June 26 ruling, held that military
benefits were not intended as community property
a nd are the sole property of the spouse who earns
them, said attorney Gloria Allred of the Women's
Equal Rights Legal Defense and Education Fund
"This decision will have a disastrous effect on
military wives. many of whom give up their own
careers in order to be with their husbands as t hey
travel from base to base around the world." said
Ms . Allred, who is representing the couple. Phyllis
and Arthur Manger of Pacific Palisades.
Tbe couple, who have been married 35 years.
ha ve ,no plans to divorce. she said Manger. 59,
ser ved 25 years in the Navy, achjeving the rank of
commander before has recent retirement The pension to which he is entitled, which Ms.
Allred said is between Sl.200 and Sl ,500 a month,
would have been considered by California law as
community property prior to the court ruling,
belonging equall y to both spouses
"Arthur is doing this because he loves his
wife, Phyllis. and he feels it's fair that she share in
the benefits from a military life to which she made
an important contribution, .. Ms. Allred said. "We
think that every U S military wife around the
world ought to ask her husband io do the same. We
hope lhat thousands of men will follow his example
and become a new kind of military hero lo their
wives and families "
Although divorced military wives are still en·
titled to Social Security and. in some cases,
spous:al support, Ms Allred said most would be
deprived of the major financial asset of a mar·
riage· whlch. due to frequent travel and modest
pay, teods to discourage the accumulation of
tangitne assets such as real estate.
"What we have a lso is an ironic situation
wher~ some military men are worth more to t heir
wives dead than alive, because al least then they
would receive survivors benefits ... she said
In adrution to the signing of the document, Ms
Allred said she would deliver to the U S Depart·
ment_qf Defense a card telling mthtary wives how
to pr~t their financial interests.
•'life are asking that the D.0 0 . give it interna-
llonafdi.stribution," she said.
SJiagested steps, other than sign ing a docu-
ment;entiUing the woman to half the pension, are
to ha~ the husband set up a pension trust rund for
the idle or to place some asset of equal value, such~ a house, in the woman's name.
Pltji. Allred recommended that any spousal
agretfibents be checked by an attorney for en·
forcelibllity, saying, "They (the wives) should not
rely OiloraJ promises." .. .
Reagan cabinet
has no 'lO's'
WASIUNGTON <AP) -There are no "10s" in
the Reagan Cabinet, U.S. News & World Report
says·
The newsma1azlne said an un.acientlfic survey
of 131 "Washington insiders" gave Treasury
Secretary Donald T. Regan the highest marks -
8.8 oh a scale of 10.
Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis was
second with 8.3, rouowed by Casper Weinberger.
defeflse, 7.5.
' .
Victim can't collect
8280,000 from suit
I
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A man who apent 10
monthl ln prilon after being tallely convicted of murder isn't entitled lo the $280,000 which a jury awlded him, the 4tb District Court or Appeal baa
rul . r1eanl Jackaon was convicted ln 1974 or
mur rtna a filling station attendant. H~ wa1
releaed when two other rMn were char&ed with
tbe '!flllal. •1 ~ '1cUm t>f mallcloua pro1eeullon may not
"""" fOlnpentl\lon from the public ntity, · · lb•
ap,..Jat. court. ruled.
''
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
I Hond-prtnt your name, address. zip code and
phone number on the official entry blank or on a
plain 3" x S" piece ol papet and check r
one of the five prtzes you wish to w1n ~t No mechanically reproduced
entnes are eligible to w1n. •
2 Entries mus1 be depc:>s1ted In
the entry box at a f\Jdttc 'JQlephone
PhoneCenler Store. or mai.led to: 'The Easy ute:·
P.O. Box 58. New'ibrk. NY 10046. Mailed entries mus1
' have the number of the desired prize printed
clearly on the outside of the envelope
3. Enter for any of the tJve prizes as often as you
wish Only one entty per store V1Stt or mai.led
envelope IS allowed All entries must be received by
July 26. 1981.
4, WINNERS OF EACH OFnlE FIVE PRIZES WTU..
BE DRAWN AT RANDOM IN SEPARATE DRAWT.N~
Erf AN INDEPENDENT JUDGING ORGANIZ.A.TJON
WHOSE OEClSlONSAAE FINAL ODDSOFWINNlNG
Win
Your
PhoneCenter Store
helps make
life easier
with one of these
great prizes~
• • • • • • •
• •
• • • • •
r--------------, "The Ea~ Life" 1
SweepstCikes
O\oose one of these pnzes and
deposit at your PhoneCenler Store
CHECK ONE ONLY.
D 1 Prolesstonol lawn and garden
• care for 3 months
D 2 Professional house cleaning for
. I year
D 3 A prolessionally catered party
• for 20 people
D 4 Sl.<XX> worth ol dinner.; at your
• tavor11e restaurant.
0 5 An Apple"' II plus
. personal computer
~··
Sale
~~courreges
south coast plaza costa mesa
642-5678
Put a few words to work for you
in the Daily Pilat
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ARE DEPENDENT UPON THE NUMBER OF ENTRIES
RECEMD f'OR EACH PRIZE. ONLY ONE PRIZE PER
HOUSEHOLD. CASH VALUES MAY BE SUBST11VI'ED
AT THE DISCRETION OF PACIFIC TELEPHONE. AU..
PRIZES (VALUED AT APPROXIMA.TELY' $1,<XX> EACH)
WIU.. BE AWARDED. AND MUST BE TAKEN OR
ARRANGEMENTS MADE WITHIN 12 MOl'miS OF
NOTIFICATION. AU.. TAXES ARE WINNER'S
RESPONSIBn.ITY.
5. Sweepstakes open only to Caillomla and
Nevada residents. Employees (and their lamWes)
of the Bell System. its advertising and promotion
agenclesand Judging organizations are not eligible.
This ofter subject to federal. state and local laws.
Void where prohibited by law .
6 FOR A USl' OF WINNERS, SEND A STAMPED,
SELF· ADDRESSED ENVELOPE TO: "Easy Ute"
Wlnneri. P.O. Box 176, New'ibrtc.. NY 10046.
@Padftc •••phone
•Pd.Mt ~ued at appr0J:lmately $1.000 each.
1
• • •
i • • • • •
I ' l
L
I·
....... ~ ......... ._$$ seouoqec •• 0 cos a -. ---------------------~ ----;-~----.--~---~-~.--------~~---........ -...-..... _,.. ..... ._ ___ .... ~
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{TuHday, July 21. 1981
THE BIG GEORGE by Virg il Partch {VIP)
, ft\MILl'
CIRCt8
"How many choices do we get for dinner
tonight, Mommy?"
"Two: Toke it or leave it."
~
'.' • ... ~+c~,r•\t\ ,lM ,l•t1 7-U
by Brad Anderson DE~~IS THE '9E~i\CE Hank Ketchum i ' ~@@ I
t
7-21
1\
_16~ 7-11 ~
"What have you done this time?" "All of us want a BROTHER!"
Jl'DGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux
j~~~~~'r:l~HAWive~A~Nli1'MMPi:PORt~AN~T MY OFFICE 15 DOINO OC>ME ~
Gi\Rt'lt:LD
APPOINl M€NT MONDAY. INVE5Tl6ATIVE WORK IN10 THE
MR, ftENO: ~HY 00 YOU DEATH OF tlC>f> ~ENOON ... ANO I
WAN'T TO ~H M€? UNOERSTAND THAT YOU KNEW HIM
7·21
PEROONAlLY, Ml&!) WE65TER I
l MAY MAVE. TO RESORT TO OE~PERATf. E.MERC:Jf.NCV MEASURE CO
MOO:\ Ml'LLl~S by Ferd & l om Jonnson
,,
HE sAYS HE's
so.AKING UP
SoME SOLAR
~at<w.
•
1 Guess 1HERE's
.JUST Too MUCH
AIR Pol-IJTION FOR
ITTO ~ACH ME .
~
PEANl'TS by Charles M. Schulz
IF THERE'S A FOU(
SALL 8EHINP THIRD
BASE. IT'S TME
I THINK I WAS
CHOSEN TO ~IN6 A
MESSA6E TO THE WOOQ,
UNVS .. I REAUV DO !
l.IMr' ELSE WOULP A
BUTTERFLY LAND ON MY
NOSE, AND TMEN TVRN
INTO AN AN6EL 7
WELL. TME
~LO CAN
cmAINLY
VSE A
MESSA6E
~ ~ST~ PLAY~
SHOE
'«JU f IN! IW)PIOS
Af'9 so CRcJ•l-l!
CRUE:?L!?
I
f I
by Ernie Bushm1ller .
ALL OF THEM WHAT'LL USE THIS BLOTTER
GORDO
ARE IN THE I DO?
LAUNDRY---
~ OF0Ca:>
~ =.t
""" 1-IKE
RJe(..JClN/
~-.:;...t:iiiii::::::=~ ~~
tT~Kl' "INKl:RBEAN
()KJil..) I &WS ... IHE MAIN 1HING I WANi
CX)lJ m ~BE~ lo lfiAI
WE'RE our HERE iO HAVE
A.JN AND rr REALJ...1.,> OOESN'T
N\AliE~ WHO WIN5 !
DR.i\BBLE
Wl4f-~ iAf A MICE OM, 00 '104' '4A~£ f'oWf:fl
cal, Wf:MO"! wolO®>S AKO MA~~
ANO f,v£~ttlN'1?
7·ZI
C:.AAAA~INl'!U
{r> ,.l!!!ltJ~ttl
NOW, lfieRE'~ A 8Pl:CIRL
LIJA.Y OF GETrlHG IN'Tb A
CAHO£ I MICMAE\. .... •
by Tom Ba~k
by Kevin Fagan
______ ,... .. ..-.. _......:--;a -·'"----"T""--_;_ ________ , ___ -----------...-------........ -------
I
I
l
...... ,.. • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 21 , 19S1 ~ .. ~ .. -.~,----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------..;;. I :~Qn Golden Pqnd' gets stunning staging
..
' . :
,.
' .
!
! •1 TOM TITUS I ., .. ..,,.......,
I • One ot the finest new plays to ruter down to the
I .Or"ange Coast ln recent years ta Ernest I 1.~mpeon's "On Golden Pond," a atory with all
: ~element. of quality theater fully realized by : tli• Saddleback Company Theater as Its partlnl
: h~t for 1981.
: • '."' Thompson weavea a warm and human tale of
: • 101tlderly couple enjoying their annual vacation at
their ruaUc Maine retreat and
·'faoin1 up to the prospect of
0 :4t\tn1e ln their. well-ordered ; llns. In five acenea, spaced a
~ .IP.,t>nth apart, this s ummer ·~1Yanaition ii played out splen· ·~·ildly ln Brian Donogbue's
:. jfperlative production.
Agalnat a most impressive·
ly reallstic setting designed by
Saddleback 's master scenic
crah.sman, Wally Huntoon, "On MAHH
Golden Pond" reaches for the heart, but doesn't
neglect the (unnybone. The characters (with one
•. exception> are painted with depth and dimension
·INTERMISSION ..
by a highly skilled cast, half of which is pro·
ressional.
The centerpiece of this superb seriocomedy is
-·Wiley Harker as a man who has just, quite reluc·
~--taotly, become an octogenarian and who isn't too
, optimistic about his chances of celebrating his 81st
'..-birthday. He is snappish, opinionated, hostile,
: • overbearing -and completely charming once his
· ·thin veneer is cracked. His is a performance of
; ~onsiderable depth, a piece of acting that surfaces
· ~l,11 to rarely in local theater, amateur or pro-
: fessional. '
H-'"-""Jr , .. Wiiey H ... llet 11 ... 1 T1'91'f' • .. .. .. • Ith ICMll
Clwlrlle MW1111 .. , • • . .......................... Wa~ Gte<e
C ... I ... TNyer We~. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. • .. .. Jecqyle Mott.ti 1111.-"..,.... • .. .. .. .. . • • .. .. • .. .. .. • • • • .. • -...... l<oebl ... 1111 "o...... .. .. . . .. .. ............... sie ... n..tc..,
Iris Korn ls equally impressive as his more
realistic wife, who dismisses his obsession with
mortality as the rantings of "an old poop." Miss
Korn creates a wonderfully giddy character who
has her own quixotic battles against the resident
insects, but who provides a line balance between
Harker and their grown daughter, who have
become estranged for lack of communication.
Jacquie Moffett enacts this role with
superlative depth and sensitivity, speaking
volumes with enforced silence, as she endeavors to
q>end her relationship with her father Steve
Thatcher has a well-constructed scene as her den·
list boyfrtend who spars verbalJy with the crochety
Harkf:r and draws some unexpected blood
The well·woven tableau s narls only in the
performance of Wayne Grace as the local
mailman with a lifelong crush on Miss Molfett
Grace, who performed a superb "Dylan" last
season, pushes his cloddish character over the
bounds of believability in a background role.
though his New England accent is first rate.
Young Pete Koebler has the pivotal role of the
play as Thatcher's pre-teen sor\, left with Harker
and Miss Korn while his dad and future step-
mother tour Europe. His effect on lhe old man.
from one scene to the next, is s triking indeed, and
he performs with the confidence and command of
a polished professional.
"On Golden Pond" will be on the Saddleback
, •................. ,
•. ,,,.,......_--------------------... Need SI J,500 or portions •
..
·:
·.
ALAN ALDA CAROL BURNETT
The most fun
money can buy
T~~ •• °"'°"' l'fCfUllU ...... nw.. ••ltlff• 111<>1 O "•-c--· c-0 "'1--i...... M119MS-
Burl lftlvnolds • /foget' AbJre
,.,.,.,,,, hwctltt . Dom DeLuise
• Rt(Jf)~S1'NJ1"1MMMITI ,_,l'1fJIJIXTl(/ll·AllM llll#A/llU
.,.,H UU,... ~-..,,. . ...., .... A..,,,,..,. ...... ~ .....
,,,,,,, ........ , ll(Uf. Ml9f Olllll• ~""'
f_ ..._.. M/ll(Jllf (/1111/f ,,.._.,Mll~T S "'°"' ._,,'1/XI fATfS ,,,_,,1141 MftMMI· --~.,M CAM • .._-.,_,,~f "*fTT
•thereof to com plate •
• multi-m1lhon dollar movie •
: ,., led! $27 ,000 in 3 mos :
• Pledge Pay TV Rights as •
• security. •
• 1714) '57-4016 : ••••••••••••••••••
LAGUNA MOUL TON
PLAYHOUSE
LAGUNA BEAC H
World PrP11111~r rs1 * 494-8021 ,
AFTER THE f ACT
A MYSTERY BY
JOHN FERZACCA
8 p.m. Wed.·S1t. Tickets: S8
OPENING JULY 29
Aw.rd Winning Comedy
MATCH POINT
by Miry Jene Roberti
SIG~ORET _,COVE·
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
nw Orl:fiKt-. Ol h '•MO• • ro "'Otm
,,.,.,... ·-.... t.-!•O<lrf)I "' mot.._. c:onfl9nf lr::w W'lll*"''1 Op'.,...,, CfMOf'tH't
r;::;J AU AGES 4~lnlo ~ a.,,_., at AUO;itne.e'
® NOONlUHOfR t7AOMIT'T£0 l~"''"'""Y••'I' 1n wu,.n .,. •• ,
Al l am AHO ll!l FILMS R[C{IV(
Ill£ SEM <Y THf "40TION PICIUR£
COOE ~SELF REGULATION
For aa.ll1ed Ad
ACTION C.D
A OAllT "LOT
AD-YllOI
'4J•M11
B•ooke Shield• ,,, ENDLESS LOVE IRI
12 302 505 10
730&950
1,, 70mm/Oolny•
lbWen .. tM '--l Altr (PCJ 11 JO 2 00 4 JO , 00 ') )0
No Economy St•t•n9
I ---, I Pr•H,,l•O ,,, OOLBV D RACONSl.AYER (PC) I 00 ) I!> !> 30 1 4!> & 10 00
Christopher Reeves
SUPERllAM 11 (PG )
IN 11_,DDLBY
11:151 :554:25
7·15 9:50
N O PASSES OR
ECONOMV SEATING
THIS ENGAGEMENT
In Ootlly S11teo FOil YOUR EYES
OfjlLY (PC)
I 3 S 4 1 S 7 00 9 30
BILL MURRAV ,,, I STRIPES (RI Snow• '1 I 00 J 20 !> 40 I 00 & 10 I 5
.l()IN I H[ * STAOIUM * • 6 ORIVE INS *
Joh" C.,D•nler'• asc:ANl'•Olll NEWVO•K (R) E.xlermlhator (R)
I RICHARD PRYOR tn BUSTIN' LOOK (R)
NICE DREAMS IRI
c:::=::==::=i
Mel Brookl HISTOINY OF THE WORLD flWt I (RI
CIHllOfTlleTolant(PO\
•IL.L MURRAY In
STINJPIES (R) Alto WHOLLY MOSl'.S
IPG)
brooke shields
martin hewau
I
endlesslove
~ Acturtt A Univcr al Rclca~
•••••••••• ••••••••• ••••••. ttlO l tt·~NlC-, (._ .. _.. ,_
C...J'"•lllflll'I
~
College 5la&e for two more weelts, dark only next
Monday, and il Is well worth the play1oer's atten·
tion. It's a play we'll be hearing more from in the
months ahead, and this version will be difficult to
top. • BACKSTAGE A special performance or
"Halloween," the Irvine Community Theater's en·
try in the Orange County Community Theater As·
sociation festival, will be presented Friday at 8
p. m . in the Turtle Rock Community Park
a uditorium, on Sunnyhill Road off Turtle RocJt
Drive In Irvine ... Rob Fahey is dlrectine the
drama, which features Steve Fox and Myrna Ryan
. . . tickets are Sl for the 45-minute play, which
will be staged In the OCCTA restivaJ Aug. 1 ...
Paramount sues state
• • over movie screening
ATLANTA <AP> Paramount Pictures has ·
filed suit in Superior Court in Fulton County
challenging a controversial Georgia Jaw that re-
quires studios lo show movies to theater owners
before the owners bid on films.
The suit claims that the law "serves no
legitimate state or public interest" and "arbitrari-
IN BLOOM AGAIN Twiggy, the former high
fas hion model turned actress, will be playing
Eliza Doolittle opposite Robert Powell in the
British television production of "My Fair
Lady."
ly favors Georgia exhibitors against Paramount ----------------------
and other nonresident producers and distribu-
tors . .
The law took eHecl in March 1979 after an in ·
tensive lobbying effort by theater owners to get the
legislation through the General Assembly. The
measure passed the House and Senate by wide
margins, despite an intense campaign by studios
to keep it off the books.
Simil11.r laws have been approved in a number
of s tates in recent years.
•BARGAIN MATINEES•
Monday thru Saturday
All Performances before 5:00 PM
(hcept Sptci1I Eng1gemen1s and Hotid1ys)
lA MtllADA MAll MHoOo at l o1e cron1
LA MIRADA WALK·IN 99'·2•00 --.. ,,.... ..... tu .. FOR YOUll EYES OHL Y' ,_
ti .. • I U • I .. •I ti• tt ..
nc-.,., '"* .... t' ca. 9/'f
"ARTHUR",,.. ,, .. , ........... , ..
~ "°"° ......... M.UJt.
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK",,.. t~•· IM• IJt•f M• 1._
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN
,,. t.an.wn.-.t e0ttr...
SUPERMAN II" IPG) ., .......... ..
M.L ..,......,, ,.
"STRIPES" '"' ""'" .... ,.. ' ... ''"
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAllC·IH
Focu11y Al ~ Amo
21l/6a..·9211
.,.,.,.,...,. flOM ...............
"RAIDERS OF TH£
LOST ARK" -, .................. .
LAGUNA
1(.,-.-..a, ...
\.l..IYAlla.al:I•
ESCAPE FROM HEW YOfllC" !111 tt:•·••·•ill•t t1•1 4il•1 .. kMa--"S.0 .8." 1111 tl:Al•t• •t:ll • , ... , .. ----"SUPERMAN II ,..,. ...................
focutly 01 Conoiewooo
213/531·9580
~ •YMCllOI • IAllaAM •A-=-n
"THE CANNONBAU
RUN" 1001 U••ttl• .... r•·•U•1MI
THE FOUR SEASONS"
• .-..... ._..,.,._ (PG)
~..,.·~MJ.a
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK",,.. ,, .. , ........ , ... , .. ,.
. .............. ---"DRAGONSlAYER" -, ........... .-, •. ,.a
so . COAST WALK·IN
South Coo11 11,..,o,
a t l•ood•Of
494-1514
BILL MURRAY IN
STRIPES"JRI .... , ....
,. 1 30
....... .0. ................
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" tNt .,. ..•. , .....
IMPORTANI NOTICl ' CHILOREN UNOER 12 FREE!
H,1rDtt '"o w;11 .. 1 Mt,, f 1\111 f 11 • lO • S•t Sufi Pttlt • 00 P'M '~r '' ~·•no-... CM llAOO '' tOUR 5'tM!~ ,, 1<0 ,,. l.y! llAOtll WIT• IGHIT\OOI ~SSOl!Y '°"1'10N
_ .,_ l'OlllAIU •All C"" rt DIWHN$ QI ON tM llltDIO
ANAHllM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
''•••0¥ ti at l•mott S•
---.,,."CM IMrf
"ARTHUR" 1Nt -"10" 1111
CIN( ,._ S()o .. O &79·9150
~~,....-.o... T------------....,. tlDOIW 41 ........... ., • -· THE CAHNOHIALL RUH (PO) -HARDLY WORICINO (POI l l •I' Wu""
I UINA PAllk
BUENA PARK DRIVE-IN
hn<Ofn Jr.w• weu ot ltttO"
12t-.•010
IOUNIAIN
FOfl YOUR EYES OHL Y <NI -THE LONG AIDERS" 1111 c ., ,, !>OU""
cu.t ~A• LU WMCl.IW ·-C-llftll'I ESCAPE FROM HEW YORK" 1111 -'THE EXTERMINATOR" °"
---·--IUPl"MAH II" (.-0) ~ ... FOUNTAIN VALLO
DRIVE·IN
so" O••oo trwy ot lroo•"'""'' (So ANY wtilCH WAY YOU CAN" (PG)
962·2411
WI ~I MIN~ll P
HI -WAY 39 DRIYl IN
S.0 .8 "(") ~w THE POSTMAN ALWAYI
RIHGI TWICE" llU CINI II SO\INO
n¥I At:aAMel A TNOUt.A•
YORCE: irl'llE 1111 ....
FADE TO BLACIC l"I
Clllf '' $0UMO
1A HAl~A
LA HABRA DRIYl IN
·~·-.. ,.11 ... fl .............
17MH2
IUI"'• ••~•
LINCOLN ORIV f IN
h"(Olf"I A.tie wet.t 04 IC"O"
121·4070
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ORANGE DRl\lf IN ---.... o .•. "" -"THI ..OITMAN ALWAYS
flllNOI TWtCI" t111
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CINI II Wll!<O
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191·3693
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THE CAHNO=LL "UN" (P'OI
HA"Ol.Y WOfUUNG" (ll'OI C:llll lfSOUllO ------"ENOUU LOYI C111 -"NIOHTI4AW1tl" C111
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fWOPI Of~ LOIT Altlt"
(P'O) ......
HAHQAA 11" (P'O)
................
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551·7022
--·-··· ...............
""' "'AM TO llUCK" 11111
-
-EVB1NG-l:I01• NIM IQJNePU
9flllclded to • ~ men, 0.... ptobel IN
... of 1111 lltVed.
•
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ICM ......... TM~ .....,., K.C., flWMty ..._
,..,, Joe l)doa, ,,.,. r.n. I T1C TNJ DOUGH M•A•t•H
Ktlnoer groww delpef.S• to
return home when ht. .non to bf1nO Toledo to
ttleunltlelle.
HELLO THERE -Ann Jillian stan u a ,,.....""""" 10:00 •• ..., WOU'll
• GOOOT...a
world-wise waitress in the comedy 1erfes
"It's a Living" tonight at 9:30 on Chan·
nel 7.
Nero tile • Nclde and
""--··~ UlwMMd ,....,.,. In with • ~
INnUeCll1pt and ... elulM Flortde hH only on•
c:fM>loe of lllrtlon wtien Ille
dhlco'ler1 whet J.J. le
~for ll'IOfleY. (Pert 21
•• IW!CTNC fiE
"Straight Time" ( 19781
Dustin Hollman, Oery.
&.ey. An ex-con deeper·
llttly trlM 10 go atftllght
after 1MW10 pr11on, 1n
~ of tM meny roed-
block• which rlM up
befOt9 him. 'Fr
e:so I JOKIJf• M.D ,,M. MAGAZINE
Poltc:e who "rob" benka lo
prepere ~for reel
robber*; • hoepltel wtler•
baby dolls -adopted. • IENNYHIU.
Benny ~ti the French
.ntry of lhe EurOpMn
Song COnt•I.
I KceT NIWMIAT
ITUDK>SEE
"BMX" A New JerMy ,_
ooec:n.. kid• In moto-cro-. epectecular ~
ICUlptufll; ttle ,.,. fllght
of e IOler bllloon. (RI
(l)QINlW8 l!J BARNEY Miu.EA e.,ney end hil men ,_
the perplexing t• of
defullng • '1Udlnl-tlutl1
nudMr delltcl.
CC) MR. la.KIE
Two eplrlted chtldren try to
IOlw • mystery with the
help of • apirtted Mal.
(I) WOfV..D AOU..EA
°'8CX) CtWilPION8HtP
T al Bebllorlle end Rendy
Girdner join ho9t Skle>
St~ M ten couplee
from atound the WOtld
compete lor the title of
world roller dl9co c:hempl·
on.
U6 8 EDITONA.L
1:00 I OU NEWS N8CNlW8
HAPf'Y DA Y8 AOAIN
Fonzie~ ~ed
to • 111111 boy wtloM tither
<*erted him.
I A9CNEW8 ~TMEWN>
"A HOUM On A Hiii"
Jonethen dr"'"' of mer·
rylng Mary, but her mi..
trMI fore11 her to to rejtct
him. (Pert 8)
• ITA&T8 CW SAN
FRAHa800
Stone 19 teerneo with •
young underCOYer poltce-
man to brMll up • narcot·
lea rtnv.
• OVEft fAllY
o.i.1: poet Rod Mc:t<uen. • MAcHEl I LEHMR
~
(I) TIC TAC DOUGH l!J MERV OIWl'IH
"The Hit Miii.ere" 0111111:
Kai Rudmen, The Pointer
S4atere. K.C .. Randy ......
ner.
al)OMAT MOMeHTI ..
IAIDA.L.L
The hl9tory of ~.
from tta Ofigtnl to the pr-.
entdey.
(%)MOW.
"The OrMI 8entlnl" (1979)
Robert Duvall, Blythe
Danner. A rough-end·
reedy Mettne Corpe olftoer
·-cklrMatlo betllea wn.i he ,,... to """°" 1111
rntlttary ldMle on I* faml--
'l: 'PO'
1:30. 2 OH TI4I TOWN
Hoate: SI-EdWerda.
M4Mody Rooer9. A lo<* 11t
how to entlyJil ~
ahlp; a look al what
lamc>ut -Edger Ce)'OI
hU done tor modern med--
lclne.
18 'Nlllt.Y A!UD
IHANANA au.et: The Unknown Com-
ic (Murny Ulng9ton).
• EYIONLA
Hoell: Ina Pedtou.. Peul
MO)'lr. Meet l .A.'1 lady
bllrtenderl In lnleMewl at
IOCel night ec>ote; diet .wtth
a former U.S. 8«:r9I Ser·
Ylcl agent wllo II now
wortilng 1111 -,y to !tie top
of tile mocMllng lnduetry; •
tour of the Old under·
ground eubways of Loa
AngMa.
I fACE THl MUltC
MACHlll. / l.EHM1'
AIEl'OftT I ~ MAGAZINI!
Pollcle w11o "rob" benk• to
preci-em~ for,...,
robe>eriee; a~ wtier..
baby dolls -adopted. CC)MOW.
"A Force Of One" (1979)
Cllucll N«rle. Jennlfet o·...-. .\ "*'• °' IN mertllt lf't9 em«>etU on •
~ .-di
for !tie kllerw ol 1'111 9dopt-
ed eon. 'PG'
CID Mee"°" THf PEHNAHT
B•rry T.,,..IM .... Tim M<C•,,... •Ka!P dlY~I N-11 11Md!n91 Md lr.-r.rvlew -of Ille ....,..., top pl •yer1. I Wlt11 Ille
pl•yon• llrlM C.t!IWlnt. ... _...,. °" ... lllwlloft wlll •IM be lftcl\ldltd.I
al)TO BE ANNOUNCID
8:00 8 Cl) WAI. TEA
CAONKJT!'I UNIVlME 88Loe<>
Lobo end hie deplti. gO
undeloover to ere<* • cer
IMft ring ualng preitty gltte
.. dec:oyl. (R) .MOVE * • * "The Rare Bried·' 11eee1 JllMI s1-111,
M-O'Hera, In the
1880a. • bealtlNI -from Engllind lnttoducM
Helefoidl to !tie Welltem cattle-. • 0 HAPPY DAY9
Jenny and the Fonz -eocldent.ity !Mn1ecS. (RI
• CHllDMH ~ THe
ntlN>WON.D
Deerl ~ hOeta "' up. beet doc:umentwy on the
forgotten c:Hkitwl ol Thlrd-
WOftd countrlea.
• AGAINST THE WM>
"The Tree Of Uberty'' Dln-
rry 11 e«tl lo c.tlll HIM
prtaon fann end b«ionlM
lnWIN9d In rebellon plaN.
(Pert n
• MOY-. * * * ·•The Count Of Mont• en.to" ( 1915) ~
ard Ohamberraln, Tony
Curtla. BMed on u,. rto¥ll
by Aleltilndr• eum.. Alt
lnnocerit men unJuatly
lmprilolled for 20 )'W9
CHANNEL LISTINGS
1J KNXT 1CBS1 Los Angeles D KNBC 1NBCI Los Angeles e ICTLA tlnd I Los Angeles
D KABC· TV (ABC! Los A"geles
(I) KFMB tCBSI San Otego G KHJ· TV t Ind ) Los Angeles
®) KCST tABCI San 01e90 e KTTV tlnd I Los Angeles
ti) KCOP TV I Ind I Los Angeles
Cl KCET ·TV I PBS) Los Angeles ml KOCE rv 1 PBSI Huntington Beac'1
mekea • ~ _,.... to
--*,..,...on ttie man ,...,....,...
.HOYA
''The Aa~ And The
~" A redlloel ,_
theory • to 'llt'f IN dlno-
_,,.. died out ..... 160
,,..,., )'Mr'I af •I( C I I lful
~ .. uemlned.
a~
"Rebecce" An~ and
• b!Dmell enampt IMd
ttle de WlnMra IO London,
where they uncover
Rebecce·1 b•ll·k•pt
aec:nt. (Pert 4) (A) C
(BJMOW.
"The Godlattier" (18721
Marton Btando, Al PMino.
&Med on the ncMll by
Mario P\ao. Alt ~
M.tloeo -IN .,.,.,.,.. ~ Illa lctyllc !Miiiy
.... and the '*"" ,.......
ofhla~llNM~
.. hi• 1on1 become
~ICl--lgly ~In IN "'°""' wortltngl ol ~ nlliad crtme. ....
Cl)EAAMrv
Jofln ay,., "'°"' you
lhlnga ltrangar """' lnlttl, lero« Vien ... and .,....
~you·ve...,
_, In IMM 199tt.I
encot9 ~ "°"' th• Showtlm• 8tarre
lbrery.
.MOYie
"Mllhogany" (1875) Diena
Roel. Anttlony Pwtllne. A
)'OljllQ bl-* womM ......
from IN dlpttw ol tM
Ohetto to lntem•tlonal
fWN ... tMNort ....
Ind ITIOdel. 'PO' a:ao • (I) R.O
Mel comee tor • Ylal1 and
trlll to tell• -the run-ning of Iha y lllow ,._,, ao LAVBNE&
IHINiY
Lenny and ~ ,.,,..
alzs ebout whet Ille would
be Ilk• If !My ... llant
/IM>'M ...... (R) Q
Cl) HOUITON llG ~
Off
8lly Cfyttel ,_.. INI
llencklp comedy~
llon teped at Aoct.....,.,
In Houlton. t:OO. (I) MY OLD MAH
ICt1lty McHlchol and W•·
ren Oetel .., In !tie atory
ol • ...,....., and ..
down4nCklut ~ train-
., !ether wllo -reunited
"'". 1~ ...,.,lltion. (~ •8HU8TIBT
8UJf.8
Cac>tM1 Furilo ~ hll
~to ~ LIAue, end .. end ....,
; go l#ldeloo..! • -
to neb e ""*'· (Al eo THNr1
COllPAHV A wealttly men bec:ioln.
~ with mel(Jng the
reluctant ancty Illa bnde.
;~
A drWMtlc lo<* at e fire
IMt burned 111.000 -
of foreat In .... """ •
de~ and nMCled elr
ltrllet ueil'O WOftd We1 H
plene., UH, 1hovel1,
c::tlemk*I and ~
at llreflgtrtera to .-ttn-
li'TO.t ITC>fff
~: Jim ThornM, Mery
~..man.
"Rebecce" An lnqueet Ind
• bledltnel lttempt lead
Iha de Wlntere to London,
where they uncover
Rebaco1'1 beet-kept
..:nt. (Pert 4) (A) Q
• HOYA
''The Aatwdct And The
Dlnoeew"' A r9dlcel -
ttleofy .. to 'llt'f tM dine>-
...... ; ll*'T:m
Wtllle on -*"' et their
c.ttle ranctt. tM Hettt
beocwM .. ..,.,.. ol • ""'*" lend berClfl wtlO
..... ptOperty tor
atrtp "**'8-(A)
." llTI "Pua1o Aleo, Our 5 ttt
State?" Pu.to Alco'•
pt9Mnt and future potlticel
car~~-
•. Nllinall >'" ( 18 7t) Aten ea-. Oeoroa de .. '-'-.
Triumph end trao•dy
punctu.ta tM llonny,....
tlonefllp .,.._ the greet
~ bellet .., and Illa
Svengell •• ININIO«· 'A' Cl)MOYW
"Blulng &eddlaa" (1974) a.vo... UtUa, G-. Wiid-
., . Directed by Mel
•~e.. A rlllroed worker
In tt1e Old Weet almoet hea
mote protllame then he '*' hendle ~ hi ..
eppo6i 1..S lherllf of Rodi
Ndge, a 10M1 ptnpointed
for deatNctlon by • buelo-
-~.'A' .MC>Ym
"The Goclfllllw, Pert II"
(1914) Al l'adno, Aotler1
ow.I. Mldleel Corttone
....,,. hll .... ""'*'•
""-and ~ .. he
~the-1..oof
the ,,..,.., finding prob-
...,,. with rtval fectlona and
IN ,_ ttwouonout Illa
reign. 'A'
10:10 • 1e111 • w Nl1WONC Niwa
• ,Mr "°""AflO
"Slmuletton And ~·
A look llt COll'lpUterW now belne UMd to llmuleee ..._
•• eltuetlona ~
1oocoeay,~
OI dlflOarOul II 1)1-iled.
• JM8MICl81D18
WOM.D
"St>orta In America: Wom-
en In Sj)0(11" J-
~ e.ptor• peat
and pr..n rotee of --
.., ..,,..... """ .... Pn>
awta Ever'I ~. "°"" Nency Lapa and euto _,,... Oultwte.. (A)
(%)MOY-.
"Cattlerine ' Co." (1913)
Jane 8 1rkln, Patrick
0..-.. A youno girt Ir•
vela to PW to beocwM e
hlgfl flllHon mo6lt but '* '*"' , .. ltW'ough and .,.
opaw. ~ Mnd\19 prOlltltulon buelnMa. .,..
11••••(1)88 NIWI
• ITM"TMK
The Enterpfiaa .. ""*' ,.,
p..e ..... ""' ott.. E9l1fl
lfllp n. .....-to en
apperenlly dtvHtated
planet. I ::..YMDGAME
''Cfy ....,_, •• ..._. ..
,..... "' tM mlddta of
GPU\ ---~two rMIOW9olOI.
• 19tNYttU.
Alt Auatf911en ~ ot-lerlny IN~
ty to~ Mllw
hero Ned IC.ey.
.TMI ....
~NA110MAL
00Ht'9ITIOH
De6oree Hendy enctlort
~ of the day'•
actlwltlee "°'" W8lfllngo ton.,P.C.
<II) Mm"°" TMI
"8eWfT
Berry TOf'llt*lN Md Tim
~ NOeP dMlloriel .,..... ..... .,,.
lnteNlew -Of tM OUM'• top .,..,..,.. (W tM '*"""" ..,.. ..........
.., ---Oft .......... .... be....,.,,)
1t:IO. (I) oouw CGUMo'• .,,...,. ....,.
Drama, comedy, music set
for public TV's 'Playhouse'
B1TOMIOllY .......... ..._ .....
NEW VORK -Drama, comedy and music
from artista aa various aa Ray Bradbury, Mark
Twain, Erle Stanley Gardner and Kurt Vonnept
Jr. will mark the premiere season of pubUc TV'•
"Pla)1louae.'' ICheduled to betln a 2$-week nm
Jan. S.
Tiie lona·1walt.ed series, produced on a pro-
gram budcet of $13.8 million by a unique con·
aorttum of four Public Broadca•Un1 Service
member 1taua:;_ will lnclude ortaiDal drama u
well u apeeta1 ptatlou ttom literatve aDd UM
at.a,., .ad epbodic works created etpectan, tor
TV.
No predM telMd\lle h• b9ID •'"NDC'ld r.
"Playboule," but Ote •erl•' executive dlncW, David II. Davlt, bu unveiled the prodaedom to lte
lnchlded In tbe im HalOD.
Tbe 'l'uelQJ Dilbt Mrl• (prodtlctioM= In leqtb from to mlDut4il to two Jloui'I) eom
meata PBS' "lluterplece 'l"'hMUr," UMt
nlpt ftltun o1 imparted c1ram.a frOm ._,md
and, now, AaMt.ralfa, •ldela lleP. lU .....
d.c•oet.'-ne~· nn .................. ..
chide a N~~. ~ ;..: ~ • ~c:~, A.........._ .... tum to lie 11-
chmd ID.tlle__,·w'zn ... ..._.
Bolton's WGBH , one ol public TV'a Important
producin& atatlona, 11 Involved tn both tbe
..PlaybouH" and "Muterpleee Tbeater" aeries.
Other participant.a in "pla)'bouM" are KCET ln
Lot Aqeles, New York's WNET and UM South
Carolina F.ducatlollal Televf.tlon Net.on.
Davia HJS bia objecUve u aecutive dinctor
ol •• Playboule" I.I to "aUl'act tbe ftDMi American creatiw talent hm tbe tndel"IDdeBl tum ud
video communlllff. productton compul• and public televillon ataU-..,.
He aa11 .. Playboule•• I.I DOt a ODe·Huc. el·
fort. "CCllltiDultJ end a replar place oa UM public:
televllloa naUonaJ Pl'Olf•••lac adMdule are amonc UM moet •tcaiftcu& M..effl betweeD 'PlayboaH' aDd prntoua pulllic ~ drama
•entura ... Dam aaya.
ONlul drama or ttltplay ta UMt,......... ...._ will baehldt: ''Tbe OnM Amllteu l'Wrtla
"lal7 ... Odall' DINMen:'.., ,_ ··••trd: ''TM 1b9Cb HID Jadna"61ii, .. b)' .leM CMI••:
"Kiq °' Amsta .. .,, l .J ........ ad .... ,
P.ut.1," bJ t.. ~.
"hr ODlalwd Olrll WM Ba" Canffnnd
adcldi-.............. Ii...,, .. " lftolMe ··••: ................... --..... l'eral'I ,., ........ ,... Clle'I ........ ti ._.. _,, wlltllt ....... _._ .... .
.. .-. . ..
TUBE TOPPERS
KOOP • 8:00 -"The Count of
,Monte Crt1i0." Richard Chamberlain
and Tony CurtJa star ln a remake of the
clualctale.
KCET 8 8:00 and KOCE 8 9:00 -
"The uterold ana the Dln.oeaur. •' Tbe
proaram examines a radical new theory
,,n the disappearance of the d.inoeaun.
KHJ e 9:00 -··wildfire.'' A
dramatic look at a fire that burned
118,000 acres in eight days.
KOCE 8 10 :30 -"James
Mlchener'1 World." The author looks at
women•s roles in sports.
In "' ..,.,.,..,. murder
-.. round deed. •• TOMQHf
Hoel: Johnn~ Ceraon.
Ouea11: Suzanne
Plaahene. Dr. Aotler1 Alt·
""" and Nino the llr9no
•&MCNNI ~
I LP"I .WC. A DUI.
STAHUY-.
• c.vTlONID MC
Niwa (J:)MOYIR
"BMne In Love" (1913)
George S•o•I, 8u11n
Anepedl. A dlYorced man
~ • )M6ol.-eultOt,
trying to ..,. Illa w"8 bed!.
'A'
®MOY-.
"High Plaln• Drifter"
(1873) Cllnl Eutwood,
Verne &k>om. A nemelela
atranger rallt11 th•
-dly rMldenta of • w-.m IOwn 10 ~
the NtflllM OMO wflic:tl
hel been terrortztno them.
'R'
12:.0D. MOY-. * * "The Trampler•"
( 19181 Oordon Scott,
~ Cotten. A I04dler
f9tum1 to hie lather'•
hol'9e .,_ the CMI We1
ceuelng protMema attalng
lrorn Iha tether'• P9t'11r·
fht. •o MOYll * * "PeNc Al L.Me Wood Manor'' • (1tm ~
8ornen, Aotlert Foxworth. veca1o1..,. et • aectuoed
mounteln ,_, -terror· ttiad 1:1)' CNeturw from the
deothl Of IN Eerttu. (R)
• GUNIMOKI
Newte)''• ... with botll
people and medk:tne .. put
to IN t.at "'*'Doc~
him to ctMIClk on Nrnlllea In
IN bet* country. l:nA
Tony~• oonapir•
cy lnvoMng • judge and •
oanoNr .,,., • retinld
;i;:g::·
"lune" (1978) ... Cley.
buf'oh, Mettltew Berry.
Oult .... In Amertcal
oper9 linger'. Ufl0tthodo11
attraction IO her ~.
heroin 9ddlct -· .,..
(%)MOY-.
''The ldolmllk.,.. ( 1880)
Rey Sherkey. Towell
Feildetlutl. A ~
man90« UNI YlflOUI
ptoys to cet~ two teM-,
agera Into pop lll'Cllng
lletdotn. 'PO'
tt:t• (JI) MOYie
"Oerden 01 8Huty•·
(1814) ~Merta Meurtn,
AclNnoe Ceyrol, A .,_.
clark lmllglri. romentlc , ...... eboul !tie_
he,,..."' .. wort!. 1a:ao. 8 TOMOMOW
~ The Poenter Sia-..,._
• HOCWfl Hl1'0U
Ho01f1 le fru91raeed by
boVI frtand and foe .. he
llt1lrnptt \o dlatroy • Ne!
convoy.
1:00. NYeHIC
l'HINOMlffA
''Heellno Thi Whole f>«.
-·· Hott: Damien 8tmp. _,, au.et: EYlr1t loomm.
M.O.
• MOW. * * * "The Court Martlel Of 8lly Mltc:hell" (1 855)
Gery Cooper, Charle•
Bickford. A man le put on
lflll ~ he deflll "'*-
lery br-In order 10
lhor1en WOftd Wt1 II.
• INDl!PENDeHT
NETWON< NIWI
1:20 <JI) MOYIE
"Smokey And The Bendit
II" (1980) Burt Reynolda,
Jecltle Oleaon. Shertft
Buford T. Julltloe c811a In
Illa two lewmen brothers to
atop I r .. lred bootlegger,
lhe Bendit, from tranaport.
lnQ • bebY lllc>hanl. 'PO'
eMOYli
"Stone Cold Deed'" (1979)
Paul Wlltlema, Alchetd
Cfenna. A cop end I lllllill-
tlme crime boll Join lorcea
to find the man reeponei.
Ille for • ..,.._ of PfOlll-
tut• ldllnol. 'R'
1:ao• MOYiE • • * "Woman Of str-··
( 1 "4) Olne Lotlollflglde.
8-1 Connery. A young
man atternptl to gain con-
trol of hll uncle'• I~
with the help of • ~
""""·
CC)MOYIE
''The lh Of Bnan" ( t919)
Graham Chej)rnen, John
CIMM. In the llrlt century,
• bungler le lllMly pro-
delrl'9d • ~ end
~ the leader of •
~ rwllok>ul mo....,,..,t r: hie wtlhM. 'R'
1:46 NEW1
1:N NlW8
2:001•NlW8 MOMCAMll! & WllE
Aomence .. In the • wtien
E.rtc end Ernie ..., In the
Milty "Ptan\etlon Of P-Iiion ...
(%)MOYIE
··spaoe MoYI•" (19791
Documantery. Mualc by
Mike Oldfteld. ArcNYll lltm
lootege c:tlronldla the in.
umc>ha of the U.S. ~
PfOOf'tln, focualng on the
drarnetlc Apollo 11 moon
landtnQ. ·o· 2:1019 HEWS 2:11 EDfTONAI.
2:20 MOW. * *"' ''The Prteet Kk'' (1911) 0eoroe Kennedy,
Reymond eurr. Police aeercn for • murderer
wn-target• -.. c.thollc pr1Mta. 2::2'. ~& WllE
Eric end Ernie llrlQ "I'm
Wllhlng'' ..,.. Eric'• In •
... : Eric llyfon ~
EmleK•t1 .
JOHN DARLING
. . .
t:10 (I) WHATa UP-... BCN
~ .. ~ ......
~ .. ,,.,.....
~~ ........
......... l(IWN .....
In w... ~ OOMMt •
blrct~wruo~
.... pet°"""" Wlfl.,....
lam blr-elfPote !tie Ilg. end ltounef~
IOft: ~ IPMll .....,. l.-. o-=-lbout ttle oreet·
... ooleotloll of '1lltlotl"
ert In ""'*'°" 1:.1 .....
l:N MOVll • * "ClttbbeM" ( 1962)
Jdwl .... Mine DIN .
"ratH In the 11001
9tt.mpt 10 !eke ,,._ • Cet·
ll>beln lallnd . •:00• MOVll * ._. "The Olent Clew''
( 1867) J4lff Morrow. Me11
~~. Jee llgMerw ., •
celltd In \o ct.troy •
memmottl, deedly bird the!
• meneolng lhe ~
tlon. 1:20!·~cw
THEAIA ~CC)MOYIE
"The T1nan1" ( 1977)
Roman Polanalll. INbllle
Ad)ll\t. A men renta an
apetlmenl wllerl I pre\11-
0UI tenant committed sui-
cide end beconlll Plll-
nold about hi• neighbors
·A'
())MOVIE
"More Americen Or11ftt1"
(1979) Ron Howard, Paul
1..1 Mat. After greduallon, •
group of high aehool
friend• npertence tile
c:heltenOel of edultllOOd In
the aoclel ~ of the
1HOI. 'PO'
(%)MOVIE
"The Or•I Sentlnl" (1979)
Robert Duvell, Blythe
Danner. A rough-and·
rMdy Marine Corpe offteer
race1 domeetlc b•lllfl
wtlerl he trlea to lmpoee hie
mllttery ldMll on hie laml-
ll: ·PG'
4:.2:5. AOEHT OAAHOE II: A
V1EW FAOM VIETNAM
4:40• MOVIE
ft * * "I M .. A Murder•"
( 1939) Jam11 M11on,
Pamela Kllllno. When I
henpee6ied tanner flnllly
ylalde to the lmpulM or lclll-
lng 1111 nagging wife, he
flndl sanatuary from the
lew with • young girl.
4:41. VOYAGE TO TME
IOTTOM ~ Tif€ HA
"Credle Of The Deep"
lt'ed1u••dat1'•
Dayf i.'"e /tfovies
-MORNt«;-
5:30 Cl> ··c.ther!N & Co."
(1973) J-Blrkln, Patrick
DewMre. A young girl tr•
vela lo Patl• 10 become 1
high luhlon mo6el but her
plena '"' lhrOUOh end lhe °'*" • hlgtlly klC'•tlve proetlMIOn buelolll. ·R'
8:00 CC) "CM Time" ( 1973)
Parnell Sue Mertln, Par11•
St-. The 11v11 of
two young coup~•
enrolled II prlY•I• lc:hool•
are cnengec:t wtien one of
Ille glrla dllcoYerl lhe la
pregnant. 'PO'
7:30 CC) "T aroete" ( 19e8) Bor1I
K.lr1oll, Tim O'KIOy. An
eglng horror-movie 1t11
trlM to rMIOn with a mur-
deroua anlper 11 a driv..ln
movie lheeter. •.oo CJ) * * * "Somebody Up There Uk• Me" (1958)
P9UI Newman. Pier Angell.
Rocky Oruleno. I New
York .rum boy, rt-to
fame .. • c:hemplooahlp
boxer.
t:00 CC) "Thi o.tttno Of wi..
dom·· ( 1971) Su11nnah
Fowle. In tum-of.lhe-cln-
lury Aultralla, a young
women from Iha Outbac:lt
hu dltllcully edjultlng to
LISTEN 10 ~HIS, .JAN!
GARY oees_ c~~& ME IHE MASTER OF THE NO-DEPTH INIERv1ew!
HE SAYS 1 NEVEc::t
L16IEN 10 WHAi MY
GUES"T 1S ~~ING-/ CAN '(OU ~ "THAii
.. Make way for the greatest
dragon yet.''
-Kevin lhomal, LOS ANGILES TIMES
, o =-::-1~ ' _.,. CMIT
• ..._ ....... C. .... W 2?11
U TOIO $tl•*'I -· e(XllM I'
• • ~..,,.. ... , .. DIMl•llT
. I .
• [ I
i:
~=· ==~ •1m-Or .. 1M<•11
. . .. . ' .. .
... ..... ~ .... ................... ... Cl) ....... ,,,..,..... Gtlf..
Mr ("71) "°" ~. ,..,. Le .... ,.,., .,.....
tlon, ••oup d .... edlOOI frlende ..,.... the
cNlll:llM Of ........ In
IN aodlt .......... of the
1MOI.. '"°'
1 t:OO. * ... ~ '°' o.n. pr" (1N1) '°'"'Y IO)'e.
Otto !Waflow. The ~
loee ... N"'1 ~ PoC
In Nor\tl Afrtaa.
CJ:) * * K ''The W'** OI fhe Mal 0...-' (1tef)
aery Coot*. CMttton Heeton. A efllp'1 afllcter le
aided by tM ...... of • ..,. boet In *-1no ..
neme of neollgenoe ~
11:ao. * * ~ "Conflct OI
Wlnoe" ( t l&J) Kief Oft
Moore, Jofln Oregaon. A
oroup of v111agera attempta
to protect • pr.oioue bird
aenctuary from the AAF,
w'1tlc:fl WMtl IO UM the
lllend • a rodt .. ·teltlng "'•· 12:00. *** "AnelomyOIA Murder" (Pert 1) (1959)
J-St-ert, Ben Oaz.
ura. A lrnell-town attor·
ney defend• an Army lilu-
tenant who II llCOUMd of
kllllng I men auepected of
1ttlldclng hie wife. • *** '-0~'(1"31
Aollllnd Ruuell. Net*
Wood. A lllQI mother
promot• her two deuoh-
ter 1. one of whom
becomH a renowned
ltrlppet.
1:00 CC) "Our nm.·· ( 1973)
Parnell Sue Martin, P1111er
Stevenaon. The Hv. of
lwo young couple•
enrolled at prl\late tc:nooll
are Changed wtlln one of
the glrll Oilcc>Yerl lhe la
~t.'PO'
1:30 Cl) • * * "Sornat>ody Up
There Uk• Me" (111581
Paul ~. Pier Angell.
Roolty Graziano, • New
York elum boy. r.... to
·-.. • dlamplonlNp boxer 2:00• "MIQM And The Lady'. ( 197 8) 8elly Keller.
man. Tony Lo Bllnco. An
11tr1C11Ye lemlll trlea to
brMk ln10 the hlghl)I com-
petlllw trucking lnduatry.
aroualng the wrath of one
pertlcular ,,...,.,, In Iha
bu"'-.'PO'
2:IO CC) · 'T llQl(a·· ( 111681 Boril
Karloff. Tim O'Kelty. An
aging horror·l'TIO\lle atar
trill to reuon wltll a mur·
derOUI tnlper II I d~
l'TIOYle theater.
3:00. * * * "Where Eeglel 0-" (Patt 2) (1Mt) Alc:tl-
ard Bllrton. Clint EMI·
wood. An Allied olfloer II
retcued from Null by
commend09 dlegulMd u
Germena.
3:30 IJ * * '"' "FalhOm" ( 1H7)
Tony Franaou, ~
W'6c:h. A crimlnel hi<• I
l1m1l1 p1rachut111 to
recover 1 prloallla P'-
ol jewelry under the Pf•
text tlllt Ille la looking lor
• bomb-lrlgger1ng devloe.
Cl) "Ru8tl It" ( 1979) Jutty
Kahen. Torn Serenoer. A
young woman In her first
rNI rornenoe dllCOWrl
Ill.It her boyfriend la more
lnl-ted In 11'1 thin In
her. 'PG'
• ··CendllahOI" (1971)
Jodie Foller, De¥ld Niven.
A tomboy from 1111 mtr ... 1
or Loa AngeMe Inherit• •
1111...0 B11tW1 ee1111. ·o·
4:00 CC) .. ,..,,. Getting Of wi..
dom" (1978) Sueanneh
FOWie. In lum·of.lhe-cln-
tury Aullralle, • young
woman from lhe Outbeclt
1181 dtrflcully aclju9llng to
the ledate proprtety of an
.. dullYe gltte. IClloot.
5:30 e "Urban Cowboy"
(1980) John Travolla,
Debra Winger. A ~-
1., W0111er wllo fandll
111m111t 1 modern·d•Y
COWboy f ... In love with I
girt he mM11 In I ~
country·end-w.tem ber.
'PO'
,
I I
(
t ,
-p • ""' .... --------------~-
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 21, 1981
one weekonlv
JULY 17 -JULY 23
FOR ELE
CUSTOMERS
For our customers now receiving Chan-
nels 14 and 16 ... we have now converted
our main system so these same channels
will appear on Channels 17 and 20 .
~his may cause some inconvenience
because your converter must be changed,
but if you will please call 642-3260 or
646-0586 we will schedule a time that is
convenient for you to have this change
made. There will be absolutely no charge
for this change. Otherwise you are more
than welcome to stop in at our
TELEPROMPTER office at 901 We st
16th Street, Newport Beach.
·SHOWTIME.
WE DELIVER .
TOTAL ENTERTAINMENT 24-HOURS-A-DAY!
I . I
I . I
I
• • • • • u • o e • c c • o u a s o c ass a ssccaseuo;aa us cssassassssss
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/TuHday. July 21 , 1981
J \fercur:y
•• J • ~ ·eveals
I ~t
4 i}lercury Savings & Loan Aa·
\ •' iaUon has announced an un-
01t dlted, after-tax loaa for the
n~uarter ended June 30 of 32
ilhtenta a ahare, compared with a
tfj aain Of tO cents fO( the like
· )teriod In 1*.
slq 1 The Hunilngton Beach S&L
}oat 56 cents a share for the first 11 ,Jill months this year. compared 0 jWith a gain of 39 cents for the
!'f like 1980 period.
An opertaing loss of nearly
.. 1.25 million for the second
' rter compared with earnings
$375,000 for the like quarter of
980. For the six months, the
L showed a loss of almost $2.2
million. compared with a gain of
more than $1.5 million for the
like period in 1980.
I-"The drastic slowdown in the
't8Jl estate market, largely as a
resuit of all forms of costs, led
by money costs , resulted in
diminis hed volu m e and an
operating loss in the first half,"
/
aid Leona rd Shane. chairman.
"We anticipate an upswing in
{J eal estate lending during the
\ econd half and resumption of
'1 ales of homes in association ~.joint ventures as product is com ·
~leted and available fo r de-
~rvery."
Effectiveness lagging?
Productivity expert has sluggish growth answers •z IOllN CUNNIFF a mistake. There ls no one "NE;~RK _ As the answer. And we should not ell·
economL becomes more In· pe ct improvements to come quickly and easily." \'olved n the produc tion of But he does bave m any sug-
aervlcea, C. Jack.son Grayson is geatlons about areas he feel! are
more concerned that we make a p 0 0 r l y u n .
clear distinction between etfi. derstood . In
clency and effectiveness. service busi·
''Efflc,ency measures if you r
·' are do&na thln1s right. Effective-! ~ ~ 1
5 eass ~ ~
neas concerns Itself with manufactur-
wbetber you are doln1 the rigbt ing, people
thing," says Grayson, chairman should count.
of The American Productivity productivity
Center, Houston. can be i m .
He contends that both must be p r 0 v e d , he
measured if a worthwhile pro· ~'""PP feels, by pay-
ductivity picture is to be ob-ing greater attention to worker 's lalned . And he s uggests that b · America's lagging produclivt"ly JO secunty, goals and need for involvement growth is in part a consequence "Involvement means asking of poor effectiveness. Should we measure hospital employees, listening to the m ,
productivity solely by such fac-recognizing their contributions perhaps with money shar· tors as the number of patients · · l · I · h treated? Or is a more productive m g an ormat1on, etting t em know about the future, letting facility one that teaches people them own a share in the busi· 'INVOLVE EMPWYEES'
how to remain healthy, and thus ne~s." Analyst Grayson
treats fewer patients? Gr ayson's "own a share" was
In lhls age of electronic com-m eant mainly in fig urative controlled when 1t was costing
puters, shouldn't productivity be sense, he said, but he recognizes more to produce goods?
measured not just on the lines of that a common management lie was appalled to find that
data produced but on the basis refl ex is the feeling that involve· producti vity data was uruella-
of whether that data is read and m ent with workers ultimate1y ble The government·s measure
utilized or just left to gather means loss of control. included labor's contributions,
dust ? "I don't think management in the for m o f o utput pe r
He draws still another exam· will lose control," he said "I manhour, but failed (and still
pie from the manufacturing sec· don't believe employees want to does> to measure the impact of
tor. American autom akers, he cont r ol. They want to con capital invested The Productivi·
observes, ran their assembly tribute." ty Center now has its own index.
lines as efficiently as they could. Grayson, former dean of busi· Raising $10 million in fi ve '· The association has offices in
brange, Los Angeles. Santa
Clara and Ventura counties. u..._... But, he contends, "they didn't ness schools at Tulane and years, he founded the business-
SPHERE RISING _ The 266-foot-tall Sunsphere, centerpiece produce the right car s. The Southern Methodist universities, supported center to educate the
of t he 70-acre 1982 World's Fair in Knoxville, TeM., nears Japanese did. The J apanese left his post as President Nixon's public. produce more reliable
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642-5678
str uctural completion. The glass-enclosed globe atop the . were both efficient and effec· pr ice commissioner convinced mea!>urements of out put, and
tower will house a 400-seat restaurant and observation live... that inflation had roots beyond teach management and labor Productivity, says Grayson, is his reach -that it was based tn how to implement techniques decks during the six-month exhibition, which begins next made up of many things, and a productivity slowdown. How, known to increase efficiency and ~~~~~~~~~~~-L~-M~a_Y_·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·-·to~w_o_r_k_o_n_o_n_e~as~p_e_c_t _c_ow__:_d_be:....:_~h~e:._w_o~n~d~e~r~ed~.~c~ou~l~d_::..p~ri~c~e~s ~b~e=--~e~f~fect1 ve_n_e_ss_··~~~~~~-
I t
Our new name is Mitsui Manufacturers
Bank. And it spells good news for customers
of both Manufacturers Bank and The Mitsui
Bank of California. As well as for business
and professional people around the state.
Because adding the top-flight capabilities
of Mitsui to Manufacturers already highly
successful operation gives us more bank to
offer you. More offices. More capital. More
expertise.
But the Best news is what hasn't changed.
Leonard Weil, president of Manufacturers
Bank, is president and chief executive
officer of Mitsui Manufacturers Bank. And
the same people who've been ~rvinzu so
well are still here to serve you rlow.
We still specialize in meeting the n of
· small to medium-sized businesses and pro-
fessional people. With the same experience
and fast dectaions you've come to expect.
Only now we can accommodate compan-
ies of any size, becauee we;re backed
by the $52 billion resources of Mitsui
Bank, Ltd. And we can offer you greater
access to fore ign markets-through Mitsui's
network of branches and ag~nts in 40
·.countries.
So, by merging the energetic banking
philosophy of Manufacturers with the
dedicated service of Mitsui, we've created a
bank that tops both. A bank you'll be
hearing more and more from in coming
months.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTrruesday, July 21 , 19A1 ·•
Putting the brakes on 'bracket creep'
By Ute Auoclated Presa
Your boss gives you a ra.1.te. You go
out a.ad celebrate. You get your next
paycheck and the celebration turns
sour. 1be raise has shrunk.
Contratulations: You've just learned
about "tax bracket creep." Your higher
Income boosted you intJo a higher
bracket -even if that ise does
oolblna more than match increase
in the coat of living. It's a disease that
atr~~UUoos of Americans and the
Se .. ~ts to cure it with a medicine
called' "Mexatlon. ·'
The tax bill just passed by the Senate
includes a provision that would
eliminate "bracket creep" starting in
1985. The percentage of your earnings
you pay in federal income tax would
NOT increase unless your salary went
up falter than inflation, as measured by
'"""l.LCCTORS CORNER
R•r• Cotna • St•mpa
GOLD • SIL VER
7-20·11 .... C-. ...... SI._ Cl. IL1' Kl'llf9W-t41t.IS t42'.JS ~...-. t41US Mii.Ji
1• C.-IM.7S .. t.7S so ~ .,.,. $11'.• ""SU-.... m.K tU.S~
70% 9anll Flunclng
the Consumer Price Index.
The Idea of indexation of income tax·
es is not new. It has been implemented
by several states and foceign countries.
A longtime supporter is Sen. Robert
Dole, R-Kan., the chairman of the
Sena te Finance Committee.
President Reagan also supports the
concept, but did not want indexation in·
eluded in the current tax bill. He urged
Congress to work out a basic tax cul
firs t, then turn to a long-term solution to
the problem of "bracket creep." The
Senate overruled him.
The Senate plan would directly link
tax brackets, the personal exemption
and the standard deduction to the
Consumer Price Index. If the index
went up 10 percent. for example, the
personal exemption -now at $1,000 -
also would go up 10 percent.
.... It doesn't work that way rt1ht now. " •
Suppose you earn SJ.5,000 and 1et a 10
percent rwe to $18,500. Your tu but i.-.1
goes up. For a family of four lt 1oea
from SJ,242 to $1,530 -a riae of 23 per-, .• r
cent. Federal income tax takes 9.3 per-' ·
cent of earnings instead of 8.3 percent. .,.,,
You lose purchasing power.
The fate of lndexaUon In the House ii
unknown. But one of the stronieat oppo-
nents of the Idea In the past wu Rep. Al
Ullman, D·Ore., who used his poekion
as chairman of the House Waya and ,.. •
Means Committee lo block the plan • •
when It was proposed. Ullman waa de·
feated for re·electlon last year.
How could anyone be aga.lnat a plan
that seems like such a good idea?
Foes of indexation argue that it in-
sulates people from inflation. If you
are n 'l hurt by inflation, you are less
likely to fight it.
...
OPPORTUNITY
LOANS ..
• .,........,. IRA& KEOUGH
READY TO SHIP -Koran Air Lines president Cho Choong Hoon ex· (714) w 1150 a~ines cr.ated aft section of F·5F fighter plane...)Vith Roy P. Jackson, South~!'::.a~.lll•g•
vice president of Northrop's aircraft division at Hawthorne, Calif.1 -::~·....,~-~-=--==c..=-~~, ~l Northrop parts are being shipped to Korea for reassembly in a co-1-$50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTV SECONDS
production arrangement.
Business meet slated
Orange C ounty bu si n es s
owners/m anage rs and pros pective
owners are invited to attend a small·
bus iness seminar in El Toro on
Thursday.
Finance. marketing, business plan·
ning , and legal requirements are
among the subjects to be discussed.
The program will be held at the
Mercury room at the Mercury Sav·
ings and Loan, Lake Forest and
Rockfield, El Toro, with a registra-
lion fee of $5.
The registration will begin at 8
a.m ., and the program will last until
4 p.m.
The seminar is co-sponsored by the
Orange County chapter of the Service
Co rps o f Re tire d Exec utives
<SCORE>. U.S. Small Business Ad·
ministra tion. a nd the Santa Ana
Public Library.
Reservation and information may
be obtained by calling 836-2709.
Coas t woDlan h e ads unit
elude meetings, a speakers' bureau,
support groups, executive luncheons
and publications.
• l nlereel ontv INIVM•nl
• lnc:o-
• Cota•erc:lal
• Rea14enllal
• Weekly co••ll•enta
• Monl"lv f11ndln9•
• 6 •onllli• to s v-n
• Soalhern Callfornil
l •11 I 1•
loan lnfonaallon ••rvlce
I ' 'f , if fl~ IHI l
(714) 759·1515
AME.-ICAN HOME MORTGAGE
7 JO Newe>urt Cenle• Orive
Design Plata "f~•P0'1 Beac"
f"cal1torn14J
92!>60
s.cwect by yow W rropertr
Let Our Expert Loan Specialists:
~elp You Obtain Needed Funds!
Charter
Mortgage
Company
Licensed Real Estate
Corporation
CALL
855-2037
23010 Lake Forest Dr.
Laguna Hills
Jan Young of Newport Beach, a
real estate broker with the Dover
Drive office of Macna b-Irvine Real·
ty, has bee n named president of the
Orange County cha pter of Women in
Business, an organization comprised
of women arfiliated with corporations
and businesses in the county.
The mother of three, Ms. Young is
a lso the immediate past president or
the USC Newport Harbor Alumni 1-----------
As president. Ms. Young is direct·
ing the chapter 's activities, which in-
Club, and is active with the Trojan
League of Orange County, Trojan
Guild and the Nine O'Clock Players-
Assistance League of Los Angeles.
Scientis t awarded MS grant
LA JOLLA <AP> -Dr. Robert Fu-
jinami or the Scripps Clinic and
Research Foundation has received
the $311,820 annual Harry Weaver
grant from the Multiple Sclerosis
Society.
Fujinami, 32. was cited as "the
most promising young scientist in the
country doing research in areas re-
. lated to multiple sclerosis."
Fujinami won the award for in·
vestigations into persistent viral in·
fections in former measles victims.
Measles can cause a disease similar
to multiple sclerosis.
1 OIL AND GAS LOTTERY
Can you affo rd to take a chance in the exciting world of oil & gas
tease acquisition on parce ls offered by the United States Government?
Only persons in high tax brackets who can afford to speculate
should be involved in this program.
• Chmtce for '-Jt proffh
• I 000/o ta writ ... for w wlwn
....... ,..,11-l tll
We wo rk in con1unct1on with Far West Energy Services. Inc. who provides:
• Correctly•• 'tW .._. ...,._
• hperl JM'"1k ......... Ntffr'C.
• Pwcef ~for ..0-preftt
• Profff_....IMM ... •the.c.
FOR INFORMATION ANO A FREE BROCHURE. PLEASE CALL
PERSONAL INVESTMENT COMPANY
1714) 544-4404
your
conf iden.ce
• • 1s moving.
,,,.,. ·, out n.w oddte11 ...
U\onk vou tot f\elplnQ u1 <)et tf'Mn.
WARMINGTON FI NANCIAL CORPORATION
17 7( 2 \OWAN STREET/SlJITE 200/IRVINE CALIFORNIA Q2714
"A Southetrl ColtfQmio K>mtty Helping Soumem ColifOfnlON''
(714) S40·26lS
A~ llroWOgll
. . 0 BUSllESS
CllCKlll FUIDS
New from Gibi'altar~
~ Gibraltar's Rocle Solid™
~ Cash Management Fund.
~ High earnings. Earn a guaranteed 13%
~ on investments of $5000 or more. (Interest
compounded daily. Effective.annual yield 14.086%.)
Investments under $5000 earn 5 1h%.
~ Instant liquidity. Easy transfer o f funds
~ by telephone between your business checking
account and Gibraltar's Cash Management Fund.
24 hours a day. 7 days a week.
~ Guaranteed rate. New rate set on the 16th
~ of each month and effective fo r 30 days.
~fully secured. Funds backed by U.S.
~ Government Securities. The fund is not a
savings account or deposit and therefore is not
insured by the F.S.L.l.C.
For more information, contact your local
Gibraltar branch or call toll-free ~25~396
and ask for our Cash Management Fund counselor. ..._ ~§1.!assodatioa • ~!!~~~
™ C 1981 Clbraltar S1vinp and Loan Attodatlon
Fullerton: 255 W. Orangethorpe Ave./(213) 930-1970 (714) 871·6101 • Hunttnaton Stach: 7777 Edinger
Ave., #91 Huntington Ctr./(714) 898-9666 • L•gun• Hfll5: 24260 El Toro Rcf./(714} 9.51-8454
• Newport Beach: 2700 W. Coast Highway/(714) 631-2611 • San Juan Caplltrano: 31877 Del Obispo
St./(714) 493-SO'll •Santa Anas 3925 S. Bristol St./(714} 979-7580 •Santa Anas #4 Santa Ana Fashion
Square/(714) 834--0717
. .,
·, . .,.
~'
. \
' . l • , ..
I
I . ,
...
".
,
I
•'
. .
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.................... -....... -~ .. ""--·---'!""----T-~:--9'.°-~--...---~--..,...~-~-~-~ --...,. • ------....-..--,.--•
Y.
•• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT (Tuffday, July 21 , 1981'
PtJBUC NOTICB
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUI Mn111•U
l&AMa ITATHMIMT T.,.,.......,.~,,...,..-... ....... ,
INTEllNATIONAL
TECHNOLOGY StEAltCH, on
WefMf, Suitt a 1, -lft9Mll IN<ll, ,,...
Lt•11•rd Low•nlh•I, 4Jl1
eoerdw•lk, No. J11, Hunlllltl•ll hecll,(AI ............
Tlllt ~It ~ttd by.,, l11-
dM4Nel. ~·~· Tlllt .....,_. -llltd wllll -c-tr Cle"' <11 Or .... c-.4Y tll Jlll'f
•• 1'11. .. , .....
.. ~ ...... Or .... c-Dolly .......
PUBUC NOTICI
.. ,.,,
fl1CT1noueMM••11 ..... ITAT ... MT
T .............. -..... -.... -·•: It)~ "°"AOO; UI POLLO
OE 0.0, 1111 ._. 1• •twt. a.M Alta, eel .... ,.,.,
EltMUT TAMAYO, ... V...,.._
ltrwt, ......_CA 919.
Tiil• ......... ~"' ....... ........... ..... T_.,.
• PlJ•UC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE .. ..,...
l'ICTITIOUI aUllM•ll
lllAMa ITAT .. dNT
TM tollowlllt ,.,_ 11 •lllf llWI· ,,. .... ,
Pt1BUC NOTIC&
'Ttllt .....,..._, ......... .,,. eeu .. 1., CleA of o.-....,. Ge<dr ... DEAN'S INOIPENOaNT 1
MAZDA REPAIR, 1010 eerllley
..,._. Aft,,...,0rtl'fll,CA'*1. J-!t.1"1.
flvlttl.,_ or .... C--Deity....... RA NOY WINSTEAD, 20711
PUBLIC NOTICE
N11'1Mj
J11ly 7, 14, J1, a , 1•1 a1U1 ~.••ortll, Hunll"91.,. hec:ll, CA
PUBLIC NOTICE Tiii• ~Is ~WCI by..,.,,_
dlvl .... I.
OllAMO• COUNTY IUfl•lltOlt
COUltT
,. Chk c.-r °"" ... ..-.-..~nm
fll•lflUff:
July 7, 14, JI, a. ltt1 ,_.., l'ICTIT10UI 9UllN811
MAMll ITAT .... MT
ltendyWIN-
Tlllt 1~ WM llltd wllll tM
C-ly CloA Ill 0r....-C-t'f.., Julr
U,IMI
MAllGAllET THEil ESE
l'llOMWILLEll
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTIT10UI .UllMlll
MAM41 ITAT8MaMT
Tiie fol-I"' ,.,...,, er• IMlllf ..,.._ .. ,
JOHN DAVID'S flORSCHtE
WOltt", SI -C...tor Orlve, •tJ. lrvl,..,CAmw.
SHAllON JOANN PENWELL. tU
Int ............ ~ 9Mcll,
CA9*1.
JOHN DAVID P'l!llENCE, IU
..... ...... e1Y11.., ~ 9Mcll,
CA9*1.
Tllll .....,,,.., la COflducled by e
....... 1 ~.
SMrWI J. ,.._ ..
Tlllt .......... -filed wiUI IN c ... nty C..,.. of Or ..... COWlty °"
J-"· '"'· "'.-....,._or ... CM1I Deity PlltC,
Jwty 7, u.11 ... "" »IHI
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tllo .......... _.... I• ....,,. IMltl-...... ,
THE aLEGANT OPTION, U Wiid
Goote Court. N••POrt heel!, CA
'266J.
JUDITH A. J ENSEN, U Wiid Goe•• ~rt ..... ,.rt ... ell, CA
'266J,
Tlllt ....,,_.11 ~ lly.,. lft·
dM -1.
JUlllWIA.-*'-' Tllll ...._.,. wa llled wltll I ..
COVfllY Cl-of Dr"'fll C-ty .,,
J-U, 1"1. .. , ...
flvbllllfWd Or-CMat Delly flllol,
.J-JO.Jvl.y1, fUI, 1''1 ,,.._.
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI aust• ..
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l'ICTITIOUI .UMN•ll
NAM8 ITAT8M8NT
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PERSOHALllEO CLEANING, Jll7 Herbor ........ eo.te -.., CA '2621.
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PUBLIC NOTICE
----------~
l'ICTITIOUS eUllNEll MAMa ITAT8MSMT
Tiie fol-Ill _._. 11 dlol"f bull·
MUH. COMMlllCIAL I. INOUSTlllAL
INTEllflRISES, 27'0 H¥_, e tw .•
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PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE (Al Llel!llTY HOME IROKIRS, ·----------
l'ICTITIOUI 9USIM811
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11AMa 1TAT8MSNT
TM t9floWlnCI ...,_, II dOiflt WM-,,._. .. ,
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ASSOCIATES, INC •• e CollforMA c•·
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PUBLIC NOTICE
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IHTEeAN OSUNA, Doti I UVOUOll 10,
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ITAT•M•NTOI'
AUNOONM8NT 01'
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Jyly 11, Jt, Aug. 4, 11, 1•1 HOWi
PUBLIC NOTICE
Real estate 'still OK'
Milionaire author says economy just going through 'pause'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sky·
htah interest rate. and slow
home 1ale1 haven't dampened·
Albert J . Lowry'• enthusiasm
for real es t••e . After all, it
worked ror him.
"The averaae penon should
try to innst aa quickly aa they
can, even wltb these ratea,"
aaya Lowry, multlmllllonalre
author of "How You Can
Become Financially lndepen·
d e nt b y Investing in Real
Estate."
Now S4 and loni aao flnancial·
ly independent himaelf, Lowry
s till projects an almost
evangelical enthusiasm for real
estate. Although he could atay
put on hia $5 million mountain·
top estate at Lake Tahoe, Nev.,
Lowry still s tumps the coun·
tryslde s preading the word -
buy.
"l 'm still active in real estate.
but l am not trylni to basically
acquire a lot more real estate or
a lot more wealth,'· Lowry said
in an interview. "What I am try·
ing to do is show the average
person that they can become
financially independent. My
personal goal is to push my
message harder."
A .......... Lowry, married and the rather
of (Ive, built a s ubs tantial
personal fortune from scratch
after moving to California 17
years ago from Canada. And
although some analysts think
Atbery Lowry, who built a fortune from scratch in real eJtate,
says it's still a good inveatment.
1 the boom years for prope rty are
past , Lowry dismisses the slump
as t emporary.
"I think real estate itself is go·
ing through the traditional pause
-if we go back into history, we
find that back in 1964 we had a
pause, 1969-70 a pause, 1974·75 a
pause, 198}·81 a pause." he said.
·'These pauses a re needed.
Five years fro m today we'll see
an awful lot of properties more
e xpensive than they are today,
and the basic reason for that is
that inflation is built into our
economy," he said
Lowry's basic formula; buy
with as small a down payment
as possible, add value to the
property through better m anage·
m ent or renovation , then sell or
exchange the property at a pro·
fit. Critics say it's s implistic;
Lowry says it works
"All proper ty which has a
mortgage agains t it is s ub·
NASO LISTINGS
sidized by the government, and
the subsidy comes in the form or
the deductibility or the interest, ..
he said. "With high interest
r ates, of course, the a verage
novice is faced with the problem
of not being able to qualify, so
seller·assisted financing is Ute
key. And if seller is not willing
to assist in finan cing, the buyers
should just go somewhere else,
bec a use we h ave a buyers'
market and you don't have to
buy the first thing you see."
1'5 1,m 1.m 1,2'0 ~
UPS ANO OOWN$ NEW YOllK IAPI -Tho 104._I,. 1191 • tllt O...r . n. C-1• ~och -•• ,,..,., U\el ,,.,,.. 911"9 141
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NO ':.t"'!.: r!:,~~-=~:·:,.~
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. ·-
ge Coast DAILY PILOTfTueeday, Juty 21 , 1981 s •••
NY E COMPO ITE TRAN ACTIONS
OUOf A rtON' INC~UD• '•ao•' ON , ....... 'rO••. MIOWIU. •ac1•1c ...... MnTON, D• J •OIT &110 COtCJllllA,1 UOC• IX(MAlfOU AllD ••PO•f•O l 'r fMI lfUO AND INUllflf
Edsa.r Bronfman, chairman o( Searram, •P·
peared to have sul(ered a au.o,inl rebuke earlier tbla
year when he made an off er to buy St. Joe Mlnerala
for $45 a share. It seemed like a 1eneroua offer alnce
St. Joe's stock was selllng at $28. But John Duncan,
chairman o( St. Joe, spurned the overture, HYlnl he
would rather liquidate the company than aell out to a
company Uke Seagram.
For Bron/man, that would seem to be humiliat-
ing. However. look at lt thia way. Searram bad
bought some St. Joe shares before it became clear
that this deal ~ was not going r:
lo go through. ~; o
And when St \.. )l1. Joe, looking for ....... '-.::l.....
somebody to =-----------rescue it from lllJll .... Ill the clutches of
Seagram ,
ended up in the hands or the California engineering company, Fluor in Irvine, it got S56 a share.
Bronfman promptly sold the St. J oe shares Sea·
gram had acquired, malling a tidy prom of SlO
million. Not bad for a couple of weeks' work.
A lol of people seem to be making money these
days in just this manner.
Frank Lorenzo, chairman of Texas Air, the com-
pany that operates Texas International Airlines and
New York Air, went to the mat with Pan American
World Airways over National Airlines. Both wanted
to acquire National. In the end, Pan Am won out. But
Lorenzo didn't fare too poorly. By selling the Na·
tional shares it owned to Pan Am, Texas Air cam e
away with a profit of $60 million.
Lorenzo i.s now pursui.qg another air c~rrier, Los
Angeles-based Continental Airlines. This time he has
accumulated 48 percent of the stock. But the
employees or Continental have rallied their forces
and are malting a valiant bid to buy the company
they work for . If they succeed and then buy the huge
chunk held by Lorenzo, you can bet the Texas
operator will once again come away with the consola-
tion prize or having made a neat profit in some short.
term trading.
It can be very satisfying to make money this way
because you're often getting it from people who bate
you. Look at Victor Posner. the Miami wheeler-
dealer. In the early 1970. he bought a huge slug of
stock in Foremost-McKesson. the San Francisco-
based wholesaler and dairy company. The Posner
presence bothered the Foremost-McKesson people.
who went to great lengths to prevent him from ac·
quiring more stock.
WeU, earlier this year Foremost-McKesson got
rid of the Posner influence by buying him out. The
Posner-controUed company, Sharon Steel, had pajd
around $30 million for Its Foremost·McKesson
shares. Foremost-McKesson bought them back for
$65 million.
Who won that tight -Foremost-McKesson or
Victor Posner?
It seems as if it's worth it to a company to buy
out an unwelcome suitor just to get him off its back.
Chris-Craft, a company that makes boats and
operates TV stations, among other nefarious ac-
tivities, recently paid Saul Steinberg's Reliance
Group S12 million to by 300,000 of its own shares.
Reliance acquired the Chris-Craft shares hut year.
Its profit on this little transaction: tt.S million.
Carl fcabn,•a New York investigator, made a
mov~ last year to gain control of Hammermill Paper,
acquiring an 11 percent stake in the company for
about $21 million. Hammermill fought Icahn fiercely.
Now it's buying the shares be owns for $30 million.
WHATMIU OIO
NRW '1'09'1( CAP) Jul 10
Todam l
I.
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·COLD COINS
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SILVER
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GOLD QUOTATIONS
MOMMY
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SYMBOLS
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B ii Orange Cout DAILY PILOT(TUHday. July 21, 1981
Harp music champagne supper backdrop l I
By MA.AY JANE
O( .. Delt ............
AllC'ELLO
H arp mualc and 1 aunaet o'ver the
ocean were the backdrop for an ele11nt
champa1ne supper hoated by the
Fri~ ot the Pacific Chorale, former·
ly the Jrvlne Master Chorale. John and Martha Klllefer open~ lbolr
Corona deJ Mar horn• ror the party, whlcb was
held to help underwrite coeta for the HO·volce
1roup which beflns lt.a 14th seuon in October.
Guest.s at the S75-per-penon affair sipped
an amber-colored Domalne Chandon cham·
pagne and enjoyed bot hors d'oeuvre. before sit
tlnd down to a dinner catered by Julia's Child or
HAPPENINGS
glazed salmon with a creamy dill sauce, ~a
Maison chicken salad, tomatoes filled wt th
minted peas, deviled eggs and French rolls with
herbed butter.
Round white tables were set with beige
linen and arranged both indoors and on the
patio with centerpieces or miniature pepper plant~ and greenery in tern cotta pots created
by the host.
While diners were finishing a dessert of
fresh raspberry tarts. Chorale President Jim
Dunning spoke to the group about the organize·
tional transition connected with the name
change and the chorale's hopes for performing
in the future Orange County Music Center.
Officers serving with him include Helen
Wardner, Bob James, Frank Gillespie and Jim
McBride. Diners didn't linger over coffee, however.
because the after-dinner entertainment was the
Laguna Beach Pageant of the Masters.
Special parking was provided close to the
restlval 1rounda ror lhe ahow, which ro·c~ealoa
famous palntln11 and sculpture• with live
models.
A second show at the open-air theater wu
the lunar ecllp e which occurrtd that evenina.
Honorary chairmen for the party were Mr.
Don Woodward and Mrs. Robert Lanen. Guest!
Included Kae and Loulso Ewin1. Phil 'and Mary
Lyons, Ken and Artle Johnson, Mr. and Mra.
Alec Perkins and Mr. and Mr• Rtehard
Brockmeyer.
E veryone needs a friend, and now the
Newport Beach City Arts Commission
ha11 a whole aroup of them
Started two years ago, the Friends of
lhe Newport Beach City Arts Commission re·
cently elected Beryl MelinkofC to serve as presl·
dent.
She spent four years on the commission, in·
eluding two years as chairman. and ls pleased
to be able lo help with funding cultural projects.
"The commission can 't reach out for money
fo r awards at the festival nor for the Labor Day
concert," she explained. "but the Friends can.
and now we will be helping financially in all
ways."
Serving with her are Richard Dixon, Gloria
Rowe. Dolores Gclberg, Margie Wood, Natalie
Perkins and Rita Gunkel. '
Anyone interested in joining the Friends
can write to them in care of the Newport Beach
City Hall
T he Laguna Beach Panhellenic As ·
socialion will hold its annual summer
coffee al 10 ·30 a .m . on Aug 5 in Laguna
Niguel
Committee members for the meeting are
Mmes . Donald Ma c K1ntosh. W illiam
Mc Donald. Henry Brian. David Buck and
J ames Lutz
All national sorority members in the area
are invited and should make reservations with
Mrs Ross Miller at 494-3820.
The group's summer project is assistance
for college-bound girls interested in sorority
membership
Current rushing information is available by
calling Mrs. W L Piguet at 494-1869 or Mrs
David Phillips at 494-5666.
Phil and Mary L11on.1
f left) chat with Jlm
Dunning at a benef It for
the Pacific Chorale held
in the Corona cUl Mar
home of John and
Martha Kille/er
M arilyn Vosel and Chici Marlin,
owners of Safari Tours or Newport,
helped hostess a party cruise for the
Long Beach Chapter of the Crippled
Children's Society or Los Angeles County.
Hank Cordier or Newport Beach. owner of
the 57 foot Carri Cr aft, TM Bay Window, hosted
the group of crippled children and adult.s from
the Orange County and Long Beach areas.
Souvenir lovers c ontribute to hotel expense
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am writing to
you because I believe it is the best way to reach
the largest number of people. The topic: Hotel
guest.s who Like souvenirs.
After several years in the business I bave en·
countered hotel guests who have lifted almost tbe
whole room -under the guise of wanting a
"souvenir." This is what they tell you when asked
why they have 12 brand new towels (from the
storage room> and a bedspread in their luggage at
check-out time. I have seen departing guests try to
get away with pillows. pictures from the wall,
bathroom rugs and even lamps.
People complain that hotels are expensive
these days. Well, one reason is because it is no
small deal to replace the items carried off by
"souvenir lovers." Why don't they understand that
the cost of the stuff they steal must be absorbed by
the consumer? It's the same way with shoplifting.
Please put this letter in your own words and
print it, Ann. -J UST SAM
DEAR SAM: Your word.I are juat fine. Tbank1
'
ANN lANDIRS
for sending them on. U the shoe ms, wear It, folks,
but please leave the eledrtc sboe·sh1ner la the
room when you check out.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was fascinated by
that letter from the woman who was worried sick
because her self.employed husband hasn't paid in
come taJCes in over 15 years.
Why didn't you tell her about the Conscience
Fund established for people who have stolen or
destroyed government property? Some con-
tributors reveal their identities. others do not. The
Treasury Department does not prosecute these
people. The money is deposited in the U.S.
Treasury. a nd Congress determines how it is
spent.
The Conscience Fund was originated during
President Madison's administration in 1811. An un-
identified person claimed he had defrauded the
government and sent $5. Other deposit.s brought
the year's total to $250. No additional deposits
were made until 1927. Six dollars were received
from an anonymous "donor."
How about printing this ·1etter and suggesting
the Conscience Fund for individuals who haven't
paid their taxes and want to sleep better at night?
IN THE KNOW lN PRINCETON
DEAR PRINCE: I connlt.ed wttb WUUam E .
Simon, Secretary of the Treasury from lt7Z to
1977, on lhls one.
Mr. Simon aald be bas never beard of the
Conscience Fund. Durlng his term of service be
did, however, receive several modest cbecka, SS to
SlOO, from good-hearted Americana wbo w1nted to
help reduce the national debt. He always returned
the money, thanked tbem for tbelr patriotism and
suggested that they use the money to help elect
congressmen who would vo&e to spend less tban
the government takes In.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have been seeing a
very attractive guy He is 29 years old and we
share many interests
The problem : When Frank gets mad he does
violent things to himself. Two weeks ago he lost a
tennis match to a guy he really dislikes He got so
mad he slammed his hand into the side of his car
and almost broke his wrist. Yesterday, he kicked
the side of the house when his dog slipped out of
his collar and ran off somewhere. The klck result·
ed in an ankle fracture. Any advice? -DOLL\'
FROM HARTFORD
DEAR DOLLY: Frank must learn to unloJa
his anger in a non-destructive, adult manner. &
needs counseling. My advice to you 11 -1&1y 09J
of his way.
What 's prudi3h? What'I 0 .K'! If you aren't 111re, JIOU
need some help. /1'1 available in the bookUt: "Nee~
and Petting -What Are the Limit•'" Mcul 11our reqM1t
to Ann Landen, P 0 Box 11995, Chicago, lU. «»JI .
enclornig 50 cent1 and a long, stamped, 1elf-c.ddreaud
envelope
If wives we r e l emo ns. • • The w edding p icture ~I By ERMA BOMBECK
In Sacramento, history is in the making.
The State Assembly has just sent to the Senate
a "lemon" car bill that would give dissatisfied
automobile buyers a new car or their money back.
Good grief. people' If this bill were passed, it
could significantly lower the GNBP (Gross Na·
tlonal Blood Pressure) and elect a car salesman
king of the While House by 1984.
Everyone in the world has. at one time or
another, bought a lemon. We had a car once that
made you pucker when you kicked the tires
Aries has tillle
Wednesday, July 22
By SYDNEY OMA RR
ARIES <March 21 Apnl 191' Restncuons work to your
ultimate advanlaf(e Time is on your side judgment.
intuition are on target New contJcls lead to greater m
dependence or thought. action Your position is
strengthened.
TAURUS tAprll 20 May 201· Answers sought from con·
rldential sources will become available Your inquiries bring desired results Ignore surface ,indications. U1g
deep for motives. reasons and obJectlves
GEMINI !May 21 -June 20) Token or affection is re·
ceived from one who aids in strengthening domestic posl·
lion Accent on home. harmony, family reunion and
special anniversaries
CANCER tJune 21 July 22)~ What appeared a "lost
cause" is due to boomerang in your ravor. Key Is to be
selective, to utilize lessons learned in recent past. Focus
on career. prestige. bus iness associate who has your best
lnterests al heart
LEO !JuJy 23-Aug 22 > Abstract principles or law
come into sharp. clear focus Emphasis also on travel.
HOROSCOPE
communication, publishing and long-distance call which
clarlflea policy.
Vl llOO <Aug 23·Sept. 22): Tie loose ends, 1et financial
affaln In order, look beyond the Immediate and realize
your potential. Mystery will be resolved Popularity In
creases despite recent controversy.
LIBllA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: New approach Is nece111ary .
Red tape, taxes, license requirements can bog you down
until you get to heart of matters. Leo aids cause. Oo
alow, maintain low profile, welcome addlUonal sources of
lnlormaUon.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Obtain valid hlnt from
Ubra message. If you don 't know what to do. do nothJna•
lndeclJion I.a nol neceuarUy avU. Know ll, ride with Ude
Focus on employment, co·workera, basic services, wW·
lncne.1 to improve health by embarkin1 on a more nutriUoua diet.
IAGITl'A&rul (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): SUlu quo ahaltea
rattles and roll• away. You're on l)tw 1rou.od, old
polJcl• oo lon1tr •P•IY. Imprint style, ai••• cllan1n1 deal with younc, vt1oroua. dynamlc ~·· CAPUCOUI {Dec. 22-Jan. lt): Accent Oii security.
prO,Ptrty, ttt•bll1Md poUctes •nd balneN trantactlon wblcb will IOOll be completed Older lndlvtdual la on your
side and prov .. lt. Check IOW'cet you'll be uktcl qMt· UOQI and bt tONlde.red tor ptoJnOUon.
AQUUl\18 (Jan. 20·P'eb. 11): P'orc.e teftd to be teal·
tertd -bt vtrtalil• wllbout IOlinc 1t1ht al uJUmate Gb·
Jectlv•. Sodal actlvtU• •«••te: people who had ben ·•out al lotlda" will 100C1 l>Mome "avauable."
PllCD (hb. lf.llarcll IO): ~'on lneoaM, obtain· lat wW JOU ....S. locaU.1 '-tt.IM. CIMck Oemim ........ b'. Hluable llblt. llwy ...... illTOIMC faaJ.IT ••W WW bt NUled You an oa brlDk of I•· ..... ~..,.
ERMA BDMBICI ~_.... __ ~~~--~~~~
Engineering-wise, 1t was a monument lo the com ·
mittee who constructed a camel and thought they
had solved the problem of tall men who needed
more leg room
The sun visor blocked lhe rear-view mirror.
The carpet under the accelerator had no re·
sistance to the touch.
The radio was wired for static.
The floor of the car burnt your feet.
The steering mechanism quivered al anything
over 35 mph.
And you couldn't get to the back seat from the
driver's side of the car
I don't understand it This col.U)try is the only
one in the world where men tolerate a lemon of a
car longer than they will endure a wife who has
run out of gas.
Think about it. Would your husband pay $50 to
have you towed anywhere?
H he couldn't keep you runnlns without stall·
ing at every traffic light, would he talk nice to you
and let you idle'>
If your warranty ran out would he stand you to
a tune-up out of his own pocktt?
When your mileage started to del~rlorate,
would he still s top al every statJon and mt you up?
If you heated up coming back from the
ballpark. would he pull off the road nnd let you
cool off?
Would he istlll take you out to dinner Ir you had
a crack ln your wmdahltld?
If you had to b taken In for repalra, would he
be satisfied with n looner?
I don't know why 1 do that. I always push a
parody too tar .
Williams,
Gilbert
Deborah Gilbert of Huntington
Beach and Brian Williams of
Fountain Valley exchanged wed·
ding vows in the First Christian
Church, Orange. '
The bride. daughter of James
and Florence Gilbert of Hunt·
ington Beach, graduated from
Edison High School and at·
tended the University of
California at Irvine
The bridegroom. son of Loren
and Joyce Williams. of Fountain
Valley, graduated from Rolling
Hills High School and Orange
Coast College.
McRae-Brown
Charmian Brown of
Westminster and David McRae
of La Canada exchanged wed·
ding vows In Corona del Mar
Community Church.
T he bride. daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry J . Mitchell
graduated from Westminster
High School and Cypress
College.
The bride1room, son of Mr.
and Mrs. 0 . H. McRae of La
Canada, graduated fro01 Cresen-
ta Valley High and San Diego
Mrs. Williams
Slate University.
The couple plan to live in San-
ta Ana after a trip to Carmel
and Lake Tahoe.
5 0th cruise
Herb and Teri Ford, who have
been Balboa Isla nd residents for
40 years, recently celebrated
.RUFFELL'S ····································~ ="WHAT'S A POPCORN PARTY?~·: ur woLSTHY
s. •• ~ ..............
1 tu H°A1101 1\.Vat.
,COSTA MI U -= 14_1•1 !U
• • ,.. ..................... :: 1.:'.:0: 9 ...... c.tf,: : °"' .., ...... ........ ....... ...,.. • • ..... c~_.,... ...... ,.... ............ :
.,... ..... 1 • :. .1 ... ,..., .. ....-.,.,...~--. a--~~~~~---1 : POPCOIMPAIT9SUMLIMITID :
: CALL 1714t la..2Jl0 : .......... ; ................... ...._ ...... . If it'sgot
wheels,
you'll move
It faster In a
Dally Pilot
classified
ad.call
642-5678 and a
f rlendly ad-
viser wlll
help you
turn your
wheels Into cash.
Mrs. McRae
their 50th wedding anniversary
with an 8-day cruise of the
Hawaiian Islands. 1
They also were given a sut·
prise dinner party hosted by Mr.
and Mrs. John Konschnik and
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Brownell.
The Fords were married •t
the Presbyterian Church in
Hollywood in 1931.
Fifty friends were invited lo
share their special day. '•
ROLE REVERSAL -San Diego Chargers
quarterback Dan Fouts (left) tries out a new
JM)sition as he takes a handoff from backup
quarterback James Harris at the team's
b ilyPilat
TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1981
CLASSI Fl ED C4
.. ~ ..........
training camp Monday on the University of
San Diego campus. There's no need to fear.
however, as Fouts will be doing the handing
off come opening day.
Mitch Kupchak appears
to be the Lakers'
new power f orioord. C2.
Bas.ehall blackout
Nobody's talking about the talks
WASHINGTON (AP> The mouthpieces have
been gagged in the baseball talks -once they
.leave the negotiating table. Whether that means
stadiums will soon ring with the cry of "Play
ball!" remains to be seen.
The two sides in the 40-day-old strike were to
resume negotiations over the issue of free-agent
compensation today, with a news blackout im-
posed at the s ugges tion of Labor Secretary
Raymon~ Do!lovan.
DONOVAN WAS DUE BACK at today's talks
after spending some four hours with the two sides
Monday, the first session In Washington after
more than two months in New York.
"We've had face-to-face tallrs all afternoon.
There's a press blackout-;-" said Kenneth Moffett,
acting head of the Federal Mediation and Concilia·
lion Service and the mediator for almost two
year's in baseball's war over free-agent com·
pens a lion.
Moffett refused to discuss what went on at the
session in the feder al agency's downtown head·
quarters, but later told the Associated Press that
negotiators "had never been further apart."
Generally, news blackouts are viewed as pro·
tection for negotiations reaching a critical stage or
close to settlement. Moffett declined to charac-
terize the blackout imposed Monday that way, but
reit.eraled that h e felt the intensive
medical coverage of t he talks while in New York
had hindered progress.
"THE MAIN REASON for the blackout is the
same reason we came to Washington," he said.
"The two sides should be allowed lo talk back and
forth without having to come down here to the
press room like it's a tennis match."
Members of the two negotiating teams
declined comment as they left the building .
.. Hope you g uys have a nice evening,"
Ra ymond Grebey, director of the owners' Player
Relations Committee. said to reporters as he de·
parted.
Marvin Miller , the usually talkative executive
director of the Major League Players Association,
would only smile a nd nod as reporters approached
him .
Donovan also declined comment.
DONOVAN HAD CALLED the two sides to
Washington to try to budget the stalled talks
toward a settlement.
"You're hopinc for the best always," said
Miller as he entered the building Monday .
Grebey, the club owners' chief bargainer, said
he saw no significance in the shift from New York.
"I don't feel that the location has much im·
pact ," he said. "We will bargain however we feel
is best."
DONOVAN MET WITH each side separately
for about 45 minutes Monday, then attended a joint
negotiating session which ended just before 6 p.m.
The two sides should be al-
lowed to talk back and for th
without having to come down
here to the press room -like a
tennis match.
Mediator Kenneth Moffett
EDT. as the two sides broke for caucuses, accord·
ing to D.J . Yount, a spokeswoman for Moffett.
Nancy Broff, the Mediation and Conciliation
Service's acting general counsel, sajd Donovan
told the two sides "he hoped we would get a settle-
ment," but declined to say If he had applied pres-
sure for quick resolution.
"We have had negotiations and we are conti-
nuing to have nE:gotiations," Broff said. "The
secretary has spent some time listening and some'
lime talking."
The lol' of the strike grew as negotiations re-
s umed. Since it began June 12, 476 games includ-
ing 14 today have been wiped out. That amounts to
23 percent of the 2,106-game schedule. ,In addition,
t he All-Star Game scheduled for last Tuesday
night in Cleveland has been postponed indefinitely.
DONOVAN, WHO TALKED with the two sides
for about one hour in New Yoi:k last Wednesday,
was asked upon arriving Monday if he expected to
reach a quick end to the 40-day-old walkout.
"Gee, I pray to God we do," he said. ··1 ex-
pected to accomplish lo get things moving again
by bringing the talks here, and we have things
moving again."
Negotiations broke down last Thursday after
Grebey presented, along with a modification of the
owners' free -agent compensation plan, a set of
(See BASEBALL, Page C3)
For Ralillshani it's not life or death
E dison High and USC gr aduate is determined to enjoy his chance at tight end
By JOHN SEVANO .,. .. Ditty,... .....
For many rookies, NFL's summer
training camps are life-and-death silua·
lions.
For those novice pro~ who went
through college for sports -not an
e<lucalion -training camp signifies
either the continuation of a promising
career, or a new start al the bottom of
the heap.
Fortunately, for Vic Rakhshani, he
devoted his college career at USC to
both athletics and academics. And,
maybe it's for that reason the free
agent tight end entered the Raou' train·
ing facility with a little different ceptions for 509 yards (10.6 average> position that's constantly in motion and
philosophy from the rest. and 10 touchdowns. used primarily as interference for the
"I decided lo come in, have fun. work The Edison High graduate ac· deep-back in USC's I-formation.
hard. keep my mind in lune and enjoy it complished his numbers. too, by play· "I'm just glad I'm back to my natural
. .. regardless of the outcome," said ing a position foreign lo the college and position," said Rakhshani. "It feels
Rakhshani Monday as he laid on the pro game. Listed as a tight end on good to get back into a three-point
grass al Cal State Fullerton in between paper, Rakhshani's real title was that of stance and block people again."
two-a-day workouts. a V-back. Rakhshani knows his work is cul out
"I like the challenge I have because It "It's a position that hurt me," ad· for him with three veterans (Henry
gives me something to push for. This mitted Rakhshani. "because the pros Childs, Victor Hicks, Walt Arnold) and
way I have fun. It's hard work -but don't run it. On the one hand it showed a seventh-round draft pick <Ron Battle)
it's fun." versatility, but on the other I wasn't on standing in his way, but the 6·3, 225·
Rakhshani went through three years the line to block." pounder also feels he has what it takes
of bard work and fun al USC (he spent In John Robinson's offensive design, to make the grade.
his freshman season at San Jose State). the V-back is a combination tight "Everything is very intense," said
ln bis rour-year career. he totaled 48 re· end/running back/wide receiver. It's a (See RAIUISHANI, Page C3) Vic R4JcJuhani ~~~~-~--~-------~~~-~~-~~
Penguin to co-star
in giant snake film
Dodgers' Cey plays detective
Maybe if McEnroe
umpi red match .. •
HOLLYWOOD <AP> -Many
baseball players have expanded
,their horizons during the current
major league strike, and Ron
Cey. the third baseman for the
Los Angeles Dodgers, ls no ex-
ception. He ls golng to appear ln
a movie.
Cey , known as "The
PenfUin," ls toina to co-star in
a tum about a clant snake.
AT A NEWS conference Mon-
day. Cey wu introduced as a co-
:star with David Carradine, the
leadln1 man of television's
"Kuna Fu" series several years ••Or-bl a theatrical mm called ••serpent: The Ultimate
Thriller." The film now ln pro-nctton should be released in Oc-
tober or Nonmber.
"I play an LA-bued detec:tlve
worktnc with David on a eertn
of m11fertou murders,'1 Cey
1ald. "He ha um theory that a
stant make ii klllla• the people
aod I'm very lbptlcaJ about it."
"It'• a wild ttleory,'• Car-
radine lnterruDted. "You try to
1aave me eertllled (u cra17).''
Larry Cohen, ~UC· •• • wrttial pd the
.... Ndd that ahould u.. cw-
t bMeball pla,..• •trik• -•bile C.,'1 role ii belnf 1bot, •·we'd ..... al'CNlld tt." c.,w ........... ... eerabll U.. atrib, wbleb bel
....... ... .... .......... for ..,..
"I'm a little bit confused and
disappointed b y the whole
thing."
But Cey said he w•s not "sit-
ting home and brooding," but
rather enjoying his summer.
"I'm 18 years old again,'' he
said. "That's the last tirpe I had
an open summer.
Cey, wbo has no formal acting
experience, said his countless
television interviews and 11
years of experience in major
league ball games will allow
him lo be relaxed and "give it
my best shot" during the days
he will actually be involved In
shootin~.
"THIS IS STBICl'L Y a short
term deal," said Cey. "Maybe
it'll open a door, maybe it
won't."
One of: the reporters at the
news cOO?'erence was Rick Mon-
day, a teammate of Cey's with
tbe Dodlen. Monday worked for
KABC-'tV Jut winter and re·
turned to the station H a
sportacuter when the 1trlke
betan lalt month.
The ftlm In which Cey it •P-
pearm, ii tbe 10th for Cohen
"ho baa wrttta, produced Ud
dlredeil llOIM other &ow·IMadl«
tbrlllen nch H "Burled AUve."
"I've worked wtth 1tbleta
before: Clluek Connon and Jlln
...... ... Oobea ..td ... ,,.., ...
... .,. waned out well. TheJ're
NI~ In frGll& al &M eamera." ·
No cme ..-. ;!t. uacUy whet
C.y Would .. • but C.ohiD
Hid, "He'll.., alJ rtpt."
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) -
Wimbledon c hampion John
McEnroe and others in the pro
tennis circuit might not be so
critical of an umpire's work ll
they had to take the job when
they weren't playing.
Notre Dame tennis coach Tom
Fallon suggests players occupy
the umpire's chair when they
are not competing.
"I don't think it's too much to
ask a guy who is making a small
fortune off the game to call a
match aft.er be plays in one,"
Fallon said.
''It's very easy lo criticize the
establlahment, but it might not
be so easy for players to
criticise their peers, especially
when they may be showerin1 wilb them or playing doubles
with them later on."
Fallon says be'• seen the
system work in Mexico and
bellev• it could be implemented
Other places u well.
McEnroe waa flne4 and •Ull
faces the po11ibllity of addl·
tional fines and a 1utpension foe
his pl'Otettl of umplru' calla at
Wimbledon. "Ad mlttedly, pl ICH like
Wimbledon u.se older IUY• wbo
m11ht not have the eyullbt they
1bould," Fallon aaid. "And
McEnroe aeems to th1nk be can
lee betW' than odlefl allJWIJ.
Wbo bowl? Ma1be be can."
rallcln .... that IDOlt ol ta..
top plQWt would not be wWIN
to take their turn u Judt•, tMi
antlcl,._ tbat aome Will ~
tlnue to abule oftldall. ..... ..,pro ...... pla1en r..I·
11 are .pretty Mlflab," ,......
1ali. "If tb'1 want top-notc:la ol-
nclatlna ud don't want to do It
themselves, they s hould pay a
certain percentage of the purse
to officiating.
'•A match or championship
calibre needs 12 peQple working
it and all they get ls a jacket, a
lunch and a chance to sit in the
shade of a tent after the match."
F o r the S urf,
it's one game
at a time
CALGARY -"Ri&bt now, it's
just one game at a time, and all we
can do ia give it the best effort we
can," says California Surf Coach
Laurie Calloway.
That pbiloeopby worked Satur·
day nilbl when the Surf downed
the hoet Portland Timben, 3-2 in
overtime to keep any chance ol an
appearance ln the NASL playoff•
alive, Calloway l1 hoptq tor a
·similar pe.rformance fonllbt
<1:30> qainlt CaJcary here.
The Surf's vtctory over t.be
Timbers -accompliabed
.tttiout the Hl'Vlce. ot the d ub'•
top ecoren, Laurie Abralaamt and Steve Mo,.,. -1ave tbeq)
II pobltl OD tbe HllOD anj
mo.eel them 11 ahead of fourth.
Plan llln loae la tbe W•t.ra Dti116cm .
Al~ Uliit team cu boMt Just a .... ,...,...., two .tttmtee could..,.* lurf blto em._,
Uoe ........ , ....... .....
wttla ................. .
wbo antWillwlu. lOlf!Otlall. •
. I
' I t
'
, I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Tuesday, July 21 , 1981
Getting tips
from the top
Norm Ni:ron (left) tower1
over young1ters during a re-
cent El Toro basketball
camp by the Laker star.
Above shirtless Mtke Cobb
wrestles for the ball while
Chri1 Tougas tunes up hil
ball handling below. Ni:ron
f 10) and Butch Carter over-
looked the workouts, while
Bob Brown (bottom photo)
found things pretty e:rhaust-
tng.
Delly Piiot photos
by Chert.a Sterr
............. , .. -"
Kupchak to sign
I
1.akers' offer sheet
From AP dlapatebe1
INGLEWOOD -Forward Milch m Kupchak has agreed to sign an offer
sheet believed to be worth $5.6
million for seven years with the Los Angeles
Lakers, the National Basketball Association
team said late Monday.
According to the Lakers, Kupchak's at-
torney, Larry Fleisher, said the offer sheet will
be signed today and presented to the
Washington Bullets.
After the formal offer is signed, the Bullets
have 15 days to match the Lakers' offer lf they
wish to keep Kupchak. They couJd also match
the offer and trade Kupcbak to another NBA
team to keep from losing the former University
of North Carolina standout without compensa-
tion.
Kupcbak, 27, is a 6-9 23S-pounder who was
selected by the Bullets as the 13th player picked
in the first round of the NBA draft in 1976.
During his first three pro seasons, he
averaged almost 14 points and seven rebounds
per game. A back injury near the end of
Kupchak's third year with the Bullets forced
him to miss much of the following season.
However, he came back last year to averag~
12.5 points and 6.9 rebounds.
Kupchak was the starting center on the 1976
United States Olympic team that won the gold
medal and also was the Atlantic Coast Con-
ference player of the year in 1975-76.
Quote of the day
Former New York Yankees pitcher
Ralph Terry, now a golf pro in Kansas,
after failing to qualify for the Western
Open: "I made some bad decisions out
there. I can't blame Yogi (Berra, his
catcher for the Yankees> for calling the
wrong signs."
U.S. trounces Senegal, 91-35
BUCHAREST, Romania -m Americans, Poles. Cubans and Mex-
icans scored lopsided basketball vic-
tories Monday at the World University Games.
The United States beat Senegal 91·35, Mex-
ico downed Jordan 138·33, Cuba whipped
Somalia 114-54, and Poland defeated Nigeria
102·48.
The United States got 16 points each from
guards John Bagley of Boston College and
Howard Carter of Louisiana State in wiping out
Senegal.
Colt's price tag: $3,500,000
LEXINGTON. Ky. -A pair of
Northern Dancer-sired yearling colts
sold for a total of sa;soo,ooo at U\e
Monday night session of the Keeneland Selected
Yearling Sale. The $3,500,000 paid for one or
them was a new world record for a yearling
colt. The top price more than doubled the pre·
vious record yearling figure or $1,700,000, set al
the same auction last year, sale officials said.
The new record also far surpassed the previous
high of $1,000,000 for a thoroughbred of any age.
s.. .... 1-st-.. •-Ooot ccaa S•• ....,"' •°"" .,.,.
coetA-'41•1219 ,_..._._
-.... ~1 -~c.--is-.... ...., ... _,,_,,
Baseball today
On lhil date ln llMS:
The Detroit Tigers and tbe Philadelphia
A's battled to a 24-lnnin1. 1-1 tie ... the
longest tie game in American Leape hlt-
tory.
Today's birthdays:
Atlanta relief pitcher Al Hrabolky ta 32.
New York Mets infielder Mike CUbba1e la
31.
Light winds stow Mackinac race
MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. -IJ Light winds and poor visibility were
the order of the day as a fieltl of
nearly 300 boats in the 74th annual Cblcaao-to-
Mackinac Island yacht race lnched their way up
Lake Michigan Monday.
"They were becalmed most of tbe day,"
said race committee spokeswoman Kathy
Mitchell al Macklnac Island. ,
The winds, which were about 5 knot.I mott
of the day, had picked up to about 10 k.nota from
the north-northwest by late aft~rnoon. she said.
Unofficial reports had Heritage, owned by
Don Wildman of Chicago, leadln1 tbe fteet,
Mitchell said. "But no one's sighted them," she
said.
The Coast Guard ai Frankfort. aald it bad
r:eceived reports that the lead bo'ta had begun
reacbint the passageway between tbe Manitou
Islands at Pyramid Point, still about 100 miles
from their finaJ destination.
Mitchell said race officials predicted a mid-
night Monday arrival time for the flnt finishers
in the 333-mile race, which began Saturday. She
said some of the smaller boat.a would not finish
until late today.
Benjamin passes his first test .
Guy BeaJamln, recently acquired EiJ
fro m New Orleans, threw two
touchdown passes for San Francisco
Monday as t}Je 49ers outscored Oakland in a
controlled scrimmage. JJenjamiri completed 9 of
16 passes for 202 yards. Raiders' M1rc wu ... , a
second-year pro, was 7 of 14 for 96 yards and
one TD . . . Fullback, Joh• lteywortlt1 a Denver Bronco since 1974, announced his retire-
ment ... Veteran defensive end Claade H••·
pbrey checked into Philadelphia's training
camp as a free agent Monday and ended the
day with a new one-year contract ... Guard
Jim Ritcher, Buffalo's top draft pick last year,
suffered a knee injury. shortly after the begin-
ning or the team's first preseason practice ...
The Pittsburgh Steelers continued two·a-days
despite heavy thunderstorms in Pennsylvania.
NFL netted just $22.5 million
1 The National Football League .•
had $326 million in total .income in
1979 but the league's net income after
taxes was estimated at just szz.s mllllon or
$836,000 per team, according to an NFL exhibit
introduced Monday at the Oakland Raiders' an-
li·trust trial against .the league ... Teti
Tompklaa and Jim Hefaer have been named u -
slstant athletic directors at USC. Tompkins iJ a
resident of Costa Mesa . . . Jemdfer &Ille, at-
torney for former boxing promotor a.. PleNI,
was acquitted Monday of two cbarees of ob-
struction of justice . . . Double Olympic 1old
medal winner Charlie Jeakias is expected to be
named Villanova University's new tract and
field coach.
Television, radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Salt Laite City at Van-
couver, 7:30 p.m .. KMPC (710); Rebroadcast of
1957 World Series (New York Yankees vs.
Milwaukee Braves, game six), immediately
following Gulls' game, KMPC (710).
·DELMAR
OPENS WEDNESDA~
COME~'{!AND .
The waiting's almost over. On Wednesday,
July 22 , racing will be back where the turf
meets the surf.
It's the first of 57 beautiful summer
afternoons filled with thrills and
ente~ainment. Thoroughbred racing's best
horses and jockeys will be battling for the
winner's circle in nine exciting races daily
except Tuesday.
General admission is $2. 25. Seniors 65
and over, $1.00on weekdays. Call
Greyhound about special racetrack buses, ,
or ride Amtrak. It all starts Wednesday at Del
Mar. Come out and play.
Oalll openlOrlmfylW ...... 8&30 ...
•
..
..
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U •l\«le I). II pelcl $2ti.SO.
llXTM llACI. I mil• •·Y••r-<>ICb ancl ..... P11rM MO,OOO
51111 01-IPoncey> t 00 1 tO UO
OH·AclVO(OI""' IVelen,1welel • 00 l.a OH·Hell11Ye C-r (Ll..,..ml l . .O 1 . .0 Also ran Forei9' Seu11arv, Hill Slllp,
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S1 ••IKle IHI pelcl -SO
U PIO Sla tS-).C•).+J) pelcl Sll,I• COwltll
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tickets"'"'""'"'"'
From Page C1
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Mlto lfo'(O, T.__ l"lomo, S.... °'*" OrHrn, Miii Doell Ont
ll'OU•TN tllACI. COO Y••Ch 1.ytar......_
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Also ren: T~. ~-. F .. 1 Jet. fire. NoJ .. S"ll. TtlonleclTlm
llXTH llAC8. 170 yorclt. l·yur-olcls. Clalmlno _ .. U,SOO.
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s.,or11,,.o.ni1a CFryoeyJ 1110 IC.00 , .. Mtrlln toy I 0.1omo.1 s.AO J 10
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OllTIUCT » TOUllNAMaNT
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OIST•ICT U TOU•NAMINT tot u OoolM.1 H'9411 ,,......,..Sc_
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Misc.
RAKHSHANI EYES THE PROS • • •
~ ~ Rakhshani or camp. "In college you'r e pretty well
~ e stablis hed and know where you stand. H e re. it's like ~ starling all over again."
~ From that s tandpoint. Rakhshani thinks the
play a contro lled scrimmage against the Dallas
Cow boys Saturday <noon l at the Cal S tate
Fullerton facility.
~-mentaJ aspect will be his to ughest hurdle.
··What we d o is physically demanding." he ex-
plained, "but it's the mental that keeps you going.
If you can s tay in tune mentally it can keep you
above ever yone e lse."
Rakshanki said the Rams weren't the only
team lo put out a feeler for his services. The
Pittsburgh S teelers . among others . gave him a
call. But R a khshani reasoned the odds w e re tough
en ough without going to a foreign part of the coun-
try
"I could h ave gone bac k East but I wanted to
s tay near ho me. a nd I 've always wanted to play
with the Rams."
R akhshani a dded that the prospect of not mak·
ing the team d idn 't worry him. He s aid if he didn't
make the squad he could always get involved in
youth groups a t h is Church , teach or maybe even
do a little acting (he took acting courses at USC>.
Those thoughts, h o wever , are secondary to his
main objective.
"It's going to be a real challenge making a
team like this, but I think I c an," said Rakhshanl.
"There's no reason to s hake or worry to death -it
c a n o nly hurt you."
R ak.shani will get his rtrst t est when the Rams
Berkhardt nabs DPYC race
Aries. s kippe red b y Bob Berkhardt. Dana ~oint Yacht Club, was the overall winner Sunday
In the fourth race of OPYC's Dana Point Series for
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet y achts.
Second was California Gold, Lee Colt, OPYC ,
and third was Valkyrie. Bill Murray, Capistrano
Bay Yacht Club.
C lass winners:
CLASS A -1. California Gold ; 2. Big Kahuna.
Mark Townsend, DPYC.
CLASS B -1. Aries; 2. Valkyrie; 3. Mackinac.
C LASS C -1. Sunset, Steve Dutton, DPYC; 2.
Holo Klki, Rick Raff, Capo BYC; 3. Firedrtll, Mike
Reardon. Capo BYC .
CLASS D -1. Sunshine. Ron Malanosky,
DPYC : Breakaway. Gary Allen. DPYC.
Golison wins in Mallory Cup
l..OS ANGELES -Mark Gollson ot Alamitos
Bay Yacht Club, LonJ Beach,waa the wlMtr of the
Mallory C up quarter·rtnal eUmlnaUont at Lot
An1eles Yacht Club Sunday.
The Mallory Cup l,t the United State• Yacht
Racing Union 's North American Junior cbam·
plonship ror three-man crews.
Runner·up was Harry Paltl50n1 Ne.-pc>rt
Harbor Yacht CJub, and thltd wu Ty Beach,
Balboa Yacht Club.
Shy win• BYC reptta
Ten ElcbelJs.22 atlppen tiii'Ded out Satu.rd.ay
tor Balboa Vac.bt Club'• One Oeilta Re11tta. n. wtnner •M Shy, 1kl~C.:: Don hver, sou~ Yadat Club; WU Spirit
kott ltaldlW. ffewpon Harbcw Yaebt Club, i.Dd lh1ril "° mdlater, Phil Lyom, Soutb Shore. Y1cbtClub.
His first real action, though. won't be until
Aug. 10, when the Rams open their preseason
sch edule against New England.
"Yeah. I'm wondering what It's going to be
like,•· said Rakhshani. "I 'm wondering how much
my body is going to hurt the next day.
"But that's the name or this game -pain.
Foot-pain-ball. It's rootball's middle name. but
that's the way it is."
It almost makes a person wonder if It's really
w orth it.
From Page C1
BASEBALL • • •
conditions for a settle ~ent. O n e would d eprive
players of credit for major league sttvice for at
least the first 35 days or the strike.
Service time, while it a ffects all 650 players in
s u ch areas as e ligibility for saJary a rbitration and
pe nsions. also is a key factor in determining
eligibility for Cree agency. A player must t{_ave put
in at least six years of major league aervi~e to be
e ligible to become a free agent. The Basic Agree·
ment says 172 days make a baseball year. This
sea son . the re were 181 d ays between the season·
o pener in Cin c innati a nd the 13 finales in early Oc·
tober , providing a cushion o f nine days, which was
quickly eaten up In the strike . •
THE UNION, WITH MILLER saying nothing
less than full service credit would be a ccepted, re·
jected the p roposed modification and the owners'
settlement conditions. Miller proposed sending the
e ntire case to binding arbitration. T he owners'
negotiators turned down that plan.
Donqvan m et separately w ith Miller a nd
Grebey the n e xt day and asked th,m to s h irt
negotiations to Washington in a "last ditch" effort
to s a ve the seaaori.
Accompanying Grebey to Monday's talks were
presidents Chub Feeney of the National Lea1ue
and Lee MacPhall of the American League. Join·
Ing MiUer were Bob Boone oC the Philadelphia
Pblllles, the NL player representatlve: Oou1
DeCincet of the Baltimore Orioles, the AL player
rep, and team representatives Mark Belanaer of
Baltimore, Steve Ro1era o f Montreal and Phil
Garner of Pittsburgh.
Mackinac sails to victory
Brilk winds and three·f oot followtn1 seu tent
the yacht.a scuddlns home Sunday ln Capi1trano
B ay Yacht Club's 14·Mllt Bank race, I.he third ot
the club'• Ocean Racine Sertn.
Overall and Clau 8 wlnntr wu Wta
TbomPMn'• Macklnac from the bolt club. Sttoad
overall wu Tory, skippered by Robert Doddl,
Newport Karbor Yac:ht Club, and thlrd w11 "ffk· Itta, aalJtd by A.J. Kadln1. Captttnno .. ,. Yacht
Club.
ClaMwtMen:
CLASS A -l. Tory; a. Rawhide, lltn Kuhn,
Capo BYC; I . Matte Uot, Hobie Alttt, DPYC. C~ 8 -1. Ma~\lnae : 2. lltclllell: 3. Gan·
dalr, ~and Slll.lllM Joae1. D~VC
'
·----··
Orange Coast OAILV PILOT(Tuesday. July 21 , 1981
PUBLIC NOTICS
Cll"t W l"OUtfTAt• VAUAY, CAu,..•IA
.cn1CC .... t'fl ... ltDI 8AIYV~c.MM•I&. .~ ............. ,.
NCMU't .... ..
MOTltt 11 MlllCIY el-NI .,.,..._v.....,._..,,.,~
'' oe ..... , •• .,._ Cltttf ~ v.ci.y, ~ .. " ,_, .. _ ...
.,...... ...... ...,. 1:• '·"'· eft Jiiiy JI, 1.,, W UllW\lei141l ff llW
I Mt Ve111¥ a.-i Slorm Otoln 7A
In ll••r A--Siii\ ...... lt,...I 111 ucett•11u •1111 ll'lollt •nt 5'«11~ ,.,_... IMll .. ~ llMllr _ ... _ .. ..,, .. ~ ...
•l' -· .. .._ .. _....,.., MC.Wiiy
"""''" _, .. .-HketNM. All Pf• ""°'' ... , M -ftl .. f'•Oll'OIA'-ON f'll()JICT NUMal• 4421 one ,,,., ... or lltlfvt,... .. •• 10 • In tM .....,. o# .. Cllr Clef11 el lier Office In
,,. Cllr Hiii, ,._. 11e1" A-. on
~ Mf-... '-' tie ... , Al Ille •· ,..._,.,.lime ell IN06 rec .. ..-wlll M Pll .. l<IY •••11••• •••mlnecl entl CIKIM .. 11¥ ltw Clly Cleril. 1-n
encl tM ... le -1 .... 11ec1 '° .. preMftf al Ille WCIOl'Ml911 Of '6111 P'tPOMIS.
All 1»1• .. reul..0, uemlnad .,.., tt<ltr .. wtll .. reterreo 11y Ille Clly
Cl"'ll It .. Oty Enel-t •"41 Ille Clly AllorMY lflr (flt<lllllQ eM ,_, .....
c11, c-11 •• It• rt911ler "'"""' on Allfl/tl 4, lttl et 1.00 p.rn
~, .... lo ~lftt wort<, .. "-Ire< 16' Mel tll WIK on tr ec tors allell ol>-tel n. 1111111\ftt llCenM from IN City 01
Fo11n1t1n Volley In eccoraence wllll
llle City Ml.inicl1141I Cocte, vo111 .... '· Tl· lie S, C"°9t'" S.CW-S.OI In acccw~ wllll tM pro•l•lons of S.cllons 1110 lP 1111, lnclvslw, ot tM
L•-COllt ol Ille Stolt 9' C.llfornle, IM Clly COIOllCll 9' IM Clly ot F-tein
Volley ,.. l>'f rno11111on eooptecl tM
prenlllng -1y ••le of ••ee• tor
•NII cr•lt ~ lype ot worllm•n or
rnechenlc -to eaec1111 tht ton· trec:t wlllcll wlll lie -•r-to the WC· ceulul llidder, ti O.lermlnecl llY Ille
Stele 01•«1• of ·~•r••• R•l•llOn•. The contrec:lor sll•ll pro•lcle •11cfl <ompa-lon lftwrence ff required
"' Ill• ....-c-ol Ille St•I• of Colllornoe. -shall 1ae<11I• • con-lr•clor'• certlllc•ll r911ercll1>9 Miid cornpa11wt1on ,._1,.,,..nls The <on·
lroctor INll l11ttMr r-lre •II •wl>-
contreclors to Mmllerly prowlele '""" corn.,...sotlon lnwrence lcw all ot 11'9 sllllcontrector"s •rnc>IOY"' Tiie <on·
lroclo,. aftcl s11l»<ontrec:ton 111011
l11rftl'1t lht City • cerUllt•ll ol wolwer
of W~OQetion -r lht terms of the wortter'1 ~omc-nw1ton inwrM<e Ho llld will oe consloered unleu It I•
m•d• on Ille olllcl•I lll•n-form r11r11lltled by ""' Clly encl I• ,,,_ In
IK<ordence wit.II UW pro•l•lon\ of 1111• Hallee encl the _.1 reQVlnrnenh
OllCI COllClitionl SM lo<'th llncler Section
l of Ille Spec 11 o< •Cl-. E tK1> llldoe r
m111t lie lie-in ec:cordenct witll
•PPllCoblt •lel• I•~ Plans, •Petlllcellons •llCI olllc101 pr-wl forms to be uHd tor oidclln1
con t>e ol>te•...ci only •I tllt otllc• 01 tlle
City E"91,_r, Clly H•ll
Cost DI sold Pl..,, -Speclli<allons II $1 00 1ncludlng tu II I,_ 1>1-r re PO•ll tll.el the PIMU •llCI Spec1lk .. IOM
t>e wn111y me11, ,,.. ma11tng -hellCll
•no clleree shall be.,.-·'-•' u oo Hellll•r Ille cosl ol lllt Plans encl 59e<lllulions ,_ ,,. CO\I OI rnelll1>9
encl ll•nclllng wlll lie relundecl Tr.. City,_,,., lht rlOf'lt lo re1ec1
any or •11 l>ICh Evetvn McC......,
City Clerk ot Ille
"'' ol FOU11l•1n v.11 • .,, ca111w"'•
OA TEO J-. 1'1'1 P111111"'9cl Or~ Coe\! Delly Pltol.
)u•v 21, •tet ll~t
PUBLIC NOTICE N.,....
e.c ... flM.1••00 NOTICI TO C•IOITOllS 011' SULK fllAlflll'lll ANDOll' INTIMTIC* TO
fllANIPI• ALCOMOLIC a1vat1AOIE LICllllSaCSI (Stu.
'1'1 .. 1'7 U.C.C. __,,., 14'11 U~I
Nolle• Is ,_..,., ,,_ •-• 1>u1-
lret1•ler ol --1 ~ •nd • tremfer ti"-llunM(tl "-.it 10
be lftedoe.
Tiie -· Soclel SK11rl!y N""'ller,
-m•lllftQ eclblr••. -ZIP com H11mber, ol ttle tr.,sferors are
ARMAND H. PARADISE, SR ..
•OJt~1.mt.
KATHERINE P PARADISE. ••U·20·-· llOO Alrwey Ho lU, Coste~ C.lll~nl• t»». Tiie ftames. So<l•l S•curlty
Nwmber, -,.,..111ng edllren , -ZIP C-N-. of UW ,,...,,.,..., .,..;
FREOJ. SMI TH, •Jt).JO.t ....
PRISCILLA K S MITH .
• 111·»41Z>. 21072 ArntlerwlO Lena,
Hvnllft910n llffcll, Celiforno• •-Tllet Ille --.1 P<_I., to t>e lra.,slerr9cl Is ~rl-In ..,..,.1 at
,,. ••• , •••• ., IVPOflff, M•r<tt•ndh•, equl.,_, tori lurnllurt , liaturH ano
••wlpment. lractenam•. oooclwlll.
INM, •--cl 1mprow,.,...h of "" 111aln1u known e a PARADISE
SANDWICH SHOP -'' louted el 1100 Alrwey No. to, Cost• Mes•. Celllornle, ...,..,., .. 1111 IM 1o11-l1>9
clesc rllltcl elcohtltc 11ew•••1• llc.,.Mts). Off Sol• ... r -Wine License Triat &IOJ07t ,_ 1.....ci few
w lcl premi-. tor -·-toulecl el JIOO Alrw•y Ho 10 , CHta MHe,
C•lllornl•. Thet IM toiet cons-•llon for IM lron•ler ol wlcl l>usoneu encl ol Hid
ll<enH(ll Is "" ...,,, ol US, 100.00 ln-Cllldl"11 1-ory eslimal.O et 1100 00.
Wfll<" c..istsol uw IOIS0-1119 Per-I CNO SS,000 ot
Oem•ncl-lolle rtplec:ecl •ltll Usl\ lllrou9" nc,_ $1, IOO.cx
Prom11--,. "°'°' In ,.,,., ol ...... w .ooo.oc
Tl\01 llllel ..... --bet-Sele
1ren1twen -Mid tr-ferors tlwll COflslcleratlon +. tM ,,..,~ 01 Mid
l>ull...U -of ..... lkenWIS) Is lo .. jNllcl on1, eller lremler hes -n .,.._
pro••cl t>y Oepertmonl of AICIWlll<
•••••• .. Conlrot. IMI''"°"' to Soc tCOIJel ..... .
Tll•I ... Mr91n •ncri-lrentlert
•re It lie c.,_ttd, WC>fect to ttlt •llov• prowltlons, el SERVICE
ESC•Ow COMPANY, U211 Bt•cll lh•cl , MAnl!N..,, CA '261:1. on or •It•• A\191111t 11, "'' Allol-llutl<les.t_._ ....
drHMt -&,, th&,,.,..,.,°'' •llnin ltwff ye.,.. let JNKI, .. ler •• llnoWfl lo ,,..,,,.._,.,.., none.
Nome --. .. 01 ••u-llolclH: Service £Jcnw c:.m,.n,, U2'2 Bee<ll
•l•cl., WH1m1Mt«, CA tHIJ.
Oolecl: Jiiiy u , "" Fr9dJ. Smltll
Prls<IH• K Smith TrOflsf..-
~rmencl H. P.,.edlM, Sr
ll•tMrlne P. P.,.Odlw
fffltllf-1 T '°'*'' ..... Oranot C~HI Deily Pl!Otl J~y JI, ltSI )l}4.t
PUllUC NOTICE
PVBUC ~OTIC£ P1JSU.C NOTICE Pll BUC NO'l'IC ...,.... --,,
Tw Of'tel•., .,., N011c1 -lllO'ltCICN'MU NOTICE 01' O•ATH Of'! , .... ,.,,......,.J_U,t•1,1A-w-...,PllCN'eHY SHIRLEY J , LEB, AKA
Offlc•lf .. Or=='t'•-·· AO • .IHT'e&Al.8 IHfRLEY JANE LEa..,
••Tiu o,. ••uuu ••• ..... .._. ANO o~ PETITION Tu ~~\i':uou:u.u•M•OHD ·~:==:c:N~:· ADMINISTER ESTATE
'"" N•.tltll eoutrrtCN'OUNO• NO. A·1095'7 • ,.0.,.._ •••• .. •• •••Tot.a v 1cTo• T o a I I h 1 I r s ,
•M"OttTMr NOT•c• tlOVlltCN'f', ......._ b fl I I di • .. VOUll f'llOf'lltTY IS IN NOTICJI IS HlllC!"IY OIVIN ltlel ene c ar ts, e re tors
l'o•ac1..osu•• ••cAu11 You tN wwn""'9• .111 .. 11 •• ~•,,••• and contingent creditors of
• 11 1 1 1 " 1 .. o 1 N v o u 11 '°'•·.,.., -.111e '"' ... ., 01 A...,.,, Shlrley J . Lee, 1k1 Shlrlty f'AV-ilNfS l'f MAY II" SOL.O '"'·et lllt Office Oft 0 y_,., J 1 . nd ... WITMOU'f ANV OOUll'T ACTION .... "'° WllJHr• ...... lol/I .. mo. ".. ane '"'"· a Ptr10nS w .. ..,
,_ "'.., ._ .. ..,... ,...,. •• .;,1119 •111••••· C•lll••nl• -"· to th• may be otherwise Interest• ~eoc~111 ...,,~_,,,...,. lllel\HIMt11Kt11t-r~111tter"" ed In the wlll and/or
""•"" .,_. ,.., .,,. •Y"'-b 111ue ..,. <.....,,._ ...,...,.11., _t._., estate · ,.,.,,,._ cw•• ...ci • ....,.... w1t11111 ..,. "'*ltC1 • c.,..1,,,,.,..,, "' ..._ • I
""" --,...,,, THI DATI THll ....,.., c-\ •II ... rltl\I, lllle .... A pet Uon has been filed NOTICI OP 01'-'U'-T WAS lnltrHltht14tec••WO•ll~ll-Of by Katherine J . Prentice
1'9CO•oao. r11i. _ ,, 11,ttu1 ... 111 .,.. 1111 ri.,.., 1111e afttl inter••• In the Superior C:04.lrt of
•• •I JYIW U '"' afttl wlll iiw;r .... tlwll Nkl _. ... "°' uqulreo lly ._.., •• 0 C ""'" .,_. ecC-t •-<ll,,et1t. tltfl o1 ...., °' OVWt•ltt, ..,_,then., range ounty requesting v ... ,,.., noe ,.. .... ...., ,,. .... u,."" in .. ,.."°" to 1.1w1 o1 Mid fK.HMCI •• that Katherine J . Prentice
N I• '°'""°" o1 .,_ ecc.-• •• ,... .,. lime.,°""' lft -"'t"° ,.., pr .. be appe>lnted as personal
,,,..,_.. ""' ,....,.....,. •• tllt......o.il. ,.,,, "'"-c.untr ot °'..,..· St•tt •t t t I t d 11u1 '°" ,,_1 ,.., IN •"*"'' tt11t.f Celllwr .. tMectl ... •• 1 .. -.. re P res en a v e o a •
.-.... Ltt ~.,Tree• a.t• •• -.... m inister the estate of
Alter CIVee .......... ,,..... ,,. .... OI ~,., ...... Mt Of Mtp• ol o ...... Shlrley J . Lee, aka Shirley
recor••Uon ot 1111• --cw111<11 .11U111y, c.llf.,nl•. ™-·of tf111 Jane Lee (under the In. dtt• •I recor410on _,. 11ereon1. P'GPer1r Is J002 51.,_ A-. Hwit· .. n1eu ,._ obli_.t1on .. ,,.. totecloM 1no1°" IM(11. C.llf~I• ,,...., d ep e ndent Administration
llPOft permltu lenett pen ... .,.......... Term• Of .... ''"'" In lewt11I _, of Estates Ac t). The pell·
only '"• , ... , rteht 10 stop '"• •t 111e Unl!M Stal• on <Mtllrmetlon •' t lon Is set for hearlnn In loreclosw•• .. , ••ylllt Ill• •ntlt• ..... •r ,.,, Ctlh •n• ll•••n(t 0 t N 3 t 700 c·1 . •-tClltfnllf*tl-.~crMlw ••lclenuo lly not• .. cwrecl llY ep • 0 . a VIC
TO lflNO OUT TH! AMOUNT YOU ,,..,,, ... Of Tr11tt Deed on -"'°"'" Center Drive, Wes t, In the
MUST PAY, Oii TO ARRANGE FOR ly so lOlcl. Ten -cenl of ·-· bid c I t y 0 f s a n t a An a • A Y M E N T T 0 S T O P lo IN cle!IOll19" wllll l>lcl • Fo•rc1.osuRr. o • ., YOU• Blc1sorot1en,,,.,tti.1n ,.,111n1enc1 California on August 12,
P•OPERTY 15 IH FORECLOSURE Wiii iN recol.Wol lht olorew lcl oflltt, 1981 at 9: JO a .m .
FOR AHY OTHER REASON, C.OH· or mo lie tllM wllh '"' Clerk OI Mlcl IF YOU OBJECT to the TACT Swparlor ca.rt. 0t C14111•orea lo Ille Acl-. , cetMr1<1e J. Al-. • Cotdbr-. ,,.,lnh•r---11,, •• any u,,.. granting o f the petition,
I••''"· CAllt~nl• .,, .. Tel~ .,.., "™ llUl>llc•llon Of llllS nollce you should either appear
11ui m...ui •n0 ••-,..."'9 .. 1c1 u 1• at the hearing and state
11 yow hen e ny QllH llon" '°" D•l•cl. Jiiiy I, Itel b · t · f' I e slloulclcontectai.wy.irorlMgowrn· GoorteV Ho.1koll, your 0 l~C IOnS o_r I
menl ..-ncr wt1lc.11 tNy "'•• tna11recl A4rnlni1tretor tor w r itten objections with the
YOllr 1oen. se1c1oec-1 c o urt before the h earing. L.l:RG•A~·;r,~•;;.s Y,~u v~A ~ L~~~ :t.:O:.!:=".:!.t11.wetw Your appearance may be
t AKE PROMPT ACTIOfl P11llll-Or-Co.st Delly Pllol In person o r by your at-
H OT ICE OF DEFAULT ANO July ,,, IS, 11, "'' JI.,_., torney. ELECTIOfl TO SELL UNOEA DEED I F y 0 u A R E A
OF f"UST p Hot le• " "'""" oiwen '"•' UBLIC NOTICE CR E OITOR or a c o n t ·
c A v A L c A o E E s c R o w lngent creditor of the de·
CORPORATIOH,. C•llh>ml• CO'llO•• w~•••Olt cOU•T OP ceased , yoo must file your
llon ,, duly _.nted T"USTEE yn. THISTATIOll' c laim w ith the court or cler Ille loll-Ing ~rl-Oeecl or CALlll'OltNIA Trwa1 PO• THE COUNTY present It to the personal
TRUSTOR JAMES OAVIOSOH , Oll'O•ANOI representative appointed
JR ,u inet•..... CASENe.Alftttt b th t 'th' four BEHEFICIARY CATHERIHE J o•o•• TO~ CAUll[ y e cour WI in
ALOHSO,an_,,_•loclwom1111 cc.c.~.s.cu.izni months from the date of
R ECOROEO Merell u. '"'· •• 1n •• EOWARO NEAL AIHIER. I first issuance of letters a s ln•tr11""'"t No. uo.t, in -1-. 1., SANORA JuNEABHER-provided In Section 700 Of peOf 111 al Oflklol Recordi, In IM of· JAMES E. SCHMIOT, Ills per•nts. f ll<e of,,,. Recorder 01 ORANGE tor cll•ft9tolne""' the P robate Co de o
c ... n1,, WHEREAS, SAH DRA JuHI! Calif ornia. The time for
s A I D 0 EE 0 0 F TR u s T AIHER -JAMES £ SCHMIOT. filing c laims w ill not ex-OESCRIBES Petltl_., 01 IM mot• ana l•tMr f • t f th Lo11a1Trec1No 1uu ... --of appllcent EOWAA O HEAL pre prior o our mon s
on • M~ recorOed in -~ _, ABHER, • ....,_ _, 1191111.., c 1t1 f rom t he dale of the hear· » •na J.colM1au11-..,. Mec>s. In,,. .,..,,of -·,.., filed • P•llll.., w1ttt ing noticed above.
ot11ct or t"-countr Recoroer 01 '"' cion. ., ""' COllrt 1or •n oro.. YOU MAY E AM NE Or•n11 C011nty, C•lllornl•, •nc1 en cllanolno appllcanl'' n•m• lrom X I
.. ...... nt MORE FUlLY SET FORTH E 0 w AR 0 NEAL A 8 HE R I the file kept by the court.
IN THE DEED OF TRUST ABOVE !!OWAAOHEALSCHMIOT; If you a re interested in the "'::.~c:!ci00, Tr.ni .. .,,., c.,1•1n .. :!.:!0°:0::~~':,!:111',i.,,''::1:;; estate, you may file a re·
ol>ll901tOM Including 11\e not•h ) tor ·-•r ........ "'" C-l at IO'lO a m. QUeSt With the COOrt to re•
'"" •11m o1 •10.ooo oo °" •·""'· "' o.c>er1 ...... 1 No 1. of 111e cei ve special notice of the THAT lM llenalocl•I lnt•rtll unoer (allo .. Co..rt, IO<•ltd •t 100 CIYIC inventory Of estate assets lelcl Deed ol l•ll\I -,.._ ol>ll~toon' Ctnler Ortvt w .. 1 S•nte An• . M<11recl 11\er•bv art preMnl'y P>elcl llY C•lllornl•, -lllow ~ ....... ii eny,' and Of the petitions, a c -
IM 11nc1ersignec1, THAT • 11reec:11 01, w11y 111. Polltlon •~ CIWlnte o1 H•""' c ounts and r e p o rt s
end ••••ult In, 111e 01111~11ono tor 111ou1c1no1 begren1ec1. d escribed in Section 1200.S wlllcll well OoMcl ol Tru.I h MC11tlly IT IS FIJATHER OROEAEO thet • . "'' occ11rreo In 111e1 pey,,..nt llOS not '°"' of tllh 0roer 10 ~ 0 .,.. ._ of the California Probate
11tenrn-o1. p111111sh•d on 1111 0 011 ., P ilot Code.
T H E I H S T A L L M E N T 0 F ne"lllO-. e ,,._, of -rel
IHT EREST, WHICH BECAME DUE <lrc111a11 ... printed lft OrOf\91 C-ly,
"' A y 1 s . I •• I . A N 0 " L L C•lllornle, once • --for ,...,, WC SU 8SEOU ENT I HST ALLME HTS ceulwe _,prior lo"'-d•lt .. 1 lor
WHEH OVE. Mariftt onti.ePetlllon T HE SUM OF t l.••t 10, AO· DATED Jiiiy 10, lttl
VANCEO BY 8EHEFICIARY IH RonelclH. Pre"""r
John D. Lang, Attorney
at Law, Lan9 & Suttle,
22055 Clarendon St., Suite
201 , Woodland Hiiis, Ca.
91367 PAYMEHT OF OEl.IHOUE,_CIES JU119eolt""
DUE OM A PRIOA ENCUMB•AHCE S.C...ior Cou'1 P11bllltlecl Orenp Co.st Dolly Pi104 THAT lly rH_, IP>ereof. IM 11n CHA.LISE. WIE•E•, ISQ. July U , IS, 11, ltll Jl .... I
O.r1l1noct. pr_.,, -11<,.ry under KILLI•, WEISS, WlllR, GllOYE• lelcl 0-ot Tr!IM, "°' t10<ul.O -& •ACINIE cletl .. r•cl to H lcl clwl' eppolnllcl AltorM.,. al Ulw lrl•llH, • wrllton OeclarotlOft of 4ttl LI-Ave.
Oeleult -De...-lo<' wte, •NI f\O> Cy~u CA..""' de11oslted wlln 1olcl cluly •-inttd (IHI .ff.nit
Tr11s .... S<Kh Deed of Tr..st -all PwbllShed Orenge Cool! Dolly Pllol, cloc11ment1 ••lclenclno olllloellons Jiiiy u 11 ,. AllO • ,,., 1161 .. 1 atewred tlltr90y, Mel"°' Ot<l•ed -· · · · -s ....._ Ot<lere all ...,.., wc11red
IMr•ll., """-lotely -Mel peyellle
61\f "°' tl«i.cl end ...,.. -.11., elect lo ctuw .,,. lr\ISI pr0fet1y to Ille sacl 10
••ll•ly 1111 ollllt•tlons u c11recl thtrelly
DATE: J-U. Itel
~lhHlrw J, Alonto
P11llllaMd OrOf\91 Coott Dell., Piiot .
J-JO. Jiiiy 1, "· 11, , .. , 1'01·tl
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTtTIOUS IUSIMISI
NAM91TATIM•MT T II• lollowlno perMns •r• clolng ~nau•' FEDERAL SAFE OEf'OSIT CO .
t0t2 T•l-1, FOllnl•in V•lley, CA .,,.,
OAVIO P ISAAELSKY, tOt2 h lllt'1, Fow>ltln Volley, CA '210I
1£RNIE P SVALSTAO, 11171
Wlnclfommer. L•oun• Nltutl. CA .,.,, '
FRAHltLIN 0 BRYANT, tSU
O\lrl<ll Cir<••. Fountain Valley, CA .,, ..
Tllll l>uslnen Is <onduclect lly • 0tner el ,,.,._Slllp Oevld P. l1t ... uty
Tiiis ... ,_. WM liltcl with ...
County Clerll of Or•nee Covnty on =~~(~~HTE ATTOllNIY AT LAW "7t~A-.Wtetu M ........ lleedl.CA'IM1 .. ,._
Pullll.,..., Or .... Coe•I Dally Pllol, JurM)O,July1, ... 11. "'' ,...,..,
PUBLIC NOTICE
N•Ttn4
STATIMlllTOP AIANOOllMINT 011' UH 011' l"ICTITIOUI
•UllllllSSNAMI TM tot-no pa,_., ,..,,. at>en·
cion.a tM ""'of ,,. lk lltl0111 111111neu Nme EOUIOOH/FOXHILLS el 11•21 BerdHn Aw..,.,., Irvine, Colllornle
'271S
Tiie t1ctlt1ou1 1>uslneu n•m• ••·
'"'"' to --... wes llled on Oct-''·'"°· 1 JOl\n a. Per11w. 1011 E,,..,.,c1 a • .,
Drl•e, .......-a..c11, CA '2Ut
PUBLIC NOTICE
NA•Mll lllWNICl~AL COU•T "91J_._.._
New..,t 9M<ll, c.111-'•""' Pl•lntllf· CITY HATIOHAL BANlt,
• n•ll-• -""·~·••loft Oefendent. OUSTAH H WOOTEH
C..N...._: .. U4
SUMMON I
NOTICll Y• uve ..... MIN. T ...
C-1 lftOJ ............ Y• WI.._. ,_....__. ..... .,...~ .................... ,...__ ....... II .,,... wisll lo ... k Ille OCl•l<t of en
•llMn•y In , .... molt•<. YOU U-lcl do
so promptly so '"°' yo11r wrllt•n rOPOnM, •I • ...,, mey bl 1119" on ti""' AVllOI U ...... ~ .....-...
II trl'-f ,.,.. tlltclt ... c-• Utl.
1i. aMMMle •--Utl. ,_ ................. Ll.N le lMWfNI· , ............ SI Usteo -... soltcllar 11 conMlo oe
11n • .,..._ ....... OlllnlO, -.!•
ll•cer lo '""' ecloalamente. oe •"• m•n•r•, w r""""'t. •t<rl••· s• "--Y •'vun•. _.,. -·~'''-• 11empo 1 TO THE OEFEHOAHT A cl•ll
cornplelnl hes -filed Doi' Ille pl•ln·
till ·~IMI '°"· II .,... Wl\h to def...0 llllt laws.ill. YOll m11\I, wltllln lO day•
•lier lllh """'"°"' ii MrYtcl °" '°"· lilt wllll Ill" COll'1 • wrlllen ,._.. to Ill• c-01nt. Unteu y.., do '°•
y-clel...it Wiii be entered on •Po pllullon ol IM plelnlllt, -1111• cOUl1 rn•v .,..., • j....,.nt a~lnat you for
Ille rell., ci.tNlllcltd In lhe complolnt.
wlllch could res.ill In OO"nl•llrn""t of ••OH. ltlllflQ ol ,.,.,...., or pr-rty or olller relief reQuHtecl In Ille com-
Pl•lnl OATEO; ~ 21. lttl
J Pttenon. cie.-v L 0 1,.._, Oet>llty
JAMii II'. 011. OUlllCIO lltCMAllO A. IOLOMOM ,,., .............. ....
llll11•11'tew ...... t., ....... c.11 ...... "'"
UUl ... 191
Pwllll.,..., Or-Coesl Dolly Piiot,
Jiiiy 14, 21, 29, AllQ. '· '"' 11'2 .. t
PUBLIC NOTICE
1. s._.... ,,., c.r1 ..... uu a.11-----
v1st• Drive, Plea Del II••· CA 92091. ~ICTITIOUS •UllHIU >. Cllflorcl R Kol.on, HOl2 Perklllll NAMa ITAT•llQNT
Roecl, El Toro, CA mJO T"e lollowlnt P«ton> ere dolno 4. CIWistCIPll« W. McGrantlllltl .... 1111/slntu ff lllu. Pe<llk Pollwcle1.CA t10n ,. • I M E s 0 u R c I[
S Oouela A B111ton, JO'l Swen ':>ISTRl lUTIHG, ll>tO Enlerpri .. 0t1 .. , C.•te Mew, CA mi.. ...... Hullllntltfl h«ll, CA.
'-Rlclwl'dl! Me<llllfT, 1 .. 1.ffworcl AUTOMATED EQUI PMENT, Lene. N._.e lo.ell, (A"'*· IHC., e c.illOtnC• ,.....,•tlo11, ttMJO
Tiii• llullMtl ••• <-.Ct9cl lly • Wercl StrMt, Founl•ln ll•llty, CA CelllOttllo Gefltrel PertnorSlllO '71 ...
Cllf!Orcl R. l(ol'°" Tiiis llull""U la conctuc1.0 lly e tor·
Thlt SYt-t -lll9cl •1111 IM porellon. C-1'1' Otrll ti Of'Oftlt Ctullty on Jlll'I' AUTOMATIO EOUIPMEHT. U.1 .. 1 INC .... , ..
Pwlltl-Of'M91 Cool! o.llJ f'ltet, J11ly ti, a.~ 4, II,'"' JUHi
lllttllftl• OMtt • '°'"' ...... *" ... "' Tlllt 1t .. _1 ... filed wllll t,_
,_,, Clfl'k °' °'Ofl99 e ... ntv on
-------------J-It.'"'· PUBUC NOTICE ....... P1111tl-Or-. C..11 o.11, PllOt,
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOUS aU\INISS
NAMI STATaMINT The loll-•no 1>9rsons are clolnt
l>u\lnou as 0 lo F CONSTRUCT IOfl COM PAHY, 1 ... 1 Gr-iew LON , Hlltll
•noton IMc:h, CA.,_ EDWARD o.MUTIS, 1 ... 1 G.....,
•••• Lana. H11nllt191on 8eec11. CA n.4'. DANIEL R. FOXX, SO• 20111
51, .. 1.~-•on 11eec:11. CA., .... Tiiis 1>u11""' IS concl..cted 11v • -••I pertneolllp
E-ercl °'""'"'· Pa'1_. Tiiis st.II-"'" filed with tlle C011nly Ciera ol Oranoo (punt' on J-1•. '"' Pl ...
P11llll1Md <>'""00 Cotst 0.lly PllOt, June JO, Jlll~I, U,Jt, ltet Jm...
PUBLJC NOTICE
lflCTITIOUS IUllNl.SS
MAMIE ITATIMINT
Tiit loll-Ing "''°"' .,. clOint "'" ........ OH·STAFF, 171> Birch Slreel. HtwPOn e.ac11, Ce1llwn1a t1IMO
ON-STAFF IHCOAPORATEO, a C•lllornla corporallon, 1111 llrcll
Streel, H••POr1 Beec:ll. Colilornl• .,...,
This _._, " ~-lly • cor porallon
(In.Stefl Inc
Rita EcliO St<Y/TrM1
Tiii• •••-was 111.0 wltll the COllnl, Clertt ol Of'enge County Oft Jiily . .....
11'1~ P11llll-Or .... Coo•I Doily Pilot,
J .. 1., 1, tc, ,,, •. '"' nn .. ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
NI,..
l'ICTITIOUI •UllNaU ...,.._ITATIMIE'NT
Tiie 1611-1"9 partOf'll ore -.. llllMMUA.
TH[ COllOElllO RANCH, 17'01 MllC""ll, 1,...1,.., CA '21tc.
ZELLNER COMM\JNITIES, INC.,
• Co lllornl• cotll'or•ll•n, 11111 Mllc ... 11, Ir-. CA '2114.
HEL·OAN INYIESTMEHTS, INC.,
• Colllwtlle C.,._Oll ... , UU W"I Jtr..c-. U!ltl "A", Or-.. CA ftMI. ROllERT S.. ANOEMOH CO., IN(.,
• CellfoNM ~9'10fl, IQlllJ •en· N II, Or.,._, CA t'M6t.
Tllh l>utlnftS h <Oftdv<IM 11., e ..... r.,~ ...
INC ZELLNER COMMUNITIES,
()anMcl G. Zellner,
Pr'WC19111
This __,,. -llletl wllll tM C..,nly Cltn of ~-C-y .., J-26.1•. .. ,....
PYbll-Or .... CiMfl Oell'I' Plltol, J11ly 1, U, 21, •, ttll JlltMI
PUBLIC NOTICE ---------ll'ICTITIOUI IUllNllS
"AMII ITAT8 ... MT
Tiie lel-lfll """'• •rt ttolflt lllutl .... lM:
ALCA DEVELOPMENT COM· ,. AN y. 111 ... lllllttsl•• AY•nw• • .... "°" IMcll, Col ........ ""' D.w.s .M. ·~ • ., .... IAC., •
Cellhrnl• <••••••ll•fll, t)J.F -------------1 IUnrtNllt A-, ~ a.ec11, PUBUC NOTICE c11111orn1e.....w
J-M.JlllyP, t~ll, 1"1 lftMI
Tiiis ..._It --.., t <•· 11'9'elltfll
0.W.S.N.1 ...... IM.
Jal-I.AK-*, ~ Tlllt ........ _lllWwlttltlW c_., °"" t110r..., c-., .. J"'Y .. "'' ....... 111'1*..,.. Or .... OMll o.ur ~ .... Jwty7, ... t1 ... ,.. 1"M1
PUBIJC NOTICB
I • • I
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT(fuetday, July 21. 1981
ONLY WAY TO GO -Looking as if she has
drawn the short straw this time and left with
the task or hitching a ride, this woman
thumbs while her companion snoozes in the
...........
warm suns hine. The photographer captured
this energetic pair along Highway 1 ln Santa
Cruz.
DEA TH NOTICES PUBUC NOTICE
81\RNES Fullerton. Ca .. also survived
PUBUC NOTICE
MILDRED JOSEPHINE by 7 grandchildren Funeral
BARN ES. r esident o r se'r~1ces will be held on
Orange County since 1938 Tuesday. July 21 , 1981 at
Passed away on July 14, 11 OOAM at the Church or
t981 She retired from the Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Orange County Probation Saints. Newport Beach 2nd
Administration office after Ward. 801 Dover Drive.
21 years. She 1s survived by Newport Beach. Ca. Inter.
her husbund Eugene. her ment . services immediately
mother Louise McFadden1 following. In heu of flowers
brother J ames R. McFad· contributions may be made
den. Jr . sister Belly Crook t.cHhe Church of Jesus Christ
all 3 of Costa Mesa. Ca., 4 of Latter-day Saints.
nieces. 5 nephews and 2 Newport Beach 2nd Ward.
gr eat-nieces. Services were cl o Bishop Keith Duke
held on Monday. July 20. Services under the direction "'~~=~=~"
1981 al 2 OOPM al Harbor of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive The,..._.,,. --11 _.,,. ...,... Lawn Memorial Chapel with Mortuary of Costa Mesa. -as:
Rev Joe Buonass1ss1 of lhe 540·5554. COULTER AIA COM,.AHSOA Firs t Baptist Church or COMPANY. 11'01 Wotmlft•t•r
C A-. • F, w.stm!,...,, CA t'JMI. osta Mesa officiating In PUBUC NOTICE AHOAEw H. McCLURE, "'° lieu Of flowers the fum1ly re Elm A .. -. U , l.Ofll .. edl. CA
quested donations be made ,.1a1nous austN•n ~:1, ....,,_.1, ~ 11y e11 ..,. to lhe F'irst Baptist Church MAMa ITATU..NT c11v1c1wa1.
M i s s I 0 n a r y F u n d ' 3 0 I The lollowlftl --I• dolft9 IMlll· ,.,. .. H. McClvre
Magnolia, Costa Mesa. Ca Muas: Tiii• .a.t-t -"._wilt\ ttw Services were under the l AGU HA CO¥¥U" 1 T v County c1-of Or•,... C~'I'.., T!LEVISIOH, lt70 S. CMlt Hwy., J-H.1tll. direction of Harbor Lawn· l.e9une 1Mc11,CAms1. l"tu.t
Mount Olive Mortuary or MICHAEL A. EVANS. 1'70 S. "ullll-Ore119t CM1t Delly "'tot. Costa Mesa cc•o.c:c·"'· Coe•I Hwy., L...-9ffcll, CA nu1. J ..... JO,Juty7, 14,21. "" ,..., ~ _,.,.,,.. Tlllt llwllneu ii ~led by .,. !ft.
BIRCHE17E -.1 .....
T HERESA BIRCHETTE. Tiii• :=·!:S~1• .1., tlW PUBUC NOTICE
res ident or Costa Mesa. Ca c I Cl • I ~ c I ..... y I ., • ..,,.,,.. -., 0" PICTITIOUIMlllN•U PasSt.>d away on July 14, J-2'. '91. "'1.-t llAM9STAHMaNT
1981. Graveside ser vices will Pllbll.,_, 0r-. eo.,1 0.lly Pliot TM 1o11°'"'"' --11 '°'"' IMlll· be held on Tuesday, J uly 21. June30 Juty7,14.21 1'91 211MI 1teuH:
1981 al Harbo r Lawn ' ' • 111 "u•1..1c AP,.AOA CH Mt'morial Park. Services un· ------SERVICE$. m P.A. s, m 4 IC•,..•• PUBLIC NOTICE A-. ... •K.~.CA .... dcr the direcl10h of Baltz CAAL J . TUA .. IH. tH hrlft
Bergeron Smith & Tuthill l"ICTITIOlll..,..••U Stroel,SM&aAN,CAmos. Westclirr Mortuary of Costa ....._ .,..,. .... .,. T111• bullfwls I• <MCllYc1M..., e11 ~
T ............. --ii ...,,. -.l-dlvlOllol. Mt!sa. 646-9371. ........ CMIJ. T"'"'
EAST """ ADAMs FUNO. LTD .. 1"1, 0 Tlllt sto._. ••fl ... •1111 tlW EL EA NOR BE AT RICE cor"r•t• Pl•u 0r1,,., s..no 100, County CIMl of 0r-. C-y °"May ..._.-A 9-:1\ CA ftMO 29• '"1· EAST, r esident of Costa _.. • · ""..., Mesa, Ca Passed away on ,.:.!~ 'i;..~~·,,:.:. Ll1'41• "1•· l"ul>ll"'9CI Orenee c..11Deity1>1tet,
July 16, 1981 She 1::; survived Tiii• ~,...,I• c...O..CtM lly o J ..... >0.Juty 7,14.21,1t91 ,_.,
by her husband Harold. ""'" .. _........,... ----------"* L.,....... PUBUC NOTICE daughter Brenda Lar aine Tiii• ~ -fll• "'"' -Young. son Robert Wayne· ~ty0ertiofOr-c;.o;iMy011Juty
East. brother J oseph Hughs '· '"1· l"MMO
and her granddaughter Pvbll1MC10r-.c..110o11yP1tet,
Shel ley Laraine Young Jv1y1,u.11,•,1"1 m 1 ... 1
Graveside services will be
held on Tuesday. July 21.
1981 al the Harbor Lawn
Memorial Park Services un·
dt'r the direction of Harbor
Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuary
of Costa Mesa 540-5554
KIMMEL
------~----
PUBUC NOTICE
""CTITIOUI aUltttUS MAMSITATSMS•T
TIMI l ol'-4"9 _ _.. 11 dol ... IMltl• ,. .... QUALITY I.AWN SEAi/iCES, IM
2111 Street, Colto Mew, CA ti627. GleM Oolo Sllldmoro, 114 2111 SI.,
Apt. A. Clllto MeW, CA m?7. Tllil ~It c:ondlKtec:t l>y en I,.. Ol•ldvel. 01 ... Ool• Slllelrnon
""CTITIOUS au11••M
MAMa ITATllMUIT
Tiie IOl_.119 -'°" fl 410int bldl-MU ot HOASI N STUFF, 1• II. Ceest
Hl .... oy, C.-de4 MM, CA tltll. Cllllord Sutt Jorden, 117 N.
llolront, P.O. llox 106A. ••1-llleftd, Col lfornlo '*2. Tiiis _,,_,ii c-i.cl..., ell ,,.. dl•lduol. Cl.._ Scott JordM Tllll ~I we1 Ill .. wllll Ille County Clefll OI Or-County Oft J ... ly 17, ,,., ""...., l"wlllltlled Oren .. CoHI O•llY Piiot, Juty 21, 21, A .... 4, I 1. It"
»OIMI Tllll ~ WM filed wltll llW ------------C..,nty CJef1l of Orell9t C:-ty °" J ... ly 17, 1 .. I. PUBUC NOTICE ,,.... ---------l'ul>ll•hed Oron .. Coost Dolly
Piiot, July 21, :it, A .... 4, 11, '"' 1215-tl
PUBLIC NOTICE
""CTITIOUI a1111••U ....... .,. .. ,. ... NT
The fol-119 --It ...... llusl· ...... : JAMCO CON$TltUCTIOH, Ull '"--'.A".~-.a.CAftU7.
PUBUC NOTICE
.......
11'1*1 .... Or ... C.st Dolly ........ vly 7, 14.11, •• "" .,..,
PUBUC NOTICE
""CTITIOUI llUM••M •AMSITAHMll•T
Tiie lolloMnt --.,.. llDlftl M IMU•: lllST I HA CLEANERS, 6017 Werner A .... HUflCJ,,.... a .. cll. CA ..,..1.
S.119 1(-Hem, ""1 Ivy 01-
lld., 1.....-w N .... , CA t2'17. Seoftt W.. Nem, .. , Wer.-r A,,..
•4'1, H\Mlinglofl 9Hcll, CA ftW. Tllll """-Is ceftdvc1" by o -r•l•l»WllNW.
S.,.K•-
S..,.lllJ'Do"-Tiiis ..__ Wft II._ •1111 Ille COVfllY Cleft! of Or .... C-y ... J ...
ly 17, ""· ,., ....
...... ,..,.. Oro .... CNll D•llY PU .. , Jutyll.•. Aug.•, 11, '"' no, .. ,
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTITiout e&; ••• tt_....ITAT•MaNT
Tiie .......... ..,_we ......
ll<illMM•:
(11 METAL MANIA; (2) Ml!TAL MAN IA STU OIO; 01 MllTAL MA'-IA GALLllAIEI, M4 Fere1I AW, •U.~9Mcll.CA'2UI. Slepllen A. Hecker, JSU1 Lo l llr ..... ~ ......... CA '2677. DI-~ ZSUI u latrM9,
L9tYN ....... CA '1617. fllll llullMe 11 <Olldloc1" lly e
tef'ff•l .. 'NI .... 5--A. Hetll«
Tii is '*--filed •IUI tlW c-1., a.r-01 Or-c:.wity °" J ...
ly 17, "''· Pl.._ l'ulllllMd Ore1199 CNll Deily Pll ... July 11, a, ""9. •. 11, 1 .. 1 ,17 .... 1
PUBUC NOTICE
PN:Ttnous eust••• ..,....., .. ,.. . ..,. TM........,.,__,, ... ,...,.._ --= CLllAAWAY ,,gwsA SWllll"ING,
10711 PrOftC•, 0.'*" 'O,.W, CA .....
Alc:ll•~ C. YH , 10711 l"r-ft,
o.r.t11 0.-, CA .... Tiii• ......... ~..., 811 ~ OM41M!.
Al<MNC. Yp
Tlllt ........... -,.._. ..tttl ""' ~Y Cllftl "Or.,.. Ctuotty .,. Jw' •• ltlt. ....... ·-~·-· .. c.....,.... ..... ,
........... CA ... ......
WILLIAM FRANCIS KIM
MEL, a 37-yeur resident or
Costa Mesa, Ca. He was a
member or J esus Christ of
Latter-day Saints . Newport
Beach 2nd Ward and thp
Amateur R adio C lub
Passed away on July 18.
1981 He is survived by his
wife Frances. sons Bruce or
Utah. Thomas and James
!?<>th of Costa Meda, Ca ,
daujthter Lynette Guarino of
Utah . brothers Allen Kim·
met or Los Angeles. Ca .
Edwin ~immel of Watson·
ville and Thomas Kimmel or
""CTITIOUI aUIUe•M
NAM• STAT.,...T
Aown LM J-. :1211 ,..._ ~ ...... C_.. MIN, CA tad1 ,,_.....,or .... C:.... OllttY ,....._
PtMCI nOYMBS
IB.l nOADWAY
MOllTUA&Y
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
IA&.Tl IHGHOH
MTH & ?Vnftl.l
WHTCU .. CHAP'tl
427 E 17rh St
Costa Mesa 646-9371
PtMCI llOTNMI
IMl1'MI' MOITUMY
627 ,.,._tn S I
Huntington Beach
~
r•~YllW ...,..ALrAU
Cematery Mort~
ChapeM:retnetOf'Y 3500 PKtftC Vtew Ot111e
Newport Beach
644·2700
Tiie lol-ftl pertoM 11 Oolnt.IMlll·
MU at:
OAOMAA · 900KKll!"ING, Wit Teledro Orcle, U11U F, Mluitft V!e-Jo,CAtMI. Dogmor A. Cllrllttlltofl. UUI Cowie, MlalOl'I Viejo, CA nffl, Tlll1 llvliNIO IS c..-.Cled..., 811 I"" 01 .. iovo1.
OoirMr A. Cllrlst-Tlllt ._,...,,. woa lllod wltfl Ille c ... nty CWll ol 0r.,. C-ty on J.,.
ly 11, '"'· l"IMIM PullllllleO 0r ..... COHI Delly P iiot, JUiy 21. 21, A .... 4. 11, 1 .. 1
________ _..-Pllttl
PVBUC NOTICE
Tlllt~ll<lftdvt'"lrYlll l,._ Jtlly7,14,t1,.,"'1 _.,
OIYl .... I,
ll.-r1LMJ-I Tiiis ~ -Ill• wltll tlW C-ty (ler1l fll Or-Cevftly M J... -
'"' t1, ,.,, .. , ....
'"llll111M ~.ft .. CNll Deity '°"9'. Jlily 21. JI. A'4 4, 1 I. 1't1 ..WI
PUBLIC NOTICE
PtJBUC NOTICE
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s s
I
F
/I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7·
·a
INDEX
f 1 ftlce Ywr M. Can
642·5678 11M£sroasm ...........
...... hh•M M.lbufil .. ftlft'i-Ulii . ... ~, .... ~ .... , ....... "·' I Ur.I• 'At'-• ·-·~·'" .. , ....
I ·~..,.. .. ,. \ ., .. '
....... rwi•.t. "'ii•" '"* '""'"'" .......... 1 ... •v~• tt1U"' '"""""' ''''"I »"'"'"' , ... ,. ~li:!:4M•:h
'-•Jtuttt ""''"•'•• '-tnl• ""• '-'•' ...... h ""'-"""I •ltiin• 'Ar"'-"1Uhh1
\111t1o1"• Uufht ~ '"'" 1mmm
.\1 r .. •~· h• '-tk .\.,..nl'htl'tlf ,,., '-'k
Ml .... '''"'"''"" Ku'l.tflil ....... ,., •• ,"'"
I '""hf\ 11~ .. t hi"'' t ttfUfht ti l•l l'11 .. t1i fl\
t '""".,.,.'""•unt• ,,,ti ,,,_,., .. " .. t t'hl· ,,~
... _.,.... litl• \l••h•I
l1••llft111 I '"it" th ,.,.,.,._.,. .. ,, ........ "
l<11h t ... , .. ..
\I;'"'°""""' 11 h ,.,, \luvnfn ,,.,,,,, H• .. ,,.., •••-.:•lo l;t•~t
::: :~ ~::~f,,1:1::"'
M••k"4 •••n1• '''"" M1.., ,.,,,.., • '' ~"•"•'
"' .1 • ._, .. 1o """"'. IENTALS
''*""w-. •w11110.h11I f .. Mw...,I t1lwtntt ... .,j , .. ""' .......... "'"'"''''' 'f111tt.1n11m11n, .. •"'II I 11t111\llftlfllflfHI I rt! ,, ...... ._."4 ......
l1Atnh!"""' t rit ·~~ ... ,,. .. tw111
lllwpl." I" "..-"'hun ,, .... l "'\tlll ,,,., •w•.-•ti In•
k1•tint•
)h•H11f. o ....... , .. ._,,. \t1A1h
'""""''"""" .. ~n1n111 t4;••" .. 1 ,...,,.,.,., H1ftlo1l ", ........ ~ ... ..... , ... ,.,. kt 11• '"'*•' ....... . ...,..,Al...,._ tihM.tl
11ld'Wn.-t Mo fllo1I
"41• .. ~· " .......... " ..... 1 .. 1 \4,o.1 M•f'lto1I•
IUSINESS, INVEST
MEIH, FINANCE
""°''.,,.."'''M~I kli; ... "' • " ...... -..
llh1·,U\1o1 11'1 ''l"l"oll \ '""'"''" .. nil " ...... ,, ~ ......... , ... .,
\11•11t \ 'A .. , ... -.. \t•itl .... Jill 'lo ,, ...
ANNOUllCEMENTS. rm0tmsl
LOST l FOUND
,, .. """',ft••"' • .. ,1·i .. 1 ... ,.1 ,,.,.' ........ "'"'"'' r ..... .,. .. i.
,.1 .. 111 .. 1 ..
''""' SEIYICES
EMrt.OYMENT &
rl£1AUTI ON
"""""• .. , '"'"" ....... J,4flft,.. .. , I
......... ,.. ... , "' t
MEICNANDISE , ........
\a-t'41olHll , ...... . .... .. ..
kwlllHta. \l.,hll•I
lt1f'l"t4 A t~1·1,.t~ .....
h,.. .. . , ... '" \ "'" ._,1"9IW1t , ......... , ... . 1 ...... .. . ............. , ..... ,
l•••ln ,,,_. .. ~
"""' .. '""'' "'"'tll•N·olJ• \11w1 H,.J,.,.,,. ~' .... , ,.
""""' .. ' '" ht11"11 lt4 1•1111 t w'"' ••1w11•
l'••h
...... .-' ....... It
v..--. "••"h"" -,-conw '•••••• ...,,.-'" te1...&.-u1 .. 1" h.-1
'-• . .,. 11 Jif..J1olht1 "'4•1•o ·aons ' MARIN(
EOUlrMENJ ............ , """"'"""'"' .... ,, .. tt11 .. 1, \l,.,m, t11~tl•
tti~;h ....... ,
l"-.l•krfll ',,,,,, .. "' .. , .. , .
Mi ... t ........ I"> .....
~..,,.--~...,..··~· Ki~·"'···~· mHSromTION
''" ··"' I •ftlt.• 1' '-"'' ICt 1H ..... ,,". ,., .. \I••··',," ...... , •• , ..
\ttll'llf llfti• '-tk "'flt
1f••lt t• '''"'"I "•'"''I ,,.,,, \"411 'wf\ff I J•,.11,
AUTDMOlllE .,,, .. , .. ,
\nth,f¥t•• 4 lo1·'•' ~·.':.· .. ~=~·;.·~t ..
••l~•t•t 0t1U t
tf•h ,..,. ,_.. ..... """"• \fltl•n.•o1tth"I
AUTOS. IMPOIJED .., ........ ,
\••Knffti{11
\w-1•
\w.-1fl llt· .. I··• HMll
~.1~'
U•t'"-" ....... ... .,. u ..... 1 .. , ........ .
J ... "'"" ~M",..,,nHt1ft1 1 ..... ,.,_
...... ".h"' '" "' lltl
14\,K
.... 1
r.~:.::
""""" "'"' .. "" ~ .. l•Ku\1•
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\•lllh-.1111i,1tl , ... , ..
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llto1~ , ... kll ..
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AITIS, llW
AUTOS. US£D
, .... -..... ... , .. "'"''" , ....... ., r.:r·
1 ..........
LM."'10• )fti\rfu\
ll ..... '""' ,,. ...... . .... "" .... ... ...... .,.,_,
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....,.., ,., We ~.~.~ ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • .e IOOZ .._,... IOOZ ••r ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
.. ... .....
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1.111 , .. .....
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'IOI
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
Ptlfllll1Jwr11Maffct: A II ru l estatt ad
verllud In th ia
newspaper is subJetl to the Federal f'air Hous
Ing Act of 11168 wh1ch
makes 1t illegal to ad
vertise "any preference,
ltm11at1on, or dis
crim1nallon basl'd on
race. color, reltg1on,
sex. or nallonal oni:in.
or an intention Lo make
an) such preferenre,
l1m1tat1on. or dis
crim 1nat1<>11 ··
This newspaper will nol
know1nf IY accept any advert1S1ng for real
estate which 15 in viola
lion or the law -
EllOIS: Act¥trtfMn
sllotrld clledr tt.lr eds
deity .... report ~
ronl••~.n. DAILY rl.OT .. ,..., ...... ... ,,.,
1:1•• .... WHlty for Hie fint ------1 l•correct IHertlOll CO-OPllATIYE ..ty. SB.La!
Long Tenn f'1nanc1ng
.... ,
1130 Port SHr'-J Harbor View Home 1n
Newport, 3 Bdrm 2 Ba
Monaco $2SO ,OOO
Sl2S.OOO assumable 1st
Try 20". down 644 7020 ...
.... • blQOO
·•·· '"
., ... . ..
••l• -··· ...
•.. ' .... . .. , ....
41DRMHOME
$105,000
Comfortable Costa Mesa family home on quiet
street. Roo(. 1 yr new,
Covered patio. brirk
BBQ, beaut garden
w •bearing fruit trees
Hurry Lo see! 646-7\71
THE REAL ESTATERS
$5,000
REIAn!
Newport Beach 2 Bdrm 2
bath. varant rondo
Owner went South' "ll 's
beautiful "Call for more
details. $46-2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
·~ 1 ........................ 1 ., ..
.,.,
.... 9.t6S ASSUMAILE :~,:: LOAN
Lovely private 2 +den
condo with cathedral
relhngs and lots or deck· ~:~: ing Serurity gated
'"' Arbor Lake Wood .::.~ bridge. s11s.ooo. owe
.,... 2nd TD 'Submit ' :~:: 7 59," 16
.. , ... ...
'"' ... ,,.
Newport Slw9s
Lmdt.clu•d
Roomy 3 Bdrm 2 Ba
home so close to the
beach. Bit-ins. including
dishwasher + frplc and
nice carpeting. Only
:;~ 1194.SOO Tty about W i
'·"· down &r owe balance.
,,._
JACOBS REAL TY
''1M'10
LOWDOWH
Versailles 1 bdrm studio
penthouse condo with a
large assumabl& loan
Only 118.000. Call today
!n9-53ll0.
t.t ALLSTATE
~~;. Re.AL TOAi
""' -r. ...
ff':•{
Spar1ous Townhouse
2 Bdrm with loft . 211
bath LOW INTERESr
Agt. V1v1an Grant
t Cote Realty
&. lnu•stment
640-5777
Owner mubl :.ell
Redured from $149.900
to $137,500 Mm1 hor:.e
ranrh . c·ustom bit
Jbdrm . 2b;i + den
w fr pit:. rowitr) home
J usl under 2 at·rl"!i with
1500 sq ft barn &
grttnhouse Set> lo ap
prei'1i.t e C all
1714]749 8927, 99-1 ~I
l Ir llaCCMdo
Has priv dock 1n back
yd Assume TDs of
1234.000, f'P $315.000
Call q_wner al 642·2645
MESA VERDE
Spar1ous. good for
c·htldren :.afe
neighborhood 4 Bdrm:.
and large famii) room .
eas) rnainlenance ) ard .
well kept re.idy to
move in $179,900
642-5200
j PETE
' BARRETT .. REALTY
OCEAHVIEW
3 Bedroom. Den, 211 Ba
Condo 180 degrtt oce;,in
view Walk lo bearh.
pool & tennis S2SO.OOO
PUICHASI OPTION
New f'antast1r 3 Br 3
Ba Condo. S2SO() mol'es
yo11 111. 11000 per month
!Why pay renll Next to
all shoppmg, theaters &
park. just minutes to
beaches
Ward Management Co
714 )·~-
45'10ATSUP
For sale S59S,000'
lnrludes sandy beuh
deck & patio +large
qualtt)' 3 bdrm + den, 2
bath home. Fireplace .
brick BBQ + extra park·
ing. Owner tAgt 673-9187
or 87S·7080
Want Ad Results 642-5678
,;:..i •,.: .. ,,
DOING BUSINESS
UNDER A
FICTITIOUS NAME?
....... Wet
Openln1 for one tx·
perienced 11lespel'IOll to
tell p~ homes
We have rreat location •
profnaional a.saoclates
and over • million In
ll1li111s. For confidential
interview call Kevin •
Corporate Plaza Realty
760-9333
CHAMM&VIEW
FROM SUHDECK
Only 5209,900! Charming
Newport Beach 4 Bdrm.
features wood burning
fireplare Huge over-
s1z.ed lot With rear ro1 ..
ered patio Owner 1s
mot11•ated and w1lhnR to
help finance' Hurry. C'all
nov. • 67 3-8S50
THE REAL ESTATERS
COMtiiaCIAL
+UVIMG
Spacious 3 bdnn. 2 balh
apl Bllins. wet bar. fireplace. atnum 01er
~ sq ft or busines~
~pace + 4 car gar.ij?e
Priced al $350.000
associated
8 P 0 • E A', • f A • • V RS
l r I ..,. I ' r ~ • ' !If,
MOVE IN NOW
This large 5 Bdrm 3 Ra
home IS Vl 1mmarulate t·on d1t1on with nt'w
rarptls . drapes & pa111t
Walk to shopp1ni.? & schools Assume large
loan and owner will ht'lp
finanre Only 1176.000
MESA DB.MAR
3 Br 2 Ba S12b.SOO
4 Br 2 Ba S132.SOO
~Br 3 Ba pool S164.000
S Br J Ba 11nmar S176.000
All ha'e attrart11•e
f1nanr1ng
TR,\DI TIO\,\L
J~f \IT\
6)1.7370
WALICTOICH
$92,950
Newporl 81."at·h
bachelors barl(ain As
)Umable 164.600 loan
Owner amuous Ac·t nov..
rall~6 2313
THE REAL ESTATERS
WatttflolllGiaiiit
·~-td to $265,000 Right on the c·anal in
Newport Shore:. A huite
3 Bdrm J Ba famil)
home in 1mm~rulate
rond1t1on A suptr loea~
t1orf only steps Lo the
beach Allract11 e owner
financing available A
suptr bu)''
lalboo l.a.d ltty
67J.11 00
PENINSULA
Fixer
Onl)' steps lo the surf. 1s
this bargain nxer Bring
paint brushes & shove~
and rash in on SU Call
now @
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-63, ·6990
ll°lo
O.M.C .
Owner may rarry at 13';
A lTD with small down 3
Bdrm, 2 balh, lar11e
bonus room. comer lot
RV access. One·of·n·
k111d. Only Sl:li.SOO Call
now, 5'6·2313
THE :REAL ESTATERS
CORONA DB.
MAIDW'LEX South of the hi1hway sits
this elegant home plus
income. Ruge owners
unit, brick court)'ard
leads to J'nnch doors
that open onto Italian
tiled noors Beautlful
wood ptued floora
enhance den and
apacious family kitchen
2nd •tory halts Hdudtd
muter suite with open
b11ton1 and bubblin1
spa too! 3 more queen
alaed bdnm for Yo'll' lilt-
tn11. Huae • oar pr•ice + 2 8d rm lilK'ocM 11nlt.
P rice reduced and
owner I.I ..WO.. Call
UM u.t Daily Piiot
"Fiil Rflu.lt" MrVict
dlr.tory. VCNr
~tlCNr ..... ,
If you hive Ju1t filed your new
Flctltlou1 Bu1lnH1 N1me Ind
have not yet aubmltted It fof
publlcatton, P'eaH don't forget
that tM llmttatton 19 30 ct.ya
from dlte of Mng. TM DAILY
PtLOT wlll pubt11h your
1tatement for Ul.50. Our
cf rcullUon fndudH ttte enttre
Orange Coatt artt end leg1I
nottcH ...,.., In a• edlllont. tn
Order to IUbmlt your .._ment
for publcdon .. nd llllPFOPftate
copy end t checll to THI DAILY
'9LOT, P.O. 101 1•, Coet1
MeM, CA. 12121. We'I do tM
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Dalebout
Bay&Beach!
Real Estate
.REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949,
COMI WITH us. . .TO coaOHA DI&.
MAI. NEARLY NEW DUPLEX TWO AND
TH.REE BEDROOMS. TWO AND THREE
BATHS .GREAT FOR GUESTS OR MOTHER.IN.LAW .OWNER WILL CARRY
SUBSTANTIAL LARGI.>: 2NDT D 1399.000
·)617 WISTCLIH DI, M.1. Ul-7l00'
REALTORS
675-551 t
.ASSUMAIU LOAH: L..')I CdM diiplex
wUll pod fl.mcillc). Eeda _,. 3 .._ 2
I&, ~ ,.. + llffUty '°°"" CloM to
, ... ,... ..... A. .. htg S42t.~OO.
COLE OF NEwrorr WLTORS
2515 l. Coaat Hwy.,C....dtl Mer
675-5511
COUMTIT CLUI
UY ..
Mesa Verde Country
Club Villas. Stones
throw to fairways! 3 BR. I
21, Ba looking out on
Pool. Cabana. GardeM.
lt.altan ceramic tiled
patios . Spanish
fireplace. Adults. Flex1·
ble terms Owner may
carry I.st loan. Offered
at $179,500 By appt
Owner /1 ent. 549-1366
• REH TORS
Owwer ""-c.d
See lhis beautiful four
bedroom 3 bath home 111
one of Newport Beach's
best areas The pro fessionally landscaped
grounds feature ver} 44 FT. OH I private pool and spa THE I.A y Hurry. tlus won 't last
Prime East Channel OWC Isl TD Offered at
I . f S315 000 ocataon across rom o 'M ManH R.._ Balboa Isl. Large 2 • · ~-nT bdrms. first noor condo 644-9990 760.0135
deluxe throughout on i-.-------ly ~75.000
· t\ Otv1s10n of
100/o DOWH
3 Br 2 Ba Harbor View
Home near park and
pool. Owner will ftnance
with low interest ONLY
$219.950
RCTaylorCo
I •4U 'l'1(XI
llarbor ln\'estmt>nt <.:o • ----:.-----
Sell idle Items 642·5678
• • WA nRHOMT HOME * * HO ,.ATMEMTS ••••••
for 1 year!!! Charming 3 Br
home located sma ck on lhe white sand beach with a private .
stairway. Features fireplace. 200·
deep lot in R-2 zoning. ONLY
$695,000. Owner will carry 1st
T.D. at l J<"'c
MEWPOIT HACH OFACE
2670 S. Mlqutf Drf•t
17141 759-150 I 17 I 4t 752·7373
~
Walker&lee
Real Estate
tlE
llDlll ILlllS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
SAM CLIMEMn DUrUX Super Buy. Upstairs Unit With
Three Bedrooms. Peek-A·Boo
Ocean View . Wet Bar. Living Room
With Fireplace. Cathedral Ceilings.
Wrap-Around Patio. Spacious
Downstairs Unit With Two
Bedrooms & Living Room With
Fireplace. Laundry Facilities. Good
Income. Owners Will Help Finance.
Priced At $195.000.
ti) --.......... ,,.
759-9100
#2C.,..•P'lao .... ,.,. c..tef'
"-an,._, Wt ....._.,._,Wt Hwft F9t W. Hwft Fer Wt ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday. July 21 . 1981 Cl • ••••• ,. ••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ For Wt ....... Fer Wt 1,..,.. 1001 t ... r.i 1001 G1•r• 1002 lwr.. 1001 . .._..,_.Wt Ho.N1FetWt ~! ................ , .................... .. • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,........... ... 1044 c.r-...... I OJ1 Coste W... I 024 H.e-... ltecJt I 040 .':. •••• •• .. •••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
\\ I ...._I I '! \;
TAYLOR CO
IU.:\l 'I UI\~ 'o1111•· l'l·ll
B.IGANT ''VElS.AIWS"~CLUSIVI
OM llG CAMYOM GOLF couase Sp~cta c ular Deane Home s
"Versailles .. locatt.'<l on largest lot of
all Deane Homes Beautiful golf
course view 1 Professionally
landscaped yard w/mature trees in a
private park-like setting including a
lovely large pool & huge spa + an at·
lracti've gazebo. Gated front courtyard
entry with fountain. Marble floor in
foyer wi th g litterin~ chandelier. 4
Bdrms. den. formal dining room & 412
baths. Priced right at $895.000. Call for
appointment.
WESLJY M. TAYLOR CO., ltlALTORS
211 I Son Jo. Hilk ltOGd
NEWPORT CENTH, N.I. 644-491 O
THE REAL ESTATERS
Classified Ads. your one
stop sh«?~.&.. center_ Classified Ads
tell a lnend.
and help choose your new
neighbors.
IAYFROHT-CONSIDER EXCHANGE
lffuttful 4 bdrm homt °" conwr wl"' boot llip. Two story wood and qlou
COlltttftPOi f11rY wi"' balcony and dtcll, CJDW'fMf kitchen. Submit exchmc)H for
prop«+y itt Potm SprlftCJS. Arro.._eod.
lie) IHr or ? Owntr wtl auM wl"' fiftecMcJ.
LIMO.A ISLE CORHER-tOVB.Y!
A r-.si«Mnce of CJrand p oportion on prnffCJicM Lindo Isle. &!fer tin lvsll CJGfdtft• o•.,-brick wall Wfll'f Ii dip
pool/spa to total ele9ance. Two 1tory
ho...t wf"' wiltdlnq oak stairwoy. tllfry
fountain. Formal lh h19 room with
specious fOlllity room iftciudlttg '-9t
...... b.r. FonMt dlnl119 "" +gowmtt '
llltchttl. Luxwio11s masttr ... + 4
CJll"t bedrooms. La"Je outdoor patio
pM boot dock & slip for J boob.
SI .395,000.
OCE.ANHONT-Pa.IHSUU rT.
Triplex Oft OHf'llH lot. 6000 sci-ft.
OWMr moti•oted a1td wfl ~ ...,
'"'°"abtt offff -tradn, tx~.
terms, etc. Pride of ow11trahlp.
$2.200,000.
ELEGANT COMDO.-VIEW
ProfeuioHlly dtcoroted by RCH)tr
Tho1t1os , La911na ltach. Plo11 5 h1
Newport Cr-.st w /lbd. iftd. ,....., .-...
lor9t family rm. Ii pctMf'Omlc VU.
Quality Ii tlec)once ~-OWHr
wll carry .AITD. $270,000. 631-1400.
WAHRFRONT HOMb,a"f<
HI Al I °'IA ff
I •'
315 Marine Ave
Balt>oa 1s1ano
\I I l'l
673-6900
RE$10ENTIAL Rf Al ESTATE SERVICES
OPEN 2·4 WEDMISOAY
111 UOLEMA
1.ALIO.A ISL.AHO CH.AlMB
Immaculate home with beam
ceilings. lots of used brick and
Hansel & Gretel charm. Good street
location near South Bay Front.
Three BR. Den & Two balhs. Terms
available. $450.000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER • 644-9060
• t . .__ .............
-~ .. ,,-..
.... IOl_fOllf .. _<h
H l 0 s A R. I
I I' I I I .
....,,.._EX _11.,.l_V,.,...,,
1
,
1 1 r r . _ ___,}
ELMUP I' I I I r . t
UNDAl'LI Exciting opportunity T Wide channel
view Crom spectacular architectural
designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home.
Slip for 2 large boats. Sl,495,000.
Summer Occupancy.
UDO ISLE HOMES
Featured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm. 3
bath home, newly redecorated. Priced to sell quicKly at 5475,000. Must see.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings. Great for entertaining.
$420.000. Best price for the money.
PENINSULA POINT IEACHFROMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge. from prime large lot, 4 bdrm. 3
bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur-
ing marine room. $1,385.000.
NEWrORT CREST COMDO
2 bdrm. den, spacious Plan 8. im·
maculate. Low priced at $215.000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J41 Bo ,\•J, o .. ,, NB 67~ 61bl
CH.ARMING IM COST.A MIS.A
Older custom home has hardwood
floors. crown moldings. formal dining
room. 2 bedrooms. Large lot. lush
landscaping . Assumable 1st T.O. Lots
of charm at $149.000.
U~l()Uf ti()Mfi
REALTORS. 675·6000
2443 wt Cout Hltllw•~. Co1011a !kl Mar
WE HAVE U OF TliE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN
EZTOOWM
ON THE HILL overloolung sail boats
and ocean sunsets! Rare
Harbor View Hills op
portunaty Owner is anx
1ous and will help
fananre Only S72.000
down. Low interest'
Elegant livuig and dan
ang room features sper
lacular views Large
family room opens to
serluded. sparkling
pool. 3 large bdrms On· Ir S359,900l Hurry. just
listed. Call673-85SO
AHO&RIOGE
Award winning
"Jodelle" estate home
Isl resale offering on
tha.s exquisitely appo111t
ed lownhome with
massive view of bay,
THMJNG
TOWHHOME?
Call the speeaalists at
the condominium in
formation center.
Touchstone Realty
__ 96J.fil67 ---
ocean. coaslltne & night --~~~~:_l1g hts orrrred at
S88S.OOO.
1n~1 !.1111n·· .'\: ~· 11 ..
~~r.il!Jll !i
Ronq 640 C.,'.&C Ato~lomp
f J~lblufl ~r.,I f;'clq
•••••••••••••••••••••••
SALE IT OWHB
327 Coral & 311 Amethyst. 673-01.88
lS"'• DOWN. 15'1 In
OCE.a. .... VIEW terest. cute cottage 3 ~ Bdrm 2 ba, ruu siled lot. $49,000 DOWM Quiet location. Trade
Just reduced $25.000! OK Desperate. W .000
Cameo Highlands beau· Ownr /agt. 1.§61·0693
ty has large assumable Copistr.o le«ll Io ti
Isl. plus owner w1 II ••••••••••••••••••••••• carry Sl00,000 2nd. Spec-l a cu 1 a r ocean views C/14,0IE.ACH
from living. dm1ng and D&l'l.D
master bdrm! Extra ASSUMABLE
large lot. Only $325,000 muoo
See it today. call67USSO 675-t 771
THE REAL ESTATERS
STIPS TO llACH
2 bdrm each uolt + ,..~-.. w. 1022 room & beth o(f 2 car ___..
Good Is ·-· ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage. w ren ..... lnveswrs Duplex on best
area. $250,000. street. pool, hi income.
associated
ll~O.,.EQ, wtn.,"~·R·,,
4' , ..,. • I I ' I ~
Taite lime to relax and
1hop at home. It's sim·
pie with Dally Pilot
Clusilied Ads And IJ
you have aomethinC to sell. call a rrlendly
Clas11Uled Ad-Visor at
642-5678 ....
Owner. $320.000 .
640-4999.
Nearly new duplex
Three and two
bedrooms. Three and
two batt.. Ideally de·
slened for cueata. Large
assumable Isl and
owner will carry 2nd
T.D. CaV Roger Bar·
qulal, 7S9·1243 or
631·7:.IO.
C 0 M I C J S R A 14 A R If R IC L C I L
S I C 0 R I S E I K T L R C K E M 8 8
0 E A K 0 I II Y M R Q D I E 0 Z I I S
11 K J R M I J 1 U A A R " C 0 II J E 0
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SSkH VAPlllT
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SHHOlStlCEIOlllE~IY
MLOCOMOTlVlClA•lSEC
IUCT ON EXCLUSIVE HUN· TUl'TUIOCIC 434 -OMIA S TINGTON SEACLJFF'S 2 lly, Bro.dmoor Plan t:legant new c Br Vic· MESA ¥a.DE o o L fo' c Ou Rs t: ! 1 .c BR 2~ ba home
tori an part I a I vu. Brand new on th t 3bdrm, pool, xtra Ira lot. w/bonu.s nn, formal dtn
ownr/contractor Just muket. See ,I.hit 3 Br 2 Man xtras ssts.OOO. l.ng. Jge pvt ram rm. 3
cqmeletln&. lm.009. Ba home you U bt rroud Bro~er . U!I 6833 . ur car Youownt~de IY Owta to own. Owner wil help m.e266 'f terraced lot with vl.w
Custom c yr old home. 3 hooancr. Priced at o the rolling hllb Walk
Bdrm, 2~ ba. Xlnt $111,000. 7$1-3191 l"IN 1044 across •treet t.o pool &
rioancin1. $UO,OOO. U% " .. ..,._v · ••••••••••••••••••••••• :r .. Take over 4 P""'X
C 8 ... THl«ING .300 at l~•'< Int -,uu dn. owtesy to r...,. TOWHHOMl7 price S267,500 Call
S46-0096 Call the sprciallata 11t owner agt for ~alls &
A IW G84 the condom1n1um in· !1>J>l 97~-Just listed · duplex. xlnt SIO,OOODOWH. tormationcentrr IS LOCATION
an come. So. or Hwy Eutside Coata Mesa Touch.stooe Realty IMrORTAMT? ~~ & a.rt... Townhouse 2 Br. 11• ~Ultl'l -You bft it ts• So fftlle •~ baths. pvt yard. 2 car Rancbo San Joaquin V1Ua your family 111t.o Cam _.. 1ar. vaulted ceahngs, Portola Model, must see v 3 bdrm 2 b 87S-2373or77~ I d SIOO UV\ pus teW • a. poo an s~ •""" mny upgrades. pran only formal dm rm Close to
21/20/o LISS THAM
GOING MAllCIT!
CDMCOTTAGE
PLUSIHCOME or 3 bdrm 2 ba home
with an i5olated master
bdrm /parent retreat or
1n-law quartena bedroom
cotta•e · any way you
descnbf it · 1l's charm· ang, up to dale and
beautifully decorated.
Priced at S21Ml.OOO with \'try special f1nanc111g.
C4U FOi DIT AILS
644-721 I
/Jn NIG(L
13All(Y &
ASSOCIATES
Costa Mt1e1 1024 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ISLOCATIOH
IMPORTANT?
This nearl) new So
Coast Plaz.a home has at
all Eng . Tudor style on
corne r lot Near
freewa ys, 4 Br 21toJ Ba
Call now Ownr Agl Rack Keeler 546-6706 or
631-0213 -
MESAVEIDE
ExecutiYe home. 3 br, 2
ba . I story home on quiet
cul·de-sac st 1 lge bdrm
OWC 1tra1g t note R & $169,500. For appt shopping and recrea· H Invest. 551 6890. v ti l f1Hlnv't 7S22l97 ----taon ery a racave -lnilt L*t terms Sl75.000 l•-5•0•1,•0 •0•0•~--.• -Beaullful I Br conrlo on
11 "" ly S8000 t.o assume loan Roomy 3 bdrm 2 ba S113,900 No quahfy1111:
home on an R2 lot with 831~238.~ plans for 2nd unit Great
eastaide location and ASSUMABLE VA
great f1ruinclng Only Take over lugh balanre
SlS2.SOO. on VA loan on 1h1i. 644-7211 almost new 3 Bdrm 2 Ba
/Jn NIG[L
[}AIL[ Y &
ASSUCIATES
on large lot. N1ee up
grades. t-enlral air, lrl( 't5l3 CAl4Pll5I>l·IRVlffE covered patio Call ror
LOW DOWN: Beautiful 4
bedroom showplace.
Plush carpets
throughout Sunken
formal dining room
Famal) room v.alh
fireplace Turked on
large lot. Close to South
Coast Plaza $204,900
TARBELL .
REAL TORS. 979 239.Q __
OWNER RH.AHCED
Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath
home , beautiful wallpapers thruoul Cul
de sac street Owner wall
carry AITD for 7 years
at 13.5'1 111terest For an
appo111tment w see. rail
!140·1151
-~~· HERITAGE
details LCMJYftO 1.oc'-I 041
-; HANCH n HFALTY v 551 2000
GR.AM.ADA Model
In Irvine Ranrh area
4 BR, 2•, BA. 3 <·ar Rar
2600 SQ Pf Lasl ) rs
prices th as ) r Prmr on
I) Cal1Jolyl_at~S552
WOODBRIDGf;
TOWNllOM t:
Detached 2br wba .
frpl r a1r1um 10'•', a)
sumable loan Sl36.500
17141552·&80 b~ Owner
MEAT
••••••••••••••••••••••• Olltof~
OutofMlnd
Prime Dana P n10l
duplex on corner lot
near Dana Marana 2
bdrm. I ba up, I bdrm
down beamed ting. frplc. dining area. end
patio $144.000
~hssaoo Reali \
49-l 07.}1 • -
New Modular T)pe
Homes. leased land.
Oceanfront Pk . 3 pvt
brhi.. 24 secunt). fishing
pier from $29.900
~3816
New wood glas~. !.pa .
solar. 6 dks. 2 frplcs
3+ 3+ close unobstruc
ta bit' pa nor v11lg \ ws
$499!'11 p .. p _494 7631
could be converted to lll!••••l!!!!!!•!!!!!!!!!~I make 4th bdrm Room
. • REALTORS
as a pm. rlean & C07\. J
llr 2 Ba w cow1 Ht rd t'n
tr) !'Jear oev. · <0.irpeb
and macrowa\t' 10
eluded Close to ,<·hoob
and ~hopping l'all for
details
IYOWHER
Lo\'ely 2 story J Bdrm , 2
ba. Man) amenities. a~
sumahle loan $229.:ioo for RV access or pool
Bk r, 963·8182 _
EASTSIDE
2HOMES
On large lot A 3 Rdrm 2
bath. 2 (pie's. patio.
PLUS 2 Bdrm cottage. S165,000 F111anc1ng b)
owner in
Roy McCanlt, Rltr.
541-77.29
MES.AY9DE
Save your down paym'l
S3000 moves you in 3
Bdrm home For more
1n to 67 3-&m'T or 645·8369
D•oPolnt 1026
••••••••••••••••••••••• e RANC H
Rf.ALT Y
551 2000
121J 1926-6719or
1714 1.JP 7706
01\orce Forces Sale Lo we r 3 Ar!'h lh} r. re at o<·ean \ 1ew p\1
area I BR bearh house * *JUST LISTED! 199 31H J ST REDIXEO IN EM"'11"'1"l"Y DANA POINT ' 2 Bdrm condo 111 adult """"""' ~
Located in the prt• oriented Oran!(l'lrl'l' Only available fronl rov.
sllgious commwuly of Super loC'al1on. aar rnn lol an this gated area
sea R j d ge. th 1 s 3 d1t1oning & morl' F'h·A1 !'Ian~ and perm11..) for
bedroom . 3 bath end umt blc fmanc1111( l'lei::.nt nlla Sl.~.000
as the largest floorplan l' \ROL TATI.:M KLTR
available You'll enJO) [Uj)'''''''dbrldgc 494-~ the rommun1ty pool. LolJllfta Mic)att I 052
spo, and tenrus courts Rcalltj ••• •••••••••••••••••••• and lhe short walk to the 551.:woo Jbdr. 21, ba Pool and
beach and manna tt?UBarrann "~'" """' s pa El Niguel cc ~ S275.000 493-8812 Delightful 1 story
~~ ~ * *PARKSIDE Owner agent 499 1320
GRAND OPOltl ~ L1'ngo Tile entry. plush (•arpel ... ~;,.leach 1069 1131/.0/ • ~ v.•ood deckin g elc ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14 /o • """"" highlight this well local , _______ _
...,.. 1111"" ed condo 1n beautiful THEllUFf n HmffllfJloll leach I 040 Woodbridge Call for de PL.AM "X"
••••••••••••••••••••••• tails Owner anxious d b $148.900 J bdrm. 111 rm . \
Su,Elc-.00 1.-..--rm . fam rm . F P. 212
,RICE.:OCEO ~i w,,,\Clbrldgc b<i . xtra large porl'elam
OCE.AH VIEW
10%DOWN
MO COSTS
TO IUYll
HO QU.A1.IFY1HG
3 Model~
From SIJ1 ~
Secluded roof-top
s undeck for romancing under
the sun or stars.
Spiral staircas~
leads to den or of· fi ce. Please call bkr. 631-2246 for details.
9'Dnl tub w ceramic tile v.all5 ,, m1 to beach' ammac. Rcalltj & floor 4 ro\ered patio
highly upgraded I br. ""' Jreas Prirt' S230.000. 5', den 1bedroom. 1 & a. !)a ·----551 ·J.,,,,I • · 1 down. assume $40.000 tst
I
Pools, jaruu1. tennis. 1920 1\arranra l'k"'. "lnr trust deed at 7''1' • Xlnt
dubhouse. wet bar. land tease $853 oo per
frplc Pert for sgl or NORTHWOOD )ear Can·t changl' unltl
cpl Owner anxious I IE.AUTY )ear 2003 w . ml onl)
Needs fmanc111gtoex1st I Immaculate 3 Bllrm 2nd trust deed due Inf 7 gr, loan Owner 1986 87 Call owner for · I bt f home on quiet cul de ::.ac w1 o a111 1 necessary appt da1l)' after 5 pm B Id __ .. in Northwood~ Plush uyer wou nn"U ap. !7141 760-8425 prox Sl.250 per mo & rarpets and <'Ustom $20,000 dwn Open draperies thruoul !luge -111!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!111!!11!!!!!1111-1111
Sat Sun. l·S 9766 Verde patio wnh soothanl? spa OCEANFRONT Duplr~
Mar Dr . Bkr Co op. Many extras plus. lov. & Tri Plex Xlnt Int· !136-1600.968-8341 interest assumable loan PP 673·76]1.67_3-71173
Walk ~oy~~~RBdrms. S167.000. PARTY IN
l~ba. farrul) rm. danang HARBOR VIEW
rm Only $146.900 Smashing family room ~36_1403,3l07.l!.!ll __ 17THATPRQ:>PECT with wet bar Un
Tl'STIN, 731 3111 _ behe\'ably beautiful en· 11.7%
ASSUMABLE
Triplex one year new.
Try $40K down Owner
will help finance Cull
MS-9161
: OPEN HOUSE
REALTY /.
More families are getting tertaaner's patio :'>Bdrm Sommerst'1. on fee land the camp111g "bug" this Absolutely ammarulate
year If }OU have 3 mo\'e an cond1t1on
camper that's not get· Creative financing ting used, sell 1t now available
with a Cl~1f1ed Ad • RED CARPET
~~~~ ... !~.~! 754-12,02 . ., ------~ down. SI 180 mo. buys 3 BR 2 Ba fixer in
ea.ta Mesa Ownr /agt
642-1523; MS-7365 ·------· l"IH 10 '"'"' 1044 •••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
DICOl.ATOlS SHOW,LACE
Owner of this 5 BR ''Kemin~on "
in University Park u a
professional decorators home
and it certainly shows it.
1 Com~letely upgraded inside and
out, mcluding custom loft, lar~e
lot, covered patio & Gazebo.
$299,500 . Julie Van Wieren
752·1414 (569)
114UTY IH MOaTHWOOD
Multi-level 3 BR, 2h BA den &
fam . rm . for dramatic living.
Highly upgraded carpets, window
treatments & wall coverings.
Microwave & trash compactor.
Wrap around patio -A lovely
home. Assumable loans. $175,000
CalJ Marian Hanson 5S1·8iOC ($70)
MAli--!Olil.WWMRW
A MOST DESIR.AILE MIWPOIT
HOME WITH Ol'ean facing
windows for panoramic views of
Catalina, sunsets and Newport
Harbor. Situated on an unusually
large lot with street to street
access from Ocean Blvd & China
Cove. Substantial seller financing
available Sl,500.000 J . Suchomel
644-6200 ($71)
CAMIO SHOltlS Outstandina 3
BR home on 11 acre. Formal liv.
rm. with cathed ral ceiling &
fireplace. Cam. rm. Master suite
opening to terrace; pool & spa.
Custom bath tiles throughout,
wall coverings. & hardwood
floors. Private beaches. 1>35,000
Fee Lynne Valentine 644·6200
($72)
2 OM A LOT -ACIOSS ~
PAI• Owner will carry fil'$l T.D.
on these two nice 2 bedroom
units. One block from shoooin1.
Sl57,SOO Larry Dyer 6'2·8235. ($73)
...
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..
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... ·--- -- -.. ~ ----.... -..... ._,__,,.._ ..... ""'!" ...... ,... ......
a Orange Cout DAIL y PILOT/Tuesday, July 21 . 1981 ~.~.:~~~ .... c=:n w j J.4JI ~ .. !~.·.~·:.~ .... ~!2.!:S.~.~ .... ~~.?! ... ~.!!.'! ~~ .... ~~
..... ..,Wt ._Wt oeei.ra.t1•w. HwtsU.b: a·,~ Yfii9..._. U12 ....................... c..e.w... J124Mtw ,..,.. Jl6t 8tt°~d','. ~~··~'k THlm.HT ••••••••••••••••n•Mf ••••••••••••••n•u••u ....................... ••••••••••••••u•••••• ••••••••tH•••••• .. •••• JR VINS Condo JOlf ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. •=--•••••••••••••• P late A1e: 25·50. SPACI ~~~~ .•. !.... ._ 1 ..._ •r JMe c-.w.. JJJ4 t11r ~~fl'::" ~ '°i., Rana.cho I:: 1 Br. OardlaAJIL~ve t p•• 1111P11T THIMHT ....................... ······•••eMN ....... ....................... m-J ~ • all~ I !. -\ . .. • mrti•. Adulta. DO pN. .. Nr Bt'b Sbr. IJlll(' lfi, -----·
D1&pluea, ~tanfroat,
beautiful ocean view.
Perfect location. New
condlt , . flS. 7300
... SO CST• &•.a. rtt rac avail. no pet.a •PP • "IVl"I· uer·.,. COUMTIYCLUI i. I ... Ml ..,. ~ """ ..---42 INTS 18drm bou11, frplc. uo.uoo da)'I, US.97M que, pool, ll"OW>d floor • ~ •vt nvme. cro. -•UAIANT9! ~~"'~~~~: Owur will urry 1mall farduk.prlv. no Ya w / atlo. $US/mo. 1B,,atta~pr~'f Bacbtlort.Wbedroom mo. In:.,_ all. HB. 300totoOOSq.P't Priml'
•• UXarou. 111.000PfUG· Ptta.• Id '150lntl Be111Uh1J 4 Br. 2 Ba. t • ~ ao. mo. · •Jlt.lls~. Waterfront olflcts 1n aumablll' oa 111.000 lll tl. 11\alt Mll now. Norm ut L • •torr kaodl. Lrl Uvl.D1 New ZBR Z8A Nr So Cit l'rom 110 fft.1!00 Prof workln1 female. Newport Harbor with
M=l@hf\!pm. McKlple1,Bkr.@l·UM Colle,. Put 3 br, Z ba, rm Is dbliQs rm combo PlaumkroPPdbl£1ec 2R8f • .-i.~/.pie Ave. · oon·1mohr. 25·..0. boat 111'9 available. -at• tam rm, coveted petio. wtlh wood bumin& frplc Oar POOIJIPt lad wtr • •rile. onlY, no OM THIWATll Prnt11oua 3 BR. 2 BAI Ph• a &oftcliatolapedal SO. C~Tm. IM¥iii ~ New pa1ot • cnt. Near (am rm. blt·b\ pa kll: b!at)75o.ft21MO ~-tl'75. Sierra )f1mt. Fabulou1 bay view, Fplc. mlcr, W D, toU ameoltlet Tttrific Jtu
ZIOIM.ttf4,t00 Da.Hf ac hool1 . H SO mo. utll rm 2 car praae 38r Condo New111lnt6 ~ffl-lRt laraeupperduolfl,3br r&,•11ded. TurtJe Roclt in«termtnowavalablto will AS$UM*• I LM Auwne 1~"" loan or 1ardener, vi..w Drive carPei. u · Seamllt Cir· 99tf AMI •'Ir JI 2 bl, 1araae. AduJla, no me. No · D40 mo. CalJ Today!
Sbarp ualt w/tecurity ~ finandaa available Goll eo.rH frontal• 4 Br by 29701 Anna Mada cle, Newport Terraee Lr12 Bdrm. Upper. 13'70 1)et.t. tlOO Mo. Yearly. hare utll. C7141675-1662
sates. Good for youna at only 137.. 5 8drma. 2 home ID Meta Verde. L a o • (crow n 1 ~. mo. BUI landacapln1. ~ .. 02aum~. Roommate wanted. A
atartera or Mftlor types, ~=~1b:Ow~SS:09,900. Renl or leue SUOO. Ast. ValJey /Nl1uel Rd a~a). 2 8 R adlt condo in No pet.a, EASTBLUFF 2 br, den 2 f!:a!:c~~!ri ~/~ l~tr Profeulonal Offices to
llO.IOO at 12.S~. 2nd 1175110. Avallimmed. Oranie quletculdeaac Ll:EWA.RDSAPTS. ba, IJe 11.mdeck, pool. h 4000aq ft. Rcmode~ to may be uruced. A DUNG ER l ASSOC. . Air p0ol l jac 13115· 2020 FWJerton Ave. gara1e. Adults. 91185. 848
1 JOUw• ._... 644-1111LLSTATE encl1d 1araae. fenced 9157«01 631·7215 · · Aml&oaWay.&M.ceo&or Profeuiooal woman tf,~~lt~:,.C!~!!!!.0C'a~i •-r. ••-_ rear yard . Separate Mis"-Vltfo l2'7 LuxW"y 2br. trplc, encl Hl·S$27. would Uke IO ahare her &44·'1722 ,,.... .. ~~~~r IO~wia!:~~t~! REALTORS wu ht r /dryer roorn ....................... ..,_, ... ,.,....... patio, nr Jllrlt/racquet· 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, flSO mo. home with a nother ----~.-....-----
I() 4 bd 2 b w/hookup.Acroufrom HOM ESYORRENT ....................... ~lllt!OflMUIS yl'lY.CaUMoothru Sat. woman CDM, Ocefn MIWPOITCIMTR .~;·oui b~:·,ue:i 111~,4 park' ahoppln1. No 3 Bdrma. M25 ·$8SO. Cott.M... l7J4nf£VICTOAlAN Newly 1~17S.lff2,Agt. view, quiet, beautiul PrealiJioul,fullaervl~
quarters. C.11 now for JI 00 pet.a. a.35 Mo. 770.SG& • JI' e n c e d Y • rd • ' ••••••••••••n••••••••• decor 28r. w /pr. adlll1 Verulllea 2 Br 2 Ba. vu of F'•m ·noaa.·a-"r to ahr ... e EX EC ofllces. lncld.s detaila. 7SZ.6498 ....................... _5q.$422, 11ragea. Kids • pets s:JSO. Attractively furn. t'rpla, dl'Jll1_blt·W . Fnca bay & ocean. $82S . .. ..... ua rcpt, aec, xerox. under s..tt.a..,.. IOl6 2100actltbkiJOftllllOOsqft Meta Verde 3bdrm. 2ba welcome. S45 ·2000 upper. l Br.+ den apt. yrd w/patao, waler pd, 142..e149 on Balboa hi and 1round pt'c. telex l an· ••H··~·.··+··.:;:OM••••1••• ~t:.Je~i: bJ.!~k ltltcb remdl, Jrg yrd, 1Ci A ent nof . Gar. Mature. quiet. 2234 '31-4120 <'Ill 1,5.1'17 Vk· lbdrm bay&ocean view. l200/mo + util. 873-0468 lique decor cont. rm. Jnsert new l'eYfl'ff lo&O
YIUA IA.UOA. 10~9. loan. 30 yr I
bdrm den, view, fpk.
mk ro, uperad cpl, lino,
tile, etc. For info
m.te01or1C-430J .
Harbor view Home
Monico. By owner 3br.
2 ba . auum S172K
.... like model ' Ask· Ida D ,500 Incl. land 1'0:9* Own/Al\
""" '""'" p...,...Ownt r e loc . xlnt ror ram. •3bdrm 2bll,famrm, C Rut1 e r s Or torta.M50. Sec. blde.1/yrleHe. Ken r ""'&M..,..,.·.--7189=---·-----
Lge comer lot. Charm· form. '~ 1750/mo. Ind aardnr & frplc, 1ci view, ad up-U213)QH10t. BEAUT. l br , bltna. mo.673-4m. M /F share Lido Ille ()(fice. 2 rooms w/ wet·
1n1 home with wood a.din,...... wa r 7 arades fncd yrd $700 ......... __.----.... l76t car-6 ~ Adlts no n.... vi cft. •-·-2 home. Tennia. Beach. bar. 232 aq ft. l200 Mo. floors ocan views P\'l 4 2700 ... ,, ' · · """' r-' _. ,..... · cb ' v..:ean ew . ..,,.c..,.... I b c: .., .. <...,4 U U Pd ......... ltiOI' n1 rklii I wro•.. E/Side, 3 BR 2 Ba, den, .,.... ••••••••••••••un••••• pet.a. Bike bea . MJS. BR 2 BA Adults ·no u . .. . .,,.,._, =t "-'--'~·.;:;._.=...;,_.~---p ·1 r.bmf spa 1 ° •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• fam rm fplc dbl gar ........ _.. ......__... ~26f 1131 W. OOSt. ~ ti soinO M7 1997 Bayfront pvt suite, !">"· •-'----.__.._..
4
..
50 unit wt 1repace. SA UOOO OwnerwiU /ope'ner ' Yard """•r-·-• La bdrm pt ulet · · · smoller.Gar.shrkrtch --•-•
1299,000. carr1 pape; Bet Coron• whildren OK . no pet•' ••••••••••••••••••••••• r1e l a • q Spacious 2Bdrm. apt 2ba, 673-U560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• L...-I.I. lElalnoreWTS-9172 ~rdnr/wtrincl. llOOmo: IA.NTIA'iODI. !tre~yd,new('JJt~= overlooking Newport mo. For store II office space 4f7·17 I a • ...a ... ...._._ Broker, 67$-'°°5 Beautiful house avail .M..m00~·.;.c Bay11 ~~lllf!.· 499-
1
1964 Female Rmmte ~ + to at reasooabW rates
---now in elepnt aru. 4 !!!!l! _. -~ A vat . 1m.._....te y shr lux 2br apt. Nr SC 500 to 4000 S. Ft • bd•fl JIOO 2 Bdrm detached home Br. 3 Ba. Dining Rm, l.arte TownbolaM 2 Br. 2Br. 2B1. behind Hoag Plau /Colleae. All MESAVERDEbR • Ottier ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• in Costa Mesa. l3llO mo Livmg Rm. ' Family 1'-' Ba., pel.io, laundry Hospital. $500 mo ~men. 554-4776 art work PLAZA ······················-· IE EXCUHM'OISI ··2 < •12 da"" '"" ••29 ... _ --IJI h-Moltlt Hws ..,.. '" ... ~ , •. '""'"'" Rm. New wallpaper, nD· DH•·ThrWW· ·4360aft6PM. ••· 1S2SMnaVerdeE.C.M ..... _11:_,_ I IOO INY---• eves. coiy kitchen • m1ny l Br. Cal']leb, drapes, lBdrm Condo VILLA Low rent lntem1llooal 4 IJl p•.a.cMR4( • UMS """ -_,_..., 11 Tore l2l2 many lllru. 11750 .mo. Y!AA·~ II\*: pool. AdllJla.t quiet at· BALBOA _..smo. Traveler look in& for IET.a.I. 11:a..a.cl -.._,... ••••••••••••••••••••••• llOlllS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Broker Cooperatton. Soc11l 1'c:IMtttt D• moeohere. 1t111lneu 6 ~&o5 quiet, clean male to shr A _.A
POMIMAHATIS, ISTA.llw.E OPPOITUMTY! HOME F'OR RENT 759.11974, reclOf •frffSundey pro(e11loatl teaant1. 11:-c&...----.t.... 2Br furn Woodbridge 770 s9. ft. on Harbor LIMOHS, l966thje1t.lclocatedln PnmeOfficespacewlth 3 Bdrm. 1600·'825, .._...,~ 81unch •880'e • 111·MA1mt. ,_ -3176 apt.S49·2m,S§l·~ Blvd.inC.M.llOO.Great
are 1~1U~~J!n on ~:::~!4:a~~:ci!~s well known Exch,angor . FT3c1 yard ' 11arage. Beiutlf~y rederorited ~:;; ~~:N: 2 Br. AduJta only, no peta. ~·;;;::~·~;~;;~~~:;1~~ MJ:nt~ B~~ ~tk11 t~ ~~':'~~q
67
5-67
00 llals huge lot w/lov,ely 4 759·417$ Servit'es: Sect 11 ins K 2ooo ~ w~ come. El Ooudo model. 3 TeMC5•fr .. Lessona f'25. 755 W. lab. St. ins, carpets, drapes, bch. Must be neat & a 21.AJ B h 5 e r v -• c 0 P 1 e r · MS· ·~no ee. Bdrm. 2~ ba, wet bar, tp10 & pro shopJ • 2 ffl·9507. rt laundr facili Office W...
r. Oa omr1j !m-~~~~~--I S200·S300/Mo. lmmed ...... i111Y6y l2l4 parquet firs. Security Ho•llhClubl•S.urlll 2 Huge Bedrooma in ~:.ri:ubuctenrufcourts: respon. Over 21. S230 NptBeach :!~~Y~~all wN~~m w or e EXCITING e occupancy. N~ar OC ••••••••n••••••••••••• 11ated, view. ll.200/mo • Hydromuuge • super location. Fully and golf course right 846-7096. Smell execwve office.
Alrport.CeneTribolet. HOMESF'ORRENT be. Call Donna Sutton Sw1mm1ng •Goll carpeted, bulll·lna , behind property!! LARGE room w/kitchen d nl address, '896/Mo ~:--~~1266 : Grt .... P.ta 957-4025 3 & 4 Bdrms. S700.17SO. U4·9076 or Henr y DrtvingRange ground noor. Over SO Adults only no pets. privileges, adults only Terrl!714)7SZ.1194
HAI• Ill Lie custom home site
With spectacular view
Just down the hill from
Harbor Ridge Owner Heu eq uit )' pe rtner or possible Trade. Ted
~Issler mll23
~S. IHI&.. Fenced yard s It 5S2·S89S,Bkrs. IEAUTIFUlAPT8 : Adults only. No pets. Available immediately C.M.M7·:i080 IETA.L5'ACE
B Ir I 2 SOB W..t.d 2t garages. Kids & pets EASTBLUFF S1ngles.1&2Bed· S3SOMo.S68W.Wllson. S375mo0wner6420131 F.2 BR.2BA.Promon· SOOOsq.ft.onNwptBlvd r~:;:,~ ~:~Br, 2:~: ...................... we_ I co me. 545· 2000. Three Bdrm, 2"'1 ba. end rooms • Furn11ned A~ E. 846-4477. · · · tory Pt. NB. Ocean view, HI trarric. Great ex·
· ,...._._ M • I .1 • ....a.t...1a~1. A nt nofee. unit. &ood cooditioo and &untvm.hed•Adult SPACIOUS 2 BR. Adult, 2 Bl~· 2 BA. ~DO. On pool tennis courts, etc posure S3SOO mo ~~:~~;~~. esa
5
"' f.wti.'iikhor llwt .... •leeclt 1240 location." llOO per mo. ~~~.~1·cfri~:~~11; open beamed ceiling , go cou~oo· S340 mo. AIUr6. Wknd's lmmed.occupy. a..ta-.•To• a,'dterrfRrontesdef> rt T ....................... Weekdan7~17S 9to6 lots of wood. serving 11:-.&.... .a.~ lllO M.67S-0797 Realonomlcs 67>6700 -r a e ~ y. o HOME FOR RENT bar. $410 No pets 2256 _. -Off1u ..... 4400 24x60· 1971 Golden west purchase 6 ~r JOUltly ~e-• Bdrm .,.00 Fenced Oakwood M 1 p I• c • 8 7 3 S 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Modem Store 2Br. 2Ba w/famlly rm & velop. I will provide .. · •• . 0NTIU:SAND5 "' "'" · Duplex 3 bdrm, 2~ ba ••••••••··~··•••••••••• or ok 1u post ofc $450. wet bar. in Laguna Hills llllrc rmancing. Charles yard & 1.arage. Kida & 2 bdrm. lots ol wood and Gerden Apettments 67 ·8803_.__ den. new paint. new 1617 WeatcU~f. N.B. Want 548 s 1f 2U1477· 7001 nicest s star park 21 yrs Perr 9$-12.81 pet.s welcome 545-2000. shutters. fireplace.I Newport hec:ll H. ~ 2 Br I Ba. bo~. No drapes. 2 teen.agers oil. financial uut 7000s.r Jerry
+toquiWy.G ,000 · Agent.not~ mature adults. IJ7S/mo 1 8801r¥1ne1a11111hl dogs. 645 V1ctona 118. No pets. 5 min to So 1st.f!2or AgentS41·5032 ~'-'-"'-------Newport Hats View CLASSIC ..... Large 2 Br House 4 yrly. (71 4)645-1104 546-91:4 Co Pia E95 m•> HIWPORTWCH OCAllU'ORT/C.M.
Home. 4br. 2ba, 2500'. 2 bloAks to beaAh Obi .. _port • .._...... s s di s t A ast u . F 11 · f 1840" prime 2 sty of MO-a HOME •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ~ . ......, _.. . tu o 1n an a na 760-1688 u service exec o h Aesiwarehouse. a c. frplcs, wet bar. lots or .._ u___ Fa Jie.d garage, lrg yard SlOO CORNER2BDRM. 1100 16111 s1 •Oo••r •• 16in1 heights l2SO mo Incl fices from 1397 '"On ~
wood1gl1ss. 4 decks SALES r-. Mo.213/$1655 with 2 ba. Paooracmk (714)642·5113 util Inquire 20201 B Apmimt•Fmwiai.cl Cati" exec olfices from cpl. 0.H. door. etc. w/spa 'ruce )'ard too 2'706 Hirbor.ste206-A :::.:·:,·~··l••,•O• lmmac Exec 3br. 2ba viewcoodo.Adlllt.s. Pool BirchStreet .. 833-1927 orU.fw •i.ci lfOO Sl05. lnclds secretanal, Sublease 966.1337 S4S9,000 by owner 540-5tl7 --and spa. WOO/molse. -••••••••••••u••••••••• h d anytime •••••••••••••••••••••• house. Wik to bch. fam Hom 1 1255 1 BR dplx. In quiet W I .... D p one ans . wor pro-~~=------M&-2647 jlll!l!!ll•••••••loN THE BEACH. Xlnt rm, dlnlnc. bu1lt·ins. Waterfront es, nc safe court. For non· S E A " cesstng. Telex.qwip CoroeadllM. ---111111111~111111--C.•ltryLoh/ loc. Winter Rental AvaiJ frplc, .recent refur.b. 631-1400 smoker c prev rental VILLAGE THE HEADQUARTERS 4200 s9 rt. Ground noor
IA.YROHT Crypti 1500 Sept 12. 1 Br. 2 Ba verypriv.m51morer s. LEA.S~YflOHT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ref.~Wmh.548-~ New l&.2 bdrm luxury c7~MPr~~ ~~:1~~0~;fsh~:r~ IJO/eFINA.MCIHG ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~pl'nls. ~ui~ L~J" ~t.s968-h 1519< br 3 ba 3 Comfortable family GtMrd ll02 lbr £/side. small but adult apts in 14 plans 1 Offl /W-.L.....--675-6700
Newport's exclusive IEDUCED v.:ea ron . Y · Exec. ome.. . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• cozy w /lots or neat Bdrm from~. 2 bdrm Ct -'"'-='-------Peninsula Point. Newly 2 c emetery lots , Au .21st.or call67S-5990 car gar. Nr. beach It hme, 4 BR or 3 & sep. ... .. MTSFOll.,.. wood. Adlt.s only SJ3S from SS~. Townhouse For lease. New carpets Retail/office space. 700
constructed 4 Bdrm and Westminster Memorial Newport leodl 316 schools. SlOOO mo. Op-ofc. Fam Rm1 llv rm. 2 At"' ,._ IA""' 551·1660. 1600 + pools, tennis, It paint. Nr. Al'"P?rl ' all sq rt. Westcllff Atta NB
4balhresidef'tce with pvt Park. Good Shepherd n•••••••••••••••••••• tiontobu . 9. cargar.2patios,oneon H.B .. ~.B ......... taMesa L;,ge 2 Br bit-ins, waterfalls, ponds! Gas Freeways. Avail now ""~""'1'""·8300"""""'"'.--:'"'.'-:--::----
BOAT DOCK. Sl.650.000 Sl'Cllon . worth $760 a.-.a u---4 BR rondo. patio. clbhse. lhe sand. SlB7b 5 mo. ~21' So8amhethtomg4foBr Evueryone oarage 1....,.. 0 Anaheim ror A00 .. ; .. g •-heatt'ng Call 6«-6500or7fi0. l377 Small office bldg for rent ' Id' h I d -• ..._.. I t Is had b II sli p may e avai · c · r. nfum. " . """ ' "'"' "' P LUSH OFFI CES C inc u ing t e an or each, asking S878 for Prof decorated 3 Bd poo . enn • n a • 673-4666 Apts Certain loc1lio~ ~2S Mo. Adulls, no pets. paid. From San Diego • Sll.50 mo. M. i1~~9:~01':fui'~da::hg~d~ both.714/642·9136eves. hom~. Fully furnished palsatygdroeunp,7d.:07$S6339S. lst, 2 Br mobile home on o.ff~r : Pool, spa . Open 7·6, Mon -F'ri Frwy drive North on S00-6000 sq rt 1801 Christina. SS7·2783. C~ w /gardener, monthly h l -""' . , fireplace. laun. room . MS-3229 Beach to McFadden Newport Blvd, C.M. Ph ~l-S117 Bibb67S.23U. '' 1600 cleaning sernces and Adult Condom1n1um . water• quiet. no bea m ed c e i Ii n ~ s. CUTE. and COZY then West Oii McFadden 646.9495 OFFtCE 5'ACE ~l!!I•••••-....................... association fees in· Mariner's Cove. 2 Br ~\!a kids /pets 1659· 968-6164 garages. all built·ms 1 Bdrm. adults. no pets. to Sea wind Village. 711 W 17th St., CM. Wet-Mo to mo,nodepostts LIDOISl.E RARE C·l·H Newport eluded. Jae .• comm ba beauty, security BLUFFS-Upgraded3~r. Carden & Townhouse Nr stores and bu.s. ms. l714)893·S198. • bar, cpt. l drps »sq PRICE REDUCTION Beach Property so· pool and dellghtlul fam1· system.sauna._pool, len· 21,1,bi. rim rm. frp c, design. NO FEE. 645-7836 1001M 4000 ft. 642-4463
5Bdrm.2story.lge cor· frontage in pnme loca· ly living. Lease for nu · Avail 1mmed greenblt loc , uo5o TSLMCMT. 642-1603 lbdrm. au.ractive, pvt,••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN VIEW Newport
ntr lot. OWC with 24'1 lion. Owner •ill finance . SlSOOtmo 6'4-703> r>°£:?i~ pet.a or gar 76:8384~~ H hts 3 Corw dllMIJr 3122 crpts, drps. stove, frige, Eastside Costa Mesa. Bch, 300 +sq ft. Re«pt
down. Now S79S,000 Exclusive. Pnnc1pals e Ne Con wpt g •••••••••••••••••••••••gas /water S33S . Nicelargeroomw/frplc rm. MOOpt'rmo. Ans.
IN C L RE C EPT .
CON FER. COFFEE. COPY RM. E'TC. ~n Sat&m 12-S 121 onl)'. Ask for Irene • 2Br, l~B1,2urgarage, Br. 2\!a Ba. 1500 sq. ft. 2er l\!a ba 2 atry, frplc, 646·9429. &ownentry.COU..EGE Ser v/secy ave1l (714)
V11 Frienze Loudon. Agt, 631-4247 or Lingo . close to bch IS50 mo Ori ve by 292 Palmer pool deck' adult no pet. 2 BR 1 Ba . So c 1 CAL pref. DJO/mo. 1st & 640-11984 ~-~ .... L.e...l ""1 7300 c-·7216 UA. 900 Mo. No petS, ' ' ' . • nr · s I t mo req Af••r < pm ..=:..=o:::..:.._O ____ h_I
IDEAL IF REAL
ESTATE RELATED
BUSINESS. ~ .... ,, na. ..::""=-:"="'-·-----i ••u..... ~ no chi ldren C a ll 873-0C73 Plau, children OK. oo " · "" "' Private Hice wit
64 50or r---...... ~•-111 lrYM 3244 7s2.6499_ 3bdrm, 3ba, frplc, 50. o1 t.s. mo.64.5-376.S 646-3375 shared recpt , sec'y
6 ).$012 C.2LOT . ••••••••••••••••••••••• bwy. saso. No pets. 1 Br 1 Ba. upstairs, Mesa Verde. pvt patio. service avail. 0 .C H 1 g h tr a ff 1c coun l. PeMISUla 2.5t11 SL Beach Calif. Homes. sm Yearl-IA YCllST 673-2098. stove /re frig carport eotran~. bath_ Refng. Airport area.151·99'13
NES2WOP,OOOORTDOHEWHIGHTS 62.5X307 lot. Ex1stmg House_ 4 drs from ocean ing. 3 Br 2 Ba. Fam. Nice house available ,._......_ u--3124 lawidr . S4o.J666 · no cooking, smoke or ov CdM Office Swte 2 pvt.
PRIVATE DE SK
AREAS OR SUITE NOW AVAIL. house on property flex· 2 bdrm. 1 ba3 parkJng Rm A IC, new p11nt now. 1n great area. 2000 -. ... -... n1te guests. S215 mo ofcs Recnit .• wort rm. Brick Home with White 1bll' uses. Owner will spaces. S37S wk. Avail Water It Crdnr meld sq rt 3 bdrm. 2 ba. 2 ........................ ,..,, ....... a..cJi 3140 549-3612 11 bath. XJnt loc Air
Picket Fence. Lowest'" consider carrying lst 7 18 thru 818 8/lS thru s. A entS41-S032. fplcs. Gardener. ind. HEWLY OECOI. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo. lg room. Beach It cond., cpt., qu.iet. IS50 WHt.•lhr 12~ C IL 714 /955-l IX>S
RF.S. 67S.SS3S
are a · Owner I Ag l TD Askmg Sl.99.500. Call 8/29. 835-ISM WOODBRIDGE 97S mo/lse. Children 1 Br_ gas pd, enrl gar THE W"9ffllTIH Ellis. Priv ba, washer, incl utJls. 673-4~ 14308 Beach Blvd. Btwn
646-1597 ~llSlfor more info. TOWNHOME welcome. (2131 84.3-5578 dtwasher, pool Adulls Luxury Adult unit.sat ar dryer, pool, jac. Non· Office Spacun PCH near 2 Fr~ys. Civic Center IY Ow.& Ho.es U11fwwhi.cl . 2 Br 2 Ba, upgraded, or <2131 27&.71»1 ask for 64!·5073. fordable living. 1.2 ' 3 smoking, quiet. S300 mo. Balboa Bay Club. 3'2 aq. Shoppmg Center. pnme Leaseoption.BackBay. ••••••••••0
••••••••••• Warmington w1frplc, Pam. 21r.lloA.d Br ~ell. decora~ed. 641·14728-4da ft.·S370permo.Also212 loc.979-118or64S·1260
3 br, 3 ba, highly up. ..... hlmd 3206 AIC . covered patio, 2 car Waterfront lease, 4 Br 4 Newly decot. C:as pd. Olymp1~ size pool, ligh~· 2SOO' CONDO on lovely sq. ft. . SZ20 per mo. C1U Ca••1rcW
graded. S199.000 with ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar w /opener Great Ba! family rm. top con· encl gar .. pool, dshwr ed tennis court. Jac~ut, Greenbelt w /spacious John at549-2117. ....... 4475
SZ0.000 dwn, Sl.500 mo. l•·------•1Yearly. 3 Bdrms. 2 ba. location. S7S0 /mo. dilloo.doct for40obo~t. Adult& 642-5073. ur~ :!!e...J1:ts~~PlllJ· patios It sundecks nr PCH •••••••••••••••••••••••
Hurry! 631-496.S Co11do•ill .... /f ow• dehn11.dfpc.1!;je patioR. N? Adult.s, no pets. 559-1351 J!12012660. _!!_!!b It ov1e l Ir To .. •autt H c: a g. tn pool. 557·7883or640-6339. , , • 312 to l260sqJt. frontage.
View to ocean . custom i.....tw.-1700 c ren _,., mo .. e · 10AM·6PM .,.. · "R· · · Private entrance in pr1v. SI JS-A w/slnk. Under ~ sq.ft. built s Br. home in ....................... tst , last, security. University Park Terrace. Newport Island Home Newly decor. gu pd.. From .846-06l9 home. No smoking or Deluxe "otri'c1 ;pace, f:.Side,CM.548-7249
Lemon Hgbts . Easy PALMOUBT 760-906l .. 67S.l624 conv located. cbannin11. 4br, 2ba, privacy, steps encl gar .. pool, dswhr. MARIHBS WAI.I drinking. Pref. male pnme NB loc, next to .... ltWl..W 4500 rmanrln&. $44-4900, Agl. Deep Canyon Tennis Low~r unit of duplex. 2 Br cheerful 2 bdrm, den on lo ocn /bay, Sl200/mo. Adulta. 642-5073. 2 l 3 Br, Townhouse over40. $300Mo. 556-0637 Arches Rest. 1300· nail ...................... .
Club Lovely Jbr, 2ba 2 Ba, rum or unfum. ~o greenbelt nr pool, No 673-3335 IMSTA.MT IN! Ana.. from $495. Patios, 5 a.....a....a.. 4200 now. Contact Byco, lnc. 90 X 127 comer with small "A" Plan. C-·t Or"""'n· 0 arage. llOO/mo. A vat I. pe•·. sub-" on children. 1 ho r-•-d bl ma Hr -b 'Id' ., _ _, N 1 991 COIM9COMOO
WA.LI TO llA.CH ·~ .. , " "' "'" WHtclffGroY.i 2 Br, 1~ Ba. Town use 11 ngle "' ou e car ••••••••••u•••••n•••• 64.5-2251 u1 1ng. ~ ·. belt Loe. mc>oo down. Aug.IS. S7 50 /mo+aecur it y Brand new-never lived Eaatside. 1 child OK. garages, neer Hunt. LIDO ISLE charming 3 CM, 3 beat.t. offices & W. 19th St. C.M.
OWC S106.000 at 12~ LORA VANCE RLTR ~1·9331 or97 in. 3 BR executive home Yard, lnd.ry rm. Great Harbour.~-bdrm, 2 beth, playroom. bath, 840 sq.rt. Xlnt loc. mo. 642-3490 2 bdrm. N bath, com· pletely refurbished
View of ocean from balcony. SIU,000.
BKR. 9$3-1220.
67~ llNTAl.S w /wet bar. Sl9SO mo. loc. SSSOMo. INSTANT IN Just remodefed. Mon· Air. cpts, drps, S750 Costa Mesa office It work
OCEAN View It OCRlty lolboo , .... 3207 3br. l'-' ba t6SO 975-1262 TSL MGMT. 642-1603 3 Br. 2 Ba. Apt. with 2 thly ren
1
tal. Bill GNndy, 645-7661 are!,!otalinflg 4A,22S.sq
1
.. 1 ft. Liahts in NEWP T ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br. 2 ba SllSO Newport Shores 4 Br 3 HIWPOIT cu attached gara'e 67~16 · HIWPOIT at ...., sq. vail Oct.
f\1 •tih.ll (}~ fk,1lty BEACH. AMume 1014~ lolboet.yfnMt 4br,2"'iba 11SO Ba.CanalFroot. . A.PADMIMTS. W/O hook·up, patio, NE WPORT QCEAN· Isl Cell 642·2928
loan. SISK down. call 4 BR, 2 BA. Boat sUp. 4br.2~ba llOOFum 912-66113. 2.2 Bdrm. l ·l Bdrm. frplc. Small pet/child FRONTLux.2-4Br. Wk· PfHlo4~ ~k~m _ _.~P-m~·-----Hersel (AGT> 964-2611. Pri bcb. spa. 2 car &ar. • BIG CANYON ADULT From $270. mo. + utils oil. Nr H1mt. Harbour. ly. 67J.SURF, 673-7677 ~pacious uecut1ve C~f· SfonNJt 4550
96S-0733 No pets. Sl750 mo CONDO. P!uah 2Br 2ba, No children. no pets, no Only U Hunt. Bch lrg abdrm ~~~ t1~~i~vai1/. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,_.us/ 673-6055,67S-«i97 A!C. rrp1c, encl prk'a. watedieda. L MT ·1603 w/apa. Near beach. Aug. ble :optional' From 225 Not ror cars tBO Mo
-------o.lh S:. 1100 Corw dll M1Jr J222 pool. ~/mo. 6«·7'TZ2. 24SONewport Blvd. MUI HACH. 2IDIM only. 960-Sl15. sq.h. up at reasonable Newport ~ach
I ' ~ . : I . : I II I
CAl ... UYING ....................... ....................... orlS7·202ll Costa Mesa Crpta. d • blt·ins. at· Newport Beach 3 Br 2 ba, rentals No leue re· 3--4U4
1111111-... ~~-... '!"'11•12 Br. Oplx. SllOO Mo. 4 Br. 2i,<, Ba. family rm. 2 Br. 1 Ba. 571 W. JoAnn. tchd a . 75. . furn. Weekly. Agent quired, call673-3002 Want Ad Help? 642-S678 Beautiful Ocean View Clean.newcrpt,alrium. pool, AvaJJ al\. Aug~ Max 1 child. No pets. DELAWARE PINES 83:USS0,673-8849 OM UDO
In this 3 bdrm. cozy
charmer on extra wide
lot w /laree patio. Extra panm, apace or small
• boat atorqe.
f\, i.J h ii Io~ Rt ·.1 lr\
f l I • 1 ~I-, ; j I\ I
•
DUPLEX 3 doors to Avail.lmmed.5511-2631. l.5th. Harbor High dis· S37S. Siern Mgmt. APTS. PRETTY. little beach
buch, CA RLSBAD . Cameo Highlands 4 br. ldct.ll500.1!5Af!!D 64J.l32.4. Spadom16 2Bdrm. rental. ·1 br, ~an vu.
Each Unit 12:50sq. ft. in· Sunny patio, pvt beach . .,,523 ,..-.... ft...fllU-EXECUTIVEHOME Fr pie . stove, dis· Non ·amkra /drmkers.
cl. 2Bdnn, 2Ba, very.lge $l500 mo. ind. gardener. "' '°""'"'""-= """"1: DOVER WESl'CUFF ~lfleld hwuher, carbl1e dis· IZ2S wk. 3 blks to bc.b. ~I ~l!ga rmk 1~1:1~~n~ Aft, 673-~. 1595 /mo, 2 Br 2 Ba 4 Br. 3 Ba. Gated f~t ~ pogall pool, laundry fac. 1·538-2741.1-639-7978
• ,._....._ u--3224 Or et Ad 1•· I court yard' rear patio PA.Ml.Y Al'TS. Sm1l • quiet complex. Oceanfront Duplexes, w /break fut nook-+ _.... ...,._ ang ree. u '""00 y, dbl frplc. "200 lncld Adulta onl~. Peta con· Newport BeaAh. 2 •· 3 dbl 1ar1ge S23S 000 Call ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• no pet.a. Pool, tennJ.a. fl ~ Brand new beautlrul Ire ~ •
Plul R. ·wop~cball, DLX CON002 Br.+ lrg Orchard. Ownr/Agt. gardener. No pets. apt. for lanli.lles with l s1dered. l r. "50/mo. 2 Bdrms. Avail weekl y.
Realtor(714)434·1735 loft Br. 2'1\ Ba. frpk, S6p.§Z21 752-ZSW. or2cbildren.Nearpark. Br. U SO /mo. 19221 Call544·0814orll38·3232.
gar., ate, new. P75. WOOOllMI Family hornet Bacltbay, Heatpald.Nopela. Delaware Sl. <So. of Yec.tioa ..... 4250 JOOO 61&-$565or96J.8377. ho bdrm love Ir. nelanborbood, 2 BR. 2 BA. *500 ft•rfl~ld l ~~h Of· ..................... .. ~~!.'!r.:!?....... LIASIOf"T'IOM l:~ptc~i·c!r enc aa;, beautiful llJ!dlcapln&l 4 •!'. WJJ!op.!13l·$HI ~ 5~~PMue~rl·M~• Oceanfront Newport Why pay rent??????? *"SO'·e.CC"!'U't Bdrm, lredinlog, lrpc, StunnlnflarCe2Br.28a. "' r · • · Beach, 2 l 3Bdrms 611A.TAMAHCM 11 !!. .. _~ nearall scboola.Notin GardeftApt.Pooll!Rec .,.. avail. weekly . Cali .COSTAMISA.UNITS New, ant.utlc,wellloca IMdi lJ41 fll1ht pattern. SUOO. area.$115. Near new 3 BR 2'1\ ba, 544-0814/838-3232
1Uo $t60.M,10.ll~. !: ~-P:.,Bamone:e!'t°r~ ....................... 630:5$'FS . 710W.18Ul.St. ~~· 1:: =~~~: 0 CE AN FR 0 NT.
14 Un 9&40l(, JO.IO""~ allshopptgC 631.. Calm vlewll 3/Bdr • .. ZBa. W-Ill Lite, brite, airy, 1 Br apt. . Newport, Sl<I Seashore. a Un tliOOM. ~-lO~'k ..::.:.:=~=-:·-==~---:--fr pie, pa o ec... nr yn wtlh balcon or rwUo aB MS-lll5t0 5'S
2847 4 Un D40M ev •. 11~ Newport Riviera Coodo. bcb /town. Sll7S mo. Won't Jut. Newport cathedral :f11n1• p;.,; lid.rm. nr beach, buih· r. : ·
BrokerCooperaUon. Avalll~.3 BRJtnb,a. 494.P Crut townhouse. spa llllh landacapin1. l,1t1, cpt/drapea. gar, 28.:rm.· 28a~. :C:.
Call TomLeeAJent ram rm, pool, tennia. No. La1un1. Redwd, 3bdrm, Z~~L wetbar. Ad~Jta. no peta. * • '* -~~c~..n P~. 1.:: s,u....... §42.IP 1195/mo.~ 1lua oc vu.. woodsy 2 waUt to beam. ~nit, up.549-1447. oec<'lbleftfs5*, C... t-... ~~~~111!1!'~ 5 Br 3 Ba, la yrd, nu Br. zi>a, din.ins, 2 frp\c. pool, apa. No pets , 2Br zsa hrnhom e Avail now. Z Br. 1 Ba.
Dctyouwaata1111cloua3 11£1PllJ Kl"H carpet, drapes. oven. drapu, cpt1. ap· chJldttft de. Avail Aue. bea'ulllolly ~ndicpd' Up1ll i r~1 d1bw1b, ....... ..,. 00
betllroom condo In the .,., Clole lo achoo!t\ part, p ll1Dt'el, dbl • .,. 10th. llOO/mo.lyrleue. rr-i.. IDdry • ref'ri.Je, W/Q, betcooy. 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••
BWf• ID Jib.new t'Oltdl· ,,... a. 10 rw ttnnis. Mesa oei Mar. StOO /mo, 1001 le rm. 15HTH, @IHf. ;,_7•J:f·mo Ad'::o cbllcfOK, no pell pleue. llovin1T A'°'41 depoeill
• with sa».ooo In u-llcw Bob or Dovie AH.2M. 497-4543 2 BR phat deft 2~ ba 1 tr pet§ S4f=ft ' aw. su.IOOO. Alt. no 6 cut llviftl expenses!
••..,able loamf Don't Act. 900. Hl.LWYllW old, appllc.' IU BBQ, · tee. Profe11lonally 1lnce
mtN lftila. II rn• Vista DtlllltMtw elec. 1ar. amenltlea. ...._ Deluxe poolside 1tr1 lf7l.
U.brofla.fM,J,OOO. !ct~fn:r: :,aprgu: :s bedrm, 2~ be. tplc, 5"00cl011~.~/Dia micro. 2 1ty, ST50. OCCWANCYI Iara• 2br, 2ba. bltu, HOUWA.TIS f.M.Mu 'dDr carpet&, drapea.. blt·lnl .fl!C __ ~.!!!:__ flJ.IN.rtHm 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt. Beam dawllr. 1'-' milet beach. ID-UM Hf.ttft 76tfHI CorolladelMar. Obit 1ar w/opener, Lovely1Pldoulbomef0f' HatborVie.Homes4BR cellln11, laundry rm, Adltt. no pd.I, 8'50 mo. M/Fto lhare11_1ec~2BRZ
2 Duplex• + l Tr1plta yarcb fudeoer lt1dl • '9ue a{ tUIO per mo. 2 2 Ba, aewcJl(I, Sl175jltr pool . Adult• only, DO Ba apt, NB. Pool fl pvt '111AMOtM In a row on Balboa pelt o.i. S1l5. N'f.1571, Br.+ 1112Uaml1yrm, mo. Slama Co. Call pelt. ....... 3144 beach . S•OO. Call
Oii Ulla "'Ilk 'D ipu" 2 Pn.lmula • I lot from Lorri Wk da, Mf.5434 do u b I • ~a 'J.t Gury or Cbr hta ISLJIGllT tg.1'03 " ..................... D.John1on 110·1tH:
bdrm cottau. Hu saodandsurf.Neartlt.h emtflbndp. "~::'-.-q fll=1Tfl;'J!tWl W'oodbrldll t'aldo, s Br 1~"~HOO!-...---~~
ltfl!IW .......,,. 11111t St. L 0yeI1 Ea. t •Id. M .• .. c...... JJ76 2\t Ba, dot locatloo, floomm•S. Wllllld. Mlllt ulllRV~.Sll0.000. ...... nel1bborhood,J bdrm,2 .. JIM ......... -........... •e8ti.W. llOOlM/blO.~or beb
1
.!!a,t.ao ..... "!~~1 6114141 t Duplu on """ wattr ba, la fen~ beckyd. ...................... I BR 2 la twnbmt, poo1a, TOWtitiaMIJ . lltif42 ._.. rom ~ ... nm.
wlthclo¥fot30'boal. ' flOO mo. Water • a bfdrm., home a be~ Prtllcl•llaUllll, •· COHDmPOltll!N'T .._. Jl41 mf.overZ.$4!1tf
--prdenerpd. buflt·lu, mdoaed Y MM••nL. 2Br. + O..NBa. "40 ...................... Uberal Roommate con-
AllAtlmnableLoam, HM19 paid tardmtr. 2 car C_. • t 28r.J\tll. .. Laiona Cliff Or b1 llctaervtee. ~~1~!~l O.wner
1
3 Ir Z Ba Ollleae Park. ~~·A~·i:.~;:r: )1 1~ MJI l8r.1"'1rt •11 Shaw'a Con. z Br. tNlHHtf.
blt·lu •• Dl'rl, frplc. di t 1 ott ....................... lraal an, l•U tlM Cktu•...,,PllJo,frplc. llale or hmalt lhart C"l=#A...a.... A•aLlablt.D.AMfor ~om• 1 · ow WOODlllDOl·IWMD. t•w•h•••· dHltle ...... lllllltotColltd lll•hN.8.48r.houae.
,. --Nt.751& ~---•v=...-,.,.....=,... . 1~ ~ rrom bucti 6 . 7 a 11l"11.w. Au HOMIPOllllJl:ce11 tuiel~ul. a 1anll~ ttt.,.: ._. •t E' •--. cowu.
duolel. •mo. la· l Nr9. -Iii. CrPll. .... ._ ...._ 2 .. ......_._ lat. 6 lat. CaU
UW. ts 91t! I ClwllW ~( 191 8, 81ft91 )'IN=--=-= &9 pool, •P.lrJ•Hl1 = r::-::::. UDO Vtn z tir, z '1a. 11lf.a ••• •: f ·'maU _IM! '""· II ,. .. -. __ ... · -1t.i; -. ......... -• .. ,.,..., ..... r.a1r•tr,1t.dtw, ••.M.a c.• " · ,_ .. ..,.,.a .... z
a.lladlt rMfnlltp ~~·-llMs ...... ,.....,_ ........ M.flr'l-.C11.W111, _._ d'"' f'l'bflliel m:aaam_ MW ....._ wtt•
1
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,
'
TIME
IS
MONEY
Use"""" M service when placing your
ad ... a Da ily Pilot ad
number will appear in your
ad ... we take your
mes sa ges 24 hours a
day ... you call in'at your
convenience during off Ice
hours and get the responses
to your ad . . . this service
is only S10 per week. For
more Information and to
place your ad call 642-5678.
DAILY PILOT
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.:=;w;;;;~=:=!ft ... :~1~1:1:.. C'fan •• e....ttc1 • ,.,...na. "••• "••••• .. • w.11Ml ,.,.....1'••-. · ~ ....................... ;-.;-.~ ................................................. ,;;; .....•.......•••.•••.•••••..•....•..•.•••.•.••.•••.•..............•............••.......•••••••••••••• ···············i·······
........ YOllSW.-.. All TyJ* Recnodtllq 6 GUAJWf"J'E£D Fonn1ca~ Olac:ouou to senior EJpert!se HoUl8etpln1 BRICKWORK : Small lALPH'S PAlHJ'INO Hot "'~t.! poo htauni.: ~ SPICIAIJST a.,iln, ~· 17 Blott wan., brickwork. Cult.om buillttmt.Ded citiJeiu All typm ot re-Oeptndable, re(• Joba Newport, COila Axt /Int, l"fU, prompt. 11ve u-.~~~
}!Jl .. ~ Herb'• Oara1e ltH YjJln/':;,a.. 6lta:i alabt, dri'9W•>'•· Bela LateatC.olon/Daipa palra. Fl'ff est Call Suppliea fwn, H liflQ Meu , Irvine, Reta. caln tu c 11 KarborBleo.t.IMesa _r._i_ . .__14 Bqa.fltM·IHZSS Fntgt. .....,1 Anew er ad 14U. QualttyHouteclea.rung .m:Atu AGAPEf'ORC£
t'1ALL1ou >' MelewC.... ORIVEWAYCL~G ....... Ce..t.I M2·4300, or U M U7. withPel"IOflalTouch BRlC.K: Walls Walka, PAlNTING COMPANY ?f':lakttn fora ... ,......_ SpedaU. In Ra.lah • Improve YoV homtl ......... ;.;;.;;1 ........ ARtrS ~ Planters , Patios , 3Gt11trttlonfof • .. R.NKi:ERS,SOD ..
301nclaylld ........ .., ............ nunoddu,Xlntref. Rtmov~tlllY oil' n11t CRPT·UN~WOOD JACKOF'ALJ.,TRADl!S WANTED! Jlouffclean· V1e n ee rs" e l c · Paint i':xctllenct. TrSP IR I DIG IT the Chlldea~ lo ~>' bomt. Jll.11Q5 ftllo· r~ji..91.-. wtalled/rtoafred. Lie. Plumblng,elec.~ lng.exp'd, rellable, B ockw~rlt, 1.oncrete. . 1..a:ds emova -700 DAI. Y Fle11 bowl call Teri or Cu atom.bu l It h 12 ClllW c.. IWJIO ~ •5142 Odd iobl. ~ bonrst. Q112hfl •PM Llc, Jlef s. 646:1581 Quality Ptk. Lowat rates · Pl.Of Dono•dU wooden 1belvu for ....................... h•amw HOME IMPROVEMENT T END ER LOV ING Frplcs, ~allOI, Planters. In OC. Neat prompt Tit SllYICI Lovlo1 mother will care atorase, display ' Sl I 90,IWI •••••••••'••••••••••••• Rem.odelln&·Odd Jobi CL£ANING BY STAR. For a job done right. Scry. Hf.S§llf.fS.llfl ..................... .. DIUC'ToaY roryouahild,myhome. c::Je. Our price I• 1*i. • ~II. -C . CLEAN·UPS/LAWN lhruH. ·rzt-226$ 15 y rs exp Re ra. Lam7»WJ8evn .......,.~..-TILE INSTALLED
DOJTNOWI 631·~.CMarra. __ .W.R =p~~ Malntenance-IAdscp H ..a __ ... .___ l\HI001ble.ff2.6119 Mo•llCJ ......... ;r.~~......... All Klnds.JGo';.U~7 Atli ... S-.. BABYSITTING my ROUGB•flNlSH -· freenl. f0.9807 ,.u•www~ ....................... Neat patche!l &textutts B!(L. YourOallyPTIOt home, lntants OK. Nr. FencinJ,Doora,etc. C ..... K... Gardenln , landacapln1, ....................... •Ho~eclelllllngt MovVtg? The Starvin& COAST Fµ>ORIN~ ~rviceI>irtctory Vlclorla.C.M.ff2Kl2 CbmftH043 ....................... tree trfmmln1 & re· HAru>~~2~RS Prok~"?:~.-~roogb CollegeStudentsM.ovln& it. H 14 lnstallation/Repatr
Repreeea&aUve ._. Cabinell ~ witer topa Cu.tom Brick, Block, moval major clean-up • ~ 832-4lllllS A nt s Co. has grown, Insured re.tlil 9 ~mJ~d. $@46§ 642·H71.eltl22 RoomaddiUODl•flnlah Tit•. Patloa, Walka, treeat.w• , oD me. .. Chartle83l;T same good service ........................ TrHSffric• -------••l•u~•oiAj;A~BAND: .. •• worlt. Fmrst7$4.j420 ~;?:'rt~vrr~!:'. Sam Fukumoto YARD ~e~~~h~g :r!:d~~'. T~:~r:T.'fe':sonl~l~r ~T.i!Zz·436 Li cense . M c C Pour..:•l C K ....... •••••••••••••••••
Aces I._ !Iltl7»J342 c.,.ts.ntc. Uc'~Doul'*'O'lll MAINT. It Clean-Ups. Personal service. All ..Q:nlal l lcm!HS-2189 REPAIR&.REMODEL JAYETIHCAU ••••••••"'•••••••••••• u•••••••o•••••••••••• ~ Tree trlmniln~. amall work gua r anteed R Ii bl G t .. , ABC MOVING, Exper St.op~aoes Reas rates Topping prun1na re BOOKXEEPlNG Sham""" ' It clean landlcniM ~3549 e a e rea wor.. prof low rates qufolt Ll " . 61. 9 a. I •-• . io yrs
F 11 b n•••••• .............. ,...... eam , •n••••••• •n••••••••• -Steady Job ~rs CaJI ca-f"I ~--= ..... <<"0410 c. A4m.s-la m.ova "'spr1ym1 or am.a usanen Bootlleeplnc&cretarial Color bris;bteners wbt GARDENMAINT. M..&... r 4 PM.~722.8 ... "-~"·---•--'-exp Local rers. Frtt Reu.rcliablc.1131-M u.rvi"e n....:.R .. ble crpta 10 min. bieacb. •WAlWlfAU.S• yd clcao·up. Tree trim· ._, ._!Jli.. · ,~ .. ---'-PoolSenke,_,,_. -1 Lie QO!M6.640-m
Boo.... Cl: c.-• -. " · """"' " H U Ii ........ ..<. C ft d f I · · S4M'1W 14-8 > ••••••••••••••••••••••• Housecleanln1, xlnt rera _ • ...,, ......... ..., •••••••••n°•••••••••• "" -·---aaee I ~rv1cesl 132·131t.EvTIS..U2& 1 • '·"'"°· rma ...,, ii!:ic: rog1 v~c min&. pm Haul,cleanup,concrete Pl II M · M ........................ Complete ser vice re TREE D~IGNS
reason• . rates. Cal '4llden ~hf rm SJ.50; ~ SlO; -·=C:tions · Tl.EIS removal Du7&.truck do!:~H§.i538 !H~ The Paper Hanger, Prof. paira, &aol.ar l.D.SlaU So Pruning, Sculpturing.
Mule 641 LB!. .. ..................... odorSSC~~°ii pet ™"i&ml37·12211 ToppedJremoved,clean Quic:kx rv._76:1! u...---~ ~tall. t~ram .:1s"tl Ca I Poo l Service Top ping. Th1nn1ng, .,..._.,..... GBWICl&SOM ·Do .. · >'11r'I uD1.lawnreD0¥.7Sl·3476 DUMP JOBS nuwn -;-reeea_._ve_ ·__ §(2·8663 Removal Clean up ........... ;.-;r.-;;;..... BullderaSlnce llM7 t~P· ...,,.. myae Df•rltt ------· --- --Small M-'H Jobi ...................... Fine patntmg by Richard -..c...1. .. ..._ ~
Macnesite .• paint, clean. Addition.a rtmodelin• ..cfa, 531-9101 ....................... CLEAN·UPS' Ca11MoCE~151 T~llRNSTV'T BOERELMOPTYN.;J Y Sinor. Lie ms. 13 yrs of In....._, WiildoMLJ"'--Cll--•-llil--g--
d .. l l I · •·. WeCare"'-C1eanen ''I Off.,JULY TREETRllOllNG ---------, ~L h N 'B ••••••••••••••••••••••• w ec.s, cemen ' crp a. ptan• Free est. Reu. Ste ""1e.,. Ir .J..J. > ... 54f.2Qt8 <Mitc> Hauling & Dump Jobg appy . customers J D Hom Refimsblng •••••••••••••••••••.•••• carpentry, weld, plumb. Ye, 310H2. 5§.2170 am r an u..,.~. Draperlet by Giovanni -k Thank yoo. 631-fflO · : · b Ori anal Window Washer Brld.H»tQ CONSTRUCTION Truckmoimlurut Al10 mini-blinds ' YARD CLEAN-UPS, tree As for Randy "Sfturlty Plus" will sit Ext tint painting, cab. re A~~,=~: ca64}~ ~vg3 br home. $35. ltfplsace..,. Add /remodel .concrete Worklu.ar. ~3718 lcv«loua.SQ221S, wo~k. 1~aUon &: re-&4l.f4Z7 ~:~;. h::~~tfi~~n~~r~ f1n 1stain Pror Rsnbl. '
....................... Free tst.581Wa(t. $ RES I 0 U E FREE . "-w.11 l>'re'ren' .. ~Ila Loatendsoacnacpee. HAULING-student hu n1,.,u., Free est. SleveS47-4281 lt.odel & • .,... GUAR USEDREFR' C t and pbo'-t ... ,--G ""' • largetruclt.Lowest ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• USE THE
SA «-. 5 ROOM ADDITIONS • arpe . u "'ery .. -.................... 642=0102, rate ~rompt. 759-1978 • -L--~ DB's PAINTING General Services no JOb L~•SERVICE REMODEJJNG Quality steam cleanini. lS yra. Dryw1U lalisl , · t .._........., . ' D•ILY PILOT Good cond. sg..n54 construction rrom de-qua 1 ity servlce at Qua!. 11 . New It re-CALL U~. We do rotot!ll· ank)'OU.John. ....................... Int/ext. Neat, reliable. loo small. Free ea t "' Hert.rArM sign to completion guaranteed reasonable log! sprinklers, lawn in· ClttuHipYowAd Brother&>Constructors rers. Oave64}0389 m_ Reas. Call AnswerAd "FAST
Family oontractors for prices.6*§193 Ta Texture AC01ntic sla I, clean-ups, It haul· G ag Ute H U l680 Sant.aAnaAv.CM Ol ympic Paint!ng -~453,642·4.lXl.or631·1137 RESULT" ...... ce $enke 30 yrs Reas rates Fr NoSteam/NoSbampoo ceru~ .. Free 'e1t Kevlo Ing. Free consultation. t l es, :u ~· p I a n ls ' int I ex l · Int/Ext Free estimates. Jl.(LI,__ --
GlfyWUson, owner eau. Allen E'Johnscio. • Stain Specialist. Fut en-•itzs..15Q.l · IonxorRax.S46-06g! ~1:1993ton true · · LandscapU;ig11trec sL1:1r· Good qual work. low S.wlMJ/AlleratloM SERVICE ~or~Uly llsi!rs w. 301007 CaU 840-5656 or drx Freust 83UH2 ALL TEXTURES&r H••• WEHAULANVTHlNG g~rr.35~pnnKiers. ac. rates ~-1903 ..................... .. 1B::a.~1 le reg. 84Q.472'7 eyes, c.ti.,.A~ Dr waU.Clean•depefi ........................ Yard clean·ups.demoli· •~-~~~ -R-ENTALSour s riaHty, Cs tm Dress M a k:~sg DIRECTORY
J lb..ICOC_.5.., ....................... da~e Reaa 531·2345 REASONABLE lion. Have dump truck .._. inttext SeastJ: Paint-alterations /Reps For Result ..,.... U"'! ~ ''• A lic Ceilina•+ ----•---·--~ PROMPT FREE~. R 953-825S ....................... p · · ""•""" Consultation in your C II ....................... Additioo.s-Remodellng cua~us haod~~' a.ctric.. ALMOSTEVERVeas. MORTGAGE MONEY ~ rompt.~!l!r'll!W llQm.~760-~0 Service a
Driveways, parklnf lot &:CustomHomes.Lic. Lie W ~9 ................... ~... REPAJRNEEDED HMMca...laM) AVAILABLE INT /EXT PAJNTING. Chi l d r~ns garme nts 642·5678 rep,airs, sealcoa Ing. IZl!8114. 67}§0ff · ELECTRICIAN-priced CHET645-4757 ....................... S20 OOOl $250 000 GENERAL REPAJ RS. made to order Genrl ht. JU ~~ Asphalt. 631-4199 C•1 e-.t,tee.cnt. right, (rec ~imate on Carpentry· Masonry Want I REAllVCLEAN M l~P.,Y... LARGE OR SMALL alteratio~. rep~1r Call Lied. • ......................................... ~ ... laraeoramtllJObl. Roofing · Plumbing HOUSE? Ca!J Gingham U~to 15/yrslo repay REAS.· PROMPT '631·m ._H_a_v_e_s_o_m_e_t_b-1n_o_y,..ou
ASPHALT REPAIRING THE CAK ESURPRISE! Pool Decka and Pat~, We. 13"1121 6710»9 Drywall · Stucco . Tile GjrL Free est. 645-$123 PRIME FINANCIAL JERRY 645-4757 ----;-. "
Sealcoating&.Strlping Unique flavored cakes Masoory.,Sport•Tenrua RESID.ICOMM'L •more. J.B.64§.9990 ROBlN'SCLEANlN G SERVJC~ lO'l DISCOUNT SEL_L idle items with a wadsanldtoo i!i't J~ICll~icriaedll Comm/res1d. Free est. delivered w/flowers &. Courts. Uc. 374067. Bob, Highly ua.lifled. No job Service a !Mroughly S 27• 477 D&D Custom Painting Daily Pilot Classified -"' Uc, 1317362 64S-8181 -11 · . i.m 85M966. KM!l78 Want Ad ~I ? 642-5678 clean llcMe *=*7 l!!!Lext. Guar. 983=3263 Ad. NOW, 642-.5678.
~ ..... !.~ ... !~.~ ~ Trwt 50· lS~•••~•~•••••??~ ••• !.~.~ ...... ??.~~.~.~ ........ ??~I~.~•~••••••~!.~•••••~~ .••••••• !!.~ Http WGllllled 7100 WG!lhd 7100 H.lp WG!lhd 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••
Bachelor 50, ~w wage ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOST: Fem Bill: w/lilllc Found Afghan & Golden Large white Samoyed.' Found : Parakeet, vie ADMIM ASST /SECTY Automotive
earner needs livmg qlr WE PAYlHEMOST Orange Cat. Vic. Carna· La b. females. Hunt· Vic. Bluebird Can on. Baker& Harbor, CM INT ER IOR bF.SIGN JIM i.~.1.•ouo w/storage for rest.onng For your T D.'s & Notes lion CdM REWARD ioatoo Beach.968-3046. Reward 494-6742. y ~9783 SHOP ...._." car/bo1~.C.M.area.w11l at Denison Assoc. 675-4129 . . f ound: Basset Hound. Perm part lime VOUCSWAGB4 pa~ ut1I. 646-3647 art 67J.731l Lost small F Poodle F 0 u n d , G 0 1 d e n vie Warner & Ne~land. 8 30 12 30 Mon Fri· is lookmg for an am·
SP 3rd T 0 rorsale 14"'c int LOST-7 wk old puppy, mb, It ~~cot. yel~~ Retr iev~r-Shephe rd H.B.847-9693,851 ~ Sharp persOt, to assist b1t1ous ind1v1dual lo
Banktng
TEI.I.ER Exe opparturuty for ex.
per. person 111 allrartl\ e
S&L Full lime position
orrers vaned duties Call
Linda at 75 4 1801,
Orange Coast Sav111g~ &
Loan EOE
Banking
HEW ACCOUHTS
Newport Beach S&L bas
opening for New Ar
counts Counselor Ne11o
Accts .. IRA 1Keogh, col·
lections & NOW Accts .
exper req 'd Salar~
commensurate with ex
per Full 1nsuranrc benefi ts & paid career
apparel Please call :
I dis l, .So Or . H~ky type. Gray, bl~ck collar• Cinnamon • mix male Red canvass , ____ _._ 5350 Pres in charge or plac-work in the Parts Dept ...... ~vest/ on Y. couo · g. white Vic 13th & Olive Adams & Placentia, • · ~ d hed r as a p cku & deU er • ,.,../,.-County prop. For de-HBBS0.4462 S3&-S298 C M Reward 751-9490 colla r . C.M. a re a. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tng or ers. sc u1ng. driver I M~t have gvoJ
....................... tails, write· P.O. Box or 546.3.11 . . 646-3611. FIRST LADY accounts payable. accls d
6843, Longview. Tex. LOST : fem. Bill Dog. . FOUND: Lg. key nng on rec, typing nvmg record and be ...._, 7 5 6 0 4 0 r c 8 11 : ~horth~~· Very lar1e: Lost . s~•ll black Poodle. beach btwn. 33rd & J4th, Escort. Models Want neat, organmd over 18 yrs. old. Great , _______ _
Oppa:tullt 5005 l·Zli-663-l•lB Pearl 556-1440 ext 30 vie. Olive &: 12th, H.B Npt. Bch.642-5795 P~"'--person with probl em oppor tunity lo start Banking ....................... daxs,5'8-450teves Da l e 7 / 1 S T ag ~ solvmg ab1bty & icood from the ground floor & EXECUTIVE
BlKE RENTAL BUSI. c....tl/ LOST: Wht Fem cat long w /Parker Pet Hos pl. Found . Lare ma~ dogj * 9 Z..1345 * communit'allon skills work up An tnleresl in SECRETARY Ms Denny Pans1a
714~
HEW PORT IALIOA
SA VIMGS & LOAM
1100 I rvme A \'C • NB
E.OE.
lo ~&una Be.ach. For grey blk striped ta\I. re· Reward! Part lab & ma , Cal MC & VISA Accepted Z50 per mo. + bencr1ts VW's helprul. but not Local Newport Bea eh
more info .• call 494·3304. ,.,.._./ wardM&-9506 L o s l : G r e a l 960-4027 or 549-1508 COVER GIRL 640·9193 nee. Call Rob, 842·2000 savings & loan is Sl'Ckang
Sheet Metal Shop. Low Lost&f.oisld LOS . grandmother's wrist (Sandy) •...1-L.t...t......t.! JIM~O a s elf moti vat ed rent. Equipment & in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• T · Blk/Tan ~ale watch, 9:1S·10:30am, Found: female Maltese, • OUTCALL • "'-rrunn VOLKSWAGB4
ventor y. 112.soo. Ph Loil & Fo.d 5100 ~u~.t~ne/~:ha .?zi~~.: 7119. 2305 Coast Hwy, vie Magnolia & Adams 9SJ.<Yl78 MCNISA N dAuhr t.tt r 18'711 Beach Blvd ~~~~~arr~!~ s~:~~~ '""-·l""• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coco's or prking lot. 963·l221 ,847·24&S ee r o n ° " 842-2000 h h •-...._._ _____ _
'"" MJ't --------•I REWARD645-2581 , . . . personality who t'an l oroug ness "' con I" Video Arcade Game Lost: Ruby &. Diamond. 640-7S22. REWAR.D. Found. Prescr1pl_1on *FOXY LADY * handle details. phones. •••••••-genial manner to work larteftdtn
Route.Choice Beacbloc. fQllMllADS Platinum Ring in or LOST: Female pal bull, glasses <metal rim) OUTCAU.ONl.V people Typing req'd. AUTOMOTIVE for President Salar) Pull & part time Callforinfo.0-010 unu around Bufrum s , dark brown wtwhile Newport ~ach.548-<Yl34 'VlSA MC Shorthand desired MECHANIC commensurate with ex Nightclub 1n Newport
SW=,__. IKflE( Fashion Island. Call cbest•.blue colJar.Also, Found: J~h Set~r. al •'72·1131 • Work inlovely surround BRITISHLEYLAND per . Pull insurance 675 1094 __ -----AJI(, 644·0338.REWARD. 2 puppies. 1 black & 1 Bolsa Chica/Warner, tngs 18751.ostart +apt Must be experienced benefits & paid career •BIKESTORE • f'..a. dark brown w /~lit &: 7 /17. !Mt-21127 discount Park Newport Good apparel Please call Ass't Mgr & mechamc
Senlce ....... • .,_ F~:u'!i~'.~~~~=~! wh t e ~ead . Cindy, Found: SmaU gold cal. SI( Apts. nr Fashion &com~~~~.~~~ Ms DennyParuuu for Schwinn dlr Sal ~~~~~o =~~ 64Z.5'71 UtasaAIJIC),tan;female 631·l030,eva,~ll79 Neuwpo~~ce a~a.2 ES C 0 RT S & lsland,NJL644-~ pl) ln person. Contact MEW:.~::..OA r.~·:oom~'h1~:~e~~10~
traio. 150.000. Full Lab, Spanie l crosa. sc•IMI~ co ary. MODELlNG AIRCOMDmOMIMG Georgeat SAVIHGS&LOAM t 544-9835
amount req. Will net LOST:SheltJe~Sable black : male Lhasa ~·~ F(!und : Cockatiel, 7/12. llS.tlff &HUTIHGSBVICf B llOO lrvineAve .NB Sfil ------
$40.000 il.&as· Call Mon/· Bei&e color. Vic. Linda Apso, grey &: while. ANS1IEIS city of Oraoie. Very "~ING M•<'<'•CE -.r-.. au~ ... , E 0 E •IKICPR/T'YPfST• lslc NB 7_. "AUGGIE" male Lab, cnm. black tame 841-9869 """''" ,..,.,,. ,..__.. ,.. • SO W P M also answer Fri. 9-5 M. 40W67.0ll l R rd _.. .c /Whit male G . . for Discrimmallllg men W 1 t h E I e t' t r 1 c a I ;;rtrl4 1 · ..... ,.~ ewa u, ... 51.., w e; erman Radisb-V'Uten -F o und ; Vi c . 17th CallPeter.484-4871 knowledge Laguna ·-·-·· ·-------· phones.nr OC Airport ·-•a.A-Y Lost : Female whlU aDd Shephe rd, tan and Plume -Riddle -St t lr vtne , NB. M.j COE S Id 1 Niguel Ocean Air ...... ..,,._.,_ 641·1130 Open 4 years, good cream cal. Short hair, white. 644-3656 NEEDED Rhodesian Ridgeback D -wou ove to 83I 0700 13991..ogan BANKING Boats
lease/location. PARS 2 blk ears, black bobtail, Lost : Cal, large gray Interest rates are so mix. Gold. 6•2·2328, party with you Call Sut' -· -COSTA M~A (' E L E S T I A I.
aU appts, Heavy cruise. grayaLripesoofronlleg. w/while collar. Approx high now that any«>M 646-6805 or K1tby anytime ALTEIATIOMS 979-1776 * Tfil£1 NAV IGATOR wanted
lour. fr FIT vol um.e. blue eyes, small animal 7 /4/81 vie Glenncyre & who managea t.o pa y orr Found : male & rema~ SZ7·7186 f fu.lter:_a~ ~ Part Tilme ror voyage to Hawa11 60'
551-6834 needs special care, Mtn. Laguna Beach. a -loao couldn't have pugs. Newport Beach KIM'S ESCORTS Anwert.a Senk.t AUTOMOTIVE Power All expense:.
ICECREAM-NEWPORT Reward.557·1802 644-6116 NEEDEDthunonex. a~a 1·88H'7ll ext.233 9AM·3AM §38.8554 Dayti me sliirt· 7.3pm. rhoM~/ paid + flight bal'k In l:it,';Ti~w'fi.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• EA:u&r:s:u;e\~a~s!g~ ~anyc ~~O:c;rd Som~e::o. de~lersb1p ~=c~e:,x~u~ ~alr':,'!.3 qu1re~6·92~artj
Ni~~fJ;!~ii: :. a-DAY WEEK SPECIAL :. E'.~~~.~,·~·::; r~~~:: i~~~~t:r:r~r: ~l~~~~~~i~ G=
Preventative & Stress pr hr Exp. is a must. eluding Saturday Six
RKeael yEst01te&Oferfiacet.1:r0umn·.. 8Day1 • 3Llnel • IDollart • Reducing Massage by Ask for Mrs. Johnson months te l ler e x ElecM.chanics Doris. "Intro" Special' §61 8200 perienre 111 a S & L or Complete furnished in· 548 2817 lOAM &PM __:__ -----commerctal ba k cludtng 5 bne phones. • It's easy to place your 8-Day Week Classified by mail, and it • . . . ASSB•LllS TOYOT•·•OLYO rerred . n IS pre-StodlrOOfll ~!~i'fi: ~:s~t~;Y ~~ e costs just $8"-that's only a dollar a day! To Qual ify for this e GrHtca.,•y Wllf:MIH "'~.~~.~·" APPLY Mon-Thurs
Corona del Mar Call • special offer. you must be a non-commercial user offering • Escorts Wall traln,84'7·24~ "•o.uoJ • s4o-•m ~ia~~'."rr!e 1.otai:rrt~nPg 15.30 u~535.,to7 I~ 5025 • merchandise for sale up to $800 per ad. and the price must • 24 Hrsc·~64l·Ol80 ASS....BS Bab~s.illel r needed ror IX'· ~ao~elaannd1ntmeur~h1ewmoarpe ~°so=i_n_. -_. ._ be · d Th t t th h th d -Irvine electronics dis· cas1ona evening silting ••••••••••••••••••••••• • in your a . e cos says e same w e er your a • AM /MC/YlM lrib ulors necch Cable ID our home on Mommg pointmenl. please coll •IOOIOCEIPIHG
WIDOW has money for needs eight days Selling time Or just One. Assemblers. Soldermg Canyon Rd. inCdM. Call Gene Fm.elle at 17141 10 ke y by tou ch At'·
2nd T.D.'s $10,000 •up! • • ---1111111!!!1~1!!1111--uper net Ext'ell. arter 7pm:644·1027 . 494·7S06 or apply dunng curate typuig Excellent
&Z CREDIT! No pnlty THE working conds & co. BABVSITIER fl . savings hours at opportunity w1h fast
CallA&lEilfto673-73U • Use one word in each box. About 4 words make one • benefits Contact Bob home 16 yr/or ~1d'!~ ~r o wi nL rompan )
• JUMIO * • classified line of type. Minimum ad is 3 lines. Please print • GirHriends Tracy, Mon-Fri . 8 s 640-8477,640-~ FIDELITY oo~~a4 :sa area
. •ESCORTS• ._54•9
11·09!54-----•I Babysitter, wanted FEDERAL 2ndT.D.'t,l·J.5 /yr. • plainly. • Homt~Offke~ ..., Mature exper, non S.~ed When you call Class1f1ed Interest Only A Hilt~ 5 /R smoking woman to sit 1 ·-r lo place an ad. you're as-cszo...,,'1»-!;000•c'~ .•r:------------------------------,
1
•• •9 Z..97 2• In teres ting Job yr old boy2dayswk& Lo.A... sured of a rriendl\· ,...-~-Male /Female Escort Women's fashions. Exp some eves. Pleas. wk.Ing 310GlenneyreStreet welcome and hel p in
1714)673-8915 •M•C••••••V•IS•All in this field helpful but cond. in coastal com· · La~uoa Beach, Ca wording your ad for best
• I • not mandatory Will munity. Must provide Equa Oppty Employer response Call Now •
For tatal stress redllction t i b · h ref & trans. Please call 642 5678 Motixps. Trwt • I • •· I lion ra n rig l person a(•7·.30 PM"u2303 . ~ SOJS "' re axa massage w /gd. memor y Top -• ....,. D •1 ,., .. ••••w.;·~c:••u •• S I.DO l, •• ~Jl~eve 10·8pm , ~~~~t~~~[ •B•AN•K•l•NG ____ . ·······~ II J 1 •.
All types ol real estate ..... ,.., .. &
lnveatmenuslocel949. ,,.....,._ AUTOMICHAMIC JfilER • fi fd S I S ~.. • • • •••• ,................. Forei&n ' Domestic • I 1e a es upervisor • Wllt Jobi Wlllhd. 7075 50% commission, own 4 e
'12·2171 HH+ll • • it:it;;;t•c•;:•pj;••;;;;; t.ool!. Large clean shop. OUR IMT'EREST • ~im1tl'd openings a\ aulab)e In the Oranue •
• • Hemet wlll bouseail Larry Hunt's AlllO IS YOU! • --~ut areu. for selr m1111\uled ra~r • Want Investor for Npl • • hile Center, Ul2$ Laguna Ca· • orientl'CI indi.\·idual who ~··n ~o-rk t .. batfronl home. Give • yooaruway. nyon ~I.. l. 8 ..... ........ F Id . •a -WI n (714)925-21S7 ~ .. _,.._GREAT WESTERN ic Sales l't'Ople Train mot t • we aecured lit or 2nd --..... ~""=-="'r.:.---1 .... or..,_...497"'"· .... _~·----SAVlNGS AND LOAN • get res ult S . • t\u e anti
T.D. Act,67Hlfl. • Add $2.60 for each addltlonal lln• for 8 time• • ~'T~~!~ble'~: AUTOMOTIVE haa an Immediate open· e ~!1~~:tl: ~xce~~~!~~~ e:~~n~~. ~rus ';~~ •.
• • •ood drlv up rer'1 A ing for a TELLER on a • U\'nefit.s a\ d1lable for the n"hl MMdAWT.D.7 A P.\RT TIME bu11 0406Plt' If you rod " • COMPETITIV!!RAT~ • • MS-74'10 MECH• .... IC'S which will lead to a r --can P uce rei.ults not Delta Padftc llort1a-Hard wkJit, lnltlligent "" FULL TIME """'ilion at • Just t.11lk ubout ll. call ll60 06!14. ror •
(7101151·31MO -~ • Publish my ad for 8 days starting • male. •1 aeetln( lem· DREAM o ur COST AM ESA •. interview. Ask for Mr Chantt •
UceoMdR.E. Broker ~r, F/\nne emj>lymt. • ,,..~... Branch. •
IZT.• ban •if!»· 20'1. lNT. ONL1 1 3rd 1.D.·75~ LTV "81.33
Paid llonthly·Prlmt
SaaUaJO Cyn. property. call CJuil SM•. Secun· ?i ID vutment1 , ( 4)7 ...
SJ.GOO bull a01C!OO. ~ I NT. ONLY , 2nd
T.D.·U l'A LTV u.as~ .Amtllll YMld I yn.. Call Cbril Sllaw, 51curtty la
ve1tcntlltt ,
l714>71tM·
••• bta1' tl2,0001 Int T.D. Stral*·&4~ An· ...,, Y&ell. Call ChtU
=.=:.~ ........... .lft
INT ONLY,-hd
T.DAK LTV '-21 ,.. ....,, Celc:llrll .... -.:., .... s ·
•• Classification : w.a:·= 7100 :J::Sfl. Prev101i• rmanc1a1 in· e a.orter/Pllo......._ :
• Name ~~T ................... Mark c. Bloome, lbe u atltuUon or cash handl· e Part time reporter ;;:;~write •
• Aui•~a.tt So.Calllomia11re/Auto Inc experience is • ankles for special sectJ<q •t lbt Dally
Or "--: Sa In C.ottr hu lmmedlate oeceuary. Public COO· ?I, '°'·. Ecfacationor -uival .... e"-rlen"'" • • Address • ~~el~te~~ opening• for exp'd tactbac~sroundhelpful. I 'D JOUrnallsm"'~equ~;ed. OPPtr"'divtt~ e
In i t•J• u mechanics. Kno•=of 10.k~ and colfe1e stlldenll worklA« on A•ar..... In • C. z· Phone • ' or a ... me I C• U'"'-tl)'p ....... ~... I:: Ii .... """''"'"' • 1ty IP tin deril 11lil la "" w -~, ~. rna am e~~ouraged lo 1ppty, Must
• • :-'~1..1.e. poa. iUoo 11~ We need lndMd.uall wbo • • ve good wr1tin° a d editll ·"I • -have their own toots ' You will tlnd we otrtr 1 °"""....., ..a.. l n copy tJ11 .. Ila
• Check or M.0 . enclosed D •l• 111• \be controller. competitive salary, tX· • ~-·• .... Yan aripbltt I pl\ll .. Salary .• • Calculatorakllla a mutt! hive the desire lo Join cellcnt benefll.S and 1 led on experience Part ti me s>otl\lon
• Charge my ad to·. • c0a,.11111L1e'-.!~t 7Sa$4v·~!OC1 the tt'I m o f P ro· comfortable wortlna •t· e ~~>' poulbly ltad to run umc. c.n <Tl41 e
...,_ 111 r ... iooai.. moa..i.ere. • --4321 Ext. 242. A•k for Jminf to rn•kt •
•
1100 Adama Ave. C .,... appointmtol for Interview. ' • # E p IOI W• offer very com· Ple-.e call ror an ap. .• •
• f 0 X " • l•••----1 ~~:'tet:1;J!~ poinlmmtto: .•. fyRM.tt.t :
• Ac~.,,.,_ Medical • Dental ln· ,.,..,, .. • , n • # Exp 11.1.M-auraaee, ~-wnn1, 714-7'Mt'3 With at ltast l year u~ as wpm
• L;.J • • lntM Id ..-cy Mtdl l ndlt 11nloft ~ A'f • e Nlaht ahlri. Exccllnt com~1 btftdiu • ·L ----------------~-------------. t-...:i=.::~ r~~ . 1;:11,VV. • Apply ~PM.Mond1)1Ulrvt"*1. •
• M11•as111W.W..l1k1 e :Tu1i.1. 6 ~~: wau1•s H':k:~• : •
e ••• , PiiWf .JMw . .,11. e :~"'m:.I. M 1~4n"'C. ..• e 11111 C.-Mlii.CA'2616 e l:.u . ..:,:.SC:; ILOOMI ------•i • • •a. ... -.mt llMIOJltJ lm*JJr • . ,........................... .~~~~~~~
£~
• DAY WEEK
Bl>ays
3 Lines
8 Dollars
' ..... r • • ,. t • t
. in your pocket!
Special nat rate for non-commercial users offering merchan-
dise priced in the ad for $800 or less. Cost is the same for '8 days
or one. Minimum three lines . Extra lines just $2 .60 for 8 days.
For an EXTRA day, call today 642·5678
JM MW Dally Piiot 8•Day Week lti Q Classified PLUS
~~.~~ ..... !!~. ~!.!~ ..... ?!~ ... !!~ ..... !!!! ~~.!!~ ..... !!.~ ~'r.!~ ..... !!.~ ~'r.!~ ..... !!~ ~'t.!~ ..... ?L~~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~ ~!.~~ ..... ?!.~~ ~!.~~~.~ ..... ?!.~~
100098 COOKSWAMTID General Otflce. AIR. Houaelteepera wanted MIDfCAL P/tlmt,1da'fl,2lln dal· HC.r'tOHIST Sales SALES t'ull or pttime SECUTAIY
Reliable mllutt person. Day or nt&ht. Apply 1n Cotta Mesa. Permanent Seacliff Motel, TlAMSClllll ly Am delivery, L.A. lmmediat.e Qpportwuty '36,000 + needtd. for a new v1deu S!ock brokerage rirm in
ad typist. tO·key by ~rson betv.'ffn 3-$pm full time position ror 494·9717 Work at home. top· f!Y Times. $00 per week for brlaht, outaoln1 8 EVERLY HILLS store in C M Cull ut I' ash1on Island hll.!I Im Dbl bkk ' t llli t --------6.u..UIJllklih. 4H·M96. M 1 ha ood • Lynn at OGM. 642 1944 m e d o Pe n 1 n R ~~~~nat baf.t~en orl. Le~·i~tt: ~i:e~w~: ~:r:r: ~=;ha ~m~ ~~~oeuw~~,riftldly, ~ns ~~i~l~tth~~rill'tu.~ :~ PUICHASIMG :~:'unic':tion =~ns & Health' Nutnu~ Corp. or 760-9133 for penonal Brokerage exper pre
WL...l...ys "•pm. ···1""". N.B. put•r M· .. t .... able to I I and d ... r typin ability Call M!Ulni up operations In U\terview f'd llrs. 8 to 4 ll. Con ua ''"' _, """ ,. -.... clent oua epenwo· perlence ln a I ~ses o elm 0 C Need key people tor --tact Helen McGrnley
:rr;per Part·t1me. c:=~et~ch~~r:;'g0>'c~ ~f:x' ~~0~:0'c:1~ ~\tawhet~':P'~f~ra11~et ~~1f:~s~~~J ror c,~1 ~e~d:d~·b~1 ':/un~~~~~ J ;EC8'nOMIST i~r.~vr15::'rt"u~:~0~n1 s.UES,'4pt.l ch , for;w>t~-~-
Wor.kyourown hours Warehouse know how. 645-3230. Ask for K!rtf! restaurant, rull time. ~rv_!tw - -Beach Citr &hoot Di•· Real Eatate Developer train. Xlnt career or Advertising sales 2S ,
W-Olll Calltorappt.W-0484 Gfl!e~IOffa~ 8$, wkdys. <Part tlme MMGMMTPOsmOtit trlct Fltlme. 12/mo needs riiht penon supplement Call~Spm, ~in op!L955 • .:1230 SECllETAIY EXEC.
COUNTER-COOK tF YOU LIKE PEOPLE till school ataru It you t'abrlr t'haln. C M " position. INO-Sl167/mo. Mlmmallyplna. rrontor· Mr. Zurherbrod at SALES Outs1desales peo Personnel/Advertising lullflHP"Jleaflt HELP ... KNOW OFFICE des1re).Apply111person, Anohehn Xlnt oppt'y dependlna on ea fice appearance. ex· . pleneeded1mmed Ne<A Dept has openU\& per
For Laauna Beach F 11 t' Gary's Dell PROCEDUR~ no exper. nee. Slonemlll r... 164 4IMO perienre Typtng speed cellent salary, benefata Saluclerk needed al novelty item on mkt expansion Npt Bch public accounting oHlce u ime. ' ••.A R E M 0 N E Y Terrace, 291$ Rtdhlll, ._,e . '----or 40wpm n!qulred App. ' working condltlon.a 10 Photomat. Apply 10 C811 Ash·lea Creation~. rinanc1al services firm
{714!494·3500. CdM,S7}2l93fonpet. MOTIVATED ta Mes MOD&S.YOUMG ly 135 t4th St . Hunt Irvine ornce. Call Pearl Pfrson BIB P.C.H .. So. 493·5~ --Gd typing. hh1hd · ex1f
Bookkeeper&c'y DJt.TAIHTRY CO MBINE PUBLIC INS. SECRETARY Body buildel"I. Athletes 1n&ton8etch.5;!8@l. rorapp't:S4N887,start· La . Sales-ortice Girt store. req'd Norum r Ca
F/C Booltkeeper&c'y OPllATOltS RELATIONS&SALES exper'd, rutt-t.lme. &ood or auders wanted by tsT•n Ina Wed JulY22 Lido V1llg Exp req 640·0123btwn.9&2.
Exp. necessary Fttime Key to disk full lime ~AU.. (714}7$1·9700 salary • benertla amateur photoarapher RIAL "'' · Self strtr. take l'hrit
11000/mo. salary. Auto days. full or part ume GENERAL Fronl ofc. Laauna Bch. 497-1044. for physique poelng. No SAW IEC.ilOMIST SALIS . Sal OJ>!l).673-4&5
repair shop. C.M. area sw111g. Exp'donly G~ 1 8PM Must lype & bfrlOAM v experience neceuary '!h1sisour36lhyearaell· DP'DOFCMCH. ~OMMll~IJt.Lll.E. Part~er ~ed to ride
S4S-•. ~253L skills $14,000KtShr. + spell . Ideal ror No commercl1I use 1n& fine Southern For arowlna general Tiredotaellinghousea7 shotgun on high pre
IOOIUC .. f /C
Pos. w IN~. Sch. Invest·
ment firm . Exper & C0111puler knowledge re· q'd'Call . 6-4(}0123
friendly atmosphere homemaker or college IMSUIAHCI S20·RIO per day Call Cal1forn11 homes practice In NewpQrl day•.• week? We need ssure sales venturu
Kath.)'. ~7-8331 student. m11u Brad~ !.213JS9'7·2131 Per ha pt you would en Beach. Xlnt environ· on~ licensee lo le am the Con la c 1 Mr we s 1 -l..ar1e lruurance aaency ,oy jo1111111 a nrm active m nt 4"" di-631 3733 sk1ll1 to manage, broker DATA IHTRY needs Rater to rlgure rt In luxury residential ' ,,.., · com mercial real estate ~7 5610
Cl.BJ( GENEUI. Arrll'[ new ala . Paid co MOD&SitSCOITS areas such u Big Ca· IEC.ilOMIST Income rrom mgmt Min 1 yr exp Full ume, urrftl benertts. Salary rom T21>..1>911'ars5Z171'16 nyon, Spyglass Hill. For dr'a olfice. Must be while you learn Super SALESPERSON wunled
N B Call Cheryl at Register today ror local menauratt with uper MOTaMAJMT. Irvine Terrace, Linda enthuslastk. motivated benents; tire 1111urance, for N 8 clothmic boutl
83J.3300 temporaryassianmenlll Call Paulint,9UOIM1 lsle.etr. · & type well Exp health inauranre & den que, p/t1me M11tun•,
Book pasteup, p T. Mon Delivery men om 18 tor 557-0045 ~p J!1me. 642-3030. -If you are presently I C helpful. but not nee. tal plan. Contact Ken, _e_x_p_filr ~5-ml
l . 30P M lo approx LA Times to homes 111 IHVISnen' Motorcycles live in real estate sates 642·4532. 675-6100. SALESPSSOH
6 :llPM . Tues 10;30/\M c M 3 am _ 6 1 m r-n.. Llr\~ COUMS&OI 3 IMM8MATl do you have Immediate RECEPT/SEC'Y HAIDWAIE
to approx S:llPM No Economy car reqwred U \• II \': Dynamic Orange Coun OPMMGS & unlimited access to X·ray lab trailllng ror SALIS DtCOIJt. TOI Exp'd Full or p time ~xy~e:,~~'1i1%:0~Ji; no co 11e<'t1 n g · llWOllAllYP111SONNll Su1111c1\ ty 2nd Trust Deed For a Set-up Man. a the president or you r right person Clerical Experienced tor 111 store Hrs to be arranged~ Ap
Av°' M S400-S450tmo +bonus 372l ~s.r..t brokerage co has im Me chanic & a Partsl rompany,onshehldden htebkkpgskillsamust, & customers home ply in person Kerm · 646·0637or646-SM4 med open1n11 ror Personorwilltratn Ask l away man ivory tower X • r a Y ~not Salary/Comm Nettle Rima Hardware. 26416
Semi retired Mor F Pan
& full time So Santa
Ana Mr Wood. S:S·407l
Mon btwn 10 & 12 or
1179·~3'7~ Iv mllA
St:RVIC E Statton a\ten dant Exp'd Day &
e\es F'ull&ptt1me Ap
ply Shell St.allon. 17th &
Irvine, N 8
STORE Mgr. for a new
''1deo store in C.: 1\1 Must
have ex per 111 '1deo eqwpment aalei. Excell
salar> & oppt) Call
L>nn al DCM 642 194-1 or 760·9133 for pen.ono.11
interview 'l:ASll~EIS DELIVERY HeWDOftltodi salaried or com rorJimat removtdfromthuce.ne necessary.~ Creek Shop, BAnderson llarbor Bt CM t .O E. m1ss1·onAA Investment SOUTH COAST Our ~esident is avail•· ., .. _ -'-'-FT e ro lo('al de ""' ble """' __ ...., addi· ~ S1£1'm ... •y • T~• im r CoU11selor Exper'd real HONDA 1~· ·~ hel IEC.rlOMIST ~ -I liveries Excell driving estate licensees onl> ts~. t tional tr111U11g t.o P SALESAur. Looking for a sharp gal U T .. TE M record req'd, Phone for General Cull Katie,640-9350 -.!!.!..: you increase your eam Exper'd Pfl'IOll needed Ex per. high lash ion to run a 1-g1rl omce with Are \'OU ured or working V appt 557·9212. ask for TM 1..,_leyCWt · MUl56-4.VM ings? to handle busy board m store Npt Sch Faahion rront·ofhce appurance rull time for part time
Mr Emmons Newport JANITORS Back orrice for G.P 3''1 Ex1>erienced or lnu dynamic Npt Bch com· Island Salary. rom & a pleasant phone Mo.y 7 Stat1~rs.lnc. illiowhlrtltg: Full time day work. days 1week Fashion perienced you may well m'l brokeraee oUice. mission. xlnt benefits voice Musl ha ve u Wh ) not tr) working
Dental Assistant. part Mon-Fri. Ex per. pre Is I and. N wpt B ch profit from our color pr o r e ss ion a I a p . Call b-44·7100__ cellent typu1g skills "" 1th part lime for full time
time. morning. RDA Tele._ POCll rerred. Permanent empl 644-1025. video lape !isling &sales pearance " mannerism good grammar & spell mone> Work 2Dto 24 hrs
MARKETS For 2nd & 3td Shirts
Starting M up to $4.50.
We promote to manage-
ment & supel'\'lSIOll from
withln.
preferred Newport Hrs 'OA M OP M. only. Co benefits. ad-training program which a must. Ca ll : Laila. ing Shorthand or 1ls per wk m plush new of
Beach area near Hoag Sat /Sun vancement Clean cut & NURSES AIDES we reel 1s tht' r1nest 83J.2900 SALES equ1va lent helpful Good r 1 c l' 1 n the s 3 n 1 a
WANTA CAREER'
Costa Mesa
Hosp s.48-5504 bondable S3 7~$4.50 per Con v hos pt Beach available. El Toro&Oranoe with figures A self Ana Costa Mel.a area PIX 0... ator aru. Free mJr. medical We are not a tranchtse. " starter 1s a plus here' ror well established Co
$17 W. Wilson Sl
6Jl.96(S
D.....,Jt.ut Hrs PM Sfurt. musl be ~re ~~s0e~1 °~ ee;~e: & dental Free CRT branch or aubliidiary-RECnOtittST Sl" OOO + For 1nterv1e". plea~e F:arning potenlialor S220 Npt Bch area, 3--4 days flex. incl wknds. Will training Top salary. just headquarters Acheftialee &. ca 11 Cather 1 n e at per wk ba.st> + romm + wk Exp. Salary open train. p..,." F rr 642 6824 We have open111gs ror a ..., p,..... !Jl'!J!!.75 lZll bonus C.:all 83.S 8883 for
Laguna Bearh
494.9233
Pleasecall640-5680_ LAHDSCAPIMG NURSING RN OR LVN ~~c!~g~.'h'a°~!v:t:e~ Exp'd =ywith ex FintYtcr SECIETARY /Adrnilt appt ~n~!~r~~~!M;:~r ~~pr~/tte•!·. ~~~im~~n~F~~nCnacli ~~:!{~h'~~~.5~~~~ me to be more sue cell communications we orrer top com Part t1mt' Tues & Tl~oh~
h1i.. -.ion Beach
!lb.. 9116
64&-l 2·10PM. incl wknds . between~7 m 979-5182 salary&benefil!mclin· cess(ul For an in skills. front omce 11>' miss1ons,bonu.undma Thurs 1 person ore insldtal
F 't', will train surance. sick pay & In· terview appQ1ntmenl Pf&rance, !>my phones. jor advertising. salary .CdM 760·U07_ Not enough tirne or SUI\ DEHTALIECEPT. LAMDSCAPEMAJM. centive program Apply with the sole owner & Fast.paced environ· tr11n1ng , ma,or •SECmAIY• and exercise Steve's
Orflce exp req. Dental Pis. call for appt fOllMAM Beverly Manor. :MOV1c-foU11der, call Wesley N ment. Call: Jan Wood, medical, lire and dental To Chier Executive 01 Detailing 15 now h1nng
Personnel Dept exp prer Wed·Sat. Top 9:30-SPM. M·F. 1145.7358 Exp. 1n all phases or toria C.M. Taylor. bl w n 9A J:f0·EN o on insurance ricer or lrvint' Bused younl( women ror a hand
... 531-440 salary for quahfled landscape mllnt incl , We•yM. T..torCo. 714·9M·0900"" computer Company car washing sen ice
_ ~rson. 542-3658. G .... RB .._1 _1 good knowledge of 1r· NurslnN KEALTc1Rs . Man a a em en I o p Will have xlnt s,h, t~P· Wash Ferraris. Rolls
CATERING Service D..W.Auilt. '""---~ naatioo Xlntopp_'tyfor I ftl'Lv·N 2mSanJo.qwnH1lls RESalespeopletoleam portun1t1es for lop ing&peoplesk1lls Call Royces. Men'edes and
needs rood prep Ortho. RDA with ex· Lookina ror a very U\· advancement. E.O.E "' NewportBeach investments ' ex· career.minded pro Peggiat(TI4)557-6660 Porscheswtuleyousoak
worlters. M hr. Part perlence. 4 lday work teresting pert lime Job (714 )546·7643 1920 S :S.ll :30PM. Cowltry Club 644-4910 changes Xlnl ?Jt'Y for fess1onab Talfl.E up the Newport Beach
ume SAM·9:30AM . Full ~eek..552-7800 in pleasant oftice' Yale.S.A. Conv. Hoept . 20362 San· n4ht person. 1 com· E u 10,P2l~ Emptoxer sun Full or part lime
time SA M-l.30PM DENTAL Clerical. tor mature LKALSIC'Y ta Ana Ave . S.A. Hts. 1-.J .............. C-m1Ssion available. Con· Wearelhetopcompany a . -pos1t1onsava1lable Call Lori'sKitchen.30'17S personLocationP.C H . N Cen Int 549.3081. -~ _ ........ fident1alinterview 111theswimm111gpool1n SECmAIY Joni6314J>ot
HarborBl .S.A.979-17747 OITHOD&n'AL Npl. Bch. Exper. a 111~~ft'b~kills~ sa::r;, Full time real estate $46-5880,Vlnce dustnes We need am Position available with UPHOLSTERF.R Work
rorappt. ASSISTANT ~oua!h:r~~~:~e ~/~~· ~n. 7$2·1Ulor~HM§ sq~l~:e:~b:t~n~~ ~: lHIDMMMGll. bilious people to help us dynamic venture capital I in air condrt1011ed com
CHl.-... CTIC 4 day wk. Mon-Thurs ··"'-Sa ··s Nursing TheSanClementelnnis keep pace With groW1h r1rm ID Newport Beach fort Mustbeableloeut _.._ Top Pay! N.8 ROA weektncl.....,,. lar: W1 L~~ 1...,.1 .LY .... 'a come 11 desperately and promotion M tu. --1Jmotivat1no "•II 646-7431 " • " d d b I looking ror a dynamic a r". ""' · " & se ~ Satar) open ASSIST ,fnt Ofc.. Reg. 6-42·2626 ~ Sm al Newport each 3.11 , full & p /time nee e >' 0 n I experienced individual secretary needed as H · 642-3113 Modern, BClSYornce. 11 1 ________ • Girl assembler Exp not 0 r rice Ci v 1 l 11 t . Every at.Mr wlmd. oH established local broker for their residenl /nite We will select people in· siJtant to President and w A_ IT R ES-S Wa 1 t er
am ·8pm andaltemat· -nee Wall lratn 642·1026 Corporate and Real Outstandina earnings c ll terested in earning Vice President or exr1t· ingS•turda)l!.847·8272 Dllnsa mterviewll-12! 1-4 Estate Call Us• 1714) Free mjr medical " avail. on a generous manaur J!Tiilion. a serious money and re 111g company locattd in w t•ar for WH'ker b3sket
Cle." ... g Lady, perma· rFor,lhte, local dehAver1esl GU .... "'S 833-3116 ~~2n~~ .• Beachareaconv. com mission split. A rPete tit.....,!ll03Tues·Sun achlnc their full poten· fashion Island Will lunrhsen 9 JO.I llPM.
m T Tl u or pt/lime. PP l · -'" ·"'"' marnlou,, opportunity or •PP ·_.. liat based on production. handle vanety or duties. M F Earn SlSG-$175 wk nent. ues &' hurs. Master Blueprint. 234 Full & part lime All LIQUOISTOCK Part-lime help wanted, for the eager pro· Restaurant Direct sales experience make appointments. I) Mu st be ntat. 9-4pm. On Balboa Pemn Fischer. C.M. 54().9313 areas. Urufonns rum'd. PERSON. Full lime Fns & Sats, t0.6pm No fessiooal. Ca.IJ Mr Hast Food Prep & sandwich IS requfred open111gs m cont a rt 01 her ex personable & energetic
675·3!72. Ages 21 or over. retired nights. Will train Apply experience nee de· 111gs at (714)640-~. malt.er. U you are friend· El Toro and Orange ec uli ves. run daily 979 0747 aft IOA:\l for
Clerical ELEC'TIOMIC welcome No ex per nee an person Ho Ilda y monstratin& food pro-ly, cOl\Jcientiou.s, & de-Contact Mike Hryr.enko operations of omre Ex· aJ>.Pt __ _ _
Expanding corporate ASSIMILEI Apply : Universal House Liquors. 2931 ducts 1n markets near pendable we wa.nl you. at<714l8ll·9131. cellent salary and Wo,....,_....._
headquarters needs 12) Im mediate openings WProt•ttthtionSt ServSanatce,Al226 Coast Hwy. Corona del 7y!u{._7h3ome 892-9288. llHI ...... S.. Now hiring for Mfull tFlme benefits For inter\lew Wholesale import Co more starr: an Ex· . . ,, .. a na. Mar. ...,......, . pos1llon. 8-5. on· r1. A.llo..ITHOllo..IY _call '71•J640-62.34 _ ____. ....... _ h 1 ecutlve Assistant with with growmg rompany lnlerview hrs 9-12 & 1·4. ForJ:lc. Ex per pre( AP.fl" in f"'lll f"'lll ..lo.!.: ~1 ware.""""' e P Mechanical assembly, F Maintenance For Apt . , POOLS s~aET ... RY 1'0 0 e x pt' r I en (' e word processing ex _Mon· ri. Co 1 · r~t M a p i Prof. person. Stooem1l Ter-~ "'
Perlence ' a Recep· w 1 ring· so Ider in g s ES mp ex m""" 1 es art t me U you are a producin~ race. 2915 Redhill. Costa Rapidly expanding Ca necessary Pleasent S375 hr with 61mo ex· HARDWARE AL $48-9556.Ex r.nec. OfftCEWOIK · ed working rond Golden's t1onlat/General OHice. . A I t l020 P ttime. semi·ret1red MANAGEMENT Am· Gtneral orrice work aaent. you should loo Mesa. Equal()pportunity regtster corporation Magic Wand !M6W llth Unusual opp'ty with perience. PP>' a type. Apply 111 person· into our NEW com· EmployerM/F involvtdlntheofr shore
diversified company W. 17th ~M. Crown Hardware,. 31177 bilious couple. Part· .oart1·i~!bleK~o;il~cdulg!t1c:;r mlssion program that IS Listed NYSE oil industry is seeking an Sa C~ Apply 9 Am to It
Call831·8660or495-6303. EXECSlCmilY E.CoastHwy.,CdM ~ie~:ndHil:choJ::yiB~I typewriter and 10 Key tbebestmtown.Ouror. UTAIL Exec..Sec'wy AM
' CUii To general partner will· HOSTESSES, opening Hu&hes.S49-m n ec es 58 r y. s peed rice is one ollhe oldest Part timeclerks SALIS To assume respons1b1h· VAREHOuSE OELfVER'
OruJ store. f Jtlme. West mg to delegate many soon Orange CoUJ'lty's -helpful established Ill Newport STOP M' GO ty for its smooth running P F.RSON Huntlngt.m Beach. Must d 1 v e rs ! r 1_ e d newest night spot The Manne hardware st.ore Approximately six Beach with a very pre· ......... -m!YS EX p 'D 0 R home ofhce Assist for party rental store
work every weekend. re 5 p 0 0 s 1 b ii l ties . American Bandstand manaaer. Send resume houn per day, nexible stig1ous location Call ...-&• SHOP President in busy dally Full or p time (!ply
Exp. preferred. Call ror ChallengUtg position tor reaturing live concert, to: Box 841 Daily Pilot. Good phone personality Walt tor an appoint· 4555 Coelt Hwy,, schedule & marketing 2025 e~J.)C>!\ Blv.!!_ M.
app't; 846-lm. caree.r minded P:trson live TV shows. rock ' P.O. 8011 1560. Costa necessary. ment. 673-7D>. Mew,.. IMd TRAINEES ertort.s. Operating Telex WAX & Detail person.
with excelJent skills & rolltodllUllg&cdancing. Mesa,Ca.921626 Excellent company We're 1ookinJ for sales & lite bkkpg part or Male or Female Exp
Clerks Real Estate develop· 180K.rullorpart-tame. MtCHAHIC beoerlls paid health. Corporate Headquarters people to join Mark C. many d1versiried nee Apply 8 to 5.
Hallm ark inventory ment experience. we train 91S3-5589. 2122 FOl SAUOATS life and dental in· or International ~m· ROOFERS. Lee Roofing Bloome. So. Caliromia's respQnsib1lities Sue· SupenorCar Wash. 4625
help wanted Tern· 4960UHAMontx N M SA I suran"e. puter Corp. bas 1m· islookinaforblltroorers II 1 tiretauto service ctssfulcandJdatewillbe W CoaslH""' NB {l()r-'(Y ' p/time. San -·· o. a111, · ·. Wanted! A consc en· ' f responsible. poesess xlnt -"----o.u ----l!arfC!p. eGl, eves Ul'aAS Hotel t1ou1, responsible in· Apptympenon. mediate opening or a with min. 5 yn. exper. center commandoftheEngbsh WELDER Exp with . T ... L-An.-y ...,IGHT-~u,c•-., dividual lo repair" 330WealBaySt., s harp,i e•,•Y golna Journeyman. 116.66 hr langua•e. out•tand1nf alum a must Sailboat CoclrhlllW...,...1 "'U"ll• •-" ~ -.-" · t 1 lb t Aa .. torEilemWhlte Recepton 1t. Heavy "•2·7222,WahorVillce Weorferour employees " " tbk~"' d-rable Experlenct preferred. Dancina and 11ngillg. Lido Shores Hotel & • m 11 n 1 n 181 0 a li'n~at "-'y Emplyr phones (sophistic~ltd s.'"tes · an xlnt starting salary & administrative typing mA "1 1~ 'K"' ~1 -~~ Ntjhtclub in Newport. ~en & women. All ages. Marin~. xlnt salary & engines, rigging & ....,. vy..., system ). t y p 1 n I AYnM an outstanding benerit shorthand skills. figure pp y a · enyon. "''" ~lfli. 11zes ContactJeMat· beoerits. F/T. Call pumpt. Must have ex· minimum&Owpm.areet "" f.ickage that 111cludes apptilude Foreign S Sus~SA ~llOl
co c KT A 1 L STAI Barbara 673 -8800, P'y~~c1e1:~:~~2! vislt~rs,telell.Resu.me You're getting older & re,Oental/Med1calin langu•geprererred. We WEWAMT YOU
WAITRESSES . No ex· ATTIACTIOtitS 7AM /3PM. t! 7 4 s.~ required, 2 years ex· better, aae 50 or over. surance. profit sharing. orrer a most congenial SECllETAIY
r:r nee, we train, also ~4$83 Hou s ekeep in I " .. ed1' "II Receptionist. perlmce 'call 974-1670 Call Allee: 9!1&1»22. credit union, discoU11ts & atmosphere, advance· MAIKETIHG SALES
Qr' bartending at the Female ll·ve-m' compa-Childcare, Sun. ' Mon .. ' Adultl with O\.Utandlng aa for Carla. "-IUn ythin ··"th much more. ment Potential. good R 1 d
I L B h mature, Hadley system all •-· """ c a.n c •• a bend1ts RemU11erat1on e q u re 1 I! o 0 American Bandstand, nlon tor 11 )'TOid lady on on Y. ~~na eac d d 4 attractive Pfl'IOO t~. ult r · k'll •. shorthand and typing opening IOOfl to live con-a wallter. Must have own area. 841:f!Q2dns. Eva. experience nee e • who enjoy working with Trade your old st or Dally Pilot Cl111lfied Ad If you're looking for an according to s I s •ex· skills Ability to spell. A ce .. • roclt' mll & dill· E da we k. 7· lO·lS year old youths new 1oodles with a ii a simple matter . eulU.o& calftr in sales perience. Send resumt ios~l dancing'. Call car. SSSO /mo. ves HOU•--MEDICAL OFFICE eventnaa 6-9PM. Call Clauifledad.64z.5671 JuatcallM2-5S71. &ren'°yworkingwiththe lo: Slmro lntemallonal speicial job with a 153-S589. t722 No. Main 833=03'79 CKl le Llvelntocareforactlve RELIEF, Aug 11-211t. 842 4321, ut. 343, pubhc .... we've got the Energy , IN C. 180 special boss. Salary
S\.SA. ~s~~~~~ r~i':ies ~~~~,:~oc!'~US:i~er~ PteabdoarBd exper pre· between 2PM lo sPM. opp~rtunity ... lr w,e·re Nse~po~\8~e~ter Dri openV-4Mt_.
*nl-. p/tlme ror K Id . r P lfl . . . . . aakforLori, RESTAU•IMT wait1111 to hear rom u e ewpor w w -..-· "" now e It o ac c negotiable. Call Day INllU you! Beach CA 92660 EO!. 3324 . amer Ave ii woman. Mature. Co a at f is h Ing & 835-2412, After 8 P.M. Have aomeC.hlnl t.o atll! •OOOPll W8 PUA.SICAU. M/F 1 Rt w n ll arbor . ~:i'!1toenr•.l~l5e1'.o~~~: ~l~~h~~~~~·t~t~o"~~ 95§·3264, l111lfledadadoltwell .• ?o': ::b~~u~ =~~ MANAGDIMT ......... , SECllETAIY f1!~rvles:J1 s~t ~
"2·2237. man. Beach area . who want lo tum part (714tll7.aOOO Challenaina oppQnunil'I ._. __ lo...-...&._
C-Salar1 open. Write time hou.n into GOLDI M A R K C with small, expanding -·-
..... VV" Claullied Ad M211, Daily Ground floor <>PlltY• Call We an looltlna for selected Individuals to fill A com pan1. Shorthand! •••••••••••0 •••••••••• =~tn~ ~e w~~ Pilot, P.O. Box lMO, f9rdel1U1.85t·tl95 OW' curnnt needs throughout Southern caur. ILOOME typlna. filing & 1enera .......... IOOI
Ired. Ap11ly ; Surf ' C!)lta M!!a. 921528, PIST COMTIO&. Pro1r111 throu1b tr•lnlnl ' advance to EqualOJ!Rty Emploxer otrlce management. ro·R .. SALr:·i;;·o·:;
afld• Hote11.4 •• M·'4SO. WANT ACTION? OPllATOI mUurant man11tment hued on Individual SALES Fanlaltlc oppty. Wlllln& tolttln. 832·M . kitchenware. Rare Hall
fn* .. SPM,J10D·rrt. CIU1lledMIM2-S67I Or•am•ntal ~ .. ·t ell· performance. for eneraetlc person. s1ECRMETARbeY Exp'nld._~· and Fiesta. Over 300
--· u • ... Unlimited potent. Call y, ust orga wu, ieca. Bil'/ OM or all
;
0 ~ I 11·~ Pilat f!~ r:::rn·nt 1i1t~r~ ASSIST AMT MMWIBS Jack Edwatda fl5=l100 alnccllra1te. ".!*Y wot rk·
••••• t • 000 fe $II 000 Pw Y S •LES I w peoprc. ){vy. YI>' I .. ' • duatnal Uric. pest COft,: S ~. • • A inJ. Apply at. Kenyon,
trol. 185C)..ll250 mo. A.la Now acctllllnr' applica· 2734 S. Susan. S A for Ron, "'1441 Full compan1 bend'lta' t.lonJ tor fuJI • p/llme ~;,.aa:O..__ ___ _ ... '7 ... ' -..._.. IHa......t •• Pre1chool teacher for opportunity for adv•neement 11\tt staff. Experienced S.aetariea ~ _... ~ .. " parent ~p. M/W tr. ID micro comptUr pro. •------111 ... ·, s.cntlrJ ._ • ..l.Z,710-t!ll tlGM SCHOOL MADUATll arammloi or 1114vcry IVICll HESTONI • ----.. 1n•-f ............. 111.... belpflll, !IOctWflll ape ·-•
• • ,.d .. l ~I di,,_ tl Wt have a tta wf prolJ'•m or._ ..,. pllcanta will ha~ b1ck· •ASSOCIAT~ EJatln Offa ::nllf:ctaare;•.::ln: =r~:d~:,a,;::e~~~~ ~~,; •r~und In nlu • lpedallettln · • \ •. KIDS iDclivicl_. d.h ptOduc-sa.z,oooper year ~ tltt attitude. Call TemponryCltrlt'al
• ' fnuntdlate.-. for veriatile ift. -tloo ulllrilnel. •• ~· L!!; nmsttwo. Pertc111MI
••••• • cUvkhaal. M• bt caeable Of handl· e ftr potfttlal tor pro-SALES 14o.cMOO
ill fut·~. mW 1od lnltrat· • SUMMER JOIS. ftulonal • peraonil ..,, ii• Ci i'O •• MO: &aelknar'k81. e 1q dutiea tor newspaper eiiecuU•• ~ c.o et·im tor .,,,,,_ 11 ,._ PIOSPICI 14• .lt11f rv
Antq. barber chair. ot•
t'tlalo red lthr. lllnt
...S91'·JU.J=~....u:a.:...--JUK E BOX -WurlilHr
1Me'7t'I~
Be111t. EnS). antique kins
li&e bfcl. muat aell. mo .
'
• • penowl tdf.ln'!!!-t0t. Call: eJ tllllrettet ....... n-~· ...._.~ •• ..,_ •m •111-Wtlttdj:!jlr.11:111:~ . rt,._._. 2f4t ,. '""· c:e.11..... • ....... ,., .. ,..,. .:Ell~"'------.• -· -·:i.:r I, ~. .• _, ~ .... ,_
&11'1 t:l0-'80 per Miii; =-:..oi:.= II ... S..ot•'""-1 .. : IAll-111 Tripe I Piiat. c.I ... ,., ,,_.......,
, ~M~ ;) Qe11•tlll•M Ei==-~e . y r __ ... _..,,_Wlll..;;,,i""JU~.::a .. -.
•· QUI Oppurt •r lmill9Jer relief. =t ..... . ~~ ~ ..
• 0 0 as 0
. ..
f Orange Coaat DAILY PIL0Tt1'uetday, July 21, 1981
· Q.uintuplets'f amily reta~ns optimi.sm despite financial setbacks
::·LIBERTY CORNER. N.J . tAP> -The parents or 11.year·
Gld. .9.uintuplets, Bill a,nd Ptll>'
111> ~~enut, say the bond• they ~l reartn1 seven children will RUB 'them throu1h their lat.eat
. ft« a seriea of money woes, ftn~J1peial crisis.
O• 1WUn1 bankruptcy, the fami·
aJmost toS't their Somerset
ty rarmhouse at a sberilrs
.,_.. this month. The aale was
and now. Mrs. Kienast
We can see the li&ht .at .
of the tunnel."
, When the fraternal quints -~my, Sara, Abi&all, Gordon and ~ -were born Feb. 24. 1970,
~
their pa.rent.I were approacbld
with ol'fera to do commerclala,
endoraemenll and public ap·
pearancea. But with the in·
creased use of fertility drup,
quintuplet.a became more com·
monplace and Lhe often dl1ap.
pear ed.
Two years a10, Blll Kienast'•
business went bankrupt, leavint
him with $74,000 In mort1a1e1,
no source or Income and seven
children In achool.
At one point, tbe only money
coming In wu hll unemploy-
ment check, and the ramlly bad
to scrape to make the weekly
$200 food bill, Mrs. Kienast said.
"It'• been t.11bt. ll'• been very
Utbt," aatd Mra. Kienast, who
1ave blrth to the qUJnll after
taldn1 fertWty dru11 and an ex-
perimental druc to le11en the
chance of muJtlple births.
Arter Klenaat's company,
Plex, which manufactured
plastics for eye1la11ea, and
Kienast both filed for
bankruptcy In October 1971,
First National State Bank of
West Jeney -holder of the
$21,381 aecond lien on the
farmhouse -demanded pay·
ment that the ramily could not
make, Mrs. Kienast said.
The seven-bedroom house. ex-
p1nded with donated labor and
materials after the quints were
born, went on the auction block.
"It was ludicrous that they
would put nine people out on the
street. It would have been the
worst possible public relaUona
scheme ever conceived by
anybody," 1ald Mn. Kienast. "I
would have been out there wlth a
shot1un If anyone thought they
were goln$t to come In here and
take this place."
Al the last minute , the
Kienast.a reached an a1reemenl
with the bank, she said.
"If you don't have to worry
about paying the bills, every-
thln1 etae Is eaay." Mn. Klenut Hid,
"Ralslnt the flve of them
brought us to1ether. 1f an)'tb!na.
we knew we had to work harder
at this thins. I do not feel that
the Klenut.a have failed. Plex
died, but the KJenasta are 1otn1 strong."
Kienast thls month atarted a
bus iness matcbln1 sellen or
c hemical commodities with
buyers. Mrs. Kienast lJ breaking
Into the real estate business.
Their oldest daughter, Me1. 15,
baby-sits, while their older son.
John, 13, says he Invest.a ln old
comic books.
"We do It the way srandma
taucbt," Mn. Klenaat Hid.
"You have to have rules when
you have nine people and two
do1s in a house. &ut each ta
treated dllfereotly at dllferent
times. Everybody needs a little
extra now and then."
"Why couldn't you atop at
one?" asked Amy. the first of
the quint.I, who were born over
the course of 10 minutes.
"I'm 1otn1 to write a book
some day," Mrs. Klenaat said,
slghln1. "I'm goin1 to call It,
·we Ordered Three, But Heaven Sent Seven'."
t 1•1 •' •'"'°'" IMM:Ufe
·lfYous~ke
Carlton JOOS 1Jeca11se
. . ... ,,.......
The Kienast quintuplets' family pose in front of
their seven-bedroom home in Liberty Corner, N.J.
Left to right in front are the quints Amy. Sara.
Abigail, Ted and Gordon, 11 years. In back are
Margaret, 15 ; father Bill. John , 13. and mom
Peggy Jo. The family dog is Daisy.
Singer combated
hunger in world
NEW YORK CAP) -Singer-songwnler Harry
Chapin was known for his mjssion as well as his
~usic : During the last decade of his life. he raised
1$ore than SS million lo combat hunger throughout
the world.
• Chapin. best known for wistful ballads like
'1axi" and "Sequel." died last Thursday ln a
f'(ery crash on the Long Island Expressway. He
\t'aS 38.
, The Long tstand resident had planned to travel
to Washington this week to testify before the House
A'griculture Committee on a world hunger report
he h~lped prepare for former President Carter.
"He never set goals for himself," Bob Hinkle.
bls manager. said. "He would love to have been
able to see the virtual eliminatiOn or major hunger
in th,, world."
While Chapin did not realize that dream, he ~d help found two organizations. World Hunger tear. a New York foundation, and Food Policy
$.enter. a Washington-based lobbying group.
:t Jack Clark, a spokesman for World Hunger ·r 1ear and a friend of Chapin, said that both will
continue their work.
"It's hard, very hard," he
s aid of the singer's death. "He
was the one who kept every-
body elsegoing."
Chapin became involved in
the world hunger cause when he
worked for famine relief In the
early 1970s. He later described
that as the "Ba nd-Aid ap·
proach," and came to view the
problem of hunger as one or
Utica and distribution. Clark said.
l Jn 1975, Chapin founded World Hunger Year as
means of alerting the public to the cause of the·
oblem as he saw it. Two years later, he traveled
to Washington to lobby single-handedly for a
ir•dential commission on world hunger.
• ~art.er agreed, and made Chapin a member of tt.e panel, which was given a two-year mandate:
Aiuarch and prepare a report outlining the scope f_~e problem. The report was completed last
~so In 1977, Chapin wrote in an article for
ftMKI Monitor, a World Hunger Year publication,
41Ulning the enormity of the task: "A S2 million
ilQefit each night of the year would only mean Sl
per rear for each person who is severely hun1ry ...
-, Nevertheless, at least half the 200 concerti he
ually over the put several years were
, Hinkle said.
"Harry talked aboul a 'human agenda'." said
~k. noting that the three items on that agenda re air, water and !ood.
• "He UHd to Hy that people don't die for lack llfr. and not many people die of thirst. Tbe fact
ao many people were dyins or hun1er was t•WiithiJllC that outrated b1a aenslblllties." ewa of Chapin'• death brouaht an outpourina
t lla from h1I lam, HinkM said .
. 'There are Utehlly thcManda or people call·
ftnd out bow they can bett use thelr money
•Ill~ efforu to further h1I aoata." le no formal plan• have been made, "there
fttl>t a way fOf' Lhem to do that," he •aid.
eanwhlle, Clark said work .,m continue at
Huqer Year, wbere the four-member staff
...,. to eope 1rith their ....
t'WllmeTer we hired Mmebocb. Harry UMd to about 1eulna aomebocb who would bt an
llillllilaY toune," l'8 Hid. •liftle bl11e1t tner1y .,..... c "
yo think they're
lo11Jest in tar, yo11're
in for a little shock.
Carlton claims to be lowest
ln tar. And inf act, Carlton
and Now share the dtsttnctton
of being the lowest 80s Box.
And the lowest 85s Sqft. Pack .
regular or menthol.
But when it comes to
lOOs Soft Pack, regular or
menthol, you'll note in the
chart on the rtght that
Carlton contains more than
twice as much tar as Now!
And when it comes to
lOOs Box. Now ts lower byf ar
.. .:-... ·~ -
than Carlton. Inf act. Now Box
lOOs ts lower than any other
lOOmm cigarette anywhere.
There's no question
about it. Now ts the Ultra Low·
est Tar r "4 brand.
And tjthat's what you'd
like in a lOOs cigarette. there's
no question about what brand
you should be smoking.
NUMBERS DON'T LIE.
NOW lOOs ARE LOWER THAN
CARLTON lOOs.
""' ""' 1005 .:Z.. 1005:-1005 ......
CARLTON 5mg 5mg lmg
All tar ~ are ~ per ogaiette bv FTC meilod
• ,\ .
BOX. 80)( 100'1: ltst men 0.01 mg. "l•". 0.001 lftl, nicotN. SOFT PACI 86'1 FILTER.
MEMTHOli 1 mg. "tar, 0.1,ig. M:oliM. SOfT PACI IO'a fllll\ ME~, 2 111· ii(,
0.2 mg. llCOCint w. per ClllflC1I by FTC mtdlill
* * • * *
Ylll HlllllWI . llllY PIPER
. 1 U ES U A Y J IJ l r l 111• · OHANGE COUNTY C ALIFOR NIA ~!"> C ENT S
Cases'compared
Irvine chief notes differences
By RICHARDGREEN
OflMD ... yptllllUfl
A woman contacts an Irvine
policeman during the night and
says she has just escaped her
house, leaving behind an emo·
tionally upset husband with a
smoking gun,
If you are the highest ranking
police orricjal on duty, what do
you do?
. When the wife of former Mayor
Art Anthony arrived at the home
of Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart
on April 9, Peart decided not to
send a police team to the Anthony
home in Irvine.
When the estranged wife of
Jeffrey Bodmer. 29, an asbestos
worker, called police in the pre-
dawn hours Sunday, a poUce
watch commander sent 18 police
officers to Mrs. Bodmer's home
in Irvine. Six nearby homes
were evacuated.
The two cases have some ob-
vious similarities. They were
handled by police in two different
ways, both of which were sound
and successful . according to Chief
Peart.
Chief Peart points out that in
both cases the men were taken in-
to custody without loss of life.
Ii m b or property.
Standard operating procedure
was followed in both cases. he
said.
In the Anthony case. no homes
were evacuated. The mayor was
allowed to stay in his home with
his political aJly, BiU VardouUa
(whom Anth<>ny had telephoned>
until the early hours of April 10. At
that point.Vardoulis left and An·
thbny was left unattended ln a
house containing two handguns
and arlfle.
Anthony was taken to the Men·
tal Health Unit of Hoag Memorial
Hospital in Newport Beach on the
morning or April 10, about 12
hours after he allegedly beat his
wife with his fists and inflicted a
grazing gunshot wound on her
scalp. Another 24 hours elapsed
before he was arrested on suspi-
cion or assault with a deadly
weapon and taken to the sheriff's
psychiatric ward at UC Irvine
M edica1 Cent.er in Orange.
Bodmer was taken into custody
at8a.m. Sunday, aboutfourhours
after his estranged wife found
him in her Woodbridge home. She
told police that she fled the house
after he fired his handgun at the
ceiling. She wasn't hurt. He was
taken to the sheriffs psychiatric
ward at UCIMC for a 72-hour men·
tat commitment. Police Sgt. Dick
Bow man said Bodner won't be
charged with a crime.
The Bodmer case was made
public two hours after police
learned of the Incident. A detailed
press release was Issued the same
day.
The Anthony case was made
CSee PEART, Page A.2)
TUCKED IN -Fourteen-year-old Robert Empfield of
Newport Beach awaits the starting gun in the Southern
California Soap Box Derby held in Laguna Hills over the
weekend. For more on the race, see Page A3.
Mail piles up
Colleges shelve class schedules
By STEVE MARBLE
OftMDallyP'l ... IMlff
Officials at Golden West
College in Huntington Beach. re·
acting to a possible postal strike,
have stockpiled 192,000 fall class
schedules that were to hit the mail
this week.
College President Lee Stevens.
noting that 10.000 mail-in reg·
istration forms also were to be
mailed this week. said a strike
co uld have "serious conse·
quenceson fall enrollment."
Stevens said class schedules
could be made available in
libraries, banks and even
markets if there is a lengthy
s trike . But he noted that a drop
in enrollment would mean a loss
in state financial support
Officials at Or ange Coast
College said they face identical
problems in the event of a
strike.
At UC Ir vi ne . sc hool
authorities said a strike would
affect the mailing of class
sc hedules. diplomas and
transfer information.
Mailroom officials at the Fluor
Corp. in Irvine. anticipating a
postal strike. already have in·
creased their use of private
messenger servi ces to get out 1m·
portant mail
Bob Van Scho' ck. head of the
Fluor mailroom. said the firm
also will begin its own 1n house
courier service to Los Angeles.
* * *
He said department heads are
being asked to scrutinize mail and
to set aside correspondence that
1s not of top priority.
M eanwhlle , employees at 4
Speed Delivery Service in Irvine
have been told to expect longer
work hours If a strike
material izcs
··You bet we're expecting an in-
crease in activity ... said SaJ
Cuerva. manager of the private
courier firm
A spokesman for Courier Ex·
press Inc in Fullerton sctid his
firm has not yet experienced an
increase in activity. "But we'rt'
hoping," he added.
The Irvine Company in
Newport Beach also has plans for
ex panding its use of private
courier service for important
pieces of mail.
"We really don't expect any
major problems in the shortrun."
said spokesman J crry Collins.
Along the Orange Coast. reac-
tion from business firms. school
d1 stnct:. and city postmasters
was much the same.
"We'r(.> just wailing to see what
happens .. explained Robert
ilousl'. poslma~t(.>r for Newport
Rca C'h
Houst' assurr<'d that the mail. if
a strike is called. will be made
;ivallablt• to the public -
somehov. lie suggestei:l that
persons l!Ceking to pay bills might
<See STRIKE. Page A2)
* * * Postal workers remaining on job
Tighter credit
policx vowed
WASHINGTON (AP > -
Federal Reserve Chairman Paul
Vo1cker told Congress today the
fight against U.S. inrlation is so
important that the board will
rurther tighten its rein on the na·
tion's credit and money s upply,
even though that means near·
record interest rates will prob·
ably continues.
Volcker, Federal Reserve col-
leagues and top Reagan ad-
m inistralion officials believe
that a rapidly expanding money
supply would fuel inflation. And
they see that as an even worse
danger than that posed by the
high interest rates which have
stifled economic activity in the
United States. especially in the
housing and auto industries. and
brought protests from European
nations.
U .S. interest rates, which have
greatly strengthened the ~ollar
at the expense or many foreign
currencies, have been a prime
topic at this week's economic
summit in Canada.
Volcker said the Federal
Reserve Board still aims to hold
the growth or the money supply
known as MlB -cash plus
checking accounts -to between
3.5 percent and 6 percent this
year, the same range he an-
nounced in February.
But he said today that the
board will pursue policies aimed
at keeping M'lB growth to the
lower edge or that range rather
than the middle.
.111111 CIAIT lllTllR
Patchy late night and
early morning low clouds,
otherwise fair through
Wednesday with some
high clouds in the after-
noons. Hight Wednesday
ran1lns rrom mid-70s at
the beaches to upper 80s
inland. Lowa toai1ht 58 to'
81.
1•11ma1 o ...... w.. Ofdo, ii now tltc
otttciol bfrHaptace o/
t'-arpMooen ~ Ooklq.
SH Pafl'.41. ••••
In addition. he said , the
Federal Reserve tentatively
plans to try to hold that money
growth to between 2.5 percent
and 5.5 percent next year.
Testifying before the House
Banking Committee. Volcker
said that "turning back the in-
flationary tide. as we can see. is
not a simple painless process,
free from risks and strains of its
own.
"All that I would claim is that
the risks of not carrying through
on the effort to restore price
stability would be much greater.
Dealing with inflation is essen·
tial to our future well-being as a
nation, and the Federal Reserve
means to do its part."' he added.
OCTD revives
'free rides'
for seniors
.,. ........ By GLENN SCOTT
Of ... Deity" ........
Starting today. senior citizens
can again ride Orange County
Transit District buses for free,
except during morning and
evening rush hours.
Moe Biller fle/tJ, pre.utent of tM American Poatal Worker•
Union, and Vince Sombrotto, preftdenl of the National Aaaociation
of Letter Carriers, shown in Waahblgton hotel after rejecting
Poatal Service offer.
The free fares were reinstated
Monday by county officials who
said they hope it will clear up
the confusion that apparently
caused many seniors to reduce
t heir use of the public buses
after fares were increased In
June.
Boys big spenders
Missing pajr found after spree
It was then that the price for
seniors to ride a bus increased to
a dime during ore-peak commut-
ing hours, from 6 to 9 a .m . and 3
to6 p .m .
Even thou1h the 10-cent hike
seemed minimal, seDtor citizen
ridership declined sharply two
weeks into June, from 10 percent or total pas1en1er1 lo 6.5 per-
cent.
While parents and police
searched Monday for two La
Habra boys, aeed 7 and 10, the
mlssing children were having
the tf me of their lives at a local
shopping center.
The boys, next door nel.chbors,
Biting bear
• gets reprieve That ratio had climbed to 7.2
percent by the end of June, but
officials stlll were speculatlnl
that many former rlder1 m\llt MOUNT VERNON, Ill. <AP>
have misunderstood the new -Tommy the Bear, who bit an
rare rates. thinkin1 they had 11-year -oJd boy at a summer
1one up1ubetanUaUy. camp, has won a brier reprieve
1..lnder tbe new plan, the fart1 as a Pn>ffcutor tries to spare It
ror HDion will be '"" durtn& from betna kUJed for a ratMet
oftpeak boun and 35 cents dur· lest.
iq tM rush houn. Accordh\I to The bear, which ,.,.nd1 ill
OCTD 1uldellnet, a senior daya lolllna ln a pen at Uae
dliHD l1 anyone at l•a1t ~ Beltevllle Catholic Diocese'•
yean 'llld. • Camp Onde11ontc. stirred up Belen , .. dae ;lied tiacl 1tron1 emotions afltr bitla1
bffn tne at ..e IO-ftlltd ••at.ell 8coU Burrellman Of Fairview =~· = J:. cwb at ':: l H~= wttb tbe bar and bit
.... , .. JI :..rr= .. off ,........ -tbelr ... ,... WbO peak ..... and • _., at.-wul to..,.,. ltott from a pa&n·
boun. tUI Hi1il ol rabta• teltl.
were reported missing Monday
when t heir parents couldn't
locate them after the boys rode
away on their bicycles about
noon.
Police sent out a description of
the boys and what they were
wearing. They searched such
hangouta as the local Boys Club.
A police spokesman said to-
day, however, t hat lhe boys
were found about midnl1ht at a
pina parlor in Whittier after a
clerk became 1uapiciou1 that
they were unsupervised. The
boys had a lot or money.
The 1pokesman aaJd one ol the
boys had lifted $400 rrom hi•
mother's purse and they simply
had •one on a 1hoppin1 1pree.
He 11.ld the boy& twice mana1ed
to cash s100 blll1.
What did they buy? Well, can·
dy and food, T -1blrl• and
wri1tw1tcbel.
Even thou1h the bot'• were
. fairly clOH to home, the pollct
didn't locate their blcycln.
That's because the boy1 dftkttd
~Ir blns needicl work 1nd left.
theiQi with tM local bUle 1hop for repllra.
Tentative
contract
rejected
WASHJNGTON (API A ten·
tative agreement to avert a na·
tionwide mail strike collapsed
today after union leaders said
the final Postal Service wage of-
f er contained "a serious in-
consistency" with what they had
accepted two hours earlier
Postal workers remained on the
Job. however.
As the negollallons resumed.
leaders of the two lar gest postal
unions said there were no im-
mediate plans for a strike by
their half-million members.
The unions threatened to pull
their workers off the job at mid-
night Monday. when the old con·
tract expired.
Moe Biller. president of the
Am erican P ostal Workers
Union. told members today "to
hang in tough · ·
Biller and Vincent Sombrotto
of the National Association of
Letter Carriers s aid they
thought they had reached agree·
ment about 2 a.m on a tentative
three-year contract.
They announced that to the un·
ions' rank and file on a taped
telephone message ana even rec·
om mended ratification . But
five hours later Sombrollo said :
"We are now in a position where
we don't have a contract
"At approximately 2 a m .. we
made an agreement. We brought
that down to our rank and file
and our executf ve bodies for
their attention and approval ...
and we put in motion our
telephone network," he said.
·'The terms and conditions
... were discussed at length"
In a caucus with top union
policy-makers, Sombrotto said.
It was then that "serious ques-
tions about It" arose, he added.
·'Then we returned to the
bargaining table . When the
wage proposal was presented.
we noticed there was a serious
inconalstency with what we had
agreed to" orally.
The union leaders refused to
elaborate on the discrepancy,
but Biller aald, "We don't view
lt as a misunderstanding." <See MAIL,'Pa1e AZ)
Retrieving hia hat
costs man his life
A puseqer on a motorcycle
waa killed Monday when he ran
out Qt\ the Oran1e Freeway ln
Bre. to rWieve bis bat that had
blown off.
Jerry Allen Ha1en aot about
hatr way into the freeway at
ll:OS p.m. when.,. w11 blt by a
car driven bf Leland ao ..... 51,
or Fullerton. Hid Calllornla
Hl.ahw•y Patrolman Axel Mil· tho(.
CONTINUES TALKS
Postal Service's Bolger
Rain visits
coastal area
-but briefly
Rain that sprinkled parts or
the Orange Coast this morning
did nothing more than wet the
ground and left behind some
high clouds expected to be
around through Wednesday, ac·
cording to the National Weather
Service.
The forecaster said any
chance of significant rain passed
with today's sprinkles. He said
the high cloudiness will decrease
Wednesday afternoon.
Temperatures In the mld-'105
along the coast and hear IO
degrees inland will lncreaft
humidity and make the air.
muggy Wednesday , tbe
forecaster said.
Clouds moved over Southetn
Californli last night as part ol 1
cloud system that developed in
the south overni1ht, accordina
to the weather bureau.
Singer improving
M !:MPHIS. Tenn. <AP > -
Sln1er Jet'T)' LH Lewl1. who un·
derwent two stomach oPJfaUonl •
and llnpred near deau.e near•
• l)' tbne ...U, bu beea &Men off
th~ erlUc:al Uat.
........ ·-
••••• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT rr uesday. July 21 , 1981
rfexas lifts quarantine on California produce
LOS GATOS (AP > -
California produce rolled unhJn·
dred into Texu today after 1
federal judee temporarily lifted
1 quvaatlne imposed by the
Lone ·aar ,State In response to
California' problems with fruit
mes .
C alifornia lawyers.
meanwhile, were preparing to
ask the U.S. Supreme Court,
.J><>SSibly today, to halt similar
1trlngent quarantines that also
went into ertect Monday ln
.Florida, South Carolina, Mis·
sissippi and Alabama.
As helicopters completed the ...
.,...., ...... '"" "'-"'
EXPLAINS PROCEDURES
I rvine Chief Peart
From Page A1
PEART •••
public 312 days after Chief Peart
learned of the matter . A press re·
lease was issued on the Monday
morning foll owing the alleged
Thursday night assault.
Anthony has pleaded no contest
to a misdemeanor assault charge.
He faces sentencing Wednesday
on the reduced charge, which car·
ries a maximum punishment of
Sl .000 and one year in jail.
Peart says his decision not lo
send a police team lo the Anthony
home doesn 't d eviate from
norm a I police opera ting pro·
cedure
"The highest ranking officer on
the shirt makes a determination
whe ther the SOU <Special Opera·
tions Uni t> is called in,·· Peart
said. "What's unique in the An·
thony case is that Elaine <Mrs.
Anthony> came to my house and I
made a decision not to deploy . . .
I imagine a sergeant on duty
made an opposite determination
1 in the Bodmer case>.
· · 1 n the Anthony case I felt we
had more detailed information on
the individual involved.
··The Special Operations Unit is
trained for certain types or silua·
lions."
A common one, Peart noted, is a
barricaded sus pect. an individual
known to have a weapon and who
has refused to come out and has
threatened violence to himself or
others. According to police re·
ports, that was the case in the
Bod mer incident.
.. Anthony was cooperative
from the point he was contacted
by telephone. He didn't threaten
anyone.
"lt·s a j ud g m e nt call.
a bsolutely ...
Peart stressed that the Irvine
police department has an out·
standing record in the handling o(
sensitive situations.
: .. Thafs a record I'm proud of,"
'fie said.
Golden Gate
toll lowere d
SAN FRANCISTO <APl -The
'Colden Gate Bridge toll will
temporarily stay at $1 , it was de·
1cided Monday. the last day of a
trial to see if cutting the loll
•from $1.25 reduced tramc snarls
1at toll booths.
Commuters between Marin
1counly and San Francicso had
complained the $1.25 toll was
,mainly responsible for tieups at
• the toll plaza. Extra time was
:needed to fumble, and watt for.
jchange, drivers contended. The
'
toll was raised from St on March
1.
: Under the direction of John
•Molinari, president of the
!Golden Gate Bridge Board, the
toll had been lowered to $1 for a
i nine·day test.
first daytime aerlal 1praylo1 ol
the peaUclde malathion Monday
southeast or San Franc:laco,
state official• expanded the
apraylne tarcet zone to 227·
square miles from 175 square
miles to battle Infestations of
Mediterranean fruit mes.
The next aerial assault on the
flies, which destroy about 200
varieties or fruits and
ve1etables, lncludin1 peppers,
tomatoes and peaches. Is
scheduled to start Wednesday.
Jn Dallas, U.S. District Judge
Patrick Higginbotham granted a
te mporary restraining orde~
From Page Al
STRIKE •••
consider delivering the bills
themselves.
"Persons may be asked to pick
up their mail from post offices,"
he said. adding, ·'the Post Office
management, the military or the
National Guard could be brought
into help."
Col. Andrew Wolf, public in·
formation officer for the National
Guard. said a contingency plan
known as "Operation Graphic
Hand'' has been developed.
But, he added, before such a
plan could be put into action there
would have to be a walkout, and
President Reagan would have to
declare a national emergency
and sign an executive order call·
ing for support.
Wolf said it would take roughly
one day to mobilize forces to help
the Postal Service .
Dave Mazer. public informa·
tion officer for the Postal Service.
noted that the postmaster general
also could suspend laws giving the
Postal Service monopoly on mail
delivery. This move. he said,
would allow private companies to
deliver mail.
* * From Page A1
MAIL ...
*
The unions had said the agree·
ment would continue unlimited
cost-of·living protection and pro-
vide base pay raises of $750 per
worker the first year and S600 in
each of the next two years. It
a l so wo uld prohibit an y
employee from being forced to
work more than 10 hours a day
for five consecutive days, the
unions said.
First word of the collapse
came from federal mediator
Nicholas Eldandis , who
emerged from the bargaining
room to tell reporters wailing
for the formal announcement of
a settlement:
.. There's no agreement here.
I've still got people in there talk·
ing ...
Postal Service officials re-
fused to comment. indicating
they did not want to say
an y thing that might c ause
further problems at the bargain·
ing table.
Middle East
shelling
• • continuing
TEL AVIV. Israel CAP >
Israeli and Palestinian gunners
ex c hanged fire across the
Lebanese·lsraeli border today,
and Prime Minister Menachem
Begin's Cabinet met to consider
an American call for a cease·
fire to halt the escalating at·
tacks .
The Israeli military command
said gunners returned fire into
Lebanon after Palestinian
rockets and artillery shells
struck Nahariya on the Mediter·
ranean coast and points in the
Galilee panhandle 20 miles in·
land . Several people were
wounded In the Galilee, Israel
radio said.
The Palestinian news agency
Wafa said Israeli artillery fire
hit Beaufort Castle, a major
guerrilla base in southern
Lebanon four miles north or the
border. and the •uerrilla·
controlled village of Aychieh.
The latest exchange broke a
brief respite from overni&ht
artillery and rocket barrages .
The U.S. government decided
Monday to extend t he delay In
shipping to F-16 jet fighters lo
Israel because of "the eacalat·
in& cycle ol violence:· Secretary
of State Alexander M. Haig Jr.
announced at the seven-nation
summit conference In Mon·
tebello, Quebec.
a. ............. 71~
All otMr •911rt:Ol4"'8 Ma-.1
..
' ' .
sought by a coalition ot ab11olulelydoneeverytbln1lc1n confined lo three San Francisco said he had m e re ly made a
California 1rowers, lltUn1 the to protect Texas Interests. Now Bay area counties and doesn't technical change Monday, one
Texas quarantine. Hit order lt Is out of my hands." affect commercial farms. The that would not affect the qua.ran·
came after trucks laden with Tony Clmaru1t1, an aide to federal government already has line area. He s aid the area
fruits and vegetables were Ca lifornia Attorney General Its own quarantine in effect In would not be expanded unless
stopped al Texas roadblocks to Georae Oeukmejlan, said Mon· the three counties. new medfly finds were made.
check to see that produce was day night the state's lawyers Before Issuing hiB ruling, fUg. The first medne s were found
fumigated or grown in areas were prepa ring to go to ginbotham was told by a U.S. a year ago In Santa Clara Coun·
free of infestation. A court bear· Washlneton today to seek action Department of Agriculture at· ty. An intensivt! ground· based
In& on a permanent injunction ls from the U.S. Supreme Court on torney in Washington that the eradication effort started in
set for Saturday. the quaranUnes ln the other four department was .. on the verge.. January.
·•we removed the roadblocks. Southern stales, which fear the or issuing a proposal that would Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.
but we are still terribly con· tiny fly may spread to their extend the three-county federal reluctantly ordered aerial
cerned the Mediterranean Crull crops. quarantine over the entire state. spraying two weeks ago after
fly Is spreading," said Texas Californi a and the federal 1ov· But Harvey Ford. deputy ad· U.S. Agriculture Secretary John
Agriculture Commissioner ernment have sought to a11ure minlstrator for USDA'• Animal Bloc k threatened a statewide
Reagan Brown. ·'I have the states the medfiy outbreak la Plant Health Inspection Service, quarantine.
...............
Four participants in the Ottawa summit meeting prepare for the official photograph. From left are West
German Chancellor Helmw Schntidl, President Reagan, Canadian Prime Minuter Pierre Trudeau and
French President Francois Milterand.
Reagan agrees to global trade
U.S. changes original posture on 'too vague' concept
MONTEBELLO. Quebec (AP>
President Reagan. in an ap·
parent concession to American
economic partners. agreed to-·
day to preparations for "global
negotiations" to help poorer na·
lions in development and trade,
knowledgeable summit meeting
sources reported.
Until now. the Rea gan ad·
ministration refused to commit
itself lo global negotiations on
the ground that the concept was
too vague.
The final communique or the
seven-nation summit of major
industrial democracies conclud·
ing today ind icat es that
Cuban r e fugee
said victim
of s lay ing
A murder victim whose body
was dumped on a res idential
street in Huntington Beach July
12 has been identified as a
Cuban refugee who disappeared
after being sponsored by a
Miami couple.
Huntington Beach police Sgt.
Ed McErlain said the dead man
has been identified through
finge rprints as Inocente 0 .
Garcia-Junco. 25
McErlain said the man
entered the United States at
Miami in June, 1980. as part of a
"boallirt" from Cuba.
He was held at a refugee camp
in Ft. ChafCee, Ark .. until a
Miami couple agreed lo sponlOr
him and arrange employment,
according to police.
McErllari said Garcia-Juneo
did not appear at the Miami
couple's home after his release.
· · m.u t u a I I y a c c e p t ab l e
circumstances .. will have lo be
found for worldwide talks.
But Canadian sources at the
summit said the qualified U.S.
com mitment nevertheless
r Pp r esent ed a signific ant
breakthrough in the s talled
dialogue between wealthy and
poor nations. Canadian Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau
is a leading advocate of global
talks on the rich·poor issue.
One U S offi cial who request·
ed anonymity said the United
States was satisfied with this
agr eement and s aid. "We're
willing to talk about talking."
He said the standa rd for
engaging in suc h talks would be
"a reasonable expectation or
success.··
The section or the communi·
que on "North·South dialogue"
s a ys. "We a r e ready to
participate in preparations for a
process of global negotiations in
mutuall y acceptab l e
circumstances offering the pros·
peel or meaningful progress ...
Third World nations have been
demanding just such a broad·
based forum ror improving
economic cooperation and aid
programs between the wealthier
countries or the north and the
underde veloped south around
the world
The s ummit sources. who
spoke to reporters on the condi·
lion that they not be identified.
said negotiations on the North·
South language were completed
Monday night, and the wording
was accepted by Reagan and the
other heads of government at
this morning·s formal summit
session.
Reagan is sco r i n g a
diplomatic victory at his first
economic summit by persuading
allies to cons ider restricting
high·technology and military·
related trade with the Soviet
bloc .
Participants in the three·day
s ummit in this village outside
Ottawa also are borrowing a
hard line from the Reagan ad·
ministration in conde mning "the
continuing buildup of Soviet
military power.. and declaring
that "we ourselves . . need a
strong defense capability ..
Deputy's
attacker
convicted
A corona man faces a possible
20·year sentence in state prison
following his conviction or at·
tempted murder in the s hooting
of an Orange County Sheriffs
Depa rtment deputy who now 1s
paralyzed from the chest down.
Robert Dust in Strong, 25. was
convicted Mo nday on e1gh1
fe lony counts . includ ing at
tempted murder. ass ault with a
deadly weapon. auto theft and
burglary, by an Orange Countv
Superior Court jury that de
libe rated two davs
Strong alternately stared at
the panel and at the counsel ta·
ble as the verdicts were read
before Judge Everett Dickey
The ex convict. previously im
prisoned for weapons theft. was
1dentif1ed during the trial as one
of three men who was attempt
ang to steal a car at t he Orange
Mall in Orange the night of No\'
6. moments beforl' the s hooting
occurred
Deputies Ira Es!>oe and Greg
Brown. who \H•re on duty and in
the arc;.i , observed several men
tampering with a car and went
to investigate.
It was at that point gunfin·
erupted Essoc was struck in the
back b~ a bulll•t that severed has
s pine
Strong, and a second defen·
dant in the case. David Knick.
24. of Riverside. '>'Cre arrested
about 90 minutes after the s hoot·
ang following a h1gh·speed chase
on the Orange Freeway that
ended in Pomona. Authorities
said t he suspects fared several
shots at pursuing officers.
Knick's trial is scheduled to
begin next week. He is being
held in Orange County Jail an
heu of $250.000 bail A third de
fendant. David Vogel. 34. of
Corona. now in c ustodv in a
federal prison on a bank robbery
con viction. 1s expected to be
brought to Orange Count ~· for
trial later this )Car
Judge Dicke) was scheduled
today lo set a date for a sentenc
1ng hear i n g for S t ro ng
Prosecutors said Strong could
face a maximum of 20 years.
eight months an prison as a re
suit of the eight-count con,·ic
lion
Su spect watched
ATLANTA IAP > Wayne
Williams. indicted in two of 28
slayings of young blacks here.
came to police attention four
times prior lo May 22. when he
wa!i stopped by a police stakeout
team near a Chattahoochee River
bridge. a newspaper reported to·
day.
He said Investigators
contacted the dead man's widow
in Miami and were told that fbe
last si>oke to him one month a10.
McErlaln said the murder
victim has been traced to a Loa
Angeles residence as of
mld-May, but his whereabollta
slnce that tlme have not been
determined.
15 cro to 50% Off
e'4etyth\ng \n the store
)u\y 23, 24 an~nlg~ !~!!lets,
. at ches, n ' i n cl ~d1ng_ ~all of our regular Garcla·.lunco was found lllot.
OnCf) lJ\ the head on St.ard,.t
Drive ln HuaUncton Beach. He
died several hours later at
Fountain Valley Community
Hotp\tal.
Mc&rlatn 11ld anyone wbo
was ~lnted with the vScUm
locally 11 aaked to conticl
Huntlntton Beach pollu,
9'0·•11.
Dollar boosted 1 LONDON <~P> -The dollar,
buored bJ U.S. lnt ..... t 1· roee lbarply a1alnltm~ peaa ,..,.,... totiy. ,
pu11Md Meir b1 tJae bllber
rat.a, QIPlllMcl around 14 an Iner.
earnngs . e
\·ty merchand•S . qua' .
(fjull <Iµaf ~!R~~~~
ISLAND •
' •
·~-........ Brooke Shields. left, star of "Endless Love." chats with
Elizabeth Taylor. child actor Ricky Schroder and Franco Zef-
f1relli. director. following a preview of the movie in New York's
Gemim Theater.
IRS to ta k e m osl
of gian t jack pot
While lhe biggest slot
machine winner in history is
savoring a check for $1
million, the Internal Revenue
Service is awaiting its op-
portunity lo take a hefty
chunk of it away.
Slot winner J eff Randolph.
who hit the giant jackpot at
Caesars Tahoe casino. ex-
peels the IRS to take $500,000
to $600,000 or his winnings.
• · 1 · m single and I don't own
anything, so I'm going to
JUmp right into the 70 per-
cent tax bracket, .. Randolph,
a Delano attorney, said in a
telephone interview from his
oHice ... But what the heck ...
he added with a laugh,
"Who's complaining?"
He planned to meet with in-
ves tment couns elors to de
cide how best to manage the
mol)ey
Former Contreasman .Jolua
Jenrette of South Carolina
sued his estrange d wife,
Rita, and her parents over a
dispute involving ownenhip
of an Aui;tln, Texaa bowling
alley.
J enreue contends in the
suit that C.H. and Reba
Carpenter and h.is estranged
wlte are cons piring to deny
him his Interest In the
Brunswick Capitol Bowling
Center.
Jenrette resigned fro m
Congress last December
after he was convicted of
Abscam conspiracy·brlbery
charges.
Charles "Buddy" Ro&ers,
widower of silent screen star
Mary Pickford, will marry a
Los Angeles real estate agent
at the home or her relatives
in Tacoma, Wash.. friends of
the couple said.
Rogers, 75, will marry
Beverly Rlcono, 50, o n
Wednesday. The wedding
had been rescheduled a cou-
ple or limes.
Miss Pickford. known as
"America'-s Sweetheart"
during her heyday in films.
was married to Rogers 44
years. before her death in
May 1979.
The couple plan to live in a
$700,000 house Rogers had
built on the edge or the
Pickfair estate that Miss
Pickford and her firs t
hus band, Douglas Fairbanks,
Sr., built in the 1920s .
Marvin Mandel was back
in his old booth at Chic &
Ruth's Delly in Annapolis,
Md .. after spending more
than a year at a federal
prison in Florida.
The former governor re-
turned to Mar yla nd on a five-
day furlough from the prison
al Eglin Air Force Base near
Pensacola. Fla .. where he is
serving a three-year term for
mail fraud and racketeering.
Storms pound Midwest
Hurricane-like winds cut power, injure 20 people
Coast a l fore cast
Patcny l•I• n1911i and u.iv morn-•no low cklud\ OUMrw •w ,.,,.. thrOVQl'I
Wednes.cs.v w1th ~ '"QI\ c1ouo1 neu
Coa•l•I low. lt, Inland .. Coa$lel
111911 mlcl-10s, in._ -IOs. Wattr ..
ltQht v•,.••D•• w ttuts throvQ,.
IOt1'91'l t•etSll lo< '°"'"-" to we\I 10 to i. llnoh on aller,_, '>oulll•ell
1well\ ' IO 1 '"' NoQlll eno morning
I-c!oucllNU bul ~llV wnny •' ,.,,_.,,,
V.S. summary
T""""""'°""' paclo.0119 11.911 ""'''" po-llW ~I lo.nocll.0119 OUI
power, ~lnq -• eno bu\1 n.1.1•1, !Ind 1n1urlf\9 more tnian 10
~Oii ..
Tiie community of Car"'' Miii• on sovth••1te,.n 111tno1' ..,.,,. w1tnovt
oower e•rly toc:My Mw:t •n ovt-rnto"'t
curt-·~on 11\ 1 SOO rn1denh
fOUOWlnQ • \torm Monotv e w•n1no,
eu!llOrlllfl wlCI
t119f' "''"°' MMS , •• n \Wei)t KrO\\
c.ntral and •·•st•rn Ml\tourt Mon
day s1 .... .iron1 ··-· on oown1own C.olumDI• -· oul .. wind\ 1u'110 up to n "'l)fl. ano 1nouwnc11 of SI
lOVll rt\Odotnb .... , .... 11r.ou1 tltH:
trlclty tarly !Oday
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, July 21 . 1981 H /F Al
Delly ........... ~--
.Robert Empfield, 14. of Newport Beach , works on his Soap Box Derby entry, which finished third
in the senior divi8ion.
IHomes for workers
Fluor developing houses near firm I
1 By GLENN SCOTT company has an agreement to 10t111eo.11,,.. ... 1UH buy up to 60 condominiums pro·
The Irvine-based multina· posed to be built less than a mile
lional Fluor Corp. has burst onto from its headquarters.
Orange County's expensive The 350-unil development 1s
housing market by pioneering a proposed by Newport Develop·
plan in which major employers ment Co. It would be located ore
supply housing to their workers. Von Karman Avenue behind the
The plan comes at a time Registry Hotel. The project has
when more and more top ex-preliminary approval or the
,eeutives are publicly decrying Irvine City Council. final con
the serious effects of high hous-sideration will be on July 28.
ing prices on their efforts to Lanny Eberling, a partner in
recruit and keep highly skilled the development firm. said he
employees. has met twice with Fluor ex-
A t Fluor , where 6 ,000 ecutives about sell ing them un·
employees work at its imposing its He said he expects that other
h eadqua rters o n Michelson major employers also will be in·
Drive. the personnel needs are terested in lhe development.
acute, according to vice presi· "We believe that part of our
dent Jay Reed. market is companies like
Speaking last week to a meet· Fluor," he explained.
ing of the Building Industry As-Eberling said the units are de·
sociation, Reed described Fluor signed for people who work in
as a business where "we sell the surrounding industrial com·
brains." plex. Most homes in the three-
The corporation specializes in and four-story complex will sell
engineering and constructiqn of for about $100,000. he said.
energy systems, Reed said, and All is not rosy in Irvine.
it employes a high percentage of however Representatives of the
technical experts who could Registry objected Lo the de·
easily find jobs elsewhere if velopment. at the last city coun·
their job or living conditions cil meeting. They said the re·
were distasteful. sidential project. if used heavily
Thus. Fluor has to keep them by nearby corporations. could
happy, and that means ensuring start supplying the short-term
that they like where they Live. housing that the hotel provides.
''Because of the people· Eberling said he understands
intensive nature of our business, that Fluor. for example, would
coupled with our genuinely high rent their units to workers for
regard for their well being, from six months to two years .
housing is a key ingredient In Since the development hasn't
our ability to grow and be pro-even received final approval .
Citable," he said. To address the Fluor obviously hasn't made
problem, Reed said the com· permanent plans. But the com·
pany is becoming directly in-pany is continuing lo consider
volved in the housing market. ways to offer more housing
The corporation already has services to its workers. Reed
leased 50 condominiums in an El said.
Toro de v e Io pm en t . The One consideration is to find a
furnished units are rented to vis·. way that the company can use
itlng workers for $550 per month corporate profit-sharing assets
for two people, he said. The cost for mortgage funds. he said.
includes maid service.
Now Fluor is ready to embark
60 compe t e
in S oap Box
De rby event
Organizers of the 1981
Southern California Soap Box
Derby say more than 60 youths
participated in this year's com-
petition in Laguna Hills.
Jim Garrison. derby director ,
said Monday the winners in the
junior and senior divisions will
compete an the national cham·
pionships in Akron. Ohio. next
month.
The senior division winner
was John Van Dyke. 14 , of Sun
Valley. Garrison said Second
through fourth place finishers
were Christina Fairbanks. 13. of
Villa Park. Robert Empfield, 14.
of Newport Beach, and Terri
Hathaway, 15, of Fullerton.
Finishing first in the junior
division was Jo Ann Brower. 10,
of Lakewood. Placing second
through fourth were Diane
Berglund, 10, of Tustin; Ken-
ndell Dupree. 10. of Mira Loma.
and Beth Bowman. 11 . of Mis-
sion Viejo
Garrison said the fifth place
winner in the junior division was
Todd Lambert, 11. of San Diego.
Michale Ward. 12. of Torrance
finished in sixth place.
Awards for best construction
went to Karey Hazewinkel, 11, of
Newport Beach. and Empfield.
also of Newport. the third-place
race finisher in the senior
division,
Garrison said representatives
of R -G. Canning Diversified Co ..
the sponsor of the derby. pre-
sented 20 youngsters with youth
achievement awards .
Garrison said derby cars cost
from S150 to S200 to construct.
and are made of wood and
fiberglass The wheels of the
cars are owned by the Southern
California Soap Box Derby As·
sociation, and are loaned. The
race was Saturday and Sunday.
on the most aggressive housing
program so far. Reed said the We1Te Listening .••
Mot o r cyclist killed
Harold Michael Barton. 39, of
Whittier, was killed Monday
morning when his motorcycle
went out of control ~!'ld crashed
into the center divider or the
tra ns ition road from Seventh
Street to the northbound San
Gabriel Ri ver Valley Freeway
in Seal Beach, the California
Highway Patrol said.
Over the past rew years, there
have been a number of very ex-
citl ng pre·Columblan gold
shows traveling around the
world. The moat recent or theM
was the lmpreulve El Dorado
Exhibit. About eighteen
months ago. the Los Angel•
County Museum or N1tural
History was approached by
Clara Yust, LA'a Colombian
Conaulate General, who
exprllMd dl .. ppolntment that
the El Dorado Show had not come to L09 Angelff, en ..... wtild'I boallt a popul1tlon or
about !I0,000 Colombians.
Mrl. Yust ottered to help put on a lhow of maior Importance
In Loa Angetn In conjunction
wi t h the L.ot Angel••
Blcen'8f'lnlat In 1181. H•r alma
..-quite t lmple. She Nid
1hlt IN would Ilk• to haw the
lergeat gold 1how e1ter
.,, ... nted outtlde Colombia. end Iha tho09hl It might be
poeelbte to lnolu<M emeraldl In
the lhOW. After all emeraldl
Wllfe ol 9f'Mt impor\ance to the
Indiana aa w•ll u to th• SC>enlth Conqulttedort.
Accompll1hin, M,.. Yuet'1 = •ntalled our tripe to
ta to neeotlat• with the Mueeum the Bank or the
,..p ubllc. privet• collectore
and emerald Hportera. The
~ra&da were a particular Pfoblem .,nee t~ had ,...
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Call the number below and your message will be recorded,
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@
6EM WISiE
642•6086
been out of Colombia. and they
aren't even on display 1n Colombia today. let alone 1n
the United States .
Aller over a year·ano·
one-half of negotiations. the
show entitled Swear of th•
Sun, Teats of the Moon
Treasures of Colombia
opened July <4 In Los Angeles
The exhibit consists or ovlf 500
pieces of pre-Columbian gold
and almost 111 known intfor
emerald• that are avallabi. for
pubhc diapl1y today. aa well •
18Y8f'al that have never been
dlapleyed before.
Most of the t1ntaallc gold
obfectt made by the
pt.COiumbian Indiana pMMd
Into obltvlon at the~ were melted down to flll the
EUfopean cott.,• with ~lltof\
Al recently ae one hundNd
Y'Mf'I aoo. even the 8tr* of
England continued to melt
down pre·Columblan lndt•n
QOld object• to produce gold
bullion and coin•.
Mlreculouety, a tmall '*1 of
the gold and treaaur•• hae
1ut1tfv•d. and the world'•
largHt collectlon of theM obfeCta (tome 21.000 of~ .. found In the Gold Mu.um
In &ooota. Thlt co lleOtlon It
oro¥1ding the !iOO , ... " .. 'I",..,,.. of Columble emlbtt.
The..aMbtt wlll run thrOUOh ~
..,.._,Dcwt'tmlealtl
t
HI F Orange Coast OAIL '( PILOT /Tuesday, July 21. 1981,
~illTI~OO~
'Unitemized char.ity
deductions backed
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Senate is offering special tax re-
lief to nearly 70 million couples
and iodlviduals who give to chart·
ty but don't itemize their deduc-
tions.
Starting next year. such tax·
payers would be allowed to de·
duct a share o f their
contributions and still claim the
standard de<Juctioo
The provision. sponsored by
Sens. Bob Packwood, R-Ore ..
and Daniel Patrick Moynihan.
D-N.Y .. was adopted on a 97-1
vote Monday and. with the SUP·
port of the Reagan administra-
tion, added to the Senate's tax·
cut plan
School districts
get $475 million
WASHJNGTON <AP> -House
and Senate confer ees agreed
Monday to authorize $475 million
for speciaJ Impact aid to school
districts with large federal in-
stallations.
Such aid, which several presi·
dents have tried lo cul, is
popular with Congress because
1t goes into almost all con·
gressional 'districts.
Of! icials vis it
hunger strik ers
BELFAST IAPl Two senior
.,, .......
Hotel trage~y
stirs lawsuits
KANSAS CITY, Mo. <AP) -
The president of a flrm that
helped deai1n Hyatt Re1ency
Hotel la di1countin1 apeculaUon
that vibrations set up by dancers
caused two suspended walkways
to crash into the hotel lobby,
kllllnl 111.
Heanwhile, the first suits to
stem from Friday's accident
were filed ln circuit court Mon-
day on behalf of a man wbo was
crltlcaUy injured and two people
who were killed. A total of $105
milllon In damages was re-
quested.
Thirty-seven funerals were
scheduled today for victims of
the disaster, which turned the
crowded lobby of the luxurious
hotel lnto a heap of concrete,
twisted metal and mutilated
bodies. On Monday. 25 funerals
were held.
of Gillum & Associates of St.
Louis, which designed the hotel,
discounted the "vibrations"
theory, he sald the catwalks
would have been designed dU-
ferenUy if he knew they were to
be desl.med for dancing.
"They were designed as
walkways, not to handle a danc-
ing load," he said. "If we had
known they were going to be
used for dancing, then we would
have designed them for that
purpose."
Gillum declined to elaborate
in an interview Monday night
and refused to speculate on a
cause. But he r ejected the
theory that dancing on the
walkways created a "harmonic
vibration" that could have
shaken the bridges apart.
Corwco to fight
Mobil takeover
NEW YORK <AP) Warning
that competition would be re-
duced 1f Mobil Corp wins a
takeover bid. Co noco Inc vowed
to go to court to riKhl Mobil's
$7 .74 billion offer
officials of the British govern
menl visited fi ve of the eight
Iris h nationalist hunger strikers
early today but failed to get
them to end their fast. the gov-
ernment said
MISS UNIVERSE -Irene Saez Conde, Miss Venezuela, is
crowned by outgoing Miss Universe, Shawn Weatherly.
Miss Conde, 19, engineering student from Caracas, won
more than $100,000 in cash and prizes Monday night.
There were conflicting state·
ments from witnesses about
whether people were dancing on
the two 45-ton walkways Friday
as a tea dance went on in the
lobby below. The catwalks
crashed to the floor without
warning. Besides those killed, at
least 186 were injured.
While Jack Glllum. president
··If you start somethin~ like
that !harmonic vibration) and
get it going, some people are go-
ing to be aware or it." he said.
"Some people would have gotten
scared and possibly run ofr. I
know I would have."
He said the walkway design
used In the year-old hotel was a
common one for balconies and
suspended walkways and met
Kansas City building codes that
specify load requirements for
corridors. which is 100 pounds
per square foot He said there
are no special requirements for
suspended walkways .
Conot'o Chairman Ralph
Bailey. announcing the decision
Monday night . said a Mobil
takeover would violate federal
antitrust guidelines and could
lead to .. a maJOr reslructunng ..
of the U S. energy 1nduslr) with
many comp<'t1tors d1!'>appeanng.
The Northern Ireland Offi ce
s aid the officials made the visit
to the Maze Prison outside
Belfast at the suggestion of the
fa m lly of one of the hunger
strikers. who are de manding
that guerrillas be treated as
political prisoners instead of
common criminal!.
Prosecution asks life sentence
Maximum penalty sought against assai lant of pope · · 1 would not hesitate at all to
use this design again ... he said.
Gillum said his firm was in-
vestigating the collapse. He said
no results would be available for
al least two months .
Laborers riot
at Netv York site
N EW YORK 1A P1 :\ melee
at a Manhattan construction site
between mosth· whit<' laborers
and black anci Hispanic dem
onstrators demandin~ 1obs for
minorities left 19 people inJured.
including e1j.!ht police officers
Club s wing1nJ! orft<'cr s and
mounlcd police waded into the
demonstration area ~1onda\ af-
te rnoon after rocks. bollles and
wood \.\('rl' thrown by the two
groups
State fi les suit
RALEIGll . NC. (AP l
~orth Carolina filed s uit Mon·
day aJ!ainst the l' .S. Depart-
m cn l of Interior, seeking to
block the ::.ale of oil and gas
lcast•s on six tra<·ts off the
stall''!'> <·oast
Plane crippled
SALT 1.AKF: CITY <AP1 An
/\m('nt·an Airlines OC-10 made
an unscht•duled landing at Salt
Lake City International Airport
on Munday a fter an e ngine
malfunction('d. company of -
ficials said
-------AIOUT
1$199GREAT I e DINNER
(") -
ROME <AP> Mehmet All
Agca boycotted his trial today
and the prosecution asked life
1 m prisonment for the Turkish
terrorist who admitted shootin@
Pope John Paul II in an auack
d escribed a s "sy mbolic
patricide."
Prosecutor Ni colo Amatc
asked for the maximum penalty
against the young gunman, call·
ing Agca "a man of hate, a man
of violence. a man of despera
lion ··
The bearded, 23-year·old de-
fendant told the Italian court on
the tr1e:tl's opening day Monday
that he shot "the chief or state of
the Vatican" in St. Peter's
Square on May 13.
But he contended that because
the shooting occurred inside the
Vatican City State. he should be
0 c Good for three pieces of juicy, golden brown Kentucky
~ Fried Chicken plus single H"'lnga of cote ataw, maahed 0 poletOH and gravy. and • roll Umll two oflere per
Z purchaae Coupon good only IOI combination white/dark I orders Customer pays all applicable salea tu
Good tor nlM pleeea ot Juicy, golden brown ~ntucky
Fried Chicken, with tour rot11. a large cole alaw, a latge
maslled potatoea and a medium gravy. limit two olfef9
per purchase. COupon good only IOI combination wllltel
dark ordara Cuatomer paya all applleabla N IM tax.
030 Oller explrH August 2. 1981 1 PrlcM m•r •art at 1 PlltlCIP•ling toe• _ tlon1 Good 011ly In jj..'.:t.. .... loulhet11 C•lllomla 1 ·~-llYll.~11'11111 wti.11 you IM ,..,...ftitd . Ille ChlCklft Sandwlell
Oller IXPtrH
Auou112. 1981
Price• may vary at Pat·
llctpaUng loeat1on1 Good
only In Southern
California where you H•
the Chicken Sandwich
Wlndo* Banner. ~ WlndOw lann.r I
_::_..---:~==--------
Designed~
Finished
Installed
28 Yea r& Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters
FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ·
QN iFHE MARKET TODAY ••• AT PACTORY
DIRllCT PRIC I c.n (714) &48-8841 or.548-1717
tried by a Vatican court instead
of an Italian tribunal.
His court-appointed lawyer
said Agca refused to attend the
trial today to protest the Italian
court's Laking jurisdiction in the
case.
Pietro d'Ovidio told the judge
his client would not leave his jail
cell at Rebbibia prison after the
court had waited an hour for the
trial to resume.
Chief Judge Severino San-
tiapichl reportedly tried to con-
vince Agca to attend the trial,
bul was unsuccessful. After
hearing a report from Italian
security police, he allowed the
prosecution to start its final
arguments.
Amato described Agca as a
professional killer who had an
obsession and wanted to klll the
pope as the symbol of a system
he hated. He said the shooting
was a "symbolic patricide."
The trial is expected to end
Wednesday.
Twenty-eight prosecution wit-
nesses testified after the opening
of the trial Monday but shed no
light on the motives of the gun·
man or for whom he might have
been acting.
The defense was not expected
lo call any witnesses. and the
judge said it would sum up Wed-
nesday. He said the jury of four
men and two women was expect-
ed to reach a verdict Wednes·
day.
Both prosecution and defense
attorneys have predicted Agca
will be sentenced to life ;:n·
prisonment, the maximum sen·
tence he can get.
The walkways were 120 feet ·
long and constructed or steel
supporting beams and a con-
c~ete deck, or floor, with glass
side walls and wood railings. At
each end. the beams rested on a
concrete base that formed the
wall or the hotel.
On each sky bridge. six steel
rods. three on a side, connected
the beams to supports above.
The rods, which had a diameter
of 1' • inches. were wrapped in
fire-retardant material and held
in place with nuts and washers.
Six rods connected the fourth-
floor walkway with the ceiling,
and six more connected that
walkway to a similar span on
the second level.
ALL AMERICAN
JULY SALE
FINAL WEEK
July 18 thru 25
Ralph Lauren Women's Wear
Reg. NOW
Polo Silk Blazer .......... $378 .00 $150 .00
Polo Seersucker Slacks .... 110.00
Polo Bib Front Dresses . • • . 298.00
Polo Blouses . • • • • • • • • • • • • • 49.00
Polo Shetland Blazers ..... 358 .00
Polo Ties ......................... $ 27 .so
Polo Solid Cotton Blazers ......... 270.00
•
Chaps Camel S~rtcoats .......... 295 .00
Chaps SpOrtcoatl ................. 245.00
66.00
208.00
34.30
Station taken off air
after Klan interview
LA JOLLA <AP> -Radio station
KSDT was taken orr the air at the
University of California at San Die10
today after an in·studio interview
with Ku Klux Klan leader Tom
Metzeer.
The Student Center Board ordered
a three·week shutdown. Spokesmen
said the board will consider changes
proposed in. slation operations. Staff
members argued freedom of speech
was being muzzled.
''There were certain people on the
Student Center Board who were just
personally offended by the fact that
Tom Metzger was here, and that we
didn't tell them," a station
spokesman said.
Simon m ay m ove
art collection
PASADENA <AP> -Industrialist Norton Simon has been negotiating
with the mayor of San Francisco to
move his vast private art collection
from Pasadena, a spokesman for the
mayor has confirmed.
Mel Wax. press secretan· to Mayor
Diane Feinstein, said Monday that
Simon and the mayor have discussed
moving all or part of Simon's collec-
tion from the Norton Simon Museum.
the Pasadena Star·News reported to-
day.
8 cited in Irish
p rotest in SF
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Eight
demonstrators were cited a fter
storming the San Francisco offices of
the Irish consul general, authorities
reported. ·
The Seven women and one man cit·
ed Monday were said to be members
of the Irish Action Committee seek·
Ing support for Irish Republicans
jailed by the British.
Pair charged
in bank case
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Federal
charges have been filed against an
Oakland banker and another man in
an alleged diversion of $1.25 million
from the Golden State Sanwa Bank.
Conspiracy a nd misapplication
charges were fil ed Monday against
Ernest B. Martinez, 43. of Clayton,
former vice president and manager
of the bank's Oakland branch. Also
charged with conspiracy was JaJ11eS
W. Paige. 32, of Lafayette.
SD trolley begins
SAN DIEGO (AP> -A new trolley,
hailed as the least expensive mass·
transit system built in the United
States in 40 years, chugged smoothly
to the Mexican border and back in its
inaugural run.
After a week of celebrations, the
bright red cars begin regular runs
next Sunday around San Diego. In
the initial 32·mile round trip with
U.S. and Mexican officials, Mayor
Custom Tailored
~Q_~~H~~
llVINE PACI~
CORP.
has iMhl1d
SEA COAST
SECURITY
SYSTEMS ...................
642-3490
EVERY
THURS.-
9PM
•JULY 23
THE MOOERNAIRES
with Peula Kelly.
Jr_ Henry
Brendon's Band
•JULY 30
TEX BENEKE • HIS ORCHESTRA Music
In the Miller
Menner
•AUGUST 6
GISELE
MACKENZIE with
~ry lrendon'1
Ilg lend
•AUGUST 13
HENRY IRANDON
SYM"10NY
,..turlno THE YOUNG SINGERS
Of LYRIC O,UA
•AUGUST 20
CONNIE HAINES
with Henry
Brendon's
Ore hen re
Pete Wilson praised the $85.8 million
sys tem.
"ll was finished on time, under
budget and without a dime of federal
funds," at a cost or $5 million a mile,
compared with $34 million per mile
of the Bay Area Rapid Transit
system of San Francisco and $43
million per mile for the Washington
D.C. metro, Wilson told the as-
sembled dignitaries Sunday.
You can help your newspaper
carrier collect at t imes
convenient to you by having
your money ready so the
earner won't have to call back.
Because this young peraon 1s
1n business for himself or
herself. please be ready -and
watch that big Sll'tle wt1ict1
says .. Thank you ··
Daily Pilat
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOTfTuesday, July 21 , 1981 H /F
Burbank jet noise fight pushed;
Legal action threatened ; councilman vows to monitor construction
LOS ANGELES (AP> -An1ry resl·
dents near the Burbank Airport have
escalated their yean·long fight against
jet noise, threatening legal action to
halt what they call a baekdoor attempt
at expanding the airport.
R ichard Close, president of the
Sherman Oaks Homeowners Associa·
lion, on Monday blasted the nine·
member airport authority for refusing
to amend or reject a con1ultant's study
outlining ways of reducing noise while
increasing traffic.
· Los Angeles City Councilman Zev
Yaroslavsky joined the criticism and
vowed to monitor any const.ruclion at
the <t58-acre facility, technically called
Burbank·Glendale·Paudena Airport.
It's located 15 mlles northwest of
downtown Los Aneeles, with night
paths above some 400,000 resident.a.
"What the study says is that you can
triple flights and still reduce noise,"
Yaroslavsky said. "If you believe that,
then I'd like to sell you a bridge."
Close said the association was work-
ing with state legislators to replace the
authority -appointed by the Burbank,
Glendale and Pasadena city councils -
with a publicly elected· body. A court
fight is also possible in conjunction with
the Los Angeles City Council, which vot·
ed last month to sue the airport if ex·
panslon is planned.
However , airport community rela·
lions mana1er Sam J ones said the
authority merely reviewed the $100,000
stud y com missioned from Ralph
Parsons & Co., engineering consultants
based in Pasadena.
Close said the stu$fy calls for increas.
Ing airport traffic from the current 86
flight daily to 226, as well as building a
larl(er terminal. "They'v• taken the
dishonest way out -accepting (the
plan) without accepting," he charged.
Jones countered that the document
"didn't call for anything. It only studied
the possibilities, from zero traffic
growth on up."
Panel won't back hid
Braum, urged to reject pardon in murders
~
SACRAMENTO (AP > -Peter
Pianezzi, 79, has testimonials from
police, mobsters, the state Supreme
Court. and relatives of a 1937 murder
victim. all saying he is innocent.
Pianezzi, who served 13 years on a
double murder conviction. now lives
in Mill Valley, north of San Fran·
cisco
He presented his testimonials Mon·
day to the state Board of Prison
Terms to back his request for a full
pardon.
But a divided board recommended
that Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. reject
his request.
Board Chairman Raymond Brown,
who voted with the 5·3 majority, said
he didn't want to override a jury's
verdict on the word of ex-Mafia killer
Jimmy Fratian no, who says two
n o w·dead gan gsters were the
murderers .
om mendations from the board,
which officiall y advises nlm on
pardons. a nd the state Supreme
Cour t . which last week recom-
mended a full pardon.
Pianezzi already holds one state
pardon, issued in 1966 by Brown's
father, Gov Edmund "Pat" Brown.
But that was on the grounds that he
had been rehabilitated from t he
murders in a dimly lit West Los
Angeles bar. Pianezzi wants a full
pardon that will clear his name.
The victims were a gambler and a
bystander.
Occasionally touching a hearing
aid that didn 't let him fully follow the
proceedings, his jaw shaking slight·
ly. he described the details or his
case. with help from San Francisco
Supervisor Quentin Kopp. his
lawyer:
The police detective who headed
the investigation swore after his re-
tiremen t t hat the eyewitness
testimony that sent Pianezzi to
prison was perjured and coerced.
.. ,, .........
Pianezzi was convicted in 1940. He
has maintained throughout that he
was a victim of a gangland framing
on perjured testimony. While he has
a record or other crime. no one has
linked him with the mob.
Fralianno. the mobster·turned·
informer who has provided impor-
tant prosecution testimony in a
number of cases, two years ago quot·
ed Leo Moceri. a now-dead gangster,
as saying he killed the two men,
while Frank Bompensiero watched.
Peter Pianezzi, 19, listen& to teltimony at 1tate
Boord of Prison Term.a meeting in Sacramento
Monday. He is seeking pardon for 1937 00ubl.e
murder.
The decision belongs to the gov·
ernor. who has never issued a pardon
on the grounds of innocence.
Brown will weigh conflicting rec·
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tueec:tay, July 21. 1 G81
Youthful criminals
don't deserve favors
' · The population of the
California Youth Authority's
eight facilities for youthful offen-
ders haa ~ growing at tbe rate
of 100 admissions per month this
year, now exceeding the capacity
of the institutions by more than
400.
Instead of helping young peo-
ple in the 15-to-17 age range, the
CY A finds itself coping with
hard-core criminals aged 18, 19
and even older -to the detri·
ment of its efforts for the
younger teen-agers.
Many have been COl\victed in
adult criminal courts. rather
!than in Juvenile Court, but re-
manded by judges to the Youth
1Authority because of their age. i Now CY A Director Pearl
1west has decided that the
toughest of the young incor-
rigibles, especially those convict-
'
ed of serious crimes, must be re-
jected by the CY A and sent back
to the crimlmal courts to relieve
the .,ressure on exisiting
f aclllties.
This is as it should be.
The idea of the CY A was to
provide a middle ground for
young off enders who bad not
res ponded to efforts to help them
in juvenile balls or youth camps,
but who seemed too young to be
sent to adult pruons without a
further effort at rehabilitation.
Unfortunately, more and
more young people today are in·
volved in serious crimes, and the
balance in the CY A is being
tipped in the wrong direction.
Older offenders, sentenced
for adult crimes, should not be
granted the special CY A band!·
ing at the expense of younger,
more malleable inmates.
'{;esture too costly
County Supervisor Roger
'Stanton senses he's getting
ripped off by, no less, an agency
1of Orange County government.
Stanton has decided to fight
back.
At issue are the fees charged
·by the county 's in-house ~reproduction and graphics de·
partment whenever a supervisor
requests an in-memoriam
certificate be issued to the f amity
of any person of note who dies.
The 8-inch square certificates
are pre-printed, and, thus, cost
·little. But it is not unusual for the
. requesting supervisor to be billed
·upwards of $60 for having the
county's reproduction people
print the name of the deceased
I person on the certificate. (Such
~xpenses are paid from the in·
di vidual supervisor's office
oudget.)
Stanton was aghast when he
learned of the printing bills,
particularly after he determined
that it talces only about one-half
hour for the names to be added.
Clearly, Stanton was correct
in questioning the reasonableness
of the charges. If there were
more questioning of such charges
-for printing or what-have-you
-costs might be lower.
And Stanton was on target in
asking the county Administrative
Office and the General Services
Agency (which oversees the print
shop) to conduct a study on the
feasibility of turning printing
work over to private shops.
Oare say it would be hard t-0
find a shop on the "outside" that
would be in business very long by
charging $60 to set and print one
line of half-inch talJ type on one
modest piece of paper.
!Freeway nerves valid
I Rare is the California driver
who bas not muttered, on spying
I a huge truck bearing down on
·him from behind, "Hope that guy
bas good brakes! ''
A recent surprise inspection
•project by the California
•Highway Patrol indicates the
;driver may have reason to be
nervous.
I In a five-hour period out on
1 the Antelope Valley Freeway, the
JCHP stopped 41 trucks for inspec·
(lion.
:\ Twenty of the rigs were or·
dered off the road immediately.
Qf the 56 citations issued, 44 were
I for faulty brakes, some in such
bad shape the truckers were not I all!Jwed to proceed without re, I pairs.
, A handful were cited for ~overweight loads and 17 of the
' drivers' logbooks revealed they
1 had been on the road without rest
1 stops longer than the legal limit. ; ' .
They were told to pull over and
get some sleep.
If the ratio of equipment and
driver impairment that showed
up in this relatively small inspec·
lion project is typical of. the
behemoths barreling along our
freeways it's not good news for
the ordinary Joe driving to work
or taking the family on a vaca·
tion trip.
Appar~tly the worst offen·
ders are truckers on local runs
that don't take them through
fixed inspection stations too
often.
The CHP would be well ad·
vised to continue these surprise
inspections at random spots
aJong the freeway system to en·
courage truckers to pay more at·
tentioo to their own and others'
safety. It's enough to have thel;D
pounding the pavement into bits,
without endangering the lives of
fellow drivers.
•Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex-! pressed on tn1s page are those of their authon and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1t· I ed. Addr ess T he Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa M esa, CA 92626. Phone tlUI
I 642-4321
1-------------------------------------------------------1
I
jL.M. Boyd / Seme of security
Elephants have ruihtmares. They
trumpet sometimes in their sleep.
But not when chained. peculiarly.
Chains around their ankles evidently
I give them a sense of security.
Elephant keepers in India put straw
1 chains around their elepbanta' ankles I tb atop the nightmares.
Q. Does your Love and War man
know how long the typical love affair
luta? I aaeao outalde marriaae.
A. About 11 mont.bs is known to be
averaae.
Am 1urpriled to bear It only takes
approximately ZI day1 to live that
apeeJal tra1nin& to a tulde dot for a
blind penoo.
Q. Cltllenl ol what country rud
moll boob!
A. lcelad. Per captta. .
Arsameat contlnuH over tbe
mber ol at.bletlc eoateata In wblcb ~pata 1DQYe baekwardl ...
ad ~ ICll'wardl. Start wttll tut o'
ORANGE COAST
llllJPlll
~ ..................... -= ... ~-------··-· .. , ..... C.-.... CA .....
war. Add rowing. That's about it,
what? .
Q. How do you explain the claim
that a buketball player's bearing
isn't as keen at the end or a game u
at the beglnnlnt? A. Light exercise abarpena the
hearing, strenuous exerclH duUI It.
And basketball qualifies aa
strenuous, doel lt not?
Q. Is it true that Scorpio womeo
cry eu11y7
A. That's the contention of the
star1uen. Leo women do UkewiM!
they aay, particularly in matrtmoniaJ
ar1umenta. The Ubra women are
more blc11Ded to 1\llll, tber Nf, ud
the PllCel women are apt to deliftf
aarc..Uc remarb.
Q. II tt leaat to lmllt on a reward
for tbe return ol aome nluable tbat
1ou'vefOUDd?
A. Only lf Ule cnner bM oft.-.d
aucb a reward publ&dy. <>tMrwtM,
lt'• lD...,... .. u atortlon.
Tttoma1 P. H•ley
Publlwr
ABC hoard outlives need
The ABC Appeals Board ls composed
of three members, each paid $24,004 a
year. The board meets once a monlh to
bear appeals from the administrative
decisions or the Department of
Alcoholic Beverage Control.
Last year it received 119 appeals
which gave it an average of 10 cases per
month to review. It sometimes whips
through its cases In one day, seldom
more than two.
Considering the time required to
fuJfill the duties, membership on the
board has long been considered the best
plum in the governor's basket of ap·
pointments. One or the lucky ones to be
favored by Gov. Jerry Brown with such
a plum was Peter Finnegan, an ir·
repressible Irishman from San Fran-
cisco. His fore most qualification for the
job was having attended grammar
school with Jerry.
EARUER THJS VEAR Finnegan, in
an unguarded exuberance, made light
of his sinecure. Some of the jocularity
had to do with an observation that the
hardest part of his job was picking up
his $2,000 pay check each month.
It got back to Assemblyman Art
Agnos, an ally ol former Speaker Leo
McCarthy. Once staunch supporters of
Brown, neither holdB a brief for him
any longer. Agnos wondered out loud
about paying such a salary for so little
work and suggested a pay cut for the
board members . Republican As -
semblyman Ernest Konnyu went to
what he perceived to be the heart of the
matter , propos ing a constitutional
llRl llTIRI
amendment to eliminate the board. It
failed to get any support.
But Konnyu was on the right track.
He should have proposed eliminating
the entire Department of ABC and then
there would be no need for the Appeals
Board.
THE FACT IS THAT the department
has long since outlived its need, if in
fact there ever was one. It was created
to take over the responsibility of licens-
ing liquor dealers, both on-sale and off·
sale a s well as wholesalers and
manufacturers, the latter also being
licensed by the federal government.
Such duties had originally been as·
signed the Board of Equalization upon
the repeaJ of prohibition. But some al-
leged scandals gave an opportunity to
an obsc ure San Francisco As ·
sem blymen to conduct a headline grab·
bing investigation.
Not much in the way of scandal was
uncovered but it provided the excuse to
wrest liquor control away from the
board and the Assemblyman. Caspar
Weinberger, seized upon the situation to
author the legislation creating the new
agency. It was before Weinberger, now
the Secretary of Defense, became the
budget cutter.
IF HE HAD possessed the penchant
for budget slashing that he later ac·
quired Weinber~er would have ques · tioned the need for state licensing of liq·
uor dealers at that time.
He would have pointed out that prior
to prohibition grocers, druggists and
other retailers sold packaged liquor and
saloons operated without state license.
And the pretense that ABC exists today
to police the industry is more fiction
than fact. Most all of the policing is
done by local law agencies.
As it is the department operates on a
Sl2 million budget, half ol which is
spent on determining whether a license
shall be granted and the other ball is
spent in attempts to prove the depart·
ment was wrong In granting the license.
Such an operation has been described
as a cat-rat factory, one hand feeding
off the other, creating problems which
then need to be solved.
Drug use prevalent in military
WASHINGTON -Members of
Congress revealed last month that
traces of narcotics were discovered in
the bodies or some of the sailors killed
in the landing accident aboard the
aircraft carrier Nimitz. The Navy
claimed that drug abuse had nothing to
do with the tragedy, how even
Alanned by the possibility that our
service personnel are functioning under
the influence or drugs, congressional
investigators traveled recently to
Germany and IWy to look into the
situation. The investigators' findings
were not encouraging.
MARIJUANA SMOKING and hashish
usage are common among 80 or 70
percent ol American military personnel
ln Western Europe, an informed source
told my associate Jack Mitchell.
What makes this particularly
disturbing is that tbe congressional
investigators round that soldiers and
sailors admitted aetting high on drugs
as readily while they were on duty as
off -duty . Not onl y that , the
congressional sleuths uncovered
evidence that suggests widespread use
Q -.,.-1:.-•• -.-111-.-. -~
of the U.S. mails to transport narcotics
aboard ships at sea.
The administration bas now agreed to
let milltary investigators belp civilian
authorities track down narcotics
violators. It's not a bad idea: At leut
130,000 members or the armed services
are estimated to be booked on either
alcohol or illegal drugs, and almost one
in five junior penonnel have reported
that they have been "high while
working."
Des pite the apparent possibility that
many of our soldiers, sailors and
Marines are zonked-out on duty.· the
Postal Service has ruled out the use or
mail openings and drug-sni!ruig dogs on
military packages unless postal
inspectors are present -an obvious
impossibility on the high seas.
THE SITUATION is so bad that
military authorities fear foreign
customs officials may start Intercepting
mall deliveries to U.S . service
personnel in hopes or cutting off the
smu11ling or illicit drugs into their
countries.
One congressional expert, while
acknowledging that there is a "hilh
recreational use of drugs, even on
duty," insisted that "It's not a milit.a.ry
full or junkies ...
Footnote: ln the Navy's most recent
tests, .50 percent or the sailors examined
had used marijuana shortly before
being tested.
Our language· needs a rescue operation
One can only greet with gratitude the
wire service report that profeuon and
graduate students at the l1llnoia State
Unlveralty have set up a "erammar bot
line" to deal with queries from tbote
wre1Wn1 with the Entlilh lanauace.
English professors at the un.lvenity
~~~' 'f •
C-Ul-lll-·l-CCll-1 ~ti)
report the bot line haa attracted "an UD· •
common amount" of tntere1t from ln·
aurance companlet, retaJl store•.
new•= aecretaries -and evm a
fe1' 1 .
The state ~f • ken and written Enalllb ii in a dlaarr.,. One ot
the cbW fun ot I~
these· days ta lncorporatiq IOlecllma
lnto the rucu.,• oa u.. iromd U..t
th .. • mlttakea are Jelitimate "uaaae."
••To critique'' la admlu.d u a Yerb
simply became to man1 people have
UM mlltaken Idea that It ta one. Tbe use
of "bopelully" for '11 bope" ii bJ DOW
nl&b·-'lftlMI aacl admitted ..s.r tbll
aame brOlld and miltak• YI..-.
WUllNG AND 1P9aldD1 an •811 OI
ftDdillc afll wtuit ,au WM,• nat~ tldM ,. ....... AaJ. belp ...
people to.,... ---•••11• ..,.,,.... ••'ilNI• ........... anrtlml tMt .,_au& la .-S. .......
the tblnklng thus produced la applied to
the manufacture of automobiles or the
writing of historical novels.
Legal pollution ii the worst of all, of
course. Obscurities and clrcumlocutiom
in 'legal English are said to def1ve from
the ancient days when scriventJ'I were
paid by the word. Thus \be wholly un·
necessary "whereu" came to be the
moat used word in the legal armamen·
tarlum. ·
Of late, public opinion bu been re·
volting a1ainst the pointless and often
dl1bone9t verbosity of moet leaal writ·
ln1. Lelal wrilinC ls deliberately false
and milleadlni, u most lawyen have
enouah education to write a lucid and
almple eentence if they are forced to.
And they are being forced to. At leut
four states now have laws requlrtn1
CODIWMf contract& to UH words with
"common and everyday meantn11."
New Yort atate, I am told. bu 'belD especially 1ucceuf\al in aettble tbl .....
e&ll• to dear up tbetr wrltbll aet.
TBS t•POaTANT tblDI to re·
memw ti tbat wrtdat well II le&f·
dllCOYWJ, \bat nothtq .. (1 Din lm,_..
tant tllan that, ud tlaat ·~ Roaet'• ,,....._ ud tbe
to ....... " ''bot ..... abolllCI bl
emp'°'41d aDd apWted tO ~ tMa
•kill. •.••• ,.rr ........... Alf:Nll llubl bu llildj:''tlle Wrtw """'Ill.._..,
teecla M s•<l=ID •ilsr11s I Ma ••t.:~ laUlifr Mz •: ..... ,., ..... ill -............................... •. cart-........ "
•
People should be taught "to write and
speak as If their lives depended on
it, u in a sense they do. It bu been sald
that good prose should resemble the
conversation or an educated and
civilized man.
By t.bls definition good and careful
speech should lake rrecedence over
writing as a skill. Skit in 1peeeb can be
acquired by practice. You must always
speak as though aomethln1 were at
1take, as indeed it is.
Debating is an excellent way to clear
the rui out ot your head, and I 1f'ilh
more emphuls were placed on It in our
public schools. In debatlnt you leam to
speak so that a crammer acbool kid or
a collece profesaor of matbemaucs can
follow the thread of your arpmenta.
Tbat verbal 1kUl la uaeful, Pd pen.,.
lndlapensable, when you take pencil or
pen or typewriter to hand. Muddle la PM
enemJ.
~:=:i'? _____ .,.....,. __ _
• ........ I IP , .... ,_ .. ~-....... .....
..
HUITllBTll llll:H /flUITlll VllllY
Diiiy Piiat
TU ESOAY, J ULY 21, 1981
COMICS
TELEVISION
FEATURES
64
66
612
.~
Efficiency and effectiveness must o I
0 be measured to determine product-
ivity ... BB .
~
Parking banned
Huntington Council clears 'Blood Alley'
Hoping to reduce traffic acci-
dents along a local stretch of
Pacific Coast Highway dubbed
"Blood AJley," the Huntington
Beach City Council has voted to
ban parking on the inland side of
the highway between Beach
Boulevard and the Santa Ana
River.
The ban will lake effect within
two or three weeks, as soon as
s igns can be posted, said Paul
Cook. t he city's public works
director
Beachgoers who ignore these
signs will have their vehicles
towed away, he warned.
Plt.Clf'IC OCEAN
\/IClORI sr
'"
In approving the ban at its
Monday night meeting , the coun-
cil acted without the consent of
Caltrans. which has jurisdiction
over traffic controls on the state
highway.
0.ilJl"I ... _ ~
o.llJ l"lleol Sutt...._
Offensive icords hai-e been removed from the tile mural 011 front of John Wayne Airport termrnal bwldrng
Def aced airport mural repaired
Words were on building 10 years
For 10 year s, the Y.Ord s
"spade .. and ··dark1e .. Y.ent
unnoticed on the figure of a man
m the large ceramic tile mural
adorning the front of the John
Wa y ne Airport t e rminal
building
Then last week. Lee Howard.
a skycap. complained about the
two word s and other s
apparently added by a vandal -
to county airport operations
personnel
No w. the offensive words are
gone. painted over with e namel
paint that closely matches the
g la zed f1n1 sh of s urrounding
tiles
But ofr1 C'1als are s till
wondering why the words were
permitted in the first place. and
how so man) )ears passed
without being observed
And equally puzzling 1s wh) a
vandal went to the trouble to use
acid to remove some of the til e
glazing to add the other ethnic
s lur. an obscenity, and the
words "peace" and "love "
The mura l was added to the
north e nd of the terminal
Volunteers sought
Volunteers are needed to help
staff Golden West Coll ege's
natural history museum in Hunt-
ington Beach.
Museum patrons are s eeking
retired people to wflrk as do·
cents. tour guides, and to help SPl
up exh1b1ts f'or mor~ informa·
lion call 893 6250
building by artist Martin Rudick
at a cost of S26.000 m the early
1970s
Rudic k . who reportedl y
res ides in Toronto. Canad a,
could not be contacted today.
But Denis Horn. airport chief
of o pe ration s. said hi s
investigation indicates that the
words "spade" and "darkie"
were part of the original mural.
He noted that the words were
glazed over
!lorn pointed out that the
words Y.ere diffil'Ult to see.
primarily bet'ause of their s mall
s ize
· T ve walked bv there I don't
know how man); times. and I
never noticed them." Horn said.
lns pet'tion o f the mural
t'onducted after Howard raised
his t'Omplaint revealed the other
obJet'tionabll' words
While terming it
"spet'ulation," Horn said he and
maintenance personnel are
convinced that so m eone
deliberately stripped glazing off
other tiles to add the other
words
Horn said the enamel paint is
blendin~ in well with t he rest of
the mural. He said it probably
won't be net'cessary to have new
tiles fabricated to replace the
painted areas.
The operations chief noted
there are no plans to r emove the
mural when the termina l is
expanded as part of a $75 million
airport improvement project
Detail of afrport mural shows figure of man that 100$
defaced With words "spade" and "darkte."
School shift plan splits trustees
By PIUL SNEIDERMAN
Of llM Olllly l"llet SIMt
A suggestion that a portion of
Le Bard School be transformed in-
to a new Huntington Beach City
(elementary l School District
headquarters has reopened a rift
among district trustees.
The board members disagree
on whether new district offices
are the most desirable use of the
school, located at 20451 Craimer
Lane.
LeBard was closed this year
because of declining enrollment.
In Aprll. the board voted 3·2
against a plan to use the enlire
school as a district headquarters.
Trustees Gary Nelson a"d Roy
How favored the plan, but opposi·
tion from David Sonksen, Norma
Vander Molen and'Paula Hulse
prevailed.
Trustees last month. rejected
three offers from organliatlons
interested in leasing LeBard.
Some truat.tts expre11ed concern
that two of the bidders, private
schools, could draw •tudentl -
and stateaJd -away from thedlJ·
trict 's public schools.
Some district officials were di•·
appointed wtlh the amount of lbe
blda.
The truateet took lhe acbool out
of the rental market allhat tJme.
At the board's July 14 meeting,
Superi n tendent Lawrence
Kemper received direction from
the trustees to prepare a new plan
to use about hall of Le Bard for dis·
trict offices, while seek1ng a pay·
ing tenant fo r the remaining
s pace. This plan ls to be presented
to the boardinAuaust.
Kemper said a nursery school
or head-start program might be
interested in renting part of
Le Bard.
··one or the reasons I brought
Breakfast meet
date corrected
An i n correct date w ~s
published In last Wednesday s
Pilot for the next seaslon of
Fountain Valley Mayor Ben
Nielsen's monthly breakfast
meetings wlt.h community
leadel't'
The meettn11 will ~ held th.11
Thursday , at 8 a .m . ln
Brtwater's Restaurant. 1M:IO
Warner Ave. Guest speaker wfU
be Oave Edwards, vlct pretl·
dent and l(eneral man11er of
Dlckinton Paclflc
Ca blcayatem1.
this back to the st'hool board was
tha,l I have concerns about the
school being vacant for an ex·
tended period of time," Ke mper
said.
"l know there will be some
spirited discussion. but I think
there's a need for the board to
come to some decision on this ...
thP 11unerintendeot added.
He said the district's present
headquarters at 735 14th St. is a
54-year-old building that former-
ly was a kitche n -ca feteria·
kinde rgarten facility.
Ke mper said the building has
healing, llghtlng and structuraJ
problems. He said there are not
enough parking spaces for the dis-
trict 'a employees.
Trustees Norma Vander Molen
and Paula Hulse retain reserva-
tions about the possible move to
Le Bard.
"At th11 point, lt has not been
proven to me that the old 1 Ile ls un-
safe or lhal ll would COit too much
to brln• It up to 1tandard1,'' Mra.
Hul1111ld.
llr1. Vander Molen noted,
"Thl• la a frultl'"atlon for me
because the board majority i•ve
its direction several months ago
that LeBard was not to be used for
district offices.
"If we use LeBard for district
offices. the potential income from
leasing it out would be lost "
Board president Nelson dis· agreed.
''This would be a shared facility
that would still generate some In·
com e ." he said. "This could
generate.as much income as IC we
had leased the whole school.··
T he cost or moving the district
o ffices to Le Bard has been
estl mated al$50.000.
Nelson pointed out that this
money would come from district
b~llding funds, which I es ally can·
not be used for aeneral education
purposes. He also said 131,000
would go toward a new telephone
system that is expected to pay for
Itself In coming years.
Trustee How aald the current
district headquarters should be
used only as a •tor ace facility.
"We're at lbe point where we
shouldn't put loo much IJ'lore
money lnto renovattn1 that buHd·
Ina." heuld
"We have a meeting
S t'heduled Friday with
Caltrans," Cook explained. "At
that time I expect to have their
concurrence "
Gary Bork, senior Caltrans
traffic engineer for Orange
County, said today he was un .
aware of the council's action on
the parking ban.
lie said he hopes to have a
s tud y of accidents on this
Pacific Coast Highway stretch
compleled before Friday's meet·
ing
"So far, the data indicate this
might be the best plat'e for a
parking ban." Bork said
But he added that the city may
face some difficulties if Caltrans
approval is not obtained Friday.
"I question whether it <the
parking ban > would be legal
then and whether 1t could be en-
forced,·· he observed
The ban was proposed by
Councilman ~on Pattinson, who
conte nded that the city must
take immediate action to curb
traffit' hazards along .. Blood Al
ley."
City traffic officials earlier
this month said 15 people have
died as a result of traffic acci-
dents along this stretch since
1976.
During the period 1978·80, 97
injury acddents were reported
on this section of the highway.
and during 1976·&0 713 traffic ac·
cide nts (injury and non-injury l
PARKING BAN SITE
Too many accu1ents
were recorded there. traffic of-
ficials said
The parking ban is expected to
eliminate the problems posed by
beachgoers who park on the in·
land side. then dart across the
highway to reach the sand.
Huntington Beach Police Chief
Earle Rob1la1lle has long called
for improvements along thi!t
s trett'h. saying hazards are
t'a u sed by poor l ighti n g.
roadside parking. and the nar·
row painted median lines
Major improvements. includ-
ing widening of the highway, are
not s cheduled until 1986.
Cal trans officials have said.
T he council also instructed its
new traffic commission to study
the possible benefits of installing
a t'ement median barrier in the
middle of the highway
Public Works Director Caok
said this harrier would cast
about $300.000. If the barrier'~
recommended by the trafD'C
commission. the council wowd
have to decide whether to spend
t'1ty funds to install 1t im-
m ediately and wait for possibl e
reimbursement from Caltrans.
Four of the five council mem-
bers present approved the new
parking ban. with Councilman
Robert Mandie abstaining. His
business has a towing contract
with the t'ity. Mayor Ruth
Finley and Councilman J ack
Kelly were ahsent.
County meeting
balanced budget
Orange County government ·s
$780 million budget for fi scal 1981
t'ame within $200.000 of being
balanced as supervisors complet-
ed their fourth of s ix days of
budget hearings
Supervisors opted Monday to
use about $11 million of $34 million
in available federal revenue shar·
ing to balance the record spend·
ing program that will fund county
operations through June 30.1982
The board agreed to s pend
more lhan $8 million in revenue
sharing money collected by the
federal government and returned
to loca I jurisdictions for capital
improvement projects. including
$1 5 million for acquisition of land
for a road that will go for a new
county landfill in Bee Canyon
north of Irvine and $1 million for
des ign of new courtrooms in the
Santa Ana Civic Center
Additionally, the board budget·
ed close to $1 million for comple·
tion of the first and set'ond floors
of the county's $9 million HaJI of
Admimstrat1on in Santa Ana. and
$600.000 for further corrective
work on the structurally weak
building
Revenue sharing also will be
used to fund about S2.3 million in
equipment purt'hases. including
about Sl.5 million in new vehicles.
a $150.000 bus for transportation
of Orange County Jail inmates
and $303.000 for apparatus for
the county public health depart-
ment laboratory
As a result of the board's ac-
tions, about $2.9 million of rev·
e nue s haring money s till is
available. Under a formula ap.
proved by the board, 25 percent of
that amount. or $725.000 will be
made available for social pro-
grams operated throughout t.tie
t'ounty, with the remainder still
available for other county equip-
ment. land acquisition or opera-
tions expense needs.
The board left about S8 million
in revenue s haring untouched
"for future county needs · ·
Former.FY mayor
Ed Just, 59, dead
Edward E. Just. former Foun·
tain Valley mayor and two-term
city councilman, died al Foun·
lain Valley Community Hospital
early today.
Just. 59, was elected to the Ci-
ty Council In 1966 and served un·
UI 1974. He was mayor in 1989
and 1972.
He owned a consultant firm in
Santa Ana and was the ex-
ecutive director of the Santa
Ana River Flood Protection
Agency.
Funeral arrangements are be·
ing made by the Neptune Socie·
ty. A memqrlaJ mass will be
held at the Holy Spirit CalhoUc
Church In Fountain Valley at 5
p .m . Tuesday.
Mr. Just la survived by hi•
wife Nola, hi• dau1hters Mn.
Dlant Nohr, ol Colorado, AllilOft
Just and Laura Just, of l'oun·
lain Valley, hit mother P'lorenN
Juat, of 1'1orlda, bis brolben
Charles and Donald and bla •la·
tera Betty, MaryanM, DoroUlJ,
Jean and Joan.
.-
I
I
Orange Cout OAIL,Y PILOT/Tuesday, July 21, 1981
----------------------------~----------------------------------------.:....;..
THROUGH SLEET, SNOW, ETC.~ Cettainly a lot of
folks in our region were wringing their bancb Monday
when it became clear we faced the threat of a postal
strike. .
People who are expecting a lot of bills in the mail
were wringing their hands in glee.
Others, who were looking for a check from Uncle
George in Antioch, who'd owed the $125 for two years,
were wringing bands in frustration.
· Further, it was in·
teresting how some of
• ~ the local postmasters of --------~l"'-t.\ .. our Orange Coast re· TD. MORPHINE -t;. gion were reacting to ~ the strike threat. _______ ...... ....., ... ..i.-They all said the
mail would go through anyway. But bow?
WELL, COSTA MESA Postmaster Lyle Verplanck
flatly declared, "The mail will go through one way or
another.''
Now that was an interesting choice of words. That's
how numerous people feel about how the mail goes
through under normal conditions.
One way or another, that is.
Meanwhile, Huntington Beach Postmaster James
O'Hara suggested, "At this stage of the game, I don 't
know what to expect ... "
Alas, that may have confirmed some other suspi·
cions.
Most Q.f the Orange Coast postal authorities said there
was a contingency plan for getting the mail delivered.
But none of them seemed to know what that plan is.
Well, now we can probably all agree on that. It's like
"No wonder the sergeant put me 0n thu mai1 delivery route"
a lot of contingency plans. Somebody has it. somewhere.
But who? Who?
Clearly, a postal strike is really going to put a crimp
in the style of a lot of people who are getting dunned for
overdue bills.
HOW JN THE WORLD are you going to be able to tell
them, "Oh yes that ... Well. I just put your check in the
mail ... "
Another statement of lasting interest came out of
Washington, D.C., Monday when Postmaster General
William F. Bolger expressed great confidence that there
would be no postal workers strike.
He declared that the people should still continue to
use the U.S. Mail.
Now, I ask you, what did he expect us to do? Kick
over to his competitors? Would we all start mailing out of
Canada overnight?
DOES BOLGER TW NK the pony express is still run·
ning him a heavy race? Wells Fargo retired the
stagecoaches a long time ago and went into banking.
Some reports had it that if all the postmen and
postwomen strike, the government might call upon the
U.S. Army to deliver all the mail.
You can just imagine how that might work out. All
the majors will stay in the post offices. The captains will
get to drive all the trucks. The lieutenants and sergeants
will run out with the platoons and assign the routes.
CORPORALS WILL GET all the routes with sorority
houses and saloons. Privates First Class will deliver to
flat residential areas.
And the yardbirds? Why, they'll be delivering at all
the places up the bills where the sign on the gate says:
"Beware of Vicious Dog!"
NEWS
f rom all over Calif ornia is
r ounded up each day in the
--. ~ .
Daily Pilat
Less water to cost Mesans more?
Chamber warned of rising rates in pitch for proposed Peripheral Canal
The decreased tap water
available in 1985 wUl cost Coeta
Menna about 24 percent more
tba.n they pay now, water ol·
ficials have warned in eain·
ing Chamber or Commerce sup-
port for the state's proposed
Peripheral Canal.
But gettlng the amount or
water each Mesan uses every
day, about 180 gallons, may be
impossible, said Karl Kemp,
manager of Mesa Consolidated
Water Dlstrict.
The average household pays
about $ll a month for water
now. The bill will be closer to
$13.65 in 1985 and probably
higher in later years. ·
Kemp and district board
member Henry Panian predict·
ed water rationing during dry
years -about every fourth year
-even if the city's population
remains static.
Costa Mesa, they explained to
chamber directors last week,
imports about ?5 percent of its
water needs.
That water nows through the
state aqueduct from Northern
California and from the
Colorado River via Metropolitan
Water District feeder lines.
More than half the water im·
ported from the Colorado River
will go to Arizona beginning in
1985 as the result of U .S .
Supreme Court rulings on water
rights. Panian noted.
And, he added, there is a good
cha nce that much of the
Northern California water that
supplies Orange County might
be diverted in future years to
Los Angeles County.
The reason , Panian said, is a
lawsuit filed by conservation
Statue unveile d
·RIVERTON, Wyo. <AP> -A
bigger-lhan-lile sculpture of the
famed Indian guide Sacajawea
bas been unveiJed on the campus
of Central Wyoming College.
The bronze sculpture was shown
for the first time by artist Harry
Jackson, who works out of bis
Wyoming Foundry Studios in
Cody. Wyo., and Camaoire.
Italy.
grou~ who are attempttni t.o.
curtail Los Angeles' water lm·
ports from the Owent Valley,
where Mono Lake la
diminishing.
Los Angeles, he said, wUl tum
to the MWD for water if the suit
is successful. And, he added, Los
Angeles has the votes on the
MWD board required to divert
Orange County water.
Panian said Costa Mesa's
water supply could be cut at
least 20 percent.
Thal would mean some form ot rationing.
The possible silver linlng to
the water cloud, both agreed,
would be state construction of
the controversial $6 million
Peripheral Canal.
The canal would divert water
flowing to sea, through the
HEADS RECRUIT ING -
Capt. Glen M. Robbe has
been named commander of
the U.S. Army 's South
Orange County Recruiting
Area. He will supervise
recruiters in Costa Mesa,
Huntington Beach, Laguna
Hills, Santa Ana and
Orange.
Feather and Sacramento
rivers, to the state aqueduct
1Yttem and on to Southern
Callfomia.
That canal, lo the plannlq for
15 ye an now, has been approved
by state leaders and contetted
by Northern California troupe.
Norther n Callforniana fear
water diversion will cause ocean
water to seep into the river's
delta ayatem, rulntn1 crope and
the water required for many ln·
dustries there.
Conaervation.ists and wildlife
advocates.also fear the effect of
salt water intrusion on fish and
animals.
The Peripheral Canal Issue,
considered by Panian and Kemp
to be critical to the city's future.
goes to state voters as a referen·
dum measure either in Nov-
Plaque due
for bridge
in Newport
A $900 bronze plaque is to be
mounted on the soon·to·be com·
pleted Pacific Coast Highway
bridge in Newport Beach
although several city coun·
cilmen doubt any motorists will
have lime to read it.
"It's a mystery to me why we
need it," asserted Councilman
Paul Hummel. "Who's going to
read it?"
He suggested that the bridge
contractor or the state should
pay for the plaque, not the city.
Two other council m embers
agreed with him.
"ll's their bridge so if there's
to be a plaque it should be their
obligation," he said .
But Hummel ended up on the
losing sic'e as the council agreed
to purchase the 16-by-18-inch
plaque which is to bear the city's
official seal and the slogan.
"The Porthole of Time."
ember or next June.
The date depends on a rullol
by Gov. Brown, Kemp noted.
Canal or no canal, whatever
water ia available tor Import by
1985 will coat dearly, Panian
added.
That's when contracts for
Hoover Dam electricity,
negotiated in the 19309, are up
for reneeotiatloo.
Las Vegas, Phoenix &Dd
Tucson seek much of the power
now used to pump water over
mountains for the downhlU now
to Southern Calilornla.
"MWD pays $5 an acre foot to
pump it now," Panian noted.
Conservative estimates in·
dicate the price wlll 10 to .at
lea1t $45 an acre fool, but some
estftnates double that figure.
NEW DIRECTOR -Art Luna,
a 1976 USC graduate, has as-
sumed the post of executive
director of the Orange Coun·
ty Housing Authority. Luna,
picked from a field of 115.,
takes over for John
Avitabile, who resigned last
January.
• I
Park development
plan draws support
Several city officials later
opined that traffic generally
moves so slowly through the
area that many drivers would
likely have time to read the pla·
que.
7 awarde d
scholarships
Seven area high school seniors
have rec eive d $1 ,000
scholars hips each from the
Irvine Company in recognition
of outstanding community
leadership.
Mesa to fund
outreach for
adult center
With funding from the city of
Costa Mesa, a day care center
has started an outreach pro-
gram lo see if the city's
chronically ill are in need of
services provided by t he Harbor/
Area Adult Day Care Center.
A $16 million development pro-
posal for Huntington Beach Cen·
tr a l Park has been
recommended as a way to
generate future revenue to
maintain the city's 50-park
system.
The city 's Community
Services Commission , which
recommends parks and recrea-
tion policy, has unanimously sup-
ported a private consultant's pro-
posal to put recreational attrac-
tions in the 297 -acre park.
The proposed attractions in-
clude a 111-acre goll course, a
hotel complex and conference
center, a six-field baseball and
sports complex, a YMCA gym-
nasium, a restaurant, a recrea· lional vehicle campground, a
fishing lake, an arcade, and a
pizza parlor, as well as the exist·
ing shooting range and adventure
playground.
The commission also recom·
Mesan name d
to honor roll
Dean M . Schmidt of Costa
Mesa bas been named to the
chancellor's bonor roll for the
spring semester at the Universl·
ty of Colorado, Boulder.
The honor roll recognizes stu-
dents who earned a perfect .f.O
grade point average for the
semester.
mends an equestrian center with
rental horses available to the
public.
The City Council will hold a
public hearing on the con·
troversial development pro·
posals next month.
A group of nearby residents
oppose development in the park,
localed off Golden West Street
between Slate r and Ellis
avenues. The park presently is a
natural setting of trees, shrubs,
hills and lakes.
According to the proposal by
Ultrasystems Inc., of Irvine, the
development plan requires ac-
quiring 75 additional acres near
Ellis Avenue. Proposed attrac·
lions would generate about $12.7
million over the next 10 years.
according to the consultant.
City officials say voters would
have to approve a bond to pay
for much of the $16 million de·
velopment costs.
Four of the scholarships have
been awarded to Irvine resi·
dents Christopher Cassady and
Suzy Krueckebe rg from
University High School and
Mary C. Egan and Elizabeth
Denney of Irvine High School.
Newport Beach scholarship
recipients include Mark Evans
and Linda Timmons of Corona
del Mar High School and Joanne
M. Martin of Newport Harbor
High School.
Dorm adviser
Debby Benevento of Hunt·
ington Beach bas been selected
as resident adviser for
dormitories at the University or
Redlands.
Although the center serves the
Orange Coast area, the new out·
reach service is restricted lo
Costa Mesa residents.
Under the service, a center
representative provides assess-
ment interviews in places such
as mobile home parks and trains
persons there to provide refer-
rals to the adult day care center,
according to Dr. Dan Sands,
director.
The center provides care for
mostly elderly patients who are
isolated due to confusion, dis·
orientation, suffering memory
failure, have had s trokes or
other similar problems, Sands
said.
He said of the center's 26
clients, 14 are Costa Mesa resi·
dents. For more information,
call 548-9331. ·
$1,000 or 1i10re-8, 12 week•
·ktd by Securities oflhe l).S. ot U.S.~
~~··THIS OBLIGATION IS NOT A SAVINGS
AOCOUNT OR OE POSIT AND 18 NOT INSURED
BY TRE FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN
INSURANCE CORPORATION.
An111ta/R11/r
Thday~ mterest ratl'
IJUllrantr-ed for
the term by
American S3YVI~
Principal plus interest p.;d by American Savino 1l
mtturi~y. NO FEE. NO SERVICE CHARGE. AVlilable
to Californil relidenta only. Interest rate• 1re tet.dliJi.
Brinr 81\1 bank or uvtnp .....-k. We'll tranafer
the f\andt.
SAVINGS
Wi llNCE , •• ASSETS OYER •• I K'lN
o~ 1()() offica lo Smtf '°"" Clad '*""""' wlaill "1IU fer. offia IW.tllUI""" w ........... ,. ....................... .... .
•
-·
.... -.. ...... ,_·-··---
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Tueaday, July 21. 1981 ,-----------------~------------------------__;;;._ ____ _ H /F •••
NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS
OUOT.tTic.t 111tCt.UOI T•ADU ON TNI .... YO••. MIOWOT PA(.IPIC, l'I• MK TON OITIOIT AND (Ut(lllN4TI UO(ll lllCll411fOll 4JllO lll'OIUIO I \' Tiii 11.A•O ANO lltUllltlT '
Edgar Bronfman, chairman of Seagram, ap·
peared to' have suffered a 1tingin1 rebuke earlier this
year when he made an offer to buy St. Joe Minerals
for $4~ a shJlre. lt seemed like a generous offer since
St. Joe's stock was selling at 128. But John Duncan,
chairman of St. Joe, s purned the overture, saying he
would rather liquidate the company than sell out to a
company like Seagram
For Bronfman, that would seem to be humihat
ing. However, look at It this wty. Seagram had
bought some St. Joe shares before It became clear
that this deal ~ was not going r
to go through. \t 0 And when St. 1 ,
Joe. looking for 4•~ so m ebod y t o :;;..._::.~ ........ ._ _____ _
rescue it from lllJll .... IJZ the clutches or
Seagram ,
ended up in the hands or the California engineering
company, 1"1uor tn Irvine, It got $56 a share.
Bronfman promptly sold the St. Joe shares Sea-
gram had acquired . making a tidy profit of SlO
million . Not bad for a couple of weeks' work.
A lot or people seem to be making money these
days in just this manner. ·
Frank Lorenzo. chairman of Texas Air, the com
pany that operates Texas International Airlines and
New York Air, went lo the mat with Pan American
World Airways over National Airlines. Both wanted
lo acquire National. ln the end, Pan Am won out. But
Lorenzo didn't fare too poorly. By selling the Na·
tional shares it owned to Pan Am , Texas Air came
away with a profit or S60 miltion.
Lorenzo is now pursuing another air earner, Los
Angeles-based Continental Airlines. This time he has
accumulated 48 percent of the stock. But the
employees of Continental have rallied their forces
and are making a valiant bid to buy the company
they work for ff they succeed and then buy the huge
chunk held by Lorenza . you can bet the Texas
operator will once again come away with the consola·
lion prize of having made a neat profit in some shorl·
lerm trading.
H can be very satisfying lo make money this way
because you 're oft en getting it from people who hate
you. Look at Victor Posner, the Miami wheeler·
dealer In the early 1970s he bought a huge slug of
stock in f'oremost-McKesson. the San Francisco-
based wholesaler and dairy company. The Posner
presence bothered the Foremost-McKesson people,
who went lo great lengths to prevent him from ac·
quiring more stock.
_ Well. earlier this year Foremost·McKesson got
rid of the Posner influence by buying him out. The
Posner·controlled company, Sharon Steel, had paid
a r ound $30 million for its Foremost-McKesson
shares ,.,oremost-McKesson bought them back for
$65 million.
Who won that fight -Foremost-McKesson or
Victor Posner?
It seems as if it 's worth it to a company to buy
out an unwelcome suitor just to gel him off its back
Chris -Cr aft . a company that makes boats and
operates TV stations. among other nefarious ac·
tivit1es, recently paid Saul Steinberg's Reliance
Group Sl2 million lo by 300.000 of its own shares
Reliance acquired the Chris-Craft shares last year.
lls profit on this little transaction: S4.5 million.
Carl Icahn , a New York investigator, m ade a
move last year to gain control of Hammermill Paper
acquiring an 11 percent stake in the company ro;
about S21 million. Hammermill fought Icahn fiercely
Now it's buying the shares he owns ror $30 million.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
UPS AND DOWNS
GOLD COINS
QW V'Ot91t CA.-! -P'rlcn I•......, ef .... ..._ <_. wllll Frleey't !W1<e.
.,..,,.,..., I.,..., ... , .-.U. ... l<.
.......... .11 1..., ...... 1.-.~ .. -~ ....-.. " -· "' ''" ....... ,,. "' ,,. ... ........ ,,_, _ . ...., .......... ........
~·o...,.._.
642-4321
WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW YOAlt IAPl Jut_ 10
T°"'1's
1l01 ~ I "
METALS
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Orange Cout DAILY PILOT fTue1day, July 21 , 1981 ..
Harp music champagne supper backdrop
• •
By llA&Y JANE SCAJlCEU.0 of .. DeltY........... .
H arp muslc and a sunset over tbe
ocean were the backdrop for an elecant
champagne supper boated by the
Friends of the Paclfic Chorale, formet·
ly the Irvine Master Chorale.
John and Martha Klllefer opened their
Corona del Mar home for the party, which was
held to help underwrite cost.a for the 140·voice
group which begins lts 14th season ln October.
Guests at the S75-per-person affair sipped
an amber·colored Oomaine Chandoo cham·
pagne and enjoyed hot hors d'oeuvres tMrore sit-
tind down to a dinner catered by Julia's Child or
HAPPENINGS
glazed salmon with a creamy dill ~auce, ~a
M aisoo chicken salad, tomatoes filled wtth
minted peas, deviled eggs and Frel\ch rolls with
herbed butter.
Round white tables were set with beige
linen and arranged both indoors and on the
patio, with centerpieces of miniature pepper
plants and greenery in terra cotta pots created
by the host.
While cJjners were finishing a dessert or
fresh raspberry tarts, Chorale President Jim
Dunning spoke to the group about the oraaniia·
tional tr ansition connected with the name
change and the chorale's hopes for performing
in the future Orange County Music Center.
Officers serving with him include Helen
Wardner, Bob James, Frank Gillespie and Jim
McBride.
Diners didn't linger over coffee, however,
because the after-dinner entertainment was the
Laguna Beach Pageant of the Masters.
Special parking was provided close to the
festival troundJ for the show, which re-creates
famous paintings and sculptures with llve
models.
A second show at the open·air theater was
the lunar eclipse which occurred that evenln1.
Honorary chairmen for the party were Mr.
Don Woodward and Mrs. Robert Larsen. Guests
included Kae and Louise Ewtne, Phil and Mary
Lyons, Ken and Artie Johrulon, Mr. and Mrs.
Alec Perkins and Mr. aod Mrs Richard
Brockmeyer.
E veryone needs a friend, and now the
Newport Beach City Arts Commission
has a whole group or them.
Started two years ago, the Friends of
the Newport Beach City Arts Commission re·
cently elected Beryl Melinkorr to serve as presi·
dent.
She spent rour years on the commission, in·
eluding two years as chairman, and is pleased
to be able to help with funding culturaJ projects.
"The commission can't reach out for money
for awards at the festival nor for the Labor Day
concert." she explained, "but the Friends can,
and now we will be helping financially in all
ways."
Serving with her are Richard Dixon, Gloria
Rowe, Dolore:, Gelberg, Margie Wood. Natalie
Perkins and Rita Gunkel.
Anyone interested in joining the Friends
can write to them in care of the Newport Beach
City Hall
T he Lagun a Bea ch Panhellenic As·
sociation will hold its annual summer
coffee at 10·30 a .m on Aug 5 in Laguna
Niguel
Committee members for the meeting are
Mm es . Donald M acKintosh , William
Mc Donald, Henry Brian, David Buck and
James Lutz.
All national sorority members in the area
are invited and should make reservations with
Mrs. Ross Miller at 494·3820.
The group's summer proJecl is assistance
for college-bound girls interested in sorority
membership.
Current rushing information is available by
calling Mrs. W L. Piguet at 494-1869 or Mrs.
David Phillips at 494-5666.
Phil and Mary Lyons
(left) chat with Jim
Dunning at a benefit for
the Pacific Chorale held
in the Corona del Mar
home of John and
Martha Kille/er.
M a rily n Vosel and C hi ci Ma rtin.
owners or Safari Tours of Newport.
helped hostess a party cruise for the
Long Beach Chapter of the Crippled
Children's Society of Los Angeles County.
Hank Corctier or Newport Beach. owner of
the 57·foot Carri Craft, The Ba11 Window, hosted
the group of crippled children and adults from
the Orange County and Long Beach areas .
Souvenir lovers contribute to hotel expense
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am writing lo
you because I believe it is the best way to reach
the largest number of people. The topic: Hotel
guests who like souvenirs .
After several years in the business I have en-
countered hotel guests who have lifted almost the
whole room -under the guise of wanting a
"souvenir." This is what they tell you when asked
why they have 12 brand new towels (from the
storage room) a nd a bedspread in their luggage at
check-out time. J have seen departing guests try to
get away with pillows, pictures from the wall,
bathroom rugs and even lamps.
People complain that hotels are expensive
these days. Well , one reason is because it is no
small deal to replace the items carried off by
"souvenir lovers." Why don't they understand that
the cost of the stuff they steal must be absorbed by
the consumer? It's the same way with shoplifting.
Pluse put this letter in your own words and
print it, Ann. -JUST SAM
DleA& SAM : Your words are jiut fine. Than.ks
ANN lANDERS
for sending them on. If the shoe nts, wear It, folks,
but please leave the electric sboe·sblner la the
room when you check out.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was fascinated by
that letter from the woman who was worried sick
because her self-employed husband hasn't paid in·
come taxes Jn over 15 years.
Why didn't you tell her about the Conscience
Fund established for people who have stolen or
des troyed governme nt property? Some con·
tributors reveal their identities. others do not. The
Treasury Depa rtment does not prosecute these
people. The money is deposited in the U.S.
Treasury, and Congress determines how it is
spent
The Conscience Fund was originated during
President Madison's administration in 1811. An un-
identified person claimed he had defrauded the
government and sent $5. Other deposits brouaht
the year's total to $25(). No additional deposits
were made until 1927. Six dollars were received
from an anonymous "donor."
How about printing this letter and s uggesting
the Conscience Fund for incJjviduals who haven't
paid their taxes and want to sleep better at night?
IN THE KNOW IN PRINCETON
DEAR PRINCE: I consulted with WWlam E.
Simon, Secretary of the Treasury from 1972 to
1977, on this one.
Mr. Simon said be b as never beard of the
Conscience Fund. During his term of service be
did, however, receive several modest checks,~ io
$100, from good-hearted Americans who wanted to
help reduce tbe na&ional debt. He always returned
the mOlley, tba1sked them for tbelr palrio«am and
suggested that t hey use the money to help elect
congressmen who would vote to spend le111 than
the government takes lo.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have been seeing a
very attractive guy. He 1s 29 years old and we
share many interests.
The problem: When Frank gets mad he does
violent things to tumself. Two weeks ago he lost a
tennis match to a guy he really dislikes. He got so
mad he slammed his hand into the side or his car
and almost broke his wrist. Yesterday, he kicked
the side of the house when his dog slipped out of
his collar and ran off somewhere. The kick result-
ed in an ankle fracture Any advice? -DOLLY
FROM HARTFORD
DEAR DOLLY : Frank must lean to uaJoad
his anger lo a non·destructive, adult manner. He
needs counseling. My advice to you ls -stay oat
of bis way.
What's pruduh? What's O.K? If llf!"' aren't iure. uou
need some help. It's available in t~ boolcUt: "Necking
and Pelting -Whal Arc the limitl/" Mall uour re~1t
to Ann Landen, P 0 Bor 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611 ,
enclosing 50 cents and a long, .rtamped, self-Oddre11ed
envelope
If wives were lemons. • •
I The wedding picture By E RMA BOMBECK
In Sacramento, history is in the making.
The State Assembly has just sent to the Senate
a "lemon" car bill that would give dissatisfied
automobile buyers a new car or their money back.
Good grief, people! If this bill were passed, it
could significantly lower the GNBP <Gross Na-
tional Blood Pressure 1 and elect a car salesman
king of the White House by 1984.
Everyone in the world has, at one time or
another, bought a lemon . We had a car once that
made you pucker when you kicked the tires
Aries has tinie
Wednesday, July 22
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES <March 2l·April 19 >. Restrktions work to your
ultimate advanfage Time is on your side judgment.
mtuition are on target New contacts lead to greeter in
dependence of thought, action Your position is
strengthened.
TAURUS <April 20-May 201 Answers sought from con
fidential sources will become available Your inquiries bring desired results. Ignore surface lnd1cat1ons. 1>1g
deep for motives. reasons and obJectives.
GEMINI c May 21.June 201 Token or affection is re-
ceived from one who aids in strengthening domestic posl
tion. Accent on home, harmony, family reunion and
special anniversaries
CANCER (June 21-July 221. What appeared a "lost
cause" is due to boomerang in your favor. Key as to be
selective, to utili:z.e lessons learned In recent past. Focus
on career , prestige, business associate who has your best
interests at heart.
LEO <July 23-Aug. 22) Abstract principles of law
come Into sharp, clear focus. Emphasis also on travel,
HOROSCOPE
communication, publlshlng and lone·dlstance call which
clarlflea policy.
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Tie ioo.e end.a, get fh'lanclal
affairs In order, look beyond the Immediate and realize
your potenUal. Mystery wlU be reaolved.. PopuJartty In· creaaea despite recent controversy.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22); New approach Is necftnry.
Red tape, taxes, license requirements can bog .you down
until you 1et lo heart of matters. Leo a~dl came. Go
a low. malntaln low proHle, welcome addlUOllal 10Urce1 of Information.
SCO&PIO COct. 23-Nov. 211 : Obtaln valid hlnl from
Libra meaaa1e. U you doo't know what to Go, do nothlna!
lndeclsion It not necessarily evU. Know It. ride with Udt.
Focua on employment, co-worken, bulc tervlcea, will·
lnlfleas to improve health by erobarklng on a more nutrlU°"9 diet.
IAGnTAIU\18 <Nov. 22·Dec. 11): St.at .. quo ahak" r1tUe1 and roll• away You're on new 1round, old
policies no lon1er ap,ly. lmpnnt style, make c:ban1•,
deal with youn1. vlioroua, dynamic people
CAPalOO&N COec. ZZ·Jan. 11): Accef'll an MCUrity,
property, etlabll1hed polteln and bualn•• tran .. ctlon
which will loon be complettcl. Older lodMdual ii on 10Ur
•Id• Uld J>f'O\'• It. Cbeek 10Urte1 -you'll be asked qu•· Uona and be t'OMldtred for p~. ~
AQUA&R.11 (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): rorftl ~to beaut· ~ -be versatile without lOllnc •ilhl ol wuaaa .. ob-
Jeft.lve. lodal actMtlet acceleratt, PtioDI• wM Md..._
''oul of toucb" wW 100D become "••atlat.le. •• . PllCll c,... lf-ll•cb •>: Afteoa IMOmt, ~
....... ,. ..... -·-Iott ltetm. a.di 0 ..... m~ llr n,_llli llMl . ....., ...,... 1n.--.
la111U1 ......... WW bil Mttled. You are Gft brink ol lm • ..... ~..,..
ERMA BDMBICll :......_ __
Engineering-wise, it was a monument to the com-
mittee who constructed a camel and thought they
had solved the proble m of tall men who needed
more leg room.
The sun visor blocked the rear·view mirror .
The carpet under the accelerator had no re-
s istance to the touch.
The radio was wired for static.
The floor of the car burnt your feet
The steering mechanism quivered at anything
over 35 mph.
And you couldn't get to the back seat from
driver's side of the car .
I don't understand it. This country is the onl
one in the world where men tolerate a lemon of a
car longer than they will endure a wife who has
run out or gas.
Think about it. Would your husband pay SSO to
have you towed anywhere? rr he cOU.ldn't keep you running without stall·
ing at every traffic light, would he talk nice lo you
and let you idle?
If your warranty ran out would he stand you to
a tune-up out of his own pocket?
When your mileage started to deteriorate,
would he still stop at every station and fill you up?
If you heated up coming back from the
ballpark. would he pull off the road and let you
cool off?
W.ould he still take you out to dinner if you had
a crack in your windshield?
If you had to be taken in for repairs, would be
be satisfied with a loaner?
I don't know why I do that. I always pu.ab a
parody too far.
Williams ,
Gilbert
Deborah Gilbert o( Huntlngton
Beach and Brian Williams of
Fountain Valley exchanged wed-
ding vows in the First Christ.Ian
Church, Orange. '
The bride, daughter of James
and Florence Gilbert of Hunt·
ington Beach, graduated from
Edison High School and at ·
tended the Univers ity o f
California at Irvine.
The bridegroom, son of Loren
and Joyce Williams, of Fountain
Valley, graduated from Rolling
ills High School and Orange
Coast OoUege.
McRae-Brown
Cbarml·an Brown of
Westminster and David McRae
of La Canada exchanged wed·
ding vows in Corona del Mar
Community Church.
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry J . Mitchell
graduated from Westminster
High School and Cypress
College.
The bridegroom. son of Mr.
and Mrs. D. H. McRae or La
Canada, graduated from Cresen·
ta Valley High and San Diego
Mrs. Williams
Sl.ilte University.
The couple plan to live in San·
ta Ana after a trip to Carmel
and Lake Tahoe.
50th cruise
Herb and Teri Ford, who have
been Balboa Island residents for
40 years, recently celebrated
.. RUFFELL'S ····································~
urMOLSTHT
s. ............. ....
ltl2 HAllOI AVD.
,COSTA ~ISA ~J4J.!1 IH
~"WHAl'S A POPCORN PARTY?~'! • = ftt ......................... •,.:. $ ...... c:.tf~ : °"" fw ...... S1 11111 ...... ....... _.. • : -.. c... •• _. pei•sp• .. ,.... wt .......... • ·-~1 . . ...,....~ . •• .. ••• ,.,., ........... ,..,. L.ly •
--------.: POPCOIM PM111S UMLIMITm :
: CALL 17141 1~2330 I -:.
•••• , ••••• ; ....................... AJI .. •• If it'sgo1
wheels,
you'll move
It faster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad.call
6'42·.5678 and a
f rlendty ad·
vtserwlll
help you
turn your
Wheels Into
Cl Sh.
..
Mrs. McRae
their 50lh wedding anniversary
with an 8-day cruise of the
Hawaiian Islands.
They also were given a sur-
prise dinner party hosted by Mr.
and Mrs. John Konschnik and
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Brownell.
The Fords were married at
the Presbyterian Church ln
Hollywood in 1931.
Fifty frienda were lnviled to
share their special day.
.
llllll IEll:l/lllTH 1:1111 '
bilyPilat
TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1981
COMICS
TELEVISION
FEATURES
64
66
612
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.
ti
..., Q1
0 ~ 1 '·
Efficiency and effectiveness must
, .. ,, -:
be measured to determine product-0 I
ivity ... B8 ...
d . '
Two recall targets to skip Dana formne
At least two of the four Dana
Point Sanitary District directors
subject to recall In August say
they won't attend an election
forum Thursday night.
A,nother says he'll attend if he's
In town. and the fourth. Earl
Hardisty, says he'll be there.
The Dana Point Chamber of
Commerce is sponsoring the elec·
lion forum, in which six can·
didates ror the posts held by the
four directors are expected to at·
tend.
The forum will be held at Dana
Hills High School, 33333 Street of
the Golden Lantern. beklnnlng at
7:30p.m.
Hardisty a nd fellow district
directors and Angus Smith, John
McComb and Jack Schmidt are
subject to a recall election Aug. 18
because or a pension plan they ap·
proved last year.
That plan would have paid com·
missioners SSOO a month after
they retired at age 65 with at least
eight years service on the
sanitary panel.
The board later voted to reduce
the pension Crom S500 a month to
$50, but a recall drive by a group
called Dana Point Citizens for
Better Government prompted the
August recall election in which six
other candidates are vying ror
seats held by the four men.
A fifth commissioner. Don
Klaasen. was ttot on the board
when it voted for the pension plan
and is not subjectto recall.
Board member Smith said to·
day he derinilely will not attend
the forum Thursday. saying
there would be .. no benefit in me
going."
"They're calling us a bunch of
bloody crooks <for voling for the
pension) and yet we just reduced
our sewer rates." Smith s aid in a
telephone interview
"I don't see any reason why r
O.lly ~n.t S'-ft ......_
Offensive words have been removed from the tile mural on front of John Wayne Airport terminal butlding.
Airport's off ending
mural cleaned up
For 10 years. the words
"spade" and "darkie" went
unnoticed on the figure of a man
in the large ceramic tile mural
adorning the front of the John
Wayne Airport ter m inal
building.
Then last week, Lee Howard,
a skycap, complained about the
two words a n d others
Laguna eyes
disposition
of $197,000
Laguna Beach City Council
members will consider tonight
whether they want to spend an
unexpected $197 .000 provided by
the state, or hang onto it for the
future.
The city received word It will
have to come up with $197,000
less in state repayment of
bailout f\lnds. anct council mem·
bers will be asked tonight lo de·
clde how to spend the money.
City Manager Ken Frank rec·
o m m ends that m ost or t he
$197 ,000 be held over until next
year "In light of the city's
tenuous fiscal posillon in future
years."
But the council is expected to
review a ''wish list" it made up
earlier this year, and to also
con4ider requesta by various de·
partment heads for projects.
equipment and personnel.
At tonieht'a aeasion , which
beeina at 6 in COWICll chambers,
~s Foretl Ave., the council wm
also:
-Conalder a means of replac·
in1 Mayor Wayne Baflln, who la
leavin't the city OJ' Saudi
Arabia;
-Conllder a proposal for a
fin·IOl tubdM•loD on nin• attea
on the lath aide ot Temple Hilla
Drtve, weet of Dom court.
-Receive a ftnal r_eport on
Uae Hltt.Orteal &urver ot old
L11una Beach homn.
apparently added by a vandal -
to county airport operations
personnel.
Now. the offensive words are
gone, painted over with enamel
paint that closely matches the
glazed finish of surrounding
tiles.
But officials a re s till
wondering why the words were
permifted in the first place, and
how so many years passed
without being observed.
And equally puzzling is why a
vandal went to the trouble lo use
acid· to remove some of the tile
glazing to add the other ethnic
slur. an obscenity. and the
words "peace" and "love."
The mural was added to the
north end or the terminal
building by artist Marlin Rudick
at a cost of $26.000 in the early
1970s.
Rudick. who reportedl y
resides in Toronto, Canada,
could not be contacted today.
But Denis Horn, airport chief
or operation s, said hi s
investigation indicates that the
words "spade" and "darkie"
were part of the original mural.
He noted that the words were
glazed o~.
Horn pointed out that. the
words we re difficult to see,
primarily because or their small
size.
"I've walked by there I don't
know how many times, and I
never noticed them," Horn said.
I n apectlon or the mural
conducled after Howard raised
hla complaint revealed the other
objectionable words.
Wbtle termini ll
"apeculatlon," Hom aald be and
maintenance personnel are
convinced that someone
deliberately •lri~ •••lint off other tiles to , lldd t be other
wordl.
Hom 111ld lM en1mel palnt lJ
blendlnl ln well wtlb the r•t ol U.t mqraJ. He aald It probably
won't .. nieftlHl'J to haft new tlJ.. fabricaled to ...,,, the
painted areu.
s hould attend (the e lection
forum.1"
McComb said reports in a Santa
Ana newspaper that he will
boycott Thursday's forum are un·
true .
· · 1 planned a trip to Washington
to help my son move," he said to-
day. "If I don't go to Washington
Thursday. I'll be at the forum ...
Board member Schmidt could
not be reached for commenttoday
but had indicated at an earlier
board meeUne that he did not plan
lo attend the forum.
Candidates invited to the
chamber forum in addition to the
four current board members th.
elude Lloyd Woerner. a chemllrt
and consultant; Emily J . Sparlts.
a bookkeeper; James Hyde, a
water district chemist: Rlcha'rd
Runge, a civil engineer: Fred M.
Roberts, a mechanical enginet'r,
and Ann Kelly, a freelance wrtty~
and reviewer
County nearing:
budget balanc~:.
Orange County government's
S780 milhon budget for fiscal 1981
ca me within $200,000 of being
balanced as s upervisors complet·
ed their fourth or six days of
budget hearings
Supervisors opted Monday to
u~e about $11 million of$34 million
1n a\'ailablefederal revenueshar·
ing to balance the record spend·
ing program that will rund county
operations through June 30, 1982.
The board agreed to spend
more than $8 million in revenue
s haring money collected by the
federal ~overnment and returned
to local Jurisdictions-for capital
improvement projects. including
SI .5 milhon for acquisition of land
for a road that will go for a new
county landfill in Bee Canyon
north of ln•ine and $1 million for
dt•s1gn or new courtrooms in the
Santa Ana Civic Center
Additionally. the board budget·
f'd close to Sl million for comple·
lion of the first and second floors
of the county's $9 million Hall of
Administration in Santa Ana. and
S600.000 for further corrective
work on the structurally weak
building.
Revenue sharing also will be
used Lo fund about S2 3 million m
equipment purchases. including
about $1.5 million in new vehicles,
a $150.000 bus for transportation
of Orange County J all inmates
and S:l>3.000 for apparatus for
the county public health depart·
m enl laborator~
As a result of the board's ac·
lions. about $2.9 million of rev-
enue sharing money still is
available. Under a formula ap·
proved by the board, 25 percent/of
that amount. or $725,000 will be
made available for social pro·
grams operated throughout the
county, with the remainder still
available for other county equip-
ment. land acquisition or ope11t.
lions expense needs ..
The board le ft about $8 million
in revenue sharing untouch~
"forfuture county needs .. '.
Among the expenditures ap.
proved by supervisors was $46,000
to improve security at the max·
1mum security men's Jail in Sante
Ana.
Planners eye
development.;
'• agreements . ·
Laguna Beach planning com·
missioners will hear a proposat
by the city attorney Wednesday
that would allow for develop·
ment agreements to be set up
with builders in future years.
A development agreement is
an understanding between the
city and a developer on the com·
mitment each side might want
to take on a project.
For example. the city might
waive some development fees in
exchange for dedication of land
on the part of the property
owner.
Com missioners will discuss
the agreement concept when
they meet at 6 p. m in council
chambers, 505 Forest Ave.
Unstable land.
threatening
·Quiet Canrwn
•County Environm en t al
Management Agency officials
will meet with t he owner of
Dana Point's Quiet Cannon
restaurant Aug. 10 to discuss
closing the blufflop restaurant to
diners.
T he hearing follows a stucb
conducted by the countxi'5
Geologic Technical Ad visory
Board. which claims that the
Green Lantern Street restaur~pt
is perched on an unstable slope.
In its report, the four-memtHir
advisory ~ard said a high le~el
of risk exists that the bluff coli.Id
give way , plunging th~
restaurant into the rocks below.
Ed Kwan. a civil englne~r
with EMA. said a fault line runs
beneath the Quiel Cannon. Kwan
said the discovery of the fault
caused construction o f the
restaurant to be delayed in Sel>-
te mber, 1971. ~ However, he said arterr a
geoloeic study found the rault;.to
be inactive, and restaurliat
owper David Perrin agreed to
move the building back from the
bluff, a building permit was 15·
aued. ~
But ln February of last year a
landslide brought the Quiet Can·
non to within a few re« of ~
blufl's edee. promptin1 co~
officials to question the 1t.bUlt1 of the bulldin1 site. ,,,
Kwan aaid a final determtM·
lion on whether the popular ·~· int place wUl be cloted will #
made by Harold Krilan, dir~
of replaUona for the EMA. • ..
"Several altemaUvet will ""
discussed," Kwan said. "It ""'
been 1u11ested that monttolWI
devlces be LnttaUecl 0-al ~
detect any earth mohmeat." , •
He said anotMr aa .. rutl~ ~"'.::LU::~.:l top and bottom al tlM .._..
lb1t would be costly, -wCMdd pay ..........
hHD'tbMndeei411d.
,.... Clulet c.... • .. ; ...... ,..... ...... ...
aoun\y offlflilh orl1l• y
•mid unuudallile, Hid J.\M
Muter, an EMA clYil lllCIDltl'u
\
Or•nge Cout OAIL.Y PILOT/TuHday, July 21, 1981
--------~~----------------:-----:i--------------------------------__;;~
Less water to.cost Mesans more?
Chamber warned of rising rates in pitch· for proposed Peripheral Canal
TllllOUGH SLEET, SNOW, ~. -Certainly a lot of
folks 1n our region were wringing their banda Monday
wben it became clear we faced the threat of a poetal strike.
People who are expecting a lot of bills ln the mall
were wringing their-bands in glee.
Others, who were looking for a check from Uncle
George in Antioch, who'd owed the $125 for two years,
were wringing hands in frustration.
~ Further, it was in·
terestinf bow some of
the loca postmasters of
our Orange Coast re-
gion were reacting to
the strike threat. ml MURPllll ~1;
They all said the
mail would go through anyway. But how?
WELL, COSTA MESA Postmaster Lyle Verplanck
flatly declared, .. The mail will go through one way or
another."
Now that was an interesting choice of words. That's
bow numerous people feel about how the mail goes
through under normal conditions.
One way or another, that is.
Meanwhile, Huntington Beach Postmaster James
O'Hara suggested, "At this stage of the game, I don't
know what to expect ... "
Alas, that may have confirmed some other suspi·
cions.
Most of the Orange Coast postal authorities said there
was a contingency plan for getting the mail delivered.
But none of them seemed to know what that plan is.
Well, now we can probably all agree on that. It's like
"No wonder the sergeant put me 0n thii mail deUvery route"
The decreaaed tap water
avaUable ln um will c0tt Colta
Meaana about 24 percent more
than they pay now, waw of.
flclala have warned ln 1aln·
tn1 Chamber of Commerce aup.
porl for the atate'a propoeed
Peripheral Canal.
But 1ettin1 tbe amount of
water each Mesan uaea every
day, about 180 1aUons, may be
impoaalble, sald Karl Kemp,
mana1er of Mesa Consolidated
Water District.
The aver•ge household pays
about $11 a month for water
now. 1be bill will be closer to
$13.65 in 1985 and probably
ht1her ln later years.
Kemp and dlatr,ict board
member Henry Panian predict·
ed water raUonlnl during dry
years -about every fourth year
-even lf the city's population
remains static.
Costa Mesa, they explained to
chamber directors last week,
imports about 75 percent of ita
water needs.
That water nows through the
state aqueduct from Northern
Callfornia and from the
Colorado River via Metropolitan
Water District feeder lines.
More than half the water im-
ported from the Colorado River
will go to Arizona beginning ln
1985 as the result or U.S.
Supreme Court rullngs on water
rights, Panian noted.
And, be added, there is a good
chance that much or the
Northern California water that
supplies Orange County might
be diverted ln future years to
Los Angeles County.
The reason, Panian aaid, ia a
lawsuit filed by cootervation
Statue unveiled
RIVE.RTON, Wyo. (AP) -A
bigger-than-life sculpture of the
famed lndian guide Sacajawea
has been unveiled on the campus
of Central Wyoming Colle1e.
The bronze sculpture was shown
for the first time by artist Harry
Jackson, who works out of bis
Wyoming Foundry Studios in
Cody, Wyo., and Camaolre,
Italy.
1roups who are attemptln1 to.
curtail Loe An1elea' water lm·
ports from the Owens Valley,
where Mono Lake {a
dlmloithln1.
Los Angeles, he said, will tum
lo the MWD for water lf the suit
is successful. And, he added, Loe
Angeles has the votes on the
MWD board required to divert
Oranee County water.
Panlan said Costa Meaa's
water supply could be cut at
1eaat 20 percent.
That would mean some form
of rationing.
The possible silver lining to
the water cloud, both all'ffd,
would be state construction of
the controversial $6 million
Peripheral Canal.
The canal would divert water
flowing to sea, through the
H EADS 1 REC RUlT INO -
Capt. Glen M. Robbe bas
been named commander --0f
the U.S . Army's South
Orange County Recruiting
Area . He will supervise
recruiters in Costa Mesa,
Huntington Beach, Laguna
Hills, Santa Ana and
Orange.
Feather aad Sacramento
l"ivera. to the state aqueduct
ayetem and on to Southern
Callfomla.
That caoal, in the pla.nninl for
i5 years now, haa been approved
by ttate leaders and cooteated
by Northern California 1roupe.
N ortbern Californian• fear
water diversion will cause ocean
water to teep into the river'•
delta system, rulning crops and
the water required for many in·
dustries there.
Conservallonista and wildlife
advocat.es.allo fear the effect of
salt water intrusion on flab and
anlinals.
The Peripheral Canal iaaue.
considered by Panian and Kemp
to be critical to the city's future,
goes to state voters as a referen·
dum measure either in Nov·
Plaque due
for bridge
in Newport
A $'900 bronze plaque la to be
mounted on the soon·to·be com-
pleted Paclflc Coast Hl1hway
bridge In Newport Beach
although several city coun·
cilmen doubt any motorists will
have time lo read it.
"It's a mystery lo me why we
need it," asserted Councilman
Paul Hummel. "Who's going to
read lt?"
He suggested that the bridge
contractor or the state should
pay for the plaque, not the city.
Two other council members
agreed with him.
"It's their bridge so if there's
to be a plaque it should be their
obl.igation," he said.
But Hummel ended up on the
losing si<~e aa the councU agreed
to purchase the 16-by-18-inch
plaque which is to bear the city's
official seal and the slogan,
"The Porthole of Time."
ember or next June. •
Tbe date depeodl on a ruu.,
by Gov. Brown, Kemp not.cl. ·: '
Canal or no canal, wbatevw
water is available for import by
1985 will cost dearly, Pini&:·.
added. • •.
That's when contracts I~ ::
Hoover Dam electrlcllJ ••.
negotiated In the ltb, are llP... • '
for renegotiation. ~ ••
Laa Veeas, Phoenix aqi· :..,
Tucson seek much of the .....-~·
now used to pump water OVtr ,
mountains for the downhill ftoitf
to Southern California. ..; ...
• • MWD pays SS an acre foal flf.:
pump it now," Panlan noted. , ::A
Conservative estimates ~:· •.
dicate the price will 10 to ::~.
least $45 an acre foot , but solllit •
estimates double that figure. ~~i~:
NEW DIRECTOR -Art Lun111· ·.
a 1976 USC graduate, has as-
sumed the post of executive ·
director of the Orange Coun-' ·
ty Housing Authority. Luna ..
picked from a field of llS.
takes over for Jobo .
Avitabile, who resigned last
January.
a lot of contingency plans. Somebody has it, somewhere.
But who? Who?
Clearly, a postal strike is really going to put a crimp
in the style of a lot of people who are getting dunned for
overdue bills.
Park development
plan draws support
Several city officials later
opined that traffic generally
moves so slowly through the
area that many drivers would
likely have time to read the pla·
que.
7 awarde d
scholarships
Seven area high school seniors
have received $1 ,000
scholarships each from the
Irvine Company in recognition
of outstanding community
leadership.
Mesa to fund·
outre ach for
adult ce nte r
With funding from the city <f . ,
Costa Mesa, a day care center . · j
has started an outreach prq--, ·I
gram to see if the cit)'',,
chronlcaJly ill are In need or· ...
services provided by the Harbor,·
Area Adult Day Care Center. '
BOW IN THE WORLD are you going to be able to tell
them, "Oh yes that . . . Well, I just put your check in the
mail ... "
A $16 million development pro.
posal for Huntington Beach ~n
t r al Park bas been
r ecommended as a way to
1en~rate future revenue to
maintain the city's 50-park
system.
Another statement of lasting interest came out of
Washington, D.C., Monday when Postmaster General
William F. Bolger expressed great confidence that there
would be no postal workers strike. The city's Community
Services Commission, which
recommends parks and recrea-
tion policy, has unanimously sup-
ported a private consultant's pro-
posal to put recreational attrac-
tions in the 'l97 ·acre park.
He declared that the people should still continue to
use the U.S. Mail.
Now, I ask you, what did be expect us to do? Kick
over to his competitors? Would we all start mailing out of
Canada overnight?
DO~ BOLGER TllDlK the pony express is still run-
ning him a heavy race? Wells Fargo retired the
stagecoaches a long time ago and went into ban.king.
The proposed attractions in·
elude a Ill-acre golf course, a
hotel complex and conference
center, a six·field baseball and
sports complex, a YMCA gym·
naaium, a restaurant, a recrea·
tlonal vehicle campground, a
fishing lake, an arcade, and a
pizza parlor, as well aa the exist·
ing shooting range and adventure
playground.
Some reports had it that if all the postmen and
postwomen strike, the government might call upon the
U.S. Army to deliver all the mail.
You can just imagine how that might work out. All
the majors will stay in the post offices. The captains will
get to drive aU the trucks. The lieutenants and sergeants
will run out with the platoons and assign the routes.
The comm.iaalon also re«>m· •
CORPORALS WILL GET all the routes with sorority
houses and saloons. Privates First Class will deliver to
flat residential areas. Mesan named
to honor r o ll And the yardbirds? Why, they'll be delivering at all
the places up the bills where the sign on the gate says:
Dean M . Schmidt of Colla
Meaa baa been named to tbe
chancellor's honor roll fOI' the
sprtn1 semester at the Universi-
ty of Colorado, Boulder.
"Beware of Vicious Dog!"
N E WS
f r om all over California is
r ounded up each day in t he
·-' ., -0 0
-4
HYPNOSIS IS THI llY ........ .., ..... ,..,..,..
.... Mle IMSmUl'I
... CQ-.YAW .... , .. .
The honor roll recocnlzes atu·
dents who earned a perfect 4.0
1rade point average for the
semester.
CViewSOn
r:tJeotal HealtJi
., oa.ALI WINKLI"· o.o.a.
WHY A BRIDGE?
ll It reaUy necessary to replace adult '1
mlHlDI teeth wlth • fixed briclae or partial denture' 'the answer la
e deRnlte YES! Tb•
rea1001 are qulu
1lmple.
Wb• a tOOtJt lt lott1
the ICllH lllt teetia aaa the tooth (above or
below) wldeh actt • a blU.~,loMtM aap and eta lllalli~HCI
•blcb tlMI Ion tootll oace~ovlded. Tbt .... a ~.Wbe
1 u b J • c to m a n 1 probl••• 11tcb u drift.... abaormallf
tapotei dtta1-prone
.......... ofall,
ffrloclollt1I di•••••· <Tit• 11011• lar1t1t ca... of tGat.lt IOM In ....... ,.
-
The lou of juet one ·
looth, lf not replaced by
a fhled bridte or part.laJ denture, wiO more than
illtely, uJUmai.ly cauae
tbe lou of more and
more teeth. In maoy patteota, It la only a
matter ol Ume unUl UM
d•truc.'tioft 11 complec.. · Tbe dlntal arch W81 ct..,_. by nature to
bave 1 eompllta tel of
t.th -one tae1ptn1 and prote~la1 the otller.
ReplaclnJ mluln1
teeth with a dental
'pplluee wtll maintain thit ... u weU u
)'OUt amOI _. ability
eo ••t Jl!CJPlll'l1. ..
_.... ....... D.D.A: I ... "-..... .... " ............. . N ...... ..... .....: ...... .
mends an equestrian center witb
rental horses available to the
public.
The City Council will bold a
public hearing on the con-
troversial development pro·
posals next month.
A group of nearby residents
oppose development in the park,
localed off Golden West Street
between Slater an d Ellis
avenues. The park presently is a
natural setting of trees, shrubs,
hills and lakes.
According to the proposal by
Ultrasystems Inc., of Irvine, the
development plan requires ac-
quiring 75 additional acres near
Ellis Avenue. Proposed attrac-
tions would generate about $12. 7
million over the next 10 years,
according to the consultant.
City officials say voters would
have to approve a bond to pay
for much of the $16 million de-
velopment eo1ta.
Four of the scholarships have
been awarded to Irvine resi·
dents Christopher Cassady and
Suzy Krueck eberg from
University High School and
Mary C. Egan and Elizabeth
Denney of Irvine Hi gh School.
Newport Beach scholarship
recipients include Mark Evans
and Linda Timmons of Corona
del Mar High School and Joanne
M. Martin of Newport Harbor
High Sc~ool.
D orm adviser
Debby Benevento of Hunt·
ington Beach has been selected
as reside nt adviser for
dormitories at the University or
Redlands.
Although the center serves the
Orange Coast area, the new ()Uf·
reach service is restricted U,
Costa Mesa residents. · .
Under the service, a cen~(. ·
representative provides assesi.' ' ·
ment interviews in places sue~ "
as mobile home parks and trah);' ·
persons there to provide refer\ ,
rals to the adult day care center', '
according to Dr. Dan Sands., ·
director. ,
The center provides care for · ·
mostly elderly patients who ~ :· . ·
isolated due to confusion, dfs.' ·,
orientation, suffering memory .
failure, have had strokes or ' ~
other similar problems, Sanda' ·
said. ;
He said of the center's 26 ·'
clients. 14 are Costa Mesa ~r-·
dents. For more informatiod, '
caJl 5'8-9331.
Sicked by Sec:uridet of tJw U.S. or U.S. GoYemmeM ~L THIS 08LIGA110N IS NOT A SAVINGS
ACCOUNT OR DSP081T AND 18 N<n IN&VaBD
BY 'nlE FIDEllAL 8AVIN08 AND LOAN
Prindpal plus mterett peid by American SaWlP It
m.turtty. NO flE, NO SERVICE CHARGE. Anillble
to ClllforNI mident1 ~ lnterelt ntn we let~
Brina mv Mnkor ••lnp ,..book. We11 t.ruwf.,
INSU~CE COIU'OaATIOPt. .... ,... .
111111
llllyPllld
TUESDAY, JULY 21, 1981
COMICS 84
TELEVISION 86
FEATURES 812
Efficiency and effectiveness must
be measured to determine product-
ivity ... BS .
What 'affordable' houses in e? l • r' ' ....
Once "affordable" housing un-
its in Irvine's Villaae of Wood-
bridge no longer are affordable
to people with m oder ate in-
comes.
That is the conclusion con-
tained In a report releas«:d today
by Orange County government's
Human Relations Commission.
It is suggested in the report
that the lack of controls on re-
sale of the units. coupled with
less than str ict limits on owner
occupancy, have worked to take
the dwe!Hngs out of the price
range affordable to persons with
I
m0<1erate incomes.
The Human Re lations Com-
mission staff, in preparing the
report, examined 382 units that
were constructed in Woodbridge
between 1976 and 1979. Original
s a les prices or those units
ranged from $33,000 to $55.800.
According to the report, the
$33.000 units. constructed in
1976, are now selling for about
Sl 10.000.
Had controls been imposed to
regulate the price at which the
properties could be resold, the
sales price for the 1976, $33,000
unit would be about $49,000, the
report said.
··overall. the results indicate
that the Woodbridie affordable
units have rapidly increased in
selling price since their con-
struction due lo the lack of long
term continued affordability
mechanism." the report said.
·'The result h •s been that the
majority of the surveyed units
which have been resold are not
now affordable to moderate in-
come families I i.e. those earn·
ins less than 120 percent of the
m edian income tn Orange
County.)
"In addition , due to the lack of
r es tr ictio n s o n owne r -
occupancy . a nd l ength of
ownership, a majority of the un-
its surveyed are no longer owner
occupied. A significant percen-
tage of the homes have been
converted into rental units.
while other umts have been re-
sold either one. two. or three
times."
The HR<.: staff began the study
of affordab1latv or the Wood·
bridge units in October 1980. It
o.11, ...... , ...........
Offensive words have been removed from the tile mural on front of John Wayne Airport terminal building.
Airport's off ending
mural cleaned up
For 10 years. the words
"spade" and "darkie" went
unnoticed on the figure of a man
in the large ceramic tile mural
adorning the front of the John
Wa yn e Airpo rt terminal
building.
Then last week. Lee Howard.
a skycap. complained about the
two wo rds a n d other s
apparently added by a vandal -
to county airport operations
personnel.
Now. the offensive words are
gone. painted over with enamel
paint that closely matches the
glazed finish of surrounding
tiles.
But o ff icia l s a r e still
,wondering why the words were
permitted ln the firsl place, and
how s o many year s passed
without being observed.
And equally puzzling is why a
vandal went to the trouble to use
acid to remove some of t he tile
glazing to add the other ethnic
s lur. an obscenit y, and the
words "peace'' and "love."
The mural was added to the
n o rth e nd of the termi nal
building by artist Martin Rudick
at a coet of $26.000 in the early
1970s.
R udlck, who reportedly
resides In Toronto, Car\ada,
could not be contacted toch1y.
other tales to add the other
words.
Horn said the enamel paint is
blending in well with the rest or
the mural. He said it probably
won't be neccessary to have new
tiles fabricated to replace the
painted areas.
The operations chief noted
there are no plans to remove the
mural when the terminal 1s
expanded as part of a $75 million
airport improvement project.
Fund limit
plan approved
The Orange County Registrar
has confirmed that more than
enough valid signatures were
gathered to insure that Irvine
City Councilman Larry Agran's
measure to limit councllmanit
campaign donations will appear
on the Nov. 3 city ballot.
A t o tal of 6,063 valid
signatures were gathered, about
800 more than needed to insure a
spot on the baJJot, said Coun-
cilman Agran.
The measure would mandate
thal an individual contributor
could alve no more than SlOO to a
candidate running for the lrvine
City Counctl. . .
/)etaU o/ airport mural shows figure of man that wa$
de/aced with words "~" and "dar~."
But Denis Horn. airport chief
o f operallona. aald his
lnvesU1ation Indicate• that the
worda "spade" and "darlde"
were part ol the trl1lnal mural
He noted.. that I.be worda were
1taatdover.
6.ounty nearing balanced budget
Horn pointed out that the
word• were difficult lo aeei
prlmarUy because oJ their smal
alle.
"I've walked by there J don't
know how many times, and I
never noticed them," Horn aaid.
tnapectlon of the mural coad~ alter Howard ra6Md
hl1 complaint rfttaMd &be o&hlr
objectionable .......,.
Wblle termln1 ll
.. ,~" Hora said 119 and
malnlfnaDet peraoanel are
con vtac:ed t•at 1omeone dell~ e&rlpPed aJ••lnt oil
Oran1e Count)' 1overninent'1
$780 mllllon budget tor fiscal 1981
came. wtthin '200.000 of betna
balanced as aupervisora compl•t·
ed their fourth of alx daya ot
bud a et heartn1e. • Su~ opted Monday to
uae abouUtt million of SM mtmon
In avalleblefederal tevenueahar-
ln1 to balance the record spend-
lftC p~am tha& will fund county
oper.UO. tbroulh.J .. J0.1m.
Tba board ~ to 'li*Ht
fl)or,,, .. " • mDUon ln rnenue da -money collictld bJ the fMlr IO"f'll8lenl and retariliid
• loc•l Jtlrtldld&ona-foreipbl fmpro, .. nent ~. tneltdal
....... ,..~etl..i fOf' I roed that wt I 10 for a MW ,
county landfill In Bee Canyon
north of Irvine and $1 miJUon for
design or new courtrooms in the
Santa Ana Civic Center.
AddltJonally, the board budget·
ed close to Sl million for cornple-
llon of the nnt and second n00ts or the county'• 18 mllll<>11 Hall of
Admlnlatratton In Santa Ana, and
M00.000 for further corrective
work on the structurally weak
buUdlnc.
Kevenue 1harlnc also •UI be
uied to rwftcl about S2.3 muuon ln
equlp~ purchaaea, JM.hadlnf
aboutlt.lmlllton In new vebltlee, al ... bulfortr~
of Orana• County Jail inmates
and Q>.1,000 for apparatus tor
the county public health depart-
ment laboratory.
As a result of the board's ac·
tlone, about $2.9 mllJlon of rev·
enue aharln1 money atlll If
available. Under a formula ap-
proved by the board, 25 percenlof
that amount, or S72'.<>00 wlll be
made available ror social pro-
1rams operated throuchout the
county. with the remainder still
available for other county equip.
menl, land acqulaltlon or opera·
tlona expenae need•.
The bou4 left about • 11\llllon
In revenue sharln1 untouched
'·for future county n~ed•."
conducted a door-to-door survey
to gain information on resale ac-
tl vity and owner occupancy.
The commission said It in-
tends to release a s ubsequent re-
port that will examine the sales
history of each individual unit,
based on information from the
county Assessor 's Office and a
title Insurance company.
In the report. the commission
staff noted that few affordability
guidelines were made part of the
original agreement in which the
Irvine Company agreed to set
aside 10 percent of Woodbridge
units for persons with moderate
Incomes.
'' fo'or example, there were on·
ly minimal buyer qualification
guidelines or procedures and no
owner occupancy requiremerla,
anti-speculation mechanism or
continued affordability controls.
Since this early period, a bu,.er
sc reening process has been
established through the non-
pr ofit Irvine Housing Op•
portunilies Corporation and
more recently a one year owru!f'-
occupan cy requirement h•s
been added.·· the report said. '
Irvine seeks I•
retail growth f.
Irvine, a city of 70.000 people,
will soon have its first car wash.
When will it get its second?
The man in charge of retail
development for the company
that owns the overwhelming ma-
jority of land in lrvine doesn't
have a firm answer lo that ques-
tion.
Irvine Company Vice Presi-
dent Dick Cannon says he is
aware that
the master-
planned city
or Irvine is
s hort of the
r e t a i I
esta bli s h -
ments its res-
id ents want
and the city's
tax base r e·
quires. CANNON
Cannon is to appear Aug. 10
before the Irvine City Council to
explain wh y Irvine doesn 't have
a ny : car washes (one is to open
this . summer in Woodbridge),
major furniture o r home
furnishings stores. nurseries
plumbing supply houses, paint
stor es or electrical supply
stores.
Irvine residents also complain
that there is only one movie
theater. not enough restaurants.
no comme r cial recreational
facilities. and only a handful of
clothing shops .
Cannon was criticized last
sum mer by the Irvine City Coun-
cil after the preparation of a city
staff report indicating that
Irvine was nearly last among
Orange County cities in terms of
retail acreage per 1,000 resi-
dents.
At that time, Cannon promised
that much of Irvine's retail
needs would be fulfilled in three
projects which would open in
1982. Now he says it will be 1983
before these projects open . They
are :
The South Wood bridge
Shopping Center along Alton
Parkway, where 96 stores are to
be built.
Univers ity Town Center
I Phase I l across Campus Drive
from UC Irvine, where 284,000
squa re feet of commercial de-
velopment including a 250-room
hotel and a theater are to be con-
structed.
The Home Improvement
Center at Culver and Irvine
Center drives, where 41 stores
including lumber outlets,
furniture stores and home
furnishing shops are to be built.
The opening dates on these
projects have been delayed until
1983, Cannon said during a re-
cent interview.
Cannon said the delays are
caused by slowness in retail
sales and consequent reluctance
by retail merchants to commit
to build stores in Irvine. High In-
terest rates add to the problem,
he said.
Irvine Chamber of Commerce
President Larry Hoffman hu a
different explanation for the
lack of retail development.
Addressing the Irvine City
Council late last month. Hoff.
man claimed the Irvine Com-
pany, instead of fostering retail
development on its land, la "alt-
tln1 on the land" and hoplnf to
thereby cash ln on Inflationary
lncreues ln land value.
Through lease arran1ementa,
the Irvine Company exacta a
ahare ol the profits from retail
outlet.a that locate on company
land.
One city councilman aald
prldt.,ly that thia aet up tend.a to
dlscoura1e the openln1 of retail
eatabllahment.1 lhat don't re.Use
lar1e initial profit.I.
A company 1pollesman said
leaH UTaqelnel\ta are tailored
to the lndlvi .. al bulln"' and
aren't 0¥er~•Nldla1.
Cannon dmlled that tM compu1 ti ~DI land alld
waltlnl f« tt to .,,nd ... la
value.
He aald ~ alUlouib lllll'e
bave bllD dela,I tia ~ lrYtal
Company retall cltftlo.._
plan1, lrvtne resklenU Min a lot
more places to shop, eat a.Ga
drink than they did al this tirtj,e_
last year.
One project for which lrv!Qe
city oHicials are a n x iously
awaiting Is so-called lrvi¥
Center, a 480-acre commercial
<'enter including a "Super Shop-
ping Mall" to be built on the
triangle of land formed by the
Santa Ana , San Diego and
Laguna freeways
Cannon said he 1s hoping Ul)tt
some portions of Irvine Centilt
will open by 1984. But the Irvine
Company has yet to announce
whether any major departm~t
sto res have agreed to locate
there 1
It 1s known that the lrvilM
Company has been having tr®-
bl e securing these commi.t·
ments, since there are already,;:1
number of shopping malls in tbe
area including Fashion lslar'4,
Laguna Hills Mall. Mission V\e,
jo Mall and South Coast Plaza,t.
Irvine City officials say that
sales tax generated by bull:
nesses in the city makes up ~
. largest part of the revenue from
which municipal operations are
funded.
City officials also say that lack
of sales-tax generating retail
establishments could restrict
planned development of resideii-
tial housing tracts which don't
pay for themselves in terms of
property taxes.
RICHARD GREEN
Publish e r
quits Irv ine
publications . j'
Mike Sommer has resigned a
publisher of the Irvine Wort
News weekly newspaper, Ne
Worlds magazine and Irvine T
World Magazine, according to a
spokesman for the Irvine Com-
pany which owns the publica•
lions.
Sommer. 45, of Irvine, was
named publisher of the thret
publications in January. He has
announced the formation of a
nationwide company specializ-
ing in media, law, politics. '°""
ernment, public relations and
corporate psychology cou~.
ing, said Irvine Compaiir
spokesman Martin Brower. •
The company. which hasP;~
been given a name, will have pf,
rices In Newport Beach, Beve~
Hills, San Diego. Washln1'9d
D.C. and New York Clfty,,
Brower said . 1,1•
Eric Shuman, editor of t.Pe
Irvine World News, will becoQle
acting publisher of that publiH·
lion and Irvine TV World. Irvine
Company Vice President Tom
Wilek will serve as actin1
publis her of New WorldJ,
Brower said.
Sommer, who resigned Fri-
day, came to the publications
after about 20 years or ex·
perience u a reporter and news
director for ABC radio and
televlak>n on the network level
and on network-a ffiliated s~.
tlona, accordinc to Irvine WoWa
News Clly Editor Don Dennis.'·
. -.. --.............. ---. _._..~~-..... ........................ -~ ............................... ----
Less water te cost MesQDs mOre?
Chamber warned of rising rates in pitch· for proposed Peripheral Canal
TllllOUGB SLEET, SNOW, ETC • ...: CertaiDly a lot-of
folks in our reaton were wriOllnl tbelr baDda Monday
when it became clear we faced tbe threat of a poetal
•trike.
People who are expectlng a lot of bills in the mail
were wrlnging their bands in glee.
Others, who were looking for a check trom Uncle
George in Antioch, who'd owed the $125 for two years,
were wringing .hands ln frustration.
· Further, it was in-
teresting how some of
• • the local postmasters of ,_ ..... ______ ~ our Orange Coast re-
Jll MURPHllf ,~It ~:~trik!~!:f.ttng to
They all said the
mail would go through anyway. But how?
WELL, COSTA MESA Postmaster Lyle Verplanck
fiatly declared, "The mail will go through one way or
another."
Now that was an interesting choice of words. That's
how numerous people feel about how the mail goes
through under ~mal conditions.
One way or another, that is.
Meanwhile, Huntington Beach Postmaster James
O'Hara suggested, '1At this stage of the game, I don't
know what to expect ... "
Alas, that may have conftrmed some other suspi-
cions.
Most of the Orange Coast postal authorities said there
was a contingency plan for getting the mail delivered.
But none of them seemed to know what that plan is.
Well, now we can probably all agree on that. It's like
"No ioonder the &ergeant put mi on tlifa ma11 Cklivery route"
Tb• decrea1ed tap water
available in 1• will coet Cotta
lleaana about 24 percent more
than they pay now, water of.
flcial1 bave warned ln 1aln·
lnl Chamber of Commerce 1up-
port for the state's propoeed
Peripheral Canal. ·
But 1ettin1 the amount of
water each llesan uae1 every
day, about 180 1allona, may be
lmpoaaible, aatd Karl Kemp,
manager of Mesa Conlolldated
Water DiJtrict.
The average houaehotd paya
about $11 a month for water
now. The bill will be cloeer to
$13.65 in 1985 and probably
higher in later years.
Kemp and district board
member Henry Panian predict-
ed water raUonlng durinc dry
years -about every fourth year
-even if the city's populaUon
remains static.
Costa Mesa, they explained to
chamber directors last week,
imports about 75 percent of its
water needs.
That water flows through the
state aqueduct from Northern
California and from the
Colorado River via Metropolitan
Water Di.strict feeder lines.
More than half the water Im·
ported from the Colorado River
wlll go to ArUona beginning ln
1985 as the result or U.S.
Supreme Court rulings on water
rights. Panian noted.
And, be added, there ls a good
chance that much of the
Northern California water that
suppUes Orange County might
be diverted in future years to
Los Anteles County.
The reuon, Panian sald, is a
lawsuit fileCI by conservation
Statue unveiled
RIVERTON, Wyo. CAP ) -A
bigger-than-life sculpture of the
famed lndian guide Sacajawea
has been unveUed on the campus
of Central Wyoming College.
The bronze sculpture wu shown
for the first time by arti1t Harry
Jack son, who works out of bis
Wyoming Foundry Studios in
Cody, Wyo., and Camaoire,
Italy.
croup1 who are attemptml to.
curtail Loe An1ele1' water lm·
ports from the Owen• Valley,
where Mono Lake la
climlnllhin1.
Loa Angeles, he aald, will tum
to the MWI> for water lf the ault ii successful. And, be added, Loe
Angeles bu the vote• on the
MWD board required to divert
Orange County water.
Panlan said Costa Mesa's
water supply could be cut at
least 20 percent.
That would mean some form
of rationing.
The possible silver lining to
the water cloud, both alJ'eed,
would be state conatructlon of
the controversial $6 million
Peripheral Canal.
The canal would divert water
flowing to sea, through the
HEADS RECRUITING -
Capt. Glen M. Robbe bas
been named commander of
the U.S. Army's South
Orange Coun~ Recruiting Area. He will supervise
recruiters in Costa Mesa,
Huntington Beach, Laguna
Hills , Santa Ana and
Orange.
Featb•r and Sacramento
rivers, to the 1tate aqueduct
system and on to Southern
California.
That cmal, in the ptanntnc for
15 yean now. hu been approved
by state leaders Md contested
by Nor1Mn> CalllOC'Dla 1roup1.
Northern Calllornlan1 fear
water dJvenion will cause ocean
water to aeep into the river's
delta system, ruining cropt and
the water required for many ln·
duatrles there.
Conservationists and wildlife
advocates.also fear the effect of salt water intrwsion on fish and
animals.
The Peripheral Canal issue,
considered by Panian and Kemp
to be critical to the city's future,
goes to state voters u a referen·
dum measure either in Nov·
Plaque due
for bridge
in Newport
A $900 bronze plaque is to be
mounted on the soon-to-be com-
pleted Pacific Co.st Highway
bridge in Newport Beach
although several city coun-
cilmen doubt any motorists will
have time to read it.
"It's a mystery to me why we
need it,·• asserted Councilman
Paul Hummel. "Who's going to
read it?"
He suggested that tbe bridge
contractor or the state should
pay for the plaque, not the city.
Two other council members
agreed with him.
"It's their bridge so if there's
to be a plaque it should be their
obligation," he said.
But Hummel ended up on the
losing side as the council agreed
to purchase the 16-by·l8-incb
plaque which la to bear the city's
official seal and the slogan.
·'The Porthole of Time.··
ember or next June.
The date dependl on a ruUDc •
by Gov. Brown, Kemp noted. ••
Canal or no canal, wba...._.
water is available for Import "1
1985 wUI coat dearly, .p ......
added. •
Tbat'a when contracts • "-!-
Hoover Dam electrldtr. ••4
negotiated ln the 1930t, are 'f •
for renegotiation. :
Las Vegas, Pboenlll ~:-: •
Tucson seek much of the ..-.r·)
now used to pump water ow..:•!
mountains for the downblll n. ·
to Southern California.
"MWD pays SS an acre foot-.,::.
pump it now," Panian noted. ·:·
Conservative e1tlmate1 lD!· ·-
dicate the price will 10 to ,it"· ;
least $4S an acre foot, but .,.-. ·
estimates double that ftiure. ..:::
NEW DIRECTOR -Art Luna1 •
a 1976 USC graduate, bu as-
sumed the post of executive· ·
director of the Orange Coun-
ty Housing Authority. Luna'
picked from a field of 1i?,
take& over for John
Avitabile, who resigned lut
January.
a lot of contingency plans. Somebody has it, somewhere.
But who? Who?
Clearly, a postal strike is really going to put a crimp
in the style of a lot of people who are getting dunned for
overdue bills.
Park development
plan draws support
Several city officials later
opined that traffic generally
moves so slowly through the
area that many drivers would
likely have time to read the pla-
que.
7 awarded
scholarships
Seven area hjgh school seniors
have received $1 ,000
scholarships each from the
Irvine Company in recognition
of outstanding com munity
leadership.
Mesa to furul·.
outreach for
adult center
With funding from the city of.
Costa Mesa, a day care center
has started an outreach pro: .
gram to see if the city'.A
chronically ill are in need of. .
services provided by the Harbol; ' ·
Area Adult Day Care Cente.r. ·
BOW IN THE WORLD are you going to be able to tell
them, "Oh yes that ... Well, I just put your check in the
mail ... "
A $16 million development pro-
posal for Huntington Beach Cen-
tral Park baa been
recommended as a way to
generate future revenue to
maintain the city's SO-park
system.
Another statement of lasting interest came out of
Washington, D.C., Monday when Postmaster General
William F. Bolger expressed great confidence that there
would be no postal workers strike. The city's Community
Services Commission. which
recommends parks a nd recrea·
ti on policy. has unanimously sup-
ported a private consultant's pro-
posal to put recreational attrac-
tions in the 297 -acre park.
He declared that the people should still continue to
use the U.S. Mail.
Now, I ask you, what did he expect us to do? Kick
over to his competitors? Would we all start mailing out of
Canada overnight?
DOES BOLGER TIUNK the pony express is still run-
ning him a heavy race? Wells Fargo retired the
stagecoaches a long time ago and went into banking.
The proposed attractions in·
elude a 111-acre golf course, a
hotel complex and conference
center, a six-field baseball and
sports co mplex, a YMCA gym.
nasium, a restaurant, a recrea-
tional vehicle campground, a
fishing lake, an arcade, and a
pizza parlor, u well as the exist·
ing shooting range and adventure
playground.
Some reports had it that if all the postmen and
postwomen strike, the government might call upon the u .s. Army to deliver au the mail.
You can just imagine how that might work out. All
the majors will stay in the post offices. The captains will
get to drive all the trucks. The lieutenants and sergeants
wilJl un out with the platoons and assign the routes.
The commiaaloo also recom-CORPORALS WILL GET all the routes with sorority
houses and saloons. Privates First Class will deliver to
fiat residential areas. Mesan named
to honor roll And the yardbirds? Why, they'll be delivering at all
the places up the hills where the sign on the 1ate says:
Dean M. Schmidt of Costa
Mesa hu been named to tbe
chancellor's honor roll for the
1prin1 aemestel' at the UnlvenJ-
ty or Colorado, Boulder.
"Beware of Vicious Dog!"
NEWS
from all over California is
rounded up each day in the
···"" -0
0
-c
HYPNOSIS IS THI llY ....,....., .... , ... Ult
........ IMl1TNll
... COl.aTA'ftOM
141-1961
The honor roll recognizes atu·
dents who earned a perfect •.o
1rade point average for the
aemeater.
<o/ieK<S On ®
r:vental HealtJi
===~~~=========~i er QMAU WINKL.U, D.D.I .
WHY A BRIDGE?
11 It really necestary
to repl1ce adult's
ml11ln1 teeth with a
nxed bridle or partlal
denture1 'the answer f•
1 definite YES! Tbe re1aont are qulte 1lmple.
Wb• • tooth ll lottl
th• ad,t.eent teillh ana tbe tootb (1bove or
below) •dt ads u • btt•r· IOM the 1up and
1ta utata~ .. e• nleb ... loet tooth o••• tro•lded. The ,......., .... .w ...
tubJeet to •••1 probleau aue~ u irlftla1, abo4rmall1 eapo1 .. deea7-pro1•
........ W'Ol"ll "' all, ptrl .... &al clllHH.
lTh 1l111lt lafltH ,.... "' ......... .....,.
...... .._ .....
The lou ol Just one · tooth, ll not replaced by
a rlxed bri"e or parUal denture, wUl more than likely, ulUmately cauae
the Jou ol more and more t.eetb. ID maa1
paUenta, It I• onl1 a
miller ol Umt Uftt1.I the
cltltrudion la complete.' The dmtal arch wu
dellped by nature to
have a eomplN Mt ol
teeth -OM htlpln• and 1roteetln1 tllt otb•r. 1'eplaetn1 ml11ln1 teetb wltb a dental
a_ppUuee wtll maintain Wtdellln .. ...nu
)'OUr 1mile and •ll'lity toeat~y ..
-.. ..........
mends an equestrian center with
rental horses available to the
public.
The City Council will bold a
public hearing on the con·
troversial development pro·
posals next month.
A group of nearby residents
oppose development in the park,
located off Golden West Street
between Slater and Ellis
avenues. The park presently is a
natural setting of trees, shrubs.
hills and lakes.
According to the proposal by
Ultrasystems Inc., of Irvine, the
development plan requires ac·
quirint 75 additional acres near
Ellis Avedue. Proposed attrac·
lions would generate about S12.7
miJUon over the next 10 years.
according to the consultant.
City officials say voters would
have to approve a bond to pay
for much of the $16 million de-'
velopment costs.
Four of the scholarships have
been awarded to Irvine resi·
dents Christopher Cassady and
Suzy Krueckeberg from
Uni versity High School and
Mary C. Egan and Elizabeth
Denney of Irvine High School.
Newport Beach scholarship
recipients include Mark Evans
and Linda Timmons of Corona
del Mar High School and Joanne
M. Martin of Newport Harbor
High School.
Dorm adviser
Debby Benevento of Hunt·
ington Beach has been selected
as r esident a dviser for
dormitories at the University of
Redlands.
Although the center serves tb_e
Orange Coast area, the new ou.t·
reach service is restricted to
Costa Mesa residents. ' · '
Under the service, a cent.et
representative provides asaes8 :
ment interviews in places 5,!f J.
as mobile home parks and tr '
~rsons there to provide refer·
rals to the adult day care center,
according to Dr. Dan San~.
director.
The center provides care for
mostly elderly patients who are
isolated due to confusion, dlS· ·
orientation, suffering memory
failure, have had strokes l>r
other similar problems, San4i
said. '
He said of the center's 26
clients, 14 are Costa Mesa resl· •
dents. For more informatlOlj, ·
call 548-9331.
A11H11t1/ Rotr
Tnday~ intere84 ratt'
guar.nteed for
the term by
Amerbn Savings
American Savirl{J.S 1J<1YS high interest with safety.
.... ? ............................... ,., ...... & ..
Bae~ by Securities o( the U.S. or U.S. Government ~a. 'ftllS OBUGATION 18 N<YI' A SAVINGS
ACCOUNT OR DEPOSIT AND 18 NOT IN8l1RED
BY THE FED&RAL SAVINGS AND LOAN
INIURANCB~RA1'10N.
SAVINGS
... • • •\.t• •••• . -. ... .. ...... . .. -.
I "'
DlllJPlllt
TUESDAY, JULY 21 , 1981
COMICS 84 • TELEVISION 86
FEATURES 812
Efficiency and effectiveness must
be measured to determine product-
ivity ... BS
0
0
I
Mesa chamber raps McFarland remarks
Costa Mesa's Chamber of
Commerce has asked City Coun·
ci lm a n Ed McFarl a nd t o
apologize for remarks about
c h amber m embers who. he
says, buttonhole council mem
bers at ~arties.
Cha mber directors also are
see kin g an apolo&y Cor
McFarland's comments indicat·
ing the cha mber isn't concerned
with the problems small busi
nessmen have with their ad
vertising signs
The action by chamber direc·
tors followed published state·
ments in which the councilman
took issue, with Councilwoman
Norm a Hert:iog's proposal to
modify the city's seven-year-old
signin~ ordinance.
The councilman said Monday
he'll confer with his wife over
the sought-after apology, but
that he doubts he'll offer one.
Mc Farland. a longtime sup-
porter of the city's cont:-oyerslal
ordinance designed eventually
lo rid the community of com·
mercial sign clutter, said he is
entitled to his own opinions.
He called published reports re·
garding t hose opinions "a c·
c urate" and claimed some
chamber members are euilly ~f
misreading his statements .
T he tiff follows a proposal ear·
ly this month by Councilwoman
Norma Hertzog to modify the
unpopular sig n ordinance
scheduled to rid the city of
larger s igns over a 10-year
amortization period ending in
1984.
Mrs. Hertzog wants to allow
any sign legally erected before
1974 to stand until the business it
advertises changes hands Then.
the sign would make way for a
new. smaller message board.
Mc Farland calls the plan .. a
bunch of marlarkey."
McFarland contends that
"businesses such as Mark C.
Bloome. Fedco and Mobil Oil
won't ever change hands "
He contended in a published
article that Mrs. Hertzog's pro·
posed ordina nce chanae "would
be discriminatory toward the
small businessmen the chamber
should be supporting. and I'm
upset that their concerns aren't
being considered ...
McFarland said the owners of
ne wer s mall firms must comply
wi th ordinances greatly limiting
the size of their signs while com·
petitors' older. larger signs will
remain m place
01.fenswe 1cords l1a ve beer1 removed from the tzle mural on front of .John \\/ayne Airport terminal buildmg
Airport's off ending
mural c leaned up
For 10 vcars . t he words
"s pade" a·nd "darkie" went
unnoticed on the figure or a man
in t he large ceramic tile mural
adorning the front or the John
W ayne Airport terminal
building.
Then last week. Lee Howard.
a s kycap. complained about the
tw o wo rds a nd ot he r s
apparently added by a vand~I
i o county airport operations
personnel.
Now. the offensive words are
gone. painted over with enamel
"J>aint lhat closely matches the
glazed finish of surrounding
tiles.
But Qffi c i a l s a r e s till
wondering why the words were
permitted in the firsl place, and
how so m any yea rs passed
without being observed.
And equally puzzling is why a
vandal went to the trouble to use
acid to remove some or the tile
glazing to add the othe r ethnic
s lur. an obscenity, and the
words "peace .. and "love."
The mural was added lo the
north e nd or the terminal
building by artist Martin Rudick
al a cost of S26,000 In the early
1970s.
maintenance personnel are
co n v inced t h a t so meone
deliberately stripped glazing off
other tiles to add the other
words.
Horn said the enamel paint is
blending in well with the rest of
the mural. lie said it probably
won't be neccessary to have new
tiles fabricated to replace the
painted areas
Police p robe
missing g old
Costa Mesa police and com·
pany security personnel are in·
vestlgating the disappearance of
about $4,500 worth or gold from
Western Digita l. Inc.
A corporation spokesman told
police this week that his firm.
which use9 the sold in manufac·
luring digital equipment, re·
celved a shipment of about 3.000
three·lnch Iona and •,11th·inch
wide sheets or tbe precious
m etal July 8.
Employees, he said. failed to
secure the ahipment.
DetaU of airport mural 1hows fi{IMre of man that too•
defaced with trords "~"and "darlde." Rudi ck , who repo rted I y
resides in Toronto. Canada,
could not. be contacteCI today.
But Oeols Horn, -lrport ch.ier
or operations , Sllid hi s
inveatllaUon Indicates that the
word• ·•spade" •nd "darkle''
were part or the or l1 inal mural.
He note(! lt\al lM words were
S~seect held in Mesa shooting
glazed over. •
Horn pointed out that the
words were d ifficult to see,
primarily because of their amall
site.
"I've walked by u..re I don't
know hoW maay Um•, and I
never noticed \hetn," Hont titl.
J nsptcllon of the mural eond_... after Howard ralMd
hit com,lalnt revealed th• other
obJecttonabl• w~
W b ~ l •-t • r "' l n I i t '"lpeeu1~." Hom Hid he and
Police have arrested a 20·
year-old woman on 1u1plclon of
assault with a deadly weapon
followtna Friday'• shootins of
JamH Evert Spence, 25, of
Costa Mna.
&~ WM 1bot in Ute cbeet
and 11 les Frifty at hi• borne.
20lt Orn1e Ave.. wtth a .as.
callber platol durln1 an ar1u·
mtnt re1ardln1 outcall Mrvtee,
uld Colla lleu S1t. BUI
8eehtal.
at Fountain Valley Community
Hospital. •
Arrttted leas than nlne hour•
after the 3:40 p.m. 1hootin1 Fri·
day was Melanie Helen Gorman.
20. \¥ho ll1ted Costa Mesa'• Al'TI·
baasador Hotel as a temporary
addrett. Bechtel aald lnvHll1ator1
lffll Mta Gorman'• boyfriend,
David Gutierre11 30. al10 of tta. Ambuudor Hotel, ror question·
ln11n UM 1hootln1.
MIA o.tman .,., arrested at
la:ll 1.m . Saturdiy al lhe bOm•
of her parent.1 ln 1V111Ha ~Vt•·
alla police In cooperation with
Costa Mesa's lnvestlcauon.
Bechtel said the arrest
followed inform1llon received
by local lnvestlcators followln1
the Friday 1hootln1.
Spef'lce'a nei&bbors told of·
n cera Friday they, heard two
IUDlbola at the victim'• horM
and 11w a man and woman bur·
riedly leavt the house, Jump lnto
a car parked at curbtlde and
speed norUI on Oran,. Avenue.
M l11 Gorman l1 beint held ln
Onn1e County Jill w1lh ba11 set
1t 110,000. Bechtel 11ld
He charged that a "small,
semi·local group of cha mber
members buttonhole City Coun·
cil members al chamber mixers
. . . " in opposition lo the sign
ordinance.
Obvious ly angry over reports
o f Mc Farland's s tatements.
c ha mber President Ke nneth
Fowler told chamber directors
last week. "Al no lime have the
chamber mixers been used by a
local group . . to buttonhole
anything that the City Council
might have brought forth
··We r e sent Councilman
Mc Farland referring to these
mixers being used in this man·
ne r."
M c Farla nd said today ~e
stands on his "buttonhole" re-
mark
· · 1 get buttonholed.·· he said.
"I've gone lo those mixers. I
have a right to my opinion But·
tonholing to one may not be to
anothe r But I was buttonholed."
The ooinl. M cJo~arland said.
has been last in the hassle.
"I think the chambe r isn't
lookin~ at the new merchant
coming into town and is bowing
to the old merchant who wants
to keep his big sign "
-JERRY CLAUS BN
' I
Plant pollution·
tests ordered
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of U.e Dally l"llee 11.ttt
Testing for alleged pollution
by Narmco Materials Inc. was
ordered Monday night by the
Costa Mesa City Council after
residents in the neighborhood
complained of a variety of ill·
nesses and asked that the facili·
ty be shut down.
Th~ action followed a 30-day
inves tigation by city depar t·
men ts
Department s pokes m en re·
ported they have no concrete
evidence that vapors or other
contaminants are coming from
the plast ic manufacturing plant
at 600 Victoria St.
Acting City Manager Allan
Roeder said he will immediately
seek a public hearing before the
South Coast Air Quality Manage·
ment Dis trict on possible Health
and Safety Code violations and
request more air monitor ing by
the regiona1 agency.
Roeder is to return to the
council Aug. 3 with a list of other
possible actions. including the
costs or hiring private firms to
test for ground contamination.
water pollution and a ir pollution.
Ellen Winterbottom . Irvine at·
to rn ey represent i ng the
Chemical Action Neighborhood
Association <CANA >. said Mon·
day the coun cil's a ction fe ll
short of organization de mands.
"I'm somewhat encouraged
that some act ion ha s been
taken," she said. "But I'm not
entirely satisfi ed ..
Ms Winterbottom r epresents
CANA members in two pending
lawsuits.
Included is a federal court suit
in which three residents seek
c los ure of the pla nt under
federal health la ws .
Thf second s uit. fil ed last
Augus t in Or ange County
Super ior Court. is a class action
s u it seeking damages for ill·
nesses allegedly caus ed by
chemical contamination
During the s pecial public
hear ing Mond ay n ig ht . the
Irvi ne lawyer told council mem-
bers that recent surveys reveal
so to 70 percent or residents
questioned in the Victor ia Street
area report neurologicaJ prob·
lems . asthma. sore throats.
nausea. headaches and a cons-
tant fear of explosion
Dr. Paul Papenek, a Los
Ange les general practitioner
with t raining In environmental
toxicology. said lung tests re·
s uits in "some frightening
results."
Tes ts or nearly 50 residents
s howed lhat most suffer about 15
percent more breathing toss
than under normal conditions.
he said. ·
About 15 percent of those test·
ed. he said, have lost 20 percent
or their lung capacity.
He claimed tests indicate a
"serious r isk condition" sur·
rounding the j)lant constructed
in the 1940s before residences
were built in the area.
Narmco manager Robert
Stemmler told the council half or
the plant's manufacturing rune·
lions already ha ve been moved
lo the firm's new locaUon ln
Anaheim.
He ~d the rest of the opera.
lion with \he exception or
some administrative employees
are to be moyed out by the
end or the year.
The property la In escrow for
sal' to a condominium develop-
ment nrm.
He reminded council memben
that Air Qu1Uty Mana1ement
Dl1trlct lnta on ~everal oc·
caalorw, lMludin1 1 prolona-d
30-day period lut year. have all
conclUded tbat plant vapor and
P•rticulate emlalloal are well
within lecal ltenelaNa.
But a parade _.i_l:· re1htent1
cbar1ed Mandiy 'dllM that die
nel1bborhoclll ll ftW with nox·
lou1 dddn. •Pftlal&r at alPl
Mothers coroplalned that
water running from the plant In-
to cit y streets is red with pol~u·
tion and one woman who suffers
respiratory illness claimed her
car and furniture often 1s cov
e r e d with wh ite dus t s h e
believes comes from t he plant.
Gerald Bangert told the COW)•
cil that after living with ~is
parents for 20 years in t he
neighborhood he was advised by
his doctor ~ove
Smee le~-. he said. sores.in
his mouth have cleared up attd
he no longer s uffers ur inary and
intestinal illnesses. '
Resident J oan Lynch said sbe
has li ved for 10 years JUSt east Of
the factory that produces paru
for the aerospace industry
She said she c·onlends day and
night with fumes from the plant.
··But it's the medical side effed.S
of those fumes." s he com·
plained
"I was in excellent health
before I moved there "
Now. she said . she suffers a
number or illnesses.
"Don 't tell m e 1t is n't
Narmco ... s he charged. her
voice quivering.
Councilman Eric J ohnson said
he wants air testing at the plant
without alerting Narmco of·
fic ials. who. neighbors con·
tended. curtail operations when
testing is under way
Councilman Donn Hall satd
that 1f initial tests indicate prob1 lems at the plant. the city
s hould be prepared to conduct
others th roughout the
neighborhood •
Mayor Arle ne Schafer tol4
CANA me mbers. "We a rc con•
cerned about the health. safety
and welfare or the whole area."
I Mesan' s body·
was h es up
on HB b e a ch
The body of a 24 ·year·oJd
Costa Mesa man. who was last
seen Monday afternoon when be
was pulled under a wave wtiile
playing in the surf at. the mouth
of the Santa Ana River. was
found today off Huntington
Beach
Authorities identified the man
as Michael Samuels. a youth
counselor from Costa Mesa who
reportedl y vis ited the beach
area Monday with a friend.
Officials could provide no
further details on the man. t
State lifeguards in Huntington
Beach said a young girl s pott,ed
the body late this morning and
contacted authorities. , ,
The body was discovered off
the roast near Brookhurst
Street. roughly 300 yards north
of the river mouth.
Lifeguards In Newport Beath.
who coordinated search etroris.
said several persons reported
seeing the man riding a boo&ie
board in the river mouth.
One witness told life1uards he
saw the man flip over his board
and 10 under. He said the man
surfaced and tried to do1·paddle
to ahore but was• hit by 1ever1l
waves. ~
Lite1uard1 In Newport sitct
one person went to the m8*·i
aid, but lost 1i1ht of him Ml
breakers rolled in. t
A scuba d.Mn1 team waa db·
patched and searched the ria
but gave up after HY•HI houri.
II
Volunteer8 10-
• • ll
Voltmteen are Deeded to~-
lttff Golden Weal Collet' Ii
natural biltory muMum ln "-· tnston Bnch. 11....-patroae an Mtb:bll ...u .... ,... to Work .. "' cenu. tour,..._, and to Ml•lll
llP ........... ~ more ..,~
Uon call • m>.
••• zw • u www ...... 4 ....... ...-·~· +:;::a:;::it 4:Nlt*' f'!' 1" >*•P 'ft WP U\¥4iP4$0 U e f ;;pc S USFWP F PP •P ••••PO S tt PPS& a u s c a s
Less water to cost Mesans more?
Chamber warned of rising rates in ¢tch for proposed Peripheral Canal •' •• ..
TBJlOUGR SLEET, SNOW, ETC. -Certainly a lot of
folkl in our region were wrlnllnl their. banda Monday
when it became clear we faced the threat of a poetal
strike. .
People who are expecting a lot of bills in the mail
were wringing their handa in glee.
Others, who were looking for a check from Uncle
George in Antioch, who'd owed the $125 for two years,
were wringing hands in frustration.
· Further, lt was in·
terestlng bow some of
the local postmasters ol --------~..... our Orange Coast re· Tll MURPllll ~~ ~~~!~:::,tmg to
They all said the
mail would go through anyway. But how?
WELL, COSTA MESA Postmaster Lyle Verplanck
flatly declared, ''The mail will go through one way or
another."
Now that was an interesting choice of words. That's
how numerous people feel about how the mail goes
through under normal conditions.
One way or another, that is.
Meanwhile, Huntington Beach Postmaster James
O'Hara suggested, "At this stage of the game, I don't
know what to expect ... ''
Alas: that may have confirmed some other suspi·
cions.
Most.of the Orange Coast postal authorities said there
was a contingency plan for getting the mail delivered.
But none of them seemed to know what that plan is.
WeU, now we can probably all agree on that. It's like
··No wonder the sergeant put. mi 0n thu mail delivery route''
The decreued lap waler
avallab&e ln lil85 will co.t Coeta
Menna about U percent more
than tbty pay now, water of.
flclala bave warned In 1ain·
ln1 Chamber of Commerce aup.
port for the at.le's proposed
Peripheral Canal.
Bul •ettlnt the amount of
water each Meaan \lies every
day, about la> ••lions, may be
lmpoaalble, said Karl Kemp,
manager of Mesa Consolidated
Water District.
The average bo\llehold pays
about $11 a month for water
now. The bill will be closer to
$13.65 in 1985 and probably
higher in later years.
K e mp and district board
member Henry Panian predlct-
ed water raUonin• during dry
years -about every fourth year
-even ll the city's population
remains static.
Costa Mesa, they explained to
chamber directors last week,
Imports about 75 percent of its
water needs.
That water nows through the
state aqueduct from Northern
Ca lifornia and from the
Colorado River via Metropolitan
Water District feeder lines.
More than half the water im·
ported from the Colorado River
will go to Ariiona beginning in
1985 as the result of U.S.
Supreme Court rulings on water
rights, Panlan noted.
And, be added, there is a good
chance that much of the
Northern California water that
supplies Orange County might
be diverted in future years to
Los Angeles Counly.
The reason, Panian said, is a
lawsuit filed by conservation
Statue unveiled
RIVERTON, Wyo. CAP> -A
bigger·tltan·llfe sculpture of the
famed Indian guide Sacajawea
has been unveiled on the campus
of Central Wyoming College.
The bronze sculpture was shown
for the first time by artist Harry
Jackson, who works out of his
Wyoming Foundry Studios in
Cody, Wyo., and Camaoire,
Italy.
1roupe who are attempUq to.
curtail Loa An1elea' water lsn· ports from the Owens Valley,
where Mono Lake (1
dJmlnishln1.
Loa Angeles, he aatd, wlll turn
to the MWD tor water ii the ault
· la successful. And, he acjded, Lot
Angeles hu the votes oa t.be
MWD board required lo divert
Orange CQunty water.
Pantan said Costa Meta'•
water supply could be cut at
least 20 percent.
That would mean some form
of rationing.
The possible silver Unlnl to
the water cloud, both •&reed.
would be state conatructioo of
the controversial $6 million
Peripheral Canal.
The canal would divert water
flowing to sea, through the
HEADS RECRUITING -
Capt. Glen M. Robbe has
been named commander of
the U.S . Army 's South
Orange County Recruiting
Area. He wall supervise
recruiters in Costa Mesa,
Huntington Beach, Laguna
Hills , Santa An a and
Orange.
Featber aad Sacramento
rlvera. to the state aqueduct
ayatem and on to Southern
California.
That canal, in the plann.tnc for
lS yean now, bas been approved
by atat.e leaders and contested
by Northem California 1ro\lpe.
Northern Callfornlana fear
water diversion wUl cause oc.an
water to seep into the river's
delta system, ruining crops. and
the water required for many in·
duatriee there.
Conservationists and wildlife
advocates.alto fear the effect of
salt waler \ntruaion on fish and
animals.
The Peripheral Canal issue,
considered by Panian and Kemp
to be critical to the city's future,
goes to state voters as a referen·
dum measure either in Nov·
Plaque due
for bridge
in Newport
A $900 bronze plaque is to be
mounted on the lU)On·to·be com·
pleted Pacific Coast Highway
brid ge in Newport Beach
although several city coun·
cllmen doubt any motorists will
have time to read it.
"It's a mystery to me why we
need it," asserted Councilman
Paul Hummel. "Who's going to
read it?"
He suggested that the bridge
contractor or the slate should
pay for the plaque. not the city.
Two other council members
agreed' with him.
"It's their bridge so if there's
to be a plaque ll should be their
obligation," he said.
But Hummel ended up on the
losing si~e as the council agreed
to purchase the 16-by·l8·inch
plaque which is to bear the city's
official seal a nd the slogan,
"The Porthole of Time."
ember or nut. June. :
The date depeada oo a ~ ;
by Gov. Brown, Kemp noted. .
Canal or no canal, what.eve' ;
water la available for import Iii)' l
1985 will coat dearly. i»aniaa :
added. :
That's when contract• for :
Hoover Dam electrlclly,:
ne•ot1ated ln the 1930s, are • : for renegotiation. :
Las Vegas, Phoenix and :
Tucson seek much of the PGtW•
now used to pump water °* . mountains for the downhill ,._, ;
to Southern Callfomla. :
''MWD pays SS an acre foot '°·
pump it now," Pania.n noted. :
Conservative eatlmalea la· :
dicate the price will 10 to at-;
least "'5 an acre fool, but some•:
estimates double that figure. : ,.
NEW DIRECTOR -Art Luna,
a 1976 USC graduate, bas 115·
sumed the post of executiv,~
director of the Orange Coon, -
ty Housing Authority. Luna.·
picked from a field of 1151·
takes over for Jot)n·
Avitabile, who resigned last
January.
..
Mesa 10 fund···
a lot of contingency plans. Somebody bas it, somewhere.
But who ? Who?
Clearly, a postal strike is really going to put a crimp
in the style of a lot of people who are getting dunned for
overdue bills.
Park development
plan draws support
Several city officials later
opined that traffic generally
moves so slowly through the
area that many drivers would
likely have time to read the pla·
que.
7 awarded
scholarships
Seven area high school seniors
have received $1 ,000
scholarships each from the
Irvine Company in recognition
of outstanding community
leadership.
outreach for ·
adult center :'.'
With funding from the city of
Costa Mesa, a day care centtt
has started an outreach pro-
gram to see if the city's•
chronically iU are in need of
services provided by the Harbor
Area Adult Day Care Center.
HOW IN THE WORLD are you going to be able to tell
them, "Oh yes that . . . Well, I just put your check in the
maiJ ... "
Another statement of lasting interest came out of
Washington, D.C., Monday when Postmaster General
William F. Bolger expressed great confidence that there
would be no postal workers strike.
He declared that the people should still continue to
use the U.S. Mail.
Now, I ask you, what did be expect us to do? Kick
over to his competitors? Would we all start mailing out of
Canada overnight?
OOF.S BOLGER THINK the pony express is still run·
ning him a heavy race? Wells Fargo retired t he
stagecoaches a long time ago and went into banking.
Some reports had it that if all the postmen and
postwomen strike, t he government might call upon the
U.S. Army to deliver all the mail.
You can just imagine how that might work out .. All
the majors will stay in the post offices. -The captains will
get to drive all the trucks. The lieutenants and sergeants
will run out with the platoons and assign the routes.
CORPORALS WILL GET all the routes with sorority
houses and saloons. Privates First Class will deliver to
fiat residential areas.
And the yardbirds? Why, they'll be delivering at all
the places up the hills where the sign on the gate says:
"Beware of Vicious Dog!"
NEWS
from all over California is
rounded up eac h day in the · · llilJ Pillf
·"'"11 HYPNOSIS IS THI llY ..,,. •• ,,.,, .... ., y_. Uh
*MB MM IMS1mll'I
NM c:otm&TATIOM -
141-1961
A $16 million development pro-
posal for Huntington Beach Ceo·
tral Park bas been
recommended as a way to
generate future revenue to
maintain the city's 50-park
system.
The city 's Community
Services Commission, which
recommends parks and recrea·
tion policy, bas' unanimously sup.
ported a private consultant's pro-
posal to put recreational attrac·
lions in the297 ·acre park.
The proposed attracUons in·
elude a lll·acre golf course, a
hote l complex and conference
center, a six·fleld baseball and
sports complex. a YMCA gym-
nasium, a restaurant, a recrea·
tional vehicle campground, a
fishing lake, an arcade, and a
pliza parlor, as well as the exist·
ing shooting range and adventure
playground.
The commiuion also recom·
Mesan named
to honor roll
Dean M. Schmidt of Costa
Mesa has been named to the
chancellor's honor roll Cor the
sprin1 semester at the Unlversl·
ty of Colorado, Boulder.
The honor roll recognizes stu·
dents who earned a perfect •.o
grade point average for the
semester.
WHY A BRIDGE?
u tt rully necesaaey
to replace adult '1
ml11ln1 teeth with a
fixed briqe or partial
denture? The antwer l1 a definite YESI The
rea1on1 are quite
shnple.
When a tooth la Iott,
the adjacent teeth and
the tooth C above dr
below) Wblch act. u a bkln• pertlW, ION tM
tupport, 1trenllb U'd
atablUaln• Influence wblcb the lost lootb o•ce~ovlded . Th• r-.a ~wW-1ubjec t o many
p r oblem• 1ucb u
dr lftla1, abnormelly
expoaed deof·proae .,... .... wont al all,
,.rlod•tal dlaeaH .
<Tbe 1la1l• lar1Ht ea ... of toMll 1oet .._ ....,.,,
The tau ot Just one ·
tooth, u not replaced by
1 rtxed bridae or part1al
denture, will more than
likely, ultimately cause
the lou of more and
more teeth. In many paUenta, It Is only a
matter ol Ume unw the
d•t.rud.lon la tomplete. ·
The dental an!h w11 detlfned by oatur-. to
have a complete Ht of
l.eth -one helpln1 &Ad protecUn1 the other. Replachtl mtuln1 tHtb with a dental ap_pUuee wm malata.19 thll dllltn u well u
your 1mOe and ablltt.J
to eat Jll'Ol*'1· ..
Ger.W ....... D.D.A. I
... Aunlll• ................
Ne ..... ..... .... : .... ..
mends an equestrian center with
rental horses available to the
public.
The City Council will hold a
public hearing on the con-
troversial development pro-
posals next month.
A group of nearby residents
oppose development in the park,
localed off Golden West Street
between Slater and Ellis
avenues. The park presently is a
natural setting or trees, shrubs,
hills and lakes.
According to lhe proposal by
Ultra.systems Inc .. of Irvine, the
development plan requires ac·
quiring 75 additional acres near
Ellis Avenue. Proposed atlrac·
tions would generate about $12.7
million over the next 10 years,
according to the consultant.
City officials say voters would
have to approve a bond to pay
for much of the $16 million de·
velopment costs.
Four of the scholarships have
been awarded to Irvine resi·
dents Christopher Cassady and
Suzy Krueck e b e rg from
University High School and
Mary C. Egan and Eliiabeth
Denney of Irvine High School.
Newport Beach scholarship
recipients include Mark Evans
and Linda Timmons of Corona
del Mar High School and JoaMe
M. Martin of Newport Harbor
High Sc~J.
Dorm adviser
Debby Benevento of Hunt·
lngton Beach has been selected
as resident adviser f or
dormitories at the University of
Redlands.
Although the center serves the·
Orange Coast area, the new out·
reach service is restricted to
Costa Mesa residents.
Under the service, a center
representative provides assess·
menl interviews in places sucl>
as mobile home parks and trailMs
persons there to provide refctr·
rals to the adult day care center.. ...-1
according lo Dr. Dan Sand,s, I
director. .
The center provides care for
mostly elderly patients who are
isolated due to confusion, 4'9-·
orientation, suffering memoQ.
failure, have had strokes <ti;
other similar problems. s~
said. /SH.
He said of the center's ~
clients, 14 are Costa Mesa resi·
dents . For more information.·
call 548-9331.
$1,000or11-.-8, 12 weeks
Ann#ol Rutr
1Mayll Ultere 1 ra1e
pnntttd kif
tht lfml by Amtrican Soivings
American SaviWJS 'J)ays high interest wiJJi safet,y. ·
1lle1111z1llleflm•h1nl •••••--lwla....,r•• .. ••••llf
8lcked by Securidrt of the U.S. oir U.S. ~nt
AaenQe1. THIS OBLIGATION 18 N<n' A SAVINGS
ACCOUNT OR DIP081t ANO 18 NOT ~StJRED
BY 'MIE FEO!RAL SAVINGS AND LOAN
INSURANCE CORPORATION.
Ptlndptl plua interest paid by Amerbn. S.W. at
matwfty. NO FEE, NO SERVICE CHARGE. A .... oo Cllli>rdl ntaident1 ~ lnterut flta .,.. •.dlill.
BrtnrmtJ benk or aavtnp ,. • ..,,.. W.'11 trader
the f\a ...
SAVINGS
,
(I;
I•
I ',
...... p • • • 0 0 a
J
0 c a o a ••••••• a a 42 4 5 a a as a
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tu.day, Jufy 21 . 1981 N
-V-Y -JS~.t ,,~ -1~ -" ~\II ~ .... 2' -1 ~= J.,._ ~ "'····· ft11H tt M~\lt .w.-y, t6V.+ v.
1"'+ IA
JD ••••.
0 -"' JOl4+ lr'~ ... .,\lo-
Dow Jones Final
OFF -6.08
CLOSING 934.41
Edgar Bronfman, chairman of Seagram, IP•
peared to have suffered a aUnging rebuke earlier lhn
year when he made an offer to buy St. Joe Mlnerala
for $45 a sbare. It seemed like a generous offer 1lnce
St. Joe's stock was selling at $28. But John Duncan.
chairman of St. Joe, spurned the overture, saying he
would rather liquidate the company than sell out to a
company like Seagram.
For Bronfman, that would seem to be humiliat-
ing. However, look at it this way. Seagram had
bought some St. Joe shares before it became clyr
that this deal ~ was not going r.
lo go through. ~; c.
And when St. ) ,
Joe, looking for k ~ somebody to ;;..-=m~ .. _.,,._.__ ____ _
rescue it from ll(Jll 111 .. IJZ the clutches of
Seagram ,
ended up in the hands of the California engineering
company, fo'luor In Irvine, it got $56 a share.
Bronfman promptly sold the St. Joe shares Sea-
gram had acquired, making a tidy profit of $10
million. Not bad for a couple of weeks' work.
A lot of people seem to be making money these
days in just thls manner.
Frank Lorenzo, chairman of Texas Air, the com-
pany that operates Texas lntemational Airlines and
New York Air, went to the mat with Pan American •
World Airways over National Airlines. Both wanted
to acquire National. In the end, Pan Am won out. But
Lorenzo didn't fare too poorly. By selling the Na·
lional shares it owned to Pan Am, Texas Air came
away with a profit of $60 million.
Lorenzo is now pursuing another air carrier. Los
Angeles·based Continental Airlines. This time he has
accumulated 48 percent of the stock. But the
employees of Continental have rallied their forces
and are making a valiant bid to buy the company
they work for. If they succeed and then buy the huge
chunk held by Lorenzo, you can bet the Texas
operator will once again come away with the consola·
lion prize of having made a neat profit in some short·
term trading.
It can be very satisfying to make money this way
because you're often getting it from people who bate
you. Look at Victor Posner, the Miami wbeeler-
dealer. In the early 1970s he bought a huge slug of
stock in Foremost·McKesson, the San Francisco·
based wholesaler and dairy company. The Posner
presence bothered the Foremost-McKesson people,
who went to great lengths to prevent him from ac·
quiring more stock.
Well, earlier this year Foremost-McKesson got
rid of the Posner influence by buying rum out. The
Posner.controlled company, Sharon Steel, had paid
around $30 million for its Foremost-McKesson
shares. Foremost-McKesson bought them b~ck for
$65 million.
Who won that fight -Foremost-McKesson or
Victor Posner?
It seems as ii it's worth it to a company to buy
out an unwelcome suitor just to get him off its back.
Chris-Craft. a company that makes boats and
operates TV stations, among other nefarious ac·
livities. recently paid Saul Steinberg's Reliance
Group $12 million to by 300,000 of its own shares.
Reliance acquired the Chris-Crall shares last year.
Its profit on this little transaction: $4.5 miUion.
Carl Icahn, a New York investigator, made a
move last year to gain control of Ham'mermill Paper.
acquiring an 11 percent stake in the company for
about $21 million. Hammermill fought Icahn fiercely.
Now it's buying the shares he owns for S30 milUon.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
... VCfll( 11'1'1 -The -"8 .... -.. -"°"' ..... '~----.. ._ .......... ---.. --et1 jlir09nl of Clleft09 r_.o-OI ,._ __ ... ....,._., ___ ....
-,.. • ..,.._. cl\ano-• ••• ,.,. -'"-'-~ ... ,..._ CiOeHlt ~ -...., .• -..-.
IOll CINS
.... 'tOM ·~ -,.,... ... ... ,,, ........ _..... .. ~ ....... .
METALS
NEW YOAK (AP) -$901 Mfll•rr-
,,,.lal llf'ICH -y; ee..er~centu PCMMI. U.S. detll-
lltna.
l.MilC2~• ........
Z* .... cllflla • pollfld. e1e11-. TlaP.-~W....c~w1-. • ._._.,.._~•PCMMl.N.Y . IMttcr9 ....... , ......
.... .._ .. to.•troyo1.,H.Y .
SILVER
----------··-
-·---· ---~ .------------.. -----
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tue1day. July 21 , 1981
Harp music champagne supper backdrop
H arp mu1ic and a s unset over the
ocean were the backdrop for an elegant
cbampaene supper hosted by the
Frienda ol the Pacifl~ Chorale, former-
ly the Irvine Muter Chorale. Jobn and Martha Killefer opened their
Corona del Mar home for the party, which was
held to help underwrite costs tor the 140-voice
group which begins its 14th season in October.
Guests at the $75-per-person affair sipped
an amber-colored Domalne Chandon cham·
pagne and enjoyed hot hors d'oeuvres before sit-
lind down to a dinner catered by Julia 's Child of
HAPPENINGS
glazed salmon with a creamy dill sauce, Ma
Maison chicken salad, tomatoes filled with
minted peas. deviled eggs and French roUs with
herbed butter.
RoWld white tables were set with beige
linen and arranged both indoors and on the
patio, with centerpieces of miniature pepper
plants and greenery In terra cotta pots created
by the host.
WhiJe diners were finishing a dessert of
fresh raspberry tarts, Chorale President Jim
Dunning spoke to the group about the organiza-
tional transition connected with the name
change and the chorale's hopes for performing
in the future Orange County Music Center.
Officers ser ving with him include Helen
Wardner, Bob James, Frank Gillespie and Jim
McBride.
Diners didn't linger over coffee. however.
because the alter-dinner entertainment was the
Laguna Beach Pageant of the Masters.
Special parkinl( was provided close to the
festival (l'OW'da for the show, which re-creates
famous paintln1s and sculptures wltb Uve
models.
A second show at the open-alr theater was
the lunar ecllpte wbJch occurred that eveninc.
Honorary chairmen for the party were Mr.
Don Woodward and Mra. Robert Larsen. Guetts
included Kae and LouJae Ewln1, Phil and Mary
Lyons, Ken and Artie J ohnson. Mr. and Mrs.
Alec Perkins and Mr. and Mrs. Rlcbard
Brockmeyer.
E veryone needs a friend, and now the
Newport Beach City Arts Commission
has a whole aroup of them.
Started two Y.ears ago, the Friends of
the Newport Beach City Arts Commission re·
cently elected Beryl Mellnkoff to serve as presl·
dent.
She spent four years on the commission . In·
eluding two years as chairman, and ls pleased
to be able to help with tunding cultural project.a.
"The commission can't reach out for money
ror awards at the festival nor for the Labor Day
concert," she explained, "but the Friends can,
and now we will be helping financially In all
ways."
Serving with her are Ri chard Dixon, Gloria
Rowe, Dolores Gelberg, Margie Wood, Natalie
Perkins and Rita Gunkel.
Anyone interested In jolnlng the Friends
can write to them in care of the Newport Beach
City Hall.
T he Lagun a Beach Panhellenic As·
sociation will hold its annual summer
coffee at 10:30 a .m . on Aug. 5 in Laguna
Niguel.
Committee members for the meeting are
Mmes . Donald M ac Kin tos h , William
McDonald. Henry Brian, David Buck and
James Lutz
All national sorority men;ibers in the area
are invited and should make reservations with
Mrs . Ross Miller at 494-3820.
The 1eoup's summer project is assistance
for college-bound girls interested in sorority
membership.
Current rushing information is available by
calling Mrs. W. L. Piguet at 494·1869 or Mrs.
David Phillips at 494-5666
Phil and Mary Lyon1
(left) chat with Jim
Dunning at a benefU for
the Pacific Chorale held
in the Corona del Mar
home of J ohn and
Martha Kille/er.
M a ril yn Vosel and C h ici Martin,
owners of Safari Tours or Newport,
helped hostess a party cruise for the
Long Beach Chapter of the Crippled
Children's Society of Los Angeles County.
Hank Cordier of Newport Beach. owner of
the 57-foot Carri Cr aft, TM Bay Window. hosted
the group of crippled children and adults from
the Orange County and Long Beach areas.
Souvenir lovers contribute to hotel expense
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am writing to
you because I believe it is the best way to reach
the largest number of people. Tbe topic: Hotel
guests who like souvenirs.
After several years in the business I have en·
countered hotel guests who have lifted almost the
whole room -under the guise of wanting a
"souvenir." Th.is is what they tell you when asked
why they have 12 brand new towels (from the
storage room> and a bedspread in their luggage at
check-out time. I have seen departing guests try to
get away with pillows, pictures from the wall,
bathroom rugs and even tamps.
People complain that ~otels are expensive
these days. Well. one reason is because it is no
sm all deal to replace the items carried off by
"souvenir lovers." Why don't they Wlderstand that
the cost of the stuff they steal must be absorbed by
the consumer? It's the same way with shoplifting.
Please put this letter in your own words and
print it, Ann. -JUST SAM
DEll SAM: Your worcb are Just fine. Thanks
ANN LANDIRS
for sending them OD. If tbe lboe fits, wear It, folk.a,
but please leave the electric sboe·shlner ln tbe
room when you check out.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was fascinated by
that letter from the woman who was worried sick
because her self.employed husband hasn't paid in·
come taxes in over 15 years.
Why didn't you lel1 her about the Conscience
Fund established for people who have s tolen or
destroyed government property? Some con-
tributors reveal their identities, others do not. The
Treasury Department does not prosecute these
people. The money is deposited In the U.S.
Treasury,,,and Congress determines how it is
spent.
The Conscience Fund was originated during
President Madison's administration in lBll. Ao un·
identified person claimed he bad defrauded the
government and sent $5. Other deposits brought
the year's total to $250. No additional deposits
were made until 1927. Six dollars were received
from an anonymous "donor."
How about printing this letter and suggesting
the Conscience Fund for individuals who haven't
paid their taxes and want t.o sleep better at night?
-IN THE KNOW IN PRINCETON
DEAR PRINCE: I consulted with Wllllam E.
Simon, Secretary of the Treasury from 1972 to
1977, on tbla one.
Mr. Simon said be baa never heard of the
Conscience Fund. During bla term of service be
did, however, receive several modest cbeck1, SS'°
SHO, from good-hearted Amer1can1 wbo wanted to
help reduce the national debt. Re always returned
the money, thanked them for their patriotism and
suggested that they use the money to help elect
congressmen wbo would vote to 1pend lea• tban
the govemment takes In.
DEAR ANN LANDERS. I have been seeing a
very attractive guy. He is 29 years old and we
share many interests.
The problem: When Frank gets mad he does
violent things to himself. Two weeks ago he lost a
tennis match to a guy he really dislikes. He got so
mad be slammed his hand into the side of hi.a car
and almost broke his wrist. Yesterday, be kicked
the side of the house when his dog slipped out of
his collar and ran off somewhere. The kick result·
ed in a n ankle fracture. Any advice? -DOLLY
FROM HARTFORD
DEAR DOLLY : Frank must leam to u.aload
his anger in a non-des tructive, adult maaaer. He
needs counseling. My advice to you la -stay oat
of his way.
What '& pruduh' What's O.K? I/ you aren't iure, you
need some help. It's available m the booklet: "Necking
and Petting -What Are the Limits?" Mail your request
to Ann Landers. P 0 Bor 11995, Chfcago, Ill. 60611,
enclomag 5lJ cents Qnd a long, stam~d. sel/«ldreued
envelope.
If \Vives were lelllons. • • The wedding picture By ERMA BOMBECK
In Sacramento, history is in the making.
The Stale Assembly has just sent to the Senate
a "lemon" car bill that would give dissatisfied
automobile buyers a new car or their money back.
Good grief, people ! If this bill were passed. it
could signifi cantly lower the GNBP <Gross Na·
lional Blood Pressure) and elect a car salesman
king of the White House by 1984.
Everyone in the world has. at one time or
another, bought a lemon . We had a car once that
made you pucker when you kicked the tires.
Aries has ti01e
Wednesday, July 22
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES I March 21·April 191 Restnct1ons work lo your
uJumate advantage Time 1s on your side Judgment,
intuition are on largel New contacts lead to greater m
d ependence of thought. action Your position is
atrengthened
TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20> Answers sought from con·
fidentlal sources wtll become available. Your inquiries
bring desired results Ignore surface ind1caUons. U1g
deep ror motives. reasons and objectives
GEMINI <May 21 June 20> Token or aHection is re·
celved from one who aids m strengthening domestic posi·
lion. Accent on home. harmony. family reunion and
•peciaJ anniversaries
CANCER (June 21-July 221 · What appeared a "lost
cauae" is due to boomerang In your favor Key Is to be
selective. to utilize lessons learned in recent past. Focus
on career, prestige, business associate who has your best
Interest! at heart
LEO (July 23·Aug. 221: Abstract principles of law
come lnto sharp, clear focu11 Emphasis also on travel,
HOROSCOPE .
communication, publishing and long·di.stance call which
clarifid policy.
Vl&GO C Au1 . 23-Sept. 221: Tie loose ends, &et financial
affalra in order. look beyond the immediate and realize
your potential. Myalery wUI be resolved. Popularity in·
creua despite recent controveray.
LI.BM (Sept. 23-0ct 22): New approach la neceasary.
Red tape, taxe1, license reqlllrementa can boi you down
uatll you &et to heart of malt.era. Leo aids cause. Go
1low, maintain low prome, welcome addJtiooal aourcea of
tnformaUon.
ICOllPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Obtain valid hint from
Libra meua1e. If you don't know what to do, do nolhlnJ!
Jndeclsim la not neceuarlly evil. Know lt, ride wllh Ude. Foc:ut GO employment, CO•wortcen, bulc Hrvlcea. WUI· anp... to Improve htallb by embarltlna on a more
ftUlr'IUoul dltt.
•AGmAUl18 <Nov. 22-Dec. 21>: Statm quo lhalru,
atUn lftd roll• away. You're °" new around. old l• no lon1er apply . lmpr1nt ltyl•, make chan1ea. al with younc, vl1orCM.11, dya.mJc peop&..
CAPalCO&N <Dec. ZZ·Jan. lt): Accent on tteuri\f, ~operty, eltabH1btd poUcl• and bualnel:I tranaaetlon
"laleb wtll IOOft be completed. Older lndMdual ti on )'OQr ttdf ud Pl'"• It. ClMek IOW'CW -)'OQ'll be uked q .... ........ be C'OMldertd ,.,,. promotion,
t1Aal1.JI (Jan. •Feb. II>: For.e 1.nd to be Mat· -be \WUUle wtSlaout loltq llcM of \llUmate ob-"·a.a.I adl.tta.S icce&.111a: P90lllt W'9o bad.,.... •of ...... wU1 IOOll bec!ome "a•atlaille."
l'iiilCUI c M. Jt.llarcb IO>: AeeeM • -...., oll&aio· wwr:m .............. a.no .... .... ....-...., ....... .... 1==~~·=:·:1r ......... YOll .. oa lliftllli fl I•· ..... ,.
IRMA BDIBICI ~~--~~~--~~~~
Engineering-wise. 1t was a monument to the com·
mittee who constructed a camel and thought they
had solved the proble m of tall men who needed
more leg room.
The sun visor blocked the rear·view mirror.
The carpet under the accelerator had no re·
sistance to the touch.
The radio was wired for static.
The floor of the car burnt your feet.
The steering mechanism quivered al anything
over 35 mph.
And you couldn't get lo the back seat from the
driver's side of the car
I don't understand it. This country is the only
one in the world where men tolerate a lemon of a
car longer than t hey will endure a wife who has
run out of gas.
Think about it. Would your husband pay SSO to
have you towed anywhere?
If he couldn't keep you rWlning without stall·
ing at every traffic light, would he talk nice to you
and let you idle?
If your warranty ran out would he stand you t.o
a tune-up out of his own pocket?
When your m ileage started to deteriorate,
would he still st.op at every station and ftll you up?
If you heated up coming back from the
ballpark, would he pull off the road and let you
cool off? ,
Would he still take you out to dinner if you had
a crack in your wlndshield?
U you had to be taken in for repairs. would be
be satisfied with a loaner ?
I don't know why I do that. I aJway1 push a
parody too far.
Williams,
Gilbert
' Deborah Gilbert of Huntington
Beach and Brian Williams of
Fountain Valley exchanged wed·
ding vows in the First Christian
Church, Orange. '
The bride, daughter of James
and Florence Gilbert of Hunt·
ington Beach, graduated from
Edison High School a nd at-
tended t he U n iversity of
California at Irvine.
The bridegroom. son of Loren
and Joyce Wllliams. of Fountain
Valley, graduated from Rolling
Hills High School and Orange
Coast College.
McRae-Brown • C harmi an Brown of
Westminster and David McRae
of La Canada exchanged wed·
ding vows in Corona del Mar
Community Church.
The bride, daughte r of Mr.
and Mrs . Larry J . Mitchell
.graduated from Westminster
High Sch ool and Cypress
College.
The bridegroom, son of Mr.
and Mrs. D. H. McRae or La
Canada, graduated from Cresen·
ta Valley High and San Diego
Mrs. WiUiams
State University.
The couple plan to live in San·
ta Ana after a trip to Carmel
and Lake Tahoe.
50th cruise
Herb and Teri Ford, who have
been Balboa Island residents for
40 years, recently celebrated
.. RUFFELL'S ····································: i11WHAT'S A POPCORN PARTY?~': urwounay ·
s. ..... _.. ......
1922 NAHOI AYD.
.COSJA MIU -:J4.~1 IM
=,._.,....... .............. , '1!. ljJ,..~C·•: .ewr• ...... •• .•. ,..... ~ .... . • ... c ...... , ... ,... ,........ .. ........... : . ,.,....... .
:1 ..... ,..+;"" --· '...UMi1· : i--~,--------f : POPCOIM PAIT9S •
: CALL 17141 IU..21JO . : .....•..... ; ............................ .
.,., .
If it's got
wheels,
you'll move
It faster in a
Dally Pilot
classified
ad.Call
~2-5678 and a
friendly ad-
viser will
help you
turn your
wheels Into
cash.
,.-e a eoa'ft-
Mrs. McRae
their 50th wedding anniversary
with an 8-day cruise of t he
Hawaiian Islands.
They aJso were given a sur-
prise dinner party hosted by Mr.
and Mrs. John Konscbnik and
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Brownell.
The Fords were married at
the Presbyterian Church in
Hollywood in.1931 .
Fifty friends were invited lo
share their special day.