HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-07-22 - Orange Coast PilotIrvine cases compared
Chief cites differences in handling of shooting incidents
fJ.~DGREEN
A woman contacts an Irvine
policeman durine the night and
says she has just escaped her
house, leaving behind a n emo-
tionally upset husband with a
smoking eun.
I! you are the highest ranking
police official on duty, what do
you do?
When the wife of former Mayor
Art Anthony arrived at lhe home
of Irvine Police Chief Leo Peart
on April 9, Peart decided not lo
send a police team to the Anthony
home ln Irvine.
When the estranged wife of
J effrey Bodmer, 29, an asbestos
worker, called pollce in the pre-
da wn hours Sunday, a police
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 toChjef
Peart.
Chief Peart point.a out that ln
both cases the men were taken in·
to custody without loss of We,
Ii m b or property.
Standard operating procedure
BULLETIN
Irvine mayor Art Anthony,
convicted of misdemeanor as·
sault in connection with an at·
tack on his wife, won't have to
serve any jail time, Harbor
Municipal Court Judge Donald
Dungan ruled today.
Antho ny was given three
year s probation aqd a $5,000
fine. .
was rouowed in both cases, he
said.
In the Anthony case, no homes
were evacuated. The mayor was
allowed to stay in his home wilh
his politicaJ ally, Bill VardouJls
(whom Anthony had telephoned)
until the early hours of April 10. At
that point Vardoulis left and An-
thoqy was left unattended in a
house containing two handguns
a nd a rifle.
Anthony waa taken to the Men-
tal Health Unit of Hoa1 Memorial
Hospital ln Newport Beach on the
morninc of April 10, about 12
houra alter he alle1ed1y beat hla
wife With hla fi•" and lnlllcted a
grazln1 gunshot wound OD her
scalp. Another 24 hours elapeed
before be wu arrested on auspi·
cion of uaault with a deadly
weapon and taken to the 1beriff1
psychiatric ward at UC Irvine
Medical Center in Oran1e.
Bodmer was taken into custody
at8 a :m. Sunday, aboutf our hours
after b1a eatra.n1ed wile found
him ln her Woodbridge home. She
told police that •be ned the house
after be fired bla handgun at the
ceiling. She wasn't hurt. He was
taken to the sheriff's peycblatric
ward at UCIMC for a 72-bour men·
tal commitment. Police Set. Dick
Bowman said &Mimer won't be
chargedwllha crime.
The Bodmer case was made
public two hours after police
learned of the Incident. A detaUed
press release was issued the same
day.
CSee IRVINE. Pace A%)
AIRBORNE AGAIN -The Goodyear blimp re·
turns from its first flight since being repaired
at Marine Corps Heli copter Station in Tustin.
Photo was made Tuesday evening. Blimp
...., ..... ,......, ..........
was blown from its mooring ln Carson March
1 by high winds and was badly damaged. A
Goodyear spokesman said the blimp was
completely rebuilt at the Marlne air station.
County jet noise data probed
Information in re1J()rt differs from actual readings
~.J~~~K SCHOEMEHL
Residents' inquiries have
prompted Orange County 1ov·
ernment officials to take a
second look at environmental
documentation that led to ap-
proval of the DC-9 Super 80
Jetllner at John Wayne Airport.
What is concemin1 both real·
dent. and offlciah la that actual
noise data for tbe new aircraft,
now ln use by AlrCal, does not
jibe with data that waa con-
tained ln the environmental Im·
pact r•Porl approved by the
county Board of SupervllOl'I
before It permitted Super IO
Hrvlce to betln.
Publicly. olflclal• are dlt·
couatta1· t1•• effect &lie dlf • fernee ill the nalN 4Mi ma,
baH. Pri•a..S,, u.n II~
I.bat It...., wU. &bl eomt1'1
poelU. ID a lawtult ID wlieb •••s-t leMb 19 clallllllil • . ...,... ............. ~ -the Super IO wu lnad9quate and
that the decision to permit use of
the aircraft should be re·
evaluated. . ·
According to the impact re-
port, the Super 80, durln1 a teat
Super 80 'aircraft
is noisier than we
expected it would
be.'
fJl1ht conducted la1t Au.-
loflN a tl.14 deelbel '°'" readlq Wben puslq °"' a
aolH moaltor 14>eated Im· .... -. .... o1u.. aenan:
1...-IO ..nice ...... hM L Dur1NU...-a..-. ... w1
Super • departarH. Th• Hera•= N ..... It U.. ..... ............... . ac......_to.,.......,......_.
UM atpart NcMe A-...... Of. ... The eompo1tte nolH ,.......,
'
for departures durinl the montb
of June (based on readin11
taken at all noise monitors local·
eel under departure paths) wu
96.14, about five declbel1 1reater
than that expected by county ol·
net ala.
•'There'• no question the
aircraft II noi1ler than '" •· peeled it would be. But 1"1 IWl
conalderabJy quJeter tbaa U..
other aircraft. <Boetns 1171 aDd
DC·l ·IOI) belDI flown,., Hid
Airport llanacer llUl'l'1 Cable.
Aceordlnc to a memorudum ••t to the county Eiifftne...a .......... ~,---Koaall. alfpcwl 111a111 Md,.,... .,. ........................ ..
, ...... to "" cletlbell ..... UUiil ......... alrenft.
··Aa ,_ ..... fNia ... :==:. .............. ...... -.,,. ... rn ..... =· .. . =-: • .;..tt:,V. • _....._...._ ......
( .. , .... ~ .... M)
• • • • • •
-___ , PIPll
\lH~\N1 ,f l 1 >l1N I 'Y l Al II OHNIA '2'> CENTS
TRUNK LINES BUSY -"Hold the phone,'' sa y
these ponderous pachyderms as they ex·
change greetings. The 33-year-old elephant
lady, "Mampe" from India. left. flirts with
...........
her younger friends from Africa as they
stroke each others· trunks at the West Berlin
Zoo .
Agca convicted
He gets life in attempted murder of Pope
ROME <AP> Mehmet AH
Age a was convicted today or the ,
attempted murder of Pope John
Paul II and sentenced to life im·
prlsonment.
The six-member jury and two
judges deliberated for 61fz hours.
Chief Judge Severino San·
tiapichi read the verdict and the
sentence.
Agca, who admitted he shot
the pope in St. Peter's Square on
May 13. was not in th e
courtroom when the verdict was
announced. He boycotted the
last two days of the proceedings
as a protest against his trial in
an Italian court instead of the
Vatican.
Life imprtsonment is the max·
imum sentence in Italy, which
does not have capital punish·
ment.
The pope is hospitalized with a
virus, and was not asked to at-
tend the trial or give a deposi-
tion.
The defense asked for a re·
duced sentence against the "re·
li gious fanatic" who shot the
pope and two American women.
Defe nse attorn ey Pietro
D'Ovidio asked the court to con.
sider a 30-year sentence against
Agca, describing his bearded
23-year-old client as a "religious
fanatic with a maniacal obsession
<See POPE, Paitt> AZ>
Disaster plea denied
Reagan rejects Brown's request for aid against Medfly
LOS GATOS (AP) -The
Reagan administration today re-
jected Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr.'a request to declare three
California counties a federal dis·
aster area because of infestation
by a destructive fruit ny.
Such action was unnecessary,
the goverhment said, because
there were "no signs that the in·
festation is spreading out of con·
trol."
Brown asked for the disaster
declaration last week, saying
the Mediterranean fruit Oy in-
Pilot's TY
Log praised
by readers
The Pilot TV Log, which was
introduced ln Friday's edition,
already bas received readers'
praise for Its large type style
and detailed listings of 22 chan·
nets, lncludin1 cable systems.
The weekly TV log will be a
regular supplement of the Dally
Pilot's Weekender entertain·
ment section on Fridays, replac·
ing the TV ma1adne which
formerly was Included in the
Sunday Pilot.
Reru.lar daily lelevlaion list·
tnca continue ln the paper on a
daily bub, includln1 Sundays.
Remember, the Daily Pilot's
moat complete guide to TV view·
Inc appeara now In the Friday
edition with up-to·the·minute
bi1hH1ht1 of weekend news,
sports and special abowa.
Ying-Ying
gives birth
MEXICO CITY CAP) -Ylftl·
)'lq, the Western world'• only
pre>aucttve paada, ha1 1l•en
bh1h acatn, and IOO oftlcialt wll1
keep . tbe $le away ror 1tJt moau. tla that I.be IDOtber
won't mlllt bab1 a• 1he did berftnt ...... ........ ,....r .-11 .....
llQt ff'OGa Illa Oif1prla1, lb• ••••d ,.... eeacelved ID c• ~· · ~""blao Vaa:•a, ad· ~ Of ... ~ ... Hid ..._. watebld oe•a eMiM telfft1lH elrewt aad
11 ... a1d na a m6eropbone ln Yta·Yllil'• Nit u .... 1ave lllrtli ,...., .
f estation in Santa Cl a r a ,
Alameda and San Mateo coun-
ties was "beyond control" of
state and local eradication ef·
forts. A day later, the governor
proclaimed the eradication ef·
forts "on track ...
The administration agreed. ln
a telegram to Brown today. the
Fed eral Eme rgency Manage-
ment Agency. with Wh ite House
concurrence, said "the area in
which the fly has been found in
recent weeks is bas ically the
same area in which the pest was
discovered last year ..
"Al this Point the situation h~
stabilized with the eradicali<>ft
measures under way.·· FEMI\
spokesma n Bob Bl air tot~
Brown.
Bl air said the U.S. Depart ...
ment of Agriculture has spent'
mo re t han SJ million in 13
months fighting the medlfy, and
has made a nother S4 million
available to match equal state
s pend ing.
"The federal government wi
<See MEDFLV, Page AZ>
Postmaster probes
wife' S mail handling
WAS HINGTON <AP l
Postmaster General William F.
Bolger said today he 's ordered
a n Inv esti ga t io n i nto a
newspaper rePort that some ad·
vertising circulars addressed to
his home are gelling special
treatment.
The Washington Post reported
today that the practice began
after Bolger's wife complained
she had received one ad late and
missed a sale.
But Bolger said ln a statement
today that he has asked for no
special favors and wasn't aware
be has been receiving any.
Bolger also said he wants any
speclaJ consideration afforded
his mall stopped Immediately
and ordered a check into the
matter to see what happened.
"It's pretty well systematized
by now," the newspaper quoted
clerk Bruce Chldo as sayln1 ln
explaining the routine he and
other clerks follow several times
a month when advertisements
from the Hecht Co.. a depart·
ment store chain, arrive at their
, Northern Vir1lnia region1l post
offlce.
"When a Hecht's ad comes In,
tbe supervisor comes over and
tell1 ua to find the one addreued
to Bolter," the Poat quoted
Chido u aayln1. "With three or
four people lo<*lnf, aomethnes
w • It n-d It r l Ch t away .
SomeUmes it takes up to an
JM)ur,"
·•whenever a Hecht Co. ad
com• ln, we ·~ everythlna and .un 1lftln1,• said 1Jnda Lewta. ''TIM 1upervt.or comes
over and 11y1, •nnd Bolter's
Hecht Co.' I'd ••Y lt "apptnl al
leut ~every two wMlu.''
The reJ>Ort said that when • .1
ad with Bolger's address ~
found it is placed in a carrier"a
bag for next·day deli very whi
the rest of the Hecht Co. thir
class mailing often remal
behind an extra day or two.
Clerks told the news paper th
the "Hecht hunt" began a
seven months ago after Mr
Bolger complained that she r
ceived a store circular too la
to lake advantage of a sale.
.Dlllllll CUST WIAHIJ
Some late nlght and ear·
ly morning low clouds and
local fog, otherwise fair
today through Thursday.
Highs In mid-70s at the
beaches to upper 80s ln·
land. Lows tonight 58 \0 68.
llllDf TIDAY
The OftCf·OJ>UIHl fffOft•
ruume coatlt ra1or La•
V•ga•. N .M ., ha• bHft
purchcltd for e&N cu o co'·
ltge. Sff,,. All.
11111
M .,_...,,_ Att
•~Jiii ... :~ .... .. •• .. •• AM .. ~..;.;.. Ct-l: ==-I:
* • • • • • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/W9dne1day, July 22, 1881
Israelis homl> Lebanon
W atl>Zanes attack Palestinians; 15 killed or wounded
TEL AVIV. ftraeJ <AP> -. hraen wu,laaes ltombed
Pa!eettlllea ~ ln IOUtbem
Leba-. •aalD today, 1111.tUaa tralAI ....Stdtr .... pen arm1"ana tve~, the mWfary c ... mand
:; Hid. l.eataneae pl'Ovlaelal
autborttiee reportH is people
kWedorwouacled.
A een9l1Dtqae from tbe Tel
• Avw ecm•Ud tatcfthe Q'alla at·
taeked ..._la U.. IC ... •leb,. lion~ Lit-' llvw and the eewary. Jt 1md the
· • pllota accura'9 blta and ·th•t all plmea returned safely
frem tberald.
Lebadtle provincial o~tie{a.ls
HJd tbe jet.I struck al a newly re-
pa lred secUon of the Qaaamieh
Brid,. on the Utani which wu
de vutat.ed in a Uthtnln1 llraell
alratrikeTbursday. They aaldthe
Jett destroyed several moving can, killln1 or woundlnc 15 occu·
panta.
laraeli awiboata alao shelled
Pale.Uni-.. 1uerrllla tar1eta In
southern Lebanon today, the Tel Aviv command 1ald. It denied a
Palestinian report of 1round ralda
lntosoothem Lebanon.
The command said northern
Israeli settlements came under
mor'e PaleatlnJan artUlery at·
tacks during the night, but there
were no cu&aalties. Israeli 1un·
nera returned the fire, the com·
mand1atd.
Meanwhile, U.S. prealdenUal
envoy PhJUp C. Habib held talk.a
with Lebanese otnclala ln Beirut
tben new to Saudi Arabia to COO•
Uaue bla aearcb for a cea1e nre
between the Israells and Paleati·
nlans.
Prime Mlnlater Menachem
Be1ln v'i1l~ laraet•a northern
settle menu today, paid a coo-
dole"ce call on the family of one of
the five Israelis killed in 1uerrtUa
ahellina, and pled&ed an end to the
PalestlnJan barrages. .
T~ S#J,ift work advances
Senate detiate bogs down on bill favored by Reagan
WASHINGTON <AP> -Tbe
· Demoaatlc·controlled House
Ways .ad Muni Cemmittee
compl~ work today on the
laraest tax shift ln history alter
offerin1 to comprom\se with
President Rea1an on reduclnc
tndlvhlual taus in three con·
secutmyeaJ'9..
The COOUll"Cee vot.a lo allow
the ~year tax shift only ii in·
nation, >interest rates and the
federal deficit are reduced to the
levels 6-ecast by the Reagan
admiDiatratioo for 1183. The pro-
posa.I was rejected by the presi·
dent's advisers.
The committee plan also
would eive a bigger sh.are of tax
relief to families eal'tlina less
than ~.oao a ~ear.
While Ute House panel was
rushiQI· to futish work ia time
for floor a ction before tbe
AufUsl (ecess. Senate debate
bof ged 4own on a lax bill to
Reagan's likiag. Liberal
Democnts were t.r'Yi,_ to block
a vote on a Republican proposal
to cut oiJ-industry taxes about
$20 billion over the next decade.
The Senate bill gives Rea1an
the full three-year, 25 percent
across-t he -board s hift in
personal rates that he asked.
The two sure years or the House
plan would cut taxes an average
lS percent.
. The Joint Committee on Taxa·
tion estimates that Reagan's
across·the -board reduction
would give taxpayers with in·
com es between $15,000 and
$20,000 a year an average 24.S
percent cut in taxes between this
Oct. 1 and the end or 1984, com·
pared with 28.8 percent under
the House bill. The average re-
duction in the $50,000-to·SlOO.OOO
bracket would be 25. 7 percent in
Reagan's plan and 21.7 percent
in the House version.
A working couple with two
childre_n and earning SJ0,000 a
year would realize a Sl,142 tax
cut from 1981 throu~h 1984 from
the Ways and Means Committee
bill, compared with $1,079 in
Reagan's plan. The figures as·
sume economic conditions would
allow the third installment of the
tax reduction.
Either bill would start cutting
personal taxes Oct. 1. Jn addJ.
lion to shifting tax rates, the
House bill .would reduce the
"marriage penalty'' faced by
many two·eamer couples, raise
the standard deduction, boost
the earned-in come c reJ1t for
poor working families , increase
tax incentives for savings, re·
peal estate taxes for all but a
handful or t h e wealthiest
ramilies and s lash business
taxes.
The committee plans to give
formal approval to the bill
Thursday, which would send it
to the House for debate next
week.
The Senate·has been debating
Reagan's plan for a week.
.. AitCal -blasts ·PSA lawsuit
Clatms redUlating flights would cost "millions of dollars"
AirCal AJrline claims that it
r would l~ millions of dollars if ~. rival Paeiftc SOOtbwest Airti.nes
is vicfu!llOus in a lawsuit filed
over a.a orange Couaty goveru-
m eat plan to rea~llate which
airllpea serve Jnn Wayne
Airport..
In papers flJ,cf in U.S. {)istrict
Court ln LGe An,eles dli• week,
AirCaJ claimed that San Diego-
b .. ed PSA is locked in an "er:
fort le . ,..event Air Calllomia
from tJecomln1 an etreetive
eom petltor ln the tnnsportat.ion
of pa11e..;erw by air betweeR
major titles in California.··
Under the airport access plan
adopted by tbe county Board or
Supent.ors, PS~,,... graated
two {llchts 6al17 from the
airport MgiMing ~cl. l . Those
flight.a are heing "created" by
takiAi an average o( 1.5 rupits
from AirCaJ and one·balf fii&ht
fn»s Republic Airll.ftes.
PSA ,{sn't satisfied with its
two-ruit.t award. Jt would like to
operate e igbt. fljghts from
could not quickly do in an
economic fashion ."
"It follows that the relief PSA
seeks. if granted, would cause
substantial damage, a mounting
in all probability to millions of
dollars, for Air California." Clif·
ford concluded.
AirCal repeatedly stresses in
its court papers that the com-
pany was formed because no
other airline in the late 1960s
was willing to expand jet air
service to Orange County.
"Air California pioneered that
service at the cost of losing its
initial S6 million capitalization
over the first rive years." ac-
cording to the documents.
AirCal further cha r ges that
PSA's contention that it wants to
promote competitive Orange
County.San Francisco Bay Area
service is erroneous.
". . . It bas been the practice
of PSA. when new carriers ap-
* * From Page A1 *
pear, to saturate the market
with flights so as to preclude the
newcomer from commencing a
profitable operation . . . it is
PSA 's objective, in bringing this
proceeding , to reduce Air
California's ser vice from
Orange County.
·'The Orange County service is
and has been the foundation of
Air CaJlfornia 's operations ...
it is PSA's objective to so
weaken Air California as to
make it unable effectively to
grow into an effective com-
petitor or PSA throughout the
state "
Meanwhile, Newport Beach
City Attorney Hugh Coffin said
the city also plans to intervene
in the PSA lawsuit but hasn't
yet.
He said Newport's position is
that the suit could result in the
current 41 daily flight ceiling be·
in~ lifted lo accommodate PSA.
* * *
Orange County. ·
Jn its lawsuit -whida wiU be
sultject of a bearing Aui. 10
before Judae Andrew Mauk -
PSA contenO tlUlt the access
pla• i1 "•ntl·cornpell\ive" in
that lt permit• AlrCal and
flepublic Airllnes to keep the
JET DATA PROBED • • •
I • majority o( tM •t jet df'panures
permitted dill)' frotn the
airport.\ . AlrCaJ, whJcb Monday was
permitted to formally j.nterveae
in the lewsuit, said lo papers
flied witb Jud~• ffaall that
: ' PSA '• llemand for more ru1bts
I ·. could -~~e of two ways. Either the 4 fti1bt per d~ lid
I. would ban be lifted, or
AirCaJ and Rel*blfc wout4 have
I to 1ive up mon fi ... llta. Neither
•1 option Is acceptable, AirCal
1 Pretideftt R.4»ert Clifford said.
The county w"ld 8ot lift the
lid because of •noise Impacts on
surrounding . reatldeots, h e
arped. ·
On tM idea fll 1ivlna:u~e hi1~ Clff«d ..... "At the
preaem Ume, 40 pereent of Air
Callfonla'a orllfnatlosr aad
destination p•11ea1ei'I are
· a~ned fto«n dae John Wayne
· Alrport. Tbe lou of Ai r
' ; ~ahfornla's i1*re of etlbt slots ·1 <nJ1Ma> would came 1ubstanUal
tlnanetal ION to Alr Calllornia.
''It wouJd be MCetaaty for Air
CaUIOl'llla t. find otber rGute1 .apoa ...... to (fly), ~ ...... it . . .
ment office calculates that the
DC ·9·80 is SS percent quieter
than the other aircraft; or con-
versely, the others are 123 per-
cent noisier (twice as loud )."
(Because decibel readings are
computed using logarithms.
seemJngly small numeric di(·
ferences represent much larger
difrerences.)
Goodman was reluctant to dis·
cuss the EMA's role in the new
a nalysis of the noise data
because or litigation pending in
Orange County Superior Court.
He dJd confirm that the issue
over the disparity between the
actual data and that contained
in the impact report was raised
by residents at a meeUng of a
county committee that is de-
veloping a specific plan to guJde
future developme nt In Santa
Ana Heights, located ~outh of
the airport.
Goodman s&id the county can
correct the impact report, either
by preparing a supplement re-
port containing "information
that was not known and could
not have been known•· or by pre-
paring an a ddendum to the
original document.
Cable said be will submit such
an addendum to the county
Board of Supervisors In the near t.aure.
Cte .............. 1141142·M71 All ................... ,
•• ... owa nlW•t119'M 1 C_..M9w,~A llUO...,_, ... lMt, G•t.Mna. CA.~
"It's no big thing," he said.
Prior to its introduction, the
new aircraft was touted as. in
large part, the answer to the
county's continuing dilemma on
how to reduce noise impact on
residents living under jet de·
parture tracks.
The county's faith in the
jetliner was so strong t hat it
became the centerpiece for a
plan to reguJate which air car-
riers win and retain privileges to
operate from the airport. Tbe
plan essentially requires car-
riers to convert their fleets used
l ocally to Super 80s or
equ ivalent n oise-Ii miting
aircraft. of which there is no
other type yet on the market.
AirCal is now operating two of
the $20 million aircraft and has
plans for a total fleet conversion
within 18 months.
RepublJc Airlines intends to
begin Super 80 service in mid-
A ugust. Two other airlines with
authority at the airport -Fron·
tier Airlines a nd Pacific
Southwest Airlines -either
have plans to or have taken de·
livery of Super 80s.
W estem Airlines ls the only
carrier servin1 Oran1e Coubty
that does not lntend to P\U"Cbase
the new aircraft. Western of·
ficlala say they will attempt to
meet nolse '°"uction 1oall by
modlf)'in& their existing Oeet ol
Boein1737t.
A1ked why the Super 80 la not
performtna up to expeet.atlonl,
county and airline ottlclala aave
• various ans"n.
They 11y piloll may 1UU be
1etting UMd to fiylnc the new
aircraft. They alto point to U..
faet tbat tbe Federal Aviation
Admln.latratlon forbids no6H·
Umlunc takeoff power ~
Uona at altitude• lower tlaan
1,000 fMt. TIM aJr eam.n ad
tlMt eoaDl1 ere attnafdll to COAYiaff t.be PM to . ...,..,
power cutbama id• fMl.1 ....
a moveweaklredule~.lo ,., ..................... ....
h'om the FM. ·
...., Nil "'991119 ............
STRUMMING THE STRINGS -13·year-old harp virtuoso
Naoko Yoshino of Tokyo, gets in some solitary practice at
UC Irvine in preparation for a Friday performance in the
Little Theater on campus. Forty harpists from around the
world will perform in the 8 p. m. free concert as part of the
4th Annual California Summer Harp Workshop.
From Page A1
POPE GUNMAN • • •
and delusion of grandeur ."
Prosecutor Nicolo Amato in
his closing address Tuesday
asked the panel of four men and
two women to hand down the
maximum penally of life im·
prisonment.
U nder. the Italian l ega l
system, the jury and two judges
decide guilt or innocence and
hand down a sentence at the
same time.
Amato called the shooting or
the pope "a sacrilege, a profani-
ty and a desecr ation."
He said Agca wanted to as·
sassinate Jobn Paul to strike a
blow against a system he baled.
He called the shooting "a sym·
bolic patricide."
Agca, born to a poor family in
eastern Turkey, had an alcoholic
fathe r who beat his mother,
Turkish newspapers reported.
They said his father died when
the boy was 8, and he s upported
his mother by carrying sand to
construction sites and other odd
jobs. He worked his way through
high school and enrolled in a un-
iversity, the papers said.
The Vatican newspaper
L'Ossevatore Romano said the
attack on the pope was "a
dramatic symptom or t he re·
bellion of hate against love, of
war against peace, of moral de·
gradation against reason."
Agca was linked to a neo-Nazi
organization in Turkey and was
sentenced to death in absentia
there in 1979 tor the killing or a
liberal newspaper editor.
From Page A1
IRVINE •••
The Anthony case was made
public 31,.\ days alter Chief Peart
learned oftbe matter. A press re·
lease was luued on the Monday
mornlnc tollowin1 the alleged
Thurlday nJpt auauJt.
Anthony bu pleaded no contest
to a misdemeanor assault charge.
He faces sentencing Wednesday
on the reduced charee, which car
r les a maximum punishment of
SJ,OOO andoneyearin jail.
Peart says hl1 decision not to
send a police team to the Anthony
home doesn 't deviate from
normal police operating pro-
cedure.
•'The highest-ranking officer on
the shift makes a determination
whether the SOU (Special Opera-
tions Unit> is called in," Peart
said. "What's unique in the An·
thony case is that Elaine (Mrs.
Anthony) came to my house and I m~de a decision not to deploy . .
I imagine a s~rgeant or\ duty
n:iade an opposite determination
C in the Bod mer case>.
"In the Anthony case I felt we
had more detailed information on
the individual Involved.
''TheSpecial Operations Unit is
t!ained tor certain types of situa-
tions."
A common one. Peart noted is a
barricaded suspect. 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.
"It's a judgment call . absolutely "
Peart stressed that the lrvme
Police Department has an out-
standing record in the handling of
sensitive situations
"That's a record I'm proud of." hesa1d
From Page A1
MEDFLY • • •
continue providing assistance to
California through the USDA to
help eradicate the medfly,
although major disaster as-
sitance cannot be provided,"
Brown was told
Ca liforni a officia l s,
meanwhile. say the fruit flies'
days are numbered, and they
will continue efforts to get the
nation's highest court to lift
curbs imposed on state produce
by rive Southern states.
"The general feeling, on the
project and olf. is that eradica-
tion is virtually inevitable,"
Jerry Scribner. director of the
medfly eradication project. said
Tuesday. ·
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I
I
~ ........
Charles Walker, who left Stanford Univerlity Medical Cerdn
recently foll.owing Mart-lung tranaplant, grins cu hil mother,
June Spangenburg, points out T·lhirl. Walker plau to return to
Binghamton. N .Y .. home in ~ember.
Honeym oon
plans announced
Prince Charles and bis
bride will divide their honey-
moon between the estate of
his late uncle and the royal
yach\. Buckingham Palace
announced.
The palace said Prince
Charles and Lady Dlaaa
Spencer will spend the first
three nights after the July 29
wedding at Broadlands, the
Hampshire country estate of
the late Earl Mountbatten of
Burma, Charles' great-uncle.
On Aug. 1, they will fly to
Gibraltar. where they will
board the royal yacht Britan·
nia for a two-week cruise of
the Mediterranean.
American conductor Sarah
Caldwell says it will be odd
to hear Verdi's opera "La
Travlata" sung in Italian
now that she's been listening
to It in Chinese during a stay
in Peking.
Miss Caldwell, director of
the Boston Opera Company,
s aid s he bas been impressed
by the Chlnest singers' will·
lngness to take new direc-
tion. Chlna's Central Opera
Company has performed its
version of "La Travlata"
more than 400 limes since
1956, but never before Miss
Caldwell's visit under a
foreign conductor.
·'In this world , It is rare to
rtnd people who do what you
ask instantly without arguing
or ha vi ng lo pro ve
something," she said.
PuJiUve financier Robert
Vneo moved to the nearly
unlnhabited Bahamlan laltnd
of Ci1tem Key, apparently at
the behest ot the Bahamian
sovern~t. accordln1 to Newaweek maauJne. T~ ma•a&lne aald the al·
Jeted 1wlodler, hi• wife and
1oun1est ~hlld moved from
their Nuaau home because
the Bahamian 1overnment
wanted to limit embarrass·
menl caused by his continued
presence. The United States
1ince 1913 bal sou1ht 1)11 ex·
tradUJon to face charges of
defrauding investors .
Bee Gee Ban')' Gibb paid
$1.4 million cash for a 12·
bedroom Miami Beach
mansion he plans-to renovate
and resell, according to docu·
ments fUed In Dade County
Court.
Gibb and his wife, LiJlda,
like to buy old houses and fix
them up, said his manager.
Dick A.9hby. The pop singer
has three Miami Beach
homes worth more than $2.5
mlllion.
··Barry likes to get in al
the bottom end, fix up and
then sell them," said Ashby.
•
CASH FOR MANS/ON
Singer Gibb
1 Southern Plains sizzle
But thunderstorms keep northern Plains in the 60s
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, Juty 22, 1981 s
Money F'lesson' eyed
OC to teach private agencies how to raise funds
With 1overnment funds for
aoctat programs drytn1 up,
some Orange County officials
are planning t.o teach private,
non-profll agencies how lo flnd
revenue from private sources.
T h e county Board of
Supervisors Tuesday approved
sta1ing a one-day conference at
UC Irvine Sept. 19 where up to
250 agency represenJ.atives can
s harpen their fuAd ·raising
techniques.
The s ession will be co·
sponsored by the Orange County
Community Development Coun·
cil.
The idea for the conference
ca me about a fter county
workers who administer the
federal revenue sharing pro-
gram surveyed leaders of non·
pront agencies and learned their
Wied e r ,
Heathe r
prospects
Orange County Supervisor
Harriett Wieder of Huntington
Beach and Newport Beach
Mayor Jackie Heather ar-e two
n ames being consider:ed in
Sacramento for appointment to
the state Coastal Commission.
Both women were members of
the South Coast Regional Com·
mission before it was disbanded
by sl ate statute on July 1.
Under a new organizational
plan, one member of each of the
defunct regional commissions
will be selected lo the state
panel.
The chairman of the state
Senate Rules Committee. David
Robe rti, D-Los Angeles. is sup-
posed to make the selection
within 30 days after applicants
are nominated.
The regional commission cov·
ered both Los Angeles and
Orange coun ties. and t h e
leagues of cities and boards of
supervisors in each county are
to offer nominations.
On Tuesday. the Orange Coun·
t y Board of Supe r visors
nominated Mrs Wieder and
Mrs Heather. plus Yorba Linda
City Councilman Henry Wedaa,
Los Angeles Supervisor Dean
Dan a and Robert Ryan. a
Rancho Palos Verdes City Coun·
cilm an.
* * *
Two name d
to pane l
SACRAMENTO !AP) -As·
sembly Speaker Willie Brown
has named a Los Angeles real
estate broker and a Pacifica
City Council member to the
stale Coastal Commission
Appointed were Carolyn
McNeill of Los Angeles. owner
of McNeill Realty International
Real E state Network ; and
Grace McCarthy of Pacifica, a
member of the Ocean Coastline
Planning Committee of the As-
sociation of Bay Area Govern·
men ts .
Sierra Club ~pokesman Mike
Para'rian said his group was not
fa miliar with Ms. Mc Neill. but
was unhappy with the appoint·
ment of Ms . McCarthy, whom he
called "very pro-development."
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Ctrtifitd Gtmologi1t. AGS
TH£ SPINEL
hol lllltrtltlrtg hlflOF'JI
The s pine t is a beautiful
colored gemstone wltb an
interesting history. Yet it is not
as well known as it should be .
Usually r ed, but 1ometimea
orange, purple or even brown, lt
bas sometimes muqueraded u
other stones in royal jewels .
Klng Henry VIII"• "ruby"
collar was really aplnel, u was
The Black Prince Ruby of
London. Sptn ela crace the
Persian Crown Jewels, the
Louvr e in Parla and the
Dlamood Fund In Moscow. In
the early 19009, It Wat believed
that apfnel could be used to
detect tQPematural powers \n
people. It WH 11ld that a
1uaped.ed dairvoyut or Witch
ll confronted wltb a aplnti
wrapl*I ln a pltc• of paper,
would JO into convulllona of the
\&Pl* Umbl. Tbt OMtt 1plnelt an fomd In Burma, Sr1 Lanka,
T•allaad •ad f1dl1. Some
1p1clmea1 al10 eome from
Atcbantai ... Mad a1ucar, Mllb'a.lla; llruu ud the u.s.
lplael liai a~ luater and
la •erJ attndlve lD artlftcJal
111p\.
ltrat priority wa1 to lmprove
abilities t.o attract money, 1a1d
Tom WaUord, county manaaer ot human resource programa.
Many non-profit orgaolzaUona
in Oranse County are known
more for their good intentiocu
than for their treasurlea, and
Watford said a "serious finan·
clal crisis" could be imminent ii
the s roups don't adopt new fund·
raising strategies.
He said the agencies no longer
can depend on public funds to
finan ce various progr ams
because of government cut·
backs.
Organizers hope to keep the
presentations simple, using a
"how-to·do-it" overview with
workshops on such subjects as
finding corporate or foundation
support, creatlna annual giving
campaigns, formln1 auxiliary
aroups and solicitlna by direct
mall or telephone.
U 1uccessfuJ, the conference
could reduce dependence on the
county and its revenue sharing
funds
But even teaching how to raise
money has its costs. Watford
said the conference could cost
up to $6,675, with the county
s haring the burden with the
community development coun·
cil, an umbrella group that dis
burses certain rederal and state
funds.
A $20 registration fee will be
charged, so up to $5,000 could be
recovered if a capacity 2,SO peo.
pie participate in the con·
rerence.
Friends remembe r
'pioneer' Hobart
Early d ay avia t or and
longtime Corona del Ma r resi·
dent Albert L. Hobart, who died
July 9 at Hoag Hospital in
Newport Beach, was remem·
bered by friends this week as '•a
true pioneer."
Mr. Hobart was buried at sea
last week in private ceremonies.
He wu77.
The Michigan native was is·
sued bis first pilot's license in
1929. ll was signed by Orville
Wright.
Mr. Hobart Jater became one
of the country's first air mail
pilots and reportedly helped
form several airline firms in the
early 1930s after moving to Los
Angeles.
Ho bart owned " llS·acre
airport in Los Angeles located at
94th Street and Western Avenue,
a family friend said. From the
airfield he conducted a flying
sch ool and o ffered aerial
s.ig htseeing tours of Southern
California.
Mr. Hobart was employed by
Crown Hardware in Corona del
Mar for 27 years.
He was voted "most popular
employee" in 1979 by the Corona
del Mar Chamber of Commerce.
.. Everyone who came in here
talked with him -usually about
flying," recalled one former
fellow worker. "He had quite the
atortes about the old days and
bls experiences."
One friend claims Mr. Hobart•
told her he left home when he
was 12, became a pilot, took to
the air and never went back.
"He was a lways a little bit
vague about things," she said,
"but to hear him tell it, he had
som e life."
Friends say they're putting
together a collection of his
memorabilia, including hls
license from Or ville Wright
with hopes of finding a museum
interested in displaying at
Lawyer for
PSA s uit
retaine d
A San Diego lawyer who sue
ceasfuJ ly defended Or ange Coun
ty government in a recent trial
on the effects of noise at John
Wayne Airport has been rehired
to represent the county in a
lawsuit over a new airport ac·
cess plan.
Michael Gatzke of Eckmann.
Lodge and Gatzke was selected
Tuesday by the county Board or
Supervisors to fight the action
brought by Pac\flc Southwest
Airlines.
Gatzke will earn tht same $110
per hour fee he received in the
airport noise case, in which a
jury supported the county's pos1
lion that it owed no monetary
damages lo neighbors who
claimed living under the airport
flight pattern caused them emo·
tiona l distress .
In the PSA suit, the airline 1s
seeking a court order preventing
the county from initiating a new
access plan on Oct. 1 that would
allow PSA two daily flights per
day. '
PSA officials claim the coun·
ty's access plan doesn't follow
federal edicts to open the airport
to outside carriers. They want
from seven to nine nights per
day from John Wayne.
The airline currently does not
serve the airport.
A hearing is scheduled on Aug
10 in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles.
We1re Listening •••
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Call the number below and your message will be recorded,
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•
642·6086
0
OMEGA
Treasuring Each Moment '""",,..
Omega Gold Collec~ion ·
Tbe dauJe of dJamooda, the ·~ of sold surround one ot
the ll.nelt facet of all time. From Omefa, devotad to
quality for over 1JO 1ean. ID textured 14K Gold with
diamond.I. .
J. C.J.lump/uw6 J.w./.r6°
MEMBER AMERICAN OEM SOCIETY
1823 NEWPORT BLVD , COSTA MESA
38Y£ARl1N THI SAME LOCATION
@
81nkArntrlcan:l-Maettr Cf\ar PHONE &4i-S401
I
\
4
s Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednelday. Juty 22. 1881 ...
~ffiN~rn hlTI
China, others eye arms purchases from tJ.S.
W ASJUNGTON CAP) -The
Rea1aJl adminiatratloo'a new
•rma policy la unlikely to set
•tales reeorda or cauae a mljor
up1ur1e ln weapons trarnc tb.ls
wear . But China and several
.other authoritarian countries
stand to benefit from the soft.
pedallna of human rl1hts con·
ieerna.
On the theory that an enemy's
•nemy is a friend, communist
,China has been taken off the
restricted list as the admlniltra·
tion maneuvers to build up its
.. anti-Soviet atraten. While no
arms lalee have been approved
10 far, a Chinese delegation wUl
111hop here ln September.
The administration has asked
Congress to lift a ban on sales to
Argentina and has proposed a $3
bllllon economic and mllJtary
aid packaae for Pakistan
despite Ila auppreulon oi
political lnlu.raents and an am·
bltloua nuclear development
pro1ram that 11 caU1llll COD·
cern,
ChUe and Guatemala. botb wa-
der Iron-fisted military rule, are
on the verse of qualifyinl qaln
for U.S. arms.
But rislna competition, mo1Uy
from Western Europe, and the
worldwide economic slump
probably will ofhet new
customers.
•'There's a notion around that
the warehouse doora wlll fly
wide open and all you'll have to
do la queue up,•• a fruatrated
State Department official 1ald
the other day. "All that's realty
GOTCHAr -Sheriff's Deputy Bob Maxey holds onto a four.
foot alligator, named Oscar. after deputies captured the
gator in pond at Indianapolis, residence. Oscar, who eluded
capture for 11 days, was sent to Indianapolis Zoo.
BACK BAY
LIQUOR
HAS
JACK DANIEL'S
ON SALE
57"1som1
Reci. '9.67
BACK BAY UQUOll
642-4774
.2611 ....... ••• ••• w ......... . M IHc•-c. ... M ...
llWSANALYSS
hap,..ect II taat a different kind
of atmoapbere prevalll."
It's one of not delvlaa too
cloael)' into the method• au·
thorttarian reatmes UH in deal·
toa with their own clllaens,
particularly political dllsldents.
Alto, ao·c'lled "unilateral
restraint," the Carter ad·
ministration policy of cu.rbinl
U.S. arms sales with the hope
the Soviet Union could be wooed
into a slowdown, ii a dead letter.
The new philosophy was
spelled out in a me11a1e the
State Department sent in April
to all U.S. embassies. "Arms
traufen lbouid be viewed aa a
PMltlve and lncreaain1ly lmpor·
tant component of our 1lobal
security s>09ture and a key In·
strumeat of our foreian policy,''
It said.
American diplomata were ln-
atruc~ to 10 out of their way to
help arms salesmen and to pro-
vide "teoeral advice on tacUc:a
for 1ecurtn1 sales ...
Swept aalde was the Carter·
era "lepro1y letter," an admonl·
tlon to the emba11le1 in 1t77 to
be courteous to the munitlona
men but to "avoid conveyin1 the
Impression that there ia endone·
ment of firm's sales efforts."
It was a Ume, an official who
served in botb admlnlatratlona
recalled, in which arms sales
"were a religious matter and
somewhat dlJreputable.''
A requeal by Nlcara1ua for
50-cent a~der claapa for 3,000
U.S. rifles was weltbed aravely
by the Carter admlnlstratlon, all
the way up to Deputy Secretary
of State Warren Christopher, •
before It finally was rejected
because of the late Gen.
Anaataalo Somoza's Internal
repression.
And while Uruauay's army
and air force were permitted lo
obtain U.S. weapons, the Navy
was turned down for mlstreatlni
pri~oners.
A-c tually, under Jim my
Carter, Idealism did not always
prevail, even before ne1ot1atlons
with the Soviets ground to a halt.
Several countries with weak
human rights, records, including
Saudi Arabia, pre-revolutionary
Iran and Zaire, acquired bllllona
of dollars of American weapona
whlle Carter was president.
So many exceptions were
carved out -for Eaypl and
lt;rael, for instance -that
Carter could not hold the line on
sales.
Market forces. not philosophy,
e merged as the ultimate
arbiters or the U.S. weapons pro-
gram.
While American weapons are
oft.en the best in the world, they
also tend to be the most
sophisticated and expensive.
Delivery is usually slow. except
in the case or what one official
called "favorite sons, like the
Arab oil countries."
Man· allowed to sue • • over 1mpr1sonment
ALBANY, N.Y. <AP) -Ever
•Ince he waa convlcted of
murder H a youth nearly 45
years a10 and sentenced to die
ln the electric chair. ltldore
Zimmerman has beenjroclalm·
ln1 his Innocence an 1eekln1 redreaa. ·
Now he's 1ot lht ttate
Le1l1lature and the 1overnor on
bts aide, and the 63·year-old New
York City doorman aald he's
planm.n, to 1.ae the state for the
2S years he 1pent behind bars
before the conviction was over·
turned.
"Rl&hl now, I'm so hl&h in the
a1r I can't come down," Zlm·
merman said Monday alter Gov.
Hu1h Carey slaned Into law a
bill allowing hiro to sue the state
in the Court of Claims for
damages stemmina from his
conviction and imprisonment.
"This ls the greatest day in a
long time."
Zimmerman achieved celebri·
ty status of sorts because of his
long fight lo prove his innocence
and bis narrow escape from the
electric chair. Just two houn
before be was scheduled to die in
1938, then·Gov. Herbert Lehman
commuted bis sentence to We
lmprlsonment.
He has been fi1ht1n1 for Yin·
dlcat.lon almo1t from the day in
1937 when be waa sentenced to
die for the murder of a New
York City detective during a
holdup in a cafe.
At the time of the conviction,
he was 18 years old and poor and
had Just received a football
1cholarahlp to Columbia
Unlvenlty. He was going lo be
the "first in the family to 10 lo
colle1e," he said.
Jn 1981, the state Court of Ap·
peals overturned his conviction,
flndln1 it was baaed on the false
testimony of a witness.
Two yean after his releaae,
Zimmerman married a
childhood friend. He's been
flghtln1 to receive some kind of
compensation for lost yean and
lost opportunlUe.1.
Damage lawsuits asalnst the
state for wrongful imprisonment
aren't allowed unless the
Legislature makes a special ex·
· ceplion, and previous bills to
grant Zimmerman a hearing
were vetoed three times by the
late Gov. Nelson Rockefeller.
Rockefeller claimed the bills
would \DlDecess arily broaden the
state's legal responsibilities.
-For starters, Zimmerman's
attorney plans to file a $10
million lawsuit.
"I'm still a victim of pover·
ty. ·' Zimmerman said in a
telephone Interview from his
New York City apartment Mon·
day. At midnight, he was lo
begin his normal midnight-to-8
a.m . shift as a doorman at a
Manhattan apartment buildlnJ.
AP ......... He insisted from his arrest he
was innocent:. but be was COD·
victed with four others -they
all died in the electric chair.
Zimmerman claimed all four
said be had nothing to do with
the crime.
"I want lo give the members
of my family a Udy sum because
they suffered all along with me,
trying to get me out,'' he said.
In another recent j.nterview he
said, "U I get rich it will be a
help. It would mean Ruth (his
wife) and I would not have to
worry about paying the rent."
PBB DUMP -The dried ground above Gratiot County.
Michigan, land fill, which bolds 80 tons of PBB, shows little
evidence of being state's worst toxic waste dum. Michigan
has recommended the site be chosen to receive f ederaJ
funds.
Huntington Beach u cH o, THESE ITEM• ARE AVAIL..ULE ,oR uL.e AS. ADVERTI~
PLUS STORE
We sell first quality and discontinued
merchandise from Sears Retail and
Catalog Distribution.
"Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which the
items were formerly offered by Catalog or in many
Sears Retail stores around the country.
Uedl¥e 7122111
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SAMPLE oney
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Former C.talog Prtcea
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Were 41" to,29M
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,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednuday, July 22, 1981 s ~·
! Family's· long wait over Trolley l
• I opening
I
I
I i I I
San Diegans learn of POW's death after 14 years hailed SAN DIEGO <AP) -"I tue.u it's all ovtr, all
the waitin1." Brad Dodie said after learnlns the
body of hJa father shot down over North Vietnam
in 1961 has fin"ly come home.
Brad wu 3 when his father's plane crashed.
"I was too youn1 to remember him.." he said
after 1ettin1 the news in a telephone cail from hi•
mother, Jania, who was in Wuhlniton, D.C., for a
meetlnt of the National Leaiue of FamWes of
American Prisoners and Mlssint in Soutbeut
Asia.
The bodies of Navy Cmdr. Ronald W. Dodee.
Olympia, Wash; Air Force Capt. Richard H. Van
Dyke, Salt Lake City. and Navy Lt. Stephen 0 .
'We've been waiting all
these years to find out .. I
guess it's better, tho-ugh .'
Musselman, ·Texarkana, Texas, arrived at Travis
Air Force Base in California Tuesday.
"My mother was pretty upset when she called.
We've been waiting all these years to find out. I
guess it's better, though."
Brad's sister, Wendy, 20, rooms with friends
across town ln Pacific Beach. She took final exams
Tuesday at San Diego State University, where she
is a business major, and arranged to fly with her
brother to Washington for their father's funeral at
Arlington National Cemetery.
A 17-year-old student at Mira Mesa High
School, where he is a standout tennis player,
young Dodge Immediately went for an old scrap-
book and looked at the family's old newspaper
clippings.
The clippings included some of Cmdr. Ronald
Dodge or Olympia, Wash., when he was a catcher
for the old Seattle Rainiers and one from the
French magazine Paris Match showing Cmdr.
Dodge after his capture in North Vietnam.
Jn Paris Match was a picture showing Dodge
being herded down a street and beaten about tbe
head, presumably within a day of his capture May
New law controls
San Diego signs
SAN DIEGO (AP > -San Diego has passed an
em ergency law to keep control over billboards
since the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the city's
1972 ban on nearly all big signs was uncorutitu-
lional.
The new, one-year ordinance extends an
amended law passed in 1977 which allows
biUboards in certain commerciaJ and industrial
zones. In San Diego are between 1,500 and 2,000
billboards erected before 1972 or kept up while the
billboard companies' lawsuit was in the courts.
In the original law at which the suit was
aimed, the only billboards allowed were on-site
advertising and political and public service signs.
The law passed in an 8-1 vote Monday allows
those already up but prohibits erection of
billboards within 400 feet of another on the same
side of the street.
The nation's high court, in a complex ruJing
July 2 involving five separate written opinions
frotn justices, said the 1972 law restricted political
messages as well as billboards with exclusively
commerciai content, thereby violating the First
Amendment rights to t'eedom of speech.
City Attorney John Witt has since told the City
Council that the less-restrictive 1977 ordinance is
constitutional under the court's definition.
"I think the city has not only a right but a duty
to its citizens to regulate land use," Mayor Pete
Wilson said Monday.
Ms. Nude titlist
wears it well
DEVORE. Calif. (AP> -The judges credited
Anna Reynolds' ability to speak five languages as
part of the reason she triumphed over 16 other con·
testants in the Ms. Nud4! lnternatlonaJ-USA beauty
pageant.
The Chile-born beauty's shoulders were \he on·
}Y thing covered Sunday as she donned the win-
ner's pale blue robe at the climax of the two-day
pageant at the Treehouse Fun Ranch Nudist Camp
tn Devore, about SS miles northeast of Los
Angeles.
"It feels wonderful," the 25-year-old beauty
queen aaid of her victory Tuesday. "Especially
since I am from another country."
Ms. Reynolds, also named Ms. Suntan and Ms.
Personality in the contest, was a dancer on
Chilean television before she moved to the United
States 21h years ago. She now works as a hotel
manager.
"I was following my husband," she said ex-
.plaining the move. "He was a Marine when I met
him and be was stationed in Chile." While vtsitin1
lier future husband in California, they were mar-
ried and settled here.
The bare beauty competition included the
standard fare, but some very notable deletions -no
evenina gowns, no swim suits, no clothes. • GARBAGE BAGS
• 1'7. 198'1. A nu~ber of friends •treed with Mn.
Dodie that lt waa of her husband. He waa llat~ by
the United States as a Vietnamese prisoner of war
until last year. -
Mrs. Dodie confronted North Vietnamese
representatives with the picture in Paris but they
denied any lmowled1e of the capture.
The Dod1ea moved to San Dleao in 1966 with
hJs transfer to Miramar Naval Air Station and
bouaht a two-story home leas than two miles away
in a erove of towering eucalyptus trees.
James Kina. stepfather of Cmdr. Dodie, said
Tuesday in Olympia that "moeUy our reaction la
relief, of course. The fact that he waa shot down H
years and two months a10 has healed the hurt to a
certain extent. It (our reaction) has been up and
down. It has been tough not knowing."
When the Kings 1ot home Monday afternoon, a
Navy representative was waiting with the news.
"It was a surprise," he said softly.
King, who is married to Dodge's mother Doris,
said Mrs. King has_ multiple sclerosis -"which
makes lt rougher to take."
..... ,......
SAN DIEGO <AP>
The new San Die10
Trolley, balled 11 the
leaat expensive mad-
translt system built In
the United Statn ln 40
years, bas chu11ed
smoothly to the Mexican
border and back in ltl
Inaugural run.
After a week oJ
celebrations. the britbt
red cars begin re1ular
runs next Sunday. In the
initial 32·mile round trip
with U.S. and Mexican
officials, Mayor Pet~
Wilson praised the SSS.'8
million system.
King, an Olympia brewery worker, sald "We
kind of wonder about it (the timing of the release).
His wife has been active in Washington, D.C., try-
ing to get information of MIAs. It just seems like a
coincidence that he should be identified at the time
she becomes politically active back there. It's
possible anyway."
Brad Dodge displays a photo of hil father, Navy Commander Ronald W. Dodge ,
°'it appeared m 1967. Now 17, Brad was too young to remember his father
before he was captured in Vietnam.
"It was finished on
time, under budget and
without a dime of
federal funds ,·' al a cost
of SS million-a ·mile,
compared with S34
million for the Bay Area
Rapid Transit system of
San Francisco, Wilson
said.
25% ·off the marked
dQwn pr.ice that appears
on any reduced ticket.
Be Hrly ... qu•ntltlH ue limited. We don't hne every Item In every 1lze •nd color.
Ex1mple of how our Hie wortca:
Junt0r stacl\1 • •
Orio 14,19
Now l.H
Less 25•• 1.15 ---Yoor pnc:e 1.24
Men sshort''
OrtQ Now Less 25•.
114.
l .H
2.25
Your price 1.74
JCPenney Special Saving In All Departments.
Yt1 on 1111ery redU<:ed Item currtnlly marlled down '/OU
c.n tlke lr!Olh9t" 25~ oll ltle rnartted prlee Merited down ~••ms
will Ille<> be tdenhfoed on l'Kka end tlllles by event 11gn1 and cerd
IOC>Plfl Hurry QUlflfthH Mitt.cl
'Item• tdtlntllltd by rid 119 or red tine• do not tf'll ~~It·
lemporeiry reduc:IO\I of reg\lllr ltltlM •
• •11ems shOwn u eumpMt Oflto/, not..,.... 'on ..,,.,., 11ore
.. • ~ • • .
'
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, July 22, 1881
LOOIDON. (AP> -Bee Gee ~p IW 10btJi Gibb 11y1 he 11 ialan~e his utraqed Wiie, ahe tried to entice
him I a .15 million adultery
case. c
Gibb, a, made the claim at
Heat)U'CJW Air9ort before depart· m1 fcir -"" Tork. "After what
baa ~ap,..ncd. I can never
tor1i,_Jaer,..1• be said.
DEAD AT 50
Louis Peters
FBI
source
dies
The 1ln1er utd he bad
evlclence h1I wife, Moll)'. wu
tryln1 to aet blm up to 1ut her
ror adultery and then "take nM
to the cleanert" wllb 1 COUil•
terault c:laimlnc defamation. Ht
said he obtained Ult haformatJon
by breakJn1 into b11 home In
W entwortht Surrey, la1t )'Hr while biJ wire wa1 away In New York.
MITCHUM
llOLL-ON ANTl-ftDlftHIANT
For Ploblem Perspiration
LODJ (AP> -The
Cadillac dealer whose
work as an informant
helped the FBI convict
r eputed Maria leader
Joseph Bonanno has
died of cancer in a local
hospital.
STICK 199 DIOOOIWIT l I
2.1 ez llZI (41 ilzf" •
Lou Peters, who died
Monday , s pent two
years as a confidant of
Bonanno after Bonan·
no's associates offered
him an inflated price for
his auto dealership in
1977 and suggested he
could profit by buying
dlher dealerships for the
alleged crime chief. The
dealership allegedly was
wanted as a source to
launder illegally gained
money.
Peters, 50. went to the
FBI after being ap·
proached. The informs·
lion he fed agents about
Bonanno's dealings was
crucial to the man's 1980
conviction on charges of
cons piring to interfere
with a grand jury in-
vestigation.
Bonanno, 76, was sen·
tenced to fiVl? years in
prison He is appealing
the conviction.
"If I had it to do all
over again. I'd start
tomorrow," Peters told
a reporter in October
1980. "It's the best way
to fight organized crime.
Hopefully othe r bus i-
nessmen will recognize
that and cooperate with
the FBI."
Peters said the m an
who approached him
about purchasing the
dealership told him that
Bonanno "was head of
the Mafia for the whole
United Slates and that
h e want e d the
deale rships to launder
mo ney from crimina l
activities."
SAVE40~
EFFERDENT DUTIIH
CLUJllD
Stro119 against
stains.
SAVE&oe
M.l!l't~~-i1111MOUDIA n.•····...., • ...,.,_(I&)
•CIUll (4 ea.)
YOUI CMOICl
...
Cotf DITIOND
Pll balanctd 5.0 wlttl luscious 11thtr.
tfer•'• Goo .. Newat NO MOltl PLIAlll On Your Pet or In Your Homel
Mra. Glbb, 34, contacted at the
G1or1ian man1ton, denied the
alle1auona.
-NOVIN
IPPICTIYI
AOAINIT1 . ,.,.., ·-• un •• :=..
:~...,.
.( -............. .. ••••ray._,......,. ••••... ....................
• unit works on aofe, silent, ultro1onlc wo11e1
• 1ofe to humans & pet•
• us .. only 4 wott1 power
• no 1peclol ln11ollo1ion
• pe111 ellmlnoted In 2 to 6 week a
The couple were married 12
)'tare 110 and ha ve two
c hildren , Spencer, 9 , and
Mtllua, 7. Jn recent yean, Gibb
baa lived with hi1 brolben In
Mlami for much or the year, vii·
llinl Britain only occaalonall)'.
..... ., .. ,..
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YOUI alOICl ggc u
While feeding i n -
formation to the FBI,
Peters became one of
Bonanno's confida nts.
Fearing for his family's
safety. he talked his
wife into filing for a
legal separation and he
moved to Stockton. al·
lowing the FBI to plant
television and audio r e-
cord i ng e quipment
there.
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HOLIDAY FOGG ER
Arter the trial, Peters
and hi s wife renewed
their marriage vows and
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"just lo case something
happens to me" and the
family needs money.
Cout student8
choose studies
Don I veraon of Costa Iii"• 111d Wa'rren Kr1mer of La1una
Beach have been cbolen to advance to the fourth
year ol lbll biomedical
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II
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 22, 1981
one weekonly
JULY 17. JULY 23
F OR ELE
CUSTOMERS
For our customers now receiving Chan-
nels 14 and 16 ... we have now converted
our main system so these same channels
will a ppear 011 Channels 17 and 20.
This may cause some inconvenience
because yo ur converter must be changed,
but if yo u will please call 642-3260 or
646-0586 we will schedule a time that is
convenient for you to h ave this cha nge
made. There will be a bsolute ly no charge
for this change. Othe rwise yo u are more
than welcom e to s top in at o ur
TELEPROMPTER offi ce a t 901 West
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Orange Cout DAIL'( PILOT /Wednelday, July 22, 1981
-~ lfZDA llUN 1CO A , S.C. (AP) -·The kld 1D me who
alwaya •••d to be a cowboy 11 a happy little dude ~. J:very sundown be pu&a on a bia
hat •n4 lillt-... 1ed boots and 1wauer1 backward
1n ttnwfD tbtOld w .. ~.
He beadt for "Oklahoma!" on the staae of the
Town Theatre, oldest continuously operatln1 little
tbeater bl~ naUon. Naturally, I ao with blm.
Polka there caU UI Slim. We drawl. We walk
bow·leaM· We mrt with tbe lad.la. We even set
Into flltfttb&I, We are one tougb hombre.
AU over the country. people like me and my
llttle alter ego use community theater to try on
ldentltiee, experiences and emoUona they couldn't
achieve and might not even ¥/ant ln their own
lives.
They're pretty good at maJtlne the exotic
clothing fit, if the public response these days is
any indication.
''Little theater Is enjoying success almost
everywhere," says William Grooms. president or
the Town Theatre board. "
"For the 1980·81 season. we have 1ar1er mem-
bership than ever before. and membership con·
notes financial success. We find that the interest or
the community is increasing.
"I'm certainly not an expert," Grooms adds.
"But from my limited view and my professional
travels. I'd say this is a fairly universal thing.
~ven theater in New York is doin1 better than it
has in some time."
The Town's ··Oklahoma!" has been a great
success, with box office sales so brisk that it was
decided on the second day of a two-week run to ex·
tend the show a week.
Popular demand forced a similar extension
last month or "Oliver" at the neighboring
Workshop Theater. which plans to reassemble the
cast for still another extra run this summer.
"Part of this success is boredom with TV,"
Grooms says. "Part Is that movlf'S don't offer as
much as the average person is lookina for. And
part is that people enjoy seeina thina1 donl' live."
That helps explain why the audlent'ti 1s therl'.
but the volunteer t'ast and t'N'" re another mat·
ter. What made us all spend mort• than two months
of s pringtime evenings und w_,llkt1nds being
hayseeds on a dusty gtutote und~r hot ll.ihti1
"First, I like the pt'Ople I mf't't," says BUI
Arvay, a manufut'turinl( t-Xet'utive by day and an
oily Oklahoma peddler by mght n uy Is seriously
hooked. He's been m eight sho,.·s m two years.
"Second. I'm a ham. and I enjoy the atten·
tion." he admits "And third. it's fun to assume a
David Tomli~ writer for Associated PreH, took a
part in 'Oklahoma' for thi& first-person piece.
Tomlin is at far left.
totally different character. It diverts you from
your troubles at work."
Arvay's reasons are a lot like mine. But direc·
tor Emmalee Robbins says both of us ought to be
demanding more for all our hard labor. For Mrs.
Robbins, the payoff for the actor who earns it is a
flt'cting moment or perfect harmony with his role
nnd his audience that makes him tingle right down
lo h 1s toes.
"'ll 's a magic moment that's inlerpr~ted dif·
ferently by everyone who experiences It." she
say~ "But you can't understand It unless it's hap·
pt•ncd to you."
ll happened to her when "Oklahoma !"
opened. "My toes tingled,'' she squealed to the
cheering cast when the curtain went down. So did
mine. but it was because my boots were too tight.
The earth hasn't moved for me yet, but the
show has two more weeks to run and I might get
lucky In the meantime , there's a kid who always
wanted to be a cowboy who's having fun.
• Advice
• Counseling
• Readings
••"-·._,., •k•illClllllll ' ,,,.,,.._
NOWPUV1NO
•IOllTll ceAST MA• IMA l'UU Ptclfle'I ... ll ceoUT
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•
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see the new Pilot lV Log first. You'll find the
most complete listings in any paper around
for sports, specials. soap operas, movies and
more, plus listings for 11 cable channels
available in the coast area. And our sign-on to
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-·~ .. . . ,, . . . -. . . .
Kurt Russell shows darker side
.,. 80811IOllA8
'NlcWnC~--
1HOLLYWQOD <AP) -Twenty years a10.
10-year-old Kurt RUNU made hll movie debut by
klcld"' ElviJ Praley'• ahlnl ln "It Happened at
the World'• P'alr.'' •
Lut yell' Jlu.uell starred lD the three-hour
televlaioo bloeraphy, "l:lvta," and acquired a
whole new career. Also a wife, Season Hubley,
who appeared ln the mm 11 PriscUla Presley.
The transformed Kurt Ruuell can be viewed
thla summer ln the Avco Emb111y release,
"Escape from New York," John Carpenter's latest
and darkest venture Into the realm of fantasy.
Russell plays the master criminal, Snake
Plllaken, aomethln1 different from. the actor,'a
portrayal• durin& hl1 10 years at the Dlaney studio.
The S7 million "Escape from New York" takes
place in 1997, when Manhattan illand la a walled
prison for 3 million crimlpala who have lost the
civil war agalnat the U.S. f>ollce Force. Air Force
One crashes on the island, and the President,
Donald Pieasance, ls captured, alan1 with papers
vital to the peace or the world. Snake PUssken lo
the rescue.
"It's not a message picture," explains Kurt
Russell. "It's pure escapism, an exercise in 'what
if?"'
What if movie audiences don't go along with
t he exercise? Russell isn't worried. He has faith in
John Carpenter, who directed the low-budget,
high-grossing "Halloween" and "The Fog," as
well u Russell's turning-point "Elvis."
The actor won the role when his career was in
: the doldrums. After leaving Disney in 1974, he bad
appeared in some television movies and two
series, "The New Land" and "Quest," both pres·
tigious, both short-lived.
"I was typed as the clean-cut nice guy." be re·
called, "even though I had played that kind of role
only three times at Disney. Those three pictures
I "FORCE: FIVE" (R)
II "FOX AND THE HOUND" (G)
"ONCE UPON A TIME"
"HISTORY OF TitE WORLD,
PART ONE" (R)
brooke shields
manin hewitt
endless love
PolyGrwn Pk:tutH A Universal Release
••••••••••••••••••••••••• C) ..... \ ...... , ..... c.,, s...-. .... ·-
ALAN ALDA
llllBlll~
Ollll .._cm ST-.!"'
~~~~~~~~--
~ llltrnoldl • /lofl# MrJorw
,.,,,,,,, FIM'C«t. Dom o.l.«*e
happeMCI to earn $75 million. Nobody remembered
the aeven plcturet ln which I played the bad kld on
the block or a kJd wltb problemt.
"I declded to atop dolnc m9vit1~f·tbe·week
and hold out for feature films. It waa demeanlna.
eoine around to audltlont for plctllffl, moet of
them erade·B diaco craR. But I WU determined to
turn my career around.
Rusaell was one of four finallall for the
Presley role -"I bad three weeb to learn the
character and to learn how to play 1ultar;
fortunately, Elvis played almple chordl."
"Elvia" led lo another well-received TV mov-
ie, "Amber Waves,'' and the theatrical feature
"Used Cars." Then he rejoined Carpenter for
"Escape from New York." The Snake Plisaken
role was extremely physical, and Russell trained
for it.
··John wanted me lo do aJ many of the stunts as possible, and I felt that the character had lo be
big physically," said Ru1tell. "So I enrolled at
Vin ce's Gym and lifted welgbta for four months.
·'There is nothing more boring than lifting
weights, but I stayed wltb it because I had a goal. I
kept it up during the fllmin1 because I was
panicked by the rear that at the end or the picture I
wouldn't match bow I looked at the beginning. The
last day of shooting was the last day or lifting
weights.
"The weights paid orr. I've always bad to take
20-minute catnaps to revive my energy while mak·
ing films. This time I never got tired."
"Escape from New York" filmed one day at
the Statue or Liberty: the rest of the film was shot
in St. Louis and Los Angeles, those cities doubling
for the ruined New York.
"It was a tough picture to make because of all
of the locations and the physical stuff," said
Russell. "But it was also the most enjoyable pie·
lure I've done, because it was a family affair. My
*BARGAIN MATINEES •
Monday thru Saturday
All Ptrformanct1 t..fort 5:00 PM
(Exce,t Sptelll Enpflmenta 11M1 Holiclaya)
--· --·-· ""°" YOUfl EVIi ONU" "°" taAI ..... a:-. ...... ...... ----c..-"AATHUA" ,,.. ·~·R'a•fl"a•"81 • .. •tilll9 ------· "RAIDERS Of THE
LOST ARK" "' ·-·-·-·-·-LAKEWOOD
CENTER WAllC ·IN ---''BUHRMAN II" IPQ) ....... ,.. .....
-.&.--.a•• . .:~.·rP.:..-:...
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAlk IN
•
.... -... .... ...... a...
"UCAN RllOM NeW YORI(""'
, ... ~·c.11 • .. ·t.m·-----"9.0 .8 ." "' ..... -..... , .... _ ----"SUPERMAN II -tlt8t•lcll•eM·--····
Focu11v ol Concrtewooct
213/531•9510 ----··-•.-n "THE CANNONBAU
AUN"'"' ·~·l::•· ...... ·1••1r11•11:tl
"THE FOUR SEASONS"
·-----(PQ) ------"RAIDE.RI OF THE
LOST ARK" -.~ ....... ,. .... --·---·---"RAIDERS OF THE ---
LOllT AM" "' , "~!£.~~ -
···-·-·-·•• I --Soultl Coo•• ~., J otlloodwo't
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L09T ARK" "' -....... Nj .....
... ,.. • ._, ·~ 7:JO , .. ,..,. 7:'5 ,...., , ......... ,.
IM,ORTANT NOTIC(1 CMllOREM UNDER 12 fRH! r--, ..
"""' , ....... , 11.,. Th•• ho 6;JO •ht h• Mtl& •:OO 'II Ctllf.ll IOUNO • "IM ,. (All t\lrOIO tS 'ICM SllNWI
If tlC) AM tNI t\lrOIO ~ OOfT10N ACCU$OllY l'OTl!10ll
---AM llQllTMU l•AU Cllll-" ~ mOll NII Ml*>
............. ------ANAHEIM ORIV(·IN ··t.ltTHU"" --..._ .. Oil•-" .. ,O" Ill)
179-tHO COl(H-__,..,...,,....,...c:::::;;,c.;.,r.:-=r.,...,..=•·=----...--r--:-:-..;_-.;.-;-.-.-. -. -
THI CAH..o.;.~L MIN" {l'O) ""°" YOUfll ~U ONLY -
HAAOL Y MINO" Cl'OI "TME LONG "'ous·· 1111
C111t 11 IOUllO C"'t " -. ,,...,. ""'
BUENA PARK Oll lVl IN
_ __.. ........ _ ·-c-. "UCAN fltOlt •w YC>Nr" 1111 -""".....,A .. Wetf Of CllOll ··~ ~ .. MINATOfr' 111
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gn"'!•m* ~w;: . "Doeoo ,,..,., ot _...,,.., CJO : AHY WHICK WAY YOU CAN' (l'O)
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t•2•24'1 Cllll " -
If' \A '• I Ir
HI WAY 39 OlllVI IN
_,. . ,, .. ,.
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CM·fllOIMO --·-··· l'OflCS: PM 1111 -"'A.DI TO at.ACK lilt c.. rt 10U1110
". '"""' LA HABRA ]~'.I I~ ___ ...... _, __ _
171•1M2
• '•A ' A • I
LINCOLN DRIVE IN
. --......
leocll -So ,,, 0..0.1\ GIO¥t Fr-
If 1• 3693 ----CMWJ ··u~"..-.
"10" ...
:tll(fl lOUliO ---· . THI CANMONUL&. MIN" IN) ...... HAltCK. Y WOMINO" (l'O) Clllf ·A TOllllO -----''INOL.I .. L.OYI Ill -"Nt9HT'MAWI" 1111 __ ._ ......
OUANGE [1111\/t IN ---.... o ....... -''Tttl fl09TllMI M.WAYI _,... .....
. '
M I SSION r D•v t tN . .
--........... ..................
"ftAOI TO aACK'' "
,
Orange Coaat DAILY PtLOT/Wednffday, July 22, 1981
• in 'Escape '
Kurt Ruaull
wife plays a role, and John's wife, Adrienne
Barbeau, is the female lead. My brother-in-law,
Larry Franco, was co-producer with Debra HilJ ,
who has worked on all of John's films. as have
most or the crew."
cineoome a
lcrizizn Com ple11
Call 6~4 2 SS~
C'-ch • C~'r -=aWAm CAI 1:413:18 t :OO a 1:10 10:11
SIGNORET I -~) 1 :30 3:45 1:00 -~O\NE" 1 .. •~;t~l~'•P•:f.., ......
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS'AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
Ille ~-o/ ftt ,_,. • 10 -~ HIOUt ... _ • .,.,,,,,
lftl> ... _IOt_by ... llC-
All Ill 11!111 N«J IJlj FILMS Al!CltvE
niE SEAi. OI THI! MOTION PCT\lf!E 000£ OIP 81!LF AEOULATIOH
Jotln 9oornwn'1 ECAL•• (Al lhoWI •t 1:00 4:00 7:00 t :45
RAIDERS OF THE
LOST AR K IPGI ............... -·o.r--,,,.._,..... -·0..,--11:-.a. ...... _1_
A ldlwd PfYOf" -.nar L.OcmfAI Which Way It Up (Al
••-•••--r ................... -.. ... ...... ,.-..... .......................... ··---...._ ......... -
f~ ,,.', "''.' l ft"'
~
. ' . .
I I
i " .. • Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/Wedntlday, July 22. 1981
·. Comp,uter scandal hit,s
governor's credibility ·
When Gov. J erry Brown
backed formaUon of the state's
Fair Political Practices Com-
. mission sev~n years ago -ln the
wake of the Watergate scandal -
he could hardly have foreseen
that his own office eventually
. would be' targeted by the
watchdog body.
Today , Brown's Com -
putergate dilemma stands to get
him in even more political hot
water than the more publicized
Med fly muddle that's brought
down national criticism on his
head.
It aJI started when it was
charged that Brown's tax-paid
staff had used a state-leased
computer to compile mailing lists
of thousands of potential sup·
porters for the governor's future
political campaigns.
This is just the sort of
maneuver that landed Orange
County political figures in jail.
At first the governor and his
aides flatly rejected the charges
of misuse of the computer.
But the picture dprkened
when the FPPC, attempting to in·
vestigate the charges, came out
with a 150-page report calling for
criminal investigation into
evidence that · Brown aides had ·
deliberately staged a Watergate-
style cover-up of the computer
affair. They had, said the report,
perjured themselves, destroyed
documentary evidence, including
3,000 file cards with names of
supporters. and altered other
documenta pJ'elented to tbe com·
mission.
Contrmted with the report
the governor admitted to ··ba~
Judgment, miatakea wMt lloppy
practices·· In the computer
operation. But he still denies bav·
ing done anything illegal.
The f 6ct remalna that his
staff members did at the outset
lie to the FPPC and there ls glar·
ing evidence of an attempt to
obstruct and derail the com-
mission's investigation.
Looking back on Watergate,
it was fairly apparent that Presl·
dent Nixon could have escaped
the whole sordid aff alr by admit-
ting, in the beginning, that his
aides had engineered the "third·
rate burglary" and by dilm.Lsstn1
them outright.
Instead he tried his hand at
the . cover-up that eventually
brought his downfall.
Why a man of Brown's in·
telligence and political acumen
cannot see the futility , ahd in-
deed the grave danger of a
similar attempt to foil justice, re-
mains a mystery.
Now the matter is in the
hands of the district attorneys of
Sacramento and Los Angeles
counties. The governor insi.sta he
intends to remain '·a formidable
political figure in this state for
the next 20 years.•'
Given the events of the past
few weeks. that may be unduly
optimistic.
Tests serve a purpose
Standa rdized college en-
trance examinations came in for
a fair blast of criticism a while
back when two students turned
up errors of fact in the Scholastic
Aptitude Tests they had taken -
errors subsequently confirmed
by the authors of the tests.
But Stanford University vice
president Robert M. Rosenzweig
' warns against blanket condemna-
tion of the tests, and he makes
some good points.
For one thing, says
Rosenzweig, standardized tests
make a notable contribution to
the democratization of American
education.
They automatically remove
subjective judgment from ad·
mission decisions that might be
s wayed by racial, e thnic. re-
ligious or class bias.
They make sure t hat intellec-
tual ability remains the principal
criterion for college admission -
a nd sometimes, he adds, the tests
turn up unexpected academic
talents.
And, says Rosenzweig, once
basic academic sufficiency has
been established by the tests, lt
becomes possible to proceed sale-
ly with the process of further
identifying qqalified appllcanta
on the basas of potential
leadership ability or other non-
academic achievements.
While it may' be true that
failure to achieve an adequate
score on the SAT tests can keep
some applicants out of the col·
leges of their choice, there's still
much to be said for a faceless ad·
missions procedure that is based
primarily on academic poten·
tial, rather than the subjective
judgment of an admissions of·
ficer.
Mopeds get official status
Motorists who have been a
little unnerved by the maneuvers
of that cross between a bicycle
and ·& motorcycle known as the
moped doubtless will agree it's
only fair that the machines
should be licensed before they
can be operat.ed on state roads.
Heretofore, operators needed
only a valid driver's license to
putt along the highways on a
moped. Registration as a bicycle
was optional.
Under a new state law,
mopeds sold new after July 1
must be licensed within five
days. Those sold prior to July 1
must be licensed by Jan. 1, 1982,
and those already registered as
bicycles must be licensed as
mopeds by July 1, 1982.
The SS charge will cover the
•
cost of a license plate, similar to
those issued for motorcycles, and
an ID card, but there will be no
annual regiatratlon fee. Transfer
of ownership will cost another SS.
Perhaps giving mooeda tbe
official st,wa of realstral.lon with
the Department of Motor
Vehicles will encourage ownen
to regard tbem as something
more than a handy toy.
But if the moped now la rec-
ognized as a vehicle the next
step should be for the bMV to set
up some statewide rules • to
whether it is, or i1 not, penni\ted
to travel in bike lanea or wbetber
its operation must be confined to
regular traffic lanes. Clariflc.!a·
lion is in order. .
Opinions expresseo 1n the space above are those or the Cally Pilot. Ot~ Ylews h ·
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Re~r comment ;s lf'lvlt-
ed. Address The Oail y Pilot, P.O. BOIC 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. p~ (11•)
U :M321.
L.~. Boyd I Singapore 1in ..
Singapore ha• been known
worldwtde throupout modem hb· toty aa a hotbed of hot beds. A vice
capital. Today it'• aovemment con·
fitcatu 1uch matailnu 11
"Playboy" and "PenthouM" ttlMn
IUCb are found la tMittl' lut•a1e.
What ..,....,. ta written IDClll fre·
quently on pldun polteardll? Som.
quirl• a clieat. That, too, hal been
researched. PredJctabJy, lt'1; .. Hav-
lni a wonderf\al tJme. Wllll Jll'I were
here." The card company that found
thil out ln a tlve·y .. r 1tud1 doel not
fret overmuch about trite liJMI. Am
nellb« do Ute people who .,.,:a.M •
card1. H1vtn1 a Wonderf\al ,,_.,
ete. ii like OOod Luck, a.It ......_
or l Love You. It wUl do.
Romance 11 more important tbU
food to a bummlnablrd. You ea &ell
by ltl wtnp. They b4tat 61 U.. a
aecoad when feedln1. JOO dJDll a
teeond wbeo courtln1.
.·~.IF~;-'a:uxo ~ iti 'PJFOlf.,, I
' ·~w'™ A ~~a ,at)))·<nJRrTO -nxN:Q ... · 'ittKO w~ A MGH~l.CZ·10 /1()61L ... I
lPC~
'Merger mania' flourishes
NEW YORK -Ir someone had
abaken me awake • couple of week& ago
and asked me what Conoco was, I might
have answered that it was a place
where Grace Kelly became a princess .
After all, what did Conoco mean to
me?
Now I know that Conoco. Inc., ls the
nlnth·blHeat oU company in the world
and that even bluer companies want to
buy it for billions of dollars. ·'So, what
does that mean to 'me?" I uked my
friend, a very busy meraers-and·
acquisitions attorney.
"I don't know," he said. "What's go·
log on 11 obviously significant. But no
one is sure what It will really mean in
the long run. It could change our lives."
IT'S BEING CALLED "Merger
Mania" -that was the headline in The
Wall Street Journal, a newspaper not
noted for hysteria. All the corporations
in the United States -and some out.aide
our horde~ -seem to be tryina to buy
each other. The company most people
wanted last week waa Conoco, the
queen of the acquisition prom, wooed
a nd pursued by DuPont, Mobil Oil,
TexacoandSeagrams .
"There are a number of business
reasons for this, having to do with oll
profit.a, inflation and diversification."
said another._friend, a financial edit.or.
"But the mo1n interesting one ls that the
Reagan admlnl1tratlon seems lo be
sending signals that anythine 1oea. If
there are going to be no antitrust ln·
vestlgatlons or even inquiries, then this
is the chance of a lifetime."
It's our lifetime. And lt may be our
money.
Mobil, wbicb apparently hu more
than $6 billion ln loose caah and credit
to get lnto the Conoco game, at the
same time is ralsina its gasoline prices
in New York s'tate by 3 cent.a per gallon.
Those wholesale prices are being raised
as the price of crude oU drops, becaUJe
llCUll 111111
Mobil wants to retaliate againlt New
York state for daring lo raise oil com·
pany taxes to finance public transporta·
Uon.
WITHOUT CLOSELY analyzing the
juatlflcation for Mobil's corporate anger
-and there la some -the company
feels •troni enou1h to confront directly
the government of the second large.st
state ln the country. The bigger Mobil
gets, the more government it will feel
ready to challenge. There will come a
time, If this klnd of c-orporate power
keeps growing, when Americans may
have to choose between democracy and
capitalilm.
For now. however, that problem is
long term. For now. the problems for
each of WI are little things Ute not being
able to buy a house. Merger mania,
which is played with borrowed money,
11 beginnfn1 to absorb so much of the
bank money available for lending that
Interest rates wlll remain high.
And, even al high rates, there' may
not be enough lending money for both
the companies and us. Guess which will
get the short end of that stick? Citibank
in New York, which is otrertog Mobil Its acquisition credit line, woufd have a
real tough time choosing between the oil
company and aome family that wanted
lo buy a home on Long bland . .
right'!
I AM NOT AGAINST business or big·
ness as such. J have thought. for in·
stance, that the Justice Department
sometimes used antitrust laws to harass
IBM for being more innovative than
smaller competitors. But with bigness
comes power, and you have to evaluate
the people who will have It.
Men lllce Ralph Bailey will have the
power. He ls. currently, the chairman
of the board of Conoco. When he -and
other Conoco officers -realized that
the company was a merger target, they
got together to protect ... themselves.
They called a board meeting and.
among other things, guaranteed Bailey
a S5 million settlement in case of a
takeover, or payment of $637,716 a year
until 1988, when he would have retired.
That's human nature. There was one
lifeboat; it was just the right size for
corporate officers. Other employees'!
Shar eholders? Customers? Sink or
swim. Now. J do think there is such a
thing as "too big." An attorney general
of the United States said that once. that
bigness per se was bad. He wanted an·
titruat investigations to be based on
nothing but great size. His name was
John Mitchell, and I guess he knew
something about human nature and
money.
There was an answer to Zionism
How different the world would look to-
day If 40 years aao. tbe U.S. had opened
ill arrM t.o the refoeees from Namm
and offered, say, a piece ol Artsooa or
New Mexico to these settlen.
U, beeinnlnl in lNO when IDtler reaJ-
Y wanted to get rid -;; the Jews, and not
· send them to the gaa cbamben, Preti·
dent Rooeevelt and our State Depart·
ment had liven more than Up-service t.o
"the cauae of humanity," wbat subse-
quent qony and crilla might have been
avoided. •£ WOULD RAVE NO State of
Israel, true; but the ancient Zlon.ltt
dream Deft{ conceived of • political
.. te, wttb lb own 1overnment, It.I nae.
lb armyi.ltl ralden and bombers. Zion wa .. a reditoua and splrltuaJ communJ·
ty, not a dvtl entJty or a naUonaJ pres·
enc•. u It wu forced to become by the
extcendet ol war and persecutloa.
The settlen would have done for our
Southwest detert wbat they did In the
far more cballeneit'a Middle tut -
turned it into a thriving alriculturaJ
and lndUJtrial center. teemlna wt th
talent from every part of Europe. Scien-
tists, engineers, artists, doctors would
have nocked here lo far greater num·
bers than theJ emiarated t.o ltraeJ, un·
der pressure and becauae the.re wu no
viable aJtematJve.
A couple of million of these imml-
gr ants would have made little dlf·
m111111111
fereoce in our American demotrapbks:
we have arown by nearly 100 mlWon
stoce U..t time, even without them. Our
vast coun.trY could bave swallowed
them up In one ll~e auJp. to their
benellt, and ouu, and the whole
world'•. 1bl9 would have been the sen.al·
ble, the democtatJc, the humane, even
the praetlcal thiq to do.
INl'l1LU>, A8 A detperat~ P" ann.
because tbere wu literally no place
else to go, a "country" was manufac·
lured for these people, in the wrong
plac-e, at the wrong time. for the wrong
reasons. It was life in Israel or death
elsewhere; and so milUona of Jews, who
had hardly heard the word before.
became "Zionists," not because they
cared about Isr ael as such, but simply
to secure the survival of their co-
religlonist.s.
IT IS A specious security, surrounded
by hosWe nations, supported only by the
continued good will of the U.S., under
attack from both the left and the right,
and now exacerbated by the vexing prob·
lem of Arab oil, wblcb may prove
more potent a force than Zloni1t sym·
pathles.
We are always looking for "solutions"
after we have created problems that
are nearly insoluble -created them by
our Indifference, our cowardice, our ln·
sen1itJvity. It it profitless t.o point to a
Hitler u the caUJe of our woe, for
Hitlers big and little are always
themselves the distorted creations of
our own moral deficiencies.
How the governor lands on his feet
Q -Governor Brown? A -Good Evenlng. 1 would Ulte to
cat.1ortcally deny Utat.
Q -That you are Governor Brown?
A -No, that lt la evening. Given the
present clrcum1tances on my watch, I
ban no choice but to wlsb you food
111orntna.
Q -11 that why you suddenly have 9oten t.o 1tand on your head? .
A -Yet, I fffl It 11ves me the propel'
perapectJve for pr .. • conferences and
Sutl pancake breakf Htl.
Q -About aerial 1pra)'lrle of the
mtdfiy, Govemor ...
A· -I RA VB ablOlutely DO 1JltenUop of,....., ct.Ith and d419tnieUaa Oil in·
llGeent woaMn aDd cbil*-daJ after
day ln order to placat• tfle bt1 ••rlcultural lntu11tl, For I baH
alwa11 held Ulat 1maller ll bt•pr n · elpt ln out.el' 1pee11 .,...,.. n mmt
~c.llWlla'I ..... . 1 Q -.. ta.f ..... al ........... il
••• Uareate111a1 to caaarantl•• CalWlnla ........... ,. ..., ....... ......,....'" ~
A -Which, of course, I will. For, con-
veraely, bl1&er ls smaller and asrtbuat·
nesa, beit11 bt11er, Is tbftefote smaller
and t have always foupt with all my
heart for the iltUe reople and the
Peripheral Canal unti lt became op-
poaed by me.
Q -But what of your promise, Gov·
ernor, not to rain de.th and deltnaction
on iMOceftt women and children day
after day?
A -THAT JS cornet. We wUI do so
nlJht after nt1bt lnttead. And may I
add that aerial 1pra1ln1 po111 no
dint• d•t.IMV• to the Ntldenta of th• .,... to be 1pr.,.cl.
Q -None, Go9ttnor?
A -None, whateoever. Tbat l• why
we a ... aaJcinl them to coyer their can
10 the pl1nt woa't nue on, teep tMlr
pelt iadoon, conr tbetr ftlhponds to
HVe lbe liWll of tbetr innoctftt ftlb,
clote tbltr windowl, turn off thelr alr
condltloaen and ttfraln from
brHUalnl bttwta mldniebt and I a.m.
Q -ADI If dae1 ate Uliable to do IO? A -1'ili dleJ muat lowtr their a · pectadma 11 I have ctoee la NWnl for
.. nator rMIMil' Ulan for ,,....._t for a °""' U.,.....,.. I am ,JIOt ... a e1...-~l*aalll••t11t•
ma... ., ""::.:t IDr ntctll .. ....,. ... .............................. ,... ... ., ..........
Q -Speaking of campai&nlng,
Governor ...
A -I'm glad you asked that quesUon.
As I natty stated on Jan. 22 -and I
quote -·'There are no names ln this 10·
called computer.'' And that tJ a state·
ment l will stand by at tb11 time.
Q -Are you referrln~ to the state·
le11ed computer which lnve1ti1ators
claim .-11 atulfed by your 1taff with
lists of your political contributors?
A -Well, It's empty at thl• tlme.
Watch th11: I place both bands on the
floor In front of my head, nex my
muscles, push and . . . Presto!
Q -That'• amazing, Governor! How
do you Invariably manase to land on your feet?
A -PtactJce. practice. practice.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, July 22, 1981 ~·· . C~tle ~comes c~llege
Desert landmarllpurchased for $1 million in New Mexico
LAS Vl!GAS, N.11 . <AP> -The once-opulent 110 .. teauma
castle that catered to lbe rich
and famou1 wltb it.II hot mmeraJ
sprin1s and splendor has been
bought for $1 million for UM as
an international college.
The Armand Hammer Foun·
d ation, a non-profit organ.iution
based ln Los Angeles, purchased
the 110 acres of bulldings and
property for use as a United
World College, said Jim Pugub,
special assistant to Dr. Armand
Hammer.
Hammer is chairman of the
board of Occidental Petroleum
and an art collector and phllan·
throplst.
The Montezuma casUe, near
Las Vegas in northeast New
Mexico, was bought from the
Catholic Conference of Bishops.
The castle, which has been van·
dalized, was used most recently
as a Catholic seminary. It has
-been closed since 1972 .
•1
During the 1981 Ne-,v Mexico
Legislature session the Senate
passed a bill that would have ap·
propriated $1.8 million to buy the
building, a dozen outlying struc·
lures and 897 acres on which there
are more than 30 hot springs.
The property would have been
• used as a park and the building
• would have been renovated into
.: a convention center. The prop· :i. erty would have been used joint·
t ly by the state Parks Division.
the Luna Area Vocational School
and New Mexico Highlands
University.
Sen. Alfred Nelson. D·San
Miguel. sponsor of the bill, said
during the legislative session
that the s tate would get a
•' bargain because the property is
worth S5 million to SlO million.
The bill was killed in the
House Appropriations and
Finance Committee.
George Clayton Pearl, an
Albuquerque architect, wut be
provldiq a report on rebabillta·
tion and cost to Hammer, but
lbe rebabllitaUon work has not
been contracted, Pugasb said.
United World Colle1es pro·
vides liberal arts tralnln1 for
lltb and 12th 1rade students
worldwide. The president of lbe
governlng body of the college is
Prince Charles of Great Britain.
Schools are operating in
Wales, British Columbia, and
Singapore, with 30 to 40 coun-
tries represented ln the student
body of each school.
The degree earned from a
United World College is called
an "int e rn ationa l ba c·
'The overall
goal . . . is peace
through interna-
tional un-
derstanding .'
calaureate." The schools have a
strong emphasis on community
service and outdoor athletics.
"The overall goal or the
schools is peace through lnterna·
tional understanding," said
Pu gash.
In this vein, the schools make
an effort to be involved in the
local community, he said.
··one of the aspects of the col-
1 eges that UWC takes great
pride in is that they are an im·
portanl contributor. to the com-
m unity life," he said.
olllclals. He also was shown
around tM Montezuma prop·
erty.
Montezuma·s history dales to
the mid-19th century.
The U.S. Army started a
hospital near the area's hot
springs in 1846, and the one·
story adobe building was con-
verted in 1882 to a hotel.
The railroad brought trade to
the region, and the hot springs
caught the eye oC Eastern pro-.
rooters who recognized their re·
sort value.
The Hot Springs Hotel opened
in 1879, a nd t he r ailr oad
purchased lhe property the next
year.
A $200,000 s tructure was
opened, but on Jan. 17, 1884, a
fire caused by clogged gas
mains left it in ruins.
In 188.5, the new steam -heated,
electrically lighted Montezuma
Hotel burned less than three
months after its opening, leav-
ing only the sandstone walls of
the first three floors .
Again, it was rebuilt, in Queen
Anne Swiss ar chitecture with 172
rooms in the main building and
a 77-room annex.
But, it was an economic dis·
aster for the ra ilro,ad company.
The resort, equipped with a
casino. bowllng alleys, a zoo,
stables. horse rflce track. power
pla nt . bath hou ses a nd a
railroad spur, was losing $40,000
a year until 1893 when it was
forced to close.
It opened under new manage-
ment in 1895, but closed its doors
for good in 1904. The YMCA
bought it in 1913, then sold it to
the Baptist Convention of New
Mexico for the Montezuma Bap·
list College campus.
Pugash said a target date has
been set for the fall or 1982 for
the opening or the school to ac·
commodate 200 to 300 students.
"Dr. Hammer liked the town
so much from his visit there that
he thought it would be a great
experience for students from all
over the world to see what life is
like in a town like that ... Pugash
said.
Hammer was in Las Vegas.
N. M .. re<."ently to visit with city
Arter lhe school closed. the
Roman Catholic Church bought
it in 1937 and opened a Jesuit
se minary lo train Mexican
priests. The Jesuits left in the
early 1970s.
BULLSEYE -A U.S .-manufactured Roland
missile (right in top photo> closes with and
..............
destroys a target drone in a test firing at the
White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.
Check
R-value
DEAR PAT DUNN : I've been shopping
for home insulation and I'm somewhat con-
fused by the different sales pitches I've
heard. Does the thickness of the insulation
material determine the insulating power?
Also, how can you eet the most insulation
value for your money?
C.G .. Costa Mesa
Oaly R-value ("R" staDCb for reals&aace)
'. measures the lnaalalloa'a abWty &o realat tbe
flow of Ilea& from a warm room &o &lie celd
ottl1lde. Tbe tblckneas of yoar lualatloa bas
nothing &o do wtU. Its effeellveaen. So, &o
measare tbe effectiveness of compellDg in·
salatlon prGducu, compare lbelr R-value nl·
iag1 as well as price. ]'be higher the R·value,
tbe better tbe lnsalatiag power.
Tbe Federal Trade Commlssloa bas
made lt easier &o sltop for tbe R·value llaat's
right for your bome. Every package of home
lnsalatton must dJsplar Its R-value rating.
Aad yoe aow caa ask dealen and installers
of ln1ulatioa &o sbow yoa fact sheets about
tbelr bome tmulatlon prodacts.
I To get the best lnsalaUon deal for your
money, you can n1ure out wbat gives you tbe
a -value you want at tbe lowest cost by
flguln& and comparing tile price of tbe
package dJrided by die square feet of lnsala·
lion Deeded for U.e R·value you select. Divide
Ws ftgure by tbe a -value number you select
le •etermlae tbe coat of one Wilt of R-value
for eaeb padlace of buaJatton. Tbe 1malleat
umber 1t...e1 yoa t11e moil ecoaomlcal
pack8ge of R·va111e. All &.be numbers you
need &o pl•I la&o Ulla formula are elUler OD
tbe package of Insulation or on the coverace
chart provided by lllauJaUon aellen and COD·
trac&on.
Of coane, there are fadon otber tban R·
val11e aad CNt U.at yo• 1boald coulder when
btlyta1 bome ln1aJatloa. AJao Important are
&lie Hie of tbe tanallatloa ti yoa•re doing lt
you..U, tM coat II a contrac&or la going &o
.. lite work, safety fact.on and a product's
sal&ablllty.
Subletting rules
DEAR PAT DUNN : Can I sublet my
apartment to another tenant without asking
my landlord? lily buainess will requJre me to
leave the state for several months and I ltnow
of a reliable P.t!l'IOn wbo needs a place to
rent temporarily in lbJs area.
G.W .. Costa Mesa
M.t rn&al apeemeets allow 1ea to ••b·
let olllY wlda tile lalldlerd'• wrt&&a eeueat.
Some fascUardl wUI ac«Pt dae mt dlredl1
rrom U•e Hltteaaat. Bat JH are still
rea~Me fw pa7tai tM mt, _... tile ••b&ellallt'• aame replacn yeua • U.. NII·
&al a.,..,., w II a aew llfte•• II wilt·
.... Y• ._.. a.e wile te rernd ,._ rell&al
•1re .............. ,.., ..............
tlM I...._~ JI 10f!' ••Met ~-1W apart•nl 1 ................. ,. ceiM let,......,
la fw a ll&fl trwllle-le1al ... ..........,..
"NATIONAL UNIVERSITY'S EVENING CIASSES
NOW MAKE IT EASIER FOR ME TO GET UP IN
THE MORNING.
People who are serious
about their careers
choos~ National
University Attend day
or evening classes wtule
continuing your present
job. Study one course
each mont.h. registering
1ust once tor the entire
program. Register any
working day of the year.
Study in a no-nonseflse
environment along with
others who are career
minded like you. Study
under business
professionals with at
least 10 years
experrence In therr
fields. Most have
doctorates
At National
Un1vers1ty you won't
I GOT A BETI'RR JOB."
Joeeptt Furturo
BS. UnNwllty of Rhode Island
MCS, w.t Coast Unlv9f"lity
MBA (7 /81). Nation.I UnlYer!llty
..
We're as serious
about your ru1ure
as you are.
~~ITY
Classes BeglD August l .
MIA/IBA
find football 1eams.
fraternities and field
days That's because
we're no fun and games
unrvers1ty for recent
high school graduates
We're an all-study
un1vers1ty for mature
adults who know where
they're going and now
want to get there laster
We have admission
and classroom locatrons
lhroughout San Diego
County Financial aid 1s
available tor those who
quahly. II you're serrous
about getting ahead m
your held let National
Un1vers1ty back you all
the way. Call tor more
1nlormat1on
IM!W (7tA) 957 .. 215 El Toro (714) llt-.3711 lo• AlamltOJ (213) SM-4714
'-"'-•.,_It 1111 ......... ••fl'•h •tftlw1 fttffCI It 1.u trtfCI ollltt Mt tr ttMC tt1t• ...... ti 1111 .,, .... ,
--Ill~ ... 5111• s...ow-. t1 ,_ ""''•'• • ~-..tt<I •• ""'""~ ... ti -..., c.otro · 4 ~ ..... • °""''..., C.C•
Durward Howes
1899-1981
With devotion and respect we
will close all of our stores
Wednesday, July 22 , 1981.
B.D. HOWES and SON
FINE JEWELERS FOR FOUR GENERATIONS
Pasadena, Los Angeles, Palm Springs,
Santa Barbara, Newport Beach,
San Francisco. Hawaii
OUR
SHOI SALi
k•-""'9 St-•• Yo.;• 0-
ICell SIOre-Y°"" A'ffl
Co.TA.....141•12" _.._._
........... 0401
-c:-.~ ......... -. ............. .
IN FULL SWING
I 052 llVIHI AVI. • WISTCUFf Pl.Ali
HIWPOIT HACH • 54M614
"Our 24th year"
9_, Auto & Homeownws ~}:· Quotes By Phone
f...S--.,
H .. Hl-4 • IJ~J4J7 ,,, ....... c .........
HllDte.P? Help yourself to a
Heaping selection or
Qualified Hopefuls
in the DAILY PILOT
HELP WANTED AD~
Y<XJ can help your newsi>llP8r
carrier collecl at 11mes
oonvenient to you by having
your money ready so the
earner won't have to call back.
Because this young person 1s
1n business for himself or
herself. please be ready -and
watch that big s1T'1le wt11cti
says "Thank You."
Daily Pilat
SMILE!
... if you've seen your dentist lately.
If you're not smiling, don't
feel alone. At least half the
people in Orange County don't
see their dentists regulaa'1y
either.
And that's a shame, because
modern dentistry has become
an integral a"d comfortable part
of total health care.
Not only does dentistry play
a major role in one's self·
esteem-how rou look and feel
-but a carefu dental exam
can often reveal early warning
signals of serious problems
elsewhere ln the body. And it's
a fact that dental disease is
preventable, or at least
controllable with regular
dental care.
Preventive dentistry,
practiced in a teamwork
manner by a caring dentist and
a concerned patient, can result
in feelin~ better, looking better
and staymg better.
So, if you're one of the 509& in
Orange County who hasn't seen
a dentist lately and would like a
{ru no-obligation refe"al to our
ltind of dentist, near where you
wor~ or live, call the
Aaaoclation for Dental Health
(714} 730-9565
and. tlten.,. SMILE!
Oran~ Cout DAIL v Ptl.OT/Wednetd1y, July 22, 1981
Castle becomes c~llege
Desert landmarllpurchased for $1 million in New Mexico
LAS VEGAS, N.11. (AP> -
The once-opulent llonte1U111•
castle that catered to the ritb
and famcu with lu bol llliaeraJ
sprln1s and .splendor has been
bou1ht for $1 milllon for uae u
an intemaUonal college.
The Armand Hammer Foun-
dation, a non-profit or1anisaUon
baaed ln Los Aneeles, purchued
the 110 acres of buildings and
property for use as • United
World College, sald Jim Puaub,
special asaistant to Dr. Armand
Hammer.
Hammer is chairman of the
board of Occidental Petroleum
and an art collector and philan-
thropist.
The Montezuma castle, near
Las Vegas in northeast New
Mexico, was bought from the
Catholic Conference or Bishops.
The castle, which bas been van-
dalized, was used most recently
as a Catholic seminary. It has
-been closed since 1972.
Ii
During the 1981 New Mexico
Legislature session the Senate
passed a bill that would have ap-
propriated $1.8 million to buy the
building, a dozen outlying struc-
tures and 897 acres on which there
are more than 30 hot springs.
. The property would have been
' used as a park and the building
would have been renovated Into
.: a convention center. The prop-
:,. erty would have been used joint·
l ly by lhe state Parks Division,
the Luna Area Vocational School
and New Mexico Highlands
University.
Sen. Alfred Nelson, 0 -San
Miguel, sponsor of the bill, said
during the legislative session
that the s tate would get a
bargain because the property is
worth $5 million to $10 milJion.
" The bill was killed In the
House Appr opriations and
F inance Committee.
Georae Clayton Pearl. an
Albuq-..erque architect, wUI be
provldlnt a report on rehablUta-
tlon and cost to Hammer. but
the rebabilltatlon work has not
been contracted, Pugash said.
United World Colleeea pro-
vides liberal arts training for
Ulb and 12th grade students
worldwide. The president of the
governing body of the colle1e Is
Prince Charles of Great Britain.
Schools are operatina In
Wales, British CoJumbla, and
Singapore, with 30 to 40 coun-
tries represented lo lhe student
body or each school.
The degree earned from a
United World College is called
an "int ernational bac-
'The overall
goal . . is peace
through interna-
tional un -
derstanding.'
calaureate." The schools have a
strong emphasis on community
service and outdoor athletics.
"The overall goal of the
schools is peace through intema-
t ion a I understanding," s aid
Pu gash.
In this vein. the schools make
an effort to be involved in the
local community. he said.
··one of the aspects or the col-
1 e ges that UWC takes great
pride in is that they are an im-
portant contributor. to the com-
munity life." he said.
qfflclajs. ff• alao was shown
arounu the Monteauma prop-
erty.
Mont.ezuma 's history dates to
the mld-19th century.
Th e U.S. Army started a
hospital near the area's hot
sprin1s in 1846, and the one-
story adobe building was con-
verted in 1882 to a hotel.
The railroad brought trade to
the region, and the bot springs
caught the eye of Eastern pro-.
moters who recognized their re-
sort value.
The Hot Springs Hotel opened
In 1879, and the railroad
purchased the property the next
year.
A $200,000 structure was
opened, but on Jan. 17, 1884 a
fire caused by clogged gas
mains left it in ruins .
In 1885, the new steam-heated
electrically lighted Montezum~
Hote l burned less than three
months after its opening, leav-
ing only the sandstone walls of
the first three floors.
Again, it was rebuilt, in Queen
Anne Swiss architecture with 172
rooms in the main building and
a 77-room annex.
But, it was an economic dis-
aster for lhe railropd company.
The resort, equipped with a
casino. bowling alleys, a zoo.
stables, horse rjlce track, power
plant, bath houses and a
railroad spur, was losing $40,000
a year until 1893 when it was
forced to close.
It opened under new manage-
ment in 1895. but closed its doors
for good in 1904. The YMCA
bought it in 1913. then sold It to
the Baptist Convention of New
Mexico for the Montezuma Bap·
list College campus.
Pugash said a target date has
been set for the Call of 1982 for
the opening of the school to ac-
com moclate 200 to 300 students.
"Or. Hammer liked the town
so much from hi s visit there that
he thought it would be a great
experience for students from all
over the world to see what life is
like in a town like that." Pugash
said.
Hammer was in Las Vegas.
N. M., recently to visit with city
Arter the school closed. the
Roman Catholic Church bought
it in 1937 and opened a Jesuit
seminary to train Mexican
priests. The Jesuits lert in the
early 1970s.
BULLSEYE -A U .S.-manuf actured Roland
missile (right in top photo) closes with and
...........
destroys a target drone in a test firing at the
White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.
Check
R-value
DEAR PAT DUNN: I've been shopping
for home insulation and I'm somewhat con-
fused by the different sales pitches I've
heard. Does the thlckneu of the inaulaUon
material determine the insulating power?
Also, how can you eet the most insulation
value for your money?
C.G., Costa Mesa
Oaly R-value ("'R" 1&aads for reslataace)
meaaures &he la1ulatloa'1 abWty to reals& tbe
now el laeat from a warm room to &lie celd
CM1l1ide. The tblcue11 of you luulatJ011 bu
nothing &o do with iu effectlvenea1. So, to
meaaare the effeetlvene11 of competlal la-
saJatloll prodacu, compare their R-value ra&·
la&• a1 well u price. ]'be higher the R-valae,
the bd&er the laslllatlag power.
Tbe Federal Trade Comml11loa ltas
made It e•sler to shop for &be R-valae &111at's
right for your home. Every package of bome
,. iaaalatloa maat display lu R-valae ratlag.
And Y• now ca• aak dealen aad lmtallera
of ln1ulaUoa to show yoa fad sbeeu about
thelr home lnsulallon prodacts.
To 1et the best lnsalatlon deal for your
moaey, you caa figure oat what gJvea you lbe
&-value yoa waal at tbe lowest coat by
fl1arln1 and comparlac the price of tbe
package divided by die square feet of lnaula-
tlon needed for &he R·value you select. Divide
tkls Op.re by tbe &-value aumber you 1eled
&e ~naJlle the cost of one ult or &-value
for eadl packace of luulatloa. Tbe 1maUeat
umber gives yoa tile moat economical
packa1e of R-valae. All tbe numbers you
aeed lo pla1 lato tb1I formula are el$.fier on
the package ot lnsalatloa or on the coverage
chart ,PrOvided by tualatioD aellen aad coa-
tracton.
Of coane, there are factors otber tltaa R·
vahae ud COit that fOtl 1lt.oald comlder wbea
btaflaC ltome lalal1U.. Alto lmportaat are
tile eaee of the luUltatloa if yOG're doing It
ynrlllf, tM cot& If a contractor II 10LD1 to
do tlae won, aafetJ facton and a prodact'a
aaltabUlty.
Subletting rules
DEAR PAT DUNN: Can I sublet my
apartment to another tenant without aaking
my landlord? My business wlU require me to
leave the state for several months and I know
of a reliable p_enon wbo needs a pla.ce to
rent temporarily in this area.
G. w .. Colla Mesa
Melt reMa1 ap-eem•u allow J• &o Ab· let ollb .... tlle laadlerd•a wrtu. eeuat.
Some faedlerdl will accept &IM remt dlredl1
from t~e HbteHat. B•t )'H are 1UJI
rea,raisl'We ,_ p1yla1 ~ ....t, ...... tlle
Ab&n1•'1 U•e replane )'WI .. llile l'W•
&aJ ar.1••1 er lf a MW ....... II wltt• .... .. ....... wile .. ,... ,.. reMal
a1re••• ... 6ew ,... ........... tJte ... ..._ If ,.. ....... ,._ a,..U.IM • ...._ ... ._,.w,e,1•e.1Mlet1..,_,
la ,., .... "'.,..... _ .................
"NATIONAL UNIVERSITY'S EVENING CIA~ES
NOW MAKE IT EASIER FOR ME TO GET UP IN
THE MORNING.
People who are serious
about their careers
choose National
University Attend day
or evening classes while
continuing your present
JOb. Study one course
each monttt. registering
just once for the entire
program. Register any
working day of the year.
Study In a no-nonsense
environment along with
others who are career
minded like you. Study
under business
professionals with at
least 10 years
experience in their
fields. Most have
doctorates
At National
University you won't
I GOT A BEITER JOB."
find football teams.
fraternities and held
days That's because
we're no fun and games
university for recent
high school graduates
We're an all-study
university for mature
adults who know where
they're going and now
want to get there faster.
We have admission
and classroom locations
throughout San Diego
County Financia l aid 1s
II!~~~~!!~~~~~ available for those who
L.; .,__ Fwtwro qualify. If you're serious
es. Un1Yef91ty ot Rhod9 1t111ld about getting ahead 1n
MCS. w.t Cout Un"*-lty your field let Nat ional
MBA (7191>· National untveretty University back you all
We're as sertous tile way Call for more
aboul your fulure informataon
u you are.
~ITY
Classes Befln August 3.
MIAl llA
IMne (11•) 157 .. 215 l!I Ton> (71•) Ht-3711 Loe Alemllot (213) 5~1'1•
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Durward Howes
1899-1981
With devotion and respect we
will close all of our stores
Wednesday, July 22 , 1981.
B.D. ll<>WES and SON
FINE JEWELERS FOR FOUR GENERATIONS
Pasadena, Lo9 Angeles, Palm Springs,
Santa Barbara, Newport Beach,
San Francisco, Hawaii
I
OUR
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IN FULL SWING
1052 llYIHI AYI. • WISTCUFf PUli
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!'
H•HB.P? Help younelf to a
Heaping selectJoo of
Quatmed Hopefuls
In the DAILYl»ILOT HELP WANTED A~
You can help your newspaper
carrier colle ct at times
convenient to you by having
your money ready so the
earner won't have to call bllldt.
Because this young person 1s
in business for himself or
herself, please be ready -and
watch that big srrile wh1ct1
says .. Thank you
Daily Pilat
SMILE!
... if you've seen your dentist lately.
If you're not smiling, don't
feel alone. At least half the
people in Orange County don't
see their dentists regulallly
either.
And that's a shame, because
modem dentistry has become
an integral aqd comfortabl.e part
of total health care.
Not only does dentistry play
a major role In one's self·
esteem -how you look and feel
-but a careful dental exam
can often reveal early warning
signals of serlOUs' problem.a
elsewhere ln the body. And it's
a fact that dental disease is
preventable, or at least
controllable with regular
dental care.
Preventive dentistry,
practiced in a teamwork
manner by a caring dentist and
a concerned patient, can result
in feelin~ better, looking better
and staying better.
So, if you 're one of the 5096 in
Orange County who hasn't seen
a dentist lately and would lilte a
fru no-obligation referral to our
ltind of dentist, near where you
work or live, call the
Aaociation for Dental Health
(714} 730-9565
and, tlten, SMILBI
MOVING ·Former
Gov. Ray Blanton of
Tenness·ee, who was
cpnvicted of extor-
tion, conspiracy-and
mail fraud, has put
his hou&e · on ·the
market ·for $179,000.
Fri·ends say he is
nearly broke because
of legal fees .
Midlife
group
• • to rise
WASHINGTON <AP>
-There are more than
44 million Americans
facing the Chfllenge of
"mi<Ulfe," a 1roup. ex· peeled to grow slowly in
this. decade and then in-
crease s:h a rply , rhe
Census Bureau has re·
ported.
Defining midlife as
ages 45 to 64, the bureau
Issued a .study or these
years ·which, it said, are
defined by the major
events taking pace ·-
children leaving home.
peak years of economiC
well being, grandparent·
hood. retirement, onset
of c hronic iJlness .
widowhood a nd the care
or infirm parents.
"During the 1980s the
size of the middle-aged
group is projected lo in-
crease less rapidly than
m os t age g roup s
because of the relatively.
small· number or persons
b or n dur·i'ng the
Depression years." sai~
the repe>rt by J erry T.
J ennings or the bureau's
population division.
However. he noted
that as the postwar baby boom generation moves
into these ages . the
group will begin grow·
ing sharply and is ex-
pe c t ed· t o reach 75
million by the year 2010.
That would be about
one .fourth or the U.S.
population.
Curre ntl y. P e n n ·
sy lvania h a s the
la rgest percentage of
people in this age group
at 22.5 percent, followed
by New Jersey with 22.3
percent. The fewest live
in Alaska, making up
14 .3 percent o r the
population of that state.
Nationwide, in this
age group, nearly 90
p e r c e n t I i v. e d i n
families, most with their
s pouses; although the
percentages were higher
for whites than blacks.
'·Persons or middle to
slightly older ages a re
likely to be established
in their careers, settled
in a neighborhood and
li ving in a house that
they own, consequently
they are less likely to
move because they have
a cons ide r able emo.-
tional and financial in ·
vestment in their pre·
sent' location," th·e re·
port said.
Clemente
Olympics
scheduled
Blind children will be
sculpting sand castles as
part ··or the Surf and
Sand Family Olympics
on J'riday ttirough Sun·
day at the San Clemente
Oceaq Festival.
.Friday's beach ac·
tivities include competi·
lions by the U .S .
Llteaaving Auoclation
and the National Junior
Lifeguard Cham ·
plonahips al the. San
Clemente . Municipal
Pier. ·
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. July 22, 1981
'COLORFUL JUMBO I
STACKING. BINS
~~~.·.~~~v~!uty 1toc· 3 9.9
klf\9 bint 1n unlimited woyt. EACH
0-olote, yellow« olmond.
~ ... , ..... , ....
·Los HERMANOS
TABLE WINES
~~~:p~:~~love A 2'' wine perfect anytime.
1.S LITllS
LITILE PLAYMATE
IGlOO ICE CHEST
llG. 10.69 I'' Holcll a bog lunch or 9
l>.veroge cons Plol11c
'with swing down lid
INTEIMAGNOIC
BLANK TAPES
CASSlnlS & I TUClS
60-MIN. CASSITY( 93c •lG. 1.2t
mG. I. .. to.WM. CASVTll I °'
llG. 2. It 120·MIN. CASVTll t.42
-.. 2.1'4S·MIN. a.ruca 1.42
... 2.4 .. 0·Mlll. •·llACll 1.•1
WIZARD
AEROSOL SPIA Y
AIR FRISlllNll
REG. 1.19
79! ..
CAMP MASTER
SLEEPING BAG
~o~~:te~~:v!~ tn· 164 9 cot l1n1ng. 100 11p
per, 3.tb Oocron 808 • ·
ALSITE
READING GLASSES
~~~~.~.O~~~oct rou I'' Ion• non·preHriptoon (A
leMes '1 half & '1 f~ll frames •
REG. 99' TO 1. 98
ARTIST'S SUPPLIES
~~~dp~:~ ·~/::~.c~tl:;~< 79c Pok of 6 Po,1er Boord Sor
gent' 8·pon Water Color' with 8rulh. Meod ti.color T em
pro poster poonl 'et & more IA.·
-
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I ~
' ~o~
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23-0Z. SUPERSIZE
BEER GLASSES
~~~n( a~!~u~mer lhor ~t 14 9
get' you get the bo9 b19
glou ond fill it up'
ICE CUBE TRAYS
PACI Of 2 ,
PWTIC
REG. 1.79'
\.~99~·
The pubUc la invited to
partlclpet.e In the Olym·
plc 1ames SaturdaJ.
Th• USLA tesloaal
LJfa,uard Chim ·
ploullipl and tM tbtrd annual lnvltaUonal In· .... ~~----lilli-... .. llii .............. ~llllilii.-._.._.._ .... ..-........... .-._~ ..... ~~lllli!il~~lil!-.-..iimlllilii.___.-....,...,...-,....,...., ... ._. ... ._iii!ii...,.-.iiiiio_..._. .... ~,_,,~ ........ 4
ternatlonal Llfa1uard
Competl_Uons will be held ..... ,. .
P'or WormaUon caU
•·77~
',_.,am YALU,Y, ... .., ............. .......... _ , .............
Daily Pilat
WEDNESDAY, July 22, 1981
FEATURES 84
COMICS 85
"f.ELEVISION 810
Robert Mann . first violinist and founder of the Juiliard ~ring Quartet. rehearsea the two violins, one viola and one cello whk h compriae
the quartet at studio in New York's Lincoln Center. At right, Mann pondera o mu.tical phrcue.
Interest rates have small
consumer as well as big
executive worried . . . B 7
0
D
Chamber music becoming rage • in U.S •
NEW YORK <API The
Atlanta Cham ber Players
perform Mozart in a shopping
center. In Baltimore, shoppers
browse to the rousing sounds of
the Annapolis Brass Quintet.
And in New York City.
passersby toss coins into the
open violin cases or street musi·
cians who fiddle away at the
classics.
·'Chamber music is getting to
be all the rage." says Benjamin
Dunham, director of Chamber
Music America. an organization
formed by mus icians three
years ago to promote chamber
music.
More than eight million tickets
to chamber music concerts are
sold each year. Audiences pack
halls to hear music that was
played 200 years ago al the
private salons or the very rich.
It's not just the classics that are
popular. either A Tokyo String
Quartet program of music by
20th century composer Bela
Bartok sold out last fall In New
Haven, Conn .
Music fans have long adored
opera stars and soloists. and
have faithfully followed sym·
phony· orchestras But chamber
music used to have a bad image,
says 'Ch arl es Wadsworth.
artistic director of t he Chamber
Music Society of Lincoln Center.
.. People a s sociated it with
fo ur arthritic guys in tattered.
dirty sets or tatls getting on
stage and sawing away all eve··
ning," Wadsworth says.
Now the string quartet has
become the darling or chamber
mu i:ic fa ns . because of the
harmonious blend of two violins,
viola and cello, the four stringed
instruments and the fine music
written for quartets.
Music for string quartets is
"sort of e crystallization of the
fines t technical and musical
points. The economy of writing
forces the composer to really
zero in on the essentials of
music." says Guarneri String
Quartet violist Michael Tree.
Robert Ma nn, fi rst violinist
and a founder or the Juilliard
String Quartet, says the music
written for string quartets at-
tracted him.
"The r e pertoir e was
something I knew would satisfy
me for lbe rest of my life," he
says.
Although the Juitliard has
played more than 600 quartets in
35 years, he says there are 400 to
500 more he'd like to learn.
Violinist Raphael Hillyer,
anol·her founder of the Juilliard
Quartet and n ow a Yale
University professor, believes
the audience likes the intimacy
of a string quartet concert.
"You have four relatively
modest people with very true
dedication , givin g m usic
because they love it and want to
share it. There is a conversa-
tion a l quality lo chamber
music." Hillyer says.
In chamber mus ic, each in-
strument has its own voice. un-
like the orchestra, in which
many instruments play the
same score. Although tbe string
quartet is most popular, com-
posers have written chamber
music for just about every in-
. strumenl that exists .
Violinist Donald Weilerstein of
the Cleveland String Quartet
saw college s tude nts turning.
toward chamber music after lbe
Vietnam War.
··P eople wer e seeki ng
something very positive in their
But Mann believes chamber
music has become more popular
during the past 10 to 15 years
largely because of the economy.
"We'r e a good bargain,"
Mann says.
A community can get one of
the top four string quartets in
the United States J uiJliard,
Guarneri, Tokyo and Cleveland,
'There is a conversational quality to
chamber music.'
lives when there was a lot of
negative feeling," he says.
Today there a re about 30
young quartets in the country,
according to Mann, who says
that every college and unjversi·
ty wants its o wn resident
chamber musicians.
About 350 ensembles belong to
Chamber Music America, which
began with 35 me mbers . About
150 concert $ponsors, businesses
and individuals also are mem-
bers. Dunham estimates there
are another 650 professional
chamber music groups in the
country.
Dunham suggests that young
musicians a r e em br acin g
cham ber music "for the same
reason people go out into the
woods and make dulcimers -
the craft approach, the feelings
that they don't want to serve on
an assembly line."
in Mann's opinion for $4.000 to
S6.000. It can't touch a noted
soloist for less than $10.000. he
says.
·'I( we start charging $10,000 a
concert, we would become
economically not viable," he
says .
Whatever the cause. there's
been a constant upward spiral In
the demand for chamber music,
Hillyer says.
In 1969, the Chamber Music
Society o f Lincoln Ce nter
brought together a group of
musicians who had s uccessful
solo careers to play chamber
music concerts at Alice TuJly
Hall -the fi rst hall to be bum in
New York just for that purpose.
··People who had somehow all
those years fell that to be iden-
tified with chamber music was
death to a solo career all of a
sudden didn 't seem to care
about that. They s tarted invest-
ing in chamber music the excite-
ment of the virtuoso player,"
Wadsworth says.
Now nearly every ticket is
sold for every performance the
Chamber Music Society gives.
And the Alice Tully Hall con-
certs get nationwide airing on
N ationaJ Public Radio.
In 1977 Ch amber M usic
America grew out of a commit·
tee of the National Endowment
for the Arts. Shortly afterward,
tbe NEA sta rted giving money
lo chamber music ensembles.
although some of that money
will be cut i n President
R eagan 's budget. Anothe r
group, the C. Michae l Paul
F ound ation, e n cour ages
chamber music players to find
unusual local co-sponsors. such
as shopping centers , radio sta-
tions, museums or chambers of
commerce.
The Rouse Co .. a Maryland
r eal estate developer, sponsor s
the Annapolis Brass Quintet. and
the Atlanta Chamber Players Is
backed by a state a rts agency.
two r adio stations, Agnes Scott
College, and Colony Square. a
residential, shopping and office
complex.
The Paul Foundation gives an
average of $13,000 lo a chamber
music group, which the n must
find co-sponsors to m atch the
grant. Paul Foundation money
is responsible for such offbeat
teams as the Lyric Arts Summer
Music Festival and Kings Point
Condominium retirement com-
munity in Delray Beach. Fla.;
the Ciompi Quartet a nd the
Duke University Medical Cent.er
i n Du rh am . N .C .; the
Metropolitan Brass quartet and
St. James Cat h e dral in
Brooklyn , N. Y .. and the North
Country Chamber Players and
its s upporters. which include
chambers of commerce from the
Fr anconia, N.H .. area.
Mann is concerned, however,
that the surge in popularity of
chamber music may be tem-
porary. and may fade like the
previous passion for Indian
music.
But he hopes the interest in
chambe r music among young
people will s pur them to create
Uteir own audiences.
A prime example is the New
World Qua rtet, whose members
com e from the Grand Rapids,
Mich., orchestra. In 1979 they
won the Naumburg Foundation
chamber music award -which
has been the launching pad for
most of the outstanding young
chamber music groups in the
past decade and no doubt
could find a home in any city.
But they chose to stay in Grand
Rapids, where they have strong
local support.
"Through the years we have
built up a chamber music au-
die nce to an a mazing size in pro·
portion to the size of the city of
Grand Rapids," says first
violinist Yosef Yankelev. "New
York has been saturated. Here
we have immediate support.
People recognize us on the
street."
Haig wearing Kissinger's 'senior official' cloak in press briefings
WASHI NGTON CAP> -First
there was The Senior Official -
a globe-circllog secretary of
state who looked exactly like
Henry Kissinger.
He informed and entertained
reporters traveling with him,
aod even poked fun at his
bosses, Presidents Nixon and
Ford, confident he would not be
quoted by name .
Now, but possibly only briefly,
there is Son of Senior Official.
Alexander M. Haig Jr .. the
s ecretary of state who was
trained in the art of bureaucracy
by Kissinger a decade ago.
traveled 27,000 miles to China
and back brleCing r e porters
aboard his jet as "the senior of·
ficial. ..
Given its history. the senior of-
fitial cloak la a transparent one
When a travelin1 secretary of
state speaks to reporters on con·
dtlion that be can only be quoted
UJlder that guise.
Orllclals who won't allow their
names used claim they can
s ~uk more candidly abou'
d plomacy, foret1n iovemmenta
a d leaders only If they are not
identified. This P.rovldes them 1omethinc call.ct 'denlablUly."
Kl11lnter, 1 m11ter at the
pme. a& limes UHd tbe eo•• to
c9'n1 an Uae NeOrd what he laad ,....,,_,......, ............
.. ll ... IMl!l to bia l~iq. Ha&~•: Ktni•1•r\;..•~d otbeil [Jal19, set tbf 'Tllltl uwe; "'*Ii ....... bit ...... . ......... Wt ....... : Op. t••~ ol '.ollttritq lite ~
rales or ucrtftctM Ute i&orJl.:
pear on Haig's next overseas
trip?
Only time will tell.
On the Asia trip. the reporters
were getting along so well with
Haig they composed and sang
for him a parody gently satlriz·
ing some of his a wkwa r d
rhetoric and syntax.
It began, "On the twellth day
in Asia, Al Haig gave to me,
twelve deep bac kgrounders."
H aig, e xpectina the
pe rformance, pulled from bis
pocket a poem prepared by a
speechwrlter and ending "a
strategic consensus, at last with
the press." Haig read it aloud,
earthy parts included.
The re was only silence,
though, after the Times story
was published the next day.
Ourlng Kisstnaer's reiao a1
secretary of state, from 1973
lhrou1h 1979, the "senior of·
flcial '' fiction was inaUtu-
tlonallzed. But Kissinaer, tbe
secretary, sometimes publicly
denied what Ki11in1er, the
senJor official, had said earlier.
On a Oitht into Saudi Arabla1
ror instance, The Senior Offtclll
mused about bla hopes for a
break in the oil tartel.
The story filed by the Al·
soclated Pteu on thole remarb
cttd not Utt the aplrtu of Saudi of.
ftctall. .
Fl)inl Clft to hil DeJd atop,
·-OtinDAn1. IUallqer ..... hl• 1•P*•man denf' the: U.S. 0¥-..ll'Mlll wat p,oblq f« I
tiNakUlroUP.
Tllrou1h those year•. tbe Hnlor offlelal arnn1ement
BORROWS CLOAK
Alezanc:Wr HaJg
benefitt.ed Kisstnier mott of all,
or he would have s uapended it.
Under the rules, stories could be
wrla.ttn about what he 1ald, but
hla name could not be uled.
Thia allowed Ki11tn1er to con·
trot the now of information ttnce
(1) he was, by far, t he re-
porter'• btlt·tnformed aource1
and (2) h e could telesraph
f oreltn leaders throu1h their
1tortt1.
"KllilOler arrived lon1 .,.,.,...
hi• ptae did," Shimon Peret"
l1raet obHrved.
Tbe llllUtuUoeallaed aen1or al·
ftctal IOaNd throu1h th• lkit1
unlll Jlmmy Carter w11 elected.
MASTER AT GAME
Henry Kiuinger
On hil final trip, a NATO
m ee ting in Brussell I n
December 1976, the lame-duck
secretary of state refused to talk
t o reporters any more .
Otherwise, he said, It mipt ap·
pear that he waa 1tvip1 advice
to his succetaor.
A more rnodMtly titled •'State
Department IOW'Ce •' briefed Lbe
prH• ln his plJCe.
Shortly beler• C1ru1 Vuce
took over u secretary of state
be dl1tusMd "ground rule•"
wltb r•porten at a d.1Mer. • ·
Vance NJd be would have no
obJecUo6 to beln1 quoted by
name When he held,brleflnp.
The new openness dido 't s ur·
vive the takeoff from Andrews
Ai r Force base on his first trip
in Februar y 1977.
Wa ndering back to the press
section, dressed casually in a
crew·neck sweater. Vance drift·
ed Into a discussion about Saudi
Arabia.
His press secretary, Hodding
Carter, overhearing the con-
versation, leaped from his seal.
·'That was zip, j ust zip,•·
Carter said , declaring Vance's
remarks off-the-record.
From then on. Vance gave
very rew briefings on the record.
He sometimes used the senior
om cial device and sometimes
simply stayed away from the re-
porters fl ying with him.
Although the title ''senior of.
flclal" became synonymous with
Kissinger, previoua secretaries
of state barred reporters ff'Oll'!
· dJvulging their name.
Dean Rusk, ln the Kennedy
admlnlstraUon, invited so~
retularly for drinks. He w ·
to be ref erred to aa "an •
mlnl1traUon" official.
• When Murray Marder, th.
dlptom•t corrapondent ol the
W llhll\llon Poll. 1aJd he WQ
equat1n1 himself whb t he
doorman ol the Fllb and Wildlf e
Servloe, R..U MUied on "Mldor
Slate ()epa.rtnHjnt alftdal."
WllUam P. a.en. tu. 1uc·
cessor, cont.lnutd the rule.
Klulnter wu tbe first
secretary ol atat.e to spea.lt ,....
1utarly u "the aenlo.r ofnctal."
I
J
• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednud1y, July 22, 1981
1'!119"----iiiiiioio--------... ~--------------------------~-.-lml!"'------~--~--~"'!"'9!-!"'--~--...... ----------------------------
ON 11IE STREET BEAT
-We aot a nice note here at
the paper juat yesterday on
the new-fangled recbrdinl
machine we have here in the
newspaper office that lets
you tell WI what you're tblnk· int by dialing 642·6086. ots of people call in to
blow off steam into the
"We're Llstening" recorder
and I th.int that's good for
~ ~' Tll lllPHllt~lt
them and good for us too. We
get to know what is grinding
on folks that way.
This particular gentleman,
who didn't identify himself,.
l e ft u s the following
me111a1e:
"The Daily Pilot ls a very
aood paper (thank you, sir).
It contains news and articles
lt'1 jult another rout~ gang fight
that are of most importance
to the public."
THEN HE ADDED, "But l
really don't see what the
murders or killings or rob·
beries have lo do with news.
•'Those events, to me, are
not news. Those are every-
day things that happen.
•'Eliminating these types
of crimes or any crime of
that sort in the paper would
be more beneficial. Thank
you.''
Now you must suspect that
a lot of people share Uniden-
tified Gentleman's views on
crime news. They'd j ust
rather not read about it while
reposing in the living room
after a long day, waiting for
the dinner bell. Too much
fear and dismay. Too much
violence.
From one stance, you can
certainly understand the
readers who object when a
paper picks up a violent item
off the wires from some
crossroads in Brazil and
soups it up into the biggest
story of the day.
TROUBLE IS, we have
enough home-grown crime
and violence to fill the paper
should editors choose to off er
only that kind of a reading
diet: Most editors, however,
try to aiv.e readers some kind
of an even-handed blend a.nd
mix in the news of the day.
But there la one comment
made by Unidentified
Gentleman that ii really _deeply dUturbing.
That la, when be describes
murders, killings or rob·
beries as 1lmply1 "Everyday
things that happen."
NOW REAIJL Y, has it
come to tbls? We are now
willing to accept that klll-
i n gs, mayhem, murders,
rapes and robberies are
nothing out of the ordinary?
Just "everyday thmgs that
happen?"
I. am sorry, Unidentified
Gentleman, but I can't ac·
cept that. I refuse to accept
that. Perhaps we have been
fed such a steady diet of
violence in ·the shows we
watch or the entertainment
we seek that we've come to
!
accept it as a way of life.
But crimes that do violence
to other people are not accep-
table. I don't want killings as
an acceptable part of my
everyday life, nor that of my
children or my
grandchildren.
PEOPLE WHO DO those
kinds of things should be
tracked down, captured and
brought to justice. They don1t
belong on my street or your
street.
And when· they are on our
streets, and perpetrating
those kinds of crimes against
other people, yes, I do want
to know about them in the
pages of my newspaper. And
I also like to know how 1 our
law enforcement agencies
are dealing with t hose.
perpetrators.
VIOLENT CRIMES are in-
deed happening every day
along our coastline today.
But I don't think we've
reached the point of no con-
cern where we can say as·
sault or murder is Just as routine as walking to (he cor-
ner store.
We wouldn't think so if it
hapj>ened to you or to me.
JULY • AUGUST SPECIAL Perk up that limp hairdo ¥Ath 1 Clr9-free perm from Nature Cut-
ters. Hurry In now for a super summer look.
,..,, •...................... •39 .. 172.00 Valu•I ........ ,...,............ . .........
Hair Cut BloW Dry • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 16• women
'I I'° Mtn
No other newspaper brings you more
of your city council, plannmwcommlsslon,
school and college districts and county
government than the
Pooling
• savings
detailed
About 13,900 people
saved 314,000 callons of
caaollne and one halC·
million miles of wear·
and-tear on their cars by
commutlnc from April
through June in car
pools set by the Orance
County Transit District.
Those results are in-
cluded in a quarterly re·
port made public Mon·
day at a meeting of the
district's board of direc·
tors.
The information was
complied through a
telephone survey or 538
people who use the
system. Results show
that 23 percent of those
who listed their names
since January in the
rldesharlng program
are commuting reguJar-
ly in a car pool. The
average trip la 18 miles
one way.
However, becau se
many applicants live or
work long distances
away or travel at odd
hours, only 56 percent of
the applicants were pro-
vided a list of possible
traveling companions.
The transit district
took over operation of
the program a year a10
from a private agency.
Commuter Computer.
and the report is con-
sidered the most com·
plete breakdown yet on
the service.
Michael Barnes, dis·
trict communications
director who supervises
the program, said some
information still isn't
available, such as the ef·
fectiveness of th e
system where it has
been instituted recentJy
for 19 pri vate
employers.
In other cases, large
employers have created
their own ridersharlng
·ROYALTY -William
and Louise Kanold of
Costa Mesa were
chosen prince and prin-
cess of the Golden
Court in the senior
citizens competition at
the Orange County
Fair.
Fresno mayor eyes Senate
Women's Political Caucus plans conference in Irvine
By O.C. HUSTINGS
ofTMDeltY,...IWf
"THIS IS NOT a fundraising
event," says the invitation, but
It will be a chance for Fresno
Mayor Daniel K. Whitehurst to
test the Orange County political
waters u he ponders a run for
the U.S. Senate.
Supporter David Stein and
friends are holding a reception
ror Whitehurst Friday from 4:30
to 6 p.m. at t.he Stein-Brief
Building, 18071 Fitch, Irvine.
Whitehurst. a Democrat who
outlines Issues more often as·
sociated with Republicans as
"integral parts or his political
philosophy,·' says he would try
to reduce the size or the federal
government.
Al the moment he appears to
be one of the leading con-
servative Democrats pondering
a challenge to any Senate bid by
Gov. Jerry Brown.
• * *
GEORGE DEUKME.llAN,
state attorney general and a
candidate for covernor next
year, will visit the Rotary Club
of Newport-Balboa at the club's
July 29 meeting. ••• "THE GREATEST Show On
Earth" is what the Orange
County National Wome n 's
Political Caucus ls calling it.a
conrerence on campaigning.
candidacy and community in·
volvement, scheduled for Aug. 8
from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m . at the
Registry Hotel in Irvi ne.
Scheduled speakers at the con·
ference are women from across
the political spectrum, including
Republican Assemblywoman
Marian Bergeson, Democratic
Centra l Committee member
Mary Capdeville. senior citizen
activist Ruth Kahn and Superior
Court Judge AJice Marie Stotler.
Tickets are $20. or $25 at the
door.
••• A SUNSE't' C R U I SE on·
Newcort Beach with area Repu Ucan officeholders is set
for Aug. 9 from 7 to 9 p.m .
aboard the Pavilion Queen, in a
program s ponsored by the
Republican Associates of
Orange County.
Scheduled to attend are
Congressmen Bob Badham, Dan
Lungren and Bill Dannemeyer.
several state senators and as·
semblymen, and others. The
cost is SS for associates, $7.50 for
non-members. Boarding time is
6:30 p.m.
* •• EXPECTING A larg e
turnout, the Laguna Niguel
Republican Women's Club has
turned its September meeting
into a dinner with featured guest
Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. The
dinner is set for Sept. 2 starting
at 6:30 p.m. at the Holiday Inn
in Laguna Hills. system from scratch . .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
One example is the H bb rc1_ b Wh '$ Ha Foods ~!~~:s ~~rl ·hasw~.i2C:, 0 , ureen au&
employees commuting wt.ole..._to.._,-.C ,~ a..,,,.1. R,.. AM_ in 183 van and car S "' .,..~ ,,.,. .. ""
pools. James Reichert, EXOTIC PLAHTS• CACTU
d is tr i ct gene r a l, 1 ~7=16=Ddl==.,=C=or0tta==del==M=cr====='=4=4-=5=1=0=6~ L, ~ , J... •• manager. has been a 1-g, RU .... ,
strong proponent of ri~:h:'~~;· interested !'~~}:~. k~ .-.. 11.llJ Pl.lat 1•111J1Ni II ••f / persons can call for in-~llUIU """",_~
formation a t 636-7433 nduaivdy m Ure . Hwbor va.w c..... 644-7733
<RIDE>. 1621 S-MhJHI DriYe. Mewport leach
WiTERMEmN ... t ~-
field.-tteslll ~ ~ •CWJ $Y(EET CIU ... .1ir •--
Qoldeftl • ~.. 14"9• • ~... BAIANAS .. ~ -PEACHES ... ~ -
~ta, Rosa. Ill)~ Fit•, trr>e. · • ~··· PLUMS... 1i11b. f0Mllf)IS .. 9k ·_
--------~
•
11
.• . ~·
TWENTY ClASSA OCARElTES
More
.·
·,
...
·I
. . . ' . . . . .... . . . ' .. .. . . .
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, July 22, 1981
.
Reagan takes plaque to D.C.
Baseball players' Miller among highest paid bosses
81 •AJULYN AND Hf G.uQlliD
Q: Whawver happened to • plaque •• oace
noticed on Ronald Rea1a.n'a diet ln Sacramento
wbeD be wu 1overnor ol Callfomla? -J.8 ., LONo eEAca, cAL1r. •
A: It's now 1lttln1 comflrtabJ~ on tbe pretl·
tt.nt'1 deak In bla Oval Offtc. In tbe White
•
House. For t.be unlnlUated il reada : "Tlwrf'• No
Umif to What a Na Con Do or ~ fie CClft Go If He'
00."J't Mbtd Who CHtt tM Crdt." (If R .R. bu an
e~tra such motto he mi&bt want to tlve lt to
Secre\al'Y of State HaJg.)
The lively U.S. News & World RePort U.u the
"25 Hlgbest-Paid Union Presidents" and lead• off
with Baseball AssociatiQO chieftain Marvin J .
Miller, executive director, not a president. His an·
nual salary is $160,000 plua '33.02'7 in expenses for
a total take of some $193,027. <Provine you don't
need a bat to be a cleanup hitter!)
Jimmy Carter's former national security ad·
viser, Zbigniew Brzezlnski, tot a $125,000 advance
from Simon & Schuster few a book he's writing.
But John Mitchell, once Nixon's attorney general,
remains in a rut. Thal same publisher, S & S, is su·
Ing hlm for $50,000 to cover an advance they gave
Pisces: Beware
off ree-loaders
Tluarlday, JaJy 23
By SYDNEY OMAJlR
ABJES I March 2l·Aprll 19): Lunar cycle emphasizes
creativity, greater freedom. travel opportunity, ability to express self in graphic manner. Take initiative, make
new contacts and welcome chance to become "in· volved." Gemini. Virgo. Sagittarius natives play impor·
tant roles.
TAURUS <April 20-May 20): One close. to you con·
!ides doubU. rears, aspirations. Be discreer. diplomatic
and don't cast first stone. Cycle remains high; judgment.
HOROSCOPE
lim1n1 will be on target. Clandestine meeting dominates
intri1Wn& scenario.
GEMi.Ni (May 2l·June 201 : Some of your hopes,
wishes will be revised. Define meanings. clarify terms
and accept counsel prorrered by one in position of
authority. Opportunity for advancement is marked;
member of opposite sex natters you and means It.
CANCER <June 21.Ju!y zi1: Focus on responslbillty.
past obligations. serious relationships and decision af·
feeling your future. Capricorn. Taurus, Virgo persons figure prominently. You come through with Oying colors
during temporary crisis.
LEO <July 23·Aug. 22>: Long.standing assignment
can be suc:cessfuUy completed. Emphasis on travel,
spiriluaJ revelation. ablillty to perceive your own poten·
tial. Others express confidence in your capabilities.
Many people are drawn to you with their problems. You
have "magic touch.'~
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 221 · Emotional responses
dominate scenario. Member of opposite sex plays key
role. vou·u be "involved" with money and love. Fresh
start enables you to rectify past errors. Leo. Libra. Aquarius persons figure prominenlly.
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Follow through on hun ch.
Learn by teaching. Come to terms with older family
hJm teveral years a10 for a Watereate book be
never delivered to them.
11me for a Joke~ lerf'1 Wlel•er, Ute poptdar
all·•~taJk . ....., laolt • lllaml radio 1tatJoD
"N reeaU. lie Uved .. 1 M•let ~at w11 10
l•all wt.ee UM! .......... Wal CH&bt tober,
0 all ol u &GOil taru f&a11ertai for klm."
Dismiss a rumor that Janet Cooke, who
fabricated a Wasblneton Post piece that momen-
tarily won the Pullt.ier Prize, was coached by tbe
infamous Howard Hu1hea hoaxer, Clifford Irving.
Lost Item we Ju at recouped cf alm\ that
Georgia Hold, Cher's mom, was married five
times to which Sonny's ex observed: "I don't real·
ly remember a man in the bouae I''
Don't be too surprised to hear that Sonny and
Cher might reunite to do 1 musical soap opera.
Milton Berle, retaining his superstar status,
says he's been on TV so long he first starred in a
test pattern.
Personal Postcard to Barbara Smith, Fl.
Lauderdale: Your eyes didn't double·cross you.
It's true that ln many golf tournament., the inside
of the cups are painted whtle for foolproof vision of
viewers as well as putters. Some pros complain
that the dried paint leaves a cruat. around the rims
of the cups -which Lee Trevino first Pointed out.
Did you notice that in the recent U.S. Open In
the Merion <Ardmore, Pa.) Club tourney, some
THERE'S
>YASHLEIGH
• BRILLIAHT..J
A crR.TAIN
STA.AN<;&: SPE'Cl&:S
OF ANIMAL ,
ABOUT WHIGH
VE'"Y LtTTL.•
IS YET t<NOWN -
IT'.S CALLED
.. Pf;OPL.£,11
member. Accent on legal aHairs. public relations. partnership proposals. marital status. You can afford to play waiting game
SCORPIO !Oct. 23·Nov . 211: Restrictions are re·
moved. Services improve. Long-distance communication will be cause for celebration. Accent on published
materiaJ, projected assignment! and social affair lead· ing to valuable contact.
SAGITrAIUUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Be willing to tear down for uJtimate purpose ot rebuiJdjng on a more solid
structure. Focus also on affairs of heart, creativity, ex·
plaining views in dynamic, gr~phic manner. Gemini.
Virgo persons play key roles.
CAPRICORN <Dec. ?2-Jan. 191: What seemed to be a "closed issue" will again be opened for discussion, ac·
lion. Key now Is to get ideas on paper. Present views.
opinions in direct manner bypass lower echelons.
Means go to source. Watch Virgo'.
AQUARIUS <Jan 20·Feb 181: Messages. contacts bring desired results Give full rein to intellectual
curiosity. Means dare to ask "sensitive" questions. Loved one will respond in favorable manner Taurus. Virgo. Scorpio persons figure prominently
PISCES (Feb. 19 March 20>: Someone wants
something for nothing -you might be prime target.
Protect assets. check mvestmenls. count your change
and locate missing material Get promises In writing. in·
slst on receipts and refuse to fall for proverbial sob stories
How to child proof your home
By JOHN D. ROSEN, M.D.
DEAR DR. ROSEN: My little boy is 18 months
old and has a real talent for hurting himself. I
seem to spend the better part of my life rushina
him off to the doctor for an injury or sickness. I've
gottoo those little plastic inserts for the electrical
outlets and wonder if you have any other ideas of
bow I could make my house more safe'! -S.N ..
NEWPORT BEACH
ASK THE DOCTOR
ANSWER: I've always wondered why just llke
plumbing little chlldren always seem to need flx·
ing at night or on the weekend. At any rate your
desire to childproof your house is a good one.
Children are more often hurt ln their own home
than any other place and the mishap which 1 see
most often is the burn Injury.
In answer to your question there are definite
ways to make your house more safe.
Children at your son's age seem to have an un·
controllable urge to reach up and pull tbinga down.
The stove is a dangerous area and I would suegest
that you make sure that pots or paos have their
handles turned inward in such a way that they
cannot be grabbed.
ll is also a good idea that until the child really
understands the perils or a hot stove that whenever
possible you use the back burners only.
Don't leave a bot pot ot coffee on a counter
with a dangling cord that can be pulled at by your
Harpilt will play at UCI
Tbltteen·year-old Naoko YOlblna of Japan will
live a laarp c:oncut at 8 p.m. P'riday at tbe UC
Irvine Art Gallery.
Illa Yosblao baa already made her pro·
feaalonal debut and hu been acdalmed in Europe,
tM U.S. e1wll uJapan. Tbl pablk la ID•tted to tbe f'lw performance.
toddler. Leave it plugged into a countertop level
outlet or unplug it when it ls left unattended.
Fortunately uncommon but tragic when it OC·
curs ls the severe burn to the mouth, which occurs
when an Infant chews through an electric cord.
Tbe mouth can be permanently and severely dis·
figured. I advise wrapping all exposed electric
cords with black friction tape. The child cannot
easily chew through this covering.
Another common hazard ror chiJdren in the
home is scalding injury from bot tap water. Most
households heat their water to 145 deg.rees. At this
temperature wate.r can cause a serious burn in a
matteI of seconds.
lfF the waler heater is turned down to W
degrees the same bum would take several minutes
of contact to occur. This lower temperature is cer·
tainly ample for household use such as laundering
and dishwashing. As an 1Clded incentive you will
save money on energy costs.
Miss Universe's
neighbors danced
NEW YORK (AP) -The new Miss Universe.
wboae ambitions include worltin1 as an engineer
and 1etting married, said she wants to be an "am·
basudor of peace" durin1 her reip.
Irene Saez Conde of Venezuela, with an In·
tef'Jfreter at her side, met with rePorters after her
victory in the internatlonal beauty pageant,
televised Monday nl1ht from Manhattan.
••1 called my father at 2:30 ln the morning. He
was 11ery happy, very emotional," said Mias Saez,
of Caracas. "They cloted up ·the street where 1 llve
and danced all nllht. EYerybod.y in Venezuela w11
happy."
Dancln1 ia a favorite paattlme of MiH
Universe, a lJ.year-old civil enflneerin1 student
who waa •elected from 78 coatfttantl in the
pa1ea.nt.
UNCLE MILTIE ... Been around a long time
ramous celebrity names were dl'opped? Like
George Burns, Bill Rogers and one of the great all·
round athletes of all time, Indian Jim Thorpe. But
only Burns was the real George -the others were
j ust name·alikes.
That's Rubbing· It-In Dept.: The. Florida
Power and Light public "futility" copping a plea
for again raising its rates with a supposedly
SONNY & CHER ... Together again?
humorous but tasteless ad campaign theme called
"Hold Down Big Bill!"
Stnd your queationa to Hy Gordner, "Glod You
Aaked Thal." COTe of thil ~.P.O. 80% 19620,
lnnne, Cali/. 92714. Marilf/11 and Hy Gardtitt will oM1Dt'T
a.t many que&tionl °' fMJI can in thdr column, but t>a.
volume of mall make1 per1onol replie• fmpouible.
So he has a fishing 'buddy'
DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband's favorite
sport is fishing It did my heart good to see him so
chipper as he packed h is gear -until I learned a
few days ago that his fishing companion is a
woman.
Now what do I do? He doesn't know I know. I am
a nJght nurse and can't raise five kids alone. They
adore their father and he is wonderful with them.
Should I confront him with the fact that I know?
I am furious that he has been lying to me for six
months. I'm not sure I can keep up this pleasant
front much longer. Please give me some advice .
-SEETHING JN THE GREAT LAKES AREA
Dear Seetblng: Have you lboupt tbrotigb the
ton1eqaences of letting him know yoa know! How
far do you want to go? WouJd you drop the bomb
and let tbe matter rest -or would you give him a
verbal blistering, force him to make a choice and
perhaps put yourself behJnd tbe elg.bt-baU!
I caution all women who are in this spot (and
their numbers are growing) to t.blnk ahead and ask
themselves: "ellactly what wouJd a head·on con·
frontaUoo accomplish?"
Talk to a counselor or therapist (not a relathe,
please) and decide the tocarse of action based on
what Is belt for you Ln the loag run. Then take U.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Will you please tell me
wby a woman would let he r hair tum gray when it
is so easy to have it r estored to its natural color -
or one she likes even better? Can't these women
see that gray hair adds at least 10 years to their
age? Whenever I see a woman with gray hair I am
tempted to ask her this question. I'm asking you
instead.
-MARY IN MANHATTAN
Dear Mary: I a1ree that gray hair tends to
make a woman look older, but not all women are
wUllag to go to the-trouble and expense of staylag
forever "35."
Every now and then I 1ee a really stuaning gray.
haired woman and am tempted to let mine go, bat
as soon as the granny.gray begln.s to peek through
I rush to the phone and call David. Mlae doesa't
have a silvery gleam. It's mousy and dull -a real
downer.
Halr t1nt bas done more to keep women yoathfuJ.
looklng than any slagle beauty prottdare I bow
of.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: What can parents <with
a nice new home> do to protect their walls, carpets
and furniture from the children or visiting friends1
We have two pre-school youngsters who do NOT
wipe their hands on walls and smear food on mir·
rors . Neither do they stand on the furniture with
their dirty shoes and tangle themselves up in the
draperies.
We have friends with children who are the same
ages as ours. They are destructive and careless . l
AIN LlllEIS
can't understand how their parents can let them
run loose in someone else's house -soiling, crack·
ing and breaking things.
When it comes time to go, not one word is said
. about the damage. We like our friends and wanLto
enjoy their company. but when they come with
their kids I am out of sorts for two days. Any solu·
tion?
-BURNING IN BILLINGS
Dear Burning: Tell the parent.I ol tllese kid.I H ·
actly wllat you hne told me. They lleed to ltear It.
Chlldrea who are llke loose cumou oa a rollt.e•
deck are unwelcome everywltere. Give u.em e941
chance to shape up. If they don't do It, lavlte the
parents for evening affalr1 and make It clear tllat
their children are not inchaded.
Are your parent& too 1trict? Hard to rea.ch? Ann Lan·
der&' booklet. "Bugged By Parenti? How to ~t More
Freedom," could help you bridge the generation flOP·
Send 50 cent• with youT re~at and a long, &tom~d.
1el/-addre1aed envelope to Ann Landen. P 0. Bor 11995,
Chicago. JU. 60611.
................
•
1-WHAT-S A
: POPCOIM
: PAITY7.. :
Summer
Ni96ts ....
• CALL •
: (7 I 4J 556-2130 = ................ ,,
Model A's•••• .
•typingtables
wheelbarrows•
rec reationa I
vehicles* golf
carts•model
trains*bikes
*pianos•cars
refrigerators
*skates••••••
@
If it'sgot
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad.call
642·5678 and a
friendly ad·
viserwill
help you
turn your
wheels into
cash.
easy
These elegant dresses
are just two from
our new selection of
beautiful party wear.
Subtle, easy to wear
and easy care, bath
are washable,
breathable poly
Georgette.
A. The ruffle front, stripe·Georgette
in raspberry . . . $54.00
8.. The pleat f root, tailored Georgette
in black or pale yellow . . . flZ.00
I
JULY SAtE
FRANCI&-@RR
.... .a.t.1:-..:•
ParlllllC IM htruee
firne stationery corona del mar
·'
l
THE
FiUllLt'
.c1ac1;1 ·
by Bil Keane
"Why do some grandmas have blue hair?"
81GGEORGE
e
}
It
I
by Virgil Partch (VIP)
"f·~
"H• clatrn1 he C*' beat you 1tendlng on hi• he1d.11
l
l MARMADl'KE by Brad Anderson DEN~IS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
I
. : 1 ·22
"I can't stand It when you're so dirty!"
. ~ ": .
, "But then, I suppose I can
take It lvlna down!"
.ll'DGE PARKER
GARt'lt:LD
(
}
~ . I
~I
"You better not come over, Margaret. I got
appointments all day.··
by Harold Le Ooux
WHAT DO YOU MEAN? HE'!>
THE D.A .. ' IF I DON'T DO
NOTlilN6. HE'LL. 5ll8POENA
ME OR 50METHIN'!
. by Jim Davis
I'M GOINC'I 1'0 51'ART VOU ON FOR THE REST OF iHE WEE~
VOOR OIE.T !>l.OWL'f, GrARAEL" VOO MA'V HAVE NO OE5SERTS
MOON Ml' LLI NS
TUllDAY'I
PUZZLI IOI.VII>
by
WEU., 1 C>lt>N'T
HAVf TIME To
T,AICE T~M OFF.
Orange Coast DAILY PfLOT/Wednetday, July 22, 1981
PMNtT8
VES, ~AM.11D LIKE TO SPEAK TO THE PREACHER,
PLFA5E .. TME OHE I see
OH TV All TME ilME ...
NANCY---
WHAT
HAPPENED
TO ALL OUR
ICE CUBES?
GORDO
>M'-4ee
'40lJft /../~ f)fes/
~ l'OIVJ ~ ~
Ml""'"Tl! , YOU BOR>J.
flMAIQ! 6ltM/J! a:'!~,.,
.,..~,_
f'l:NK \' "INKERBEAN
MA'-4F!JE 1-rWA~ TI)~f
11Jll1'L.7 ~-
HE'S 60T LW<,JRD SKVNRD
WRrrrEN ON HI!> l-5HIRT f
A SONDAY' SC~
PAPU?VE5. MA'AA.tu.
TAKE IT ... eor NOW
LET ME TElL l(OO
A80VT THE AH6EL ...
by Ernie Bushm1ller
I PUT THEM IN THE
BIRDBATH FOR THE
BIRDS
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
by Kevin Fagan
I WM 1'.-.Nt(1fM. MO~
A&.OHlr 1'.-i LIM&S Of AN
£LU'f~"
&U~'f.
-Or.no-Cout DAILY PILOT /Wednnday, July 22, 1981
Pl18UC NO'l'IC&
PUBLIC NOTICB
PVBUC NOTICE
,ICITtnout •utt•atl --ITAHIM•T Tiie ... ._Int ,_,_, ere delftt ---·•: IN ANO OUT ,.HOTO, 110
••rtlft Ori ... , New ... rl •Hell,
CelltN'IU....i L......,.. $11'99t 1,,.....-. LN. IM., e Cell,.,ftle ,_,,_,.ue11, Ut
Netti\ ............ ,., Miii .. Celltwftle .. ,.
Tllll ....,_, II 'OflCIU<tM by e CW•
,.re UM. ~·sa-1 llh .. th•Ota LI& IM. ...., .... .......-
PUBLIC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
•ic:Ttnout euu ...
..... ITATUMl.-T Tiie ......................... -.. : JIAN•TTll'I OllMTAL
HYOllNtlT •IPl .. AAL MltVICI, ,,..t LwrllMI• W•Y. S.11t• AMI, Cllllfet .... .,. JMM«te .... ,.,_, ,,..,
..._ ..... Wily, Sellte AM,~
""" ™' ........ ~..., ...... dlw!Wel.
.......... T-•OH Tllll .....,.,. - , .... W1t11 ...
C:-ly Clertl fJf Or .... c-tT"' J-Jt.ttll. p1.-
l'WI ..... Or .... CMtt Delly .......
Jiiiy '· .. u .. ti, ltl1 ,....,
PUBUC NOTICE
PVKIC NOTICS
PUBLIC NOTICE
'fCTt"°"' Wll••• ..... ITAftlMWT TM......,....,.,_,.,.. ... lltl
111111'-•: l"•Ol' .. &IONAL t••VtCH,
tUll ...... hwl• 0r1 ..... s,. ....
&...-..... CAtMea. JI ... C. 9UlllN, Im! ltldtla a.-,Ne.4.~Hil ... CAfMA. nit~ .. ~..., .. .,.. ........... ,,_c,....,,
Tllll ........... -,. ... tultll ..
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1, 1•1. , ...... P\JBUC NOTICE
~ .... Or .... (Mil OellY """' -------------..,.. ,....,I, IS, It. !t, 1W1 Jl1M1
PUBLIC NOTIC&
PVBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE
'ICTIT'GUI aulf•... "CTlnCIUI 9Utt•IM lllAM91TATUIMIPIT •AM9&TAT81MNT
Tiie .......... ,.,_, ere ... "' Tiie .......... II"'-It ...... blltl· Wit_ .. : _ .. :
ltlVIMlotl, LTO., Jl91 ~ OAVIO WAltlt E N & AS · 't;,11~•· Suite Ill, lnlne, Gelltetlll• SOCIATl!S, 1t1U MecArlll11r
"= '"""*"""' "'-elleft, llOllleww•. Suite w.s, lnrlfle, Ce•Hcwfll• ""' • Cell CM91Weflefl, ll'2 O....t Oev .. WerNft, 1tlt2 MecAl'llwr Ori,,., 11111• 111, lrwlne, C.llterftle llOlllewerel,. Sllllt MS. lrwlfle, cetHorflle '271S mu
Jee11-Merle s,.r11n1, JS ltve Tiiis ...,.....11 c-tod by en..,..
Or•11• Owcel, N••P••I •••<II. lneor'°'oted •-lelloft Ofller u .. n • c.IHW!lletlMO !Mf'lnerllll,_ Tllll Miii-i la COndll<I .. by e Dewld Werrwi
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Publl ..... Or .. CO.JI Dally Pllel, Jilly n , 1', Alft. S, U, ltll.
PtJauc NOTICS
PVBUC NOTICE
'ICTl1' .. 9Ull••M
llAMa ITATIIMalfT Tiie ,...._.._ ,.,_ ere Nllll _. __ I
ll!llTCHILL ••OI ., 7171 I .
OrM .. ...,,. ·-· S-Peril, Cel lferlll• •21
MITCHl!LL .. ouc•. INC .•• Celller11I• cerHrotlefl, 7Ha II. Or~...,_ A-, 9-Peril, Cel"'9rftle..,.
PU.UC NOTICS
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MOWMa, ••1tnte1t & .....
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1'.0 ... .. ............ c. ...... P .... ltllld ~ ~ OollY PllO(. Jiiiy 1$,22.2'.""'9-S, IWI 11-41.
Tlllt ...,..., I,~ bye<•· -------------we11M. Mltc:Mll & Oloce, Inc. WllMem Mltcllell, ............
Tltll .....,_ -Ill .. wlUI IN C-IY C:.... OI Or .... Ctlwllty M July
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P\JBUC NOTICE
'1CT1nous •utt••ll ...... STAT•MaNT Tiie ltllewl"I ,_,...,, ere dollll
-1-•:
WALNUT CltlEIC, LTD., 21'2 0... •onl Drlwe, S11lle 111 , I rwl11e,
Cel l,.,,,.e '27 IS
SPA"LINO I NVESTMENT COltl"OltATION, e GlllfwrlM ,.._ ..
11 .... lln °'-1 on,,., Swll• 111, lrwlne, CelllerNa'271S
PVBUC NOTICE
ltOTte•TO
CONTUCTCNtl CAL.UM Nit •IDS
klleel Otttrkl: 1•VINll UNlflllO SCHOOL OISTltlCT; 9W °"4111.,..
t;• •'<lllCll -· ... JMll...,., J• ly. lttl ,.l•U ef ••• 1teu1,1: DIST ltlCT AOMI NISTltATIVI Cl!NTElt, *1 AIWft A-, lrwlM, Cellfernle 92714 (P.O .... ltSH,
lrwlM t27UI Prele<I t•ntlll<•lleft
Ne-: l!L CAMINIO •EAL SOUit
SYSTEM MOOll'ICATIOMS; l'lece Ple111 ere Ml fllle: f'ACILITll!S ll'LANNING OFfllCI llUSOI, nf1
AllM Awe., lrwllle, ClllMnll• tt11• 171•1~.
NOTICE IS HEltE•Y GIYaN -Ille •• .,,. ,,_,., k"-4 Ohtrkl ef
0renee c:.intv. Ca1•ton11•. Kl 1111 ..., end tllrowell Ill Oewernlfll .......
llerel11efter r eterre41 lo •• "OIST•ICT"; wlll reca4we w, le, WI
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lw u.. -protect.
•kh IN6I ..... 1 .... '" ... lllk:e Tiii• .....,_.. -Ill .. wlDI Ille c-iy a.-flOr-.. '*"""' .. J"'' 1-----------, ITAT81MMTOt'
AllAllCOMU•NT Ott UM O• "CTlftout •uat••M NAMI Tiit lell-1"1 .,.,_ NI •Mfl·
J111, "· tt, 2'. Ave. s. 1•1 a1-.e1. -PVBUC NOTICE
J een-Merle 51M1rlln1, U lt11•
Orend Dwcel, N•••o•I •••<II, Celllarnle tlMO
ldeftllllecl ....... and 111\ell .. -""' .... Pl'lllkly ..... -........ _ 11. 1t11. Pt .... ,.. ..... Or.,.. CO.al Delly ,.llet,
Jiiiy IS, 2'. !t, All9-S, IW1 J1J:>.11
PVBl.IC NOTICE
PknTICIUS •UllNIM NAMll ITATIM9NT
Tll• 1 .. 1-lnt ,,.,...,, ue Hint
-'Mn•: OltANOE CO\INTY ATHLETIC CLUI, 17611 lrwllle lollleW-. Swlle
la, Tllttlf\ CA.,.._
ATHLON COltPOltATION, •
Gell..,,,,. c.,.., .. 1 ... 100 •rac1c111t,
Sent.. AM. CA ftM.
OOUOLAS IHVESTMEIHS, •
Cellfetlll• cw...,ell•, 17'1 1rvl11e .... M¥erct. TIAUll, CA f26IO. T1111 ...,..,,.., 11 tendwcteo lly • ..... ,.1,..,...,..,.
ATHLOH COltPOltATION
Wiil..,, G 0.¥11,
~
Tllll .._ •• Hied •Ill\ -c-ty Cten • 0r.,... c.nv .. J111,
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""o•••· a•NDALL • MA•· ..... TO.
A '"OPISSIONAL LAW COtll"OUTIOlt .........................
......,..._..,CA,.... , ....
"'*lltl!M Or .. Coiut Delly Pl ....
Jiiiy tt. "·AMI· s, 12. 1•1 n11~1
PVBUC NOTICE
•tCTtTIOUI IUMM8M _....ITAT ... MT PVBLIC NOTICE
Tiie .......... ,.,_. •r• delnt -
~-= ACI! ~Tl llOUTIOUll, Wlllt .,..,.... ..,. ,,_...,, v....,,
CA"1a ¥ACX M. MIVAZAlll, ... C-ity CIW, C.U Mite, CA...._
SACHIKO M. MI Y.uAltl, ~
cw..try 0-. C..U MeM, CA.,.._ Tiii• .......... ~.., .......
dMwel ,.......,.. Wife).
SllcHM M. ... ,....
Tllls .......... -fl ........
CauMy °"" -Or .... GeuMY .. Jwly 7,1ttt. , ......
...... 1 ...... Or ... c-t Delly,......
Jiiiy •• "· 22, Jt, ,.., 111141
PVBUC NOTICE
'ICnnoul IUllPI ... .._ITAT.,_WT
TM._...,,.,.,_ ....... ~ _ .. ,
HAZEL'& P\.ACI!, aD .....,.,,
••wlew•r•. •15 Ceil• Meu, CollfernleflU7
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•ten'"*' euu••• MMS ITA'91Mll1' T ............. ..-........... -": JASQef T•INT & COMPANY
(JT&C), llNI I!.., A-~ ..... v.-,, CMlfw'flle .. ,. 1Cett1 E. Keller, ltt41 a41 .... ,
·-· ....... v .. ...,. Cll...,.,... tt7• Tiiie ........ 11 e.-.elH lty 9ft IA-.. ., ...... .
tt...elE. Keller Tllll..,....__lllMwttll._
C-ly CIWtl .. OtMee C-y ..
J-II, Itel. Pl..,
PWI ...... Or .... CO.ti Delly .......
Jiiiy I, I, IS, 21, 1'11 lttUI
PUllUC NOTICE
'teTITiout Mlll•US IUMllSTATaM81fT
Tlle ........ 11WtMl1 ..... ~ -.. : MANAGllMINT SIAltCH
COHWLTAHU, UOI 0..., ~
9Mc.ll. Glltlwftle .... Gew'lil M. Hernt, IJlt Vie U ...... , ~ e.cl\,c.llfonlletM)
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PVBUC NOTICE ..... ""IM fl Ullt fktll*9 lionllle .. -------------PICTITICIUS •UllNllSS
Tlll1 _..,." la ,...,,.., lty • _,.1--... ......
SPAltLIHG INVESTMENT -: l'ICTITICIUI 9Ulf•aU UMa ITATIM9NT COAST TOWING SlltVICE, 11:1 ...... ITATaM8NT Tiie tOltewl"I ~ la dolftt lllltl• C09'P
l11•111trle l Wey, Cella Meae, T _ ...
ClllllerftleftUJ .... ~.~ ....... ,......It tPDlfl9 llll•I· SLIDING o.AltAOE OOOltS, l)U
~S.-11"1 ,.,.,... Sotewly.
Vice,.,._ Tiie flldl"-...._, .._ r• llltTA V1 AltT 47'1 WI,,._. Mllcllell,T..tln,Clllllornlet .. .... r ............ , .... In Or ......... _ ........ Me cillfornl•*D SLIDING GAltAOIE OOOlt co .. Tlllt llla'9"""4 -Ill• •1111 "'9 C-ty c...,. .. a.. .. Coo;ftty ... Jiiiy
10, 1•1. c-ty., ....... U, lt7.. 1t°'*1e M. ve...... o...... 4191 IMI Mite.••· Twtln, Gelltomle tMIO
AUTO<aASH, INC ... c.u-.... Wl11Uono Ave111.1• L• p.·..... Fr•Mls Olly CM/ljleftell. Jr., 1141 ~ ... '°' ....... 11115 llllCI .. Mr•. ,,__ Cellferfll• tOUJ • • Mltcllell, TIAllfl. Gellfoml• ....
te111 Velley, c:.lltwftle tl19 Tllll lillAIMlf 11 <-....Cted by en 111• Tiii• bullne111 , __ by en In·
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Publl-Or .. CO.ti Delly Pl'"-
Tllli ....... -~ by • '4wl4111el. flvl4111•1 cw-etleft. ~ M. ..,.,,.,,,_ Ovuen Frenkll Olly ~II•
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=~.:: T1111 ~ •• 111• w1u. .. JrTlll• ·~ •• "'" wiu. t11e __ P_V_BU __ C_N_OTl __ C_E __
S.Uetery C-ty Oerll al Or .. Caunty on Jiiiy c-ty C'9rll OI a...,.. C-ly • Jiiiy
Tllla .....,,_. •• fllell •ltll .. It, 1'll. ,..._ at, 1'11.
C-ty Cleftl OI Or .... Gellftty., Jiiiy P11blllllecl Of ..... C:-1 Delly PllOI,
10, ltll. ......, July H, tt, Allg. S, 12, IWI HU41.
NOTICll INVITINO •tot
,....,, Mollee II lle••bY tlwen tll•I ....
PvOll-o...,. CoMI Dally Pilot, eoerd Of TNIC-Of Ille C.011 C-.·
,..,bl, .... 0r.,... Cant Delly "let. -Jiiiy n . "· Auf. s. 12. 1w1 J14441. m11nlty COii ... Dlsl•lc1 of Orenee C:-y, CelllOrllle, wlll recalft ._,..
Jiiiy "· ZJ, Jt, ..... s. 1•1 1ta41
PUBUC NOTICE
•ICTlnOUI 1U11••11
IUMll ITATlllllll.-T Tiie....._..,_ .. ....._......_ -.. : OESll•T HOMEI, 117' Mlllrt
...... lrwble, Ce!--"7W
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PVBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE bl4'•.., ae 11:•a. ..... "'*Y· ..,....1 1.
IWI, ., Ille""'"-'"' o.-tfNN of Ml• col .... **let lee.Nd et U70 l'ICTITIOUS•UllNaU PICTITIOU,•UllMISS Adamt Avenwe. Coate Meu, NAMI STATHlllNT ...... ITATIMaNT C:.lllornl• ... """"time Mid bids •Ill
Tiie 1o11ow1ne ""°"' are dol111 Tiie 1e1 ... 1ne pertoft• ••• dofnt be 1141b!lcly opened-reed I«. lllltlneu•: bllllneu•: PltlNTING NEWSPAPER .. COAST IAY HAlt90ft MOllLI MANOll, OALLEltlA II PAltTNEIU, i200 ltEPOltT" 1•1.-J SCHOOL YEAR, * lh1 Mrwt. C.ta Mesa. C:.lllONll• lrltlol Stl'99t. Suite MO, Ceet.. Mela, 09'ANGE COAST COLLEOE
"'27 C.llfwni. ,.. All blc?I.,.. lo be lfl eccarc&ellc• w1111
Wllbllr Alll..., Y ....... "6 2hl Denlel W. ~. I* Yeclll Ille •Id l'arm lflstrllcllent Md Coftdl-
SW•I, c:.aa ....... Celiforftl• ..v Colin le , ,.......,, .. Kii. c!elllwnl• ''°"' -S,.CHlclltten. ~" ••• -flerM L. Y-.,, ,_ 2111 Slnel. tJ6'0 ... Ille end,,,,,., be SK_ In tlle offlu
C•t• Me--. Glllfwnl• m v T"*-L. k..,..._. tn S.nlk••· of t11e ~,.. ._..,, o1 Nici <oll ...
Tlll1 ........... 11 ~IM by .,, Ill· lie, Cat-dltl MM, Gellferflie n.2S lllatrlcl.
elvlduel Je .... 1 Aldoraon, tJt WHI 2111 aecll ...... r ""''' lllbmlll •1111 1111 Wllllw A. YIUllf StrMI, SlfM AM, Cellfromle '210t bid• cetlller'1 Clleell, car11tlecl cllecll,
Tllll ,.._ -tiled wllll tfle Wiii .... J. It-}'. Jr., 611 AldNll -bl4dor'I llOftd ....... Nyeble '° Ille
•t..lMlllN .... ptace.
Tiie•• wlll ..... .._it r..,irect
lor eecll Ml of bid de<ll-fllt to
...., ..... ,_... "' .... caMI·
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Eecll 11611 .,...I be ec.c-'ecl ...,
IN eecwrlty referred•'" Ille CMtrecl
.. _ -by.,. 1111 ..... --
-.. I••'°"-Tiie DISTltlCT ,_,,... 1fle •leM 10
rej«I -er .. , 111411 W to MY Ir· ,..,,.,It ... ., ............. " ... 1 .... , ...
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lftt reto Of per diem ..... In IN lecallly Ill #flkll 11111 _,, It • •
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ltect.. ,._ rll4ft .,. e11 Ille II IN OIST .. ICTofflce ....... el ,.., .. _
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C..lel -y .. olltelflM Oft r""91l. A topy of -..... allell .. _.... et
llle Jolt•""· Tiie l~"I .c:-.1e Of per diem
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etOTtea 10 COWTllACTOU ~Or ... C.-OeUy "-~ ..... Or-.. CMte Delly ,. .... ......., ...... Jwly I, U, 22. Jt. 1'11. _. J"'y 1, &. IS. 22. ttll Ni.t1
c-ty 0.. fl Or ... Cowlty 911 Jiiiy •.•tit. ...._
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IS. IWI "'61 OlttrlCI ...,d of T111t1M1 In en
P'l .. 1N J•-• G. 0.tften, 700 S.11111 _, "" leU !Mii llw ,.re-Of
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Notlu II IWf' .. Y l lftfl IMI Ille ------------......... Of .. c.eotl Delly "le(, 0 t a n I e 0 t o Y e IN Wlft 11611 a ..... ettlM llwt tlle ..... Jiiiy 22, tt, Ave. S, 12, 1WI ,,.._., llOlllew.,._ ,...._, Celllorftle tl1ti dor wlll MW I_,,....... C-rect If
Jllly t.1t.n. ... 1... ...... ... ,.... ...... -...... --...... wlll .. ._.wed prier a. ate• .. ,.._n MIM UftlflM $<-OIArkl
flt 0r.,.. c-.cy, c.MlfwN•. Kllfll
... -......... It• Gowmilll .....,., 1••11•• concrecloo lo r .. 111er for
.... lflcMIOft of """"' ........... ~ _ .....
A"llc•tleM ere awellMlle et II• OIUrlct P11rc11a11n1 Office, llS7
l"lllcelltle St., Callll Mne, CA. Mlfle
...i-~·· ........ 111 ..... ... ,....
Tiiis Notice h ""bll1~ In ec. con&Mc• w1111 uw 1WOYllieftl Of l!d c.-,.....s.
GOYEltNINC# IOAltO Dllroa'wy Katwy ,,..._
c.,..M., ,...,."'-'"' Dlrec111r DatM: Jilly .. IWI
""4111 ..... Or .... Coetl Daily ~ ....
'"'Y n. "'' n1NI
PUBUC NOTICE
l'ICTITtOUS IUSt••ll ..._ITATIM9•T
,. .... ,
........... Or ... Coelt Delly ... .....
J111y n . "· Aue. s. u . 1•1 H'7>tt
PVBUC NOTICE
Pl18LIC NOTICB
P\JBUC NOTICE
P1C111'0US 141M•IM
lllAMatTATblilllfT Tlle ........ .--11 .... ._. -.. : cov•••o WAGON SALOON •
11:11 .,....., c-. ..... Calltwlil•
O«* L ..... Hit lt....,cy
Circle, ""'""""" GlflMrllle Tlllt ...._II ceMIK• i., et! i...
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Gef'eklL ......
Tiii• ............ -11 ... •ltll ... c_,, Cteni er 0r.,... eow.ty e11
J-2',1"1. ~
........ Or ... CMtl Delly" ... • J"'Y I, I, IS, 22. 1'11 1"1-t1
PVBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
P\JBUC No;rtCE
•ten....,...,.. .. ...._ STAffMl8.Wf
Tiie .......... ~.,. ..... ........ :
llTCMINGS llTC, rm Acocle ......... o.r.... o-. CllllfwM• ... ,
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Jecll It. weedll, m 1 htt 4ttl
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o.w °"""' Tllit .......... _..._._.. ..
c-y °"" .. Or ... c..cy. Jiiiy
PVBUC NOTICE
'ten"°"' ........ ..._ ITAftMa.-T
PVBUC NOTICE
Tiie ......... .-11...,.. ........ 'tennousau11••11
-.. : ..... ITATllMlll•T CHESTNUT MIU INTllltlOltS. Tiie ,_.._,_. --t ere Miftt
Its" .... ..,......_ ............. WM-••: Cllllfllnllo'*' TH a H 0 LL a NIE C It ·
$aMwo LM r.ylor, IU¥lt lleat SUNNYMUD VaNTUltE, t1M .....
.. .,.,.., ...... ,......_ c.MlfwNe Alrwey Aven11e, CHle Meu,
...., CellferMe ..
Tltls ........ It~..,• • Htl!IM9dl Dtu118'1"W114 Ca., IN:. .......... • C:.lllenll• ,.,..,....... 1194 .... :
"'9rwll.MToYIW Alrwey Awe1111e, Cota Meu,
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Je<I: '*-· na Pwt Carlltle, Ille M-II -"" • "'"'· In Ille H_,.,, 8"dl, c:.etlfoml• tJMO eftnt of lellure lo enter Into well ton·
,.•trkli, s. '*-· IJ:l\o't Opel, trect, Ille,,__ Of llW O.Cli •Ill be
• ..... Ill-. C.lllorllle ,_, ferfolttd, or 111 tlle UM 9' e -· llW Tllll butlMll IS COftdllCttd .., e tllll ..,m tNr9ol wlfl be lot1el..., to
..... ,., ~ Mid eel .... dlltrlcl. ,,_,_ L. Scllrlller Nt bld:llW,,,,,.., _.__ 1'1• bid tor
Tlll1 ,.........,. •• lllad •11'1 t11e • period OI fwty·tlwe IO I NYI •tier c-ty Oen!• o...,.. c-ty., JUiy Ille d•lt Ml tor U.~ lllereot . U, 1•1 Tiie ... ,. OI T,...._ ,._.,,.. IN
'1'6111 tl'lwll991 of rejoctlfll eflY -ell -PlltlllllWd OrWlfl C.O.tl Delly' Piiot, « to welw _ l,,....._rlll .. or
Jiiiy U, 1', ..... S, U. 1W1 ~I ...,,_., E. Wet.Mn
PVBUC NOTICE
s.c....,., .......
of T rvtt.et CoeJI
c-lly COi .... Dist.
C:-ty Cleftl fJf OrM99 c-ty • Tllll ....,_ 11 <eMllKlff .-, e ...._... PwOll-Or .... CMll Dally PllO(.
11 ... of IM~KI. TM~t .....
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~
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Jiii' IS, ZJ, 1•1 J1&41
PVBUC NOTICE
7, 1111. W J-t, HI!. l~IH ...,_.,._ T..L llO. -Jiiiy u . 2', 1•1 ,,...I
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
J. WARREN LENNON
AND OF PETITION TO
ADMINISTER ESTATE
NO. A10Mt3. ........... Or .... C....Delfy'1.... ,..... Htl~ll 0....t-4 .o'fteaCM'TIUllTllH'IAU
JIAy I, tt, 22.1', H11 ~t. l"WlllMlll Or ... CMll Deity ~.... Ce,. Inc. 0.. ....,. .. l"1 M 11 :• e.m. fllt'lt
Jiily e, IS, 21. Jt, 1111 -..,. ,.otrkle H. Neye1, SK. A-le.en Tiiie 1-eioca ~y " T I I h i .._ ___________ ,T,_. Tr111tee, w s..cce110r Tr1111" w NOTICE OF DEATH OF o a e r s •
T1111 ....,_. -11..i -.. .-.u~ Trwtw • ., lflM <orlllill beneficiaries, creditors PVBUC NOTICE C-y0ertt1110r.,..Cew1tYet1J111y ou• et Tri111 ... ,,. ... i.y Jey N I C H 0 L A S P • and contingent creditors of
•1CT1TIOU1iutl.... M,!'91 =c:-:;.:: .. r~ ... ':-~ PEZZENTE AND OF J . War ren Lennon ~nd
..... ITATUl9.-T ':.:.:..""::::::."::' ll'Wll.,.. 0r ... e.-t o.u~= IJIWI,,.... ""., Oltklel .._. flf P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A D -persons who may be
Tiie ........_...,_•re...._ r-. .......... .--ere...._ Jlllyts,n.Jt.A111.s.tt11 1197~ oru1e c ..... 1y, ce11ter111a, .,.. MINISTER ESTATE NO. otherwise Interested In the '-i;::i,. •UHINO CA••· m ....._.: ""'"".,.. •• .,... certel" Nee ice ., A 109424. wl II and/or estate: .. ,..-... ....., co.-*' Mer AL'"A DKVILOl"MllNT <OM· PUBL!C NOTICE Dete1111 .,.. 111ect1e11 •• s.11 T o a I I h e i r s ' A petition has been filed .~nus ,.ANY,,,,.,. 1t1~!• •v•-· 11en11Marrwc.,....~11·"1'-•IA-beneficiaries, creditors by James Warren Lem a..-IE Wll J m ....,_, 9MCfl. CA-ltnllMftC ... 111, lfl .,._ t-.., .... . ...,;;;;. = C..:·.f·M.. JAUM AL.CALM.,._...,• NnCaWntUITH'tlAU •a.., Offklel .._.,.et..._ c-and contingent creditors of mon, Jr. tn the Superior c.i...,...... w . ......, •-· s. ~. CA T.S. -...... ty, •111 ~ .,. --' • .... Nicholas P. Peuente and Court of Orange County f1116. ltOTIGa II Ha•l•Y GIVllM, 9IOt OM4I el Trwl .... M ...... k wctlell let h b L1ey• •11u w11 ..... tu Juuo IA'ATA. Vtw,,......... u ... '"""' _., .. t11e u .. n .. persons w o may e requesting that James ~Z:::-.S:-c.w *' MM, .., w . ....., •-· s. o.iwtM'. ~.:':'!9!i ::J ::,, :"ti.•_: IUll• ., Alnlrtcll. .i • _ ... _. otherwise Interested In the warre n Lennon, Jr. be ap-
Tlltt ...,.. .. ~.., ... CAtm.. ., ••AL .. T•Tll ••cu1t1T111 ,,.,.ce t• "'"' •"'•rl<.,, Tiii• will Ind/or estate: po inted as p ersonal ._ __ ......... --• Tlill ......_. '' c..-.c..-lly • 1••v1c11, tecetH •I ltH Nettll 111111'-.. ~y ....... •1 114 A petition ... s ....._ filed --.------..,.. .... ...,.... ·---.----. ..... c1 ... .,..,.. •••• fllttt1~1nu.c1tyfls.M11 '"" ........ n representative to ad-,.,,..._ Mte~ ;~o::t; .. 0r.,...'ie.., AM,ce1...,.,1111M1r...,.,u11e..,. by Martha E . Peuente In minister the estate of J .
P\JBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
"'::~J~ 11..,. """.,. ™'........,. -.. ..,. .,.. .. c.ei...,. 11QU1TIWd. • c.i"9nlMI ~-.-_.,.. .. _._.,......,It the Superior Court of Warren Lennon (under the
c.e-eyQlftletOr .... C4WICY•JWy eo.MYo-tt-'Or..,Collr!CY•J_., cwper.-,._,., ....... T,..... .... , •• :.~~~T~_!'Y ...... ~ Oran~County requesting lndel'\andent Adminlstra-
1111 7• 1ttt. _..... • ,..,_.. • .. ,._.. fl -'" -.__... -th t rt .. • E P t ""' •· P_.. .... ,....,.... 111 ... ~ o.-fl ._,.,..: a '"" • ezzen e tlon of Estates Act>. The ,ICTt.,,.,..,..... ,._ ,......0r...,eo.eo.ity"9C. Tr111t uecvte4 •Y MANLEY J. &.ot•flTrectNe.6A:I.•...._ be appointed as personal petition is set for hearing
T11e ,::':!:"!. ,,_~:::c.-DllMY~ Jlllyt.u.n.2'.Hll ....., f111ouc1uNN81e>ao.,.•ouc1A. :;,•~"::*:'::::.:.'i.= representative to ad-tn Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
...... ! =::.=~,'::" ... ~ ··r.·· recerft .. Drwiea c-nty, minister the estate of Center Drive, West. In the TH11twt1DLOW0.i<>u~.111 PVBUCNOTICE PVBUCNOTICE fltMNCNllY.•,....• . ......, .• CMfenllll. Nicholas P. Pezzente Cun· City of Santa Ana •
.....,.,. •-· Oe1W1 lkww, "'*"''*" -. attt. ..., ,_ ., • UUl"TINO TI4D•P1tOM •11 •0• der the Independent Ad-Callfornla on August 19, .... tuNato11eou.iT .. ,_ .. , .. ,.,., .,, ... , '" NY-t., e1i .~ ~ ........ ,~ r'::'9· ministration of Estates 1981at9·30 AM
SWllDLOW, INC .. • Cllllfenll --..... Ta su,.a•10• cou•T, C"''NTY Of' ,.,,.,,.....c. •' 111• ••11••11-• ,.. 11'• , .. :._ • ........ !.:.~ • ., A t) The -'ltl I t f · O • • "'..., ....... lt112.....,... ·-o;c;;.;;oa... .. .. .. vv -.1WM .... 111itt1M11111tlll!IW-llY.,K.,.... ...... _......, .. _ c • ........ on s se or IF YOU BJECT to the o..tllfl~.CA...... couenv°'..,..... ~~~.!'c-..o..iww..t ., .,...., --. flf ...._.,.,.. -· tMI _,.,._.....er....,. ht1rlng In Dept. No. 3 at granting of the petition, ,.!~;.::--11 ~i.,•cw ,.a.o.11ra.r.w. ......-.c.i.......,•ttJtt ~ ~""·"' ._ ,_. .. :=.~.::...-.:.:• 700 Civic Center Drive, you should either appear
IWl!OLOW, INC. .... ..._ c.. '*"' PL•• NT 1,. ,. : o" u c "11" Offklel ,._.:,. ~....,:.:. .... .._ --':T,.. "-""•.,.. ...,. W est, In the City of Santa at the hearing and state :=..... T,:1~At!'rt~~rT: tc~·~::~1C:-"o'; cH•~•lllS. 1"c.· • Cellflln!lo cw· r.:. ~ sau. .; fl'U•L•c 11uc. :f.':'..:-.. i:;-.....,~.:; Ana, Callfomta on July 29, your objections or flle
Tllll ............. -........... TllNNUSH •• ,_ ~· "'C:11fliNDANT· ••CHA-0 I TIC* TO THI HIOMHT •1oot111 .. ,, ............. "' .... ,._.... 1991at9:30 A .M . written objections with the ~an1110r-..c=.-,et1J llell, HOWNI, llOWAAO ttNHl.AND: :.CMt~-:::.....iw:r:.-:.:: ... _._ .... _.,::t:": IF YOU OBJECT to the court before the hearing.
1, ""· 011,•HOAHT: THE ,..,. ••• , .. •-• tao KHllU.AHD, ....... ,...... ... _,"""""' -1 .... -= .. ntM • granting of ·the petition, Your a......,.rance may be uw.....as CHAM IHC.1 WA&MI ... O'HA•AA; OOllSl ....... IMMlw. • T .... ., ... '" I*"' ....... ..._ ........ Id -'t.. ~-.......... •••vl O'H••••: .... 0 ... 1 11; .... ,.an ._....., .... ,,.............. ,.. i...-..., ...... liltNll A1te1 you ~-.... er appear In person or by your at-
... ._......,.,... lfnlltll"'IMMM· .-... oCOMl'\A .. T .. ~.,....111 .... c-.ey ... .._,..., ... ., ... ....._..._.. .. at the ~ring and s tate torne~.
--,....... Ml 1111;11 CAlllW.a•• ...._,...,... • .....,_, ....,..._. ..... .,.,.. .. _.your o~ecttons or file I y OU AR e A ...,.....,. --PIOTtC8I Y•""" -.... ,,_ Lot I 11Trect ... 01' Ill• CltY flf awtec:t ti MW ....._ eM .. ....,. ....... ..,..0r~co.eDt1.:= .....=o"'C:.....1•T c.rt_.,_....-...,....._ .......,. ........ ._. •• _,, '"'"""I••""., •1rect1-11y wrlti.n Jectlons w ith the CREDITOR or a cont·
J·"y 1, tt. .. -. --,. ....... --..... ...,. ..._ ,.. ,..... c.-. 111 .,.. *' ,.... " ., •111 .. """' ..._.. ... .,. _., court btfore the hearing. lngent c r-ltor of the cte.. .. _... --· ---...... ~.-._ .. ...,.-co•••~·---• .,.. ...... .,...,.-...-. ..., NOT1c•1 ••-.. .._ ~ "" ...... ._. ,_.... ......,., ... ~. ll!Nta ....,, _. .. ~ ,......, Your ..,.,..ranc. mey be ceaseo, you must file your PUBLIC NOTIC& CRrt!MY .... ....,...,_..._. .. .,. ..... _. .. ..,,1a .. 111 Tiie ... .,....,.._ ...-. ---. ...-• ..._.. ... In person M by your at-clalm with the c ourt or ::..~..:':.'.:..":: ...,.,... ... _..,.,...._.. ......... 119' • ..,,., .. ,...,,_,. ... , ... .., """ we11• w "'"'"' torney. present It to the personal
--C9U11T ...... .. ,,_,.1Y •, ... ,yew·~ :::.11,:•-=-=: ......._ ...__., .. ,.... .. .,.... t F v o u ARE A representative airntnted
........... ._ 11 .,......,._..,.-*ke.,.., '""""·"•·_., ... ...,..,_, ._.; ~ ' MlllO, .. .,. ...... .,. •• •'•1• cRcOITOR or a cont-by t-court wl n four WCAU........_. ~ 111 M ~ ,.. ........ AVllOI W .. II*.. 0 II • . ..,..... .. ...-. er .. ...,.,• "" '"' couwn .. ..,.,... .. ,,...,.., .. , .... ,..., ., ...... ••.....,,... ...._-. • Tiie .......... ..,.. ........ 111t .. ..,. .......,. .... .,. ._. lnoent cr9dltor of tM de-months from the date of
..... ,.. .... CAIUM.,.. ....-.••.iMY•.._..,._ .• .....,.. _ _..,.,...._ "' ,.._..... tw lllY ....,..,iC.,.. "'""'•••.._,....._ .. __. .. ceaMd, you must flit your first Issuance of letters as
•11 .. ....,• .. --~••1 .,....,_.._.._.,.w. -----=--•_,...._. --~..., ....... ,...,.... tMntfttothe I ""' ~-..... AVllO _,.... .............................. u. .......... ~-=-------........... ,,,...~ .. tl•lm with th• court or rrovlded In Section 7M of
•11t•••H 11oa•&.•• ••ou ... .,.......,_.,..,..,....... •w-1111e.., .. _.... ......... ....,... ........... ttrt.111 ..... -.,... pr penona he Probate Code of
'9m1MlllW• oeeat WM.MM • ..., a... .. •....,. •• ,_. u. .. ...._. :!t::r:':::,.-=:.::=: :'::: =·..,.. •., •• •• 1., • •..:.:=.=-., .. ........,, repr~v• •:r:inttd C1llfornt1. The time· tor
...... ITAT11M1111' ...-.CAM-••-''::.-:.. ....... _,. .. _.,•,....._,..,ea 119' .....,. • ........ ....,." • ....... ,..... ........ ._._ by the wl n four flllno claims wltl not ex· .::..,..:e-',.,.... .,. •119 ••• .. i.•T ..otAL.•• ••Oii• _ ...... • ....... ....,.. ......,,...._,......... • .._. .... •..., ..,.,.,.=:..., ._1 o.w....., ow• 11 . monttt1 from tM dlite of ptre prior to four months
O••·OAY AUTOMOT•v•-o..1t WM.Oii• •,.... • 11ec.,1e ,,,...... .... _ ... • .... TO TN• "'•NoA•Tt' • '"'" :, ':."·"==--· = "' •· ,..,_ "'"'· ceett .... , first lllu9nce.of letters as from the date of the hear· .,.... •ea.KT•-·· ,,.. ... __..., .. ..., ........ ,... .....,., • ,_ --. 11 • ,_,., ............ , .... •r 1111 -.--. • ..,, ~ • t... C411 ........ ...,. prov~ In Section ,_ Of 1"-noe1c.o ~. -.,...r .. :rrc Mr -,_ -r-:o-*-~·i::. =--~ ..... ,.. ..................................................... ~"'th• Prolt•t• Code Of OU u•y EX"'MINE ·~~ UMI .... I, A ..... , o•a •tl ""'O•a , --• : A ... -,.-. ..... • .. _.... .. _., .. ......_. 9' ne 1~ Ill-. m" " ..-...--~ ••• •••r • -.....;L. .. 'A1."• ~;;.;:;;..._.., .. ,..... -...-• ..-.. .. ..,... ::r,-..=-...-:=....--..•_. ... .._ .. ..........,,..,. CatlfOntle. :n" time for the file kept bl/ tM court.
• • 1..uu. 1 IM...-,... If,...-• ..... ,.., '"' .. WI -.t • ..... ltf ..w .... ti y,. ,,_ -.. " .... "-.. ""',...IAllllr4 flt rllfnt dllrN WUI not IX· If You lrt lnttrnted In thl ..... ~-=:. .. ..,._.., ., .. _.,..,.. ..... ,.,... •....,.,,. .... .,.. • ..,. =:-,.::.... ::_~:. =..:: ...... t1 -=.,•.,, ,,· ........ -:.._-: •• .._.._...._ plre P'* " four month1 Htat•. wou may fll• • rt-~ ---:.:==·~-= :r.=.:= • ...:,:.: .. 1 ..................... :.:.• ......... ., .. ,,.~ .. -:1: ..... .,......, ....... .,~ t1rom~~nof""hMr· questWllththlCiOUrtt•r• ....., ... ...... 1 .. ,. °'* C111111r.,,..,. ..... • • _......._ .,.... ,.. •-. _. ,... .., • ...._. ...-....._. ...,...._ " ....... ..,,_...__._ .... , non--, ctlvt speclal notice of the ••:-;::~:-::-'.lf!:....D&I -. • ._... 11, ,_ .....,. • • _.. • • ,.. "'• ,_. lllriwM .... =-.-... .-.. "= :....._.. ............. VOU MAV XAMlftE Inventory of Hlate 1uets -.~-. ..,. _.l.:i.,_ ...... l:r':."'&;if:-:..• =:.,":s:"J~== w'-A:t :9T,."~•• thefl .. =bVtMceurt. tftd of the pet1Uon1, a c · ii:L I...... --:~-= ..:-.. -..,I\ s.:t .-r-:.==·~ ,.. tf',l:-=F-==.: .... -=,··j ~:~-w~-:: ~~~rn":C:.:r~; .. ..._ - -.. .. t. :.·-...... ... ... .. _,.,.....,. Z:Tria.wlt.... _l_(I a U UTA U ;:".l"" fl ... ........ Setet QUiii ... court to ,. of tM C.llfomta PraNtt --·-~·My &::..:.-=-.:..£..c.:==.·-:;::-·---Et.... •cu••.,. ·=:: °""',:..: .. tcM :~··--:e=:.:=c~ .... . -...... -. . ... ..it·-·-A.~ -~ ~ HiW'I fl&•••.utt•tte•COM-•• ~ .................... ,.. • ._, ........ : .. ,:
r ...:.:.-.,....... a.;.~~-=':.. ... ......., . \;~"·......., counta and r•••rt1 ._..., •• u..1" s.. :~St:._ • ,_ ~'!!2r..a-." ; !!!!:,..= #"~=-~:.: l'l•••r ltreet1 L•• • a ._. ~CM"--~ lltACA... Cede.;.,-A•1•• CA _,1: .... .... .-..... o..... 'o!:'.. -,,......or..c.-........... (~~ .... r.nr. ... ~~ .::=r. ~~ ~:: .. c: ... -= .... -....... ~.:;r ..,.=My........... ...., ~°"':....,-'=
r
..
mrn~~mrn~~~
ln~ereSt rates worcy
Small borrower concerned with rates in elite company
By JOHN CVNNIFI' AJ....._....,.
NEW YORK -Aa an lnterest rate-worrier you
are in eUte company these days, shoulder. to
shoulder with the chancellor of West Germany the
president of General Motors and the chairma'n of
Merrill Lynch.
They maintaln also that tbe effects could be
permanently damaginc to •&erpriff and en-
trepreneurahlp, much aa an etteetlve weed ldller
after having done its primary job, turns up ln th~
drinking water.
You have u much reason for concern as they,
,. and they have plenty.
The chancellor la worried that hiCh U.S. rates
are drawing investments to the United States from
Whatever the more distant impact, there la llt·
tle dispuUng that high ratflS tolay -more than 20
percent for prime cu.stomera, D perceat for small
businesses, 13 percent on t.u•••mpt bond.I -are
restraining business activity.
abroad. GM's president fears
hi&b borrowing costs are
responsible for poor car sales.
And the head of Merrill Lynch
ls disturbed because hilh in·
terest ls stalling stock market
activity.
And you, quite llkely, are
angry because you cannot af.
ford to borrow at 16 percent for
the house you want to buy or
sell, or for the new car you ~'""
-; needed two years ago, or for a vacation or for lui·
, lion bill.a.
ffigh interest rates make it tough all over.
. Small businesses are over a . barrel because
1 they are unable to borrow at 23 percent without
:: raising their prices to a degree that drives
customers down the street to the big.volume dis·
'• count store.
. Big businesses -primary businesses such as
' lron and steel -are finding it rough because so
many big customers have postponed capital im·
provement programs unlil they have' a clearer
view or the future.
President Reagan has told his counterparts
from six major industrial nations who met in
Ottawa that high U.S. interest rates were a tem-
porary phenomenon, and suggested they would
fade from the scene when they had done their job
of weakening the roots of inflation.
Many domestic critics, including what appears
to be a growing number of small business leaders, ·
challenge the necessity for high interest rates, con·
tending that such rates destroy the incentive to
build.
-·Housing starts fell 11 percent ln J'une to an
adjusted annual rate of just 1.032 mUUoo units, the
lowest since a 938,000 fieure in May 1980. Building
permits plunged UU percent from May to an an-
nual rate or 976,000 units lut month. The weakness
will continue, said Willlam Cox, acting chief
economist of the Commerce Dllpartment.
-The factory output fell to an adjusted 79.6
percent of capacity in June, ac~ni to the
Federal Reserve Board. It said declines were felt
most in steel, paper and electrical machinery.
-June factory sales ol automobiles fell 2.7
percent, making it by some meuures the worst
June since ~. when the economy was smaller
than today. Imports look 28 percent of the June
market; a record.
-Stocks suffered a severe drop oo Monday.
The Dow Jones industrial aver,ge fell 18.36 points
to a reading of nearly 940 points. Earlier this year
when investors anticipated a rate drop, and thu~
less competition for the investment dollar the
average had risen above 1,000 points. '
The consequences are betni fell. In interna-
tional relations and family affairs. Al steel mills
and drug stores. In car assembly plants and in
local real estate offices. The impact hurts. The
economy may shrink.
Some call it bloodletting, but those who claim
to be more experienced in economic matters say
high rates are necessary to restrain demand dis-
courage speculation and redirect investmenb into
productive uses.
Get
Two
·sundays
-
a eek
Unneeded items taking up place in your space? Sell it
all and put cash in your pocket with the new Daily Pilot
8-Day Week. We can put you in touch with more buyen
because our classifieds have an extra day to sell every
week. Get results with the ads that last longer. Get the
8-Day Week special classified rate. Call 642-5678 today!
For an EXTRA day, call today
,C.. 6'2·5678 ..
Open a to 5:30 Monday-Fttday, a to noon a.tu.Uy.
'
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, July 22. 1981 117
EXECUTIVE HUNTER -An·
drew P. Pflueger has been
named head of Korn/Ferry
International's executive
sear ch office in Irvine.
Gall tax eyed
WASHINGTON <AP> -The 4-cent-per-gallon federal tax on
gasoline may have to be in-
creased i f the interstate
highway system ls to be com-
pleted and the deterioration of
roads reversed, Rep. Glenn M.
Anderson, D-Calif .. chairman of
the House surface transportation
committee, has told the National
Limestone Association in a
Chicago meeting.
If it's got
wheels,
you'll move
r-bill yields top
two montfu high
WASHINGTON <AP>-Vleldt on abort-term Treasury
aecurllle• have soared more
· than a tull point, reachln1 their
hltbest level ln two months, gov-
ernment officials have reJ)Orted.
About $4 billion in six-month
T·bllls were sold at an average
discount rate of 15.318 percent,
up sharply from the 14.23 per·
cent of one week earlier . of·
flclals said after Monday's auc·
tlon.
The government also sold
about $4 billion in three-month
bills at an average yield or 15.563
percent, up from 14.558 percent
July 13. Banks and savings In·
stitutlons, beginning Tuesday
were permitted to pay as much
as 15.568 percent interest on six·
month mon ey mark e t
certificates, up from 14.48 per-
cent. Interest on the $10,000-
mlnimum deposits is limited to
one·quarter percentage point
above six-month T-bills.
In addition, beginning Aug. 1,
savers investing in 2~-year
"small·saver" certificates can
earn 15.15 percent at savings in·
stltulions and 14.9 percent at
commercial banks. On that day
a federal regulation limiting in·
terest to 11.75 percent at banks
and 12 percent at savings institu-
tions will expire.
As of Aug. 1. interest paid by
banks and thrifts on 21h ·year
certificates will be limited only
by the Treasury's average yield
on notes of similar maturity
I F
lenfth. That averaae for the ftve
(lays ending Monday waa U .15
percent, Treasury officials tald. 1
As on the slx-montb certificates. :
the thritu are given a quarter· 1 point advantage.
On Treasury's s hort·term
bills, the average T-bill rates in 1
1
Monday 's auction were the
highest since the May 22 levels
of 15.675 percent for slx·montb
bills and 16. 75 percent for tbree-
month biUs. The 18. 75 perc@t is
the all-time record for three-month Treasury securities, and
the 15.675 percent ror six·month
bills is just under the 15.7 .,,er-
cenl record for T-bills of that
maturity.
The discount rate on short·
term bills understa~ the actual
return because part of the price
is r efunded at the time of
purchase. The actual return. or
investment rate. came to an
average or 16.83 percent on six-
month bills and 16.43 percent on
three-month bills at Monday's
auction.
Bank's income off
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -
Wells Fargo & Co. has reported I
second quarter earnings of $23.8
million, down 9.9 percent from
the same period in 1980.
The bank's per-share earnings
were down 11 percent. from
$1.16 to $1.03.
I • 1 ct. Fllwleu ., ... 17.MI 11.711 ..... YYS·l tt.• 1.711 .... a.• VVS·t 7Jll .... a.• Ult ¥1· 1 UM a.• UM -..... it faster In a
Daily Pilot
classified
ad.Call
642-5678 and a
friendly ad-
vlser wi 11
help you
2 ct. Fllwllu m -1 ZUll
YVS·t tl•
.... 11.• 11.• 11.• 11.• ..... 11.• uoo Ull
turn your
wheels into
cash.
VI· 1 lt• lOOO UOI 7.411
3 ct. Flntm 7Ull 11.711 ZU5t ZUM
YYS-1 U.7M ZUM ZU50 IUM
YYS·Z D.711 ZUll 1U5t IUIO
VS· 1 Zl.711 17.!IO 11.500 lUOI
: ~~ ..:nc;:~::...,--:r• -d'"9 10 cenlltealft by Sc...,111tc GefTt0009"" l e00<.,0t.es
"'-.,_on,.,. r-.g ""'-'
illOUHO 9'UW AHl TA8L£ % S3·llO OVERAU OEPTM % n ·tlt GIRDLE THtCllNESS h<ll,.MEOtVM
CV\.ET. NOHE·MtOIUM FlUOAESCEHCE NONE fAINT BLUE GRAINING Htl
" IN~ ~ ~ 10 .. la • ---Of....,.,. Ot n04 w4U1.n I-.,.,_ .. , plHw e4101 IOt ,,..
l>'I09 .... ~ At --ol 8-lilllc Gem ~ IOt -tflcaflOn Of ~y INlyM <99.,°"'9 ,,_ -
• wll M Peid '1 ~ ~ lftduatr• """--..ct IO-... -10 _.. .. ~ f'.~l\'ERSAI. DIA.,,O.'\·o l .\Dl"STRlf:S
-----101 • ..__ -~ .-...-..i "' ,,.......,_ ...... ~,,,...,,.r .....
; I
I'
*Unlimited Withdrawals • No Penalties
$10,000 Minimum Balance Requ ired
Other High Paying Investor Plans Available ·
\
Minimum
Term (days) Balance Rate
14 5000 16.00
15 to 30 5000 15.50
31to89 5000 15.00
14 to 89 2500 13.00
Columbia's Investor Plan Is backed by U.S. Government,
U.S. Government Agency, and U.S. Government Guaran-
teed securities. Because the Fund Is not a savings
account or a deposit, It Is not Insured by the Federal Sav-
ings and Loan lnsurJoce Corporation. Rates are set dally
and fixed for the term of your Plan. At maturity, you can
reinvest at prevailing rates with Just a phone call.
Ii
I
Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedn .. day, July 22, 1981
CONSl'RUCflON
MONEY
AVAilABLEAT
HERITAGE BANK.
• Retidential
• Commet'dal Buildinp: Takeout
Commitment ~ulred alon1 with lea1e&.
• Land Loam up to one vear 50% appraisal.
CONTACT: •Jeff Johnaon-
lrvine Offi~ (714)851-4050
IBE UN~ON VENTlONAL BANK. Herit~e ~~l\~ A
(QllAl--Ll!NDI!"
BANKER ADVANCES
-Donald E. Wilson
has been appointed
vke president of the
new metropolitan
banking department
for Crocker Bank at
it s Irvine office.
Big cable ·
SAN FRANCISCO
(A P > Am e r i C'8 n
Telephone and Tele-
graph Co. has an -
nounced plans for the
world's l argest high-
speed digital coaxial ca-
ble system.
The sys t em will
stretch 2,300 miles from
Sacramento to Plano,
Ill.
Money market funds up
Brokerage firms extend services offered with accounts
81 LO&IAN PETAt
Tbe riH ln popularity of money market fuodt haa prom_pLed HveraJ brokeraee companlu t.o ex·
tend 1ervlcea offered In conjunction wJtb money
market accounts.
For the saf•ty-conacloua, fundJ which buy only
treasury aecurlllet have additlonal a al. The
government f\lnd1 have been
arowina ln slie at a much faster
rate than the typlcaJ money
market fund which invests ln a
combination of treasuries, bank
CD1. and agency notes. A few
firms also otter tax-free money
market funds backed by short
term municipal obligations.
One variety of money
market funds whlcb has attract-
ed a large following is the all· NUY
inclusive type providing unlimited check writing,
er.edit card charges, no minimum deposits, cash
advances and an automated system for buying and
selling securities.
. This type of fund was introduced two years
ago to clients with large portfolios or those capable
of m aking substantial cash contribution lo their
account. The normal minjmum deposit today for
this type of account is $20,000 in cash or a com·
binalion of cash and securities.
Since the accounts are fully automated,
dlvldtndl, deposit.I, and 1a.lu are credited t.o tbe
money market fund to earn immediate dividends.
Check.a, VISA charges, or security purchases
debit the moaey market trust to setUe IJlY pendJ01
ch1r1es. Thls gives the investor direct acce11 to
hit account Yilthout havine to request credit
balances be forwarded or debit balances be cov·
ered.
C hecks and VISA charaea are handled
generally by banks located ln the Midwest or Eaat
In order to have operations centrally loeated.
Instant loaM can also be obtained through the
margin borrowing power available with the ac:·
count. The borrowing power Is created by the
securities in the account. There Is no maximum
llmlt affixed to VISA transactions or check writing
other than the account's borrowing power. The in·
terest charged on the debit balance is the same as
the current brokerage margin rate.
Normally, money market fund accounts are
provided without charge to clients. However, the
more comprehensive servi~e accounts carry an
annu.aJ fee ranging from $20 to $30. Since competi·
lion for money can be fierce, each brokerage firm
varies greatly in services offered by its money
market fund.
Lorlan Petry it an account eucut1ve for .Jrfemll
Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith Inc., Sonia Ana
Western Airlines takeover sought
MIAMI (AP) -Air Florida Systems Inc., the
parent company of the booming Miami-based
airline of the same name, has filed a formal ap·
plication with the federal government to take coo·
trol of Western Airlines.
Air Florida officials also say that as of late
last week the airline had acquired close to 11 .6 per·
cent or more than 1.5 million shares -of Los
Angeles-based Western's outstanding stock.
(Western Airlines serves John Wayne Airport in
Orange County.)
The Civil Aeronautics Board last week cleared
the way for the carrier 's latest stock purchases
when it approves a voting trust allowing Air
Florida to b1>Y up to 50 percent of Western while
the acquisition case is pending.
Western called the voting trust anti·
competitive and said the CAB might have to ad·
~ress "serious and substantial" antitrust questions
an any takeover bid by Air Florida's parent com·
pany.
But in its filing with the CAB, Air Florida said
its acquisition "could not possibly lead to any ..
lessening of actual or potential competition."
Steel dump suit filed
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Pacific Steel and
Supply Co. and Mitsui & Co. (USA> have been sued
for $2.3 million in a federal antitrust lawsuit which
alleges Pacific Steel monopolized the wholesale
nail business in Northern California.
'HOME' SERVICE -
Mark L. Wright is
president of the re·
cently opened Hunt·
ington Savings ,
de sc ribed as a
"hometown " busi-
ness. The flrm is at
Golden Wes t and
Warner Avenue.•
Newport
firm aids
Italians
Th e Blurock
Partnership, a Newport
Be a ch archit ectural
firm, has been com-
missioned to design and
supervise construction
of six schools in areas in
Italy hit by earthquakes
last November.
Alan Smith, A.I.A.,
partner-in-charge, and
Tom Blurock, A.I.A ..
project architect. re-
cently left for Italy to
survey lhe school sites
and confe r with an
Ital ia n team of
architects in Naples. ---------------------------·
LID
RI I e
• Ofo
$5000 or more • 89-Day Term
GREAT AMERICAN
MONEY FUND '~
Rate assured to maturity by San Diego Federal.
Your investment is backed by U.S. Government
and Federal Agency Securities ... and by more
than $2.6 billion in San Diego Federal resources,
proven safe since 1885.
For aU current rates, call y<>ur
Marest San Diego Federal office
To open your account, bring $5,000 or more into
any San Diego Federal office ... along with $100
to open your Interest Checking PLUS1 M account
for automatic deposit of your interest.
•Current ennut1I rete, elmple lnterHt, eultJeot to
011.,.... Thia olalle•tlon I• not • uvlne• eooount or
Hpoelt •IMI I• not IJteurecl 1tr ttae Pederel hvln .. and
Leen ln•uta~ Co'"'.aon.
S. 10"' pltotu dlnnory for • offkt Manlt yo11/
Inflation
to dip
in state?
LOS ANGELES
California's inflation
r ate should drop below
the national level by the
end of the year and the
real income of Califor·
nians should rise con·
siderably by 1982, ac·
cording to the quarterly
Economic Report issued
by Security Pacific Na·
tional Bank.
··While the 1980 re-
cession marked the end
of a period of sustained
economic expansion in
the s tate," said Dr.
Robert Parry, c hief
economist and senior
vice president of Securi·
ty Pacifi c, "we shQuld
see a moderate rebound
in most sectors through
the remainder of 1981
and accelerating growth
in 1982."
The combination of
high interest rates., and
inflation during 1980 led
to a taxable sales in·
crease of only 8.4 per-
cent compared with a
15.6 percent increase in
prices. Consumers since
then have been paying
down their household
de bt lo strengthen the
famil y balance sheet.
according to Dr. Parry.
.. An improved outlook
for consumer spending,
especially in 1982, is sup·
ported by the e xpected
growth in dispensable
income, the Reagan tax
cut, and the lowering of
interest rates and intla·
tion," said Parry.
Computer
profits up
CUPERTINO <A~ -Apple Computer, I . , a
leading manufaclu er of
home and small busi·
ness computers, has re-
ported a third quarter
profit Increase of 334
percent and a sales in-
crease of 179 percent
over the same period a
year ago.
Net Income for the
third quarter rose to
$11.9 mlllton, or 21 cent.a
a share, from $2.7
million. or 6 cents a
s hare, In the same
quarter or fiscal 1980.
Sales climbed to $90.7
million from $32.6
million a year aao.
OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS
Haw YORK \AP> Clt&IOO• HASOAQ quoca ~ CIUUV. -1"9 MiNtt blOt Cll1Ull -1-on.rt by C:leraJI..
-rktl 1Niken et of ~lowCp T11e14ey. Prlcoeo "° otrTlt not lnclu4• retell olOtllOI m•rk11p n\trk4own omCIH
or cqmmln lon for CmlSl!r Tuetdey. CmwTtl Con Pep Stoo Bkl A•• Cor41a AEI.. ln4 1114 11\/t Cro1Trt
AFAProl •v. I~ Cullrl'O I AVM Cp 4V. 4" Cycllron ~Y~~ ~:-:~ 8r:l{.':' ~m=~ 4; .... 4~ g;~··
~:r,·o~~· JlYI ~~ 8:~l~!• AltH 6 6"it 0.weylEI Amar•• 24V. 2'"'-OleCry1 /<lnGp 1 ,.. ,.\Ii OlanCrw
A.Micros ,..-. 11 Oocull 1 AHallnt I~ I~ OollrGn 1i.0ua1r 22 22 .... 0or,1oa , AlttsMv 1""° 17\lo Or efCn AWe14 1 a 2"h Ounkl110
Anacllle 9" ~ OunllO •t A"'SA f2V. t2V. Ourlrft 1
All9AG4 ,. IO'h l at11'Vnc Anf.cp I""' 17 l!c011Lat1
Apple< 14 14 .... t!tPa tEI AplclM I 1' 1t14 IEIO.rk
Anlet!Gp ~ • f le .. llCI AldCOle 40 40Yt I tMo41 1
AllG11..1 IS "°"' EftrDov AUefllh 17'.lo 17V. fftrMellld :::~~ ·=I~ ~~~t~ll IMeHE 11\'t 11"'-lqulSL
J\li Jv. ~=~':'o"..K Mio 4 PlllCrp I
Jll/I >tWo Holollm 26111 21 OallvyM
J> lJlll Hoover .~:: 1~'-&::~r~~ I'll 1'-Horl1•h 411, S OlltrTP 11~ ~!:; 11u·:~7· t~ r~ :;:.:~·
l7•.i. 17111 lnfrelno •111 ~ PcGall u It lnlt l 1'V. »"" PeurtyP It 1714 lnlrcEnr 12'"' U~ Pey11Q >•~ ""' lnlmlGI ·~ 1°" PHrMI 1114 11111 lnBllW'11 1•'1't U PtntEnl lJ J.J\lo tw•SoVI 21h 22'Ao Ptflle lr IYI 2 .... Jtm1by JO'n ~ Petri! 1 11111 U J erico • 2tl't 2614 PtltlllOn
"'" 70°"' J 1117, I'd '"' 111 Pllllt Nat JO JO\lo Joa ynM 1714 v-. PitrceU 21 22 ka11s1 pt 1• · • 1,111 Plnkrtn
I ~U l'lo Kiiver 2 S·I• 2~ P IOflHIB JO lO\lo l(eman I u •.i. 23\/t PfHllM II 12 l(e ywm S.W; ~ Postll l Jiii l(tflySv .. 41 PretGM n lll IAV. Ktvffel U 2>V. Prt$ttyn :UV. .,,., Kimbell 20'h ~ Progrp ~ 27 Klr19lnl J"" ~ Pb$vNC 14\lo ·~ ICIOOIG ,..,., 27 Purl&afl
" ISlll l(nepeV 16YI 11 PulOCej>. 2S U'AI Kratot 14111 IS OuellrClt lu-.,~ 12•4 Kvllckt IS'll 16 ReganPr •• L•nceln Ullo ~ Rayc11m 14\'t I~ L•tlCIR•• ~ • lleymnel IJY> IJY> l..a...C.o 3' ~ ll-• I ~ 21 Lllftvl J,._ Jl-RNCIE1 I~ 10\lt 1..14Slor 14 U'4 Rolll!My • tYt 1..lnlctl )I~ UV. RoMlon
U U'AI $:" 21111 2' Rovtt JI ti"' IC ~ U lf'I R11.Slov IJ\lo IJV, M .. 0 I 11111 11-SMiier •'-•l'l Meo.GI I~ IJ"' S.IKO 14 .... 1414 Mt .. f Pl t~ t V. SIHtlG<I
ll'IO 12\lo Mt Rt ~ J4'o ScrloPH awc111 11 • 111. e9t011 1 .. 11l'r J4 U llo l'SC l eyltMll IOf't llV. 1'-lh
9"" t v, 5!r:'"P .. , .. ~ SIPt ul
12'-12'11. Mt 11 r I • U-. JJ'1I s.ttlOr 1 ,. .. 2 S-1• MMlon • • ... 10'.llt SvcMer
4" 4.., Me11ll..P J2Y, ,. Svcmst • ll .. llne t<.c. 10 l'ermGP
lefltPll 211o 2'-1'141cor :~u.. ~ ~ ~1:::ln' := ::: :~ ~:~":I~ .. llrOSon IS UYI FletllU
llrtcllr IV. I" Fll011r llyvoor 12"'-1l FloatP 1
leflanu >YI ,_. Fl•H "• BrwTom ~ >I Flurocb 1
ll11<k-111Yt I~ l'ort1IO Blllfelt JO ~ l'ormlgll 111r11UD1S 1~ , .... Fran•cr CH\. fi'ln 2'AI 2~ Frtnlll CPT t 17-., II l'rttSO CelWISv J2 J:l\lt I' remnt 1
Caftra4H J4'o '"" FuilrHI C•l"ll 1-. H't g11A11tm c .. s.c 19"'1 JOV. no ... ct C.lnAr II 4 4\lt j;11llllll
Cer•Cp II I~ l>o•ll'" C.vnC II 1'-It\ Ort911M CnVIPS 14'-" 14" reyA4Y CIMlrRlv mil 1' lllnht
$.llrmS • 1414 14111 Gyroelyn (:~~: I ~v. ~v. HemlP I ~011 17~ 19 Her4Wll• •• HrpRow HwTr " 100 HarllOP Cllullll &JV. ~ Harlllft Clrtko s... • Htctw\e I
>I~ I) MayPI 2'V. 2'YI SllMed
JIV. 21'-Ma~M>ll 1414 14"' Sllwm11t 1
4114 """ Mc orm 1"-1..., ~tlWlr JI )II/I Mc ... , 14111 14-.,
Ullo IS-. M<Qual I~ ISV. UP I ,:~ ~ ~1::w ~ ~ S AND DOWNS 2
I..,. ""' M41dCep 10•.i. 1~ l 22'11. Z> Mldlllta I S-16 1~ 4
ltll't "'-M1411U 3314 33-., S 11"' IJV. M1111er " . 2'Vo NEW YORI( (AP> -Motl ecllve OVtf· ~ UYI ,," '" IG ""' ,, llle-covnler tlocu ,._.,.,, by NASO • ~ 4Yt Molt!! I 4Wo 4'Vt Ntmt Vol11me Bid Atked CllQ. t
IOY, ,, Mo11fCol s... • Pn1t8 .. JU,IOO It ""' -i,i. 10 19"" 19\lt MonuCp 20'AI ~ Clleyft • . 219 400 I I 1·16 I I = r..:: Moortl'4 Jl\4 J2 Pltlo .. . 2!!.* '"I ,,.,. ; 1:1• 12
2'V. 2,_ Mo~r,~11111nn ~ ·.~ MCIC .... ,,,.,200 u-. UYt + 'Ao U ...... .,. .,. 01111c un.. 1n,j//(J 2" J 14
10-... II Mo 1\111 2\to 2111 Solv h . . ISi .JOO 2'4 2YI ·; ~ U
•Ill 4'-Mwlltr ll\oa J2Vt ATHlt C . . 14.J,.OO 24 24.... -''°" 16 II~ 12 NerrllCP 1 20 21Vt •n4m I .. f14,to0 JtV. H iil + 2 11 114 I NOia 1 I.._ 1.-. MtytrF . 11', 100 SO'-SO... I 7 11 '!. 3~ HJHO.. I~ 1414 l!nClln ... 111,100 11/o 1 S·lt ..... It ... HlckOG I n-2l • JO
1:: 2~ Hlcolet '"" llYt Adnnce4 211 JI !Tllo 17_. Hleltn A Jl4'o Jt\11 e-c11-.... ............ 1,1Jt 22 Sill t Hltltft ll 3' ~ nclletlllfCI .............. , l,M 2J .. ~ HoC•rGI UV. 12YI Tott! ,,_. . .. .. . . . .. . • .. J,U. J4 Ullo 1.~ HoaurO I II IN New "'"" .. .. .. • .. . .. .. • u ~ ~ N*1NOt 11" 11-. Nt• lowt · .. .. • .. .. . t• 2t 2'14 2'V. H•llPS UV. U'l't Total .. In , .. .,.... .• . 21,JSJ,JIOO 27
11\lo llV. Noull JI"' 2' •
Neme BHconP
WGter' Clletl..lll Mark IV ,..,......
ClllnaT WI
S11•U"'4 l(MS Ind WolvAlu llepllK
C<MMI ""' Morel!M
Coctftlw1 Comair SllW$9n
EICIMit 81otc1111
O.UEn Gtr1M4
IPM Tell' l(lr19ln1 TreMlnd TtnOm 1 Pellnd
Monelk '
Htme Atrottl lnlOle WI UnvProP c • ..-. lnllkt 11 NPeree
Cvmo 1 G11Env 1 Mlllrlno
OllM un WlldE• un
Ln lcn un Marcllllt Am .. llCI &~°"
S..•rt• AMO.Rel 0 111<00 Htlton
Oecl.Srt Ortalr 1 ~17.!Zr l'lntrm WI Nov..-TllrMlld
UP'S ... ~, .'"i.
~ • >"-•11'1 + I z • ''-
IVI • 1 1\lo • .... J~ ....
s • "' 10•;. •• 2 • J.16 " . ' ,... . .. ,... . . .,. . .. .,.,
)•.-.. • '4
1JV1 • 1 JI • IYI
1 • ....
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1 • ....
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1t'lo • 2
U14 + ' "" . .,.,
DOWN• .....,1 :r:i. , -' 2 -I 2 -...
111'1 -"" 2 -YI ·~ -2 , ... -""
Jillo "" 1~ -YI 2~ -~ ltSO ->oo
•Vt -I ,.,, -.,., , ... -...
""" -2 ,... .,,
4.\i, -" '" -~I• 7-., -' 1 -...
10 -IV.
2 -"" •v. -1'-" 4'-" -YI
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Pct. Up ».O Up ltA Up 11.l Up IU Up 1U Up IU Up It.I Up II.I Up II.I VP I0 • .1 Up 10.0 Up IO.o Up U Up t,I
VII 1.1 Up LI VP 7J
VP 1.1 Up 1.1
VP 7.1 Up 1.1 Up 1.1 VP 1 .. Up 1,0 VP U
Pct. OH 11.1 OH Ja.J Off 3*.J Off JU Off U.1
Ott JIO.O Off , ...
011 IL.2 Off 1L7
011 U.•
Ott 1U Ott 1U Off IU 011 u.s Off 12.S Off '1 . .1 Ott 11.1
Off "·' Off 11.6
Off tt.• Off n .t Off 11.1 Oft 11.1 Off IO.I Off tu Off lo.I Off le.I
..
• • ..
.;,
• I • •
• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 22, 1981 s
E PO 'ITE TRA SACTION
OVOTAllQtlj. IN(l..UO• fWAQUON TH( Nfw 'f'OWIC MIOWI" ""C"''· .... •onQi.. Olt•OIT ANO (IHCINIUTI noc• fllCMAllOI• •HD lllll'OltfllO a 'I' Tl•f Naio "HD INUIHf 1
.,., ... ~ .. .. ,. Furnitur
rentals ris
Vou, Mary, have just graduated from colJeee.,..
taken a new Job 800 miles from home that ptlYS yo~
enough to afford the unfurnished apartment your new
employer's personnel department hu11 found tor you. i.
You. Dave. also have left home after 14 yt>orff or
enduring a miserable marriage, and you are about tO'"'
move to a new address that will be your-; until your
divorce pro -~ ceedings have •
b ee n com ~
pleted. ~ t« ...
And you . ._ 1"I"
Jim, a career A · • -:;:
~~~ye o~~c=r~ SYLVIA PDRTIR
given a new as
signment in a new community with quarters in a ni ce.
neighborhood tq...\ttelp you enJOY life whale you train
recruits.
What common need do you all share. differefll
though your backgrounds and your lirestyles mil)'
be? A "home" to turn to whale you make your adjust-
ments.
A home means furniture but this you do not
want to buy. You cannot ufford the investment, you
do not expect to remain in your new surroundin&s for
more than a temporary period. and )OU shrink from
the burden of carrying a load of belongmgs wath you
or taking the certain loss associalt!d with selling the
stuff used.
Multiply Mary, Da vid and Jam by 5 million other
Americans and you will grasp one emerging pattern
tn today's mobile America a 12 percent lo 15 pei;.
cent annual rise in the amount of furniture being
renll'd.
In the 20· to 30-year-old segment of our society
alone. some 20 percent are pulling up stakes each
year and trving to duplicate the comfort or their
former living arrangements without buying beds,
tables, chairs, lamps and other furniture
A full 500.000 of the movers m this aJ;tt.' group
have turned to rented furniture as a <,1mple solution:
says the Furniture Rental A!>soc1at1on of America '
1 FRAA l And a large proportion of the mo\'crs are
the young with new careers. the divorced and the'
military
Also prominent among these movers are
Victims of fire or rlood !A ho are di splaced for
short spans while adjustments. repairs and replact!·
men ts are going on; ·
Home·shedders who constantly changl' ad-
dresses because of job ad\ ances, increases in hous-'
mg needs or allure of another c:limal<'. •
Newlyweds, transferl'cs. l'l'lt•br1t1 e ... sporti.
figures and politicians who move fn.•qul·ntly as well,
as retirees who are trying somt· n<'" t•xperience-
awav from their old homes.
· Technicians. sc1ent1i.l!> and 1·onsultants "ho·
tra vet to wherever the challenges drt'
Diplomats and traveling t!Xl'CutiHl> "ho,
"warm" temporary quarters with comfortabl~
furnishjngs that they rent on their O>A n
The process of selecting and renting furniture is:_
similar to buying -up to the point or purchase Arte~
selection <a process that can take as little as an hour,:
with trained rental specialists to help you select~
items that meet your needs and bud~et 1 rental
agreements are made 1nst<>ad of credit or payment:'.
terms. ·
As a renter, you can expect faster and more corh
venienl deUvery than as a buyer with an entard
grouping arriving together within 48 hours.
An added bonus is the option to purchase what
you rent.
A listing or FRAA member showrooms, acroSS'":
the U.S., is available fr ee from FRAA. 20 Norttt:
Wacker Drive. Chicago, lit. 60606 Send a stamped .
self addressed business·size envelope with your re-.
quest
... .
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES.
NEW VORIC APo Fo""l Oo., Jone\-\ lot TuUdO Jul 11
STOCIC.S o Hi.ti L.ow CIOM ·TI'' 30 lno tr,' 11 ~l JS <n1 U 9.14 •o · oe 10 Trn '°103 .cl8 04 .ma. 40S 88• /1 1S VII 10. l l 101 11 105 N 106 71> tt
•5 Slk :i.5 11 \6t .u )61 JI .J6S '" • '11
• IMlus • ~!l~ r, •n ' 1;;y;,200
• '' ~l11~\k • t'~ ; ,;:
: l~ WHAT STOCKS DID
,; NEW VOAK 1AP1 Jul 1t
AMERICAN LEADERS
• l • " '• ~
11.: .1 l'l i'.~
il
·~· ......... n; ..... u. ~.-. I Wot• .. ...,, .. tff IUJ ~-..... ,,..~ ........ rtJ.., '"·" .......... '~ ,,_, ... ,,.,. ........ .. ......
a.re. o..-.-.
•ovanuo 0.<llM<I Vn<ll•n~<I Total luu~ ,.,., lllQM ...,.w lows
'"""' r 4'MEA DO
NEW VORIC •P
AOvanceo Oecllnad vncnan@eO Tour luun New lllQIU N•w tovo
h•I 11
METALS , .. .u,
Ca,...r ll~ C""h • POU"4J, lJ S. O.ttjM
''°"' '-••II •1ttn"•-
ZIM 46 uni'•"°""°· CMhvt•.cl
Thi '1 0319 -Ill> WMlt c~11t lllt-
Al11111I-, ... '"""a POUl'd. N Y
Mercu.-, ~ 00 ~· 11 .. 11 "•Ii_,. ~10 00 lroy 01 . N Y
SILVER .
GOLD QUOTATIONS
S.lt <l ... _ICI QOkl P<l< .. l1"..,_Y • L.e.,... MON'llllO llalno "* 00, otl ~
L-1 .... ._ llllnQ .,_ 00, tU ~.IO ~arlt: al...,_ li•lllO MJ4 ... , ~I •J l'rHllfwl: MOt.00.
lerlClll lelt fl•lllf MOC 00, oO M 00,., 00
atUCI
M•1t•r • Ner...-111 e111, Clelly It
5A04 00, oft " so 1 ....... 1 1111\t OAlly ..,... ..0. ".to. ...... _..,only
5Aft 24, off.,. 1'
SYMBOLS
,1
I I
l '
'1
-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 22. 1981
NIWI
fl\J
~·I l\orM-•INIPGr,1 follt a t>ounly
IM COfT* to know
IM-oflow 1 911 fN) OOUGH
trA•l'H
A -llOfteellM coloMI "11-...... ~!.71~~
,,,J, ~ loUery,
~ with two gun•
DISAPPEARING SPECIES -The largest
members of the ape family are the sub-
ject of a National Geographjc special.
"Gorilla." tonight at 7:30 on Channel SO
and 8 on Channel 28.
~·~·
r~~ E:-:man~o-~ t1 .... ) Kim NcMlk.
~ ~ Hwve)'. &..a
• .oft .. noWI by w. 8°"*·
NI, ~m. A )'OIJOO rNdltll 91~1 wUh e
Mftailt d1lormlty 11111
.,._... In love with •
pr---too1 waltreu.
<IDTlflOOOFY 8POAT8 ITOIW
Animlled. Thi Well Olltll)'
ClllW INm• thing• hi dldlf' llnow 1l>Ollt thl wcwtll of 890'11 through hit ,..._ tn.no. "Thi Spltlt
Of......,.INhlp '' l:30, ..... WILD
,, .. MAOAZlHE
A ..... wtlO 11\iklt
hlglt ~ paper d(-
•: I Mlt-,ptocllllml<I etllla
~It put to thl 1111
• BENHYHIU '
Benny Lek• )'OU beck IO
thl dl)'I of "How Tt>t
WM1WuWon ..
I l(CEf NEW88EA T
STUDK>8Ef
"Scuba. Too" A m)'llerl-
ou1 thlpwf'ec:k OH thl C.y-
man lllancta: a young ear·
toonl1t; three Hulem
teens e11pio(e Hew York
City lil)'IC(apetl (R)
(()QI NEWS
(fl 8AANIY MILLER
An outraged clllten er ..
1tn a dlaturbance when
hi learn• that hi• dlpo111
at 1 speciall:r:ed medical
bank hat been 1CC1d1t1tal·
lt_rulned
Cl) WE'LL BE RIOHT
BACK
AYef'/ Schr .. ber ano Cr1111-
na Ferr .. • host this IOOll 11
-of lhl most unf0t·
gettable comm«Clt ll -
ITllCM.
7:00 I cea NlWI N9CNIWS
~OAYSAGAIN
RlcNe and Pollie heve 10
lulf1N Ila dat• to Mm thew
tlc*eta ~ ll\IY .,. 10
become members of 1M
Demon Club
I uc..wa
~THEWIMO
"When Kingt Go Forth To
a.in." Dinny and othlt
reblll pr9Plf• for b11t1t
u 1 fOfc. ol redooata
IPO<oechll. (Part 81
• eTNnS OF IAH
FAAHCl8QO
A *"Qlt "Sllurdey Night
8pe0ai" l18glcally lff9ct•
the !Wet of -al untaltl·
ed peopll In a 2'·h<>ur
"period.
• OV£REA8Y
Guetts· Vine.en! Price,
Jane Bryant Quinn (RIQ
• MACNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
(() TIC TAC DOUGH
(fl MERVOAlfFlN
Gueelt OaYIO Brenntf.
OM HWltNlll. Ctwlstopflet
Alklnl, Dr A"r.O Zimm.
CB)MOV1E
"Son Voyeg1, Charlie
Brown' ( 11179) ~~
Snoopy end Woodstock
follow axehange ttudentl
Charlie Brown, Peppermtnl
Pally. Llnua and Marcie on
an aoventura-fllted tour of
England ano France 'G'
(il)MOVt£
"Wiiiie & Phil" ( 1980)
Michael Ontkaan. Ma1go1
Kloder. Three people
begin a lrtangular romance
In Greenwich VIiiage 1hlll
eonllnuea lhroughoul lhe
mercurial aoclat milieu or
the '70. 'R'
(l)MOVIE
• • • \i "Hobaon's
ChOlcl" ( 1115<4) Jann Miiia,
Chwtes Laughton. A boot·
maket •11'"'91• to retair
hit mup tourl:4t ot labor
by pr-ting hll lhree
daugM.,.. trom marrying
7:30 9 2 OH THI TOWN
Hoell Steve Edwards,
MllOd)' Rogers. Vlelt an
L A movie IMtlw wtlerl
au the employ-are
llal~. an k)tervllvr
wiU'I producer-turned·
ectOt Howatd P~.
I Cll FAMfl Y FEUD
SHANA NA
GUM1: Adrienne Bet beau.
• HOU YWOOO
800AAU
I FACE THE MUSIC
fMCNEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
Ii) NATIONAL
GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL
'Gorflfa" E G. Marshall
hosts e took et the efforts
ot 100 directors, dedicated
tndtv1duels ano KJenllsts
who a11 working to auure
thll Ille targes1 ol the
greet apes dOes not fell
vtctim to extinction (R)
(I) P .M. MAGAZINE
A Olligner wtio mallet
htgh fUNon paper dr--
"· I Mlf-procllimed a-a ~· ii l)UI 10 lhl tell
1:00 9 (() THE WHITE
SHADOW
Coach Reevlt II offered
$1,000 10 appear 1n a com·
ma<Cl&I and hit 1-.n gets
1 chance to wt a f'IGOl'd
(RI
• Cll REAL PEOPl.E ,._fll!'aO a cal aoctor. sun
llMll\t competnion: a
whis111"Q contest: an fndl·
"'Who ~If)' fought
the 00"9'twnlnl ~ t~
llnd CAI
• MOYSE • * *'~ "The 8r•v114ot"
1195&) Gregoty Pack. J0411l
Coltln1. A man reallal tl'llll
he hat wutad m~h of hll
NII fllrc:hi"O fOf' Ull ml!\
WhO rlPICI Ind lllled hll .,,.,, .. e a MOVIE
• ••;, ··Dynasty" (1981) ·
John Forsythe, LlnOa
Evens The patriarch of a
-nhy Oet!ve< o11 rarnll)'
unleaaties atrong IM!lngs
ot anger and reeentrnent
from his offsp<lng ~ hi
marrlel his secretary (A)
CHANNEL LISTINGS
1J KNXT CBSt Loo, Anqt>tt., D K.NBC 1NBC1 LO., An·jCh''
"KTLA 1no 1 l')O, Anti·· I'~ II KABC TY t ABCt Lo-. Anq1•l1•">
(I "FMB 1CBSt S,1n O·eqo
Ci) KHJ TV (lnO I Loo, AnOPIP~
«JI KCST 1ABC1 San 011•qo
I KrTV 1lnd I Lo~ A nqf'I",
KCOP TY 1 lnLl 1 L no; ArHW"''
f£I KCE 1 rv , PB51 Lo~ An1i•·'"'
'1!) K.0C( TV 1PBS1 Hun1•1111I•'" 81'.icri
9 MOYIE a • • "o.ughter 01 The
Mind" (1"9) Ray Miiiand,
Gene Tierney Following
!hi dellll of hla young
daughl.t. • lop govern-
ment aci41ntlal becomel
alarmed when her 191fll
begin• eppearl"Cj blf0ta
him
• AGAINST THE WINO
"The Farmer's Friend"
011vllle, now 1 POWarlul
tandowne<, tries to force
Mary end Jonathan lrom
th84r 11no. (Part 9)
., MOVIE • * • ~ "Splendor In Tt>t
Gren" (1961) Natalie
WOOd. W1tren Beall)' Two
young people make Iha
painful and beaulfful di•·
covary of tove In 1 small
Kenses town fD NATIONAL
GEOOAAPHIC SPECIAL
"Go11lla' E.O Marthall
hOlla a tool\ •I Ille tf10t11
or wo Otreclora. dedicated
lnOIYlduafl and ICler'llltll
whO are woritlng 10 euora
thll the largest ol lhl
g<HI lj)tl dOet not fell
YICtlm to extinction (RI
(C)MOVIE
''Our Time" (11173) P~
Sue Mat1Jn, f'arker Ste-
Y9"1CH1 Thi lfvn or two
young c;ouples enrolled 11
private IChOOI• •re
changed when one ot the
girl• Ol&coYflfS she II preg·
nant 'PG'
(S)MOVIE
"The Shining" I 19801 J9ck
Nicholson. Shelley OUvalt
Olrectea by S1anley
Kubrick A former
schoolleachei hired aa a
winter caretaker for a
remote. ano apparently
haunted, C010tado hotel. la
snowl>Ollnd theta with 1111
wtfe eno Clairvoyant young
son 'R'
0 MOVIE
"The Godfllhlt Part II
I 1974) Al P1e1no. Robert
OwaH MICNMI Corteone
USUfTIM Illa 1111 rat'-'•
111rone Ind power ea he
becOrbll the ,_ head ot
Iha Malla. finding prob-
leml with ,,..... Itel lone and
1tie law UlfOUOllYOUI '* reign .,..
1:30 ti) FME>OM'S
OEFEHSE: AMERICA'S
CUP 1NO
The col0t Orama and
beauty ot 12-me1ar yachl•
compeltng f0t Iha moat
P<n11Qioul lrophy In yadlt
ratloo ofl the ~port.
Rl!Ode ltlaod cout la CllP-
tured In till• documlnllty
narrated : t>y Robert
MacNetl. (R)
CB) AACE FOA THE
PENNANT
Barry Tom pk in• and Tim
Mccarver recap dMslonal
baseball standings ano
1ntarv11W some of the
g1me'1 top players (II the
ptayeta' strike continues
an update on the 111u111on
will also be tnctua.d I
t:OO II(() MOVIE • * "A N-Lile 11979)
Angle 0tcktn11or1. G0taon
Plntenl A womMI llrug-
gla 10 rebuild hit ltfe altar
her husband, leavtng no
•~planatton commns SUI·
ClOejRJ o a 0tl'f'AENT
STROKES
Wttlls hat problems rlCOfl·
Oiiing hit 0tigln1 es 1 POOf
black youth wllh hie cur·
rant Mfe of luxury (R) O
ID TOPSTORY
Hos11 Jtrn Thom11, Mary
~erlOll 8iJ LOS ANGELES
PHILHARMONIC AT THE
HOLLYWOOD BOWL
Zubln "4411!UI mellee hit
lut '~ IPPM'-.. oonauctor of Ille LOI TUBE TOPPERS
AnQtlH PhllhlflftOnlo ' ----------------------Orchettr• Vl#tvOtO vlolln-
lal ltdllk ,.,.."""' ......
tured u IOlolel
MOV1I
"Wlftmlllran" ( 19711)
I.Al.Kt Antonetll, Man:elO
Mutroltnnl Tht newt INI
her 11ulOlnd nu dltcl on •
bu"'-ltlp fOl"C* a rlcti
wine mercmenl'• wtte out
of hlr llokbed to take over
Int NMlnO Of 1hl latnll)'
bualrlMt 'A' Cll>MOYll .. _.Y 8rllflefll C:al"ffr"
(1taOI .way OM, eam
Nllfl, In turn.of·~IU
ry Au11181111, an lndepend•
tnl young wom1n trlee to
mek• • C#Mt ... Wfltat
dllplte IOClll PfMel,lfM
f« her to meny.
(%)MOVIE
"The 01 .. 1 Santini'' 11979)
Robert Duvall, Blythe
Danner A rougll-and·
rMdy Marini Corpe officer
lac•• domaellc balllee
wt*l he ui.. to lfnPOM hit
mli«ery ld8llt on Illa I~
It:_ 'PO'
e;JO D al THE 'ACTS Of
UR
8ltl< beCOmM lnvoN9d In
an lntenee com.petition
with lllOlhlr lludenl thel
!led• 10 MriOUt c;onea-
~-(R) Q
• MEJWOAll'AN
Ouea11· Dlvld Brtnntr.
Dan Henman, CM11()9hlr
Alklna, Or. ""'ed Zamm,
Lindi Purl, Pudgy. G MAAKM$fll
PollllCll Htlrlll Miik Ru ..
NII tekH viewer• on an
amualng algl't!IMl"O lour
of tittle-known adlftc•.
monumenll and oddlllel In
lhe nation's capita!.
~MOVIE
"Ta1get1" ( 19e81 Borla
K1rtolf. Tim O'l(ell)'. Alt
aging hOrtor•movle ltat
ttlal to reason with a mur·
derOUI anlper al I drl.....iri
movie ll!Mler
10:00 D Cll OUINCY
A medical eumlner train-
" eccuMI one of Quincy's
moat reapec:ted coli.aguM
of coveting up a murder
(RI
•
•• NeWS FRHDOM'8
DIRN8e; AMPICA'S
Clift 1880
TM COIM, dtama and
llelulY or 12-meter yechla
oompellng fOf Ille most
presllgloua trophy In )'8Cht
racing OH lhl N9wport,
RhOde lllllnd C0811 It OIQ-
lured In this Oocurnentary
narretad by Robert
MacNetl (RI G FlAMBARD6
"Thi Cot<I Light Ot Day"
Wiiiiam land• hla flrat )ob
as an airplane mechanic
and Christina goes 10 worll
•• a waltr111. (Paf1 51 (R)
10:30. INDEP£M)IHT
NETWORK NIWS
Cl)MOVIE
00.Joltes My Folks Never
TOid Me" Playl)Oy 8unnlel
and PenthOuM P.ia ac1
OUI bawdy !Ok• and tllltt..
'R' 1~45 (D> MOVIE
"Honeyauekla Roaa"
( 111801 Wlllil Nlflon, Oyen
Cannon While on tour. •
Teaaa country-western
linger ~ lnvoMcl
wtlh lhl Mducllve daugh·
let of hi• lldllcldc -
though he ""' lovea hll llay·ll·h<>ml Wife 'PG'
1t:008D8Cll«ICll
NEWS 8 STAATAEJ<
Sent 10 negotfate a treaty.
Capt. Kiri! II ltnprllOMO
wllln he Int-In an
••ecutlon.
I NEWLYWED GAME
MANNIX
"Deeth la The 5th 0-"
Mannix ...,tier• eerloua
heed tnjurlll aftlf Qtlth-
ln<;i hta racing car Into 1
brtck well, which rMUlta 1n
his not remembering If
threatt on hit life -• reel or Imagined CD BENNY HILL
Walch lor Benny's IOOk at
HollywOOO and Ille "Gren·
ny ol the Year Juml)lng
Conies!"
• THEUMAH
LEAGUE'S NATIOHAL
CONVENTION
Oelorn Handy anchors
coverage of the Oay's
acuvtues from Waslllng-
ton DC
Ii) WORLD Ct1AONICU:
Jan Mwenson, Aaslstanl
Sec:retary-Oeneral. U.N ..
and Brtan Suton of the
BBC dlecust the arms
rKt.
(C)MOVIE
"The First NuOll Musical''
f t97S) Cindy Wllll1m1.
Bruce Kimmet A oown·
KOCE A 7:30 and KCET Qt 8:00 -
"Gorllla." E.G. Marshall hosts a look at
the largest of the opes.
KCOP m 8 :00 "Splendor in the
Grass." Natalie Wood and Warren Beal·
ty star in a love story !Jet In the Midwest
KCET a 9 : 00 • I Los Angeles
Philharmonic at the llollywood Bowl."
Zubln Mehta conducts and ltzhak
Perlman plays violin In a televised ap-
pearance.
KOCE 8 9:30 "Mark Russell."
The poltttcal satirist pokes run at
slghtseeine in the nation's capital.
and-out Broadway pro-
ducer plant to eoark lntw-
lll 1n hit 111 .. 1 projee1 by
llaglng 11 c:omplelely In the
nude 'A' ®MOVll
"Allen" ( 111711 Tom Sktr·
rln, Yaphel Kono Ttie
crew of • ep~no
ICHP cerrllt follow • ITl)'l-
letloul 11gna1 10 1 auppoe..
edly dead plant4 and, '"" landing, dtaoover INI lllt
meeaege wu 1 warning to
lley .way. 'A'
.MOW!
"Mallogan~" (11175) Olene
Roaa. Anthony Perltlna. A
young bt.ak women rllet
from the depth• of Iha
ghetto to lntern1Uonat
lame ea 1 lalhlon detlgntf
and model. 'PO' CI> MCK OAMlt TALKS I
wrrH8T£VEH IPIELIEM
11:15 Cil MOVIE
"CIOM Encounter• 01 Thi
Thlrd Kind: Speclal Edi·
tlon" ( 1980) Richard Dray·
lu•. Francolt Ttvlfaul
Aller llghtlng 1 UFO, a
poMr company emolO)'M
blComlt obM88ed wt1h
finding the allene. "'1dlng
alte PG'
11:30 8 (() MOVIE * * "Thi Graateet Thing
That AlmOll Happened"
( 19771 Jimmie Walker,
J-Ear1 Jonie A hlgll
school b11ketbat1 atar
,.,_ 10 Ill an lllnMI
atand be'-him and an
important game. (R)
D 8TONIOKT
Holl Johnny Carson
G111111. David Brenner,
BrOOke Shllldt,
8 9 ABCNIWI
NIOHTLINE
I LET'S MAl(f A DEAL
STANLEY ll£GrL ID CAPTIONED AIC
NEWS
12:00 8 MOVIE • * • •;, "The Ptalntman"
( 19311) Gary Cooper.
Char1et Blckl0td A trio of
famous Western chltac·
ters try to atop 1 wtllte
man from aelltng oun• to
lndllnl e a LOVtlOAT
"lmlllble Maniac:" Berna-
Oatla Slanle, Cllflon DeYll.
"Slptember Son" David
H1111lhott. Shelley
Fabar11. "Peeuboo"
Gordon Jump, Peggy
Casa.(A) D OUNSMOKE
A Cleting jallbr_. teunlt•
e fetl\ily of 'floloua outlaws
wt>o wound 1 pur~ng
mwlhal and -•" hit <Mpu·
~NEWS.
• IAAETTA
Tony I• stumped by an
uncooperative murder wit-,_.,
Cl)MOVIE
"MOH Amerlean Qr1fflll"
(111791 Ron Howard. Paul
LI Mii. Aftat 9radulllon, a
group of high achool
friends ••Ptrilne• lhe
ctllllengll ot adult hoOd In
thl IOelal upheaval or the
19609 'PO'
12:IO D QI TOMOMOW
O'*lt The Knee*.
• HOQAN'I HPOU
Hogen muar aqueah the
laleel German plan to
delltoy Ille 8rltllll 11r
f«ce
12:46 {C) MOVll
"11100' ( 19771 Robert
DeNtro. Gerard De9ero11u
Seventy year1 or ltat<an
1oc111 ano po1111ca1
cllangee are_,, 1hrough
the 8)'91 or two unllkety
beet trlenda. 'R'
1l00 9 PIYCt11C
PHENOMENA
"U8'ng Per11or111 Cr1sn At
Learning Tool•" Holl
Damien Simpson Guest
Cerol Ann Dryer ID MOVIE • * "Only Thi Valiant"
( 195 IJ Gregory Peck. Bar-
bara Payton. A cavalry unit
regains retpect '°' lhelr
leader when he .. vu them
from an lndtan atteck CD IHOEPENOENT
NETWORK NEWS OD REMEMBER WHEN:
WHEELS. WINOS AND
WHISTLES
Otck Cave11 traces the hta-
tory or Amertcan transpo1-
t1110n from the COYefed
wagon ol the Oki Wes1 10
the newly d"'9IOped space
llhu1tle
t:t08 MOVIE • * * * · An Amerleln In
Parte ( t9S1) G-Kelty,
Leslie Caron Musical
ICOI• by Ge0tge ano tra
Gerlhwtn An American
••-GI finds romance end
IUCClMt In Pa111 ' 9 NEWS
t:200 MOVIE
"Thi Godlatller. Part II"
119741 Al Paclno. Rober1
Duvall MlchMI Corteone
aasumes hi• 1111e lather'&
throne and power es he
becomes lhl new hlad of
thl Marte, llnOing prob·
!arm wtlh rtv1t lectlons and
the llw throughout hlS
ttlgn 'R'
1:30 11t MOVIE
• • '11 "Johnny Cool"
( 1963) ~ry Silva. Elia·
beth Montgomery An 1tat-
1an boy ralMd by a Sicilian
guerrlMa 11 Mnl to New
Yori. 10 wreak vengeanea
on Iha anem111 or an
Amertcan Upalrlala
(%)MOVIE
''Thi ldOlmaker'· I 19601
Ray Sharkey, Tovah
~ A maoipulativa
manager uses various
plOyl to catapult two •~
agers Into pop 9lng1ng
alardom 'PG' !~::1 = 2:00 QINEW8
MORECAMBE & WISE
Erl<: ana Ernie Clown to lhl
"Ch111anoog1 Choo
Choo". an etC1rev1g1nza •
performance of "There's
Nothing Like A Dame."
(I) WE'LL 8E RIGHT
SACK
AYef'/ Schreiber and Cristi·
ne Ferrara hOll lhls look 11
some ol lhl moat unfor·
gettable commercials ever
midi
JOHN DARLING
THIS COLUMN GAAY
PEE& DIP ON ME
REA\..1-'f &uGe> ME!
2: 111 lOITONAL 2:10 MOVll * * "t "Mr 'Mbody And tht ~meld" (tt'f) Wtf.-
llam ,OWlll, Ann llyth
Wlllll tllhing, 1 men lfom
Soeton c:atOllM • met·
maid, 1ues hlr l)Oll'll end
, .... In IOvt wlltl her
t-.21 e MOMCAMll I WllE
Enc llOlvea thl mlHder tn
Ernie'• ptay "My9taty In
M1yf1tr", Etlc and Ernie
mova 10 1 magnificent
estate but find lhll bigger
la not alw1ya ballet 2:00 1 NEWS 2:06 MOVIE
•• "Croeawlnda" 11851)
John Payne, RhOnd• Flam·
Ing A 1htp·1 captain
encountera peril whln hi
1111mpt1 to recover his
11o1en lhlp and hi• lover a:oo • MOVIE
II • "Cour1geou1 Or
Chrt111an" ( t9•0) Jaan
Herlholt. Tom Neal A
a.dk:ated Ooctor'a work
With the poor la compllcel·
ed whln an eoldemlc
3:11i k==
3:30 Cl) MOVIE
• • • "II 1 Always Fair
Weather' I 1115510-Ket·
ly. OM Diiiey A local TV
starlet aec.a.. 10 brotO·
Clll 1 reunion of lhr"
World War It Army l>uO·
dlee
(l)MOVIE • * • •;, Hob1on'1
Chot<:e" (195<4) John Miiia,
Charllt Laughton A bOOI·
mlkflf allempts to retain
hla cheap soutC41 of t1b0t
by pievenllng hla lhree
daughters from marrying
4:15 18 MOVIE
• • "Double Jeoperdy
f 19551 Rod Cameron, Jack
Kelty A wealthy real esllle
man allampts 10 v1ndtcate
hlmsetl trom charges of
havtrn;i murOflfed an axlor·
t1or1111
':45 8 VOYAGE TO THE
BOTTOM OF THE SEA
"Gholl 01 Moby Otck
Thur•darf•
Dayf i•e .ff or•~•
-MORNNG-
5:00 ct) "The First NuOle MuSt·
cat ( t9751 C1nOy Wllltams
Bruce Kimmet A down·
anO-ouf Broadway pro·
Oucer plans to spark Inter·
est •n his latest protect by
s11g1ng 11 completely m 1 he
nude 'R
6:30 (S) * • • •;, "R10 Bravo
( 19591 John Wayne Olan
Marlin An old cripple, 1
former Oeputy-turnaO·
drunk a yourn;i QutekOraw
gunstonger ano 1 girl help I
sheftlf to outsmart a POW·
erful rancher who w1nt1 lo
gel h11 k•llar brother
relelleO Ir°"' pnson
The Great Sen11n1·
( t979) Robert Duvall
Blythe Danner A IOUOh·
anO-reaoy Merine C0tp1
Olhc;ef faces OOmetliC bt l·
lies wllen he trilt IO
1mposa h11 m1111ary Ideals
on his lamlly 'PG
7:00 (CJ * * • Heidi' ( 19651
Eva-Maroa S1ngh1mmer
Gerttano Mlltermayr A Ill·
ue Swiss girt ts teken lrom
her mount11n home In the
At1>5 by her aunt to the
~·1 1:00 (.SJ * • • • "Father 01
The Bride" ( 1950) Spencer
Tracy, Ellubeth Taylor A
lather axpertences 111 01
tne !<JY• end he10ecne1
1nv01ved with the preoat1·
toons f0t h11 01ughter'1
upcoming we001rn;i
8:30 (~"Agatha" I 1979) Dustin
Hollman V1na111
"'°Or"" '" ~onoon .,. 19H. an Alnatloeft ,.....
!>"* reportat meet• end
~ lt1Vof¥ecl With
lamed tnyellfY Wftl• Ate
Iha CMlhl, who 1118 1111
Pitt unftllllf\>l riu.blnd
'ftO' tO:DO(I) ··~ ,_. .•
( 11180) Wiiiie Nellon. ~
CeMOti Whlll on tour, •
Tull c:oun1ry-w11t1rn
llngat beeorTlll lnvoev.cl
With the llducllve daugll·
tar of hit lldlklek _,
lhougll hi still IOwe hi•
lll y·aMIOIT>t wife. 'PO'
10:30 (C) "Up Rivet" A yQUng
~ ~ lnvOIYICI
In a ui.and-dltlh llrugglt
wlth 1 gotd·llungry llllO
baron
11:00 •• ·~ "Looea In LOO•
don" ( 111531 Bowery Boye.
Ethel Grilles Thi Boye run
up agllnll I bunch of
ac:hetnlng rallUYll When
one or them la nlm8d heir
to an Englll/I Earl
11:3C> 0 • * "The Alvef'1
Ectoa ( 1957) Ray Mlltend.
Anthony Ou4M A eon man
involves an Innocent
rancher In 1 mlNIOn-doltar
robbery
12:00 ID • • • Anllomy Of A
MurOet (Part 21 (1959)
James Stewart. Berl Oa -
,.,. A smalHown allor·
ney def1nos an Army lieu·
tenant who ts eccuaed of
kllltng a man kllPICled ot
a1tack1ng hi• W1fa
ti) • • • "X· 15" l 111611
01vt0 Macl een, Cherie•
Bronson Events surround·
tng the reM111ch ano teat·
Ing ot lhl x. 15 jet •re POI·
trayea
CC)••*''\ "Brigadoon"
t19S4) Gene Kelly. Cyo
Charisse Two frleno1
1tumble upon Brtgadoon, 1
village 1n the Sco1111h l'llgh·
tends. which comes 10 Hfa
IOI I .. ngMI 01)' every 100
years
2:00 (_t Tucit EvflflHUng"
F reo Keller. Josapn
MacGuore A young gttl
meets an 1mmor1at lamtly
known 85 lhe Tucki U SorMwhere In Time
I 19801 ChrlSIOC)her Reeve.
Jene Seymovr Ob-sed
w•lh the por1raJt of a 19\h·
century acuess. a moa.rn.
Oay New York pt1ywrogh1
uMt hypnoSls 10 travel
back 1n time and mee• her
PG
3:00 Cll * * ·~ Froga· 119721
Ray Miiiand Sam Ettt0ll
Whtie on I birthday OUltn<;j,
a man bent on de11roy1ng
bayou w11ottte gets 1 pres-
ent "e haOn't counlea on
when swampy c;rea1ures
flH up 10 murder him and
hts family
3:30 Ci) • 01\ "The Leger'IO 0 1
Custer· ( 19681 Wayne
Maunder. Sllm Ptellens
The m1t111ry CllrM< of Iha
coiorlul Ame<ICln c~t
teada to h15 lemoos Last
Stano
I$ C1ndfeshoe" (1977)
Jodie F' oster David Niven
A IOnlbOy from Iha streeta
or Los Ange4el 1n11ern1 a
1111ared Bnttlh nlall G'
''()() C * * • Ht101 '(1965)
Eva-Marte Songhemmar.
Garuand Mntermayr A kt·
lie Swiss 91r1 IS taken from
,.., mountain home on the
Alps by her 11unl 10 the
City 0 "'Return From w ncti
Mountain ( 19771 Bella
01v11 Christopher Lee A
~-mlO lf•llocret and
h•s greedy female COhOr1
a11emp1 to 1uptolt thl
supernatural 1b1lt11es ol
two Cl'lllOren from out"
space '°' their own evil
purposes 'G'
5:30 ( • * *''\"Rio Bravo" I 1959) John Wayne. Dean
~arlln An OIO cripple, a
former deputy-lurneO·
drunk, a young Quickdraw
gunslinger and a girl help e
1har1fl to oul5mart a pow-
Mful rancher wt>o wenls to
get his killer brother
reteaMIO frO<ft P<laon
by Armstrong & Batiuk
1'0 SAY I SHOVEL..,
WOULO 9E 0-06EP.
10 IHE MARK!
Erank Blair delivers had • news in NBC comedy pilot
By FRED ROTHENBERG 14,, .......... .-
NEW YORK For 23 years. Frank Blair
broke the news to us gently on the "Today" show.
In all that lime. he says he never cracked a smile
tor fear of belng accused of slanUng the news. Now
tt.'•in the comedy business.
Blair. wbo retired from NBC's morning pro·
gram ln 1975, Is cast as l$)0ny weatherman Dave
Johnstone on the comedy pilot "Live Eye" about a
TV news team ln Atlanta.
As BleJr and the producers shop the pilot
around the lelevi1lon netwOTks. It won't be con·
fused with "The Mary Tyler Moore Show."
On the s urface, Blatr would appear to be an
unUkely choke for laughs. H1I newa delivery la re·
membered aa utterly atraJ1h~forward, a morning
pl•tt of toaat. without Jam, and cert.ainly no a tlt.ute tor that rtr1t cup of colfee.
Jl hew com,4ic talent. it·waan't di1cernible
ID pllot, which had the look of a home movie
wl&I strange' camera •nctea cull.Ina off heads and speaken indlscrtminauity. Blair waan't funny, but
he waan'l •liven much to work with In OM blt. be
forecMtt lhe weather by opentn1 the windo•. And
la anol.her bl11ne ga1. he monitors LM naua1
llaltill ol 1quittel1 in the belief that the Mtpt of tMlr wtnttr homea wlll provide duet lo tbt im·
~"'-...OwtaJI. In ALlanta' Blah' He9 U.. character u lovable and eecen,. w. "lf bt'• *ttloped properly." But In the pUot.
be •u 1P9cecloCMA and idiotic.
"I don't think we did a good JOb on the tape.
We worked a little too fast." said Blair. He pre·
c11cts major changes. and orfers the pUot merely
for the networks to gel a line on the concept and
the character development.
For his part, Blair. 66, thinks he can play high
comedy, although his previous work in com-
mercials and movies never moved him out or
character. "l have a sense or humor," Blair says. men·
tloning Archie Bunker as a character who tickles
him. "This i not incompatible. I'm not in news
anymore, so I'm not concerned about that kind of
credibility. 111 can make the character believable.
"'()lit Fashion Island
Newport Beach
•
what's wrong with having a little fun in my de<'lin·
ing years? I'm entitled lo it."
Of course he is. But Blair himself raises ques-
tions about the need for public figures to protect
the image they've spent a lifetime nurturing.
"In 2S years at NBC. 23 on the "Today" show.
I built up a reputation and an image. It's my most
valuable asset. and since I've leCt the show I've
been extremely careful not to tamper with it. I've
been very careful, very selective In the com-
mercial area."
Blair has pluHed Bayer aspirin, but balked at
the chance to sell a laxative.
"l didn't think It would be right ror my Image.
My wife would divorce me," he said.
Blair admits he has qualms about the role of
the tanv weatherman He remembers Edward R.
Murrow tarnishing his reputation as journalism's
while knight by doing some smarty Hollywood in·
terviews on "Person lo Person."
"As long as the part isn't degrading and I can
show another s ide of my personality, that's OK,"
Blair said. "ln the la!'lt six years I've tried very
hard not to tamper too much with the public's
memories. staying away from what I think Is dis·
tasteful, rude or vulgar "
Based on the pilot of "Live Eye." Blair's
reputation deserves a better vehicle.
1031
FM
STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
' . ' t
.,Plllt
WIDNRSDAY, JULY II, 1"1
.SUPERMARKETSHOPPER C2
SLIM GOURMET C6
Make Fresh Apricot Ice Cream
from scratch or from commercial
ice cream . . . C2 SPECIAL DIETS C9
Peaches go
country chic
The American home cook is one of
the most sophisticated and versatile
in the world.
The selection of fresh peach recipes offered here
reflects an attitude prevalent throughout the nation.
The American home cook is one of the most
sophisticated and versatile in the world.
All of us, from amateurs to professionals, in food,
have seen intere1,ing culinary developments in recent years.
As a result f the great American zeal for travel,
we 've eaten food from Asia to Zambia. We have learned
to make our own. pasta, bake authentic French bread and
unravel the intricacies of Indian spices and cuisine.
We're secure in our knowledge of techniques and
we've become more demanding about the quality of food .
We 've entered a period of consciousness that concerns
itself with eating well.
Witness the trend towards fresh. Preference and con-
sumption of fresh fruits and vegetables is on the increase.
We 're constantly becoming more aware of the vital con-
tribution fresh makes to our diets and overall good
health.
Mindf uJ of the honest-to-goodness simple wholesome-
ness fresh foods provide is this quartet of country.fre:;h
like recipes featuring one of the nation's favorite fruits,
the fresh peach.
Each recipe is made with the best of ingredients. The
Fresh Peach Condiment Salad makes an attractive quick
summer lunch or light dinner served with a spiced and tangy yogurt
For a patio party, try the Hot Peach and Ham Rolls.
French rolls are split, the soft centers hollowed and the
creamy hot peach filling baked inside.
The influence of Eastern Europe is seen in the Peach
Poppyseed Coffeecake, a rich, close-grained pound cake·
like dessert studded with golden nuggets of fresh
peaches.
The country-like goodness of provincial France is
found in Tarragon Chicken with Peaches. A faintly
licorice-like seasoning, tarragon is best known as a
flavoring for vinegar but the French use it widely with
fish and poultry. Made with white wine and brandy, Tar-
ragon Chicken with Peaches is a quick and special treat·
ment for chicken, a perfect patio dinner entree for two.
So get "Country Chic" with this collection of fresh
California peach recipes.
For starters, be selective. Choose only peaches with a
creamy or golden under color. Although the bright rosy
blush is tempting, it's really only an indication of variety,
not ripensess. From now into October, fresh California
peaches wiU fill produce counters with most abundant
supplies coming through August.
Fresh peaches that haven't fully ripened will do so
best when kept at room temperature. To hasten and pro·
mote more even ripening, place in a loosely closed paper
bag or ripening bowl.
FRESH PEACH CONDIMENT SALAD
2 fresh peaches
:V.. pound cooked chicken meat ( 1 whole boned chicken breast), cubed
'h cup sliced celery
3 tablespoons minced green onion·
Yogurt Dressing
Lettuce
Flaked coconut
Chutney
Raisins
Cube 1 peach and combine with chicken, celery and 2
tablespoons green onion in a bowl. Toss with Yogurt
Dressing. Line shallow serving platter with lettuce and
arrange peach salad in center. Slice remaining peach.
Surround salad with separate mounds of peach slices,
coconut, chutney and raisings. Sprinkle with remaining
green onion. Makes 4 servings.
Yogurt Dressing
Stir together 1 cup plain yogurt, ~ teaspoon thyme,
crumbled, 114 teaspoon salt and bot pepper sauce to taste.
HOT PEACH AND BAM ROLLS
1 medium to large fresh peach
'h pound center-cut ham slice, diced
1 cup sliced celery
2 tablespoons chopped green onion
3 tablespoons mayonnaise
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon Dijon mustard
3 French rolls
Chop enough peach to get l 'h cups. Mix with ham,
celery, green onion, mayonnaise, lemon juice and
mustard. Split rolls and bollow out soft centers. Fill each
half with peach salad mixture. Place on baldng sheet.
Bake uncovered in a 400-degree oven for 10 minutes or
until heated through. Makes 6 servinp.
<See PEACHES, Pa&e CU
The country-like goodness of provincial France is found in Tarragon Chicken with Peaches. Made with white wine and
brandy, it's a perfect patio dinner entree.
Plenty of peachy recipes ·
Cook .and can with peaches . Freeze 'em and preserve 'em, or slice them,
dice them, puree or saute them.
Fresh fruita and ve1etables
can be a source of so many WOO·
derfuJ summer menus.
This season fresh peaches
from California will be in abun-
dance. The estimates for this.
year exceed 13 milllon packa1es
refleclin1 an increase of more
than 2.5 percent over the 1980
crop.
So cook and can with peaches,
freeze and preserve 'em, or allce them, dice them, puree or aaute
them. Fr-esb peach possibilities
are limited only by your im-a1LDaUoo and tbe season.·
From now into October apart
your cnat1Yity wttb tb1I eolJec.
tlon of peach palate lleuen
from f'nlt Bowl Up, a
bealthlu.l blender drink for an
on·the·r•n brealrfa1t, to
Soat.bern CUltanl Peach Pie. •
rich, creamy de11ert with a
praline toppmc.
DOUBLE DSLIGBT PBACB PANCA&U
l~CQPaaWk
Jeaa
8 tabMlpoom mtlt.d Rt· tel' or marprlne 3 8ftedflour .
2 c:\1Hpooona bdlllf powder
~ ... ..... , ... , .. ... a ,,..... peaelaes,
andditwd
PudllallC!e
CollllllM .-;~-....--... &er. llbt ~ •. _--.,,_...,
1•1ariildNIL_, ..........
clleett IMo flam atmn .ua
bl ...... f'old diced IMHMt llllo
pancake batter. Prepare Peach
Sauce; keep warm. Pour batter
by 'Al cupf ula onto bot 1reued
1riddle. Cook unW pancakes are
1olden underneath. Turn and
brown oo other side. Serve pan.
cakes with Peach Sauce. Mates
6 servtnas.
PEACH SAUCE
2 tablespoons butter or
margarine
2 tablespoooa nour
\4 cup suaar
i tablespoon comatarcb
3 cups oran1e Julee
3 fresh peaches, peeled
and sliced
. '4 cup finely chopped
marocblno cherries (optioul)
Melt butter and lt1r i.D Dour.
Mix •uaar and cormtareh and
add to butt..-aad Dour lllhture, •tirrtal untU blmded. Gradually
add or..,. Juke. Cook, stlrriq
CODI~ °"" low beat UDtU
aauce bubbles and tblclleu.
Fold i.D peach 1Uce1 and cMr·
rlea. Rebeat and simmer 5
miDuwe.
eight 8-ounce drinks.
PICK-UP PEACH SALADS
6 fresh peaches
Juice o( 1 lemon
2 packages (3 ounces
each) cream cheese, softened
~ cup sour cream
\4 cup chopped almonds or
other nuts
\4 cup chopped dates
2 tablespoons chopped
crystalll.zed ginger (optional)
Fresh mint sprigs (op-
tional)
6 bolrolls
Halve and pit peaches but do
not peel. Sprinkle with lemon
juice to keep from darkeninc.
Chill. Meanwhile, in small bow)
combine cream cheese, sour
cream, almonds, dates and
stn1er. Spoon mlxture into peach
halvea. Arraqe on servins tray.
Gamlab wttb mint 1p11t1s. if de·
aired. Serve wttb napkins u 1
flnser aal..S. Otter bot roUI to
accom..-Y peacb Salada. Makes
t 1ervtap, a halves per aervt.nc.
Notes: Watereresa or parsley
can be 1ubstitutecl for mint.
Cteam C!beele misture can be
made ll•• day before and
refri1erated until needed.
Preheat oven lo 450 deerees.
Sift nour. baking powder anf
salt into a mixing bowl. Cul in'
tablespoons butter with a p~
blender until mlxture is grrliai Stir In buttermilk. Shape d
into a ball and roll out to ~-in
thickness on lightly floure
board. Cut dough into 4-lncJa
r ounds. Bake for 18 to 2»
minutes. Split biscuits wbU"e
warm. Butter .witb rem!! butler. Serve In individual ·
es with peaches between 1 t
layers. Top with remainiDI
peaches and whipped cream.
Makes 4 servings.
FRESH PEACH SBE&BET
5 fresh, medium-ailed
peaches (about l~ pounds)
V. teaspoon almoAd ex·
tract
~ cupsuaar
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1 cup daley IOUI' c ... am
Slice and pit 4 of tbe peacbll. c Ruerve flftb c.••cb for 1arnlah.) Drop ln&o eeder ftll·
talaer; 1dd remallliDI tnar'e· dienta. Blend on hip 1peed 9l&il
1mooth. Pour Into abaUow ,..
or lee cube tray1 . ..,.._ lillll
almost flr!J'. TUrn lnto ~
bowl. Breal& up. •••&. atll smooth, but not melt.cl. ,..._
a1alD .• To Hne, ... mo\'. ~
Inner, 1Al lta.Dd II •'• ...
before Hnl•~· S late
deaHl't il••• &lip.,... 1Uea ti peecJa •
•At Ilda pa6lll. t~lf'9l. r.acktl a.tO 1111Ut:...-.. ro-.MllmalUW~U.
ca. PLDl'n, Pap Cf>
I
I I .
·1
l~
j
. ,
' .
,,
0,.,. Coatt OAILY PILOT/WednHday, July 22, 1981
Churn it; ft;eeze it
Traditional Supermar.k.et
Chum lt and freae it,
tpoon lt or scoop It.
However you aerve it,
fresh a)>ricot lee crHm
111ure to be a wtnnerl
And now'• the Ume to
find· out. Tb.rou&b earl)'
Au1ust, 1olden treah
aprleotl appear ta fruit
market1. Thu1, it'• a
perfect Ume to try aome
of tbne old·fatbioaed
lee cream favoritee.
might go out of style
81 IUllTIN SLOANE
· • wide opn 1pac• ot tbe traditianal ·~ ma1 eventuallr Mec»me a wa, fll tlM l*llt Uh lbe Wild Wwt. .. HI.,. eeWnp aDd larie open 1pa~
41"'9ft euatomen. Wflat we are tr)'lna to ac·
Eplilh W... 'W ...,_•supermarket la to
• their =loo •"'the product.a," aay1 11'7 Lind, "Vice pnUdent of Arnold W•N-=, ,,,.. ol a dleeo firDll that •p i,-.namet del1p.
ADoC.ber Mw metlMMI ua.t we are uainf
ro n.p lhopl1' eyt1 on the lbelves i. U&bt·
1.W. "Lone rows ol nuorescedt Ota will IOOO be • ttimc ot tbe put. , our deslana now call f« cue ¥lllls and 11* Uptlaa focUled on tbe pro-
dueta and low·leval Uthtlq to Wumlaate tbe
. al-.. 1'bil lilrjap out ta.. eolor in the. food
a8' in the J:!'-1Di. Aed. this new type of
U1hU. b a ht1 etaerty aavel'." J..f ncl ··ta• tltat the wide open ,_.rmarqt 1pace1 are vanishing because of tdi new cWlp treqd to "boutique" each de-
; part-..t.
''Tld.s ~ta a marketplace ol several
.-Ora1 wi$hin tll1e 11,lpermarket -each
fflP•rate, ·-doin1 a better job or focuaing IM&fper llt1Htian on the products in tbat de-
partment," 9* sa19.
"Tbe dDduce ••rtment la a good ex-
amp)e. WW 1hop,.. .. enter the store, they
•bou&d wa~rllht '* tbls department. I t ~
Desisned as a aeparate 1tore within the
1upermarket, it 1hould have a low celllnl and
U1ht1n1 that la directed at the fruill and
ve1etables.
"Tbll 1ive1shopperta1ood feeliQ1 when
they walk Into the It.ore because they are
looking at rul food with Iota ol briaht colon
-. food they can am ell and touch, not Ju.at
cans and bottln."
Llnd think.a that the meat department
should 1ive shoppers a 1pecia1 feelln1 of
cleanliness. One of hJ1 firm'• recent deslam
uaed a 1uspended ceUln1 made of chrome
blinds.
"We achieved exactly what we wanted -
a sparkling clean look that also helped to
separate the meat department from the other
areas that surround lt, '' aaya Lind.
These design trends m~ be fencln1 in
the wide open apace• ol lhe traditional
supermarket. But they also seem to otter U1 a
more enjoyable shopplni experience.
If only the supermarket.a wouJd conaider
the one Innovation that we 1boppen often
long ror -restrooms.
REFUND OF THE DAY
Write to the following addreu to obtain
the form required by this $1.SO refund offer:
Allerest-Store Special, Box 8"3, Rochester,
N. Y. 14618. Send a stamped, self-addraaed
envelope with your request. This orfer ex·
pires Oct. 31, 1981.
:
If the ice cream
f reeser'a handy, cburn
up tbe paddJe-llckln1
type of Apricot lee
Cream. Flrat, wblrl fre1b 'cots In tbe
blender, then comblne
wlth cream. milk and
navorm,a and churn UD·
UI frozen. Or. If JOU
would rather let YOllf
freezer do the work,
be1tn with a com-
mercial type of vaaWa
lee cream. You add OD.ly
the fresh apricots, a lit·
Ue oranae liqueur and
a l m o n d s , •t b e n
refreeae. . . Euy·Doet·
It Aprieot Ice Cream la
ready few aerviq!
Of course, otber
favorltea 1tart wlth
fresh apricots too. Bake
·cots into homesnade
plea, sUr them into fruit
compotes, s lice them
over shortcake. or spoon
them over breakfast
cereah. Whenever
they're used, apricot.I
add nutrition • well u
flavor to any dish they
appear in. One aentlnl
-that b, two medium
fresh apricota -supply
over one-third of t he
Recommended Dletary
Fresh Apricot Ice Cream can be made from scratch or by ad-
ding fresh apricots and flavoring to commercial ice cream .
Allowance of vitamin A a time, into boiling
needed 'daUy by adult.a water ror about 30
and teenagers. seconds until skins will
Whether it'• time for slip off easily when
homemade lee cream, peeled. Plunge into cold
or just fruit anacb for a water and remove skin.
picnic basket, pick up Cut apricots in half and
'some fresh apricots remove pits ; place
soon ! apricot halves in elec·
FaESH CALIFOa1* tric blender contaioer.
APRICOT ICE CREA. Bl~nd apricots until
2 pounds fresh smooth.
apricots Com bi" e p u reed
1 ~ cups sugar apricots and remaining
2 cups light cream ingredients in container
2 cups heavy cream or 4 quart electric or
1 cup milk hand-churn ice cream
~ teupoon 1alt maker. Cover container
1 teaspoon vanilla and place in ice cream
with crushed ice and
coarse salt using about 1
cup salt per 3 quarts
crushed ice. Chum until
frozen.
If Ice cream is not to
be eaten immediately.
repack with rresh ice
and salt and transfer to
metal pan and place in
freezer until serving
time. Makes 2'h quarts.
QUICK CALIFOR NIA
APRICOT ICE CREAM
1 quart vanilla ice
cream, softened
2 table s p oo n s
orange liquer
1"2 cup slivered.
toasted almonds
Dip apricot&, a few at maker; pack ice maker ~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,~~~~~~...:-.-.......~~~......::..,_:.__~....:..~.;..;......:.;.;;.._~-
8 fresh apricots,
peeled, pitted and diced
2 teaspoons granted
orange peel
Quickly stir all ingre·
dients together in large
bowl to combine; spoon
Into freezer container.
Freeze for 1 hour; stir
mixture to get an even
distribution of ingre·
dients. Return t-0 freezer
and freeze for 3 hours.
or until firm. For easier
serving, place ice cream
in rerrigerato r 15
minutes before serving
time to soften lightly.
Makes 4'r2 cups. ,., . '•
••• t
• ~C30c::x:::x:x:>a:J• ' . I of
. ;
PRODUCE
.. SllDLISS
Grapes •••••••• 5 9 ~.
Cantaloupes •••• I 9 ~.
IARTUTT
Peers ••••• · ••••• 39~.
TIOPICAL
Papaya
ROMAIHI
Lettuce
........ 89.:
. ... ; ... 29c .....
MIX OR MATCH
• Ollra
... coll s~ •Sum 1r S•nh • Jlc_. .. . , ..
WI carry • wide 11lldl•
of tropical ....... ...... . , .. .,. • M•w:;... • ICJwl
. ...........
•U... • C.C••••
•Sit_.,....._
•C.... ...... • c.-....... ....... . ......... .......
•
R£AL VAl!U ES
BAKERY
FUSH FUHCH I LI. LOAF SHOULDIR
Lamb Chops •••• s I '!. Bread •••••••••. 5 9 !.
label hi OW OWft O'fff
RlUIT FtLLIO
•••• 52°:. Coffee Cake •••• s I 2.!.
Lamb Rib Racks •• 52'!.
LOtM
Lamb Chops •••• 5 392.
~\Ua~~ ..... s.I '!.
•••• s2sz. IYIOF
Round Roast
Rump RC?ast •••• s2az .
RUT MIGM~ s5a9 Roast • • • • • • • • • • ..
W,e4 Ill OW OWft O'f ...
FUSH. CREAMY
Mapolean Slices •• 79.:
1•1~MI
Turkey Roll
1-wwt. Meatl. • • • • • ••••• s I '.Z.
AMlllCAH
Cheese
NOVOL~
Cheese
MOUAltlU.A
• • ..••.. s2'%.
Cheese •••••••• 528%.
Boiled Ham Pet Food •••••••• 49~ s3e9
lj,1!1
WHOU DUH61MISS
~! ...... ,.. ...... 52'!.
Fresh Shark
UYIMAA
Lobsters
CSUctdl • • •• • • • • • •. • •·
--·~·-.. ,..... ........ ~ • W.w.rf S.-.. .... Ill -ldldlm&
GROCERY
Mddaen Dazs ,1 Jt ··~J;........... ,..
·P•sl ,3 ... ,... 12.-..~ • • • • • •• • ...
on Items from applesauce to zlp.,.rs
are advertlSed every day In the
'·
\.
Orange Co.ast OAIL:Y PILOT, Wednetday, July 1a:1ee1
produce meal fish i
I
!
I IMll ,. .. ~ ,.,..,. •lfbt . •rl•IH I
· 111•1 ~l-1rry· 98t L ... _. L ... L ... L... "'49 llWJ Maun "9' I~. hll~lf f11et9 · lllNlll •II t '"' ..... rl 14-~. -----:= •49• ••. 1
l .,,r1. 69• : W',... tt '' ••. ,. ...... """' . •. .,.. ..
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...,. .. ,.. 11111• ' ' 'a ,· ' 0 0 ~· .......... "" flt ..... ..
I '
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ro1111lne lefflM 99+ ... groand •I· *249, •.
. ~..... . "'~:"' 29• ....... , .. -.,-,.-,---.4''···
~ .......... '""' 98+ ,.. .. ,.1 .. 19r1pe1 · • ...... of heel . tl4S ••·
59
• , ..... ~,. .. ,,..., ... b ........ ,,..
... hind t1•rlet1 *''' ... llln .. ,..
kiwi fr111t --------
tp19heffl ~-9At I •leld • .,,.,. .. frtu1r ..... ti .~ .... "'•
;,7 •.
vitamins
.... .. •
INI• ,..~ ,.,.,,. •rllll
..... , .. ,.. . ""'"' ..... "I·: 59• ~-~~ ., fl•rl
lllptr 100 ti• ""'" .... 11telatM ~ .. ,... t510 ...... ,, "I· 4,. .. ,. '7t
. IO flM "I· 6.8 1111 ' · . : ., Mix 111 flMn 9'
60 .... ,..: n.u .... t91a ....... , ... ·••" •a.s •. t-tt6 M 446 granola ,... us ........ ,
...... "I· 17.11 ... T I .,... ........ .
t• .... "I· ~n : ... ·•27~,• "-"" "I· u~' =~ •2t4
..... ,. •• ,.,.,,. ... t ........ ...
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60 .... .... 4.61 .... *9'5 •11 •erry •re•• · .... ,
tltll ...... -~ ... ·~•714 ••In et• ... ...;.. ,. ....... , ....... ts.. ·
SI .... fll· l.4t •II &~ iplgheffl 111118 ...... .. .. •s~·
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eoeldlll lhrlmt
cleli ·
""' ..... Mlrnlf i~llll *2''·· .............. *1149 . ' llllllOll lal , •. .......
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Orange Coaat OAIL Y PILOT /WednHday, July 22. 1981
Peacli party pace-changers
, Peacbll are the but. 1lu1e1. wtt.b nm. flnt '4 cup liD tbawed
f o r w o n d e r f u l , dipped in 1ranulated Spe.rldlJll water 1 can (12 ounces>
refresb.lq aummer par· 1u1ar. Garnlab wltb Put all ...,,.....ta H · water
,ty drlnkl. peach and Ume aUcn. eept aparkJ1na water ln· 2 cull' atrawberriet,
Fot a cbanae of pace, M a k ea 4 ( 5. ounce) to a blender eoaUiner. bulled and halved
try Peach Mar1ueritu, drlW. co·ver aDd blend until 4 freab peachea,
Peach Flu or FeaUve PBACH FIZZ 1moodl. P'l1I tall sJuaea peeled and allced
Peach Sancrta. 1 tablespoon lemon ~ full; pour aparkllnl 1 lemon , thinly
PEAcH juice water lnto 1laaae1. 11lced
llA&G ... •-aa 2tableapoona1u1ar Serve wtU. loal handled l oran1e, thinly
,. .... "'7 .a:~ teupoon oran1e 1poon1 a nd atrawa . aUced t Froun Peach flower water (optional) Mallet 2'4 cupt or J tall 1 lime, thinly allced
Cubes l eu white aervlnp. •1 botUe (fifth) red
3ouncestequUa• 2 freth peaches, J'ESTIVEPEACH wine
3 ounces orange· peeled and sliced (1 SANGIUA 1 bottle (10 ounce•>
flavored liq\leur cup) 1 can (12 ounces) club soda
ud water ln a 2..quart
freesw container. Add
a ll frulta, cover and
freeae until ready to'uae.
To MfY•, remove froun
punch bue from tr .. aer 4$ minutes before nrv·
ln1. Place ln pwacb bowl
and pour in Nd win• aDd
soda. Stlr tently to
blend ftavon. Makel U
6-ounce 1ervlnp.
•1 tenth red wlne and 1
tenth champa1ne or l
flfth Cold Duc.k.
Note: Th1I recipe can
be doubled.
Pea.ch Morgarital,
Pea.ch F'fa and Feltit>e
Pea.ch Sangna are
refr••hino iummn par·
ty drinkl.
1 ounce (2 table· 1cupcruahedice frozen lemonade , Combine lemonade spoona)llmejwce --~.:..=.::!:.,;:.:..:::==.::...:.:=-~.....:....:.....::...:::...:..:::......:.~:..:..:::..=.....:....:..:..___:~::...:..:..:::..;;,_~.:....:...:....:....:.;...:.....:....~~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2 tablespoons sugar
10 ice cubes
Granulated sugar
Peach slices
Lime slices
Put peach cubes into
blender container. Add
remaining ingredients
except ice and garnish;
blend smooth. Add ice
cubes, one at a time,
blending until smooth.
Pour into stemmed
Chicken
is peachy
On sultr y summer
days, few food s are
more refreshing than
sweet, juicy peaches.
Here are two unusual
recipes that make ex-
cellent use of this sum-
mer favorite.
PEaSIAN PEACH
GLAZED CHICKEN
1 roasting chicken.
about 6 pounds
3 large . fresh
peaches, peeled and
diced v. cup sugar
Juice and rind ot 1
or a nee
2 tablespoon s
minced crystallized
ginger
1 teaspoon curry
powder
1 tablespoon finely
chopped onion
1 tablespoon
aromatic bitters
Mint sprigs
Fresh peach slices
Wash c hicken; pat
dry. Sprinkle with salt.
Roast at 350 degrees for
21,AJ boon. Combine re-
m alnin1 ingredients and
simmer witil thick and
jam-like ln consistency.
Brush chicken heavily
with glaie and continue
roaaliDI for an addi·
tlonal 30 minutes until
chicken is tender, being
carefuJ that the glaze
doesn't burn. Garnish
witb mint sprigs and
slices of peeled, fresh
peaches. Makes 6 to 8
servings.
NOTE : To pe el
peaches easily. drop into
a pol of rapidly boiling
water and leave in for 10
seconds. Remove with
slottedspoon. When cool
enough to handle, skins
will slip off eaaily. ·
PEaslAN PEACH
MOUSSE
5 fresh peaches.
peeled and sliced
2 envelopes < 1
tablespoon each) un-
flavored aelalin
J,AJ cup sugar
'I• t.eupoon salt
4 ea yolks
t~cups milk
1 cup half-and-half
(cream>
1 c up whipping
cream, whipped
~ c U.P c a n d i e d
gin1er, chopped v. cup orange
marmalade
2 tablespoons fresh
lime juice
Puree peaches in
blender; set aside. In
lar1' saucepan, mix
gelatin, sugar and salt;
set aside. In large bowl.
combine egg yolks ,
milk, and half-and-halC;
add to aelatln mixture.
Cook over low beat, stir·
ring, until tbichned1 about 20 minutes .
Remove from heat; stlr
lo peaches. Refrigerate
until partially set. Fold in whipped cream and
gin1er. Pour into 6-cup
mold; refrigerate
several hours. To serve.
unmold mousse; drizzle
with oranie-Ume &laze.
To make tlue. combine
marmalade and lime
juil:e Im iiDall 1aucepan.
Coo~ 1lllnlnl. ~r low
heat .. well tlended.
Cool te room tem·
· perature. ~-I Ht'V·.
lnl•·
PSAC8SI WITB nDIClln.ua .
Sil•• lrull ripe
peachll •ball, dip bato aa ueorble add mix· tun fl.., eta. ,....
........ \0 t .... a•d refrt~. At..._ U••· 1poon peaeii
halnt bU pl.ta and pour .-..navond U·
queur over them ·
&1e1ataadea1y.
Potent la I
Labor Dispute
The poealblllty exa.ta
of a major work
stoppage In the
Food Industry. We
Sincerely hope a
peaceful 11tt1ement
can be made but In
any event ...
Ralphs .Wiii
Be Open
to serve your
food need•
Llmlt2 ~
Foster Farms or Zacky Farms
Fresh California Grown
Consists of Breasts, Thighs,
Drums and Wings
Best of
f '18f
C•llfornl• Grown
per
it.
Value Pack
Fryer .
Wings
per
i.
Zacky Farms or Foster Farms
Whole Legs
Thighs or
Drums
C•llfornl• Grown per
lb.
I.
Peak of the Season
Sweat
Corn
Zacky Farms or Foster Farms
Consists of Breasts,
Drums Thighs
combo
Pack
Cellfornle Grown
Zacky Farms or Foster Farms
Fresh Fryar
Breast
Cellfornla Grown
per ·09 lb .. .I
per
lb.
I 39
•
Ralphs-Sliced Food Italian
American Wishbone
Cheese Dressin
gjt.
Save .34 with Coupon
Sliced-Assorted FREE Ralphs
Adult
Pepsodent
Toothbrush eKh with coupon end purc"8M of
OM .. N1Uler prtc. Chipped Meat ~::: with coupon and purcheM of
one pkg. et reguler price
Llmtt One Item eftd One Coupon ,., Cuetomer.
Coupan ltrecttve ""1 n thru Mr 11, 1H1
Tree Sweet Frozen
011111
J1lC1
Ralphs .. Egg ••• lrlld
.95:: '.49~: .. 85.:::
~-.
Llmtt One Hem and One Coupon Per Cuetomer
Coupon Uecllwe.hlly 23 llvu JulJ 21, 1H1
Prlcn Effective Julr 23 thru Julr 29, 1981
ioS ~ears of Va111es
·c~1111.,....,.. ••~.,_,..,.. ....... ....,,-c ..... ..,. ............ .....-..
All ............. r-. ..... ., ........ ,., .. ............................................... ,,.._ ....... .,. , ........................ ., ,. ......... ,_.. ............................................. __ ,,.......,..._
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iililla.. 191-U.&i t•• 1M111 PP 3 11,ll IB --4111~·-f~-.----lllm,_._._Nlli!li ·)-· •••ll&D
I I
·I
Or'ange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 22, 1981
Takeoff on Eggs Benedict
Peaches Goldenrod l1 two boun abead and
aapeclaJentreethat'110 held in a warmed
al m pie to make you vacuum bottJe for ease
won't want to wall for a ln do-a.bead preparation.
special occulon. Convenient canned
A takeoff on the peren· cUna peaches are prob-
n 1 ally popular E11s ably in staple In moat
Benedict, this main people's pantry, as well
course is perfect for they should be. Thia
brunch, lunch, even a versatile fruit can be en·
light dJMer. Joyed with every meal
The toasted En1Uah aH year-round.
muffin base la layered PEACHES
with ham or Canadian GOLDEN&OD
bacon, then topped with BLENDER
a m us tar d · co ate d HOLLANDAISE
broiled cling peach half. SAUCE:
2 tabl•PoOM lemon
Julee
Dash 1tound red
pepper
._., cup butter or
margarine, melted and
hot
PEACHa
GOLDENROD: ,
1 can (29 ounces)
cllna peach balvea
~ teaspoon or y
mustard
8 slices ham or
Canadian bacon
4 English muffins,
split
l hard cooked en,
optional
Watercress or
parsley
Blender Hollandaise
Sauce: Place e11 yoJk.s,
lemon Juice and red pep-
per ln blender container.
Cover ; blend untll
smooth. With blender
runnlna, graduaJly pour
ln butter. Continue
blendlng until thick and
fluffy, about 30 seconds.
Heat over warm water
unUI ready to serve.
Makes l cup sauce.
Peaches Goldenrod:
Drain peaches; reserve
Y4 cup syrup. Blend
mustard with reserved
syrup. Place ham and
peaches <cut aide up) on
broiler pan. Orlule
peaches wlth syrup.
Broil 4 inches from heat
until peaches are hot
and ham la slightly
browned. Meanwhile,
toast English mufflnt .
Place ham slice on muf.
fin haJ!, top with peach
and Blender Hollandaise
Sauce. Garnish with
sieved egg rolk and watercress, i desired.
Makes 4 servings.
Tcxuted Englilh mu/fin
ii bole for Peo.cMI
Goldenrod, a nice dtlh
for bnmch, lunch or ,
• Ught dinner.
The mustard, which Is 3 e11 yolks mixed with someofthe r-~--'"""-''--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
peach syrup, adds a
sweet-sour touch and
gives the peach an ap·
pealing glaze. As a
smooth flavor and lex·
lure complement for
both the fruit and ham,
an easy blender HolJand·
aise is spooned over
the cling peach half. The
sauce can be made up to
No booze
in colada
Some call It the Virgin
Colada. Others call It
the Skinny Colada .
Whatever you want to
ca ll it, this non ·
alcoholic, cool concoc·
lion is a sweet, simple
variation on the Pina
Colada. It just leaves
out the rum .
What's more, it's fast
becoming one of the
most popular drinks
around this summer.
The reasons? It's <Je·
licious, easy to make
and fun to serve.
The non-alcoholic
Pina Colada iJ perfec•
for those long, hot sum·
mer afternoons and wlU
refresh you. whether
you make it slushy or
icy. That a1J depends on
how much ice you add to
the blender.
To make the Pina
Colada, simply combine
the following ingredients
in a blender:
~ cup cream of
coconut
l cup unsweetened
pineapple juice
2~ cups ice cubes
Blend on high for one
minute. Pour into a tall,
skinny glass. Garnish
with the traditional
pineapple spear and
cherry or select some
colorful, fresh fruit for a
difference!
Both children and
grownups will love it.
Dieters will thank you
for it too -It's the slim·
mer version of the
alcoholic pina colada.
Makes 4 servings.
START THE DAY
-Fill a simple omelet
with refreshing slices of
fresh peaches. Top with
a spoonful of sour cream
and a sprinkling of
nutmeg and brown
s ugar.
-In a hurry? Fresh
peach slices also add a
special touch to favorite
cold cereals or flavored
in s tant oatmeals .
Sweeten with brown sug.
ar or maple-flavored
syrup.
EASY BUT ELEGANT
Arrange fresh peach
halves in a buttered bak·
Ing dish. Fill cavities
with a mixture of toast·
ed blanched almonds.
powdered sugar and a
little grated orange peel.
Sprinkle with dry sherry
and more powdered sue·
ar. Bake 10 minutes at
3~0 degrees . Serve
warm.
PEACH CLOUDS
Plle sllced, sweetened
fresh peaches into in·
divldual meringue
shells. Drizzle with a
favorite liqueur, if de·
sired, and top wtth a
dollop <A whipped creim
and shower of sliced
almonds.
PEACH SA.LAD
SAMPLE&S
-Toss peeled and
diced fresh peacbet wltb
shredded cabbage, dlced
a p.Plos, a handrul of
raisins and a creamy
sweetened mayonnalae
drettlDI for a nutrlUoua
and retr..iu.nc summer
salad. .
-Add diced frttb
peach11 to your tavorlt.
chicken salad reclpe.
For extra el•••nce1 •f'Oop tbe chaekea 1a1aa
lato · pe!eled lrwb peacb
halves.
-Sin• tllced tr .. b
pe1ebl9 wttll little balll
ol Cl'MID .... rolled
ln,._.yc....,..ntaor Ifie...., munbl for a
IO.el1 appetiser or Upt
de9HrL
100 PRD TRIPI PLUS VOrtS
PRO DU Cl
Red'~ U1 .49
~-v..99
=~ fA .33 c=ia=A-POOOS U1 .29
.W~~OO'V\KT Freal'I ,,uubl UI .69
U1 .49
389
Hf· AL TH [, BLAU TY'
I IUUl JI~
1149
129
)Ufll-1111) .. 0llMIN!rf~ 3" CWoRl*tewtrM =:...-,w;:.ica*ll& 2"
LIQ..~ 2"
~ 259
................ ma 1-.., a.,..,.,, ...
c.... .....
t•
1• I. 1"'-..... efMI Of-.. A ... ·
LOWPRICESI
TABLETS
1 OOC'T -NW.0£S.::
I.MT ) (l'llfdwe -hll<ftlll. "*-2.29)
MF.ATS
~~Gl:ror~ 199
~s~ ui 259
c=be~TUC>U-u:NI LA 2 59
TAIUl9tll-YCJllXIC>-OCUIC)l ] 79 Leen Ground Beef ~mui
~l.Mr ui 209
~t&~;~~.98
~~l.ep UI ]15
~~ka u 119
~ ui l19
(Ml ---DIUllS.-~ ·-123 Combo Chicken Piiie An UI
SI HVl <'f '-,I .'\I < >00
F::ti Red Sftll'I* f1llta UI 179
;;.. 8uUerfllh Nita I.II J 69
ui 269
la-298
I IU>/l NI <>ODS
'HO I" BAKl HY
fA 199
EA 239
fA .59
VONS B . .<\Kf HY
11.~IUOIOllOIWG~ J 15 An,.a Food CMell
.93
.66
.79
.89
I )f I IC A JI SSI N
16()1 .wt-l'OUl -~ ...,.ooc1 Dtaelnp
~=-~llfAT
~-a::.-rooc1
D~""\':l,,...
~189
GROCERIES GROCERIES
~Juice .79 -CNl~(,ti! Dennison <Ml Beens }89
~CM • Seueltcnut .53 ~~ 108
ilt;'aC:f'omlltO Juice .78 ~-~fie-239
c=.~ce 121 ~-a=,.TM!OOOI 104
~-f'OWl>Q£O Drtnk/Wllx 319 ~~ J47
~Chocotllte Qulc 149 ~=.t..,,....,. 159
l 00 FREE PSA TRIPS
PU18 l 00 FREE SHOPPING SPREE.&
;
..
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• ~
-I
Orange Co••t DAILY PILOT/Wednffday, July 22. 1981
Sweltering summer
beat can dry up a party
f aater than water on a
sidewalk. So, when 1lz-
zlln1 temperatures are
expeeted, be ready with
heat-extinguJsbln1 sum-
mer coolers made with
chilled fruit and brandy.
Brightly colored and
refreahlna, these sum-
mer sippen are easily
end quickly made .
Sevei;:al can be made ln
bulk and kept in the
freezer, ready for days
when the mercury bub-
bles.
CRANBRANDY FROST
1 (6 ounce) can
rrozen cranberry juice
cocktail concentrate.
l2 ounces ( 1 ~ cups>
cold water
6 ounces ( ~ cup)
brandy
Chilled club soda
Crushed ice
Mint sprigs for dec-
oration
Mix cranberry juice
concentrate, water and
brandy together. Cover
and chlll. When ready to
aerve, pour 4 oune. ( ~
cup) over crutbed le• la
a lO·OUDCe alaaa. Add
club soda and aUr 1ent·
ly. Decorate wttb mint
sprl1. Makes e drlnka.
BaAHDV OOBBLE&
COOLEJl
in cup 1Uced fresh
fruit (such as nec-
tarines, strawberries,
kiwi fruit, peaces, melon
2teaspoons
superfine su1ar
4 ice cubes
6 ounces (~ cup)
brandy
ChiJJed champagne
GenUy stir fruit with
sugar, cover and chill.
Dlvidt between 4 (8 to 10
ounces> glasses. Add 1
ice cube to each, pour In
brandy and stir gently.
Add about 4 ounces
chilled champagne .
Makes 4 drinks.
BRANDY PUNCH
IN A GLASS
6 ounces ( ~ cup)
frozen orange juice con·
cenlrate
Peach-sauce
is economical
ByBAllBARAGIBBONS
Wba1 dq you do with
over-rtpe peaches? Most
likely you'U avoid them,
particularly if you're
s hopping for frult to
freeze OI\ can. For that
reason over -ripe
peaches Cand nec -
tarines) are usually
bargain-priced. Nobody
want& them.
Except me. And when I tell you why, you may
seek them out. too. This
time ol year I'm always
on the lookout for past-
SLIM GOURMET
prime fruit to make into
peach-sauce for storage
in the freezer.
Peach·sauce realty is
nothing more than peach
puree which I enjoy all
year u a tow-calorie top-
ping tor ,#Undaes. a sauce
for ~Gftage cheese or
yogurt, a natural fruit
syrup for pancakes or
frencb toast. or the
flavorful base for fruit
drinks. barbecue sauce
or anythJng else that
coulcl profit from real
peacbftavor.
Over~ripe peaches are
eveJI better than perfect
fruit .. because their
ClavO( (s even sweeter
a ndaeachier . That ·s
bec•ae soft peaches
have developed their
maiilnrum natural sugar
anrt flavor. or~season peaches
that a.ave become soft
were never ripe to begin
with. So, in lookin1 for
pea~ for peach-sauce.
be sute to buy those that
have ripened naturally
and are now merely soft
with just a rew bru.,ised
spot1 Cwbich you can cut
away anddlscard).
A.void peaches that
have become rotted or
moldy. Expect to pay on-
ly h8llthe 1oing price and
if you•re ~ying a quanti-
ty or the merchant's lefl-
overa, .you can usually
neeot.iate even lower
pricet.
FRESH PEACH-SAUCE
Over-ripe freestone
peaches (or nectarines)
Lemon juice
Optional: fructose,
honeyotsugarsubstitule
Halve peaches and re·
move skin and pits. The
peel of over-ripe peaches·
or ne~tarines should slip
ofl easily. lf not, you can
simplify peeling by drop-
ping the whole fruit in a
pot of boiling water for a
few seconds. Remove
each peach with a fork
and slip off the skins. Put
the peeled, pitted
peaches in the blender
(or food processor, using
the steel blade), and
puree-smooth. Add l
tablespoon fresh lemon
juice lor each cu~uJ of
peacb-sauc:e; tbia will
prevent tbe peach-sauce
frorQ darkenin1 .
Tranlfs-. 1-cup 1lu1
Jelly Jart; la~I a nd
refricerate or freese.
Peach-uuce uaed u 'a
topph\I for ice milk or
frozen yGCurt needs DO
sweetenlnf. For a
1weel• peacb-•••ce to u.e wtdl cottqe ebeele,
plain ,.,.urt or a topptn1
for tartfrait, IOutor pan·
eaket, 9dcl J labt..,.,_
fruetoH or hoaey or
equivalent •r:;•r aub-ltltute per cu . Tbne aver• peac make l
cDp peaell·HU~•. 10
calorlll per tabl•pooa;
wtlb rr.tole or bOD•11&n· d.r 1scaloriea pertabt ...
poon 17 calories more per
tablespoon with nec-
tarines).
ORANGE PEACH ·
SAUCE I
6 medium peaches
2juiceoranges
Peel and pit peaches.
Remove skin and seeds
from oranges. Combine
the fruits in a blender C or
food processor. using the
steel blade>; blend
smooth. The citrus fruit
will retard darkening of
the peach puree. Makes
approximately 2th cups,
11 calories per table·
spoon.
ORANGE PEACH·
SAVCEU
Puree peeled. pitted
peaches. Combine each 2
cupfuls of the puree with
the contents of a 6-ounce
can of orange juice con-
centrate. defrosted but
undiluted . Add no
s weetener . Makes 2~ ..
cups; 15 calories per
tablespoon.
PINEAPPLE PEACH·
SAUCE
This is a mock mango
sauce. Substitute a 6-
ounce can of defrosted
undiluted pineapple juice
concentrate for the
orange juice concen-
trate. Add no sweetener;
16 calories per table·
spoon.
GINGER PEACHY SVN·
DAES
Crush. pulverize or
process gingersnaps into
crumbs ( 1 gingersnap for
each serving). To as-
semble sundaes, put a
scoop ( 'h cup) low-fat
v anllla ice milk or
froaen yogurt into a
stemmed glass. Top
with 'ft cup peach-sauce
and 1incersnap crumbs. Each serving; 135
calories.
COTTAGE C H EESE
PEACHY
BANANA SPLIT LUNCH
Arranie • 2 scoops < %
cup) of low-rat cottage
cheese betw e en 2
banana halves, s plit"
len1tbwise; top with Y.i
cup peach -sauce.
Calories: 275.
PEACHY -KEEN
SPRITZER Combine ~ cup peach-
sauce (or orange peach-
sauce> with ice cubes and
seltzer in a tall glass.
<Add a few whole berries
or mint leaves for
garnish, if d~sired. > With
peach-sauce, 80 calories;
with orange peach-sauce,
120 calories (garnish ad·
diUonaJ).
PEACHY WINE KlR
Combine 'ft cup dry
while wine with quarter·
cup peach-sauce over Ice
in a tall glass. (Add
seltzer and fruit garnish,
if desired.) Calories: 90
(garnish addlllonal).
PEACHY TOPPING
Use plain or sweetened
peach-sauce as a low.
sugar (or su1arleas) sub·
atitute for jam or syrup.
Spread peach-sauce on
tout, or add it to bagels
or Enellah mufflna whJch
have been topped with
low-rat cream cheeae.
GenUy beat J)eacb-aauce
and Hl'Ve lt with pan-
cakn orfrench tout. (No
butteraeededl >
PEACBISL-LOW
So"-1 envelope plain
selatia ln l eupeold water
or appleoror...,.JwceJ.
HHt ~t ... Stir ha
I car pucb·Hace. Chill
untl set. (Add diced
fruit, ll ct.llred. > Maka 4
Hrvlnp, 46 calori• eaeb
with Wiler: TS calort ..
each wttb Julee <diced
f ruli addlt.lonaJ >.
• O\lDCH ( '14 cup)
froaen pineapple Juice
concentrate
6 ounces (~) cup)
frozen lemonade concen-
trate
48 ounces (8 cups)
cold water
12 ounces (1~ cups)
brandy
lee
Chilled club soda
Lemon, lime and
orange slices for aarnish
Combine fruit juice
concentrates, water and
brandy toe ether. Stir lo
mix well. Cover and
refrigerate. Pour about
4 ounces ( ~ cup) bran-
dy mixture over ice in a
10-oun~ glass. Add club
soda and stir gently.
Decorate with orange,
lemon and llme slices on
bamboo skewers, if de-
sired. Makes 16 to 18
drinks. The basic fruil-
brandy mixture can be
•White
made and stored ln
refri&erator for a week,
but stir weU before mak·
ln1 into a drink. ChHled
champagne can be uaed
In place or club soda.
FROZEN BRAND\'
SOUR
1 (6 ounce) can
froien lemonade conc4ln·
tr ate
1 (6 ounce> can
frozen orange Julee con-
centrate
12 ounces (lV.. cups)
cold waler
16 ounces <2 cups)
brandy
Chilled club soda
Combine undiluted
fruit juice concentrates
with water and brandy.
Stir to mix well. Pour in·
to 1 'h quart container,
cover and freeze. For
each drink, spoon about
~ cup frozen base into a
10-ounce glass. Add %
cup chilled club soda
and stir 1ently. Makea 5
cups frozen bue (about
15 drink.a). An easy, and-
dellclOUI mlx to keep on
hand In the freezer for a
refreshing cooler.
ISLAND PARADISE
12 ounces (1~ cupt)
guava nectar
6 ounces < '14 cup>
brandy
V.. cup sliced straw·
berries. 1 cup finely crushed
lee
Halved strawberries
for garnish
Turn guava nectar,
brandy, ·~ cup sliced
strawberries and lee ln·
to blender jar. Cover
and blend at hl&h speed
until frosty. Pour into
chilled large cocktaJJ or
stemmed sherbet
glasses. Garniah with
halved strawberries.
Makes 3 or 4 drinks.
FullCef\le1Cwt
Sofewoy OvoJuy ._, ~188 ........ °'"··o-. 3 I C lvnt. .;;·h••
~ltlig.
of I
CMWio 311 •thl ...
•1194 ........... y $
•H«t•t
Vint-
-.& 3 -...-. uier
............. oi.,7 I C
~ 2-Uter
-• lottle
.~, ...... 0..-'--"'
:it .. ~!199
lottl•
~ 2 · c -· ka.
Con
, .... y 29C ~.
QUALITY MIA T! DAIRY-DELI GROCERY FRESH PRODUCE!
Rump Roast ""::....."-.... -
Beef Cube Steak .:::;:.
-1•1144 Beef Back Ribs '--::..0:.-
London Broll i::.:..°':.. ..... Premium Ground Beef ~
Sliced Bacon ':::.;'
Skinless Franks '=" _,_
Fresh Fryers -=.~:=;-
Whole Fryer Leos == --Drums or Thighs '?:li.0::-
• 1219 "!::f Half & Half .=. c::..49' :;:=[ Stokley Gatorade :.:98' Golden Bananas • 29'
• '259 ~ Lucerne Buttermilk -46' V!..i Nu-Made Corn Oil t.: '129 White Rose Potatoes .s· .. , • 29'
• '1°' "!::f Chocolate Milk ~= -'239 :;:=t' Fabric Softener '=" :;...1121 Cherry Tomatoes ......69'
• '24' :-;, Whipped Cream ...... =: 65' :!-i Dial Bath Soap °::.'1' 4-'1 47 Crisp Cucumbers -25'
• '1" ~Cottage Cheese ._ '='1" "!::f Paper Plates =::i .:.:...99' Golden Delicious Apples • 35•
:..: '134 ~ Lucerne Yogurts ll: '109 , YardleyliquldSoap'7: 115' Cole Slaw ..... 59'
:.,: 1119 3'Sott Margarine ~ \:59' Assorted Fruit Rolls· r .. 35'
,. 79' 3;. Ught Spread ':;" •,149' Large Mixed Bouquets .., '25'
• 1115 ~ Orange Juice 'f:" t 89' • Popov Vodka .._ ::'6"
,. '11' :It Gllbey's Gin ~ ~:'9" HEAL TH & BEAUTY
• '21' m;,euttertopBread ~ 79' XOldSmuggter is:. t.:'9" ._Night of Olay i:.'3"
Sure to cool of/ a hot
tum mer day ore the1t
fruit-ba&ed lfppera.
Shoum from left are:
Cranbrandy Ff"ost, o
combination of cran-
berry juice cocktail, ice
and brandy; Brandy
Cobbler Cooler. fresh
fruit 1lices floating in
chilled champagne and
brandy; Brandy-Puncy-
m-a-Gla81, made with
frozen fruit juu:es. and
I skind Paradise, a blend
of canned guava juice,
strawberries and
brandy.
..... $119 --· Half
Goll on
IAYE 12 .00
1*1USIVI SAFnaY Of'f'DI
MAGIC MOUHTAIM
TICKml ....... __._,_ . .,._.....,. . _ . .:r~--I '~
-""' --..... ......... ·-·-
, ..... -., ... ...._.
'8.95
~
-·---... ··-·-·-. ·-Pork Loin Chops ~a'.S
CU1try Style Ribs s=. • '1" mc.0onuts =.r':'C :ts 99' · X Jacate. Wines • 2 ,z•JOO 3C Vaseline -::-~ •1 ••
:=T:.:'~~ .... ~ ...... ...::.::.= ......... -........ ~ .....
Burrttos ::.:: ~ 34' m¢Gralnbelt8read1tt.'ii..i:.:89' X Heineken Beer 6 i,13" :M Old Spice Deodorant Ii: •1••
DELI & SEAFOOD
PoJllh Slulage = '1.;-11"
ffeMl Buttlrftth -= . '1"
Breaded Fllhltlckl !:' 1:,: ~71
• •
We've Glven.LOWIPRJCEl1A Mew Mame •••
,
..
.=119
J
• . • • Peaches
(From Page Cl> ,
PEACH POPPYSEED COFFEEC.U:E
1 to 2 large fresh peaches
1 cup butter, softened
1 cup sugar 'n cup milk
tr., cup poppyseeds
2eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla
2 cup~ flour
3 teaspoons baking powder .
:Y.. teaspoon salt
Chop enough peach to gel 1 ~ cups. Cream butter with
sugar. Beat in milk, poppyseeds. eggs and vanilla until
smooth. Gradually mix in flour, baking powder and salt,
beating on medium speed just until blended. Stir in
peach. Turn into greased and floured 6~·cup ring mold.
Bake in a 350·degree oven 1 hour 10 minutes or until pick
inserted into center comes out dry. Cool 10 minutes in
pan. Invert onto wire rack to cool completely. Makes 1
cake.
TARRAGON CHJCKEN WITH PEACHES
1 egg
1/4 cup flour
•/4 teaspoon salt 'I" teaspoon pepper ·
1 whole chicken breast, boned and split
2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 1~ teaspoons tarragon, crumbled
2 tablespoons brandy•
1 2 cup white wine•
1 tablespoon butter
l large or 2 s mall fresh peaches. sliced
Break egg into shallow container and beat with fork.
Combine flour, salt and pepper in another shallow con·
tainer. Dry chicken and trim off excess fat. Coat chicken
with egg then with flour mixture. Heat oil in lO·inch
skillet. Saute chicken. skin side down. over medium·high
heat about 4 minutes or until brown. Turn and brown
other side. about 3 minutes . <Reduce heat to medium if
oil starts to burn.> Sprinkle chicken with tarragon. Add
brandy, wine and butter to pan. Bring to boil and cook
uncovered for 2 to 3 minutes to reduce sauce. Add peach
s lices ; cover and cook 2 to 3 minutes until fruit is hot.
Garnish with parsley if desired. Makes 2 servings. •u desired, lemon juice can be substituted for the
brandy and water substituted for the wine.
••. Plenty
(From Pate Cl>
onto platter. Gamlsb wllh mint
sprigs, lf desired. Serve in·
dlvidual slices topped wltb u ·
sorted fresh summer fruJta.
Makes about 3~ cups.
VTRERN CUSTARD PEACH
shell
PIE
se11 yolks v. cup su1ar
l teaspoon vanilla
1 cup whipping cream
I ~ cups light cream
1 unbaked (9·inch> ple
1 ~ pounds fresh peaches
(4 to 5 medium)
Praline Topping
In bowl, whisk egg yolks light·
ly with sugar and vanlUa. Stir in
both creams. Pour into pastry·
lined pie plate. Bake in preheat·
ed 425·degree oven 25 to 30
minutes or until tip of knife. ln·
serted in center, comes out
clean. Cool on rack; then chill at
least 2 hours. At serving lime,
peel peaches: dip into boiHng
water for about JO seconds, then
into cold. Slip off skins. Slice
and arrange decoratively on pie.
Shower with Praline Topping.
Serve at once. Makes 8 servings.
PRALINE TOPPING
Toast ~ cup slivered almonds
in 350 degree oven until golden.
Set aside. In small saucepan, br·
ing to boil 2 tablespoons water
and Y:i cup sugar. Cook until
syrup turns a light nut brown,
about 4 minutes. Add toasted
nuts. Pour at once onto baking
sheet. When cold, break up the
brittle; then pulverize in blender
or food processor. Makes about
12 cup.
Dairy sales
Dairy farming is the number
one agricultural commodity in
California with agriculture
the number one industry Dairy
rarmer s ales exceeded Sl.6
billion
SAVE25c
and gl~ your .. the ·
bel ler alle111atlve to dry clog food.
.................. ,Chunks.
Cuts .... d1 ..... chunks of··-•.••.. ..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. July 22. 1981 a . I
SAYE30¢0N
Pm1.
• 6()UNCIN' & 8EHAV1f-t. HAUt lo CUT ALONG DOTTED LINE
~~~--------sAVE30¢~~~ ---~f
ONEAm~
SIZE ~~~hompoo
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE
...... ...,J ........................... , ...
Joint
--------------AIOUT AIOUT
1 s199G.EAT I 9 DINNER ()
$5 ftft SUPE.I
e77DINNEil
0 c GOOd tor """ plecH of Juicy, golden brown Kentucky
,, Fried Chicken. plua alngle MNlngs of colt 1l1w. muhed
0 potatoes and gravy, and a roll Limit two olfera per
Z purchase coupon gOOd only for comt>ln11lon white/dark I Ofdtra. Customer paya 111 1ppllc1ble HIH tu.
030 Ollar explrH Auguat 2. 1981 1 PrlcH m•v ••ry 11 1 p1nlclp1t1nq loc•·
_ 11one Gooo only tn
wt.ere YO\I '" I th• Chicken Sandwlcll
z
GOOd tor nine plecH of Juicy, golden t>town l<Atntucky ~
F111<1 Chicken. with lour rolla, a large cote alaw, 1 large ~
maanl<I 1><>ta1oe1 and 1 ~lum gravy Limit two off.,. O
per purchaae COupon good only fOf combl,,.tlon wflllet U
d1111 orders Cuatomer paya all 1pplleable .. , .. w .
Oller exptres
Auguat 2, 1981 030
Prices may vary at par·
llclpaung locat1on1 Good
only In Southern
Cahforn1a wnere you aee
lhe Chicken Sandwich
Window Banner ~-Soulhern C1ttl0fnl1
• Wlnctow Ban,.., I
L':..:.-.~=-=---.. --
•
RON CAREY SAYS:
"Nabisco takes the great taste of
cheddar, bakes in real sourdough for delicious tasting
Better Cheddars Crackers. A San Francisco Style Snack Thin.'.'
•
. '
. ..
• ,I .
I '
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneeday, July 22. 1981
Summer ·syrup.s are fruity
Whet.her you're serv· and clnnamoo sticks for 2 cups water cheesecloth or jelly baa.
inf. piping hot walfles at s minutes. Mix su1ar l tablespoon arated When juice stops now·
a estlve brunch or fros· and water, boll to 260 lemon peel lng, squeeze to extract
ty tee cream for a late degrees. Add apple juice 3 cups water r e maining juice and
nt1ht snack, sweet sum· and com syrup to suaar 4 cups sugar puJp from berries. Mix
mer syrups give either syrup. Boil S minutes. 2 tablespoons lemon suaar and 4 cups water.
fare a fresh new twist. Remove cinnamo n juice Boll to 260 degrees. Add
Three winnin1 syrup sticks. Add lemon Juice. Prepare home can· berry juice to su1ar
recipes capture the uni· Carefully pour into hot ning jars and lids ac· syrup. Boil for l minute.
que taste or luscious jars, leaving \4 inch cording to manufac· Add lemon juice .
strawberries, plump head space. Adjust caps. lurer's instructions. Carefully pour Into hot
blueberries, and. mellow Process In bolllna Remove stems, r inse, jars. leaving \4 inch
apples. For future use, water bath canner for 20 and drain bluebe rries. head space. Adjust caps.
the syrups must be minutes. Yield: two 26 Crush berries, add 2 Process In bolllna
processed in a water ounce juice decal\ter cups water and lemon water bath canner for 20
bath canner before Jars. peel. Simmer 5 minutes. minutes. Yield : two 26
storing. After they are BLUEBERRY SYRUP Carefully drain through ounce juice decanter
I' .. • • •
Strawberrie•, blueber~
Tie• and appl.t1 are
trana/ormed Into de·
light/ul If/TUPI /or pan~
cakes /or deaserta.
opened, they must be 2 quarts blueberries sever a I I a ye r s o r Jara. s t o red I n t h e .-------------------__.:..-----------------------------------------------
refrigerator. E s pec ially a sum·
merlime favorite. the
fla vo r of S Wt'el
strawberries can be en·
joyed anytime with
versatile Strawberry
Syrup. Beyond its usual
place atop pancakes or
waffles, Strawberry
Syrup is found in a
vari e t y or popular
treats.
Top a few scoops of
your favorite ice cream
with fresh berries and a
swirl of Strawberry
Syrup for an unbeatable
homemade sundae. Or,
mix the ice cream and
syrup with a lllUe club
soda for a delicious, old·
fashioned soda.
Sin c e blueberry
season is so short, you'll
want to take advantage
of those few weeks when
blueberries are at their
peak. Plan ahead to
savor their sweetness in
mid winter months by
preserving your own
Blueberry Syrup. For an
elegant touch to
breakfast or brunch, it's
nice to have on hand for
any special occasion.
Try topping delicate
slices of sponge cake
with Blueberry Syrup
and a dollop of whipped
cre~m.
Using apple juice, you
can make delightful Ap·
pie-Cinnamon Syrup
anytime of the year.
Refreshing apple flavor.
accented with a touch of
cinnamon will please the
whole family as a delec·
table change to their
brel\,kfas t menu. This
lightly spiced syrup is
especially good on
French toast or drizzles
over a freshly baked ap·
pie.
Having develop~d
these recipes in their
own lest kitchens. home
economists recommend
s toring the syrups in
their 26 ounce juice de·
canter jars. The reusa·
ble pouring spout quick·
ly converts jars into con·
venlent servers that go
dire ctly from
refrigerator to table.
STRAWBERRY SYRUP
211\i quarts strawber·
ries (ab out 10 c ups
cleaned>
l'h cups water
1 piece or lemon peel
11,"l cups water
21,A;i cups sugar
3"2 cups corn syrup
2 tablespoons lemon
juice
Prepare home can·
ning jars and lids ac-
cord l ng to manufac-
turer1s instructions.
Cr ush cleaned berries.
Add 11,A;i cups water and
lemon rind. Simmer S
minutes. Carefully drain
through several layers
or cheesecloth to extract
juice. Mix s ugar and
wat e r . Boil to 260
degrees. Add berry
juice, and corn syrup lo
s ugar syrup. Boil 4
minutes. Add lemon
juice. Carefully pour in·
lo hot jars, leaving v,
inch head space. Adjust
caps.
Process in boiling
water bath canner for 15
minutes. Yield: two 26
ounce juice decanter
jars.
APPLE-CINNAMON
SYRUP
6 cups apple juice
3 cinnamon slicks.
broken
4 cups water
S cups sugar
3 cups com syrup
14 cup lemon juice
Prepare home can-
nin1 Jars and Uds ac·
cording to manufac·
lurer's lttslrucUona.
Simme!'......!2J>le juice
L IV ELY S PINACH
SALAD
The 1weetne11 of a
rres h Bartleu. pear addl
a new flavor dimension
to a piquant spinach
salfd . Slice a fresh
Bartlett lnto your next
splaach salad and toes
wltb hot bacon dre.slna. au• BAKED PEAU
Quarter f'resb .Bartlett
peau Into a 1bllow
baklnt dish. Sprinkle
wltll brOWn 1u11r, dot wttb butter and add a
few table1poc>1U ot rum.
Bake la a bot OYetl Jutt untU pean.,.. tender.
#
Lower Prices Overall
IN THE EVENT OF A
WORK STOPPAGE
MARKET BASKET WILL BE OPEN!
Triple-The-Difference ---
Guarantee!
IU• I\ O•• •Uhl ll•S #QllJ!j UI o• 1110111( 11 ....... U hff '"' .. c;.o 10 .....
OfM(I c.owwf lilHO ... l SU'flllMUlfl UIO (0111,Uf HllCU IM1$ 'llflh o .. '"' , •••
•ff•S tO•n' 011111 OJ lACM •If•••• If USID lllf t .. f COIOlillhSOtt , tr INll,i •OU.l
1$ LOWt• t•1 .. c; •Cu• 1Ullll1tfO •OCff U S•t l •tt1llll' UPI AllD f11tf 01.-1• SIO•f s "'ICU fO ..... ., uo• I ••O Wf WIH ,,, •Ou fllU"I , .. , O•UI Jf'ICf ··~"'" YOU MAY FINO A FEW ITEMS OUT OF STOCK OR IN SHORT SUPPLY IF LABOR PROBLEMS MATERIALIZE IN THE
FOOD INDUST RY BE ASSURED THAT MARKET BASKET Will MAKE EVERY EFFORT TD KEEP AOEOln'TE SUPPLIES ~l~=~=~:.~.·.::·.:i.~ll~t U1 ff( \IOU 1ou rco tuu•hOt.&·•'"~ (I~ UI \•O•f
OF PRODUCTS ROLLING TO OUR STORES WE URGE YOU TO SHOP EARL YI
CRISP
CUCUMBERS u ~ 19
N .. l~WHI 1.29 ~,.. Blueberries 11·11 , ..
R1Pt N lwHI ~~ Honeydew Melons " . 39
~,.. to""' 2° 4.85 Smirnoff Vodka
.
All OUANTllY RIGHI$
ft£5UVEO NO SAlf
10 OUlEU Oft FOii
llES~E 011
COMMEllCtAl use
ROSARITA
REFRIED
BEAIS
An .. ttdVanthU
'1' Rice-A-Ron i
'l~ Gr1tnOW11
Niblets Corn
H! Royat l'ln•
Pink Salmon
32-0Z. JAR
·~.52
6 111·01 .61 p•q
1101 .39 ti •
15 &·II 1.89 "" ..,...,, * ........... C'*' 3 2 9 ""'' ' '-Taylor Calif . Wine :,,a • il+ Tomato Ketchup '!:' 1. 49
lllCTAll llOH..1 aHI ... MO IMlllOUHDY 011 Wlllll CllMLIS
ILIADll
IT. WllE I.I
LH.
,,
219
WISHBONE
ITAUAI
DRESSING ~ .. ao
SAVE UP TO ~:~30% WITH
IO·FRILLS •• ..,Pl.CTI
.73
1.95
:::.
.66
f.49
.~: 1.59
.37
.85
rf!ICES HfECflVE WED
JUl Y f1 THAU TUE$
JULY 18 1911
411L 211 CRISCO
SHOITElllHi CAI
~¥ Mllkll luitl 30 Get 1.29 Trash Bags 10-tl ,.,
'~ ... ,. .. 2.65 Corn Oil IHI •n
Wlt"d ™ 1.69 Charcoal Lighter u .. ,
"" ''(! f1111n T tit I tp .93 Apple Juice 11·01
""
FROZEN MINUTE MAIO
ORAllE
JUICE lf.IZ.11 g
CAI
' MEAT FAMILY PACKS REDUCED
5c PER LI . OR MOREi
PAMll Y PACK w11t11 B! Frying Chicken Legs ... 64
~FAMILY 'ACK IMt ClllK• 2'1:!'7-Bone Steak
~FAMILY PACK ....,H'"'
~Sirloin Chops
~ FAMtl Y PACK 1tet
var Cube Steak
~ FAMtl Y PACK lttt l•lf• lm
7!.lt!' Chopped Steak
~FAMILY PACK 1tt1 ..._"
?la' Chuck Steak
~HI AVG
COUNTRY CLUB u149 WHOLE IOIELESS
TURKEY HAM
~~ Bttl lo11t In U19e End
Rib Steak .. 1. 98
ili llhtUI luktl Cerllff
Beef Brisket "1. 59
OIUI Mayer ;~~ 1. 49 Wieners
~ • j>~~ kc'h~ji~"" .. 1.49
AVAILAllE Olll Y Ill
¥ii1r•1n.ii1 3 5 g :HALIBUT LI.
, ADVEllTIHl IUM AVAllAllltlY GUAllAllTU
l&t• .. 1"411 .. ,., ,, ... _. " .. fl(""'' .. "' .... ' ... , .. I "' ll<• • •-fltAS-11 lltf" tHl'fClllCAl\T .. 111• 1 .. I •I II., .. _ .. , .. Ill =...:.· ~·.~,::i...-ii11"'"m.:o:.: c:c: :ru:c~.·11~·.:i: ~Mtlr t•I trtl•llllt tit• ~I lllf U.Ofllll NICI WllM"' It .. H
(OPH~T 101
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Wednffdav. July 22. 1981
Diet might control arthritic probkrns
BJ .JVNE llOTR
Lone years ot teatina
and study have led Dr,
Norman Cblldan to
b elieve that mo at
artbritJc problems may
be controlled by diet.
The diet recommended
excluaea the uae or the
group or foods and
tobacco known as the
nlghtahade planta.
Childers, who 111 pro-
whtch tbe book la bued.
More lbaD '72 percent of
them h•ve recovered
comrletely Or lbOWD
mar ed lmprovemedt
dependln1 on ,t.be de·
velopmental •lite of
artbrltia in the acll,
neck. cheat or thnb1.
The book lnclude1 a
amalJ sect.ion of menua
and reclpea that can
s u batitute for the
popular tomato that II
ever-present In our food
auprily. Here are aeveral
rec ~ from Childer'• boo that were de-
veloped by
LeBoeuf.
Llncl a
CA&ATO
<S•Nd&tl&e for Tomato)
4 pound.I fresh car·
rota
2 lar&e fresh beeta
SPECIAL DIETS food processor. Uae lbl•
mixture as a tomato
substitute In your own
l"' CUPI water recipes and In thote that
2lemons follow. Makes approx-
Cut carrot.a and beets lmately 8 cupe sauce.
into Ndiona and cook ln
water at high tem -CATSUP
perature in a covered l cup carato
~t for 10 minutes. Add 2 tablespoons water
Ice of the two lemons Ya teaspoon salt
and mash all with a 5 tabl es poons
1 tablespoon honey 1 larae onion, Combine all ln1re-
\4 teupooo onlon chopped dlenu i n a lar1e
powder , "' cup Parmesan saucepan, Cook at hl1h
Combine all ldtre· c~eese temperature for "' bour. dlents ln blender and 2 tabl espoon• 1Urrlng frequently,
blend at low speed for 60 oregano Sauce may be thinned
seconds . Mailes 1 ~ 2 teaspoons garlic by adding water. Blend,
cups. powder if smoother consistency t teupoon basll 11 desired. Sauce may be
CA&ATO SAUCE lh tea.spoon aalt used for any recipe call·
6 cups carato ~ teaspoon black Ing for r:fular tomato
1 cup water pepper sauce. M es about 6~
Juice from 1 lemon cup1 sauce.
fessor of horticulture at -------------------....:.. __________ __;:;,.._ __________ ~------------------------potato masher or use a vinegar \4 cup olive oil
Rutaers University in
New Jersey, bases his
statements on 100 years
of documented research
with the white potato
and tobacco, and more
recently with shtdle11
that include the tomato,
eggplant and all kinds of
peppers except black pepper.
He has written a
paperback book explain·
ing case histories and
how they have been
helped by the simple
a voldance of these
plants from the cUet, and
in the case or tobacco,
from its use by the
arthritic patient.
Published by Somentet
Press in Somerville,
N.J .. "A Diet to Stop
Arth ritis : the
Nightshades and Ill
Health." contains an ex·
planation of why and
how to eliminate the
nightahade planta from
the life of the arthritic
person.
Childers is a well·
t rained scientist and
makes no rash claims in
this book.
H e s lat es that
although the nightshade
food planta are impor-
tant and widely popular
round the world, less
than 10 percent of. the
population are sensltlve
to them.
The nightshade plants
all are closely related
member s of the
Solanaceae fa mily of
plants, some of which
are highly toxic as the
black a nd deadly
nightshades. More than
5,000 patients in the
U.S.A., Canada, Carib·
bea n and Eu r ope
participated in a study
of the nightshades, upon
Fast, e a sy
peach tips
NOw that most fresh
peaches are defuzzed
before being sent to
market, ma ny peach
lovers enjoy eating their
peaches skin and all.
However, if a recipe
calls for peeled peaches,
use the tomato method.
Put peaches into boil·
Ing water for approx-
imately 30 seconds, then
transfer Immediately to
cold water. The skiJis
will slip right off.
To keep peaches
bright and fresh looking,
dip in an ascorbic acid
mixture or citrus juice.
PEACH PUREE
For quick and simple
peach puree, halve and
pit fresh peaches, un-
peeled.
Slice into blender con-
tainer with a dash or
lemon juice. Puree can
be frozen in ice cube
l.rays for later use or in-
corporated Into a varie-
ty or frosty salads,
deuerts and cooler
drinks.
BAKING PEACHES
Bake peaches into a
pie, into tarts, cobbler
or upside-down cake .
It· s easy lo peel and
quarter fresh peaches
for your favorite baked ·
peach recipes.
Whole, unbaked sum-
mer fruit plea also
freeze beauUfully. Place
them wicovered in the
freezer witll firm. Then
wrap in plutic freezer
ba11 and seal, label and
date.
When r eady to use,
don't thaw lirst, Just pop frozen pie ibto the
oven and bake 10 to 12
minutes lon1er than
usual. Or, if preued for
time, just freeze tbe
fresh fruit fUlln1 In
freeaer-proof containers.
When the cravtn1 for
fresh 1ummer fruit
strikes, you'U be ready.
Simply thaw the fUlln11 mau a quick crutt ana
enj•Y tb• flavor . and 1~1 only a freah
peaeh pie hat to otfer.
8 A&8ECUE D PSACllD
P•acb baJves ar• d•·
UclCNI barbecued. RolJ
tbem la brown 1u1ar
with a lbU• ol ....... , then thnad OD ... ....
and trtrl unW the .. ., earlllllMI. Sen -.
companllOaat t•
barbecued meat, ftiib or
poultry.
fJllAlll
Mll:lllffle
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APPLETIME I APPLESAUCE ..
nu llOUfjO
90HE IN ~
• 1 ••L8
• IHOffTENINQ ' 09 CRISCO ..................... ~oz 2
~RSOAP C f ~AFEIUARD ........... ~oz 48
.. 30-CT •2•7
STATER BROS. SLICED AMERICAN SPREAD ... I PET RrTZ FROZEN ILICIERRY,PEACH OR CHERRY • 179 C•ILER. .. . . .. . .. 2tr0z
I IPPLEN JUICE
B.DE
COKE.TU 01 IPllTE . H.
'1.29 I
•-.r •mm ...... .., •-·
.12-0z96c
CUD lmT 1tt'f ...................... ,.,,~ •1.11
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ltOllnlHIOVA
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l.'2" ... •27•
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'"°" 'llODN LI ••• •11111•
•••••• HAM
KRUSE SHANK PORTION
t I 09LB
Mn .. •n•• Ll•1" Ll11"
FAUTLESS T~HUP
FABRIC FINISH "'UlnllS
liRAIO l DID
.• ~Ir
>aoz 51.14
1 $11$11111
WllAT WAFERS
GLAMORENE 3:1~~'o
DIAMOND FOIL t
ZEE llAPKINS FAMILY PA~
ORAllGE JUICE VITAPAKT
CHEESE IUIAn CflACllEll llAAR£l ~Aft CHEoo.\11 llflCll
280Z
51.89
l!»SO n 53.28
llOGT $1.&&
6"-0Z
51.97
~ $1.39
·~z 52.87
·~z 52.119
SHARP CHEDDAR LAKlTOLAM 2~Z 54.29
m Paas FISI nas .~·
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TUlTI FAUITIIWllD a FllUm llAltU ..OT•.
PEPSI COLA ~~N~~N ' 11112~Z 53.89
MILKMAll MILK ~· I --·~r 51.63
FIGURlllES :i~a::?~ I ,~z 51.59
REALDIJI JUICE . uoi9r
STOKELY BWIS E~.~ ' 11-0ZW
'!!r.~-~ltllT OMNOC~ s119 AJUll .. A&WllOOTIU1' 2-l
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12.39
Cl e Onange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wtdneaday, Juty 22, 1911
·Simplif' hmneh menu
A brunch la a ctiarm-
tna way to entertain.
Gather trtendl to1etber for a fe1tlve mld-
mornin1 party that's
easy to do and fun to
have. Timely tips from
the home economists at
Ball Corporation on how
to put the brunch
together will slmpllry
planning and eliminate
some last minute prep-
aration.
Three recipes have
been develop ed
speclfically with
brunches in mind.
Strawberry Grape
Freezer Jam pairs the
two top vote getters in
an easy to make spread.
Lemon Mint Jelly
com bines zesty fresh
lemons and refreshing
mint in a aparkllnl clear
jelly.
Ambrosia Conserve is
an adaptation or that
p erennial Southern
favorite combo or
oranges and coconut
with a sprinkling or
maraschino cherries
and almondf.
Once the recipes have
been made, set a conve-
nient date for the brunch
and invite a small group
or compatible friends.
For openers you might
serve strawberries or
raspberries au natural,
sliced peaches in cream,
or a macedolne or fresh
fruits laced with a Ii·
queur. For the main
course, light airy crepes
mak e an excellent
brunch time entree.
For your guests,
there's something ir-
resistible about dis·
covering what's Inside
the delicate wrapping.
Our first entree choice is
a creamy cheese blintz
topped with luscious
homemade Ambrosia
Conserve. Or how about
a seafood or salmon
mixture stuffed inside a
feathery crepe, and
served with sprightly
Lemon Mint Jelly? Or
make crepes the French
way. Suzette style, fold -
ing the circles in fourths
and pour warmed
Strawberry Grape Jam
on top. With whatever
you decide to serve, a
platter or crispy bacon
curls, count.ry 11ausa1e
links aQd grllled ham
slices are sure to please.
Don't forget Iota of
ste aming , freshl y
brewed coffee ror your
guests as they linger
over your culinary de-
lights. or course. the star or
the morning festivities
will be y9ur own "put
up" topping. Treat your
friends to a jar as they
leave . A gift of
hom emade jam is
always welcomed and
app~eciated no matter
what the season.
AMBROSIA
CONSERVE
l fresh pineapple
2 oranges
S cups sugar
1 cup coconut
1 cu p c h opped
maraschino cherries
1h cup s li ve r ed
almonds
Prepare home can-
ning jars and lids ac-
cording to manufa c -
turer's instructions.
Peel pineapple, re-
move eyes and chop In
food processor or
blender. Grate peel and
extract juice from
oran1es . Combine
pineapple, oranae peel
and Juice In large (6 to 8
quart) ,saucepot. Sim-
mer 10 minutes. Add
sugar and cook to jelly-
ing point (220 degrees).
Remove from heat: stir
in coconut, cherries and
almonds. Carefully ladle
into hot jars, leaving I/•
inch head space. Adjust
caps.
Process 15 minutes In
boiling water bath can·
ner. Yield : at.wt four
12-ounce jan.
LEMON MINT IELLY
1 ~ cupe f~h lemon
Julee, 1tra1Md
l~ CUPI water
1~ ttupoon1 mint
'extract I
l ~e (l~ ounce) pecUn
.,,,.eupllqll'
Prepare ~· can· nlnl Jan aM -lcM ae-
cordln1 to .... fac·
turer•1 lnat ructlona.
Jaf't 1bou1d be covered wtUt water and bolled 10
to 11 minutes to
tterlllse.
C.mblne lemon juice,
water and mint t:xtract
la • medium (4 to I
•Ull"l) launpol. lt1r ln ~; ~ to a hall,
l~FI
rolllng boll over blgb
heat. Add 1u1ar; return
to a tull. rollln1 boll.
Boll hard 1 minute, 1Ur-
rln1 constanUy. CareruJ-
1 y ladle lnto bot,
sterillr.ed Jara, leavln1
1ti inch head apace. Ad·
just caps. Invert Jara for
a few seconds; stand up-
right to cool.
Yield: about rour 8·
ounce Jars.
STllAWBEaav
GRAPE FREEZER
JAM
l cup cru•hed
1trawberrlea (about 1
pint )
1 cup un1weetened
1rape Julee
1 tablespoon lemon
juice
4 cups 11.11ar
1 PJCka1e (1~
ounce) powdered pectin
~cup water
Prepare rre411er Jart
and ltd• aceordtnt to
manutacturer'a tnttruc· tJona.
Combine crUtbed
str awberrlea, 1r1pt
Julee and lemon JUiee ln
1 l1t1e mlxln1 bo•l.
dd aupr; mix well and
ltt stand 10 minute..
Combine pectln and
waler ln a small
uuctpan. Brina to a
boll: boll 1 mlAute. Add
pectln to fruit mixture;
1Ur 4 minutes. Pour tnto
treeaer Jara. leavlns "'-
lnch head apace. Adjust
c11)1.
Let atand 2' hours; tb.n atort ln the treerer.
Vltld : about five 8-
ounce Jan.
IBUDDIC 57 . ~n!;!£~2 M.~~~~ .
S YarlttleS I
!"DIET RITE OR 81 3 ~R.C. COLA
1Ltr Btl .
!"JOHNSTON'S 29 d> YOCURT
IV~ llOZ Cupe
BLADE CUT
CHUCK STEAK
8onoeo INf lb •
RIB EYE
FILET
~s llOnOed lfff soencer .. 298
BALL PARK
FRANKS
MHt or 8"' 11 Oz PllO
159 ~ ..
TREE SWEET
DRINKS
Cupe Nrrv or TrOPICll llUnCt1
Sii PXll, I Ot ~
.89 :n.
WHOLE BEEF
BRISKET
B~S 8onOfO Bttf M UIS
SHANK 121 ~.,~,!~2!! HAM lO
TUF-N·READY
PAPER TOWELS
70 SI llOll
.65 ~
BACARDI
RUM
Amtitr or Sllwr, eo lln>Of.
1 H ltr "'
999 ::..
ALMA N
WINES
K•8"1JS ..... r.m. ........
Kc) ltU)'I> ·~ h(m\ p~'d (\(ft "~~, IMll '"''" ~(f)'dl)' dh.ct1t1111 ~,.,,.•mutt ol
"'"'uf'llCtv~' •~pnqr)· ,.,..-i. ... 1
1lln•1111m1 or (11\-Cl"k,..1 if"''*~· VM11 fi!MI
f111nd~ nt Ir, h> i~ t\n) Ii•~'"'""'"'·
\
..
!"CRANCE i JUICE
Mll'Vt\t Oly Ff'OZl!fl
Conctntr ltt
!"BURGIE
iBEER
12htl
Enj~a~r1l11
brunch bu home·
canning fM1dou.I
ipreadl which become
port of the meal. Tr1J
A mbrolia Conierve,
Lemon Mint Jell11 or
Strawberry Grape
Freezer Jam.
,, .. ~.79
.... ,..279
!!..~L BROIL .. 199 ROUND
STEAK
IOnleln ..... lftf .. 178
LAROE END
RIB ROAST
londldlMf .. 188 CROSS RIB lb197 ROAST
'°"""5 IOnOIO ... oiuca
'
7
HONEYDEW HAWAIIAN LAROE
MELONS PINEAPPLE PAPAYAS
A.II of fllf¥0f. Lb. Wfl.~DCll Cltt Of t'1t Tl'OCJICS, Eacf\
.25:m .98 ~ .69 :-
FRESH ITAUAN RUSSET
CAULIFLOWER .!2~!~ POTATOES
DllcMt N¥0r, UL US NO 1, 11eitn9 Sia, Ul
.49 :m ' .35 ~. .35 b
-~..__ ... y::i:--tt-~ ....... ., -...... ,,,. ,._ "" '-'""''*...._ .......... """'•--c-
£11 Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, July 22, 1981 __________________ ...;. __________________________________ ------------------------------------------------------.-.--------------------------------------------
• Blintz brunch features fresh, juicy peaches
What a beUer way to
loaat the summer
season than with a bub-
bly champagne fruit cup
and a blintz brunch
featuring everyone's
favorite summertime
fruit, fresh, juicy
peaches.
Brunches are an ideal
way to entertain. Much
l of the preparation can
be done ln advance free-
-ing the afternoon and
evening for other events
and activities.
The recipes featured
here are eaally prepared
and need only be com-
pleted with ·a simple esg
and sausage dish, plenty
of well-chilled cham-
pagne followed by mugs
of fragrant, steaming
black coffee.
Peach RosU, remlnis·
cent of the Swiss
version, is a ~risp potato
"ca ke " like dish
e nhanced by crunchy
bacon pieces, sauteed to
golden brown and em-
bellis hed with warmed
glossy fresh peaches.
The blintzes take on a
new and different
character as flour
tortillas replace the
usual blintz wrapper.
The fresh peach sauce
can be made in advance
and the blintzes Cried
j ust before guests ar-
rive. Then, simply keep
warm for awhile until
ready to serve.
There now are more
than 130 varieties or
pea c hes grown in
California with major
varieties being shipped
throughout the season
from May into October.
Ongoing breeding pro·
grams have resulted in
improved varieties that
pack and travel well and
are more resistant to
disease and injury than
so m e of the older
varieties. In addition,
they also produce
greater yields and
higher quality fruit.
Select your peaches
carefully and treat them
tenderly. They shouJd be
kept at room tem -
perature until slightly
soft . Peaches taste best
unchilled, but for those
that become too ripe, be
sure to store in the
refrigerator and serve
within a day or two.
CHAMPAGNE FRUIT
CUP
3 fres h peaches.
cubed
1 fresh Bartlett
pear.cubed
1 fresh plum, sliced
1~ cup dry cham-
pagne or ginger ale
Toss fruit together in
large bowl. Pour cham-pagne over . Serve
promptly. Makes 4 serv· ings.
SWISS PEACH ROSTI
2 fresh peaches
l pound baking
potatoes
Marinated
fruit bowl ·
Summer is that
specjal time to enjoy a
variety of fresh fruit•-
strawberries and can-
taloupe and melons and
apples and bananas.
And exotic fruits rrom
all over the world such
as Australia's kiwi and
papaya from the Carib·
bean.
Add your own special
touch. and complement
the marinatlnt fruit
with triple sec. It's tbat.
little extra that ineans a
truly refreshin1 and de·
Lectable treat.
MA81NATED F8UIT
BOWL
1 pint strawberries,
sliced
l ~ cups seedless
greed crapes
1 cup h oneydew
balls
2 kiwis, peeled and
sliced
2 oranges, peeled
and sliced
1 apple, cored and
sliced
2 bananas, peeled
and sliced
Y• cup triple sec
2 tablespoons honey
1 tablespoon Ume
juice
Mlntleaves
Mix all fruits, except
ban anas, ln lar1e bowl.
Blend triple sec, honey
and lime juice; pour
over fruit and to11.
Rerrl1erate about 2
houri. J•t before "". Ina. add ban.nu. Ml:a
well. Garnl*ll wttb mint leues. a to JO Mntqa.
Note: Any eombla.·
Uon of fr•b MAIOGal
fnaill CM be UMd. Allo,
equally d•ll.floua
marinated wHb
amaretto.
4 slices bacon, diced
'Al teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon butter
2 tab l espoons
powdered suear
Plain yoiurt
Dice I,\ peach; slice
remainder. Peel and
coarsely grate potatoes.
Squeeze out and blot dry
on paper towels. Saute
bacon ln 10.lnch skillet
over medium-high heat
until crisp. Remove
bacon from skillet with
slotted spoon and com-
bine with grated
potatoes, diced peach
and pepper. Heat fat ln
skillet. Add potato mix·
lure and pat aently to
form a cake. Cook over
high heat for 2 to 3
minutes or until brown.
Reduce heat to low and
cook another 2 to 3·
minutes. Turn to brown
other side by inverting It
onto plate and sliding In·
to pan. Raise heat to
high and cook 1 to 2
minutes. Ir necessary,
reduce heat to low and
cook seve ral more
minutes until potatoes
are tender. Turn into
servine dish. Cover with
foil and.keep warm.
syrup form s and
peaches are hot. Spoon
over potato cake .
Garnish with parsley lf
2 pacta1es (3
ounces each> cream
cheese
Brunches are an ideal way
to entertain.
2 teupoons su1ar
~ teupoon vanilla
Ve1etab1e oil .. nour tortillas (8-
inch diameter)
1 fresh peach, sliced
Melt butter In skillet.
Add sliced Pf'aches and
sprinkle with powdered
sugar . Cook over
medium-high heat, stir-
ring constantly for 2 to 3
minutes until a glossy
des ired. Serve with
yogurt. Makes 4 serv-
ings.
Fresh Peach Sauce
Cream cottage cheese.
cream cheese, 1u1ar
and vanilla until well
blended. Heat lightly
BUNTZES WITH oiled 10-incb skillet.
FRESH PEACH SAUCE Briefly fry a tortilla,
lcupcottagecheese turning once, over
medlum beat Just untll
soft. Drain on paper
lowela. Portion \4
cheese mi:ature in
center. Top ·wun one
fourth peacb slices. Fold
ln two sides, partially
coverine ftlJ.lq. Roll up
to enclose fUUna and
make a rectaneulaa
package. Repeat with
rem ainlng filllna and
tortillas. Add oil as
needed to skillet. Fry
filled tortillas over
medium-low heat until
brown on all sides .
Drain on paper towels.
Serve with warm Fresh
Peach Sauce. Makes 4
servinp. Reelpe may be
doubled ll desired.
f'realt Peace 8Hce:
Combine ~ cup water, v. cup sugar and 2
tablespoons lemon Julee
in saucepan. Bring to a
boil. Boil uncovered 5
minutes. Remove from
heat. Stir ln 2 cups thin-
ly sliced fresh peaches
<about 2 peaches l.
f/iifJe~
LIDO
~~~~~~
We accept ALL .coup·ons
'lrom other super-markets!
llMll t t(,HI\ ll\f IV(O NO ~Ali 10 Co-llCIA( Ot•lftt ()II
WH()ll\AlllS !>OM( \()ti a--\ N()r "'""''"''ll , .. V(Nrl)ltA COIJ .. " n .. ~ .id only tffacti ... ot ~ El ltonch-
: 1. Expired coupon• not accepted. 2. Continuity promotions & grocery purchase coupons not accepted ..
3. Only manufacturer's coupons of $1 .00 or less con be doubled. '4. Substitution of items on monufocture~'s coupo~~ proh1b1ted
by low. s. Value of all items on retailer coupon determined by our shelf price. 6. If we do not stock the item spec1f1ed on other
food market's coupon, we will •ubstitule on item of equivolent volue. 7. liquor, tobocco & dairy products e•cluded. 8. Sub•ect ond ~lido.
WI WILCO• FOOD 11a•• •H01t•••s to limited imprinted on eoch coupon. 9. Offer Good July 23-29, 1981
GROU DBEEF
E.lt. Leon. Mot to bceed 22'Mo Fot
GROUND BEEF & PATTIES ...... te. 1.89
E a Oqipad s..oks• DoetNotE.aceed 1 S'Mo f.ot
LEANEST GROUND BEEF ..... te. 2.19
E.lt. With Fredi fwt
MEAT LOAF ............................. te. 1.89
WHOU
TOP SIRLOIN
170'1
Q-TIPS ...... .93
LOOK GOOD-FEEL GOOD DIET AIDS
DIUREX 42'5...... . ........... 2 .29
THINZ SPAN 21 '5 ............ 2.67
DIETAC MAX. STR. 20'5 ..... 3.24
DIETAC REG. 14'5 .......... 2.73
--··--
DOES NOT EXCEED 30% FAT
FRESHLY GROUND
3-LB. PKG.
LIMIT 2 PKGS.
E .R Own Rtady
HAM LOAF ..
E.R Coori.e. Nor to E.ceed 30% For
GROUND CHILI BEEF
E.11. Hot & Sweet
ITALIAN SAUSAGE
Fr~h Poc1fic Ftlltt
LB 2.19
LB 1.89
LB
RED SNAPPER
E R Pork & Seotonong
BRATWURST SAUSAGE .. . . l8. 1.49
El llond•o
RANCH STYLE BACON ... ta 1.29
1.49
.......... LB 1.59
FitUH ••• SOLi
FroienlOefro.ted Coolted & Pttled
tB 2 . 99 COCKTAIL IH•IM• te 4. 99
ftoun/Oefrotttd Centtr Cul Northern
HAUBUT STIAKS .....
f 1oten Oei•olted Stufftd .. 2 01 Eo
LB. 3.89 MATLAW CLAMI , ... S for 1.00
GIANT TIDE
Pre Prtced I. I 8 Ant Vor
FRITO DORITOS ..
Kroft CrflOmB. 16-oi
CUCUM ER DRESSING
K'£"cot·P1nto~Elt I0-01 ERN'S P SERVES
Blendtd• Fruit ot the &onom 8 01
KNUDSEN YOGURT
Aul Flovors 64 or
MINUTE MAID DRINKS
Creomtr ... I I -01
COFFEE MATE
~ C•ock•r Fom1IXFudge 21 s 01
BROWNIE Ml ......
INCL .
15c OFF
49 oz.
LIMIT 2
.89
1.23
.69
.. 43
.95
1.29
. 1.25
• 69
Kibble N B•h 10 lb.
DOG FOOD
Cop 'N' Crunch 16 or
CEREAL
Reg 01 Diel 2 l11er
SEVEN UP
II~ or Diel, 2 lorer
A & W OR SUNKIST
......... 3.35
1.78
1.39
1.39
New Nob1Ko Snock Crocktr, 7-01. 99 BETTER CHEDDARS .................. .
Honty• Cinnomon, 16-or.
SUNSHINE GRAHAMS ............... 93
12 or Con1 3 19 12 PACK COKE • SPRITE.......... •
NECTARINES LARG139c JUICY
GOLDEN LB.
. EA.• 19
iTOi.n.'i• I 6 5 lllTRlll .. ,,.o,. •
Ploin, !90. Onlon ... 12 Ga• 73 LWHaAGILI .................. .
Apple• StrowtM..!2'.!~'· M•I. IMITR'I CllDll ......... 99
Gr.en Giont. 9-ot.
MACA• .. .a Cllllll .......... 73
KnudMn low Cal o...t. \; ·Ool.
IMIAUMI ..................... 1.49
Foney
RAUAll IOUAIH .............. la .• 29
IFC IMO ... """9,. ho I 0 SI or 11\o
ROASTED BARL.EY .. . .. .. . • 79
If( 16 Of "'9
MUNG BEANS............ I .09
I 2-01. Chub Kor.her
HIBRIW
NATIONAL 2 39 IALAMI........... e
........ MfCM. I.A-..... ' ,,. .......... ,.....,. u.wv ..... , ..............
...,. ...... _,. ... ... -~" .. "'""'"' r-. ....... ~ ... _... "-1 ,,. ... v,. .. c'"'"' -.... -·---· •••r 9IM11 _._,.. euae
JOJ Yoe I* °''" ·-t1>4 • ....._ °" .... ,..._.. ............ Mell
r
1S...r'-tt1c. ..... 1 ................. .......... "'° w c.i.. ...... , 11 .. o..,... 0. ... 1
................ ..... ,. .....
uu lett...,.. .,..... , .... ...,..v.-...c.,...,i
-\ r ·
U S 0 A Cho.ca 8"1, Blode Cur
CHUCK STEAKS
U S D A Choice Stal
CHUCK 7-BONE ROAST
ta I .09
lS I .39
U S.D A. Choiu 8"1 8ontlau Rolled Chuck 2 49 SHOULDER CLOD ROAST ... te. •
FRllH SLICED
BEEF LIVER
Slunnad & 8 9 C 0...eoned ....
6 Pock Rag. or Dork . 12 01 8rl
LOWINBRAU ... 2.29
Vollo Srtnlo 750-ml
LAM BRUSCO..... .. .. 1. 79
Ploon lob@! 'Wtlite or Gold 1 7S ltr
TEQUILA . 8.89
. l
I ·-:"( ,,._.......,,.,.-,.;;;;,. ..
I ' • ' I J
f
•
I
•
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•
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hi
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. ·-·
•
--_. . .... . ....__ -----...... ---... -. ----·-...... -.. , .. , ___ . --. . . . -.
How about ... a reliable mother's helper. One that comes to
your home regularly, every day. One that offers new ideas on
child rearing and teaching. Household organization , time
management and budgeting. Food, nutrition and health.
Consumer issues and saving money. And one that's always
available, at your convenience. Where can you find a mother's
helper that terrific? You're looking at one! This newspaper is a
real help to homemakers ... because it's filled with practical
information that makes the job easier and saves time. Of
course, you'll also keep up with the news in this community
and around the world. Like most busy women, you can use a
little mothering, too. So turn the pages and help yourself.
What's In It for you? The answer
appears on every page of
• II
642-4321
•
•
I
• ..... -. e '
•
I
I
Dally Pilat
WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1981
CLASSI Fl ED 04
BVD TVCKER
USC's John Robinson
will enjoy the action
at the Rose Bowl
Saturday. D2.
If Haden goes down, so will the Rams
lt was 12 months ago, to the day. that Ray
Malavasi would stomp angrily around in circles
lamenting the tendencies of the outside world to
nitpick about the quarterback controversy
peculiar to his football team.
Ray Malavasi has no quarterback controversy to
ripple the calm of this place. Ferragamo has gone
abroad and Haden is wtiolty incumbent and a guy
is liable to ask Malavasi about the defensive
tackles.
pathy for Ma lavasi having to make the ap·
propriate decision.
"That question may be ahead of itself."
Malavasi says.
What the coach means is that it may be
necessary for him to arrive at a decision without
any terrible fate befalling Haden. Malavasi will
have to choose between Lee and Rutledge as the
No. 2 person. if it is impractical to carry three
quarterbacks. It may also be impossible to keep
three quarterbacks if management concludes
needs are greater in other areas.
it a ctually confronts him, at which lime he will
seclude himself with his head in his hands for
several days.
Lee is listed ahead of Rutledge in the early
book. Lee 1s a transient of 14 autumns who has
learned the demands on the patience of a man
asked to serve as a backup quarterba.ck and this
attitude is not without value to a footbalt team.
particularly when it is combined with knowledge.
"Why doesn't anyone ever ask about the de·
tens ive tackles?" Malavasi would ask. Well. it has not quite come to that. It first
behooves a bystander to jnquire as to what hap·
pens if Haden goes down. Because nobody cared about the defensive
tackles The Ra ms had Vince Ferragamo and Pat
Haden and only one of them could play at a time
and little Cal State Fullerton became the intrigue
capital of the universe.
Left st,anding would be Bob Lee. a veteran of
many autumn s and many cities. and Jeff
Rutledge. a youth in every respect.
You wince at the prospect of either one assum·
ing the responsibility of a full time National Foot·
ball Leag~e quarterback and you tremble in sym-
"'Lee could do the Job if he had to." Malavasl
says.
This assessment may be too generous.
Actually. Malavasi does not despair at the
<See T UCKER, Page 03)
As you know. one lhing led to another Quite naturalty. Malavasi could hardly be ex-
pected to comment on the fore~oing dilemma until Now. in the year of our landlord 1981, coach
Carson: a wild .
and crazy guy
Linebacker's antics are legendary
By JOHN SEV ANO
Of tM o.lly ...... SIMI
People who consider comedian
Steve Martin wild and crazy ha·
ven 't run into the Rams· Howard
Carson yet.
Heck. even Jack Reynolds.
having once sawed a ·53 Chev in
half. would be tame hy com·
parison
CARSON IS A he ll -raiser .
plain a nd si mple He "s a
pra nkster , the type of person
who always livens up a party
whether you want him lo or not
In his four years of college
al Howard Payne. a tiny Baptist
institution <enrollme nt 1,200) in
Texas Carson was on proba·
tion every semester .
Only his football coach, who
served on the board , saved him
from being booted ocr campus
Although admittedly r a m
bunclious at an e arly age Che
was spitting tobacco for distance
and accuracy al six>. Carson's
"reputation" was built during
his college years.
a lways eat ~arty so they
wouldn't have to run into us."
explains Carson .. My buddies
and and I would always sit next
to the drink counter in the
cafeteria and 1f a fat gtrl showed
up we'd moo at her."
Most of this stuff may sound
crue l or inhumane, but to
Carson 1t was hi s way of being
m1srh1evous and making a dull
s ituation lively
Of course. Carson is taking a
different approach in battling
for a spot on the Rams' roster
T here are no jokes or pranks go-
ing on only hard work.
"WHEN YOU'RE a rookie."
s ays Carson . ··you lay back
and observe what's around you.
You listen and don't open your
mouth ··
Carson was signed as a free
agent in 1980 and spent the year
on the club's injured reserve
list. nursing bruised ribs . With
Reynolds and Carl Ekern in the
middle he didn't figure to see
much action anyway.
IT'S ALL BUSINESS -Ra m rookies and veterans are going
through some rigid workouts these days at Cal Stale
Fullerton. Starting clockwise. tight end Walt Arnold makes
...., Niii ...... ., ca-M MMT
a catch during drill; halfback Lucious Smith watches in-
tently from the sidelines; and wide receiver Stacy Colbert
hauls in a pass.
"I was the kind of guy who
was always popping orr or say·
ing something stupid to get a
laugh," Carson says. "I 've
always been a loud mouth."
He still is, too. With Reynolds
departing t o San Francisco.
Carson has assumed the role as
the team's clown.
This season is another matter.
however. as Carson is ranked
second on Coach Ray Malvasi's
de pth chart at middle linebacker
behind Ekern
"When I came out last year I
figured there was no way I was
going to make the team." ad·
m1 ts Carson ''Th ey had
Hacksaw <Reynolds I. a great
linebacker. probably the best.
and Ekern I knew my chances
wcren"t ~ood. but I decided to
make Lhe best of it a nd see what
happens .
Mistake
stops Surf
CALGARY When things are
going bad. everything goes bad
even the most minute details.
Take the Surf's game with
Calgary for instance. One minor
mental lapse on defense with 43
seconds left to play in the nrst
half gave Calgary a goal and
cost the Surf a possible victory
Tuesday night.
Tbe result was a 3·2 Calgary
win as two goal& by Franz
Gerber the first coming at
. 44 : 17 of the first half -proved
to be too much for the Surf.
Calgary scored first at 23:20
on a.goal by Jurgen Roeber, but
the Surf countered 20 seconds
later with one of their own by
Jan vanderVeen.
Gerber's fint goaJ then aave
Cal1ary a 2·1 lead at the in·
termlaslon before Charlle Coote
Ued the score a1aln at ll:IO ot
tbe tetond heir. Gerber punched
In bl1 teeond 1oa1. lhou1h, al
77 :» for Liie flnal marlfn ot .tt·
tory.
"J ut0u1ht we put up a 1ood pertormanH, '' Hld Surf C.O.ch
Laurie Calloway.
''(TRAJNING> CAMP 1s hell ...
says the 6 -2 . 233-p ou nd
lineba cker "If I didn 't do
something to take my mind off
it. I'd crack.
.. People bave s aid there's
never a dull moment when I'm
around."
Some of Carson's college an·
tics a re legendary.
For instance. he a nd hi s
cronies <Carson always had ac·
complices) once killed a bunch
of rabbits and snakes, and then
scattered them around the cam-
pus chapel the day of ser vices.
After a long day of hunting
deer. it wasn't uncommon to
find Carson cleaning hi s catch in ·
the dorm showers.
-ON ANOTHER, he once
placed a dead snake inside the
main door of the girls' dorm
Then he sat back and watched
their reactions as t hey opened it.
Hey, folks. this is just for
openers.
"The ~iris on campus would
"T H E DIFFERENCE
bet ween this year and las t is like
night and day. I feel I have a
better chance of making it this
year I've gained experience and
I kn ow the system better.
Hacksaw said it takes about
three years to learn everythin~.
"lt"s very difficult for a rookie
to come in and start here -
especia l ly at middl e
linebacker "
Carson 's c h a n ces are
en hanced by the fact that
linebacker Mel Owens. the
Rams· top draft pic k . hasn't
signed and is not in camp. and
Jim Collins, the team's No. 2
choice. has been slowed in
workouts by an abdominal pull.
Baseball still under blanket of silence
or cour se. non e o f this
detracts from Carson's image,
"Seems to me ever y linebacker
is a crazy-type person." he says.
AND, HJS brothers Johnny
(no, nol THE Johnny Carson )
and Gordon don't help mat·
lers any WASHINGTON CAP> -Under a blanket
of silence and heavy pressure from the na·
tion's top labor official. negotiators met
for almost seven hours Tuesday in efforts
to end the major league bueb4'1l strike
which has wiped out almost a quarter of
the season.
Nancy Brorr. acting general counsel ror
the Federal Mediation and Conciliation
Service, said the representatives of the
Major League Players Association and the
club owners' Player Relations Committee
would return to the bargaining table to-
day.
Also back. Broff said, will be Labor
Secretary Raymond Donovan, who spent a
second consecutive day at t.be baseball
talks . The session started at 9:30 a .m . and
lasted until 5:30 p.m . with a H1•·hour
break to allow the secretary to addreaa the
Urban League convention at the Shoreham
Hotel.
•'The two. sides met both separately and
In joint session, and the secretary attended
all sessions that the mediators sat in on."
Broff said.
Acting under a news blackout Imposed
at Donovan's request Monday, Broff re-
fused to discuss the substance of the day's
meeting or if Donovan had made any pro-
posal or revisions to plans already on the
bargaining table.
Marvin MIUer, the players association's
executive director, refused to comment on
the talks or whether any progress was be·
Ing made.
"They're all just as bad as I
am," says Carson. "As a matter
of fact, when you go out with my
youngest brother <Gordon). the
only way we get out of places is
lighting out of the m .
"I don't go looking for trouble
but if it presents itself -I'ni
not going to run away from it.
either."
The owners need to make bucks, too --Snider
MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP) -When
Duke Snider recall• early meet1n11
between major league baseball owners
and the then-young players' auociatlon,
he thlnka about bar1ainin1 ror .. a door
to the toilet ln Phillldelphla, or a water
cooler in Pltts&urgh."
That's one fJI the reasona lhe bueball
Hall ot Fame outlielder aldel wtlb the
owners In U. eurrent 1tandoff wttb the
llajor Leatu' Players' /dlOdeUoa.
••t wuoneoltheones who'°4.edtoform
lhe ~· &MOdatloo. 111d Snider.
"But thinp have come • Iona •ay st.nee
then. haven'tthey?
''Things have changed so much since
• Marvin MUler became director of the
players' association. He's gotten a lot of
good thlnp for the players, things we
never would have been able to get,"
Snider saJd.
"But lhlnp have come to the polnt
now where he's aotten so much t.bere
h" to be a levellnc off proceM •tartinl
aomewheH. Th6 owners need to make a
buck, too."
The players' HIOclalloo wu formed
In 1N7, Snider's rookie seuon.
"We were eoneemed W'tth the need for a pension plan," he recalled. ··we
t.hou1ht we needed to lel unlfted."
And, he said, the Idea worked.
"We were llcklng our Ups back then
because we were going to get a $200-a·
month penslon at such-and-auch an
age," saJd Snider, who was Inducted
lnto the Bueball .Hall of Fame last year.
"That won't go very far now, butit meant
a lot toua."
Known aa "the Duke of Flatbulb,"
Snider, "· played moat bis ma,tor
le••ue ureer wllb the Brooklyn
Dod•en. In t.M early days ol die at·
tociaUen, he said bla roommate waa
Carl 'Eraklne, tbe Dod1era' player
repr...-taUve, and ht waa, therefore,
privy to mucb of what went on at
player-owner meetlni1.
It was Ion.a before t he days of federal
mediation.
"The players would come ln wttaa a
list," Snider said. "One 1uy mltbt
say that the locker room ln St. Louis
needed a new shower lfead, U\at only
two were worktna and they needed
three.
'·somebody else dlttht aay they
needed 1 door on the tollet ln
PhUadelphia, or a new waLer cooler ln
Pltt1buJ'Cb. There would be 1Mt 15 411·
ferent thlnp, and the owMrl wou.ld Juat
co throup It one by oae, 1aytq tMH
were aome Uilrilt we eou.lcl bave and some
thln11 we couldn"t, • • Snldel' aa1d. • 'Tbete
wasn't any ne1otJatlnr.
r .. Orange Cout DAILY Pll.OT/Wedneadav, July 22. 1981 ........... ______________ ~· ~~----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------. .Plunkett, Paatorlnl start workouts
,Quarterbacu n. Plake&& and EE D•• .....,...., both comln1 off re· • •
cent 1boulder operations, went
Shoemaker to. retire soon?
SAN DIEGO -Wlllle ml Shoemaker, the world'• wtnnin•nt
thoroughbred jockey, said Tuesday
his retirement ls at hand. alt.houlh be
1topped short of namln1 a SP"lnc day, a Su
Diego newspaper aaid.
"My days 1&1 a rider art numbered," Shoemak~r told the San Dle10 Tribune wbta.
preparing for Wednesday'• openln1 ot Del
Mar 's 42nd s ummer
thoroughbred raclna seHon.
Rams sign Meisner,
but he can't report
throucb tbelr lint preteuoo workouu of the
7ear witb Oakland. P .. torlnl, who practiced In
1boru, II 1Ull two weekl away from f\illy re·
covertq . . . Jimmy &ob..._, a wide Nceiver
with San Francl1co last season. baa 1l1ned with
Denver . . . Guard a1ek Deualley, a third·
round draft pick, fractured h.11 rl1ht band dur·
ln1 a Pitubur1h workout Tuesday . . . All-pro
loll• leffenoa bas reportedly h.ired Howard
81•1Mr 11 his lawyer in an effort to sweeten
Jerteraon'1 contract with San Diego . . . A aet·
Uement of $28,0~ has been proposed for the
cancellation of two football games by West
Vir&lnia with San Jose State ... Washington
1t1ned ltl top draft choice{ orten..ive tackle
Mark May, to a four-year con ract.
"The time for me to re·
tire Is not far off. I can't aay
It will be tomorrow or the
day after, but the time ls
drawing near."
The 49-year.old jockey,
who bas won 8,028 races
spanning five decades. said
he would probably become a
Kupchak signs Lakers' otter sheet
INGLEWOOD -Forward Mitch m
Kupcha.k signed an off er sheet with
Rookie defensive llneman Gre1 From AP dispatches •
Melsner of the University cA Pitt.a· •9•
burgh signed a contract with the Rose's recipe for success-practice --trainer after retiring from
Shoemaker ridinJt.
the Los Angeles Lakera today, a
spokesman for the National S.sketbaU Auocla·
tlon team said. leaving the next move to the
Washington Bullet.
Rams Tuesday. although the third round Na·
Uonal Football League draft choice won't be
able to practice with the team for a few '!eeks.
Meisner suffered head and back utjurtes
June 13 when he was assaulted at a private club
in New Kensington. Pa .. his lawyer reported,
and the Rams said he still has inner ear probJ
PHILADELPHIA -Practice is •
the road to success. according to
Pete Rose of the Philadelphia
Phillies.
"My father taught me that the only way you
can make good at anything is to practice and
then practice some more." Rose says.
"I ulwuys thought I could be a good
trainer," he said. "I've watched a lot of top
ones and I've been around long enou1h to know
how to do the job. The things I don't know, I'll
pick up as I go along."
"It's up to the Bullet.a now to decide we.at
they're going to do," said wker 91N>kes~d M
Steiner. "Even if fhey want to tracle him;tfU be
a mauer of findin1 some other team that wUI
pay the kind of money we're going to pay him."
The Lakers' agreement with Kupchak
would pay him a reported SS.6 million over
seven years. • "It's easy to practice something you're lems . • . . f h Meisner. who signed a senes o t ree one·
year contracts with the Rams. will be unable to
practice until he gets a doctor's clearance. said
Ra ms Publicity Director Jerry Wilcox.
already good at and that's what most people do.
What's wugh is to go and work bard on things
you don't do very well."
Shoemaker has steadfastly refused to Iden·
tify the best horse or all Ume, but says Spec·
tacular Bid in top form "could have beaten any
other horse I had previousty ridden ... Bobick wins Commonwealth title
Meyer grabs silver medal in diving
Quote of the day
Former Stanford star Hyland dies
PALM SPRINGS -Richard Fran-EE
cis Hyland, a former football player • • •
at Stanford known as "Tricky Dick," •
has died or natural causes. He was 80.
Canadian heavyweight champion m
Trevor Boblck bulled, pushed and
pounded his way to a convincin1
second-round knockout victory over Co•r•Y
Nelaon Tuesday n.ilht to win the Commonwealth
titre. •
Buddy Bell, Texas Raneers third
baseman. expressine his diseuat with
Commissioner Bowie Kall.a: "We've got a
commissioner who doesn't represent both
sides. He doesn't even know who's playing
the game. I've been introduced to him
eight or nine times over the years and
every time he says, •Nice to meet you."'
BUCHAREST, Ro m ania -•
Megan Meyer , a 19 -year -old
University of Florida diver from Mis·
sion Viejo won the United States' first medal of
the World University Games today. taking a
silver in the springboard competition behind Li
, Yibua of China.
The Chinese diver compiled S00.82 points to
win the event while Meyer finished second with
498.66. Ruxandra Hociota of Romania was third
with 490.71.
Hyland. who was born in San Franclato and
lived in Palm Desert in recent years, died
Thursday at the Wawona Hotel in Yosemite Na·
lional Park.
Hyland was in Northern California laat week
to compete In a cele brity eolf wurnament.
Hyland worked several years as a sporu writer
at the Los Angeles Times. Al Stanford, he was
known as an out.standing punt returner.
Television. radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball-Salt Lake City at Van·
couver, 7:30p.m., KMPC (710>; Rebroadcaator
1957 World Series (New York Yankees va .
Milwaukee Braves. game seven), immediately
following Gulls' game. KMPC (710).
Francis' retirement
a shock to Patriots
Utilityman's dream
comes true tonight
Tight end played only six seasons TULSA, ·Okla. <AP) -Who 's
on first? ... at shortstop? How
about in left field ? ... or right?
SMITHFIELD. R.1. <AP> -
Veteran tight end Russ Francis
or the New England Patriots
startled the National Football
League team Tuesday with the
announcement that he is quitting
professional football because of
"personal reasons ."
Francis. a n All-Pro three
seasons and a member or the
Patriots for six years said he
told Head Coach Ron Erhardt of
his decision Tuesday morning at
Francis' home in the Boston
area. However Patriots' owner
William Sullivan said Francis'
decision caught him by surprise.
The 6-6. 242-pound Francis was
to have reported to the team's
training camp here at Bryant
College Friday. Rookies and
free agent began workouts Mon·
day.
"l'VE GIVEN IT (retirement)
some thought over the last cou·
pie or months. the las t few
months. l guess," Francis told
Honolulu radio station KDEO in
an interview later picked up by
Enterprise R a dio Sports
Network.
·'Obviously a career change is
somettring you do not do im·
pulsively. It's for personal rea·
sons. and reasons I really can't
go into at this point."
Francis. who comes from
Hawaii, said his decision had
nothing to do with forcing a
trade, or because "of failing
health." A team spokesman s aid
Francis is still under a
multiyear contract with the
club.
"I feel the best thing for Russ
Francis at this point in my
career is to retire. and that is
what I've chosen to do." Francis
said. ·'There are some problems
I've ha'd philosophically with the
game of football , but it has been
a lot of fun. It is a good game.
There are conflicting thoughts.
when I think about it, but I'm
going to miss it."
In a statement, read by Tom
Hoffman. team spokesman,
Sumvan said:
"WE ARE IN complete shock
with Russ' int~ntlons. consider·
ing the fact training camp has
just begun. The timing of th.is is
Inconsistent with Russ Francia's
character in that he has always
County team
eyes crown
The Orance County A's semi·
pro bueball team ls only a cou·
pie of ltepl away from advanc·
Int to tt'te National B .. eball
Con1ress championship ln
Wichita, Kan.
The A'• defeated the Southern
California Dodaera, lt·l, Satur·,
day ln a rectOl\al loumament at E1~do Hlth to advance \0
tbe 1tate tourneY LbJa Sa.turday.
The A 's face the San
Bernardino Nulle.ti Saturday
mornln1 at t In tbe openln1 l'9Qlld ot the three-day double
ellmlutiaD wwoam•nt at the
Ual•...UY ot Redlands.
Tbe FouDt&lD Valle)'·baMd A'a
are led by former Aapl Dav.
Ska111. Oa.td B.a• and ez· ro•atala ValJ•.r Hl&b and Or .... a.ti': COllelll .....
.. ,.., .. lb. All "'" ..... ..... to tJll aU·tourumnt ............. Mod* ft·
Aalel, plte!Mr C11.. Wnllat.
ille plQI for tM A '1.
' .
been very con s iderate of
Patriots management and his
Patriots' teammates ."
And Dic k Steinberg, t he
Patriots' player personnel direc·
tor, said he thought Francis' re·
tirement was only temporary.
··certainly this is not
someth.ing that is final." said
Stieinberg. "We know that th.is
time of year players have things
on their mind personal and
fin ancial. and that the drudgery
or training camp sometimes
makes them wonder how much
they like the game. We haven't
totally written Russ off . . .
deep down. I th.ink he'll play,
again."
Kennelh R. Fishkln, tbe
Boston attorney representing
Francis. said his client had
reached the decision to leave the
game ••very recently.••
FISHKIN SAID Francis tried
to telephone the Patriots from
the attorney's office on Monday,
but could not contact club of·
ficials. The lawyer would nol
elaborate on Francis' decision,
and said be expected him to re·
turn to Hawaii soon.
The answer. with apologies to
Abbott and Costello. is easy: It's
Marty Scott of the Tulsa
Drillers.
Scott will be playing all nine
positions t oday when the
Drillers host the Texas League
All-stars in Sutwn Stadium.
SINCE SCO'M', 26. is a player·
coach for the Class AA farm
team of the Texas Rangers, he
may have a one -position advan·
tage over the handful or major
leaguers who have played aJI
nine spots in a game.
"This is the ultimate for a
utility player ... said Scott.
Drillers Manager Me rrill
Eckstein suggested the multiple
roles to Scott as "something for
the fans w enjoy" during the AJJ.
star contest.
About 3,000 people are expect·
ed at three -month-old Sutton
Stadium for the All-star game. It
will be one of a few All-star
games played in the country this
year. The major league version
fell victim to the players' strike.
However Hoffman said, "He's
not due to report to camp until S
p. m . Friday. A lot of things can
happen in 72 hours."
....., ............ .,,~ ....
Scon', FROM Hurst. Texas,
says his fifth season as a pro-
f essional baseba ll player will be
nis last. Drillers spokesmen say
the 6·0. 190-pound all-purpose
player "is being groomed" for a
manaeement position in the
farm system.
Francis' bac kup , Don
Hasselbeck. is one of a group of
veterans who bu still not siened
a new contract with lbe Patriots.
REFRESHMENT BREAK -Ram players Kirk Collins ( 42),
LeRoy Irvin (47) and Bob Cobb (97) take a short break from
workouts at Cal State Fullerton Tuesday. Rookies and
veterans are currently going through two-a-day workouts on
the Titan football field.
"He's a really sharp kid." a
spokesman said.
So what's such a bright guy
doing trying to come at the All·
ROGER CARLSON
Welcome future Trojans
Olgatng out from the deluge of calla (yes
mam, I know Duval "Bubba" Love is a
product of Fountain Valley ffigh, no air, I
know every super football player that
comes atone is not necetearily a product ol
Edison Hi&b >. we proceed, undaunted.
Among the anticipated 35,000 at
Pasadena's Rose Bowl Saturday will sure·
ly be one John Robinson of the University
of Southem California.
Robinson bu nine playen in the 30th
Shrine AU-star football 1ame who are
beaded for Troy. includlll& EdiJon de·
feosive back Dualne Jackaoo, Banning
superbact Michael Alo (at 5-11, 220, you
have to see blm in cuual dress to really
appreciate tbe bocly), Plut X tackle Jomo
Pal1e and Bl.tr'• Fred Crutcher, who led
the CIF ln ruahinl lHl seaaoo, among
others.
Oran1e Co•t area 1tars particlpaUn•
include Fountai.ll Valley Hllh'• Love and
CIF Dlvilion I Player of the Year Emile
Harry (beaded fOI" UCLA and Stanford.
reapettively), .J1caoo and Kanau·bound
Dtno Bell, and Kat..-Del'11.An1 WW11ms
(ticketed few Notre DameJ and Dave
Uranlch (New Mexico).
,
Uronich WiUiama
parenUy allowed to select any position they
wouldllketoplay at.
Says Marshall: "Even thoueh I could
take any position, I'll stick wtth wtde re·
celver." • • • Another player to watth la Lynwood
Hlfb'1 JohM.Y Jackson, a 6.0, 210-PoUDd
de enalve line man, who Marina Hl1h
Coach Dave Thompson says would have
been AJl·Everythln1 foT two yeara ti he
had played ln Oranie County Instead of off
In lbe comer in Lynwood.
BroadcuUna will be laduon'a Oeld at
New Mexico. • • • Other Oranae County playen involved ln
th• cam• for th• South Include El
Modena'I Kurt Burier, El Toro'i 0 ....
Pacoa, El Modena'• Jack !'aria 1nd
Loara'1 llante Taylor.
Jt wu Bur"er wbo put Sunn.y Hl11a Hip
quart.el'Mck Jim Kar••lol out of tbe SbrlMGame~
Bur ... wu the player whO 1m..W blto
lbe lead • bJocker In the rwent Orat\19
County A.U·ltar 1ame, knocldnl him down
'·
and lnw Karsatos reaulting in an injury
that may keep the latter out of action dur·
ing his freshman season at Ohio State. • • • Edison's Bill Workman and Banninafs
Chris Ferragamo share responsibilities
for coaching the South. Also on the South
staff Ls Edison assistant Russ Purnell and
Dave White, who will act as a spotter for
the South.
The Shrine Game baa pumped Sl.7
million ln\O Ila Cblldnn'a Hospital in Los
An1eles from the proteedl of this series.
which has amounted to over • percent of
the aroes, an unreal figure. There are no
fat promoters In this one.
• • •
Harry· of Fountain Valley la very aware
of the ramiflcations of lllneaa and
bospitalbat.ion.
A friend, Jerry Latlto\llcb, wbo la con·
flned \0 a kidney dlaJy1l1 macbine three
Umea a week, itvt1 him lnttchl.
"Beuuse of talkln1 to Jarry i 've
teamed to be aware ol the obvlous that we
lake few sranted , " 11y1 Harry. • • • • A pre1ame pafeant bepoa at 7 and
kickoff ls •uppolediy to be at 7:JO. Don't
be late.
stars from every direction?
"I wouldn't have agreed. to it
if 1 didn't think I could do it
without embarra.saing myself."
Scott said.
SCOTf, A product of Dallas
Baptist , was selected as thP
utility i.nfielder in All -star balJot·
ing July 15. When the game was
set against Tulsa. he was
replaced on the All-star roster.
His most accustomed position
is third base. but he has played
every position on the field.
Scott will start U.eifirst inning
as catcher for t&rmer Yale
hurler Ron Darling, the top Tex·
as Rangers draft choice.
"I figure that's my toughest
position. It'll be a challenge."
Scott said.
SC01T WILL advance around
the bases then play all three out·
fi e lds in successive innings
before coming to the pitcher's
mound in the ninth.
E c kstein . who s aid he
wouldn't mind winning the game
against the talented All-stars.
said if the game is close in the
ninth Scott will still get to pitch
·•unless he gets tired. then we'll
take hime out like we would any
pitcher ...
The 18-man AH-star squad is
dominated by San Antonio, with
six selections. 1hl! Dodgers con·
eluded a sweep of the Drillers
with an 11·10 vicwry In 10 in·
nings Monday night.
That makes it important w the
DrHlers. atop the Eastern
Division of the league. to pro-
vide a good match against the
All -stars. Eckstein said.
"But it'll be a fun eame. as op-
posed to bk>od and guts." Eeks·
Lein said.
Tennis play
opens today
in Niguel
The sixth annual Southern
California Senion tennis touma·
ment started toda y at the
Laguna Niguel Racquet Club.
More than .C>O entries are
scheduled to COIJ\pete in all aie
divisions from 3S to 70 for men
and 30-M for wollMft. •
The tournament will feature
many nationally ranked men
and women players from
Southern California.
Entries Include national grass
court 40 sinales champion Hont
Ritter of Pasadena, who ls also a
national bardcourt singles
ehamploo ln the J5 age dlvlslm.
Ron Lt.vin1aton of La,Una
leach ls the former natlooal
bardC!OGl't '5'• ,_... ehampion, ·
while Lenny Lhllb0r1 of R\mt·
io1ton Beach curre1Uy hol• tbe
national 40 doubles ,,..,. court
tltle.
Repreaentln• the L11una
Nl1uel Racquet Club •re Jim
Nelton, the national lndoor
doubles cbamph>1• fOf' the IMft'S
4$'1, and Stralpt Clark, UM cur-
r•t Mltklnal Wt sra11 court
1ln1le1 champ.
Top wom• ,a,,.,. lncJ.cle
--"'ILi '=Feii l• ...... a!.;&• ..
Rerwatd flfiE ii .-...... ~ ..
..... rouadl be played I
Saturday and lun•a1. Ad·
mlN• ls tree.
!
I
I
t I
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left o.... u 1• •a 11 .. * IMA"'* U II a 4J •Mt ... ,, . .,., ...
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Malort f11·12·Y••r-oldtl
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Clolmlflt for fllllol. Pl>rw tUOO.
ltoltlHI lt..io CCordoul .... U O t ...
A·MY H-.y And Spico (l'rydayl t.• S.10
lmHot~ff,_,.., 4.00
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Time N ~. l'ly Liilo, "'"-·Miu .... Cllartor, Trlpoll l..edy, lldd9rl.
tl uecto C._11 PAld Ml.40.
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Ool Hit sn.e CCordoUI 1.20 J.ot 2.:111 lloqUfft A tlcl (P ... llno) t... UO
Sootier ltlt.rrl"" (l'r~yl >M
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U n«ta (J.11 pelcl UH ....
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wllll low wlnftlne llcllet1 (hlur --1. U Pk ll Sb C4Moiolloft POfcl MO ... wflll 1U
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Rell, lnll'(I Oelklllt. Little C-v 0•0 . Kiel
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A ttollCIAllco -U .t 1.
Hollywood Pe" •1ndlrt91 ,,....,
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Plncay
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192 Of>lfwt: It) llonlto, • 1MC1 -·· ISS callco lleM, 2 yotlowtall, It rocll 11111, 1
llollllolt, 115 mocllorol.
OAMA ..... , -za .,.._t: 1'5 !Nit. ti
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raclldo, • llOnlto, 2'a colko ...... 2 llAllM .
•t rocll 11111, t I wlllto fllll, u 1111 .. percft.
llAL 9CACH -141 1111tlon: 50S Mr·
reclldo, 71 tloftlto, 5'11 mackerel, U cetke
NH, I IMCI llMa, Ito rock flUI.
aaOOMDO -JOI ontfonr UI lleftMit, m
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Coatt area rHultt
UMMIMA tlACM MaM'I CLUt
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1'119111 A -I. ~m Hiii ltl·ls..61; "lftM
t -1. Welter Spleu lt:M...,l ; "119111 c -
I, Goor .. Mlttermann CIMO·~>; 1'119"1 D -
1. Merli"""""'* t•n.a>; 1'111111 E -1.
Alllorl Werd '" J4 ... I.
Wtthf~ ltar chemplonthlpt ,,, ................
Victor "'9ccl ••· y.,. Wlrlltllly, ._., .. 2.
M ; l llot To!llC,_r def. l rad Drawe«. .. I, ..t; Harold ....,.._ def. Jaime "lllOI, M ,
.. I; Gollrlol Urpl def • ........,, Gl9"'molve,
.. J, W, .. ); ltlutW C-def Miiie 9-,
S-1. M , M , T.,.ry #loOlr def. llon Hltl\I-.
W ... ,, M ; a 1c11 l' ... 1 del. Manuel Or-. >• ... , ... ,; -'-"-~·Ma-def. 11-., v ... ·1 Hol, '-' .. ,, 74.
Yonnkll NMfl def ... lut Pretov• ....... 1.
.. ,, CEddlo 1>1-. dlf. lt ... Krllevltz, M .
.. I ; Jimmy AllH def. t lfl konton ... 2, ......
Vino v ... Potion at. Scott Oo•I•, M , W ;
J-Hi.,.t• clef. °"°" J OUOOr1, M , .. ,:
Marco Otto!• def. J im Oel-y. M , •·1.
lwedlth Open c .............. , ,.,.. .... ........
Po1.11 Mc...,_ dlf, Hone Kary, •·2 . .,7, .. I; ,..,., McN•,,._• def. Wayne Ho .......
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7·5, ..-; P ... I ICronll clef Ull Marto"'· 1-4,
M , M ; I'-Lune def. Onffy Pa,..., .. , ... ,.
U.S. Pro chemplonthlp
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J-·Lull C*< def. H-Glldomol1tor,
0·61 •·t , •·2. !Clore wln1 JU,000. 011_1 ..... wt...-t 14,00D). o.Mo•,. ...
lto1.1 I ltaml ror·P•v•I Slo11 del . Ollllomol1ter·A,.dro1 Gomoa, .. 4. 7_.
Clt•mfNl ·llofl -.m .10.-. Gl........C••·
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Mal ,.,,.,_ dof "'-Socllfnoll. M, .. ,. ,,.__ wfne M.•. SadtlmAll wtM
P ,JOOI.
Misc.
Tueeda.,;:,:•ntaollont
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ATLANTA 'ALCONS -Cul Ylode
Jonoklovllll, pt-llkllor. A....-od tMt
O.orto OtN!d. '-'"' 11«11, toll c-p.
HOUSTO.. OILlllS -llle<od Conway
Haymen, ......., .. II,._, on tlle "'ytlcoC·
ly uno111o to,.,.._,,. lftt. Cllt .. n torley, ol·
I-Ive ...,,.; Grotor'Y J°""'°"• r~ 11«11; y ,,... Pl'lnc:o, tlnoll«kor; trlon MAI·
lllow -Trocy $1n1111. Cltfonslvo ondt.
LOS ANOELCES ltAMS -S ....... Gret
Mel_,, ...._. .. l!Mmon, to 111r .. -
yoor C Mlr«11.
HRW I NOL4"10 l'ATRIOTS -An·
-od Ille retl.-1 of llllU "'Aft<ll.
t 1t11 I Olld.
ltllW ~LEA"IS SAINTS -Trodecl Attle 0.-, ,_,,.. lle<ll·wtW rocol•or. to e. Son ,.,_ltco "9rl tor ... llMIK-1'12
~•ft ci.ko. "-'ctd 1"91 Joo Gorcbl,
toclllt, loft c-N llW YOltK GIANTS -SICIMCI Keltll H11ll. llllllledl.
ST. LOUIS CAllOINAU -SI.,,.., $ .... Nell1, ,.,.,._....,, to o IOf'lot ol _ • .,..,
contract1.
SAit 'it.AHCISCO ftCEltS -lltNd Gary Allder-.....,,., to•,,......,, contrect.
TAMPA llAY tUCCANllllltS -SI .......
0ovl4 ~. -..ivo llM-, too -IM of-·..-c.onlr~ WASHINGTON ltllOSKINS -SllMd
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NOCJCl'f
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contrecl.
Wortd Unlverttty 0.mH , ............. .._...,
IP -I. MkllMI CMter (U.S.), ... J; 2.
O.lltl Mwl .. lh•I Oor,...ny), •M; a. OolllllOf' \1811Coll IClo<MalovOlllo), .... io.• --. -1. ,_ tt.Ntry cu~
Siii, atioGM: t. M9r11o c;.,.,.., Clt ......... 1,
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Oym,.ottlU (tndlvld1101) -I. NHIO
C--1 C-.-&ol, '9.• pelnft; I. Millla
ltMr•n 1uua1, at.to; a. 011,,.ltrlt• ,_ C....,....),,. ec.wo.
l•tllotMll -U.S. 4"f. Solltll •-. 1 ... 1'; ,... ... ~. , .......
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,,, TUCKER'S COLUMN • • •
"We u.lked about hlm,•· Malavaat .. >'•· "but
not Hrioutl)'. ••
Seriously, t.be bottom line ii that If Haden 1oe1
down, the Rama 10 down with hJm. You read the
thouchta of Kalavul between th• lnatant Pat
boun• to UM peeaaward and tbe merciful mo·
ment ht letl back up.
Cleerty, Udl II a quart...hck 1ltuaUon a coach
candoUtUe.tleut.
"We cm prQ a lot," Kalavul ••YI· He em allO Job a UW..
"W• tu .. to tbe •lall• ._ ucl UM Nolan
Crom...U • .... ~...-.~«*." Malavul ••11· It II 1 Jib. 91 ..,.., bUl clMek back tn Nov·
ftllber a ... trbO'a la..,......'
Orange Coaat DAILY PtLOY'/WednHd1y, July 22, 1881 DI
Co11rse is shaping up
First nine holes completed at AVCO's Salt Creek
By CURT SEED EN
O(U.o.lfy ..........
Work on th~ AVCO Corporat1on'a 18·hole
champlonahJp 10Lt course ln Laiuna Nl1uel It pro·
1resafnl on schedule.
Designed by architect Robert Trent Jones 11.
the course wtU wlnd a mon1 the vario1.&.1 houalne
developments AVCO hae scheduled tor the area
nea.r Crown Valley Parkway and Paclflc Coast
Highway.
AU grading on the first nine holes has been
completed. according to AVCO spokesman John
GOLF
Stevens. and work on the second nine holes wiU
probably start next month.
For those unfamiliar with A VCO's plan, tbe
course, currently being called the Salt Cr eek
course because or its proxlmity lo Salt Creek
Beach, will include two holes on the ocean side of
Pacific Coast HJ ghway
"Phase one is complete." reports Stevens.
"The first nine holes have been graded. alJ plant·
Ing or the greens has been completed and the Ir ·
rigation systems are now operational."
The course Is part of a major development
package that will include a 3SO·room r esort hotel.
complete with other recreational outlets such as
swimming pools and tennis courts. In addition,
AVCO wilJ construct a conference center which
could be utilized by s m all business groups .
While guests of the hotel will have access to
the course. it will also be open to the public.
nine holes wUl be open ror play whlle the Hcond
nine ii beln1 vadet!.
"Robert Trent Jones sa.ys It takes at least a
year after the grass la planted bef.1re you can play on
It.'· Stevens says.
St.evens 1ays J ones designed the course wtth
plenty of lakes and bunkers to teat the most skillful
goiters.
Jt everything 1oe1 as planned. the first nlne
holes will be playable by spring of next year.
• • •
THE PGA'S Southern Section will hold its I P·
pre ntlce championship tournament ~Ui. 10 at
Friendly Hllls CC In Whittier.
Registered apprentices. actively e mployed
and in good standing. are elitelble to compete in the
championships , and head professionals around the
Southland can sponsor their apprentices.
Entry fee of $40 includes goU cart, t wo rounds
of golf and lunch. Check·ln time Is 7: 15. with the
rirst shotgun start at 8 a.m.
More inform ation ls available by contacting
An dy Thuney, SCPGA apprentice tournament
chairman. at (213> 985-5454 • • • THE SECOND ANNUAL Amy Alcott Golf
Classic, a benefit fo r the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society. has been scheduled for Sept. 28
at the Riviera CC in Pacific Palisades.
A totaJ of 144 golfers. men and women. will
participate in the s hotgun style tourna ment. Entry
fee is $250 and Includes the round or golf, followed
by dinner at the country club
Alcott's tournament earned $11 ,000 for the
multiple sclerosis research last year . "Fifty percent of the starting limes must be available to the general public, according to the.---------------------
California Coastal Commission." notes Stevens .
"And, the public will be encouraged to use the
co urse."
Stevens says a completion date for the con·
rerence center will be "dictated by the economy."
but construction is schedule to begin in mld·lO·late
Paramount· Spor~
Annual
1982.
He adds that It hasn't been decided if the fi rst
Pursuit wins Angelman race
CLEARANCE
SALE . Bob Babson's Pursuit rrom the host club was
the Class A winner Sunday ln Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club's 18.6·mile 20·fathom Buoy race, the
fourth of t he Angelman Series for Performance
Handicap Racinte Fleet yachts .
NOW IN PROGRESS
thru FRIDAY, JULY 311t
Class B winner was Flying Colors, skippered
by Dave Stone. BCYC, and the Class C winner was
Vortex, Bruce Twichell, Voyagers Yacht Club.
MRYTHING DISCOUNTED
from
Class trophy winners :
CLASS A -1. Pursuit ; 2. Momentum. Peter
Tong. SSYC: 3. Cats Pajamas, Marcia Last.
10°10 to 50°10
hco,.lllh
BCYC. '
CLASS B -1. Flying Colors: 2. Andlamo. Bob
Soda ro. BYC , 3. Runaway II. John Wieble, VYC .
Expert Racquet Stnnging and Repairs
Featuring all Top Brands'
CLASS C 1. Vorte x: 2. Strawberry Jam .
Justin McCarthy, BYC: 3. Ling, Wally Chang·
Mark Schryer. BCYC .
lll E. 17th St .. Costa Mffa ,._.. 642 .. 116
(Behind lnterna11ona1 Pancake Housel
P195/75R14
P205/70R1•
P205/75R1"
P205n5R15
P215175R15
P225175R15
P23S/75R15
155/SR12 S30.95 1•51SR13 . 30.95
155/SR13 . 31 .95
185/SA13 32.96
175/SR13 34.96
185/SRt• ........ 35.95
175/SRt• .. .. . ... . 37.95
185/SR1• . . . . . . . . 40.96
185/SRt& ......... ~.
STEEL BEL TEO
SIZE PR PRIC
'100-14 . 4 .. .. 148.96 '100-15 . e .. ..42.86 076-15 . e ,52 .•
H71-15 .. e ... 55.95 710-181.T. ' 55.96 800-18.5 . ' 57.86
171-UU .. ' .81.85 850-11.5 . ' 87.15 1200-11U e . n.•
70 SERIES
175170SR12
175170SR13
85/70SR13
195/70SA13
185/70SR1•
.$35.96
35.95
36.95
37.95
39.95
195170SRt• 205/7QAR14
18$170SR15
.. 42.95
...•... •5.95.
...... 48.95
1551SR12 ............ '26.95
145/SR13 • • • • O I It I I•• 26.95
155/SR13 • • •'' o t' •'It 26.95
186/SR13 o' too f ••I' t I 28.95
175/SR13 o • o • o o • o • o I I 34.95
185/SR14 o 'o''' o o' o o I 34.95
175/SR14 33.95 .. , .........
185/SR14 ............ 35.SS
1.161SR15 . ~ ..........
MOU~ & IALAMCIM• AVAILAILI
HEAVY ALIGNMENT DUTY
SllOCKS ...-c ...... ac.-.r
~, .. I ........ 517'5 ..... , ...
Moet U.S. Cart
s 18'5 • IMSTALUD
Moet u.s. care •
10-15
11-15
11 ·15
12·15 12·16.5
12·16.5 H70-15
L70-15
F7lr14
PR
4
4
6 6
6
8 4 4
REPLACES
BR78·13
OR78·14
ER78·14
FR76-14
GR78-14
HR78-1'
FR78·16 GR78-15
HR78·15
LR78·15
PRICE
116.95
85.95 eus
85.95
88.95
102.95
52.95
55.95
SERES WHITEWM.l
$29 95 G78lt t4 35.95 27 95 H7Sx14 38.95 29 95 0711115 36.95 30 95 H7k15 37.85 31 95 l 78x15 38.85
70 SERIES RAISED WHITE LETTERS
A70l13 S33 95 G70a14 44.95 El'Ol14 38 95 Q70l15 '395 no.14 31195 H70l15 4695
-.13 $35 ts L8()a14 52.95 Et0al4 40ts OIOl15 •• FIOl14 ... ts L80a15 5295 OIOl14 45.ts
BRAKES
519•1 I
...,.IWHATYou•m
.. '-It -... -~ a, .-.... .. -~,~,_..,..,_4 ... ~ L:."-' '9lllm ~= rr...:.~r:.... ..._ •• ·= ..-., _.... 10. Mfl ft\1111 If ~ • I I lllOld "41 ..otT If.I. &All
"
(
:t ~ lit t: •• ·\3 llt K(
...
I .. I~
If 1) ft ~ ~.
\1 At kt ~ ,,
" ••
Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT /Wednuday. Jury 22. 1981
• ~ .
Ho ruing
covenant
upheld
ANNAPOLIS, Md.
(AP ) -Property cove·
nanta barrln1 unmar·
rled coupl es from
purchaal nc h omes
to1etb er are valid
because "auch rela·
Uonshlpe are simple, 11·
legitimate unions," a
state appeals court says.
The Maryland Court
o f Special Appeals UP·
h e ld a covenant in
Greenbelt restricting
home ownership to mar·
ried couplea. The state's
second highest cou r t
ruled the covenant <\<>es
not violate s ta te laws
barrln1 dlacrlminatlon
on the buts of marital
status .
"The obvious intent of
our Le1taJature la to en·
courage the proverbial
con cept that m o r e
belongs to a marria1e
than lour bare leis In
bt1d," the court ruled .
··Even ~ntemporary
dlacrlmlnaUon laws are
not Intended to pro·
mul1ate promiscuity by
statute or case law as
having legal status ."
SOVIET SUFFERER -This Russian polar bear rests limply against
the side of a Moscow zoo bear pit as a heat wave in the Soviet capitcrt
pushed the mercury into the 90s. He's probably thinking how nice it
wouJd be to be banished to Siberia in JuJy.
The rule was
ehallenged by the
Prince Georges County
Human Relations Com·
m ission on behalf of
John Hemphill and Lynn
Bradley, who were not
allowed to buy a home In
Greenbelt, one of the na-
tion's oldest planned
communities .
DEATH NOTICES
CURTISS KJMMEL
WlNEFRED 1FREDDIE1 WILLIAM FRANCIS KIM·
ClJ RTISS. resident of Santa MEL. a 37 year resident of
Ana. Ca. Passed awa} on Costa Mesa . Ca. He was a
July 15, 1981 at he r re · member of Jesus Christ Of
sidence She was a resident Latter-day Saints . Newport
of Costa Mesa. Ca . for 29 Beat>h 2nd Ward and the
years before moving to San· Amateur Radio Club lie
ta Ana. She is survived by passed away on July 18,
her daughters Dixie Fuller 1981 lfe is survived by his
of Vancouver. Washington. wife Frances , sons Bruce or
Mary ColVin of Oceanside. Utah. Thomas and James
t:a .. S00.4' James Curtiss of both or Costa Mesa .Ca .
Everet!. Washington. sisters da ugleter Lynette Guarino of
Dorothy Neller of Garden Utah. brothers Allen Kam ·
Grove. Ca .. Joanne Smith of mel of Los Angeles, Ca .
Henderson. Nevada and Ann Edwin K.Jmmel of Watson
Cleaver of Redlands. Ca .. ville and Thomas Kimmel or
brother Edward Dyksera of Fullerton. Ca . also survived
Princeburg. Minnesota and 4 by 7 grandchildren. Funer al
grandchildren S he was 11ervices were held on Tues
employedfor7 yearsbytheday . Jul} 21. 1981 at
Farmers Insuran ce Com· Q :OOAM at the Church of
pany. Santa Ana. Ca .. where Jesus Christ of Latter-day
she worked an the cafeteria. Saints. Newport Beach 2n<
Graveside servace:o; will be Ward. 801 Onvn Drive
held on Wednesdav. July 22. Newport Bea<'h. Ca . Inter
1981 at lO:OOAM at Pacific ment services followed im·
View Memorial Park. mediately . If desired .
Newport Bea<'h. Ca . with contributions may be made
Re\' James E Pip~r of· to the Church of Jesus Christ
fi c ialing Pac1f1c .V ie w o r Latter da y S aints,
Mortuary d1rtttors Newport Beach 2nd Ward,
-----------. c o Bishop Keith Duke
Neptune Society
caUAAl'IOll IUlllAL At HA
646-7431
·-NdM -Wlty .......... _ .. ,., ....... ...,lb May .... y _.,.._,,___. ...
c:..ii1w1 .... _,...i.
Ser\'lces under the dire<'tion
of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
Mortuary of Cos ta Mesa.
S-40-5554.
EAST
J4 11n. C.M./lllr
ELEANOR BEATRICE
EAST. resident or Costa
Mesa. Ca Passed away on ~===~========~I July 16, 1981. She is survived
,_CIMOJHIH
la&.MOAIWAY
MOtll'VAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
IAlTZIHMttOt4
SMTH & TUTitlU
WISTCUff CHANl
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
6-46-9371
~ll90n..I
SNITH$' MOITVMY
627 Main SI
Huntington Beach
536-M39
PACIFIC Y•W ...., ..... , ...
c.n.tery Moou1ry
Chac>el-Oematory
3600 Pac1hc V..w Of1ve
Newport Be.ch
644•2700
NcCOti«X MOITUAa•H
Laguna Beach
-49'·9415
Laguna Hills
766-0933
San Ju.n Capistrano -495--tna
K'DO' LAWM-MT. OUVI
Mof1UlllY. Cef\"tflef'f
Creme tort
1625 G19'ff Ave .
CostaMeM S.0-5654 0
+·
by her hus band Harold.
daughtt'r Brenda Laraine
Young, son Robert Wayne
East. brother Joseph Hughs
and her granddaughter
Shelley Laraine Youn g
Graveside services will be
held on Tuesday, July 21.
1981 at the Harbor Lawn
Memorial Park. Services un
der the direction or Harbor
Lawn-Mount Olive Mortuury
or Costa Mesa. 540·5.'154
ORTMAN
JOSEPHINE O lJ ICHi
O R T MA N . ru ld~nt "' Corona dt'I ~for. Ca . widow
of Fred B Ortm•n. PHllt'd
away on July 18. 191U
Service• will bt held on
Tuesday, July 21, lfHl l at
10:30AM In the Church of the
Receaalonal. fi'or~•t Lawn
Glendale . f"orut l,11wn
Mortuary dlre<'tOl'I.
IOTHS
ELSEWllRE
BUDAPES'I', Huniiar1
t API Tl"8r UdYIN)'. 81.
conside re d Hun1ary 's
1rHtett tA.nor, whole opera
en1a1ementa ranged from
New Yortt to Moscow, died
Fndayol a heart attack.
8ET~DA1 Md. (AP>
Lonctlma Ne•ada
new1paperman De•••r
Dlehrto11, 81, who once
served as speaker or the
Nevada A.nembly. died ol
cancer ln ti.is home.
a a
Judge dismisses
'frivolous' suit
NEW YORK <AP> -Deborah Ann Fountain,
who was thrown o ut o f the Miss USA pageant fe r
padding her s wimsujt, had her legal complaint
thrown out of court by an angry federal judge.
Miss Fountain asked the judge to prohibit CBS
from televisin g the Miss Universe contest Monday
and to keep M iss USA, Kim Seelbreed e or German·
town, Ohio, from participating.
"I have n ever seen a complaint that has less
m erit." said U .S. District Court Judge Vincent L.
Broderick. "I think it's abuse of the judicial pro·
cess."
He ordered Miss F ountain's lawyer to pay the
defendants' legal fees as a penalty for filing a
frivolous action.
Miss Fountain, who was Miss New York,
claimed she was improperly disqualified from the
Miss USA pagent this spring. Sbe claimed s he had
to tailor the swim suit because it was too big.
But Broderick ruled that her complaint
showed no "liability or harm" on the part o r either
CBS or Miss Seelbreede in connection with her dis·
qua lification.··
Bitten boy collects
. VISALI A I AP I -A $14.000 out-of-court
settlement has been announced for an 8-year-old
Visalia boy bitten on the face by a m e m ber of the
Tulare County sheriffs K-9 unit.
However, \he boy, Scott Reyna. cannot use any
of the money until he is 18 years old in 1991.
Superior Court Judge E dward Kim ord ered.
The dog was being kept at the r esidence of
Sher iffs Deputy Home r Barker when Scott. a
neig hbor, was bitten o n the side of his face ,
shoulder and lip in 1979. The attack left the boy
with a two-inch facial scar which doctors say may
be corrected by plastic s urgery when he is olde r .
a ·•
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HOUIOI
r ·-
..
PlJBUC NOTJC8
PlJBLIC NOTICE
fllCTIT10UI 8USUflU NAMll S1'AT•MaNT
Tiie fOllowlflll per-. It dolflt 111111· ,.u•.1: R AND D SYSTEMS, IMO Wetl
lib Strwt Seftta AM, CA. J.,.l"lll!Y NEIL "ICKl!TTS, 1Mll w..-""'~~Ana. CA ftltll. Tlllt ..,._II c.--by.,.'"" dM411al.
Jeff,.., Hell lllCuttl Tllla llaf9mOlll w• lllN wllll the C-ty Claf'll fl/IOr ..... ~y Oii J4ily
1•. ""· ,.,...,
Pwu-. Ora1199 COllll Dally Pllo4, July u. tt, n, Aue. s. 1•1 3111_.,
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTl1'1CIUS IUlllf•U
NAMS 51'ATHllalfT
Tll• loll°"'I ... 1>9rl0ft1 ••• clOlnt ... ., ....... ,
PVBUC NOTJCI!
PlJBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUI IUlllfllS HAMS STATllMSMT Tiie fo1towl119 peraont •r• dol119
MNIMttat·
COHVINleNT AUTO "•"•o. 1111 l61u,Ml-.yCJty.CAft .. 1.
NICOl...AI SflNGACIU, JU '#.
WffWf'I, C.le MK.I, CA '2'17. HUMl!YA ADAMS, 222 W Wlf-StrMI, Celle-· CA '16%7-Thla l>vtlnoH I• condu<led l>Y •
....... 1 pat1nerll\lp.
H le.DI• StlfteKlv Thll tla.._I wat flied with Vie C.,lllY Clar11 ot Or ..... County Oft July 10.1•1 .., .....
PuDfl"'9d Or ... C-t Dally Pl!Ot,
Jvly 22, 2', ""' s, 11, "" ,,,, .. ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
PtlllUC NOTIC&
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTIT'IGUS 9UMlf•M MMelTAT .... lfT
Tiie l..._.ftl ..,_ I• flifl9 tw+. ........
fa) •MPLOYE• ••NEl'IT IYSTllMI Of' CALIP'Olll(JA lbl MAS TIE"IU"A N C:f l<I CALll"OllHIA OflGANllATIOM 01" ,.uauc. l!MPl.OYEH, 1..Z V611ey View. Svll• 10, Garf•11 Oran , C.lllOrllla fJMS Or•-Y er-11, J4e P'alr,,1••. La9""9 llaadl, CalllOfllla "'51 Thll ........ Al1 c.~by ..,1,.. flv ... al.
Gneart 8'own This '"°"*" -ftt• will\ !tie County Cl-ot 0r.,,.. C.-y °"
J VM 16, "'1. ,., ...
PvOll.,.., a-.,._ CMll o.lly ~·~
P\18UC NOTICI!
IHTl"T~OE, UO Llltlaton ---July U, D, 2'. Allf. l, l•I ,,_.., .·-----------,.lau, C..IAI ~ C:.lllorllla nt» P'ICTITIOUI euStN•U PUBLIC NOTICE Hltllol• JoM Matyaa, 14'61 0.... NAM• STAT•M•NT PlJBUC NOTICE .,.,,Y Clrcta, Tuetln, C:.fllornlatHID TM totl-nq --11 001"9 ..,,,. Ly-llMtM Malyat, 1*1 0.... ,,. .. H : llOTtU TO Cl*TllACTOU CAUJ ... ..,..,os ... ,,y Clr<la, TloltCln, C611twllla fMIO GTS TEXAS LTD/GTS TEXAS 11, f'tc:T1'1CIUS euM••M
M.AMS STAT•MalfT Tllh _,...,It c...-t941 by 4111 111· L TO ll:D s.nll-Ori .. , HHr110<t k-Olaarlct: Nl!W..c>"T~IESoA
UNl,.ll!D~HOOl. DIST,.ICT •••1911411 Beac.11, C61ilorllla tu.o TM teltew"'9 --•are ......
...... f'IHI•: N~ .. J Malyea Roeer1 I! Aft"-, 11» 5ant1-elf DMdllN: t·• o'clee:ll p.m. 04
... 4111 er.., ot .......... 1•1 Tlllt •lal-... tH• wltll I Or in , Newport B .. cll. Calllornla DANNY'S VILLA MA"ftlT, 1 ... C-1¥ Gian._, Orall09 C...llly .. Jiii t?MO Harbor l lvd., Svlt• A, f'wttlaln Valley, CA'21'1. Plato ot •ICI ltecelpC: 11157 l"lecHtla
SC., Co6t• Mna, CA t26l7 10, l"I T1111 ...,11neu I• conduct9<1 by a P't llmll941 parlMf'llllp DANll!l. GILBE"T CON· T"EllAS. "•• Deblols, l"ounlaln
Y alley, CA ft70I.
,.roJact lde111ltlca11011 Name : Pv111"'9CI OrMOt CM•I o.ir~ Pll04 ROC.11 e. .... ,._ CAllPl!T LAYING •EQUl,.EMENTS TH,.OUo.tOVT THI OIST,.ICT July U, n , '9.,Auo t, n11 .,..., <Hnerat l'at1ner
PlJBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUt 8UllN•M NAM& ITATllMlfT
flle IOl-ftl __,It dolflt Ill*•
iwtt•• W • AOVSllTISIHO, JIS. Y'°'°"• cost• Metoa, c:a11tornt• nu• W•r,., O. kttw•1, JU6 Y11<on, Cotta Mew, Callf#nl•t»» Thlt bullllfft It COl'ldllcled Dy an Ill· Olvldval. w..-ScllW•n
Tlllt --· .... llled with Ille c-•Y Clffll of Oranve eo..111, on July
T1111 1i.1-wet 111941 with llW C_,nly Cler11 of Or ..... COUl\IY on July
11, ""· Pul>lllll Or ... Coatl 0.lfy Piiot J.,. ly 21, H , Auo t, 11, 1'11 )2n-tl
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOUS IUllN•U NAMa STAT•M•NT T II• 1011-1119 peraon1 ••• doln9
busine11a1. WEE NEEDLE, JOS Pelm Str .. t.
aa111H. C:.fllor"'• '*' Geor9la Heclll. 4H Eatt
Ed~•utar. a.lbo4, C:.lltorllla ttMI
AND .. EA CONTll l!RA $, "U Deblel1, ,._ ... ,. V611ey. CA '270I. Thia ..... ,,.. Is condllclad by an ""' dlvlOU61.
o...lol Giibert contrwet Tiiis It-w• flied •ltll h C-ty Ciani ot Or .... C-y °" Jiiiy u.1•1. Plw.16
Pvt>ll.,_, ()-..... COllsl 0611y '"''°'· July IS, 22, 29, A119. S, t•l 2t1H1
,.,a«t ,._ .,, • .., file: 1es1 Plecon-
ua St., c.u "'1WM. CA m11 NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN Ulal
IM allOw-St-Dllltkt of
Or..... Oawirtty. c.lltoml•. act"" by anf lhr....,. 111 Go,..rnl ne 9oarcl. h•r•lf'lafler r•hrred to •• "DIST .. ICT ..... II receive "" I•, ""'
-, ..... .,_ .. Mowe·•latad time, Mal.O t;jch for Ille -Cl of • <ontrect for llW abOw -1«1. -------·-----! Bids lllell be recel..O 111 Ille 114«•
ldelllltlecl -·.-Id 11\alf ... ---pvbll(fy ,..., aloud ...... -... PUBLIC NOTICE
Staled ti-.-Id place
fltw.tt D•llfa l"aul, JOOS Eaal Ouan, a.11>N. c.lllorllla .,..,
IJ.1 .. 1
llOTIC:IE YO CRIEOITORI OP MILK TUNSP'••
l lK.61fl.-6111U.C.C:.J HOik• 11,,.,..,, ,,...,. to crMllon •t
llw wltNn MINd traMlerort !NII • ...,Ill t•-'w 11 -lo .,. m.O. on P•,.onaf prop•rly n•relnaller
Tiier• _.II be a H/A '-" ,._....., tor each H i ol ltld CllO<-ume11t1 lo
.,.,....,. ... llW retwn i.. ..... Uftllltlon
•ltlllll NIA ...,,, ellff Ille -_..,. date. ,.ubt l"'9d 0r.,... Cout Dally Pll04, Tllla ...,,,,.. .. h conducted by • July u. n. 2', AUIJ. s .... , ,'24-4t. llmlled ~-aNp Each blf "''"' conform -be relojlOllll119 to llW '°"'' ect clOc.v..-i ----Geo<~• Hatlll 0.K rll>ed. I! ac:h llld INI I ... «comPMied by Ille MCIM'lty retlNecl to Ill the c.onlr«I
clOc.umants -by -lfsl of pr_.t wlK011lrecton.
PUBLIC NOTICE Tllll slat-I ... 111.0 Wllh Ille Co.inly Clerk of Of-County on July
--10.1 .. 1
The ,.."'" -!>onltWU addreH of ,,,. lnlaftdlld trantter..-1 an. ROG£"
CAllTER -JUNE A. CARTE". )It Caaedor L•n•, San Clem•nt•, pt ..... ,.~~~::~:.i::r Pvl>fl"'9d a..,. C-1 Dally PllOI,
T,.. IOl!o.11111 per""' Is Ooi"9 ...,SI· July 12. 2'. AU9 S, 11, "" l27M1. C•fltornle.
Tiie DISTlllCT -Ille rltfl( IO retect *'Y or 611 lloldt or to ..... any lfre1lul•lli. w IMwmalllift 111 .,.y
lloldtor i. .. ~ ,.. ...•.
ASSAULT PREVE NTION OF CALIFORNIA. 141' NIMOll R-. •4.1, Tvslln, c.llfomlaflMO
Oana M. ""'Keio, 1411 NllM>ll Road, • 4.1, T11itl11, c.lllornla t1llO Tllll buSlllHI Is c.onduc;led by an Ill· dlvlClual.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tll• IO<ellon 111 Calltornl• ot tM chi" •ucutlff olflc.• or prlnclpal bodl· ,,. .. office ot Ille In-lr.,.slenir Is: IS. SooM CoaJt H19'1wey, L..-ll••<h. c.Jllomla. All oltwr bonlllHI ,,_ alld ad-
P'ICTITIOUl IUStN•SS drUIU uud by Ill• llll•nded NAM• STAT•MllNT tra111l•rot ..tthln ""'" y .. rs last pail
Tioo DISTRICT -oi.c.itWCI lrOf'll
!tie Direct• ol h ~of ln-•scrl•t ...._._ ,,. _ .. ..,..,..u.
"" ret• ef ,.,. diem ·-In the locallty 111 '#Nell Uwa W«1l 11 to be
TM 1011-1119 ,..,..,,. It dolnv ...,11. 10 tar aa known 10 lh• 1111e11ded
Dana M. Mu.suto ,,.11 aa. lranate•M are: H••ven·D•n. Jal>
Thl1 tla*'-1 Wti llled wllll tfW NEWPORT INDUSTRIES. LTD • Brlatol St.-, C~la Mew, C:.fltorftla
pertormod for HCll crett 0< ty119 ol -km.,. ,...,,.., ta auc:ute llW con· tract. TheM ,_ •• on file al tlW
OISTltlCT ofllc• tocatH ., 1'57
Plac.,.tla St., c-ta Maw, CA "'21 C:O.lff may .,. ollUIMd on ,_.._ A C.,nly ClertHll Oreneo County on JvlY ~t c.iw1110 str .. 1, Cosl• Mew, CA '1'1•, 5-• 1UB n. 1"1 mt T,.. ,.."'" -~ .odreas of PlWIS ~ICHAEL BAUCE EMMONS, ~I lh• lnl•nfeCI lra111lerees are · PUOllV!ed Or-Coasl Dally Piiot, C•brllfo SlrMI, COiia Mela, CA fUJJ. PATlllCK M. HUllLEY, 10 Ha..-
<GPY ol I-r-. -II be poslild al
tlM lob 11 ..
July IS, Z2. 2', AMf. S, 1•1 JllMI. Thls-sh c-.Clltdbyanin· ll ld9t Dr ive. Newport •••ell, -----------1 dlvldvel Calltor"'• t?MO, DOUGLASS. HONIG,
Tho toreeDlllV ~ of per ell..,
..... 11 ---• -1<~ .,.., ot "91\1 Ill -1. Ti. ret• for llolldar
-0¥9rtlme -11 "-II be et taast llmealld-"911.
PUBLIC NOTICE Mi<hMl 11 E~ UH G .... lola, La9u11a a .. ch. Thl1 1tale......,1 weJ tiled With llW C.Ulor1'ia '21U1. CO..nly Clal'tl °' 0r.,. County Oft Jilly Tllal Vie -rty llWtlnanl ,,.,..to 11
20, 1 .. 1. 0.Krlbed Ill veneraf as: All ll1lu,..1, fllCTITIOUS IUSllf•U ,,...., •q11lpmenl, -d ll'llfl<O-IS,
......... STAT•MaNT Pvbll"'9d °'-Coal! Dally Pllol, IHMl\olcl .,.._,,_I ... ,,...,. ... ,.,.
11 .,.all ll9_y_tlleCOH· TRACTOR to -,,_ <-lrecl 11 -••Md._, wPClfl --onlrKtar ...... , lolm, ta pay not lftl tMll tN ...:.~::ol'°""ftl .-_, 11
Ooill9 llvll· July JJ, 1', Aut. S. 12. 1'11 '21M1 ~:-:.~=.. lll.:r~: ::C.C.::!~ ~
MOE -CUSTOM WOODWOllKS. Brltlol sc.-, Costa Mew. C.lltor'ftla UICI -If! .. ,._. lo 611 ---ffllp!OY*!.., lllem ... ,,. •JSOCllllOfl ol
Ille contr«l lloOI w. INcAttllw, ~. IA, Sant. PUBLIC NOTICE t?•i.. 5"ce 12511
A,.., CA'21Gt. The~ -..-by tlW toalCI Na~ ""'Y witfldr-llli 11114 ...
a p.,iod of torty-11.. 1.UI da.,, •~
llW .. le a.t lor ,,. _..i119 of ltilb.
NORMAN BERN.ARD MOE, lloOI 1r .... 1..-or ft toaid Joc;iUon ,, H9-· W. Mac:..,_, Apt. IA. Santa Ana, CA P'ICTITIOUS 9UM•.U Deu
'270.. lfAMa ITAT~lfT Tllal ..id llUlll tr8Mffr ls lnl-to This llull...s II ~lael by ... In-Tiie -... --11 fOlll9 bus!-... co11•11mmat94I •I tlle offlu of: A ,...,_,. llOnd -• parlorlNIK• llOnd will .,. ,_,,.... to Ha<iltlOI' ot
dlvlduat. ,.... a.a: Prol•uklnat EKrow S.rvl<aa 1'21 N.
HorYnM a. -H. H. HAROING & ASSOCIATES, Tv1ll11 A-.., SMiie Alla, C.lllornla
llW COftlr«l. T .. pay..-t bond IMll .,. 111 Ille lorm •t lcwtll ltl ,,. c.ontrac:I
clOc.u~ This ... ._, Wet llled will\ tlle JU01 Pin••··· L•n•. Hv11 ll"1ft•11 '2701 °"°"•"'"" Augu117, ""· C-ly o.rtl ot Or-c-tron Jiiiy 8-11 CA.,,..,_ Tiiis .... lk transfer 11 1ubje<I to
1J, 1•1. H £ "Ill II T HAM I LT 0 N Calllorllla Ulllfcwm Gornme<<lal Coo.
Gowml119 lloard
P\>llll-,,.___ ,._11 o.ii"'=· HARDING, 21J01 Pt.-. I.MW, Hvnt· s.<llan '10.. ---,._ y ,... '""°" 1eec11. CA ,,...,_ Tiie ...,,. -_ _.of llW 1>9rton
By Dorollty Har .. y Ff!lfttr
PWchal119 Olrec:tar
Pvl>ll-Or ..... Cofft o.lly PlloC, h1ly IS. 22. 29, ""-· S, 1•1 J11'41 Till1 .....,_ 11 cOlldvclN by .,. 1..-wltll •hom clal1n1 may be 111941 Is
dlvl4uel. Proln•-1!1Lrvw S.rvkH 1'11 H
Jwly 22. 2', 1"1 nu41
PUBUC NOTICE H. H. H...... Tw1lln A-. 5-ta AM, C.lltorllla Tiits ~ •• flletl •1111 tlle '1701 -t,. lllll oay for 1111"9 ctalme PUBLIC NOTICE C...nty Cleft°' Or-~ Oii Jvty by ... ., c.reditor INll ... ....,, •. 1'11 --------P'ICTITIOUI IUSllf•U 1, t•t. which 11 -_.,..., day ~ tlW MAMaSTAT•,...NT ,.,..,. conwmmallonoa1a..,ac:lflad a110ve. NOTICE OF DEATH OF
LUCILLE CYE ANO OF
PETITION TO AD -
MINISTER ESTATE NO.
A-109600
Tiie loltowlnq __, 11 doln9 IMlll Pvbtl-Or-CoMt Dally Piiot, Dated July 21, 1•1 ....... : J & " CUSTOM AUTOMOTIVE $EllVIC£ CENTE,., 11101 lladoftdt Clrci.. UNI P, HUfttlft9lan 9Hcll, CA
"ODNEY D. MAMANDIK S"··
'1U Warllefd Drive, Hv11ll111t•~
leac: II, CA .,,..,_ Thia bullMss II c.ondwdH l>Y ...... dlvl .... I, ,.......,0.-111
Jiiiy I, U, 22, 29, 1•1 J007-41 Palrk• M Hwlay
PUBUC NOTICE
flJCT'IT10US Miii•• llAMe STATSJMllT
Tiie ......... --.. ...,_. ~ _ .. ,
Oouelea S Honl9
TraMI•~ ,.lll>llV!ed Or .... Coatl Dally l"tlo4, Jvly 12. 1"1 JJSMI . T o all h ei r s ,
b e ne ficiar ies, c reditors PUBLIC NOTICE and contingent creditors of
NOTICIE YOCOltTUCTOlll I Lucille eve and persons
Tllll ~ w• Ill• wlUI Ille c-•Y o.n • 0r..,.. ~Yon Jiiiy n, ue1.
,.ACIP'IC OARDIENINO, eo1
YOftllow!I A-, ._....,.... llNCll, f'tWll c.llforni.tM4 Pul>ll-.S 0..,,.. Coatl Dally Pllo4. 11 ane If D. Ha•kl111, U 11
CALI.ING"'°" 11os who may be otherwise in·
se11oa1 0111r1ct: COAST COM· terested In the Will and/or
MUN•TYCOLLEG£D1ST"rcT Estate. A petition has aid DMOlltW: 2:00 o'clock p.m. ot been filed by Pearl ,,,. •ltl er..,°' ......., .. ••1
Jyly IS, 22, 2', A\IQ. l. 1•1 '122~1 ~~ :::-• _......, 9Mcll, "l•c:e of 9kl "•etpt: Office 01 llW King in the Superior Court ""rcl\asl,. AIOlll. Ma. llMtlan f'enltl, of Orange County request-
COAST COMMUNITY COLLEGE 1'nn that Pearl Ki""' be ap-
REAL
VALUES
on items
from
applesauce
••• to zippers
are
advertised
every day
in the
Dilly Piiat
Dally Piiot
classlf leds wortcfor you.C.11 642-s.n
tor quick caslau ....
'
Tiii• .....,_Is c--.-, Oii i,.. ~IY1du61.
-.....D.H-MA Tllls ............. _flled_... .. C-ty Oer'll of 0r.,.. ~ ... J-JO.Htl.
DIST .. ICT, 1110 ~A-.COIU w • ._
,,,. .. , c.illwftle,... p o 1 n t e d a s p e r s o n a I
"'•IHt 1e1e111111ca110tt Name: representative to ad· C••••r••~r-.i-·•11 th t f "l•c:e "'-.... °"111a:,,.. Blvl'llCll minister e es ta e o P1tlt1t ,..,t11•r1111p, noo N•wport llvd., Lucille Cye (under the In·
,. ... 1.,., 0r.,.. c:.-Deity"'•· N9Wport 8Mdl, c.111or111a fH6J. 1m1 depe•nt Administration
Jvlr•. u .n ,29, 1•1. -...1 "~'t'r.ce is HUHY GtVIEH t11et of Estates Act> The peti-
,,.. • ._.........., 5'1\oot Dtttrtct .. lion Is set for hearing in
Oraf199 c-iy, c:.tlfor'N•, ect"" "" Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civ ic
•114 tllr°"llfl '" Govemlne ... r-. c t Ori w t 'n the
PUBLIC NOTICE
h••••n•t t•r rahrred ,. •• en er ve, es , 1 •OT•CS TO ca•o1TOU "OIST"•Cl ... w111 rece1 .... .,_ ta, • Ci t y o f Sant a An•. o,. 1uut T,.....,.." not•••• -llW ........... tac1 ''-· California on August 19, Cleo.'"'""' U.C:.C.) M•lad DldS fOf.,. ••••d of. COOllrecl 1981 t 9 30 Not k•lttlaf'9b'f t1--.tocrH11onot 1 • .,,....,..~1. a : a .m .
tne w1t11111 .....,.. 1r_t.,°" tne.t • alch .,,.,, .,. rec:.illed 1n t11a ,.._ IF YOU OBJECT lo the
""'" Ir-II -la be m ... on ldentllled .....,, _, llMll be ....,._ granting of the petition, p.,1onal property llaralnellu alld IMllllOcly rMd a*'CI et IN...._ "OU shoUfd either annoar O.scrllled. slated llme8"dplaca. ' ~ .... ~ Tiie _, -bullftetl ..,, ... of There wtll 119 • t l0.00 ... It r• at the hearing ltnu Stale
111e 1n1_...,tr_,.,.,...r•: "OOllR civ••ed10rHC11M4efllldt9DC-11a your objections or flle ~:!!..e:· ~·. ~~'::" ... ~-T~~ :,:1~ ::: ":::.'::::::; written objections w ith the
m c:a~ I.MW, s.i ci.-ta, c.. ..... court before the hearing .
Tiie 1oui1on ,In C6111w111-. ot t11e E•cll bl• ••I '8flfo"" •119 w Your •ppearance may be clltet u ec:vtl,.. otllc• w IH'ln<foel ,.~ .... ,.,.,.,~ ... I b t ltlv&lllHI olllu of Illa llllOftfff £ech bid 1f11111 ... KC.,..olMI I>'( n person or Y "fOUr a •
trauteror It : 1u lovtll C.Hsl 111e1ec:wttt~•1At11e cefltract torney. Hltflway, U.-8oecll. c:etlfonll•. ,__.... Olld tip Ille lltl of ..,_. I F Y 0 U A R E A ,:~~,4::-'"~ ~f'lr.=ci~ w;c.:~=T-ttierltl'lt• CREOITOR or a cont-
1r..,.,.rww11111n 111r" .,.., , ... peat r•ltcl •r" 811 ..._.,18 •••we MY lngent c1'9dltor of the de· .. tar •• 11now11 •• 111. '"'....... 1r....,,.,,.._ or 1""'-11t1M 111 ..., ceased, yOU must file your '"'"".,." _, HAAG•N·O.U'-isa lltftwlf'l_..._,..,111 .. ......._. cl•lm with the court or ~l•tlll Mrwt. O.IAI _.., CA "'*'• Tlla OISHl(T '-........ '"" .__. It to t-,.,...., S,.ACll nsa. , .. Dlrwdlr .... Ol9'ef•:•A ., .... pre-.. '""' per_. ...
TM --_, ...,_...,.. • ..,..,._, ............. ...., .. .,..,.... representttlve appointed Illa l11te11fU trattafarua an: 1111 , ... ., W "'"' ..... Ill .. by the Court Within four
"ATfllCft M. HU"L•Y •• ...,.,. M<•llly "' Miki\ ..... -.... M mont ... from t-d•te of ..... Drive, N-..,-t .. acll, CA "'1efSNf "' --(,.lift • .,,. .. fY '""' ,,. .. : oouoLAs 5. HON10. m • _.. _ _.. .. -• .. ,_ first fssuence Of letters as
on1ete,......,.. 9Ncll, CA msi. 1ra<1. ,.... ,.-.,.. ... 1110 at .. provided In section 700 of -~~==:.r::'T.::!~ ~~~!:~r .. :.:=:.::_: the probate code ot ..,,,..,..... 1-.....lf 1""".,,._..., cafl'lmYnlly c.11 ... 011ttl<t, 1t7t Callfornl•. The time for loaM11alf....-..1.tftf ... ,, .. _ .,.,," Avef'ln, Catt• Meu, filing claims will not••·
.,.. ,,_,.... ~ ., c.talft I<• ce111er111e "'*'·~ _, • • plre prior to four months <,_ .......... Mt I• ........ M: lM teltltf efl ,......_ A _., ef Wleta f •-,._. Of t...._ --r ~c-t"""'"".L...-INc.11, , ......... -.,_..., .... ,.... rom u-.. .... e ,.., ._ • tel"_.. Tiie ..,..... _...... • ,_, ._ Int noticed ebovt. Tiie_._. _ _.~,,.-.,.... .. .._._.._....__,,.. VOU MAY EXAMINE ::~~.z~t .. If le<allOll It: ltM Ill ..... n. ,_ .... ......., the file kept IW tht (OU.rt.
T11eualfM11tnMfart••,_,..• :=.::::.....~ _...,. 81 .._ If you art lnttreSttd In tM
M , ..... -..-·~ etfk~ i:: lhMO• "* ••• ' --.. CON-tst•te. you mey file a , .. .. ,.. ....... ·-~ .. k ... I 1 . T"ACTCMI .......... C41Mrect II quest with the court to ,.. TllttltlA-,1Mtellte,CAftPll at1 _.,.._ .. _.._, ...... , • .., cel .. t ._, .. ....al-of•-.............. 1,1"1, ltltll. .. ,., ... IM& --.. ,. ~ ,_ -.. ,...
Tiii• IMll• , ..... ~ ,, tMi.ct , ............... "'841 ---lnv•ntorv of matt and Of c....,,.. UM111rwt c:-n-c•• CMt .. ....,. 111 .. •--.... .. Ith• pet1tlons, accounts ltet1M1• c...... ~. ,_.. ... ,.. -.. ,,,.,,_""" .-... ...., .-. ............... .., Ind r9POrtS --r usu .-• ... --. cleltN _., • ,.._ •• ,., ... "....,... ••...,....., Section 1200.S of th•
;:1 11 '-•-.__., "" "· ......... _.. .. _... Celltwnl• Pnlbat. Code. •-. ..... ...., CA ..,., • ..,_... ........ •ti .... _._ • ,. Jr
....... -.., ....... (I .. _.., ............. .,,.., • tmw-' -·-.... ...... .l. • ..,ye,_ ............ 1'11, lallef .. aMl'aet.Tlll~ .... 16171 ..... _ ..... Mlle
llN&tl tt t111 ...... r--. • • 111 •""""'..,."'.. I
eellC •,:•........ ...... • .............. -....., I M••ll•c• ....._ca., OAT••'.!! . _..
. ......... --···---............. ··---Or Coe t ...... " .... _ ~. PubUIMll anet s ....,..... ~ c... °""' '""'-~0:...'":.,..., ~ O•lly Pllat1 Juty 22, 23, 29,
..... -..1 .. ,, .... ,.. ltlMl• "" ms-11.
• • 0 =· -·.
m1. mm
SERVICES
EMPlOYMENT &
PtEPAHTION
• lllEICNANOISE ' ... ~ .. Apa.At•,.."" e,~
M...\d,"tt \t••rn•I• . t-.-,.,. t Cf\HJ1fh~ "' (' ... J...,, .. ~~~~-,,,,, .... ~· ..
~1-
~tfl.._ ..... '""" LI•-• .. ~~..:. ...
I '\C....,... .... h "'•P'h4f • .la._.tl~rwn't'"h
Ufl1tt '""' 6 ~.qvi~ ""' =~-=t:::~ Sper\1,.. , ........ I,. •• MN.w11..-~.,
#' ~~ Titd .. 111 r1 'tt'f..,,.
HATS l MAtlllf
EOUlrMEllT
U.-11
41o1t\<1 """' """'"lt" ·t~: ~~~ t:cw111
lto:lt• H"'4 <"~•ttrr Miil•tJ> S.11 .,,., .. ~tP" laut ~ .. """",,,.....' ,,,., ffo.M•.Slftt'IU
THllSPOITATION
\1ru1ft
t amprr~ Vh• Nrnt rk-rtr•r l'lr\
'\ttuw C\t~ "'""' .. )lotor Um11 ~M-""~t TUI'"' lr•'t4 • Tr .. '"' l ·uhH .\llta -wtuc-t f•.n•
I AUTDMHILE
I ~ ... ,. AtlllqWti ... , .. , ....
Mt'<A'll~ \ l"''"" ~If\.• •·n-•.•.
.... •h«1 ""'"' lr•b
\ ""' AtK .. Lro•tt• I A-"""'"I AITOS. IMPOITEI
"~·· Al•IC.o•u \wtt
' \r..OR llf•l•)
lllW. tr
"''"'"" y_..,,.,. r•·• lluntl• '·~··' . '"ft ...... '"•'""'""'H~11' , )tfltlf
M .. r. ,1,f.1"' ltil•n1
'\IU . )lijll
\~~t, ....
it'Nt:•, .. I"'""" : M•"'n•ttl1
'jt"4lll•MV)ti:
"'""' $..I.th
MlfMtl• fw)t.111.f r ... ,..,.,
,~.~~"''""
11 AITIS, Ill
''""" .. AITIS,HO
'"" Hn~
"' IMI" IUU ,,.,.
'"" 14"1
""' ll>llt
11111 Ii ...
lldll
HAI 11•~ I• ... 14,;,
1tf.•
'"'' l"'i lf .. 1 ,_
111.Jt
.,.,
10 1 IJ ... ,_ ..
l~li
ltt,11 I;~., ,, ... ,, ..
/'IUJ
lftfj
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n 11
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7f'll ..... ,,.
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lflll•
mOIS:Mtttilraan ............... ..,.= .. ,.,. h •• .,..
DALY Pl.Of• m" ~-...... 1.cerrtct •••rte.• ...,.
HollttfwWt ••••••••••••••••••••••• G ... NI 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
PENINSULA
Fiur
Only atepe to the sw1. is
this bar&ain fixer. Brin&
paint brUlhes ' shovels
and caah in oo •· Call now
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
7 f 4-63 f-6990
~
THINllMG
TOW ... OME?
Ca II the specialists at
the condominium in·
formation center.
Touchstone Realty
96.l-(1167
CORONA DB.
MAR DUPLEX
South Of the highway Sits
this ele&ant home plus Income. Huge owners
un it. brick courtyard
leads to French doors
thal open onto Italian
tiled floors. Buutiful
wood pened floors
enha n ce den an d
spacious family kitchen.
2nd story bolts secluded
master awu with open balcony and bubbling
spa too ! 3 more queen
siled bdnns for your lik·
in&. Hu&e 4 car carage + 2 Bdrm income unit.
Price reduced and
owner is anxiolll. Call
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
7 f 4-63 f ·6990
:::: HAHOl Rl~E ::~ A w a r d w i n n i n g
•1,., "Jodelle" est.le home.
...,, Isl resale offering on
th11 exquisitely appouil·
,..,. ed to wnbome with ::!: massive view or bay, :!' ocean, rout.line & mght
Mo lichts . Offered at
:11.: S88S.OOO.
ftt)
r.vt •114
'"" Ii\• r.11 v;1,, -r.1:
1•1 •.'.' \' \ 1.' ,, ' . \ I I .i ~ ,
j. • • • :1 'f I f' 11
; t • ~ ~ , 1 I t ' I d I•~ ,
~:: -------· ~~ STIPS TO IUCH .;,., 2 bdrm each un it +
:!~ room ' beth off 2 car •a• carace. Good w/1 rental :f ~ area. SZO,<WXt.
WiU
Vi .. 1
•ll; •1• Wi"\11
~
Y7if
•:IM
associated
fl~ •., 1 U • i..' I fl. l ,.,. >
' • ,,.., t ' ••
·-
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedoetday. July 22, 1981 • 8f
~~~ .............. ~~-····· ~!:':.~ .... ", ~.":'!.~ ......•. ~.~!:'!':. ....... ~.~.~·······!~·~·~···· .. :· ~.~.~ ... =:.
·-· •• • .. , .... ,. • .. , ...... I 1002 ... ,.. 100 IOOJ. .... I ...... ltM .................................................................................................................. ·······················,··················•••!• ................... .
llmS !! \\ I I ,
lt \JNITS: AMUmabM ·
1112,000 la Joana . mo.ooo. Oruee . TAYLOR CO.
I: I ". 'I 11 · " I • I• I I NEW C<WDOS: From 112s.ooo to su1 .ooo. Co&ta Mesa.
DUPLEX: l Yr old. Al·
aumaule IU0,000 loan .
l:ZU,000. Oranp.
6 UNITS: Brand new.
11'8~ loan. ~.000. San nemardioo .
HAllOI YllW llOADMOOI ¥llWI
New offering in lhls lovely 4 bdrm
home with a great view or bay, ocean
& bright lights. New prof. Jandscapina
front & rear. Lge family rm, rormal
dining rm & 21/J baths. Great location.
Leasehold . Reduced to $395,000! Vac.
LOT IN DANA POINT
29 % d ow n • will
ubordlnate 1145,000.
WISUY M. TAYLOR CO .. llALTOIS
JlllS•J ........ ._.
NIWPOIT CIHTll, M.I. . ••4-4t I 0
SO. CAW. IW.TY
54M605
Tell a friend ...
and help choose your new
neighbors.
EASTILUFF VIEW HOME
lJk. Mw! WoetderM fellllly .._ witlt
•• decor thrCMIC)ltowt. Wood ftoon,
crowtt ~ " tltla I CM!• 4 ~ t•ly roo. ..t fonMI cW:1cJ
roo11tho.M. Sl39,000. 631-1400.
UDO ISLE IEACH UTUAT
Stnet to afrfft loc.tioft. CoMfortaWt
3 bed. 2 betll i.o.. with ...... drc*
flrtploct. Pric.d ri9'f at $355,000.
CUFfffA YEM_.EAUT1RIL
ltocfy to MOU ••to ., ... ,. .....
... ..,., & ,.,.,.t ""'~·Lott of
dNnl witt. 2 flreptocn. ...,. c..try
lrifdwB, ... "•'-' l'OOlll .. pooklud back yard. 2-alory holM with 3
....... & vu fro"' bid floor ....
f9Nly l"OOM with ftNpleu + ....,_
OW~ER WILL EXCHANGE & lltlp
&c.c.e. $375,900. A flM ••la•
S'fCI of hicJher priced i.o.....
PAHOliMIC VU--OWMEI FINAN.
IH11tlhl decor & coordiHttd
1111 cughMt to you c• • ., ri,i.t lft.
.... "*" lltcludtd i. tWs vu "°""
.. ... 3 bN. ..... ""·· dlft. ""' + W..-d
ra 11p•• ....: Pfi••.,.. dKu I balcoay. OWHEl WILL CAllY .
,,75,000. 631 -1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES. INC
REAL £.STATL
s.,i,, Am.i. P,,_,, M"'"'i' """''
7431> \lo Co..r lh.\ JIS ;...,,,,,., A...,
l'Wwpo.1 a.. ... h &t-1 .. l~nr1
Ui-1400 '7Ut00
CE
110111 ILlllS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
uuaa POIMT, COSTA MESA
Just What You 've Been Looking
For. Three Bedroom. Two Bath
Condo. Near South Coast Shopping. Spacious Feeling With Skylights.
End Unit. Assumable First Trust
Deed. Priced At $134,000. Owner
Will Accept A Lease-Option At
$139,000.
MESA VEll>E
WHATS UHtquE
AIOUT UNIQUE
AN AFFORDABLE
DREA M-Remodeled
Peninsula Point 3 Bdrm
home. One block lo
beach. Great assumable
financing. $475,000 fee.
YO U'LL F ALL IN
LOVE-Atr.olutely darl·
ing 3 Bdi·m Country
home, per 'ect in every
way. Bri :ks. beams,
French dcon1. lrresisti·
ble at S22S.IXXI
LUXURY PLUS AN IN·
C OME-This new
custom duplex in Old
CdM has a 3 Bdrm unit.
and a 2 Bdrm umt Best
quality on the market. I $449,000 I
ASSUMABLE FINAN·
CING-Old CdM duplex,
3 Bdrm and 2 Bdrm un·
1ls. Su per location a.nd
very well built. $330,000.
REALTORS
'75-HI I
SO. Cl HIGHWAY -Ta ........ .,..,,
1 Wecl&I tr.. ~Helt. T1nt ptr old ,...
.... 2 ... Jle."-tlllffoWerWlllct
wHt. l .... hat .,.. of okl COM. Of.
"'" .. Sltl,500.
COLI OF MIWPOIT IEALTOIS
JSIS E. Coest HWf·• C.... .. Mer
675-5511
Dalebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
_REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949.
COME WITH US ..• TO THE ILUfF LARGE CARMELITA MODEL .. FOUR
BEDROOM COND O .. PORMAL DINING
ROOM .. TASTEFULLY DECORATED IN
NEUTRAL TONES .. BONUS ROOM OFF GARAGE .. 2 PATIOS SEE CHRIS PITCHESS
2116 VISTA ENTIADA. $239,000
THURSDAY
COME WITH US. . .TO THE COlOHA
DEL Mil WAY Of LIFl. .. BEAUTIFUL
BUILDING SITE. WITH 2 BEDROOM ccrr TAGE INCLU DED LOCATED FIRST
BLOCK ABOVE OCEAN BLVD WITH VIEW
FROM LIVING ROOM AND DECKS SEE JIM MELBORN OR LISA CASEY 222
MARIGOLD
222 MARIGOLD WEl).flJ l~S $375,000
·' 1617 WESTCLIFF DI, M.I. 631-7300
Beautiful Contemporary Home In
Costa Mesa's Best Area. Features
include Five Large Bedrooms, Two
Impressive Fireplaces. Gorgeous Living Room & Family Room .
Skylights, Wall Coverings, Wet Bar
-Fantastic! Price. $229,500. INCOME PROPEITIES
(i). --. ., •..•.. ,,
2285 & 89 Santa Ana Ave.
l>7 Hamilton
415 Han1llton
1395 & 99 Baker St.
COMMBCIAL
3 Lots · 23rd & Newport.
RESIDEN11AL
2030 Monrovia
$265. ()()()
$175,000
$190,000
$375,000
$275,000
17141759-1501
ExclUng op~~tit't1de channel
view from spectacular architectural
designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home .
Slip for 2 lar&e boats. Sl,495,000.
Summer Occupancy.
UDO ISLE HOMES
Featured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm , 3
bath homei_ new ll' _redecorated. Priced to sell q'4c11;ly at $475,000. 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 IE.ACHFIOMT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm , 3
bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur-
ing marine room. Sl.385.000.
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bdrm, den . spacious Plan 8. Im
maculate. Low priced at $215,000.
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
J-l I I'. · 1 ":. J · . r, ~ f> ,", ti lo I
17141 752-7373
/.Jn ~ILlL
13AILU b.
ASSUCIATES
A1 .... I/~
lf")OO VA lol.n. 3 BR 2
BA w/dbl pr, fto«d
front ' rear yd• S
110,000 B"--.alO
I
,.
,..._ I,
a11;;.:!'1
OCUN VllW
lffo DOWH
MO COSTS
TO IUYll
NO QUAUFYM
) Models
Ftom Sl 34.~
Secluded roof-top
s undeck for
rom ancing under
the sun or stars.
Spira l staircas~ leads to den or of·
fi<'e. Please call
bkr 631-2246 for
details.
...........---.~~ ,..._,......,.....~
15000 down, SI 180 mo
buys 3 BR 2 Ba fixer in
Cosla Mesa. Ownr agt
642· 1S23, 64> 1:.;s
EASTSIDE
Lovely 3 BR 2 Ba. ram
rm home wlfplr, dbl
gar Sl49.SOO
~roker, 646-4380
SI 0,000 DOWM
Easts1de Costa Mesa
Townhouse 2 Br. 1'2
baths, p\'1 )ard. 2 c:ar
gar. \'aulted ceilings.
pool and spa SI09.SOO owe straight note
R&H lnv't 7S2·2lln
USTSIDE DUPLEX
YA
Two I Br. only Sll9,SOO.
640 7814 or91µ-7600
LOW DOWN: Beautiful 4
bedroom showp lace.
Plu s h c arpe t s
lhroughout. Sunken
form a 1 din mg room
Fam ily room with
fireplace Tucked on
large lot Close lo South
Coast Plaza S204.900 TAR B ELL ,
REAL TORS 979-~ _
MlSADllMAl
IEAUTY
2 story. S Bdnn 3 Ba.
Ext'c: home. Roman
slyle pool & rowita1ns.
new paint & carpel .
c us tom11:ed garage
game room. Seller will
carry lsl. T D at 13'f
StB0.000 Da"t' Bourke
ReaJtor ~9950.
4 Br 2 Ba home with 2000
sq ft Intl. lg lot with RV
a ccess P r i de of
Ownership. Shows well
I mile from So. C Plaza
20':'r down. Buyer obta111
13718"{ FNMA conv. In
Inte rest r ate sbJ to
change OW C Call Fred. agnt. 559· 1887 for•
deta.~1l""s __ _
EAST SIDE
Sll.000 dwn. 3bdnn. 2ba.
pool owe al 12·.
Sl8S,000 SS7·2783 or
8Sl·Sll1
MESAV9DE
ASSUM.AILE
N1re 3 Bdrm 2 bath
home New roof, near
schools and shops Ask·
mg 1129,900 For in·
formation. call ~1151
-~~ HERITAGE
REALTORS
~:f --------1 ~; COtl.-CW. Pete Barrett Real~ Walker Blee $ 95,000
·m: +UYN
Spacious 3 bdnn, 2 bath
-· •Pt. Bltlna, wet bar,
firtpl•ce1. atrium. Over "'1 590 aq. n. ot bullnes• ,... apace + 4 car 111119. ~ Priced at Sl50,000. ,.,,
associated
' . .
presents
OMI llAUTlllUL V11Yt
Harbor View Hills Broadmoor, 4
Bdrms and family room. Excellent
financing. $429,000. ' TWO OH A I.Of
One bdrm each, well located
Peninsula Point. Owner will
finance . $.\59,500.
THiii UP AMO J DOwt4
Ocean rront duplex . fantaatic view.
1750,000.
I •AU.IS IM MIWPOIT
Customized 3 Bdrm, 2~ bath
Harbor Hi1hlands home. Move your cars, boats or toys right in. SllS,000.
THE HEISSER C•ANY INC.
714/641~763
SOPHISTICA110M
Describes this captivattna 4 BR. 2
bath detached home. Prof esslonally
decorated &r landsca])ed. Mirrored
wallst alriupi , loads ol decking ' comp1ete privacy. $192,500.
Real Estate
ICUMUllM:aua .. C' Wt 111 ...
PllHCH OUAITll
3 BR 2Vi ba twnhse.
Patio, fpk , double gar, ow e 1110.000. BKR
646-4.'llC>
YA
BY OWNER I
Walk to beach. 4 Bdrm ••
1•.ba. family nn. dinU.,
rm . Only S146.90f
5.1S-2403 3 to 7
POOlHOMI
Lovely 3 Bdrm homt
ruturt.ng muter bdrm
with open beamed cell
I.op and 8tn Franklin
fireplace. den. and
library /1tudr otr muter
bdrm. Eatgant rormal -------· dtn1111 roam Mrlooklni pool and peUo. Assuma
bl• flnanrlnt also
nailable. Aalllng
1116.000. For an appoint·
CMnt to••· call S.0-1 m
-· ... -······ 11••• JOW1tllatm Call lM apedalletl at
lbt e0Ddomleh1m la·
fonut• cimtel'. ToutlllllontRedy
ASSVMAILI VA
Take ov• blP balalle. •S23 "· ...,.__ om VA IOID OD tbta _,.,.,Ja~llWM.
alm01t new a Bdrm a Ba L..ti-.... 1 Ml :in:.~ ~l':. ~r; ............. ~·····
covered paUo. C1JJ i
detalla.
~. .. "-" ,, llAUTllUL
YllWHote
Located In a quiet --------1 wooded area ol La11m1 WOODBJUDGE Beach, on a private TOWNHOME Det1cbed 2br. wba, drive, thine• 3 Bdrm 3
Crplc, atrtwn. 1~" 11. Ba home olfm the best
le .. In coutnadion and •P-1um1b lo&n ••• 311,500. •-t •• ._ .... ,_. (714)W·1510by0lmer. pow meo .. , ....,... ..... c· ---la ble ocean view and the HIA T charm of a by-aooe era.
u a pin, cleao tr coiy, 3 Th1a la a m14'lseebome.
Br 2 Ba w/courty1rd en-"50,000. IM-?UlO
try. Near new carpeta •
and. microwave In· l" eluded. Clole to acbeols 1ngo aod 1boppin1. CaJJ for _ ~· details. -.-.. -•
~-~' ...
. ' . .
'I
Tile entry, phab carpet,
wood decllin1. etc hi&bll&bt this well local-
ed condo in beautiful
Woodbrid&e.CaJJtorde-
talls. Owner anxious.
1141.900
l l\bodbrklfe
Ruk1
S51-3Mt
en "'•>.ln•llM>
don osen
17THATPROSP!CT lnllt 1144 TUSIJN, m..a1u ......... -......... ..
I .. OOMS -LAI• UY LOT OuUtanding location on larse end
Of cul-de·HC lot "Htl~" uu Model iD Harbor V\ew Hilla.
Canyon view ' mini view 1 tool ! ... 900 Darlene Herman '75i·l4H · (5'14)
OUTSTAMDtN• YllW POPUlar· Laure1 model ln TurtJe llock
Olm. LovelJ, lg 2 BR pl .. den, 2 bla., ell'tJltoM decor -Bihl Yins. Seller •••i1ted ltiiladQI. 1111,IOO Jeanne LaFourc1cfe •• ....,.. (.S15)
COWMS ISU MAMSIOM W /It 7' OM THI IA YI Spacious and ~ant bay front w /Mansford
" 180" view of islands and peninsula. Fl ve handsome .bedroom suites. Dockage for 3
yachts. Offered at S3,900,000 ln·
clodln& land. Cathy Scbwekkert for appt. 6'2·8235. CS76) .
TMI IAY, HACH & IOA1'M .cnwn Lovely new home on
Balboa bland. 3 Br le f am. rm.
surrounded w /vlew1 ! New cmtom conttructlon. Slip ror 30'
boat. Jane Paquin 642·8235 "15,000 (S'1'7)
Wf & CHIMM CAIN& MOD& I BR, 2 bath home located
In Seawtnd Community clole to
pool ' ttnnii. Security . 1259,500 Fee. Jennifer I. 844.aoo. (818)
llU&i ....... ~ ....... ~M .... lllll&i
..
R&"M~
IL\ ' 1
\
YUR·M>UMO NM:
Soc111 Actlvltlea O.·
reciof • F1oe Sunoay
Brunch • BB0"1 •
PartlH • Plu1 more
OlllUT lllECMATIOM: r.,...... • Frte L.eNorw
IJ>fo ' pro •Plop) • 2
Heelth Oubl • Sauna
• Hydrom11sag1 •
Sw1mm1ng • Goll
Orw1ng Aa1191
IUU'fW'Ul Ant:
Slnole•. t ' 2 Bed
room1 • Furn11ht<1
' umum.hed. AIM! L1v1ng • No Pet1 •
Modela Open Delly
1110 e
Oekwood
a.den~
Newl*11eecf1N.
880 ltvlM l•I 1111~1
(71') 645-1104
Newl*1leecfll.
1700 16th St rPon< 11 1t1hl
(71•) 642-5113
1 Br. GardalApt .. Stove"
rerrtce. Adultl, no Pfti s.m. S4a.t377.
lBr, attacbed pr, aupv-
clean, l37S mo. m w
Wiboo, ~llli
2 Br. 1981 Maple Ave.
Refrice. Adults only. no
peU S375. StHTa Mimt.
Co.641-l:D.4
··~TOWMHOMIS
CONDOS FOR RENT
2 Br + Den. 21,; Ba. 5640
2 Br. 21,; Ba. S620
1 Br. xtra Ir& $515
Brand new, full size
townhomes, double
garages. private fenced
yards. rireplace.s. No pet.s Locaucl 2 blocks
from downtown shop·
ping , 5 min. to buch.
Open daily U.6
666 W 18th. Sl , C.M.
540-9626 or 64.2-~
q.iet Aclllh Oftt' J5
Lrg 2 Bdrm. Upper. $370
mo Btfl landscaping
Nopeu .
LEEWARDS AP'J'S.
2020 Fullerton Ave
631-0397
ntE VICTORIAN Newly
decor 2Br w/p.r. adlt.s.
crpt.s. drps, bit-ins fncd
yrd w /patio. water pd.
636-4120 call 1·5. 667 VIC·
toria. kSO.
BEAUT I br, bllns.
carport "pool. AdlU. DO
pet.&. Bike to buch. k 15
931 W. 19th SL 548-04.92
Laree l bdrm apt. quiet
area. yd, new c~. 2 cars ok. No pets, no children
mo.~3780
Large Townhouse 2 Br
1"'1 Ba .. patio. laundry
rm.S42Smo.~
2 Huge Bedrooms in
super location full y
carpeted, built·•ns. &round floor. Over SO
Adults only. No pets. S350 Mo. 568 W. Wilson.
AptE.~.
SPACIOUS 2 BR Adult.
open beamed ceiling.
lots of wood, serving
bar 1410. No pets. 2256
Maple 548 -7356 ,
67J.8803
Stz:s. 2 Br l Ba. !louse. No
doga. 645 Victoria •8
54§-9124
Studio in Santa Ana
heights. S250 mo Incl
ut1l. Inquire 20201 B
Birch Street. 833-1927
$'255. 1 BR dplx. In quiet
aare court. For non ·
smoker c prev rental rer. ~ w 17th. S48-0358
lbr E /side, small but
cozy w/lots of neat
wood. Adlts only. S33S.
551-1660.
-)
J ·'
.._..., __ _.~ .. ·· .. •
~ lwllh u.hn. AfJalw•s u.hn. ...._ te Sime 000 to Sime 4300 ..... 4450 ....._..... 4450 ....... W_.... 4600 ._...., ._..., Morf91i!IJ". Trwt
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• o,,ort.lty SOOS Oppot.._..ty 5005 Dffclt 5031 ............... 3140 s..c....... 1176 Coodo OD 20 acre park. RETAIL ofc. 11_1ace. 700 NewportModemStore Bachelor 50• low Wiit v···J .... A .... d ... G ................................................. ..
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • lui. furn., pool, ~·a", "•· sq n.. Wntclicr area. or ofc or post ore. k.50. ea mer needs living qtr 1 eo rca e am e 3rd T.O. fouale 14% lnl
DELAWARE PINES · · "" • "V bletv.ovmnnli .m l5l·UOO 548 s / · 213 477·700l car/boat,C.M.atta,w11l Callforinfo.0-4310 """" County prop. For de· 2 BR Z BA CONDO ,.,,_ '~*' ~l•te~ '" '" f / w/1tor1ge for restoring Route. Choice Beach loc. SSS u .a.11y! only, discotml, So. Ori.
Spacio.!~Bdrm. 1olfco~. t/1 i'lfled .. t w/uliJs.N 642·l312 OfftaW. Jmx pay utll 646·3647 art ICEC'REAM·NEWPORT r:;~!:;M"::!IBi;~ tails. wnte P.O Boll
· Offlul..... 4400 NptBeach OC.A~/C.M. 6PM Xlntbeachloc.$19,500 Northern California 6843, Longview. Tu Fr p I c, s tove. d 1 s · s.N A.. JllO "··----....................... Small ex.ec:Wve office. 18-40 prime 2 sty or-Must sell now' l·533-'242 A k' S60 000 7 5 6 O 4 o r c a I I
bwasher, garbage dis· •••••••••••••.......... Oldest ft lar&estagency 1617 WeJtclirf. N.B. Want lllot 1ddrell, 111196/Mo. fi cea/warebouu. ale, .__.,/ .. ...ti N . · 5 1111
63j.zj42 1·214-663-1418
posal, pool, lawidry Cac. Duplex 3 bdrm. 2-,., ba in So. Calif. since 1971 financial inst. 70005.f. Terri !714)752-1194 cpl. o .H. door, etc. Fflt9ct ew .crowing worens ell· 7 Unit Riverside. ll87,000.
Small, quiet complex. den, new paint, new Credlta :ABC,NBC,CBS, 1.at.noor. tS4l·5032. llTAl.SPA.Cl Sublease. 968.1337 ••••••••••••••••••••••• erc1ae & h~a th spa. Equity 557,000. Will
Adults only. Pets con· drapes. 2 teenacers ok. Cosmo. Phil Donahue ... EWPOIT .... CH N 81 d an)'tJme ._....___ Great potential l.'2.50,000. trade to Costa Mesa sidered. I Br. $450/mo. 2 No pets, 5 min to So •\.\off• " -SOOOsq. ft.oo wpt v · -Terms 770--0633Blu Br. U50fmo. 19221 Coast Plaz.a. 1695 (714 ) toallwboneedaplace Full semce exec. of. HI tralfic. Great U · Co 1rcW O"or .... t 5005 R t Et ()(fi T house, Property, Gold or
Delaware Sl. (So. or 7I0-1A8 fices from 5397. "On posure. 13500 mo. 1---"-"-.... 75 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ea 5 ate ice , um· 2nd. TD ~·2075 or --lm ... . -,.,. BIKE RENTAL BUSI. Ke Y o Pt r al Ion ~ 5163 Garfield) 842-8807. or. ..__. ....... F• 11&.e..I Newport Beac:h. 641·1899 Call" ellec. offices from meu. OClCUpy. ....................... In La• o-h F Comoletely furnished in· , •• ~SHOP ·-=-==·'------
(IC-hrs · Tues Thurs "'r-"""" _. .. _... <>-rvin• allt .. ·S Coast 11-. lnclds ·~--·rial Realooomics 875-6700 312 to,....,,. rt r t elml ...,ac: or r · "' Sattler Mtg Co.
.. •1 • orU11fw Jaa.d l900 ""' • '"" · ""'· · ""'"'~ ' , ._..sq. · ron aae. moreiofo:call494-3304. eluding 5 line phones. Th I l bus" ess C M f 1 arter 5:~PM, Fri·Mon. ••••o••••o••••••••••• GardenG-8915-"~.., phone ans., word pro-C.,_4'1Mlr w/a)nk. Under 5or sq.ft . P r ime location on 1o: ~~:w C~ll· f~r All types o rea tslale
9-5PM. s E A w I N D ovn., '""' ~~in.f~ul~ERS -IQ fl Ql'9Ulld floor. E.Side. Cll. 548-7249 Sheet M~I Shop.,. ~w Pacific Coast Hwy in details. l&S.000. Craig invest= l!M9
lBd.rm, or/dbeach, built· v1• •·GE COW-PANIES ~.0•1•l H!1bway .... tw ...... 4500 ~~lo~Ul.~~. Ph ~~~ del Mar Call 631-UIMI s~· ~ cpl rapes. gar. New 1~ lwcu.ry Roommate wanted. M.ust 714/851-Clll81 11:.:.r:.nomiu Corp. ~xm;;;;·;w,·;;·.·u 641-1.234 • Sml town mtaurant in 642-2171 545-0611
5J6.<S2l adult apta in 14 plan5 1 be neat. S250mo + utal.l PLUSH 0 f FICES . OfftCI SPACl building. 1.oned N·l. 991 SwC!;Pool Atascadero. Ca. Profita·
Avail. now. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Bdrm rroml465 2bdrm block from beach. fem. 500·6000 sq ft. 1801 Motomo,oo.i--tts W . 19th S t. C . M . ble even with non· ..,._~/
Upstairs1 dsbwsb . rrom S.S35, To~house pref.over25.548-9816 Newport Blvd, C.M. Pb ..,......, l650/mo.142-MIO working owner. Price Pe...._./
refri1e.w/a,balcooy 1 MOO + pools, tennis. Liberal Roommate con· 646-949§ INCL RECEPT . CollaMesaofflceliwork S..-.lct....... negotiable.OWCpaper. Mo. toLo. 5025 Lost&Fomd
childOK,nopeuplease. waterfalls, panda! Gu Lactservice. 711 W 17thSt .. CM.Wet· CONFER, COFFEE. areat.otalinc4,225sq.ft. Southem Orange Coast Call Edith W Hesskk •••••,•••••o•••••••••• n••••••••••••o•••••••
S.Sr 25. 545-2000. Agt. no for cookmc & heating (213) 633-3449. rbat ~~;~Ji dips. 311< sq. COPY RM, ETC. at » IQ. ft Avail Oct. trr:T~ N~5e:~0~· F~11~ 8R0~t1r46f1-,.._A00uoAcsika tfeosr WIDOW ta.s money tor Happy A• 5120
ee. paid. from San Dieao Male or Female share .vu--. lat. Call 642-2928 ·l • w·.11 '"l " v·"" . · 2nd T.D ·s 110.000 & up' •••••••••••• .. •••••••••
Deluxe poolside lllra Frwy drive North on plushN.B.1Br.bouse. Private Office with IDEAL IF REAL llm-4pm. $:.:.ipt:.'c an1M;,"t GayleSbarp. E-Z CREDIT!Nopnlty
large 2br. 2ba. bllns. Buch to McFadden l'i'I blocks rom beach shared recpt, sec'y £STATE R!LAT!:D Sfor..-4550 Fri.9-5PM.p:861-01ll RETAll.JEWELRY CallAgtEileeo673-7311
dswhr. l~ miles beach. lben Weston McFadden w/pool Ii tennis courts. service avail. O.C. BUSIN~. •••tt•••••••••••••••u• 6years at prime Lagwia i--------•I Adlta, no pets. k50 mo. lo Suwlod Vlllace. S3SO. lit. ft last. Call Alroortatt1.8Sl·tt'13 N t f l80 M ftAYB.ASINCY Beach location. Heavy
536-8362 (714)893-.$191. Paul7IO-~. Cdfll Offi-........ 2 pvt. PRIVATE DESK ; or ~~..:... o. Open 4 years, good ntio cub sales. Owner . '""' ..,...... AR"" .. .., OR Sun'E NOW ewport _... RS lirin P 0 Bo 6263 2 br, 2 ba, blt·ins, gas 1.-4000 Mature adult. male or ores. Reeept., work rm. .,.,... 87MU4 leuellocltion. PA 2 re I · · · x ·
f I I •. h V'-• ..... _ l AVAll.. all Ip .. •. u-vy ---'--. La•una Ni•uel, Ca rp c , enc gar ............... •••••••• femtoabrlce3Bdnn,2 •bat . AJJl4-• .,.;. Ar ~•h•-is .,... """" "'"""' • • $475/mo. 1st, last, fl50 Eutaide Costa Mesa. 'ba, rum apt. CM. w /0 , cond , cpl., quiet. ~ GRll...!,14~~ CM .... ...,8 tour, • FIT volume. 92677po~ ~111158311·5232
•JW.0•
2nd T.D 's, 1·3-5/yr.
Interest Only
l20.@15.oao.ooo
C...tFill•cW
(714)873-8915 sec.~:~~;!i.4115 ~GiAL:,:;;r~.:f/oumow,/~~t~ =~5/mo. Ulll incl. ;~!:~:~:::~near .............. : •••••••••••••• oo.:.
,_.._. ~.... r·~ ......, ... • Room lnclud•s all Balboa BayClub,342"". ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
-,_.. --lut mo. req. Aller S pm • " · """' • • Morl1J11!9f1 Trwt ....................... 6*-3375 Rudy. 12115 mo. 406 SIC n .. S370 per mo. Also 212 DJ; .. 5035 L;hcau!~s ~!~'e .D~. ab!. Mna Verde, pvt patio. ~~ A11e : 25·50 ~at~c,.mo.C.U • 8•D •y WEEK SPECIAL .... •••••••••••••••••••• entran~. bath. Refrig, Nr. Bch. Sbr. spar tri· • A A • Want investor for Npt ~~n4;.~~io~~~ ~1coo,kinc.tsrnti~;; ov level home. Micro. l2SO P .C.H. • I Daya • 3 Linea • 8 Dollars • ~~f/~:~~0~~ 0~~~
6216-2149. ~e3812ues s. mo mo. inc. all. HB. Sl .lS~Ft. • • T.D.Aft.675-6161 111AKESOM10filltw1t'r
lbdnn, new. Irr, deck, Condo. 11 room, Beach & 536-SC.O.lll!O-IU> Deluxe ortlce space, It's easy to place your 8-0ay Week Classified by mail, and it lllAKf SOlllEONl $11111.l r:e~~~~,:z~.:7~~ lo :ms. Priv 1baj wasNher. p::~.::r::!~. f~~.a1~: r:~:/~~~!~a~ • costs just se -tt)at's only a dollar a day! To Qualify for this • co~~Elf,.,~ES Pla~ethis~::nAD
....... __...___.. ·~.6, ry_e[· poo 1 ·~ 00· Prestlcous 3 BR. 2 BA. now. Contact Byco, tnc. • special offer. you must be a non-commercial user offering e roronJyS32.5 ,__r-. --smuaing, quiet......., mo. Fplc, mlcr, w D. total 645·2251 f Delta Paolic Mortgage ....................... 641:1472Mda upgraded. TUrtle Rock CM 3 beaia. offices 11 • merchandise or sale up to $800 per ad. and the price must e 111•>as1.:io.o Call642·5678 0~!:~!~~"~!~1s~!~te~ 2500 CONDO on lovely Home.Nopeta.S340mo. balh,840sq.rt.Xlntloc. • be in your ad. The cost stays the same whether your ad • LicenaedR.E:Broker
unturn. Broker. ~12. Gr~eobelt w/spacious Share utll753-2.1136 ~J: ..
7
· ~1pLJ. drps. 1750. needs eight days selling time Or J. ust one. ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
patios • sundecu nr Roommate wanted, ...., -• WEPA.YlffEMOST UcJMllltC... NO FEE! Apt. ~ Condo pool. SS?·7'1183or640-6D. female HB.1116 mo, 1st, • For your T.D. 's ft Notes FOi
rentals. VlU.Rentals. Private entrance In priv. last sec. AvaJl 8/lS nr , .. ~A • Use one word in each box. About 4 words make one • at Den isob Assoc smEIAIU'S 87H'12Broker home. No 1mokin1 or beach. 960-98117 ~-673-7311 llrtWlyC41111t!! ,An ........,. drinkin~Prer. male Proresalooal woman ~pacioua O.~IAivec~t • classified line of type. Minimum ad is 3 lines. Please print • ·-Se---l ..... ll--bln=-,.-,_-wi_t_h_D_a1-ly Wtd...W,Zl.
RtWrUlll over40.~Mo.556-0637 would likeeoahare her H1cesll •ucroaa . rom lil y • plainly. • i~il~otWia~ntiAds:li· iiiiiiiiiiii.C:::::::: COUMTIY CLUI Xlnt L• 11>.4 .._ nr Hoag , h h • . A services ava •·
1 .,--. It' • ~-"~ d home wit aoot er bit. 'optkloal'. From 225 •
""-no lloo ........ stea y M woman. COM. Ocean sq.rt. up at rusooable r:------------------------------,. Bachelors, 162 bedroom $225. 646-lOZ view, quiet, beautiful rentals. No lease rt· •
apts •toWllhcMel. Su .. 1r.... 4200 $3)0. 873-&562 guittd, call873-3002 · •
From f5l0 A4-l900 ....................... Fem non·amkr to shr hse BO •y SLIP : • LJOO VIEW 2 br, 2 ba. 2 LIDO ISLE charming 3 on Ba I boa Is land A
ten-.• frplc, prime, adlts. bdrm, 2 bath, playroom. '200/mo + ut1l 873-0468 lilclilldtd II,....... •
fl,OOOmo.mase Just remodeled. Mon· KenorCUrt we.. ._.
OMTHIWATB lblyrental.BillGnindy, M/F share Lido Isle ..._r;. te.:. •
f b I I bay view 875-8161. home. Tennis, Beach. c.. Ft. ......___ c~ • • ~.eu ll::e, duplex, 3b; NE w p 0 RT oc EA N. Club. $300Ji375. 673-52'74 ;:.. ~ui'
2 ba, 1anae. Adulls. no FRONT Lull. 2"4 Br. Wk· Bayfront pvt suite, non· • •
pets. N llo. Yearly. b .871-SURF,87).7677. smoker. Gar, shr kitch. Profeulooal Offices to • •
87M2JU111J.1W2. Hunt. Bch Ire 3bdrm 165()/mo. 673-tll60 4000 sq ft. Remodeled to
3 Bclrm, 2 beth. '750 mo. w/apa. Near beach. Au11. Female Rmmte ~ + to your 1peclflcation1. • •
yrty. can llcm lhnl Sal ocilx. 9e0:5715. 1hr hu 2br apt. Nr SC Birch St. nr airport. Call 15 IO 10-4.1'7~1'42.Act. NewportBNcb38r2ba. Plua/Colleae, All 644-71?2 • • •
OCH 6BAYVIEW furn. Weekly. Acent. amesa. SSM7'1hft 1W0rk· MIWPOITCIM'f9 : •
Bright 2ar. 2Ba pen.Uise m.aso. t1UM1 m1 hn. PmUliola. twJ lft'Vlce Add $2.IO for each eddltional llnt tor I time•
un.lt, ha amenities. '750 Oceanfro11t Duplexes, Low real . lotemational EXEC offica. Inclda •
mo. BYCOtg.pt Newport Beldl, 2 6 3 Traveler looking for rcpt, sec xerox, wtder· •
Sl'\JDIO . acrota from Bdrm1. AYll1 weekly. quJet, clean male to shr lroulld Pk'c, t.eln •an. •
bevb. '315/mo yrl)'. CaU$ff:OSUorUl=m2. 2Br furn Woodbrld1e Uque detbr. conr. rm. • Publish my ad for 8 days starting •
Pool, eac pr, lallDdry. ,..,.... .... 42IO apt.$41-2'215,5'51-91553 166-7119. •
210 Cedar. Nsit Sborel. • .......... _........ .." to '"' 2bdrm •11t ~.!"· 2 ~ft ~ ~· Classification •
.... ,..,. OceaafrHt Newport Hunt. Bdl. 1 bit from ..... m Ill . -•0· : •
Jbdrm, bey •oceu view. Beach, 2 • aBdrma, bcb. M\llt be neat • UUJ Pd . .,... Name
Stt. bld1. l/yr leue. avall. weekly. Call mpoo. Ower 21. szao. •llYM t ----------------------• •'•·llHll· su.-14-.mz Me-10M. IXICOMCI • Add . °""' ...... S,.0-2 0 c I A N , a 0 N T . LARGE room wlkkcbtn Ottm ... fVlllbld I ress •
llt, I BA. Ad•lta DO Newport, 5~ SnlJlort. JrMclt .. a.. ...... _ only. apace. WtD l'8ll Mo/Ito : I c ·1ty z· Phone • ..... '71!N1M'Mlf7 pr, ffS.H.56-*7 .., -·~~-buil. .... I 1p __ _
SpeckM 28drm apt a., Ddnn, 281, rva, llOO r. 2 IUl, J BA. Promoni Ch k M 0 I sed 0 • 'OYerltokl•I Newport cleaala1 + M!CWlt dep, tor)' Pt. NB. Otoe• •lew. ...... ..... I ec or . . enc 0 •
llJ IUlll/mo. •1114 •· A111 l·'1. Pool. lln· PoOI te• murta, etc. ••••••• .... ••••**••••" I Ch d A!lll 1•,,,,,..tlt Dmf•I! rtf1Hl=P IMO mo. After'-Wknd'1 hr •tort 6 oftlce 1peee • 8rg8 my 8 to: •
11r Ila. ...... ao.1 ..... 4JM l·Z.fTH'J'lf atnuou .. nttt. I !~~·~•• mo. ,;,; .. :~"""1•R•• ':!t. ': ... ;:;. W:: l:'J::\\':' ·.I EJ # Exp. •• 1~C0.d0.VILLA II !;.':Ni'J:i~,.: l!B.Al·•orftM • Pl».A f
BALBOA tmmo. bu d1. uoo . c 111 remelt or llaJI to 1bere 1111 • .. v .. e:. C.M. • 1 0 • # E I MM D.Joh100 fff·lMf; fun '2 ir. Newport '*4111 • Xp. •
S. Ct m rrt1 •7' .,._ .. ~. • llel4 .w.. llrM.•ACI L.. ........ ,"••••••••••" ...,.., A_. ....... ff!Mdarl: nt ... ft ... • Har.., • ~-------------------~-------------..--• ,..., ... aw ........ , nt .. ., .. ,, ... , =•n::-:~"::t BM.1ac..11 .... a,.. • • ....licQ•t'WAltal t 1 • ~~'C'.:': ~t'•HIM•Ur 111ee tro.M••••· ..,...,... • .11Hj p•i1t .
&.r • ..-..... ~ ..... ,. ........ "". I .... .., ...
._"' -""" WM ••••n ,....., .... 11.WTYIWl'ft.c.11;. c.111 ....... CAtHM •••••• ,,.,.,,,., ••kr ,.., tltcHt llrNll•tt~I , MaJta..., • ............. ,_, ......... ''"· , .. 1, Jae, ,,.., lie .. aMe
Use Anltfft M servfce
when placing your-
ad ... a Daily Pilot ad
number will appear in your.
ad ... we take your
messages 24 hours a,
day ... you call in at your
convenience during office
hours and get the responses
to your ad . . . this service-..
Is only $7 .so per WHk. For
more .information and to
place your ad call 6'2-5678.
DAllY PILOT
• ......., H• ..,.. Wttlt a ...,.."'-.... Del r 1MI
~~~:E!!!!d~~~!!!.!~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!I!
i
* Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 22, 1981 !~!!~ ..... ?!!4! ~ p~=:~,. ~~?.'.~ ..... ?!!! !~~~~ ..... ?!.~ ... ~'!!~ ..... ?!.~ .... !!~ .... ?!.~ ~"°" ...W for rttaU ll1IAI Halt Stylilt. Bncb area .... A&.llC'Y
BANKING CEIS
SATUIDAY INTEIVllWS
;:!:-'11-:'rnln ~ TAI.INT AMCY ~~,.r!ct~:=• t"ewportetrurxlnttyp. """~. uu
Daoelo1 aad 1ln1Ui1. ml11lon or Natal tr· loal•lbJ~ 'it}~ D • ltn COUNTER-coot( HELP
Mtn•woa•tAJJa1e1, raa11d Excellent · -·---"'--3-U :30PM CowlttyClub
1!1t1 Coal.act Jtnn at c 11 u r opp ' t y In Lftt11 l•Cl"'lfsy Conv. Hatpt., »3a San
Full Ume. o.,,.·, o.n.
CdM. fIHlR (qr IR!lS
STAI ut1bll1htd 1hop Call Sroatr Newport lfeach ta Ana Ave.. S.A H1.1
4nuct10MS Terry at S.0-2211 to ar· or r I ct CI vi I I 1 t . 5d-30l1 rr you'tt an experienced :
• UTIUTY CmtomtrS.rvtet
ra e •t.lnterv w. Corporate and Rul l!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
HARDWAR!SALES Eatate. Call Usa (714> LOST· rem Biil w/llltle
Ortn1e Cat. Vic. Cama-
llon CdM REWARD -------1 Lost: Female while and GrHtCOIRf•Y
cream cal Short l\a1r. Escorts
blk ears. black bobtail, 24 H11. 64101801.:i::==:-=::==:::::::=:...
1ray stripes on front le& Cult/Ce.cb Babysitter needed for oc-
blue eyes, small anlm11l AM td /MC/VlH caslonal tvtniu!C 1ittlna
-needs apec1al care. I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!! In our home on Momln1
• Y4ULT TIU.II
• COMMllCIA&. TILL9
Female Uv•l11 compl·
nloll for '71 yr old lady on
a walker. Mutt have own car. '550/mo. Evea au.me
P/llme. 1eml·retlred _.833 ........ ·.,.m .... 6.__ ____ _
type. A-Poly in person: LNAL SICUTAIY
Crown Hardware. 3l07 Newport Beach law r1rm
E.CpaatHwx .. CdM practlcln& In com·
HOSTESSt:S. opening mercial 1JU111Uon & I.II·
soon Oran1e County's aolvendes needs starr
neweal nllht spot The penonnel with 1ood 1111
American Bandstand round s kill• It ex featuring live concert. r' en . 64().8851. live TV 1hoW11, rock It
OMCIH&P
P1tlme, flulble bra
Outlu lnrl f11tn1.
telephone work Call
646-1823
Reward. MM802 _ Canyon Rd, In CdM Call
t.OST·7 wk old puppy, 'l"l.JE arter7pm:644-1027 __
We'd Uke to meet you ! You won't
have to schedule 1:1n Interview or take time off work. Just come U> our Sad·
dleback Valley Office, 25255 Cabot Rd.
<San Diego Frwy at LaPaz Rd.), between lOAM & IPM on Saturday,
July 25. 1981. Talk with our Manager,
Operations OWcer & Personnel Of·
fie er & explore a career with
ELDORADO BANK. Too pay, excell. benefits & opportunity for advance-
PHOMll•
Helpl We nMd t1m
por1r1J190t>I• full time!
Our CaoleTV Co. II hav Ina a z month 1ublcnp.
lion drive • we ,,.. U ·
pectll\1 ~ &et hundreds
of phone calla. Main
ruponalbllltiu arf'
answerln1 phontt & Ot·
der t•ktna . Gd .
telepl\ooe speaking
voice ' ablUty to work well with I.he public •re
mustJ HOW'I are BAM·
5PM or9AM-8PM .. Mon·
Fri Several posltlo11a
available. All l)(Jlillona temporary 12 montbs l
Submit appllcationJ to
FISHING TACKLE aalea
Ii service, f/time
Knowled1e of Pacific Coaa t flah1n1 &
mechanical ability nee.
Xlnt opp'ty for ~ouna
man . Beach area.
Salary open Write
Cla .. lrled Ad H28, Dully
Pilot. P.O. Box 1560,
Coat a Men, 93126
roll to dining & danrlng. --------
P1rt·tlme help wanted,
Frit fl Sat.a, 10-6pm No
experience nee de·
monatrat.lng food pro
ducta in markett near
your home. 892·9288. Ltflll StcNtwy 768·5573, 18 OK. full or part-time,
Sfo Sll,000 S 'AITTIMI
ment.
H~kytype.Gray. black in Babysitter wanted
white. Vic 13th & Olive Girlfriends Mature ex per, non
H B 960·4462or 536·S2l.!!_ •ESCORTS* smoking woman to sit l LOST: Fem Blk Dog yr old boy 2 days wk &
we train. 953-5589. Z722
No. Matn,S.A
Hotel
Well known farm needs stollPMSat,5tolOPM
sharp sec'y. for Ji'11h1on Sun. Mslst board and
ls land orfi('eS. Fa.ntastlr care racllily. ~143S Shorthair. Very large HOMt/Offlq/Hot.I $0Jl'le eves. Pleas wklng
"Pearl" SM-1440 ext 30 • 972-9772 * cond in coastal com
days, 541-G>t eves Male Female Escort mun1ty Must prov1df MC VISA rec & trans Please call LOST: Wht fem cat long1•111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!' art 7 '.30 PM 645-Ul.1 m Howard Derman
644 6'796
General omce
IF YOU UKE PEOPLE
•••KNOW OFFICE
PROCEDURES ... ARE MONEY MOTIVATED
HIGHT DESIC CLllK
Lido Shores Hotel & Marina. xlnt salary &
benertt&, F T Call
Barbara 673-8800,
7AMi3PM
benefits include year ·-------• end bonus' pd. parking
Hurry! CaU: MarJOrie Sulbvan. ~5001. Snell·
1ng • Snelling or
Newport Beach A1ency,
43'0CampusDr . EOE
Part lime
OFFICI WOii
Genera I office work
available In Circulation
oUJce Knowledge of
typewriter and 10 Key
ne ceesary , speed
helprul.
1rey blk stnped tail. re 1· -ward846-9606 For total stms reduction Babysitter
& relaxalton massage Mature woman to LOST Blk Tan Male b> Ste'e 10 Spm. babys1tuiourhomefor
&.DORADO IA* Personnel Dept 830 8800 EOE t)lHEw rDllWlf
COM DINE PUBLIC
RELATIONS&SALES Housekeeping &
Childcare, Sun & Mon
only Laguna Beach
area. 641-8700daYS. Eva
Dob erman ' 1 c S4S 2817 uifant Mon Frt 8-tpm Tustin 20th "ZEEK -Ref's °CdM 67S.J937
CALL: t71tl 751-9700
1081 CamelbackSt GENERAL Front ore
REWARD645-2581 Serious Rock Drummer ------
Lost. R b ,-D -ond seeks musicians to form Bank1.11g 1•-------•ICATERING Service Nl!wportBeach,92660 J-8PM Must lype &
Equal Oppty Employer s p e 11 t de a I r o r HOUSBCEIPER
Ll~UOI CLEIJ(
Exp d with wine
knowledge preferred
New store near 0 C
Air rt Steve &42-4774
Bank ma Platin~ni Rmt::i or band Nils646 2231 ~ ~1 TELL~
a round Burr um s . F.xr opporturut> for ex· IMMEDIATE
Fashion Island Call lfttll&o~ & per person Ul attracti,·e o•-..la....l.'-.5 64-4-0338. REWARD ,,..,.,....._ S&L Full time pos1t1on '"'"" ~
F d M I 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• offers vaned duties Call Entq· level through oun : a e asset! Join W..t.d, 7075 Linda al 754 · 1801 . managemenl pusitions
Hound, tricolored. male ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orange Coast Sa,·ings & av a 1 la ble within cor· LhasaApso.\an.female ne11red coupll' from ~EOE porateorfi<-esor111vings
Lab. Spaniel cross. Hemel will housesit -& loan in M1Ss10n Viejo
bl ark : male Lhasa while you are away 1--·.-----• Any savings & loan Apso. grey & white: 7 ) 925 2 57 Banking backgrowid Is helprul.
male Lab, cross, black l_ti __ .J_ EXECUTIVE Call todoy for interview
wiwhite. male German Hard wkng. m.telhgent SECRETARY Employer paid rees.
Shepherd. tan and male. 26. s..aeking tem-Local Newport Beach Tustift,9"0ftMI
white. 644-36S6 por. F time emplymt savings & loan is seeking SERVICES. INC
Lost: Cat, large gra)' J.;vs .... 545 89'll ---a self·mot1vated 17702 lrv1.11eBlvd
w 1wh1te collar Approx Help W .net 7100 Secretary with STRONG Ste 20l Tustin
7 4 81 vie Glenne)re & ••••••••••••••••••••••• secretat1al skills, 544-6141
Mtn . Laguna Beach * ACCOUHTIMG lhoroughness & C'On 1~11!!11111111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~· 644-6116 1 o k e > by 1 0 u ch genial maMer to -.ork 1~
Lost : small F Poodle D1vers1f1ed experience for President SallH> I~
mix. It apricot. yellow nee. including bte but commensura~e with ex f u II & pa rt 11 me
collar. "Cinnamon'', accurale t)p111g Good per Full insurllnce Nightclub l'l Newport
Adams & Placen111 opportunit) with ra~t bener1ts & paid career ! 675-1094
C.M Reward 7Sl 9490, a rowing rood com pan) apparel Please call B.A TH-ER & Brusher
546-3471 Cost.i ~1esa area Ms D=sia Permanent pos Mon
Lost small black Poodle. ~ 2444 MEW;~ IALIOA f.:ri CdM ~ @lO
vie Ohve & 12th, H B & O •BIKE STORE• D a 1 e 7 1 5 Tall Accounttn& SAYINGS L AM Asst Mgr & mechanit
w Parker Pet Hospt llLLIMGCLW llOOlrv1.11eAve .Nl:I for Schwinn dlr Sal Reward!~~ Irvine ad agenc) needs E.O E. Sl0.400 Must ha\'e pnor
gd bill.Ing clerk Must bike mech exp in a
grandmother's wrist L o s t G r e a 11 haH bkpg background. Sl<!re S~-~
be veru11le. accurate. Banking watch, 9 IS 10 30am.
7 19. 2305 Coast U-. \
Coco's or prk1ng 10·1
640-7522 REWARD'
Clex1ble & detail MEW ACCOUNTS
minded 10-ke)' by touch Newpe>rt Beach S&L ha~
& gd typ1.11g skill~ req'd opening for Ne-. Ar
Will tram on NCR llS counts Cowuelor New Large white Samo)ed Excell. benefits. Call Accts . IRA Keogh. col· Vic. Bluebird Can) on ~trs Brecke, 752-6171 lect1ons & NOW Aerts .
Reward.494-6742 llll!!!!!!!!!!~!l!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!"'il exper req 'd Salar)
F o u n d Go Ide n t'ommensurate w11h ex Retriever-Shepherd Adrniniltrati•• per Full 1nsuranC'c
mix. male. Red canvass A11itt.f beneC1ts & paid rarecr collar C M area Need front ofc apparel.Pleasecall 6t6-3671. personality who can Ms DeM) Pims1a
fOUND : Lg key ring on
beach btwn 33rd & 3-llh,
Npt. Bch. 642-!795
handle details. phones. 714-64..S-6.S«>
people Typing req 'd MEWPORTIALIOA Shorthand desired Work m to~ely surround SA YIHGS & LOAM Found : Large male dog 11185 587510 st.art +apt 1100 lr\'1.11e A,·e . NB
Part lab & Bernard Call d p k E 0 E
• IKKPR/TYPIST * SOWPM also answer
phones. nr 0 C Airport
641 1130
Boats CELES TIAL NAVIGATOR unted
for voyage to Hawa11 60' Power All expenses
paid + rtight back In
<lUI re ~46·9215 art 5
IOOIKHPE:R
Reliable mature person.
gd t ypist. 10 key b)
touch Dbl entr)• bkkpg
lhru tnal bal & gen ort
Wkdaya 8-5pm S45 1060. 960-4027 or 549 1508 ISCount ar Newpe>rtliiiiiiiiiiii. iiiZiiiiiii A pis . nr Fash1onJ
(Sandy ) ~Ian~'\ !_s+l 1900 _ BANKING Bookkeeper Part time
Found: remale ~falte~e. "niwe~ "--I--Work your own hours
545 4050
vie Magnolia & Adams A •...., _...-.. -645-0130 Tel op to 'A'Ork Sun Mon Tfil£R · 963·1221•847·~ llPM 7A M Stan ~ 00 * . lookl!Hptr/Recept
round Prescnp11on pr hr Exp IS a must Part Time For Laguna Beach glasses <metal rim 1 Ask for ~!rs John,on pubhc accounting office Newport Beach 548-0734 I 661 8~ --The beaut1ru1 Laguna 1..7141494 ~-found lnsh Setter. at
Bolsa Chica Warner ASSEMIURS Beach office oC a gro"A i--------7/17 840-2827 l WIREMEN ing sav1.11gs and loan has IOOKKEIPB F/C w 11 847 24'K an 1mmed1ale openinl! p05 w Npt Sch. invest found . Small gold cal 1 train, "" ror a part time Teller to ment rirm Ex per "
Newport Terrace area 21--------1 work J days per week in com put er knowledge re collars.646-9al0 ASSEMIURS eluding Saturda~ Six q'd Call:640-0123
Found; Cocka11el, 7 12. Irvine electron1rs d1~ months tel 1 er ex l-'!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
city Gf Orange \'ery tr1butors needs Cable peraence m a S & L or Book pasteup. PIT. Mon
tame.848-91169 As11emblers Soldering commerc1albankispre 1 3oPM to approx
Found . Vic l1lh exper. nee Excell rerred · 630PM. Tues lO·JOAM
St/l n •ine, NB M working conds & co to approx 6 :.>PM No
Rhodesian Ridgeback benefits Contart Bob We ocrer a top startmg exper net Apply Pen
mix Gold 642·2328, Tracy. Mon-Fri · 8-S salary. free career ap· nysaver 1660 Placentia 549 ~ parel and mueh more. 646•6805 For an 1.11terview a p· Av~~-· -
found: male & rcmale pe>mtment. please call •-------•1
pugs. Newport Beach --A·S-SEMBL--ER--Gene frizelle at (7141 c•SHIERS area. 1·886-6711 ext 233 494. 7506 or apply dunnl! ,.
Founil. Parakeet, v1c ELECTRO.MECH sav1.11gs hours at Baker&~~r97~~.C M Electronics co 1n u TOTEM
.l'W' ..., Laguna Beach needs an FIDELITY
round: Basset Hound. E M assembler with FEDERAL vk. Warner & Newland. soldering & E M as-MARKETS
H.B.847-E3,8Sl-S489 sembl> exper Requires SHiMpGRd For2nd&3rdShlCta
Lost. Gold Snakl' Cham gd marJual duterit)' Lo.t AHA. Start mg S4 up to S4 SO
Bracelet w'S2•,..gold pc Ab1lit> to use basir test 310GlemeyreStreet I We promote to manage A 1 r P 0 rte r 1 n n equ1pmt such as Po"''er Laguna Beach. ca ment & supervision rrom
REW A RO 759 6812 meters -.'Ould be a big Equal Oppty Employer wiw~NT A CAREER•
wkdys _ plus Costa Mesa
Lost. 2 M neut cats. 1 We oHer excell pay & USE THI Sl7 W W1lsonSt black and I white & benerits plU5 a 631-~
brown. vie. Spyglass. 4 DAY WOQ WEEK DAILY PILOT
CdM Reward for both Co 15 2 m1 from Coast 11FAST Laguno Beach
494·9233 759.0169 Hwy & 8 m1 rrom 4~ & RESULT" Found : Keys at C'est S1 s Frwys Huntington Beach
962-9116 Bon Bakery, NB Mui· SERVICE
doon 's ke)' rhain Pleasecallforappt DIRECTORY
-'645'-=-·"'"0«'-'-'-'7 ___ Personnel Dept.
Found : Ladies watch, TELONIC BERKELEY For Result Personnel Dept
S37·4840 Tewinkle School, CM 714-494-9401 E O.E. Service Call
f/11. 545-Bl 642 5671
Found: Irish Setter pup-A11ht .._ S/R • Make your shopping
easier by wiing the Dally
Plk>t ClusUled Ada. Id ., ~r· bt. JZZ PY. approx. I yr o . <". I n t e r es t 1 n g j o b
St CM 64.2-om Women's fashions. Exp.
'-"•• USO in this field helpful but not mandatory Will
tr11n bright pttrson
w gd. memory Top
pay No smolun1 Appb'
In per10n· Back Street.
.......................
FIRST LADY
Escort. Models ,.., o.c.n.
• 972-1345.
MC 6 VISA Act"epted
COVER GIRL * OUfCA&.L * IU-0778 MC/VISA
•fOXYWY•
OUTCAI.L ONI.. Y
VISA MC
• f7J..llll • • IS C ORT S &
MODELING
Jl.tlH
COIDl-would love to
fll'J .U '°"' ca1rsue tr 111111 anyLtme
~ .. St., T\atln
AUTO MECHANIC
Forei&Jl & Domestic
SO~ comm1ss1on, own
tools Larae clean shop
Larry Hunt's Auto
Center, 11:25 Laguna Ct·
nyon Rd .. L.B. 83:l-8966
or4'7·2030
Automotive
JIM~O
VOUSWAMM
It loolttn1 tor 111 all\· bltlou1 Individual to
work ln'tbe Parts Dept.
H a pickup ' dellvery driv9r. Muat have 1ood
drtvin1 ftClOl'd and i.
over 11 yp old Grfat
opportun1ty lo 1Url
froin the P'f.Uld noor •
wort up. AIJ int.lrwlt ID
VW'• fl1Jpful . M °" MC, Call Rob, ld-IOOO
*MAlltO YOLllW ....
111ar'1
CONSTRUCTION
LOAN PROCESSOR
Vice-president seeking peraon
experltnoed with construction
fund disbursement. Minimum 2
years' e•perlence In realdentlal.
commercial, lnduatrlal and tract
loan processing.
RECEPTIONIST·
CLERK· nPIST Position requires aptitude for
numbers, filing ability, good
typing skills, Eitcellent oppor·
tunlty for advancement.
Corporate Bank olllce located
In elegant Newport Flnanclal
Center. Excellent Hlary, out·
atandlng benefits and profit
aharlng.
For confldtntlal Interview, aut>·
mlt reaurM to Luclllt Kuehn.
Community Relation• oftlotr.
DAT4INTIY
OPIUTOIS
-homemaker or college
student. 9'19-1711
General
Live 1n to care ror active
school age child in lovely
Irvine home. Salary
negotiable Call Da y
835·2412, After 8 PM.
Maintenance · for Apt
Complex ui Costa Mesa
~-9556. Ex r.:J!.e~
needs Cood prep.
workers. S4 hr Part
time 5AM-9:30AM. full
time 5AM·1.30PM
Lori's Kitchen. 3'117 S
Harbor Bl., SA 97&-0747
ror appt
CHllOPIACTIC
ASSIST /Fntt Ofc.
Modern. BUSY omce. 11
am · 8 pm. and alternat·
Ing Satl!.f'daxs 847 ·8Z12
Key to disk rull Ume
days, rull or part time
swing. Exp'd only Good
skills. $14,lm K1S hr +
The lalaoo ley Club
ft ROW WrilMJ: 955-3264_. -----
Housekeepers wanted
Seac1irr Motel.
494-9717 friendly atmosphere T•lt.._P~ K~thy 957·833:·::.:.l__ H r. · \ o AA~ M .., M . a ,. Housewives
DAT A EMTIY Sat/Sun ir you are friendly. cons·
Marine hardware store
manager Send resume
to Box 841 Daily Piiot.
-P 0 Box 1560. Costa
_Mesa, Ca. 92626
Clerical
Expanding corporate
beadquarters needs l2J
more staff: an Ex
ecut1\•e Assistant with
word processing ex-
perience & a Recep-
t1on1s1 General Ofr1ce
Un usual opp'ty with
divers1ried company I £a I l 831 ·8660 or 49S·6303.
Clerks
Ha llma rk inventory
help wanted Tem·
porary & p lime San
Jua_n Cap. "9H261 ev!§_
Cocktail Waitns1
Experience preferred
Nightclub 111 Newpe>rt
675.:_l094_ ------
COC K TA l L
WAITRESSES ~o ex·
per nee. we tram. also for ba rt ending at the
American Bandstand.
opening soon lD live con-
certs. rock & roll & din 1ng & dancing Call
953 5589, Z122 No Main
St SA.
Companion. p time for
elderly woman ~1ature.
responsible . non
smoker SSI 0945 .
6(2-~ ------
COMPVTB
DATA ENTRY CLERK
P time. seasonal. \'ana-
ble hours 10 ke> adder.
t) pe 40wpm, non·
smoker SS per hr CPA
r1rm. CM Call Carole
CLBU( cienUous and dependa·
Min l yr exp Full tim e. 'IX C>Derotor ble we want you for a de-
N. B. Call Cheryl at Hrs PM Sftart. mWit be 11ghtru1 . qua 1n1
S33-3300 nex, incl. wknds Will re staurant. full time.
Delivery men over 18 for trun PtT&t FIT 8·5, wkdys. (Part time
L.A. Times to homes in till school starts If you
C M 3 a m 6 a m Hnpr/lllsoKt/ A11t. desire l Apply in person.
Economy car required. H r1 Mus{ be rlex . no ex per nee. Stonem1ll
n 0 c 0 11 e ct 1 n g 2 lOPM . incl wknds . Terrace. 2915 Redhill.
S400.S4SOimo + bonus F T. will traui Costa Mesa.
646·0631 or646-ssy__ IMYESTMEMT
DELIVERY Pia call ror appt. COUHSaOR 9.J0.5PM,M F,&45-7358 D Or c F Time for loul de ynam1c ange Oun·
liveries Excell driving ty 2nd Trust De ed
record req'd Phone for GEHEIAL OfftCE brokerage co has im
appt 557-9212, ask for Looking for a very in med opening r o r tertstmg part time JOb s a I a r 1 e d or co m Mr Emmons Newpe>rt in pleasant office' missioned Investment
Stationers, Inc Cle rical, for mature Counselor. Exper'd real
Dental Assistant. part person LocatlOfl pc H . estate licensees onl> time, morning RDA Npt Bch Ex per a <;_all Katie,640-9~
prererred Newport must Accurate typ1.11g. JA .... ITORS Beach area near Hoag no shorthand 20 hr 1""111
Hosp. ~SSOt week Includes Sat & Sun full time day work,
C II 646 7 31 Mon-Fri. Exper pre Dttltd Asst _a · · 4 (erred Pennanent empl Npt Bch area. 3.4 days Girl assembler. Exp not only co benefits, ad
wk Exp. Salary open nee. Will train 642-1026 vancement Clean cut & ..f!~ase call 640-~--interview 8-12! 1·4 bon.dable S3.7S.$t.50 per
Dental Assistent. Exper GRAPHICSCAMER.A hr ba'sed on exper
perrerred. Costa Mesa OPBlATOR N e w port Be a l" h
646-9fi7l Vert Some paste-up. 642·6824·
DEHTALIECEPT. will traui. S4 ~lhr to JANITOR
Office exp. req. Dental start f time Perm full lime. pvt. school
exp prer Wed.Sat Top Non -smoker Apply C.M area.642-0411 __
salary for qualified 10-2pm, Ons1te Photo· KITCHEHHIELP
_.Qllrson. MZ-31158. graphics. 3303 Harbor Reliable persons San
DENTAL/ASSIST !H.vJL..Ynrt E 5,C~M.__ Clemente Inn Apply
RDA CHA I RSI DE Cher Charles Thurs
Short hrs. xlnt benehu Guards Mon I~ A\'e Espland1an
ror expenenced. eager NOW HIRING ~an Clemente.
person Ms-9475 Security Off1cu po11 LAHDSCAPIMG
DENTAL tlOl\s are now avatlable M1n1mum experience
ORTHODEHTAL in M1Ssion VleJO & So nee Mon-Fri Call
--ASSISTANT Laguna ror malure I betweenS.7pm 979-5182_
COMPVTB I 4 day wk Mon-Thurs m1.11ded mdJvlduals No LAMDSCAPEMAIH.
754 1040
time Seasonal. vanable Req. 642-2626 necessar) Mu.st ha,·e Exp in all phases or
Data Entry Clerk, part I Top Pay' NB RD A prior experience 1s FOREMAH
hours 10keyadder.type Expe~Orthoordenlala'; own phone & ca'r landsrape maint incl
MECHANIC
FOR SAl.IOATS
Wanted' A consc1en
t1ous. responsible in·
d1v1dual to repair &
ma1nta1n s ailboa t engines, rigging &
pumps Must have ex
perience & be at leasl 21
yrs or age. Referen res a
!!!_USl! t7 14J67S.~
Medical Recept1on1st.
mature. Hadle) S>~lem
experience needed, I
gay w"~ 557 1911_9
MEDI CAL Ot'FICE RELIEf. Aug 17 2ul
Pegboard exper pre
rerr!d NB 7S9Gn
MEDICAL
TRAMSCRllER Work at home. top pa)
Requires muumum S yrs
acute hospital e"
penence 1.11 all phases or
medical dJctation Call
1114 ) 768 8500 ror 1n
te.D:.!~W . __ _
MEDICAL SEC'Y
& tran sC'r1be r
Radiolog y orf1re
Fulltime. M1Ss1on V1eJo
~95·470.Q _
MHGMMT POSITION
Fabric chain. C M &
Anaheim Xlnt oppt > Gen 646-4(MO
MODS..S.YOUHG Body builders, Athlete~
or surrera wanted b)
amateur photographer
for physique posing No
experience neresur)
No commercial use
S20 S80 per day Call
_l!rad (2131S97 2131
MODELS/ESCOITS
Top Dollars 527· 71~ 40WPM Nonsmoker. SS sista1nt, PIT I Mon & Veterans bnng DD214 good knowledge or ir
per hr CPA firm Costa Wedlr-lBoffi~64.2-S997 Pinkerton's. 2701 B S ngation Xlnt opp'ty for MOTB.MAIHT. Mesa Call Carole J Ma in. S.A (to rear or advancement. E 0 E
1
Exp. Pitlme 642·3030
7S4-llMO ~7c DIJVB Radio Shack store! (714lS46·7843 1920 S M t -1 -Co~domuuum Manager Ace bting applications S57-9020 Equal Oppt) Yale s A o orcyc es
Orange co Property fo driver Wholesale Employer -' . ----3 IMMEDIATE
Management Co. needs Searood Delivery in 0C lllll.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ LAHDSCAPIMG O'&UHGS
l'Ondominium manager Responsible. dependa· GUARDS ASSISTANT for a Set-up Man. a
to handle So. California ble. good driVU1g record Full & part time. All Fantastic working en-Mechanic & a Parts
proJe<"ts Applicant 14.5 E. Broadway CM areas. Uniforms rum'd. vironment in beaut Person or will train Ask
should have property Ages 21 or over. retired Dana Pt. Harbor Full ror Jim at.
management exper. & DRIYB welcome. Noexper nee time. Mon-Fri . 6AM SOUTH COAST
good admin1strat i ve for lite. local deliveries APP 1 Y . Univ tr s a I 3PM . Gardening ex per HOHOA skills. Above average full or pl/lime Apply· Protection Service. 1226 help(ul Pis. apply, 957 1966 salary Contact Betty Master Blueprint, 234 w Sth St, Santa Ana. Tues thru Sat . Dana •
964-3531 Fischer. C.M. ~9373 lnterview hrs: g.12 & 1.4. Pt M artna Co., 24701 Newspaper Dell ver>
Co-P/TIME Mon· Fri. ------=· Dana Dr., Dana Pt LA Times to homes in ""' West Newport 3.JOam
IOAM·2PM. C.M. area ILECnOHtC la1•1y ,,.,., 6am. S6SO mo ~8441 64~-~~KSWANTEO lmm!1i~p~nings ······~ or~l:~perStutrer
Da y or night. Apply in with growing company • • LA Times. Sat1Sun on person between ~5pm. Mechanical assembly. • • ly Over 18 548-8441 or
Mon Thurs. Reuben E 'faW,:!. · ~~'~:~~ne~ • General Assigmart • _646-__ 14_13 __ _
Lee. lSI E Coast Hwy. perience. Apply at 1020 • s ta to • HIGHT CHEF
N'-'B=--------:-1 W.17thSLC.M • 8Cr8 ry • Experienced only, Con
Cosmetic company needs 11nental Restaurant exp shipping clerk. DECSICUTARY • U8CUtl'Ye Office • Partn•r'1 B1•tro. W h kn h To "eneral ""''n"r .. ..111. · " ~ are ouse ow-ow o ,...... " wi Laguna Beach. 497.4441
c;all for appt. 64.5-0484 ing to delegate many • Immediate opening for ver5atile Ul· • Contact Rick or Carl
d i v e r s tf 1 e d • dlv1dual. Must be capable of handl· • When you call Class1f1ed resp on s i bi 11t1 es . uig rut.paced. vaned and 1.11terest-HUIS&-l VH
to place an ad. you're as· Challenging position ror • Ing duties ror newspaper executive • Back orrice for G P 3•,
s ured of a friendly career minded person f & personnel admmistrator Call· • days/week Fashion
welcome and help in with excellent skills & '642-4321, Ext.mrorappt Is land, Nwpt Bch
wording your ad for best Real Estate develop· • •• 64-4-1025.
response. Call Now! ment experience • Or911CJ9 Coalf • ~'-'N""'U=l-'-SES--A-ID_l_S_
642·5678 496·0194 AM onJY. • Dally Pilot • -------. Conv. hospt. Beach Da.1,1 Pi•lat 330 W. Bay Street • area. Free mjr. medical
•••••• ~ e Costa Mesa, CA & dental. F'ree CRT
• ., • •. F.qual Opportunity Employer •• ~=-lni~g. Top salary
• Fi Id Sal S • •••••••••••••• NURSING RN OR LVN
18 es UperYi~r • _111_._. ... --=-----~ needed for night shift In • 7 v ~ -' conval hosp. Xlnt
• ~1m11et1 openings av11ilable in the Oranatt • salary & benefit$ Incl ID·
• loast ~rt'a, for seJf-mot1vatfd, career • ~~~~~·P~cg'«,..9;.Y t~~Y·
•
oricnt.-u tnd1v1dual who can work with •
Field Sales People Train, mot.lvlite and Beverly Manor. 340 le-
• II et res u Its St a ti on w 11 a on or ,. a n e itiioiiriiiaiiciii. Miiii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I
• necessary Exceptional eaminp, plus )ob •
related bener1ts ava.ilable for Ult> right Nunlng
• people If you can produce mulls not • I BIAICH
• Just talk abou1 it. call: 960·0694 ror • MlMAM8
• •
interview. Ask for Mr. Chance. •I ,..,..,.
Thia llfy position re-• R rtlf/Pll ~ • quires aalu ability, e eaa . I e 1tren1th 1n manat1emt11t
• Part tl&ie reporter n lo write e • and • LVN Ucenae or
. artlcla for 1pecl1I aeclloN at the Dai.tr • I 1tron1 healUI care back· .• Pilot. Education or equivalent operitft~ 1round Thia Polillon Is
I In Joumlllam requited. Upper dlvialon e In the Oranae County
C'Olfe1e 1tudenll workln1 GD des* In • area.
l:malltm tncoura1td to :fltl1· Mlltt . • ~~.:,"~:::f ;r~~=•JA~:!1~~··· KIDS -&u,rdl~o;~~~r:e~' o~ e bued on experlenct. Part tlint poelUon private duty. home
• mar poulbly lead to full Un. Call (114) e , SUMMER JOBS. health Ii hoepilal nura-M2421 Ext. w : Aalt for Jlftioe lo make e I ln1 personnel
• appolntrMDl for lntervln. • ~,.__.. e If thll Polltlon aoundt
-Utt UM dllllenfe you've
:
... • bMn lookifteforcall:
D>W. 6trHt • JIMM-6111
CGita 11 ... CA ~;f
Equal ()pportun,ttl Employer • "-. ............. .
l1 ··-..
Approx 1mately six
hours per day, flexible
Good phone persooJahty
necessary
Excellenl company
benefits. paid bealth.
1ire and dental 1n
surance
Apply in person.
330West8aySt .
Ask for Eileen White
Equal Oppty Emplyr
P /TIME EY&tlHGS
CCMIMllMJ
Yollthc..n.n Adulu with ouutand1.11g altract1ve personalities,
who enjoy working with
10· lS year old youths
evenings 6-9PM Call
642·4321 , ext 3<13 . between 2PM to SPM.
ask for Lon.
$8000 Pa WEB
Our new Co is look111g
for a i:n b1t1ous people
who want t.o tum part
time hours int.o GOLD '
Ground floor oppty Call
ror details ~l-9~
PEST COMTIOL
OPllATOR
Ornamental plant ex
per reqwred Will tram
for rea1dent1al in ·
dustnal afric. pest con-trol. ~ 1250 mo Ask
for Ron, 646-7441
flHOTOSHOP
HANDYMAN
Spray. build shelves.
va nous other duties
Non -smoker F time
S4 ~ hr to start Apply
10 2pm. Ons1te Photo
graphics. 3303 Harbor
Blvd , Uml E·5, C.M
Preschool teacher for parent ro-op M W F'
9-12 760-!Ql
PROOUCTIOH
Medical d1agnost1r
manufacturer seeking l!ldl\'lduals with produc-
tion expenence We or-
f er potential for pro-
fessional & personal
gro..-th Call llll-1.572 for
apphcatlOfl & tnt.erview
PROOF I.EADER
Clerk Major Newport
Center law firm seeking person ror proor reading
& general office duties
1nclud1n1 receptionisl
relief College back
ground helpful Please
call : Lu Ann Dutcher al
Jlill759·JIOO.
P 'lime, 7 days. 2 hrs. dai-
ly Am dehvery. L A
Timl's SlOO per week.
~una Beach 494-8496
,UICHASIHG cuu
Purchasing Clerk
needed by Huntington
Beach City School Dis
trict F lime. 12 mo
position SIM0-$1167 mo
depending on ex -
perience Typing speed
or 40wpm required App-
ly 735 14th St . Hunt-ington Beach 536-8851
REAL!STAn SALB
This IS our 36th year sell·
1ng r1ne Southern
Cal1rornia homes
Perhaps you would en·
joy Joining a r1rm active
in luxury residential
areas such as Big Ca·
nyon. Spyglass Hill.
Irvine Terrace. Linda
Isle, etc.
H you are presently ac-
tive 1n real estate sales
do you have immediate
" unlimited access to the president or your
company, or Is he hidden
away in an ivory tower
removed from the s~ne.
Our president is availa-
ble. Do you ~ addt·
tional tralflin11 to help you 111crease your earn·
ln&s'
E1perienctd or inex·
penenctd you m1.1 wttll
prom rrom our color
video tape list Ina• sales
tralnln1 procram wllkh
we rut ii the finest available.
We are not a franchise.
branrh or 1ublldiiry-
J1.11t l\eadquartt" . We have optninp for a
few bllhl)'·mollvated
per1on1 who have a df. .
alre to bt more 1uc·
cesaful. For an In ·
tervlew tPpolntment
with the to&t owntt Ir
fo11t1dtr. caU Walt)' N
Taylor. w"'?:i.=c..
llllllnJ09CIUlnKltis
Newport 8tach __ ............................. _
j
" ..
.. .
.. .
. ~
..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/WedneSday, July 22, 1981
.Sell it al-and put cash in your pocket!~
DAY WEEK
8Days
3 Lines
8 Dollars
Special flat 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, cal l today 642·5678 .
The new Dolly Pilot 8·Day Week It's a Classified PLUS
Mefp W_.... 7100 Http W Cllftd 7 I 00 Help W Qll'ted 7100 Help W ..ted 7 I 00 Alltiqws 8005 • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
m. to Y • 1045 hntitwt 1050 Mhul••-IOIO rets 1017 loah, rowtr 9040 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
........ c.w Rt-: Salt'!! JX'l'>pl1• to ll'i1m . ~l·retar1e Antq burlier 1·hu1r. or
in\(.>bltlll'llh & 1·x SALES 11•IJ111, r1•d lthr. ~Int F Urindle Great Dane, QUEEM-SIU HD
111 yr old, very friendly . •1so. 67).Z'/77
Very r hoace & rare I PIED & 1 AL BINO hrtnen want.cl
TANZANITE 1-'aceled Cockatiel both hand 1 97 !I P 1• n 11 Yan
rull time real estate
sales associate who re
quires substanllal in
come is desperately
needed b y loni:
established local broker ·
Outstanding earntnR,
avail. on a generous
commission split. A
marvelous opportunit)
ror the eager prt>·
fessaonal. Call Mr 11a~1 In p at ( 714 >MG-:>560
l0h11n1w11 Xln1 01•1111 101 IVICKI HESTONI 1·und ~ 640-781-l
n11ht ~1er.1111 IOU tum F:l lum & Orange Jt 'KE BOX Wurflt11•r
644 36$6 '
M !Jrmdle Pit Bull, I yr
old, loves people & other
dogs 64(~
St o ne, over 2 cts lamed w lge wrought spor tf1 ~hl'• cll~~cl
Estate sale, living & din 640.8688. _ l!Q . .n...£.a&_e SZJcl557 1122 S 154 mo. :!4 Sl'lml)
mi~sion a\.111,d It 1•11 & \SSOt'lATl::S l'Hti 7K, rt'<'Ords
fident i:il tlltt I 111• 4 $]2,000+ ~J>l!l'iJll~L'm ll:ll ll!lll8
ine rm furn. color TV. 21 Backgammon t'Olfee ta LHASA ASPSO Sdm·er SIJOrno. :!5 skiµ
cu ft. refrig, freezer, dbl ble Funrllonal traffic 5 months Shob up tu I jatk tr Sllllmo. !;ltp
5~ 5&11l.' u1 ' rrobot* l'•·nworar~ l'lt>rn JI 1 ISt-Jul f.11i:I Jnt1q1W I.in!!
Fint YMr 1'1·n.ti1u1cl ,m. i,,.,1, m1.t>t \ell $2:>0 MIXB>rurs
552~e\·~
dooL 642·3468 lighl SJOO ea 759 6894 date Ma le AK C: renh 1111 lutlt-d llL., t'qUll~
7 piece Sbmline Patio set days.i.L.60-36S3eves ~~rs Sl75 646 ~ dn µa) m 111.i 7:K>-&620t:\
IHl&tates.t
For Top
rrof.Offke
U you are a producmii
agent. you should look
into our NEW rom
m1Ss1on program that 1~
lhe best in town Our or
fice is one ol tht olde~t
establ.Jsbed m Ne-.pon
Beach w\lh a ver~ pre
1t1gious location. l all •
1 Walt for an llPIXllOI
ment. 673-7:.>0. I
Corporate Headquarter.
of international ('om
puler Corp. has 1m
mediate operunR for a
sharp, easy go1ni:
Receptionist Ilea\> ,
phOnes (1oph1st1cated I
system), l yp1nl!
muumum 60 wpm, grt•ct
visitors & t.elex. Resumi:
required. 2 year~ ex
penence & call 974 7670
esk for Carla.
IECEPT10MIST l Immediate opportumt)
for bright. OUIJ(OIOI:
person. Must have f(OOl'I
1
communication skill~ &
typing ability Cull
Joann 54().J.1!3.
IECIPTIOMIST I For dr's office. Mlbl be
RESID9{T MMGR.
Tht Sdr t'«·rrw111 1111 '
looking tor 1 11\11,111111
t!XIJl!tll'lll t·d ui<lf\ 11lu.ol
for 1h1•1r 11 ,1ol1·111 r1Ll1·
m.rn.1,:,•1 1•r..11t11r 1 ill
l't•lo \1111 h•ll I 11• " 111
for JjJjll ~tj! I 1113
Hnl 111r <1•11
1110•1 1'11·11 ,\ ,,11111~1rl1
111.1k,·r 1hm1.1r 'rt• 1111
I\ t10"'l•'lllh•11 \ It
l>\'ll•f~l;h· \\t 1\,111• •II
.\u .. h1r111~ fur full 111111
po~1ltnn ~ ,, \lun I r 1
E\jlt'I J'l"I \j1pl1 Ill
lll'hun .!'II •II 111 I 11 I
r.il'l', ~I 111111 • 1, 1,
\le~a
R1 IJur.1111
ROBl~SOtfS
HEWPOQl BEACH
BUFFET SERVER
~ 1111 ,, ' t i .... 1•1 111••"'
·•' 1 lalol1 !Jam 111111
:\Int'" l;.·111•111'
I 1lwr,d ""' 111111•
\p11l.1 111 , .. ·r 1111
:! f'.i,111111 I IJI I
'\t'"'1••n 1. 1• ,
RETAIL
f',Ul ftHlf' t t1
STOfl H'GO
MARl<ETS
4555 Coast Hwy .
Mewporl leoch
If
enthusiastic, mot1\Jtt'd ._ _______ _
& type -.ell E'~ helpful, bul not nN· SAILMAJCER IM/FI
642.4532, L\1• ir• 1 'I 11r 1
lul• k t .,. • ,1 r • t I
RECEPT10MIST rirt•'fh "I h II 1 ' L • r
Newport law orrrct• ti'.11 ,Cl I
54G-0400 tllti ~Jtj S400 +comer llJ'OUP S300 TRS-80 r~,;;put;r, Le\el Gra' Zebra f1n rhei. 4 SSi 9J"li
\\ ,. urtrr tup rnrn . 1111.~HSk)pJrk Ill At'Tln.llE rnb~1un,, bumc. and ma !iu11t: 235 In uu 1 .,. ..
IA•\ 1nJ? f Genn Shep .
i:reu t w chtldren
19'J 3592or761_4712
~306_9____ I. 4K . wtcass S375 pa1r atSIOpaar 211 \1on1t·n·~ L>11"sel
Ktng mattress. box bpr 646·0697._64.,2-4548 _ 642.~ Ft!>h 1ll\r. \\ork &.
)It! ad\'t'rtl81111(, 'alitr,)' I I vni;hl Jll:lllCI S51 ~ 199
I r .I I n I II I! m a J 0 r --sE·c·R·E-TA·R-IE_S_ Applionc.es 80 I 0
11 t"fltt ,tl hft ,•m1 dtntal •••• •••••••••••••••••••
Sh11rt haired Collie needs
J(ood hume. 2 yf)\ old
\IJlt• Gd w rhildn·n
~116919
ings,newcond.$7Sorof Dinette set, Gt:: gas O O l'hara<'tl•r boat Xlnt rer dryer. Mens Schwinn Piaft05 & <>r.,... I 9 Sl2.SOO \.\'1th or \\'llhOUl 848-69611 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :\ B rn1.111ru1g Ms.8734
'I t n .1 i: cm r n t op
l'"I I UOllll'\ for loµ
1r1•1 r 1111n1l1•tl pro
r''°"'U~1 J
I\' are thi: wp 1'1)mpan)
111 I he' w1mmmj.l pool tn
lu•t ric• \\ •· m•t•d am
t, \111U' llt'Oplt lu h..!1> U'
~ •'l'J' l'Jt'l \\1th i:ruv. th
,1111tprnmu111111
\\ • ~Ill 't•l1·1 I l•·1tpl1 Ill
11 'l'•l1•J Ill •'.trlllOI!
, r "'"' 11111111·1 .1r11t re
;i nmi; thl.'11 iull 1>utcn
11,1 hJ,l'd on produc·\11111
1111 ••Cl 'Jll'' l'\Jt('rlt>nCl'
I •1111r11I Opt•lllllj!~ Ill
~I T11ru and Oranl!e
., 1.1< t \11k1· fin Jt'nku
11 • l 11.t.191 H
ANTHONY
POOLS
~,•1•1,11 u111•1rt unit'
l'.lllJJl<t~l."r \I ~
L1~ll'<I '11 'r "F.
SALES
Ht i:1,tcr 1oda~ ror local I I BUY Jt..PPUJt..HCES
--beach cruiser. piano. 21---------•I Um1ng room chairs 4 chest of drawers. gutlar. STE 1 N WA y Md 1 S 5.1122 Chn:. St-a.~kirf -.11h
t1·m JlOrar~ ""''1rnmenti-1. .. , !157 KIJJ
557 n045 ~fl't'/t'I upni:ht l'ledn. :1 ml\ed breed pup'
Kindel SlOO Packard metal shed. & more Walnut Baby Grand ~1111 >ism
Uell 4' H1·F1 S50 645f41S n+·· BltlllUMS.betler ti4~41!19
-U \\orlo.' l!t1od Sl5U 'ivank)'s DoR louk en L'n-<i 111 l!5IJ,;;.111~ Jiii"•' LO\lnl! honw
644 6579 Steno court report to I! than new Re<"entl) re 15' Bo,tun \\'halN 115 H
8 drawer dresser machme, current mdl. IU\1shed, 1mmac & \'ery P F1 mrud1• Luaded
-;.111 1798 ':_ 1 Up l:'r. ltll'. dc<1n. \\"orh FIW ~ K ITI'F:-IS , t S60 perf rood. + case or rare. Hammond Ori:.in 1111mJ1 l'trnil Pri1att' 64±~2 paper, deluxe Samsonite & Piano Cent~r <.:dM Part) tJM~OQA~Y 11~~0NMI llM/"I' lo(Oflcl ~7~1 W'hr. C'll•itn. • • •• !U J:Uot 'I • t s , honw I white. 2 whrk 3723 8. hSt t ""'"'' i:ou• ""I trc ~ !>Ill 1\.)1 I '•\I! ;~ .,. 11ranl!t' ~µoti.. I wh1tt•
72" Cherrywood Frcnd1 ('ase & stand & assorted 644·8930
f'ro, Buffet by While books. $3115. Webtern 1~1111!!!!~------Sea HoJ.?Ut! SJlt\ ~1onk Hewporl leoch . \\ Ii I J r k I .. h 1 t t' }:OF .!'110\ ~ llt•J11. -..11rk' " lrt•q!e i\lter 5 1-'urn No CarollnJ saddle. A I rond & as 1J1<•,t·I tr:1.,.ll•r :i C~l'Jl
' l(tl<MI Sol~ ~UI 11513 111 ~Iii 'i96i Sl500 951_-~_ ~orted pack. $255 STEINW\'r'6'(;R \:\fl SIJ uuo uorn,·11 sale
536 9~4. Com pl reblt &. ll'llll \loorrnl: J\Jll !>.I.) ~l:ll.1 s111 1 VI.\ i'urmlure. incl table,,
Fumiture 1050 rhair?>. bureal&S & bm J
uSECRETJt..RIES•• l~t:~i'1'.!~1 lr~::r~~,·t~1111;~ •••••••••••••••••~••••• brJt' some ant1<1ur
Hr Pr" D11'!$20 1110 ~i:,11 '.tlH >1..1:1.s.111 .1u1;,
1
1JJ111'h modemteak\\ood ~II 3229arto5
Hnpt~ ~m Fu11$ll~lfMt I lll'lll\1' Id•. Wa~her & '111111Jm1: •. tahle 1\11(~ Ii O~\\ct Gor. s• 1055
'ihHO ~·l'~l,~IK.IM•I f 11·1 1l1 \t·t 1(;11td • l\t•d 1 t h I 11 I! "n ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• TU.'l T1.11n\\.11111S11 HM1 1, 11111 ~1,11 , ;111 • h.11r' $275 IHI !lent MOVING SALE 2NO
f \ p I 'ml,Ult.1111 Clur 't'i'I .. lll!t \\ k ··nib 711 ~·la'~ oak l'hma l'.lbrnl'I · llAN D ER 120 f. 23rd St
l.11 Ht.'1ndt•r.. \)!~ hu 'lf·l lli'il 1 JOllque rt'µrudul' C M 10:!\J Um hf:,1 1,.n:u~. llun 1 $295 00 Km~ ,11t•d \ton.sat 11.5pM
:\1•\\1.1on KJ:IHJ90 ~rl·c· 171 f rd11~· l11plr1r '\r rnaµll' headboard .,.llh ---E
n." \11"1 .,!'llS:1m 1h.t141'r'> turned spools GI \!'IT GARAGE SAL
to IS. '11 :> t-11• l>S It 111·.1 ut' rl·~ matt rt''' & Thurs ·Sat
SECRETJt..RYEXEC ~·ar dhl1~•1rrl'ln1: .'~n1 11r1111!' s25000 1·.111 7812FranklinDr,HB , • 111nd I \I ulil S.1 1 ~1 •1/t 7'.l.'>2altt.'r 511m lElhs &_Qe!a_warej I • rs1111nl'I ,\d\\·r li,11111 I 11 , .. r 1 , If u 1 , free gilts. refreshments,
llt•pl h;,' 11111·nnii: 111'1 ""h1·1 ctr 11'1 1111111 * * I BUY ** super garager. b:lrgam
t'\1IJOslon :\pt II.tr 1nncl S:t.50 huth 1;;1;,,,2:11 lo1HHI u;,ro Fum1tur1• & prices July 23 7041
lmJ1111JI 't·l\flt~ l1rnr \ppflJntc' OR 1 \\Ill Valeotme. llB. 847 6576
Gil t~vm~ 'hnhcl "'" 1 "i.I mall 1"'" & ,c•llorSEU,lorYuu IOam 7pm_ n·<tff '''" """' 1 ,1 II r" f r 1 r ,. r .1t111 ..: a' •~wui:!:lht.,.11 !l6.'L ,,,,,,. \\urkin~· rnntl MAST~.ISJt..UCTION !Jewelry 8070 ).!.~ l'J lrl<! ·~ 646-8616, 813-9625 •••••••••••••••••••••••
F'or sale, beautiful ne.,. Sll.500l'J F t>h Imm 1our O\\n 2ti
screen door I am unable OQl'IST 1,1 \\OS I' J • 1· n1 .1 k i: r t h 1 •
lo use ~~ 842-1943 8600 llamiltun \1 .1111 \\1•1·1-. .. nd ~.ulh equ1rHI
3 Pageant ol the Master 5:l>ll77:, \lnl I 111 '2.1.l~KI hrm
t1rkets for812. W11J 11wap I•---------ci:Jl cr.lh lurillll l.tsll
for!!_i 14.67)-5896 MahOI? Jj Crane! l'rJno. HEW PORT CLJt..SSIC Ball) pinball, <Pla)bo~ 1 Si900 lrrm \bu 111llt·1
perfert rond S995 tur':. '>l.ilUJf\ I• I' 21' ... 11lllh I OJ'I l'Ut\~
< ;itnn 1 1 lll'•·r 'Int 1 und
Full 10\ 1·1 t Ix•\ \ii t'OI?
HJ1l t.1nl. ~rJtlleo' !¥om
h.itt .l luln JIUITIV'
Call Karen 551 5:ll!l 545 !270
Ceiling fan Casabella
ror ... ard. re\'er.ie, \:Jrta
ble s peeds, light iocld
Was S239 Takt' SIOO
JudylJ0-1916
Tickets to Lal(una Arts
fo'est1val Pal!eanl or tht•
Masters. Thur<; Aug
6th. $16 ea. 493 3552
646 1774
Sportift9 Goods 8094 •.•...••.•.............
S & W Puhu· l'h1t·I hcJ•I 1lt·1,l1 n·1 iO i:al
Spec·1al 311 Uram! Ill'\\' I ~ .. , 1.,111. 11111 k JI Jtl
$250645 95111 \lu,1 w1· '" .ipµrt'tlJIC·
FOR SALE IO \l'llr' ol I :.15'15 1;7;, .1ifl'.I
Sl'OllTS i!I l!i ..,unrunm•1, J2 hr'
ILLllSTH \T~ IJ "'!"" 1rJ1l1•r lm50
c 1971 811 pllL' '>ltmt· I rum IS'f ·~u'l \It ::.
1960s ll~t orrer
~ 121(1 Boah. Rem/
Charter 9050 ••.....•...••.....••••• S.·mt M ir,'tl \I or• !'an Air Con~ 1 IUY FURNITURE Beaut lge smoke) quart1
Old Vaml)' with mirror
SJ50. Metal framl' for
1 .. In bed S8 673-6880
""" tor tul1 & JI t1m1• \nJ \Ir \.\'noel ll.r.i llYI 1 .1 • .1..!:ll.! 957 lll33 About 22 carats ea Only John Wa yne Tenn15 l'luti
'""' ·""l'(ltrni: Jµphl'a
1
.i. full 1111,,. s,, ...,,1111 ., \\ h1rl1>•~117~•1 H1 l SI;!.~ 1. .. , cTopazl faceted stone:.
,1,111 f.\1)(•111•111'l'tl ,11111 ht\\!\ 111 & I.! ••r•lr ilftor., & S:tlller rlhl WSOF \:,,ne-...S9fll'J SIUperslCJ!!e!64().8688 family membt.'r~h1µ, r. 1111 ro 111rn11ult'r uro , 1 15 l,m('l;eaU.,S75t·a A Ve ry special "' .. ! d~ best oHer
fOR SALE lllH•Jr-ut
THESPORTl'.'.C: '<E\\S
( 1971 811 lk-:;10111•1
54.~ 4210
TY, Rodio,
HiFi, Stereo
••••••••••••• •••••••••••••
•IT'S SMARTER•
.. 4, .. •1:1;111\ 111,e .... 11 11\t'n \\ rnt"' lft7 :n.ll !>.'>4~JllO ,..., " _64SJ,25.5
r 1 ""1"1•' '" u't'\l'f\ Serva·,. .. Station' i,11·.01 n1nd~5H.11> .~ii '· 1 ur "l:n gold & fresh .,.ater _ l..Jµful sur11..,,1ut ap -1 r11p1111nt· Cant ind 1 pearl bracelet. Call for SCRIU ·a~ 1'h1 Joi~ \\Ill ha• t h.11 k M-r 111 111 · ):!:!5 \\ hr ii. tln r 1 hr' :! 11ll'klail thlt•\. .ippt to inspect. 644 0323 IUtt\, ~ •·ruun1t Ill ,,1 Ii' ~ --T" 'ID •'J ll1'h"';,i'h1•r I' 5-< e\-~ 1 II llu\ nul plJnurt1•r••I ~llll. 1,1., Jl!.11! 1~1· 111·.. '" t·.1 µr "~ ANSWERS
,, 1111 •• 11111111 l .1 f.71Xl3• II I "'rall 1· L' 1-!1:111113 ROLEX Submariner " I I'\ 111 .. 111 1.n1 I I llj;... II J r. I I u :\ :II d \I I I I l'k ' Cariop) Dull~ s~ It\ ll ~. st.1111111 .tllt•n 11 \\hilt'. •<•n f.!u1t1! Ml •• l Ii rawer etu stam ess st.ee . 1 enc~. Aoile H~ke•
SALES/Hpt.Bch 1
1
11.101 ~.~p•t 11,11 <'l' one! s.·>2!> 19:llllllJ l>l''k w wood i:ratn top flawless S725 OBO ,. "' , t•\I•\ Full" 11 111111• \1• I ' ·~ ~10(1 r1rrn tl)7 0.}.13 752 7919 GOOD LUCI\ \1!11tllh1tU:,.11t·, 2.'>. "' -1111'1'1-RTO'\EI . . 1 1 a ·t
"mm onl.\ 'h"• "'.111 pl~ ~h1•Jl l.,t,1tro11 1.Jh & Udrr11•r.1t11r Sli:1 (1111 I Hull ,1 ;a' ~\:fl i ~·k~ Machiltery 8078 ne1g1h~r~ W~r~~~u
In Int'.\ 11 • n·1•11·r $?;. h1tlr .. ,,r._ Ill'\\ 711 Set 0 3 ilar •••••••••••••••••••.•••• leave the bwldmg. peo
\I ~-"lluL11J1 .1lt·'Jlt'O ---------i~ \\t ll'{•l II:!:! •• "'rou1tht inm ~wl\t'I Binks 26 Spra} Gun pie don't Sa) 'Good
8098 .••..•.................
Beauulul Color T\' 2 'r
\\rOI\ frt'e rhd111·n
$148 646 lnli
Beaulllul t'olnr r\ l \f
14 rnt \' f'rc•e tlt'1111•1 ·,
5148 646-171!6
15 .. Son 1 t'Olor T\'. \\ 1111d
('abmei. perl1·1·t l'Ond1
lion S2SO 640-7!.\S I
•TOCHilTER-
Go h.11 k Sit 11•ar.. tn t 1nic·
(II lh .. t•r.1 ul Sir rhomJ'
L1ptun .inti tht• \'an
dt-rh1h• \\lllll' ,31hn)!
aho,.rit lh1• 1•1,·i.:ant I'S:!
:-.. , h 11 11 n e r
SIH. \It'.\.\ rt:H f ed
tht· thrtll 11'\J Tum .. r ·
l' \ jl 1' I I l'I\ I l' '-.... h 11 l'
\HU fl' JI tl11 lrdrn of tht• rJmou~ 'WI S11arl.rncin 6.
Skpltt'll' lltt."UO lt.:uer l'I• lttt••it .. t 1mnwd -.;e.,. Siii!' 11 \I\()\ orrm r j . . Ir Ir \looh. S2fl \".I Rtbuill, new cup ~ bye .. The\ Sa) "GOOD
\ n1i r. ".it·ni: hl ·r ~ 1 t.\l'lt, 1lt·m ''" mkt SI .'!lllJ pt•r 1110 2 \ °' ,., 11 4 1 I-Ht'fni;. :.! d•1 \\ ruui:ht iron hanging I Rurge:.s Airless Gun SJO LUCK •· · '· lt"r .... , ... 1 , .. ,1 r 1 Jll \•h h·a l rto>.i!lons ~ \ 1 1 11 •·m.ikn l'l!rfrtt 1:1t11i 1.unv 510 540.0021 536 96S2 ~ -"' • .. "' ~ per J' ''" Jll s.tuo 1i,t11lr ·~112GJ ---IM. -•~-
Must type !JO wpm. hi.111 .:-..tli• super front olf1re a ~1
pearance & at leJ~t ~
years experacn l'c
64~9951.
AVOH 2 P\' Sp I speakl'r!> I'\
7~S. PA mn bd 18 mo~ old. xlnt rond Sat SllOO
Dan 751 3191 or e'e'
.§.42 lli4
1. rs fl rn: c·ru1~1·
lh..-1 h.1ond blJnlb lllth
.1111· \linn.1 Jl.ooJrt1 h1-
i:old µl,111·d 111 Ya"I
"Tri',. l-· The~t.' tiu~h
Jrl' JI our il111 "' 'iOW · Joel ,11 .11J.ihl1· for \'Our 1n~11t•1·1run ~k1111it•r,. &
l'rt'\\' ,1 rt• 'lCll!llLlll! b\· Sf1 n1m ,. 1111 rl<•"' n a ud · ,l.,,
1h1· ho.it<. 'l•ln .i ff'"
\.lrn\ hJ\o' .. lotld1 or.!.
.rnd .1rran>?1• .1 d1.trtl'r rn
.i t1n1 \\l••ll'n ld1ht
c .• n \lttt· •11 l():!:: 1~;1.,2\Jti \1.inJ l<!l'r Jnd or , Bdrm lum Set tnd bed tO" RADIAL ARM Sawr ·11c..,_
IEC.-i'IOMIST I•--------l'.1rtn,.r lll"t.'fle<I 111 nd; I \landl:l'f ,111v b<1d1tl 1•r ll t. ru rt rl'fn.: \\ t \\ 11 hout matlre,s. great rond With exlras W..ted 1011 Exper'd. person needed Sit.LES ,hot~un on h1l!h rJre Con I n•·t .I ule~ t1·l'mJkt•r. near lit' ... ' 1lr"''"''r. night~tand . S275 •080 645 0703 •••••••••••••••••••••••
to handle busy board m '"'r. t.' 'IJ h·~ I 1•11tures I U1ebenow, 7t41137 i:t.'12 I 56.<iO fl.l2 f>l!ll I I hl''l or drawers. SlJnd Rocky 2 twin. mattresses '" good
Ward's 3 m I i.ten.•o ~1th
stand. xlnt rood S200
556-64_23. dynam1r Npt. Bl·h rom COMMERCIAL R.E. • unt a ct \Ir ""~' --------•· .\\11\ m11 Sears h\') du11 11111 m 'rror & de~k cond1t1on. Need 4 to 8 'I bk rr l1rl'd•1lwllro, h'""', ,., '>l>IU • • • \\J'h'·r \Int rond .,. ,.h.u r SJ.507541911 Mlsce~ 1010 drawer desks for m ro erage 0 ire 11.1" .. .,., .. ~ • \\• ,., 1 Sh1pplftCJ/Pacl1109lfl9 ,7., h<·~tofft•r &14 Z'JIZ I ••••••••••••••••••••••• children's rooms. re 2 GBL Stcl'l:'li ~l.ll'aker~
Professional aµ 11n"l"'"'·t'ttu ·~m11 .• !'\I ~"'l'rH .... O\ "'Jntl'd Full 11m1· "'Ill trJin MEVERUSfO: REDW0002X6'S asonable~~3645 SJOOorbesloller&l.220111
pearance & maMtmsm ''-111~ !11 m .. 11.1~· 11111 Ir ft1r :-.. II o lulhrni:, hriull ro,td \Jf',il &L~ "421 f{i•trii: '""' frt'l' lrl! tnp Hunk~ $200, (Jn bdrm 2' lo 20' long Xlnl deck Wa nted Pickup truck ~s_kJQr Lanre a must Call Laila I I ,1u1 1, timr \IJturt fr1· .. 11·r ·dnt nint1 Sl~.CI ~.111 " tt -.. r & u-h lo .... l \' 1133-2901,-tommi'fl'tot n·. ,..,t •l" 1 1,r~I .,-,< .·~· • Te~ • :,.o;•i .,1\i l'H"' ~ .. uw e""" '" .i In!! fresh truck load ar Good mechanical rond1 119 m D'U se1 C'O r~ I lnr •01• lrun 1111:1111 ' "" "'"'v ·:r',7""·-lu1l',rJt S300 \lat r11m~ weekl} Save al hon Pa) up to SIOOO tr old Worh i:reat
RECEPTIONIST /Typist.
wllh dlcta phone &
switchboard exp pref'd
Front ofc. Tues-Sat. p, t
country club. 644-~04
14h1ll' \Oil Itani !'>111K'r SJt..USrERSOM Soh~,~on, k Bicycles 8020 t'"' ttin. 5pnngs tl4rn 55rft pp c·all Jim ~~3237. ~o 67371<1!
bend 11; 1111· 111 ur .uir 1· H "ROW "RE \re· ) ou 11r1'\I n \\or In.( • • •• • •• • • ••••• ••••••• •• $,~, lull Sll.1. quct'n SI~ 646 9885 an.l'.!•me •-ots & M_._
h··all'1111.-u1 •11•• ,• il1·11 "' "' l11lll1ml•lnrnant1mr I \l .. 11 IO•rvuod ..1111 Nautilus Aerobic plus '"' --...
1· \ I I F fi R \ I \
I 'Hl IS~~"i ' 1 • " ~.,~1 11 Full or µ tune " • · ' s ·•r• I ' Approx 93 sq yds or gold membership Movtnit Equipmetit
tal pl.in < 11111'"'1 "'"11 llr' 10 be arr;mged \µ Money ? l;d l'i•nd SiS '1' •HE' 770 090I n) Ion shag Practically Good deal 8 mos left for ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675 6ill0 oh in 11er,on Ke-rm Wh1 olll tq \\11rkrni: :..1111110:1 l>uwttt• 'l'I Rattan idnt new. changing del·or S8S mrl Aerob1r exrrrtse Gt'Mrol
tcima llarcl"Jrt' 2f.G6 PJrl 1im1· for full I uni• \I~:\ 'i 111 .,, .. 1 Tt•.1111 1111HI Ill I rha1r; S29S S2 SO}d lilJ.0774_ classes~9414 E\t'S 9010
·~;,:17 W l'llJ'I II 14)
:\ .. p1 llt11 1it11jlM 1191 "h• II It I tlllll'S I,,
I h,1rl1•11111: \At.' \\f'I)\(' thl
111111!.. 111 '1 ,1r' '11m1
Im ·111011 IEC.-i'IOMIST
Adwttililtc)
ACJl"CY Exp'd. person with ex
cell. communicat1onb
skills. front office ap
pearance, busy phone~
Fast·paced environ
ment. Call . Jan Wood
btwn 9A M·Noon
714·955·0900. EOE
To Place your
"Fas~Resull''
Service Directory
ad .... Call Now
642-5671
ht. J22
Get GREEN cash
for WHITE elephants
with a Classified Ad
Call &f.2.567!.. _
SALES DECC>aA TOR
~ ~1wr11·n<1'<l f111 luri
&. ( U't«•Ult'f t,, ... I I
'ii.JI.<(\ • 11111111 :-;, Ith•
I ,..,.J.. Shop II \11d1 r "111
1;.111Wi11 I
SJt..LES/Eipr. I i::"<p•·r h1.:h r •• ~h1nn
-.tun .\µ1 lld1 ~."h1011
l\la11•I ~.ii.in 'urn
m"~11111 \Int IK'rt• fits
(."all1;41 ilUI.
S\U:.'i
MO
PR OSPECTIMG
timo !-.1101 mu \\' "'"''' G Ml!\\ ~;ih-. ll'I > \t'.,lt·r
ti.,~ \l'\\ m••ml h.1~
trtJh••I 1n U\ttll11v. ol
1·unl 1rmt~l .1J1Jol
w~ 1n -;~.11 • 11q
E\ E'l"<i \\ 111<"-
\\ l\L 'r I'"
~511 ,,'1'.>I
ti42 Slii8
RESTAURANT
MANAGEMENT
We are lookine for selectt>d 1nd1\llluab 111 1111
our current needs throughout Snuthm1 < altf. Progress through traln1n.: & JChJn11· 10
restaurant man1gement ~ on inti" ulu.il
performance.
ASSISTANT MAMAGEIS
SI J,000 to SI S,000 rer Ytor
hll company IW'ncf\ts &
opportua1ty (or ad\·emrnw.nt
HMH1 SCHOOL HlDUATES
We hue a Lnintnk program (or thu e htath ldilOol trlChllta 1'h0 •ould hk t.o Stir\ II
career In m1na1ement ~rt111" alltry m.ooo per year.
1,.1, .. ,rl'I t·\I monc\ \\urk6tt112~hr· H\l~l<.lllm1dt·S:to 64-ll9H ,..,._ S p •-R 1. Q 1 d "' ' k 1 h f ~P ea o~. ee~,. 2 ueen AM st} e mm~ J'\'r~ rnvu..' nt·\\11 115iOJ.lJ l'~·lrm ~urnllure ror Poles, Tackle SlS30 rmcha1rs w1thann~&2 Sit.LES REPS
I '"JI t "'ml•! IC ('o
I 1.l11n111·cl 1111 11µ111\
ht:! fi33'J, !llOti
1 fiff' .111 lhl' !'>Jot.i l..\UHSfrwM•ron11111.il 'JI .. heds dr1·~~cn. 5489832___ without Need re \na (. o,1,i \lr,.i Jr~a pJIJ11 SHlU UBO nrlt• 'tJncb. bedspn•adi. lot .,.,.11 (''!Jhh~hed t ~· 'i-\K \1.12>! ,,11 r:.ill AnRie al Tht· Sterling Grand Bamque lmishmg__ OK 644 6579
1.arnin..: 1x>tl•11t1al11f S2:..1u1 , • """" Cll'mente Inn 6 ~ell1ngs, SISO ea Music.al 1wr\\J. bu~t' • rnmrn +18uild11uJMattt;ok8025 nllO'I Go rham 's Fren!'h lnitnlnetlh 801]
SfCRETJt..RY/Jt..drnin honu~ l'all llJ.511118:1 furi •••••• .. ••••••••••• .. •• 1 ' • Srroll. 6 /setl1n!(s. •••••••••••••••••••••••
.................•.....
Reduce Yow T oiu
Non profit ori:an11.111on
nds your bont plant• ·
rar. t'lr l.1heral la\ ilt'
duct ion atl1 an\ JI!•
213 654 2341
loots, MCIWeftonu /
i\ \1mrw' ~Jm1h
········••**"' •••••••••••••
I' ..rt t 'ml· Tun & JJIPI REDWOOO 2 X 6'S Whitt' rrenrh provmc1al S9S ea Also 44 pl Rhodes Stage 73. 250W fhur' I p1•r,nn ok 2 1 L h bdrm ~ct. canop} trun Dia mond rmo , S250 G 11 K \ REI.A"< Com!' i.a1hni: ('oi\1 iMJ LWi Tired of sittillq 2 to 11 nn~ • n•, cllt bed desk dre'>.~er " 1 ien ruger amp. rp ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. 11h l'Jpl Robt-rt Bum~ Ser•ice 9020
inside al dav' 11 Ut· k load J rrl\ in I: ~ ,hrh es. nightstand 646·8223~ -Axe s Y n • renter Yacht refm SuJ.ll•r.tru1 Bl· H, Sl'lHRTf..RS
•SECRETARY• nr r1• .. ,.,•kl\ -...\l di 55 It ~ Newport ~arh Tennis Bassman speaker for tures. non ~k1dd1ni: i;;5 2tlf).'
Tn thief Exe!'Ull\e or \nll'MUl?htimr or,un l'I' 1all Jim fi.lli'tllH5 50 957 82BI Club membership full sale.Andy49'L3351 shear & boot \tnpe' --------• l1~1·r or lnme li;ned :ind t'ltHl'l\l Ste'r ~ .in\t1ml' \\I \RT Quain~ Walnut membership 11S01orrer. PV Classic wlbu1lt in Buffing & 1111ll'h1111! I lll•talhng t' n<•\\ hirtnJ! • I L>rnm~ I able & 4 rhr;. 644 8483 R f SH ARKS II tomµutrr <'omp.:in) I ~oung womenforahaod Int door!>\\ hdwl' 121 '111.~ 121 MatrtungOhve ___ phaser 6 months old _e_!8405.'D2 ••
W11J haH· xlnt s h, lyp· i·ar \\a~h1ni: 'enH't' 1111'<2!'· Sl,5 ~~· (2180~~1 I 1;recn ClubChrsS7S ca MITtftllisClub S34010B0642.7063 loots, Marine I 31!' Part·makrr Y:.u;ht. 1111: & lll'Ople ~ktlls Call W .i~h f'eorram Holl~ S2'I ta ( loset door... 1~1 r J 1 On·sser~ SIS ea Reg memben;hip S600 Yamaha Flute, like ocw. Eqllipmetit 9030 slf'rp5 6 ror Charter' l'el(~1 al 17141~7 666(1 Ro~ C'l'\ \\t•n't'•ll'\ and 93"<30. l 21 !13x36 '~I 645 20!U incl trans fee Call eve~ SL50 ••• •• •• ••••••••• ••••••• Sr<·1·1a lmng lll !'hark f1~
TalFILE Porst he~ .,.h1lr \UU soak 93x 12 SIO ea Gd '"'nit . • . w b .. 673 6474__ __ __ S40-0042 Used JShp John.,un o U hint: nrr <'JtalJna Island
L 10 L I . &.llG57'l Kl''i(, S7. :iter en 213 -~ 7"'' ... kd ,.qua 1>P'l r.rn11 O)l'r UJI lhi: Nl'\\1Jltl1 H<'ach .. heatl"r. sheets & hner Ce1hn!l Fan. Casabella CONN TH EATR •CAL l977 electr Mart 11>50 · ,,1' ""' "l't' ~ll
SECRETilY ~un full or JMrt 11!'1t' D09s 8040 $150 ~7 1122 forward , reverse. ORGAN, convex pedab. Mt~,83J.82t9 CHJt..RTSl R;1µ1dl~ t'xpantl101t? C:a P0"110"' a\ailabl' < Jll ••••••••••••••••••••••• lleaulllul sohd wood vanable spd. Light mrl appraised new S9.000 Trailer for:.>' boat. 2 J~ 25 so l'o.,.er Hoats 11 .:1~tl'rl'tl ror1JOrat1on Jom S3t l»I l\FESllONO Pup.:. \I\(.' llanala)' stereo, Jpc Was S239, take SIOO Seldom used.64.5-5299 le. calkans. mu..~I ~ell Tra.,.ler \a1hL ... tiiJ.'860
111,ol1ed Ill thr orr ~hore L'PllOl.STERF:ll Work <ha mp w'I.' ~! f l'l'I ~ n1hmct UXl <no room I Jud17JO.OOll6 Office,....._.. & 7_60·0184 !Boots, Soil 9060
"" ind us tr) I~ ~ttk Int! an '" a tr c·ond1t inned ('(tin 2 ~ ~!17 134: r ~ p I ' IW6 OS03 J 011 N w ayne Fam 1 I y Ecpl,.....e 1015 5H p out board molor $2'.!5 •••••••••••••••••••••••
bee. Secretory fort \I 11l.l .l>t• ahlr lo cut • l . a t _pm l.arKl' Comfortable arm Tenn is members hip ••••••••••••••••••••••• As is. EST It.TE SALE' 111 ussume rr~pnr\.\llitllty &. sew :Sulai' open l orkrr rup1nr!>. II we\'kll. chair and matchma ot SOOD mcls. transfer ree Like new AB D 1 ck 54().1819 '"2 ·•713 St9<1 .. ,,. 1 9 197° l 'al.ibna Z7 Good for 11~ smooth running '"'" · tnman ruslcoloredcor .,..4 _54 Mim eogra ph •532 BrandnewPcrkoUl'out "
h11mt• offl rt' Ai.:.1st WJt..RDCLERK ti/3SIS4 duro-. Xlnt oond S140 Sola & chair Stoo. Stereo 891·21117.119..Z~ riggers w spreaders. c-oncl Wl't'k da'~ plea~t·
Prl'i-ident tn Ii~~ da11} Expentnce '" C:oo,al W11r II aired Fox Ter 6731·11~ S200 1.5'' colorTV SL!JO 4 AB Dick Stencil Marhll\e ti•" diameter. cost ne.,. l'all
"'rhedll.le & marketing de!\irl'tl ('all ad nl'f~ \KC. 12 \\ks wall posters Sl5 eo -588 S695 891 2107 . S150 sellS7S $460001 iS9 H75<>rliiSM2'7 t•flort~ Operalmg Telex mmistrator 646 776-1 f e m a I e S I I S Sofa. chair. end table, 645-1494 -.=...= Cat a I 111 J JO. d1~u·I
& hie bkkµg part or ,. r 171419810028 dresHr . area rug . PLAY HOUSE C I 894·2356 loats,rowtf' 9040 relng. 110 gen. i bag
many d1vrrs 1fred V.\R~:llO~~~:.m:t.l\!';H llOSTO~ Trrrler Pups i~.T1~·~~ase etr wood.A-frame, bal~~Y: A~Coc: ... tt ...... 2"s"."=t•••••••••••••• s ail:.. t>lc S33.j 00
res pons1b1htleh Sue • I ~,Jl-.ON AKC 5 \\'k.S S2.50ull males -swmg. rope lidd, can all kmds of accessories, 546 7506 _.. cesslulcandldatew1llbc f,nr part~ rrnlal stor<• l:Ot>4ZG4 IO Beauty Rest King mat disassemble. SHO C111anXtimeS94-8311 '78. Twin 14 Mt Ell'<' Racin$: SABOT trfin l
l't'sponstble. possess xlnt Full nr I' lime AP. ply -t spr11s S\50. oak ice box G l ,_ • .,,, 'lk bait tank. elec wmch. l'Ond • 2 sails, new mast
t'Ommand of the English 201.5 Newj)Ort Ulvd C M PIT BULL PUPPIF.S S200 , oak desk chair S56J389 ::1:t~·:.r D;,5\yp~~r VHF·CB. Of, Compass. banana boom & raring
Janiiuage, outslaodm& w .\X & Detail penoon. Pu~':tll$1'J() SIOO, stereo cab S7S GYM SET with weight.a stencils, typeset 41 BIW r u 11 rover. tr Ir rig. hull rehntsbed
1dmm1straU\e, typmg & .\!ale or Fem.;ile Exp -644 2ll9___ and attachments S80 oboto6 ssoo ~l 1213)286-1163 days. t213l ~ offer 67S ng
whurthand skills. r1aure nee Apply 11 to 5. M1 niture Schnauier Teak bunk beds from 642-3214 · 796·~Ev,wkends S~MRK Brand-~
llfll1tudl' forc1an Superior CarWash.46~ Local Champinn hnes Norway,goodcond S250 BAR KEG COOLER Home/Office Lii rolllop A classic• Beauttful)) $300 • ...._
hmKuage preferred We W Cooslll"'...)' NB Oul,tandmg Male. 8 ~ w/fountain, like new ~k968~i•'ood wood restored Century l8 F1 549 2!5ff!
offer a most congenial WELDER E'xp ;!th wks 5,p $300 OBO Customqualityhardwood $600/0BO Inboard Circa l960 By • ~
atmo5phere, ad\•ancc· alum a must ailbout 768-62Q:lj 975-Dl --fumllure. 1·7 IBM Exec. 1,pewriler, Centurr· Boat Co. Exlnt Re~~t:o~~~~m~~. F~
meot potential, ll~Od ma~l bk11md clt·inrable PUPPIES AK(' Golden 498-0088 Lo•tl•um rr:::~ CDbtn U Selectric 1 fNor sk1inle11 o~-fi~hing new $BOO ot 0 r
bl•neCIL,, Remuneration Appl} al Kcnyon 2734 Retvr Mb.. Avail July Double bed xtr1 long ' Helium Bouquets de· ew trat r rut<ho <SO fer 646·3879 --
lH'COrdma to ,kills & eic s Susin s A 546 1io1 2St h S40 Ca II S ue frime. Pad. Two sets I II vered. Perfect tor l'eh IM7 CH VHF'l Cover SIJ.000 per~nce Send resume ' ---639 32115.anlefil sheets. Pillow eases '75. every occasion 673-4419 ....................... 851. ·1221 Day G42·0'U5 16' f\ catam11'il\ W60den
to. S1mro lnlemataonllMffc...._ 41.i yr old SILVt:R 8755 C -• FOISALI!!! E~es. hull w trlr,Utb $60CI
Eneri:y. ln r 180 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GREAT Dane llkes lub Memberah1f w/ Young blue ' iold ----Nod 1Mn ~ Ne • port Center Dr ........ , IOOS eluldrt'n, tbetralnedSIOO Sor11 loveseat, end tbl. University Ath ellc auuw with a huae '72DllSIL 645 5634~
Suitt' fl 180 Newport ....................... 54A IU7~ cofree tbl. Early Am.tr tlub. '500. 7~1118 wroufhl Iron ca&e. . lO'l'IAWUI ~· Cl.A IC 11 desi11n 1
Rtach CA 93l60 EOE. FOR SAL~ 1930'• Lh A d ll atyle MOOtotal.5$2-8369. DISHWASHER , Lonely ... needl 1 fritGd! W1l11rd Vtp Scarchtlr Kel ch w 42' Newp0rt
MIF ___ 11.ltche~warc. Rare Hall w~~io . ~:'ie.a~Kn~: llM· -Whlrlp00tporublet100. Sl200.00.CIUDanut Model. Xlnt COnd Fuel Moorin.&..~760-117119
SICUTilY and Fle~l• Ovtr 300 Jlll fl SI00.6'1S-nt8 Beaut Lradillonal love Sewln& mach .. Ken· 541o 17 consumption 1.,_gal per -SUOT--
cb•ll n"tnf opportunity f!~c.~. Uuy ont> or all AKC Co" .... r-Sp"nlel seats w1lbls & limps. more, wood cbnt.1. Zll· p t 11 hr. U0,000. Bus <7141 Good..;...." .7,,;0, .,, • ~,......, '"'"' • from 1Uomey'sofc Coll Za& • Cams 1115. arro 1oun1 vtry 8 4 4 ·I U O. h o m • ''""" -w1lb tmal. expandln&--pupa. SUS lo SZ25. SUOO. Suritlce ct7 tame 1300 Ca11 In· '114 . M42\IS •
company. Shorthand. Unusu~l. solld m1hoca11>' MHS~ nt.s. SlSOO obo _ .............. ..._-.Mi..-pi". ;tvutdewd0•11 '45-7903 19 ..... Vl .. '"'• Sf, Ridir. lyplng, nliDa., 1Cener1I 19$0 s TV ('at1net y A.11111 .,.,,....., ~ -19"!; ' !'!! -!!!!! IH ..... ore.ct manaRemeot Needs rel1111shl.na. 1100 ,,.... .. • •-• 10 pc crum colored t1n'el ....... Dlmaltd , ' 'twiA Catt Oit11l1.
Wllhnttotram832911M. OBOM2~ ••••••••••••••••••••• .. matchlnabv.nn•dln 111rftlN~MDllkll5. I Colvmb6aft Red TaJI rlstol PP.1758651 _
SEl'RtTARY Ex 'd. 00. 5 Drawer antique mans Brindle Great Dent. rm tum S.S0.64HU5 a men. a I;"::' Boa, •l&t'* • beattr C1bUt Cruiler. flC>d !Ive-
l .. , ..... ..!..n1-..1 drtutr $250 080 Mtle 3 1ra old. Very Sot ......._. 1 - -(9ftl" ) DOO/bt\9't.•llt1 aboard. Louted In Y •I.II• "" ..-.-....,, friendly a.._No12uoo.e1ec:trlc N.I I UlMmPY'nlON Franu 21· clluel ·~t.CU!i~~!., wr-. . -. 6311111) -~.rrerSU$. = re:: MJ.Mlillwl!R· '"ft ... /lilt j_lL_llOO. m.-Sallcil 131$ Sc*k .. l
• •1 ,.,-Tt1d• your old ttalf for 5 yr old Sclln.lwer maJe • ' ' · r a. .,...._ y oN -.... f -.._ ....... w/NOf"lh Nil 21\4 Ar'~!!•:.·n: OfW 100dltt .. ·~ I Gentle, lntellipnt M•l ~·11 1714 . :;,a '11 ...a ;:. .. ; ..... ~ -w, "',;;.; 1 .
·.;..._.-.. ...... -..:...--..._ ....... _____ -""'::..:S.:.:::...:l:.::lO:.:.I---Cl11alflfdti.d . ._~,. r1t1 ooc1 7tl).01J4 ClaulfitdAdlMa-1171 "'°· 71J.Mlftl:ll ~ ea.n.War!A.
-..
Oranoe Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 22, 1981 ...... .., • .w :......~.tW •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
t7Ja ........ 9770 ......_ UHCf • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~W t060 oW'~111/ AMlotW.W tsto ....................... c-.a t120 ..................... ..
,,ISTSAIL 41 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP $ . S c.,n t7 IS H"91 aid dKll, u la, or ·~ Cbtv Nomad New DOLLAI •••••••••••n•••••u••• ~t16MADA '7• Duhtt win, 4.-spd. C.... ff 17 COSMOCOUPI IOmpf fl"Ofll wh.I dtlv• ...................... .
5 apud trans., pwr. AM /tM tape eltctr.1&1 'IO Camaro Z21, lmmac,
atu rlna. air cond.. nltloo, alnt OOoci. '2isoo. loaded, T Top. s1000
AM /FM atert0 tape , ..!fl5:JllPM45283U!tl. so~g1~ o ·•tem. 17775
~ C111llhtd to your paint• chrome. t8K U\• ForatanUffd '76 Capri U, 'for sale by
, .... ., Conta ... w vested M• .. t llt!ll Beat Cars&Ttucks orli owner, &d cond.
P"" • u ayne · -· We.,...vcuhonthe1""'1 W I t ", • n r (. Alkt1 Yadlb offe . 6 l~_qrj75>7922 r-1 I"'' .. •
-'63 Lincoln COnt.inmttl. Con_tact bl.Iyer at am ifm t ater\'o, V·G,
U ' Monobule,
m14"(.1&.
R ood -~~ bod manual trans. ps, pb. needs uns &OOCl. ,_ Y Ntw Michelin tlru.
work. l500or belt offer. 13.300/0 8 0 Work.
~t~tJ~~).•lloy wheels. '75 VW Rabbit, aood '72CAMARO
ONLY $3595 shape, CantutJc mpa. Sl800orbettoUer.
·!122. Mf:l50S.__ __ _
4 Wllttt DfWtt tHO ~~4.sl:sU O ' Hom c:
MIUCUMAIOA ~ MHl07/~96'7t __ S7..}31S88 --........ tt20 2~Harbor81vd 'H VW Super Beetle, COSTA MESA I k S ~45-5700 ~~~. 1reat 3,000 Dahllt t720
.... ,,..,
5'I tOIO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... •'10..-Sta San Clemente SEE US FIRST!
1$' ~kl BOAT with new 4WD WA60Hml t.rawr~ Automatic tran•. air
n 1.osao 4t1.a5oo ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltlODATSUH Mewrwtl t73t '66 B111 MIMt atll! Good We have agoodae~ctlon
of NEW' USED
Chevrolell! --+--'-==1--.--1 eo11d. Ir ln u~lk-nt ron-WANTED!
Late modtl ToyotaJ and
Volvos . Ca ll us
DAY!!!
200SX
Halrhbark model with
automatic trans ,
AM 1•'M steceo, µwr
~luring, air cond ,
cruise control, pwr mir
ror•. rur wiper & 11
jewt'I' (843YNR>
••••••••••••••••••••••• rood. RWll &real. Xtras. OIANGI Rblt en 631·__.11..,.73...__ ,, . ., .......
••••••••••••••••••••••• c-n.S./
.... 9120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10~ Camper f our Star
wfre(rlgerator ' stove P orl ·•·polty All
Butane. Queeri s1 z.e bed
Sleeps 6 In exrellrnt
condition. S12SO Call
between IOam Spm
631-7657
'63 VW Bus '70 Motor
Custom built. Lo m1
Runs ood ~~ ll066
"• Cabover ramper for Import truek. lee box,
dinette. xlnt rond ~7~.
IM.2·3413
7'Cab Over Camper
for import 111rkup, m•n~
.mi-~ s.G-2027
ditlon I (8(1VP'W I
ONLYS6995
HOW AltD CM•ro6tt
Oove/Qwlll Sta.
NEW POltT 8£ACJI
_133-0555
'7 4 JI• WAG OH
Low mi luge All extrai,
~ UIQI
Trvcb tUO •••••••••••••••••••••••
ltlOFottD
FIOOrtCKUP
Et'onomlr11I 6 n I
engine. 4 Mpet'd uvl'r
drive truns . air l'Olld &
pw r . istrcr1n1i
UV\61371
ONLY $6995
MIRACLI Mil.DA
2150 Harbor Blvd
COSTA Ml-SA
'4~~700
ltUH.W II•& c ....... ..
""64'·00) w '40.UU
Top Ollar
Paid
F'or Your Car•
JOHHSOH & SOM
Lillco'-Uercwy
2626 llarbor Rlvd
l'Ollll "16! 5-10-5630
w.r!l
OVER
llwlooll
for Your Good
VW. Porscbe or A ud1
ONLY $7495
MlltACU MAZDA
2150 II arbor Blvd
COSTA MfflA
6 S.1700
C Ollnl-S 12 VW Camper xlnt cond,
EXCLUSIVE new pnt, en,, tr•ns, etc .
$4250 of er firm . MASllA Tl 631-487&1.SJ.9146'-_.._
COHMELL
CHEVROLET
"-"JI HI•, I'
• t--. I \ \I I ' \
S4l>-1 l00 DEALERSHIP '67 VW Bug. New paint ' •
tall for an appointment b r a k e 1 , Id con d '&9 y y • •
lOd•Y' Sl800/bstolr. healer, 4 dr, good rond
IEACHIMPORTS 67U73hll6._ .631·1918
848 Dovr Stl'fft '73 VW Type 3 Fastbtclt, '77 Chevy Luv with !jhell, 752-0tOO auto sllrk, xlnt cond.. tape deck. $3500
1969 Harbor Bh'd ~bit en& . proof. new 499-
U 1·7I70 C 1• tires, reg. gas '8IChevyCaprlcerlass1r ------CaU960-7804 4·dr , blk wired ml .
Mere ... ._ t740 '7_2_ Super Beetle. Xlnt must sell immediately
· ........................ cond S2400or best offer 979·2326, 634·~
__ ....§6Ul61 ___ '74 CHEVY Capr1re 4 dr,
SELLINO YOUR MB? 1979 VW Bug Conv. 8500 good cond, xlnt t1rea
TOP ~It SS m1, River blue, loaded ~1.l00642.oo79_
Call Jack Bacon with xtras. 50.000 mi Chry.Wr 9t25
warranty. t9200 833-3231 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JIM SUMOHS J!!.r~~~-1484 Eves _ '73 New Yorker t•lean,
IMPOITS '68 Pop Top Camper good transportation S800
1970Harbor Blvd Very clean, new eng. !162·1487
COSTA ME.SA etc_ ~obo.jJ5 3.m CCHICJlr ttll •1!!!!!!!63!!!1!!!1Z1!!!!!!!6!!!!!833-!!!!!!!9300!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I '79 Convertible Rug ••••••••••••••••••••••• Silver. m111t, 14,000 m1, '68 XR7 80,000 m1 Orig MoSc'°!:r.:'' t I SO Cl1STOM '72 Ranrhrro
••••••••••••••••••••••• GT loaded' New brakes.
'78 ~ONO>\ ClHZ:SS 97 tires. a e, etr etr Must VW PORSC.lfE A\ll)I
mpt. 4,400 m1 lmm'ar , see! S2'700 or bst orrer 445 E Coast 1t1w11>
CASH TODAY ~OCli.Ql!O PP ,.67J.0912 owner. Automat1 r V8,
Wew1llrometo you 72VWCamper Rblteng, ~.!J,_o.!i&J>auit 644·l:nl
$S7$,lohn8DZ'>47 64.2-5460 646-9780 at Bayside Uriv11 MYCEDES stereo. xlnt thruout '78 Cougar XR7. loaded. WAHTtD Hurry' '3450. 6612030or 34,000 m1 . must sell , 74 Suzuki GT 750 Runs '81 Datsun Looabed 'tit Ith Ne_w119rt ~al·h 673·0000
&real. El!.tras Lo,,_, M1 camper & slt>eper kit Prem1umpncc~ Call for 1mmf'diaLe 549:0181 ~100. 66.!.:~I9,tl31·26S2
A1k1ng S800 080 Snrf. am rm ras~. CB paidforanyusedrnr
St&-8102 UICI 16900. 974 4227 t rore1gn or domestH· >
appointment '72 VW red bu.:. xlnl Ford 9940
Ask for con d . S 2 6 0 0 D a y ••••• •• ••••••••••••. ••• Mark Sarh.s·Buyer ~5· 1637 ,.!!.!.&.hi 644 1628. '65 Ford eustom Good
1131 1740 495·1700 73 VW Squarebark New lransportatton S200
750F HONDA '80 S2000 ' 7 9 C II E \' R 0 L f. T in good rondltion
750F HONDA '81 S2250 DELIVERY Van. 12ft SeeUs t'trst'
MISSIOH VIEJO features Exlnt rond §.42-3418
IMPOITS _ , Must see! S2400 080 Liltcoll 9945
Both Stock_~7-7196 box 3,093 m1 Powt>r ~11!111-Wll!!ll!lll•ll!t.I brks. steering S..S0.000 • '78 Su1uk1 TSl2S, xlnt
cond . S600
---~Ill! -MIDI bike. s~ Honda
XL-100, tm. Trail 90,
S350 All in xlnl rond
548·3304.
1980KX llOKAWASAKI
Good Cond. S4.'iO
_ __.968-=·~Zl.52 d_!.{s_ -
lt7( KZ 400, ~O 080
Volkswagen front End
~-4~8 --
'84 Lambrella Scooter.
125cc, cond, see t.o a~
re S7 50 S3;.4982
'69HONOA 70
Runs good. hr'd. Sl50
4311 ahlJa~M
'77 YA MAHA OT 250
Mono Enduro, new
engine S700 080 ~ves
Bren l. 64$-3400
Yamaha '76 OT 400 En·
duro. Xlnt. S8oO
892 4764
'71 HONDA CB 35() E.
Corvette )'ellow. runs
OK but needs some work
S2SO rirm m~ _
MotorH-.. We/
ltewt/S ...... tl60 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WECAHSB.L
YOUR R.V.
559-1:.M
TNllen, Treml 9170 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1978 Taurus Vacation
Trlr. 24 '. sips 8, incl
bunk bds. new rond . S.S. 000. 842-IM29
'U INTRUDER 24'. Self
cool. and '76 Cad CdV.
many extras. 646-~2.
646-5482
10 Fl Crown Sleeps 3.
Icebox, sink. Plus murh
m ! 5500. ~9510
,,...,.., Utflty t 110
••••••••••••••••••••••• b6 End Gale or will
carry 4 motorcycles.
. 54S-QS19
S..-..,P.ts
AcUIMritt t400 •••••••••••••••••••••••
SHVICE DEPT.
Open 6 Oars A Week
Mon.-Fri.7:30-5:30
SaturdaysB:00-5:00
AftlltC~.rtw.
2929 Harbcir Blvd.
Costa Mesa
4'-lt34
SSAVISAYIS
WITH USID PARTS
Imported car parts
IMPORT
AUTOSUPPLY
101 N. Manchester
Anaheim 776-9900
MB '60 23> S. Complete
car for parts . S950 -0597 Altu6 PM __
Wot for We ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTANT
N<mCETO
READERS AND
ADVERTJSERS
The price o( Items
advertised by vehicle
dealers In the vehicle
cl111ifled advertising
cohimns does not in-
clude any applicable
tana. license. transfer
feta. nnanre charges.
feee for air poUullon con-trot device certifications
or d•aler documentary
preparation chlr11es un·
1111 o4henrile specified
b dw~.
tSJO
mile warrant). hke new
Sl!l.998
_646·4041 or5-lll7llOO
VClfts 9570 .......•.........••••••
'76 Dodge \'an Auto. lo
m1. New 318 motor
!_~ 641!:8.1 IO or 5-18 I 580
71 Dodge Van. PS, trlr
hitrh. int ext good cond
S2200 ~42-4028, 548·2229
'77 Custom L>odge Van.
29.000 m1 Ver) good
cond. S4200 545-~79
Autos WClllhd 9590 ..........•.•..........
19 300 SO snrf. all xtras. ~().1304 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 1 k e n e"' S 2 7. 2 5 o 13 VW Bug, new pa mt, '81 Cartier Mark VI. hke
966 1779, G<i().Q15 gd eond Clean 1n out new , less thlln 10.000 m1
'80 300TO Sunrf.' ~ ... rall6445679 Muslselldlll•tolllnei.) llillllM•~ .... 11111 I v or~· tan 1 n tr I '64 BUG. custom render.. 530-6386._ -
Showroom new S23,SOO & whls. '68 eng. xlnt 19 Town Coupe, loaded .
714 642 74U7L714 568·~ ~QndLS2100 646-4Q13 sacrif1re$6975
WE BUY '76 M ermk'S lXlD • .snrf. '79 vw Convt lllk Blk, -~ 1873
USEOCARS&TRUt'KS Bloupunkt stereo, xlnt am Cm, nard1 wheel. Mercury
COl1 E IN OR l' o n d S 9 9 5 O chrome runs. very lo m1, •••• •••• •••••••••••••••
CALL FOR <71419634421 xlnt M S 0 Pr1\·ate ORANGECOUNTY'S
FREE APPRAISAL ,one he 97 50 759·0169 FINEST
Corm1er-DeL1llo ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED LlNCOLN MERC URY CHEVROLET Porsrne 92i Turbo 1980 '71-'72 ·73 \IW camper DEALER.SHIP
18211 BEACH BL\'D Loaded, lo mileage I &ood eondJtlOO 646 ~9-1
' '
HUNTINGTON BEAl'll '76 280 z ~ pls 2 65 .000 S20.000 Ph 714 !l!J0.8951 VolYo 9772
WEPAYTOPOOLLAR 847-60l7 or m1 AM FM tape :>tags I oraft5.Pm213697·6J82 •••••••••••••••••••••••
for lop used ra ri; 549 3331 New paint S6500 OBO '6791 1 Elecsnrf Weber *I YOLYOD1t"LEI foreign. domest1c·s or --· •s .8651 b blk N lf ~ ~ car s . intr ew IN ORANGECOUNTY' class1rs H your rar 1~ / ~,,.,..,.. rr d
~ "?'*""• LINCOLN·M ERCURY
16-18 Auto Center Dr so F'wy-Uc f'orei.t ~XII
IRVINE
130.7000
t I ........ .___._,. · ...-... paml '1IQJVtJ o er ys ex ra r ean. see us ...... 1, ..,.,.... ·~ .:""'19"" 213 830 6754, ev wknds FIRST! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~31 0490 _ SALES, SERVICE _ ~~!'!'! .......... !?~~ '70 Pomhe 914-6, xlnt OV E~~~~~~tt.i't:RY Monarrh 16 4·dr i.edan. eond. musts~' S9SOO EXPERTS Leath uphol Loaded 646-53TI l2500 0 l!Ct l 14 990 11951
JEEPS, CARS ·59 3S6C St<XXJ or best or-EA.RU HCE ·77 Mere Cougar Station PICICW'S ~,,,....,......,..,,.....,.,..... rer VOLVO Wagon Onl> 31K m11~~.
•I i. o,.... c~ 1 F'rom ~ .Available al 536-2113 1966 Harbor Blvd new radials. loaded. xlnl
Z92S HarbOrBlvd loral Govt Aurtmns lt;.=;,;;:~~~;;;;~:11.67 911 Pors" .. _ ''real L'<' cond Muslsell ' S32!¥.>or
COST • .. .,..,, f'or 01rectoryrall ''"' v COSTA M ... A l~!!!!!:.~2-§132
9 79nz'"sr:,;;JOO,... Surplus Data Centtr IUUTIFUL! rond' ~e t.o appreciate' .. _4~t JO. 3 540.t_4w6 7 Mtllt•CJ 9952 --~ • (4151:n>-7800 ·72 240 Z Dart-Burgun ~o~~rm 494 7591 · Sarnfire 75 Volvo ag ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~!!!!!!!1!!!!1!!1!1!!!!1!!1!!!!!1111--ll!l'I d> with black mteraor gd cond net'<ls minor .69 Mustang 8 cyl. auto,
We'll Buy
Or Sell
Your C:lran
Import On
Con\iqnment' 11
Call Our
U\ed Car
Manaqrr
TODAY"'
831 -2040 495.4949
Soddleboc~ BMW
Minion Vie10
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FOR USED CARS
ALAM MAGt40H
POHTIAC/SUIARU
2480 Harbor Blvd
COSTA M~A
549-4300 54t-1457
PORSCHES
WANTED
Allow us the opportunity
to consider the purrhase
or trade·i.n or your clean
Porsche. Check Wllh Us
Today!
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
AND TRUCKS
CONHElL
CHEVROLET
'X.?<llt:f•,f 111 •. 1
11(',J\\1 ~.,\
S41>-1200
HIGHIUYa
Top dollars for Sports
Cars, Bugs, Campers,
914's, Audi's
Ask forUICMGR
JIMMAIJHO
YOUCSWAGIH
18711 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
14 2000
TOPDOU.AI
PAID FOR
GOOD l CLIA.N USIDCAIS!
AlfaROtMO 9705 Newllres Magwheels MUSTSELL 911 '73 work S2850 owner 63.ooomi,ongeng.xlnt
••••••••••••••••••••••• Exlnt cond Rebu1ll SILVER Like New <!cs,perate6311719 cond. S2IXXI r.rm 11141 Alf R · s d en1nne S4750 0 80 6316994 a omero6ll pyer. Da)s. 675-9510. Eves. 4utos,UMd 7_60-967...Q PM
rlass1<' boat tail convt '71 914. Only 731< m1. Mint .. ••••••••••••••••••••• 'M M UST Cl-'"'SI'' 1 Like the rar m the 759 027I cond ! Many extras -"•"' '-
"Graduate" Xlnl int '79Dat.sunp1rkup Lom1. Mustsee'S4S50_4971597 AMC 9905 VB. auto. Pl>. pb . I ext . & merh $4500 ar,auto.xlntcondS5995 ••••••••••••••••••••••• restored . S2395 Ql4)631-~1 493 !>449 'I I roaSCHE 1977 Pacer, retired srhool l-5~5865
. 280Z pd 11 928 Brand new Chiffon learber's. 24.000 m1 ·69"M-;ut 6 l')I mm~n. Alldl 9707 78 •· 5 s · a c. a White Be1oe Leather. Perl rond. man) extras auto Xlnt rood m out Pwr. am rm. I owner. " S2 975 F' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Auto lran:. J-23 opllon · 1rm New paint. I o,,_,n"r 1980 A d ·~ bt!st offer 631 3576 ' u 1 ...........,, a:.~umt' group 1nrl Pwr seats. Slll-9817._ 495 1490 ~. 67J.~l l'!B lease ...... mo ''all for ·77 D"tsun _.,, 2 ' 2 I k "I -H.Q '-" c,aw, ... mirrors. oc ~ r.. er lwd1 9tl0 '68 Mustang. rebuilt 289 details 857·9_101 e\es Xlnt rond Lo mileage r f t 1 m snr . ar ory a ar ••••••••••••••••••••••• V8, new brks. rlutrh. IMW 9712 $6450 or be:.1. orrer da & system Auto ch mate 64 Rmera Xlnt rood. full top, 1111. 4 new radials
•••••• ••••••••••••••••• eves f14,i.8032 -ront rol pwr incl W111dows 94k 892-3459 an 5
F'orThe Best Fiot 9725 Sat.! $39,tOO m1. ong owner llas a~ ~ -9955 Buy Or Lease Deal ••••• •••••••••••••••••• List "13 ~ __praisal of S1500 536-1502 In OrangeC-Ounl) '73 Fiat l284dr. Call Virginia· 645 "800. 64 -Buirk-Skylark ronv •••••••••••••••••••••••
Come See Us Today• 4 Door S7SO ~ 1122 _ s1200 or best orrer Nds 'IOOLDS
&
SADll.EBACK
BMW
28402 Marguente Pkw)
M iss100 Vie JO
AveryPkwy exit
(o(( 5 Freeway I
831-2040 49>4949
Closed Swidays
S1,!9!t~oo
OFHEWIMW'S Sales and Leasing at
rompetitive pnres Ex
rellent service and pons
dept
Good selection or pre
v1ously owned BMW &
other fine cars in ex
cellenl condition
We also hove a lease
co mpany that leases
other makes of autos.
trucks and vaM F'or ad
ditional infonnollon on
leasmg please call
714'972-IZ70 714 1fi61 9611
F'or a good deal and good
after sales service see
Q CREVIER
963-3407 eves ~·wkn~ oh Royce 9756 ~l!B-~-642-5242 CUil.US
Holtdcl 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·11 Bu1rk Electra 225. IROUGHAM COurE ••••••••••••••••••••••• #}DEALER IN U.S.A. 48.000 mi . 115. pb, air. 6 cylinder. power steer VISITYOUR works perf All eler & 1ng , power brakes .
OR ....... GECO.a.ST ~ ROY newallemat.or Runsgd power seats. AM FM "'" "' CARVER S500 499 ~ stereo. tilt. muse. half HONDA ROLLS·ROYCE ·15 Regal. all new rond. v5i33ZnylUOto)p. Beautiful HEADQUARTERS ,,.., • .,...,.. sunroor u100 oeo 1
TODAY!!! !:::"'""' Eves,957~44 $8295
U.._.IVERSITT Codiloc tt 15
" Cl0\(0 SUNDAYS •••••• ••••••••••••••••• SALES &SERVICE
OLDSMOllLE
H(M)A
GMC TltUCICS
2850 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA ME.SA
540.9640
Toyota t765 COMT&l'LATIMG
••••••••••••••••••••••• CA.DILL.AC? '80 COROLLA SRS, 5 spd. We specialize in leases
am rm stereo. wire for the business ex-
wheels, snrr. 13K m1. ecutive & professional
SS800675_6150 Lorge S.led6oa
'68 Toyota Co rona OfM.w ltll 'f.M.G ~IQCSJi•
·79 Accord 5-spd. good am rm . new tares-C.-.Ct ~
cond111on. S4300 brakes. need\ eng work How Ill Stodd '76 Olds Starlire, gold tan ~131 S300968·2283 int. 5spd. stereo. tape
'80 Prelude, a1c, stereo, '76 Toyolo Corolla Lo NAOOR~ deck. St950.64+4S94
mags. many extras. mileage,55.000.Am Fm C"ADll l ~. '81 REGENCY98. Xlnl auto. red. wfsunroof, 4 spd. On~. owner S2100. .J' " .. J~ ... Mint, 4dr. wire wheels. ~950 080 768-1~--64S-SOOO K1rk _ ~ /1.00H.111•• ~it stereo cass. loaded
JCIC)lllr 9730 Vo•awCMJfft 9770 ('"'·' ~ ..... c,4ooiioo SI0,699837-919()4
•• •• • • ••••••••••••••• .. •••. ••• •••••••••••••••• i9 Toronado dsl. 33.000 1970 JAGUAR '60-'65 VW left & right '77 Seville, Mel brn ml, lthr. loaded. S8000.
XKE 2+2 door. '73 left door. S50 w/mrf & all avail xlra~. 67J.8895
Bntish racing green. 4.2 each. Western style whl minl. S0548-~ '79 Olds Royale, Diesel. 2
litre engine. new tires, rims for Super Beetle '79 Eldorado Loaded dr. Loaded, 37.000 ml.
brakes & engme over· S20ea. 548-9744 Sll,500. Days S56-9360 or $6400.
haul Air rood.. custom '79 VW Convertible Bug: 734-1900 Eves37141S9 538·75311964-5151
stereo. sheepskins, very 8 trart am rm stereo ·75 El Dorado 56.000 mi. 3 Olds. xlnt rood . Cully
clean, excellent nmning Xlnl cond. New braltea. Am f Fm. radio. air. equipped.
condition. $6495. Call red With while top moo. cru15e control Drive & 551.asfi
M7·1708 after 6 p.m & 1714)760-2544 or 637-6565 m e be t r ~ ",..'"' tHO
ask for Ed. act 7 .30 '79 ELDO BRTZ DSL. ::t:: ............... ..
62 MKll 3.8 l.iter, Very ·71 Sqblt Very clean. Eng 26K ml, moon rf. yellow, Good transportation car
SAlES-SERVICE-U!AStNG good cond S7SOO 080, & trana under 3lOO ml. loaded '13,000673-8895 ~
208 w. 111. SANTA ANA 947-6166. (114)682-7474 1800 646-8310 548-'75 Eldorado Convt. last 4t 96().1141 -7141Sg5'3JJ~v .an $;3() '67 BUC. Reblt. eng, nms oH the line: Cardinal CHAMP Dix, grut
ClOSE SU --'66 Jag s.&5. White, atan· xlnt. Perr ror dune xlnt cond. New tires. ml, runa flawlessly, n. MotUxcltlllt dard trans w/overdr. bu&&y. 1otr.6TUS29 S3950 pp (714)33'7·~af. carefully malnla1ned , r.tOfYow Xlnl cond. ~wty over· 1979 VW Rabbit diesd, temoonSat.alld.lySun . run todrlve,3lmpgclty, IMW Pw cl111t Or .hauled $5000. Ph 7fi0.1891 sunrf, AM/FM cass, xhlt ~ to hwy, t spd, twin stick.
LHMc:..Mle 60 Jag Mark lX Sell) cond. u + MPG . 177 ELDO 1 owner . am ·fm . hatr hbaclt .
McL ... IMWI! ~~:_P~~" :::_1.~~ 751·1811' ~~~~R r!,=Pr~'i!!r. ~~:~i .. ;;~ ~n_::i; ~Or..... 7 1 lt7' VW C.., wtlh med 11le S47$0 77S-WS for Dan, $$Mm hOme:
IJOir"""'"-1 1173 J11uar XXE Vl2. t.H•ty, stt,.•1 lo e olfice 17Ma43offitt.
1714t ZJ.53 l Xlnt cond, many xtru. •lltt. Mlat SHOO c... ffl7 r..etec ff61 __ ._ St4,000 080. Ca.ll Rod flna. ... ....................... • .................... .. ~c~, • • n m 497·~ 70 4 •11 C1 m1ro Berllneua '78 Trans Am. Xlnt cond.
OLDIST ~ f7Ja •89 vw 8"' ~ew Intl· Cull pwr, loeded. TSOOml, •.ooo mt Selkn& below · & ....................... paint reblt '1800cc. Ultentw UnderD .. ~r·a bl11ebk,MO.IJU11L.
lt77 MADA radiela. tuc rt xlnt $MOO lnvolct. MUil aell, 10111t 'tt Pontiac GTO '7& IX J IP COWi back t '°' Trant·•m bulll en11M •
Limited Production m t Conlb6 Ven, tinted ioCamaro. m1ahell. Gd Hydte •~le. tai ~
mocse1 6 •PNd tnm , wlndowa, everything cond Umpt, need• lncbft. l«IO or bftt of
AM/Fii tape a fanory ~ aln t Sl700/080. fer.ffH tll
aU.1 w-.. U.llllJ<R) ,.... nu •uMt.t "70 ONLY 1 .. 1 I.Me tomftlalne valu · 'TZ. hall power, air, oril ....................... . u•.a.-•u•-• bi.? PIMt •ad In our owner, U OOO. P.f . 'T7 Tblllldertllrd immoe. ~-....-. t.o1l ... Pond tol· •••tu:• Ill l cctl IMI Dr Mall. NOC~!~ eu. T'hltt'• wlllrt ~ .. llalb 9ll0l't eion•trt, 1a•1H, am/tm ta pt,
VIO>•n _, pie look ...... U.., •t rMll ,,.., _. tlm, nt • h11t·br1ht + t•u M9laham. .T ~IL....-
·-·
1981
GRANADAS ICENI'
OVER
COST
1982
EXP's 5899! COST
1981
T-BIRDS 59 929 COST
1911 saaoo FlOO & F250 ~.,.,ova
PICKUPS COST
DELIVERS ANY HEW OR
USED VEHICLE IH STOCK
• MEW IM CAUF.7
• LITILEORMO
CREDIT?
• SHORTOH
DOWM rAYMEHT7
• MEW OH YOUR JOI?
• MILITARY?
SLOW CREDIT
HISTORY?
WE CAN HELP!
1975 CHEVROLET
IMP ALA SEDAM
.__~-~· ....... -· ~-·-"'9_.,._.., ~f1'712')C$11o P-1
1977 FORD
LTD II WAGON
Aoom 10, tht wi.011 family' •vtorn1nc
•eNimlt.MOn DQllillllf ti.ttn; ~ IM111t4 'tat0
"'99090 ro<o tno ....,.• t1JTtl•1 IS" P•-111 •
-·5~
53595
1976 HONDA
CVCC COUPE E_....._.,.......,,...... • ..,..._
9"'0tf"4 • 109M frlf'lf'll"•O" t•OIO ._.,.,.
----o-d• ' _ .. ()61110 (9tl< 091111
52395
1974DODGE
DIOOPICKUP
(Q1,,1t~f •M....,_ I c,~~ t,_.I i .. tO Ye
..,..,. ~ -""O mott' tCl!>~I IS" '"21ll 52695
1978 D MUSTANG
ltKl flfEW t11rO ,, 1 t • 10tn •
1971 PLYMOUTH
SAPA.110 COUPE ·~=~"---.. ~"'·-"""-~ 6-'!' (ti Hiit. 093MI
53995
WEDNESDA Y. J UL Y .'~' I 'lH 1
I
County jet noise data 'probed
Information in report differs from actual r eadi ngs
lb FREDERICK SCHOEMEJIL oi-.DMty ...... , ....
Residents' inquiries have
prompted Orange County gov·
ernment officials to take a
second look at environmental
documentation that led lo ap·
proval of the DC·9 Super 80
jetliner at John Wayne Airport.
What is concerning both resi·
dents and orricials is that actual
noise data for the new aircraft,
now in u.se by AirCal, does not
jibe with data that was con·
tained in the environmental im·
pact report approved by the
county Board of Supervisors
before it permitted Super 80
service to begin.
Publicly, officials are dis·
counting the effect the dif·
ference in the noise data may
have. Privately, there is concern
that it could weaken the county's
position in a lawsuit in which
Newport Beach is claiming the
environmental impact report on
the Super 80 was inadequate and
that the decision to permit use of
the ~ircraft s hould be re·
evaluated.
According to the impact re·
port, the Super 80, during a test
flight conducted last Au1uat,
logged a 92.14 decibeJ noise
reading when passing over a
noise monitor located im·
mediately south of the airport.
Super 80 serVice began June 1.
During the month there were 141
Super 80 departures . The
average noise readin" at the
Super 80 'aircraft
is noisier than we
expected it would
be.'
same monitor was 99.4 decibels.
according to figures compiled by
the aiport Noise Abatement Of·
flee.
The composite noise reading
for departures during the month
of June (based on r eadings
taken at all noise monitors local·
ed under departure paths> was
96.14, about five decibels greater
than that expected by county of·
ficials.
·'There's no queatlon the
aircraft is nolaier than we ex·
peeled It would be. But it'• still
considerably quieter than the
other aircraft (Boeing 737s and
DC·9·30s) being flown," said
Airport Manager Murry Cable.
Accol'<lin& to a memorandum
sent lo the county Environmental
Management Agency by Steven
Kozak, airport plans and pro·
grams officer, the Super 80 is
three to five decibels quieter
than the other aircraft.
··As you can see from the
above," Kozak wrote environ·
mental analyst Mark Goodman,
''the Super 80 is measurably
quieter than the other air car·
rier aircraft it is replacing. On a
composite basis, the noise abate·
ment office calculates that the
DC·9·80 is 55 percent quieter
than the other aircraft; or con·
versely, the others are 123 per·
cent noisier (twice as loud).''
(Because decibel readings are
computed using logarithms,
seemingly small numeric dif·
ferences represent much larger
differences.>
<See JET, Page A2)
Deity,.... ...... .., Ilk .... ·-
AIRBORNE AGAIN -The Goodyear blimp, in Carson March 1 by high winds and wa s
Columbia, returns from its first flight since badly damaged. A Goodyear spokesman said
being repaired at Marine Corps Helicopter the blimp was completely rebuilt at the
Station in Tustin. Photo was made Tuesday Marine air station.
evening. Blimp was blown from its mooring
Area postal workers happy
Agreement to avert nation al strike hailed ·b y all
BJ ARIFRAJI Of .. .,.., ...........
Orange Coast U.S. Postal
Service r epresentatives ,
employees and union leaders all
said they are relieved today that
union leaders and manaaement
have reached an agretment,
averting a nationwide postal
strike. (Related story A4)
''I am very glad it's over,"
aald Cecil Herring, 58, of Costa
Mesa, Who has been a lettor car·
rter for U years.
Wyatt Lee, mana1er of the
.Fairview branch of the ea.ta
MeH pa1t offlff, said tbe tm·
taUve ..Wement baa "lifted tbe
wei1bt."
Mean while, Jordan Brown,
,..., ..... ol Branch 1100 ol tbe
letler arrten• m:at.on bu.d ln
Oraa1e, aald II• i1 bappy
ae1od....,.llla••--bee ... be ........ ...., of W.
eaniln 61 Mt want to llrlke. How~ Malle Tortonle, a ..... .... ... 8oaUt &..pna,
said based on a reaction ~rom a
rally last Sunday, even though
most employees did not want to
strike, they would have lf asked
to do so by national union
leaders. . "I didn't want
t o str i ke , but 1
sure ivasn't about
to cross a picket
line," Tortor ete
said.
over a Jus tice Department
claim that striking employees
could be arrested and charaed
with felonies, and Postmaster
General William F . Bolter's
claim that poata1e would IO up
to 45 cents if union demands
were met.
"lt was simply rhetoric," Hid
Georae Early, a 12-year veteran
of the Costa Mesa po1t office.
Union leader Brown ealled lt a
scare tactic and also labeled It
u "bartaininl rhetoric."
But be 1aid, Bot•er wu .PIAJ·
lnl a t!:lerout 1ame wben be tbna to ftn ny emploJee ""° 1truek. •·wMt be waa doln1 ll DlWU
the puMte .... U.. fedenl •• ,...,.... 'ftil .......... .
tioa," .............. local
rtplllll tat ....... drltln. _',"-"'*" ........... ..... ....................... ........................... ... ,.. ....... .,,.. ..... ............ ,
• • • • •
Ylll 11111• llllY NPll
OH AN(jf ( O U N l Y C A LIFOHN IA 25 CENTS
TRUNK LINES BUSY -"Hold the phone," say
these ponderous pachyderms as they ex·
change greetings. The 33-year-old elephant
lady, "Mampe" from India, left, flirts with
.. ~ ...........
her younger friends frorri Africa as they
stroke each others' trunks al the West Berlin
Zoo.
300 flee poison
Acid fumes leak from truck near Blythe
BL 'Q'HE (AP) -At least~
people from two towns on either
side of the Colorado River were
evacuated today as a poison
cloud of brown fumes leaked
from a tanker truck that had
also leaked 250 miles earlier but
was supposedly fixed and aent
on lts way.
The truck was carrying 26,000
poun<b of red foaming nitric
acid from Vandenberg Air Force
·Base, 150 miles northwest of Los
Angeles, to Holloman Air Force
Base in New Mexico, when leaks
occurred near Thousand Oaks,
Calif., 50 miles northwest of Los
'Disaster'
of Medfly
rejected
LOS GATOS (AP> -The
Reagan administration today re·
jected Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr.'s request lo declare three
California counties a federal dis·
aster area because of infestation
by a destructive fruit fly.
Such action was unnecessary.
the government said, because
there were "no signs that the in·
festation is spreading out of con·
trot." .
Brown asked for the disaster
declaration last week, saying
the Mediterranean fruit fly in·
fes\allon in Santa Clara,
Alameda and San Mateo coun·
lies was "beyond control" of
state and local eradication ef·
forts. A day later, the governor
proclaimed the eradication ef·
forts "on track."
The administration agreed. In
a telegram to Brown today, the
Federal Emergency Manage-
ment Agency, with White House
concurrence. said ·'the area in
which the fly has been found ln
r ece11t weeks ls basically the
same area in which the pest was
discovered last year . . .
"At this point the situation has
stabilized with the eradication
measures under way," FEMA
spokesman Bob Blair told
Brown.
Pilot's TV
Log praised
by readers
The Pilot TV Log, which was
introduced ln Friday's ed.lUon,
already has received readers'
praise for lta lar1e t)'Pe style
and det,alled llatinp of 22 chan·
nel1, lncludlnc cable systems.
The weekly TV lot wUJ be a
re1ular supplement ol the Dally
Pilot'• Weekender entertain·.
ment aecUon on Frielaya, replac-
ln1 the TV ma1aalne wblcb
f or merlr was included in the
Sunday Pllot.
llepl• daily televlaion I.lat·
ta11 coatlnue bl the paper on a
dally bMll, lllOludln1 8undan. • ... .._._, u. Dallr Pilat'•
moet~l•...,.toTV.t.w· ... .....,. .......... Piida)'
edit• wn up-t.tlae•mtnute
lllt1lall1litl of weekend newt. 1,..a ajd apeelaJ •bowl .
Angeles, and in Blythe, about
200. miles southeas t of Los
Angeles. said Capt. Anne Peck
at Vandenberg. The chemical is
used as a rocket propellant for
some space launchers, she said.
"It can be fatal if swallowed
and it can get in through the skin
if it touches anyone and causes
chemical burns," s aid Riverside
Count y Fire Department
engineer Steve Harding. ··A
brownis h colored cloud has
formed and the proble m is the
c loud is spreading the fumes
around."
He said it aJso can explode if it
touches water.
·'There is a southwest wind on
this cloud and it is getting much
denser and thicker." said fire
d e partm en t Ca pt. James
Wright
He said people were evacuat-
ed from an area two miles north
of Inters tate 10, a mile south,
and two to three miles east and
west aJong the highway, near
the Colorado River. which forms
the border bet ween California
and Arizona.
Wri2ht said some Riverside
<See ACID. Page A2)
Agca guilty in bid
to murder Pope
ROME <AP> -Mehmet Ali
Agca was convicted today of the
attempted murder of Pope John
Paul II and sentenced to life im·
prisonment.
The six-member jury and two
judges deliberated for 6112 hours.
Chi ef Judge Sever in o San-
tiapichi read the verd ict and the
sentence.
Agca, who admitted he shot
the pope in St. Peter 's Square on
M ay 13. was n o t in the
courtroom when the verdict was
announced He boycotted the
last two days of the proceedings
as a protest against his trial in
an Jtalian court instead of the
Vatican
Life imprisonment is the max-
imum sentence in Italy, which
does not have capital punish>
m ent.
The pope is hospita lized with a
virus. and was not asked to al·
tend the trial or give a deposi·
lion.
Anthony giv en
3-year probation ...
Former Irvine Mayor Art An·
thony, convicted of misde·
meanor assault in an attack on
his wife, was given three years
probation and a $5,000 fine today
by Harbor Court Judge Donald
Dungan.
Anthony, 50, now an Irvine Ci·
ty Councilman, won't have to
serve any jail time, but wut be
required to donate 1,000 hours of
community service, Judge
Dungan ruled .
As part of the probation. An-
thony may not drink alcohol,
possess any firearms or go into
a home where firearms are
present.
Orange Co~nty Deputy Dis·
trlct Attorney Pattie Manoukian
asked Judge Dungan lo give An·
thony a one-year prison term.
Bill Dougherty, Anthony's at·
torney, argutn1 against a prison
sentence, told Judge Dungan
that Anthony ls "a hero and an
outstanding civtc leader." Aaaresamg Judge Uun1an,
Anthony said, "I am sincerely
aabamed for l01ln.C control of
m ysell and putting a woman in
harm's way. I shall always
carry remorse and1hame."
He told Judie Dunaan that be
can't remember what happened
on the night of April t wben bt
aUecedly beat hi• wtfe, Elalae,
wltla hla ftatl and 1rued her
aeal_p wtth a bullet from a .'5-
ullber handpn.
He 1ald tdl lack of memory ia
vertll.cl by a poly1npb test .
•'I 1hall nev.,er repeat my
deP:lorable eonduct," Anthony
prom~ the Judie.
After the sentence was handed
down. Anthony told reporte
he's not sure whether he wi
continue to serve as councilm
He said although he doesn't r
member what happened on th
night in question. he will alwa
carry a bad picture in his min
based on what others said he
did.
.DlllSI COAST lllTHIR.
Some late night and ear·
ly morning low clouds and
local fog, otherwise fair
today through Thursday.
Hi1hs in mid·70s at the
beaches to upper 80s in·
_land. Lows tonight 58 to 68.
111111 TllAY
The .onoe-opule"I Mon·
tezuma coaUe near Lo•
Vega1, N.M .. ha• bun
purchoNd /or MN cu a col·
~fie. See Page AU. .. -
11111
Al • '* ~ •• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 22, 1981
Warplanes aitack Palestinians; 15 killed or wounded
TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> -
Israeli warplanes bombed
PalesUnlan largeta In 1outbern
Lebanon ,again today, bltUni
trails used to transport arms and
guerrlllas, the military command
aa ld. Lebanese provincial
authorities reported U people
killed or wounded.
A co°'munique rrom the Tel
Aviv command said the trails at·
tacked were ln the Kassmieh re·
gion along the Lltanl River and
the Zahranl estuary. It said the
pilots reported accurate hlts and
that all planes returned safely
from tberaid.
Lebanese provincial orriclals
said the jets struck at a newly re·
paired section or the Qassmieh
Bridge on the Lltani which was
devastated in a Ughtnlng Israeli
air strike Thursday. They said the
jets destroyed several moving
cars, killing or wounding 15 occu·
pants.
Israeli gunboats also shelled
PalestiQ.ian guerrilla targets ln
sou them Lebanon today, the Tel
Aviv command said. It denied a
Palestinian report of ground raids
into southern Lebanon.
The command said northern
Israeli settlements came under
more Palestinian artillery at·
tacks dur,ing the night. but thert!
were no casualties. Israeli gun-
ners returned the fire, the com·
mandsaid.
This report
for the birtls
In the better-late-than-never
department.
The U. S. Fish and WildJife
Service was a bit tardy in
forwarding its comments to the
Ci vii Aeronautics Board on an
environmental impact state-
ment regarding air carrier ac-
cess to John Wayne Airport. So
late, in fact. that its comments
could not be made part of the
bound document
So, the CAB sent the service's
comments out In letter form.
The letter is seven pages long.
Its conclusion : "It is our
biological opinion that the pro·
posed action is not likely to
jeopardize the continued ex·
istence or the light-footed clap-
per rail or the California least
tern."
Both are birds that inhabit Up·
per Newport Bay.
From Page A1
ACID ...
County sheriff's deputies, who
just ended an eight-day strike to·
day. complained or burning eyes
as they went from house to
house evacuating the affected
area. Californians who were
evacuated were taken to a tem-
porary shelter at Palo Verde
High School in Blythe.
The Arizona Department or
Public Safety said people in the
border town of Ehrenberg. in·
eluding one whole mobile home
park. also were evacuated.
The truck remained at
roadside on Interstate 10, where
the driver discovered the leak at
6: 14 a.m. The roads were ex·
pected to remain blockaded for
four hours while repair and
cleanup crews arrived from Los
Angeles.
The truck was owned by the
W .S. Hatch Co .. said Capt. Peck.
They had a repair crew on the
way and, she said, the IT Co. of
Los Angeles was going to handJe
the cleanup.
Sam Collins , a Hatch
spokesman to wbom Vanden·
berg referred inquiries. declined
comment.
Capt. Peck said the transfer of
the nitric acid was ordered by
the Aeros pace Fuels Division at
Kelly Air Force Base in Texas.
"We got an order to ship it
from ~andenberg to Holloman,"
she said.
She said the tank truck was In·
spected and released by the base
fuels branch at Vandenberg and
''there was no problem with it
then."
She said the truck driver
noticed a leak from a seal on the
truck about 7:30 p.m . Tueaday
when the lanker was near
Thousand Oaks, ln Ventura
County. A repairman from the
W .S. Hatch Co. fixed the seal, or
nange, she said, and the truck
went another 250 mlJea ~ore
the leak was discovered near
Blythe.
MeanwhJJe, U.S. preatdentlaJ
envoy Philip C. Habib held talk•
with Lebanese o(fldala ln Beinlt
then ne• to SaUd.I Arabia to COO·
tinue his search for a cease fire
between the Israelis and Palesti·
nlans.
Prime Minister Menachem
Be1ln visited lsrael '1 northern
s.ittementa today, paid a C!OO•
dolencecalloothefamllyofooeof
the five laraella killed in guerrtlJa
shelling, and pledeed an end to the
Paleatinlan barraeea.
AirCal raps PSA
over flight suit
AlrCal ·Airline claims that it
would lose mUJioos or dollara lf
rival Pacific Southwest Airlines
Is victorious ln a lawsuit filed
over an Orange County govern·
ment plan to regulate which
airlines serve John Wayne
Airport.
In papers rued ln U.S. District
Court in Los Angeles this week,
AirCal claimed that San Oiego-
based PSA is locked in an "ef·
fort to prevent Air. California
rrom becoming an effective
competitor ill the transportation
of passengers by air between
major cities in California."
Under the airport access plan
adopted by the county Board of
Supervisors, PSA was granted
two flights daily from the
airport beginning Oct. 1. Those
flights are being "created" by
taking an average of 1.5 flights
from AirCal and one-half flight
from Republic Airlines.
PSA isn't satisfied with its
two-flight award. rt would like to
operate eight flights from
Orange County.
Jn its lawsuit which wiU be
s ubject of a hearing Aug. 10
before Judge Andrew Hauk -
PSA contends that the access
plan is "anti-competitive" in
that it permits AirCal and
Republic Airlines to keep the
majority of lhe 41 jet departures
permitted daily from the
airport.
AirCal , which Monday was
permitted to formally intervene
in the lawsuit, said in papers
filed with Judge Hauk that
PSA 's demand for more rlights
could be met in one of two ways
Either the 41 flight per day lid
would have to be lifted. or
A,irCal and RepubHc would have
to give up more flights. Neither
option is acceptable, AirCal
President Robert Clifford said
The county would not lift the
lid because of noise impacts on
s urrounding res idents, he
argued.
On the idea or giving up more
flights, Clifford said, "At the
present time, 40 percent of Air
California's origin ation and
destination passengers are
served from the John Wayne
Airport. The loss of Air
California's share of eight slots
(flights> would cause substantial
financial loss to Air California.
"It would be necessary for Air
California to find other routes
upon which to (fly), which il
could not qui ckly do in an
economJc fashion "
"It follows that the relief PSA
seeks, if granted. would cause
substantial damage, amounting
in all probability to millions of
dolla rs. for Air California." Clif·
* * * From Page A1
ford concluded.
AirCal repeatedly atreaaes ln
its court papers that the com·
pany was formed because no
other airline in the late 1980s
was willing lo expand jet air
service to Oran~e County.
"Air California pioneered that
service at the cost of losing its
initial $6 million capitallzat.ion
over the first five years." ac-
cording to the documents.
AirCal further charges that
PSA 's contention that it wants to
promote competitive Orange
County-San Francisco Bay Area
service is erroneous.
· · ... It has been the practice
of PSA, when new carriers ap-
pear, to saturate the market
with flights so as to preclude the
newcomer from com mencing a
profitable operation . . . it is
PSA 's objective. in bringing this
proceeding, to reduce Air
Ca lifornia 's se rvice from
Orange County.
"The Orange County service is
and has been the foundation of
Air California's operations ...
it is PSA 's objective to so
weaken Air California as to
make it unable effectively fo
grow into an effective com·
petitor of PSA throughout the
state."
Meanwhile. Newport Beach
City Attorney Hugh Coffin said
the city also plans to intervene
in the PSA lawsuit but hasn't
yet.
He said Newport's position is
that the s uit could result in the
current 41 daily flight ceiling be·
ing lifted to accommodate PSA.
"Our prediction has always
been that more carriers means
more pressure to extend that
celling," Coffin explains.
Newport, he says, has no op·
position to PSA joining the John
Wayne family as long as the 41
flight ceiling is maintained.
From Page A1
POSTAL • • •
"Now. we can carry on busi· ·
ness as usual." House said.
The new contract, supported
by Moe Biller, president of the
American Postal Workers Union
and Vincent Sombrotto, presi·
dent of the National Association
of Letter Carriers, calls for a
$300 -a-year pay raise and Sl,200
in bonuses over the next three
years in addition to cost-of-living
adjustments
Brown predkted that the con·
tract would be ratified by rank
and file
JET NOISE REPORT • • •
Goodman was reluctant to dis·
cuss the EMA 's role in the new
analysis of t he noise data
because of litigation pending in
Orange County Superior Court.
He did confirm that the issue
over the disparity between the
actual data and that contained
in the impact report was raised
by residents at a meeting or a
county committee that is de·
veloping a specific plan to guide
future development in Santa
Ana Heights, located south of
the airport.
Goodman said the county can
correct the impact report, either
by preparing a supplement re·
port COJltalning "information
that was not known and could
not have been known" or by pre·
paring an addendum to the
original document.
Cable :said he will submit such
an addendum to the county
Board or Supervisors in the near
future.
"It's no bla thing," he said.
P rior to jts introduction, the
new alrcrah was touted as, in
· larae part, the answer to the
county's continuing dilemma on
how lo reduce noise impact on
residents living under Jet de·
parture tracks.
The county's faith in the
jetliner was so s trong that it
became the centerpiece for a
plan to regulate which air car-
riers win and retain privileges to
operate from the airport. The
pl an essentially requires car·
riers to convert their flee'ts used
locally to Super 80s or
eq uiv a len t noise-Ii mihng
aircraft. or which there is no
other type yet on the market.
AirCal is now oper ating two or
the $20 million aircraft and has
plans for a total fleet conversion
w.ithin 18 months.
Republic Airlines Intends to
begin Super 80 service ln mJd·
August. Two other airlines with
authority at the airport -Fron-
li er Airlines and P acHlc
Southwest Airlines -either
have plans to or have taken de·
livery of Super 80s.
West.em Airllnt1 la the only
carrier servln1 Oran1e County
that does not Intend to purcl\aae
the new aircraft. Weatem of·
flclala say they wlll attempt to
meet noise reduction aoell by
modtrytna their exlltln1 nett of
Boelni '7811.
Asked why the Super 80 la not
performlna up to Hpec1'Uom.
county and alrllne otnclall l•vt
varlOUI anawen.
They H)' plloU may 1t.W be
aetttnc UMd to n11n1 the new
aircraft. The)' alao potat to tbe
racL that the Federal Av1-Uon
Admlnlatratlon forbid• nolH·
Umlttn1 takeoff power nduc·
UODI at altltudtl IO'ftf tban
1,000 fMt. 'JM alr carrt.n Ud
tbt county are attemptlq to
CODYIDet lb• FAA to permit
poww eutbackl at aoo f Mt. Suell
a move WOuld reduN DOIH. lo
far, tMn bu .,..... no dedlloft
from tbe P.M.
omty ~ ..... ., a1cc-...11..-..r
Postman John Hamwm tori• mail fur deUW111 in Santa Ana Heights. Nattonwide strike wa3 averted
whn tentatWe ogreenwnt um reocMd TuetdaJI.
Bolger orders ad probe
Postmaster general denies asking ·special mail favors
WASHINGTON <AP > -
Postmaster General William F.
Bolger said today he's ordered
an investigation i nt o a
newspaper report that some ad·
vertising circulars addressed to
his home are getting special
treatment.
The Washington Post reported
today that the practice began
a fter Bolger's wife complained
she had received one ad late and
missed a sale.
But Bolger said in a statement
today that he has asked for no
special favors and wasn't aware
he has been receiving any.
Bolger also said he wants any
special consideration afforded
his mail stopped immediately
and ordered a check into the
matter to see what happened.
"It's pretty well systematized
by now," the newspaper quoted
clerk Bruce Chido as saying in
explaining the routine he and
other clerks follow several times
a month when advertisements
from the Hecht Co., a depart·
ment store chain, arrive at their
Northern Virginia regional post
office.
"When a Hecht's ad comes in,
the supervisor comes over and
teUs us to find the one addressed
to Bolger," the Post quoted
Chido as saying. "With three or
four people looking, sometimes
we find it right away .
Sometimes it takes up to an
hour."
"Whenever a Hecht Co. ad
comes in, we stop everything
and start sifting,·• said Linda
Lewis. "The supervisor comes
over and says, ·Find Bolger's
Hecht Co.' I'd s ay it happens at
least once every two weeks."
The report said that when the
ad with Bolger's address is
found it ls placed in a carrier's
bag for next-day delivery while
the rest of the Hecht Co. third·
class mailing often remains
behlnd an extra day or two.
Clerb told the news paper that
the "Hecht bunt" be1an about
seven months ago after Mrs.
Bolger complained that she re·
ceived a store circular too tale
to take advantage of a sale.
"They <the super viosrs l came
up lo us and said. ·w e're looking
for a Hec ht 's ad for this
( Bol ger 's home> address.'"
Williams said. "We said 'Wh y?'
They said, 'Because he didn't
get it on time.'
"It's just the Hecht's ads we
have to go for because they're
dated," Williams told the Post.
"It's not uncommon to have
several clerks and a supervisor
s ifting through thousands of
pieces of mail looking for it It's
turned into a game. Everybody
goes for it ll's the standing
joke.''
Clerks said the "Hecht hunt"
is most often begun by Donald
Pender . one o f three
supervisors. who said, "I can't
comment on the days I'm not
her e." What about the days he is
there? 1·1 can't comment on
that. either."
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Charles Walker. who left Stanford University Medical Center
recently following heart-lung traruplant, grin1 °"' hi8 mother,
June Spangenburg. points out T-shirt. Walker plans to return to
Binghamton, N. Y., home in September.
Royal honeymoon stirs fireworks
LONDON (AP> While Prince
Charles and his bride will start
their honeymoon in a secluded
English country mansion, their
plan to board the royal yacht
Britannia in Gibraltar for a
Mediterranean cruise has caused
fireworks in Spain.
A day after Buckingham
Palace announced the honey-
moon route for heir·to-the·lhrone
Charles and the former Lady
Diana Spencer. the Spanish
Foreign Ministry said King Juan
Carlos and Queen Sofia would not
attend the July 29 nuptials at St.
Paul 'sCathedral.
It said the choice of the British
colony, a huge rock on the
southern coast of Spain and the
subject of a long sovereignty dis·
pute between the two nations. was
"inopportune and gr atuitous."
However. Britain's Deputy
Foreign Secretary Sir Ian
Gilmour told the House of Com·
mons that the government would
not advise the prince to alter his
plans.
"It is their honeymoon, nobody
else's and it is not Cor anyone else
lo interfere with it,·· he said.
American conductor Serab
Celd•ell 11y1 it wlU be odd
to hear Vtrdl's opera "La
Travlata" suna In ltaliao
now that she's been lbtening
to lt in Chineae during a stay
In Ptklng
Miss Caldwell, director of
the Boston Opera Company.
said she haa been Impressed
by the Chinese singers' will·
lngness to take new dlrec·
Uon. ChJna's Central Opera
Company has performed its
version of "La Trav)ata"
more than 400 times since
1956, but never ~fore Miss
Caldwell's visit under a
foreign conductor.
"In this world, it is rare to
find people who do what you
ask instantly without arguing
or having to prove
something," she said
Fugitive financier Robert
Vesco moved to the nearly
uninhabited Bahamian island
of Cistern Key, apparently at
the behest of the Bahamian
government, according to
Newsweek magazine.
The magadne said the al·
leged swindler, his wife and
youngest child mov~d from
their Nassau home because
the Bahamian government
wanted to limit embarrass·
ment caused by his continued
presence. The United States
since 1973 has sought bis ex·
tradition to face charges of
defrauding investors.
Bee Gee Barry Gibb paid
$1.4 million cash for a 12·
bedroom Miami Reach
mansion he plans lo renovate
and resell. according to docu-
ments filed in Dade County
Court.
Gibb and his wife. Linda.
like to buy old houses and fix
them up. said his manager.
Dick Ashby. The pop singer
has three Miami Beach
homes worth more than $2.5
million.
"Barry likes to get in at
the bottom end. fix up and
then sell them." said Ashby.
Wind, hail hit Oklahoma
Windows blown out in Tulsa; trees uprooted in Owasso
Coastal forecast
~mt low <IOud•MH •nd local 109
tale 1on1111>1 •no urly Tllur.Oay
mornl"9. but ottwrw•M '•'' '"'OVOI'\ TP\unO•y c. ... slal low M I0...•11111, IS
1111111 T llun<Moy W•lor .a
lnlaftd low •I ton•IJl\I, H 1111111
TIWr\d•y
EIS«•,_, •• Ugf'lt v•r t•bl• wtnO\
tonfQ'11 •nO T"u,.\O•y mor1un1
o.comlr19 -slt'1y •IQht to It t.no"
Tllund•Y 1tternoofl Wino wt•et two
10 lllrH Ifft Soutll"'fll swell -10
IWO feel Fttr lllrOUIJll TtturMley ..
Ulll Ml-low cl-•nd IOC:al 109
IOlllQllt -Htly Thur\<Mly morn•1111
U.S. summary
le><•lly twoy lllUl'lder\lO<mS, "'" eno llllJll wl"'*' .._It_ Niten• arid
<efttr•I oi.1-..., wNle other l)artl
of IM \l•te .._ked .u lemoer•lur ..
loe>oed the centlKY ,..., ...
lilww,.re Tue\<Mly, 11•11 Wal re·
l)Orted In I .. Ooot.u, end widely
Kallered V.0-~ •rid 1-rst0<m1
, .. , ... d across the U9C1er MIHIH ll)pl
Valley, llW .-them Aoct.i.,, l)Whof
Arbont, llW Gull C:0.11 r911i0ft -
Ille mlcldle arid no.-ttwrn AllMlllC co .. 1 stat>ts.
Winds gu1Unv 1111 to 40 mp!\ -...t
lhrou9ll oowntown lulu. Ot.la.,
lueMI•• "'II"'· blow11111 OUI w1.-.. n al Ille city'\ hbrtry and CIOWnlnlJ
l>OWer llnes at .,, 1nlerMCllOt1. An
Inch ot IWil pelted Owauo, H Ille
norm upr-ed lr•s -dtmaoect
power llne\ •n th81 cemmunltY .
In ot,,.r l)arts of Ot.lellom• Oii
Tuesday. 1om11ereturn 1111 IOt
clelJr•H ·~ the lar wntern town of
Allu• wll11t1 llNI Duct.led 118¥e"'9fll
al • Ne>rmM lnter-llOll •rid Wftl
etec1roca1UWIJ!t10 en ell ""'* 1111111
Sc.•ll•,.•d 'l\ower' •nd '"u"·
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central Plain\ and tllt mlddl• and up.
per MIHIH11JC)I Veney. Some '"""·
deritorm\ •IM> •re l)f"edteled tor Ille
Florida Pf"IMula •no the Arhone
tnount•1n1
Temperaturu arou<>CI Ille nallo"
r.onoeo trom <> '" -·-11e, Mkll •
lo 101 1n "'-"••.Arlt
California
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lie l•lr lhrouoh TIWrMlty, but wllll
some c IOuds over tile \GU111ern moun-
t•IM. \OUlllem -Hiler" deWrU
•no Ille lOIA~ltll COfflllM
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COior-River Valleys •'-kl also
uperoence lalr -•Iller, but •lso
with --CloudlneH encl a SlllJlll <lltnu ol l.........,.,_.rs lorlilJlll
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. July 22, 1981 H /F
Money 'lesson' eyed
OC to teach private agencies how to raise funds
With government funds for
social programs drying up.
some Orange County officials
are planning to teach private.
non-profit agencies how to find
revenue from private sources.
The county Board of
Supervisors Tuesday approved
staging a one-day conference at
UC Irvine Sept. 19 where up to
250 agency representatives can
s h arpen the ir fund-raising
techniques.
The session will be co·
sponsored by Lhe Orange County
Community Development Coun·
('II
The idea for the conference
ca me about a rte r co unty
workers who administer the
(ederal revenue s haring pro-
gram surveyed leaders of non-
profit agencies and learned their
Wieder,
Heather
prospects
Orange County Supervisor
Harriett Wieder of Huntington
Deach and Newport Beach
Mayor Jackie Heather are two
names being considered in
Sacramento for Ctppointmenl to
the slate Coastal Commission.
Both women were members of
the South Coast Regional Com·
mis:.tcm before 1t was disbanded
by s tate s tatute on July I
U ndcr a new organizational
plan. one member or each or the
defunct regional commissions
w1 II be s~lectcd to the state
panel
Tht• chairman or the state
Senate Rules Committee, David
Roberti. D·Los Angeles. is sup-
posed to make the selection
within :JO day:-. ufter applicants
arc nominated
The regional com mission cov-
ered both Lo!-An~eles and
Orange count1e:,. and the
lea~ues of cities and boards of
:,uper\11sors 1n each county are
to offer nominations
On Tuesday, the Orange Coun·
ty Board of Supervisors
nominated Mrs Wieder and
Mrs Heather. plus Yorba Linda
t'1t) Councilman Henry Wedaa.
Los Angeles Supervisor Dean
Dana and Robert R yan . a
Rancho Palo!) Vt•rdes City Coun·
cilman
* * *
Two named
to panel
SACRAMENTO CAP) As-
sembly Speaker Willie Brown
has named a Los Angeles reaJ
estate broker and a Pacifica
Cit v Council me mber to the
state Coastal Commission
Appointed were Car olyn
McNeill of Los Angeles, owner
or McNeill Rcaltv International
Real Estate Network : and
Grace McCarthy of Pacifica. a
mPm ber of the Ocean Coastline
Planning Comm1ltt•e of the As·
sociahon of Bay Area Govern·
men ts
Sierra Club spokesman Mike
Pararian said hi s ~roup was not
familiar with Ms. McNeill, but
was unhappy with the appoint·
m enl of Ms McCarthy, whom he
call ed "very pro development."
Gem
Talk
ByJC. HUMPHRIES
Cnt1f1ed Gemolog111. ACS
THE SPINEL
hoa 1nlereatmg history
The spinet is a beautiful
colored gems tone with an
interesting history. Yet It is not
as weJI known as it s hould be.
Usually red, but sometimes
orange, purple or even brown. It
has sometimes masqueraded as
other stones in royal jewels .
King Henry VIII"1 "ruby"
collar was really spinet, as was
The Black Prince Ruby of
l..ondon.' Spinets srace the
Persian Crown Jewels, the
Louvre in Paris and the
Diamond Fund In Moscow. In
the early 1900s, it was believed
that splnel could be used to
detect supernatural powers in p~opte. It wes said that a
1u1pect«i clairvoyant or witch,
If confronted whb a spinet
,wrapped in. a piece or paper,
would go lnto convulllona of the
upper limbs. The flnest aplnell
are found ln Burma, Srl Lanka,
Tballand and lndla. Some 1peclmen1 alao come from
first priority was to Improve
abilities to attract money, sald
Tom Watford, county maneaer
of human resource proarama.
Many non-profit or•11nl11Uon.s
In Orange County are known
more for their good Intentions
than for their treasuries, and
Watford said a "serious finan·
clal crisis" could be imminent if
the groups don't adopt new fund ·
raising strategies.
He said the agencies no longer
can depend on public funds to
finance various proarams
because of government cut-
backs.
Organizers hope to keep the
presentations simple, using a
"how-lo·do-it" overview with
workshops on such subjects as
finding corporate or foundation
support, creatlna annual iiving
campaigns. forming auxiliary
aroups and solicitina by dlrect
mail or telephone.
U successfuJ . the conference
could reduce dependence on the
county and its revenue sharing
funds.
But even teaching how to raise
money has its costs. Watford
said the conference could cost
up to $6,675. with the county
s haring the burden with the
community development coun·
cil, an umbrella group that dis
burses certain federal and state
funds.
A $20 registration fee will be
charged, so up to $5,000 could be
recovered if a capacity 250 peo-
ple participate in the con
ference
Friends remelllher
'pioneer' Hobart
Early day aviator and
longtime Corona del Mar resi-
dent Albert L. Hobart, who died
July 9 at Hoag Hospital in
Newport Beach, was remem·
bered by friends this week as "a
true pioneer."
Mr. Hobart was buried at sea
last week in private ceremonies.
He was 77.
The Michigan native was is-
sued his first pilot's license in
1929. It was signed by Orville
Wright.
Mr. Hobart later became one
of the country's first air mail
pilots and reportedly helped
form severaJ airline firms in the
early 1930s after moving to Los
Angeles
Hobart owned a 115-acre
ai rport in Los Angeles located at
94lh Street and Western Avenue.
a family friend said. From the
airfield he conducted a flying
sc hool and offered aerial
s ightseeing tours of Southern
California.
Mr. Hobart was employed by
Crown Hardware in Corona del
Mar for 27 years.
He was voted ··most popular
employee" in 1979 by the Corona
del Mar Chamber or Commerce.
"Everyone who c:ame in here
talked with him -usually about
fl ying,'' recalled one former
fellow worker. "He had quite the
stories about the old days and
hi s experiences."
One friend claims Mr. Hobart
told her he left home wheo he
was 12. became a pilot, took to
the air and never went back.
"He was aJways a little bit
vague about things," she said,
"but to hear him tell it. he had
some life."
Friends say they're putting
togethe r a collection or his
memorabilia. including his
license from Orville Wright.
with hopes of finding a museum
interested in displaying it
Lawyer for
PSA suit
retained
A San Diego lawyer who suc-
cessfully defended Orange Coun·
ty go\lemment in a recent trial
on the effects of noise al John
Wayne Airport has been rehired
to represent the county in a
lawsuit over a new airport ac·
cess plan.
Michael Gatzke of Eckmann.
Lodge and Gatzke was selected
Tuesday by the county Board of
Supervisors to fight the action
brought by Pacific Southwest
Airlines.
Gatzke will earn the s ame $110
per hour fee he received in the
airport noise case. in which a
jur y supported the county's posi
tion that it owed no monetary
dam ages to neighbors who
claimed living under the airport
flight pat(ern caus~d them emo·
tional dis\,reis.
In the PSA suit, the airline is
seeking a court order preventing
the county from initiating a new
access plan on Oct 1 that would
allow PSA two daily flights per
day.
PSA o(ficlals claim the coun
ty's access plan doesrl'l tollow
federal edicts to open the airport
to outside carriers. They want
from seven to nine flights per
day from John Wa yne.
The airline currently does not
serve the airport.
A hearing is scheduled on Au g
10 in U.S. District Court in Los
Angeles.
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H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, July 22, 1981
Nation's· economy on down trend
Gross national product sinking at annual rate of 1.9 percent
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
national economy fell bac:k
quickly In lhe Aprll·June
quarter from the atrenstb It
s howed earlier lhia year, with
the LntlaUon-adjuated arou na·
tlon and private analysts are
lorecaaUn1 a lJat or po11lbly
ne1attve third quarter.
performing poorly in the aecond
quarter, the report tald. ttircraf t maker,
j ustice meet OK
WA S HINGTON (AP > -
Justice Department internal ln-
ve.sligators have con cluded
there was no impropriety in a
meeting between a lop depart·
ment officiaJ and the eeneral
counsel or McDonnell Douglas
Corp .. which is under federal in·
dictment for making overseas
payoffs.
alleged irregularities in soybean
speculation.
• Uonal product sinking at an an·
nual rate ot 1.9 percent, the gov·
emment reported \od•Y.
The Commerc:e De partment
report raised anew the poaslbili·
ty or at leut a minor receuion
this year. Economists generally
define a recession as two con-
secutive quarters of ne1ative
GNP. and both the adminlslra·
lnfiaUon, as measured by the
GNP lmpllclt price deflator, also
declined In the second quart.er
Crom 9.8 percent to 8 percent,
the repbrt said.
But l.nflallon-adjusted naUonaJ
output, hit bard by high interest
rates, plunged below the zero·
growth mark alter soaring at an
annual rate or 8.6 percent ln the
lirst quarter.
GNP -the total value or the
nation's 1oods and services -
increased to a seasonally adJual·
ed annual rate of SZ.88 trillion ln
the April-June quarter, the re·
port said.
That was up 4 percent rrom
the first quarter, but the s how·
lng was clearly on the ne1alive
side aft.er adjusUna for lnllatlon.
Net exports, which helped
push GNP upward with a strona
Clrst quarter. decreased $9.8
bilUon in the second. depress-ln1 the nation's overall output,
the repor1 said.
Commerce officials said la.st
month in their "Oash GNP'' re·
pert that output probably was u
close lo absolutely flat as they
could compute for the April·
June quarter.
The department's Office of
Professional Responsibility "de-
term lned that no law, regula·
tlon. order or standard of con·
duct was violated" by Associate
Attorney General Rudolph
Giuliani when he met May 14
with John T . Sant, general
counsel for the aircraft corpora-
tion. The finding was disclosed
in letters sent Monday to Rep.
Peter Rodino, D-N.J ., chairman
of the House Judiciary Commit·
tee and others.
Hunts settle
soybean issue
WASHJNGTON <AP > -The
Hunts a Texas famil y
estimated to be worth $8 billion
-have agreed to pay a rerord
$500,000 civil penalty to settle a
government complaint involving
Af'u_.....
PROTEST DUE -P a ul
Watso n, l eader o f Sea
Shepherd Conserv a tion
Society, says the anti ·
whaling vessel Sea Shepherd
II will sail to the Bering Sea
in an attempt to halt Soviet
whaling vessels. Watson met
the press in Vancouver.
Rritish Columbia.
ln an aJtreement reached
Tuesda)! with the CommodJty
Futures Tradlne Commission,
brothers Nelson Bunker and W.
Herbert Hunt also pled&ed that
the family will not purchase soy-
bean futures contracts for two
years.
Allies endor•e
Reaga~ 's policie1
OTTAWA <AP> -Overcoming
European protests about high
U.S. interest rates. President
Reagan has an endorsement
from America's m ajor aJlles for
his anti-inflation policies and
favora ble reviews for his debut
in s ummit diplomacy.
Leaders of the seven richest
democracies submerged their
major ~fferences on economic
policy and returned home from
a three-day summit Tuesday
after acknowledging that high
interest rates "have to play
their part" in reducing inflation.
Polish work e r8
call of f strike
WARSAW. Poland (AP)
Polish dock workers and alrline
e mployees blve caJled off
threatened strikes this week,
promising t he hard-pressed
Communist government another
temporary respite from labor
unrest.
The Solidarity dockers' union
canceled a strike Thursd-.y by
46,000 longs horemen in four
Baltic ports after negotiations
produced a compromise agree·
ment early today.
Draft dodger
cases o n hold
WASHINGT()N (AP> -The
J ustice Department is looking
into 134 cases or young men who
allegedly have failed to register
for the draft. but any prosecu-
tions are le~rerily on hoJd , a
Selective Service official said to-
day
The Sel ec tive Service
System 's d e puty d i rector,
Brayton Harris. said the agency
will not initiate any enforcement
action until Congress decides
whether to allow the Social
Security System to cooperate
with Selective Service in
searching out the names of un-
registered young men.
BACK BA"Y
LIQUOR
HAS
JACK DANIEL'S
ON SALE
SJ99 750ml
RecJ. '9.67 ~
BACK BAY UQUOll
642-4774
2651 l"IM Ave CAt MeH Drivel
Newport leach -Cos .. Mesa
IJ
i\r.....,. ......... ~, .... ..,.,..,""',., '"' ~·'""'""'' -~ ""'Piii
The housin g and auto in·
dustries were a mong those
Final sales reported by
American buainess were up a
bit, but showed a negative figure
after adjustment for inlJation.
..............
MIA REMAINS IDENTIFIED The Depart-Re public of Vietnam , July 17. From left are
ment of Defense released these photos Tues-Capt. Richard Van Dyke, USAF ; Lt. Stephen
day in Washington of three servicemen who 0 . Musslem an. USN; and Cmdr. Ronald W.
died during the Vietnam war. The remains Dodge, USN. More than 160 Americans re·
were turned over to the U.S. by the Socialist main 'unaccounted for' by North Vietnam.
Postage hike on agenda
New contract to cost P ost a l Service $4 .8 bill ion
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
tentative three-year contract
that headed off a nationwide
mail strike shouldn't push the
cost of a first-class stamp
beyond the 20 cents already
sought by the Postal Service,
Postmaster General WilliaJn F.
Bolger says.
Bolger estimated the pact,
hammered out Tuesday after 30
hours o ( a lmost non-s top
bargaining, would cost the
Pos tal Service $4.8 bilJion. 1t
would give the h alf-million
m e mbers or the two largest
postal uniocu about a 10 percent
pay raise -$900. apiece more in
base wages and about $1,200 in
bonuses -plus unUmited pro-
tection against inllaUon and ris·
ing health benefit premiums.
Jn announcing the setUement
n ine hours after an e arlier
aereement fell apart when
words were put into writing.
Bolger took the occasion to plug
the Postal Service's request to
raise the first-class mail rate
from 18 cents lo 20 cents.
But he said he thought 20
cents, twice rejected by the
Postal Rate Commission, would
be enough "for a couple of
years~"
Higher labor costs can be off·
set by increased productivity,
Bolger explained, noting that the
settlement includes $350 in pro-
duct i vi ty bonuses for each
worker in each year of the con-
tract.
PostaJ oflicials had estimated
their first offer, limiting cost-of·
living raises lo an average S per·
cent a year and freezing base
pay. would have increased mail
rates 3 cents by 1982. They had
said union demands for 14.7 per-
cent annual wage· and cost-of.
living raises. a 35-hour week and
a 10th holiday would have forced
a 45-cent stamp by 1984.
Moe Biller, president of the
American Postal Worke r s
Union. predicted the contract
will be ratified.
While the unions didn't get
everything they wanted, "we
feel it's a good contract and that
the membershi p will approve
it," Biller said.
Vince Sombrotto of the Na·
tional Association of Letter Car·
riers said the ratification pro·
cess will take about 30 days.
A typical postaJ worker cur·
rently makes S23,000 a year, in·
eluding fringe benefits.
The figures released today.
although reflecting later in·
formation, still were called pre-
liminary.
The ories
s urfac ing
in traged y
KANSAS CITY <AP> Two
design changes and a missing
washer combined to help cause
the fatal collapse o r two
"skywalks" at the Hyatt Regen-
cy Hotel. The Kansas City Times
reported today
Although no single factor was
to blame, a series of design, con-
struction and inspection prob·
lems contributed to the acci-
dent that killed 113 people and
injured 186 others. a structural
e ngineer , hire d by the
newspaper to look into the dis·
aster. was quoted as saying in a
copyright story
Various theories on the cause
or the skywalk collapse began to
surface Tuesday. Two other
structural engineers said there
simply was too much weight for
the s uspended walkways to
bear, a nd they gave way ,
cr as hing into the lobby and
crushing people
The two engineers, hired by a
law firm that has filed a damage
suit stemming from the acci·
dent, disagreed Tuesday with a
theory. presented in a Kansas
City St ar story Tuesday. that
s aid a des ign error was to
blame.
"It's just overstress too
much load," said Lee Lowery.
an engineering professor at Tex -
as A&M Unjversity.
He and Rex P aulsen, a Denver
en gineer. said there was a
failure at the point where
suspension rods on the sides or
the fourth-floor skywalk were
joined t-0 steel support beams.
In another development, The
Times reported in a copyright
story today that the criminal
di vision of the Internal Revenue
Service is investigating allega-
tions that gratuities were given
to building inspectors and others
during construction of the hotel.
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Sears Ret ail stores around the country.
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Former C.t81og Price•
MEtf S
SPORT COATS
Were 4111 to 29"
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~illTI~·
Canal vote set for J .une '
Brown won't put issue on November ballot
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. Ed·
mund Brown Jr. baa decided 111lnat
puttint the Peripheral Canal on tbe
ballot next November -it will to on
the June 1982 ballot aa scheduled.
The Democratic 1overnor said
Tuesday that be made the declalon ao
both sides of the laaue would have
more time to campai1n. He also said
there will be a lar1er voter turnout in
November than in June.
More than two-thirds of the state la
scheduled to vote in local elections in
November.
But the decisjon surpasses the 20·
year political ~ttle over the canal:
It means five more months of wailinl
before votin1 on measures to repeal
the state inberitanc't tax and cut
state income taxes, totalln1 $700
million in first-year tax reductions.
Also on the June ballot will be
primary elections for statewide and
legislative officers, and for the U.S.
Senate. Brown no doubt considered
bis anticipated candidacy for the
Senate seat now held by Republican
S.I. Hayakawa, aJthou1h bis state-
ment did not mention lt.
Brown also said the $1 mlllion COit
of a special election would be a
"needless expense."
Opponents of the canal, mainly
from the Delta and elsewhere in
Northern California, contend it will
ruin farming and fisheries in the
Delta and threaten other Northern
California waterways ln dry years.
They say the canaJ ia too expensive
and wouldn't be needed if the
farmers and Southern California
suburbanites conserved water.
Backers of the project say it la
vital to Southern California because
of the impending loss or Colorado
River water, and the prospects of
population growth. They also say it
will actually improve Delta water
quality.
GE,'s flat iron
plant to close
ONTARIO, Calif. <AP) -General Electric
plans to close its 77 -year-old flat iron plant, putting
about 1,000 employees out of work, because it is
phasing out its metal irons in favor of plastic
bodied ones. a company spokesman said.
Plant workers were told Tuesday that GE will
halt production in the U.S. of metal irons and close
the plant by next February. No attempts are being
made to convert the plant to the production of
plastic irons, which company officials said would
take 18 months to two years.
Henry Unger, spokesman for the United Elec-
trical Workers Local 1012, said the closure will
mean a loss of $91 million to the area's economy
and will put entire families out of work. He also
charged that GE is trying to force the plastic irons
on consumers, and that GE will continue produc-
tion of the metal irons in Brazil, Mexico and
Singapore where labor is cheaper.
Brown rem oval sought.
' RED BLUFF <AP> -The Tehama County
Board of Supervisors has unanimously called for
the removal of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. from of-
fice for his handling of the Mediterranean fruit fly
sttuation •
The five commissioners voted on the motion
after hearing a report from the county agriculture
commissioner that Medfly traps would have to be
increased from five per acre to 10 to comply with
other states' quarantine requirements.
Newton bails o ut of ja i l
OAKLAND <AP> -Former Black Panther
leader Huey Newton. free again after a six-day jail
stay. says it was unfair of an
Alameda County Superior Court
judge to double his bond while
he appeals a handgun convic-
tion.
As he walked out of the
Alameda County Jail Tuesday,
Newton called Judge Joseph
Karesh "one of the most unfair
judges I've been in front of."
• 1 Asked where he raised the baU
N•WT°" funds, Newton replied, "I don't
think it's anybody's business where I got the
monev."
Pilot~' remains returned
TRAVlS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (AP) -
For one relative, the return of the remains of three
American pilots who had been missing in Vietnam
meant the "little ray of hope" had ended. For
another, it meant an old wound had been re-
opened. But several othe,r relatives expressed re-
lief the long wait for news was over.
About 200 people, mostly servicemen and their
families, watched on Tuesday as an Air Force col·
or guard stood at attention, and an honor guard
took the coffins to waiting hearses. The remains of
Navy Cmdr. Ronald W. Dodge of Olympia, Wash.,
Air Force Capt. Richard ff. Van Dyke of Salt Lake
City, and Navy Lt. Stephen 0 . Musselman or Tex·
arkana, Texas, were turned over to a delegation
from the United States in Hanoi July 7.
Electricians back at work
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Some 6,000 electri-
ciarts begin returning to work today after a 5~
week walkout that threatened to cause serious de-
lays in major .construction projects.
A tentative pact giving the electricians a 35
percent rajse in wues and fringe benefits over the
next two years was hammered out Tuesday eve-
ning by negotiators.
,RBAGEBAGS "'"'_,_ ,. " • SMALL
~llf!EN BAGS
..... 1.23
•MEDIUM . •
Orange Co11t DAILY PfLOT/Wtdn1td1y, July 22, 1181 H /I'
~rosecution mulled
Judge rejects dismissal in Hillside case
... .....,.....
COWBOY AND BRIDE -Gene Autry, 72,
stands E·th his bride, Jaqueline Ell am Autry,
39, outsi e the First United Methodist Church
in Burb . It is the second marriage for
Autry, owner of the California Angels.
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Olstrlct
Attorney John Van De Kamp, under orders from a jud1e to continue pros·
ecuting Hillside Strangler detendant
Angelo Buono, was wei1hin1
alternatives today Including possible
transfer or the case to a special pros-
ecutor.
But first, Van De Kamp said he
mi1ht submit more lnformat.lon to
try to persuade the judge to throw
out charges aeainst Buono.
"We tend to think there Is addl·
tional information that could help
Judge George should he decide to
keep his ruling open," the district al·
torney said.
Van De Kamp, whose office recom·
mended dismissal of the case against
Buono, was stunned along with de-
fense lawy e r s Tuesday when
S\U)erior Court Judge Ronald George
took an action believed to be un-
precedented in California courts. He
rejected the dismissal request.
George, saying he would not be a
"rubber stamp" for the prosecution,
insisted a jury should decide Buono's
guilt or innocence.
The judge set another pre-trial
heartn1 for' July 28 b~t ltfl the
acheduled trial date of SeQt. 1.5 fqr
the murder cbarees. Buono a110
faces a separate trlal on 11 non·
murder sex-related counts includln1
pimping, pandering and sodomy.
The 46-year-old Buono frowned but
s howed no emotion as the judge
ordered his murder trial to proceed.
"There are no reasons founded on
prosecutorial ethics that would pre-
clude the District Attorney from con·
tinuiog lhe prosecution or this caae,''
said lhe judge.
. He rejected arguments that the
state's star .witness, confessed
Hillside Strangler Kenneth Bianchi,
had told so many conflictine stories
in recent weeks that he could not eive
credible testimony against hls
cousin, Buono.
''Ever since Mr. Bianchi's first ac-
counts two years ago of the com·
mission of these IO murders over a
four-month period. his story has been
plagued with contradictions .... "
the judge said, noting that the pros·
ecution still thought it had a strong
case.
25% off the marked
down price that appears
on any· reduced ticket.
Be Hrly ... quantltles are llmlted. We don't have every Item In every size and color.
Example Of how our HI• wOfka:
J untOr Sl&Ckl • •
Orig
Now Leu 25•,
14.tt •••• 1.71
Your price 5.24
Mens sn.tt • •
Orig
Now
Less 25"•
$14.
l .H
2.25
Your pttCe 6. 74
JCPenney Special Saving In All · Departments.
Yea on every reduced Item currently marked down you
can like WIOtner 25' olf the mtrlled price Marked d<Mn 1tema w• lllo be denltlted on rlldla Ind tables by event llOfll Ind oerd
t~ Hurry quentihes ltmlted •
'Item• idenhliect by red '8.51 °' red ltne • do not ""~~It· temporary rec)Jclion1 of reguls llwml
• •1tem1 trlOwn .. eqmple1 only, not 1vatleble
in e*Y atOfe
144-2111
DEAD AT SO
Louis Peters
FBI
source
dies
LO DI <AP > -The
Cadillac dealer whose
work as an informant
helped the FBI convict
r eputed Ma fi a leade r
Joseph Bon a nno h as
died of cancer in a local
hospital.
Lou Peters. who died
Mond ay, spent two
years as a confidant ol
Bonanno after Bonan-
no 's associates offered
him an inflated price for
his auto dealership in
1977 and suggested he
could profi t by buying
othe r dealerships for the
alleged crime chief. The
dealership allegedly was
wanted as a source to
launder allegally gained
money.
Peters. 50, went to the
FBI after being a p-
proached. The informa-
tion be fed agents about
Bona nno's dealings was
cr ucial to the man's 1980
conviction on charges of
cons piring to interfere
with a grand jury in-
vestigation.
Bonanno, 76, was sen-
tenced to five years in
prison. He is a ppealing
the conviction.
"If I had it to do all
over again. I 'd star t
tomorrow," Peters told
a reporter in October
1980. "It's the best way
to fight organized crime.
Hopefully other busi-
nessmen will recognize
that and cooper ate with
the FBI."
P eters said the man
who approached him
a bout purc hasing lbe
dealership told rum that.
Bonanno "was head of
the Mafia for the whole
United States and that
h e w a n te d th e
dealerships to launde r
m oney from criminal
activities."
While feed ing in -
formation to the F BI,
Pete rs became one of
Bonanno's confidants .
Fearing for his family's
safety, he talked his
wife into filing for a
legal separation and he
moved to Stockton. a l·
lowing the FBI to plant
television and audio re·
cording equipme nt
there .
After the trial. Peters
and his wife r enewed
their marriage vows and
be sold his dealership
"just in case something
happens to me" and the
family needs money.
Cout students
moose studies
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Wednnday, July 22, 1981
The 1ln1er uld he had
evidenoe Ml wile, Molly, waa
tryln1 to set him up to aue her
for adultery and then ••take me
to the cleanera" with a coun-
terawt claimlnl defamation. He
Hid he obtained the information
by breakini lnto bis home in
Wentworth, Surrey, last year
while h1a wife was away In New
York.
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SAVE40~
PREPARATION H
HIMCHlllMOIDAL
SUPPOllTOlllU
Here'1 Oootl New1I NO MORI PLIAIU On Your Pet or In Your Homel
Mrs. Gibb, 34, contacted at t.be
Georgian mansion, denied the
alleaauona.
-PllOVIN
lfflCTIVI
AOAINITI
• l'U4I • ao.ocJ • un • lllCI • ftm ·-.......... ·~•tin
w ••••u ... CllA .. ••11••rey.-. .... t..,.elll••···
................ hi
• unit works on sole, silent ultro1onte wovea
• tol e to humans & pet•
• u1e1 only 4 w olls pawer
• no 1p.ciol ln1tollo1ion
• pests ellmlnoted In 2 to 6 weeks
The couple were married U
ye ars a e o and h a ve two
childre n, Spe ncer, 9, and
Melissa, 7. In recent yeara, Gibb
has lived with his brothers In
Miami for much of the year, vt.t-
itlna Britain only occasionally.
: :a:'n""" ·-... ,._ (714) ~1-9191 (714) 760-7251 DU T'kllUTIO IY
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WEDNESDAY,
July 22, 1981
0 • s
FEATURES 841
COMICS BS
TELEVISION 810 I
a 5 a
Interest rates have small
consumer as well as big
executive worried ... B7
D
0
Stftte OKS I1·vine Coastal developnient
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. o.lly .........
State Coastal Commission ap-
proval o( plans for development
of the Irvine Coast Tuesday
night means work could begin
within a year on the 9,400-acre
parcel between Corona del Mar
and Laguna Beach.
And last minute compromise
between lhe commission's staff
and Irvine Company· ofticials
can probably be approved by
Orange County Supervisors in
rapid fashion. Fifth District
Supervisor Thomas Riley said
today.
·'I anticipate changes agreed
to by the Irvine Company wiU
have no difficulty getting board
approval, .. said Riley, whose
district encompasses the Irvine
Coast.
Coastal Commissioners. meet·
ing in Los Angeles, voted 8 to 1.
with member Beth Wyman op-
posed. to approve the land use
portion of the Irvine Coastal
Plan. Three new commissioners
abstained.
Approval, with several major
changes. came after more than
three hours of testimony from
two dozen Orange County
citizens
The commission maJorlty
sided with the Irvine Company
on dedication oC 2,SSO aero of
open space ln return for develop-
ment of 2,000 dwelUna units, two
roads leadina to the coast, and a
pair of conunercial centers.
The commisaloo staff had in·
eluded a requirement that would
have made dedication of open
space land by the company ir·
revocable at the start of de·
velopment of certain tracts and
projects.
The company successfully
argued that the requirement
would mean land would be given
to the public even if the com-
pany, in future years, was pre-
vented from completing its de·
velopment.
Company offi cials said the ir·
revocable offer clause would
provide incentive for private en-
vironmental groups or govern-
ment agencies to stop develop-
men t, in the knowledge that
dedicated open space couldn't be
retrieved by the company.
Commissioners agreed that
the staff stipulation was unfair,
with Commissioner Robert Ryan
savin2. "The staff is prooosin2
that after 30 years the land goes
public, no matter what : appens
to the Irvine Company. . t looks
like you've got a guy (the com·
pany) willing to give up the
land, but you don't trust him so
you're putting another gun to his
head.
"The Irvine Company ls giv·
iog away the store In my opi-
nion,'' Ryan said.
Michael Fischer, executive
director of t he com mission,
agreed to the deletion of the ir·
revocable offer requirement
after reaching an "on the floor"
compromise with Irvine Com·
pany Senior Vice President
Thomas Nielsen.
Upon sale of 75 percent of the
lots in a specified development,
the company agreed to give up
open space lands of the same
value in the southern portion of
the property.
Under the compromise.
greater "resource value" was
placed on lands scheduled for
development closer to Coast
Highway. ·
The commission also ap-
proved cons truction of Sand
Canyon Avenue as a two·lane
,,,,...·-·-·---·-·
Private RecrMtlon Resldefttlal °"" SPK• \'
CRYSTAL COVE
STATE PARIC
Abalone Point
CONDITIONAL
DEDICATION
AREA
.............
Reddent1al, commercial and open space areas outlined on map o/ 9,400 acre Irvine Coast wmch
teceived state Coaatal Commiuion approval Tu.etday night.
Mesan 'always helped'
Ride in waves near mouth of Santa Ana River fatal
Those who knew 24 -year-old
Michael Samuels say they're un-
certain why their friend took to
lhe waves off Newport Beach
this week during an afternoon
outing that ended in his death.
The Costa Mesa man, friends
explain. did not like the waler
and was not a strong swimmer.
Samuels. a day camp youth
counselor in Costa Mesa who
was four units shy of graduating
from UC Irvine, was last seen
Monday afternoon ri~ing a
Boogie board in the waves near
the Santa Ana River mouth.
His body was found 20 hours
later in the water off Huntington
State Beach near Brookhurst
Street.
Witnesses told police Samuels
was thrown from the board he
was riding and then was tossed
around by a series of breakers
as he tried to dog-paddle to
shore.
One person on the beach swam
to his aid and grabbed him. but
lost him as more waves crashed
over them, lifeguards said.
Lifeguards said when the
water settled, Samuels' body
could not be located. A scuba
diving team spent several hours
searching the area.
'·He was the kind or guy who
was a lways smiling. always
there to help out," explained
Luis Martinez. an Irvine resi-
dent who said Samuels was his
best friend.
He said he grew up with
Samuels In East Los Angeles
and attended Lincoln High
School and East Los Angeles
College with him.
"We both translerred down to ucr together and roomed
together that first year ,"
Martinez said . "He was a neat
guy. He was ambitious."
Samuels, Martinez said, was a
psychology major who loved to
work with kids. He had taken the
day camp job for that reason.
friends said.
Another friend speculated that
Samuels might have been at·
tempti n g to s how some
youngsters how to ride a Boogie
board.
.. He was that way," the friend
suggested. "always trying to
help, trying to show someone
how to do something ."
OHicials from the day camp,
listed on the lifeguard's report
as Cultural Educators Day
Camp, could not be located for
comment.
It was unclear, lifeguards
said, whether ·Samuels had gone
to the beach with a day camp
group, with fri ends, or by
himself.
Funeral arrangements.
friends of the family say, are
pending. Samuels is survived by
his parents. two brothers and
two sisters.
l'Nannco testing ordered
Mesa council probes alleged pollution by facility
bearing· Monday night, tbe
Irvine lawyer told council mem-
bers that recent surveys reveal so to 70 percent of residents
questioned ln the Victoria Street
area report neurological prob-
lems, asthma, sore throats,
nausea, bMdachea and a cons·
tant fear o( explo.slon.
Dr, Paul Papenek, a Loa
Angeles 1eneral pracUtionu
wlt.h tralnlnc ln environmental
toxicology, uld lune teat•
resulted. in "some frlghtenll\I
re1ults."
Testa of ntarly 50 resldentl
•howed I.Mt moll •utter about 15
percent more brutbl111 toa1
than under normaJ con~
be Hkt. '
About lS petteot of thoM *l·
ICI, be~ ... " loll • l'WtWl ol th* l..a eapedty.
8• •-a ... IDdtua. • "l•l'IMll 11* eo.t1U0ii'f1 ·1ur. ,....., .... , ............ ....
.......... Win Nlld••• were buUt ta tbe aru.
arterial highway, rather than a
meandering two-lane park road
as s uggested by commission
staff members,
And they reduced the density
of a commercial area al the
junction of Sand Canyon Avenue
and Coast Highway from 50,000
square feet of commercial space
to 25,000 square feet. Company
plans for 500 hotel rooms at that
site were reduced to 250.
The commission let stand
plans for 250,000 square feet of
commercial buildings at the pro-
posed Pelican HUI development,
as well as a 1,500-room hotel.
That commercial area will
abut the proposed Pelican Hill
Road. a lour-lane roadway lead·
Ing from Coast Highway to the
proposed San Joaqµin
Transportation Corridor.
The commission, in a separate
vote, also approved company
plans for resale controls on
about 400 affordable units that
may or may not be located
within the 9.400-acre coastal pro-
perty.
Representattves of a coalition
of seven Orange County Coast
organizations that hired a bus to
attend Tuesday's meetln1 ex-
pressed disappointment in the
commission's action
The group, calling Itself the
Coalition of Concerned Coastal
Citizens, had urged that office
buildin~s be excluded from the
coastal sector; that San Can·
yon be a small park road ; that
only 400 hotel rooms be built,
and that commercial areas be
greatly reduced.
FV honors ex-mayor
City Hall flags to fly half-staff in memory of Ed Just
Flags at Fountain Valley City
Hall will be flown a l half mast
this week in memory of former
mayor Edward E. Just, who
died early Tuesday at age 59.
At the lime of his death, Jast
was executive director of the
Santa Ana River Flood Protec-
tion Agency. and his loss is be·
ing mourned by city and county
oCficials alike.
"The community is going to
miss Ed Just," said Fountain
Valley Councilman Marvin
Adler. who worked with Just on
the executive board of the Oood
control agency.
"I've never met anyone who
could get a job done better than
Ed," he said. "Ed fought tooth
and nail for us to ~et the flood
control project moving. As far
as we've gotten on it, most of it
is due to Ed."
Just had been working since
1974 to win federal approval for
a proposed Sl billion Santa Ana
River improvement project for
Orange, San Bernardino and
Riverside counties.
The project calls ror constr1·
Huntington orders
lots condemned
The Huntington Beach City
Council ha.s ordered condemns·
lion proceedings for 11.5 acres
consisting of 179 privately-
owned lots to clear the way for
city purchase to expand Central
Park.
The small 25-foot-by-112-foot
"enclyclopedia lots" are north
of Ellis Avenue between Golden
West and Edwards streets. adja-
cent to the 297·acre Central
Park.
Valued at about $6,000 per lot,
the acreage would cost the city
about Sl million, according to
Vince Moorhouse, director or the
city's Community Services de-
partment.
H e said the concept or
purchasing the small lots to ex-
pand Central Park was first ap-
proved by the 1977 City Council.
The city presently has more
than $800,000 in s tate bond
money for parks and would
make up the difference from the
city's park acquisition fund. he
said.
The City Council approved the
condemnation proceedings Mon-
day on a 4-1 ·vote. Councilwoman
Ruth Bailey dissented.
In the early part of this cen-
tury, when land was less valua·
ble, traveling salesmen gave
away the small lots throughout
the city as a bonus to people who
purchased an encvclopedia set,
Equipment
taken from
college
Burglars look nearly $15,000
worth of office and classroom
equipment from Orange Coast
College over the weekend, and
Costa Mesa police believe the
thieves may have keys to college
rooms.
Officers said there was no
evidence of force used lo enter
rooms and that burglars either
unlocked doors or entered
through doors inadvertently left
open.
Taken Crom the college's ad-
minlslraUon office was Sll,o70
worth of equipment includin1 a
copy machine, a typewriter and
a two-way, hand-held radio.
Reported missing from the
rourth n oor of the Ubrary Build·
ing were a tape duplicating
machine and video disc player.
Thal equipment was valued at
nearly $2.100.
Taken from Science Room 144,
official• 1ald, was an electronJc
balance scale valued al about
$1,700.
Burglars ran9ack
Valley school
Harper Elementary School in
Fountain Valley hu been
burcJarleed and a vldeo cas•ette
recorder worth *800 was taken,
Jl()lice r.ported.
Tia. burclar or bur1l1ra ap-
parent11 entered the 1cbool,
louted near llapolla Street
Ud &Illa Av.-... on Santa Ynea
••· b)' breulq • cJuaroom window lload•J or Tueiday
m1ht; poUce qld .
I
according to city historian Bud mg gins.
The lot owners now are scat·
tered throughout the nation.
Moorhouse said they will be
identified through property tax
records and notified of the con-
demnation proceedings and the
future public hearing on the pro-
posed land purchase by the city.
Improvement
of bus s top
set for HB
A $75,000 construction project
to improve Huntington Beach's
busiest bus stop at Lake Street
at Pacific Coast Highway is
scheduled to begin this fall
T.h e proposal to install
benches and widen sidewalks on
the beach side or the highway
and to build a stairway from the
bus stop directly to the beach
was approved Monday by the
Board of Directors of Orange
County Transit District. The dis·
trict will pay $46,500 toward the
work.
The remaining $28,500 -for
stairway construction -will be
paid by the city. The Huntington
Beach City Council already has
approved the project.
Ten metered parking spaces
have been removed to make
more room for buses from four
separate OCTD routes that stop
at the comer, said Ralph Leyva.
city traffic engineer.
Bench installation, sidewalk
and stairway construction won't
begin until the summer beach
crowd has subsided, he said.
As many as nine buses from
the four routes can be parked at
the downtown stop at the same
lime, and Leyva s\ressed that
the improvements are tem·
porary until an oH-street
transportation center can be
financed and built.
A city study identified the
Lake Street intersection as a
good spot for such a ~enter, but
the private landholder, the Hunt-
ington Beach Co .• has been op-
posed to selllng the land, Leyva
said.
City officials are examining
other sites, particularly those
already municipally owned. he
said.
Bloodmobile
due in FV
A Red CtQll bloodmoblle will
be ataUoned ln Fountain Valley
Monday.
The untt will be acceptln1
donors from 2'4.5 lo 1:30 p.m. al
the Holy S.Plrl\ Calbolic Churcb,
17270W•~Sl.
Anyone 1n IOOd he•lth '*•-lbe •l•of 1' andt6whowelehl at ltut uo Iba. 6-tllllble to donate. Tom• •QPOlnlment, call the
Arnetic:tm led' cro11. w..m1. ens
tion or a dam at Mentone, rais·
ing of the Prado Dam at Corona
and improvements along the
Santa Ana Ri ver channel in
Orange County.
Experts haye predicted that a
lengthy period of rainfall will
cause the river to overnow and
flood adjacent citiE's, unless the
improvements are made.
·'The greatest tribute that
could be paid to Ed would be to
see the culmination of the Santa
Ana River project," observed
Orange County Supervisor Har-
riett Wieder.
County supervisors Tuesday
adjourned their meeting in
Jusl's honor
Fountain Valley Councilman
Al Hollinden noted. "He early on
had an appreciation that no city
can be an island. He was a very
forceful individual. Nobod y
pushed him around. but every·
one respected him."
. A memorial mass and eulogy
for Just will be conducted at 5
p.m . Tuesday, July 28 at Holy
Spirit Catholic Church. 17270
Ward St , Fountain Valley.
Funeral arrangements are being
handled by the Neptune Society.
His family has requested that
donations be made to the ln·
diana University Alumni Club
Scholarship Fund in care of Dick
Fraaes. 1331 Bonnie Doone ,
Corona del Mar. Calif. 92625.
Just was born in Indianapolis
an d attended Ind iana,
Northwes tern and Yale un·
i versities.
He moved lo Fountain Valley
in 1963 and was elected to the
council in 1966. He served as
mayor in 1969 and 1972. remain-
ing on the council until 1974.
In addition to his job as the
flood agency director. Just
operated a management ad
visory s ervice for various
organizations and county agen·
cies.
He served as preside nt of the
Orange County League of Cities
in 1970-71, as chairman or the
J oint Board of the Orange Coun-
ty Sanitation districts in 1971· 72
and on numerous League of
Cities committees at the state
and local levels.
Veteran phone
worker dies
in Huntington
William Wedel of Huntington
Beach, who worked 40 years as
an engine e r with Pacific
Telephone. died Monday at age
64.
Visiting hours were s cheduled
from noon lo 9 p.m . today at
Pierce Brothers Smi th s '
Mortuary at 627 Main St . Hunt-
ington Beach.
Private graveside services
will be conduc ted by Paul
Johnsen of Grace Lutheran
Church of Huntington Bea.ch.
Wedel was born in Escondido.
He was a graduate of Hunt-
ington Beach High School and
Santa Ana Junior College.
He is survived by his wife
Wlnifred. hi s chUdren Mark and
Marilyn Wedel, h is brother
Henry Wedel and bis siters Veva
Cosper and Vera Runser.
The family has asked that
donations b e made to the
American Heart Association.
.FJ/ Chamber
honor told
Jim Conklin of the Kwlk Kopy
printing center h> Fountain
Valley wu named .... ..,_ ~
the Vear" of U\e Fountaln Yalley
Chamber of Commerce dun~
the or~Uoo'• recent ln1tall•·
lion ot otncers and awards
luncheon. Frank Na varrool ForulU Wat waa reclpltnt or the HCQnd an·
nual John Kelly Award preeeated
to 1 chamber board member for
enthualum In the orslDlaatiOD's
actlvltles.
-
ON 111E STREET BEAT
-We 1ot a nice note here at
the paper just yesterday on
the new-fangled recordln1·
machine we have here in the
newspaper office that leta
you tell us what you're think·
Ing by dialing 642-6086.
Lots of people call in to
blow off steam into the
"We're Listening" recorder
and I think that's good for
~ ,~~1
-TDM_M_U_RP-111-1,~lt
them and good for us too. We
get to know what is grinding
on folks that way.
This particular gentleman,
who didn't identify himself,.
left us the following
message:
"The Daily Pilot is a very
good paper <thank you, sir>.
It contains news and articles
It'• j1Uf another routine gang fighl
that are of most importance
to the public.·•
THEN HE ADDED, "But I
really don't see what the
murders or killings or rob-
beries have to do with news.
''Those events, to me, are
not news. Those are every-
day things that happen.
'•Eliminating these types
of crimes or any crime of
that sort in the paper would
be mor e beneficial. Thank
you."
Now you must suspect that
a lot of people share Uniden-
tified ~ntleman 's views on
crime news . They'd just
rather not re ad about it while
reposing in the living room
after a long day, wailing for
the dinner bell. Too much
fear and dismay. Too much
violence.
From one stance, you can
certainly under s tand the
readers who object when a
paper picks up a violent item
off the wires fro m some
crossroads in Brazil and
soups it up into the biggest
story of the day.
TROUBLE IS, we have
enough home -grown crime
and violence to fill the paper
should editors choose to offer
only that kJnd of a reading
diet. Moet editors, bowev.erz try to give readers some klDO
of an even-handed blend and
mix ln the news of the day.
But there la one comment
made by Unidentified
Gentleman that is really
deeply disturbing.
That is, when he describes
murders, killings or rob-
beries as simply, "Everyday
things that happen."
NOW REALLY, has it
come to this? We are now
willing to accept that kill·
lngs, mayhem, murders ,
rapes and robberies are
nothing out of the ordinary?
Just "everyday things that
happen?"
I am sorry, Unidentified
Gentleman, but I can't ac-
cept that. I ref use to accept
that. Perhaps we have been
fed such a steady diet of
violence in the shows we
watch or the entertainment
we seek that we've come to
a ccept it as a way of life.
But crimes that do violence
to other people are not accep-
table. I don't want killings as
an acceptable part of my
everyday life, nor that of my
children or my
grandchildren.
PEOPLE WHO DO those
kinds or things should be
tracked down, captured ·and
brought to justice. They don't
belong on my street or your
street.
And when they are on our
s treets, and perpetrating
those kinds of crimes against
other people, yes, I do want
to know about them in the
pages of my newspaper. And
I also like to know how tour
law enforcement agencies
are dealing with thos e
perpetrators.
VIOLENT CRIMES are in·
deed happening every day
a long our coastline today.
But I don't think we've reached the point of no con·
cern where we can say as·
sault or murder is just as routine as walking to the cor-
ner store.
We wouldn't think so if it
happened to you or to me.
JULY • AUGUST SPECIAL Perk up that limp hairdo wtth a car•free perm from Nature Cut·
tera. Hurry In now for a super summer look.
Ptttlll • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • s39oo t72.00 V1luel ........................ . .......... .
Hair Cut Blow Dfy • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 16• Women
'11 11 Men
No other newspa~r brings you more
of your city council, planning commission,
schOOI and college districts and county
government than the
..
t 4oqcsscso z::;u;,c«;•soaa a Af o so 4 0 • ¢ 0 5 • es a socs U1¥W4SL4Q 501 4JY44N
Pooling
• Bavings
detailed
About 13,900 people
u ved 31',000 1allons of
1aaollne and one Mill·
milllon miles of wear·
and-tear on their cars by
commuting from April
throu1h June in car
pools set by the Orange
County Transit District.
Those reaulta a re in·
eluded in a quarterly re·
port made public Mon-
day at a meeting of the
d istrict's board of direc·
tors.
The information was
c ompile d through a
telephone survey of 538
people who use the
s ys te m . ·Results show
that 23 percent of those
who listed their na mes
since January in the
ridesbarlng program
are commuting regular·
ly in a car pool. The
average trip is 18 miles
one way.
Howe v e r . because
many applicants live or
work lon g d istances
away or travel al odd
hours, only 56 percent of
the applicants were pro-
vided a list of possible
traveling companions .
The tra nsit district
took over operation of
the program a year ago
from a private agency.
Commuter Computer.
and the report is con-
sidered the most com·
plete breakdown yet on
the service.
Mi chael Ba rnes . dis ·
trict communications
director who supervises
the program. said some
info rmation st iJI isn 't
available. such as the ef·
f ect iv e ne ss o f t h e
system whe r e it bas
been instituted recently
f or 1 9 pr i v a t e
employers.
In other cases, large
employers have created
their own ridersha ring
ROYALTY -William
and Lo.uise Kanold of
C o st a Mes a wer e
chosen prince and prin-
cess of the Golden
Court in the senior
citizens competition at
the Ora nge County
Fair .
Fresno mayor eyes Senate
Women's Political Caucus plans conference in Irvine
By O.C. HUSTINGS ofTlleDeil't~IUIH
''THJS IS NOT a fundraising
event," s ays the invitation, but
it will be a chance for Fresno
Mayor Daniel K. Whitehurst lo
test the Orange County political
waters as he ponders a run for
the U.S. Senate.
Supporter David Stein and
friends are holding a reception
for Whitehurst Friday from 4: 30
to 6 p.m . at t he Stein·Brief
Building. 18071 Fitch, Irvine.
Whitehurst. a De mocr at who
outlines issues mor e often as·
sociated with Republica ns as
"integral parts of his politicaJ
philosophy." says he would try
to reduce the s ize of the federal
government.
At the moment he appears to
be o ne of the leading con·
servaUve Democrats pondering
a challenge to a ny Senate bid by
Gov. J erry Brown.
* * *
GEORGE DEUKMEJIAN,
state attorney general and a
c andidate for governor next
year. will visit the Rotary Club
of Newport.Balboa at the club's
July 29 meeting.
* * * "THE GREATEST Show On
Ea rth" is what the Orange
Co unty Na tio n a l Wome n 's
Political Caucus is calling its
conferen ce on campa igning.
candidacy and community in·
volvement. scheduled ror Aug. 8
from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m . at the
Registry Hotel in Irvi ne
Scheduled speakers at the con·
ference are women from across
the political spectrum. including
Republic an Assemblywo m an
Marian Ber geson. Democratic
Centr al Committee m ember
Mary Capdeville. senior citizen
activist Ruth Kahn and Superior
Court Judge Alice Marie Stotler.
Tickets are $20, or S25 at the
door.
* * * A SUNSET C RUISE of
Ne wport Beach w i th a re a
Republican offi ceholders is set
for Au g. 9 from 7 to 9 p.m.
aboard the Pavilion Queen. in a
program s ponso r e d b y the
R e publican Assoc ia t es of
Orange County.
S c hed u led t o atte nd a r e
Congressmen Bob Badha m . Dan
Lungren and Bill Dannemeyer.
several state senators and as-
semblyme n. and ot her s . The
cost is SS for associates. S7.50 for
non·members Boarding time is
6·30 p.m.
* * * EXPECTING A l a r g e
t urnout. the Laguna Niguel
Republican Women's Club has
turned its September meeting
into a dinner with featured guest
Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. T he
d inner is set for Sept. 2 s tarting
at 6·30 p.m. at the Holiday lnn
in Laguna Hills . system from scr a t c h . .---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
One e xample is th e H bb a b Whl 's Hee Foods Fluo r Corp., whic h 0 1"", reen aufl! Ba rnes said has 1,200 J O a ft Oii
e mployees commuting Whol.saletothe,....c rM lt..1•/I rl~ -
in 183 van a nd car ClUS •••1 .. pools. James Reichert. EXOTIC PLAHTS· CA
d i s t r I c t g e n e r a I 1 '==7=!6=Dall==a.=C=oroftCl==del==M=•====='=4=4-=5=!=0=6~ ..&, ~ , A. •• manager . h as been a ~ ~ ,,.,. ..,.,
s trong propo ne nt o f
ridesharing. ,.,.,_.,.,.,~ II ... .1. /
He said inter ested cp~~~-'Lcoomg~. k-'.--D11·1·y P1·111' MN• nr persons can call for in· wKnu rr~r-.
forma tion at 636-7433 n chmvely m the Hmbor View Cellhr 644-7733
(RIDE>. 1621 s.. Mh)HI Dri••· Newport leach
WiTERMEllN ... t'I~
Field.-fteslll WlfJ ,,,~.-, $WEET CIU ... i~v ,,..
Soldenl • ~r-· LA~& • ~. • BAllANA~ ... ~ -PEACHES ... ~ -
~Gt.ta,·Rosa. Ill)~ Fit•, tipe • ~·· PLUMS... 1i11b. TOMAllES .. ~ -_
----=--------...;=---
'
~ . ---. .. . .
----.. cs 0 ••• 0 !U $I s c ta USC SEO #IU&C;;ac¥
r-~ ..... -.... ~--~--------------_,:O::.:,ra:n~g~e~O:o::•:,:•t:.,:D:A~IL Y PILOT/WednHday, July 22, 1981
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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,,
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ADVOCATll
In te-•
DAllY PILOT
·JJli[.! :::1ht~ :: .• ~11i1 ._~a =;~ ...,. ...... ..-..m...~....;..;;._.:_J~---------------...-...
,. _____ __
Furniture~
rentals rise
You, Mary. have just graduated from <.'oUt"le•
l~ken a new job *>O miles from home that pays yoll
enough to afford the unJurn1shed apartment your nf'w
employer's personnel department ha" found for you
You, Dave, also have left home after 14 years oP
enduring a miserable marnage, and you art about lQ
move to a new address that will I><' yourb until your
divorce pro ~ ceed ings h avt•
been com
pleled. ~ ~ :
And yo u . _
J 1 m , a caret.>r .4-..--•---------~~ ~ye o~~c=r~ SYlVIA PORTIA
g1,·e n a new as
s1gnment in a new <:ommunity with quarters in a ni ce.·
ne1gh!><>~hood to help you t'nJOY hfr wh1lc you traip
recruits.
Whal common nee d do )Ou all share. d1Here rif
though your back~rouncb and } our hfebtyles ma)'
be? A "home" to lurn to while you make your adjust
ments.
A home means furnnure but this you do not
want tu buy You cannot afford the investment, you
do not expect to remain 1n your new surroundings for
more than a temparary period .. and you shnnk from
thl• burden of carrying a load of belongings with you
or taking the certain loss associated with selling the
stuff used
MuJtiply Mary, David and Jim by 5 million other
Americans and you will grasp one emerging pattern
in today's mobile America a 12 percent to 15 per·
cent annual rise in the amount of .furniture being
re nted
In thl' 20-to 30 year old scgm1•nt of our soe1ety
alone. some 20 percent are pulling up stakes each
year and trvin~ lo duplicate the comfort of their
former living arrangement s "1thout l>u~ ing beds_
tal>les. ch<lirs. lamps and other furniture •
A full 500,000 of the mo,•ers in this <1ge group
have turned to rented furniture ai, a simple solution.
:-.ays the f"urmture Rental A!.soc1at1on of Amer1ea
! FHAA) And a large proportion of the movers a re
thl' young with new careers. thr divorced and the
m1htarv
Also prominent among these movers a re
V1ct1ms of fire or flood who are displaced for
bhort spans while adjustments. repairs and replace·
men ts art> going on.
liome·s hcdders \\ho eonstanll~ ('hangt' ad
dresses U<!c•ause of JOb a<lv;.inet's , incrca!>c•s 1n how.
Ing needs or allure of another climate.
Newlyweds. transfrrees, celebrities. sports
fi gures and pol1t1cians who move frl'quenll\' as \\ell
as retiree:. wilt> are trying somt' rw ..... e~penen<:c '
away from their old homes.
Technicians, scientists and consultants who
travel to wherevc·r the challt•nges ~re:.
Diplomats and traveling executl\es 1.1.ho
··warm · t emporary quarter!. \\1th com fortable-
rurnishings that they rent on their own
_The proce~s of selecting and renting furniture 1s
s 1mtlar to buymg up to the point or purchase After-
selcction <a process that can take as little as an hour
with trained rental spe('ialists to help ) ou sel ecr.
items that meet your needs and budgell, rentaJ
agreements are made in:.tead of credit or payment
terms . ·
As a renter, you can cx1>ect faster and more con ...
• venienl delivery than as ;.i buyer -with an entire
~roupmg arriving togtthc r within 48 hours
An added bonus is the option to purchase whal
you rent.
A listing or f''RAA member showmoms. acros~
the U.S . 1s a\'a1lable free Crom FRAA, 20 ~orth
Wacker Drive. Chicago. Ill 60606. Send a stamped.
self-addressed business s ize en\'t•lope with your re·
quest
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES ·
AMERICAN LEADERS
UPS AND DOWNS
.,.....,..... • trw•~ IQI "·••• ....... I ....... "'°'IS.-. ......
-· ..... lt1N'fet~t»1 ...... ..... •--•c'°""" ._ tl'9t., •.. 11-. •••
HEW YORKIAPI Fll\al Oow JOnf\ &VII' for T UUdllV Jul 21
STOCKS
10 1no 10 Trn 15 Ull •S Stk lndui Tr•n Ullls
•S Slk
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW Y0Rit; IAPI Ju• 11
"Cl••n<td OtClln•d Un<~•nQeO Tot•I luuK Ntw nlQlll ~•w tows
w"A 1 AMC~ oio
roo;&
10'6 •1 lkl • •S
NEW YORK •AP> Jul 11
rC>CSr"
~ 101 ns > "
r ... ,,.u METALS
C•I'-93-. .. Ct<\IS • J)OUnCI, U ~ .,.,jj""
''°"' LeMI 41 <•nh • pound
line ... ~ •elll\ • ...,..ncr, dellvtrea
Tia .7 OJ7t Meleli W ... CO<npOllle 111,
Alwmlnum 1...0 ctnt' a pouno N v "'•""'°' "4lO 00 por "'"" l"l•ll-SAIOOOtroyor N y
SILVER T_, .. ,,.
H af\4, ~ .. .,,...n, '8 •2 °"' ""Y CKlflC•
GOLD QUOTATIONS I '
"91.c,IM world oold pr~•• 100.y •
L•...., morn1no 11 ... 111g SAOt u. UP J
U ..... : •fl•n-flrl119 SAll.liO. ull
P.,111 ati.fllOOn flal1>11 M1• ,., Oii U
'r•,.ll'hlil11 .. 10 .SO, U1P llO $1
lt,,lcli: ltle ll•lllt MIO 00, "'
"UOOnbd
Malllll' & N•rm•,.
$A11,)0, UP U.SO.
............ ; onl't dtlly auete .. II
U IO
.,.........: only IM!I~ ~· I•~
Mll .... wu n
SYMBOLS
•
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/W1dn11d1y, July 22, 1981
··m ::w-c.-~·. hOIM-.... 1'oy, foll• • bOunty
llU...., Ind --to know
tlleJlll!I of low I 11C TAC DOUGH ••A•t•H
A~ G010M1 vi ..
... .. 4017th ®ring "' ou'*""91k of AP<ll Fooit' 0.Y=· • TIM£8
DISAPPEARING SPECIES The largest
members or the ape family are the sub-
ject or a National Geographic special,
''Gorilla," tonight a t 7 :~ on Channe l SO
and 8 on Channel 28.
Altlt J J. wlna the lotttlfY,
he It !**' with two gyn-
totlne membef• of 1 glrta'
lilt tu:CTIUC I~~.
MCNIWS
tee NEWS
MOW • * '.t "Of Human Bond·
'09" 11"41 Kim NoYu
~ Harvey 8-.d
Oii "'9 nowt by W. Somer·
Ml ~ham. A young
medlael ltudent wlttl e
"'~ deformity 11111 .,..,.y In loV. with e
pronillC\IOUt weltress. ® fHI GOOFY SPORTS
ST()fn'
Anl!Nl.cl Thi Walt °'~
clnllW ltltnt things he
didn't know at>out lhe
WOfto ol 19«11 lhrough hla
,,.... frt.nd, "The Splflt
Of Sponemanlhtp "
uo I JOKIR'S WILO ~ ... MAOAZINE
A deelg"4!1' who m1k11
high IUhlon paper dr-
es. 1 Mlf·proclalmed C'-1
~t It pul 10 the lesl
• &ENNYHIU
Benny lakes you back to
the daya or "How The
West Wu Won "
• KCET NEW8BEAT G 8TU0t08EE
"Sc:ubl. Too" A mysten·
ous thlpwreck off !he Cay·
men ltlends: e young car·
toonlat, lh•N Harlem
,_,, 111p4or1 New Vor1<
City lk)'llCf&Plfl (R)
())afNEWS QI BARNEY MILLEA
An oulreged citizen cre-
ates a dlsl\Jrbenoe When
he teems thet his deposn
81 a "199C1111Zed medical
benll hat been 8CC1denl 81 •
~ulMCI.
Cl) WE'LL BE RIGHT
BACK
A~ Schretblf and Cristi-
na fief1111 host this look at
IOIM of the most llfllor •
gettable cornm«clals -
midi
7:00 I c;u HIWI Nee'Mfwa •
HAPPY DAVI AQlillf
Ridlle and Pot111 hlw to
Mfln 1bc darll to earn lhtlr
Jackett when they try lo
t>eComl memblfs of thl
Demon Club.
I ABCNEWI
8UU.8EYE
AGAINST THE WINO
"Whan Kings Go Forth To
Battle" Dinny •nd Other
rll>lll pt99ar1 ror battle
• • lorce ol redcOet•
900<oec:llM. fPar18)
• STAEET8 Of' SAN
~
A tingle "S.turdey N!Qhl
Speclll" tregiealty allecta
thl .._or se\lereJ onrelat
ec:t people In e 2'-hOU<
• perlOd
fll OVEREASV
Guests Vincent Price.
Jane Bryant Ou1nn (RIO G MACNEIL I L.EHRER
REPORT
{[) TIC TAC DOUGH 9 MERV GRIFFIN
Guestt. OeV!d Brenner,
Dan Henman. Chflltc>phlr
Atkin&, Or Allred Zl/'l'lm
CB)MOVI£
'Bon Voyage. eti.rll•
Brown' ( 1979) Animated
Snoopy and Woodstock
follow e JCCfllnQI lluct.rlta
Chlt111 Brown PIC)l*IT'lnl
Petty, llnul and Marcie on
1n ld....,,lu<e-lllled tour ol
EngllnO 1nO FrlnGI 'O'
(1»MOVll
"Wlllle & PtlH" ( 19801
Michie! Ontkllrl. Margot
Kidder Three people
begin 1 111ang<.1l1r rom1nce
In Greenwich VIiiega lhet
continues throughout lhl
mercu111l soclal milieu ol
thl '709 R"
(%)MOVIE * • • . .., "Hob1on 1
COO.C.' ( 19541 John Mills.
Chlrlll Laughton A l>OOI·
meker 111ernp11 to ret11r1
!lit~ source ol l1t>ot
by ptWll'lllng his 11\rll
dlUQhlera from marrymg.
7:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Hoste S1e"' EdWarda.
Melody Rogers ViSit an
L A movie U..ter wnere
au thl •moloy-•••
lllndic;apped: en lnlenrllw
wllh producar·turned·
IC1or Howard Paputti.
Q aJ FAMILY F£UO
• SHANANA
Ou.t AOrilnnl 81ft>eau
• HOlLYWOOO
800.AAES Cl FACE THE MUSIC fll MACNEIL/ LEHRER
REPORT
~ NATIOHAL
GEOGRAPHIC SPECIAL
"Gorilla E G MlfShall
hosts a took at tn. effort•
ot zoo directors. ded1c11ec:t
1ndMdu1ls and tclenllSIS
wtio are wor111ng to assure
that thl 111ges1 of Chi
great apes does noc fell
vlcilm to exhncllon (R)
(I) P.M. MAGAZINE
A desi9nlf wno mlll" 1
high tUlllon ~ d,....
11. a sell-procl1un1d cnesa
11!'11UI II put tO lhl lest ·~ • Cl) TH~ WHITE 8HAOOW
Coch ~ le offered
S 1 000 10 appeer In a COfn•
merc111 end hll 111m get•
• ~ to cut e rllCOfd
fRI D at REAL PEOPLE FutvraCI. a cat doctor, aun
tennlng cor11p11111on. '
whistling COl'llaet, .., lndi·
anwho~lty~1
the (IO\lernmenf over tribal
land. (R)
• MOW! * * ''\ "'The 8r1Yad08" I •958) GrlQOfY Peck. Jol.r\
Colltns A man rllllzes tf\11
hi 1\18 WUllCI rnudl of hit
Hie -chlng for the men
wtlo raped and kitted his
wile
D ®J MOVIE
• • 'h "Oynaaty" ( 19811
John Forsythe. Lindi
Evans The patriarch or 1
wealthy Oen,,... ou remtty
onleesties strong reefing•
or ange< 1nd reaentment
from his offspring when n.
m1rrle1 hll MCrlllry (Rl
CHANNEL LISTING S
I) KNX T CB St l ., A nq1• ,.
0 II.NBC f\18( LO' An It''" 0 K.llA ilnd 1 L p., A <1t.j1•lt!' D MBC TV 1ABC1 LO'-A'1QPlt•
1: ... FMB . CBS1 S.i" D "9"
Ci) K.HJ TV 1 ln1J 1 l u<, An Wit''
@ KCST 1ABC1 '-i.1n 01t•u11
G) II. T TV iln11 1 l ''> Aru11 "
Cl) KCOP TV 1 In l L ,.. A'"'' '"
fE) l\C E T T\ I PB$1 l , .. ''" ,. ...
Cl> KOCE TV 1 PBSl Hvnl n Jlon Bt' 1rh
a Mov1E * * • "Oeughler 01 Thi
Minct' ( INf) Ray Mln.nd.
G-TlltMy FoflOWlng
the death of hll young
daughter, 1 top govern·
men1 .ctentitl becomee
1l11rT*:t when her aplrlt
begin• appearing before
him.
• AGAINST THE WINO
"The Farmer's Friend'
Gr111111e, now a POWerfUI
lendowner tnes to toroe
Mil)' and Jon1th1n lrom
trwt•t r•nd (Part 9)
ti) MOVIE * * * ·~ "Spllnd0< In Thi
Grass ( t9611 Nat1ll1
Wood, W1rren Bully Two
young people make the
pa1nro1 1nd belulllul dis·
cov.ry ol love In 1 11mall
K•nSISIOwn e NATIONAL
GEOGRAPHIC Sf»tCIAL
··Gorilla · E G M1rsn111
hOsll • look al the effor1•
ol zoo directors. dec:tleated
1nd1vklu111 end tc:lenllsta
wtlO ate working to essure
lhlt thl largest ol thl
gre11 8Pll dolt not lalt
vtc11m to utinctlon (R)
CC)MOVMt
"Our Time" (1973) Parne11
Sue Mlffln. Parker Ste·
venson Trwt 11\1• ol two
young couples enrofled 11
or•vete schoots are
Chlnged Wh4KI Of18 ol lhe
gifts dllC0\19t'S She II preg-
nanl PG
(S)MOVIE
"Thi Shining" ( 19801 Jack
Nlcholson. Shelley Duvall
01rected by Stanley
Kubrick A lormer
sc:h<>olreacher hlted ., a
winter c1re11ker lor a
remote. and app11enlly
haunted Cof0<ado hOtel. 11
enowt>OUnd llliffl with hit
wile end C11irvoy1nt young son_ 'R'
0 MOVIE
"Thi OodfJt1'4r. Plrl 11"
( 1974) Al Pectno. Rol>lf1
Duvall llAiCl\ael CO<teone
8'5Ulllllll ,..., .. ,. llll'lt!f'•
thror'lt lllMI ~ .. hi
blCOfM8 !tie MW hMd of
the Mell•. finding prob-
...... with river lectlona Md
the I-throughOUI 1111
r11gn R'
8.10 6B FREEDOM'S
DEFENSE: AMERICA'S
CUP1NO
The col<><. drama and
beauty of 12.fnlllf yachts
comoe•tng tor the moat
pnatigJous trot)hy In y9Cllt
rec;ng off lhl Newporl,
Rhode tlland COll1 II alCI·
tured In this doeumenllry
n1rr1ted by Robert
MllCHlll (R)
(8) RACE FOA TliE
PENNANT
Barry Tompkins end Tim
Mc;Carver recap 01V1Slon11
baseball standings and
1n1erv1ew some ot the
games 100 oteyers (II the
players strike cont1nue1.
en update on the slluallon
will 1teo t>e 1nctuded I
9:00 I) Cl) MOVIE • * "A New l 1le' (19791
Angla Olcillnson. Gordon
P1nsent A woman 1trug.
gtes to rel>Vlld hit hie alter
rier husband. 1aav1ng no
e•plan&tron. commits su1.
Clde (R)
Q 3 OIFF'RENT
STROKES
Wiiiis hu problem• recon·
citing hit origin• u a poor
black youth wtlh "" cur-
rent Ille of luxury I R) Q
G) TOPSTORV
Hosts Jim Thom8'. Mary
~toll St LOS ANGELES
PHILHARMONIC AT THE
HOlL YWOOO BOWL
~ ....,.. !Nit!• hie
1 .. 1 tllev!MCJ IHMflllOI
.. oonduotOt °' the l.oe Ang1111 ll'llltharmonlc
Orcti.atr• \llrluoeo l/lollr>•
Ill lllhak lltr«llTIMI " fN
1Uf9d .. '°'°" ®MOVl9
"Wll1ml1tr1u" ( 1971)
t..eure Ant~I. M1rcel10
Mutrolannl 'Thi newt \Ml
"" hutl>tnd hu died °" a l>u9ineM \rip lorote • rich
wl~ merc;hlftt'e wife out
Of '* eldlbld to take~
\Ill running ol the fll'llliy
bullneM 'A'
Cll)MOVll
"My 8rllll1nt Ctrffr "
( 1980) Judy De~. lam
NllU. In turn-of·t*°9ntu-
ry Auatrlll• 1n lndlplnd.
ent ~ng woman trlee to
makl • *-.. a writ«
d11plte toelal preuur11
fOf hit to marry
(.Z)MOVll!
'"Thi Gr•t Santlnl'" ( 1978)
Robert Ouv111. 8ly1n1
Denner A rough·and•
f'Mdy Marine Cor1>9 omc.t
•~• domeetlc b•ttlet
""*1 hi trlel to lmpoM hit
mlUlllY 1<11111 on hi• 181'nl·
~·PG'
t:3CI D 8 THE FACTS Of
Lift
.,..., l>ICOITlll ln\lofved In
an 1n11n" competition
With another student Uiat
lead• to Hrtoua cont1-
~ (R) Q
• MERV OAfflH
Oues11 David Brenner,
Dan H1rtm1n. Clvlatophlr
Allllna. Or. Allr.ct z.mm,
Ur>da Pur1, Pudgy, ID MAAKRUMEll
Polltlcal utll'flt Miik Rue.
Mii takll Vlewlfl on Ill
amusing alglltaellng tow
ot tlttt.ltnown .ctlflole,
monument• Ind oddltlll In 1
the nation'• capltll.
CC)MOVll
"T 11g111" ( 1"8) Borla
K1r10ll, Tim O'Keny, An
aging hor•or·mo\111 star
tries 10 reuon wttll 1 mur •
derous sniper at 1 d,.,..._.,,
mo"le theater.
10:00 a a QUINCY
A mec:llCll h .atnln« trlin·
M IOCU9M one ol Oulncy't
moo r1101Ctld collelQYM
of COYetlng up 1 mul'dlr
(R)
I D• NEWS I · FAEEOOM'I I OUEHSE; AMERICA'S
CUP 1NCI
The color. dr1ma ind
t>eauty ol 12-rnet1< yacnta
competing tor the moat
Pf"llglOua tropny In '(9Chl
racing OH lhl Newport.
Rhode lat1nd COll1 la c-o-
lured In lhls documentlt)'
n1rret1d by Rober t
MecNell (R) G F\.AMBAROI
The Cold l..lght 01 Day
W1J11am landa hl8 llrtl )Ob
IS an eJrptane mectlank:
and Chr1111n1 goes to work
11 a wlltr-. 1Par1 5) (RI
10:30 ., IN0£P£HOEH'T
NETWORK HEWS
MOVIE
'.k*• My Follla NIWf
Told Me" P\Jyboy ~
~,._...Pll•ect
out blWdy IC*• end alcll•
'R
10;'5 CO) MOVIE
"Honey1uckl1 i.oH "
11980) Willie Nelton, Dyan
CMinon Whtie on 1our. 1
Ten• country-weatern
tlngef blO-ln\IO!lled
with thl Mdue11W dlUQtl·
llr of his sldelc lctt 1\1111
thOugh he tllll IO\llS hll
1t1y.aH1ome Wile 'PG'
11:00BQ8{[)0Qt
NEWS
• 8TAATAEK
Sent to negotiate 1 tr11ty,
cac>t K•r'k ta lmpr1toned
When hi lnterve"" In 1n
IJCICUtlon
I Ne#\.YWED ~
MANNIX
"Death ta Thi 6th Giii'"
Mannlk suffara Mrkxi•
tiead lnrurlls alter crash-
ing hit <IClng car 1n10 1
brick wall. which reeotta In
hll nol rememl*'tng tt
threat• on hll 1111 -• rN I or Imagined.
ti) BENNY HILL
Watch tor Benny's look 1t
HottywOOd and lhl "Gr-
ny or thl Veer Jumping
ContMI " fm THEUABAH
LEAGUE'S NATIONAL
CONVEHTION
Deloras Handy •nchor•
coverage of th• day'a
ectMt'" rrom Withing·
ton. DC
Ii) WORLD C..RONICl.E
Jan M1renaon. ASllslent
Secr111ry·G-1I, U.N •
1nd Brian Sexton of Ille
BBC dltcuS8 thl afmt ·-(t)MOVIE
"The Flrtt Nudle Musical"
f 1975) Cindy Wllllamt.
Bruce Kimmel A down·
tUBE TOPPERS
KOCE 8 7:30 and KCET 0 8:00
"Gorilla." E .G. Mars hall hosts a look a t
the largest or the apes.
KCOP G) 8:00 -"Splendor ln the
Grass." Natalie Wood and Warren Beat·
ty star in a love story set in the Midwest.
KCET 9 9 :00 -"Los Angeles
Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl."
Zubin Mehta conducts and Hzhak
Perlman plays violin in a televised ap-
pearance.
KOCE 9 9:30 -"Mark Russell.''
The political satirist pokes fun at
sightseeing in the nation's capital.
1nd-out Broedwey pro-
~ plana to eperk Inter·
"' In his 11111t proi-ct by
a11g1ng It eomotetlly In thl
nude 'R'
®~
"Allln" (1179) Tom Sker-
rltt, Vaphll Kono. The
crew of • IP•c.Qofng
acrap carrier follow 1 mye.
terloos algnal to 1 euppoe..
.clty dead pt-I Ind. 11ter
landing, di.cowr thll lhl
-. W81 8 Wlt'ning tO
lley 1w1y. 'R'
.MOVIE
"Malloglny" (1975) Diana
Roa, AnlhOny Petkln1 A
yoong blaotc women rl-
lrom the depth• of 1hl
ghetto co lnternallonal
lllTll II 8 funlon dlllgnet
and modal. 'PG'
(%)MICK QAMll TALKS
WITHSTIWH
ltttEUIEl'O
11: 11 (%)MOVIE
"CIOll Enc<K1nter1 01 Thi
Third Kind Sc>«lal Edi·
lion" 119801 Rlctlard Orey·
lust, Ffln<:oit Trullaot
Alter aighllng 1 UFO. a
~ company lfTl9loyll
l>loomll obMIMd With
finding lhl llllna' tending
lit• 'PO'
11 :30 9 (I) MOVIE * * "The Gru1111 Thing
Th81 Almoll H9P91ned"
C 11771 Jimmie Walker.
J-Earl JonM. A high
M:hOOI bHllllbell atar
refu-10 let en "'nett
tllnd be'-him and In
lrnportlll\I g1m1. CRI D 8TOHIOHT
Moat· Johnny Caraon
G1111t1 David Brenner.
Btookl Shllld1. e O A8CNEWI
NIGHTUNE
I LET'S MAKf A DEAL
STANLEY SIEGEL CO CAPTIONED UC
NEWS
12:00 9 MOVIE * * •'A "The Ptalnaman"
(19391 Gary Cooper.
Cftarlla 9IClllO<d A trio of
lamou• W11tern charec·
1er1 try to atop 1 white
man from MllrlO guns to
lndlarlt e O LOVE BOAT
"Invisible Maniac" Bern•·
111111 Sltrlll. Clifton~:
'Septembef Son" O.\lld
HUHlhOll, ShllllY
F1b1r11: "P11k1boo"
Gordon Jump. Peggy
C-.(RI 9 OUH8MOl<E
A daring jllll>teak l'IUf'lltel
1 lamll)I of VICiouB ou111wt
wtlO wound • pur911tng
m1rlhal end klH hla *"·
l=:nA
Tony la etumped by an
ut\COOPll' lllW murder wit·
11118
(l)MCME
"More Amertcan Graffiti"
11979) Ron Howlrd. Peul
l.1 Mii Alter grldiJlllon. I
group or high achool
lrl1nd1 111per11noe the
chlllengll of ldullhoOd In
the IOClll uphllval of the
1960s •PQ'
12:*> a a rOMOMow
GUll11 Thi Knaotc
• HOGAN'S HEROES
Hogan muat aqulth the
lallSI Germen plan to
dlttroy lhl Brltllll l lr
force
12:46 (I:> MOVIE
"1900" I 19771 Roberl
a.Niro. Gerard Dlp11dieu
a.....nty years of nallen
aocl1I and porttlc11
Chlnglt ara -through
the 1ye1 or two unllkaly
l>ltt lrlel>da 'R'
1:00 D P8YC..IC
PHEHOMENA
'Ullng Peraon11 Crltff At
Learning Toots" Hoat.
01mten Slmpaon Guest
CarOI Ann 0tylf
• MOVIE
•• ''Only The V1llent I 1951) Gregory Peck, B11·
b111 Paylon A Clvllry unit
reg1ln1 respect 10< thetr
leader whln hi Sl\111 them
from an Indian 1ttack
• INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NEWS
(H) REMEMBER WHEN;
WHEEL.8, WINGS ANO
WHl8TLE8
Dick Caveu traces the his-
tory or American 1r111epor-
t8110n from lhe cov.red
wagon ol the Old West to
th• newly davetoped spi ce
lllullle.
1:t08 MOVIE
• • • • "An American In
Paris" I t95 ti Gene Kiity,
leslle Caron Mostcat
acore by George and Ire
Glrthwin An American
••·GI 11nd1 romance and
aucceaa In Paris
@NEWS
1:200MOV1E
"The Godtllher, Part II"
(1974) Al PIClno. Roblft
Duvall Mtcheef Cor1eone
UM.tmet hll 181e lather's
throne end PO-at hi
blComes lhe new hMd of
thl M•ll1, r1nc:11ng prob-
lems with rtvll faction• and
the law throughout h1a
taign 'R'
1:aoe MOVIE
••'A "Johnny Coot"
( 19631 Henry Sliva, Ellll-
Dllh Montgomery An llal-
lan boy rllMd by a Stc1Han
~'"'' la aent to N-York 10 wrelk vengeance
Oii VII enemllt of an
American expatrle11
(%)MOVIE
"The ldOlmeklf" ( t980)
Ray Sharkey, Tovah
Flldll'luh A manipulalf\11
men1ger u1es vulous
ploys to cetapull two ,_,.
1191'• into pop "ng1ng
llardom 'PG :~=1 = 2:00 a!NEWS
MOAECAM8E & WISE
Eric and Ernie clown to the
"Ch1111noog1 Choo
Choo", en 1111r1vaganu
Plfformence of "There•
Nothing Uk• A Dime ..
WE'LL BE RIGHT
BAO<
Avery Schralber and Crtsll·
ne Ferrare hOSt lhll look el
some of the most unlor-
g111a1>11 comlTlefcllla .....,
midi.
JOHN DARLING
"THIS COl.UM N G-~Y
OEE& DID ON ME
BEAU.Y 9~ ME!
t:11 , IOfTONAL
t:JO MOVll
**"'"Mr f'MbOdY At'td
lhl ~" (1 .... ) Wllo
Ham P~I. AM 81y1h.
While fl•hlng, 1 man from
8otton c.tcttll 1 met·
mild, tlk• her notnt Ind
lallt In ~ with hit
2:25 . MOMCAMBE & WISE
EtlO IOIVM the murder In
Ernie's play "Myatery In
M1yf1lr": Erle and Ernie mo.... to • ~llcent
Mll11 l>UI !Ind lhll bigger
II not llwaya bitter 2:501 NEWS 2:16 MOVl!
• • "Crouwlndt " (1951)
JOlln Payne, Rhonda Fi.tn·
Ing A 1hlp'1 c1pt1ln
encountlfa peril wnen hi
1111mpta to ·-hta 11olen tl\lp llld ht• lover
3l00. MOVIE * * "Cour1g1oua Or
Chrllllan" f t040) JH n
Heral\Olt, lom Neel. A
dedtcatld doctor'• work
wH h the poor ts compllcat •
ad when an 101d1m1c
llllkll.
I NEW8
3:15 NEWS
3:30 MOVIE • • * "11'1 Alw1ys F11r
WHther" ( t966) Gene Kii·
ty, Dan 01lley A local TV
aterlet d~ldff to brOl d·
c111 e reunion or three
World War II Army bud-
dlel
(%)MOVIE • * • . .., 'Hob1on·a
Choice" ( 1964) Jol\n Miiia.
Charla LIUQhton A bOol·
maker 1111mp11 10 111e1n
hi• cheap source ol labor
by preventing his three
daughters from m1try1ng
4:15 . MOVIE
• • "Double Jeopardy"
I t9551 Rod C1meton, Jeck
Kiiiy A -llhy real esllte
man •llemota 10 vindicate
h1maeH from charge• of
having murdered an eat<><·
llon18t
4:45 8 VOYAGE TO TME
BOTTOM OF THE SEA
"Ghost 01 Moby Oict.,"
T hur•day'•
Daya h11t-.ffot·ir •
-MORNltG -
5:00 CC) 'The First Nudle MUii·
c111" ( 1975) ClndV Wiiiiams.
BtUCI Kimmel A dOwn.
and·OUI Broadway oro·
ducer plena 10 spark Inter·
nt 1n hlS 181HI pro11Ct by
s11g1ng 11 completely 1n the
nude "R'
6:30 (SJ •• * ..... RIO Bravo .
119591 Jol'ln Wayne Dien
Mar11n An Oki CflPP'I I
lormer deputy-lurned·
drunk, a young qu1ckdraw
gunS11nger and a girt help 1
ah«llf IO OU1tmlfl a OOW-
erlul ranchlf whO w1n11 to
get hlS killer brother
rlillsed from prison CZl "The Gr11t Santini
119791 Robert Ouv1tl,
81ylhe Danner A rough·
and·ready M111ne Corps
offlCef 1-S d~tic bet·
llet when he tries to
tmPOM hit mlllt11ry 1deeJs
on tt11 tem11y PG
T:OO CC) • * • "'Hlld1· (19651
Eva-Maria SlnQhammer.
Gertrand M1l1ermayr A Ill·
Ila Sw1u oirt 11 taken from
Iliff mountain home 1n the
Alps by her aunt to the
Cl~
1:00 {SJ * • * • Fatlliff 01
Tn. 8nde' ( 19601 Spencer
Tracy. Ellubet'1 Taylor A
lather eaperlenoe• 811 ol
thl l<IYI and t'oeldachfi
1nvof\lld with the prepara-
11on1 for his daughter's
upcoming wedding
8:30 lC) 'Agalhe I 1979) Ou111n
Hollmen Venessa
~·~, In londOfl In 1121, en American ,,._..
P8C* rapor11f mette end
l>ICOITlll ~ with
fem.cl m)ltltfY wrltar Ag•·
thl CM•llt. wt10 hu left
hlf unflllhlul huSbat\d
'PO'
tO:OO (I) "Honeyeuckle Rc>M"
( t880) WUlll ~. Oyen
Cannon While on tour, •
l 1111 country·wHtern
11ng8' bec:omee ln\IOll/ld
With lhe Mduc:llvl OIUgh-
llf Of "" lldlilldl -lhougt\ hi llHI I0\111 hll
SllY·lt·home wlla 'PO'
1(){'° Ct) "Up Rl111t"A voung
Pl<>nllf blcomll '""°'* In 1 11ra-and·dlllh atruggll
W1lh a gold·hUngry land
baron
11 :00 • * '.>t "LOOM In Lon.
don · (19631 Bowery Boyt,
Ethel Gtlff11 lhl Boye Nn
op eg11nat • bundl ol
tc111m1ng 11la11..... when
one ot them 11 named heir
to an Engllatl E1rr
1 t·30 I> * • "The Rl\le<'s
Edge ( 19571 Ray Miiiand.
Anthony Outnn A con me.n
Involves an innocent
rancher 1n a mllllon.Oollar
robt>ery
12:00 G) • • • Anatomy Of A
Murder (Plf1 21 ( 19591
James Stewart, Ben Qe.z.
zar1 A smell·lown all<><·
ney Clefenda In Army lieu·
1en1n1 who 11 eccuMd or
killing a man auspectld or
111eck1ng his wile
g) *** X-15 119611
Oav10 MecL11n. Charles
Bronson Events surround·
1ng Ille resHrch end tlll·
Ing of Ille )C.15 191 lf8 OOf·
lrlyld
\Cl ***"" "Brigadoon"
P9~1 Gane Kelty Cyd
Char11se Two friends
stumble upon Bngadoon, e
village 1n the Scot11th hlQh·
lands. whteh cornea to Ille
IO< I aingle Oly """'! 100
years
2:00 fCJ "fuck Ell9f1Hllng"
Fred Keller JoHph
11Aac:Gu1re A young girl
m1111 an immortal temlly
known es the Tucks
D ~e In Timi'
( 19801 Christopl\er ~.
Jane Seymour ObMHed
with the po11ra11 of a 19111-
century ac1r111. • mod.-n·
oay N-York P'•l'W•IQhl
u"' hypnosis to 1r1vet
baek in 11me and meet h4f
'PO
3:00 (B * • 't't Frogs· ( t9721
Ray Miiiand. Sam Eltloll
While on a btrthd1y ouhng,
• m1n t>enC on deslroy>ng
b1you wildlife Qets a prn-
enl he hadn't counted on
when swampy creetures
nse up to murdlf him and
his lam1ty
3:30 Ci> * 't't "The Leg4Kld 01
Culler i 1968) W1yn1
Maunder Stirn Ptekan1
The military career or Ille
colorful Amertcan colon94
leads to his ramous l ast
St end
S 'Cendle1hoe (19771
Jodie Foste•. Oa~1d Niven
A tomboy from the 11reet5
ot Los Angllls 1nhlf1t1 1
lllllfed Br111ah 1s1a11 G
4:00 fCl • • * "Hetdi" ( t96!>J
Eve-Mena S1ngh1mmer
Get1t1nd Minermeyt A Ill·
tie Swiss girl 11 taken from
her mountain home 1n the
Alo• by her aunt 10 the
city • 0 "Return From Witch
Mounl8ln' l t9771 Belle
01v11 Christopher l ee A
~-mac! ertstocret and
hts greedy lemale c.ohOtt
anempt 10 expto11 the
su1>1<natur1I 1bU1tllt ot
two children from outer
spece for lhelr own evtl
purposes 'G
6:30 * * * ; Rio Bravo
f 1969) John Wayne Deen
Martin An old cripple. a
former oeouty·lurned·
drunk a young qulcildrlW
ounsJ1nger end a girl help e
sherlt1 to ou11mer1 • pow-
arrur rancher whO wanta to
gel his killer brother
retea'led from prison
by Armstrong & Batiuk
1'0 SAY 'SHOVEL.' WOULD eE CLOSER
IO THE fll\ARK !
Erank Blair delivers bad • NBC comedy pilot
8y FRED ROTHENBERG APT.._,,lt._w.-.
NEW YORK -For 23 years, Frank Blair
broke the news t.o us gently on the "Today" show
Jn alJ that time. he says he never cracked a smile
for fear o( being accused of slanting the news . Now
he'$ in the comedy business.
Blair, Who retired from NBC's morning pro·
gram in 1975. is cast as l~ny weatherman Dave
Johnstone on the comedy pilot "Live Eye" about a 1'V news team In Atlanta .
M Blair and the producers shop the pilot
1round the televl!1lon networks. it won't be con·
fuafd with "The Mary Tyler Moore Show "
On the surface, Blair would appear to be an
unttkely choice for laughs. His news delivery is re·
.. tmbered as utterly s tral&ht-forward, a morning
iitttcre ol toast, without Jam, and certainly no ~e for that first cup of coffee. (f·-•u comedic.! talent, ll wun't dlscemtble
pilot, wMth had the loot of a home fftOVle.
w etr_,e' cemera an•les Mtlnt off beada and
1peaktrt lncUacrlm1nately .. Bia Ir wasn't f\lnnr,, but
be wun't ~ttn much to work with. Jn one blt, he
rorttut.I the weather by opening the wlndow. And
ta another bb.arre aa1. be monitor• the neslln1 hailt. al aqwrrels lo the belier that lhe btt1ht of tWfr wllMr bome• wUJ provide clues to the Im·
Dlidlal inoWf all. ~ T"'ln AUuta"
Blalr..., the dllracttt 11 lovablt and eccen·
"If be'• 4t..-fiopld ~rly," But In th• pllot,
•U 11N1ced-out arid ldtouc.
news m
"I don't think we did a good job on the tape.
We worked a little too fast," said Blair. He pre·
diets major changes, and offers the pilot merely
for the networks to get a line on the concept and
the character development. '
For his part, Blair, 66. thinks he can play high
com edy, although bis previou.11 work In com-
mercials and movies never moved him out of
character.
"I have a sense of humor," Blair says, men·
t loning Archie Bunker as a character who tickles
hlm. "This is not incompatible. I'm not In news
anymore, so I'm not concerned about that ktnd of
credibility. If I can make the character believable,
what's wrong with having a little fun in my declln·
ing years? I'm entitled to it."
Of course he is. But Blak himself raises ques·
lions about the need for public figures to protect
the image they've spent a lifetime nurturing.
"ln 25 years at NBC. 23 on the "Today" show.
I built up a reputation and an image. It's my most
valuable asset. and since I've left the show I've
been extremely careful not to tamper with it. I've
been very careful. very selective in the com·
mercial area."
Blair has pluaged Bayer aspirin. but balked at
the chance to sell a laxative.
"I didn't think it would be right for my lmage.
My wife would divorce me," he said.
Blair admits he has qualms about the role of
the zany weatherman. He remembers Edward R.
Murrow tarnishing his reputation as journali sm's
white knight by doing some smarty Hollywood in
lc rviews on "Person to Person:·
"As long as the part isn't degrading and I can
show another side of my personality. that's OK ,"
Blair sajd. "In the last six years I've tried very
hard not to tamper too much with the public's
memories. staying away from what I thinJc is dis·
tasteful, rude or vulgar."
Based on the pilot of "Live Eye." Blair's
reputation deserves a better vehicle.
1031
FM
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Also ro11: Slurmo111 l'ra11. Quarter
Mollo!, Udlf ... Sii. Kl"8 Loo Dlol, ArtllW, 0,11amk O.lln, Lii Girl $tll<o.
TNlltO llAC•. ISi yord a. 2·YH••lcta. PvrMU,GIO.
Aye Oora tW-) 17.00 .... s ..
RelM IEICll'9U IOalomMI t.00 MO
1100 J.,, tPlt-1 s.ao
At .. re11: Sco..ta ..... Bleck s.q.,111,
Gr•lld Tlgr9u, Rlcll '-tHS, Lowly SI•
ter, Sit,,., Oroy f'Oll.
,OU.TN •AC•. 150 yorcts. J..vaor_..,...
Clotml111 _. P,IOO
Sp1aai. A Rocutea.dr 20.10 11.10 ._.
Jan o L«ll <C...aver> •.eo uo ""' ci_., CB .. 1111111 ruo. Also ,.,,: Olarry sr-t, l'lnet Ar~.
VIMI Clle ...... Slnc*a llm 8y, Plet1 Of Alteck,
NHI To 8o Rlcll, s..ctdall T"°"911t.
"uoeu ().101 paid5110 ... ""™ ••Cl!. uo yards. 1-yoor•lctL Pvrw54,000.
l'lcllot Ht tMtlclWlll •.20 l .40 uo
9ottya Ht IPllka11lolll I 40 J.20
Tllroa Wllct O....Cot (Troo•u,..I l.20
Atao ,.,,, Jal Roell Eo1y, C"-m.,..,..
Ho111, R~ Sue, Rulcloto Stock.
l l XTN •ACI. lSO roco J.year-o1ds Ctalml119 tor tNUot.. PwM U,600.
R .. llosa •CISio ICerctoull •·· l.20 J .0 A·My H_,, And $pico lf'r,.s.yl 9.IO J.20
Im Not~ IT,_.) '-00
AIM r .. : A-Mollvo1-, KIPI J auy Miii,
Time N °"'"'"·Fly Liiio, Arr-. MIH •ue Cl\ereer, Trlcloll Ucty, Bidders. u .. oc .. (4-1) paid ......
SllYllNTH llACI!. 150 yorcb, J.yoor-olcts
allCI ..... c i.1m1n9 purw ... ooo.
Gol HI' Sllere ICerctoul S.20 l.00 2.20
RaquastABlcl(PMlllMI .... uo
S-.er Kitor<I-(Fryday) 2.•
AIM> ret1; T--.... MoYlll KlllCIO MM!,
Klulll•• Pop, Boan. Cracker Joell h •, Oii
011010.
U Ue<la (I-JI paid .... 00.
l1014T14 llACI. lJO 'ords. J..yoar-s
OllCI 11p. f'llrw $9,fOO.
MIH TN A-orct (Mll<llatll ... 60 24.ID ll.IO
F•slldlooa Fiiiy (Hartl ).40 >-00
J e1away Sesay I P-..1111a1 J.60
Also rOll. Liil .. Fair .... Ima Wiid Wind,
Merry w_,, Fair Trip, KlllCIO S4H\11y.
12 uocla (Ml patct U JS.60.
U f'ICK SIX 17·).~7) paid '7.J10.4D
•1111 '-•inlllnt llcllats lfowr --•· U Piek SI• Collwletton paid MOAO wllll IU
•IM lfll tickets ,...., --l
lllMTH llACI, lJO ,aros. J..yoar-olcl,.
Purto U 1,l00.
EHY A~" IAOolrl 22 . .eo t.oo •.IO
Dari! LOVlllWU (Mylesl f.00 S.00
MltlllY Ofl tCar-..1 6.IO
Atao ra11. t+aU TN A-. G\1$1-. HllMft Rell. lnbs Otlklht. Lillie c ... , Doca, Kid
Al Hearl, ..-.eoc11 Brow11 n ea«ia 1 ... 1 paid 114120_
Allalldanu -6,MI.
Hollywood Perk lt•ndtng•
lf'IMO
M<Co rnin
0.1--...e Howley
Plllcay
Mc Har ..
SMem-
LIPfl•m
Vale111.,.lo
Coat.e-
Wllll-
TOIO
Frollk'1
Vlen110
Fat111l119 Mllcllall
Wlllltt,,._. B.,,..,.
R .......
Doyle
TrVl'llon
Llllly
JOllOI
u trol•
JOOt•YI -1 ..... ...
T•AINll•I
40S .... ,.
U) ., • .,
271 JI ••
Jll .... ,. w 41 Jl u
ls.141162S >71 11 u n
J71 M ....
,Mt 2t 42 M
•itlOJIJ
, .. it 12 ' ... , .. _.,.
1•1 27 ,. " '° u ti 12 121 n 12 12 12 21 u •
7' 17 IJ 7
117 1S " u 62 IS • t
7JUIOJ
"u 1•10
M 12 U ' J1 12 • •
•4l2 J I
0..., M• ft1hln9
ltlWf'OltT (,.,,.t ....... ) -4' Oft91en.
'1ballllo,1' bell, JM m«llOAI, »roe II llafl,
I yallowlOlt, I Cobenlll. (0..,..,,1 LedlW) -
112 OllOion: 1'3 bOllllo, ' MM bell. IU collco bess, 2 petl-.lt, 11 rocll flt.II, 1
1101111u1, • m«llorot.
OAMA -A•I' -211 etltlora: tU Mlt.11
llolltte. I llOI~. Jt rocll ""'· wt mockO<'al .
OC•ANllOll -9' .,,.iora: U '*'lie. IH
cOflco -. 7' Miid best. J llollllllt, 10 rock ""'·, •lllecor•. D I ,,_ .. .,. .. SAM Plll90 t"a M LANI .. , l'llllH·
........ P9tt1t LeMol -11J 0119ler1: .,, etl>Ocoro-tllflo, 22 1911-lall, 76 NH, 12
lll110t111 1-. 16 w rocllde, '1J -•to. ft mec11oro1, a. roclt lllll.
LON• ••ACM , .. I-•• f'lor) -70
•1191ert: tll llWroelOdo. U llolltto. 11 Ulko o.u . JOO rnad1or01, 20 rock 11111. 1 rel-.o!t , ....... Wllatfl -, • .,,......, 11'1 ...
recucta, 40 llONto, ~ colko Mia. 2 NII-. ., roo llafl, 11 w1111e ""'· u 111 .. parc11.
t•AL •EACH -l•I Mll .. rt: "'5 ..,.
recucta, n bonito, "° mecllarot, U collco
INH, I unct lles1, HO rocll 1111\. ••DONoo -20a .,,...,.., IM llenlto, m
coll<o beu, t 111...,111 tune, 2 yo1iowt.11, tu
mecllaral, • llOl!Out, nJ rocll 11111 . ..,... -
U3 ...... ,., l.'30 l'lllC ...... al. IJS IMftlto, 210
rocll 1111\.
IAll NOllO IU. M. ....... ) -,.
•1191•": 210 betrec.,..., 112 cellco M&a. 2 IWlllO..I, .. llONto, HO r«ll 11111. 1"""9 O'
C•lll -110 onoion: 2 atllK-. 6U Mr•
rocllf•, It colk • Mtl, tD llclnlto, ft rec11
tit.II. " .._,._I.
IANTA Ml*ICA -" enetan: 17S ..... "°"· n colko ..... • ._,., ..... 1a rNM:llarel, 1 ll'lleflft--._
MA•lllA 0.L ••Y -., .,,._,..! ,.
'9tll C'Ad, 100 tNC-.i.
SANTA M •aAllA -104 .,....,., 6 11"9
CM, In collco .,..., UI rock n111, 100 ,.., -~. swrec..oa, 1n ,,___,,
v8'1tTUltA -'6 Mtttn: ~ cellco ....._ 11 .. 11e1 ._., uo rocll 11111.
PGA lftOMJ leader•
,.,_,.,.... -· It) t.T-......... a. lley ,,..,.
I. ·--Uetlllot 4.T-ICI ..
S.Jorry,....
•• JOf1My Miiiot
'·Ha .. lrwlll e.crott--..
'· •Ill R...,.. tt.Cllrtlt .. ,._
11. Oo Ylf ~tlwll It. Loa T,.,,.,,.
11.l(tllll~
... JKll HlclllOllt "· • .,c ........ 1._ Letl Hllllllt
0 . L.orry lltl-
1L Joy H-
"· .... Mnck .IO. T_Wal .. ._.
ll.J-0..-12. AMy .....
2'..l•0"-24 .• ..., Cl•rniaan u. Gii M1w>tiM
2'.J lmSl-
27. Ed P'lw t .. """",_. ... 2".G-..~
JO.Fr-~
)l.Goeret ..... n. Jim c..111ar1
D. Tom Purtler
14. Oa11 Ho1idonml
U . Loonorct Tilomotoll ,._ 8orryJae<llat
17.MllloAald •.c ........
Jt.Morll....,..
40.kotlSl-
41. Mork O'Meoro
42. Jofvl IM!lelley o. Dovlcl l!ctworcts
... Clll Clll llodrl-1
U. BrYCe l'i.l .... r
4'. J .C. Sf.-
wa.• JM.114 tJf,611 ,, ...
19',"2 ,.,,,. ••.n4 17,,t.U
1.0,M u•.-1M,111
ttJ,JU 1ao.m .... ..,
'"·"' '"·* 1 .. ,.,,.
111,Jlt
110.-
101..-IOUM
104MI
102.• '6"6' fi.m ... .m
"·112 IJ,616
14.SU ..... "·"" 7 .... n.m
"·"' 71, "1
t9,1)1 ..... o
'7..Mf
67,IJJ
U,tCD "-J.19 61,JIJI '°·* n.m 5'.-
S9 ....
Coelt •r•• r••ult1
L.AOUMA l •ACH MmN'I CLU8
Cot ... .>.aHllllCCI ~NatT--1 Flltllt A -1. Sfterm Hiii <IMJ.461; Fl'-"
8 -I. Wetlaf' Splot.s (12-1 ... JI; P'llglll C -
I Goor"' Mlttaf'rnMWI 11:3-20-611. Fll9lll 0 -'-Morllll Rummel , ... 2'-6l>; Flltf>I E -I
Albert Wot'd ltl ~>-
WHhlngton Star champlon•hl1>9 P'lnt ...........
Victor PIKCI dlf. v .. Wllllblly, .... 6"l,
.. ,; Eliot TaltJ<llar dtl. Brod Orowotl ... 1.
6-2; Harold ~ def. Jaime Flltol. lo-4,
..l; GHrlal Urpl def. s.tnmy Glammalva,
.. l, W ... t; Rl<Mcto C-def Miiie II-,
J.7, M , M , Tltf'ry -def Aon Hl(llll-.
W , W , H , Rick F0901 ctal. Mol!WI Or-M.
1 ..... 2. W ; .>-. L-l-AUMO 001. 11-
VMl'I Hof, ...... 1, 7 ...
Va11111<11 -ctal. 8al11s PralOY•, 4-t, W, .. ,; Eddie Oll:llK def. ste,,. KrllevllJ, 6-0,
.. ,; Jimmy Anos def. Biii Scollloll, .. 2. •_.:
Viii<• y.,, Pollell def. Scoll Davia, M , W ; Joaa H ...... es def Dool! JOlltlerl. 6-0. t-1,
t.Urco Ollol• Clef Jim Oel-y. M , 1·1.
Swedl1h Open , ............... I ,, .......... .......
Pa111 Mc,.._ def. Ha111 Kary, .. ,, .. 7,
.. ,; Polor Mc:Homora ctal. WOYM Hempso.,
.. l ... ,; Thlorry T11to.,. ctal. Lloyd Bourne,
7-S. M ; P-..1 Kr-.... Ult Mon ..... , ...
H , H ; ,,.,_ LUllA def. OnllY Perun,
.. , ... 2. •
U.S. Pro ctlemplon1hlp
IOl.._..•,Mou .. ) ............ ,
JOM-LMIS Clerc def. H•11• Olloemotster, O·•. •·2, 1·2. ICta rc wins Ul,000.
Gll-11• wlM IH,0001. ~ ......
Ra11 1 Romlr ••·f'ove l 51011 Clef
Gildamahtar-A11dru Gomu, •·•. 1 ...
(Roml ... ~·Stoal .. II 510,IOO GllctamolSW·
Gofno1 ap4K U.•>.
Grand MH tera tournament c .. w.......-1 ............ Mal Alldtt'Wll def. F~-5ac1tmon, 7-S,
.. 2. (AftdtnOrl wlM M,.fOI. s.fe ...... wins ss.soo>-
Misc .
Tuelday'1 tranaaC1lon1 ~--u. ................ L...-
ATLANTA FALCONS -Cwl Vlocto
J-lliovtlll, 111-Ille ....... AllllOllllCacl -Goor ... OaMICI, """""9 Mell, lafl CM\9
HOUSTOff OILERS -f'loeod Collw•Y
HeymMI, ~ ... II_.,_, on Ille (lflyl~·
ly IHIOblo to jllor10Nll llll. Cul Boll k'IOy, of·
I-Iva ........ ; GroeorY JofVlton, fVlllllllO
Mc:k; y,,.. Pl'lflca, II-lier; 8 rlat1 AUi·
tllaw alld Tracy Srnlltl, detellllY• ancts.
LOS AHOllLl!S RAMS -SllMCI G"9
Meisner, def-1w llMrnall, to '"'" -yoor c-r«1a.
llllW EHOLAHD PATRIOTS -All·
-oct IN rotl.-of R1111 FrMCI\,
lllflteftct.
NEW OftLEAH5 SAINTS -TrMacl Artie
0..-, "'"""' Mell-wide ..celvor. to IN ..,,, FrOllCltcO 4tw1 IOI Oii lllldlKIOM<I 1"2
ctrott <Mia. "'-'need fllol Joa Gor-. loeltle, Mft<Amja.
Hl!W VORIC GIANTS -Slenod Kellll H 11 If, I Ill 1'iocti
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS -$19"0d S-
Hfil1, "-""· ... -'"of__.,_ <-reel&.
SAN FRAHCISCO ftE"S -Slenoct Gory
Allelarton fUlnl, IO 0 trao ~I COlllroe1.
TAMPA BAV •VCCANEEllS -$19Md D.vlct .....,,, dat-'W ll11am111, to a _ ... of_.,_ C_,oell.
WASHINGTON REDSKINS -Sllftoel
llMrll Moy, .._..,. lecllle, lo a ••lot of
lawr --contrab. NOCICllY ........ ......,L...-
COLOllAOO •OCt<IES -Sl9Md Ow\tlll f'otlor, rttM w1~1er. la o mu111 • .,..,
COlllre<t.
Wcwtd Untv•r8tty ClamH .......... .._..,
SP -I . Mic,_. CM1lor IU S.I, ... a; 2.
Oottel Mort .. (l!tit 0.N'Mf>YI. U.; J 0.ll_V.._l~olllo),U..
to,• ~ ... -I. T-ICIWlrry (US.
SIU, 2':~.e; 1. -...o Gyorvy IR-lol,
llO llffto; l. De•I• Mlll"llfly lllrltolnl, no llmo.
OymMltiu llNml -I. R-lo. 11LOO
"°'11t1; 2. USSR, 11 ... ; J. CN.M , llO tc-. GYl!llltitlu Cl,,.lvl~ll -1 HHlo C--1 ,,._..,,at.• 11191ftt1; J. Slitllo
l e llorove IUH•>. st.JO; a. Dumllrllo
TW!Mi' 1"'"*"-1,,. K-. 8HlletMll -U.S. Clef. Soutll l(erM, 104-7';--. .... ~. t«IH' . ,,_,.......,.. fl!Me-I. LI Vllluo (Ollflll),
... U,......; J. ~ .. .,... (U.1.1, ...... ; .. ""•**• ....... 1"-•l. .... 71.
'
~ TUCKER'S COLUMN • • •
lboucbt at RuUedJe fUAD1nc bl.I team. .tie bat
always 1naiated the ctilld bad pot.enUal. ti "Obv1ouely,'•• Malavael musn, "what be
.,. doeta't have 18 experience. l realJy feeJ Jeff la 10-
1 lDS to be • lood quarterbed one ot lbele day1. ., Tit• problem la aelilftl him t.be nperteaee ••.
1'bil lnvolvea tbe weU Down vtcloua circle. A
quarterback ii frowned on wttbout aperieac. and
It la qulte IUICI.., wben ... pta lt.
1"tMre .,. IDWIDvt Gia t.be boulevard tbat tM
aa1a1 m., be ID~ ID M old ........... Ctd
•••rterMell namH Dan Putorilll. be pro·
1 lilietan OI tbt &aftl'DI and 1alooae w10Widla1 t.be t> llam1' tralalq tam, Sot ap a ped.Uoa.
.. We talked about him," Mal1v11l aaya, "but
not aeriouaJy."
Seriously, the bottom llne ia that If Haden loet
down. t.bt Rama 10 down wttb him. You read tbe
thou1hts ol Malavaal betwe.n the lnttant Pat
bouncea to t.be lreeciawatd and the merelful mo-
ment he ,.u back up.
Cleerty, t.ht.a la a quarterback eituatJon a coach can clo UUJ.e about.
''We can pray a ~" llalavall aa19.
He ean a1ao JoU a UW..
''We ean IO to UM •laa'M wtaa ud uet Nolan
Crom...U 11 the quarterback," Malavul aaye.
It II a Joie, ol eouneh•= ~beck back ln Nov· ember and Me W'bo'a laua
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 22. 1981 03
Course is shaping up
First nine holes completed at AVCO's Salt Creek
By CURT SE EDEN of•o.ttY ...........
Work on the AVCO Corporation'• 18·hole
championship golf course In Laguna Niguel Is pro·
greasing on schedule.
Designed by architect Robert Trent Jones II,
the cow-se will wind among the variou.s bou1in1
development.a AVCO has scheduled for the area
near Crown Valley Parkway and Pacific Coast
Highway.
All grading on the first nine boles has been
completed, according to AVCO spokesman John
GOLF n
Stevens, and work on the second nine holes wiU
probably start next month.
For those unfamiliar with AVCO's plan, the
course, currently being called the Salt Creek
course because of its proximity to Salt Creek
Beach, will include two holes on the ocean side of
Pacific Coast Highway.
.. Phase one is complete." reports Stevens .
"The first nine holes ha ve been graded, all plant-
ing of the greens has been completed and the ir-
rigation systems are now operational."
The course is part or a major development
package that will include a 350-room resort hotel.
complete with other recreational outlet.a such as
swimming pools and tennis courts. ln addition,
AVCO will construct a conference center which
could be utilized by small business groups .
While guests of the hotel will have access to
the course. it will also be open to the public.
"Fifty percent of the starting times must be
nine boles will be open for play whlll' tile second
nlnt! is being graded.
"Robert Trent Jones si.ya It takc11 at least a
year after tbe grass is planted bei.1re you can play on
It ." Stevens says.
Steven! says Jones designed the course w\th
plenty of lakes and bunkers to test the most skillful
golfers.
If everyUllng goes as planned, the first nlne
boles will be playable by spring or next year
• • •
THE PGA'S Southern Section will hold its f P
prentice ch.amplonshlp tournament Aug. 10 at
Friendly Hills CC In Whittier
Registered apprentices, actively employed
and in good standing, are eligible to compete in the
championships, and head professionals around the
Southland can sponsor their apprentices.
Entry fee or $40 includes golf cart, two rounds
of golf and lunch. Check-in time is 7: 15, wi th the
fi rst shotgun start al 8 a .m .
More information is available by contactiJlg
Andy Thuney, SCPGA apprentice tournament
chairman. at ( 213 > 985-5454.
• • • THE SECOND ANNUAi. Am y Alcott Golf
Classic, a benefit for the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society. has been scheduled for Sept. 28
at the Ri viera CC in Pacific Palisades.
A total or 144 golfers. men and women, \fill
participate in the shotgun-style tournament. Entry
fee is $250 and includes the round of golf. followed
by dinner at the country clu~.
Alcott's tournament earned $11.000 for the
multiple sclerosis research last year.
available to the general public. according to the .----------------------
California Coastal Commission," notes Stevens.
"And, the public will be encouraged to use the
course."
Stevens says a completion date for the con-
ference center will be "dictated by the economy."
but construction is schedule to begin in mid-to-late
Paramount · Spor~
Annual
1982.
He adds that it hasn't been decided if the first
Pursuit wins Angelman race
CLEARANCE
SALE
Bob Babson's Pursuit from the host club was
the Class A winner Sunday in Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club's · 18.6-mile 20-fathom Buoy race, the
fourth of the Angelman Serles for Performance
Handicap Racing Fleet yachts .
NOW IN PROGR ESS
thru FRIDAY, JULY 31st
Class B winner was Flying Colors, skippered
by Dave Stone. BCYC. and the Class C winner was
Vortex. Bruce Twichell, Voyagers Yacht Club.
EVERYTHING DISCOUNTED
fr'Olft
Class trophy winners :
CLASS A 1. Purs uit; 2. Momentum. Peter 10°/o to 50°/o
bcept l llh Tong, SSYC; 3. Cats Pajamas. Marcia Last.
BCYC .
CLASS B 1. Flying Colors; 2. Andiamo, Bob
Sodaro, BYC: 3. Runaway ll, John Wieble, VYC .
Expert Racquet Stringing and Repairs
Featunng all Top Brands'
CLASS C 1. Vortex: 2. Strawberry Jam.
Justin McCarthy, BYC: 3. Ling, Wally Chang.
Ma rk Schryer. BCYC .
333 E. 17th St •• Costa M.sa rt.. 642-6886
(Behind International Pancake Housel
P195175R14
P205/70R14
P205/75R14
P205/75R15
P215/75R1S
P225/75R15
P23Sl75A15
155/SRt2 ...... . $30.95
'. 30.95
31 .95 1'5/SR13
155/SR13 165/SR'13
175/SR13
165/SR14
t75/SR14 185/SR14
165/SR15
. 32.95
.. . .. 34.95
...... -35.95
...•.... 37.95
. . • . . . • . . -40.95 .... !fl.
STEa BELTED
StZE PR PRIC
700-14 4 148.95
700-15 8 42.95 078·15 8 52.95
H7t·15 ' 6 . 55.95 750-UIT.T. 8 55.95
800-1&.5 8 57.95 976-1&.5. 8 81.95
aeo.1e.s . t f7.95 120C>-1e.s 8 n .95
70 SERIES
175/70SR12
175/70SR13 85/70SR13
195170SR13 185/70SR14
. $35.95
35.95
36.95 37.95
. 39.95 . 42.95 195170SR14
205/70AR14 185170SR1S
••.•... 45.95.
• .•.. 48.95
15S/SR12 ....... . '26.95
145/SR13 ............ 26.95
155/SR13 .. . . . . . . . . . 26.95
185/SR13 ............ 28.95
175/SR13 ............ 34.95
185/SR1• ...... ' ..... 34.95
. 175/SR1• ............ 33.95
185/SR14 ............ 35.95
twSR15 ............
MOUMl'IM(i & IALAMCIMG AVAILAILI
HEAVY ALIGNMENT DUTY
SllOCKS ut-tCeatw&c.-...
ca!:t''" 517'5
s .. .,..., ..... ,". Most U.S. C.B
IMSTALllO s 18'~ • MOit U.S. Cart •
r
SIZE
10·15
11-15
'1-15 12·15
12·16.5
12·16.5 H70-15
L~15
SIZE
P185175R13
P185175R14
P195/75R14
P205/75R14
P215/75R14
P225175R14
P205/75R15 P215175R15
P225175A15
P235175R15
4
4
6 6
6
8
4
4
REPLACES
BR78·13
DR78·14 ER78·14
FR78-I•
GR78-I•
HR78-14
FR78·15
GR78·15
HR78·15
LR78·15
PRICE
'65 95
6595
6995 8595
88 95
102 95
52 95
5595
PRICE 142 95
43 95
44 95
4695 4$.95
51 95
4795 499i
52 95
54 95
78·SERIES WHITEWM.l
S26 95 G7S.14 3595 27 95 H78x1 4 3695 2SI 95 G7S.IS 3695 3095 H78x1S 37 95
F78J14 31 95 L78x15 3995
70 SERIES RAISED WHITE LffiERS
A70l13 $33 95 070.1' « 95
E70l14 36 95 G70.15 '395
F70l14 3895 K70.15 405
aeo.13 S36 95 UIOJl14 S295 E«)l14 4095 • Geoic15 49.95
FeOl14 ...95 l60lc1S . 5295 OllOl14 45.95
BRAKES
519•s .....I WHAT YOU •m ,_.._,.., ..... ,~ .. -
~·,...,..·~·-· ,..11111'11 ...... ="" 6 1~ ........
& ... r: _,,.. 81Md • = .,..., ~°'*~·· -~ 10 "44 11\ltlt II tt-.....y • 1\ "*• won ltl. un
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT{WednHday, July 22. 1981
Program
set for
children
Children sbt weeks lo
6 years old are in vited to
attend a child develop-
men t proaram at
Oranae Coast Collegt in
Costa Mesa beginning
Sept. 8.
..
The part·day or all· -
day cluses are ortered PUBLIC NOTICE
rrimarlly to assist tow----,tCT-,TI-ou-,-,-u-., .. ,11 n c o m e s t u d e n l s MAMa ITAHMllMT
enrolled in occupational The 1011ew111t ..,....,. •• oeino Dut1 nett••: classes at the college. R ANO o svncMS, 1...a w.11
MeaJs are Included for 1ot11str•,SMt•A,,.,CA. JEl'l"ltEV NEii. "ICK•TTI, 1..0 c hildren attending at wnt 1ot11su.1. s.n1u1W1, CA fJ1m.
lunchtime and fees are '"''!MIMI••• <llldl.Kltd 11, •11 •11 dlvldw•I• based on a sliding s cale Jell,., ... 111111e11e111
basis . For information Thl1 .... ..,,_. •• Ill .. wltll ... call 556-5735. c_,, c...-"'°"-c.ov.,.., "'Jiii• ii.'"'· ,I...,
Publl"'941 Or ..... CM1I Dally PUol. July H, 21, 19, Awo S, "" Jllt•t
P UBLIC NOTICE
11'1CT1nou1 av""•" MAM& ITATl!MINT Tftt IOl-1"11 pertont ere Clol"ll ............ ,
P UBUC NOTICE
PUBLI NOTICE
lllCTITIOUI aUllNIU "AMI tTAHMaNT Tiie to11ow1119 perto111 are doln9 llutlMtle•: CONVI NllNT AVTO STE .. EO,
II I I lolM, Mldwey City, CA '2 .. j HICOLAE STINOACIU, 121 W
WllMll, C.IA MeM, CA '2627. HUMEYA ADAMS, 222 W. WllMll r.1r .. 1, C:-19 MeM, CA '1U7 Tllh llutlMU It collducted l>y • -··I~. NkOI .. Sll .... Clu Tlllt tlAlefneftl wa1 Ill .. wllft 11W County Cle" of 0r.,. County on JUiy
20, "" "-,ul>ll"'941 Dr-Coe11 O.lly Piiot. July n , "· .... s. ll, .... ,,., .. ,
PUBLIC NOTICE '
P\Jauc NOTICE
l'ICYl"outeuttll ... ...,..nan•wr
TIM ............ ,_. •r• ... ftt Ml-•· D AMO M CL.Uo#-Ul1', -.,. 0.
11¥M HI* llleM, .-in., c.ltw.i. ... o.v .. Mii'--M !MW-,.._, C••Y•• Hllh II•••• A11•llel1t1 c.tllfwlll• ... , •
M«rm A Miiia, .,. _......,,
Ult A-J-Dtl,.., Plec-le
c.ll .. nHta1'
°"'41Mllll MenlltlNI•
Tillt --wa Ill• wlUI UW c-ty Oet1i fl 0t eft99 c;.u..ty M J .. ' tO,t .. I, ,I..,
P11llU.,.. Cir ..... CMtt o.lty PllM July It, tt, "·A.it. l, ltll ,,..,..
PUBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUI IUMMlll MAM91TATaM9MT TM lollOWlflt per-It Clll"t llWI·
MUH:
C•I U_.PLOVEE l•N«"T SVSTEMS 01" CAl.IFO .. NIA 1111 MA S Tl!ltSUllANCI CCI CALll"O .. NIA O"GANIZATION 01" PUaLIC EMPl.OVllS. 12902 11e1i.y \llew, Sulle 10, Garfe11 Grove,
Callforni•~ Greeory •r-n, Ut '•lrvtew. ~ 8Mcft, ~11or..i. ,..,, Tlllt ... ,.., It ~led ll>y en 111-dMduel.
~ar-n
Tlllt •-WM 1114111 wllft tfle Coun I y O erll ot Or.,,.. c...,,. y tfl J-t•.ttll.
'1MIM Pul>ll"*I Or ... Coett o.tly Piiot,
PUBUC NOTICE
llOYtC•OP euucT....,.•11 1-.tttMteU.LC.J NtllC. It ~relly elv•fl t• Ill• Cr•.,.. ., O•w•b •1Ci..ttt .,.. Ae> _......,,, ....................
a44r•u It IHI Ov•ll. lvlt• tit, .... -.rt ...,., c:.w..t't' ., Or .....
...... (.fl ............ .,.,...., It...,. .... ,._.. M 09Mlt II~
•11• Ao•<•••··· '"'.,,., .... . ,,_,.,_, ................... ..
lltt o..tf lt19tl, ., ..... ~ .. tell, c.vnty ef Or ....... _ ..
Ctlltwflla. , ... ,,_,, ............... . ltteleCI el 1100 Oll•ll, iulle 200,
.... ,.... IMul, '-''., Orenee. St•eefc:.I...,.,..._
.... ....,.ny It dl!K"-'" ...... .. , All IWll 11'1 tr.-, llllivrK, ~
"'"'I elMI .... wlll •INC llNl hwt. ...,,.. .. ._ • o.i.1a •kuttt & A-1 ........ ....._ .. 1100 0...11, lulle •.1. ~ ~. c-.4Y .. orenee, -flfC:..WINml•. TIM 11111111 ,,....,. will M ,.,_
mated CHI Or •lier I ... •Ill d•y ef Aueutl. Itel, el Oetwllt "'<"-"• .-
AMOC lelA, Inc .. 1100 °"""'· ....... Newport 1 .. c11, C-ty of OrMte, SI•• of Celllonll9.
So l•r • ~ lo -,,.,.,,., ... , ellllutl--.lfld--u ...
by Tren ......... for IN llWW YHft ltil
-·· II .,,_, ,,.,.. .,_ ~. ere. O.""lt "kMtl~ .... Au«i.tft, ... 0.ve, ~le UO, ~ .. ecll, CA OATIEOJ .. 0 , 1'11 O..Wt lllcll91U, ,,_,.,..
ALI• •T M911CAOO, A..,_y
11'211 ............. , ..... MI T•ll•,CA ... m..-
Pvt>tlllWcl Or ..... Coett o.lly Pli.t, July 22. 1•1 m•••
Sign-ups
for OCC
announced tNTE .. T•ADE, 2UJ LllfletCHI ------July IS, 12, 19, Awo· $, '"' JI....,
Registration ror fall
classes at Orange Coast
College in Costa Mesa
begins Aug. 17 by • ap·
pointment only.
Piece, eo.ie-.., Celllomla '1•• fl'ICTITIOUS eUSINl!U PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Nl<Nlla Jollft Mely•t, 1 .... 1 O.n NAM• ITATl!M&NT llef'ry Clrde, Tldtln. C.lllO<nl• '1MO Tl•• lollowl"I __. It CIOl119 .,.,,1-1. ynne '"'-•le -Y••. , .... , O.n· ,.. .. ••· "CTITIOUS •USINall 111AMa1TAT•M•NT
NOTIC• TO C:OtlTaACTOttS
CAUJllO POtt a1 DI l)erry Clr<le, TvMln, CelllOfnlt '26IO GTS TEXAS LTO/GT.S TEXAS 11, Tlllt -4'-• I• cOftdwclMI .. ., ... In· LTD 1m s.r.11990 0fl"9, Nt-1 Tiie IOllOWl"9 ·pertOflt ••• doing S<'-1 Ol5trkl· NEWPOllT·MESA UHll'IED SCHOOL DISTlllCT dlvlduel. •••<II, Ceillornle '1'60 Nkl'tOI•• J. /INIY•• Ro~ E Mtlow, 1m S...11990 C>llM "'"' '": DANNY'S VILLA MA"l(ET, 1'4WO Bid DMdllne· 2:00 O'Cloek p.m. ef .... 6111 Cley of ......,. .. 1•1 Sign.ups for day and
evening classes will con-
tinue through Sept. l at
the college's Admissions
a nd Records Office .
Tiii• \lat-I •M lllMI wllft I Orio, N•wPOrl BH<ft, Celllor11I• County Cl•" Ill 0r.,... C-nly an Jul tl..O Herllor Blvd., Sulla A, Founl•ln Valley, CA 9'10I. Plu• Oii l kl "«elpt: 1115' Plec•ntl• St., CHI• MeM, CA '2'27 10, l'ltl Tllh o .. alneu '' conaucteo 11>y a DAN IEL Gi i.BERT COH· TR ERAS, ttu D•ll>lol•, Foul\l•ln v •lllY, CA '1109.
1"16.M1 llmlled 119f'lntt'111p. Project lde11l lflc•llon Heme : P11blllhell Or-eo.11 OeAly Pllol ltoberl E Mtlow CARPET L.AVI NG "IQUlllEMEHTS THROVGHOVT THE OIST .. ICT Pl•<• ,.._•••Oft file: 1157 Plece11-ll• s1 .. eo.141 Mele, CA mv
July U, U, 11. AllQ. s. 1911 JOtt-11 Gefter•I Partner AN DREA CO NTRERAS, n o O.l>loll, F-.lllln ll•llrt, CA '17ot This llullnetl It <enduel.cl lly ell II\• dlvldwel.
SOVIET SUFFERER -This Russian polar bear rests limply against
the side of a Moscow zoo bear pit as a heal wave in the Soviet capital
pushed the mercury into the 90s. He's probably thinking how nice it
The Admissions Otrice
is op e n Monday s
through Thursdays from
8 a .m . to 7:30 p .m . and
Fridays from 8 a .m . to
4 :30 p.m .
Open registratio n will
be held Sept. 2-18. School
starts Sept. 8. For in-
formation call 556·5772 . would be to be banis hed to Siberia in July.
DEATH NOTICES
Pl'CSLEV Ilene Gravesulc serv1cei.
J ESSIE L PL'GSLEY. re will be held 'on Wednesday.
sident of lfuntin~ton Reuch, July 22. 1981 at 11 ·00AM at
Ca Passed away on July 21. llarbor Lawn Mounl Olive
1981 She was Yl'r\' acl1 \'e in Memorial Park Services un·
the area. huvrn·g been a der the direction of llarbor
member of thl.' Women's I.awn Mount Ohvc Mortuary
Club and the F:twll Club Shl' of Collla Mes a. 540 5554
Judge dismisses
'frivolous' suit
NEW YO RK <AP> Deborah Ann Founta in,
who was thrown out of the Miss USA pageant for
padding her swimsuit, had her legal complaint
thrown out of court by an angry federal judge.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IUllNaU •AMI! ITATaM•NT T "• lollOWl"I peno11 I• Clol119 llodl·
MH .,. w.s. ADVERTISING. Jll4 Vucon,
Cott• -... Celllornle •»• W••nM G Scl1wen , II» vucon, CHle M. ... C.lllO<fll• t1111' Thl1 llwtlfteu 11 conducted try .,, In· dtvlou•t . _,,,., S.Cllwan
Tiii\ ~•tt-t we• llled wllh -cou"I' Clerk ot 0r..,.. County on JIAy
IJ, '"' "'""' Pullll-Or-CO.\I Oelly Piiot, July IS. 22, 2'. A119 S, ltll >12•_.I
P UBLIC NOTICE
fl'ICTITIOUS aUStNI!" NAAd STATI MI NT Tfte lol-1119 per_, 11 CIOl"9 bU\I
M UH. ASSAULT PREVENTION OF CALIFORNIA, ••12 NIMon lloed, •O, Tu111n, c.illornle '2 .. D•"• M. MuM:elo, t0 2 Nin on R .. CI, • 4J, T•"lln, CAlllCW1'1• ,,.., Tlll1 llUSJnet\ 11 tonelu<IMI t>y 4111 Ill
Thi• \tel..,..nl wu lllMI wllll Ille County Cltrlr. ol Ofanoe County on July
"· l'ltl. Put>ll'11 Or•llQll CMll D•lly Piiot Ju· 1y n. "· Auo s. 12, "" ,,,,_,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTI nous •USINESS NAMI! ITATl!Ml!NT The 1011owln9 per1on1 ••• doing llutlneua• WEE NEEDLE. JOS Palm Sl•MI, 8••-. Celltornla ~I Gt org1• Hecll t, H S E•" Edoeweter, Belbo9, C.llfornla '*' Del>r• F•ul, 2005 EHi Ou•n, B•ll>Oe, Celllornl• '196 I Tlll1 llu"neu I\ tonelucted lly a llmlttCI _,,.,tl\lp Geor91• Hechl Tllh \ltl-1 we• 111«1 with 1"9 County Clerk al 0.-C-nty on Julf
20, l'ltl
DM!el G11t1 .. 1 Conlrer .. Thi• ll-..-i wn flleel wllll Ille Counly Cler\ Ill Oranoe C-ntr on JUiy
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N 11\411 Ill• al>0"9-nernecl s.ci-1 Ol1trkl of Or411109 -C-ty, Cetllomle, ectlntl t>y and 111ro119ft 111 Governl119 Boer4, lurelnafter r•l•rrtCI to ••
,., ... 16 "01$Tlt1CT", wlll reutve wP lo, -
Publl"*I OrMQit CM" D.Wly PllOI, -l•t« .,_ IN -"9·11411MI 11,..., July 1 S, 22, 19, Auo s. ltll 1'1MI Mal .. '*''tor ,,. -••d of • contrect
IJ, 1 .. 1.
PUBLIC NOTICE
tor ,.,. -project alcit "'911 lie reul-In llM piece
lclenllllMI -· -~II lie -""' •nCI pulllk ly ·-·-• , .. --NOTICC TOC••DtTOlll \lllleel llme-lllect 01" auuc TllANll"CC T-• Wiii lie• NIA ..._II reQU!r.O uoec.tt•l•M7U.C,C.I tor ••<ll HI 01 l>ICI CIO<ulftenll to Holk•;,'-'"" 1,,.... 10 er-tor• 01 9'i9,.,,, .. "'9 retwtn In eooci c-11'-.,,. wll.ftln .....,,... tr-leron 11\et • wltllln NIA 1My1 eltil< 11\41 !>Id -111"9
.,.,,k l•-'• II -.i lo lie m.-on del• P•flonal prop.,ty ll•rtln•ll•r Eecft lllCI ""'st <onform enCI l>e CIH<rl-reWIOft•ll• to tfle con1rec1 flK-b Tl•• --.,_,11,,.., -"' 01 Eecll llld .,._., lie «·<-led by the 1111..-tr-leror\ .,. ROGER llW teewflly referreo 10111 ttw toMrect CARTER -JUNE A CARTER. lit Clotumenb -bJ llM 1111 of pr......., C•1•dor Lene, San Clemenlo , wllc:Oftlratort 1'1-C•lllornl•, TM DIST .. ICT ,_,.,.. ttw ri9ftt lo P111111.,_ 0r.,,.. C0.11 0.lly Piiot, Tfte location In C•lllornla 01 tft• rtJ«I .,, or •II blfl or to w•lve eny July 12• 1', Auo s. 11• "11 227~11 clllef ueculln oflke or prlncl119I .,.,,,. 1'.,.11'1•1U.. W lnlor,...uun In any
neu ollke o1 ""' tnlencled 1,.,.,._,., !Md• or In llW .......... ----11· 1)4 South CO.•I HIVfl••Y. Laeul\9 TIM Dtn lllCT -..... ...., lrom PUBLIC NOTICE Bu<ll, C.lllCW1'1e. Ille Olrec:lor Ill Ille Oetioertmenl of In· 'All OINr bwtlneu ........ •nCI -dwtl•l•I ...... loM ,,. ....... 1 P"•V•ll·
-----dr••••' ~n•d by the '"tended lno rete OI Pl'f' cffem w-.n •n the
l"ICTITlOUS auSINISS lre111leror within lhrM yeert 1•11 pe1I l«•llly In wftkft lftlt ·-It IO l>e NAMI STATEM•NT 10 ,., •• lll\OWll lo Ute Intended -'°"'*' for •.Cll craft or type of
was also a forml'r resident SARDANO
of the Pomona urea from E DITH 1'. SA RDANO .
Miss Fountain asked the judge to pro hibit CBS
from televising the Miss Universe contest Monday
and to keep Miss USA, Kim Seelbreede of Germa n-
town, Ohio, fro m participating.
Tiie lollowl1>9 ........ I dol bU I lran1teret ere. HH09n.Qen, UU -•men -d lo ••<Ute Ille <on-0.... M W...Kelo nan et ' n9 •. Br111o1 Strfft, COit• w.. ... Celllornl• lr•ct. T-. ,., .. .,. on Ille •I Ille
Tlll1 •IAl.menl ••• lllMI with Ille NEWPORT INDUSTRIES. LTD , tUU, SQke IUB DISTRICT olllet touted et llS7
dlvldu•I.
1920 lo 1003 Sh1.· 1s surv1vt>d pa:.bed awu~ on July 21.
by her duu.:htt·r~ Kathr yn 1981 Sh<' 1s survived b\' her
tlerest of Jluntm!(ton Rcuch. daughlc•r Marthu lfau.brick
Cu <1nd .\1ur1t•I Wini( of and ht>r 'iOn·in law Charles.
Bonita. Ca . ~•~ll'r Mu riel brother Theodore Torok or
Cromwt>ll of Cu nud a. •I New Jersey. 7 grandchildren
grandchildren and I !(rt~at and 6 great-grandchildren
grandchildren Cn pts1de Scn•C<'S IAill be h<'ld on Fri
s ervices IA lll b<' held on da}. July 24 . t98l al
Thursda\', Juh 23. 19181 at 11 30AM at the llarbor Lawn
I 00 PM. at ihe Po mona Memorial Ctiapel 1Aith Rev.
:\1 ausoleum . Pomona. Ca Oouitlu McKenzie offtc1al-
Sen•1ce~ under lht• d1ret'tt0n Ing' fntermenl services im·
of Balli Bergeron Smith & m e d 1 a te I}' ( o 11 ow1 n g
Tuthill Westt'l1ff Chapel SC'rv1res under the direction
~lortuary of Costu Mesa of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
646-9371 Mortuan of Costa Mesa .
"I have never seen a complaint that bas less
merit." s aid U .S. District Court Judge Vincent L.
Broderick . "I think it's abuse of the judicial pro·
cess."
Counly Clerk of Oraneo Counly on July HI Cat>rlllo Str .. t. CHI• Me ... CA Tfte ,,.,.... -.,_,.,,,.0 ecldrnt 01 Plec411111• SI., CAKI• Mft9, CA '1417 I),"" l'l ... IS '1'11 Ille ln tel\OeCI trenllere•• ere . Coplet ,..., lie oblelned an r-t. A PubllWwcl Orenoe , .... D II Pll I MICHAEL BRUCE EMMONS, ... , PATR ICI( M HURLEY, IO Herl>Or copy Of ..... , ... , .... II lie POllMI ., July 1S 21 7' Auo 5 ltll a ~11._:1• Ce11rl1toStr"1.Coo1eMe .. ,C.t.'1U7 Ridge Drive, Newport Bt•<ll, 1"9Jol>tlle . • • • Thi• ..... i ... u ,, conou<t•O by .,. II\· C•lilorl\I• ~. DOUGLAS s HONIG. Tiie 10fe90'"9 w-1• of -...... Cllvldu•I U16 Ga•lo ta, L•9u1,. Beet II, waoet It --•-•Int Cley of
RO'l'llMi\N
GERTRUDE ROTllMAN.
passed away on Julv 20.
1981. She is 5un·1vcd bv hl•r
daughter Sull\' Bohnloftnk
a nd her grandddual(h.lU
5'10·55~
WEDEL
WILLIAM WEDEL. age
64. resident of Huntington
Beach. Ca Passed away on
July 20. 1981 in Los Angeles.
Ca Mr Wedel was born in
He ordered Miss Fountain's lawyer to pay the
d efendants' legal fees a s a pen alty for filing a
frivolous action .
Miss Fountain. who was Miss New York.
claimed she was improperly disqualified from the
Miss USA pagenl t his s pring. She.claimed s he bad
to tailor the swimsuit because it was too big.
But Broderick ruled that her complaint
showed no "liability or harm" on the part of either
C BS or Miss Seelbreede In connection with he r dis-
qualification."
Bitten boy collects
VISALIA <AP> A $14 ,000 out·o f ·court
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS aUllNall NAMIE STAT•M••T The foflow1119 ,.,,_ It doi"9 t>Uil
neuat MOE CUSTOM WODDWORl(S,
1601 w IN<Al1""r. Ao4 114. s..rt• Arw, CA '111W HORMAN IERHARO MOE:, 16111
W M.cArtl\Ur, A"4 IA, S-le AN, CA '171M.
Tlllt ....U-l •• u1ndl1ete0 Dy .,. "' Cllvlclllel
'-mMB Moe Thi\ , .. ._, wes 11190 wllll -
C-ly Cl•" al Or ..... Couflly CHI Jiiiy
IJ, l'ltl ..,_,,
Pul>ll"""' Or41n91 CMll o.lly Piiot, July IS, 22, "· A\19. S, '"' lll._.I
P UBLIC NOTICE
Neptune Society E~condido. Ca. on June 6.
c•l!MAT10lfo au"i.t.L A' HA 1917 lie was a graduate of
settlement has been a nnounced for an 8·year ·old
Visalia boy bitten on the face by a member of the
Tulare County s he riffs K·9 unit. fl'ICTITIOUI eUSINaH MAMaSTAT•M•llT ll unl1nglon 8C'ach High 646-7 431 School and Santa Ana Junior
v-..... -. ... ov .,.. -·... College. He was an engineer :!."!~'!:'~-:.":.~~:,~Y for Pacific Telephone for 40
However, the boy, Scott Reyn a. c annot use a ny
of the money until he is 18 years old in 1991.
Superior Court Judge Edward Kim orde red.
The IOll-1"9 PWIOl'I It dol119 1>11'1
MU at: J & R CUSTOM AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE CENTER, 11101 lledonoo Cir< It, Unll P, Hwnllneton Beec;ll, CA ROONEY O. MAMANDIK SR ,
tlU W•rllelCI Drive, Hunllneto" BH<ll.CA'2...._
c:.au , .. ,,.. ,.ntell• years. Beloved husband of
u ..,._ c.""'..," Win ifred. beloved father of ~~=~~=====~M ark und Ma rilyn Wedel
a nd also s urv iving his
brother Henry, and sisters
,_CIUOfHHS
l&L •OADWAT
MOSTVAIT 110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642-9150
Veva Cos per and Ver a
Runser. Friend!! may call al
Pitrct Brothers Smiths'
Mortuary on Wednesday,
July 22. 1981 from 12 00 noon
to 9 ·00 PM Pr i v ate
graveside ser vices will be
']'.he dog was being kept at the residence or
Sheriff's Deputy Hom er Barker when Scott, a
neighbor, was bitte n on the side of his face,
s h oulde r a nd lip in 1979. The attack left the boy
with a two-inch facial scar which doctors say may
be corrected by plastic surgery when he. is old er.
Thlt bUti,_t Is ConduCl.cl ll>y •fl ill Cllvlduel. RodneyO....-lll TftlJ Jlll-1 wM filed wlfft ,,. County Clerll Ill Or-C-y on July
ll, ltll.
IAlTttHGHO ..
SMITH & TUTHtU WHTCLW CHA,_
427 E 17th St Costa Mesa
8'8-9371
... Cl..OTHMS
IMfT'NS' MOITUMY
627 Main St
~nttngton Beach
S36·6S39
,AClltC YllW
..-..OltALrAll
Cematert Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Pac:1f1c View Om1e
Newport Beach
64.4·2700
MICoawtcll MOaTU.AlllS
Laguna Buch
•SM-IM!S
Lagun1 Hills
' 768-0933 San Juan C.p111r1no
.. 95-1776
K'llO' LAWM-MT. OUYI
Mortuary • C.nw tery
Cr91NIOty
1625 G111er A.,. ,
CoslaMeH
~555-4 C>
conducted by Paul Johnsen
of the Grace Lutheran
C hur c h of Hunti ngton
Beach. Ca. The family re-
quests donations be made lo
lhe American Heart As -
sociation. Pierce Brothers
Sm iths' Mortuary dire<'tors
S36-6S39
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE
Reprimanded
SAN DIEGO CAP> -
Dr. Tom Goodman .
superintendent of San
Diego schools, and three
top aides have b een
reprimanded for
"negligence" in com ·
p romising a key basic
academic s kills test .
BUDAPEST. Hungar y WASHJNOTON I AP)
1 AP) Tibor Udvardy, 67 , Wiison ~hmldt, 54, Pres I·
conside r e d Hungary 's dent Reagan's nominee to
greatest tenor, whose opera represent Ule United Slates
engagemenu ranged from at the World Bank, died
New York to MO$t'ow. died Tues day or injuries suf·
F'ridayofaheartattack fered In a fire at the • Cosmos Club.
BETlfESOA. Md <AP)
Longtime Ne v ada AUBURN tAPI Dr
newspaperman D eaver Cl1ytoft JadtMn l.Alndy, 115,
Dtckereon, 67, who once a cardiologist In Chicago 41
served es speaker of the years. died Friday. He was
Nevada Assembly, died ol profeuor emeritus of the
c11ncerlnhlshome. Rus h Medical College. Unlvel'tlily ol Chicago. and
SACRAMENTO 1API t h e Ab"a.ham L i n coln
Ed1ar P. Prtee. 81, • U.S. Sc h ool of ~ o d i c In e.
Buruu of Reclam•tton Unlvertllyof llhnols
e nalneer who held top OSNTON. Texas <AP>
redtral a nd state po~ts MH•ll Ellis, 64, u com·
before retltinc in 1919, died p 01 • r , teacher a n d
Selurday. performer ol electronic and -:::::::===================:::::;::-, ln termedla mu1lc. died Tuuday. Elll1 wu the
slmpUclty ~ ft.uiemls
founder and director or the
Electronic M""lc at NOrth
Texe1 Stale Unlvenlly .
KUPFl:RZILL. Wut
Gtrman, CAPl -•• .,
• ...._... wltO nr.tvtd
llM 1111 Callfornl• ur
cn .... tMI ldW ~-ftlbi'k* ...... Duft; died
·--~ ............ COit· lrol 4f 1111 elf Oft I ~ rMd Adtt..W,po1tte1ud.
'1Me11 PullllllWd Or-CMll D.Wly ~llot, July IS, 22. 1', Awo S, ltll J122•1
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C)Nc•ml
HOUIDI
C C Y I If A H H I F A W R I X A Q E D
STDACHIIIHORWIFIHNA
W E X A C Z D A Y Ii 0 X N Q E 0 U S '
H ' I I 0 ' A R $ D D It H E I A A f R
I 'OR,TCTDEEALOOLQXS
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TWSRNUHWOOOOICSUDRD r A z o v o u o u 1 ,,, I I i a BIR R I 0 L M U A N N U R E I H A S A I Z Y M I H D D I N D 0 T R 0 D M C I
A'fDIOSIHHLDIHUAOORS
LCDUIAAEC,RRMTCOlll I It M l L M It R I T T D I W I L 0 0 D
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MIC,_I 8 Emmont C.tllornla f2tjl, tl91\I Ill "°"'L Ttw rete lor l'tOl1$y Tiii• •telM'Wnl ••• lllecl with llW Tll•I IN pr_,,., pertinent llere lo 11 -overtime WOrll .,,.II l>e •t le-1 C°"nlY Cle1'11 of Oranoe County on JUiy deKrl-In -ral u All 11•1\lfH, 11 ..... •lld _..1'911. 20, ltll 9<1111-nt, ._ lmprov-", II tl\all lie mendelo•·y --COH· 1"1-IHMntld l'"ernl, -Ille tr-,,_,... TRACTOR le _.,, 1"9 c.,lr•I It
P11t>ll.,_ Dr ..... CNU OeAly Piiot, -lrancNw lnlerHI 01 c•rt•ln I<• ••••dad, - -...... tilAIContr•Oor July». 7', AUQ S U. ltll l11HI <,.•m -~ -11 louted et ml ...O.r lllm, to 119Y -leu ...,. U. -------er1uo1 SI.-. co.u w.. ... C.lllornla .. Id ._lllMI retM to ell _.,_ '1'1•. So«• 12111 emplor.o OI' 1rwm 111 ltw uecwtian of PUBLIC NOTICE -:-11e -.,_,,..,.... .-o 11y ,,. .. id -'°""ec1 ----trantltror •I Yid IOUhon I• He ... n H• l>I'*' mtY wllhdr-II" Did i.. D•n • period of lor'tY·llW (0 ) de'f' en..
fl'ICTITIOUI •USINl!U Tll•I telcl .,.,, .. lr .. •l•r .. ,,,,_to ,,.. date let lor ltw -1no of l>klL
NAMl! ITAT&M••T II>• COl\lunl,...led el Ille office of A pefmenl --a pertormenc:e Tiie ,.._,.. .. .._ It CIOlne i.nl-Profeulonel EK,_ wvlC•I 1'11 N llOnd wlll l>e required to t KKutlon of "'" ••· Tu\lln A-. s.nte AN, C.11104""'• ,,. contrect Ttw .,.y..-llOnd M\ell "· H. HA .. OIHG & ASSOCIATES, '1701 on or •lter A-M '· ..... lie '" lhe lwm ., lor .. in ... <Ont reel 2UOI Pl11•tr•• L•n•. Huntln9ton Tllll .,.," t•M•I•• I\ \ullf•<I 10 Cloeu"'-•
he<fl, CA-. Cellfornl• Uniform Commerc••I COde Gowml"I 8-d H E II 8 E R T HA M I I. T 0 N Se<Uon 610. By Dorot"" H-y F1-r HA"DIHG, 21J01 PlnetrM Le•, Hunt-Tiie n...,. --r•n of ttw perlOll P\lrcl\nl1>9 Dlrectof l"llor\ a..ch, CA '2tol6. wllll w"°"' <tel-mey lie flled h Pull>llllWd OrllnOO CMll Delly Pltol, Thl1 l>ullneu It tondllcl90 l>Y en I~ Proleulonal Et<row Service\ 1n1 H July 22, 1', ltl1 326.l-tl
Cllvlclllel. Tu•lin A-. Sllnl• Al\9, C.lllornte H H Herdl119 '1701 •nd IN I••• lley '°' 1111"9 Clellftl PUBLIC NOTICE Thi• •lat-I •• lllMI wltll -II'( any creditor .,..II l>e A._11 •. '"' County Cl9,_ of Ore-C-,, Oft July whicl\ ll -_.,.... dey l>elore Ille
1, '"' con•ummtllon <1ete_.:1tltdeb0ve. NOTICE OF DEATH OF
LUCILLE CYE AND OF
PET I T I ON T O AD ·
MINISTER ESTATE NO .
A·109600
1'1.... Dated July 11, ltll Pu1>11.-Oranoe Coe•• O•lly Piiot, Petrick M H\lflty July •• IS, 22, 19, '"' J007 .. I Oouol•• s Honl9
Tran1ferM1 ------Pull>llt/WCI 0r.,. c .. 11 Delly Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE Ju1y 22, '"' >,.,.,, T o all h ei r s,
beneficiaries, c reditors
P UBLIC NOTICE
MOTIC• TOC .. IDIT0"5 o, auut T•AM.,•111
CtecL '111•t11 u.c.c.1 Holk• I• i.r.oy ti"" lo crecJllors of
Ille wltl\111 llMMd tr-ferort thel • ~111 lr.Wer It _,. to lie in.a. on P•rto11e1 property ftere ln•ller dew:rllletl. The ,..,..., -bu\I,,..• 9Cldr•t of
tlW '""-lr-feron ue: ROOER CAltTER, 11' C.reelor L•ne, S.n Clement•. CA.; JUHi! A. CAlllTa R,
J" Cerlldor i.-, S... Cl-I•, CA.
Tiie IOC•llon ·'" C•llf«11la OI Ille <"l•I necutlve Office or prfn<IN I 1>utl11en olllC• OI Ill• lnlendtCI lrenaftror It: IH Soutft Co•tl Hl91tW•Y. ~ IMcll, CMlttrlll•. All otNr blnl•• ,..,_ 9'ld ... Cir••••• ut•CI ll>y Ill• lnlend1CI 1re111••--wltllill lflr.e .,..,. ........ . 10 fer H t11•own lo tlle lnt•11ded lrllll.,_ _, HAAGEH-OAU, am
ar1a111 Mnet, cau MeM. CA ma.. IPAC• nsa
The _,_ -"""""' ........ lfte l11tt11CleCI lr•n•l•reet •re PATltlCK 1111. HU•LEY. IO H.,._ •1 ... Orlve, New .. rt 1••<11. CA
tt..O; OOUGLAS S. HONIG, U76 O.vlet•, L...-9N<ll, CA fMSI. TMt ._ ,,....,.,, '9'1"-'..,... IJ .. ICrlllled In ....... •t: All fllltvrtt,
..,IPIMM, ......... ,,,., •• -It ..
IM .. lleid ltlterl'lt. ... tM Ir .. -
.... ,,_,,.. '"'-' Of "' ... " lu cr .. fft ....,_, Mf i. loutef et· IN ...,, .. C-1 H~y, 1....-.. .ell,
Ctl If W!llll. TIM ....,_, ,.,."" _. tty tlle Mid
lr•fttfer•re •I Hid lectll ... ill HAAOIH-OAU
Tlltl NMll 1111111trMlfllf11 IM..-. ..
lie Ceft_ ... et tlle .tfk• .. ! P,_._,_. EK,_ ..,..,le ... lftl N,
T"'4111~ A-. fiMIAI AN. CA Ml ell «.,.., ~ '· 1'91. flllt 1111111 tfl111ter It til!llMI ,.
CtllfWllf• ~ ~·-c... "' ...... ,,.. -""' ...... "",..._ Wltll """"' <ltl--y .. ..... IJ ~-11'111 IKfW llntc9', "" N, Tw011 ,._, ...... Me. U. W1't
..,,. "" • ..., "' ,.,.._ cltl--, ..,, ....................... . ......................... ,,,.1111 ..... , .. _ ..........
OATIOMY tt."" lllllftCll M .....,, ................ ....... ,, __
,........ er._ c.-0.. ..... '"" n."" _..
PUBLIC NOTICE
• and contingent c reditors of
NOTICE TOCOMTUCTOH Luci lie Cye and persons CALI.I NG FOR BIDS S<11 .. 1 0111r1<1. COAST coM who may be otherwise in-¥VNITYCOLLEGE 01sTR1cT te rested In the Will and /or
Bid Dffdll•: 2·00 o'cloell P"' of Estate. A petition has Ille .. ,,...., of A..,.t, '"' b , i I d b p I Piece Oii _.., Receipt. Office of 111e e e n e Y e a r
Pur<r.a.i,.. ....,., Ma ""'9.rten P9rrln, King In the Superior Court coAsT COMMUNITY co1.1.EGE of O range County request·
oisrRtCT, mo Adel'M A...,..,., c .. t• inn that Pearl Kinn be an.. MeJe. C .. llorflla 926» • "" " Pro1ec1 1dan1111ca110" Na m• po i nted as p e r sonal ~a,::;.::: .. C::~::.~~;·1•rl• s1e1r representative to ad · Pfau~ ... .,. Ill• ,.,. eiuroo m in ister the estate of
Par1ner.itlp, noo H••PO•I Blvd . Lucille Cye (under the In· :7~:'=1 a..cri. c.111or"'• f'H6l 1110 dependent Administration
NoT1cE 1s HERuv G•VEN ,1191 of Estates Act> The peti·
111e ·-S<-. 0111r1« of tlon is set for hearing in o •• ,... co.ny, Cellfof'flla, ecune 11>y Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic ~:d, ~~~~~•!ts,~:·:~~: ~=-~·~ Center Drive, West , In the "DISTRICT", •Ill receive .... lo, -c I t y 0 f s a n ta An a '
not l•t•• t'-.,. • ....,._, ... ,eo u-. California on August !9, w•l•d llldl i.. -••••Cl of a contrecl 1,,81 t 9 30 1or Ill•.....,. proJect. .. a : a .m .
lid• INll 111 received 111 1t1t p1ece IF YOU OBJECT lo the
1c1e111111.c1 ........ -"'4111 111-"" granting of the petition,
•!Id pullll<ly ,_ ·-•• ,,.. ..,.,... you should either a......,.ar 1181.cl llftW 91\d l>IK•. .,,.~ ,,,.,. w111 .. • 110,00 CleCIOtll ••· at the hearing and state
qulredlorH<ll wtof1>1a c1oc-1110 your ob jections o r file
""r•nlft IN ret<wn 111 tood coondlllon ltt object I Ith th w11111,. 10 er.a.,. •ltM ,,.. l>kl _,,1,,. wr en ons w e
cieta. court before the hearing.
Eacll llld ntvst conform end ... Your appearance m ay be
••-.iw1o111e cor1trectdoc-b. In person or by your at-Eecll 111e1 111111 lllt eccOMpCN1l9CI 11y
Ille Mcurlty refff...O lo 111 llM contrat (OfOt)'.
ctoculMllb -11¥ ti. 11a1 of P"-* I F Y 0 U A R E A
wtKontrtdon. CREDITOR or a cont· Tiie OllT"ICT >_..... Ille rieM 11 I I re1ec:1 eny or •H llldl or 10 wa1 .. tf!Y ngent cred tor of the de. ,,,....,1.,11 .... ., •-1111et 111 •ny ceased, vou mus1 file your
111dur111eftyllldtorlfl-ll*111t. clalm with the court or TM DISTRICT 1W *""" ,,_ ,,. 01rec:w ot ,,.. o..-i ...... 1 of 1,.,. present It to the personal
fll•trl•I ..._....,.ti...,..,., iweveii. representative appointed
1ne ••t• ., ,., dlM\ ..... '"' 111e by the court w ithin four
toc•111• "' ~11 ""' -11 •• .. • months from the date of =:::in":,:;.,,-:,!~.::."'!.:. first Issuance of letters as
trec:t. n.. ,..., -... 111e et IN provided In section 700 of
011uiCT9fflw -....••Ot11c•• t h t probate code of
Pllys•u• 'ec11111•• Pi ..... i,.., CN•t Callfornla. T .. ~ time for C•"'mu1111y C•ll ... Ohtrltt, uto ,,..
Ad•m• A.,.110, c .... Ahu, fllln9 clalms will not ••· ceillo•~•• .,.,.,ce.Mt _, • • filre prior to fOYr months l•I-M ,........., A er..-, el ..... ....._ _._t '""-1111.,.....etDlltM•U•. rom t .... ua e of the heer· r11e ,.,..... tc:....,. .. ,... ..-. Ing noticed above. • ._.. .. .,.._...._.lflt•ye1 YOU MAY EXAMINE •lefl• "' ,_,,, Tiit , ... • ,...,.Y the fil e k:'f,t ..... t-court. .,.. .-tlll'\I --... -.. ..... .,, ... lltM.,..-.Mlf. If you ere nterested In the u w u • _,....,, _... 111e cON. estate, you may flle a ,...
, .. ACTOfl .. "'*" .. _..,., .. QUHt with the court to ,... :r'-:M.an:.1: :n:::4:..•: ctlv• sP1ct11 notice ot 1"'
ie ll*lflM , ... • 4111 _._ lnv•ntory of estate end of
,,........ ., """"111 IM •JM"""'• Ith• pet tlons, accounts Ne~ and reports described In ,:,;;-;;~:,~..: Stctlon 1200.S of tl\el
..., .. ,., ............ ~ Calltomll PrOIMteCOCle. A_.,.....,... ... ....,......, .. 111 I a.a-llMJ ............. Jr.1 ..... ,...,...., ...... --
""'" .. _..._ '111 .. YIMM._. 1U71 IHcll II~. tte
II IM Ill .. """ Ill '9rtll t.I -1JI ..., ... -:--, .. -...... I " ........ INC, CA. ,.,....._.,..... J"'1 ==<,,..._ PubUIMd Of'ange CQut ,,........ ..._ c.... °"'" ,._ OlllY-Plloti July 22. 23, 29,
Illy u,...... J1IM1 . "'' ~1.
t (
I
W EDNESDA Y JULY n 1 ·111 1
Comity jet noise data probed
Information in report differs from actual readings
By FREDERJCK SCHOEMEHL
Of .. Deltr ...........
Residents' inquiries have
prompted Orange County gov-
ernment orficials to take a
second look at environmental
documentation that led to ap-
proval of tbe DC-9 Super 80
jetlin er at Jobn Wayne Airport.
What is concerning both resi-
dents and om cials is that actual
noise data for the new aircraft,
now in use by AirCal, does not
jibe with data that was con-
tained in the environmental im-
pact report approved by the
county Board of Supe rvisors
before it permitted Super 80
service to begin.
Publicly . officials are dis·
counting the effect the dif·
ference in the noise data may
have. Privately, there is concern
that it could weaken the county's
position in a lawsuit in which
Newport Beach is claiming the
environmental impact report on
the Super 80 was inadequate and
that the decision to permit use or
the aircraft should be re·
evaluated.
According to the impact re·
port, the Super 80, during a lest
rtight conducted last August,
toned a 92.14 d ecibel noise
reading 'When passing over a
noise monitor located lm·
mediately south of the airport.
Super 80 service began June l.
During the month there were 141
S uper 80 d e par tures. The
average noise readin~ at the
Super 80 'aircraft
is noisier than we
expected it would
be.'
same monitor was 99.4 decibels,
according to figures compiled by
the aiport Noise Abatement Of-
fice.
The composite noise reading
for departures during the month
of June (based on readings
taken at all noise monitors locat-
ed under departure paths) was
96.14, about five decibels greater
than that expected by county of·
Cicials.
·'There's no question the
aircraft is noisier than we ex-
pected it wouJd be. But it's still
considerably quieter than the
other aircraft <Boeing 737s and
DC-9-30s) being flown," said
Airport Manager Murry Cable.
According to a memorandum
sent to the county Environmental
Management Agency by Steven
Kozak, airport plans and pro-
grams officer, the Super 80 b
three to five decibels quieter
than the olher aircraft.
''As you can see from the
above," Kozak wrote environ·
mental analyst Mark Goodman,
·'the Super 80 Is measurably
quieter than the other air car-
rier aircraft it is replacing. On a
composite basis, the noise abate-
ment oCfice calculates that the .
DC-9-80 is 55 percent quieter
than the other aircraft; or con-
versely, the others are 123 per-
cent noisier (twice as loud)."
(Because decibel readings are
computed using logarithms.
seemingly small numeric dif·
ferences represent much larger
differences.)
<See JET, Page A2>
\
....., ,... """'"' ._.... ......
AIRBORNE AGAIN -The Goodyear blimp, in Carson March l by high winds and was
Columbia, returns from its first flight since badly damaged. A Goodyear spoke~man said
being repaired at Marine Corps Helicopter the blimp was completely rebutlt at the
Station in Tustin. Photo was made Tuesday Ma rine air station.
evening. Blimp was blown from its mooring
Area postal workers happy
Agreement to avert national strike hailed ·by' all
8y A&IF llAJI °' .. ...., ............
Orange Coast U.S. Postal
Service repr esentatives ,
empJoyees and union leaders all
said they are relieved today that
union le•ders and manaeement
have reached an agreement,
averting a nationwide postal
atrtke. <Related story A4)
"I am very glad it's over,"
aaJd CecU Herring, 58 of Costa
Meaa, wbo baa been a iettor car-
rier for 15 years.
Wyatt Lee, manager of the
Fa1rview branch of the Co.ta
Meta po1t office, Hid the ten-
tative ..Wement bu "lifted the
weilbt.''
lfeanwhJle, Jordan Brown,
prealdent ~ Branch 1100 ot the
letter carr1en' union, baHd In
Oran1•. uld be 11 bappy
ne1otletlmll llave mded e..e ...
be uid Ute ml)oiit1 ol l4ltter
earrten did not want to •trib. Ho....,, Make Tortor ... , a
letter eiU'riei' hi South u.-..
said based on a reaction from a
rally last Sunday, even though
moat employees did not want to
strike, they wo~ld have tr asked
to do so by national union
leaders.
"I didn't want
to strike, but I
sure wasn't about
to cross a picket
line," Tortorete
said.
"I didn't want to strike, but I
sure wMa't about to Cl'Olll a
picket UM," :Tortontf, M, laid.
Botb l•Uer carrlen aad cleru. wbON '...Uoat ~
rtprii11Dt --............. tlonall1, said tlltre l• ao antmoett1 towird m•aPlllllll
over a Justice De partment
claim that strikine employeet
could be arrested and charged
with felonies and PostmHter
General Wilham F. Bolter's
claim that po1ta1e would to up
to 45 cents If union demands
were met.
"It was simply rhetoric," aaid
Georee Early, a 12-year veteran
of tbe Costa Mesa POil office.
Union leader Brown called lt a
scare tactic and also labeled It
a1 "bar1alnlna rhetoric."
But be aaid, Bolter -•• ptay.
lnl a ..=erous 1ame when be
three to ftre an1 employ9e
wbo1tnack.
''Wbat he WU doiDI ii 1*lial
the .PUblle ...... 'tfie f9deral emploJNI. Tldl ea ... .._.
Uon," Nkl Brewn, w....-. local rr••J.•leUereU'l'WI. ewport leHb P01tm..W Bob .................. ...
......... tM ....... WU 01t1'
and felt DO 8idlnalllr nmll.Dedl
, ... POftAL; .......
• * • •
Ylll llllTlll llllY Ml
UliA Nl.f (OUN l Y C AL IFOHNIA 25 CENTS
TRUNK LINES BUSY -"Hold the phone," say
these ponderous pachyderms as they ex·
change greetings. The 33-year-old elephant
lady, "Mampe" from India. left, flirts with
.............
her younger friends frorri Africa as they
stroke each others· trunks at the West Berlin
Zoo.
1,500 flee poison
Acid fumes leak from truck near Blythe
BLYTHE <AP) -About 1,500
people from two towns on either
side of the Color ado River were
evacuated today as a poison
cloud of brown fumes leaked
from a tanker truck that had
also leaked 250 miles earlier but
was supposedly fixed and sent
on its way.
The truck was carryine 26,000
pounds of red foaming nitric
acid from Vandenberg Air Force
Base, 150 miles northwest of Los
Angeles, to Holloman Air Force
Base in New Mex.ico, when leaks
occurred near Thousand Oaks,
Calif .• 50 miles northwest of Los
'Disaster'
of Med/ly
rejected
LOS GATOS (AP ) -The
Reagan administration today re-
jected Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr. 's request to declare three
California counties a federal dis·
aster area because of infestation
by a destructive fruit Cly.
Such action was unnecessary,
the government said, because
there were "no signs that the in-
festation is spreading out of con-
trol."
Brown asked for the disaster
declaration last week, saying
tbe Mediterranean fruit fly in·
festalion i11 Santa Cl a r a ,
Alameda and San Mateo coun-
ties was "beyond control" of
state and local eradication ef-
forts. A day tater, the governor
proclaimed the eradication ef-
forts "on track."
The administration agreed. In
a telegram to Brown today, the
Federal Emergency Ma nage-
ment Agency, with White House
concurrence, said "the area in
which the fly has been found in
recent weeks is basically the
same area in which the pest was
discovered lut year . . .
"At this point the situation has
stabilized with the eradication
measures under way," FEMA
·s pokesman Bob Blair told
Brown.
Pilot's TV
Log praised
by readers
The PUot TV Loe. which was
introduced in Friday'a edition,
alread)' hal received readers'
praise for Ill lar1e type 1tyle
and debiled llltlnp of 22 Chan·
nel1, iildudlq cable l)'ltems.
Tbe weekly TV IOI wlU be a
replar supplement of the Daily
Pilot'• Weetendu entertain·
ment MCtioa on Frida,•, replac·
ia1 lb• TV naa1aalde wblcb
for..ty WU Included ln the Buday Pllat.
Replar dally teleYlllon, Utt· tnaa eaatinue lft the paper on a
dallr blllta, laol~ia)'I. .......... tlle Pilat'•
moetei.-.jll'tepideto *"· lal IH 1•1 DOW bl tliil Jl'rlda7
edttloe •ltb ap·tO·tb•·mlaute '
Jat1llU,bt8 of •••k~ aewa,
lporU -1peclal lbril.
Angeles. and in Blythe. about
200. miles southeas t of Los
Angeles. said Capt. Anne Peck
at Vandenberg. The chem ical is
used as a rocket propellant for
some space launchers. she said
·'It can be fatal if swallowed
and it can get in through the skin
if It touches anyone and causes
chemical burns," said Riverside
Co unt y Fire Department
engineer Steve Harding. "A
brownish colored cloud has
formed and the problem is the
cloud is spreading the fumes
around." ·
tf e said it also can explode if it
touches water .
·'There 1s a southwest wind on
this cloud and it is getting much
denser and thicker," said fire
depar tme nt Ca pt James
Wright
He said people were evacuat·
ed from an area two miles north
of Interstate 10. a mile south,
and two to three miles east and
west along the highway, near
the Colorado River , which forms
the border between California
and Arizona
Wri~ht said some Riverside
<See ACID, Paite A2>
Agca guilty in hid
to murder Pope
ROME <AP> Mehmet Al i
Agca was convicted today of the
atte mpted murder of Pope John
Paul II and sentenced to life im·
prisonment.
The six -member Jury and two
judges deliberated for 612 hours
Chi e f Judge Severino San-
tiapichi read the verdict and the
sentence.
Agca, who admitted he shot
the pope in St. Peter·s Square on
M ay 13 . wa s n ot in t h e
courtroom when the verdict was
announced. He boycotted the
last two days of the proceedings
as a protest against his trial in
an Italian court instead of the
Vatican
Life impnsonment is the max-
imum sentence in Italy, which
does not have capital punish-
ment.
The pope is hospitalized with a
virus. and was not asked to at·
tend the trial or give a deposi·
lion.
Anthony given
3-year probation
Former Irvine Mayor Art An
t ho n y. convicted of misde·
meanor assault In an attack on
bis wile, was given three years
probation and a $5,000 fine today
by Harbor Court Judge Donald
Dungan.
Anthony, 50, now an Irvine Ci·
ty Councilman. won't have to
serve any jail time. but will be
r equired to donate 1,000 hours of
community service, Judge
Dungan ruled.
As part of the probation, An·
thony may not drink alcohol.
possess any firearms or go into
a h ome where firearms are
present.
Oran1e County Deputy Ois-
trlcl Attorney Pattie Manoukian
asked Judge Dungan to give An·
tbony a one-year prison term.
Bili Doueherty, Anthony's at·
torney,. arguin1 agaJnsL a prison
sentence, told Judge Dunean
that Anthony is "a hero and an
oulltanding civic leader."
Aaarea11n1 Juaae Uunean,
Anthony said, "I am ain~ely
aaham~ for lc>1ln1 control of
rnyaell and putttn1 a woman ln
harm's wiay. I 1hall always
carry rf!mont and ahame."
· He told Judae Dun1an that he
can't remember what happened
on the nllbt of April t when IM
alle1eclly beat hll wlfe, Elaine,
with bla ftlll aad 1raaed her
acalp 1'\t.b a bullet from a .45·
eallber handluft.
He Mid hi.I lack ot m•"*Y li vertned by a potysrapb test.
•'I 1baJI never repeal my
deplorable cond\aet," Anthoiu'
After the sentence was handed
down, Anthony told reporters
he's not sure whether he wil
continue to serve as councilman.
He said although he doesn't r&.
member what happened on ~
night in question, he will alwa>!
carry a bad picture in his minCl
based on what others said he
did.
.DRANGI COAST llATlll.
Some late night and ear-
ly morning low clouds and
local fog, otherwise fair
today throu1h Thursday.
Highs in mid-70s al the
beaches to upper 80s ln·
land. Lows toni1ht 58 to 88.
111111 TIDAY
Th• orace-oput1ne Mon-tuu ma cattle near Loa
Vega•. N.M., ho1 beu
purchoaed for uw °' a eol· ~gt. SH Poge All.
11111'
promlsed tbe Jud11e: .,,.,.,_1111!!11111111111!!1!'-~~~~l!I
•
-U ' • • • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedne1day, July ~2. 1981
Israelis bomb Lebanon
Warplanes attack Palestinians ; 15 killed or wounded
TEL AVIV, Israel CAP) -
hraell warplanes bombed
Palestinian target.a ln aouthern
Lebanon aaaln today, hltUn1
traUs used to transport arms and
guerrillas, the military command
said . Lebanese provincial
authorities reported 15 people
killed or wounded.
A communique from the Tel
Aviv command said the trails at-
tacked were ln the Kaesmieb re-
flion alont the Litanl River and
the Zahrani estuary. It said the
pilots reported accurate hits and
that all planes returned safely
from tberaid.
Lebanese provincial officials
said the jets struck at a newly re-
paired section of the Qassmieh
Bridge on the Litani which was
devastated In a lightning Israeli
air strike Thursday. T hey said the
jets destroyed several moving
cars, kilJing or wounding 15 occu·
pants.
Israeli gunboats also shelled
Palestinian guerrilla targets in
southern Lebanon today, the Tel
Aviv command said. It denied a
Palestinian report of ground raids
into southern Lebanon.
The command sajd northern
Isr aeli settlements came under
more Palestinian artillery at-
tacks during the night, but there
were no casualties. Israeli gun.
ners returned the fire, the com-
mand said.
This report
for the birth
In the better-late-than-never
department·
The U. S. Fish and Wildlife
Service was a bit t ardy in
forwarding its comments to the
Civil Aeronautics Board on an
environmental impact state·
ment regarding air carrier ac·
cess to John Wayne Airport. So
late, in fact, that its comments
could not be made part of the
bound document.
So, the CAB sent the service's
comments out in letter form.
The letter is seven pages long.
Its conclusion : ·'It is our
biological opinion that the pro·
posed action is not likely to
jeopardize the continued ex-
istence of the light-footed clap·
per rail or the California least
tern."
Both are birds that inhabit Up·
per Newport Bay.
From Page A1
ACID ...
County sheriffs deputies, who
just ended an eight-day strike lo·
day, complained of burning eyes
as they went from house to
house evacuating the affected
area. Californians who were
evacuated were taken to a tem-
porary shelter at Palo Verde
High School in Blythe.
The Arizona Department of
Public Safety said people in the
border town of Ehrenberg, in·
eluding one whole mobile home
park, also were evacuated.
The truck remained at
roadside on Interstate 10, where
the driver discovered the leak al
6: 14 a.m . The roads were ex-
pected to remain blockaded for
four hours while repair and
cleanup crews arrived from Los
Angeles.
The truck was owned by the
W.S. Hatch Co., said Capt. Peck.
They had a repair crew on the
way and, she said, the IT Co. of
Los Angeles was going to handle
the cleanup.
Sam Collins·. a Hatch
spokesman to whom Vanden·
berg referred inquiries, declined
comment.
Capt. Peck said the transfer of
the nitric acid was ordered by
the Aerospace Fuels Division at
Kelly Air Force Base in Texas.
"We got an order to ship it
from Vandenberg to Holloman,"
she said.
She said the tank truck was in-
spected and released by the base
fuels branch at Vandenberg and
"there was no problem with it
then.''
She said the truck driver
noticed a leak from a seal on the
truck about 7:30 p.m . Tuesday
when the lanker was near
Thousand Oaks, in Ventura
County. A repairman from the
W.S. Hatcb Co. fixed the seal, or
flange, she said, and the truck
went another 250 miles before
tbe leak was discovered near
Blythe.
ORA GE COAIT
Dilly Piiat
Meanwhile, U.S. presidential.
envoy Pblllp C. Habib held talks
with Lebanese olflclals ln Beirut
then new to Saudi Arabia to con·
Unue his search for a cease fire
between the Israeli~ and Paleatl·
nlans.
Prtme MlnJster Menachem
Begin visited Israel's northern
setUements today, paid a con·
dolencecallontbefamllyofoneof
the five lsraeUs killed ln 1uerrilla
ahelUng, and pledged an end to the
Palestinian barrages.
AirCal raps PSA
over flight suit
AlrCal ·Airline claims that it
would lose millions of dollars lf
rival Paclflc Southwest Airlines
is victorious ln a lawsuit filed
over an Orange County govern·
ment plan to regulate which
airlines serve John Wayne
Airport.
In papers filed in U.S. Distric,l
Court in Los Angeles thls•week,
AirCal claimed that San Dieeo-
based PSA Is locked in an "ef-
fort to prevent Air California
from becoming an effective
competitor iJl the transportation
of passengers by air between
maJor cities in California."
Under the airport access plan
adopted by the county Board of
Supervisors, PSA was granted
two flights daily from t he
airport beginning Oct. 1. Those
flights are being "created" by
taking an average of 1.5 flights
from AirCal and one-half flight
from Republic Airlines.
PSA isn't satisfied with its
two-flight award. It would like to
operate eight fli ghts from
Orange County.
In its lawsuit -which will be
subject of a hearing Aug. 10
before Judge Andrew Hauk -
PSA contends that the access
plan is .. anti-competitive" in
that it permits AirCal and
Republic Airlines to keep the
majority or the 41 jet departures
permitted daily from the
airport.
AirCal, which Monday was
permitted to formally intervene
in the lawsuit. said in papers
filed with Judge Hauk that
PSA ·s demand for more flights
could be met in one or two ways .
Either the 41 flight per day lid
would have lo be lifted, or
AirCal and Republic would have
to give up more flights. Neither
option is acceptable. AlrCal
President Robert Clifford said.
The county would not lift the
lid because of noise Impacts on
surrounding residents. he
argued.
On the idea of giving up more
flight.s, Clifford said, "At the
present time. 40 percent of Air
California 's origin ation and
destination passengers a r e
served from the John Wayne
Airport. The loss of Air
California's share of eight slots
(flights) would cause substantial
financial loss lo Air California.
"It would be necessary for Air
California to find other routes
upon which to (fly), which it
could not quickly do in an
economic fashion."
"It follows that the relief PSA
seeks, if granted, would cause
substantial damage, amounting
in all probability to millions of
dollars, for Air California." Clif·
* * * Fr.om Page A 1
ford concluded.
AlrCal repeatedly stresses in
its court papers that the com·
pany was formed because no
other airline in the late 1980s
was willing to expand jet air
service to Orange County.
"Air CalifornJa pioneered that
service at the cost or losing Its
initial S6 million capitalization
over the first five years," ac-
cording to the documents.
AirCal further charges that
PSA 's contention that it wants to
promote competitive Orange
County-San Francisco Bay Area
service is erroneous.
.. . . . It has been the practice
of PSA, when new carriers ap·
pear, to' saturate the market
with flights so as to preclude the
newcomer from commencing a
profitable operation . . . it is
PSA 's objective, in bringing this
proceeding, to reduce Air
California's servi ce from
Orange County.
"The Orange County service is
and has been the foundation of
Air California's operations .
it is PSA's objective to so
weaken Air California as to
make it unable effectively to
grow into an errective com·
petitor of PSA throughout the
state."
Meanwhile, Newport Beach
City Attorney Hugh Coffin said
the city also plans to intervene
in the PSA lawsuit but hasn't
yet.
He said Newport's position is
that the suit could result in the
current 41 dally flight ceiling be-
in~ lifted to accommodate PSA.
··our prediction has always
been that more carriers means
more pressure to extend that
ceiling," CoCfin explains.
Newport, he says, has no op·
position to PSA joining the John
Wayne family as long as the 41
flight ceiling is maintained.
From Page A1
POSTAL • • •
"Now, we can carry on busi-
ness as usual," House said.
The new contract, supported
by Moe Biller. president of the
American Postal Workers UnJon
and Vincent Sombrotto, presi·
dent of the National Association
of Letter Carriers. calls for a
$300-a-year pay raise and Sl,200
in bonuses over the next three
years in addition to cost-of-living
adj ustmenls.
Brown predicted that the con·
tract would be ratified by rank
and file .
JET NOISE REPORT • • •
Goodman was reluctant to dis·
cuss the EMA 's role in the new
analysis of the n oise data
because of litigation pending in
Orange County Superior Court.
He did confirm that the issue
over the disparity between the
actual data and that contained
in the impact report was raised
by residents at a meeting of a
county committee that is de-
veloping a specific plan to guide
future development In Santa
Ana Heights, located south of
the airport.
Goodman said the county can
correct the impact report, either
by preparing a supplement re-
port containing "information
that was not known and could
not have been known" or by pre·
paring an addendum to the
original document.
Cable said be will submit such
an addendum to the county
Board of Supervisors in the near
future.
"It's no big thing," he said.
Prior to ill introduction, the
new aircraft was louted as, In
large part, the answer to the
county's continuing dilemma on
how to reduce noise impact on
residents Uving under jet de-
parture tracks.
The county's faith in the
jetliner was so strong that it
became the centerpiece · for a
plan to regulal.e which air car-
riers win and retain privileges to
operate Crom the airport. The
plan essentially requires car-
riers to convert their fleets used
locall y to Super 80s or
equivalent noise . Ji roiling
aircraft, of which there is no
other type yet on the market.
AlrCal is now operating two of
the $20 million aircraft and bas
plans for a total n eet conversion
within 18 months.
Republic Airlines Intends to
begin Super 80 service in mid·
August. Two other airlines with
authority at the airport -Fron·
tier Airlines and Pacific
Southwest Airlines -either
have plans to or have taken de-
livery ol Super 808.
Western Airlines is the only
carrier serving Orange County
that does not intend to purcbue
the new aircraft. Western of-
fjcials say they will attempt to
meet l)Olse reduction 1oall by
modlfytna their exlstln1 fleet of
• Boeing 737s.
Thonl P. HIJ9V ~-Clllllf ........ OMW
Rot.rt N. Weed
MAINOfflCI
Asked why the Super IO ii not
perfonnina up to expectatlona,
county and airUne offlclall 1ave
varloua amwen . ......
TI10mlt A. Murphln• ....
Mk:hllel P. Herwy
........ OloelW
L. .C. lchultz ~-~ . ~ H. Goddatd' Jr: • ~ .......
~ldlulmen
?-.t:s.H>c.
c.at 4. ..,,.. ---
la Wul ... SI , C•I• WM, CA
M•ll ~ ... IMO, Cai. -.W, CA '161'
They say pUota may still be
eettina uaed to Oylna the ne•
aircraft. They also point tQ the
fact that the Federal Aviation
Admlnlatratlon forbid& no6H·
llmitln( takeoff power reduc·
tloll1 at aJUtudes lo••r tJau
1,000 feet. Tbe a1r carrien IDd
tbe county are attempU.., to
convince the FAA to permit
power cutbacks at IOO feet. luc.b a move would reduce nolte. 8o
far, there baa been no declaicla
from the FAA.
o.lly ............ "" Ille_ I[..._
Postman John Hcirman ""11 moil fur deliwrJI in Santa Ana Heights. Nationwide strike t008 averted
whm tentative agreement um reached Tuelda.JJ .
Bolger orders ad probe
Postmaster general denies asking ·special mail favor
WASHI NGTON (AP) -
Postmaster General William F.
Bolger said today he's ordered
a n investigation Into a
newspa~r report that some ad-
vertising circulars addressed to
his home are getting special
treatment.
The Washington Post reported
today that the practice began
after Bolger's wife complained
she had received one ad late and
missed a sale.
But Bolger said in a statement
today that he bas asked for no
special favors and wasn't aware
he has been receiving any.
Bolger also said he wants any
special consideration afforded
his mail stopped immediately
and ordered a check Into the
matter to see what happened.
"It's pretty weU systemaUzed
by now," the newspaper quoted
clerk Bruce Chido as saying in
explaining the routine he and
other clerks follow several times
a month when advertisements
from the Hecht Co.. a depart-
ment store chain, arrive at \heir
Northern Virginia regional post
office.
"When a Hecht's ad comes in,
the s upervisor comes over and
tells us to find the one addressed
to Bolger." the Post quoted
Chido as saying. '"With three or
four people looking, sometimes
we find it right away
Sometimes it takes up to an
hour."
··Whenever a Hecht Co. ad
comes in, we stop everything
and start sifting," said Linda
Lewis. "The supervisor comes
over and says, ·Find Bolger's
Hecht Co.' I'd say it happens at
least once every two weeks ...
The report said that when the
ad with Bolger's address is
round it is placed in a carrier's
bag for next-day delivery while
the rest of the Hecht Co. third-
c lass mailing often r e mains
behind an extra day or two.
Clerks told the newspaper that
the "'Hecht hunt" began about
seven months ago after Mn.
Bolger complained that she re
ceived a store circular too late
to take advantage of a sale
"They <the supervios rs J came
up lo us and said. 'We 're looking
for a Hecht ·s ad for this
< Bolger·s home l address,"'
Willi ams said. "'We said 'Why?'
They said, 'Because he didn't
get it on time.·
"It's just the Hecht's ads we
have to go for because they're
dated," Willi ams told the Post
··It ·s not uncommon to have
several clerks and a s upervisor
sifting through thousands of
pieces of mail looking for it. It's
turned into a game . Ever ybody
goes for it. It's the s tanding
joke."
Clerks said the "'Hecht hunt"
is most often begun by Donald
Pender . one o f thre e
supervisors. who said . "J can't
comment on the days l "m not
here ··What about the days he is
there? "I can't comment on
that. either."
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•
lllilll BllCH /lllTI ~lllT
.
' -··· WE DNESDAY,
July 22, 1981
FEATURES
COMICS
T ELEVI S ION
8 4
BS
810
Interest rates have small
consumer as well as big
executive worried ... 87
0
0
State OKs l1·vine Coastal developnient
.,.,,,,,, ........ .-.-·--·-·
Aesldetlttal
CRYSTAL COVE STATE PARK
CONDITIONAL
DEDICATION AREA
................
Residential, commercial and open $JXJCe areas outlined on map of 9,400-acre Irvine C003t winch
received state Coastal Commimon approval Tu.eldo.11 night.
'Affordable' housing myth
Agency says Irvine's Woo dbr idge homes out of reach
Once "affordable " housing un·
ilf) in Irvine's Village of Wood·
bridge no longer are affordable
to people with m oder ate in ·
comes.
That is the conclusion con·
tarned in a report r e leased
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 strict limits on owner
occupancy, have worked to lake
the dwellings out of the price
ran~e affordable to persons with
County planners
back freeway plan
Members of the Orange Coun-
ty Planning Commission have
agreed a north-south freeway
s hould be built through the south
county ranchlands to ease over -
crowding on t h e Santa Ana
Freeway.
But the commissioners, to the
dissatisfaction of at least some
of the SO Mission Viejq residents
who attended t he Tuesday meet-
ing in Santa Ana. said they don't
want to recommend an exact
route until more planning
studies are completed.
The residents objected chiefly
to one or several possible align·
ments described in an environ·
mental impact r e port. That
route would pass close to res-
idential districts in their com ·
ll)Unity.
Although two commissioners.
Alvin Coen and Earl Wooden.
wanted to drop that a lternative.
the other three commissioners
voted to retain a ll possible align-
ments.
They said a ll alignments
should be retained at least until
the county Board of Supervisors
reviews the issue Aug. 26. A
specific route is expected to be
chosen next year.
The commission's action, in
technical terms. was to e ndorse
inclusion of the so.called
Foothill Transportation Corridor
on the county's mas ter plan for
arterial highways.
Although the route s till is un·
known. the freeway would run
gene rally between the Riverside
Freeway in Santa Ana Canyon
and San Clemente. The freeway
is considered by most county of·
fi cials as c ritical to the develop·
m ent of lands east o( Mission
Viejo and El Toro.
Niguel sewage unit
to Use own power
Aliso Water Management
Agency oHicials say work is
about half finished on a new, $33
rpillion Laguna Niguel sewage
treatment plant that is designed
tb produce its own e lectricity.
dustriaJ users that produce toxic
wastes, all treated wastes can
be sold for use as fertilizer or ir·
rig a lion.
moderate incomes.
The Human Relations Com·
mission staff. in preparing the
report. exam ined 382 units that
were constructed in Woodbridge
between 1976 and 1979. Original
sales prices o f those units
ranged from $33,000 to $55 ,800.
According to the report, re-
leased Tuesda y. the $33,000 un·
its, constructed in 1976 are now
selling for about $110,000.
Had controls been imposed to
regulate tne 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 Woodbridge affordable
units have rapidly increased in
selling price since their con-
struction due lo the lack of long
term continued affordability
mechanism," the re port said.
"The result has· been that ~e
majority of the surveyed units
which have been resold are ~ot
now affordable to moderate tn·
come ramilies t i.e. those earn·
ing less than 1.20 percent of the
111~u1an Incom e 1n O r ange
County.)
"In addition, due to the lack of
re s trictions o n own er -
occupancy, and l ength o f
ownership, a majority of the un-•
its s urveyed are no longer owner
occupied. A significant percen-
tage of the homes have been
con verted into rental units,
while other units have been re·
sold either one. two. or three
times."
The HRC staff began the s tudy
of affordability of the WP<>d·
bridge units in October 1•. It
conducted a door-to-door survey
to gain information on resale ac·
tivity and owner occupancy.
The commission said it in-
tends to release a subsequent 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 compa ny.
Plans involve 9,400-acre parcel
By STEVE MJT.CHELL of IM De6ly,.... Ss.fl
State Coastal Commission ap·
proval or plans ror development
of the Irvine Coast Tuesday
night means work could begin
within a year on the 9,400·acre
parcel between Corona del Mar
and Laguna Beach.
And last minute compromise
between the commission's staff
and Irvine Company officials
can probably be approved by
Orange County Supervisors in
rapid fashion. Fifth District
Supervisor Thomas Riley said
today.
·'I anticipate changes agreed
to by the Irvine Company will
have no difficulty getting board
approval," sajd Riley, whose
district encompasses the Irvine
Coast.
Coastal Commissioners. meet·
ing in Los Angeles. voled 8 to l.
with member Beth Wyman op-
posed. to approve the land use
portion of the Irvine Coastal
P lan. Three new commissioners
abstained.
Approval, with severa l major
changes, came after more than
three hours of testimony from
two dozen Orange County
citizens.
The commission majority
sided with the Irvine Company
on dedication of 2,650 acres of
open space in return for develop-
m ent of 2,000 dwelling units. two
roads leading to the coast. and a
pair or commercial centers.
The commission staff had in·
eluded a requirement that would
have made dedication of open
space land by the company ir·
revocable at the start of de·
velopment of certain tracts and
projects.
The company successfully
argued that the requirement
would mean land would be given
to the public even if the com-
pany, m future years. was pre·
vented from completing its de·
velopment.
Company offi cials said the ir·
r evocable o ffer cla use would
provide incentive for private en·
vironmental groups or govern·
m ent agencies to stop develop·
m ent, in the knowle dge that
dedicated open s pace couldn't bt:
2nd burglary
suspect
identifie d
A second man arrested by
Sheriffs SWAT team members
inside a Sout h Laguna pharmacy has been identified as
Steven Houser. 27, of Anaheim.
SWAT members captured the
purportedly drugged suspect,
who was armed with a handgun,
inside the Aloha Pharmacy m
the Alpha Be ta shopping center
on Coast Highway after efforts
to talk him o ut of the shop
failed.
He was tackled from behind
last Saturday morning as other
deputies distr acted his attention.
and t aken lo South Coast
Medical Center suffering a drug
overdose, deputies said.
He was later booked into
Orange County Jail on $25,000
ball, along with his purported
accomplice. Gr egory Stuck. 2!1.
also of Anaheim, who was cap·
tured o n the r oof o f the
pharmacy shortly a fte r the
three-hour showdown began.
r etrieved by the company
Commissioners agreed that
the staff stipulation was unfair,
with Commissioner Robert Ryan
saying, "The staff is pr oposing
that after 30 years the land goes
public, no matter what happens
to the Irvine Company. It looks
lik e you've got a guy <the com-
pany) willing to give up the
land. but you don't trust him so
you 're putting another gun lo his
head.
"The Irvine Company is giv·
ing away the store in my opi·
nion ," Ryan said.
Michael Fischer, executive
director of the commission.
agreed to the deletion of the ir·
r evocable offer requirement
after reaching an "on the floor"
com promise with Irvine Com·
pan y Senior Vice President
Thomas Nielsen.
upon sale of 75 percent or the
lots in a specified development,
the company agreed to give up
open space lands of the same
value in the southern portion of
the property.
U nder t h e comprom ise.
greater "resource value" was
placed on lands scheduled for
development closer to Coast
Highway.
The com m ission also ap·
p roved construction of Sand
Canyon Avenue as a two-lane
arterial highway. rather than a
meandering two-lane park road
as s uggested by commission
staff members.
And they reduced the density
of a commercial area at the
junction of Sand Canyon Avenue
and Coa st Highway from 50,000
square feel or commercial space
to 25,000 square feet. Company
plans for 500 hotel rooms at that
s ite were reduced to 250.
The commission let stand
plans for 250,000 square feet of
commercial buildings at the pro-
posed Pelican Hill development,
as well as a 1,500-room hotel.
Thal comme rcial area will
abut the proposed Pelican Hill
Road, a four·lane roadway lead·
ing from Coast Highway to the
p r oposed San Joaquin
Transportation Corridor.
The commission, in a separate
vote. also approved company
plans for resale controls on
about 400 affordable units that
may or may not be located
within the 9.400-acre coastal pro-
perty.
Representallves of a coalition
of seven Orange County Coast
organizations that hired a bus to
attend Tuesday's meeting ex·
pressed disappointment in th~
com mission's action.
The group, calling itself the
Coalition of Concerned Coastal
Citizens, had urged that office
buildinlieS be excluded from the
coastal sector ; that San Can·
yon be a small park road; that
only 400 hotel room s be built,
and that commercial areas be
greatly reduced.
Council filing
deadline nears
Laguna Beach City Council
members have set a July 27
deadline for applicati6ns from
city residents wishing lo fill the
vacant seat on the council left by
Mayor Wayne Baglin's res igna-
tion.
Baglin, whos e resignation
from the coun cil became effec-
tive Tuesday. ·will be leaving
the city next week to take a job
in Saudi Arabia.
In his absence, Mayor Pro
Tern Kelly Boyd will exercise a ll
t he duties of mayor un til the
other council members elect
another mayor He will not
automatically assume the post.
At a council meeting Tuesday
night, the four remaining mem·
bers agreed that a person should
be appointed to fill in for the
nine month s remaining in
Baglin's term.
The council will hold a special
meeting July 28 to select a fifth
council member from the list of
applicants.
Council members said holding
a s pecial election lo fill Baglin's
council seal would be too cosUy,
and agreed on a plan for each of
them to choose five applicants
P oets meet Friday
William Pillin, whose poems
have appeared in "The Nation"
a nd "Literary H.ev1ew," will
r ead s elections of his work at a
meeting of the Laguna Poets
Friday.
The session will be at Guild
Hall, 428 Park Ave. an Laguna
Beach at 8 p.m . Admission is
free.
for consideration.
Under the plan. if the council
became deadlocked \hile voting
for appoint ment of an applicant,
t hat name would be thrown out.
Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick
said that method would force the
often-divided council to make an
a ppointment acceptable to all
m e mbers .
Persons wishing to serve on
the City Council s hould write a
short statem ent of why they are
seeking the council seal and list
their qualifications.
The statement must be taken
to city hall. 505 Forest Ave., no
later than noon July 27 The
council will meet at 6 p .m. the
following evening at city hall to
consider the applications .
Publishe r
quits Irvine
publicatiQns
Mike Somhter has r esigned as
publisher of the Irvine World
News weekly newspape r. New
Worlds magazine and Irvine TV
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 three
p ublications in J anuary. He has
announced the for mation of a
nationwide company s pecialit-
ing in media. law. politics. gov-
ernment. public relations and
corporate psychology counsel-
ing . . 'B ill Becker, agen cy ad -
rfiinistrator, said the fac ility will
P,rovide its own power through a
<*>·generation system .
•Methane gas, a byproduct of
Sf!W&ge, will be used to produce
electricity. Surplus power that
lf n't needed to run the plant will
be sold to Southern California
Bdl6on, Becker said.
·'The ideal is that during the
dry months we won't be sending
anything out the ocean outfall,"
Becker said. The outfall pipe for
the plant already has been in·
stalled adjacent to Aliso Pier in• South Laguna. ~~~~~~~__;~~~---,~~~~~~~~~---,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---,~~~~~~~~~~-,
• Becker said the plant 111 de·
sJgned to treat both solid wastes
$ld liquids. For the time being,
plans call for treated sludge to
be trucked out of the facility to
Sjllnitary landfills.
However. Becker said, ways
for the sludge to be sold as
fertilizer' after it has been t.rul·
ed. are bein1 inveatlaated. In ad-
dition. waate water· wlll even·
tb11ly be soid for irrigation.
Becker &a.id since the La,una
l'fl~uel plant wlU have no ln·
~a scream
cldish issue
When opened for operation.
the facility, situated on a ts-acre
site off La Paz Road between
Laguna Niguel Regional Park
a nd Crown Valley Parkway, will
have about 30 employees.
A ccordlng to Becker , con-
s truction is moving at a (aster
pace than bad bee n expected.
"We had originally looked at a
later startup 4ate," be said.
"But It now looks like we will be
able to move It up six months to
either January or March 1983."
He said work began in Ma)' 1980.
When completed , t he plant
wlll serve the communities ol
Laauna Nlguel, E l Toro, Lellure
World, South Laguaa, Lapa
Beach, Emerald Bay and a por·
tton of the Irvine Ranch.
Beeker said t h e Lacuna
Nlsuel plant ta one of lhe lut
llnk• ln tbe Albe> Water Manqe-ment qeocy <AWMA) 1ra&em1
wllleb la IUde up ot a eo.lldon
of tevm lofal • .-diatridl.
.... ...........
N.w Pl nriJljort ~ tr~f P!qiit gNitd to produce its OWft electricit11 taking ihape in Laguno N~l.
Yes, crime is news
ON 111E STREET BEAT
-We 1ot a nice note here at
the paper just yesterday on
the new-f an1led recording·
machine we bave here in the
newspaper office that lets
you till us what you're think·
tna by dialing 642-6086.
Lota of people call in to
blow off steam into the
"We're Listening" recorder
and I think that's good for
~ ~\
JIM MUIPHlll ,mlt
them and good for us too. We
get to know what is grinding
on folks that way.
This particular gentleman,
who didn't identify himself,.
left u s the following
message:
''The Daily Pilot is a very
good paper (thank you, sir).
It contains news and articles
It'• Jtut 0110ther routine gong /ighl
that are of most importance
to the public.''
THEN HE ADDED, "But I
really don't see what the
murders or killings or rob-
berie~ have to do with news.
·'Those events, to me. are
not news. Those are every-
day things that happen.
·'Eliminating these types
of crimes or any crime of
that sort in the paper would
be more beneficial. Thank
you."
Now you must suspect that
a lot of people share Uniden-
tilied Gentleman's views on
crime news. They'd just
rather not read about it while
reposing in the living room
after a long day, waiting for
the dinner bell. Too much
fear and dismay. Too much
violence.
From one stance, you can
certainly understand the readers who object when a
paper picks up a violent item
off the wires from some
crossroads in Brazil and
soups it up into the biggest
story of the day.
TROUBLE IS, we have
enough home-grown crime
and violence to fill the paper
should editors choose to off er
only that kind of a readina
diet. M06l editors, however
try to give readers some kind
of an even-handed blend and
mix in the newa of the day.
But there 11 one comment
made by Unidentified
Gentleman that is realty deeply disturbing.
That is, when he describes
murders, killinga or rob-
beries as simply, "Everyday
things that happen."
NOW REALLY, has it
come to this? We are now
willing to accept that kill-
ings, mayhem, murders,
rapes and robberies are
nothing out of the ordinary?
Just "everyday things that
happen?"
I am sorry, Unidentified
Gentleman, but I can't ac-
cept that. I refuse to accept
that. Perhaps we have been
fed such a steady diet of
violence in t he shows we
watch or the entertainment
we seek that we've come to
accept it as a way of life.
But crimes that do violence
to other people are not accep-
table. I don't want killings as
an acceptable part of my
everyday llf e, nor that of my
c hild ren or m y
grandchildren.
PEOPLE WHO DO those
kinds of things should be
tracked down, captured and
brought to justice. They don't
belong on my street or your
street.
And when they are on our
streets, and perpetrating
those kinds of crimes against
other people, yes, I do want
to know about them in the
pages of my newspaper. And
I also like to know how our
law enforcement agencies
are dealing with those
perpetrators .
VIOLENT CRIMES are in-
deed happening every day
along our coastline today.
But I don't think we've
reached the point of no con-
cern where we can say as-
sault or murder is i'ust as routine as walking to he cor-
ner store.
We wouldn't think so if it
happened to you or to me.
JULY • AUGUST SPECIAL Perk up that limp hairdo ~th a care-free perm from Nature Cut-
t•, Hurry In now for a super summer look.
112.00 v11ue1
•••••••••••••• ...
.,, ..
•11 •
No other newspaper: brings you more
Women
Mtn
of your city councll, planning commission,
hoOI and col leg8 districts and county
government than the
Pooling
• Bavings
detailed
About 13,900 people
saved 314,000 1allons of
aaaollne and one ball·
million miles of wear·
and·tear on their cars by
commuUn1 from April
throuch June ln car
poola set by the Orange
County Transit District.
Those rtsuJts are in-
cluded in a quarterly re·
port made public Mon·
day at a meeting of the
district's board of direc-
tors.
The information was
compiled through a
telephone survey of 538
people who use the
system. Results show
tl'lat 23 percent of those
who listed their names
since January in the
ridesharing program
are commuting regular·
ly in a car pool. The
average trip is 18 miles
one way.
Howeve r . because
many applicants live or
work long dis tances
away or travel at odd
hours, only 56 percent of
the applicants were pro·
vided a list of possible
traveling companions.
The transit dis trict
took over operation of
the program a year ago
from a private agency.
Commuter Computer ,
and the report is con-
sidered the most com-
plete breakdown yet on
the service.
Michael Barnes, dis·
trict communications
director who supervises
the program. said some
information still isn't
available, such as the ef-
f e c tl v en es s of th e
syst e m whe re It has
been instituted recently
for 19 pri vate
employers .
In other cases, large
employers have created
their own ridersharing
o e a c c c a c a a c ¢ s ; #$ OJ¥
ROYALTY -William
and Louise Kanold of
Costa Mesa were
chosen prince and prin-
cess of the Golden
Court in the senior
citizens competition at
the Orange County
Fair.
Fresno mayor eyes Senate
Women's Political Caucus plans conference in Irvine
8y0.C.HUSTINGS ofTMDMlr~llMf
"THJS IS NOT a fundraiAing
event," says the Invitation, but
it will be a chance for Fresno
Mayor Daniel K. Whitehurst lo
test the Orange County political
waters as he ponders a run for
the U.S. Senate.
Supporter David Stein and
friends are holding a reception
for Whitehurst Friday from 4: 30
to 6 p.m. at the Steln·Brief
Building, li.>71 Fitch, Irvine.
Whitehurst, a Democrat who
outlines issues more often as·
sociated with Republicans 81
"integral parts of his political
philosophy." says he would try
to reduce the size or the federal government.
Al lhe moment he appears to
be one of t he leading con-
servative Democrats pondering
a challenge to any Senate bid by
Gov. Jerry Brown. • • •
GEORGE DEUKMEJIAN,
state attorney general and a
candidate for governor next
year, wHI visit the Rotary Club
of Newport·Balboa at the club's
July 29 meeting. • • • "THE GREATEST Show On
Earth" is what the Orange
County National Women's
Pollllcal Caucus is calling its
conrerence on campaigning,
candidacy and community in·
volvement, scheduled for Aug. 8
from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the
Registry Hotel in Irvine.
Sched~ speakers at the con·
rerence are women from across
the political spectrum, including
Re publican Assemblywoman
Marian Bergeson. Democratic
Central Committee member
Mary Capdeville, senior citizen
activist Ruth Kahn and Superior
Court Judge Alice Marie Stotler. ,
Tickets are S20. or $25 al the
door.
• • • .
A SUNSET C R U I SE of
Newport Beach with area
Republican officeholders is set
for Aug. 9 Crom 7 lo 9 p.m.
aboard the Pavilion Queen. in a
progr a m s ponsored by the
Re public an Associa t es of
Orange County.
Scheduled to attend are
Congressmen Bob Badbam. Dan
Lungren and Bill Oannemeyer.
several state senators and as·
sem blymen. and others. The
cost is S5 for associates, S7 50 for
non·members Boarding time is
6:30 p.m. • • • EXPECT I NG A larg e
turnout, the Laguna Niguel
Republican Women's Club has
turned its September meeting
into a dinner with featured guest
Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. The
dinner is set for Sept. 2 starting
at 6:30 p.m. at the Holiday Inn
in Laguna Hills. system from scratch . .--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
0 n e exam ple is the H bb /41. b Whi ~ Hn foods ~~~~;s ~~i~P ·ha:~.i:~ 0 ~ ureen au&
employees commuting Wholeaal•tothefl'Mc ,,, A..1•/I R~ AM -in 183 van and car C CTUS .,..1 •• fl1T pools. James Reichert. EXOTIC PLANTS• A
di s tr ict gene r al 716Dalla,CoroftadefM• 644-5106 A,~.&., h..,
manager, has been a r., .. ,. .... ,
strong proponent or
ridesharing. ,.1._....a1.~ II .. ,.1. /
He said interes ted cp~~~-'Lcoomg~. k_ -.·... Da1·1y P1·1at ··•N• rlf persons can call for in-u1tu1U mc1..u•-
form ation at 636-7433 e%clU1tvely m the Hc.t»or View Cellhr 644-7733
(RIDE). 1628 s.. MlcjHI om •. Newport leach
WiTERMEB2N ... t'I~
field.·ttes\t .. , .,,~.ftJ
1 $WEET (IU ..... ~v _.
Goldenl r • ~,. L.Arga • ~r-· BAllANAS ... ~ -PEACHES ... ~ -
~"ta, ~sa, Ill)~ Fir"4-, tipe II ~-PLUMS ... 1171b. TO~ES .. ~1·.
E)( • lea.c,( Not over z-zx fc ) GROUtf &:>at _
gEEF -~;ftt
I I -..----....... --.--~--1-------...----------~--
IRVlll
..., ....
WEDNESDAY,
July 22, 1981
.. . . . " .....
FEATURES 84
COMICS 85 .
TELEVISION 810
; oa4 .. ..
Interest rates have small
consumer as well as big
executive worried ... B7
D
0
' State OKs • Coast developm:ent
,.,,,... ·-·---·--·-· Project plans involve 9,400-acre parcel
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of U.. DMIY PIMI '""
CRYSTAL cove
STATE PARK
Abalone Point
CONDITIONAL
DEDICATION AREA
o.lty ..........
Residential, commeTcial and open space arta.t outlined .°" map of 9.400-acre Irvine Coast which
received state Coastal Com111i.uion approval Tuesday mghl.
Friends mourn sea victim
Michael Samuels' drowning off Newport puzzles many
Those who knew 24·year-old
Michael Samuels say lhey're un·
certain why their fri end took to
the waves off Newport Beach
this week during an afternoon
outing that ended in his death.
The Costa Mesa man. friends
e?Cplain, did not like the water
and was not a strong swimmer.
Samuels. a day camp youth
counselor in Costa Mesa who
was four units s hy of graduating
ftom UC Irvine, was last seen
Mon day afternoon riding a
Boogie board in the waves near
the Santa Ana River mouth.
His body was found 20 hours
l•ter in the waler off Huntington
State Beach near Brookhurst
Street.
Witnesses told police Samuels
was thrown from the board be
\l(as riding and then was tossed
a)'ound by a series or breakers
as he tried to dog-paddle to
s~ore.
One person on the beach swam
to his aid and grabbed him, but
lost him as more waves crashed
over them. lifeguards said.
Lifeguards said when the
water settled. Samuels' body
could not be located. A scuba
diving team spent several hours
searching the area.
"He was the kind of guy who
wlls always smiling, always
there to help out." explained
Luis Martinez. an Irvine resi-
dent who said Samuels was his
' ~st friend.
He said he grew up with
~muels in East Los Anlleles
and attended Lincoln High
School and East Los Angeles
College with him.
"We both transferred down to
UC I together and roomed
together that first year ,"
Martinez said "He was a neat
guy He was ambitious ...
Samuels. Martinez said. was a
psychology major who loved to
work with kids. He had taken the
day camp job for that reason,
friends said.
Another friend speculated that
Samuels might have been al·
tempting lo s how some
youngsters how to ride a Boogie
board.
"He was that way," the friend
suggested, "always trying to
help, trying to show someone
how to do something."
Officials from the day camp.
listed on the lifeguard's report
as C ultural Educators Day
Camp, could not be located for·
comment.
It was unclear. lifeguards
said, whether Samuels had gone
to the beach with a day camp
group, with friends , or by
himself.
Funeral arrangements,
friends of the family say, are
pending. Samuels is survived by
his parents. two brothers and
two sisters.
County planners
back freeway plan
Members of the Orange Coun·
ly Planning Commission have
agreed a north-south freeway
should be built through the south
county ranchlands to ease over·
crowding on the Santa Ana
Freeway.
But the commissioners, to the
dissatisfaction of at least some
of the 50 Mission Viejo residents
who attended the Tuesday meet·
ing in Santa Ana. said they don't
want lo recommend an exact
route until more planning
studies are completed.
The residents objected chiefly
lo one of several possible align·
ments described in an environ
m ental impact report. f h at
route would pass close lo res-
idential districts in their com-
munity.
Although two commissioners.
Alvin Coen and Earl Wooden,
wanted to drop that alternative.
the other three commissioners
voted to retain all possible align-
ments. They said all alignments
should be retained at least until
the county Board of Supervisors
reviews the issue Aug. 26. A
specific route is expected to be
chosen next year.
· The commission's action, in
technical terms. was to endorse
inclusion o f t he so-called
Foothill Transportation Corridor
on the county's master plan for
arterial highways. .
Although the route still is un·
known. the freeway would run
generally between the Riverside
Freeway in Santa Ana Canyon
and San Clemente. The freeway
is considered by most county of·
ficials as critical to the develop·
ment of lands east of Mission
Viejo and E l Toro.
Unstable land
threate n in g
Quiet Caniwn
County Environmental
Management Agency officiaJ1
will meet with the owner of
Dana Point's Quiet Cannon •
restaurant Au1. 10 to dlscuu
closlnc the blufftop restaurant to
diner-a.
The heartne follows a study
conducted by the county's
Geologic Technical Advisory
Board, which claims tbat tbe
Green Lantem·street rutllurant
Is perched on an unstable slope.
In it.a r9.,ort, the four-member
advisory board aald a tu1b I.wt
ol rlak atata that t.be bbalf could
1lve way , plun1ln1 the
restaurant into the roeu below.
l:d Kw•n, a elvU tnltMlr
Witti DIA, •aid a fealt U.. ,_ -..ultMQuMtC. ... Kwu
laid tbe dlHMWY of U.. fnlt e•••ed eoaetruetlon of &II•
net. ... '° .... .,.. In .. .......... tlh.
State Coastal Commission ap-
proval of plans for development
of t he Irvine Coast Tuesday
night means work could begin
within a year on the 9,400-acre
parcel between Corona del Mar
and Laguna Beach.
And last minute compromise
between the commission's staff
a nd Irvine Company officials
can probably be approved by
Orange County Supervisors in
rapid fashion. Flfth District
Supervisor Thomas Riley said
today.
"I anticipate changes agreed
to by the Irvine Company will
have no difficulty getting board
approval," said Riley, wh<?se
district encompasses the Irvine
Coast.
Coastal Commissioners. meet·
ing in Los Angeles, voted 8 to 1,
with member Beth Wyman op-
posed, to approve the land use
portion of the Irvine Coastal
Plan. Three new commissioners
abstained.
Approval, with several major
changes, came after more than
three hours of testimony from
two dozen Orange County
citizens
The commission majority
sided with the Irvine Company
on dedication of 2,650 acres of
open space in return for develop-
ment of 2,000 dwelling units. two
roads leading to the coast. and a
pair of commercial centers.
The commission staff had in·
eluded a requirement that would
have made dedication or open
space land by the company ir-
revocable al the start of de·
velopmenl of certain tracts and
projects.
The company successfully
argued that the requirement
would mean land would be given
to the public even if the com-
pany, in future years. was pre·
vented from completing its de·
velopment.
Company officials said the lr·
revocable offer clause would
provide incentive for private en-
vironmental groups or govern-
ment agencies to stop develop·
menl, In the knowledge that
dedicated open space couldn't be
retrieved by the company.
Commissioners agreed that
the staff stipulation was unfair,
with Commissioner Robert Ryan
sayinl'. "The staff is pro_oosin!!
that after JO years the land goes
public, no matter what happens
lo the Irvine Company. fl looks
like you've got a guy (the com-
pany> willing to give up the
land, but you don't trust him so
you're pulling another gun to his
head.
"The Irvine Company is giv·
ing away the store in my opi·
nion." Ryan said.
Michael Fischer, executive
director of the com mission,
agreed to the deletion of the ir·
revocable offer requirement
Drugs, d rink
• • semin a r top ic
The Irvine city Youth Services
Department will sponsor a free
two-hour seminar on drug and
alcohol dependency on July 28
from 7 to 9 p.m . at the city
Youth Center. 4601 Walnut Ave ..
Irvine.
The program will feature a
lecture from Vickie Wilson, a ·
community health educator
from the Positive Action Center
of Good Samaritan Hospital.
•-....... --~
after reaching an "on the floor"
compromise with Irvine Com-
pany Senior Vice President
Thomas Nielsen
Upon sale of 75 percent or the
lots in a specified development,
the company agreed to give up
open space lands or the same
value in the southern portion of
the property.
Under the com promise ,
greater "resource value" was
placed on lands scheduled for
development closer to Coast
Highway.
The commission also ap·
proved construction of Sand
Canyon Avenue as a two-lane
arterial highway, rather than a
meandering two.lane park road
as suggested by commission
staff members.
And they reduced the density
of a commercial area at the
junction of Sand Canyon A venue
NAMED TO POST
Robert Bruce
and Coast Highway from 50,000
square feet of commercial space
to 25,000 square feet. Company
plans for 500 hotel rooms at that
site were reduced lo 250.
The commission let stand
plans for 250,000 square feet of
com merci;d buildings at the pro-
posed Pelican Hill developmen\_
a s well as a 1.500-room hotel.
That commercial area will
abut Lhe proposed Pelican Hill
Road. a four.lane roadway lead-
ing from Coast Highway to the
proposed San Joaquin
Transportation Corridor.
The commission, in a separat'
vole. also approved company
plans for resale controls on
about 400 affordable units that
may or may not be localed
within the 9,400 -acre coasta~ pro-
perly.
NEW PRINCIPAL
Gary Norton
3 lroine school
posi tiom f i lle d
Irvine Unified School District
trustees have appointed Robert
Bruce principal of University
High School, Gary Norton as
principal of Irvine High and
Dean Wa ldfogel as assistant
superintendent of schools .
Bruce. 43, who has a doctorate
in education from use. replaces
fo rmer University High prin·
cipal Robert Mohr. now superin·
tendent of Lindsay School Dis-
trict near Fresno. Bruce leaves
a position as principal at Glen·
dora High School.
Norton, 44. who has a master's
degree in health eduClat1on from
Cal State Northridge. replaces
former Irvine High principal
Dean Waldfogcl, who has been
appointed assistant superinten
dent of schools. Norton was the
former assistant principal at
University High.
Waldfogel's new position had
been vacant s ince Ma rilyn
Harris left the school district in
1978, said Superintendent of
Schools Stan Corey.
He said the responsibilities of
the position had been assumed
by other district adminislrators
since Ms. Harris left.
APPOINTED
Dean Waldf ogel
School Trustee Fred Gahm
said Waldfogel was given the job
al this time in order to increase
efficiency in the school district.
achotanhlpl. From left are Kana WiDiaard
Sheryl Ann Kelly, Susan Marie Lall ud
Lorie Ann Fridell .
•
Yes, crime is news
ON THE STREET BEAT
-We 1ot a nice note here at UM paper just yesterday on
tbe new-f an1led recordin&
machine we have here to the
newapaper office that leu
you tell us what you're think·
inl by dialing 642-6086.
Lota of people call 1n to
blow off steam into the
"We're Listening" recorder
and I think that's good for ,,.,.,.
,~~1
Tll IUIPllll ,@ It
them and good for us loo. We
aet to know what is grinding
on folks that way.
This particular gentleman,
who didn't identify himself,.
left us the following
message:
''The Daily Pilot is a very
aood paper (thank you, sir).
It contains news and articles
that are of most importance
to the public.''
THEN HE ADDED, "But I
really don't see what the
murders or killings or rob-
beries have to do with news.
"Those events, to me, are
not news . Those are every-
day things that happen.
"Eliminating these types
of crimes or any crime of
that sort in the paper would
be more beneficial. Thank
you."
Now you must suspect that
a lot of people share Uniden-
tified Gentleman's views on
crime news. They'd jllSt
rather not read about it while
reposing in the living room
after a long day, waiting for
the dinner bell. Too much
fear and dismay. Too much
violence.
From one stance, you can
certainly understan(i the readers who object when a
paper picks up a violent item
off t he wires from some
crossroads in Brazil and
soups it up into the biggest
story of the day.
TR01,1BLE IS, we have
enough home-grown crime
and violence to f iU the paper
should editors choose to offer
only that kind of a readlna
diet. Molt editors, however,
try to ove readers some kind
of an even-banded blend and
mlx in the news of the day.
But there la one comment
made by Unidentified
Gentleman that is really
deeply disturbing.
That is, when he describes
murders, klllings or rob-
beries as simply, ''Everyday
things that happen."
NOW REAL.LY, has it
come to this? We are now
willing to accept that kill-
ings, mayhem, murders,
rapes and robberies are
nothing out of the ordinary?
Just "everyday things that
happen?"
I am sorry, Unidentified
Gentleman, but I can't ac-
cept that. I ref use to accept
that. Perhaps we have been
fed such a steady diet of
violence in the shows we
watch or the entertainment
we seek that we've come to
accept it as a way of life.
But crimes that do violence
to other people are not accep-
table. I don't want killings as
an acceptable part of my
everyday life, nor that of my
children or m y
grandchildren.
PEOPLE WHO DO those
kinds of things should be
tracked down, captured and
brought.to justice. They don't
belong on my street or your
street.
And when they are on our
~streets , and perpetrating
those kinds of crimes against
other people, yes, I do want
to know about the m in the
pages of my newspaper. And
I also like to know how our
law enforcement agencies
are dealing with those
perpetrators.
VIOLENT CRIMES are in-
deed happening every day
along our coastline today.
But I don't think we've
reached the point of no con· cern where we can say as-
sault or murder is just as
routine as walking to the cor-
ner store.
We wouldn't think so if it
happened to you or to me.
JULY • AUGUST SPECIAL Perk up that limp hairdo with a car•free &Mtrm from Nature Cut-
•· Hurry In now for a super summer look.
"'"" •••••••••••••••••••••• 53900 172.00 Value! ... , ..... ,...... .......... .........
1 16'° Women
..... Mtn
No other newspaper brings you more your city council, planning commission,
hool an.d college dlstrilcti and county
govern'!'entthanthe
Pooling
• 8avings
detailed
About 13,900 people
aaved 314,000 11llona of
1110Une ind one h11f·
miUlon mJles of we1r·
ind-tear on their c1r1 by
commutlnt from April
tbrouah June ln car
pools set by the Orange
County Tran.sit District.
Those results are in-
cluded In a quarterly re-
port made public Mon-
day at a meetine of the
district's board of direc-
tors.
The information was
com piled through a
telephone survey of 538
people who use the
system. Results show
that 23 percent of those
who listed their names
since January in the
ridesharlng program
are commuting regular-
ly in a car pool. The
average trip is 18 miles
one way.
However. because
many applicants live or
work long distan ces
away or travel at odd
hours, only 56 percent of
the applicants were pro-
vided a list of possible
traveling companions.
The transit dis trict
took over operation of
the program a year ago
from a private agency.
Com muter Computer.
and the report is con-
sidered the most com-
plete breakdown yet on
the service.
Michael Barnes. dis-
trict communications
director who supervises
the program. said some
information still isn't
available, such as the ef-
f ect i ven ess o f th e
system where it has
been instituted recently
f o r 19 pri vate
employers.
In other cases. large
employers have created
their . own ridersharing
.. : . : : ;
ROYALTY -William
and Louise Kanold of
Costa Mesa were
chosen prince and prin·
cess of the Golden
Court in the senior
citizens comt>etition at
the Orange County
Fair.
:9
Fresno mayor eyes Senate
Women's Political Caucus plans conference in Irvine •
By O.C. llUSTI NGS
OfTIM Oellr l"lletlleff
"THIS IS NOT a fundraising
event," says the invitation, but
it will be a chance for Fresno
Mayor Daniel K. Whitehurst to
test the Orange County political
waters as he ponders a run for
the U.S. Senate.
Supporter David Stein and
friends are holding a reception
for Whitehurst Friday from 4:30
to 6 p.m. at the Stein-Brief
Building, 1~71 Fitch, Irvine.
Whitehurst. a Democrat who
outlines Issues more often as·
sociated with Republicans as
"integral parts of his political
philosophy," says he would try
to reduce the size of the federal
government.
At the moment he appears to
be one or the leading con-
serv alive Democrats pondering
a challenge to any Senate bid by
Gov J erry Brown. • • •
GEORGE DEUKMEJIAN,
state attorney general and a
candidate for governor next
year, will visit the Rotary Club
of Newport-Balboa al the club's
July 29 meeting.
* • * "THE GREATEST Show On
Earth" is what the Orange
County National Wom e n's
Political Caucus is calling its
conference on campaigning,
candidacy and community in-
volvement, scheduled for Aug. 8
from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Registry Hotel in Irvine.
Scheduled speakers at the con-
ference are women from across
the political SJ)ectrum. including
Re publican Assemblywoman
Marian Bergeson. Democratic
Central Committee me mber
Mar y Capdeville. senior citizen
activist Ruth Kahn and Superior
Court Judge Alice Marie Stotler.
Tickets are $20, or $25 at the
door.
• * •
A SUNSET C RUISE of
N e wport Beac h with area
Republican omceholders is set
for Aug. 9 from 7 to 9 p.m.
aboard the Pavilion Queen, in a
program s ponsor ed b y the
R e publica n Associates of
Orange County.
Scheduled to attend are
Congressmen Bob Badha m, Dan
Lungren and Bill Dannemeyer.
several state senators and as·
semblymen, and others. The
cost is SS for associates, $7.50 for
non -members . Boarding time is
6:30 p.m.
* • * EXPECT I NG A l a rge
turnout, the Laguna Niguel
Republican Women 's Club has
turned its Septe mber meeting
into a dinner with featured guest
Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. The
dinner is set for Sepl-. 2 starting
at 6:30 p.m. at the Holiday Inn
in Laguna Hills. system from scratc h . ..-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-..-~~-.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
m£~E~'~.:~!~ Hobby C!reenbau& Wh -s Ha Foods
employees commuting WholeHletothe .... c ,,, ... ,.,, Rll 0/1-
in 183 v a n a nd car CTUS .,..~ pools. James Reichert. EXOTIC PLAMTS· CA
d I s tr i c t ge n e ra 1 ''==7=16=Dall==a.=C=orOIMl==del==M=cr====='=4= .. =S=l=0=6~ ,,, .J. , J... •• manager . has been a i...: .. ,. ..,.,
s trong proponent or
ridesharing. , ___ _.,...._....,..._---_.....--------:"':'I ,.,., ...... ,.,.~ II ... ..1. / pe~s~a;! ~na\f rf~~tfn~ ~~!:~ ~:!~. Dlil Pilaf. MPS• Rf
formation at 636-7433 ezclunvely m the Hmttor View Cellhr
<RIDE>. IL..------~-----=----...... 1621 s-Mlc)MI Dri••· .. WDDn
. -tlOW ••• '-' HuM.tiM-q\ot\, seo.dtl ~C> FooW\to.\~ Vo,\\~ •••
#!I~ ftODUCEl
WiTERMEmN ... l'J.~
riel~-ftes\u 'Jrt ,,,~.ftJ $YIEET CIU... 1tv --
iiANAS .. l:P ;EACHE$: .. l:P
~a...ta, Rosa. Ill)~ Fit...,, trpe • ~ •. PLUMS ... 1•11b. IOMBeES .. ~ ·_
E>c·I._,( Not over zzx fi ) GROUtf 1:> ~ _
DEEP--~-tt
----
WEDNESDAY JUL 'T l .' 1 'IH l
County jet noise data probed
Information in report differs from actual readings .
By FREDElllCK SCHOEMEHL Of .. Deity ...... ,....
Residents' inquiries have
prompted Orange County gov·
ernment officials to take a
second look at environmental
documentation that l~ to ap-
prov al of the DC·9 Super 80
jetliner at John Wayne Airport.
What is concerning both resi·
dents and officials Is that actual
noise data for the new aircraft,
now in use b irCal, does not
jibe with da a that was con·
talned in the environmental im·
pact report approved by the
county Board ·of Supervisors
before it permitted Super 80
service to begin.
Publicly, officials are dis·
counting the effect the dlf·
ference in the noise data may
have. Privately, there is concern
that it could weaken the county's
position in a lawsuit in which
Newport Beach is claiming the
environmental impact report on
the Super 80 was inadequate and
that the decision to permit use or
the aircraft s hould be re·
evaluated.
According to the impact re-
port, the Super 80, durine a test
flltht conducted last August,
togaed a 92.1' decibel noise
reading when passina over a
noile monitor located lm·
mediately south ol the airport.
Soper 80 service began June 1.
During the month there were 141
Super 80 departures. The
average noise readini at the
Super 80 ''aircraft
is noisier than we
expected it would
be ."
same monitor was 99.4 decibels,
according to figures compiled by
the aiport Noise Abatement Of.
fice.
The composite noise reading
for departures during the month
of June (based on readings
taken at all noise monitors local·
ed under departure paths> was
96.14, about five decibels greater
than that expected by county of-
fi cials.
..
•'There's no ·question the
aircraft is noisier than we e:t·
peeled it would be. But it's 1tlll
considerably quieter than the
other aircraft ( Boein1 737s and
DC·9·30a) bein1 flown," said
Airport Manager Murry Cable.
According to a memorandum
sent to the county Environmental
Management A1ency by Steven
Kozak, airport plans and pro-
grams officer, the Super 80 is
three to five decibels quieter
than the other aircraft.
··As you can see from the
above,". Koiak wrote environ·
mental analyst Mark Goodman,
•'the Super 80 .ts measurably
quieter than the other air car·
rier aircraft it is replacing. On a
composite basis, the noise abate·
ment office calculates that the
DC·9·80 is 55 percent quieter
than the other aircraft; or con·
versely, the others are 123 per-
cent noisier (twice as loud)."
(Because decibel readings are
computed using logarithms,
seemingly small numeric dif·
ferences represent much larger
differences.)
<See JET, Page A%)
~ ... ,.... .. •kllMI .......
AIRBORNE AGAIN -The Goodyear blimp, in Carson March 1 by high winds and was
Columbia, returns from its first flight since badly damaged. A GQOdyear spokesm~ said
being repaired at Marine Corps Helicopter the blimp was completely rebuilt at the
Station in Tustin. Photo was made Tuesday Marine air station.
evening. Blimp was blown from its mooring
Area postal workers happy
Agreement.to avert national strike hailed ·b y all
By ARIF HAJI '"-~ .......... Orange Coast U.S. Postal
Service representatives,
employees and union leaders all
said they are relieved today that
union leaders and management
have reached an agreement.
averting a nationwide postal
strike. <Rel•ted story A4» "I am very glad it's QVer,"
Hid Cecil Herring, 58, of Cotta
11 ... , who haa been a lettor car· rier for~ yean.
Wyatt IAe, manlier of tbe
Fairview branch of UM eo.a ••a past olftft. laid u.. ...
tatJve Mttlement bu "liftM tbt
•iitltit.'' ICenwblle, Jordan Brown,
pre.ldeiK ol Br•cll 11• al tbt
lettar csn.n· .... buld ..
Ora•1e. 1atd •• a bappJ ........................
... Nld tbt ......., "' ..... can11n did not.,.. lo *8DI.
Bowt•er, lllft ~a &eu.wrtera.-....1 ... 1,
said based on a reaction from •
rally last Sunday, even thou1b
most employees did not want to
strike, they would have ll uked
to do so by national union
leaden.
"I didn't want
to strike, but I
sure wasn't about
to cross a pjpket
line,"
5 $
"' >
• .I
1
• •
Ylll llllll ll llllY Ml
OH ANGE: COUN I Y C ALIFOHN IA 25 CENTS
TRUNK LINES BUSY -"Hold the phone," say
these ponderous pachyderms as they ex·
change greetings. The 33·year·old elephant
lady. "Mampe" from India. left, flirts with
.............
her younger friends from Africa as they
stroke each others· trunks at the West Berlin
Zoo .
1,500 flee · poison
Acid fumes leak from truck near Blythe
BLYTHE (AP> -A tanker
that leaked a poisonous cloud of
nitric acid. forcing the evacua·
tion of 1,500 people in two
Colorado River towns briefly
erupted in names just as repair
and cleanup crews arrived on
the scene today.
Riverside County firefi&hters,
wearin1 protective au masks.
were pulled back from the area
because flre officials feared the
truck mi1ht explode before the
flames were quickly ext-
inguished. Officials said the
truck's tires had caught fire as a
result of a chemical reaction
with the •cid.
'Disaster'
of Medfly
rejected
LOS GATOS CAP> -The
Reagan administration today re·
jected Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr:s request to declare three
California counties a federal dis-
aster area because of infestation
by a destructive fruit fly.
Such action was udnecessary.
the government said , because
there were "no signs that the in·
festalion is spreading out of con·
trot."
Brown asked for the disuter
declaration last week, saying
the Mediterranean fruit fly in-
festation in Santa Cla ra ,
Alameda and San Mateo coun·
ties was "beyond control" of
state and local eradication ef·
forts. A day later, the governor
procl,Umed the eradication ef-
forta "on track."
The administration agreed. In
a telegram to Brown J,oday. the
Federal Emergency" Manage·
ment Aaency, with White House
concurrence, said "the area in
which the fly has been found in
recent weeks Is basically the
same area in which the peA was
discovered last year . . .
'·Al this point the situation has
stabilized with the eradication
measures under way," FEMA
spokesman Bob Blair told
Brown.
Pilot's TY
Log praised
by readers
The red foaming nitric acid
began leaking from the tanker
along Interstate 10 on the out·
s kirts of Blythe this morning,
after a previous leak of fumes
and a repair job 250 miles
earlier. The truck was carrying 26,000
pounds or red foaming nitric
acid from Vandenberg Air Force
Base, 150 miles northwest of Los
Angeles, to Holloman Air Force
Base in New Mexico, when leaks
occurred near Thousand Oaks,
Calif., SO miles northwest of Los
Angeles, and in Blythe. about
200 miles southeast of Los
AnJ(eles. said Capt. Anne Peck
at Vandenberg. The chemical is
used as a rocket propellant for
some space launchers, she said.
"There is a southwest wind on
this cloud and it is gelling much
denser and thicker," said fire
departm e nt Ca pt. James
Wright.
He said people were evacua~
ed from an area two miles north
of Interstate 10. a mile south.
and two to three miles east and
west along the highway. near
the Colorado River. which forms
the border between California
and Arizona.
Wriizht said some Riverside
(See ACID. Page AZ>
Agca guilty in bid
to murde r Pope
ROME <AP > -Mehmet Ali
Agca was convicted today of the
attempted murder of Pope John
Paul II and sentenced lo Life im-
prisonment.
The six-member jury and two
judges deliberated for 6112 hours.
Chief Judge Severino San-
liapichi read the verdict and the
sentence.
Agca, who admitted he shot
the pope in St. Peter's Square on
May 13. was n ot in the
courtroom when the verdict was
announced. He boycotted the
last two days or the proceedings
as a protest against his trial in
an Italian court instead of the
Vatican.
Life imprisonment is the max·
imum sentence in Italy. which
does not have capital punish-ment. 1
The pope is hospitalized with a
virus. and was not asked to at·
tend the trial or give a deposi·
tion.
Anthony g iven
3-year probation ' I
Former Irvine Mayor Art An-
thony. convicted of misde-
meanor assault in an attack on
his wife, was given three years
probation and a $5,000 fine today
by Harbor Court Judge Donald
Dungan.
Anthony, so. now an Irvine Ci·
ty Councilman, won't have to
serve any jail time, but will be
required lo donate 1,000 hours or
com munlty service. Judge
Dungan ruled.
As part of the probation, An·
thony may not drink alcohol,
possess any firearms or go Into
a home where firearms are
present.
Orange County Deputy Dis·
trlct Attorney Patue·Manoukian
asked Judee Dungan to 1ive An·
thony a one.year prison term.
Bill Doulherty, Anthony's at· .
torney, arl\lin1 against a prison
sentence, told Judie Dun•an
that Anthony 11 "a hero ucl an
outatandinl cMc leader.••
Aaare111n1 Judi• o unsan,
Anthony ta.ld, "I am 1lncerely
11hamed for l01lq control ol. my.ell and putUn1 a woman in
barm'a way. I 1ball always
catty remorse ud lbame.''
He &old Jude• Dunaan that be
HD't remember wbat ha...,.00 oa the nllbt ol April I when he alle1edl1 beat hb wife, Elaine.
witla Ida ftltl aad. ~~ IMr 1calp wttb a bUllft. a ·* caliberbuclcun.
He Mid tm lack Of memory la
Hr1fted b; a .... ,.. ... tell.
"I 1h&l aner re"at my deplorable ...... .. AdtMny promtM die tadl(e. 1,
After the sentence was hand
down, Anthony told reporte
he·s not sure whether he wi
continue to serve as councilm
He said although he doesn't r
m ember what happened on th
night in question, he will alway
carry a bad picture In his ·
based oo what others said h
did.
.lllllil CUii 1111111
Some late night and ear·
ly momln1 low clouds and
local ro1. otherwise fair
today tbrou1h Thursday.
Highs In mid·70I al the
beaches to upper 80s In·
land. Lows tonight 58 to 61.
lllllUllY r,.. o"ce~oplllHf Mon ·
&numa eaaflt nlar La•
Veoa•, N.M., ha• be.it
pllf'C"°9N for UM GI Cl col· ~gt. SH PQg. All.
-·-. . .... _...,.-4 ..,...,.,.-............. ~.-.... ... -
•\] I •
u •••• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, July 22, 1981
Israelis bOlnb Letianon
Warplanes attack Palestinians; 15 killed or wounded
TEL AVIV, larael (AP) -
Israeli warplane• bombed
PaleaUnlan tar1eta ln IOUlblrD
Lebanon a1aln today, httdn1
trails laed to tran.sport arma and
guerrillas, the military command
said. Lebanese provincial
authoritlea reported 15 people
killedorwowlded.
llleuwhUe, U.S. pHtldeoUal
envol Pblllp C. Habib held talks
wltb 481Niaete olftclala la Beirut
theft flew to 8aucli Arabia to COD·
tbuae his search for a cease fire
betwffll the Israelis and PalesU-
alana. .
Prime Minister Menachem
Belin viaited Israel's northern
aetUemeota today. paid a coe-
dolencecalJ on the family of ooeor
tbe five Israelis klJJed in gueniJla
ahemna, and pledged an end to the
PalesUnlan barra1es.
A communique from the Tel
Aviv command said the tralla at-
tacked were Ui the Ka11mleb te·
1ion alon1 the Litani River *
the Zahrani estuary. It said the
pilots reported accurate hita and
that all planes returned aafely
from the raid.
A.irCal raps PSA
over flight suit
Lebanese provincial official•
said the jets struck at a newly re-
paired section of the Qassmieh
Bridge on the Lltani which was
devastated in a lightning braeU
airstrikeThursday. Tbey~aJdthe
jets destroyed several moving
• cars, killing or wounding 15 occu-
pants.
Israeli gunboats also sbeUed
Palestinian euerriJJa tar1ets in
sou them Lebanon today, the Tel
Aviv comtnand said. It denied a
P alestlnian report of grollnd raids
into southern Lebanon.
The command said northern
Israeli settlements came under
more Palestinian artillery at·
tacks during the night, but there
were no casualties. Israeli gun.
ners rreturned the fire, the com-
mand said.
This report
for the birds
In the better-late·lhan-never
department:
The U. S. Fish and Wildlife
Service was a bit tardy in
forwarding its comments to the
Civil Aeronautics Board on an
environmental impact state-
ment regarding air carrier ac-
cess to John Wayne Airport. So
late, in fact, that its comments
could not be made part or the
bound document.
So. the CAB sent the service's
comments out in letter form .
The letter is seven pages long.
Its conclusion : "It is our
biological opinion that the pro-
posed action is not likely to
jeopardize the continued ex-
istence of lhe lialht-footed clap-
per rail or the Callfornia least
tern."
Both are birds that inhabit Up-
per Newport Bay.
From Page Al
ACID ...
County sheriffs deputies. who
just ended an eight-day strike to-
day, complained of burning eyes
as they went from house to
house evacuating the affected
area . Californians who were
evacuated were taken to a tem·
porary shelter at Palo Verde
High School in Blythe.
The Arizona Department of
Public Safety said people in the
border town of Ehrenberg, in·
eluding one whole mobile home
park, also were evacuated.
AlrCal ·Airline claims that lt
would lose mllllons of dollars ll
rlvaJ Pacific Southwest Alrllnet
11 victorious in a lawsuit filed
over an Orange Coooty govern·
ment plan to regulate wbich
airliaes serve John Wayne
Airport.
Jn papen filed in U.S. District
Court in Los Angeles this week,
Ai.teal claim~ that San Dleeo-
based PSA is locked in an "ef·
fort to prevent Air California
from becoming an effective
competitor in the transportation
of passengers by air between
major cities in California."
Under the airport access plan
adopted by the county Board of
Supervisors. PSA was granted
two flights daily from the
airport beginning Oct. 1. Those
flights are being "created" by
taldng an average of 1.5 mghts
ftom AirCal and one-half flight
from Republic Airlines.
PSA isn't satisfied with its
two-flight award. It would like to
operate eight flights Crom
Orange County.
In its lawsuit -which will be
s ubject of a hearing Aug. 10
before Judge Andrew Hauk -
PSA contends that the access
plan is "anti-competitive" in
that it permits AirCal and
Republic Airlines to keep the
majority of the 41 jet departures
permitted daily from the
airport.
AirCal, which Monday was
perD'litled to formally intervene
in the lawsuit, said in papers
filed with Judge Hauk that
PSA 's demand for more flights
could be met in one of two ways.
Either the 41 flight per day lid
would have to be lifted, or
AirCaJ and Republic would have
to give Up more fiikbts. Neither
option is acceptable. AirCal
President Robert Clifford said.
The county would not lift the
lid because of noise impacts on
s urrounding residents , he
areued.
On the ldea of giving up more
flights, Clifford said. "At the
present time, 40 percent of Air
California's origination and
destination passengers are'
served from the John Wayne
Airport. The loss of Air
California's share of eight slots
(flights> would cause substantial
financial Joss to Air California.
"It would be necessary for Air
California to find other routes
upon which to (fly), which it
could not quickly do In an
economic fashion."
"It follows that the relief PSA
seeks, if granted, would cause
substantial damage, amounting
in all probability to millions of
dollars, for Air California." Clif-
* * * From Page A1
ford concluded.
AlrCaJ repeatedly stresses in
lta court papers that the com-
. pany was formed because no
other airline in the late 1980s
was willin& to expand jet air
service to Orange County .
"Air CaJlfomia pioneered that
service at the cost of losing its
initial $6 mJJUon capitalization
over the first five years " ac-
cording to the docum.ents. '
AirCal further charges that
PSA 's contention that it wants to
promote competitive Orange
County-San Francisco Bay Area
service is erroneous.
". . . It has been the practice
of PSA , when l\ew carriers ap-
pear, to saturate the market
with flights so as to preclude the
newcomer from commencing a
profitable operation . . . it is
PSA's objective. in bringing this
proceeding, to reduce Air
California's serv ice from
Orange County.
·'The Orange County service is
and has been the foundation of
Air California's operations ...
it Is PSA's objective to so
weaken Air California as t6
make it unable effectively to
grow into an effective com·
petitor of PSA throughout the
state."
Meanwhile, Newport Beach
City Attorney Hugh Coffin said
the city also plans to intervene
in the PSA lawsuit but hasn't
yet.
He said Newport's position is
that the suit could result in the
current 41 dally flight ceiling be·
init lifted to accommodate PSA.
"Our prediction has always
been that more carriers means
mo.re pressure to extend that
ceillni." Coffin explains.
Newport, he says, has no op·
position to PSA joining the John
Wayne family as long as the 41
flight ceiling is maintained.
From Page Al
POSTAL • • •
"Now, we can carry on busi -
ness as usual,·· House said.
The new contract, supported
by Moe Biller, president of the
American Postal Workers Union
and Vincent Sombrotto, presi-
dent of the National Association
of Letter Carriers, calls for a
$300-a-year pay raise and Sl,rocl
In bonuses over the next three
years in addition to cost-of-living
adjustments.
Brown predicted that the con-
tract would be ratified by rank
and file .
The truck remained at
roadside on Interstate JO, where
the driver discovered the leak at
6: 14 a.m. The• roads were ex-
pected to remain blockaded for
four hours while repair and
cleanup crews arrived from Los
Angeles.
The truck was owned by the
W .S. Hatch Co .. sald Capt. Peck.
They had a repair' crew on the
way and, she said, the IT Co. or
Los Angeles was going to handle
the cleanup.
JET NOISE REPORT • • •
Sam Collins, a Hatch
spokesman to whom Vanden-
berg referred inquiries, declined
comment.
Capt . Peck said the transfer of
the nitric acid was ordered by
the Aerospace Fuels Division at
Kelly Air Force Base in Texas.
''We got an order to ship it
from Vandenberg to Holloman,"
she said.
She said the tank truck was in-
spected and released by the base
fuels branch at Vand~nberg and
·'there was no problem with It
then."
She said the truck driver
noticed a lea~ from a seal on the
truck about 7:30 p.m. Tue.day
when the tanker was near
Thousand Oaks, ln Ventura
County. A repairman from the
W .S. Hatch Co. fixed the teal, or
Oan1e, she said, and the truck
went another 250 mllea before
the leak was discovered near
Blythe.
Goodman was reluctant to dis-
cuss the EMA's role in the new
analysis of the noise data
because of litigation pending in
Orange County Superior Court.
He did confirm that the issue
over the disparity between the
actual data and that contained
in the Impact report was raised
by residents at a meeting of a
county committee that is de-
veloping a specific plan to iulde
future development in Santa
Ana Heights, located south of
the airport.
Goodman said the county can
correct the impact report. either
by preparin& a supplement re·
port cohtaining "information
that was not known and could
not have been known" or by pre-
paring an addendum to the
orl•lnal docwnent.
Cable aaJd he will aubmit such
an addendum to the county
Board ol Supervls9rs in the n~
fUlllfe.
"It's no big t1Un1," he said.
Prior to ill introduction, the
aew aircraft wu touted u, in larse part, the answer to the
CIH..._ ....,.,.. .... 114/M2·M71
A" ot'-.. ,....... .. 142-4321
MAIN~
U9 WHI lef ti., C..Ca -.a. c• Mall ............... CAie Maw, C~ .,._
-
county's continuing dilemma on
how to reduce noise impact on
residents living under jet de-
parture tracks.
The county's faith
jetliner was so strong that it
became the centerpiece for a
plan to regulate which air car-
riers win and retain privileges tO
operate from the airport. The
plan esentially requires car-
riers lo convert their fleets used
locally to Super 80s or
equivalent noise -Ii mltlng
aircraft, of which there is no
oth'r type yet on the market.
AirCal is now operating two of
the $20 million aircraft and has
plans for a total fleet conversion
within 18 months.
Republlc Airlines intends to
beein Super 80 service in mid-
August. Two other airlines with
authority at the airport -Fron·
tier Airlines and Pacific
Southwest Airlines -either
have plans to or have taken de-
livery of Super IOI.
W estem Airllnea is tbe only
carrier aervtnc Oran1e Coanty
that doea not int.ens:' to purchase
the new aircrart. Westem of.
flciala say they will attempt to
meet noise reduction 1oa1t by
modllYial their exlatinl neet ol ~17311.
Aaked why tbe Super IO II not
performtn1 up to e~pectatiom,
county and airline offlclala 1ave vadous anawen.
They aay pUota may atW be
1ettin1 UMd to n1th1 the ...
alreraft. They also point to the
fact that tbe Federal Avlatioa
Admlnl1traUon forbtda noiH·
Um1tlq takeon power redue·
tloH at allltud• lower tbu
1,000 fMt. Tbe air eantin md
llM cown1 are •u.DpUq to
COllY1ace tbe PAA ..... It
power eutb9cu et• feet. a.m a move WOUid rM1iee Mlle. lo far, dMn bU b9ift DO dedlioa
from tbe FAA.
o.tty""',........., •k ..............
Po1tman John Htirmon *"1• mail for deUoef'v in Santa Ana Height•. Nationwide ltnke uw averted
when tentative agreement um reached Tueid(q/.
Bolger orders ad p .robe
Postmaster general denies asking ·special mail favor
WAS HINGTON <AP ) -
Postmaster General William F.
Bolger said today he's ordered
an in vestigatio n into a
newspaper report that some ad-
vertising circulars addressed to
his home are getting special
treatment.
The Washington Post reported
today that the practice began
after Bolger's wife complained
she had received one ad late and
missed a sale.
But Bolger said in a statement
today that he has asked for no
special favors and wasn't aware
he has been receiving any.
Bolger also said he wants any
special consideration afforded
his mall stopped immediately
and ordered a check into the
matter to see what happened.
"lt·s pretty weJl systemati&ed
by now," the newspaper quoted
clerk Bruce Chido as saying in
explaining the routine be and
other clerks follow several times
a month when advertisementa
from the Hecht Co., a depart·
ment store chain, arrive at their
Northern Virginia regional post
office.
"When a Hecht's ad comes in,
the supervisor comes over and
tells us to find the one addressed
lo Bolger," the Post quoted
Chido as saying. "With three or
four people looking, sometimes
we find it right away .
Sometimes it takes up to an
hour."
··Whenever a Hecht Co. ad
comes in. we st.op everyth ing
and start sifting," said Linda
Lewis. "The supervisor comes
over and says, 'Find Bolger's
Hecht Co.• I'd say it happens at
least once every two weeks.··
The report said that when the
ad with Bolger's address is
found it is placed in a carrier's
bag for next-day delivery while
the rest of the Hecht Co. third-
c lass mailing often remains
behind an extra day or two.
Clerks told the newspaper that
the "Hecht hunt" began about
seven mont.hs ago after Mrs .
Bolger compl ained that she re·
ceived a store circular too late
to take advantage of a sale.
"They !the superviosrsJ came
up to us and said, 'We're looking
for a Hecht 's ad for this
< Bolger ·s ho me J address."·
Williams said. ··we said 'Whv?'
They said, 'Because he didn 't
get it on time.·
"H's just the Hecht 's ads we
have to go for because they're
dated," Williams told the Post.
"It's not uncommon lo have
several clerks and a supervisor
si fting through thousands of
pie<.'es of mail looking for it. It's
turned into a game. Everybody
goes for it. It's the standing joke ."
Clerks said the "Hecht hunt"
is most often begun by Donald
Pender , one o f three
supervisors. who said, "I can't
comment on the days I'm not
here.·· What about the days he is
t here? "I can't comment on
that, either."
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To lneure a Hat. call.Harry, 842-2050.
•
2
111111 ClllT
11111111111
WEDNESDAY,
July 22, 1981
FEATURES 84
COMICS BS
TELEVISION 810
..
Interest rates have small
consumer as well as big
executive worried ... B7
......
State OKs lr·vine Coast developtnent
,,,,.·---
/
./
/ ""JcleMlal
CRYSTAL COVE STATE PARK
ANlone Point
CONDITIONAL
DEDICATION AREA
Olllty .........
Relidential, commercial and open space areaa outlined on map of 9,400-acre Irvine Coast which
received nate Cocutal Commiuion approval Tuesday night.
Friends mourn sea victim
Michael Samuels' drowning off Newport puzzles many
Those who knew 24-year-old
Michael Samuels say they're un·
certain why their friend took to
the waves off Newport Beach
this week during an afternoon
outing that ended in his death.
The Costa Mesa man, friends
explain, did not like the water
and was not a strong swimmer.
Samuels, a day camp youth
counselor in Costa Mesa who
was four units shy or graduating
rrom UC Irvine. was last seen
~onday afternoon riding a
Boogie board in the waves near
the Santa Ana River mouth.
His body was found 20 hours
later in the water off Huntington
State Beach near Brookhurst
Street.
Witnesses told police Samuels
was thrown from the board he
was riding and then was tossed
around by a series of breakers
as he tried to dog-paddle to
shore.
One person on the beach swam
to his aid and grabbed him, but
lost him as more waves crashed
over them. lifeguards said.
Lifeguards s aid when the
water settled. Samuels' body
could not be located. A scuba
diving team spent several hours
searching the area.
"He was the kind or guy who
was always smiling, always
there to help out," explained
Luis Martinez. an Irvine resi-
dent who said Samuels was his
best friend.
He said he grew up with
Samuels in East Los Aneeles
~Jl d attended Lincoln High
School and East Los Angeles
College with him.
"We both transferred down to
UC I toge ther an d roomed
t ogether that firs t year.··
Martinez s aid. "He was a neat
guy He was ambitious ."
Samuels. Martinez said, was a
psychology major who loved to
work with kids. He had taken the
day camp job for that reason.
friends said.
Another friend speculated that
Samuels might have been at·
tempting to s how some
youngsters how to ride a Boogie
board.
"He. was that way." the friend
suggested, "a lways trying to
help, trying to s how someone
how to do something."
OfCicials from the day camp,
listed on the lifeguard's report
as Cultural Educators Day
Camp. could not be located for
comment.
It was unclear , lifeguards
said. whether Samuels had gone
to the beach with a day camp
g r oup, with friends, or by
himself.
Fune ral arrang e ments.
friends or the family say, are
pending. Samuels is survived by
his parents. two brothers and
two sisters.
Mesa jail inmate
nabbed in flight
An unidentified San Pedro Police said the shoeless and
towing service employee tackled shirtless prisoner walked out the
a prisoner who police said fled front door of the Police Depart.
from Costa Mesa Jail when un· ment building on Fair Drive,
guarded by a probation officer. pa s t the lowing s e r vice
Police s aid Kevin Robert employee who was waiting to ob·
She han. 26, of Santa Ana slipped lain paperwork on an im·
out of an interrogation room !)Ound_ed car ..
Tuesday at the jail when Santa Officers said the San Pedro
Ana parole officer Lee Widrig m an a.p Parenti Y .thought
left the cubicle In search of a something looked fishy and
urfne specimen bottle. c~ased after Shehan. tackl~ng
Widrig, police said , wanted ham on grass.between the pohce
samples to determine whether facility ~nd Caty Hall. .
.or not Shehan was using drugs. ~n animal control omc_er and
He was booked by Costa Mesa police _cadet took She.han in tow.
officers Monday on suspicion or returrung hlm to confmement.
receiving stolen goods. Shehan now races additional _....---------------~--_..;;;______ charges of felony jail escape, of·
ficers said.
Patrol boats
join harbor
trash cleanup
A lour-hour cleaning blitz of
Newport Harbor, to include an
underwater scuba team and a
Cleet of litter patrol boats, will
begin 8 a.m. Saturday.
The waterfront area in
Newport will be divided Into
seven areas, each with its own
litter commander.
A neet of boats, operating un·
der the direction of Art Oronsky
or Art's Landing, wilt scout the
water for floating debris and
transport bagged trash from
piers and docks to dealpated
depots.
A police department dlvin1
team will hunt t.rub underwater
and several Boy Scout troope
will patrol the shore..
The Idea, saye William
Hamilton -president of tbe
Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce's Karine Dlmlon,
la to have the beaches and
harbor spic and span for the
September celebration of the
city's 75th anniversary.
Those interested In h~lpln1
ehould call 875-5777.
UCI chancellor
given pay raiee
Project plans involve 9,400-acre parcel
By STEVE MITCHELL Of_.,..., ...........
State Coastal Commission ap.
provat of plans for development
of the Irvine Coast Tuesday
night means work could begin
within a year on the 9,400-acre
parcel between Corona del Mar
and Laguna Beach.
And last minute compromise
between the commission's staff
and Irvine Company officials
can probably be approved by
Orange County Supervisors in
rapid fashion, Fifth District
Supervisor Thomas Riley said
today.
·'I anticipate changes agreed
to by the Irvine Company will
have no difficulty getting board
approval," said Riley. whose
district encompasses the Irvine
Coast.
Coastal Commissioners, meet·
ing in Los Angeles, voted 8 to 1,
with member Beth Wyman op·
posed, to approve the land use
portion of the Irvine Coastal
Plan. Three new commissioners
abstained.
you're putting another gun to his
head.
"The Irvine Company is glv·
ing away the store in m y opi·
nion," Ryan said.
Michael Fischer, executive
director or the commiss ion,
agreed to the deletion or the ir·
revocable offer requirement
after reaching an "on the noor"
compromise with Irvine Com·
pany Senior Vice President
Thomas Nielsen.
Upon sale of 75 percent of the
lots In a specified development,
the company agreed to give up
open space lands of the same
value in the southern portion of
the property.
U nder the co mpromise,
greater "resource value" was
placed on lands scheduled for
de velopment closer to Coast
Highway.
The commiss ion also ap·
proved construction of Sand
Canyon Avenue as a two-lane
arterial highway, rather than a
meandering two-lane park road
as suuested by commlasiol\
staff member.s,
And they reduced the density'
or a commercial area at the
junction of Sand Canyon Avenue
and Coast Highway from 50,000
square feet or commercial space
to 25,000 square feet. Company
plans for 500 hotel rooms at that
site were reduced to 250.
The commission let stand
plans for 250,000 square feet ol
commercial buildings at the prq·
posed Pelican Hill development,
as well as a l.SOO-room hotel.
That commercial area will
abut the proposed Pelican Hill
Road, a four-lane roadway lead·
ing from Coast Highway to the
p r opo s ed Sa n Joaquin
Transportation Corridor.
The commission. in a separate
vote. also approved company
plans for resale controls on
about 400 a/fordable units that
may or may not be located
within the 9.400-acre coastal pro-
perty.
Approval, with several major
changes, came after more than
three hours of testimony from
tw o d ozen Orange County
citizens.
The commission majority
sided with the Irvine Company
on dedication of 2,650 acres of
open space in return ror develop·
ment of 2,000 dwelling units. two
roads leading to the coast . and a
pair of commercial centers.
Newport captures
oil wells control
The commission staff had in·
eluded a requirement that would
have made dedication of open
s pace land by the company ir·
revocable at the start of de·
velopment of certain tracts and
projects.
The company s uccessfully
argued that the r equirement
would mean land would be given
to the public even if the com·
pany, in future years. was pre-
vented from completing its de·
velopment.
Company officials said the ir·
revocable offer clause would
provide Incentive for private en·
vlronmental groups or govern·
ment agencies to stop develop-
men t . in the knowledge that
dedicated open space couldn't be
retrieved by the company.
Commissioners agreed that
the staff slipuJation was unfair,
with Commissioner Robert Ryan
s aying, "The staff is proposing
that after 30 years the land goes
public, no matter what happens
to the Irvine Company. It looks
like you've got a guy <the com·
pany ) willing lo give up the
land, but you don't trust him so
By STEVE MARBLE
Of .. Delly ,.. ... $Utf
Newport Beach has won an
eight-month-old fi ght for control
or 16 oil wells that are projected
to earn the city more than Sl
million a year.
Control of the wells, located
outside city limits on the inland
side of West Coast Highway, was
transferred to the city Tuesday
by S u p e r i o r C o u r l J u d g e
Leonard Goldstein.
The battle over the black gold
has pitted the clty against
oilman Robert Armstrong,
whose Newport firm operated
the rigs for 12 years.
The wells, rooted in city con·
trolled tidelands off the coast of
West Newport, were shut down
last January when Armstrong's
contract expired.
Newport City Manager Robert
Wynn said the city legally has
possession of the wells today
' but, he noted. it likely will be
another three months before the
rigs start pumping again. .
"We'll start buiJdfag our own
tank farm next week and start
going out lo bid to find a new
operator ," Wynn explained.
Armstrong could not be
reached for comment today. But
his attorney, Robert Buchanan,
said his client's legal options are
not exhausted and will be
pursued.
Last year. with Armstrong
operating the wells, the city
earned $162,000 in oil revenue -
a 12 percent portion of the total
operation.
Now. Wynn calculates, the ci·
ty should be able to get more
than Sl million each year in
petroleum earnings if a willing
operator ls found .
Although the joke around city
hall has been that the city itself
would man the wells. Wynn said
that is not the case.
The city's relationship with
Armstrong turned sour early
this year when the oilman re
fused to turn the rigs and under
ground lines over to the city.
Armstrong argued that the ci
ty does not have the right t
operate oil wells or acquir
them for oil production.
The Newport oilman further
charged that if the city took con·
trot of the wells it could harm
three other wells in the area that
he operates for Mobil Oil.
Oil firm to give its story
Barto to explain about disputed Costa Mesa wells
By JERRV CLAUSEN
Of .... Delly ...... S!Mf
Costa Mesa City Council
members say they will listen to
Barto Oil Co. officials' explana·
lion for three new wells which
City Attorney Tom Wood con·
tends have been drlUed Ille.Cally.
Barto drilled the wells in late
June and early this month
despite a city ordinance banning
new wells inside city limits.
Barto , which sec ured
permission from state offi cials
and the County of Orange for
four new wells on its 20-acre prop·
erly west of the end of 18th
Street, has held up drtUlng the
fourth well pending an Aug. 3
councU hearinJt.
In paralleling action Monday
night, the council voted, 4·1, to
approve a new city General Plan
policy that could /ave the way
for laws that woul allow new oil
welts in the city.
Still to be determined are
legal ramifications of either a
voter referendum or initiative
passed in the 1960s which relo·
forced new drilling prohibitions
in the citv.
City officials Monday ordered
that action researched after
staff members Indicated some
confusion over the impact of
that election on future laws.
A majority of the council
favored the newly approved
policy because it could enable
earlier depletion of the Mesa
area oil field and open the land
to other development.
The General Plan policy. one
of several alternatives advanced
by the Planning Comml11lon
last week, was opposed by
Mayor Arlene Schafer.
She favored an alternative
that would allow pumping in·
crease& at existing wells but
said she could not endorse a
UGI.I ICOUTI -lamine U.. lalitt11t awai'd in ~Una '~" hili left. llrlllll Blw, If, ~ 11, and Jim 11(?\;utbr. n. all of Coita lled. IN memberi of TrOoP ~ _. l'.ltancta H1p kbool . -'
policy allowing new wells in the
city
The well-ban ordinance cur·
rently on city books was ap·
proved when Costa Mesa was in·
corporated back in 1953.
That law remains in effect un·
lil a new ordinance is approved
in line with the new General
Plan policy.
Barto is the only firm current·
ly pumping oil within the Meu
city limits, said Acting City
Manager Allan Roeder.
T he firm operates eight wells
drilled in 1947 in addition to the
three allegedly drilled Illegally
thJs year.
Mobil Corp. and Armstrons
Petroleum operat e about 400 oil
wells on county-owned land ad·
jacent to lhe Costa Mesa city
limits.
Barto lawyers contend that
the firm can drill new wells In
the old oil field because or opera·
lions existing there prior lo city
Incorporation.
But City Attorney Wood
·claims the Sant.I Ana oU com·
pany broke the law by clrcum·
venting city departments In
gaining county and state ap-
proval ror Ute four new welhl.
Burglars get
typewriters
I
..
O~ THE lftEET 8 .. T
-We sot a nice note here at
the paper Just ye1terday dll
the new-f analed recor4ln1 machlDe we bave here la the
new1paper office that lets you tell ua what you're thlnk-
in1 by dialing 642·6086.
Lota of people call in to
b low off steam into t he
.. We're Llstenlng" recorder
and J think that's 1ood for
them and iood for us too. We
1et to know what is grinding
on folks that way.
This particular gentleman,
who didn't identify himself,.
left us the following
me11a1e:
"The Daily Pilot is a very
iood paper (thank you, sir).
It contains news and articles
only that kind of a readln&
diet. Moet editors, how~':er:
try to live rudera some KUMJ
of ¥ even-banded blend and
mur ln the news of the day.
But there ia one comment
made by Unidentified
Gentleman that is really
deeply d.isturbin1.
That ls, when he describes
murders, killings or rob·
beries as simply, "Everyday things that happen.••
NOW BEALL Y, has it
come to this? We are now
willing to accept that kill·
ings, mayhem, murders,
rapes and robberies are
nothing out of the ordinary?
Just "everyday things that
happen?" .
I am sorry, Unidentified
Gentleman, but I can't ac-
cept that. I refuse to accept
that. Perhaps we have been
fed such a steady diet of
violence in the shows we
watch or the entertainment
we seek that we've come to
,,. • ·. --... ~ -~ ,» -/'Ji·~~ .... ~.x:"1l - -.. .; -:,,,......... ,. .. ·;· ·~--... ·~"!;.·~· . " . .
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,., , '.I~' ~" ·f ' ~(./~{... " . ' ... -.
IJ-• I · , .. !.• .-. , ... 1. ~ . (.~ rt:_~·~i .. ~., ~ .;i71'; ~··.J.4. , ' ' . . . ~ , ... ·. 1' ... _ • .:-,; . .~·· ' ' ,. -• ' .....-: \ 6---~ • • ~ _, . ~. . ' .. . ~·-~ ·v\·.-~~-·--_ . _, .,,·~· -~ ~ ~ .\. t ·.~~ . .--_... ~JI!. . . -;-:lffli:..~ .. <. .-...; I !.fi(' . f ' "
_ ~·--~ -! . ' rt •I ~~ . ~.·;I ·. ~1 <-· .' • 1 ~ ... '.'?~.-·;J.<: 1 '. .._ ' : ~ _,~tt . .. tf :t• .. :~.:.~
' . : ~ ~ ~
'
. . -. "'-· '"J ''~~ .. ~ <> ... , : .... (' ~l ~" ··-.... '8t~ -l_,t --. I . :. . ---~ ~ / _ • (• .~1 •• . ~ . .~.· .
It'• jun anollwr routine gang fighl
that..are of most importance
to the public."
THEN HE ADDED, "But I
really don't see what the
murders or killings or rob-
beries have to do with news.
•'Those events, to me, are
not news. Those are every-
day things that happen.
''Eliminating these types
of crimes or any crime of
that sort in the paper would
be more beneficial. Thank
you."
No·w you must suspect that
a lot of people share Uniden-
tified Gentleman's views on
crime news. They'd just
rather not read about it while
reposing in the U ving room
after a long day, waiting for
the dinner bell. Too much
fear and dismay. Too much
violence.
From one stance, you can
certainly understand t he
readers who object when a
paper picks up a violent item
off the wires from some
crossroads in Brazil and
soups it up into the biggest
story of the day.
TROUBLE IS, we have
enough home-grown crime
and violence to mt the paper
should editors choose to off er
accept it as a way of life.
But crimes that do violence
to other people are not accep-
table. I don't want killings as
an acceptable part of my
everyday life, nor that of my
children or m y
grandchildren.
P EOPLE WHO DO those
kinds of things should be
tracked down, captured and
brought to justice. They don't
belong on my street or your
street.
And when they are on our
streets, and perpetrating
those kinds of crimes against
other people, yes, I do want
to know about them in the
pages of my newspaper. And
I also like to know how our
law enforcement agencies
a re dealing with those
perpetrators.
VIOLENT CRIMES are in·
deed happening every day
along our coastline today.
But I don't think we've
reached the point of no con·
cern where we can say as-
sault or murder is l·ust as routine as walking to he cor-
ner store.
We wouldn't think so if it
happened to you or to me.
JULY • AUGUST SPECIAL Perk up that limp hairdo \\ith a care-free perm from Nature Cut·
tn. Hurry In now for a 8l.IP8r summer look.
t 12.00 Value!
'I 6• Women
., ... Mtn
No other newspaper brings you more
~r c ity council , planning commission ,
hOOI a nd coll.a& di stricts and count
government than the
-
---.. --.---__ .... _ ---.... ---,.-•wzacu a a a a a so •
Pooling
• sav ings
detailed
About 13,900 people
11ved 814,000 11Uons of
caaoUBe and one hall·
mlUlon mllea of wear-
and-tear oo t.helr cars by
commuUn1 from April
throuch June ln car
pools set by the Orange
County Transit District.
Those results are in-
cluded ln a quarterly re-
port made public Mon·
day at a meeting of the
district's board or direc-
tors.
The lnformaUon was
complied through a
telephone survey or 538
peo ple who use the
syste m . Results s how
that 23 percent or t.hose
who listed their names
sin ce January in the
ridesharing program
are commuting regular-
ly in a car pool. The
average trip is 18 miles
one way.
H owever, because
many applicants Uve or
work long distances
away or travel al odd
hours, only 56 percent or
the applicants were pro-
vided a list or possible
traveling companions.
The transit district
took over operation of
the program a year ago
from a private agency,
Commuter Computer.
and the report is con-
sidered the most com·
plele breakdown yet on
the service.
Michael Barnes, dis-
trict communications
director who supervises
the program, said some
information s till isn 't
available. such as the ef·
fectiv e ness or the
system where it has
been instituted recently
for 19 private
employers.
In other cases, large
employers have created
their own ridersharing
ROYALTY -William
and Louise Kanold of
Costa Mesa were
chosen prince and prin·
ceu of the Golden
Court in the senior
citizens competition at
the Orange Count y
Fair.
Fresno mayor eyes Senate
Women's Political Caucus plans conference in Irvine
By O.C. HUSTINGS
OfTlleo.lly ...... IUft
· 'THJS IS NOT a fundralsing
event," says the Invitation, but
It will be a chance for Fresno
Mayor Daniel K. Whitehurst to
test the Orange County political
waters as he ponders a run for
the U.S. Senate.
Supporter David Stein and
friends are holding a reception
for Whitehurst Friday from 4:30
to 6 p.m. at the Stein ·Brief
Building, 18071 Fitch, Irvine.
Whitehurst, a Democrat who
outlines issues more often as-
sociated with Republicans as
"integral parts of his political
philosophy," says he would try
lo reduce the size or the federal
government
Al the moment he appears lo
be one or the leadin g con·
servative Democrats pondering
a challenge lo any Senate bid by
Gov. Jerry Brown.
* * *
GEORGE DEUKME.ll AN,
state attorney general and a
candidate for governor next
year, will visit the Rotary Club
of Newport-Balboa at the club's
July 29 meeting.
* * * "THE GREATEST Show On
Earth" is what the Orange
County National Women's
PoliticaJ Caucus is calling its
conference on campaigning,
candidacy and community in·
volvement, scheduled for Aug. 8
from 8 a.m . to 4 :30 p.m . at the
Registry Hotel in Irvme.
Scheduled speakers at the con-
ference are women from across
the political spectrum, including
Republican Assemblywoman
Marian Bergeson, Democratic
Centra l Committee me mber
Mary Capdeville, senior citizen
activist Ruth Kahn and Superior
Court Judge Alice Marie Stotler.
Tickets are $20, or $25 at the
door.
* * * A SUNSET C R UISE or
Newport Beach with area
Republican offi ceholders is set
for Aug. 9 from 7 to 9 p.m.
aboard the Pavilion Queen, in a
program sponsor e d by the
R epublican Associates of
Orange County.
Sc heduled to attend are
Congressmen Bob Badham. Dan
Lungren and Bill Dannemeyer,
several state senators and as-
semblymen, and others. The
cost is $5 for associates, $7.50 for
non-members . Boarding time is
6:30 p.m.
* *. EXPECTING A large
turnout, the Lagun a Niguel
Republican Women's Club has
turned its September meeting
into a dinner with featured guest
Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. The
dinner is set for Sept. 2 starting
at 6:30 p.m. at the Holiday Inn
system from scratch. ,.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--..-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
One example is the H bb r.I_ b W ~ Ha foods ~!~~:s ~~rt ·hasw~.i2~ 0 ' ureen aus
in Laguna Hills.
employees commuting Whol• .... totht,...UC ·~ ~ ... R~ AM -in 183 va n and car I'~ .,.~~,.1 9"' "'1'
pools. James Reichert, EXOTIC PLANTS· CACTUS
d i s t r i c t g e n e r a I 716 Dalle. CorcNHI chi M• 6 44-5 106 L, ~ , J... ••
m anager, has been a r.i .. ,. .... ,
strong proponent of
rldesharing. ,.,., ...... ~~ " -..£/
He said interested CPandllo~,, lcoomg~~.-1 111•1 p•11at MPS• ,,.,.. persons can call for In· .u ~-
formation at 636-7433 euluiiwly m the llwbor View Cesthr
CRIDE I. IL------.;.__----....... -----"I 1621 S-Mic)MI DriYe, 5'1WWDOl"I
WiTERMEllN ... t-i~
· iiEEr e1u .. 7r~l~
Goldeftl • ~·· ~· ,.,",. BAIANAS ... ~ -PEACHE$ ... ~ •
~"t°' ~sa. llf)~ Fir•, rape • ~ •. PLU~ ... 1i11b. TGMllOIS .. ~ ·_
--~----r--
\
Oran
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
1110fat*'1,•c"u" ,. ....... .,... .... .,ott .. 1110.U Y,•ACI,,( ,. •• IOUCHll O•UOll' A•O (1111,lllOIATl UOO JllCltAllOIJAllO HllO•ltO • ., , ... ltUOAlllO llOflNIT.
22 1811
Dow Jones Fina
OFF -9.80
CLOSING 924.18
1.•"' -S.' "<t .._,~ Furnitur
rentals ris
You, Mary, have. just graduated from eolle1eu
taken a new job 800 miles from home that paya yolt0
enough to afford the unfurnished apartment JOW' neW:
employer's personnel department l\as found for you.
You, Dave, also have left home after 14 years of
enduring a miserable marriage, and·you are about to
move to a new address that will be yours untU yout
divorce pro-~ •, ceedings have ~
bee n com ·
pleted. a. i«
And you. ..:;. J im , a career .A-....... -»._ ______ _
~~~ye o ~~c=r~ SYLVIA PIRTIR
given a new as-
signment in a new community with quarters ln a nice
neighborhood lo help you enjoy life while you train
recruits
What common need do you all share, different
though your backgrounds and your lifestyles mar
be? A "home" to turn to while you malce your adjuat·
men ts.
A home means furniture -but thls you do nOt
want to buy. You cannot afford the investment, you ..
do not expect to remain in your new surroundings for
more than a temporary period, and you shrink from
the burden of carrying a load of belongings with you
or taking the certain loss associated with selling the
stuff used.
MuJttply Mary, David and J im by 5 million other ..
Americans and you will grasp one emerginc pattern .
in today's mobile America -a 12 percent to 15 per·
cent annual rise in the amount of furniture being •
rented. •
In the 20· to 30-year-old segment or our society ,
alone. some 20 percent are pulling up stakes each
year and lrvi n~ to duplicate the comfort or their ..
former living arrangements without buying beds.
tables. chairs, lamps and other furniture. .'I
A fuU 500,000 of the movers in this age group
have turned to rented furniture as a simple solution, 1
says the Furniture Rental Association of America
I FRAA l. And a large proportion of the movers are ?
the young with new careers , the divorced and the Cl>
military. •
Also prominent among these movers are: •.
Victims of fire or flood who are displaced for ~
short spans while adjustments. repairs and replace·
ments are going on; ~
Home-shedders who constantly chanfe ad· IO
dresses because of job advances, increases in hOUI•
ing needs or allure of another climate; u
Newlyweds, transferees, celebrities, sports
figures and politicians who move frequently as well
as retirees who are trying some new experience •
away from their old homes;
Technicians, scientists and consuJtants who "
travel to wherever the chaUenges are;
Diplomats an d traveling executives who.,
"warm" temporary quarters with comfortable ..
furnishings that they rent on their own. •
The process of selecting and renting furniture is •
similar to buying up to the point of purchase. After •
selection Ca process that can take as little as an bout
with trained rental specialists to help you select ...
items that meet your needs and budget>. rental ..
agreements are made instead or credit or payment · •
terms.·
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS •
Ccino<.olnc MlnnMM Am Altlln T~s
~ 1~ .,..
•I . '" v.
,,~
NEW YORK (AP)-S.les. l p.m. = ~~,.~ ... "LC: '"tit<~:' ,..:::, tradl119 nallonelly et moN than St . ....,. =~~rPs =:: ~ J ~ France<!• OG o 11.IOO 11 ••• 2• • Cryst•IOll n;100 2'\11
W•no 8 7•,700 Jt:W. -4 \It Chemp Ho .o.eoo 2:w. Yo R•nger011 Jt, 1CID 111" Yo
e .. on l L.IL. Co AmerHeu
T•• Ulll PfllllPSP•I LTV Corp
1.n •• 100
'°'.IOO m ,600 ~.JOO SI0,700
.. 7.'IOO 06 • .00 J:M,:IOO n>.~ JC».AOO m100
213,700 290,600
27$,l()O 71'UOO
~I l°'P Sl,900 t7n IYt ~ .:.811~~" !!:= l..7: :: ~
f.S:f U.T .... ,,.. METALS Tuesaull s HetSeml Mobll ~ ~ ,,.. NEW YORK IAPI -S.01 _, • ...,...._
metal prices todey·
UPS AND DOWNS
Name 1 HouOllRoy J~rCp
• Munford S Munford pf
' ScleAll 1 Isner Fds 1 Ferell Mio f !'lewDrllRI 10 HevP 1.74pf II WasllNell s 12 Mc: o.rmott ii .. Ida Hem
14 FttMlH C'=-IS ~O.r J. lt ~~O.J
1 ecil.:~eo 2 Flelcknl M t~i~
t &f?'no ~· ! ,.rg~.llfll I ~1iUmt I ~nc.ICOrp IJw~;.= 't~Ln~
' ,_,., Hot
u" I.Ml Cha Pc1
?JV. + JI"_., Up 17.S ?W. + 2111 Up !U
'"" + '.11 Up 10.I 7"" + ~ Up , •• SV. + '-Up .1 2'¥t + 2 Up 7.J
111.t + ~ Up 7.01 II'" • :W. Up ) 10" • 111t Up 6.S
Hl"I + :W. Up 6"4
1" + 2 Up ··~ • 2 Up 6.1 1" • ~ Up S.4
tt\!t • 1 Upi s.J JS + l:W. Up ISllt • 'Ill Up Siio • 14 Up
OOWflS I.Alt O!o ,,,,, -1
2.Sl"I -2Vi '" --12~ -I 2A"'-'"' '°" -"' s.-"' Wt -... ~ =l~
u-"' SP4 -t
"' -w. ~._ \lo
at -1\\
·-14 ,.... lfli
GOLD COINS
.... YO._IC IAP> -l'rle" IMt T\IHlll'r
of .. ld coins, c_...., wltll MOtlfey•a
.~ . .. ,,...,......, , ,,..,., • M».U.•tt.-.
.......... 11'9; •• 141 1$, -'*'lllf
...ic.-• -. '' ,,... .... ""· .. ~ ... ,,
....... IOI t.-_ tlOt ,,..., CIJ., ... 11, .. ..... iew<tJ ~ • ....,.,.
de~~~:fior!'..,_..111 mu • S-114. ~
L.eN 42 <...a. a _..i, •
ZIM .. lit cent.s • llOOHICI, e1e11 .. ~.
Tl11 '7.1'3011Mtel1W .. k <~Ile lb,
Alttlll'-7...0c ... tsa ,.._, N.Y.
Mercwy $4111.00 per II-.
l'letl-MIO.OOlroyOI:., N.Y.
SILVER
... ,.,,., ~ Har..-,., 7!0 per trey~
GOLD QUOTATIONS .,n...._ ..........
S.IKtM -1d told ..-left tCMley:
.__, momlilo flalne .... u .... a1
IAMMI .,.,_ ll•lno Soll I.SO, ... Cit.
"•rtt1 atte-11x1no M14,M, off UM. Pr-: $<110.90, .. IO.J1. •
l •rltlll l•I• fl•lnt ..,,0,00, MIUO.._
Na1tf' 6 Mat•H : Ofllr f ell•
lol11.JO.uPtJ.• ......... , enly Clelly OWll ... 11.
l.UO.
........ I tniY delly .... fMI
Ml7 ..... .s n.
0 0 a 0 p •
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wtdnt1day. July 22, 1981
~ .. IU:w'
Cekle ~· a home-.... ... folll • bounty
~~'°"'"to know
l\llMll ~ !Mk• hie
tut 1-...0 ...,..,.,_
u oonduetor of tM Loe
AngtlH Phlll't1rmo11lc
Orchellfa. ~UOIO W)lln.
.. , ltdllll P9ftttlNll " .....
t11t.cl .. tololtt.
(8)MOVtl
··w111mlmtM" ( tt7t)
Laufl Anlaftlll, MwOllo
Mlllrolennl The -111M '* l'lu9bend lull died on a bUtlnlel trtt> forote 1 l1dl
wine metehlnt'• .... out
of.,., lk*Otd to ... fN«
'"' running of '"' femlly butln9ll. • ,..
calMOVW
"My 8rllll1n1 C•rMr"
1199()) Judy 0.1111. ""'
,,_.II, In turn-ol·tn..centv-
ry "u1t'91ia an I~
ent young woman trlM to
m1111 • urttr .. a wrtter
~" toell l ~
for hit to tNrfY.
CZ)MOVIE
"Tiie Gr .. I 6111Unt'0
( 11179)
Robert Ouvell, Blyth• "" ~ 9f (Oyt, T/fl;DOUOH I A·•·H A~ colonel via-~ the 40nth dUf'lng an
Olll.,,_ of Apfll Foolt"
~--· • ..ac>TIMU
A"9r .tJ. wlN the IOllety.
"' .. llced wtth two gull· tolftt IMlftberl of • girt•"
DISAPPEARING SPECIES -The largest
members of the ape famlly are the sub·
ject of a National Geographic special.
"Gorilla," tonight at 7:30 on Channel 50
and 8 on Channel 28. ~ Oanner. A rough·and·
ready ~"'"' Corpe omc. taeef dom .. uc ,.bftt'"
wMtl he trlll to~ hla
mllftwy ldMlt on 1111 lam4-
• It,_ 'PO" 9!30 . 8 ntl! FACT8 Of'
LR
n aecr..:
loow:..J:a
MONIWI
NeCNIWS
MOYM! ••·~ "Of Humll\ Bond· age•• (1"4) Kim Nolllk.
Laurence Hlt'Yey. 8Ue<I
Oii ll\9 llO\lel by w. SOmer·
Mt MIOghlm A young
medlc9 1tu<1ant with •
Hf'IOUI deformity fall•
trlQIClllY In lo111 with 1
ptornleolAOUI Wlllflll <Bl THI: OOOf'Y 8PORT8 STOfW
Anlmaled. The Walt Dleney
ealllrte tearn• th•no• "'
dldn'I know •bout the
'
world of eporta ll'trouot! 1111
MWIAI friend, "Thi Spfrlt Of~p.··
t:M I JOQlll'I WILD
P.M. MAGAZINE
A dellgner wno "1llt•
high lalhlon PIP« Cir-·
11: • Mlf·P<ocllimad en.a 9!fllu9 Is put 10 Iha 1111
• 9EHNYHIU
Benny tak• you beck to
the <llYI of ""How The
Westw .. w on •·
I K~NEWSHAT
STVOtOIEE
"Scuba. Too" A myalerl·
OU1 lhl~ oll 1111 Cey·
man lllandl. 1 young r»t·
toonlat. tl'tree H1rtem
1een1 eaplore N-Yort!
City lkyterapara. (Al
(1)8NEWI
(fl BARNEY MIUEA
An outraged citizen cre-
atn e Cll1turb11101 when
he 1eetn1 ll't11 his deposit
11 1 speel1llzed medical
blnk has been 1CCident1.l-
l}'_rulne<I.
(I) WE'LL BE RIGHT
BACK
A.,.,.., Sctorefber Ind Cristi·
na Farrare host tl'tll IOOk 11
IOml of the moa1 unfor·
gettable tommerc1111 -
med•
1:00 I cea NEWS N9CNIW8 • ~OAY8AGAIH
Rletlle 111<1 Pot ale MV9 10
MflH ala darn to ewn CM!r
IK'tet• wnen they try to
beCOfM rnembell of Illa
l~:wa
~HEWINO
"'Whan Klng1 0o FOflh To
Blttl•" Oirtny llld °'""
rlOlll prepare for blttle
11 I foroa ol r.000118
eooroec:MI. (Plf1 8)
• STAEETS Of! 8""
FRAHCl8CO
A single ··s1tur<11y Nlgl'tt
Speciltl"' treglcllly 11feet1
the lt\IM ot -•J unrel11-
ed peaple In I 24-hour
~IOd.
• OVEAEA8Y
Gu11t1. Vlnc1n1 Price,
JIM Brylrtl Qulnrt (R) 0
D MAa4EJL I LEHRER
AUORT
(I) TIC TAC OOUOH 0 MEW OAIFRN
Gu.all· 01vld Brenner,
0111 Hartman, Chrtlt~
Alklnl. Dr Allr9d Zimm ®MOVIE
"lk>n Voyage. Chatfl•
8'own ( 19791 Animated.
Snoopy Ind Woodltocll
fOllOw e11ch1nge 11uctent1
Char1ll Brown. Peppal'mlnt
P1tty, Unu1 end M1rde on
en a<111t1ntur•flllecl tour of
~nd Ind Franoe. ·o·
(D)MOVU!
"Wlllle & Pl'tll'" ( 1980)
Mlehl4M Ontkean. Mergot
Kidder. Three people
begin 1 tr11ngui.r romance
In GrMnwlel't lllllege thet
cont1nu11 throughout the
merwr111 1ocl1l mllteu of
thl '70s "R'
CZ)MOVIE •••lit .. Hobson's
Choloe" I 1964) John Mills.
Ch"* LIUQl!ton A boot·
mMlt ttl«T\PIS 10 retalr
Ne d'IMp IOUf~ ol lel>or
by prewntlnO 1111 ,.,, ..
daugllter1 lrom l'NlffYlnG.
7;30 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Hosea. St111e Edwards,
Melody Aogen Vllit an
L A rnoYle lheatw Where
all the employeee are
hlndic;ppad; Ill "''~ wlll't proelucer-tum•<I·
actor HOwll"d P.pwn.
I 8 FAM&L Y F'£UO
SHANA NA
GUMt· Adrienne Barl>eeu 8 HOLLYWOOD
8QUAAES
I FACE THE MUSIC
MACHEIL I LEHRER
REPORT
'1!) ~TIONAL ~HIC~t
· Gorilla . E.G M1rShlll
tooall e took 11 the ellorts
or zoo dlrec1or1, <le<lle1te0
1ndl111Clu111 end sclenllsta
who ire working to auure
trtet thl largest ol the
great apn doel not llll
Ylcilm to utonctlon. (RI
Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE
A designe< wno makes
lllgl't l11h1on pee>« dr ....
es; 1 Mll-proelalmed chels
~a 1s put to the test
8:00 9 Cl) THE WHITE
IHADOW
Coec:h Aee\W 111 offefecl s 1,000 10 1PPMt In 1 c:om·
mereill Ind 1111 lean\ oets
I Chlnca to cut e record
l"J D 8 REAL PEOPLE
Feetured e cet doelor. son
tinning compet111on; 1
wt1111t1no eomwt. an Incl•·
an wno --1Ully lough1
the gover~ 0..,., lt1bel
land (RI e MOVIE
• • i. "Thi 81'1vadot'"
( 19!>81 Gregory Peci!, JOM
Collin• A men rM111ea tl\et
he hat Wiiied much of his
NI• -Citllng tor Ch• men
wflo raped Incl kHl.c! hll
wife D O MOVIE
••·~ "Oynuty" (1981)
Jol'tn Forsythe, Linda
E11ens The p1trlatch of 1
wealthy Den11er oil family
untealhel s1rong leehngs
of •noer 1nc1 resentment
lrom l'tls ottaprlng wflen he
merrles his secret1ry IRI
CHANNEL LISTINGS
8 KNXT CBS1 Lo.., AnQ1 IL'' D KNBC 1NBC1 Lo.., Anqt>h''> 8 KTLA 1lnC1 I LO'> AnQl'·t!'> D KABC TV 1ABC1 LO'> AnQPll''
([. "FMB 1CBS1 S<tn Diego 8 KHJ TV llnCI I LOS Anq!'11•..,
[JI KCST 1ABC1 San 01>'qr>
.. KTIV 1lnd I Los AnQl'l1• ...
., t<COP TV 1tnt1 I Lo<, AnU•'"'"'
SI KCET TV 1PBS1 Lo"' An<l•'''">
'1l) KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hun1,n111on 8PdC"h
• MOVIE ** .. "~hllt Of TM Mind" (1Nt) Riy Mlffancl,
o-nw~ FollowlnO
the CIMth of Illa young
dlUghtar. I tOf) gcwerll·
men1 ac:lent111 becOtMI
llarmed when her aplrlt
baglna IP9Nflng t>elore
him. m AGAINST THE WINO
""Th• Farmer's Friend"
Grevllle. now 1 powerful
11n0owner, tries to force
Mary encl Jon11rt1n from
their tine!. (Part 91
G) MOVIE • • * ·~ ·•splendor In The
GrHS.. ( 19611 Nllllll
Wood. Warren BHllY Two
you119 people make lhe
peJnlul end t>eautllul di•·
CO\llty Of '°"' In • 1mlll K1n .. 11own 9 NATIONAl OEOOAAPHIC~l
"'GorlUe.. E.G M1t11't1ll
l'tolll I tOOk II the lllfor11
ol ZOO dlfKIOfl de<l!celed
1n<1lllldull1 and ldenhlll
who -WOf1lll'Q to ....We
th1t the largest or the
grNI t1P11 doee ,,_ fal
¥1Cflm to eirtlnetion I RI (C)MOW
"Out nm. ( t9731 P.,,.,..a
Sue Mlt11n, Pet11e1 St•
venson The ltvae ot two
YOUOO COUplea enroll.cl 11
prl111t• scl'tool1 i re
chengec:t wnen ona of the
girl1 dlsc:o..,.,s she 11 P<eg·
rtant ·PG·
MOVIE
"The Shln1ng·· (19801 JllCk
Nleholson. Shetley Ou11111
Directed by SCenley
Kubrick A I or mer
SCl\OOllHCl'ter !\Ired .. •
winter caret1ker tor 1
remote. ind apc>erent1v
hlUrtled. Colorldo l'totet. lt
snowboUnd !hara with hill
wot• end delrvoyent young
ton 'A" O MOVIE
""Tile Godfelller, Pe'1 II"
11974) Al Pactno. Aober1
Ouv1H MIChMI Corll<>na usu..-hos Ille llltoer"•
""~ .. powflf .. .,.
b9COfMI --head of the Mafia, llndlrlg Otob-
..... wrtll ""'" llCtlonl Ind
the -throughout 1111
reign 'R'
8:30 '1l) FAE.EOOM'S
DEFENSE: AMERICA"&
CUP 1980
Th• cotor. dr1m1 ind
belUty Of 12·rne41f ylCtlll
~petlng for ,,... moat
P'MllQIOua trQPhY In yacht
tw:;ing off .,_. !Mwpol1,
Rl)od• luand oout II oac>-
1Ufed ll'i this documentary
n1rr1ted by RObltl
MICNell. 4Rl ® AACE FOR THE
PENNANT
Barry Tompkin• and Tim
McCarver recap Clllllalonal
basebell 1tandlng1 ertd
1n1er111ew some or the
ga~·· IOP pl1yer1 lit the
pl1yera strike con11noas.
1n update on the 111uetlon
wtll IJIO be Included I
9:00 8 Cl) MOVIE * * A New Ufa (t979)
Ang11 Qlcklrtton. Gordon
Pinaent A WOMlll etrvg-
glea to rebulld her l1le 111er
her hUsbend IN\llng no
e1pt1n111on comm111 soi·
Clde IRI o a DIFF"RENT
STAOl<ES
Woll/I hll P<Obleml recon·
clling hta oroglna 11 1 poor
bllCk youtl't woth hie cur·
rent Ille of luxury (RIO
.., TOPITORY
Ho111· Jim Thom11, Miry
~eraoll
Uil L08 ANGELES
Pt41LHARMONIC -'T THE
HOLL YWOOO BOWL
..... ~ lnllOIY9d In an l11tenN c~hlon
with 8nOtMr lludenl that
leedl to .-10ul oon..
~.(A)O
• Ml!fWO ......
Qunt1• O.lltd &tenner,
()an Hlf1man, ~
Alklna, Or. Alhd ZaorMI,
Lindi Pwt. PudfY, ID MAN< RUlllU
PoUtletll aalll'lll Mll'll Ru•
Mii llkt• ..,__.. on an
1muslng ligl\tlMlng tour
of 1111i.-kn0Wf\ .cllncte,
monument• and oddltlM In
the nation'• capital,
(C)MOVIE
··T1roe11" I 1"8) Borl•
Kerlolf. Tim O'Kelly. Ari
aging llorror ·moYll ...,
trlff10 rtalC)(I wlt.h I muf·
e1atoua enlper at a ~
mo111e tl'lelter.
10:00 D 8 OUINCV
A madlell Hlflllner trlin-
.. KC-Olll of Qulnoy'I
moat ""*1ed cOllMgueS
of covering uc> a murd«.
i D• NEWS FMEDOM'I
OEFENIE: AMENCA'S
OUP 19IO
Thi color. df1m1 and
beluty of 12-mallt yldltl
compellng for the "'°91
1><estlglou1 trophy In yedlC
r Icing off Ille Newpot1.
Rhode ltllOc:I COUI IS Clo-
tured In lfN dooumlntltY
n1rra11<1 by Robert
MICNall (A)
., F\.AM8Alll08
"The Cold Ught Of Oly"
Wiiiiam land• hit n11t job
11 an 1lrplane t'llldl111le
end Cl'trlatlna goea to wor1I
11 a w1lttes1. (Part 5) (RI
t0:30. INDEPENDENT
NETWORK NIW8
(l)MOVIE
"Jokel My Folk1 ~
T Old ~·· Pl8yboy Bunnlel
lllld Pen!~ Pett loC1
OU1 bewdy ,.. Ind llthl.
A"
10:45 (Q) MOVIE
'"Horteyeucllte AoH"
I tNOl W.. Nlllon. 1>y9n
CIMOfl Whlle on tour, a
Te .. • cou11try-we11ern
IWlg9f ~ l""°"'9d
with IM MCSuctf\19 dlugn-
tar ol hi• tldeklea _,
though he 111U !o\181 his
lley·ll.floma wlle. ·PG'
t t:oo e D 8 Cl) Ill a
NEW8 8 STAR TA!K
Sertt to nagotllt•. 1*1V.
CIP1 Klrll Is lmP<WONd
when hi lnt""9MI In en
eHOUllon
I NEWl YWEO GAME
MANNIX
"0..lh 11 The 5tl't Gear"
M1nnl1 1ulfet1 MrlOUI
heed lnturlea 1tter Ofhh-
lng llll ricing cer Into a
brick Wiii. whk:t1 t'IWlll lfl
hla not remembl<lng If
111ree11 on l'tls Ille-• reel
Of Imagined
., BENNY HILL
Watch for Benny'• look el
Hollywood 1rtd Iha "Gran-
ny of the Veer Jumping
Contest ••
• THEUMAH
L£AOVE'8 NATIONAL.
CONVENTION
OelOtn Hind)' ertef>Orl
co11erage ol the day•s
ICll\'11111 ffom WalhlnQ-
ton, DC. Ci> WON.O CHAONQ.I
Jlfl M1renson. Atela1111t
S.Cre11ry-O-al, U.N.,
1n<1 Brien Sbton of the
BBC dlecust Iha erma ,_
(J:)MOVIE
"The Flrll t-ludla Musical"'
(19751 Cindy Wllll1m1.
Bruce Kimmel. A down·
TUBE TOPP.ERS
•
KOCE 8 7:30 and KCET 8 8:00 -
"Gorilla.'' E .G. Marshall hosts a look al
the larcest of the apes.
KCOP • 8:00 -"Splendor in the
Grass." Natalie Wood and Warren Beat·
ty star ln a love story set in the Midwest.
KCET @ 9:00 -"Los Angeles
Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl.''
Zubin Mehta conducts and Jtzha k
Perlman plays violin ln a televised ap-
pearance .
KOCE IP 9:30 -"Mark Russell."
The political satirist pokes fun at
sightseeing in the nation's capital.
and-out Broactway PfO-
duoer pl"" to .,..,. in.-I
Ml In hla 111111 PfOjlc1 by
~ It completlfy Ill 11\e
nude. 'R'
Cll>MOVll "'Allen" (1979) Tom k er·
ritt. YIPMI Kotto. Tiie
crew of • tpecegolng
llCf IC> ClrfW tolow • myt.-
ter1oul llgr\el to a tuppoe-.-y deed pllM4 end. atter
landing, clllcowr lh•t "" ,..,...... wu • warlllng to
11.yaw.y. 'R' .MCMI I "Mahogany" (1975) 0Cen1
Aoe6, Arlltlony Penllfla. A
youog blecll woman rieM
from the depth• of the
ghetto to International I
flllTte .. a fllhlon o.elgner
and model. "PO'
(%)MICK GAMll TALQ I WITHITIVIN
~ 11:15(Z)MOVIE
··c~ Enc:ountar• Of Thi
Third Kind: Speotll Edi·
t1on·· ( 1980) Rlotlard Orey·
fuu, Frencol1 Trullaut
Al\« llgll!Jng I UFO, I
~ OOfl'IPlnY ~ t>ecomee o~ wltl't
llndlng the ellenl' landing
Ille. •PO'
11:*> • Cl) MOVll * * ''Thi Or .. l•t Thing
TlleC Altnoal H~··
I 1977) Jimmie W1tker.
J-Eari Janee. " l1lgtl
SC:hool b1Aletl>1N atar ,.,_ 10 let .,, ~
•tend t>etween him and en
~ant game. (RI
•8TOHIOHT
)401t. Johnny C1r1on
Gu..11 01Vld Brennet.
8'ooke Shlelda 8 111 UC NlW8
NIOHTUNI
I LET'S MAKE A DEAL
ST ANL!Y llEOll. G CAPTlOHEO A.BC
NEWS
12:00 • MOVIE * * • ·~ .. Thi Piii"""'" ..
( 193&) G1ty Coopar,
Cl'tlt1M 81ckf0f'd. A trio of
femout W•tarn cflerll()o
t«I try lo tlGP I wnlll
man from Mlllf10 euns to
I~ 8 9 LOVl.oAT
'lnVlalble Manlec:" Bema-
dette Stente. Clifton Davi•.
"S..,t.,.,.., Ion" ~
HHH lhOtf, Shelley
F1b1re1, "PMlt•l>oo"
Gordon Jump. Peggy
C...IRI
• OUN8MOK£
A daMO jellbleak reunlt•
• !amity of vlc:iout outllWI
who ~ • pU(IUlng
mal'lhel end klll hie dee>U·
i::nA
T Ofly HI aturnped by 111
unc:ooperatNI ,,,..,e1 ... wit· ,,....
(l)MOVIE
"MOf'I Am«leen Oralfltr"
'p979) Aon How9rd, PIUI
Le MM. Att« gradu1llon. I
group of l'tlgh I ChOOI
friend• experience th•
chlllang" of edul1h00d In
the eoc:lel upheavll of 1hl 1oeo. ·pa·
12:30 G 8 TOMOMOW
Oueat1. The Kneck
• HOGAN'S H£~8
Hogan muat aqyurt the
letl9t Oarm1n plan 10
dMtroy the British air
'°'°'· 12:'8 CC) MOVIE
•• tooo.. ( t977) Robert
DeNlro. G«atd Oeperdklu
9-Yenty yelrl of ltllian
IOClll I nd pol111c11
cllengee 11a -tl'trougl't
"'9 eyea of two unlikely
bMI fflende. 'A'
t:OO G NYCHtC
PHf.NOMENA ··v11ng PltlOnll CrtlM Al
L.Hrrtlng Tool•.. Hoal.
Damien Slmpaon. Gueat·
Carol Ann Dryer
• MOVIE * • .. Only Th• Vellant ..
(19511 Gregory Peek, Bar·
b111 Payton A eevetry unit
regllnt respect for I he or
laed« When he 18\IM them
trom an Indian llCICk.
• INOEHNOE.NT
NETWOAIC NEWS
(H) AEMl!.M8E1' WHEN:
WHE!L.8, wtN08 AND
WHtlTl.EB
Didi c • ..,.11 lrlCM the hls-
IOfy of Am«~ tranapor-
lltlon from the coYated
wegon ol the Old West to
'"' newly deYe4oe>eCI spec. lhut1la
1:10 . MOVIE * * * * ··An Amerlean In
Par11·· (19!>11 G-Kelty,
Le1Ue Caron Mu11c11
ICO'I by George and tre
G«lhwtn An American
ex.QI 11nc11 rornence 11nc:1
~lnP1rl1 0 NEWS
1:200MOVIE
··The Godl1ther. Pin ir·
(19741) Al PICino. Rol>erl
Ou111ll Michael Cotleone
..._ hi• 11te tither's
throne end ~ n he
t>eeomea the,_ 1111<1 of
the M1fl1. lincll119 prob·
lema with rlvll l1Ctl0nt and
the lew throughout his
reign. 'A' 1:ao• MOVIE * • '°' ··Johnny Coor·
( 1963) Henry Sll111. Eliza·
l>etl't Montgomery An 1111·
Ian lay relMd l>y • Slelllen
ou-rflla It Mnt to New
Yor1t to wrNI< ~
on thl "*"* of 1n
Amef1can eapetrl•ll.
(l)MOVte
"The ldOlm•kar'' ( 1980)
"•Y Shirkey, ToYlh
F~h A manlpu\111..,.
m1n1ger UHi \lltlOUI
ployl to cet1PUll two tMn·
agers tnlO pol) llnglng
1:A6111ar~G·
1:56 NlW8
2:00 QINlWS
MOAECAMBE & WISE
Erle Ind Ernie ctown to Iha
'"Ch1tt1noog1 Choo
Choo", 111 e1tr111eganu
perlormance of .. There·s
Notl'tlng Liie• A Dame:·
Cl) WE'LL. IE RIOHT
BACK
AWK'f Schlelbl< and Cri•CI·
nl Flttlrl hOll thll loolc It
aome of the most unfor·
gatt1ble commerc1111 ever
mlde
JOHN DARLING
--.---~· 0 • u ··-· ...
1:111 IDffONAl l'.IO MOYll * •i.t "Mr. ,Mbody And
IN M«mald'' (1'411 Wl-
Uam '°"""· AM lly1tl Whllt fletllng. • "*" lrom Botton eetcr-• ,,..
Maid. lllk• '* home end
, ... In IOlle with '* 2:tl. MON!CAMM 'W\11
Elle IOI-... IN m1irHr In
Ernie'• pley "Myettry In
Mtyf llr"; Eric end Ernie
-10 a magnmo.nt
•tat• but find that ~
le not lllWayt bett.,
2:501 NeWt 2:66 MOVll!. * * "CrONW1nc11·· (19511
John Payne, RhOn<la Fi.tn·
Ing A •hip'• ceptaln
enoountere peril ~ he
a111n1p11 10 rec:o11er hit
atOlen ttllp and hi• 1011er
3:00 ... MOVll!. * • "Courageou1 Or
Chrlellan" (19410) JHn
Hereholt, Tom ~I A
dedicated <10C1or·1 work
with the poor 11 compllcat·
eel wh•n an epidemic
ttrlk•
I NEWS
8:15 NEWS
3:30 MOVIE * * * "11"1 Alw•YI Falr w .. thar'' ( 1955) Gane Kel·
ly, Dan Dalley A~ TV
atarlel Clacldae to twoeo· cut a ,...,nlol> ol thrae
World Wiii II Army bud·
CllM
(Z)MOVIE
• • •·~ ··Hobeon·a
ChOica'" ( 195411 John Mllt1.
Chlll1ea lau0f1ton A boot·
makar attemc>ll to retain
his Cheap 10Ur~ of l•bor
by ptl\llntlng hll thrM
d1Ughte11 from m1rrylng
41:15. MOVIE
• • '"Double Jaopa1<1y'
( 1955) Rod Cameron. J1ek
Kelly A wellthy <HI estate
man attempt• to vlndleate
hlmlWllt trom chargn ot
having murdered an e1tlOt·
tlon111.
4:45 8 VOYAOE TO THE
BOTTOM QI' THE SEA
'"GhOst 01 Moby Dick"
T ltursda ffll
D ayf i•e .tfot·ie11
-MORNl«i -
5:00 ~ .. The First Huelle MUSI·
c11"" 11975) Cindy WllHama.
Bruce Kimmet A dowrt·
and-out Broadway pro-
ducer plans to lj)ltk Inter·
esl In h11 lateat pro1ec1 by
staging II completely on the
nude ·R·
5:30 CS)*•*~ "Rio Brevo'
l 1959) John Wayne. Dean
Martin. An old cripple. 1
tormer depu1y-turned·
drunk. 1 young QUICkdrlw
gunslinger and 1 girt halp 1
lherltl to outamut • pow·
..-1u1 r&ncher wno w1n11 to
gel h11 klller brother
releated from prlaon cz:i ··Tne Gr111 San11nl
C 19791 Robert Ouv1ll
81y1he Dinner A rough·
lnd-t11dy M1t1ne Corps
ottlOer f-. dorMtlle bit·
ttes -hi 1r1es to
•mP<>N "" mohtery 1<11111
on his tamlly "PG"
7:00 CC) * * * 0Hek11 I t965)
Ev•· Mar11 Sl119rt1mmer.
Genr10<1 M1t11tmayr A Ill·
tie Swtr.s girl is llllen lrom
toer mountafl\ home in the
Alps by ,.... eunl to the
Clty
8:00 CS) * * * * "'Fllhlr 01 The Bttde .. (1950) Spenc•r
Tr1CY. Ellubeth Tlytor A
fatrter eaperlence1 111 o!
1111 ICJYS and h91C11c:hea
lnvol\le<I with tl'te prep1re·
lions for hi• <11ughlar'1
upcom1119 we<ldlrtg
8;30 {t). Ag1tl't1'0
( 19)9) Ousllrt
Hoffman, V1n1na
~-In LondOll .. 11H. en AINwlCM ,_..
P411* ttel0f1• "*"9 ...
~ lrwOI* wtetl
lamed "'Y9*Y wtff .. ,....
the CMIMll. wflO 11M lefl
lier 1111telthlUI ~!Mln4
"PO
10:00 ··~1tAoM"
(INOI WM~. Oyen
Cannon While on tour, •
TeaH country·w•1ter11
~ *-ln\IOMd
with the MductW. '*'IJll·
,., Of hi• ..-1c11 -
though "' 91111 '°"" 1111 11ay .. t·home wtfe. "PO"
10:30 ct) "Up Rl\IW""Ayoung
ploOMr ~ lnYolYed
In 1 lll•and-d .. lh 91tuogle
wltl't I gold·l\ungry line!
b11on 11:oom *"' "LooM In Lon· e1on·· I 19531 Bo-v Bo)'I,
E1rtal GrllfM Thi Boyt run
up ag1lnt1 1 bunch of
ICl'tltnlng re11llv• wMtl
ona of them 11 n1rnecl Mir
to 1n Engltlh e.n.
11:ao a ••"™RI..,.,·•
Edge 11957) Ray Mlllend,
Arttl'tony Oulnn A con mlt'I
1n110111e1 art Innocen t
r1nchar In 1 m~llon-ooltat
robbery
t2:00 .. * • * Anllomy Of A
Murd« (Plfl 21 ( 1959)
J1mea sc-an, Ben Gu·
z1r1 A amlll·town ettor·
ney defend• en Army lieu-
tenant whO II ICCUM<I ol
k1ll1ng 1 man 1U1P9Cled of
111ec111no hll wit•
• • • • ··x.15 .. 11H 11
01v1d MacL .. rt. Cherlel
BronlOn Events aurround· •no the ,....,ch 1nd tnt· •no or trta X· 15 111 .,. POt·
!rayed
(C) * • • 'l't "Br1g1doon•·
t 19541) Gene Kelly. Cy<I
Ch1tl1ae Two friend•
stumble upon Brigadoon, 1
vlllege In the Scottlsto high·
l1n<11. which comes to Ille
fOf • 11ngta <l•y every 100
yeara
2:00 <tl ··rue~ E11er11111ng"
Fred Keller, Joseph
MacGuore A young girt
meet• •n 1mm<N'11l 11m11y
known u the Tuck• 0 Somewnere In T1me··
l 19801 Chrlstoptoer R-
J.,.. s.ymour ObMSMCI
with thl portrllt or a t911't·
century 1etreu. a modem·
day New York pllywrigl'll
uses nypnoaAs to ltlvel
blCk on tome 1nd meet hef
PG
3:00 QI * * '> Fraga· I 1972)
R1y Milland. S1m ElllOtt
Whole on a btrlhdey outong.
I man bent on deslroytng
b1you wildlife get& a pres-
ent he lladn I counted on
when swampy creaturea
rise up 10 murder him and
1l11lamlly
3:30 0 * ·~. The Legend Ot
Custer·· ( 19681 Wayn1
Maunder Slim Piekens.
The mlhlary cereer ol lhe
colorful Amerlean colortet
lead• to 1111 famous LN1
S11nd
(SJ "Candtashoe'· ( 19771
Jodie Foster Oa111<1 N•..,.,.
A 1omb0y from troe street&
of Loa A"iJefel lnh«1t1 1
llt11ted Brlllll't 11tate G"
41:00 (Cl * • • Heidt · 11965)
Ev1-M1t1a S1ngh1mmer,
Ge1tr1no M1tterm1yr A hi·
tie SWiii girt IS tllleo lfom
he< mourttlln l'torne In the
AIPI by hef 1Unt to the
City 0 • Relurrt From W1tctl
Moun111n t 19711 Sette
0.111s Ch11st09toer Lee A
po-·mld 111stoc;r1t and
1111 greedy fem1le cotoor1
attempl 10 HPIOtl Ille
super n11ur11 1bihtoes of
two children from oute1
spice tor their own e1111
e>url>OIM 'G
5·30($) ***''> 'R10 Br1110 ..
119!>91 JOlln WI~. Dean
Martin Art old c11pple. 1
lormer deputy-turned·
drurtk. a young qulckdraw
gunslinger 1nd a girl l'telp a
aherln 10 outsmart a pow.
erlul rancher wl'to w1nts to
get hos killer brolher
relea5ed rrom prison
by Armstrong & Batiuk
1"0 S,..Y • SHOVEL I
WOU\.D eE C~OSER
l'O \HE 1"11'\A~!
firftnk Blair delivers bad news m NBC comedy pilot
"I don't think we did a good job on the tape.
We worked a little too fast," said Blair. He pre·
dicts major changes. and offers the pilot merely
for the networks lo get a line on the concept and
the character development.
For his part. Blair. 66, thinks he can play high
comedy. although his previous work in com·
mercials and movies never moved him out of
character. •·1 have a sense of humor," Blair says. men·
lloning Archie Bunker as a character who llckles
him. "This is not Incompatible. I'm not in news
anymore, so I'm not concerned about that kind of
credibility. If I can make the character believable-,
I •
what's wrong with having a llltle fun in my declin·
Ing years? I'm enUtled to It."
Of course he Is. But Blair himself raises ques-
tions about the need for public figures to protect
the image they've spent a ll(etlme nurturing.
"In 25 years at NBC, 23 on the "Today" .show.
I built up a reputation and an image. It's my most
valuable asset. and since I've left the show I've
bee n extremely careful not to lamper with it. l"ve
been very careful, very selective in the com·
merclal area." Blair l'las ptu11ed Bayer aspirin, but balked at
the chance to sell a laxallve.
''I didn't tblnk It woul~ be rtaht tor my Image. 1
\
•
My wife would divorce me." he said.
Blair admits he has qualms about the role or
the zany weatherman. He remembers Edward R.
Murrow tarnishing his reputation as journalism's
white knight by doing some smarty Hollywood in·
terviews on "Person t.o Person:·
"As long as the part isn't degrading and I can
show another side of my personality, that's OK."
Blair said. "In the last six years I've tried very
hard not to lamper too much with the public's
memories. staying away from what I think is dls·
tasteful. rude or vulgar."
Based on the pilot of "Live Eye." Blair's
reputaUon deserves a better vehicle.
-1031
FM
OF TiHE HARBOR
'