HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-07-23 - Orange Coast PilotTHURSDA V JULY ~3. 1981
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• • • • • •
Ylll llllTlll llllY PINI
ORAN GE COUNTY C ALIFOR NIA 2~ CENTS
Andrea Doria dive due
Wifmington adventurer seeks answers about wreck • WILMINGTON (AP) -On the
25th anniversary of the sln.ldn1
of the Andrea Dorla, undersea
adventurer Peter Gimble will
set out on a mission to find out
why the luxury liner sank, and
whether a fortune in gold and
jewel.a sank with It.
'Tm not obsessed with the
wreck," said Gimble, who first
dove at the · site off Nantucket
just one day after the ship went
down July 26, 1956. "I just have
never been able to answer cer·
lain questions that I'm curious
about."
watertight door was miasang,
causing the ship to sink, u well
as to recover two safea from the
first-class lounge to determine If
''I just have
never been able
to answer certain
questions . . . "
they do indeed contain treasure.
Gimble, who haa dived al the
scene four limes since be flnt
visited It, nearly loet bll llfe ln a
1975 exploration while mmm,
·'The Mystery of the Andrea
Doria" for CBS-TV.
During the dive, he suffered
equipment failure and nearly
suffocated, but recovered and
was back in the water the next
day. That dive a nd the onia
scheduJed to leave Montauk,
Long Island, N. Y. on Monday;
were conducted in conjunctl°'l
with film maker Elea Andersen.
Gimble will actually ren·
dezvous at Montauk on Sunday
with h..is specially outfitted shl;p1 the Sea Level JI . which will oe
arriving that day from Mora~
City, La.
The Italian liner Andrea Doria begins to link off Nantucket Island July 26, 1956 , after a collision with the
Stockholm. It was the first time that two large pa&senger ships had ever collided in the open sea.
One of them. he said in an·
nouncing the dive Wednesday in
this Los Angeles Harbor com·
munity, is "why did a ship that
shouldn't have sunk sink as a re·
suit of damage that apparently
shouldn't have put her down?"
The expedition aims to explore
~a rum o r that a c rucial
Some 51 people lost their lives
in the 11: 10 p.m. J uly 25 collision
between the Italian liner, on Its
way from Italy to New York,
a nd the S w e d ish liner
Stockholm. The Andrea Doria
sank hours later in about 235 feet
of water, while the Stockholm
managed to limp into New York
Harbor.
The privately financed expedl·
tion will include a team of three
commercial divers, four dJver·
<See SUNKEN, Pa&e AZ>
Russ to process fish off state coast
Judge's order
lets man die
with dignity
OCALA, Fla. (AP l -The
66-year-old man dying of Lou
Gehrig's disease couldn't speak
to tell a judge at his hospital
bedside he wanted to be un·
plugged from a respirator and
die at home. But he could bold
the judge's hand.
"I said, 'If you understand
what I say, squeeie my hand,'
''I think everyone
was crying at the
time, myself in-
cluded."
and he did," Circuit Judge
Wallace Sturgis said Wednesday
about the hearing he held at the
bedside of John C. Ford.
"I said, 'If you're taken off the
respirator. you likely would not
live very long.'
"l asked him if he understood
that be would likeJy die if taken
off t he life-support system. and
he squeezed my hand again."
Ford's family petitioned the
court to aJlow him to go home,
away from the machines that
helped him breathe. After ascer ·
taining that Ford aereed, the
judge granted the request, and
Ford died the next day at home.
Sturgis said he had presided al
hearings in hospitals before, but
the night session at Munroe
Regional Medical Center on JuJy
10 was something different.
"I think everyone was crying
at the time, myself included,"
be said.
Ford suf f ered from
a m yotrophic lateral sclerosis,
nicknamed Lou Gehrig's dJsease
for the New York Yankees fint·
baseman who died of it in 1941.
.The disease attacks the central
nervous system and erodes its
victims' ability to control their
motor functiom.
Ford was at home July 9 when
his lungs a nd heart stopped
working, but his family kept him
alive with mouth-to-mouth re·
suscltation, Sturgis said. He wu
brought to the ~ospital that day
and was still on a breathing
macblne a day later.
After Ford 's family petitioned
to have Ford released "to the
peace and comfort of his own
home," Sturgis appointed a
lawyer. Frank Amalea, on his
behalf.
Amalea attended the bedside
hearing along with Ford's four
children and a nother lawyer.
Meredith Power, who represent·
ed the famiJy.
··I went in and talked to him
and explained the whole thing to
him." the judge said of Ford. "I
could get a visible signal from
him because he could press my
hand.
.. After talking to all members
of the family and getting their
concurrence and their (liability)
release of the hospital, and talk·
ing to the doctors Involved, I
signed the order allowing him to
be removed from his life sup-
ports," Sturgis said.
··He died the next day at
home , and I received a call from
the family. They were most
grateful of the fact that he had
been allowed to go home and be
with the family when he passed
away:·
Sturgis said doctors "felt like
t hey could keep him alive a
month, six months or six years
in that state, but all the family
wanted was for him to go home
and to be with them. And he was
able to communicate with me to
the point where that's what he
wanted."
Jury selection
questioning held
SAN FRANCISCO CAP>
Journalists, but not members of
tpe public, received permis$ion
to watch questioning of prospec-
tive jurors today In the murder·
con spiracy trial of former
Peoples Temple cultist Larry
Layton.
Layton, 35, is charged In con-
nection with the ambush slaying
of U.S. Rep. Leo Ryan on a
jungle airstrip in Guyana on
Nov. 18, 1978.
Supermarket clerks
readying for strike.
LOS ANGELES <AP.) -A
1trille aptmt more than 1,200
1upermarllet1 ln 12 Southern
CallfomJa counties appeared
PoHlble today after lut.ditcb
nepdll&om broke down amldlt
bttter words. • 'Thll proposal ii ridlcuJoua and
inauJtial," cme union oftldal Wd
II DtlOtiaton for &be United,,_
an~ Comm.re 1 Workere 1tom.-.. out of bar1alDlft1
-~•QIDllllOJ NC!Dlll tMir .... nJeet ~ ....... olflt
... toeetoatnn.
M ana1ement neaoll•ton sald
tt1ey would return to the bar1atn-
ln1 table today, but union leaden
said they hd no lntenUon of talk·
lat further until union membert
voted whether to atrike "uni ..
tbe manapmenUareedy to mat•
a mHniaafulpropoeal."
The union, formM about a year
AJO bJ the _., .. of U.. rMail
c:leru ud but.chert amtona. W ne1oUetlnl, a new pact for 101M
TJ.100 el.ta bi IJ c:ouatl• -lu Ltala Obl8po, IAata Barbara, V9t-l••· lAI Aqei•, Orn11, • CIMtnlllS, Pa .. Al)
NOT MUCH LEFT -Only ornate facade of
Kam's Restaurant in Corona del Mar is left
. standing as workmen clear site for a new
Deity,.... ...........
office building. Owners of the r estaurant
n ear Avocado Avenue lost their lease.
Car re turn
offe re d b y
fra ud s u sp ect
Newport Beach a uctioneer
Robert Ogle , charged with con·
ning a man out of three ex·
pensive cars for a handful of
gems alleged to be worth a frac·
tion of their stated value, has of·
fered to return the cars. his al·
torney claims.
Attorney Jeffrey Walsworth
says Ogle, free on $100,000 bail.
is mystified by the allegations.
Ogle, 42, the reported owner of
Newport GaJleries, has "offered
to return the cars for his jewelry
to settle matters ," Walsworth
says.
"But since they haven't got
back to us," the attorney says,
"it makes us think it was a fair
deal." ·
But Newport Beach police
take a dJflerent look at the case.
Detectives assert that Ogle was
conspiring to commit grand
theft when he traded the stones
fo r a pair of limited edition
Mercedes-Benz and a $100,000
handcrafted Clenet automobile. 1
Ogle was arrested July 8 along
with two business colleagues on
grand theft charges.
Police have not identified the
man who gave up the cars ln the
trade.
The gems, police claim, were
reported to be worth nearly
55001000 by Osle, who aaaertedl.y
proauced documenta to aupport
~cl~m. ·
Police, thou&h. say wh•t the
unldentllled man aot were In·
ferlor atAJaet that "ll you could
even flnd • buy•r" woold barely
buy back one ol hl1 can.
Osl•'• attorney clalma It wu
the can, not th• 1•m1,. that turlMd out to be worth 1 ... than
their stated value. Ht did not
•lve dollu-ftpres.
Police .. Y that Mveral people
have eontact.d autborttJM allel·
ln1 they hav• been victJmlMd in
dealln• with 0•1•.
I sraeli warplanes
hit Lebanon again
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> -
Israeli warplanes swept into
southern Lebanon again today
and the PLO and Lebanon's
state radio said the fighter.
bombers blasted a key bridge in
the foothills of Mount Hermon.
The Tel Aviv command said
the planes scored accurate
s trikes at lJOmm cannon near
Has bay a , northeast of the
Israeli border town of Metulla,
and that all the jets returned
sa fely. The Israelis made no
mention of attacking a bridge.
The PLO and Lebanese radJo
brt>adcasts said the planes
s truck at the road bridge that
link s guer rill a b ases in
southeast Lebanon with the
eastern Bakaa Valley and the
Syrian border.
The bridge s pans the Hasbani
River near Hasbaya, which is
the forward moet 1uerrjlla posi·
tion in tbe foothills of Mount
Hermon about seven miles north
of the Israeli border.
There was no immediate re·
port of casualties. Since the
latest cycle of violence erupted
two weeks ago, five people .have
been killed by guerrilla rockets
in northern Israeli settlements
and more than 400 have died in
I s raeli reprisal strikes In
Lebanon.
The PLO reported Israeli mis·
sile boats shelled the Rashidleh
Palestinian refugee camp south
of the port of Tyre during the
night and then pounde d the
camp with long-r ange artillery
from the border during the day.
T he guerrillas also claimed
they beat back two Israeli at·
tempts to land commandos by
helicopter ln southern Lebanon.
The Israeli military command
had no immediate comment, but
Israeli military sources denied
the re}>Ol't.
In Tel Aviv. Prime Minister
Menachem Begin today rebuked
U.S . Defense Secretary Caspar
CSee MIDEAST. Pue A!)
Man saved in NB
after pier incident
A Newport Pier Janitor wu
arrested Wtdnelday after be al·
leeedl)' threw a 2l·year-old m•n
off ·a side ot lbe pier lnto the
water JO feet below where the
man tlDDI to a pllln1 until
harbor patrolmen pulled him to
11tety. t Tbe janitor, Pattlell Ahin Lann •.waaboMMaa•
HUit ad Mid 18 lieu of
•10.000
A an Al
police
Panel
approves
• permit
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Over
the objections of sport fish·
ermen. conservationists and
commercial fish operations, a
Soviet factory ship soon may W
allowed to process mackerel,
anchovies and squid three miles
orr the Southern California coast
by August.
The permit for the ship was
granted by the Pacitic Fishery
Manaeement Council in a meet·
ing in Boise. Idaho.
Those supportint the appUca·
lion included the Fishermen's
Cooperative Assn. of San Pedro
-whose 20 to 25 boats would
provide the fish -and the Fisbl
ermen's Union -which wou14
man those boats.
One council member who voti .
ed in favor of the permit w14
John RoyaJ, who Is also presit
dent of the Fishermen's Union!
the Los Angeles Times report.e1
today .
There are other joint ventures
of domestic companies workinl
with foreign factory ships ln the
Pacific Northwest, but this
appar ently would be a first
off Southern California shores.
The Soviet operation would
also be the first in which a
foreign shlp was allowed to pro·
cess fish species in competition
with U.S. processors and dis·
tributors. Presently, fishermen
in the Pacific Northwest take in
hake and other fish which aren't
marketed widely by U.S. en·
terprises.
The recommendation of th'
Pacific Fishery group has been
forwarded to the U.S. Departr
ment of Commerce and la ex..
peeled to be approved by Aua. l:
However. the matter will be con·
sldered by the Fish and Game
Commission at a public meetinf
Wednesday in Long Beach.
Groups opposed to the factory
ship said they will contact Presl·
dent Ronald Reagan , the
California d elegation ,to the
House and Sena te , and
Secretary o f Co mmerce
Malcolm Baldridge.
.lllllif CIAIT IUllEI
Low clouds tonlaht
through Frl day m ld ·
morning, but otherwlae
fair throu1h Friday. Hi1h1
72 to 85. Lows tonieht 58 to
68.
lllllTllAY
A BC'• "World N11111 '
Tcmtgllt" ,_., moo«f iMO CM
top tpoC ttt tlw Mtwort ,.,_,.
ratiftg race for tlw l't'fl &jfM,
See ABC Nft11, Pofll BJ.
11111
• • • • • Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, July 23, 1981
U.S. refuses to declare counties diaaster area
LOS GATOS <AP) -M ol·
flclal1 moved to meel the de-
1 manda of Southern stet.a by
w1tcblna for"Medllerruean hidt
riles throughout CaUfornJ1, the
'federaJ government refUHd to
• declare fly-infested counties a
., disaster area.
. "W • p.y more taxes than any
other state, and controllln1 the
t medny la a matter for the whole
· country," an unhappy Gov. Ed·
mund Brown Jr. said Wednesday
,after the Reacan administration
rejected his request for a disuter
declaration In three CallfomJa
counties.
A declaration would have made
farmers eligible for low-intere$t
Joans. The federal government
1 already hu offered to help pay for
serial pesticide spraying, expect·
ed to cost S6 million.
Meanwhile, the second round of
airborne attacks on the crop.
ravaging pest began today. Three
helicopters took off just after mid·
night to spray sticky bait laced
with the pesticide malathion over
parts of Palo Alto. Mountain
Vlew, Loi AH.al and lM AltOI
HUl1,eompletln1theJobbyh.m.
At 1eut alx .. riaJ appUHtklm
Wtre l!i-.cl OV• the 2:2T·lquate·
mile "eore" lnleatatlon zone, pro-
ject dlrectoJ" Jerry Scribner saJd.
The first round of 1praylng ended
Monday.
Me41ly larvae have been found
tn l~ Places jn the spray 1ont, but
the ntet haven't invaded any of
the state's large commercial
farms out.side the three counties.
A sharpdroplnthenumberofOles
found in traps was reported after
the iniUal spraying, ottJclaluald.
California officials plan to ln·
crease moo.it.orlne or the pest by
setting five ny traps per square
mile throughout California by
Friday. said Gordon Snow,
special assistant to state Food
and Agriculture Direct.or Richard
Rominger.
The increased monitoring
would meet a key demand of five
Southern slates attempUng to Im·
pose a quarantine broader than
that ordered by the federal gov·
ernment on 200 fruits and
ve1etabl that can act u bolts to
themedlly.
The federal 1overnm1nt'a
quarantine forbids abipmeet ot
unfumltated host fruit• and
veeetables from the quarantined
area.
The Southern stales :_ Texas,
Florida, South Carolina, Mis·
slsslppl and AJabama-alsowant
California to certify that crops
come from areas where the traps
were ln place for 30 days.
Thal could doom much of the
crop, which is at the height of
harvest Se8l$0n, Snow said. Only
about 1 percent of potential med·
fly host crops in the state are in
the Infestation zone.
The U.S. Supreme Court has
given the Southern states until
Friday to answer California's re·
quest for an order prohibiting
their quarantlnes, which have re-
sulted in rejection of several
truckloads or produce. A federal
j udge in Dallas already has halted
Texas' blockade pending a hear-
ing Saturday.
DC paper to close
Loss of Star leaves capital with only the Post
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
128-year-old Washington Star.
beset by mounting circulation
losses, will cease publication
Aug. 7, leaving the nation's
capital with only one daily
ne wspaper. The Washington
Post.
Richard Munro. the president
of Time Inc .. the Star's parent
company, cited the evening
pape r 's mounting final'lcial
losses in making the annbunce-ment today.
Munro said in a statement,
"This is a sad day for all those
connected with The Star -its
readers; its talented. loyal staff
and many of us at Time Inc. who
. tried our utmost to turn it into a
profitable enterprise."
His statement said that,
·'despite our substanti al invest-
ment, the newspaper continues
to lose money and shows no pros·
pect ot tanancial improvement.
Regrettably, we have no tholce
but to close it.··
Company Vice President
Donald M. Wilson said the
newspaper's employees .>"t;re
told or the closing at an early
morning meeting. The paper
employs 1,427 persons full time.
the newspaper said it wouJd try
to help them find jobs.'
The announcement apparently
caught both Star employees and
management at the rival Post
by surprise.
A Star editor who asked not to
be named and who was at the
morning employee meeting said,
"Everybody's in shock ...
Everybody knew the paper was
not in good shape, but nobody
knew it was this bad."
Syndicated columnist James
J . Kilpatrick, based at the Star.
said the announcement ''hit me
like a thunderclap."
And Star columnist Mary
McGrory, who said she "loved
the Star and never wanted to be
anywhere else," lamented that
"here we have the capital of the
We stern world with one
newspaper."
Reporter Kenneth Walker said
after today's meeting, "Morale
has been extremely low. It's
been speculated for the last cou-
ple of weeks that they were go-
ing to do th.is."
But Ms. McGrory said she bad
discounted such s peculation
"because Time had given it.s
word" to operate the paper for five years.
And, Reporter Jer emiah
O'Leary said his first thought on
seeing television crews outside
the buildirtR this mornin.r was.
"I thought someone migbt have
gotten hurt.''
Puppy drowning brings charge
Florida man says he was only 'teaching do{! how to swim'
TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -A f1aD
charged with cruelty i n tbe
drowning of a puppy says he was
only trying to teach the doe to
swim so it wouldn't drown when
1 rainfloodshis backyarddogpen.
The Hillsborough County State
Attorney's Office filed an animal·
cruelty charge Wednesday
against John Darling, 38, amid
public outcry over the drowning,
shown in a sequence of photos
published in many newspapers
across the country.
S. Bruce Wiwer. Tampa Times
managing editor, said that after
,., the pictures were published, let·
ters and telephone calls came
from readers wanting to see the
man punished, and from others
criticizing the photocrapher for
not savine the puppy.
What readers didn't realize,
said Witwer, was that the photo-
grapher was about 300 feet away
using a telephoto Jens .
Other newspapers around
Florida published the photos
Sunday after they were
transmitted by The Associated
Press. Palm Beach Post om-
budsman Tom Smith said his
newspaper was deluged with calls
and lettersofoutrage.
Darling is accused of torment·
ing a 6-week-old cocker spaniel
and contributing to its death f'ri.
day by repeatedly throwing it into
a flooded park lake, then holding
it underwater for five seconds.
Darling claimed that he tossed
the dog, named Billy, to teach it to
swim, and submerged the animal
so it would learn to hold its breath.
Jove animals. I love lo see things grow."
He faces arraignment Aug. 12
on the misdemeanor, which car·
ries a maximum penalty of one
year lnjaiJ and a$1,000rme.
The photos were taken Friday
by Tampa Times photographer
Doug Pizac, who said he saw the
man throw the puppy and hold it
under water for several seconds,
and that a few minutes later an
older dog grabbed it and held it
under.
He said the man tried to revive
the dog. but couldn't.
Reagan aims
to calm· furor
WASIUNGTON (AP> -Presi· dent Reagan will try to calm the
furor over the minimum Social
-~ ......... Underwater photographer Peter Gimbel enters a diving bell during
a training session in Wilmington for the filming of the movie
"Andrea Doria : The Final Chapter "
From Page A1
SUNKEN • • •
photographers Including Gim-
ble -and fi ve alternate divers.
A team of divers from New
Jersey previously announced
plans to dive at the wreck site ln
October, using some of the same
new technology that Gimbel's
team will employ.
Their plans, said Gimbel,
"gave me nightmares." He said
be had plaMed his dive, which
will be filmed as a documentary
entitled ''Andrea Doria: The
Final Chapter," long before he
learned .of the other dive, ''but
we kept a very low profile Inten-
tionally. We didn't want to claim
to be able to do things until we
were much further along. We
didn't want to stimulate the New
Jersey group to greater vigor."
Gimbel's team will be using
. technologically advanced eqµip-
men t that he described as
"cruciaJ to the operation."
The equipment, assembled by
the undersea technology firm of
Oceaneering International.
permits a method called
"saturation diving." Whereas
previously divers were limited
to about an hour at a time un·
derwater, followed by as much
as seven hours in a decom-
pression chamber, divers u&ing
the saturation equipment can
spend four or five hours at a
time underwater, and upon sur-
f acing will remain in com-
pressed chambers so that de-
compression is not required.
------------~
Salinas boy
back to life
after dying
FRESNO (AP)-A Salinas boy
remembers dying and coming
bac k to life when he nearly
drowned at Bass Lake east of
here.
Phillip Carrillo, 9, fell into a
deep hole while wading in
s hallow water.
A friend wasn't disturbed
because he thought Phillip was
just pretending. Jt wasn't until he
lay still after swallowing water
that the companion became
alarmed.
Doctors at Valley Children's
Hos pital here credit the cool tern·
perature of the water and a
re sc uer 's knowledge of
cardiopulmonary resuscitation
with saving the boy .
·'I was all shook up,·· the tourth
grader said. "It was like I wa.s
asleep. Everything was green
and I saw some red. It just oc-
curred to me, 'I'm going to die'."
The boy was underwater for
about five minutes before being
rescued Tuesday by Bill Starr of
Santa Maria . He was not
breathing when he was pulled
from the water and there was no
detectable heartbeat.
The boy was kept at the hospital
overnight for observation.
Transit hike foes lose round
LOS ANGELES (AP> -Oppo.
nents of the Southern California
Rapid Transit District's recent
20-cent fare hike have lost an in·
itial attempt to get a court to roll
back the increase.
I. Weil Wednesday ruled against
the request by the Coalition for
Economic Survival on the basis
of a procedural flaw in the
group's petition. But he agreed
to consider the matter again,
possibly next month, when the
From Page A1
STRIKE ••.
Die10. Imperial, Riverside, San
Bernardino, Kern, Inyo and
Mono.
The 21 supermarket cba.lna in·
vol ved have 1,277 at.orea, bandlin1
85 percent of the cooclJ for the 13.9
mllUoa people Uvtna ln the relion.
In the put few weeks, help.
wanted alans have appeared ln
many m arket wlndow1, and
employers have been compillna
llata of persons wllllng to be hired
and trained during a atrJke.
Although negotlatJon1 be1an in
mid-June, the market.a put their
first money package on the table a
little after 6 p.m. Wedne1day -
only six houri before a deadline
imposed by the union for reachin1
an agreement.
The union's contract with the
Food Employers Council does not
expire until Sunday, but the union
set the deadline prior to that so it
would have time to present a
package to its membership for a
vote.
The company's offer called for
an Increase of rou1bly 22 percent
in wages and frinee benetita over
three years-considerably below
the 56 percent b<>Oet being sought
by the un.loo.
Currently, top-scale clerks
earn 99.10 an hour in wages and
$4.12 an hour in Cringe benefits,
for a total oUll.22. They areseek·
ing a $7 an bour boost In wages and
fringe benefits over three years,
but the companies insist that is
far too much.
From Page A1
MIDEAST • •
Weinberger for what the Israeli
leader called the "astonishing"
allegation that Israel's bombing
of Beirut on Friday and of an
Iraqi nuclear reactor in June
had set back efforts to ease Mideast tensions.
Begin said in a communique
that he met after each attack
with Philip C. Habib, the U.S.
presidential envoy seeking to
mediate a peace. and Habib
never said the Israeli actions
damaged his efforts.
Habib was in Jidda today try.
ing to enlist Saudi Arabia's help
to arrange a cease-fire in the
fighting between Israel and the
Pa les tinians . And Arab
representatives were gathering
in Tunis, Tunisia, today at the
request of Palestine Liberation
Organization Chairman Vasser
Arafat lo discuss additional col-
lective Arab assistance to the
guerrillas.
Tax bill due
from Senate
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Senate, with Democrats scoring
a rare victory by threatening to
hold President Reagan's tax
cuts hostage, is putting the
finishing touches on its tax bill
and waiting for the House to catch up.
The House could take a long
step forward today with a
scheduled vote by the Ways &
Means CommiUee that was ex·
pected to send its Democratic
alternative bill to the floor for
debate next week.
Democrats and Republicans
on both sides of Capitol Hill say
they want t.o get a tax bill with
an Oct. 1 effective date to
Reagan's desk before Congress
begins a month's recess in early
Teen cyclist
killed in
county crash ·'It was a bad accident, to lose a
dog I just got," said Darling. "I Security benefit cut in his .----------------------------------------planned address lo the nation,
Superior Court Judge Robert technicality is resolved. August.
An 18-year-old bicycle rider
died in Anaheim Wednesday af·
• ternoon when he tried to pass a
· truck and trailer rig that was
turning to the right, according to
• Anaheimpolice. _,
Richard Charles Ramirez of
Anaheim was pronounced dead at
the scene al Ka tell a Avenue and a
northbound on-ramp to the Santa
Ana Freeway, said police officer
Paul Dohmann.
The truck, driven by Edward
Arbiso, 30, Buena Park, was turn·
ing from Kate Ila onto the on-ramp
when Ramirez tried lo pass on it.s
right, Dohmann said. The truck
first knocked the victim oft his
bike and then both the truck trac·
tor and the traller ran over him,
the officer said.
Pact approved
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The un·
precedented labor dlapute of Sall
Dle10 Countr sheriff'• depuUes
bas ended wtth lbelr new •ll'ff·
ment ratified by the Board of
Supervt~.
ORA COAIT
lilly Piiat
'Split' thief
gets freed om
OAKLAND <AP> -A woman
who claimed one of her other 12
personalities committed the
crimes bas been sentenced to
three yearf probation and or·
dered to pay $3,000 restitution on
burglary charges.
But Alameda County Court
Judge Stanley Golde warned
Diane Goldman that if she, or
any other personality, showed
up in court, he would impose a
jail sentence.
Ms. Goldman bad been
charged with four Alameda
County burglaries, but she
pleaded guilty lo one count and
the others w~e dropped during
plea·bargain.lng. EarUer she had
been sentenced by a Contra
Costa County Judge to five
years' probation and ordered to
make $12,000 restitution in six
other cuea.
T"°"'* P . ._.aley ~-0... ........... 0Meer MAIN Of'ACI
Robert N. Weed l'l'Wllllll
ThomM A. Murphln• ....
Micheel P. H11VeV ...........
L.. ~ W.uttJ ~-a.--
~ N. Goddard Jr. '--......
dleftufman
!:a-
JJI Wu! 1.., ti., C•la MHti, CA ,,,_."•Hrttt ... 11•,c•1•-...c• ~-
c._,,~ l .. l Or ... CMtl ~IWfteC-. ... lltw• ,..,. .. ,, 1KtHCr•li9'!t _. ...... , M411~ .. H
•tfltU-1119 ...... fl ,,..y .. Fftlf-(ff "ltllfVI ~ .• , ........... et(.,,.""' .....
VOL.7 .....
Senate Majority Leader Howard
H. Baker Jr. said Wednesday.
Reagan disclosed in a letter to
Baker this week that be would
ask for television time soon "to
tell the American people tbe
facts, and t.o let them know that
I s hall fight lo preserve the
Social Security System and pro-
tect their benefits."
Asked by a reporter whether
Reagan would have a proposal
on the $1.22 monthly minimum
benefit, Baker replied: ''I'm
convinced the president intends
to address th.is issue." At a dif.
ferent point, Baker said the
president "probably will have a
proposal" to deal with the
minimum benefit. ·
Stag party
for prince
LONDON <AP) -Prince
Charles held a pre-wedding stag
party for 20 of his friends at an
exclusive club In central Lon·
don, pres1 reporta said today.
Bucklqham Palace refuaed to
confirm them.
The event, described by the
London Times aa "&be most
closely auarded aecret'' ol tbe
royal weddlna, was held Wed·
ne1day nJaht at White's, • po1b
all·male club on one of Landom moil fa1hlooable atreetl. The
new•paper said Chari.ti met b1a 1ueat.a there for dinner.
Cbarles 11 lo marry Lady
Diana Speacer neat WMMlclay.
•
Solttalres for the singular womM.
Women who ar~ ~ of a kind
deserve a diamond as individual
as they ar,. ~lect ~ of our
diamond solitalr~ for her. Each
ts set In 14 karat Y'llow gold,
priced from SSOO.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 23. 1981 s
During a trip to New York,
Kathryn Murray bought a
pair of bedroom slippers for
. her husband. retired dancing
instructor Artbul' Murray.
Cons11mer agency saved
She had the slippers
mailed to Honolulu, but when
Murray opened the box. he
discovered sUpper for two
right feet.
County reorganization plan spares office from budget ax . .
II.PW ........
Actress Bo Derek and husband John were in New York City this
week seeing a screening of their film "Tarzan, the AJ?e Mon ."
Bo was s1ar of the picture and al&o the producer. John directed
''ll could have been
worse," he said. •'They could
have thought 1 ttad two left
feet."
Evangelist Biiiy Graham'
says he and
Pre•ldent
Rea1an are
just friends
who d on 't
dwe ll on
politics when
they visit
. After s re·
c e nt White
House dinner.
Graham com·
menled to the GUHAM
Asheville Citizen that he ar·
rived al the White House
about 5 p.m. and talked 'til
10 The four of us had dinner
. We didn 't mention
politics once "
Orango County 1overnment'1
Consumer Affairs office will not
be dlJbanded, the county Board
of Supervison baa decided.
Tb.e board, with superviaors
Bruce Nestande and Roeer Stan·
ton dlqenting, approved a plan
to reorganize the county Cor:n-
munlty Services Agency, which
admlnJaters the consumer of·
flee. The plan adopted Wednes·
day ls designed to save money
and to keep the consumer office
open.
Nestande proposed last week
that the office -with an annual
budget of $33:1,000 -be
abolished. He said the money
should be spent for what he
termed more pressing needs,
s uch as services for abused
children and women.
Nestande repeated that con·
ten lion Wednesday. pointing
out to fellow supervisors that a
myriad of state and federal
agencies offer protection for
consume rs.
The conaumer atralrs office
last year handled more than
38,000 complaints and won more
than $700,000 in reslllulion for ita
clJents.
The motion to reorganize the
CSA and keep the cons umer af·
fair s office in operation was
made by Supervisor Harriett
Wieder, who said Nestande's
proposed action bordered on the
'·precipitous.'·
She said that her colleague
was refusing to acknowledge the
relationship the consumer a f-
fairs office has with the county
District Attorney's orfice in pro·
secuting consumer protecllo'\
cases.
Nestande, claiming he had
nothing "disparaging" to say
about the consumer affairs of-
fice. maintained that changing
financial priorities necessitated
that the board place m oney
where it was most needed.
"There are numerous <con-
sumer) organizations to pick
up the slack," Nestande satd.
Under the proposal prepared
by the county udmlnllstraUve of-
fice and backed by Mrt Wieder,
more than $132,000 would be
saved annually by moving th~
consumer affairs office from
leased space to a county-owned
building and combining ad·
ministration of the office with
tbe cowlly Veterans Services of·
flee.
By combining the admlnistra
tion of the two programs, one
management and two typist
clerk positions will be eliminat-
ed. the administrative office
s aid.
"I view this as a creative ap-
proach to saving tax dollars and
pres erving these two non
mandated s ervices." Mrs .
Wieder s aid.
Combining the two programs
drew criticis m from represen·
tativ es o f se v e r a l groups
representinlo? vete rans
:· He has his
ups, dow11s
Carl Elchelman recorded
hrs 2,000th roller coaster ride
at an amusement park 1n
Howard "Bo" Callaway
Colorado Republic an Party
cha irman, ski
resort owner.
airline t'X
ec uti vc.
forme r con
gress man and
form<•r Army
o;ec rMary
ha:, b t•("llnW J
banker
Graham said his influence
on the preside nt probably is
not as great as it has been on
pas t prl'sidents
First lady Nancy Reagan
is visiting England for only a
week. but s he'll be squeezing
in rive luncheons. five dinner
parties. two re ce ptions. a
fireworks display and a royal
wedding
Wilson sees water rationing
without Peripheral Canal
Ma son. Ohio. But the I RS
computer ope rator vows thal
rs JUSt the beginning.
Eichelman. who brags that
he"s the world-record roller
coaster r ider. s a ys he 'll
reach 10,000 r ides 1n hil.
lifetime.
.. I may bE' 99 year:-old
when you see me in line, but
I'm going to do it ... he said.
Eichelman claims he's r id
den every roller coaster in
the United States "'except for
a few kiddie coasters ." lie
s pends vacations traveling to
amusement parks. this year
driving more than 7.000 mile!>
to ride some 50 coaster!>
Ca 11 a'' a,.
CALLAWAY \\ il'i l'll'('tl•d
to the board uf director'> of
L"n1t ed Hank o f Oe n' er.
Colorado '!> larges t ('O m
mercial ba nk llt• previous ly
s er ve d a ::. pr t•:.id c nl .
l'hairman a nd l·h1l•f ex
ecutive officer of lntr rf1na n
c:ial Inc. of Atlanla
Callawa' :>t•rH•d a ~ u US
r epresentative from c;coq~1a
and was Arm) '>ecrl'lur~ un
der President Ford.
Mrs Reugan leaves for
London today In a ddition to
the July 29 wedding of Prince
{'ha rles. and Lady Olan a.
her schedule inc ludes one of
the prince 's polo matches, a
luncheon hosted by Princess.
Margar et at Ke n s ington
Palace and a late·night re-
ceptio n g iv e n by Queen
Elizabeth at Buc kingham
Palace
The first lady's traveling
1>a r ty in c lud es her
h a 1 r d r e ~ :-. l' r
San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson,
a Republican candidate for gov·
emor , has told a Newport Beach
l uncheo n audie n c e
that. without construction or the
Peripheral Canal. "Southern
California will become the semi-
desert it once was."
He predicted that. without a
ne w source of water, Southern
California will be forced into
water rationing. H e t old
listeners at the Newporter Inn
Wednesday the canal project is •
probably the m ost important
decis ion voters face th is decade.
Voters will decide the fate of
the canal project for bringing
Northern California water lo
Sout hern California next June
Wilson told those attending the
Town HaJI Forum that his sup-
port of the canal will anger
North Californians and likely
cost him votes.
He rapped Gov. Edmund G.·
Brown Jr. and Lt. Gov Mike
Curb. also a Republican can-
didate for governor. for lack of
leadership on the water issue.
"You have to be taller than
either of them to straddle the
fen c e without doing serious
damage to yourse'lf." Wilson
wisecracked
"The governor ." he went on.
"has no w t ake n an uncom·
promising s tance of courageous.
hard-hitting ne utrality "
Gene Cubbison. a San Diego
tele vision reporter on hand for
the luncheon later noted that he
had trave led with Wilson to
Northern Calirornia recently
and the m<1yor had steered clear
of the canal issue there.
Wilson also took shots al Gov
Brown on the Medny episode.
· Plains still roasting
Commuter trains
for OC planned
"The agriculture experts tell
us that the Medny could have
been eradicated within the Santa
Clara area a year ago with a no-
nonsense decision costing Sl
million.·· Wilson observed.
Wil so n . a f o rmer as ·
s emblyman who was elected San
Diego's mayor 1n 1971 . suggest·
ed that lhe ~overnor's seat was
not the only change needed.
He r e fe rre d lo the s tate
Energy Commission as ··a mis-
nomer that hasn't produced one
watt of energy" and called the
s tate Coas ta l Commission a
"Qightmare " V.S. suntmary
T •MP4'r•tvr•' wer• hie" In ttw
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Caltrans Director Adraana
Gianturco is scheduled to hold a
press conference Friday al the
Santa Ana Amtrak railway sta·
Uon to formally I announce plans
to add four commuter trains to
link Los Angeles and Orange
counties.
Tbe trains two northbound
in the morning and two south·
bound In the evening -are in·
teJlded to supplement Caltrans
attempts to use mass transit to
improve commuter transporta·
lio n and ease con gested
freeways.
Ms. Gianturco announced dur
mg a visit to Newport Beach on
May 20 that her agency was
planning to add the four com-
muter trains.
Specifics of the proposal ha-
ven't been ironed out, said Heinz
SD trolley
'smashing'
SAN DIEGO (AP > -The new
San Diego Trolley is off to a
smashing start.
"' LO In the second day after the
n 11 grand opening. a pickup truck ts ,,
61 u tore through a railroad-crossing
., n barrier . Two hours later , the ~ !~ trolley and a car collided .
• 11 No injuries were reported in
: ~ the collision Tuesday, which
Heckeroth. director of the re-
gional Caltrans d istrict ttlal in-
cludes both counties.
Before t he trains can be
added. for exa~ple. Ciiltrans of·
fic1als must negotiate with the
Santa Fe Railway. which owns
the tracks. over kinds of im-
provements needed to increase
commuter runs .
The commult:r service Is one
part of a larger plan involving
local counties and Caltrans to
build several new "multi-modal
s tations" where bus and rail
services would be coordinated.
When complete, there wouJd
be 11 stops along the tram route.
at San Clemente. S an Juan
C apis trano. Miss ion VieJo.
I r v ine. Santa Ana. Anaheim.
Fullerton, La Mir ada. Norwalk,
Pico Rivera and al Union Sta-
tion in Los Angeles.
Wrong-w ay
drive r killed
A Garden Grove man driving
his pickup tr uck on t he wrong side
of the road smashed into a parked
tr-.ick in Anaheim this morning
and died instantly. according to
the Cahfornia Highway Patrol.
Charles llasham. 41. apparent·
ly was driving at high s peed on
Frontera Street east of Glassell
Street and south of the Riverside
Freeway al 3 30 a m . when he hit
the trailer. said Cl IP Officer Axel
M itthof.
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642·6086
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R O LEX
THE CONCEPT
OF ENDURANCE,
THE FACES Of. INTEGRITY
Rolex Datejust. self-winding chro-
nometer. stainless steel and 14kt
gold OYt>ter case. Jubilee bracelet .
Rolex Lady-Date. self-winding with
stainless steel and 14k t gold Oyster
case. Jubilee bracelet.
Both models guaranteed pressur~
proof down to 165 feet
RAFFPt€lrY"
32 Fashion Island
NewPOrt Beach • 844-2a.O 3 Gener1tlona of frlendty penone1 Hl'lllce
Orange Coast OAILY PIL.OT(Thuraday, July 23, 1981
l~illTI~OO~
'Crisis' building
against CIA chief
W ASlllNG1'0N l AP 1 -The Tues day morning and reached
top Democrat on the Senate In· Moynihan early in the afternoon.
telligence Committee says a Moynihan 9aid the attorney
''Crisis" is buildin g that could general prom ised to cooperate
for ce the resignation of CIA in tht' investigation but "did not
O\rector William J Casey concede" that committee sta!f
Sen. Daniel Palrn:k Moynihan members were having trouble
of New York. the panel's vice getting Information from the de-
chairman. said he telephoned partment
Attorney GenHal Wil liam Al lhe White !louse. deputy
Prench Smith on Monday eve-press secretury Karna Small
n?ng to deliver the warning •said officials were rt.'lurning the
Moynihan accused the White committee's call s as soon as
flouse and the Justice Depart· possibl('.
ment of failing lo t·ooperate in T h e committee's inquiry
the comm1ttec's inquiry into s tems from a rinding by a
Casey's finllnc1al dealings federal judge in Ne•" York that
before he was appmnted head of dur ing lhe mid 1970s Casey and
the C IA other directors of a no\\ defunct
"If they arc going lo cover firm. Multisonics Inc . misled
up ... he .,aid. "thc.v arc going lo poten tial investor!>
lose lht•mselves th111r d1n•ctor of tile CJI\ ... fast " The court ruling caml' lo light
In an inlt'rvic" Tucsdav. after Max llugl•I. Casey's hand·
Moynihan said he rnllcd Smith picked dl'puty. resigned as chief
lh'e previous evening to caution of Cll\ l'landestine operations
htm that "vou ha\ e a l'ns1s after two forml•r business as-
b\Jllding up hen· You doubtless sociall'"i allcgl•d that he engaged
AP ........
Mobile missile
decision vital
WAS HI NG T ON <AP > -
Defense Secretary Caspa r Wein-
ber ger is cautiously j uegling
political and military considera-
tions crucial to solving a vital
and expensive proble m · how to
deploy the mobile MX m issile .
·'T h is is a n e n o rmo u s ly
we ighty decision." sai4 Pen-
tagon spokesman Henry Catto.1
"Whal he decides is going to af·
feet the strategic bala nce of t he
wor ld for the next 30 years. So
this is som ething that he is not
pre pared to be rushed into."
Apart fl-om tough political rac
tors. Weinberger also knows his
recommendation lo President
R eagan w ill h ave poten t
b udgetary effects because lht·
M X shapes up us t he mot1t f'X
pensive Amt•rlcun wt•a 111in
system of all l1m~ Tht· 1•0111
could reach $70 b1lhot1
The Reagan uclm1n111tr11t1tm 111
on record as lH'l1t:v1n1< thut
Townes report. but this has not
prevented a spate of rumors.
many from defe nse ind ustry and
congr essional sources. purport·
ing lo picture a t least tentative
decisions made by Weinberger
or recommendations forwarded
by the Townes panel.
There have been r eports that
the Town es pan el favor s a
smaller deployment about 100
m issile~ in 2.300 shelters
which would luke up less area
and thul> m1t1gate environmental
and Mcx·1al lmpac·t 1n the Ulah-
N1•vada ari·a
Ovt•r 1111 . 1t 1i. known that the
Tow rw11 IHJllt:I ht1!> reviewed
mur1· t 111111 :10 ch U1·n·nl conc~pts
1 111 1l••plovm1•nl uboard
1111111.1111·.. 1111 'llllp'>, in sub-
111111 """" 111111 in vanou~ land
1111""'' 1111 rll'>
1 111· f)1·f1·n,,1· lh·partment
IJ1J111"t ... 1l ,, "''r111u'! ist•Jrc·h for a
m11t11li· 1111 111.11<· 1·11n1·1.·pt 1n 1973
Amer ican
worried t hat
str ategists became
t he Russians would
achieve don't kno\\ \\hi.ii is happening. in illegal or improper stock trad·
but that isn't to sav it won't.. inJ( pructices llugel den ied the
And he told the eommillec allt•gations ··u th(ly'n• not j!lung to hl'lp us Tht• comm1tlt'l' 1s seeking
t•s tablis h th:.it tht• director financial information from the
!i hOuld not resign. lhl'n the result hark ground ln\'l'Sl1gat1on that
will be that he "Ill resign .. th(• FBI conductt.'d on Casey
FIELD DEDICATED -Sid Gutter of Albuquerque, N.M.,
breaks a bottle of champagne on a front-end loader to mark
the dedication of t he 400-acre Cutter International Balloon-
port in Albuquerque . The field will be the site of the 10th In-
ternational Balloon Fiesta Oct. 3-11.
enough nuc l ear str iking·
pow er i n their big new missiles to
wipe out the 1,000 U.S. Minuteman
missiles poised in fixed undergr ound
launch sil os .
~~~~~~~~~~~~-
11 0 " e ,. l' r . s c• n n arr} b(•fon• hi.; nom1nat1on as CIA
Gold\\ale r tht• l'Omm1ttee din·<·t111
c-ha1rman. n •llt•1:.itl'd to re l\tmn1han said tht· c·om m1tlee
porters Tul'sda} thul ht' behe\'cd Sl'lll 'a formal n·quesl for lht'
Ctist•v ''\\ill l"l'mai11 unless "e mulcnal to the .JuslH'l' Depart
fi nd ·further all<·gat1ons against mc·nt on Tuc:-.da} aflt•r telephone
him 1n the cour-.(• of thl' tn · rcqut.'sls pr11vcd unsuccl'ssful
'est1gal1on.. Dt.'l':11r .;aid tht> n•quest had
Navy won't give up
live practice range
dc•ploymcnl of the M X 1s essen-
tial to the preser vation of the
land-ball ed portion of the n<1
lion's nudear force in thc face of
~rowing Soviet m1s~lle power
w ht?n intell1genC"e tnd1<"all'CI that
l h l' H us s 1 a n s w e r t• m u k 1 n g
om inou~ progn·ss in rll•n'loping
a nl'W generllllOn Of pOW('rful
and int·n·as1nizl~ accur:.111· long
rnnge nul'l eur \I. eapons M O\ nihan ..,a id he dl'l'lded to hl•cn fl'l'el\ ed hut the Prl\ acv
c·all Smith after commlllee staf At·t \\Ould have to bt.' studied to ABOJ\RD CSS EISENHOWER
fers seeking information about dt-term1nt.' ho'' muc h of the t AP 1 Tht> PuC'rlo Hie· an islet
C:wsc' ·.., finant·1al :.iffu1rs com-matl•nal l'Ould tw turned over to of \'1cqul's and the waters
pl<11n.cd that lht• Whit<> !louse the <:ommillct.• around 1t arc :.i un1qut' a nd vital
ul,ld Justice Dcpartmt•nt were ll1•fort' talking lo Smi lh . praC'IH't' range that the U.S
g iving thl•m thc run around. Mo\ n1han told Lhl' c·omm1ttee Navy rl'fUSl'S to give up volun-
J us lic e 0 l' par l men l · I don't kno" 1f the allornev l:.iril). :-.a~s Adm Jt•rry 0 Tut·
.. pokesman Tom DeCa1r said gerwr:.il 1s afraid to talk to mt:, t it•
Sa11th had left his office al the dot•<;n t know who J am or r1shl'rmenandoth1.•rrt•s1dents
llml' Mo\nihan t·Jlled but re· dot•\n I think \\hat \H"rc doing 1~ .1Jong Pul·rtu Hico's cast coast
turned the call thC' first thing important haH• been <·amp<11gn10g for
~~~_..:..~~-..:..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BOMBING VICTIMS -Lebanese villagers
crouch near their hombed-0ut house near
Zahrani in southern Lebanon following an
Israeli air attack on the oil refining area
Wednesday At least 11 people were killed as
c. result of the air strikes in the civilian-
populated area. A Red Cross van is seen in
the background at right as volunteer s worked
to uncover bodies from t he rubble.
-------------------
Get'em whlle they're hotl
Quicl<sllVef's. Echo Beoch.
now In diomoods and stripes.
AL S GARAGE
56 FASH,ON ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
(7141644·7030
) t•ars for JO end lo the bombing.
~h ('ll1ng and :.trafing (}f the
s mull offs horC' island Now the
Put>rto Rican F.nv1ronmental
Qualil~ Hourrl is s upporting
tht·m
A dcs tr<" l'r'!> atc1dental
launth last \\ec>k of a high·
explosive Harpoon m1ss1le sup-
plied nt·\\ ammun1t10n for the
t•ampa1gn
But Tuttle, d1n•ct1ng Navy
training exercises in the area
from the ~5.000-lon aircraft car·
rH·r D\\ight 0 Eisenhower.
says "I can't Sl'l' the m1ht<1r~
rel 1nqu1shtn~ 11. or offt'ring to
· It "tht· la::.t training place we
have (last of the M 1ss1ssipp1
where "'e ca n d r op live
ordnance. and li vc• ord nance is
essC'nlia l. absolul<•lv essential. if
you. rl' going to be ready to go in·
to combat "
J\ s th l' ll d m 1 r a I ta I k ed.
1.400 'm1le an hour r 14 Tomcat
fighters were taking ·orr with
ear shattering J(•l !><Teams from
thC' 412-acrc flight deck above
his quarters
P ilots <.1board the 1,092-foot-
long ''Ike" concurn•d 1n Tuttle's
asl.cssnwnt of \'ieques
· We can ·1 do "1thout 11. .. said
Lt Cmd r St:.in Br~ ant. the
operations offi cer or the ship's
air group
Bryant. whoSl' I\ fi Intruder
can earn· 7' ~ tons of bombs.
says his pilots have droppC'd al
least 1.000 livt-bomhs. each
weighing 500 pounds or more.
plus about 2.000 :.mall practice
born bs on the islet and its "'aters
during the past two weeks of the
readiness exerctM'
It's "<•xt r(·mely important"
for pilots lo ht• able to take off
from a carrier with a heavy load
of live bombs. drop lhem on
targN and th('n return to the
ship. '>aid Br} ant
Ile added that V1cques is the
only area available to ships on
t he east coast where this can be
done
Each MX would earn 10
nuC'lear warheads with the ex
plosive equ1valt•nt or 335.000 tons
of TNT each about three
times lhc t•xplosivc power of the
current l r1plc· warhead
Minuteman Ill ICBM
It would . provide the United
Slates with a mass1\'c capacil}
lo s trike such "hard taq~ets" in
the Soviet 1Jn10n as command
and control bunkC'rs. m issile
silos and nuclear stor age depots.
The United States now has only
a limited abilily t11 blast such
largels
While anti-nuclear groups op·
po"<' tht· MX 1ts('lf. the main IS·
!>UC bt>de\'ihng the R('aJ:':an ad·
m1nis lrat1on is ho"' the weapon
!>hould be deployed to minim ize
environmental dam age in the
West.
Much of the pressure on Wein·
berger lo reach a conclusion was
generated by his own promise to
Con~rcss to report his decision
by July 1 a deadline missed
by three weeks
Long-l ime critiC's of IJ S. arms
I policies are fighting the M X on
grounds that it would accelerate
the arms race a nd intensify the
dangers of atomic warfare by
ra1s 1ng Soviet fears that the
l'01ted States might attempt a
first strike in time of tension.
But perhaps the most telling op·
pos1t1on comes from r esidents in
the Nevada-Utah area where the
Air force now wants to
deploy 200 MX missiles among
some 4.600 horizontal, bomb-
res 1s tant shelters in desert
valleys
Weinberger will not act until
after he has studied the recom·
mcndations of a special advisory
panel which includt's prestigious
s c1t•nlisls and forme r national
SC'CU r1 ly offi cials
The panel. headed by
Un1vers1tv of California
physicist Charles Townes. has
not vet handed in a fina l repor t.
w·einberger has imposed a
strict secr ecy r u le on t he
i\mc·ncan strategists ht·came
worrwd that thc Rus-.1ans would
ach1t·vt• t•nough nul'lt'ar -.triking
powt·r in their big n!'\\ missiles
lo wi pt• out the J .000 l . S
M 1nult•man m1ssilt•s po1st•d in
fixed underground launch -.dos
The pus h for a moh1h• m1ss1le
system culminated in President
Carter's 1979 dec1s1on to go into
full-scale development of the
190.000·pound M X mobile missile
designed lo elude any Soviet
knockout attempt
Carter approved a mull1ple
protN·t1ve struC'turt-~PS basing
mode' the so-railed "shell
gllmt"' concept 1n which one
m1ss1le would be deployed among
23 reinforced shelters built along
strai~hl-hng road patterns The
missiles would be periodically
shifted among lhe s helters in each
cl ustcr
The Air Forl'e c hose the l'lah·
Nevada area for M X deploy~
menl in lhlS fashion because Of
l hl' vast expa n sc•s of gov
er n m enl-owned land a nd the
relatively thin population there
Rut r1.•s1dents obJt.'(·ted on
grounds 11 \\OUld upst•l the en·
v1ronmt·nt and quahl\ of hfe
The J\1r Force convinced
Congn•s, to proceed and the fis -
cal 1981 f>C'fense Authorizllt1on
l\cl finally approved tht• 4.600·
shelter MPS svsl<'m
The issue flared in lht.' 1980
pres idential ca mpa1g n when
candidate Ronald Rl•agan al-
t arkt.'d the M PS dPplo~ m enl
scheme as :.i "fantastic-plan
Lo take thousands of squllre
m iles out in the Western stales "
While saying the m 1ss1le 1s
n eedC'fl. Reagan said in Sep-
tember 1980 that "I am not m
favor of the plan that 1s so
costly ..
With Reagan'!> election. the
deployment question "'as re·
opened and Weinberger began
looking for an alternative to the
Carter approach
DUCANE
BAR-8-Q
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OUTDOOR
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(1ocludes rear raised burnef
for rotisserie and 1nctudes rotisserie)
Porcelain grills quartz ignition
. LP or natural gas
5-yr. burner warranty
1-yr. parts and labor
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CJIEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
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SUMMER LIVING
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--
Or.an;e Co11t OAIL. Y ftlL.OT/Thul'lday, July 23, 1911 i
~UffiU~
Nuke hla~ktnrill next?
Head of LA anti-terrorist unit says it's inevitable
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The
head of the Los Angeles Police
Department's litlle-publiclzed
counter-terrorist unit says that
nuclear blackmail is an inevita·
ble part of the modern terrorist's
arsenal.
''It's a matter of when, not
if," Cmdr. George Morrison sald
Tuesday.
"I am looking at the broad
scope of radioactive material,"
not just the idea of a clandestine
atom bomb. he said. "The con·
lamination factor is just fierce."
Although Morrison said he
"wasn't qualified'' to mentlon
specific Incidents, he did say,
"It's happening right now.
There's nuclear extortion.
"We're finding increased ter·
rorist technology," he added.
·'There's no rules by which ter·
rorists play. If there's an item of
equipment they can't buy,
they'll steal, extort or murder lo
get it.
"We. on the other hand. go
through a budget procedure,··
Morrison continued. "There's
not a law enforcement agency
around that doesn't have to pro-
ject two years down the road, so
we're in a constant state of hav·
ing to play catch-up.··
M Orrison said com munica-
t ions eq uipm ent wa s a
particular problem because
sophisticated terrorists have
equipme{lt that enables them to
monitor law e nforcement
transmissions.
The anti-terrorist unit com·
prlses nine command-level of-
ficers who represent other ~le·
ments of the LAPD. such as the
bomb Squad , the Special
Weapons and Tactics Team. the
Criminal Conspiracy section and
the Public Disorder Intelligence
Division.
Although the unit does involve
an element of intelligence, he
said , he referred to it as
"surface intelligence" -the
gleaning of information through
s uch sources as the news media.
releases from government agen·
cies and seminars.
He said the current lawsuits
against the Public Disorder unit
for alleged spying on peaceful
groups "has greatly hindered
us."
Morrlson mentioned the
takeover of the Iranian embassy
in London last year and the
lessons to be learned from it.
.. We study inc idents ...
trends, grievances against a
particular government or in-
dustry. and try to stay a step
ahead of the game," Morrison
said.
.. We try t o identify the
methodology, who might be in·
vol ved locally and who might be
targeted," be said. "If, in a
particular country, a new ele·
ment comes to power that might
be willing to shelter a certain
kind of terrorist, we want to see
lf we have in our area a kind of
industry or flglire that" might be
targeted. We try to set up a
game plan ·•
That could be particularly im-
portant in 1984 when the Olym-
pic Games are held here.
"We will take the operational
game plan we have and expand
it to fit the Olympic mode,"
Morrison said.
The unit was formed in 1974 by
then-Assis tant Chief Daryl
Gates as a result of terrorist in·
cidents in this area and around
the country directed largely at
police facilities, the commander
said.
Terrorist incidents in this area
in recent years have been aimed
at Croatians. C hinese and
others. with a group identifying
itself as Armenian laking credit
for the recent born bing or a
Swiss bank.
•·The number of people that
get into the country illegally can
pose a threat, but there's no way
of screening that,.. the com-
mander said.
.............
ATTACKS CUTBACKS -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. said
Social Security and other programs are imperiled by "the
Reagan-Stockman Juggernaut," in comments at Sacramen-
to Wednesday.
Baby gulls die as Mono Lake shrinks
Nesting grounds of birds decay while water drawn ; researchers eye food supply
MONO LAKE <AP> -As Los
Angeles continues to draw out
water from Mono Lake the nest-
ing grounds for gulls have de·
cayed and almost all of the baby
gulls in the s pring hatch have
died .
Researchers believ.e a lack of
brine shrimp upon which the
gulls feed has caused the prob·
lem at the lake, which is just
east of Yosemite National Park.
It's the latest setback for the
gulls. whose eggs were being
dovoured by foraging coyotes
beforP meai.s to keep the coy·
oles out of the birds' nesting
grounds were e mployed several
years ago.
While researchers are unsure
what has brought about the
gulls' food shortage, decline of
the lake water and r ising salini·
ty levels are believed to be con·
tributing factors.
Surveys earlier in the spring
had counted about 11.700 chicks.
but at last count 97 percent of
them had died. some from heat
prostration or para:.ites and
others from starvation.
David Winkler. a University of
California ornithologist ex·
plained, "Unlike most gulls,
these feed on a very narrow diet.
a nd when it doesn ·t come
through they have nowhere else
to turn:·
Scientists had thought that the
brine could withs tand irv:reasing
salinity levels in the 1\ke, but
surveys showed that a hatch of
the shrimp had fallen to less
than 10 percent or past levels.
Mono Lake conservationist
David Gaines called the shrimp
decrease .. unexpected and unex-
plained."
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WESTCUFf SHOES
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Quality in /ashion and services with that ph'aonal touch
Gaines said it hasn't been de·
l e rmined what caused the
decline. but added, "I don't
know of any explanation being
advanced other than those that
deal with chemical changes tak·
ing place in the lake ...
To him. the changes signify
that "there's no hope for the
future of the gulls and it means
the other birds who use the lake
during migration will be forced
elsewhere ."
Los Angeles uses about
100,000 acre feet of water from
the lake each year. and as the
lake has shrunk it has also bared
land bridges that connected
some of the breeding grounds on
lake islands. The br idges then
made a path for coyotes who
traveled to the islands and ate
the gulls· eggs.
In 1979. an attempt to foil the
coyotes was made by blowing up
the land bridges, and when that
didn't work, a large fence was
built to bar the passage.
Tbe.()fpartment of Water and
Power.: which oversees the
water diversion program. is
looking into the situation.
LA plan.s
se~ shop
crackdown
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
plan to tighten controla oo the
establishment of new adult en·
tertainment businesses -in·
eluding dance hall• and sexual
encounter and masaa1e parlon.
-as well as game arcadn hu
won prellmin4U"Y apprQv al from
the city council. .
"At the pres~nt time these
uses are generally permitted in
a general commerclal zone as.a
matter of right," said Asslatant
City Attorney Claudia Mc:Gee
Henry. "One of the issues hu
been that in many areas of Qie
city· you have commercial areu
adjacent to residences."
Also, some establlshfllents in
commercial zones, such as
nursery schools and senior
citizen centers. may be adverse·
ly affected by having an adult
establishmert next door. she
said. ·
The new ordinances -one
dealing with arcades and the
other with the remaining types
o r businesses-were unani·
mously approved op first read-
ing Tuesday and will come
back for final approval next
Tuesday.
They would require t.hat
anyone wis hing to open such an
establishment obtain approval
from the zoning administrator,
s ubject to a public hearing, with
notice of the ·hearing to be given
to any property owner within 300
feet of the proposed new busi·
ness.
Former Gov . Edmund G .
.. Pat .. Brown Sr., who was
present at Tuesday's proceed·
ings as le gal counsel for a
manufacturer opposing the plan.
didn't address the council but
told reporters the · new rules
"would indeed make it pro·
hibitive to "establish a new
arcade business."
Philip Krakower. who spoke
as a representative of another
game manufacturer. objected to
the ordinances because they
didn 't differentiate between
businesses located near residen-
tial areas and those that are not.
Half a dozen residents and
business people testified in favor
of the regulations.
DAILY PIL.01'
CLASSIFIED ADS
M2-M78
•I
.. • ... • -:-I
•• Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, July 23, 1981
"Pekin Man, meet Hefdefburg Man."
Amerjcans 0 K
Hr aft for men
NEW YORK (API -The military draft should be reinstated, but for men only, Americans said in
the latest Associated Press-NBC News poll.
The public also agreed with current prohibi-
tions that keep women who are in the armed
fbrces out of combat jobs.
By a 59 percent to 33 percent margin, the
public said they favor reinstatement of the draft
rpr the armed services. Eight percent of the 1,599
adults polled by telephone across the nation July
13-14 were undecided.
If the draft were reinstated, 52 percent said,
they would oppose the dran1ng of women. Forty-•
three percent said they favor drafting women, and
5 percent sa1d they were either not sure M opposed
to drafting anybody.
An executive order by former President
Carter last year reinstated draft registration
which had ended in 1975, two
years alter the last civilian was
drafted. Five million young
men are registered for the
draft. but none can b-: con-
scripted without action by
Congress.
Last year, Carter asked
that women be included in the
draft, but Congress refused.
The U.S. Supreme Court. in a
CAltTH recent ruling upholding the all-
male draft, cited federal law prohibiting women in
military combat.
Americans agreed, 59 percent to 36 percent,
that women s hould not be allowed to bold combat
jobs in the armed forces. Five percent were not
sure.
On the general question or whether the draft
should be reinstated, 68 percent of the men and 52
percent~ the women answe.ring the poll said they
favor remstatement.
Minority group members were only slightly in
favor of reinstating the draft. while more than 60
percent of the whites favored it. The only age
1ro .. p whicb opposed r~instaJ,ement was the 18-to·
24-ytar-alds -thole most lik•ly tO be drafted.
Among those wbo favored reinstatement of the
draft, ball opposed draftine women, 45 percent
favored d.raftlne women and S percent were not
'sure or opposed drafting anyone.
Among those who opposed reinstatement of
the draft, opposition to drafting wQmen was even
stronger; SS percent.
On the question of drafting women, men were
about evenly divided while women were strongly
opposed. Drafting women was favored by people
who supported the Equal Rights Amendment, but
opposed by a more than 2· 1 margin by people
against the ERA.
People who favored reinstating the draft were
pearly 2-1 against women holding combat jobs,
"While those against the draft were only narrowly
"against women in combat.
More men than women were against women in
combat. Fifty-five percent or the women and 63
percent of the men said they oppose women in
combat.
P etitioner told
'to go fl y a kite
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Kite peddlers on
·.8an francisco's picturesque Fisherman's Wharf
do not have a fundamental right to be free of com-
petition, a state Court of Appeal bas ruled.
.. High As A Kite of San Francisco Inc. and
'Others who own kite stores or sell kites sought to
,et aside a license to sell kites granted John F.
Doherty by the San Francisco Board of Permit Ap-
j>eals. Doherty already is licensed to sell balloons.
A San Francisco Superior Court denied their
petition.
The appeal court said the board correctly
pointed out that its responsibility is to bear
~vldence and use its "own sound discretion in pro-
Jnotlne the public interest ... ''
The court said there was evidence Doherty
iad b.een eellln1 In the area about 25 years before
there were any street artists or "anythine else
lawn there" and before any peddler's license wu
required.
It said one witness contended if Doherty got an
expanded permit to sell kites, one of the 1lx kite
1wres would go out of business. But lt said this wlt-Dea• conceded no Idle store ln the vicinity had re-
cently sone out of business.
l'arents buil,d park
HELSIN.KJ, Findland <AP> -Parenti ln a
1Jel1lnki suburb reaorted to what they called
wpo1itive civil disobedience" to circumvent
)ureaucratlc red tape and build their chlldrtn a
)layaround. the daily Helainain Sanomat reported. • the parenll boulbt materiatt for S100 and then
"uUt a 1win1, 11lde, playhouae and 1andbox under
Die cover of darlkne11 to avoid sovernrnent
leteetkJn. • • fUd wt done lt the legal way, we know from
pperiente tut the flnal declal• with all Med9ll ~u..., wO'lld laave comt to• lime la 19C.
lad bF. lbat u.. all our kidl would "n• left aome, 'Giii ol tlle partDll WU ..... U NJtei.
~flW!llM
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Classifieds
-------"°"' 1 s•~M 1 GIEAT I 19 DINNER n "No response from
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thru the Piiot."
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~ Fried Chlcaen, plu1 1lngle Mn1lng1 of coli 1l1w, malled f'rled Chicken, with lovr ro111, a large col• 1l1w, a 11191 0 poCatoee and or•~. l .nd a roll. Umlt two Ofllfl I* mHhecl PotllOH and a medium gravy. Umlt two offen
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..
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thureday, July 23, 1981 A7
Courtship pays off
Unorthodox methods prove costly
TAMPA, Fla. CAP> -"Will
you marry me?" asked Stanley
Pinder.
"Yes.'' replied a sleepy Wen·
dy Arnell with no hesitation.
I t could ha ve b een your
average marriage proposal ex·
cept that a radio station's listen-
ing audience also was privy to
Plnder 's query.
Plnder asked Miss Arnell to
marry him in an on-the-air pro·
posal Tuesday. Pinder lives in
Brandon. outside Tampa. Miss
Arnell lives in Seattle.
·'I thought IC I proposed to you
in front or a quarter million peo-
ple you would thin k r was
serious," Pinder , 43, told his
22-year -old girlfriend after
WFLA disc jockey J ack Harris
awakened her at 7:45 a.m.
She said the call was a
s urprise, but the proposal
wasn't.
plant. When she arrived home,
she found two small cratet and a
large one inside the front door ot
her apartment.
·•1 opened the two smaller box·
es and found a set of speakers,"
she said. "Then this band comes
out or the large box. I was
scared to death and headed for
the door."
Pinder was inside.
Another time, when s he visit·
ed him In Florida, he drove past
a billboard overlooking the in·
terstate highway. In great big
letters was t h e m essage:
"Stanley Pinder loves you, Wen·
dy Amell. He really does."
Pinder won't say how much
h is courtship has cost, but
acknowledged. "It wasn't
cheap."
Two nuns killed
TARGET OF PROTESTS-A Navy EA·6B electronic recon-
n~issance jet takes off from the deck of the USS Dwight D.
Eisenhower to monitor .Navy exercises in the waters off
Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Fishermen and environ-
mental groups are protesting and trying to halt the ex-
ercises, which this year included the accidental firing of a
high-explosive guided missile.
The courtsh ip has an un-
orthodox tti story .
About six months ago, he
called her in Seattle to say he
had a surprise. She works nights
at a Boeing manufacturing
BRENTWOOD. N.Y. <AP>
Two of four nuns in a car headed
for a funeral were killed when the
vehicle rammed into a building on
the St. Joseph Convent grounds.
officials said. The other two were
hurt.
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Orange COu t DAILY PILOT/Th ut'lday, July 23, 1111
............
BEAK JOB ''Gus." a young Canada goose
owned by Dr. and Mrs. Louis B. Gaker of
Middletown. Ohio. gets fitted with a new
lower beak by a Middletown dentist. The
goose apparently stuck his head inside a dog
pen and lost the lower beak. At right Gus
shows oCC the new part.
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Wed. July 27th "2nd Vegetable Planting"
Prisoners eating junk
SD County trying to lure convicts to better diets
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The
survey only fortified what the
jud1e suspected, that people are
what they eat. In two weeks, in·
metes of the San Diego County
jail bou1ht 2,485 bags of potato
chips, 2,918 candy bars and 4,893
s ugar packets.
The well-balanced meals
served in the jail kitchen are ig·
nored in favor of a sugar fix
from the canteen. As a result.
San Diego County is start.Ing to
substitute nutritious nuts and
erains for junk food at the can·
teen and is considering an offer
of parole in trade for the
prisoners' promise to start eating
better.
Bad cliets and bad behavior
appear to be linked, authorities
believe.
The jail inmates also will be
seeing a videotape on their in·
house television telling them
what's good for them to eat.
Their eating habits. says
Superior Court Judge James
M alkis, are affecting their
behavior.
Malkis, a member of the coun-
ty's nutrition committee which
made the survey, conceded In a
interview that "good nutrition Is
not easy to maintain.
"But it can make the person
feel better, lessen the possibility
B ad diets and
bad behavior ap-
pear to be linked,
authorities
believe.
or recidivism and lessen the
possibility of violence in the
jail," he said.
If certain inmates agree to
follow a nutritious diet. Malkus
believes they should be granted
parole but the idea .. is not for
the violent person it"s for the
perso,n who is not so far gone we
can 't do anything about it."
Bernard Rlmland, a research
psychologist and director of the
Institute for Child Behavior
Research In Sun Diego, noted in
another interview that" "most
people coming in contact with
the crimrnal justice system have
their brains badly polluted with
alcohol. drugs, food additives
und sugar.
"If the brain isn't worklng
right, the individual not only has
poor judgment but has difficulty
controlling impulses," Rimi and
said.
M alkus, who takes vitamins
and drinks only purified water,
s aid the San Diego defense bar
1s leery about the idea because it
requires a questionnaire .
The questionnaire would reveal
if t hey a re suffering from
hyperglycemia, an abnormally
high concentration of sugar in the
blood. An unidentified organiza-
tion in San Diego is looking into
plans for a halfway house where
former inmates with nutritional
problems can stay for 90 days.
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A DIVISION Of TANDY COA'°"ATION
-
l l
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 23, 1981
Adinirills in charge Co md t hGu
1
ard
f N h nee s e p
0 avy oot camps WASHINGTON CAP) -Com·
' mandanl John 8. Hayes says lbe
SAN DIEGO CAP> The
Navy is putting admirals In
charge or Its three boot camps to
show. it says, that It regards the
trainlne camps as increasinely •
import,nt.
A spbkesman said Capt. War-
ren Aut, commander or the
North Island Naval Air Station,
will be promoted to rear admiral
and put In . charge 9f the San
Diego Naval Training Center.
Rear Adm. Pauline M . Hart·
ington will take over the Orlan·
do, Fla .. training center from a
captain. She Is the first woman
picked to run a boot camp.
A captain in charge at Great
Lakes, IU1, will be relieved by
Rear Adm. James H. Flatley
Ill. a Navy spokesman said.
"This ia recognizing the Im·
portance of boot camp, and
there already has been signs or
that as we lighten up training
with more drill hours scheduled
and more attention to dis ·
cipline." he said.
"As the Navy builds toward a
600-ship Navy, it is going to need
good people to man those ships
and we have got to get off to a
good start as we do that."
15 cro tO 50% Off,
ever1tb\ng \n tbe store
Coast Guard doesn't have lbe
shlpa or personnel to step U}> Its
war against drue smununa by
sea.
Hayes told a congressfonal
subcommittee that the Coast
Guard's goaJ is to aeb:e 75 per·
cent or the marijuana smuggled
into the United States by sea.
but it only is able to intercept 15
percent lo 20 percent.
Without more ships and peo·
pie, Hayes said, the Coast Guard
could not even meet its goat by
giving up search and rescue
missions, enforcement or fish·
eries regulations and other ac·
ti vi ties.
A"~ ABORIGINAL ARTISTS -Members of an will perform in New York before a concert
Australian aboriginal group pose at a New tour of the United States. )U\l 23, 24 and 25
s ~~~ 01 our York press conferenae. The aboriginal artists
. bracelets. earrtf 9, We proudly
Pool c ontractor suing actor Including nng~~ndise is on sa J .Collection and
quality rn:er t Corum. Concor
ASPEN. Colo IAPl An
Aspen contractor 1s suing actor
George Hamilton in Aspe n Dis·
trict Court for S2.033. the amount
of money he has refused to pay
for work done on the indoor
s wimming pool al his home
here
ll amilton's As pen attorney.
Richard Neiley, however. said
the bill submitted by the Weld·
ing Co. of Aspen for work done
in Man·h was "exorbitant" and
t.e believes the company "may
have been trying to sting" his
client
Thomas Crumpac ke r . al·
SKI
paid only Sl.333 of the $3,366 bill. feature Piage . torney for the welding company.
said a Hamilton aide ordered the
actor's pool sand-blasted to re·
move a coat of paint. The job
was to be done during the three
da ys immediately befo re
Hamilton's arrival here. he said.
Hamilton lives in Beverly Hills.
Welding Co . employees
worked "into the wee morning
hours" to finish the job in time,
Crumpacker said .
Neiley said the actor felt that
th(' charge of up to $43 per hour
by the sand blasters was too
high
Records s how that Hamilton
bought the home in Aspen's
fas hionabl e Wes t End for
$750,000 in September 1979.
Ord watches. cone
73tJell qrla/he!J R~~c~t!!
ISLA ND• NEW PO
He and Neiley agree that the
dis pute arose over damage that
allegedly occurred to tiles atop
the pool during the blasting. As
a result of the dispute, Hamilton
Fire man su ccwnhs
M crARLANO <AP ) -Kern
County fire captain, Donald
Moore, 44 , died Tuesday after col-
laps ing while lifting a hose line
over a fence.
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AUTHIER
HEXCEL
SPALDING
THE SKI
This sale is being held
for our local friends and
neighbors.
------IOOTS-----
sAM MARCO-LANG-SALOMON
SC01T·GARMONT ·NORDIC A
CABER-HAMSON
•1050%0FF .. , , .. _ . -. .
UP · CLOIHINI
10 70% OFF
iLtSll
CLOTHING
SI 0000 Parkas
en low as 5 29 95
SAlE HOURS ARE 10:08 a~.-5:00· P.M.
1
2700 W. Coat llJMn, ll111Rort leaclt .
I . ..
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11
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Orange Cout OAllY PILOT(Thumay. July 23. 1981
..
Games ban attempt
lacked preparat~on ·
The Fountain VaUey City
Council's recent attempt to ban
electronic games from liquor
stores turned into quite an em·
barrassrnent for the elected of·
ficials.
The city already requires a
conditional use permit before any
store or restaur,itnt can install
coin·operated games .
The Planning Commission
has rejected several permit re·
quests from liquor stores, con·
tending the machines would draw
youngsters into otherwise adult·
oriented businesses.
The commission urged the
City Council to adopl-a new law
forbidding game machines in
liquor stores.
The new ordinance was pre·
sented to the council June 9 and
was approved unanimously, with
little discussion among the coun·
cil members and no comments
from the audience.
Three weeks later , when the
law was presented for its re·
quired second reading, local
game dis tributors and liquor
store owners argued their side of
the issue.
The objectors called the new
law discriminatory because the
games would still be permitted in
conve ni ence markets and
restaurants. Also, the law would
pr even t adu lt l iquor stor e
customers from playlng the
games at these locations.
The liquor store owners
claimed they supervise youn1
people more closely than most
other businesses.
One liquor store spokesman
argued that any problems as·
sociated with game usage can be
controlled by existing laws gov·
erning truancy. loitering and
curfews.
Queried about whether they
had received any formal com·
plaints about electronic games at
liquor stores, the city's police
chief and planning director ad·
milted they had not.
The council then reversed
itself. voting down the proposed
law 1-4 . <Barbara Brown voted in
favor of it.)
After additional debate over
whether to send the game or·
dinance back to the Planning
Commission, the council finally
vote d to drop the whole idea
pending more solid evidence of
problems associated with the
game machines.
The episode displays some
careless work by the city staff
and the elec~ed officials .
In their haste to solve a
problem with new regulations,
Fountain Valley officials forgot
to find out if the problem exists.
Avoid toxic waste
A Huntington Beach contrac·
tor a llegedly dumped cancer-
causing ast>estos in the Coyote
Canyon Dump near Irvine's Tur·
tie Rock area last month.
E & G Contractors Inc. has
received four citations from the
Occupational Safety and Health
Administr ation in connection
with th~ ha ndling of asbestos and
its reported placement in the
Coyote Canyon Landfill near.
Irvine's Turtle Rock area.
The landfill isn't authorized
to accept hazardous oiaterials
such as asbe6tos.
The Coyote Canyon Landfill
is to be abandoned in three years
in favor of the proposed Bee
Canyon Landfill to be located
north of Irvine.
The Irvine Company, which
now leases Coyote Canyon to
Orange County for use as a
landfill, has plans to one day de·
velop the area near the landfill.
With the potential for res·
idential development near the
dump. county officials in charge
of the landfill should strive to
stem the unauthorized dumping
of toxic materials .
Dumping at the facility is
free. while it costs about $100 a
ton to use a landfill authorized
for hazardous wastes. So un·
fortunately there is an economic
incentive for people to dump
hazardous materials in Coyote
Canyon. .
County authorities should
take clear and decisive steps to
assure that there is no prolifera-
tion of haurdous materials being
dumped in Coyote Canyon.
School furuh sought
Trustees of the Laguna
Beach Unified School Di strict
have appointed a seven·member
advisory committee to study
possible money.making uses of
district-owned property.
Sc h oo l di s tri ct ad -
ministrators say the duties of the
committee will be to look into
possible lease agr~ements and
sale of s urplus property to raise
money for the financially pressed
district.
The committee members
have been given a tentative Oct.
15 deadline to turn in a written
report of their findings and rec·
ommendations to dis trict
trustees.
Under consideration for lease
is the Aliso Elementary School in
South Laguna, which was closed
because of budget constraints by
district trustees in May.
•
The advisory committee will
also look at alternate uses for an
11-acre parcel in the Top of the
World neighborhood.
Other property includes a
small park site near the elemen·
ta~)' school ~t Tpp of the World
and a house adjacent to the high
school that formerly served as a
continuation school.
It will be good news for
Laguna's schools if t he newly
formed committee can find some
revenue-producin g uses for dis-
trict property that is currently
not being used.
With an estimated $540,000
deficit that needs to be erased
from the 1981·82 school budget,
any additional income the dis-
trict can derive from lease agree·
ments or sales of unneeded prop-
erty will be welcome indeed.
Op1n1ons exprc>ssed in the space abOve are those or the Oa1ty Pilot. Otner views ex
pressed on tn1s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s 1nv1t·
ed. Addre")S The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box ISW, Col>tcl Mew, CA 92626. Phone (7141
&•i ·432 1.
L.M. Boyd I Romantic months
It is in the autumn moreso not in
the spring that a young man's Caney
turns to love. according to the
statisticians. Their study of the birth
records indicates May. June and July
an• the three least romantic montha.
November and December are the
mos t romantic. they say.
Sad. but true. you catch a baby
ocelot the same way you catch a
baby gorilla. You shoot the parent•
first. Those who purport to know say
th re'!\ no other way
Students of the stars say Taurut la
a fixed &ii)'!. If you we re bom inder
ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat
it. you're a pt lo be practical, de·
termined and .-ellable. Taurus folk
also tend to be authoritative and
somewhat predictable. They 10 by
the old rules. usually. Claim is they
make good police officers. teachers
and soldiert.
Your typical railr oad t>oxcar
moves trelght ohly 7 percent ot the
time. Mostly, it runs empty, or Just
sits on a siding someplace. T he
transportation boys have been trylnl
to figure out how to Improve UUI pat,
tern for 100 yeart or more. But about
tbe only tbini that puts all tlte box·
cars &o work all the Ume ia war.
TIMIMI ... Hater
PublllMr
TllOINI A. Mu,,...lftl
Editor
8arura Kreillk"
Edltorl•I Page Editor
.,
Nuke boondoggle cost soars
WASHINGTON Government boon·
doggies are always good for evanescent
headlines. But if they a re really to stick
in the public craw. l wo considerations
are usually necessary : The fiasco must
occur under high auspices. and the
story must have a certain oomph capa·
ble of kindling public interest.
By all the oomph indicators. the
Clinch River breeder reactor at Oak
Ridge, Tenn .. may not register high It
1s an unheralded project, with an
awkward name, well off the beaten
path But it is a multimillion-dollar
fiasco born of fraud and mis manage·
ment.
The plant. darling of the nuc lear
power industry. is supposed to produce
more nuclear fuel than 1t uses. which
sounds like a bargain. But It has ~n
no bargain for the taxpayers who are
unwittingly paying for it.
ORIGINALLY, it was to be in opera ·
tion by Decem ber 1979. at a cost of S669
million But it has already cost $1
billion, and the latest estimate 1s that 1t
won't be operational until February
1990. By that time. the biU will be al
least S3.2 billion.
How could this happen? It's easy.
when the government officials who are
supposed to keep track of the project's
contr actors shirk their responsibilities
According to a spokeswoman for the
Clinch River proJcct, about 80 percent
of the cost increase was due to
circ umstances beyond official control.
In other words. the bureaucrats were
responsible for "only" $500 million of
t he estima ted $2.5 billion overrun
That's bad enough
But it's actually worse than that. Jn.
vestigators for Rep John Dingell . D
G.
-JA-Cl-Al-D-IR-10-1 -d
Mtch .. told my associates Tony Capac·
cio and Howard Ro enberg that at least
t hree-fourths of Clinch River's prime
contracts a rc open ended. that is with
no firmly set costs or completion dates
The investigators warned that even
lht: staggering S3 2 billion estimate may
be optimistic It fails to take into ac·
count the poss1b1 hty that the entm.'
Clinch Ri ver facility might have to be
relocated for safrty reasons
A 1978 NUCLEAR Regulatory Com
mission report listed nearly 100 safety
problems. A Clinch River official said
many of the problems had been ad·
dressed tven before the NRC report,
but tt\e commission had not yet checked
to set· if the needed corrections were ac·
tually made
Fraud has also plagued the project
One internal Department or Energy
memorandum told how an employee of
Atomics International. a subcontractor.
received a Sl.000 interest -free loan in
return for advant·c information on con·
tracts. and another $5.000 in cold cash
for bid price information
The FBI found thal two purchasing of
fic1als inve nted bogul> companies. from
which thev cl;,11med lo have solicited bid~ for item:. needed at Clinch River
This resulted 1n overcharges running a!>
high as~ p('n·ent
Typical of the <.'availer wa y contrac
tors bchavt.' when l 'ncle Sugar 1s paying
thl' bills I!> an incident reported 1n
another intt'rnal DOI-: document dated
Feb 13 It d1sclost•l> lhat the chief of
We:.t1nghoui-.<."i-. data proce!>smg facthl~
al Clinch Hi\'er had been using a
S200.000 comµuter for his own personal
bu~iness He not onh stored leases and bu~incss direct.oriel>. in the computer.
bul used 1t for a football pool
The Congressional Budgt•I Office has
estimated that terminating Clinch
River "could save the government SI -t
b1ll1on over the f1ve ·year period of
1982 1986 .. But the Reagan admin1stra
tion. reported!~ over the obJect1ons of
Budget Director David Stockman. has
decided to go ahead
Athletic recruitirig charges denied ·
To the Editor
I would like to challenge some state
ments made by the Daily Pilot in an
editorial which was publishf(i June 21.
The editorial dealt wiUf a previous
article by reporter Pat Kennedy relat·
ing to high-school athletic recruiting.
The editorial slated that Edison High
School has an ugressive. successful
athletic recruiting program It further
MAILBOX
went on to state that the Edison coach.
Bill Workman . expects four to six select
transfers to be in his s tarting lineup
next year.
I feel it is imperative that the public
know that Edison High School does not
and has never had a program to recruit
athletes outside of its attendance boun·
daries.
THIS PAST SPRING several con·
cerns were brought. to our attention that
athle~es had been recruited to attend
Edison High School for the purpose of
participating on its athletic teams. We
also had information that this type of
r ecruiting was occurring in other
schools in the district.
An intensive investigation followed.
What we did find was thal there were
individuaJs lo the Edison community.
a nd in other school communities. who
were actively e ncouraging young
athletes lo attend particular school• to
participate lo specific athletic pro·
grams. Our lnvestiaation proved con·
elusively th1t in every case where
recruiting violations dld occur~ the
school coachJs were unaware ano ap·
pa lled that such ac\ivlties were taking
place.
In the case of Bill Workman, I can as·
s ure you tha t he has aggressively
• worked to maintain an untarnished rep·
utation. We are very proud of Bill
Workman as· an educator, as we are of
his entire stare and the other coaches in
the Huntington Beach Union Hi1h
School District. They all realize that
athletics are an important part of our
total Instructional progra m but they are
Just a part.
l feel that It Is important for the
publlc to know that the district will not
tolerate athletic recruiting and I.a mak·
in1 every effort to eliminate this Ute,al
practice; that our ~oaches are not n·
volved ln recruiting; and that we are
ver y proud of the success of the Edison
football program and the other fine
athletic activities which the distnct pro·
v1des for the youn~sters we serve
FRANK J . ABBOTT
Superintendent of Schools
Why Canadians?
To the Editor :
In reference to the Irvine Com.,any's
informal selection of a Canadian firm
to operate a proposed luxury hotel <J uly
131. my question is. what happened to
the good old days or Am erican business
profit for America and not for foreign
countries?
We might decide to do business with
A m~ric,ns a nd no{ Canadians as
management. '
KEN GOODWIN
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTE R TO tHE E DI TOR
See instructions below
Trash y Calif ornia1u
To the Editor:
We have possibly one of the most
beautil1d coastal Meas and beaches in
the world.
Why are our lovely beaches and
Pacific Coast Highway so littered with
every conceivable type of trash? Do our
citizens not appreciate this wonderful
gift? They s urely do use it.
We have traveled in other states and
find no comparable messes. In fact. in
Colorado. Oregon, Washington, South
Dakota and several Provincial Parks In
Canada you see few cigarette fillers,
can tabs, or even small throw aways.
let alone the ridiculous accumulation of
trash we see around here.
What is the matter with Californians?
D. MEYER
Lesson learned
To the Editor:
The merchants of Westport Center.
369 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. wish to
thank the Daily Pilot and Steve Tripoli
for bls front page story of the advertis·
In• problems they were having with
Balboa Graphiu. ·
We are sure that due to the publica·
tlon or this story we were all able to
retrieve our money. It was in fact men·
• l.tlln$ from r1ader1 art wc-womt Th•
right lo ConMnlt Ldttrs IO "' •poet ot
t'llmtnott llbfl 1& rfltrwd wUtrl o/ 300
words or l'u will be gtt>a•n prt/tr"'" All
/etltrs mu.ti inch.1.dt 11gnatur't end moiling
oddrt,_ °"' nomt1 mov ~ WdMcrld on rt•
QUt !I 1/ 1Mj/1c1tnt rtpton 11 apportrU
PHlry dll "°' bf pMbll•ltf'd. Ulltrt mov ~
11le""'1Md to 64H10M Namt and phont
ftumbtor o/ tM cM1tnti..1or mu f bf ghlfft tor
~n/lcoltort purpottt
' tionl'd to us that we were the only OJles
to make a fuss abbut it and therefore
our money would be returned to us.
WE ARE LIVING in a world when' it
seems almo!.t the accepted mode of
behavior to cheat We must choke off
this lie by almost vigilante means and
we urge e\'eryone who may feel the:
are being cht•ated. swindled or used to
fight back Whal better way is thert' to
fight back than through our own
neighbo rhood nl'wspaper" We must
stCI mp th1i-. tendency out ourselves for
we beli eve thl' police departments are
overwhelmed these days
We have all learned a lesson m our
center from our unpleasant experience
On1;• merchant paid $175 and eight paid
$65 which amounts to S695 This was
supposedly to mail out 25.000 advertts
ing leaflets. Bulk mail runs approx
tm a tely 8 cents a piece. therefore the
mail cost alone would be $2.500 for our
center. to say nothing of the cost of
printing and art work. It was therefore
an im possible tr ansaction from the
beginning We urge everyone to
mathematically double check these
~rams.
IRIS SCHNEIDER
Music doomed?.
To the Editor·
l feel it incumbent upon me to mtn·
tion t he s horl·sighledness of the
Newport·Mesa School Distr ict ad-
ministration. school board and the
parents who are allowing it to happen.
The district is dropping th~ elemfn·
tar y music program.
Without the teaching of instrumental
music in the lower grades the mld4le
school program will wither from •acl( of
a "feeder .. Lincoln , Middle School
already has dropped its music program.
After the "death" of the middle
school music program logically comes
the demise of the high school music pro·
gram .
We can't allow Newport to become a
"culturally deprived" community.
There won't even be anyone to pro·
vide music at the football and basket·
ball games.
JOHN E . LINDFORS
lllllY Ill
Britain has learned the hard way that
an unarmed policeman ts as effective as
a GO SLOW sign on a danaerou.s curve O.M ·-·--c--._..,..... .. ,_.. ..... _ _ .... ,~ ... ..._. .... ttms1rv .... ...,"4 ..... •• o-. Otll• ,!Mt. I
DIVORCE -Rita
Jenrette has been granted a divorce
lrQm former Rep.
John Jenrette, D·
S.C., who resigned
I rom Congress after
his Abscam convic·
tion of accepting a
$50,000 bribe.
Mesan g e ts
cash grant
Clarice B. Wolf of
Costa Mesa has received
· a $600 scholarship at Cal
Poly San Luis Obispo.
The scholars hip ls
. given in honor of J . W.
Van Dyke, former cbalr
of the board of Atlantic
Refining Co.. now At·
lantic Richfield Co.
'• He selected Cal Poly
,, as one or six universities
• in the nation to receive
1• scholarship endowments
• of $500,000 .
. ,
, .
•' ' .
•I •
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I
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11•
111
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Jcrl
J .u:
BJ .IOYCS L. &ENNllDY
Dear J.,~: ... •Mil C-... I
•akelaapmbllalcua.. ... llln
e••ld I leau &le &ra•• ,ro· .......... ,.,
-.l.W.T., Nert1lk, Ve. .
Paul Piawin of Cbanainl 'nmea
HYI that AtlanUc City ~ulno dealen
and crouplen earn up to ..., Hr
week lo pay and tlpa; floor
1upel"Ybon, about· $40,000 a year;
ablft mu-.en, '65,000 to '71,000;
cubien, from SH,000; elot machine
meehanict, from Slt.000.
To nm the 1ames, you need the
ability to compute rapldly, a 1ood
memory and manual dexterity, u
welt as Ule ability to keep your cool
in tt1ht apota.
0.ne place to learn la the Casino
Career Jnautute operated by the
Atlantic Community Colle1e In
Atlantic City.
For information, contact personnel
offices or casinos in New Jersey and
Nevada.
* * * Dear Joyce: Where la •he nearest
school ol optometry!
-C.C., New Bedford, Maas.
Rather than give a direct answer, J
suggest readers interested in becom·
ing an optometrist write for a free
leaflet, "Career Opportunities in Op-
tometry." This can be a high-income
profession. Enclose a gummed, self·
addressed mailing label with your re·
quest to Joyce Lain Kennedy at this
newspaper before September l, 1981.
* * • Dear Joy~e: Wh at Jo b op·
portunlties are available IOI' a Zt&Ja.
annlvenary Engllah major?
-K.P., Eaaloa, Pa.
A good summer read for you is
suggested by Phyllis Needy of the
University of Washington's place·
ment center. Needy kindly helps me
keep up with ihe mlnd·bo11Un1
number of career book• belnt
,publllbed .
Try "What to Do Wltb t.be RHt. of
Your Ute" by the •t•ff ol Catalyst,
the pioneer career plaanln1 or·
•anlsalion for women at 14 E . 80th
Street, New York, ~.Y. 10032. The
800·ph11 pa1e booll COits $11.15; it
waa pubUlhed by Stmon and Scbuater
and abould be ln boolcator•. • • • Dear .le1ee: De Y• llan a free
b••kle& fer Ute h•dlea,.e4 Job ... ..,
-K.P.,~ tlevelalld, Olllo
Sorry, no. But for Sl . there's "How
to Get a Job, A Handy Gulde for
Jobaeeken," a 29·pa1e booklet pro-
duced ln 1978 by the Preaident's Com·
mittee oo Employment for the Hand·
icapped. Order from Superintendent
of Documents, Washington, D.C.
20402.
Additionally, a new free four-color
catalog that lists many popular gov·
ernment publications ls available
rrom the same address; ask for
"Just for You."
Solons have • gun permits
30 MONTII 'J'IWUIY ACCQUNT
Nomllalmam
12.94%
EJt'tttl ve AMual "t\tld
12.00%
Annual Rate
Rate a•ali.ai&e July 21 tllrouch Jw7 at, 1181. Rae, Ml bl·weeldy. based on )'ltld of U.S. l'rella.y S«untln. lnctte• ~ ct.ily. lnlttnt rate wbeo acaMlll opened rcm.1111 elect = fedetll ttpbonl reqwtt IUt.unlJll penally lor Ul'fy
......_...,.ty-paya morethm mnr bm*
AMERICAN SAVINGS
[g]i].
SAFE SINCE 1885 •ASSETS OVER $9 BIUION
Over 100 o.ffias to serve jlt)U. Chtclr ttlephotu white pages fer tM offia nearest you.
Call tor rates on high.yield eccounta of S100,000 or more.
DETROIT <AP > -Usin1
Michigan's Freedom of Information
Act, the Detroit News has learned
from state and county records that at
least 13 s tate lawmakers have
permits to carry a concealed~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ weapon.
"I've had one ever since about
three years ago when J got a death
threat," House Speaker Bobby Crim
of Davison was quoted as saying.
People a ll along aa·11y P1·1at the Orange Coast rely on the 642-4321
JOIM1HEMEW
as your own.
7,U. tnMlers cMcb, cosblerl
chlcb, money ordtrl (U.S.
Dolan). All you11 Mr need, with
no service charges.
With the Gold Account, Wells
Forgo dellwrs the maximum
amount of bank you11 find ony-
'Mlere fOf the minimum amount
of your monev.
We've mode It possible for MfY008 to haY8 on Interest check-
ing account. Md to quit WC>n)1ng aoout seporoteMMo8 chorge9.
trs Mn oy to oPPtf for. Just
head for ,our necnSf Welts
Forgo office.
And stake your clotm.
Mtn\bfWf OIC
} I
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ANM¥•JAIT DTATll ...,.,, A MOITH ILUPH Tice, C11Mron Shotkott, 0 . 0 . Strong, B~Wilson, Linda Dudzik. Donald Elmore. Janell Beckner. Alchard Albflght. Mrs. Kenneth T091,John Somers. Maclyn B Thyen. Or. & Mra Oelane Egan, Or. & Mrs Robert Farmer. Cal t='d· Rotten & Beth Albr:t,t. Mrs LOii TurMr. Jamet K. Specht, Norman W. Tw~I. Md .. Thomas Fam a, Raymond L Fedorchek. Mr & Mrs M1cheel II, kelth & Lydia Ami ,.Jo9&Jean Vou.JeenS. Staling, Donald W Ward. Ronald M Fief. Moms Greqory. R Leaverton, Wilbur Atkinson. Mrs. Avla Wallace. Or. & Mrs. David Ulens. Howard Webtter, Paul W Fine. Esther & Sruart Harris, Jack C Mother John Berdin. Robert Warmln~ton. William C Ill Unvert. Allen 0 .. M 0 Wetch. Velma Foratw. Fred Henkte.W. R MHhi • .lOMph Bartow, Arthur F Warnoc • Ella Walker, Johnnie Foxx, Richard & Elaine Holland. Robert & Jennie Vorte.Laura Baatedo. Mrs Edgar L Wuhtngton, J C Wayne, Mrs. Pilar Frederickson. 8111 & Bonnie Holland, Wayne
Blckner, Robert & Mrs Wayman. Jose~lne B I.AST ILUff UDOISU Frink, Emory & KathlM n Hufbauer. Karl & Sally Blthop, Margaret w .. ka.Jame• . Gadsl, Edwm S. Kahoe.Ed IALIOAISUHO Bowler. M Oou~lar/Barbara Weitzman. Earl M. Andre. James A. Brannan. Clyde Garnaus, Jack & Marge Kelllnger. Mr & Mrs Harry BNn. Rosemaria Bur~ Mrs. A ltn J Woodward, Lawrence Barnum. Karl Cunningham, David L Giibertson. Lance Kettley, Mr & Mrs. Richard Beatty, Don Bu",G.o<~H. Zarowskl, L. Beatie, Mrs. John D<>Nett. Mrs. Andrew Gordon. Michael s. Khallghll, Khosea
Bac:k. Mr. & Mrs. Seymour Calhoun'E lllla~ancy Bosomworth, Marie & Frank Fontes, Henry & Beth Gouthart. Jr .. Maurice J Kniss, Sam & Sally Chem11. dward ...... , Brock, Earl · Fudge. G•rx Gr::r.hock, Philip Lareen. Moris F. Bernhard, Donald & Sharon Oolllns,Jean Bernard, B. B. Foury, Rosalie K. Gartung, C fiord W Gus ey, Norma T. Leclerc, Robert & Jacquell Columbero, Saconda'Oonald
Dear. Allee & Gib Compton. H. R. McAllister Mr. & Mrs R H Gilmore. Grego~ & Agnes Gilchrist. Edgar Haddox. Mr. & Mrs. Gene Marshall, Carol M. Cook. Albert L Grabow. Richar M. Girton Ralpn w. Hall. James K. M1kord11, Ronald & Leslie Deem, Sydney Crawley, Contance Hall, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Hendrlckaon Chas. & Marilyn Harrington, Jean Miller, EIHot T Dorsey. Or & Mrs Cunnlao~ Mr. & Mrs. Robert QJ ......... Henderson, Charles & Gale Hiiton. Dan & Patricia Harrington, A. E Montes. Mr. &'Mrs Field. Gingerlee C. O.Oiel nR. AyrM, Mrs. Toni House. Howard E. Hodges, George T Hartman. Mr & Mrs. Carl Moseman. Waller H Flynn, Russell I Hann1h O.v1s. William H Herman. F. R. Jenkins. John C. Hollander ROaniel Hayes. Dr. Laird Mutter. Mr & Mrs Frank Fortner. George C Oefon11t. Thomu B. Newber~, ~bert & Dianne Karger, Patti Kroenert. . J. Hildenbrand. Robert Newsom, Mr & Mrs Robert Fortner, William E. OeSimone 0 . R Schraeg e. .A. Kovach. EuJ.ene & Karen F>yle, Richard 0.0.S. Irvine. Michael Scog~ns.Oee Frye, Stuart Dettwytar, H. R. Leason.J . Roth, Fred H Isett. Mr. & Mrs Edward Shim augh, Sandra V Gentner. a.or\: Dixon. Barbara COUAMISA Mau, Richard 0. Roussel. Roger Johnson. Kenneth Shooff. Mar~ & Andy Glauall. Mr. I rs Drew Dillon, Mr. & Mrs. DuBois. Eileen K McKeever. Stanley Shariiro, Art Kellogff ·Warren & Charlane Smith.John Gould, L. K Dillon, P9ter I Kathleen Melton. Tar{( She ton. Jim & Judy Kenda • Robert R StaHRs. Florence Hall. A. Marcus Dooley. W L & Chrystol Fletcher, John Menkin, R. Simon. Bonn11 Koch. Eugene R .. M 0. Ste orn. C1sca Hansen. Charles P Gooch. Suzette M. Strom. Jerry & Marie Jacoby, Ned & Mary Dumars. I< w Honwood.R 0 Manton. Seymour & Cathy Snyder. Monty Laurie. Mr J. Tom Teter. Mr & Mrs Arman Justin. Sidney Dunmire. Lucile & Lew11 Stanabu~. B J Merritt. Nancy L. SC'""~ Georaia Leider. Jack & Sharon Towerseb Brian & Marianne Ehrenfeld. Richard Montgomery, Robert & Marg11et S .. 11, lchar L11gh. Michael J F1nl~endell W, Slatter. T omu H L1chman. Or & Mrs Jay Tunnell. on & Charlolle Llll~Clarke & Beatrice Snr.der· Ronald & Carolyn Pegg. Bernard Mac1nwe· Marilyn Walker. Charles Ma ney, Mr. & Mrs Thomas Fletc . Robert & Mary WI ho1t1, Jes5e A P~lor. Kris & Charles UteAISU Mann. 1n & Trudie Waverly, Les Markh1m, F S Forbes. Mr. & Mrs Allister Pu ch. A. Mansfield. Welton C Webster. Thomas & Bonnie Marrero. Or & Mrs Victor Forbes, Robert P. DOYMSHOllS Quist. Arnt G. Bar~, Wilham McCune.F M Wiersema. K N Maxson. Rodman H Fortuna. Ruth L. Wayne, Mrs. Pilar Ramm. Bernard Coo a, En McCunnilf. Dr & Mrs James Wrighl. Adam Miller. RouJ Foster. Ronald G ~rs. John Wayne) Simon, R.J. Knapp, R1ndy & Meta McDermott. Clyde F Yasumura. Mr & Mrs J Francisco, J.B. Mitchell. Mrs Fr1nk FredensburY.: Fred mpson, Sue Sklanskc. Jeck Lipper Ra~ McWilhams. Thomas F Pendleton. M B Steele. llfton Lonp,. br. lchard Miller. Lawrence Phelan, Thomas P Freeman.J. Iverson, Chick Tackhlnv1lle, Marta Mer man. Rudy A. O'Keefe, James E Raeder. Dr & Mrs John. Jr Garford. Mrs. Thelma Klein. Lawrence, Dr Ukroplan, Robert Shore, Geor~ A. O'Meara. John MISCIUAMIOUS Reeves. Nell•• A G1tes. Lara, Steele. Barry & Carole Willson. Richard E. Wiasman,G .. Oeth. Mr & Mrs Peter J Allen. Ken & Toni Rycolf. Paul Golbach. rs. Richard Stuart. Marshall Oschner. George H Allen, Tom & Susan Smith. R~er/B1xby Gunlgan. Forest J. Arthofer. Dan HillOl ISUMD UTTU IALIOA ISLAMD Pauley, Patricia S Bennett, Walter R Spencer .. c Ham, Geo~e A. Bachelor. Robert W Markin. Claudia Hill Perkins, Ronald & Alex Be~auaer, Mr. & Mrs L E Spinney, Ed~r W. & Mrs. Harrison, orence E. Sltnson. Mr. & Mrs. E. P Virtue, John Allen. Wilham A. Phillips, Thomas 0. Bii rouRh. William Jr Vandergrift. o~r Hart, E. Thomas Bllbeisl. Mr. & Mra. Watt. James & Jean Brown. Har~ B. Redin~ton. Don Brant. Dav d Viel, Mr. & Mrs. 1lon Heath,B.W. Buchanan, J. R. Morgan. Lucille & Marshall Cleary. Petri la Reyno ds. Glenn Burg, Irving X. W1t9on, Karen & George Hickman. Wilma I. Butler, George & M ary Voegelin. Winifred L. Chandler, Mra. Philip Rini;i. Msri1n W. Clabaugh, John Wilson, Hunter Hicks. Robert B. Christy, Mr. Mrs. Nick Dorsey, Or. & Mrs. Robinson. John & Hetty Collins, Budpe Zinzer. Or. Frank Hill. Mr. & Mrs. Hugh Cokas.Georga FOUll FOUIS E .. t.Leon Robinson. Mark Corbin, Edwtn H Honey.John F. Cottle. Fr1nk ~ Flamm. Donald E. Sauerbrey. Will & Marcia Oak1n,E W. Horton Douglas W. Cummings. J n H. Bartz. Mar~aret A. Haviken. Robert C. Schroeder. Ernest & Donne Davis, Mr. & Mrs A R IA&..IOA ... SUL.A P0tHT Howland, Mar~ret ~Trina and Alex Hagenbuc , Mrs. Katherina ~mes. Byron M.. Sellwood. Steve & Carol Dexter, Earl =-'Dorothy JohMOn, Mrs. elen ner, Richard E. Johnson. Halen M ard, Laura A. Sharp, TommyT Durkee, Mr. & Mrs Regent Jones.Judy Dotson Jayne Mouron, Iona Hunt, Thomu E. Skinner, John F Eberha'lt. J. W Blair, Charles M Jofdan. Richard Fahey. Mark & Gloria T~lor.Zada Ingles. George & Mary Smith. Robert D Farwell, Lyman G Clark. Mr1.. Wilham 8. Kendell. Edward Fine, Eathlr & Stuart Wnght, J.P. Lattin. Truman W. Stanton. Lynn Farry. Mike CUnningham Vincent La Cascia. Cathrine Fitzsimmons. Richard & June •YMTIUACI Malloy, David J. Stickler. H ~" Freundt, C Kent Ororl.NN Leenders. John E. Grow. Carl & Virgin•• Richardton. Charles Stickler,H~E Fuller, Theodore J. Fuchs. Mr. & Mrs MetlVine Lalther, Robert E. Grahem. Nellie L. Hummel. P1ul Rivett, Richard C. Strauch, Fr Galnea, Jamea & Doris Groa. Mr. & Mrs Robert Lesh•. Harry A. GrON. Earl L. Winkelmann. Joe Sandberg, Albert Thomas, R~r H. Garrett Carolyn ~W.Rhodea Leuler, Paul M.O. GUiiey. Norma T. Ptast1no. Richard Schnelde<. Arnold J Thompson. L. Gordon. Allred M King. r I Mrs Stan lord Levinson. Carlyle Gwoozdziowskl. C Speights. Sharon & Paul Swgenwald. Mrs. A. J Tooley, Francis Gross. Mr. & Mrs Robert L°:J.~· David & G11I Lorimor•. Max Qyunk, Stephen Ba1111e. Jeck Uncapher. Keith W. Whittington. Stephan A Groth. Jack E Pe I • Thomas Roy Marina. Jules A. Hall. Leonard Baker, Neal 0 . Whlta, Mra. Stroller Wicker. Sherman T. Haller, Adeline L Spangler. Don Meindl. John M. Harrln~on, R 0. Barmes, Robert J. Zeff, Frances Brown Woodrutt, John & Karen Hamilton. Phillip 0 ~een. Robert Mankin, R. K. Hehir, r. & Mrs. S. Bartow, Mr. & Mra. G. w. Zimmerman. Art Hause.Don nlf'. Henry Mohs.Dev• Heller, Mr. & Mrs Karl Ba~,Oon PIOMONTOIY IA Y Heu~. 0o1"191d & Ann Zill. Stan Montooth, Donald Hoagland, A. K. Bl II, Mrs. Chester Bare. Richard L. Hile. rs. Edn1 Montooth, Robert G Holland. Mrs MarilW Chapman. Jr .. C. S. .. .... , B1ewers. Werner Jacobsen, Leo Moore) Mary Kay Holmes, Mr. & Mrs. llll1m Cox.J.A. B1khaza. Henry B Jensen, John L IAYCIHT NNI, Marj<>fie. Holslnter. D.R. Crawford. Barbara S. Turner, Clarance Bransford, Jack Kissell. W1lh1m J Newquist, JCS W. Hoyle, ouis W. Dorn, Al and Rhea Jorr.nson, Joe & Kathy Brueckner. Lenon Kraft. Edwin J Anslow. Robert/Carolyn Qbegl. Char yne Humphries. J. 0 . Elliott. John J. W1I ams. Tom & Roaallnd Cassel, P.A. Malouf. Ronald & Judy Berglund, Robin Obefman. Betty Johnson, Mr. & Mrs. Allan Emmi.James Krumins. Or. Andy & Debbie Gross, Nelson B. Mongold, Howard G B<own. William S .. Jr Odell. Mr. & Mrs. Francis Kircher. C. W. Fricke. John T. Albflght, Jean Haskell.Don Colhns. Van~J1nn Parker. James F. Koohler, Robert L. Gibbons. Jamea J. Ashanino, Or. & Mrs. Steve • Ike, Mr. & Mra. Earl NUlt ll.Gus Dunn, Mrs. Fred P. Peck, Madelaine Walton Lardan. Georie C. Glib, Charles & Ruth Aune, Ba.rbara ~inney. Jr .. E.W. A11kas.J1m Edelh1uaer. Bill & Norma Penn. Louis L. Leopold. Or. Mrs. Irving Halperin, Linda 0 . Ball.~n Sarnes. Les 0 . Or. Rousey, Wilham I Glueck. Or & Mrs Michael Pier~f Mr. & Mrs. Wilham ~I•. Or. & Mrs. Sanford Harris, John H. Bangert. Ruasell W. Tahl, John E. Jacobs, L1urence L P1varo . Mom s aravich. Mr. & Mrs. Rudolph Helgoe, Mrs. Calvin Barratt. John E. Scott. Kathleen L ... Vang Plant. James Mathews. Or. & M rs. William Howard. Mike & Pam Bertoli<>, Al SAHTA AHA HltGHTS Searls. Hank Miller, Lawrence Rat<ln, Penny Matthlwa~homaa B Hyson. Mr. & Mrs. Robert BMch. Linda & Gordon Rin!ler. Harry Mulroy, John M ~anu:e McCann an Jay, RusaellC. Blxby~n & Barbara Coic., AIVin S. & Pit Sewell. Richard Stanton. L~n =nol ,Fred Moran, E. Terrance M.O. Kuehn, Lucille Blanc , Carol G. Odeg11d. Gerald & Mona Stanley, Jun & Rhode Walden. A rt J Shnn,Pem Nelaon, Russell Llmacher Robert W. Bloomber09. David & Lynn Anderson, Harold W. Stansbury, B. J ~le.CalvlnG Neuhau11r. W. E. Lincoln. Winslow S. Jr Bod9. Hans R. ~er,A.R. Silverman, Dr. & Mrs Ron O'donnell John 0. Lind. RuSMll & Carol Bori .. Tom am, Dannis & Erm1 Stephenson. John & Lucy
IAYIHOIH Smllh,C.K. Oeth, Mr. & ._.ra. Peter J Martin, Roberta B<imMll. Lucille E. Barnet, Kath~ Stev.nson. Hugh H Smith, Robert M. Olsan, Max Matheson. T. A. B<ock. Frank & Patricia Batchelder orm & Allee Strong, Michael C Bonner. Dani .. I Ken ~uhl, Or. & Mrs. Charles Otting, A. McKenzie, Robert B<own. Willlam S .. Jr. BenMnd. Mr. & Mrs L1vntz Bowl•j Mr & Mrs Tad ! E .Thelma Peloquin, Or. Carol M Moamann. Chari• & Jane Butch. 8::'" Bobo, Sardis L SWN<lngton. Lee Burdor • Ooneld L ic.~~ OecalfLoulae Peterton. N. A Olson. Wallace Butler. ~ & Mary B<UC4t, Oou~las V1nn1cof. Paul Burdorf, Donald L Phillipe, Al & Sally Place. James F. Collison. Jr.. artln A. Camerzell. aul L. Wilhama, Mrs Howard C. Gtavn,L t.r....,, 0Yant f Rotan,Joae Queen, Thomas & Gloria Collison, Renate I<. Church, CharleJ E Williamson. w. v , D.O.S. McWethyb.J.ck Th~~= t hllllng M D Wal tar Ruualt Helen L.. Conn, Mr. & Mra. Ralph PNraon. C hultz, M, ~·lint Damiani, Thomu COffey, Jill Wlt10n, Herbert Shipp, Robert Thom•.Aot>MD =~ P•t• & Carol SC eeffar. John OeL.uca. Jack Cowr, Ralph J. Wilaon, James o. & Mrs. Storch. Johr¥Batty Thompeon wr~ K w A lttva & Carol Shatter, David oi.mer. Mr. & Mra. Robert Culllngton. Jamn F. Wright, Gordon K. Young, Barbara ThorntOf'I. *r"" e . C nlhony Slmbro. Dela Oitche. Frank & Mary Dey, Richard & Donna Yates, Mr, I Mrs. Wilham
-------------------~---~--------------~~--~~------~-~ .
MAI L TO: AIRPORT COALITl()tll.
Pott Office lox I013 Newport Btach, Cellforn11 '2660 <IU > 979.ss..c ..
PIHse cheek (I ) tM appropriate bOxes :
W e have just begun to f ight th i s b attle. We shal l never
r el nt in this struggle until we have won the just1 cP
which we are being so wrongl y denied
:i Yes -1 would be wllllno to contrl~• 1 m .. lmum of ''SO per YNr for thrN Y••n In • group action l•wsult against the County of Or••· (Thi• ~tH to 1.CC per MY per perton fot • famll y Of S.) DO NOT SEND THE S1SO UNTIL IT IS
REQUESTED 8 Y THE AU-PORT COALITION ATT09'NI YI .
:J Y••-I 119'" to allow the Airport Coelltlon to UM my NHM In,,. ••• ..., MwrtlMmentl •S. "°'entl•l lltlgent.
:i I would Ilk• to contribute $ . . . • . . • • . . • at this tlmt to help dtfrey tM costs of prlntlnQ, postage, advertising, etc:.
In your effort to '°"''°' the ..... and Mlerdl Of John WIYN Airport.
PIH• make thl1 letter •v•ltebte to•• meny Of your frlenell and N4oN»r• H possible. Onct we Mve received YoUr reply,
we wlll Inform you In more cMpth ••to the detalts of t"I• PAPOMd wit. I
NAME...................................................... ADDRESS .................................................. I
eus. PHONE . • • • . • . • . . • • • . • . . • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • . . • NAMI Oft ttOMaOWNER I
E DA.U'\&OE ASSN.°" LOCATION ...................................... I HOM r-nvn • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • I
# OF YEA9'S YOU HAVE LIVaO IN N.WPOltT •.•.••• , . • # Of' NMalM IN f'AMILY • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • · • • I
lfYoU"9ft•Yold~• rnr1rc1--.11a .......... eec.tNMcwNftt•,..,,.,ONlllll~·.• I 5'1Ptf'YIWI concemfng.. Ill o;.e. C9unty Alrt*t. ..... MM ............ W. Ill ....... ..-e.m.
I
Our con1mun1ty WILL be sa v ed, and there 1s an 1mpor
tant part f or you to play in t his v ict or y for Ju st ic e, but
only if you act NOW. Rem ember , a ll that 1s evt•r
n c '.\ssa r y for wrong to triumph is for enough good peo
pie to do not hing !
TOM WILLIAMS
Coordinating Director
Al RPO RT COA L ITION
-"' ...... -I
I I
, i
ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) -
When Belva Fleale had her
babies, she was "scared to
death." Her husband, Dick,
wasn't much help.
"I alm0st puaed out in the
labor room," he remembers.
But now they're 10 ea1er for a
grandchild's arriv•I that they
went to ''school" to learn what
lt' s II k e t.o have a b a b'y
nowadays.
The Minneapolla couple at-
tended an Expectant
Grandparents class at the
perinatal center jointly operated
by United Hospitals and St. Paul
Children's Hospital.
Their daughter and son-in-law,
Barb and Darwin Lindahl of
White Bear Lake, pushed the
Flegles into taking the class.
The Lindahls themselves bad
been auendlne weekly Expec-
tant Parents classes.
''They're making this baby a
real experience for us aa well as
themselves," says Mrs. Flegle.
"We're enjoying this as much as
they are."
Their family is close, Flegle
says, and It's exciting being in·
volved in the day-to·day ex·
perience of his daughter's preg·
nancy.
Marlene Fondrlck, clinical
director of obstetrics .
eynecology and mother of three,
teaches a 'grandparents' class
every two months. Class size bas
range.d from six to 42. A fee of $5
la requested from couples able
to pay.
By slides, discussion, tour of
the perinatal center, and ·'The
Birth of a FamiJy'' videotape,
expectant grandparents learn
how the birthing business bas
changed.
"Family centeredness is a big
part of our program," Mrs. Fon-
drlck explains.
A husband may remain with
bis wife throughout labor and de·
livery. If there's no husband, the
woman can have another sup-
po rt person -maybe her
mother, sister or boyf~nd.
"It's all right to photograph or
tape·record the birth. If the
mother wants lo care for her
baby in the hospital, or have the
baby room in with her. that's
OK, too.
Prospective grandparents see
that each labor room has an
electronic fetal monitor to follow
the effects ol abnormalities or
an abnormal position. They see
lar1e deijvery rooms, designed
lo accommodate multiple.
Caesarean and high.risk births.
They see "birthing rooms"
where labor and delivery re·
covery occur without changing
..
Qil!Plat
THURSDAY,JUlY23, 1911
JUST COASTING
FEATURES 82
86
For the first ttme, .... o I ABC' a World News Tonight
has edged out long-time a leader CBS ... Page B3
Future grandparent! check out the nuraery where the1r ~ grandchildren
wiU spend the fir!t hours of life. United Hospilal.s and St. Paul Children's Hospital
in Minneapoli.3 are operating the pre· natal classes in hopes a concept
unity for parents and grandparents can be fostered.
rooms. They see "family center
bedrooms," where mother and
father may spend a transitional
night with their baby before go-
ing home.
New parents are treated to a
private gourmet dinner, an
"evening 6f elegance." once
during the hospital stay.
A St. Paul grandmother who
badn'l taken the class, or hasn't
heard of such a thing, says it
makes sense to her.
"I think anything that's new
and that people can learn from
is great," says Margaret Walsh.
Mrs. Walsh has four
grandchildren, aged 6 months to
8 years.
Ir91a Moody, of Brooklyn
Center figured that when it
comes lo being a grandmother,
love is the important thing.
"I love being a grandmother,
to be a good grandmother." she
says.
"I love being a grandmother,
and my grandchildren love me
ver y much." says Mrs . Moody,
the mother of five, grandmother
or 20 and great-grandmother of
seven. "All my kids except the
youngest daughter are
grandparents themselves."
"Having a baby is drastically
changed from what it was even
10 years ago," Mrs. Fondrick
tells the people who had babies
or their own 20 or 30 years ago.
Celia and Jarvis Stoffel,
parents or six, look the class a
month before the birth ·or their
first grandchild. Jarvis Jr.
stayed with his wife, Dolores,
througout labor and delivery.
"When I had my babies. I was
taken Into the delivery room and
this door was s hut in m y
husband's face ," recalls the new
grandmother. "He was gone,
and that was terrible."
While Mrs. Fondrick stresses
advanced procedures. s he is
supportive of some age-old prac·
tices. In response to a man's
question, s he ag r ees that
certified midwives us ually func·
lion very well. Clinical dietician D ebl;>i~
Mayer told the class that preg-
nant women s hould avoid
tobacco, liquor. unprescribed
drugs and caffein e -laden
beverages.
A woman wondered a bout the
vegetarian diet or her pregnant
daughter. If milk and dairy
products are excluded. the dieti·
clan says. a vitamin supplement
is necessary to assure a diet
a dequate for nourishing the
baby and for breast·feeding.
For mothers unable to supply
breast milk, the center operates
a "human milk bank." one of
about a dozen in the nation.
Mrs. Fondrick says mother in·
stinct develops as a woman
care~ for her baby, and a
grandmother wanting to help
should do the housework and
"let the new mom take care of
the baby."
Grandparents should share
their experience but not feel
hurt when advice is ignored. The
parents must be allowed to
make the decisions.
''I'm not telling you to keep
out of the way. but I want you to
be helpful, .. Mrs . Fondrick says.
Lorenchia and Irvin Scott
were in the November class and
their grandchild was born Dec.
16.
"I liked the idea that having
the baby was a complete family
thing'" says Mrs. Scott. "I liked
that our son and his wife made
their baby a part of our lives. I
have an exceptional daugbter·in·
I aw who s hares , and this
brought us closer together."
The FlegJes got litUe feeling of
involvement when their fir~t
grandchil~ ,was born four years ago, in Crucago, (o the couple's
son and daughter-in-law. It's dif·
ferent this tim e, with the
daughter and son·in -law living
so close.
"We went out and bought the
baby's bed and mattress yester·
day," Flegle says.
From travel to tattoos -gifts deluge 52 former Iran hostages
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
outpouring of joy and sympathy
when the 52 Americans returned
from Iran balf·a·year ago bas
had Its material side as well : a
virtual deluge of girts for the
former hostages.
Gifts and offers or gifts have
ran1ed from trips to Hawaii to
bags of potatoes to Bibles to ap-
ple juice lo gift certificates for
tattoos, says Laura Dolley of
Flag, Inc., •the agency assisting
the hostages and coordinating
their activities.
••It was totally unexpected.
I'm still getting reactions from
many of them that are: 'Gee, I
can't believe it's stUl going on,'"
ahe said.
"I was absolutely touched,"
reflected Kathryn Koob, one of
the former hostages reached by
telephone in New York.
"Sort of overwhelming," was
bow Catherine Keough, wile of
hostage William F. Keough Jr.,
described the delu1e of lifts.
And her reaction was echoed by
Susan Cooke of Memphis, Tenn.,
mother of bosta1e Donald
Cooke.
•'I think we were all sort of
overwhelmed by it and very
sraleful to the people. The
public was just marvelous,''
Mrs. Cooke said.
Most of the gift.a, Mi11 Koob
1aid, "were very personal
tbin1s, hand-drawn pictures
from school children,
watercolors that they did, little
tbln11 like a cros1 that they
wore durtq the entlre time."
Mra. Cooke said she received
a "tremendou1 number" of
praren from .,..a.. " Juat eouldD't .believe that
tlaere were still so many people
tlaat were t'9llaloua ln tbia coun-
try. We welllt tbrousb a period
wben everJOM wa1 saylq God waa dud; well, we found out
•at be ii very much aU.e,'' a.be
nfleded.
Tbe sift livinl sot uader way n•• before the holta1• 1Ml'e trHd, and by the time tbeJ
reached Weiabeden, a~.
leblt .. and pluaa were wait·
~ut the flood1ate1 rea111
U.ro ~. managfng <firector of tlw Famil~ UaUon Action
Group, ii wailC de.,, in the gift• tM 52 formn laoltager haw been
opened .men they reached thi1
country, leavtnt many unable to ·
take advaata1e of the 1llt.I juat
~1uae there wun't time to do
everYlblnl and alao spend Ume
wit.la tWr famlli•. "Part of the problem i1 lhat it
all came ao tut and furiouely
..., ... .,.... they were releaMd U.lll u..e .., barely tJme to
IOl't out wtdeti child waa at home
I
and which wu ln school • . ••
So moat ol them did not take ad·
vantap of the bulk or tbinp
that were offered," explained
Ma. Dolley. "MOit ol us met our famillet
and stay~ put," Ml11 Koob
said, explalhlnt why many ol
the vacation and travel 1U\a
were not Uled.
Sb• Mid abe was able to vialt
----.--------' I I
)
-wE
:(EME~mt 1{
T< ){ J
,.,. ..........
•mt. TM preaenta have ranged from free vacation.t to tattoo gift
c•rl#U:ote1.
relatlvn In Florida and New
En1land because of the offer ol
free travel.
And then, -ishe 1ald, there wu
one 'ctft ~ a week on the llll-
allslppt Queen riverboat -that
••came Just at lbe r11ht Ume,
when I couldn't ·race another
flHhbulb or another queaUon."
And the boat operators Uved
up to their promise that there
~ ,,
wouldn't be publicity about her
bein1 aboard, 1he 11ld.
''They were Just super."
Free vacatlou were alao of·
fered by the Caribbean l1land
nation of Jamaica, which at
least a few or the former
hoataces are p11Mlne to accept.
Orl1lnaUy t.here wu aom• quet·
tJOD about this betn1 proh1b6ted
by the law barrlns 1ifta from
foreign governments. but that
contains an exception for of·
ficially sanctioned travel.
So. former hostages who want
to accept the vacation will be as·
signed to visit Jamaica by the
State Department and their ex·
penses will be reimbursed to the
department by the Jamaican
government.
Although the scale is reduced,
the gifts and messages continue
to arrive -a hand·e mbroldered
s hawl coming in only last week.
Vacations in Hawaii were
perhaps one of the most appeal·
ing gifts. Ms . Dolley said ,
because it gave the former
hostages a chance to get away
from the glare or publicity and
constant public attention. She
had praise for the Hawaiians for
allowing privacy.
·•But even with that nict
aspect of it, only 10 or 15 or them
went," Ms. Dolley added.
The desire for privacy, Ms.
Dolley said, was balanced by a
thankfulness lo the American
people.
"Most of them felt a tremen·
dottS responsibility to the public
that had, I think, contributed in
no s mall way to their re·
lease ... .I think there was an
overwhelming feeling amon1
them t.hat they had to react with
gratitude and acceptance and
thanks," she added.
Mrs. Keough said her husband
has declined offers of larger,
more cosUy gifts such as travel
and vacation.s, feelina that "to
receive money or free tripe here
and there was not in keeplnt
with the spirit of the American
people."
That's just a personal decil~
of their family, she explal.nedi
and doesn't indicate that they
feel people 'fho accept slit.I are
wrons 91' that they couldn't have
used the Items.
Keouch. like several f~ bo1ta1ea, la donatln1 lect
reea lo the Arthur Simon
Memorial Fund, a 1cholal'lbl
pro1ram for the 1'l chtldnn t.he aervicemen killed or crip-
pled ln the attempt to rescue tbe
holta111. More than 1130,000 bu
been collected.
• I
HUMBUG TO THE HO-HUM: They
call it ''the summer game•• but as far as
Summer, 1981 , is concerned, it was a
strikeout. A total fiub. A pitiful little hiss
where it should have been a throaty
roar.
So this was professional baseball
this season. Personally, I couldn't care
\ le11 if they ever settle the strike now.
The season la a total toss and we might
as welt get oo to so1Pething interesting.
Some spertawrlters are still clinging
to a faint, hysterical hope that they'll
hear the crack of bats at the big stadium
before the mists of autumn close in.
They write stories about 40 days and 40
nights of strike-bound agony.
Forget it.
MOST OF THE SPORTS scribes are
beginning to discQver more lively things
to bring to the readers. Del Mar horse
racing opened yesterday and the first
runnings of the haybumers got pretty
good play.
So the sporting pages have turned to
professional soccer, beach volleyball.
yacht racing, water skiing and by golly,
the upcoming football season.
Considerable enthusiasm is already
being general~ over the Rams' next
season at Anaheim Stadium when Pat
Haden, late of Corona del Mar and now
of San Marino, will once again be at the
controls at quarterback.
Even the pro football training camps
are getting more attention that they
have summers past. Rookies from the
Rams and the San Diego Chargers went
at it in a scrimmage only yesterday out
on the green al UC Irvine. And the
Dallas Cowboys, menacing as ever, are
in camp up in Thousand Oaks.
LISTEN, Tms CRAZED strike has
bad some advantages on the athletic
front. Some sportsmen, who have
labored in near-anonymity over the
years, relegated to the back pages of the
sporting section along with the lost dog-
gie & kitty ads, abruptly have found
their achievements splashed all over the
front of the section.
Why, there was even considerable
note given in advance billing for a
Laguna Niguel tennis tournament for old
fogeys, ages 35 and up.
So this is how baseball has done
CONVEN1£N't DfSPOSABlE
• COlOPlAST• BRANO
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We now c.arry the CO'T1plete COLOPLAST ltne-me
1cYg~1 se11tng ~ble ostomy apol1anc.~ 1n me
WOtld (verylh1ng ror cOIOStomale'> •l~tomale\ and
U'lNl'f OSIO<Tla~-atl Wtth convenient COlOPlAS T
OrSOO!idl>~ty COloPl..AST •e•tabo!tl\'-D'u!> case oaci.
economy
0e sore 10 asi. tor your FREE coe>v ot IN!ltC.H 1 S-
ltie puOhc.ation thats 1u\I IOI yov-atway\ 1ncludeS
couoons IOI !ref' ~~-371.4 \
MOUL TON ftl.AZA PM.,_ MACY
23115 Moutton Partlwey. L.agun1 H1ll1
(Heirt to El Rencno Mar~)
A BARO HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER
~esa \7erde
\J ine and 19iquor
SALE! SALE! SALE!
Reg. 13.70
WEIBEL
WHITE
ZIN FANDEL
A delicious, summer-time wi ne. great for
picnics. poolside. or beach. Nice touch of
swetttness.
Reg. U .80
GALLO CELLARS
SAUVIGNON BLANC &
JOHANNISBERG
REISLING
Gold Medal winners at the Orange
County Fair. Fine varietal \\1nes at Jug sale
prices I
PLAIN WRAP
CIGARETTES
A popular "light'' brand with no frills.
King.size, filter-tip regulars.
56!!
A "light" vodka -70 proof. Enjoy
IUmfft8r coolers·with , .. aloohof.
...
............. " ............. 26 ...
ti MIDAL 'Wlll•ll'AWIMU
IM l1'0CI
549-~
BAKER Al
Dana project ·denied
Supervisors reject plan to convert mobile home park
itself in. For decades past. the sporting
writers have depended on the bat and
ball game for the full coverage of sum-
mer. They just naturally figured on
slouching in a chair high atop some
stadium and writing notes all summer
long on what happens below upon the
fabled diamond.
Now, however, out of sheer necessity
th~y have learned thcr.e are indeed other
s portlng events all over the summer.
Why. there'u actually water out
there in that place called the Pacific
Ocean where they have sporting events
they play without even a ball in sight.
And you con always start covering
the coming football 1eoson early.
Avast there! II' a another summer tpOrtingevent
BASEBALL WILL LOSE to football
even in tbe event the professional foot-
ball people decide they want lo follow
their compatriots and go out on the
picket lines. Unlike baseball, you see,
football has a heavy following at levels
other than just the play-for-pay people.
Regardless of a pigskin walkout for
the pros, you can be assured USC and
UCLA will be going al it, along with the
s maller colleges like Cal Slate Fullerton
and Cal State, Long Beach.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE, Sad-
dleback and Golden West also put on
some exciting gridiron shows right here
a long the Orange Coast. And don 'l forget
the vast array of football offerings that
will come your way at the high school
level.
Lots of sporting fans are loo king
forward to fall.
And by the time next summer rolls
around. a lot of sports people might be
asking, .. Baseball?" What's that?"
A proposal lo convert a Dana
Point moblle home park into a
commerclal center bas been de-
nied and a plan to locate a
medical research facility otr the
Ortega HJghway near Caspers
Wllderpes1 Park was supported
by the Orange County Board ol
Supervisors.
On the advice of Supervisor
Thomas Riley, the board threw
out the proposal from Union OU
Co. to replace the Marina Shores
Mobile Home Park wlth new
commercial development.
Riley said the mobile home
park at Del Obispo Street and
the Pacific Coast Highway
represents needed affordable
housing in the community and
noted that the proposed develop-
me nt did not conform to a
specific plan to locate such cen-
ters in'a "downtown" area.
In the oth e r case. the
supervisors agreed to move up
consideration from December lo
October for a general plan
change for the Nichols Institute.
The medical resear ch and test-
ing lab is currently located in
San Juan Capistrano. but of-
ficials want to move it to an
isolated 100 acres across the
Ortega Highway from the coun-
ty-run park.
At Ril ey 's urging. the
supervisors said they'll consider
creating a new general plan
designation for the property to
preserve a maximum amount of
open -space.
Under the new land use de-
signation, building sites near the
park would be at least 50 acres
and parking and structures
couldn't cover more than 20 per-
cent of the property.
The institute has a staff of
about 250 persons. It specializes
in c r eating diagnostic pro-
cedures a nd carries o ut
specialized testing and research
fo r hos pitals and m edical
schools.
Ruling overturned
AUSTIN, Texas <AP) -The
Texas Court of Criminal AppeaJs
has overturned the contempt
citation of a minister who was
jailed alter refusing to answer
questions about a drug suspect
he counseled. The Rev. Ronald
Sal f en of the Trinity
Presbyterian Church in Collin
County had been cited.
K&B SPORTSWEAR 2300 tt.tMar, Costa Mna
PREWASHED
JEANS
LATEST
TOPS
Delly l"tlet ....... "' Rlt1119 .. IC...._
THA rs NOISY -Two-year-old Stacy Fellon holds her ears
as Newport Beach policeman Bruce Foster fires up
helicopter. Officers staged a "police fair" in the Newport
Crest area over the weekend to help bolster interest in the
department's neighborhood watch program . Stacy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Felton of Newport Beach.
didn't seem impressed.
SHOES • SHOES • SHOES • SHOES
WOMEN
MATURALIZER
UH STRIDE
HUSH PUPPIES
CHEROKEES
lilETR»S
FAMOLARE
MUSHROOMS
GRASSHOPPERS
MEN
FLORSHEIM
HUSH PUPPIES
JAR MAM
STACY ADAMS
30-40% . .. • • SA• PEOPLE MOVERS
,,...., PLUS CLOGS
MEH'S SHORT SLEEVE
T-SHIRTS
OFF ,,
sr• MIEN'S W ALKIMG
SHORTS
ALL
BOOJS 25% off
SADIW AU( SALi SPICIALl
•%1FF
ON ALL
DIAMOlll ·
IEWELIY
'
'
\
s1411.24s1
IH HAUoa CEMTlll
2300 HARIOR • COST A MESA
Come To Our Value Packed
SIDEWALK
·sAtE
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
JULY Mtli-25111 ,
HARBOR CENTER
42 STOllS TO 111¥1 YOU
2300 HARBOR CAT WILSOMt
·COSJA MESA
l
I
I
. I I
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thu.raday, July 23, 1981
... __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ....,~
ABU news hits top spot
Network noses out CBS in evening slot for first time
NEW YORK <AP> -It took
4 ~ months, but ABC'• ·•world
News Ton.l1ht" baa rinally over·
come the le1acy that Walter
Cronkite left to CBS and moved
;Jnto the lop spot in the network
news ratings race for the first
time.
"It's very nice to be No. l,"
said J eff Gralnlck, executive
I producer or "World News
Tonight."
"We've been able lo taste it
for a month. Jt was just a ques·
• lion or when it was going to hap·
pen. When Walter retired, It
,.. freed Up a large piece O( the BU·
dience," Gralnlck said.
Before the A. C. Nielsen rat·
ings were released Tuesday,
CBS had held a virtual monopoly
for five years on top ratings for
its dinner·hour news show. NBC
;CIA hurting
. or· linguists
WASHINGTON CAPI -A
¥rowing scarcity of people fluent
in foreign languages. especially
1 Mideast dialects, is hampering
perations. CIA and Pentagon
·~officials have told a House sub·
.committee.
·•We have been impacted
severely," Ad m. Bobby R. In·
man . deputy CIA director.
testified.
;. Craig L. Wilson, a special as·
!· sistant lo Defense Secretary
'" Caspar Weinberger. s aid the
• military's probl e m filling
Joreign language s lots "may in·
:. ~;:rease as we press on in the de·
i•;"Velopment of the Rapid Deploy·
•Jllent Force."
defeated CBS only twice tn the
last rive years, and ABC never
reached the top.
ABC, after trailing in enter·
tainment ratings 20 years, final·
ly captured first pl1ce in prime·
time 1'atings in 197tVi7. But lbe
network was unable to shake
America's Jove affair witll the
avuncular Cronkite.
But when Cronkite retired in
March, ABC's anchormen,
Frank Reynolds, Max Robinson
and Peter Jennings, began to
gain ground on Cronkite 's
replacement -Dan Rather.
Nielsen said for the week of
July 13·17 , "Wo rld News
Tonight" had a 10.7 rating, a 24
share and was seen by 8.55
million homes. Nielsen says that
me ans 10. 7 percent of all
televisions in the country were
tuned in to ABC, and 24 percent
of the homes actually watching
television at that hour were
watchi n g ··w orld News
Tonight."
CBS had a 10.3 rating. a 23
sha re and was seen in 8.23
million homes. NBC had a 9.4
rating, a 21 share and was seen
in 7 .51 million homes.
Since Roone Arledge was
named pr~sident of ABC News
in 1977 , ABC has been making
steady news audience gains al
the expense of both CBS and
NBC. Arledge created the three·
anchor concept of Reynolds in
Washington . Robinson in
Chicago and Jennings in Lon·
don. He raided the other two
networks for personnel and also
jazzed up ABC's presentation
with more film and graphics.
Officials at both ABC and CBS
stress the race is tight and has
been since Rather replaced
..
SAVE UP TO 50 % OR MORE
BUY NOW and SA VE
NEW MARKDOWNS
SPORTSWEAR
FOR MEN AMD WOMEN
CRYSTAL STEM-Will REDUCED 'I.• e.ch.
REG. '4. •TO '6.• MOW -'J. 11 TO '5."
SINCE 1949
DCPAftTMCNT STOftC
1111 NEWPORT BOULEVARD
H•bor and Newpor1 Blwda. In downtown Costa MeH
Cronkite on the ••Evening
News" March 9.
"If the slippage persJsta then
we'll take It sertoualy," Ramona
Dunn, a spokeswoman for CBS
News, said Tuesday,.
Dunn said CBS orflclals ex·
peeled to lose some ratings
strength with Cronkite's de·
parture.
Gralnlck said he had no ex·
planatlon for the liming of
ABC's rise to the top but said the
networks' order easily could re·
vert back after this week.
Although the actual ratings
differences seem minor, the
jockeying for No. 1 is import.ant
for network morale and prestige
as well as the extra revenue the
top.rated network can command
from advertisers.
,.,.~ Oregon OKs
smoking curb
SALEM, Ore. CAP> -Smok·
ing in retail stores and many·
other Or egon commercial
establishments will be restricted
by mid·l983 under a bill signed
into law by Gov. Vic Atiyeh.
MOVE WE ADJOURN -Proceedings at the
Economic Summit Conference in Ottawa
apparently were something less than excit-
ing, judging from this reaction by U.S.
Secretary of State Alexander Haig. The un ·
diplomatic yawn was a human response to
fatigue or sleepiness and it happens to
everybody.
T he measure requires that
smoking areas be set aside in
banks, many restaurants, retail
stores, schools, auditoriums and
arenas and other public gather·
ing places.
Louisiana to teach creationism
The law lakes effect July 1.
1983, and violations wut carry a
fine of up to SlOO. Taverns and
cocktail lounges are exempt
from the law, as are restaurants
that seat fewer than 30 people or
that have a state-approved air
filtration system.
BATON ROUGE, La. CAP> -
Beginning in 1982. Louisiana
schoolchildren must be taught a
biblical version or man's crea·
t.ion whenever they study the
theory of evolution.
That requirement was signed
into law by Gov. Dave Treen.
making Louisiana the second
state with a "creationism" law.
BLACK STAINED ROSEWOOD PLATE a
VASE STANDS From Hong Kong
Beautifully crafted to hold
., ........ .,. plate or vase .
• ~~~.. OPENWORK
( : VASE
~ STANDS
, ' ' 3V2" dla. ...... ,,, ~;j 2.49
~,.. 4V»" dla.
: 3.49
I
PLATE STANDS
4 S&ZES 4• to 10· tall
.99 to 2.59
A similar law recently passed in
Arkansas is being challenged in
court
Immediately after the bill was
signed . the American Civil
Liberties Union announced plans
to right the law in court. callmg
it unconstitutional.
And State Superintendent of
Education Kelly Nix, an out-
Colorful accents on
marbleized beige tones
to hold loose dla·
monds or emeralds .
HEART OR OVAL
Approx. 2v. •wide
---.....,.-1 V. • deep 1.99 each
s poken opponent of the measure.
warned it could cost Louisiana
$8 million lo replace textbooks
and wouJd take away his depart·
ment 's responsibility for setting
curriculum standards.
"It's a religion. It should be
taught an the church and in the
home, not m the classroom." be
said.
FROM OUR
CLOTHINO
SECTION
From lndla
EMBROID·
ERED EYELET
COTTON
BLOUSE
Beautifully
made. solid·
color blouse
has rows ol
embroidery and
Approx. 3•0~1~~ loop-button closing.
d 2 99 Assorted Colors !l.>'-~1 '":'.""I·~· "'.""'.e"'.""'.e:"".":p ~· ~ S·M·L·XL 14.66
"NAMAKO" BLUE EMBROIDERED
STONEWARE BONSAI DETAIL COTTON
PLANTERS From Japan SNAKE PANTS
Stunning coball·blue glaze With embroidered
covers 10·s1ded planters detail ankle cull.
-------..-. and saucers. In·
sides are unglazed. Assorted
Colors
S·M·L
9.99
PARK CONVENIENTLY AT OUR REAR ENTRANCE -END OF MAGNOLIA
last 3 Daysi
STAINLESS STEEL
COLANDER
From Hong Kong
Everlasllng effl·
clency for draining,
straining or
vegetable bath.
WHITE PORCELAIN
DEMITASSE CUP l
SAUCER From China
Enjoy your espresso!
2'/t • tall 4 oz.
HANDCRAFTED
BASKETRY FOR PLANT
HARVEST OR
CENTERPIECE
BAMBOO PLANTER
HOLDERS From China
3 SIZES 12 v,· to,,. dla.
13'/t" to 14• deep
3.9910 5.99
SHOE fl~~ l .Semi-Annual 3• Bara
.39each
boxed
CANE BERRY
BASKETS
From Mexico
3 SIZES
·-·.-rn 11'/r•><13" to
14'1\. )( 17"
' PRICE
Selected
s~
Broken Sizes
All Sales Final -•
OIANT NATURAL JUTE MACRAME HAMMOCK
From Bangladesh
Knots, braids, tassel• and twists form
a roomy, Inviting hammock.
Approx.
37• wide
1s2· long
AROMATIC CEDAR FAN
From Indonesia
To hang In the closet.
11· long 1.99
NATURAL OR WALNUT BURNT BAMBOO
FINllH HARDWOOD ACCESSORIES
FOLDINO CHAIRS From .China
22· >e'2" 27~. tall 11.99
From Romania Organize cosmetic•
Well col'latructed, or sm111 plant
smoothly finished collection or dlaplay
chair• have easy· a preferred plant.
ectlon braaa fittings. ROUND PLANT
STANDS 18" to
19• tall
12v.• dla.
11 .55
15• dla.
17.56
17Yt" dla.
23.56
DIR•CTLY ACROSS I' OM
SOUTH co~•T PLAZA OPEN 7 DAY.S A WEEK
MOI. TO Fil. 11 A.M.-1 P .M. IUIHTLY WUT OF llllTOl AT 1111 IUIR.OWn
(TAU lltlTOL DIT OFF • fl&WAY)
VllA. UITll CllAm •• ~. ---• Allft.l flll ,.. ..
UT. 11 A.M.-7 P.M.
.... 11 A.M.-1 P.M.
I
I
I l
~
' J
• • • • ....... -.. • ..... ·-0 u soswueoccwos 0 0 a a
Oraiioe Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, July 23, 1981
O'CONNOR PROTEST -Dr. Carl Mcintire,
president of the International Council of
Christian Churches, leads a demonstration
FOR THE RECORD
Births
MOAG MllMOttlM.
HOll"tT.tU.. ... El8YTE•IAN ,_It
Mr. •NI Mrs.~.,. Warrwr. Hunt-
lntlOft 8Ncfl. llO'(
Mr. •nd Nils. R09H C•-11. Hunt·
'"''°" 8Ncl\, Qlrl ,_.
Mr. and Mn. David Devb<lt, Cotta
...... t in
IN. •nd Mn. Raj.._ C ...... HYlll· ,,,., ... ...,,. llO'(
IN. and Mn. 'f-. Sarr'(, HYlll·
lnetOft 8Nc.ll. bo'( Ctwlns)
Mr. -Mn. ...,lo 8oloko, Hwnt· 1"9t0ft 8Mdl, tin
J-11
Mr. •nd Mn. MIOft R-y. Hunt-'"''°" llMCh, tlrl Mr. •nd Mn. RlcllarCI Vlll•tH.
HUf'llnGIOft llMdl, bo'( ,_n
Mr. And Mrs. David Hiii, lrvllw, tin
Mr. And Mn. R-rt GIM .. r, Cotta
...... bo'( Mr. and Mn. Klt"k EltlOI, NewllO'I
8ea<ll, t in
Mr. and Nils. Plllrkll Dully, Cotta
llMN,tlrl
Mr. and ""''· Oanlel Oelallow . lrvlM,t ln
Mr. and Mn. Pet•r Ruuo, Hunt·
lno '°" 8Mc:ll, llO'( ,_n
Mr. •nd Mn. •lcllard ErlcllMNI,
........ t1 llMOI, t lrl Mr. and Mra. _,_ Hartrwy, Hunt·
l119ton a..m. glr1
Mr. •nd Mn. R'(Oll It•-. HUfll·
l119ton 8-:tl, tin ,_14
Mr. and Mrs. Roger FrHman,
l•lllM l....S, boy
Mr. and Mn. Mlcl!MI Cherney, Hunt·
l119ton 8-:tl. t lrl ,_,.
Mr . a nd Mn Tllomu Evan•.
N••lllOr1 e..dl, t 1r1
Mr. and ""'· OouglH Murplly.
~ ........ llO'(
Mr. -Mn. Ralpll T-, Cotta
...... bo'( llo\r. and Mrs. Oeftnh Olll, Costa
llMM,llO'( ,_17
llo\r . a nd M,.. Mark JollnUon,
........ rt llNch, llO'(
Mr. And Mn. ROllert Slwmate, Hunt· '""°" 9Ndl. tlrl Mr. -Mn. David RMl!n, Hunl·
lnlt• 8Mcll, llO'( Mr. and Mn. Ezra .. '1. lrvlfte, Doy
Mr. and Mn . Alejandro Monie•.
CCKt• Mew, bo'f ,_.
Mr. and Nila. Oeftald 8olle. Coll•
Meaa,t lr1 ,_Jt
Mr. •nd Mn. ,,...,., ··""'· San JU4111 C-.il14r-. bo'f
Mr . •nd M". Kolclllro En•l•w,
trvlne, tlf'I
Mr •nCI Mrs .. '~1~nc1o Andrade,
lrvlne, llof
""'. -Mn. 8rlen ~ Smltll, L ....... 8Mcll, llO'(
Mr. -Mn. Edward Scott, Hunt-lnet8ft ...,_,tlrl
Mr. •nd MrL Mlcl\MI Marquand,
lrvltle,flrl
Jlltyl
Mr. •nd Mn. Marti Hlrti.r, Cotta
MeN,t lr1
Mr. -Mn. Jack Mc:Ew.i, 0.M ..... "" Mr. eftd lllrL 8rlan Smllll, Cotta
Mata,t lr1
Mr. and Mn. Hal PMm, C-1• Mew, ... .,
Mr . and Mr•. Zavarlo 8r•nn•r,
C•-dl4 MM, tlrl Mr. end Mn. P"'I Murrey, YOUM
a.Kll,lln Mr. efMi Mn. ,.etrkk Sllleld, Hunt·
1...-8-dl.llri Mr. Md Mn.. AMOftlO y-........
.... ,...,8Mcfl.llloy
~OUNTAIN VAU.•Y
COMMUNITY MOl .. ITAL ,_ ..
Mr. •nd""" T-...s Nevin, Hunt·
iflllon ltM<ll, llO'( ,_17
Mr. end Mn . Oou91 .. 8r-n, Hunl·
ln111on 8H<ll, Doy ,_ ..
Mr. enCI Mn. Cameron PllllllP1, Hun·
llnot°" 8Mdl, t in Mr . e nd Mra Foller Wllll•,
HunllftQIDft llMU>, t in ,_,,
Mr. and Mn.. Mk l\MI Pheml1ter,
Hunllft91m! 8Mcll, t in ,_.
Mr. enCI #wL O.nlel Rice, Coste
llMN,glr1
Mr. end"""· i.ae l.OCllen, Huntington
eeach, boy
J-11 Mr. end Mrs. Ptltlllp Berrios, Foun-
tain Valley, girt Mr. and Mr-. R-.t .. las, ugune
Niguel, Doy
J-n Mr. and Nila. Clwl1 eer-., Founleln Vell•y. girl
Mr. and Mrs. ~ Jonot, Cott• llMM,glrl
Mr. end Mrs. Lory Ur\Oft, Hunt-
inglOft BMcll, boy
Mr. end Mn. Erlcil Krueck, Hunt·
lngton IMCll, glrl J-n IN. and Mra. Mark Heiney, Newport
••acll, llO'(
Dawn EllloC. Huntl119ton a..c11, t l•I Mr. Mid MrL O«Oon S--MI,
Hu111ln91on 8Mcll, boy Mr. end Mn. MkllMt Sln<lalr, Coale
Meta, bo'(
Mr. end M". G•rolCI AnCleraon,
Fountain Vell•'f. boy
Mr. encl Mn. Kerl Selll, HuntlnotOft
Beech, glrl
IN. and """ Peul Slebet1, Fountain
Vall•'f. llO'( ,_u
Mr •rid """ MICllMI c-. Hunt· ington ...... boy
Mr. a nd Mr-. Sl•P'len Thornton,
Fountain Vetley, bo'( ,_26
Mr. end Mn. Arll"IOftd Malillien, Hun-llnglOft llu<ll, llO'( ,_t1
Lore Leroque, Hunllnoton 8••<11,
boy
Mr. end Mn. Ste,,,_ Kimber, Foun•
laln v •li.y, llO'(
Mr. and MrL Alldr9W Coyne, Hunl· Ing !Oft IM<ll, Doy
J-11 Mr. end Mn. Harold Ali.n, Founteln
Yelle'(, girl
Mr . -Mn. Ronald Ortlz, Hunl· lnglon 9"<11, llO'( ,_Jt
Mr. end""'-· Fr-P ....... Hunt·
1no1on 8Ncn, bo'f
Mr. end ,,,,,.._ Wllll.,., Kr•lfl, Fou•,.
taln valley, bo'( ,_.
Gr•t ory Fltuer•do end Jull•ll•
Mall"'-lk'f. F_,taln Vell•'f, boy
Mr. •nd Mn. Hertlert Adams, Cotle
MIN, tlr1 Mr. end Mn. Robert Oecll9f', Cotle
MeN, llO'(
w•n••N MaDtCAL CENT•• ,_ ..
Mr. and Mrs.. Oevld Ar,....trono. Hunt·
lnQIOft 8MC11,t lrl. ,_It
Mt. •'"' Nila. RkherCI Allinger, Sen J 114111 Capl14r-. llO'( • ,,_IS
Mr . and "'1IL David ....... Hunt·
•no ton ee«Ji, t in. ,_t1
Mr. e"° Mrs.. Rutian Oe~. F-taln
Ve119'(,t lrl. ,_Jt
Mr .endMrll..JonnTorres,C.olteMeaa, boy. ,_.
Mr . end,,,,,,.., AIYW•nl, Cost• Meta,
boy.
Famous Bedroom Ensembles
at 2 0°/o Savings
.
Headboard•_.._,. .. ,
Draperiee -Boudofr Chairt Complete Interior Dleorattng Services
nettle ~REE~
• Weighty problem
ap9ears solved
Archbishop to get his pig .
DES MOINES, Iowa <AP> -
British and American officials
pitched ln to solve a weighty
problem, and lt looks as though
the Archbishop of Canterbury
may rinally aet hll gift Pia.
Archbishop Robert Runcle.·
who raises Berkshire hoaa as a
hobby, was 1iven the pig during
a visit to Iowa.last May. But Bri·
tain'a strict animal health rules
made It difficult to import the
hoa home.
A breakthrou1h came recenlly
when the Brillah aareed to
waive some of the stricter re·
quirement.s for animal import.a.
"Thlng1 IC>ok &ood now." said
Kirk Ferrell, district re pre ·
aentatlve in the office of U.S.
Sen. Roaer Jepaen, R·fowa, who
has had a major role lo the
neeollalions .
"We're waiting for the British
foreign minister to iaaue an Im·
port permit, which they have
agreed to do. They're making a
special case, and they have
waived some of the regulations
so we can get t,he hog shipped
over."
Besides British and American
officials and Jepsen's orfice, the
negotiation s have involved
veterinarians, church officials,
a nd an exporting rirm, Global
Swine Exchange of Iowa. Ltd ..
based in Ames, Iowa.
T r a n s po rting the pig,
however. is a weightier matter
now ~han it was in May. The
pig's weight has increased from
40 to 100 pounds.
BIRTHDAY NOTED -Rose
Kennedy. matriarch of the
political clan that has given
the country a, president and
two senators, celebrated her
9lst birthday Wednesday
with her family on Cape
Cod.
Her•'• Good Newel NO MORE FLEASll On Your Pet or In Your Homel
-NOYIN
IPPICTIYI
AOAINIT:
• fUA' •M)AOm • un ... • n,s,
·~ ·-Ot • CAllllllTlA Awn
• llU. """" • caam ·-.... ~
ONI SIHLI ltU•CMAA
••1111-ny .... ltfttpreltl ..... ....................
• unit works on sole silent uhroson1c wo11es
• sole to humans & pets
• uses only~ wotls power
• no special instollotton
• pests elimono1ed 1n 2 to 6 weeks
oa~ion
Pest Roi .Sales (714) 661-9191 (714) 760-7251
STEPHEN BROWN
LIQUIDATORS APPRAISERS
By Order of Major Furnffuf• a Carpet Manufoctur•r
SUNDAY, JULY 26 ~t0~~~0.~.
17751 Sky Park East, lrvlne, CA
Deeorator Furniture
Elegant ~ tumlture lncludlng: Sleepers • Loveseots • Ploypem a SecHonols.
Cocktoll, CoffH A End Tablet. avollobl• In d.corotor fabric• and Imported
hordWood trom•t.
Persian Carpets & Rags
Exquisite hondknotted silk a wooi.n Pe_.._ corpefl In tom• or the following
dellgnt: l<Olhon • Kerman • IChoroN<Jn e TobrlZ e Shiraz.
Hunting, Prayer • Animal Carpets. T™t•• co~ts ore ovollob'9 In many Illes. omee Equipment
An extensive aelectton of new and uaed offtce equipment lnclUdlng: Executtve O•lks,
Hermon Miiier Fumltur• e Bookco .. , e Fli.s e Stor0g9 Cabinets e Safes.
Conferenc• TObl• and Cholrt e IBM Seleclrlcs e 60 N•w Electronic Calculotora.
Ad'9r a Royal Slngle Element fVJ>9Wrftert e Mollroom Equlpm•nt and
Much, Much More.
------Futured Items lndude:------
Rou Top Desks e "Vegas" Slot Machine' e Hand Carved furniture,
Silk Carpet& e ExecuUve Offitx Furniture and Much, Much More.
To be sold in separate lots to highest bidder.
IMpeotloft: •rt. M. lat. 21 -9 a.m..' p.m.
fof llutflal9d Srochure Coll:
18730 OXNARD ST. e 1208 • TARZANA. CA 91356 • (213) 881·9377
VISA • MCJllterCord Welcomed
If You Want A Handsewn Loafer!
Huggins Has It e
SEBAGO
FOR WOMEN
The Finett Craftsmanship.
Sile a 4 -5 6
AA.AA x x
AAA x x x
AA x x x x
A x x x
x x x x x x
x x x x
.e •
7
x x x x
x x
x x
x x
x x
for women In Wee1u,,
Brown Leoth•r
GrHt Campus CompanloMI
• x x
x x
lC x
x x
x x
x x
YMr around comfon
anc1 11 •• n;lllty.
9 10
x x x
x ~ x
x x x
x x x
x x x
x x
ENVIRONMENT AL
awv.v SCOPING MEETING
What do you think about widening
Pacific Coast Highway?
• N
PROPOSAL
The California Department of Transportation (CAlTRANS) Is proP.C?sing to
widen State Rte 1 (PCH) from four to six lanH between Rt• 55 (Newport
Boulevard) and Golden West Street In the CltlH of Newport Beach and
Huntington Beach.
Thia Is one of the Initial steps In the project d•velopm•nt process. and it
will be used to guide future studies leading to the circulation of a Draft En·
· vlronmentol Impact Statem•nt (DEIS).
The reason for thla Scoping Meeting is to Insure that various public agen·
clea and any Interested persons .. ore Involved early in th• environmental pla~nlng process. The purpose of the meeting Is to identify the range of
alternotlves and the algnlflcant social. economic. and environmental
Issues which should be considered In depth In the DEIS.
Thia mfftlng will give you an opportunity to learn about certain features of
the project and comment on the declalon·moklng proce11.
WHIN AND WHIRi
The Scoping Meeting will be held on Wednesday. August 19th, at 7 p.m., In
the Huntington Beach City Council Chambers, at 2000 Main Strfft, Hun·
tlngton Beoch.
For further lnformo11on about this protect. contoc1:
or:
Mr. Mike Frey
CAlTRANS
(213) 620-2175
Mr. Al Gallardo
Federol Hlahwoy Admlnlstrotlon
{916) ~-9578
If you can't attend the meeting, you may send your written comments to:
CAL TitANS, District f11
Publlc Transportation Branch 120 South Spring Street
Lot Anoe'"· Callfomlo 90012
IF YOU CARE, COMEI
i .
.,
I • I I
..
:·
• ... ~ . . ...
..
Thurtday, Julv 23, 1981
Book
lists rights
DEAR PAT DUNN: Where can I contact
som eone about tenants' rights? I've bad
several problems with the condominium I
rent and letters to the real estate company
that owns it don't do any good. There's just
no response. It's a horrible feeling to just
keep sending rent to an address, yet not be·
ing a ble to communicate with the owner.
L.E., HuatlDgton Beach
Have you tried a persoaal vlllt to tlae real
estate company? Before yoa do tbls, learn
about your rights and respoaslbWUes as a
renter by readiag "Tenant•' Rights,"
published by Nolo Press. It's available in
most book stores and at some atatloaery
stores which sell legal forms. For help wtth
specific renta.I problems, you also can con-
tact the Orange Codnty Fair Homing Council
by phoning 835-0160.
Tax refund delays varied
DEAR PAT DUNN: My lax refund check
still hasn't arrived . What should I do -call
the Internal Revenue Service or write a let-
ter?
W.H., Huatiaston Beach
IRS says that refud clafflu cae be de·
layed for a variety of rea1ou: math errors;
Illegible entries and omission of entries; in·
valid Social Security numben; use of non-
standard forms; mlsslal W·2a; 108t or s&olen
checks; and undeliverable chttks where tax-
payers have moved and left no forwarding
address with the post ornce.
The first step la resolvlnl any tu prob·
lem Is to call the IRS. Aulators will re·
search your problem, provide specific hi·
strucUons, and in most cases inltlate the
neceuary action to process your refuel You
may be required to nu out a FoTm 3911,
"Taxpayer Statement Regarding Refund."
Each time you contact tbe IRS, you
should provide your n'°'e and address as
they appeared on your tall return, your ac-
tual name and address If different from your
tax form, your Social Security number (or
numbers lf you rued a joint retur•>. and the
type of form fUed.
The number to phone regarding refund
Inquiries ls (800) 688-6110.
Boating safety important
DEAR READERS: Now that boating
season l.s ln full swing, here are a few safety
tips from tbe U.S. Coast Guard.
Don't ride on sections of the boat not de-
signed for passengers, such as the bow, stern
or gunwale. It's too easy to fall off. Before
faelln1, close all doors, hatchet and ports to
keep guoline vapors outside the boat. After
fueling, ventilate all compartments aad
cbeck all machinery and fuel tank spaces for
fumes before startl•I the engine.
Carry a secondary meaas of propulsion,
such as an au.xlllary eaglne ror a motor boat,
or If you're sailing a small boat, a paddle. Be
sure to have a baUer.
U yoa capsize, and the boat noatt. stay
with It. People who leave a capsized boat
often underestimate the distance to shore and
tire, cramp and drown before reachlnl land.
Remember, a boat ls more vlllble than a
head bobbing la tbe water.
Before yoa 10 boat1a1, tell someone
where you're &olnl and wbea you expect to
re&ura. Leana weatlaer wantln1 slpals.
Flaally, earoU In • free 1afe-boatlac
couse sponsored by die Coast Guard. For
pamphlets oe boating salety, wrtte to the Of·
ftce of Boatlog Safety of tlae U.S. Coa1t
Gaard, M 7th St. S.W., Waslllnftoa, D.C., or
contact a local Coast Guard office.
I AD STARTS THURS.
ENDUIA LAVATORY
FAUCET WITH
POP-UP
2777
Thia ia what I call sophisticated
simplicity. Thia wuherleu top mount can
be installed in about 10 minutes. Chrome
finish.
......
PLUMB SHOP
ANTI SIPHON TOILET
TANI REPAIR KIT
4!s?os1
Thia'kit replaces all the moving parts in
the tank.
GLIDDEN
PAINT
SP RED
HOUSE PAINT
8!!
SPRED LATEX
GLOSS HOUSE &
TRIM PAINT
9!!
Thia ia one of Glidden' a
. finest. 100% latez. Holda up
in all kinda of weather. If you haven't
picked out a color to paint your hou.e,
don't sweat it...,.·,,. got thousands of
colon to chooee from.
BLACK I DECIO
STOWAWAY
STEP STOOL
18~
If you'd like to perspire (or ia that Hp.ire )
to gnat heights, get this. Adda 18W' to
your reach and folds down to l" wide for
storage. .
TBDMOCllP
PIOFESllOIAI.
GLUE IUl llT
18!?
BLACI I
DICIER
SHAIP 'I SAID
SENTRY
SAFES
CADET
#S-1
MAJOR
#S-8
All Sentry safes have passed the UL one hour 1700° F
test and rating. The Cadet has a combination
lock, a locking bolt, and a removable shelf.
The Major will store cash or ledger trays.
THE TANNERY
l 1?!
Hels-keep leather aoft and
suppl.. ( 0.., I wonder how
the cow who used to own that
leather feels about this kind
of thing.)
ST AR BRITE AUTO
CARE PRODUCTS
Thia stuff ... ma to be
pretty popular ( maybe
they know aomethinq I
don't ... try it, who knows
maybe you'll like it.)
~~~CTOR 199 PLUS 160~
POLY SYSTEM ONE 3!!
PUROLATOR
AUTO PRODUCTS
My motto ia to alway. k .. p
on the little car maintenance
things and avoid the big on .. ~u:....-u .... G"""u~, later on. (How profound.I ) 99c , .• PCV
VALVE
XSV OIL
FILTER
XSV AIR
FILTER 199
CASTIOL ITI
IOW/40 WT. •OTOI OIL
85~
I onC9 let my oil leffl get too low years
ago and it burned a couple of valves.
Neftr A4Jainl Limit two C&N9 per
customer.
A aood looldag bioycl. wtth 28"al.78"
Balloon Whit.w.U.. foam typeltf-handleb&r, ~ eout... m..u. l R.cl
flniah.
llUIUY 1111'1
2&" 10-IPDD
~ ILLVllOIS
&8•!79
SCOTTS GROW
PRODUCTS
Scott.a mak .. good stuff for all
your growablea. They've been
around a long time and they
really kn«?w their stuff.
• VEGETABLES YOUR CHOICE
• FLOWERS
•SHRUBS, TREES, 399 -~~ l~~·
HAPPY GIASS
·~"-I know why they named this "Happy
Grau," you don't have to water it, mow it,
or weed it. 2 year waJTanty. In 6 ft.
widtha.
6 FOOT CINZANO
UMBRELLA
3988
I always think of Europe and little
outdoor caf .. when I ... one of th.... (I
don't want to rush you but auppliea are
limited.)
MONARCH
MIRROR
WARDROBE
DOORS
48x80 6999
Th ... make your 9799 room ... m almotrt 60x80
twice the aiae.
Adjustable height 11799
and leveling. Nice 72x80 .
earth tone or bronu 14799 finiah .. in the L 9SxSO a.rt ...
\
I
:I
I
I I
I . I
-Orange Cout OAlL 'V PILOT/Thur9day, July 23, 1981
Taurus: Don't
permit fears
l'rfda1, July M
81 SYDNEY OMARJl
Aal c March :n·Aprll lt>' Food COJta and olhtr
household expenses could dominate scenario Emphaala
on Income. payments, inleresl rates and budael conn•ct
ed with "necessary" ltema. Taurus. Libra. Scorpio
natl\•ea play Important roles
TAURUS CAprll 20·May 20>: Don't permll fears. doubts
to dictate actions. Cycle hl&h your llmlna. Judament
HOROSCOPE
wur be on target. Envious associate could carry false ··boltror tales.'' ~fine terms. brlna objective Into focu11
W,aUh Places' UMINI I May 21.June 20> A&rttmml reached :at
claD(tnUne conference will prove beneficial You 11atn
a~s to privileged information. Past ravore art' re·
tuned your position ls strenathened throuah support
b'-ildJvldual who "pulls slrlngs.'' ClNCER 1June 21-July 22>: You tend to attract
pfHonJ who confide their problems. Be sympathetic. but
dOll'i permit vitality to be sapped by ·•psychic vam ·
plm." Emphasis on desires. hopes. wishes and payment
otdl\'idends. Watch Aries ~
tit:O 1 J uly 23-Aug. 221 · Set your own pare. highlight
llJ;lependence. originality and define ambitions Anolher
lavs key role. Focus on career. prestige. reputation.
y to fol1011. lhrough on promises You make signifi· c new rontacts Romanre rould be invoh•ed
VIRGO 1Aug 23·Sept. 221 Follow through on hunrh.
learn by sharing knowledge lnd1v1dual who 111ded )'OU 1n
past 1s due to make reappearanre Emphasis on travel.
communication and spiritual revelation Caneer, Lffl. ~q"'1rius natives rigure prominently.
LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 221. Opporlunily exists for you to
display humor. versatilily and to satisfy Intellectual
curiosity. Gemini, Virao •. Sagitlarlus persons rt1ure
.·RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY .
s. •• tr-..........
ltU HAHOI ILYU.
COSTA MISA -::J"-.1..:l IH
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
:"M/HA T'S A POPC.ORM PARTY?" :· . " . .
e ,,. ......... -· HC ....... ' •,..:..5' ,._ M c.lf. : : Olfy fw ....._ S..1a1u1 ...... ......... -. •
• ._ Cle• &NIJ _.. pecltepd .. ..... we __, ..... • ., .... ,,.u • • • • .. ... ,..., _ ...._.,...,. L*'r •
: PO PC ORM PARTIES UNUMITID :
: • CAl.L 17141 556-2330 : •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
'ICTITIOUI au11 .....
leAIM ITAHMllNT
Tll• 1911-lfte PffMMlt art dol111
Wllnett•:
OIAMONO ST"l!E T
... 0 .. E"TIU, HO! Oo¥e Stt'ttt. S..ltt .,. .... .,.,, .. .,.. Galllcinil• two.
CAll"E .. Tl!ll & ASSOCIATES, a
Calll1r11la cor.,.r111.i1. 1401 Oov1
ltr11t. hll• oo, N•w.,.rt l11e11. GallltrllU ......
nava ~I! & ASSOCIATES,
INC •• a c:.tlfwftia ~allOfl, U01
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
o.v. ser-. ..... •· .....,_, ._,,, "'"'" C..11.,.,... ...... 'ICTITIOUI autl .. IU
...... Maerl&~lat" MAMCl1'ATHMUfT ==:;. Meon TIM IOllOwl .. --It dtlflt IMrtl>
Tlllt __. wa fllld wttll l"9 ""'c~ln TOWING sa"v1ca , 1n
c:-ffClef1llf0r81199C-y011Jlllf 1ne1uttr11 1 Way, Cola Mau,
•· "11• C.alllornl• tat:r1 ... , ... a_., .........,. .. ..._ 0 & W T-... 111(., C.lltomla, •t• .....,.,_. ......,~ 1«1 Ollmt Wey, C.la Mew, C.llf9rftla
'2•27 . ..... 0""1t .. J1tt Tltlt llutlntlil It ~CM 1>y a C:W· .............. CllllNrllll....a _., ....
C'1•1.... '-"'UIM o.w TtWlllt Inc •• G. w.,,,. Miiier, """' "'*I .... Or ... C-JC Oelff ....... Tlllt Nttt1Nm w• Ill• WIOI tN '""' '· , .. n. .. 1tel M1•1 c-1, ,._ .. OrMlt c:.tunt, ... ""''
PUBUC NOTICE
PtCTtTt ......... ...,. ITAT9.Me"1'
TM ,......_ ,__ are M4nt ..._.;
INTl•TAINMIENT
CO.UULTANU ANO MODau
UNLIMITIO, UU Naw11ort
IMI••.,.•· C:.lo Meoe. Clllftnlle .....,
Mat .. TMIMllllll, 21 tlllllMP,
ll'Wla,~t111• Pll~•=-111•, 11 llllllaal. '"""'· ,.,,. TM• ........ I• ,_.~ ... lrf a ....,.. ......... .... .....,_,.......,
TIMI .....,_.. -,,... wttll .... c..itT ~"Or ... Gellllty ... ,,..., '· ""· .,...
....._. ar .... c..a °"'"' .,..._ My'{"• .. "" tl1t<lt.
P\19UC NOTICE
14,1tl1
His hiccups are embarrassing
SUCCESSllUL PSOPLS
A•K CWTSN YEAV. 901"N•
TO OTMl'I'~ WHO
ARE NOT AUCCEhl"UL.
•~o
TO OTMlrAS
WMO ~RC .
••• 1)1•1
prominently Cr\'11l1vr rln11nl'ln1 11 rnaJur 111tt 11f )'uur
~uonal •c~n11rlo
SCORPIO c<kt 23 Nov 21 > Rf. awMrt of tJel•ll•. l'h•1•k
Fine print 11nd bt!come famlller with le1al rlaht•. perml11lon11 You'll bo aakt'd to makt• publlr 1p1)011r1nn.
lo exph1ln m t'thod111 Mnd to ''frlfy f1rt11 , rt1utt11
SAG l11'Aftll'8 I Nov 22 Der 21 1 lndlvldu1I •l)'lu
1hln t11 throuah baalc IUUl'll will btt reaolvtd and you
gain pnpularlty among peers. Oomlnl. Vlrao and 1mothrr
Saatttarlan play Important roles Wh11t 1ppurnd to btt 11
"loat cawie' ts due to boomt•r11n111n >'"ur favor CAPRICORN ll>et 22·J 11n 19 t. <.:hunae. ocrur In vol v
Ins emollonal responses and domestic 11trl1lra Taur u1.
Llbru. Sc1>rplo persons play st11nlflc11nt rolea F OC'UI on
sperulation, cre11tlve endea\'Ors. children and J1me11 of
skill Stirk with number 61
AQtlARlll <Jun 20·1"eb 18 1 Purchaal'S and nil's
elaim spolllAht . emphus1s 1>n strut'lure, deal&n and resl
dence Longstanding transaction Is closer to romplel1on
than mi&ht be indicated b) s urf are •ppt>arances l'anrer ,
Srorp10. P1scell play key roles.
PISCES c Feb 19·March 201: By sending out numerous
"(eelers" \'OU will receive at least two legitimate
responses 'Emph11sis on trips . messages. calls and in·
qulrles which could Improve prospects for security.
10EAR ANN LANDERS: I 1m wrttln1 about
mY hutb1t1d. No, he doe1n1t chaae women. drink to
txce11 or 11mblt away hit paycheck. The prob·
ltm: He 1et.a tht hiccups at the damedett Umea,
1nd hla hlckln• can be heard a block away. When
he l•ll the hlccupa at. the theater. the movlea, dur·
ln1 a lecture or (n church, J ••t to embarraaaed I
want to crawl under the seat.
Do you, or any or your conaultant.t, know ot a
1ur1 cure for this pesky pla,ue? I'd be
GRATEFUL FOREVER IN WHITE PLAINS
Otar Wlllte Plalu: Carry a packet of
1ranul1&ed 1u1ar la your p1tne. Oae packetlul,
tall.ea dry, placed oa &be toa1ue aDd allowed lo dl•·
1olve, wUI •lop tbe hiccups In IO ca1e1 out of lot.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I won't 10 Into detail
here, but J have known for aeveral weeks that a
certain puty has been wantint to aerve me with a
aummona I 1ucceaafuUy avoided the server until
last nl1ht.
J was havln1 s upper in my home, and a
jletntll'man was dining with me. When the doorbell
rana, J suspected it might be the aummons and
aaked my 1uest to go to the door and uy J was not
al home. There Is a chain on the door, as well as a
ptiephole from which one can look out but not in.
My friend went to the door, saw the summons
server and said, "Mrs. --is not at home.''
When the party saidJ 'l can't hear you," my friend
unwisely cracked the door open. but the chain was
still on. The summons server quickly clipped the
chain with some extraordinary scissors, shoved
my friend out of the way and walked in.
He saw me seated at the table, handed me the
summons and said, "You gave me a darned good
chase. but I finally nailed you."
I am burned up about this because the man
pushed his way Into my home. Must I appear in
court regardless? What do you say, Ann?
-FRIED IN FLUSHING
Dear Fried: Wbat I HT ctoeu•, coa•t .•• , •
l1wyer whom I consulted HY• If >'°" waat to n11tt
tbe 1u.mmoa1 you caa do It. A ternr mutt l•la
peaceful ealry, or the servla1 of &be 1ummoa1 ll
oot valid.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: For 25 years my
husband has sat on his fat rump i nd had every·
thing carried to him Every time I walk by, It 's,
Ul lllllll
"Bring me a beer on your way back," or, "How
about a bag of pretzels?"
We have four teens and he is doing the same
with them. I don't want my kids to treat their
spouses t he way their dad treats me. I am
ashamed of this situation because I contributed to
it.
Should I explain to my children that this is not
acceptable behavior and I am not going to do it
anymore and they shouldn't either? What If this
starts family fights? Please help me, A.nn.
-A DUMB HA NDMAIDEN
Deir Dumb: Arter 25 yeart of catering lo His
Royal Majes ty you will have a hard time getting
him off his piazza.
CbUd·parent relationship• are different from
spouses. KJds should do chores for parents when
asked -bul It should nol be a master·1lave at·
range menl. Jn all fairness tbe kids should give
HIM a chance to reciprocate.
TeU your husband that on Monday·Wedne1d1y·
Friday-and·Saturday you wUI retch and carry for
him. On Tueaday·Thursday-and-Sunday It's his
turn. I hope It works, but I wouldn't bet the rent.
SICK
.\~DTIRED?
carrlages•tea
carts*trikes
rol lerskates •
walker!> .oys
*wagons••••
scooters*hot
rods*coupes•
trailers*hard
tops*convert-
ibles•motor
homes*lawn
mowers*timos
•corporate
headquarters
•garden carts
Model A 's .. ••
SIZZLIM' SUMMER
IF SOMEONE YOU
LOVE IS HURTING
(And you are hurting too)
Because of
.\LCOHOLIS~l
or other chemical dependency @ Va ·to i/2 off!
Learn how you can help now! Yes, there is
something you can do -even if the victim
won't seek help. If it's got
wheels,
you'll move
it faster in a
Daily Pilot
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friendly ad-
viser will
help you
fashions for sunup to sundown
one morl~down only!
Attend Our Free
Community Education AlcohoHsm
Intervention Program. Every
Saturday Morning, 1oam til Noon
STARTS THURS., JULY 23RD
~U~IA'L 'Fashion~
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301 Victor ia Street
Costa Mesa, CA 92627
(714) 642·2734 Ex. 129
Approved for Medicare turn your
wheels into
cash.
• ~ SURF ANO SANO SHOPPING VILLAGE
~· 146S South C1\~s1 Highway, Laguna lk~i:h C'A 926S I
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
ITATIE ..... TCW ,.CTITIOUI au1ue1u ,.en nous aUMNIEU WITMCMIAWAL ,ltOM
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Falrvlaw llCI., CeMa Met.a, CA '2W. Haro11 Cr., H11nll111lon aaacll, at a tanaral "artnar from llll
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PUBLIC NOTICE
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,97.4774
PUBLIC NOTICE
SUNalCNI COUaT
0, CALl..oll .. IA
COUNTY CW Otl ..... IE 7WCl.tcC..-~. ......... C..""1
.. L.AINTIFF: L.O•EN ""ARIE
KING
Dl!FliNOANT: ""ICHEL.E L.EA
L.ANCINA. NOEL. H. OOUL.E, OOES I
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l'ICTITIOUI aUSINEU
MAMIE STATl!Ma .. T T"• 1•11-lno ""ons ore doing llvslneun.
aouzy AOVOE. JllO N••llOft
Av•nue, Newpor1 .. ec:ll, C•lllOflllt
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ao pro,.,.u r ao 11111 '°"' wrllt•11 J.,1, 2.•.1 .. u .1"1 1tff41 rt-110 II llrf, ,,.., lie filed Oii lime.
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PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI 01' T"USTIEE't SAL.I!
T.t ..... _,..f
T.O. SERVICE COMPANY ts duly
ICll>Olniecl Trv-Ullder Ille lollowlfto -rlbod .._. ot trust Wll .. L. SEL.L.
AT PU9L.IC AUCTION TO THI!
HIG ... EST llOOEA FOR CASH, (payable al time ot wi. In lawful
mone, 01 Ille U"ll•tl a ll rlglll,
11111 -In-I C-ytel 10 -""'" l'tlld lly 11 unClltr Mid ~of Trvst ltt
1he pr11119,,, lla,.lnel•r dttoerllled:
TAUSTOA Ol!981E GROSS, •
m•rrled wom•n •s her w•• ano
Mptrele prclpef1'
9 EHEFICIAA Y EVA M 8AKEA, a widow
Recor-Augint "· "" •S IMlr HO 1»16 In llooti u2n p-HI of OI·
llclal Records In the office llf Ille
AKO,..., oll 0rll9 County; Hid dOeCI
01 1rut1 dttcrlbu '"• 1011owln1
Pt'OIM'1'f:
An lll\lllvt-'-' 1"1t1'9SC In ...., to;
L.ol 200, Traci 1112, as per m111> ••·
corded Ill llOOll ~. "'9t '' '""' ft In· cku lve ot MIKallaNOUs rn19t, In Ille
llfllct ol Ult ~y rec;O<dtr of Mid ,_.,
2120 11..-.1< AW , Coate MeM, CA ,,.,,
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Trust, llY ,_of • ..,_" o< ftlautt In 1111 otlll .. llons M<Uftd 11 ..... .,.
1191'910tvro HK\A9d -.......... lo the uftderM9ned • written Oec:laratloll
of Otfeult -Demand for 5111, aftll
wrllttll llOlk • ol llrea<ll .,.,, ol •IOc1ioll
IO CIUM thl under~ 10 Mii .. Id
p,_,1, lo wtltly *41 otllltatleM •
end thereafter Illa uoldltf tlt"M C_.
.aid notice of -11 a(ld of ••ec:llioll to
tie ltKOf'OM Mlf<ll IJ, 1•1 M IMtr
Ne . I,._ Ill_. 1Jtn ..... HJ, $11141
.. •• •Ill be ,_, INt w"'*"I c..,..
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I It was. ehristnias in July
Service awards presented to Hoag Hospital volunteers
ly MAJlY JANI 8fA•4,.....0 Of ... ...,,..... If .
Balboa Island received 500-hour pins.
T be JunJora °' Social Service Auxiliary created a Christmas ln July entry to a
cotktail party held ln Los An&eles.
Others recoenized for workine 100 hours
each Include Frank Hopkins and Roselyn
Rie mann of Corona del Mar, Ann Bastedo and
Jean Kallmes of Newport Beach and Sally Ken-
nedy, Helen Cummins and Pal Warman of
Costa Mesa. A 12·fo•t Frosty the Snowman
areeted au.ta '° rem• \hem or the group's
46tb annual Candlelitbt h.11 scheduled for Dec.
12 at the Beverly HUf.oa Httel.
Caodystripers (the junior auxiliary> who
were honored for volunteer work include Kelly
Golsarry with 750 hours, Day Bishop with 250
hours, Ann Farrow and Susan Gavelln for 150
hours, Monique Huebel and Mariella Paldl with
100 hours and JuUe Borda, Juli Harlan and
Tracy Machnikowski with 50 hours.
Proceeds frem tile ball aupport Re&is
House, a commualty tenter in West Los
Anceles.
The coclrtall •arty was held in the
warehouse and we= of Daly Desiens, which will Cf'eate -WM for the December
eala, so guelY ettjo ieeina how floral de·
signers create arrtn~•· T he Arts and Crafts Center in Irvine in-
vites everyone to its second annual
"Free Beans With Every Bowl" chili
bean bonanza from 4 to 8 p.m. Satur· A Santa Claus, Ill .-,fl complete with harp
and Christmas sweets acWed to the festivities,
and among the Orange C9Unt1ana who attended
the party were Mr. and Mn. Murton Munson
and Mr. and Hrs. Earle Ille of Newport Beach.
day. .
Anyone who buys a handcrafted ceramic
bowl can enjoy a complete free buffet dinner,
including homemade chili, cornbread, salad
and iced tea.
J acqwe Miller, president of the Auxiliary
of Hoa& Hoepilal, recently gave service
awardl for hospital volunteers.
Folk music and other entertainment will
complete the evening, held at the corner of
Walnut and Yale avenues in Heritage Park.
Bea Lace of Newport Beach re·
ceived a 6,500-hour pin, Betty Rima or Costa
Mesa was given a 1,,500-hour pin and Esther Lin-
dell of Laguna Beach waa awarded a 1,000·
hour pin.
Prices of the bowls begin at $4, and they'll
be available on a first-come, first·served basis.
Proceeds from the evening will fO toward
special equipment and programs at the crafts
center. More information is available by calling
552·1078. Kay Johnson of Balboa and Ann Maxwell of
One saving grace
Doris could aluxiys find the car
You have to understand about
Doris.
We've never been too cruy about
her. She's the type of.woman who, if
you said you were golnl to give birth
to a Savior next weel, would say,
"Me , too!"
For the last five yeatt, -~ft invit·
ed Doris to go into ...,. and have
lunch with us. We fte94I Iller. She is
1111n111c1!
the only woman we kaow who can re-
member where we parked the car.
The rest of us have tried it with no
success. We have tried writing It
down. We have tried to memorize it
through word association. We have
even assigned the level to one to re·
member. the color to anot.ber and the
direction to another. But a ·s no use.
We end up wandering around and
around until we faint fN>m exbaus·
tion or emissions. ,.!.
We have come to the C9dusion
that finding your car ls a· atA. You
either have it or yolf doa',l. ~s hu
it. We fl.J'St di.Kove'ted it .. ~ day
when we were wanderillg ~la a
garage in ablolute panic. Hele1a said.
"Can't any of yotl retn:e1nber
anything about the level we •p.rked
on?''
Grace said. "Of course. We were
facing a lot of signs that said, "DO
NOT ENTER!''
"But what color was it? .. I asked.
"Red. All the signs were in red."
"Not the signs. The level."
"If we could just find the car door I
scraped while opening mine, we're
parked right next lo il." said Helen.
"Frankly." I said. "I think the car
has moved. Did you put the emergen-
cy brake on. Grace?"
"I thought you put it on." she said.
"Why would I put it on? You 're
driving."
"Oh," she snapped_ .. You could
have fooled me."
We had just decided to go to a mov -
ie and wait until all the cars cleared
out and lake lhe one that was left
when we ran into Doris.
"Looking for your car?" she
chided. "It's In Section A on the Red
level, East concourse, Stall CRE-
CZI, the third from the end, parked
next to a Japanese Import with a
Japanese dog in the window that
bows when the brakes go on."
"How did you know all that?" we
asked.
"I saw you when yot.r drove in."
Doris is a bore, she's uncouth, she
brags about her kids. she borrows
money for lunch, she never pays full
price for anything you have just
bought, and she's never ready when
you drop by for her, but we wouldn't
leave home without her.
Gorilla rattles zookeepers
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP> -Where does
a 300-pound gorilla sit? Anywwe he
likes, as long as he doesn't trash the
place.
The Toledo 1.oo hat come te that
conclusion about Max, a 16-yar-old
,orilla brought here tllree ytars ago
rom West Germaa y . William
Dennler, the zoo dlr~ N.id the
animal "is just a big tld. ~ likes to
scare people." , ·
Max lunges against tM at1AAnurn
bars ot bis cage and bu ~ and
rattled them nearly to bits, leaving the
zoo no choice but to replace the bars
with stronger. but more costly, stain-
less steel.
Estimates "are really up in the air
right now," Dennler said, but it could
cost $100,000 to $150,000 to hold down
the damage of a Big Max attack. he
said.
"Max is a peculiar animal," said
Philip Skelden, the former zoo direc-
tor , who described the gorilla as "a
hammer, superactive, a pounder."
Final Clearance Sale
on
spring and Summer ·
· Merchandise
• Discounts to
Open Mon., Tues., Wed.
Fri., Sat. till 6:00
Thurs. till 9:00
1ii('7dt and Irvine ~TCLIFF PLAZA
NEWPORT BEACH
548~121
Admiring the snowman are Charlene Laraneta f from leftJ, Penny Mun.!on , and Sonia and Earle Ike.
MEN>s P0PUN SlAO<s
fr~e lrad11ron,,/ .. ,,, .. $ 15 99 ~· 5alvar100. t:"/er ~ill pOp/jn s/.,cks
ors. "411sts 28·38 R SOffed ~ alld eqular~ S25 S27
JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS
$ 599-56:,ent d colofiul'"
Terrlllc salllngs ~~n as mer lashloo Junio" shlrlS. peffec1 (Of nu• sum S·M·L. Regularly \8·\10
SMes and brands ~ are repr~taffw of /he seledlon and ~ not be In all slom .. Sale prices good 7 I 22 thru 71 ~ on/iy.
:. •'
t I
' I
..... ... '
I '
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,. .. .. .. ,. ...... . ,,, ...
.. ' . ' ......
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tMll 1 . ~· ,, .... ~
• : ·'4
·~ •
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..
Orange Coaat OAJLY PILOT/Thursday, July 23, 1981
lleitven'y Valley ski lift accident causes named
IAN JJlANCISCO (AP> -A tower removed from a Heavenly
Vaftey 1kl Utt contributed to an
accident that Injured 17 people
wbo fell to the ground at the re·
aorl April 5, the U.S. Forest
Service hu reported.
The accident tossed victinu u
far aa SO feel to the snow below
and' brou1hl injuries rangln1
frosp cuts and bruises to severe
head and back problems, lnclud·
ln1 a skull fracture.
In a report released on the
Rld1e Lilt failure, the Forest
Service said the accident OC·
curred In two stages and that
patsen1er1 were ejected by "the
-sudden drop of the chairs."
The prKl1t cau11 of the llrtt
1ta1e ol the derailment could not
be Identified, accordln1 to
service spo kesman John
Belluardo.
A state report has not been re-
leased
Belluardo, Quotlna from the
federal report. said a haul rope
slipped from Its groove, slid
throuah a cat>le catcher and
then fell to the 1round.
'1Becau1e the cable catcher
did not retain the haul rope and
Jrlp," Belluardo quoted from
the report, "pa11engera were
ejected by the sudden drop of
the ch11Jr1.
··A secondtary rHctlon or the
. , ..........
··~FLY MANIA -Joan Levine munches on
10-.e fruit and models a medfly T-shirt at
Santa Cruz where entrepreheurs try to cash
iron the fruit fly controversy in Northern
California.
Operatio~ safer
in "!.Jusy lwspitals
BOSTON <AP) -Routine operations result m
fewer complications if they are performed at busy
hospjtals, not ones where the surgery is rarely
do f. a study says.
'The more you do, the better you get." said
Dr. Bruce F. Farber. who directed the study.
Researchers at the University of Virginia kept
figures on post-surgical infections at 22 hospitals.
ovet 29 months. They found such infections are
significantly less common at big hospitals that do
many operations. hlbllchl•
rope cauaed a rapid rlee and fall
of the chairs, ejectlnt more
passengers. The motion of the
rope caused a third derall·
ment."
He said invest11ators believe
modifications made to the
chairllft in the summer of 1980
-the removal of a second tower
supporting the Ridge Lift ..-
have been "Identified definitely
as being a contrlbutlnj factor"
in the lift's failure.
Critics have blamed removal
of the tower for Increased swing
or the chairlift during operation.
The resort Is on National
Forest land and operate~ with a
federal permit Belluardo said
the Forett Service has not de·
clded what, lt any, action to
take.
Millions or dollars In claims
have been filed against the state
on behalf or victims. who charge
the Rldae Lift should have been
closed after a state inspection
found wlesed problemt.
In addJtJon to those Injured, 80
to 75 people had lo be evacuated.
M ichclla Aliot.o, the 12·year·
old granddaughter or former
San 1-~ranclsco Mayor Joseph
Alioto. suffered severe back and
leg injuries.
So vie t s u s ing d um dums?
LONDON (AP > -Soviet
soldiers are being issued in-
ternationally outlawed "dum
dum'' bullets, which cause gap·
ing wounds and can rip bodies
apart, the authoritative Jane's
Infantry Weapons reported.
The annual survey said in Its
latest edlUon that the Soviets
were making dum dum am-
munition for new 5.45mm rlfiea
Introduced lnto the Soviet army.
Jane's said it got the Inform&·
lion from Western sources.
have a banana • • • chair!
Multl-poaltlon banana chaise made of strong, comfortable vinyl strapping over
steel frame .
' . '
A report on the research was published in
today's New England Journal of Medicine. All of our hibachi• have cast Iron body,
woodtn baH and handlea. Take your
choice.
protect your Investment
For clean and lustrous plastic. rubber &
vinyls, treat them to Armor-All
on your way out of
sttclly 11tu1ttons
protecta metal. loosens ¥
become part of
the chain 1111'1
With the Homellte 10" gas
The doctors reviewed the results of 25.941
hysterectomies, colon removals, hernia opera·
lions, gallbladder removals. appendectomies,
vettebra removals and Caesarean sections.
Infections were far fewer at hospitals that do
the surgery often. The only exceptions were for
vertebra removals and Caesarean sections. The in·
fectlon rate for these operations were similar, re·
gardless or how often they were done.
10"x10'' .....,., ..... s." ......... 3.81
10"x17" t1MM1, ,.... '·" ........ 5.11
10''x17" wftli l .. s, ree. 14.tS ...... 9.88
411., ..... 1." ................. 1.29
I II., ..... J.4t ................ 2.29
"11., , ... '·" ............... 4.49
WD-40 1top1 squeaks. 99"
rusted pane. 2 oz. Reg 1.49
'oz., .... 2.Jf ...................... ..
12 OI., .... 2.H ................... 2.21
chain saw. It weighs Iese 84'' than S'n Iba. Automatic
olllng. #XL 10. Reg. 94.95
Post-surgical infections are rarely fatal.
··They tend to double the length of stay in the
hospital. and they generally double the cost." said
Farber, now on the staff or Massachusetts General
Hospital.
The report said that high infection rates after
operations result from poor surgical technique.
Farber speculated that surgeons at hospitals
where these operations rarely happen are less ex·
perlenced. the anesthesiologists and nurses are
less skilled and the equipment is not as good.
ln general, small hospitals have the fewest
ope:utions.
"Certain small hospitals in this study did very
well," Farber said. "This is not a total indictment
of s mall hospitals. But I would not be interested in
having my surgery performed at a hos pital where
there is llltle s urgery of that type being done."
Infection rates were 30 percent at hospitals
that did less than 50 hernia operations in the 29
'rp<Nlths, compared to 6 percent al hospitals that
pedormed.350.
· There was an 18 percent infection rate for
ityaterectomies at hospitals that did 50 of these
P.rocedures, compared with 6 percent at the ones
~al performed 350.
Rcakistani wo01en 1 • ~a p model ban
? " I
· lkARACHI, Pakistan <AP> -A coalition of 18
•omen's groups is protesting the Pakistani gov-
arn91ent's proposed ban on female models in
tele~ialon and.radio commercials.
The federal information minister, Raja
~&hurul Haq, said this month that the government
jirjRoted the ban because-"women were being ex·
~ u sex obje(ts, wblch was un-Islamlc."
!llama Llaquat All Khan, president of the All·
tan Women'• Association, told the coallUon
lhe hu written President Gen. Mohammad
uJ.ltaq to protest the federal government's
t brings $19,000
RONTO CAP) -A whalebone carvlnl by
A.tbevak aold for $19,000, a record for
work of art, Sot.beby Parke Bernet an·
'ar.tnt, of a dancer wttb a drum, •••
by aa .madeaUll.ci v...-. • ., collector wt.,bone . The previout lqla ,nee paid won I& a lothtbJ aueUID ... SIJ,000.
---... BtMmo llldlU. al nll'lMrD Cuada Mw ntalnid their tradltioDal llflll;te.
J
tlnkl I lot
7 piece torch kit lnclud"
propane tank wttl'I brua
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Dally Pilat
THURSOAY,JULY23, 1981 The Reagan. administration
blames Jimmy Carter for
economic decline ... C5
MOVIES C8
COMICS C10
TELEVISION C11
FUN IN THE SUN -Del Mar Thoroughbred Club opened its 42nd season Wed-
nesday, and nearly 30,000 racing fans were on hand for the occasion. Racing
enthusiast Jay Rose (left) makes a thorough study of the entries for the next
race, while (from left) Peggy West, Mary Hendry and Howard Rey combine
for a study in contrast as they watch the two-rear--0ld maiden fillies in the
second race.
Lopes
blasts
'circus'
TORRANCE <AP > -Davey
Lopes of the Dodgers Is unhappy
with the way the baseball talkt
are going and had some word.I of
criticism for teammate St.evl
Gar vey, who ls beinl paid dur·
ing the major lea1ue atrike.
"The whole thing ls a circus."
said Lopes, referrin1 to the
negotiations over the atrike.
"Each side has handled It poor-
ly. What is t he player•' ex-
ecutive board doing ln ne1otia·
lions? I don't think they have
c redentials to be in a labor
meeting."
THE DODGERS' All-star
second-baseman expressed his
frustration over the strike
stalemate in an interview with
the South Bay Daily Breeze.
··Do Doug DeCinces and Bob
Boone h ave legal back ·
grounds?" .asked Lopes. "I
didn't see any postal clerks go-
ing into their negotiations. N. an
e ntity, we have become the
laughing stock of the United
States. Everybody's laughing at
us . We are not to be respected as
a union."
It was reported last week that
Garvey and teammate Derrel
Thomas are being paid by the
club during the strike. which
began June 12. r
"We all voted to st.rike, and
now jus t what does bis
(Garvey's> vote mean?" uked
Lopes. "It means absolutely
nothing for anybody who accepts
money. regardless of their inted-
ti o n s . I think it 's ve r r
hypocritical.
• 'TIUS JS ONE of the rea~
players get made to look lik~
jerks. This stuff snowballs, it's
all bad public relations. People
see this and they assume every-
!>od y_ is ~tting paid. Tbat's
why we are having a problem
with the public."
wm or lose, they're hav.ing a good time
Lopes said he feels there will
be resentment s hown toward
Garvey when the strike enda.
''I will not hold any grudges,
but I think you'r e gotn1 to see
some hostilities toward the CUYf
who get paid. especially by some
or the players who could bavt
done the same thing but didn't,''
said Lopes .
It's just one big rxirty at Del Mar where fans come to bet , win, drink and enjoy the sun
By JOHNSEVANO
Of Ute Dally ...... l\llH
DEL MAR -Cars were lining In-
ters tale 5 in both directions are far as the
eye could see.
Parking attendants were feverishly
herding the automobiles into their collec·
live spaces.
Thousands of people were pushing their
way through the front gates, eager to
start their day's activities.
Why all the excite ment?
We ll, if you've never been to the Del
Mar race track. you probably wouldn't
understand.
The track, in existence since 1937. has
grown tremendously over the past de-
cade (the Del Mar Thoroughbred Club
look over operation in 1970).
In 11 seasons. attendance has risen 102
percent. while the mutuel handle has in-
creased an incredible 202 percent. In 1980
alone. attendance totaled 821,733 for 43
days, up 9th percent from the previous
summer.
For the die-hard race fans. Del Mar is
probably no different than Santa Anita,
Hollywood Park or Los Alamitos, for that
matter. All the track represents is
another place to bet. and another day of
winning or losing.
"Because Kay Is my middle name,"
was her logical reply.
The foursome, based on sound reason-
ing, decided to follow the lady's advice.
Lucky Kay R. paid $8.80 to win in the
second. lending credence to the absurdity
and run -that takes place here.
The buildings, which house the ticket
windows, are of Spanish architecture. A new comer almost gets the feeling he's in
a Mexican villa.
Bettors who don't want to fight the
crowds along the track. huddle around
televisions posted within the complex.
rooting for their horse to finish first.
windows to collect their payoffs, while
losers shuffle through their racing forms
in an attempt to recoup.
·'It's almost like a country afmospbere
out here," said Jerry Martin of Long
Beach "Everybody would like to win. but
"I remember when this was nothing.
Now, they're building everything out
here. I like coming here because people
go for the fun of it.
"I don't care where yo u walk around
here, people are having a good time -
young and old."
Lopes said he supports the
strike, but is upset about some
of the statements from player
representatives.
"The last thing I want to do is
pick up a paper and read Dou1
DeCinces· synopsis about the
players' feelings because he is
not qualified and he doesn't
know what he's talking about,"
said Lopes. "This 'forget the
season' altitude really eats al
me. Before we do that, brother,
we better stop and take a vote.
Nestled amongst the residential rolling
hills of this community, and with the
Pacific Ocean just a stone's throw to the
west. Del Mar represents more than just
a track.
Outs ide, w agerer s, ne rvous l y
For the majority, however -and Wed -clutching their tickets, cheer their
nesday's opening day crowd (26,762 ) in favorites every in choflheway.
Del Mar will run continuously. except
Tuesdays, through Sept. 9. Twenty-eight
stakes races are scheduled including the
$150,000 Del Mar Handicap on Labor Day
<Sept. 7), and the Del Mar Futurity on
closing day. Post time is 2 p.m.
"WE ALL BETTER stop and
think about that before we get so
deep in this strike that we can't
dig ourselves out. We've got to
gel back to the fi eld. It's my life.
it's my livelihood." The atmosphere. the scenery. the en·
tertainment -the setting is more con-
ducive toa social event.
particular -Del Mar was more than just a betting complex . . . it was a party ··See who breaks from the gate first.·· said one person. Lopes said he hasn't heard
an y thing from any playe~
representative, including the
Dodgers' Jerry Reuss.
Groups or four or more, carrying "Don·tradeonmenow,"yelledanother
lounge chairs and ice coolers. were the as they came into the stretch.
Of course. although it's a perfect family
setting, there will always be the hard-line
track enthusiasts, too" norm. not the exception. ·•I came here to bet. win. drink and en-
joy the sun,'' said Lorilel Gottschalk .
"The atmosphere is much different
here," added Kathy Hunt. "The type of
people are more friendly -and it's a
younger group.··
"He's going to take him. Look , he's go-" Let's bet on Lucky Kay R .... said one ing to take him," hollered another as the
lady to her group before the start of the horses cametothefinlshline.
··My mind is geared to one thing,'' said
Charlie Spindle, "and that's making
money. I don't let all this scenery distract
me ... exceptthewomen."
"The only thing I've seen is
wha t I 've read I n tbe
n e w spapers," said Lopes.
"Who's Jerry Reuss? ls be sU ..
our player rep." second race. The cheers and moans al a race's end
"Why?" asked her male co_m_panl __ on_. ____ a_re_s_im_uJ_t_an_eou~. Winners hurry to the
McElhany, Kiernan
eye Laguna upset
By CURT SEEDEN people in Laguna Beach who
Df ... Delly........... didn't know I had moved to When Ron McEJhany gradual-Tucson."
ed from San Die10 State with a "I had the a bility to play
business marketing degree, the · another year," McElhany con-
Laguna Beach resident knew he tinues. "But Phoenix juat didn't
had a nice conservative business bave the charm or Tucson.
future ahead of h im. Tucson had a mystique about it
There was a s tint as an -somethJng like Laguna.''
en1lneer for an aerospace com-McElbany grew up in Laguna
pany, and I ater the sales Beach -Emerald Bay, to be ex-
• representative Job he now bolds act -and has been playing
at an automated packaging cor-competitive volleyball off and on
poratlon. for the pa.st 14 yeara.
But, for one year, McElhany He brings his volleybaU talent
ued another one of bis talents -to Laguna's Main Beach this
playing profesaional volleyball weekend for the third annuaJ
ln tbe now defunct International Cuervo Laguna Beach Open
Volleyball Anoclation. The P~ beach volleyball tournament. r .. sloul sporit world took him . htom tbe .,01y f Onflnes of His partner is former Lasunan
1-JIUDa Beach to Tucson. Gre1 Kleman.
Mc!!lboy earned about Sl.000 A 1raduale of Lafuna Beach
I month plus expense• ror the Hl1b. McElhany just miased us-
Tue._ Tur41ll01M. th•l ...,_, iJlS bit volleyb•ll tal•ll OD the ~ ,..e up the rote ot a pro. prep level. The reason -
lilalona.l athJet• tbe next year volMJMll didn't become a team
b be wa1 drafted b1 sport at lAIUD• until the year alter be traduated.
only aavtn1 irace 1bout Stlll, Jie went to UC Santi
. ._,, ... In Tur.son wu tbal we Barbara wbtte be played col· ti•• out to Caatfornl• 4111te le1lfte baJI one year before Oftea .. p1aJ tbc11e IVA a.am," tr1n1ftrr1ne to San Dle10 State
Mi] .., Nr.all. •!'l'IMn .... F-"'E'-•eEUIANY, .... C.)
TRADED -The Rama traded running back F.ddie
Hill to the Miami Dolphins
for an undi11clo1ed futu~ draft choice Wednesday.
Hill, a 6-2, 203·1>9under, was
a aecond·round draft pick by
the Rams in 1979. Durtns bis
two years with the club, ~
camed·tbe ball 68 time& for 234 yards and one TD. He
alao had three receptions for:
86 yarcll and another K'Oft,
Snyder ma~es up for lost time
After a slow start, the future is bright for UCI standout
By EDZINTEL
Of Ille Delly,_.._,.
HJs coach calls hlm a real rags to aches story.
His mother gets a little cboked up and teary·
eyed when she talks about him.
In the sports information office at UC Irvine,
his picture is prominently displayed on the so-
called Wall of Fame.
The person in reference is 21-year-old Jim
Snyder. tennis player par excellence. His is quite a story.
EIG.lfl' YEARS AGO, Snyder didn't know the
difference between a volley and a free throw.
Before high school, Snyder wasn't too interest-
ed ln tennis. He was a typical kid who was more
concerned with model trains and after acbool
touch football.
Hls lather wu a club player but youn1 James
dldn't have that Jimmy Connors instinct ln him.
Jlm went to Mater Del High where be played
on the freshman football team. There wu no ten·
nis there, so Snyder ituck to football.
When bis family moved to Cost.I Meaa, Snyder
traded in the pl11kin for a racket.
At Dtanda Hip, Snyder slowly be1an mov-
ln1 hit way up the tennia ladder u 1 aopbomore.
Wrr& THE HELP of F.atanda Coach Jlm Jen-
ner 1 aiOl\I with private lnatructor Jacques
Greaory, Snyder made marked improvement hia
flrlt year of compeUtlve pa.,,
A year later, Snyder wu leaaue champion -a
Utle he woald win •1taln a1 a tlllldor.
Snyder moved on to UC Irvine, hoping to
benefit from the coaching of Greg Patton. His fint
year, Snyder never got that chance. A cue of
mohonucleosis put him out the entire season.
Thls year, Snyder broke his thumb at the betin·
ning or the season. He came back toward the latter
part or the year, however. and won the PCAA
TENNIS tg·
stnsles uue. For that, he was named tbe con-
ference player of the year.
BUT SNYDER WASN'T reslinl on bla lau.rela.
He bad work to do.
So oll he went to New Jersey.
New Jersey? Well. Snyder bad bffn playtq
<and leadinl) the California Tennia Featlval
circuit at the be&innlnl of tbe s ummer. That •at
fine. But he didn't feel be wu 1ettin1 the kind If'
diverae competition necesaary to become a na·
Uonally recopi&ed player.
Snyder be1an hlf aummer tour by Winnlnl a
hard Court tlU&.
Lut week, the nnest moment ln hl• ,.,....
came wt.l SDJcler woa the Amateur Clay :g
champkmtalp la Pltuburp.
In the ftnal, Sluchr defeated Pbll Tucttneu
1 Rhod•la ID a thrllltn1 U.bnaller. The HCntt
7 ••• 2·tiii:7-t. T f'INAL LAITBD 3~ boun and ...
played ln srueUn1 heal. SnydM''1 lep cramped ta
( 8NYDSa, Pa .. ti)
...
I
I
-
,,
I•
..
I
I I ,
,,
It
..
Orange Coast DAILY Pll01/Thursday, July 23, 1981
Pastorini's accident
blessing in disguise ?
From AP dl1patebe1
SANTA ROSA -Dan Putorinl Ell
of the Oakland Raiders fell off the •9•
National Football League tradlna
block, at least temporarily, with his
fall from a bicycle inMay.
• · 1 don't know what the Raiders have ln mind
now. But I'd like to stay with them, contrary to
what a lot of l>80Ple think," the quarterback
said after reporting to train· ing camp.
He'll be with the NFL
champions at least untlJ bis
right shoulder, separated in
the May biking accident, ls
proven sound again. He could
very well open the seuon as
backup to Super Bowl hero
Jim Plunkett, and he says,
'Tm willing lo accept that ...
Po1torini Pastorini was a starter
·with the Houston Oilers his first nine years in
the NFL and no was No. l with the Raiders untU be
broke a leg in the fifth game ortast season.
"I'm not ruling out the possibility of a
trade. But nothlng's going on now," Coach
Tom Flores said Wednesday. "No team Is ln·
terested in a quarterback coming ofr an arm m·
jury."
But Pastorini believes. "The injury was a
blessing in disguise. I had an arthritic shoulder
and didn't realize it. They went in and cut about
two inches off tbe end or my collarbone.
Quote of the day
Senator AUonse D'Amato (R-N.Y.) on
why he introduced a Senate resolution call·
ing for an end to the basebaJl strike:
.. Americans are being bombarded by
television reruns and old movies. Divorce
rates are soaring as busbands and wives
are being forced lo pay attention to each
other."
Navratilova Is no longer '1tatelH1'
LOS ANGELES -Aft« walUq m nearly six years to become a United
States clU1en. tennls 1tar Martina
Navratilova flew to Europe Wednesday carrying
one of the benetita of ciUzenshJp she prbot the
mott, a U.S. pusport that wm aUow her to vlait
her native Czechoslovakia.
Navratilova, 24, wbo waa amon1 48
naturalhed cltliena sworn tn durlne a federal
ceremony Mond•y tn t.o. AnleJea. new Wednea·
day lo Monte Carlo ror an fnvitatlonal touma·
rnent.
Stabler falls to report to camp
Houaton Olien quarterback &ea EIJ Stabler, cornerback Gre1 aMe...tck 4 • •
and running baclt &•It Carpn&4tr •
faUed to report lo the OUen' tralnJne
camp Wednesday and will be flDed, new head
coach FAI Biles said. Stabler's agent phoned the
camp to say be had personal busloesl that pre·
vented his arrival . . . Buffalo quarterback
Joe Ferp1Ga says he's tired of walling for a
new contract and is ready to
lest the free agency option of
his 1975 agreement ii a new
pact isn't reached soon
. . . Runnlni back Geer1e .
Roten, the first player
taken in the NFL draft ihla
year. jogged the sidelines at
New Orleans Saints' pre·
season training camp, ob·
viously upset that he'• belnt
Stabler held out of a controlled
scrimmage against Miami today. Ro1ers has
missed most contact practice this week with a
slight muscle pull . . . Woody P eoples, who
spent 12 years in the NFL before going to the
Super Bowl with the Philadelphia Eaales. has
announced bis retirement ... Atlanta
fullback WUUam Andrews bas signed a contract
for a reported $400.000 after rushing for.more
than 1.000 yards in each of his first two seasons
Portes engineers another upset
. WASHINGTON -Who said El
lightnJng never strikes twice in the •
sam e place. For the second year in a
row. France's Pascal Portes has engineered a
major upset in the Wasbingt.On Star lnterna·
tional Tennis Championships, knockJne ofr a
seeded player in the second-round of the clay
court tournament. Last year, the .unheralded
Portes stunned then top·seed Jimmy Connors, a
victory the 22-year·old Portes still considers the
highlight or bis professional career.
On Wednesday, Portes was back on center
court. spotting No. 5 seed Harold Solomon the
first set before roaring back for a 1-6, 6-3. 6·2
triumph. The victory reversed a personaJ losing
streak for Portes that had stretched back to
March.
Baseball today
On thJt date ln 1922:
ClnclnnaU Reda outfielder Edd Roush
ende d one of the lonaest holdouts In
baseball hist.Ory . He hlt .3~ for the rest ol
the season.
Today'a birthday•:
Former Brooklyn Dodeers shortstop Pee
Wee Reese la 62. Former Dodger pitching
ace Don Drysdale is 45.
Players confused at talks -Alce
WETHERSFIELD, Conn. -The •
talks being conducted In an alt.em.-
to end Uie current major league
baseball strike are confusing -just alk Bost.on. ~Soxou\{Jel4 . .,lm Rice.
"No player not attendina the meeting bu an
Idea of what ls goln1 on. Even when they bad open
seuions, you could pick up four or tive
newspapers and get four or five verslon1 of what
bad happened," Rice told reporters 11thered at
the W etbel'sfield County Club Wednesday.
"They're working on another agreement and
they have a closed session ao you don't know
what's eoine on. The players are confused, tbe
owners are confused and tbe fans are confused,"
be said.
Holmes, Cooney agree to title bout
World Boxing Council champion •
Larry Holmes and No. l contender
Gerr7 Cooaey have agreed to a title
right. The site and date have not yet been de·
termined, the New York Daily News reported
. . . . David Saatee, a member of the U.S.
Olymplc figure skating team in 1980, is sklpping
the National Sports Festival in Syracuse
because of an injured knee . . . It will be at
least another week before a decision Is made on
whether to fiae and suspend John McEnroe for
his behavior at Wimbledon earlier this month,
officials for Grand Prix tennis events say
. . . New Zealand police said they would call
in reinforcements for future South African
ruaby matches after Jl violent demonstration
that resulted in the arrests of 70 persons Wed·
nesday ... Both the San Diego Sockers and Los
Angeles Aztecs won their NASL games. putting
more pressure on the third·place California Surf
which is trying to make the NASL playoffs. The
Aztecs topped Toronto, 4·2. while San Diego
downed Portland. 3-1 .
Television. radio
TV: No events scheduled.
RADIO: Baseball Salt Lake City at Van·
couver, 7:30 p.m .. KMPC (710).
U.S. athletes
discover gold
BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) -American
athletes had a very 1uccenful day Wednesday at
the World University Games, baiJinl four 1old
medals while the Chinese men cfomJnated nm·
nasties, then threatened to withdraw from the
com petition.
Aunnen Mel Lattany and David Lee, hieh
jumper Leo Williama and 1wlmmer Nick Nevld
mined the sold for the United States. Latt.any, the
favorite in the 100-meter duh. nipped teammate
Calvin Smith to win the sprint ln 10.18 lffOllda.
... WAS A Ll'ITLE high today so I'm 1urpri1ed
it all went so smoothly,'' aald Lattany, of the
University of Geor1la. Smith, the 1Uver medalist.
attends Alabama and is a conference foe of Lal·
tany.
Lee, of USC. captured the hurdles in 49.0S
seconds. romping home by almost half a second
over Dimitri Shkarupin of the Soviet Union.
"I thought my tlme was pretty good, co111ider·
ing· bow slow and tired I've been feeUng lately,"
said Lee.
Williams, of Navy, took the high jump at 7-4"'
(2.25 meters). His victory was a surprise as he
edged out Jianhua Zhu of China and Gerd Naeel of
Weal Germany. All three jumpers cleared 7-4~
but Williams beat Nagel on fewer misses and Zhu
withdrew from the jumpoff with a pulled muscle.
NEVID, OF the University of Texas, won the
men's 100-meter breast.stroke, with his time or
1 :04.33 bettering the games' record of 1 :05.17 aet
by Graham Smith of Canada.
Angelika Knipping or West Germany took l.he
women's 100-meter breastroke in 1:14.20 and broke
the games' mark of 1:14.39 aet·by Hong Shao or
China in earlier qualifying. Willie Banks. the American record bolder in
the triple jump, puJJed a hamstring and bad to
watch while Zhenxlan Zhou of China took the iold
medal with a games' record leap of 56-10 (17.32
meters). Banks held the old record of 56·6 'A. 0 7.23
meters).
··As team captain, people expect something of
you. l • m very disappointed," said Banks, of
UCLA. who was tired of traveling abroad. "l can't
wait lo get back, man. It's been too long."
The Chinese believed that Soviet protests
or gymnastics scores have been too much. Chinese
men won five gold medals Wednesday. but
threatened to leave the competition after the Sov·
iet Union contested scores for the third consec·
cutive night. The Soviets had protested gymnastics
scores in the two previous night's events, and got·
ten them raised on both occasions.
from Page C1
·SNYDER • • • Controversy brews at festival Oranges nip
Bre ake r s • the second set but he was able to
• massage them out.
B asketball coaches want closed-door policy for practice OAKLAND <AP ) -The
Oakland Breakers' Fritz Buehn-
ing kept Wednesday's match
with the California Oranges at
Oakland Coliseum close, but it
wasn't enough and the Breakers
lost, 28·Z7.
' "I thought something like this
would happen to Jim sooner or
later ." said Patton. "l heard
• lhat he was down. 2-5 in the fmal
·.set.
· ·' ll just shows you how tough
he is. He's tenacious . He's got to
be the stroneest person mentally
I've ever coached."
His mother, Rosemary
' nyder. had this predictable re-
j ction: .. We're very proud and
f)appy for him. I think. summing
it up. you 'd have to say we're
~hankfuJ."
No one could have guessed
that Jim Snyder would come this
Car. Now. it looks like tennis is
· his fu ture.
"PEOPLE ASK ME what
Jim·s· major in school is," says
bis mother. "Well . I think it's
political science, but we tell
everyone it's tennis ."
According to Patton, Snyder
has a good chance of getting an
invitation lo next month's U.S.
Open.
Whether he does or not. Patton
feels it's only a matter of lime
before Snyder goes professional.
··One of his goals is to win the
NCAA singles title and he can do
that next year," Patton says. "I
· bate to see him go pro. natural-
l ly, because he's the stalwart and
l soul of our team.
"But whatever he decides to
do himself. l'll go along with.
My job as coach is to try to help
him realize his goals."
Jim Snyder
Minor league r
hurls no-hitter
LYNN. Mass. (AP) -Tommy
Hart, a 22·year-old right-hander,
pitched a seven-inning no-hitter
Wednesday. leading the Reading
Phillies to a 3·0 victory over the
Lynn Sailors in the first 1ame of
a n Eastern League
doubleheader.
Hart, S.4, struck out seven and
walk~two.
Reading won the second game
3·1 as southpaw Don Carman,
10-9, slopped Lynn on just five
hits.
SYRACUSE, N.Y. <AP> -The
third National Sports Festival,
showcase for some big names in
amateur sports and some who one
day may be big, officially opens
tonight already touched by con·
trovers)I.
Even before tonight's opening
ceremonies at the modernistic
Carrier Dome on the Syracuse
University campus, a flap arose
over the closed·practice policy of
the coa c hes of the eight
basketball teams . John
Thompson. he ad coach at Georgetown, O.C. and of the East
team at the Festival, was the
prime mover behind the policy,
which was adopted arter two
photographers and radio
personnel were denied admission
lo a Sunday night practice.
"l requested that my practices
by closed," he said Wednesday.
"You'redealing with some people
(players) who are new to you
coaches and it's kind of bard toac·
custom them to you with people
standing around.··
He also said each team only had
two 00-mjnute practice sessions
daily and all that time was needed
to prepare for the games, which
begin Saturday.
The policy officially was adopt·
ed Monday njg.ht for men's and
women's basketball at a meeting
of the coaches of the four men's
teams. It provides that only the
first 15 minutes of practice at the
university's Manley Fieldhouse
BUTCH
VS.WALTS
and Ute San Diego Friars
Sundafl, J"'1J 26 at 6 p.na.
FAN APPRECIATION NIGHT!
' .;
. (
Featuring drawing •tor free prizes ...
• New tennis racquet by Prince Pro 110
• 2 llfetlme family memberships at
Los Caballeros Sports Club
• Free weekend for 2 at South
Coast Plaza Hotel
~-~--------------, I SPECIA~ ORANGES I 1 TEAM TENNIS I I DISCOUNT COUPON I
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be open and that none of the prac-
tices al local high schools be open.
Mike Moran , the festival's
media coordinator who attended
Monday night's meeting with
Festival Director Baaron Pit·
tenger and the coaches, said the
closed practice• are ''totally
against U.S. Olympic Committee
policy."
USOC Executive Director F.
Don Miller said that he would look
into the matter but that the policy
might not change. -.
··As long as the athlete is not
disturbed from practices and in·
tended purposes I urge full
cooperation with the media,"
Miller said.
The Festival is designed in part
to acclimate amateur athletes to
such competitions and to give
coaches and officiais a chance to
spot potential talent for the 1984
Olympic Games. Among the bet-
ter known athletes are track and
field stars Edwin Moses, world re·
cord holder in the 400·meter
hurdles : Eve lyn Ashford,
American record holder in the
100-and 200·meter events, and
four -time Olympic discus gold
medalist Al Oerter.
Today's opening ceremonies
were upstaged when the U.S.
Olympic Committee approved a
petition by the figure skating
event coordinator to reschedule
the men's compulsory figures to
12 hours before the ofricial start of
the Festival.
NSF competition was not
scheduled to begin until Friday,
but the U.S. Olympic Committee
advanced the men 's com-
pulsories lo 7 a .m. after event
coordinator Anne Gerti petitioned
for an earlier start.
Some
OfU1
Carry Oar
Homes On
-----Oar Backs
Twenty-year-old Buebning is a
big hitter and he kept Marty
Riessen, 40, scrambling to keep
up. Buehning took the match,
6-1.
Katz leaves post
Di ck Katz, who guided La
Quinta High to the CIF 3·A
basketball championship in 1980
a nd to the 3·A semifinals this
past season, has left his post for
a similar job at W.F . West High
in Chehalis, Wash.
His three-year record at La
Quinta is 61 -19. No succeasor has
been named ..
Wt know how critical a Q<>Od "mobile home" Is to backpac~ers. That's
Why wt off'tr desians by The North Face . . the ftnnt available l~ht
wctQht tents, backpacks. sleq>lnQ b-gs. and handsome. functional clothlnQ.
Performance ls the key and all products from The North Face are Full
l.Jfetlmt W4rrantied.
Remember Sid & Sports for all your backpeekina. skl. tennJs. racquetball,
and aeneral sportJnQ needs. 4 locations to serve you.
!
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 23, 1981 Cl
0.11¥ l"llet ......,. Illy CM rles Starr
TOUGH DECISION -Jo.hn Mastronski lleft) and Stan
Rose talk things over before a race Wednesday
afternoon on opening day at Del Mar race track .
Thoroughbred racing. Ylhere the turf meets the surf.
was a big hit as a record crowd of 26,762 was on hand.
They saw jockey Eddie Delahoussaye win the final four
races of the day.
Flight of the Lasers set Sunday
Di~ghies, manned by young and old alike, compete in annual event
By ALMON LOCKABEY
O.lly ...... -· .......... Laser dinghies will "fl y" around the
bay Sunday in the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce's only
yachting event of the year unless you
count the Character Boat Parade
The Chamber is calling 1t the .. 46th
Flight of the Lasers.. which isn't ex·
aclly correct.
The 46th Flight, m aybe, but oldtimers
will recall-that the midsummer sudden-
death classic was the Flight of the
Snowbirds. a unique little 12-foot dinghy
that originated in NewPort Beach.
When the Snowbird began to die out
as a class. the "flight" was tried with
other popular dinghies such as the Kile,
but never really caught on Then came
the Laser. one of the most popular new
fiberglass dinghies in the U S. It is a
boat particularly popular with single·
handed sailors but can also be sailed
with two people.
The Flight of the Lasers has never
equaled the Flight of the Snowbirds in
numbe r s . In th e early days the
Snowbirds turned out in droves of up-
wards of 150 boats. The Lasers rarely
equal 100.
Nevertheless, the Flight is still one of
Newport·s most spectacular "yachting"
events or the summer.
The Lasers. manned by ever yone
from 6-year-olds to oldtimers and mar·
ried couples, will line up oH the Balboa
Pavilion for a 1 p.m. start Sunday.
The course will lake the Lasers over
all reaches of the bay. finishing al the
starting line. The race usually takes
about two hours.
Five years ago, Perpetual Savings &
Loan Association of Newport Beach.
and its c hairman . the late Tom
Webster, look on the sponsors hip of the
Flight along with the Commodores Club
BOATING
of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce Webster and his brother
were the owners of the first Snowbird.
Bill Ficker will again assume the
duties of race chairman of this year's
Flight fi e will be assisted by Paul
Salata. Rick Jackson (representing
Perpetual Savings & Loan) and rormer
commodores John Curci, Pele Barrett.
John Rader. Bob Wilcox and Bill
Blurock
Following the race. trophy awards
will. be made at Newport Harbor Yacht
Club to the winner. the first girl.
youngest boy . youngest girl, oldest skip·
per and first married couple.
Entry blanks are still available at all
area yacht clubs
Other area ~achtang events over the
weekend include an offshore race for
Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ocean
Racing Series for skippers seeking the
Ahmanson and ,Dickson trophies, and
Balboa Yacht Club"s 66 Series for In·
Windsurfers to compete
~Three-day event lures top board sailors
}
~ , LOS ANGELES -More than 200 t board sailors will convene at Cabrillo
;: Beach Yacht Club, Los Angeles Harbor t Friday for the Windsurfer Region I f cha mpionships on breezy "hurricane
, gulch" in the outer harbor.
e The spectacular regatta, featuring f some or the most acrobatic Windsurfer
~ sailors on the West Coast. will continue
through Sunday. ~ Region I takes in tbe area from San
~ Diego to Santa Barbara. but board
• sailors from as far north as San Fran·
cisco are expected to compete. ~ t Special bleachers have been
set up on the beach near CBYC for the ~ open freestyle tournament on Sunday in
' whic h the sailors are expected to
perform some of their most spectacular
acrobatics. On Friday and Saturday the
• board sailors will compete In regular
: triangular course racin2.
The International Windsurfer Class
: Association is a manufacturer's one·
: design sailing class comprised or more
t han 20.000 members in over 70 coun-
tries.
T he Windsurfer Is said to be the most . : .
elemental sailboat. and board sailing is
acknowledged by many as the most ex-
citing type of sailing.
The patented windsurf er 1 s.
actually a surfboard consisting or a
durable fibeq~lass hull, daggerboard
and twin-boomed sail rig joined to the
hull by a universal joint assem bly .
Sailors sail the craft standing up, steer·
1ng by trimming the sail with a
wishbone rig. To tack or jibe the sailor
walks around the mas t. carrying the rig
with him
In the event of a miscue -the boat
never caps izes the sailor often finds
himself in the drink with the rig lying
flat an the water. No problem other than
wetness. The sailor climbs back aboard,
hauls the rig back in place by grasping
the wishbone rig and continues sailing.
Sailboarding has become a
sophisticated sport with the experts
able to leap giant waves or sail the craft
through surf onto or off t he beach.
Since most regattas are held close in·
s hore, the sport of board sailing has for
the first lime brought m ass "spectator
appeal to l he s port or s ailing
te rnatio'nal Offshore Rule and
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet
yachts on Saturday.
Lido-14 sailors will be busy Saturday
and Sunday in the Ullman "B" Regatta
sponsored by Balboa Yacht Club.
South Shor e Yacht Club will stage a
race for the Orange County Women's
Ocean Racing Series with the top prize
as the Sheila Burnell Mem orial.
In other Southern California Yachting
Association areas:
Los Angeles-Long Beach
Seal Beach Yacht Club -Dana Point
race and return. Saturday. Sunday.
Cabri llo Beach Yacht Club -
Windsurfer District I ct)ampionship,
Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
Santa Monka Bay
King Harbor Yacht Club -Dinghy
Day (centerboards> Saturday.
California Yacht Club -Buoy Mania
< PHRF. MORC> Twilight Series. Satur·
day .
Pacific Mariners Yacht Club -In·
verted Start race, Stein Series No. 5,
Sunday.
San Dle10
Coronado Cays Ya cht Clu b -
Twilight Predicted Log contest, Satur·
day.
Santa Clara Racing Association -
Laser Circuit, Saturday.
San Diego Navy Sailing Club -Op-
timist Regatta. Saturday, Sunday.
~oronado Yacht Club -Barr Sum·
mer Series (invitational handicap) Sun·
day.
North and Inland
Ventura Yacht Club -Blue Water
Series No. 3, Saturday.
Anacapa Yacht Club -All Fleets
Day, Sunday.
Sant.a Barbara Sailing Club -Sum-
mer Series, Saturday. Sunday.
Westlake Yacht Club -Sabot lnvita·
tional Regatta, Sunday.
Motorcycles vie
RIVERSIDE-Over 30ofthecountry's
top motorcycle racing teams will face six
grueling hours of competition al speeds
exceeding 150 mph in the Six Hour
Motorcycle Endurance Race Saturday
and Sunday al Riverside Raceway.
A variety of classes will race from the
550 cc street legal s tock bikes to
streamlined 1200 cc Formula One race
bikes.
The heat races for the American
Federation of Mot orcycliits CAFM )
event will begi n Saturday at noon with
prel iminary races and o p e n ing
ceremonies s lated to start at 10 a.m. Sun·
day.
The Six Hour main event starts at noon
Sunday.
Admission prices are S6 Saturday and
S8 Sunday with pit passes costing an addi·
tional$3.
Women race rans will be admitted for
$3 Saturday and $4 Sunday with children
under ~2 free.
' j
c Jr. All-American
i registration set Cowboys' rookie sharp POCKET
PAGER
COVERS
FOUR
COUNTIES
T he South Coast Jr. All ·
American football program, with
an expanded eight and nine-year-
: old djvision, will begin practice
.Aug. 10 in preparation for the 1981
season .
The uam• are ~omposed of
compat.lble age a nd weltht
1roup1 · and In tum they play
slmtlarly structured teams In
other areaaof Oran1e County.
Openlt\a ttay Hremonlea wlll be
held Aua. 30 at Saddleback
C0Ue1e.
• For lnlormation and repstra·
• lion ~ute, call Kent Harr at ! 83l·l"3or Ron'Grebel at551·~1'5.
~ All children are we lcome
· Scholarship proaram s are alto
available to chUdren requl:r1n1
• nna.nclal uslstance.
-... _
Jerry Hoge boom completed
8 or 10 passes for 113 yards
to highlight the Dallas Cowboys'
efforts Wednes day In a scoreless
rookie scrimmage a1alnst the
San Diego Cha rgers at UC
lrvlne .
Hogeboom . a second-year
veteran from Central Michigan
who saw no actlon at
quarterback last year, dlrected
the Cowboys' rookies on their
I ongest drive of the day, 64
yards to the San Dlcao six.yard
Hoe, before tht march s talled.
Terry Elston. the for mer
U n iversity o r Hou lton
quarterback who Is maktn1 a
bid aa a free a1cnt tlght end, led
lhe Cowboys recclvers with
three receptions for 50 yarda.
Another tight end prospect. free
agent Wilbur Montgomery of
Stetson, caught two passes tor 40
yards.
TOP-Pln1 the Dallas rushina at·
lack were free agent.a Sam Platt
of Florida State with 18 yards on
elgbt carries and free a•ent Ken
Lovely of Fresno Stau with 18 ·
yards on six carries.
The Charaera' deepest of·
tensive penetrallon was to the
on_e·yard line.
Free a1ent s.tety Mlke Downa
o( Rice had Dallas' only fn.
terceptlon, a dlvlnc end zone
pickoff of a PIH by San Dle,0•1
Ed Luther.
.,........ co .. LA. co.
SAM..........OCO.
llYllllDICO.
•2000 :.::..
AUOCilPHOtm
News blackout over?
No 'Pf Ogress reported at surprise session
WASHINGTON CAP l -As the
baseball strike reached the 490·game
mark Wednesday. It appeared lhe
negotiations ne ws blackout imposed
by Secretary of Labor Raymond
Donovan would end after three days.
In Baltimore Wednesday ni&ht.
Doug DeClnces. ·the Orioles third
baseman a nd Ame rica n League
player representative, sajd that an an·
nouncement was to be made about the
talks. ending the blackout at noon to·
day.
Appearing on WBAL-TV, DeClnces
refused lo discuss the negotiations say
Ing he was still honoring the blackout.
.. 1 can say though that the blackout
will be lifted at noon tomorrow." he
said Wednesday. 'Tm sur e there'll be
plenty of information coming out at
that lime."
DeCinces said he was not sure if
m anagement representatives also
plan to lift the blackout at that lime.
Raymond Grebey, the club owners'
chief negotiator, was unavailable for
comment on DeCinces' statement.
Kenneth Moffett, acting head of the
Federal Mediation and Conciliation
Ser vice. surprised reporters earlier
'.fednesday announcing t hat the two
s ides had switched sites and met face
to face for 11-; hours with Donovan
present.
Moffett said the meeting had been
moved to the Office or Personnel
Management because: "We felt there
was less likelihood there that anyone
would tense up."
The site of the surprise meeting
between the negotiating team for the
Major League Players Association
and the executive board of the owners·
Player Relations Committee is about a
half-dozen blocks from the Mediation
and Conciliation headquarters. where
the negotiations had taken place since
Size 155SR-12
Blackwall
moving here from New York Monday.
The meeting started Jea1 than an
hour alter Moffett announced that the
two sides bad failed to conduct any
race-to-face bargaining during five
hours or morning sessions. Moffett
said then that the two aides would re·
turn to the Mediation and Conciliation
headquarters later in the day, but not
necessarily for bargaining.
None or the principals on either aide
of the 41-day-old strike attended the af··
ternoon news briefinli(.
At the briefing. Moffett also said the
two sides. along with Donovan, would
return to negotiations at his agency's
headquarters today
200 dragbikes
battle Saturday
The quest for the first 200 mph timing
on a closed course continues this
weekend as Or ange County Jntema·
tional Raceway and the American
Motorcyclist Assoc 1 a ti on host the third
annual Dragb1ke Orange County Nf·
lion a ls.
More than200leams from the United
States and Canada are expected to
compete for lhe more than $25,000 in
cash , including a $3.300 top fuel casb
Pot -highest ever for drag bikes.
The official nationals top fuel speed
record or 190 mph is held by Sam Wills
of Oklahoma City on a Kawasaki.
The 190 mph-plus qualifying session
will start Saturday night at 6 along
with preliminary semipro and ET
bracket races.
Sunday the gates will open at 10
a . m .. with practice and qualifying
from 11 ·2 and the m a an event at3.
For mor e information. phone
292-4444 after 6 p m
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7 0
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThursday, July 23. 1981
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ro<udt ISO -.110. IJ7 o.u . ll rot•""'· 112
m•<k•r•I
SAH Sllollll~ II •nol•r> '° lino <Od, II~ roO too. 10'> r<IO rotk coo. I~ red W>AI>"
Pit 1 (OW Cod
MOit 110 •AT I Y1rt .. La11•l"ll U
•noter\ t61 rotk <OO 12'9 r•O roe.a t OO
AVILA BAY l,..'1~ft 1. .. 1.1 ll •no••n
l' ttno uxt 19i ted tO(• coo,'' .,e11ow ~u,
7llO rOO COO, II m<Kkerel
SAN TA l*<ltlAllA U 1119le" )01 l •lico Ns, .. ll o.n.c....o.. \ HnQ <.OCI, 9 cow
<Od l .. ,..,.,.._r.n -.110 l lMllllMll
II [ NfUltA 10. angler• JSO t •IKO ......
\1 \•nd DI~'· 1t nallbvt 3 t>.err•Cud•, J1
"'•'"ertl, 1SOro<k ft\n, l'Or0<11. cod U CO*
<Od. s ll'IQ <00
OXNARD •ll•nol••• tlO roo """· -
\ llolO °"'"· l ... 110..1, II ~ 0.U lOO <ot• coo. 1 ••no coo •<ow cod POllT HUENEME (Amorlcaftl .,
•nOltr\ 111 <•llco oan. 35 •ot• 11111, •
"•110..1. 79 mecko•ol, lll rock tOd
MAL19U '9 •n111er\ tO 0.U, I llallbWI
IS \<OnG 0..•, J blrr .. ua. 100 m<0<U1 •I. Ito
roe.II f i\ft
PAllADISE COYE 110 a,,010,. 10
<•ll<O bH" I hl libUI. S o.rracw<I•, 110 rock
'"" SANTA ~ICA Ill •no l•n 11' Wl>d
On • 100 rr-.otrOI. to -.110 U O.f<KUCW,
SJ roo .... ., I 11a11tiw1
/lolAlllNA OIL llEY II •no••" GO
ro<k cod, I h•llllul 2J \I nd Dau , ISO
m •t kl'tfl, l .. bonUO
•I DON DO 191 a11glort lot -.110. 411 °"" I IMlll bWI 19 t>arracudl. 110 roe& 11'11
•• ,.. 1)0 eno'en J,S.0 "'41Cllertl, IU
oon110 11$ roo 11th
SAN PEOltO (UM St. l..IMl"ll I ..
enol•" J Y1ll0"'1•1I, 114 blrr•cUdA, US
bO"llo .. ,~ tall<O ..... ll'Wti o · Call) 104
•nQler\ • •lba<ort , 511 O.HatUCIA, 10 u ll<o t>•u. ns -..io. " mack••••. 1 ,_bin LONG •EACH llolm••I l'ler) -S•
•noltf\ 2 c•h<o I»•" 100 macurel, IU
b•rr.cllCll. 4~ bonllo, l roo 1•'11 I°"""''
Wharll -Ill Miilet\ J'll lwrra c...,., 91
bOnllo, I Mllbul, J Wiid o.u . MS mec•orol.
11t ca11cooau
SE AL lllACH 2GI afl9lert U I l»r
r•t.,d•, lSO -.110 200 m«Uret
OCEANSIOI 118 ll>Qltrl 111 bonllo. 99
u 11<0 t>a•" n und b•~l. 18 roo 11'11, t'lO
m •ck.ertf
Thi• week'• lrout plants
LOS ANO lll.ES 8 10 Rock C< .. ll,
J«kM>n L.ak•, Pv••m1d Lau, Upper Pint Cr• ... a t FroncllnWn" Fl•t
SAN llllNAllOINO J t llll.\ LOe,
Silverw ood RHll#'YO•r
111v111s1oa Fwlmo• LO•, Heme1
l.tkt
SAN 01100 t uyam.ca Ro-volr.
MAOlllA -San Joaqll411 lllv•r (Mlddle
For-), Sotcller I.Ike. Slarllw .. tller LAilo
K£1tfl k.er11 lllver 10.mocret Da m to
I( RI P-erllOV.. llortll l'owerllOVM to
Demo«•I Dam. lw bella D•m to Borell
Po"•'"°"'W t' AJ PowerPoiou\e to L•ke
lw bell•l
TULAllE l(er" lllvor 1ra1rvtor• D•m to
I( Al PO-ff\OU\e JOllnM>nd•I• 8rlcloe to
F•lrview O.ml Pepeiermlnl (rMt., Ttilo
Rt<tttr CNOr1h and SovtP\ Fo''' of ,._In fo,~1
IN TO Baller (<et&, BIO Pl119 Cr-,
Bi>llOll Creek (Lower, Mlddle, South •lld 1,..
10 t 111. Good•I• C•tek, lndepe11H11ce
(rMk, Lone PIM CrH ll. HO<lll ........ OM
Creo . ~North l'o•-1, Symme\ Creek,
T ·-.. C•Mk. Tl119m•n• CrHll, Tutll• ,, ....
MONO 8rldoe00rt Rt\er'volr. 8uoeye
(rMk, Con•kl C.rH k, (OllVICI u lto, Oe.O.
m i n C•ot~. Eller'y U ke. GM•Qa l.AU,
Gt .. \ t r•o.. Gren! l..lh , G•H ll CtHk, G.111
l..lllt Hll-(l'Mk J-I.Ille, L .. VINftO
Creek, LIM'Cly l.•-•. Nl.lm1e i..110. Mammotll t • .. ll, .McGee Crftlt, Miii CrHIJ. 0-
Rlver (Bel\IOll C.rou1119 and 91Q Sprl~l.
Rever .. c ....... Rof>ln-. C••k. lloclt Cr-
1 P1r•01te (Amp lo Tom I Piece. T...., •
Pl•c• ~lfNm lo Roe& CrMk Ut.•
Loa Alam1to1
WU>HISOAY'S 11£lULTS
( .. , .... ., ............... -_,.,..
rlltST llACa . JSO yard1 1 yelr olda.
C11lm1no pur• u.aoo
llellt. Party 8oy 18•""'-\I tt .o 10 10 UO
S.em• Tna ICerdoul I 10 S.00
Sbn wo N Rk ll IHaru J 10
Alto fKeCI _,,,,., WlllCly. Torn Em uo. Ally Tl,... l •oy, ~ .. JllMr Buo. Mlifl.-
Oy\ Te, Clever Polley, *<•lullr 81d. u ••acu 1 ... 1 peid ,,., 10
llCOND ltA(E 170 v•rdl :J.yu r-<ikb
•lld up C·IAlml"O PU• .. IA 200
Stum -Cl\a•~ I Flore$) I S.O I .lO uo Brlqlll Polley IC••Oo••I s.to •.JO
In Yo.,, Qooole,...11 I Tr.a1urel • .O
Also , • .., Prouo P•lrtO , CaPOY DM\,
N•sllvllle Neon 5111 L.oH
TH I 110 llACS JSO Y••dt t·yotr-<ild•
Cl•lm l"ODurw M.400
,,, .... ., O\.ll>h<alt (Harl) S.00 J,IO l.20
Mulu•I RH~cl ITr .. iurol 1.IO S.10
Got Ille Gold ICrt .. trl • .a
Alto •.><td 8-11' RevelallOll, AallOlll
f'oot. MIU EtyCllaroer. l(lpty""
l'OU llTN llAC• • .., r ••d•. J-yHr.Old>.
Cl•lm l"O PUrw M,000. Prl•m Buo IFrydllyl I.JO S.00 J.00
E • E\ Te IC.O•doral :MO UO Myl(ld•l•-•(PHkontonl J .0
AllO ·--·"" 8rffk, JMton R-. Me111y Morrli, c-of Ille Wnt. Catcll 1111t
Melody, Mllso Culla.
'1 ... ci. (W I p,tlCI Ul.00
rt rTH ltACI. lSO u rdt ).yoar -<il<IS.
C'la1ml11Q purM IJ.000
Value 111 OuHllOll (Hartl 1 to J .. .o 2 JO
MIO EH• (lru wro) • • .O J.IO
Qullo1a I 8roo1t1l 1 _,
Al•O raced Do.)blt R T•-··· S.llyc ... f
ly, Make "'oOI'""· Tru A04UHI
'IJITH ltACI. lSO Y•rdt >·year-oldt and
up P .. uaM.800
MIU Pill ((ArdOral 10 40 S.IO •.OO
Miu Clll• s.iwr (Oelornl»I t . ..O ' «>
Donn• 8Gdlf ICreaoe•I 10 '° Alto raced 0. NOCIUflWI &ally, OWr ~
AO.Vt, N .. vo J-, Myrt• l'lrer, /lolUCNI
Rt•trd, #M S-t G«ollM lh~a<ta CJ 11 peld,IUO
11vaNTH AACI. <IOO yaro~ ,., .. ,..io,
a~ Ill> Cltl"""9 purw \7 .000 ~'" L..o (Hartl • 40 uo '40
Jtl , .. , IAMlfl • '° ••
"'""' lkl ((,......, t.40 Al .. t~' T090'N'I. llletttr 11.,.., l'eM
I m loy. S2 ua<t. ,,_.I Otkl uuo.
,..., .. ,..-
uo uo uo •.•
IA
NlflTM aACI UO ya•dt ) Yett•lft
Cl•IMlllO....,... .... Httllf H ....... (,..., .. , • 4t t JO t.•
OOOdy 10 ltll IAOalrl 4.JO UO
s.in"' A•Wf'M 1 r,__1 uo
Al .. ••eel ~ .. , .... .,., """' ...... 1.e11...,.11t, ...,. ... ,,.,...., Alolflrm
,, t ••(le (I II pa l fl \II 40
All•-· •.692
Del Mar
w1.-.1MY'' •uu" n l ~llWI .. ._, ... S'S •--.i r1an IACll, 1111• ml .. • ,_,...,...._
Clalml .. ~tlt.eeo.
fom Oely IMcettrWtl
HMCIOWll Mo;tk IWl11l ... l
1 101 .. ,Mtta cva1e111 .. 111
AIM raacl 'W Atule, Mo•••. filapld l f'nMf
• . .io •• ,_.
t IO t.• ,,.
L ... ~.
HCOflO 11.ACI. h .. lut ..... t . t , .. ,..._
ClalmlflQ _ .. ti 1,000
L110y 1(1y A IC..1 ...... l I• t 10 1 •
Ntada,.,. T,.,.,..t Cl.lpNm) n .0 1$..0
Ceremony (Nl(C.,rOlll ,M
AIM •tted' w.Ny't ~. lro<> Oole,
1111• O••U ,_,, Tritt.tr Ledr , Nall ..
f o llv1I, lllw•I, AUy WOY. A l'Oalllvt
M•rbe It O•llr Ouuellt (.HI .. Id U I 10
THlllO llACI • '"''-' ) n•• a lct• ..... llP (.lal,.,.lne purw \11,000
rtmolou Avt111111• tOrlt111•l It tO I to , 00
'-ml (..,\Clout 18allar••I U IO 10 40
Mat~•• r....,.,,. 1valt<\1uo111 •to "'''° , .. .., 111Q111 on Tot1111 ~,..,.,.Ma.-,
0.1Mvllle o.-. l.mply lloed, Rt tten koll.
1(1110l111\I. W•• Allled U tH(la It 4) paid ~I 00
l'OU•TM ltA~ Oii• mllt >-Y•O• -1111!0• (11111•1"0 PU•M \11.000
N•ll•• lie I\ ( Pln<eyl S 00 ) 40 1.0 s .. , 111 N1IH , Cati.-i 10 t.'9
L• Prl11t .. w IOl>lalloun•y•I t . .O
Alto ret.O• I WenN Ootl0<, l!a91t'• l.•tl. Goldt11_,
rtrTH •.t.CI I"' mllft on 1 .. ,, J.YH•
OIOl alld VD (l•lml"ll llU<M ,0 ,000
Ptr1lt I V•l.,,,uelal Jt.to II to 1.IO
Ptr•I• FIHI (()Hv•r•ll s '° 4.20
Lau11111no Ilk•• (Toro) s.eo
Alto rlCecl U""'lk(a. AV.I• Say, Otwel
C•o..o, Moor• Dyrw'1y, e.10.10 G..,.111111
'fo1;• Royel Ow•hU. HllN • •no TllllNf,
Hort>aoe• L.a
U necl• ll••I paid P4' SO
SIXTH llACa. Slit '"'''°"11' 1 YH•-olct
rrualden <olh -QllOlllO' t 1a1ml11t puno \U,000
l(Jt19 1(•l<01<• ...
I Oel•hou1w .,.1 I IO 4 00 3.AO
Accen1ue1e I P•'1teyl l to J.00 St•ndupC-lan t~mek.,I J.O
Alto •ICecl Ftr•l l 1rrv. Roocotoro G<Hne,
Pullli< 5119• .. ., Po.mnmob . Jet Pirate
SIVaNTH llACI • lurtonot Fllllel -
mare•. > ve•r-<>ld ""d VD Clalml119 ""''"' tJl.000
Forluvol lv 10.1--..vel e 10 4 IO 3 10
l l P .. lol• (llaleNutl•I I .0 J 00
E T allQI (Mrirleyl 1 .0
Alto r.ced PfOl\9 Po\Ulon. ICIHI E•·
t,,an9e. Ert ru
U tl4K I• J 0.1) IWIO \II I 00
'1 P•clo. SI• .. 9 I 11 I ., !WIG U •, ltl wllll
lour WIM•"O ll<•el• h1• -... , t1 PIO Sia
conM>l•l-iw10 tJll 00 "'''" l lt '"'""'"O llCkot• ll1ve llor>nl
I IOHTM llACI I'> IUflOllQ> 011 o•au
l-YH •-<>10. c1a1m1119 "'" .. '-'0,000
T lblt forth I 0.1..-,w ye111 JO • 10 • .0
Hlort Countel IGlfhQlnl 4 to 310
Jue" 8•rreu I BAIPI l 00
Aho receo C•ll Me Ml\11'. Our Pal
MICllH I. Mtltr Tl'll lCll L•u0111"ll 8oy
"""'" ltACll I ' 1 furl""ll' J ••••-<>Ids (la1m1119 t><-<>e t.I0.000 e ... n Cllt<O I Oel•hov\Wy•I • '° J IO , ..,
Re11••be'1.o llorol s .a 1.to
hlt nG Wlltrt IM<HtrQut) 1 _,
Alto recod !lock !'M>llly. llul)y ' Jen ,
(OIOr Beer.,
" ...... 11-41 pelCI , .. 00
Allelldane~ 'lfl.IU
Loa Alamitos Standings
(,.........,.W ......... y )
JOCKEYS
O•nny Co<001•
Kenn•tn H•rt
Steve l r••wr•
JoM (<O-O-r
D•nnv M11< ne11
L•rrv c.,. .. ,
R011er1 Adi"
l(en11olh Cle""'" Jamo erook>
Don1ld OMomoe
TltAIMlltS
Btane Sic:ttvanr-ttelOI
C W Caw10
E Mark W@lch
Cllarltt 8loomqu1\I
St~v• Aott\blum
Ruuelf Harri\
Keith (04ello
Gordoll S1tlnm1lft•
P•ul J-\
Berry WOOdhou ..
S1' h i 1 ... ar. soe ., •I n
47' " II 1• 0 9 SI SJ SI
111 ,. .. JI .,. .. so n
X'I ,. n 1'
lOI i. 4:J lt
J?I " 31 4J ,,, 1S 2' lO
149 lJ J• IS
Sh 1M1"" ar. 400 14 ,. ..,
lot 11 " ,. I,. ,. 1• 11
190 14 11 JI
.,, It 10 ,.
, .. 11 U IS
11 11 IJ I
!4 11 19
Ill u u 11
100 IS 11 10
Sierra Nevada Open
1.t Stat .. IM. Nev.I
Clllrlle GI-. Ill D•vo ,_,., llt
John 11.,_11 13'
Oave E-rKk 13'
tuar~ 1to
Dalt Alloy 1«1
Sieve St•h 140
Bol>WyM 140
Misc.
Wednesday'• tranaacilona
H•lleMI ,_II L .....
ATLANTA FALCONS -Eate11ded Ille
COllltlCI Of Wllltem And ••··· 1 .. 11ti.cll,
111ro..01> 19'2 I UFF ... LO BILLS !>ioneCI J oe O.vll11,
tar.Ille, 10 • -.erin ol ON·yH r <Olll•k" Cw!
P1l<10 1(1119, PU"'"" •lld AIAll Oew•rt.
John (llOUU ir -WayM Alldtr\Oll, pl«•
klch ,. "'""°""<"° 11111 O.rroll ""°"'""· wld• rK elver, left <MnP
CINCINNATI 8£NGA~S S•oll90 Rou
BrowMr, 0rtt.,..11ve end
L.OS ANGELES RANIS Tr-Eddie
Hill, runnl119 bk~ lo lhe Mleml Oo1plll111
to• an UlldlK-draft t hOio
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS Slor>td
9rlt l'I Moll-ay, ott•"•lve l•ckle, lo • "''IH
of Olle yu r con1 rech
HEW OllLEANS SAINTS S'-1! H-
8 raM er. 11(111 •nll
PHI l.ADEl.PHIA EAGLES AllllOUllC.0
Ille rallreme111 of Woody Peoplel, ollenllvo
oword
lT. LOUIS CARDINALS SiQNd Ge<)'
WMllOrd -Wllll• U,,.,.._, clele11•lve
IMKllt SAN l"llAN(ISCO ... ,. Pl.Ced G-oe
VltOOf, defen•1ve ll11emen,on Ille '"lu<tcl ro-.. ,..,e ll\I
HOltHltACINO
CMUltCHll.l DOWNS Nlmecl H-•d
l. 11•111• rlCl"O -••lary
COLLI OE
E ASTERN ll.LINOIS N•m•d Tom
WHlhoff Hslttafll loolllall c-11
NO ATHWESTE llN -N•m•d Roll
Wtllma11~M111tll c-11.
WOt1d University Games
(allw""'"".._....
TltACK ANO "'''-0 100 l'IMWO I Mel LA!latty (U.S.), 10 11,
l C•lwll\ $1'1\llh (U.5 I 10 t•, l . •rMil
Otoe119 IGNNll. 10 11
.OOl'lllNI" -I O.vld &..ft IU I I, 4' ts. 2
Dimitri SNlan.>ol11 IUSSlll, ••.u.
HJ 1. Lao Wlllltrnt (U.S.), I·•\.\; 1.
Jlatlllllua ~ IClllrw), 1-4\lt; ' Offfl ,..I
IW .. I Q«_,y), 1•4¥.1 (Wllll-<#IM 1111
lewerl'llf-l . '·'°' _..,,, -I. s.kl O\llU (--1. i :a Q ; t Vlnu l'•l1111l~k l'fllfHlav .. I.
J : Jt,~j J,AIMrll•t"lmla (Aloor'tal.J :Jt ... ,
WOMtft'l 100 "'°"WI I .. ,, ~
8rlte411l, II M w......,.. JT -1 fl•tra ,..1-. ceui °""' ... 'YI. ttJ.11, t . It.-Smllll IU.&.1. 2!0-4"'-
Wat'llall'I ,_..•tllle11 -t. Mal .. ntU
011tewr.1!1'•.MMI ..... We-•1 h• _..,. -t O.W"41•
P9fle UW!Yl.4 •.at ... _. .. t•.,... _. t. lft(ll """ IV.I.), 1 ;IUll; I: Ullt , .... OW-y), Ill ti-. 1. ........ =>.111••-· .......... -1 .... 1-..~-..... CWt.t Oe~J. t 14 ll; t UM ~ .. (t.*a), ....... : " ....... (OllMl,M..,.
A HEAD ABOVE San Di ego Socker Gert
Wieczorkowski ( leflJ outleaps Portla nd's
John Hain to get a ht.•ader off during N ASL
JIM NI EM/El'
action a t San Diego Wednesday night lhl'
Sockers stopped the Timbe rs. 3·1
Hooked on a favorite lure
Ask a thousand sail water anglers what kind of
Jigs they prt'fC'r and most likely you will gel a
thousand d1 ffcn•nt ans wers Evervone seems to
have his O'-'n favorite Jig. and that's t he reason
the re arl' so m any Jigs on the market.
lroncC'all v 1t doesn't make that much d1f
ferl'nt'l' tu tt11• fish whether thl'y be albacore or
ma rlin
IN THE llAY DAYS of Newport Harbor . dur
in ~ the 40's a nd 50's. when thousa nds of tons of
a lbat·ore·luna were brought into local canneries
for processing, a nd Newport's fleet made toda)' 's
San Diego n ect seem sm aller. many lures on the
market today we re getting their s tart
Traditiona lly. in t he days o f Zane Gray,
a nglt•rs would use bone jigs or combinations of
chrome ;.rnd hrass t11 attract tuna and marlin.
Wa lte r Rac kc•r a nd Ted Ponting of Newport Beach
introduced the Baldy Jig to both comme rcial fish·
er men a nd sport a nglers About the same time
bone Jigs wt·n• becoming popular. the extremely
productive jap head was introduced. These two
11gs worked hand-in hand to reward both groups of
fishermen with good ca tches until the early 50s
"'he n other lurt's began s howing up on the ma rket
and the com1w tit1on for the hottest jig sta rted.
Every lurt• on the market tried to reproduce
.... hat hungr} fish. moving at speeds between one
a nd 15 knots . would stnke
WHEN MARUN FISHERMEN discovered
that s pikebi lls were being hit as ofte n as flye rs and
lt vt.' maeker<•I. big Jigs came on the market I can
remember m~ first local ·marltn trip with George
Lobaugh and Phil Hedlund When we got a few
miles off the heach we used a special wea pon
ca lied a "Di go Spec1 a I .. This lure was a series of
four·to-fivc onc -ounn• japs of various colors.
strung togcthcr on 150 pound mono with the lead
lure being a plas tic head
Today, lures are manufactured for either
s mall or big game f1~h Some are sold specifically
for a lbacon · tuna and some for bill/ish. But in
many C'ase-.,, t hco;e fish can be caught on the s ame
jig
Albacore• Jigs are in the 3·lo·7 inch le ngths.
yellowfm tuna Ji gs in the 9·t0· 15 inch class. while
m arlin jigs are traditiona lly in the 12·lO·l8 inch
spread. Exceptions to these measurements are the
tiny pinheads a nd big squid on the market
Weights of thcSl' lures and jigs vary with fi shing
conditions a nd <ingler preference.
Some an• light and ride high on the wake .
while ot he rs seek d ee pC'r water s bevonrl the
From Page C1
McELHANY. • •
transom On ma ny ln ps 1n local waters and off Ba
1a . 1 have fou nd that it cs best to carry a complett•
selet'tinn of V(.lrtous Jigs On long range boats 1t
somC'llmes takt• t \\O an~lt•rs to carry a tackle box
loadt'd with iron a nd frathers on board
EVE!'/ TllOl'GH lhl•re are hter alh thousands
of comb1nat1ons a v(.ltlable to angier~. som e
\etcran big game flsht.>rme n ha\'e their 1>1A n i dea~
(ransformed mto a c us tom t ied Jig or lure
Fl•athers ha n· bct'n replaced on som e J ig~ b'
rubber. plast1t·. nylon and \'mvl "'h1le heads art!
FISHING
m adt• out of polished a balone c ncased m resin.
fibe rglass. plastt<·. ha rd rubber. s pectra .reflector
, stra ps glued on to polis hed metal a nd m some
cas es. would you be he\'e , tied on directly to hand
carved bone again.
To try a nd convint:e an angler that any one jig
will catch a ll the fish 1n the ocean is impossible
Mos t anglers want a se le<'l1on to choose from. giv
ing them the feeling thc~ ha"e selected the right
head. color and name to put thc first fi sh of the
d ay on dcck.
OVER THE YEARS. one of the best color
com bmations to troll fo r either albacore or tuna
has been a green and yellow. with red-white a nd
bluc·white followinf! prell) far behind Purple a nd
black has come along for those who troll dun ng
the early morning or late evening hours a nd on
over cast days. J ap hea ds still work extremely
well. and perhaps millions are sold every season.
but combinations of jap heads (remem ber tbe
DigoSpecia l J a re even m ore effective.
My fa vorite combo is a ha lf.ounce green and
yellow jap head (bright) s lipped up and under a
Sevenstrand hexhead with a lighter green and
yellow or green a nd white with fl akes s kirt
/\s to marlin j igs. it appears to be a toss-up
hetween gr een and yellow. black and red . a nd
mac ke rel. Maritn will hit a lmost any lure trolled
c lose to him 1f he is in a feeding mood. but you
won •t convince the vetcran who trolls his own
c ustom·styled jig of that
Big game fish arc a funny a nd a very
particula r inha bitant of this world Let"s hope no
one ever discovers a single lure or jig that will
c atch every fi s h that swims our oceans
Some how. I think that m ight ta ke all the fun
out of fishing.
where he played a nother three
years of volleyball.
Today, Mc Elhany keeps busy
with bea ch volleyball. although
he has n't played in more than 20
tourna ments ove r the past five
years
he's going to have to j ump
higher and at the same time be
consistent in his hilling.
Laguna Open
attracts b est
in volleyball
"I guess J 've ba d to work at
my job a little too much," he
s ays . "l love beach volleyball
d early becaus e I'm a com ·
petitlve person. On top of that.
it's fun ...
There won't be that much fun at
Ma in Beach beginning Satur·
day morning.
The majority of the two·man
volleyball teams participating In
the Laguna Open consists of
trlple·A rated teams -teams
th n t have e ither finished
anywhere from first to fourth In
an open volleyball tournament.
or who have won a double-A
tourney .
McElhany and Kiernan are
double·A player!\, but that
doesn't bolhtr McElh-.ny. In
ract, the home court advantage
ahould apply for the duo.
"We have the height advan·
taae. We 're both around 6 3.
Laauna i• known for having h.tah
net.I and ton H nd," be explalnt.
"lf you take Just a ny player.
.. And. this is a hitters · touma·
ment. We can beat the smaller
playe rs on the Laguna court but
we might lose to them on any
other beach." Mc Elhany adds.
Mc Elhany calls Kier nan a
phys ical s pecirpan. '"He's 6·3,
190 and all muscle. Compared to
some of my other partners, he's
probably the best o verall,"
Mc Elhany says.
The two actually grew up
together in Emerald Bay. play·
ing plenty of volleyball at the
beach.
"I'd rather play with him then
against him." McElhany addl.
Mc Elhany looks forward to
the Laguna Beach tournament.
Since he's pretty much bis own
boH, he's been taking ofr a tad
earlier each day to work out at
Main Beach.
Last week, McElhany and
Kiernan finis hed seventh In tht
touah Mission Bay Open, and be
takes the blame Cor the team'a
eUm lnaUon.
"We made It Lo the wlMer11
bracket but I Just ran out or 1aa .
l 'm not in as 1ood of abape aa
Ore•. Ht'a a fierce hiller."
Defending champions Andy
Fishburn and Dane Selznick
. make up the top-seeded team in
this weekend's Cuervo Laguna
Beach Open be ach volleyball
tournament at Main Be ach.
Twenty .two tw o -ma n
volleyball teams will battle both
• Saturday and Sunday in the dou·
b le elimination tournament,
which is part of the California
Pro Beach Tour. AcUon begins
at 9 a .m. each day. with the
flnallt expected to ~gin at 3:30
p m . Sunday.
The event. In its third year as
part ol the pro tour. drew 14,000
fans lul year. Volleyball teams
will ~going an.er $7,000 In prbe
money with the first·place team
earning $3,500.
While some o r the top
volleyba ll player s from
t.hrouthout the stale wlll be on
hand for the tourney, one team
which will not be prttent is the
duo of Mitt o,,ae and · Jim
Men'les.
The favorites, Ftsbbum aod
Selznick, rtrat Joined rorce1 at
the 197'8 Le1una Open.
.
I • I I I l
I
I I
I I I I
I I I I
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thu~ay, July 23, 1981
' €arter blamed for 2nd quarter economic dip
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
stumbling of the economy to a
second·quarter decline in out·
put has hei1htened chances ol a
recession in President Rea1an's
first year in office, the govern-
ment bas reported.
The administration quickly
blamed former President Carter
and the Federal Reserve.
The inflation-adjusted gross
national product -the market
value of all goods and servic~
-fell at an annual rate of 1.9
percent in the April-June
quarter, a sharp turnabout from
the robust firs t-quarter growth
rate of 8.6 percent, the Com·
merce Department reported.
In a press briefing shortly
after the figures were released
Wednesday , Commerce
Secretary Malcolm Baldrige
contended that "this setback is
the result of mismanagement of
economic policy during 1980.' •
He said credit controls Im·
posed by Carter and the Federal
Reserve Board plunged the
economy into a severe receHion
early last year and then Carter
and the Fed overreacted by eas·
ing up too much and too soon,
re-igniUng inflation as well as
economic activity.
.. As last year's excesses have
TRADING FEVER -Trading of certificates of
deposit brought this enthusiastic response
this week at the Chicago Board of Trade. The
Commodities Futures Trading Commission,
.............
which regulates CD trading, last week ap·
proved certificate trading in Chicago. The
certificates had previously been traded only
at the New York Futures Exchange.
Crocker Bank incotne rises sharply
SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The
holding company for Crocker
Bank has reported second· quarter net incom e of $20.9
million, up 18.1 percent from the
first quarter but down 10.8 per·
cent from last year's strong
second quarter.
Net income per common share
was $1.42 in this year's second
quarter, down 14.5 percent from
$1.66 in the comparable period of
1980.
$22.8 million in the second
quarter or 1980 to $20.9 million.
Net interest income, the dollar
difference between interest in·
come and interest expense, was
$158.8 million In l981 ·s second
quarter, 1.7 percent above the
same period a year ago.
$1,000 or 11IOl'8•8,12 weeks
%
A 11111111/ k 111"
1lidayk inll'rt'sl rail'
1tW1rnnlt't>d fur
I ht' lt'l1n bv
Amt•ffi•an Sa\1n)(~
American Savings pays high interest with safety.
111e str .................... twig ..... ,....1r ...... .
Backed by Securities of the U.S. or U.S. Government
geodes. TH IS OBLJGATION IS NOT A SAVINGS
ACCOUNT OR DEPOSIT ANO JS NOT INSURED
DY THE FEDER.AL SAVINGS AND LOAN
INSURANCE CORPORATION.
Principal plus interest paid by American Savings at
maturity. NO FEE. NO SERVICE CHARGE. Available
to California residents only. Interest rates are set~
Brtnr any bank or 1avlnp puabook. We'll tranefer
thefund1.
AMERICAN SAVINGS
SAFE SINCE 1885 •ASSETS OVER $9 BILLION
Over 100 o/fwe$ to strw you. CMclt ul.eplum1 w#tile pages for. office neamt you.
c.11 t...._ • •1111 yl1W~•1a11ef SIM,IN .....
----------
For complete ad copy and art services
advertisers all along the Orange c:; ~ 1111111 PHat
.... ..
faded and the impact of
monetary reatraint has taken
hold. the economy bas lost its
forward momentum," Baldrige
sald.
Private analys t Lawrence
Chimerine, chairman of Chase
Econometrics in Bala Cynwyd.
Pa .• said there was "a little
truth" in the contention that last
year's government actions
magnified both tbe economy's
downturn and its quick re·
covery.
But he said the stagnant state
of the economy probably would
not be greatly different if credit
controls had not been imposed in
the spring of last year.
Economists inside and outside
government agree the 'Fed's cur·
rent tight credit restraints have
contributed to the new weaken-
ing of the econ omy . But
Baldrige said the administration
wants Federal Res e rve
Chairman Paul Volcker and
other Fed governors to stick to
their guns this time as a way of
fighting inflation. despite the
cost to credit-sensitive in-
dustries such as housing and
construction.
·'The months ahead are likely
to be difficult for bush1ess,"
Baldttge acknowledged.
"l expect no significant pickup
in economic activity until late ln
the year," Baldrige said, but he
added that he w.ould "leave the
technical definition of a re-
cession to the economists."
That technical definition is
two consecutive quarters of
negative GNP -a definition
now well within the range of
many forecasts.
"It's clear we're in at least a
mild recession, but probably no
more than that," said Allen
Sinai, vice president of Data
Resources Inc., a Lexington,
Mass .• forecasting firm.
Sinai said, "Thia is the price
we are paying for the 'impact on
fnflation," noting that the new
report pegged second·Quamr ln·
flation -as measured by the
GNP implicit price defiator -at
6 percent, down sharply from
the first quarter's 9.8 percent. ,
Volcker told Congress on
Tuesday and again on Wednes·
day that the Fed has no plans to
ease its credit controls, even
though .members realize their
actions are "no simple painless process."
The new Commerce tieures
showed total GNP risin1 4 per·
cent to a seasonally adjuated an·
nual rate of $2.88 trillion in ·tbe
second quarter. Tran~lating the
figures into 1972 dollars, which
is how Commerce adjuats for
inflationary · increases, the
quarter showed the 1.9 ~cent
drop to an annual rate of.$1:51
trillion.
Recovery seen for Chrysler
Auto firm, boosted by loan backing, shows profi~
WASHINGTON (AP > The
Chrysler Corp.. kept afloat in
part with $1.2 billion in federal
loan guarantees, has posted its
first profit since 1978, according
to an announcement by
Chairman Lee A. lacocca.
Iacocca said the company, on
the verge of a tiankrupt year,
registered a slight profit of $12
million in the April-June
quarter.
The company, he said, ··is now
on the leading edge of the in·
dustry's recovery. Chrysler has
fought its way back to prof-
itability."
lacocca, who spoke at a Na-
tional Press Club luncheon
Wednesday, gave no other de·
tails about second.quarter eafll·
ings. The company was to re·
lease a financial statement later
in the day.
Chrysler ·s last profit was $43.1
million in the fourth quarter of
1978.
Since then the No. 3
automaker has lost nearly $3.2
billion and was forced to go to
lhe government for $1.2 billion in
loan guarantees to stay afloat.
Chrysler spokesman Bill
Stempien said in advance of
Iacocca·s speech that the com·
pany's financial situation is now
so good that Chrysler has no in-
tention of asking the govern-
ment for the remaining $300
million in loan guarantees for
which it is eligible.
He said better-than·expected
sales of the Chrysler Omni
Horizon and of its K·cars were
behind the profit. In the first
quarter of the year, the
automaker posted a $290 million
loss.
Chrysler was the first of the
top three automakers to report
its earnings for the second
quarter.
General Motors is expected to
report a profit of $45() million to
$550 million while analysts
believe Ford Motor Co . will be
near the break·even point.
Earlier this month the smaller
American Motors Corp. an-
nounced a loss of $19.9 million in
the quarter.
Car ~ales of late have been
generally sluggish because of
high interest rates and the sag.
ging economy.
In the first 10 days of July,
sales fell an average of 17.4 per·
cent for the dome s tic
automakers. making it the worst
early July for sales in 20 years.
Only Chr%1er showed an im·
provement, with an increase in
sales of 13.6 percent compared
to the same period a year ago.
Ford sales were down 34 per-
cent and GM sales were off 14
percent for the period.
Stempien said sa les at
Chrysler have been increasing
for six consecutive months.
Special tax aid
backed for seniors
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
House Ways and Means Com·
mittee is endorsing special tax
relief for persons 55 and older
who sell their homes while
lengthening the tax-free grace
period between the sale of one
home and the purchase of
another.
The committee agreed this
week to add to its tax-cut bill a
provision increasing to $125,000
the amount of lax-free profit a
person 5S or older may realize
from the sale of a principal
home. The exemption. which
may be claimed only once in a
lifetime. now is $100.000.
OUR NEW BUSINESS BANK
WILL SUCCEED
WHERE THE BIG, OLD BANKS
HAVE FAILED YOU. .
Ler us introduce our·
selves.
Marine Na1ional Bank
is now open for husiness
at the comer of Harhor and
MacArthur.
And when we say
open for husiness. we mean
we·re o pen for you to meet
a new style of banker-the
business banker.
We're going to provide
a new dimension in bank·
ing and financial counsel.
bast!d on our in ·depth
experience and our ability
to make decisions quickly.
And we're going to
succeed where the big
banks have failed in serving
the growfng. aggressive
businesses.
us to acl 4uickly: we·re nol
compromised hy hranch
hanking commi11ees. and
outdated hanking routines.
Since we have no loan
committees. we·re ready
to give you a straight
answer. FctSt.
.Youll get mo re
in1eres1 in your company's
financial future. And more
advice on how to increase
your yield on deposits
and cash flow.
In e ffect. we·d like
to become your business
hanking partner with the
abili ty 10' quickly focus
on your financial oppor-
tunities.
And. as business
bankers. we11 be offering
special financial services. Now don't get us
wrong. We have nothing
against the big banlts. Them, not us.
1 like economic reports pre·
pared by Arthur 8 . Laffer,
business lines of credit.
real estate construction financing and cash
But. just as their
gigantic size has helped them with big business.
we think it's hurt them wit~ the small to medium
size company.
That's where we come in.
management.
Plus. we11 be providing all the regular ser7
vices the giant banks offer. From personal check·
ing and savings accounts to money .market · Marine National Bank was org~nized by a
group of highly successful business leaders and
mpnaged by professional business bankers who
have spent most of their careers working with
growth oriet;tted companies on the move.
certificates ... all this on a personal basis.
Come see us. Or. if your busy sctiedule
keeps you at the ofrice. we11 come to you.
. .
Frankly. we're staking our reputations on the
belief that we can do a better job than the big
banks In this speciallz.ed area of banking.
Our business and banking experience allows
MARINE NATIO'JAL BANK
Harbor at MacArthur.
3330 S. Harbor Blvd.
Santa Ana, CA 927Ck
(714) 754·6544
We're in business for you to profit from our
batiking relationship. a combination of our bank·
ing experience and your business-acumen.
•
Call Donald A . Miller. president at (714)
754·6544. .
, .
W.'r91n·aus1neet
1b Help~ 'roftl
. ~
~I
, I
Orangt Cout DAILY PILOTIThur.day, July 23, 1981
a.My .............
Exxon
profits
soar
NEW YORJ< CAP> -Exxon
Corp., the nation's largest oil
concern, sajsl.. loday its second·
qua~t rose 77 percent on
a 5 percent gaJn in revenue com·
pared with the same quarter last
year.
Exxon was the first of the ma-
jor U .$. oil companies to report
lts second-quarter earnings.
Exxon's second-quarter profit
was $1 .8! billion, or $2.11 a
share, compared with earnings
of $1.03 billion, or $1.18 a share,
In the second quarter of Ul80. It
said the per-share earnings
reflect a 2·1 stock split effective
May U .
Second-quarter revenue rose
to $27 .S billion against $26.2
billion a year earlier.
In the first six months, Ex·
xon's profit rose 16 percent to
$3.43 billion, or $3.96 a share. on
revenue of $57.8 billion. In the
first half of 1980, Exxon earned
$2.9S billioni.<!r $3.38 a share. on revenue or ..,.,,9 billion.
OC .grower
issues alert
on shipping
TWENTY TONS -Crane lowers 20.ton (39,500 pounds) table
that's being installed at the Newport Harbor Shipyard at 223
21st St., Newport Beach. The heavyweight table is to be
used to lift large boats out of the water for repairs.
EXETER (AP) -Elimination
fof federal marketing orders
controlling shipments of navel
oranges would cause "violent
manipulation of the market for
four to five years ... an Orange
County grower predicted.
$50,000 to $500,000
INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS
Jack Christensen made his re·
marks this week during the
second day of a federal hearing
called after a record harvest
forced ranchers to divert fresh
oranges to cattle reed and food
cooperatives.
.... _ ...... "......,....... ··-• w-1111" e•••t.-u •..._tWvhuMMef•
His projection was based on
the time it would take "to break
the smaJl farmer" if controls on
volume and sizes were removed.
Shipment sizes are set weekly
for ranchers by a committee of
s ix growers. four shippers and
one public member
•C•••ercW • 6 -tlMI to 3 v--•8..W..dal • s-tt.e ... Calif°"""
.. ..
C 11nltUt nur
foe• t..roraadoo Mrvko
I•'' ~· •ur lon<1nr1ny nrtd'
(714) 759-1515
AlllUllCAN HOME MORTGAGE
730 Ne•P0'1 Center 011ve
O•stQn Plaze
NewPOn S.ech
Celtlor,...
92eeo
,
WEARE A
PREICIUPTION
PHARMACY
'Cm: ~ R. Ph.
cou.ECTORS
CORNER
R8re Coln8 & 9tamp1
GOLD & S.LVER
.... c ... ~1-1\..-a.SL .. ..., Sett 1(,.,..,,.,.. .. ,... M2'.JI
Maflle LHll MU .. • MU.a 1ooeor-.-. .• ...._.
'°Pesos $111.ZS U tl.U ~SllWt'S. ··~ ~
It is f\Ow believed that 70% Bank Financing
rheumatic fever is IRA& KEOUGH COURTEOUS,
PROFESSIONAL,
TRAINED •••
caused by thl' same (714) 5Mtll0
st r e ptococcus germ South eo..t Plue Vlffege
which causes a strep 1._"':-..:..~-1
throat. It can make a ·~==========~~ child or adult llr~ and
Dncrtba TAB Operators and Scrvkie.
CONFIDENCE
Dacrtbes OUT Customers· Feellngt
About TAB.
\
TAB OPERA TORS WD.l..
Take Messages • Take Orden • Quote Pncn
• Relay Calls • Make Appointments • T •~•·
and Facslmllc Service • Supers fOf aD
Southern Callfomill • Wake-up Scrvce.
Rota and &rule~ to At Yoc.ar·NeftM
714-547-7m =1m, Pie•••••" for EXT. 751T
TELEPHONE ANSWERING BUREAU
have painful jdlnts or
abdominal tenderness.
More serious results
occ ur. Th e Illne ss inflames the hurt 's
mitral valve. Scar tissue
can form and permanent damage may result.
Worse yet, 1 child does
not grow out of this and
can get rheumatic rever over and ovl'r again
Physicians know these
dangers. but can protect you most if they are
consulted about any sore throat as soo n a s possible.
YOUR DOCTOR CAN
PHONE US when you
need a medicine. A 1reat
many people entrust us
with their preacrlpUons.
May we compound and di1pe1UJe yours?
PAU LmOPMAINACY
,.=;? .•
*=flw• ... 60:••
1 OIL AND GAS LOTTERY
CM you afford to tak• a chance In the exciting world or oll I gas
1 .... acquisition on parcels. off9nMS ~ thl Unit.d Ste1" Government?
Only persona In h~ tu ~who can afford to speculate should be I~ In this program. •C._.._. .. ,,...
• 1"'4. .......... _ ..... ... ,...., .... ..
We work In conJunctlonwtth F• w.t Energy S.rvlc:n, Inc. who provldft: . c.,, ....... 4 .... ..... : =::= :=:-::-..... '-::;:
• 11'1•1\suh • ..__.. • 1' t If
,OA INFO"MATIQUHDMMI MOCHUAE. fl'l!All ~l
PERSONAL IMYISTMINT COMPANY .,, ........ . ' .
Second -story man a
teenager whose parents didn 't believe his first story
•••
You can spe>t an egotist
by the gleam in his I.
***
Notice on chu rch bulletin
board: "Don't keep the
rait h .. sp r ead it
around.
***
Too bad we can't invest
In taxes. They're .the only things that go up every year
***
Man 's three bas ic
ha!ratylts: parted. un-parted. and dep~rted .
•••
Here'a how we aee ll:
you'U find the best selec· tion of quality tJttt Jilht
bere at Tlre City, l9150
Newport, Clolta lfaa.
r
--.
Beckman dividend 9 cents
Directors of Fullerton-baaed Beck•••
la1tr•meata be. have declared. dJvldend or
9 cents a 1h ,re, /ayable Au1. U to
sbarebolden ot recor Au1. 3. 1be company,
which manufactures anal)'tlcal and proceas
control instrumentation. amonf others, has
20.4 mlWoo •bares outatandlnc. • Newport Beach·b11ed Compreheulve Care
Corp. bad announced July 24 11 the dale for
the accelerated payment of the 100 percent
common stock
dividend. That
~::~ ~:sc~r=~t BUSINESS BRIEFS
payment date Is ----------July 21.
The California Public UtUillea Commlaaion
has granted Southera California EdlSOD a r ate
increaseof$4.6 million a yeartooffaetcosta U·
soclaled wtth the utility's conversion from bi·
monthly to monthly billing. The chanae was
implemented between May and December of
1980. Edison had aou1ht a M.2 mUUon annual In·
crease to finance the chan11.
• Units ot Fluor Corp., Irvine, have been
awarded contracta by Aramco for enalneer·
ln1. procurement a11l1tance and construction
management for a 1aa-1athortna project tn
Saudi Arabia. Value of the contracu WH not
dladoet."1 The project le a continuation of
Saudi Arabia's ext.enelve pro1ram to utilize
surplut gas for the induatrlallzatlon of that
country. • At tho urging or thci PubUc Utilities Com·
mission, San Dle10 Gaa Is Eledrtc Co. la
planning to otrer zero·lnterest loans next
year to 6,000 realdential customers to help
weather ize their homes. A request has been
flied to lncreHe rates by about Sl.6 mUllon
next year to finance the state-reques ted
''Zero Interest Proaram" (ZIP). If granted
by lher P UC, the rate Increase could mean a
lS cent incr ease on the typical monthly
residentlaJ gas bill.
• Tustin-based Eldorado Buk has reported
record earnings. operatlng lncome and total
assets for the second quarter and first half or
1981. For the three months ended June 30, net
OVER THE COUNTER NASO ll~TINGS
NfiW YORK ("IP) CltlS.00• 1-. I HelmRsc ~ 4 Nu<rp 1
N<llSOAO qyotet-CIUUIA J:2\lo JI Hellfdl" i.111 27 OQllvyM Sllowlng 1119Ntt l>iOI (IUUte )IV. ll'llt HOIObm 2V. 2'-OflioCH
-1-1 offeo t>y tlerkJl .. n ttv1 Hoover 11V. U'-Ofll"erro Merkel ~l es of C-Cp 1"4 1111 Horl1lh lil'J 4111 Otte<TP Wtd. Prket 00 not ColrTle I~ "''°' Hyettlnl 2111'1 2J PC.II 1111 '"'I-reuMI tnel1t:yP CotGlllOI Iii .... IMS Int 1"' "" Peost8 merkOO-°' COf'NI\> ComCIH 31 37\lo lnlrelnct ........... PcGeR IHl011 lor w.d CmlSllr 14111 ,. Intel JI lJV. l>euleyP Stock 8kl AJlt Cm•T•I 1• 11v. lntrc Enr 1214 11'-PeylsCs °"EL Ind 1"-llV. ConPep JI';, J2 lntmtG1 I~ I~ P .. rMI Al"AProt t V. I~ CMdli 11"-11\'J ln8kWlh 14!'> lS PeneEnt <llYM Cp 4'4 4 .. CrosTre JJ ... l3V. 1111.SoUI ,,._ 22V.. Penteir
<llccuray '" lO'i\ CU11rl"d 1 1v. ,,,. Jemsby lOVJ ~ Petri! • Addl"'W llllto 12V. Cytltron 11"' U Jerico I UV. 2 ... Petllt>on
AdlrROS• 4..._ 4~ OenlyM ""' I~ Jlllyl"d 14 Iii Phll•H•I AtflBlh ""' Ull'I Ot•OH 20 20'4 JosfynM 371/. 3111' Piere.SS 'AluAlu 3111'1 ""' OeytM•• 11 n k•issi -,;i~,. i.v. Plnkrtn
<llllcolnc 43\l't 4S 08 .. r 1>-1•11-Jl Kelver 2 ~16 2"' PlonHl8
<llltu 6 ..... DftlbA' 1tll'J 2'-\11 Kem en 1 n .... 23~ Ptelllne .llmU•• 14\<o 14"1 0.tC•n 11 ,, Keyw m SVo ~ PO&SIS •.llFU<n l llo 4"' 0.w•yEI J JV.. Kell S• u .. PruGM <llGr"t IJ'11t '"" 01.Cr'I" n .... 1411'1 Keul.•1 n~ U ltt PrsSl..,n
AlnGp • U\l'J S4 Otlll'ICru lSVJ • .,., KlmlMlll -· 21 '4 Pr09rp AMl<ro1 11"' 11VJ Docwll 1 11V. 11'-Klnglnl ,.,.. ~ PbSvNC ANet1n1 1,-. U'-OollrGn 14 1.-., KloolG 2~ 11 Pu118en
<110...v 211'1 21"' Ooyl08 • u Ullo KnepeV 1'111 " PutOCep
AltesMg "'" ""' Ori.ten UV. Hh Krelos 1414 14"" Ouak•Cll =':' ' ~ ~ DunklnO 2:211'1 n"' wllck• ISVJ 16 Rege11Pr •-~l• 12 I?~ OUMO tltl IS ISll'I Left«ln 2JVJ ll"' Reycllm -·-..._ ... °"''"' ' ""' u lAndRH SVo ' Reymnct !:t'c<;° =: ~ h tnY"' 11..., llYJ LAMCo Jt JMO ~..,,. • °'"'.c n "' nf'I eunl •I> -~ Lllno nv. n-. .. oectE• Apff!M ' ,. 1'V. Etl"HEI 10\t. 10-0 LldStor U\lo '~ :obl>Mr AroenGp )~ • Elder I• • •I'> l ln8ul J1Vo l2V. R O..ICll'I
AldCOI• 40 -El•Hucl IJ'A 1,.. Loeetrn 21'A ,, -· AllGslt '"'°' 15..., EIMOOI ' 11 11~ MCIC ~ 2l,_ lttHStov <llll.,Rt II ll''J EnrO.v 12~ IJ"' MGF O t 11\'J ""' s.dll..-8elrdC.P '°" IO'\ finrMellld .-. 4111 M.tctsGE ,,._. 1~ S.le<o lallyPP ..... IVJ EllRlv 1,_. I~ M.e9elpt ..... "°' SIHelGd 8-HE lJ.ll> 11,_ Enl•ISll ~ ..... Mer:mP ........ 11'1 StPe"I latlclh 9 ~ • fiqutSL II~ u Me RI 114 ' ~rlppH anstFr 24 2cv. E•IOll 12 .. 12~ M.t krt 1 J3VJ ~ $e11M>r SeyllMk IP. 11 .... l"SC 1 211. Merton 1 10 I~ SvcM•r e .. 11,,. •v. 10 FellrlTk ~ 4"-MeuilP l2\lt 3' Svcmu 1 8entP11 2•, 1"' FermGp »'-' JOf'I Mey pt 1tll'J ~ SllMect 8nlly 1 » ,...., l"ldlcor 21W. 21''1 MeynOll lM 1~1
e etiuo 41 4111, FtBkSys ~ o McCorm '"' let.
Income lncreued 42 percent to S:Jtt,MO, or 38
centa a share, from lb 12'77,837, or 27 cent.I,
for the 1980 second quarter. For tbe six
months, net income was S754,473, or 73 cent.I ·
a 1hare. up '2 percent from the -.244. or 51
cents a t hare for the year earlier. •
The board of dJrecton or Parker Haulfta
Corp. has voted a 3·for·2 stock spilt and a 9
percent increue ln ita cash dividend. Tbe IC·
lion by the board raises the common tbares
outstanding to 24.9 mllUon from 16.6 million .
The additional shares will be distributed
Sept. 4, 1981 to shareholders of record Aua.
14, 1981 . Cash wllJ be paid ln lieu of fractional
shares. •
Badia.at Techooloty Corp., Newpol't Beach,
at its meeting JuJy 10 terminated the employ·
ment of Charles F. Steer as president and
treasurer, effective J uly 3. The board of
directors' request for Steer 'a Immediate res·
ignalion as director was refused. Subse·
quent to being notified of the action propo8ed
to be taken by the board and oflered an op·
portunity to resign. Steer attempted to ex-
ercise an option to purchase 800,000 shares of
common stock or the company. J oseph S.
Romance, chairman and chief executive of·
fleer or Radiant Technology, said the com·
pa.ny is evaluating the circumstances and
validity of the attempted exercise and the op·
lion. Romance will undertake the duties of
president and will act as chief financial of·
ficer pending the a ppointment or a new
treasurer .
•
American City Bank reported continued
growth In deposits, loans and total assets dur-
ing the second quarter of 1981. Recorded net
earnings after taxes were $630',000, up so.~
percent from fi rst quarter earnings of$419,000 ..
and an Increase of 27.6 percent from second
quarter 1980 earnings of $49',000. Total aaaeta
exceeded $400 million during the quarter.
reaching, $410.9 million on June 30,. Net
loans were $262.0 million at June 30, 1981. up
6.3 pert":ent from the March 31 level and a
growth or 39 percent from the June 30, 1980
level. Total deposits at June 30 of $349.2
million were up 2.9 percent from the March
31 level and up 29 percent from June 30. 1980.
Heme SIO*llTK Geri Md S•l.e-CmllUWI Codnt un EaptSvy ~~r:sc""
Womet COdnlwt IPM T<J\t lntDI• WI NPereg
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lornell "" <11mC't10, l"U.r<) 9 O.Cefin CntSI...,. or .. Jr . c; .. eroo. Ne•edaS Pelle• Palla pf
UP$
lei! C1'll Pt I lV. + ~ Up U.O
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41/• • >.I. Up 21.4
14'11 + 1''1 Up :ZOJ 13 + 1 Up 11.2
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JV. • 1 '' Up 14.J U Y> • 1\o'J Up 11-6 l~• • ~ Up 1),0 7•, • ~ Up 12.S
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21'1 It. Up 11.1 SI._ • VJ Up 10.I 7ll6 + _,. Up 10.7
2'Wo + '" Up 10,0 11 + I Up 10.0 ) V. Up t.1 ,,..., Vo Up 1.6 '°" + .. Up 1.6 ,,,,, • ~ Up I ' •
l•vMgt Uf'I IJ'At l"t&oltn lO'll JI Mc Fert 1411'1 ""'I
81tl0Co 10 IOl<t F1EmpS u~. ""' Mc0.,•1 14¥. uv. UPS ANO DOWNS 8irCISoll U U'4 FtWnl"ln iv. S-. Mlty•rl" -'° I e1nc1>r 7,4 n. l"leg8h 2' 2••• MlduW 1..iw. 11~ 1
DOWNS
LA ~·'I• _";\,
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l'<L Ott U.O Oii 11.6 Ofl IU Ott , ...
81yvoo.-., .. Ullo l"llcl19r llV. 11\11 MdldC9P ~ 10111 J eon ... u ~ Vl't FloatP I n'H 22\'J MldlRe• I~,. I"' 4
8rwTom JOll'I -, .. NFI• '"' ·~ Mld18kt J3 J3"' s &uckllff 10-0 1~ 1<1uroc1> • 11"' 11 1111er ~ ,,.,.. NEW YORK l<llPI Mott ec11ve owr· ,
Suflelt JOlh -ForettO 22\1: ,,_ IH IG ""' " Ille..:.......... •vlO<OI~!... ·-dlled ,."!~HA.SO •' 8..,,,..115 14'-'"" Forml~I ~ ''" Mo••• • ~ .. 11'1 Heme -·-&le ........ Cha CNl Fin , 2iw. Frenk p 10 .... " nlCol SVo s~ PIH O 2'2,400 '"' 1 1).1' • "' t
CPT ' """ II Frank I ,. 1'11'1 Monu<p 20l/'J ~ Tendm '·. w 400 19"' ,, + Iii 10 C.IWISv l2 »V. l"t'ffSG 3'Y, u NloorePd JIV. J2 C!Myn .. :rn.,too 1 ). " 1 v. t l-1' 11 C.nredH JO)Oo lit. Fremnt • lilt !I'll Mort R.. W 4\iit <llmpllce «-',100 10 10\lt ..... u
Ce&>Eng lllto lf'I l"ullrH8 2 ..... 2414 Mors.n In fl6 10 ,ANetPI . 2111•, 1.22, 21~ ~~ -:_l·!t 11! c:apswe ,,.,,, JOll'I Gn.llulm lOMt 11"" Mo!Ctllb 211. ,...., MCIC .... ,_._ .._ ..,.. , ....
C-lnAr h ,._ 414 GnOevcs ._ '"' llo\wllw JI.,., J2 ApldMd . . llS,000 1 1·1' 11-1' -..,_ IS C.r.C:-17.,., 11111 OnRlfill ll'At 1111'1 NerrgCp s "11'1 21 'Sefeco . 111,400 l741. • -v. " C.•nC 11 1._ '"' bovfil"n IV. I NOie s IMll 1' EnltSll ... 1S7JIOO IJ" 134 -11'1 11 C•VtPS lM ,._ GrHnM 12 121/: NJN&z.' IW. 14\t. Om"Cre 152.300 21VJ 21"--'At 11
CIMr"lv J7V. •II'> Gf~~~:v ,=i, r.111 N~!1.1 ' m: ~ .. .lldvenceci m i:
ClwmS I 14111 ""' yrod '"' ~ Nle l"' ,ot. Jt'AI ~ O.Cllneel 1 .. 1 CNtHou I lt 1111. em•~· 1"4 II Nlellft • ,. ,. .... Unch.,...CS 1 g:t:t.r ff~~ .,... , .... , NoC••G• 121,1, 11"' ra1e1 ,,_ • H~1fl
OllN•Tr 97v, ""' '-""' '"' u~ No Euro 1 11 " New n•ons . . • , • '1• Olllbb Cl 4'1" Her.Op "" JO NwtNGs ll'At 11-. -IO'ln . . ..• • 11212S Clr1ko ~ • HertlHt n ~ NwtlPS ,._ 1~ TOl•I .... 21.1•1.200 2' ~nt I II tt V. NoHll 2'\4 -~
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Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT/Tl1ursday, July 23, 1981 s C7
NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS
OUOU.lK*I INCUIDI HAOUOll fJtl lllW YOllll, MIC*UY", 'aCl,.C. 'IW, IOtfOIC, OlY•OIY 4JllO CINC011Hll fTOCll lltCM••on ANO •llro•uo •Y TMI N.UO ANO llllTOll"t
f t
ln un uncertain world there are always those who
claim they know "The Truth." And not only do lhey
know it, they have thi5 peculiar tendency to want to
puni11h anyone who doesn't see things the way they
do. These proclaimers recently broueht to heel aome
of the biggest companies in the nation. includin1
Procter & Gamble < P&G>. our most succuaful
marketer of consumer good&.
The issue was sex and violence on television. 86ven
(undamentalilst and conservative iroups formed the
Coalition for Beiter Television to put pressure on com·
panies torefraln ~ from adverUs· ,,
lng on programs ~; a
deemed (by the r ,
coalition) to be k 4
m ark e d by =-~~ .... -------~f~~~~~o~s !~"ci lllJll •DllJZ
profanity."
The kind of programs which would qualify for
such condemnation are "Soap," "Dallas," "Charlie's
Angels,'' "Saturday Night Live" and "Starsky &
Hutch." The founding members of the coalition are:
Moral Majority, National Federation for Decency,
American Life Lobby, Eagle Forum, Pro-Family
Forum, Concerned Women for America. and Citizens
for Decency Through Law.
They have people all over the country with their
eyes glued to the tube. monitoring where com-
mercials fall and assigning merits and demerits to
advertisers. The coalition had been on the verge of
launching a nationwide boycoll of 10 companies found
to be the worst offenders. These companies -and the
products they make -were to be targeted in full·
page newspaper ads and mailings to 10 million
homes. The boycott was to receive the pulpit endorse·
ment of 70,000 ministers
But at the last minute the coalition called off the
boycott. Here's what happened. First, Owen Butler,
the chairman of P&G. delivered a talk in mid-June in
which he said it was time for advertisers to "look
beyond" ratings. Butler praised the coalition for "ex·
pressing some very important and broadly. held
views," adding: "I can assure you that we are hsten·
ing very carefully lo what they say."
Now P&G is not just any advertiser . H's the
largest one of them all, spending more than half a
billion dollars a year to promote Tide, Cheer. Bold,
Ivory. Crest. Head & Shoulders, Prell. Pampers.
Duncan Woes, Folgers and a slew of other brands.
Butler·s talk was made just before the coalition
summoned about a dozen ·big advertisers to
Memphis to make a case as to why they should not be
on the boycott list. Among the companies defending
themselves there were SmithKline (Contact).
Warner-Lambert (Listerine, Efferdent, Rolaids) and
Mi les Lab< Alka-Seltzerl.
Well , after meeting and talking with the targeted
companies the coelition called off its boycott. an·
nouncing triumphantly that all of them, "without ex-
ception," had agreed to cooperate. The Rev. Jerry
Falwell, leader of the Moral Majority. said "no ma·
jor company was in defiance of our request to clean
up their act "
The Rev. Falwell called P&G's Butler "the hero"
of this morality play. P&G 's concern for TV pro-
gramming can be seen in the afternoon soap operas.
The Cincinnati soap-and-detergent king owns and
produces "Search for Tomorrow." "As the WQrld
Turns," "The Edge of Night," "The Guilding Light"
and "Another World."
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
•
HEW YORK (AP)•~ -·_,le.
-net chenge ol the llft•n ..-t tKtlW .... Ye><k Stock E•<"-nee IHUH, tre<ltn11 n41tlon.fly •t mon !twin '1.
HEW VOIU((APl Fl""I Dow.J-i •119~ tw w..i .. Jvl. 22.
JTOCKS ..._ LAw OIM Qa
Gonocolnc 1A04,,400 l)ft MlnnMM . «JS, !GO SIV.
Am Alrlln 7S7,700 1S1/o
EUOll I n9,.300 ~
Duke Pow "2,700 lt"" T !Indy s M2,SOO 321/o
Arner T ~ T 5-66, toO S4"' LIL Co *•IOO 1411'>
ArnerHess 4n,soo 32~ Not-IOll Sim 442.800 16 I. TV Corp ,,7,700 21 PNllpsPet lll,IOO 43h Clt1"$vce lU,toO SS 18M 347,IOO SS'A Tex Ulll 341.IOO 20V.
-¥t -1\.11
-"" .....
AMERICAN LEADERS
H EW YORK CAP)-S.19$, Wed. IM'lt.e
and net Chelllll ol the 1en most ac11w
AINrlc.an Slocll E•c,,.no• Is-. trecll!'ll netlOnelly •I mor. tNn l L Ee.,. a 42',700 u,,.., , ~
Ptff ' 2'2,700 19"' .....
MIO 8 1 .. ,700 l'l-" "" ~talOll 110,300 211/• • ~
Fr•n<e"41 OG II 91,000 23¥1 -"" Cll•mp Ho 1),200 1-. Aa4*r011 11,400 11~ .:.::·;~
HouOllTr 73, 100 24 ''-
Intl 8nknot 71.600 ~ v. CMI Coro •7.400 171/o • 'l't
UPS AND DOWNS._ _
NEW YO"I( CAP) -Tiii loltowlng llit _, the '"""' York Stock Exc""nee
JlOCk• end werr.,.ts "'-' !Wive oone up tilt most •1141 _,, Irle most !f te<I on crcen~:: .. <""9 1"99Ardl.u volume
Ho .. curltllS tredlftQ below S2 ere Incl· uded. Hel encl pet'cftaQe CMnaft are llM dllNntne• .. _ the prnlous CIMl"9
price enclWIMMesdeJ'~
H.,1\9 I.Mt Cha Pct.
1 HOllOll "oy Z2~ + 2-., Up 1JA
t Gofd11r• QI "" + I Up II.• J 5'1ew 1nctu• 11\lt + 1 Up 9A
A M\lftford 1~ + "' UP I.I S Conte-~ ;. If) Ull 1.0 •.. "OEJi ·ea Mll't + 21!.. Up 7.0 7 HevP 1. 4flf Ull't + ~ Up •• 4
• ,.,.,.,. dt \~ : ;: ~: u
• 11\IChCO t.05pl .... + I"' Up •• o 10 .,_oep 1'~ .. "' up s.t n ~!::~11 llf 10\i + '"' Up s.1 ta PflEI UOpl -~ + lYi Up S.5 1' 9elelg Hem 7"' + ~ Up U U ICLM Alrl fl • ,._ Up S.l
16 GTl"I 1Jf9 r}' t VII Up S.1 17 8etlcltffHY + V. Up S.0
Nenie. ~ Pd. 1 Hiii\ •.lOllf Ul,'o -Off 1U
1 Equlmrk Q! ._ -Off "" a ectn11 uu11 '"' -, ._ ~ 10.1
• fMtOcrtt M g~ : ttt ~ •:: ~ ~0::..-"1.~" 1~ -" ~ !·' 7 81tUYl"SL 11"' -1\.11 A • ,,.,,,.. 1~-"' .s
1' kfme!! *"' -\Ii 7.4 0 , ,._ 10VI -, .. Off 7.1 ,, "~:l~ H"' = ;v. ~ ~:J ll ''"' 12 -11111 Ott '·' j ~retOll .,_ -•h g;t 6.9 1: ei::= n: = tt °" :1
GOLD COINS
Hl!W YO"IC IA,-1 -Prlclel leW TIMMY of told <elns, ,_.,... •1111 ....,._.,.,
~1'9
., 1nc1 °Css tff,01 m .:11 •u,w-•.e ZO Tm .O..tS 410.60 401.J7 402.6>-US IS VII 106.4' I07.S7 10S.U 10..41 +-0 U
U Stll a.a M.62 J61M JU,n-l.• ~ri:::.s ...................... ~:=J:
UUli . :. :. ::·. ::,: : ... ~. -713,= U Stll • ........ ... ... ... 7,.22',
WHAT STOCKS DID
HEW YORK (AP) JUI, 1:J
Mven<'ff OKllMCS unc,,.nged
Tot•I INl>ft Hew highs Hew lo-
WHAT AMEX OIO
TOCIA~
HO
Cl3 1112 11 S6
HEW voiii< CAP) Jul.,,
Tod;J1
JJ3 ttl ,..
1
1S
METALS ....... , c.,_., 13~ unu • pound, u. S. ci.tON-llons
L•M 4l CMb a pound.
llllC 4'\li cenu • '*""'· CMll.,.l'H.
Tia '7.0329 Mtt•ls Week c-•· II>. AN..W-7...,<9"1t•l*lftll. H.V.
Mercwy s.ao.oo per fle$11.
l'letl-M10.001fOJ 01., HY.
SILVER W f I flf
Hendy ~ H•men, w.•2 per troy O<oMe.
GOLD QUOTATIONS
S.IKled_..,9'141prlcftW..........,:
L..._: mor-nlngfl•lnt~.u.1111,1.u . L ....... : e1...--1t•lftG .. lUO,upU.SO .
l'erlt: .,.,_ 11•1"9 "''•·•· olf U .SS. l"re ... JW1: '410.SO, up SO.SI.
hrlclll 1e1e ll•lng '410.IO, 11p a..oo. -.iu oo M1<tc1. M•••r a M••M•": only dell., quo!•
'41'·'°• •U.to. I ......... : Olll'f deOy ouolit Mil.JO, .. ts.so. 1..........-: only deilY _. fel>tlut.o
t<iJ7 ... ,upu.n.
SYMBOLS
l
~
1 ·I
•
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur1day1 July 23, 1981
An old-fashioned melodrama staged by Saddleback Valley
By TOM TITVS
OftMOelty ...........
The mOlt native American form of thHter
also Is probMbly the leDSt produced, but every ao
often some brave theatf"r or another detldta to
mount an old·Cashloned ch~r the·hMo, hl111 th•
villain melodrama.
The Saddleba~k Vulley Communlly 'rheattr
has choeum auch a project fur Its last show undt1r
Its old name <I t become lht" Ml11lon VltJo
Playhouse in September) and Ila 1wan son• al lh11
<'urrcnt uddrua <lht"
INTERMISSION ~;~:orf a "'m dl!0~t0 ~':
Entllled "Pur.-M
the Driven 'now" <or "/\
Working Girt 's Secret" I. the play 111 e dasslr ~lt
ample or Its atenre, presenll'd without many or the
romlc shtick that on en push ll over Into tho area
of Carce Al Suddleback, dJrector Vince Cordlo
plays it falrl) struil(hl. with thl.' po$turlng ten to
the thrt'C mam characters the hero. heroine and
villain
These roles are quite capably enacted.
something which <.'annol &lways be said about lht'
large supporting cast, several ot whom appt>ar Ill
at ease in their assignments Underplaying is cer
latn death in melodrama. and some less ex·
perienced performers lend lo slow the pace or the
Saddleback production
Most impressive of the cast Is Murti Louise
Sm ets a;, the chaste I and chased I heroine. aptly
christened Purity Miss Smets displays a natural
(lair for melodramu in her gestures and facial re
actions
Tom McKee does a creditable job as the coun
try bumpkin hero. but 1t is Ellis Estes us the
dastardly blackguard pursuing Miss Smets who
reaps the lion's share of audience response Tall,
•BARGAIN MATINEES•
Monday thru Saturday
All Performances before S:OO PM
(E1t1pt Special Engagements and Holidays)
--... .,,.... 90"9 ... -•
FOft YOUR EYES ONLY '"" ,, ............ , ....• • ... ,-.-m..1 ...
'-81fUt~·
ESCAPE FROM NEW Yt>Rll" I"' ,~ ............ 1'41•tk•
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..,.... __
"ARTHUR" -
12:" .... ·t::•·...-·••·••···· "S.O.B." 1111 tl"M•~•IM•J ••t .. -----------------___ ._.,.....,..
"RAIDERS OF TH£
LOST ARK" r"" t~·l---·L••Jll •t ..
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALl<·IN
'"'~·~ SUPERMAN II" IPG) t1•t:t91•tau•
MJ,. ........ , ...
"STRIPES" '"' tt.•·••· .... , ... , ...
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAUC IN
foclJllV Al Del 1'lnO
21l/6a.tH1 __ ................
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" -................... .,.
LAGUNA
r
---(;-"SUPERMAN 11 ,,... 1~•·•=-··-···· ....
faculty 01 Condlewooo
213/531·9510
.., ,.,...._.. • rMAAM 'A~
"THE CANNONBALL
RUN" ,,... ,, .............. ...., .. ""
THE FOUR SEASONS" __ ..............
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK",,... ........... '-"., •• •ertt
·------"DRAGON SL.A YER" -t , ............ , ..
so. COAST WALK·IN
l outn Coo1t Htwoy
ol l roodwoy
494-1514
lllLL MURAAY IN
STRIPES" IR) ,. ........ .......... .-O.. ...... M.l8'.
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" -111••::Jl•1••t::tl
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • •
•
PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES
.. I lO , 1 IS ._,
IMPOAUIH NOTICl ' CMllOAfll UllOUI 12 JAU ' "lf..,. "'' W.,M, M~ '"'"' f1; • JO• c,,, Sv" ""' • 00 •• t11o1 rt SOUNO • '°"" aM (.NI -IS IOVIO llUrlfA ~ • ., (.NI -,,.... '°""°" li(.CI iSOll• flOSl'IOI _.....fl#, '1)111-.1 •'li OOff.110IWl.S Dlf)ll A#~
ANAHllM
ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN
O.-IM)tl NII _"" ..... ARTHUA' IHI -h•••oY •1 ot l•"'o"" ·10" ....
179·9150 C °" "~D
•
--,.,....,.....:,::,:-...--. r-;;;.,.---... -;;;.;;;;;-
TME CAN NO NllALL AUN" (POI I 'FOR YOUR EYH ONLY '"' ~w -HARDl.Y WORlllNO" (PO) L THE LONO AIOERI" I ..
c1...: J. sou"o c "'' • ,UUtliu --------------
I UINA PAl1l
BUENA PARK ORIVf IN
...-.~&mL.1.IWUCUllP ... ..,...<.......,,.....
"ESCAPE FROM NEW YC>ftll' "" -l1ncoln Avo "•" 01 lnort "THE f)(TEAMINATOR" t"' 121·,070
IOUN'AIN
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVE· IN
so" O••QO f rw, 01 tfoO" ""t'' Oo 962·2411
NI ~IMl .. Sll~
t .. 60¥1Wf\latC-
IUPERMAN II" (PO) ~w
ANY ~ICH WAY YOU CAH '(POJ
C••I 11~"0
Hl ·WAY 39 DRIVE IN
-· .... !.Cl Of G.l<Otn C',lo.t lottwO•
191·3693 -----10.8 ."(R) .,._, __ c_.,.
....,. ARTHUA ' ,,...
THll POSTMAN ALWAYS -AINOS TWICE" IAI "10" t•t
C* II SOUMO :1•1 '' tou•O .~_;_-=~---+---.=..:::::a:~ ---·-___ ..
FOACl: FIVE 1•1 THE CANNON8AU. RUN" (l'O) -~ "FAD€ TO 8LACll I'll HARDLY WOAIUNO" (PO)
Cllll II -CtNI '' SOUllO
, A 11A8Gi'.&
LA HABRA ORIVI IN _ ......... -.......... "' ....
17Mf62
8L•f NA ~.a.Pt
LINCOLN ORIVE·IN
\1Mot~ A•• ..... Of l~Otf
121·.-070 ---
~ -,., ·'
-·----"ENOUll LOvt"' ""' "NIOHTHAWlll" 1111
,.......,.,. ................
llAIOIRI Of' THE LOST ARit"
(ll'Q)
l'\.W
HANOA" 11" (l'O)
ORANGE DRIVE IN
'•"to 4f"IO ,,._..
• ltot• C OH•9•
551·7022 ----··1.0 .•. """ -"Ttta flOl'fMAN A&.W4YS ,_NOl'IWICI " 111t . .. .. .. ~ ~ " ..
MISSION Olllv( IN
...... ....., .. , .
"THI GflQT W""" CANll" "XA~" ,._ (01 --·-....... ii."" ...
"f AOf TO l&.ACI(" ft
\
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
dtrk ind 1nu•l1u1h1oel1, Ellie proJectJ a menacln1
t11ur1t.
P'rt<I l 1MWM)' 11nd Ruth Comfort Davia are
rlMhl out ot ''II•• llaw" 11 t he proprtetora of a
Nt•w l"Jlll•nct hotol. Mark Orumm 11 qu!te Cood 11 Ill•' unwllltnes 1rcClmpllc1, wh.lle Ron Sorensen l•
t"tU'"f hut ~n1•1ln• •ii » )'Ount plckle plant scion. M 1r cu le1 Ml'C1ult1Y 11 tine •• a 1tutry 1oclely belle.
but ,ljuanu llhanco and Liu S111e require a bit
moro 11ruap In thtilr rolH H would·be lemme
(MU•I " "flur UI lho Orlven Snow'' Ml)' be ll11ht years
awuy from "A Vll'W 1-'rom the Brld(Ce," another
l'N'ttnl ~V('T oflcrlnM. but lt'1 a fun show for the
l'urlly QMtl •
LMllOerl. .... I ...
MerUfMf I' "'4111fltMll\ JeM,Mlli.....,, •
Aufll UMefl \A9fln
JH Lllllfl , • ,
Merl! 1.eulM imeO ... TemMClt .. ...............
.....• "'" L.tnwn
• .. • .. .. • .. • .. , ""'" ComfCM1 Devit • Mw1l CHW't\m
11.1'1<11-....... . • • • ""' SIN'en .... . . . • . . . L.tJ-•1e11<0 , ........ , Merlorte MCC.Vley lm.flel'tcll-...... .. Mrt. HeW1111 .. , ...•
AlllaonHewtlll
'•11'1 H99W
LelW lerilH Nttlle Monl1
.... LIU S-. Llftlle L.twla .• , ... llU~l••l-o • , . , ... c.1e.t• u n1e1on
fum1ly. It continues Fridays and Saturdays al 8
p.m . through Aug. 1 at the company's soon-to·be
vacated theater at 25741-C Obrero, Mission Viejo.
* OPENING WEEK END activity focuses on the
western part of the county as the Huntington
Be urh Playhouse unveils "Murder 1n the
M ugnoll us" and the Fountain Vall ey Community
Theater presents a musical version of "Tom
Sawyer."
''Make way for the greatest
dragon yet."
-Kevin Thomas. LOS ANGELES TIMES
•~IPICIUlll [ ••
-·-·--NOW PLAYING ~~I
• Cl•IDOIH 01,1n~ 611 l/~J SOUTll CDHf
• IOWAllOS IADDUa&CI, COS'J. 'ilt\.i ~46 .'It' ' , ' '·"'' ·~"n--•[DIDCl.9f.,..,r
H W&llllt·
llUllTlllGTDll lll&Cll
Hunllnq!Of" llo.ocn ~•8 ~J8o
llO 'HSU &CCl'TlD fOll HllS lllG&GOlllll
IQMWI
[Rl-
COWAMI IAOOUU Cll.
(1 Tooo ~· !)360
llWUll'•ITtl c..u "'"' ~ ,. .. va c1n c•••
!••"Ut hJ• JQ •
"Maiinollaa" la described u a spoof on
Southern·1lyle plays by Tim KelJy, author of "The
Uninvited." John Wllllam1 la dlrcctln11 the show,
which features Wll Thompson, Ann Leverett. Jo
Scott, Helen Velentlne and Peter Stone
Other• In tht' cu.t are Todd Marahull, Norm
Cobb, Beverly Turner . Richard Drake, Marjorie
Roc kwell, Martin Eckmann and Elaine Herman
Performances wilt be alven Fridays a nd
Saturdays at 8: 30 throu1h Aua . 29 at the
playhouse, In the Seacllff Vlllase center on Main
Street at Yorktown Avenue, Huntlntton Beach
ReaervatJons 847·4465
Also opening Friday Is "Tom Sawyer" by the
Fountain Valley Community Theater at Lo11
Amigos Hiah School, at the corner of llell and
Newhope avenues in Fountain Valley Rick flablb
is directing a cust of 25 youngsters
Performances will be given Friday and Sutur
day of this week and next Kt 7 .30 p.m , with
matinees at 2:30 on July 26, 30 and Aug 2 Cull
847-1108 or 962·5279 ror reservations.
Closing out their respective production• this
weekend to make room for newcomers next Wednes
day are "Flower Drum Song" al Sebaalian'a West
Dinner Playhouse and "After the Fact" at the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse.
"Flower Orum Song" bows out with
performances tonight through Sunday at varying
curtain limes at Sebastian's, 140 Av e. Pico, San
Burt~· llollfl' Moore
hnrlh ~·Dom DeLui••
n ,IJt.Jl~""'flrffll'lllSIMSJ.U;/JllllI llU()()1"1t)(}fJ(/#1t A#AJ •llU•W I 11
-r11tCA11~1 l/U1t"
~«Alt~""' UJIMr IMl'U. n A-ltltl MllllA;J JAMIE fA/111
TflllfrlMlllHAW 1111 TltllS JAC/11( CHAN MICHAEi lllJI
/,,,,,,,,_,,,..,..,,,.PAflllJf0tlf()W lit,Jt!vt14:, 4Jl(R' ~(JOI.Jr ttr~ .. ,811~<, ,Afl
O,.,.,Wtt ~4 ~lf.J#"Altl "'•'-llof•t 4 ~,_. 61-.1 .#, t .t II ~R/lfrt
ll'frH~fMl!IAI(~';_' ___ ~.
G .. ~ I····-··-·· ... I ···""*'·... ..,.,.,, ...._ _____ _,
•••• arid ~ow doeu 1ou.r
(tirdel\ (POW\>
Whether it1s about a simple shrub, a sophisticated
bed of flowers, or a !asty selection of vegetables ,
the Daily Pilot1s garden page blossoms every Fri-
day with handy hints and delightful features .
We ,ll give you tips on when to plant, when to
prune and when to pluck. Our writers also
brighten the garden section with interesting
features on local people who grow unusual plants
ctr achieve exceptional results.
Our crop of stories comes up new every Friday to
help you have more success and more enjoyment
with your growing . If your thumb is green, use it
to flip to the garden page in Friday's Daily Pilot.
llilJPilat
Clemente, to be followed by Edward Mulhare ii
·•Deathtrap." Reservations 492-9950.
"After the Fact" is on stoge toniaht throuah
Saturday at 8 p. m at the Moulton, 606 La1una
Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, where the double blll
of "Match Point " a nd "Dead Heat" arrives
Wednesday REservatlons494-0743
Univers al plans
movie facility
LOS ANGELES I AP> The parent company
of lJ niversal Studios plans to build a motion pie·
t ure and telcv1s1on production racility along with
its 11 lready announced $100 million theme park in
Orl ando. Fla , the Los Angeles TI mes reported.
MCA Inc. will announce at a press conference
in Orl<.1ndo Friday pla ns for the first major studio
produc:l1on fac·ili t) outside California, the
111•wsr1arwr said
It said llE'rbert Steinberg, vice president ol
markettni< for MCA Recreation Ser vices. an MCA
unit. confirmed that tht> studio facilities will be
hu1ll 1n Fh1nda ---------------------
•
I
I I
t
I I I
I I
i
I
Broadway star insuritnce
helps to avert disasters
Suicide, drugs and alcoholism not covered
lh JAYSllARBUTf .,.,1tw.ttw
NEW YORK Jt happens in "42nd
Street" the star of a lavish Broadway musical is
disabled just before opening night. Lo, a scared
young unknown subs for her. becomes a star.
But what if the unknown bombs. ditto the
show" Can a producer seek insurance against such
disasters·? The question is put to Jolyon Stern. one
of New York's top theatrical insurance brokers.
A short pause. then this ruling: "The producer
has various options. If he proceeds with the un·
known a nd she becomes a star, fine. But if she
bombs. that's a business Judgment you can't in·
sure "
Stein 1~n·t involved "1th "42nd Street." But
the list of other current Broadway shows he's
helped insure an various forms are rairly heavy·
duty "Annie," "Amadeus," "1'~1ddler on the
Roof," "Morning's at Seven" and "Sugar Babies."
all hats.
lie also says he brokered protection for "The
Elephant Man" and "Piaf" when they were on
Broadway. and also "star" insurance for Linda
Rons tadt when s he w.a s in "The Pirates of
Penzance" here.
Right now. the emporium he heads is arrang·
1og coverage for what promises to be next fall's
most ta lk ed-about event the Royal Shakespeare
Compan) ·s two-part. 81 2-hour. $5().top-price pro·
duction of "Nicholas Nickleby" on Broadway.
He estimates he's helped insure about 500
shows on and off Broadway sance 1963. when he
JOined has father's firm. DeWall, Stern. Guttma n &
ly out of proportion," adds broker Stern, 41 . who
says Insuring a mil lion.dollar musical can cost
$100,000 annually, a straight play $15,000
When you write up a show, he explains. the
major items Include the physical production, the
cast Wld staffers. the theater, and the "key peo·
pie" involved m the proceedings.
The most key of people usually i!l the star
Wh en readying a policy on such folk, he says, you
consider "everything particuJuly health, age,
the severity of the role and even booiin1 habits.
"Certain people are known drinkers." he
notes. discreeUy declining to name them.
With "star" ansurance, one hopes to cover
losses ancurred ir a star misses one or more
performances or abrupUy abandons the show for
various reasons, be it demon rum or a decision the
tableau 1s a turkey -reasons that tend to provoke
la wsuits against the AWOL party. •
It ~an be difficult dealing with stars. but Stern
contends that "we don 't consider anyone un insura-
bl e. Yes. there are standard exclusions" -i.e .. no
payoff "in any ins urance policy, such as
aleoholism, drugs, suicid e. things like that.
"But there have been cases wh ere the ex·
cl us Ion was waived." The broker. who prefers not
lo s pecify cases. was asked if producers ever ask
about protecting against losses incurred by lousy
reviews. He smiled.
"Onl y an a Joking manner." he said
Arts c uts r e buffe d
Co. established in 1899 and in the theatrical· WASHINGTON (AP) -The House has rebuffed
protecting trade since 1952. President Reagan's bid to halve federal support for
Theater. of course, is one of the most risky of the arts, approving a $157.5 million budget next year
enterprises. akin in spirit to going over Niagar a for the National Endowmenlforthe Arts.
Falls an a beer firkin . But he insists it's no more The appropriation is only lOpercentless than the
risky to insure than IBM . $175 million endowment budget proposed by Presi·
··Not at all. What's different about the theater dent Cart.er for fiscal 1982 before he left office in
1s that you're dealing with much smaller numbers January. Reagan had proposed cutting tha trigure in
of tn),urancl' You can only have, for example, 32. half, lo$88million.
33 ),how), running on Hroadway at one time. The arts spending was part of a package ap-
"So when you have a Joss. it's blown complete-proved by the House. 3S8·46.
~====~-===============,
Starts Tomorrow
Mao to Mozart
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR PARENTS AND
YOUNG PEOPLE
'""-oq.K:f\4 ()I""' '•11n9s d to ~ ~ e()o!JI fte s~t•~ ol .ff'D.,,. ~ ~ tfle•"fiJ o..-""-"' tl'WOIWfl
ALL 'l IHil AND IHI 'll MS RECflV(
!)if SlM. 00' fH( MOf ION PtC IUfl(
COO£ Of S£Lr REGOlATION
brooke shie ld s
1 martin hewitt
~L.o..us-rookt -Sh·~-E (R_..,,I I endlesslove ~~lr92srs:10 11 IRI
~';,/;Dolby
rgJ ~~~"r~~ I ~ ~~.~~r-~~ .... ~.~~!~~~~~! .. ~:ka~
No Economy Stating
STADIUm a
Scrczczn Driucz-ln coll 6l9 8770
~
~~1~£IRI
Fo"es (RI
iWIP1'~10F1 '™~
Clash 'c:f r.:v1tans (POI
8 111 Murrey
STR..a l RI
Plus
Wholly Mosn (PGI
OPEN 7:30 NIGHTLY
Undtr12FREEUnlnsNottd
Al.AN ALDA CAROL BURNETT
To love a stranger is easy:
To kill a ~ is not.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thurlday, July 23, 1981 c•
The most fun
money can buy
IKMICOIOre _.. OIUOl'f 1Jteru11u -'""' ..,. ... ,. 1110a O • ... _ c-·-• c_...
C ltt1 -"'""" (-M ..-n -
Tile comedy tllat pamps
the fan Into nm•er.
~ •'IW\
STARTS TOMORROW
AllC OUJMll •All
01 •noe 63 7 ·0340
f.DWUDI IOWTM COAIT
Costa Mtw ~9·33~2
UCIMllAI Wll1mln11er 893-~6
f.DWAMI
Ct.UU COTO
Costa Mtw 919 4141
STADIUM Hln·I• Or•noe 639-8770
•At+f t< S
MIHIOll OfllYl·I•
S,n Ju~n Cap.s1t•no
11u1 493 ·~·~
SPIRITUAL
~ I UllA~US \1:'1 •'-1\4.l.(l','IH ....... ,,,. ........
(~• ... toU•t,141•1
SPECI' L STUDIO
•E'H PllEYIEW
TOMORROW lllGlll
NOW
IS THE TIME
FOR
HEROES.
VICTORY
tJ llUMAK l'Mt~t.1' r-. I\ t'Rtl.lOIF FUlJlS PROOUCTION A fOllN ltl ISTON t1LM
-.v1 ~ ST/\IJ.QNE
MKlt..V11 J\INE MAX VON -.vuuw l'tl.£
Vl("J'lJllY
MUii< by 81U OWTl Ou""'.I.,. of ~aphy GtllM' n SHtJI BSC.
><.tMnplay by EV/\N )ONES e.nd YABO Y/\8U.Jl'ISkY SIOrf by Y/\l!O Yl\JIUJNSKY
•NI OIORDI~ Mil.JU.VIC •• IDr M/\CUIJlE PTodumd by nu])OI£ F1lllJS
JINClo!d b¥ l(l+tN H\JSTUN A P/\ltM,4C)IJp.(l' PICT\laE ..... ~!~~~ ~ ·~~~!2!3... .....::::_:;:: r.;it
~ CHEO< YOUR LOCAL THEATRE FOR TIME~ SNEAaj
lllAH IMA 'LAZA IOWAJIOS Cl•I MA UA CIJY Clllt:MA
Bre.a ~?9 ~339 Cos1a Mesd ~4fi J 101 o"noe bJ4 J'I • •
AMC CMMGl MAU IOWAllOI CllftMA WCIT fDWAllOI "UO TWIN
OianQf 637 01•0 Wesrmooste• 891 39lS l,l•sst0n Vreio 830 6990
READINGS
• Advice SUMMER SPECIAL • Happy
• Counseling
• Readings
• Successful
• 14 Years
• Business
..... ta.ooNow $15.00
1115 S. El Camino Real
492-9034 San Clemente 492-7296 o.ly
10 •.m.-10 p.m.
BO DEREK · RICHRRD HRRRIS
The molt beQ.tf\j woman clo.x trne
n thz molt erotic~ of all time .
-• •raw AnlMltn OrM-ln South CoU1
17M850 548-2711
OIAm Clntaome 634·2553
lllWO =le ... Tl .. HUD
Fountain V illly
839•1500
-------------.1..·~-------, ·-
Cit Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT{Thurtday, July 23, \981
THE
f"Mltl'
ClaCtl
BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP)
··.
" ... and that's what Marmaduke is doing
today. Next-Heothcliff the cot .... " "NotrM."
by Brad Anderson DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum
~I
f ~4'.v f 1-'l~
i 9 "t ..
~ • e
"Hey, Al, could I Interest you In some
health and accident Insurance?" "Be real careful Vt'ill ya, Mr. Wilson?
Joey here can't stand the sight of blood!"
Jl'DGE PARKER
YOV !(NOW. !)AM ... YOVRf PVTTINC,
ME IN A [)POT ! MORE THAN THAT,
GARt'IELD
HELLO, ICE C.REAM.
MELLO, HAN\00f'.~ER.
MELLO , LA~A&NA
..,.~ JfM "'vt!>
00 ~( KNEW HIM! MAYM f1Hf
WAe> A (;IRLFRIEND Of Hie>!
WHAT 0000 16 THAT GOIN6TO
DO MAOOI, flNDtNCJ IT our
NOW THAT HE'5 DEAD?
~
by Harold Le Doux
WHATEVER THE TRUTH
If>. oHE E>HOUl.D KNOW Ii. Al.EX! r--.,.._-
MOON Ml' LLI NS by Ferd & Tom Johnson
I1M HAVIN<Q TROtJ8L~
RAISING Tl-IE~
THIS MONTH,
J1LL RA ISE: IT ""\I FOR yov, l
MR.DOODLE ...
LADYP ..
ACROSS 59 African lend WIDtilllOArl
1 enty -82 Cut hay PUm.1 IOlYID
5 Strllght· 84 Wild one
Pr91' 85 Olt1en1
t Cwriagee 87 HeedllCM:
1' Proflla Fr. ptw ...
15 Ch161'1 70 Mr. Greene
neighb« 71 Allied
18 F0tg!W 72 Slllt mll!tl'
17 t renqul 73 Rigid
19 Tfllnll 7 4 :.tningrld' 1
20 Fldtllty rlYer
2 t Held '*' 7& Hollow 23-HWY st tit DOWN
24 Oarbtd t ..... -
21 f.piC llOtY 2 Pr9¥tnC
2t Coollnl 3 Fe.otlnQ ........ ,.,..
31~ 40flcM
MS. ont 5 Un!Odl: Pote. 30 nw..ct: f!Nf. 5 t FOlf't,,.,..
11 Cutt CUtlel 8 ump'e coun-32 Fl!Md 53 Jo¥lll
.. Reg Wl*t ....... .,""'. 55 -niMWlll
40 P8'11de 7 ~le 2 WOtdt 57 "-": ~ w.11• I lutu ~ 33 Strf 2 words .. o.tt t In ,._ of 34 !nit"""'"' 51 Dllalll
mound 10 "9nounold 3S Uttl unit• 5t .......
4S '*" t t 'Mollglll 3e MftY need
47 Venl\nl ti~ 31 M : ll'rtf. 80 ...
• ~ t3 IA< welPOn 41 p...,,_ tt FOflllleni eo ma c:.i: "r• 43 ~ .-.. '*""' 22 a. o.y a..,., 1ra ............ "~··,.,. .. "'*to •a.ve M ......... •Ten 41 ...... • .._(llN!t
NC... 210.. ._ • -~-
~
... $z AMDNTH
MORE.
PUNIJT8
TIJMBLE• ££08
11'1E SEEN TO ~EE
TABERNACLES, FOORTEf N O~~CMES AND TWO
TEMPLES ...
WHV,JLJSS VOU, MYCHll..Pl
HOW NICI: OF YOU iO Bf VE
ME A SACK OF-COOKlf;S !
l'M
Sf:U-ING'
1rf EM FORA
NICKEL,
SIR.
SHOE
NANCl'
NANCY---WHAT
WOULD YOU LIKE
FOR DINNER'¥
GORDO
1~
I'M SORRY---
! DON'T
HAVE STEAK-
t't:NK l ' "INKERBEA N
W6W 010 I MAYt ro
WALK t~fO 1*1" ~1W10 'A~0-4 S~?
.,
-. -----------. ---------
YOU1LL HAVE
"TO SETTLE FOR
HAMBURGER
by Charles M. Schul ~
'' WANT TO RECEIVE
A 8lES51N6 ?DOHATE
iO OOR NEW LAWN
SPRINKUH6 SVSTEM ''
1
I . C l
i
I
f.
I
by Tom K. Ayart
UH, 'THERE'S A FIVE ceNi
CHAR6E FOR P£:'7Pt.f N6j
WlllfOUI A UCENSE, PEAR.; v
by Ernie Bushm1ller i
by Gus.Amela
.
by Kevin Fagan :
•u., '4DU'ft~ N01' "1'1't~'1 NO oNE ~OflCf 9 ~()\)
AN~ ~~M~1'tN ~{lOM Me ! fO ~A'f 'f14A'f ~N1Htf;
Cl40£0l..A1~ ~IN& SAU.~
)
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---..... t ... IOt ~ANnoa'apeet.
(C)MCMI
"AtaN" Ctlftt DuMln
HIC>PllY IMffled 8.J. ,.
tor • ~tltul -oorr. 1pond1n1 (Suun 81.
Jtimle).
• GOOOTIMll
J.J . trtee to~ 1 help4rlo
hand wt11r1 Mien.~
1nc11 hit llret great
rOINlllC*.
CON ARTIST -George C. Scott stars
with Sue Lyon in "The Flim-Flam Man"
tonight at 8 on Channel 9.
Hollman, V1n1111
AldgrlY9. In L.ondon In
192t, an Amlricen ~
Ptll* ~ ,,_., and *°"* lnvolv9d with
lamed nlyltrt writer Aoa-
thl Chrtlell, wt\() 1111 left
•• fU!IOTNC
l=ANY= N90NIWI
MOYll ***th "Brigadoon"
C 11154) Oana Kiiiy, C)'d
Charl111. Two lrt1nd1
ttumbll upon Briglldoon, •
vllllgl In Iha 8colttah hlgh-
lenda, wtlldl com. to tit•
fora~~~ 100
00 AJGHT Of THE
WHrTE STAUJONI
Aoblrt T lylOr and U1tt
P""'* ltlf In thl true ato-
ry of the World War It raa-
cua ol Vienna'• prized
wtlltl ~. (Part 2)
• A n.un TO JN
~
An outa~lng tribute to
one ot rod! mullc'• great
llglndl. m1t111ng the tenth
anntvwaary of thl death ol
Doore. lllld lillQ«. Jim
Morrieon.
uo I JOKEW• Wll.D P.M.MAGAZJNE
A ao-i> OC>lfl actr-
wllOll home Illa la tar dif-
ferent from her Charac-
ter'•; • ,......tHa J-
Bond.
• llNHYHIU
Binny pleya IM top TV
~ I KCET NEWUEAT
9TUOI09U
"Riller Boat.a" Take 1 ride
on two hlatoric: river bolt•:
• lann Wfllrl hot.-.,.
two 1111 tall; IMm hOw to
lntr~ yourMlf LO I
analla. (R)
(1)(8NrWt 0 IAAHEY MIU.EA
Dlmonlc: poaNlion, an
~ lllln and an ac:coun-
tant with 1 poc:llltful of or-.,, anoug11 to me111
the d«KtMI wish lhly
'*'~"'-· =1== N9CNIWI
H.YPY DAY9 MNH
Jowlil a-I• ITIOfe then Iha
bllrgalnld '°' whlll 1111 gaols • Job ... pf\Ot09'•
lphaf':.:~
~THEWINO
"A Matter Of Uta And
Dllth'' Jonathan .. pur-
auld by Gr1¥1111 wtllll
...., .. In nMd of medlc8I
care and I-dllth. (Part
10)
• 9TAHT9 Of 8AN
FRAHCl8CO
A woman hlrlllld by I
troubled young man
c:onc:11l1 Information
about her par10tlal IHI
from thl po11c1 11111 ~
c:oeta lier lier tlta.
• OVEAEAIY
Guaata: Barb111 Cook,
photogn1pher J-Van
Dir Z., Dr. Ootothy W.0-
dlll. CRlQ
• MACNEJl /LEHRER
AIEPORT Cl) TIC TN; DOUGH 0 MERY GlllmN
"Salute To 'Endllll Love""
au.ta: Brook• Shleldl.
CHANNEL LISTINGS
Franco Zlmrllll. ®MOYIE
"Rocky II" ( 1978) Syt¥Mtar
Stlllona, Talia Shira. Attar
loatng hie. bOut wl1h the
world dlalnCJIOn, an ambl-
tloul boxer tralnl tor 1
~ chencl 11 the tltll.
'PO'
(a>MOVIE
"Brubtikar'" ( 1980) Robar1
~ord, Yaphat Kotto. A
ratorm-mlndad warden
Unc:c>Ylt9 wlclllOr'lld cor-
ruption whlll hi antara hie
newly UllglllCf prtaon poe..
~ 11111 lnmeta. 'R'
• TNIYA TUaWt HOTI
Thi auJtry. dynlmlc: Tanya
T udlar parlor me aonga
ranging from ~ntry to
hard-drlvlng rod! 'n' ro41,
llva trom th• Ro1ty
<!'~Loa AngalM.
"Thi ldolmallat" ( 1980)
Ray Sharkey. Tovall
Feldthuh. A manlpulatlvl
manager UHi vartoua
ploys to c:atroputt two 11111-
""'' Into pop tinging atardorn. "PO'
7:30 8 2 ON THI TOWN
Holla: St-Eclwarda,
Mllody Rogers. T• to
"whit• collar gaya" to
laltn •bout their llflltylaa;
produc:ar Hagan Smlll\
, .... •boot 1111 delarmin.-
llon to rlYMI lhl "M .. ld
Trudi 0rl¥er" 111 national
pop culture .,..tlty.
I QI FAMll.Y '8JD
8HANANA
Guaata: Edgar 8atgarl and
Chlt1il McCarthy,
• EYEONL.A.
Hosta: lnC Pldtoza. Paul
Moyer. A look II ~
land'• tlnlllt llC:tll: movie
mlnlluraa and Iha artltta
who Cfl9tl them; I look II
Iha llee:trtc: auto; a trendy
apot IOI' hot water IC)Orts.
"Thi Hot Tub."
I FACE THE MU8IC
MACNlll. I l.EHMR
A90RT l~MAGAZM
Thi llrcr•lt c:errllr' u.s.s.
Kitty HNll II ... Ii.Id.
1:00 8 Cl) THI WAL TONI
AoM'a a -tlanol c:omll IO
Wllllon'a Mount.iii~
Ing for • ,.. ... and hid-
ing the feet that hi Ml not
l>Mrl mentally wait. CR)
88MOVIE ** "Two-Mlnull W•,.._ Ing" (1978) Chlrtton ...._
ton, Jonn c-v.1-. To
dlYar1 attention from I
plannld art halal. • gang
of lhllvee plant I antpar In
11\1 LOI Angella Cofl..um
during 1 .--out football
-~ •• th "Hour Of Thi Burl"
C 1987) J1m11 Garner,
J11on Robarda. Wyatt
Earp atlllll• the man who
killed Ills brOlller. e 111 MOAK ANO
MINDY
Morie'• Orllan hero Xertlo
~ to ~h Intent on
tatting owr MMe"• Job u
ottlclll ~ oblarYar. (R) G MOWE * * * "The Fllm-Flem
Man" ( 19417) George C.
1J KNXT 1CBS) Los Angeles
D KNBC 1NBCI Los Angeles e KTLA tlnd I Los Angeles 8 KABC TV 1ABC1 Los Angeles
Cl) i<.FMB (CBS) San Diego 8 KHJ-TV (Ind t los Angeles 0 KCST IABCt San Diego
I KTTV (Ind I Los Angeles
KCOP·TV (Ind, LOS Angeles
• KCET· TV 1PBSl Los Angeles ID KOCE ·TV tPBSI Hunttng1on Beach
Soott. 8411 l~. A oon en-
lat Wld Ill Army ---'°"' IOl'Cll, and Iha otd
m.n glvae 1111 bOy •
COW"ll In fllmtlarnmlng.
• AGAMT THI WN>
''The ScWlt Of Entlrpr1M"
Jonathen trial to -1111
lllfYWI and Mery earl do
nothing to help him. (Pll'l
11)
• MOYIE *th "Stcy Hllat"· (1975)
Don Meridith, 8teflnll
Powara. Loa Ang1t11
1n-~1ora tail• to the
Illy In hlllcoptara to t1-*
down 1 pair of gOld
lhle¥M.
• T.H.R.C. PM8BfT'9
"Take tO, Ametloe" An
amualng look II lhll coun-
try'e raliltanca to the
metric ~am and hOw the
Twelfth Night ~oty
Company help• both
young and old f\guf'I out
Iha new numtlwl game.
• MAGIC METHOD Of
Otl. PAINTING
"Wa.ltm OaMrt"
(C)MOYll
"Up ""9r"A ~ plo-
-~ lnYOlv9d \n
• It~ •NQClll
with • gold-hungry land
baron.
Cl)MOYll
"Hon1y1uc:kl1 Ro11"
(1980) Wiiia ~. DyWI
Cennon. WhMa on tour. 1
Tell&• cou11try-w11t1rn
.., blComll Involved
wttll Iha llductlve d~
ter of hie lidekldl -lhougn hi ltlM lo-hie
11ay-e-noma wtta. 'PO'
.MOYll
"B1tw11n The Lln11"
C1977) Und11y CrouM ,
Jett Goldblum. Thi l1atl
rnamtlwl of an "under-
ground" Boeton newepa-
par haw vartoue romantle
and Journ1 tt1tlc:
anc:oumera with Mdl °""' and the aubJICU ol ttlllr
atorlll. 'R'
1:30 e 0 8080M IUDOIU
Amy and l(jp try to get
Sonny romantlc:lllly lnter-
llted lfl Henr/. CA)
• IHIN< PMYleW8
Roger Eblr1 and G«la
SllMlll "°" In lnfonMtlva look It wllat'I MW It the
m<Mll.
• JUUA C*.i>AHO ca.ANY
"8ifttldey Dlnnlr" CR) t:00. Cl) MAGNUM. PJ.
Magnum b9frtande two
~ awvtvota who
havw .,_,,. '"a-ti of unr~tant Hazle. CR)
• 0 1AAHEY MIU.EA
Barney II llllld for rtlfl».
Ing to ,_ an lntonnant
Clurlng 1 lrial CPlr1 1) CR)
• TOPSTOAY
Hoell: Jim Thoma, Mary
~ION .
• IUJIOMHAT
WATfN.00 VIUAQE
A lhre9-d8y *ltv.I ot Qld..
f Hlllonld mualc, loot
atomc>lng and good tim.
11 held llCfl yMr -Stanhope, N9w JatrMy, at
hlltorlc Waterloo VMllQI.
• IHIN< PMVIEW8
Roger Ebltt and Gana
Slakll llOlt "' lnfonnltNe look It wllat't MW II IN
movlla. CID STANDING AOOM
ONLY: HAU.E.UJAH
HOUYWOOO
From the MGM Grand
Hotel In Lu VIQM, Oana
Kiiiy hOeta 1 glittering Lu
Veg.a rewa wttldl Mlutea
th• golden era ot
rnovllmlklng In tong and
danc:a.
(%)MOVIE
"Space Movie" C 1979)
Oocumanlal'y. MY* by
.... Otdtllld. ~ ftlm
loo41Q1 ctwonldll the trl-
her "'*"""" lwlbend. 'PO' (a>MCMI
"Al That Juz'' C197t) Roy
Sclllldlr. JaMlca l.lngl.
Thi tumultuoua 11'9 of •
prota.fonll denoar 11 I~
towaCI from ~on thl
•lllQI to paraonal cr1lll.
'R'
10:00 • Cl) KMOT'I L.ANDHi
Gar(• embltlon to a-t
llllMd tend• him 150,000
tn debt to mot>-oonnac:tld
pat1am(R)
30/lO I .. NIW9
U.I . CtMONICl.E
"Boomtown" Jim l.lfvlr
axamlnal the modlm-4ay
anargy boomtown of
Craig, Colorado, and the
probllml lhlt proaparlty ..
~to the conwnuntty.
CIDHIOIHIN< ~
Huat>an6-and-wlll comk:a
Jarry Stllllr and Anne
Mier• Introduce Iha mov-
111, apeclala and apor1I
-ta coming to Homa
Box otllol In Auguet. Cl> lllAMI JOQ
Jofln ~ 8'IOWI )'OU
thlngl atrangar thin truth,
lwgar thin .... and unllr
thin enytNng you've -
Min. .MCMI
"l egend 01 Franchi•
King" Brigitta Bardot.
Claudla Claidlnall. Ave
.... .,. .. nothing get In
their wey, .,.,, they tangle
with • lamlly of loc:al
~ owr the rlghta to
In olktdl randl. 10:30. NllJBtDINT
NETWONC~ • u.9UC.AN
PIMPECTIVE: ANOTHER
YEW
"El Tlltlo Cempttlno" A
look II I.akin II ttle hlltory
of thl WO<ld·ranownld
Farmwotkera' ThNter and
"" .., of playwtlght and
director l..ull Va6du.
• W<INGel
"From Thi Fllf'/ Of Thi
Not1Mwl" Thi Viking lul'y
ci.Yutltld Europa .. the
Dwlilh Vlklngl MiC*ld c:lty
all• ctty ... °"' Pllrll to
Not1tl Alrtca. CA)Q CIDMCMI
"Amlfic:an Glgdo" ( 1980)
Richlld Gate, l..luran Hut-
ton. A e.-ty Hiiia gloolo
~ thl prirnl --pact In • rnutdlf lnv.t~ uon. 'R'
Cl) 1l4E WNJlt<Y WORLD
OF JONATHAN WINTW
Hoa1: Orlon Wlllll. (%)MOVIE
"Thi Gr•t Santini" (1979)
Robe rt Duvall, Blythe
Danner. A rough-and-
rl!IOy Marine Cor-pa ofllolr
,_ domaatlc battlll
....,, hi 11111 to lmpoll Illa
mllltery Idella on Illa tllft-
~·PO'
11:00 ••• Cl)1119
NrWI
• 8TAATMI<
Whh on 1111\'1 on thl plan-
et Argllull, Cept. Kirtt and
two craw m1mb1re
blcon'll lnYd'lld In mur-
der.
• THIY AUN R>A
THEJALNU
Johnny Mann nerrlMI tha
plight of aHocl'ln rafl.t--~ .. A w-. In Thi Sl'lldowl"
• llNN'( HIU.
Benny cloel • Nmlk• of
"Thi SUlldenol Kid ...
I l**OAYITT
THI TOM COTTll
SHOW
"DM>tcl: A CNd'a Par·
apectlw'. Otlllcfr'ln talk
c:andldly about the impllct
of their paranta. dlvorol. I Cl)MCMI
"Thi Tin °"""" (1971) Da~ a.nn.tt, Angell
Wlnllllr. A llNll bOy with
CBS holth tightly to first
LOS ANGELES <API -For the ninth con-
secutive week, CBS topped ABC and NBC ln overall
vlewership, according to the A.C. Nielsen ratings of
net work performance.
CBS had four of the flve top-rated shows for the
,week ending last Sunday, accordtng to tbe A.C.
!Nielsen Co. ratings of the networks. "The Jef-
fersons," in sixth place the prevtous week. moved to
the top of the list with a 22.8 raUn1.
The networks say that means 18.2 million
householda-22.Spercent ollhe naUon'1 79.9mlllion
ielevtaioo-eqtdpped a.omee-Aw at least part ol the
ttcom.
''Trapper John II. D. • • moved up to second place
rrom third wiUl a 21. l ratln1, while " Allee'' hopped t~
I ~third frolll Jab wttb. 2J0.5 raunc and "60 Minutes'
cJlmbecUtr.u.rtb from nlntb at 20.2.
ABC'• "Kart to Hart" round.cl out the top five
With aall'lldnl. Althou&ll "Harttoffart" and "60
Mlnut.11• W llie .... ratial, "80 lltmates" was
ranke4 ~._ .... It Md 1...., alaare of the teaevman ............... tMt u.. H .t mtllion
bou 'lH' blMd to tae IM'nm.,ulne repneented , a ,.,.... pnportio8 oil.he number ol Mtl in UM at the •u..e. = .,_ .. ~ ..... CIS' .. ll·A·S.H,'' ··~ ... ,_ ...... 17.tril&lq.
CBS' overall rating for the week was 14.2, mean·
lng that during an average prime-time minute 14.2
percent of all households with televbion were tuned
to a CBS show. ABC was second with 13.l aDd NBC
followed with 12.0.
It was not a good •eek for flnt-nm 1peciab.
three of which were amonttheflYelow11t·ratedpro-
grams. ABC's "Omnibus" t.budded to U.. bottom of
the list at No. 87 with • 4.$ raUn1. and NBC's
"Comedy Theater: Dear Te.cher" WH nnt-to-laat
wltb a 7.8 rating. Another ABC ort1inaJ 1peclal,
"8e1tolTimes,"wuNo.UWiUlanl.traUa1.
RoundiQI ou& the bottom ftve wen 1 pair of NBC
reruns, "Games P~ple Play'• and "BJ• the Bear,"
which occupied the $3rd and t4th 1lott wttb ratlng1 Qt
l..31nd'1.8respecUvely.
The top 10, thelrratin•• and 'riewenhlp:
1. "'l'be JefftnOM.'' CBS. 22.1, 11.J mlllion; 2.
"Trapper John, M.D." CBS, 11.1, lf.t mUUora; I.
"Alltt..;· CBS. au, 11.4 million; '· "IO Mmut.tt;·
CBS, •.J. te.l 1111Won; I . "Hart to Hart," ABC, IO,I;
11.1 mllloa i .. "Too CloM b Comlw&." lt. 1. 15.1
mUllGo; T. '"lllree·s Com1N1D1/' ABC, 11.t . W.I
mlftlGli; •· ''fte l'.U ot Life,'' NBC, 11.S. H.I m~ ·~~~~8." CBS, 17.8, H .l mUMoli; It. "Dtrrrent "MBc, 11.s, 14.0mlllioe.
The ..... IO:
11. ''11M Dlitl of Haaaard," CBS; 12. "BarMJ
Mlller," A.BC; SI. 'S:ID," ABC ; H. "Taal," ABC; ... ··a...cau. ucm· 11 ... ~. •.&.," N9C; 1'1. ••MOllluMt ... : ,,_-o.AolOMUvtft
Pan," ~(~·Dallat,'' Cll; II .......... 6 ...., ... A.BC; ................ hCll.
KJU e 8:00 -"The Film-Flem
Man." Georce C. Scott and &Je Lyon
star in this movie about a con man
chased around the country.
KCET Q't 8 :00 -"Take 10,
America." The Twelfth Night Repertory
Company takes a humorous look at re-
sistance to the metric system .
KCET 9 9:00 -"Bluegrass at
Waterloo VUfage." A three-day festival
of f oot.tapplng music.
KOCE 9 10:30 -"Vikings: From
the Fury of the Northmen." The Danish
raiders devastated Eu.rope, city by city.
UIWIUll ~ of l*OIP-
tlon reject• polltlol, ,_,
companlonahlp and -IOllthOod and ~
about ,. cowatry during
Iha tumultuoua Ylll'I of
the Nat 1'9g11M. rlltllllly
~a toYdrum. 'R'
11:30. Cl) THI JlllRMON8
<Morge truly bella¥el thll
H Napol«>n and Ltncoln
could do It, then IO c:an a-, Jaflwaon. (R)
8f8TOMGHT
Hoit: Johnny Carton
GUMta; Marietta Hartley.
George Sagal Ind the &.Y-
erty Hiiia Unllltld Juz
Band. •Ill .A8C HEWS
NIQHTUHE
I STAHLEY 8'EGEl.
• CAP'T10N!D A8C
HIW8
(C)MOVIE * * * "Hit" ( 1973) Biiiy
Dia Wltllama. Richard
Pf'YO(. A black led«al
191nt blttar ovar hi•
daugllter'• dllth Mtl out
to lrlP Iha gang of Franch
drug 1muggt1re h•
bllllvll to bl raaponlibll.
(Q) LOAIETTA LYNN
Thia apac:lal parformanc:a
by thl "Flm Lady or
Countty Mullc" taped at
HanM'I In Reno, lhoW•
CMll many ot Lottittl'•
blll-lowd aonga tndudlng
"They Don't Mike 'Em
like My Daddy" and
"You're Looktn' A• Coun-t ..
11='8.MOVIE
"Lepke" ( 1975) Tony
Curtll. Anjanette Comar.
Louil "LAC*•" Buchlltar,
I llldar of Am«lol' I
undarwof'ld, held• up the
notorloua org1nl11t1on
known " Murder. Inc. 'R'
-r.tDflGtt'T-
t2':00. Cl) HS:~
Hae'• nrat love II oonvlc:t-
ld ot murder Ind llCtlld-
uted tor 11tac:utlon.
• MOVIE ••~"Streett Of Laredo"
11949) Wllltam Holden.
Macdonald Cerey. A pair
of outlawa reilorm after
joining the T IXU Rangara ... -. ea CHARUF•
AHClll.I
Thi Angell .,. hnd by •
rrl8f'I who ......... Ill II the _. t.wvat of Ill ...-i
wN> 1111 w..oy t•an the
fllM of ..wrll of hie --time buddlM. (R) e CIUHIMOKI
A llOIT*-be.by tttgvlrl
the mother lnltlnc:t In two
woman, one of u.n Klt1y. 1::-rA
Tony retr11¥91 I atOllll
~ and la ICCluald ot taktnV • hall-rnlllon dotlarl
from n.
12:30. GI TOMOMOW au.t: linger Peggy Lii.
• HOGAN'S Hl"°'8
Hogan g911 KMllk pro-
moted lo Garman Chief of
Stall.
®MOVIE
"Rocky II" C1978) Sytveater
St-'lonl. Talia Slllrl. Attar
IOllng 1111 boot wtlh Iha
wor1d champion, an wnbl-
tlOUe bO• train• for 1
aeooncl chanol II the 11111.
'PG'
CD)MOVIE
"'Coll Miiiet'• Deught«"
( tllO) Silly Speoall, Tom-
my lei Jonea. 8Uld on
Loratta Lynn"• autoblogr•
phy. A young gift ffom •
poor lamlly tn rural Kan-
tudly matTlla • much otd-
er local boy who ~· her rlM to atardom In thl ""'* lnduatry. 'PO' (Z)MOVll!
"Thi ldolmalcar" ( 1980)
Ray Sharkey, Tovah
Flldthuh. A rnenfe>u'ltlw
manager UHi vartoua
ploys to c:atroputt two 11111-
llllfl Into pop alrlglng
ttardorn. 'PG'
1:00 • PSYCHC
PHENOMENA
"Gaiting Walt Again" Hoat:
Damian Slmpeon. Guaata:
C1tl and Stapllanla Simon·
ton.
• MOVIE * * * "Kaapar Of Thi Flame'' ( 11M3) Kathlflna
Hac>bum, Spanoar Tracy.
Whlll r-..rc:hlng I ltory
on • renowned Arnarlcln.
1 '9l)Of1er i-ne from his
wtdow lt\lt hi-. In tact,
1 luc::iat.
• !HOS lllDEHT
HETWOMNIW9
1:10• MOYll
•• "' "Thi Death Of Ma
Yet" (1 971) Doug MoCMa,
Darren Mc:Gavln. The
~ llf• of • former
RuMlln 19Y In 1 tmall Mid·
WMtem town II dramatl-
c:ally lntarruptld Whan hit
,.., ldlntlty la unc:ovated
and the Ru1111111 IMrn 1\1
dllactld rattler lhlln died.
1:1•1= "Between Thi l lnH"
( 1977) Und11y CrOUM,
Jett Goldb!um. Thi atatl
rnamblra of an "under-
ground" Bolton -.pa-
per haw vatloue romantic
and 1ourn1tl1tlc:
ancountara with ~ other
lllCI Iha aub)lc:U of their
atone.. 'R' 1:aoe MOVIE
• *'A ""Point Of Terror"
(1171) Peter Carpenter,
Dyanna Thoma. Followlng
• tragic car crllh, • young
man'• fM11t1Q11 of morbid
giullt produce _,.. that -
,.._ """'8 to deatr01 film.
Cl)MOVll
"KIU Or Ba Kiiied" ( 1980)
JOllPl1 Ryan, Chatiott•
Mlc:h•ll•. Two 11v1g1
equedl OI llltl klHll
ch1mplon1 c:IHh tor
~and MW\'twl. 'PO'
11 .. 1 .....
2:00 .....
MONCAMM & WISE
Emil •-hOml attar Erie lnautt. him on the
r9dlo; Eric buys 1111 wife I
25th annlYlr9lrY ~· (C)MOVIE •••th "Brigadoon"
( 195-4) Gana Kiiiy, Cyd
Cnarl11e. Two lrt1nd1
ltumbll ucion Brigadoon. 1
Ylli.ge In Iha Scot119h lllgh-
tanda, wttldl com. to IHI
lore~~__, 100 2:10•:n.
JOHN DARLING
--·~-·-............ ..,. ..
lttoll'llll ...... .......
trtM; lrlo llt4 .... llllnl ........ c...~
IMo ........ ~,.,. ..... m ··~ Movta" ( ttT9) o-a-i.y. MuellO ~
.... Otdleld. ~ 11111
.. CifllOlllclel tna VI· ~ of ttie u.a. epaoa
ptogram. --. on the
drlmltlO ~ 1 t ITIOOft
landtng. -0'
~1 IDfT'ONAL ...... MOYll • *.,. "Go AalC AliCI' •
C1173) WllMam Shlln«.
Jamil Smith Jac$ton. A
lltfl-IQI gift atNQllM to
O¥erCOme her drug habit. t:tOI NrWI ..... MOYll * • • .. Jamaica Aun"
(1t53) ~ Miiand. Arlena
Deni. Murder raatlt1 wMrl 11x paopta llQht ewer ,,...
OWOlf'lfllc> of • Jln'\llcan
.. tale. a:001: * • • "Thirty Sacondl
0-Tolly0" (19") Sflan·
oar Trac:y, Van Joflnlon.
General Jimmy Doollttll
praparll for Ind OOM·
m1nd1 B-2h In l)pmb!ng
mlalionl over Japan.
• MOVIE
• 'h "Twitted Brain"
C1974) Pat Cardi, John
Niiand. A tormantlel teen-
ager It driven by rorcaa
outaldl hll c:ontrol to com·
mil lrenilld act• of mur-
der. s:ao Cl) 8POT\JGHT ON
JIEMYL.EM8
Thi uny comedian par-
torma on •lllQI 11 thl
Sahara HOlel In LM Vagu.
It l11turld In 1 t>ackllaga
Interview Ind In c:llpe from
aome ot hll ntma
S:llO (%) ··r · MAGAZIHE ~
THE AJA
4:00 CC) MOVIE
"Agatha" 11979) Duatln
Hottman, V1n1111
Redgrave. In London In
1928, an American ,_._
~ '9l)Of11r rnMI• and
blc:Omll Involved with
lamed myetary writer Aga-
tha Chrlatil. who 1\11 lltl
her unlaltlllul lluablnd. ·po·
(%)MOVIE
"Thi Gr111 Santini" (1179)
Robert Duvall. Blythe
Danner. A rovgh·•nd-
rMOy Marini Cotpa oftlc:lr
11011 domutlc: balllel
when hi trill to tmpoaa hit
military tdllla on hi• fami-
ly, 'PG'
4:30 Cl) MOVIE
"Bronco Biiiy" ( t980) Clint
Eutwood, Sondra Lodi•
A I~ al10I allMman
lrom N9w JarMY rllllz•
hit drllm of performing In
1 Wild W111 ahow. 'PG' 4:401 HEW8 4:45 VOYAGE TO TME
BOTTOM Of~ 8EA
"Thi Sky 11 F llllng"
Friday'•
Oayilaw Mo.,le•
-MORtetG-
eoG CC) "Kii Of a. Kllled"
(1980) Jo11P1 Ryan. 0111r-
lot11 MICNlll. Two 11vage
aquNI Of 1111• kar111
c:h1mplon1 cla•h lor r-. and IUMval 'PG'
(%) "8'iacl Movla'' ( 1979)
oaa-itary ~ by
..... Otdfilld. An;tlfvll """
lootaga cMonldll the IJ1.-
~· of IN U.S. ~
pt()gl'am, loc:uling on 1111
dramatic: N>oflo t I moon
llndlng. •().
t:IO Cl) .. Wlurda" ( 111n) Ani-
mated Directed by Rllpn
BalctN. In • world of Ula
Mura, aoroary ptaya •
major roll In thl batll" or
two grail c:onlltctlng
ltmlea. ~CC) "A Force Of One"
( t 879) Chuck Norril. Jan-
""" O'Nallt. A muter or
tn. martial 1111 embark•
on • ravanga-motlvallel
Cll ...,..., .. ....,.., ....
....... ... f!Q· . .... ...._..
, ............ 0.-..... ......... ... ........ ~.-. ,........,. Muet ~ ...... .. ,., .. ,...... ..............
-(C)··~.w..,.; ,..... .. ,,.71) o--
lary. er..r.. ol Mr'-' ..... ---"'""* Mt\lfet ....... 'Q.
Cl) "fl'oe*y ., .. ( ••711.,..
Ylltlr •t•llOnl, T•ll•
lfh.NWfoell'8NtbOlll
wttfl .. ..... CllWllPOft,
In .......... i,o.., ...
lor • llCOnd otw"°9 ....
... •fl'G'
11:00 ••• \t "'--*Y ~ ..
(t,aG) 9-y ~ Thi
loyt' "' -ioac~ ,,~
tfMll their ..... ~ _..._,.....,.,_.
dat
U:*O e • • 'h "'Balla Starr"
C1t4t) Gena Tllmly. ~
dolph Sc:ott. A daring
woman lie-lier home lo
~ Iha IMd« of an
OU11ew band 11 ~ c6oM ot
thlCMIWw
CC) "T roeedaro 61111
Citron" (1978) MlcMll
Shoe*. Anny Dupray. A 10·
year-Old boy ii tmlllan
wltll I Miiia gift wl10 ,_
blaldl him at Troc:adaro.
tt:OO ••• "Blade Sabbath"
( 19&4) Bona Kerlott, Mltk
Dimon. ThrM I .... of 11\1
euparnatural conoamlng.
raepec:Uvaly, 1 ring tt.olln
from 1 dead woman, the
ve ngeful glloll of I
apornad IOvar Ind • Ylt«OI'
to tl'le ,_ of • lolth-
-vampir• .,. !Old • * * * "Ne¥1r Too Lall" I 198S) Connie St•
vane. Mautlln O'Sullivan
A. mlddll·lgld couple are
am.uld to llarn 11111 !hey
are IJlPIC1.lng • Child
1:00 CC) • * '4 "t. Moblter" c 195') st-Cochran, Uta
Milan A gangs1er malcll I
ollln brlllt of hi• llfl.
1:30 CIJ • * * "Ranlorn" ( 195e) Glenn FOl'd, Donn•
~. Whan hie eon le kid·
napped, • WNlthy bual-
n111m1n mull decide
whelller to pey IN ranaom
or work wlUI thl pollcl .
2::00 • * * '.~ "TM Mackln-
IOlh Man" I 1973) Paul
Newman. Dominique San-
di BUld on 1 novat by
o-nond Bagley. A Brltl.n
Int~ agent and hla
larnall c:otlor1 -IO'old
IO c:opa wllll doubtl lglntl
Ind tr~oaaea on their
million to c:aptura 1 c:om·
muntatapy.
2:*l CC) "Animals Ara 8-.otllul
People" ( 1975) Doc:umen-
tary Cr11tur11 of African
w4ldllta .,. -in lhllr
natural habitat. 'G'
1:00 8 * • '4 "They Only Kiii
Their M11t111" ( 1973)
Jamat Garner, Katharina
Roll. A Doberman plnach-
., llgufM promlnlnlly In
Iha murder ol a pregnant -S:3011 "Flghtar Pllota" 119191
WIM Roberta, John Hwdy
Pllota lace dlath on • dally
bllla during World Ww II.
Cl) "Wlutdl" (1977) Ani-
matlel. Dirac:tld by RllC>fl
BakllN In 1 WOt1d Of the
future. aorc:«y playe •
major rOll In ll'le blttlll of
two grHI conlllc:rtng
annill.
4:00 CC) "T roc:ad«o Btau
Citron" ( 1\78) Mlchlll
Shodt. AAn)' bupray A 10-
)19¥-olcl bOy le amltlll\
with 1 111111 glr1 MIO rec.
bealda him II T rocadlr"o g • * 'h "lnternatlOnll
Lldy" ( 19-t 1) Baell Rath·
bone, Ilona Muaey
1!00 CID "Candillhol" ( 1977)
Jodie Foater. David NIY«I
A atrllt·wlM tomboy from
Lo• Ang1111 auddenly
llndl harMll IN hlirMI 10
• taltarlel Engltah manor ·o·
6:30 CC) "KIM Or Bl Klttld"
CtNO) JoMph Ryan, Chat-
tona MlchllM Two NYaga
equlela of lilt• karate
champ ions c:l11h lor
revenge and IUMval 'PG'
by Armstrong & Batluk
Judge refuses to
gag '60. Minutes'
SACRAMENTO <AP) -A judge has refused to
extend a gag order preventing persons with
knowledge of the Dr. William Miofsky sex crimes
case from talking lo a researcher for the CBS News
program "60 Mhtutes."
Superior Oourt Judge Fred Marler Jr., who had
iaaued a temporary gag order on July 2, bas now
d'-6olved it.
John M0ttnier, lawyer for the anesthesiolo1Lst
wbo plnded • eontest in 1179 to sexually abuslnJ
remale p1tiedb in a holpltal oper1t1n1 room ,
clalm.S • Ml•Vllaon report about Lhe cue could c1em11t ...,,_,,, richt to a falr trial of DIQDeroua
dvUJawtuU.a IDd violate hie privecy n,bta and bll
prGlec:Uoa&sal.Dltself-incriminltion. tlOUlder contended "80 Minutes" WU ..,.. an
........,. &bu 1 news procram, ud mfcbt aot
t.N•t U.ean retpOQI bly.
After the Judie"• rulln1, Chris Glblon, l••Jer for CBS, aald t.he bet work would conUnuetoreteareb
,,Mk>flQcue. ••we cu't force anyone lo talk lo us or.to stve ua
but at leut lbe1 are no I~ prolalblted "~ fromdobtcao.'''9alid. T1ae temPor1r1 order bad prev~ ''IO
....... ,......... h'om ......... cllloiWont el
II..,.,, un. 111chl1trllu "9 ~him.
1ad -wtii ... ve cl•h• ........ tM ...... ~ ,,. oHer Uo hM prolllllbd •DJOM ...... "-'lllU"...,......_atlail •ca ••"nil to llliit -....abouttbeeue.
• z:;p
ly
JULY 17 -JULY 23
FOR ELE
CUSTOMERS
For our customers now receiving Chan-
nels 14 and 16 ... we have now converted
our main system so these same channels
will appear on Channels 17 and 20 .
This may cause some inconvenience
because your converter must be changed,
but if you will please call 642-3260 or
646-0586 we will schedule a time that is
convenient for you to have this change
made. There will be absolutely no charge
for this change. Otherwise you are more
than welcome to s top in at our
TELEPROMPTER office at 901 West
16th Street, Newport Beach.
. WE DELIVER
TOTAL ENTERTAINMENT 24-HOURS-A-DAY!
1•1111111111111
Thuraday, July 23, 1981
INDEX ,,,.., .... Cal
642-5671
.USFHUU 1.-.11 .. "'""""""' "'"* .......... . ,,.,. ..... "" Kf•• h t'or ..... 1\lor t' lMit ~ .. . .,.,..,_
r.JTIJfo
··-.. •'-11•1 11...-.~ ... 11 ... ~
ln•fW
'•l\liftl tw.rh '"'•""-'""' U«""''" .. ' 311111\MM \ ••ti11 ~r:~-;~
~ JtiUA l l~dr.-.. '-•••'Ml .... ., ..... -.......... . , .. ""'"""~'"~" -·~-....... u mm
t\tru.cr,_ '-..,
AJW18Wfllit' hw '4W tllra<~"•"'' ~~ . .., .... ,
t ... '"'''°'"'',..,."' ( MHftflflel tJr.,.,..n' c.~ .... ifft\\~lt ,_.,\.h l "•'\ "'"" '"-••bt "'""' l~t"r~th INlv~n.-P•~rh ..... ,.,. .....
;\lulloltl1•1t '''''"'" \louftln l~n N..-"'"'' '•-•ill ·~"II tlUIJtwnt\ p,,..,
flW4 -~lltl ''""' M.nc~ ··-m, t,rn,..., Mr1I tJ111h t:..\tlrtittUW
kol t~\t1tr "'"'"'
lfNULS
uw .. e-1ro h.1rn1\hf"il I~ l nfw,rnhhtJ
It.*'"" furn YI l nl
t ondonJllWU'H"' t Wtft
l Oftdonuruvnh t ft.I To-Mw~t ,;rn To.fthuu,,, I n1
°""*'"""' • "'" ·~\'""''" AP'' t\lre
A.pl\ l ""''" Apt' t•wrri ut l "' k...,,.
M_.,llu.rd
Uatth \lucrh.
(, W'lt ' '"''"' .. "-'"'""' ..... , .. \.,. .. .,. Mf"iW •h ......... , "'"'""'" (,., .. ,_..,fut "•ftl CJfhn ktM•I """""'"a ..... 1 l~r1•1 Mt'f'4•1 ..,.°'•"' knit ...... • el\Crd
"'"' k~.1,
IUSIMESS, INVEST·
MOH, FINANCE
a.... ..... .,,._.
"""M"'>"'"'•"tf'id '"~f"ltrWntt~t\
11\f'"ft'lir• .... rd
\l(lef'\ lu lAN"
MOM'\ Y.•ntf'd
\lort1t•1tt\ Tl•,
ANMOUNCEMENTS,
MllAlS &
LOST & FOUND
Anl'kJUrw.11mtnh l'u Pool
l#UI \ghf'"t" u...• '""'nd PttMNlill" '°""1-11 t luta Tr•\f'I
SEIYICES
DlrtOYMOIT &
NEIAHTION "'".,. .. '""'""'~ Jut> v. 4.ltltof lifll' •• ,,, .. \I ' t
MEtCNANDISE -..-~ ... r.
AvitllUft
twu "°' e.Nt1tc "•ltr-••1"' f•9W'••' • t -.w1o1nlf "' .. . ,,
[ ....
tr..,1v \vu ........... _,,~
""'-'"'"' tiww.
l~f1toch
J"""rt" Uuwor-~
MMP\lf'llf'f\ l&•~'·""""'" )rh\ilf'f'll~ .. •.inh"iJ
\lw._"c •I ln"rwntrnt ... ~~':" t'vtft 6 tJCfUl)f '
c..u:: ~~:~~~
""""""'""'"'' Slorf' K'''""•M h1r ;~•.f:ctto lhh Nttr•-.1
IOATS & MARINE
EOVtrMENT
tJ"""'•I "-t•b lhtM '-'" ic f' 8oit1o \l•nM t l;Uill
flo.M.\ '°"'" ttro.i1o.Mt"4 l h.irt.., lloM...~11
bh~.,.. .,.,, .....
"""''~''"' 9'Nt1o ......... ,
llAMSIOHUION
Nttt1ft
t •MPf'n .... 'wt. """' t.lfot·h·tt l •""'
\kcw l 'f""' ~-,.. )lafor lh1h ~k-Hf'nt Turwr. Tr.,tt
Tr•'"' I U~\ 41lo Nt-utt f••n'
HTOMOlltE
W.r•l .\at..., ... l't ...... ~ Mftrnt.-.\~""'°'' '-".,,"' M•u H•~t t Vlbn'l Ut"hn
r1.-"• I •R>
AutuWo•a.:
AUi"' Wentt"ft
AUTOS, IMPOITEO
l..mrf•f \l••N•1a.·u
\uit1
AYllhll lhwl''
llllll
~!r.' lb~Wl
t"f'tt .,.
"'•' , ...... ,.
J-.;twilf
1-• fl\.4f ""'Mt1h1tt ... , ...
llttf,..,.__ ........ "' .lh;
'lli;H ,,..., ., ... ,. .....
.... '".'"" ......... "-·-...,.,, .. ..,,.
••l'\•1 ~·· :iufMN
IV"tY r ... .,.,-\...tt•••""" \81f\U ams. o
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
,... ....... tWlcr.
All real eatate ad
vertiud in th ia
newspaper is subject to
the Federal Fair Hous· in& Act ol 19111 which
makes it ille&al to ad-vertise .. any prde~nc:e.
llmitatloo, or d is-
REALTORS
'7S..HI I JUST USTID -$1 H,000
,..., crlrQinatlon based on
,,,. rad, color, rellalon,
:!~ sex. or naUooal origin, , .. ,. or an intention to make
:: any such preference.
, • ., limitation. or dis·
~'::! criminatioa."
COLI OF MIWPOlr UALTOIS
ZSI 5 L Coest Hwy .. C..... .. W.-
675-5511
MIA TID KIDMIY·StWe POOL
Here's the cutest 3-bedroom cottage in all Costa Mesa and j~ nestled in
flowers. Large grassy back 1ard for
the kids, plus beautiful pool with large
deck area. 90' wide frontage .
Centrally located to major shops. See
it and you'll fall in love.
WISLEY M. TA YLOI CO .. UALTOIS
Jiii s.,,..... ... 1 ...
MIWPOIT CIMTH, M.I. '44-49 I 0
'IUU ~~ This newspaper will not 1--------1 , .. , knowinf ly accept any llDUCa WlllllS !! Mo D• + Wrtt.off i!!!!!!!!!!!!!ii!~
~ advert sing for real SI00,000
......, estate which is in viola-OCEANFIOMT
10 UNITS: Assumable .
1172,000 In loans.
$380,000. Orange.
Live in one wlit of this
CO M duplex, or rent
both unitaout. You make
pa y ments ror ....,
ownership + 100%
writeoff. Owner 760-0297
~: llon oUhelaw. Choice comer duplex. 3 ,..,, ,._ _______ ,,
r• bd~1 3 bath up, 2 bdrm,
2 baUI down. Can con·
111111 111015: Adftrthen vert to a larger home. :~ ._...Uedtlltlroda SELLER WILL HELP ;:J; cW1y M .!"flO'f .,.. Fl N AN CE AT 13 % ±~~ "°" I•··~· n. $795,000!
8 NEW CONDOS : From
St25,000 to Sl37,000
Costa MH&.
DUPLEX: 1 Yr old. As·
sumaule Sl.50,000 loan. $215,000. Orange.
PIOPllTY
MAMA~
SPECIAUST
~~· DAILY N.OT ._. ..... hJ Prop. ;.-.z ....., for ... first .......
Call Terry or Chris
851 ·5117 or 851·5157
Residential & Comm 'J.
Management ~ured & ::;; l•corrtct i.HrtlH •675-7060• 6 UN ITS: Brand new. ..,., ~ l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I s i68.ooo 1oan S25S. ooo. ~ntals.
"""' -1· San Bernardino '"'' PUICHASl<»r'nON OCEANFIONT ~~; 1--------1 New Fantastic 3 Br. 3 LOT IN DANA POINT. By owner. Lge price re-1--------!: HMMS for s. Ba. Condo, S2500 moves 2 9 % d 0 w n . w I 11 duction few cash. 4 & 2 br JASM941 cam
Ult• ••••••••••••••••••••••• y;ubin. $1(0> per month. ubord1111tdl4.S,OOO dplx. 640-7990 I ~autiful plan2 with lots
::; c; ... _, I oo• ( y pay rent). Next lo 3 BR. added Firm, RV of extras. New Ts:· seen
00, .. ,.... & all shoppinc, theaters " so c • • 11r ... • •n 1\.,, ....................... park, juat minutes to · _._ ~ access. C\ose to schls. 10 newly Ian scaped
::: ~IAM'f FIX.a beaches 54'-5605 As s u m a b I e 1 o a n . yard. Skyli&hts enhanc s Bdrms. 3 Ba, pool. RV Ward Manaaement co I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! S125,000. AIL 64.S-7221 this tastefully decorated
>•••• M~J ~ !.Jtt
\1\IJ "'" ... ,,
-
access. 2 frplcs. and 714/631-SOSS AWAY FROM CROWDS 2 Bdrm 2 bath, den. r· · c II b formal dining room great 1nanc1ng. a Find out about the hi&h· C<>-Of'aATIVE < ut close to nearly home. SJ65,000. Owne
now ror more lnforma· earning real estate sales SIU.a! everything else) Lrg will carry financing lion. FullpriceSl&4,900. career opportunities Long Term Financing Jbdrm, 2ba, din rm. Call for appomtment t
w i t h T H E R EA L Spacious Townhouse Crplcs, 3 car gar. den. see.
PENINSULA
Fiur Only stepe lo the surf. is
this bar1ain ftxer. Bring
paint brushes & shovels
and cash in on SU. Ca ll
now:
@
SEA COVE PIOPERTIES
114-631-6990
THMOMCi
TOWM40Ml1
Call the specialists at
the condominium in·
formation center.
Touchstm.e Realty
96.1-<*i7
COltOHADB.
MARDWLEX
South or the highway sits
this elegant home plus
income. Hu&e owners
unit, brick courtyard
leads to French doors that open onto Italian
tiled noors. ~autiruJ
wood peued Uoors
enhance den and
spacious ramlly kitchen.
2nd story hosts secluded
mast.er suite with open
balcony and bubbling
spa too! 3 more queen
med bdrms for your lik·
Ing. Huge 4 car garage + 2 Bdrm inrome unit. Price reduced and
owner la anxious. Ca ll
@
SEA COVE PROPERTIES
714-631-6990
HAllOllllMiE
Award winn ing
"Jodelle'' estate home.
lat reule offering on
this exquis~ly appoint·
ed townbome with
maaalve view or bay,
ocean, coutline le night
H&hts. Ortered at
119$,000 .
•': . . ' \ \
. . . . '
. '
Sf9!S TOllACH
2 bdrm each unit +
room • betll elf 2 car pra~. Good w/1 reotal .,.. .•.
associated
ESTATERS. Licensing 2 Bdrm with loft. 2,,., ramrm&muchmoreon ~hoot fees completely bath. LOW INTEREST. a lrg lot l.S hrs. from 642-5200
~fwulable to school of Agt, Vivian Grant Newport Beach on the E. your c~. Extensive side or Mta. in Chrystal A PETE BARRE TI .. REALTY
sales training. For in· *Cote Realty Aire. Counu1 Club with
formation, call7Sl~191 & Investm ent pool, sauna. Jacuui, gotr course, fine dining & bar Dl191.U 640-5777 2 min. away. 5 min from $94. 900 gliding school & rides & '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~
lnvestors delight! Two 2 20 min lo ski resorts. For Bdrm. Uniu. Current in· inro. contact Neal with C
come . S740 Mo. 1 year It W Realty in Palmdale. WESTCUFf
Worry free condo living
in a super location not
rar from shopping and
transportation. Atlrac·
live and well main·
tained. 2 bdrms .• pnvate
yard, pool, nicely de
corated. S129.SOO. Owner
will help finance
home pro(ection plan in· (I05)27H71M olc: (805)
eluded. Call to see! ~·«35hm.
646-7171 MO 9UAUFYIMG
$25,000 down and total
monthly paymenli or on·
ly 1956 foe this lovely 3
bdrm clll*aac home.
THE REAL ESTATERS
0 w n er must ae I I. Only $129,500. Call now Reduced Crom 1149.900 ii--------lo SL37.SOO. Mini horse m$370.
IHl .... Stiln ranc h, custom bit ALLSTATE Openinc for one ex· Jbd rm . 2ba + den I,.
perienced salespersoo to w/Crplc, country home.
sell presti.&)oul homes Just under 2 acres with REAL TORS We bave great location. 1500 sq. rt. barn &
profession.al associale1 greenhouse. Sff to ap-OWtB
and over 25 mUlion in p r e c i a t e C a I I flMAHCIMG
listings. Foe confidential (714)749 9927 994-5831 interview call Kevin. · ' · 4 bdrm home in good Corporate Plaza Realty l Ir l le Co.do location with a com·
A Di v1s100 of
llarbor lnl'~tmenl Co
760-9333 Has priv dock in back e.I e le I Y re m~de led '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Ill!"!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I yd. Au ume TDs or itche'!· new paint, new IMOCl·KHOCI S234,000. FP $315,000. -carpetu~g and drai>es. M a k e t h o s e good Call owner at 642.2645 Owner fmanc111g availa-This is no Jolte. It's op·
household items you·~ --ble. Sll2,SOO. Call now portunity knockmg Be
not UJing available to LEASE OPTION 979-5370 sure lo see this mint con·
some other family by ad· Sl0,000 op(jon money + A dilion 2 br beauty. As·
vertising them for sale Sl600mo.Jbc1nn.21t!l ba, LLSTAT,J sume existing loans at
in Clauiried. Call Newport ~ach home. ·----·-~,. __ c_ less than 13"4 err rate.
·642--567m8miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimAiiiiieiiiniiit 7m~iiiiiimiiliiiliiii R~LTORS ~-':i~ery motivated•
llE
llDlll ILlllS ca.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
MIW WATHFIOMT U~ Two Story Home With Four
Bedrooms Plus Family Room ,
Formal Dining Room, Plus Den .
Three-Car Garage. Pier &
Boat/Slip . Call To Inspect.
$1,600,000.
ISLAND LIYl.,_
Move Into This Bright Four
Bedroom Lido Island Home, With
Only 20% Down . Assume The Large
First Trust Deed At 12% & Owner
Will Carry A Second At 123. A
Fabulous Opport unity To Own
Property In One Of Newport
Beach 's Most Pict uresqu e Communities. An Excellent Buy.
$475,000.
® --..............
Classified Ads are the
answer to a successful
1ara1e or yard sale! It's
a better way lo tell more
people! Want_Adftesylts 642-S618
RESIOENTI~l REAL ESTATE SERVICES
sorHISTtcA TIOH
l)es(ribes this captivating 4 BR. 2
bath detached home. Professionally
decorated & landscaped. Mirrored
walls, atrium. loads of decking &
complete privacy, in University
Park. $192,500.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
.:.-. ........... ,.......,..osPJOMPICH
,.....,......,--~CISUMIO IM 0 MQUITIPASNCCOO
•PllOIACMOXUMlCllH
S CMAPl•LIPAAOLTLP
TYIPOPO•IMZfMT l AUl
TIMTHlZCMAAllMUOSMl TlXPMMAOCMIMAA YlPrc
l IMlOSOfCAOTML"oro
• •COlPPlP•OlOlMLXC I•llCPA•MU•NAAIMCMJ l04LISTIHJJPIOllTIA
OANM•APD•SMlXYUOCIT
CSPOUlSOOXMXPYSS•Al
•DllPSClllSCl J OAMTI
........ ·'T" .. ~llh .. =c rt,
All Liii CllllMI ...... ~ e e .. ei
Whether you're looking for a grass
shack or a palace at the beach , see
classification 4200.
'
Dafebout
Bay &Beach
Real Estate
.REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949.
COME WITH US •.. TO IAYCHST.
ATIRACTIVE THREE BEDROOM, ntREE
BATH HOME .. CATHEDRAL CEILINGS IN
LIVING AND DINING ROOMS .. OAK PLANK FLOORING .. LOVELY BREAKFAST
ROOM .HUGE COVERED PATIO. POOL
SIZE YARD .SEE GAYLE AMATO.
10lt SHtf'W A Y LM ,.Fll I ·5 . $215,000
COME WITH US ••• TO IAYCIEST.
INCREDIBLY SHARP THREE BEDROOM.
TWO BATH HOME .. FORMAL DINING ROOM. DEN .. FINISHED GARAGE WITH LOADS OF STORAGE CABINETS .. SEE PIA
D'AURIA.
I '21 Tl.ADEWIMDS LM .Fii I ·5 $325,000
1617 WESTCLIFf DI, tU. 6lJ·7lOO
EVBYlHIMG IS UP·TO.OATE Terrific s unscreened spa , two
fireplaces. great kitchen , three
bedrooms, large yard and convenient
location. $193,500 Fee
U~l()(Jf t i()Mfi
REALTORS, 675-6000
144S Ea.1 c_. Hlth.,. Corou da Mu
WI HA VI 45 Of THI llST AMHn IH TOWN
Tell a friend. .
and help choose your new
neighbors.
UY AVL COMTIMPOIAIY 11ne ,... old cnto. .._ -ttlt VU.
Wood, ..... & 11ry1t11tt. _, ldtc._
Wa ,..._. l Md. + ~· 0--.ti c.,., Anl T.D. U75,000.
PIJDE Of OWMHSHf P DOU. HOUSI
Mew ....... -~·· poW. zw.. lllJJe. w /co.,.red Ho • • .. & 119 . .w ...,. to .. ,., .., ...... ftfty
ed ~ f'triced for '-•••• ..
........... wll help witll ... &mci.,.
Slll,000.
OWMEI FtMAMCIMG--OWUI s,.c-. 2-ttory 4 ldrw i.o-, ,... I
.... ... Ant ff• °" ...... s.p.r-
locaHo. • M..t .. A ... my dcps to So. lay. SSl0,000.
WA TE.RFRONT HOMES. INC
REAL ESTATl
~,_.., Kt>m.+, Pt•lf"''' .. MitnJ9' t•11t•f'\1
24.lb W Cno•I H .. ,
Nt,.PO<I 0.."'h
Ul-1400
* • WATEIFIOMT HOME ••
HO ,AYMENTS ....••
Cor l year !!! Charming 3 Br
home located smack on the white
sand beach with a private
stairway. Features fireplace, 200'
deep lot in R-2 zoning. ONLY
$695.000. Owner will carry lst
T.O. al 13'4
MEWPOIT IUC'H OFftCE
2670 S-MICJMI Dri¥t
l714175t-1501 c1141 1s2.nn
Walker&lee
Real Estate
LINDA ISLI Exciting opportunity T ""Wide channel
view from spectacular arc~ural
designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home.
Slip for 2 large boats. $1,495,000.
Summer Occupancy.
UDO ISLE HOMES
Featured on Homes Tours this lovely
traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm. 3
bath home'-newly redecorated. Priced to sell q~cKly 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 IEACHFIOHT
Panorami c bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm. 3
bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur-
ing marine room . $1 ,385,000.
NEWPORT CREST CONDO
2 bd rm. den. spacious Plan 8, im -
maculate. Low priced at $215,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
J.) 1 Ho 1 , .. J, Or •• "< fl I'·", ,. '/','
I 00' TO IEACH DUPLEXES 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, new paint,
new carpet. rantast1c
location Only 1249,500
Good r1nanc111g
E's1de C.M. close to
beach. 3 & 2 BR. Lge as-
sumable loan. SlS.S.000
JACOBS REALTY
j7M67~
TopofSPY911u owe stso.ooo
Gorgeous custom estate.
ocean & harbor views.
ultimate design & de·
corating 4 Bdrm. 31,
Ba . formal d1n 1ni:
Reduced toSl.395.000
Peninsula . i., block lo
beach 2 BR each 111\it
Furn ror s um -mer winter rentals
1230,000
Large A-f'rame: 4 BR &
bachelor w loft. Btwn bay & ocean beaches on
Peninsula $310,000 lease
hold.
Col for ....
BURR WHITE
REALTOR. INC.
67 S-4630 ---
Get GREEN cash for WHITE elephants
With I Claasifled Ad
Ca 11642-5678
For • Ad ill WClll9tl's Worid
Hot-Plate Hits Breeze.Easy!
9434 SIZES 34-50 I
~ lfT,...; .... ltit...T. .. '
'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thur•day, July 23. 1981
1lUNI .. ~In' .. TN ITAft 'te'TlTtCMa!Mtll••M WGM.' II I• ..,...ITATWtlT 1 :-=-*''-C:."=~ ..:..~ ..,_, ~ ......
.... ~... , ... MXTlllt O"()UIJ, an• Via
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ltOelllt CelMwlM...a ~: -..1l.Ll, o.\HllU. I.IN Jer'9 M • .._tt. •n c.iti.t fON M. COLL11~1 _DOltOTHY I . 1.-.~fllllltr.(.ell..,_.-,
<0&.&.11•. SA-. _,.It, Jlt , O••a. NICMI .. J Geere .. t1M N.n11
J!AIU.IH. llCUalTY TITl.I Uwell '--• 1eMa ~. c;aitll0tftl.I IMIU•MK• COMl"ANY,. c.11....... ..,.. f«Mt.-, •ell,.,_ \IMMWll Ml<Mtl W Mlli.r, •• C.Uter t....,.i ... ,,,,,, ................ '""'-1..-, ............ c.tltOt ........ II .. ,..-............ lolU.~• OtM A. r-, Mt IM..,_., "9f1J f!IK,._ 111 IM ~M ... ...._ It, Cll&e M9M, C.Jli.t"Me n.11 ~ te ............ tit•,# M'I' <...... Tflh MIMt' I• C4'1\WCl9111 lllY e ........... .....__.. .. DOI,...,.,.,~.
·~-.~. .... .......... MPUS-Tfllt MM1m1nt -lllM wltll 11-. C......,.. c:.itotY ~•Qr .... C*ll\IY Oft Jiiiy NOTICll .,., IW-. ...... _,._ TM ti, 1''1
J,-1...., ~-~ .... .,,._, .. ,...,. ~r ...,_ ,_,4 ...._ WW F....-f PulMllNf 0r...,. COii" Deity "'°" Wltlllfl ............. ~lleft Jliff tJ, JO, Aue t, IJ, ltll ..,..... •. ......
It .,_ wllll ti .... tN ellvk• et efl I
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.... ..... ell .... ·-··· .... ,. 11eur1e 1~1•••-••· .... .. ~•. • ,....... .. etcrl&e. 11 .,.., ........ ,.... _ ,...," ..... .._
DISCIUl"TION 01' IJ~lltTY
l'arcel 1: Tllel ••rtlefl ti IM
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOT'ICa 10 CO"TltAC10•l
CAWNO l'Otl a101
PUauc NOTICE
ITATSMPTOI'
AaAllOOMMlllT 0' Ull Of' fllCTITIOUt
auat•&HNAMI ffle lollo"llne _ _, II•• •119~
Ille llM 9' tM 11<1111-9\itl-Mmt
C:OHTIV,(TOlllt Sl'A & aAUHA,
4'2 Horii! ltPlenelle, Or•fltlt,
CellforfllefaM' All.,. LeWi•, 4'1. N.,tl\ l~len-,
0t•flt9, CellfOt"fll• .,...
Tllll Mlrw" we• t -IO<led lly en
lfldlvl-1
Allwll.ewh Tlll1 ~ ... 111.0 wllll I~
Cw111y c:-.. °' ..... '-'"'"' Jlil
JI, ltlt ""'" l'11D11..r.eo Or.,... COOltl Dally IJll01
Jyly u. '°· "'"' •. ., "" ,,., .,
+-
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
1JlcTl'1°"9 ..... ..
NMIMllTAT .... NT
Tiie ltll"""t ...,_It ......... 11. _ .. ,
INS AND OUTI, t• Hofl4ey Itel.,
Hew,.n 9Ndl. CA fl*. hl'#O JMll ........ U .. H .. ICM'(
ltd., Ht...-t 9MCll, CA '2*.
Tlll1~11 c~ .. 1i1't eit lft• ...... 11., ...
~eJ.llmer
T1111 IUl-4 •• lllecl wllll IN
c;.., ... , Oen 9' 0r ..... C-'1' ... J ... ,
'·!Mt. ... ~ ""-''.,_.Or-. CMM Dollr l'llef,
Jlllr t. tt. u. •· ,,.. »tt•1
PUBUC NOTICE
Pl!BUC NOTICE
PlJBl.JC N011CE
PIC11TIOUt auatMIU
llAMS ITATIMtlNT
The lollOWI~-ere cltlf!Qbusl·
MU et:
ADVANCED ACCllSOR'I'
CONCEPTS, HU Int eorcll••"
$trffl, s.Ma Ant, C.lllorfll• '1701
Jellrey A. a.c~. 4'11 PHl'ct
SUMI, H-.ntl"llGf\ lltecll, Celll0tfllt '2 ... , .
Devlll Po•IOll, US un1 .. rally, Gest•,,_.., Glllforfll• t..0
Tiii• 1Mi1lflfft It c..,O.,c tell by • .. ~··· ...,_,,.., .Jtllh<k-
r PtJaLIC NOl'IC&
PUBUC NOTICE
IJICTITIOUI .UllllUI
MAMll STATIUMftf
The lell-1 ... '°'Mfll ere ...... _._ .... :
C l.4UICAL au RG• ltl, S'Ot
Welf!VI A-. Suite "O'', lrvlfte, CA
AltTI• eAVA,.0, Utl
wt Ille~ Orentit. CA '2661.
41.1 JAVAHMAltO, DWI 0.-e •
L..-Hlll .. CA~
Tllll llwliMs• It ~-lil't M Ill dl~klllt.I
AllJtv__.. .vttea..--t-...,,., el IN l'ett"-'* .... "., ..... .,......_... ..
klleel Ohttl(t OCEAN VIEW tlld
0.eclllM: 1.00• tletll, em ol t1W IOffl
.. t •I ..... 1. "'' l'lec• of I I• RK•l,4 liltl""' Otlk• Otffn View klltel Dut~I«. 1...0 1 sc,.tt. H-.nt l ... IOft IMc.fl, C6illenlle "'91KI ,.,...
tlllCellH H•mt To Ufl'leYe •ftll ,..._. ....... t ... vlftttl VIII ... View Sc'-fl, ar-vi... so .. 1 0 111ric;1,
Hlifll'-111 llNCll. Celli.tvl• Piece ~-· ..... "' ..... OcMn ...... k-C
Tllll ttellfMfM we.> llleo wltll llw
COlinty Clerk of 0••"99 c;....,1., Oft
J11 ... n, "" Ohl••cl. •...i-• Ottk•, 1 ... 0 • PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NQTICE PICTITIOUt autt•H• ,.,...t, ~ a..tl\ C.lllonlle .,.., NOTICE IS H~REl'I' GIVEN l'ICTITIOUI eUllNlll ltAMa ITAff ... NT . ,.,..._.
Tllll ft-..M -11 .... wllfl Ille
C-ly Cltr'll ot Ot•""' c-tr °" J-·· ltl1 l'WtJt Se<lleft ti......,..~ tMte ..
Wftt. lfl IN .._,,. SM J.-11 Ce .... 0.
SMI• AM. CJty et._.,.., C-y ef
Or•f119, MeW .. C.11""111•, u ,.,
m•~1 ..... s1,...1te1
mlec•I-"'-' 111 WW efflce .,
--1~ "'-DI PICTlflOUI IUll"•" M&~11T&T•MINT Tiie lellOWlllf ,.,_l .......... ft P11Clllllled 0r-,_,, "•'ly -.~.
•-1 --·•-'*' --1 tit k t IJICT1nou1eUllllllJ -~ ~-·-··· ""'"• -...... -..-.,.... n'" ol Of• .... c:-l Celllorlll ecilfltl NMl'I $TAT•M•NT TM fOll...int ,."°" It dollltl bull .,.,.. Jiiiy It, ?l, JO. Awg •• Itel >1.,..1 l'vlllltlleO Or .... (ant O.lfy .......
JlilY 2, t. 16, 1J, ltll ~I .., Ml llWOll!ll'O I~ 0.0... e. ... lf4MC ITAT•MlllO Tiit IOll-fl9 '9tWlfl I\ dol"9 lllill• MU at SOL.Alt IHT•ltl'lltlffl, ltO We• N •1 " ,... "'!~ rel. Tll• loll-.f--1' •"t IMl•I ntuet HARBOR GROOMING. 1 .. 4) 'l'ele~.lnt!N,CelltomletllU --------
1"11 r~e"'i • ~!~~· .. :.sat~•'. _. u ~DATA HllVl"U, FOWLER ~ASSOCIATES. 1.s21 .i.1ftoflq11 l11, H1111tl1191011 •••e ll, L• u..teY. tto w.sa Vele~. PUBUC NOTICE ... c_., ... .,., .. *" c-·'· •tetl .............. .
PUBLIC NOTICE w -.. 'IP ..,, ""' ·-,.,,, .,,., tUI I (....__. ...__. •-te A .... '& H 11 ' • H I I a • Ille elleW lbtilOd u-. -1..i lllch IO• UIOO .~....,.. -. _. • ~ •' our ... -. Yllt 119 on •e<ll, Ct lllornl•.,... 1rv1M,Ge1-..etJ1H
I...
-
-I I ' .~ ~ Celltorfll•..,.... Cheri••" S11Hn Mell... lt7'1 Tflll .,.,..._ •• ~ l>Y ... "" ' .,. "'e COii t« Ir ,_ ..,... •••tit ' ffltf'Mlt, 1)00 Wa,,en DonN M ,_ltr. IUll Her-.. lvlcllitl. N ""' .... Mint ..... __ ,_ ..
Ille '*"' ~rl-kl Ille ...... '8 O.vlol
project aldt Wll M rectl""" lfl ,,_ llrttl, N~ '' t.flle Me. CA l(lngtwOllCI ~. H""tlf19lo11 lltecll, IJICTITIOUI aua1N•H pl.Ct ldtlltlllecl ello ... •flll •llell Ila '110$ },~· Hu11ll11111011 Bte<.11. C.lllornle Celllonlle .,._ Tflll .... ":.i~.: llfed wltll tlw NAM• ITATIMlllT
PICTITIOUI eu1t1tau
llAMSIT'AT•NNT
T II• lollowl119 HtMnl ere "°'"' IMitllltUH. P ... fl -wife, H~ ..... Merell 1,
ltSt Ill ... 2111 ..... -effklel ,. Oflttl04 -ll"'lllk ly ,..... •!Oud •I ,,. flllt llMlllMU It c-1•4 by IWI 111 Tiii• llutlneu 11 c-ltO llY en ,,.. Tiii• blitlneu 11 ~1"° Dy .,. 1"" COlilllY Cltrll Of Ot-C-ly G" Tiie 1011-111• Ptrtonl ere dol119
-"• ltolet 11--pt«• &111 • . dlvl41\1el, dlv11111a1. dtvld11el ,..~,1 .. 11 S. ~·11et J .. ,.. to, 1'91. ,, ..... , 111111 ........ MY PLACE, S4U C..-cl.el ~ .. corn, '" IM "'Ice et uMI c-ty •• corder, Miid .....,, Mlfte .,. llW -llrw of tM .......... _,.., of Mkl
M<llOfl,MWl'\O• H'W ' Hlt ... 1'1•1
,,..... .... ~-...... MC.llofl, ..... <.,.,., ....,. tN lnterta(tlOfl of Ille
tllll,.. Mey lie e .. t<loecl et 01\ltkl'' It_,\ r--..et OoNWIS F le ...,_ ~ _,.. JOHN DAVID KING & AS·
ocitlOfl. E.cll bid"''°'' conlorM enc:t lie fllll .t'"-I -"let wllll lht -Ir Tiii\ lltltmtlll Wet lllecl will! I/It Pul>ll,._ Or ..... Coetl Delly Piiot, SOCIATES, 12'» 8r-hlirtl, S..lte E, H1111t111gton llHcl\, CA tU47.
11111 fllll , .. ,_. w•• II .. wllh Ille COlinty Cltrtl"' Ot-COulllY 011 July Jwly 1 • " u. tt•t ,,...t G• Cle ,..~ ':'~blO ."..'!1~ contract docu,...enlt C°"nty Cten" Or-COliftly on Jlily Co11nly Clerk ol Or•ft99 County on t•. 1"1 ' ' ' · 'JD"H.,,...N ow0&:, CAID 1('2MO. ,..ecn ..-. -eccOMpenled II'( 1"9 t, Itel. Jllnt JO, ltll ~• ING, 21112 HefllOt
Cflerlu 8eddilr, t100t ........ Cow·
1,..,CAtltU.
w c11rlty r41!Wred to 1n Ille tonlr.CI , • .,. It, Dem PtUlU Pt .. t• PUBUC NOTICE !!!!,,L•M. H11nll119lon 8Hch, CA
c10c:11Menlt ellO by the li•t ot pt-4 ,_ .... ,,_.._ Publl.ned Ot-Coe11 D•ily Pllol. n-
Vl11un1 •eddllt, t10et 8efllMIW, Cov·
lne,CAttm.
Ceftler lltlt .. CMrlllDI A-''°"'
Ille -ti wllfl Ille norlfl eflcl IOlitl'O
,._,., -llM lllle ....... MC.llofl;
lileMt ~ ... U' W ' -t •lont tlW
tlMfl llflt • • i.-•ecr1..,. Ill ... ,. ........... lltlt ....... tMf\weM ......,; lNMlt MWlll o• ,.. U " •ett
tlOflt Mid .... llM to tlW IOUIM•si ,_ .. I_~._ ...........
111kefllrKIO,.. The DISTRICT ••• AltwMftMl.e• PliDll ...... Or ... Coe•I D•llv Piiot, Jyly "· U,IO, A1i9. '· "" """' -- ------WILLIAM J FLEMING, n•1
1 1..,., J uly 2, t , 1•. u. "'' ,m .. 1. 8,.,.,, Ori 0 Mf'ffl fW ',,.~ to ••IKI tlly or •II llM H..-r ................. JU PICTITIOUI aUllNllS ......... .,. .. , HUii "lllon IN.cl\, CA
Tlll1 lllitl11eu II COflcllictecl by a
, ...... 1 "'IJ\er'tlllp.
lllcla o• towel .. eny 1trevu1•r1ll•• or C• ........ CMltwlle.... PUBLIC NOTICE •• l11lerMetllltS l11 any blO> or In tt. biO IJtNNI PUBLIC NOTICE NAMI ITAYEMINT Tlll1 llullntn It cond11cttd by •
c,..,1 .. w ........
Tllll llAl-1 Wet flleo will\ ttw
:Oli11ty Clerk o1 Oteft91 c-e, °" J"'1 dlllO. ,..,1111-Or-C..it Dell' PllOI, ---- -Tiie 1o11-1119 perton It c1o1119 llU\I· venerel Ptrtrwrlhlp.
TM 0111nct hit• 001alneo ''°"' 1,.,. J111, •. 1e, u. •· 1"1 )OM.II p1c;T1nou1 eu1111•11 neu et: Jom D. Klfl9
1• '"'·. PtiNU P11bllllled OrWIV-C...14 Deity Pflol, Olrect0t of Ille Depart,...enl ol In "CTITIOUS •USINISS HAM9 ITAT•M•llT THE STUFFED POTATO, UIOO Tlll1 1..-..1 wet lllecl wltll IN
Cllillrl•I 1t.iet1011> tllt -•el i><ewall NAME STATEMENT Tiit tollowlng ptttolll tre doing El Toro M , El Toro, Celll0t11I• t2'l0 COlillly Clerk of Orenoe COlillly °" J11ty '· "· u. ». "'' _...,
Pllllllp Oeftlelt ..... Wiie, tKOtoecl
J-21, ... , Ill ... ..., ..., 42 ... l~el tKor•; tMnce -•rly eloftt
Ille '°""'I ... ol Uk! I-ol Pl>lll ..
0.flfell le Mlol -lltlt; llleflO notll\
0•1.-w·-to 11\e POlfll o1 "91nlllfl9
1119 rel• ot .,., diem w•v-• ,,. ,,.,. PUBLIC NOTICE
1
Tr•• to11-1nv perWJfl 1s dolne l>V>I· ..., .. ,. .. , .. , lteoer G LA,.,.,..r, l1112 -.. J..,,.U, 1'91.
lot•lllY 111 wfllcl\ lhl\ work Ii 10 be ntn H SUNSHINE CYCLE AC• l•••Y, Solitl\ lAOlifte, C.lll0tlllt tl611 l'tMl7t perlot,..... lor tech c•all or IYi» of S G M E N TE RPRISES,••• CESSOllltES, 1014 lltocll a....wwerd, Thl111wtl,,..1l>ConClutleclbye11t11 P1illllllledOr-CoellDellyPllot
workmt11 ....-to eaecule 11• con '~C!.'1!°"1., •.,•1u11•11•» Bo9onl• Aven11e, Cnl• M .. •. CA Hunlll'gton llN<ll, Colltorfll• tl!MI lllVldV•I J111y ~· t , It . 2>, 1•1t 2 .. 1.-i
PUBUC NOTICE
trecl -A M llT t1•l• Ell-~1 .. ,t211S...Aft99IO,M5, A-rG U ..........
A <09Y <JI ttw P'° .. ••11119 rtlt\ I\ an ... ~~foltowlng pe'10fl 11 Oo1119 lllill DOHALO G McLEOD, tU Hu11U11glona..tll,ColllorfllaUMI Tllll tl.._1 wes lllllO wllll 1"9 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS eu11N•U
11-1 ITATU ... NT
Porcel 1: Tiie "°"" II AO leet ol IN
..... 11 u. .. oo .... of Ille IOlilll-11
.... , .. , o1.,.. "°"-.... ,..,of Ille
1oulfl••ll q.,.,,., ol HCtlOfl n . 1o.1t11• 4 IOOl9I. , ..... 10 Wffl. In Ille
Ren<llCI Son J-C.jofl 0. Soni• AM, Cltf of ANllelm, Golinty ol Or1n911,
St•te of C•Ofonlle. et pet MtP,...
c0teled kl lor* SI ,... to ot ,... ...
cell--· kl .,,. office of ,,.. CwM'I' .._....of ..... ,_..,
Ille •I "" °'"'"'' ,,...,,.,, ..... 1,.,, ... 01 MASSIMOS PIZZA, ,.. E 11111 !~v,.onl• Avenve. Co.I• MeH. CA Tflll .,.._.II (-led llY ... lfl-COlinly C.lettr. "'Ot-COlifth Oii July fl<• for Conlt«lor-\ r«Y••w •no tn ...... dlvldual Ui, 1'lt l0tm•tl0fl Sir Mt, COiie Mow. CA ,,.27. Tiii\ llvllnt\• I> con<IUClt<I by .,. in· Ell..,. Glill• 1'1 .. ltt
The 1011.,.1119 perSOfls ere 4M1n9 llullMUft
11 "'•II M menoet0ty ._, llle Con· ISMET PEPIC, *I Hlel A ......... dlwlOu•I Tllh ~I wM lllecl wllll llw P11Dlltlled Ort1199 Coetl O•lly Pilot,
tree lot lo w1ton1 Ille co111recl ,, H""11.....,.. INO<ll, CAtlMl Oonalo G -LtOO Coufll' Clffll ol Oun .. C-ty on Jiiiy JlilY ''· ll, IO, ""9 •, 1"1 JICJO.tl
PICTITIOUI aUSIN•H ltAM91TATUYllT
Tiit l0Howlfl9 per10f11 ere Clolflt
11\itllltllM
SAN DIEGO INVESTMENT As. so c I AT ES. IJ Cotpor•I• Plue,
NewPOf1 BMcll, Colitoml• t3MO ····-· -""""My \Ull<Ofltreclor• Tllh ~ 11 Condi.<-by"" Ill Tiii\ \tel-I .... l1led Wllh ,,.. I."" ------""°'' ftlM 10 pey nol IH> llwn tlle MOO dlvlclu•I C"'"''Y C1er• Of 0<•'9 c-iy on J11IY 1'1'1'21 PUBUC NOTICE LA VIOLETTA DI PAllMA lllSTOAAHTE, .. JO WMMr AYen .. ,
Fou111e111 ve11..,.. C.lllorfll•tVCll
Pel .. M_ O<M, .... 1-1• Ter
rtce.C0t-def Mer, Cotitonll• ta»
Ktllll A .-, 1122 See VUl-
Dtl•t , Cerdlll II'( Ille SN, C..lllonll•
91001
1ptcllltO r•tn to •II workmen Thll ;:,::r~M fllecl wltll llw I. lttl P11Dlltlle0 Or-C.O.tt Delly Piiot, -,~ ~tr-l:lrl . .,.,... !ft lN eaeculton ol C011r1ty Clertl"' Ot-County°" Jiii" Fl.-Jyly •. 1•. n, JO, 1"1 >OIMI ·--· -' P11bll..,,.., Or-CN\I 0.tly Pilot,
No Ill~ ,....., wllllelre.. 111• bid tor n , l .. I l't.. July '•· U, JO. A1i9. 6, 1 .. 1 Jta. e1
ITATllMNT Of' 06.llCT 01' THI
ACTIOM
PUBLIC NOTICE
• period of lorty live l•ll 0.Y• •111' p1111111Nc1 Or.,. Coesl o.ily ~llot, 111e ••11 wt llOt -1nvot bicts J 111., n . JO.""' •. "· 1"1 m1"' PUBLIC NOTICE -----
Com9'elflt lo "'"91 Ht .. IO le...-0
lllttrHt.
,. NY,_ -Mid• r;»r1orm.,.ct FICTITIOUS IUllNIH
bond wlll De requlrt<I prlOt 10 exec11· C 0 CE -- ---NAME ITATIMENT
TO THE OEFENDANT: A clvll lion ol trw conlrecl The payment bond PUBLI N Tl l'ICTITIOUS IUllltlH The lollowl119 Pt•tonl •r• dol119
\/\all lie In ttw form \ti f0tll\ 1n 11\e NAMI STAT•MJllT Dusln .. 10.
compleiflt --111ec1 "' 1tw plel~ 1111 ... IMI you. II yoo1 wttll • ....... 11\11 tewllllt. .,... ,.,.... wttf\kl • Cleyl
efter lflll -II ,..,,.... Ofl YOli,
Ille wltll WI ~ • wrltlefl r.._.,,...
to IM c.efl.lllWillll. Ufllelt '°" do 10.
... -defeull wUI lie •fllenct °" epo
plketlell ol 1M plOl111Hf, and t1111 <-1
tontrectdou1,...•nh "CTITIOUl•USINEll I Tiie IOllo.1"9 penon 11 doi119 llW\I· PEAFOAMEX 110 Newport 810 SECUAI TY Eecfl blO sfl•ll Dt NAME ITAT•M•HT neu et: Ctnler Drive, $11ll~ 200, Newport
e ccoMp•nltO by • certllleO or Tiit lollowl119 perM>nl are 001110 SWANK MODELS. 8Hcl>, Calll0t11la t21143
c•1111er·1 CMck IHY•IM• to lhe 01 .. bU1lne11n: SWANK IHDUSTAIAL MODELS, M•n•e•melll work AHO<l•ln,
lrl<t, o• e wllsl.clorv bid bond In GO ROI'S DELI, l))C 8ektr 12t WHI 1'111 Street, CMI• Mete, Inc , Celllor11le, 110 H-port Ctlllltf
ltYOt ol llW DISTRICT u ec111eo by llle Str .. I, C.te MeM, C•lllornlt t2'l6 Celllor11le t2'.21 Orin, Suitt 200, Newporl Buell,
1>1-r .. prillCtjNI -... u.teclory T-1(-•I. 401 E Wtll Allon, Altllerd Edwl" Sw ... k. ,,. WHI C•lllornl• '16'0
May -•I~ ...... 11 "°"tor s11ttty company •• 111retv. 1n •n S.111• Ane. Cotllorfll• '2107 atll SlrMI. Cott• Me1e, Colllorlll• Tl•I• llu1lneu 11 condY<ltd Dy• cOt .,...°""' nol ltKI than 10 perc.,.I ot ow Clll,,.,.u K•wel, 401E w .. 1 Allon, tUJI PO••llOfl. Ille telltf ......... In I ... Complelnl,
wflkfl 'ould '""'I kl .. ,,......,._, of
·~· t•lfte Of money 0t prape<1y .,.. otMr retlef reqliHled 111 lhe COM·
Pltl11t.
mealmun1 •"'°""' of tht bid Tiit Soni• Ane. Ctlll0tnla '1101 Tflt1 .,.,..,..,..1, condlietecl by en lfl· Mt11egemenl worlr. Al
cllecll o• bid ~ -II Dt gl .. n •• • Thi• llUSlneH 11 conOutltd by •n In dlwld11et. ....:•lltK, Inc.
gu•r•nt .. tllel ,,.. l>ldc:ltr >11•11 •• dlvl,.yal. Al<Nrd E. SwMll D Fltl<Nr, Prnldltfll
tcul• tlw ~tract •' It ta •w•rOtO lo Cl\i,,.,., K•w•I Thi• wot-I w .. 111.0 wltl'I lllt Tlllt •1•1-1 wet 111.0 wllll tNi
DATED MArcll IO, 1'11
1..AeA.Br-11.
CleB a.,C.H.--.
hlM lfl cOlllorMlty Wiii! Ill• contract Tllll stet-• w•I flltO with Ille COlilllY Cl•rll ot Ort1199 C-tr Oft Jlily COlinly Cl-OI Ot•llQlt COlinty Oft Jlily
cloc""'tftl> --II prov10. llw wrt· COlinlY Clerk ol Orenv-Cou111y on 1, 1tt1. u , '"I
ly lloNI 0t -.,. -clflt<I w<tnln i JIHW ». 1 .. 1 l'tu1• '"IU4 l't .. nt
cleyl .,.., notllkalloll of tlw .... ,o ... P11D11.-Ott1199 Coul •llY Piiot, P11blltlled Or-CoeAt Delly Piiot, P11D111Nc1 Or ..... Coell D•ll'I' Pllol,
°'"""' ,,.. conl•«I to.,. b._r. S.10 MC11•1· Jlily 2, •. t•. n. "" nn.-1 J111, '· 1•. u , •. 1•1 :iou-11. J 11ly u , U, IO, Auo. •. t"' nt»-tl.
L•VllHOM, aow•N, MILL••.
JACOH& llAaltlNI ... ~,..·-w.•1• La ........ CA_, Tel. 111..,.., .,._!SU
P\1411 ..... Or ..... Coetl Deity Piiot,
JYlf !J, • Allf .. t, U, t•I l*-11
PVBUC NOTICE
IY -II lie for.,eltecl lo 11\e OISTAICT .... .. 10 ,,. ... _, 10 Wllotn .,,. Cofl·
tr.ct 11 ewonlecl !ell 10 ••"'Ula IN Agr .. fl'ltllt .... ptOYillt ttlCI bond>
wlll\111 S cei..-CS.~ ol •w•rO 0. ............... ,.
a,Mil ... llS.:.llew.
CMt1I
P11blttlled C>-C:O.tf D•Hy Pilot.
Jyly lJ. lO, 1 .. 1 3JIUI.
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF DEATH OF _ ~ ----
i·N: ~::: R~:'Tl\~tNN~~ NOTICE OF DEATH OF
ADMINISTER ESTATE ~uec+~\.~ g~E TA~DA °o~
NO. A109613. MINISTER ESTATE NO.
T o a I I h e l r s , A-109600
beneficiaries, credi tors T o a 1 I h e i r s ,
and contlnoent creditors of beneficiaries. creditor s
J . Warren Lennon and and contingent creditors of
persons who may b e Lucille Cye and persons
otherwise interested in the who may be otherwise in·
will and/or estate: terested In the Will and/or A petition has t>esn filed Estate.
by James Warren Len-A petition has been
non, Jr. in the Superior filed by Pearl King
Court . of Orange County in the Superior Court of
requesting that James Orange County requesting
Warren Lennon, Jr. be ap· that Pearl King be ap-
po i nted a s persona l pointed a s personal
representative to ad-representat ive to ad·
minister the estate of J. m inister the esta te of
Warren Lennon <under the Lucille Cye (under the In-
Independent Administra-dependent Administration
lion of Estates Act)· The of E states Act> The peti-
petition is set for hearing tion Is set for hearing in
in Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic
Center Drive, West, in the Center Drive, west, in the
City of Santa Ana , City of Santa Ana , California on August 19, California on August 19,
1981 at 9: 30 A.M . 1981 at 9: 30 a.m .
IF YOU OBJECT to the IF YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition, granting of the petition
you should either appear you should either appea;
at the hearing and state at the heariOQ and state
your objections or file your objections or file
written objections with the written objections with the
court before the hearing. court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be Your appearance may be In person or by your at· In person or by your at-
torney. torney
IF YOU ARE A IF .YOU ARE A
CREDITOR or a cont-CREDITOR or a cont-
ingent creditor of the de· lngent creditor of the de·
ceased, you must file your ceased, you must file your
claim with the court or claim with the court or
present it to the per~onal present It to the personal
representative appointed representatlv~ •Ppointed
by the court within four by the court within four
months from the date of months from the date of
first Issuance of letters as first IMUance of letters as rrovlded In Section 700 of provided In section 700 of
he Probate Code of the probate code of
allfornla. The time for California. The tlmt tor I.lino cl1lms will not ex· filing claims will not ex·
p1re pr1or to four months plre prior to four months
from the date of the hear-from the date of the hHr· •no notlctd •bove. Ing noticed above.
YOU MAY EXAMINE YOU MAY EXAMINE
he fllt kept by the court. the flle kept by the court.
If you are Interested In the If you are lrUtr"ted In the
t1te, you may flle a re-estate, you may fllt 1 rt·
at .._.th the court to re-quest with the (Ourt (o re·
Ive tPtCl•I notice of the cel\le tPtClal notice of the
nvtntorY of estate assets Inventory of est.at. eftd of
nd of the petitions, ac-the peUtlons, acc:o1.1ntJ
oun\s end ,.eports end r.,U dtscrlbtd In
scribed In Section 1200.5 St(tiOn 1200.J of the
the C.llfornl• Pr.obate Callfornta ProbJte Code.
· Mtrllflll J . PerwftHn, Jr. L.-n & Watlslna, A. 161,, BNc• Blvd. IC..... Klmlweftlt1 At· hlte m
,,.., al Law, Js:t So. "...........,.-.ch ca ltwer Street, Los ,.., " · i!r:':' CA t0071 ; ltl. PubllsMd Or~ COfft •J!:; c.-. ~' """' 0111~ Ptlot1 Jul't i2, 23, 29, ~-~-~,.,~,.
PUBLIC NOTICE
111/11 Draft Environmental Impact Statement W available for review on a proposed interchange
on Route 1-S at Alton Parkway and modification
of the Irvine Center Drive interchange on Route 1-405
Public Meeting to be Held
u • ar AA *
"'ooo•c ,,':',.~=~-/ .. .,... .. ...,, ai.o
Cemet /
.__,. . ....., ·-------.., ....
LEGEND 0 NEW INTERCHANGE 0 MODIFY INTERCHANGE
WHAT'S BEING The City of Irvine, In conjunction with CalTrans (Callfornla
PLANNED Department of Transportation), is planning to construct the
Alton Parkway/l·S interct\ange and widen and Improve the
Irvine Center Ori ve / I ·•OS Interchange. This work is
necessary to provide access to existing and approved com-
mercial and industrial land uses. It is also necessary to pro·
vide vehicular access to a proposed multi-modal transporta-
tion center a1'ld to provide a crosstown arterial highway that would connect residential and regional employment areas
within Irvine.
WHY THIS AO
WHAT'S
AVAILABLE
WHERE YOU
COME IN
The City of trvlne, in cooperation with CalTrans, has studied
the effects thll project may have on the environment. This
notice is lo tell you of the preparation of the Draft Environ-
mental Impact Statement, of Its availability to the public,
and of a p\lbllc meeting thnl will be held.
The Draft Environmental lmptct Statement and other pro-
ject Information are avallablo for Inspection at the Public
Works Department, lrvlno City Hall, 17200 Jamboree
Boulevard, Irvine, California.
The documents are also •vallable for Inspection at CalTrans,
Environmental Planning Br•nch, 120 South Sprln9 Street,
Los Angel.s, California.
Oo you have any comments regarding the findings of tht
draft Environmental lmpael Statement? Oo you dlsa~rw
with 1ny ot the findings of our study? Would you ure to make ~ny wrllttn comments on this pfOJect? If so, please submit
your comments In writing no later ihan September 2•, 1991 to
Wayne Ballan,lnt, CalTrans, Envlronment11 Pl1nnln9
Branch1 ~artment of Transportation, 120 South Spring
StrHt, L..OS Angeles. Callfomla, 90012.
A public meeting will be held on this proJtct In September,
l9tl. at 7:30 p.m. I" the City Council Chambers, 17200 Jim·
boree Boulevard, Irvine, Callfornlt. Tht purpose of the pub41c
mHtlnQ I$ to provl~ 1 forum for public comrMnls and to r11PQftd to technical qu11tlons on tht Draft Environmental
Impact Stattmtnt •nd th• design of the prc>pc)Md Pf'OJ.Ct.
Por more Information •bout this project, calt CalTrans at
(2U) 620-3550 or the Cltir of lrvlne Public Works o.partmtnt
at en•> 754-3683.
l'ICTITIOUI aUSINIH
llAMa ITAT•MUIT Mety ElalM N-• Mori. to.
Tilt 1o11.,.1n9 P9•'9ftl • ·• ooln9 .,, .. 1_ ...
ColliMlllfW A-. F-l•ln Velley, Cellfor,..•
ArteMlo Mori, tOll Col11n1Dln•
Av.,.11e. F-te111 Vell..,, C.lllorflla
tJ1QI
Tiii• l>V>IMH 11 c-CltO by •
v-,..ral Pet1nttWP
Peter M 0t tis POWEii CONVERSION SALES
COMl'ANY, 1011 Leite St,...I, .. ..,,.
l119ton 8Mdl, C.llloNW• ..... Tllt1 _..,. .. Is c-.C'leo Dy .,. ,,..
.. lvlclliel
Tltlt , .. ,.,._, wet 111.0 wlll\ UM
Coullly Cttr~ of o..,. c-ty °" Jlily
20, "" PCSC, INC., C.lllOtflle, 1011 u ... s1r .. 1, Hwlllfllll°" a..c11, c.111., .. 1. tt..e Elel,.. N-• Mor'I
Tllll 11 .. _t WM lllecl wllll Ille
C01i11ly Cltrtt ol Ort1199 c:-4'1' °" Jiiiy
7, lffl
1'1....,.
COX, CASTLE~ NICHOLSON, .... ~ Tllll I-WH lllecl wlll\ U. °' ... c-., Ottke
1222 --"'-'· s.lte 1• ltWle, Co. "711
Coliflly Clettr. ol Ot-COliftty 011 JlilY
I, IMI. l'ltSZU
P111111.-0r-. Coe1t Delly Piiot, '1M61S P11bllllled Or .... C.0011 Otlly Piiot, PubllllheO Orenge Coe11 Dolly Piiot. J uly 2. t , "· 23, "" 2"2 .. t. J11ly t , ll, 2l, IO, 1•1 J04J .. I J11ly 23, JO, Aue.•. U, 1 .. 1 lJ02"1
PUBLIC NOTICE
Study Results Available Public Hearing
Proposed Improvements and R.allinrnent ol
Moulton P•rkway/lrvine Centlf' Drive
WHAT'S BEING
PLANNED
WHY THIS AD
WHAT'S AVAILABLE
WHERE YOU
COME~N
CONTACT
ua"" •lfl IT t. TIO"
The cities of Irvine and Tustin wOYld like to improve
and realign Moulton Parkway/Irvine Center Drive.
The project includes construction of fOYr travel lanes
of pavement throughout the realigned section of
Moulton Parkway/Irvine Center Drive and two lanes of pavement widening adjacent to the existing two
lane alignment. The roadway wlll ultimately be six
lanes. The project also Includes provisions for a
future raised median, construction of Myford Road
from the AT&SF railroad track to proposed Moulton
Parkway/Irvine Center Drive, and construction of
two bridges and Improved flood control facilities.
The City of I rvlne, In cooperation with the City of
Tustin and CalTrans (California Department of
Transportation>, has studied the effects this project
may have on the environment. An Environmental
Assessment prepared by the City Indicates that the
project will not adversely affect the quality of the en-
vironment. This notice Is to tell you of the prepara-
tion of the Environmental Assessment, Its avallablll·
ty to the public, and of a public hearing that will be
held on the project.
The Environmentll Assessment Is available for re-
view at the Crty of Irvine, Public Works Department,
17200 Jamboree Boulevard, Irvine, CA 92714.
Do you have any c;omments about the findings of our
study as set forth In the Envlronmental Assessment?
If so, please submit your comments In writing no later than August S, 1991 to: City of lrvlne, Public
Works Department, 17200 JambOree Boulevard,
Irvin•, CA 927H.
A public hffr1nv wm be held on the Environmental
Assessment on July 291 1991 at 7:30 p.m. In the City
Council Ch1mtMtrs, 17200 Jamboree Boulevard,
I rvlne, C.llfornte. A public hearing will also be held on August ~911 •t 7:30 J).m. In the City Council
Chambers, ;J1JU c.ftteMl•I Way, Tustin, C•llfomte.
The purpose of the hffrlno Is ID provide • forum for publlc pertlclpetlon llnd to respond to technical ques. lions on the Environmental Assessment end
Englnterlng Design.
For more Information 1bout t"ls proJec!_. call the Cl· tv ot lrvlne Publfc Works Otpertment, (114) 75'.,..,.
tnttd: Junt 23, ''"
tfAHCYC. ROWLAND Ctty citrk
City of lr¥11it
,
.............
Fraud
plea
guilty
•
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
Lona Beach man haa pleaded
IUilt)' to what WU descrlbed as
a pyrarnld scheme in which he
bilked lnveatora out of more
than Sl million, whlle promi1tn1
them profits of 60 to JSO percent
within 17 to 60 working days.
Joseph 0 . A1ullar, 30, the
owner of DD&D Paper Stock
Co., entered his plea on three
counts or wire fraud before U .S.
District Judge Lawrence T
Lydick.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark
E. Ka lmansohn charged that
Aguilar took the money he got
from investors acr oss the coun-
try from November 1978 to May
of t his year and spent it on
jewelry. Ferrari cars, clothing
and gambling in Las Vegas.
Aguilar told potential in·
vestors his company purchased
surplus and scrap cardboard for
export to the Far East, the
prosecutor said.
Sentencing was set for Sept. 8.
Aguilar could get five years in
prison and a Sl ,000 fine on each
count.
New prison chief
CLOSE TO KERMIT -Jennifer Kenny, 18 months old, of San
Francisco, presses close to the plexiglass of Kermit's dis-
play case at the Art of the Muppets exhibit in Golden Gate
Park's Hall of Flowers.
SACRAMENTO CAP ) -
Former probation officer Sylvia
J ewell Johnson was named by
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. as the
third superintendent in 14
months at the state women's
prison at Frontera. Ms. Johnson,
44, had been acting s uperinten·
dent.
Majority wantS harsher jails
Americans also think more prisons should be built
NEW YORK (AP ) -
Americans believe conditions in
the nation's prison s are not
hars h enough , but they will say
prisons s hould be built lo relieve
inmate overcrowding .
The latest Associated Press·
NBC News poll also ,s.ays that
more people think the primary
purpose of prisons should be re·
habililation rather than
punishing cr iminals or simply
removing them from society.
There was a much sharper
divis ion of opinion on what
s hould be the primary purpose
of prisons: 37 percent said to re·
habilitate criminals, 31 percent
said to punish them, 25 percent
s aid to remove them from socie-
ty and 7 percent said they were
not sure.
suburbanites, conservatives and
Southerners. The poll said that
the more educat ion a respondent
has, the less likely the respon·
dent is to say prison conditions
are not harsh enough.
Blacks were more likely than
whites to s ay re habilitation
should be the pr imary purpose
of prisons, but were also more
like ly to say punishment and
less likely to s ay removing
criminals from society s hould be
prisons' primary purpose. 1 The r esults are from 1.599
1 adults across the nation contact·
• ed by telephone July 13·14 in a
In regard to prison overcrowd·
ing, a problem in nearly every
state and the cause most prison
officials have cited for riots in
several prisons this year , there
was overwhelming support for
state governments' s pending tax
dollars to build new prisons: 63
percent in favor. 30 pe rcent op·
posed, 7 percent not sure.
Hypnosis approved • scientifically -selected random
• sampling.
More than half the respon·
· dents, 53 percent, said they think
conditions in this country·s 1 prisons are "not harsh enough."
Only 13 percent said they think
prison conditions are ··too
• harsh," 18 percent said condi-
Even those who said they sup-
port President Reagan's spend·
ing and tax cuts al the federal
level gave strong s upport to
state spending for prisons.
The poll said those more likely
to think prison conditions are not
hars h enough include men.
TRENTON, N.J . CAP> -The
stale Supreme Court says iden-
tifications elicited through hyp·
nosis may be used as evidence in
New Jersey criminal trials as
long as the hypnosis is conduct-
ed properly. The state's high
court ruled 5-2 that such iden·
tifications are admissible even ii
a witness at first doesn't re·
member details.
• lions are "just about right" and
16 percent said they were not
sure.
·~~~~~~~~~--
:DEATH NOTICES
t
Pl'GSLF.Y
JESSIE L Pl'<;su:Y. rl'
'11denl or llunttn~ton Hl•ach.
•Ca Passed U\\iJ\ on Jul~· 21.
: 1981 She was H'n at·t1,·t· in
the area. hav1n1t bt'l'n a
member ur tht· Womt·n·!'
'Club and the F.bt>ll l'lub Shr
"as also a rorml•r n•..,1den1
or the Pomona an•a frol'll
' 1920 to 1963 Shi.' " ~urv1ved
, b) her daul(hlerl> Kalhnn
Berest or llunltnitlon At•arh.
Ca and '.\1uriel Wini( of
1 Bonita. Ca . i.isll'r '.\1unel
Crom\\ell of CJnada. 1
J(randt'h1ldrrn and 4 jlrt•al
J(randrhll<lren Cr) pl!.1de
, sen· ices "111 be hrlrl on
Thursda). Jul~ 2.1. 19181 al
1 OO P:\1 at the r omonu
,
I
f'tHCEH01'HHS
l&LHOADWAY
MOtn'UAIY
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
IALnlHGHOM
SMfTH & TUTHILL
WHTCUff CHA"L
427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
PAc.HCYllW
..-..OllAlPAll Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel-Crematory
3500 Ptc;1f1c View Or111e
Newport BHCh
MA-2700
NcCOllMfCll ..OITVAlllS L-V\ma 8HCh
494·9415
Laguna Hiiia
78'-0933
San Ju.n C.p111rano
495·1778
M'MC.LA~.OUYI
Mot1'*Y • Cemetwy
Cf9'"'tOry
ta5G19*Ave.
CoetaMMe 540-5564 0
~aui-.oleum. Pomona. Ca
St•n ires under the dirertiun
of Balt1 Bergeron-Smith &
Tuthill Westt·l1ff t'hap<'I
'.\t orluan of l'osl<t '.\ksa
tWi 9371
ROTH~1AS
G f.RTR L'Df. ROTll:'\IA~.
passl'd a~a\ on Ju l~ 20
1981 She 1s sun l\'ed b' hl·r
d d Uf! hler Sa I h Hohn I.of ink
and her granddaughter
1 lene Gra,·e.,tde sen ires
"111 bto hl'ld on \\'ednesda\·
Juh 22. 1981 al 11 OOAM at
llarhor l.a"n '.\fount Oh,·e
;\lemorial Park Ser\'lces un
dt·r the d1rrclmn of Harbor
La" n·Mounl Oii\ e Morluar~
of Costa Mesa. 540·55:>4
SAROANO
EDITll T SAROANO.
passed a" ay on July 21.
1981 She ts sur vived b\ her
dau11hll'r Martha llauhrick
and her son-in law Charles.
brother Theodore Torok of
New Jersey. 7 grandrhtldren
and 6 great-grandrhildren. Services will be held on Fri
da y. July 24 . 1981 at
11 . JOA M al the Harbor Lawn
Memorial Chapel with He\'.
Douglas McKenzie ofricial·
Ing Interment services im·
mediate ly fo llowing
Service!'> under the direction
of Harbor I.awn-Mount Olive
Mortuary of Costa Mesa.
540·55M
WEDEL
WILLIAM WEDEL. age
84, resident oC Huntington
Beach. Ca. Passed eway on
July 20. 1981 in Los Angeles.
Ca Mr. Wedel was born in
Escondido. Ca. on June 6,
1917 . He was a graduate of
Huntington B~ach High
School and Ss'nla Ana Junior
Colleae. He was an engineer
ror Pacific Telephone for 40
yeorg. Beloved hU5band or
Winifred. beloved rather of
Mark and Marilyn Wedel
and also surviving hia
brother Henry. and sisters
Veva Cosper and Vera
RunStr. Friends may call al
Plcrce Brothers Smtths ·
Mortuary on Wednesday,
July 22. 1981 lrom 12:00 noon
to t :OOPM . Pri v ate
1revc•ld aervtces will be
ton4ucted by Paul Johnsen
o f tbe Grace Luthonn
Church of Huntln1\on
8"ch. Ca Ttle f1mlly re·
ques~ donaUona bt made to
lbe American Ht1art As·
IO<'tatlon Pltrco Brothen
Smith&' Mottuary dlf'ttlort ... .,.
I
Dropping cancer
cells aids lab
BOSTON <AP> By using a technique that in-
volves dropping can cer cells five feet, University
of Minnesota researchers believe they can identify
subtypes of a common form of leukem ia, accord·
ing to a report in the New England Journal of
Medicine .
The researchers cultured cancer cells. then
dropped them from a he ight of five feet onto
slides, stretching the chromosomes so scientists
could see m ore details.
The discovery will permit more specific treat·
ment for the disease. said Dr. Jorge J . Yunis. who
developed the technique at the university medical
school's department of laboratory medicine and
pathology.
"You can divide one cancer into many types,
depending on which chromosome differences they
have," he said in a telephone interview.
Yunis said that if a doctor diagnosed a more
serious type of leukemia, he might want "to treat
the disease more aggressively with new
chemotherapy or with bone marrow transplants
rather than the standard treatment.
"Or. you may have a type you treat with the
same standard treatment, but milder, becauae a
milder treatment may be good enough for that
type and you can avoid the bad side effects of
chemotherapy.··
"This work may have wider ramifications,"
added Yunis. "With t his technique, you can see
where the cancer attacked the chromosome or a
cancerous cell. If you know where the
chromosome defects are, that's where the cancer
genes may be localized.
''Then you can clone these genes and you may
be able to treat leukemia by replacing the defec-
tive genes with a good, normal 1ene.
"The basic technology ls available to do that.
except we don't know what the cancer 1enea are.
That technology ls two to five years off."
-PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICB --
,IC't1110UI ........ ,ICTl110UI llUMUM
lllAMll ITATSMallT llMW ITAR•llT fM teli..tftt W-t ert ...... L.0001 aL.aCTi.tc, 1'• ......
..,., __ ,
AM A-, C.... Nl9M. (.ti~ 8L.oottAOO INVOT•NTI, m tutJ C,.9"11C : Drlw, Wl!IM a..ctl. MerylMI "· ........ tt• s.ta Clilltemle ' AM, A-, c;..,.. MIM, CM ........ JfllllT .... -.tn~ ..,, ..., Dflw, LlllllNt a..ctl. c:.tHWtll.t Tltlt-..... It t..C .. W fll Ill-.... , .......... o.rie ... ._._, m C'-"" .......... ,..~ ..., °'"" u.-9Mcll. ~ Tiii• .....,.... ..... , .... """ .. .... ,
~· ~"Or .. c.itw. Jlift Tlllt ..... 11~"' -.... ti,"'' ............ llUlll..., .... I . ~ ,.. ....... '"'*'""°""' c..11 o.i.':'=' .,.,,.....,_
Jiiiy u. .. "'-.. 11,.,., • TMI....._._ ..........
---~ °"' •O-.,.. c.ier • ,.., "· ,.,
!0ra~1 .. ~ ---c.llm&......., __ , _____ ..-==-----Cllll ...... ·-··-~,. ,J.. "" ~.
6
4
2
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7
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, July 23, 1981
..._..,...see ..... ",.,.see "'""..,. H•••" ....................... . .............•........•....••.•.............. ~, .. , ................. .
• ,.,.. IOOJ W... 1024 Hmtlll ........ 104011"¥111e 1044 ••••••..•.•....... : .....•......•...... , ....................•.................•..•......... ,.
(flTOUTI
Thia OWMI' will 1tand on
her Mad to make a deal on a traditional 3 wdt
Balbo& llland proJ)erty.
Alklnl price la '389,250 Tbe tel'1DI art left to
your creaUve mind. ............ Uy
' 700
ClftllcUdollle
This executive family
home ia one of the most
charming on the I.stand.
With S Bdrm& & 3+ Ba,
there Is plenty of llvlng
area. PlantaUon wood
s hutte rs and f rench
doors lead to e legantly
landscaped paUo. Also
with aunroom in the
master sulte you may
enjor. a partial bay view.
Don t mlas thb enchant·
Ing and h i ghly
sophisticated home.
$725,000.
O.M.McnWUr •4 -ttto 7'0.011s
lrlaMj Yow DMdlv!
60' bayfront on l.lnda
Isle. S Br 6 Ba, pool &
spa, double dock for 4
yachts. Owner will carry
1st T.D. $2,100,000.
MCWllM
COMMTIOH
Sharp S Bdrm. 5 yeara
new, lar1e open kitchen,
lovely alriwn. earthtone c:arpeu. Aakina $134,900.
CaU 5'0-1151
• HERITAGE
fUALTURS
ISLOCATIOM
IMPORT AMT?
BfDOfTHI
lANOW
Beauurw 4 Bdrm S6S
built home{ on quiet cul
d• nc, n pride or
ownerehlp home In love· ly Goldenweat Eltates.
Larfe farnlly room with we ber a nd cozy
fireplace. Sparklln&
IOUrmct kitchen. plUAh carpets. l2112,500.
don osen
J. t,'• 1 • Thia nearly new So. Coaal Pia.ta home has it
all. Eng. Tudor style on c o r n e r Io l. N e a r ---='-=:t=~~...::.c-=--
rreeways, cenlr. A/C, 4 •--19111-----•I Br 2~ Ba. S21U50 Call OPIM HOUSI RI
now. Ownr/Agt. Rick 10 to I PM
Keeler 546-6706 or Don't mi&a t.h1B uhique
631·0213 home. located in most
FllMCH OUAITIA desired area of Hunt·
3 BR 2'h ba twnhse. lnaton Bearh. Call for
patio, fplc, double gar, details. owe Sll0,000 . BKR
84§:4380
PRIME E.SIDE
2 Bd. lrg family rm, 2
pvt patios, RV access.
owner financing, great l"M I 044 terms. $145,000. Call
Robert Milliken631·1266. ••••••THMeHG••••••
R&'M~
II~ \I f111C...,
TOWtieo40Ml7
Call the spedalists at
the condominium 10
formation cent.er.
Al...., 1112010 Touchstone Realty
qu1n1••x. Ttie klnd ol plate ti;•
ea1y to come home Ao
aft.era hard day at wot\.
The DeaM Hom ht e
an excel.lent uaortm~t
o( recreatJonal taciUtlcs
to match the euy 10 na
IUeatyle of Irvine. 3
bdrm. 2 ba. Clo•e to
everything. All thi.I com
bined makes an exct>p-
llonal buy at '202,SOO.
tt513 CA..,..,,J)a~IR\'M
LCMJm•IMc.h 1041 •••••••••••••••••••••••
0.tofSk#
OtlfofMMd Prime Dana Point
duplex on corner lot
near Dana Marina. 2
bdrm, 1 ba up, 1 bdrpi
down beamed cl ng ,
frplc, dining area. encl
patio. Sl«.000
Mission Realty
IM-0731
New Modular Type
Homes. leased land.
Oceanfront Pk. 3 pvt
bchs, 24 security, fishing
p ier from $29,900
499-3816
RCT<ly lo rCo
$64000 VA loan. 3 BR 2 ---~963-=-<1167=!----I BA w/db1 gar, fenced Rancho San Joaquin Villa
fron t & rear yds. S Portola Model, must see 110,000. Brker646-4:llO mny upgrades. prin only
$5000 down, Sll80 mo. $169,500. For appl
buys 3 BR 2 Ba fixer in -'55"""-1.""6890=.:....· ---
Costa Mesa. Ownr/agt. lnlMIAllH
New wood/glass, spa.
solar , 6 dks, 2 frplcs.
3+ 13+ close/unobstrur -
lable/panor/villg vws.
S499M. PIP. 494-7631.
·!t ) 1 'I)\) · 6'2·1523; 645-7365 Beautiful 1 Br rondo on· EMERALDIAY
Beautiful ocean view
from this 3Br 3ba, ram
rm bome. Great financ
mg' SS2S,OOO.
---.-.-Cat--IA_Y ___ 1 EASTSIDE ly $8000 to assume loan.
Lovely 3 BR 2 Ba. fam $113,900. No qualifying.
DBJGHT rm home w/fplc, dbl ~83=1·~6238=·_,_....,:::.-._ --Lovely 3 Bdrm 2 Ba w1lh s SSUu & •LEV & CAROL TATUM RLTR.
494-0029 new French country gar. 149·500. A ~ " kitchen and used brick Broker. 64&"4380 Take over high balanre
exterior. Located in the St 0,000 DOWN on VA loan o n th is D1vorre Forces Sale
heart of Newport's up-Easlside Costa Mesa almost new 3 Bdrm 2 Ba Lower 3 Arch Bay
per bay, overlooking Townhouse. 2 Br, 1•1z on large lot. Nice up-Great ocean view, pvt
country club. Priced at baths, pvt yard, 2 car grades. rentral air. lrg • area 4bdrm beach
only Sl87.500 with ex· gar. vaulted ceiUngs, covered patio. Call for house. 4,.:::99-"-"'31:..:4c.:;4.,__ __ _
cellent financing availa· pool and spa. Sl<l9.500. details. 1-.-.-.-.-------·
bte. Call 751·3191 owe straight note. OPEH HOUSE
R&H lnv't 752-2197 ChoM,.... lrwteh c:. <,f t ( ( l
~1 1HtJl 1t ~~1 11 <, ------
FIX UPIEACH
HOUSE-VIEW!
Incredible bar galn-112
blk to ocean. Quaint.
white picket fe nce &
dutch door entry. Spiral
stairway to ocean view
mstr Bdrm. 2 Bdrms + loft, atrium & frenr h
doors! Take advantage·
you paint, fix & save SSS!
Only Sl89,900. Call Bob
Burdick, Ownr/ Agl.
759-1221.
lol»oal.a..d
Nearly new duplex.
Three and tw o
bedrooms. Three and
two baths. Ideally de·
signed for guests. Large
ass umable 1st and
owner will carry 2nd
T.D. Call Roger Bar·
q u lsl. 759-1243 or
631-7300.
43411GOMA
Ele1ant new 4 Br Vlc-
t or I an partial vu, ownr/contractor just com letln . s 000.
EASTSIDE DUPLEX See our M'edit.erranean 'fA Villa with Laguna's best
Two 1 Br. only $119,500. View Sal. 9-12. Sl.100.000.
640-7814 or 963-7600 497 ·4844 for directions &
MESA DB. MAR MEAT !'!!!a p!!!!!p!!!!!!t.!!!!!!A!!!!g!!t. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!' IEAUTY as· a pin , clean & cozy, 3 S
2 story, s Bdrm. 3 Ba. Br 2 Ba w/courtyard en· FAIULOU Exec home , Roman try. Near new carpels is the word for this
style pool & fountains. and microwave in· OCEl¥NFRONT unit
new paint & carpet, eluded. CIO!le to schools with custom decor in
custo mized garage and shopping. Call for every detail PLUS front
game room. Seller will details. row whitewater view
carry lsl. T.D. al 13"k•. S36S,OOO
S180.ooo. Dave Bourke LCHJUM V~ R.E.
Realtor ~9950. 497·17'1 __
4 Br. 2 Ba. home with 2000 LcMJwto HMJ-1 I 052
sq fl \nll. lg lot with RV ••••••••••••••••••••••• acces s. Pride of 3bdr. 21.._. ba Pool and
Ownership. Shows well. * * JUST UST£DI s pa . EI Ni g u e I cc 1 mile from So. C. Plaza. • Delightful. l story
20% down. Buyer obta111 2 Bdrm condo in adult Owner I agent. 499-1320
137/8% FNMA conv. In. oriented Orangetree $320~~000~·-----lnteresl rate s bj to Super locatJOn. air ron·
c hange. owe. Call ditioning & more Flex1-OCEAHIRHU
Fred, agnt, 559-1887 for ble financing Clean air, mountain
details. view. trees, 3 bdrm, 212
.. "''STSIDE [giUL..-... brtdge ba. spacious townhome .._ """" SJ24 .000 by owner
$9,000 dwn, 3bdrm. 2ba, ftealtl ~-7700 wkdys. 495-6585 pool OWC al 123 E /Wknds $185 ,000. 557-2783 or 551·3000 ~"-==---
851·5117 4t%081rnnu Pln•'y, lnlM-Newport leech I 069
2 Br. 2'-'l Ba. Condo with p•Dlf~IO[
fireplace, 2 car attached * * MM garage with opener. Tile entry, plush carpel,
Q'lany extras. Sll0,000. wood de cking . etr
•••••••••••••••••••••••
PAmlN
Call for tenns. 77~5578. highlight this well local· HARBOR VIEW
Smashing family room
w ith wet bar. Un·
believably beautiful en·
tertainer's patio. 5 Bdrm
Sommerset on ft!i? land.
Absolutely immaculate
move -in condition.
Creative rinanr in g
available.
HOME + IMCOME ed rondo in beautiful
Eastslde clean 2 br W?O<fbr1dge. Ca~I for de-
house, hdwd flrs. formal tails . Owner anxious.
din .. cozy frplc. 2 units in Sl48,900
rear. Has assumable [giUL.. ...... brldne
loan. Open house Sat. 179 ~ '"""' w Broadway. $1~9 ,950. Realty
~riiJ.64 -4845 , eves 551_3000
SUPERCOHDO
PllCE RIDUCED
\-l mi. to beach! immac.
highly upgraded 1 br.
den/bedroom. 1 & ~ ba.
Pools. jacuzzi, tennis,
clubhouse, wet bar,
rrplc. Perf. for sgl. or
cpl. Owner anxious.
Needs financing to exist·
Ing 7.93 loan. Owner
will obtain 11 necessary.
Buyer would need ap-
prox. Sl,250. per mo. &
$20,000 dwn . Open
Sat/Sun, 1·5. 9786 Verde Mar Or., Bkr-Co-op,
53f.1600. 988-8341
4120 Barr111r1 Pkwy. I rvlnt'
TURTUllOCK
RED CARPET
4-1202
2 sty, Broadmoor Plan 7, THEil'-. 4 BR 2~ ba home ~
w/bonus rm. formal din· PLAN "'X" ing. lge pvt ram rm. 3 3 bdrm. din. rm .. bv
car gar. You own the de· rm., fam. nn., F/P , 212
ep terraced lot with view ba, xtra l.1rge porcelain
or the rolling hills. Walk tub w/ceramic tile walls
across street to pool & & floor. 4 covered patio
park. Take over approx. areas. Price si:.>.000. 5'k
$96,300 at UW•'7c int Full down, assume $40,000 lst
price $267 ,500. Call trust deed at 7'-"i'k. Xlnl
ownerl agt. for details & land lease $853.00 per appt. 975·0063 year. Can't change until
WOAAm••--E year 2003. 14'7c lnt. only vv..uu.r 2nd trust deed due Be au l. Ivy cove red 1986·87. Call owner for
home, 4br, atrium, ram appt. daily aft.er s pm.
rm, formal din, country (7 141760-8425 decor. cul-de-sac, steps i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! to bch & tennis club. Brick & lattice patio. Want Ad Help? 642:5678
$249,000 , F in . avail. l"ae 1044
552-4946. • ••••••••••••••••••••••
BY OWNER ii--------•I Wal.It to beach. 4 Bdrma, 21'2~ LISS lHAM 1 ~ba, family rm, dinlnl
IYOW.-
Cuatom 4 yr old home. 3
Bdrm. 2~ ba. Xlnl
financln1. '410,000. J..S%
dn. Courtesy to Brks.
848-0088
TUlTLI ROCK HU~HLAMDS
Gracious "MacTavish" plan w /all amenities ror family living
& luxury entertaining. Gated
entry, 4 BR, ram. rm., Formal .
dining, custom pool & s pa .
Assum . Loans. $389,900 Belle
Partch 752·1414 ($79)
•ot ... MAlllTI rm. Onl y $148,900.
CDMConA•I
PLUS IMCOMI
or a bdnn 2 ba home
wltb an ltotaled mHter
bdrm/parent retreat or
tn-law q\larte..-bedroom
cotta1e • any way you
deeertlM ll • lt'I charm· ln1. u_p to date and
btauUfuUy CS.eorated .
Priced at •.ooo with •ery _1pt!lal flnanctftl.
CML llOI Dlf AIU
'44on11
588-2403. 3to7 pPl.
11.7%
ASSUMABLE Triple• one ,.ar new.
Tty ~ dOWI\. Own.r
will IM•P finance. Call
..... 181
fa. ,;·tlj II I , _'\__.:t"' ,,
/
CUSTOMIDD DIAMI NOMI 4 •.
University Park Home bu been
recarpet ed, newly painted • relandscaped . Decorated \n
neutral tones. Many extras
lnclude all c ustom window
covertn11. Best. of all -Two assumable loans! $264,900
L«raine Reid Ml-8700 (5-)
WMr. AtmJ.WAWraL .
Plan IV R~al :
IAYNOMT
12"-AMAMCI._
Netrport's excluaive Peninsula Point. Newly
constructed f Bdrm and
4 bath residence with pvt
BOAT DOCK. •uso.ooo
includln& the land or
U ,295,000 leasehold. Owner/Builder Dan
Bibb S75-23ll.
BESTYAWE IN
EASTallff 3 Bdrm 2 bath, 1m·
maculate! OwMr anx
lous. $205,000.
RoyMce-6,Ur.
541-7729
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Otller •• w.te NEW Bayfronl home
with SO ft pier. Owner
fmancin&. Al\. ~7221
NEWER 3 Br. upper bay
condo. Model cond. Low
Int. loan. Owner anx·
ious.A ~7221
OWMr ~ 140/o 3Br. P/R, spa, lush
•••••••••••••••••••••••
1100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ESTATE SAU 1966 Majestic located in Laeuna Beach Park.
Near Ocean. Week days
7:1M175
grounds. Sl98,000. --------645-1496,,.__ ____ _
BAYSHORES. f bdrm. 2
ba fam. rm. 1325,000.
YILUIAUOA
l Br condo. View or
Catalina. Owner will
help finance. Submit of·
fer.
t6Mll2
•EXCITING•
PllCIOUS JIWIL IY THI SIA!
View of entire harbor cuatom
decor and remodeled to Include exp1nded canttlivered deck . Wi<te lot, views rrom all rooms. Sol, alarm 1y1tem. One or Irvine 'ferrace'• finest loutlona.
$195 ,000 Fee. Helen Wood .
8'4GO. (Sil)
IASTSIDI COSTA MISA 3 bedroom 3 bath condo with a
srut Priv1t1 patio to ldd tQ the
roomy Uv1bilit1. $158,000. Tom
Allinson or Terry H1ne1 "2-ms
(Sii)
I
INCL RECEPT .
CONFER, COFFEE.
COPY RM, ETC.
t DEAL I F' REAL
ES TATE RELATED
BUSINESS.
PR IVATE D ESK
AREAS OR SUITE NOW AVAIL.
GlL 714/SM-l<llS RF.S.6'JS-~
RETAIL ofc. apace, 700
sq ft .. WatclHf area.
IEST AUIANTS IN
HIWPOIT IEACH
We have several fine
restaurants in Newpor1
Beach arearorsalefrom
'3.W,000 to Sl,800,000.
F,L'I Iii 1 I!°'~ f\L',lit\
t I~·. ; ~. : I " I
8S 1 ·8300 I""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ·BEAUTY SAL()N.in C.M. r::
for rent due to illness. 3
spaces, gd loc .. nice
eqllipment, IUIOl'lable.
4794
C1 •trcW .....
For u le: Established
beauty saloo. North CM. Call af\er61Jm. 151,9234,
Mo.ty .. LMt 5025
•AMO• 2ltd T.D. '1, t-S.S/yr.
l!Mrat Ollly
sio ...... 000.0QO c ........ rW
(T14)1TN115
~~~"----'~~.S11~~ .. = ....,., •• ~r,..
.... D9i4i 50J5
I ••••••••• .... •••••••••• Baebflor 50, low ••1• .. mtr oeeda l viq q'1
w/1tor11e for ~ft t ar/botti.C.11. art1. wl
:;, utl •1147 •fl
~I
I
-----------------~ ------- ----
-------------------------• 1.00
10.60
13.20
15.80
Add S2.80 for each 1ddltlon1l llne for I tlm••
Publish my ad for 8 days starting _______ _
Classification ______________ _
Name~ ____ ....,_ ____________ _
Address ______________ --:-
City Zip __ Phone ___ _
Check or M.0 . enclosed O
Charge my ad to:
#_...;._ _____ ~ ____ Exp. __ _
I •
I
TIME
IS MONEY
Use AlllWll M se rvk e
when placing your
ad ... a Da i ly Pilot ad
number will appear in your
ad ... we take your
me s sages 24 hours a
day . . . you call in at your
convenience during off ice
hours and get the resPonses to your ad . . . this service
Is only $7 .so. per Wffk. For
more information and to
place voor ad catt 642·5678.
DAil Y PILOT
AUTOMOTIVE
HELPWAHTE:D
MEW CAI DESK
bperiaced~ t~.,
cwz~
Connier-DeUUo
Chevrol.ei
18211 Bt-ach Blvd.
8(7.(JJT7
~3331
AUTOMOTIVE , .... ~ .. / ............
Some auto. dea~rship expenenre helpfu l. Full lime Tues . .Sat. Cootact Elsie Tompkins or Sid
Wiggms al
Earle Ike
TOYOfA·YOUO
l tUH..Wll••
CMl•M•M
,... .... , 101., uo-•01
Bank mg
. TEUER
Exe opportunity for ex-
per person in attractive
S&L. Full lime posit.ion
offers varied duties. Call A..W.tnltl••' Linda at 754·1801 ,
... ._. Oranlle Coast Savinp &
Need front o r e . •Loiiiiiamn~.E~O~Eliiiiiiiijiiiiiii
personality who can Bankinll I
handle details. phones. EXECUTIVE
people Typing req'd. Ste•-••y Shorthand desired. -·-Worlt in lovely surround· Local Ntwport Beach
lnp. S87S t.o start + apt. savings" loan ls seetll'la
cllicount. Part Newpor1 a s e I f · mo ti v a t e d
Apls . nr. Fashion SetretarywitbSTRONG
_,J""§h,..,!J:.:.ind:si•o..:.N.:..i•.xB..,,. fffr..u..·..,,1900=---i sec re l ar 11 l s It l 11 s , •~w---.t-1...-thorougbness " ffft· _. ..... ..., _........_ genial manner• to 1Wor\
Tel op to w0rt Sun-Mon ror President. Sala llPM 7AM. Start IS 00 commensuraw with ti·
Pf hr. Exp. is a mll.$l per Full insurance As~ for Mn . Johnson benefita ' paid ca'""
Ml· appa~l. Please call:
APT MANAGER. matu~ Ms. 0-, Pariail
tOUple. Haut. 44 unit. 7HW.e.
Costa Mesa. Adulfs no MIWPOIT Ml IQA
pets. Apt + 1mall 11iary SA VMS & Lo.M
t bonua. Wkdn§42:f?O? llOOlrvineAve.,N•
Ass•aas &o.E. w ....
Will traln M7· .......... ,,.
ln terutln1 job Women'a fublofts. Exp.
.._ "''' rltld hflpf ul but not man~ator)'. Wiii train brl1hl per•on
wt 1d . meinory. Top pe1. No .-1n1 Apply
ID penon: Back $ttett,
W "B" t
AUTO MIQWIC
reret11 • Domau~
M ttm•MI. owa too11. t.arwe tleln 111oo Larr1 H111l'1 Au(o c.a.r..l ?8 Llpu Ca· .,. .... L.B..._
It mi _ --iM>w-. . JIM _;-Co~ DAIL V.PILOT/Thulwd1Y'. Ju~ 23. 198f ~!~ ... !!~ ~!:=:! ..... !!!! ~~~ ..... !!!! ~!~ ..... !!!! ~?~-... !!~ ~!~ ..... !!~ •··~ ........ -....... -..er. •• !*" 1111 ~~ ,. 71 W.....i 71• ----.-.. llMMrf'OlmOM SIHl .. W. ..... ..,. ,....°"'°' IU •t ' --.... -. -.-..,. ................... 9,_-r ... --..........v;Y Fabrtt ctaailn C 11 6 Our ..,, OD 11 loc*Ul•• IMI ... S.. ial .,.,..alilf for tOod N ti.. t 11 I Moo m o -C
0
:.+o...,,M....., • -1 ' ~ -C~•l&ATOI Auulm. nit o,,t·,. for ambluM peopif ,_., Pf°fP,~lt!'.~'· 111n1rrt.ti.Y9IOOdt11>
-•lEWI ~ PartTiM
the beautiful L11Wl1
Stub oftlce ol • crow· ti 11viftp and loan bu
n lmmedlatt o~ r a pan time Teller to ~rt S dl)'S Pt'~ ID·
E
udlna Saturday. Six
ontbs Ulltr U ·
ritnce In a S 6 L or
ommerclal bank is p,. femd. •
}Pie otr er a top atartln&
>•lary, rree c&lftr ap-
parel and much more.
f or an lnterview IP· l)Ollltment. pleue call
Gene rrt.wUe at 1714>
CN-1508 or apply durinc
1ll'rin11 houn at:
FIDB.ITY FEDERAL ,\ s..ti.ia• .. Lo.ha.
310 Glenneyre Street
Laauna Buch, Ca, Equal Oppty Employer ... " .. ,..
Full 6 part time.
Nl&htdub In Newport.
S'l~l(!t
BATHER le Brusher.
Permanent pos Mon-
fri. CdM.644=4000
•BIKESTORE•
Ass 't. Mar.• mtthanic
for Schwinn dlr. Sal.
Sl01400. M~t have ~rior
bike mech. exp. in a
stort.5ff·B
*'111"'"'9ST• 50f PM·also answer
phones, nr O.C. Airport
86H11t1
Boats CE LESTIAL
NAVIGATOR want~
for voyaae to Hawaii. 60' Power. All expenses
pa.Id + flight back. ln-,Qujre $46-WlU alts.
Bookkeeper Part·time. Work yourown houn.
~Ol:KI
Book pasteup. Prr. Mon
l :SOPM to approx.
O: 30PM. Tues 10::.IAM fo approx 6.:KIPM. No
exper. n«. Apply Peo-
anaver. lfi60 "'Placentia
Ave, CM.
IUAICFAST COOi
Full time permanent. at have experience. ~SiPIY In penon: Jolly
ROcer, 400S. Coast Hwy,
La&upa Beach.
Car Wash/Cashiers. Ftn
Vly. Npt Bch, Irvine
areas. Full & PIT
64+4460
·· CASHIEIS
' UTVTIM
MARKETS For 2nd Urd Shlft.s
Startin1S4 uptoS4.SO. We promote to manage-
ment le supervision rrom within.
WANT A CAREER•
Colla Mesa Sl7 W Wilson St
631·96<&
L1g1.11a Beach
494-9233
Huntingtoo Beach
967,9116
r .. 1• Co. Pro= -Corpor1w Watn, for Gtr11.9:M wbo waa& lo turw Part ,,..,.·J• ••t ......... .,_ft ., ....., aacDt obotie llu11...a Co
0
... _
1
1t1tt wide rfunclal tlme boun loto OOLOI If Oflllprod alattt. •·• Moo.·Ftl. auwerlnf, Htwport coodomialum muacer ,_ 11rvlc11 nnn ruhk>n MODllJ.Ya.. G 4 noor C u YOU are• uclna N/bt. AlloftltdtJJ>..U· hath location Xlnt
to headi. So. Calllomil UNM1f KINI llland. To run IDvatory Bod)' bl&ilden.. A&Jllttn ro~d':,ill .:Jf'J· 1 "tent, YOll aboUld looi fa.~~ '7·3. at l4JO/llr beotll&a, · Call ltOb for
project•. Appllunt ;Rtnru ~ 'mallniom operatlona. or 1urftt1 w11ted by ----·---In o our NEW com· • •n11'tu1..-
1hoi.ld have property Mia Sblp,Pl~~-L~!~elvln1. amattur ~:pher PllTCOMTIOL ~~~~tprocramAt:!torll s1e-••y manaCtinent exper 6 ,.llOTI lll1B. lllPPb' orwnna. IDveia. for pbyajque . No ONATOI ..,. .,.. In COW'ft. V'R • .. -·-1ood administrative lory ~. mall pro-11perltnee netet11ry. Ornadle11tal plant ex· flct la one ol lbt oldnt llfAIL Developmtnl ~ con·
akllla Above avere1e <'ftlinl • apedaJ pre>-No commerclal uae per Nqu.ired WUI train •tabliabed ln Newport Partt.lmedfrb 1tructto11 co. 1n So. ~~ary. Coot.ct Belly •PM Guesl <'.'-rvlce .1..a-1U ...... a . Ject1 l1per. req'd. '20.SIO 11tr day Cali foi realdentlal/in· 8ttafh ~~aJery ~j STOPM'.O ~1uaa needlSecrecary -.m, •Secur~ila o--~()(~fi;_~•ve Call: l~OUl, t :ao to Brad: t2WlfZ.Z13L duatrtal tlric. Piil coo 'w 110111, -a on. c1aal MAmTS with bookkttp1J1' exp. Comtnict.lon .::oa ... _ 5PM M~ tn>l. $9(50.JJ.250 mo. Alk • t or an appo nt· .. auo,a,
..... •-'ntru •Laun ry Workers ~ for Ron ...... , .... , meat 17S.73DO. 41Hc..IH"J.. -------
Fl'aan.1n1 contractor baa •PBX Operator IMYBW -.... ,...._. SlCllrAIT
lmmtd. openlnc for COUMllLOI MOT&MAIMT. PHH'f'.2y~~ ~:~:rn=I~:. Support atcount·
qua I. estimator. Must Dynamic Qran4e Coun-Exe. P/tlg. lfZ.IOOQ. ~ _... c b -1111/persmoel fUrict1on1
have exp. w/cocnm 'I ty 2nd Tru1t Dted Motorctc* Spray, build abelvea, ~'!!si~tt ~ ... ,"ro~~~ oSA .. Mdll ~n Good variety " 4rowth take.off•. 41M..-a&. aak Exciting, established hotel has b-"•raae ..... hu Im· ., .... ~.Tl various other duties. ..,_.... a:.xp pref c M rm opportunity. Min. ss f Clnd i ed f [I•· nil ,,,..., w • _,,. Noo ·amoker. F/tlme.' ah1rp, euy 11olna · · · • k h orx. mm . u w part time opportu t es med. op1nln1 for ont••s IUS/br. t.o atart. Apply Receptionlat. Heavy looka for • career· wpm, to ey by touc . COOi ,.......... avail. for quaHried applicants. ..1ar1 td or com. For a Set·up Man. a lO·Zpm, Ontlte Photo· phone1 (aoph.latlcated ~!!•.'!.~~d hard worker, Newport Center loca·
1 •-miulontd lnveatment t ) t ...... ,_.... lion. Good ulary & lOAM 2PM, C.M. area. Coun1tlor. ~per'd. real Mechanic ' a Paru i"tlc~I. 3303 Harbor ~t:im~:' eo'wp~.P11,:J Saltl benefits. Call Arlene.
&42·0m We are seeking people·orlented lltatt _!lcenatca only Peraonorwilltraln Aak _lv_ .. U!!!l£·5.C.M. . . • .. _,_ R AYON 640-Slll.
Coo.,sw•..-.. persons wh h a sin -1-·1 t l r .. 11 ..-.. , .. MB.DIM ror Jim at: Teacher, -acbool, ror v15itors • ICJll:l. esume !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ " ,.,,.,_ o ave ce ... m ere9 n 'd.IUUI SAi-.. CO•ST ... ~ / required. 2 years ex·
Day or ruahl. Appty 1n a future with MARRI<YrTCORP. J • ~ITORS vv•n ,,. garent co-op. MIW F perieoce ' call 974-7670 You're ceUln& older' perwo between j.$'pm, ~" HOMDA 12. 760-IQl -uk for Carla. better! •ae SO or over
Mon -Thut1. Reuben E We offer excell. co. benefits includln.r Full time day work, _ 917-19'6 rUSSll IEC-.-.ST SaCallAJce :~ Lee, m E. Cout tlwy, FREE l .. Mon·rrl £xper. Pl'f· New1paperDeUvery Wanted part tame. ..... .. _.... ~ N.B. a mca per stlift. Apply In ftrrtd Ptnnanentempl L.A. Tim• to bomet In Michelle's Cleaners ~rm~lia~~t.oppottoutauruo::Jty )]6,000 +
Cosmetlccompanyneeds person 9AM ·Noon, Mon ·~'r l. only. Co. benellta, ad We1t Newport. 3::.>am· 496-SlZ4 exp. shipping clerk. PERSONNEL v1n('ement.Ct.an cut& Sam MSOlmo. 548-8441 --'~t.I:""------penon. uathave1c BEVERLY HILLS
warehouse know-how. 900 N t C 0 iu bondable.13.71-".SO per orl*l41S. PIODUCTIOM oommunicaUon skills & Health & Nutrition Corp. Call[orappt.MS-°'84 ewpor enter r .. 1 ... ewport hr baud on exper. -----Medical dla1nostic typlngability. Call settina up operations In Beurh Newport e e 1 ch NewipaperStuffer manufacturer seekine JoannMQ:3383, O.C. Need key people for
COUNTER PERSON Equal Opp Emplyr M/F '42-6924, L.A. Tlri'lftl, Sat/Sun on· indivlduala with procluc· llC-AUAST Supervision &. lrainin~-Personable, mature ly. Over 18. M&-8441 or llon experience. We of-..... ""'"' Full or pert Ume. W1U person needed for retail JAMTOI *-1'13. fer potential for pro-For dr 5 <>!fice. Must be train. Xlnt career or
seafood stort in Costa F'ull lime, _P.~ 1chool NIGHT CH• fesS1onal & personal enthusiastic. motivated supplement. Call S.Spm.
Mesad Moo·Pri. 145 E. DIC SICllTAIY •UAIDS CM 1rit HU!ll Experienced only, Con· erowth. Call lllll·U12for :el~~J1e b":i~l I. t Exp. Mr . Z ucherbrod al
Broa_wn. To 1eneral partner wlll t'ull ' part lime All •UTCH94HILP llnental Restaurant. applicatlon&vitery1ew 642-4S32:
00
nee _.gi.-3-... 844~3=------
COlJNTER-COOK toe to dele&ate many artH. Unlfomu rum'd Rtllable peraona. San Pa rt n er 'a 8 ls t r o. PIOOf RIADll
HELP d 1 v e r a I r 1 e d Alta 21or1>ver. recll'C'd Clemente Inn Apply La1una Beach . .w7·4441 Clerk. Major Newport IECB'TIOHIST SALES
iv1c11 &Esroxl
' A.SSOCIA T fli Speciahsts in
Tern porary Clerico I
Personnel
540.0400 l8004 Sllypark Bl.
Swte 23S Irvine
SECRETARY
for Newport Beach
morteace banking of.
rice Salary to 11200/mo.
Entry level appliunt.s
OK Call Roll or Anita
133-7770. E.O.E Full time. Gary's Dell. resp on 1IbiIit1 u . welrome No ex par ner Chef Charlea Thun· Cori\act Rick or Carl. _ Center law fimueeking Newport law office.
CdM • 6'7S.2l93 for appt. Challeo1in1 po11tlon for App I y · u n 1ver1 a1 Mon l25 Ave Eapl1ndlan NUISl-4.YH penon ror prool read Ina Must ty~ SO wpm, have
DATAINTIY career minded person Protection Service, 12211 San Clemente. Back omce for G.P 3.,,., ' general office duties super root orflce •P. OPllATOIS with excellent skills & W. Sth St., Santa Ana. LAMDSCAl'IHG days/week Fashion including receptionist pearance & at least 2
COMMaCIAL LE.
Tired or selling houses 7 --------days a week ? We need SECRET ARY
Key to disk full Ume Real Estate develop· lntervlewhrs:9-L2&t4, Minimum experience hland , Nwpt Bch relief. College back years experience
days, full or part time meot experience. Mon·Frl. nee. Mon -Fri. Call 644-l~. ground helpful. Please --=640-'-="995=1:.:.·-----
swlne. Exp'd only. Good 496-0l94 AM ooly. Hair Stylist. Beach area ~tween }lpm. 97S.Sl82. call: Lu Ann Dutcher at lec.,...t
skills.114.000K/Shr. + EmAS r~sident with following L... MUISISA.IDIS \714)759·3800. Westmins ter Are11 .
frle od ly atmosphere TAUNT ACHHC y preferTed. Hi&hest com· A"DSCAl'IMG E.X P ERIENCED P /lime, 7 days, 2 hrs. dat· Front office. FIUne and Kathy957·83.11 _ 0 -d 1 mission or rental ar-ASSISTANT 3-11. 11-7. Conv ho6pt. ly. Am delivery. L.A typing required. Exper anc1n& an s ogin1 ranged. Excellent Fantastic working en· Beach area. Free m1·r Times. SlOO per week preferred, but will train DATAIHTIY Meo&women.Allages. car ee r o pp 'ty in vlronment 1n 'beaut. medical, dental & lie. La1un1Beach.494·8'96. 8»9CXll
CL.Ill( sizes. Contact Jenn at established shop Call Dana Pt. Harbor. Full Only positive attitude. -=oa.:==-==:..::::..::..:<.:~
Min. l/yr. exp. F lime-STAR Terry at 540-2218 to ar· lime. Mon·Frl.. 6AM· 642.ilni.t PURCHASING --------Pltime N 8 Call Cheryl ATTliC'TIOMS ran&eSat.interview 3PM Gardening exper. NURSlNG RN OR LVN Cl.Ill UC8'TIOMST at 833-3300. S40-4S83 HARDWARE SALES helpful. Pis. apply, need~ ror night ahm 10 Purchasing c 1 erk ExPfr'd. penon needed
Female live·in co mpa. Pltlme, semi-retired Tues. thru Sat .. Dana con val. hosp. Xlnt needed by Huntington to handle busy board in DEUVEIY nion for 71 yr old lady on type. Apply in person: Pt. Marina Co .. 24701 salary' benefits Ulcl in· Beach City School Dis· dynamic Npt. Bch. com· PARTS DRIVER a wallter. Must have own Crown H'ardware, 310'7 Dana Dr. D ...... Pt. I surance, side pay & Ill· trict. F /t1me1 12/ mo. m 'I. brokerage office.
one licensee to learn the
skills to manage, broker commercial real estate.
Income from mgmt while you learn. Super
benefits: lire insurance,
health insuranre & den-tal plan. Contact Ken.
675-6700.
SALES DEC ORA TOI
Experienced for io·store & customers home
Sal1ry1Comm. Nellie Creek Shop. B Anderson
6'4·8860 Good driving record. car USO/ E E C H L~ ~ I centive P"""ram. A'{Jlly position. f940.lll671mo Profession a I a p Hours8am·5pm.$1133 · mo . ves · oast WY •• CdM . .,,.. d d" pearance & mannerism S•LES/ 833-0379 HOSTESSES, opening Smal Newport each Beverly Manor, 340 le-epen ing on ex· ,,. Eur. Deliverr men over 18 for FISHING TACKLE sales soon Orange County's of r' c e Ci vi I Ii t , loria C.M. penence. Typing speed k.~t. Call : Laila. Ex per. high lash1on ~·'\t•m;s.~ ~::s~n ~o~!ted~~e~,u~~~r~r ~e::;~c~:b~as~t!~~ ~r.~.r~~~l ~~. %~:: NursllnN II' LVN ri4r:~4~~[~H~~r ~~~~~~~~ ~~~e~:.~~h~y~~::n Economy car re<\ulred. c 0 8 5 t r h & 833-m& initon Bearh 536-llll~l. RECEPTIONIST/Typist. mission xlnt benefits
no co ll ecting · 15 •0 1 featuring live concert R11r.••EST.,. with dictaphone & _Gtll644·ll00 S4()0.$4SO/mo. + bonus. mechanic~! ability nee. IJve TV shows. rock & LEGAL SECaETA.RY lU'a. An; switchboard exp. pref'd. Sal-·~-'-"'=-----
646-0637 or§4S.M44 Xlnt opp ty for yo11ng roll to dining & dancing. Newport Beach law firm 3-11 :.>PM Country Club SALES Front ok Tues.Sat Pvt ..... man. Beach area 180K.fullorpart-time, Conv Hoept .. 20362San-Th11· isour36th earsell ·1ub ManneHardwareSales
DELIVERY S I W pract1c1ng in com· Y countrx c .644-~ person to~-~ at store a '[Ii; open. r11e we train 9SJ..SS89 2722 . 1 Ii . . & la Ana Ave., S.A. Hts. iog fine Southern lei -v• ..
FITime for local de Class· 1edAdllQ8,D11ly No Main:s.A ' :!~~~ciesu~= st::fr 549-3081. California homes evel.8-S.645-171l
liveries. ExCt'll dnving ~ilol, P.O Box 1560. H ouse k ee.p in g & personnel with good all-Perhaps you would en REC8'TIOMST SALES
record req 'd. Phone for ostaMesa,921626. Childcare, sun. & Mon. round skill:1 & ex joyl'oiningafirmact1ve A.chtrlltlltg
Computer IOftware firm
has ao lmmed. opening
for data entry person in
our documentation area.
Job responsibilities in·
elude : accurate Mwpm
typing ror technical manuals. updates. some proofreading & ofc
skills req'd Exper. pre·
ferred but we will tra111.
Pleasant surroundings
& excellent salary & fr-
1 n g e benefits. Non -
smoker Call · Shen
Mickelson for immed.
interview. 714-54~6952
MCS,INC
* •SECIETAIJES•• R E/PreslDlctSZ0,400
R'cpts1'J'ro/FunS14.400
S h80 I f' ash lsS 18, 000 TtiS Tra111WangS14,400
Exp Comultant Ours
Liz ReandersAgy, Inc
4020 BirchEsf64EOE
N ewport/llJJ.8190/Free
appt M7-9212. ask for GENERAL Front ofc. only. Laguna Bearh perience.640-99Sl. Nursing in uxury residential AcJNcy Now accepttng appllca Mr. Emmons. Newport 1·8PM . Must type & area. 641-8'700days, Eva BDIW'U areas such as Big Ca· E1tp'd. person with ex lions for full & p'time
St.at1oners, In(. s Pe 11. Ide a I r or Ll~UOI CLEIK """"'1 nyon. Spyglass Hill. cell. communications sales starr. Experienced --------
Dental Assistant, part homemaker OT college HOUSBC911 Ex P d with wine MHlll'EI Irvine Terrace. Lind11 skills. front office ap-in micro computer pro· SECRETARY DIC.
time. morning RDA student. m.1111 Live in to care for active knowledge preferred. ,.,.... Isle, etc. pearance. busy phones gram ming or usevery Personnel! Advertising preferred Newport schoolagechildinlovely New store near 0.C. This key position re· U you are presently ac-Fast-paced environ· helpful Sucl'eSsful a~ Dept. has opening per
Beach area near Hoag General Irvine borne. Salary Airport.Steve642-4774 quires sales ability, live in real est.ate sales ment. Call: Jan Wood. plicants will have ba(' · expansion. Npt Bch
Hosp.548-5504. TL-•.....__._CL..L. negotiable. Call Day Maintenance: For Apt strengthanmanagement do youhaveimmediate btwo . 9AM ·Noon ground an sales & financ1alservicesrirm
0
....., Aut ·-__ , -83S·24l2, After 8 P.M. Complex 111 Costa Mesa and a LVN license or & unlimited access to 714·955·0900 EOE ~snive attitude Call Gd ayping, shrthd . exp
It llOW~ 955-3264. -~ Exper. nee. sarong health are back· ahe president or your ~~~~~~!!!!!!!I!!!!!!! · v: 1714Js.4().l§:KI. req'd Non·smkr Call
Npt Bch area. 3-4 days s-.-... r......-.1... Marine hardware store ground. Th.ls position is company. or 11 he hidden RE Sales people to learn SALES Outside sales peo-640-0123 btwn 9 & 2.
wk. Exp. Salary open --.. ,~ Housekeepers wanted manager Send resume 1n the Orange County away in an ivory tower investments & ex pie needed immed Nev. Please caU640-5680 F /T eve. position & Se1rlirr M«el, to Box •• 1 Daily Pa"Jot, area. removM from the scene h Xln r novelty item on mkl T i i ...... 9717 '" c anges. t oppty or C 1 Dental As&ilt.ent. Exper e m P P o s t o n ....,. p o Box 1560, Costa Our president is ava1la-right person. 1~ com al Ash ·lea Creations.
perferred. ,.._,_ M'""a lOam~pm Housewives Mesa Ca _..., Our corporation 1s a ble. Do you need add•· mlS· s'ion ava"ilable Co 493-5206 ___ __ 648--9611 "" Musthavelyr.MlUtary Uyouarefriendly,cons. • ·-leading provider or tional training to help fidentlal intervie: Partner needed to ride orSecwityexp. clentious and depend•· MECHAM<: private duty. home you Increase your earn· S46·S880, Vince shotgun on high pre· DEHT A&. llCEPT. ble we want you for a de-FOi SA.IUOATS health le holpital nurs-ings? ssure sales ventures
Office exp. req. Dental Hlkpr/a...d/Aaat. llghtful. quaint Wanted ' A conscien· ingpenonnel. Ex\'erienced or inea: RESIDEHTMHGR. Contact Mr West
exp. pref. Wed·Sat. Top Hrs: Mus{ be flex.. restaurant. full time. Uous. responsible in· penenced you may well The San Clemente Inn Is ~7-5610 ___ _
salary for<iualifled 2-IOPM. Incl wknds .. S.S, wkdys. <Part time dlvldual to repair & If this position sounds prom from ou r color looking for a dynamic. S .. L-_t....._. person.542-~, F/T,willtr•in. Ull school starts if you maintain sailboat likelhechaUengeyou've videotapelisting&sales experienced 1ndiv1dual ,,. n..-~"'" DEMTu 'ASSIST desire>. Apply in person, enaines, riuiog & beenlookingforcall: training program wl\ich for their residenttnite HA.IDWA.RE
RD A c"H"... r RS
10
E P Is. call for a ppt. no exper. nee. Stonemill pumps. M\Sl have ex· 21 )..464..4725 we feel is lhe finest manager position Call Exp'd f'ull or pltime 9:30-5PM , M·F. 645-7358 Terrace, 29LS Redhill. perience & be at least 21 available. Pete Mitchell Tues·Sun Hrs to be arranged. Ap-Short hrs. xlnt benefits Costa Mesa. yrs or age. References a We are not a Cranch1Se. for annt. 492~103 ply in person. Kerm for experienced, eager must! l7l•l67S.9060 Nursing branch or subs1d1ary Restaurant -Rima Hardware. 2'66 persoo.~!M75 GB4EAA&.OFACf M d 1 R . . RM4YHC:.... justheadquarters Food )1arl>2_r_Bl..CM_ Exper Ortboordental as-Looking for a very m FACTOIY e •Cl ecepllon1St. :J.-11 & 11·7 rebef ~v. We have opentngs for a Prep & sandwich
sistaot, PIT (Mon & teresting part time JOb WOllBS mature. Hadley system hospt with exrell. re-few highly·motivated maker. Hyouarefriend Sales
Wed lNBotfice642-5997 in pleasant orflre? Ceramicexperiencepre-edxperlekc!,7~~ed. 4 putation. Beach area. persons who have a de· ly, conscientious.' de·
Dental Clerical, for mature rerred. but will train ay wee ·..,, ·.-. Free mjr. medical. den-sire to be more sue-~odable we want you. ORTHO ASSIST person. Location P.C.H., Packing, glazing le cast· MED IC AL 0 f' FI CE tal ' Ute. Top salary cessf ul. For an in· ow hiring (orfull lime .._ Npt. Bch. Ex per a ing & kiln loading tobs RELIEF, Aug 17-21st. Flex. hra.&42-MM terview appointment position. S.S. Mon· Fri.
PA.INT
SEC'Y/llCEIT.
f'ullt1me. TYJ>Uli. good
phone manner& &
salary Please call
754.7091
Semi-retired Mor F. Part
& full tune. So. Santa
Ana. Mr. Wood. 839-4Ull
Mon, btwn 10 & 12 or
979·9378 l~v"-'ms=1""'-2.--
SerTic. Shlliolt
Buy-ou~::'n'fr~red
673'm>
SW...-!Poda~ Fu1r "t1rri't. w1ll~n.
Costa Mf!! 645-5421 __
Penoonel Dept.
537...0 Mon·Thun. i~~ pay ! must. Accurate typing. available. Day & mght Pegboard exper pre· 0 .,1tu-1Ha • with the sole owner & Exper. pref. AP.fly in N.B. RDAreg.~282e. no shorthand. 20 hr. shifts. All jobs fulltime rerred. NB. 759-0306 r'"'-_,.-founder, call Wesley N. person. Stonem1l Ter-i•-------weekincludesSat&Sun with benel'rt.s. Apply at P/lime, flexible hrs. T 1 race, 2915 Redhill. Costa CATERING Service Dralt.lnm Call: 646-74ll Vohann. 26381 Via de MBMCAL Duties incl filing, •Y or Mesa.
needs food prep. DR.a. -s,,..,.. Girl assembler Exp not Aon (nr San Juan TRA.MSCIUIB telephone work. Call WffltyM. Tawlor Co. Restaurant
Exp. preferred. Must be
able to work Sat. & Sun Other brs. to be ar-ranged. Wages based on
exper Apply in person
Kerm Runa Hardware,
2&a6 Harbor Bl.. CM
TUCHEI
Independent school
seeks part lime Spanish
leacher. must have
minimally 4 years ex·
per1ence & be familiar
with Churros y
Chocolate Please
respond to Jay Van
Wankle PO BOX 23 CdM
workera. S4 hr. Part "' l'"Sft "'" Work t ho to 646-1623 R"EALTd'Rs R Ume MM·9:'""'M, Full Si'rnSl,,ll· nee. WilH.rain. 642·1026 Creek Rd exit>. S.J C. R a me. P pay. 2111SanJoaw:wnH1lls OllMSOM'S ~ • mt.erviewPrl2! 1-4 496-5761. equireaminimumSyrs Part-lime help wanted. MEWPOITIEACH
SALES UPS
Local Cosmetic Co:
time 5AM · l . 30P M. SIU per Mo. acute hospital ex-Fris le Sats. ll>-6pm. No Newport ach
Lori 's Kitchto.. 3077 S. Requirea one year of GIAPHICSCAMllA penence in all phases or experience nee. de· 644-4910 _ Has openings for
Unlim ited inc opply
6ot2 -6339 I 9 to 6
92625. ----Harbor Bl.. S.A. 979..()747 drafting experience or OPaA.TOI Whal a Wonderlul World medical dlctallOn. Call monstratin& food pro-________ .,
for appt. drafting coune work in· Vert. Some paste· up, of Shopping, right at (714 l768·8500 for io-ducts in markets near IHl&WtC...,
Full lime real estate
sales associate who re-quires substantial in·
come is desperately needed by long
established local broker.
Outstanding earnings av a i I. on a generous
1uFRr sava SECRETAaY/ A ..
Part time. Tues &
Thurs. l person ore •Ts':* -eluding tri1onometr1. will train~ 14.25/br to your fingertips every· ~ew. your home. 892·9288. ci.ricST~ c• _.,I ~~rl /rf:::.!suc!U::hd 1Ntart. F /tklme. Perm1 . d a y ! Dai I y Pi Io t MEDICAi. SEC'Y '"'7'""'68""·""M:.:.7~3.'------Full & pllime positions J;dM . 760-1507 Are you ttred of worktng
full lime for part 11me ........, ~ on-s mo er. App y Classified Ads. To place le transcriber . PAllTTlME
Salary$111l6-$1320Mo 10·2pm, Onsite Photo· your ad, call 642-5678 Radl I rrl
available.9am-4pm •SICltlTAIY• Mm.y?
nrlST Cl.Bl II
Salary Sl~l227 Mo
nrtSTCl.Bll Salaryl'38-lll90Mo
Apply by July 31. 1981 lraghics, 3303 Harbor and let a Classil1"ed Ad-o o I)' o c e. 5 to 11 PM Sat, S to 10 PM
I Fullllme. MJSsion Viejo. Sun. Assist board and
CITY OF v .. UnitE·5,C.M. Visorhelovou. .-4700 r IU ....,. care ac ty.~1435 s~~~A o .. Now HlllNG ••••• ~. Daily Pilat Parttime commission split A
OHK:EWOll marvelous opportunity
Xlnt co. benefits
Liberal discount
Apply In person.
2 Fashion Island
Newport Beach
To Chief Executive or.
ricer or Irvine Based Co mputer Company
Will have xlnt s/h, typ.
in& & people skills. Call Peggi at (714)M7-6660
T8JFl.E Cit Hall Security Officer pos1-• •
Se 1 plo ~ tiona are now available fi Id Sal S • • ~:!it~ mr:i~taitr 20~~~f ~!i~;a 1n w1as1on v1ejo "So. • 1e es upemsor •
General oUice work for the ea1er pro-available in Circulation ressional. Call Mr Hast·
office. Kaowled1e of in&s at (714~5$60
typewriter and 10 Key l'!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!j
Equal Opp'ty Employer EQual OPl!ly Employer
SICltETAIY Rapidly expandin& Ca
registered corporation
involved in the off shore oil industry is seeking an
Why not try working
part lime for full time
money Work zo to 24 hrs
per wk in plush new of·
fi ce 1n the Santa
Ana 1Costa Mesa area for well established Co
Ea ming potentu1l ol S220
per wk base + comm +
bonus Call 8:§-8883 for Oran&e County city. £mployerM/F Laguna for mature· • •
Muatbeabletolype40to I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! mindM individuals. No • L1m1ted openings available In the Orange • neceaaary, speed helpful. Tellin1 the most people Approximately six possible ia Important to
hounperday,nexible. the succeu of any
Good phone personality garace sale. Make sure
necessary. yours is listed In
Excellent company Classified, phone
To Place your
"Fas~ Result"
Service Directory
ad .... Call Now
_!.PJ!L_
SO wpm (corrected for 0_ prior· experience Is • Coast area, for s~H motivated, career •
errors). Excellentfringe tuY-necessary. Must have oriented ind1v1dual who can work with • ilMMOts. Acceptinl applications own Phone & c 8 r · • Field Sales People Train, motivate and btc. s.cretarw
TB.B'HOMI
SOUCrTOIS
~ • for driver. Wholesale Veterans bring 00214. • Seafood Delivery In OC. Pinkerton's, 2701-B S. • gel results Staaeon wagon or van 642-5671 to •s•ume responsi6ility
for Its smooth runnina
home office. Asslat
President in busy daily
schedule le marketing
efforts. Operating Telex
lmmed. openings to
work pleas.ant evening
hrs, 3·9, Mon-Fri. No
selling Hourly wage.
Call after 1nm: 966-0151. .I, a~~:Yn!:1~~g Responsible, dependa· Main, S.A. (to rear of • ne,cetsedsarybe Exr1'ts•eplionall ebal rnfingslh. plusrijohb • '171 • ble,gooddrtvingrecord. Radio Shack store>. rea ne ava1a e or e gt . :· 714'834-4154 l4SE.BroadwayCM 557.9020. Equal Oppty • people. If you can produce results, not
benefits, paid health, 6'2·S6'71. lire and dent a I in · ~~'-'"""-----··-------~
bt.U2
•.. .__._ The fulest draw in the .E!!m!!!plo!!!!ye!!r!!. !!!!!!!!!!!!I • JUSl talk about It. call 960·0694 for •
l•., ~ .. _..AM = Interview. Ask for Mr Chance. •
:--fenonnel Dept . West. . .a Dally PIJot :
aurance
Apply In petaOD,
330West8aySt.,
Alk for EUe«i White
Equal ()pply Empbr
RESTAUIMT
MAN AG DINT
& lite bkkpg part or JYmMr many diversif ied rNI~
t.·-CXyHalJ v ,.,_ ____ ..._ _____ , -· respoaslbllllles. Sue· Resister t.oday for local
casful candidate will be tempo5ra5~-ments
responsible, poasesa xlnt II
Part Time command of the Enalish
• RrnSCll ClualCledAd'.MZ-5611. Want Ada Call642-51711 ~ c.-..a •
20Cl•lcCenterPl11a / e D fllot •
Eql&IJOppEmplM /F "~ • 330W. ay Street •1------
1tfi'mark Inventory • ,._.,., wanttd. Tem-
porary ' p/tlme. San
1i_llCH.@:Gll. eves.
~w._
~Dtrlence preferred .•
Nl119klub In Newport ·
~£?·KT .A IL
W' BES · No o · ,., '*· • tn.ln, aho fof , Nm.lini at tile A•ul~n l alldttud. oplmiDf IOCID lo lh~ COD• mu, rock II roll 6 din·
111 la danctn1 . Call f ~· Jm'No. Main
'<*•P••ite. plume for ~y ....... llahn,
• l'tlJODllble, DOD ·
'•••ktr. U l·otU. .,. ' : \lit II ftltll ~::::r::::r. 1 .. o. ..............
ro~ • Costa Mesa, CA • ~ ... c:~ e . Equal Opport.WlJty Employer e Reporter/Photoa.ral>her We att loolun1 tor selected tncbv1duals to rm lan1ua1e. outstanc!ln1 . rn..L•n:_
needed to write artlclea OW' current needs throuihout Southern Calif. admlnlltraUver typing & U 1 11
for special aectiona at Pro1ress throu&h training & advance to shorthand akil15.-'ngure lllMOllMY "llSOHNU SllMCU
lhe Dally Pilot. F.duca· restaurant management bl.std on individual aptitude· Fore I & n ,,72.-.... ~......__,, ....1 lan1ua1e preferred. We • a_._ ;iJfnll"lll"f '& ••••••••••••••••
KIDS '\· rvy
SUMMER ~S: ~ ~
Eifn $30-$80 pet' week
Trips & Pri• Ctl '*· 0 -1.1 it tAMiK
• lion or equivalent ex· !Jt• 10tmance. ofrer a molt congenial tt.w~ 1tec•
I ily P•1at perience In joumaliam h ..,, I I encoun&ed to aptly. .a.5515y.a.U9 u.a. ... .a.aas atmoap e•~. advance· .O.E.
• •••
~ "' "'" 1 ~ ment potential, good '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
•• " !':tC::;eJ:rtna•~l~~ $ 13,000 te $11,000 Plr Ytw bentflta. RcmuneraUon UPHOLSTERER. Work
• . . • Photocraphy and :cor1hllft1~llls le ex· in air~ com·
• •
paphlca a plua. Salary Full company btnellt5 • r-enc.. _.... mume rort M1.1St be able to cut
• s.r.t Assipll6nt • baaed on al rlence. opportunity for ad¥anttmml ~~~I~~ .~a~ ~~~~J Salary OPfft
f._ . Part time lion may Newport Center Dr. e .-.ellrJ ti e poulbly aead to full ..... SCHOOL ...,A11S Suitt 1110 New9ort WA•C&.m
• -• tlmt. Send m ume to We have a trainiaJ procram for thole hip Beach CA 980 EOE. ExPfrienM in Conval
• UICI.a..;.. Offa • Janine Fiddellte, Soedal tchool araduatt• who would llkt to at.art a MIF d ea i red . Ca 11 ad.
UH Stctlont ld.ltor, "Dally career In mana1emenl. Startin& aalary s--·-minlatrator W.TTM.
•
_1_ • • Pilot, P.O. Bo1 lHO. .,.,000 ,...r ear ...,_,_, lmmediat. ..,.._,,for versatile ift. Colta lhea,CAllDI ..... "" Y · Olalltn1N opportunity VAREHOUSEIDtLIVER
• dMdual. llllll be capt1blt of haodl• • 1 with amall, expandlnJ PERSON
• ~.• df~,~~e•"~e· e ,,.. .... _19_-••s C: · compan_y. Shorthand1. For party rental atort • -... -..,....,..... ........ / , _ _... ,_ t•• • •• 111111 •11 I'' flint • .-.a Full or pltlme. Apply
'
6 penooDel •Ullatrator. Call: e ' C 111 .,,., .. ,._ • u maucement. t~~Blvd.C.M
•
'ta..ml,llLmforappt J. T .. Ctrrtin ~.W,JKt•i,.. ~ulolnill~m.-. ......_..
I -----M""8 -Olltltw'W I-,...;.a,. ....__ -t'I.--·--•SICllrAIY• .......... "••••••• .. •• • Piii aUnttlt'I,__..., Q ...... S..ef-~) lu•tlf•I Ne•port .wt4 I ... • mw. 11tnet .i :ri-J:r~.::: ~ ... di loalic:a Pltlme ........ -........ ..
Cotta II.a. CA I ., ...... MPll. C11l •1 ... .nt •· • -Pm. ceii '~!.:~~ ~·:~~ l'AjUI ~ ......,,_ , 1\=iiit•~ N~: -'i , IWlllAlflS ~ltl:D~----I.ltd Pitlta O.tt >00
•llllM ..... CW'tfll;t1,. Mf' .....,~, ~· hYmtor all
-~ -J .,._ •'•-••••""'"-:1 I ! ~~.!!!l~-'I ,~'~!!!!]'!!!:!-!!!!!!~!!!!' ~.:-Ad . -_ -• r _ _ .-~--•. 7' ~ c"~ ,_,_,_ .. ll Oiii __ : _ ~ c • ~ -~ __ ~ = ) r,,jg11jt'' '· ~\.A0.111M.JAD
~.':-,:,' ~ -'-~ ' ~ -"-_,' ~ ·~ ....,. ~-. ~-~ '--~
......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 Drawer ~ue mini
dresser. 1250 0 80
Antq. barber chair, or·
celaln, red llhr, xlnt
cond. SSOO. 7814
JUKE BOX-Wurllt1er 194671'•~
Beaut. EneJ. aaliquelr.ine
slu bed. muat sell. 1250.
644-4327
AMllQUI Upri,cbt piano. $SHUii
Antique Smokina pipe.
Solid bone, Approx 200
yrs old. Make offer. 714/
nt!E~lo&ood home. I wtllte. 2 while wfor~ .,ca. l white w/btaer. l white
w / hl1e. Aft tr S.
6'5·5000 ext 311 P'RCE ltdl O.chsund 9
Antiques, re1. clocks. yrs, Male Irish Setter
S250. Wash basin set, 2~ra. 89l·IUI
S7$. Trunk, k s. Med. lllALF., ~· tabby cat, desk, $85. §31·5979. Vet")' melltW' & loving,
.... w:. IOIO Mlfl .. bea-trn.557·7197 .......................... ,..... 1050
I IUY APPLIAMCIS •••• •• •••••••••••••• ••• Les 957-8133 Danish modem teakwood
Freerer, llJ)right, clean, •min& ~ with 6 new
works eood. Sl50. mat c h l n e caned
S48·8SlS,54M485 chaira-$27S.OO. Bent
Dryer, ~as. clean, works tlau oalr. china cabinet
ood S W h I C antl~e re~oduc-1 . . s r. c ean. t'~) ~ ~-· . _5, __ .. works good SIS """.. "" ueu 5411-8513, 548--44115 maple with
STOY E-clean, works drawers tamed spools, Beautyrat mattress & good. SlSO. 548-8Sl3 or s pria a-12.50.00. Call
971 ·7 s .m.
Relri1erator, G.E. 17 cu. 60'' X 30" 6 drawer Metal
ft. White. very good Desk w/'lllDGCI grain top
cond. $225.49M163. IUIO(irm.81'74M3
C OPPERTONE
Refrieerator S175, Old Ml'8 USID:
Freezer 17S both won Bunb -· Qn bdrm well ~H122 SS.O. dinttte ISO. sora &
18.4 C/F Rd rig, 2 dr, loveaeet S300, Mat·
lcemaker. perfect cood. lnll/bn aprings : twin
S400/batolr. ~ ~ fuJI • queen Sl25
OE 2u cu ft rerria. "· lioaEr no.0901
lcemaker, near new. Dinette Ht. llallan. xlnt
-=""·'-"84:!.!2,_,,-649=.t.1 ____ , con4. e " 4~rs. $295.
lllovine-Sea.rs hvy chlly 1'74
wash er; xlnt cond, B•rm Furniture ror
f?S ibest olfer. 644-W sate-beb, dressers.
IUfrle. rrast-rree. Ir& top aite atancll. bedspreads.
lreeur, I.Int cood. 1150. etc. Call Ancie al The
S59--0957eves. ~.!~Je111ente Inn.
Wards 20 cu. 3 dr refrie. !!!!ft
1'"1 mo. old. 3 yr warr .. Whitt French provincial S750 OBO. 548·3825 . bdnn Id, canopy/ trun-
H+8809 dte bed, dest, dresser
20 c u It. Upr1eht wf1belves. nightstand.
Monteomery Ward 13.WISl-8311
Freeier. Xlnl cond. SMART Quality Walnut ~'=28S~/c"'"a""s""h."""548-6234---...=--"""· __ Di.nlnl taMe Ir 4 chni,
lkycles IOJO SW, (2) ~!line OUve
••••••••••••••••••••••• G""' Club Chrs S7Sfea. MEN 'S 10 spd Team (I ) Dr,wers SIS/ea.
RALEIGHbicycleS31>. ~
__ ___;8S7c..:....·oW""""~--i Kitt SZ Water bed
LADIES Cruiser orieillal " , ~ & Uner
paint, Sl00/080
~9928
For aale: Girts bites. s. a peed, 3-speed, IO".
Best offer. 840-&431.
.............. 025 •••••••••••••••••••••••
llDW000216'S
2' to 20· Iona. Fresh
truck load arrivlne Sofa, cllair, end table.
weekly. Save at W /ft. dreuer. area rug,
PP call Jim 646-llm limps, bookcaae etc.
anytime fl-SJ.SO. 644-11116
Int. doors w/hdwe. (2) Beauty Rea Kin' mat·
IOs28. SlS ea: (2) 80x30. t/1pre1 SlSO; oalr.1ce box
S20.ea. Clolset doors, m l'""" Ir d Ir. h · 93130 .. (2) 93136 .. (2) ~vv: 01 es c air 100; stereo cab S7S. 931'2, $10 ea. Gd cood. 644-2lll 144-~7' ~~'-=-'-~~--~~~~-
"--IMO Tt1k llua.k beds from _,.. Norway I pod cond. $250 ....................... ~
KEESHO".ID Pupa. AKC. C-.Om ~y hardwood Champ Sire. M/F. Pet • tl.ll"DltON show . Pvt ply . •
%13/697·134§@ft6pm. 498-(.9
BOSTON Terrier Pups Dou W. xtra lone
AKC 5 wbtz!Oall males frame. ..... Two seu
(3) &42-6410 llleeta. P\llliw eases $75. 81H~2 Mlnlture Schnauzer. Sof• i....-, end tbl. Local Champion U1te1. ~ Out1t1ndln(. Male. a conee tM.. EM'ly Amer. wh. SIP. J300 OBO .tyle ..... telal.MZ-8389, 'J!l:fZOa.f15.30fl ~~;g;.,o .... i=:1..__~~~~ PUPPI~. AJCC Golden 8e11t. tr.-tlon1l love
a.tu. Ml.I. A•a.11 .Jul)' at•&I w/• 6 lamp1,
.... b $40 c 11 s from attor1ey'1ofc. COit .... tmsal\7 a ue fnto . l .crlflce
'~ y r old SILVER llt00/obo.f1M313 .
GREAT Dane 1ikes 10 pc cream ·C~lored
dllldtea, i..trOMct SIOO makllia&h. rm 6 dla.
MMl15 !'Jl9 lm.~. ltf.flU
i..asa Apeo, d1rll11. Sortbe4 tm. electric
wblte, •ale, AIC. ~.-.... "!!°'5 •een.1190.m.ma. &}.; ~ lltTeO, •• ·
AKC Cocker Spaniel llltMe ~1~1 at dill·
_. ....... <Z,Lz,;,,z::.i..~~~~1 ...... , ..... ... ,. ~ t'Olor TV. 21
Orange Coast OAl L Y PILOT/Thursday, July 23, 1981
atland ·put -myour •••••
DAY WEEK
8PaYs
3 ~Lmes
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, call today 6'2·5678 l••I
111 , ' 8 Dollars TM ftf1W Dally Piiot 8·Day Week lti a Classified PLUS ., ,
••• l
.to s.mc..r.+s ..... w..w tHo AMtos, 1 .. arW & Ac~ 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
IOIO M•lcal loah. M .. sn•ct/ ao.tt. Sol 9060 lllth a11•1 1oa3 ~a fo20 ..................... .. HIT.-c... ....................... ....................... Mowlplll 12
. 673-n Ree membership. S600 Risson bass set., S100. Yacht ref111. Supentruc-•sails,~ ••••••• ••••••••••••••• ,ORSCHES AAN1 t101
W ·~ .........•.......•••...
F . 1 incl trans fee Call evea Taka acoustic 1uu11r w tu res. non-slr.1dd1ng 646-2017 u~1ture, incl. tab es. 6'73-6474 · case. Sl~. 6'>4415 shear & boot stripes --ch1U"5, bureai.' bnc·a· ---Burring ' polis hang Sabot SJ7S Schock Boat
br ae. some antique GYM SET with weights OfflcEd Nait.lf •• &1,..5 Reis. 84(). w/North sail,
$48·3229 art. s. and attachments S80. .-P• 1--•--L M-L.... 673-0064 __ "-t r 4 U ts I 2 642.321 • •• •••••••••••••••••••• -., --W "'"' 0 wa wu • tnc Geslel.ner 420 silk scm ~..... 9030 ESTS.-. 42
SSAVESAVH
WITH USED PAITS Imported car parts
IMPORT
AUTOSUPPLY
101 N Mancheslec
Anaheim -ns.9900 blr.cases. 1 chllla cab .. l BAR KEG COOLER printer. Does typwrtr ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• Hull and deck. as 1s. or
drybar .. Must sell. Wk . wt Fountain, hke new stencils, typeset & B/W Trailer for JI' boat. 2 ax rustom ftn1Shed to your
7S2·52'13, Hm. &S7·427l. S600/0BO .Ithq\95 $SQQ. 645-4631 le, calk1ns, must sell specs. Cont art Wayne 1 for S.
Pvt. owned brand nu ·7 HomefOCfice. Lg rolltop 760·0184 Aiken Yachts •••••••••••••••••••••••
stock orturn. Uv rm. din *I AU.OOHS desk, very good wood SHP outboard motor S225 557·9:500 IM PORT ANT
rm. lbls, lmpa. pie's.. UnaquePartyGift S3?.S968·7260 Asis • 12' Monohule. needs NOTICE TO etc. Will lake S()r on $40-1819 mast.$250 READERSAND dollar. All $U) or less. Delivered Locally IBM Exec. typewriter, _631 ~ ADVERTISERS &Sl-l82S af\§pm, Order Now 64.s-64-45 Model C, S27S. Selectric Brand new Perko 18' out The price or items
S pc bdrm set, $350. Dbl Ball ~rt 11 elements.$12.892·8628 rig~ers wlspreaders. LAYMAN l2, dolly, (ull advertised by vehicle
S Lo••l•a•s l exec. cornpl. office: l~i diameter. cost new boat cover. New sail. dealers Ill the vehirle ~~s~,2s.90sd:p~:.mrzi· Helium Bouquets de-desk, bkcase, me cab., 5150 sell 5· 06QI :;~~ard. S475 eves classified advertising
494.7954 livered Perrect ror all solid walnut, judge MERC 7S. 60 HIP with -· -columns does not in ·
Couch 8' Brown/Gold ~V!QOt'~asion.673-4419 chair, 2 4/drawer rilt> controls. Runs good. loclts, Sips/ r lude any applicable
Herculon S12s. Gold Club Membership w/ cab .. 12/drawerfilecab. ~~"~57·~-Dock1 9070 taxes. Lit-ense. transfer
Uphol. DOUBLE Rocker University Athletir <metal>. l ruJJ size stor. Si·Tex recordmg depth ••••••••••••••••••••••• fees. financt> charges.
Cl b s unit (metal I. 1 sounder,Koolatronl2v NEWPORT Slip Avail feesforairpollutioncon· S6 0 • Br 0 w n Vin YI -u -· ~. 760;.1.8l8__ secretarial desk. M1.15l (ridge· VHF radio·seH Tom 645.()2'l2 eve& trol device certifications
Recliner$S0,548·2687 DISH WA SH ER . sell. Wk : 752·5273; Hm· rurling gear & Jib 67_}3.129 or dealer doc11mentary
White Indian cotton sofa, Whirlpool portable SIOO. 857-4{7.,L -----m1uen·c~luons & mist' 45. Shp for rent. Nr. Hunt-preparation_ charges un·
xlnt cond, Sl2.5. 551-13S9 Sewing ma ch . Ken USED IBM Executive, _Fro!J!..44' ke!!'.h ~-0928 ington Harbour S~ per less otherwis;e spec1f1ed
aft. 6pm. ~:~e. 41w~ ~~t.S 1~/f' elec. Gd. cond. S250 or loots, Powtt" 9040 mo 2131592.~~--~the advertiser
(2) Swivel Bar Stools 437-4259 ofr ,631-5419_ __ •••••••••••••••••••••••loafs 5..-..11r Jutt1A.-1/ $35/ea, (2) French Prov 28' Ski k V I • ,...-c'i'!':'"'· 9520 Fireside cbrs S7Slea Dinette Set S60 MISC p1r Pets 1087 pJac · 0 \'OS Ski 9010 l'IDllCI
64s.i876, 1.;m.3)97 1 SS.SlO 0 fed ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2SO/ hrs . full 1nstru ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
. s~~ard SIO ~a 25 FOR SALE"' meot .. swim stp . can 15· SKI BOAT with new PRETTIEST
(3) Living Rm Tables & more 42 ·Seascape y bl &... Id I \'&SS, hsh gear. plank. trailer S800 •57 T-llRD Smoked Glass. Sl50 all oun g ue go I tr Ir S2S 000 r 1 rm 548-9691 (l ) Halltree s5o. <next Lo 1402 Supenor1 macaw with a huge w terms biS.l225 IHTOWM!
Boo.. ..,, At N.B wrought iron cage . . • '71 SKI Boat Ill' J et IEST~B I .. case _,, n ique 642·9242eves wknds. Lonely ... needs a rnend! 28 Sk1pJack, Volvos Drive, S4600 ~. TableS60.~9147 -----S"'"".00.CallOanaat 250 hrs . rull instru 5362"9 """'n77 (OO>UKZ> F I .. _ ol Female Dobie. Year old '-'"" .... ~ _ or sa e: Tv.'O C11e>t ~ •78 Suzuki RM250 · 5~7127 ment. swim stp , can.
drawers. One with m1r· S600 l75-~aft 3 l> vass. hsh gear. plank. ,..sportafioa
ror.Sl2S·Sl75.548-97S8 ---Parrol /:oung & very trlr S25 ,000 r1rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._.Wt 1055 v./I~z~M.J.Ef ~a:~~~ ~Tu~:d. s~~11c:fs~1~~j ~terms.bi~~ C~n.S•/ ~0• ·v· •1 •N•G• ••s•A••L••E•• •2•N• •0• St on e . o v e r 2 ct s Eve, w k:nd '7 2 IHESB. Reid ti 20
"' · 30· ... ·w· ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
2060 HARBOR BLVD
COSTA MESA M2 · 0010 HANDER 12D E. 23rd St. 640-8688 ----3' Columbian Red Tail . •-WOR JOI, Camper Four Star c M Backgammon corree ta· Boa. w/tank & beater. Willard Vega Searcher WI refrigerator & stove. '29 Model A Town Sedan.
· Mon·Sat ll·SPM ble Functional traHic Sl00/bstofr.~J.S47 Model. X\flt ~d. Fuel p 0 rt. a . po ll y . A 11 4 dr, restored. Ideal for
GIANT GARAGE SALE light. SJOO/ea. 7S9-6894 BURMESE PYnl()N consumpt.ton 1,,gal. per Butane. Queen slze bed. student. SlO.SOO. Al.SO
Thurs .• Sat dan;760=3653 ves. 3'"1 (t $40/bsl hr. S30,000. Bus <7141 Sleeps 6. lo excellent '46 F o rd Wood ie.
7812FranltlinDr.HB Steno court reparllng 646-59M 644 ·844 0 : h ome condition. St250. Call restor ed . Sl3,500.
(Elli &Del machine, current mdl. P IED & ALBINO J1!4~-~ between 10am·5pm §7S~6161 __ _ s aware> perf. cond. + case of I l '79 JS ' Viking SF . Radar, 631-7657 4 Wheel Dri•tt 9550
Free gilts, refreshments. paper. deluxe Samsonite Cockatiel both hand T~in Cats Diesels. '63 VW Bus. '70 Motor. ••••••••••••••••••••••• super garager. bargarn case & stand & assorted ~a med w/lge wrought Bnstol, P.P. 67s.&651. Custom built. Lo mi. prices. July 23. 7041 iron cageSZiOS.s'Hl22 Valentine. HB. 847.6576 books. S38S. Western LHASA ASPSO Cabin Cruiser. good hve· Runuood. ~. 5'8-8066
lOam.7pm saddle, A I cond. & as· S months. Shots up to aboard Lo~atcd in '• Cabover camper for
'74 JHPWAGOM
Low mileage. All extras _ __ 557·l@L_ _ sorted pack . S255 . d t M 1 AKC France 26 diesel import truck, ice box, Estah/MovilMJ S;)Ei·9544 a e · 3 e .. · $15,000. !m-2.890 dmette. xlnt cond. SS75, Trucks '560 Fr1~Sat Irvine S..1. Anti~ For sale. beaut1ru1 new Papers. SllS.64&C844 ,_....... w..tecl ~·3413 •••••••••••••••••••••••
ques, coUectibles. dining screen door I am unable Gr~y Zebra Finches. 4 1979 P-Y• ..a... _ __. 7• C•b·Ove.rCamper 1978 CHEVROLET set.love seats. furn· lake _to use CheaJ1.._IW2-1~3 pair at SlO pair .__ __.. r -'-l/4 TOH rlCIUP! Culver to Deerfield Lo 642·5944 Sportrisher SJ.S4 mo or import p1 .. -..up, many
DoeTraLI West. 3 Pageant or the Master 3fishtan.U.S20,S3o&S35. 24'SearaySD Sl30mo e~ras~.S49-~ _ Auto tram .. pwr steer-
-tickets for8/2 Will swap 25.Sk J k Sill u..-.&....-=-/ ing, etc. Fine 11o•ork GARAGE SALE-Kitchen for9'14 67_}5896 Baby r abbits. S5 IP ac mo ~ truck! <001717)
11tensils. eltt appl, murh 540-1581 Slip rents mcluded Scoo 9150 O.._.LY S .. 995 more. Plants. 2500 Lake Bally pinball. <Playboy>. m __ & n.-1_0 Plu.s eqwtydn paym't ••••••••••••••••••••••• " "' perfect cond. 1996 ,.--s ...... Y--u 7 __Qa 730-fi620ev 5§.7·9327 74 Suzuki GT 750. Runs HOWARD a.•roltt
Parlr.Ln.Sat1Sun9-S _Call Karen_}!!·~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 28 ' Monterey Diesel ereat Extras Low Ml. Dove /QuailSts.
GarageSaleSat only,Ju· Ceiling Fan -Casabella · STEINWAY Mdl S Fish, dive. work & As k1ne 1800 0 80 NEWPORTBEACH
ly 25. 9-3 l807 Tahuna forward. reverse. vana-Walnut Baby Grand character. boat Xlnt .M§-9102 __ ,___ UJ.0555
Terrace, CDM ble speeds. light 111cld. 5'l + .. Bit in 1948. better I Sl2,SOO. With or without 750F HONDA 80 S2000
Garage Sale Sat Only Was S239 Take SIOO lhan ~ew Recently re· N.B. mooOOK:.~8734. 750F HONDA '81 '2250.
9am. Odds & ends & J~ 730-00!!i,_ ra.ntshed immac & very '58 22' Ctms Seask1lf with J&th 7 . rurn. 224 Pauline Pl . T k l..a ' Ii ~ •• IV\ • S '-TS 1c els to guna Arts rare. Hammond Organ s P ......... 78 uzu .. i 125, xlnt
C.M. Festival Pageant of the & Piano Cent.er. CdM . -~19!!, _ cond.,S600
Masters. Thurs Aug. 644-8930 15' Boston Whaler. 85 H. ~""'11""36"----
6th, St61ea. 493·35S2, P. Evlnrude. Loaded , Mini bike, Sl50. Honda
646-1774. Mahog. B. Grand Piano. immac cond Private XL 100, bX> Trail 90.
Old Vanity with mirror Sl900 firm Also collec Party S350. All in xlnt cond.
SlSO, Metal frame for tor's s tatuary. P P. 846-Jl995 S43·3J9i._
twin bed SS . .§7}-_~ ~~1270. _ Sea Rogue, Salty Monk 1980 KX *>KAWASAKI
1980FOl.D
FIOOPICKUP
Eronomical 6 cyl
engine. 4 speed over-
drive tram . air t'Ond. &
pwr . steering .
UVl6137 l.
ONLYS6995
MIRACLE MAZDA
2150 Harbor Blvd.
John Wayne Tennis Club Piano & Bench Janssen diesel traw ler. 3 GPH. Good Cond. 145() COSTA MESA
645-5700 family membership, Console walnut (inish. St3,000 1mmed sale 968-Z752d!Ls -
bestoHer xlnt rond . seldom Moorin&,avail.64.s-41~ 1974 KZ 400 -53.5-0;oBO CUSTOM '72 Ranchero
645-1255 _ 2)~4:..i799. 759-197!__ Fish from your own 26' Volkswagen ' Front End ~T loaded ! New brakes.
GE Gas Dryer $200, Chest Rhodes Stage 73 Mark II P a ce maker th 1 s S3s 631 ·4578 llres. ale, etc etc Must of drawers S20, Guitar piano W'phase shirt. xlnt weekend Pully equip'd, . ---see! $2700 or bst offer
SSO. 64S-4415 cond. Abo Roland Jan xl nl fin. S25,000 firm f25cLc~m~~t~c~t!~ 642:~' 646-_ffe~ _
T...n Ca.b Chorus amp. 548-~ ~l·O'.!!ilor76C).l ..erec 750 526-4982 1947 Jeep panel truck
M~ SportiltgGoc* 1094 MEWPORTCWSIC '69HONDA70 4dy AT St:m J.9 pm
L1ndborg Tennis Club ••••••••••••••••••••••• 24 . South Coast cutty Runs eood. he'd, $150 549 4949-- --S600/oHer. ~ ' S & W. Police Chief cabin cruiser. xlnt rond. 4 Dahl.a CdM. '81 Datsun Longbed with ~~~~~~~-,Oficedesktmd'al i 30x60" Special.38. Bnnd new' Fu~lcover.Che"'.V8en~ ,77 -YAMAHA oT.250 camper & sleeper kit
rorS7S Xlntcond Chair $250645-9510 Bait tank. 2 radios. twin Mono Enduro, new Snrf. amt(m/cass. CB
S25 ~art s · · FOR SALE: lOyearsor ball 3 bilge pumps, engine 1700 080 eves IJl~$§900.974~
- -SPORTS head. de~ rec. 70 gal Brent. 64.s-3406 '7 9 CH EV R 0 LET
Bar, 4 stools. S200 Pool ILLUSTRATED gas tank, dock avail Yamaha '76 OT 400 En DELIVERY Van. 12ft
tab I e. Ii g h l. ac 119'71·811 plus some rrom Must see to appreciate duro Xlnt SllOO box 3,093 m1 Power
cessories . S600 All or 1960s Best otrer S459S. 675-5703 """'·47,,.. brks. steering. SS0.000 rers considered """ ... 964.~0 56-4240 '79 19' Sunrunner. 32 hrs .. 71 HONDA CB 3.SO' E. mile warranty, like new
-FOR SALE: 10 years of extras. trailer '9750 C 11 S9 998 Knitting Machine, new 892 3'59Alt5 orvelle ye ow. runs · 646.4041orS48·7800 Toyota $25(). Tif E SPORTING NEWS " OK but needs some work
19 Cl971·81). Bestotrer loafs, Rt9'/ ~m~ll98 Yeas 9570
-----'=="----! *='240 Cltarhr t050 1977 YAZ80 ~l977 ...................... .
1L2 Harne1ss Redwood TV Radio. ••••••••••••••••••••••• YZC'2S SJSO both good '77 Custom Dodge Van, ~~""""=~~=-=--1 oom w accessories HIFI St.no lotl d' i · 29,000 mi. Very good
$500 ' RELAX-Co me sailing con at on.545-91$79 -cond. S4200. 545-9579 675-?11>7 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Niagra Thermal Heat 8!~~~~~l ~~r lJiv!r~~ wiJti~~~~1~Jrt· J1;!:k~£i~:S ~.~~~~ .... !~!~
Sl48.641H786 675-2867 MUST SELL Financial WE PAYTOP DOLLAR
Beautirul Color TV, 2 yr Problems Will Sacrifice ror top used cars-
wrpty. Free delivery. SH •RKSl.I. '79 HONDA 75G-only SK forei~n. domestics or IOI I Sl48. 64&-17118 llll mi, Immaculate! Best class1rs. If your car is
38' Pacemaker Yacht. 0(Jer968-S210 extra clean. see us
sleeps 6, lor Chart.er! MoRDtotewt•/HS....,.-..w.~160 F~IRST! SpeclaU1lng In shark ris-hm~ otr Catalina Island.
213 17~:.;;kda~s. • .. W.EC.AMSaL... le
YOURR.V.
......... .., ,, .. ......................
II End Gate or wlU
carr y ' motorcycles.
l 111 11t0r_,.c....,
292$Harb0r81vd ·
COSTA MESA
979. 00
"'"I 5" 1880 Audi ~. UIWDf Allow ua the opportunity leut S22S mo. C~I for
to consider the purchase det1ils 8.S1·tl01 ens.
or trade·U> ol your clean IMW 9712 Porsche Check with Us Today• •••••••••••••••••••••••
For The Belt -
Buy Or Least DfaJ
WEIUY
CLEAHCARS
AHDTRUCKS
COMMELL
CHEVROLET
'l\.'l< J l.1rl• •I Jli • .f
I I r.-. I \ \1 ~ ~ \
546-1 200
HIGHIUYEI
Top dollars for Sports
Cars, Bu~s. C;impers. 914's, Audi s
Ask for U/C MGR
JIMMARIHO
VOUCSWAGEH
18711 Beach Blvd
HUNTINGTON BEACH
142-2000
TOP DOI.UR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAH
USED CARS!
miracle
mazda
2150 ......... ll•cl
eo.t. Met. 645-5700
•-==t·~ ..... , se ---x·x
WIHllD
YOUIEXOTIC
&llmSHCARS
l~w.@
3100.W.CoastHwy
Newport Beach
64Z-~
TOPS DOI.URS
For Clean Used
Cars & Trucks We pay cmh on the spot'
Contact buyer at
D~SANFIS
CHEVROLET
San Clemente
ll 1-05IO 492..f 500
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas and
Volvos. Ca ll u s TODAY!!!
Earle Ike
JOYOJA-YOUO ............... c ........ ...
"'•O·tlOJ w S40·t4'1
Top Ollar
Pid
For Your Car'
JOHHSOt4 & SOM
~~
Costa_Mesa 0.5630
WeP!L.
OVER .......
For Your Good
VW. Porsche or A udl
~8§
VW-PORSCHE·AUDI
445 E. Coast Hi way
at Bayside Drive
Jieweort Beach 673-0900
Premium prices
paid for any used car
< loreien or domestic l
in good condition.
Stt Us Flrrit !
WllUY
USED CARS 6 TRUCKS
COME IN OR
CALL FOR RHUPtilSAL
Cormltr-DtUllo
CHMOUT iau BEACH BLVD.
HUNTINGTON BEAOl
147 ... 011w I
549·3 I
In Orange County, .. ComeSeeUtT~
.. $ I'
SADIWACI .
BMW
28402 M~uerite Pkwy. Mis5100 Viejo
A very Pkwy. ellit · (O(fSf'reeway)., • n 1-2040 4tMMt
ClosedSW!daY•• .
$1,~!!'JD:
OFHEWIMW'S
Sales and Ltasinf at
competitive prices. Ex·
cellent service and plll15 dept.
Good selection of J>l'e·
v1ously owned BMW "
other fine cars in U ·
cellenl coodition. · •
We also have a Least
company that leases
other makes of al#OI,
trucks and vans. Fof all·
ditional information. 'bra leas1ne please call ... -.•
714 972-1Z70 7141661~.J.l
For a good deal and '°1ld &""""""'"-· CREVIER
SAl.ES-SEIMCE-UMllNG 208 W.1at.SANTA~
714J83S.3171 '
CLOSED SUNDAY . I
TIM Mod &cllllcJ
PartOfY_.-
IMW~Or
Lt ... c.w .. McLare11 IMW1t.
.. yOrl.Mw = l_yOw,.._ ,
1714) s J..5333
C>a.AMGECOUNTT'S OLOBT
$ ....
Sales·Ser.ice-Leasing
Roy CarYtt,lnc.
Rolls Royce BMW
1540 Jamboree
Newport Beach 64().6444
'76 S30i sunroof. new
trans. clean S71000
497·2SJ4 Eves. 67:J..S200
da
Capri 9715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Capri II, for salnf
orig bwner. gd cbdd:
Whi te . s n r f ,
am rmisrereo, V·&,
manual trans. ps, ·Jib.
New Michelin ti~s.
S3,30010 BO. Work::
644 -7520 . Ho nu : 760-9543. D..._ Mat .......................
lflODATSUM~
200SX
Hatchback model J!Yith automat i c trajs .,
AM/FM stereo. pwr. steering, air cond ..
cruise control. pwr. ,nir·
rors, rear wiper 6 a
jewel! <M3YNRI.
OHLYS7495 ,
MIRACLIMADk
2150 Harbor Blvd: U COSTA M~A ' 645-5700 . ·~
...... 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• G MKll 3.1 later, Very .aoct cond 17500 OBO. fit7 ·6166. (7141682-7474
.!c·~==----
1913 Jaeuar "KE v12
Xbit cond. manr xtras
Sf4.000 OBO. Cal Rod
(7 l4J t97 ·mi.
M rk II 3 8, xlnt
a (2131 43'1·1205.
3.,U!t4-0116
....... t7ll ••••••••••••••••••••••••
lt77MAIDA
UJSPCOW'I
.Limited Production
i el. S speed trans .
I FM tape & factor)
y wheels. <lSOUKRI
OMLY$3595
MllACU MAIDA
2150 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA __ HHz.tt
Coaat DAILY PILOT!Thurad1
•••••••••••••••••••••••
•MIW'llMIZ•
2400.JOOD +SD
HU'iE IMSCOUMTS
Earle Ike's
TRANSPORTATION
CONSULTANTS
t15:11H(Nry
CASH TODAY
We w 111 come to you
MEICIDIS
WAMTID
Call for Immediate
appointment Ask for
Mark Sachs Buyer
831 1740 4~1700
MISSIOH VIEJO IMPOITi __ _
•1 DEALER IN U.S.A.
ROY
CARVER
ROLLS·ROYCl
IMtJ•"'MfH No•llW1 .. ull \'---~~
.,. ........ , . .
COHMRl
CHEVROLET
'l'.'l<ll.1rt• II
I~ I \ ,, t '
SU-1200
i9 Town Coupe, loaded,
11crif1ce 16975.
--~54tl!Z_3 .....---1
Mtrcwy ttlO , ~.w ••••••••••••••••••••••• egs.GDj &li.(IJJ
'77 Chevy Luv with shell. ORANGE COUNTY'S
tape deck. $3500. FtMIST '79 Olds Royale. Diesel. 2
4119-LINCOLN·MERCURY dr. Loaded. 37,000 mi,
'81 Chevy Caprice classic DEALERSHIP $MOO. • 53&/91!4· 151 4-dr. blk wi red ml ,
must seU 1mmed1ately <0-.-'Jliu(.11'' 73 Olds. xlnt cond . fully
979·2326, s:M-~ ~ T' equipped.
'11 ELDO I owner •• 66 Chevy CAPRICE LINCOLN·MERCURY $$1-U __
SU PER SHARP. fully Wgn, k OO good cond. 16 18AutoCenter Dr PW. tt57 loaded reduced for 1m SD F '" Fo ""t •x1t ru_ns ood 661~_7 _ wy UL r"'" " ••••••••••••••••••••••• med sale $4750 77~433S -IRVJNE '68 Chev Nova, 4dr n.000 '11 Pinto H.att'hback, not home. 97&-_IKttofflce I "7000 d -~ m1. radio. heater gd -~ --pretty-runs goo . IEALSPICIAL! cond or ig owner ·71 MercCoogar Stataon 30 MPG S650 Pal
1980 El Dorado. all 559'4016 Wagon Only 31K miles. Mf-4325. $47-3W
black. 6800 miles C.._,lltr -9925 newradaals.loaded.xlnl Ply•ntli 9'60 Alm~l n.r_w' 675 7707 •• ":'.~•••••••••••••••••• cond Must sell' S.1295 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 Fleetwood Bram. new ·73 New Yorker clean, lfrms~-67~ -Good tran1portallon car
pnl. new radials, lo m1. good transpe>rtataon $800 MmtcmcJ 9'52 ism
12500 64_5-I PP 962-1487 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 981Hl41
'19 El Dorado. blk1blk. C~ W tf30 '69 Mustang 8 ryl. auto. ·79 CHAMP Dix, ereal
31,000 mi, many xtras, .. ~ ... ·.~ .............. 63,000 ma, ong eng, xlnt m1 . r uns flawlessly.
xlnt cond. orig owner .. 63 Lincoln Continental cond S2000 firm !714> r artfull.Y maintained.
only Sll,~PP 846 ~ Runs ood needs body 760-9670 PM fun to dnve, 31 mpe city,
'79 Brown ~vllle Diesel work 1500 or best offer '65 MUST. CLASSIC 40 hwy. 4 spd, twin slick,
All xtras Leather S48·1~ V8. auto . ps , pb. am .rm , hatr hback ,
Sl2500 Call 6317545 C--..::.... 9932 resto r ed . S2395 radials, met. bronze.
after62£fl on ...... t 1·535·5865 be1geint . PP, $4000 A11k
C-9917 ~··•••••••••••··~··•••• '69 Must 6 cyl convert, for Dan. ~4m home; CllROf'O 75 T Top Auto. air. p b, 67J-A'>..t3offlce ••••• ••••••••••• ••••• •• p w . p s JiClnt cond auto Xlnt rond in out =~~---'70 Camaro, must sell Cid $6700 497 .5499 & New paint. I owner PCNIHac 9965
rond 2J mpg. needs 497 Sill ~,67J.2A81 NB ••••••••••••••••••••••• fs~ 1oUi s 1700 0 8 ° Co.r 99ll ''t'a M~!~nirk':b~111~t~9 ·~ra~:~~a~~:n~in;7:
'72, lull power. 111r. Ori~ ~·••••••••ooooo~•••Q••• lop, int, 4 new radials , Jfydro automatic 402 C
owner. S2000 p p 68 XR7 80.000 m1 ng 892·34S9aft5 anrhes $400 or best of-""" 4066 aft .• .,,. owner. Automat1r V8, -fer 642.3418 """ ., "" A1r,or1uaint.644·1D Olch.oblt 9955 . ~~=-----
'68 Rally Sport t'On\'e rt, .78 C xii1 lo ded ••••••••••••••••••••••• 72 Formula ~. 2 bbl. reblt traM new tires. 34 ~gar · 1 a 11· '76 Olds Starlare. gold·tan mint cond. amifm 8 Irk.
'4900 7519178 s..ioo 66'[':!w1;:~1 ~ · ant. sspd. stereo. taJ>t' ~ul~/arr St800
'80 Camaro Z28. 1mmar Fo.....r 9940 deck S!95C!c 644 459-1 -----
1 d d T T S 00 ru '79 T do dsl 33 ooo '72 Grandville Convert. oa e op. I o ••••••••••••••••••••••• orona . . all pwr. S2000 offer. ~ sound ~)i.tem s7775 ·ss Ford <'l.L'ltom Good mi. lthr. loaded. S8000 a t She II St a 11 on .
8.sl Ol84 transportation $200 673 8895 Warner Newland. H.B
Want Ad Results 64.2-5678 642·~ .Ml·.JC<!"'------
MATCH THE NUMBERS OM THE
• A. TLAS CHIYSf.&.ft. YMOUTH
2929 Harbor Blvd Costa ~ Tel ~-193' 3 blocka
south of San Diego Freewey off Harbor Blvd Complete
body shop Sales S.rv1c1 Ptris $tfv1ce Dept open
Monday thru Friday 7 30 AM to S 30 PM and 8 AM to
5 P M on Saturd1y • HA.CH IMPOITS
4M8 Dove Street. Newport Beach Tel 752-0900 Call us,
we re the specialists for Alla Romeo. Peugeot & Saab
THEODORE aOltHS FOaD
~n H let , Mrv1c.. parts. body. ~Int & tire dep11.
Q>mpetltlve rates on ltatt & ct.Uy rentals. 2060 Harbor 9vd .. Costa Mesa. 842·00fo"' ~211
JOHNSON & SOM LINCOLN MllCUltY
2e Harbor Blvd . Costa Miu Tel ~5630 57 Yeara
~friendly family service -Orange County's oldest Lin·
Ofln·Mtrcury dealership
SOUTH COAST OOCMH
Harbor Blvd., Costa M .... Tel. ~. RV Mrvlce
1allst1, cu stom van convert10t11.
MIWPOIT IMPOltTS
W. C out Hlg h wey, Newport 8ucl'I. Tel.
ll..jm+e4>5/5-40-17M The l'errarl HeedQultWra.
MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES .
NEWPORT DATSUN
888 Dove Street Newport Beach Tel 833-1300 At the
triangle ol Jamboree MacArthur & Bristol behind
Victoria Statton Sales. Sefv1ce, Leasing & Parts Fleet
discounts to the public
0 HOW ARD CHEVROLET
Dove/Quail Streets. Newport Beach. 833·0555 We
spec1a11ze in Corvettes• And our body shop Is one of the
bestl Excellent body and paint shop for all makes and
models!
• DAVID J. PHILLIPS IUICl<.p()HTIAC-MAXDA
Sales • Service • Leasing
24888 Alicia Parkway
Laguna Hills 837-2400
C OltMIER-DtLIU.O C .. VROLET
18211 BHch Blvd . Hunllngtori Beach Tel 847-6087 or
5-49-3331 Salts Service Parts Full Leasing Dept
Freeway close to all Orange Co
• 4LA.H MA.c;HoM rotmAC-suulU
2480 Harbor Blvd , Coata Meaa. Ttt. 54M300. Salts.
Service. Ltatlng "Mr. OOOdwrench "
0
IA.ltLI HCI TOYOl'A·VOLVO
19" Harbor B lvd .. Cotta Mesa (714) 84&·9303 or
~94e7 # t Volvo dHltr In Orange County and when
you .. k tor ~Toyota at Earle Ike'•. you get Ill
IOI LONGPRE PONTIAC
13600 Beach Blvd . Westminster Tel 892·6651 Orange
County s oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Safes.
Service Parts
UNIVERSITY HONDA
2850 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 54<>-9640 1 Mile
South 405 Freeway. Sates. service. parts & leasing
• SANTA AMA DATSUN
2001 E 17th Street. Santa Ana Tel 558·78t 1 Your
Or1g1na1 Dedicated Datsun Dealer
0
MIRA.CLE MAZDA
2150 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 645-5700 •1 dealer
In So Calif See the all new 198t GLC
A.LLIM·OLDSMOllLl-CA.OILLA.C
SUIAIU4MC nucis
San Diego Fwy. at Avery Exit on Camino Ca~trano in
L.Atguria Niguel Tel 831·0800/495-0800.
• SAM 01 SA.MTIS CHIVROLIT
'*01 8'. El Camino Real, 88'1 Clemente
Sale1, Service, LMlfng And Parts
Orange County'• NEWEST Chevrolet dealer. 'Growing
Your Wey •· E•lt £1 Camino off-tamp.
831"°580 4i,2-8500
COSTA MESA DATSUN
2845 Harbor Blvd Costa Me$8 Tel 54(}6410 Serving
Orange Counly tor 16 years 1 Mite So 405
SUNSET FORD, IHC.
(Home or Wttlte the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd.,
Westminster Tel 636·4010
fRA.MK PROTO LIHCOLN-MBCUltY
Sel"llce and Parts Department always open 7 days a
week 7 30 AM to 6 30 p M. 848-7739.
0 COHMkL CHIVaOLIT
2828 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. Ollef 20 years MrY1ng
Orange County• Salts. leasing. service. Call 546-1200;
spec111 parts line. 646•9400. body shop line. 75-4-0400.
0
CHICK IVIRSOM POllSC~UDl-VW
415 E Coast Hwy .. Newport Beach 673-0900 The only
dealership 1n Orange County with these thrH great
makes under one root•
• ROY CARVll ROUS IOYCl-IMW
1540 JamborH Road, Ntwpc)(1 S..Ch ~Sal•,
~Ice. Parts And LHtlng.
THURSDAY JULY 23 1981
.., ........
CH~AN GE COUN TY C ALI FOH NIA 2~ CE NT S
Andrea1 Doria dive due
Wilmington adventurer seeks answers about wreck • WILMINGTON (AP) -On the
25th anniversary of the sin.kine
of the Andrea Doria undersea
adventurer Peter Gimble will
set out on a mission to find out
why the luxury liner sank, and
whether a fortune in gold and
jewels sank with it.
"I'm not obsessed with the
wreck," said Gimble, who first
dove at the site off Nantucket
just one day after the ship went
down July 26, 1956. "I just have
never been able to answer cer-
tain questions that I'm curious
about."
watertight door was missing,
causing the ship to sink, as well
as to recover two safes from the
first-class lounge to deter~ine if
"I just have
never been able
to answer certain
t ' ,, ques ions ...
they do indeed contain treasure.
Gimble. who has dived at the
scene four times since he first
visited it, nearly J9st his lire in a
1975 exploration while filmine
"The Mystery of the Andrea
Doria"' for CBS-TV.
During the dive, he suffered
equipment failure a nd nearly
suffocated, but recovered and
was back in the water the next
day. That dive and the one
scheduled to leave Montauk.
Long Island, N.Y. on Monday,
were conducted in conjunction
with film maker Elga Andersen.
Gimble will actually ren-
dezvous at Montauk on Sunday
with his specially outfitted ship,
the Sea Level II, which will be
arriving that day from Morgan
City, La
The Italian liner Andrea Doria begins to link off Nantucket Island July 26 , 1956, after a collision with the
Stockholm. It was the first time that two large pcusenger ships had ever collided in the open sea.
One of them, he said in an-
nouncing the dive Wednesday in
this Los Angeles Harbor com-
munity, is "why did a ship that
shouldn't have sunk sink as a re-
sult or damage that apparently
shouldn't have put her down?"
The expedition aims to explore
.a rumor that a crucial
Some 51 people lost their lives
in the 11 :10 p.m. July 25 collision
between the Italian liner. on Its
way from Italy to New York,
a nd the Swedish liner
Stockholm. T he Andrea Doria
sank hours later in about 235 reel
or water, while the Stockholm
managed to limp into New York
Harbor.
The privately fin anced expedi-
t ion will include a team or three
commercial divers. four diver -
<See SUNKEN. Pue AZ )
Market strike deadline Tuesday
Judge's order
kts man die
with dignity
OCALA;' Fla . CAP) -T he
66-year-old man dying or Lou
Gehrig's disease couldn't speak
to tell a judge at his hospitaJ
bedside he wanted to be un-
plugged rrom a respirator and
die at home . But he could hold
the judge's hand.
''I said, · 1r you understand
what I say. squeeze my hand,"
''I think everyone
was crying at the
time, myself in-
cluded.''
and he did ," Circuit Judge
Wallace Sturgis said Wednesday
about the hearing he held at the
bedside of John C. Ford
"I said, 'If you're taken off the
respirator. you likely would not
Ii ve very long.·
"I asked him if he understood
that he would likely die if taken
oCf the life-support system. and
he saueezed my hand again.""
Fo.rd"s family petitioned the
court to allow him to go home,
away from the machines that
helped him breathe. After ascer-
taining that Ford agreed, the
judge granted the request, and
Ford died the neit day at home. ·
Sturgis said he had presided at
hearings in hospitals before, but
the ni ght session at Munroe
Regional Medical Center on July
10 was something different.
"I think everyone was cryi.ng
at the time. myself included,"
he said.
Ford s uffer e d from
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis,
nicknamed Lou Gehrig's disease
for the New York Yankees ftrst-
baseman who died or it in 1941.
The disease attacks the central
nervous system and erodes its
victims' ability to control their
motor fun ctions.
Ford was at home July 9 when
his lungs and heart s topped
working, but his family kept him
alive with mouth-to-mouth re-
suscitation, Sturgis said. He was
brought to the hospital that day
and was still on a breathing
machine a day later .
After Ford's family petitioned
to have Ford released "to the
peace and comfort of his own
home,'" Sturgis appointed a
lawyer, Frank Amalea. on his
behalf.
A matea attended the bedside
hearing along with Ford"s four
children and another lawyer ,
Meredith Power , who represent·
ed the family
"l went in and talked to him
and explained the whole thing to
him," the judge said of Ford. "I
could get a visible signal from
him because he could press my
ha nd.
··Arter talking to all members
of the family and getting their
concurrence and their (liability>
release or the hospital, and talk-
ing to the doctors involved, I
signed the order allowing hlm to
be removed from his life sup-
ports," Sturgis said.
··He died the next day at
home, and I received a call from
the family. They were most
gratefuJ of the fact that he had
been allowed to go home and be
with the family when he passed
away."
Sturgis said doctors "felt like
they coµld kee p him alive a
month, six months or six years
in that state, but all the family
wanted was for him to go home
and lo be with them."
Injure d sea lion
dies after surgery
A sea llon rescued from Seal
Rock near San Clemente Wed-
nesday with a steel fishlnt gaff
stuck in ill side died durtne the
night after undergoing surgery
to remove ,the hooked Imple-
ment.
Oranee County Sheriff's
Harbor Patrolman Bob Denl-
inaer and state lifeeuards Chris
Arnold and Steve Lone swam to
the rock from the Dana Point
Harbor Patrol fireboat at about.
l p.m. to make the rescue.
The ln)ured sea llon was then
taken to the Laf una Canyon
Animal Hoaplta in La1una
Beach where veterinarian John
HamU removed the 1atr. But tbe
marine mammal'• wound Id lt
in a sueb a weak concHUoa tbat
It didD't IUl'Ytve.
Joba Cunl:lllaaham, 1 member Of Pr .... Of 1.\be Sea LkJal, a La~ 8Ncb ..... , t'OllUIUtted
to u~ sick ud injured Ha
li ons, said someone had de-
liberately plunged the gaff into
the animal.
"We had been getting calla for
several days from concerned
citizens who had seen the
animal," Cunningham said. "I
don't understand the mentality
of a person who could do such a
thine."
Cunningham said he would be
notifying state Fiab and Game
Department ofrlclala to tell them
of the violation ot the Marine
Mammal Act.
"Dr. Hamil clid aU he could,"
Cunnln1ha1n uld, "but the
wound wu Nvwal days old and
lbe animal had little chanc. Of
survival to belia with."
Denltnas, Arnold and Lone uted a blanMt to eorral t-. ID·
Jurtd ... Uoe. o-·-·· Nkt the 1atr wu plmapd Into tbe ...
lion· 1 llft ,._ aear the lefl fl'Oll&
nJpper.
NOT MUCH LEFT -Only ornate facade of
Kam's Restaurant in Corona del Mar is left
standing' as workmen clear site for a new
o.lty Pt•,_ ,_
office building. Owners of the restaurant
near Avocado Avenue lost their lease.
Convicte d
laivyer su es
ex-e mployer
By RICHARD GREEN
Of tlle Deffy ...........
A former Irvine attorney who
specialized in workers' com -
pensation lawsuits before being
sent to prison on a voluntary
manslaughter conviction has
filed a suit of bis own against the
law firm that employed him.
Gar y Wayne Patton, 36, al-
leges he suffered mental stress
whjle working for the Kegel &
Tobin law firm, Santa Ana.
The worker's compensation
suit seeks compensation for past
and future medical care, dis-
ability and rehabilitation, said
Ben Whitehead. a ttorney for
Truck Ins urance Exchange,
which carries the workers' com-
pensation insurance for Kegel &
Tobin.
Patton wiU be present Aug. 3
at the 9 a .m. workers' com·
pensallon trial in the Workers'
Compensation Appeals Court,
11801 Olympic Blvd., Loa
Angeles, Whitehead said.
Patton ls serving a five-year
sentence in Cl)!no State .Prilon
on hls voluntary manalauabter
conviction lait year in the slay-
ing of his 23-year-old wife,
Katherine. He was accuaed of
confronting her with a .22·
caliber pistol in the couple's
Irvine apartment and Urine
three ahoU into her skull.
Patton's defense attorney, Al·
Ian Stokke, told Jurors ln the
murder t.rtal that Patton wu
meatal.ty ill when be purportedly abot and killed bla wlfe, and • lber_.., wu not rapomlble
for bll acta.
Israeli warplanes
hit Lebanon again
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> -
Is raeli warplanes swept into
southern Lebanon again today
a nd t he PLO and Lebanon 's
state radio said the fighter-
bombers blasted a key bridge in
the foothills of Mount Hermon.
The Tel Aviv command said
the planes scored accurate
strikes at 130mm cannon near
H as baya, no rtheast of the
Israeli border town of Metulla,
and that all the jets returned
safely. The Israelis made no
mention of attacking a bridge.
The PLO and Lebanese radio
broadcasts said the planes
struck at the road bridge that
links guerril la bases i n
southeast Lebanon with the
eastern Bakaa Valley and the
Syrian border.
The bridge s pans the Hasbani
Ri ver near Hasbaya, which is
the forward most guer rilla posi·
lion in the foothills of Mount
Hermon about seven miles north
of the Israeli border.
There was no immediate re-
port of casualties. Since the
latest cycle of violence erupted
two weeks ago, five people have
been kiUed by guerrilla rockets
<See ISRAEL, Page A.2)
Argument on pier
emls up in water
A Newport Pier janltor was
arrested Wednesday after be al-
legedly threw a 21-Year-old man
Body found
at Irvine Cove
La,una Beach pollce are at·
lelDptiat to identify the body of a
map found wnhed up on the
beacb 8t lrvlne Co\'e early lbla
mondftl, elM In 1wlm1\dt and
on.•wtlnftD. '
A MN'ltJ ~ at ~ 19\ed community dlHoYered the boclJ
Of a .... 1nbls1ew40lortart1.,.
lhortfJWonT a.ID.
Polkle Nld lt dOel not ~ tbemaWbileBllltbtWlllr~
I lone p.tod. Or ..... 'Q; ...,
Coronet'• depatlu ..... to
off a slde of the pier into the
water 30 feet below where the
man clung to a plline until
harbor patrolmen pulled him to
safety.
The janitor, Patrick Al vln
LannJn1, aa. WU booked 00 ...
sault charaes and held in lieu of
$10,000 bail.
A fully clothed Howard Dolak,
an Alhambra resident, told
police he didn't kne>'f¥ how to
swim and was forced to bold on-
to the ptlina unlU the patrol boat
arrived. Police 11ld Dolak wi.1
cold and wet but uninjured.
The tnclc*lt beaan, otficen
Hid, When tbe Janitor lpotted
Dolak throwll\I a beer bottJe on the~. The Cwo ..... Id•· 1rr _.and...,,.. .... Dolu
•W up IQ Utt watw, poUee
aatd.
Union's
delllands
r e j e cte d
Contract talks between
So uth e rn Cali f o rn ia
supermarket owners and uniOfl
employees broke down in Los
Angeles Wednesd ay. the
deadline imposed by the union
for reaching a n agreement
before a strike vote could be
taken next week.
Representatives of the unnea
Food and Commercial Workers
angrily s tormed out of the
bargaining session at about 6
p.m .. sayin~ they would not con-
tinue to negotiate and would
r ecommend that their mem-
bership reject the offer.
John C. Sperry. president of
union Local 324, w hi c h
represents Orange County. said
the union would stick to the
deadline and take the current
management offer to unioo
members for ratirication or re-
jection.
H owever. management
negotiators said they would re-
turn to the bargaining table to-
day. That group is headed by
Robert K. Fox. president of the
Food Employers Council, which
is representing supermarket
owners in the talks.
Fox characterized the union's
demands as ""unrealistic and in-
f I ex i b I e . · · an d sa id
supermarkets will remain open
even if there is a strike
·'The public should not be vic-
l i mi zed by the union ·s un ·
reasonable position," Fox said.
"The supermarkets will con ·
tinue serving their customers.··
Orange County s tores that
would be affected by a strike in-
clude Albertson's, Alpha Bela,
Mayfair. Boy's Market, Hughes,
Lucky Stores. Markel Basket,
Ralphs, Safeway. Smith's Food
King, Stater Bros .. Thriftimart
and Vons.
The proposal by the Food
Employers Council called for an
increase in wages of about 22
percent over three years. The
union is asking a 56 percent in-
crease.
The United F;'ood and Com-
<See STRIKE, Page AU
.ORllSI CDllT WllTHIR
Low clouds ton ight
through Friday m id·
morning, but otherwise
fair through Friday. Hiahs
72 to 85. Lows tonight 58 lo
68.
llllDI TIDIY
Tht raalion'1 capitol will be
down to one daJl11 newspope-r
onct the Wo1hington Star
clo1t1 Aug. 1. Ste Page A4.
11111
Poltee 1ald lln. Patton wu
lenlq bft balbud and ta.ct
been mcMDI dOt.MI out of tbe
family bome at 14 ElplUlade,
Jrvtnt, wbln llM WU lhot to
death.
perfonn a •utoPIY to determine the CIUHof deetJii.1 ·.
The Alhambra mu told of·
ncera he nearly at.ruck a pllln1
11 he fell to the waler. ~-----------•
)
• • * Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Thul'lday, July 23, 1981
Medfly ruling .. Jpme
U.S. reftfses .tq de~laHl(cou~ties disaster area
LOS GA~ CAP> -M of. dtclar.Uoo lD Ulree .CaUlornla View, LOI Altot and Loa Altos
ficials moved to meet the de-counUee. HJlla.eompletlngtheJobby3a.m.
manda of Southern 1tat.. by A declaration would bav• made At leut 111 aerial appllcat!onl
watehlnc for Mediterranean fruit tarmen tlicibl• tor low-tntere.t weref.!annedoverthe227-aquare·
flies throughout California, tbe loans. The federal covernment mile 'core" infestaUon zone, pro-
federa1 government refuaed to already haa offered to help pa)> for Ject director Jerry Scribner sald.
declare fly.infested counties a serial pesUctde sprayln1, expect· The first round of spraylna ended
disaster area: edtoc<»U18milllon. Monday. ·
"We pay more taxes than any MeanwbUe, the second round of Medt17 larvae have been round
other state, and contrqUln& tbe airborne attacks on tbe crop· in 158 places lo the spray zone, but
l}ledfly ls a matter for the whole ravagiq pest began today. Three the mes haven't invaded any of
country," an unhappy Gov. Ed· helicopters took off justafter mid· the state's large commercial
mund 8ri>wn Jr. said Wednesday nl1ht to spray sticky bail laced farms outside the three counties.
after the Reagan admlnistraUon with the pesticide malatbionovel' Asharpdroplnthenumberoffiiea
rejected his request for a disaster parts of Palo Alto, Mountain found in traps was reported after
Soviet ship OK'd
·will process fish off state coast
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Over
tbe objections of sport fish·
ermen, conservationists and
commercial fish operations, a
Soviet factory ship soon may be
allowed to process mackerel,
anchovies and squid three miles
off the Southern California coast
by August.
The permit for the ship was
granted by the Pacific Fishery
Management Council in a meet·
ing in Boise, Idaho.
Those supporting the applica-
tion included the Fishermen's
Cooperative Assn. of San Pedro
-whose 20 to 25 boats would
provide the fi sh -and the Fish-
ermen's Union -which would
man those boats.
One council member who vol·
ed in favor of the permit was
John Royal, who is also presi-
dent of the Fishermen's Union.
the Los Angeles Times reported
today.
There are other joint ventures
of domestic companies working
with foreign factory ships in the
Pacific Northwest, but this
apparently would· be a first
off Southern California shores.
The Soviet operation would
also be the first in which a
foreign ship was allowed to pro-
cess fish species in competition
with U.S. processors and dis·
tributors. Presently. fishermen
in the Pacific Northwest take in
hake and other fish which aren't
marketed widely by U .~. en·
terprises.
The recommendation ot the
Pacific Fishery group has been
forwarded to the U.S. Depart·
ment of Commerce and is ex·
peeled to be approved by Aug. 1.
However, the matter will be con-
sidered by the Fish and Game
Stag party
for prince
LONDON CAP) -Prince
Charles held a pre-wedding stag
party for 20 of his friends at an
exclusive club in central Lon·
don, press reports said today.
Buckingham Palace refused to
confirm them.
The event. described by the
London Times as "the most
closely guarded secret" of the
royal wedding, was held Wed·
nesday night at White's, a posh
all-male club on one or Lon<k>ns
most fashionable streets. The
newspaper said Charles met his
guests there for dinner.
Charles is to marry Lady
Diana Spencer next Wednesday.
'Split' thief
gets freedom
OAKLAND CAP) -A woman
who claimed one of her other 12
personalities com mitted the
crimes has been sentenced to
three years probation and or-
dered to pay $3,000 restitution on
burglary charges.
But Alameda County Court
Judge Stanley Golde warned
Diane Goldman that if she, or
any other personality, showed
up in court, be would impose a
jail sentence.
Ms. Goldma n bad been
charged with four Alameda
Cou nty burglaries, but she
pleaded guilty to one count and
the others were dropped during
plea-bargaining. Earlier she had
been sentenced by a Contra
Costa County j udge to five
years' probation and ordered to
make $12,000 restitution in six
other cases.
Commission at a public m~g
Wednesday in Long Beach.
Groups opposed to the factory
ship said they wiU contact Presi·
dent Ronal~ Reagan. the
California delegation to the
Hou se a n d Senate, and
Secretary of Com merce
Malcolm Bald.ridge.
Salinas boy
back to life
after dying
FRF.SNO <AP> -A Salinas boy
remembers dying and coming
back to life when he nearly
drowned at Bass Lake east of
here .
Phillip Carrillo, 9, fell into a
deep hole while wading in
shallow water.
A friend wasn't disturbed
because he thought Phillip was
just pretending. It wasn't until he
lay still after swallowing water
that the companion became
alarmed. ·
Doctors at Valley Children's
Hospital here credit the cool tern·
perature of the water and a
re sc u er's knowledge or'
cardiopulmonary .tesuscitatioo
with saving the boy.
"I was all shook up," the rourth
grader said. "It was like I was
asleep. Everythin1 wu ireen
and l saw some red. It Just OC·
curred tome, 'l'mgoingtodle'."
The boy was underwater for
about five minutes before being
rescued Tuesday by Bill Starr ol
Santa Marla. He was not
breathing when be was pulled
from tbe water and there was no
detectable heartbeat.
The boy w&S kept at the hospital
overnight for observation.
From Page A1
ISRAEL •••
in northern Israeli settlements
and more than 400 have died in
Israeli reprisal strikes in
Lebanon.
The PLO reported Israeli mis·
site boats shelled the Rashldieh
Palestinian refugee camp south
of the port of Tyre durlng the
night and then pounded the
camp with long·range artillery
from the borde'r during the day.
The guerrillas also claimed
they beat back two Israeli al·
tempts to land commandos by
helicopter in southern Lebanon.
The Israeli military command
had no immediate comment, but
Israeli military sources denied
the report. .
In Tel Aviv today, P r ime
Minister Menacbem Begin re·
buked U.S. Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger for what the
Israeli leader ca lled the
·'astonishing" allegation that
Israel's bombing of Beirut on
Friday and of an Iraqi nuclear
reactor in June tiad set back ef·
forts to ease Mideast tensions.
Begin said in 8/ communique.
that he met after each attack
with Philip C. Habib, the U.S.
presidential envoy seeking to
mediate a peace, and Habib
never said the Israeli actions
damaged his efforts.
Habib was in Jidda today try·
ing to eOlist Saudi Arabia's help
to arrange a cease-fire in the
fighting between Israel and the
Palestinians . And Arab
representatives were gathering
in Tunis, Tunisia, today at the
request of Palestine Liberation
Organization Chairman Vasser
Arafat to discuss additional col·
lectlve Arab assistance to the
guerrillas.
the initial sprayina, officials sald.
California officials plan to in·
crease monitorlng of the peat by
setUng five fly trapa per square
mile throughout California by
Friday, said Gordon Snow
special assistant to state Food
and Agriculture Director Richard Rominger.
The increased monitoring
would meet a key demand of five
Southern states attempting to lm·
pose a quarantine broader than
that ordered by the federal gov·
ernment on 200 fruits and
vegetables that can act as host.a to
themed.fly.
The federal government's
quarantine forbids shipment of
unfumigated host fruits and
vegetables from the quarantined
area.
The Southern states -Texas,
Florida, South Carolina, Mis·
sissippi and Alabama -also want
California to certify that crops
come from areas where the traps
wereinplacefor 30days.
Tbat could doom much of the
crop, which is at the height of
harvest season, Snow said. OnJy
about 1 percent of potential med·
fly host crops in the state are in
the infestation zone.
The U.S. Supreme Court has
given the Southern states until
Friday to answer California's re-
quest for an order prohibiting
their quarantines, which have re-
sulted in rejection or several
truckloads of produce. A federal
judge in Dallas already bas halted
Texas' blockade pending a hear·
ing Saturday.
Reagan aims
to calm furor
WA,SIUNGTON <AP) -Prest·
dent Reagan will try to calm the
furor ov,r the rnift\mu.n Social
Security benefit c ut in his
planned address to' the nation,
Senate Majority Leadet Howard
H. Bak.er Jr. said Wednesday.
Rea1an disclosed in a letter to
Baker this week ~t be would
ask for television time sooo "to
tell the American people the
facts, ~ tQ let the'11 know that
l shall fi1bt to pi'eaerve the
Social Security System and pro-
tect tbelr benefits.··
Asked by a reporter whether
Reagan would 'have a proposal
on the $122 monthly minimum
benefit, Baker replied: "I'm
convinced the president intends
to address this issue." At a dif.
fe renl point, Baker said the
president "probably will have a
proposal" to deal with the
minimum benefit.
Tax bill due
from Senate
WASIDNGTON CAP> -The
Senate. with Democrats scoring
a r are victory by threatening to
hold President Reagan's tax
cuts hostage, is putting the
finishing touches on its tax bill
and waiting for the House to
catch up. .
The House could take a long
step forward today with a
scheduled vote by the Ways &
Means Committee that was ex·
pected to send its Democratic
alternative bill to the noor for
debate next week.
Democrats and Republicans
on both sides of Capitol Hill say
they want to get a tax but with
an Oct. 1 effective date to
Reagan's desk before Congress
begins a month's recess in early
August.
From Page A1
STRIKE •••
.,...._..
Underwater photographer Peter Gimbel enten a diving beU during
a training sessioo in Wilmington for the filming of the movie
."Andrea Doria : The FiMJ.Chapter."
Frorft1>age A 1
SUNKEN • • • • photo1raphers -lncludlns Gim·
ble -and five alternate dlven.
A team of divers from New
Jersey previously announced
plans to dive at the wreck site in
October, usln1 aome of the aame
new technology that GimbeJ's
team wm employ.
Their plans, said Gimbel.
"gave me nightmares." He said
he had plaMed bis dive, which
will be filmed as a documentary
entitled "Andrea Doria: The
Final Chapter." long before he
learned or the other dive, "but
we kept a very low profile inten·
tionally. We didn't want to claim
to be able to do things until we
were much further along. We
didn't want to stimulate the New
Jersey group to greater vigor."
Gimbel's team wilJ be using
technologically advanced eqµip-
m en t that he described as
"crucial to the operation."
The equipment, assembled by
the undersea technology firm of
Oceaneering International ,
per mils a metb o4 ca lied
'•saturation diving.'' Whereas
previously divers were limited
to about an hour at a lime un·
derwater. followed by as much
as seven hours in a decom-
pression chamber, divers using
the saturation equipment can
spend four or five hours at a
time underwater. and upon sur·
facing will remain in com·
pressed chambers so that de·
compression. is not required.
Puppy drowning brings charge
Florida man says he was only 'teaching dof! how to swim'
TAMPA, Fla. CAP> -A man
charged with cruelly in the
drowning or a puppy says he was
only trying to teach the dog to
swim so it wouldn't drown when
rain floods his backyard dog pen.
on the misde meanor. which car·
ries a maximum penalty of one
year in jail and a$1,000fine.
The photos were taken Friday
by Tampa Times photographer
Doug Pizac, 'who said he saw the
man throw the puppy and hold it
under water for several seconds,
and that a few minutes later an
older dog grabbed it and held it
under.
He said the man tried to revive
the dog, but couldn 'l. The Hillsborough County State
Attorney's Office filed an animal·
c ruelty charge Wednesday
against John Darling, 38, amid
public outcry over the drownittg.
shown in a seguence of photos
published in many newspapers
across the country.
S. Bruce Wiwer, Tampa Times
managing editor, said that after
the pictures were published, let·
ters and telephone calls c~me
from readers wanting to see the
man punished, and from others
criticizing the photographer for
not saving the puppy.
Su.spect inf raud
will 'return cars'
What readers didn't realize
said Witwer, was that tbe photo~
grapber was about 300 feet away
using a telephoto lens.
Other newspapers around
Florida published the photos
Sunday after t h ey were
transmitted by The Associated
Press. Palm Beach Post om-
budsman Tom Smith said his
newspaper was deluged with calls
and letters of outrage.
Darling is accused of torment·
ing a 6-week-old cocker spaniel
and contributing to its death Fri-
day by repeatedly throwing it into
a flooded park lake; then holding
it under water for five seconds.
Darling claimed that he tossed
the dog, named Billy. to teach it to
swim, and submerged the animal
so it would learn to hold its breath.
'·It was a bad accident, to lose a
dog I just got," said Darling. "I
love animals. I love to see things
grow."
He faces arraignment Aug. 12
Newport Beach auctioneer
Robert Ogle, charged with con·
ning a man out or three ex·
pensive cars for a handful of
gems alJeged to be worth a frac·
lion of their stated value, has of·
fered to return the cars. his at·
torney claims.
Attorney Jeffrey Walsworth
says Ogle, free on $100,000 bail,
is mystified by the allegations.
Ogle, 42, the reported owner of
Newport Galleries, has ''offered
to return the cars for his jewelry
to settle matters," Walsworth
says.
"But since they haven't got
back to us," the attorney says,
"it makes us think it was a fair
deal."
But Newport Beach police
take a different look at the case.
Detectives assert that Ogle was
conspiring to commit grand
theft when he traded the stones
for a pair of limited edition
Mercedes.Benz and a $100,000
hand<:rafted Clenet automobile.
Ogle was arrested July 8 along
with two business colleagues on
grand theft charges.
Police have not identified the
man who gave up the cars in the
trade.
Solltalres for the'slngular wonwi.
Women who are one of a kind
de~ a diamond as Individual
as they a~. ~lect one of our
diamond soUtal~ for her. Each
Is ~ In l 4 karat yellow gold,
priced from ssoo.
The gems, police claim, were
reported to be worth nearly
$500,000 by Ogle. who assertediy
produced documents to support
his claim.
Police, though, say what the
unidentified man got were in·
ferior stones that "if you could
even rind a buyer'· would barely
buy back one or his cars.
Ogle's attorney claims it was
the cars, not the gems, that
turned out to be worth less than
their stated value. He 'did not
J?ive dollar figures.
Police say that several people
·~ave contacted authorities alleg-
ing they have been victimized in
dealinJ?s with OJ?le.
Bill delay urged
WASHINGTON CAP) -The
Reagan administration has
urged Congress to delay action
on a new GI bill iiroviding
educationa l benefits f or
servicemen. but sponsors said
today they would push ahead anyway.
...........
Bo Derek, hU3band John and C.J . the orangutan monkey around
outside the U.S. courthowe in New York to proteJt JCer&e cutJ in
their new movie, "Tarzan, the Ape Man." C.J. is Joying "I 'm
mad OJ hell -some of my scer&eJ have been cut."
He has his
ups, downs
Carl Eichelman recorded
his 2.000th roller coaster ride
at an amusement park an
Mason. Ohio. But the IRS
computer operator vows that
is just the beginning
E1chelman. who brags that
he's the world·record roller
coaster ride r . says he'll
reach 10,000 rides in his
lifetime.
"I may be 99 years old
when vou see me in line. but
I'm going to do it," he said.
Eichelman claims he's rid
den every roller coas ter in
the United States "except for
a few kiddie coasters ." He
spends vacations traveling to
amusement parks. this year
driving more than 7,000 miles
to ride some 50 coasters.
Howard "Bo" Callaway
Colorado Republican Party
chairman, ski
resort owner.
a i rline ex
ecutive ,
former con·
gressman and
former Army
sec retary
has become a
banker.
Ca llaway
CAUAWAY was e lected
to the board or directors of
United Bank or Denver.
Colorado's larges t com ·
merc1al bank. He previously
se rved as p r esi dent ,
c h a irman and c hief ex
ecutive officer of lnterfinan·
cial Inc of Atlanta.
Callaway served as a U S.
representative from Georgia
and was Army secretary un·
der President Ford.
Ourln& a trlp lO New York,
lhtbrra Murrar bou•hl a
pair or bedroom slippers for
her husband, retired danclnti
lnstructor Artll•r M•rray.
S h e had the allppers
malled to HonoluJu, but when
Murray opened the box, he
discovered slippers ror two
rl1ht feet.
"H could have been
worse," he said. "They could
have thought 1 had two left
feet."
Evangelist BlUy Gr•ll•m
s ays he and
Pre s ident
R eagan are
just friends
wh o don 't
dwell o n
politics when
they visit.
After a re·
cent Wh ite
House dinner.
Graham com· mented to the ORAHAM
Asheville Citizen that he ar-
rived at the White House
about 5 p.m . a nd talked 'til
10. The four of us had dinner
.. We didn't mention
politics once."
Gr aham said his influence
on the president probably is
not as great as it has been on
past presidents .
First lady Nancy Reagan
is visiting England for only a
week, but she'll be squeezing
in five luncheons. five dinner
parties. two r eceptions. a
fireworks dis play and a royal
wedding.
Mrs Reagan leaves for
London today In addition to
the July 29 wedding of Prince
Charles, and Lady Diana,
her schedule includes one of
the prince's p<>lo matches, a
luncheon hosted by Princess
Mar gar e t at Kensington
Palace and a late-night re·
ce pt1on given by Queen
E lizabeth at Bu ckingham
Palace.
The first lady's traveling
part y in c lud es h e r
h airdresser
H&il pelts S. Dakota
Thunderstorms also spawn tornadoes in Nebraska
Coastal forecast
N19111 tllrc>u9'1 mlO.rnort1l"9 low
cl-1, Dul ot,..rwi .. fair \llr°"9fl
Friday. Coe1tat low SI, 1111-..
COHlal lllOh n, lnl-IS W•l•r ...
E•s.-re, 119111 varlM»I• wlllOI
1on1011t -Fr!Oay ,,_nino, llKom 1119 we1ttf'IY 10 to 16 llllOI\ Frloay •f·
ternoon. Wind wavH t-to tllrH
• f"t So<ltllWHt•rly , .. u -ID two
fHl IM<Wllfto " .... ly loni9fll N'911t and mom1nv s-c-llKomlno
mo1lly WMY Friday •ftffnoon
U.S. summary
Severe thunoerstorm' SP•wnect
laro• hall and t.,.._, In Soutll
Oallota -Nabreslla, wlllle tllun· Cler>torms ,..,.. ><•ll•rM from Ml" -I• to Ml•*'" WIO.IY·IUtlered ~"' •Ito tell
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 23, 1981 H /F .43
Cons11mer agency saved
• County reorganization plan spares office from budget ax
Ot&llfe County aovernment'1
Co1l1umer Alfair1 office wUI not
be d l1banded, the county Board
of Superviaora bas decided.
The board, witb supervl.aors
Bruce Nestande and Roeer Sw-
ton diasenUna, approved a plan
to reor1anlz• the count,y Com·
m unity Servic• Agency, which
adD)lnlaten the consumer of.
lice. The plan adopted Wednes·
day ls designed to aa ve money
and to keep the consumer office
open.
Nestande proposed last week
that the oflice -with an annual
budget of $335,000 -b e
abolished. He said the money
should be spent tor whal he
termed more pressing needs,
such as services for abused
children and women.
Nestande repealed that con·
tentioo Wednesday, pointing
out to reUow super visors that a
myriad of state a nd federal
agencies offer protection tor
consumers.
The consucner ,.ft Ir\ t&ctiJ !IUmer>vorganizAtlons lo pjck
last year handled more than up the s1ack," Nestande said.
38,000 complaint.II and won more Under the proPQs~J prepared
than $'700,000 in restitution ror It.a by the county admbustratlve of
clients. flee and backed by Mrs . Wieder.
The motion to reorganize the more than $1321000 wo.uld be
CSA and keep the consumer af· saved annually DY movmg the
fairs office in operation was consumer affairs omce from
made by Supervisor Harriett lease~ space to a couoty-owned
Wieder, who said Nestande's b~lldrng and combin.ing ~d
proposed action bordered on the manistratlon of the office with
"precipitous... t~e county Veterans Services of·
rice She said that her colleague By combining the adminlstra·
was ~el\lsl!'g to acknowledge the tion of the two programs, one
re_la tlonship the ~onsumer af· management a nd two typist
ff.1rs .office has ~1th the ~ounty clerk positions wUI be eliminat·
1'1strict Attorneys office lD ~ro· ed the administrative office secutlng consumer protection said.
cases. "I view this as a creative ap-N~stan.~e: c laimin~. he had proach to saving tax dollars and
nothang dispar aging ':<> say preserving these two non
a bout the consumer affairs of· mandated se r vices," Mrs
fi ce. maintained that changing Wieder said
financial priorities necessitated Combining the two programs
that the board place money drew criticism from represen·
whereitwas most needed. tatives of se veral-groups
''There are nume rous <con· representine veterans.
Wilson sees water rationing
without Peripheral Canal
San Diego Mayor Pete Wilson,
a Republican candidate for gov·
ernor, has told a Newport Beach
lunch eo n a udi e nce
t hat, without construction of the
Peripheral Can al, "Southern
California will become the semi·
desert it once was ."
He predicted that. without a
ne w sour ce or waler, Southern
California will be forced into
water rationing . H e told
listeners at the Newport.er lM
Wednesday the canal project is
probably the most imp<>rtant
decision voters (ace this decade.
Voters will decide the fate of
the canal project for bringing
Northern California water to
Southern California next June.
Wilson told those attending the
Town Hall Forum that his sup·
port of the can al will anger
North Californians and likely
cost him votes.
He rapped Gov. Edmund G.
Brown Jr. and Lt. Gov. Mike
Curb, a lso a Republican can·
didale for governor. for lack or
leadership on the water issue.
··You have to be taller than
either or them to str addle the
fen ce without doing serious
damage to yourself." Wilson
Commuter trains
for OC planned
Ca ltrans Director Adriana
Gianturco is scheduled to hold a
press conference Friday at the
Santa Ana Amtr.alt railway ala·
lion t.o formally announce plans
Lo add four commuter tr ains to
link Los Angeles and Orange
counties.
The trains -two northbound
in the morning •nd two south·
. bound in the evening -are in·
tended tb s upplement Caltrans
attempb to use mass tranilt to
improve commuter transporta·
ti o n a n d e a s e c o n g est e d
freeways.
Ms. Gianturco announced dur-
ing a visit to Newport Beach on
May 20 lhal her agency was
planning to add the four com·
muter trains
Specifics of the proposal ha-
ven 't been ironed out. said Heinz
Heckeroth. director of the re·
gional Callrans district that in-
cludes both counties.
Before the trains 'can be
added. for example, Callrans of·
fici als m ust negotiate with the
Santa Fe Railway, which owns
t he tracks. over kinds of im·
provements needed to increase
commuter runs .
The commutet service ls one
parl of a larger plan lovolving
local counties and Caltrans to
build several new "mu lti·modal
stations" where bus and rail
services would be coordinated.
When complete. there would
be 11 stops along the tr ain route,
at San Clemente. San Juan
Capis t rano. Miss ion Viejo.
I rvine. Santa Ana, Anaheim.
Fullerton. La Mirada. Norwalk.
Pico Rivera and at Union Sta·
lion in Los Angeles .
wisecracked
"The governor," he went on,
"has now taken an uncom
promising stance or courageous.
hard-hilting neutrality."
Gene Cubbison. a San Diego
television reporter on hand for
the luncheon later noted that he
had trave led with Wilson to
Northern Californ ia recent1)
and the mayor had steered clear
of the canal issue there.
Wilson also took shots at Gov
Brown on the Medfly e pisode.
"T he agriculture experts tell
us that the Medfly could have
been eradicated within the Santa
Clara area a year ago with a no·
nonsense decision costing St
million." Wilson observed.
Wils on , a f o rm e r a s -
sem blyman who was elected San
Diego's mayor in 1971. suggest·
ed that the ~overnor's seat was
not the only change needed.
He referred to the state
Energy Commission as "a mis·
nomer that hasn't produced one
watt or energy" and called the
state Coastal Commission a
"nightmare."
Wrong-way
driver killed
A Garden Grove rn an driving
his pickup truck on the wrong side
of t he road smashed into a parked
truck in Anaheim Wednesday
and died instantly. according to
the California Highway Patrol
Charles Hasham. 41 . apparent
ly was driving at high s peed on
Frontera Street east of G lassell
Street and south of the Riverside
Freeway at 3 :30 a m when he hit
the traJler. said Cl I P Officer Axel
M itthof.
SD trolley
'smashing' We're Listening •••
(Ille-14 SI
California Clr><tnnatl II St
San Frenc:IKO
S-t• B.n..r.
Stocll.ton
Tr.rm••
Ukiah Barstow
Jt S2 s .d ,~: : u11..i moon, ti es SAN DIEGO (AP) -The new
San Diego Trolley is off to a
smashing statt.
Wh at do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like?
Nearly all of Souther" CallfO<'"I•
1h0uld be fair lllrOUQfl Friday, wllll
tome low c-8'-Ille CC>all uP IO
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61
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In the second day after the
grand opening, a pickup truck
tore through a railroad-crossing
barrier. Two hours later. the
trolley and a car collided.
No injuries were reported in
the collis ion Tues day, which
bent the underskirt of the bright·
red, light·raU transit car.
•
Call the number below and your 'message will be recorded.
transcribed and delivered lo the appropriate editor
The same 24-hour mlswenng service may be used to record let
ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must include
their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation
calls. please
T ell us what's on you r mand
642•6086
-~
RO LEX
THE CONCEPT
OF ENDURANCE,
THE FACES OF INTEGRITY
.Rolex Oatelust. self-winding chro-
nometer. stainless steel and 14kt
gold Oyster case. Jubilee bracelet
Rolex Lady-.Oate. sett-winding with
stainless steel and 14k t gold Oyster
case. Jubilee bracelet.
Both models guaranteed pressure-
proof down to 165 feet
.. _,.., __ ,.
~HAFF jeK€ltY'
32 Fashion Island
Newport Beach• ~2040
3 Generation• or friendly pereol'\tl Mf'VIC•
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thurtday, July 23, 1981
" •
. Titani.c lianters
f a ·il, but hopeful
fioSTON (AP) -Researchers
aboard Ule vessel that scaMed
the ocean noor tor the Tltanlc ar·
rived here today empty.handed.
and the sunken luxury liner's
location remains a mystery.
"We didn't discover a whole
shlp sitting on the bottom," Mark
Olsson said after the 174-foot re·
search vessel Gyre docked. "We
found tantalizing clues . . we
now know where it's not."
Texas oil man Jack Grimm,
who financed the expedition. said,
''I'll never rest till we've solved
the secrets" or the Titanic's loca·
lion.
China assails U.S.
'power comple~'
PEKING <AP) China ac·
cused the United States today of
having a "superpower com·
pl ex," championing the rival
Nationalist government on
Taiwan and treating the ancient
country of China "like a piece of
cake to be s liced as they
pl eased."
In a di s p a tch fr om
Was hington, D.C .. the official
Xinhua news agency again de·
nounced the U.S.-Taiwan Rela-
tions Act which provides for U.S
weapons sales to Taiwan.
Inte rior funding
backed by Home
WASHING'OON <AP> -The
House passed an Sll.2 billion ap-
propriation bill for the Interior
Department Wednesday that in-
cludes several rebukes to James
G. Watt. the Interior Secretary
whose pro-development moves
have caused controversy.
One of the rebuffs to Wall was
a provision barring him from US·
ing money in the bill to lease
offshore oil drilling rights to
four areas off the Northern
California coast. The proposal to
open the areas for drilling
generated heavy c riticism in
California.
Hi11ckley reported
sane at shooting
NEW YO RK (AP> Govern·
ment psychiatrists have ten·
tatively concluded John W.
Hinckley Jr. probably was sane
•t the time he allegedly shot
President Reagan, The New
York Times reported today.
In a report from Washington.
the Times said doctors and
lawyers close to the case also
concluded that Hinckley 1s com-
petent to stand trial
Stock trading
suspension ruled
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The
Securities and Exchange Com·
mission has ordered a lO·day
suspension in trading or stock in
Triad Energy Corp., the cor·
ooralion headed by a man whose
allegations prompted the res-
ignation of Max Hugel as CIA
spy chief
The order was issued Wednes-
day as a committee of Triad's
directors said in New York that
''the bulk of the company's as·
se t s. approximate ly $2.5
million," bad been withdrawn
from the corporation's bank ac-
count.
Get'em whlle they're hotl
;
Iran candidate
slain by le/ litJt8
BEIRUT. Lebanon tAP> -A
parliamentary candidate related
to the late Iranian strongman
Ayatollah Mohammad Bet)esbU
was shot to death today by lefVJt
terrorists posing as mailmen,
Tehran radlo said. Hls 4-year·
old nephew also was killed.
The state radio and the official
Pars news agency ident!fied the
victim as HojatoJeslam Seyyed
Hasan Beheshti. a 36-year-old
Shiite Moslem clergyman and a
nephew of Ayatollah Beheshti,
the founder of the ruling Islamic
Re publican Party who was
killed by a bomb June 28 along
with 71 other top political
figures.
1
Pope: 's assailant
'Woll't appeal
ROME <AP> -Turkish ter·
rorist Mehmet Ali Agca won't
appeal his conviction and sen-
tence to life imprisonment for
the attempted murder of Pope
John Paul 11 and the shooting of
two American women, his courl·
appointed lawyer said today.
Pietro d'Ovidio visited Agca in
the maximum-security wing of
Rebibbia Prison a day after the
jury verdict and said Agca told
him he didn't want to file an ap·
peal.
Vietnam asked
for deaths info
WASHINGTON (AP> -The
State Department said Wednes·
day it is asking the Vietnamese
government for an explanation
of the deaths of two American
servicemen known lo have been
alive at the time of their cap·
tu re.
Department spokesman Dean
Fischer said the administration
is seeking information on the
deaths of Navy Cmdr. Ronald
W. Dodge and Air Force Capt.
Richard Van Dyke.
BETTER LATE -Gabriel
Isahar lsaharov, a 99·year·
old Russian immigrant who
had been denied citizenship
because he cannot speak
English, thanks Judge
Henry Bramwell, who grant-
ed him citizenship in a New
York court.
,.,...,...,....
Ho.using costs
hike infl.qtion
WASHINGTON (AP) -Houa·
ing costs, boosted by record
home·loan rate1, tent tbe na·
lion '1 lnfiatlon up 8.8 percent at
an aMual rate ln June, the gov·
ernment rep()(ted today.
June's 0.7 percent lnflatlon ln·
crease marked the fourth con·
sec uti ve month of what
economists have beeo callln1
"slngle·digit terrltory"l-below 10 percent on an annuahaed
basis. U the June rate contlnued
for 12 straight months, the an·
nual inflation rate would be 8.8
percent.
Deputy White House press
secretary Larry Speakes said to·
day that "June's results ,
In rental costs. the smaUest in
more than a year.
All the figures are adjusted tor
normal seasonal variations in
prices.
The CPI ls the most widely
publlciied inflation index, but it
has been criticized for the heavy
welgbt it gives to housing costs,
particularly mortgage costs.
Although mortgage rat.es have
clearly risen rapidly in recc'lt
months, reacttlng an average of
16.75 percent in early June,
critics point out that relatively
few Americans are buying
houses in any one month.
Therefore. they say. housing
costs should not be allowed to
"Inflation has definitely slowed, but
is far from subdued. Our overall goal
must be to win the inflation fight." .
together with the GNP (gross
national product), emphasize
the overall moderation in inlla· tionary pressures, which are
bringing a measure of welcome
relief to Amer1can consumers."
produce as big a swing in the
CPI as they did in June.
The Washington Star will cease publication August 7. Thb u
today's front page and accompanying sectiom.
The improvement from last
year's 12.4 percent annual rate
has been due largely to lower·
than-expected energy and food
prices, and both increased only
moderately again in June.
Prices for fu els and other
utilitilies rose 0.9 percent in
June, giving homeowners
further problems as charges for
electrictricity and water and
sew age services rose substan·
ti ally. the report said.
··The food and beverage com·
ponent increa~ed 0.2 percent in
June, continuing the moderating
trend evident throughout the
year," the report added. Washington Star
'shutting down'
But a big increase in housing
costs, which had begun showing
up in May, came on strong in
June. according to the Depart·
ment of Labor's Consumer Price
Index.
The housing component of the
index rose 1.1 percent in June.
accounting for about three·
fourths of the overall inflation
increase.
Jn other categories
Transportation costs rose
0.3 percent in June, with new car
prices ris ing 1 I per cent.
However. gasoline prices fell 1.5
percent. about the same decline
as in the previous two months. WASHINGTON CAP> -The
Wa s hington Star will cease
publication Aug . 7, its parent
company, Time Inc .. announced
today.
That will leave the nation's capital with only one daily
newspaper, the morning Post.
Time President Richard
Munro cited the Star's mounting
financial losses and said, "This
is a sad day for all those con·
nected with The Star -1ts
readers; its talented, loyal staff
and many of us at Time Inc. who
tried our utmost to turn it into a
profitable enterprise."
Company Vice President
Donald M. Wilson said the
newspaper's employees were be·
Ing told of the closing at an early
morning meeting. The paper
employs 1,427 persons full time:
the newspaper said it would try
to help lhem ftnd jobs.
The announcement apparenUy
caught both Star employees and
management al the rival Post
by surprise.
A Star editor who asked not be
named and who was at the
morning employee meeting said,
"Eve r ybody's in shock ...
Everybody knew the paper was
not in good shape. but nobody
knew it was this bad."
At the Pos t, s pokeswoman
Virginia Rodriguez said top
management officials "had no
inkling" of the Star's impending
demise.
Unly Wednesday night, the
Star source said, Editor Murray
J . Gart was trying to convince
an employee not to quit the
paper. Two days ago, the source
said, Gart had told subordinate
editors they could fill vacancies
on their staffs.
Munro's statement said that,
"despite our substantial invest-
ment, the newspaper continues
to lose money and shows no pros-
•
pect of financial improvement.
Regrettably, we have no choice
but to close it."
Home-ownership costs rose
even more -about 1.5 percent
but that increase was soft·
tened in the overall housing
figure by a slim 0.4 percent rise
Medical costs rose 1 per-
cenl
Prices for clothing and up-
keep rose 0 1 percent after
declining slightly in May.
The entertaninment index
rose 0.4 percent
Yet. the editor in chief of Time
Inc., Henry Grunwald, said in a
s tatement that "many ob·
servers. including sharp critics,
have said that the Washington
Star is the best afternoon daily
in the United Stales." And Post
Executive Editor Benjamin C.
Bradlee, in a recent interview
with the Wall Street Journal,
challenged others to "name me
a bette r evening paper in
America.··
Skywalk removed
Time lnc. bought the Star in
March 1978 from Texas finan-
cier Joe L. Allbritton for $20
million. Time said then that it
would invest $60 million over
five years in an attempt to make
the newspaper profitable.
Mayor calls it 'vital evidence'
Munro's statement said the
paper has been losing money at
the rate of about $20 million a
year.
It had once been Washington's
premier newspaper. but in re-
cent years had only a fraction of
the rival Post's circulation and
advertising. In July 1979, the
Star added a morning street-
sales edition that went head-to-
head with the Post.
The Post's ci rculation. as of
Sept. 30. 1980, was 584,500 daily
and 820,000 on Sundays.
But the Star's cir culation ..
chairman of \he board James R.
Shepley said in an announce-
ment, had fallen to 323,000 daily
and 294,000 on Sundays.
He said Time Inc. was pursu-
ing the possibility of selling the
newspaper and that discussions
have been held with several pro·
s pective buyers, but that none
had been substantive.
The Washington Star was
founded as The Evening Star in
1852. selling for a penny a copy
with a circulation of about 1,000.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP>
Using torches and a huge crane
inside the Hyatt Regency Hotel
lobby, work crews early today
began dismantling the remain·
ing "skywalk" because the
building's owner feared it could
be hazardous.
A lawyer charged the move
would "diminish the ability" to
prove who was al fault in the
collapse of two other walkways,
and the mayor considered the
s pan as .. possible vital
evidence," his spokesman said.
The two other spans fell in a
torrent of steel and concrete Fri-
day night, killing 113 people and
injuring al least 186.
In another development. The
Kansas City Times reported lo·
day that a large section of the
lobby roof of the hotel collapsed
while under construction in 1979,
but it never was reported
publicly.
Police and the mayor's office
had said last week that the four·
section. 120-foot third span was
cracked and could collapse on
rescue \IJOrkers.
The tttlrd-level skywalk was
removed because experts felt it
could present a hazard. "We felt
it was unacceptable to continue
any condition that presented any
possibility that the events of Fri-
day night could be repeated in
any degree." said James C.
McClune. president of the Crown
Center Redevelopment (;;orp.,
whi ch owns the building. ..
The walkway. already ex·
a mined in place by lawyers and
investigators, could be ex -
a m ined in a safer location after
~t was dis mantled . McClune i;aid
A s pokes m a n for Mayor
Richard Berkley said the mayor
was awakened by a reporter
about 2 a.m. today and told of
the removal.
The spokesman, who asked
not to be identified. said Berkley
was concerned that there are "a
lot of activities taking place in
secret." and that the mayor con·
s idered the third walkway
"possible vital evidence" in the
investigation of the disaster.
Lantz We lch . a lawyer
representing some of the victims
of the collapse. said he had con-
s idered "getting a judge out of
bed" to halt the removal but de·
cided to wait. While the hotel
has a legal right to remove the
walkway because it was on
private property. its removal
would "diminish the ability" to
prove who was at fault in the
disaster . he said.
DUCAN
BAR-B-Q
CROWN
HARDWARE
OUTDOOR
# 1500 Sugg. retail SALE
'449"8 '349" .......
#2000 Sugg. retail SALi
'484~ ... , ...
(Includes rear raised burner
for rotlaserie and includes
rotl ... rie)
Porcelain grills quartz ignition
. LP Of natural gas
5·yr. burner warranty
1 ·yr. parts and labor
Wettcllff ,.. .........
1024 IMn• Ave .
Newport Beech ........ •
SUMMER LIVING
11" llack
Colors
22" ltock
Cotors
Harbor View Center "--'-.....,..o.9M
1814 San Miguel Or
N~r:,eecn
Orange Cout DAILY PIL.OT(T'hurtday, July 23, 1981 ~· I
Fumes linger from chemical kah
Protesting vets
stir security alert
Evacuation order remains for 600 in truck mishap near Colorado River
GEORGE AlR FORCE BASE
<AP> -Four Vietnam veterans
on a 900-mile protest march
from New Mexico to Camp
Pendleton in Southern California
caused a ruU security alert at
this desert outpost when base
personnel mistook them for ter-
rorists.
Because the veterans and two
sympathisers were wearing
Army fatigues and carrying
semi·automaUc weapons Wed·
nesday, guards reacted as if
they were terrorists, said Maj.
Joe Moore, chief of security
police at the base, 70 miles
northeast of Los Angeles.
Group members are protest-
ing what they say has been un-
fair government treatment of
Vietnam veterans. As they
neared the base, guards met
them with M-16 rifles. But the
marchers, who were accom-
panied by sheriff's deputies, had
already put their unloaded
weapons in the back of a pickup
truck, said former Marine Mike
Chavez, 34 , leader of the
marchers.
Seized tunaboats
/ace penalties
SAN DIEGO CAP> -A tuna industry spokes man says two
tunaboats seized since July 10
face fines and penalties of up to
$2 million after Mexican
authorities seized them for al·
leged fishing violations.
Jose Munoz. a spokesman for
the American Tunaboat Associa·
lion, said Wednesday it would be
a week before $1.6 million in
confiscated catches were re-
moved from the two San Diego.
based tunaboats, the Cindy Ann
and United States, at the
mainland port of Mazatlan.
Bid to block
stock buy nixed
LOS ANGELES CAP) -A
federal judge has rejected a re-
quest by Western Airlines to pre·
vent AJr Florida System Inc.
from buying more stock in the
Los Anaelea-based airline.
Laat week, Air Florida re-
ceived approval from the Civil
Aeronautics Board to acquire 50
percent of Western and put the
stock in a voting trust pending
CA 8 approval of a merger. The
Miami company presently owns
11.57 percent -or about 1.5
million shares -or Western.
Violence erupts
at San Quentin
SAN QUENTIN CAP)
Prison guards were called on to
quell several incidents here. in·
cludine a prison yard melee
that left 16 people with minor in·
j uries.
Nine guards and seven in·
mates were injured Wednesday
when a struggle over possession
or a marijuana cigarette erupted
into a brawl, according to a
prison spokesman.
Quake loans
made available
WESTMORELAND, Calif.
(AP ) -The U.S. Small Business
Administration has formally
declared the April 26, 1981 ,
earthquake a disaster, making
certain homeowners, renters
and business owners eligible for
low-interest government loans.
Five homes and one business
were so badJy damaged by the
quake, which measured 5.6 on
the Richter scale, that they had
to be condemned and torn down.
Madera inmates
exposed to TB?
BLYTHE (AP> -An evacua·
lion order remained ln effect to·
day for more than 600 of the 2,000
people who ten their homes in two
Colorado River towns when
poisonous chemical fumes leaked
from a tanker truck travellna on
Interstate 10.
As cleanup crews removed the
residual of a large pool of nitric
acid that also escaped from the
rie, sheriff's spokesmen In Yuma
County, Aris. -just across the
border from California -said the
600 real dents of the rt ver com·
munity' of Ehrenberg would
probably be allowed to ret:um
home later today.
·'The wind is blowing from the
west to the east (from the spill Into
Ehrenberg) and that's the bit fac-
tor," said Yuma County Deputy
Jerrell Albrecht.
Re~idents of the Blythe Marina
trailer park also were prevented
from returning home when the
rest of the evacuees from th.ls de·
sert, border town 200 miles east of
Los Anteles were told they could
1ohomeabout8p.m. Wednesday.
Eleven people were treated for
acid fumes Inhalation, itchy skin,
and beat exhaustion after the 6: 30
a.m. splll Wednesday, but none
were hospitalized.
The accident aent a toxic cloud
billowing.1,000 feet Into the sky
above the two communities on
either side of the Colorado River
which forms the border between
Ariton a and California.
Riverside County Fire Captain
Joe Sheble said limestone was
poured on the pool of explosive
acid that he estimated was 20 feet
wide, about 150 to 200 feet lone.
and four Inches deep.
Interstate 10 was re·opened
Wednesday evening as crews
from ITI Co. of Loog Beach re-
moved dirt that had absorbed the
chemical when It leaked from a
W.S. Hatch Co. truck.
The truck earned 8,000 gallons
of the acid, which ls used to propel
rockets, but authorities were un-
sure how much leaked out.
Sheble sald a leaking valve on
the tanker caused tbe spill, whlch
was noticed by drl ver Emory Hoff
of Escondido as he drove along In·
terstate 10.
After the driver pulled off the
road, the chemical melted the
truck tires and the rig caughtfire,
but it did not explode. Sheble said.
Several of the 11 people Injured
were firefighters, sheriff's dep-
~tles and cleanue crews mem·
bers who suffered heat exhaus·
lion whlle wearing heavy protec·
tive clothing and masks in the 100
degree-plus beat, said John Gep-
ford , administrator of Palo Verde
Hospital in Blythe.
Authorities quickly evacuated
an eight-square-mile area or
Blythe, as well as Ehrenberg's
population of 600. The Red Cross
set up overnight evacuation cen-
ters at high schools for the Ehren-
berg and Blythe Marina res!-
Al'W .........
MADERA (AP) -Tests or·
dered after a prisoner was
diagnosed with active
tuberculosis indicate 13 of more
than 30 Madera County jail in-
mates have been exposed to the
disease.
REFINERY BLAZE -Smoke billows from the
Martinez Shell Oil Co. refinery in Martinez.
Calif., after an explosion and fire that forced
the evacuation of more than 100 employees.
The blast was reportedly caused by an oil line
obstruction. The fire was contained within an
hour and no one was hurt, a company
spokesman said.
WESTCLIFF
PLAZA
ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE
SANK OF).Mf:PX.A
CHARLES BARR JEWELERS
CROWN HARDWARE
DICK VERl'OJ SPOHSWEAR
OR. LOJ El.DER optometmt
HAIRHANDl.ERS SALQ.i
HALLJDA Y'S MEN'S CLOTHI'(;
HICKORY FARMS
specialty food item•
HUMPTY DUMPTY children·, clothnq
JEAN OAH. desiqner ond bettet 'f'O"SW90'
LA GAU.ERIA
et.90nce ;,, l~
MARKET BASKET
MES AMIES TEENS
NANCY DUlll-I ANTlOJE.S
NEWPORT BALBOA SAV1tlK35
P,4.PER UNUMITED
qifts ond stotionet\
SAV.Q.l DRUGS
STOREKEEPER
1rodtionaj sportswear
VET A'S INTIMATE APPARa
WESTCLIFf Cl.EAt-ERS
WESTCLIFf COWERS
QOl.fmel WOf9 ond collecft~
WESTCUFf~
XAVIER'S A.~ST
Qualit11 in /ashion and services with that personal touch
, ,,
dents. aherirf's department
spokesmen said.
The acid "can be fatal if
swallowed and It can aet In
through the skin if it touches
anyone and causes chemical
burns," said Riverside County
Fire Department engineer Steve
Harding. He said it also can ex·
plode iflttouches waler.
The chemical, used an an ox·
idizer in rocket propellant ror
some space launchers, had ten
Vandenberg Air Force Base, 150
miles northwest of Los Angeles,
by truck on Tuesday
Disabled man
left to spend
night in car
RIVERBANK <AP> -A
quadriplegic man was forced to
stay overnight in a car here
becaus e the wheels of
bureaucracy moved too slow to
aid him.
A Riverbank police sergeant
and an Oakdale paramedic
worked through the night to as-
sist 37-year-old Loren Dale Liv-
ingston Sr.
But it look about 12 hours to
get the Salida man admitted to
Sceni c General Hospital in
Modesto.
"It's just like leaving a baby
in the street," he said Tuesday.
·•If they found a child. the
wouldn't leave it there."
Livingston was left alone last
Thursday when a Stanislaus
County deputy arrested his son.
Loren Jr .. 18.
Their car failed to start after
they stopped al a liquor store
and the son called the highway
patrol for help. Authorities dis-
covered outstanding traffic war-
rants against the son and took
him into custody, leaving Liv-
ingston to fend for himself.
'· 1 was really frustrated and
disappointed there wasn't some
agency to help him," said Sgt.
Mike Lyons, who was sum·
mooed after the arrest.
He and paramedic William
Gowan dialed their way through
several public and private agen-
cies before Livingston was re-
united with hi s son 19 hours
later.
• I
Or'ange Cout DAILY PtLOTIThuntday. July 23. 1911
• .,,__,.lid.
.. "Pekin Man, meet Heidelburg Man."
~ericans OK
Draft for men
' NEW YORK CA P > -The military draft should
M reinstated, but for men onJy, Americans said In
~ latest Associated Press·NBC News poll.
'l The public also agreed with current prohibi·
a that keep women who are in the armed
~s out of combat jobs.
By a 59 percent to 33 percent margin, the We bllc said they favor reinstatement of the draft lbt the armed services. Eight percent of the 1,599
Multa polled by telephone across the nation July
.)¥-14 were undecided.
:-.If the draft were reinstated. 52 percent said,
i:hey wouJd oppose the drafting of women. Forty-
du-ee percent said they favor drafting women, and
S percent said they were either not sure or opposed
f.o'drafting anybody.
··An executive order by former President
ter last year reinstated draft registration
which had ended in 1975, two
years after the last ci vilian was
dra fted. Five million young
m en are registered for the
draft, but none can be con·
scr ipted wHhout action by
Congress.
Last year . Carte r asked
that women be included in the
draft, but Congress refused.
The U.S. Supreme Court, in a
.....,.. .. recent ruling upholding the all·
male draft. cited federal law prohibiting women in
military combat.
Americans agreed, 59 percent to 36 percent,
~at women should not be allowed to hold combat
J~ in the armed forces. Five percent were not
sdre.
On lbe general question of whether the draft
Jhould be reinstated, 68 percent of the men and 52
~~enl of the women answering the poll said they
't.~cn-reinstatement. ;t, )tinority group members were only slightly in •rTOt of reinstating the draft, while more than 60
JM!l"Cent of the whites favored it. The only age
~p which opposed reinstatement was the 18-to·
~-y~.r-olda -lhose most likely to be drafted.
r 1_Arnong those who favored reinstatement of the
'dTftt, baJf opposed drafting women, 45 percent
favored drafting women and 5 percent were not
'lure or opposed drafting anyone.
• Among those who opposed reinstatement of Uk draft, opposition to drafting women was even
4tronger; 55 percent.
On the question of drafting women, men were
~ut evenly divided while women were strongly
qpposed. Drafting women was favored by people
•ho supported the Equal Rights Amendment. but
apposed by a more than 2· l margin by people
against the ERA.
People who favored reinstating the draft were
-'early 2·1 against women holding combat jobs,
while those against the draft were only narrowly
a11inst women in combat.
More men than women were against women in
combat. Fifty.five percent of the women and 63 1-~rcent of the men said they oppose women in
.&fmbat . .
'\' Petitioner told
;to go fly a kite
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Kite peddlers on ilatn Francisco's picturesque Fisherman's Wharf ~not have a fundamental right to be free of com-
~ition, a state Court of Appeal has ruled. t Hlgh As A Kite of San Francisco Inc. and
~tl~rs who own kite stores or sell kites sought to ·~t aside a license to sell kites granted John F.
l>Oherty by the San Francisco Board of Permit Ap-
peals. Doherty already is licensed to sell balloons .
., A San Francisco Superior Court denied their
J«jtien. .
• The appeal court said the board correctly
~·nted out that its responsibility Is to bear
~nee and use its "own sound dilcrelion in pro-
Gtlnt the public interest . . . "
... The court said there was evidence Doherty
•iad been selling in the area about 25 yeart ~fore
,dlere were any street artists or "anything t.e
jown there" and before any peddler's license wu
bMIUlred.
:•, It aaid one witness contended if Doherty got an
••}Uded permit to aell kites, one of the aix kite
'llote• would go out of buainess. But It aald this wit·
i "'
1 conceded no kite store in the vicinity bad re·
Uy gone out of business.
arents bui/J, park
\
~~mM "'Piiat Classlfleds.
-------AIOU1
"No response from
the Register -hired
thru the Pilot."
I $1 :99 IGIEAT -h DINNll
0 c Good for thrM plecH of Juicy, golct.n t>town K.,,tuclty Good for nine plecff of Juicy, golct.n t>rown ~ntucky
.,, Fried Chicken, plua alngle aervlnga of col• al1w, m .. hed Fried Cfllcken, with four IOlla, 1 l1roe co11 al1w, • 1-. 0 Pot•IOH Ind 011¥)', Incl • toll. Umll two offer• pet INllhed pot1tOM and. medium 0'1VY· Umlt two off.,.
Z purcl\Qe. Coupon good only for combination whit~ pet purchlM. Coupon good only for oornblnatlon wtll'-1
~~tI @642-5678
I Ofderl. Cuetornet paya alt Nlllllcable aalet tu. dark ordera. Cv1tomef paya 111 ~llcable lllM t&ll.
030 Oller explrn A1111u1t 2, 11181 Offer H QirM I Auou1t2,1ee1
charge It~-by phone
From South Laguna & North County
call 540-1220 toll-free.
030
Price• mey \'ety •I Prtcea mey v.,y 1t par·
l)et11cloetl"O IOe• I tlclpatlng tocattona. Good
!lone Good only In only In Sovthern
Sou!Mln C.llloml• Cltlloml1 where you IN --·you-1 1n. Cltlci.~ knctwlotl Ille Chicken Sandwich
Window e.nner. Window Binner.
--I
CUSTOM CALLING.
FOIAIYONE WHO CAN'T STAND TO BE TIED DOWN.
. " . ....
.
I~
If you're the kind of person who really uses the phone, but
can't stand to be tied down by it, Pacific Telephone has four
easy ways to help. We call them Custom Calling Services~
If you don't like hangfilg around waitin for im rtant
calls;alil FOrWarding is made 1ust or you. ust a 2.oopef
month service charge gives you automatic transfer of ...,
your calls to any number ~ou wish, 24 hours-a-day, in or
out-of ·town.
!f.you like the idea of being in more than one place at a timQiou'll
want 3Jf y calling. You can call one friend across town and an er friend way around the world and all three of you can talk. What a
great way to get together for just a $3.00 per month service charge.
If you'te on the phone a lot and others can't reach you, then you'll ~Tut Waitfug. A soft beep tone lets you know someone else 1s Ing. A simple press of the button connects you to the other call, while
.)
~"
keeping your first call on hold. It's like having an extra incom·
ing line.for only $3.00 a month.
![youcallthesamenumbersallthetime S Calling
can make 1t p~n m seam s. ust press one or two d'igits
on your phone and it automatically dials the
full number for you. You get 8 Speed Call
numbers for $2.00 and 30 for sa.oo a month.
Visit your local PhoneCenter Store to find out
more about these economical Custom Calling Services.
You really save money by getting all four services
for only $8.00 a month; with just a one-time rrs
$6.00 setup charge, whether you get one,
two ... or all four services. Best of all, you
can stay on top of things without staying FQR~ 'I
tied to your phone. I~
@Pacific l8lephone
COSTA MESA
Colla Meta VUtqe 3033 Briat~
250 Otte Stmrt
BAST ANAHEIM Eall Anlhtlm
=."f.1-.= Ave.
GARDEN GROVE mn C1rdtn Grove Blvd.
CLIND.\LI 121 S. <Antnl Avaiue
"UR'~~ Plue
HOIJ.YWOOD u• N. Gower Street
lUI N. HllWend A¥tnot
KUNTDIGTOH PAH
3175 r. Aftftue
INCLIWOOD
111 N. lA BM ""'""
IRVINE ArbotVUlqe
14085 Jeffttr R09cl
LOS ANGELES 4t7 E. Vernon AYenue
7t0 s. °"" Sln!et 1t6 S. StMl)O Avmue
J010 Wllthlrt Blvd.
1'30 W, Mancl\Htcr Avt1111e
5'55 North F'ipel'lll
3149~St-
~rn:A.v.=
Wd·Wllahlre Arn 5'14 Wllthlre Blvd. -w. ·3rc1• Stftet ~v~ ~~wy,
MONT!BELLO
2181VlaCampo
MONTEREY PARK Montcrty Pl~ Shoopinc Mall 404 D S. Adlndc Blvd.
NEWHALL 26076 Peachland AYen11e
NORTH HOLLYWOOD Vllln Plul 964l t.urel C.nyon Blvd.
NIFlRIDGE ~Ctnter Releda Blvd.
O~G! ~Coumrr Center 7 Mein Stl'HI
PALM Dr\ LE
9'll E. Palmdak Blvd.
PA SA DINA 371 N. Allen AvttM
~':.Blff.
\
RESEil.\ ~Plua 17224 Slticoy
RIVBRSJt>I Canyofl Creal Town Center 5225 Can70ll Cmt Dr.
De Anaa Collntry Plau 7700 Llmcnlte Avenue
TYier Mail 10166 Map>lia Ave.
SAN CLEMi NTB
Pico Plul 89 Calle de lnduttriat
SAN PIDRO Gl*nVilluc 28098 South"WCllem Avtnue
SANTA ANA Seni. Ana §.\uart l2l8 l. "17tll Strtt\
SHUMAN OAKS '"°' v.-.. ""·
SIMI 2816 Cochran Street
STUDIO CITY 12112 Vtt1tura Blvd
TARZANA 19'18 Vflltura Blvd
~J.... 2210 W. Arttlla Blvd.
VANNUYS 6930 Van Nura Blvd.
VENTURA 8-no Ventwa Ctntcr 325 S. Milta ROid
WISTANAHllM 618 S. Broakllum
~~DHILLS
~entura Blvd ••
: .. t I .
..
)
A,.,...._....
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!Thursday, July 23. 1981 ~·
Admirals in charge Coast Guard
needs help of Navy boot camps WASHINGTON CAP> _ eom.
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The
Navy is putting admirals in
charge of Its three boot camps to
show, it says. that it regards the
training camps as increasingly
important.
A spokesman said Capt. War-
ren Aul, commande r of the
North Island Naval Air Station,
will be promoted to rear admiral
and put In charge of the San
Diego Naval Training Center.
Rear Adm Pauline M. Hart·
ington will take over the Orlan-
do. Fla., training center from a
captain. She is the Cirst woman
picked to run a boot camp.
A captain in charge at Great
Lakes, 111:. will be relieved by
Rear Adm. James H. Flatley
Ill, a Navy spokesman said.
·'This is recognizing the im·
portance of boot camp, and
there already has been signs of
that as we lighten up training
with more drill hours scheduled
and more attention to dis ·
cipllne," he said.
"As the Navy builds toward a
600-ship Navy, it is going to need
good people to man those ships
and we have got to get off to a
good start as we do that."
15 cy0 . to 50<ro Off
ever1thlng ln the store
mandant John 8 . Hayes says the
Coast Guard doesn't have the
ships or personnel to step up its
war against drug smuggling by
sea.
Hayes told a congressional
s ubcommittee that the Coast
Guard's goal is to seize 75 per·
cent of the mar ijuana smuggled
Into the United States by sea,
but it only is able to intercept 15
percent lo 20 percent.
Without more s hips and peo-
ple, Hayes said, the Coast Guard
could not even meet Its goal by
giving up search and rescue
missions, enforcement of fish·
eries regulations and other ac·
livities.
ABORIGINAL ARTISTS -Members of an will perfor m in New York before a concert
Australian aboriginal group pose at a New tour of the United States. lu\1 13, 2 4 and ~~ s ~~~ oj our York press conference. The aboriginal artists
. bracelets . earr L 9, We proudly
Pool contractor suing actor Including nng~~ndise is on sa J .Collection and
quality m:er t Corum . concor
feature Piage . ASPEN. Colo. <AP> An
Aspen contractor is suing actor
George Hamilton in Aspen Dis·
trict Court for $2,033, the amount
of money he has refused to pay
for work done on the indoor
s wimming pool at his home
here.
Hamilton's Aspen attorney,
Richard Neiley, however .. said
the bill submitted by the Weld·
ing Co. of Aspen for work done
in March was "exorbitant" and
t.e believes the company "may
have been trying lo sting" his
client.
Thomas Crumpacke r . at·
SKI
paid only $1,333 of the $3,366 bill. torney for the welding company,
said a Hamilton aide ordered the
actor's pool sand-blasted to re-
move a coat of paint. The job
was lo be done during the three
da ys immediately before
Hamilton's arrival here, he said.
Hamilton lives in Beverly Hills.
We lding Co. e mployees
worked "into the wee morning
hours" to finish the job in time,
Crumpacker said.
Neiley said the actor felt that
the charge of up to S43 per hou r
by the sand blasters was too
high.
Records show that Hamilton
bought the home in Aspen's
fashionabl e West End for
$750.000 in September 1979.
d watches. concor ~!Jell ®alhe!J R~~1:fi~~
\SLAND • NEWPO
He and Nelley agree that the
dispute arose over damage that
allegedly occurred to tiles atop
the pool during the blasting. As
a result of the dispute. Hamilton
Fire man su ccumbs
McFARLAND <AP> Kern
County fire captain, Donald
Moore. 44, died Tuesday after col-
lapsing while lifting a hose line
over a fence.
35 FASHION
FRIDAY ancl SATIRDAY ONLY
JIL Y 24th and 25th
RT llA T SKI SALE
(for Locals And friends)
All Tennis Merchandise 50% Off
free stringlwith
purchase of a racket .
• SHOES
• CLOTHING
• • • Don't wait for our tremendous August Sale, sltop Saturday for
Great Savings • • •. IJeat tlte crowds • • • great selection.
Rossignol 1981 • 82 Skis
15% OFF
This sale is being held
for our local friends and
neighbors.
----BOOTS---..
s
K
I s
1·2
AUTHIER
HEXCEL
SPALDING
THE SKI
CHOOSE FROM THESE
fAMOUS BRAND SKIS
ALL40%0FF
UP CLOTHING
TO 70% OFF
ALLSll
CLOTHING
.$I 0000 Parkas
as low as 5 2 995
SAii .UIS All 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
-
I
"'. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 23, 1981
Games ban attempt
lacked preparation
The Fountain Valley City
Council's recent attempt to ban
electronic games from liquor
stores turned into quite an em·
barrassment for the elected of·
ficials.
The city already requires a
conditional use permit before any
store or restaurant can install
coin.operated games.
The Planning Commission
has rejected several permit re·
quests from liquor stores. con·
tending the machines would draw
youngsters into otherwise adult-
oriented businesses.
The commission urged the
City Council to adopt a new law
forbidding game machines in
liquor stores.
The new ordinance was pre·
sented to the council June 9 and
was approved unanimously, with
little discussion among tfle coun·
cil members and no comments
from the audience.
Three weeks later, when the
law was presented for its re·
quired second reading, local
game distributors and liquor
store owners argued their side of
the issue.
The' objectors called the new
law discriminatory because the
games wou ld still be permitted in
convenienc e m a rkets a nd
restaurants. Also. the law would
prevent adull li quor store
c ustomers rrom playing the
games at the e locations.
The liquor stor e owners
claimed they supe rvise youna
people more closely than most
other businesses.
One liquor store spokesman
argued that any problems as·
soclated with game usage can be
controlled by exlsllna laws gov·
ernlng truancy, loitering and
curfews.
Queried about whether they
had received any formal com·
plaints about electronic games at
liquor stores. the city's police
chief and plannipg director ad·
milted they had not.
The council then reversed
itselr. voting down the proposed
law 1·4. <Barbara Brown voted in
favor of it .>
After additional debate over
whether to send the game or·
dinance back to the Planning
Commission, the council finally
voted to drop the whole idea
pending more solid evidence of
problems associated with the
game machines.
The episode displays some
careless work by the city starr
and the elected oHicials.
In their haste lo solve a
problem with new regul ations,
Fountain Va lley oHicials forgot
to find out if the problem exists.
Celebration kudos
During the annual budget re-
view sessions of the past few
months, city and school district
offi cials have frequently com-
p I a i ned that c urrent tight
finances leave little room for
"frills."
Some c ity s e r vices a nd
school programs have been cut
becau!.t' of rising expenses and
declining revenues.
In light of these problems, it
was heartening to see that Hunt·
ington Beach once again was
able to present its annual Fourth
of July parade and fireworks pro·
gram without using a single tax
dollar.
The holiday activities' $41.000
expenses were paid through con·
lributions from residents a nd
local businesses. as well as
t hrough ticket sales to t he
fireworks pro~ra m .
Huntington Beach Public In·
fo rmation Officer Bill Reed re-
ports the city was repaid for all
law enfor cement and street
closure expenses associated with
the holiday events.
The 1981 celebration was a
popular success: a crowd of
150,000 to 200,000 watched the
parade and the fireworks pro·
gram was a sellout.
Prior to Proposition 13, the
Fourth or July cele bration was
partially paid for by the city. In
recent years. however, it has
been organized by volunteers and
operated without tax dollars.
These volunteers deserve
credit for continuing an enjoya-
ble tradition and for setting an
example or enriching their com -
munity without asking for a gov-
ernment handout.
Ordina nce changes aue
The Huntin~ton Beach City
Co uncil has fo rmed a committee
to make numerous technical
changes and one major overall
change in the city's election cam·
paign ordinance.
The major change is to make
the ordinance enforceable. City
Attorney Gail Hutton says the
present ordinance can't be en·
forced. Therefore. she says, it's
worthless. The present ordinance seeks
to limit individual campaign con·
tributions to $200. But because of
several loopholes. including no
limitations on money donated to
a committee working "on behalf"
or a candidate. the donation limit
isn't enforceable and is easily
abused.
City Council members have
decided that they want a simple,
easy·to-read ordin ance that does
wt)at it's intended to do.
Reasonable Ii mitations to
•
financial donations have been
discussed by the city officials but
the overall direction or the pro-posed revised ordinance hasn't
crystallized.
However, the council mem·
bers seem to agree that an en-
forceable ordinance should be de-
vised before nex t spring's
municipal election for four city
council seats and the city at·
torney's office.
It appears that the council
also agrees that donations made
in the final days of a campaign
should be reported before elec-
tion day. That way voters have a
chance to see who is financially
supporting the candidates.
Both seem to be good points
that will serve the best interests
of the voling public.
And, finally, the City Council
has decided to repeal tpe present
ordinance, which legal analysis
indicates is ""eless anyway.
Op1n1on<> exprr.,.,ec, tn lhe <>Pa<e above are those of the Daily Pilot. 01ner views e1t·
pre!>sed on th•'> pdge are I hose ot their aulhors and art 1sh. Reader <omment 1s 1nv•t·
ed. Addre'>'> Ttw ~tllfy Pilot, PO Box lSf>-0, Costa Mesa, CA 92b2b. PhOne 17141
642 ·021
L.M. Boyd I Romantic montha
It is in the autumn moreso not in
the s pring that a young man's rancy
turns to love, according to the
statisticians. Their study or the birth
records indicates May, June and July
are the three least romantic months.
November and December are the
most rom:inlic. they say
Three out or (ive wild animals do
th Ir huntinl(, foraging, whatever. in
\he night.
Sad, but true. you catch a baby
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
J
..
ocelot the same way you catch a
baby &orllla. You s hoot the parents
first. Those who purport to know say
there's no other way.
Amertcan astronauts can't be more
than 6 feet tall. The design of their
equipment limits tht height to that
Those who teach Illiterate
grownups say such persons u.sually
can team t.o write simple letten lo
about three weeks.
Thomn ... Hiley
Pu bit.,.
T'"""'-A. MuJ'Pftl•
Editor
B•rlNlr• ICi'itMCli
Editor••• P ... adltoi'.
' Nuke hoonde>ggie cost soars
WASlllNGTON Government boon·
doggies arc always good for evanescent
heudlines Rut if they are really to slick
in the public craw. two considerations
are usually necessary: The fi asco must
occur under high auspices. and the
story must have a certain oomph capa
blc of kandhng pubhc interest.
By all the oomph indicators, the
Clinch River bre<'dl•r reactor at Oak
Ridge, Tenn .. may not register high. ft
is an unheraldt•d project. with an
awkward name, well off the beaten
path. But it is a mult1 m1llion·dollar
fiasco lx>rn or fraud and mismanage
ment
The plant. darling of the nuclear
power Industry. 1s supposed to produce
mor e nuclear fuel than it uses. which
sounds li ke a bargain. Hut it has been
no bargain for the taxpayers who are
unwittingly paying for il
ORIGINALLY, it wa:. lo be in opera·
lion by December 1979. at a cost of S669
million But it has a lready cost Sl
billion. and the latest t•st1mate 1s that it
won't be operational until Februar y
1990. By that time. the bill will be al
least $3.2 billion.
How could this happen., ft's easy.
when the government 0Hic1als who are
s upposed to keep track of the project's
contractors shirk their responsibilities.
According to a spokeswoman for the
Clinch River project. about 80 percent
of the cost i ncrease was due to
circumstances beyond oHichtl control.
In other words, the bureaucrats were
responsible for "only" $500 million of
the estimated S2.5 billion overrun
That 's b<1d enough
But it 's <1ctually worse than that In·
\'t·~t 1gator~ for Rep John Dingell. D
Q
-JA-l:K-Al-D-IR-11-1 -d
M1 t·h .. lold my ai;sociates Tony Capac·
c10 and Howard Rosenberg that at least
three-fourths of Clinch River's prime
contracts are open e nded. that is with
no firmJy set tosts or completion dates.
The investigators warned that even
the s taggering S3.2 billion estimate may
be optimistic It falls to lake mto ac
count the pol4s1bility that the entire
Clinth River f<1t11tty might have to b<'
n•located for s<.1fl'ty reasons
A 1978 NU('l.•;AR Regulatory Com
mission n.•port liste~ nearly 100 sarety
problems A Clinch River official said
m any of the problems had been ad
dressed even before the NRC report.
but the commissfon tw4 uot yet checked
to see 1f the m·edl•d corrections "ere ac
tually mude
1-'raud has also plagued the project
One intern<.11 Department of Energy
memorandum told how an employee or
Atomics lnll'rnational. a sub('Ontractor,
rece1,·ed a Sl.000 interest free loan tn
return for <1ch <1m·e information on con
tra ct~. <1nd :i nothl•r S5,000 in cold cash
for bid prin· information
The FBf found lh'Ut l"o purchas ing of
ficwb mvt•ntt.'d bogus C"ompames. from
whic·h lhl'V l'la1med to ha\'l' solicited
bids for 1t~·ms nl'l'dcd at Clinc h River
This resullt'd an over eh<1 rgcs running as
h1~h as 800 pen·ent
Tyi.m·al of the caval1t·r "<IY contrac·
tors behan• "hen L'nelt· Sugar 1:. paying
the bilb Ill an incident rt'ported in
another antt•rnal OOF. clol'umcnt dated
Feb. 1:1. Jt disclost•s that the chief of
Westinli(houst•s data· pl'O('l'SMng racilit~
al Clineh H1vl'r had IH•en us ing a
S200.000 computt•r for hi:. 1Nn pt.>rsonal
business lie not onlv ston~d leases and
busancs!) d1rt•t·lorics. an the C'omputer
but u~C'd 11 for <1 football pool
The Conli(ressional Budget OHtce has
est1m<1ted that term1nat1ng Clinch
RivN "tould s ave the govt•rnment Sl 4
billion ov<.•r the fiv e ·~'l'ar µl'nod of
1982 1986 .. Hut lhl' Reagan admtn1!)tra
lion. report1•1ll:. o\'er the ohJetl1ons of
Budgt'l D1n•c·tor lh1v1Ct Slockm<1n. ha!>
decided to go <ihcad
Athletic recnrlting charges denied
To t he Editor:
I would like to challenge some state
ments made bv the Daily Pilot in an
editorial which ·was published June 21.
The editorial dealt with a previous
article by reporter Pat Kennedy relat·
ing to high school athletic recruiting
The editorial stated .that Edison High
School has an aggressive. successful
athletic· recruiting program It further
MAILBOX
went on to state that the Edison coach.
Bill Workman. expects four to six select
transrers to be in his starting lineup
next year.
I feel it is imperative that the publi c
know that Edison High School does not
and has never had a program lo recruit
athletes outs ide of its attendance lx>un
daries -THIS PAST SPRI NG several con·
cerns were brought lo our attention that
athletes had been recruited to attend
Edison High School for the purpose of
participating on its athletic teams. We
also had information that this type of
recruiting was occurring in othe r
schools in the district
An intensive invesllgation followed .
What we did find was that there were
individuals in the Edison community,
and in other school communities. who
were actively e n couraging young
athletes to attend\ particular schools to
participate in s pecifi c athletic pro-
grams. Our invesUgation proved con-
clusively that in every case where
recr uiting violations did occur the
school coaches were unaware a nd ap·
palled that such activities were taking
pface.
In the case of Bill Workman, I can as·
sure you that he has aggressively
worked to maintain an untarnished rep·
utalion. We are very proud or Bill
Workman as an educator, as we are of
his entire starr and the other coaches in
the Huntington Beach Union Hith
School District. They all realize that
athletics are an important part of our
total in.'ltructional program but they are
j ust a part.
I feel that it is Important for the
public to know that the district wj)J not
tolerate athletic recruiting end Is mak·
Ing evtory dfort to ellO'llnate \.bb llle1al
practice; that our coachea are not In·
volvcd ln recruiting: and lbat we are
very proud or the succe11 or the Edison
Quotel
"Tbe 1ovemment ol France la not
mid• for forelpen. ll • made for r.nnce." -....._. Pn9ler Pierre M .. ,.., ln reepondiq lo concem1 from
11Ue1 abCMlt COmmaltt participation tn
t.heCa~.
football pro~ram and the other fine
athletic activitie~ which the distnct pro
vidl's for the vounji!sters we serve
FRANK J. ARROTT
Superintendent of Schools
Why Can a d iaru?
To the Editor
In reference to the Irvine Company's
informal selection of a Canadian fitm
to operate a proposed luxury hotel c July
131. my question is. what happened to
the good old days of American business
profit for America and not for fore1J.(n
countnes'>
We might decide lo do bus iness with
Americans a nd l'lot C anadians as
management.
KENGOOOWIN
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
Trashy CaJif omia11s
To the Editor.
We have possibly onr of the lriost
beautif\.ll coastal areas and beaches in
the world.
Why are our lovely beaches and
Pacific Coast Kighway so tittered with
every conceivable type or trash? Do our
citizens not appreciate this wonderful
girt"! They surety do use it.
We have tril~eted lo other states and
find no comparable messes. In fact, in
Colorado. Oreg°", WashingtOA, South
Dakota and sever'lll l>rovinci'J Parks in
Canada ~ou see few cigarette filters.
can tabs. or even small throw aways,
let alone the ridiculous accumulation or
trash we sec around ~re.
What is the m att ... wtth Californians?
• D. MEYER
I
Lesson learned
To the Editor:
The merchants o( Westport Center.
369 E. 17th St .. Costa Mesa. wish to
thank the Dally Pilot and Steve Tripoli
for hia front page story of the adverlis·
ing l>roblems th~y were having with
Balboa Grepht .
We are ure that due to the publlca·
lion or \his "tory we were all able to
retrieve our money. ll was In fact men·
• l.ttltm< from read.er• ore welcomi> Th"
right to condrR1t k Utr• to /it 'P'Wf or
rlrmlMtt bbel 11 rts~wd ~"'"'' o/ JOO
14!f1rcb or Ltu wdl hf-gi~ pr•/untet .4U
lttttrs must mclu.dt slgnohfft and mollmg
oddrtu btit MJmtf mo11 be Wtthhtld on rt·
q11tst 1J .•ulf1c1•ttt rtawon II appartnt
r twtr11 wtU "°' ~ pu~shn. L.ttttri maJ( bt-
lf'lepllrmn:I to 6'f2·6'86 Namt and ph<m•
numbtr of r~ contrtbtitor mu!f Pit Qtllf?l /or
U .. rl/lColWfl f'U'f'OIH
tioned to U!> that we "'ere tht• onl~ ones
to m <1kt• a fo:.:. a bout II and therefoN'
our monl•\ v.ould IH· n•lurnl'd to us
WF. ARE 1.1 \'l!"JG an <i v.orld when it
set•ms almost lht· ac·ct•pted mode of
be havior lo l'hCat We mu!>t choke ore
this lie hv almost vigilantt• means and
we urge· t'' t•ryone who ma) feel the:
are b<>tng chl'ated.1s wmdled or used to
fight ba<'k Whal helter "a" 1:. there to
figh t h"c k than through our o"n
nei ghhMhood nt'\\!-p<1per" Wt.' must
stamp lh1 :-. ll'n<lt•ney oul ourst•lves for
\Vl' bl'11t•\'t' tlw pohrt• dC'part men ts arc
O\'t•rwhc•lnwd tht•sl' d<i) s
We haH• ;,ill lt•arnt•d a h.>s!-on in our
c·l'nlt•r from our unpleasant (•xper1ence
Om• nwn•h<1nt p<11d $175 a nd l'tght paid
S65 wha<'h a mounts lo $695 This "'as
suppOM'<ll ~ to m;1il out 25.000 advert1s
ang ll'afh.•t:. Bulk mail runs approx·
imatt•ly 8 C'ents a piece. thNdon' the
mail t·ost ;i lcml' would he $2 ,500 for our
center. to say nothing of lht.> cost of
printing and art ""ork It was therefore
an 1mpos-;1hle transat·t1on from thto•
bcg1nntnit We urgt' everyone to
'llathcmat 1call~ double C'heck these
I HI S SCHNEIDER
Music doonied?
To the Editor
I fc<'l it incumbent upon me to men
lion the• s hort -s ight<'dnC'ss of the
Newport Mc:.a School District ad
ministration. school board and t he
parents who arc a llowin~ it to happen.
The district is dropping the elemel'I
tary music program
Without the teaching of instrumental
mus ic an the lower grades the middle
school program will wither from lack of
a "feeder." Lincoln Middle School
already has dropped its music program.
After the "death" of the middle
school music. program logically comes
the demise or the high school music pro·
gram
We can·t allow Newport to become a
"culturall y deprived" community.
There won't even be a nyone lo pro
vide music.' at the football and basket·
ball games
JOHN E LINDFORS
lllllYlll
Brittin has learned the hard way that
an unarmed policeman Is as crreclivt as
o GO SLOW slJrn on a don-trous ~ur~ OM
....... ~~ .... ~ ............... .... _, ... ,., '"'-''' .. ·-..... .......,, .... ._ .. ........ .....,., a-.. o.11, ,., ...
' r
IUITlllTll llACl l flllTlll lllllY
THURSOAY,JULY23, 1981
JUST COASTING 82
FEATURES 86
For the first time,
ABC 's World
News Tonight has
edged C B3
D 0 ~
r
Fire unit disbands
It
SANO SHARK -Just when you thought it was
safe to go back in the sand ... Huntington
Beach Junior Lifeguards build their own
version of the "J a ws" shark, complete with
shells for teeth and discarded sunglasses
O.lty ...... "--'' oa-y .-
down its gullet. Participating in fourth an-
nual sand castle building contest are, from
left, Brad Sheldon, Tiff any Miller and Debbie
Hughes, all 11-year-olds from Huntington
Beach, and Jodi La Veile, 11, of Costa Mesa.
Stabbings
probed
by police
Huntington Beach and
Westminster police are probing
two stabbing-robbery incidents
that occurred 45 minutes apart
early today.
It was not immediately de-
termined if the same suspects
were involved.
In the first. Luis R. Ramirez
28, of Westmins ter, was pulled
off his bicycle at 3:45 a .m . while
riding home from work aJong
Westminster Avenue near
Monroe Street, Weslminsler
police Lt. David Wiggs said.
Ramirez attempted to flee. but
was overpowered by his two as-
saJlants, who stabbed him ln the
back and abdomen, searched his
pockets and found nothing, then
left tum at the scene, Wiags
said. The assailants were picked
up by a thlrd s uspect in a Uaht
green station wagon, he said.
The victim received aid from
a passing bus driver. He was re-
ported in stable condition at
Fountain Valley Community
Hospital.
In the second incident. two
18-year -old youths were at-
tacked at 4:30 a .m . while sleep-
ing at Huntington City Beach,
police said.
Huntington Beach police Sgt.
Ed McErlain said the pair told
officers they were approached
by three men in their early 20s
with short haircuts .
The assailants, armed with a
handgun and a knife. took SS
from the youths, police said.
On e of the victims, Randy
Proctor or Arcadia, was stabbed
once in th.e back, while his com·
panion. David Zirbel of Temple
City. was pistol-whipped, police
said.
Proctor was reported in stable
condition at Pacifica Hospital.
Zirbel was treated and released.
Rabies clinic
in Huntington
Low-cost rabies, dis temper
and parvo-virus vaccinations for
dogs will be offered from 10 a .m.
to 2 p.m. Saturday at the Edison
Com munlty Center , 21377
MagnoUa St., Huntington Beach.
Rabies and dlJt.emper a~ota
will be priced at S3 each , parvo-
vlrus at $4. California law re·
quires rabies vaccinations for
all dogs over four months of age.
City of Huntington Beach dot
•icense11 also wtll be avallable at
the vaccination clinic, which b
being sponsored by the city and
the Animal Assistance League ol
Orange County.
TUCKERED OUT -Taking a snooze after some rigorous
sand castle building is Junior Lifeguard Paul Alexander, 10,
of Huntington Beach.
HB loan plan set
Huntington Beach is getting
into the money lending business
as a replacement for the city's
current subsidy program for
home improvement loans.
The city will lend out home
improvement money under the
Joggers run
for girls club
A fund-raising jog-a -thon to
benefit the Fountain Valley-
Huntington Beach Girls Club
will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday
at lhe club's new headquarters,
Wardlow School, 9191 Pioneer
Drive, Huntington Beach.
Sponsors have pledged money
according to the number of laps
run by participants. Proceeds
will help offset the club's operat..
ing expenses; includJng rent for
space at Wardlow.
With 250 m embers, the Foun-
tain Valley-Huntington Beach
group ii the only Girls Club in
the county that includes boys In
its program. Boys make up
about 40 percent or its mem·
bership.
Crash fatal
to FV driver
federally funded Neighborhood
Preservation Program.
The plan replaces the former
program under whic h the city
subsidized loans from a local
bank, thereby lowering interest
rates.
The council unanimously sup·
ported the new proposal because
the subsidy program was
becoming too expensive due to
high interest rates.
Under the city plan. interest
rates will rise but s till will be
substantially lower than prevail·
ing commercial interest rates .
All loan payments will be used
by the city for future home im·
provement loans.
Interest rates on the home im-
proveme f\t loans will range
bet ween 5 and 12 percent, with
the lowest rates going to low·
income ramilies.
HBparking
fees increase
Consistently sunny weather
starling in May is being credited
for a record income or Sl million •
from coastal parking fees in
Hunlin~n Beach for the year
ending June 30, according to city
officials.
Max Bowman, beach superin-
tendent for the city, says balmy
weather this sprin g and summer
app arently bas brought more
motorist. to the beach.
Tht revenue record i1 23 per-
cent above lut year's parking
fee income or $839,000, he said.
Funds dry up for cities' arson squad
By PIUL SNEIDERMAN
Of .. Delly Pleet ......
The Net Six arson inveslica-
tion unit, which has probed sas-
piclous fires in four west Orange
County cities during the past two
years, bas been disbanded
because at least two or the cities
no longer can afford to fund it.
Net Six is the cooperative
firefighting operation for Hunt·
lngton Beach, Westminster,
Fountain Valley and Seal Beach.
Its squad or full-lime arson in-
vestigators was funded by a
federal Law Enforcement As·
sistance Administration grant
during its first 18 months and
has been subsidized by the four
members cities during its last
six.
But official s in Fountain
Valley and Seal Beach, strugg-
ling with budget shortages, said
they could provide no more
funds for the arson squad alter
June 30.
Althdullh Net Six will con·
tinue to provide Level 1 In·
vestigation for all cities <de-
termination of the cause or a
fire l. Level 2 service (criminal
investigations or suspect ed
arson incidents l will be handled
now by fire marshals. baltaJion
or fire chiefs and police officers
in Fountain Valley and Seal
Beach.
Huntington Beach will con·
tinue to e mploy one full-time
arson investigator, with backup
investigators available when
needed.
Westminster Battalion CMef
Charles Mc Werter said his city
council has allocated funds for
the Westminster Fire Depart·
ment to "rent" an investigator
from Huntington Beach when an
arson probe is needed.
"None of us questioned the
value of the program." ex-
plained Paul Summers. acting
Fountain Valley fire chief. ''It
just came down to llnancial
priorities. The $13,000 (Fountain
Valley's cost for the arson
squad ) was needed elsewhere."
Gary Glenn, an arson squad
member who has now been re·
turned to regular Huntineton
Beach firefighting duties. said
the west county program served
as a model for other cities who
wanted to create a cooperative
arson investigation team.
Glenn said the Net Six unit
made 139 arrests and juvenile
counseling referrals during its
two-year existence.
He said an average city of
300,000 (the approximate com-
bined populations of the four Net
Six cities) makes 9 arrests per
Quadriplegic
arrested on
rape charge
Two men one described by
police as a quadriplegic confined
to a wheelchair -have been a r-
rested by police in connection
with the reported sexual assault
of a 22-year-old woman on Hunt-
ington City Beach.
Huntington Beach police Sgt.
Ed McErlain said both men,
Robert E. Abatiell, 27. who is in
a wheelchair. and Danny Ray
Riggle, 22, have been jailed on
suspicion of rape.
Both are Huntington Beach
residents.
Police said the victim met the
men at a bar Monday night and
walked with them to the beach.
She told police Riggle raped
her while his companion cheered
him on and kept watch.
The victim broke away and
sought help Crom state beach
rangers, who held the pair until
city police officers arrived,
police said.
Dimes post
·for MacKenzie
Art McKenzie, former Costa
Mesa city manager and the city's
first police chief, has been elected
chairman emeritus of the Orange
County March of Dim es.
He retired u the county chap-
ter'• acUnt chairman recently
after servina the organization for
morethan20years .
100 s45pected arson cases.
Glenn said the full-time arson
squad raised the local rate to 16
arresta per hundred cases.
Fire officiaJs in the four cities
observed that the arson arrest
rate may now drop because the
non-specialists who will take
over this job may not have the
expertise or time to complete a
lengthy arson investigation and
prepare a case for tbe district
attorney's office. 1
·'I think we bad a prograro
that was demonstrated effec•
live," Glenn said. •·1t's un·
fortunate that when cities gel in
a financial pinch, they look at
programs like ours to cut.
"One of the things our pr<>
gram didn't do was put money
in the city coffers."
Riley terms Koch
'negative force'
Walter Koch, who resigned
this week from the Orange Coun·
ty Airport Commission, was
proving to be a "negative force"
because of his positions on
several controversial airport is·
sues, Supervisor Thomas Riley
said today.
Koch, Riley explained, voted
against the airport master plan,
air carrier access plan, addJ-
tional airpor t personnel and
start-up of DC·9 Super 80 service
by Republic Airlines.
Those votes ran directly
counter to Riley's positio11s.
Koch was appointed by Riley
to the commission as Fifth
Supervisorial District represen·
tative in 1975.
Koch, in Ms handwritten letter
of resignation, said, "The events
of the past few months have
greatly disturbed m e, and in
good conscience. I feel it best I
resign at t.tiis time.'' The res-
ignation is effective July 31.
In a telephone interview to·
day. Koch said it is "painfully
obvious" that recent actions by
the County Board of Supervisors
lo move ahead with $75 million
in airport improvem ents will
mean "a lot more people, a lot
more traffic, a lot more
h eadaches a nd a lot more
flights."
And those actions, he said,
"indicate to me that those of us
who live in Newport Beach and
under night patterns have a lot
to be concerned about."
Koch said "it was pretty much
by mutual agreement" with
Riley that he submitted his res-
ignation. Ril ey did not
specificaJly ask for Koch's res-
ignation. both men agreed.
"Wally, since his votes on the
master plan and the a"ccess plan,
had been a negative force,"
Riley said.
Koch wa s summoned to
Riley's office Monday to explain
his decision to vote against" in·
troduction of the new. less noisy
Super 80 by Republic Airlines.
·NEGATIVE FORCE'
Ex-commissioner Koch
The carrier, which operates 12
flights daily from the airport,
plans to place two of the
jetliners in s ervice in mid-
August.
It was during that meeting
that he gave Riley the resigna-
tion letter.
Both Riley and Koch stressed
that the supervisor never told
the commissioner how lo vote in
advance or matters coming
before the airport commission,
which is advisory to the board of
supervisors.
D espite Koch 's assertions,
Riley said, "I ~lieve very con-
fidently that we will tame the
airport, and Lhat we will find a
s ite for a new, regional airport."
The s upervisor said he has not
yet decided whom he will rec-
ommend to replace Koch. "I
hope I can find someone within
the <noise> impact area who will
take the job," Riley said.
Irvine focuses
on retail stores
Irvine. a city of 70,000 people,
will soon have its first car wash.
When will it get its second?
The man in charge of retail
development for the company
that owns lhe overwhelming ma·
jority of land in Irvine doesn't
have a firm answer lo that ques·
lion.
Irvine Company Vice Presi·
dent Dick Cannon says he ls
aware that
th e master ·
planned city
of I rvine is
short of the
retail
esta bl\s h -
meots its res·
idents want
and the city's
tax base r e-
quires. cANNOM
Cannon is to appear Aug. 10
before t he Irvine City Council lo
explain why Irvine doesn 't have
any : car washes (one is to open
this summer ln Woodbridge),
major furniture o r home
(urnishiogs stores. nurseries,
plumbing supply houses, paint
stores or electrical suppl y
stores.
Irvine ·residents aJso complain
that there is only one movie
theater, not enough restaurants,
no commercial recreational
'facilities, and only a handful or
clothing shops.
The South Woodbridge
S hopping Center along Alton
Parkway. where 96 stores are to
be built.
University Town Center
c Phase I 1 across Campus Drive
from UC Irvine , where 284.000
square feet of commercial de·
velopment in"cluding a 250·room
hote l and a theater are lo be con-
structed.
-The Home Improvement
Cen ter at Culver and Irvine
Center drives. where 41 stores
including lumber outlets,
furniture stores and home
furnishing shops are to be built.
The opening dates on these
projects have been delayed until
1983, Cannon said during a re-
cent interview.
Cannon said the delays are
caused by s lowness in retail
s ales and consequent reluctance
by retail merchants to commit
to build stores in Irvine. High in-
terest rates add to lhe problem.
he said.
Irvine Chamber or Commerce
President Larry Hoffman has a
dirf erent explanation for tb'e
lack of rel.ail development.
Addressing the Irvine City
Council late last month. Hoff.
man claimed the Irvine Com
pany, instead or rostering retail
development on its land, Is "slt~
ting on the land" and hopina to
thereby cash In on inflatlonal'J
Increases in land viAlue. , A Fountain Valley sift shop 1waa robbed of MO by a lone 1un·
man who escaped lq a brown
compact ear Wednesday after-
noon, police reported.
A Fountain Valley man was
killed near Big Beat Lake Dam
when hls car failed to negotiate
a turn and plunted about 300
Ceet down an embankment, the
CaUtornJa Highway Patrol re·
ported.
A CHP spokesman said Kerry
Ko11. 27, was northbound on
s tate Rout~ 18 Juat west of the
dam at 10 p.m. Tuesday when he
Illegally croued a double-yellow
Une and paned another vehicle.
Teen cyclist IWled in crash
Cannon was criticized last
summer by the Irvine City Coun·
ell after the preparation of a clty
start report ibdlcatln1 that
Irvine waa nearly last amon1
Oranfe COunty cities ln terms of
retat acreage per 1,000 resi-
dent.I.
Thrauab leaM tarrangementa.
the trvlne Compan.Y exacts a
ehare or the profit& from retail
outleta that locate on company
land. No me ~u injured ln lbe 3:20
p .m . robbery at the Red Pony
llft shop on Warner Avenue ••r Bushard Street, police Mid.
The IUll*l II a male whlta,
Mout •. who entered tbe store liild jiulled a ha..,_ from bis
al1tbad an4 clemalHled the
ltore'a mcmey, aut.bortUff laHI.
'
l
Al Koll auemj>C.ed to re-enter
tbe proper lane, the road took a
a harp curve to the Jett and t.be
drl ver IPlunsed down the em·
benlu111at, the C HP saJd. He
waa pronounced dead at the
scene
An 18-year-old 'bicycle rider
died in Anaheim Wednesday af.
ternoon when he tried to pus a
truck and trailer ri.1 that wu
turnll'\8 to the lithl, accordl.nc to
Anaheim police.
Richard Charles Ramlrft ol Anabu wu Pl'ODOGDftd dead at
the scene at Katella Avenue and a
northbound 01..ramp to tbe Sulla
Ana Freeway, aatd police otncer
PauJDohmann.
The truck, driven by Edward
Arb'-o, 311Bueoa Park, wu turn·
tn1 ft'OID utell• onto tb•on·ramp
wbea Ramirel lrted to paa1 oa ill
rilbt. DDlamann aald. The tnlek
ftnt knocked tlMI victim otf bla
bike and U.. both tbe truck tree· tor &nd the traU• ran over him,
lbeOf'ftewHld. 1
At that tlme, Cannon promlMd
lbat much of l~lne'a retail
aeedl would be Mfilled in tbrM
proJecu which WOQJd ~ • i•. Now he .. ,. it Wtll .be"-~fore thete pn>Jeeu open. 'ftMy
aret
One clty councllman~al prlvatdy that lhll aetup tends dlaeour~~of Hl•bflth
tarae lnltiat •
A C!Ompaa1 sPt*•ma• said
leaae arrancemenu are tiailond
to the lndlvidual bualneas and
1ren'l ovtrb demandlnc.
Orange Cout OAILY PIL.OT/Thurtday, July 23, H~81
HUMBUG ro THE HO-BUii: They
call it "the 1uinmer 1ame':.but q . .far as sz:. i... is conce~. it was a
I 2 t. A total nub. A pitiful little hiss
where it should have been a throaty
roar.
So this was prof esslonal baseball t.bis season. Penonally, I couldn't care
. ~ ~'\ '
Ill IUIPllll ,~11 . '
less if they ever settle the strike now.
The season is a tota1 loss and we might
as well get on to something interesting.
Some sportswriters are still clinging
to a faint, hysterical hope that they'll
hear the crack of bats at the atig stadium
before the mists of autumn close in.
They write stories about 40 days and 40
nights of strike-bound agony. ·
Forget it.
MOST OF THE SPORTS scribes are
beginning to discover more lively things
to bring to the readers. Del Mar horse
racing opened yesterday and the first
runnings of the hayburners got pretty
good play.
So the sporting pages have turned to
professional soccer, beach volleyball,
yacht racing, water skiing and by golly,
the upcoming football season.
Considerable enthusiasm is already
being generated over the Rams' next
season at Anaheim Stadium when Pat
Haden, late of Corona del Mar and now
of San Marino, will once again be at the
controls at quarterback.
Even the pro football training camps
are getting more attention that they
have summers past. Rookies from the
Rams and the San Diego Chargers went
at it in a scrimmage only yesterday out
on the green at UC. Irvine. And the
Dallas Cowboys, menacing as ever, are
in camp up in Thousand Oaks.
LisrEN, TIDS CRAZ ED strike has
had some advantages on the athletic
front. Some sportsmen, who have
tabored in near-anonymity over the
years, relegated to the back pages of the
sporting section along with the lost dog-
gie & kitty ads, abruptly have found
their achievements splashed all over the
front of the section.
Why, there was even considerable
note given in advance billing for a
Laguna Niguel tennis tournament for old
fogeys, ages 35 and up.
So this is how baseball has done
CONVENIEN'I; DISPOSABLE
COLOPLAST· BRAND
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We now <Jrty lhe (()ml)'ete COlOPLAST tone-me
la<gest sen.rg t1•!>00'iat>le ostorn~ apoliarx l'S 1n the
WOtld Everything !0< cQlostomat~ 11~1orna1es and
unnary ostomates-all Wt!h COl'lvenoent COLOPlAST
OISPOSabokly COlOPLAS T reltabtllfy-plus case pack
ecoro:ny Be 51.Jfe to asi. t0< your r RH C®r ot 1NS1GH IS-
tl'le publ<.aton that s rust t0< you-atway<. nc:ludes
cou~ tor fref' 5-)ni~
7ta.3714 MOUL TON PLAZA PHARMACY
23et5 Moulton Parkway. Laguna Hiiia
(Next to El Ranc:tio Market)
A BARO HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER
f\esa \7erde
\J ine and ~quor
SALE! SALE! SALE!
Reg. $3.70
WEIBEL
WHITE
ZIN FANDEL
A delicious. summer-time wine, great for
picnics. poolside. or beach. Nice touch of
sweetness.
Reg. $<4.80 ..
GALLO CELLARS
SAUVIGNON BLANC & s311 JOHANNISBERG
REISLING 1.u
Gold Medal winners at the Orange·
County Fair. Fine varietal wines at jug sale
prices!
PLAIN WRAP
CIGARETTES
A popular "light" brand with no frills. Kl~lze. filter-tip regulars.
Dana pmjeet denied
Supervisors reject plan to convert mobile home park
itself in. For decades past, the sporting
writers have depended on tbe bat and
ball game for the full coverage of sum-
mer. They just naturally figured on
slouching in a chair high atop some
stadium and writing notes all summer
long on wt)at happens below upon the
fa bled diamond.
Now, however, out of sheer necessity
they have learned there are indeed other
sporting events all over the summer.
Why, there'u actually water out
there in that place called the Pacific
Ocean where they have sporting events
they play.without even a ball in sight.
And you can always start covering
the coming football season early.
Avast there! ll'sarwther summer sporting event
BASEBALL WILL LOSE to footbaJJ
even in the event the professional root·
ball people decide they want to follow
their compatriots and go out on the
picket lines. Unlike baseball, you see,
football has a heavy following at levels
other than just the play-for-pay people.
Regardless of a pigskin walkout for
the pros, you can be assured use and
UCLA will be going at it, along with the
smaller colleges like Cal State Fullerton
and Cal State, Long Beach.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE, Sad·
dleback and Golden West also put on
some exciting gridiron shows right here
along the Orange Coast. And don 't forget
the vast array of football offerings that
will come your way at the high school
level.
Lots of sporting fans are looking
forward to fall.
And by the time next summer rolls
around, a lot of sports people might be
asking, "Baseball ?" What's that?"
A proposal to convert a Dana
Point mobile home park Into a
commercial center has been de-
nied and a plan to locale a
medical research facility off the
Ortega HJghway near Caspers
Wilderness Park was supported
by the Orange County Board of
Supervisors .
On the advice of Supervisor
Thomas Riley, the board threw
out the proposal from Vnion OU
Co. to replace the Marina Shores
Mobile Home Park with new
commercial development.
Riley said the mobile home
park al Del Obispo Street and
the Pacific Coast Highway
represents needed affordable
housing in tbe community and
noted that the proposed develop·
ment did not conform lo a
specific plan to locate such cen·
ters in a "downtown" area.
In the other case, the
supervisors agreed to move up
consideration from December to
October for a general plan
change for the Nichols lmftllute.
The medical research and test·
ing lab Is currently located in
San Juan Capistrano, but or.
ficia ls want to move it to an
isolated 100 acres across the
Ortega Highway from the coun-
ty-run park.
At Riley 's ur g ing . the
supervisors said they'll consider
creating a new general plan
designation for the property to
preserve a maximum amount of
open -space.
Under the new land use de·
signation, building sites near the
park would be at least 50 acres
and parking and structures
couldn't cover more than 20 per·
cent of the property.
The institute has a staff of
about 250 persons. ll specializes
in creating diagnostic pro·
cedures a nd ca rries out
specialized testing and research
for hos pitals and medical
schools.
Ruling ove rturned
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -The
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
has overturned the contempt
citation of a minister who was
jailed after refusing to answer
questions about a df"" suspect
he counseled. The Rev. Ronald
Sa lfen of the Trinity
Presbyterian Church in Collin
County had been cited.
K&B SPORTSWEAR
2300 ....,_.,Costa MHe
PREWASHED
JEANS 59''
LATEST
TOPS
Delly ............ .,, Ille-" .......
THATS NOISY -Two-year-old Stacy Felton holds her ears
as Newport Beach policeman Bruce Foster fires up
helicopter. Officers staged a "police fair" in the Newport
Crest area over the weekend to help bolster interest in the
department's neighborhood watch program. Stacy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Felton of Newport Beach,
didn't seem impressed.
SHOES • SHOES • SHOES • SHOES
WOMEN
HATURALIZER
UFI STRIDE
HUSH PUPPIES
CHEROKEES
IARETRAPS
FAMOLARE
MUSHROOMS
GRASSHOPPERS
MEN
FlORSHEIM
HUSH PUPPIES
JARMAN
STACY ADAMS
30-40%
MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
T-SHIRTS
PEOPLE MOVERS 59• PLUS CLOGS s14e1.24e1 s7• .
OFF
1
SHORTS
ALL
BOOTS 25% off
SIDEW AU SALi SPICIAL!
20% OFF
ON ALL
IH HARIOR CEHTH
2JOO HARIOI • COSTA MESA
Come To Our. Value Packed
SIDEWALK
SALE
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Jll y 24th-25th
HARBOR CENTER
42 ITOllS TO SllVI YOU
•
2300 HARBOR tAT WILIOMt
COSTA MESA
THURSDAY,JULY23, 1911 H/F
MOVIES C8
COMICS C10
TELEVISION C11 \
The Reagan. administration
blames Jimmy Carter for
economic decline ... C5
Lopes
blasts
'circ u s'
TORRANCE (AP) -Davey
Lopes of the Dodgers is unhappy
with the way the baseball talk!
ii.re going and had some words of
criticism for teammate Steve
Garvey, who is beint paid dur-
ing the major Jeague strike.
"The whole thing is a circus,"
said Lopes. re!errlne to the
negotiations over the strike.
''Each side bas handled it poor-
ly. What is the players' ex-
ecutive board doing 'in negotia-
tions? I don't think they have
credentials to be in a labor
meeting."
THE DODGERS' All-star
second-basem~n expressed his
frus tration over t he strike
stalemate in an interview with
the South Bay Daily Breeze.
"Do Doug DeCinces and Bob
B oon e ha ve l e gal bac k -
grounds?" .asked Lopes. "I
didn't see any postal clerks go-
ing into their negotiations. As an
entity, we have become the
laughing stock of the United
States. Everybody's laughing at
us . We are not to be respected.as
a union."
It was reported last week that
Garvey and teammate Derrel
Thomas are being paid by the
club during the strike. which
began June 12.
"We all voted to strike, and
now jus t w h a t does hi s
1Garvey':>J vote mean?" asked
Lopes. "It means absolutely
nothing for anybody who accepts
money. regardless of their lnten-
ti on s. I think it 's very
hy pocriticaJ .
FUN IN THE SUN -Del Mar Thoroughbred Club opened its 42nd season Wed-
nesday, and nearly 30,000 racing fans were on hand for the occasion. Racing
enthusiast Jay Rose (left) makes a thorough study of the entries for the next
race, while (from left) Peggy West, Mary Hendry and Howard Rey combine
for a study in contrast as they watch the two-year-old maiden fillies in the
second race. · ·
"THIS IS ONE of the reasons
players get made to look li.k~
jerks This stufr snowballs. it's
all bad public relations. People
see this and they assume every·
pody_ is ~!?tting paid. That's
why we are having a problem
with the public."
Lopes said he feels there will
be resentment s hown toward
Gar vey when the strike ends. Win or lose, tlley;'re having a good time "I will not hold any grudges,
but I thlnk you're going to see
some hostilities toward the guys
who get paid, especially by some
of the players who could have
done the same thing but didn't,"
s aid Lopes.
It's just one big party at Qel Mar where fans come to bet, win, drink and enjoy the sun
By .JOHNSEVANO
OttlMDallyP'll.eSi.tf
DEL MAR -Cars were lining In-
terstate 5 in both directions are Car as the
eye could see.
Parking attendants were reverishl y
herding the automobiles Into their collec-
tive spaces.
Thousands of people were pushing their
way through the front gates, eager to
start their day's activities.
Why all the excitement?
Well, if you've never been to the Del
Mar race track, you probably wouldn't
understand.
Nestled amongst the residential rolling
hills of this community, and with the
Pacific Ocean just a stone's throw to the
west. Del Mar represents more than just
a track.
The atmosphere. the scenery, the en-tertainment the setting is more con-
ducl veto a social event.
··I came here to bet. win, drink and en·
joy the sun." said Lori lei Gottschalk.
"The atmosphere is much different
here," added Kathy Hunt. "The type or
people are more friendly -and it's a
younger group "
The track. in existence since 1937, has "Because Kay is my middle name."
grown tremendously over the past de-washerlogicalreply.
cade Cthe Del Mar Thoroughbred Club The foursome, based on sound reason-
took over operation in 1970). ing, decided to follow the lady's advice.
In 11 seasons, attendance has risen 102 Lucky Kay R. paid $8.80 to win in the
percent. while the mutuel handle has in· second, lending credence to the absurdity
creased an incredible 202 percent. In 1990 -and run -that takes place here.
alone. attendance totaled 821,733 for 43 The buildings, which house the ticket
days, up 91/:i percent from the previous windows, are of Spanish architecture. A
summer. new ,omer aJmost gets the feeling he's in
For the die-hard race fans. Del Mar is a Mexican villa.
probably no dirrerent than Santa Anita. Bettors who don't want to fight the
Hollywood Park or Los Alamitos, for that crowds along the track, huddle around
matter. All the track represents is televisions posted within the complex,
another place t.o bet. and another day of rooting for their horse to finish first.
winning or losing. Outs ide, wagerers , nervously Forthemajority,however-andWed-clutching their tickets. cheer their
nesday's opening day crowd (26,762) in favoriteseveryinch ofthe way.
particular-Del Mar was more than just a betting complex. . . It was a party. "See who breaks from the gate first," said one person.
Groups of four or more, carrying "Don'tfadeonmenow,"yelledanother
lounge chairs and ice coolers, were the as theycameintothestretch.
norm. not the exception. ··He's going to take him. Look. he's go· "Let's bet on Lucky Kay R.," said one ing to take him," hollered another as the
lady to her group before the start of the horses came to the finish line.
second race. The cheers and moans at a race's end
''Why?''askedhermaleco_m_p_aru_·_o_n_. ____ a_r_e_s_im_uJ_t_an_eo~. Wlnners hurry to the
windows to collect their payoffs, while
losers shuffle through their racing forms
in an attempt to recoup.
··It's almost like a ·country atmosphere
out here," said Jerry Martin of Long
Beach.·· Everybody would like to win, but
"I remember when this was nothing.
Now . they're building everything out
here. I like coming here because people
go for the run or it.
"I don't care where you walk around
here, people are having a good time -
young and old."
Del Mar will run continuously, except
Tuesdays. through Sept. 9. Twenty-eight
stakes races are scheduled including the
$150,000 Del Mar Handicap on Labor Da y
(Sept. 7). and the Del Mar Futurity on
closing day. Post time is 2 p.m.
Of course, although it's a perrect family
setting, there will always be the hard-line
track enthusiasts, too
"My mind is geared to one thing," said
Charlie Spindle, "and that's making
money. I don'tlet all this scenery distract
me ... exceptlhe women."·
Lopes said he supports the
strike. but is upset about some
of the statements from player
representatives
·'The last thin g I want to do is
pi ck up a paper and read Doug
DeC1nces' synopsis about the
pla yers' feelings because he i.~
not qualified and he doesn'f.
know what he's talking about. ·
said Lopes "This ·forget the
season· attitude really eats at
me. Berore we do that, brother,
we better stop and take a vote.
"WE ALL BETTER stop and
think about that before we get so
deep in this strike that we can't
dig ourselves out. We 've got to
get back to the field . It's my life. it's my livelihood."
Lopes s aid he hasn't heard
an y thing from an y player
representative, including the
Dodgers· Jerry Reuss.
"The only thing I've seen is
wh a t I 'v e read in the
news paper s." s aid Lopes.
"Wbo"s Jerry Reuss? ls be still
our player rep.··
McElhany, Kiernan
e ye Laguna up~et
Snyder makes up 'for lost time
After a slow start, the future is bright for UCI standout
By EDZINTEL
Of ....... ,Pllll ..... By CURT SEEDEN
Of .. o.lty~SWI
When Ron McEJhany graduat-
ed from San Diego Slate with a
business marketing degree. the
Laguna Beach resident knew he
had a nice conservative business
future ahead of him.
There was a stint as an
engineer for' an aerospace com-
pany, and later tbe sales
representative job be now bolds
at an automated packaelng cor-
poration.
But, for one year, McElhany
used another one of hls talents -
playing professional volleyball
ln the now defunct International
Volleyball A.uoclalion. The pro-
f esslOOll 1port1 world took tum
from t•e COIY confines of
Lagona 8eatb to Tucson.
Mcl!ll\d~ earned about •1.000
a month plua expenses for the
TuelOl'I 'hrquoiee thet ......
e 1ave up the ml• of a pro.
re1•ionaJ athJe~ lbe next , ....
'wben be wa~ dratted b, :Ptaoenlx. .. ,.be only aavln1 trace aboUt
iA Tur.IOD Wll \Mt .. o cautonla qatu
tboNIVAtfflM " Nnl.11'1'~•
\
His coach calls him a real rags to riches story.
His mother gets a lltUe choked up and teary-
eyed when she talks about him.
In the sports information o(flce at UC Irvine,
his picture is prominently dilplayed on the so-
called' WalJ of Fame.
The person In reference is 21-year-old Jim
Snyder, tennis player par excellence. liis is quite a
story.
,
Snyder moved on to UC Ir vine. hoping to
benefit from the coaching of Greg Patton. His first
year, Snyder never got that chance. A case of
mononucleosis put him out the entire season.
This year, Snyder broke his thumb at the begin-
ning or the season. He came back toward the latter
part of the year, however, and won the PCAA
TENNIS
slnsles tiUe. For that, he was named the con-
ference player of the year.
BUT SNYDER WASN'T resting on his laurels.
He had work to do.
So off he went to New Jersey.
New Jersey? Well, Snyder had been playinc
(and leadin&) the California Tennis Festival
circuit at the be1lnning of the summer. That w11
fine. But he dJdn't feel he was gettin& th~ .inti Of
di verse competltJon \ neceasaf'1 \o become • na-
tion ally~ p ayer.
Sn}'Cter Mj.a ~a,.aununer .&Qur by wlnnln1 • hard' court tlUe-:
~ week, the fin .. t mocneot ln hll career
came when SnJder woe UM Am1tnr Cla1 C..,
cbamplomblp la Plttaburp.
In tbe ftnal,19ny••"dldef1NM .. tlld..ii Phil 1'vck1nell Of
Rhodesl1 in a tluiWq U•lnder. TIM 1~f:
NI, 2-1, 7-1.
THE FINAL LAITD 3~ hour. and wat
played in srueUn1 he1t. Snyder'• lep cramped la <9eeSNTna. Pa1ea>
-~:i--..... -
..
...
.•
Orange Cc;>ut DAILY PILOT(Thuraday, July 23, 1981 ,....,...,.. ____ ....., __________ "'Im!!•
ll Ii. ,
·Pastor ini's b:ccident
'))l~~sing in dispise?
From AP dl1patcbe1
SANTA ROSA -Dan Putorinl •
of the Oakland Raiders fell off the • • • National Football Lea1ue tradlnt •
block, at least temporarily, with b1a
fall from a bicycle lnMay.
·•1 don't know what lbe Raiden have ln mlDd
now. But I'd like to stay with them, contrary to
what a lot. of people think," the quarterbHk
said after reportlnc to train·
inc camr · He'I be with the NFL
champions at least unW bil
right shoulder, separated in
the May biking accident, la
proven sound again. He could
very well open the sealOll aa
backup to Super Bowl hero
Jim Plunkett, and be says,
"I'm willing to accept that ."
Pa1torini Pastorini was a starter
with the Houston Oilers his first nine yean in the NFLand no was No. 1 with the Raiden unUlhe
broke a leg in the fifth game of last season.
·'I'm not ruling out the possibility of a
trade. But nothing's going on now," Coach
Tom Flores said Wednesday. "No team is tn·
terested In a quarterback coming off an arm in·
jury."
But Pastorini believes, "The injury was a
blessing in disguise. l had an arthritic shoulder
and didn't realize it. They went in and cut about
two inches off the end of my collarbone.
Quote of the day
Senator AJlonse D'Ama&o CR·N.Y.) on
why he introduced a Senate resolution call·
ing ror an end to the baseball strike:
"Americans are being bombarded by
television reruns and old movies. Divorce
rates are soaring as husbands and wives
are being forced to pay attention to each
other.''
Navratllova la no longer 'ltateleU'
LOS ANGELES -After wa1Uu
nearly alx yean to beeomne a Unit.a
Statee cltilen. teonlJ atar Martina
NavratUova ftew to Europe Wednesday c&rrylnl
one of the benefit. of clU1enab.le abe prises the
moet, a U.S. p ... port that will allow ber to vlslt
ber natlveCsecbollovakla.
Na•ratllo•a. 24, who WH amona "
oatuallaed etttMJU awom ln durtna a teclera1
ceremony Mondar In LOI An1eJes, new Wednea·
day to Monte Carlo for Ill JnvitaUonal tourna·
ment.
Stabl• fails to report to camP
Houatod ou.n quaJUrbeek ... • 8'a1Mw, cone'fbeck o,.. .. _.. 4 a nd rwmln1 back ... c...,.mter
failed to report to the Oilers' tralnlna
camp Weclnelday and will be ftnecf." new bead
coach Ed ..._ 1a1d. Stabler'• .,enl phoned the
camp to say be had personal bulln ... that pre·
vented hiJ arrival . . . Buffalo quarterback
IM Fer...-••v• he's tired of wa1Un1 for a new contract and la ready to
test the free aiency option of
bis 1975 aereemeat if a new
pact isn't reached soon
. . . Runnin1 back Geor1e
ao1er1. t he first player
taken ln the NFL draft lb1s
year, joe1ed the sidelines at
New Orleans Saints' pre-
seaaon trainin1 camp, ob·
viously upset that he's bein.g
Stobln held out of a controlled
scrimmage acainsl Miami today. Ro1ers has
missed moat contact practice this week with a
slight muscle pull . . . Woody Peoples, who
spent 12 years ln the NFL before goinc to the
Super Bowl with the Philadelphia Eacles, bas
announced his retirement ... Atlanta
fullback WUllam Andrews baa signed a contract
for a reported $400,000 after rushing for more
than 1.000 yards in each of hia first two seasons
Portes engineers another upset
WASHINGTON -Who said ~ ligbtnlna never strikes twice in the ~ ,
same place. For the second year ln a .
row, France' a Pascal Portes bas encineered a
major upset in the Washington Star· lntema·
tional Tennis Championships, knocking off a
seeded player In the second-round or the clay
court tournament. Last year, the unheralded
Portes stunned then top·seed Jimmy Connors. a
victory the 22·year·old Portes still considers the
highlieht of his professional career.
On Wednesday. Portes was back on center
court. spotting No. 5 seed Harold Solomon the
first set before roaring back ror a 1·6, 6·3, 6·2
triumph. The victory reversed a personal losing
streak for Portes that had stretched back to
March.
• =;:;t::;:;.::::>"*4»'> ;;s:us:; e:s .. urn • q:::t;;;::1:;:
a-ball today
On th1a date ln 1122: ,
CinclMaU Reda outfielder Edd Roush
ended one of tbe toniest holdouts lo
baseball history. He bit .352 for the rest of
the Sfalon.
Today's birthday a :
Former Brooklyn Dodtera shortstop PH'
Wee Reese Is 82. Former Dod&er pllchlnl
ace Don Dryadale ls 4S.
Players confused at talks -Rice
WETHERSFIELD Conn. -The Ill
talks belnt conducted b\=a~mpt to end the current ma or lea1ue
buebaU strike are con ...._ juat uk Boston.
l;\edSoxou\fleldJ!m Rice.
"No player not attendln1 the meettn1 baa an
idea of what l11oln1 on. Eveo when they had open
seulpns, you could pick up four or five
newspapers and 1et four or five venlona of what
bad happened,•• Rice told reporten salhered at
the Wethenfteld County Club Wednesday.
•'They're worldn1 on another aareement and
they have a closed session so you don't know
what'• IOi.nc on. The playen are cooluaed, the
owners are confused and tbe rans are confused,·•
hesald.
Holmes, Cooney agree to title bout
World Boxing Council champion •
Larry Holme. and No. 1 contender
Gerry Cooney have agreed to a tiUe
Cight. The site and date have not yet been de·
termined, the New York Daily News reported
. . . . Davld Santee, a member of the U.S.
Olympic figure skating team in 1980, is skipping
the National Sports Festival in Syracuse
because of an Injured knee . . . It will be at
least another week before a decision is made on
whether to ri"e and suspend John McEnroe for
his behavior at Wimbledon earlier this month,
officials for Grand Prix tennis events say
. . . New Zealand police said they would call
in reinforcements for future South African
ru.rby matches after a violent demonstration
that resulted to the arrests of 70 persons Wed·
nesday ... Both the San Diego Sockers and Los
Anceles Aztecs won their NASL games, putting
more pressure on the third-place California Surf
which is trying to make the NASL playoffs. The
Aztecs topped Toronto. 4·2. while San Diego
downed Portland, 3·1 .
Television. radio
TV: No events ~cheduled.
RADIO: Baseball -Salt Lake City at Van·
couver, 7:30 p.m., KMPC (710).
U.S. athletes
discover gOld
BUCHAREST, Romania <AP) -American
atbletet had a very aucce11ful day Wedneaday at
the World University Games, ba11in1 four sold
medals while the Chlnese men dominated 1Ym·
naatlcs, then threatened to withdraw from the
competition.
Runners Mel Lattany and David Lee, hlth
Jumper Leo Wllllams and awtmmer Nick Nevid
mined the gold for the United Statea. Lattany, the
favorite in the 100-meter daah, nipped teammate
Calvin Smith to win the sprint in 10.18 seconds.
"I WAS A UTrLE hlah today ao I'm surprised
It all went so smoothly," said Lattany, of the
University of Georcla. Smith, tbe sliver medalist,
attends Alabama and ls a conference foe of Lat·
iany. .
Lee, of use, captured the hurdles ln 49.05
seconds, romping home by almost h~1f a second
over Dimitri Shkarupin of the Soviet Union.
''I thought my time was pretty go6d, consider·
log how slow and tired I've been feeling lately,"
said Lee.
Williams, of Navy. took the high jump at 7·4'h
(2.25 meters}. His victory was a surprise as 'he
edged out Jianhua Zhu of China and Gerd Nagel of
West Germany. All three jumpers cleared 7-41.h
but Williams beat Nagel on fewer misses and Zhu
withdrew from the jumpoff wilb a pulled muscle.
NEVID, OF the University of Texas, won the
men's lOO·meler breaststroke, with his time or
1:04.33 bettering the games' record of 1:05.17 set
by Graham Smith of Canada.
Angelika Knipping or West Germany took the
women's 100-meter breastroke In 1: 14 .20 and broke
the games· mark of 1: 14.39 set by Hong Shao of
China in earlier qualifying.
Willie Banks. the American record holder in
the triple jump, pulled a hamstring and had to
watch while Zhenxian Zhou or China took the ~old
medal with a games' record leap of 56·10 (17.32
meters). Banks held the old record or 56·61/•, (17.23
meters>.
.. As team captain, people expect something or
you. I'm very disappointed,'" said Banks. of
UCLA, who was tired or traveling abroad. ··1 can't
wait to get back, man. It's been too long:·
The Chinese believed that Soviet protests
of gymnastics scores have been too 'much. Chinese
men won five gold medals Wednesday. but threat~ to leave the competition arter the Sov-
iet Union contested scores ror the third consec·
cutive night. The Soviets had protested gymnastics
scores in the two previous night's events. and got·
ten them raised on both occasions.
From Page C1
SNYDER • • • Controversy brews at festival Oranges nip
Bre ake r s ~ the second set but he was able to
massage them out.
Basket bal.l coaches want closed-door policy for practice OAKLAND (AP > -The
Oakland Breakers' Fritz Buehn·
Ing kept Wednesday's match
with the CaUfornia Oranges at
Oakland Coliseum close, but it
wasn't enough and the Breakers
lost. 28·27 .
"I thought something like this
1 would happen to Jim sooner or
later," said Patton. "l heard
that he was down. 2·5 in the final 1 set.
.. H just shows you how tough
• he is. He's tenacious. He's got to
be the strongest person mentally
I've ever coached."
His mother . Ros ema r y
Snyder. had this predictable re·
action: "We're very proud and
happy for him. I think. summing
1 it up. you'd have to say we're
thankful. ..
No one could have guessed
that Jim Snyder would come this
far. Now . it looks like tennis is
his future.
"PEOPLE ASK ME what
Jim's major in school is ," says
. his mother. "Well . I think it's
political science. but we tell
everyone it's tennis."
According to Patton, Snyder
has a good chance or getting an
invitation to next month's U.S.
Open.
Whether he does or not, Patton
reels it's only a matter or time
before Snyder goes professional.
··One of his goals is to win the
• NCAA singles title and he can do
that next year." Patton says. "I
hate to see him go pro, natural·
ly. because he's the stalwart and
soul of our team.
.. But whatever he decides to
do himself, I'll go along with.
My job as coach is to try to help
him realize his goals."
Jim Snyder
Minor leagu er
hurls no-hitte r
LYNN, Mass. (AP) -Tommy
Hart, a 22·year-old right·hander.
pitched a seven-inning no·hitter
Wednesday. leading the Reading
Phillies to a 3-0 victory over the
Lynn Sailors in the first game of
an E\ste ro League
doubleheader.
Hart, 8-4, struck out seven and
walked two.
Reading won the second game
3·1 as southpaw Don Carman.
10·9, stopped Lynn on just five ruts .
SYRACUSE, N.Y. CAP> -The
third National Sports Festival,
showcase for some big names in
amateur sports and some wboone
day may be big, officially opens
tonight already touched by con·
troversy.
Even before tonight's opening
ceremonies at the modernistic
Carrier Dome on the Syracuse
University campus. a flap arose
over the closed· practice policy or
the coaches of the eight
basketball teams . John
Thompson , head coach al
Georgetown, O.C. and of the East
team at the Festival, was the prime mover behind the policy,
which was adopted after two
photographers and radio
personnel were denied admission to a Sunday night practice .
"I req~led that my practices
by closed," he said Wednesday.
"You· re dealing with some people
(pJayers) who are new to you coaches and it's kind or bard to ac-
custom them to you with people
standing around."
He aJso said each team only had
two 90·minule practice sessions
daily and all that time was needed
lo prepare ror the games, which
begin Saturday.
The policy officially was adopt-
ed Monday night ror men's and
women's basketball at a meeting
of the coaches of the four men's
team'S. It provides that only the
rlrst lS minutes of practice at the
university's Manley Fieldhouse
and the San Diego Friars
........ ., .... 26 ., 6 p.111.
FAN APPRECIATION NIGHT!
'
Featuring drawing for free prizes ...
• New Pro 110 tennis ra_c._quet by Prince
• 2 lifetime family memberahlpa at
Loa Caballero• Sports Club
• Free vteekend for 2 at South
Coast P.tua Hotel
DllCOUlltid 801 hall S5 •
Tickets $10, $15, and $20.
be open and that none of the prac·
tic es at local high schools be open.
Mike Moran, the festival's
media coordinator who attended
Monday night's meeting with
Festival Director Baaron Pit·
t.enger and the coaches. said the
closed practices are "totally
against U.S. Olympic Committee
policy."
USOC Executive Director F.
Don MiJler said that he would look
into the matter but that the policy
might not change.
·'As long as the athlete is not
disturbed from practices and in-
tended purposes I urge full
cooperation with the media."
Mill er said.
The Festival is designed in part
to acclimate amateur athletes to
such competitions and to give
coaches and officiais a chance to
spot potential talent ror the 1984
Olympic Games. Among the bet·
ter known athletes are track and
field·stars Edwin Moses, world re·
cord holder in the 400-meter
hurdles ; Evelyn Ashford.
American record holder in the
100-and 200-meter events, and
four.time Olympic discus gold
medalistAlOerter.
Today's opening ceremonies
were upstaged when the U.S.
Olympic Committee approved a
petition by the fig1J11e skating
event coordinator to reschedule
the men's compulsory figures to
12 hours before the ofricial start o(
the Festival.
NSF competition was not
scheduled to begin until Friday,
but the U.S. Olympic Committee
advanced the m e n 's com·
pulsories to 7 a.m . after event
coordinator Anne Gerli petitioned
for an earlier start.
Twenty.year-old Buehning is a
big hitter and he kept Marty
Riessen, 40, scrambling to kttp
up. Buehning took the match.
6·1
K a tz leaves p ost
Dick Katz. who g uided La
Quinta High to the CIF 3·A
basketball championship in 1980
and to the 3·A semifinals this
past season. has left his post ror
a similar job al W.F. West High
in Chehalis, Wash.
His three.year record at La
Quinta is 61·19. No successor has
been named.
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 23, 1981 H /F ca
HAULING IT IN -Rams' rookie tight end Vic
Rakhshani (left), and Edison High and USC product,
comes up on the receiving end of a pass during a
workout this week at Cal State Fullerton. Veteran safe·
..............
ty Ivory Sully, defending on the play, appears to have
lost track of the ball. The Ram rookies will play the
Dallas Cowboy rookies Saturday (noon> at Fullerton:
Flight of the Lasers set Sunday
Di~ghies, manned by young and old alike, compete in annual event
By ALMON WCKABEY
Dall'° l'lht IMtl .. Wrt ...
Laser dinghies will "fly " around the
bay Sunday in the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce's only
yachting event of the year unless you
count the Character Boat Parade.
The Chamber is calling it the "46th
Flight or the Lasers" -which isn't ex·
actly correct.
The 46th Flight, maybe. but oldtimers
will recall that the midsummer sudden·
death classic was the Flight of the
Snowbirds. a unique little 12-foot dinghy
that originated in Newpart Beach.
When the Snowbird began to die out
as a class, the "flight" was tried with
other popular dinghies such as the Kite.
but never really caught on. Then came
the Laser. one of the most popular new
fiberglass dinghies in the U.S. It is a
boat particularly popular with single·
handed sailors but can also be sailed
with two people.
the Flight of the Lasers has never
equaled the Flight of the Snowbirds in
numbers. In the early days the
Snowbirds turned out in droves of up·
wards of 150 boats. The Lasers rarely
equal 100.
Nevertheless. the Flight is sliJI one of
Newport's most spectacular .. yachting"
events or the summer.
The Lasers. manned by everyone
from 6-year·olds to oldtimers and mar·
ried couples. will line up off the Balboa
Pavilion for a 1 p.m. s tart Sunday.
The course will take the Lasers over
all reaches of the bay. finishing at the
s tarting line. The race usually takes
about two hours.
Five years ago, Perpetual Savings &
Loan Association of Newport Beach,
and its chairman , the late Tom
Webster. look on the sponsorship of the
Flight along with the Commodores Club
BOATING
of the Newpart Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce. Webster and his brother
were the owners of the first Snowbird.
Bill Ficker will again assume the
duties of race chairman of this year's
Flight He wiU be assisted by Paul
Salata, Rick Jackson (representing
Perpetual Savings & Loan> and former
commodores John Curci, Pete Barrett.
John Rade r . Bob Wilcox and Bill
Blurock.
Following the race, trophy awards
will be made at Newport Harbor Yacht
Club to the winner. the first girl.
youngest boy. youngest girl, oldest skip·
per and first married couple. Entry blanks are still available at au
area yacht clubs.
Other area ~achtin( events over the
weekend include an offshore race for
Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Ocean
Racing Series for skippers seeking the
Ahmanson and Dickson trophies. and
Balboa Yacht Club's 66 Series for In-
Windsurfers to compete
ternalional Offshore Rule and
Performance Handicap Racing Fleet
yachts on Saturday.
Lido·l4 sailors will be busy Saturday
and Sunday in the Ullman "B" Regatta
s ponsored by Balboa Yacht Cl ub.
South Shore Yacht Club will stage a
race for the Orange County Women's
Ocean Racing Series with the top prize
as the Sheila Burnett Memorial.
In other Southern California Yachting
Association areas:
Los Aogeles·Loag Beach
Seal Beach Yacht Club -Da.na Point
race and return. Saturday, Sunday.
Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club -
Windsurfer District I championship,
Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
Santa MOilica Bay
King Harbor Yacht Club -Dinghy
Day <centerboards> Saturday.
California Yacht Club -Buoy Mania
( PHRF. MORC> Twilight Series, Satur-
day.
Pacific Mariners Yacht Club -In·
verted Start race, Stein Series No. 5,
Sunday.
San Diego
Coronado Cays Yacht Club -
T)Vilight Predicted Log contest, Satur·
day.
Santa Clara Racing Association -
Laser Circuit, Saturday.
San Diego Navy Sailing Club -Op·
timist Regatta, Saturday, Sunday.
Coronado Yacht Club -Barr Sum·
mer Series (invitational handicap) Sun·
day.
North and Inland
Ventura Yacht Club -Blue
Series No. 3, Saturday.
Anacat>a Yacht Club -All
Day, Sunday.
~.Three-da y event lures top board sailors Santa Barbara Sailing Club -Sum·
mer Series, Saturday, Sunday.
WesUake Yacht Club -S~bot lnvita·
tional Regatta, Sunday. F LOS ANGELES -More than 200 elemental sailboat, and board sailing is
~ board sailors will convene at Cabrill o acknowledged by many as the most ex· 1 Beach Yacht Club, Los Angeles Harbor citing type of sailing.
Friday for the Windsurfer Region I
championships on breezy "hurricane
..,. gulch" in the outer harbor.
;· The spectacular regatta, featuring
1 some of the most acrobatic Windsurfer
sailors on the West Coast, will continue
through Sunday.
Region I takes in the area from San
t, Diego to Sant,_ Barbara. but board
sailors from as far north as San Fran· f cisco are expected to compete.
,. Special bleachers h ave been
1 ' set up on the beach near CBYC for the
• open freestyle tournament on Sunday in
, which the sailors are expected to
~ perform some of their most spectacular
,. acrobatics. On Friday and Saturday the 1 board sailors will compete in regular
.. triangular course racin".
The International Windsurfer Class
.. Association is a manufacturer's one· -: j design sailing class comprised of more
:: than 20,000 members in over 70 coun·
tries.
The Windsurfer is said to be the most
T h e p a t e n t e d w i n d s u r f e r 1 s;
actually a surfboard consisting of a
durable fiberglass hull. daggerboard
and twin-boomed sail rig joined to the
hull by a universal joint assembly.
Sailors sail the craft standing up, steer·
ing by trimming the sail with a
wishbone rig. To tack or jibe the sailor
walks around the mast, carrying the rig
with him.
In the event of a miscue -the boat
never capsizes -the sailor often finds
himself in the drink with the rig tying
flat in the water. No problem other than
wetness. The sailor climbs back aboard.
hauls the rig back in place by grasping
the wishbone rig and continues sailing.
Sailboarding has become a
sophisticated sport with the experts
able to leap giant waves or saU the craft
through surf onto or off tbe beach.
Since most regattas are held close in·
shore, the sport or board sailing has for
the first time brought mass spectator
appeal to the sport of sailing.
Motorcycles vie
RIVERSIDE -Over30of thecountry's
top motorcycle racing teams will face six
grueling hours of competition at speeds
exceeding 150 mph in the Six Hour
Motorcycle Endurance Race Saturday
and Sunday at Riverside Raceway.
A variety of classes will race from the
550 cc street legal stock bikes to
streamlined 1.200 cc Formula One race
bikes.
The heat races for the American
Federation of Motorcyclist3 <AFM)
event will begin Saturday at noon with
preliminary races and openin1
ceremonies slated to start at 10 a . m. Sun·
day.
The Six Hour main event starts at noon
Sunday.
Admission prices are $6 Saturday and
$8 Sunday with pit passes costing an add.i·
tiona1$3.
Women race fans will be admitted for
$3 Saturday and $4 Sunday with children
under 12 free.
Jr. All-American
• • registration set Cowb.oys' rookie sharp PoCKET
PAGER.
The South Coast Jr. All·
American football pr<>1ram, wilt'
an expanded eJ1ht and nine.year·
oJd divialoo, wUI be1in practice
Au1. 10 in preparatioll for the 1981
season.
The teams are composed of
compatible a1e and w1l1ht
aroupe and in tum they play
almilarly structured teams in
other areu or Oran1e County.
Openlna day ceremon.l .. will be
beta Aue. 30 at Saddlebact eou ....
For lnfonnaUoo and rtSbtr•·
Uon procedun, caU Kent Harr at
IS HMS or Ron Grebel aUS1·5Ul5.
All cbUdr en ar.e welcome.
Scholanldp prOll'•&n• an allo
avallable to children requir1q
llaandml ... 11ttance.
J erry Hogeboom completed
8 of 10 passes for 113 yards
to highlight the Dallas Cowboys'
ertorts Wednesday In a scoreless
rookie scrimmage a&alnst the
San Die10 Char1ers at UC
trvine.
Hogeboom, a second.year
veteran from Central Mkhi1an
who saw no action at
quarterback 1aat year, directed
the Cowboys' rookies on their
lonaeat drlve or the d ay. 64
yardt to the San Dleao •ix·Yard
llne, before the marc.b JlalJed.
Terry Elaton. the rormer
University of Houlton
quarterbtlck who la maktns a
bid aa a free a1ent U1ht end, led the Cowboys recervera wlth
three receptions for SO yards.
Another tight end prospect, h'ee
acent Wilbur Montaomery of
Stetson, caught two pa11es ror 40
yards .
Topptn1 the Dallas ru1hine at·
tack were free a1enta Sam Platt
of Florida State wlth 18 yards on
eight carries and ll'ff afent Ken
Lovely or Freano State with 18
yards on alx carries.
The Char1era' deepest of.
f enalve penetration wa1 t.o the
one·Yard line.
Free arent safety Mike Downs ot ~lee had DallH' only in·
terceptton, a dlvln1 end aone
pickoff ot a pan by San Dteto'•
!d Lut.Mr.
COVERS
FOUR
COUNTIES
News blackout over?
No progress reported at surprise session
WASHINGTON <AP> -As the
baseball strike reached the t90·game
mark Wednesday. it appeared the
ne10Uations new• blackout Imposed
by Secretary of Labor Raymond
Donovan would end arter three days.
In Baltimore Wednesday ni&ht,
Doug OeClnces, the Orioles third
baseman and American League
player representative, said that an an·
nouncement was to be made about the
talks, en(ijpg the blackout al noon lo·
day.
Appearing on WBAL·TV, OeCinces
refused to discuss the ne1otiaUons say·
tng he was still honoring the blackout.
"l can say thou1h that the blackout
will be lifted at noon tomorrow." he
said Wednesday. "I'm sure there'll be
plenty of Information coming out at
thattime."
DeCinces said he was not sure if
management representatives also
plan to lilt the blackout at that time.
Raymond Grebey, the club owners'
chief negotiator, was unavailable for
comment on DeCinces' statement.
KeMeth Moffett, acting head of the
Federal Mediation and Conciliation
Service. surprised reporters earlier
'.lednesday announcing that the two
sides had switched sites and met face
to face for l '12 hours with Donovan
present.
Moffett said the meeting had been
moved to the Office of Personnel
Management because: "We felt there
was less likelihood there that anyone
wou Id tense up.··
The site of the surprise meeting '
between the negotiating team for the
Major League Players Association
and the executive board of the owners'
Player Relations Committee is about a
half·dozen blocks from the Mediation
and Conciliation headquarters. where
the negotiations had taken place since
Size 155SR-12
Blackwall
movinithererromNew York Monday.
The meeting started less than an
hour after Moffett announced that the
two sides had failed to conduct any
face-to-face bargaining during five
hours or morning sessions. Moffett
said then that the two aides would re
turn to the Medlatlon and Conciliation
headquarters later in the day. but not
necessarily for bar&alning.
None of the principals on either side
of the 4l·day-old strike attended the af·
ternoon news briefing.
At the briefing, Moffett also said the
two sides, along with Donovan, would
return to negotiations al his agency's
headquarters today.
200 dragbikes
battle Saturday
The quest for the first 200 mph liming
on a closed course continues this
weekend as Orange County lnterna·
tional Raceway and the American
Motorcyclist Association host the third
annual Dragbike Orange County Na·
lionals.
More than 200teams from the United
States and Canada are expected to
compete for the more than $25,000 in
cash, including a $3,300 top fuel cash
pot -hlghesteverfordr~gbikes.
The official nationals top fuel speed
record of 190 mph is held by Sam Wilts
of Oklahoma City on a Kawasaki.
The 190 mph-plus qualifying session
will start Saturday night at 6 along
with preliminary semipro and ET
bracket races .
Sunday the gates will open at 10
a.m., with practice and qualifying
from 11·2and the main eventat3.
For more information, phone
292-4444 after6p.m.
SIZE
s3415._165S----+A-14 ~
165SA-15
175SR-14 Plus $1.-41 F.E T 185SR-14
G. T. SPECIAL STEEL Y882
70 Series-Raised White Letters
Size 175/70HR-13
Raised White Letters
Flis MtJl C1••1et1 11.,..U
YOKOHAMA Y205
4-Ply Polyeeter
Blacllwall Tubeless
·2'1"'!1
Plus Sl.33 F.E.T.
RAISED
WH11E
SIZE LETTERS F.E T
185/70HR-13 '62" $1.86
185/70HR· 1• '68" 1.96
205/70HR-t• 117411 2.38
My !=REE Road Hazard Guarantee goes
with every new paaaenger car tire we
Mil-your MONEY BACK If you can find a
better one ... you've got my word on ltl
'PCllCellt 11~
Comcilttt Dltllls on this Free Road Hazard Guar1ntee Avallablt at All Locations Uated Below
Foreign Car
Owner• ...
GUllrlel
M1cPh1rson
$11
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/1'huraday1 July 23. 1981 ,,_ __________________________ .._. ~-----------------------.
..
NAIL wan a•• OtVltlOM w "., ... , ...
LMA-lft 14 II l' '' D llS ~ Dleto 14 10 U • J) m Wt t1'4HMto
Sel\Jo.. • It H ~ D 11 NOltTMW•IT OIVlllC*
VMIU'll-U 1 "4 1' 4' Mt
s .. 111• u 11 " ..s 4 "' Ct ltttY IJ 12 4t • J1 111 Ptwtlanct u I) • ,. lS t«I
Ed"llOnw 10 14 41 St .0 *
•AST•aM OIVlllC*
CMMM
41MnlrMI
" , ., J1 iJ l.s
w • .-. ...... u ......
u u .. 41 41 112
Ul2 444al0f
S to JI Ml ll t i
IOUTM•aM OIVlllOM
All..ilt U t SI Jt 4 UI
l'ortL•-U • 41 2' )I Ill ,...,.,. a.,. n u so n 4 111
JaOMlf'IVll.. 12 1) JS Jt 2' .,
ca MT a AL DIVlllC*
Chi<-11 1 U D 4oJ I.a
Ml•"'•Hota IJ II 4oJ 42 Jt 111 TlllU U ll 0 Jt .0 110
Dell•• l 12 " St ,. Sl
SI• poln .. .,. •w•r-!of • 1'9111atlof\ or
ovffil,,,. vl<tory ""°'' polftll tor a .-out victory ONlloftuspolnllor • .,.,., tNI M-
•1111 • mt•l-Of llVM perttme No-
Point 11 _..,.., !of" overtl..,. or .-,i
QCMll 1 _,,,Sc_
Tampelltyl,Jtcktonvll .. 1 c.o.moas Mlllnll' .. 1' CIOI ~ .>-i, Fort LauOtrdt la 1 coll
LOl"ngeln4, Toronto2
$tn ONQDJ. l'oo'Ufftd I T ... 1M'tO-
No9ameuc:llldlli.d ''*r'•G-FortL-•dalea1s.rf,n
Vanc-ra1Cal9f'Y.n
DalltHIS..llle.11
Surf 1tetl1tlc1
c T1W'wllll J ... , 111
0-• • s1 .... -.,.,. ,,
Lt<lrle "'°'-10
~umal(flalll • Crel9All., ti
J.n VMI Der ....... IS
Pa111ac-" CllarlleC-. 22
Gr•IWl,,,.O.tn II
Clltrll•Gr-11
CarlOI Alberto u
VldtlF...-1 14
Kai Slett.I • Joa Cl ...... IS
Me .... , ... II
~,-I J-Sc:--• Sin• SNl9H"I 2S
JoMCr-1•
tony Crudo II
Alan ea.,., u
Paul Ctlllll" u
MtrkLtnduy• I
Toltll 2.S .,
o -nts· toetts u ~
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l
l
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0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
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0-• • ...
Alan Meyer 2S 143 SI s
Miit• Mt/IGnrf I s I 0
SleveHellmkll I I , 0
Tot el a 2S 1 .. SS s
0-nt•' lottll 2S 111 G •
" • 22
1 " 2 •• • 14
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Key· t ~ll. a..-$111•, P-lotel polrlb
Goat It ffll9" key I ....... l-10fll, -lllUIOUll, ... -110fll ..,aintl .........
·-No1-onteem
~ . ' . "
LITTLE LEAGUE PLAYOFFS
Melora ( 11·12·yeer-olda) OISTatCTUT041•MAMaNT IN'ff l ttCke.,.vlew~rk.,.)
........ , •• 1c ...
O<••""lew -ri<Alll S, Fountalr1 Vtttey
Norlll l I FounttlnVtttey NOt'llltllmlMtedl
T.......-10-
NottmeKPledllled
flrtUy'•G-
Seevl-VI. C>cHnvlew Arnark tn, S. 4S
1Nw2•t• .......... , ........ ,.,Sc ....
Robl.....ooci>. FounlelnValleySo111111 ,..,......,o_
CkHn View N•ll-1 111 Fo..ntalll.VaCley
~111,s:u.
DIST•tCTUTOU•NAMaNT
CatMl ..... VlejeYMlllAlllMU< '•rlll ....... , .........,.,Sc ...
No9ame11t..,,.,led
T_.....-so-
M1u 1 ... v1eioNort11111. s.dclteOe<lt, S:JO
"'*Y'•O-N09fmtKIW<ll.lled '-..,....,.,o_
lrvtna NorUI VL Mlulon Vle)o NW1fl.
Saddl-kwlrww<, 10e .m ,..,...., ....... .,..1c ....
S.n Jia.n Ctpl1tr-12, ~ BHCll • c~&N<:llellmlnatadl
T...._..IG-
Mln lon Viejo Soutll n Sa r1 J11•"
C~l•tr-,S JO l'n.ty•so-
No .. meK--...... ,..o_
lrvlNSoiltllvLtotllg11t'1wlnner, 10. m
S.nlor9(14-1S.yHr-oldl)
OIST•tcTtJTOU•MAM•MT
( .. It ti .. ....".,.,
T ....... ,ai...ipllAl ... OW
Foumtln Vetlay Nerti! va. Roelnwood, S
pm
S.nloH I 13-yeer-olda)
OIST•tCTtlTOUaMAM•MT
CetLtQMIMIM .... I •••••t(•lc.,. l'ownltl11 v t11ey NorlhS, lllOOlnwoocl •
T_.....-10-
S.1vlew v1. H1111ll"91onVtlley, S:'°
o•n••CTSSTOU•MAM•MT <at"-Y9NPt411,lfYlllol ........ .,..1c ..... I.AM l"IN'ffl·Sllddlebacll 11, Lavun• llMcllO
c Lf9llAa e.tc11ellmlna~1.
Mlstlon Hiiia 11. trwlN Nortll J ClfYIN
HortllollmlN!IH).
T ....... aO-
Vle}ewa.MIMllftlflejoS...tll,Sp m,
MJNleflHltlt"' Ltll• .. -t ..... ..__,J
llJll,
Deep M• ftahlng
N•W~ IM't ~I -t4~.
• Mollto, "tie•. lU •A•<k.,.1, U roclt c• J lltllbul, I re!-..11. IDeWT't LAICWI -
tot anoien: 1• lllltrtcllllt, m -i111, 11 ...,.. Mu. 21 <tllco Nu.• "'lowt.tll. -.S
moclterel, t rock 11111.
OAMA ...... , -in tfttler•: .. -... lltrrecllM, 2' boftcto, 4A roclt 11111, IU mtelt.,91.
, ... 01aoo IM&M UMI ... ,,, •.
Ma•'•· ~ ~, -.... efttlert: 10
albacore, 11 yellawttll. • --· t D«· rtcuda, 11' bonito, 1'7 ..... 61roclt11111, ID
ma<kerel.
SAM SIMEON -11 tntten: 40 lino ceo,
'" rocll tod, 2QS red roclt c,oel. I,. red _.
par, I <-COii
MO••o aAY CVlr1'• ltMl .. 1 -u
-•an: '" rocll cocl, 22' reo rocll <od. AVIL.AaAY C.....,S.Lltltl ->l ant19n.
J.I 11"9 cod, 1tS red roclt <od. 7• yellow 1>e1a. 1M rock <04. 11 mtc1tere1
SAMTA aaaaA•A -., •nel•rt. M11 calico-.. » D«rac:llllt. s 11119 cod, t cow
coo, 144 reo loNCIPe•. n bonito, 111t11111111.
vaMTUU -'°' antM": "° ctlkO .... n und 1111u . 1t 11tll111.tt, l titrrtclldt, ii
mackerel, UO ro<k 11111, 3"' rock cod, It c-
cocl, S 11119 cod.
OXNA•O -1a •no .. ": tlO roclt ""'·..,. cellco bMs. 2 lltlllllll, 11 Wind1>ea,a,., ro<ll
coo, 7 11119 cod, •cow cod
"O•T MUaNaME (A ... •rlc••I -.,
anot•n: 117 <•llco lleil. u rocll ""'· • llallbllt, 2' mtcll.,.I, 337 rock coo
MALllU -It enQ!ert; 'IO bua. S lltllllllt.
IS Wnd -'· J btrrtc.,.,., 100 mtckto el, llO
rock fl1h.
""•AOISE cov• -110 an11er1. 1.i
calico !less, I llallbut, S -rac:llM. 1211 roclt
11111
SANTA MONICA -Ill a119ler1 226 .-
lleu, 100 ..-11 ... el, IO bonito, ll barrac:.-, » roe k 11ess., 1 IWl/111111
MA•IMA oaL ••Y -II aneterl GO
rock cod. 1 llalll>lll. U Uftd ball, ISO
ma<lterel, 14 bonito.
aeoo-oo -1'7 tn9•"' M _,to,•" btu. I llaltclut. 1' ia.rrtcuU, 110 rock Ill/I.
....... -ts.I ~: 2,WO mecllerel, 1u
bonito, 1lS r«ll ""'· UN NOtlO IU. M. ~I -14'
•nelert: 2 .,.tlowtall, 116 toerrtcuda, llS
bOrllto, 1..S <tllco llMI. I"""' O' Ctlll -104 .... , ... , ...... ., •• S21 -rte ..... 10 <tllC•
bau, ns bOnlto." mKk ... 1. • ~ titu.
LOMG aEACM ( .. t_i "•ti -S4
•nolert; 1 c.alko titu, 140 meckerat, IU
titrrt<uelll, o tionlto, J rock 11111. lo--'•
WMrfl -1'1 fn9le": JM btrrt<llde, '7
bonito, I llallllllt, l sand lieu, MS rntcker.t,
Sii t t llcolless.
saAL auc" -,. _ .. ,.. 01 -·
re<uda, UO bonito, 200 mt<kerel
oc••JtSIOE -lit_ • .,., 171 bonito,;.
callto !Miss, 21 -.cl-·· II rock flsll, t20 ma< Orel.
Thia week'• trout planlt
LOS AMGaL•S -lie Roell Cr""·
Jt<klOn LAU, PyHrnlcl LM.e, U ..... r Pin.
Crffk al Frertcllrntn'I Fial.
SAM IEaMA•OIMO -Jellh Ltke, Sllv...-R"9NOlr. ••V••Ste>a -l'ulmor Lelle, Hemet
lAlle.
UN ot•GO -c .. ,_. 11-..tr.
MAOaU -S... Joeqllln •t,..r I~
Fo<ltl, Sotcit'lff l..He, $1---LAU. K•aM -ltarn RI-CO...-r .. 0.... ..
l(R1 P-rllOuM, lkltell P-•,.-• lo
Oemocr• o.rn. twtlllll• D..n to llwell
PowerllOUtt. ICRl P-•rllOUu lo Ltll•
tu11e11a1.
TU&.Aaa -IC.,.,. Rl,..r ll'elrvi.w 0.... to
ICRJ "'-· J--la 9f""9 to Fatrvi.w !Mml, "-rml11I er-. TWle River 1~11 .,.d South l'orh of _,,,
Forlll.
INYO -8tller Cr-. Bit PIM Cl'-. e 11NP c...... c~. Ml4dl•. South and ,,..
leU 111, ~tie Cr-. 11\..,_l\deft<e
Crfflt, i.-PIM ~. NM\11 L.tu. 09ll
Cr••ll CHOrtll Forlll, Symmes Cl'Hll,
T allOOM Crfftl, Tlnem•llt Crffll, Tutt ..
Crffll.
MOMO -8r'I~ R~r. auc:gy.
Crfflt, Convld Cr-. c.onvkl Ltke, 0..
mtn CrMll, eu ... y Ltke, George Ltu,
Gten C,...., Grent Ltke, G'"" Cr•k, G«ll
Lake, Hilton c ....... J-Ltll•, LM Vlnl"ll
CrMll. Lundy Ltt<•, _,,,,. l.tk•, --C•Mll. MCGM CTMll; Miii Cl'Hll, 0-..
River I &enton Cnm"'9 -919 Sorlllesl,
Rov•r• c,_, R001r1ton Cr-. ••• "-C Par adlM CMnp lo Tom'1 Plac:e, T..,,,,
Piao upst,_,. to Rock Cr"" Ltlle.
lo• Alamhoa
waOMHOAY'S aaM.tLTS ( ..... ~---·-.u.a> l'talT •ACa. JSO yarcll. 2-yH r .. lft.
Ctalmlflt-• U,IOO. Reh Party lloy (9f-ll 2' ... 10,20 MO
SMms Tna !C-doul L• S.OD
51\r'aWd N Rkll CHanl I.JO
"llO ,_,...: ~I-Windy, T-1111
Ull, Any ll,,,. '-*'Y, SlwMI Jitter a111. ~
dys Ta, CieWf Polky, $tle<etultr 8141.
,, eucu CU I "Id '142.211.
SICOMO ltACa. 171 ytra ,_,...,...,,_
•Ad .... Clalfftlnt pUrM M.D .
St .. lft.,..,Oltr91 tFlore l IUO 7.JO UO
erttM Polky cc.re110u1 sa •.20 In V_...........,. IT,.....n1l UO "''° r-: Proud .... rk lt, ~ Den, HHllllll .. ,.._, Siii Ltfl.
TH••o ••ca. iJO yerds. J.yHr111da.
Clalmlntl>W99 M,«111.
l'ltflly °'4tlktle IHtrtl S,00 a.• a.a
M11t11tl aetpect CTl'Mtunl I.OD S.JO
Get 111o Gold cc,.......1 •.•
Alto rtcad: ._,. Re,..latten, RlllllllU
Fool, Miu Ery Cl\erger, l(ltMyllM.
'OU•TI4 a.ca . ..o yarth. J.yetr-otdl.
Clalml119llUfM14.a.
Priam 9111) CFrydity) a.to ... MO
El Es TitCCM'dO&tl J.• tAO
My l(lclS Tr.-IPllkeollOlll Uf
""o ractd: Mtrll Oii lnllll, JHMn "-•
Mtnty Mtln1s, Olde Of IN w.tt, ~II ttll•
,_!My, Ml\IO (;wllt, ».,.. .. (Ml ...........
Plf•TN •ACa. stO y.,cn .. ,_,..,......._
Clelntl"t,.._'5,GllO.
v a1ue l11 Qo.9tlleft l~I tM t... >ID
Mid Etla CT,_-el 4MI JM
OYltel• ........ , uo "''° raeo: ~ R Tr .... , S.llyc..,,. ly, MAM......,_. Trv R_.,
llJlT .. ~. * ,.,. .. ,_,..., ..... MW
""~....-. MIU "llC IClr ... 1 10.40 Ml ut MIN~,_, 1.,...,..1 t .40 tA
OoMa .... IC:,....,I ,.,_
Al .. rte:•; Go Ne«WMI ... .,, ~ ...
A""'9, ..-J_, Myr\t 111.,.., MllCM
............ s-tc.eret•· u eudl ci.11 ,. .. .,s.a .
.. .,,..,,. 11ACa. • y...-. ..,..,.....
IM•• OellNlte ,_..., .-, ~1.MC-U •·• >.a L40 Jet, ... ,,...,, ... ut
--. ... (0.....,) , ...
AIM ,,_.; T'"lll'Mfl, • ._.., •t\lell, ... ........ ., .......... , ........ .
11•MTM •ACa ..... ,--. ..,._ ....
IM -.,M._,.,..,... .... ....,__....,,. 1Ut Ml IM
c-1•111.....,lHertl ......
•-llllll"Y~·~ ... ........ : ......... "--... ...,. .. -. ,,,,,
ltCNc:a.. ~~(Mt .... t1'A. •I' 1 11 -
• '1cl .. cu.....,, ............. ................... ._. ............ , .......
~.
D.eMar ........... ••tue..n ,,.,.. ... ..,... 1 0 ._....
PIHf llAC8> 1111' """"' ) ,_..-ClelMltlHIWWI... , T-o.iY (~J ,, .... IM
....,.._ Mlllk !WW.WI l.OD ta
....... ,... cvei-11t1e1 ut Ai .. rMIMi .... aww, ,.,..., -., _,,,. ..... ,......
HCONO uca. '" 1--., ...,_....._ Clthlllfll 11WW 111,-
L"'IY Ke,•. C~I ut t..• ... MMama t-Cu,Mllll a ... UM
c;tre'"9"Y l.C:.tOlll Mt AIM r!lflM: ._.,., .....,, ,,.. 0-.
ah1• or-a-t, Trl.W I.My, Nettw
"uilwtl, lllw .. , ~ey ~. A "°"'ti .. Mty ...
12 Delly~ 14-tl lllld '51 •••
THlaD !Ulea. • IW ..... ..,_.,...._ .....
"ii· ClallftCftl••t1t.OOO. Tlmelefa ......... le>neeel ltM 1 A S,00
5tml-c:Oftec._ 1.-u ... 1 11.00 IMI
Mtrutc ...,..cv....,.11t1•I •• AIM l'«M: •ltM MT~. l't•ffl ...,_,
OHllWllle 0.-, I,,..., ROMI, Ratttll klllt.
l(lnt El«t. War AlllM.
tSetttctt 1"'4> .... Ul.OI.
"Ouant llACS. OIM mile )oyHr ...
flllltt. Cltlmlfll 11WW 111, ••
Nallwa lkll Cl'tnctyl S.00 J 41 tM
S.-Clal -. Ca->.• 1 • .0 La Pr1-co.1-.,.1 1 ... AIM rtc:tO. I w-o.c ........... I.Mt.
i;.lelen INdr'O
""" a.c•. '"-mu .. .,. t11rf, ._.,..,. .icts ano ...,, Cltlml"ll _..tu.-.
"lrtle IVtltntlaltl 2' ... 11,• , .. Pirtle Flwt COllverft) S... 4.JO
l.futlllnt •tc.r cT-1 UD Alto rtc:M; Umotk <t, Aeete a.y. Gt.-Cloud, Moor1 Oynnty, ....... G...,lllM,
Vtur Roy.,, 0..-. Hllller -n.1u.r.
Her0t9er I.Ad. tJ Ht<lt C 11 .. 1 paid IJ't,jO,
SIXTH ••ca. s .... 1ur1one1. 2·Y•er..td
mateen GOii• •Ni .. 1e11,,... Clt lml119 _..
tt•.000.
l(l1191Ca1.._
CO.ltllollssa.,.) I.ID 4 • .0 UO
Accent ... I• C Pln<ay) J.IO ).QI)
Sttnc!.ipeomtdl.,. 1si-.n...er I l ... "''° rtced: l'lnt l.Arry, "ot<otore G,_, Pvl>llc SclMUr. Powcle.-e,Jet Pirate.
s•Y•MTM ltAC•. • lurlOfteS. Fiiiies Md mares, ).,...,-old -yp, Clelml119 1111,.. ~.ooo.
l"ort11veflv Co.t-..U.y•I a.211 •·• l.JO
Lt Pl•tot• cva1oni ...... 1 1 M >..ao
E'Tellta CHtwleyl UO "''° rtcad. Pr-PMltton. hteal E•· c11t,,..,Erl T11.
U Ut<lt 16-21 paid ,171.00
ll PIO Sb 1""1·11·1-41 paid U•,1'7 wtt11
ICM1r wlMlne lklletl Ith• llOr-1. U Pkll Sb
conlOl•tloft palcl U11.00 ..tlll 11' wlrtnlnt
lk ltell Clive 110r1nl
• tOMTH llACa. 11'> fwl0ft9S on .,...._
J.yotr-olcb. Clt lml119 puna ....,,000
TtltlaTorcllCOel-..yel1720 t.IO uo
Hltll C..._l IGlllltfnl •.• l.to
Ju.n aarrwa C&uel l.00 "''° rtc.O. Cell Me Miiier. Our Pe• Ml<llMI, Mttw n..tcll. ~Int eoy
NIMTH llACa. II'> l11t'°"9:1 • ._.,..,.,-.
Ctalml"ll ~ "".000 9ue11 Clll<o C Oel-.eye I t 60 l.IO L.O
Re .. lllerto (Torol S • .O ta
ltltnd Wlllrl IMcH ... _I 1 . .0
Also rac.o Rock Softly, R11by'• Jeu,
Color aeeror u euctt C2-41 paid 1w.oo.
"'··-· 1',761
Loa Ale".'ltOI Stsndlngt
l""-t'IW.-.....yl
JOCKaYS
Stl lit bit JN
DaMy Ctroou sot t1 67 n
1Cenr>e111 Hart O• " 11 14 Steve lr-• 41' SO » SI
JOlln Cr .... r •1 St .. •
Dtnny Mlt<llell 416 <II '° » Ltrry Che,.., 2"' Jt J2 tt Rolle rt_, JOI M 4 Jt
K•nMlll C1etla1e m 1S tt 4oJ
J emea a.-, 2'7 2S tt JO
Dontld OelorT'll>9 I.. U 1' IS
T•AtNa•S
••-Sdw-wtdl c w C..lo
E Merit W.kll
Cllerlu •--tit
Slave RCICllOtum
RlllMll Harri•
l(e I lll Colet10
Goroon Stelnmlllor ..a .. 1J-.
earrv Woodllollse
Sts 1• bit ...
400 74 76 u
10t • " ,.
12' -•• 11 I .. 24 21 JI
'tS ,. lO 1•
, .. 1' ts IS
72111)1
S4 II 1 t
111 u ,, 12
100 IS 11 ••
Sierra Nev•d• Open ... ,._. ......... ,
Cllerlle GI"°"
o .... "'-··· Jolvl 11-11
O.va t:rnarkk
Ceurs--
0.1• Riiey
SleveS.11
900 WyM ,
Misc.
WedMtdai:::~nHctlont ......... ~
1• 1Jt ,,.
IJt
1.0
1.0
140 ••
AlLANT" "ALCOHS -E•laft094 tt.
contrtcl of Wllll-.Andrews. twllllt<lt,
tlll' ...... 1.
9Ul'l""LO &ILLS -~ Joe Oovlill, MKltle, to • ..,.,.. ol _.,..r cOfttracb. Cut
""trick IClllO, llllftltr. -AIOll Otwart.
Joftll C ....... r -WtyN --·place
ltlCkera. -tNI O.rrall Moulef\. wide recal.,..., left camp.
CIHCINHATI BEHGAU -SltNO ·-
.,..,,.,, o.1-1 ... -· LOS ANGELeS •AMS -Tradllcl Eddie
Hiii, rwnnl"ll bKll, to IN Miami Ooltlltl,. I« en IA'MllKloMCI 0ratt clloke.
NEW ENGL.ANO PATRIOTS -~ lrltn l4oll..,.y, olfensl,.. tt<k ... to• -In
of_ • .,.., contrtcb.
Haw OftLE"NS SAINTS -SltNO HoClle ,,.._.,., ,,.,.-.
PHILAOE&.PHIA EAGLES -"""°""'ad
1M retl,_,,. Of WooOV "9optas, ofltMlw
e-d. ST. LOUIS CAaOINAU -SltMd Gery
WM!fonl W Wlllla UMorwood, • ...,..,,.
Mells. IAN .. aAHCISCO ttffa -Ple<M 0.-..,. vi...,, dlNM!w llNmM.-. tlW lnlwtd,.
-11•1· .... AC ....
CMUaCWILL DOWHS -Ntmacl -· L. a.t.._ rtctne _,....,.,. c:ou.a ..
aASTE•N ILLIHOIS -Nall'lff Ttlfn
Waa!Mfl -1tUllt ...._.t~tec.11.
HO"THWESTe•M -Nam•• .....
WOll-.......it-11.
Wottd UnlwenHy ......
(ft ........ ~
TllACtl MO Ptft.'o
1•-. -1. MtC L..a.y cu.1.1. 11.11; t. Cot.In imlth CU.$,) ,. •• ; .. ~t
OWttt l~I. 11.#. -_....-1. OWlf la CU.I.I, ... OS: J,
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A HEAD ABOVE San Diego Socker Gert
Wieczorkowski (left) outleaps Portland's
John Hain lo get a header off during NASL
JIM NIEMIEC
action at San Diego Wednesday night. 'foe
Sockers stopped the Timbers, 3·1.
Hooked on a favorite lure
Ask a thousand salt water anglers what kind or
jigs they prefer and most likely you will get a
thousand dirrerent answers. Everyone seems to
have his own favorite jig, and that's the reason
there are so many jigs on the market.
Ironically, it doesn't make that much dif-
ference to the fi sh. whether they be albacore or
marlin.
IN THE HA V DA VS of Newport Harbor, dur·
ing the 40's and SO 's, when thousands of tons of
albacore·tuna were brought into local canneries
for processing. and Newport's fl eet made today's
San Diego fleet seem smaller. many lures on the
market today were getting their start.
Traditionally. in the days or Zane Gray.
anglers would use bone jigs or combinations of
chrome and brass to attract tuna and marlin.
Walter Racker and Ted Ponting of Newport Beach
introduced the Baldy jig to both commercial ·fish·
ermen and sport anglers. About the same time
bone Jigs were becoming popular. the extremely
producU.ve jap head was introduced. These two
jigs worked hand·in ·hand to reward both groups of
fishermen with good catches until the earty 50s
wben other lures began showing up on the market
and the competition for the hottest jig started.
Every lure on the market tried to reproduce
what hungry fish, moving at speeds between one
and 15 knots. would strike.
WHEN MARLIN FISHERMEN discovered
that spikebills were being hit as often as flyers and
live mackerel. big jigs came on the market. I can
remember my first local marlin trip with George
Lobaugh and Phil Hedlund. When we got a rew
miles off the beach we used a special weapon
called a .. Digo Special. .. This lure was a series of
four-to·fi ve one-ounce japs or various colors .
strung together on lSO·pound mono with the lead
lure being a plastic head.
Today, lures are manufactured for either
small or big game fish. Some are sold specifically
for albacore-tuna and some for billllsh. But in
many cases. these fish can be caught on the same
jig.
Albacore jigs are in the l ·to-7 inch lengths,
yellowfin tuna jigs in the 9-to-15 inch class, while
marlin jigs a re traditionally in the 12·to·l8 Inch
spread. Exceptions to these measurements are the
tiny pinheads and big squid on the market.
Weights of these lures and jigs vary with fishing
conditions and angler preference.
Some are Light and ride high on the wake.
while others seek deeper waters bevond the
From Page C1
McELHANY • • •
transom. On many trips in local waters and off Ba-
ja, I have found that it is best to carry a complete
selection of various Jigs On long range boats it
sometimes take .two anglers to carry a tackle box
loaded with iron and reathers on board,
EVEN THOUGH there are literally thousands
of combinations available to anglers. some
veteran big game fishermen ha ve their own ideas
transformed into a custom tied jig or lure.
Feathers have been replaced on some jigs by
r ubber. plastic, nylon and vinyl. while heads are
FISHING
made out of pal ished abalone encased in resin.
fiberglass. plastic. hard rubber. s pectra·reflector
straps glued on to polished metal and in some
cases. woutd you believe. tied on directly to hand·
carved bone again
To try and convince an angler that any one jig
will catch all the fi sh in the ocean is impossible
Most anglers want a selection to choose from . giv·
ing them the feeling they have selected the right
head, color and name to put the first fish of the
day on deck.
OVER THE YEARS, one of the best color
combinations to troll for either albacore or tuna
has been a green and yell ow. with red·white and
blue-white following pretty far behind. Purple and
black has come along for those who troll during
the early morning or late evening hou rs and on
overcast days. Jap heads still work extremely
well, and perhaps millions are sold every season.
but combinations of jap heads (remember the
DigoSpecial ) are even more effective.
My fa vorite combo is a half·ounce green and
yellow jap head <bright > slipped up and under a
Sevenstrand hexhead with a lighter green and
yellow or green and white with flakes skirt.
As to marlin jigs. it appears to be a toss·up
between green and yellow, black and red. and
mackerel. 'Marlin will hit almost any lure trolled
close to him if he is in a feeding mood. but you
won't convince the veteran who trolls his own
custom-styled jig of that.
Big game fis h are a funny and a very
particular inhabitant or this world. Let's hope no
one ever discovers a single lure or jig that will
catch every fi sh that swims our oceans.
Somehow. I think that might take all the fun
out of fishing.
where he played another three
years of volleyball.
Today, McElhany keeps busy
with beach volleyball, although
he hasn't played ln more than 20
tournaments over the past five
he's golng to have to jump
higher and at the same time be
consistent in his hitting.
Laguna Open
attracts best
in volleyball
years. ·
''I guess I've had to work at
my job a little too much," he
says. "[ love beach volleyball
dearly because I 'm a com·
petitlve person. On top of that,
it's fun."
Therewon'tbethatmuchfun at
Main Beach beginning Satur·
day momln1.
The majority of the two-man
voUeybaJl team• partlclpating in
the Laguna Open conslats of
triple·A rated team• -teams
that have either flnhhed
anywhere from l\rat to fourth ln
an open volleybell tournament,
or who ha~e won • double·A
tourney.
McElhany and Kiernan are
doubl•·A players~ but that
doean't bother Mcl!;lhany. ln
fact, the home court advantqe should apply for tbe duo.
"We have the belabt advan· taae. We're both around 6-3.
Laauna la aowa for havln1 llllh
neta uid IOft Und," be tXplalnl .
"II you Lake Juat any player,
"And, this is a hitters' tourna-
ment. We can beat the smaller
players on the Laauna court but
we might lose to them on any
other beach," McElhany adds.
M cElhany calla Kiernan a
physical speciman. "He's 6-3,
190 and alJ muscle. Compared to
some ol my other partners, he'•
probably the best overall,"
McElhany says. The two actually 1rew up
together in Emerald Bay, play.
Ing plenty of volleyball at the
beach.
"I'd rather play wlth him then
agalnat him," ?tfcElhany addl.
McElhany looks forward to
the Laguna Beach tournament.
Since he's pretty much bll own
boss, he's been takln1 oft a tad·
earlier each day to work out et
Malo Beach.
LHt week, McElhany and
Kiernan flnLlbed teventb la the
touah Mlsllon Bay Open. and be
takea t.be blame for t.he teem'a
elimination .
"We mlde lt to UM wt.Dner'1
bracket but I Just raa out ol 111 .
I'm not in 11 Sood of 1b1.,. u
Gre •. He'1 a nerce bitter."
Defending champions Andy
Fishburn and Dane Selznick
make up the top-seeded team in
this weekend's Cuervo Laguna
Beach Open beach volleyball
tournament at Main Beach.
Twenty-two two ·man
volleyball teams will battle both
Saturday and Sunday in the dou·
ble elimination tournament.
which la part of the California
Pro Beach Tour. Action begins
at 9 1.m. each day, with the
finals expected to begin at 3:30
p.m . Sunday.
The event, in its third year aa
part of the pro tour, drew 14,000
fans lut year. Volleyball teams
wlll be aomt aft.er $7 ,000 in prise
monty with the first-place team
earnln1 13,500 •
Wblh aome of the top
volle)'b•ll playere from
lbrouOtout the state wlU be oa
band for the tourney, oae tam
•hlcb wlU not be pretent ls the
duo of Mau o,.e arrd tllm
Men••·
the favartlel Fishburn and
S.llnit'll, nnt :lo&nect fore• at
tbt 1171 Lapn1 Open.
Ruling oppo•ed
LOS ANGELES <AP) -CoatJnen.
tal Atrtlnea bu uked a rederal court
to aalllf7 Callf ornia CorporatJona Commllalc>ner Geraldine Green's Ju.
ly 13 rulln1 •hlch beld lbat the
airline must l•l abarebolder and
emplo7ee approul before Im·
plementlng an Employee Stock
Ownenblp Plan.
ConUnntal, locked la • bitter takeowr batUe wttb Tnaa ..._...
Uonel Alrllan, a1ked or... for
pennl•lan to ..U 11.4 mllliGD DIW
1bare1 at •tock to em~-·
H /F C1
In an unccrtal.n world there are always lhote who
claim they know "Tbt Truth." And not only do they
know it, they have thl1 peculiar tendency to wunt lo
punish anyone who doesn't see thlnp the waf Utey
do. These proclaimers recenUy brou1bt lo hee some
or the biggest companies In the nation, lncludln1
Procter & Gamble ( P&G). our most successful
marketer of consumer goods.
The wue wu sex and violence on televlalon. Seven
fundamentalist and conservative groups formed the
Coalition for Better Television to put pressure on com·
paniea to refrain ~ from adverll.t· r.
Ing on programs ~; et
deemed (by the ', · ,
coalition) t.o be K ~ marked by -=--~..,... .. ..._ ____ _
~f~~~~~ !~d 111111 IDDlllZ
profanity.''
The kind or programs which would quallry for
such condemnation are "Soap," "Dallas," "Charlie's
Angels," "Saturday Night Live" and "Starsky at
Hutch." The founding members of the coalition are:
Moral Majority, National Federation for Decency.
American Life Lobby, Eagle Forum, Pro-Family
Forum. Concerned Women for America, and Cititens
tor Decency Through Law.
They have people all over the country with their
eyes glued to the tube .• monitoring where com·
mercials fall and assigning merits and demerits to
advertisers. The coalition had been on the verge of
launching a nationwide boycott of 10 companies found
to be the worst offenders. These companies -and the
products they make -were to be targeted in full·
page newspaper ads a nd mailings to 10 million
homes. The boycott was to receive the pulpit endorse-
ment of 70.000 ministers.
But al the last minute the coalition called off the
boycott Here's what happened. First. Owen Buller.
the chairman or P&G. delivered a talk in mid-June in
which he said it was time for advertisers lo "look
beyond" ratings. Butler praised the coalition for "ex·
pressing some very important and broadly held
vie ws," adding : "I can assure you that we are Listen·
ing very carefully to what they say."
Now P&G is not just any advertiser. ll 's the
largest one or them all. spending more than half a
billion dollars a year to promote Tide. Cheer. Bold.
Ivo ry, Crest. Head & Shoulders, Prell, Pampers.
Dunc~n Hines, Folgers and a slew of other brands.
Butler's talk was made just before the coalition
summoned a bout a dozen big advertiser s to
Memphis to make a case as to why they should not be
on the boycott List. Among the companies defending
themsel ves there were SmithKline <Contact),
Warner-Lambert <Listerine, Efferdent, Rolaids> and
Miles Lab <Atka-Seltzer>.
Well. after meeting and talking with the targeted
companies the coalition called off its boycott, an·
nouncing triumphantly that all or them. "without ex·
ception," had agreed to cooperate. The Rev J erry
Falwell, leader of the Moral Majority, said "no ma·
jor company was in defiance of our request to clean
up their act."
The Rev. Falwell called P&G 's Butler "the hero"
of this morality play. P&G's concern for TV pro·
gramming can be seen in the afternoon soap operas
The Cincinnati soap-and-detergent king owns and
produces "Search for Tomorrow," "As the World
Turns," "The Edge of Night:· "The Guilding Light"
and "Another World."
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW YORICIAPl FIMI Oow-J-•v9'.' Woc:'f'·· JIJj. 22 .
AMERICAN LEADERS
Sewo!O... .......
.. ,,.., omit =to1 ~ ~ ~
llO Tm Q.tS <110..0 «II.JI "'12 U-J.lS IS VU 10.. .. I01.S7 1~.62 10..41 + 0 U 65 Stk JiM.D ... ., 161_.. as.11-2.a lnckls . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . . . . •.14. 200 ~r.; ... :·::·:·: :.::.: 2-m:= 65 Stk . • • ... , 7.21'.600
WHAT .STOCKS DID
NEW YORK IAPI Jul 1J Prev.
A#vanced roes..:. dv7
DKll...., ~ 1• Vn<Mnetd ut ..
TO!al 1-1112 llM New lllOftl II • Mew IOWI ~ ..
WHAT AMEX DC>
NEW YOAIC IAP) Jul t2 PAv
Today "~J. """""'.., 1)1
Oecllneel m 3'14
Onchen99d m 201
Toll~ llWH 716 77S
New hight 1 J .... ._. .s JS
METALS
c...-~ t1t1t1 • ~. u.s a1t1,.. u ..... LAM! CZ CMlh a_,._ zi.c 4614 ~·_,.,dell_...
Tit! .7.DH NlelA" w..111GOftlPKl't111.
Ai.""-,...centtl pound, N.Y.
MwCWY S.00.00-11$. ~U-M10.C11•r-oy o1 , HY.
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
Selt<19d-IO VolCI Pf'ICff ~y:
~: "*"'"' ,..,.,. .,., .. se, oft''·°'·
........ ! ....,_ tlalfllt t401.1J. eff P.7S.
Ptf't11 .. ..._ flalftl W UO, wp ......
.. , ....... , ... 10.'7,-.. to"· &torte•: IMl 1111119 ........ u.oo; MtUO
e•klCI,
Ml•41• ft Ner .. e: .-ily dlll' 4vot1
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........... , ., dell• .-'*~ .., .......... ...
SYMBOLS
-
l
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, July 23, 1981
...
An old-fashioned melOd~ama staged by Sail,dlebOck Valley
B1 TOM'nT1.J8 °' ..................
The m<>1t natJve Am rkan rorm of lht1ttr
also ia probably lhe least produ~. but every 10
often some brave theater or another dtcldt1 to
mount an old·ta1hloned cheeNht htra. hlH the
villain melodrama.
The Saddleback Valley Community Theater
has chosen such a project for lta last show under
its old name (it becomes lh MlHlon VltJo
PlayhoU!e ln Septemberl and Ila awan 1on1 al the
current addreaa l lho
playtirs will move to INTERMISSION !'e~:o~~-" Hiiis next
Entlllcd "Pure u
the Driven Snow" <o r "A
Working Girl's Secret"), the play Is a classic ex
ample of Its genre. presented without many or the ...
comic shticks that often push It over into the area
of farce. Al Saddleback, director Vince Cordlo
plays it fairly straight. with the posturing left to
the three main characters -the hero, heroine and
villain.
These roles are quite capably enacted.
something which cannot always be said about the
large supporting cast. several of whom appear Ill
at ease in their assignments. Underplaying is cer·
lain death in m elodrama, and some less ex-
perienced performers tend to slow the pace of the
Saddleback production.
Most impressive of the cast is Marti Louise
Smets as the chaste (and chased) heroine, aptly
christened Purity. Miss Smets dis plays a natural
flair for melodrama in her gestures and facial re·
actions.
Tom McKee does a creditable JOb as the coun-
try bumpkin hero, but it is Ellis Estes as the
dastardly blackguard pursuing Miss Smets who
reaps the lion's share of audience response. Tall,
•BARGA.IN MATINEES •
Monday thru Saturday
All Perlorm1nces before 5:00 PM
{Elc1pl Special Engagements and Holidays)
lA MlllAOA MAll o Morado 01 Ro1ecron1
LA MIRADA WALK·IN 99'·2400 --.. .AAmlS --.. .., • 'FOA YOUfl EYES ONLY" '"' tl:l9. ,., .......... ,.,..
. .... _.. ....
LB VY CLaV' •
'"ESCAPE fAOM NIEW YOAK'" "" ti::•. 1 •. ·~ ....... l:AI. , ... ------------l*....., PUN ...... , C:.u _,,
"ARTHUR",,... 't:ll·I'•·••·•'•·••· ,._.
._...... ........... AU.all •
"RAIDERS OF TH£
LOST ARK" -............ , .......
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALIC·IN
---·~ 'SUPERMAN II" IPG) U·•>•t•t•u•
R.l. ..... , ..
'"STRIPES" 1111 12:411•,..·• ... , •. , ...
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WAlll·IN
FocullY Al Oel Arno
21l/U•·9211
........... ..,_ • •AM• A&.L8
"RAIDERS OF THE
LO.ARK" -, ............... ".
LAGUNA
....... __
"S.O.B." 1•1 , ............. , ... , ..
.... --·~ "'SUPERMAN 11 -..... _. ......... ,,.
focully ot Condlewooo
213/531·9580
eulfT M'Y~De • 'AAAAM PAWCSTT
"THE CANNONBALL
RUN" INI .... , ....... •••t 11•1t ti
THE FOUR SEASONS"
, ... ""• • •• ,._. (PG) ___ ....,..,._
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK",,... 11»•••·••·'•·•"11•
... ntlOAAC .....
............. bl
"'ORAGONSLA YER" -t tt• t-n • I 61 •.-te• te:a
so . COAST WALK-IN
South Coo1t Mowoy
ot l roodwoy
494-1514
t ill MUR9'AY IN
~IPES"IR) ·--· "' ··--
MMAt .. flOMJ • AA.Mii MJ.111 ..
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK'" -....... , ......
I JO " t. U
IMPORTAN (NOTICE' CHllORE N UNDER 12 fRU !
H•tltM .tn.i w,,.,., M•ri Jfu11 fr1 6:l0 •\•I Sul'! Ht!' •·OO ""
CllOISI -• •buA ... W MOlO IS t~ ~l'(N<lR
I 110 ... CAA 11.\0tll wl'I• trMmOlt ~ HOii! IO$ITIOlf
--A• l'OlllMU •AU Dtf.f'I Olll'lf-lllS '311 ()II AM -
ANAMllM
ANAHEIM DR IVIE·IN
... _,""' .,..fC.aMWY
A9'THU9'"' l"9 -''••-ov tt ot lemo"' St io·· 1••
179•9150 CINI JI 50\JNO ~;..::...;-...-r:eiiO t ---~;.~;;,.;;;;-
THE CANNONBALL RUN"" (PG) I ··FOR YOUR EYES ONl Y !Nt ....
HARDLY w~':K1NG"' (PG) I "THE LONG AIDIEAs·· 1111
C1Mf t SOU4rl0 • CllllllJ F1 iiO\lfilllJ -----==--
8UI NA PAlll
BUENA PARK OAIVf·IN
IC-'....U.6"°Lll "IAllQ.UP --~ ··ESCAPE FAOM NEW YOAK"" !"I -'"''""" A•e Wet1 o4 llMI" "THE EXTEAMINATOA" 1-. 121·•070
JO UNIAIN
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVIE·IN '°" o.eoo 1rw., ot ''°""~"''' 1io 962·2 ... I
"'' s•M1N~11g
.......... ..,UlllCO<m-
SUPEAMAN II"' (PGI ~ ...
ANY 'MOCH WAY YOU CAN" (PGJ
Hl·WAV 39 DAIVf·IN
ho<~ ., •• so oc ""0." GtOiwt J11 ... o-y
891-3693
1.0~~· (A) -~~~~~,::.,.
THE ~ITMAN ALWAYS -AINOI TWICIE"' IAI "10" 1•1
CINI fl SO\JHO :,... " sou•o ~.;.;..._~=----+-~..,.~ ......... ....--.=~ -,..........., .. ~ ......... ..
FOACE; FIVE ,,_ THIE CANNON8AU 9'UN"" (l'O) -~-••fAO« TO llLACK ... HAAOLY WOAICINO" (l'O)
CIN( " SO\JllO Ctttf ft 10UllO
l A MA8PA
LA HABRA DRIVE IN
''"'''". Ml'W • lto(rl lt•t & "'ttDOr a11;0 171-1162
ftUI "" ~A~I
LINCOLN DRIVf ·IN
lM\C&ft A•e W•" ot •"°" 121·4070
.... ,,j ',.!
-·e----~ "ENDLESS LOVE 1111 -"'NIGHTHAWICI" 1111
....... ,.,. • aAAb~•
AAIOIEAS OF TH( LOST A9'K"
(l"O)
~HANGAR 11·· (l"O)
ORANGE DlllVl·IN ---"l .0 .11." .. -, 'THE l'OITMAM ALWAYS
...... TWIU" ...
&'t , .. I ....
MISSION (111 1\lf IN . --·-·· Kf«HJ.!"• ..
o "''ADI TO ILACK'' 111t
d1rk and mu1tac:hloed, Ellie proJecu a menacln1
n1urt1. ~·rfd lAtnway end Rulh Comfort Davia ue
rt1ht out of "llee ll•w" •• the proprleton of •
New Enaland hotel. Mark Drumm la quite 1ood 11
El Ila' unwllllnt accompllct, while Ron Sorensen Is corn~ but t nl•llnl •• 1 )'OW11 pickle plant 1cton.
Mar orl Mccaul y 11tine11•1tuffy society belle,
but ajuana nlant'o and LlH 8111 require a bit mor~ snap In lhtlr rolea ll would-be femme
ratales.
''Pure 11 the Driven Snow" may be ll~l year1
away from "A View From the Bridie.· another
rectmt SVCT orrcrln1, but It's 1 tun ahow tor the
"~•I At TMI D•IVIN .-.r• A me...,""' rt l"wl LAtmll. llll'e<IM 9¥ VlllCA Cw•, ,.._.
n'lefl..., J-Wtt1leell, ltelwli<•I lllrt<Mt ifl4 Ml .. ._ lrl111
1.-.1111. lltlllllll.., °"' -5"tl i.e.-. ,,_ ......... ,. -ktvrlleu el I 11>m INWlll A119 1 •• .,. ~-V•ll•• c;-.
mv111ty '""'"· Ut•t ~ O•••r•. Mt"letl Vlel• .__,,.u.,., m<tU) TMI CAIT l'vrll, ONll . . , . . • . • , , , , Met11 UlulM Smelt Lellflller l,•let•tl-. . . . .. , . ,., . . . .... To•n McK•
Mtf'llll'ler '""hlntflem.. • ...... , .•... , . . . . ........ , lllla 11'" J~llllfl i.....,. . . .. . . . . . . . . • . . . . • • .. • . • . . . . . . . ''°" LA!lwey Avt11ie1N11 l.ot911 , . . ...•• , .• , . . . • . . . . . . • . 1111111 Comfen O.wl1 JHl.VM .................................... MerllDrllfNl'I 11. Pie..._.. .. , ..•••..........••• 9'en~ 1mov-ne Pkllena • • • • • • • • ••• , . • . • • • •• u1-•1-0 Mrt..Hewlltt •••• , ............. ,MMjO<leMcC.Vley AlllMft -1111 • ..• •• .. •• • . • . ... Liu S..
,.,.. ..... • • • •• . . . . .. ••• • • .. . . l.lllde ..... 1. ullY 1..-. . . . • • • . • . Mercie 1 1-o Neille MIN'rla Celnte LlttlelOll
ramlly. It continues Fridays and Saturdays at 8
p.m. through Aug. 1 at the company's soon-to·be
vacated theater ut 25741-C Obrero, Mission Viejo.
* OPENING WEEK END activity focuses on the
western part of the county as the Huntington
Beach Play house unveils ··Murder in the
Magnolias" and the Fountain Valley Community
Theater presents a musical version of "Tom
Sawyer."
11Make way for the greatest
dragon yet."
-l<evln Thomas. LOS ANGELES TIMES
•~ll'ICIUlll fA
NOW PLAYING ·~ .:I
• ClllllOMl 0<1nQ* 6J4 1?~J IOUlll COAll
• IOWAllOS UOOUU CK CO\ll Mes.. ~46 2/l I
t to1 ',~, l,880__. •CXJIDOL9f.....,)"
IDWAllOI
llUll TlllG TOtl IUCll Hun11n~IO'l fle.ac~ 848 ~)811
1tO , ..... acc"no fOtl '"" 111C1ao1111111t
~ -IDWAllOI " IAllOU U CK
(I l0to ~· ~
UWUDl" IAllTIM.
COSli Mtu 540 7444 ua c1n c11r111a l>'•"'lt ~J• }91
"Ma1nolias" la described as • a poor on
Sou them-style plays by Tim .Kelly, author of "The
Uninvited." John WlU1oms ia dJrectlng lhe show.
whlch featur.a Wit Thompson, Ann Leverett. J o
Scott, Helen Valentine and Peter Stone.
Othera ln the caat are Todd M,arahall. Norm
Cobb, Beverly Turner, Richard Drake, Marjorie
Rockwell, Martln Eckmann and Elaine Herman.
Performancea will be given Fridays and
Saturdays al 8: 30 through Aug. 29 al the
playhouse. In the Seacllff Vlllage center on Main
Street 111t Yorktown Avenue, Hunlln&loo Beach
Reservations 847· .. ~.
Also opentn1 Friday is "Tom Sawyer" by the
Fountain Valley Community Theater at Los
Amigos HJgh School, at the comer or Heil and
Newhope avenues In Fountain Valley. Rick Habib
is directing a cast of 25 youngsters.
Performances will be given Friday and Satur-
day of this week and next at 7:30 p.m., with
matinees al 2:30 on July 26. 30 and Aug 2. Call
847-1108 or 962·5279 for reservations.
Closing out their respective productions this
weekend to make room for newcomers next Wednes-
day are "Flower Dru m Song" at Sebastian's West
Dinner Playhouse and "After the Fact" al the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse.
·•Flower Drum Song '· bows out with
performances tonight through Sunday at varying
curtain times at Sebastian's, 140 Ave. Pico. San
Bun /fqnokb. ~Moot.
,.,,.,,,, Fttwt:ett ·Dom DeLuiu
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Wool-N1J9H
•••• and ~ow doea 1our
(a.Pd.en (POW\l
Whether it 's about a simple shrub, a sophisticated
bed of flowers, or a !asty selection of vegetables,
the Daily Pilot's garden page blossoms every F ri-
day with handy hints and delightful features.
We'll give you tips on when to plant, when to
prune and when to pluck. Our writers also
brighten the garden section with interesting
features on local people who grow unusual plants
<1r achieve exceptional results .
Our crop of stories comes up ~ every Friday to
help you have more success and more enjoyment
with your growing. If your thumb is green, use it
to flip to the garden page in Friday's Daily Pilot.
• •
lailJP.illd
642-4321
. --
Clemente. to be followed by Edward Mulhare
·~Deathtrap " Reaervutlons 492-9950.
"After the Fuel" ls on stage tonjght throu&J)
Saturday at 8 p. m at the Moult.on. 806 La1unl
Cunyon Road . Laguna Beach, where the double bill
of "Match Point'' and "Dead Heat•• arrives
Wednesday. REservalions494-0743.
Univers al plans
01ovie facility
LOS ANGI:;LES <Al'> The parent company
of Universal Studios plans to build a motion pie
ture and telev1s1on production fa cility along wit~
ill> alread) announced SlOO m1lhon theme p.irk In
Orlando, Fla., the Los Angeles Times reported.
MCA Inc will announce at a press conference
in Orlando Friday plans for the first major studio
r>rodutt1on fad'l1ty OUll>ide California, tht
news paper said
ll said fl~rbcrt St~inberg. vie<! president of
marketing for MCA Recreation Services, an ·MCA
unit, c:onfirmed that the studio fac1ht1es will be
built in Florida
A,. """"""'
Fraud
plea
guilty
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A
Lona Beach man has pleaded
auUty to what was deacrlbed 8J a p yramid scheme in whlch be
bilked lnvestor1 out or more
than $1 mllllon, while proml1ln1
them profit.a or 60 to ) so percent
within 17 to 80 worldn& days.
Joseph D. Aguilar, 30. the
owner of DD&D Paper Stock
Co.. entered hJs plea on three
counts of wire fraud before U.S.
District Judge Lawrence T.
Lydick.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark
E . Kalmansohn chareed that
Aguilar took the money he got
from lnvestors across the coun·
try from November 1978 to May
of this year a nd spent lt on
jewelry. Ferrari cars. clothing
and gambling in Las Vegas.
Aguilar told potential in·
vestors his company purchased
surplus and scrap cardboard for
export to the Far Eaat, the
prosecutor said.
S entencing was set for Sept. 8.
Aguilar could get five years in
prison and a Sl ,000 fine on each
count.
New prison chief
7'CLOSE TO KERMIT -Jennifer Kenny, 18 months old , of San
' Francisco, presses close to the plexigl~ss of Kermit's dis·
play case at the Art of the Muppets exhibit in Golden Gate
Park's Hall of F lowers.
SACRAMENTO CAP > -
Former probation officer Sylvia
Jewell Johnson was named by
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. as the
third superintendent In 14
months at the state women's
prison at Frontera. Ms. Johnson,
44, had been acting supertnten·
dent.
'Majority wants harsher jails
Americans also think more prisons should be built
NEW YORK (AP >
Americans believe condit ions in
the nation's prisons a r e not
harsh enough. but they will sa y
"prisons should be built to relieve
inmate ove rcrowding.
The latest Associated Press·
NBC News poll also sa ys that
more people think the primary
purpose of prisons s hould be re·
habilit a ti o n r a the r than
There was a much s harper
d ivision of opinio n on what
s ho uld be the primar y purpose
of prisons: 37 percent said to re·
h abilitate criminals. 31 percent
s aid to punish them. 25 percent
s aid to remove them from socie·
ty and 7 percent said they were
not sure.
s uburbanites, conservatives and
Southerners . The poll s aid that
the more education a respondent
has. the less likely the respon-
dent is to say prison conditions
are not harsh enough.
Blacks were more likely than
whites to s ay rehabilitation
should be the primary purpose
of prisons. but were a lso more
likely to s ay punishment and
less likely to say re moving
criminals from society should be
prisons' primary purpose.
1 punishing criminals or simply
In r egard to prison overcrowd·
ing, a pr oblem in nearly every
st ate and the cause m ost prison
officials have cited for riots in
sever al prisons this year. there
was overwhe lming support for
state governments' s pending tax
dollars to build new prisons. 63
percent in ravor . JO percent op-
posed . 7 percent not sure.
I rem ovin~ the m from societ y.
The results ar e from 1.599 l adults across the na tion contact·
ed by telephone July 13·14 in a
'scientifically-selected random
s ampling.
Hypnosis approved
: More than half the r espon.
1 dents, 53 percent. sa id they think
conditions in this country's
prisons are "not harsh enough "
Only 13 percent said they thmk
prison con ditions a r e "t oo
harsh." 18 pe rcent said condi·
: tions are "just about right" and
1 16 percent s~id t hey were not
1 s ure.
E ven those who said they sup-
port President Reagan's spend·
ing a nd tax cuts at the federal
level ga ve strong s upport to
s ta t e spending for prisons .
TRENTON. N.J . (AP> -The
state Supreme Court says iden-
tifications elicited through hyp·
nosis may be used as evidence in
New Jersey crimina l trials as
long as the hypnosis is conduct·
ed properly. The state's high
court ruled 5·2 that su ch Iden-
tifications are adm issible even if
a witness at first doesn't re·
me mber details.
I
·~~~~~~~~~--
1DEA TH NOTICES
AYNES
I J AMES PAL:L AYNES.
!Retired Lt Col USMC Resi·
dent of Corona del Mar. Ca ..
i Passed awa\• on Jul\ 22.
l1981 He was· a graduate of
llndiana University. 11 retired
Marine Corps Av iator. and
also was Branch Manager
for Mc Donnell Oouglas
jcorporalton He 1s !>urv1ved
!by his wife Malva Joon. sons
James Paul Aynes. Jr . and
John Peter Aynes Memorial
services will be held on
Saturday. JuJy 25. 1981 at
2:00PM at the Marine Corps
IAir Station. El Toro Chapel.
El Toro. Ca i PUGSLEY
, JESSIE L PUGSLEY. re·
The poll s aid those more likely
to think prison conditions are not
hars h e nouJe h include m e n ,
!'ldcnt of Huntington Beal'll.
Ca Passed away on Jul y 21.
1981 She was very active in
the area. ha' 1ng been a
member or the Women·s
Club and the Ebel! Club. She
was also a former resident
of the Pomona area rrom
1920 to t963. She is survived
by her daughters Kathr} n
Serest of Huntington Beach.
Ca and Muriel Wing of
Bonita. Ca . sister Muriel
Cr o mwell of Canada. 4
grandchildren and 4 great
grandchildren Cr ypts1de
services will be held on
Thursday. July 23, 1981 al
I OO PM a t the Pomona
Mausoleum, Pomona, Ca Services under the direction
of Baltz Bergeron-Smith &
Dropping cancer
cells aids lab
BOSTON <AP> By us ing a technique that in·
volves dropping cancer cells five feet, University
of Minnesota r esearchers believe they can identify
subtypes of a common form of leukemia, accord-
ing to a report in the New England Journal of
Medicine .
The researchers cultured cancer cells, then
dropped them from a height or five feet onto
slides, stret ching the chromosomes so scientists
could see more details .
The dis covery will permit more specific treat·
ment for the disease, s aid Dr. Jorge J . Yuois, who
deve loped the technique at the university medical
school's department or laboratory medicine and
pathology.
"You can divide one cancer Into many types,
depending on which chromosome differences they
have," he said in a te lephone Interview.
rtHCINOJHUS
ml llOADWAY
MO«TUAIY,
110 Broadway
Costa Mesa
642·9150
Tuthill Wi!stcliff Chapel
Mortuary of CO!>la Mesa.
..... 646-9371
Yunis s aid that if a doctor diagnosed a more
serious ty pe of leukemia~ he might want "to treat
lhe dis eas e more aggressively with new
chem othe rapy or with bone m arrow transplants
rather than the standard treatment.
IALnlHGUON
SMfTH A TUTHILL
WHTCU,. CHAP'IL
•27 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
B•&-9371
NICI MOTHUS
iMITHI' MOITUAIY
627 Main St
Huntt110ton Beach
536-6539
PACIAC Y•W ....,llAL, ...
Ct"9tery MOftuary
Chapel-crematory
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newpo11 Beach
&44·2100
McCOIMCll NOITUAl•S
L-ci1.ma Beach
41M·9<415
L.119una Hiiia
768-0833 S... J'*" C.p111rano .as.1n1
SAR DANO
E DIT H T SA RD ANO .
pas!>ed away on July 21.
1981. She is survived by her
daughter Martha Haubrick
and her son-In-law Charles.
br other Theodore Torok of
New Jersey, 7 grandchildren
and 6 great-grandchildren.
Services will be held on Fri·
day, July 24 , 1981 at
11 · JOAM allhe Harbor Lawn
Memorial Chapel with Rev
Douglas McKenzie offic ial·
Ing. lnlerment services Im·
m e d ia t e l y foll o wing .
Services under the direction
of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive
Mortuary of Costa Mesa
540·S:S54
DEATHS
RSEWHERE
COALINGA 1AP )
Veteran CalUornU
newapaper publlahtr ft)'
JamH McColl••· 97. a
charter member or lht
C altrornla New1paper
PubH•h•rs Auoclatlon,
dltd htN Monday.
SAN RAPAEL CAP> -.II• IC.Ma, 5e, who tllt'Nd
from prlntln1 to award· •lnntnc pboto1raphy In a
M·year newtP•Ptt carMr,
died al hit hocne followlnl
a thrft·month battle with
can«r.
"Or. you may h ave a type you treat with the
same standard treatment, but milder, because a
milder treatment may be good enough for that
t ype and you can avoid the bad side efrects of
chemothera py."
"Th.ls work may have wider ramification s,"
added Yunis. ·'With this technique, you can see
where the cancer attacked the chromosome of a
c ancerous cell. Ir you know where the
chromosome defects are. that's where the cancer
genes may be localized.
•'Then you can clone these genes and you may
be able to t.reat leukemia by replaclne the derec·
tlve eenes with a good, normal gene.
"T he basic technology Is available to do that,
except we don.'t know what lhe cancer genes are.
T hat technology is two to rive years off ...
PUBLIC NOTICE P\1BUC NOTICE
-...----~~--~-------------·--·*"~-·-~~·-~ .... #p'" ......... _.,~'------···-· .............. __ ..... ~--------~·----------~
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Or•nge Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Thur9dmy, July 23, 1981 DI
H111HPwS. ..... " .... s. ._.................... • .............................................•••• , ••••••••••••••••• ! •••rtll 1002 ...._ 1024 lliwllattea 1w1t I 040 lrWt. I 044 ...•..................•••..........•.. , ................•...................................
GITOUT!
Thi.I owner will ataod oo
ber bead to make a deal on a trad!Uoftal 3 unit
Balboa l1land property.
A11ttn1 pn~ Is 1399,2&0.
The term. are left to
your creative mind. .......... lly
' 700
RE~LT R
c ... a1cu.1• Thia execuUve family
home is one ol the most
charm~ on lhe Island.
With 5 Bdrm.a Ir 3+ Ba,
there is plenty of livina
area. Plantallon wood
abutters and trench
doors lead lo eleganUy
landscaped patio. Also
with aunroom in the
master suJte you may
enJor. a partial bay view.
Don t miss this enchant· I n g and h i ghl y
soph isticated home.
S725,000.
D.M. Me-IW Ur
'44-tttO 7'0.0lll
lrilHJYowD...-VI 60' bayfront on l..inda
Isle. 5 Br 6 Ba. pool &
spa, double dock for 4
yachts. Owner wUJ carry
1st T.D. $2,100,000.
RCTaylo rCo
l . ! ti J
IACICIAY
DBJGHT
Lovely 3 Bdrm 2 Ba with
new French country
kitchen and used brick
exterior. Located in the
heart of Newport's up·
per bay, overlooking
country club. Priced at
only $187,500 with ex·
cellenl financing ava1la·
ble. Call 751·3191
C:::. '1t I I ( I
...,....PHllPI 1!111 ', -------
FIXUPIEACH
HOUSl-VIEW !
Incredible bargain· '.-.i
blk lo ocean. Quaint.
while picket fence &
dutch door entry. Spiral
stairway to ocean view
mstr Bdrm, 2 Bdrms + loft. atrium & french
doors ! Take advantaae·
you paint, fix & save SSS!
Only S189,900 Call Bob
Burdick. Ownrl Agt.
75&·1221.
R&'M~
I<~,, l••I<'-
100
······················~ SALEIYOWHM
327 Coral & 311
Ameth st. 673--0188
Nearly new duplex.
Three and two
bedrooms. Three and
two baths. Ideally de-
signed for guests. Large
assumable 1st and
owner will carry 2nd
T .D. Call Roger Bar·
quist. 759·1243 or
631-7300.
MOVI ..
COMIMTIOM Sharp a Bdrm, S yeara
new. lar .. open lllkbtn.
lovely atrtum, eal'Ultone
carpeu. Alklna SU4,900.
Call MO-WI
• HlRITAGE
fU AL roH~
IS LOCATION
IMPOITAMT7
IMDOll1HI
lAIMIOW
Beautltul 4 Bdrm S4iS
built bome{ oa qwet cul
de u el n pride ol ownenh p home tn 10\'e-
ly (ioldenweat Eatata.
wrfe family room wlth we bar and cosy
rtreplacf . Sparltlln&
gourmet ldtthien, plush
carpets. '2$2,SOO.
d on ose n
'' .
9UllT • .l&AXID
The klnd ~ plac• It 'a
euy to come home to
aft.r • l\ard day at wort.
The Deane Korn• have
an excellent uaortmt nt
of recreaUon.al faclllllet
to match the eat)' colna
llfeatyle of Irvine . 3
bdr m. 2 ba. Clo1t to
everythln&. AU thla com
btned makes an excep-Uoul buy at S202,li00. ,
Thia nearly new So.
Coast Plua borne has It 11TII ATPRClSP ECT
all. En1. Tudor style on TUSTIN. 731,3111 c o r n e r Io t. N e a r ---=--==<--=--=~. =-·.a_..,_ ""---1
freewaya, centr. A/C, 4 •--------1 Br 2~ Ba. $214,950 Call OftEM HOUSI NI
now. Ownr/Agt. Rick 10 to I~
Keeler 546·6708 o r Don't mlas lhia unique lf523 CAMllU'J)a~fRVlllE
L.,_.h«. 1041 631·0213 home, located in most
NIHCH OUARTa desired area of Hunt s BR 2~ ba twnhse. lnaton Beach. Call for
Patio. fplc . double aar. details.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
owe s110,ooo. BKR
f48.4380
PRIMI I.SIDE
2 Bd, Ira family rm. 2
pvt paUoa, RV acceM, •---------owner financing, great lrYIM I 044
terms. $145,000. Call •••••••••••••••••••••••
CM of SN#
o.tofMl.d
Prime Dana Po int
duplex on corne r lot
near Dana Marina 2 bdrm. l ba up, 1 bdrm
do wn beame d c lng.
trplc, dining area . encl patio. 1144,000
Mission Realty
0731
Robert Mllllken631-1.266. THlt«IMG
R&'Mtal<
l!~\l l 'ill',
TOWHHOME? New Modular Ty pe Call the apecialiats al Hom es. leased la nd.
the condominium in· Oceanfront Pk . 3 pvt
formation center. bchs, 24 security. fishing
A1.-l 'fzO/o Touchstone Realty Pier r ro m S2 9. 9 o o
$64000 VA loan. a BR 2 ---=963-=---me7~---499·3816
BA w/dbl gar. Cenced Rancho San Joaquin Valla New wood glass. s~a. front &c rear yds. s Portola Model. must see 1 6 d.k.s 2 f d rin I so ar. , rp cs. 110,000. Brtler646-4:llO mny upara es, P on Y 3+ 13+ close/unobslruc·
SSOOO down, S1180 mo. s169.5 oo. For appt table/panor/villg vws
buys 3 BR 2 Ba fixer in 551·6890· S499M. PIP. 494·7631.
Costa Mesa. Ownrl agt. lnlM Ldln EMll.ALD IA y
642-1523; 845-7365 Beautiful 1 Br condo on· BuutiCul ocean view
EASTSIOE ly ssooo lo assume loan from this JBr 3ba. ram
Lovely 3 BR 2 Ba. fam 1113·900· No qualifying rm home. Great financ·
r m home w/fplc, dbl 831·6238· A · Ing! $525,000.
gar. $149.SOO. ASSUMAILE VA CAROL TATUM RLTR.
Broker,~ Take over high balance _'94-0029
SIO,OOODOWH on VA loan on this OivorceForcet>Sale
Eastside Costa Mesa almost new 3 Bdrm 2 Ba Lowe r 3 Arch Bay
Townhouse. 2 Br, l "' on large lot. Nice up· Great ocean view. pvt
baths. pvt yard. 2 car grades, central air. lrg ' area 4bdrm beach
gar, vaulted ceilings, covered patio. Call for house. 499-31«.
I d S 09 500 details. pod an spa. 1 , . owe straight note. R&H lnv'l 752-2197
EASTSIDI DUPLEX
VA
Two 1 Br, only Sll9,500
64().7814 or963-7600
OPEMHOUSE
MESA DB. MAI HEAT
c ........... runch
See our M"editerranean
Villa with Laguna's best
view Sat. 9-12. Sl.100.000
497.4144 for directions &
appt. Agt.
11.AUTY as a pin, cleen & COi)', 3
2 story, 5 Bdrm. 3 Ba. Br 2 Ba w/courtyan:I en· FAIULOUS Exec home. Ro man try. Near new carpets is the word for this
style pool & fountains, and mic rowave in · OC EANFRONT un it
new paint & carpet, eluded. Close lo schools with custom decor in
customized garage and shopping. Call for every detail PLUS front
game room. Seller will details. row whitewater view.
carry 1st. T. D. at 13"k . Sl65L.:!a V~ 1.r. S180.000. Dave Bourke ... Realfor~9Q50. __ 497-17 I
4 Br. 2 Ba . home with 2000 LOfU1tC1 MlcJ-' I 052
sq ft <nt >. lg lot with RV ••••••••••••••••••••••• a ccess . Prid e or ---------Jbdr, 2•,, ba. Pool and
Ownership. Shows well. * * 1·~ UST£or spa EI Ni g u e I cc 1milefromSo.C.Plaza. UJ1 • Delightful. t s tor y 20% down. Buyer obtal.n 2 Bdrm condo in adult Owner1agent 499·1320 137/8% FNMA conv In oriented Orangetree. s
Interest rate · s bj to Super location, air con· 320•000=-· --
change. owe. Call ditioning & more. Flexi-OCEAHllEEZE
Fred, agnt. 559-1887 for bleCinancing. Clea n air. mountain
details. view, trees. 3 bdrm. 212
EAST SIDE
S9,000 dwn, Jbdrm. 2ba,
pool. owe at 12%.
$185,000 557·2783 o r
851·5117
\\bodbrtd-ba. spacious townhome
111-$124,000 by o wne r Realrl 533· 7700 wkdys, 495-6585
551.3000 EvesLW::=:knds=--
412.t Bernnu f>tiwy,ln•lM twwport leach I 069
2 Br. 2'1 Ba Condo with p••s10E fireplace. 2 car attached * * Ml\
•••••••••••••••••••••••
PAmlN
HARB VIEW
garage with opener, Tile entry, plush carpet.
many extras. $110,000. wood dec k ing. et c
Call forlenns. 77~5578. highlight this well locat·
HOMI +INCOME ed con~o in beautiful
Easts Ide clean 2 br Woodbndge. CaJ_I for de-
house. hdwd nrs. formal tails . Owner anxious.
Smashing family room
wi th wel bar Un·
believably beautiful en·
tert11iner's patio. 5 Bdrm
Sommerset on fee land
Absolutely immaculate
move -in cond 1t ion -C re ative financ ing
available.
:;':;;'.oil :?~;.'.':::~'ti: (~if :b.rldge loan. Openbo~Sat. 179 """"
Broadway. Sl99.950. Rcahu ~iJ.64 -4845 ; e ves 551.3000
---------•( 4920 arrann Pkwy.lrvhH' RED CARPET
754-120 IMCOMECZ Oii It
SllZ.500
"'"'"'
SUPllCOHOO
PRICE UDUCID
"1t ml. to beach! lmmac.
highly uperaded 1 br.
den/bedroom. 1 & ~ ba.
Pools, jacuzzi, tennis,
TURntaOCIC
2 sty, Broadmoor Plan 7. THEIL•-4 BR 2...., ba ho me vrr
w/bonus rm, formal din· PLANT'
ing, lge pvt ram rm, 3 3 bdr m. din. rm .. liv:
car gar. You own the de-rm., fam. rm .. FIP, 212
er terraced lot with view ba. xtra large porcelain
o the rolting hills. Walk tub w/ceramic tile w1llls across street to pool & & floor. 4 covered patio
park. Take over approx areas. Price SZ.30.000. 5'7r
$96,300 at 1~~ int. Full down, assumeS40.000 1st
pric e '267,500. Call trust deed at 7'-'tr.t Xlnt
owner/agt. for details & land lease $853.00 per
appt. 9'15-0063 year Can't change until
Wo-•*DGI year 2003. 14% int. only vvwwu 2nd trust deed due Beaut. ivy covered 1986-87. Call owner for home. 4br. atrium, fam appt. dally a.Iler s pm
rm. formal din. country (714) 760-8'25
deeor. cul-de-sac. steps '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ to ~h & tennis club. Brick & lattice patio. W.tnl Ad Help?
1249,000. Fin. avail. '"1H
5$2·4946.
612-5678
1044
clubhouse, wet bar, 434 llGOMIA frplc. Perf. for sgl. or
Elegant new 4 Br Vic· cpl. Owner anxioua.
torian partial vu, Needsrinancingloexlst·
ownr/ contractor Just Ing 7 .9% loan. Owner
completln&. H'!5.000. will obtain ii necessary.
IY OW... Buyer would need ap·
Cualom 4 yr old home. 3 rrox. Sl.250. per mo. 4'r
Bdrm, 2"11 b•. Xlnt 20,000 dwn. Open
financlQg. 1410.000. 15~ SatJSun, 1·5. trT• Verde
dn. courtesy to Bries. Mar Dr., Bkr-Co·op, 846·00N ..:i53St=..·.e>l800:;;:.:..a1.::;~=-"=1 __ _
BY OWNER
._•2•,1•.a1-.... -1-_..-... -.... •1 Walk to buch. 4 Bclrma, .,. '"""" l~ba, famlly no, dinlnl •0t•MABm rm . Only sue.too.
CDMCOTTA•I
Pt..USICOMI
or 3 bdrm 2 ba home
wtlh an itolated m u ter
bdrm/pannt retreat or
ln·law quart.n bedroom
cotta1e · al\)' W8)' you
describe ll · K'• cbann·
tn1, up to date and btautlrully decorated.
Priced et -.oao with c'I:r~=i w.na:t
pe-2403, 3to1 pm,
11.7%
ASSUMABLE
TripM• one Yffr new.
TtJ ~ down. Owner wlll help ftft•c.. Call ...... ,
TUITLI ROCK Hl•HLAMDS
Gracious "MacTavuh" plan w /all amenities for family Uvtna
& luxur)' entertaining. Gatea entry, 4 BR, ram. rm., Formal
dining , cus tom pool & spa .
Assum . Loans. $389,900 Belle
Partch 752~1414 (579)
CUSTOMIZ. DIAHI HO ... 4 aa·
Unlvenlty Park Home has been re~1rpeted, newly painted it
rel1nef.1caped . Decanted la neutral tonea. litany eltr11 lndude all custom window to\fertrfp. Best of all -,_
auumable loan..,.! sae•.fftr. ~ne Reid 551.s700 <•>
--~pa•
. -~----...... i-. ..-.o. ..... ("4),....
+
Or1ng1CoutDAILVPILOT1Thurlday,Julv23 1981 HwHUa .. l1h• ...._U1fuzhh1• A,c ...... ,_.lrW 'rf ..,..u.;,... Afzlw1t1&lilfln. ~~.~ .. ~?!! -' • •••••••••••o•••~•••••• •••••••••••• .... ••••••• •u••••••••••0 •• .................................................... Movlna! A~o6d depot1tt ~!:~ .. ~·~fer Wt 0..-1 ... tt h I' Xclla._. JJ• ... __,..._ l26t c-....... J714C-....... JH4t..,...._. JHI AP tut
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... ..... ......... ••••• .. t •••••••••••• ... •••• .. •• ............ ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••'•••••••• .. •••••••• •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ro tll ODI 1 llD(w hlmii't IMt ........... IMt ...... ~zl1h1• 21r l~la.2 2 a oW&e boa Utll1 pald 8nbelor llr <'-"*Apt~· lbdrtD, new, Ira dttll, 1171 Oi-:f••uuueu .......................... _ p;191 + 1611 ......... -........... c.O.. t.o bdlctr..lo":: wa'um,, 1'h t.•:: ~ets.ft. ~-• riae. Mhal. "oo ,.u, Nortb eacl . Clou to HOUla&Am M~:;:.· ~aa':"t· Htirtierftlw ......... *8 ...... ;.-r. ..-n · h Jll) 1111 / . lor7'1:111t. · .!e•(ll,_~"1!. _ Rli&it __ = .. en 1o&-°:C :r· MHt ta teed&tlon, •. R.AftE C.J.R Newport ....................... 11-1...-BLUrrs-uwadeiUbr .... "" a..&...&AMi•YffJI hotel califanWI Aptl. ~ MIFloOM'HfeC.21R2
11• • •• bdrm, 2 be ktmt In Beach Property. SO' ON nu; 8£,\at: XI.al ...,._ 2"'b f r tc' ..,_... ._,,, bloek lo bntll, HtW'lty Ba apt fi1B Pool 6 Pf' ft·M .f7>nll.. Harbor V.... Hip ... fraet.alt lllD prim9 lou· *· WlaterRIMalAvall ................... ,., 1' b am 1111• {P ' .......... -... -.. u1 JBdnn.Upper.e .. 11v bids. rtfrlae. 1tove, b h SOO. Call
OCIANRONT 0..,ln nmable *'-· RltlllY Uon. OnerWUlflo&ace. S.9! u. '7 Br. 2 Ba. Calif. HOii*. 5112 Ytarl-reeo ll loc. lOSO mo BUI l1nd1capm1. cal"Pd. d"!pe1· '*Mo o'Jotba't0n '7tO·ltH. J D'l"rl·Plt1. Xlat loc. ~Plr•ded throuabout. iu1u11, •. Prlaclpall Appl'•· laqulre IJI r;, :•· I A~· 2n:· t-1::: N""" eon:= H" .. LI 3 "°a.WwARDSAPTS locfudu II.ill. t'Mo min ~ ----
-•r..1tT).'l!n.17a.m& lllow1 like model. lllllt only. Atll for Irene <>tt•nf,_, July JMb. w':tu • 'ordlr lnclct° e"' 2~ Ba. 1500 .., ft 20» hlltf1oo Ave . 1 tJbt,.I Roommate COCI
JO se.Te.._. seu fuL Alkiq lZIUOO Loudon. Alt. Ol-G.47 or Ay.Jltteor_n11815-s 1. 0~·lve b 292 P:lmer Ul. .... ,....._. J16t tact .. "1,te.
Water view, locludtt Incl laad. come for In· lot.er .... ' B.R l'6 Uaiveratty PattrTtnace. #IA $e::l Mo. No pelt THE VICTORIAN Newl ........................ --i.:2.:,:l tu.:;IC.i!="--
land. 10~ a11um1ble =~~oa=t.tSat, Sun lt·~j C ..... I ..!Tew• be, IC LR. klcJI, fpk, eoav located, dwmina, no c: b lid ren. Ce Ii dttor 2Br. w/aar. adltf. Oceanfront for Winter Male or Ftmale abare
loan, 4 bdrm. a ba, 1 O rorc ...._.., ... 1700 patio Lotated on W eheerfulZbdm:l.cMnon 7 crptJ.drp1,bltiN.Fncd Rentalt. l"umlshed" pll.llb N.B. 4 Br boule.
w I poul bl• auut •• • ......... -......... lay. Oya. 549-5111 : lf'ffnbtlt ftl'. pool, No IAYCllST yrit w/paUo, Wiler pd . .Mfilum ~!i.~!! 1\.) blockl ft'OITI beach Cl=--~ ~lit' PAl.MDBllT ~ peta,submiJonchlldren. 't'W.•9'0UND Nti W-4120 call l·S. 867 Vic NO FEE! Apt 6: Condo w/pool 6 t.ennil courll. -.... Deep Can~oe> Teoola Mtw__.IMdl JI" SUO/mo+11curlty. Nice house available Soclll ActMtl .. OI-rtntala ViUaRntals. $350, Ut. Ii taat. CalJ
Club. Lovtiy abr, 2bt •••• f.':'.~ ......... 11•••• .Jll:t 1 now, la 1rut •rt•. 2000 ltdOf•frMSUndly S r Paul780-10'lA. ''A" Pl G t G IQ ft. 3 bdrm, a ba, 2 B 11 880. Lar1e Towoboust 2 Br lo, '" ree&· ..... ..._. llMfALS fplca Cardto r I cl 11inc • • • l~ Ba., ptUo, laWldry PAH flWPOIJ Maturt adult, male or belt Loe. l5000 down. Prof. dtt0rated a 8d Jbr rn ba $650 St75 'mo/lse. ~hlld~eri Ptrtlte • Plu• "'°" mo 5-0000. ftm to i h.r l&e 3 Bdrm. 2
...... COMM> OWC l t",000 at 1214· home. Fully flll"BUbed Jbr0 2ba SU.50 welcome. (213) 943-5578 GMATMCMATIONi 2 Hu .. Bedrooms in COUMTIYCLUI ba, furn •Jll. CM. WIO.
Plan IV Real! ·
lmmacul1tUbdrm con· BKR w/sardener, monthly 4br z~ ba l8SO or (213) 276-7C.l u lt for r.,,,,..F,..IMIOnt iuper location. Fully UV• I. S27Sfmo. Util incl
do,dt>Mtopool.Endun· RE.,LTOR OCEAN View• City cleanin1 aervlce1 and 4br2.,..ba -.ioFum Pam. ~~~ urptted, bullt-1ns, Bachelors,t"2bedroom ---=-"'J.200=------
lt ll•.oeo. Ll&h1* lo NEWPORT auoclatlon feta In · ' Waterfront leue, 4 Br 4 • HydromHHQt • ground noor. Over 50 apta&townbouses. C/21 Maw-tC. IMTHllWPff BEACH . .U.Swne 10~~ ~•dad. Jat .. comm. Ba fami•u .... •Ap........ Sw1mm1ng • Golt Adult1 only. No pets. YromS$10 644-1900 O. 7 r:-161 Lovely wae "E" ~tan loan, 115X down, call ~and dellf:'ul faml· d.ltion. dcd'(;; 40 ~';l: Orwing Range l350 Mo.• W. Wlllon. UDO VIEW 2 br. 2 ba, 2 -..1 .. •-with co1111try kite en. !!.,encJ~ IAGT) 914·2'1l. 1?J!l1°1a...~• for 12200. Bob fr Dovie lfAUT1fUl UTI: A E. 84MC77. terr., frplt, prime. adlta.
'" ~ Recently remodeled. -· ......, mo. 631·12MAct. S1n11tea, ' & 2 Btd• PAClOUS 2 BR. AduJt, o.875-&'5
PRIME view condo. 3 Privacy plus on a quiet ~"f. • . Newport Island Home 1ooma • Fu1n11111<1 open beamed uiHna. Bdrms · hont row. Fee cul-de·sac. Ear•" Bluff1 ti &l.Wumlaned •AGA! I t t ood · OMlHIWATB I d L d 1•• Y l• 4.br. 2ba, privacy, steps Living • No P•tt • o 1 o w • serv1n& F b 1 b 1 an . ow own · w.;aUon-lar&e u loan ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• • IOgQ to ocnfbay, Sl200/mo. ... ..... , o-n 0 •• ,.. bar. s.10. No pets. Z2.S6 a u ous· •Y v ew. crtaUvt Dnuclfti. available. 12111$0. "" ... .. ' M I 5 u 1u6 large upper duple•. 3 br C/21 Mew,.. t C.. O.M....., h • • Beautiful Ocean View .. .,&_ . 873-9 10 8 67 a P e · · q" • 2 ba. rarage. Adults, no
6 0.53 1 61 644-Hto 76f.OIH DUPLEX 3 doors tQ • • tt513CueMDl:fRvtN£ WHtclffGro•n Oakwood •·-2B Ba ..... ~. N pets. S900 Mo. Yearly. -----beach. CARLSBAD. Brand oew-Gever lived ~~a 8'Voi1. r. l .• ..,....,.. o 67}023Uim1092. _
MIWPOITCllST S....... Each Unit l.250sq. ft. In· Pennisula 2Sth St. Beach In. 3 BR executive home do&•· 645 Victoria 18· 3 Bdrm, 2 bath. $750 mo
3 bdrm condo. Cloee lo Clfhh-1071 cl.t8drm,2Ba,very l1e House.4drsfromocean. 191CltoS. .__._ w/wetbar. 11950 mo. ":~="~· 124 yrly.CaUMonthruSat pool aod tennil. Excel ....................... living rm, w/dlning 2 bdrm. l ba3 park ing ~ 975·1282 1714)8-4S·ll04 Studio in Santa Ana l6-4.67s-1642 A rananclna. Priced toaell. TIAOIOISALI a re a • Ii: i l c he n spa ces. S:J75 wk . Avail Luahlous J!" course N Shores belght1. S2SO mo. Incl
1189,500. 2.117 Acres. l'IOO sq. ft. wlbreakfast nook-+ 7118 thru 818. 8/15 thru viedw loca • 2 bdnn Beawpoc rt I ""--t 4 Br. 3 NewpGlt leecfl I . ulll Inquire 20201 B B p<:hN2•BBA2Y8aVt~ .. ., C/21 Mew,.,. c.er. home, bam, corrals. dbl iarare. s:m.ooo Call 8/29. 835-15.S.5 + en " formal dining · ana rr.-. · 1100 161h St f..°5" !' ie11>1 Birch Street. 833-1927 ns t r, penu&6e 64 Sl57 7'CM '7 view or entire valley, Paul R. Wopschall. room . Smartly appoint· MZ-6683. (714)8-4 . 11 lbr E/side, small but unit, lux amenities S750
many extru. financing, Realtor (714)434-171S tto.es u.fwaftlitel ed & nearby pool. Avail. BIG CANYON ADULT cozy w /lots of neat J!!i>. BYC0645-2251_
Prlvatt/Owner lic'd. ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• Sept. l atl825/mo CONDO. Plush 2Br 2ba. wood. Adlts only S33S STUD IO . acros.s from IAYflOM'r !114)193-1312 lacwP••r+t 2000 ..... t.a.d 3206 AIC, frplc, encl prlt'g, Mptld..... l·l.O. bea ch $~mo yrly
12"eFIMAMCIM& S-.AM IOIO ................................... ~.......... Woalll,.. pool , $950/mo. 644-7722, 5_., wt.t.r Large 2 Br . bit-ins. Pool. enc gar. laundry N t• t I y I 8d 2 b De l l11 htful 2 bdrm or 7·2026 , ... ........._... 210 Cedar, Npt Shores ewpor s exc u1 ve ••••••••••••••••••••••• a 1 .... ,-. ........... 1.u!. ear y. 3 NM. a, .. ._ 1arage. l!lllODAnahe1m. 5078 Peolnsula Point. Newly Ml. SO CST f1LA1A • ~ ,._ ..., den fpc large paUo No ~~!!!'~mFn~rfil•~ld~.•,r.mle·. 4 Br.1 21H, Babor. Fan:illy rm. __ 675-9111 152$ Mo. Adults. no pets 640--COGllrUCl~4~and 3Brl"'aba"Btadlord" COSTA..SA~ children'l850mo. Ref u•·-· .. "" ... poo . ar H11hdis· Open 7-6. Mon -Fri. lbdrm,bay&oceanview 4 bath residence wtlh pvt condo. S99..SOO 8.4~ as· 8Un keOM.10-lh r. 1st, lul, security. bri&ht & airy corner lrlct. SlSOO. incl. water & ~-545.3229. Sec. bldg. I/yr lease
BOAT DOCK. $1,850,000 sum able 00 157 000 I.st 14Un1840M, l0-10""% 76().906l 87~3624 location. Ideal "couple" m a i n t. 9 5 5 . O 8 o 9 U.fw nhtitd 2 BR 1 Ba. nr So. Cst $650/mo ~3-44.W _
lncludln& the land or 549-1135 atU pm. . 8 Un lSOOM, ~-10~% ' home. Avail. Sept. I at Owner/ Ail ....................... Plua children OK no Ocean VIN" SpaclOUS 2
$1,2115,000 .leasehold. SANDPOINI'E DREAM 4B~n .. ~~!"!1."t ~~.:!~ ... ?~~ ~Imo. EXECUTIVE HOME G..ral ll02 ..-ta.S500mo. 645.3765 BR, 2 BA Adults no
Owner/ Builder Dan · 1vaer~.uon. ..... nds DOVE R WESTCLIFF ••••••••••••••••••••••• l~B--1 -B---t --_eets. S750mo. 557-1997 Blbb675-23U Located across fr~m CalJTomLeeA&ent Cameo Hi•1ul 4 br. 4 Br 3 Ba Gated front ..,_ n~a-r a. ups airs , . -""!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I park. 3 bedroom with 642-1B03 Sunny patio. pvt beach. · · . Ar, M """ ll:l"O, stove/ re frig. car port. Spacious 2~ .. apt 2ba. '= enclosed patio. Red Sl500 mo. incl. gardener. court yard & ~ar pauo, H.B .. N.B .. Costa Mesa laundr $300 ~J6fi6 overlook mg Newport LIDO ISLE brick fi replace in livin& Aft, 673-~. dbl trplc. 51200 meld Somethln& for Everyone -~ ~---Bay. SIJOO mo 4.99-1964
PRICEREDUCTION room. Dining room NEWPMT BEACH aardener No pets. Bach. to 4 Br. Unfum. EASTSID~ _M.ail.•!f11TI.e91atel.r__
5 Bdnn,2story.l&ecor· Motivated owner will Ulll 2..,_a.116 752·~. Arts· Certain locations Bright , spac iou~. 2 2Br. 2Ba. behind Hoag ner lot. CINC with 24~ help finance. $132.500. PrWbtldeatld Jae. double gar. Redec . Family home. Backbay. o fer Poo I s Pa bdrms, 2 ba. enc patio H I S<oo '---Nr Fas"'~ Isla-" and wo----I I · hbo hod · · carpart S500 mo Avail osptta · " mo down. Now 1795,000. T A R B E L L , -· "'"" nu _.... ove Y. neig r o · fireplace. la~. room, 811 640.f/1111 64$ 4360aft6PM ~n Sat/Sun J.2.S. 121 1,.RllEliAllLllTOiililRSm. m.llliireollili-. beach. $750 MO (213) Townhome, 2 bdrm + beauuful lanchcaping. 4 beamed <' e 1I1 n gs . ,__ --~-s.i
Via frieme. i• 3 triplexes in a row on 991·0687 or (213) 1112-UM den fplc, 2 car enc gar. Bdrm . lrg dining, frpk. garadges, all built-ins. IMMOC..._ & qw.t ~W~"~e2dP:rd 'f!11~1~
H.._'-rlly,Ltd. ASSUMA&ILOAH oceanside of PCH in Costa Meta 3224 $750 lse.~ near all schools. Not in Gar en 'Townhouse 1 Br apt Up or down ~7~
64S.tf50or HO qu~M«i Corona del Mar ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laltes 2br. CONDO. up-flight paltern 11500 design NO FEE. Pool & spa Adults. no -· - --
F hi · ..... ha DLXCOND02Br. + lr0 0 rade,S625/mo. 630·5576 TSLMGMT. 00-1603 P. ets. $460 up Mesa Near Hoag Ho:.p Newly 67).5012 rea Y painwu, 1 rp 4 2 Duplexes + l Tnplex "' " p decorated 3 Br 2 Ba 2 Bdrm 2bath,1argeyard, in a row on Balboa loft Br. 2\.\ Ba. frplc. 857-0211 ldbooP.-. 3107 _J!les.549-~L _ story, frplc. dswshr
S20,000DOWM new driveway. Brick Peninsula . 1 lot from gar .. a/c, new. $775. L..-o lt«lt 324' WOW !!! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Duplex Eastside Adults lndry rm gar Adults
NEWPORT HEIGHTS ftreplace, 5 years new. sand and surf. Near !9th 673-S:i65orll6S-8377. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Won 't last Ne-.•port Yrly rental, ba<'helor. only. no pets. built-in~. 2 no_pets ~. 548 02:.J · BrickHomewithWhite Owneransicu.Movein LEASIOl'T10H No. Laguna Redwd, Crest townh o use SJ:!Smo •11 bl.kofrbch Br , crpt, drps. gar, --
PkltetFence.Lowestin condition. Asking St. glass, oc vu, woodsy, 2 3bdrm. 21-'lba. wetbar. 201 E. Balboa Blvd. lndry rm lil Ogle. Apt SClllC~ 3876 0 $ Why ~ay rent"·'·'·'.'·'·'· Lk to be h . a re a . w n er I Ag t. lZ1 ,500. For an appoinl· B b A;";"" f I wa ac • tennis. 675·9562, 752.Ql25 B. 00· 1298 ................. 0 •0 • &46-l597 call~ 1 Duplex on the water New. antastk, weU loca r. 2 a,~ ....... 2 rp c. pool, spa. No pets. ------ -2 BR 2 BA CONDO On . menltosee, Ll51 wilhdockfor~'boat t.ed3Br.,3Ba.newCon· dlrapes. cpdtbsl. ap· children ok. Avail Aug COtOMdtfMcr 1122 2BR,nr.OC.C: Patio gar golfcourse.S500
IYOW... do.S800~rmo,nextlo P 1ances. gar ..... *"t"I 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ch. OK . ..,25 +sec 492,670(>' Lease opUoo, Baclt Bay. All Assumable Loans allshoppU\c.631·~. S900 /mo. long term. 1""'· ~mo. I yr ease. 2Br ii,; ba, 2 slry, frplc. 645·1387 ~---
3 br, 3 ba, highly up-al 12 1'2 "fc. Owner's 5 Br 3 Ba. lg yrd. nu _!97·4543 545·8407,640-l544. pool.deck,ldult.nopel Iii stove,pnvatepatio. s.toAM 3810
graded. $199,000 with Motivated! HI•• u~ ..._., 2 BR plus dm. 2''.I ba. I yr ~~ __ gas paid. pool. laundry ••••••••••••••••••••••• S20 d S carpet. drapes. oven S .~l'F1sn 10· old, applic. gas BBQ. m Adults Rer's ,000 wn. 1.500 mo. Sotltll•-lot' Close lo Khools. park, pacious3Br. am m. elec gar . amenities. PEH1HOUSE r · ~H~u~rr~y~!~631~~=---1 ...... ::;::::•••••••••• C/21 Mlwporf C..tr t.ennis. Mesa del Mar. !Ill~ Mo.4!H·S208~ micro, 2 sty, $750 2 Bdrm , 1 ba, beam ce1I· S320lmQ.:_616;87Z7
View Lo ocun . custom ~ 64«).Sl57 Bob or Dovie 631-1.266. Lovely spacious home for 631·3213, 979-4031 __ in gs, fireplace. pool, 2 Br 2 Ba 4·Plex
built 5 Br. home in ~ t.$900. leaseatS~permo 2 HarborViewHomes4 BR Adlts.nopet.s.564.SMo NopetsS4tOMo
Lemon Hghts. Easy 0..._ M.w Br. + 16 x 21 family rm. 2 Ba, new cpts, lm5 per 640-120842.SSeaward _ _ _54&-sg,o
finaocin&.$+H900.A(l. P~of 3 bedrm,2...,ba,rpk. do_uble g_arage , mo. Starnes Co. Call 2Br,l~ba.6mosold.1 Br. car~t. drapes,
HOOOWNI OwwnMD carpets. drapes, bit-Ins whitewater views, quiet Gerry or Christa View deck. S750 /mo stove & refrige Adults.
Uve in 3bdrms, 2"2 ba 20 units, E.side tM. 1 Obie gar w/opener. niei&bbon.*-9976. 67J.7761;7&0-lll7 975-0363 work, 760-2:566 no u .$350 646-4382 ..................... ..
home in Newport Beach, JUST yn1 old. Overall ftnanc· yards, &ardentt. kids ' L..-. H• 3250 Deluxe 3 Br 3ba duplex in res. __ BEAUTIFUL 2 Br. ~ Ba. SEAWIMD
Pror work.Ing female
non -smoker. 2S·40 Presti&~ 3 BR, 2 BA.
Fplc. m1cr, W o. total
upgraded. Tl.I.rt.le Roek
Home. No ptta l340 mo
Share u U.75,1,
Professional woman
would like so share her
home with another
woman COM, Ocean
view, quiet. beautiful S380. 673-8.'iQ_ __
Fem non·smkr to shr bse
on Ba I boa Island
$200 mo + util 6'1J.0468 .Ken or C.!!!L_ __
MI F share Lido Isle
home Tennis. Beach.
Club $300.S375. 673-5274
Bayfront pvt suite, non·
smoker. Gar, shr kitch !S50 mo. 6'13-0560
Female Rmmle 35 + to
shr lux 2br apt. Nr SC
Plaza College. All
amen 55&4176 aft work
ingh!]_ -----
Low rent lntemallooal
Traveler looking for
quiet. rlean male to shr
2Br furn Woodbridge
l!.l!LS49·221.5, 551·9553
M • F lo shr 2bdrm apt.
Hunt Bch. 1 blk from
bch Must be neat &
respon Over 21 S230
846-7096 ___ ---
f' 2 BR. 2 BA Promoo·
Wry Pt NB. Ocean \'tew.
pool tenrus courts. etc S340 mo After 6. Wknd"s
t 7. 675·CTI~-__
Fem roommale wanted
to shr oceanfront home.
NB. 631·<rl32or67$-752S
Female or Male lo share
furn 2 Br Newport
Beach S2&S incld ulils
673·8392_d!l'.L_
Respon. nnmle wanted
2br CdM Ilse 11., blocks
from Bch UX> mo + sec
dep. Brent 6'15-2389 eves
Mature feminine non·
s mkr room. kitchen
pr1 v . pool . Ja c ,
stores bus dose Dee
~-4379 _____ _ and make payments for STARTING OUT?? tng 103. Owner motlvat· pets o.lt. $725. 547-9571, ••••• .. ,e••••••••••••••• exclusive Bluffs. Beaut LUXUIY COHOO Mesa Verde. 1100 sq ft.
...., ownership and 100'% Then this i.s Just the ed. Hurry! Call Kevin. Lorri Wit da, 546-5434 HOME FOR RENT greenbelt view w/pools 2 bdrm 2 ba pool spa frplc. lndry, patio. dtS
write off. Why rent! home for YoU! ! Located ~ eves' Wltends. 3 Bdrm. SQS. Fenced Avail for 1 yr be&inning garage'. we~I or · PCH hwshr, encl gar. AdllS, VILLAGE Condo on 20 acre park .
New 1&2 bdnn luxury lux. furn .. pool, jar. ca·
adult apt.s tn 14 plans 1 ble tv, own nn & ba. S32S
Bdrm from $465, 2 bdrm w/ullls~Nwpt, &t2-l312
from $535, Townhouse Rmmte shr 2Bdrm. lBa.
S600 + pools, tenn1s . 2 car gar CONDO Male
waterfalls, ponds! Gas 21-30 yrs. Non smkr
for cooking & heating pre r. I 0 min b ch .
paid From San Diego S225•mo + 1'2 ut1J aft
A&eot7804!97 justa shortstrolltothe 3BRl"28a.SantaAna yardandgarage.Kids& Sept 1. $1250 /mo 185-0permo no pets. $550. 31 06
beach. this 2 bedroom 1 Hgts duplex. l600 mo. In· pets welcome. 545-2000. 644-5137 bef lOpm, 75Z..1869 ar 6498-6716 _Qinger, ~ -
BESTVIUE IN bath ~ottage has a sun-quire at 20201 B. Birch Agent, no fee. DECORATORS CONDO Large 1 Br. Apt. ~ear urge 1 bdrm apt. Quiet ~:o~aes-rale guesl Sl. mum 4 Br+ boous. lrg home & Eastbluff 4 Br 3 Ba. beach. wet bar. frplc, area. new cpl. 2 C!lrs ok EAS1lllfF $ . OW"S for ooly I Bdrm house, frp lc. Ya rd . $ 9 00 inc I Fam Rm. trplc, near single preferred. S$25 in· I No pets. no children
l4i,500.499-4MI small yard, priv. no gardener. 768-6245 or pool. 11300. 675-0604. ctdsmosl lls.673-1153. S35-0mo.00·J711() __ 3 Bdrm 2 bath. im-
maculate! Owner anx-
ious. 1~000. 10, Mee.*, Ur.
5 .... 772'
Lingo -~o~
.. .,....., Super C06ta Mesa area,
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~ ..........
NEW BayCront home ••••••••• .. •• .. •••••••• with 50 ft pier. Owner Moltle H ...
finapcing. A.&t. MS-7221 For S• 1100
NEWER 3 Br, upper bay •••••••••••••••••••••••
ISTATESALE
$140 additiooal income. Owner ·will finance
$220,000. Call Rae
Rod en 631-12166
pets, sgl adult $350 loci 951·8555 67$-2490 £njoy summer livin« all
qtil.642-2790 Lot-e..... '3252 E. Bluff CONDO beaut year. Walk to Cd M
Golf course frontage 4 Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br, 2i.ba, pool Si35/mo beach. 2bdnn. frplc. lrg
home In Mesa Verde. 4br home in new develop-848·3119Suzi1640-8449 d eck. en cl p r kg .
Rent or lease Suoo. Agl. ment. mode~ kitchen, Newport Heights old 2 B"r. S800/mo. Av~il 67}85!!9_
646-5096 rec fac avail. no pets 1 Ba . house. large yard, Coate Mno 1124
Eastside 2 Br. 1 Ba. 540-8300 days, 136-97114 2..., car garage. Adults. ••••••••••••••••••••••• enclsd garace. fenced wknds/eves no pets. Isl. ' tut +
rear yard Separate Beautiful 4 Br. 2 Ba. I $200depoeit.S685Mo.461 MEWLYDICOR.
~BJIU
AP AltTMEKrS
Beautiful landscaped
garden apts Patios or decks. Pool & Spa. cov
ered parking. Adults. no
pets.
Bach. S36.5-S370
2250 Vanguard, 540-9626 condo. Model cond. Low
ml. loan. Owner anx-
io . A 6'5-7221
0WMr~14%
1966 Majestic located in Laguna Beach Park.
Near Ocun. Week days
759-4175
washer/dryer room story Ranch Lrg living Sanla Ana. 548-50'1 afl. 1 Br. gas pd. encl gar
w/book up Across from rm & dining rm combo 6. d washer. pool Adults
park & shopping. No w1thwoodbumin&frpk. --------&t2~-507~3=·---
pets .. S435 Mo. 770-5629: fam rm. bit-in gas kit . lcryfrOlltYe..tr 2 Ir. I laADt Eutside Costa Mesa ..2 •~ 548-5422, util rm, 2 car garage, 3 Br. iien, 2'"1 ba, frplc. Newly decor. C:as pd Spacious I Br. Apt .. loft
3Br, FIR, spa. lush ,. ""'• ~ Mesa Verde 3bdrm, 2ba, gardener. view Drive spa. prv bch, 2 car gar I g pool dsh Ava11 IH5 32!9 Univers1· Owner will ca rr y kl h mdl l rd d by 29701 Anna Mana No pets. SlSOO mo. Boat enc ar.. . wr. ty Or'. See Manager Apt.
8.6Xgross. 131.000 per lot~. r;lnt' f~/ f~~-L 1 n e < c r 0 w n slip avail. 673-6055 . ~dults.542-5073. S.548-0648eves.
unit. Must sell now. s750/mo. incl gardnr & VaUey/Niguel Rd areal. 675-0597. l lrTo'Mllew H.t...._ltodl 1140
&rounds. 1198.000 . --------B615~~~RES, 4 bdrm. 2 •EXCITING• ba fam. nn. '32:5.000.
631.~
Principals only please. water.551-4469. S875Mo.Availimmed. ExeA .• Bdrm with New1ty decopoolr. 19!, pdh .•••••• ":'!:••••••••••••••• Norm McKinley, Bltr. DUNGER• .,,.,nr ~ .. enc gar ..... w r o,.. ... .,,.. E/Side. 3 BR 2 Ba. den, ™· separate master suite. Adults.&42-5073.' · THEWHIFfUTRH ~ S9t SlH21&6 ram rm, fpk. dbl gar 9S7-070l 3000 s/f. On Santiago Dr
VILUIALIOA
I Br condo. View of
Catalina. Owner will
help finance. Submit of·
fer.
Beautiful 24x60 Bar· ..... ,= w/opener Yard , 2Bdrm, garden home. in Dover Shores IMSTANTIM!--Tourd~VteA~~J~~i~;~afl
· gtoo H 2B 2B 2100 children OK. no pets g.ardener, guarded com-S1800/mo lease Smith· 2 Br. 11,1a Ba. Townho~e Br. Well decorated (!':n rm,~ ~esa~~ ....................... Grdnr/wtrtncl. S900mo mly, priv bch access. Meyer Bltr.548-781_3 _ Easts1de I child OK. Olympic size pool. light·
nic•st 61tarpark. 2.800 sq ft bldg®9800sq fl Broker, 615-9006 Rec . center w/pool, spa. Pvt k 3 B 2'i'l B Yard. lndry nn. Great ed tennis court Jacuz.zi " lot. Fenced & black $600/mo. avail Sept. I. par • . r a, loc 11u"M · · · •roar. "u 112
htta..,lllTewa topped. c.onsider trade Nu adlt tondob ,bnr1S.C. 970•7740or55l.utl WJD. refng. $725/mo. TSL._,,.,MGMTo. ., • ., 1603 park belike landscaping1 24xl0-1971 Golden west for res Owntt645-4S32 Plaza. 2 r, 2 a ~35. Kids OK. no pets. · ,_. Most aut1ful bldg n
2Br, 2Ba w/family rm & · 551·2425, 1-495-flll2S MisNo. Vilfo 3267 John Manhall HEWPOIT H.B.
W ... bar. m" I n"una H1·1·-Ollt of c....... •br 2ba x.... .. ... , drns ....................... 531·18 , ....... _._ from $ll6 846-0619 "'' .._. "' P ~r •550 .. ' e ...... ~ .. ' ... ' HOM''"'FORRENT A A",.......,.,~. . --OP8011DAY nkut5starpark.2tyrs ,...., a blt·lns, 1750. lat. last+ I:.;} 2 2Bd 1Bd M•RJHERSW•IJ( to lit 131000 ....................... $200.545-~ 3 Bdrms $625-$650.' · rm l · rm A A 10to2PM + quay. • · Br d 3 Bdnn2Ba - -Fenced yards & From$270.mo.+ulils. 2 & 3 Br Townhouse HI U. hrt Dr. CWSIC an new 2bdnn house. refs garages. Kids & pets No children, no pell. no Apts. from' $495. Patios, MOIUHOME home with 1932 sq ft oo •• 7</ · t ...... RingSE 3.6 acres ol wiable land 4:,.1"~· welcome. 545-2000 . wa er....,.... single & double car Sec u r It y BI d g . SALIS f ho rd ""·-... Aaent nofee 2450NewportBlvd garages, near Hunt. Panoramic view on 2'706Harbor.ste20&-A or . rm•e:·.,ga,.!n,.ooor Vacant! E/Side quiet 3 • • ~269 S.C....... l276 Costa Mesa Harbour.840-6807.
f this 1 bd you na "' 1 · ~... · b 2 b f I DW Newport.... ~ ••••••••••n•n•••••••• w Cw0a~eOrp. romCom• by thrmls S•5tl7 Owner may as111t lo r • a, rp1c. • ••••• .. •• .. ••••H•••••• 2 BR 2 Ba twntune. pools, 2 Br. 1 Ba. ~1 . JoAnn. " financing for 1 year lndry, gar. 169$. 359 5.u ....... ~-Presidential Hgta SSSO Max l ~hild. No pets. 1 p eclal preview . m4 cameran.uxeo,2 w/gooddOwo FAilhW Woodland.873-3800 -."·---, SSZ.$CM8 ftSPM • · $375. Sierra Mgmt. S280,000 bdrme. Adlt Park or Renick Blt r & As: 2 br. crpts, drps, 1 car Beautiful house avail a 641-1324.
WATt:Rf'ROllfT Hoaa. <Newport Beach) eociates. Aslt for Gayle aar. No pets. Rtfs. now In elegant. area. 4 Cuda•• 'I •St ~~unnln~~g-.lar_g_e_2_8_r.-2-B-a-.1
HOMES Small pets ok. $25,500. Sharp.~/i66-@ "50/mo. lit ' last + LBf°tn3 BRa. Diftin,. 91. RW, U.fw...., 3425 Garden Apt. Pool & Rec EST. TE &M-1908 !lOOdep. 646-5§17 v g m. m Y ....................... area. kU.
REAL 'A MO. SAMDt50 E' "d lean. 2 B Rm . New wallpaper. WOODBRIOGE·3bdrm. 710W IJlh.St 631-1"400 Maw....t .._.. I06t COUNTY SI e. c sunny r cozy kitchen Ir many S5$0 Upslairs spacious ·
'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J .... 1,999 __ ........ OCIAMYW# 1 ';.:· u~. =to many xlras. $1750 mo. quiet nelgbboftiood Btt'. 2bBr ' 218f all twlndhomed.
PUCIOUS .llWIL IY THI SIAI View of entire harbor custom
decor and remodeled to include
~~panded cantillvered deck.
Wkle lot, views from all rooms.
SDI, alar' system. One of Ir\tine Terrace s finest locations.
$885,000 Fee. Helen Wood .
....... (581)
,
,.csar pa 1• IC • mo. Broker Cooperation. Ins Crpts drps access eaul u y n scp • _. T w/gar , laundry rm, 758 ..,4 · 1 · • 1 frplc, Jar, lndry room. HI g h on a t no I I. dect, no petl.13l·lllte • · to poo • spa: tenn 5 etc. klO mo. Adlts·no
OvtTlookln(the Pacific. CHARMING ........ ~ courts. 51 Wildwood. .5*«1lG
1 ml to bucb, lwturious E SIOEHOME Beautifully red«Orated 12131837-&15.
owner's apt., mother·ln· 28dnft 1Ba fenced yrd El Dorado model. 3 New 2BR 2BA Nr So Cst IMte
law apt., .t separate 2 car g~r w7opener new Bdrm. 2i,; ba. wet bar. Plasa micro FPdbl Elec OCCWAMCY!
r uest apt. + olfict with cpt/drapea sardtner parquet Ot1. Security Gar pool/spa incl wtr & 2 Br. l Ba. AJJ'. Beam
outalde entrance lcfrpk. " '585 ..em sated. view. $1200/mo beat~.matOeve• cellin11, laundrri rm,
Priced roe quick ule. su'.,p J 8ctm, 2 ba cpt. lie. Call Doma Sutton New ocean view condoe. 2 pool. Adults oo Y. no
Sll$,OOO. drp1 fntd ymt w&Jtto $44 ·9016 or Henry bdrm. 2 bath + den. l)tla.
Jiii w..t •· 1llop1/1cbls. Mso/mo. 552.5115, Btn. From SISO. 875-llll or TSL MGMT 642-1§03
&71417 155-0117 EASTBLUFF 675·9132, 2 Br. 1911 Maple Ave,
._..... ,.__ Modem 4 BR. 3 ba, 00 'l1lree Bclrm, 2¥t ba. end $Br. Condo. New paint" Refriae. Ad~ only, no ....__ 2700 pett $100 unll. 1ood COllldtllon and carpet. u Seamltt Cir-Jleta, l&'i. Sierra P11mt. ........... · · ~IUoe. llOO per mo. de, Newport Terrace. ~MM334
J2JJ Weekdan11HJ75 .... 1=•'-'M~·----oAWifi&& 2 BR adll condo In ~ .__..1--...1 • ....i 0r1AI•, culdeHC. 2 uvtm, _..,. wvuu..... Air, 6 Jae. $385
aS.Uttert 1 !I ft.JI I ace. _,63=..l·J.:a:r..-----matun muna. "75/mo ~fly. Afak1•r.at I 1~ .......................
CORHER280RJI. C....... m4 wllll 2 ba. P-.cmlc ........ ._ ....... .
vlew ~AMI. Pool CASA DIOIO u4 apa. NGO/mo lie. AU. UTIUTIES PAID • •&erfrollt ....... lac . ....
IMSTAHTIH
3 Br. 2 Ba. Apt. with 2
car attached gara,e. W / D hook-up. patio
frplc. Small pet/child
ok. Nr Hunt. Harbour.
Only $595.
TSL MGMT 642-1603
MIAl IEACH, 21DIM
Crpts. drps, bit-ins. at·
lchd ear. '575 ~l.
DELAWARE PINES APTS.
Spacio~ 1 &2 Bdrm.
Frplc, stove, dis
bwasher. garbage dta·
pout, pool, laundry fac.
Small. quiet complex.
Adult.I ont,. Pets con.
1idered. 1 Br. $4$0/mo. 2
Br. $$50/mo. 19221
Delaware St. ISo. or
'Garfield > 842·8807. Of .
flee hrs: Tue1-Thura
after S:30PM. Fri-Mon. p
f'rwy dnve North on 6P 892~-07_67 ___ _
Beach lo McFadden ChnslJanRoommate
then West on McFadden 2br 38st, N.B. Pen S160 to Sea wind Villa l(e _6_13-78$6 Dan Eves 6-9
UHJ89J.5~ M F 10 shr 2 br furn apt.
ROOlllls 4000 pool. S250 ut1Js incl. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644·6141 645-3026
Eastside Costa Mesa. ---~ ----00
Nice large room w frplc Office R..tal 44
& own entry ('OLLEG E ••••• •••••••••••••••• •• GAL pref bx> mo. lst & 1617 Westchrf. N 8 Want
last mo req After 5 pm financial 1nsl. 70005.f. 646-3375 lsL!!oor A ent ~I·~. -
2.500· CONDO on lovely HEWPOlrTIEACH
Greenbelt w spacious Full serYice exec. of.
patios & sundecks nr fices from $397 "On
I. 557-71!83or640-6339. Catr· exec olfic" from
Pnvate enlran~ in pnv S105 lnclds. secretanal,
home. No smoking or phone ans .. word pro·
drinking. Pref. male cessmg, Telex.qwip.
over 40. UX> Mo 55&0637 THE HEADQUARTERS COMPANIES ~lnt Lg Pvt be nr Hoag 714 851·0681 s~.it64"tf.f~ steady M PLUS II OFFI CES .
2 working adults wanted
Huge pool home, across
Santa Ana C.C SZ75 &
S295 mo. S45-6891 aft
6PM -----Beautiful Npt Bch home
wants working female
adult SZ75 mo 646-5~ s_.,._.. 4200
• •••••••••••••••••••••• LIDO ISLE charming 3
bdrm. 2 bath. playroom
Just remodefed. Mon·
thly rental. BUI Grundy,
675-11151~. ---~
NEWPORT OCEAN·
FRONT Lux. 2-4 Br. Wk· Jx . 573-SURF, 673-7677. _
Hunt. Bch tr1 3bdrm
w/spa. Near beach. Aug.
only. 960-571.$.
Newpol'\ Beach 3 Br 2 ba,
fu rn. Weekly. Agent.
·2650 673-8849
Oceanfront Duplexes.
Newpart Beach, 2 & 3
Bdrms. Avail weekly
Call ·0614 r8311·3232.
New home. 1 bllt from
Ferry on Peninsula, 3 Br
2~ Ba. llOO pr wk lhru
Sept. l . Avail. for yearly
Se 1.7~
Beach rental Sunset
Beach, 2 8t ~-fum. I
bllt to beb. NII.I per wk.
C1llZ11/m 114
4250 .......................
Oceanfront Newport
Buch. 2 • IBdrnu
avail. weekly Cal . 141
500·6000 sq fl 1801
Newport Blvd. C M Ph
~-9495 ----
Office Space on POf near
Balboa Bay Club, 342 sq.
ft · $370 per mo Also 212
sq fl. S220 per mo Call
Jolyl~t 549-2117.
P.C.H. s I .JS 141 Ft.
Deluxe office space.
prime NB toe. next to
Arches Rest 1300' avail
now. Contact Byco, Inc.
645-225_1 --
CM. 3 beaut. offices &
bath, 840 sq.ft Xlnt loc.
Air, cpts, drps, 1750. _645·766_1 ____ _
MIWPOIT
PIMMSULA
Spadous execul1ve of·
fices acroas from City
Han. All~icesavaila·
ble. ·optional'. From 225
sq.ft. up at reasonable
rentals. No lease re-..tti.!:!d. oll &7UOOZ
THEllGHT
SPACE THIRIGHT
PllCI
•UAIAMlmt 300 to SOOOSQ. Fl. Prlmt
Wattrfroot offices 111
Newport Harbor with
boat 1Ups available .
Phasa loaa lilt ol epeeial
amtnltltt. Ttrrifk It.as
i11 tmns..,.. availabat
CIUTodar!
17141675-1662 ~..BRA!!!l!ML
,. ...........
•'J, • • l" •••
Orange Coast DAILY PILQT{T'hursday, July 23, 1981
Admirals in charge Coadst hGuanl
nee s e lp of Navy boot camps WASHINGTON •A P > Com
SAN DIEGO CAP> -The
Navy is putting a~mirals in
charge of its three boot camps to
show, it says, that it regards the
training camps as increasingly
important.
A spokesman said Capt. War-
ren Aut. commander of the
North Island Naval Air Station,
will be promoted to rear admiral
and put in charge of the San
Diego Naval Training Center.
Rear Adm . Pauline M. Hart-
ington wi ll take over the Orlan-
do, Fla .. training center from a
captain. She is the first woman
picked to run a boot camp.
A captain in charge at Great
Lakes, Ill., will be relieved by
Rear Adm. James ff. Flatley
111. a Navy spokesman said.
·'This is recognizing the im·
portance of boot camp, and
there already has been signs of
that as we 'tighten up training
with more drill hours scheduled
and more attention to dis-
cipline," he said.
··As the Navy builds toward a
600-ship Navy, it is going to need
good people to man those ships
and we have got to get off to a
good start as we do that."
15% to 50% Off
ever1th\ng \n the store
mandant John B. Hayes says the
Coast Guard doesn't have the
ships or personnel to step up its
war agaihst drug smuggling by
sea.
Hayes told a congressional
s ubcommittee that the Coast
Guard's goal ls to seize 75 per-
cent of the marijuana smuggled
into the United States by sea,
but it only is able to intercept 15
percent to 20 percent.
Without more ships and peo-
ple. Hayes said, the Coast Guard
could not even meet ils goal by
giving up search and rescue
missions, enforcement of fish·
eries regulations and other ac-
livities.
ABORIGINAL ARTISTS -Members of an will perform in New York before a concert
Australian aboriginal group pose at a New tour of the United States.
Yori< press conference. The aboriginal artists )u\1 23, 24 and 25 s !"~~of our
Pool contractor suing actor
. . bracelets. earnr9, we proudly .
Inctuding nn2~~ndise is on sa: .Collection and
quality rn:er t Corum. Concor
ASPEN, Colo. <AP > -An
Aspen contractor is suing actor
George Hamilton in Aspen Dis-
trict Court for $2,033, the amount
of money he has refused to pay
for work done on the indoor
swimming pool at his home
here.
Hamilton's Aspen attorney,
Richard Neiley, however, said
the bill submitted by the Weld-
ing Co. of Aspen for work done
in March was "exorbitant" and
t.e believes the company "may
have been trying to sting" his
client.
Thomas Crumpacker. at-
SKI
paid only $1,333 of the $3,366 bill. teature Piage . torney for the welding company,
said a Hamilton aide ordered the
actor's pool sand-blasted to re-
move a coat of paint. The job
was to be done during the three
days immed iately b efo re
Hamilton's arrival here. he said.
Hamilton lives in Beverly Hills.
Wel ding Co. e mployees
worked "into the wee morning
hours" to fini sh the job in time,
Crumpacker said.
Neiley said the actor felt that
the charge of up to $43 per hour
by the sand blasters was too
high.
Records show that Hamilton
bought the home in Aspen's
fas hionable West End for
$750,000 in September 1979.
rd watche s. Con co
(/31Jell <Walhe!J ~~1:t~!
ISLAND• N EWPOR
He and Neiley agree that the
dispute arose over damage that
allegedly occurred to tiles atop
the pool during the blasting. As
a resuJt of the dispute , Hamilton
Fireman su ccumbs
McFARLAND (AP> -Kern
County fire captain, Donald
Moore. 44 , died Tuesday after col-
lapsing while lifting a hose line
over a fence.
35 FASHION
FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY
JULY 24th and 25th
RT llA T SKI SALE
(for Locals And friends)
All Tennis Merchandise 50% Off
free strings with
purchase of a racket
• SHOES
• CLOTHING
• • • Don't wait for our tremendous August Sale, sltop Saturday for
Great Savings • • • beat tlte crowds • • • great selection.
Roslignol 1981 • 82 Skis
15% OFF
\
This sale is being held
for our local friends and
neighbors.
--BOOTS-.---.
s
K
I s
K-2
AUTHIER
HEXCEL
SPALDING
THE 511
CHOOSE FROM THESE
fAMOUS BRAND SKIS
·ALL40%0FF
UP CLOTHl~I
TO 70% OFF
.
ALLSll
CLOTHING
' '-I
SI 00°0 Parkas
GI low GI 529 9 5
SALE .UIS ARE IO:• a.M.·5:M P.M.
j
•
~·· L Orange Coatt OAIL Y PILOT /Thursday, July 23, 1981
Community merger
would be ·beneficial
It appears from preliminary
studies that the proposed annexa·
lion of a major portion of South
Laguna to Laguna Beach will
mean a substantial financial gain
for the Art Colony 1f the merger
is approved.
According to a report pre·
pared by City Manager Ken
Frank, Laguna Be ach could
come out about $78,500 ahead if
the Local Agency Formation
Commission ( LAFCl agrees to
the wedding of the two seaside
communities.
Laguna Beach council mem·
bers last week agreed to pick up
the $500 filing fee with LAFC
and become actively involved in
proceedings for annexation of un·
incorporated South Laguna, from
Laguna's southern city limits to
Aliso Creek.
A 2()-page preliminary report
on the feasibility of the merger
s hows additional revenues de-
rived from the move at $320,575.
Costs involved in the pro·
posed annexation would total
about $242.000. according to the
study.
Additional rev enues from
property taxes. bed taxes. busi·
ness licenses and taxes on gas
a nd cigarettes would all mean
more money in city coffers.
The joining of Laguna Beach
a nd South Lag una seems a p-
propriate and beneficial for resi-
dents of both communities. The
1,800 South Laguna residents will
benefit from more localized gov·
ernment. while the Art Colony
will benefit from increased rev-
enues.
And while opposition is ex-
pected from some landowners in
South Laguna. annexation propo-
nents already have garnered the
signatures of more than S4 per-
cent of the rej{istered voters in
the unincorporated county area
on petitions favoring the merger.
Laguna Beach city govern-
ment participation in the official
a nnexation process should speed
the .approval and give notice to
LA FC that joining of the two
communities is desirable .
Government aside, while
Laguna Beach and South Laguna
each have neighborhood pride,
his torically. there has almost
always been a strong "one com·
munity" atmosphere. Laguna
Beach and South Laguna have
long-standing lies in business and
commerce, sch ool systems.
s h ared coastal concerns and
social and cultural activities.
When it becomes governmen-
tally official. it should be a very
happy marriage.
It can also be a nticipated
that South Lagµna will always be
known as South Laguna.
Schoolfundssought
Trustees of t he Laguna
Beach Unified School District
have appointed a seven-member
advisory committee to study
possible money-making uses of
district-owned property.
Sc h oo l di s tri ct ad -
ministrators say the duties of the
committee will be to look into
possible lease agreements and
sale of surplus property to raise
money for the financially pressed
district.
The committee me mbers
h ave been given a tentative Oct.
15 deadline to turn in a written
report of their findings and rec-
ommend a lions lo dis trict
trustees.
Under consideration for lease
is the Ali so Elementary School in
South Laguna. which was closed
because of budget constraints by
district trustees in May.
The advisory committee will
a lso look at alternate uses for an
11-acre parcel in the :rop of the
World neighborhood.
Other property includes a
s mall park site near the elemen·
tary school at Top of the World
and a house adjacent to the high
school that formerly served as a
continuation school.
It will be good ne ws for
Laguna's schools if the newly
for med committee can find some
revenue-producing uses for dis-
trict property that is currently
not being used.
With an estimated $540,000
deficit that needs to be erased
from the 1981·82 school budget,
a ny additional income the dis-
trict can derive from lea!e agree·
ments or sales of unneeded prop-
erty wiJI be welcome indeed.
Appoin tment significant
Laguna Beach M a~·or Wayne
Baglin's announcement that he
will be lea\'ing the city next week
to take a job in Saudi Arabia
leaves the remainder or the Ci ty
Council with some tough de·
cisions to make .
The mayor fo rma ll y a n -
n o un ced hi s d ecisio n a l
Tuesday's council meeting. He
will leave with his family for the
Persian Gulf July 27.
That leaves the makeup of
the City Council potentially in a
deadlock on major development
and philosophical issues.
On the one hand are Sally
Be lleruc and Neil Fitzpatrick,
both council members who place
heavy emphasis on environmen-
tal concerns. On the other hand
are Howard Dawson and Kelly
Boyd. who tend to vote more con-
servatively on building issues.
The true swing vote on~,~e
five-member panel was Bag~
•
whose pos itions were frequently
unpredictable by even the most
astute council observers.
At their meeting Tuesday,
the remaining council members
decided holding a special election
to replace Baglin would be too
costly. and agreed to appoint a
s uccessor.
That person wit I be chosen
from a list of applicants for the
post at a special meeting of the
council July 28.
The four remaining members
s hould appoint an interim council
member who will be responsive
to issues that come before the
city and vote individual merits of
an issue rather than some pre-
determined ideology.
That person s hould have the
ability to com m a nd public
respect and confidence, and be at
least relatively untainted by the
often volatile politics of Laguna
Beach.
Opinion~ expre<o<oed in the spa(e above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex
pressed on ln1 s page are those ot their authors and art1sh. Reader (Omment i s 1nv11
ed. Addre')s The vally Ptlol, P.O. Box 1Sb0, Costa M esa, CA 92626 Ptlone t7141
b4~ 4)21
L.M. Boyd I Romantic months
It is in the a utumn moreso not in
the s pring that a young man's fancy
turns to love. according to the
statisticians. Their study of the birth
records indicates May, June and July
a re the three least romantic months.
November and December are the
most romantic, they say
Three ~ or five. wild animals do
their hunt1na. foragmg. whatever. In
the night.
Sad. but true, you catch a baby
ORA NGE COAST
Daily Pilat
ocelot the same way you catch a
baby gorilla. You shoot the parents
first. 1bose who purPort to know say
there's no othe r way.
Ah'lerican astronauta can't be more
than 6 feet tall. The design of their
equipment limits the height to that.
Those who leach lllllerate
arownups say such persons usually
can learn to write simple letters ln
about three weeks.
Tltomls P. Haley
PLlbUIMr
TllolNI A. Mu.,...I ...
Editor
BarlNlr• KNlbklt
Editorial P• Editor
Nuke boondoggle cost soars
WASHING TON Government boon
doggle:; are always good for evanescent
headlines But if they are r eally to stick
in the public craw. two considerations
are usually necessary The fiasco must
occur under high a us pices. and the
story must have a certa in oomph <"apa
ble o r kindling public interest.
By all the oomph ind icators. the
Clinc h River breedl'r rt'al'tor al Oak
Ridge. Tenn . may not register hi gh ll
ts an unheralded proJect . with an
awkward name. well off the beaten
path But 1t is a multimillion·doll ar
fiasco born of fraud and mis manag(•
ment.
The plant. darling of the nuclear
power indu:;try. is :;upposed to produce
more nucl<.'ar fuel than 1t uses. which
sounds lik<' a bargain But 1t has been
no bargain for th<' taxpayers who arc
unwittingly paying for 11
ORIGINALL V. 1t \\as to be m opt>ra
lion by Deet'mber 1979. at a cost of $669
million R'-ll it has <1 lreadv cost $1
billion. and the laks t estimate is that it
won"t be oper<1tio nal until February
1990. By th<1t tim P. lhl• bill will be at
least $3.2 b illion.
How could this happen ., It's easy.
when the government ofrtcials who are
supposed to keep track of the project's
contractors shirk their res ponsibilities
According to a s pokeswoman for the
Clinch Ri ver project. about 80 percent
of the cost increa se was dut> to
circumstances beyond official control.
Jn other words. the bureaucrats were
responsible for "only'· S500 million of
the estim a ted S2 .5 billion overrun
That ·s bad enough
But it's actually worse than that. In
vc:;tigators for Rep J ohn Dingell, D·
G
J-A-Cl-Al-D-IR-SD-1 -~
'.\lich . told my associates Tony Capac·
cio and Howa rd Rosenberg that at leas t
three fourths of Clinch River's prtml'
contracts arc open ended. that is with
no firmly set costs or co mpletion dates
Tht• 1n vl'sligators warned that l'\'en
tht:· s taggt'nng SJ 2 bi llion est imate ma)
bt• opllm1st1c It fails to take into ac
c·ount the poss1b1hty that the entire
Clinc h Rivt'r facility might have to bt•
re lot·atc•d for safl•t y n•asons
A 1978 NL'C'LEAR Regulatory Com-
m1 ss1on rt.'port listed nearly 100 safety
problt'ms A Clinch R1v~r official s aid
many of the problems had been ad-
dres:;cd even bcfon• the N RC report.
but the commission had not yet checked
to M'l' 1f lh<• rwt•ded <'or rectwns \\t•n• at·
tually made.
Fraud has ulso plugued the project
One internal Ot•partment of Energy
memorandum told ho\\ an employee of
Atomics International. a subcontrnctor.
rec<'l\'t'd a SI .000 1nll1rest fret• loan in
return for advanc·<• 1nformat1on on t·on
I ra<·ls. and :rnolht•r S5.()()(l in cold cash
for bid price mformatwn
Tht• FRI found th;1t '""purchasing of
f1 c1ab 1m roted bogus eompanlt.'s. from
which lht·~ cla1m1:d lo ha,·e soll t1 ted
bids for item:-, m•<•ded al Clim·h R1\'er
This n•sultcd in on•rt'hargcs running a::.
high i.JS 800 Pl'rt'('lll
Tvp1t·<1I of lhl• l'a\ aht.>r \\a\ t·onlrac
tor., l>ChaH· Y.ht·n l'nc·ll-Suga~ 1s paying
th<• hills 1s an 1n('1dt•nt reported 1n
<1n11th<·r tnll'rnal l>O fo: document dated
Fd1 13 It d1sc·l11st•s lh;,i t thl' c hief of
Wt•s t inghoust•'s data procl'ssing facilit~
a l l' Ii n l' h H 1 vt· r h ad Ii t' c n us 1 n g ;1
SW0.000 tnmpult·r for ht.., O\.\O pl'rsonal
husin<·ss llt· not onh ston·d teases and
hus1m·ss dirt·<·turll's. rn tht• tompute r.
but u:-.t·d 1l for a foolhall pool
T h<• Congn•ss11mal Budge•! OffH·c· has
l•st1m aled th<1t tt•rmrnatrng Clinch
R1n·r '<:ould sJ\'l' the go\·l'rnmt•nt SI .i
b1ll1on O\ e r tht· fln .. yeC1r pt•riod of
1982 1986 · But tht• lh'agan admtn1slra·
lion. n•portt•dl~ oq·r the obJt•tt11ms of
Bud1H'I Dircdor l>;.r\'ld Stockman. has
dt'l'ldt•d lo go a hl'ad
Athletic recruiting charges denied
To the Editor
I would like to challenge some stall'
ments made b\ the Dailv P ilot in an
editorial which ·was published June 21
The editorial dealt with a prev10us
article by re porter P<1t Kennedy relat
ing to h1Rh school athletic recruitin~
T he editorial stated that Edison High
Sc hool has an aggressive. successful
athletic recru1tinJ: program. It further
MAILBOX
we nt on lo state that the Edison coach.
Bill Workman. expects four to six select
transfers to be in his starting lineup
next year.
I feel it is imperative that the public
know that Edison High School does not
and has never had a program to recruit
athletes outside of its attendance boun-
daries.
T HIS PAST SPRING sever al con
cerns were brought lo our attention that
athletes had been recruited to attend
Edison High School for the purpose of
pa rticipating on its athletic teams. We
also had information that this type of
recruiting was occurring in other
schools in the district
An intensive Investigation followed.
Whal we did find was that there were
indivrduals in the Edison community.
and in other school communities, who
were actlvely e ncouraging young
athletes lo attend particular schools to
participate in specific athletic pro·
grams. Our investigation proved con·
elusively that in every case where
recruiting violations did occur the
school coaches were unaware and ap·
palle d that s uch activities were taking
place.
In the case of Bill Workman, I can as-
sure you that he has aggressively
worked to maintain an untarnished rep·
utalion. We are very proud of Bill
Workman as an educator . as we are of
his e ntire staJr and the other coaches in
the Huntingto n Beach Union High
School District. They a ll reallie that
athletics are an Important part or our
total instructional program but they are
just a part.
I Ceel th1tl It IS important for the
public to know that the district will not
tolerate athletic r ecruiting and is mak·
Ing ever1 effort to eliminate this llle1at
practice; that our coaches are not ln·
volvcd ln ncruiting; and that we are
very proud or the s~ce1J11 of the Edison
Quotee
"The covernment of France lt not
made IOf' (ortipen. It ii made for
fraace." -Fread Prellilir Plern
M •• ..., in respoaclin1 to concerm from
1JUn abODt Communl l putlctpetlon In
t.he C abtnet.
football progr am and the other fine
athletic activities which the dis trict pro
v1dcs for the voungslr.>rs we ser\'e
FR/\N K J ABBOTT
Supl'rllil(•ndent of Schools
Why Ca11a d ia11s?
To the Editor
In rt'fcren<.'e to tht> Irvine Company's
informal selection of a Canadian firm
to operate a proposed luxury hotel 1July i:u. my question 1s. what happened to
the good old days of American business
profit for America and not for foreign
countries'!
We might decide to do business with
Ameri('ans a nd not Canadia ns a s
management
KEN GOODWIN
TELE PHONE YOUR
LETTE R TO TH E EDITOR
See instructions below
Trashy Calif omia11s
To the Editor :
We have possibly one or the most
beautlful coastal areas and beaches in
the world.
Why ore our lovely beac hes a nd
P acific Coast Highway so littered with
every conceivable type of trash ? Do our
citizens not appreciate this wonderful
gift? They surely do use it
We have traveled in other states and
find no comparable messes. In fact. in
Colorado, Oregon . Washington. South
Dakota nnd several Provincial Pa rks in
Canada you see few cigare tte filte rs.
can tabs. or even small throw a ways.
let alone the ridiculous accumulation of
tras h we see a round he re
What is the matter with Californians?
0 . MEYER
Lesson l earned
To the Editor:
The m erchants of Westport Center.
369 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa, wish to
thank the Daily Pilot and Steve TriPoli
for his front page story of the advertis·
Ing problems tltey were having wilh
Balboa Graphics.
We are sure that due to the publle!a·
tlon of this story we were all able to
-retrieve-our money. It was ln fact men-
• l.tlttr~ /ram rtodrrs art tL.'t'lcomt Thi'
rrght to t'rindtTI$, lt111rs 10 /11 6J'OC• or
tltmmatt libel 11 rtwrtu>d l.tlli'ra n/ 300
4•ordi OT wu will t>.o gt&>tn pre/~fttef All
ltflfrJ mu.YI mcludr aignoturt ond mo1l111g
oddrru bvl namta FflOJI bt WtthMld on r~
qur ~I 1/ •M//1rh•ru rtoaon ., opparu1
POfl'll WtU 19()( bt f*bh"9ftf IAtl•r1 rno11 bt
ll'l~phOMd '" 642 "'* Namt cmd pltont """'M' nJ P'-t ('Oftfrff;Wor muit bt flWR for u raf1cal1an pi.rpo•f'•
liont·rl lo us the1t ,,., l' wt•re tht' only onfs
to m;.1kt· J fu ss about it and tht•refore
our mont·~ would h<· n•turnt•d to us
WE ARE UVINC in J \\Orld \\ hl'n \I
sc·t•ms almo~t lt1t• a<'Ct'Pll'd modtt of
bC'he1vior ln t heal We must choke off
this lie tw almost r1gllanlt' means and
we urJ!l' t'\ t•ry<>Ol' "ho ma~ feel the:
ate being l'ht•att·d ..,\\ 1ndled or used t o
fight baC'k What IWtll'r wa~ 1s then• to
fi g ht baek than th rough our own
nC'1 J.(hb11rhoorl m·wspaper" Wt• must
... tamp th1!> ll'n<lt-nt·~ out oursl'l\'es for
\\ l' bl'llt·n· !ht• pollet• deparlm<•nts ar c
O\ t'r\\ ht•lmed lht'"l' cla\s.
W t• ha\'c all lt•arnl'd a lesson in our
l't•nll'r from our unplt•asant experience
Ont• m1•rehanl paul ~1 75 and ei~ht paid
Sfi5 \\h1eh amounts lo $695 This was
'UIJIW"l'dl) to mail out 25.000 ad' ert1s
111g lt•afh·ts Bulk mall run., approx
1matt•h 8 cents a piece. therl'fon• the
mail l';>sl <1lont· \.\OUld be S2.so0 for our
center. to say nothmg of thl' cost of
printing and art 1,1,ork It was thl'refore
an 1mpossiblt• transaction from the
beg1nn1nJ.( Wl• urg e e\'er~onc• to
-nathema1it•alh dfluble check these
IRIS SCHNEIDER
Music do'onied?
To the Editor:
I feel it incumbent upon me to meh·
ti on the s hort s i g htedness o f the
Newport-Mesa School Distric t ad -
min is t ration. school boar d and tbe
par ents who are allowing it to he1ppen,
The district 1s dropping the e lemen-
tary mus ic program.
Without the teaching of instrumental
mus ic in the lower grades the middle
school program will wither from lack of
a "feed er .. Lincoln Middle School
already has dropped its music progra m .
After the "dl'alh" or the middle
school music progra m logically comes
the demise of the high school mus ic pro-
g ram.
We can't allow Newport to become a
.. culturally deprived" community
There won't even be anyone to pro·
vide musi<" at the football and basket-
ba 11 games.
JOHN E. LINDFORS
lllllY•
Britain haR learned the hard way that
an unarmed policeman Is as erreclive as
a GO SLOW sign on a dangerous curve. • DM. . ._, ... -............................ _ __. ... , .. , ,...., ............... _....., .... ,... ... ..... •• • .._, °"'· o.i1, ""-'
8y STEVE MJTCHBLU ot .. Delty ..........
State Coastal Commission re-
jection of a land uae plan ror
Dana Point because it does not
provide resale controls on af.
rordable housing units leaves
Orange County with two ways to
go.
-The county can impose re-
sale controls and thereby re·
cei"e approval or the develop.
ment blueprint.
-Or the county can propose
alternatives to lhe resale control
restriction that would be accep·
table by the 12-member panel.
Commissioners unanlmoualy
rejected the Dana Point Local
Coastal Plan on Wednesday, ln·
sisUna resale control• be plaeed
on affordable unitt alon1 that
coastal sector.
"Maybe the county will come
up with some clever
alternatives,'' one coast aJ com·
mission spokeswoman said to-
day.
The commission wants Orange
County to change its low·~ost
housing requirement to include
a stipulation that one-quarter or
City treasurer
salary sliced
By JOHN NEEDHAM
Oftlle_., ........... In a 4·1 vote, with Council·
woman Sally Bellerue dissent-
ing, the Laguna Beach City
Council has cut the monthly
salary of City Treasurer
Frances Engelhardt by $524.
Tuesday's council action
rouows the completion of a re·
port by a citizens committee ap.
pointed last month to study the
duties of the city treasurer's
post.
In its report, the fi ve·member
committee recommended that
Mrs. Engelhardt be paid $ISO a
month, the same as the City
Council members.
The committee also recom-
mended that a senior account
clerk be hired part time to assist
the treasurer at $730 a monlh.
The majority of the council
agreed with the findings and
adopted them.
A d i ffe r ence .o f opinion
bet ween Mrs. Engelhardt aod
City Manager Ken Frank over
bow the treasurer's operation
should be run prompted the ap-
pointment of the committee.
The elected treasurer bas the
taak or investing certain city
money in interest-bearipg ac·
counts, along with making city
deposits and monitoring city
bonds.
Mrs . Engelhardt was elected
to her post a year ago last April
at a time when t.he job l>aid $30 a
month. She successfully argued
last year that her salary should
be the same as the elected City
Council's SlSO a month.
Later, she pushed for, and re·
ceived, $8.43 an hour for a 20·
hour work week, along wilh the
$150-a-month paycheck. Mrs .
Engelhardt then said s he needed
a part-time assistant to help her
carry out her duties.
However, Frank contended
that staff time already provided
by the finance department
would be sufficient to satisfy her
needs.
Mrs. Engelhardt and Frank
were each allowed to appoint a
member to the committee when
the council agreed a study of
their disagreement should be
conducted by an impartial
group. City Council m embers
appointed the three remaining
committee members.
In its report, the committee
said it did not "feel this is lhe
lime to add ... salary In·
creases to the city treasurer's
office, but rather it is time to
streamline the office and seek
areas for greater efficiency and
economy .... ··
But Mrs. Engelhardt charged
that reducing her salary wou.ld
io effect make her a "figurehead
city treasurer." She said the
committee did not understand
the duties of her offi'ce and
didn't galher enough inform a·
lion before it made a decision.
Mrs. BeUerue, who cut the
only City Council vote against
the salary reduction, sald the
move was unfair to Mrs.
Engelhardt and lhe committee's
report was "not without bias."
But Mayor. Wayne Baglin, al·
tending bis last council meeting
before he leaves the city for
Saudi Arabia, said the commit·
tee report was an unbiased
analysis of the city treasurer's
duties.
"lt 's not fair to say this is an
issue involving black hats and
white hats," Baglin said.
Riley terms Koch
'negative force'
Walter Koch, who resigned
this week from the Orange Coun-
ty Airport Commission, was
proving to be a "negative force"
because of his positions on
several controversial airport is·
sues, Supervisor Thomas Riley
said today.
Koch, Riley explained, voted
against the airport master plan,
air carrier access plan, addi·
lional airport personnel and
start-up of l)(;.9 Super 80 service
by Republic Airlloea.
Those votes ran directly
counter to Riley's positions.
Koch was appointed by Riley
to the commission as Fifth
Supervisorial District represen·
tative In 197S.
Koch, In his handwritten letter
of resignation, said. ''Tbe events
of the past few QJonths have
areatly disturbed me, and in
good coo.science, I feel it best I
resign at UUs lime." The res·
t1natioo is effedive July 31.
lo a telephone lntervfew to-
day, Koch said tt ts • 'palntully
obvious" t.bat recent acUons by
the County Board of Supervisors
lo move ahead with $75 million
in airport improvemenll will
mean "a lot more people, a lot
more traffic, a lot more
headaches and a lot roore
RI hu."
Ind lhote action•, he •aid,
"indicate to me that thote ol ua
who llve lD Newport Beac:h and
111der rusht patteraa have a IOl to be concerned about.··
Koeh •aid "it wa pretay much ~y mutual •lrHm•nt'' wtth
atlty t.bat he 1ubmitted hla res·
1natlon. Riley dld not
'.lfeclftcally uk tor Koeb'a ,....
lilnaUon, bot.h men a1rMC1. ~'Wally. liDN tall ft>l• •the
ter pl• Md ... HHl8 .....
d bee• a ne1aun for",'' leYUld.
ltoc:la wu 1am1noa•d to
lilt> .. , Oftlce Mollday to uplm
-~--_,,.,, _______ _
'NEGATIVE FORCE'
E%·Commia!ioner Koch
hi• decision to vote aaainst in·
troductJon of the n ew, leas noisy
Super 80 by Republic Airlines.
The carrier, which operatft 12
nJghta dally from the airport,
plans to place two of the
JetHners ln Hrvlce '" mid· August.
It was durin1 that meetln1
that he gave Riiey the reaiana· ''°n letter. ioth IWe1 a.nd Koch stretffd
that the •upervltor never told
the commlaaioner how to 'Vote tn
advance' of mattera comln1
before t.be airport commlaakln,
which ll advtaory to the board of •• ,.rv11on.
Deapite Koch'• auertlon•,
Rile, aaid, ·'I believe vtr)' con·
IWtMl1 that we WlU tame tbe
aJrport, arid that we will find a
•lt.e f0t ~new.~ airport.··
Diiiy Piiat
THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1981 For the first time,
ABC 's World
News Tonight has
edged CBS . . . B3
D
0 JUST COASTING 82
FEATURES 86
Dana Point Olternatives
all new hotnea built In Dana
Point be sold to low and
moderate Income buyers.
County officials argued unsuc-
ceasfully that more than hall the
housing in the unJncorporated
coastal area is already arrorda·
ble.
The clincher, said com·
missioners, is t.bat low-cost
housing be preserved by imposi·
tion of resale controls on the un·
its, thereby preventing new
buyers from selling their homes
at market price in a few years.
Commission executive direc-
Dally~ ........ -
SALARY SLICED
Treasurer Engelhardt
Cell death
in Laguna
probed
Orange County Coroner's dep·
uLies are investigating the
death of a Lag\ina Beach man
who was found unconscious in
hb jail cell Wednesday morning
by Laguna Beach police officers.
Efforts by police, firemen and
paramedics to revive the JS·
year·old man faiJed. He was pro-
nounced dead at South Coast
MedicaJ Center at noon -about
11 hours after police were called
to the 1400 block of South Coast
Highway where a man was re·
ported lying on the sidewalk.
The tdenlity or the man was
being withheld unlit relatives
could be told of his death, police
said today.
A police spokesman said the
man was discovered nearly un-
conscious on t he sidewalk on
South Coast Highway at about
1:30 a.m. Wednesday.
Paramedics said they believed
lhe man to be intoxicated, police
said, and he was taken to the
Laguna Beach Police Depart·
ment and placed in a cell.
Police said Jail personnel
"checked on his condition hour·
ly. and it appeared he was doing
fine."
But at about 10:45 Wednesday
morning, the m an's condition
had deteriorated and firemen
from the adjacent fire station
a nd paramedics from South
Laguna were called.
A police spokesman said an in·
ternal investigation of the death
will also be conducted. Such a
probe is routine in such cases,
the spokesman said.
' Crematoriwn
plan nixed
Laguna Beach City Council
members have rejected a re·
quest by a city mortuary to in-
stall a crematorium, upholding
a previous denial by lhe Board
or Adjustment.
Repr ese ntativ es of
McCormick Mortuary on
Laguna Canyon Road saJd no
odors wou.Jd be emitted from the
oven, but there would be a small
amount or heat.
The mortuary w •• sMldnl a condltJol)al uae permit from the
city to allow the CTemaUon of 158
bodies a year.
An ta-year.old bleycle rider
died In Anaheim Wedneadar af.
Lernoon wben be tried to pua a
truck and trailer rit that wu
turntn1 to the ri&hl, accordiq to
Ana helm polloe.
Richard Charlea Remlrea al
Anaheim wu proiiOU8"d di9d al
lb• acme at~ A• .... ind a
DOi'thbOuDd CID•ramp t0 aM Seate
Ana Freeway, wcl pola Of'fteer'
PaulDolamana.
tor Michael Fischer contends
that affordable housin& is worth·
less without resale controls. The
commission staff has said 30·
year deed restrictions would
keep a supply of low·cost houses
on the market.
Another concern or the coastal
commission Is proposals that
low·cost housing be located out·
side lhe coastal sector In that
event, a developer would be al·
lowed to construct market value
units within the coastal area, but
would be required to place af-
fordable units at another loca·
tlon.
Commission officiaJs say that
plan is an option, addine af,
fordable housing units have been
located "within two or three
miles of the coastal zone in the
past."
Peter Herman , an aide to
Fifth District Supervisor Tom
Riley, expressed disappointment
today in the commission action.
"I'm disappointed with the in·
ability of the Coastal Com-
mission to tailor its view of (af-
fordable) housing to particuJar
situations ," he said.
·'They were very dogmatic on
the issue and never considered
the circumstances."
He said the county's effort to
convlnce the panel that there is
affordable housing in Dana
Point now was ignored.
''And they ignored the fact
that the community in Dana
Point worked for three years to
make this plan."
Herman would not speculate
on what action the Board ot
Supervisors might take follow·
ing the commission decision.
MAC plan due ballot?
Proponents gather required signatures on petition
An Orange County Registrar
of Voters official said Wednes-
day that more lhan enough valid
signatures have been gathered
on organizing petitions by propo-
nents of a municipal advisory
council for the Laguna Niguel
area.
Shirley Deaton, chief elections
operator for the registrar. said
more lhan 1,000 signatures have
been verified by her omce.
Those seeking to form the
cou n cil needed 950 valid
signatures, representing 10 per-
cent of aJI registered voters liv-
ing within lhe proposed boun-
daries of the council's jurisdic-
tion.
Paul Haseman. president of
the Laguna Niguel Community
Association, said he and other
proponents of the municipal ad·
visory council (MAC) will be
meeting with county Supervisor
Thomas Riley in preparation for
a scheduJed Aug. 4 appearance
before the county Board of
Supervisors .
The MAC sponsors will be ask·
ing lhe s upervisors to place the
question of forming an advisory
council in Laguna Niguel on the
November general election
j LAGUNA
l 8~Hj ·-:!../
I
I
NIGUEL AREA SHOWN
Advisory cauncil pushed
ballot in that community.
If Laguna Niguel residents ap·
prove the MAC, Haseman said,
a separate election will be held
in June 1982 t.o elect the mem-
bers of the council.
If the MAC wins voter ap·
proval, it will be lhe third to be
formed in Orange County. The
two others are in the unin·
corporated communities of Mis·
sion Viejo and Tustin HiHs. 1
Council members would make
recommendations to county
supervisors on matters concern·
ing planning, development,
health, safety and public works
in their area.
Through the MAC, the 17,000
residents in the area would have
a larger voice in decision ma~
ing at th~ county level.
However. the rive· to nine·
member council can only make
recommendations to county
supervisors. and is not em·
powered to make rulings on any
matter.
The boundaries of the Laguna
Niguel MAC include all of
Orange County Service Area 3,
which now provides municipal
services to lhe community.
Original plans called for th«i
Bear Brand Ranch area lo be in-
cluded in the MAC, which is not
part or the service area.
Haseman said the area has
s ince been excluded from the
MAC boundaries pending the
conclusion of hearings by lhe
Local Agency Formation Com-
mission lo determine if the
parcel should be included in
service area 3.
New Aliso service area eyed
Supervisors asked to create taxing entity
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors soon will be asked
to create a new taxing entity
that one day may fund such
thjngs as street sweeping and
landscape m aintenance in the
new Aliso Viejo community.
The Local Agency Formation
Commission, meeting Wednes·
day, recommended the board
approve formation of a county
service area for Aliso Viejo. It
acted at the request of the Mis·
sion Viejo Company. which is
building the 20,000-home planned
community.
Formation of the service area,
however, does not mean that tax
dollars will be used to pay for
maintenance costs of pubhcly
held works such as streets,
sidewalks, medians, slopes and
parks. At least, not initially.
The county is on record that
those costs must be borne by
future Aliso Viejo residents. It is
a nticipate d that yet·to-be·
formed homeowners' associa-
tions would assess residents for
those costs, said Richard
Turner, LAFC executive direc·
tor.
But formation of the service
area was desired, Turner said,
so that the mechanism would be
in place should tax money be
available in future years lo cov-
er all or a portion of the costs.
For example , there 1s con·
s id e ration being given lo
changes in existing state law
that would permit the levying of
new taxes to pay for local
services. Showd such legislation
be approved, the money could
then flow into the service area
budget. Turner said.
The company currently has 13
service areas that provide main·
tenance work in unincorporated
communities. No new service
areas have been for.(fled since
passage of Proposition 13, the
massive property lax cutting
measure approved by voters in
1978
Irvine pushes retail growth
Resident complaining about lack of facilities
Irvine, a city of 70,000 people,
will soon have Its first car wash.
When will lt get Its second?
The man in charge of retail
development for the company
that owns the overwhelming ma·
jority of land in Irvine doesn't
have a firm answer to that ques·
Lion.
Irvine Company Vice Presi·
dent Dick Cannon says be is
awa r e that
t h e mas ler-
plaoned city
or Irvine is
s hort of the
retail
es tablish ·
ments its res·
idents want
and the city's
tax base re·
quires. CA"**
Cannon ls to appear Aug. 10
before the Irvine City CouncU to
explaln why Irvine doesn'l have
any: car washes (one 11 to open
thl• aummer in Woodbrldce>,
Major turn~ture or home
rurnl1hln11 st.ores. nurserlea,
plumbina aupply houses, paint
stotea or electrkal supply
stores.
lrvlne resident• also complain
th•t there ts onJy one movie
theater, not enouch retlauranta,
no commercial recreatlonal
'faciUU., and only 1 handtul ot
clothtn1 IMpe.
CallDOll waa criUdaed lut ,. ...... bJ taa. JrvlM City C.O..·
ell an. tbe pt'.eparatlon of a city
ataff report lndte1tln1 that
lnlM WU DUfl)' ••t •mon• O..ua CoUntr clU• ln t.enn1 ol
retail acreage per 1,000 resi-
dents.
At that time, Cannon promised
that much of Irvine 's retail
needs would be fulfilled in three
projecLc; which would open in
1982. Now he says It will be 1983
before these projects open. They
are:
-The South Woodbridge
Shopping Center a long Alton
Parkway, where 96 stores are lo
be built.
-Universit,Y Town Center
(Phase I ) across Campus Drive
from UC Irvine, where 284,000
square reel or commercial de·
velopment including a 250·room
hotel and a theater are to be con·
atructed.
-The Home Improvement
Center at Culver and Irvine
Center drives, where 41 st.ores
including lumber outlets,
furniture stores and home
furnlshihg shopt are to be built.
Tbe openinl dates on these
proJect.1 have been delayed untll
1983. Cannon said dul'ln1 a te·
cent interview.
Cannon said the delays are
caused by slowneaa In retail
sales and consequent reluctance
by retaU mercbanta to commit
to build stores tn Irvine. Kl1b In·
ter"t rates add lo tbe problem,
he Hid.
Irvine QaamM-r of Commel'ff
Ptuidmt Latr7 Half ... hM a
dlfftren\ tllplaHUoo tor the
lack of Mall develoPm•
Addre11ln1 the lnlM at1
Council late IMt moat.Ii, ROif.
man clal~ ~ lrvtM Com·
pany. m.~tead 01 tostering retail
development on its land, is "sit-
ting on the land" and hoping to
thereby cash in on inflationary
increases in land value.
Through lease arrangements,
the Irvine Company exacts a
share of the profits from retail
outlets that locate on company
land.
One city councilman said
privately that this setup tends to
discourage the openin1 of retail
establishments lhat don't realize
large initial profits.
A company spokesman said
lease arrangements are tailored
to the individual business an~
aren't overly demanding.
Cannon also denied that the
comr.any is holding land and
wait. ng for it to appreciate in
value. ·
He sald t.hat, althoueh there
have been delays ln 19me Irvine
Company retail developme•
more places t.o shop, eat and
drink than lbey did at tbls time
last year.
One project for whlch lrvtnp
clty olllciala are anxlou1lJ
awalllna la •o·oalled lrvha
Center, • 480-ac" commeTdal
center lncludlnf a "Super Sbop.
ptni Mall" to be built on tllii
trlanale ol laact forllMCI ~>' Santa ADa, ••n Dle10 a• t.aaua=s .. c.-.aa14 la_.n,
som•Pol'I• WMt wW°""b)t lllt. ButtM ~ lau yet to an•mce ... ., lftajor departmeat
ttorH •••• •trHd lo •~•le there.
I
)
HUMBUG TO THE ffO.HtJM: They call it "the summer game" but u far as
Summer. 1981, ls concerned, It was a
strikeout. A total flub. A pit\ful litUe hiss
where it s hould have been a throaty
roar.
So this was prof essionaJ baseball
this season. Personally, I couldn't care
~ b.\ T-IM_M_U_RP-HIN-1 .~lt
less if they ever settle the strike now.
The season is a total loss and we might
as well get on to something interesting.
Some sportswriters are still clinging
to a faint, hysterical hope that they'll
hear the crack of bats at the big stadium
befor'e the mists of autumn close in.
They write stories about 40 days and 40
nights of strike-bound agony.
Forget it.
MOST OF THE SPORTS scribes are
beginning to discover more lively things
to bring to the readers. Del Mar horse
racing opened yesterday and the first
runnings of the hayburners got pretty
good play.
So the sporting pages have turned to
professional soccer, beach volleyball,
yacht racing, water skiing and by golly,
the upcoming football season.
Considerable enthusiasm is already
being generated over the Rams' next
season at Anaheim Stadium when Pat
Haden, late of Corona del Mar and now
of San Marino, will once again be at the
controls at quarterback.
Even the pro football training camps
are getting more attention that they
have summers past. Rookies from the
Rams and the San Diego Chargers went
at it in a scrimmage onl y yesterday out
on the green at UC Irvine . And the
Dallas Cowboys, menacing as ever , are
in camp up in Thousand Oaks.
LISTEN, THIS CRAZED strike has
had some advantages on the athletic
front. Some sports men, who have
labored in near -anonymity over the
years, relegated to the back pages of the
sporting section along with the lost dog-
gie & kitty ads, abruptly have found
their achievements s plashed all over the
front of the section.
Why, there was even considerable
note given in advance billing for a
Laguna Niguel tennis tournament for old
fogeys, ages 35 and up.
So this is how baseball has done
CONVENIENl DISPOSABLE
COlOPlAST· BRAND
OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We now (arry tne col'fl()lete COLOPLAST tone-the
&arge<;t se11tng Cl•~saDle O<;IOf"1~ apoltan<:e<; on !he
WOtlCI Everything IOt COIOStomate!> •tecstomates and
uronary ostomates au ....,,,, con~.ent COL OPLAS r
dfsOOSabohty COl.OP\.AST retoao.~l"y-pluHast' oack
ecoromy Be sure to a'>k tor y0ur f"RE.£ copy 01 tNS1GHTS-
ttie out>lication thats rust to• you-alway<. 1nclu0e'>
couoons tor ''"' samoles 111-3714
MOUL TON PLAZA PHARMACY
23M5 Mou.lton Parkway. Laguna H1ll1
(Next to Et Ranctlo Market)
A BARO HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER
1'\esa \7erde
\J ine and 19iquor
SALE! SALE! SALE!
Reg. $3.70
WEIBEL
WHITE
ZIN FANDEL
A delicious. summer-time wine, great for
picnics. poolside. or beach. Nice touch of
swetttness.
Reg. $4.80
GALLO CELLARS
SAUVIGNON BLANC & s311 JOHANNISB ERG
REISLING 1.a L
Gold Medal winners at the Orange
County Fair. Fine varietal wines at jug sate
prices!
PLAIN WRAP
CIGARETTES
A popular "lfght" brand with no frills.
King-size, filter-tip regulars.
,
• 4 • • • w.. .. • . .. .. . <Fve uu us uq:;o a oo
Dana project denied
Supervisor s reject plc:in to convert mobi le home park
itself in. For decades put, the sporting
writers have depended on the bat and
ball game tor the full coverage of sum-
mer. They just naturally figured on
slouching .in a chair high atop some
stadium and writing notes all summer
long on what happens below upon the
fabled diamond.
Now, however, out ot sheer necessity
they have learned there are indeed other
sporting events all over the summer.
Why, there'u actually water out
there in that place called the Pacific
Ocean where they have sporting events
they play without even a ball in sight.
,
And you can always start covering
the coming f ootbaJl season early.
Avast th.ere! lt'sanolher summu sporlmgevenl
BASEBALL WILL WSE to football
even in the event the professional foot-
ba ll people decide they want to follow
their compatriots and go out on the
picket lines. Unlike baseball, you see,
football has a heavy following at levels
other than just the play-for-pay people.
Regardless of a pigskin walkout for
the pros, you can be assured USC and
UCLA will be going at it, along with the
smaller colleges like Cal State Fullerton
and Cal State, Long Beach.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE, Sad-
dleback and Golden West also put on
some exciting gridiron shows right here
along the Orange Coast. And don't forget
the vast array of football offerings that
will come your way at the high school
level.
Lots of sporting fans are looking
forward to fall.
And by the time next summer rolls
around, a lot of s ports people might be
asking, "Baseball?" What's that?"
A proposal to convert a Dana
Point mobile home park into a
commercial center has been de· ~ nied and a plan lo locate a
medical research faclllty otr the
Ortega Highway near Caspers
Wilderness Park was supported
by the Orange County Board of
Supervlsors.
On the advice of Supervisor
Thomas Riley. the board threw
out the proposal Crom Union OU
Co. to replace the Marina Shores
Mobile Home Park with new
commercial development.
Riley said the mobile home
park at Del Obispo Street and
the Pacific Coast Highway
repr esents needed affordable
housing In the community and
noted that the proposed develop·
ment did not conform to a
s pecific plan to locate such cen·
lers in a "downtown" area.
In the other case. tbe
supervisors agreed lo move up
consideration from December to
October for a general plan
change for the Nichols Institute.
The medkal research and test-
ing lab is currently located in
San Juan Capistrano. but of·
ficlals want to move it to an
isolated 100 acres across the
Ortega Highway from the coun·
ly-run park.
At Ril ey's urging, the
supervisors said they'll consider
cr eating a new general plan
designation for the property to
preserve a maximum amount of
open -space.
Under the new land use de·
signalion. building Sites near the
park would be at least 50 acres
and parking a nd structures
couldn't cover more than 20 per·
cent of the property.
The institute has a staff of
about 250 persons. It specializes
in creating diagnostic pro-
cedures and ca rri es out
specialized testing and research
for hospitals and medical
schools.
Ruling overturned
AUSTIN, Texas CAP) -The
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
has overturned the contempt
citation of a minister who was
jailed after refusing to answer
questions about a drug suspect
he counseled. The Re v. Ronald
Sa lfe n of th e Trinity
Presbyterian Church in Collin
County had been cited.
K&B SPORTSWEAR
2 300 Hmttor, Coda Mesa #
PREWASHED
JEANS 59''
LATEST
TOPS
.,..,, ,.. ... ..._....., a 1ci...-•.-..r
THAT S NOISY Two-year-old Stacy Felton holds her ears
as Newport Beach policeman Bruce Foster fires up
he licopter. Officers staged a "police fair'"' in the Newport
Crest area over the weekend to help bolster interest in the
department's neighborhood watc h program. Stacy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Felton of Newport Beach,
didn't seem impressed .
SHOES • SHOES • SHOES • SHOES
WOMEN
HATURALIIER
UFE STRIDE
HUSH PUPPIES
CHEROKEES
IARETRAPS
FAMOLARE
MUSHROOMS
GRASSHOPPERS
MEN
FlORSHEIM
HUSH PUPPIES
JARMAN
STACY ADAMS
30-40%
PEOPLE MOVERS 59• PLUS CLOGS s14e1.24e1
MIEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
T-SHIRTS
OFF
s7• MEN'S W Al.KING
SHORTS
ALL
BOOTS 25%•
SIDIW ALI SALE SPICIAl.l
20% ·OFF
ON ALL
IH HARIOR CBfTltt
2300 HARIOI • COST A MESA
Come ro Our Value Packed
SIDEWALK
·SALE
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
JULY 241h··25th
HARBOR CENTER
42 STOllS TO lllYI YOU
2300 HARBOR ' .. , WILIOMt
COST~ MESA
I
'
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 23, 1981
Admirals in charge Coadst hGuard
nee s elp of Navy boot camps WASHINGTON (AP) _ C<>m·
SAN DIEGO <AP> -The
Navy Is pulling admirals In
charge of its three boot camps to
show , it says, that it regards the
training camps as increasingly
important.
A spokes man said Capt. War-
ren Aul, comma nder of the
North Island Naval Air Station,
will be promoted to rear admiral
and put ln charge of the San
Diego Naval Training Center.
Rear Adm. Pauline M. Hart·
ington will take over the Orlan-
do. Fla .. training center from a
captain. She is the first woman
picked to run a boot camp.
A captain In charge at Great
Lakes, Ill:, will be relieved by
Re ar Adm. James H. Flatley
111 , a Navy spokesman said.
·'This is recognizing the Im·
portance of boot camp, and
there already has been signs or
that as we lighten up training
with more drill hours scheduled
a nd more attention to dis-
cipline," he said.
"As the Navy builds toward a
600·ship Navy, it is going to need
good people to man those ships
and we have got to get off to a
good start as we do that."
15 ~o to 50'Yo Off
everyth\ng \n the store
mandant John 8 . Hayes says the
Coast Guard doesn't have the
•hips or persoMel to step up its
war aeainat drug smuullnC by
sea.
Hayes told '> congr~ssional
subcommittee that the Coast
Guard's goal is to seize 75 per·
cent or the marijuana smuggled
into the United States by sea,
but it only is able to intercept 15
percent to 20 percent.
Without more ships and peo-
ple, Hayes said, the Coast Guard
could not even meet its goal by
giving up search and rescue
missions, enforcement of fish-
eries regulations and other ac-
tivities.
ABORIGINAL ARTISTS -Members of an
Australian aboriginal group pose at a New
York press conference. The aboriginal artists
...............
will perform in New York before a concert
tour of the United States. )u\y 23, 2 4 and 25 s ~n~~ of our
. bracelets. earrtnl 9, we proudly
Pool contractor suing actor L .. Aing rings. . on sa e . nd I nc uu chandise is d Collection a quality rn:er t Corum . Concor
ASPEN. Colo (AP> An
Aspen contractor is suing actor
George Hamilton in Aspen Dis·
trict Court for $2.033. the amount
of money he has refused lo pay
fo r work done on the indoor
s wimming pool at hi s home
here.
Hamilton's Aspen attorney,
Ri chard Neiley, however, said
t he bill submitted by the Weld·
ing Co. of Aspen for work done
in March was "exorbitant" and
t.e believes the company "may
have been trying to sting" his
client.
Thomas Crumpacker . at-
SKI
paid O(lly Sl,333 of the $3,366 bill. feature Piage . torney for the welding company,
said a Hamilton aide ordered the
actor's pool sand-blasted to re·
move a coat of paint. The job
was to be done during the three
da ys immed iately before
Hamilton's arrival here, he said.
Ha milton lives in Beverly Hills.
Welding Co. employees
worked "into the wee morning
hours" to finish the job in time,
Crumpacker said.
Neiley said the actor felt that
the charge of up to $43 per hour
by the sand blasters was too
high.
Records show that Hamilton
bought the home in Aspen's
fa s h ion able We s t End for
$750,000 in September 1979.
Concord watches.
V31Jell CWalhe!J ~~1:t~:
ISLAND • NEWPOR
He and Neiley agree that the
dispute arose over damage that
allegedly occurred to tiles atop
the pool during the blasting. As
a result of the dispute. Hamilton
McFARLAND <A Pl -Kem
County fire captai n, Donald
Moore. 44. died Tuesday a fter col·
· lapsing while lirting a hose line
over a fence.
35 FASHION
FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY
JULY 24th and 25th
RT llA T SKI SALE
(for Locals And friends)
All Tennis Merchandise 50% Off
free strings with
purchaM of a rocket
• SHOES
• CLOTHING
• • • Don't wait for our tremendous August Sale, slaop .Saturday for
Great Savings • • • beat tlte crowds • • • great selection.
I• Ro11ignol 1981 • 82 Sidi
15% OFF
This sale is being held
for our local friends and
neighbors.
.....--BOOTS----
sAN MARCO·LANG·SALOMON
scon-GARMONT -NORDICA
CABER-HANSON
•11m%0fF
s
K
I s
1·2
AUTHIER
HEXCEL
SPALDING
THE SKI
CHOOSE FROM THESE
FAMOUS BRAND SKIS
ALL40%0FF
UP CLOIHINI ·
·io 70% OFF,
ALLSll
CLOTHING ... , " -'
1 •
SI 0000 Parkos
as low 01 52995 ,,
SAD HOURS ARE . 10:00 a~.-5:00 P.M.
1 1
I
\
,.. .. o,_. CoMt DAILY PfLOT/T'hurtday. July 23, 1981
Mayoral selection
shuts out minority
The Irvine City Council next
Tuesday wlli once again attempt
to select a mayor from its ranks.
At the last session, council
members deadlocked, 2 to 2, over
the mayoral choice . Bill
Vardoulis backed David Sills' bid
for the one-year mayoral term
and Mary Ann Gaido supported
Larry Agran for mayor.
Art Anthony and his deciding
vote were somewhere between
here·and Monterey at the time of
the meeting. He was, on his way
to a California League of Cities
meeting in that city.
Traditionally, the mayor's
gavel has been passed from the
hands of one member of the con-
servative majority to another.
For example, Mary Ann
Gaido, who belongs to the liberal
minority, has served on the City
Council for more than five years
and has never served a term as
mayor.
On the other hand, con-
servative majority members Bill
Vardoulis and David Sills, with
similar time on the council, have
each served two mayoralty
terms. Art Anthony has served
one.
It is rather too bad that in
our cities, where the mayor's
post is supposed to be largely
ceremonial and all council mem-
bers carry equal legislative
responsibility. the position has
grown to carry s u ch heavy
polltlcal overtones.
Thus lf a council member ap-
pears to be the member of a con-
sistent minority faction of the
council, he or she can probably
'lve up any notion of ever sitting
m the mayor's cbalr, regardless
of length or effectiveness of coun·
ell service.
On the Irvine council, for ex-
ample, chaf\Ces are slim that
Councilman Agran will get the
mayor's Job thls time around
because be and Galdo have con·
sistently been a liberal minority
faction. The council majority
likely will not want to give b1m
the podium of the mayor's post to
use to advantage in a possible re·
election campaign next spring.
So. local politics and poll-
litical prospects for higher of·
flee, real or imagined, become in·
exorably linked to the high vis-
ibility and additional powers of
the mayor's chair in Irvine just
as in most other Orange County
cities.
It might better serve the
needs of communities if the tests
for fitness to be mayor would be
simplified to recognition earned
for honorable council service and
the ability to adequately
represent the city in other gov-
ernmental and civic rela-
tionships.
But politics and govern-
ment, even at tfie community
level. are no longer that simple.
Avoid toxic waste
A Huntington Beach contrac-
tor allegedly dumped cancer-
causing asbestos in the Coyote
Canyon Dump near Irvine's Tur·
tie Rock area last month.
E & G Contractors Inc. bas
received four citations from the
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration in connection
with the handling of asbestos and
its reported placement in the
Coyote Canyon Landfill near
Irvine's Turtle Rock area.
The landfill isn't authorized
to accept hazardous materials
such as asbestos.
The Coyote Canyon Landfill
is to be abandoned in three years
in favor of the proposed Bee
Canyon Landfill to be located
north of Irvine.
The Irvine Company, which
now leases Coyote Canyon to
Orange County for use as a
landfill, has plans to one day de·
velop the area near the.landfill. With the potential for res-
idential development near the
dump, county officials in charge
of the landfill should strive to
stem the unauthorized dumping
of toxic materials.
Dumping at the f acillty is
free. while it costs about $100 a
ton to use a landfill authorized
for hazardous wastes. So un-
fortunately there is an economic
incentive for people to dump
hazardous materials in Coyote ·
Canyon.
County authorities should
take clear and decisive steps to
assure that there is no prolifera-
iion of hazardous materials being
dumped in Coyote Canyon.'
Give program direction
Dee Manning, Irvine city
director of Community Services,
has recommended that the city
remain in the business of provid·
lng birthday parties to local
youngsters.
Her recommendation comes
several weeks after the Irvine
City Council asked her to review
the program to determine U it
represented unfair competition
between the city and local
merchants selling birthday
services.
Ms. Manning declared that the
program was appropriate and
was well-received by the
youngsters and parent.a.
This ls not the first time that
the Irvine City Council bas qu,s.-
tioned whether a Community
Services activity was placing th~
city in inappropriate competition
with local business.
•
Last Valentine's Day, then-
Mayor Art Anthony ordered Ms.
Manning to scuttle a progrart.
that would have featured city.
paid "Cupids" delivering flowers
to resident.a interested in paying
for the service.
Those wishing to give their
children city-employee-
aupervised birthdays are charged
$75 for the service. This money
accounts for the city expense of
staging the event.
It may be that the birthday
parties aren't as objectionable as
the flower delivery scheme.
SWI, the City Council should
place firm limits on to the Com-
munity Services staff on what ls
and isn't appropriate when it
comes to programs that might
put the city in competition with
local business.
Opinions expressed 1n the space abOve are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views e>c·
prtssed on tnls page are those of their authors and artists. Re.der comment is 1nv11.
ed. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 9262&. Phone (7U l
6•2·•321.
L.M. Boyd I Romantic mo nth&
It la in the autumn moreso not ln
the aprin& that a youn1 mao'a faDCY
turn• to love, accordln1 to tbe
1tatlaUclant. Their atudy of the birth
reeordl Lndicat.et May, June and July
are lbe tbret leaat romantic montlM.
Nbvember and December are the
most romanilc, they say.
Three out of five wild animal• do
their hunUn1. fora11na. whatever. in
lb• nl_,,t.
Sad, but true, you catch a baby
ocelot thf same way you cat.eh a
ORANGE COAST · ·11ilyPlat
baby gorilla. You 1boot the parenta
flrat. '!bole who purport to know HY
there's no other way.
American utronaull can't b9 more
thao t feet tall. Tbe dnlp of tbelr
equipenent Umita tlll belfht to that.
Motl American car borna honk ln
the key of F.
Those who teach llllterah
srownupa ••Y 1ucb peNOGI UIUally can leam to wna. 1lmpl1 I.a.. in
about three •ffkl.
/
NO,S\~
W~Tf.'.'
f
Nuke boondoggle cost soars
WASHINGTON -Government boon·
doggies are always good for evanescent
headlines. But if they are really to stick
in the public craw. two considerations
are usually necessary: The fiasco must
occur under high auspices, and the
story must have a certain oomph capa·
ble or kindling public Interest.
By all the oomph indicators, the
-clinch River breeder reactor at Oak
Ridge. Tenn .. may not register high. It
is an unheralded project, with an
awkward name. well off the beaten
path. But it Is a multimillion-dollar
fiasco born or fraud and mismanage-
ment.
The plant, darling or the nuclear
power industry. is supposed to produce
more nuclear fuel than it uses. which
sounds like a bargain. But it has been
no bargain for the taxpayers who are
unwittingly paying for it.
ORIGINALLY, it was to be in opera·
lion by December 1979. at a cost of S669
million. But it has already cost $1
billion, and the latest estimate is that it
won't be o~erational until February
1990. By that time. the bill will be at
least $3.2 billion.
How could this happen? It's easy.
when the government officials who are
supposed to keep track or the project's
contractors shirk their responsibilities.
According to a spokeswoman for the
Clinch River project, about 80 percent
of the cost increase was due to
circumstances beyond official control.
In other words, t he bureaucrats were
responsible for "only" S500 m\lllon of
the estimated $2.5 billion overrun.
That's bad enough.
But it's actually worse than that. In·
1 vesligators for Rep. John Dingell. D·
G
-JA-Cl-Al-D-fR-ID-1 -~
Mic:!h .. told my associates Tony Capac-
cio and Howard Rosenberg that at least
three.fourths of Clinch River's prime
contracts are open ended, that is with
no firmly set costs or completion dates.
The investigators warned that even
the staggering $3.2 billion estimate may
be optimistic. It fails to take into ac·
count the possibility that the entire
Clinch River facility might have to be
relocated for safety reasons.
A 1978 NUCLEAR Regulatory Co m·
mission report listed nearly 100 safety
problems. A Clinch River official said
many of the problems had been ad·
dressed even before the NRC report.
but the commission had not yet checked
to see if the needed corrections were ac·
tually made.
Fraud has aJso plagued the project.
One internal Department of Energy
memorandum told how an employee or
Atomics International, a subcontractor.
received a $1,000 interest-free loan in
return for advance information on con·
tracts. and another $5,000 in cold cash
for bid price information.
The FBI found that two purchasing of·
ficials invented bogus companjes. from
which they claimed to have solicited
bids for items needed at Clinch Ri ver.
This resulted in overcharges running as
high as 800 percent.
T ypical of the cavalier way contrac·
tors behave when Uncle Sugar is paying
the bills is an incident reported in
another internal DOE document dated
Feb. 13. It discloses that the chief of
Westinghouse's data-processing facility
at Clinch River had been using a
$200.000 computer for his own personal
business. He not only stored leases and
business directories in the computer,
but used it for a football pool.
The Congressional Budget Office has
estimated that terminating Clinch
River "could save the government Sl.4
billion over the five-year period of
1982-1986." But the Reagan administra·
tion . reportedly over the objections of
Budget Director David Stockman. has
decided to go ahead.
Athletic recruiting charges d.enied
To the Editor:
I would like to chaUenge some state-
ments made by the Dally Pilot in an
editorial which was published June 21.
The editorial dealt with a previous
article by reporter Pat Kennedy relat-
ing to high school athletic recruiting.
The editorial stated that Edison High
School has an aggressive. successful
athletic recruiting pro1ram. It further
MAILBOX
went on to state that the Edison coach,
Bill Workman, expects four to six select
transfers to be in his starting lineup
next year.
I feel it is imperative that the public
know that Edison High School does not
and haa never had a pro1ram to recruit
athletes outside of its attendance boun-
daries.
THIS PAST SPRING several con-
cerns were brought to our attention that
athletes had been recruited to attend
Edison lligh School tor the purpose of
partlcipaUng on ita athletic teams. We
also had information that this type or
recrullinl was occurring in other
schools ln the district.
An intensive inveat11ation followed.
What we did rind waa that there were
individuals in the Edison communJty.
and ln other school communities, who
were actively encouraging young
athletes to attend particular schools to
participate in specific athletic pro·
crams. Our lnvesti11tlon proved con-
clusively that in every case where
recrulttna violations did occur the
school coaches were unaware and ap-
palled that such activities were taklnl
place.
In the case of Bill Workman, I can IS·
sure you that be has anreaalvely
worked to maintain an untam11bed rep·
utatlon. We are very proud of BUI
Workman u an educator. u we are of
his entire staff and the other coaches In
tbe Huntln&ton Beach Union Hlgb
School Dl1trict. They all realln that
athletics arf. an lm'POrtant part of our
total lnatrucponal pro1ram but they are
Ju1t a part. · .
I feel that ll ta Important for the
public to know that the cliltltct wtU not
tolerate athletic recruJtiDf and ii mak·
I.Jal •Y«Y effort to eUminaw th1J Wtpl
practice; that our coacbet IN not in·
volved in rHnaitlnt; and tbat we are
VIO' proud ol lM IUCCHI of the UilOft
football program and the other fine
athletic activities which the district pro·
vides for the youn~sters we serve .
. . FRANKJ.ABBOTT
Superintendent of Schools
Why Canadiam?
To the Editor:
ln reference to the Irvine Company's
informal selection of a Canadian firm
to operate a proposed luxury hotel (July
13), my question is. what happened to
the good old days of American business
-profit for America and not for foreign
countries?
We might decide to do business with
Americans and not Canadians as
management.
KEN GOODWIN
TELEPHONE YOUR
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
See instructions below
Trashy Calif omiam
To the Editor:
We have possibly one ol the most
beautlful coastal areas and beaches in
the world.
Why are our lovely beaches and
Pacific Coast Highway so littered with
every conceivable type of trash? Do our
citizens not appreciate this wonderful
gift? They surely do use it.
We tuive traveled ln other states and
find no comparable messes. In fact, in
Colorado, Oregon, Washiniton, South
Dakota and several Provincial Parks in
Canada you see few cigarette fUtera,
can ta~. or even small throw aways,
let alone the ridiculous accumulation of
trash we see around here.
What la the matter with Californians?
Leaaon learned
To. the Edltot':
D. MEYER
The merchants of Weatport Center,
. 369 E. 17th St., Cotta Meta, wish to
thanJt the Dally Pllot and Steve Tripoli
for bit front P•C• 1tory of the advertt•·
inl problems tfteJ we~ having with
Balboa Grapbies.
W• are twe tbat due '° tbe publlca·
tlon ol thlt ttory we were all able to
retrieve our money. It w11 ln fact men·
• l.tHt" /rom rtodtr1 ore i«lcomt Tht
r1f1IU to ~H ~Ufrl to /if lpOCf or
tl1mtnaa. WNI .. N•rwd. "'-""'' of -wordl or ,_ wUI N ,.wn ,,,,.,.,_,, AU
lttttr• mutt Include dpoturt ond moiling
addrtu Out nom.1 ma11 bl tuUllMJd °" r•· qaur tf tM//tcfnl , .. ..,,. 11 opparfftt
Poerfll • llOC bl,.... .. .,. Utttt• mar M rtl~ to ta..,., Norn. CMCf ~ ,. .. ,,.. "" ,,. ~,...,.,, ..... " ~ '"' u.rl/fcotlott Jl'lf'J*.U,
tioned to us that we were the only ones
to make a fuss about it and therefore
our money would be returned to us
WE ARE LIVING in a world when it
seems almost the accepted mode or
behavior to cheat. We must choke off
this lie by almost vigilante means and
we urge everyone who may feel th0 •
are being cheated. swindled or usec' w
fight back. What better way is there to
fight back th an through our own
neighborhood newspaper? We must
stamp this tendency out ourselves for
we believe the police departments are
overwhelmed these days.
We have all learned a lesson in our
center from our unpleasant experience.
One merchant paid $175 and eight paid
$65 which amounts to $695. This was
supposedly to mail out 25.000 advertis·
ing leaflets Bulk mail runs approx·
imately 8 cents a piece. therefore the
mail cost alone would be $2,500 for our
center. to say nothing or the cost of
printing and art work. It was therefore
an impossible transaction from the
beginning. We urge everyone t o
m athemalically double check these
si::ams.
IRIS SCHNEIDER
Jet noise interferes.
To the FA.itor:
Retarding AirCaJ President Robert
Clifford's testimony that he has never
been told "directly by airport nei1hbors
that jet noise interrupts their sleep
<June 30)":
I would be glad to knock on Mr. CHI·
ford's door and tell him race-to-face ti I
knew where to find him.
Not onJy does the jet noise interrupt
our sleep, it wakes us up every momtna
at 7 :03 a.m. (8:03 a.m. Sunday. Thank
you for that). The planes also lnternapt
. telephone conversations and vialtin1 ln
our home.
My health is not the best, so I do nap.
but It la not po1sible to sleep in lhe af.
ternooo because of the nolse.
We have lived in our home over 16
years, ao we were here when the nolay
flrst jet arrived.
J . PERRY
Britain has learned the bard way tbat
an unarmed pollceman la u effeeUve u
a 00 SLOW 1Jp on a danaeroua curve. D.K.
.._,_ ................................. .. -"-".t.'.:::c· -....... __ ,,, ......... ... ....... -.o.1 . .,,..
\
I
By STEVIE MITCHELL
O( .. Oelty ..........
State Coastal Commlaaion re~
jectioo or a land use plan ror
Dana Point because it does not
provide resale controls on af.
fordable housln& units lea;es
Orange C.Ounty wlth two ways to
10.
The county can lmpose re-
sale controls and thereby re·
celve approval of the develop-
ment blueprint.
-Or the county can propose
alternatives to the resale control
restriction that would be accep.
tJiible by the 12-membef panel.
Commlaslonera unanlmou1ly
rejected the Dao. Polnt Local
Coastal Plan on Wed.neaday, ln·
1lltln1 resale controla be placed
on affordable unltl aJona that
coastal sector.
''Maybe the county will come
up wlth some clever
alternatives," one coutal com·
mission spokeswoman said to-
day.
The commission wants Orange
County to change Its low·cost
housinJt requirement to include
a stipulaUon that one-quart.er of
Koch explains
• • resignation
Walter Koch, who resigned
this week from the Orange Coun·
ty Airport Commission, was
proving to be a "negative force"
because or bis positions on
several controversial airport is·
sues, Supervisor Thomas Riley
said today.
Koch, Riley explained, voted
against the airport master plan,
air carrier access plan, addi·
lional airport personnel and
start-up of DC·9 Super 80 service
by Republic Airlines.
Those voles ran directly counter to Riley's positions.
Koch was appointed by Riley
lo the commission as Firth
Supervisorial District represen-
tative in 1975.
Koch, in his handwritten letter
or resignation, said, ''The events
or the past few months have
greatly disturbed me, and in
good conscience, I feel it best I
resign al tfus time." The res·
ignation is effective July 31.
ln a telephone interview to-
day, Koch said it is "painfully
obvious" that recent actions by
the County Board of Supervisor5
to move ahead with $75 million
in airport improvements wlU
meah "a lot more .people, a lot
more traffic, a lot more
headaches and a lot more
flilhts."
And those actions, be said,
· 'lndicate to me that those of u,
who live in Newport Beach and
under flight patterns h,ve a lot
to be concerned about."
Koch said "it was pretty much
by mutual agreement" with
Riley that he submitted his res·
ig n alion . Riley did not
specifically ask for Koch's res·
ignation, both men agreed.·
"Wally, since his votes on the
• master plan and the access plan,
had been a negative force,"
Riley said.
Koch was summoned to
Riley's office Monday to explain
his decision to vote against in·
troduction of the new. less noisy
Super 80 by Republic Airlines.
The carrier, which operates 12
flights daily from the airport,
plans to place two of the
jetliners in service in mid·
August.
It was dtlring that meeting
that he gave Riley the resigna-
tion letter.
Both Riley and Koch stressed
that the supervisor never told
the commissioner how to vote in
advance of matters coming
before the airport com mission,
which is advisory to the board of
supervisors.
Despite Koch's assertions.
Riley said, "I believe very con·
fidently that we will tame the
airport, and that we will find a
site for a new. re~ional airport."
The super visor said he has not
yet decided whom he will rec-
ommend to replace Koch. "I
hope I can find someone within
the (noise) impact area who will
take the job," Riley said.
UCI chancellor
given pay raise
UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel
G. Aldrich has been given a 4.2
percent pay raise, bringing his
annual salary to $74 ,000.
The pay raise was approved
last week by the University of
Californfa Regents based on the
recommendation or UC Presi·
dent David S. Saxon.
HB b a m p a rking
on 'Blood A lley'
Hoping lo reduce traffic acci·
dents along a local stretch of
Pacific Coast Hi ghway dubbed
"Blood Alley," the Huntington
Beach City Council has voted to
ban parking on the inland side of
the highway between Beach
Boulevard and the Santa Ana
River.
The ban will take effect within
two or three weeks, as soon as
signs can be posted, said Paul
Cook. the city's public works
director.
Beachgoers who ignore these
signs will have their vehicles
towed away, he warned.
Jn approving the ban at its
Monday night meeting, the coun-
cil acted without the consent or
Callrans, which has jurlsdictlon
over traffic controls on the state
highway.
• · We h a v e a 'm e e l i n g
sc h eduled Friday with
Callrans," Cook explained. "At
that time I egpect to have their
concurrence."
Gary Bork. senior Cartrans
traffic engineer for Oranae
County, said today he wu un·
aware of the council's action on
lbe parking ban.
He said he hopes to have a
atudy or accidents on this
Pacific Cout Highway atretch
tompleted before Friday's mfft·
tns.
•·So far. the data Indicate UU.
1nl1ht be lbe •t ptact for 1
parklns ban,'' Bork said.
Bul he added that lbe city may face llODW dlmeulUet lf Caltrau
QProvaJ UI nat obta!Md Friday. "I qu•tion whether lt (tbe
Eln1 ~ID) would be ltlal
Mid whether It ~ld bt tD-
~." heoblened. Tbe ban wu propoa.S by
IAllDC:tlmu Rm PaUllllOD. WM
teridM Wt tbe city muat
• lmiMidl ... Mu. .. IWb
l .. ffMI .................. Al·
f'llGIFlC OCEAN
lllCT~I S T
......, ........
PARKING BAN SITE
Too manJI accident&
City traffic officials earlier
this morith said IS people have
died as a result or traCfic accl·
dents along this stretch slnce
1976.
Durina lbe period 19'78·80. 97
Injury accidents were reported
on this aec:Uon or the highway.
and during LW76-80 713 traffic ac-
cidents (litjury and non·h\IW'Y)
were recorded there, traffic of·
ftclals aaJd.
The pu1dn« bao lt expected to
eUmtnate the problem• posed by
beacheoers wbo park on the in·
land side, lhen dart across U\e
hllh••Y to r.acb tbe aand.
Runllnlton Bffch Police Chjef
Earle Ro<aille bu tona r.aJ*l
for hnprovemenu aloo1 lbJ1
atretch4 11yln1 haurda are
c1u1ea ='1 oor ll1bt1n1. roedlldl • and the Dal'·. .... P9inted HDet.
11gmpr°"9n"ll, IMiud· t.. ol lbe "1cb•11. are
not ache uled unUI UH.
..., .... I
THURSOAV,JULY23, 1981
JUST COASTING 82
FEATURES 86
all new homes built In Dana
Point be sold to low and
moderate income buyers.
County off~cials ar1ued uosuc·
cessfuJly that more than half the
housln1 in the unincorporated
coastal area Is already afforda-
ble.
The clinc her. said com·
miuloners, is that low-cost
housing be preserved by imposi-
tion or re$ale controls on the un-
i ts, thereby preventing new
buyers from selling their homes
at market price ln a rew years.
Commission executive direc·
tor Michael Fischer contends
that affordable housing Is worth·
less without resale controls . The
commission staff has said 30·
year deed restrictions would
keep a supply or IOW·COSt houses
on the market.
Another concern of the coutal
com mission is proposals that
low-cost housing be localed.out·
side the coastal sector. In that
event, a developer would be al-
lowed to construct market value
units within the coastal area, but
would be required to place af·
.... _....
For ~st time,
AB World
New; Tonight has
edgetl ... 83
,1T
fordable unit.is at another ~·· n situaUonB," be aaid.
0
0
tion. • • , "They were very doematlc on
Commission officials say that the issue and never considered
plan Is an option. addtn1 elr the circumstances."
fordable housing units hav~ Ml\ He said the county's effort to
located "within two or 1thr.ee convince the PIVlel that there la
miles or the coastal zone m. the '' affordable housing In Dana
past." . Point now was ignored.
Peter Herman, an afd~ to "And they ignored the fact
Fifth District Supervisot Tom that the community in Dana
Riley, expressed disappointment P oint worked for three years to
today in the commission action. make this plan."
''l'm disappointed with the in· Herman would not speculate
ability of the Coastal Com· on what action the Board of
mission to tailor Its view or <a(. Supervisors might take follow·
fordable> housing lo particular ing the commission decision.
Hummel raps policy
'NEGATIVE FORCE'
Ex-commissioner Koch
Newport councilman calls expansion stand 'hypocritical'
Newport Beach Councilman
Paul Hummel says he will ask
colleagues next week lo rescind
a city policy that he feels con-
dones expansion at John Wayne
Airport.
Hummel. a Corona del Mar
resident. contends city leaders
have taken a "hypocritical"
stance by recommending that
the airport terminal be ex·
panded up to 75,000 square feet
-roughly twice the size of the
existing facility.
"The city is supposed to be op·
posed lo expansion and here we
a re recommending gr owth."
Hummel explains.
The cou ncilm an c l aims
several homeowner groups view
the matter as he does.
County supervisors in approv
ing the airport master plan this
year went far beyond the city
recommendation by okaying ex-
pansion of the terminal up to
213,000 square feet.
· · l think we should tell the
county t h at we favor no
changes, no expans ion and
nothing that would accom-
modate more passengers, ..
Hummel says.
The councilman, though ad·
mils that the city's position like·
ly would have little effect on
what the county does.
Councilman Don Strauss says
he doesn't favor Hummel's re·
quest lo strike down the city's
recommendation on the size of
the terminal. He says it's clear
that some improvements in the
terminal are needed.
"And anyway," he adds, "it
wo n't change what the county's
going to do one damn bit."
Cell d e a th
in L aguna
probe d
Orange County Coroner's dep·
ulies are investigatin g the
death of a Laguna Beach man
who was found unconscious in
his jail cell Wednesday morning
by Laguna Beach police officers,
Efforts by pohce, riremen and
FAA discounts air inciden t
paramedics to revive the 35·
year-old man failed. He was pro-
nounced dead at South Coast
Medical Center at noon -about
11 hours after police were called
Agency says danger minimal in Wayne Airport episode to the 1400 block of South C.Oast
Highway where a man was re·
ported lying on the sidewalk.
The Federal Av iation Ad·
ministration says safety was not
compromised June 15 when an
Air Cal Boeing 737 and a small
private airplane came too close
to each other at John Wayne
Airport..
The Air Cal jetliner , arriving
from Reno, Nev., came too close
to a Pi.per Cherokee that was in·
volved in a louch-and·go landing
exercise. the FAA concluded
following an investigation,
because an air traffic controller
failed to maintain the required
separation between the two
craft.
·'There was a variation from
the technical (separation) re·
quirements, but it certainly did
nothing to derogate safety,".
Gene Garrett, an FAA air traffic
control evaluation specialist,
said tnday.
Garrett ·said a separation of
3,000 feet was required. He said
he did not know exactly how
close the two planes were when
the pilot of the AirCal jetliner
decided to cancel his landing
and circle the airport.
According to Garrett. the con·
troUer involved in handling the
two aircraft was "evaluated"
Air Cal signs
to buy five
Su per 80s
Newport Beach-based AirCal
announced Wednesday tha t it
has signed contracts to purchase
five additional $20 million DC-9
Sµper 80 aircraft, and placed op·
lions on an additional six of the
new, less noisy aircraft .
The carrier now bas two of the
M-c Donnell Douglas ·
manufactured aircraft in
service in its four·state route
system, and will take delivery or
two more by October. according
to spokesman Mark Peterson.
By 1985, Peterson said, the
company's financial commit•
menl to the new aircraft w1U ex·
ceed $250 million.
"We are buying this alrcrart
because It ls fuel efficient and
produces less noise,·· Peterson
said.
AlrCal previously said lt was
savina about lt percent on I*'· ,
pasun1er fuel coats. The ,
aircraft, accordln1 to lbe John I
Wayne Airport. noise abatement
office, la 1bout 55 perc.nt
quieter on takeoff lban com·
parabl~ &Miq m and DC·t-IO
aircraft.
AlrCaJ serves dt1Unatlons In
CaJlromla, Nevada, Ort•oo Ind
Waah.lngtoo. The carrier recent·
I)' WU sold to Newport Beacb la·
veators WtJHam Lyoa aad
Geor1e Ar•yre>a, for tea .s
mlllloa IA bukruptey ~· • 1011 lavolvlDI WHtfate·
Calllomla eorp; ln U.S. °"1.rtrt
Court In Su:DJ.10.
after the incident and later re-
certified for his regular assign·
ment.
Garrett said he agreed with
previous statements of Ralph
Odenwald. chief of the Orange
County tower, that the incident
was not serious.
Garrett said a witness' state·
ment that the AirCal jet was
about 50 to 100 reel above the
runway as the smaller plane
was taxiing "was not subslan·
tiated by the facts.'·
Meanwhile, the National
Transportation Safety Board is
continuing its analysis or factors
that led to the crash landin~
Feb. 17 of an AirCal jet in which
34 persons were injured. The
board is expected to release the
res ults or the investigation
sometime in August, according
to an NTSB spokeswoman.
The identity of the man was
being withheld until relatives
could be told of his death, police
said today.
A police spokesman said the
man was discovered nearly un·
conscious on the sidewalk on
South Coast Highway at about
1:30 a.m. Wednesday.
Paramedics said they believed
the man to be intoxicated. police
said. and he was taken to the
Laguna Beach Police Depart·
ment and placed in a cell.
Police said jail personnel Case "checked on his condition hour·
ly. and it appeared he was doing (:ompute r firm
hear ing under way
A preliminary hearing is un·
der way in Harbor Court for an
Orange Coast trio accused of
quilting their jobs in an Irvine
computer firm and then opening
their own fir m with an alleged
$3 million wo rth of stolen
mate rials and trade secrets.
The hearing, which started
earlier this week. has been
closed to the public at the re·
quest of defenda nts Tommy
Charles Sammons, 51, of 20Z72
Morristown Circle. Huntington
Beach: Steven A. Hain, 28, of
Orange, and Eileen E. Jackson.
28, or Santa Ana.
Each are charged with grand
theft and conspiracy to commit
grand theft
Orange County Deputy Dls·
tricl Attorney Mar s ha
Strickl and said arguments
heard so far in the hearin~ have
centered on defense attempts to
quash a search warrant issued
in the case and thereby thwart
prosecution attempts to display
key evidence.
lrvme police Detective Phil
Povey said that police. armed
with a search warrant. searched
the National Mini-Computer
Services pl ant in Garden Grove
last September and discovered a
number of documents allegedly
from Computer Automation.
fine.··
But at about 10 :45 Wednesday
morning, the man's condition
had deteriorated and firemen
from the adjacent fire station
and paramedics from South
Laguna were called.
Teen killed
An 18·year-old bicycle rider
died in Anaheim Wednesday af.
ternoon when he tried to pass a
truck and trailer rig that was
turning to the right, according to
Anaheim police.
Richard Charles Ramirez of
Ana heim was pronounced dead al
the scene at Katella A venue and a
northbound on-ramp to the Santa
Ana Freeway, said police officer
Paul Dohmann.
MAC plan due 'ft.allot?
')
Proponents gather required signature~. ~n petition
An Orange County Registrar
of Voters official said Wednes·
day that more than enough valid
signatures have been gathered
on organizing petitions by propo-
nents or a municipal advisory
council for the Laguna Niguel
area.
Shirley Deaton, chief elections
operator for the registrar, sald
more than 1,000 signatures have
been verified by her office.
Those seeking to form the
council needed 950 valid
signatures, repr,sentin1 10 per·
cent of all ree,istered voters llv·
ins within the proposed boun·
dariet of the council's Jurtsdlc·
tlon.
Paul Haseman, president. of
the LalJUna Nl.guel Community
AtaoelalJon, said he and other
proponent.a of the munlcipaJ Ml·
vlaory council (MAC> wnt be meelinl with county SupeTVllor
Tbomu Riley In preparaUao for
• acbeduled Aua. 4 appearance
before lbe county Board of
Su~.
~ MAC 1ponaon wlll be aalt-
lnl the ~"""°" to place the queaUan' 'ol foi'mlna an advtlory
council ID l..aPDa Nlpel oa lht
November ••neul alecllon
i LAGUNA L~~
I _I
I I
-·
NIGUEL AREA SHOWN
Ad~ council pwMd
ballol ln tut communJty.
Jf Laiuna Nlpel retlden\I ap-
prove the MAC, Hueman uld.
1 tep&r1t.e •IMtloo will ~ held
ln J~ tm to elect the--~
b@ra of the council.
ff the MAC wlna votff '~P'
proveJ, It wUl be &hit dW'd tO '8
fonned In Or-anl• °*""· ,,. two o\her• are ln the untn·
~orporated communities of Mia·
Ion Vi ejo and Tustin Hills.
•1 Council members would make
recommendations to county
aupervisors on matters concem·
In g planning, development,
health. safety and public woru
in their area.
Through the MAC. the 17,000
residents in the area would have.
a larger voice in decision ma.It·
lng at~ county level. However. the five-to nlne·
member council can only make
' recommendations to county
supervisors, and II not em1 powered to make rullncs on ay
matter.
The boundaries of U.e l..alll8a
'Nt1uel MAC Include all .of
Orange Cow\ty Service Atta i!
which now provldft munlc:ls-l Hrvl~ to the co~unity.
Orlllnal plau nlled fOf' tM
Bear 1'1-ancf Ruda area to be ill·
eluded ln the II~ ""'"~ la oat part of the M"Ylee .,..,
HaMll\aB tDI the ana b
alnee been tuluded from CMUdUW.'rfft41 .. el*'-of....,.,. bJ
al ~ ....... Uoe CQID·
balaaton to determine tf tbi
perffl 1hould be lnthadld I•
H "lceana3.
J
r
HUMBUG TO THE ~HVM: They
call it "the summer 1ame but u tar as
Summer, 1981, ls concerned, It was a
strikeout. A total fiub. A pWf\11 little hiss
where it should have been a throaty
roar. So thia was professional baseball
this season. Personally, I couldn't care
~ ~\" T-DM_M_U_RP-HIN~l ,~11
less if they ever settle the strike now.
The season is a total loss and we might
as well gel on to something interesting.
Some sportswriters are still clinging
to a faint, hysterical hope that they'll
bear the crack of bats at the big stadium
before the mists of autumn close in.
They write stories about 40 days and 40
nights of strike-bound agony.
Forget it.
MOST OF THE SPORTS scribes are
beginning to discover more lively things
to bring to the readers. Del Mar horse
racing opened yesterday and the first
runnings of the hayburners got pretty
good play.
So the sporting pagei have turned to
professional soccer. beach volleyball.
yacht racing, water skiing and by golly,
the upcoming f oolball season.
Considerable enthusiasm is already
being generated over the Rams' next
season at Anaheim Stadium when Pat
Haden, late of Corona del Mar and now
of San Marino, will once again be at the
controls at quarterback.
Even the pro football training camps
are getting more attention that they
have summers past. Rookies from the
Rams and the San Diego Chargers went
al it in a scrimmage only yesterday out
on the green at UC Irvine . And the
Dallas Cowboys, menacing as ever, are
in camp up in Thousand Oaks.
LISTEN, THIS CRAZED strike has
had some advantages on. the athletic
front. Some sportsmen, who have
labored in near-anonymity over the
years, relegated to the back pages of the
sporting section along with the lost dog-
gie & kitty ads, abruptly have found
their achievements splashed all over the
front of the section.
Why, there was even considerable note given in advance billing for a
Laguna Niguel tennis tournament for old
fogeys, ages 35 and up.
So this is how baseball has done
CONVENIENl DISPOSABLE
COLOPLAST • BRAND OSTOMY PRODUCTS ARE HERE!
We now c..wy uie comp1e1e COlOPlAST 1.ne-1t1e
lal'Qt'Sf selltl'g dtSPO'>clble OSl()f'l~ ae>C>liance\ ,,, lhe
WOlld ( ...efyth1ng IOI c010stoma1e-. 1!ecs1ornates aria
urtnary os1omates -a11 N•ll'I convenient COL OPl.AS T
O•S(X)sat>l•fY COLOPlAS 1 rehat>11ty plus case oack
economy t'e !.Ure 10 a~~ tor your fR( ( copy ot INSIGH rs-
tl'le out>licatl()n 11\at s 1vst tor you-alwayc, 1r>eluoes
coupons tor fref> samoles 7U-3'714
MOULTON PLAZA PHARMACY
23M5 Moulton P1rtlw1y, L1gun1 H11t1
(Next to El R1nctlo Mark•tl
A BARD HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER
f\esa \7erde
\J ine and 19iq,uor
SALE! SALE! SALE!
Reg. 13 70
WEIB EL
WHITE
ZIN FANDEL
A delicious. summer-time'wine. great fol'
picnics. poolside. or beach. Nice touch of
sweetness.
Reg. H .80
GALLO CELLAR S
SAUVIGNON BLANC & s311 JOHANNISBERG
REISLING I.IL
Gold Medal winners at the O range
County Fair. Fine varietal wines at Jug sale
prices I
PLAIN WRAP
CIGARETTES
RUSSO FF
VODKA
. . . . .... .. .....
summer D~a project denied
Supervisors reject plan to convert mobile home park
Itself ln. For decade• put, the aporting
writers bave depended on the bat and
ball game for the full oovera1e of sum·
mer. They just naturally t11ured on
slouching in a chair h11h atop some
stadium and wrlUn1 notes all summer
long on what happens below upon the
fa bled diamond. Now, however, out of sheer necessity
they have learned there are indeed other
sporting events all over the summer.
Why, there'u actually water out
there in that place called the Pacific
Ocean where they have sporting events
they play without even a ball in sight.
And you can always start covering
the coming football season early.
Avast there! ll'sanolhersummeuporlingevent
BASEBALL WI LL WSE to football
even in the event the professional foot-
ball people decide they want to follow
their compatriots and go out on the
picket lines. Unlike baseball, you see,
football has a heavy following at levels
other than just the play-for-pay people.
Regardless of a pigskin walkout for
the pros, you can be assured USC and
UCLA will be going at it, along with the
s maller colleges like Cal State Fullerton _
and Cal State, Long Beach.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE, Sad-
dleback and Golden West also put on
some exciting gridiron shows right here
along the Orange Coast. And don 'l forget
the vast array of football offerings that
will come your wa y at the high school
level.
Lots of sporting fans are looking
forward to fall.
And by the time next summer rolls
around, a lot of sports people might be
asking, "Baseball?" What's that?"
A proposal to convert a Dana
Point mobile home park into a
commercial center has been de-
nied t nd a plan to locate a
medlc&l research facility orf t.be
Ortega Highway near Oaapen
Wilderness Park was supported
by the Orange County Board of
Supervisors.
On the advice of Supervisor
Thomas Riley, the board threw
out the proposal from Uqlon OU
Co. lo replace the Marina Shores
Mobile Home Park with new
com merciat development.
Riley said the mobile home
park at Del Obispo Street and
the Pacific Coast Hlehway
represents needed affordable
housing in the co mmunity and
noted that the proposed develop-
m e n t did not conform to a
specific plan to locate such cen·
ters in a ··downtown" area.
In the o ther case. the
supervisors agreed to move up
consideration from December to
October for a general plan
change for the Nichols lnstltule.
The medical research and test·
ing lab is currently located in
San Juan Capistrano, but of·
ficials want lo move it to an
isolated 100 ·acr es across the
Ortega Highway from the coun·
ty-run park.
At Ril ey 's urging, the
supervisors said they'll consider
creating a new general plan
designation for the property to
preserve a maximum amount of
open -space.
Under the new land use de·
signation. building sites near the
park would be at least 50 acres
and parking and structures
couldn't cover more than 20 per·
cent of the property
The institute has a staff or
about 250 persons It specializes
in creating diagnostic pro·
ce dur es a nd ca rries o ut
speciali zed testing and research
for ho spitals a nd medical
schools.
Ruling o verturned
AUSTIN, Texas <AP) -The
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
has overturned the conte mpt
citation or a minister who was
jailed after refusing to answer
questions about a drug suspect
he counseled. The Rev. Ronald
Salfen o f the Trinit y
Pres byterian Church in Collin
County had been cited.
K&B SPORTSWEAR
2300 HmiMar, Costa Mesa
PREWASHED
59'' JEANS
LAnST 52• TOPS
DellJ ............. ..., Ric ...... IC....._
THATS NOISY -Two-year-old Stacy Felton holds her ears
as Newport Beach policeman Bruce Foster fires up
helicopter. Officers staged a "police fair" in the Newport
Crest area over the weekend to help bolster interest in the
department's neighborhood watch program. Stacy,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Felton of Newport Beach,
didn't seem impressed.
SHOES • SHOES • SHOES • SHOES
WOMEN
MATURALIZER
UM STRIDE
HUSH PUPPIES
CHEROKEES
IARETRAPS
FAMOLARE
MUSHROOMS
GRASSHOPPERS
MEN
FLORSHEIM
HUSH PUPPIES
JARMAN
STACY ADAMS
30-40%
PEOPLE MOVERS 59• Pl.US CLOGS s1411.2411
OFF MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
T-SHIRTS
s7• MEN'S W Al.KIM&
SHORTS
ALL
BOOTS 25% off
SIDEW AU SALi SPICIALI
20%.IFF
ON ALL
,
-
IH HARIOR CEHTIR
2300 HARIOI • COST A MESA •
Come To Our Value Packed
SIDEWALK
SALE
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
JULY 24th-25th
HARBOR CENTER
42 STOllS TO S .. VI YOU
2300 HARBOR IAT wtLSOMt
COSTA MESA
I
,.~ ...........
Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThurtday, July 23, 1981 ~·
Admirals in charge Co adst hGu,a rd
f N . b nee s e p
0 avy oot camps WASHINGTON <APJ Com·
mandant John 8 Hayes says the
SAN DIEGO <AP> The
Navy is putting admirals in
charge of Its three boot camps to
show, it says, that it regards the
training camps as Increasingly
important
A s pokesman said Capt. War·
r e n Aul, commander of the
North Island Naval Air Station,
will be promoted to rear admiral
and put ln charge of the San
Diego Naval Training Center.
Rear Adm Pauline M. Hart·
ington will take over the Orlan·
do, Fla., training center from a
captain. She is the first woman
picked to run a boot camp.
A captain in charge at Great
Lakes, lll:, will be relieved by
Rear Adm. James H Flatley
Ill, a Navy spokesman said.
"This Is recognizing the Im·
portance of boot camp, and
there already has been signs or
that as we tighten up training
with more drill hours scheduled
and more attention to dis
clpline," he said.
.. As the Navy builds toward a
600·ship Navy, it is going to need
good people to man those ships
and we have got to get off to a
good start as we dd that."
15 cro to 50% Off
e'4erytbing in the store
Coast Guard doesn't have the
ships or personnel to step up its
war again.st drua smugalina by sea
Hayes told a conaressional
s ubcommittee that the Coast
Guard's goal is lo seize 75 per·
cent of the mariJuana smuagled
into the United Stales by sea.
but 1t only is able to Intercept 15
percent to 20 percent.
Without more ships and peo·
pie, Hayes said, the Coast Guard
could not even meet its goal by
giving up searc h and rescue
missions, enforcement of fis h·
eries regulations and other ac·
livities
ABORIGINAL ARTISTS -Members of an will perform in New York before a concert
Australian aboriginal group pose at a New tour of the United States. )u\y 23, 2 4 and 25 s ~n!~ of our York press conference. The aboriginal artists
. bracelets. earn!ig, We proudly
Pool contractor suing actor ! d·ng nngs. . on sate . nd Inc u t handise is d Coll ection a quality rn_e rc t Corum. Concor
ASPEN, Colo. <AP> An
Aspen contractor is s uing actor
George Hamilton in Aspen Dis·
trict Court for $2,033, the amount
or money he has refused to pay
for work done on the indoor
swimming pool a t his home
here.
Hamilton's Aspen attorney,
Richard Neiley, however, said
the bill submitted by the Weld ·
ing Co of As pen for work done
in March was "exorbitant" and
t.e believes the company "may
have b<'cn trying to sting" his
client
Thomas C rumpacker. at
' SKI
paid only $1,333 of the $3,366 bill. fea ture Piage . torney for the welding company,
said a Hamilton aide ordered the
actor's pool sand-blasted lo re·
move a coat of paint. The job
was to be done during the three
da ys immediately before
Hamilton's arrival here, he said.
Hamilton lives in Beverly Hills.
Welding Co . e mploy ees
worked ·•into the wee morning
hours" to finish the job in lime.
Crumpacker said.
Neiley said the actor felt that
the charge of up lo $43 per hour
by the sand blasters was too
high.
Records show that Hamilton
bought the home in Aspen's
fashionable West End for
$750.000 in September 1979
d. wot ches . concor
\B1tell q{ja/he!t R~~~t!!
ISLAND • NEWPO
He and Neiley agree that the
dispute arose over damage that
allegedly occurred to tiles atop
the pool during the blasting. As
a result of the dispute , Hamilton
McFARLAND (AP> Kern
County fire capta in, Donald
Moore. 44. died Tuesday after col·
lapsing while lifting a hose line
over a fence.
35 FASHION
FRIDAY and SATURDAY OllLY
JULY 24th and 25th
RT llA T SKI SALE
(for Locals ·And friends)
All Tennis Merchandise 50% Off
free strings with
pure hase of a rcxket
• SHOES
• CLOTHING
• • • Don't wait for our-tremendous August Sale, sltop Saturday for
Great Savings ••• beat flle crowds ••• great silection.
Rossignol 1981-82 Skis
15% OFF
This sale is being held
for our local friends and
neighbors.
--.BOOTS---.
SAN MARCO·LANG·SALOMON
SCOTT·GARMONT ·NORDIC A
CABER-HANSON
·gpro.%0FF
,, ". . i ·-
s
K
I s
K-2
AUTHIER
HEXCEL
SPALDING
THE SKI
.
CHOOSE FROM THESE
FAMOUS BRAND SKIS
ALL40%0FF
UP CLOTHING
·TO 70% OFF
ALLSll ,_CLOTHING ..
' ,. .
$I 00°0 Parkas
a1 low as 52995
I SALE •URS •RE 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
c Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thuraday. Juty 23, 1981
Health hazard issue
needs objective test
Welt Costa Mesa residents
have asked city officials to close
a Vlctoria Street plastics
manufacturing plant as a public
nuisance.
But after 30 days of studies
by various city departments. City
Council members declared this
week there is no evidence to
prove that Narmco Materials,
Inc. is polluting the air, the
ground or the water basin.
So the council Monday
ordered tests at the plant, includ·
ing air monitoring and earth
drillings where chemicals may
have seeped.
Council members say that if
the results indicate pollution,
other tests will follow in the sur·
rounding neighborhood.
Costa Mesans who live in
homes around the plant testified
they are suffering a number of
ills they believe are the result of
Narmco manufacturing prac-
tices.
Extensive air testing by the
South Coast Air Quality Manage-
ment District has proved in the
past that Narmco has operate<l
well within the plant emission
limits prescribed by law.
But some residents and at·
torney Ellen Winterbottom told
the council that area residents
have little faith in the AQMD.
They charged the regional
air organization is anlagonistic
toward area residents.
The residents, most of them
members of Chemical Action
Neighborhood Association, also
claimed Narmco curtails of-
fensive operations when plant air
is monitored.
The city's tests should be
conducted by a private agency,
one that could gain the con-
fidence of west side residents by
testing without prior announce-
ment.
Narmco's neighbors have
been complaining for nearly two
years and have filed two lawsuits
contending the plant is a health
hazard.
Their fears should be proved
or put to rest once and for all.
Signs of weakening
Back in 1974, Costa Mesa's
City Council passed an ordinance
designed to eliminate the clutter
of business signs in the communi-
ty -especially the larger over-·
powering billboards.
New businesses were forced
to comply with new rules regulat-
ing sizes and shapes of signs and
messages , and older non-
conforming signs were placed on
schedules for elimination over
the years.
All non-conforming signs are
to be eliminated by 1984 under
the ordinance.
Now, council members who
are faced with enforcing the law
are weakening as time runs out
on the older signs and pressure
builds in the business community
against the ordinance.
Councilwoman Norma
Hertzog says the ordinance isn't
reducing clutter and suggests
that signs put up before 1974
s hould be allowed to stand.
Maybe that way. she con·
tends, business owners who are
fighting compliance will support
the law.
That's possible.
But what about the new busi-
nesses forced to put up lower or
smaller signs because of the law?
And what about those who have
taken down the older signs in
compliance with city rules?
Council members bad better
bite the bullet. face up to the
business community and enforce
the ordinance designed to rid the
city of an unsightly glut of signs.
Otherwise, Costa Mesa city
government will need to de-
ter mine bow it would make
amends to those who already
have complied with the or-
dinance.
Fund request valid
For years, the Newport
Beach City Council has made a
point of not dealing out any of the
city's Revenue Sharing F\lnds to
community service agencies,
such as the Family Crisis Center
or the YMCA .
The reasoning has been that
the funds should be spent on one-
time purchases in the city in-
stead of bankrolling ongoing pro-
grams.
This year. Jim de Boom,
director or the Orange Coast
YMCA, suggested that the coun-
cil set aside 10 percent of the
federal money for these agencies.
That amounts to $40,000.
He said a committee could be
put in charge of reviewing ap-
plications from various groups
and distributing the money.
•
DeBoom noted that Costa
Mesa, Irvine and Orange County
government started doing this
last year.
Newport council members.
meanwhile, are informally re·
viewing this request. It appears
doubtful that the council will go
along with it.
But the council shouldn't be
too quick to dis miss deBoom's
idea.
While the city probably is
correct in its thinking that it's
bad practice to spend federal
money for ongoing projects, this
modest appropriation could be an
exception.
If federal money did, at some
point, run out, these agencies
would be no worse off than they
are now.
Op1n1ons expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex
pressed on tn1s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1t
ed. Address The L>atl y Pilot, Po Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92o2o. Phone I 7141
0•1-021
L.M. Boyd I Romantic months
It is in the autumn moreso not in
the spring that a young man's fancy
turns to love, accordin1 to the
atatisUcian.s. Their study or the birth
records lndicates May, June and July
are the three least romantic months.
November and December are the
most romantic, they say.
Sad, but true. you catch a baby
ocelot the same way you catch a
baby gorilla. You shoot the parents
first. Those who purport to know say
there's no other way.
American astronauts can't be more
than 8 feet tall. The design of their
• equipment Umits the height to that.
.-
Mott American car horna honk in
the key of F.
Studeatt of lb• stars HY Taurua ii
a fixed 1isn. II you were born under
it, you're apt to be practical, de·
termlned and rtll,ble. TaW'UI folk
al10 tend lo be authoritative and
ORANGE COAST
Daill Pilat
somewhat predictable. They go by
the old rules, usually. Claim iA they
make &ood police officers, teachers
and soldiers.
Three out or five wild anlmals do
their hunting, foraging, whatever, in
the ni1ht.
A sick tree, too, runs a tem·
perature. And this temperatur.e is at
its highest in the mornlnf.
Your typical railroad boxcar
moves fret1ht only 7 percent ol the
tJme. MolUy it runt empty, or just
sits on a aiding aome~~·· The transportation boys have t.r)'lnl
to n1ure out how to improve Wt pat·
tern tor 100 yean or more. But about
the only thtn1 that putt all the box·
cara to work all the time 11 war.
Those who teach illiterate
ITOWDUpl U)' such penona usu.Uy
can team to write almple ltttert ln
about three wteb. .
Nuke boondoggle cost soars
WASHINGTON Government boon·
doggies are always good for evanescent
headlines. But if they are really to stick
in the public craw. two coruiiderations
are usually necessary: The fiasco must
occur under high auspices, and the
story must have a certain oomph capa·
ble or kindling public interest.
By all the oomph indicators. the
Clinch River breeder reactor al Oak
Ridge. Tenn., may not regis ter high. It
is an unheralded project. with an
awkward name, well off the beaten
path. But it is a multimillion-dollar
fiasco born of fraud and mismanage-
ment.
The plant, darling of the nuclear
power industry. is supposed to produce
more nuclear fuel than it uses, which
sounds like a bargain. But it has been
no bargain for the taxpayers who are
unwittingly paying for it.
ORIGINALLY, it was to be in opera-
tion by December 1979, at a cost of $669
million. But it has already cost Sl
billion, and the latest estimate is that it
won't be operational until February
1990. By that lime. the bill will be at
least S3.2 billion.
How could this happen? It's easy.
when the government officials who are
supposed to keep track of the project's
contractors shirk their responsibilities.
According to a spokeswoman for the
Clinch River project. about fl> percent
of the cost increase was due to
circumstances beyond official control.
In other words, the bureaucrats were
responsible for "only'' SSOO m\llion of
the estimated $2.S billion overrun.
That's bad enough.
But it's actually worse than that. In-
vestigators for Rep. John Dingell, D·
G.
-JA-Cl-A-ID-11-11-1 -~
Mich., told my associates Tony Capac-
cio and Howard Rosenberg that at least
three-fourths of Clinch River's prime
contracts are op«?n ended, that is with
no firmly set costs or completion dales.
The investigators warned that even
the staggering $3.2 billion estimate may
be optimistic. It fails to take into ac·
count the possibility that the entire
Clinch River facility might have to be
relocated for safety reasons.
A 1978 NUCLEAR Regulatory Com·
mission report listed nearly 100 safety
problems. A Clinch River official said
many of the problems had been ad·
dressed even before the NRC report,
but the commission had not yet checked
to see if the needed corrections were ac
tually made.
Fraud has also plagued the project.
One internal Department of Energy
memorandum told how an employee or
Atomics International, a subcontractor.
received a $1,000 ihterest-free loan in
return for advance information on con·
tracts. and another SS,000 in cold cash
for bid price information.
Ttte FBI found that two purchasing of
ficials invented bogus companies. from
which they claimed lo have solicited
bids for items needed at Clinch River
This resulted in overcharges running as
high as 800 percent
Typical of the cavalier way contrac
tors behave when Uncle Sugar is paying
the bills is an incident reported in
another internal DOE document dated
Feb. 13 It discloses that the chief of
Westinghouse's data-processing facility
al Clinch River had bee n using a
$200.000 computer for his own personal
business lie not only stored leases and
business directories an the computer.
but used it for a football pool.
The Congressional Bwdget Office has
estimated that terminating Clinch
River "could save the government Sl 4
billion over the five-year period of
1982-1986." But the Reagan adminastra·
tion. reportedly over the objections of
Budget Director David Stockman. has
decided lo go ahead
Athletic recruiting charges denied
To the Editor.
, I would like to challenge some state·
ments made by the Daily Pilot in an
editorial which was published June 21.
The editorial dealt with a previous
article by reporter Pat Kennedy relat-
ing to high school athletic recruiting.
The editorial stated that Edison High
School has an aggressive. successful
athletic recruiting program. It further
MAILBOX
went on to state that the Edison coach,
Bill Workman, expects four to six select
transfers to be in his starting line up
next year.
I feel it is imperative that the public
know that Edison High School does not
and has never had a program to recruit
athJetes outside of its attendance boun-
daries.
THIS PAST SPRING several con·
cerns were brought to our attention that
athletes had been recruited to attend
Edison High School for the purpose of
participating on its athletic teams. We
also had information that this type of
recruitin1 was occurring in other
schools in the district.
An intensive Investigation followed.
What we did find was that there were
individuals in the Edison community.
and in other school communities, who
were actively encouraging young
athletes to attend particular schools to
participate In specifi c athletic pro·
grams. Our Investigation proved con-
clusively that in every case where
recruiting violations did occur the
school coaches were unaware and ap-
palled that such acUvities were taking
place.
In the case or Bill Workman, I can as·
sure you that he has aggressively
worked to maintain an untarnished rep-
utation. We are very proud of BUI
Workman as an educator, as we are or
his entire staff and the other coaches in
the Huntlngton Beach Union Hl&h
School District. They all realize that
athletics are an Important part of our
total lnltrucUonal program but they are
Just a part. I feel that lt ls important for the
public to know that the dl1trtct wlll not
tolerate athletic recrultln1 and ii mak·
Ins every effort to eliminate Ulla Ulttal
praeUce; lbat our coaches are not ill·
volved in ree~tln1; and that we are
very proud of the 1ucce11 of the Edllon
football pro&ram and the other nne
atbJeUc actlvJUes wblch tbe diltrtct pro-
\ ri~• for lbe youngaten we serve.
FRANK J . A880'M'
Superintendent of Schools
Reltore beauty
Tollle&dlts: •
TUralal from Harbor BOulevai'd to 8a7 .... a.ti .......... .....
the loal block that eAdl at Newport
'
Boulevard. I find the sidewalk outside
two parking lots cluttered.
The clutter includes a telephone
pole, wild weeds and grass at places
almost blocking my way, small crushed
barrel, broken beer bottles. used
diaper, paper bag with garbage, aban·
doned shopping baskets, paper cups,
discarded machille parts, stray papers.
dog leavings, rues. Also one nee<b to
duck under branches that sorely need
trimming and pruning.
What is the city's rule for keeping
sidewalks clean? A few store owners
sweep and hose down debris but in most
c'ases litter and weeds have their way.
Often bushes and flowers are planted
and watered, but never weeded or hoed.
Weeds infest sidewalks holding on to
windblown litter, causing cracks and
deterioration of the blacktop. Doesn't
anyone care?
I know these conditions may exist in
other parts also. ll takes time and effort
to pull up a weed, let's get at it!
MAGNY L. JENSEN
Music doomed?
To the Editor:
I feel it incumbent upon me to men-
tion the s hort-sightedness of the
Newport·Mesa School District ad·
ministration, school board and the
parents who are allowing It to happen.
The district is dropping the elemen·
tary music program.
Without the teaching of instrumental
music in the lower grades the middle
school program will wither from lack of
a .. feeder." Lincoln Middle School
already has dropped fts music program.
After the "death" of the middle
school music pro1ram logically cornea
the demise of the high school music pro-
gram.
We can't allow Newport to become a
"culturally deprived" community.
There won't even be anyone to pro·
vlde music at the football and basket-
ball games.
JOHN E. LINDFORS
Lesson learned
To the Editor:
The merchants or Westport Center,
369 E. 17tb St .• Costa Mesa, wlsh to
thank tbe Dally Ptlot and Steve TrtPe>U
for hla front pace atory of the edvertll·
tnc proble1111 they were bavtns "1th
Balboa Graphics.
We are sure that due to the publlca.
• L~lters /rom rtod•r• art IOtlce>mt, TM
nght to c~t Ltlltri to /ft fPOCt or
eltmtnatf ~l~t fa '~"""" ullm of 300
word1 &r lt>u auUl bf ,."" prtf~ AU t f ti'" mu.ti fric l ud« tf11'10t IU'f mid malhng
oddre., bat names mo~ bf wrthlwld °" rt·
qa.ot If nlf1c11nt '"""' ta opportftt.
PO.ftfl wUl "°' f,. pllfJli#Md L.ttt.r1 mo, bf
telcpltONd to 842"'*. Namt and phoM
nmfwr ol fltf co.t~ tnlllf be """' ~ Vlrtfk:at~ fl"tpOUI
---.-C-'"-= ~
lion of this stor y we were all able to
retrieve our money. It was in fact m~·
lioned to us that we were the only ones
to make a fuss about it and therefore
our money would be returned to us .
WE ARE LIVING in a world when it
seems almost the accepted mode of
behavior to cheat. We must choke off
this lie by almost vigilante means and
we urge everyone who may feel they
are being cheated, swindled or used to
fight back. What better way is there to
fi gh t back than through our own
neighborhood newspaper? We must
stamp this tendency out ourselves for
we believe the police departments are
overwhelmed these days.
We have a ll learned a lesson in our
center from our unpleasant experience.
One merchant paid $175 and eight paid
$65 which amounts lo $695. This was
supposedly to mail out 25,000 advertis·
ing leanets. Bulk mall runs approx·
imately 8 cents a piece. therefore the
mail cost a lone would be $2,500 for our
center. to say nothing of the cost of
printing and art work. It was therefore
an impossible tra nsaction from the
beginning We urge everyone to
'llathemalically double check these
scams.
IRIS SCHNEIDER
Trashy Calif orniam
To the Editor:
We have possibly one of the mQst
beautiful coastal areas and beaches in
the world.
Why are our lovely beaches and
Pacific Coast Highway so littered with
every conceivable type or trash? Do our
citizens not appreciate this wonderful
gift? They surely do use it.
We have traveled In other states and
find no comparable messes. In fact, in
Colorado, Oregon. Washington. South
Dakota and several Provincial Parks in
Canada you see few cigarette filters,
can tabs. or even small throw aways,
let alone the ridiculous accumulation of
trash we see around here.
What Is the matter with Californians?
D. MEYER
lllllYSll
I wish the Costa Men Clt..v Council
would put .. much fervor ln ncbtlnl
the cloaln1 of the AtlanUa M11111e
Parlor aa they do In tryln1 to make All
Rou1han remove his rell1tou1
aculptw.. M.8. ..... .... _ ........................ -
,...~,...._, .. _ .... _....., ...... _ ... ........ ..._.Ga,.,.... ... ...
By STEVE TRIPOLI °' .. .,....,.... ....
¥embers ot the Newporl
Beach and Costa Meu clly
councUs agreed to work loJether
on several areas of common ln·
terest to their cities al a Joint
dlnner and meeting Tuesday.
Five council members and <me
administrator frdm each cily
spent two hours prior to the
meeting eatlng, drlnklnl and
socializing at the Rlvlera
Restaurant in South Coast
Plua, running up a $2SO tab that
officials from both cities said
would be paid from city funds.
The menu included liquor, hors
d 'oeuvres and a complete filet
mi1non dinner.
Despite the socializing, the of·
ficials insisted the get-together
wa.a needed to hell> th• two dtlea
coordlnate their ef!om oo tuuea
affect1n1 both com,munltles .
They agreed to:
-Push fire officials ln both
~ille• toward conchwon ol an
automatic aid r•ct tlaat would
allow firef 1bter• and
paramedics to cross city lines
when needed without first bein1
Invited.
-Tell county and atate of·
ficials that the two cities believe
road improvements around John
Wayne Airport are Becessary to
handle an increasing volume or
traffic.
-Bring to the county division
of the League of California
Cities a joint proposal asking all
cities in the county to ban the
sale of fireworks because they
Koch explains
• • res1gnation
Walter Koch, who resigned
this week from the Orange Coun·
ly Airport Commission, was
proving to be a "negative force"
because of his positions on
several controversial airport Is-
sues, Supervisor Thomas Riley
said today.
Koch, Riley explained, voted
against the airport master plan,
air carrier access plan, addi·
tional airport personnel and
start·up of DC·9 Super 80 service
by Republic Airlines.
Those voles ran directly
counter to Riley's positions.
Koch was appointed by Riley
to the commission as Fifth
Supervisorial District represen·
tative in 1975.
Koch, in his handwritten letter'
of resignation, said, "The events
or the past few months have
greatly disturbed me, and in
good conscience. I feel it best I
resign at tfus time." The res·
ignation is effective July 31.
In a telephone interview to·
day. Koch said it is .. painfully
obvious" that recent actions by
the County Board of Supervisors
to move abea'd with 175 million in airport improvements will
m ean "a lot more people, a lot
more trafftc. a lot more
headaches and a lot more
flights."
Driver soug ht
Costa Mesa police are at-
tempting to locate the driver of
what is believed to be a four-
wheel·drive vehicle that lore up
an estimated $1 ,000 worth or
newly planted grass at
Paularino Park.
And those actions. he said
"indicate to me that those of~
who live in Newport Beach and
under flight patterns have a lot
to be concerned about."
Koch said "it was pretty much
by mutual agreement'' with Riley that he submitted bis res-
ignation . Riley did not
specifically ask for Koch's res-
ignation, both men agr.eed.
"Wally, since his votes on the
master plan and the access plan,
had been a negative force."
Riley said.
•Koch was summoned to
Riley's office Monday to explain
his decision to vote against in·
lroduction of the new. less noisy
Super 80 by Republic Airlines.
The carrier, which operates 12
flights daily from the airport,
plans to place two of the
jetliners in service in mid·
August.
It was during that meeting
that he gave Riley the resigna-
tion letter.
Both Riley and Koch stressed
that the supervisor never told
the commissioner how to vote in
advance or matters coming
before the airport commission.
which is advisory to the board of
supervisors.
Despite Koch's assertions,
Riley said, "I believe very con·
fidently that we wilJ tame the
airport. and that we will find a
site for a new. regional airport."
The supervisor said he has not
yet decided whom he will rec·
ommend to replace Koch. "I
hope I can find someone within
the (noise) impact area who will
take the job," Riley said.
HB bans parking
on 'Blood Alley'
Hoping to reduce traffic acci-
dents along a local stretch of
Pacific Coast Highway dubbed
"Blood Alley," the Huntington
Beach City Council has voted to
ban parking on the inland side or
the highway between Beac h
Boulevard and the Santa Ana
River.
The ban will take effect within
two or three weeks, as soon as
signs can be posted, said Paul
Cook, the city's public works
director.
Beachgoers who Ignore these
signs will have their vehicles
towed away, he warned.
In approving the ban at ils
1 Monday night meeting, the ooun·
cil acted without the consent or
Caltrans, which haa jurladlct.ion
over traffic controls on the state
highway.
"We have a meeting
sc h edu l ed Friday wlth
Caltrans." Cook explained. "At
that time l expect to have their
concurrence ...
Gary Bork. senior Caltrans
traffic e ngineer for Orange
County. sald today he was UO·
aware of the council's action on
the parking ban.
He said be hopes to have a
study or accld~nta on t.bla
Pacific Coast HJahway it.retch
eompleted before Ftiday's meet·
ln1.
"So far. the data indleate um
might be the but ·place ror i
parklne ban."' Bork utd.
But be added Usat Use clu may
faee t0me dlffkUllles lf Caltrana
approval la not obtained f'rtday.
.. I qlldUOO wbtlbtr It (Use
perk.ins ban> would be &aaal
Ulen Md whether lt could be m·
fGi'ced." he oblerved.
The ban waa propoHd bJ
CeudJman R«I P1ttlftaGo, ,.,t.c;
:~~Oded that UM e•lJ au1at ~ lmmedllllo --'° ...., traflk hllarda ...... lloiod ~· lfy,•· •
Pll!CIFIC OCEAN
VICTOAI ST
,,.,",... ...
PARKING BAN SITE
Too many accidents
Cit,y traffic officials earlier
this month said 15 people have
died as a reswt of traffic acci·
dents along Ws stretch since
1976.
Durtnc the period 1978-80, 97
injury accidents were reported
on tbla section of the highway,
and during 197&-ltO 713 traffic ac-
cidents (injury and non·inJury)
were recorded there. traffic of·
flclals said.
. The parldJ\I ban la expected lo
eliminate the problem• ~ed by
beachgoen who park on the ln·
laod side, then dart across the
ht•bway to reach the und.
Huntiqton Beach Police Obief
Earle llolMtail.le baa tons call~
for Improvement.a alone lb.la
stretch, 11yinc baaarda are
caused by poor llchttn1. ro1Uldt putdq, and the qar.
row pelnled median lines.
Midilr JlllllJl"OYementi, lDclud· m1 Wllimna of the talpway, are
not acbeduled uaUI 1He.
llllJPllat
THURSDAY,JULY23, 1981
JUST COASTING 82
FEA,TURES 86
For the first time,
ABC's World
News Tonight has
edged CBS ... 83
0
0
co nun on goals
are a fire hazard.
-Caltlornia CiUea a jolnt pro·
posal asking all cities in the
county to ban the sale of
fireworks because they are a
fire hazard.
-Support construction of the
so·called University Drive Ex-
tension above Upper Newp'ort
Bay. a project that would link
the road from Irvine lo Costa
Mesa and make it a major
artery for persons wishing to
avoid the freeway or Pacific
Coast Highway.
The push for quick agreement
on an automatic fire aid pact
came, the council members
said, because they want fire
chiefs -and other officials who
have been negotiating the agree·
menl to know that they are in-
terested ln an agreement first
and in ironing out detaUs later.
The two cities have been
negotiating the agreement for a
year . the council members said,
but have stalled over logistics
and the question of which side Is
providing the most benefit for
the other through the asre~
ment.
The council members said
• they want the current mutual
aid agreement changed so that
people will get help from the
nearest source when they need
it, regardless or city boundary
lines.
The move to seek road 1m·
provements around the a1rport
was the product or near ·
unanimous agreement among
the council members that in·
creasing tramc volume will
create problems tor both towns.
Newport Beach Mayor Jackie
Heather said after t he meeting
that no further road improve·
ments are planned for the area
in tbe next four or five years,
but that more flights in larger
aircraft plus other factors will
increase traffic greatly around
the airport before then.
Even though Costa Mesa cur·
rently allows lhe sale or
fireworks. there also was near·
unanimous agreement on the
need for a countywide ban on
sales as the only effective way lo
curb the annual fire haiard dur·
ing the Fourth of July season.
On the University Drive issue
the council members agreed
that the road link Is needed, but
Newport Mayor Heather said lt
may be too late t-0 aave the pro-
posal.
She said the slate Coastal
Commission may kilJ the plan
because of Its proximity to
wetlands at the head of Upper
Newport Bay . Cost a Mesa
Mayor Arlene Schafer said the
plan might be saved If the road'
is located far enough from the
north end or tbe bay to please
state officials
Officials from both cities
might attend the coastal com-
mission's Aug. 22 hearing in
Santa Barbara to express their
support for the project, but no
decision to attend was made
Tuesday.
Second-class citizens?
'NEGATIVE FORCE'
Ex·commissicner Koch
NB airport
policy hit
by Hummel
Ntwport Beach Councilman
Paul Hummel says he will ask
colleagues next week to rescind
a city policy that he feels con-
dones expansion at John Wayne
Airport.
Hummel, a Corona del Mar
resident, contends city leaders
have taken a "hypocritical"
stance by recommending that
the airport terminal be ex·
panded up to 75,000 square feet
roughly twice the size of the
existing facility.
·'The city is supposed to be op-
posed to expansion and here we
are recommending growth "
Hummel explains. '
The counci lm an claims
severaJ homeowner groups view
the matter as he does.
County supervisors in approv-
ing the akport master plan this
year went rar beyond the city
recommendation by okaying ex·
pansion of the terminal up to
213,000 square feet.
·'I think we should tell the
county that we favor no
changes, no expansion and
nothing that would accom-
modate more passengers ,"
Hummel says.
The councilman, though ad-
mits that the city's position like·
Jy wouJd have little effect on
what the county does.
Councilman Don Strauss says
he doesn't favor Hummel's re·
quest to strike down the city's
recommendation on the aize of
the terminal. He says it's clear
that some improvements in the
terminal are needed.
"Aod anyway,'' he adds, "it
won't change what. tbe coWlty's
going to do one damn bit.·'
Mesa woman's
rites El'(iday
Funeral services for Edith T.
Sardano of Costa Meea will be
held Friday al 11:30 a.m. at the
Harbor Lawn Memorial Chapel
ln Coste Mvsa. ~
Mrs. Sardano, who dltd Tues·
d1Y , b "urvtved by her daulhter
Mirtha Haubrick and her ton·ln·
·law Charles of Heaperla, Calif.,
brother Theodore Torok of New
Jersey, Mven grandchUdttn and
six 1reat·1randch1ldrtn. llri.
Sardanowul8.
Burial wlll b~ at Harbor
Lawn.Mount Olive llortuuy
followlna the Mr:Ylcet.
West Newport residents threaten recall action
By STEVE MARBLE
Of -o.llr ~-St.ft Residents in West · Newport
Beach, upset with plans to de-
velop portions of the SOO·acre
Banning-Newport Ranch, say
they'll initiate city council recall
action unless someone starts
listening to them.
·'We're lik e s econd-class
citizens over here that the city
doesn't have time for." ex-
plained Barbara Cope, a
Newport Crest resident.
She maintains members or the
West Newport Legislative As·
sociation, a fi ve-year-old group
with 600 members, believe that
council members are spending
their lime worrying about ex·
pansion plans fo r Newport
Center on the east side of town.
"We have some m ajor and
legitimate concerns with the
Banning project but we're being
ignor ed." said the Newport
Crest woman.
The legislative group, she
said. is considering action s uch
as starting recall efforts against
council members or reQuestiniz a building moratorium in West
Newport to get the city's atten-
tion
Plans for development of 75
acres of the ranch with homes.
offices and stores will come
before city council m embers
next month.
The development would be
west of Superior A venue on the
inland side of West Coast
Highway. Balboa Boulevard, at
a point west of its present
"We have some
major concerns ,
but we 're being
ignored.''
terminus. would be extended
nort h to provide access lo the
homes and offices.
Newport planning com-
missioners have recommended
that the developer -Beeco Ltd ..
be ordered to do $6.3 million in
rnadwork as a condition to the
project.
Further. commissioners re·
quested that a five-acre park
and a 30·foot wide gr eenbelt
around the Newport Crest
neighborhood be constructed by
the develooer.
County mulls moves
in Dana Point plan
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of Ill• DeHr Pitel 5t.tt
State Coastal Commission re-
jection or a land use pl an for
Dana Point because it does not
provide resale controls on af·
fordable housing units leaves
Orange County with two ways to
go.
-The county can impose re·
sale controls and thereby re·
ceive approval of the develop-
ment blueprint.
-Or the county can propose
alternatives to the resale control
restriction that would be accep-
table by the 12-member panel.
Commissioners unanimously
rejected the Dana Point Local
Coastal Plan on Wednesday, in·
sisting resaJe controls be placed
on affordable units along that
coa stal sector .
"Maybe the county will come
up with so m e c l eve r
alternatives." one coastal com·
mission spokeswoman said lo·
day.
The commission wants Orange
County to change its low-cost
housing requirement to Include
a stipulation that one-quarter of
all new homes built In Uana
Point be sold to low and
moderate income buyers.
County officials argued unsuc·
cessfully that more than half the
housing in the unincorporated
coastal area is al.ready afforda-
ble.
The clincher, sairt com·
missioner s, is tha t low-cost
housing be preserved by imposi·
lion or resale controls on the un-
i ts . thereby preventing new
buyers from selling their homes.
at market price in a few years.
Commission executive direc·
tor Michael Fischer contends
that affordable housing is worth·
less without resale controls. The
com mission staff has said :Kl·
year deed restrictions would
keep a supply of klw·cost houses
on the market.
Another concern of the coastal
commission is proposals that
low-cost housing be located out·
side tbe coastal sector. In that
event, a developer would be al·
lowed to construct market value
units within the coastal area, but
would be required to place af·
fordable units at another loca·
lion.
Commission officials say that
plan is an option, adding ar.
fordable housing units have been
located ''within two or three
miles or the coastal ione in Lbe
past."
Peter Herman. an aide to
Fifth District Supervisor Tom
Riley, expressed disappointment
today in Lbe commission action.
G~mes unplugged
Laundromat owner loses round
Balboa Island laundromat
owner Dante Vesplgnaru is back
doing buaineas with only two
kinds of machines -wubers
and drytra.
Hls electronlc aames, the
cause of much excitement in re·
cent weeks, are unplu11ed.
Vespl1nani, who own• Golden
West Laundromat at 129 Agate
St.. lott 1 round in Oran1e Coun·
ty S1.tper1or Court l11t Friday to
keep \he electronic skUl 1ames
aotna.
"I dOD't know what's 1o&n1 on," bl ..,umbled today ... ,,,_
l•lllH •"e unDlu11ed bal they·,.. ltlll there.'·
The lauftdtomat o._r c.ame
under ftr• last month wben
several other island merchants
complained that the machinea
were causing police and nolse
problems. The clty council told
him to get rid of the machines.
But Vespignani didn't do that.
Instead he went to court and ob-
tained a temporary lnJuncllon
allowing him to keep the 1ames
operating.
But be lost the injunction lut
Pr-lday and now, he saya, he's
'not suro what bis next move la.
•'Thia whole thin1 has been
blown wa}' out ol proportion," he
uplalned. "M)' only point la
that It's unfair eY...,._. et. ean
have theM sames and r un•t."
But nen wlthoUI ~ -pm.,
he aayw he's doial • ,.._,. talr
bu1lneu in dirty clothe.
Mrs. Cope said her group feels
that's not enough.
"Newport Crest is like a little
island and this giant develop~
ment is going to back right into
us." she explained. "We'll be
trapped."
She said at a recent meeting of
the legislative group roughly
1,400 people showed up to protest
the project. Trame and density,
she reported, were the biggest
concerns
"Also." she went on. "there's
a feeling that we just never ge\
anything pleasant on this side of
town. Try comparing us to
Corona del Mar."
The plan that is to come to
council members calls for con·
s truction of 170 homes, more
than 700,000 square feet or office
and industrial space and 75,000
square reel or commer cial
space
The remainder of the 500-acre
ranch 1s set aside for oil drilling
operations that are expected to
continue until the mid 1990s.
Eventually. a spokesman for
the developer said, there are to
be nearly 5.000 homes built on
the ranch.
Mesans held
• 1n separate
sex attacks
Two Costa Mesans have been
arrested on suspicion or assault
to commit rape and police are
seeking five other men in two
other sex attacks this week.
Arrested early Wednesday
and held for suspicion of assault
to commit rape on a 17-year-old
Huntington Beach girl were
Juan M. Castille, 27, and Donald
E . Davis, 35, both of 2293 Pacific
Ave.
The girl told officers s he
escaped the two men at about 4
a m. after she declined their ad-
vances in a car parked in the
Canyon Drive area.
Sought are four men who
barged into the home of a 17·
year·old south Costa Mesa
mother early Monday while her
husband was at work.
Three of the men, police said,
raped ·the young woman after
threatening to harm her baby if
she did not submit.
Also sought. said Lt. Jack
Calnon, is a man who hit a :Kl·
year-old woman in the face near
her apartment complex's spa
and swimming pool after she
resisted his sexual overtures.
The woman, who lost con·
sciousness from the blow at
about 6: :Kl a.m. Tuesday was
raped on a lounge chair, Calnon
said.
Teen litter
patrol soughl
for Newport
A teen litter patrol is being
formed In Newport Beach to
help pick up trash from th4=
beaches and business dlstric\4
durln1 the remaining aumroer
weeks.
Five leen·a«ers are to be
.selected by the Nowport Har~ Area Cbamber of Commerce tq
work wtth Tim Newman. t.b•
police department's litter CG01
trol officer.
Fo\lr Newport flrms -tM
1rvlnc Comp1ny , P acifl(
Mutual. the c...nery Res:5auraa
and Cat11tn1 Pall=r
"ave •creecl to write eo1t of the prosra1n.
TM litter wonen wUI be
U .15 an hour. Thole betwteft the
.... OI 18 and 11 that are ln·
l'"9t.d In paifficlpat.inc should
contact Newman al "4·J852
r
w
Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Thursday, July 23, 1981
HUMBUG TO THE JIO.HUM : They
call it "the summer game" but u far as
Summer, 1981, ls concerned, it was a
strikeout. A total fiub. A pitiful little hiss
where it should have been a throaty
roar.
So this was professional baseball this season. Personally, J couldn't care
. ~
b \
TOM MURPHINI -~It
less if they ever settle the strike now.
The season is a total loss and we might
as well get on to something interesting.
Some sportswriters are still clinging
to a faint, hysterical hope that they'll
hear the crack of bats at the big stadium
before the mists of autumn close in.
They write st-0ries about 40 days and 40
nights of strike-bound agony.
Forget it.
MOST OF THE SPORTS scribes are
beginning to discover more lively things
to bring to the readers. Del Mar horse
racing opened yesterday and the first
runnings of the hayburners got pretty
good play.
So the sporting pages have turned to
professional soccer, beach volleyball,
yacht racing, water skiing and by golly.
the upcoming football. season.
Considerable enthusiasm is already
being generated over the Rams' next
season at Anaheim Stadium when Pat
Haden, late of Corona del Mar and now
of San Marino, will once again be at the
controls at quarterback.
Even the pro football training camps
are getting more attention that they
have summers past. Rookies from the
Rams and the San Diego Chargers went
at it in a scrimmage only yesterday out
on the green at UC Irvine. And the
Dallas Cowboys, menacing as ever. are
in camp up in Thousand Oaks.
LISTEN, THIS CRAZED strike bas
had some advantages on the athletic
front. Some sportsmen, who have
labored in near-anonymity over the
years, relegated to the back pages of the
sporting section along with the lost dog-
gie & kitty ads, abr uptly have found
their achievements splashed all over the
front of the section.
Why, there was even considerable
note given in advance billing for a
Laguna Niguel tennis tournament for old
fogeys, ages 35 and up.
So this is how baseball has done
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urinary ostomale\-all w•th convenoerir COLOPLAS T
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the ovohcatl()n !hells rust tor you-alway<. 1nctu0es
coupons fOf lrt'f' samOles 111-3714
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23M5 Moulton Perkwey, Leguna Hilla
(Next to Et Renctlo Merk•tl
A BARD HOME HEALTH CARE CENTER
L'\esa \7erde
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Reg. S3 70
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A delicious. summer-time wine. great for
picnics, poolside, or beach. Nice touch of
sweetness.
Reg. S4.80
1 GALLO CELLARS
SAUVIGNON BLANC & s311
I JOHANNl ~BERG
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Gold Medal winners at the Orange
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prioesl
PLAIN WRAP
CIGARETIES
A popular "light" brand with no frllls.
King..alze. filter-tip regulars.
.
RUSSO FF
VODKA
Dana project denied
Supervisors reject plan to convert mobile home park
itself ln. For decades pa.st, the 1porting
. writers have depended on. the bat and
ball game for the full coverage of sum-
mer. They just naturally figured on
slouching in a chalr hlgh atop some
stadium and writln1 notes all summer
long on what happens below upon the
fabled diamond. Now, however, out of sheer necessity
they have learned there are indeed other
sporting events all over the summer.
Why, there'u actually water out
there ln that place called the Pacific
Ocean where they have sporting events
they play without even a ball in sight.
And you can always start covering
the coming football season early.
Avastthere' lt's arwther summerlf)Ortmgevent
BASEBALL WILL LOSE to football
even in the event the professional foot-
ball people decide they want to follow
their compatriots and go out on the
picket lines. Unlike baseball, you see,
football has a heavy following at levels
other than just the play-for-pay people.
Regardless of a pigskin walkout for
the pros, you can be assured USC and
UCLA will be going at it, along with the
smaller colleges like Cal State Fullerton
and Cal State, Long Beach.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE, Sad-
dleback and Golden West also put on
some exciting gridiron shows right here
along the Orange Coast. And don't forget
the vast array of football offerings that
will come your way at the high school
level.
Lots of sporting fans are looking
forward to fall.
And by the time next summer rolls
around, a lot of sports people might be
asking, .. Baseball? .. What's that?"
A prope>sal lo convert a Dana
Point mobile home park Into a
commercial center has been de·
nled and a plan to locate a
medlcaJ research taclllty otf the
Ortega Hiahway near Ca1pen
Wildemesa Park waa supported
by the Orange County Board of
Supervisors.
On the advice oi Supervisor
Thomas Riley, the board threw
out the propoaal from Union 011
Co. lo replace the Marina Shores
Mobile Home Park with new
commercial development.
Riley said the mobile home
park at Del Obispo Street and
the PaclClc Cout lll&hway
represents needed affordable
housing In the community and
noted that the proposed develop-
ment did not conform to a
specific plan to locate such cen-
ters In a "downtown" area
In th e oth e r case . the
Rupcr vlsors aareed to move up
consideration from December to
Oc tober for a general plan
change for the Nichols Institute.
The medical research and test·
Ing lab is currently located in
San Juan Capistrano. but of·
tlclals want to move it to an
Isolated LOO acres a cross the
Ortega Highway from the coun-
ty-run park.
Al Ril ey 's urging , the
supervisors said they'll consider
creating a new general plan
designation for the property lo
preserve a maximum amount of
open -space.
Under the new land use de-
signation. building sites near the
park would be at least 50 acres
and parking a nd s tructures
couldn't cover more than 20 per-
cent of the property
The institute has a staff of
about 250 persons. It specializes
in creating diagnostic pro-
ced ures and carries out
specialized testing and research
for hos pitals a nd medical
schools.
Ruling overturned
AUSTlf'i, Texas <AP> The
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
has overturned the contempt
citation of a minister who was
jailed after refusing to answer
questions about a drug suspect
he counseled. The Rev. Ronald
Salfen of the Trinity
Presbyterian Church in Collin
County had been cited.
K&B SPORTSWEAR
ZlOO Hart»or, Costa M•sa
PREWASHED
JEANS 59''
LATEST
TOPS
O.llJ ~lel "-te 11J akMN It .......
THATS NOISY -Two-year-old Stacy Felton holds her ears
as Newport Beach policeman Bruce Foster fires up
helicopter. Officers staged a "police fair" in the Newport
Crest area over the weekend to help bolster interest in the
department's neighborhood watch program. Stacy.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Felton of Newport Beach,
didn't seem impressed.
SHOES • SHOES • SHOES • SHOES
WOMEN MEN
FLORSHEIM
HUSH PUPPIES
JARMAN
STACY ADAMS
30-40%
MATURALIZER
UFE STRIDE
HUSH PUPPIES
CHEROKEES
IARETRAPS
FAMOLARE
MUSHROOMS
GRAS SHOP.PERS
PEOPLE MOVERS
T SHI RTS SAU PLUS CLOGS ...._· ____ ,,_.,--t s14e1.24e1
MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE OFF
SHO.RTs 57•
ALL
BOOTS 25%•
SIDEW AU SALi SPICIALl
20 ·% OFF
ON ALL
llUIOlll
JEWELRY
IM HARIOR CIHTER
2300 HAlllOR • COST A MESA
Come To Our Value Packed
SIDEWALK
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FRIDAY & SATURDAY
JULY 24th-25th
HARBOR CENTER
42 STOUS TO SHYI YOU
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CGSTA MESA
... ... ..... .......
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thureday, July 23, 1981 ,,,-.------------------------------------------------....;;, ______ __ N CT
• l
Dow Jones Final
UP 3.90
CLOSING 928 .58
In an uncertain world there are always those who
claim lhey know '"The Truth.'" And not only do they
know it. they have this peculiar tendency to want to
punish anyone who doesn't see things the way they
do. These proclaimers recently brought to heel some
or the biggest companies In the nation. including
Procter & Gamble ( P&G). our most successful
marketer of consumer goods.
The issue was sex and violence on television. Seven
fundamentalist and conservative groups formed the
Coalition for Better Television l.o put pressure on com·
paniestorefrain ~ from advertis-•
ing on programs \; 0 deemed tby the ', ,
coalition> to be A:~~ m ark e d by =-==~t..,.;:i .. ._ _____ _
~ f ~T~u~~o~s !~xd lllTll lllllllTZ
profanity.''
The kind of programs which would qualify for
such condemnation are "Soap," "Dallas." "Charlie's
Angels," "Saturday Night Live·· and "Starsky &
Hutch." The founding members or the coalition are·
Moral Majority, National Federation for Decency,
American Life Lobby. Eagle Forum. Pro-Family
f orum, Concerned Women for America. and Citizens
for Decency Through Law
They have people all over the country with their
eyes glued to lhe tube. monitoring where com
mercials fall and assigning merits and demerits Lo
advertisers. The coalition had been on the verge of
launching a nationwide boycott of 10 companies found
to be the worst offenders These companies and the
products they make were to be targe ted in full·
page newspaper ads and mailings to 10 million
homes. The boycott was to receive the pulpit endorse
ment of 70.000 ministers .
But at the last minute the coalition called off the
boycott. Here 's what happened. first. Owen Butler,
the chairman of P&G. delivered a talk in mid-June in
which he said it was time ror advertisers to "look
beyond" ratings Buller praised the coalition for "ex-
pressing some very important and broadly held
views,'' adding: "I can assure you that we are listen·
ing very carefully to what they say ''
Now P&G is not just any adverlsser. It"s the
largest one of lhem all. spending more than hair a
billion dollars a year lo promote Tide, Cheer. Bold.
Ivory. Crest. Head & Shoulders, Prell. Pampers.
Duncan Hines. Folgers and a slew of other brands
Butler's talk was made just before the coalition
sum moned about a dozen big advertisers to
Memphis to make a case as to why they should not be
on the boycott li st. Among the companies defending
the m selves there were SmithKline (Contact l.
Warner-Lambert I Listerine, Efferdent, Rol aidsl and
Miles Lab <Alk a -Seltzer>.
Well , after meeting and talking with the targeted
companies the coalition called off its boycott. an
nouncing triumphantly that all of them. "without ex-
ception." had agreed to cooperate. The Rev Jerry
FalwelJ. leader of the Moral Majority, said "no ma-
jor company was in defiance of our request to clean
up their act."
The Rev Falwell called P&G 's Butler "the hero"
of t his .morality play. P&G 's concern for TV pro-
gra mming can be seen in the arternoon soap operas.
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
UPS AND DOWNS
Pct Up J31
Up U Up 7.l Up 10 Up •• t Up 6.t Up •. I UP ... UP 6.5 Up 6.l Up •• o Up U Up S.t Up U Up S.7 Up 5.7 Utl S.6
of<1 t .O I l.j u
1.2 u .. •• J u •• o •. o u I" s.: "' u s ••
AMERICAN LEADERS
MUALS
NEW YORK IAP) Spot nonlerr~ metal pr1<,n too1y.
C._ ~Centl •pound, U.S. dloltl-
tlon1.
LH41 C2 c.nts I -'Cl.
~·-.... ~. --'· dellverecl Tl• $7.z>ltMei.ts-111<om.,o10111>.
........... ~<Miil I POOllld. H Y.
MffcwY WJD.00 -...... .... ~~to oo troy~or::c....:.:":...";__ ___ _
SILVER
Handy• HannM, st tOO "'troy OOlftCI,
GOLD QUOTATIONS
ay Tiie A-lallM l'rft1
S.IK-world gold jM'l(tl IOCllY.
~: "'°"""' fllllfll toitUO, off $1.00. ......... , ...,_ llJtl11t "°1.1S, tfl AUS.
..... : ~ 11•1"9"7S. .... ~ ...... ,r...._.: toiM.'7, ... 111.41.
Zer10: !Ille fl• MOe.00, off U.00, M11.00 •tit"· Medt 6 Mar-•; only 41•llY 4VOI•
M07.7S, ofl t.).l S.
........ : ......... y ~ Mtl.7t, ...
U.7S .
• ,.._..,, Oftly Ollly ..... ·~..., •. 0., eff $1.cl.
t • .. • • ......
Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, July 23, 1981
An old-fashioned melodrama staged by Saddleback Valley
8 y TOM TITU
Of ... DeM, ............
The most nuUve American fQJ'm ot theater
also is probably the least produced . but every so
often some brave theater or another decides to
mount an old-fashioned cheer·the-hero. hiss-the·
villain melodrama. /
The Saddleback Valley Community Theater
has ch~en s uch a project for Its last show under
its old name (it becomes the Mission Viejo
Playhouse in September ) and Its swan song at the
curr ent address <the
players will move to INTERMISSION ;e~:o~~.8 Hi lls next
Entitled "Pure as
the Driven Snow" (or "A
Working Girl's Secret"l. the play is a classic ex·
ample of its genre, presented without many of the
comic shticks thal often push it over into the area
of farce. At Saddleback, director Vince Cordio
plays it fairly straight, with the posturing left to
the three main characters the hero, heroine and
villain. 1
These roles are quite capably enacted.
som elhing which cannot always be said about the
large s upporting cast. several of whom appear ill
al ease in their assignments Underplaying is cer·
lain death in melodrama, and some less ex·
perienced performers tend to slow the pace of the
Saddleback produl'llun
Most impressive of the cast is Marti Louise
Smets as the chaste 1 and chased 1 heroine, aptly
christened Punt} Miss Sm ets displays a natural
flair for melodrama 1n her gestures and facial re·
actions
Tom McKet· docs a creditable JOb as the coun·
try bumpkin hero. but it is Ellis Estes as the
dastardly blackguard pursuing Miss Smets who
reaps the lion's share of audience response. Tall,
•BARGAIN MATINEES •
Monday thru Saturday
All Performances before 5:00 PM
(Except Special Engagements and Hohd1ys1
LA MIRADA MALL lo M1tooo 01 Ro1ecron1
LA MIRADA WALK·IN 994·2400 --... ...... .o. ••• , ..
FOA YOUR EYES OHL Y toot .,. .............. , ...
ne _,.,A*..,., CAM _,y
"ARTHUR"'"°' ,, .. , •.......... , ..
......... ION • u.M.• M.&.l.M ..
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" '"' 11 M • LM •.It• r M • 11:11
LAKEWOOD
CENTER WALK·IN
f'Ml~_lif'f\llllll ~
SUPERMAN II" IPQ) •t-••• ........ .
•tu. .... tllAl' ...
"STRIPES" 1•1 ,,,. ... , ... ,.., ... ,.,.
LAKEWOOD CENTER
SOUTH WALIC·IN
focutv At 0et Arno
213/04·9281
•~MMMU ... ...._ • ._ .. CLIU.
ESCAPE FROM NEW YOflK ,,. .. ,_ .............. ,~.
...... .__
"S.0 .8 ." 1•1 u ... , ••• ,.., ... , ...
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"SUPERMAN 11 ,.,. .................. •· ,,.
Faculty at Cono1ewooo
213/531·9580
"THE CANNONBALL
RUN"'"' ,,._ •• , ....... , ••• U •tt 11
THE FOUR SEASONS"
~~·UAUAU..U
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" -,,_.. • 1•· ·--., 61 • ,...,.
--O·•Allt•AU.O-I -..... 0..... ...... .............. IM. "RAIDERS OF THE
LOST AAK" '"°' "ORAGONSLAYER" -............. ti.
LAGUNA so. COAST WALK·IN
lllLL MURRAY IN
STRIPES"J R) .... , ....
1 U•JH·t ••t tl·t~
Soul~ Coast H••oy
ol l •ooowoy
494-1514
""" .... JtOM ...... AU.IM.
"RAIDERS OF THE
LOST ARK" 1,.. ,. ...... , .. ...., .
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
PACIFIC DRIVE-IN THEATRES
... 1 )() #
IMPOR TAN r NOTICl' CHilORfN UNOl R 12 FRlE!
H110t• •~• W1in11 Mah UHM f o 6 10 • \11 Sun Hfl\ ' 00 , .. u-.f fl ~-.o . •<141" ''-" '"" IW)() ,s_ TOVA !.l'll(N(Si
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ANAHEIM
ANAHEIM DRIVl·IN
f••••Of tt ot len'\on St
179·9850 ._.-..,.._. -,-...... ,..,... o... r -· TH£ CANNONBALL AUN (l'GI "" ... HAADlY WORKING (POI
.. f ' lOU"-0
SUINA l'AllK
--""' MO•fCAMavY
AA'fHUA" ,,.. ....
10" 1•1 ___ ........ -....
FOA YOUR EYES ONLY -.....
THE LONG AIDfAS' ...
RIMt'T Ml9MU..,. L.11 ¥M CU:O .,..,.,...c,,... .....
•
BUENA PARK DRIVf·IN ESCAPE FROM NEW YOflK" lltl ....
ltncoftt Av• Wett Ol 11'\0"
821·4070
FOUNTAIN
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
DRIVE·IN
$oh O••oo •t'W't ot l'oo•"u•t• (So
962·2481
WF51MINSllll
THE EXTERMINATOR 1111
nc.....,.....,..,_
SUP£AMAN II" (PO) """' ANY WHICH WAY YOU CAN" (PO)
HI-WAY 39 DRIVE IN
84!ot• ll\10 so Of
<N<otn Gto•e """'°' 891·3693 ----8.0 .11."(RI """' THI! POSTMAN ALWAYS
AIHOS TWICE' IAI
CINI Ii SO\INl'
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THI.,.-, PW!_,.,.-. CAil Mn
'ARTHUR" 1'91 -"10'' •• ,
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• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
FOllCI!: '1VI! 1•1 -THE CANNONIALL llUN" (ltO) .
' FAOf TO BLACK l'OI
Ct1111110UNO
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LA HABRA OAIVf IN
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ltftfO't' •w-• .... ot ·"°~ 121·4070
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MISSION OlilVI IN . .
-HAllDL Y W()ftt(JHO" (itQ) Clltf ,. SOl1'IO -·----_., lNOL.l!SI LOY£ ... -NIOtfTHAWKS" I'll
...._.._ ....... MAM.
flAIOlAI Of' Tltl! LOST AIUt"
(l'O) -HAHQAll 11" (..0)
--·-· '''°'""'-"" "' ''PAOI TO llLACI(" 111
dark and mustachioed, Eliia projects a menacing
rigure.
Fred Lenway a nd Ruth Comfort Davia are
right out of "Hee Haw" u the proprietors of a
New En1land hotel. Mark Drumm la quite 1ood as
Ellis' unwilJlnc accomplice, wh.lle Ron Sorensen is
corny but en1a1tng as a young pickle plant scion.
Marjorie McCauley is fine as a stuffy society belle.
but Lajuana Blanco and Lisa Sage require a bit
more snap in their roles as would-be femme
fatales.
"Pure as the Driven Snow" may be light years
away from "A View From the Bridge," Another
recent SVCT offering, but It's a fun show for the
THI CAl'f , .•• , •.• , , Matti LMM Smell . • • ,. ......... TeM M<K ..
.. .... • ................. IElll•E1'"
....................... l'reel LMMay , • • .. .. • , • • .. 1111111 Cemlot1 Oe•I • .. . .. • .............. llMrllO,_
....... • .. ... • • ..... 110ftlor9n ....
• "· .. • • "· • .. • ... •• .. • L..11-lllAllCo , .... , ....... , •• MMjotle Mcca..ltY ........................... Llus.QI
.. LI-Lewis .... ....... • NYr<la llanco
• • • • • .. .. .. • • , • • .. . c.teate LI ttltlOfl
family. It continues Fridays and Saturdays at 8
p.m. through Aug. 1 al the company's soon-to·be
vacated theater at 25741 -C Obrero, Mission Viejo.
* OPENING WEEKEND activity focuses on the
western part of the county as the Huntington
Beach Play house unveils "Murder an the
Magnolias" and the Fountain Valley Community
Theater presents a musical version of "Tom
Sawyer.''
11Make way for the greatest
dragon yet."
-Kevin Thoma~. LOS ANGELES TIMES
PG -
NOW PLAYIN G
• CllllDOM« Ot•·~ 634 IJ'J IOUlN COAST
• lOWAllOS SAOOllUCll (' '• ¥t:1.1 )'IL 11' 1
, ~ Ill. •CD•--1·
l DW&llDI
.i!iiiL r.~
MUllTlllCTCMI IUCll
HuOl•nfjlOI' llt.c" 84~ (,.181!
110 Plllll &CClPTlO fOll JMll lllGAGIMllll
IOWAllOI IAOOLU&Ca
( IOIO !II•~
uwuea· •tTOl Colli ltltw ~0 7U4
1111 Clfl Cl#IM&
t .. ')J '"
"Magnoliaa" is described as a s poof on
Southern-style plays by Tim Kelly, author of ''The
Uninvited." John Williama is directing the show.
which features WU Thomp on, Ann Leverett, Jo
Scott, Helen Valenllne and Pete r Stone.
Others In the cast are Todd Mars hall, Norm
Cobb, Beverly Turner , Richard Drake. Marjorie
Roc kwell, Martin Eckmann and Elaine Herman.
Pe rformances will be given Fridays and
Saturdays at 8 :30 through Aug. 29 al the
playhouse. in the Seacllff Village center on Main
Street at Yorktown Avenue, Huntington Beach
Reservations 847·4465.
Also opening Friday is ''Tom Sawyer" by the
Fountain Valley Community Theate r at Los
Amigos High School, at the corner of Heil and
Newhope avenues in Fountain Valley. Rick Ha bib
Is directing a cast of 25 youngsters.
Performances will be given Friday a nd Satur
day of this week and next al 7:30 p.m ., with
matinees at 2:30 on July 26, 30 and Aug. 2. Call
847· 1108 or 962·5279 for reservations.
Closing out their respective productions this
weekend to make room for newcomers next Wednes.
day are "Flower Orum Song" at Sebastian's West
Dinner Playhouse and "After tbe F act " at the
Laguna Moulto n Playhouse.
"Flower Drum Son g" bows out with
performances tonight through Sunday at varying
curtain times at Sebastian's, 140 Ave Pico, San
Burt~.,..,, Moore
hllnh Ft1wctttt ·Dom DeLuise
n •vl••Afllf '1"1l;Hll••Al.llR' -w '"""°' • A•'-1 •11uo111• II
'1111 CA~IAll ,1111' "' » llAlt MA•TIN U.llllY OtlV1'. A-' A#llllltf IAllllAll JAMK IA/Ill
rEHrllrAOS#AW llfl Tit.Ill JACll/I CHAfll llllCllAll #Iii
11,.,.1.11+ , ~A,WJ•j "Jtt ,. ,,. 'r4t'1P' ll)f){jt jl/ltt ffr•t,JiRt I tAll
ll1,1n ~,,.._ •ilD,,,A'I .,,.,1 • , •,A, ,,_ ·W .. -·J ,"4 111J.l/~J .'I
PO -llfll...-rllm.in•-" BJA.' '•l.l' •/ PU(Rf'" AA.\ -.. ~, ... --.---..,..._,,_~ ·-----~J
•••• and Mow doea JOU.P
fti .. den irowt>
Whether it's about a simple shrub, a sophisticated
bed of flowers, or a !asty selection of vegetables,
the Daily Pilot's garden page blossoms every Fri·
day with handy hints and delightful features.
We'll give you tips on when to plant, when to
prune and when to pluck. Our writers also
brighten the garden section with interesting
features on local people who grow unusual plants
or achieve exceptional results.
Our crop of stories comes up new every Friday to
help you have more success and more enjoyment
with your growing. If your thumb is green, use it
t.o flip to the garden page in Friday's Daily Pilot.
Clemente. to be follo~cd ~Y Edward Mulhare ¥\
"Deathtrap " RescrvMions 492·9950.
"After the fo'act" Is on stage tonight throu9'1
Salurduy ut 8 p m a t the Moulton, 606 Laguna
Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, where the double bi)J
of "Match Point'' a nd "Dead Heal" arrlv•1
Wednesday REservations4!M 0743.
Univer s al plans
mov ie facility
LOS 1\NG ILL ES I AP, The parent company
of l'nawri.al Stuchos plans to build a motion pie·
turt· and tt•lt•vision µroduction focilaty along with
Ill> <iln••Hh announced $100 million theme park in
Orlando, Flu . thl' Loi. Angeles TI mes rePorted.
MCA I nC' .,., 111 announl't.' at a press conference
in Orlund!1 f'rnla) plani. for the first major studio
p rodul·t1on fa('il1t~ outi.1d e California . the
nc.,., spape1 said
ll smd lll'rbcrt Steinbt•rg. Vil'(' president or
marketing fm MCA Rcl·reat1on Services. an MCA
unit. l'onf1 rmed that the 'tud10 fac1ht1es will be
built in Flornlu
________ .... 11111!'11111911111!111 ...... -........ _~ ....... -~~~ ...... ---~--·----·----· --· •
·~· .......
Orange Coast DAIL y PILOT/Thurtday, July 23, 1981
Admirals in charge Coast Guard
needs help of Navy h~ot camps W.\SIUNGTON <AP>_ Com·
SAN DIEGO <AP ) -The
Navy is putting admirals in
charge of Its three boot camps to
show. it says, that it regards the
training camps as increasingly
important.
A spokesman said Capt. War·
ren Aul, commander or the
North Island Naval Air Station,
will be promoted to rear admiral
a nd put In charge of the San
Diego Naval Training Center.
Rear Adm. Pauline M. Hart·
ington will take over the Orlan·
do, Fla., training center from a
captain. She is the first woman
picked to run a boot camp.
A captain in char1e •t Great
Lakes, lU:, will be relieved by
Rear Adm. James ff. FlaUey
Ill, a Navy spokesman said.
•'Thia is recognizing the Im·
portance of boot camp, and
there already has been signs of
that as we lighten up training
with more drill hours scheduled
and more attention to dis-
cipline," he said.
"As the Navy builds toward a
600·ship Navy, it is going to need
good people to man those ships
and we have got to get orr to a
good start as we do that."
l 5 <J'o to 50'7'o Off
e'4erytblng in the store
mandant John 8. Hayet aay1 the
Coast Guard doesn't hlv• the
ships or personnel to step up lt.s
war agahut drug smugalln1 by sea.
Hayes told a congressional
subcommittee that the Coast
Guard's goal la to seize 75 per·
cent of the marijuana smulflled
Into the United States by sea,
but It only Is able to intercept lS
percent to 20 percent.
Without more ships and peo·
pie, Hayes said, the Coast Guard
could not even meet its goaJ by
giving up search and rescue
missions, enforcement of fish·
eries reguJaUons and other ac·
tivities.
ABORIGINAL ARTISTS -Members of an will perform in New York before a concert
Australian aboriginal group pose at a New tour of the United States. )u\y 23, 24 and 25 s ~n~~ of our York press conference. The aboriginal artists
. . . s bracelets , earnreg' We proudly
Pool contractor suing actor Inch~tng r~~gh~ndise is on sad .Collection and
quality rr1: t Corum. Concor
feature Piage . ASPEN, Colo. <AP> -An
Aspen contractor is suing actor
George Hamilton in Aspen Dis-
tr ict Court for $2,033, the amount
or money he has refused to pay
for work done on the indoor
swimming pool at his home
here.
Hamilton's Aspen attorney.
Richard Neiley, however. said
the bill submitted by the Weld ·
ing Co. or Aspen for work done
in March was "exorbitant" and
t.e believes the company "may
have been trying to sting" his
client.
Thomas Crumpacker, at·
SKI
paid only Sl,333 of the SJ,366 bill torney for the welding company,
said a Hamilton aide ordered the
actor's pool sand-blasted to re-
move a coat or paint. The job
was to be done during the three
days immediately before
Hamilton's arrival here. he said.
Hamilton lives in Beverly Hills.
Welding Co. employees
worked "into the wee morning
hours" to finish the job in time,
Crumpacker said.
Neiley said the actor relt that
the charge of up to $43 per hour
by the sand blasters was too
high.
Records show that Hamilton
bought the home in As pen's
f ashionable West E nd for
$750,000 in September 1979
rd watches. conco
\f3!1ell CZ{Jallte11 R~~~t!:
ISLAND • NEWPO
He and Neiley agree that the
dispute arose over damage that
allegedly occurred to tiles atop
the pool during the blasting. As
a result of the dispute, Hamilton
Fireman succumbs
McFARLAND <AP> Kern
County fire captain, Donald
Moore, 44, died Tuesday arter col·
lapsing while lifting a hose line
over a fence.
35 FASHION
FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY
JULY 24th and 25th
RT llA T SKI SALE
(for Locals And friends)
All Tennis Merchandise 50% Off
free strings with
purchase of a racket
• SHOES
• CLOTHING
• • • Don't wait for our tre111endous August Sale, sltop Saturday for
Great Sa•ings • • • Mat tlte crowds • • • great selection.
Rossignol 1981 • 82 Skis
15% OFF
This sale is being held
for our local friends· and
neighbors.
IS-.......
SAN MARCO-LANG-SALOMON
SCOI 14ARMONT·NORDICA
CAIER·HAMSON
•11•%1fF
s
K
I s
1·2
AUTHIER
HEXCEL
SPALDING
THE SKI
CHOOSE FROM THESE
FAMOUS BRAND SKIS -
ALL.%0FF
• CLOTllNI
io 70% OFF
ALLSll
CLOTHING
S I 0000 Parkos
01 low 01 s29 95
SALi -S All ID:• A.M.•la• P•. '
Ale N Orange Cont DAILY PILOT/Thurad'ay, July 23, 1981
" und sharing request
• • merits an exception
For years , the Newport
Beach City Council has made a
point of not dealing out any of the
city's Revenue Sharing Funds to
community service agencies,
such as the Family Crisis Center
or the YMCA.
The reasoning has been that
the funds should be spent on one·
time purchases in the city in·
stead or bankrolling ongoing pro·
grams.
This year, Jim de Boom,
director of the Orange Coast
YMCA, suggested that the coun·
cil set aside 10 percent of the
federal money for these agencies.
That amounts to $40,000.
He said a committee could be
put in charge or reviewing ap-
plications from various groups
and distributing the money.
DeBoom noted that Costa
Mesa, Irvine and Orange County
government started doing this
last year.
Newport council members,
meanwhile, are informally re·
viewing this request. It appears
doubtful that the council will go
along with it.
But the council shouldn't be
too quick to dismiss deBoom's
idea.
While the city probably is
correct in its thinking that it's
bad practice to spend federal
money for ongoing projects, this
modest appropriation could be an
exception.
If federal money did, at some
point, run out, these agencies
would be no worse off than they
are now.
Worth the battle
Eight months ago when city
leaders in Newport Beach ex·
plained how they intended to take
control of 16 lucrative oil wells it
all sounded so easy.
It was hardly easy but the
city, it now appears, does have
control of the oil wells and does
stand to earn up to $1 million a
year in new revenues.
The problem in the oil well
dispute was that the wells had
been operated for 12 years by a
private firm . Although the oil,
drawn from city -controlled
tidelands off the coast, belongs to
the city, the rigs belonged to the
private operator.
The details were complex
and res ulted in m o nths of
courtroom battles. In the middle
or the fighting , the operator's
contract expired and the 'wells
were shut down.
This week . though , an
Orange County Superior Court
judge ruled in favor or the city
and gave Newport full possession
of the wells and underground
lines.
The city now must build a
tank farm to store the oil and find
an operator willing to give the
city the kind of dollar return it is
anticipating.
As messy and convoluted as
the oil well fight has been,
Newport should be complimented
for identifying an opportunity to
bring more money into the city
and then going after it.
As ha s beco m e clear
throughout the state, municipal
governments must be aggressive
in developing new sources of in-
come, all within the constraints
of legality, not competing with
local businesses, and avoiding
direct taxation.
Plan i n v ites problems
Newport Beach city officials
appear to be courting trouble
with their recent decision to al·
low resident-only parking on tiny
Newport Island.
The island. which has only
157 dwelling units. does indeed
suffer severe parking problems
during the summer months. Out-
of-town beach visitors contribute
to the jam.
To give the residents some
relief. Ci ty Council members
agreed to implement a trial park-
ing sticker program through the
summer of 1982 and to place
warning signs at the entrance to
the island that only residents and
visitors with proper permits can
park on the street.
There are several problems
with this one being that it may
not be legal.
While state law does allow
preferential parking, it generally
ha s bee n allowed to give
neighbo rhoods relief from
•
vehicles parked by commuters or
commercial employees.
In this case, on Newport
Island, the move appears to aim
at discouraging motorists at·
tracted to Newport for recrea-
tional reasons. City Traffic
Engineer Rich Edmonstron says
that could mean legal problems.
Also, it is doubtful that the
state Coastal Commission will
smile upon this move and that
could mean more problems.
~ Legal challenges can be
fought , of course. The thing
Newport Officials might have
trouble fighting, is that residents
in other congested areas of the
city could ask for similar parking
preference.
City officials may have a dif·
fi cult time supporting a pref eren-
tial parking system in one area of
the city while ignoring pleas for
the same kind bf relief in other
neighborhoods.
Opinions e"prcssed in the space abOve are those of the Oath• Pi lot. Otner view s ex
pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is lnvlt·
ed Address The \)a11y Pilot. P 0. Box TS60, Costa Me~. CA 92626. Phone 17141
641-4321
.
L.M. Boyd/ Romantic months
It is ln the autumn moreso not in
the spring thal a young man's fancy
turns to love. according to the
statisticians. Their study or the birth
record.a indicates May, June and July
are the three least romanUc months.
November and December are the
most romantic, they say.
Sad, but true, you catch a baby
ocelot the aame way yo\I cat.ch a
baby gorilla. You shoot the parents
first. Those who purport to know say
there's no other way.
American astronauts can't be more
than 6 feet tall. The deal&n of their
equlpment Umita the hei1ht to that.
Most American car horns honk 1n
the key ol F.
Students of the start HY TaUl'UI ia
a fixed aip. 11 you were bom under
U, you're apt to be pracUcal, de-
termlned and reUable. TaUnat folk
also tend to be authorltaUve and
tomewhat ptedJctable. They 10 by
the old ruSet, u1u1Uy. Claim la lheJ
I I
make good police officers. teachers·
and soldiers.
Q. How many buttons are 1n a good
vested suit?
A. 16, usually.
Three out of five wild animals dQ
their hunting, foragJn1, whatever, in
the ~ight.
A sick tree, too, run1 a tern·
perature. And t.hlJ temperature la at
U.1 blahett in \be mornio1.
Your typical railroad boxcar
moves freisbt only 7 Ptretnt ol the
time. MoeU1. It l'\lDI empty, or Just
tits on a 1idln1 someplace. 1'b•
tranaportaUoo boys have been tr)1nl
to flpre out how to lmpron ~ pet·
tern f« 100 yean or more. But about
the only UUn1 that pug all tbe box·
cars to work all the t.lme la war.
Tlloae who teaeb Hllterat•
1rownup1 uy such pal"ICllll mually u n learn to write almple a.tten ID
about it.. weeu. ·
/
NO,S\~
W~Tf.'.'
I
Nuke boondoggle cost soars
WASHINGTON -Government boon·
doggies are always good for evanescent
headlines. But if they are really lo stick
in the public craw, two considerations
are usually necessary: The fiasco must
occur under high auspices, and the
story must have a certain oomph capa-
ble of kindling public interest.
By all the oomph indicators, the
Clinch River breeder reactor at Oak
Ridge, Tenn .. may not register high. It
is an unheralded project. with an
a wkward na me. well off the beaten
path. But it is a multimillion-dollar
fiasco born of fraud and mismanage-
ment.
The plant, darling of the nuclear
power industry. is supposed to produce
more nuclear fuel than it uses, which
sounds like a bargain. But it has been
no bargain for the taxpayers who are
unwittingly paying for it.
ORIGINALLY, it was to be in opera-
tion by December 1979, at a cost of $669
million. B.it it has already cost $1
billion, and the latest estimate is that it
won 't be operational until February
1990. By that time, the bill will be at
least $3.2 billion .
How could this happen? It's easy,
when the government officials who are
supposed lo keep track of the project's
contractors shirk their responsibilities.
Accor~g to a spokeswoman for the
Clinch River project, about 80 percent
of the cost increase was due lo
circumstances beyond official cQntrol.
In other words, the bureaucrats were
responsible for •·only" $500 million of
the estimated $2.5 billion overrun.
That's bad enough.
But it's actuaJly worse than that. In-
vestigators for Rep. John Dingell, D-
Q
-J1-c1-1-11-11-1a-1 -~
Mich., told my associates Tony Capac-
cio and Howard Rosenberg that at least
three-fourths of Clinch River's prime
contracts are open ended, that is with
no firmly set costs or completion dates.
The investigators warned that even
the staggering $3.2 billion estimate may
be optimistic. It fails to take into ac·
count the possibility that the entire
Clinch River facility might have to be
relocated for safety reasons.
A 1978 NUCLEAR Regulatory Com·
mission report listed nearly 100 safety
problems. A Clinch River official said
many of the problems had been ad·
dressed even before the NRC report,
but the commission had not yet checked
lo see if the needed corrections were ac-
tually made.
Fraud has also plagued the project.
One internal Department of Energy
memorandum told how an employee of
Atomics International, a subcontractor,
received a $1.000 interest-free loan in
return for advance information on con·
tracts, and another SS.000 in cold cash
for bid price information.
The FBI found that two purchasing of-
ficials invented bogus companies. from
which they claimed to have solicited
bids for items needed at Clinch River.
This resulted in overcharges running as
high as 800 percent.
Typical of the cavalier way contrac-
tors behave when Uncle Sugar is paying
the bills is an incident reported in
another internal DOE document dated
Feb. 13 It discloses that the chief of
Westinghouse's data-processing facility
at Clinch Ri ver had been using a
$200,000 computer for his own personal
business. He not only stored leases and
business directories in the computer .
but used it for a football pool.
The Congressional Budget Office has
estimated that terminating Clinch
River .. could save the government $1.4
billion over the five-year period of
1982-1986 ... But the Reagan administra-
tion, rep<>rtedJy over the objections of
Budget Director David Stockman. has
decided to go ahead
Athletic recruiting charges denied
To the Editor:
I would like to challenge some state·
ment.s made by the Daily Pilot in an
editorial which was published June 21.
The editorial dealt with a previous
article by reporter Pat Kennedy relat·
ing lo high school athletic recruiting.
The editorial stated that Edison High
School has an aggressive, successful
athletic recruiting program. It further
MAILBOX
went on to state that the Edison coach,
Bill Workman, expects four to six select
transfers to be 1n his starting lineup
next year.
I feel it is imperativi that the public
know that Edison High School does not
and has never had a program to recruit
athletes outside of its attendance boun·
daries.
THIS PAST SPRING several con·
cerns were brought to our attention that
athletes had been recruited to attend
Edison High School for the purpose of
participating on its athletic teams. We
also bad information that this type of
recruiting was occurring In other
schools in the district.
An intensive investigation followed.
What we d1d fmd was that there were
Individuals in the Edison community,
and ln other school communities, who
were Jctlvely encouraging you ng
athletes to attend particular schools to
participate In specific athletic pro-
grams. Our inveatiJalion proved con·
elusively that in every caae where
recruiting violations did occur the
school coaches were unaware and ap·
palled that such activities were taking
place.
In the case of Bill Workman, I can as·
sure you that he has aaaresslvely
worked to maintain ab untamilbed rep-
utation. We are very pl'oud of BUI
Workman u an educator, u we are of
bis enUre staff and the other coaches ln
tbe Huntln1ton Beach Union Hl1b
School District. They all realise that athleti~ are an important part of our
total lmtructlonal proa:ram but they art
JU.It • pert. I fMI that It la tmportant for the
public to know that tbe dlttrlct will DOl
tolHete athletic recruitinf and II mak· ln• every effort to eUmlnate tllll lllqel
pr1c:Uee; that our eoecb11 en not ln·
volved lD nendtln1: and tbat we are ver1 proud ol the 1uceftl ot the Edilon
'
football program and the other fine
athletic activities which the district pro-
vides for the youn~sters we serve. . FRANK J. ABBOTT
Superintendent of Schools
J et noise interferes.
To the Editor: Regarding AirCal President Robert
ClUford's testimony that he has never
been told "directly by airport neighbors
that jet noise interrupts their sleep
<June 30)":
I would be glad to knock on Mr. Clif·
ford's door and Lell him race-to-race if I
knew where to find him.
Not only does the jet noise interrupt
our sleep, it wakes WI up every morning
at 7:03 a.m. (8:03 a.m. Sunday. Thank
you for that). The planes also interrupt
telephone conversations and visiting in
our home. My health is not the best, so I do nap,
but it is not possible to sleep in the af.
ternoon because of the noise.
We have Jived in our home over 16
years, so we were here when the noisy
first jet arrived.
J . PERRY
Beaches a disgrace
To the Editor:
Normally I just consider summer a
congested lime and learn to live around
lt, aa do all other Newport Beach
resldenta.
But, tbls year I am truly appalled and
I wonder Just what is really happenina
to Newport Beach.
Early this mornina I took my usual
walk along the beach down to the
Wedge and with a sickening heart I de-
cided to write this letter with copie1 to
· the mayor, Jackie Heather, tbe Coastal
Com miaalon, the Board ol SUperviton
-boplq that someone would llaten
before Newport Beach becomes just
another "dump clt.Y" with crhM oo the
increase and airplane fallout Just
anotw me11 to clean off the windows.
I W1111 ova mayor wcu1d take a
walk oa OW' beacbet in Balboa on a
Monday morntna and aee the trub, the
early mornlq people 1UU a1eepl.q oa
Ua• •bucb Of" JUlt ,.W.1 up. beat' bot· u .. and cw all onr Her')'wbere, tn
the tu.ta and pttan u well u tbe
• t..~11~.,, /rom rtO/Jtft are -fcome. Ttw
nghr co ~ lcfrn1 ro Iii ~ or
tUlftbecde ,,,., II rntrvfd Utftn of 300
word.I or Ina l&lill fM """' '"#fffftet. AU wirn1 mllll MCluM _,...,.,,. Giid "'°"""
odtfrtll bMf MfMI ~ bf IPMMdlf Oii rt•
q11t1t •I nl/lclnt '"'°" ft apportftf, • Poer,.., wll "°' fM ,.,..,...,, Lfftff't maw be
t~lq#tolttld lo .a.-. Na,_ _, pltOfW """'"" °' ''* , .... .,,.., ... ,..... ....... ,., Mrll ...... ,..,, .. "
I
beach. I look at the sign on the trash
bins overflowing that s ays, "No
alcoholic beverages allowed, no fires,
no dogs. beach closes at midnight" and
a sign down the road that says "$50
Fine For Littering."
I know the mayor and tbe Coastal
Commission are advocates of "Let's
open our beaches and everywhere else
to the public," but I cannot understand
the public's blatant abuse of our once
lovely beaches. Sunday I witnessed peo-
ple using the curb in front of our home
in Balboa as a bathroom. then they got
in their car and left their sacks and
empty cans sitting on the sidewalk. I
have personally asked people to pick up
their trash, but I am afraid because we.
the homeowners and residents of our
beach cities have become the "victims"
of the public. who have open invitations
to come to the beach and do anything
they please without respect or feelings
for anyone, least of all us residents.
I am truly sad and I am afraid. I am
asking you residents -what can we
do? I am willing to put forth a little
time and effort and money if need be.
Are you?
MRS. ROBERT PETTIT
Music doomed?
To the Editor:
I feel It incumbent upon me to men·
lion the s hort-sightedness of the
Newport-Mesa School District ad-
ministration. school board and the
pafents who are allowing it lo happen.
The district is dropping the elemen-
tary music program.
Without the teaching of instrumenlaJ
music in the lower grades the middle
school program will wither from lack of
a "feeder." Lincoln Middle School
already has dropped its mwilc program.
Alter the "death" of the middle
school music program logically comes
the demise of the high school music pro·
gram.
We can't allow Newport to become a
·•culturally deprived" community.
There wbn't even be anyone to pro-
vide music at the football and basket-
ball games.
JOHN E. LINDFORS
Britain hu lea.med lht bard way that
an unarmed policeman It 11 eftedlft •
a GO SLOW t11n oe a 41a..,.roua cune. D.11.
................ -................. .. =·=."::":::.:=-:::· 1 d ....... ..